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)| THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 1897 AMUSEMENTS. BALDWIN THFATER —“Merry Tramps.” Sunday evening, June 6rh. MOR0SCO'S OPERA -HOUSE—*'A Dark Secret,. ALcAZAR THE. The Three Hats” and “The First Born.” COLUMEIA THEATER day evening, May 31 TrvoL: OPERa Hot ‘The Fatal Card” Mon- E Martha' ORrrEUM —High-Class Vaudeville. OPERON.—Grand Concert. SUTRO BaTHS.—Bathing and Performances. THE CHUTES AND aily st Baight stree GOLDEN GATE PaBK— Lo PICNICS AND EXCURSIONS. E1 Caaro—>Music, Dancing, Boating Fishing every Sun one biog R SR T AUCTION *AL By Epinivax & Dovie Foxball Stab 320 Fillm Also Thursda Caroline str: By June 1, Horwes, ave..at 11 o'clock. June 10, 7CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. dgers has sued John Hussey her prophet promises fair | eaks this evening at the urch. decide the Durrant and ¥ O to-morrow. raise & fund to aid the of their country. al Greeks wi ows and orpha: The Sons of St. George will pienic with their riends at Surset Park to-morrow. normand has been declared ot | ¥ & jury in Judge Dunne’s court. H. Fowler, Guilford H. Lewis and T. Cottier have filed petitions in in- T a work this n been painted. California are doing good Some notable portraits have sts ol Tai, who has just arrived from aks fo-day at the Japanese Epis- a sailor, committed suicide t asphyxiating himself T. Carey of Sac- 00 atiorney lees y note dated May 6, gathering and games b were held in Shell and proved s great nnual exercises of the San ing School will take g at Howard M. E. has been sentenced to pay & erve 10 the County Jail one 2 of the fine, s L. Crittenden has not yet imposed by Judge Slack ptot court for having a loaded re- court during a trial. the City Hall G ave vio'ated the law in chanein ious for the gutters of the new ter the contract was let. David Jordan lectured last he supject of a_zoological garden for >n. He denied certain statements to him by the Examiner. mons are now waiting for the Divine vhich 1o build a temple at Inde- J:.ckson County, Mo., declared, they revelation to be the site of the nmew r Phelan sa glia, & boy of 17 employed in Pala- 1’s fish stall in the Spreckels market, h been missing since Tuesaay. He left a note 10 his pare! ving that they would find his body in the bottom of the ocean. Miss C. McQuaide, the teacher in Lhe ton Grasmmar night school, where exploded, states thatshe or permanently suspend T the offense. unknown man about 60 yearsold fell at the:corner of Third and Mission sterday and died after pein eiving Hospital. Both his ey ened and he nad been drinking. preme Court has reversed the de- the lower court in the electric rail- ds case of the Bradford: Investment y against Behrend Joost and others, a partisl victory for the latter. for divorce have been filed in the k’s office as follows: Beriha E. Inor against Ciarence H. Milnor, for failure rovide: Hannsh Hawkins against JamesM. s, for willful neglect and failure to | te Equalizers warned the Assessment | Board of Supervisors yester- ain the assessments s are made or t ing raised, as it was last ye , each bearing the number of n the Original Little pany drawing were the ground that 1cTe is great indig- -buyers. t 600 postal employes were paid off day in nicke and dimes, owing to the hey were counterfeits. nation among the tick neck could not rom Washington r 0dd tnousand doliars | nited States sub-treasury by r McCoppin. Volume 1, No. 1, of The War Call, *“the of- ficial organ'of Jestis Christs Atmy." has made its appearance. Iu is a neat four.page pa 10 be published weekly by Gendrai Goorgs Spurgeon Duggan and edited oy K. B, Avery. : esenis a creditable appearance, typo- -ally and editorially. aeposiied in the the late Postmas r reduced its rates to §5 pectively to Portland, and tne i Siezmsnip Company, in order to protect its Puget Sound business, made rates 10 Victoria and all sou:d ports ot $10 and $5. The Pacific rates o Portland remain ke was arrested yesterday morn- the Caledonian picnic by United States Service Agent Herris for passing several 5 pieces at the butchers’ picnic last Wednes- Starke is a cierk in the drugstore of his srother-io-law, Dr. Morgan, ai 401 Sixth re he complain: was made by Capiain of Sn-11 Mound Park, who accuses Starke of Leving passed eight of the pieces on the grounds. E.R. Thompson in his suit against James Touhuy of Sicramento slleges ingratitude on the par. of the delendant in addition toan npaid debt of $3000. Mr. Thompson says he s0ld u m: chine 1o Mr. Toubey for the purpose bituminous rock for strest puve- Mr. Touhey laid the pavements g 8L o State Capliol in Steramento and profit of $12,000, yet reiused to settle h ed him his reve- Save up your Schilling’s Best tea tickets and see if you can’t win one of those $100 prizes—you know you can use those same tickets in competing for the $1ooc prize. But if you want the $10c prize you must send in your tickets by June 15th—give you more time for the big prize. Rules of contest are published in our large PUT 70 SEA N CLOSE COMPARY Ocean Steamers, Barks and Barkentines Went Out. With Other Vessels They Made a Pretty P.cture in the 0 fing. The Gunboet Whe: ing More Than Exceeds the Demands Made on Her. The Golden Gate was full of vessels yes- terday afternoon, and every one of them was outwardbound. There were lumber schooners, which are regularly employed in the coastwise trade; barks bound for Australia and barkentines for Central America, barks and steamers for other points, all making the best of their way | past Point Lobos. After securing a good offing they cleared away on their respect- ) and were making good time een. Among those who left in a bunch were the steamer Colon for Panama, the Belgic for Yokohama, the bark Mercury for Port sound, the schooner Bonanza on a whal- went out with supplies for the sealers at St. Michaels, and the Bowhead started for Kodiak with provisions to fill the place of the lost schooner General Siglin. Dr. Chalmers, the BState guarantine officer, asserts that he s in full authority as far as the quarantine laws of California areconcerned. *“Under section 3020 of the Political Code,” said he vesterday, ‘I have full power to handle all these ves- s Not one of them can enter or clear ithout the certificate of the representa- tive of the City Board of Health, and as such I will assert my rights. The whole matter hus resolved 1itself into a conflict between the State and Federal authorities, and I think we will win. stop the passengers und cargo in the bay we can prevent all and sundry from land- ing. Iithecargo and passengers require fumigating, we can order the vessel back into quarantine and then the trouble will begin.” ‘While the ruling of the Federal authori- ties is perfectly legal ana takes precedence over the State laws, still Dr. Chalmers, on behalf of the State, can step in at any moment ana refuse the ship a clean bill of health. the chances are that the Pacific Mail the matter when the Peru arriver from Hongkong and Yokohama via Honolulu to-morrow. The City of Panama is also due from Panama and_way ports, and as there has Leen corsiderable talk about yellow fever and -malarial fever in Mexi- closely watoched. In tho case of the Colon Dr. Chaimers ordered her into quarartine after the Federal authorities had passed her. In consequence a test case is sure to Blakeley, the barkentine Gieaner for the | ing cruise, the schooner W. F. Jewatt | 1t we cannot | Then the trouble will begin, and | t | leading railway officials, have been meet- | Steamship Company will make a test of | can ports the way steamer is sure to be | way In far quicker time than the contract called for and in every respect has a right to pe called a twin to the Marietta. Every vessel contracted for in the £ast by | the United States has been in more or less trouble. Every vessel built for the United States by the Union Iron Works of Ban Francisco has been a success from the word go. The San Francisco has been continuously in commission since she was launched and she is still the “stand by” of the fleet. The Charleston has visited almost every port on earth and never a word about her engines or superstructure comes to this port. The Oregon, Monte- rey and others built in this port are with us still, and we ail know their abilities. The Scotts can go to sleep with the per- fect satisfaction that accompanies the knowledge thatin the Wheeling and Ma- rietta they have turned out two warships the equal, it not superior, of anything of their class in the United States navy. The schooner Bowhead had to put back yesterd: She cieared for Kodiak, but off the heads carried away her foremast, and in consequence came back for re- paira. CHARCOAL FUMES DID IT. Suicide of a Sailor, Despondent Because of a Protracted Sicknes: Henry Bursill, a sailor who had been sick for some time with Bright's disease | of the kidneys, committed suicide last Friday night in his room at 116 West Park. He was found dead by his biother | Henry half an hour after midnight, with | the stove full of burning charcoal and the | lid off. He had been asphyxiated by the | fumes. | . A notein pencil, addressed “To whom it may concern,” was found on a table near the bedside. It read as foiiows: | _ May 20, 1897.—Be it known tnat I, Heury Bursill, do not own any real or persounl prop- | erty outside of the suit I have on HENRY Bursik. Another note was addres:ed by the de- ceased to the Coroner: Mr. Coroner: J guess by the time yon get this I shall be over on the other shore. I have Deen sick for nearly three years with Bright's disense; £0you will know where to look. H. LURSILL. | Tue last sentence was evidently for the | benefit of the antopsy physician. | The deceased was a single man, a native | of England, aged 33 WESTERN ROADS ASTIR, |C. F. Smurr on the Work At- tempted at St. Louis and Chicavo. The Transcontinental Lines to Have | an Agency in the Windy | City. C. F. Smaurr, general freight agent of the Southern Pacific, returned yesterday after several weeks’' absence in St. Louis and [ Chicago. Mr. Smaurr, as wel as Nr. Stubbs, who has not yet arrived, and other ing the representatives ol d fferent lines in an endeavor to come to some under- standing about rates. The recent Supreme Court decision knocked the Transcontinental Association | to pieces and the railroads have been try- ing to effect some kind of a traffic organi- zation (o take in the lines that were in the old association, besides other lines. There was a meeting in St. Louis, so Mr. Smurr states, of the railroad lines in | on the importance of the question uuder LIFE IN CITIES 15 ARTIFICIAL Professor Jordan on the Subject of a Mission “Z‘o." He Thinks It a Boon for Al' Classes and the Best Site on Earth, Vigorously Denies Some Misrepre- sentations of Speech Made in the “Examinar.” President David Starr Jordan lectured last evening in Social Hall, at the inter- section of Twenty-first and Howard streets, on the subject of a Mission zoological gar- den. the Mission Park Association, acied as chairman of the evening and intrcduced the speaker in a few brief remarks bearing consideration. “There are certain peculiarities of life in cities not found in the country,” said Professor Jerdan in his opening remarks, *In the first place, we have not learned bow to live in cities. Under the artificial conditions at present obtaining they are really devourers of li'e. The rich either lead lives of ease without sufficient exer- cise or too much brainwork in the cares of business without sufficient recreation, In the case of the common people—meaning those in moderate circumstances—they generaily have not the opportunity for proper recreation. All classes are affscted by the constant wear and tear on the nervous system incident to the noise made by heavy Wagons on cobbles, the streetcars and the machinery of large establishments. “Contagious diseases generally appear in cities, becau-e there the microbes abound through lack of propersanitation. There is a tendency to seek spurious p eacures also and to drown the effects of care by the use of drugs.’”’ The lar_est percentage of efficient men, Professor Jordan believed, either came from the country themselves or within one or two generations. He was proud that he had been reared in the country, and had learned to drive horses, make hay and plow. These statements led up to the subject of the prrk, which he siid would bring the country into the City in the form of a breathing spot, where all could nave necded rest and recreation. European cities, he added, thing money spentin parks and zoological gardens a good in- vestment. “In London,” he continued, *a zoologi- cal garden is maintained at a great ex- pense, because the ciimate there is not equable. This is largely true of New York, Chicago and Philade!phia. “‘We could maiatain one here ata third, or perhaps a fiith, of the cost of any of these. We have, in addition, a host of George D. Shadburne, president of | family. for a’ that.” that family. as exhibits. nary to acquaintance. NEW TO-DAY. A Fair Warning For the Family. Unknown persons are not admitted to the Who are you? is the necessary prelimi- What are you? precedes intimacy with those who have learned that “rank is but the guinea’s stamp, the man’s the gold Why not test medicines, as well as men, not by name only, but by nature. not the name of the medicine that will help you or injure you; it's the nature of the ingredients make the medicine. -~ Ask what are you? before you admit it to the That was World's Fair of 1893, to all medicines entering the test The World’s Fair Free, J. C. Ayer Co,, Lowell, Mass. applied It’s the medicine the at received no medicines whose ingredients were secret. . That fact shut out all sarsaparillas but Ayer’s, whose formula is open to physicians at all times. a Fair warning for the Family: parillas are not safe. Get Ayer's. “ Curebool.” It's Secret _sarsa- A story of cures told by the cured. the case of the young man being presented by Attorney M. M. Foote, while McKinstry & Me- Kinstry appeared on behelfof the relutives of the accused, who considered him dangerously insane. It was cvident that the verdict of the jury was based ou the excellent understanding manifested by Lenormand while on the wit- ness-stand. He seemed to comprehend all the proceedings and to have a fuli appreciation of circumstances attending his incarceration in amadhouse. He appeaied to the jurors to put themselves fn his place and sce how the; would like to be committea to an asv.um ai- though consclous of having the facuitiesin their normal state. 1and and marine animals that could be se- Several physicians who are experts in mat- B O T 5 A 08 Oecan Steamers, Coasting Vessels, Parks, Barkentines and Schooners Went Out on the Ebb Tide Yestcriay Afternoons Passing Through the Golden Gate They Made a Very Pretty Ficture. The O. and O. Company’s Be'gic Was the Whipper-In. be made of the City of Panama when she arrives. The following information relative to the windsand weather in the North Pacific during June has jusi_been received from Bmcflyamgnpmc Office at Washington, The northeast trades will vary in direction from north northeast to northeast, with north- ern limit slightly north of the thirtieth paral- lel. To the west of the Hawaiian Isiands, however, in the vieinity of the twentisth par- ellel, the winds will probably be from the east, while near the American coasi, within the trade-wind limits, noriherly and northwesterly winds may be expected, instead of northeast- erly winds. Frequent squalis may be expected in ihe trade-wind region in the vicinity of the Hawaiian Islands, In the doldrums, or calm region between the trades, much rain quent thunderstorms may be expectes puniea by calms, light variable wi squslls. In the zone between 35 deg. and 50 deg. north frequent gales, accompanied by rain may be expected, less irequenily, however, than during May. ' In the vicinity of the Aleu- tian Isiands. and 1o the southward, the pre- vailing winds may be expected from the south- ward or wesiward, moderate to fresh. Along the coast of Mexico and Central America heavy thunder storms are likely to occur. Fog and mist will be prevalent along the American const north of latitude 30 deg. north. Frequent fog may be expected north of the 40:1 parallel {rom the American to the Asiatic coas southwest monsoon will be found to have set in along the southeast coastof As bringing with it the wet season and hot, sul- “’i‘ and rainy weatber. yphoons are not of frequent occurrence in the Chin, during June, but during the Iatter part of the month they may oceur, first appearing to the eastward of the Philippine Islands. W.S. HueHzs, Lieutenant, U, 8. N. Both of the mail docks are overcrowded with freignt, and in consequence the Cit of Panama will have to dock at Lombard- street wharf to discbarre. The dockine of the Panama steamer goes with an “if,”’ as both Drs. Chalmers and Blue are con- cerned as to ber bill of healtn. The United States gunboat Wheeling had her trial trip yesterday. She beat the Marieita’s time, and when the United States officers have finished their calculations it is thought tha: the war- ship witl have beaten all records. As 1t advertisement about the first and middle of each month. A3 , the Wheeling has made a splendil showing, beating all records under all cir- cumstances. She backed and gathered the Texas traffic. The prospectus of an organization was formulated, prov.ding in substance that all rates of all lines be announced through one medium. In case of the unlawful manipulation of rates there is to be an investigation and the evidence gained is to be submitted to the Interstate Commerce Commission. The organization will probably be known, Mr. Smurr says, as the South- western Bureau. Tne meeting in Chicago was represented by various railway men interested in the Pacific Coast business. No rates were dis- inrbed, but a number of changes were made in the groupings of articles carriad under carload in westbound commodity tariffs. They were suggested by the Pa. | cific Coast Metal and Hardware Associa- tion. | No changes were made in the rates. The transcontinental lines, he goes on to say, will probably have no association, but will have an agency in Chicago to publish th s of different lines. These will be filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. PERHAPS A MURDER, An Unknown O1d Man Dies After Be- ing Beaten by Unknown Persons. An old man wearing overalls, with both eyes blackened and bleeding at the no: staggered into a saloon on the southwest corner of Third and Mission sireets at 10 o'clock yesterday morning and fell un- conscious. Policeman Wallace sum- moned the patrol wagon and had him conveyed to the Receiving Hospital, where he aied a few hours afterward. The un- fortunate man had been drinking. The body was taken to the Morgue un- identified. The decsased was about 60 years old and had a white mustache. Apoplexy is supposed to have been the cause of death. - MORTON SPECIAL DELIVERY. Baggage iransferred Lo trains, steamers, etc. Also moved in the city. Furniture moved; estimates furnished. Fragat (ransferréd and shipped. 408 Taylor street and 650 Market street. “Telephone Main 46. . stbound cured at no great expense and would form novel attractions. “There is no other city in the world so favorably situated as this one is for such a garden. I do not speak in favor of any one part of the City, but my own opinion s the most favorably situated. hat no place needs it worse, for no place here is so badly crowded. in my opinion, is the place for it, and there is no better time to start it than this summer.”” Professor Jordan’s remarks were warmiy applauded, especially his_expression of sentiment in favor of the Mission, and at their conclusion a resolution of thanks was introduced by Attorney T.V. O’Brien and adopted unanimously. President George D. Shadburne then in- vited him to deliver the lecture at the time of beginning work on the park, which he believed would be soon. Samuel Partridge then gave several stereopticon views of park and zoolo, ical garden scenes and of various animals, Professor Jordan was asked after con- cluding his lecture if he had made the statement, purporting to come from him published ' in yesterday's Examiner, that “there are only twelve firsi-class lawyers in California who are equal to the best lawyers elsewhere. The others are pre- tenders. He made v gorous denial, asserting that he had merely said a legal friena on marked in canversation that there were only about a dogen lawyers in Caliiornia equal to the best elsewhere, and that they descended in quality gradually to some who might perhaps be termed misnomers. “Nor did I say,” he protes:ed, ‘‘that ‘there dozen first-class physicians in this City, but there is a mob of other doc- tors whose pictures are_in the daily news- papers and who murder people in the dark.” What 1 did say was that if such a condition of affairs as regards attornevs really obtained the same would probably be found true in medical circles. The article in question 1aisrepresented me all the way through.” Lenormand Not Insaue. In Judge Dunn:’s court yesterday a jury ae- cided that Alfred Lenormand is of sound ters of insanity testified that the youn¥ man appeared to be insane and warned the jurors that his mind might take a dangerous turn, but despite this warning the jury set him free. ——— ELEOTRIO ROAD BONDS 'Behrend Joost Successful in His Ap- peal to the Supreme Court. Supreme Court Commissioner N. P. Chipman has rendered a decision in the case of the Bradford Investment Company against Behrend Joo st et al., which was concurred in by Justices Brittand Haynes, in which the case was sent back to the Superior Court of S8an Francisco for s new trial. It was an action to foreclose fifty first-morteage bonds of the San Francisco and San Mateo Railroad Company of the par value of $1000 each exclusive of con- pons, given to secure a promissory note of $25.000, issued by Joost. An agreement was made by Joost that the bonds might be sold for the payment ot the note. The plaintiff’s rizht to judicial foreclosure was not denfed, but the right of & personal judgment against Joost for a deficiency, if ihere was any, was guestioned. Upon filing the answer, the plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings, on the ground that the answer denied none of the material ailegations of the complaint. The lower court granted the motion and ordered ;udgmenl in accordance with the prayer of the complainant, including a de- ficiency judgment, to which order Joost excepted and on this he appealed. The other defendants did mnot appe: After reviewing the case at length, Commis- sioner Chipman says: My conclusion is that the trial court erred in granting plaintiff's motion for judgment on the pleadings, and it is reccommended that the jndgment be reversed and thata new trial be granted., “The Perfect Man.” The meeting at the Young Men’s Christian Association, Mason and Ellis streets, this aft- ernoon will be addressed by Rev. E. H. Jenks of the First Prolb{:orlln Church, this City. His discourse wiil be on *The Perfect Man.” The service opens at 3 o’clock aud will be free to all young men. mind and he was accordingly ordered dis- charged from custody. The trial of this case occupled several days, ADVANCES made on furniture and pianos, with USBOEN U5 THEPUAD The Humane Sccety Thrown Out in the Co'd by the Supervisors. The Keeper Has Ob‘ained a Doz Establishment in an Old Mission Brewery. The Public Pound has again passed un- der control and superyision of the City because of a refusal on the part of the Supervisors to remove Fred A. Osborn, the present keeper. The pound was formeriy a City institu- tion, but in 1893 passed into the hands of | the Society for the Prevention of Crueity | to Animals. A keeper was appointed by the society at a salary of $75 per month, which he never drew. Later ne resigned and Osborn was appointed. He, too, turned the salary back to the society until a short time ago, when he informed the directors that his circumstances were such as to make the pay needful to him and he keptit. Then amovement was made to oust him, the cousent of the Supervisors being necessary for such action. This action was taken on the ground that the society could not stand the expense. The Health and Police Committee of the board heard both sides Friday, and on the showing by Osborn that the society bad a big cash balance to its creditand | also owned real estate the petition for Os- burn’s removal was denied. Directors Lissak, Hutchins and Stevens, who appeared for the society, then an- nouncei that the pound would be closed, but Osborn at once announced that he would provide a pound and there the matter dropped. Osborn los: no time in making good his threat, for yesterday, he selected as the newpound an old brewery on Fifteenth and Dolores streets, whers in the future ne will excerminate luckless and home- less canines. He will be obliged to fit up the entire place and provide wagons, horses, harness, etc., for those recently in use are the property of tae Society for het Prevention of Crueity to Animals. This society of course will close the Animals’ Home, as it was called, at once. The first move was made yesterday bv the discharge of five of the employes, From all appearances the new dogeatchers will be tuose who ran with the wagon for Jake Lindo. ®A. H. Lissak, one of thé directors of the society, is very indignant over the action of the Supervisors in retaining Osborn and completely ignoring a large organizas tion whose only purpose is to labor in the interest of humanity and common de- cency. He said that while the society owns considerable property its income is not sufficient to pay expenses within $50 a month. It has over $19,000 invested in the home on Sixteenth stireet, which is now practically useless. It also hasalot on California street tfrom which no reve- nue is derived. Mr. Lissak feels anything but kindly toward Mr. Osborn for the part he has taken 1n this controversy, saying that without the society’s aid Osborn would never have been made Poundkeep- er.- He regrets that the Pound should pass from under the control of the society, and predicts that it will fall into disrepute as it was in former years. His sentiments are shared by nearly all the other die rectors. e S u— BON AGAINST FATHER. Young Peixotto in the Role of a Logat Tconoclast. Attorney Edgar Peixotto is naving some sport with the indictments presented by his yenerable father as foreman of thae Grand Jury. When the indictments against Dr. Frederick H. Stahle, charging him with embezzlement of property be« longing to the City and County of San Francisco, were filed the original docu- ment bore the signature of Peixotto pere, and possibly just to show that he bore no malice to the family Dr. Stahle at once employed Peixotto nls to conduct his dee fense.” His first move was to demur to the indictment, and the District Attorney tacitly admitied that he was right by al- lowing and adyising the filing of & new indictment. When the fresh documents were presented .in-Judge Carroil Cook’s court yesterday the younger Peixotio at once began to pick flaws and point out errors. In order to bring the matter u regularly a continuance was granted unti next Tuesday. Y. M. L Picnic. San Francisco Council No.7, Y. M. L, will nold its twelfth anmual picuic at Scheutzen Park, near San Raiael, to-morrow. A tug-ofe war will be one of tne features. NEW T AY. A WOMAN SAVED. A SEVENTY-YEAR-OLD WOMAN STRICKEN WITH THE GRIP. Mrs. Mary Stevens Tells a Story of Suffer- ing and How She Was Cured. Mrs, Mary Stevens, who resides at 425 Eddy street, San Francisco, said: My troubles I date back to a severs at- tack of the griptwo years ago. Since that time I have doctored considerably in order to get relief from the re-ults of the grip. [ can candidly say I have obtained no real help until I began takirg the Electro- Medical treaiment. I can now sleep and eat. [ feel bungry now as I did not be- fore, can walk up a flight of stairs with ease, and my cough is gone. “Iam, in fact, curea, and place it all to the creait of the Electro-medical treat- ment. Especially is this happy result. re- markable, as I am now past 70 years of | age, and could harily have expected to regain mv health and sirength so readily.” Signed May 29, 1897. MARY STEVENS. This is but one of the many remarkable cures made at the State Electio-Medical Institute during the past week. The curing of disease by the Electro-Medical treatment, which, by the way, cannot be had at any other place than at the above Institute, is beyond the compreuension of ihe local doctors. Mauv of them have visited the Iustituie o soive what seemed or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1028 Mission, | t0 them a mystery. The people, too, are interested in the work of the State Electro-Medical Instis tute, because it means that henceforth the burdens of heavy doctors’ fees with maximum of charge and minimum of benefit have been lifted from their shoulders. They are interested because the Electro« Medical treatment gives new li e to worn- out bodies, new elasticity to laggirig steps, new activity and life to paralyzed mus- cles, new rest to sensilive and upset nerves. g That is exactly what the State Electroe Medical Instituie is doing for the sick of this Coast. Is it any wonder that the Institute is thronged from early morning unul laie at night? Out-of-town patients are treated with unfailing success through correspondence, Seud for symptom blank and leiter of advice, wito full particulars, Office hour: 9 A. M. 108 P. M. days 10 to 12 M. Call or address State Electro Medical Enstituce, Market, Poweil ana Bady stree.s. lintrance No, '8 Kddy street, San Francisco, Cal, Sun«