The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 30, 1898, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 30, 189S. 9 ALASKA PILOTS IN THE SWIM Doubled Their Charges for Taking Vessels to Dyea and Skaguay. Coal and Lumber Advance in Price Because of the Scar- city of Vessels. Arrival of the Ship William J. Rotch After a Long Passage From New York. The chartering of ves fleld rush still continu, of coasters is beginning to make i felt. Lumber has advanced in for lengths not in stock the d ers are charging exorbitant rates, s in some instances the timbers can be supplied ay night the whole- price, al- sale coal dealers held a meeting and advanced the price of Wellington coal Washington coals $1 a will not be reduced ht months, and the ces are t before the Klondike dies out there will be a-further ance a. The recent arrivals of heavy ship- 1 have not relieved the appreciable extent. Very few of the black found their ay as quickly as it was discharged out of the colliers. The with steamers and sailing vessels fr trade in order to carry pa L and Skaguay has and there will b until the he ship Yosemite {s to be turne a pa vessel. to be sent dowr ar b between Seattle and "homas Gattenby, forn ¢ will go out as m « take n, and ack pat- e as a t. Michael, and Dy re not to ehind am_ schooner unol has bheen old by the L. E. White Lumby pany to C. A. Hooper . It is not settled as to whether will run to ain in the lumber trade. new Cap- ohnson am schooner 11 comr . The nd of Captain Har a and Skaguay ning of the stea: :; by R v"‘\"'\vflcr/‘ e AR ANCHORED ON THE BAR se to s thoroughly dange :n by the he put in morning. ' aranc fell g got ready rapidly | A cabl Good Government b 1 much AWORTIY CAUSE ~ REQUINES HELP Presentation Convent School Unable to Meet the Taxes. An Entertainment to Be Given by the Nano Nagle Debating Club Next Week. Never before has the little Presenta- tion Convent on Powell and Lombard streets called upon the public to assist it, but this vear, as with all other people, the hard times has affected it d it now | finds itself obliged to ask a ance of the people to help pay off the tax on the property. | _ The way the convent seeks this little | favor is in the form of an entertainment, | and all the numbers on the programme | are very interesting and entertaining. | The musical and literary entertain- | ment is to be given by the members of | the Nano Nagle Debating Club on Thurs- | dz ay evening, February 10. and promises to be a very interesting affair. gramme has a variety of numbers—cho- | ruses, stringed orch a, trombone solo, recitations and selections by the chair- | man of the evening, Dr. J. P. McCarthy, while the laughable farce, “Events of a The pro- Night,” is sure to meet a general ap- plause. The tableaux are of a striking and highly entertaining character. Tickets, 50 cents, will be on sale at the Monitor office, 529 Clay street; Mauvais’ , Market street; Sherman & rner of Kearny and Sutter and at the Debating Club rooms, 1901 Powell street. e Manufacturing Company Incorporates. The Pacific Coast Manufacturing Com- pany, organized for the purpose of con- ducting a general manufacturing busi- filed articles of incorporation yester- The capital stock of the corporation 5,000, all of which has been subscribed. my eye which pr to be a cancer. It of the eye. wrote me to go to Dr. Chamley and be ought fer arti- 5 2 ® guarantee Kknife or pain. B g g 3 of the Australla on |a local shiy P AT Insolvent Tobacco Dealer. the Honolulu run. Chief Officer T. E. | circulated s some f not climb a tree or| 5 B Paulsen. a cigar and tobacco Dowdell of the Alameda will go as : steamers Both round it, but by hold- | géajer, has been declared insolvent. His master of the were to come from the scales. A snake on a t are scheduled at $10,306 60; as . Kell age in the business of :Imost helpless. ts about $3000. re: S. E. Wrenn, F. B 2 5 2 B Nichols, Guy F. Mayvdwell The American Ship Wm. J. Rotch Arrived Off Port From New York Last Friday Night and Anchoredi ney. SEnmElee il Inside the Nine-Fathom Buoy. A Tug Lay by Until 3 p. m. Yesterday, and Then Captain Lan- 1 CANCERS IN BREAST AND EYE caster Decided to Take a Tow. | Learning that some remarkable ST s g | cures had been made recently in this i ——— — = i = | city by Dr. S. R. Chamley of 719 Mar- now in the like trade, has | tain Dowdell is one of the most popu- | transy to the Kiondike. Van- | ket street, a Call reporter located the | TI6A 1o Han Franelsboito, tens | 1ar it Mmoers's 45 the s migloy-of Ths |ionver @ ay were the points |y oce, S0 e en the | Oceanic Steamship Compan and his | between it was reported that| '\ "7y “pioxard. who resides at ny and | friends will be pleased to learn of his | the steamers would run. - Mxa 11, Pickard, w sides Dur- | well-earned promotion. His place on| The rumors heretofore published in | 504% Guerrero street, was seen. She er Donaldson | the Alameda will be taken by Captain | The Call that mers Australia | said: “About five years ago I be- ; e 1 Czarina of the Oceanic line were to | came afflicted with a lump In the breast ttempt is being made to charter | There will be a number of changes in the Klondike trade have been | that was pronounced by my physician r Del Norte for the 's department of the As soof &5 the Australis | o icnucer. © Later sine asipered e the | 11d the deal be con- VOUREE § et A mnl "0t trip to Hono- | gther preast. 1 would not submit to | be 1t up and ac- who has been with Y = 7 & PRy o S5 padke she went into guny:senhie | The KR e pn Ahont UL S Aime Tleaxuea | s Crescent ity will ta resigned to beco: run until spring, | 0f and visit Dr. Chamley and w place in the lumber trade. r of the Commercial Power | ply between San Fran- nnnwll«mjl impre: M_i with his method. Owing to th > fleet going to | Company. His place will be taken hael. ln) August, 1897, I (('m[x\fn&-x-xl tre; Juneau uay there are | by C. Horgan and R. Denmark will fage . Clity, wiich | Sent, ~Wilin twelve Says from that not he to go around | be promoted to second assistant, &G0 _nuxchased St [{iie the camtens dropgeds ont withait and many of the steamers are taking G. Brown will become third assistant e time ago, reached port { 3nY pain. The sores healed rapidly, The charge f hip Wil J. Rotch | at 8 o'clock last evening, and anchored | leaving very little scars. I cannot ” ag arrived from D 3 off the barge cffice. Captain Goodall | SPeak too highly of Dr. Chamley and but the dily on the | ter a long voyage of Brought th ind the Horn, and | M3 treatment), o ae upon Mr. advance until now it is $250 and still | November she was caug made the nine days, hav- % OMC P N s e rising. to the numerous and | storm and had to put into g-fa her all'the way )t #wh% Covil TRomas B Fish ot e 3‘“’\?“'1‘12 ve 1 1y | with her ] :?\1}‘;\.:‘w..xr:(:u}“li:lt:‘l".- 1 be put on the Alaska |11 ore appeared on the lower ligd of affected the eyeball and I lost the use | A friend in Los Angeles | glolthe Qeng ot and Gia | cured. In twenty days the cancer e e Canbs ¥ Us the perfection | came out. I recommend his cure to| o e > d and bottled In bond. | ail.” have to be recorded. | changed his mind and was brought in S.used. The U. 8. Gov-| The doctor sends a 75-page book free eamship Company s | by the tug Sea Witc & nd purity, on cancers and tumors cured without | pelled with such force that it struck his CHARLES W. WILLEY'S WRECKED LIFE. 000000000 0, ~. G R Oooaac W MILLE, AN \ AN 0N0000000000000 0VIC0COOBEOOCOL0 ©00006000000000000000000000uww0000° r Gl o £206660000000000000 006604660006 06006660006860600 Charles Walter Willey, a young man who recently broke his father’s will, and was awarded property of the value of $125,000, was found dead in his bed yesterday morning in his room at 1145 Mission street. A gas jet turned partly on and the presence in the apartment of a suffocating quantity of gas told the story of the sad ending of a wrecked and wasted life. The deceased was 26 years old, the son of the late Amasa P. Willey, who died in this city on February 16, 18 He was the only child, but was a grief instead of a blessing to his parents because of his appetite for liquor. In 1892 he married Miss Georgietta Stevens, both being under age, and they took up their residence with the parents of the groom. His mother died soon after, and left her son the income of a plece of property on the cor- ner of Powell and Clay streets, amounting at that time to about $160 per month, but at present it not yielding more than $30 or $40 a month. Young Wille: wife subsequently obtained a divorce from him on the ground of habitual intemperance, and was awarded $50 per month ali- mony. He never paid it except under compulsion, and on one occasion he was confined five days in jail for contempt of court for refusing to pay it. There is now due Miss about $1000 for alimon Amasa Willey left a will in which he bequeathed his property to trus- tees to be distributed by them to distant relatives in the East and to vari- ous charitable institutions, part to be distributed immediately and the re~ mainder after the death of his sin, to whom he left an income of $500 per year, with the proviso that if hi hould contest the will the allowance should be stopped. Shortly after his father was buried young Willey called an auctioneer into the house and sold all the furniture, and on the day he became of age he mortgaged his income from his mother’s estate for $1000, and squandered is son the money in dissipation. For several months past the young man has been rooming in the house of Mrs. Harvey, his aunt having paid the rent for him. He had been drinking more heavily than u f it is not be- lleved that he committed suicide. >ssed and had gone to bed and presumably to sleep, for the bed clothing had been gathered around him, and he was in the position of one in a natural sieep. cock was turne@ on about half w The deceased succeeded in breaking the will of his father, but the trus- tees have appealed to the Supreme Court. The gas stop- A Curlous dccldent. F. Anderson, an employe of the Bibb | Lumber Company’s planing mill, Bay and Stockton streets, met with a curlo accident yesterday af 1e of the belts broke and a copper rivet was pr | | boot and went through into his foot. He was n to the Receiving Hospital in ambulance sre the rivet was ex- te Advances made on furniture and pianos, with or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission. OVER 10,000 CURES IN 1897. This is the record of Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt during the past year. &z \1} It cured after every other remedy failed, RHEUMATISM, LAME BACK, NERVOUS DEBILITY, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, FAILING VITALITY, VARICOCELE, KIDNEY TROUBLES, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, FEMALE WEAKNESS and the many weaknesses and pains of men and women upon which drugs have no effect except to ruin the stomach. A GODSEND TO HIM. RED BLUFF, Cal., Jan. 14, 1838 Dr. Sanden—Dear Sir: It is now over threé months since T commenced wearing one of your Belts. I was $o run down that I had to give up work. 1 have been under the care of a doctor for two years, until T got your Belt. Now the pain I 1 gained in weight right 1th’is so much better in It has been Belt has done for me, and I will at any time be pleased to veri- Ty this statement. Yours respectfully, BURTON J. DOWLING. RHEUMATISM 25 YEARS. SANGER, Cal., Dec. 8, 1897. During the last twenty-nve years I have been troubled with Rheumatism. At times it nearly killed me. Nothing did me any good. Patent medicines and doctors to no end I tried, with only siight relief. Last spring 1 bought one of your best Belts, and after wearing it a few weeks 1 had no more pain. My trouble was entirely cured. Now I am recommending your Belt to_every one that is af- Dr. Sanden—Dear Sir: flicted. Yours truly, JOHN HERKNER. CURED TWO YEARS AGO. £ “I was all broken down with a complication of allments when I got your Belt. After wearing it a while I began to feel an improvement, and now I feel like a new man altogether. I have seen the time when I would not take $1000 for it and be without it, but I don’t need it any more. ful now as _when I got it in June, 159. I shall always speak a ood word for your Beit.” W. E. Furrey, 20 Blaine street, Sama. Cruz, Cal., Jan. 22, 1898, It is about as power- 3 wonderful cure of the age. is felt instantly and can be regulated to suit the wearer. free. Call or address 1 ¢ grateful to you for what your | There is not a town in the West which does not claim at least one cure by Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt. SANDEN ELECTRIC CO., OFFICE HOURS—S a. m. to 8:30 p. m.; Sundays, 10 to 1. THOUSANDS ARE PRAISING ITS GOOD WORK. VARICOCELE—INSOMNIA. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 14, 1888, Dr. Sanden—Dear Sir: In June, a year ago, I purchased one of your Dr. Sanden Electric Belts. I was a miserable suf- ferer from Varicocele, Insomnia and Rheumatism, with a gen- eral broken-down feeling. 1 am thankful to say your Belt has done all that was clalmed for it. Since putting it on I have not had one Rheumatic pain. I sleep well and am refreshed, where before I would go three or four nights without gerting a wink of sleep. I can thank God and your wonderful Belt for making a new man of me. I feel tWer;n_\' yr{glrs ,\'m:mtzea‘“)[ 'se this for humanity ours grate! Vo i o ’“me-lrx\fiES F. MACCASKIE, 53 Mission St. NO MORE PAINS. “T have worn your Belt thirty days and am happy to say that I have no more aches and pains of any kind and my vari- cocele is nearly gone. I am working hard and am able to work harder. Your Belt is all right,” writes John L. Chambers from Dillon, Mont., Dec. 13. A LADY’S THANKS.. “Thy elved from you a couple of months ago has hflpg:i D e ey, ‘T am mot troubled with my back any more and my headache is much improved. I shall heartily rec- ommend your Belt.” Mrs. C. S. Butler, Sycamore, Cal., Jan. 25, 1898, WORTH $10,000. “If it were not possible to get another Belt, I would not take $10,000 for mine. klt“fine! A!lvyv'o'l:l:,llaln]l i;ol;li:hand :liore, as my friends say I lool e a ne 3 el lem it's your Bglt that has gone me so much good.”—J. C. Cornelius, Rands- burg, Cal. It is the most Don't suffer any longer. Get one of these life-giving Belts and be cured. ~The electric current It is warranted for one year. Book telling all about it, with prices, 630 MARKET STREET, Opposite Palace Hotel. OTHER OFFICES 255 Washington street, Portland, Oregon; 24 South Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal.; ®1 Sixteenth street, Denver, Coi.; 25 Main street, Dallas, Texas.

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