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24 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1902, ADVERTISEMENTS. IT WILL LOOK WELL ON YOU. THE AMEER A hat full of dash and becomingness. spring shades, STEEL BLUE, PEARL AND BLACK. Destined to become one of ..] Is the price for the Ameer Department. COR. KEARNY STREET & UNION SQVARE AVENUE. Swedish Dramatic Club. The Swedish Dramatic Club, an ama- teur organization made up of members of the Swedish colony, produced two plays in Turn Verein Hall last night. The at- tendance large and the audience was generous its applause. The following took part: C. Shoquist, Fred Johason, M Agnes Lundgren. C. Gardelius. Fritz Wahlin, Axel Alf, O. F. Svenson, Charles Lagerberg, Miss Olivia C. Wahiin and C. J. Larson. Peterson, Fritz | In the new the Hat Hits of the season. in our big and popular Hat , . SEATTLE, Feb. 22 —The Ottawa authorities have given permission for the removal of the cargo of the Alaska Commercial Company’s steamer Bertha from the scene of wreck, in British waters, to an American port in a United States vessel. It is stipulated that the £00ds must be moved ‘‘under customs super- vision.” —_——— GERMANTOWN, Feb. 22—The preliminary examination of “Jack” Wallace, the_murderer of August Hasch, will take place next Thurs- | day before Justice Schwenk. 5 Perfect Fruit Oflys Fure Sugar Cleanliness onys F xoeriznce ongs Are the essentials in ongs the making of Pure ongs Preserves and are the reasons why ongs ongs ngs are pronounced by all consumers to be the “bes.” ' Ask for QIgS preseryes LONG’S PRESERVES, JAMS AND JELLIES ongs Ongs a jar of Bngs Strawberry Blackberry Apricot Pineapple Cu[rant Orange 5 Qngs = pesch A""y Plum Fig Raspberry - or Loganberry ongs ongs All grocers sell them, longs ongs LONG SYRUP REFINING CO,, , Eighth and Brannan Sts., San Francisco, Cal. Phone, South 486. CRUSADE HELPS HONEST MINING Mineralogist’'s Plan to Block Frauds Is Approved. Since the original and exclusive infor- mation was published in The Call con- cerning State Mineralogist Aubury’s cam- paign to put the mining and oil fakers out of business in this State by having proper- | ties examined by his representatives, the mining papers of the State have paid con- | siderable attention to the matter. Its im- | portance will make it a theme for discus- | sion for some time. Important results in | favor of the legitimate miners and oil pro- ducers as distinguished from the fakers are certain. Eastern and European papers are print- ing page advertisements of propositions on this coast that are known to be sail- ing under false pretenses. This is a mat- ter of common knowledge. The discovery that frauds exist and the inability of the Eastern people to discriminate, owing to distance from the coast, has led to a constant bombardment of the State Min- eralogist's office with queries about the value of stocks, etc. This has brought about the move that concerns all honest miriers and is calculated to be a source of great discomfort to fakers. Mr. A says he will follow up the investigations | he is making into the real values of min- ing and oil propositions until he is ac- quainted with them all." Siskiyou Has Prospects. The Scott Valley Advance says of the prospects of mining in Siskiyou County: Mining in Siskiyou has made a substantial advance during the y€ar 1901, the established districts and their gold yields have proven that the mines {n our county are permanent, and | with the new prospects found and the develop- ing of the older ones that a combination of the increase of gold output can and will be looked forward to during the coming year. Districts as well known but from which less was expectsd have made even greater ad- vances. Development has been backward by reason of the bellef that gold values were en- tirely in shallow placers which were largely | worked out. An increase of placer gold during | the past year shows that this bellef is not well | founded. * One notable feature is development of quartz ledges throughout our county. Gold mining was considerably extended dur- ing the past year, not £o much by entirely new discoveries as by the opening and development of old ones assumed to be valueless. Perhaps only a single mine In some of our districts has proved to be permanent, but that one is proof of more not yet discovered and developed. Our districts that have permanent mines now working can be safely depended upon as con- taining more yet undiscovered and be counted on to make a much greater showing in values during 1902. Bonds Are Taken. The Redding Free Press says that F. E. Ware, general manager of the Mount Shasta Gold Mining Company, has taken a bond on the United copper group of mining claims. This group is situated in the Flat Creek mining district and con- s:ste of seventeen claims. The bond is o $16,000.- Mr. Ware also_holds, with C. D. Porter, a bond on the McClure group in the Bully Hill district. The price named in the last mentioned transaction is_$50,000. The Mother Lode Banner says: ‘The mill on the Von Tromp mine, near Co- lumbia is running steadily on good ore. Messrs. Burdick ‘2nd Riggs have bonded the McAlpine mine near Big Oak Flat. The Maler property, consisting of three claims with a total length of 3600 feet, situated on the Tuolumne Riyer, has beer bonded to H. M. Heath of Boston, the price being set at $13,000. Much development work has already been performed. The Grass Valley Union and Herald says that the Reward mine is likely to become the property of the com&:ny that has bonded the California and Gold Tun- nel Company. . The Pacific Coast Miner has an account of the mines of Calaveras Coun?. in the course of which is included the following i account of the famous Utiga mine in the Angels Camp district: xR gorking Bundreds of fee . - A gallo ubury | — ADVERTISEMENTS. Our In I tons of ore out of the miles of underground workings. It stands at the upper end of North Main street and is one of the first points of interest to catch the eye of the vis- itor to thie town. Near It stands the sixty- stamp mill which is used to crush the 300 tods of ore run through the mill each /day of the year. Underground the work is s> vast that one cannot realize how many tons of ore have been excavated. For every ton taken out tae space thereby created is at once filled with country rock taken from crosscuts run into the foot wall or hanging wall, in addition to the heavy timbering nccessary to hold the ground up while the ore is being taken out. In consequence anybody visiting this mine would be surprised to see sach a small amount of open space in it. At this point fis also situated a machine shop, blacksmith shon and sawmill, where all necessary work is ouickly turned out for this mine. The mill has 60 stamps and 24 Frue vanners, The concentrates from this mill are carried by a wire rope tramway to the chlor- ination plant, 1500 feet distant, at a cost of 5 cents per ton, estimating power at $5 per horsepower per month. The holst, tramway and sawmill are run by waterpower, Wwhile the mill. machine shop and the blowers for the blacksmith shop “are run by electric power. The hoiste mill and all the works are lighted by electricity, but no electricity is used un- derground. The log vard is also lighted with electric lamps. ‘Work of Development. The Nevada City Transcript reports that _development work is in progress at the May Flower gravel mine at Forest Hill. The lessees of the Dardanelles mine bave begun to hydraulic. A force of men has been put to work by the management cf the Ralston Divide Gold Mining Com- pany on the Blacksmith claim. e Yreka Journal says that the hydraulic mines at Oro Fino and Quartz Valley are running at full capacity, and there is an abundance of water with wkich to operate the giants and hydraulic elevators. A rich strike is reported at Hall City on the side of the ridge oppo- site Harrison Guich. The vein is_ sup- posed to be a continuation of the Midas ledge. x The Redding Searchlight reports that the Coffee Creek country will have a toll road twenty-five miles long between Delta and Trinity Center. The Trinity Toll Load Company has, according to this story, bought the townsite of Delta from the Pacific Improvement Company. . T. Pendergast writes to the Phoenix (Ariz.) Republican an account of the placer flelds of Yuma County. He ures out that the Ochoa and Middle camps ought to yleld upward of $19,000,000 in gold on the basis of 37,000,000 yards of gravel at 53 cents per yard. He says: The locality of these placers is among the oldest known portions of Arizona. Forty years ago the Colorado River was the main Bateway of the territory. Frelght entered by that route for many years, and mills are still standing that were landed at Aubrey on that river. The value of these placers was known to the miners who In early days passed over all the region contiguous to the Colorado, but the almost total absence of water in the moun- tains compelled the miners to pack their rich dirt to the river, or to distant natural tanks to be washed. Oro Fino was the most cele- brated camp of that time. There the soft shale bedrock rises to the surface, and when the art of dry washing was learned, this rich rock was the scene of active work, and much of it has been washed and rewashed a score of times, Leadville’s Suburbs. According to the Daily Mining Record, published at Denver, considerable pros- pecting has recently been in progress in the country adjoining the main Leadville district. Says the Record; There s plenty of desirable ground in the main area of mineralization, but naturally it is held at a high figure and in many cases means deep and expensive mining. Many min- ing men say they would mot attempt to start a large enterprise in the main portion of the Leadyille district under $50,000. But there are outside gulches and hills where land is cheap and plenty, which offer some al- luring prospects to individuals and companies of comparatively small means. Inquiry among mining men who have in- terésts in the fringes of the county reveal the fact that there are not less than twelve dis- tinct sections to which more or less attention is now being given. There are always pros- pectors working here in a small W assessment and digging according to ited ability. But now there seems ai ition” to ‘do some ‘more pretentious ex- ploration, and the indiciations are favorable for the discovery of a few mines this year. Conditions in Rand. Mines and Minerals says of mining in , doing their im- to be a the Rand, which is reviving: Gold mining in South Africa is essentially a low grade proposition, but to offset this is the fact that the deposits are not only widely extended but they are quite regular in their occurrence. A deposit can therefore be de- pended upon to continue more or less regu- rly over a comparatively wide while the value of the deposits can be calculated M Ed Spring Model... STROLLER SACK... A jaunty, smart affair, broad shoul: dem(. in the highly fashionable English Worsted Cheviots For style and nattiness its equal is not to be found. The complete suit— MEN’S SUIT DEPARTMENT. . New Either Blue or Black (Full-Weight Fabrics). $10.00. I JUDGE SETTLES THE BEER CASE Estee Renders Decision Against a Law in Hawaii. HONOLULTU, Feb. 22.—United States Dis- trict Judge Estee has rendered a decision ! declaring unconstitutional a Hawaliian law under which twenty-five licenses for saloons which sell only Honolulu-made beer have been issucd and dre now in operation. The decision was rendered in a suit brought by the local agents of a half-dozen Eastern breweries, whose sales in Hawali have materially decrcased since a brewery was opened in Honolulu and ']g'h'en the advantages of the Hawallan aw. The law in question was passed in the days of the monarchy, and allowed issu- ance of retail licenses at the rate of $25) to saloons that should sell no liquors ex- cept the product of a brewery in Hono- lulu. The regular retail license is $1000 a year, and it is only by paying this license that any dealer can retail beers made in the United States in Hawail. Estee held that this was an unconstitutional discrim- ination against the mainland breweries. The twenty-five licenses issued are still in force and the saloons remain open, as the decision as rendered was simply on a petition for an injunction to restrain the Territorial Treasurer from issuing mofe such licenses. It is claimed, however, that its declaration of the law- applies equally to licenses already issued, and Judge Gear has directed the attention of the Grand Jury to the twenty-five saloons, which it is now claimed are selling liquor without licenses, the law under which the licenses were issued having been declared inyalid. The matter will be appealed from Judge Estee's decision, and in the meantime the saloons may continue in business. The home rule Republicans are now dis- cussing the indorsement of Samuel Park- er for Governor. Since they have come to the conclusion that Delegate Willcox, for whom they have declared before, cannot get the place they have been discussng the former Republican candidate for Del- egate, and his indorsement was talked of at the last meeting of the central com- mittee. There was nct a quorum present, however, and no action was taken. A builders’ exchange is being organized here under the auspices of the local Mas- ter Builders’ Association. The member- ship includes practically all of the local builders and members of allied trades ex- cepting the Chinese in Honolulu. . A pub- lic meeting, which Governor Dole and oth- er officials have been invited to attend, has been called for next Wednesday to inaugurate the exchange, which will be opened in good quarters centrally located. L T 2 2 L ) with a falr degree of certainty in advance of actual exploftation. It has _been . possible, s therefore, to lay out the work systematically and the pro has been one of economically handling large masses. These features in con- nection with the industry render gold mining on the Rand a stable business proposition, and while the country has had its share of wild- cats, enough is now known about the char- acter of the deposits =o that it is compara- tively easy to secure capital for any legiti- mate enterprise. —_———— OFFENSIVE PERSONATION OF JUDGE HARRINGTON ALTURAS, Feb. 22.—Great indignation was expressed here to-day among the better class of citizens over the fact that the committee having in charge the pub- lic masquerade given here last night for ihe benefit of the Alturas band permitted several of the maskers to portray in cari- cature Superior Judge Harrington and the gentlemen connected with the prosecution of James W. Brown in the Lookout The personation of lJynch case, 'udge on was lcularly of- f ive, and the actlon of the committee masker glnoth 1l m’m“eh mttugn l: e floor sud a rarticularly condemned ADVERTISEMENTS. £ e Yo Is 2 name we have given to one of the very smartest of suits for chaps be- tween the ages of 10 and 16 years. | Knee trousers, made as you see pic- tured oprosite; broad, full, generous shoulders. A smartly tailored garment | in all the very newest and most fetch- ing of spring colorings; greenish ef- | fects 2mong "em—a suit that will find |its way to our special sale counter at $3.48 These represent values up to $6.50. The'most fetching things in plaids in the spring shape of the Golf Cap for boys, in our r Boys” Hat Depart- ment. No end of em. Special Mon- day at JACK TAR A name that we have given fo our new Spring Sailor. generous in double - and - twist English Serge, in a beautiful shade of ment. chaps between the ages of 3 and 10. Special the suit, $2.98 Lanyard and Whistle with every Suit, - We don’t want to talk too strong- ly, but if you will come Menday you will see the smartest spring fash- ions that have ever graced the Ju- venile ent of that big and popular Kearny-street house. The styles are bewitchingly handsome— European novelties as well as the production of our geniuses at home. | [ g2 =/ 5 it 8 INco sEp ~ UMoN Square Ave, —— ; Suicide Identified. Mrs. Metcalf, who conducts a lodging- house at 409 Minna street, yesterday identified the body of the man who shot himself in the park on January 13 as Henry Hook, a walter, who had roomed dt her house. The dead man was positively identified by means of keys found on the body. The detectives Who worked on the case were Dillon and Crockett. Hook had been out of work for some time and was despondent. He went out to Golden Gate Park early in the afternoon, shot himself in the temple and Was removed to the Central Emergency Hospital, where he died. Colonel William H. Dickey. KALAMAZOO, Mich., Feb. 22.—Colonel ‘William H. Dickey is dead at the Michi.- gan Asylum for the Insane here. He served during the civil war and was afterward colonel of the Twelfth United States Infantry. William A. Stockley. NEW YORK, Feb. 2—Willam A. Stockley, three times Mayor of Philadel- phia, dled last night in that city of paralysis, aged 79 years. — - In 1896 there were three million this country out of work. b mations and chronli men that treatmen: AR RR R s st R S e 2 RS R S S SPSUUUSUU U UUUUN Disorders of Men. It certainly can be stated without fear of contradiction that previous to our announcement of the importance of urethral inflam- prostatic affections as factors in disorders of was conducted in an cessful manner. Our brilliant cures and ods by others is proof of its correctness. Much labor has been spent in writing about, though but little in investigating, those morbid conditions which are man- ifested by the so-called “weaknesses” of the male. + impracticable and unsuc- the adoption of our meth- The voluminous literature of Strictly Reliable. [ F.L. TALCOT'. M. D, the subject is restricted largely to a nar- ration of cases in which the chief symp- toms are pollutions, prematureness, loss of vitality, etc.; the stereotyped cause is comprised in early youthful follies; the routine treatment consists of the bromides, tonics, steel sounds and mar- riage. So long as this practice pre- vails, so long as what is called “weak- ness” is regarded and treated as a dis- ease rather than symptoms of the most diverse morbid conditions, the treat- ment must remain as unsatisfactory as it is to-day, furnishing occasionally a suc- cess, often entirely barren of good re- sulfs, and sometimes even aggragating materially the patient’s condition. Many Men Treated for a Weakness Which Never Existed R R e 2 2 R0 A SIS VUUPVIIUU R TO WO In the largest proportion of of symptoms known as “‘weakness, cerer prostate gland, continued excitement so react on and function Is nduced. Our knowled, cord center are mysteries may be, however. the sffects ae seems that even the unprofessi will not cure, but efforts dlmlo:illl In practice such is the case, the desired resuit. patient Colored c] + + + + + + ’ & + % + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + : e 57 + + + + + ,1 ettt 4444 Certain morbid conditions of the urethra and the organs that a condition of diminished vitality Selves is quite clear and full, but how these chanses Spermie oy o o, orsans them ects ate appasent 1n the crban rent In the embarrassed sufferer; these troubles being symptomatic of the above-mentioned and well-defined morbid conditions, oward repairing the damaged tract will restore. 2 A8 the treatment on these lines never fails to accomplish hart of the organs sent on application. * F.L. TALCOTT, M. D., or Dr. Talcott & Co., %7 B R R S T S lost vitality, prematureness and the train nges operate on the nerves and spinal Whatever the morbid change must understand that stomach drusging Market Street, Corner Sixth. e Rt R SRR R R