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THE ‘SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 1904. DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. KIDNEY AND BLADDZR TROUBLES PROMPTLY CURED. A Sample Botte Sent FREE by Mail. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great gemedy, fulfills every wish promptly curing kidney, bladder and uric acid troubles, rheumatism ‘and pain in the back. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liguor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the ex- traordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderfdl cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is not recommended for everything, but if you have kidney, liver, bladder or uric acid trouble you will find it just the remedy you need. If you need a medicine you hould have the best. Sold by druggists in fif- ty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle of this great kidney i Swamp-Root, and a book that | remedy tells all about it and its great cures, both sent absolutely free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing be sure to mention that you read this generous offer in The Francisco Sunday Call. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y, every bottle. A PETIT CAMERAS 3% x4% Regular Price $9.50 Reduced to $6.35 Same with Rackand Pinion Gt 10$7.35 SUNSET BAZAAR G 32 Third St. sax rRancisco 0000000000000 H. S. BRIDGE & CO., MERCHANT TAILORS, # 622 Market Street. $§ Up Stairs. Opp. Palace Hotel. 25 SAN_FRANCISCO. | § Novelties in Imported Wear. Scouting With Telephone. “Scouting with the aid of the telephone has - become one of the res of modern warfare, and is now being made use of by the Japenese,” says the Western Electrician. “Two scouts proceed from the lines toward the enemy; one, the observer, is a skilled army officer, who makes the observations, which are transmitted back to headquarters through e telephone line paid out from a reel carried by an electrician of the signal corps. A ground return is used, the ground being made by thrusting a yonet or hatchet into the earth and taching one end of the line to it. The trician carries a battery on his k He also makes the connections does the talking. A special con- ductor is used, which will stand rough usage. In this manner a scout may be e to stay out a long time and give able information without being iged to make a number of hazardous trips to the front.” in | San | on | | | Viadivostok squadron. | out that the Admiralty now explicitly | states that the Russian squadron ac- ADMIRAL WITHOEFT KILLED BY A JAPANESE SHELL WHILE DIRECTING FLEET FROM HIS FLAGSHIP'S BRIDGE Battleship Cesarevitch, Irreparably Damaged in Run- ning Fight, Will Be Dismantled and Put Out of Commission in the Harbor of Tsingchou. —_— ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 14, 3:40 a. m.—Rear Admiral Withoeft, who was in command of the Russian naval forces at Port Arthur, was killed dur- ing the engagement of Wednesday. The Emperor has received a tele- gram from Tsingchou, signed by Cap- tain Matouzvitch, the rear admiral's chief of staff, reporting that Withoeft met his death aboard the flagship Cesarevitch. Both his legs were blown off. | Captain Wamoff of the Cesarevitch, Captain Samoff and were wounded. Several officers besides the rear ad- miral were killed. The battleship sus- tained severe damage. Her rudder was broken bevond hope of repair. Captain Matousevitch did not report as to the whereabouts of the other vessels, but the disatpch adds that the protected cruiser Novik has left Tsing- several officers | chou. The Admiralty entertains the hope that some of the battleships, after the return to Port Arthur, managed to elude Admiral Togo and join the tually went back to Port Arthur. The Russian account of the latest na- val battle between the Japanese and Russian fleets indicates that the Japa- nese torpedo-boats sustained their pre- vious reputation for daring by making | & daylight attack upon a squadron in battle formation, and admits the effect- fveness of these frail, daring craft, which seripusly impeded the move- ments of the Russian fleet. The wording of the official report that the battleship Cesarevitch “turned” to | try to go in the direction of Vliadivo- stok arouses some comment here. As- suming, as the report seems to indicate, that the battle was off the Shantung peninsula, the turning of the Cesare- vitch to go toward Vladivostok would most probably indicate that the re- mainder of the squadron was going back in the direction of Port Arthur. At the same time the report that the day after the battle four Russian bat- tleships were ' sighted off Shanghal makes it possible that the battle oc- curred farther south in the Yellow Sea ! than the report of Captain Matouse- vitch indicates and that when the Ce- sarevitch “lost sight of the remainder of the squadron” the Russian fleet was actually proceeding southward. This opens an interesting question as to the ultimate destination of the remaining Russian battleships, The fact that the crushing nature of the blow to the Russian fleet was largely due to the feeling of comrade- ship which prompted the squadron to halt for the purpose of protecting the disabled Cesarevitch is viewed here with grim satisfaction and regret is mingled with admiration for the brother officers who threw away their ADVERTISEMENTS. and fumed oak. San Francisco, Sunday, 14 August, 1904. A man’s couch Leather covering, $25 An uncommon price for a leather couch, and one that should be taken advantage of in a hurry. The construction is strong and durable, and the interior strictly sanitary. Plenty of springs to make it com- fortable, and covered with leather that will last a life- time. The base and legs are oak, finished golden. Pedestal hall lamps, with opalescent glass shades. Odd creations and very effective. In weathered oak (Formerly. the California Furniture Co.) 261 to 281 Geary St.. at Union Square o SRR TR S SEE PAGES 40 to 46. BUSINESS CHANCES, MONEY TO LOAN, ROOMS TO LET FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED, HOUSEKEEPING APARTMENTS TO LET. SITUA- TIONS WANTED, HELP WANTED, AND A THOU- S AND OTHER WANTS FULLY DISCUSSED— PAGES 40 TO 46 INCLUSIVE, TO-DAY’S CALL. —_— of Port Arthur. only chance of escape rather than de- sert the crippled flagship. The distress caused by the squad- ron's failure to get away has height- ened, if possible, the bitter resentment felt over the conduct of the Japanese in the Ryeshitelni affair and the Mi- kado’s orders to allow non-combatants | to leave Port Arthur merely deepens the painful impression, indicating as it does the bellef of the highest Japanese authorities in the imminence of the fall FERTR R SR, CESAREVITCH OUT OF ACTION. Battleship Probably Will Be Dis- mantled in Tsingchou Harbor. TSINGCHOU, Aug. 13.—The Rus- slan battleship Cesarvitch received terrible punishment in the fight off Shantung Promontory on August 10. The Cesarevitch bore the brunt of the fighting until 4 o’'clock in the after- noon, when Admiral Withoeft was hit by a shell, which blew his body to pleces, only one of his legs being found after the explosion. Four of- ficers standing near him were killed. It is pointed |Altogether the Cesarevitch lost fifteen men killed and forty-five wounded. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon of August 11 a Russian torpedo-boat de- stroyer, badly damaged, steamed slow- ly into Tsingchou and a half hour lat- er the protected cruiser Novik, slight- ly injured, entered port. No dead were on board either vessel. They took coal and departed at 8 o'clock on the morning of August 12. The battleship Cesarevitch arrived at Tsingchou on the night of August 11, steaming at the rate of four knots an hour and burning immense quan- titles of coal to make even that rate of speed. Her rudder shaft was broken, one gun was disabled, lifeboats had been lost, her masts were badly bent, her funnels were riddled and her bridge had been twisted out of posi- tion. The projectile holes above the water line were covered with make- shift stoppers of wood. The same night, August 11, the cruiser Askold, with fifteen of her crew dead and twelve wounded, and one torpedo-boat destroyer attempted to enter Tsingchou, but were kept out by a Japanese cruiser, whereupon they proceeded to Woosung. The officers of the Cesarevitch are of the opinion that the Japanese ves- sels undoubtedly suffered severaly in the fighting, as the pursuit of the Cesarevitch was maintained for a short time only. The decks of the Russian battleship were slippery with blood and the men on board were al- most deaf as a result of the concus- sions of firing. Several Japanese crulsers are now reported to be off Shantung Promon- tory near the scene of the fighting, while destroyers on scouting duty are watching the mouth 'of. Tsingchou harbor. The German warships at Tsingchou to-night are the cruisers Fuerst Bis- marck, Geler, Hansa and Hertha, the gunboats Luchs and Tiger and two torpedo-boat destroyers. They con- trol the harbor exit absolutely. ey TOGO HURRIES TO SHANGHAL Battleship Squadron Will Intercept Russian Ships in That Vicinity. CHEFU, Aug. 13.—According to Chinese authority, the Russians had six and the Japanese four warships at the beginning of the fight off Shantung Promontory. The Japanese, however, soon were reinforced, but to what ex- tent is not stated. A private telegram received here to- night says that the Russian battleship Cesarevitch has moved farther into Tsingchou harbor, following a demand made by the Japanese that the Rus- sians come out and fight. It is sur- mised that the Cesarevitch will be dis- mantled. The German crulser Thetis left Tsingchou hastily to-day. An Italian warship also has left there. The desti- nations of these vessels are not known. Admiral Togo is said to be with the main portion of the Japanese fleet, which has gone toward Shanghal. This portion of the fleet includes all the battleships. The whereabouts of the Russian cruisers Pallada and Novik are not known here. It is believed that if these vessels are still afloat they will undoubtedly endeavor to connect with the Vladivostok squadron. A cipher telegram received here from Osaka, Japan, confirms previous reports that the Japanese main squad- ron is bound for a southern destina- tion “on an active campaign.” Launches containing sixty Russian sallors are said to have entered Wei- haiwei to-day. The sailors belong to two torpedo-boat destroyers which are reported to have gone ashore in the vicinity of Weihaiwel. These vessels presumably are the same which were reported yesterday to have been cap- tured. The steamship Dagmar, ariving to- night from Tsingchou, had on board the harbor pilot who steered the Rus- sian battleship Cesarevitch into that port. He confirms the press reports regarding the damage to the Cesare- vitch and adds that her rudder shaft was broken during the fight, but that her engines were not badly injured. He expresses the opinion that the fighting days of the Cesarevitch are over and that she probably will be dismantled. RS Loses Faith in Russian Arms. LIAOYANG, Aug. 13.—The Chinese Governor of Mukden has issued a proclamation welcoming the Japanese, This is due to the fact that the suc- cessive retirements of the Russians upon their main lines have caused the Chinese to lose faith in the Russian arms. — e British Steamship Searched. GIBRALTAR, Aug. 13.—The Brit- ish steamship Ronda, from Hull for Naples, passed here to-day and sig- naled that she was boarded by a Rus- slan cruiser yesterday. Her papers and other documents were examined and her hold was searched. Japanese Lines Are Gradually Closing In Upon Port Ar- thur and the Losses of the Stronghold’s Defend- ers Are Reported BERLIN, Aug. 13.—A dispatch to the Lokal Anzeiger trom Toklo, timed 12:30 P. m. to-day, says that heavy fighting took place at Port Arthur day and night on Tuesday and Wednesday and that the Russian losses are reported to be enormous, CHEFU, Aug. 13.—Chinese dockyard laborers who left Port Arthur on the night of August 8, and who arrived here to-day confirm the report of heavy fighting there. They state that the Japanese lines are gradually closing In on the inner forts. A shell which exploded in the general hospital killed a number of patiehts. TOKIO, Aug. 13.—Another sign that a general assault on Port Arthur is im- minent, or already In progress, is found in the fact that the Emperor of Japan has notified Field Marshal Yamagata, chief of the general staff, of his desire that non-combatants be allowed an op- portunity to leave the fortress. The chief of staff consequently Instructed the Japanese commander at Port Dal- ny to give the requisite instructions for their removal. Further detalls of the naval engage- ment of August 10 indicate that Ad- miral Togo's main attack was directed against the Russian battleships and that while this was going on the speed- fer Russian cruisers succeéded in get- ting away. il ST ASKOLD PUTS INTO SHANGHAL Badly Damaged Russian Cruiser Takes Refuge in the Harbor. SHANGHAI, Aug. 13.—The Russian protected cruiser Askold, flylng an ad- mirdl's flag, with her two stacks de- stroyed, a large hole In her hull near the water line and one below the water line, her upper works much battered and her after barbette destroyed, ar- rived at Shanghai at 3 o'clock this aft- ernoon and commenced to make repalirs in the drydock. Fifteen of her crew were killed and fifty wounded during the battle off Port Arthur on August 10. The torpedo-boat destroyer Grozovoi also is at Shanghal. The Taotal has notified both vessels that they must leave port at the expiration of the twenty-four hour limit. The command- er of the Askold claims that his vessel is unseaworthy, and it is said to be his intention to remain in port until the repairs are completed. Local shipping is demoralized, under- writers refusing to take any further risks. There is a feeling here that Rus- sia is Infringing upon Chinese neutral- ity by using Shanghal as a port of to Be Enormous. day by the news that four Russian warships had anchored off the Saddle Islands, where they are awalting Brit- ish colliers from Tsingchou. A Japa- nese squadron, consisting of one iron- clad, two large cruisers and four tor- pedo-boat destroyers, is watching out- side to intercept the colllers. The Japanese Consul here is urging the Taotal to disarm the Grozovoi and Askold, but no decision as yet known has been reached. In the meantime Japanese shipping remains inactive. e DEPRESSION IN RUSSIA. Full Extent of Disaster to Port Ar- thur Flect Just Being Learned. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 14.—Not since the beginning of the war between Japan and Russia has anything so ob- viously affected Russian spirits as the gradual revelation of the extent of the Port Arthur squadron’s reverse. The efforts of the Russlans to fight their way through the Japanese prob- ably would have been successful had it not been for the disaster to the battle- ship Cesarevitch, which compelled the squadron to fight a second battle, end- ing In the dispersal of the Russian fleet in darkness. The awful mortality among the offi- cers of the Cesarevitch, which was merely stated in the official report, was due to the fact that Admiral Withoeft | and most of his officers were gathered on the bridge during the action, in or- der to set ad example to and encour- age the men, instead of remalning In comparative safety in the protection of the conning tower. A Japanese shell burst beneath the| bridge, wrecking that part of the ship | and killing or wounding every officer on dutv thereabouts. One of the most important features of Captain Matousevitch’'s dispatch, aslde from its grimly brief account of the battle, is the detalled statement of the make-up of Rear Admiral Togo's fleet, which consisted of six battleships, | eleven cruisers of various classes and approximately thirty torpedo-boats. Aceording to this statement there were in line of battle some ships pre- viously reported destroyed. This gives | an indication of the Japanese naval strength, which Admiral Togo has hith- erto concealed. e Lt Japanese Release Two Prizes. TIENTSIN, Friday, Aug. 12.—The Japanese have ed by the China Mining and Engineer- ing Company of Shanghal, which were refuge. captured in July last. Part of their Great excitement was caused here to- | cargoes also were released. — CIVIL, WAR VETERANS TO BANQUET IN LONDON Permanent Organization Will Be Made and Annual Reunion Pro- vided For. The London Morning Post of June 29 said: “On the initiative of Colonel G. Gouraud it is proposed to hold for the first time out of America a meeting, to be followed by a banquet, of the mili-| tary order of the Loyal Legion of the | United States. The membership of the | organization is limited to military and | naval officers of the Civil War of 1861-5, who still number nearly ten thousand. Many of them are resident in Great| Britain and on the Continent of Eu- rope, and at a recent conference it was | decided to hold a meeting and banquet in England annually hereafter. United with the members of the order will be | officers of the Confederate forces, mem- bers of the Soclety of Cincinnatus, the Spanish-American War Veterans, the | Roosevelt Rough Riders, the Sons of Veterans of the Union and Confederate armies, the Sons of the American Rev- olution and the descendants of British naval and military officers who served in the war of the American Revolution. The guests on the occasion, it is hoped, will include several distinguished offi- cers of his Majesty’s navy and army. The Lord Mayor of London has given his co-operation. Those wishing to join in the reunion are invited to communi- cate with Colonel Gouraud at the Savoy Hotel, or at Edison House, Marine Pa- rade, Brighton.” —_—————— Leaning Against George III. The Declaration of Independence is a most trenchant argument to show that George III was a very poor kind of king and that the colonies could do better by setting up for themselves, Of course, the British Government did not think that the colonies were yet ready for self-government. No Gov- ernment ever does think this of its colonies. When Secretary Taft says that independence for the islands lying Off in the Pacific must not be men- tioned for years to come, he is simply €choing the spirit of the past and of all governments which get their grip on a people without their consent. It would have knocked American inde- pendence higher than a kite. But the “‘spirit of '76” was greater, mightier, truer to human instinct and human right. George III did not believe that . CONVENTION AT YREEKA. Mendocino County Names Delegates to the State Convention. YREKA, Aug. 13.—The Republican County Convention convened here to- day, with fifty-four delegates present | from various portions of the county. The platform, among other things, warmly commends Roosevelt for his| action in the Panama matter. The following representatives were chosen delegates to the State conven- tion and also to the Congressional and Assembly district conventions, which meet at Santa Cruz: R. S. Taylor, L. M. Foulke, Judge J. 8. Beard, Albert Lindley, Clifford Coggins, Dr. G. W. Dwinnell, J. L. Coyle and R. J. Wil- lard. Supervisor Abner Weed was renom- inated in District No. 2 without opposi- tion. Samuel Gardner beat his ponent for renomination by a close vote in District No. 4. A. D. Terwilliger, a business man of Montague, beat John Cooley, a farmer, by one vote for the nomination in District No. 1. Terwilli- ger’s prospective opponent is Ed O'Con- nor, a brother-in-law. —_—— Mrs. Alice Galleher Sessums, wife of the Right Rev. Davis Sessums, Bishop of Louisiana, has received from the United States Patent Office letters pat- ent covering an improvement upon the bodkin. Mrs. Sessums has already re- ceived three flattering offers for the patent. DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. Life the American colonies were ready for self-government simply because he did not want to believe it. The first ques- tion to ask ourselves is whether we want the Phillppines to have inde- pvendence. If we do not, we will al- ways be able to find an argument to run with our wishes. . Lincoln said that no man was good enough to govern another without his consent. But Lincoln was a rare kind ©f human. In these smart days there are men who think themselves good enough for anything. And as between George III and Lincoln they lean up against the former.—Chicago Advance. —_——————— Rockefeller’s Picture. John D. Rockefeller has a little grandson something over a half dozen years of age of whom he Is very fond. One day recently this youngster, while visiting at the Rockefeller country home, at Pocantico Hills, New York, mnmted his grandparent’'s knee and saild: “Grandpa, here’s a picture of you that I drawed.” h, yes,” replied Mr. Rockefeller, as he examined it. *“Very interesting. What am I doing?"” from 'CO!.IIIXIS home ves; I see. But what’s that I have in my hand?” “That’s a gallon ol can. You've just got it filled with kerosene and are fetching it home for the lamps. Of course,” the artist continued in patron- izing expl tones, “it's a 'mag- inary picture. 'Tain’t drawed from see- ing you do it, you know. I fought it all up in my own head."—New York Times. the village released the British | steamships Hsiping and Peiping, own- | op- | | | i We ha $5.00. 50 per States the price for all stap! $3.50. We know of no other American commodity of such a staple charac- ter seiling at a premium of from 20 to S0RQSIS ADVANCE FALL STYLES. OPENING DAY, Monday, Aug. 1S. Free Souvenirs to Every Pcrsoa Who Galls, We extend an invitation to every person to come to our Fa'l Opening. We will try to make Aug. 15 a day to be remembered by all who come. ve on display the newest of the England the price is $4.00 to $4.50 pair ; in Germany, $4.50; in Canada, $4.50 to $5.€0; in Franc: and Russia, are made for exclusive trade. In per Everywhere in the United e styles is cent in foreign countries. Asa rule prices are lower —very much lower—as many Americans who have traveled can testify, to their disgust. Over one-third of our preduction has recently gone abroad, which ac- counts for the delay at timess in get- ting SOROSIS. Only to be had at SOROSIS SHOE PARLOR ROYAL SHOE STORE, 2i6 POST ST. 50 THIRD ST. RUSSIANS LOYAL TO THE FLAGSHIP Sttt Continued From Page 21, Column 4. Shantung Peninsula, where she ar-| rived on Thursday night, within the} twenty-four-hour limit, according to an official dispatch to tke Navy De-| partment from the Governor of Kiao- | chou. are still in the harbor in a disabled condition. \ The German Government is not| willing that the names of these ships | and the details of the damages should be published on official authority, be- | cause such intelligence might be con-! sidered inconsistent with neutrality and as affording Japan information. The instructions sent to the authori- | ties at Tsingchou permit the Russian | vessels to repair sufficiently to go to | another port, but the repairs must-be| | strictly limited to making them sea- | | worthy and not to increasing their | fighting capacity. | Admiral von Prittwitz, the com-.! mander of the German naval forces in | | Far Eastern waters, is assembling his | ships at Kiaochou to enforce Ger- | many’s neutrality against either bel-; | ligerent. —_— | | DESTROYER BURNI BEACHED. | | Survivors of the Russian Craft Walk | to the Port of Weihaiwei. | LONDON, Aug. 13.—A dispatch | from Weihaiwei says the Russian tor- | pedo-boat destroyer Burni was beach- ed and blown up on August 12 on the south of the Shantung Promontory. Three of her officers and sixty men, who walked from the scene of the ac- cident, have arrived at Weihaiwel. | According to a news agency’s dis- patch from Tokio, the Russian tor- | pedo-boat destroyer Ryeshitelni, which was captured- by the Japanese at Chefu, is being taken to a Chinese port. e | A dispatch from St. Petersburg to a news agency says the machinery of | the Russian battleship Cesarevitch | was so damaged during the fight that | most of it is worthless. She lost 210 | officers and men killed and sixty | wounded. Rear Admiral Withoeft was on the bridge of the Cesarevitch when a shell | exploded there, blowing him to pleces. “A dispatch from Shanghal says the | reason given for the entrance of the Russian torpedo-boat destroyer .Gro- zovol into that port is that it is neces- | sary to repair her machinery. The vessel, the dispatch adds, shows no | signs of recent fighting, except that her forward rails are damaged. Her hull, guns and torpedo tubes are un- injured. The officers of the Grozovol report that the Russian warships, after a se- vere engagement, forced their way through the Japanese fleet and escaped in several directions. The correspondent of the Evening News at Tsingchou cables that he learned from an officer of the Rus- sian battleship Cesarevitch that the Russian Port Arthur squadron met the Japanese squadron twenty miles out. The flagship Cesarevitch was espe- clally attacked and changed her course for the Shantung Peninsula. The Japanese followed and overhauled her and the accompanying vessels off | Shantung at 4:30 o’clock in the after- noon. A two hours’ battle followed. PRI DOUBTS JAPAN’S VERSION. Great Britain Much Disturbed by the Chefu Incident. LONDON, Aug. 13.—The cutting out of the Russian torpedo-boat destroyer Ryeshitelni by the Japanese torpedo- boat destroyers at Chefu has eclipsed for the moment in the public mind the Knight Commander incident. The Jap- anese legation claims thatthe Japanese torpedo-boat destroyers entered Chefu for the purpose of ascertaining if the | Ryeshitelni was really dismantled, and | that the Japanese boat's crew was al- tacked by the Russians. This version does not agree with the reports received by the British Foreign Office, in which the Japanese appear to have been the aggressors. Consequent- ly the British Government has evi- | mitted by subord Several other Russian vessels| | | My pains are all gone. denced a desire that Japan do nothing to cast a doubt neutrality China, and has ed conflde that Japan w any errors com- rate officlals. ADVERTISEMENTS. B U ek S | i i & i ¥ 7 B ¥ ‘When to grow old he usually sick in many ways. ect this, don’t the ol rheum Stiff k eat table. I 1d. beeau m les w the penalty ise I had taken much without benefit. I be- however, that I d to try the Electr . on Feb. 21, 1903, “hemic Inst g 0 able. atisfactory, a fres loan apparatus a small charge for ree months' time I and I did not have at all, as my treat- d y the home method. I went for the first examina- tion, for that was just the thing and it showed at once what was the matter with me, and after that my cure was comparatively easy. I can truthfully say that I feel twenty years B younmger emic course. I can eat like a t everything I eat,.and [ & for a man that is get- along in years My name is R. B. Cutting and I live at Santa Cruz. Cal. I am an old ploneer and I want to recommend ‘the lectro- Chemic treatment to all sufferers 11y to the bld folks who are m erable and sick. Medicines do ne g0od i such cases, whilst Electro-Chemistry surely puts new blood new life into both men and women who are wearing out just because they ne of e taking the Electro. truthful Electro-Che erer who is laced into i ly strengthened and purified blood is cir rgan, Catarrh is cure Consumption, Asthma Bronchitis and diseases of the air passages are Ringing Ears. Deafness. Disc Painful Ear Dise are cured culated to ev Old cal treat vous disc almost m! that bromides eases, but never cure In Rheumatism. New Ataxia and Paralysis th tro-Chemistry ha wonder in San Fran the very worst cases have cheaply and permanently one interested will be giv and addresses of cured pat In speeial diseases of womer larities. Displacements, Painful Weak Backs., Dizziness, Faintin. Ovarfan Pains. Ulcerations, Electro-Chemistry ecures -quick) manently and painlessly. HBlect Chemistry keepg many women the operating table, and no sufferir woman should consent to surgical treat- ment before investigating this wonder? new treatment. Consuitasion;and adv is free In any case. The Institute pr vides separate and' private apartmen for male and female pat tvery of who can possibly do so shogld come the office for the e X examination. “This examination most reliable. It is painless and harn less. Babies a v successfully and they d free to all sufferers. The grand success of the -Electro- Chemic [nstitute has caused imitators to spring up—so every ome contemplat ing a visit should be sure to get the right number, 118 Grant avenue. sorner of Post street. The office hours are from nine to five and seven to eight daily, and on Sundays from ten to one