The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 31, 1906, Page 2

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WILLIAM S, GROVER WINTED ON CHARGE OF EMBEZZLEMENT i i attorney e Grover, that he would call he alimony of $% a s m erny however. thing store. intended for a with offices building. ver up to two ved. He de- of the Equit- other than that existed. It had said, and he t of business it ague way that it warr The r's denial of in face of the mong the ney hange orated WIFE OBTAINS DIVORCE. e was educated in this city = s fe here. His " a Grover resides at W w dlvorce we e MAY INVESTIGATE MERGER OF NEW YORK RAILROADS Resolution duced by Borough President Coler in the Board of Aldermen. —A resolution merger by | and sub- 1gh-Metropol- roduced In the New York Cit ident Bird S sking e investiga- e f ms: That & ends absolute | ransportation | the interests merger have contrel of | of the eity | service with- for the public ed to add to of the com- ck issue of | are to ooklyn Rapid | Ar the € for duty. th Mort inance de- ke one vigit to Fort ¥ 1 Fort Miley, ] son Fort Winfield Scott on s pertain to the in- P f seacos armament Sec- : Charles Burnett, Fif- proceed to the nsport " y 1 ver yet falled 1o | leaving | RIGA POLICE FOIHL PLOT T0 KILL THE GOVERNOR s and a Steam- | The | RIGA, Livonis, Jan. 30.—The police have discovered a plot to kill General Sollogub, the Governor Genmeral of the Balt.c provinces, and several high civil d military officials. Many arrests e been made. | The suspicions o, the police were aroused by the constant spying of the conspirators on their intended victims for the purpose of learning their habits. A mob attacked the jail in the center of the town this morning, shot down the sentries, broke open the cells and liberaged all the political prisoners. Hslf a company o. soldiers was sta- tioned in the building, but so rapid and | unexpected was the aétion of the riot- ers that their purpose was successfully carried out. There were many women among the attacking party. The murder of General Griaznoff, chief of the staff of the Viceroy of the Caucasus, yesterday was most dramatic and audacious. The assassin evidently bad studied habits of his victim the and lay In wait behind a wall of the Alexander Garden, opposite the en- palace, where a carriage up to take the general for drive. As all suspicious per- . re liable to be searched in the streets by the police and military pa- trols, the assassin impersonated a painter, carrying the bomb with which he committed th deed concealed in a paint can. ile was thus able to pass the seairy posted at the gates of the park and reached his place of ambush without suspicion. General Griaznoff, clad in a crimson uniform and the white lamb's wool shapka, or cap, worn by the Viceroy's aide de camp, made a shining target for the crouching assassin when he emerged from the palace. BOMB HITS THE GENERAL. As the general stepped into the car- riage the man eprang to the wall, swung the can by a cord and the bomb, as if thrown from a sling with marvelous pre- on, sped straight to the mark and struck the general on the neck. A flash of fire and & terrific explosion followed and Griaznoff was literally blown out of the and, with his coachman, the Cossack orderly and the latter's horse, was instantly killed. A lady passing t th of the explosior was mor- « shapeless body, surrounded presented a sickening spec- a crowd gathered a few min- it seemed as if his crimsen 2 oldiers. had melted into the pool of in which weltered his head, tein away from the trunk. The general's dis- widow knelt in the blood and mud tr acted | beside the mutilated body. The assassin had alrea been caught and beaten into inseneibility by the infuriated soldiers, after being loaded into a drosky, being carried off to the ancient tress above the (ity where, as Tiflis law, he probably was awn to-day. Intense excitement followed the assas- | sination, as terrible punishment is meted out by the troops to bomb throwers. The | | population fled in terror before the Cos- sacks and other troops, who were soon out in force to clear the streets. Shortly before dark a fusillade exchanged be- tween Tartars and Armenians: prolluced & panic, as it was feared that the horrors of the recent war between the races had been renewed. Instantly all the shops were closed and thousands of troops poured into the streets HATED BY THE TERRORISTS. So far as ascertainable there was no relation between the erime and a renewal of the race war. The crime undoubtedly act of vengeance decreed Terror! The identity the assin has not been established, but he 2 Georglap and probably was selected lot at a meeting of social revolution- to kill General Griaznoff as retalia- the latter's severity in repress- revolutionists and arresting the According to reports the general was. a political by of t is! tion ing leaders was the head of a faction which believed in not showing mercy and he is charged with setting the native people against one another. . He had recetved “repeated letters of warning and for months past, unt vesterday, had never ridden out without his wife. Advices from Kutais say that the revo- utionist ey have been -driven from the rafl- rcad line into the mountair and it is hoped to inclose them in a trap between the troops advancing from the seaboard and the expedition from Tiflis. Troops have been landed all along the Black Sea. R K JEWS MEET CONFERENCE. | | Consider the State of Their People Throughout Russia. BRI Jan. 30.—T general Do ter, the effects of colder, damp, changeable weather on the pores of the skin and the harder work of this sexson are beg’ ming to Hood's Sa: just at this time, will give tell on yot parilla, aken your system just what it needs d must have, and will help you ver this hard spot—the bare ground as it were—and quite ikely save vou from a serious liness later. “A stitch in time saves nine” is a wise old saw, hence we repeat, Don’t wait, but begin to take Hood's Sarsapa- lla r now. It purifies and en- and gives health and strength. on’t g to come, but take Hood's Sarsaparilla now. ches the blood, strengthens the stomach, improves the appetite, Wait It will do The heavier living and closer confinement of the win- P “Putnam, Conn., Jan. 17, 1906, My confidence in Hood's Sarsapa- rilla is established by much experience, I take it regularly every spring and think it just what every one needs for a good blood purifier and tonic. One winter I had serious palpitation of the heart, sick headache, that extreme tired feeling. Could not sleep nights, nervous system seemed unstrung. On taking Hood's all these bad symptoms disappeared. I am well and my weigh! has increased from 140 to 178 poun Mrs. F. H. Andrews, R. F. D. No. 2. It effects radical and permanent -ures of all blood, stomach, liver and kidney troubles. = To-day buy and begin to'take Hood’s Sarsaparilla SPECIAL—To meet the wishes form, we are now putting up Hi as well as in the usual lguk solid extract, we have retained of_those who (00d's hl‘:s.fl“n form. By ucing Hood’s Co., Lowell, Ma refer medicine In tablet n chocolate-coated tablets parilla to a in the tablets the curative properties of e medicinal ingredient excc'cg( the alcohol. Sold by druggisis or sent by 100 doses one dollar. there bave not been supprassed. | SOLLOGUB IN DANGER \Mob Inciuding Many Women Attacks Jail and Liberates Political Prisoners. Jewish conference called to consider the state of Jews in Russia formally opened its session here to-day under the presidency of David Wolfisohn, chalrman of the International Zionist Committee. In his opening address President Wolf'sohn urged the estab- lishment of an international commit- tee, either in Berlin or London, to watch the interests of the Russian Jews. A motion to that effect went over until a later session. M. Mandelstam of Kieff presented a report on the conditions in. Russia, from which it was gathered that the Jews had no hopes of an improvement in their status resulting from a revo- lution er Government reforms. The only solution of the problem, accord- ing to the report, wouid be the foun- datton of a Jewish fatherland. M. Kohan of Kishenev helieved the eventual emigration of all the Jews | from Russia was inevitable. He pro- posed Egypt or Asia Minor as Buitable for a Jewish settlement, and advised that all emigration of Jews to the United States and Great Britaln be stopped in consequence of the laws against aliens which are in force In those countries. S e REVOLUTIONARY CA E WANIN Inhabitants of the Cancasus Deliver Up the Ringleaders. ST. PETERSBURG. Jan. 30.—Alarmed by the vigorous campaign waged by the troops under General Alikhanoff, the in- | habitants of the Caucasus are abandon- | ing the revolutionist cause. They are coming in by thousands to make submis- sion and are giving the most abject prom- | ises of good conduct in the future. The | campaign against'the active insurgents in the mountains has thereby been facili tated. In many cases the inhabitants themseives have seized and delivered up the ringl:eders of the ‘insurrection. In a von Voronotzoff Dashkoff, Viceroy of the | Caucasus, says Géneral Alikhanoff re- | ceived one deputation of 8000 persons, rep- resenting twelve communes near Kwiriil. { The deputation, which was headed by nobles and clergymen, promised to stop the disorders, to return all property and | arms seized and to pay all rents and taxes if the gemeral would re- ! frain from punishing their people. Another deputation brought in the par- ticipants in the attack on the troops at { Tengira, bound with ropes. These par- ticipants will be executed. ¢ In the district of Osurgeti, however, the Viceroy says, the entire population remains obdurate. One-half the people have fled to the mountains and others are roaming the country, ravaging it and | burning house Count de Witte has received from the Governor of Moghileoff an. account of the excesses at Gomel, where there has been fighting in the streets and incendiarism. The origin of the disturbances the Gov- rnor attributes to the murder of a police lieutenant by revolutionists. The troops, while they are restoring order, are sub- | jected to attacks with bombs and bullets from the houses. The Governor says the soldiers are forced to answer these al- tacks by firing vollesw. -The number -of dead or wounded is not vet known, as the victim§ are sheltered by their cd- religionists. During the recent fire at Gomel the fre- quent expiosions of bombs and ammuni- tion showed that the revolutionists were well prepared for the struggle. 2B INTEREST RAISED. RATE OF Extrs Inducement to Depositors Russian Suvings Banks, ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 30.—An im- portant finan~izl measure, dictated by the drain of the savings banks in con- equence of the revolutionary agita- tion and the impossibility of compet- ing with the rates of private banks, is announced. It increases by imperial order the rate of interest of the Gov- ernment savings banks from 3.6 to 4 per cent. The Government hopes it will have a favorable etfect in the way of redeposit , which has already been recommended. According to the official statement, the increased deposits in the savings banks for the first half of the Rus- sian Januar were $2,500,000—ten times the increase during the similar peridd of 1805, g Late JAPANESE “CORNER” MARKETS. Handling British and Ameriea ia_Manchuria. ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 30.—On ac- Goods count of the threatened invasion of Japanese and American goods on the Russian markets in Manchuria. the management of the Zast Chinese Ralil- road has raised frefght the question of es. worthward ng Cheng-"%ze to the stations in Russian han It is said that Japan- ese middlemen ave hdndling British and American goods as well as Japan- ese wares. Twenty trains are running daily from Yakow to Kuidtuan, where enormous stores of goods are belng assembled for the Finrbin, Vladivestok and other markets. e REH LT, Find Weap in Synagogue. VLADIVOSLOSO, Russian Poland, Jan. 36.—After an unsaccessful attempt on the life of Sheriff Popenoffski, the police to-day searched a synagogue. in which they found a quantity of arms. A fine of $1600 has been Im- posed on thc Jewish community, —_——— COLORADO AND SOUTHERN LINE TO BE EXTENDED in- Denver to Hmve u Direct Rond to Northern Wyoming and Montuna. CHEYFNNE, Wyo.,, Jan. 30,—K. M. Carey of this city announced to-day that he has been informed by James M. Herbert, vice president of ‘the Col- orado and Soathern Railway, that an engineering party will start out on February 1 for the purpose of survey- ing a new lide of railroad from Orin Junction to Sheridan, Wyo., to form an extension of the Colorado and South- ern. The new road will pass through EBuffalo and will connect with the Bur- lington at Sheridan, giving Denver a direct line to Northern Wyoming and Montana. —————— Largest Steel Mill in World. PITTSBURG, Pa., Jan. 3¢.—One the new steel mills of the $10,000,000 group recently authorized by the Unit- ed States Steel Corporation began op- erations at McKeesport, Pa., to-day in the presence of many ofticials of 3 company and visitors. The mill is d to be the largest and finest In the world. The other mills comprising the group are rapialy being completed and :vm soon be put in permanent opera- ion. A & GRAY CASE 8U) ted by Fa teldgram to the Emperor, Count | arrears of | ot | | bers that the rules forbid the MR, CLEVELAN VISITS ALBANY Welcomed in the Capital He Left Twenty Years Ago to Become the President GREETS A FORMER FOE Legislators Applaud When “Sage of Princeton” and Senator Grady Clasp Hands —_— Special Dispatch to The Cail. ALBANY, N. Y., Jan. 30.—Former Pres- ident Grover Cleveland was in Albany to-day. The Republican Legislature met in special joint session in the capitol to do him honor and to listen to an address in which he expressed confidence that the Legislature would satisfy in a worthy way the demand of the people for reform, and set an example 1o legislatures throughout the land. Addressing the State Medical Society in the evening, Mr. Cleveland made a playful speech, in which he embodied a plea for less mystery in the relation be- tween physician and patient. In revisiting theé capital, which he left more than twenty years ago to become | President of the United States, Mr. Cleve- land alluded to the absence of faces which had become familiar to him when he was Governor. An incident of his visit which attracted much attention was his cordial greeting of Senator Thomas F. Grady. When he was Governor he made an es- pecial request of John Kelly, then leader of Tammany Hall, that Senator Grady be kept at home, “for his personal comfort,” during the next session of the Legisla- ture and his request was obeyed. Senator Grady was the only member of | the ol Legislature to greet him to-day, | seventeen of the Senators who served | then having died. | Al eves in the packed Assembly cham- ber were on the two men when Mr, Cleve- | land took his stand in the main aisle of | the Assembly after his brief address, to | shake hands with members of the Legis- | lature, who were introduced to him by | Lieutenant Governor Bruce and Speaker | Wadsworth. “I am pleased to see you looking 80 | well, Mr. President,”” said Grady, extend- | ing his hand, with a smile. i “Senator, I'm glad to see vou,” Mr. | Cleveland replied, responding to the smile and giving Senator Grady’'s hand a | hearty clasp. Applaise and laughter, in which both men took part, filled the chamber and they stood for a moment with hands joined. Both houses of the Legislature took a recess after their regular sessions and met again in the Assembly chamber at noon to welcome Mr. Cleveland. —————————— McKINLAY TALKS OF JAPANESE EXCLUSION DUNCAN Says the Omly Real Immigration Prob- lem Is on the Pacific Coeast. NEW YORK, Jan. 80.—Representative Duncan E. McKinlay of California, who is leading the fight of the Pacific Slope to have the provisions of the Chinese exclusion act extended so as to include the Japanese and Koreans, stopped over in New York yesterday to look into immigration from the East's point of | view. He spent the at Ellis Island as the guest of Commissioner Robert | Watchorn. He sald: Ko ivby So far as the Buropean or white races are concerned, there s no immigration problem. This country is the better for every white man, strong and willing to work, who seeks sheiter here, It is ocly in dealing with the Asintic races that the bars should be put up and kept up. There should be no discrfmina- tion between the Japanese and the Chinese. They are both cut out of the same cloth; they hoth come to exploit the country for their own ain, underselling the labor market, living on vents a day and sending their earnings to their aative land svery month. There are probably 60,00 Japanese already in this country, and they are pouring in at the rate of 1000 8 month. Personally, 1 do not belfeve that the extension of the provisions of the Chinese exclusion act to include the Jap- anese would offend the Government of that country in the least. When I was in Japan With the Taft party I had an extended talk with Marquis Ito and he told me that the Jap- anese Government was anxious to keep its peo. ple at home. —_—————————— To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Drugglsts refund money If it falls to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature s on each box. 25¢.* MILLIONAIRE HILL SEES DANGER AHEAD Railway Magnate Says We Have Become Extrav gant Nation. NEW YORK, Jan. 3).—"This country to-day is like a boy who has inherited a big fortune and is living on it with- out earning anything himself,” said James J. Hill, who returned from the | West yesterday. It is all very well to talk about our great prosperity, but we arc spending what has been earned, not what we are earning now. We are uging up our capital and have become an, extravagant nation.” i1l would not admit that the ¢oun- try was tending toward overproduc- tion, because, he said, it he did people would call him a croaker, Y“The consular and other reports show,” he said, “that Japan is sending us more than we are sending to Japan, and it behooves us to be watchful for our position among the commercial na- tions. “During the last few years things have been s¢ stirred up on account of the Boer and Russo-Japanese wars that, with the existing close relations aniong the nations, it has been Aiffi- cult to get a true perspective in com- mercial and industrial matters. But now we can look around and appre- clate our true position. Look at Great Britain, with a million men out of work. Great PBritain is a ' country with a balance of trade against-it, and we should take warning. There are not many more new continents or lands to open up.” —— SISTERS OF THE PRESIDENT TRANSGRESS HOUSE RULES Encorted by a Senmator to a Lobby Sacredly Reserved for Representatives. ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—An inno- cent transgression of the rules guard- ing the prerogatives of the House re- sulted when Senator Warren of Wyom- ing escorted President Roosevelt's two sisters. Mrs. Cowles and Mrs. Robin- son, and two gentlemen Into the pri- vate lobhy just back of the hall of the House during the session to-day. This lobby is 80 sacredly reserved for mem- Speaker others.. ] RATE BILL DEBATE IS BEGUN IN HOUSE Minority Membe publicans in ’ rs Join With Re- Its Support. Continued From Page 1, Column 7. upon complaint and after full hearing, to substitute a reasonable maximum rate in place of one found to be unjust or unreasonable. Townsend went at length :I’zto this phase of the proposed legisla- on. ¥ While the number of commissioners is increased by two and their salaries raised to 310,00 a year, Townsend expressed the bellef that when the law was once es- tablished the dutles of the commission would decrease rather than increase. The rallroads, he suggested, would doubtless realize the justness of the law and fix their rates with reference to it. WARNING TO HIS PARTY. In closing Townsend said: “To me it has seemed that a system- atic effort has been made to dl!creditl the administration in various matters in order to divert attention from this great Q@estion, and I have no doubt that delay will be caused wherever possible in the vain hope that something will yet occur | to prevent final action. As one of the younger and most humble Republicans in the House, let me admonish my party associates in both houses that this ques- tion will not down, nor will it much longer breok delay. - The people spoken and every day their demand is more imperative. The day of grace may be passed and the unpardonable sin of | trifing with duty may not be condoned, even with deathbed repentance. “Temporizing will bring nothing but disaster. Already we hear the rumblings of discontent and soclalism smiles with satisfaction with every delay. Regula- tion of a public servant is .not a de- parture from the principles of popular governments but disregard of righteous law and indifference to legal restrictions imposed to protect the people's rights is more than sociallsm—it is anarchy—and were 1 a railroad agent instead of a people’s representative I would hail the proposed legislation as a salvation to my master from the fate which an in- dignant people is sure to visit upon the corporations which believe that they are above and beyond the law and seek to become a law unio themselves.” Townsend asserted that the railroads had consistently and persistently op- posed every device for the safety of the public and their employes, and also that they had maintained a rich and powerful lobby to oppose rate legisla- tion. SPEAKS FOR THE DEMOCRATS. Adamson of Georgia. who is in con- trol of the time of debate on the Demo- cratic side, followed Townsend. He said the Democrats had labored, since the courts revealed the weakness of the Anterstate commerée law, to amend {ts defects. He criticized the Republican platform of 1904, asserting that “it wag unquestionably intended to assure the corporations that the work of regulating them had been completed and that they need not ap- prehend any further legislation, and it was no doubt so understood by the corporations.” . Explaining the regult of the election on that platform Adamson sald: “Between the millions who stayed away from the polls because Cleve- land's crowd procured the nomination of Parker and the hundreds of thou- sands who r¢ ined at home because ‘Bryan supported’ the ticket aufter the nomination, the mistake of failing to vote on g¢lection day, thereby failing to ratify our platform declarations and elect our candidate. “But,” continued Mr, Adamson, “if the result was claimed by anybody as a victory against raflroad regulation the President-elect, undoubtedly the ablest as well as the most honest and fearless President we have ever had, promptly disabused their minds by taking a position perhaps as advanced in faver of our platform declaration on the subject as our own candidate could have done had he been elected, em- phatically and repeatedly demanding substantially the very legislation asked for in our two platforms and emphat- fcally denying the hypocritical declara- tion that enough had-been done. “We would have been idiots and traitors had we declined his powerful ald,” declared Adamson. As a minority member of the Inter- state and Foreign Commerce Commit- tee Richardson of Alabama said that while there was a distinct differ- have | four milllon people made | ence between the position of the ma- jority and the minority on the com- mittee the unanimous report on the Dbill was a distinct demonstration of patriotism. —_————— THREE KILLED -~ INTRAIN WRECK Disastrous Head-On Smash- Up in Montana on the Great Northern Railroad KALISPELL, Mont, Jan. 30.—A dis- astrous head-on collision between passen- ger trains Nos. 1 and 2, the Oriental lim- ited on the Great Northern Railroad, oc- curred on the main line one mile west of Columbia Falls shortly before midnight last night. Three of the crew were killed and several others seriously injured. The dead: O. A; Hansen, fireman; — Kangley, fireman; W. H. Wurszacher, express messenger on east-bound train. The seriously injured: Willlam Ther- watcher, engineer on No. 1, ‘badly in- jured and may dle; H. O. Bardin, engin- eer of No. 2, arm broken and otherwise injured; Charles Quinn, conductor on No. 2, left arm broken; Tom Gordon, mail clerk, badly wrenched arm and bruised: W. H. Reynolds, mail clerk, badly wrenched arm and bruised; B. 8. Rob- ertson, conductor on No. 1, somewhat bruised and shaken. None of the passengers were injured be- yond a few brulses. Both trains were | telescoped as far back as the first-class icoaches. The engines were both com- | pletely wrecked. The wreck.occurred as the trains wers rounding a curve. Lea¥ing White Fish, about ten miles distant, train No. 2 had orders to meet No. 1 at Halfmoon, four miles west of Columbia Falls. Engineer | Bardin ran past his meeting point. He reversed and threw ‘on the air so that bis train was slowing up when struck. BRIEF CITY NEWS. HURT IN THE RINK.—Miss B. Sterrett of 1126 Jackson street fell in the skating rink last night and broke her atm. The fracture Was freated at /the Central Emergency Hos- pital. DRINKS CARBOLIC ACID.—In a fit of de- spondency Mrs, J. Murray swallowed the cop- tents of a vial of carbollc acid last night at her home, 11% Weish street. There is no Fope for her recovery. TURNS ON THE GAS.—George Randall, a bartender, turned on the gas I his room at 71 Harrlson street last night. e was taken to the Central Emergency Hospital, where he now lles In a precarious condition. RAID GAME OF CHANCE.—Detectives Richard Bell and Edward Gibson raided a game of chanceé at 017 Jackson street last night and arrested eight men, including the keeper, operators and cappers. The game is known as the ‘‘dart” game and a mumber of complaints have béen made to the police re- cently that it was not homestly conducted. Ac- cordingly the police took action and charged each man with vagramey. FIRE IN CHINATOWN.—The top floor of the overall factory of Kim Sun Lee & Co.. at 723 Sacramento Street. took fire last evening and before the blaze was extinguished damage to the oxtent of $500 was dome. For a time the firemen had difficulty in reaching the flames, as they started in the interior of the block, and it appeared as if a disastrous fire might occur. Danger, however, was over in a short time, MEYERS' PARTY A SUCCESS.—Roy Mey- ers, who lives at 402 Geary street, after giving ta few of his friends a dinner party, wound up | the soclal affair by proceeding to the Alturas on Mason street. There a row was started between some young men that were present {and some of the women members of Meyers’ jainner party. In the mix-up Meyers was knocked down and Kicked over the right eye- brow, which was stitched at the Central Emer- gency Hospital. WILL KEEP RECORD OF CASH.—Tax Col- lector Nichols has _introquced a permanent record of the amount of cash received daily and deposited with the City Treasurer in his office. The book will show the amounts of the cash In tabulated form. No such record 1 | was ever kept in the office, and it will be the means of saving much trouble in tracing de- posits of moneys belonging to the city. vious Tax Collectors were in the habit of tak- ing away the memorandum books showing the { cash deposited for their own protection. ADVERTISEMENTS, The Watch-Dog in your Vest Pocket 'OU can buy Health Insurance now. Several good *Accident” Companies sell it. X Sixty dollars per year will bring you $25.00 per week, for every week you are Sick. But, your time alone may be worth far more than that. And $200 per week might not pay for your suffering. That's why '‘Cascaret’’ Insurance which prevents Sickness, is worth ten times as much money as other ‘‘ Health "' Insur- ance. Yet *“Cascaret Insurance” will cost you less than Ten Cents a week. That gives you a *““Vest Pocket” Box to carry constantly. * - *Indigestion’ means food eaten but only partially digested. *‘Constipation’’ means food retained in the body undigested too long, till it decays. It then supplies the poisons of decay _to the system, in place of the nourishment it might have supplied. ¥ Isn’t that a tremendous handicap worth insuring against? What does it cost to Cure Constipation or Indigestion, with their train of small and great ills, and to Insure against a return of them? . Not so very much. Gy One 10 cent box of Cascarets per week, to entertain a motion to admit Senator Warren, accustomed to th ractice of the Senate to entertain ests in the marble room, which cor- _responds to the House lobby, escorted the party into the lobby and tem; e ily left his guests. Assistant keeper Kennedy, with apologies, es- corted them hurriedly beyond the dead line and to a place in the gallery re- m for the President -and his { in the Bowels, or exist through poor Nutrition. Cascarets don't purge, don't weaken, don't irritate, nor upset your stomach. No,—they act like Exercise on the Bowels, instead. They stimulate the Bowel-Muscles to contract and propel the Food naturally past the little valves that mix Digestive Juices with Food. They strengthen these Bowel-Muscles by exercising them. . % = ‘The time to take a Cascaret is the very minute you suspect you need one. —When your tongue is coated a little. —~When your breath is not above suspicion. —When your head feels dull, dizzy, or achy. —When you have eaten too heartily, or too rapidly. —When you have drunk more than was good for your digestion. —When you have a touch of Heart- burn, Gas-belching, Acid-rising-in-throat, or a Coming-on-Cold. LN R Carry the “Vest Pocket' Box where it belongs, just as you would your Watch, Pocket-knife or Lead-pencil. 1t costs only 10 cents.. At any drug- gist. - Be sure you get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU. Few People Realize the Importance of Good Digestion Until It Is Lost. Many people suffer from and do not know it. They feel out of sorts, peevish, do not sleep well. do not have a good keen appetite, do inclination and enersy for physical or mental work they once had, but at the same time do not feel any particular pain or distress in the stomach. Yet all this is the result of poor digestion, an insidious form of | Dyspepsia which can only be cured by a remedy specially intended to cure it and make the digestive organs act naturally, and properly digest the food eaten. Bitters, after dinner pills and nerve tonics will never help the trou- ble; they dor’t reach it. The new medical discovery does. It is called Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, and is a | specific for dyspepsia and indigestion. It cures because it thoroughly digests all wholesome food taken into the stomach, whether the stomach Is in good working order or not. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, by digest- ing the food, instead of making the worn out stomach do all the work, gives it a much needed rest and a cure of dyspepsia is the natural result. | When you are nervous, rum down | and sleepless, don’t make the common | mistake of supposing your nervous system needs treatment and fill your stomach with powerful nerve tonics which make you feel good for a little while only to fall back farther than ever. Your merves are all right, but they are starved, they want food. . Nourish them with wholesome every- day food and plenty of it, well digested, and you can laugh at nerve tonics and medicine. - But the nerves will not be nourished from a weak, abused stomach, but when the digestion has been made perfect by the use of this remedy all nervous symp- toms disappear. ‘Who ever heard of a man or woman blessed with a vigorous digestion and good appetite being troubled with their nerves? Good digestion means a strong nervous system, abundance of energy, and capa- city to enjoy the good things of life. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will certainly set your stomach and igestive organs right; they can't hélp but do it, because they nourish the body by digesting the food eaten, and rest the stomach. You get nourishment and rest at one and the same time, and that is all the worn out dyspeptic needs, to bulld him up and give new life to every organ and an added zest to every pleasure. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are a god- send to the army of men and women with weak stomachs and nerves and justly merits the claim of being one of the most worthy medical discoveries of the time. not have the ARNFOLD { **ARROW CLUPECO SHRUNK. QUARTER SIZRd. 15 cents each. 2 for a quarter. 1-30th | o e tap e mye “Cures B. W.GROVE'S signatuscon box. 25c ers, bootblacks, bath- BRUSHE houses, billiard tables, brewers, bookbinders, candy makers, canners, dyers, flour mills. foundries, laundries, paper- rs, printers, painters, shoe factories, sta- blemen. tar-roofers, tanners. tailors, ete. BUCHANAN BROS., Brush Manufacturers, 600 Sacramento St FOR BARBERS, BAK- e Steamers leave Plery 9 and 11, San Francisco. m + pany’'s steamers at Seattle. For Victoria, Vancouw Port Townsend, Seattle, Ta ecoma, Everett, Anacortes, So. Beilingham, Bell- ingham—11 a. m., Feb. 4 9 14, 19, 24, Mar 1. | Change at Seattie to this Company's steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.: at Seattle or Ta- | coma to N. P. Ry., at Vancouver to C. P. Ry For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona, 1:30 p. m._Feb. 5 11 17, 25, Mar. 1. Corona, 1:30 p. m.. Feb. 2, 8 14, 20, 26, Mar. 4 For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo), San Diego and Santa Barbara: Santa Rosa, Sundays, 9 a. m. State of California, Thursdays 9 a. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and East San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Mon- terey, San Simeon_ Cayucos, Port Harford (San Luls Obispo), Ventura and Hueneme: Coos Bay, ® a. m., Feb. 2. 10, 18, 26, Mar. 4 Bonita, 9 a. m.. Feb. 6, 14, 22, Mar. 2. For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose de! Cabo, Mazatian, Altata. La Paz, Santa Ro- slia, Topolobampo, Guaymas (Mex.), 10 a_ m., | 7th of each month ALASKA EXCURSIONS (Season 1908)—The excursion steamship palatial Alasl attle and V will leave Tacoma, 21, July 5. 20, Aug. 2. For further information. obtain folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or salling dates TICKET OFFICES, 4 New Montgomery st. (Palace Hotel). 10 Market st. and Broadway wharves. FREIGHT OFFICE, 10 Market st. OAKLAND, 968 Broadway. C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, 10 Market st.. San_Francisco. TOYO KISEN KAISHA (ORIENTAL S. S. €0.) Steamers will leave wharf, corner First and Brannan streets. 1 p. m., for Yokohama and Hongkong, calling st Honolulu, Kobe (Hiogo), Nagusaki and Shanghal. end comnecting at an- torfa June 7. ngkong with steamers ete. No Pk nteived on board on day of sailing. S. S. Nippon Maru, 3 8. S. Hongkong Maru, Th . Mar. 15, 1908, §. 5. America Maru, Saturday, Apr. 14, 1908 d-trip tickets at reduced rates. Roun: For freight and | office, W 0CCAMICS.S.C0, S 3 o iAMI MARIPOSA, for Tahitl, Feb. 3 11 a. m. g Wl‘lpr. ::f ‘Honolulu, Saturday, Feb- N e T T . SPRECKELS & BROS. (0., Agls. Tiekst 0ca 585 Markat, Freigh Ofis 327 Market SL., Pt ? Pacifn st Compagnle Generale T s s 8 1 TRt MARE ISLAND NAVY YARD, VALLEJO and NAPA Napa Valley Route

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