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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALIL, SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1906. FORGER MAKES | Neglested Colds CRAVE CHARCE 20 Y CLEA HH] REGRETS ENGLAND 0 A ISSU[? HAS TAKEN OFFENSE U MAY CAUSE Consuti . il 3 Success or Palluge o Mosko " Japanese Statesman Who Interpellated Al What e B can Conference at Alge-| War /szs/er Exp/ams His Monwe. $1000 oo 4n Tednsetantl citas Will Soon Be Known ' ¥ e 7 ¥ toa Man to Marry Mother EUTRALS ARE" sveive: ACCUSED DENIES STORY Still Striving to Arrange Dififerences Germany Admits, However, That Coin Might Have Been Used by Her Legal Representatives eitiement ol did - Hee DULUTH, Minn., Feb. 3.—Alleging the payment of $1000 to James Lindsey | as an inducement to marry her mother, thereby securing thousands of dollars’ worth of property under the provisions of her father's will, is the charge in the deposition of Alonzo J. Whiteman. now serving a sentence in Auburn (N. Y.) prison for forgery. against his sister, Mrs. A. J. Gibbs, in a suit to be tried in the Federal Court in this city Febru- ary 14 to set aside a deed alleged to be fraudulent. George F. Perkins. who held a judgment of $15000 against Whiteman, is plaintiff in the suit. ana Clara J. Gibbs, Albert L. Gibbs and the Cliquet Lumber Company are defend- ants, with the Detroit Trust Company intervenor. fllll. ADDIE HARDING. MRS, MARY MEYER. MRS. FRANCES WILSON. was possessed of a time of his death and Clara Whiteman, large fortune .xt the York and the 4000 acres of land in this |leged that the sister induced James Lindsey to marry her mother and there- by secured possession of the bulk of the at the time the second marriage of his mother took place and that he knew nothing of the marriage. When asked the question as to whether she paid the $1000 for the purpose charged, Mrs. Gibbs answered, "I did not pay it It mlght have been paid by my attor- neys.” ! It is eertain on the face of the ree- | ords and depositions Mrs. Gibbs paid ‘Whiteman, it is charged, has no in- terest In-the result of the suit. —_——————— RALRCAD RATE BILL as a hereditary disease, but con- sumption is net hereditary. sumption. Even people who have strong lungs fully say that there 18 no better medi- cine on earth. “With me it is a sure preventive always be found a bottle of Peruna. Two or three [-times a year I am troubled with my throat. “I always had to have the services of my physician two or three times in each case. “Although a user of Peruna, I never PREVENTIVE.” and never have since. Mrs. Mary Meyer, Thomson aveaue. for yvears. “Often it was so bad that I could not na to _me twe years 2go. I began to take Peruna and now 1 am perfectly free from a cough. “I am glad to say that Peruna cured “Peruna is the best medicine for coughs and colds. I have told many people how mueh Peruna has helpea me.” A neglected cold is a well-worn path to consumption. Many a person catches cold and pays no attention to it. He scarcely recovers from the first cold when he takes the second Still ke gives it no heed. and possibly A common cold is acute catarrh. | tungs. The suit involves the title to 4000 acres of valuable land in Sti Louls ROBABLY every case of consump- can check it every time with Pe- Finally, if the cold is allowed to con~ County. tion begins with a cold. tinue, it becomes c:;u‘nu uu:.;.l"rh\r g n W . father of Al E «| Mrs. Frances ilson, 32 Nelso Reuben Whiteman, fathe; lonzo Consumption is generally classed Perlu::r;:ienll;m:guld not be withoun street. Clinton, Mass., writes: “Had you seen me at the time of my illness and now, you would not Wnnde!‘ : q near Shell Road, W , L. L, N. Y., e o s 000: e |, A contitutiona) weakness (s tnber- | Rifpyr ™! ot Winfsid B PR TRt v | ¢ 28 ¢ s- |, 2 . B i »f Peruns {tate ana personal property .in.. New|lted which renders one lable to con T have been annoyed with a cough| " My, ajiment was a severs cold which fllta(ked the bronechial tubes and lungs. “I followed your special directions county. By the terms of his will White- [ | man dort his wealth to his son and | MaY acquire consumption from a cold.| slesp ~ half ‘the and afier using six bottles of Peruna | | Gaughter. with a life estate to his wife.| Mrs. Addie Harding, 121 W. Brighton | BIEBL ~Many peo- I oo cyasprigy || T Was on my feet again g If she married, however, it was pro- | avenue, Syracuse, N. Y., writes: P Deapis 1A Wik T I think Peruna a wendertul medi | vided that it went to the son ‘and| ' “I have beén & user of Peruna for| “A woman ree AS FEARED. “A" i conm. Sopschite idaughlor. Alonzo and Clara. It is al- | the last twelye years and can truth-{ Ommended FPeru- gitis and tonsilitis should be treat catarrh, as they are in reality catarrh. The success of Peruna in relleving these cases entirely depends upon the fact that Peruna is a catarrh remedy. fortune for herself and Alonzo. for colds and|me entirely. I take Peruna occasion- Whiteman, from his cell-room in Au- many other ills. | ally when I do not feel well and Lalso| It relleves tarch wherever located burn prison, declares he was in Europe . = give it to my children. in the system, whether in the - 4 b i A SR D, ¥ howe o bronchial tubes or lungs. It has saved multitude of pe ple from consun tion by eradica ing catarrh before it reaches th The tendency of catarrh of the threat or head is to spread downward to the lungs. If taken in time, Peru- na will prevent these cases. We have in our files many testimon- | nothing for the property, and the con- | JiOUSht of taking it for my throat un-| takes another cold, and so on. tals from people who thought thg tention in the suit is as to whether the | /1, bout two years ago. He doses himself with bromides, of consumption, but T e o e ey he| “I tried Peruna to check it, and to|quinine and various expectorants. ey mileved by - 4 my great delight 1 was not troubled | His case is catarrh, at this stage, and | faithful use of Pervna. thus sho ; With'the smothcred and choked feeling | his case should be treated as catarrh. | that cgtarrh was really the caus their allments. NEW ELECTRIC CLERK OF COURT UNDER INDICTMENT Grand Jury Charges Him SHOOTS AT SHERIFF FOR FOILING A MOB Husband of a Negro's Vietim sumptmn and Hemorrhages Mrs. Mary Griffis of Albion, Pa., ous Health by Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, Recom= | aimcuit but indispensable reform.” mends it as the Greatest Medicine for Weak and Aged People. "1 Was a Mere Skeleton From Consumption of thg Liver and p'ess as a Ba b) but Now, at 64. am in n° M diciaa’ | under article VIII of the Angio-Japan- ese convention, is somewhat surprised at the British comments on his ques- tion. He authorizes the statement that he had not the slightest intention to give offense. His only motive in raising Restored to Vigor=|the question was a sincere desire to help our noble ally in effecting a most He thought the external stimulus often fa- cilitated the accomplishment of a diffi- cult task. LONDON, Feb. 3.—The Japanese em- bassy, which cabled the Government at Tokio on the subject of the Oishi- Terauchi incident, received this morn- ing the official version of the War Min- ister's answer to Oishi, as follows: The speech which Lieutenant General Terauchi, Minister of. War, recently | made in the House of Representatives | was, according to the official verbatim i report, substantially to the following ef- fect: “I am aware of the article in the alliance agreement pointed out by M. Oishi, stipulating that the naval and military authorities of the two powers shall frankly and sincerely consult one another on the condition and means for armed assistance to be rendered. The Government, therefore, will have to act upon this stipulation hereafter, but they have not yet entered into any discussion on the subject.” |“MENTAL HEALER” IS FOUND GUILTY Sentenced to Fine and Im- prisonment for Misusing the Malls. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Feb. 8.—Hel M. Post, the famous “mental, healer,” after a trial of twelve days, was found guilty in the United States Court to- day ana s®htenced to pay a $500 fine and serve thirty days in jail. Mrs. Post, who is 65 years old, was head of the mental science institute at Bea Breeze, Fla., and was charged with using the mails for fraudulent pur- poses. Her patients resided in every State of the Union. She claimed to cure all ills by the so-called “absent treat- ment.” Notice of appeal was given and defendant was released on $2000 bail. gt 6 -1 R i CREDITORS TAKE EXCEPTION TO REPORT OF uwlfl‘m Allege That Mrs. Ahm Iel(bley Failled to Account for Insurance Policles. ion the only localities which would be benefited by the proposed bill were those which had only a single railway and did not profit by competition. Hogg questioned the right to delegate both legislative and judicial authority to a commission. He quoted the Supreme Court to show that the commission was not a judiclal tribunal. It was a judicial function, he said, to say where a given rate was or was not reasonable, and a legislative function to prescribe a rate for the future. ————— ROCKEFELLER CRUISING ALONG ATLANTIC COAST Keeps Out of the Sight of Process Servers Sent Out by Hadley of Missourt. CLEVELAND, O., Feb. 3—Friends of John D. Rockefeller declared to-day that the oil king was cruising along the Atlantic coast and in the Gulf of Mexi- co on a private yacht. The latter, they said, belonged to a member of the Standara Oil Company. They also claimed that the elder Rockefeller was not at his son’s home, but was in the Adirondack Mountains at the lodge of Willlam Rockefeller. The story that John D. Rockefeller's father was at his home was circllated, his friends say, to mislead the public and the authorities seeking to sub- poena the ofl king. ¥ DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES, DIED SUDDENLY OF HEART DISEASE. How frequently does n heul llm simi- lar to the ubvvz he news- PAl .fl;!‘h: rullh. pus! nd lmnmu- ness can fi hndeonc t;lolfir uj wwvw other "fi“om o!“th' Ipitation, dlu‘?nfl, ar a Toaothared. sonaktins 'and obber distress: symp pmm‘ of which Dr. Ploroo's Golden - R s the eure ‘of just such cases. Gnlm “:31 or ingtance, 18 uld. o fimny “te hw »31 1?-1. Numerous 3 uturl ny wuh-t it must be gru P dan Special Dispatch td The Call. SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Feb. 3.—The first test of the powerful electric car built by the General Elec- tric and American Logomotive compa- nies of this city was made over the Schenectady branch of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad to-day and proved to be a complete success. While the car is not designed for high speed, it easily made forty-five miles an hour and could have attained a much faster rate. Carrying a party of Delaware and Hudson and General Electric officials, the car started from the station here at 3 o'clock;, and made the trip as far as Ballston at an average speed of a mile in one minute and thirty-seven seconds. Everything worked perfect- ly and the trip was made well within the regular passenger train schedule. The car then proceeded to Saratoga, and the return trip was started with- out delay. On the stretch of track be- tween Saratoga and Ballston the high- est speed was attained, and it was evi- dent that the car met all ,require- ments. Although it is believed at least sixty miles an hour could have been reached, the engineers decided not to attempt this. In speaking of the test J. N. Burdick of the Delaware and Hudson said: “This can almost be said to mark a new area in railroading. I did not be- lieve that the car could attain a speed of more than thirty-five miles an hour. The great saving in operating expenses 'by use of a car of this cnaracter is shown by the faect that it consumed but one gallon of gasoline for each nile, even when running at the highest speed attempted. It is probable that the car will be placed on the regular ent B{thls mporb genenl l!ml e, b ! service and tests will be continued while it is being run on the regular trips between this city and Saratoga. Engineers of the General Electric Company say that the car will revolu- tionize railroad work and will within the next few years be adopted on prac- tically all of the short line runs of the principal railroads. The car is sixty-five feet over all, and in appearance is similar to a regy- lar combination baggage and passen- ger’coach, At one end is a gasoline en- gine driving an electric dynamo. Un- derneath are motors like those used on the trains in the New York subway, governed by the motor- The enclno which is used in this minjature power station is of about 150 horsepower. The initial impulse is gasoline | { warrants belonging to the. county val- them charges that he entered into con- spiracy with Frank J. Chaiser, a clerk in his office, to defraud Cook County out of $50,000 by false pretenses; an- other that he embezzled money and ued at $50€0; nine indictments allege that he committed larceny against the county by taking different money, ranging from $100 to $1850; twelve indictments declare that Linn forged county warrants for sums of be- tween $12 and $117; another indictment charges that he entered into conspiracy with others to pursuade Chaiser to re- main away from the Grand Jury and refrain from giving testimony: and another that he withheld the record of his office from his successor. Linn gave bail in the sum of $35,000. —_————————— TELEPHONE COMPANY GREATLY IMPROVES SYSTEM IN VALLEJO VALLEJO, Feb. 3.—Superintendent of Construction Glass of the Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company has just completed an inspection of the 340,000 worth of improvements made upon the local system and is so pleased with the outlook for business in this city that he has given orders for the expenditure of $20,000 additional on a number of new improvements and has given the authority to increase the foree of operators in this eity to fifteen. sums of | N B PRI TR, oMM TED, CPON THE NEBD OF RE- With Lzrceg)}z‘ Embezzle Tries :0 Kill Peace O TERPELLA N, Cf J! N 1 N vy 'fll‘ LATIO‘\ IN THE ARMY OF GR. T BRITAIN. g men a‘n Orgex-" cer. — Continued from Page 29, Col. 5. A S CHICAGO, Feb. 3.—John A. Linn,| POPLAR BLUFF, Mo, Feb. 3.—In TOKIO, Feb. 3.—Oishi, leader of the 2 - 3 clerk of the Superior Court of Cook | spite of the avowed intention of a mob | Progressive party, on January 51, be- | Beqecal eotey, o Sublect to Btate and | Propelled by a Dynamo|Sounts. was today indicted by the|to wreak summary vengeance imme- B {tore the budget committee of " the | Crumpacker discussed the rate-mak- hi = % e e T it Soa for. | diately. upon positive identification of :‘ flma" ure n fl Dot inerpelluted | War Minister | ing power conterred upon the Interstate Which Is Driven by ajzi% > Bua Jackson. & negro. as the assailast EE “ommerce Commission as the all-im- g y : e Twenty - fi dictments | 0f Mrs. Daniel Norman, Sheriff Hogs | strengthening of the British army | potiietl SIEMESIE A0 e MR Small - Gasoline Engine| | Twenty - ave ngs:lpna-rtmiln‘r: ome ot | late this afternoon suceeeded in remov- ing Jackson from the jail and started on his way to Hendrickson, sixteen miles distant, without actual harm be- ing done to the prisoner. Daniel Norman, nusband of the as- saulted woman, enraged at the action of the Sheriff in removing the prisomer from Poplar Bluff, fired a shot at Jack- #0n as the Sheriff was leaving the jail with his prisener. The bullet went wild, however, and Norman was re- strained from further violence. Jackson had been identified by Mrs. Normaa before hé was taken from jail. ————————— OUSTED NAVY YARD EMPLOYES MAY YET SAVE THEIR J't Orders Dismissing Them Revoked, It Sald, and Furtoughs Given VALLEJO, Feb. 3.—Upon orders from ‘Washington, it is sald, the officials at the Mare Island Navy Yard have been com- pellad to revoke the orders discharging head stable keeper James Ward, head gardener Henry Cassady, Captain of the ‘Watek John Parham, and assistant stable keeper James Doland, which were issued at the vard Wednesday evening. These men were appointed from Washington, and nnder the naval regulations it re- quires an order from the Secretary of the Navy to discharge them. The men have all been furloughed and influence is now being, brought to bear to head off their dismissal. 13 Scrofulous Lumps nherited Disease—Eyes Affectec—Weak, Could Hardly Walk—Life of Suffering. Still Another Great Cure by Hood's Sarsaparilla Thc following letter is from Mr. Geo. A. Zirkle, School Teacher in Mt. Horeb, Tenn., well known all through that county, Where he was born and has always lived. “Mt. Horeb, Tenn., Jan. 10, 1906. “C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. 3 “T have suffered .all my life, until MRS. MARY GRIFFIS. aken Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for almost one year, and I can z onscientiously recomm end it to every one as the best medicine for weak and aged people. One year ag o last winter T was taken very serfously with what the doctors called hemorrhages and -consumption of the liver. the latter part of May 1 could not turn over in bed, ana SOMERSET, Pa., Feb. 3.—Under a given to the engine by firing a black rule issued by Judge Francis J. Koo- ser of the Somerset court several weeks ago depositions relative to the estate of Abner McKinley taken by Commis- sioner Owen Abraham of New York lately, from inherited scrofula. When a mere babe I had a scrofula sore back of my ear. At 21 I had 13 scrof- ulous lumps on -y neck. At 37 the disease assumed a new and_tantaliz- help baby. I was a mere skeleton. I was advised to re recei: here to- Ve Sohiskey, and ft (e:l}a‘lnlglin better than lnywmed{clne g:mm,eg::n em:‘):t;.mmgh ing form. My eyes wm affected s: at 64, 1 am in per ealth, and never hav - sunset. an Do 5 s win ever e Swithoay ;02 | Hermanus L. Baer, Ferdinand F. Hig- that I not read after ¥ constant medi Albion, 5 when I them it was difficult to by Jr. and James Soole were examined. 2 teopen them. m was always in- URS MARY GRIFFIS, y 2 ' .— The depositions were taken following exceptions filed to the account of Mrs. “:*”' over body. Dul ‘ S P I Annie E. McKinley, executrix of the bk ,;hm.nd MeKinley estate, by creditors of Abner T"‘;' "“"i ursied g he positive preventive of consumption, hemorrhages, bronchitis and ail dis- m’:‘;",‘;’;o:'m“m"m'”‘ :“fi‘:,",':w""“"' :.':, ;&";Z: by othu. until six had G st e Tetuta Lo vigorous heAlth s Gu to e prompt | BOlclen ittued on the life of' Abner Me- formed and T el At B s preseribed by physicians of all schools as the sure cupe | Kinley, which are sald to aggregate T could umely’nnr. and could hard- every day.” iggstion and all stomach complaints. It is the greatest tonie- | about $800,000, u‘ which, u 18 alleged. attend t« h::hms All the o medicine, and thousands of old people the country over | are a part of the estate. The Beaboard Iy ast 2 ‘3 “to i Kept healthy and strong by its regular use, National Bank of New York, Frank B. medicine T tr to help until T SPECIAL | Dimye e the only whiskey recognized by the Government as a medicins | Granger of Somerset and the Columbue began the use of He Sarsaparilla. | , 0eBCATTE meet the o ione an s endorse an commed everyw! 18 Y w ) Sorkers Guaranteed to be absolutely free from rusel ol = spin o4 L s Oni: 8 n lesa than three “Wfl" m it e sutting " CAUTION When you ask for Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, be sure yon & ’ usual Dlevomest deaters wilh vcy to Seil Fow chiap Toiiasions Nas ek Peanclag Haod s the zenuine. titates, which are put on the market for profit only, and ure poxitively harm- | ful. Demand Duffy’s. and be sure you wet it. relin amd Erocer in t the “Old Chemist ken. Address Dufiy Malt Whiskey Co. Rochester, N. Y. h“m *r.m