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ADVERTISEMENTS, CuresThe SickFree, New Treatment for Restoring the Afflic- ted to Health Discovered by Dr. U, 6. Lipes. THE REMEDY 1S FREE FOR ALL. rom disease in dg.. Indianapolis, Ind., for g is remarkable treatment for the 1ed or unnatural condition of ¥yt re, for he has made the st ife work and o the subject. He cures m?"hm"ucl.“"h' heart er troubles and rheu- | matism in 8o short & time that why they ffered as long as th lmdclpdh‘ p— His treatment for liver complaint, neuralgia, pimples, scrofula, ete,, mervousness, bad blood 18 truly wonderful in its effect ) ful tn nd its marvel: ©us power 15 felt from the very first day's usa Sout, dropsy, partial paraivele. o yepepsia, debility’ or weakness o ar consumption diseese, kidney and Dy form quickly yields to the influenc - ~—F I, ence of Dr. Lipes The dootor's theory is that neo | he Primary cause may be, all 4 aae vemcins n the human system on acocount of & disord condition of the blood or merves, or both. Tai & working bas %0 these t may throw off s of any "{h prove the truth .’r"\v»[ to all sufferers without eXxcepiion a free trial of his wonderful treatment. . He wante you to tell him the nature of your affiction when you write for free treatment. SANFRANCISCO'S SCIENTIFIC DERMATOLOGISTS #5% FRECKLES! £ CLAIM THAT MONTCHOIR'S reckle remedy 18 the only permanent cure for freckies. We prove it by furnishing volun tary testimonials from the best people of this oity (San Francisco) who have tested it, after | &l other remedies had falled, the freckies in. variably rveturning. #ee these people before socking further for a remedy. We have their Permiskion to refer respectable persons to them e o persons may test the remedy befors pay—if the fre return or the wkin is in- Jured in the slightest degrec—pay nothing Call or address New York Institute of Der. matologs mbian Bullding, 916 M . ®an Fran topposite Emporium) > ator 1o the Nfth floor, A woman with freckies ren side face on exhibition as a | GALIFORNIA LIMITED "'THE SUPERIOR OF THEM ALL” Everything that tends to speed, comfort, pleasure and luxury unlimited. $87.00 Buffalo and Return. October S and 4. Reserve berths for this famous train at 641 Market Street. IT LEAVES EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, 9.00 A, M., ON THE SANTA FE | | Boston-System Eye-Glasses AT NO EXTRA CHARGE. OCULISTS' PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED. FACTORY ON PREMISES. QUICK REPAIRING. PHONE, MAIN 10, IC APPARAT OPTICIANS Z, oroGraPiCAPPoRATLS, 642 MARKET ST. “InsTRUMEnTS umorn cxromcet uioine, CATALOGUE FReE wventor, Dr. Plerce, discovere: that the only remedy for Rup- ture is Electricly, and in per- fecting bis wonderful Electro- Magotic Trussand estab- lishing its sale throughout the world, be gave o sut- ferers from thisdangerous malady the relief and se- curity v-m'}‘I sought for elnewhere. Thisrenowned . sppliance is radically dif- ferent from all others and its action on the ruptured parts is quick and effective Cures sccomplished by its :nlem nuwm“hwa thousand. If ruptured investigato 3 2-cent stamp for new - Booklet Ko. gnetic Truss C NewYork, or 206 Post 8t., KIDNEY. & LIVER " BITTERS A PLEASANT LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATINC w K MEN. DR.HALL’S REINVIGORATOR CLo 5tope all losses in %4 hours. You Y\ foel the rovement from the 1 firet dose. We have so much con- nee n our treatment that we r five hundred reward for any “This secret HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE, #55 Broadway, Oskiand, Cal. Also for sale at 10754 Market ot 8. P 1 private diseases quickly oured. Send for free book, Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year | the latter ‘vale REALTY MARKET 15 IMPROVING The Demand for Choice Lots Is Growing Steadily. Prices Received in Late Deals Are Pleasing to Sellers. All realty brokers in the city agree in the pleasing statement that realty is again Improving. Cifents are more eager and the demand for business and resi- dence properties {s good. There has Leen less demand for smaller priced lots for cheap residences in certain localities. The lists of sales are again increasing and the figures Involved are satlsfactory to the sellers. Among the larger sales of the last few days is Included the transfer of the southeast corner of Howard and Hub- bard streets for $42500. The lot is 79:6x 112 feet and there s an L in the rear. The improvements are old bulldings of little value. The deal was made through the agency of Thomas Magee & Sons. Another sale of some size was of land at Point Richmond. In this latter trans- action the brokers were Davidson & Leigh. Through these Mrs. E. Tewks- bury sold 120 acres to the Pacific Coast Oil Company for $70,000. The property will be extensively improved by the oll com- pany with wharves and buildings for its | own use, and thirty houses will be erected on adjoining land for the use of the men who rre employed by the company. Con- tractd for six of these houses have been let and work will begin at once upon the structures. A. M. Speck & Co. report the sale of a lot and 12-room house at 181 Fifteenth street, between Church and Dolores, for $6250. The seller was C. J. E. Harterius and the buyer Dr. W. A. Harvey. The same brokers have sold the property at 1 Butter street, between Taylor ana Jones, on the south line of Butter, for 4.635. The weller Is the Californla Safe deposit “and Trust Company and the buyer is Henry Kahn, The dimensions of the lot are 45:10x137:6 feet. There are old improvements that will be torn down. On the site Mr. Kahn will put up a lodging house of 135 rooms, which has been jessen already for a term of five years at the rate of $760 per month, MeAfee Brothers have sold the south- west corner of Pacific avenue and Brod- erick street for M, J, Balfe. The lot is 46x100, The price was $10,00, On the site the new owner, whose identity {s withheld for the present, will put up a fine dwelling. " The property on the west line of Devisadero wstreet, 111 feet south from Vallejo, has also been wold for $2600, Tho slxe of the lot in 20:3x110 feet. Other Brokers Report. The ?rvllnwlnr sales of clty properties have been made by Davidson & Lelgh! fhe property G0XS0 fest on the wet line of Urth street, 80 feet south from Bryant, for the Fargo estate to J. Urloste for 010; lot 2Tx120, on the north | of Butter street, 1634 foot eant from Gough, with residence of 13 fooms. from Mrs A. M. Bkaife to Mrs. Anne G N for $12,000; 38x137:6, with new resi- 3 Broadway, botween Pleroce and Noott rom Jullus Weber to Blliott Bhow for J. Gunn representing the buyer (n Property at the southeast corner of Polk and Green streets, 118 feet on Polk Mtreet and 126:6 feet on dreen, and the adjoining plece on the north line of Val- lejo street, 62 foet cast from Polk, 65:11 by 160 feet, hive been #old by Thomas Magee & Bons on private terms. F. B, Burryhne reports sales as follows: B. ¥eehan to Philip N, Lillenthal, n the north 1 outhwest of Eigl x100 on the west line of Hroderick atre 180 feet north of Page, for . for $2500; house and lot 20x80 at 1 Chatham piace, for '$2500; lot 24xS1 on the north side of Webster street, 80 feet north of Hermann, for $1600, Nelson, Johnson & Co. have made the following sales: From Oliver & Truman to Rivers Bro southeast corner of Noe and_Henry streets, 2 x98, with three flats, for $200; from W. J Rickards to M. B. Dickey, four tenements and A Iot 25x80 on the eouth side of Clementina street, near Socond, for $3100; by Rivers Brox. to Frederick Krohn, lot %5x112:6, with cottage, on the east side of Hyde street, §7:6 south of report that they th Point street, for $3000; by Mrs. M. A. lor to C. von Bremmer, two modern fats 216 and 2415 Clay street, between Fillmore and Webster streets, for §7750; by Alexander Campbell to W. H. Eckley, eight- room residence at 1571 Fulton street, between Baker and Lyon streets, for $250; by J. " Holland to Mre. C. Grieb, residence at 1613 Scott etreet, near Sutter, for $6000; by J. R Aitken to D. R. Dogan, lot 24x81 on the south- east corner of Buchanan street and Ivy avenue, with heuse and two_flats, for 38500, and by Oliver & Truman to Rivers Bros., lot 26x8 on the west side of Noe street, 2 feet south of | Henry, for $1800. McEwen Brothers report a good dem: MME. RIBAULT’S SPECIFICS Made Her Beautiful Every Lady in the Land Can Now Have a Beautiful Skin. A TRIAL BOX FREE. It has remained for a Cincinnatli woman to discover the secret of a perfect skin. She has at last found the key to feminine beauty. AU the sighs and heartaches over & poor appear- FANNIE B. RALSTON, (Sbowing her wonderful improvement.) ance may now be banished, for it is within the means of every lad young or middle- aged, to have the clearest and most reflned complexion so dear to woman's heart. Fannle B. Ralston, 623 Lexington ave., New- port, Ky., eays: '(hen I began using Mme. Ribault's ' complexion beautifiers I did not think it possible to clear my skin; my face was in & horrible condition, literally covered with red ts, pimples, blackheads, moth patches and freckies. 1 suffered a thousand death and when 1 sent for a trial of Mme. Ribault's beautifiers 1 improved so wonderfully that my friends did not recognize me, 80 quickly had the change taken place. My skin is now per- fectly lovely, and thers is mot & blemish or wrinkle anywhere.'’ It is not & face powder, cream, cosmetic or bleach, contains no ofl, grease, paste, chemi- cals of poisons of any kind and is absolutely pure. Write to Mime. M. Ribault, 2683 Blsa building, Cincinnati, Ohio, and she will mail free, pre. paid, in & plain sealed wrapper & free of her wonderful beautifiers and you will ways bless the day you wrote. Do not fall to write to-day. \ - Mention is poper. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1901. JOE ROSENBERG'S. $1.98 Instead of $3.50. stitched cuff, lining, Waists. LADIES' WAI quality “of colored tucked back and front, new bishop sleeve with lined throughout with a white We were lucky enough to buy them at a low price and you will get the benefit.. 81,08 First Showing in Winter made of best twilled flannel, striped and dotted designs; plain back and full front, new detachabie collar, They come in red, pink, blue and lav- JOE ROSENBERG'S. | 74 Nockwear, Neckwear. Every day we are In recelpt of novelties from the Eastern and European market. THE LADY MINER COLLAR—It is a tis and collar combined, The collar is made of best quality black silk velvet. The tie is made of good quality of soft 215 WAISTS, made gilk taffeta. The com- of good quality black binations are pink. red, lavender, silk ~ taffeta, the kind white and blue. The material would that will not cracl cost you more than we ask for it com- pléte .... 45¢ Mere Good Offerings. The new KING EDWARD COLLAR, made of best quality of velvet, finished with a how x\m{, gllt buckle, lined, per- ery fect fitting. price .. More Than Even Exchange for Your Money fn Cur Kos'ery Department, 285 pairs LADIES' BLACK HOSE, made of the best French Lisle, double chic. but low in - 29¢ ender. They are the Banner Brand, heels and toes, good width. full length. known for fit and finish. Sample of —=c=p '~ A surprise in qual- g the way we sell walsts. Lo T0e itv. ‘a surprise in price v 28€ Prepare for Cold Weather While Our Assortment Is Complete, LADIES' DRESSING SACQUES, AGAIN — 9% gqnlrs CHILDREN'S STQCKINGS, made of XX Parls Lisle made of the best all-wool elderdown, thread, fast black, finished wlfh a crocheted edge all .‘.‘:If,‘“d?.,el‘fi?r'."n'-x ";‘r! around the body, collar and sieeves; fect stocking ml‘\‘dl‘ colors pink, blue, gray and red, Co: Our prices make us fort and health for very little....8O¢ Busy Rt T, 74 3 0 Nares h,':‘mza’,’.f.w ,mf '[.’; the very FIrst omrlne In Knitted Underwear, lowest prices ever heard, Our KNITTED UNDERWEAR I8 500 pleces RIBBON Width No, §, oo Me Width No, 16, e Width No, 2..., Width Ne. 40. R It you anticipate using ribbon now or later on It will pay you to buy them now, a8 we are selling them for half price. for lots In tho town of Banta Fe M Pulnt Richmond, The town will profit by the location there of a great oll refining plant, Sold at Auction. Easton, Bldridge & Co, obtained the fol. Luwlul prices at thelr auction last Tuess ay: Lot on the north line of Callfornia street, ABX12T IR, $AR0O, west from Gouxh, subject to confirnmation| northeast corner of Houth Brod: orick and Hourteenth streetn, 30:x8918, With T-roum hous b N/ I8 Church l‘l’!‘!ll,"fi foot north Iro tago and lot' 2% 80, $1600; Now. \y Atina atreot, 338 foot northeast from Hecond wtreet, lot s0x80, With ten flats, $8100; Now, 27, 29, 31 and 83 Bhip. loy wtreet, lot d1:2x00 foet, with six small Nats, $0000; 1ot on the west' line of Btanyan stroct, 233:8 feet wouth from Rivoll street, 23x 120; $000, G, H. Umbsen & Co, will auction real estate to-morrow at their rooms at 4 Montgomery stree he will include 835 Capp street, the northwest cor- ner of MoeAllis and Webster streeis the moutheast corner of Harrison und Twenty-third streets, 2408 Washington stroet, 2006 Bush street, 3§ A, B, C and D Welsh street, 16 Trenton street, lot on the northwest line of Market street between Church and Sanchez, 1420 Montgomery street, between Filbert and Greenwich, and 40 and 442 Harriet street, Sales of considerable consequence have been placed on record in the past woek, among them being the following: Property on the south lino of Sutter straet, 137.6 feet east from Hyde, G0X137:6 feet, and _aleo property on the n line of Post street, 7:6 feet east from Hyde street, 26:0x13{:6, by the Hibernia Savings and to John Coop for $40,000; north ankiin and Chest- 37:6, by Charles G. Welling to Susan A. Moore for $20,000; 85x87:8 on the south line of Pacific avenue, 102:6 feet east from Scott, by 3. Bowes to Thomas W. Huntington fo : 1ot on the west line of Steiner street, 30 feet north from Pine, by Benjamin M. Gunn to the Pacific States Tele- phone and Telegraph Company for $17,500; 35x 127:8% feet on the north line of Pacific ‘ave nue, 1026 feet west from Broderick street, by Calvin E. Knickerbocker to James T. Dona- hue, for $17,00; 137:6x137:6 feet on the east corner of Brannan and Third streets, by Sig- mund and Abraham Stern to Henry E. Lands- burger for $35,000. Building Operations. Herbert E. Law has let the preliminary contracts for the Rialto office bullding. which he will erect at Mission and Nuw Montgomery streets at a cost of about $300,000. The designs are by architect Fred H. Meyers. The structure will cover a lot 100 by 160 feet. Gustav L. Page will puild a five-story lodging-house at the southwest corner of Leavenworth and Turk streets, to con- tain sixty rooms, at a cost of $30,000. Edward B. Hindes has leased his hotel building, recently completed, on the south line of Bush street, between Taylor and Jones, for $800 per mouih. The Hibernia Savings and Loan Society has released to the S. & H. Lachmal estate the south corner of Fremont an Market streets, upon which there was a mortgage of $100,000. * ‘The sale to Bdward J oper by the estate of Rose K. Bosq of y 137:6 teet on the south line of Butter street, 137:6 feet east from Larkin, for $22,000, has Leen confirmed by the Probate Court. The German Savings and Loan Soclety has released to John I. and Laura Sabin the lot on the west line of Steiner strcet, thirty feet north frcm Pine, which was mortgaged for $13,600. Louise de Martini will erect a two-story frame dwelling with concretc foundations, to contain six flats, on St. Charles place, to_cost $§120. Three flats are going up on_the south- east corner of Steiner and Sacramento streets. Burrell E. White will put up a threa- story house on the northeast corner of Devisadero and Bush streets, to cost nut_streets, 147:6x13 11,000, Peter Kelth has arranged to build flats on the south line of Walnut street, 100 feet west from Buchanan, which will cost about $4000. Lively in the South. The Los Angeles papers tell of lively efforts in Southern California to make ready for the coming Eastern winter visi- tors, for whom there Is insufficient ac- commodation. The Los Angeles Bullding News says that E. 8. Rowley is preparing plans for not less than forty residences to be erected on Normandie avenue. The Los Angeles Journal has the following: dena 1s fearful of experlencing a lack of ions for the promised rush of win- ter Although & large number of apartment houses and dwellings have been constructed and others are in course of com- pletion. The demand even at this early day seems to be greater than the supply. Many Eastern people who have made that city their home during the winter months and were pa- trons of the various hotels have purchased property and provided residences for their own use, but still the increasing number arriving tax the capacities of the hotels to thelr utmost. Furnished apartments are almost out of the market, and it seen hough & rich harvest s in view for all ti ‘who can furnish ac- commodations for temporary sojourners. The same ccndition of things may be said to exist in Angeles to a marked degree. Lodging. house keepers report business brisker In their line at lprennt than it has been for many years, although many large and commodious apartment houses and flats have been con- structed during the past year. Considering the fact that the winter travel to this ntil‘gn has hardly commenced, it looks as though Los An- geles will be taxed heavily to furnish the re- quired accommodations for visitors during the next fow months. SEerm—— Great Lake Tahos Excursion. 8peclal Southern Pacific train leaves 8 & m. Saturday, October 6. Daylight trip, Personally conducted. Tickets good eight days. Round tri 50. Hotel rates :Eva"':-: 60 per a-‘}.“mmm 013 xnkg made of the XX French black all-silk luster taffeta— always to the front for quallty and price. PUADIES COMBINATION SUITS, made of the best Peruvian yvarn—high C peck, long wleoves, ankle length, ¢ Onelta shape, the kind that bufton C over the shoulders—fieece lined, edged at the neck with a crochet edige and finished with a sllk tape run through— volors _ecru and gray, This reason's first offering and a good one, too, . 8§ ¢ 0 THKE PLACE OF 0L FUELS Tesla Company Com- mences Manufacture of Briquettes. New Industry Destined to Be of Advantage to California. A new fuel in the &hape of coal| briquettes is being manufactured and sold in California, and it is a matter of great public Interest as to whether this product Is to come Into general use In homes as well as In factories and on locomotives and steamboats, From present indica- tlons It appears that such is to be the case. In point of economy and effectiven the briquette surpasses coal and othe fuels, and judging from the rapidity with which the pubiic is adopting Its use there would seem little doubt that the inaugu- ration of the new industry marks an era in the progress of the West. Beveral of the larger nations of Europe have been using the briquette as a fuel for some years and sclentists throughout America have been attempting as usual to make a superior article. To California belongs the honor of success. A briquette is now being manufactured at Stockton whieh is | said to be far {n advance of anything of the kind ever before placed on the mar- ket. Coal screenings or slack and ofl are the chief compouents of tne product. The process of manufacture Is very sim- ple and the materials are of course inex- pensive. That the general use of the briquette will prove ot the utmost value to Calizor- nia is evidenced from the fact that the process enables the screenings and slack, which has previously been of littie valu to be utllized as a domestic coal. llons of tons of slack are thrown away annualiy in the United States. The Lri- quetting process will doubtless be used to save a great amount of this fuel. Furthermore it affords another outlet for the supply of oil in which the State is found to be g0 rich. Another pleasing f ture about the briquette is that it is ci an and can be handled freely without leav- | ing a trace of its presence. The capitalists at the head of the ven- ture have had chemists working for u period covering about three years in_an effort to segure a satisfactory fuel. The ?rlnclpal difficulty lay in finding a _proper binder for the screenings. In Kurope pitch or coal tar Is used, but oil scienti cally treated has proved to be of far greater efticlency. The San Franciseo and San Joaqnin Coal Company is parent of the enterprise and the business of briquetting is being conducted on a large and constantly in- creasing scale. The company's plant is located on .the water front in Stockton, where the bri- quettes can be easily shipped to any oint, Adjacent are the bunkers of ths ‘esla Coal Company, to which a rallroad thirty-six miles In length and owned hy the corporation, conveys the output of ti Tesla mines, liverything has beeu o ranged in an admirably convenient man- ner and all materials are handled carefu ly and expeditiously. The simplicity of ({m entire arrangement engages one's at- tention immediately. In making the briquettes, the coal {s first pulverized by powerful crushers. The oil which is the binder is then treated chemically and the residue I8 mixed with the coal dust at a very h:l‘h temperature, The composition {s immediately passed in glgantic hoppers into the presses. There the material is shaped into briquettes which are in the form of oblate spheroids from three to four inches in dlameter. After cooling they are ready for the mar- ket. The presses, two In number, are each capable of turning out 250 tons of briquettes dally. All the machinery is covered by patents, as is also the process of manufacture. In Europe and In Chicago, where the only other similar factory in this cou try is located, the making of briquettes en attended with considerable i lence and expense on account of a waste of materials. This difficulty T, the perfection of machinery been entirely obviated by the Stockton people. Not an ounce of coal or oll 18 lost at any ep In the frucen‘ cost of briquettes s about the same that of common forms of fuel. A ton of the new ?mduc!, however, will last as long at least as one and a quarter tons of coal. The heat efficlency, too,.is sald to be 60 per cent greater. That a_great deal of heat is ordlnurll( lost in the combustion of coal {8 a well- known sclentific fact. How to remedy this defect has been the source of count- less investigations and chemical axgnrl- ments, A number of these efforts have roved partially successful and so far as s known the experts employed by th Franclsco and San Joaquin Cn‘ JOE ROSENBERG'S. | JOE ROSENBERG'S. If You Are Stout We Can Make You Thin By wearing the NEW MAJESTY COR- st‘é-rs—mfi e of extra fine |mp';g§d with best rustproof steels. While they brace the body they will sateen, . Notions, Notions, LITTLE ARTICLES AT LITTLE. not break or bend on the hips. Made PiflleIS: s S for dl!fen-l'\tpdfl ures, These corsets nittin arge s each Aare guarantes or ays. they Nickel-platod sfery pins...de dosen Dreak a steel In that tme. nnother one Pearl buttons, good, heavy kind..... . free. If you have your corsets made to order we guarantee we can save you more than half and give you a beiter figure. Our way of selling. B2.75 Eoraet Sidelk, sateen Covereds B paie Black bonnet pins, jet head and the Io{sgh):lnd‘ flof;d ’steel‘pln‘.‘“ i%c Ielch Cablnet haigpins, pkgs pins In a capinets. LTI B Bcasinet 60¢ Instead of $1,00. tirneerirtsasasvsemaenisnseee B0 & DAIF qCOFASts made of good uality sateen, new stralght ront, empire shape, lace trimmed top and_bottom, colors pink, blue, white and black. At this price you save just one-half...... 50e A Lucky Catch for You and for Us, Bought from Lackenback & Ce., an over- stocked Umbrella manutacturer, When You Want to Improve Your Form Come to Us. That's wha' we make a spec alty of. ALASKA DOWN PADS—Are war- ranted to give a proper, neat, rounded appearance so essentlal to the well- gowned woman. They are made of the very best woven silvered wire and featherbone, which makes them light 3900 UMBR: and sanitary—no heavy hair padding, ;}{l“g‘ Do . 0N It is made to produce the most natural ars maOLLAR-They and perfect form—healthy and inex- are made o’ the bLeat pensive ........ BHoe all “sllk. with {vor sterling trimmed and What the Leadlng Physiclans Say, 5 . matural wood handles, And that is long life We'll quote a few of the for a liitle money by Ladles’ Umbrellas, made of fast wearlng _the ADRI- black TItallan twill cloth, steel rad, ENNE BRACE. natural wood handles. In great vario- EST SPECIAL SUPPORTER made; Invaluable for suffer- ers from weak back and pulmonary tfou- tles to choose from. To be sold at the unheard-of price, SOVIE MORE, $ - WHY NOT PREPARE FOR RAIN bles; giv NOT e B Dl T ceEl NS Bl UMBRELLAS AT GIVEN- ness of walk; it throws AWAY PRICES? your chest out so it LADIES' AND GENTS' UMBRDI.- gives your lungs more LAS. made of extra heavy merceriacd reedom to breathe; twilled eloth; fast color; waterproof; your skirts can be at- steel rod; 120 different handles to tached to the brace choose from; sterling silver, natural with only a hook and eye, thus relfev- wood, with sterling silver trimmed; ing the unhealthy pressure on the dell- also horn and bone handles, ster- cate organs of the body, Comes in ling metal trimmed, You can buy three different sizes—boys’, misses’ and three for the usual cost of one, Just ladies'. 1f all les would wear the think, T8¢ We have many more In better and cheaper qualities, Space will not per~ mit us to write 816 MARKET STREET, Running through to 11 @'Farrell, PHELAN BUILDING, Adrienne brace consumption would be- come unknown, You get your money's worth at Rosenberg's for, ®1,00 JOE ROSENBERG Malil Orders Solicited. = e S Moo it ‘ompany have surpassed all previous ate tempte, Ordinarily great quantities of the hydrocarbons or velatlle gases have encaped, In the Stockton briquette they are o a great extent retained. Boveral of the Interfor towni and eittes have begun the use of the new fuel, and the firat trainload of it for the bay eities rolled into Oakland a fow days L The rewult has been attained only at the cost of years of patient labor and the outlay of an Immenke amount of capital, ‘Ihe #uccess which 18 attending the enterprive i well deserved, S—— DUNPHY, THE MAN-SLAYER, APPEARS IN OCOURT He Justifies His Act and Says His Deceived Sister Will Bear Him Him Out. James W. Dunphy, who shot and killed Edward Stanton at Minna and Mary streets Friday night because he claimed that Stanton had deceived his sister, ap- peared before Judge Conlan yesterday. As the complaint was faulty he was not even Instructed, and the case was continued until Wednesday. The defendant did not Eave an attorney, but his mother and Judges Still Unable to Agree. —— Supreme Tribunal. —_—— for belleving that Governor HAAINN COURTS BOLY TANRLED Federal and Territorial Governor Dole Virtually Pe- pudiates Decision of the HONOLULU, Bept. 21.~There {8 ground Dole has 21 | JOE ROSENBERG'S. ' The First Comers Monday Morning Wiil have an opportunity that they will not sconr forget. We bought a travelor's sample line of FLAN. A \ NELETTE GOODS. They W& are perfect in finish and make: only slightly solied {3 from being handled; be- ing that way we bought :lhem at a great reduc- ‘ on, LADIES' FLANNEL- ETTE SKIRTS, DRAWERS AND GOWNS. LADIES' FLANNELETTE DRAW- ! ERS, made of very best quality of :h flannelette, with a deep ruftle, :EAblES' FLANNELETTE GOWNS, W De. L.XDIES’ FLANNELETTE SKIRTS X with a deep flounce, 29¢. ¥ These goods are made of the best daisy cloth, plain and striped; war- ranted fast colors; you know what samples are. They are always made better than regular goods. Our ad- vice: Come early, so you will not be disappointed, as the quantity will not last long. Sale O'Farrell St. Entrance. There's One Best of Everything, and Here It Is, The Barker Brand of LA- 6 DIES' LINEN l'(\lAI,ArE‘iS. ne made of 4-ply extr: linen, in all the new styles and ' shapes; no fancy price here; the small store with the small price. 12%e One Item, and a Good One, Too. 8 dozen gents' HANDKERCHIETFS, made of extra heavy Belfast linen— hemstitched, full size. If we did not buy them direct from the manufacturer ! you'd have to pay twice the price we 5 ask ' e Store News. i Look In our windows and see those 25c and 35c Ladies' handkerchlefs we are sellin b R iy .. 18¢ Qloves cleaned and made to look ke new .. sesseneee B¢ pale Tollet combs, made of the very finest gutta percha, ‘the kind that will_not tear or pull your halr . 19e ! a new llne of Arablan Venise lace Insertion, 4 380 Just recelved colored Polnt fnchen wide Mysterious Hermits Are Loocated. BANTA CRL Bept. WN—~Word was brought here to-day of an aged couple ia the northern end of the county, where for twenty years they have led such hermit's existence that they run away and hide whenever any person approaches their rude hablitation. Who they are or where they came from is not known, The Bupervisors will bo asked to logk after the couple, who are -urpn-nd to be with= out the nece fen of life, brother Frank, who were {n court, sald that George A. Knight had been retained to defend him. The inquest will be held T\lndu?". Dunphy was not In a talkative mood yesterdny. The only stutement he would make was that he was well satisfled with his act, and he believed any jury in the land would uphold him in what he had done, His sister, he said, would be In court at the proper time to tell her story of the wrong done her, NEW TYPEWRIT! L. & M. Alexander, agents Smith Pre- mier Typewriter, recently recelved orders from the following well-known firms: Roos Bros., Raphael’'s, Newman & Lev- inson, 8. N. Wood & Co., Emporium, Hale Bros., Miller, Sloss & Scott, Baker & Hamllton, Balfour, Guthrie > Bancroft, Whitney & Co., Sun Insuran Offize, State Treasury Department, Thom- as Dye Works, Western Union Telegraph Company, Willamette Paper Co., Hart- ford Insurance Co., E. J. Bowen & Co., California Business College, Fidelity & Deposit Co., Southern Pacific Co., Postal Telegraph Co. The Smith Premier Typewriter is espe- cially adapted for billmaking. It has the softest touch and is the lightest running typewriter made. No typewriter machine has ever made such wonderful progress as the Smith Premier. ke Architects File Protest. The San Francisco Chapter, American Institute of Architects, filed a protest with the Board of Supervisors yesterday against the passage of the new building ordinance. ————— To-Morrow at ® a, m. The Boston will sell 1000 pairs Lad'es' Shoes and Ties worth $4 and $ for 30c a pair, These are Lalrd-Shober and Mit- chel's make., All will go at 50c a pair at the Boston Shoe Co., 1506 Market, above City Hall ave. . ————— Plummers Separated. Kathryn Plummer was granted a de- cree of divorce from Alvin Plummer by Judge Kerrigan yesterday on the ground of willful neglect. ADVERTISEMENTS. SENT FREE TO MEN! A Most Remarkable Remedy Thaat Quickiy Restores Lost Vigor to Men. A Free Trial Packaws Sent by Mail to All Who Write, Free trial packages of a most remark- able remedy are being malled to all who will write the State Medical Instituts. They cured so mln( men who had bat. tled for years against the mental and physical suffs ne of lost manhood that The Institute has decided to distribute fres trial packages to all who write. It iy q home treatment, and all men who suffer trom any form of sex ing from youthful foll e strength and memory, weak back, varico~ cele or emaclation of parts can now cure Vi emedy has a peculiarl e bmth and seems Lo aciTjotul the desired location, giving :c:ld dev lflp':“"h been an absolut: success in . A request to the p ::ll ‘nultuu 328 Elektron bul““ u“'g will 81 Wayne, Ind., stating that you Y Uhelr free trial packages o v g plied with promptly, The Tn titute 1s do sirous of reaching that great class of men able to leave home to be treat- ed, and the free samples will enable them 1o see how On‘vmu il' h‘: h: eu:.d of sex- 0] rem " The ‘Tnstftute makec m; lons. Any man who wri .'w.l.ll fl: t a free sample, carefull; fain ' ngnn. ;o that its recipjant é‘:‘a 8. "netters ave Tequested ta” welte without delay, come to w decision virtually repudiating the Hawallan SBupreme Court decisions creating a legal transition period wherein the United States constitution did not operate in the Hawallan Islands. This period, under the Supreme Court rullngs, existed from the passage of the annex: tion resolution, July 7, 158, to the Inaug- uration of the Territory of Hawall under act of Congress June 14, 1900, George A. Davis was one of the attor- neys in the habeas corpus proceedings in- stitited for the release of prisoners con- victed and sentenced within that period on the ground that they had not been in- dicted by a Grand Jury, nor were the ver- dicts of the petty juries unanimous for their conviction. The Territorial Circuit Court and the United States District Court released the prisoners on writs of habeas corpus, but before a case was brought before the Federal Court the Su- preme Court entertained appeals from the orders of the Circuit Court and remanded certain of the prisoners to jail, holding that their convictions were légal. Owing to the absence of Attorney Gen- eral E. P. Dole, who is in San Francisco, and a crowded state of the Circuit Court calendar existing, Attorney Davis has been commissioned as a special deputy of the Attorney General to prosecute criml- gul cases at a special term before Judge ear. George Wade, who killed a fellow stew- ard on the steamship Australia in 1899, and four of the Japanese rioters at Ka- huku plantation were released on habeas corpus from sentences for manslaughter. They were immediately rearrested on warrants charging them with murder in the first degree, though Federal Judge Estee who released one of them, sald there was nothing to prevent their’ rear- resting on the original charges, as they had got been legally placed in jeopardy. In the course of proceedings yesterday Deputy Attorney General Davis said: “'I am authorized to state officially that the policy of the Government in these cases will be to follow the rulings of ths Circuit Court and of the United States District Court, and to endeavor to rein- dict all those convicted and sentenced during the so-called transition period.” Attorney Davis made the announcement on high authorify and it is confidently asserted that this authority is Governor | ole. The four Japanese rioters declined to lead to the indictment on the advice of *. M. Brooks, their attorney. This action is taken to mean that new habeas corpus proceedings are contemplated on the strength of the Supreme Court’s decisions, but In view of the statement made by the Eubllc prosecutor, Davis, it Is not proba- le that an attempt will be made to block their trial. Ah Oi, a Chinese burglar, was released by Judge Gear yesterday on habeas co pus from imprisonment continued by vir- tue of the decision of the Supreme Court. This was prior to the statement of G ernment Attorney Davis. Judge Gear says that he made the order of release in accordance with the decision of the United States District Court. HONOLULU, Sept. 21.—A contract has been closed by Alexander & Baldwin of this city with the Unfon Ofl Company of Calffornia to supply the sugar plantations on the island of Maul with oll for fuel. Tanks holding about haif a million gal- lons will be constructed on Maul and sev- 3 eral of the pluntations there will use oll | in place of coal. Special Rates For side rides to points on the Santa Fe. Open to holders of Episcopal Church Con- vention tickets, friends accompanying and Lolders of nine months' excursion Dates of sale, Bozllember -] November 10 inclusive. mit 30 For time tables, descriptive literature and full_information call at Santa Fe offices, @41 Market d pot. —_——— Narrowly Escapes Death. Arthur W. Caswell had a close call from being sent to the Morgue yesterday Caswell Spgaged o room ut 1007% Market street. While unumrllnl to light the gas he fainted. The smell of the ‘;lns fluld attracted the attentlon of landlady. She rried to the Emer- by, Caswell onibed bla' wirength 3 ‘ABW #O0N re| Ine wtrei and loft the hospital L. | Music Cabinet $4.40 Made of potished mahoganized } birch, 38 inches high, 17 inches wide Ficture tells the rest. Richmond Ranges cost about 1oc a pound. ink of that! Very ordinary rough castings cost that much but the castings in a.RICHMOND are smooth as satin. It's easy to get a cheaper range than a Rich- mond—get a lighter one! Lighter ones seil at 12to r4ca Iband last about half as long. Q(casionplly you find a cheap light-weight range that will bake. RICHMONDS Balie or every penny of your money back. Roman Chair $1.25 Made of golden oak, strong and serviceable. The seat is upholstered in velours. an account with us. You can make the payments to suit your convenience, STERLING Furniture Company 1039 Market St. Ooposite McAllisteq adway's‘ Pills Purely vegetable, mild and relluble. Catves rfect digestion, complete absorption and realthful regularity. For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, 1 Kidneys, Bladder, Female fr- regularities, Sick Headuche, Billousness, Coii- stipation, Pilvs and all derangements of the Internal Viecera. e a box. At Druggiets, o RADWAY & CO., New Y by mall