The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 28, 1902, Page 27

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ADVERTISEMENTS. 1000 hair brushes go on sale to-morrow. Some are worth 75¢, some are worth $1.00, some are wortlfmore—some with handles—some are military brushes —some have solid backs and 2l have REAL bristles—in all | kinds and sizes—this is the finest lot of brushes we ever saw —you cannot afford to overlook them—ground floor, rear. 50c Each. Lisic and Silk Gloves. a long time si ave been able to advertise silk the demand—they are very stylish these come in white, black, gray ones have dou- now for everybody ...... 50c a Pair Columbia Dollar Gloves—all colors dged to be the greatest One Dollar glove in a ce we h » Satin Ribbons. 1 hes wide—every thread silk and in all col- been sold at 3oc—be- lSC Yard white, nile, old rose brox bow Rt 20C Yard The Best $2.50 Siik Ruff in san Francisco. » doubt of it—made of liberty silk—full box pleat- cf ends—in plain black, black and white, white and t has been sold in i low Tops. he new art goods department we are showing v tops that are very different from anything ver 7 ore—among those shown are Jack and Jill,” “Maid in the den,” etc., poster styles 50C ta('h Hand Drawn Lien Open Wor< Squares, sale to-morrow . - 60c Each h $125—83¢ Each 54 inches—wortlh (Take Elevator—Third Floor.) Louis Brother Against Brother. P, Auditor Appoints Clerk. Auditor Baehr yesterday er of the Bakers' Sup- red a warrant from | terday for the arrest | F. Schuster, on a drawing $200 from on that he | Louis al- formerly a p had been | gt |as i salary of $100 per month. signed. ———— “Well e was a-gargling.”’—Tit-Bits. X appointed Daniel Maher from the civil service eli- gible list to be a clerk in his office at a Maher takes the place which Asa R. Wells Jr. re- . cook, and what did you think of Lor’ mum, she sang beautiful—just o - P - 1 Friedman’s Furniture Small Things We get as much satisfaction in selling you the small comfort-giving necessities as the rich rugs and car- pets that only luxury demands €50002000000000600800000000050000000000900000 Hassocks soc. Axminster, Velvet, Body Brussels and Tapestry covered, Axminster Rugs 1.75 The Turkish and Persian patterns retain their full value in the high piie and rich colors. 2 feet 3 in. by 4 feet 6 inches. New, English Cottage Carpet 30c. Where an expensive carpet is not needed the novelty durabil- ity and price commend these. Distinctly different, bright pat- tern on each side. Sewed and delivered but not laid, 80c. yd. Art Squares 6.50 Wool. For every day use and the protection of a fine carpet, waxed or painted floor on occasion. Big enough to cover an average fioor. Many patterns and all the colors. 9 by 12 feet; §6.50. M oedmon s, “The Credit House.” 233 235 237 Post Street. Mill Site Wanted. TENDERS OF LAND are requested FOR A NEW STEEL PLANT, ON NAVIGABLE WATER FRONTAGE, San Francisco Bay, Contigucus to Railroads. = Ten to twenty-five acres. Submit same in writing. Pacific Jupiter Steel Company. Temporary Offices—218-215 Battery Street. 206000026052 09088C222CC000CO0RCOC2CC0080000C ® | The local divi = 1m(—ntu and Los Angeles divis B | saving for the THE fAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1902. DIL WILL § VE MANY MILLIONS Southern Pacific Com- pany Profits by Use of New Fuel. Issues General Orders for the Conversion of Engine Burners. e RGO | Oil as a fuel has proved such a success {on all the lines of the Southern Pacific that general orders have been issued for | the conversion of all the engines into oil burners as soon as possible, Coal will be abandoned absolutely. Within a year the Southern Pacific will be on an oil bagls solely. The order will atfect all the divisicns of the company. The local div- {ision generally known as the Western, is {1 the lead in the number of oil-burning engines. The Sacramento division comes next and the Los Angeles division third. All of the divisions are usmg oil for about one-third of the traffic. ion now has sixty-three | oil-burning engines. There remain eighty- | three yet to be converted. It is estimated | gines will have been converted and the ¥ | usc of coal on the Western division per- g | manently abandoned. During the month assed the oil-burners on the local ion traveled a-distance of approxi- | 200,000 miles. The coal-burning { engines passed over 306,752 miles of track. # | The grand total traveled by all engines is 5, These figures do not include the Sacra- During 2 corresponding month last year the mile- vas a little over 450,00. The gain ear over last is something over {50,000 miles per month, which is a fairly |accurate index to the increase in busi- (ness, It requires on an average about twenty-four barrels of oil for every 10 | miles, as compared to five tons of coal. ENORMOUS SAVING. The saving on every *hundred miles by using oil ranges from §16 to §20. The total 2 miles. @ oil-burning engines represents from $36,000 8 | to $40,000 per month. The company bhas expended upward of $5,000,000 for oil. The investment is a good one, however. The saving effected will have paid for the enormous expenditure | long before all the- engines have been converted into oil-burners. On the West- |ern division alone the saving per month | when all the engines have been converted fl | will approximate $75,000. When the other | coast divisions use oil exclusively the to- tal sum saved will be upward of $100,000 per month, The company's profit on oil is lessened | by the fact that when oil was first intro- duced as a fuel the company entered into a number of contracts at 25 cents and %0 cents a barrel. Since the contracts were signed oil has fallen to as low as 20 cents and 2% cents a barrel. Thus on much of the oil used the company is paying from |5 cents to 25 cents more per barrel than | the market price. Notwithstanding this fact, the enormous saving arising from the use of oil is sufficient almost at the present time to provide a million in div- idends annually. To the saving effected by the use of oil in locomotives must be acded the saving drising from the oil- burning passenger and freight boats. The | opinion of those best informed is-that it will take ten months and possibly a year for all the locomotives on the Pacific Coast to have oil burners installed. OIL-BURNING ENGINES. | Al the engines which go into the re- pair shops at Sacramento, Los Angeles or Oakland come out as oil-burners. There are very close to 150 oil-burners in use on the three divisions. The Southern Pacific is unable to ob- tain redwood ties, which have heretofore been regarded as the best, relative to withstanding the wear and tear. after being treated by a creosote process | will outwear the ordinary tie by six or soven years. | The inability of the company to get the | ties desired for its new lines is owing to | the scarcity of redwood itself. It has re- | cently become by far too valuable to be {used for raflroad ties. The prospects are |that the price will rise steadily. Oregon Ipine is being substituted for the red- }wood. | PRISONERS SENTENCED TO TERMS IN PRISON Frank P. Heinemann, a Dishonest i Valet, Will Spend Two Years | in San Quentin. Frank P. Heinemann, who pleaded guilty in Judge Dunne’s court to a charge | of grand larceny, was sentenced yester- day to serve two years in San Quentin. Heinemann was valet for S. Prentiss Smith, treasurer of the San Francisco | Savings Union, who is paralyzed on. one side, and on July 14 Heinemann abstracted $300 from his employer's pocketbook and spent it all at the Chytes that night. He is a son of a tea merchant’in New York and was formerly in the quartermaster’s department in Manila. Tillie Ardaga, who was allowed to plead guilty to petty larceny, was sentenced by Judge Dunne to serve six months in the County Jail. She stole a gold watch and fob from J. W. Richardson on June 22. William Kavanaugh, who was convicted by a jury in Judge Lawlor's court on a charge of criminal assault upon ' Nellie ‘Williams, a little girl, was sentenced yes- terday to serve three years in San Quen- tin. —_———— POSITION OF CUSTOMS WATCHEMAN GOES BEGGING John J. Regallo Tries Job for One Night and Resigns Next Morning. A position as watchman in the Cus- tom-house service, worth $720 a year, is | going begging for want of a taker. John | Ragan, a Philippine war veteran, was at the head of the civil service eligible list | for that position, but Collector Stratton was unable to find him. The second high- est on the list was George Kenny and the job was offered to him, but he de- clined it. The third man, John J. Re- gallo, accepted the position and went on watch last Friday night. Yesterday morning he notified the Collector that he did not care for the position and resigned. The position is a good one in that, be- ing filled by appointment under civil ser- vice rules, the watchman holds the job during good behavior for life. Another advantage iz that watchmen are often promoted to the position of customs in- spectors. The Collectoghas sent to Wash- ington for a new list ® eligibles. Her Hamper Is Stolen. Mrs. Benjamin S. Dean reported to the police Friday that while she was having her shoes shined at the ferry about 7 | o’clock that morning, prior to going | across the bay, she placed a hamper at | the side of the bootblack stand. When | she looked for it again it had disappeared. | It contained about $75 worth of clothing | and other articles. She asked that if jt is recovered it be returned to 320 San- some street. i that within eight months all of the en- | 200,000 miles traveled by | The tles | MARY EXCHANGES MATE IN REALTY Extensive Deal in Water Front Property Is Completed. Heirs of the Late Charles F. . Crocker Make Large Investment. Large transactions in realty have been ! brought to completion in the last week. ' | The previously rumored large deal in ‘water front property on the east side of Illinois street is confirmed. In that in-| stance the sum of about $250,000 is in-, volved. The property consists of two | blocks, each 200x110 feet, south of what would be the extension of Sixteenth street There are improvements consist- ; ling of a large stone warehouse and sev- leral wooden warehouses. There is a frontage on the Central Basin and the property is well supplied with wharf fa- cilities. The seller is the Pacific Packing and Navigation Company, which several vears ago absorbed the Arctic Oil Works and the Pacific Steam Whaling Company and which recently sold its business to| the Standard Oil Company. The pur-| i chaser is reported to be a large oil com- | pany controlled by Los Angeles moneyed | { men. The deal was closed by Baldwin & | | Howell. | The transaction involving the purchase through Baldwin & Mowell some weeks ago of the properties at the northwest corner of Grant avenue and Post street is | | now practically completed and deeds for | three of the four parcels sold have been | recorded. The title has been taken in the | !name of John J. Mahoney, the builder. The price paid for the thpee pieces, for | which settlement has beeh made, was | about $375,000. It is understood that the | | Crocker heirs are the real purchasers. | Shainwald, Buckbee & Co. have sold| { Adolph Mack’s residence on the east line of Octavia street, between California and | Sacramento. The lot is 75x137:6 feet. The | ) house has been built about two years. | Mr. Meyer of Meyer & O'Brien was the| | architect. The interior is very handsome, | [ the finish being in mahogany and oak. | The floor: chaser is are of hard wood. The pur- ugene J. de Sabla of the Bay | Counties Power Company. The' price of | the residence is said to be in the nelgh- | | borhood of 850,00. | WILL MAXKE IMPROVEMENTS. | | A client of the Union Trust Company has purchased from Elizabeth May the | lot, 55x60 £ on the north line of Mis- sion street, 432 of Fourth, for $44,000, the intention being to improve it in the near future. Baldwin & Howell were the brokers. | F. B. Surryhne has sold the four houses | at 1409-1411-1 street, between | California and to, lot 60:6x10 , feet, for $13,000; two flats on the southeast | i corner of Plerce and Clay streets, lot| 27:434x93:9 feet, for $10,000; two flats of six and seven rooms at 1554-1556 Grove street, lot 25x187:6 feet, for $6800; house and lot, 1701 Broderick street, northwest corner of Bush, 26x100, feet, $7500; house and lot, 3914 Clay street, between Cherry street and First avenue, lot Z5x125 feet, $6000; lot on the southwest corner of Hermann and Church streets, 28x85 feet, $3500; lot on the west line of Church street, 85 feet south from Hermann, feet, $1750; lot on the north line of Union street, 150 feet east from Baker, ZxI37:6 feet, $1550; «lot on south line of Green street, 112:6 feet (west from Hyde, 2x137:6 feet, 8$1850; lot on south line of West avenue, 100 feet ; east from Mission street, 50x100 feet, $300. | " Florin L. Jones & Co. have made the | following sales this week . B. Glidden residence on the east side | . 83:3_feet south of Gre Mary Prasg, 001 25 on east | t south of 1 tewart, for $12,000; | homas Brady, lot 7:6 on North Union | [ street, 170 feet wést of Gough, to Albert Wil- ford, for §1950. i i i MANY BUILDINGS SOLD. | Thomas Magee & Sons have sold lhet following properties: | Lot on the west line of Polk street, 103 feet | south from California, 34:6x88:9 feet, with im- provements consisting of a three-story build- 000; lot on the north line of 92:6_feet east from Baker street, | 45x136 feet, to William Mooser, the architect, who will erect a handsome resi the south line of Broadwa from Webster street, 30x114:33, on the north line Of Unlon street, &7: east of Webster, 206x100 feet, for $1750. | Lyon & Hoag have sold the three-| story building containing a store and two | flats with a lot 34:4.2 by 137:6 on the south | | side of Geary street, 34 feet west of La- | | guna, for David Slany to Eugene Legal-‘ let. ! Mrs. Alexander Center has sold the res- | idence and lot €8:9 by 137:6 on the south: west corner of Vallejo and Fillmore | streets for $21,500 to a client of Hooker & | Lent. i | Mrs. Emilie Schubert has sold to J. F. Riley for $17,500 the brick bullding on the cast side of Third street, 55 feet south of Howard, and the lot 25 by 8 feet. The sale was made through O. D. Baldwin & | Son. The new owner contemplates im- | FREE TO MILLIONS. | A Valuable Little Book Sent Free for | | the Asking. i Medical books are not always interest- ing reading, especially'to people enjoying good health, but as a matter of fact scarcely ‘ofie pgrson in ten is perfectly healthy, and even with such, sooner or later sickness It is also a well established truth that nine-tenths of all diseases originate with a breaking down of the digestion; a weak | stomach weakens and impoverishes the | system, making it easy for. disease to | gain a foothold. Nobody need fear consumption, kidney disease, liver trouble or'a weak heart and nervous system as long as the digestion is good and the stomach able to assimi- late plenty of.wholesome food. ) Stomach weakness shows' itself in'a score of ways and -this little book de- scribes the symptoms and causes and points the way to a cure so simple that anyone can understand and apply. Thousands have some form of stomach trouble and do not know it.. They ascribe the headaches, the languor, nervousness, insomnia, palpitation, “constipation and similar symptoms to some other cause than the true one. Get your digestion on d¢he right track and the heart trouble, lung trouble liver disease or nervous de- bility will rapidly disappear, This little book treats entirely on the cause and removal of indigestion and its accompanying annoyances. It describes the symptoms of Acid Dys- pepsia, Nervous Dyspepsia, Slow Dyspep- sia, Amylaceous Dyspepsia, Catarrh of stomach, and all affections of the diges- tive organs in plain language easily un- derstood and the eause removed. It gives valuable suggestions as to #et, | and contains a table giving length of time | required to digest various articles of food, sometbing every person with weak di- gestion should know. No price is asked, but simply send your name and address plainly written on pos- tal card to the F. A. Stuart Co., Mar- . shall, Mich., requesting a little book on |Btommh Diseases and it will be sent promptly by return mail, ! ADVERTISEMENTS. ‘ | | { must come. { ADVERTISEMENTS. 27 ing to only 10 cents a day. several weeks’ time. val. p ogress of the world. Eacyclopaedia is a necessity all thority upon that subjsct. One dim great work. yerday ? 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Take advantage Over $1,000,000.00 Saved About cne year ago The American Newspaper Association announced that it had secured con. trol of the New 2o0th Century Edi ion of the Encyclopse i1 Britanni¢a, and wo uld supply for a limited time that famou . set of books a: LESS THAN HALF PRICE and on easy monthly payments, amount= Great interest was aroused Dy our announcement and thousands f ap- plicaitons were received asking for*sample pages and full particu ars. Orders for complete sets came in sofast that ail availabie sets for inmediate delivery were soon exhausted and those who de- layed in filing their applications had to wait until new sets could be manufactured, which required 95,065 Sets ot e Encyclopaedia Britannica were or_ered, and the largest book manufactory in the United States found it Ppac with the demand, and we were requastad to Jiscoatinus a::epting orders exzept f or future delivery, Our Less Than Half Price offer eifected a sav.ng to subscrioers of over YINE MILLION DOLLARS. ! the privilege of paying a little at a timé eacn month, together with the superior quality of the volumes, expiain the cause of the unprece lentel demand, On account of the great advertising facilities of the American Nswspaper Association the publishers have renewed their contract with us for a sho scriptions until further notice at the sam: prize and on th: sams terms warning, hovever, that all applications wi.l be filed in the order received. readers ot The Call o send for sample pages and full particulars without delay. For more than one hundred years the Eacyclopaedia B-itannica his occupied the‘forem st rank as a self-educator and work of reference, through its va-io s revisians and a 1dition ;s during th .t inter- It was first issued over one hundred years ago in Three Voiumss. At iatervajs new and erilarged editions of the work were publish=d, thus keeping pace wirth ths The N-w 2oth Century Edition, which we now offer, occupie~ 31 magnificent \o.umes, containing nearly 25,000 pages, and covers every depaitment ot knowledge known tu mankind. That some so:t of an That the great Brizannica is the very best none will deny. It is an Eacyclopaedia in which each principal ubject is treated by. an acknowledged au- N> other Encyclopaedia his given Ten Theusand Dollars tor a Single Article or Six Hundred Do lars a page lor written matter. The fact that $3,000,- ooo were expended in its preparation, requi irg the labor of 2,000 of ‘he world’s greatest scholors, tells the storv of its exalred super rrity. a day for a short time w'll secure this Who can afford not to spare 10 cents must acknowledg=. this great sclences ment to courses of reading, and or ought to know about makes systematic reading LR Fill out and mail this coupon to- day for particulars about our great 9-28-02. The American NeWspaper AsScciatio, arrott Bldg., §25 Market Street. L BAN Fi‘{’\NCISCO. CAL. Please send me free of charge sample pages and full particulars of your Encyclopaed'a offer. BOOaCA_E «OUPUN: Nalhd ol oo i anadregendors Street ... ..., Town coeevreccserecnsccnaane County coeeee covetcnccccanes State... CALL BUREAU. rt tim= and we will therefore accept sub- jrts, or 142 per volume. compiled by special contribuors, forming four-ffths of the entire work. 675 maps and 7 Nearly 12,000 illustrations, exclusive of plans. Special Features of the 5=Vol. Ameri= 1. An extension of the. original articles on the arts down to the present day. 2. Introduction of topics arising from new departments of sclence or [rom new discoveries and new inventions. 3. Biographical enlarge- inciude eminent living persons and the hundreds WEG have recently won distinction. 4 of American interests in their various phases. tion of technical subjects in a form comprehensible to ordinary readers, as in the treatment of Electricity, Morphology, ete. @& Coplous " {llustrations, over 1500 in number. Th: Guide to Systematic Readin‘s subdivides the whole work into_departments, -— impo ssible to keep pace This great saving and as before. W=z give fair W: therefore ad.ise THE NEW 20th CENTURY EDITION. can poy the t the rate of only 10c a day For a short time. You a It Cohtains: 16,500 articles, averaging 1% pages eaeh, 3296 articles written and signed by special- 16,235 pages 333 ' full - page engraved ., contalning over 900 separate illustrations. lans, including 257 colored maps. ©3ps 4ad can Additions: and new A survey 5. A 73 different points out the things you may want to know your business or protession. Furthesmere, ft along any line practical. What Is Said of It. ““It is without a peer in the whole noble ammy of encyclopaedias.”—LYMAN _AB- BOTT, D.D. . /The Encyclopaedia Britannica is . of its trive.”—PROF. DAVID SWIN( “The mcst useful reference Book young or old is the Encyclopaedia M: nica. Children, beginning at 10 old and on. need its. stores of Ristorieal blee graphical, mythological, elementary-acien- tific, patural history information. The eager boy can study balloons, kinds dogs or firearms, locomotives, the house fiy or ach. The may want information on_subjects geology or electricity to the settlements of the Fiji Islands, or volcanoes and earth. eS8, Cr a most fascinating story ; and for the still older all fundamental conceptions of law, theology, ethics, sociology, eurves functions, architecture art—all §a Napoleon Chinese metaohysica. for eductaion or information, 2o man whe once has this book will ever let himself or his children be without constant access to it. If another deluge came and the ark had room but for one secular book, this s beyond any doubt the one.™ BATES, Judge of Court, Cincinsat!, Ohlo. — proving the property. A. M. Speck & Co. report the follow- ing sales: Fifty vara lot on southeast corner of Bush and Webster streets, for $24,500, fro a Gates Butler to a client, name withheld; lot and Improvements on westerly line of Bartlett street, porth of Twenty-fifth, 88x117:6, for §6500, from Emma §. Ager and sisters to S. S. Phiilips; lot and improvements on northerly line of Ellis street, between Devisadero and Broderick, from Brady heirs to J. F. Lind- strum, for §3000; negotlated lease Willlam Ede Cumpany to Daniel Miller of the brick bullding | on the southwest corner' of Ellis and Powell streets for five years, $19,500 for the term. John H. Speck, the president of Speck & Co., has just geturned from an Eastern trip. Bovee, Toy & Sonntag have removed from Market street to 232 Montgomery. Easton, Eldridge & Co. report the fol- | lowing sales: Resldence on the west line of Folsom street, | No. 2934, 170 feet south of Twenty-fift | lot 25x115 feet; 1321 Guerrero street, east side, 251:10 feet south of Twenty-fifth, lot 24:6x123 feet, residence 8 rooms and bath, for $4050; northeast line of Dore street, 265 feet south- east of Bryant, lot 25x85, six flats, for $2200; southeast corner of Sansome and Vallejo streets, lots 26:6x80 feet, store and flats, for $7000; north line of Nineteenth street, 155 feet east of Noe, 25x114 feet, for $500; cottage at 12 Boyce street, east side, 552 feet north of Point Lobos avenue, 27x120 feet, for $1260; a three- story warehouse at 341-343 Tenth street, east side, 9 feet northwest of Harrison, 40x80 feet, for '$7000; stores and flats on the northwest corner ofThirtieth street and San Jose avenue, ot 28x77 feet, for $6450; building lot on the east line of Masonic avenue, 89 feet south of Waller street, lot 27x105 feet, for $2500; busi- ness property at 10 Drumm street, west side, feet south of Sacramento, lot 22:11x70 two building lots on the east line of Noe t, 76:6 feet north of Nineteenth, lot 50x11¢ BUILDING AND LOANS. In the loan and building circles there has been considerable activity during the last week. Ninety-six mortgages and deeds - of trust, aggregating $591,479, agaipst eighty-one releases and reconvey- ances, amounting to the total $378,000, were tecorded. The Hibernia Bank ad- vanced by far the largest loan, which amounted to $200,000. It was made to A. Aronson on the property on the west cor- ner of Third and Mission streets. He will erect a magnificent structure on this property. The principal release was to the extent of $50,000 by the San Francisco Savings Union on the premises of Mrs. Charlotte F. Clarke and her daughter, Mrs. Charlotte H. Wright, on the north- west corner of Ellis and Jones streets. The building contracts for the week have been larger and more numerous than for several weeks previous. They amount- ed to forty-one at a value of $335,479, but feet. were divided up among a number of dif- ferent pleces of work. Bids have been received this week by Reid Brothers for the Fairmount Hotel, which is to be erected by Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs and Mrs. Virginia Vanderbilt on the block bounded by California, Sacramento, Pow- ell and Mason streets. It is expected that the breaking of ground for this great structure will take place within a fort- night. The stone work on the St. Fran- cis Hotel, on the northwest corner of Geary and Powell streets, has progressed to the sixth story, while the placing of the steel frame of the buflding bas gone no further than the seventh and the eighth stories. However, the last ship- ment of material is now due and when the steel arrives in a few days the skel- eton of the large building will be press- ed to completion. The plans for the new Tivoll Opera-house have been finished by Shea & Shea, and negotiations are be- ing ccnducted for the steel to be em- pleyed in the building, which is expected to reach San Francisco about January L "HAVE YOU HEARD of the new Kurd Kid Shoes for Children? We have them, and you’ll want them when you learn of their superior qualities. ing else like them. Noth- Kurd Kid is a strong Brazilian skin especially adapted to hard usage, such as healthy children are apt to put their shoes to. Mads in Lace and Button, with soles, extension edge, patent round toe and $pring heel. leather ROCK OAK tip, full Sizes 6 to 7%, $1.00 Sizes 8 to 1074, 81.25 Sizes 11 to 2, $1.50 Sole agents for the WATERPROOF NOVA SCOTIA Cork Sole Shoes for men. $5.00 Price . Address mail orders to Department U, 738740 Market §t. San Francisco.

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