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BARE bootb! ses, bi B RUSHES ™" bin <hoe . , tatlors, BUCHANAN BROS., Brush Mar.ufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. ete. 'THE WEEKLY CALL THE SA WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER 3, 1900, ADVERTISEMENTS. e e e irs. Watson telis ali suffering wo-~ men how she was cured and advises them io follow ker example. Here is ke first letter fo Mirs. Pinkhamn = (PUELISHED BY PERMISSION.) : * March 15, 1899. “To MRS. PINKHAM, LyYNN, Mass.: “DEaR MapaM:—I am suffering from inflammation of the ovaries and womb, and have been for eighteen months. I have a continual pain and soreness in my back and side. I am only free from pain when lying do'_»\'n or sitting in an easy chair. When I stand I suffer with severe pain in my side and back. I believe my troubles were caused by over-work and lifting some years ago. ‘“Life is a drag to me, and I sometimes feel like giving up ever being a well woman ; have become careless and unconcerned about everything. Iam in bed now. I have had several doctors, but they did me but little good. “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been recommended to me by a friend, and I have made up my mind to give it fair trial, : ““I write this letter with the hope of hearing from you in regard to my case ”—Mgs. S. J. WATSON, Hampton, Va. Mrs. Pinkhasn’s advice was promptly received by Mrs. Watson and a few months Iater she writes as follows (PUBLISHED BY PERMISSION.) ‘‘November 27, 1899. ‘“DEAR MRs. PixguAM:—I feel it my duty to acknowledge to you the benefit that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has done for me. “I had been suffering with female troubles for some time, could walk but a short distance, had terrible bearing- d_own pains in lower part of my bowels, backache, and pain in ovary. I used your medicine for four months and was so much better that I could walk three times the distance that I could before. “I am to-day in better health than I have been for more than two years, and I know it is all due to Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. ““I recommend your advice and medicine to all women who suffer.”—Mgs. 8. J. Warsox, Hampton, Va. Mrs. Watson’s letters prove that Mrs. Pink- ham’s free advice is always forthcoming on reguest and that it is a sure guide to health. These letfers are but a drop in the ccean of evldence proving that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-~ table Compound QURES the ills of women. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such hosts of grateful friends. Do not bhe persuaded that any other maedicine is Just as geod. Any dealer who suggests something else has no interest in your case. He is seeking a larger profit. Follow the record of this medicine and remember that these thousands of cures of women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper were not brought about by ‘‘something else,” but by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetahble Compound Owing to the fact that some skeptical people have from time to time questioned the genuineness of the testimonial letters we are constantly publishing, we have deposited with the National City Bank, Lynn, Mass.. §5.000, which will who wrill show that the above testimonials are not gentine. or were published before LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO., Lynn, Mass. REWARD be paid to auy person obt::‘:hg The wiiter's special permission. DR. CROSSMAN’S SPECIFIC MIXTURE For the Cur: of Gonorrhoea, Gleots, ENLARGED TO 16 PAGES. $1 PER YEAR. | S tane of Senecation | l Price §1 a bottle For sale by druggists. POLICE COUATS CONVENE IN NEW - JUSTICE HALL Rivalry Among Judges as to Which Should Pass First Sentence. Conlan Carries Off the Honors by Sending a Petty Larcenist to Jail for Six Months. | LA The four Police Judges held court yes- terday morning in the Hall of Justice. They all expressed themselves as pleased | with the new order of things and every- thing went along smoothly. The only ob- jectionable feature was that of taking the s” from the City Prison to the courtrooms. Arrangements will be made £0 that the Judges can dispose alternate- 1y of these cases in the mornings in the prison. There was a rivalry as to who would have the credit of sentencing the first It fell to Judge Conlan, and it a unique coincidence that the man sentenced was the first prisoner booked Monday at the new City Prison. He was nk Jennings, who stole a plece of cloth from a store on Stockton street and was arrested by Policeman Staples for petty larceny. He pleaded guilty and the Judge sentenced him to six menths in the Coun- ty_Jail. Judge Mogan was a close second. Now | Comora, a Japanese who was convicted | Monday for ‘stealing a watch from S. H. Collins, Kearny stre: red for sen- tence before Mogan and got fined $90, days in jail. He was immediately taken | tence for st ling another watch. -~ WAYNE HARRIS WILL BE | TRIED AT NEW HALL After Completing the Jury Judge f ' Cook Orders That His Quar- | ters Be Moved. Judge Cook yesterday rushed through the work of completing the jury to try Wayne Harris, the messenger boy, for murder, and then prepared to move his | quarters to the Hall of Justice. is composed of the following named citi- zens: Post street; O. Walheim, reet; J. Jacobsen, 13 Sixth ain_street G. H. Wi 3469 Kletnert, 15 venty-eighth 31 Ninetsenth Sixteenth street; n, ey, 0. Dwyer, 3 08 _Hayes street; Gall, 2 . W. Burmester, 1143 Market . King, 1049 Valencta street After the jury had been sworn, Judge | Cook ordered all members to report at | his new quarters on the third floor of the | Hall of Ju | ther hearing of the case. A corps of | workmen immediately went to work and within an hour the court fixtures were on | their way to the new hall. Among them was an historic r. ross, carved on | the m, serves to identify it. In this chair Durrant, Hoff, Cordelia Botkin and many others who stand convicted of mur- der, or who have been hanged for_ their crim sat when the evidence aRainst them was being placed before the jry Judg wlor and Dunne will ~move thelr quarters within the next few days - Japanese Ends His Life With Gas. Sakuyva Yasuda, a Japanes servant family of Alfred sher at 2240 Pa ound asphyxiated in his bed at 7 o'clock yesterday morn vy of the gas burner wi e room was filled Yasuda had been drinki the previous evening a several empty liquor bottles were found in his room. The facts that he had been employed in the fully turned on with the fumes ing to excess on | family nd a half, that the ith both gas and in and that he was e of both, lead | familiar with the = | belief that his death was a sulicide. | — | Raid on Tobacco Store. W. G. Hawkett and Frank D. Worth of the United Sta 1 revenue servic vesterday _selzed five one-pound plugs of tobacco, third-ounce plugs and 11 plugs of twist in the store of Mattheas > 1420 Market street. The tobacco had been taken from the original stamped boxes and was placed on exhibition in the windo The removal of the tobacco from the stamped boxes prior to its sale to the consumer is con. trary to law, the revenue collectors say, and they will put an end to the practice, even though they are forced to raid every tobacco shop in the city. -~ | Brizzolari’s Death Accidental. | The Coroner's inquest into the cause of the death of A. Brizzolari rendered a ver- dict yesterday to the effect that death was_caused by a bullet from a rifle in | the hands of Willlam Schopplein and that | the weapon was accidentally discharged. Brizzolari was shot through the head last Sunday while standing on Telegraph Hill | talking to several other boys. Schopplein | was a block away in another group of boys. e was examining the rifle and it accidentally discharged, the bullet iking Brizzolari in the head. In the Divorce Court. Decrees of divorce were granted yester- day to Thomas Malcomson from Eliza- beth Malcomson for desertion, Lina Eger- berg from Lawrence Egerberg for deser- on, Ara MacLeod from George MacLeod for neglect and Charles Powell from,Lena | Powell for desertion. Suits for divorce h been filed by May Oswald against Henry Oswald for deser. Melchoir Simmen against Annie wa Str . and Mabel € | Young against Shirley T. Young’ for cru- elty. w il Seifert Wanted in Los Gdtos. | C. A. Seifert, ex-secretary of the Phar- macy Board, who was mixed up in the gcandal created by the selling of answers { mination questions, was arrested sterday by Detective McMahon on a warrant from Los Gatos charging him with obtaining_money by false pretenses from William Johnston, a druggist there. A felony charge against him for doing the same thing in this city was dismissed by Judge Dunne vesterday — - Injured Brother Was to Blame. Charles Pollitier, the boy who stabbed his brother Frank at their home on Min- | na street, near Tweifth, on September 22, | appeared before Judge Cabaniss er- | day. The testimony of the witnesses ved that Frank was to blame for the attack upon him, and the Judge would | have dismissed the case, but tae boy said he was willing to go to sea and the case | was continued till Friday that he might get a ship. ol i Verdict for Mrs. Doolin. The jury in Doolin, who was {njured in 1891 in a wreck on the old Omnibus Cable Company’s line, which 18 now a portion of the Market | Street Rallway Company's turned a verdict in her favor late Monday night for $760). In a former trial Mrs, Doolin was awarded $20.000, but a retrial of the case was ordered by the Supreme Court. b el Ak Fight of Rival Hairdressers. Maude Blevin, otherwise known as Katie Burns, the hairdresser who vicious- 1y attacked Lulu Rawson, her former as- sistant and later rival in business, at Bush and Leavenworth streets last week, was convicted by Judge Fritz yesterday on the charge of battery. dered to appear for sentence this morn- ing. el Stole His Gold Watch. John H. Weber, 711 Natoma street, swore to a complaint in Judge Fritz's | court yvesterday for the arrest of Lilly | Brooke on the charge of grand larceny. | He met Lilly Monday night and when he | left her he discovered that his gold watch valued at $150 was gone. —_————————— Rainfer Beer bottled here; awarded med- al Paris Exposition for purity and quality.* with the aliernative of ninety | before Judge Fritz and got a similar sen- | s The jury | ice this morning for the fur- |y g. The | to the | the case of Mrs. Mary | system, re- | She was or- | THE ART OF EMBROIDERY AND LACE MAKING. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. BY MARGARET AINSLEE. (Concluded.) The early Gauls also showed great pro- fic in the art of embroidery. Thi taste fostered by Greek merchants, who brought Orfental goods -to the -pe- riodical fairs held near the monasteries hrines of saints, so that in time the onasteries became the working centers for the early specimens of this crafts- manship. Here the sister art of missal- illumination also flourished, many of those cloisteral designs furnishing most alluring patterns to the embroiderers. The Monastery of St. Gaul, Switzerland. contained workrooms for weavers and embrolderers, whose handiwork was | greatiy ouraged by the church in or- | der to increase the wealth of sacerdotal ornaments. At funerals, too, where the bodies of the dead lay In state there was great display of embroidered mortuary cloths, the pall of Childeric being worked with 300 golden bees. Charlemagne the Great encouraged his family, court and subjects to perfect themselves in the art of embroidery, with which he was very fond of decorating his huge person. His obliging sistgr-in-law accordingly founded many- conVents in Aquitaine and Provence, where she taught all the inmates the intricacles of the | various forms of needlework. There ill preserved in St. Peter's, Rome. | Greek dalmatic called the “imperial dal matie,” because Charlemagne is sald | have worn it when singing high mass as | a_deacon upon the day of his coronation. | Entirely astde from its historic interest | it is of the greatest artistic value and is regarded by modern connoisseurs as. the finest plece of embroidery in the world In addition to the numberless small fig- ures of silver ax Jld_embroldered upon the blue silk_foundation are the roundels | on front and back representing the last | judgment and the transfiguration, em- | broidered in silk and. gold thread, and | considerea marvels of skill. | “In Anglo-Saxon England embroidery made such great strides that it was ear ! known as “Anglicum Opts. Anglo-Nor- man ladies were a'so rerowned for this kina of work. the best-preserved specimen | of thelr skill' being the tapestry (wrong| so called) in the al at Bay embroidered by Matilda, wife of William | the Congqueror, or by her near relatlv | Upon this narrow band of stout linen, feet long, Matilda and her maldens, ulating Helen's needle-working achie ments during the siege of Troy, fanta tically embroidered over 1200 figures, form- ing a needle-wraught epic of. the conquest | the “Opus Anglicum,” so justly célef | until after the reign of Henr to have been a modified chain-stitch em- | broldery. producing a granulated surfac | its facial depressions and ¢ les we simulated by pressing down the upon i ‘!pmhrux.xory 2 heated metal rod tipped with a small bulb. | "Returning crusaders adorned with be- trappings and a marked influence upon the s uary arts, modi- | fying the early. my: smnity of dis- | tinction by a ten: ey ard the intri- | cactes of emblazonry. Cut work or work. composed of of st cut out tched to | ornamental sha wool velvet or linen n arate al were Inserted in the p: method of ormamentation combined th graceful, interlacing scrolls, was especially popular for head- dre shoes, gloves and other articles of apparel. In the Bayeux Cathedral are “two woolen mittens, with embroldery on | the hands of two figures of St. Veronica surrounded by pearls.” Of similar orna- mentation must have been Laura’s dainty glove, which, g0 Petrarch tells us in the one hundred and sixty-sixth sonnet, “Gold | EOWIN RNDLETT - MUST LIQUIDATE |Judge Coffey Charges Him | With Breaking Law to | Aid Himself | | Eawin A. Randlett. vice pr | Alameda real estate fizm of E | & Co., while in the allaged pursuit of ! profit, has placed himself in an unenviable if not serious predicamen Judge Coffey has directly charged R dlett with delib- erate perjury and vioiation of his trust as an officer of the court. He has been given until this morning to adjust hi standing before the court or go to } for his offenses. A few months ago Jud-e Coffey or- dered the sale of a piece of real estate belonging to the estate of the late Jo. J. Markham. This property is on the northwest coraner of Mound | Van Buren streets in Alameda. property was advertised for sale by uel M. Re ttorney ident of the D. Judd. 230 Co. for sale 5 Was called upon to confirm the sale of the property to Mrs. Mary A. Randlett, wile of Edwin A. R ett, for the sum of $2000. Randlett called to the stand and undér oath testifled that the bid of- fered by his wife was the only celved by him fag the propert | Coffey confirmed the sale of the proper! i a deed was made out to Mrs. Randlet and the deal was closed. Monday evening Thomas Doolin called on Judge Coffey and asked Low it was that (hn‘saln\r‘\r rh:‘l nrr‘l;l;\.'!\' w:s '|!'-t d to Mrs. n Dunn, his sis- f"."”\'i‘ri Dunn, he said. had bid $2250 for the property, which was $250 in advanec of Mrs. Randiett's bid. He ~roduced a contract to verify his statement entered into between Judd & Co. £nd Mrs.- Dunn. Judge Coffey immediately sent for the | attorneys In the case and Informed them of the development. that palpable perfury has mitted.” said Judge Coffey, who are r ble for this Imposition on | the court of their errors A citation- ordering Randlett to appear and show canse was ssued and_made re- furnable vesterday morning. Mrs. Dunn been com- DO as to her offer. Randiett and Mrs. Dunn were both 'n court when the case was called. Randlett admitted that Le had Mrs. Dunn's con- tract in his pocket when he testified that the onlv bid received for the pronerty was that offered by his wife. “T did not con- rs. Dunn's offer in the nature of a bid." she said. deposit of 10 per cent of e price of- fered.” Mrs. Dunn_ testified that she made the offer as shown by the contract. She be- | lievea something was “crooked™” in matter. however. and zow would not have | anything to do with the property } 7T regret that T have not a Flank com- mitment in my pocket.” said Judge Cof- fev, addressing Randlett. “Tt fs plain tha not only the court but Mrs. Dunn_ has | been imposed unon. Doubtless within a few days Mrs. Dunn would have come into possession of the property. and in ad- would have made a profit of Mrs. Dunn will either pay the amount of her bid into this court to-morrow morning or you will be held responsible for the dif. ference between her oid and the amount ! paid for the property by Mrs. Randlstt. “It 1s clear to me | “ and those | 11 be made to feel the weight | was also subpenaed ‘¢ appear and testify | . = she did not leave a | dition to your commission of $50 vou | HISTORIC STUDIES IN HOME FURNISHING. [ — |and silken broidery bore.” Pearls and spangles ornamented coats and sleeves in whimsical and extravagant patterns. Great castles of the middle ages were par- titioned by embroiderec and recesses and royal dressi: were thus ingeniously contrived by means of canopies and side hangings. While pers household adorn- ornamentation genuity of the rs of the mid die -ages. A pattern for alta frontals, statue gings and ecclesias tical vesfments was that of the Je: tree. This tree was intended to represent the sacred lineage of Jesus Christ, and was but a_curious religious adaptation of the genealogicai 1 gave rise to coats of arms. fea f ail forms of orr iring the middia ages, it is thus ¢ rnes £ bre:' “The tree rises braham, an old man leep below tween interlacemen of its leading branches are K David, Solomon an the Virgin Mary; surmounting all is t crucifixion. Du all th issance embroidery, ilke was largely affected by Venic ) é other 3 influence. belts pum upon a_sim manner we Homo of the Rembr: portrait pictures, 1 ns of the Muriilo e Spanish le of T This need but fnsta reryil Tux dery to_the art has iiversion in pick broidered court s Wh whi¢h the hand veafs of toil emb fluous art and its e. To-day. e of profe Note—An examination for th upon this eourse anting of certificat irsday, Octot If this Is not done so jail, and 1 you ha ch difficulty in divining my meaning " A continuance was then ordered - un morning. —_——e In Memory of Colonel Jackson. The San Franelsco Board of Trade hos »pted resolutions concerning the deat Colonel John P. Jackson, eulogizin tless rec as a2 citizen. i d as chief officer of the United State Customs in San Franeisco,” and expres ing sympathy with his family in fts I ment s SV S0 ‘Wardrobe Trunks. nd va the newest thing trunks h In ovr trunk 41 Marke Verdict of Accidental Death. A verdict of accidental dered by the Coroner’s jury the case of the death who w street ath was rem vesterd f John Me( killed ¥ rd CORONADO k of this bea Cataloguss and Priee Lists Ma'led 01 Application. ATTORNEY. F. H. MERZBACH. lawyer, 503 Cal.. Clunie ba COAL, COKE AND PIG IRON. J.C WILSON & CQ.. %0 Batterystreet Telephone Main 1381, CO.F'PEni.VHTH. C-W. SHITH. SiP Work o soccimtra "2 aad L\\' hington st phao | | ELECTRICAL. D. D. WASS, Electrical Engineer. 3§ East st. FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BflYES_& (;0 hipping Butchers. 104 ¥. Tel Main 1294 i GALVANIZING AND METALS, | Mf%. & Dealer in Metals & Galvanizing. JOHN FINN METAL WORKS, 315 Howard st META | | Extra lnotype and stereotype metal | Metal Works, 137-9 Pacifio LUBRICATING OILS. ZONAF S. 418 Front st., S Phone Malp 171 PAINTS. Cylinder & Lubricating Oil Candles, C. G. CLINCH & hnelder's Mint CO.. 9 Front, S PRINTING. | E. C. HUGHES, . i PRINTERS. BOOK BINDER | THE HICKS-JUDD €O. | 4 23 First st., San Fran-tsco. STATIONER AND PRINTER. PRI 311 Sansc TER, WHITE ASH STEAM COAL, 33 %2 28 DIAMOND COAL MINING CO., a* its GREEN RIVER COLLIERI oal in the market. Office and Yards—450 Main street.