The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 30, 1902, Page 28

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JALL, SUNDAY, OVEMBER 30 1902 MUST ATTEND CHINESE SGHOOL Katie Wong Him Cannot Attend Clement Grammar, Judge Seawell Sustains the Action of Board of Education. Little Hattle Wong Him, the dsugh- ter of Dr. Wong Him, the Chinese herbalist, must content herself with the knowledge she can gain at the Chinese primary school at 920 Clay street if she desires an education in the schools of this city. Judge Seawell decided yesterday that the Board of FEducation acted within its rights in transferring the lit- tle Oriental from the Clement Grammar School to the school provided for the e@ucation of Chinese children and refused to issue a writ of mandate compelling the board to restore her to the place in the class &t the Clement Grammar she oc- cupied when the order of transfer was made by Superintendent of Schools Web- ster. Katie is a native of Los Angeles. Her father is one of the wealthiest of the wealthy Chinese and in addition is a scholar of no mean ability. He does not live in Chinatown and in consequence, when Katie became old enough to attend school, he did not have her enrolled as & pupil at the school provided for the lit- tle brown children, but sent ber to the Clement Grammar School to be taught with the c ren with fairer skins. That was last March. The almond-eyed miss remained at the school until July and won warm words of praise from her teacher for her brightness and ready manner of acquiring knowledge &s it is taught in the American schools. Katie was happy and for four months walked home from school with her white schoolmates and took part in their games. Then one day she went home to her father, and with tears n her eyes told him how she had been summoned to the room of the principal of the school and tolé that she could not go to the school with the white children any more. “You must go to the Chinese school, Katle,” said Miss Callahen, the acting principal of the school. “It is against the law for | you to come here any more.” { The herbalist got very angry and tried to get his daughter restored to standing, but without success. He finally sougnt the service of & lawyer, who advised him to appeal to the courts. He did so, but with little success, for Judge Seawell's Gecision means that the board had power to do as it did and that therefore Katie | Wong Him is not entitled to any more | privileges than the little brown-skinned, 1 i-eyed youngsters who spend their he dirty streets of the Chinese quarter. es——— ADVERTISEMENTS. AT AUCTION! REFEREEY SALE EY ORDER SUPERIOR COURI THANKSGIVING DAY MARRIAGE COMES AS SURPRISE TO FRIENDS Frank G. Smith and Miss Olive ligner, Formerly of Sacramento, Are Joined in Wedlock at the Residence of the Bride’s Mother in This City when Miss Olive Ilgner and Frank G. Smith were united in marriage. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. C. A. Buckbee at the residence of the bride's mother, 1336 Buchanan street. The home was beauti- fully Gecorated with palms and white flowers. Only a very few of the most intimate friends and nearest relations of the young couple were invited to the wed- ding. The bride wore a cream crepe over corn-colored sifk and carried a large bou- | quet of Brides’ roses. The maid of honor, | Miss Martha Ewing, wore a pale blue silk gown. Attorney Wiillam M. Sims was best man. Mrs. Smith Is a beautifcl young woman and 1is gifted with many accom- plishments, and with her husband has a host of riends, both in Sacramento, PRETTY home wedding took place A in this city on Thanksgiving day, At Salesreom of | BLAMES THE COMPANY FOR Shainwald, Buckbee & Co. 218-220 MONTGOMERY ST, Wednesday December 10, 1902 At 12 O'clock Noon MARKET AND SECOND STREETS SE. corner; lot 140x155 feet, fronting Mar- ket, Second and Stevenson sts. Solid and substantial four-story and basement brick buflding, occupied by three tenants. Gross acnual rental THIRTY-TWO THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED ($32,1000 DOLLARS. The walls of this building are unusually lieavy and several additional stories could be added if desired. SECOND AND STEVENSON STREETS SE. corner Second and Stevenson ste.: lot B0 feet on Second st. by 137:6 feet. . Solid and substantial five-story and basement brick bullding. Gross annual rental THIRTEEN THOUSAND NINE HUN- DRED (§13,900) DOLLARS. This butld- ing will stand two or three additional stories if desired. ¢ MONTGOMERY AND PACIFIC STREETS NE, corner, 137:6 feet on Pacific st by 113:6 feet on Montgomery st. and extra Jot 24x73:6 feet. Three-story brick bulld- ing with annex, occuples about 60x85 feet on corner. Remaining portion of lot cov- ered by brick and frame tulldings. Four tenants. Gross snnual rental $2740. —_—— For turther detafls apply Shainwald, Buckbee & Co. 218-220 Montgomery st., Mills Buiiding, or te JOS, M. QUAY and S. C. BUCKBEE, Referees. ad R*“Fiie” Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. ~Causes fect _digestion, complete absorption and ithful regularity. y Tor the cure of all disorders of the Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, regularities, Sick Headache. Biliousness, Co: ts DEATH OF DAVID FIGONE Coroner’s Jury Tlung That Proper Precautions Were Not Taken at Dangerous, Crossing. The Southern Pacific Company was blamed yesterday by a Coroner’s jury for the death of David Figone, an aged scav- enger, who was run over at the crossing of Eighth and Townsend streets on No- vember 21. The ‘evidence showed that Figone was driving his wagon across the tracks as the gates were shut down. He was on the track when a locomotive came along, smashed his vehicle and !dmgged him under the wheels for about 100 feet. The gateman swore that the gates were | not closed at the time of the accident, although all the other witnesses swore that they were. The fireman, Berjamin H. Bowie, and the engineer of the locomo- tive testified that they were going at the rate of six miles per hour toward the roundhouse when the accident occurred, and that the body of Figone was dragged about sixty or seventy feet. There was evidence to show that drivers of wagons | were always in great haste to cross the | track before the gates were closed, and that they often cursed the gateman for | shutting them out of danger. e Music in the Park. | 'The Golden Gate Park band will render the following programme jn the park this { afternoon: March, “The King's Fighting Man".True .Oftenbach Overture, *‘Orpheus Concert mazourka, “Clematis’ Solo, “Polka de Concert™. Performed by W. H. Grand Fantasia, “Andre (first time).. Overture, “Son and Str: Mendelssohn ) ..Mascheroni (b) “Fackeeltane” No. 1..Meyerbeer Seleetion, “Florodora”...... .Stewart Descriptive, “The Trumpeter of the Emperor” -Volstedt “Reminiscences o Song ozart’ ..Arranged by Godfrey Merrily Going On Is the great shoe sale. To-morrow will be shoe day at the Bee Hive. Men and women can choose from kid or patent All sizes and all widths, hand sewed and turned, low and French heel, Columbia or Newport toe. One price for all. $1.85 for 3350 shoes for either men or ladies, high and low cut, at the manufacturers’ shoe sale, 717 Market street, near Third. * —_——— Recruit Camps Are Discarded. | The military authorities have decided to do away with the recruit camps at the Presidio. Henceforth new men will re- ceive their instruction in army tactics at the hands of the officers of their respec- tive companies. Burn! Burnt! A Gift! That's it: we sell you the pyrography machine and you do the rest. Great line of goods to burn. Artist Material De- artment, Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Mar- et street. 8 ————————— Chinese Bazaar and Social. Empress Victoria Lodge of the Daugh- ters of St. George will hold a Chinese ba- zaar ard social in the Red Men’s build- ing to-morrow night, which, the commit- tee In charge says, will be the first of the a select programme of entertainment and refreshments will be served during the :vnlng by: young ladies in Oriental cos- lume. leather regular $3.50 shoes for $1.85 a pair. | kind ever held in this city. There will be | rieridld ! 2 + POPULAR YOUNG PEOPLE WHO WERE MARRIED ON THANKSGIVING DAY. | & - which was their former home, and this | city. Mr. Smith is adjuster for the Lon-| don and Lancashire Insurance Company and ,is highly esteemed by his business associates. The news of the wedding will come as a surprise to the friends of the couple, as only a few were aware of their | intention to have an early wedding. The happy couple are spending their | honeymoon in the southern part of the | State and.will make San Francisco their home on their return. . . WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION :E’EASTS| Six Hundred Girls Sit Down to| Sumptucus Repast Served by Hospitable Hands. The members of the Young Women's Christian Assoclation enjoyed a: boun- | teous Thanksgiving feast yvesterday at| their lunch rooms, 116A Davis street. The repast was given in accordance ! with the custom of those connected with | the instituticn. Mofe than 600 girls sat | down to the feast. At the conclusion of the dinner a musical programme was performed by the Misses Grass, Ward, | Stowers, Mrs. Emily Webb Gilsey and | Mrs. Edwards. The ladies assisting in | receiving and serving the dinner were: Mesdames W. O. Gould, M. J. McDon: sld, A. R. Baidwin, S. P. Tuggle, N. J. Sadler, Wendel Easton, A. L. Baldwin, A. K. Baldwin, Mr. Sanborn, L. S. Van Winkle, L. 8. Andrews, V. S. Matthew, A. Keys, F. Meyhew, C. A. Morgan, J. 5. Frank, W. A. Martin, E. W. Franks, C. Harley, George Meyers, Mrs. Willlam | Gunn and the Misses Martin, Helen Vau kle, Wainwright, Meilon, Ella Atkin- M. Atkinson, I Jackson, E. Mau, son, E. Bothim and A. Sadler. ——————————— A Martyr to Love. George Herold, who was severely burned | about six months ago while rescuing his iwo young sons from the flames in their | home at 1219 York street, died yesterday | from disease to which the injuries he had | received contributed. An inquest has been waived. ADVERTISEMENTS. THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. Few People Know How Useful It Is in Preserving Health and Beauty. Nearly everybody knows that charcoal ; is the safest and most efficient disin: fectant and purifier in nature, but few realize 1ts value when taken into the| human system for the same cleansing pur- Dpose. Charcoal is a remedy that the more you take of it the bétter; it is not a drug at all, but simply abgorbs the gases and im- purities always present in the stomach and intestines and carries them out of the system. Charcoal sweetens the breath after smoking, drinking or after eating onions | and other odorous vegetables. Charcoal effectually clears and lmpro‘les the complexion, it whitens the teeth, and, further, acts as a natural and eminently safe cathartic. Jt absorbs the injurious gases which collect in the stomach and bowels; it dis- infects the mouth and throat from the poison of catarrh. \ All druggzists sell charcoal in one for! or another, but probably the best char- coul and the most for the money is in Stuart’s Absorbent. Lozenges. They are composed of the finest powdered Willow charcoal and other harmless antiseptics in tablet form, cr rather in the form of large, pleasant-tasting lozenges, the char- coal being mixed with honey. The daily use of these lozenges will soon tell ia a much improved condition of the generai health, better complexion, sweeter breath and purer blood, and the beauty of it is that no possible harm can resuit from their continued use, but, on the con- trary, great benefit. A Baffalo physician, in speaking of the benefits of charcoal, says: “I advise Stu- art’s Absorbent Lozenges to all patients suffering from gas in the stomach and bowels and to clear the complexion and purify the breath, mouth and throat; I olso believe the liver is greatly benefited by the daily use of them; they cost but 25 cents a box at drugstores, and although | down Tuesday. in some sense a patent preparation yet I believe 1 get more and better charcoal in Stuart’s Absorbent Lozenges than in any of the ordinary charcoal tablets.” SEEKING GOLD WITH MONITORS Hydraulicking on Solo- mon River Proposed by Miners. Winter Brings Activity to Mountain Sections of State. —_— Hydraulicking on the Solomon River next spring is proposed. Land has been secured along the river by Charles A. Giffen, who says he believes the Solomon River country will pay well as a hydrau- lic proposition. He has four claims on the river below Shovel Creek. Giffen says the gravel is from 20 to 25 feet deep. A ditch has been surveyed from Big Hurrah, ‘which will carry 4000 inches of water. The ditch will be six and a half miles long. Sfx monitors will be placed along the xiver, so says Mr. Giffen. He says that there are vast areas in Northwestern Alaska that will yield richly under the hydraulic method of mining. The mining conditions in Inyo County are reviewed by the Inyo Independent. A group of mines, it says, situated in Snows Canyon, has been purchased by the Gold- en Argus Company. A five-stamp mill is running. Snows Canyon is one of the old- est gold camps in the district, but it has never been fully developed owing to the difficulty of saving 'the values. Adjoin- ing the Golden Argus on the west John C. Cress has a veln which crops out in two claims. He has performed development work at several points and has run a five- stamp mill. The Morton property adjoin- ing the Golden Argus on the east has been purchased by S. R. Phail and H. Thur- man. The Jefferson mine, adjoining the Bluebell, has been leased by James Chris- ty. At Arondo, about ten miles from the old Reilly mine, reports the Independent, is one end of a vast porphyry.dike. The dike extends twenty miles_to Mountain Springs on the west. The ground is held by the Arondo Gold Mining Company. QUARTZ MILLS RUN. The Calaveras Prospect says that all the quartz mills in Calaveras County are running full time. A new company has taken charge of the Mack mine, in Tuolumne County. The mire will be worked after the water is pumped out of the shaft. The Bright Star group of mines, six-miles from Groveland, on the south bank of the Tuolumne River, has been sold to a company for $10,000 by Lawrence White. Machinery and supplies have been sent In to the Alto Dina mine, once known as the Kearsarge, which is on the top of Yankee Hill. The property was recently sold by M. T. Fill- more to A. W. Holmes of Detroit, Mich. The price paid for the Lulu and O. K. mines in the Dale mining district, which were recently sold, is reported to be $75,- 000. The mines are the oldest and deepest of any in the district, which is in San Bernardino County. There are several shafts down on the claims, the deepest go- ing 300 feet. A reduction plant with a dally capacity of thirty tons is proposed for the mines. Another recent sale of mining properties | in the south takes in the Blair group of mines in the Bisbee neighborhood. The price obtained is reported to be $200,000. Of the purchase price $75,000 was paid down and the remainder will be due in six months. The Redding Free Press says that the closing down of the Mountain Copper Company's works at Keswick is complete. Brickmasons, railroad hands, machinists and clerks have been dismissed. The Free Press says: Not only does Keswick suffer, but people living within a radius of many miles are suf- fering. The Texas mine, in Old Diggings (Colonel Woodrow, superintendent), closed About twenty men were em- the ore being \worked in the Keswick smeiter. Panter & Litsch had twelve men employed in their mine. That is closed and the men are out of employ- ment. The Holt & Gregg lime quarries and kiln near Kennet has also been compelled to close. Holt & Gregg were furnishing the smelter lime rock for flushing purposes. The Bakersfield Californian says the smelter to be established at Bakersfield will be of great value to the mining goun- try of which Bakersfield is the center. The smelter will be a 500-ton affair. Ex- tensive bodies of ore may now be opened up that have been considered unprofitable because they have been so far removed frcm reduction works. The company claims to have guarantees of ore from all the country adjacent to Bakersfield and from points in Arizona and as far north as Tuclumne County. The enterprise was originally intended solely for the opening up of the mining industry of Kern County. ploved there, According to the Redding Searchlight another company has been formed to op- crate on Salt Creek in the Shasta Moun- tain district. The properties acquired consist of six claims. The Placer Herald says that Oakland partles are putting up a mill at the Gay- lord mine near Auburn. MAY MINE OPALS. Calaveras County is taking considerable interest in an opal mine at Stockton Hi'l. Many years ago an opal lead in that vi- cinity was prospected by a company of miners They ran two tunnels of some depth and discovered opals, but the qual- ity was®not satisfactory. Recently gems have been found in the old workings that lapidaries say are good. The land is a lava formation and is quite soft, so that it can be worked with a pick althost as quickly as if blasting were resorted to. In working the mine, so says the Cala- veras Chronicle, no blasting timbering, pumping or hoisting would be required. T'he expense of operation would therefore be very small as compared with other mining. The Calaveras Chronicle calls the fact to mind that this opal mine, like the famous crystal mine at Chili Guich, has been known since the first Americans penetrated to what is now Calaveras County. Only one company has ever paid any attention to it. The paper says: Occaslonally a curiosity secker would go and pick over the old dump, but that was all. The crystal mine just mentioned shared a similar existence for many years, until J. 1. Burton, a mining man from Michigan, realizing the possibilities of this mine, put several men to work for a short time, with the result that one of the largest, most eolid and periect cry- stals in the world was found, valued at thou- sands of dollars. This crystal, since being on exhibition at' the Paris Exposition, is in the possesion of Tiffany & Co, of New York. Our mineral resources are not half known, much less developed. In the case of an opal or crystal mine it requires the coming of the man who knows something about that par- ticular kind of mining, the value of the min- eral itself, and one who can appreclate the varying indications as the research or work of development progresses. The final payment has been made on the bond taken by W. W. Worthing on the Rhetta mining claim, adjoining the Bay State mine in Amador County. ‘Wecrthing is the State. He represented the people back of the Bay State in bonding the property. HAn ore body has been tapped in the orn mine_in the Defender district. The Bunker Hill mine has also run into = large body of ore, so say the local pa- pers. : NORTH IS ACTIVE. The Yreka Journal says of operations in Siskiyou County: Humbug Creek and other streams are fur- nishing an abundance of water for ground sluicing and running _quartz mills. The Spangler Bros., atsmouth of Humbug, are kept busy in their hydraulic clalm, and the quartz mills of Dave McCook, W. H. Wilbur and others are running to fullest. capacity. The Theodore Willlams quartz mine on Hum- bug, recently sold to a New York cimpany, is to be worked on a large scale, and i has been purchased for the same. mine manager, B, A. Cardwell, e expects to also | manager of the Bay | Highest Award ‘Wherever Exhibited. B0k Has No Equal. Philadelphia Centennial, 1876. The World's Columbian Ex- position, Chicago, IlI., 1893. California Midwinter Inter- national Exposition, San Francisco, 1894, Cotton States an International Exposition, % Atlanta, Ga., 1885. Franklin Institute Medal, National Export Exposi- tion, Philadelphia, Pa., Paris Exposition, 1900. Pan - American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901 South Carolina Interstats and West Indian Exposi- tion, Charleston, 8. C., 1802 Richest Best Flavor. é | | | é | ADVERTISEMENTS. COMPLETE RECORD From 1857 to the Present Time, 1902, 45!11 Year. —_— The Products of BORDEN’S ONDENSED MILK CO. have led in quality. The continual yearly increase of our output dem- Our goods have always taken the HIGHEST AWARD wherever exhibited, besides receiving the patron- age of the most discriminating buyers. Our testimonials are always up-to-date and up-to-date buyers and users know that BORDEN’S EAGLE BRAND Condensed Milk is the very best in respect to richness, purity, quality and flavor. onstrates this beyond question. Prepared by BORDEN'S CONDENSED MILK (0, New York, Originators of Condensed Milk. ! § § | | | CHORCACHCS CROMCRCAONE KBORCRCY U. S. A have teams hauling coal to Yreka from the Herr ranch in a few days, as the cool weather now prevailing is drying up the roads rap- idly. River mining swill soon close down on the Lower Klamath, as the cold weather inter- feres and renders work dangerous, especially where large bowlders sometimes roll down into the deep cuts, when the ground freezes and thaws under heat of the noonday sun. Dan- ger of being flooded is also liable from the winter storms expected very soon to raise the river. The dredging company has a crew of men working to get the dam in that was washed out by the high water of Scott River, near Callahans. Several hundred feet were washed out before the river went down. The dam Was to turn the river into a channel that would not interfere with the working of the dredge, and must be repaired before work can be resumed. The Mining and Scientific Press has the following concerning the operations of the Tonopah Mining Company: The Tonopah Mining Company reports that only such ore has been taken out as was lo- cated in the line of development. This devel- opment work has produced as much first and second class ore as it has been possible (to- gether with what the lessees have offered for shipment) for the present transportation faclll- tles to move to the rallroad, and in addition to this quantity there has been placed on_the company’s dump 7000 tons of ore, graded as third class. From 500 assays taken daily this tonnage averuges $61 per ton. The company’s main working shaft is on the Mizpah claim, 200 feet distant from the ledge at the surface. It is a three-compartment shatt, 5x17 feet, and has been sunk 515 feet. It is proposed to con- tinue sinking this shaft to a dept feet. At the 500-foot level a station is being built. ~The Valley View shaft is near the center of the Silver Top claim and has been sunk 310 feet. At 340 feet it will encounter the crosscut mow being, run from the main working shaft at the 300-foot level. The Desert Queen shaft on the upper end of the claim of the same name is down 315 feet. At a depth of 414 feet it will be on a line with the 300 foot level of the main working shaft. All leases to operate the ground of the cof- pany have been terminated. The company it- self is the only one performing any mining operations upon the property. During the past four months the returns received from the smelters, after deducting freight and treat- ment charges, have amounted to $450,000, more than one-half of which amount was for lessees’ ore (taken out prior to explration of thelr leases December 31, 1901), out of which was deducted the 25 per cen. aiie the company, and the balance pald tessees. Employer Banquets Employes. The employes of a well known local publisher of souvenir goods, Edward H. Mitchell, were handsomely banqueted on | the cafe celebration of which the in the Call the era establish- Tuesday at building in of prosperity ment {s at present enjoying. Those present were Miss L. Raggio, Miss N. Henre, Miss A. Israel, Miss D. Jur- gens, Miss B. Israel, Edward H. Mitchell, W. W. Carter, F. A. Raynaud. J. D. Car- dinell, Charles Goot, Harry Hutchinson, ‘William Buchi, Frank Hancock, Harvey L. Christlance and William Meyer. ——e———— California Calendars for 1903. “Wild Flower,” ‘“Poppy,” “Violet,” “Poinsettia,” “Redwood,” “Coast Views, “Burnt Wood,” “Japanese” and ‘“Chi- nese’” calendars now ready for foreign and_domestic mail. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. . Libel Against the Fuller. Peter Dam and three other sailors filed a libel in the United States District Court yesterday against the barkentine Fuller 1w recover $23964 claimed to be due as wages. h of 1000 | BlG OIL TANKS BEING ERECTED Southern Pacific System Establishes New Fuel Service, Construc’ion of a Lisrge Tank at Narrow-Gauge Pier Begun. R i A 0 Oil as fuel for the railroad companies has come to stay. In their annual reports both the Southern Paclfic and the Santa Fe showed that they had saved thousands of doliars every year by using oil instead of coal. Within a short time the Southern Pa- cific Company will have a complete sys- tem of stations where oil can be fed to locomotives. For weeks gangs of men have been stationed at Benicia, Vallejo and Port Costa, constructing and erect- ing a number of tanks that wiil eventual- 1y contain oil that will be fed to the oil- burners. The work is about finished and by the time several other towns on the western division are furnished with the huge tanks the Southern Pacific Company will have a complete system of oil feed- ing stations. A gang comprising about fifteen men will scon commence the construction of a large oil tank near where the new nar- row gauge pier will be built and the same gang bas just finished building a number of smaller tanks in the southern part of the State for the company. Sacramento and Stockton are equipped | with oil tanks and one has just been fin- ished at Galt. Added to these are the others that have been built and mention- ed from time to time. The railroad officials state that the oil stations will not of a necessity be less than 100 miles apart on an average, and on the desert and other places that de- mend it the stations will not have to be less than 150 miles apart, so great is the capacity of the new tenders. ‘When oil burners are introduced it is figured that before 1904 the Southern Pa- cific Company will have eonsumed not less than 6,000,000 barrels of oil. Appraise Mrs. Lane’s Estate. The estate of the late Pauline C. Lane, widow of Dr. Levi Cooper Lane, has been appraised at $511,344 67. The report of the appraisers, which was filed yesterday, shows that she left $171,14966 worth of perscrnal property and realty in this eity and Los Angeles County worth $340,195 01. The Lane residence, located at Broadway and Scott street, which is included in the inventory, s the principal piece of realty, a value of $170,000 being placed upon it. APPY THOUGH ofILL A BRIDE Mrs, A. E. BanksSays Her Husband No Longer Loves Her. ‘UNH Asks a Divorce After Less ‘Than Six Months of Married Life. el G s Mrs. A. E. Banks, who was Miss Cora C. Hoag, daughter of a prominent farmer of Santa Clara County, was married to Alfred E. Banks at Sara- toga, Santa Cruz County, less than six menths ago. She is already tired' of mar- ried life and has filed a suit for divorce. She filled her complaint yesterday and asks that the court sever the bonds uniting her to Banks and grant her periission to resume her maiden name. Actcording to Mrs. Banks' complaint, her husband has violated his marriage vows and made her extremely unhappy by bestowing his affections upon another woman. Mrs. Banks claims that ever since the early days of this month she has suffered great agony because she then learned, she alleges, that the man she married less than half a year ago had given his affections *o a Hazel Wil- liams znd spent considerable time with Ler in a jodging-house on Ellis street. The marital infelicities of Raphaella Acosta Keener and her husband, Edward Kirby Keener, will never again furnish food for gossip for the numerous guests ol the various apartment and lodging- houses in which the Keefers have re- sided since their marriage two years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Keener will in the future wend their ways separately, for yester- day a decree of divorce signed by Judge Cook was filed at the office of the Coun- ty Clerk. The decree was granted to Mrs. Keener, Judge Cook having found that the various charges of cruelty made by her were true. The Limit. The last car has been opened for the excursion to Mexico December 10, the limit of 150 being nearly reached. It will be necessary to register early to sec a place in this delightful holiday outing. See lthe itinerary in booklet at 613 Market street. . ————— Sixth Anniversary Ball. Altahmos Tribe No. §7 of the Improved Order of Red Men will give its sixth an- niversary ball in Golden Gate Hall to- morrow evening. There will be a grand mareh, which will be started at half past 8 o’clock. CONSUMPTION The grim specter stalks through every walk of or poor, high or low, it afflicts its thousands every year. Simply be cause . of neglect. Neglect. Many give up hope at first, only going to the physician because it is a matter of form. IT CAN BE CURED. The Electro-Chemic Institute has proved its cu cases, even as far advanced as the third stage. Supplied with every facility, The Electro-Chemic S; sition to off er more hope. for cure than any other ph The Electro-Chemic X-Ray and Ozone Treatment WHY? The highest medical au- thorities state emphatical- ly that, in its early stages, ods of all cther authorities and is extended by methods of their own. There nre mnn{ to the time when they m knife. ‘RO - CHEMIS' Uterus and Appendages, ing the Electro-Chemic This wonde: ! new treatment, take to her bed, lkeeps her on the general heal tation in any case is free. cured in Je: eafne: cured perfectly by Electro - Chemistry. Cases of years’ standing in persons well advan - e oL ment have failed to even bemefit them. oy th In R Neni Zia magiecal, qnleklln)"e:-rel. No cutting nor burning and the patient is not detained in_cat sly, surely and and general infla) Sep:rlte RS mail is free. The ELEOzl'B Offi women in San Franeisco who are Jook, t take their lives in their hands A moodly proportion of these fectly and pafalesaly cured withont the LEC TRY cures Cancers, Tumors, mation of (he Ovaries and Tuben, Bnlarsement, inlessly and quickly ‘eatment are bullt -‘:d-ld strengthened for the patient to er feet. The treat < o - th and strength from the start of 16 & (& A Weparate apartment of the Institute hns b It would be of Stricture of all Tn men ndvanced in yenis oo Ao mation of the Urinary partments h-ve.bee‘ ,re-e ce hours 9 a. m. 0-CHEMIC INSTITUTE is l:c-ted under the terrifying ordeal of urei Mali; 'l‘hlekenlns “and Dis without eutting. ng it necessa cures her fe thi the efiects are men out of the surgeon’s e 1o il s at 118 Grant ave.. o life. Cruel, Simple re in many pecialist in Consumption is in a po- ysician or institute in the country. is scientific—it combines the meth- ng forward with drea: sufferers. if they but knew it, eoll.l-le per- een set aside for Ladies. Con: ng to consult the Electro-Chemie in years are cured after al ectro-Ch. try for men in the l-nmfu. . Consi daily. cor./Post st., San ~ Sy Rich older systems of treat- and Pil Fissure and Fistula are from business for & le day. ll:ly‘

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