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HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 27 OMCERS OF THE FCOND CABIN Seiitee Immigrants Use It to Avoid Scrutiny. IC CHARGES . BECOME PUBL — SESSION OF THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION. . Rossi of the Italian Bureau Ex- plains His Letter Sent Out During the War With Spain. Dr. On such Lloyd, Cu- nd Wh on pas- rivals in m Mediter- age the othe ent coming and pa- ists all Ttalians | ut naturalization 3 Goverr -d a circular hich vou said in 1 his coun- passports, the s engaged NIGRA'S AMENDMENT TO ARBITRATION CONVENTION. Will Admit Non-Signatory Powers if There Is No Oppo- sition. UE, July the 1 he drafting nal Pea HAG ternat « € ay decided upon the torm € the laws and customs £ the Ger will be Italian del- endment permit- ADVERTISEMENTS. "PQSTHOORN CIN. | | | { | The Finest Made in America. CHARLES MEINECKE & CO., AGENTS PACIFIO 00ABT, 314 Sacramento Bt, down h; | gard_ th Ban Franciseo, 03l | watched with interest here. CUBANS BEG FOR % |Gomez Says the Gift| Was Il Timed. HAS CAUSED DISSATISFACTION THOUGHT HIS SOLDIERS WOULD REFUSE THE MONEY. Instead of This, They Are Grumbling Because It Was Not Distributed Quickly Enough to Suit Them. The Call .—In an interview printed In La imander Wwas ore afflicting > $3,000,000 > cause of ill right and jus ited. “It was thought at first that it ought not to have a honor to aspect is changed now nd it should c 2 wandering soldiers begging pain to see lementa in tion of the D! incapacitated f payment b was fu ready cost nished by G the Cubans do not pos upon which they tread not know the werk and ¢ mpatien who or asked ed are natura w any ames appear on the sts should not be paid re on_the inal ve order. gift of the orig 1 by , who &Y their epublic will pay them, but Impa- | tience wil INCREASE IN PRIVATE HOLDINGS OF WAR BONDS The Registration of Coupon Bonds Is Going Rapidly For- ward. July there have $1.000,000, % it incres “ and for rt h r i t1 THE BIG SHIP CANAL It Will Provide a Passage From Lake Erie to the Hudson River. ALBANY, July 26.—Engineer W. Rafter, in charge of the survey for | George the Great | the proposed ship ca Lakes to the ed his preliminary rawn | I his report. The project is to cut a canal thirty feet deep 140 feet wide ich is three hird the depth and five times the Erie | Canal, from to Lake On-| tario, around 1 Falls, leaving | Lake Ontario at Oswego River, through Oswego River to Oneida Lake, thence through the Mohawk Valley to the Hudson River. A single lock will be a thousand feet long and will be over | fifty feet high. The greatest problem | has been to find storage for water to| i this great canal on its varfous| levels and yet not affect the water sup- | ply of manufacturing concerns now us- | ing various rive Mr. Rafter plans a great dam_at Carthage, on the Black River, in Jefferson County, making a lake covering eighty square miles of land to feed the canal. From this reservoir Mr. Rafter has located a canal nine miles long, as wide | | as the Erie, to the proposed ship canal, | and on the way planned a secondary reser- in the Imon River. The com-| on's work also includes a similar s for a canal of the same charac- ving the St. Lawrence River a the head of the Coteau Rapids and| thence into and through Lake Cham- | plain. | t of Rome | Just w e LEWISTON COUNCIL | LICENSES GAMBLING | Clash Between the Idaho State Laws and Municipal Regu- | lations. BOISE, Idaho, July 26.—The City Coun- | cfl of Lewiston has decided to licens gambling, notwithstanding the State law | prohibiting it. At a recent meeting of | the Council a resolution was adopted, the | effect of which will be that games of | chance may be operated openly in Lewis- | ton on the payment of $50 a quarter, as | provided vy the ordinance, for each game. a special charter, and the decided that a general en- not t that charter un- makes special references to the | i As the Lewiston charter Is mot | | specifically amended by the anti-gam- bling law, it is held that the city may | license_gambling under the provisfons of the ordinance in effect before the State | prohibitory law was enacted. | “'T'he county will, it is understood, pros: | cute all who open games, and a test will | | e made in the Supreme Court. As Bofse | a special charter and is in all respests situated with Lewiston in re- eto, developments will be | bureau. | and accomplished the work of | house demonstrators | the story of Mrs. McCarty holding up the @ I3 & 3 > e - > o + PEROR WILLIAM recently went t of Mr. and Mrs. swig-H tely inspe He remained on board an @+ es el B e e o e e e S e HOWARD GOULD’S STEAM YACHT NIAGARA. cin and sixteen gentlemen of his ted the Niagara and expressed great satisfaction with the hour and In leaving presented Mrs. Gould .rge autograph picture of himself. B e O o S : ! ! © ! ¢ ! be ! * aboard the Niagara at Molde, as the & ould, and was accompanied by Prince Albert of ¢ suite. The BEmperor - e @ RESPONSIBILITY OB NEW VESSELS Long Divides It Among; the Bureaus. | ——— | CHIEF CONSTRUCTOR EASED Bt HERETOFORE IT HAS ALL REST- | ED ON HIS SHOULDERS. | SRR This Ruling Settles the Long-Stand- ing Dispute Among the Heads | of the Various De- \ | | . partments. s to The Call. WASHINGTON, July 26.—Secretary | Long has passed upon the long pending ither personal difference which xisted among the heads of the ,us naval bureaus concerning the new ships, and as a result a new order, to be known as special order No. 84, will 2 y or ding the The I al officials and the Board divided into ma matter ng among y and m ng report » what should be Che main point has been the ex- authority and res sibility of constructor and the desirabil- ity i -:au pass upon the prope )t all other bureaus in the building, arming and equipping of new | ships. Secretary Herbert placed the respon- sibility almost entirely with the chief| constructor as to all parts of the ship as a whole, and this order, as been the subject of r follows in the main the the old on but some changes in the text were made which il work « rable variation in the W -tion 1 is changed so as to designs’’ of all ships from the responsibilities charged upon the chief constructor. Heretofore, he has been charged with the responsibility for the i gns, structural strength and the ility” of all ships. jons 5 and 6 are changed so that snstructor in passing on pro- changes of design, equipment, | is authorized to state objections 5 to matters under the 4 bureau.” The other o are required to confine orts to matters under their own The general effect of the new be in the line of giving r share of respon- ectly under it. ete., “'so far cogniz: rule appears to a - affal DATO POURS HOT SHOT INTO WEYLER Acrimonious Discussion of the Army Bill in the Spanish Senate. MADRID, July 26.—The discussion of the army bill in the Senate to-day led to an exciting scene. General Wey- ler, arguing against any reduction of the strength of the army, warned the Government that the present situation made a revolution highly probable, since it had never been so easy for the army and the people to make common cause. He, himself, he said, had never thought of heading a rising, but it must be confessed that revolutions some- times cleared the political atmosphere regen- eration. Senor Dato, Minister of the Interlor, replying, savagely censured General Weyler, declaring that a general who with 300,000 men had failed to suppress the Cuban rebellion had no right to make such threats, and that any at- tempt at revolution, no matter by whom, would be proceeded against with the utmost rigor of the law. The Senators warmly applauded Senor Dato’s speech. The army bill was adopted. BIG DEMONSTHATIdN IN BUENOS AYRES Populace Turns Out and Demands Protection to the National Industries. Special Cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyrighted, 1599, by James Gor- don Bennett. BUENOS AYRES, July 2%.—A mon- strous demonstration of manufacturers paraded the streets of Buenos Ayres to- day. About 40,000 persons, employers as well as employed, and also many women and children, took part. A delegation was sent to the Vice Presi- dent of the Senate with a petition re- questing Congress to protect the national industries. In front of the Government cheered President Roca, who appeared on the balcony and pronounced a short speech, saying the country cannot adopt either an extreme protectionist or free trade policy. The Government was resolved to protect all branches of national industr: pectitim i Y. Forest Fire Extinguished. SAN ANDREAS, July 26—Many rumors current -during the progress of the great forest fire are now_denied, among the rest fire fighters with a shotgun. The fire has been extinguished by the efforts of the cople and the computation of the loss is n progress. The fire covered a wide arcq and entailed great loss on the county. It was the most disastrous conflagration in | | many years. MAY COMPROMIS ON A FREE PORT of Boundary Dis- pute in Sight. e TO HOLD THE LYN iR A NEW DEPARTURE FOR TEE UNITED STATES. B It Has Never Before Granted Such a Privilege to a Foreign Power as the One Offered. RS s ot End N CANAL Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL HEADQUART B VW LINGTON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, July 26.—Administration officials are much relieved by the prospects of an early settlement of the Alaskan boun- dary dispute. There never was any fear that controversy would lead to a serious disagreement with Great Bri- tain, but it was thought at one time s placed in the way by Canada would result in prolonging ne- gotiations and might cause friction be- | tween the United States and Canadian officials in the disputed territory. I was told to-day by an official that the two Governments were already con- sidering a permanent settlement of the controversy on the lines proposed in the modus vivendi. This official was sure that if the United States granted Great Britain a free port of entry on the Lynn ‘Canal, under the sovereignty of the United States, the privilege thus granted would be made permanent. Any agreement by Great Britain on this basis will be far reaching 1n effect, as it will amount practically to an ac- knowledgment by the British Govern- ment of the claim of the United States to sovereignty over the Lynn Canal and surrounding territory and will re move the only difficulty in the way of a final demarkation of the entire boun- dary line. The granting of a free port would be a new departure for the United States as never has a foreign power bee given such rights as it is purposed to allow Great Britain in this instance. It is analogous to the right of shipment of goods in bond through territory of the United States to Canada, but does further and amounts practically to a lease of the port to a foreign pOWer. It would naturally necessitate the United States malntaining an Inspec tion service in the leased port to D vent the smuggling of goods into con- tiguous territory, but the expense of this service would be paid out of th rental received from the British Go ernment. SOUTHERN PACIFIC PAY CAR WRECKED Some One Tampers With a Switch and Causes & Disaster Near Dunsmuir. DUNSMUIR, July 26.—The Southern Pa- cific paycar speclal was wrecked last night at 10 o’clock at the west switch at Morley station. The disaster w. caused by some outsider tampering with the locked switch. The section men had used this siding at 8 p. m., and knew it had been left properly set and locked for the main line. When the paycar special ap- proached in the night the partly open | switch was observed by the keen eye of Engineer Estabrook and a serious acci- dent averted. No one was injured. The engite tender was derailed and the Miller hook coupling and platform of the pay- car pulled out of place by the engine go- ing upon the siding, while the paycar kept the main track. The wrecking crew from Dunsmuir replaced the derailed trucks of the tender and at daylight the paycar was again on its way. ROUND VALLEY FEUD MAY BE REOPENED : « Frank Hanover, a Witness in the Lit- | tlefield Lynching Case, Ar- rested for Perjury. COVELO, July 2.—News of the appre- | hension of Frank Hanover at Santa Rosa to-day, charged with perjury in the Little- field Iynching case, was received here with much rejoicing by the faction favoring a reopening of the case. The arrest gives impetus to the endeavor to free the con- victed men—Van Horne, Crow. Officers are en route to Santa Rosa to bring the prisoner here for a hearing. Round Valley to-day is on the eve of a repetition of the exciting events enacted when the lynching occurred. Judge Cum- mins is busy preparing papers and sub- penas praparatory to acting in the case upon the arrival of Hanover. Brophy and Gregory’s mother are still here, flrepared to support their charges against Hanover. Surprise is expressed that no difficulty was encountered in arresting Hanover. ——— Young Fool With a Gun. LAKEPORT, July 26.—Edgar Watten- burger, aged 23 years, went to the house of a neighbor to borrow a rifle yesterda: Noble Llewellen, a boy 12 years of ag got it for him and in fun pointed it at him and pulled the trigger. The rifle was loaded and the ball went through the lower part of Wattenburger’s body. at- tenburger lived two hours. A Coroner’s %un;ngeclded that the shooting was acci- ental. Ocean Water Tub Baths. 101 Eeventh street, corner Mlssion. water direct from the ocean. Salt Gregory_and | NGERSOLLS B0DY S N STATE Take | Incineration Will Place To-Day. . HOUR HAS NOT BEEN SET ol LETTERS FROM ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY. gl Funeral Starts Whenever the Widow Is Ready—Last Writings Will Not Be Pub- lished. . e Special Dispatch to The Call. | | NEW YORK, July 26.—Walston, the | beautiful, at Dobbs Ferry, where Rob- | ert G. Ingersoll died, was a quiet place | to-day. The body of the dead agnostic | lay on his flower-covered bier. Onl the widow and daughters sat near; all | others kept away. | Three hundred letters were recelved | to-day from all over the country, most of them from intimate friends. Among | those who sent letters were J. H. Man- " | ley of Maine; Mrs. Elizabeth Cady | Stanton, who wrote a beautiful letter | | of hope and sympathy; Octave Thanet, | and Owen Miller, president of the American Federation of Musician: This Is what Mr. Miller wrote from St. Leuls to Mrs. Ingers | “On behalf of 15,000 professional mu- | sicians, comprising the American Fed- | | eration of Musicians, permit me to ex- | | tend you our heartfelt and most sin- | cere sympathy in the irreparable loss | of the model husband, father and | | friend. In him the musicians of not | only this country, but of all countrie: | have lost one whose noble nature grasped the true beauties of our su- | | blime art and whose intelligence gav | those tmpressions in words of glowing eloquence that will live as long as lan- | guage exists.” 3 Colonel Ingersoll's body will be ere- mated to-morrow. The coffin was sent | to Dobbs Ferry to-day, but it remained | | all day at the local undertaker’s. It is ! a plain, black, cloth-covered -coffin, | | without ornament or handles of any | kind, and without even a name plate It is simply a box in which the dead | | may lie at rest during the journey to | the crematory at Fresh Pond, Long sland. he body of the dead agnostic will| from the bier to the| Whenever the widow ready the hearse will start down the | ng hill that been the joke of | onel Ingersoll many 2 time. A spe- | cial train will n waiting at the sta- tion to tak arty to New York | City only a few minutes’ ride. to | Fre The incir vate. The in order that the public may not know. The funeral party will wait during the hours. while the body is being con- | sumed, to take the ashes back with them. The funeral urn has already been se- It is the choice from a thou- of George Grey Barnard, the| ulptor, and the dead man’s friend. | This is ‘only temporary, but it wili| | satisty Mrs. Ingersoll until a finer one | | can be made. She is determined thdt | the.ashes shall not be away from her | a single moment. Whatever was written by Colonel In gersoll’ before his Geath is still unpub- lished and wiil not be printed. ‘ration will be strictly pri- time has not even been set, | i 4 Supervise Christian Church | [ STATE BOARD NAMED. Will Werk for a Year. | NTA CRUZ, July %.—State President | J. H. Hughes of Chico, in his address tq | the Christian Church convention to-day, | recommended a number of changes in the | bylaws, among them being that the| | chairman of the convention be elected one | year in advance of his incumbency; that | | all members of the board of directors be | chosen from points near some center of church population; that the best financial agent possible be sent to each church {in the State that is not properly contrib- | | uting to the State work; that encourage- | ment be extended to Berkeley Bible Sem- inary, and that Curtner Seminary be re- built. The members of the State board were | | elected to-c They will meet Saturday to elect officers organize. The new board, which has supervision over the | work of the church, is composed of Re: S. M. Jefferson, Berkel Rev, Guy W. mith, Oakland; Lyman Maguire, Sara- | Henry = Shadle, Sacramento; RS Davis, roy; Rev. W. H. Martin, Fresno; Profe r H. D. Mec- Anemy, Berkeley. Among the arrivals this week are: El- mer R. Thompson, G..roy; Rev. James McCullough, Irvington; M and Mrs | Stockt, y Stockton, BaKersfiel 2 Fresno; F. i A. Murdoch Fresnc rd, Celia | nie Raymond, San . Butte City; Mr. isecarver, Geyserville; isalia; J. Durham, Irving-| icGuire, Arthur McGuire, | . M P. F;.url'lshé P. Colvin, | Mrs. P, Mrs. W. W. Stitt, Santa | Ro: H Boulder; Mrs. Z. | T. Magill, Winters; Mrs. J. H. Harlan, | | Woodland; L. A, Brewster, Eva Delia | | Brewster, Miss Stow, R. H. Sawyer, E.| A. Connell, Mrs. E. A. Connell, Watson- ville; Clarence Hoke, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Smith, Santa Cruz; Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Warlow, Fresno; Edward E. Rose, Santa | Clara; J. W. Marbut, Santa Maria; C. C. | Hockabout, Robert H. Orr, Watsonville; A. R. Ellis, Mrs. A. R. Ellis, Hollister; Mrs. 1. S. Brown, Mrs. Leah Brown, San Juan; Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Juett, Santa | Cruz; F. J. Jeans, San Francisco; Leland Georgia Cutler, Irvington; J. H. E. Dill, J. S. King, Mrs. J. H. Mrs. ice, Mrs. R. W. Craig, ; J. J. Burnett, Hollister; J. M. i C. B. Younger, | Corralitos; alvaren, Chlco; Mr. and Miss Cleo and Mrs. rtar, J. A. urgeon, Roy H. Russell, Mrs. Sp D. Auff, Palo Alto; W. P. Mack, Watson- | ville: Chellie Sharp, Oakland; Mrs. M. C. Proctor, San Jose; Mrs. E. A. Hall Healdsburg; Rev. J. W. Ingraham, Pasa- dena; Mamie Ogburn, Maggie Clark, Col- |lege City: Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Murphy, [ Mrs. J. E. McCubbin, Mrs. Duncan, Red | Bluft; Miss Grace Ellis, Rosa J. Johnson, Holiister; Mrs. E. Enfield, ~Healds- | burg; Helen C. Davis, Gilroy; Ernest R. Johnson, Lodi; Jerome Madden, ~Oak- jand; J. E. Mack, C. H. Barrett, Morgan | Hin; Lillie Johnson, Eureka; George W. | Brewster, Oakland; Maggie M. Hall, Mary B. Franklin, Lizzie Franklin, Ella | Franklin, Lydia F. Luse, Bertha Luse, | San Francisco; Lily Bardin, San Fran- cisco; Christine Stripling, Stockton; Belle Dixon, Edisa Dixon, Hollister; T. C Drake, Vallejo; Anna Sellsby, Mrs. R. N. Thompson, Mrs. G. A. Foster, George A. | Foster, Lodi; Mrs. W. H. Nash, San Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence , Dayton, Fla.; Henrietta Val- ey, Warm Springs; B. J. Gleason. Hol- | Reter; 3. W, Lowry, Santa Rosa; Mrs. C. | A. Baker. Santa Clara; Jennie Kelley, | Healdsburs. Accused of Burglary. SACRAMENTO, July 26.—A young man named George Bingay was arrested here to-night on a dispatch from Nevada County charging him with burglary. Bin- gay was reared here and a_few years ago was engaged in assaying. His father was an old-time newspaper man, |v | punch her fac | sentenc: T SHE ATTACKED HUSBAND AND LADY FRIEND Mrs. J. J. Groom on the Rampage. SCENE AT THE VAN NESS e SHE BLACKENS MRS. HETHER- INGTON’S LEFT OPTIC. Sl A Jealous Wife Surprises the Couple in the Lady’s Apartments and Threatens to Kill Them Both. i Mrs. J. J. Groom, wife of the fight pro- | moter, made a savage attack on her hus- band and Mrs. Hetherington at the Van Ness House on Market street Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Groom found her hus band and Mrs. Hetherington in the lat- ter's apartments and without any cere- mony proceeded to chastise both of them. She blackened Mrs. and breast. When the infuriated wife thought that Mrs. Hetherington had been punished severely enough her attentfon to her husband, who had been tremblingly watching the proceed- ings, and began to treat him in a manner similar to that in which she had treated the lady whom he was visiting. Becoming exhausted, Mrs. Groom left the couple, vowing vengeance upon them. Her screams created intense excitement among the other guests at the hotel, who expected every moment to hear the report of a pistol. Mrs. Hetherington, whose husband for- merly kept the Yellowstone saloon on Montgomery street, called at police head- quarters with a lady friend and wanted Mrs. Groom arrested on the charge of threats against life. She was taken to Warrant Clerk Wren of Judge Tread- well's court and, lifting a heavy black \'f'flfi showed what her assallant had done to her. “I am a friend of Mr. Groom,” she said, “and he called at my apartments at the s to-day to e s matter. - While we were talking room came in, and after accusing nd of all sorts of things com- cratch his face. I said to her ould be careful not to tear s ¢ ut, and she turned on at to ched my face and went threatened E 4 olver sticking out « 3 rom's pocket. T want her bound over to keep the peace, as both my boy and myself are afraid she will kill me. My husband is able to keep me, as he sends me remittances when I need them, and I cannot understand Mrs. Groom’s de- sire to kill me. 1f I felt inclined I could nto a jelly. If she is jeal- ous of her husband I cannot help it s discu: While the warrant clerk the issuance of the com s Groom made his appearance. His face also showed the effects of his wife's He talked in whispers with fingernails. Mrs, Het ngton for a few minutes and they went away together. So the warrant was not issued STATE LAW BARS NICKEL MACHINES Thus a San Jose Justice Declares in Deciding an Offender Guilty. SAN JOSE, July cigar dealers and others who reap har- rests machines are e.of A. Klein, who was found guilty by Justice Hirsch to-day of having vio- lated the State law in maintaining one of these gambling devices in his saloon. Klein, who is proprietor of the Pastime saloon on South Market street, and his two bartenders were arrested a short time ago charged with having robbed Henry Lekner, a rancher, of $110. They were acquitted, as it was shown Lekner had spent his money in a nickel-in-the- lot machine. Lekner then charged Klein with conducting one of these mac This city and county license these binig devices and Klein's presented in court as _eviden right to have nickel- 1ot machin in his saloon. Justice Hirsch, found him guilty under the State law and held him in $200 bonds for appearance for to-morrow morning. will be appealed to the Super- for Court. It will be watched with in- terest, as it involves a clash of authority between the State law and city and coun- ty ordinances. Other saloon keepers and tobacco men were to have been arrested for conducting these machines, but ihe arrests have been delayed result of the appeal. It is said they have organized to fight the case. et et TAKING TESTIMONY ON THE SMELTER TROUBLE State Board of Arbitration Has Fin- ished Its Investigation and Will Sit in Pueblo. DENVER, July 2%.—The State Board of rbitration to-day concluded its investi- on in this city of the causes of the deadlock between the smelter managers and their workmen, in consequence of which the smelters that are in the trust have been idle since June 15. The board will take testimony at Pueblo to-morrow and will reassemble in Denver Friday to hear arguments. The impre: sion is gaining ground that the board's deciston will be accepted by both sides to the controversy and that the smelters will resume operations next week, The testi- | Hetherington's left | eye and scratched her face, besides tear-| ing her dress and scratching her arms | she directed | 26.—Saloon keepers, of nickels from nickel-in-the-slot ! deeply interested in thel pending the | And bring us the order for glasses. | \ | | | | | | mony given to-day bore chiefly upon the | relations of the smelters to other indus- tries, showing that practically all the peo- ple of the State are suffering on account of the cessation of work. Managers J. B. Grant and Dennis Sheedy both claimed that it was impossi- D ta grant an elght-hour day and the iu crease of wages demanded by the men; as the increased expense would®have to be placed upon the producers of ores and Would lead to the closing of many low- Uup! GOING UP! $3.50 PER SHARE Contracts for machinery now being let. Sinking of wells In three different places to commence inside of 20 days. NO MORE STOCK AT $3.00 AFTER AUGUST Ist. During the past two weeks hundreds have investigated and put in their money. The moment we strike ofl FORTUNES ARE MADE. You have a few days to join them. Orders recelved up to midnight of July 31 will be filled at $3 per share. Right, however, re- served to return all subscriptions recelved after the balance of the 5000 shares are taken. Union Consolidated 0il and Transportation Co., Parrott Building, 8an Francisco. PROSPECTUS FREE. { | ' ADVERTISEMENT | | | | ‘ DESERVES SYMPATHY Despondent_Men Should Not Wait Till All Hope Has Fled. HOW COURAGE MAY BE RECAINED. | up In the race Wit stronger. If & man is run down physical mentally_he needs a_the tional t treatment DR. ME & CO., the noted = iste, ad Cheap doctor dangerous drugs. 1 | { | tric beits and temporary stimul never do the work. Such the patient not only of his he: his_purse as well The staff of DR. MEYERS & CO. is composed of the best doctors (all specia Tiste) in Europe and America. B have given years of study to d and weakness of men. They are graduates from two or more of the medical colleges in the world DR. ME S & CO. use remedies, methods known only to themselves. ey conduct the largest medical institution In America and have a practice that ex- c Coas! tends not only all over the Paci but through the United States. AILMENTS THEY CURE. Lost Vigor, Premature Decay, Unnat- ural Losses, Wasting Drains, Nervous Debility, Stricture, Rupture, Tumors, Varicocele, Special Diseases, Eczema, Cancer, Sleeplessness, Rheumatism, Neuraigia, Kidney Disease, Bladder Disease, Spine Disease, Liver Disease, Heart Disease, Blood Disease, Skin Disease, Stomach Disease, Eye Disease, Ear Disease, Lung Disease, Rectal Disease. with any of these crease your danger, ultimate cost of & clalists, who have g their patlents. st us by cur l NO PAY TILL CURED. It a patient has any doubt about being n he price of a cure ancisco, to be pald CO. after he is en- this payments may be made in weekly or monthly installments. CONSULTATION FREE, & CO. make no charge advice. DR. MEYEF for consultat!: see them or write. letter costs nothi quently re- sults in a great deal of good, evenm if treatment is not taken. HOME CURES. Call and talk or a ymptom ars. All corres- DR Market street, San Francisco; elevator entrance. Hours, 8 to 5 daily; 7 to 8 evenings ; 9 to 11 Sundays, TRUST Your Oculist They will be made to suit him and fit you. With the new clip, don't slip, tilt, waver or pinch. Factory on premises; quick repairing. Phone Main 10. HneyKatordb Cl st%i PHICAPPARATYS OPTICIANS %y 5106 ewmiric 642 MARKET ST. INSTRUMENTS WABER CHONICIE BN DING L e e i ¢ ] visir DR, JORDAN'S creat MUSEUR OF ANATOMY 1051 MAREET ST. bet. G:2478, 8.F.Cal, The Largest Anatomical Museum i the World Weaknesses or any contracted disease pesitively cured by the ddest Specialist cu the Coast. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES § Consultation free and strictly private. Treumens. personally or by Jeher. & Pos.twe Curein every case undertaken. -‘:nte Iu'\‘:;';k PHILOSOPRY of RERIAGE: MAILED FR ! valuable beok for men) o DR_JORDAN & CO., 1051 Market St.,S. F. VDDV VDV VTV Y A PLEASANT: LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATING ASH KIDNEY & LIVER @89S DR. HALL’S REINVIGORATOR Five hundred reward case wo cannot cure. . This seorer remedy stops all losses in 24 tx::cr; Sures Emissions, Impo- g aricocele, Gonorrhoea, Gleet. Fits, Strictures, Lost Bl Manhood and all wasting effects - of self-ab sealed, $2 bottle: 3 Bottice, 38; “sastaniced 16 ny case. Address HALL'S 3 STITUTE, 555 Broadway. Oskiand. sl —Als for sale at 1073% Market st., S. F. All priva: diseases quickly cured. Send for free book. BAJ/-} CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters 1= & Great Restorative, lavigorator and Ne~ The most wonderful Tonio for the Bexual Orpans of both sexmn The Mexican Remedy for Diseases of t neys and Bladder. | Sells on lts (wa Merits. 328 Market street. S. v.—(mmx‘u@uum:l':r-' Weekly Gal, $1.00 per Tear