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4 TIBE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, FIND BODY WOAAN THe PARK Bicyclists Make a Grew=| some Discovery in Early Morning. Well-Dressed Girl of Prob- Iwenty-1hras Takes ier Ow. Life. Carbolic Acid Bottle Beside Her and Handkerchief Saturated With Chloroform Indieate Un- fortunate’s Suicide. lists returning C ff Hou e through 10 m'nutes past s morning found bottle and hand- d with chlo- plainly to carbolic acid baarbt d was a tall blonde, dressed and ap- about 23 years of age. There were no rings or jewelry on her person and nothing ty which her iden- tity could be established. The bicyclists, C. J. Mc- Laren and F. T. Bragon, has- tened to the Park police sta- tion and gave the alarm. An officer was sent to guard the body until the arrival of the Coroner’s deputies. The Morgus wagon was hurriedly dispatched to the park and the body brought in to the Morgue at 4:30. fairly wel parently to BOARD OF EDUCATION NEEDS MORE ROOM | Plans to Remodel Large Assembly Hall and Use It as General Office. ting of the Board of Educa- At tion he mee held ye! fficers of the board and its d t length. The afford room for istant secretaries ly .decided to remodel the large @ v room, which has not been required ce the board was reduced from twelve to four members, and use it as the general office. The rooms now by the board could then be and the office which he now has be utilized as an office for Chief Secretary Hansen. The plans submitted by the architect for the Noe Valley School were also dis- cussed and practically adopted. e —— ACME CLUB MATCHES HERRERA AND ATTELL OAKLAND, Sept. 2.—The Acme Club has matched Auralia Herrera of Bakers- fleld and Abe Attell of San Francisco to battle fifteen rounds on the evening of October 15. The men will welgh in at 125 pounds. Attell reached here this morn- ing from Chicago, where he conquered some of the best of them. He will train at the Terminal, Golden Gate Park, San | Herrera has engaged quarters | Francisco. at Croll's Gardens, Alameda. will be matched against Young Corbett. The West Oaklend Club's exhibition will take place to-morrow night. Kid Flynn and Young McConnell will fight four sounds and 80 will Bervert and George Brown. The main event will be betweon Spider Welsh and Loule Long. ——— Tardy in Passing the Sugar. Charles Christiansen and Carl Olson appeared before Judge Fritz yesterday on a charge of battery. They were in restaurant Sunday night eating at the same table as Alphonse Leger and Augusie Finck, when Olson spilled a glass of wine, much to the disgust of Leger and Finck. A few minutes later Olson asked Finck to paes the sugar and Finck and Leger gesticulated and talked to each other, but did not pass the sugar uud C;’l‘sonkl;sf‘. his temper. When Leger and Finck left the restauran y followed by Ci i diig last named struck Finck on the nose and over the eye. The Judge dismissed the case against Christiansen, but convicted Olson and will sentence him to-day. THE OLD RELIABLE ROYAY BaNG POWDER Absclutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE body of a young| 1z on the grass| old music st:nd. A erday behigd closed doors, | ng better accommoda- | stenographer. | ged into an office for School Director | The winner | 2| tiansen and Olson. The | panied by MILES FAVORABLY IMMPRESSED WITH FORTIFICATIONS OF BAY Commanding General of Army Makes Tour of the Harbor Accom- Prominent Officers and Inspects Its Defenses. | Will Review Troops at the Presidio Golf Links This Morning e IRIVIr < < | | g VI RAWIE'S UFFICE £y IEUTENANT GENERAL NEL- SON A. MILES of the United States army inspected the fortifl- cations of San Francisco Bay i and harbor yesterday. | At 9:30 this morning he will review the | troops on the golf links at the Presidio | and on Wednesday will sail on the trans- | port Thomas for the Philippines, where he goes, at the instance of President Roosevelt and Secretary Root, to inspect L Lo | WILL MAKE A FIGHT | TO SECURE CONVENTION (Delegation to Attend Christian Church Conference at Omaha Is Appointed. A resolution was adopted at the recent | California conference of the Christian | Church in favor of securing, if possible, | the international convention of that de- nomination for San Francisco in 1905. The convention meets at Omaha. this year, be- ginning its session the 16th prox. Some thirty thousand delegates and visitors are expected to ;be in attendance. The con- ference here has appointed a strong del- | egation, with H. D. McAnerney of Oak- |land at its head, who expects to open headquarters in Omaha and. enter at once upon a vigorous campaign for California. The State Board of Trade is lending ef- fective ald in the way of supplying litera- sands of representative men who will be at the Omaha Convention, regarding the advantages of this State. The delegates 7ill make a strong fight to secure the convention, but even if it is lost, the dele- gation points to the fact that the dis- tribution of a Mberal quantity of Califor- nia literature will eventually result in good to the State. | _———————— | MRS. IDA MAGEE LEAVES HOME AND DISAPPEARS She Is Demented and Has Made Two Attempts Already to Kill | Herself. Mrs. Ida Magee, wife of W. F. Magee of San Rafael, has been missing since last Friday, and it is feared that she has com- mitted suicide. Mrs. Magee had been a sufferer from tu- berculosis for several years and became a vietim of melancholia. She had been an inmate of Dr. Robinson’s private sanita- rium at Livermore and more recently of the State Asylum for the Insane at Uklah. At the latter place she mproved so much that her husband was allowed to take her | away on probation on August 16 of this year. Mr. Magee took her to live with him at 721 Ellis street in this city and placed her in charge of a professional riurse, but she eluded the nurse last Fri- Gay morning and disappeared. Before her commitment to the asylum at Ukizh last March she had made two attempts to take her life. She is the mother of two children. The police have been notified to be on the lookout for *her. —_——— J. G. Higgins Is Missing. G. Higgin i | | | | | | J. y a laborer, whose home is at 409 Harriet street, was reporfed as missing by his w terday. The woman also stated that five children, all less than 11 years of age, were in very destitute circumstauces as a result of their father's disappearance and conse- guent failure to provide. A search will be made for the man. The Assoclated Charities took steps vesterday to relieve the condition of his family ture with which to enlighten the thou- the United States army forces on the isl- ands. Last night the general and his immediate staff occupied boxes at the Al- cazar, witnessing the performance of “The Ambassador” by the Alcazar Stock Company. In his official voyage of observation yes- terday the general was accompanied by his aid, Lieutenant Colonel M. P. Maus: Major General R. P. Hughes, command- ing the Department of California, and his ald, Lieutenant A. L. Conger, Eighteenth Infantry; Colonel J. B. Rawles, artillery ISES ESTAT OF THERESH FAR The sixth and final account of the trus- tees of the estate of the late Theresa Fair, widow of the late James G. Fair, was approved in Department 9 of the Su- perior Court yesterday, thereby closing an estate that has been in the courts for the last fifteen years. The account shows that since the death of Mrs. Fair the es- tate has increased in value from $5,096,646 to $6,996,646, an increase of $1,900,000. For caring for the property since Mrs. Fair's demise the trustees, the late John W. Mackay and Richard V. Dey, earned 365,004 25 as fees. This entire amount goes to Dey by virtue of an agreement made with Mackay, who transferred to Dey his interest in the fees allowed by the court in the original probate proceedings and the sum allowed the trustees yesterday, $12,818 25, The account approved shows that the income from the Theresa Fair estate dur- ing the last year amounted to $174,023 88, Out of this sum Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs recelved $50,566 and Mrs. Virginia Vander- bilt $45,857. Mrs. Fair provided in her will that her estate should be held in trust by Mackay and Dey until Mrs. Vanderbilt should reach the age of 2 years. In the interim she and Mrs. Oelrichs were to receive $2500 a month and her two sons, James G. Jr. and Charles, were to receive $250 a month each. She also provided that Mrs. Oelrichs and Mrs. Vanderbilt were to re- ceive $1500,000 each and Charles and James G. Fair Jr. $500,000 each. The last- named died some years ago and his share went to his brother Charles, who was recently killed in an automobile aceldent near Pafis. Social Usage Prescribes correct forms of stationery. ‘We have the right papers for polite corre- spondence, and also ideas for engraving visiting cards and wedding announce- ments. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 74l Market street. . —_———— Says Motorman Was Careless. William Rayhill, who was knocked down by a Page-street car last August, filed a suit for $16,350 damages against the United Rallroads yesterday. He alleges that the accident was due to the care- lessness of the motorman in charge of the ecar. B Swim at the Crystal Baths, Bay street, near Powell. Water always clean, warm. Tub department best in city.* —_—— Learn to pronounce it now: King Ed- ward's illness is per-i-tif-li-tis, with the accent on the “I.” —_—— ASams' Sarsaparilla Pills ‘chocolate-coated) cure constipation, billousness, sick headache, dyspepsia; 10c, 2b¢, all druggists’. . — - GENERAL MILES LEAVING THE McDOWELL AND IN HIS CARRIAGE. KN corps, commanding officer of the Presi- dio, and his adjitant, Captain E. A. Mil- lar, artillery corps, and Major W. E. Birk- himer, artillery corps. The tug McDowell conveyed the party on the trip. She sailed first to Point Bonita and from there | to Fort Baker, thence to Fort McDowell, Angel Island, Alcatraz and Fort Mason, ending the trip at the Presidio. Here the first artillery of the field battery recelved the general with his salute of fifteen guns, after which the party went to Fort Miley and Fort Winflield Scott to make a careful inspection of the guns. Although disinclined to comment pub- licly, the general makes no secret of the fact that he is especially pleased with the fortifications in and around San Francisco. During the journey yesterday he voluntarily commented favorably upon the perfect safeguards which have been thrown around the city. What delighted him most was the impregnable fortifica- tions at the army barracks in the Presi- dio. He hoped that it would be possible to fortify other coast cities as strongly as San Francisco is entrenched. DENIES USING WORDS r ATTRIBUTED TO HIM Hearing of Dr. Dudley Tait on a Charge of Criminal Libel Commenced. The preliminary hearing of Dr. Dud- ley Tait on a charge of criminal libel pre- ferred against him by Dr. Carl W. von Tiedemann in consequence of an alleged interview with the defendant published in the Examiner last Friday, in which Dr. Tait was reported as having said that Dr. von Tiedemann “wore stripes in San Quentin,” was commenced before Judge Cabaniss yesterday afternoon, The reporter who wrote the interview was examined and stated that the words ‘were In effect used by the defendant. Dr. ven Tiedemann testified that he never wq‘é stripes in San Quentin. He had been tried on a charge of offering a forged deed for record and acquitted and was later tried on a charge of perjury and convicted, he said, but the conviction was reversed on appeal to the Supreme Court. Dr. Tait denied that he used the words attributed to him. He admitted that he had sald to the reporter in a conversa- tional way that Von Tiedemann had, he believed, been convicted and sentenced ‘o San Quentin, when the reporter remarked that he had been a wltn%u for the pros- ecution at the trial and knew all about ‘“‘the fellow.” Dr. Tait then remarked, he says, that there was no use in him saying anything, as the reporter seemed better informed than he. Dr. Tait was corroborated by Dr, Ber- nard Klotz, his assistant. The case will be argued to-morrow afternoon. —_—— Normal School Trustees Meet. A mecting of the trustees of the San Francisco State Normal School was held yesterday afternoon in the office of the secretary, Henry G. W. Dinkelspiel. The resignation of Fred G. Athearn, a mem- ber of the faculty, was received and ac- cepted. A. H. Suzzallo, now a member of the Stanford University faculty in the department of education, was elected his successor. Diplomas of graduation were 1ssued to Miss Evangeline Adams of San Francisco, Miss Rita Castle of Carson, Nevada, and Miss Julia Lemon of Salinas. —_———————— Excursion to Pacific Grove, On Sunday, October 5, the Southern Pa- cific will run an excursion to Pacific Grove. Train leaves Third and Townsend- street depot at 7:15 a. m.; returning, ieaves Pacific Grove at 4:15'p. m. Fare for_the round trip $2.00. Full particulars at Information Bureau. 613 Market street. —_——— Burglars in a Barber Shop. The police were notified yvesterday that the barber shop of Aitken & Drackert, 7 Stockton street, had been entered by burglars early Sunday morning and that six razors and $10 in coin had been stolen. Pntrance had been effected by forcing open the rear door. Notice to Passengers. Round trip transfer tickets now on | Clyff, Isaac Upham, 8. Nickelburg, Mar- sale :‘t uny) o!mwr offices. trunk (roun 3 cents. Morton 8 Del:very, Taylor street, m street and Oakland ferry depot L 19502, HUNDREDS HEAR EULOGY OF DEAD Many Gather to Pay Re- ] spects to Memory of Levi Strauss. Rabbi Voorsanger Delivers Touching Tribute to the Deceased. The remains of the late Levi Strauss, philanthropist and capitalist, were laid at rest in the family vault in the Home of Peace Cemetery. The funeral took place from the family residence, 621 Leaven- worth street. Exactly at 10:30 o'clock Rabbi Voor- sanger spoke to the immense number of | fricnds that crowded within the room | where the bier rested, and on the stairs, | along the broad hall and down the steps | to the sidewalk. The rabbi extolled the virtues and pald homage to the memory | of the deceased. Around the coffin were grouped the be- reaved relatives, the nephews and nieces who had loved to call the departed father | —Jacob and Mrs. Stern, Sigmund Stern | and his wife, Abraham and Mrs. Stern, | Mrs. Sam Frank, S. W, Heller, Henry Sahlein, J. Kahn and Mrs, Kahn and Mrs. L. Sachs. At the head A¢as Rabbi Voor- | sanger who, in a voice touched and broken with sorrow, spoke ‘of the deeds of the dead. The sudden call, he said, | of thelr friend, was unexpected, but he, | the rabbi, thanked God that the end came | suddenly and that Levi Strauss was spared the affliction of lingering on a bed of pain, a condition he, so generous and noble and kindly in life, would never have deserved. KISS OF PEACE FROM GOD. The kiss of peace from God which came | so quickly to him, said Rabbl Voorsanger, | was a message of 4ove which summoned Bim to his everlasting reward. 1t was characteristic of the age, said the rabbi, that men who had gained suc- cess through sheer effort and unblemished | Fusiness record were belittled, their vir- | tues were minimized by those who had | been less fortunate, while their faults | were enlarged by the envious. Those suc- | cessful ones, he sald, were harshly judged by the ones lving a purposeless and ob- | scure life. Their departed friend was | well grounded and well rounded. He had there’s nothing like my Ask your friends about t Incidentally, my fall ti 'what you're looking for. you pass the store of FREE .PHON comfortable underwear. he “Gibson” underwear, es, shirts and hosiery comprise some new effects that may be just See if they don’t when E SowvTH 850 TWO MEN SEARCHING FOR WOMEN WHO ROBBED THEM | M. J. McCarthy and J. M. Couthwait Are Victims of Misplaced Confidence. Two men reported to the police early Sunday morning that they had been rob- bed by two women and asked for help in regaining possession of their coin. M. J. McGarthy of 110% McAllister stre reported that while he was visiting a woman in the Brunswick House on Sixth | street she stole $25 from his pocket. He gave a description of the woman, saylnxi she welghed about 350 pounds and was of da=: complexion. Policeman Bennettspent some hours with McCarthy looking for a | woman of that description, but falled to find her. J. M. Couthwait, a carpenter of San identifled himself with higher thoughts and aims and was therefore an example | to all aspiring youths. He repaid God's | debt of early youth with gentleness and | kindness and high and lofty character | and’ pyrity of nature. Those were the | characleristics which made Levi Strauss | universally beloved. If he had done| nothing beyond creating the university | schelarships he would have accomplished | great results, His aid to education, 101 the uplifting of the youth of the State, | would even outshine his remarkable | achievements as a merchant. | | REMAINS PLACED IN VAULT. | At the conclusion of the eulogy the | funeral cortege proceeded to the Home of | Peuce Cemetery, where the service was | conducted by Rabbi Voorsanger at the | entrance to the cypress-wreathed Ionic | vault. 1 When the remains had been deposited | in the vault the family filed past the mas- | sive pillars and remained within the great stone structure for some moments, lin- | gering with the departed, The pall bearers were Barney Schweit- zer, Willlam Alvord, Philip J Iecher. who had been connected with Mr. Strauss for forty-two years; L. Sachs, Adam Grant, Reuben H. Lloyd, Danfel Bloch, E. L. Heller, I. W. Hellman, Judge Hunt, | Sigmund Greenebaum, Eli Marks, Lewis Gerstle and J. B. Reinstein. Among others present were Henry Ach, Raphael Weill, William Hass, J. Neustad- ter, D. Neustadter, J. Ach, M. C. Meyer, J. Godchaux, M. Sigel, the Rev. Dr. Nie- to, Walter Castle, J. Eppinger, Sylvain ‘Weill, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Herman, Mr. and Mrs. Judah Newman, H. J. Solomon, J. W. Davis, M. Hale, Leon Bein, Mrs. I. W. Hellman, Adolph Son, K. Strauss, Miss Fanny Ashe, Mrs. Hirshfield, Mrs. R. Peixotto, Mrs. P. L. Davis, Mrs. An- drew Davis, Mrs. F. Epstein, Samuel Ro- senhefm, Charles L. Ackerman and the following directors and officers of the Board of Trade: A. Watkins, president; H. L. Smith, secretary; Sanford Bennett, treasurer; Joseph Kirk, attorney; Willlam tin Triest, H. M. Holbrook, T. J. Parsons, | H. L. Loveland and Walter Mansfield. About 100 employes and former employes were beside the bier of their dead friend and formed a procession to the vault. Sergeant Owen Gorman, with Corporal Bowlen and Police Officers E. Moloney, Clark and Hutchins, directed the arrange- ments outside the residence until the | cortege proceeded to the Townsend-stfeet station, where a train of seven special cars conveyed the mourners to the cem- | etery. UNIDENTIFIED MAN i COMMITS SUICIDE His Dead Body Found in an Unoccu- pied Lot With Revolver in Hand. The dead body of an unidentified man was found at 7 o’clock yesterday morning in a vacant lot on the corner of Folsom ! and Spear streets. There was a bullet | wound in the right temple, and in tha right hand was a revolver, one chambar | of which had been discharged. Nothing was found on the body by which it couid be identified except a laundry mark on | the shirt. Detective Bell was detailed on | the case to discover the identity of the suicide. The dead man was about 50 years of age, with brown eyes and gray hair, and ! weighed about 150 pounds. The upper and | lower sets of teeth were artificial. The | clothing was a black sack suit with rounded front, and the trousers wers of dark material with white stripes. The shoes were congress galiters and the hat was a soft black one. The body was removed to the Morgue. e —————————— Diseased Horse Is Killed. Officer McCurrie of the Humane Soclety found a horse afflicted with farey tied to a post at the corner of Twelfth and Har- | rison streets Saturday night. A hunt was | made for the owner at the time and yes- terday, but no trace of him could be found. The offense of leaving an animal affected with a contagious disease in & | public place is punishable by fine and im- | prisonment. The beast in this case was summarily dispatched. ———e— Falls From a Ladder. An old man named J. Denny, who re- sides in Oakland, fell a distance of tweive feet from a ladder yesterday while mak- ing some improvements at the residence of Millionaire A. L. Davis at 601 Stockton street. . The aged workman's injuries, which consist of abrased wounds on both feet and lacerated wounds on the head and hands, were treated at the Emergen- cy Hospital by Dr. Maher. ; ———— Edward Fay Insolvent. Fdward Fay, of the Grand Hotel bar in this city, filed a petition in insolvency Jose, reported that while he was drinking with a woman in a saloon at 129 Sixth | street she took his purse out of his pock- et, which contalned $43, and sald she would pay for the drinks. She left the | room and did not return. He was able | to give a good description of the female thief, but the police have been unable to find her. _———————— LINCOLN ATHLETIC CLUB BOXING BOUTS TO-NIGHT Amateur Sluggers to Meet in Four-| Round Bouts in Mechanics’ | Pavilion Annex. | Seven “‘main events” are to be present- | ed to-night in Mechanics’ Pavilion annex | by the Lincoln Athletic Club. The best- | known amateurs in the city are to take | part in the fistic tourney. Manager Mur- | phy has issued instructions to the con- testants that they must fight all the | way, otherwise they will not be re- | warded. Louis Balletro and Jack Roberts are to | 0 I0UT TUUNAS mt eho trowsy ——sbeie tms | 7 it; Barney Driscoll and “Kid" Mejla will | box at 110 pounds J;immy Little and Bar- ney Sullivan will meet at 125 pounds; Dick Cullen and Jim Crowe are to box | box at 110 pounds; Jimmie Little and Bar- fams will meet at 110 pounds; Joe Lahey, | a brother of the redoubtable Jack, will try conclusions with Will Edwards. Al Young will try to beat Tom McGreel in- to submission. McGreel has the reputa- | tion of being able to assimilate more pun- ishment than any ether man in the ring. | Young is a stiff puncher and will try to win out. l ————————————- ORDERS FRANK MITCHELL TO PAY WIFE ALIMONY Judge Seawell: Decrees Musician | Shall Defray Household Ex- penses Pending Suit. Judge Seawell made an order yesterday directing Frank S. Mitchell, who is suing Lilllan Mitchell for divorce on the ground | of cruelty, to pay his wife $75 a month | slimony pending the trial of the divorce suit and $150 counsel fees. Mitchell, who is a clerk in the employ of Eppinger & | Co., is prominent in San Francisco musi- cal circles, being a member of numerous church choirs in this city. Suits for divorce were filed yesterday | by E. P. Floyd against M. J. Floyd for | desertion, Mamie Peek against Roy J. Peek for intemperance and Helen S. Cam- cron against James S. Cameron for failure | to provide. 1 Divorces were granted to Artemesia | Reban from Lewls Beban, Rose J. Wood from Robert H. Wood and J. A. Doyle from Ray Doyle for desertion. — e——— Elevator Boy Commits Suicide. Because he was inflicted with what he thought to be an incurable disease, Guy Overmeyer, elevator boy at the Ashworth, on Mason street, committed suicide last Sunday night in the Winchester Hotel, on Third street, by taking the contents of two boxes of Rough on Rats. He engaged the room at 9 o'clock last Sunday night and registered as T. J. Hawley. The body was found in bed at 2:20 yesterday after- noon. He left a note for his folks, who live at 669 Turk street, and a note on the bureau, reading as follows: “In case of accident, notify my people at 663 Turk.” Overmeyer was 21 years of age. —_—————————— Sues to Recover Expenses. The California Shipping Company filed | a suit for $967 47 against the firm of Alex- | ander & Baldwin yesterday, alleging that | that amount is due from the defendants as its pro rata of expenses incurred by the captain of the steamship Henry Field- ing while on a voyage from New York to Kahulul. The plaintiff alleges that the NOTICETO { BREWERS. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., September 23, 1902. On account of the high price of Barley, we are compelled to raise the price of malt to take effect im- mediately, as follows: Bay Malt........$2 20 per 100 pounds Chevaliér Mait..$2 50 per 100 pounds Ground Malt, extra 10 cents per 100 pounds. EMPIRE WALT HOUSE. NEW YORK MALT H.USE. yesterday in the United States District Court. He owes $158 and has no assets. He has only two creditors, Oliver Reedon of Baltimore, §1288 44, and Henry Steil of this city, $296 50, ® : H (3 PIONEER MALT HOUSE. | licitor for the company in Arizena. vessel was compelled to put in at the Falkland Islands because of the sickness of the crew, and that while the vessel was laid up there!the captain had to ex- pend 38760 08 for necessary repairs. —_—— Pay for Breaking Game Laws. Deputy Fish Commissioner W. H. Arme strong arrested Thomas Dixon Saturday, JOHN T.GIBSON “Your-Bosom:- Friend:Shirls” . 1202 ~1204 MARKET ST for killing ducks during the close season. * Justice of the Peace Brown of Vallejo fined the offender $25. William West was caught with a doe hide in his possession at San Fernando, Los Angeles County, Sunday, and was compelled to pay 325 for the offense by Justice of the Peace Bar< clay of that place yesterday. —_——— Appointed Santa Fe Solicitor. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 29.—Announce- ment was made to-day at the local head- quarters of the Santa Fe system of 'the appointment of T. J. Norton, to be so+ He will make il headquarters in Prescott, Ariz., and will attend to all of the Sants Fe's legal business in the Territory, ADVERTISEMENTS. Your Teeth, How Are They? When we fill your teeth, ve give you a written guarantee that the fill- ing will last ten years. We would never give you the guarantee if we were not sure of the filling. We are the only dental parlors in the City who will guarantee their work, ana we do it because we know our busi- ness thoroughly. Your teeth should be worked on by men of wide ex- perience. A poor filling is more harmful than no filling at all. Our work is quick and painless and our prices reasonable. Painless silver Sllings . . + . §.35up Painless cement fillings . asup Palnlcss gold fllings e e bo SN Painiess gold crown, 22k . . . 3.50up Painless porcelain crowns . . L.soup Painless bridge work per tooth . 3.50up Fullsctofteeth . . . . . . 400Up 1001 Market, Cor.6th Open evenings 'til 9—Sundays, all day San Francisco, Cal. EMORODICIDE (Trade Mark Reg.) IT I8 A SHAME FOR ANY CASH OB PILES To be cut when more than 500 business men &n equal number of women in this city have: been permanently cured by this treatment with- out surgery or delay. Move than 100 gent as reference to those who wish to appiled sent. gate. The treatment can only be skillful physiclan and cannot be particulars call or write. THE EMORODICIDE CO., Rooms 496-495, Parrott Butlding. BEW AR ————————0 Of impostors. Mayerl cannot be had from traveling Market, S. water, 50c. Phone South 512 R.MCNULTY. 'HIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLD Spectalist cures Blood Puison, Gonorrhasm, Gleet, 5 Stricture. Seminal Weakness, Impotence and theie ¢ allied Di<orders. Hook on Discases of Mer: - Gverap;-arw experience. Terms reasonable. ;\m‘a'»n 9toTdaily :6:30t08. Wev'xs. Sunduys. 10 o L2, Con tationfreeand; y confidential. Call of address P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D. d Kearny pit., San Francisco, Cal. BAJA CALIFORNIA The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Tonie f The oeys and N. the Sexual Urgans, for both gex: Remedy tor Diseases of the r. Sclls on its own merits. ALFS & NE. Agents. et S. F.—(Send for Circular&sy Warrauted geruine. N toy. No humbug. M drugs. C Sent by mail on receipt of Try Electricity. No 2 =T ; SOUTH PARK MALT HOUSE. ecoe Damiana Bitters A5 A SHEAT RESI1ONALVE INVIGOMA n-i-;.rvnn. Speciall ‘l ]