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anaheim-gazette 1901-09-19

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Dr. Dek P. Yonkerman of Kalamazoo, Mich., claims to have discovered a new tuberculosis cure. In explaining his discovery he says: "I began experimenting ten years ago. Medical men have long known that tuberculosis bacilli cannot live in the presence of copper. One-fifth of 1 per cent solution of copper in a drop of water will kill an entire colony of tuberculosis bacilli in a test tube in 15 minutes. But the trouble has been that science has failed to discover any means by which copper can be introduced into the systems of human beings or any vertebrate animals. The blood of all vertebrates contains iron and not copper, while the blood of invertebrates contains copper and not iron. "It was to the discovery of some means of introducing copper into the blood of vertebrate animals that I directed my experiments, and I have discovered a salt of copper which accomplishes the purpose. I give two substances in solution in milk, and the fat in the milk prevents an immediate union, so that the substances are taken into the system in a nascent state. I introduce hemocyanin, displacing the menoferric elements, or, in common language, copper in place of iron, and the tuberculosis bacilli cannot exist under such conditions. To introduce the copper it is first necessary to exhaust a part of the iron in the blood, and I have found a means for doing this." A Remarkable Operation. Dr. Seyfried, the famous Berlin surgeon, has just received the congratulations of his professional brethren on a successful operation believed to be unique. He removed a portion of a workman's skull, pulverized by the blow of an iron bolt, and filled the cavity with bone from the skull of an ox carefully pared down and carved to fit the hole. The skin was laid over the injury and healed naturally. The patient experienced no ill effects. Red Hair and Rheumatism. Among the various warning signs given by Dr. Still as leading one to look out for rheumatism is red hair. He suggests that this color of the hair may be only the index of some peculiarity, perhaps in the chemistry of metabolism, which produces a soil favorable to rheumatic infection. At any rate, it is one of the many little indications which are sometimes of value in leading to the early detection STUDYING AUTUMN LEAVES. A Government Expert Seeking the Secret of Their Gorgeous Coloring. The Government’s new Bureau of Plant Industry is taking up the problem of how our gorgeous autumn foliage receives its variegated coloring. That is one object of the investigations which are now being made by Albert F. Woods, lately appointed pathologist and physiologist of the bureau. To preserve autumn leaves Mr. Woods says the gatherer should immediately lay them flat between two sheets of new blotting paper spread upon a table top and covered by a stack of heavy books. It is essential that all moisture should be pressed out of them. By this simple process they should be dry within three or four hours. So treated they will retain their beautiful color for years, provided they are not exposed to the direct light of the sun. If not thoroughly deprived of their normally large percentage of water they will soon assume a dirty brown tint. The color of a leaf, said Mr. Woods, in explaining his investigations, is furnished by minute grains of pigment within its cells. What we see in the fresh leaf is not simple green, but a combination of many pigments, which when mixed appear as solid green. Red is one of the color elements of fresh leaves. Reddish coloring matter is usually in liquid form within the sap contained by the leaf cells. Yellow, another normal color element, when combined with green, is the natural shade of the grains of pigment within each cell. Brown is the normal color of the wall of the cell. To explain the leaf of the cell Mr. Woods says that he would exhibit a very thin rubber ball filled with water. He would add to this liquid sufficient red dye to dissolve and color the entire solution. He would add paris green, whose minute grains will not dissolve. Yellow grains changes in leaf tints he would spread upon a table hundreds of green beads, interspersed with others of brown, yellow and red. Then he would take out all of one color, then all of another, and so on, the general shade or tint of the entire mass undergoing a change all the while. Just so in the autumn leaf—when any of its elementary colors disappear the general effect of those remaining clustered in any particular area is altered. If an autumnal leaf turns entirely red this tinting is due to the fact that only its red pigment is left. If it is yellow all of the other coloring has been destroyed, except the minute yellow grains. If the leaf turns brown it can be safely diagnosed as dead. All living tints have disappeared, leaving only the brown walls of the cells. The brown leaf is a dingy ruin, within which every spark of life has been extinguished. “There has long been a controversy as to the cause of the autumn leaf’s coloration,” said Mr. Woods. “Some botanists have attributed it to frosts. We are finding that light frosts, not sufficient to kill leaves, greatly facilitate their coloration by causing an increase within them of a normal chem- Among the various warning signs given by Dr. Still as leading one to look out for rheumatism is red hair. He suggests that this color of the hair may be only the index of some peculiarity, perhaps in the chemistry of metabolism, which produces a soil favorable to rheumatic infection. At any rate, it is one of the many little indications which are sometimes of value in leading to the early detection of rheumatism in a child. Medical Use of Wood Pulp. A novel use for wood pulp has been found. It makes an excellent water dressing for wounds, as it absorbs much water and retains it well, evaporation being very slow. The pulp also retains heat well, so that it will serve for a hot poultice as well as a cold dressing, and it can be medicated with drugs at will without exerting any altering action upon them. To Care Asigmatism. An eminent fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, in England, Claude Worth, is much worked up over the number of squint eyed children in the world. He says that this deformity can be prevented if the parents take the child when it is young and have it treated not only to glasses, but to a daily application of a drop of atropine in the good eye. The Latest Disease. A new disease is announced, hatched full fledged, from the scientific conquests of physicists. "Microbiophilia," the disease in question, is a horror of microbes. This fear is manifested in those attacked by a permanent state of mistrust of all external objects, animated or not, which in their sick brains they consider as capable of giving them some infectious disease. An Opening For Our Medicos. A prominent Liverpool shipowner well known in the United States has just founded an "international fellowship" in University college, Liverpool, open for competition by members of American universities and medical schools. Hydrophobia Fallacy. It is a mistaken idea that merely an angry dogs can cause hydrophobia. The animal must be rabid, at least in the early stages of the disease. How Animal Waste Is Used. The utilization of animal waste presents an extensive field. In the large pig killing establishments in this country and some in England and Ireland there is literally nothing lost save the squeal. An organization in Paris known as the Society For Promoting the Use of Horseflesh claims to have provided Paris between 1860 and 1881 with 67,809,460 pounds of meat. With us the wormout and dead borses come out from factory yards, the flesh as oil for soapmakers and leather dressers and the bones as oil, fat, glue and fertilizer, to say nothing of the large quantities sold for cat's meat. Novel Uses For Peat Wood. Peat wood is adapted perfectly as a material for street paving, being absolutely free from dust, noiseless and exceedingly durable. Natural wood blocks. Country Life Ought, it would seem, to give exemption from the diseases which prey upon the residents of thickly populated cities. But there is no exemption from disease, and in the country, as in the city, one may see the cheeks grow hollow and the eyes grow dull while the frame wastes away with that terrible disease, consumption. Weak lungs are made strong by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures obstinate and stubborn coughs, bronchitis, bleeding of the lungs and other symptoms which, if neglected or unskillfully treated, terminate fatally in consumption. The action of Golden Medical Discovery in the curing of wasting diseases is entirely philosophic, Emaciation, and consequent loss of weight, are among the most striking symptoms of what are known as wasting diseases. The body is not being adequately nourished, and the cause of this lack of nourishment is not lack of food but lack of ability in the stomach and the other organs of digestion and nutrition to prepare the food for the assimilation and nutrition of the body. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and the organs of digestion and nutrition, and so enables the body to be nourished back to strength in the only way by which strength can come; that is, by food perfectly digested and assimilated. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a temperance medicine. It contains no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine or any other narcotic. We are finding that light frosts, not sufficient to kill leaves, greatly facilitate their coloration by causing an increase within them of a normal chemical. THE NEW BABY Opens up a new world to the loving mother. If it is a strong, healthy baby that new world is a world of happiness. If it is a weak, fretful child the new world is full of anxiety. It has been proven in thousands of cases, that the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes all the difference between strength and weakness in children Healthy, happy mothers have healthy happy children. "Favorite Prescription" gives the mother strength to give her child. It makes the baby's advent practically painless and promotes the secretion of the nourishment necessary to the healthful feeding of the nurtian child. "I have been using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and can say it is just what you advise it to be." writes Mrs. Victor J. Haddin. It began taking it just two months before baby can eat and greatly benefited by its use. The doctor who attended me said I did about as well any one he had seen (as I was sick only about three hours), and also that your 'Favorite Prescription' was 'one patent medicine' which did have faith in me. We now have a darling boy, strong and healthy, who weighs three pounds when born on March 15th month he gained three and one-half pounds. Have given him one dose of medicine." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medicine Adviser, in paper covers, sent free receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Address R.V.Pierce,Buffalo,N.Y. STOPS PAIN Athens,Tenn.,Jan.27,1901.Ever since the first appearance of my menses they were very irregular and I suffered with great pain in my hips, back, stomach and legs, with terrible bearing down pains in the abdomen.During the past month I have been taking Wine of Carrot and Theodore's Black Draught,and I passed the monthly period without pain for the first time in years.Nannie Davies. What is life worth to a woman suffering like Nannie Davis suffered? Yet there are women in thousands of homes to-day who are bearing those terrible menstrual pains in silence. If you are one of these we want to say that this same Novel Uses For Peat Wood. Peat wood is adapted perfectly as a material for street paving, being absolutely free from dust, noiseless and exceedingly durable. Natural wood blocks on the other hand, do not resist atmospheric influences sufficiently and soon warp. Peat wood is suited also excellently for railroad sleepers. Screws, rivets and nails become fastened therein as firmly as in the best of oak. Formaline as a Preservative. One of the most remarkable uses of formaline, the new chemical which is a preparation of formaldehyde, is in the preservation of animals collected by students of natural history. This chemical not only preserves the form and color true to nature, but it retains the true posture of the subject treated with it. Government Automobile Line. A regular automobile line has been established by the French government for a distance of 150 miles between the coast and Tannanarivo, the capital of Madagascar. Tananarivo is situated at a considerable elevation above the coast, making the average grade about 6 per cent, but notwithstanding this it is intended to make the trip one way in 14 hours. The first automobiles will be shipped from France, but later a factory will be established on the island, where new machines will be built and old ones repaired. Use Allen's Foot-Ease, A powder to be shaker into the shoes. Your feet feel swollen, nervous and hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures swollen, sweating feet, ingrowing nails, blisters, and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it today. Sold by all druggist and stores for $5c. Trial package free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N.Y. 4p CAUGHT GOLD. "The first day of this year," writes Mrs. Kate Schey, of 716 St. Paul Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. "I caught a heavy cold, which settled on my lungs and brought on a hemorrhage. From that time on until the first of April I bled from my lungs five different times. I was so weak and undone I could only do the lightest work. The doctor told me I was going into consumption. My breath was short and at times I could hardly get my breath at all. This is the state I was in when I began to take Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. After the first bottle I was much better, and I could walk two or three blocks without trouble. My breath was not so short and I was much improved. After taking four bottles I could work all day, and I never felt better in my life. I think your medicine the best in the world and I recommend it to all who are troubled as I was." WILL MAKE AFFIDAVIT. "I was sick for about three months, had chills, fever, and coughed a great deal," writes Mr. W. L. Brown, of McDearman, Jackson Co., Tenn. "Most of my neighbors and friends thought I had consumption. I was reduced in flesh, and was very weak—only weighed 110 pounds; my physician thought there was little hope for my recovery. "My wife went to the store to get some antifibrin, quinine, etc., for me and a friend of mine (Mr. W. W. McDearman), who had been taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery recommended this medicine for me. Finally I decided to use it, after my physician told me that it would be good for me. I sent and got one bottle and before all was taken I weighed 149 pounds—a gain of 39 pounds. I am still taking the Golden Medical Discovery, have taken nearly two bottles, and now weigh 163 pounds, which is more than I ever weighed. I am still gaining strength and taking the Discovery." I wish to say that this is a recent recovery, that only two months ago I only weighed about 110 pounds. "I can and will make affidavit to this full statement any time. If you wish to use this as a testimonial do so, and I will answer all letters from inquiring sufferers." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, containing 1008 pages, and over 700 illustrations, is sent free on receipt of stamps to defray expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 cents for the book in cloth binding. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., BORROMEO THE NEW TOWN AT THE DOOR OF THE OIL FIELD BORROMEO is the newest town in Orange county; it is on Col. J. K. Tuffree's great ranch in Placentia. This ranch is the very gateway to Orange County's splendid oil field and affords a site second to none in the state for a manufacturing town of large size. Tues. Oct. 15 Is the date set for opening the town, and at that time auction sale will be made of a few 10 and 20-acre tracts and city lots. Already a big warehouse, from the site of which San Pedro harbor can be seen, is nearing completion. Streets and alleys of liberal dimensions will next be turned to. Then there is a pipe-line project for the conveyance of natural gas to the city for lighting and domestic purposes and a line for oil for steam purposes. A feature among the most important of all to the coming city is the abundance of both subterranean and ditch water available. Wells on the site produce the finest water in the county. One railroad has been surveyed; negotiations are in progress for another. Railroad companies wanting free right of way should apply to Col. Tuffree Before October 15 THESE MEN LOST THEIR JOBS Expressed Sympathy for the President's Assassin, and Were Summarily Bounced. ed him, telling him that he did want to hear any explanations. Hans Wagner of Casper, Wyoming expressed sympathy with Czolgosza, was tarred and feathered and rift out of town on a rail. The citizens THE NEW BABY Up a new world to the loving life. If it is a strong, healthy baby world is a world of happiness. A weak, fretful child the new full of anxiety. It has been in thousands of cases, that the Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescripkes all the difference between and weakness in children, happy mothers have healthy, children. "Favorite Prescripkes the mother strength to give." It makes the baby's advently painless and promotes the nourishment necessary healthful feeding of the nursing men using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescripkes can say it is just what you advertise," writes Mrs. Victor J. Hadin, of Riley Co., Kansas. "I began just two months before baby came recently benefited by its use. The documented me said I did about as well as he had seen (as I was sick only about babies) and also that your 'Favorite Prescripkes' one patent medicine' which he used now have a darling baby and healthy, well-behaved this month he has finally agreed to ride him out of on a rail, after administering a collar and feathers, and this was done with one dose of medicine." The pierce's Common Sense Medical paper covers, sent free on of 21 one-cent stamps to pay for mailing only. Address Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. It is worthy of remark that if we imagine a sufficiently powerful sensitive and perfect set of eyes placed in a cluster of the Milky Way, at a distance of 5,000 light years, and directed toward the earth, the ethereal throbfalling upon them would reveal history as it was 5,000 years ago; and if these should move toward the earth they would witness all human history as it was enacted through the successive centuries. Thus the nature of terrestrial events is forever preserved and transmitted on through the other infinite space. A COUNTRY ROAD. A dusty, stormy way, whose bord'ring sod is thick with blackberries and goldenrod; Abrupt, bare hills on one side looking down. And from the other you can see the town follow the river's course through meadows green. Or which thick woods and marble ledges lean. Col. Tuffree Before October 15 THESE MEN LOST THEIR JOBS Expressed Sympathy for the President's Assassin, and Were Summarily Bounced. Manuel Silvey, secretary of the Retail Clerks' union of Sacramento, is out of a job. For many years he has been employed in the hat department of the large store of Hale Brothers & Co. When the President was shot Silvey brought to the store news of the shooting. His fellow-clerks expressed abhorrence of the crime. They were asounded when Silvey, applying a vile name to the President, said he ought to have been shot long ago. E.W. Hale, a member of the firm, heard of the incident. He called Silvey to his office, received from him an admission of the facts, and immediately discharged him, telling him that he didn't want to hear any explanations. Hans Wagner of Casper, Wyoming expressed sympathy with Czolgosza was tarred and feathered and ridden off town on a rail. The citizens did this warned him if he should turn he would be lynched. Wagner was knocked down and beaten unintentionally by men who decided they heard him say that President Kinley got what he deserved, and (Wagner) was glad of it. Wagner denied he had made statements attributed to him but dignant citizens decided that the defence against him was conclusively proposed to hang him, but finally agreed to ride him out of on a rail, after administering a collar and feathers, and this was done. The telegraph brings many stories peculiarly feminine. It establishes regularity, dries the drains which women heal inflammation and ulcer and cures female weakness. For women it has advantages over any lar preparation, by reason of its position of a perfect condition of femal health, and because it is free alcohol, and contains no opium, nor any other narcotic. Backache, ache, and the many ailments real from womanly diseases are entirely by use of "Favorite Prescription." "I will drop you a few lines to let you know that I am feeling well writes Miss Annie Stephens, of Bellwood Co., W.Va." "I feel like a woman. I took several bottles of vorite Prescription" and "Golden Discovery." "I have no heart now, no backache, and no more pain my side. No bearing down pain more. I think that there is no need like Dr. Pierce' medicine. I thank very much for what you have done—your medicine has done much good." IMPORTANT TO WORK Dr. Pierce invites and ailing women to suit him by letter or charge. All corrections are regarded as and the written confidences of women are guarded the same strict proficiency observed in normal consultation women at the Invaliety tel and Surgical Intensive Buffalo, N.Y., to whist situation Dr. Pierce consulting physician. Women in general young women in part express their apprehension this free consultation letter with Dr. Pierce only because his social advice is supported by his wise counsel, but because forms them a way of from the indelicate tionings, the offensive animations and objecies peculiarly feminine. It establishes regularity, dries the drains which women heal inflammation and ulcer and cures female weakness. For women it has advantages over any lar preparation, by reason of its position of a perfect condition of femal health, and because it is free alcohol, and contains no opium, nor any other narcotic. Backache, ache, and the many ailments real from womanly diseases are entirely by use of "Favorite Prescription." "I will drop you a few lines to let you know that I am feeling well writes Miss Annie Stephens, of Bellwood Co., W.Va." "I feel like a woman. I took several bottles of vorite Prescription" and "Golden Discovery." "I have no heart now, no backache, and no more pain my side. No bearing down pain more. I think that there is no need like Dr. Pierce' medicine. I thank very much for what you have done—your medicine has done much good." A COUNTRY ROAD. A dusty, rioty way, whose bord'ring sod is thick with blackberries and goldenrod; Abrupt, bare hills on one side looking down. Add from the other you can see the town Follow the river's course through meadows green. O'er which thick woods and marble ledge lean. A little farther, where the road descends, A brook's soft tinkle with some bird song blends (Gone from its edge the dear old dame's small cot). Half hidden by quaint flowers); lush bergamot Makes sweet its banks; its depths the boys still swim. Or watch the minnows from some willow limb. Upon its bridge how often I have stood, Watching the west, whose glory seemed to flood With tenderest light the poorhouse and the graves Beside it—turn to gold the brooklet's waves—Till from the hill, oh, dearest sight of all, I saw my father, and I heard him call! He came with sturdy stride and swinging pall—My hand in his—told my day's whole tale Of joys, that 'neath his bright smile seemed to grow, While lessened was my every childish woe As his sweet words fell on my soul like balm While we walked homeward through the fragrant calm. Mary M. McCarthy in Boston Transcript. Bertie Soppful—I's pose; my boy—aw—that all the acres heh belong to—the aw—squire—aw! Kid (with toothache)—Some on 'em. But I've got arf a dozen achers of me own, and well I knows it! Emergency Ability. "Women have no originality—no inventive genius." "Nonsense. I've seen my stenographer make a memorandum with a hatpin on a cake of soap when she had no paper handy."—Chicago Record-Herald. Artificial Marble. Manufacturers are actually making marble by the same process by which nature makes it, only in a few weeks instead of a few thousand years. They take a rather soft limestone and chemically permeate it with various coloring matters, which sink into the stone and are not a mere surface coloring, as in seaglolla. The completed material takes a fine polish, and many of the specimens are of beautiful color and marking. mother is a barrier of reserve. Just a word of advice or counsel might mean so much to a girl at a time so critical, but she shrinks from asking the question, and the mother refrains from opening the subject, though in the palid cheeks and dark rimmed eyes she reads the signs of woman's suffering. THE NEED OF HELP. There is a real need of help for the young woman. Neglect may pave the way for years of suffering. The dawn of womanhood is one of the crises of a woman's life, and every care should be taken to prevent or cure derangements which may have serious results in later life. "A heart overflowing with gratitude as well as a sense of duty urges me to write to you and tell you of my wonderful recovery," says Miss Corinne C. Hook, Orangeburg, Orangeburg Co., S. Carolina, (care of J. H. Hook). "By the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription I am entirely a new being compared to the poor miserable sufferer who wrote you four months ago. I remark to my parents almost every day that it seems almost an impossibility for medicine to do a person so much good. During the whole summer I could scarcely keep up to walk about the house, and yesterday I walked four miles and felt better from the exercise. I now weigh 125 pounds. I read in your book of testimonials where a lady said Dr. Pierce's medicines were a 'Thousand pounds of comfort,' please let me add one thousand pounds more to it. Mine was a case of complicated female disease in its worst form. "My sincerest thanks-for all you have done for me and a hearty 'God bless you.'" Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the most valuable and reliable put-up medicine ever offered for the cure of dis- Write without fear as without fear R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's offer of free consult by letter is not to be classed with spurious offers of free medical made by men or women who are physicians and cannot legally use medicine. Such advice is not only less, but may be dangerous. In a little over thirty years, Dr. Pierce, chief consulting physician Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institution in Buffalo, N. Y., assisted by his nearly a score of physicians, has cured hundreds of thousands and sick women. The offer of Dr. Pierce puts at service of women, not merely advice, but the advice of a specialist in the treatment and diseases peculiar to women. Sometimes a dealer tempted little more profit paid by less men preparations, will offer a substitute "Favorite Prescription" claiming "just as good." It is not wise or trifle with unknown medicines on "Favorite Prescription" the next which has won the confidence of by its almost countless cures. GIVEN TO YOUNG WOMEN Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Adviser, an invaluable guide to is sent free on receipt of stamp expense of mailing only. "I think that your 'Adviser' book," writes Miss Flora I. Green Howe St., Akron, Ohio,"and a book every one should own. If more would read it instead of trashy there would be healthier women children than there are to-day." Send 31 one-cent stamps for this bound volume or only 21 stamps book in paper-covers. Address V. Pierce, Buffalo, ... Y. THE... UNITED MINES.. MINING CO. Incorporated under the Laws of the State of Delaware Capital Stock $400,000 Authorized Issue. Par value $1 per share. May carry on any business except banking in any part of the world. 20,000 SHARES TREASURY STOCK LEFT AND FOR SALE AT $2.00 Per Share. In ordering shares, address and remit to, and in favor of GILES OTIS PEARCE, General Manager United Mines Mining Co., Santa Ana, Cal. October 15th October 15th GILES OTIS PEARCE, General Manager United Mines Mining Co., Santa Ana, Cal. instances of discharges for disloyal references to the martyred President. Several young men at Hanford, Tulare county, prepared stuffed figures representing Hearst's three papers, the Examiner, Journal and American, and dragged the same through one of the principal streets to a prominent business corner, where they were hanged and burned in effigy. A yellow dog was led in the procession, well blanketed, and representing Hearst. In the presence of a large crowd the figures were strung up across the street. A pile of old Examiners were stacked under the hanging figures and set on fire to illuminate the scene. When the objects were hanged, the leader of the crowd announced: "Ladies and Gentlemen: — There hang the three representations of the yellowest journalism in the world, the greatest upholders of anarchical movements in the United States. The first represents the San Francisco Examiner, the second the New York Journal, the third the Chicago American. The little yellow dog represents Mr. Hearst, but, feeling sorry for the dog, we have clothed him in sackcloth." The leader then gave the signal, and the match was applied to the dangling figures, which were slowly consumed in the presence of several hundred people. The leader was Frank Tiffany, and he was assisted by several well-known young men, who took this way of exhibiting disapproval of the methods used by Hearst's papers in exciting the rabble to deeds of violence and the perpetration of crime by the hot-headed and unthinking class. Working Night and Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into strength, listlessness into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful in building up the health. Only 25c per box. Sold by all druggists. If you are going East and want a through tourist car from Los Angeles, personally conducted to destination; via Ogden or New Orleans; cheapest fare and most comfortable service take the Southern Pacific... THE middle route, via Ogden, Salt Lake City, Royal Gorge and Denver is most delightful for summer travel, and the mountain scenery is equal to any in the world. If you go through New Orleans there are attractions along the route in shape of sugar and cotton plantations, with their mills and cotton gins. There is no difference in the price of tickets to through Eastern points via either route. These personally conducted excursions give service as follows. OGDEN ROUTE Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from Los Angeles at 11:40 a.m. SUNSET ROUTE Leave Los Angeles at 2:00 p.m. Monday—New Orleans. Tuesday—Washington and way. Wednesday—Chicago and way. Thursday—Washington and way. Friday—Cincinnati and way. Saturday—Washington and way. The Shasta route via Portland affords a pleasant and cheap way to St. Paul and common points. Leave Los Angeles at 10:20 p.m. Money saved by patronizing Southern Pacific Tourist Excursions. T. A. Darling, Agt. Women in general and young women in particular express their appreciation of the privilege offered by this free consultation letter with Dr. Pierce, not only because his professional advice is supplemented by his wise fatherly counsel, but because it affords them a way of escape from the indelicate questionings, the offensive examinations and obnoxious local treatments, which offend the delicate sensibilities of modest women. Write without fear as without fee, to Dr. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's offer of free consultation letter is not to be classed with the various offers of free medical advice made by men or women who are not physicians and cannot legally practise medicine. Such advice is not only worthless, but may be dangerous. In a little over thirty years, Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Valdals' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., assisted by his staff of early a score of physicians, has treated and cured hundreds of thousands of weak and sick women. The offer of Dr. Pierce puts at the free service of women, not merely medical advice, but the advice of a successful specialist in the treatment and cure of seases peculiar to women. Sometimes a dealer tempted by the more profit paid by less meritorious reparations, will offer a substitute for "Favorite Prescription" claiming it to be just as good." It is not wise or safe to trade with unknown medicines. Insist "Favorite Prescription" the medicine which has won the confidence of women its almost countless cures. GIVEN TO YOUNG WOMEN. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, an invaluable guide to health, sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. "I think that your 'Adviser' is a fine book," writes Miss Flora I. Greer, of 107 Avenue St., Akron, Ohio, "and a book that every one should own. If more girls would read it instead of trashy novels there would be healthier women and children than there are to-day." Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-ground volume or only 21 stamps for the book in paper-covers. Address Dr. R. Pierce, Buffalo, ... Y. Some Reasons Why You Should Insist on Having EUREKA HARNESS OIL Unequaled by any other. Reinders hard leather soft. Especially prepared. Keeps out water. A heavy bodied oil. HARNESS An excellent preservative. Reduces cost of your harness. Never burns the leather; its efficiency is increased. Secures best service. Stitches kept from breaking. OIL Is sold in all Localities Manufactured by Standard Oil Company. For Catarrh May Never Cold In Head ELY'S CREAM BALM is a positive cure. Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 68 cents at Druggists or by mail; samples No. by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren St., New York City Eight Cheap Excursions East via Santa Fe The places, the rates for the round trip and the dates of sale are below. The other details can be had of the Santa Fe agents. Buffalo, $87 Aug. 22, 23; Sept. 5, j. Louisville, $77.50 Aug. 20 and 21. Cleveland, $82.50 Sept. 5 and 6. The Comfortable Way is Santa Fe J. H. Clabaugh, Agent NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Oscar R. Luecke, deceased. Notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, the above-named deceased, to present them within ten months after the date of this notice, to the County clerk of the County of Orange, State of California, at his office in the city of Santa Ana. W. A. BECKETT, Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange. By R. L. FREEMAN, Deputy. Dated July 30th, 1901. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney for the Estate augs-5t