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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1902. 5 EET DEATH | IN VERITABLE STRUGELEFOR 3t OF FIRE - HIGHER WAGES Naphtha Escaping From |One Hundred and Forty a Wrecked Freight Thousand Answer Car Is Ignited. Call of Union. MINERS BEGIN Explosions Follow and Burn- ing Fluid Is Thrown Upon Bystanders. | Coal Companies Are Making Preparations to Stand Long Siege. Tie-Up Is Said to Be the Most Com- plete Ever Known in the His- tory of Hard Coal Mining. R PHILADELPHIA, May 12.—Minework- ers throughout the entire anthracite coal regions of Penn 140,000 began Score of Lives Lost and Fully Two | Hundred Persons Are Injured, i Majority of Whom Will Die. | | The new ndle Railroad g of the most | nown in A score of r struggle to-day for in- creased wages and shorter hours. Never in the history of hard coal mining has a tie-up been so complete, not one of the 357 collieries in the territory being in opera- ticn. There is every indication for the be- f that the suspension, which was to cover only the first three days of this be made permanent by the general convention, which will Hazleton on Wednesday. te quiet prevailed e In pursuance of the dis ards, which met_joint week, all the Ic here to- unions and elected delegates to the , Ohio, | sue where the vote of a local blic the ballot showed a de- rity for a permanent strik less the operators grant concessio: 1 e made ‘that if it is desired on to continue the I be longer and more bitter was that of 1900, which lasted six weeks. The coal companies in various parts of the region have already made prepara- | tions for a slege. Coal train crews, tele- Sinter- ats, of Sheri-| graph operators, switchmen, carpenters, | . ; ral Hospital | machinists and other employes, number- ¢ ai ©ld, of Sheri-| jng geveral thou: not identified with # ¢ age, | n have been laid oft e, et | Some of the compa- sbout ught their mules to the urface and placed them in pasture, | . President Mitchell spent a busy day at his headquarters. He was in close com- tion with all the district leaders, sed himself well satisfled with the way the men were responding ll the call for suspension of work. He will leave for Hazieton to-morrow after- noon. died t Mercy Hospital. d 20 years, Car- n section hand, ged 10. ton, Luzerne Floral Festival at Sacramento. The street fair which\opens at Sacra- mento to-day will attract large numbers of people from San Francisco, particular- Iy in view of the one-way raté of $250 made by the Southern Pacific for the rcund trip, tickets being good from to- day up to and including Sunday, May 18, returning. This is an opportunity to_visit he capital city at little expense and en- oy 2 pleasant outing. Sacramento is now en fete, and her citizens are according hearty welcome to all visitors. LIST OF INJURED following persons who a 14 Smml poCim e burg, fractured skull, ClEb “Women Znferiained. SAN JOSE, May 12.—The New England delegates to the women's conference at Los Angeles were the guests of the San Jose Woman’s Club in the Hotel Vendome this evening. THere was a profusion of flowers, a fine musical programme was rendered and light refreshments were aged 22, Elliott- | served. e e P. C. Kelly, Assignee. Brooker Bros." all-wool men’s suits, worth are now being =old for $4 65 at the clothing assignee’s sale of the Bos- ton, 773 Market street, near Fourth. . —————— | TACOMA. May 12.—David Thompson, alias | David Tullis, the English contractor arrested | in Scattle on March 2 on a charge of having absconded with $70,000, was taken East from Tacoma on Saturday In charge of two Deputy ed States Marshals, who will deliver him to the British authoritiés at B County and ed to-night. DISASTER. ton, Mass. ania to the number of | al t the region met during the day | strike the | CONDOR'S FATE la REVEALED BY A SEALER Tells, in Letter to His Brother, of Cruiser’s Foundering. Says the British Craft Went Down During Storm of December 3. Crew of Sailing Vessel Is Unable to | Give Aid in Response to the ‘Warship’s Signals of Distress. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. VICTORIA, B. C., May 12—The fate of | H. M. S. Condor has at length been defi- nitely learned. She went down, as mam't had believed, in the heavy southeast gale | of December 3d, soon after leaving the | Straits of San Juan de Fuca. The news | of the foundering of the lost warship is given in a letter which Robert Marshall, a boat puller on the sealing schooner | Mary Taylor wrote to his brother, a resi- dent at Metchosin, near this city. The! letter, which is evidently the production of a none too literate man, does not give much detail, but this sentence in which | he speaks of the Condor shows that she ! | foundered during that awful night of De- | cember 3d, carrying her crew of-10 down | | to death near Cape Flattery. | It is too bad about the Condor, isn't 1t? | One of the schooners see her in distress on the night of December 3. She was firing oft guns and skyrockets and afterward she went down. It was too rough to get near her. The writer refers to the Condor again in the close of his letter, saying: 1 suppose you have heard all about the Con- dor, though, from the papers. | This would indicate that he could give further details of the disaster. : The schooner Mary Taylor is now on her way to the Bering sea and Copper | Islands on a sealing expedition and will | be back about two months hence, When she arrives the scene attendant upon the | foundering of the warship may be told | | in full. | _The Condor sailed from Esquimalt on December 2d for the South Sea islands via Honolulu and was never heard of again, She was given up by the Admiralty and officially written off the books on Febru- | ary 17th, after some life buoys, a boat| and miscellaneous wreckage had been | found on the west coast of Vancouver Island. It was the theory of many that she collided with the lost Matteawan, be- lieved to have gonme down in the same storm, while others gave it as their opin- ion that she had foundered. The letter from the sealer shows that the latter theory was the correct one. Trunks and Valises. We have a larger and better trunk than the $750 special offered last week. It is made of genuine basswood, brass trimmed, with two straps, two travs and cloth faced, at $8 50. Also a sole leather suit | case, with ehirt #old and steel frame; for | $3 0. All trunks, valises and leather | goods lettered free of charge. Banborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street . QUEEN FAY RECEIVES THE CROWN “IN SIGHT OF MANY THOUSANDS With Mimic Regal Pomp the One Week's Reign of Her Charming Majesty Over the Street Fair in the Capital City Is Auspiciously Commenced —_————— Robbed Firm Will Not Prosecute. PHOENIX, Ariz., May 12.—Charles Dieb- | ling, collector and manager of the ‘whole- | sale department of Wakelin & Co., gro- cers, to-day walked into the Sheriff's of- fice and gave himself up, confessing the embezzlement of about $1000 of the firm's money. The grocers, when notified, made | no charge against him and Be was re- | leased. He is now at home with his wife and children. The examination of his books shows a shortage that it is believed | will azsregate $1500 or more. Rlebling | says he has been gambling, but no one knows where. r more men from | il (ESC betting_on the | g Few of the oc- | Sate escaped_injury, | & Seymour dan_Hotel feared, fatally f the it is htha exploded about spectacle soon at- | on the streets lin- to the railroad. r exploded about 5 o'clock, | | »ck_when three more v stuff went up with a e heard for miles that| ion really began. | belched forth on | followed was almost be- | .. The successive explo- | heated the air to such an ex- e the third explosion many uncenscious by the ex- the gase fumes and rried away when the tor- | e swept over the excited | ELCOME DEATH. , their clothing ablaze, d _and blistered and‘ ned off their heads, ran g, hither and thither,*only from that awfuk furnace | re vent to frenzied ap- them and put them out of while little children with | cks 2nd light summer cloth- ried piteously as they were| The townspeople did all in th en victims, and | ambulances were immedi- | hed to the scene with a corps oigm’ Many of those not seri- | i were removed to their homes while others were sent to the | : hospitals. The dead | undertaking establish- | and vicinity and to | carpets these days. sion sent showers of | upon_the freight sta- | cheapened.” after the first ex-| of refined petroleum., | d by the bursting | and were leaking, | ic report. No one | owever. | and flames drew a | ie scene. Troops of chil- | ir play to the fire. The | lie in a narrow valley. | the yard is a rounded | trees. On_the other side of | 1 fully 200 feet high rises . In less than se hills were biack women and children, who were ching the flames n the cut be- making it to-day. Remember our o Suddenly 2 t d explosion was heard, muffled this*time, 2= though from a Q6. to choose from. 1 i eventvally coming from the ley on the Ohio River, when the first tank of ged in switching and | leak and the moment when it | enough of the liquid had es- | d to work Ay into the sewer that | ed into the Ohio River near the | of Cork Run. Burning oil, too, | found its way into the sewer, and as soon | as it reached the open air at the mouth | an exvlosion followed. This third explo- | sion, separated as it was by a mile from :&:‘ scene of !hern‘fl)um{n‘t ':mu at Sheri- ved as a warning to - = g e few specta- “Roxburys,” 75 cents What funny tales you hear about “Roxbury” One dealer remarked to a customer recently—“Of course I have ‘Roxburys,’ but you don’t want them; they are being made by a different factory now and the quality has been Of course this is not true. The quality of “Roxbury” carpets is idefti- cally the same to-day as it has always been—the same as it was before we cut the price, when dealers the city over were selling it for $1.10 the yard. Furthermore, the same manufacturers who have been making the “Roxbury” for years are sewing, lining and laying. Twenty-five patterns Sty Grewner (Successors to California Furniture Co.) 957 to 977 Market Street, Opp. Golden Gate Avenne. price—75 cents—includes 4 EXECUTIVE WHO PRESENTED CAPITAL CITY'S KEYS TO THE BEAUTIFUL CARNIVAL QUEEN. — % ACRAMENTO, May 12.—The third annual street fair opened bril- liantly to-night, there being an immense attendance. More than forty concessions occupled the midway, and the attractions afforded a world of amusement for the good-natured multitude. The crowning of the May Queen, Miss Fay Jackson, was the chief event of the evening. J A great crowd awaited her appearance at the Golden Eagle Hotel, and when she finally took her seat in a victoria laden with pampas plumes and drawn by four fine blacks, a cheer went up from thou- sands . of thrbats. Mounted heralds, quaintly attired, rode ahead, while in two breaks the maids of honor followed the Queen. The maids, too, were most pret- tily gowned, and with their powdered- halred little pages added a charm to the fairy-like spectacle. Arriving at the throne, and in the pres- ence of a vast-throng which covered the grandstand and filled the street, the cere- mony of crowning the Queen and the presentation of the keys of the city by Mayor Clark was performed with much pomp. The mimicry of royalty seemed to please the crowd greatly. Miss Jackson, in her raiment of purple and ermine, made a bewitching picture as she ascended to the throne from which she is to rule the week’s festival. A drop of rain descended from an omin- ously dark sky, but the heavens forbore to spoil the fairy scene, and for the rest of the evening perfect springtime weather prevailed. To-morrow will witness the big event of the week, the floral parade. It is expected to start about 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon and will contain many handsomely deco- rated turnouts. e e e e o e e a2 ) SENATOR FORAKER SPEAKS ON PHILIPPINE SITUATION Declares That the United States Can- not Leave the Islands Until There Is Order. WASHINGTON, May 11.—An important contribution to the discussion of the Philippine government bill was made in the Senate to-day by Foraker of Ohio. He maintained that the United States could not leave the islands until order had been restored and until a stable gov- ernment had been establfshed. He de- clared that this Government would nor come away from the islands under the present or the next administration, even though the latter be Democratic, because the American people would never con- sent to poltroonery. Foraker read some editorials from the .Denver News, of h Patterson of Colorado is the pro- :l’tifle‘éor. The editorials maintained that the United States must retain control ot the Philippines and put down_the insur- rection among the Filipinos. With keen sarcasm the Senator declared that the ed- itorial did not read as did Patterson’s speeches now. Foraker held that the policy adopted in the Philippines was one of the kindest and gentlest possible and in strict accordance with the instruc- tions of President McKinley. He de- clared that the minority had attacked the army from! the commanding general to the humblest private, all because the wrmy had resented outrages, without parallel in cruelty, committed by the Fil- ipinos. The American army, he said, had shown a humanity unsurpassed in his- tory. The American people always had stood by their army and they always would. ————— DANISH WEST INDIES TREATY IS CONSIDERED COPENHAGEN, May 12.—The confer- ence committee of the Danish Parliament appointed to consider the action of the two houses on the Danish West Indies tréaty has commenced its sittings. It held two executive sessions to-day. The op- ponents of the sale of the islands seem inclined to yleld to the demand of the Ministry for a plebiscite, relinquishing their former proposal limiting the vote to those who are qualified to vote for the election of members of the Colonial Coun- cil, that scheme having aroused popular disapproval. The members of the oppo- sition, however, insist on withholding final judgment on the treaty until after a plebiscite, which they contend is neces- sary to show the real temper of the isl- anders. They are willing to bind them- selves to agree to the ratification on specified conditions before the elections. The Ministry will not agree to such a course, preferring to'let the matter rest until after the September elections, when the Landsthing is likely to give the Min- istry a majority, enabling it to secure the ratification unconditionally. Knowledge of this will now in all probability conduce to a satisfactory compro the oppo- sition. AR < B CARDINAL GIBBONS LEAVES TO-DAY FOR ST. AUGUSTINE Goes to Florida to Take Part in the Consecration of Bishop-Elect Kenny. BALTIMORE, May 12.—Cardinal Gib- bons, who was to have left for St. Augus- tine, Fla., to-day to take part in the con secration of Bishop-elect William J. Ken- ny in the cathedral there next Sunday, has altered his arrangements and will not start until to-morrow. Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul arrived in Baltimore this morning and proceeded to the Cardinal's residence, where the two prelates were in conference until noon. It is not known what was the sub- Ject discussed at their meeting, though it was probably the Philippines, as well as the successorship to Archbishop Corrigan. Il SR Yukon Is Open to Travel. VANCOUVER, B. C., May 12.—The ice in the Yukon has broken and winter is ended. The break-up occurred during a blinding snowstorm, with the mercury at 40 degrees above.: The water rose six feet, but little damage resulted. A flood is expected unless the jam breaks within twenty-four hours. The river is now clear from Lower Lebarge to Big Salmen. Steamers laden with the freight which has been accumulated at White Horse are following the ice down and the first is expected to reach Dawson this week. GOVERNMENT OF AMYTI 15 DVERTHROWN Congress Is Forced to Suspend Business Hurriedly. Troops at Arsenal of Port au | Pricce Surrender to Revolutionists. ——————— Former President Sam Still Occupies the Palace, but Will Embark To-Day on a French Mail Boat. — PORT AU PRINCE, Hayti, May 12.—At the meeting of Congress to-day called to elect a President of the Republic, the Minister of the Interior formally handed | the resignation of President Sam to the| House. A member of the Chamber of Deputies asked the President of the House to order the withdrawal of the strong force of troops which occupied the | chambers. The President replied that | the troops were necessary to protect Congress while engaged in its delibera- | tions, and said that he approved of the| presence of' the military. | The meeting, which opened at noon, had | hardly heard the words of the President | of the House, declaring that a President of the Republic was to be elected, when | Deputy Jeanott declared that the Con-| gress did not have the confidence of the ' people. This was followed by cries of | “Vive la Revolution!” and “Aux Armes!” \ and a scene of great disorder followed, during which Congress was practh:ally’ dissolved. i Shooting in the streets began soon af- | terward. | The street fighting, which lasted about | one hour, resulted in a triumph for the opponents of the government. The troops at the arsenal surrendered without any | resistance, ahd the government passed into the hands of the revolutionists. Only | two men were killed and three wounded. | Former President Sam still occuples the palace, but he will embark this even- | ing or to-morrow on board a French mail boat. A provisional government has been es- tablished under the presid¢ncy of Bois-| roud Canal, a former chief magistrate of | Hayti. He says all the towns of the re-| public are in a state of revolution. Port au Prince is now quiet, but fur- | ther fighting is expected this evening. Boisroud Canal was elected President | of Haytl July 19, 1876. A revolution | against him broke out in 1879, and he re- signed about July 17 of that year. He | was succeeded by General Salmon. | KINGSTON, Jamaica, ous efforts here to reach Hayti before a new President has been elected. They had arranged to charter a steamer and sail for Port au Prince last Sunday, but the Haytian consul here refused to grant the | exiles passports, and the steamship agent | at the last ‘moment declinéd the charter. The followers of Callistheme Fouchard, | the former Haytlan Minister of Finance and a rival of General Sam in the lat-| ter's candidacy for the presidency of | Hayti, are anxious to return to Port au Prince In order to take a hand in the | struggle which they expect will follow | the election of the new President. Fouchard i1s determined to return imme- diately to Hayti, and it is believed will endeavor to do so by way of the United States. | Great excitement prevails among the exiles, who have just recelved word that | former President Sam’s candidate for | the presidency is General Moot-Plaiser. The moderate and enlightened section of | the Haytlan refugees are in favor of the election of General Firman, the present Haytian Minister at Paris. MEN OF BISBEE CLAMOR FOR A MURDERER'S LIFE Mexican Stabs Man Who Refused Him a Drink and a Lynching May Result. BISBEE, Ariz,, May 12—Emil Lindthel, a German barber, was stabbed to-night by a Mexican and, died twenty minutes later. It is said he refused the Mexican a drink | of beer. Officers arrested the Mexican and have him in jail under guard. There | is strong talk of lynching. b Tty LOS ANGELES, May 12—Walter Scott, a miner from Kingman, Arizona, was struck by a San Pedro street car on Main’ street last even- ing, sustaining injuries which caused death two bours later. @ iriiniieli e @ BID FAREWELL TO BERKELEY HALLS —_— Continued From Page Four. *Albert Henry Mowbray, *James Hugh Wise. Sixth Congressional District—Eugene Francis Aloysius Carey, *Raymond Willlam Henderson, *Etfie Josephine Rigden, *Elizabeth Smith Wet- more, L Seventh Congressional District—Fred Calvin Dunham, Florence Holman Fortson, Mary Frances French, *Ethel Blaine Magee. Eighth Congressional District—Dorcas 4 lett Asher, *Ethel Carter, *Clinton Kelly Judy. LEVI STRAUSS SCHOLARS. First Congressional District—*Mary Helen Campbell, *Mabel Elizabeth Coddington, Edith Tracy, *William Eugene Yocom, Second Congressional District—*John_Joseph Mazza, Janet Ruth Mery, James Willlam Welty. Third Congressional District—*Cora Elizabeth Hampel, *James Mossin Koford, Elsle Nutting, Rosalind Wulzen, Fourth and Fifth Congressional districts (to- gether)—*Edward Gustav Cahill, Pauline Chamberlain Goetzee, *Anna Herkner, Schome Chatlotte Kurlandzik, *Leslie Wrightson Stock- er, *Ralph Watts Wardwell, Harry Lincoln Wollenberz, Sixth Congressional District—*Ethel Bartlett, *Evie Myrtle Gilbert, *Martha Elizabeth Miller, Seventh Congressional District—*Everett Eu- gene Adams, Robert Sibley, Willlam Irving Steele. / Eighth Congressional District—Ezra Ottley Burgess, Carrie Turetta Hell, Margaret Eina More, *Raiph Oliver Reiner. *Annle Silverbers, Ladies, Be on Your Guard! DENOUNCE THE RASCALS Who steal your money by .forcing upon you a dangerous counterfeit powder when you ask for the genuine Lablache Powder. Give your trade to honest and reliable dealers who will sell you the gen- uine Labgache Face Powder. the stand- ard toilel®powder, which is in general use by the best and most disitinguished women, not only in America. but also in London, Paris, Dresden, Hongkong, Shanghal, Japan and Manila, and, in fact, every. where. Its virtues have been sounded by Sarah Bernhardt, Mme. Emma Eames, Mme. Emma Calve, Mme. Suzanne Adams, Mlle, Rea, Mlle. de Lussan, Miss Maude Adams, Miss Marguerita Sylva and by scores of other famous women of the stage and in’' private life. The genuine BEN LEVY & (0. BOSTON, MASS. Lablache Face Powder is a positive benefit to the skin. It freshens, clears, beautifies. Restores and preserves the natural softness of the skin, while the counterfeit powder will injure the com- plexion. We ask that every lady using Lablache Face Powder will examine the label of the box carefully, and if in doubt as to the genulneness of the powder, send us the circular or the cover of the box, to- gether with the name of the dealer from whom the powder was purchased, and if it is the counterfeit, she will be advised by return mail, so that she can demand that her money be refunded, and whoever sold it will be prosecuted to the full ex- tent of the law. Fifty cents per box of all reliable drugsgists or by mail. FRENCH PERFUMERS PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND. Many of Our Boys and Girlsare Suifering This Month from the After Effects of Winter Grippe. Wise Parents Provide Paine’s Celery Compound For Their Loved Ones. The Wondrous Medicine Quickly Expels all Germ Poisons from the Blood and Fortifies the Weak and Run Down - System. A busy city physician, enjoying a large annual income, remarked the other day that a host of young pecpla—boys and giz!s--were suflering this month frum the after eftects oi winter grippe. M21” pote have any of your cluldren suffered from an attack of the cruel mon- ster grippe, during the past winter months? Are your boys and girls irrit- able, feverish, pale, or weak? Have they cold and clammy limbs? Is the blood watery, impure, or sluggish? Is the ap- petite poor and digestion weak? Has the rose tint of health faded from the cheeks? If any of these conditions are noted, be assured the dregs of deadly grippe are fmplanted in the system. If your children are not blithesome, happy, boisterous, and strong in May, their condition calls for prompt action om your part. Their future—health and phy- sical happiness or sufferings and early death—is in your hands, dear parents, and you alone are responsible to Heaven and the community of which you form a part. ‘When winter grippe has implanted seeds of virulent diseases, the first and most important work is to expel from the blood every trace of poisom. This is always sue- cessfully accomplished by the use of Paine’s Celery Compound. This marvelous medicine after purifying’ the foul and stagnant blood, acts as a nerve food. It builds up the nervous sys- tem and nourishes all the bodily tissues. Boys and girls with such a start in life as they always receive from Paine’s Cel- | ery Compound, grow up as sturdy as for- est oaks; they revel in strength and true life; they are falr to behold; they make the men and women most needed by our country. Do your part this month, dear parents, with promptness and honesty, and rest assured Paine’s Celery Com- pound will not fail in its grand work of health building. DIAMOND DYES Purest. Strong~ est. Simplest. Fastest of all dyes. AUCTION! YON RHEIN R. E. CO0. 513 CALIFORNIA STREET. THURSDAY, 12 O'CLOCK M. Cor.Geary and Laguna—7 Superb Lots, All Sunny. MAY 1Sth SHARP. 98 ‘LEEMLS YNODVT o 271:6 21:6 | 27:8 27:6 | 2710 GEARY STREET. PACIFIC AVE._HOME OF JUDGE W. VAN FLEET. = 27x127:6—2721 Pacific, W of Scott; 12 rooms, 3 baths; hardwood floors; fus range, bile liard room, reception hall, ete. CALIFORNIA-STREET RESIDENCE. 27:6x132:6—2914 California, sunny side, weed of Broderick; 9 rooms, bath, laundry, ete marine view; bank mostgage can remain; 990- 966 Filbert. LEAVENWORTH, NR. ELLIS—Rents $57 50, :6—310 and 312 Leavenworth. For abe solute certainty of advance in value no location superior to this. McALLISTER—STORE, FLATS—RENTS $65. 25:9x137:6—1015 McAllister, W. of Buchanan; rents $65; can be greatly increased by & mod- erate expenditure. 1574 POST. EAST OF LAGUNA. 25:10x90—77:1 ft. E. of Laguna; sunny lot; adapted for flats or dwelling; improvements no value, 21st-STREET FLATS—RENTS $30. 25x100—2932 and 2934 21st st., N. line, east of Treat ave.; each flat 5 rooms and bath. S. W. COR. 17th and CHURCH. 100x100, with store and residence ments—3711 to 3717 Seventeenth st., or will sell corner, 55:6x100 and adjoining lot om Seventeenth st., 44:6x100. BUILDING LOTS—CASTRO AND 1sth STS. 45x80—West line of Castro, 30 feet N. of . in 1 or 2 lots; also 48x75, N. lie of 18th, W. of Castro, in 1 or 2 lots. TWO DIAMOND-STREET LOTS—BARGAIN. Two lots, each 25x115, west line of Diamond, 310 feet S. of Twenty-first street. LARGE DOLORES-STREET LOT. 30:6x117:6 to an alley—Mission sunty belt: east line of Dolores, 122 N. of Twenty-second. Dolcres is one of the widest in the citfh GEARY-STR ET CO! NT $34. 25x92—2295 Geary and 1316 to 20 Brodericlly suitable (or grocery; §8000 bank mortgags cam remain. edy cures Emissions, Impotency, Varicocele, _Gon Gleet, Strictures, Drains, Lost Man- fects of self-abuse or excessas. Sent sealed, $2 bottle; 3 bottles, $5; guarantesd to cure any case. Call or address orders HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE. way, Oakland, Cal. Also Market F. Send 125 Kingston St. Wiy Call $L00 e Yot