The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 2, 1905, Page 2

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MONICIPAL OWNERSH NOT COSTLY Fifty Millions Wil Buy Chicago’s Railas. Special Dispatoh to. The Call._ {YCAGO, May L—Mayor Dunne to- decla instead of having to , his' campaign esti- , be could not only get >ontrol of dction “lines in Chicago, y for them and rehabilitate less than $50,000,000; first declaration from cerning the repoft from the ear building and Cummings,. in his de- ngs, r all squeeked out” ystems may be- acquired d for ‘wice the sum it wd to ger con- roperties. ention of the the report to-the t at the suggestion ep was Darrow this r conside radical sugg » the Mayor, declares | ‘Rival Factions Pla Emergencies W ‘! Continued From- Page-1, Column 3. | statutes sRich .prohibits the carrying of rifies In the streets by unauthorized persons. - President Shea’ of the Teamsters’ Un- lfon safd to-night if the Employers’| | Teaming Association armed fits drivers with rifles he would do the same with i\hs unidn drivers. “If it is legal for the non-union. men {to arm themsclves,” he said, “it cer- | tainly is mot .illegal for us to do 1ike- | wise.” There was a report late this after- poon that Mayor Dunne ‘was about to force an adjustment, but he declared to-night this was incorrect. Z Four men were seriéusly hurt during | the fights to-day, but the-number ac- tnally fnjured is greatly in excess of this and it is impossible:to state it ac- curately for the reason that many of | those hurt disappeared in the crowd or were carried away by friends as soon as possible after being injured. Those | serlously hurt to-day are: | OTTO BELMER, shot in the.leg. CHARLES KULLET, non-union teamster, badly beaten, nose broken, | head. cut. JOBN WILLIAMS, non-unipn team- ster, badly beaten. C. F. INGALLS, non-union -team-| ster, badly beaten. WILLIAM CROCKETT, non-union teamster, clubbed and stoned until in- | sensible. CHICAGO SITUATION ~ [SILVERCITY REACHES ACUTE STAGE! MOYING 10 n to Arm to Mééf hich-May Arise. - .~ Thirty-five teamsters employed . by the anthracite and bituminous compa- nies struck to-day. The hauling for the company was turhed over to the Employers’ Teaming: Assoclation. Reports Were received ‘that the ex- press companies were doing consider- able transferring in suburban places. | This move, it was said by the strikers, would be checked by spreading the strike to the suburbs. B Merchandise and other material stored in four buildings of Wakem & McLaughlin is tied up. Teamsters and otheys who have done hauling to and from vhe warehouse bécame involved in the strike complications to-day and quit works A large nurhber of persons who have engageq. In strike demonstrations were reportea to-ddy-to attorrieys, who, with the aid of agents and detectives, are collecting evidence against persons al- leged to have -violated injunctional or- aers of Judge -C. C. Kohlsaat of the United States Federal Court. The mat- ter will be taken before the Federal Juage. STRIKE BREAKERS ARRIVE. - The largest consignment - of _strike breakers arriving to-day was met at. the Illinofs Central' Railway depot by a guard of 100 policemen. Watched by thousands of hostile eyes, the new ar- rivals,- 400, ‘were ‘marched in the middle of streets to lodging-houses in the cen- ter of the city. Police. details are running short, it is THE ' SAN FRANCISCO : \ "CALL, | TUESDA O THE HS Population Is Driven + ~ From Canyon by Floods. _Epecial Dispatch to The Call 'ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., May 11— | The inhabitants of Silver City, one of | the largest and most prosperous towns in the Territory, has determined to move the town and the work is well jalong at the present time. Silver City | { was built in a wide ‘canyon and the heavy rains of that section bring down | too much water, and two or three 'times each year the entire business | portion of the town is flooded. ! Last fall the principal hotels had an |'average of four feet of water on the lower floors and one of the largest and finest hotels in the Territory was ab- | solutely cut from the .rest of the town, | except for foot passengers. The hotel closed and the immense structure {1s now being torn down. 1 After the experience of last fall | many of the business men determined to move the town to higher ground and that is just what the entire popula- | { tion is now doing. usiness blocks are ; & THE LAXATIVE oF . KNOWN QUALIT There are two classes of remedies: those of known qual- ity and which are permanently beneficial in effect, acii ance ; and another class, compos=d of preparations Fig Syrup Co., which represents the active principles plants, known to act most pation and the mdny ills resulting therefrom. Its active prin ples and quality are known to physicians generally, and t containing nothing of an objectionable or injurious character. There are two classes of purchasers: those whoare inform: as to the quality of what they buy and the reasonsfor the excellence of articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage to go @ gently, in harmony with nature, when nature needs assist- remedy has therefore met with their approval, as well as with the favor of many millions of well informed persons who know of their own personal knowledge and frem actual experience thatitis a most excellent laxative remedy. We donot claim that it will cure all manner of ills,but recommend it for what it really / represents, a laxative remedy of known quality and excellence, ng of unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting tempo- W) rarily, but injuriously, as a result of forcing the natural functions unpecessarily. One of the most exc.epuonal of D the remediesof known quality andexcellence is the ever pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California of neficially, in a pleasantsyrup, in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to con- tribute their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy of all remedies to sweeten and refreshandcleanse the system gently and naturally, and to assist one in overcoming consti- Cie he ed elsewhere when a dealer offers an imitation of any well known article; but, unfortunately, thefe are some people who do not know, and who allow themselves to be imposed upon. They cannot-expect its beneficial effects if they do not get the genuine remedy. To the credit of the druggists of the United States be it said that nearly all of them value thejr reputation for proféssional integrity and the good will of their customers too highly.to offer said, by some- of the loyers, who | being moved to the flats and the moun- | It is not expected any of the injured) ,..4ict that military élgn:fl!l}be neces+ | tainside and as fast as com;l;ed ‘::e will die sary before thé end.of the ‘week. -Four | being occupied. New residences are GROCERY DRIVERS TO AID. hundred wagons under guard are now | €0ing up, although the residence part No decided increégsé in the number of |'on the streets, according to Victor Sin- | Will-not be so much affected. The | men on strike was made to.day, the|cere of the Employers’ Association. | Santa Fe Railroad will be put.on high- most important accession to the strik- |" “From.the wholesale grocery houses |er grqund in order. to get the track ing teamsters being the drivers of the | e have had many applications for po- | where the water can do no damage. delivery wagons of reail grocery |lice protection to-day with which we | Silver City is a prosperous place of |° stores. These declared that they would | have heen unablé to complyy” said Sin- | bétween 3000 and 4000 inhabitants and | said $77,000,000 at that fime € given by car eelves. Now I am HONORS WILL BE PAID TO EMBASSADOR PORTER 555 ists. As teamsters are on_strike at fa - b . b h 5 —_ actically all the wholesale groceries | men ‘that dre necessary: 2 new enes wi e, 80 the greatness Will Be Entertained by Delcasse and ©i e oy A S o oply of food| The strike presents-a: particularly | of the task can be wel understood: P i American Colony Before for the citigens of Chicago is apparent- | serious outlook for prodyce dealers, | —————— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., and in order in no case call for goods at any.whole- sale establishment where a strike ex- cere. % On the other hand, Assistant Chief of Police Schusttler says he has all’ the To-day they were almost unabie tp get {the trade center of ‘one of the-richest mining sections of the Territory. 'The buildings were ‘all brick and stone, as | T0- RECEIVE DEGREE FROM imitations of the Genuine— Syrup of Figs to buy the genuine articlé and to gez, aving Paris. v limited to- the stocks now held in | To a3 Shey were atnont Wnaple 'a €14 X its beneficial effects, Delcasse w ® a dinner to General sy nal ; strike { 10 do 8o’ would quit. Prices for fruit, | 5 g ¥ —Californi —plai inte the ¥ nd the Ameriean [EfUSe to handle meat if any strike{fo €0 80 WOUIC WL e ks and.|Alvia Magary of 'San Francisco to & the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printedon asked General smoking-room, r son ne about occurred in the stock yards. The Employers’ Association this aft- | erncon drove home a wedge into the ! ranks of the Chicago Teamowners' As- sociation. This latter orgahization is | nposed of men who do teaming. for | ny of the large business houses and { similar articlés showed a tendency (o" advance. | While five coal wagons from the Dan-'| iels Coal! Company were being unleaded | in the rear of the Union League Club | to-day missiles were thrown at - the | several shots | Graduate From Auburn School. : : AUBURN, N. ¥., May 1.—Among | the students who ‘will receive the bachielor of divinity degree at the Au- front of every package. Price, 50¢ per bottle. point of death. m; | i * o rbatn Theological Seminary ‘on May 3 in the matter. of -hauling | non-union teamsters, when ‘one’ of the | P18 TUCOlORICEl Seminary ‘on Max N7 1 taken seriously il and several times N nave fought shy so far of | detectives mmrd’lnnli ;:: g lg;:g:,.-r,mc.sw Magary graduated from L | |since she has been reported at the A ACC !S R . aiding the employers to the extent of | making deliveries on their centracts, going to the length of asking employ: ers to refrain from requiring them to | crowd which had gathered was dis- | persed by the police, | A new Federal injunction, /it * was: stated to-day, would he dskéd for on the.San. Francisco Theological Semin- ary in 1903. He and George T. Pratt of Albany, Or., are the only graduates at Auburn from the Pacific Coast. Ma- , — e — ARMY OF IMMIGRANTS ON WAY FROM EUROPE One size only. \ g, | \ h i p rerc] ™ se: | ary wi v ce- 3 / B el s stopped while on the | he sround that the sirike fs interter- |EUT, T RAYS € Isediom commenpey, lS ”\ DICTLD Twenty-Five Thousand, a Record MUy streets there was nothing for them to (D€ Wwith inferstate ~commers . Cuc| i : Crowd, Due to Arrive During do but to return to tire barn. The ém- |2PP ICaHOT. 1t FRAS BEC. 0T T anien ! S —F the Week. ployers this -afternoon informed the | O beha Sl P . The Grand Jury yesterday indicted| NEW YORK, May 1.—On twenty- Special Dispaich to The. Call. owners that they must make de- | s at once and continue to®make | the from this time on. The team- owners agreed to make deliveries as | OVER THREE THOUSAND OUT. President Shea of the Teamsters ahd President Dold of the Chicago Federa~ | tion issued the following statement | are preparing for general strikes in July for recognition of the union and a ‘new wage scale. The largest .of these organizations is the Cloakmak- Pietro Torturici and his wife, Rosa Torturici, for the murder of Biaggio Vilardo, the Sicilian laborer who was | | 1 1 two steamships due to arrive in port this week from Great Britain and the Continent is the biggest crowd of im- migrants ever scheduled to ente: dur- —_— GRANTS PASS, Or., May L—A new development in the Dunlap murder case | was that of yestesday in which both demanded. | this afternoon: ers’ Union, which ",2&‘ memberghip hecked to pieces at 736% Green street: ;e guch a period: of time.. The horde | Apdrew Ingram and Esley Dodson, the K .greeable remarks The union. labdr jeaders who were| “To the Trades Unionists of Chicago: | of between 11,000 and.12,000-in:New. on April 5. The indictment was found | numbers nearly 25,000. At Ellis Isi- | two men accused,’ and’ whom young America indicted last Saturday in connection | The teamsters’ organization® has the | York. against the woman to defeat the at- | and arrangements have been madd for | Lioyd Ingram (Son:of Prisoner Ingram) Rkt s> civ ks dlineg BECOMES EXCITED AT OPENING OF TRIAL HOCH The jury in the Hoch, ‘the alleged who is now on trial th wife. murder, was com- ter the jury had to the reporters w y Olsen ex- fied with the the case. Hoch de- when with, the strike appesired at the Crim- | inal Court building te-day and gave | bonds in the sum of $1500 each. 5 FAIRLEY ON THE SCENE. Strike-Breaker” Fairley from New York arrived here to-day. Immediately upon his arrival Fairley held a con- ference with representatives of the em- | ployers. Plans for putting him in full | charge of all “strike-breakers” are said to have been decided.upon. Fairley managed. the -non-union men in the New York subway ‘strike. Non-union men in- forces said to he almost un- precedented are on ‘their way to Chi- cago. It was reported a special train bearing 475 left St. Louis early to-day and that another ‘train with 500 men was being prepared. The work of mo- | all mémbers of organized labor to pre- situation well in hand and we earnest- | ly request that no sympathetic strike be called or adly member ledve employ- ment until such time as they'are asked to.do so by the committee having the maftter in charge. We also urge upon | serve peace and commit no act that can be -interpreted by the courts as a violation of the law er of either in- junction issued.” ! It was further announced that union | teams would be supplied to any ‘‘fair’” house whose team companfes had sold out to the new teaming company. Practically. the first victory of the strikers came to-day from Fuller & | Fuller's wholesale drug house. Manager Peters announced that his firm ~had employed twenty-five union teamsters | {in_favor- of an éight-hour day. | street cars were stopped. Some talk also is heard of scattered strikes among the bakers, but nothing deflgne has cu tempt made by Attorney Spinetti to have her: released en-a'writ of habeas < corpus. E | While the police ‘are now. inclined to believe that' the woman was not di- - rectly implicated in the.crime, they want her held. she is held *Pletro Torturici will lurk in the vicinity of the city in the hope of some day being able to see his chfid. Captain Burnett believes the wife must have some knowledge of the plot that was behind the brutal butchery of Biaggio Vilardo. For these two reasons the police are loth to let the woman 0. Attornty Spinetti -glves -notice that he will fight' the.effort to hold the wo- man. ‘I do not see why she should be t occurred. 3 CARRY RED FLAG. Anarchists Make a Demonstration in Toulon, France. PARIS, May 1.=—Labor day was ob- servéd throughout France. The trades unions of Paris held a mon- ster meeting and adopted resolutions Dis- occurred . at where the orderly manifestations Brest and St. Etienne, The demeonstration at Toulon as- sumed a threatening aspect. Anap- They believe that if ! | !'tention of any part would at once tax cheir prompt handling because the de- | the* facilities of the immigration sta- tion far beyond its limits. Figures for the weéek just ‘closad wére close to 22,000, showing that the | rush has been kept up for a longer | period than ever before and it is like- | ly that the total immigration for the spring will far exceed any pre year. ——— | ARGUMENT YILL CLOSE TO-DAY.—At- | IDEram has employed forney Timothy J. Lyons will close the argu- | hopes to gain his freedom ment against the trust clause in the will of | habeas corpus proceedings. the late Thomas J. Clunie to-day. Yesterday | on innocent people. | Ingram, | there, refuses to leave with Grant closed the argument on behalf of the | proponents of the will. e RICO HEIRS FILE ANSWER.—Answer to the contest of the will of the late Mariano E. has made up the story. Vious] yewis and Deputy Lister, who | from here to bring him back to Oregon. counsel declares killed Willlam Dunlap, the old miner, declare thaj the boy killed the old. man himself and has made up the story in an attempt to place the blame Information was received here yes- terday from Crescent City, Cal.» that who was: taken into custody Sherift went and through Dodson, who has been employed as a miner near here and who has always borne a_good reputation, says the boy Some men think the world owes them . Sate W MRV - 2 2 e : | chists marched in a processi y. o b caie W. ' bolizin, he en In St. Lo as con- a 1d do its hauling with their | D! on Carr: indicted,”. he said. 1 will insist that | Gonzalez by Edile W. Gonzalez was flled yes- S tis- which was exhumed last week. du’|(22dg1;1 (s:a]:p(yn Sist of Ihe e | et ':;':‘.lday's additions to the strikers’ Ing a red flag, chanting a revolution- gpe be -iried within sixty duya.sThlgre B A s B ns Tt :legvl?i‘t' g‘l’:‘e":t:zr:\elmc:::ce“teo a4 he embalming fiuid has been were taken from Southern Iilinols and | ranks brought the number up to a fo- |4y hymn and bearing a banner - s no reason why the unfortunate Wo- | benat meonmtoney of th astanience and | o slgnment Eiven the strongest test,” declared the Zentucky. Many of them are negroes. | tal of 3355 : {scribed, ‘Remember the Victims of mgn 'should .be held. She has en-| . : ' pros and no arsenic was found * (One hundred strike-breakens em-| Gir! messengers, riding in ‘carriages C“K“‘_‘;‘ Chicago and Limoges.” .-gured enough already.” e H * ned fr : ployed by the American Express Com- | driven by men wearing coachmen’s 1iv- “l affray occurred in: front of the ~ Shortly after the indictments were ADVERTISEMENTS. om his chair “and the Pacific, Northern Pacific | ery, were used by some of the depart- | naval arsenal, during which several found the woman was formally accused > when he . down 2nd remain girike to-day to enforce a demand of | of urgent orders. The ruse worked 2 two months thé habeas corpus proceed- o $5 a day for drivers and $4 a day for | well and it was hours before the union 1 oft quietly throughout Austria, In ings instituted by Attorney Spinetti. - conductors and helpers, an allpwance | pickets discovered 1 . .| Vienna = 30,000 workmen pafaded The police believe that Torturici is - of 50 cents for luncheon and extra pay T L e T . . v |ywithout disorder. There were the gtill in the city or in close vicinity. for overtime. The increase was APPEAL TO PRESIDENT, . |customary meetings of socialists. He is perfectly sife among his own granted and the men returned.to 2 S BV countrymen, for Sicilians make it a | ’ | thrown from a window, struck Wil- pany, and the National companies went on work. NEGRO USES PISTOL. Tumultuous scenes were witnessed to-day at Jackson boulevard and Franklin street, near the headquar- ters of the Employers’ Teaming Com- pany, the organization formed to sup- plant the striking. teamsters. John Willilams, a colered non-union driver, was sitting on ofie of the wagons of the employers’ company waiting for caravans t6 be formed. A crowd of several hundred persons had gathered and were jeering: Williams and other non-unionists. Suddenly a Dbottle, liams on the head. The negto drew a revolver and fired toward the window. The action of the colored man angered the crowd and a concerted rush was made toward him. Williams jumped houfes were more or less completely ment stores to-day to make deliveries Chief Executive Will Receive Petitio of Strikers, s GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo,, May{{ 1.—President Roosevelt has agreed to | give the Chicago striking teamsters | an opportunity to present their peti-: tion when he reaches that city on | May 10. Word: reached the President in his camp on the West Divide Creek | that the strikers are preparing te ask | him to use his influence in their: be- | half similarly to the manper in which -1Ing other workmen to leave the yards. he adjudicated the coal strike. He | has given the strikers no encourage- ment other than agreeing to réceive a delegation from the petitiofiers, should an audience be requested. ~ Little. leisure time will be at the disposal of Mr. Roosevelt.in Chicago.. The, party will arrive in Chicago at the for him at the Auditorium Hotel. The workmen were slightly injured.: WIENNA, May 1.—May day passed 0 M. This will stay for at least point of honor to hear and to see noth- ing after a erime is committed. Others dare not tell, if they know, for fear of (the Mafia's vengeance. 'NETTIE CRAVEN PASSES AWAY IN AN ASYLUM - THQUSANDS LEAVE WORK. ’ Mob Parades Behind Red Handker- chief on a Pole, % POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., May 1.— A mob of several hundred foréigners and negroes went on strike from the brick yards in and near Dutchess Junction for higher wages and khorter hours to-day. They marched to Chel- sea, stopping on the way and compel-l Atlth;irlhead wadu ahsy(r"lan chlrrylnt a { pole flying a re andkerchief as a pecial Dispa flag; ;and many’ of the m-iker{ were | i, i O armed with clubs. When the' march = BURLINGTON, Ia, May 1.—Finis was completed they had forced out has been written to one'of the most the employes of thirteen brick yards, notable and strange careers of modern numbering 1000 to 2000 men. No Vio- times, in which a woman. a Senator lence was reported. All plumbing work in this city was and millions were involved. Mrs. Net- PEACE IN MOST TRADES, Iowa, where funeral services will be | ~ About This Belt, I:want to ta’k to men who have pains ac the old “fire” and energy which was so you—to see what 1 done for others who my introduction. confldence presented one to you and Belt. If you are full of dent in youth Is absent now; men who can’t stand the amount of exertion they could years ago. want you—if that means fust as bad off. That's “Jack, here's Brown; 1 can cure you with my Electric and who feel run down physically, who realize evi- 1 have were It _a friend In whom you had some said, he i v ¢ noon and at once will end g?::‘ h"nfpa'x?.'éb“Zgafefaudg'm"n};e luncheon given by the . Merchants' | stopped to-day by a strjke of union tie Craven, who claimed to be the com- > bhas made good with me, and [ |2 he was Dbeing savagels bemten | Club. The Hamilton Club reception | plumbers who éemanded an increase mon law wife of United States Senator trust him.” wouldn’t you trust | When the police rescued hiwm. VWil | i8 expected to continue from. 2 until|of minimum wages from $2 75 to $3 Fair, and who had been confined in the s gan | liama, was* arrested. The wholesale ! 4:30 P. m., and after that the Presi-)a day. el e died there 5 ; scala iud ‘cottee. 4 3 spice | dent will rest at apartments reserved . 8uddenly to-night. The body will be Now, if you don’t feel right,, BYRCIRY ERG . QOROR, e IR SUES | taken to her old him in Washington. rheu- tied up to-day by the spréading of the | kroduois Club dinner will begin at y i ey L b » © | p. m., and when that is over the party | Agreements Renewed for Another Leie OB Wednesday. Her daughter. matie pains, I can knock them The death list in the teamsters’ | Will return lu;‘ the special traih and Year In Chicago. summoned. - ' R out. I ean pour oil into your Shi | strike is increasing. Police Sergeant | SPERd the night on board = o L¢l CHICAGO, May 1—May day _Nettie Craven was 54 years old. She joints and ltmber them up. I r' s Rithard Cummings, Who was injured ! ation to. the petition until he Yeachek dawned on Chicago with every indica- has been confined in the asylum but a have often said that pain and f are sutted to every figure and every function. They are made on modern { methods. In colored | shirts the colors stay. | $1.50 and more | CLUETT. PEABODY & ©O., Makers of Cluett and Arrow Collara. | Dr. Lyon's | out of the strike he was knocked un- ‘ at the teamsters. The police dispersed while in charge of a squadron guard- ing a number of wagons, died to-day. During one of the many riots growing der the feet of horses attached to a wagon and was crushed beneath the vehicle's wheels. John Ceresa, the driver, was arrestéd, and is.being held under heavy bonds. ° Colored non-union men in charge of’ ‘ten trucks of the Employérs’ Team- ing Company were attacked at Clin- ton and Van Buren streets by a crowd of strike sympathizers. Bricks, { sticks and other missiles were thrown i the crowd and arrested one of the as- sailants of the non-unionh teamsters, DELIVERY MADE BY MAIL., ‘Washington. s Secretary Loeb went to the Presi- dent’s camp to-day. The length of his stay is undecided. He may remain over a day or two to participate in the hunt. The camp will be moved to~ day to the East Divide, where it was located first. R S NO STRIKES IN NEW YO‘!‘K_. > Many May Leave Work During the Week, However, i NEW YORK, May 1.—May day strikes here were lacking this year in the building trades, but before the | week ends thirty to thirty-five thou- safid men may quit work in various tion of labor peace, except for the gar- ment workers’ and teamsters' strike. short time. A similar condition has not existed * Mrs. Craven's death rechils to the [ since 1886. All the building trades, minds of San Franciscans her long répresenting more than 30,000 work- fight for a share of the millions left by ers, begin work to-day under new the late Senator James G. Fair, whose agreements, a few with slightly high- Widow she claimed to be, basing her er wages and nearly all with some ¢laim on a marriage alleged jo have concessions in working conditions. been performed by Justice Simpton of The several thousand bakers and the Sausalito. Preceding her contest of Master Bakers' Assoclation reached therfenltol's ‘will, Mrs. Craven filed in an eement and signed 1 0 ‘to several valuable pieces Sohie ot Anothar yeag cd last year's ot oroperty in this city, which she al- Agreements have been renewed in leged Senawr Fair had transferred to all the maritime trades. ; itk e RS . Hyrley Assumes New Dutles’ to “Efl"m her TQPEKA, Kans, May 1.—General | widowhood. ~She received, 2 however, - Manager J. E. Hurley of the Santa Fe $50,000 in cash from the Fair heirs as a her several years before his death. || and I prove it every day. Mr. L. J. writes: “Your treatment certainly electricity can't live in the same house, Barnett of Tillamook. Or.. does. what no other can, for it has cured 1 cannot praise the Belt too hl‘hl¥ gladly recommend it in any case of ‘weakness.” runs by the steam in your blood and nerves. When in any way you are out of steam. That's just what you begin to break want to give you you the name of & man I've cured. One thing ev. man ought to know is this: Your body is a machine. . and vital It down back. I have a cure in every town. Tell me where you live and I will give | | honestl cure - | The Federal Government is helping | vocations in the hope of forech - | arrived to-day from Chicago and as- bl %y P e T s Bty 52K PERFECT | the department stores deliver smali | creased wage. "6 0 07| imed the dutica of his mew office, The Craven cgse was one of the most | [l you or ot X¢ Lcant curs vou Idow's want your n:'i'{"’»u" B Tons puds: | parcels in a way that is beyond the! About 25,000 members of the Rock- | Hurley says no changes will be made sensational in ‘n“m“d(mmm“ omitomis | because I giv 4 ¥ 1 ol % I and T am growing yet, se 1 give every man all he pays g | interference of the teamsters. Thou-|men and BExcavators’ Union, whieh | &t present. and was bitterly ' At 58 1dn" o-giving N on 0“ | sands of small packages are being de- | made demands on the Contractors Pt e at e A e VIl L s iy Sient. Sn8 feol Tin Eing warath fnto you and Jeel |livered by mail through the sireet-| Protective Association jon March 20| Snow Falls in New York State. | Wreck en cended i hef mind civing | B SCIP5e"ling on a new lease of life with cach applicktion. jhan 16 clog A raiiway postal cars. Colonel Le Roy | for a new wage scale and recognition| NEW YORK, May 1.—Light snow | ™ e e suntn st |J§ your intestines up with a lot of nauseous drugs? Sireiy! “Fry me. ses and beautifies the | Sic¥ard, superintendent of the free- | of the union, have not received what |’ : . faces. ¥t Co o Fair ,,g“'; ochaid 3 i braham catraz, writes cured and the 9 | delivery system of the Chicago post- | they consider a satistacto; fellctosday in many ol -In Central the x "&fi.fi Xhs. ot oot o e s & purifies the breath. ' ome, says there has been a peropt- | Thor sve Row Consisas the aduhy. | and Northern New York, accom ., tention of the California courts for || former allments, and you have my heartfelt gratitude for what your Dsed by people of refinement | ibi: incresse in this business trom the | blity of ‘ordering & general strik Rl peer, i e SRS e VAR S el S D s ST s 3 for over a q a century. | day the delivery wagons of the depart- | Hoisters and drill win lh:?l by | ihe, Nen, Er8 o e 50“ W&M I'ot th Ptlhn“ m" hln- o un‘tmnll oo v o ment stores were stopped. By the | them If they quit. Bk 5 p D nirage. TEvon pend thin sae © g ery convenient tourists, | street-car service, articles pur . A strike of one thousand o g x e in the morning may be delivered by night at the door of the purchasers, providing the package is not too heavy. Thousands of purchases are light enough to meet the limit of pos- tal regulations. is expected this week in the dow: town warehouse districts. The own- ers have carefully prepared 08 continue - thy nti Garment workenoqt\h.“smg i - ‘qca-’llo-fi—lg-h'l;-.zf*u-x. = e

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