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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1900. ADVERTISEMENTS. PERUNA HAS BECOME I HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY, There is no other thing that th2 household needs worse than a good family medicine. There are a thousand and one little ailments | @il b kool @ that are sure to spring up which can be promptly relieved by such a | Dbl Sk b et Sl e D e S S e medicine. A family may have a| good physician near at hand, in | whom they have great confi ience, | yeta household remedy cannot be | spared. A slight hoarseness, hacking cough, co.d in the head, or ca- tarrhal indigestion, for which no one would think of calling a family physician, may be promptiv met and mitigat=d bva tamily m-dicine. Peruna has found its way into thousandsof househo!ds. We are receiving letters from a multitude | of intelligent women, N rth, South, East and West, who teel that they could not keep house without Pe- runa. Foliowing is a sample of this kind of letters : | Mrs. Julia C. Brown, Secretary | General Henry W. Lawton Circle, | No. 27, Ladies of the G. A. R., of Pecatonica, lil., writes: The Peruna Medicine Company, | Columb: Ohio > Gentiemen—*‘l have used Pe- runa in my home for the past four | years and am thoroughly convinced that it is a reliable family rem- i edy. If any member of the family feels badly, catch cold or suffer | any physical ailment, Peruna brings us back to health in a few days. | 1 find it splendid in cases of indigestion, or any irregularities of the stomach. Very truly, y MRS. JULIA C. BROWN. Address The Peruna Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio, for a ! free catarrh book STUART HAROLD BRIGHTER DAYS 1S OUT OF JAIL' IN EMERALD ISLES e ° i —_— Barry Haughen, Wounded | Father McQuaid Says Way Spzcial Policeman, Will Is Being Prepared for MRS. JULIA C, BROWN. +0e0ecelelel eleledelededed + . | Recover. Final Triumph. . e Stuart Stewart Upshur A lecture which proved exceedingly in- | esting to his audience was that deliv- ered by the Rev. Father Joseph P. Me- ght to San F cisco Coun- ung Men's Institute, in Pio- g White, president of the introduced the lec r his address, was pre- | ed with a diam adge of handsome gn by W. H. I n in behalf of the 1 his presentation J E f Father McQuaid's record r entitied his address “A rough Two Continents,” which s T stern Asia and Europe. The € P duce : ne point was at Honolulu, and the s was put up | sp bade adieu to his hearers in < 4 Harold was What, to his audience’s delight, he termed » was with | the : ulk;] ]flr; : o ettt HBudic=g BT nolulu the Rev. Mr. McQuaid e e trom | 54l that the leprosy, though :mparQ-‘nH\' eased from | little feared, is held in constant terror by % the inhabitants, who, while profes wh the re- | ¢ ward with utions against its r an, t ¥ ) Sey- | _Japan, the next place visited, was = u scribed as being the home of a people e who were made up of a curious mixtu - of immorality. dishonesty, simplicity and Vhile one of the | politeness. *“Th re a hardy race,” sal : two ladies kept | Father McQuaid, “but are dense > eby attracting the |Tant and terribly regardl principles of hygiene. This accounts for their enormously high death rate—s0.000 to a birth record of 1.000.000. Fires in win- ter are comparatively unknown even in the best hotel Their place is taken b; small stoves which give little or no heat. A graphic picture of the Catholic mi sion work in China was the next subject of the lecturer. He spoke of the Catholic as being the only ones to be nd a radius of a hundred miles ypean settlement who engineers constructed rail- | through graveyards re- veneration for sald the speaker, “are in a recent ing the revol to blame for the . and not the mi s, as we have been told—at any r; he Catholic ones.’ ver f a heard place | in~ the Jheard | “While in Rome Father McQuaid had the id = he was leaving the first | yare oxperfence of a private audience ] with the Pope, whom he describes as be- old and feeble, but with a = - > es that indicates such in- St D Tkl domitable spirit that_the jecturer gaid: 2 > o should not be surprised if Leo XIII I man of the Fol- | jived to be a humdred.” er littl mil But it was when the priest spoke of Ire- go and crushed hearers showed most inter- land that h arge of battery ment of every familiar town or P v Judge Cabaniss g forth enthusiastic applause. . e rule of an alien power, Ire- of the Mis- igns of a prosperity which er and Kkiiled | can only be designated as splendid, and in ks ago, had | this is building up the surest means r against him | to the final triumph,” concluded Father < | McQuaid. Special Sale of Silks | Worth 85c and $1.00 at | 65c a yard. At our silk department you will find Fou- ‘ lard silks in seasonable shades and desirable ! designs; black and colored silks in crepon | effects, corded, hemstitched and brocaded | stripes; black silks with a variety of colored stripes; also an excellent quality of standard Taffeta in the leading shades for fall ; all of ! which will be sold at the special price of | 129 Kearny Street I | engible PRESTON-OWENS ENGAGEMENT PROVES _ A DELIGHTFUL SURPRISE TO SOCIETY ‘Betrothal of Popular Couple Made Pub- lic Yesterdau. R HE ladies of gave adelightful reception yester- afternoon in honor of Ho Yow, the Chinese Consul. In the hall where the reception was the Chinese dragon and the stars ripes mingled their folds and made h and very pleasing decoration. Ho Yow ad- dressed the club women and spoke of the presen Eli T. Sheppard also spok e in the Orlent and Mrs. Frances Edgerton read an interesting let- ter telling of life in the Oriental legation. After the programme the ladies were formally presented to the Consul by Mrs. Fred Hewlet, their club president. & ow e Last evening at 8:30 Miss Ramola Bige- jow and Samuel Austin Wood were mar- ried at the home of the bride’'s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Bigelow, on McAllister street. Mr. Leavitt of the First Unitarian Church performed the ceremony. The home was beautifully decorated for the cecasion with a profusion of choice white blossoms and palms and ferns. The bride was attended by Miss Mary Hath- away and Miss Kate Gunn, who acted as bridesmaids. Willlam F. Wood was best man and John Zeile and Power Hutchins | were the ribbon bearers. The bride wore an exquisite white crepo | Charming Daughter gown. The bridesmaids were attired alike in green mousseline over green silk and carried bouquets of sweet lavender. One hundred and fifty guests were present at the wedding. TR Willlam Pierce and Miss Lottle Bau- man, two of Sulsun's most prominent | young people, were married yesterday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the residence of the bride’s uncle, D. K. McMullen, on Pa- cific avenue. Rev. A. F. Hitchcock of Suisun_performed the ceremony, which was witnessed by fifty invited guests. H. Bailey of Oakland was best man ani Miss Susan McMullen officiated as brides- maid. It was a pink and green wedding, and pink blossoms and a profusion of palms and ferns made the home beauti- ful. The bride wote an elegant gown of fawn colored silk and Miss McMullen, the bridesmaid, was attired in a stylish lavender epe gown. Mr. and Mrs Pierce left last evening for the East, where they expect to spend two or three months. the Century Club oL MISS ISABEL H. PRESTON AND LEN D. OWENS, WHOSE ENGAGE- MENT WAS FORMALLY ANNOUNCED YESTERDAY TO THEIR FRIENDS OF SAN FRANCISCO'S EXCLUSIVE SOCIAL SET. — 4 of Attorney Is to Be Married at Portola Hall. e N interesting engagement was made public yesterday when it | was_announced that Miss Isabel | H. Preston and Len D. Owens | were to be married early in De- | cember. The betrothal was a genuine surprise to the exclusive set In which the young couple move, and both Miss Pres- ton and Mr. Owens spent a busy day yesterday receiving congratulations. The fair young bride-to-be is the eldest daughter of E. F. Preston, the well known and able attorney. She is charm- ing and talented, with a penchant toward art. She is also an athletic girl, excelling especially as a horsewoman. Len D. Owens, the fortunate man, is the senior partner of the California Bill Posting Co., of Owens, Varney & Gréen. He is an ardent sportsman and for sev- eral vears was a direetor of the Olympic Club. He was also the chief organizer and captain of the defunct Olympic Gun Club. Although Mr. Owens goes in for all Kinds of sports, he excells as a gunman and has a reputation as a trapshot that extends throughout the State. The wedding of the young couple will be celebrated at “Portola_Hall," the ele- gant Preston home near Redwood City. PRIGAITY AULE 5 OBSERVED BY SCHOOL BOARD Directors at Last Act Justly | | pack train for the wharf Teamster W. H. in Assigning the Teachers. —_—— New Classes Established in Three Schools to Relieve the Congestion and Five Instructors Are Assigned. S A The Board of Education, after ignoring criticism as long as it could, yesterday began to live up to the rule providing that the chronological order of appointment must be followed in the matter of assign- ing teachers. Five assignments to classes were made from the substitute list, and while two teachers were overlooked in the selec- tions resolutions were adopted explain- ing the reasons therefor. The resolution reassigning the teachers to classes, three of which are new ones, In the Franklin, Grant and Everett schools, follows: Resolved and are hereby m: dates of appoint teachers named, n: Miss M. A. Harrigan (appointed September 12, 1571), to the James Lick Grammar School, during the leave of Miss A. D. Miley. Miss M an (appointed April 22, 1578), to the Everett Grammar School (new cliss), during the leave of Miss J. Johnson. Mrs, D. Cooper (appointed February 11, ade in accordance with the to the department °of ent 1879), to the Franklin Grammar School (new class). Miss A. E. Sutherland (appointed December 16, 1584), to the Grant School (new class). Miss M. C. McKinney (appointed November 7, 18%8), to the John Swett School, vice Mrs. L. A. Shaw, transferres Little, now No. 5 on the sub- under date of April 2, 1881, fafied to report for substitute , was placed on the unassigned list until such time as she Is willing to per- form substitute work. Mr Holmes, now No. 6 on the sub- stitute list, under date of November 7, 1888, was placed on the unassigned list until her leave of absence expires. The following unassigned teachers were placed on the substitute list, in the order of the dates of their appointment to the department: Miss N. Gamblitz, Miss . G. Sullivan, Miss J. McDonald, Miss E. Hawkins and Miss M. ¥. Mooney. Louis de F. Bartlett was appointed to the principalship of the Hamilton Even- ing School. Mrs. L. A. Shaw was transferred from | the John Swett School to the Hamilton | School. W. Engs was placed on the evening iist, under date of his appoint- ment, his leave having expired. The salary of F. Daunet, janitor of the Washington Grammar School, was fixed at $65 per month. Under suspension of the rules, teachers are required in the future to visit other schools but one-half day during each term. The board transferred the power of re- pairing schoolhouses, which it had_here- Yofore usured, to the Board of Public Works, where it belongs. A gesolution was adopted providing that the repair de- partment of the School Department be abolished, and that P. M. Wellin, inspec- tor of builwngs, and his assistants be dismissed, their dismissals to take effect October 15, 1900. Director Casserly introduced a resolu- tion providing that Miss Nellie O'Lough- iin, formerly vice principal of the Hearst School, be temporarily ~assigned to the vice principalship of the Horace Mann School, but it failed to receive a second. The resolution that permission be given Mrs, L. K. Burke, principal of the Co- jumbia Grammar School, to hold a bazaar for the Columbia school bed at the Chil- dren’s Hospital, was also defeated. Leaves of absence were granted to Miss Pauline Hart, Miss Annette Miley, A. J. Houston and Miss Charlotte Thompson. The resignation of Dr. Thomas B. W. Leland as principal of the Hamilton Even- 1n§ School was accepted. Miss M. J. Canham applied for retire- ment upon a pension, she having been a teacher in the department for twenty- eight years. The City Board of Examination recom- mended renewals of teachers' certificates to the following named: Grammar grade—Miss Allce Madden, Miss Cornelia Farrell, Miss Alice Lewls, Miss Eva G. Efsen and Miss A. C. Maulty. Primary grade—Mrs. B. A. Litton, Mrs. K. 3. Polley, Miss Katie Mayers. Miss Lola Mc- Feely, Miss Mamie C. Donnelly, Mrs. M. Miel and Mrs. Mary Hogan. The following named were recommended to the State Board of Education for life diplomas of the grammar grade: E Elizabeth Butler, Miss K. M. Paxton, Miss Marion V. Earle and Miss M. F. Lorigan. The following named were recommend- ed to the State Board of Education for educational diplomas of the grammar rade: Miss Lilllan B. O'Neill, Miss Char- otte, Lavery and Miss Caroline Barron. The_controversy over the right of Dep- uty Superintendent Kingsbury to repre- sent Superintendent Webster at the meet- ing was resumed. Webster sent a formal | able to sail on the army transport Lee- | lanaw yesterday morning owing to the That the following assignments be | notice that he had appointed Kingsbury as his legal representative, but the board again refused to recognize Kingsbury. TEAMSTERS’ LEGS ARE BROKEN BY ARMY MULE Wicked Animal Sends Two Employes of the Quartermaster’s Depart- ment to the Hospital. Two of Uncle Sam's teamsters were not misbehavior of one of the pack mules. Out at the Presidio just a few moments before the signal was given to start the Hardy got in the way of one of the nu- merous hoofs flying about and was sent to the hospital with a broken leg. The animal that kicked him seemed to have a penchant for disabling teamsters, for hardly had the train reached the wharf when the mule let drive again, this time landing on the shin of Teamster B. L. Claiborne, breaking the bone. are being treated at the post hospital and will spend the next few weeks racking thelr brains for a cause for the mule’s enmity. The post hospital is to be greatly im- proved within the next few weeks. The upper veranda s to be entirely inclosed with glass, affording the patients an op- portunity to enjoy the sun without ex-| posing themselves to the cold winds. Warren Spellman, private in Company | C, Thirty-ninth Infantry, died yesterday at the general hospital of chronic dysens “Clptain Willlam E. Perviance, assistant surgeon, U. S. A., has been assigned to duty at the general hospital. —_————————— SICK WIDOW DROWNED IN HER BATHTUB| Mrs. Caroline Anderson, a Sufferer From Pneumonia, the Victim of an Accident. Caroline Anderson, a widow, 52 years old, died in her bathtub yesterday morn- ing at her residence, 663 rison street. She had been sick for a long time and | had been demented recently to such an | extent that she would not allow strangers | to approach her. Mrs. Anderson went to | the bathroom at an early hour, and her daughter Leonie, becoming alarmed at her | long absence, visited the room and found | her mother's dead body in the tub. Cor- oner's Deputies Flynn and Donahue, who went for the body. found t the water ason of the | partly out | had escaped from the tub by plug of the waste pipe being : of the socket, but the dead woman's hair and face w though her body had been covered by the water. | Morgue Surgeon Leland performed an | autopsy and found that the woman had | been drowned. She was also far gone | with pneumonia, and he expressed the | opinion that she may have collapsed in the bath and that the drowning was accl- | dental. —————e—————— GIANT ROAD ENGINES | FOR SOUTHERN PACIFIC Twenty More Locomotives Are Added to Big Equipment—Order Re- cently Given. The Southern Pacific Railroad Company has just increased its recent equipment order for seventy new engines to ninety- | four, twelve of which are to be the larg- | est road engines on the Pacific Coast, and | among the largest in the United States. They are to weigh 180.000 pounds each on ving wheels. The total weight of | e e W tender will be 160 tons. i he engines will be constructed after | the very latest deslgns for consuming coal | economically. They will contain much larger fire boxes than those now in use | and will also be equipped with an enor- | mous heating service. Two of the moun- | tain engiyes, included in the first equip- ment order, were placed in service at Sacramento yvesterday. The company has just placed an order for fifteen new chair cars for use on the lines east of El Paso. They will have a seating capacity of sixty people and will be equipped with all the modern conve- | niences. — e Spokane Man Weds New Orleans Girl Miss Jdsephine M. Moore, daughter of John C. Moore, a prominent citizen of New Orleans, and Harry M. Adams, gen- eral agent of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company, and also superin- tendent of the Unian depot at Spokan were married at St. Mary's Cathedral yesterday noon. The ceremony was per- | formed by the Very Rev. John J. Pren- dergast before a few immediate friends of the contracting parties. A luncheon followed at the California Hotel. The couple will enjoy a two weeks' trl through Southern California, after whic! they will make their home in Spokane. P TR R Found Dead by Husbang Mrs. Lillian M. Zabel, who resides at 1 Uranus street, was found dead by her husband yesterday morning. She has been troubled ~with swelling glands in the throat and about one month ago came from the East to join her husband, who “: a discharged soldier. She was 31 years of age. B — This Saturday, October 13th. $25,000 worth of fine shoes for 35c on the dollar_at bankrupt sale of the California Shoe Co., 1506 Market st., above City H=n ave. tion concernin | the welters had not the men back to work. The shoes will be | SHOEMAKERS RETURN TO WORK THIS MORING Employes Will Resume U der Conditions Previ- ously Existing. B S Buckingham & Hecht Reach Agree- | ment on All Points With the Men Who Walked Out Last Week. —_— The shoemakers employed by Bucking- ham & Hecht, who walked out last Satur- day, will return to work this morning. This statement is made by Mr. Weil, su. perintendent of the works, and also by Humphrey Gallagher, who was made manager of the interests of the employes. | All pleased that the controversy had come o an end so soon. As was published yes- | parties seemed last evening to be terday morning in The Call, Mayson. holder, who was dismissed, has beeil re- instated. Humphrey Gallagher said last evening that the situation was satisfactory to the men. The conditions were those existing | before the employes walked out. Mayson- holder had been taken back. The zues- the dipping of shoes by been a bar to calling dipped as _heretdfore. not want to The concern did ay the wages of a boy to moisten the channels. Every employe was notified yesterday afternoon to return to work this morning at the usual hour. Superintendent Weil said: “Work will be resumed to-morrow and our employes will all return. ised to conform to the rules and he has been taken back. As to the welters, that | question was settled to the satisfaction of all concerned.” Maysonholder has prom- ADVERTISEMENTS. What suffering frequently results from a mother's ignorance; or more frequently from a mother’s neglect to | properly instruct her daughter ! Tradition says ‘‘woman must suf- fer,” and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examina- tion ; but no mother need hesitate to | write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. f, of South Mrs. August Pfalzgrad n, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote B; Mrs. Pinkham in Jan: , 1899, saying her daughter had ::;yeud for two ears with irregular menstruation— in.d headache all the time, and pain in her side, feet swell, and was generally miserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly replied with advice, and under date of March, 1899, the mother writes again that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured her daughter of all pains and irregularity. Nothing in the world equals Mrs. Pinkham's great medicine for regu- htln{uwomn'l peculiar monthly troub] and Wool Fabrics. Dress and | 1 ] Hundreds of Short Lengths of This Season’s Silk Remnants One-Quarter Off AlreadyReduced Prices To-Day Only, Thursday, October I11. E EMPORIQ Golden Raule a.;...-.u CALIFORNIA'S LAROEST--AMERICA'S QRANDEST STOR®. Come in Morning for This Sale if Possible— Avoid the Rush anit Get First Choice. It's Worth Coming Down This Morning to Get a § First Choice and Avoid the Afternoon Crowds. P D L) THE EMPORIUM. Goods Silk ARAAAR A AR RAR A AR ARAARR AR QAR AL AR AR AR AARARAR R AR AT A N AR aun PRESBITERIANS DISCLSS THER FORMS OF FAIT Local Ministers Will Oppose Radical Revision of Their Confession. —_— there will be no material changes in the Westminster confession if the Presbytery | of San Francisco can prevent any by | united action. A proposition to revise this confession has agitated the Presbyterian | church of the United States for over a | year. In the Eastern States many sug- | kestions, some of them radical and most | important, have been made, but the West | has never placed itself on record as op- | posing any changes except verbal ones in the credal articles of the Presbyterian | faith. The Presbytery of San Francisco has taken the initiative in this matter and its | decision will doubtless have great weight with other presbyteries in the State. The local ecclesiastical body has been in ses- sion to listen to proposed changes to the confession, based upon Eastern agitation and modification. The committee chosen | for this work was composed as follows: | Rev. Dr. Henry C. Minton, Rev. Dr. John | Hemphill, Rev. Dr. Robert Mackenzie, | Rev. Dr. Sturge and Elder W. P. Len- festy. The report which this committee | submitted was unanimously adopted by | | the presbytery and now represents the | | collective views of that body. This report does no more than modify | the language of the Westminster confes- | sion without making any essential change | in an article of faith. The language of} the confession in reference to predestina- | tion, foreordination and the doctrine of infant damnation is changed so'as to be more explicit. A suggestion is also made | to remove the prohibition upon marriage | between Catholics and Presbyterians. | These are the only changes which the | local_presbytery will accept, and if the | synod attempts any more radical revision J.e local bedy will vote unanimously to dismiss_the whole subject. The United Presbyterian Church of Cal- ifornia_has begun a series of sessions of great importance to the denomination in | this State. The meetings are being held | in the First United Presbyterfan Church at Golden Gate avenue and Polk street. | The meetings include the autumn meeting of the United Presbytery of San Fran- cisco, the eleventh annual meeting of the | Presbyterial ‘Young People’s Soclety of Christian Endeavor and the biennial meet- ing of the United Presbyterian Synod of California. Representatives from all parts of the State are present and the sessions will continue morning, afternoon and night | during to-day and to-morrow. The ladles | of the First United Presbyterian Church | have made elaborate preparations to re- | ceive and entertain the guests and dele- | gates. The assembly rooms are daintily adorned with flowers and lunches will be | served during the days of the meeting. The first session was held last night under the direction of the Rev. W. H. French, D. D., of Easton, Cal. Dr. French opened the services with devotional exer- cises. He was followed by the Rev. J. M. Gillesple of Castroville, a candidate for ministerial honors. The reverend gentle- man delivered an eloquent sermon, gave the necessary answers to questions pro-| pounded and was ordained to the gospel | Mministry. The opening address of the Young People’s Society of Christian En- deaver was then deliveréd by the Rev. J. | L. McKittrick of San Jose, who chose as his theme the ‘“‘Outlook Through the Golden Gate of the Twentieth Centugy. The meetings to-day will begin at 9 o’clock in the morning. Fruit-Growers Will Convene. The twenty-fifth State Convention of Fruit Growers of California will meet In | Ploneer Hall, this city, under the auspices | of the State Board of Horticulture on Tuesday, December 4, and continue In ses- sion four days. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to all fruit growers and others in- terested in horticulture and kindred pur- suits to be present and take part in the Proceedings of the comvention. Subjects of the utmost importance to the fruft in- Qustry In general will be considered. All fruit exchanges, associations, granges and other bodies of producers are re- quested to send representatives to the convention. The Southern Pacific Com- pany and the San Francisco and San Joa- quin Valley Railway Company will issue excursion tickets to all persons going to the convention and returning at reduced rates. McCarthy Returns From the East. P. H. McCarthy, president of the Build- ing Trades Councll, has returned from the East, where he went early in September as a delegate to the national convention of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. Several hunared delegates at- tended, nearly cvery State in the Union being represented. it was at this conven- tion that $40,000 was aprmprlnud for the millmen’s strike in this city. Mr. Me- Carthy is hopeful that the millmen will win in their demand for an eight-hour workday and he says there is no in- clination on the part of the strikers as a body to give In to the employers. —————— Abbott Was Easily Bunkoed The preliminary examination of Kitty Turner, accused of feloniously embezzling “Bllly" Abbott's diamond ring, valued at $250, was begun yesterday before Judge Cabaniss. Abbott claimed that he loaned the woman the ring, as she wished to “make a flash,” and that she agreed to return it in a short time. Subsequently she declared she had lost it. Kittle de- clared that Abbott voluntarily slij ‘When the Presbyterian Synod of Cali- | fornia meets next Monday at Berkeley | h. ring on her finger as a token u{vm :u: dying affection and esteem, he thinking at the time that she was going to become his consort. She said she really did lose the Ylece of jewelry. The court will ren- der its decision to-day. SAY!ANT | DTHOT STUEFD THE YELLOW KID Even can have his linen laundered in beautiful style at this laundry. Collars, cuffs. business or dress shirts are laun- dered to the acme of beauty and away up beyond the standard of ordinary laun- drg work. omestic finish for full dress shirts iIf you wish it. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street Near Powell Telephone—South 420, Oakland Office—62 San Pablo Ave. You will never have greasy, soggy, indigestible food if you use WHITE COTTOLENE in your cooking. Have you tried it since the last great improvement was made in | its manufacture? It is neutral now. he N.| The NEFask Compar. Our dainty bookiet, FREE!Y 550 Stereect matled free to any address. For one 2c stamp we will send free our 135 page recipe book. - Home Hetpa.” edited by Mex Forer. PALACE AND GRAND HOTELS The best evidence of the popularity of these hotels can be found in the continued patronage of those who on some previous occasion have made them their head- Quarters when visiting San Francisco. Connected by a covered passageway and operated under one management on the American and Furopean plan. TONG PO CHY, Successor to Dr. LAI PO TAl graduate of Canton Medi College, after a very success- ful practice of many years im China. has located In San Francisco. The surprising and marvelous cures effected by his herbs demonstrate ‘heir potence and his skill. These herbs cure over 400 different diseases, including _Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Consump- tion, Asthma, _ Paralysi; Brain, Nerve Cancers, Tumors, Blood, Mals and Female Maladles. All persons afflicted with any kind of malady whatsoever are in- vited to call. . 727 Washington st. Otffice bours—9% a. m. to 12 m., 1 to 9 p. m.; Sundays, 10 a. m. to 12 m. Accept grateful thanks for effecting a cure of asthma of several years' standing. A. DARLEY, San Rafael. DR, HALL’S REINVIGORATOR! Five hundred reward for any case we cannot cure. This secret remedy stops all losses in 24 hours, cures Emissions, Impotency, Vari- wELD cocele, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Fits, " Btrictures, Lost Manhood and ail (44 WU wasting effects of seif-abuse or - case. Ad- dress H. S MEDICAL INS OTE, $55 VT X Broadway, Oakland, Cal. Also for sale at 1073 Market st., 8. F. All private diseases quickly cured. Send for free book. 3500 if my Skin Ointment falls to cure any case of eczema or tetter, or if one application fails to stop Pri the lt:hlng_ ce 25 cents. ruggists, or sent po: %d on receipt of price. DR. PAUL D! RD, 175 N. Spring St.. Los Angeles, Cal. Dr. Bennett's Electric Belt Makes weak men and, women strong and men and women stronger. Rooms § and §, Post st. San Francisco, Cal. L Aeflf INATE CASES | RRE( IES s v o e e DR CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE For the cure of GONORRHOEA. G ICTU ILEETS, STRICTURES and analagous compiaints of the Organs of Generation. Price $1 a bottle. For sals by druggists. Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year