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24 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1902. ADVERTISEMENTS. MARVELOUS GROWTH OF HAIR. A Famous Doctor-Chemist Has Dis- covered a Comvound That Grows Hair on a Bald Head in a Single Night. Startling Annovncement Causes Doctors to | Marvel and Stand Dumfounded at the Wonderful Cures. The Discoverer Sends Frse Trial Packages to All Who Write. After half a ces spent in the laborato: crow with high honors for his many worl famous discoveries, the NISS CLARISSA KERBY lnd Eer Mar- velous Growth of Hi d of the great Altenheim has just made the start- nat he has produced a rows hair on any bald head. the claim that after experi- t ete, he has at To the There are narkable cady made re it not for the high ian and the con- a any one else s ready and willing kages of this great hair one who writes to him for cent stamp to prepay postage. as started hair to grow- for years. r. It never fails no mat- ge or sex. Old men and fidren, all have profit- ur hair is falling out or s or evelashes are thin or 2 Medical Dispensary, nnatl, Ohio, inclosing ay postage for a free t time you will be en- “eceecceccscsccoecsosesese RUPTURE. wish to be cured. We can It is not necessary to risk your life by operation. It will not even hurt. You lose no time. It is not necessary to risk any money. Ycu don’t pay till you are cured. You are the judge. Hundreds have been cured. Come and see us; Itation is free. Fidelity Rupture Cure, 26}; Kearny Street, €an Francieco. sessssssssssssssssssssssssssens s Wiil Insu-e Your Eye-Glasse: Against Breakage. Quick Repairing. Factory on Premises. 642 "MARKETST —_——— AT LEON LEMOS’, Merchant Tailor, «- 1117 to 1127 Market Street.. Bet. Seventh and Eighth, FROM hAE’I;EGA:T REM. NAN1S FO« SUIT $B12.50 | 1 opoen’ St UP. Fxtra Pants Free. WE MAK= SUITS| ‘n_INSTALLMENTS| FROM $15.00 UP $1.00 WEEKLY. [ cannot edy cure. This secret Emissions, Impotency, orrhoea, Gleet, ins, Lost Man gther wasting _ef- TE, Also for sale at 1073% _Send for free book. CHICH I'T 'S ENG! e!;" f'""‘ {BRUSHE celebrated physician- of citizens all | too miratulous no doubt of the doctor's ear- | s nor can his | Tt has stopped | great new discovery. | STRANGE SLEEP ENDS IN DEATH Nellie Corcoran, Called the “Trance Girl,”" Passes Away. | | | Autopsy Performed on the Body Fails to Reveal Secret. Special Dispatch to The Call. | NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—Satisfying them- | | sclves, through the application of many ! quaint and modern methods, that Nellie | | Corcoran, the trance girl, was really dead, doctors in St. Vincent Hospital to- | day performed an autopsy on her body in the hope of discovering the cause of | a long profound sleep which began on | October 18. They learried nothing. There | was no post mortem indication to teu\ them what was responsible for death. Every organ was in a healthy condition | and the brain and spinal cord were per- | fectly normal. Nellie Corcoran was 19 years old and a | healthy and cheerful girl until a year ago. On the morning of October 18 she | could not be awakened. Every effort was made to rouse her, and finally doctors were called in. They were mystified by the girl's ccndition. Her pulse was feeble, | but there was no evidence of any serious | ailment. She was sent to St. Vincent Hospital and there various methods of | awakening persons from deep slumber were tried, but all in vain. During many days the girl's form be- came emaciated and her cheeks perfectly colorless. She had the appearance of deain and yet her heart fluttered away as | busily as ever. On Friday it was thought | that the end was near. The heart beats became fainter and fainter and in the evening were almost imperceptible. Mrs. Corcoran, the girl's mother, was at her | side during the night and she says her daughter spoke to her faintly as follows: “Mamma, I am dying. angels.” At twenty minutes past 1 o’clock in the morning the doctors, who had been watch- ing her every movement, said her heart had stopped beating. They applied the | blaze of a candle to the large toe. No blister resulted. When a blister is caused there is life. This is a custom which was in use hundreds of years ago. An analy- sis of the blood was made. It showed death. A plece of cold, polished 'steel was held to the lips. Had moisture ap- peared on it, it would have indicated lifs, | but no moisture appeared. Last of all | the electric battery was used but her | { body had lost all excitability. | | I can see the | Shot by Masked Robbers. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 8.—Three masked men | with drawn revolvers entered a saloon n | North St. Louis last night and attempted | te hold up the occupants. During the scrimmage that ensued Richard' M. Ever- | ett, an insurance agent, who was sitting | at a table, was shot in the stomach and will probably die. The noise frightened | the robbers, who ran without securing any booty. Saloonkeeper Routs Robber. BAKERSFIELD, Nov. §.—An unknown | | man_attempted to hold up the saloon of | { R. Dellaringa, an Italian, located at | Twenty-second and M streets, to-night. | There were a number of persons in the | place at the time. The sajonnkeeper‘ grappled with him and in the scuffle the | | robber’s pistol was discharged, wounding | | Dellaringa in the foot. #he robber fled | empty-handed. | 1 ADVERTISEMENYS. \ Don’t Die of 1 Consumption A Positivse Cure Found by a Celebrated Michigan Physician—Fe Sends a Larce Trisl Packazs Freo by Mail to All Wao Write. | Incredible after the centuries of failure, At last a cure has been found as it may seem, | % f | 1 ' | DR. D. P. YONEERMAN, The Dizesveier of Tuberen- |~ losyme—Endorsed by [tate Cffeials snd Greatest Mcdical Men of the Werld s | the Only Cure fir Cozsumption.« a positive and certain cure for the deadly con- | sumpticn has.at last been discovered. It re- | mained for a great physician of Michigan ‘o find the cnly known cure for consumption, af- ter almost a life’s work spent in experiment- ing and study. Consumptives. who have returned from the West—come home to die because they ihouznt nothing could be done for them—huve tried this mew discovery and are now well and stro If you are afflicted, do not fail Lo send at | once to Dr. Derk P. Yonkerman, 950 Shakes- peare Bide., Kalamazoo, Mich., for a free trial package of this remedy, m'oors and tes- timonials from hundreds of cured patfents. It costs nothing. The Doctor does hot ask any one to take his word or any one else’s, ds he sends a trial package free, and a few days use will show you how easily and quickly you can be Delay is dangerous. There is no time to lose when the death haud of cor- sumption tightening its clutch upon £ Write to-d s gl EVERY WOMAN is interested and should know about the wonderful ‘nvEL WHIR. l.lNG The new vuhul Injection and Suction. Best—Safest—Most Con- venient. ItCleanses Instantly, | | -4 your drugglst for it. e MARVEL, acopi no st ~end stasop for illus- s acaled. "It gives il ion ineziuable MARVEL €0 Room 203, Times Bdg.,.New York." v FOR BARBERS, B. kers, bootblacks,” bal houses, billiard ' tabi brewers, bookbinders, candy-makers, canners, dyers, fiour mills, foundries, laundries, paper- hangeérs, printers, painters, shoe factories, stableman, tar-roofers, tanners, tallors, etc. BUCHANAN BROS. Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EARNY AND WASHINGTON STS.—Re- modeled and renovated. NG, WARD & CO. European plan. Rnoms, S0c to $1 50 $5 to §8 week; $8 fo $20 month, Iree ba hot aud cold water every room fire grates in "every room; elevator runs all might. | without provisions; HUGHES DEFENDG HI3 SOLDIERS General Replies to the Charges of Anti- Imperialists. RN War Department Finds a Priest Was Killed by Water Cure. SRR WASHINGTON, Nov. §.—The War De- partment made ptiblic to-day a statement of General R. P. Hughes in reply to charges contained in a letter written by Henry Loomts Nelson in a Boston news- paper August 25, 1902, and which letter is embraced in a pamphlet signed by | Charles Francis Adams, Carl Schurz, Ed- win Barrett Smith and Herbert Welsh, committee, under the title of *“Marked Severities: Secretary Root's Record in | the Philippine Warfare.” General Hughes quotes the following extract from the letter: “The Eighteenth Regiment marched from Iloilo in the south to Capiz in the north of Panay under orders to burn every town from which they were at- tacked. The result was they left a strip of land sixty miles wide from one end of the island to the other over which the traditional crow could not have flown without provisions. That is what burn- ing means, and no more. It is not' done of the thing, but out of stern General Hughes, who commanded in Panay at the time, says the burning of Tloilo was_shown by the official records | of the insurgent counsel to have been the work of the insurgents. He says the troops, by “some work, some fighting and much exposure to fire were able to wrench a portion of Ilollo from the flames.” After reviewing the work of the Eight- eenth Infantry in the Province of Panay | General Hughes says: “It has thus been shown that the | Eighteenth regulars had no order to burn all towns from which they were attacked, and that they did not leave a strip of land sixty miles wide from one end of the island to the other over which the traditional crow could not have flown but, as a matter of fact, they did leave the country unin- jured, the towns and villages iIntact, the roads improved, bridges rebuilt and the 500,000 natives of the sectlon covered were left in the full enjoyment of their prop- erty and rights.” An investigation that had been made by the War Department into the allegation by the anti-imperialistic committee de- livered at the Lake George conference, to the effect that Father Augustine, a Catholic priest, was killed by the water cure in the Philippines, has apparently confirmed the fact that the man died as | the result of the administration of the ! cure, but it has also been found that the persons who administered the cure, to se- cure insurgent funds of which he was the | custodian, were volunteers from Vermont and are now beyond the reach of mili- tary justice, having been mustered out of the service. INCENDIARY SETS FIRE TO SAN RAFAEL HOUSE ‘William Mulcahey’s Residence Is Barely Saved From the Flames. * SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 8.—An attempt was made last evening to burn the house of William Mulcahey on Third street. The blaze was discovered before great damage had been done and was extinguished. The fire was started while the family was seated at the supper table, the match being applied to the lace curtains of the front parlor windows. 'The incendiary went up the side porch stairs, opened a window and ignited the window curtains. One of the family leaving the sooner than the rest discovered the flames and gave the alarm. The front room was badly damaged before the fire was ex- tinguished. Several months ago barn was set afire and completely de- stroyed. After the arrest of Eugene Case 4 Antone Morris, the juveniles charged arson, they confessed that Mul- barn was one of the nine build- to which they applied the torch. = Receiver for a Mine. SAN DIEGO, Nov. the Superior Court has made an order ap- pointing Frederick A. Aces of Los A geles receiver of the mine in Rancho Rii con del Diablo. Suit has been brought for foreclosure of the mine, on the ground that the terms of the contract were not | fulfilled. According to the contract, the | mine was sold to S. M. Green of Milwau- kee for $100,000; $75,000 was to’ be paid down, 35000 was to be paid at the end of | four months and the remaining indebted- ness was to be paid in $5000 installments every two months. Green paid the $75,000 and the first $3000, but neglected to pay the balance of $20,000. it o Redmond Arrives at Queenstown. QUEENSTOWN, Nov. 8—John E. Red- mond, M. P., who returned Friday on the steamer Celtic from the United States, cre he attended the convention of the United Irish League of America in Bos- ton, did not disembark from the steamer at Queenstown, but said he was going di- rect to London to resume his Parlia- mentary duties. Redmond said also that his mission to the United States had ful- filled his every expectation. Navy Requires More Officers. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—Secretary of the Navy Moody is working on his annual report. It is understood that one of his principal recommendations will be for an increase of officers for the navy. The lack of officers to man our warships is glving the department grave concern and he will strongly urge that additional cadets at Annapolis be appointed to sup- ply the growing deficit. He will not rec- ommend a reorganization of the depart- ment. Mulcahey's fine ° ADVERTISEMENTS. DYSPEPSIA And Indigestion, the most common ailments of mankind, can te cured by the use of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. It has arecord of fifty years of such cures back of it and will not disappoint you now. If you are a sufferer from these com- plaints, or Insomnia, Nervous- ness or General Debility, be sure to try it. Our private stamp is over the neck of the " NOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS. table | w 8.—Judge Conklin of | OR NOT. Prices, Catalogues, New Uprights from. Second Hand Uprights from... Squares as low as ce veee.. $180.00 385.00 10.00 ese o CoOome Rain or Shine.... etc., on application. Pianos selected for out-of-town buyers. Only 20 of the Pianolas included in the sale are left. RELIABLE GOODS ONLY. AGENCIES EVERYWHERE. SMITH SEEKS LEGAL REDRES Retired Brigadier Gen- eral to Make an Effort for Reinstatement. Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, N. , WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—General in- terest has been aroused in Washington by the not altogether unexpected an- nouncement that General Jacob Smith, who was summarily retired by President | Roosevelt a few weeks ago as a result of his famous “kill and burn’ order, would make an effort to be remnstated. That Smith would seek legal redress was re- ported soon after the order of his retire- ment was issued—the contention of his friends being that under the statutes the President has no right to increase’the | sentence imposed by a courtmartial. The court which tried General Smith recom- mended that he be admonishea by the re- viewing authority, which -was President Roosevelt. One of the numerous laws under which an officer may be retired from the active list is one which provides that the Presi- dent may retire without giving a reason any officer over 62 years of age. When this law was put into effect there was no other retiring law, and it was designed merely for the purpose of placing the re- tiring power in the hands of the Presi- dent and not as a punitive power. The administration does not regard it on this account, therefore, an increase of the sen- tence of admonition imposed by the court- martial. Congress has power by special act to reinstate General Smith. The sen- timent in the army was adverse to his re- { tirement. AVENGING NEVADA MOB YIELDS TO PERSUASION Argument Saves Angelo Zari’s Mur- derer From Lynching in Dayton. DAYTON, Nev., Nov. 8.—A murder that nearly resulted in a lynching occurred here last evening. Angelo Zari, a wealthy Italian farmer, was shot and killed by a countryman named Adamo Juroli, whom he had in his employ. After the capture of the murderer an extra guard had to be placed about the jail to prevent an angry populace stringing him up to the nearest tree. As the Italians outnumber all other nationalities in this section, the authori- ties for a time despaired of saving the prisoner, but after much argument, they persuaded the friends of the murdered man to permit the law to take its course. Zarl, who was killed, was one of the wealthiest and most popular citizens in this country. He was a leader and a favorite among his countrymen. The murderer had been in his employ as a laborer but a short time. The trouble grew out of a dispute over the ownership of a horse and commenced in Bunaffi's saloon. After some warm words Zari refused to argue further and started to walk away. Without a word of warning Juroli whipped out a revolver.| an. shot him to death. Quite a crowd had assembled, discussing the election news, and the murderer, with the smoking revolver still in his grasp, made a desperate attempt to escape. He was captured after a sharp struggle, dis- armed and landed in jail by Justice of the Peace A.-M. Smith and C. S. Bowman. It was some time before the crowd realized Wwhat had happened and the officers util- ized this time in securing their prisoner against possible attack. Their precautions were timely, for soon a mob had assem- bled around the building. Wiser counsel prevailed and the Italians who were clamoring for vengeance were finally urged to depart. 3 NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—Arthur S. Hardy, United States Minlster to Switzerland, arrived to-day on the Umbria from Liverpool. . BABE DROWNS IN PUDDLE WHILE SEEKING A DRINK Little One’s Death Indirectly Due to Land Owner’s Attempt to Evict Poor Family. MONROVIA, Nov. 8.—The Coroner’s in- quest here to-day on the body of Man- euel Sandoval, aged 2 years, who was drowned yesterday in a puddle of water three inches in depth, brought out a story which has caused great indignation. The Sandoval family live in a small hut near town and for more than a year they have been supported by charity, the head of the family and father of the child hav- ing been permanently crippled by a fall. After the accident to the father, a priest at the San Gabriel Mission permitted the family to occupy a small parcel of ground which he owned. The priest recently moved to Mexico, and, before leaving, sold the property. According to the evidence at the in- quest, the purchaser sought to oust the poor family, but they, being ignorant of the sale, refused to move unless the priest advised them to do so. The new owner of the place decided to cut off their water supply, hoping thereby to force them to move without having to resort to the courts. to evict them. Accordingly the water was shut off from the pipes leading to_the house. Near the place is a pipe line carrying irrigating water. A leaking in this pipe formed a small puddle of water and it was from this source alone that the fam- ily obtained its supply. Yesterday the baby was playing about the house and told its mother that it wanted a drink. She did not pay any attention to the child’s request at the time and the little one toddled off-to the small pool, where it had seen others stoop over and drink. It is believed that the child tried to get a drink in this manner, for twenty minutes later the mather found its:lifeless body, its face buried in three inches of water. Postoffice Physicians Discharged. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 —The Postmas- ter General has ordered that the position of postoffice physician be abolished in all postoffices in cities under 500,000 pop- ulation. There are about a dozen cities in this class where such positions exist, and a number of postmasters reported that the position was not necessary. It is expected that this section will save the Government about $10,500 a year. Battleship Kearsarge Departs. NEW YORK, Nov. $.—The battleship Kearsarge, flagship of the North Atlan~ tic squadron, started south Friday from the navy yard with Rear Admiral Hig- ginson aboard to begin organizing the great fleet which is to go through war maneuvers in the Caribbean Sea during the winter. At Hampton Roads the Kearsarge will meet other vessels of the fleet. AT LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 8—Wiliam H. Balley, a prominent turfman and trotting horse breeder, died here to-day of apoplexy. LAST THREE DAYS OF THE GREAT iano Clearance Sa FIONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Will be the most memorable in the piano history of the Coast. : Do you believe that a dollar saved is a dollar earned? Then, rain or shine, if yow want a piano before Xmas, take a few dollars for a first payment and, come down town to see the prices. It’s more than worth while even if yow don’t intend buying; it’s educational. Monday morning all odd and special style pianos will be markad at the lowest prices ever seen here on dood doods. Our prices will reach a low water mark which will stand for years. But yow must see the prices on the pianos in order to appreciate them. EVERYBODY IN SAN FRANCISCO IS INVITED TO OUR WAREROOMS MONDAY WHETHER T0 BUY IT WILL BE AN OBJECT LESSION IN PIANO BUYING WHICH CANNOT BE FORGOTTEN. KOHLER & CHASE 28-30 O’FARRELL STREET. BRANCH 1013-1015 EROADWAY, JAKLAND. WORKMAN IS WHIRLED BY REVOLVING BELT Receives Horrible Injuries in Los Angeles Plant of American Can Company. LOS ANGELES, Noy. 8.—Robert Hed- rick, aged about 30 years, in charge of the presses. at the. plant of the American, Can Company, on Anderson street, was fatally injured to-day. Hedrick was in the act of throwihg on the belt of one of the presses, when he moved a fraction of an inch too close to the moving belt and was caught by his clothing. He was taken up to the revolv- ing pulleys about eight feet above the floor and was whirled ardund the main shafting, both feet being literally beaten off between the ankles and knees against the heavy timbers of the roof. Workmen who saw the accident ran to stop the engine, and when the shafting ceased to revolve Hedrick dropped heav- ily to the floor, his clothing having beeny almost stripped from his body. il i WASHINGTON, Nov. S.—Th§ progress of the cholera in Egypt Is recorded in the foi- lowing cablegram to the State Department from United States Vice Consul General Smith at Cairo, dated to-day: ‘“Since the st in there have“been 140 cases of cholera and 1 deaths in all Egypt.” i JACKSON, Miss., Nov. 8.—Bishop Hugh Miller Thompson of the Episcopal diocese of Mississippi has arrived in this city in a hos- pital car from New York. He stood the trip fairly well. | | | | Guaranteed solid oak sideboard, 6 feet high, 20x 42 inch top, 2 swell front drawers, one large draw- er and ‘roomy compart- ment below; beveled French plate mirror, lix 24 inches; carved trim- mings, brass knobs and handles. Formerly $27.50, and worth it. Now.. o - 816 vidual buyer. Furnit 338-342 Post st. Sideboards In anticipation of the season of good cheer now almost at hand—that period of thanks- giving and rejoicing now almost upon us— that period when, in gratitude for favors en- ioyed, we eat, drink and are merry; pause and give thought to the most neces- sary adjunct tothe feast—the sideboard. Ofits uses we need say nothing; of its beauty, as exemplified by the imposing array upon our floors, we cannot say too much, Here are to be found gathered together a variety of woods and finishes selected to harmonize with every interior finish, and to suit the taste or the liberality of each indi- To this display we invite you and for your present consideration we call your attention to the two sideboards shown above and to the prices placed upon them. Brllllal\'l: \uare Co Opposite Vnion Square let us Solid quarter sawed oak sideboard, 6% feet high, 22x42 inch top, 2 small front drawers, large drawer and lower com- partment; 14x24 inch bev- eled French plate mirror, brass drawer pulls and heavy carved trimmings; has the massive richness of many $4 sldeboud& Formerly 332.50. N We extend to our patrons liberal credit if desired, and those coming from out of town poeints can always arrange with us to pay freight or to refund railroad fare both ways upon purchases of sufficient size to warrant it. We so- licit your patronage upon the basis of just prices, liberal terms, courteous treatment and the largest and best stock that we have ever shown.