The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 21, 1906, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1906. MOODY ENDS ARGUMENT] NST THE PACKERS. LOVERNOR 1Dt | AGAI WALLACE FAVORS SEALEVEL PLAN s + SENATE PASSES PENSION BILL ADVERTISEMENT. ot Gl G 000.” The latter figure he deemed am- He has grown strong and 13 now a very - . 3 Attorney Gemeral Moody vesterday concluded his argument In the pro- 1 PHAIS[S wuun "othsf Belle'es Hood s Sal‘- ceedings brought te determine whether the packers are Jegally immune | E > : from prosecution. oody claimed that the beef men must be held to trial 10 B ” * 3 . : e sapan"a Saved son S l_lfe. and Talled upon the Judgc to execate the will of the people. ’Lables From Manila Denying | Former Chief Engineer of Measure Carries an Appro- s P ol = -+ . yeans ! . s g 3 s | Reports of Wanton Killing| Canal Opposes the Locks , priation of One Hundred Bk At e Iasihii B -~ v . . . - s i : % o | ; Befor . Beef Men, He Says,| of Women and Children e Senate Committee ~ and Forty Million Dollars| "ng" control of Muscles. A —_— Must Stand | et R : = An Attack of Paraly Must Stz | (MAJOR SCOTT'S REPORT |PRESENTS HIS VIEWS NO PHILIPPINE FORTS| Aafter piphtheria. ? T, I I‘].il- | | R : 3 i 2 ? . I & “I firmly ‘believe that Hood's Sarsa- A U | Explains Situation in Jolo|He Urges Great Care in the All Provisions for Defensive | varinta saved the 1ite of my son Raiph. = | g Z y . 3 ) . One spring all our children had diph- Calls Upon Judg e| Leading Up to the Battle| Construction of the Dams Works in the ‘Archipelago | tnoria. Raipn was very sick, and when = o = i endon 5 £ for the Great Waterwa inTl he passed the crisis of the discase it e Drobect the 3 B in the Crater of Dajo Tea y Voted Down in UpperHouse | ;o P25 the <raih of O Cnever be L L ! | - ) : - any better. He was weak and misera- > ' WASHINGTON, March 20. — Secretary W‘X;‘SHINGTON, March 20.—John F. WASHINGTON, March 20,—In less | ble, and his limbs gave out. The physi= I L‘(‘vplc- Taft has, received the following cable- |y alace, formerly chlef engineef of the than twenty mintites’ time the Senate | 3 Isthmian Canal Commission, today tes- c { |'gram from Governor General Ide at voted away $140,000,000 of ‘the public . 34 { ! tified before the Senate committee con- funds today. The suym is carried by E GRS et AR | Manfla, - dated today, relative to thecerning the type of canal to be con- the pension appropriation bill, which March A Y P | | Mount Dajo fight: structed across the Isthmus of Panama. brief document was made the subject | | poThe mewspaver reports trom Manila an- m‘t’:‘::::‘-g:: L TR :‘m:x;:;li; of very-little discussion. | nouncing a wanton' siaught women_an : ea-level canal, || children at Mougt Dajo are extremely sensa- | width and = depth, as the best type, The railroad rate bill was laid aside tional and in all essential detalls falve. The |\ oeq ¢h, i ioh ol for the day, and the major portion of | | sitvation occupled by the Moro outlaws, on the | Ur8ed that any other plan which places the time was devoted to the considera- 4 | | crater of xdhfinvo}(‘nnod‘zlflo fleddhlxh‘.'nv;:n‘fl:- ::;rl:"mz!t llnan ”tlhf nlrtobable ll‘m'- tion of the fortifications bill. In that | | ceedingly cult and required a - ency he canal itself,'as well as connection the question of the neces- | play of h 8 d i P N | | has *and""ehe" 15liino “and Moro._Constapu- | UPOR. the speed and tiie size and nm- sity of seacoast fortifications in the N | |1ary, who rendered most valued service. er of vessels passing through it, must Fhilippines was discussed at length, ;( | | Some women and children were killed or |render the canal far less valuable; that Wwith the result that all provisions for §4 ‘wou_nde‘grhby preliminary shelling at a t}u- the deterrent factors in this connec- such fortifications in these possessions u\z\ [ | et T e e e L hemer. | tion are relative time and cost, and that was eliminated from the bill. The con- h N7, | | ing repeatedly to murder our forces, who were | i approaching the discussion the ques- sideration of the measure was not con- P, § \[rescumz‘ wounded Moros. The Moro Suitan | tion of how much money the American —————————— | cluded. R T e rrendie ot s great | PeoPle supposedly are willing to iivest | | FORMER CHIEF ENGINEER | OF There was also 'a briet discussion of = | }s,\'mpml{xy “n;: the course taken to remove the ::_etheutl:‘nnal‘:nd ?tm; m:x‘ch time they ffi:’{"fif ;!LHA% FAVORS THE SEA the power of the conference commit- | | | Eang of cutthroats, who were preying upon willing to walt for its proper ac- 2 tee to amend the bill providing for the | atrea T what. thes mipmsact to” bt tmpens. | COmPlishment should be considered. He |d———————— pupishment for premature divulgencs | o : y | Fahie ooroenes. sald that judged by the capitalization of Government secrets so as to make | C'an 8214 It was an attack of paralyais, |~ There was no killing of any one except such | and dividends now paid upon the stock { the Inhibition extend to Senators and | Wiich sometimes follows dfphtheria. X | ST, iodspemale o a3 aislesoly)| of the Bues canal it Is apparent that rembers of the Hause of Representa. | We did everything, but he srew wor || every resource looking 't a possible adjust- | the rates charged for transit through it tives, but the subject was left undis- | until he lost all control of the muscles | ment had failed. The troops and officers are | ré excessive and that thus a material posed of for the time. of his body and limbs. i | | deserving of the highest praise. saving would be offered commerce by On motion of Clay the appropriation e L . o | | Secretary Taft also has made public an | the Panama route. applying to seacoast defenses in the| o "Were Just about in despair when | | exhaustive report from Major Hugh| ‘“Assuming that the present tonnage Hawalian Islands was reduced to $260,- | Something induced us to try Hood's Sar- s Scott, who was Governor of the Moro | through Suez of say 10,000,000 tons per b 000, to correspond with the estimate | faparilla. For a time we saw little or | | provinces just preceding the engagement, | year would pass through the Panama for those islands. no improvement, but we continued giv- = ——————=*| respecting the habits of warfare of these | canal, even at a dollar a ton, there| . . the thi mddnel P - e | ATIC GENERAL WHO YES- | | people. In this report Major Scott ays: | would be,” he said, “an approximate in- ——— e & ey ey A AR . . | SO A ED i e | | The recent trouble in Jolo had its beginning | cOME Of $10,000,000, which is sufficient s CoRIEhs. WU I fhrve SRORING A NS BN A ST | |over a year ugo, whon o Sula Moro by the | to Justify an expenditure of $300,000,- [ Hiouse Shows Sudden Desire able to attend school part of the time. Miller, al to s made d be an stand un torney General was only without ting in »ns these defend ents t will be a calamity for these defend ey are in- | to be alone of nd have proved pt waived part or his argument to to » ques- t eral he conclusion of his y Gen: ! left ————— “harles Ingra an escape fror at Steilacoom, against | nt of I Jeave | leave | o speak, | b the officia uil | ger. | C | Works of S: | considerabl Maryland law BUREAU, G I SH ON, Only an ‘oast, that It wa o Pacific Coast he Nav: e betwee! Works a from the n the nd the LOAST AFFARS ~TTHECARTAL Navy Department Explains | Why Drydock Dewey Was Not Built on Pacific Slope e POST BUILDING, March 20.—According to of the Navy Department, the »ck Dewey, which Senator Perkins »day sald in the Senate should have been on the Pacific Coast, could not have | been constructed in that section of the country under existing conditions. | contract was awarded to the lowest bid- one bid came from ‘the Pacific | Unfon Iron n Francisco, whose bid was | higher than that eel Company) té which™ the contract was awarded. ealized at the Navy d the drydock have been built there would have been a saving to the Government in tow- age "expenses to the Philippines, but the vas mandatory that the contract be ded to the lowest bidder. It is said N Department that such was Department bids of the Maryland “ompany that even if the contract | ave been awarded to the former it would have cost the Government more | to deliver the dock at Cavite than it will | under present conditions. The of _the neéme of Pala ran amuck in the streets of | Dahud Datto, British North Borneo, and ran | away after killing or wounding twenty-six perdons.. He returned to his cotta on the south side of the Sulu Islands, about fifteen miles from Jolo. An attempt was made to arrest Pala by surprise. His cotta was taken and destroyed, but o escaped to the jungle. General Wood came down with troops from Mindanao to surrcund Pala's jungle and arrest him Gencral Wood was fired upon on the way to Pala’s jungle in the Tambang Pass by the Dajo people. One soldier and several Moros were killed. Many of the Dajo people then ran up on Mount Dajo and began fortitying themselves, The troops went on, fought Pala, who would not surrender, and killed bim, They then went on to Tando Loone, where another band of sympathizers, who had been depre- dating upon friendly Moros, were found in a crater on & mountain about twenty-five mil from Jolo. - By means of an old Moro, who W captured on the way, the chief of the band was | induced after many offorts and long walting | to surrender without a fight to the commander of the force and gave up. his guns. Upon the return of General Wood to Jolo it was considered that the ri aders were dead | and the Morcs had been put¥hed enough and | the expedition disbanded. It was discovered | that Dujo fugitives from the Tambang fight | They put in a were on top of Mount Dajo. crop of rice and sweet potatoes inside the crater and had plenty of water there all the year around. They sald they did not want to fight and only wished to cultivate and reap | thelr crops. A demand.,wes made on their dattps, Joakanaln ‘apd! JKAIL, for14he guns of the ringleaders, which Were surrendered, and they were told to come down and settle below, but that they eould cultivate their crops above 80 as not to lose all their food. They promised to refrain from depredating upon anybody to prevdnt anybody from using the mountainy| as_a ftronghold for thieves. Dattos Joakanain and Kalbi (from whom the Dajo pcople had run away) exerted thelr power of command over them and Kept them - from depredating during the summer and fall. They accordingly caused about a hundred and fifty of the original two hundred reported to be on the mountain to come down &nd settle in their old homes below. A day or so before Thanksgiving I wént to Zamboangd, 100 miles north, and returned about December 1. 1 foundthat during my absence some Moro bad told the Dajo people that the Governor would attack them at day- light on November 30. They all ran away to the top of the mountain, sounded their gongs all night and made ready for the attack. They considered that a state of war on, and | reported that forty armed Moros ere going ple to construct the sea-level canal As to the additional time involved, ‘Wallace predicted that upon a basis “of reasonable energy and the use of proper business methods of administration, a sea-level canal can be fully completed in ten, or to be entirély safe, say twelve years, and a lock ocanal, even.if only sixty feet above the sea level, would require only three years less.” He re- iterated that increased efficiernicy could be secured if the work were handled by a single contracting firm, unham- pered by Government methods and with every incentive to early completion, with possibly the utilization' of two shifts instead of one shift of ten hours. Wallace questioned whether Con- gress would be justified in indorsing the constructfon of any dam of large dimensions, retaining a head of water, say, eighty-five feet, the foundation of which does not extend to bedrock or to some equally reliable stratam. ‘With this situation in view; he said, it is greatly to be feared that the dam at Gatun' proposed by & nilnority board of consulting engineers and indorsed by a majority of the Isthmian Canal Commission might, after some years, b found incapable of withstanding the strain upon it, He pointed out reasons for apprehension on this point, and said his. pemar! this subject applied, though in a Jessér, degree, to the series of dams and barrages holding back a head of fifty-five feet of water, which it is proposed by the minority report to ‘construct across the alluvial valley of the Rio Grande, on the Pacific side of the canal. P 0 If it is decided to d 4 lock canal, Wallace said, then it {§ ta be earnestly hoped only such form of lock canal will be authorizéed as will be admissible in connection with the construction of a dam at Gamboa, where it is positive- 1y known that the primary rock foun- dation exists at mo greater depth than sea level, rather than at Gatun. There for Economy in Acting Upon Appropriation Bill WASHINGTON, March 20.—The House ot Representatives toddy did business with & microscope in one hand and the DIl making appropriations for the salaries of its officers and employes in the other. The resuit was that, although five and one-half hours were spent in reading the legislative appropriation bill for amend- merit, less than twenty-five pages of the measure were completed. The spirit of economy in little things was all-absorb- ing. Points of order were made, and many of them were fatal to proposed Increases in the salarles of officers, janitors, door- keepers, messengers and laborers. A.point of order which made the salary of the superintendent of the engine-room of the House $270 a year, instead of $280, as proposed, caused a constitutional de- bate of more than an hour on the point as to_whether the House could do as it saw fit in the matter of fixing the salaries of 'its employes.: The concluston seemed to be that it could, and that it prescribed its own action by its rules. However, these rules prohibited‘increasing a salary with- out provision of law. - Prince had stricken from the bill on a point of ‘order a provision which gave the clérk of the House authority to discharge Janitors. Some display of temper by members of the appropriations committee was shown when points of order proved fatal, not only to the proposed increases of salary of the sergeants-at-arms and doorkeeper of the House, but to the entire salaries of these officers, as they. remalned unpro- vided for. Littauer made no effort to re- ingert the regular salary, whereupon Fitz- gerald of New York characterized this method of doing business as likely to lose prestige for the House. It was a trick, A POLICEMAN Tllinois~ Attorney General Proposes Method to Put| End to' Reign of Crime CHICAGO, March 20.—A great auxiliary police force, composed of every able-bid- ied citizen of Chicago, in plain clothes was advocated by Willlam H. Stead, Attorney General of Illinols, in a speech on “Crime in Chicago From the Standpoint of the Btate Government' before the Congrega- tional Club last night. Stead pointed out clauses of the State law authorizing citi- zens to make arrests, land prisoners In jail and set the machinery -of justice in motion. He pointed the finger of con- tempt at the man who blames the gourts and the laws while shrinking from his own duty as a citizen. State’s Attorney Healey condemned the segregation of the vicious element in Chi- cago. He declared that & war of sxter- mination was the remedy for thuggery, robbery, murder and crimes unmention- able. He asserted that the people are lotus- eaters when it comes to the punishment of lawbreakers, and admitted that he himself “was not unwilling to shirk his share of the responmsibility” in view of the prevailing apathy. City Prosecuting Attorney Howard S. Taylor blamed the prevalence of the drug habit as a cause of crime, and advocated the municipal suffrage of women as a sovereign remedy for the crime problems which contront the city. ——————— STENOGRAPHER SWALLOWS rugged boy. We.cannot say too much i praise of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a blood purifier and building-up medicine.” Mrs. R. E. Anderson, Cumberland, Me. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood; builds up the system after all. blood- poisoning diseases; gives health and strengfh. Get a bottle and begin to take it today. ORDINARY DEPOSITS The Renters’Loan & Trust Co. Savings Bank 222 Moatgemery St., San Francisce TERM DEPOSITS O about at night to take property from friendly Moros, General Wood ordered two companies of the Nineteenth Infantry to Jolo, as_the cavalry had not arrived from the United States. Datto Joakanain was able to prevent any further depredations. and said that if he was allowed to he would succeed in getting all the Moros off the mountain. All during the month df December he kept them. quiet and he brought in Ahko, who was the most prominent man there. Ahko very muck wanted to get a dog. The Governor gave him one and he went away greatly pleased and did his utmost to make the others come off the mountain. The Sultan and his two brothers, Raja Muda and Datto At- tick, also Majarah Opuras and Sawakain, all influential Moros. went to the mountain and is, he said, no urgency that, to his mind, would justify the great risk of earth dams at Gatun or La Boca. The army engineers, he said, could most effi- clently supervise the contractor, and all the governmental functions, includ- ing policing and sanitation, could easily be performed under the control and di- rection of the government of the canal zone. ‘Wallace pointed out that in consider- ing 'the additional time required for the construction of a sea-level canal the prompt and efficient utilization of the Panama Rallroad is a matter of great he said, and he predicted that the com- mittee would resort to the expedient of supplicating the Senate to restore these salaries, —_——— ARMY ORDERS. WASHINGTON, March 20.—Army or- ders: The army retiring board convened at San Francisco on October 13 has been dissolved by the President. By direction of the President an army re- tiring board, to consist of Brigadier General . Frederick Funston, Colonel Stephen P. Jocelyn, Lieutenant Colonel 5| Senator Flint'’s bill providing for the e a"iects. | payment of $140,000 to the heirs of Wil- ified tod: " liam Pinkerton for money and labor ex- pended on the Nolan Grant was reported favorably to the Senate today from the committee on. claims. The bill appropriating $35,000 for filling the portion of the Honolulu naval station site, known as the reef, with material dredged from the harbor, was favorably reported to the Senate today by Senator Flint. The House committee on Indian affairs will give a hearing on Thursday on Rep- FALSE TEETH IN COURYT LOUISVILLE, Ky., March 20.—John P. Martine, a police court stenographer, lost two of his false teeth today while laughing at Deputy Clerk Shelly, who had taken the witness stand to testify against Fred Zock, charged with drunkenness and disorderly conduct. Zock had applied for a warrant for him- self, and it was issued by Deputy Clerk hat sometimes your won't digest your eat or it may be f t resentative Smith’s bill providing for the )t dyspeptic | purchase of land and water rights for | USed thelr utmost endeavors, @ ot 26 ana | importance. William H. Comegys, Lieutenant Col-| gheily, who also acted in the role of whether | 3, < I sy Genetal ‘Wood about B onel George H. Torney, Lieutenant Col~ m bowels. | Mission Indians of Southern California |(old him the two companies of the Nineteenth ok —_————————— o' Lt e g arresting officer. at a cost of $100,000. Smith, Senator Flint | Infantry would not be needed for the present, | yyen es and Neuralgia From Colds. onel Louis Brechemin an TS eu. Shelly’s denieanor on the stand pro- : little tab- | and Indlan Inspector Kelsey will address |82 the Moros were being kept down by JOIK- | 1 4xative Bromo Quinine, World wide Cold and | tenant. Edwin C. Long, is appointed to | yoked Martine's risibilities to a point - a day, may | the committee in behalf of the measure. | 20ain, and the ovder sending them o 00 | Grip remedy, removes.cause. Call for full name, | meet atSan Francisco for examination | peyond restraint, and with the damage pote 1 possibili- | Friends of the bill have a strong hope of | 08 "N (\iare (the elements of trouble are | 100k for signature of E. W. Grove. . of officers ordered before it. noted. The stenographer's mishap oc- H F T pig Uhe fourse of & | favorable action on 1t by both Houses |ivays somewters in Tolo. & was trouent 1 - pifist Lieutenant George O. Duncan. | casioned considerable merriment among * y —| "The following appointments of San |could leave them as well gs Vo ; - a court ues. DT e el | e follewi apfoinimnte of den | SN S AR Tt R OBCULATUBTASHVICE | /| inees Ciou ool SR 0065 | aolels sha st mppimns ok b " con had not been suis | clamation service: Joseph Jacobs, engl. | Sbgence of AT L o sy were GIVEN BY AN EXPERT |emination. Captain Thomas M. Moody | ) verdict an to Wreck's Cause. WHI be served in the white sal fer of the Stomach he | neer, $3000; Frank Tiechman, $2400; Ivan | aateq January 20 and, the Dajo question not i is relieved from duty at Atlanta, Ga., CANYON CITY, Colo, March 20— gold room every Sundsy Evening » stead of lost—at | Landers, $1000, and C. D. Howe, $1200. being mentloned, 1 sup) the Moros re. | 4 Etl 8 and will proceed to San Francisco and e 2 - x0u w : A% Callfornia. patents were issued today as | mainen uiet, st least uncth cnat date.” 10 e | Actress - Tithel : Green Says|san for aanila about June 15 to re- | Atter belng out two hours, the Coron- | | at §:30 o'clock. art’s Dyspepsia Tablets w. e 4 resumed they got oul - 9 pe . huve cured his Stomach Trouble had | TUOWE: e nd began to depredats on other Moros, Women Do Not Know leve Captain Mazcellus . Spinke, who | 78 1Y ester reported that it could | | $250versiats. Huber's Orchestrn they then been invented. as they have| Atbert C. Calking los Acesles crushing |ascorclne poiche Mom siions Snd b0 toen: How to Kiss. port for further ordérs. not return a verdict until it had heard | | Reservations may be made with S penen. Wh r:a{\:'ré:gny{na"m Past | macna, mowing machine: Augusta S Coop. | don ihe sffort to preserve law and order in 2 —_——— the testimony of Agent Lively and Op- the Maitre &’Hotel, 5 4TS, ho ed just as - erator Van Dusen of Swallows. As er, Berkeley, separator for gas oil, water and sand; Linnaeus T. Ellis Lapark, magazine for bolding tollet paper; Edward J. Ericsson, Ban_ Francisco, automatic feed device; Ferdi- nand W: Krogh, San Francisco, centrifugal 10. e policy of General Wood in that archi- lago has always been to bring about. peace nd order as gently and with as little Toss of life as possible. In every case when it has FILES INCORPORATION. —Martinez, March 20.—The Mountain - Copper Company, Ltd., operating the new smelters at Bullshead Point, has filed articles of incorporation. The cap- 250,000 and all of the capital Epectal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March 20.—*There is no harm in kissing.” At least that is what Miss Ethel Green says, and if anybody aid can readily appreciate that ring all these people, Stu- psia Tablets is helping to rid’'s work done, by leor you neither could be produced, the Inquest was adjourned until Monday. The offi- cers of Pueblo, Denver and other cities have been asked to search for the miss- ital stock s £ people | pump; Francls Martin, San Francisco, mat- necessary to arrest Moros charged with do worse work if they were | tress; James. Mayhew Chino, roller seeding | bime amd hey had Eone into their strong- | ought to.know, she is the lady. is British. With the principel place of business | oo yop ey m be having a great | machine; Charles W. Merrill, Alameda, re- | 1oids-and called thelr friends and relatives “‘lflu et Chte M Hie taes in London. HONED - - c e GROUND- - fining hydrometallurgical products containing NEW HANDLES precious metals; Alfred S. Mitchell, Oakland, ore wash machine; Joseph Silverman, San about them to resist arrest, every possible ef- fort, extending in some cases over weeks and months, has been made to bring about the ar- et way, on the world's 5 many minutes, and there are forty-eight kisses being exchanged within earshot, That Man Pitts therefore, be classed as f the triumphs of science, amongst discoveries, in medicine, mechan- msportation, etc. t remain in your mem- zpon which to act when oc- your vast digest- out of order, you Stuart’s Dys- ge, i to put your machinery d one of the great . i Francisco, telephone attachment; Frank N. Spear, Los Angeles, fine fuel furnace; Firman Vorce, Fresno, adjustable hame clip; Joseph Walker and B. M. Frederick, San Francisco, enimal trap; Gustavus Wangenheim Los An- geles, sanitary garbage can —_————————— PRESIDENT DENIES FURLOUGH TO MAN SEEKING OFFICE Governor of Soldiers’ Home Must Con- tinue at Post While Running for rest without bloo ——————————— WOMAN WHO SHOT GUEST RELEASED FROM CUSTODY Will Not Be Tried for the Killing of the Man Who Insulted Her, KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 20.—Mrs, Ida Donielson, who during the course too. All of these kisses take place at the Casino in ‘“‘Happyland.” In the last act there is a song, “There Is No Harm in Kissing.” Miss Green is one of eight maidens who are kissed rap- turously by eight soldiers. “There is no stage kissing' about it either,” said Miss' Green today. “If you would make a comic opera song go you have to use a’little realism. Since the play opened the giris have been kissed 1008 Market St. Sax Frincisco. BAJQ CALIFO_RN 1A Damiana Bitteprs S A GREAT RESTORATIV 1 . o E. INVIGORA- you will save much use- Congress. | her h here. & Tonte Sexual Organs i to th ergy of a dinner party at her home here on | g3,5,¢ 3000 times— d by the same most phrodistac s af smerEY and| wASHINGTON, March 20.—Secretary | Sunday shot and killed E. C. Harris, & mnfw,' Rorgp iy Horiegl L S e i | romie o e Peane; for Dot : relieve yourself from suf. | Taft, acting under instructions from | painter, one of her guests, because of | yagreals’ You see, there are many verses u’a.g. + Sene R 0 S weakness, premature | the President, recently wrote to Gen- | an insulting remark, was discharged | y;"tne song, and nearly always three en- B, “ALsS 5 h, eral MacMahon of the Soldiers’ Home | from custody today. cores, and then we rehearse -every day, s 5T, 8=ND RSan, : h ‘: flnv !‘\‘!n ;«rl':‘"rd’fl"!':: ';‘nl; | Board that it was not considered to be and when theé play ‘was being rehearsed 3 the most medern teachings bes ible with public interest for kissl ‘ sientific schools of health, hygiene ana | SO nPatible wi 2 ; e for the opening we had to do that ng B Eoma 3t will be 6 Somr igvand i George W. Steele, Governor of the NEW ADVERTISEMENTS: .. | 1ohe so ‘maiy times: that thera lsw't & me these facts to heart home in Indiana, to have a furlough girl in the number who isn't an expert GUNS 5522 2ot hek ate Try Stuart’s Dyspep- | while he made a campaign for Con-| Why Many Women Suffer | 8,1 (b nimber orca #in Tablets today gress. e > SHRE' BaroEm | Steele formerly was a member of the From Constipation e i 1s . ) st anden FOR BARBERS, BAK- ers, bootblacks, bath- BRUSHE House and was defeated by Frederick | iLnndlsv Landis is a candidate for re- The Natural Remedy supposed to be a woman's alluring charm. It is, too, but it is a shame to desecrate bouses, billard tabies, | glection and Steele is seeking his old brewers, bookbinders, candy makers, canners, , 3 | it. Think of the women who fancy a diers. flour mills. foundries, laundries, paper. § POSition. ~Complaint has been made| ... gejjcate and intricate character | kiss is nothing more than a puckering SAN FRANCISCO, Qab, Masch 1T 1908 hangers, printers, painters, shoe factories, sta- | that Steele is using his position to aid £ the fORAIE: orgkie e thegh most | nip and Brotruding oFins Hpk . The. real Sealed )lw-::- .'glhu. be re- e g him dnd that his influence with over | O e TER8 2 RS R G Por the | kiss should be receptive and initiative at A e AMITIR Sele ey PPONAES L BN 3000 members of the home will be to | *SCePUble to IrieE B brtant thot [ the, same time: Io e ridiculons Yor @ Opened, for furiishing, during the Ascal yoar Brush Manufacturers, 809 Sacramento St | the disadvantage of Landis. same reason it is most impor: that | the e g commencing July 1. 1906, wood and coal for: FRlp cach one should be kept {n conditlon to | woman to stick her lips ou ugly Fort Rosecranis and’ Presiflo of M, P ONCERTS OUSE WILL DISPOS) perform its functions in a normal man- | pucker when she wants to kiss. | fuel ofl for Fort Rosecrans, Cal; aiso at POP C HOUS L B raas DeTLOT} All of the pecial periods when | “How do I know women don’t know Saime ime."at"this otfce Sul. for wao aid Instrumental and Vocsl. Every Tues.. Thurs. ¥ _STATEHOOD BILL | yomankind Js performing the functions | how to kiss? 'Well, I’ certainly am not Y2 ¥ Bk, Benicla, and Ssturday Afternoons, bet. 8 and B, &t | L oo B ment fo Comt peculiar to her sex there a decided | basing my remarks upon my knowledge Miley, Presidio of San Francisce, San .-...l ",'.' ZINKAND’S 0 Conference | {ongency to sluggishness of the bowels. | gained from kissing women. The way cisco, Cal., and Depot of Recruits and Cas. After Forty Mimutes of Nature then requires a gentle assistant. | women kiss one another is—well, it is to E:._u-u Island, and fuel ofl at Fort Debate Today. Not powerful and expensive drugs, that laugh.” % ', Fort Miley and Presidio of San Fran- WASHINGTON, March 20.—The | must be taken at frequent intervals . 5 “ glaco, Cal, Al during facal year commiemcing’ - statehood bill will be taken up n the |8nd are so drastic as to das % the Accused of Steallng Gas. reject ‘or ‘any or ail Bids. o sy gave. House tomorrow under the protection | (RTINS ST 1he TOMASH SRCDOWE | MITWAUKER, wis. | March - 20— Do Prefarencs given "t Stk "o 4 ©of a special rule, the adoption of which | o pure and harmless laxative such as | Charles Ross, a retired hardware dealer, American ‘production, conditions of " quality: Y will be the necessary step on the part | js the famous Natural Mineral Water— | was arrested today, char; with steal- price G Sty e m), m.‘m ; of the House to get the bill into the | HUNYADI JANOS—one dose of which |1 5 $26,000" worlh of sas in the past B0 mach oreterenca_siven 10 seiien ¥ 6\ hands of a conference committee of the | will move the bow::nrnuhbut copi- | seven years by tapping the Milwa American production produced on the Pacifie - | Benate and House. Forty minutes' de- | OUSiy in a natural er. The dose 1s | &oVSh Veals by t ¥ mm Coast 10 extent of conmumption required. ro B e S v Tt | nb ik st | S Somereyt 2, R oot o e d opponents of the rule, when a vote | 1. 3 4 S b=~ y ""‘W cures Spraine, Brulses, Mosquito Bites, Stings of | 27 ® | sulte). One hottle contains many deses | leged the building was heated by stolen and of Thnecis Eunturss, Burns, Toothache, Headache, | Will be taken. “land costs but a trifle at all Drugglstet (gas ¢ .. oo © - INO. L. CLEM,

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