The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 16, 1900, Page 28

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1900. THERS NO = GRAND ENCAMPMENT PROSPECTORS [PAULIST FATHERS NOW i The Forty-Sixth Annual Session Is to Rev. Michael P. Smith Is Chosen t | = d Rev. H. H W Be Convened in Redding ucceed Rev. H. H. Wyman as ; Next Month P f St. Mary's § ext Month. Field of Exploration Extends astor of St. y's. caroll & Joh " From Arizona to MGSSTS. aro onnson | Alagka. : : ; ‘ Still continues. We will commence | 4 Northern California Miners’ Clatms i bricht an F “ Threatened by Southern Pacific. Monday morning tg : fd Ce;arly to | General Facts About Mines - stoc o oth ; of the State. sell this elegant ing, ‘ o Furnishing Goods, Hats, Trunks, etc., at ] The search f:r :cw L‘“PDE; 1‘:(!‘1&:;;03; f = B | stitutes one of the slgns of the 2 ; The rafaing Indastey. . Senguine. Dredic: exactly half the former prices. Below | | tlons are continually made concerning the g B ol e - stian el ' e or other district. n- ~ { i’c‘,‘.‘a‘:;?ni’ Gemand for sopper & be used we give you a ie Yy goo in the application of electricity in multi- 3 i % | farfous ways is making prospecting for thlngs Wthh we are se”]ng : | copper ores more and more necessary. | Shasta County. in this State, has made |large development of its copper resources : in the last two years and other extensions are projected. Other sections of the lstxi.le MEN'S SUIT, ell Chev- yo:;gnsd ‘s;,':x"x;i,"xx:x also hav otation of winning large plaid and plair B time the copper mines of Arizona &re ex- 1t, age 13 to 19, ploiting their properties abroad. An East- color, size 24 to ¢ sult, ag ern publicati ed in Denver says that - E— e St s e $2.45. $2_95_ WOOL UNDERWEAR |last year to $20,000,000 in value, will be 33C. | notably increased in the near future. The | plants of the Arizona Copper Company HAL}LXEIIA;\v\ it Co Mining C y E 3 1 :?dch};:)r?:lr:g i\l‘or’:‘x‘:ft’ will Sg e)&?!?:::fi. MEN"S SUIT, all Wool, BOYS REE?E‘R and ZSC | Negotiations are progressing to put in a | in blue and Havana SCHOOL srk“S' knee . | | 100-ton water jacket and condensers on | pants, a nice, warm | ——————— | the San Francisco River to treat the ores | brown, a good durable Boit: b therse Sifferest DRESS SHIRTS | of the Shannon mine. The Arizona Cop- | suit, size 34 to 44 patterns, age 4 to 15. 35c¢. per Mining Company, on the same auv.hor; - | fty, is reported to be producing aboul SOLF CAPS | | $3,000,000 worth of copper bullion annually, $4._ 95. gsc. 15¢ | The United Verde, the greatest copper | e duce in A will soon shut lown o { e e ot The rooes ot ne S HATS | plant and extenston. - 65¢ Most of th mines of the Morencl MEN'S OVERCOATS, | MEN'S ALL CHEVIOT . | i e oty Osnt in navy and black, a PANTS, in gray and BOYS OVERALLS | Thgs or ¢ ot Company Were lockted good durable and win- | striped colors, all sizes, 25¢ | by “‘wilde s.”” 'When the properties | ter coat, siza 34 to 4. 20 to 42 walst. “ | séemed to have value they were taken in | - { y @ Scoteh company. This was $3.55 95¢ HANDKER- | Were" operated at a loss until five vears | &t N . . pEomething like &0 tons of grafues | Eemms " T led d The Media Company | . MICHAEL SMITH, C. S. P. has in view the putting in of a smelter | THE B has In view ! (Photo by Anderson.) | < b d tised t [ A priter in the ol Miving . These goods, as above advertised, mus o> Py | er belt in A vs that two distine- ) B, B . WYMAN, superior of the | ter ayalified, than myself to hold the of be sold at once, so come early. MicHAELSON, PATTERSCN « |large m r or ma ic fron C Pe! ¢ St. Paul, has been | fice of supe 3 t | Zespe == | == e Q mipgracig by Rev. Micwaeh Smicn, | WiOCT, B ple management v wotk, | Remember the Place | re is ess . 8. P. The news o S a | Syt to the congrega- | Rev, Father Wyman has been pastor of and Number | EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT, i r o Sy ul‘l\m.. mt l;_ h ‘—]‘:fl 3 \;”x‘m‘lllm n the order w k 9 1 5 i i : e e e chumgs Pather W T 9156--Market Street-- ) & . bue native coppe 1: energies to the cause of local Catholics. Ab. Fifth g 2 * well as the red I am happy to say that I believe T am | Rev. Michael P. Smith, who is now in | i 4 rand Encampment of the Inde-| The following committees have charge | bornite. Continul £he has beal aupetion of the Goliets ove od g ev nt: nt, Frank W. Smith; vice A J. Wright, 8. P. E. § . M. P. Rose, Fred Michae! Louis Moors, T. B. Smith, dat! atthew Patter- . J. Wright, T. B. M. P. Rose. Louis Moore, tlitary atsplay—Frank - S g, ¥ zes ur es—Fred Michaelson, ADVERTISEMENTS. “Fifteen Years,” S Says Dr. Bean ntific Ro- b ‘\‘\“m\;.'.,‘;;; he city of Red- fo! a . r [ Jis P I visitors at R committee x < s arriving at - a. m., reception P ns’ from south; 9 : e nd Lodge, Odd Fel- « Grand Encampment = ) & m., reception - delegates south v Grand . a don, Ar- ncert on grand s | 2 opposite Depot at p. m., reception et defegates and : 7:30 p. m., at 3 siden rule 'de- “ncampment No, - tal No 57 of San - Hall; 10:20 p. m., recep- ‘ ain from the north. 0 a. m., reception « - ‘and_officlat band meet train from A m rade. 2 p. m., at Terry's Park, competitive driil antons Militant for the following prizes ment_silver troph 3§ h: second prize, $i 3100, to be followed by fancy drilis Drill Corps of San Francisco, and other cit will be equally the Rebékah Drill Corps ap- ade and exhibition drill with not n twelve filo three officers, pro- however, that not more than $7 shail 14 to any one drill corps; should the prevent outdoor drilling above contest thition will be given in Armory Hali; fter drill the decoration of c ly conferred on_ applicants peliove L and 1 wil liow ¥ one of - for my exclusive pa r el wed when burn her belt o Armory Hall by cantons 4:40 p. m., reception com- y from the south. 7:30 p. m. . review and dis ibution of prizes. . grand ball in Armory Hall, music months usage. are of frauds and g during which the prizes will dy o o 0 cantons Patriarchs Militant "har) Pn»‘_‘ e S g chekah Drill Corps. 10:30 p. ., reception Pom Ave Carcd” and “Three Months s S S e a. m., reception com- from the south. § a. m. closing session Armory Trial” offers. s train to-a ampment ! or w . reception committee meets You which w the north and south. 11 a. m., re 1t Let pienic excursion to Keswick over b Pacific broad-gauge and then to Mcuntain over the Mountain Copper Com- i | pany’s narrow-gauge picturesque railroad, re. Electric | turning from the mountain in time to visit the { city of South Park. 4:40 p. m., reception com- Beit Co. | mittee meets train trom ‘the south. . Bannef T some time at least, but little m ing machinery will be required ore can be sllected from the r nd the 1 output t able that nent on the 3 can The completed which is at Yuma, and the Pot | dredge, be en operate. t for m Shasta, has Jocation eto must accompa & to furs elected Iey ent M. ) vift; vice clal secret | veras County papers report | mpo Seco is in the midst of a cop- | | per boom. In Amador C w hoisting ma ty work Is progressing. s being p steadily go t/Jackson in, wi e powerful hoisting | vill s00n begin at the | King's ranch, one mile | According_to_ the Yreka Journal the | Creel, dredger at Hawkinsville, in Yrek: been strengthened, but has had a of breakdowns. — Several new | have been located in the Fool's e district. | E al strikes' are reported as having | been made in the placer mines near Bar. | stow, San Bernardino County. The forces | of employes have been doubled on some | of the claim ! Miping machinery has been arriving ai ville for the Mount Pleasant mine nd also the rafls for the Mount Hope | nd Kimball gravel mines. The -quartz ledge in Black Canyon, | Placer County, has been bonded to San Francisco men, who will develop the | | property. Many claims in the mountains | have been compelled to suspend, owing to the scarcity of water. Preparations are under way for resuming work on the Tad- pole Consolidated mine. The Ploneer | mine is about ready to start up. San Francisco men have been looking into the prospects of the Harney Consoiidated | mine. An electric plant is being put up in | El Dorado Canyon for the Turkey Hill mine. { 'The United States Supreme Court h: | dccided In the case of Black vs. The Kl horn Mining Company that > interest {in a mining claim prior to the payment of (any money for the granting of a patent to the land is nothing more than a right | to the exclusive sessfon of the land based upon conditions subsequent, a fail- | ure to fulfill which forfeits the locator's | intcrest in the claim.” The language of the decislon is in_part as follows: The Sorrento Coal Mining Company fs developing a ledge of graphite in Sonoma County, south of Petaluma. The shaft | has been put down about 100 feet and a | well developed ledge is reported. | _The annual report of the Minister of | Mines of British Columbia shows that the | miaeral output of the province for the ar 1899 was $12,308,131, as against $10,- 06,861 for 1808, an inerease of $1486,.270, or | 133-3_per cent. This would have been | largely increased but for the shutting | down of several mines, owing to the pas- sage of a law prohibiting miners worfllng over eight hours under drastic penaities, causing a deficit of 3910814 in silver and lead values aione. The coal mines of the province during 1899 turned out 1,306,324 tons of coal and 34,251 tons of coke, an in- crease over 1898 of 170,459 tons of coal and as k- the Paulist ted with the Cath- hington, D. C. He rmon at 11 o’clock Aquina mli no- will preach t this mornir wi only too happy life in laborin the eloquent charmed thou- s _masterful Beautiful,” one of the joined 185 conceded chers in the order, t missiona nd in Chi Turk had the ed by Judge Cabaniss yester- and Polk streets, in the province to make an entry in his An attorney nion was in arge being WINDOW AND They do the work qui | representing 2 and co! reduced. ARy | A Special for Men. T —— Viel kid. box calf. and tan ngelistic Services. s, worth none le an will be pair at the As- John E Market street, . nett Anderson, x zrim, will t in the Rick Church, corne z Sentenced. TR Alpes, Eiis tly found gullty on o |a it to murder, was sen- imprisonment Reccived Stolen Goods. Lawlor ye awfield. a second-hand dealer, who | convict was. on ety pu ased a quantity of carpenters’ t I~1 n Quentin, rved a term for stolen Ha Hastings from a build- ! burgl: ADVEKTISEME‘NIEA OCTOR EFORD For His Advanced Homeopathic Remedies —He Is Con- tent to Submit Them to the Judgment of the Piople— The Verdict Wili Be Rendered by These Who Try Them. ] A 10,000 VIALS FREE Of DR. DE FORD'S ADVANCED HOMEOPATHIC REMEDI either COUGH CURE, DYSPEPSIA CURE or RHEUMATISM CURE (ask for what you want), will be dls uted from the office of “The Examiner,” beginning Monday morning, at 9 o clock, FREE TQ ALL for three days, closing at 6 p. m. The reporters will investigate, The name and address of each person receiving the treatment will be carefully and privately kept, reporters detailed to interview these persons and the results of this in- vestigation will be published in the San Francisco newspapers. Being interviewed by reporter Dr. De Ford boldly said: I have no fear as to the results of the investigation tng upon the distribution and trial of my remedies here in San Francisco. The people must he the judzes here of the curative powers and qualities of my Advanced Homeopathic Remedies, as they have been before in thousands of cases. In every Eastern city where my remedies have been tested it Lias been found that they cure in ninety-six out of every one hundred cases, properly indicated, taking all stages and conditions of ses together, and that in these cliles the death rate was lowered ten to twenty-five per cent in one month.” Modern Medicine. Dr. De Ford has searchod and labored in science to the good of the people of America and all humanity. He spent five years in study and research in the great universities of rope, who conferred upon him the aimost exclusive degree of B. M. (Bachelor of Med- icine). ' He has justly earned this great homor and distinction and well deserves his po- sition as head of the ADVANCED SCHOOL OF HOMOEOPATHY IN AMERICA. His ad vanced system of Homoeopathic Medicine, the result of years of expericnce and research, 80 mild, yet so quickly effective, has completely taken the place of all Homoeopathic methods previously advocated or known, as much as the electric light has superseded the tallow candle. Dr. De J'ord says: *‘My remedies are the only medicines discovered up to this time that are effective, safe and suitable for the diseases of man. All other Homoeopathic remedies in existence previous to my discovery are plain white sugar pills, without the slightest indication of medicine; no physical, physiological or chemical evidence of medicinal elements being present. You can take the entire contents of a vial of these sugar pllls without the slightest ill-efiects: such so-called medicine is not any the less fatal, because of its utter ineffect- iveners against disease and waste of time so preclous to the sick. Don't trifle away the health and life of yourself and dear ones, Ibeg of you.”" Dr. De Ford further says: ‘Each one of my remedics has its individuality as to taste. color, odor and medicinal action. They are effective, yet harmless, because they DO ACT ONLY ON THE DISEASED parts and NOT on the healthy structures of the body. As to the old, yet to-day still common, methods of treating disease with strong drugs, physics, mercury and other poisons, refuse to Le treated by a system of medicine that produces a half-dozen diseases in tha effort to get rid of one, and if it cures the disease, practically destroys the patlent; medicine that is no more fuited for the human system than an ox yoke for a pony.” DR. DB FORD'S ADVANCED HOMOEOPATHIC SYSTEM OF MEDICINE is the intermediate sys- tem that stands between the candy-sugar-pill fallacy (harmless and FATAL because in- competent), and the health and life-destroying nostrum and strong drug treatment. DR. DE FORD'S ADVANCED HOMOEOPATHIC MEDICIN' are_the only rational remedies known to mankind. Do not fall to take advantage of Dr. De Ford's generous offer; get the medicine that will cure you. A separate cure for each disease—5 different remedies for 4 different diseases. NO MATTER WHAT YOUR DISEASE MAY BE— NO MATTER HOW MANY DOCTORS HAVE TREATED YOU— NO MATTER HOW MUCH MEDICINE YOU HAVE TAKEN— NO MATTER HOW HOPELESS YOUR CONDITION MAY SEEM— Write to Dr. Paul De Ford. IT WILL COST YOU ABSOLUTELY NOTHING FOR THE HOM THIS EMINENT PHYSICIAN. b reliable, B AD\'!C\ OF die 175 N. Spring St. Few? Los Angeles, Cal. mm-wummmmmgm T S PHINE FOLSOM 1406. THE MONARCH Country Orders Filled When Money Accompanles the Order. ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST. S:l'ATEMENT —OF THE— | CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— ~ GIRARD FIRE AXD MARINE INSURANGE GOMPANY STATE OF \t er. T 1 3 - ursuant to the p nd €11 of the Poli Kk furnished by CAPITAL. Amount of Capital Stock, paid up in Cash ... % $300,000 00 h Mark onds owned Amount of Prem Bills receivable, not Matured, for Fire and Marine Risks. Rents due and acorued_. Due from other Companics surance on losses already paid. taken 450 50 Total Assets .. LIABILITIES. Losses In process of Adjustment or insurance 50 per cent. Gross premiums on Fire Risks run. ning more than one year, $367,935 1 insurance pro rata. 297,848 05 Amount reclaimable by the insured on perpetual Fire Insurance Poli- cles 624,088 31 All other demands against the Com- pany . Total Nabilittes .. INCOMP. Net cash actually received for Firs premiums . $409,265 38 Received for interest on Bonds and Mortgages . 46,687 41 Received for interest and dividends on Bonds, Stocks, Loans, and from all_other sources. Received for Rents Recetved from all other sources. Total Income ... EXPENDITURES. Net amount paid for Fire Losses | (including $29.612 11, losses of previ- ous years) . $225,3%3 79 Dividends to Stockholders 75,000 00 Paid or allowed for Commission or Brokerage . 94,033 60 Paid for Salarfes, Fees and other charges for officers. clerks, ete. 65,368 44 Paid for State, National and Local taxes 23,029 28 and expendi- All other payments tures 35,311 52 505,126 63 Total Expenditures incurred during the year Risks and Premiumni Fire Risks. | Premiums. [ | » ..$263,107 17 | UNITED STATES BRANCH. STATEMENT —OF THE— ‘ CONDITION AND AFFAIRS 'LIVERPOOL and LONDON - and GLOBE | INSURANCE COMPANY. o F LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND, ON THE ST day of Decembe: D. 198 03 nd Loans - v 4 accrued on Bonds et . 088 0 % of Colleom Life loan | Perpetual Pol Total Assets. LIABILITIES. Losses in process of Adjustment or P — sRarprans 524,990 53 Losses resisted, including expens 30,400 20 Groes premiums on Firs Risks r ning one year or less, $3,422.9 reinsurance 0 per cent LuLe @ s on Fire Risks run- Gross prem! ” $2.533, ning more than one year, 548 §9; reins: Amount reclatz | _ en perpetu: Liability e insurance policies. Department All other ands against the com- Total Liabilities... INCOME. N ly received for Fire :\;Lu:m actually 717,490 3 139,644 33 on Bords and ind atvidends s ° 96,534 08 Recelved for Rents statons 162 0 Received from all other sources. 250 00 | Total Income. 35,047,051 09 EXPENDITURE: Vet amount paid for Fire Losses (in- cluding $515.057 63, losses of pre | _vious yearsi............. | Paia or allowed for Commission |~ Brokerage ’ # Paid for Salarfes | _ charges for o “Fees and P e . M8.329 %9 | All other payments and expendi- o | " tures .c.cceeee | Total Expenditures. LOSSES fncurred during the year. nt of Risks the et amow | written 6,028,301 33 Net_amount of Risks| written during the| year Net amount of Risks! explred during the year 43,102,887 439,798 70 Net amount in force| December 31, 1599..| 82,505,043 781,852 33 JAMES B. ALVORD, Vice President. EDWIN F. MERRILL, Secretary. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 29th day of January, 1900, GEORGE P. WILGUS, Notary Public PACIFIC DEPARTMENT, NE. Cor. California and Sansome Sts., SAN FRANCISCO, WILLARD 0. WAYMAN, G. W. McNEAR, General A::nl:f-“ $52,722,275 | $507,213 58 EATON, Rest. Manager. HOYT, Deputy Manager. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 2Tth | day of March, 1900. W. H. WILDEY, | Notary Publie. PACIFIC DEPARTMENT, NO. 422 CALIFORNIA ST., CHARLES D. HAVEN, ‘THE WEEKLY CALL. Resldent Secreotary. $1 per Ycar.

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