GRIEF HOMERS WILLREPLY FIRST MAN To Sick Ones PEKIN. · 2017. 12. 17. · have perfected a remedy...

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To Sick Ones I Will Send You Help If You'll Ask It. Send no money—just a postal, stating which book I shall send. 4 Simply write me—as thousands do every week—to tell me that you need help. Then I will do this:—l will mail you an order on your drug- gist for six bottles Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Tou may take it a month on trial. If it succeeds, the cost is $5.50. If it fails, I will pay the druggist myself—and I will leave the decision to you. I do that to convince you—to prove my faith in myself. I have perfected a remedy so unusual—so nearly certain —that I want all who need it to have it I have made my offer so fair that no doubt or prejudice can deter any sick one from ac- cepting it. In the past 12 years I have furnished my Restorative to over half a million patients, on trial. My records show that 39 out of each 40 have paid for it gladly, because they were cured. The rest had the month's test free. My Restorative is the result of a lifetime's work, in learning how to strengthen the inside nerves. It is the only remedy that can bring back the nerve power, which operates the vital organs. A weak organ means weak nerve power. It simply lacks the strength to do its duty. It is like a weak engine that only needs more steam. With the old way we doctored the organ itself, and the re- sults at best were but temporary. The results of my Restora- tive are permanent, and they are absolutely certain, save where some cause like cancer makes a cure impossible. _ With this remedy I have cured cases as difficult as physi- cians ever meet; and I have rarely found a chronic case that could be really cured without it. My book will tell you why. If you don't need it, please tell me one who does. Book No. 1 on Dyspepsia. Simply state which book is want- gook No. 2on the Heart. , , \u0084 Book No. 3 on the Kidneys, ed, and address Dr. Shoop, Box Book No 4 {or Women . 761, Racine, Wis. Book No. 5 for Men (sealed). Book No. 6 on Rheumatism. t Mild cases, not chronic, are often cured by one or two bottles. &i Dr. Shoop's Restorative is sold by all druggists. . The Matriarchal Age, When Women Ruled the World BY HUBERT M. SKINNER. The word "patriarch" has been in use for thousands of years, and whole libraries of old books have been writ- ten concerning the patriarchal age of eoci'ety. The stories of the patriarchs are numerous in the earlier Scriptures, and are familiar to all. "Matriarch" is a new word with us: for it is only in these new and glorious days of "the new woman" that we have come to have any conception of the true old woman of the primitive ages. The philosophical world was really in need of a new subject for speculation when, by a stroke of genius, this new and startling theme was originated and its discussion precipitated. And doubt- less today there are dozens of pro- found thinkers and patient investi- gators who are writing books on the matriarchal age, which they fondly hope will bring them fame and for- tune. Thos; who love to study the growth of institutions among men take de- light in the pages of Sir Henry Maine, "who seemed to have gone back to the beginning of human society. Back of the ancient republic was the king; back of the king was the chief of the tribe; back of the chief was the pa- triarch, who ruled his family and pervants, including all their descend- ants —and these were mar.y in the times when the span of human life Mas long, and when polygamy pre- vailed. But since Sir Henry passed away (fifteen years ago) investigation has been pushed much further back, and to the imaginations of men the won- derful matriarchal age has been re- vealed. Ridpath, in his college lectures, used to depict the simple courtship and marriage of the primitive man, who stole out in the witching hour of sun- set, with throbbing heart, to the path- way frequented by the beautiful maid- en whom he had seen, hid himself behind a. tree or a rock as she passed unsuspectingly by, knocked her down •with a club, and carried her off on his shoulder! Passing back to the matriarchal age, are we to depict the reverse of this? Did the square-jawed Amazon fix her affections upon some stripling youth of graceful form, seize him with one hand by his uncombed hair, and with the other cowhide him into re- turning her love? In the ages of civilization, and gen- erally also of barbarism, woman has been subject to man. In a large part of the world today she is his slave. In a war of the sexes, in almost any age, women could have been easily exterminated, through the superior strength of men. In any isolated re- gion, however, if by any cataclysm of nature, or through a successful con- spiracy, the men could be all cut off at once, it would be-possible for the Star Brand 3|fT| Cents wv per pound Extra good is Milton's "Star Brand" Butter. No other kind is Just as good. Extra care is taken to have extra good milk, from which we skim by centrifugal process the richest of sweet cream, and make this extra good butter. You might know there Is something extra about it by the vales. More "Star Brand" is sold in St. Paul than all other brands com- bined. M'hen you can buy this excellent butter for 30 cer.ts per pound, packed In two three and five- pound jars, delivered at your horns the day It is made, why will you icnger tclerate the or- dinary kird? Telephone for jar any time. MILTON DAIRY GO. Cor. 9th and Wabashi Sts. women to maintain their supremacy thus obtained by killing their male infants generally and rearing only a few tractable and favored ones among them, to remain servile members of the body politic. This would seem to have been the case in the Isle of Lem- nos, in ancient days. The history of Russia in the eigh- teenth century shows how ambitious women, once In control, could keep down the men of their families by the repression and rig-or of the early train- ing of the latter. Elizabeth and Cath- erine 11. seemed bent upon perpetu- ating the sway of Amazons in that empire. But the story of Lemnos could not be duplicated except in some place equally isolated from the great world. The theory of the philosophers of to- day, however, is that it was not a war of sexes that precipitated the ma- triarchal age, but exactly the opposite. When men stole their wives from the tribes of their foes the luckless females were torn away from their kindred, and had no friends. They became the trembling slaves of their captors. In a preceding age, however, this was not done. The young men who had been brought up in one com- munity, which was practically all one family, with no distinction of father or uncle, brother or cousin, were led by a natural instinct to seek wives else- where. They left their own kindred and identified themselves with the tribes or families of their wives. The wife, being surrounded by the strong influences of her relatives, had an ad- vantage over her husband, who was only a stranger, and on trial..-. Hei children were loved and honored for her sake, and not for his. They took their names and their inheritance from her. Descents were reckoned only in the females'line. As to one's father, it was a matter of little moment Le- gitimacy cut no figure. The mother could always- be identified, in any event. Kindship then had reference al- ways to the mother. So far as stories of ancient myth- ology go, the matriarchal age would seem to have been a period of sex war, when the women dominated the men by physical force and by the cunning which was allied with it. The Amazons come up repeatedly In classic fable. They were a warlike nation of women. Hercules fought with them, and carried away the girdle of Omphale, their queen. Thesens carried : away the queen her- self. The Amazons invaded Greece to rescue her, and she was slain In the struggle. Bellerophon defeated the Amazons in their own country. They came forth under their queen, Pen- thesilia, to aid the Trojans in the war of Troy, and Penthesilea was slain by Achilles. The story of the Danaidee tells of the slaying-, all but one, of the fifty husbands of the daughters ot Danans. The dark story of Liemnoe also points to a deadly sex hatred. Philology, however, and the primitive customs of some surviving tribes Indi- cate that, in a matriarchal age, the women rule by love and kindness. Kin, of gens, was reckoned through the mother, as stated above. Our words "kindness," "gentleness," etc., are de- rived from them. Perhaps, after all, it was only love and respect that were the basis of female rule. And It may be that the female head of a family or tribe did not actually rule, in many cases, but only gave her name to her followers, all rights being Inherited through her. In fact, some of the more cautious writers of the present prefer to speak of the system of society con- templated as the "metronymic system," indicating that it was merely a sys- tem of tracing family relationship and descent, as we have now its opposite, the "patronymic system." But they must not be allowed to cheat us of our matriarchal age, which we have so lately discovered. With its elusive evidences of novelty and surprise, we must leave it to talk about and write about for at least the first decade of this new century. Here's to that glorious age of old, when wo- men ruled the world! Whether It ever existed or not, does not matter. Bring on your discussions, your controversies, your reviews, your poems, your pic- tures and your statues relating to that marvelous era. The public Is waiting for them. PRESIDENT DISCOURAGES THE "WATER CURE" Disapproves Findings of Court-Martial In an Officer's Case. WASHINGTON. D. C. Jan. 17.—Final action has been taken by the president and secretary of war in the case of First Lieutenant Edwin A. Hlckman, of the First cavalry, one of the officers tried by court-martial by direction of the presi- dent on the charge of having administered the water cure to Filipino prisoners in or- der to extort information regarding the j movements of native bands of maurau- ders. The military courts exonerated them The president simply wrote "Disapprov- ed, meaning thereby to discourage the use of the "water cure," without how- ever, affecting the judgment of the court- martial i n acquitting the officer on the general ground that its employment in this instance waa justified \»y the clr- THE ST. PAUI, GLOBE, SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 1903. CRAZED WITH GRIEF ANTON STEIDL SUICIDES His Wife Died Recently and He Could Not Stand Life's Loneliness Physicians Try Hard to Save Him but They Fail to Arouse Him From Stupor Caused by Poisonous Mixture. Crazed with grief at his loneliness consequent upon the death of his wife three weeks ago, Anton Steidl, a baker, at 480 Greenwood avenue, committed suicide some time during the early aft- ernoon yesterday. The first intimation given of Steidl's intention was when a friend, George Hale, 402 St. Anthony avenue, received a letter late in the afternoon saying: "When you have received this letter I will be dead." Hale hurriedly went to the Steidl residence and found the man in bed quite unconscious. A doctor was sum- moned who expressed little hope for his recovery, and after his removal to the city hospital in the police ambulance he died early last evening, after the doc- tors had worked continuously to save him. BIRD FANCIERS WILL FLY HOMERS Poultry Association Makes Plans for Minneapolis Exhibit. St. Paul members of the~ Minnesota State Poultry association-last evening met at 51 West Third street and made arrangements for having their birds transported to Minneapolis, where the association is to give an exhibition Jan. 28 to Feb. 3, at 25 and 27 Fifth street south. This is the seventeenth annual ex- hibition of the association, and it is expected that it will be larger and more attractive than any previously held. There are about seventy-five members in St. Pau4 and many exhibits are expected from here. A committee was appointed last evening to attend to the shipping of the birds to Min- neapolis. Henry Gruenhagen. who is chairman, will, if notified, attend to having exhibits delivered to express companies for transportation to Min- neapolis. There will be about 3,000 birds, as well as many cats and other pets in the show, and many features have been arranged, including a special event on Jan. 29. Dan Patch, the race horse, owned by M. W. Savage, will run on the ice track of Park avenue driveway and endeavor to break the world's record of a mile in 1:59 1-4. Fifty homing pigeons will be liberated each day by the Twin City Homing Pigeon club. These pigeons will be divided into classes of 100, 200 and 500 miles. "Albina Bay," a homing pigeon having a 1,000 miles record, owned in Indiana, will be on exhibition. Admis- sion tickets will entitle holders to chances of fine bred birds, several pairs of which will be given away each day. Saturday several pairs of pigeons will be given away to children. The same day a white a"ngora, cat will be Just what the nature of the prepara- tion he had taken was not known at a late hour last night, though it was sup- posed to be an opium mixture. Despondency over the death of his MEDICINE MEN OF MACCABEES DR. C. H. COLLIER. The visit of Dr. R. E. Moss, supreme medical examiner of the Maccabees, is expected to be an important event among the Maccabees of St. Paul. Many plans have been made for the entertainment of the supreme officer, and local Maccabees will turn out in large numbers to attend the celebra- tion in his honor. wife is the only reason that can be as- signed for the deed. Steidl had been a St. Paul resident for thirty years and conducted a bak- ery at Greenwood and Winifred. He was fifty-eight years of age and con- sidered to be well off. He leaves a daughter twenty-one years of age, and two sons, twenty-six and twenty-eight years old, respectively. An autopsy was performed last night. CROWN PRINCESS OF SAXONY LEAVES SWITZERLAND She and Giron Travel South Under Assumed Na|mes. GENOA, Jan. 17.—The Crown Prin- cess of Saxony and M. Giron left Swit- zerland secretly this evening. They traveled south under assumed names. BERLIN, Jan. 17. —The legal repre- sentatives of the Crown Prince and Princess of Saxony have arranged the terms for their separation. The prin- cess abandons all the titles, rights and dignities appertaining to her through her marriage and resumes her maiden name. The crown prince has expressed his willingness to pay her $7,500 year- ly. The agreement does not mention the right of the crown princess to see her children. CALUMET, Mich., Jan. 17.—Fred Mac- Kenzie, editor of the Copper Evening News, and for thirty years clerk of Calu- met township, died today, aged seventy- two. He was born in London and came to America in 1865. Heart trouble was the cause of death. He lea-yes a widow and grown children. Michigan Editor Dead. AN OBJECT LESSON In a Restaurant. A physician puts the query: Have you never noticed in any large restaurant at lunch or dinner time the large number of hearty, vigorous old men at the tables; men whose ages run from 60 to 80 years; many of them bald and all perhaps gray, but none of them feeble or senile? Perhaps the spectacle is so common as to have escaped your observation or com- ment, but nevertheless it is an object lesson which means something. If you wHI notice what these hearty old fellows are eating you will observe that they are not munching bran crack- ers nor gingerly picking their way through a menu card of new-fangled health foods; on the contrary' they seem to prefer a juicy roast of beef, a properly turned loin of mutton, and even the deadly broiled lobster is not altogether ignored. The point of all this is that a vigorous old age depends upon good digestion and plenty ot wholesome food and not upon dieting and an endeavor to live upon bran crackers. There is a certain class of food cranks •who seem to believe that meat, coffee and many other good things are l-ank poisons, but these cadaverous sickly looking indi- viduals are a walking: condemnation of their own theories. The matter in a nutshell Is that if the stomach secretes the natural digestive vjuices in sufficient quantity any whole- some food wiil be promptly digested; if the stomach does not do so, and certain foods cause distress, one or two of Stu- art's Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal will remove all difficulty because they supply just what every weak stomach lacks, pepsin, hydro-chloric acid, diastase and nux. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do not act upon the bowels, and in fact are not strictly a medicine, as they act almost entirely upon the food eaten, digesting it thoroughly and thus gives a much needed rest and giving an appetite for the next meal. Of people who travel nine out of ten use Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets knowing them to be perfectly safe to use at any time and also having found out by expe- rience that they are a safeguard 'against indigestion in any form, and eating as they have to, at all hours and all kinds of food, the traveling public for years have pinned their faith to Stuart's Tab- lets. , All druggists sell them at 50 cents for full sized packages and any druggist from Maine to California, if his opinion were asked,- will say that Stuart's Dyspepsia .Tablets is the most popular and successful remedy for any stomach trouble. DR. E. HUBBELL. He will arrive in St. Paul this morn- Ing from Chicago, and will be enter- tained by members of the various tents today. Tomorrow evening the commanders and other officers of the tents of the Twin Cities will give a banquet at the Ryan hotel, and in- formal speeches will be made by many of the officers and members present. Tuesday, at Bowlby hall, there will be a class of fifty candidates initiated given to a lady. The annual meeting of the association will be held Jan. 29 and the Commercial club, of Minne- apolis, will tender a banquet to all exhibitors. Many premiums have been secured, including twenty-two silver cups, for- ty-five other special prizes, and cash prizes amounting to $1,400. The judges are Sharp Butterfield, of London, Ont.; J. D. Lambert, Opponaug, R. 1., and Geo. D. Holden, Owatonna, Minn. R. W. Wales, of lowa City, will judge the pigeons, and Mrs. Hampton Lane will judge the cats. The birds and pets will be exhibited in uniform coopß, and the score card system of judging will be employed. All the railroads in Minnesota have granted a special rate of vne, fare and a third for the round trip from points in Minnesota for visitors to the show. This privilege is also extended to points fn Wisconsin where; the rate does not exceed $1.50. C. 'A. Smith, president of the association, ;aTid G. A. Loth, assistant secretary, of Minneapo- lis, last evening came over to St. P^ul and conferred with St. Paul ( members at the meeting. WOULD-BE SUICIPS IS PICKED UP BY POLICE James Carroll Found on Doorstep With Razor in His Hand. Officer Aynsley found James Carroll at the foot of the steps of the Pittsburg hotel on East Seventh street shortly after midnight with a razor in his hand, declaring his intention of committing suicide. Upon investigation it was found that his leg was in a plaster cast, bro- ken, and that he was walking on crutches. The wagon was summoned and when the man arrived at the station he was recognized as one who had fallen, while intoxicated, in front of the Man- hattan building on Dec. 6, and had broken his right leg. He had been sent to the city hospital, where he remained till yesterday, when, for some reason, he was allowed to go. Carroll was in no condition to say why. He told the police that his home was with his brother-in-law at 23 East Fifth street, that he was a railroad man and that he was penniless and was in much pain. He denied all in- tention of wishing to destroy himself, and even denied the owner-ship of the razor. He was detained at poMce head- quarters till his friends could be com- municated with this morning. MOST IMPORTANT TO MRS. MAYBRICK Will Lose Fortune If Not Released in Time to Testify. RICHMOND, Va., Jan. 17.—Mrs. Florence J. Maybrick and her mother, the Baroness yon Rogues; will, it is said, lose all title and interest in 2,552,302 acres of land is Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky, valued at $7,500,000, unless Mrs. Maybrick is released from prison in England in time to testify in a suit now pending in the chancery court of this city. Charles O. Saville, clerk of the court, said tonight that the suit had been filed in the chancery court about seven years ago by Judge Leo D. Yar- rell, of Emperia, on behalf of Mrs. Maybrick and her mother, and had been in the court ever since. lie did not know, he said, that any time limit was about to expire. Episcopal Clergyman to De- liver a Series of Sermons on Subjects Touched on by St». Paul Doctors Who Will Help Entertain the Supreme Medical Examiner. DR. E. H. HAAS. Germany and Venezuela. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral One dose at bedtime pre- vents night coughs of children. No croup. No bronchitis. A doctor's medicine for all affec- tions of the bronchial tubes and lungs. Sold for 60 years. £&&?£&: DANIELS WILL REPLY TO ARGUMENTS OF PAULISTS Fathers Harney and Con- way—Priesthood and Ca- tholicity Will Be Among Subjects Discussed. Some of the Episcopalian clergymen of St. Paul have been aroused by the recent mission to non-Catholics at St. Luke's church to an attitude of op- position and some polemics may be looked for. It is the intention of Rev. Mr. Dan- iels, rector of St. Phillip's Episcopal church, upon his return from the East, to rebut in a series of sermons the statements made by Paulist Fathers Conway and Harney during the course of their mission held for the past two weeks in St. Luke's church. Among many other matters that will form the subjects of sermons will be "Catholi- city," "The Priesthood," "The Doc- trines of the Episcopal Church." It is the contention of the Episcopal church dignitaries of the city that there are many things of interest that might be spoken of in these proposed sermons. Chief among them are "The Anglican Priesthood" and "The Insuf- ficiency of the Edwardine Rite." A churchman said to The Globe that in honor of the visit of Dr. Moss, after which degree work will be exemplified by the degree team of Unity tent. Dr. Moss will leave St. Paul "Wed- nesday morning, and will spend the remainder of the ween in Minneap- olis. He is on a tour of the cities of the country visiting Maccabees. This is the furthest West he will go. He has his headquarters at Port Huron, Mich. the letter to Leo XIII. from the arch- bishops of Canterbury and York still remained unanswered. W. L. Cullen, in a note to The Globe yesterday, said: "There is a widespread feeling amongst clergy and laiety of the Episcopal church in St. Paul that the Paulist Fathers during the past two weeks, through their method of the 'question box,' have used this as a medium for misrepresenting the Epis- copal church." Anglican and Evangelical clergymen generally do not care to discuss the proposition. APPARENTLY DEAD BODIES ANIMATED New Fluid That Gives Life to Decapi- tated Animals. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 17.—Dr. George W. Crile. a member of the Cleveland Medical society, has con- tributed an article tao the current Cleveland Medical Journal announcing that through the use of a fluid called "adrenalin" life can be restored to ap- parently dead bodies. The article says: "By the combined use of inhavenous infusions adrenalin, ar- tificial respiration and rythmic pres- sure upon the thorax over the heart, dead as long as fifteen minutes were restored to life. Animals decapi- tated were made to live ten and one- half hours." Dr. Crile states that the adrenalin Is an extract obtained from the glands directly above the kidneys of animals. It had been used heretofore for increas- ing blood pressure both in human be- ings and in brutes. The discovery is the result of recent experiments in vivisection by Dr. Crile and other phy- sicians of Cleveland. BERLIN, Jan. 17.—1n the negotiations which are about begin at Washington, Great Britain and Germany as the result of further correspondence, are Quite de- termined that the irriducible condition of arbitration is that President Castro shall pay or give collateral security for the sum already specified. The powers will not consent to raising the blockade until Ven- ezuela complies with this unalterable con- dition. The allies place the possibility for further delay upon Venezuela. Scientific Miscellany Astronomically Speakfng. Jaggsby—l understand that Miss Fcote Lyte has become quite a star. Waggsby—She was. my boy; but since that awful tale has come out on her she's a comet.—Baltimore American. Two coats of hot oil, carefully applied after thorough cleaning of the metal, are recommended by a Canadian artisan as an improvement over any process now in use for preventing rust of structural iron and steel. The oil would fill crevices cracks and holes where paint cannot en- i ter. It would cover rough places often imperfectly coated in ordinary painting and it would be a fine preparation for subsequent painting or covering with ce- ment coating. Arsenic, the dreaded poison that Prof. Armand Gautier. of Paris, asserts is es- sential to life, proves to be disseminated in the primitive rocks from which sea- water derives its store. The minute quan- tity taken in the food becomes localized in the skin and its appendages, the thy- roid and mammary glands, the brain and the bones, and It is stated to be the ex- citing ferment of the functions of sensa- tion and reproduction just as phosphorus Is the exciting element of the-functions of cellular nutrition. Some of the giant sequoias of Southern California are estimated to be from 5,000 to 8,000 years old having perhaps spanned the entire period of written history. A section in the American museum of natur- al history was cut from one of these trees at a height of twenty feet and is a little more than eighteen feet in diameter, and its concentric rings show that it began its growth in 550 A. D., the tree reaching a diameter of thirteen feet at Columbus' landing. "Nieves penitentes," slightly inclined snow columns resembling shrouded figures doing penance, are a peculiar phenom- enon or the Andes to which Sir At. Con- way has given attention. They are the lost remnants of drifts or slides which have become hardened in nearly vertical strata of different densities. Various drugs are enumerated by Dr. Schweinitz. as liable to produce forms of amblyopia, •or weakness of vision. Qui- nine in moderate doses may cause dimness of sight lasting for several hours, and in large doses it may give rise to sudden and almost complete blindness persisting for some days. Similar effects upon vision and the retina are produced by the calicylates and by acetahilid.v Weak sight is caused by ordinary alcohol, and in a more severe form by wood alcohol, : two drams of the latter having been known to produce blindness, while in 90 per cent of the cases . the - injury is permanent, lodoform, either ; absorbed from dressings or taken internally, sometimes affects the vision. Strong tobacco is very liable to cause the sight to fail after some years, and blindness may jbe hastened by alco- holic intemperance. Amblyopia Is some- times due ito substances used in certain occupations. Workers in lead and rubber become gradually affected from the fumes of lead and of : carbon disulphide; 3 hat- makers suffer through . the vapor of wood alcohol used* in the varnish, " and employes in chemical factories have their vision im- paired by the fumes of artificial essence of almonds—or nitro, or dinitro—benzine. Reviving an old question, Dr. G. Leigh- ton shows that ( there is no anatomical reason why adders should not swallow their young. An adder's' gullet is quite capable of containing, a field mouse, and as . frogs are: known •to j live for a con- siderable time - after being swallowed by snakes, it seems quite possible that young adders should be swallowed by their par- ent without being =killed. The phenome- non is improbable, however, until proved by certain evidence. '\u0084-' - \u25a0 ":,'/-.\u25a0-\u25a0'.:-— - ",' mi; ;—— \u25a0 Prices Positively Coming Down. NETW YORK, Jan. 17.—Coal from the independent operators, which has been selling at not less than $10 a ton sjnce the suspension, of their agree- ment with the coal roads, sold in in- RICH STRIKE OF 5 FIRST MAN TO SCALE '\u25a0:;-- WALL OF PEKIN. Mr. James A.Galt, of the Fourteenth U. S. Infantry, Which Was the First to Scale the Wall of Pekin and Plant the Stars and Stripes on Chinese Possessions, ] , •: Contracted Inflammation of the Kid- : -*•-' neys and Was Cured by * WARNER'S SAFE CURE MR. GAL FATHER WAS ALSO CURED OF GALL-STONES BY "SAFE CURE "'\u25a0• \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'- - _':.' . c" V""".".'^';' JAMES A.GALT. :'[\u25a0;'- : . / \u25a0 __ •> ,- „• - Z<^"-"*' '\u25a0• * \u25a0 ' .*" St. Paul, Minn., November 14, 1902. 'i \u25a0 mv w F ner 8 s?f. e. Cure Co- Rochester,. N, ( Y.: Exposure during the war, settled lit Srt«« a /fh" bladder- causing severe Inflammation and; serious pains in passing m to^.l he time of my discharge I was simply unfit for duty and unable to work, '««* My father had been cured of gall-stone through the use of Warner's Safe Cure J°K he * *dvised "M" take I £ ed it faithfully for three weeks before I found ' relief, - but it seemed like, a Godsend to me, I had endured suffering so long. I kept I up the treatment for four months and was then completely cured. This Is over eighteen.months ago. but Lam pleased to state, that I have had no relapse since. \u25a0 f but am enjoying most excellent health and gladly do I indorse your Safe Cure Very'! respectfully yours JAMES A. GALT, City ' Hotel, St. Paul Minn. Secretary to Colonel Daggart, 14th U.S.. Infantry, Regulars. President St. Paul Ski ClubT *- "SAFE CURE" CURES BACKACHE. *, t *yonlF!JL H«~ m the«s ack> rheumatism, uric acid poison, rheumatic gout, ' diabetes. Brights'. disease, inflammation of the bladder and urinary organs; scalding pains when, you urinate, eczema, jaundice, swellings or torpid liver; if a woman, I bearing-down sensation, fainting spells, so-called female weakness, painful periodsl these symptoms tell you that your kidneys have been disease* for a long time for kidney diseases seldom put out such symptoms as the victim recognizes until they have been working several months. You should lose no time—get a 50c. bottle curf^lt^fs^l^e^l!^. * WflMell6Ve y°U at nCe &nd effeCt a Permanent f™J* IN DOUBT MAKE THIS TEST: Let some morning urine stand for twenty- four hours in a glass or bottle. If then, Itis milky or cloudy, or contains a reddish, 1 brick dust sediment, or if particles or germs float about in it, your kidneys ar<J ANALYSIS FREE. '• _ If, after you have made this test, you have any doubt in your mind as to the development of the disease in your system, send a sample of your urine to the > Medical Department, Safe Cure Rochester. N. T., and our doctors will ' analyze it and send you a report with advice free of charge to you, together with a valuable book describing all diseases of the* kidneys, liver, bladder and blood, and treatment for each disease. ' ' All letters from women read and answered by a woman doctor All cor- respondence in strictest confidence. : - - ... .' ~ . . . . Warner's Safe Cure is purely vegetable and contains no narcotic or harmful drugs. It is free from sediment. and pleasant to take. It does not constitute, it is a most valuable and effective tonic; it is a stimulant to digestion and awakens the torpid liver. It repairs the tissues, soothes Inflammation and irritation, stimu- lates the enfeebled organs and heals at the same time. It builds up the body, gives SreSHB 1 CENTS eSAND g'SPioSi^" bUy Sa£e Cure at any drUS Stre « Beware of so-called kidney cures which are full of sediment and of bad odor— they are positively harmful and do not cure. *- WARNER'S SAFE PILLS move the bowels gently and aid a speedy cure. "\u25a0:\u25a0.- I _ .... dividual instances at $9.75 and $9.50 a ton yesterday, although most sales ' were at $10. A further break is look* ed for Monday, and with the increased*' amount of $5 coal expected to arrive next week, there should be still lower prices for the independent product. GOLD IN ALASKA! It ia in American Territory and Stampede Begins. SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 17.—A spe- cial to the Times from Dawson says a tremendously rich strike of gold had been made fifteen miles north of a point on Tanana river, 500 miles from its source, in American territory, and a stampede to the scene is in progress. Soldier Shoots Lawyer in a Duel. BERLIN, Jan. 17. First Lieutenant Werner yon Grawert, son of the lieuten- j ant of that name, shot Dr. Aye. a law-1 yer of Flensburg, through the neck, cut- , ting the spinal cord, in a duel fought In j the Grunewald forest yesterday. Death ! ensued immediately. The cause of the : quarrel was obscure, but of long standing. : The duel occurred in pursuance to the \u25a0 findings of a military court of honor, j Lieut, yon Grawert surrendered to the ' military authorities. TUDOIt'S Dollar Spectacles and Eye Glasses Will not rust. All Stylos—One Price, Expert Service. TUDOR OPTICAL 60. 320 Robert Street, Between Third and Fourth, Did You Ever Sltfp to compare the effi- cient telephone service of today with the tele- phone service furnished before the Twin City Telephone Company en- tered the field? It is much better now, and We Did It. Independent metallic circuit telephones, Business, Per Month, $4.00. Residence, Per Month, $3.56. SPa CHICHESTEH'S ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills £&{3££k *" CHICHESX2B-S ENOlla {•Pltfll W&%U la BED »nl Gold M.iallic box... Mil** Ok S^W«* lv bi" '«>*•»• Take bo other. Refn«« fn D******.. •\u25a0btUtadoa* and Imlt*- I 7-y \u25a0* tW *}«»»- *»J of jourDrttfgijt, or »nd 40. 1* i 1 21' T*« •**??* r \ r ParUemlara, Testlntomlal* V WISJP Jrt f.r I^dlw;- <.««-, b7rS. \u25a0AT *J~V tarn Mall. 19,000 ToitimonUU. Sold kv HattoatUtscfw, 2U4IMS »«a*r«. HULA,£S# J8P85589^ * "* ' 1"X" ' " ''""Kjijj^j ' \u25a0 i * '* ilsnmi*'™''' iii K:V limit

Transcript of GRIEF HOMERS WILLREPLY FIRST MAN To Sick Ones PEKIN. · 2017. 12. 17. · have perfected a remedy...

Page 1: GRIEF HOMERS WILLREPLY FIRST MAN To Sick Ones PEKIN. · 2017. 12. 17. · have perfected a remedy so unusual—so nearly certain —that I want all who need it to have it Ihave made

To Sick OnesI Will Send You Help

If You'll Ask It.

Send no money—just a postal, stating which book I shallsend. 4

Simply write me—as thousands do every week—to tell methat you need help.

Then I will do this:—l will mail you an order on your drug-gist for six bottles Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Tou may take ita month on trial. If it succeeds, the cost is $5.50. If it fails, Iwill pay the druggist myself—and I will leave the decision toyou.

I do that to convince you—to prove my faith in myself. Ihave perfected a remedy so unusual—so nearly certain —that Iwant all who need it to have it I have made my offer so fairthat no doubt or prejudice can deter any sick one from ac-cepting it.

In the past 12 years I have furnished my Restorative to overhalf a million patients, on trial. My records show that 39 outof each 40 have paid for it gladly, because they were cured. Therest had the month's test free.

My Restorative is the result of a lifetime's work, in learninghow to strengthen the inside nerves. It is the only remedy thatcan bring back the nerve power, which operates the vital organs.

A weak organ means weak nerve power. It simply lacks thestrength to do its duty. It is like a weak engine that only needsmore steam.

With the old way we doctored the organ itself, and the re-sults at best were but temporary. The results of my Restora-tive are permanent, and they are absolutely certain, save wheresome cause like cancer makes a cure impossible.

_With this remedy I have cured cases as difficult as physi-

cians ever meet; and I have rarely found a chronic case thatcould be really cured without it.

My book will tell you why. If you don't need it, please tellme one who does.

Book No. 1 on Dyspepsia.Simply state which book is want- gook No. 2on the Heart.

, , \u0084 Book No. 3 on the Kidneys,ed, and address Dr. Shoop, Box Book No 4 {or Women .761, Racine, Wis. Book No. 5 for Men (sealed).

Book No. 6 on Rheumatism.t Mild cases, not chronic, are often cured by one or two bottles.&i Dr. Shoop's Restorative is sold by all druggists. .

The Matriarchal Age, WhenWomen Ruled the World

BY HUBERT M. SKINNER.The word "patriarch" has been in

use for thousands of years, and wholelibraries of old books have been writ-ten concerning the patriarchal age ofeoci'ety. The stories of the patriarchsare numerous in the earlier Scriptures,and are familiar to all. "Matriarch"is a new word with us: for it is only

in these new and glorious days of "thenew woman" that we have come tohave any conception of the true oldwoman of the primitive ages. Thephilosophical world was really in needof a new subject for speculation when,by a stroke of genius, this new andstartling theme was originated andits discussion precipitated. And doubt-less today there are dozens of pro-found thinkers and patient investi-gators who are writing books on thematriarchal age, which they fondlyhope will bring them fame and for-tune.

Thos; who love to study the growthof institutions among men take de-light in the pages of Sir Henry Maine,"who seemed to have gone back to thebeginning of human society. Back ofthe ancient republic was the king;back of the king was the chief of thetribe; back of the chief was the pa-triarch, who ruled his family andpervants, including all their descend-ants —and these were mar.y in thetimes when the span of human lifeMas long, and when polygamy pre-vailed.

But since Sir Henry passed away(fifteen years ago) investigation hasbeen pushed much further back, andto the imaginations of men the won-derful matriarchal age has been re-vealed.

Ridpath, in his college lectures, usedto depict the simple courtship andmarriage of the primitive man, whostole out in the witching hour of sun-set, with throbbing heart, to the path-way frequented by the beautiful maid-en whom he had seen, hid himselfbehind a. tree or a rock as she passedunsuspectingly by, knocked her down•with a club, and carried her off on hisshoulder!

Passing back to the matriarchalage, are we to depict the reverse ofthis? Did the square-jawed Amazonfix her affections upon some striplingyouth of graceful form, seize him withone hand by his uncombed hair, andwith the other cowhide him into re-turning her love?

In the ages of civilization, and gen-erally also of barbarism, woman hasbeen subject to man. In a large partof the world today she is his slave.In a war of the sexes, in almost anyage, women could have been easilyexterminated, through the superiorstrength of men. In any isolated re-gion, however, if by any cataclysm ofnature, or through a successful con-spiracy, the men could be all cut offat once, it would be-possible for the

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More "Star Brand" issold in St. Paul thanall other brands com-bined.

M'hen you can buy this excellentbutter for 30 cer.ts per pound,packed In two three and five-pound jars, delivered at yourhorns the day It is made, whywill you icnger tclerate the or-dinary kird? Telephone for jarany time.

MILTON DAIRY GO.Cor. 9th and Wabashi Sts.

women to maintain their supremacythus obtained by killing their maleinfants generally and rearing only afew tractable and favored ones amongthem, to remain servile members ofthe body politic. This would seem tohave been the case in the Isle of Lem-nos, in ancient days.

The history of Russia in the eigh-teenth century shows how ambitiouswomen, once In control, could keepdown the men of their families by therepression and rig-or of the early train-ing of the latter. Elizabeth and Cath-erine 11. seemed bent upon perpetu-ating the sway of Amazons in thatempire.

But the story of Lemnos could notbe duplicated except in some placeequally isolated from the great world.

The theory of the philosophers of to-day, however, is that it was not a warof sexes that precipitated the ma-triarchal age, but exactly the opposite.

When men stole their wives fromthe tribes of their foes the lucklessfemales were torn away from theirkindred, and had no friends. Theybecame the trembling slaves of theircaptors. In a preceding age, however,this was not done. The young menwho had been brought up in one com-munity, which was practically all onefamily, with no distinction of father oruncle, brother or cousin, were led bya natural instinct to seek wives else-where. They left their own kindredand identified themselves with thetribes or families of their wives. Thewife, being surrounded by the stronginfluences of her relatives, had an ad-vantage over her husband, who wasonly a stranger, and on trial..-. Heichildren were loved and honored forher sake, and not for his. They tooktheir names and their inheritance fromher. Descents were reckoned only inthe females'line. As to one's father,it was a matter of little moment Le-gitimacy cut no figure. The mothercould always- be identified, in anyevent. Kindship then had reference al-ways to the mother.

So far as stories of ancient myth-ology go, the matriarchal age wouldseem to have been a period of sexwar, when the women dominated themen by physical force and by thecunning which was allied with it.

The Amazons come up repeatedly Inclassic fable. They were a warlikenation of women. Hercules foughtwith them, and carried away thegirdle of Omphale, their queen.Thesens carried :away the queen her-self. The Amazons invaded Greeceto rescue her, and she was slain Inthe struggle. Bellerophon defeated theAmazons in their own country. Theycame forth under their queen, Pen-thesilia, to aid the Trojans in the warof Troy, and Penthesilea was slain byAchilles. The story of the Danaideetells of the slaying-, all but one, of thefifty husbands of the daughters otDanans. The dark story of Liemnoealso points to a deadly sex hatred.

Philology, however, and the primitivecustoms of some surviving tribes Indi-cate that, in a matriarchal age, thewomen rule by love and kindness. Kin,of gens, was reckoned through themother, as stated above. Our words"kindness," "gentleness," etc., are de-rived from them. Perhaps, after all,it was only love and respect that werethe basis of female rule. And It maybe that the female head of a family ortribe did not actually rule, in manycases, but only gave her name to herfollowers, all rights being Inheritedthrough her. In fact, some of the more

cautious writers of the present prefer tospeak of the system of society con-templated as the "metronymic system,"indicating that it was merely a sys-tem of tracing family relationship anddescent, as we have now its opposite,the "patronymic system."

But they must not be allowed tocheat us of our matriarchal age, whichwe have so lately discovered. Withits elusive evidences of novelty andsurprise, we must leave it to talk aboutand write about for at least the firstdecade of this new century. Here'sto that glorious age of old, when wo-men ruled the world! Whether It everexisted or not, does not matter. Bringon your discussions, your controversies,your reviews, your poems, your pic-tures and your statues relating tothat marvelous era. The public Iswaiting for them.

PRESIDENT DISCOURAGESTHE "WATER CURE"

Disapproves Findings of Court-Martial Inan Officer's Case.

WASHINGTON. D. C. Jan. 17.—Finalaction has been taken by the presidentand secretary of war in the case of FirstLieutenant Edwin A. Hlckman, of theFirst cavalry, one of the officers tried bycourt-martial by direction of the presi-dent on the charge of having administeredthe water cure to Filipino prisoners in or-der to extort information regarding the

j movements of native bands of maurau-ders.The military courts exonerated themThe president simply wrote "Disapprov-

ed, meaning thereby to discourage theuse of the "water cure," without how-ever, affecting the judgment of the court-martial in acquitting the officer on thegeneral ground that its employment inthis instance waa justified \»y the clr-

THE ST. PAUI, GLOBE, SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 1903.

CRAZED WITH GRIEFANTON STEIDL

SUICIDESHis Wife Died Recently and

He Could Not Stand Life'sLoneliness — PhysiciansTry Hard to Save Himbut They Fail to ArouseHim From Stupor Causedby Poisonous Mixture.

Crazed with grief at his lonelinessconsequent upon the death of his wifethree weeks ago, Anton Steidl, a baker,at 480 Greenwood avenue, committedsuicide some time during the early aft-ernoon yesterday.

The first intimation given of Steidl'sintention was when a friend, GeorgeHale, 402 St. Anthony avenue, receiveda letter late in the afternoon saying:

"When you have received this letterIwill be dead."

Hale hurriedly went to the Steidlresidence and found the man in bedquite unconscious. A doctor was sum-moned who expressed little hope for hisrecovery, and after his removal to thecity hospital in the police ambulance hedied early last evening, after the doc-tors had worked continuously to savehim.

BIRD FANCIERSWILL FLY HOMERS

Poultry Association MakesPlans for Minneapolis

Exhibit.

St. Paul members of the~ MinnesotaState Poultry association-last eveningmet at 51 West Third street and madearrangements for having their birdstransported to Minneapolis, where theassociation is to give an exhibitionJan. 28 to Feb. 3, at 25 and 27 Fifthstreet south.

This is the seventeenth annual ex-hibition of the association, and it isexpected that it will be larger andmore attractive than any previouslyheld. There are about seventy-fivemembers in St. Pau4 and many exhibitsare expected from here. A committeewas appointed last evening to attendto the shipping of the birds to Min-neapolis. Henry Gruenhagen. who ischairman, will, if notified, attend tohaving exhibits delivered to expresscompanies for transportation to Min-neapolis.

There will be about 3,000 birds, aswell as many cats and other pets inthe show, and many features havebeen arranged, including a specialevent on Jan. 29. Dan Patch, the racehorse, owned by M. W. Savage, willrun on the ice track of Park avenuedriveway and endeavor to break theworld's record of a mile in 1:59 1-4.Fifty homing pigeons will be liberatedeach day by the Twin City HomingPigeon club. These pigeons will bedivided into classes of 100, 200 and 500miles. "Albina Bay," a homing pigeonhaving a 1,000 miles record, owned inIndiana, will be on exhibition. Admis-sion tickets will entitle holders tochances of fine bred birds, severalpairs of which will be given away eachday. Saturday several pairs of pigeonswill be given away to children. Thesame day a white a"ngora, cat will be

Just what the nature of the prepara-tion he had taken was not known at alate hour last night, though it was sup-posed to be an opium mixture.

Despondency over the death of his

MEDICINE MEN OF MACCABEES

DR. C. H. COLLIER.

The visit of Dr. R. E. Moss, supreme

medical examiner of the Maccabees, isexpected to be an important eventamong the Maccabees of St. Paul.Many plans have been made for theentertainment of the supreme officer,and local Maccabees will turn out inlarge numbers to attend the celebra-tion in his honor.

wife is the onlyreason that can be as-signed for the deed.

Steidl had been a St. Paul residentfor thirty years and conducted a bak-ery at Greenwood and Winifred. Hewas fifty-eight years of age and con-sidered to be well off. He leaves adaughter twenty-one years of age, andtwo sons, twenty-six and twenty-eightyears old, respectively. An autopsywas performed last night.

CROWN PRINCESS OFSAXONY LEAVES SWITZERLAND

She and Giron Travel South UnderAssumed Na|mes.

GENOA, Jan. 17.—The Crown Prin-cess of Saxony and M. Giron left Swit-zerland secretly this evening. Theytraveled south under assumed names.

BERLIN, Jan. 17.—The legal repre-sentatives of the Crown Prince andPrincess of Saxony have arranged theterms for their separation. The prin-cess abandons all the titles, rights anddignities appertaining to her throughher marriage and resumes her maidenname. The crown prince has expressedhis willingness to pay her $7,500 year-ly. The agreement does not mentionthe right of the crown princess to seeher children.

CALUMET, Mich., Jan. 17.—Fred Mac-Kenzie, editor of the Copper EveningNews, and for thirty years clerk of Calu-met township, died today, aged seventy-two. He was born in London and cameto America in 1865. Heart trouble wasthe cause of death. He lea-yes a widowand grown children.

Michigan Editor Dead.

AN OBJECT LESSON

In a Restaurant.A physician puts the query: Have you

never noticed in any large restaurant atlunch or dinner time the large number ofhearty, vigorous old men at the tables;men whose ages run from 60 to 80 years;many of them bald and all perhaps gray,but none of them feeble or senile?

Perhaps the spectacle is so common asto have escaped your observation or com-ment, but nevertheless it is an objectlesson which means something.

If you wHI notice what these heartyold fellows are eating you will observethat they are not munching bran crack-ers nor gingerly picking their way througha menu card of new-fangled health foods;on the contrary' they seem to prefer ajuicyroast of beef, a properly turned loinof mutton, and even the deadly broiledlobster is not altogether ignored.

The point of all this is that a vigorousold age depends upon good digestion andplenty ot wholesome food and not upondieting and an endeavor to live upon brancrackers.

There is a certain class of food cranks•who seem to believe that meat, coffee andmany other good things are l-ank poisons,but these cadaverous sickly looking indi-viduals are a walking: condemnation oftheir own theories.

The matter in a nutshell Is that ifthe stomach secretes the natural digestivevjuices in sufficient quantity any whole-some food wiil be promptly digested; ifthe stomach does not do so, and certainfoods cause distress, one or two of Stu-art's Dyspepsia Tablets after each mealwill remove all difficulty because theysupply just what every weak stomachlacks, pepsin, hydro-chloric acid, diastaseand nux.

Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do not actupon the bowels, and in fact are notstrictly a medicine, as they act almostentirely upon the food eaten, digesting itthoroughly and thus gives a much neededrest and giving an appetite for the nextmeal.

Of people who travel nine out of tenuse Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets knowingthem to be perfectly safe to use at anytime and also having found out by expe-rience that they are a safeguard 'againstindigestion in any form, and eating asthey have to, at all hours and all kindsof food, the traveling public for yearshave pinned their faith to Stuart's Tab-lets.

, All druggists sell them at 50 cents forfull sized packages and any druggist fromMaine to California, if his opinion wereasked,- will say that Stuart's Dyspepsia.Tablets is the most popular and successfulremedy for any stomach trouble.

DR. E. HUBBELL.

He will arrive in St. Paul this morn-Ing from Chicago, and will be enter-tained by members of the varioustents today. Tomorrow evening thecommanders and other officers of thetents of the Twin Cities will give abanquet at the Ryan hotel, and in-formal speeches will be made by manyof the officers and members present.

Tuesday, at Bowlby hall, there willbe a class of fifty candidates initiated

given to a lady. The annual meetingof the association will be held Jan. 29and the Commercial club, of Minne-apolis, will tender a banquet to allexhibitors.

Many premiums have been secured,including twenty-two silver cups, for-ty-five other special prizes, and cashprizes amounting to $1,400. The judgesare Sharp Butterfield, of London, Ont.;J. D. Lambert, Opponaug, R. 1., andGeo. D. Holden, Owatonna, Minn. R.W. Wales, of lowa City, will judge thepigeons, and Mrs. Hampton Lane willjudge the cats. The birds and pets willbe exhibited in uniform coopß, and thescore card system of judging will beemployed.

All the railroads in Minnesota havegranted a special rate of vne, fare anda third for the round trip from pointsin Minnesota for visitors to the show.This privilege is also extended topoints fn Wisconsin where; the ratedoes not exceed $1.50. C. 'A. Smith,president of the association, ;aTid G. A.Loth, assistant secretary, of Minneapo-

lis, last evening came over to St. P^uland conferred with St. Paul ( membersat the meeting.

WOULD-BE SUICIPS ISPICKED UP BY POLICE

James Carroll Found on Doorstep WithRazor in His Hand.

Officer Aynsley found James Carrollat the foot of the steps of the Pittsburg

hotel on East Seventh street shortly

after midnight with a razor in his hand,declaring his intention of committing

suicide. Upon investigation it was foundthat his leg was in a plaster cast, bro-ken, and that he was walking oncrutches.

The wagon was summoned and whenthe man arrived at the station he wasrecognized as one who had fallen,while intoxicated, in front of the Man-hattan building on Dec. 6, and hadbroken his right leg. He had been sentto the city hospital, where he remainedtill yesterday, when, for some reason,he was allowed to go. Carroll was inno condition to say why.

He told the police that his home waswith his brother-in-law at 23 EastFifth street, that he was a railroadman and that he was penniless andwas in much pain. He denied all in-tention of wishing to destroy himself,and even denied the owner-ship of therazor. He was detained at poMce head-quarters till his friends could be com-municated with this morning.

MOST IMPORTANTTO MRS. MAYBRICK

Will Lose Fortune If Not Released inTime to Testify.

RICHMOND, Va., Jan. 17.—Mrs.Florence J. Maybrick and her mother,the Baroness yon Rogues; will, it issaid, lose all title and interest in2,552,302 acres of land is Virginia,West Virginia and Kentucky, valuedat $7,500,000, unless Mrs. Maybrick isreleased from prison in England intime to testify in a suit now pendingin the chancery court of this city.

Charles O. Saville, clerk of thecourt, said tonight that the suit hadbeen filed in the chancery court aboutseven years ago by Judge Leo D. Yar-rell, of Emperia, on behalf of Mrs.Maybrick and her mother, and hadbeen in the court ever since. lie didnot know, he said, that any time limitwas about to expire.

Episcopal Clergyman to De-liver a Series of Sermonson Subjects Touched on by

St». Paul Doctors Who Will Help Entertain the Supreme Medical Examiner.

DR. E. H. HAAS.

Germany and Venezuela.

Ayer'sCherry PectoralOne dose at bedtime pre-vents night coughs ofchildren. No croup. Nobronchitis. Adoctor'smedicine for all affec-tions of the bronchialtubes and lungs. Soldfor 60 years. £&&?£&:

DANIELS WILL REPLYTO ARGUMENTS

OF PAULISTS

Fathers Harney and Con-way—Priesthood and Ca-tholicity Will Be AmongSubjects Discussed.

Some of the Episcopalian clergymenof St. Paul have been aroused by therecent mission to non-Catholics at St.Luke's church to an attitude of op-position and some polemics may belooked for.

It is the intention of Rev. Mr. Dan-iels, rector of St. Phillip's Episcopalchurch, upon his return from the East,to rebut in a series of sermons thestatements made by Paulist FathersConway and Harney during the courseof their mission held for the past twoweeks in St. Luke's church. Amongmany other matters that will form thesubjects of sermons will be "Catholi-city," "The Priesthood," "The Doc-trines of the Episcopal Church."It is the contention of the Episcopal

church dignitaries of the city thatthere are many things of interest thatmight be spoken of in these proposedsermons. Chief among them are "TheAnglican Priesthood" and "The Insuf-ficiency of the Edwardine Rite." Achurchman said to The Globe that

in honor of the visit of Dr. Moss, afterwhich degree work will be exemplifiedby the degree team of Unity tent.

Dr. Moss will leave St. Paul "Wed-nesday morning, and will spend theremainder of the ween in Minneap-olis. He is on a tour of the cities ofthe country visiting Maccabees. Thisis the furthest West he will go. Hehas his headquarters at Port Huron,Mich.

the letter to Leo XIII.from the arch-bishops of Canterbury and York stillremained unanswered.

W. L. Cullen, in a note to TheGlobe yesterday, said:

"There is a widespread feelingamongst clergy and laiety of theEpiscopal church in St. Paul that thePaulist Fathers during the past twoweeks, through their method of the'question box,' have used this as amedium for misrepresenting the Epis-copal church."

Anglican and Evangelical clergymengenerally do not care to discuss theproposition.

APPARENTLY DEADBODIES ANIMATED

New Fluid That Gives Life to Decapi-tated Animals.

CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 17.—Dr.George W. Crile. a member of theCleveland Medical society, has con-tributed an article tao the currentCleveland Medical Journal announcingthat through the use of a fluid called"adrenalin" life can be restored to ap-parently dead bodies. The article says:

"By the combined use ofinhavenous infusions adrenalin, ar-tificial respiration and rythmic pres-sure upon the thorax over the heart,

dead as long as fifteen minuteswere restored to life. Animals decapi-tated were made to live ten and one-half hours."

Dr. Crile states that the adrenalinIs an extract obtained from the glandsdirectly above the kidneys of animals.It had been used heretofore for increas-ing blood pressure both in human be-ings and in brutes. The discovery isthe result of recent experiments invivisection by Dr. Crile and other phy-sicians of Cleveland.

BERLIN, Jan. 17.—1n the negotiationswhich are about begin at Washington,Great Britain and Germany as the resultof further correspondence, are Quite de-termined that the irriducible condition ofarbitration is that President Castro shallpay or give collateral security for the sumalready specified. The powers will notconsent to raising the blockade until Ven-ezuela complies with this unalterable con-dition. The allies place the possibilityfor further delay upon Venezuela.

ScientificMiscellany

Astronomically Speakfng.

Jaggsby—l understand that Miss FcoteLyte has become quite a star.

Waggsby—She was. my boy; but sincethat awful tale has come out on her she'sa comet.—Baltimore American.

Two coats of hot oil, carefully appliedafter thorough cleaning of the metal, arerecommended by a Canadian artisan asan improvement over any process now inuse for preventing rust of structural ironand steel. The oil would fill crevicescracks and holes where paint cannot en- iter. It would cover rough places oftenimperfectly coated in ordinary paintingand it would be a fine preparation forsubsequent painting or covering with ce-ment coating.

Arsenic, the dreaded poison that Prof.Armand Gautier. of Paris, asserts is es-sential to life, proves to be disseminatedin the primitive rocks from which sea-water derives its store. The minute quan-tity taken in the food becomes localizedin the skin and its appendages, the thy-roid and mammary glands, the brain andthe bones, and It is stated to be the ex-citing ferment of the functions of sensa-tion and reproduction just as phosphorusIs the exciting element of the-functions ofcellular nutrition.

Some of the giant sequoias of SouthernCalifornia are estimated to be from 5,000to 8,000 years old having perhaps spannedthe entire period of written history. Asection in the American museum of natur-al history was cut from one of these treesat a height of twenty feet and is a littlemore than eighteen feet in diameter, andits concentric rings show that it began itsgrowth in 550 A. D., the tree reaching adiameter of thirteen feet at Columbus'landing.

"Nieves penitentes," slightly inclinedsnow columns resembling shrouded figuresdoing penance, are a peculiar phenom-enon or the Andes to which Sir At. Con-way has given attention. They are thelost remnants of drifts or slides whichhave become hardened in nearly verticalstrata of different densities.

Various drugs are enumerated by Dr.Schweinitz. as liable to produce forms ofamblyopia, •or weakness of vision. Qui-nine in moderate doses may cause dimnessof sight lasting for several hours, and inlarge doses it may give rise to suddenand almost complete blindness persistingfor some days. Similar effects uponvision and the retina are produced by thecalicylates and by acetahilid.v Weak sightis caused by ordinary alcohol, and in amore severe form by wood alcohol, : twodrams of the latter having been known toproduce blindness, while in 90 per centof the cases . the - injury is permanent,lodoform, either ; absorbed from dressingsor taken internally, sometimes affects thevision. Strong tobacco is very liable tocause the sight to fail after some years,and blindness may jbe hastened by alco-holic intemperance. Amblyopia Is some-times due ito substances used in certainoccupations. Workers in lead and rubberbecome gradually affected from the fumesof lead and of : carbon disulphide; 3 hat-makers suffer through . the vapor of woodalcohol used* in the varnish, " and employesin chemical factories have their vision im-paired by the fumes of artificial essenceof almonds—or nitro, or dinitro—benzine.

Reviving an old question, Dr. G. Leigh-ton shows that ( there is no anatomicalreason why adders should not swallowtheir young. An adder's' gullet is quitecapable of containing, a field mouse, andas . frogs are: known •to jlive for a con-siderable time - after being swallowed bysnakes, it seems quite possible that youngadders should be swallowed by their par-ent without being =killed. The phenome-non is improbable, however, until provedby certain evidence. '\u0084-' - \u25a0

":,'/-.\u25a0-\u25a0'.:-— -— ",' mi; ;—— \u25a0

Prices Positively Coming Down.NETW YORK, Jan. 17.—Coal from

the independent operators, which hasbeen selling at not less than $10 a tonsjnce the suspension, of their agree-ment with the coal roads, sold in in-

RICH STRIKE OF

5

FIRST MAN TO SCALE'\u25a0:;-- WALL OF PEKIN.Mr. James A.Galt, of the Fourteenth U. S. Infantry, Which

Was the First to Scale the Wall of Pekin and Plantthe Stars and Stripes on Chinese Possessions, ]

, •: Contracted Inflammation of the Kid- :-*•-' neys and Was Cured by *

WARNER'S SAFE CUREMR. GAL FATHER WAS ALSO CURED OF GALL-STONES BY "SAFE CURE

"'\u25a0• \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'- - _':.' . c" V""".".'^';'JAMES A.GALT. :'[\u25a0;'- : . /\u25a0

__•> ,- „• - Z<^"-"*' '\u25a0•

* \u25a0 ' .*" St. Paul, Minn., November 14, 1902. 'i \u25a0

mvwFner 8 s?f.e. Cure Co- Rochester,. N, ( Y.: Exposure during the war, settled litSrt«« a /fh" bladder- causing severe Inflammation and; serious pains in passingmto^.lhe time of my discharge I was simply unfit for duty and unable to work,

'««*Myfather had been cured of gall-stone through the use of Warner's Safe CureJ°Khe

**dvised "M" take I£ ed it faithfully for three weeks before Ifound 'relief, -but it seemed like, a Godsend to me, I had endured suffering so long. Ikept Iup the treatment for four months and was then completely cured. This Is overeighteen.months ago. but Lam pleased to state, that I have had no relapse since. \u25a0 fbut am enjoying most excellent health and gladly do I indorse your Safe Cure Very'!respectfully yours JAMES A. GALT, City ' Hotel, St. Paul Minn. Secretary toColonel Daggart, 14th U.S.. Infantry, Regulars. President St. Paul Ski ClubT *-

"SAFE CURE" CURES BACKACHE.*,

t*yonlF!JL H«~ m the«s ack> rheumatism, uric acid poison, rheumatic gout, 'diabetes. Brights'. disease, inflammation of the bladder and urinary organs; scaldingpains when, you urinate, eczema, jaundice, swellings or torpid liver; if a woman, Ibearing-down sensation, fainting spells, so-called female weakness, painful periodslthese symptoms tell you that your kidneys have been disease* for a long timefor kidney diseases seldom put out such symptoms as the victim recognizes untilthey have been working several months. You should lose no time—get a 50c. bottlecurf^lt^fs^l^e^l!^. *WflMell6Ve y°U at nCe &nd effeCt a Permanent

f™J* IN DOUBT MAKE THIS TEST: Let some morning urine stand for twenty-four hours in a glass or bottle. If then, Itis milkyor cloudy, or contains a reddish, 1

brick dust sediment, or if particles or germs float about in it, your kidneys ar<J

ANALYSIS FREE.'• _ If, after you have made this test, you have any doubt in your mind as to thedevelopment of the disease in your system, send a sample of your urine to the >Medical Department, Safe Cure Rochester. N. T., and our doctors will 'analyze it and send you a report with advice free of charge to you, together with avaluable book describing all diseases of the* kidneys, liver, bladder and blood, andtreatment for each disease. '' All letters from women read and answered by a woman doctor All cor-respondence in strictest confidence. : - - ... .' ~ . . . .

Warner's Safe Cure is purely vegetable and contains no narcotic or harmfuldrugs. It is free from sediment. and pleasant to take. It does not constitute, it isa most valuable and effective tonic; it is a stimulant to digestion and awakens thetorpid liver. It repairs the tissues, soothes Inflammation and irritation, stimu-lates the enfeebled organs and heals at the same time. It builds up the body, gives

SreSHB 1CENTSeSAND g'SPioSi^" bUy Sa£e Cure at any drUS Stre «

Beware of so-called kidney cures which are full of sediment and of bad odor— •they are positively harmful and do not cure. *-WARNER'S SAFE PILLS move the bowels gently and aid a speedy cure.

"\u25a0:\u25a0.- I_ ....

dividual instances at $9.75 and $9.50 aton yesterday, although most sales 'were at $10. A further break is look*ed for Monday, and with the increased*'amount of $5 coal expected to arrivenext week, there should be still lowerprices for the independent product.

GOLD IN ALASKA!

It ia in American Territory andStampede Begins.

SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 17.—A spe-cial to the Times from Dawson says atremendously rich strike of gold hadbeen made fifteen miles north of apoint on Tanana river, 500 miles fromits source, in American territory, and astampede to the scene is in progress.

Soldier Shoots Lawyer in a Duel.BERLIN, Jan. 17. — First Lieutenant

Werner yon Grawert, son of the lieuten- jant of that name, shot Dr. Aye. a law-1yer of Flensburg, through the neck, cut- ,ting the spinal cord, in a duel fought In jthe Grunewald forest yesterday. Death !ensued immediately. The cause of the :quarrel was obscure, but of long standing. :The duel occurred in pursuance to the \u25a0

findings of a military court of honor, jLieut, yon Grawert surrendered to the 'military authorities.

TUDOIt'SDollar Spectacles and Eye Glasses

Will not rust. All Stylos—One Price,Expert Service.

TUDOR OPTICAL 60.320 Robert Street, Between Third and Fourth,

Did You EverSltfp to compare the effi-cient telephone serviceof today with the tele-phone service furnishedbefore the Twin CityTelephone Company en-tered the field? It ismuch better now, and

We Did It.Independent metallic circuit telephones,

Business, Per Month, $4.00.Residence, Per Month, $3.56.

SPa CHICHESTEH'S ENGLISHPennyroyal pills£&{3££k *" CHICHESX2B-S ENOlla{•PltfllW&%Ula BED »nl Gold M.iallicbox... Mil**Ok S^W«* lv bi" '«>*•»• Take bo other. Refn««fn %» D******..•\u25a0btUtadoa* and Imlt*-I7-y \u25a0* tW *}«»»- *»J of jourDrttfgijt,or »nd 40. 1*

i 1 21' T*« •**??*r\r ParUemlara, Testlntomlal*VWISJP Jrt f.r I^dlw;- <» <.««-, b7rS.\u25a0AT *J~V tarn Mall. 19,000 ToitimonUU. Sold kvHattoatUtscfw, 2U4IMS »«a*r«. HULA,£S#

J8P85589^ * "* ' 1"X" ' " ''""Kjijj^j '

\u25a0 i * '* ilsnmi*'™'''iii

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