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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, MAY 13, 1895. WINNING FAME ABROAD, A Young California Artist Who Has a Picture in the Paris Salon. HE IS CHIEFLY SELF-TAUGHT, The Strength of the Painter’s Work Is Its Excellent Drawing., ‘Among the pictures in the Paris salon which opened on the 1st of this month is a delicate and effective landscape in oils, | representing a pastoral scene at Concar- aean, France. Incredible as it may appear, the work is by a young California artist, Harry Stu- art Fonda, who has studied for only eighteen months. Up till a year and & half ago the young painter was entirely self-taught, and yet his salon picture, the work of an unknown foreigner in Paris, was one of 8000 sent in to the salon jury, only 1200 of which were accepted. The work represents a road in a level country, with the luxuriant foliace of a rural French scene in the height of early summer. The time is the early afternoon of a brilliantly clear day, and the light filtering down through the overhanging | trees throws brilliant patches of gold and | creen here and there on the purplish trown of the road in the foreground. In the middle distance is a gate, through which can be seen a_glimpse of a white road, winding away into the tender green of the far distance. | The scene is very simple, almost un- romising in fact to reproduce on canvas, | ut the drawing is so good, and the color- | i while offering strong contrasts of light and shade, is so_sincere and true to | nature that it is little wonder the work | was accepted at the salon. Juries see so | guage; to encourage members in business or aid them in obtaining employment, and to extend to members relief or assistance in time of sickness, need or misfortune. The officers of the new organization are: P. B. Berges, president; J. Bayle, vice- resident; B.Sarthou, second wice-presi- gent; P. A. Bergerot, recording secretary; P. Berges, treasurer; August Bergez, finan- cial secretary. These officials are direc- tors, and the other members of the direc- tory are: F. Garrissere, B.D. Lacazette, A. Miqueu, J. B. Pene and J. Tauzy. The doctors of the society are Dr. L. Bazet and Dr. J. E. Artigues. The board of directors consists of eleven members and the constitution provides that they shall be chosen exclusively from the male members born or descended from persons born of the four departments of France, Basses-Pyrenees, Hautes-Pyrenees, Landes and Gers. No one under the age of 15 nor any one over 50 years of age can become a member. 1In case of accident or misfortune the society may,by a two- thirds vote, give pecuniary assistance to a needy or unfortunate member. This is apart from the weekly benefits to be paid in case of sickness. The society will bury its deceased members and pay to the’ widow or minor children one dollar for each surviving member. In case there are neither widow nor children the beneficiary shall be the father or mother or either. The society started with 110 names on the roll of membership. AT THE BEACH AND PARK An Immense Crowd of People Down by the Side of the Ocean. The Park Visited by Thousands—A Very Artistic Plece of Floral Work. The people of San Francisco took the advice of the late Horace Greely, and went west yesterday. The majority of them kept going until they could go no further, because the great Pacific Ocean prevented them. At no time o1 a Sunday during the past much bad drawing, which the painters seek to atone for by crude and sensational | coloring, that they are generally quick to | show appreciation of an absolutely good piece of drawing. Harry Fonda, the latest addition to the ranks of California painters, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Fonda of 3011 Bacramento street. He was born in Marys- ville, but he lived from infancy in San Francisco. Atan early age he showed a great fondness for art, which generally, as | interpreted by fond parents and relations, means a desire to own a paintbox, and lay | on pictures of georgeous hues. From childhood, however, Harry Fonda'’s | ten years was there such a crowd on the ocean beach as yesterday, from the rocks | near the site of the old Cliff House to the | point where the turn is made into the Ocean House road. The people who were | there inhaling the invigorating ocean | breeze looked like the crowds that fringe the sidewalks on a prominent thoroughfare on the occasion of a grand parade. They | crowded down to the water’s edge, as near as they dared to go, and some stood while many sat on the sands watching the antics | of the little ones wading into the surf, and COMING TO CALIFORNIA, The Shakers Will Start a Com- munity in San Fran- cisco. STRANGE STORY OF ANN LEE. Mr. Dowe Tells Some Interesting Things About This Wonderful Woman. The Shakers are determined to establish acolony on the Pacific Coast,and their representative, Arthur W. Dowe, is strain- ing every nerve to convert people to his | peculiar belief. Each Sunday he lectures | at Golden Rule Hall on Mission street, and he has already succeeded in bringing many | people to believe that the Shaker religion | is the only true one. To be a Shaker one must believe in and ELDRESS D. CANTERBURY, N. H., WHICH- FRANCISCO. A. DURGIN AND THE SHAKERS' was ready Joseph Meacham and five others came in. Mother Ann said to Jough, “I saw H?Emégn you crossed the river.”” (Nine miles In America she was ast into prison— often beaten and ah‘m:lifllg abused by mobs incited to riot by bigots who claimed to be Christians. Dragged downstairs and out of doors by the feet; stoned, spat upon, smitten with rods, and continually slandered {n & most shameful manner. Several thousand acres of land have been purchased lately in Osceola County, Fla., and a building constructed suitable for fif- teen persons. They will try one of the hot summers there before making extensive improvements. The probabilities are, however, that this community will come to California on account of the excessive heat of Florida, Drowned While at Play. The body of Charles Willby, aged 13, was picked up at the foot of Channel street yes- HOME AT EAST IS TO BE DUPLICATED IN SAN [From photographs.] practice celibacy, combined with a convic- tion that Jesus Christ and Ann Lee are the true children of God. There are only about 5000 Shakers in America, but the communites, as they call themselves, are spreading rapidly through- out the country, and the work now being tne passing to and fro of steamers and done by Mr. Dowe is but the preliminary HARRY STUART FONDA’S SALON PICTURE. [Reproduced from a pen and ink sketch made for®the “Call.””) . inclination was for drawing. He copied everything, from straight lines to land- scapes and figures, so that, though he re- ceived no instruction, he gradnally trained his eye to correct ideas of lines and angles, and, as_he grew older, he taught himself the rudiments of perspective and geomet- rical drawing. In fact, almost before he Was grown up, so many friends were anx- ious to acquire his powers of reflroducing on paper whatever he saw that they asked him to give them lessons, and soon he had | alargely attended class. Seeing that his son was determined to become an artist, Mr. Fonda built him a studio_adjoining the paternal home and there Harry gave lessons and studied, al- ways saving most of his earnings with a view to studying in Europe. A yearanda half ago the needful sum was acquired and Harry Fonda went to Europe and at_once entered the famous Julien School. ' There he found that his progress would eventu- ally be more rapid if he began at the Jowest rung of the ladder, and without a murmur he took up his pencil and studied drawing fora whole year without touching colors. It is only six months since he began to aint in the Julien School and already he as a picture in the salon. If his progress continues to be so rapid there is no saying to what honors he may not aspire. Six months after his arrival in Paris young Fonda was elected a director of the Art Association of Paris and at the last two entertainments given for the benefit of the-American Art Association much of the music was his composition. LIGUE D'HENRI IV. A New Benevolent Society Organized ‘ by French Residents. The Ligue d’Henri IV is the name of a new society that has been organized in this City by members of the French col- ony. The prime movers are natives of the middle of France, but natives of other yortions of that country are entitled to be- come members. The objects of the society are social intercourse, mental improvement and mutual aid, benefit and protection; to improve the conditions of its members by establishing schools or courses of instruc- tion when the funds of the society will jus- tify the same; to give an English educa- tion to those of its members who are unable to speak or write the Englisn lan- sailing vessels, but the principal object of each was to revet in the delightful cool breezes that came over the waters. Those who did not care to go down to the water’s edge contented themselves with promenading on the grade that leads to Sutro Heights, gazing upon the foundation of what is to be_the new Cliff House, the timbers of which have been laid in cement and give nFood idea of what size and what shape bui diu§I it will be; looking at the Firth wheel, which has been put up to the north of the road; examining the terminal work being done on the Sutro electric line and walking through = Mayor Sutro’s grounds, which at this time arerich in green foliage and flowers of every shade. rom early in the day until aslateas4 o'clock in the afternoon both lines of steam cars were crowded to the utmost limit of their cagscity. Thousands who did not care to go to the beach stopped at the park. The lawns and the slopes were covered with men, women and children, who stretched themselves on the green sward and seemed to think that that was the only way to recuperate from the effect of the heat. There was not a vacant seat in front of the band shell, while the space reserved for carriages was overcrowded with vehicles of every de- scription. Then the bicycle contingent was out in full force, and among the number were seen several Japanese, who made their wheels spin. There were also several col- ored men, who cut quite a dash oniron borses. ‘‘Among the latest additions to the mu- seum,” said Superintendent McLaren, ‘“is a contribution of curios from the Hawaiian Islands by Mrs. Weaver, and some Mexi- can pottery and figures.” . An attractive piece of work in the park is that which has just been finished by Gardener Thomas Monroe. It is on the north bank of Conservatory Valley and is cmezosed of designs wrought in growing plants, —— There is little chance of Mrs. Carson of Chicago making her round trip to Liver- pool this year. She was preparing to start so astoreach New York in time to take passage on the Lucania, when she was stopped on an order from Judge Donnelly of the County Court that an inquiry might be made as to her sanity. he‘}s asrich as she is eccentric, and her favorite way of spending her time and money is in ocean voyages. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report effort toward establishing a community in San Francisco. It is proposed to erect a church here, though just when active operations will begin has not yet been determined. The building will be an exact reproduction of the one now being usedfiy the community at East Canterbury, N. H., having a seat- ing capacity of several hundred and apart- ments sufficient to accommodate at least a hundred people. When the work on the coast_has progressed a little further a few prominent Eastern Shaker leaders will come to San Francisco and begin actively the work of establishing the church or community. In the Jecture delivered by Mr. Dowe at Golden Rule Hall yesterday he took for his subject “Christ and Ann Lee.” The remarkable history of this more than re- markable woman, as told by Mr. Dowe, sounds more like fiction than truth, yet he backs up all of his statements with his- :loncu}dproof. In the course of his remarks e sald: God annointed Jesus of Nazareth and Ann Lee with the Holy Ghost and with power; who went about doing good and healing all that :Lere oppressed of the devil, for God was with em. In the person of Mother Ann, as the Shakers call her, was literally fulfilled the promise of Jesus, that “he that believeth on me the works that I do shall h 1s0." “Many times,” said she, “when I was about my work I felt my soul overwhelmed with sor- row, and I used to work as long as I could kee }t c'oncel!ed and ‘l‘hexlzdrnin to ge‘y'&uh: &f slxix A est some one shou! me at which God did not.” 2ty i And when I was born into the spiritual kingdom I was like an infant just born into the world. They see colors and objects but thez know not what they see. And so it was with me when I was born into the spiritual world. But before I was twenty-four hours old Isaw and knew what I saw. She was oiten arrested and thrown into Tison. On one occasion she was foreibly ragged out of the meeting and cast into a prison in Manchester, England, and placed in a cell so small that she could not recline at full length. Here she was kept without food for fourteen days, and not_once during that time was the door opened. Food was, however, con- veyed to her by a lad of 19, whom Ann had broufht up from boyhood. He succeeded in supplying her secretly with a mixture of wine and milk by inserting the stem of a tobacco fi'pa through the keyhole of the cell door. 'magine the surprise of the turnkey when at the end of the time he afgnea the door, ex- pecting to find her dead from starvation, and she wa. away looking as well as when she entered. It was in this dark, gloomy cell that the ge‘t vision of her life was ted her, when the Lord Jesus appeared to her and revealed the great mystery of the ‘‘fall of man”: “You must_forsake the m e of the flesh, and travel out of it, in order to be married to the b, W is_to be married to Christ or joined to the Lord in one spirit.” 5 She -bo;mged in figmn‘ln gil ln:? ';l heal- ing, prophes S e ngues, dll'éeprnmpmt 5’ spirits. 51: one oceasion when on trial on charge of hemy re four ministers of the established church she spoke for four hours in seventy-two different lan- She had & wonderful faculty of search- ng the hearts of Peth for hidden sins and brfn'ln' them to light. Like her Lord and the woman "’mmfl'fi she ““told them all things 8t ever ‘Once in the Staie of New York she spoke to sisters and bade them pre] victuals 2'9’:"‘5: Reoples They did N.Wmut terday afternoon by Bob Gibson, the boat- man. He had been out playing with some boys at the foot of Third street, and during | a game of hide and seek he lost his footing and fell into the bay. His parents, who live at 177 Perry streef, were notified, and a search for the body was begun. The tide carried the remains up the creek, and the searching party was still at work when the news reached the relatives that the body was at the Morgue. KNIGHT'S CRACK. LAUNCH The Athlete Turns Things Topsy-Turvy on Her Trial Trip. A Mirage on the Bay Saturday After~ noon—Brush With the Satellite. Attorney George Knight launched his new launch on Friday night from the foot of Howard street, and on Saturday he took a spin over to Sausalito and around the bay. The name of the new-comer is the Ath- lete, and she is aptly called, being one of the stoutest craft of her kind on the bay. She was built for rough weather, and her trip on Saturday was not a test of her sea- worthiness, as the bay was smooth as glass. The Athlete is 40 feet in length and 8 feet beam and has a fifteen horse-power Oriental engine. The hull was constructed by George Hitchings in Eureka and the cabin and furnishings were put in by Andrew Wilson of this City. M. H. Graham of Beale street built the engine and guaranteed the speed ten knots an hour “'strong.’’ Colonel Knight started to build a boat which would eclipse Dr. V. P. Buckley’s Satellite, and the colonel thinks that the Athlete is the craft to do it. “I'll race Dr. Buckley,” said he on Sat- urday, “from Sausalito out to the heads, then up the bay again and around to Hun- ters Point, thence around Goat Island on the Oakland side and out to the heads again, for an orange. “How do you like the name? Athlete! that's the ‘proper name. It took me a long time to think of it, but as soon as it occurred to me I said, ‘That settles it.” At first I was going to call her the Pleiades and go the Satellite a basket of stars better. Then I thought I would give her some- thing soft and call her the Escondido, which means a shady place. I consulted with Jack Bivens and he suggested El Trembodor. That means a tumbler or an acrobat. Neither of the last two names suited me, and then out of the darkness came light. The great thought dawned lam'l the next day she was called the Ath- ete. “She is an athlete, too, for she will breast the waves like a young Achilles.” % The launch went over to Tiburon Point from Sausalito in ten minutes by the watch. Her trial trip wasa perfect success in every way. For a new boat she acted like a charm. Although the engine was not well braced, there was only the slightest vibra- tion perceptible. On the return from Tiburon a most re- markable looking object was sighted over near the San Francisco side of the bay and uhe Athlete headed for it. The object re- sembled in ngpenmnca a big boxcar, but it wasonly a harmless steam-schooner tak- ing on most fantastic shapes in the waves ofh heat which swept through the atmos- phere, ‘Hello! What's the matter with Blos- som Rock?” exclaimed Colonel Knight suddenly. All eyes were turned toward the rock and the staid old bunch seemed to be danc- ing in midair. Alcatraz Island was en- tirely out of water and sailboats afar off were seen sailing upside down in the air. The Sausalito, which was beyond ““‘3:1 seemed to be as large as the Palace H and over on the fiukeley side immense breakers seemed to be flooding the very hills. It has been a long time since such a mirage was seen on the bay and the picture was completed when the Satellite appeared in the air above Sausalito. “That’s the only way she can beat us,” said Charley Knight, the attorney’s son, who was one of the party. k toward Sausalito s the Athlete, and the mirage faded from view. The Batellite was sighted and away went the two boats fmur% Richardson’s Bay, with the Gazelle in their wake. They were greuy close at the turn, and side by side ihey came down past Sausalito, the yachts firing salutes as they passed. '.I(he. Satellite seemed to cut the water like a knife, while the Athlete rammed her way through with vigorous strokes and nem{er vessel had any bone, the white water g away from the bows, The Athlece left an immense swell in her wake. The vessels Tan nose and nose for nearly half a mile, when the Satellite commenced to out and steadily walk away from the Ath- lete. The latter was notin racing trim and she headed for San Francisco. ——————— According to the transactigns of the Cremation gociety the dilvosntll%i the dead by burning is making a slow but steady gzo ss in England. In 1885 only three es were cremated at Woking. Last year the number was 125, ANOTHER INVADING ARMY, General Booth of the Salvation- ists Would Attack China. FONG F0O SEC MAY GO SOON. He Is a Captain Here and Very Eager to Carry There the Red and Blue. In the last number of the English War Cry General Booth is reported as having in contemplation the sending of a con- tingent of the Salvation Army to China to start the work of evangelization there. China has heretofore proved a rocky soil to the otherwise phenomenal methods of the Salvationists, but it is now felt that the war and its lessons will make an oppor- tunity of which General Booth is eager to have the army avail itself. There is in this City a Chinese. who has been a member of the Salvation Army for six years, He is one of its brightest, most pleasing, and at the same time most use- ful members. He talks English with a ready fluency and proves himself an expert on the typewriter, at which he is employed in the sanctum of Editor John Milsaps. * A few days ago he was made a captain. His name is Fong Foo Sec, and he will in all probability be the pioneer Salvationist to invade his nativeland. He is very anxious to go. Said he, yesterday: “Yes, I expect that the Army at the proper time will send me to China. To go to China was the object that really led me into the Salvation Army. I wanted todo is_ornething for my country along army ines. “The war, I think. has made China open her eyes. She has lived too long in the. past, but I believe its lesson cannot fail to awaken her to_her position and condition among the civilized powers. As a result the way will be opened for Christianity civilization and all tie other good things.” Captain Fong writes English like a native, and like his fellow-warriors who Captain Fong Foo Sec. follow the red and blue, he has some sanguine, if peculiar, expressions, as the following bears witness: 1 fully believe that when we have a Chinese work started in & prosperous way lots of Chris- tian Chinese will rally round us and fight beneath our colors to bring China to Christ. Yours to lick the devil. Foxa F., Sec. There is a charming naiyete about Ca tain Fong and he tells of his career both in his native land and this country with a candor that is all the more remarkable f)opsfidering his race. This is his story in rief: “It is just twenty-six years since I was born in the little, low, gray village of Lun On, in the province of Kwang-Tung and near the city of Canton. One-half of that time I have been in China and the other half in this country. 7 “My father was a farmer and my boy- hood days were chiefl{ spent inherding our cattle.. My echooling began when I was nine years of age and continued until, with some relatives and friends, I left to seek my fortune in far-away California at the age of 13. “Qur little home was full of al! =orts of idols. There was a ‘god of mercy’ upon a big shelf in the back partof our sitting- room, which we thought had influence over the rain and sunshine. This, of course, was a very important idel to us. There were others bearing the names of our ancestors for several generations back. All about the house were mottoss referring to deities, such as ‘the god of the cattle king’s place, ‘fiod of the stove king's place,’ ‘door judge’s place.’ There was another god under our beds to protect us from sickness and danger, and another sign near the sky read, ‘God of heaven, bestow blessing.’ “These deities we worshiped by burn- ing incense and placing a cup of tea on the 1st and 15th of every month, and at New Year’s we placed fore them pork chicken, rice and burned incense an papers. To the ‘God of heaven’ we did not pay as much respect as we did to the others, because, I suppose, we regarded him as a merciful and long-suffering divin- ity who would not do us any harm even if we did not pay him the attention sup- posed to_be due to him. Our peovle, how- ever, look upon the devil as a very mean fellow, and fear if they don’t serve him that he will do them great injury. **Our teacner at school wrote the name of Confucius upon a piece of paper and hung it on the wall and that piece of paper we worshiped to inspire us in learning. “One of my relatives was a priest—a sorcerer. I used to go with him beating a drum to help perform such ceremonies as we fancied would placate the devil. “I had never been in cities, therefore I had not learned the wicked ways of city life, but I learned how to gamble all the same and sometimes I stole my father’s money to gamble with. Once I took some money from a store and my mother gave me a good thrashing for it. “When, in the spring of 1882, we were having hard times in China my parents agked me if I would like to go abroad, and, having heard maryelous things about Cali- fornia, I said I would. My grandmother I bade good-by first, and she told me to fol- low the ‘good companions.” I was dumb and tears came to my eyes, and went out on the street and wept. = All my people ad- vised me the same way—to follow the ;%ood companions,’ and for a few months ter I landed I did so, but I soon fell into all kinds of vice, particularly gambling. ‘‘A cousin in Sacramento took care of me at first, and I was directed to the Chinese mission school to learn the English lan- guage. After a period of degeneration I came under the wholesome influence of a Chinese missionary there named Chin Foy. It was not long before I found myself en- tering a ‘Pi-Shi-Kai'—‘Jesus hall.” DRY GOODS. offer 50 pieces F 15 choice colorings, “In the winter of 1838 I went into a Methodist meeting which was very spir- itual, and six Iyun ago I joined the Salva- tion Army.’ I am satisfied with my new life, and believe other Chinese would soon jmgt‘,;.f they could only realize what was in i The Princess Mercedes of Spain, now in her thirteenth year, enjoys the distinction of being the only ex-Queén of her age in the world. She was Queeu of Spain dur- mi““ six months after the death of her father, Alfonso X1I, and before the birth of her brother, the present King. ——————— THERE uflm article on this market u'lid:; equaled and never excelled—Jesse Moore ky. Moore, Hunt & Co, guarantee its purity. * SILKS! § NEW AND ELEGANT GOODS '&ATG@ ONE-THIRD REGULAR PRICES! Commencing Monday, May [2th, we will offer 25,000 YARDS GENUINE FRENCH BENGALINE COTELET, in fancy weaves and newest colorings. Price @ B per Yard, The regular value of these Silks is $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 per yard. SILKS ! In addition to the above we will also RENCH TAFFETA PLISE (the latest French novelty), in Price $1.00 per Yard, Former price $2.50 per Yard. EZ" These are positively the greatest values ever offered in San Francisco. bBPoRATg o Y 1892. 111, 118, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. THE POT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK BECAUSE THE HOUSEWIFE DIDN’T USE SAPOLIO LIFE AMONG THE LEPERS Bishop Roperts Talks of the Missions in the South Seas. Golnz to Rome to Visit the Pope and Bring Back Young Recruits. The Right Reverend Bishop Gulstan Ro- perts of Honolulu celebrated mass at St. Agnes Church - yesterday and later preached to a large congregation at the French church on the subject of devotion to the Blessed Virgin which is generally observed in the Catholic world during the month of May. The Bishop is a slight man, but very active and delightfully entertaining. He is at his best when discussing the South Sea Islands, where he has lived and la- bored as a missioriary for over thirty years. Three years ago his consecration as titulor Bishop of Panopolis was celebrated in San Francisco. Bishop Roperts is on his way to Rome to tell the aged Pontiff at the Vatican of the work of the missionaries in the Hawaiian Islands and recite the harrowing story of life among the lepers. The Bishop will first visit France, where he was born. He entered the Picpus Community (so called because the mother house of the priests is located at Picpus, just outside of Paris) at | an early age and was commissioned for missionary work in the islands of the | South Sea. ““We have nearly 1200 lepers under our care,” said the Bishop yesterday, ‘‘and are in need of more persons to care for them. It is my intention to bring back with me from France some of our brothers to assist us in carrying on the work which Father Da- mien began. There are now only two riests and seven sisters, the latfer be- onging to_the Franciscan community of Syracuse, N. Y., now on_the island with the lepers. I have made frequent visits there. The sightis awful; too sickening to discuss, but these poor creatures must be cared for and it is our duty as Christian ministers to do the work. “Besides a Mr, Dutton, who fought in your civil war, and who retired as an offi- cer from the army to devote his life to car- | ing for the lepers, has done excellent | work. Heisthere on the island among | the unfortunates and I am glad to be able to testify to the nobility of his heart and conduct.” Bisho oliti Roperts was asked as to the situation at the islands, but he gged to be excused from saying any- thing further than that peace reigned there at Ereunt. He said that the church, though half of the native population be- longed to her communion, took no part one way or the other in the unpleasant- ness. The missionaries had been well treated under the monarchy and bad no complaint to make of the consideration which the Provisional Government had extended. Bishop Roperts came up from theislands on the same steamer with Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson and spoke in most compli- mentary terms of thatlady and her dead husband, whom he esteemed both as a scholar and a gentleman. 4 The Bishop leaves for the East this morning. He will visit the Brothers of Mary at Dayton, Ohio, eifihteeu members of which order are at Honolulu, where thfif have a college with 500 ]fupil's and will then proceed to Europe. He will re- turn to the islands in about six months, oA XA AR WM. RADAM’S MICROBE-KILLER. NATURE'S BLOOD-PURIFIER. CURES tenm CURES Asthma, All Brenchitis, Diseases Cancer, of the Consump- Kidneys, tion, Liver, Fevers, [ Bladder, Malaria, Stomach Rheuma- Skin, usm" Blood, Female Complaints and Private Diseasss. The Power of the Remedy Is NOW FULLY DEMONSTRATED In the marvelous cure of persons apparently beyond all human aid. B~ We invite thorough inspection. Send for circular giving full history and explanation Radam’s Microbe Killer Company, Office 1330 Market st., opp. Odd Fellows’ Bullding. OBDONTUNDER DENTAL PARLORS. 8153 Geary, bet. Larkin and Hyde. Don't make mistake in number. Directly o PPO- site Saratoga Hall, Teeth extracted i- ll\'&l_\'lvu "f’hullb the fi}::b- est pain by our own ented method, - OBDONTUNDER. We have the sole right to use Obdontunder on Crowns | Bridgework. 5 $100 up | Plates..$5, 87 and $10 00 ‘we advertise. All work guaranteed, WALSH has just returned from the Iatest improvements in crown and R. L. WALSH, D. D. 8. . R. L. East with the bridge work. 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