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THE SAN FRA\TCPSéO CALL; MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1906. EX-SPEAKER HENDERSON PASSES AWAY IN I0WA Former Leader of the House Succumbs After Illness of Nine Months. —— ARIS AR LEADER IN THE HOUSE. Henderson Ome of the Most Powerful Men of the Natl er Her o the front -sixth Towa a OF THE following HOUSE. EMBER He pr ed i 1902, taking « and pro: business of the Ho law, judiciary carried | He also advocated » election of Senators by » people and was one of the Strong- t supporters of the civil service law. He was chairman of the committee rules during Mr. Reeds occupaney on of the Speaker’'s chair, 2 position which especially - prepared him for the Speak , which fell to him in 1889 ] on the death of Thomas B. Reed. A STANCH REPUBLICAN. Henderson wielded large influence in the House when on tke floor and few measures - ever passed without his asse He was personally very popu- lar among his colleagues in the House, frrespective of party, but at the same time he was @ strong partisan and vas freely criticised by -his opponents for his alleged autocratic rulings. Just before his retirement he became out of har- mony with his party, favoring tariff reduction and reciprocity ‘treaties, to which the Republicans were not ready to accede. In his profession he was first a mem- ber of the firm of Shiras, Van Duzee & Henderson and later of the firm of Fend@erson, Hurd,” Lenehen & Klesel. He was known as one of the best trial | favor | the civil government in Indtan military H0LDS STA Public Interest Centers in the Contest About to Be| Begun in the = Senate © Rowran b WASHINGTON, Feb —From the e that Senator Tillm report the raflroad rate Dill to- 1 that measure shall have disposed. of by the Senate the bill will actually, if not technidally, occupy the foremost place on the calen- on dar prospect of immediately statehood bill, but there N many intimations that such a might be pursued if that bill continues to be unacted upon when, a | few weeks later, Senators generally find ther prepared to enter, what all have believ om the beginning | would be the real conflict of the ses- Ele All Senators, whatever their in- ité in considering the the most important and friends and op- Hebpurn-Dolliver bill re 19 ha possib ficor a prepa ed speech raflroad rate question. His will first formal specch on the sub- subsequent to the reporting of the far ouncement has been nator stands alone road legislatio es of the Hepburn-Dolliver bill, re is already much speculation as the prospects of the rate bill. The most generally accepted view is that it w amended by the Senaté in some leleyed consideration of the army appropriation bill will be resumed & the chief topic of legislation in the House of Representatives this week. A mpromise on the provision abolishing | | the grade of lieute reral in the army has been pr: ed upon, | whereby General General | MacArthur will to - reach that-rank before their retirement. —_———————— MORLEY TAKES A STAND AGAL T LORD KITCHENER Secretary for Indin Favors Upholding the Supremacy of the Civil Government. LLONDON, Feb. 26.-—John st official act as Secr has been to intervene in the thorny dis- Morley's pute which led to the resignation of Lord Curzon of Kedlest he former Viceroy. His decision, as indicated by dispatches just published, of upholding is strongly in the supremacy of atters, which confirms the view taken Lord Curzon as against General Lord Kitchener. nending the pfoposal of the pres- eroy, the Barl of Minto, as in- s the line of least resistance, and islon is approved by most of the morning newspapers, The Telegraph, lhowever, doubts whether this arrangement will compose a controversy and problem admittedly of gr difficulty, and conslders that Lord Kitchener ought to be paramount. — % lawyers in the State of Jowa becauss of his ability to win juries. He was always an uncompromising Republican and was frequently men- tioned as the most available candidate of his party for the Governorship. He was a member of the Round Table, a literary organization, and the Key City Club, both of Dubuque,’ as well as the Army and Navy Club of ‘Washington and the Chicago Club of Chicago. He was married on March 4, 1866, to Augusta A. Fox, daughter of Alonzo H. Fox of West Union, Fay- ette County, JTowa. SHORE LINE LIMITED. New Daylight Train, Sau Franciseo to Los Angeles. - Beginning March 1, “‘Shore Line Limitea' will Jeave San Francisco and Los Angeles dafly § a. m., arriving destination 9:30 p. m. Only first-ciass. tickets, with parior-car meat tickets, honored on this trajn. See Southern Pacific agent, 613 Market st., for particulars, * n presents his | for sufficient t to pre- | the conflict Wednesday Senator Foraker will along | tary for India | pired by the late Government, Moriey | TIDAL WAVE AND QUAKE KILL 2000 Late Reports Tell of Great Destruction Wrought on | the Coast of Colombia by the Seismic Disturbances BODIES BY HUNDREDS ENCOUNTERED AT SEA | Buildings Shaken Down in Several - Cities and- a Big Wall of Water Sweeps Upon Terrified Inhabitants gt Epecial Dispatch to The Call. BUENAVENTURA; Colombla, Feb. 25. | The earthquake that, occurred on the | morning” of February 21 lasted about | seven minutes, the movemént being from north to ‘south. The town W considerably shaken. ‘The damage was small, but the pepple were thrown into a panie, kneeling, weeping and praying in the street. All the clocks in the town were stopped, while the cables | | were broken in many places. | Following the earthqmake there was |a tidal wave which was of no conse- quence here, but reports from the coast, includipg an area of fifty leagues to | the south, state that 2000 persons were | | killea by falling houses or drowned by | | the wave, whole famflies having been lost. | Salling vessels report having | countered hundreds of corpses | quantities of dead fish. ,Many settlements were completely away. The damage done by the earthquake and tidal wave at Tulaco was greater than here. The shock was felt in the | interior and five people were killed at | Tuquerresin. At Popayan the people en- | and | small | swept. resorted to | were tents, and thanksgiving services 22 held on February 21 and Twelve distinct shocks were felt, but it is believed that all danger is over now. | MR. ROOSEVELT NOT ‘ | “A BORN DEMOCRAT” | Perry Belmont Objects to | This Description of the § i President. i Special Dispatch to The Call. | WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—Perry Bel- | mont has written to William Pitt | Mitchell a letter in support of his res- | sons for objecting to references to | | President Roosevelt as “a born Demo- crat,” in an address to members of the | New York Democratic Club, prepared | by a committee of which Mitchell is | chairman. Eelmont says: { It did mot seem to me necessary that the | President’'s name be mentioned at all and to | describe him as a born Democrat was a de parture from accurac as well as from the propriety of such document. President Roogevell's father was an honored office holder under Republican administration, and the Pres- | ident hlmself has been aiways an active and | bitter Republican partisan, unwavering in h hostili to Democratic prineiples and unspar- ing in his criticism of all Democratic leader om Thomas Jefferson to the prisent day, i cluding Cleveland and Bryan. The Preside: [and his Cabinet officers for him proclatm upon | every euitable occasion that he is an orthodox | organization_Republican, | Presid Roosevelt does not cherish a single | ciple of government which the founders of | e Democratic party taugnt. He has lll\l’fl.\'sl Leen and is now a true and consistent diseiple | of Alexander Hamilton. His present apparent | ment with the Democratic party | estion, ‘so far as he does agree | y an_ agreement upon policy, | While we may accept his do} om0 2o further in nis | cy of‘rate regulation than some of the | an leaders are willing 10 go. does D 1 he is even_now supporting the proper | kind of bill to regulafe raflroad ch ! { he has surrendered one of the most vital points In the whole controversy when he assisted the railroads to fnsert in the bill a prov for a | maximum instead of an absolute rate. I} STANP CLERK HAY BE AR | Employe in Postoifice at Pueblo Says the Bathhurst Title and Estate Are His EESSSEITARE SR Special Dispatch to The Gall. PUEBLO, Colo.,, Feb. 25.—A man'who [ claims to be the Iarl of Bathhurst is | selling stamps in the postoffice in Pu- | eblo. The man says he is heir to an estate, the valuc of which is estfmated lat from %$25,000,000 to $50.000,000, and | also to the ldom of Bathhurst in| ngland. He is known to his friends as | xpect ¥ President ‘ f | | Dwight Lawrence Bathhurst. He says that he hzs long been convinced fhat | the present Earl of Bathhurst, who lives on a magnificent estaté at Piren- | cester, is not the rightful Rarl, but a member of a related family. He has | traveled all over the United States and | | has talked to all the members of the | Bathhurst family he has been able to find. He says the American heirs who are interested in proving his rights to the title and estate are about 460 In number, They nave decided to organ- ize an association for the purpose of furnishing money to prosecute Bath- hurst's claim. A meeting of all' who are interested hLas been called, to be held in Bloomington, Ill., on March 3. Bathhurst is a stamp clerk in the Pueb- 1o postoffice, which position he has filled for three years. He claims that he is de- came to this country and settled in Ger- mantown, Pa., In 1750. The father of Lawrence Bathhurst, who was the first earl of that name, dled in 177 and it is the contention of the Pueblo claimant that, owing to the fact that he was ac- tively engaged on the side of the colon- iste, Lawrence Bathhurst was debarred’ from succession. Bathhurst has no trouble in tracing his ancestry back to the Bathhursts of the Revolution. His English cousin, who is acting as Earl, declares t the Law- rence who is supposed by the American branch to have come to this coun died while an infant. . ® Bathhurst is 35 years of age, married and has a son. b | dengér American establishments, ROOT. WRITES OF THE CONGE by Which United States Can Institute an Inquiry NOTE TO CONGRESSMAN Secretary Points Out That Afriecan Problems Are Be- yond American Influence SR TRy ; WASHINGTON, Feb. 25—The atti- tude of the American Government to- ward the couditions in the Congo Free State, and the American desire for some plan for the administration of Central Africa by the several powers ruling or exercising a controlling influence there, are stated in a letter sent by Secretary Root to Representative Denby of Mich- igan. Secretary Root says this Govern- ment has no power to investigate Con- £0 conditions. His letter follows: I have your letter of the 15th.. regarding the widespread feeling among your constitu- ents, that our Government ought to do some- thing (o bring cbout an international inquiry relative to authoritative adjudication of issues o which the conditions supposed to exist in the Conge Free Staie are related. Your_inquiry expresses the difficulty in the was. It ik nof cléar that the Uniied states is in.a_pcsition to. bring avbout such an interna- tional inquiry and aafudication. We are par- Ues 10 & general act jor the suppression of the siave traue and the regulation ot the fire arms and liquor traifics in Central Atrica, but that act relegates and confines all power and func- tlons 1o those ‘ends to the scveral powers hav- ing possessions of spheres of influence in Afri- ca. “The United States has neither, and its participation in the general act was on the distinet upderstanding that we had ho terri- sorial or adminisirative interest in that gnarter. Our only potentlal function s in relation to the search and capture of slave vessels within certain waters of the African coast, and no occasicn has arisen 1o exerciss that function. e ure not parties to the other more commonly ¢lted (reaty of the Congo (signed at Beriin on Februgry 20, 1883). Our treaty relation to the Congo Svate is tkat of one sovereign to an- otrer, Wholly independent of any relations created by or deducible from the general act of Berlin, which applies only to its signatories. Tt is yuestionable whether the treaty rights of the signatories extend to Intervention by any ufie of more of thém in the internal affairs of any of them. The Congo State absolutely denics any right on their part to intervene in its affairs, and none of the othér signatory powers appears to controvert that denial. How. ever this may be, it {s certaln that the United States has no tréaty right of intervention, We couid ‘1ot rightfully summon or participate in any intervational conferénce looking to inter- vention, adjudication or_enforcement of a gen- eral accord by other African powers against the Congo State. Moreover, we are without opportunity or power fo Investigate, conditions in the Congo. We have no diplomatic or consular representa- tives In that country. We could not send any one there excipt with the consent of the Gov- ernment of the Congo—to do otherwise would be rn Invasion of its sovereignty. Other pewers being parties 1o the general act of Berlin, have made ifivestigations through thefr authorized representatives, and the Congo . Government also bas sent investigating commisslons. —The information we have on the subject of Congo misrule comes at second hand through opposits channels, ‘Whenever complaints have been made by the interests in the Congo that the adminlstrative conditions there impair American rights or en- the matter has been brought, promptiy and foreibly, before the Congo Government anc has been met with due assurance of jnvestigation and, if sub- stantiated, full redress, ¢ Iu taking this-courss we act within our ereign rights, directly and without subordinat. ing them to judgment .of any third parties. So far as we Nave rights of our own in the Congo, it would Be impossible 1o submit then} to an international confercuce. 1 most sincerely wish that some way could be found by which Central Africa could be rigntly admiristered by' the “several powers ralng or exercising a controlling Influence thérein 50 as to realize the intention of those powers when they framed the general act of the Congo. Much may be desirable in a way good government in that vast region else- where than in the Congo. If the United States had happened to possess in Darkest Africa a territory five times as great and populous as the Phillppines, we, too, might find good government difficalt and come in for our share of just or unjust critictsm. No such respousibility falis upon us. That per- taing to ihe powers who have assumed con- | trol and undertaken by mutual agreement to regulate its exercise. Very truly. yours, ELIHU ROOT. ——————— CISSICHS THEE BRUTAL REVENCE |Girl Who Shot Chief of Se- cret Police Beaten With Whips and Rifle Butts RETRL S ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. 25.—Great wrath has been arousad in Liberal circles by the publication of a letter from Mile. Spiridonovo, the 17-year-old girl who shot M. Luszhenoffsky, chief of the secret po- lice at Tamboff, in which she describes the indignities and brutalities to which she was subjecte On account of her youth and her f-sacrifice In executing the sentence inst Luzhenoffsky, who was detestcd on account of his cruelty in suppressing. poasant disorders, she had been made one of the heroines of the rev- olution, and is called a second Charlotte 's that after the shooting of Luzhenoffsky, whose bodyguard of Cos- sacks did -not save him from five well- almed bullets, Mlle. - Spirldotiovo was knocked down and beaten-with the whips of the Cossacks and with rifie butts. She was then dragged by her hair downstfairs to . a sleigh by the enraged Cossacks, taken to the police station, undressed and thrust into a damp, cold cell, where she ‘was subjected to eleven hours of torment in order to force her to réveal the names of her accomplices. The girl says that two officers took brutal pleasure in kicking her back and forth across the cell, tearing her hair, burning her flesh with their cigarettes andl threatening her with abandonment to the Cossacks unless she confessed. iridonova Is now in a hospital in a sérious condition. Her skull is frac- tured in two places, cne eve is injured and her body is a mass of bruises from head to foot. The newspapers demand the instant trial and punishment of the two officers, whose names are given, but the vengeance of tie revolutionists probably will antieipate officlal action: The Russ also condemns the organiza- tion “which sent this child on such a mission,” WARBAW, Feb. 25. —Anotheér encounter scended from Lawrence Bathhurst, who | between the National Democrits and the Soclalists, the latter being bent on break- ing up campalgn meetings held by the former, took place today at Praga, a suburb of the city. One man was killed and fifteen were wounded by revolver shots. Troops then surroundsd the hall where the meeting was being held and many afrests were made and a large number of weapons confiscated. ODESSA, Feb. 25.—At § o'clock this aft- efnoon the police suddenly raided the res- idences of thrée anarchists, who in turn threw bombs, which exploded, kiiling a police commissary and the janitor of the bullding and his wife. Thereupon Cos- were Summoned and bombarded ousé, killing all three of the anarch- HOUSE OF HAPSBURG. IN DREAD OF NATRI MONIAL SCANDAL Archduke Ferdinand Karl Decides to Wed Daughter of a Vienna Professor. Special Dispatch to The Call. VIENNA, Feb. 25.—After a compara- tively long period of peace and quiet the ancient house of Hapsburg, is once more threatened with a matrimonial scandal. Archduke Ferdinand Karl, nephew of the Emperor Franz Joset, and younger brother of the heir to the throne, Archduke Frangz Ferdinand, an- nounces his determination to marry Fraulein Bertha Czuber, the daughtet of a Vienna professor. Court circles ars horrified. The Emperor has pro- tested and s0 have all the Archduke's imperial and royal relatives, but so far he has refused to heed them. There weré rumors- of such an at- tachment a couple of years ago and the Archduke was relleved of a high military command, and sent on an ex- tended foreign tour to cure him of his infatuation. He has now returned, but change of scene seems to have made no change in his affections. He is still de- termined to wed the professor's beau- tiful daughter. Because of the Arch- duke’'s nearness to the throne, the af- falr excites- much anxiety and atten- tion. Born ‘in 1868, Ferdinand Karl was the third son of the Emperor’s brother, the late Archdyke Karl Ludwig. His elder brothers dre Franz Ferdinand and Otto. The former Archduke having contracted a morganatic marriage with the Countess Chotek, renounced the rights of succession to the throne on behalf of his children. The Arcaduke Otto, the next heir. is in a very pre- carious state of health, and of his two sons, the elder, Archduke Karl Franz, is also delicate. It will be seen there- fore that the Archduke Ferdinand Karl, as next in successlon to Otto’s sons. is quite near enough in the direct line to make a left-handed marrizge an af- fair of very considerable consequence for the dynasty. WINS LOVE OF ARCHDUKE. Bertha /Czuher. the “burgerlicher” maliden, 0 has won the Archduke's affections, |8 described as being extra- ordinarily beautiful, with®>charming and dellghtful manners. Her father, Emanuel Czuber, is professor of math- ematies in the Vienna Technical Insti- tute and has the offlclal rank of ‘Hofrath.” Bertha made the acquaint- ance of her imperial lover in Vienna, but their opportunities of meeting were much more favorable at Rostok, near Prague, where Bertha's uncle is dlrector of the Nobel Dynamite Works. Rostok is a favorite excursion point for the citizens of Prague, and the Archduke, who was then commanding the Nineteenth Infantry Brigade with headquarters at the Bohemian capital, made frequent trips to Rostok. His attachment to the dynamite director's niece became the subject of much gos- sip, especlally among the ladles of Prague, with whom the Archduke was a great favorite. Of course the news was speedily car- ried to the Vienna court, and the Em- peror was at once informed of the af- fair. Little notice was taken of it in court circles, however, until it became apparent that the Archduké's inten- tions were serious and he really want« ed to marry the professor's daughter. A family council was held and as a re- sult Ferdinand Karl was told that any marriage, morganatic or otherwise, was entirely out of the question. The aged Emperor was absolutely inexor- able and refused to listen to anything of the kind. MARRIAGE IS OPPGSED. Ferdinand Karl appealed to his brothers, but with no better success. His entreaties were especially hope- less so far as Franz Ferdinand was concerned, for he had been the bitterest opponent of the former's morganatic union, protesting that the inequality of birth on the Countess Chotek's side was such that a marriage, morganatic or otherwise, ought not to be enter- tained. And even after the Emperor had yielded an unwilling consent, and Franz Ferdinand was allowed to take his Bohemian bride, his brother Ferdi- nand Karl remained obdurate and abe sented himself from the wedding fes- tivities. It was theéréfore scarcely to be expected that Franz Ferdinand would aid his brother in marrying a woman of far lower sacial rank than the Bohemian Countess.Chotek. So far as Otto is concerned he is probably quite indifferent as to what sort of an alliance his brother contracts. Per- haps to feels that his own love af- fairs have been too numerous and no- torious to give him any particular right to regulate other people’s matrimonial affairs. In the face of such opposition Ferdi- nand Karl was powerless. The Emperor suggested that he should give up his army command at Prague, and take a long leave of absence and spend it abroad. The Archduke accordingly left Prague, and began his foreign travels. After spending some months in Germany he went to the Riviera and thence to Spain. Somae years ago ef- forts wera made to bring about a mar- riage between the Archduke and the Infanta Maria, elder daughter of Queen Maria Christina. The Archduke made several visits to Madrid, but in the end nothing came of it and some four yelr:’ / PRINCE AND DAUGHTER OF A VIENNA PROFESSOR WHO HAS WON HIS anin_____* f SRS ago the Infanta married Prince Charles of Bourbon. It was said that Ferdi- nand Karl found his Spanish cousin pleasant enough, but he couldn't make up his mind to become a natauraliged Spaniard and settle in that country, as he would have t- do, on account of the Princess being the next heir to the threne. GOSSIPS ARE KEPT BUSY. After a long stay in Madrid the Archduke came north again and re- sumed his military career in Austria, but at points outside of Vienna. He has now returned to the capital and his affair with Frauletn Cgzuber is once more the gossip of the hour. Curiously enough, it is said that the Czuber family are by no means keen on the match. The Archduke has more than once formally asked the profes- sor for his daughter’s hand in mar- riage, but the father has discreetly avolded compromising himself in the matter. If the Emperor consented to the match it would be of course an- other matter, but as that is a very un- likely contingency, the ..err professor is holding back. He is not at all anx- ious to see his daughter living in such an exalted circle, having great doubts as to the happlness which she migat find there. Personally, the Archduke Ferdinand Karl is one of the most popular and highly esteemed members of the im- perial family. He has a slender and elegant figure and until a few months ago nad a remarkably boyish appear- ance. Latterly, however, he seems to bhe more reserved and serious and his features have become bronzed from ex- posure to wind and sun while perform- ing his military Auties. He is fond of art and.loves the drama, and was a frequent occupant of an imperial bex at the court theater. He has also taken part in amateur theatricals. But what is much more remarkable in an Aus- trian Afehduke is that Ferdinand Karl takes a keen interest in politics and is an avowed supportér of the German Liberal party, which is not particularly pleasing to the heir to the throne, Franz Ferdinand, who is a strong re- actionary and clerical. Among his brother officers and the general public the Archduke is im- mensely popular. Some years ago, when commanding the Third Tyrolean Imperial Jaeger regiment, he dined regulariy two or three times a week at the officers’ mess, but only after ex- pressly stipulating that there should be no change of tlie meal on his ac- count. His brother officers were quite free to come and go., and appeared in their ordinary undress uniform. One of his first acts after going to Prague was to dispense with police protection, and he frecuently walked home alone to the Hradschin palace from the town at midnight. Public sympathy is entirely with the Archduke and it is hoped that the Em- peror may vet be prevailed upon to permit him to marry the maiden of his choice. There are rumors that the couple are already married, but I am assured that there is no foundation for such a report. praclaf AT IR VALUABLE INFORMATION = AGAINST THE OIL TRU tes Paid. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Feb. 25.— After an all-day conference with At- torney General Hadley, J. F. Marchand of Washington, D. C., a representative of the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, said tonight that he had obtained what he considersd valuable Informa- tion as to the freight rates paid by the Standard Oil and ite alleged subsidlary companies. The information will be used by the commitiee in investigation of charges of discriminationis in rates, and Hadley also was invited to appear before the commission at its meeting in Kansas City on March 12. - military preparations of CHINA RESENTS WAR NEASURES People Regard Preparations Being Made in Ameriea as Decidedly Unfriendly ALARM- IN THE PALACE Empress Dowager Uneasy as Result of Manifestations of Revolutionary Spirit PEKING, Feb. %5.—No official announce- ment has been forthcoming to explain the reason for imcreasing the guard about the palace of the Empress Dowager. All | the information obtainable indicates that the military measures at the palace were only precautionary and were taken be- cause of the widely circulated rumors that there would be trouble here Satu day. The finding of the packages of dyna- mite outside the palace gates, which is somewhat mysterious, probably caused uneasiness, as the court has been ner- vous since the outrage in the Peking rail- way station on September 24 of las when a missile was exploded inside private car, killing four persons and wounding twenty others. It was thought that the car was mistaken for one carry- ing one of the missions ordered abroad to study foreign political methods. The reports of trouble within the palace cannot be corroborated, but they prob- ably are founded on gossip, for which Peking 13 always a hotbed, or are based on the strengthening of the palace guards. The police tonight appeared - without their rifles. The city was never quieter. There has not been the slightest sign of feeling shown against foreigners, nor have the foreigners here any apprehension. Sev- eral parties from the foreign legations are taking advantage of the mild weather to make long excursions into the country. The canard that Saturday had been designated as the day for disturbances is saldeto have emanated from the United States. The telegrams describing the the American Government for trouble in China have been widely published g the Chinese newspapers and are considered as de- cidedly unfriendly. ——————— The Shah of Persia will not sit at a table on which either salmon or lobster is placed. ADVERTISEMENTS. tarrhal Gastritis “For two years I was in 2 very bad comdition. I was treated by a number of emi- nent physicians for chronig catarrhal gastritis and dilata- tion of the stomach, and ob- tained no relief. I grew grad- ually worse, my breathing was so difficult at times that I thought I would die. My heart was in very bad condition from poor circulation and pressure of the dilated stomach. I de- cided it was only a matter of a very short ‘time with me. I was. advised to try Dr. Miles Nervine and Heart Cure, and before I had finished taking one bottle of the medicine I felt like a new being. I took eight bottles of the medicine, and am entirely cured, for & matter of about $8.00 in the face of two hundreds spent in the two years before without relief.” A. D. SLACK, Mastér Mechanic of the L. & G. N. R. R, San Antonioc, Texas. Dr. M Nervine Is sold by your at the 3m refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind And maintains the high reputation of the Henck- els Cutlery. Has stag hree blades of finest eel, is Dbrass lined and steel riveted. rge size. My price. - - » Mail orders promptly filled. LOS ANGELES TIMES ROOM 41, CHRONICLE BLDG, f‘!.”:-l.* 1472, Arthar. L. H;.—hmmin The Times is the sdvertising medium of the Southwest. Cure all Plles. WAY & CO.. Ne o