The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 18, 1906, Page 30

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NCISCO CALL, “SUNDAY, FEBROARY’ 1§, 1906. JOHANN ARNOLD. he be e Malt Whiskey. I am now stomach perfectly. It d nerves Duffy 4000 men and women one who have passed the nark, and nearly every icly acknowledged health, strength, faculties and Pure Malt d preventive ir of life, We booklet containing ers of many of these le medical infor- would be strong, husky and v s the work E s « e fullest; if ¥ ripe old age without ns, take Duffy’s Pure rected and av 's the most pow- fighting and iroat, lungs and d all weakening, -down, diseased tever cause. It It gives ine pleasure in my old age to testify ts 1 am deriving from the judicious use of your ave a good appetite and perfect digestion. number of wines and whiskies for their stimu- t my stomach would not retain them. Duffy’s aged, who meed a stimulant to tone up thelr crease their digestive powers and strengthen Johann Arnold of Read- ing,Pa., and Mrs. Phebe Pratt of Chelsea, Mass., say their sturdy old age is due to the regular use of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey. It makes the old young and the young strong 104 years old, hale I excellent health, Catarrh of the th is certainly a God- prolonged my life. ’s Pure Malt W Hale and Hearty at 104 Received on 90th Bi rthday MRS. PRATT. Mrs. Pratt writes:— Gentlemen: I am now almost 91 years of age and am in owing to the use of Duffy’s Malt Whiskey. roat troubled me for four years, and I tried many remedies, without any benefit, until a friend induced me to try Dufty’s Pure Malt Whiskey. My general condition was very poor also until I used Dufty’s, but I am v grand medicine the catarrh has left me, my general health is better than it has been for vears, and I know that it has ery glad to state that since using this I most certainly would not be without it. hiskey . acts guickly and builds up the whole system. Duffy’'s Pure Malt Whiskey is | used exclusively in leading hospitals. The old reliable family remedy of hun- dreds of thousands for over 50 years. Its purity is vouched for by chemists, and by the fact that it's the only whiskey recognized by the Government as_a medicine, Every testimonial is published good faith and guaranteed. AVOID SUBSTITUTES Be sure you get the genulne Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, sold fn sealed bot~ tles only—mever in bulk—by all re- liable druggists and grocers, or direct, price, $1.00. It is the only ubsolutely pure medicinal whiskey and contalns no fusel ofl. This is a guarantee. Look for the trade-mark, the “Old Chemist,” on the label, and be certain the seal over the cork Is unbroken. in DENIES THAT CLUB LADIES HAVE TRAITS OF THE OWL Continued from Page 29, Column 7. 1 demonstration, e Mogan. t there would to air his he was at- movements a revolver in X M ceman of A r e football ¥ was ne time employed as & de ¢ e Southern Pacific t is not the spirit of the tor Club to condemn CLUB PRESIDENT TALKS. irs. Schiller's sponsors are most esti m m sure that she her- s a family upon whom . adow of a blemish. You 1 come to ping his wife I did not M p. m., and I un- hiller arrived Now if she had = | n‘ RENO, Feb. 17.—Nevada's capital | been to that concert and had been there | with another man other than her hus- | band we could have seen nothing im- | proper in it, if things had been as they | should be and the man was a friend of | her husbend. [ SAYS CLUB IS BLAMELESS. | “Iam always among the last to leave | the club functions and I never saw any- { thing that should not be nor has any- | boay el Mrs. Schiller did {a prominent place in club : | scarcely knew who she was until this | affair was made public. Then I recog- | nized her from the pictures. | “If the accusations’ against Mrs. Schiller are true, I do not see where | the club can be held to blame for her | conduct. Personally I think that, while | she may have been indiscreet, she is | guiltless of the wrong that is charged. | I will continue to hold this opinion un- til the courts shall decide differently, and this I am sure is the attitude of the board of directors.” Mrs. Cotton is the wife of Judge Ay- R. Cotton and has been promi- identified in affairs of women's or some time. The Schiller epi- sode is naturally the source of much noyance to the ladies of the Califor- nia Club. It is the cause of conslder- able gossip, but the majority of the ladies’ are willing to abide by the deci- sion of the president and the board of action regarding the | directors in any accused member. WILDCAT PUTS OUT ‘ LIGHTS OF CARSON Special Dispatch to The Call. was {in darkness for several hours last night. | A wildcat climbed an electric light pole and coming in contact with a live wire electrocuted. The dead body of the ned on the wires and broke the 1 The I s went out suddenly and the people at the substation were { unable to determine the cause, as every- eemed to be In perfect order. A was sent out to make an inves- and when about one mile out rson discovered the body of the cat the wires. The wires carried 000 volts, being the high tension wires | direct from the main power plant on the | Truckee River. ADVERTIS ~ How Good MENTS. Fogd may Turn to Poison even when it place in the stomach. Food decayed in the body caten is as dangerous to ecayed before being eaten. sons, just accord- w long it remaius in the Bowels takes are the simplest and surest t Delayed Digestion yet * * n a thin Enamel Box, half as thick as your watch, which fits into the wvest pocket or lady’s purse 3s if it grew there. round-edged Enamel Box are found six small Candy Tablets. One of these toothsome tablets works wonders for digestion. Soon as placed in the mouth it starts the Saliva flowing, which at once gets to work dissolving it. The Saliva becomes blended with the Candy Cascaret tablet, and from the moment they start going down your throat together they start working to- gether. Now, what do they work at? Bowel- work, of course—Digestion. * e Most of the Digestion occurs in the thirty feet of intestines that connect with the Stomach. They are lined with a set of little mouths, that sgueeze Digestive Julces into the Food eaten. The Digestive Juices thus mix with the food, just as Saliva mixes with Cas- caret tablets, dissolving and changing that food into nourishment, as It passes along the channel. The Intestines are also lined with mil- lions of little suction pumps, that draw the Nutriment from Food, as it passes them in going through. * * * This Nutriment is then carried into the Blood, and spread over the Body as Brain, Bone and Brawn. But, when the Bowel-Muscles are weak, the Food moves too slowly to stimulate the little Gastric Mouths and there is no flow, or too little flow of Digestive Juice, to change the food into nourishment. Then, the food decays in the Bowels, and in the thirty feet of Intestines. When this Decay begins the little suc- tion pumps draw Poison from the decayed Food, into the blood, instead of the Nutri- tion it should have drawn. Now, Cascarets contain. the only com- bination of drugs that Stimulates these Muscles of the Bowels and Intestjnes just as a Cold Bath, or open-air Exercise, stimulates a Lazy Man. Cascarets therefore act like Exercise. They produce the same sort of Natural result that a Six Mile walk in the country would produce, without any Injurious Chemical effect. The Vest Pocket Cascaret Box is sold by all Druggists, at Ten Cents. Be sure you get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped “CCC. . i i &~ FREE TO OUR FRIENDS! We to to 1' colors. It is a beanty for ithe SRk A8 Snastnbtad is trinket is loaded. 725 Stertig Remeéy e o e Sor STEAL AWAY IN AUTO AND CET MARRIED Rich Chicago Girl and a Wealthy Gotham- ite Elope. e Feb. 17.—Alded by an au- tomobile driven and owned by Harrison M. Zier, the Pasadena millionaire, Mirs Maude Burkitt Milligan of Chicago and Albert Gallatin Cooke of New York, two of the most prominent members of Pas- adena’s exclusive circles, eloped from that city this afternoon and were mar- ried this even/ng by the Rev. H. E. Ben- ton, rector of All Souls Universalist Church. Miss Miillgan, who is the Gaughter of Charles F. Milligan, owner and propric- tor of the Victorla Hotel, Michigan ave- nue, Chicago, left her home, 4620 Echo street, Los Angeles, this morning at 11 o'clock, ostensibly for a short visit to one of the beach resorts, but in reality to met her fiance at the Main-street Var Nuys Hotel After joining Cooke th: pair boarded a car for Pasadeia. where Mr, Zier was in walting at the Raymond Hotel, with Stephen Templeton Jr. of Princeton, Iil, and Cobboll W. Parsons | of Louisviile, Ky. Here the voung couple were showered | with violets and roses. The start for | Riverside was made at 1:10 p. m. Excel- lent time was made in reaching the Hotel RIVERSID: they met a friend, T. Edward Murtaugh, who assisted in procuring the license and clergyman. At the . conclusion of the ceremony at the parsonage Mr. and Mrs. Cooke were driven to the Glenwood, where they are guests of honor to-night at a brilllant dinner given by Mr. Zier, who acted as best man. .| The bride is one of the noted beauties of Pasadena and Los Angeles, where she last three de has resided for ‘he | 8he fs a stunning blo of the most popular gl Maryland in past seasons. The groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cooke of New York, and is a sclon of the Lan | Francho family, known as the earliest | settlers in Los Angeles. He is 25 and his bride is 22. They will remain at the Glenwood until Monday and then will | go to the Alexandria, Los Angeles, to | make it their home. WILL T i ~ COUNTY ROA | Landowners Cause of Fail- ure of Plan to Improve Highway in San Mateo A AR SAN MATEO, Feb. 17.—The county road within the limits of this town |is destined to remain 1In {ts present wretched condition for some time to | come. This pesult is particularly dis- couraging, as many determined -efforts have been made to obtain the tremen- | dous trafic which naturally belongs to | this county but which is diverted to the Alameda shore because of the poor con- | dition of San Mateo County roads. Pub- lic and private corporations have used every endeavor to obtain this traffic, but the primary condition of success is a radical improvement in the county road. The Board of City Trustees was asked to assist and readily acquiesced. It called upon property-owners to appear and show cause why they should not submit to an assessment to defray the expenses of improving the road. A majority of the realty owners voiced an emphatic protest to the proposed as- sessment on the ground that the rate fixed would be a practical confiscation. They urged that all property-owners, not only those having frontages on the :olmfiy toad, should share in the bur- en. On the other hand, certain property- owners on the road expressed their will- ingness to submit to the assessment of $2 60 a foot as fixed by the City En- gineer. These people, however. were in the minority, and the proposed improve- ment of the highway must rest without action for some time. ; vears. and was one s at the Hotel Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, | Glenwood, the party arriving at 4:40. Here | PEACE IN SIGHT T ALGECIRAS Exchange of Notes Between French and German Dele- gates Gives Encouragement COMPROMISE PROBABLE Representative of American Government Takes Lead in Effecting a Settlement A ALGECIRAS, Spain, Feb. 17.—An im- portant step forward has been made in the Franco-German controversy over the question of the control of the Morocean police. Last night M. Revoll, the ranking French delegate, sought Herr von Rado- witz, the German envoy, and delivered to him a written response to the proposi- tion the Germans had previously submit- ted. Becrecy is maintained as to the con- tents of the French document, but it is known to be a serious effort toward con- clliation. Henry White, the head of the American delegation, sald in an interview: “The communications that passed be- tween France and Germany were in no sense proposals, or even notes. They were aides memolres, giving with precision the points of view of the two countries, but may unddubtedly be considered an important step forward.” It is understood that the French reply contained only ten lines and was with- out heading or signature. Although little of a concrete character has resulted from this exchange of views, there is good reason to believe it has made possible a compromise and that this is already tak- ing shape along lines which White is un- “derslond to have suggested. | It was on White'’s proposal that the | conference to-day exempted merchant training ships not engaged in trade from the formalities imposed by the new cus- toms regulations. | LONDON, Feb. 17.—The British Govern- ment had not been advised late this even- ing of the nature of the French reply to the German note on the Moroccan ques- tion, handed to the German representa- tives at Algeciras to-day. The Foreign Office does not expect France to make any concessions from her first demands respecting control of the police. At any rate, Great Britain has not been notified that France will modify her case, which, in view of the close relations between the two countries, would seem to be the probable course had a modification been contemplated. Discussing the question this afternoon, an official said he did not believe France had made any compromise.in regard to the policing of Morocco, but she might agree to international control of the State Bank of Morocco, France and Germany having two representatives and Great Britain one on the administrative council of the future bank. This would be con- tingent on Germany agreeing to French control of the police. Great Britain apparently is somewhat in the dark as to what is passing be- tween France and Germany at Algeciras and fears are expressed in certain quar- ters that the Germans are endeavoring to interfere with the friendly relatlons be- tween the two powers. The British Gov- ernment is Insistent that it Is desirous of an amicable settlement, but it cannot go behind the agreement entered into with France to support her demands. INDIAN CHIEF WEDS WIDOW IN HOLLAND Speclal Cablegram to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyright, 1906, by the New York Herald Publishing Company. LONDON, Feb. 17.—With their eyes to- ward the setting sun, “the last of the Mo- hicans,” a party of Americans weary of the wiles of the palefaces and their coun- tries, have left for Canadu on the steam- ship Lake Champlain. an unfortunate experience. Full of hope, they came to England less than a year ago and at the Earls Court exhibition | showed their skill as archers and paddlers | of canoes. They were not novelties, Eng- lishmen being now familiar with the feathered redskins and the wild men from Borneo, and their show was not a finan- cial success. They were later taken to Holland, where there were plenty of | places to paddle, but matters went from | bad to worse. A fortnigh. ago a number | were reported stranded In Rotterdam, when Lord Strathcona came to the rescue and guaranteed their passage homeward. Before leaving Holland, however, a widow married one of the chiefs, who called himself American Horse, and is go- ing back with him to the campfires on the Great Lakes. This latest venture of American Indians will probably deter others from coming to this country, and spectators may have geen the last of the redskins for a long time. DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. Habit-formning Medicines. Whatever may be the fact as to many of the so-call ?nunt medicines con- taining injurlous ingredients as broadly ublished ‘in some journals of more or ess influence, this publicity has certainl: been of great benefit in arousing need: attention to this subject, It has, in a considerable measure, resulted in the most intelligent people avolding such foods and medicines as may be fnirl( sus- | gected of containing the injurious 0 ionts complained of. Recognizing this {act some time ago, Dr. Pierce, of Buffal N. Y., “took time by the forelock,” as | were, and publlahea broadeast all the ingredients of which his popular medi- cines are comy Thus he has com- pletely forestalled ail har iniermu and all opposition_that might otherwise be urged against his medicines, because they are DOW OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. Iur- thermore, from the formala printed on overy bottle wrapper, it will be seen that these medicines contain no alcohol or other babit-forming dmfi. Neither do they contain any narcoties or injurious agents, their i lents being ‘purely vegetable, extracted from the roots of medicinal plants found growing in the degflu of our American forests and of well recognized curative virtues. Instead of alcohol, which even in small portions long continued, as in obstinate cases of diseases, becomes highly objec- tionable from its wndencfirh 11Rmflmm a craving for stimulants, Dr. Flerce em- ploys chemically pure, triple- refined glycerine, which of Itsolf I8 & valuablo remedy in man; %ot chronie di being a n?-{nc uloent, 1 e enhances ve Gol Ch *Gold 1 Theirs has been | MOST DELICATE OF INSTRUMENTS Invention Records Measure- ments Up to One Seventy- Millionth Part of an Ineh GREAT AID TO SCIENCE Will Be of Use in the Study- ing of Molecules and Move- ments of Invisible Matter Special Cablegram to The Call and the New York Herald. Cepyright, 1906, by the New York Herald Publishing Company. LONDON, Feb. 17.—A remarkable dis- covery made by Dr. P. E. Shaw, one of the physical scfence lecturers at the Uni- versity College, Nottingham, whereby measurements up to one seventy-millionth part of an inch can be taken, is likely to lead to some vitally important develop- ments in sclentific investigations. It has already been applied to practical use in the improvement of telephones. It will measure the smallest audible movements in the telephone diaphragm— movements of only one forty-millionth part of an inch. The apparatus has proved of the greatest use in measuring engineering gauges, surpassing all other methods in delicacy and accuracy, Wire- less telegraphy is expected to benefit from Dr. Shaw’s work to a very great extent, his wonderful mechanism acting as a most delicate coherer. The most important branches of sclence which will receive aid from the invention | will be those dealing witn the investiga- jton of the secrets of life and matter. The instrument will aid physicians in studying nature, possibly even the move- ments of molecules, and the elements of all that we can see ‘and touch. | When Dr. Shaw was conducting his ex- periments he had to use the vaults un- der the university, and he could work only in the dead of night, when all the | factories were closed and the traffic in | the streets was entirely suspended. He | spent many nights in’ the vaults experi- | | menting during the last five vears, and | |is still improving the apparatus. He has every hope of measuring quantities still | more minute. L Some idea of the delicacy of the instru- ment may be gained from the fact that | the vibrations of an engine 100 yards from | | the vault make it impossible for Dr. | | Shaw to work. It is so delicate that he cannot demonstrate with it before an | | audience, becatse it is affected by ordi- | | | | nary dpsts and draughts, The apparatus consists of a fine microm- eter screw and a series of six levers act- ing ’n conjunction with fit. | 0L PPE LN CVES CONTROL Possession of Private Car- rier Will Work a Hard- ship on Small Producers pan g ] Special Dispatch to The Call. BAKERSFIELD, Feb. 17.—George A. Dow and P. M. Hunt of the George A. Dow Pumping and Engineering Company of Ban Francisco are in Bakersfield to- night. They state that a large quantity of material for the new Southern Pacific rifled pipe line on the Kern River field to Delano has been shipped and will ar- | rive at Delano early in the week. Buck- ner Speed, inventor of the rifling process and superintendent of the pipe line, has | been in San Franecisco since Wednesday. He will return to Bakersfleld to-morrow morning. Before Mr. Speed left for San Francisco ofl had been forced through the pipe line to the terminal at Delano by the single | pumping station of Volean Slding in the | | Kern River fields. The plant was shut | down for minor repairs and pumping | will be resumed on Monday in all prob- ability. ‘While nothing definite can be learned at | the local offices of the Southern Pacific | Company or at the Standard Oil offices | regarding the nature of the shipments | from the north, it is stated on good au- thority that two or more storage tanks of 50.000-barrel capacity are to be placed | at the Delano terminal of the new pipe line. There are already two tanks of this capacity at Delano. It Is expected that when the line is in operation 20,000 barrels a day will be de- livered at Delano, which is to be made the shipping point of the Southern Pacific and virtually of the Standard, and no secret is made of the fact that additional storage capaclty will be needed. It is the expressed opinion of independ- ent producers, best in a position to know, that the object of making Delano the point for Kern River oil shipment by means of the new pipe line is a move to evade the resuits of possible Government regulation of rates on oll transportation. The independent producers have no means of delivering thelr ofl to tide water save | over the Southern Pacific rafls or through the Southern Pacific or Standard plipe .lfl\e!. In an interview to-night a prominent loeal oil man pointed out to a Call corre- spondent thgt by rall, even should the Government fix a rate on oil transporta- tion by rail tkat would under ordinary conditions enable the local interest to compete with the ratllroad and the big corporations, the private pipe llne just completed still places the big corpora- tions in a position to dictate to the small- er producers. Especially is this true, he said, if, as has been generally reported, the Southern Pacific is planning to con- tinue the pipe line to Fresno and thence to tide water. McCALL’S DEATH ONLY QUESTION OF HOURS Special Diepatch to The Call, LAKEWOOD, N. J., Feb. 17.—Phy- siclans of John A. McCall, the former president of the New York Life Insur- ance Company, to-day announced that almost all hope for his recovery has been abandoned. McCall was much weaker to- day than at any previous time during his {llness, this condition being due largely 1o the fact that for several days he has been able to take only small quantities of liquid nourishment. McCall grew weaker this afternoon, and the end appeared to be very near. Rev. Matthew Taylor, pastor of the Ro- man Catholic Church of the Blessed Sacrament, in New York City, which MecCall's family attends, was sum- moned to go at once to the patient's bedside. Members of the family gath- ered in rooms adjoining the sick cham- ber. Late h)-nll‘l{: McCall was reported as being very low, but it was beileved he of matter invisible | 2 Worst They Ever Saw Hospitai Physicians Gave No Hope and Advised Amputation. Dreadful Ulcer on the Ankle— Bad Humor From Childhood. One More Wonderful Cure by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “Needham, Mass., Jan. 26, 1906. “C. 1. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. “Gentlemen:—I] believe it will be nothing more than justice to you for| me to write a few lines in praise of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, as it has been a great blessing to me and to my wife. I was laid up a whole year with ani ulcer on my ankle, which I supposed came from a humor in my blood, which has troubled me from boyhood. I went to the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston for treatment twice a week during a period of three amputated. I would not consent to this, but began to take Hood's Sarsa- 1 parilla for my blood. I have taken a months. The attending surgeon ad- | dozen bottles, and now I am as well vised me to give up work and take all |as ever. The sore was all healed up, the comfort I could. It w: id that | and T am working all the time. My my case was the worst one of the kind | health never was better. I shall al- they had treated at the hospital, and | ways speak well of Hood's Sarsapa- the doctors advised that I have my leg rilla.”—CYRUS G. UPHAM. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Has effected thousands of wonderful cures of scrofula, eczema, ulcers and all other blood diseases. It makes people well. SPECIAL.—To meet the wishes ot these who prefer medicine in tablet form, we are now tting up Hood's Sarsaparilla in chocolate-coated tablets as well as in the usual lquid form. By reducing Hood's Sarsaparilla to a solid extract, we have retained in the tablets the curative properties of every medicinal ingredient. Sold by druggists or sent by mail. 100 doses one dollar. C. 1. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. . Mill Vadlley The Switzerland of America BOYLE DARK The choicest spot in the valley, five minutes to station. Nine iots sold in four days. Large, sightly lots, covered with oak and bay trees, commanding fine view of Mount Tamalpais and the bay. There are choice lots in all tracts to those who come first. Prices reasonable. T. G. PARKER CO. 20 Post, St., S.F. -oooo | | | | Heveeesoes NEVADA WAL THEF CALCHT George Mitchell Arrested in Denver After Leading De- tectives a Merry Chase PRIt i eoesssssssessenssssessssssettssssssssses peese — The Call Breakfast Sets Ready for Delivery. Several carloads of CALL Breakfast Sets have just arrived. ‘These handsome sets are now ready for delivery to CALL subscribers. All coupon hold- ers should present the:a at once to their carrier or to the busi- ness office of this paper, and orders will be filled at the ear- liest possible moment. | L AR R e X | T ————— | moves one more danger from the course of finance. The money fraudulently ob- tained by the prisoner in this haul is es- | timated to be about $3000. No irregularities were suspected until correspondent banks gave notice that ex- a number of drafts sent out by members | pected remittances had not arrived. The of the American Bankers' Association of | Pinkertons traced the letters as far as Goldfield and Bullfrog. | Hazen with the assistance of the postal Mitchell is a past master in the criminal | authorities. The thief was identifled art of forgery and check raising. He | through his operatigns. The bad paper commenced negotiating the paper and |was passed in Boston. Philadelphia, New raised funds in every city he visited. He | York, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Denver. traveled throughout the East and was on | Mitchell confessed his guilt upon arrest. a return trip when apprehended. He is | He will be taken west for trial as soon considered to be onme of the shrewdest |as possible. He Is known also as F. H. men in the business, and his capture re- ' King, F. H. Kingsley and Alfred Henry. YOU SAVE $10 A suit at one of the downtown cash stores was selected by one of our custemers, the price of which was $30.00. Not having the ready cash, she had the bill sent to our office, which was promptly paid, and for this accommodation we made the price to her at $33.00. It so happened that her sister-in-law purchased a similar suit in one of the high - priced installment stores at a cost of $43.00. We would have saved her §10.00, Spectal Dispatch to The Call. DENVER, Feb. 17.—George Mitchell, who robbed the mail sack at Hazen, Nav. on November 29 of last year, was arwest ed v Pinkerton detectives in this ecity to-day. The prisoner had led his pur- suers a merry chase through the country for three months. His loot consisted of We can do the same for you if you will but give us the op- portunity. 3 Come in and get acquainted with us. It costs you nothing. We can dress your entire family, furnish your house complete, and be of other ser- vice to you. Weekly or Monthly Payments ‘would live through the night. All the members of the family are present to- night, and they expect to be summoned to McCall's bedside at any moment. 1

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