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1 ADVEBTISEHFNTS \oveltv \lléwOos Ftamines ;s 75¢ french Serqes. :!lack Serge. 3 Black C repoas. 33¢ . 7¢ Grass Linen - Pet icoats. A5 Dress St lrtg 6Cc. 9¢ 5¢ 89c. BLACK VELVET RIBBUNS. 2062000000268 00GEC0REARCPONNRANDDAHCLCRODSLNDPCIONIRNCOACOOOCCINNNONTOCICRCII0DC0RCEE0CIBCIDRAOA0INER80262000 BIG BLAZE AT TACOMA. Mattress Factory B: Firemen Injure wi OIL! We own over 11,000 acres right in the center of the Kern County oil fields. SRS S Get in at the start with the Occidental 0il Company of West Virginia. Five new strikes on land immediately ad- joining ours within the past week. Big returns on small in- a few more shares of the 30c stock left. Don’t miss this op- portunity, for you will surely regret it if you do. —:0 We own over 11,000 acres right in the heart of the Kern County oil fields. OCCIDENTALOIL CO. Room 364, Parrott Building. OIL!! COUNT JeoTCICOSBCH00020000 vestments sure to follow. Only " ~|ll\ Waists $2.98 Each. Silk Skirts A broker fach. < ‘mxrt V\dlsts White Wai -ts 120 ned and Two m;w <3 GOLD FIELDS OF 'S0 Writes a Prospector on OUR JULY CLEARANCE SALE BEGINS TO-MORROW, MONOAY, JULY 2, looked In the p at our com Mpieces Irish Dimities, in pretty c +lavende: Y9c¢ and._ Thi H(qh Nov*lty Dimities. qui por S| handsor . = ‘( T P s 2(:--‘,vn ‘_»:9;:3,; vale B ra 59c¢ L 6995 SHEETS, SHEETS, |am Deeaeint Hemmed 62x00 72x90 Tost. tine Damask. rowe 50 o He qualt ar; r ropr 89( | 4 »EHE:_AT LFAN 0P oF FINE suxs 15t and dres eft » in all tals | $00 yards 24-inch Blac 5 all silk, extra heavy, 87(: dupll regular price price RY ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. 3895202000800 forward to, pri codiges Hamburz Edges and taah LS american Qlng. | LSTHONRIZ o U 200 pleces n Ging- | inches ~ wide; gr INGNAMS J e o quality, In | iaines. Rews: |0 t tr cks, | ) ice 2\\ 6c Yard. Rt ar sric c . rea ‘and gray: regu u alue N yard. § price .Yard c Cheviot Shirtings Hrotoh Cheviot | Torchon Laces, Eds. P ¥ 9 ! Insertions, 2 pretty - stripes | ¢ lar price 9¢ . Yara s season's most ex- site styles in im- ted Point de Parls and riped Point de Venise All est \\hlt" B ankets @ m«hm 150 yards 2l-inch Black Taff Cluster Tucked "and Lace Strive All 0\ pretty effects, inches wide. Regular value See. watched reparation of this imand to brine to- 'HE MOST PHE- view—to make a artment wiil be ere outlined gives h. 25c Over Embroidery, tinen s, All olors of pink, blue, 2 black and < 83C r Shirtings, i n fabrie f. Deautiful -\1\11~Iw ~<l\hs acques, embroldery. 39¢ Hemstitched Bde each 1 6le each ezular vaiue $1. Each Jabots, + 59¢ Make | Pure Linen Hand Em- broldered Tnitial Hand- | at the f | & sheer qual- o | it Ular = | cach | Each SSC oa DIC = 2t | Ladies wr. the best per med prettily Yard k Satin Duchesse, cannot 1»» $1.00 Wash Siiks., the best corded effacts in pretty colorings sold all sea- rp won at e yd 2 vy £3C EXQUISITE FANCY RIBBONS. Al silk, wide, CAPE NOME AR A GREAT SNARE the Ground to a Friend. = No One Making Five Dollars a Day, the Average of All the Men on the Beach Being Low. ol et That all {s not gold that glitters and that the reports which come from the Cape Nome goldfields are at times highly colored is evidenced by a letter written by William L. Phillips under date of Nome City, June 9, to Judge Frank H. Dunne of this city. He says In substance that the country is staked for miles in every direction; that some claims pay $2 per day; that the beach claims paid well for a time, but nothing like the returns sent out, and that they are completely worked out now. He affirms that they do not average $§1 a day to each man engaged in mining. En- gineers and mechanics are scarce, $i00 a month not being an unusual salary for skilled labor. The majority of the claim holders are awaiting the coming of the tenderfeet, to whom they may sell their claims for large sums. The writer be- Meves the suffering will be intense this summer, as typhoid fever and other dis- cases are expected to develop. The let- ter in full reads: 1 have had some experlences since I saw you last which I do not care to go through again. It is now June and we have had some of the worst weather this last week that we have had this year. One of its most_prominent characteristics has been a heavy gale, acompanied by a blinding snowstorm. The bark Alaska arrived somre days sthce from San Francisco and was blown ashore during the gale. She went 10 pleces immediately and her cargo is dis- tributed along the beach. Three tughoats and one £loop were also wrecked and some lives were lost. The steamers Bear, Mary D. Hume, Alexander, Robert Dollar and the schocmer Louisa D were compelled to put to Sea OWILg to the severity of the storm. The steamers Portland and Dora arrived this evening. Peopie of the outslde world a climate we imagine what 2 There is no summer. Although it is day- it is just fall and iight all the time now, winter. 1 left St. Michael on February 5 with ‘my three dogs and 610 pounds of freight. 1 traveled alone and was thirty- five daye in covering 315 miles. 1 pros- ed Norton Sound and Golovin Bay dis- tricts on my journey. but found nothing en- couraging. 1 arrived in Nome on March § without mishap. Upon arrival 1 found the country staked for miles in every direction. 1 received informaticu of a good location some miles from here. 1 went there and located six claims. £ome thirty other pros- pectors arrived on the scene immediately after me. A meeting was called and a recorder Was elected. It was de- cided that all pbwer of attorney clalms be taxed £250. that being the amount fixed sther district 1 prospected for three weeks on claim on per day. the claims, but the best that any the creek would pan out was $2 A man near me was satisfied to small return In opder to earn to take him out of the half interest in a claim about twenty miles from which I have left for my partner to prospect. work for ou the salaries pald in this part T was offered $550 a month by the North American Trans- portation and Trading Co. to act as chief engineer. Engineers and machinists are The chief engineer for Lane offered me $15 per day. s which have been sent from exaggerated beyond all belief. & that some good strikes ade here. The beach pald well put nothing like what was ex- is now worked out. A little 2ing is going on but no one is making over §5 per day. If the money taken out was uveraged among the men at work it would not be over $1 to each man. Two or three creeks are good but that is all. Some men own fifty claims in different . but not 5 per cent of them pay to . They are holding them to sell to The tenderteet now coming. In by thou sands. The companies are booming the country In order to sell their goods at ex- orbitant prices. The suffering here this summer will be something awful. To make matters worse, typhold fever is expected to break out in another month or o, owing to the bad sanitary conditions. This is a breeding ground for fever because of bad water and marshy ground. I have heard of people going to California and telling of their rich claims and the money they have made here. Some of them ought to be han I epeak of the coun- try as I have found it, and I have trav- cled over as much of it as the average man here. SUFFERED MUCH HARDSHIP. Adventures of a Prospector in South America. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, June 30.—The story told by Charles N. Simpson, who reached San Diego on the steamer Serapis, is one of much traveling in a few months and of peculiar hardship which made him wish | for home and work his passage to get a start in that direction. left his home in Wheeling, W. Va., for South America, York and Liverpool to Buenos Ayres. That was twice across the Atlantic, besides traveling almost the entire length of it. He had started with the intention of prospecting in the Andes Mountains, in Chile, and he rode from Buenos Ayres to the foot of the mountain, whence with a single companion he start- ed on foot to cross into Chile. It was not the season for mountain traveling and he found plenty of hard- ships, besides finding the mountaineers had a peculiar way of robbing the few travelers who made the trip at that sea- son. He was compelled to pay $25 to one man_for supper, lodgin, g breakfast and $16 to another man for lodglnx and a cup of coffee. Though he finally managed to reach the Chilean side of the moun- tains he was too disgusted to want to re- main and too nearly broke to think of | prospecting. He umrdin(l‘ made his way to Valparaiso, where he succeeded through the American Consul in getting the opportunity to work his passage to America on the Serapis. He expects to remain in Southern Cautornla for a time, having telegraphed for and having re- ceived money from home. He declares }mu the gold in lhe Andes an stay there | o r all he c: he will not back for that wi ch he left there. In March last he | going by way of New | BYCABLETD The Call, 6 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL DAY, JULY 1, 1900 e 5 ; ; ADVERTISEMENTS. POWERS MRE 1N FULL ACCORD AS REGARDS CHINA There Is No Danger of Com- plications Declares Ber- lin Offical. R Question of Dismissing Peking's: Representatives in Europe Has Not Been Broached. e e Copyrighted, BERLIN, June 30. clal sald to-da The old theory of ‘no war' is still up- held. The understandings between the powers are still intact. No exchange of notes is going on. Japan some time ago asked the powel for their programme, which communication was answered. The press has been exaggerating the share | | which diplomacy hitherto has had in the matter. There has not been any talk of | dismissing the Chinese Ministers in Europe.” Lord Gough, the Charge d'Affaires, said he thought the powers were keeping up‘ | the fiction of “no war" as long as | out of fear of the difficulties that mi | arise between themselves in China if war were once officially admitted. The corre- ndent of the Associated Press int 1900, by the Assoclated Press. high foreign offi- | | viewed the Chinese Minister, Lui Hal | | Houan, who said: | | _*There has been no question hitherto in | Europe of handing the Chinese Ministers their passports. No one knows where the foreign are. It they | went to Shang Kwan it was a step taken the Chi; or their pre stion and was not their dismissal. [he hence to China is use- thing will be over before | ‘It wiil require x weeks to e get them to Tientsin, and Li Hung C h.mg 3 n three week: . admits | will suppress the Boxers The Chinese Minister, howeve! aving received no direct news from the inese Government Germans Dissatisfied. | There is growing dissatisfaction through- | gut Germany with the attitude of the Government regarding Chi iall because the Government publishes it official news, and even some of this Is er- roneous. At the Foreign Office evasive answers were given to inquiries about the number of troops and ships which may be dispatched. The correspondent of the Assoclated | Press understands that the Emperor and Count von Bulow, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, who has just returned from Kicl, reached an understanding about the general lines of Germany's attitude in the present crisis, subject to unforeseen | circumstances compelling a deviation. It is certain, however, that the Emperor could have all the volunteers for China | he wanted for the army if larger forces were needed there, for the popular =enu-} | | ment against China is quite strong. A number of papers, including the Tage- blatt, express astonishment at the meager and {ll-considered reports from Vice Ad- miral Bendeman, saying the other nations have been better served in this respe: Regrets are expressed by the newspapers that the Reichstag's adjournment deprives the nation chance of obtaining detailed information ding the extent to which Germany ticlpate in the Chine: 2 vhich will necessitate the expe: diture of large sums of money. Severas of the leading papers demand that the Reichstag meet in extra session. a The jingo newspapers ate Ger- many's acquiring a large army for trans- marine uses. One of these papers, the Schiesiche Zeitung, justifies this demand | by the argument that some time a mas- acre of Germans may occur In the United States, “in which case Germany would be forced to throw large bodies of troops upon American soil,” adding: | “Once the feeling obtains in trans- oceanic countries that Germany Is power- less to throw large bodles of troops be- | yond the seas Germany's prestige in | trans-marine ports Is gone.” | Believes the Powers Erred. | A leading diplomat here, who has had | an extensive experience in China, sald that he condemned the present an(i-Chi- nese course pursued by the powers, claim- | ing that the naval demonstration with | which the hostilities began was unjusti- fled, as_was the marching of troops toward Peking In time of actual peace. | | He considers the subjection of the Chinese | | impossible, and says pacification also 1s | impossible. "Besides, he adds, to accom- | plish anything like lasting military_suc- cesses against the Chinese at least” 200,000 | men will be required; but even then Burope could not administrate China or | even some of the provinces of China. He | | strongly advocates a rullcy of mutual for- | glveness and forgetfulness and the putting | of an effectual stop to missionary efforts | | there. He concluded with saying: *We may leave it to commerce and time to carry our civilization to China. AMERICAN'S HORRIBLE ATTEMPT AT SUICIDE Tragedy Witnessed by a San Fran- ciscan on a Street of Paris. PARIS, June 30.—Edward Goering, for- merly employed at 30 Cornhill street, Bos- ton, Mass., fatally injured himself this morning in a sensational attempt to com- mit suicide. His queer actions on the Avenue de la Bourgonne attracted the | attention of C. J. Stilwell of San Frar. |y, cisco, to whom he spoke in an erratic manner, and, drawing a razor, said he in- | tended to calmed Gi On the shed his life. Mr. Stilwell ent for the police. the police Goering with the razor, and, started to run down | take his ering and s rrival of throat bleeding profusely. the avenue, followed by the gendarmes. As he ran Goering kept slashing his throat. three blocks the | After a chase of | man was overtaken, w of blood, but fought fiercely. 3 While the surgeons of the ambulance station, to which he was taken ed to administer ether, Goer hold of his own throat and hand in_the wound tore the Vit al por tions. The physicia ay this makes it impossible for the sufferer to recover. Goering had lost money and began drinking absinthe. MRS. SARAH VAN DYCKE HUBBARD DIES IN PARIS Sudden Passing of a Former Resident of San Francisco and Marys- ville. Spectal Cable to The Call and New York Herald Jpyright, 1800, by the Herald Publishing Company. i Hub) at 9 o'clock this mornin ace Hotel, where she h for some months p ly well yesterds the cours l!uh ard h attack in Dycke three years point of 1 but had an night. Mrs, d spent the nd was at the ad to join her . and Mrs. Ryer, of San Francisco. Mrs. formerly city and also lived some prominent cles and was staff of the 'm\u—rnur When King [\dla- kmm .mrr-ununl his. )n'r-mmn of visiting Van Dycke Hubbard was resident of this ah a w tion to be come an fifl- aration from her hus- failed. however, to make a tirement. e . — FIEND OF THE PRINZ CARL DOOMED TO DIE Man Who Murdered Seven Persons on a Vessel at Sea Will Be Executed. STOCKHOLM, June 30.—The trial of Philip Nordlund, who, on May st, on | the steamer Prinz Carl, on which he was a passenger, murdered seven men and wounded five others and a woman and 4 after which he escaped in a boat to 5 aptured the follow avana, fifty-seven miles , was commenced to-day d resulted in the prisoner being convict- ed and sentenced to deat after his arrest Nordlund con- fessed that he nad deliberately planned the crimes, and that he had stolen 810 ptain of the steamer. kronen from the e 1 t he had not ki e Prinz Carl, em- that he was insane, and he had committed tke “‘avenge himself on phati asserted ie that crimes In order to mankind."” TRANSPORT COLLIDES WITH GERMAN VESSEL Steamship Bremen Sunk by British Troopship During a Dense Fog. June 30.—The steamer Oro- h sailed for South- Africa on with 1200 troops, has returned mpton with the crew of the German steamer Bremen, with which she collided off Ushant in a dense fog on Fri- day morning. The Bremen sank four minutes after the collision occurred, but no lives werc lost. The Orotava received some damage about the bow. FRENCH CHAMBER VOTES FOR A GREATER NAVY Fifty Millions of Francs Added to Appropriation for Torpedo Boats Alone. » 30.—The Chamber of Depu- de the clause of the naval il aniended a0 s to privide fov the cans struction of six battleships and five arm- ored crulsers and appropriating 118,000,000 LONDON francs for buflding torpedo boats and sub- rine boats. is an increase of )00,000 francs above the amount appropr ated for the latter ( ICE TRUST ILLEGAL. District Judge’s Decision Against an Omaha Concern. OMAHA, June 30.—Judge Dickinson of the District Court decides that the Reser- voir Ice Company, known as the ice trust, of this city, is in_violation of the State anti-trust law. He declines to dissolve the corporation, saying that steps can be taken only after a reply and joining of sues. Atforney General Smith s he is satisfled with the 1lev|vinn and he calls attention te the fact that any person con- nected with the company, now that it is declared a trust, is liable to fine upon complaint of any citizen. i A Broke the Record. 30.—The Salinas Fire Department hose team broke the record to-night by making a 300-yard run, un- reeling 100 yards of fire hose and getting water In forty-seven seconds. Another Goehel Suspect. | FRANKFORT, Ky., June 30.—Deputy Sheriff Harold telegraphed from Bigstone, | Va., to-day and announced the arrest of Robert Noaks, suspected of being impli- cated in the Goebel assassination. RIS, June 30.—Mrs. Sarah Van Dycke | ak_from the loss | the gendarmes | i { 1 She was apparent- | daughter | and has since been ltving in re- | BURDETTE-COUTTS RECITAL ARDUSES GREAT BRITAIN Grewsome Details of War in South Africa Related | to Parliament. S U General Belief in England Now That the Ministers at Peking ‘Will Not Come to Much Harm. bt Is Copyrighted, LONDON, June 20.—The spectacle of a man of American birth, William I. Ash- mead Bartlett Burdette-Coutts, Con- servative member for Westminster, standing Jn the House of Com- mons amid a storm of jeers and cries and exposing to the world the horrors and abuses that followed in the wake of British victories proved as dra- matic as it was unprecedented. For over an hour Coutts, once known as the “‘young husband of the millionaire Baron ess,” but now growing gra; th his years, his face bronzed by the sun South Africa and his hands clenched ner- vously behind him, commanded the atten- tion of the hostile majority of the House and drew a succe: £ zhastly pictures that in grewsomeness of « eclipsed the horrors of the Crimean war. The task was terribly difficult. Mr. Burdette-Coutts has seldom spoken in Parliament, and never before at such length or with the whole nation waiting to hear what he had to s: He is nothi an orator and was obliged to present a mass of detail that now and again grew tediou: He never- theless held his audience by the strength £ his statements. His dec- atement that I made with ar arnestness that atoned for all his rhe- torical aerects. This terrible arraignment t l{rll(xins care 190, by the Assoclated Press. y of the Foreign O yndham, which e v Mr sutts the Government leader and L Treasury, W. J. Balfour, that followed it, were both efforts that neither man has | equale b y The rious s ing oratc ndham his critics behind the scenes of the great campaign. graphic language he dis- cussed the t difficulties’ of the com- mu nd exposed for the first tim laring conception of Lord Rob- erts' plans and the risks he ran. In short, without tiring his hearers with too many statistics, the Under Secretary for War gave such a fascinating panorama, | interjecting facts to prove that the War | Office took all precautions, reiterating that war must always be fearful, that his hearers well nigh forgot the sick and wounded in their admiration in the sue- cess of the great general; but this, the Times points out to- all crumbled vay under the damning details present- by Mr. Burdette-Coutts, who spoke with~ the advantage eof having seen whereof he spoke. Mr. Balfour for once lost his self-con- trol. Flushed and trembling with pas- sion, he denounced the attacks, which he declared merely amounted to ungenerous criticisms of Lord Roberts. This, the Times denied, and in point of fact the whole of Mr. Burdette-Coutts’ speech was an attack upon the methods of Lord Kitchener instead of Lord Roberts, though this was not openly stated. As a result of the dramatic debate pub- lic opinion seems fairly evenly divided between two verdicts. First, that the War Office is guilty of eriminal neglect: second, they reserve all judgment till the Parliamentary committee reports. Mr. Burdette-Coutts has suddenly become one of the most prominent men of the hour and the Government has still to face the | agitation which has stirred the country almost to a greater extent than did the declaration of war itself. Great Britain seems to have pretty well settled down to the belief that the Minis- | ters at Peking will notcome to much harm. | The average observer agrees with Lord | | service to the Cape. Salisbury’s idea that if they are safe at present, as there seems every reason to believe, it Is not likely that they will be harmed in the future. Vice Admiral Sevmour's unsuccessful trip inland has brought upon him much censure. It is maintained that he shouid not have left the fleet. Thanks partly to the Boxers and partly to the Boers coal is going up rapidl Japan, Russia and the United States a all ordering large quantities from Eng- land’s stock, which is aiready depleted by the immense demands for the transport Coal promises to reach a record price this winter unless, as some merchants think, importations can be secured from America. Already 100,000 tons of American bunker coal have been landed at Glasgow and sold cheaper than the fuel could be got from Scotland. The probability of a big rise in wheat, owing to the shortage of the American crop, is also worrying the British business world, for, though supplies are still com- ing in plentifully from Argentina, the In- dian crop is quite insufficient to meet its | normal demands. Crushed by a Landslide. DECATUR, Ala., June 30.—A I occurred at Hartzell Hill, thirteen miles below Decatur, on the Louisville and Nashville road. It is known that three men, one negro and two whites, were killed, and it is thought several others shared the same fate. | o (2] o o o Q i i g o 0 [*3 [~ © o ms Center st., Los Angeles, June 7, 1900. A. McLAUGHLIN—Dear and T am well pleased that I got A. C. KINTERB M. Sir: Yo Electrle Belt has done me more good in ‘érwa weeks than all other treatmenu. Who Is Broken in Health ? Whose Back Is Weak ? which belong to strong men. leaving him. lates t! in earlier®years. sleep. It is N: regulator and wclal cushion electro MY BEL CURE YOU. I want you to call if free. If vou can't call worth $§100 to any weak man closely sealed. Who Is Old White Young ? You are here offered New Life, Fresh Courage and the Nerves and Vigor Dr. McLaughlin’s Electric Belt Is worth its weight in gold to every man whose strength and fills the body with nerve force, warms the blood, stimu- e circulation and restores all the mental and ph: ature's own remedy. It saturates the body with a current of elec- tricity which can be felt yet does not blister or burn as do other Belts which ‘do not have my perfected des. . After you have worn it a few times you will say as others have said: “I would not part with it for ten times its cos you can and test m send for my book, wl r woman. Sent DR. M. A, McLAUGHLIN, 702 Market St., Cor. Kearny, S. F., and Cor. Spring and Second, Los Angeles. DOCOOG000 00 00 0 0 00CCODCO000CO00000 00 0 00 6 OCCOTOLOCOTONO000 © 00 00 0 VOSOoOTO ARE YOU A MAN Whose Power Is Wasted ? Whose Nerves Are Shattered ? vitality are cal energy wasted Tt does [ts Ereat work whis you Belt ch is tree, Is Still A-Booming. We Will Make a Strong Effort to Cicse Them Ail Out This Week. NOTICE TO COUNTRY BUYERS. Our Nail Orliers are enor mous on account of the great advantages we giv: our cus- tomers. IF SHOES ARE "NOT AS REPRESENTED RETURN TEEA AT OUR EXPENSE AND HAVE YOUR MONEY REFUNDED. WE HAVE ALL SIZES AND ALL WIDTHS, so we don't have to mark them over to flil your order, thereby saving the eus- omer the encrmous exp2nse of expressing the shoes three ways to hava tham exchanged. WE HAVE MADE A BIG REDUCTION ON ALL OUR SHOES FOR NET CASH. GOODS CHARGED WILL BE CHARGED 25 PER CENT EXTRA If you want good shoes cheap see our Bargain Counters WE HAVE NO BRANCH STORES. NOLAN I BROS., 812-814 Market Street, Phelan Building. % Quart Bottles, $320 Express Charges Prepald. IGHEST GRADE FOR MEDICINAL OR family use. We give you the bemefit of tha middlemen’s profit; besides, you are guaranteed the certainty of [ES5" PURE WHISKEY ~“3mg Nothirg on case to indicate contents. Money refunded if not satisfactory. Twice the price could buy mo better. Reference, any business firm and commercial agencies. ’l— EP“RAIM & (0., Distillers’ Agent: 18 Montgom:ry St., S. F., Cal. Sole Agents French Colony Vinevard Co., Ime. andslide | . BELMONT HOME ‘For Sale at aBargain Elegant house of § rooms. bath and base- ment, hot and cold water throughout Seven minutes from station ed site oking the town. Six acres, '3 in pas- ture, 2 in orchard, 1 about house: barn and hen : all femced. Excellent w: supgly. owner $10.000, but compelled to re East, bence will sell at sacrifice. Investi and make offer. APPIY to owner, J. D. ALLAN, Cor. 2d and Braxa I PALACE HOTEL The high standard of excellence main- tained by these hotels is recognized and appreciated by a discriminating and fas- tidious clientele who regularly make them their headquarters when in San Francisco. Cost Located in close proximity to wholesale and shopping districts, places of amuse- ment and with the further advantage of baving street cars to all points of interest pass the entranee. American plan. European plan GRAND HOTEL 'DR. WONG WOO, Chinese Tea and Herb Slnl- tarium, 764-768 Clay st., Sam Francisco, Cal. All diseases cured exclusively by Chinese herbs. Advice free. Hours, 4 to 11 a. - m., 1t 3 7tw9 p San 'Francisco. January 2. 1900, I had a very serious attack of consumption and my feet were so swollen thag it was with difficuity I could walk. The doctors in the witals could not give me any relief for n'ne weeks. was persuaded to go to the well-known Chinese Doctor, Wong Woe, and in threé months I was completely cured and in pecfect healtr:, having | gained ight. '1 m‘::uth m\l: in recommend- o any way what . JAKOB RAUCH, 13% Freelon st, city