The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 3, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1902. ADVERTISEMENTS. comp Illustrated Anno panion, once with $1 All the issues GIFT 1 GIFT 2. two weeks of 1993 — TheYouth's The Best Christmas Present for so _Little Money—$1.75 copies of the paper free. Christmas Present Offer. ’ To make a Christmas Gift of The Youth’s Com= send us the name and address of the person to whom you Wish to give the subscrip- tion, with $1.75 and the following coupon: CUT OUT 2ndsend this slip orthe name of this paper at subscription is received to the end of 1902, ® FREE, including the Beautiful Holiday Numbers. The Companion Calendar for 1993, lithographed in twelve colors and gold. Then The Youth’s Companion for the fifty- until January, l”l—nzl}s for $1.75. crs THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. anion MEN and women emi- nent in every walk of life will contribute to the 1903 volame of The Youth’s Companion. The contents of the 52 issues for 1903 will include SERIAL STORIES, eacha Book in itself, reflecting American Life in Home and Camp. SPECIAL ARTICLES con- tributed by Famous Men and Women. TIMELY EDITORIAL AR- TICLES on Important Public and Domestic Questions. SHORT STORIES by the most Popular of Living Story-Writers. SHORT NOTES on Cur- rent Events, Science and Natural History. AMUSING ANECDOTES, Items of Strange and Curious = Knowledge, Poems, etc. uncement for 1903 and sample .75 and you will receive : of The Companion from the time ADVERTISEMENTS. 'MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS (Legal Holid »ys). f THE ATTENTION OF THE | ELECTORS ©Of the City and County of San Fran- cisco is respectfully directed to Ordi- | nance No. 324 of the Board of Super- visors duly approved July 19, 1901, | providing that all days upon which | general mu: pal elections are held in San Francisco shall be holidays. PURSUANT THERETO, Public| notice is hereby given to the electors | of is City and County that the municipal elections to be held on De- cember 2d and 4th, 1902, for the| purpose of voting for or against the:‘ proposition to issue bonds for the ac- quisition of the Geary-street railroad | and certain amendments to the Char- ter of this City and County, will be LEGAL Holidays. E. E. SCHMITZ, Mayor. San Francisco, December 1, 1902. BITTERS CURES DVSPEPSIA. | Dr.Plerce's Electric Truss is s Marvel, Nothing like it. Best Retainer on earth and s eyenwine Cure for Rupture. | "\ World renowned. 27improvem'ts. | I ruptured investigate at énce. 1l or write for “Booxust No. 1.” < C0., 33 West 24th Street. Nsw Francisco, Cal. S bo Birect. Ban 3 BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters & A LKEAT RESTOKATIVE, INVIGUKA- b “ior end Nervine. The most wonderful apbrodisiac and Speclal Tonic tor the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Xidneys and Bladder. Sells on its own merits, 222 Market st.. S. ¥.—(Send for Circulars.) FREE TO THE DALY CALL READERS, BEGINNING .NEXT SUNDAY. The Newest Fad. Quite the Rage. ““CARTOONS IN COLOR” By Oscar Holliday Banghart, the re- nowned young New York artist. Free to Call Readers. Onec Each Week. Collect the Serics of Twelve Beautifal Carto as in Color. Extension of Frisco Line. SAN DIEGO, Dec. 2.—Further informa- tion in regard to the building of the Enid, San Diego and Pacific Raflroad from a point on the Rock Island in Oklahoma to the Pacific Coast explains that the pro- posed road is to be an extension of the Frisco system. A special dispatch says: *“The building of the Enid, San Diego and Pacific gives the Frisco a direct line to the Pacific, something that President Yoakum has long desired. mani line from St. Louis and Fort Worth. The route selected, it is claimed, will be in casy connection with the Mexican Cen- tral at El Paso.” It will be the | MAYOR SNYDER'S LARGE PLURALITY Los Angeles Winner Has Lead of Nearly Three Thousand. | Admits That He Owes His Victory to Republican Support: IR 5 L.CS ANGELES, Dec, 2.—Official returns show that Mayor M. P. Snyder’s plurality in the election yesterday over Pomeroy W. Powers, his Republican opponent, is 2014, When it is remembered that less than a month ago Los Angeles city gave Pardee a plurality of 2453 and some of the other candidates on the State ticket 4000 vlurality, it will be seen what a remark- abe victory Snyder has won. It was not a political victory and the Mayor is zmong the first to admit that he owes his clection to Republican votes. The result amazed the Republican organization, which up to Sunday was confident that Powers would be elected. Varlous causes contributed to the result, but the most important was the fact that Snyder ve- toed an ordinance legalizing a franchise “grab,” to which nine-tenths of the peo- ple were opposed, and, in his capacity of Councilman, Powers had voted for it. The only other Democrat elected is for- mer Mayor W. H. Workman, who is re- #cted City Treasurer by a plurality ven greater than Snyder’'s. His success was due to personal popularity and the act that his oppohent was not so well «nown. The Democrats elected three out )f nine Councilmen. Following is a lst »[ the successful candidates: yor, M. P. Snyder; Clerk, Harry Lelande; City Attorney, W. B. Mathews; Treasurer, W. 1. Workman; Auditor, E. E. Unger; Tax Col- lector, E. E. Johnsong Engineer, Harry Staf- ford; Street Superintendent, E. R. Werdin; Assessor, F. W. Wismer. Ward, O. McAleer . Skilling' (R.); Third, O. A. 3 Fourth, Theo. Summerland (R.)} Fifth, W. M. Bowen (R.); Sixth, J. P. Daven- port (R.); Seventh, E. Kern (D.); Eighth, R. A. Todd (D.); Ninth,”FT\V. Nofsiger. Thirteen amendments' to the city char- ter were adopted, which, if ratified by the Legislature, will give Los Angeles an opportunity of trying new ideas in muni- cipal government. Perhaps the most im- porlant are those which centralize the power in the city’s executive. Heretofore the powers which are now to be held by the Mayor were in the hands of the Council. Under the new order of things the Mayor will appoint boards to administer the affairs of the various clty departments. Civil service will apply to all city employes. Amendments were adopted providing for the initiative and referendum. McGahan, the Union Labor candidate, received 3204 votes yesterday. - - VOTE ON CONGRESSMEN. SACRAMENTO, Dec. Secretary of State Charles F. Curry to-night -an- nounced the official vote for Congressmen in all save one district—the Bighth—as certified to the Governor. The vote by dis- tricts is as follow: First Dis Thomas §. 810 N. Gillette (R.), 21,268 9,606, E. S| L. Goombs (R.), 21,181; 71; W. P. Fassett (P.), H. Metcalf (R.), ite (D.), 8574; M. W. . H. Montgomery (P.), Calvin ilkins (S.), s, 33 Fourth District—Edward J. Livernash (U. L. and D.), 16,146; Julius Kahn (R.), 16,005; Wil- ; (S5, 616; Joseph Howedi (P.), 69: trict—William J. Wynn (U. L. and K Bugene ¥. Loud (R.), 16,577; Jo- ph Lawrence (8.), Frank E. Tatton (P.), Needham (R.), 17,268; J. L. Cobb (S.), 815; McLachlan _(R.), n (D.), 8075; George ¥red F. Wheeler (P.), R - | Santa Clara County Contest. | SAN JOSE, Dec. 2—Emil G. Hirsch, a | defeated candidate at the late election | for Justice of the Peace of Santa Clara | Township, to-day filed a contest against | I. Herrington and J. G. Glendenning, the | successful nominees. The official returns | Herrington 704 votes, Glendenning Hirsch 68. Hirsch alleges that 635 | votes were counted and tallied for the and | successful candidates which were not | voted for them and votes cast for him were not counted. R S i Strife Over Assembly Seat. ! SANTA CRUZ, Dec. 2.—Harry C. Wan- zer to-day gave notice of a contest for A. D. Duffey’s seat in the Assembly, Wanzer (Republican) was defeated by five votes. His ground is that sixty-one ballots with distinguishing marks were illegally counted for Duffy. ——— Pardee’s Plurality Has Grown. SACRAMENTO, Dec. 2—The official vote for Governor in Humboldt County, | as received by Secretary of State Curry, | follows: Pardee, 347; Lane 2316, Brower 135, Kanousk 87. With every county heard from, Pardee's plurality over Lane is 3615. seal on the bottom proves it. RE " NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Agents, PENNYROYAL PiLLs o .k 3 o S ENGLIH oo ’ “‘OPEN UP!” SAID THE SAW TO THE BLACK-BOTTOMED SHOE. ‘‘ WHAT CUTE APOLOGY HAVE YOU GOT FOR AN INSOLE?”" ‘“ WHAT YANKEE OAK TREACHERY FOR AN OUTSOLE?” ‘‘ WHAT CHEAPENED FRAUD FOR A TOE CAP?” Ninety per cent. of $3.50 shoes have common Hemlock or other “Yankee Oak” soles, as our window tests demonstrate. Every Regal has the real Oak Sole of a $6.00 shoe, and the removable Such soles add a dollar to the wear, at no expense to you. C) Beld only in 45 Regal Btores, from New York to San Francies> and Londen. Also by miil. SAN FRANCISCO STORE, é S. W, Corner Stockton and Geary Streets, L | ea many of the visitors to the various A ] LUSCIOUS FRUIT AND ELOQUENCE DELIGHT CROWD AT CITRUS FAIR State Growers’ Association Visits Ferry Build-| ing and Enjoys Speeches on the Teem- ing Orchards of Northern California | { these most important orga DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It. To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp-Root, Will Do for YOU Every Reader of The Call May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Absolutely Free by Mail. It used to be considered that only uri- nary and bladder troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern sclence proves that nearly all diseases have their beginning in the disorder of ns. The kidneys filter and purify the blood— that is their work. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order you can understand how quickly your entire body is affected, and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or “feel badly,” b%‘ln taking the great kidney remedy, Dr. Kil- mer’s Swamp-Root, because as soon ag your kidneys are well they will help all the other organs to health. A trial will convince any one. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re- o sponsible for many kinds of @iseases, and et if_permitted to continue much suffering i with fatal results are sure to follow. ki Kidney trouble irritates the nerves, {LEl makes you dizzy, restless, sleepless and ) ey irritable. Makes you pass water often during the day and obliges you to get up PR, KILMER'S many times during the night. Unhealthy kidneys cause rheumatism, gravel, ca- SWAMP_ROOT tarrh of the bladder, pain or dull ache In the back, joints and muscles; makes your head ache and back ‘ache, causes indigestion, stomach and liver trouble; you get a sallow, yellow complexion; makes vou feel as though you had heart trouble; you may have plenty of ambi- tion, but no strength; get weak and waste away. The cure for these troubles is Dr. Kil- mer’s Swamp-Root, the world-famous kidney remedy. In taking Swamp-Root you afford natural help to nature, for Swamp-Root is the most perfect healer and gentle ald to the kidneys that is known to medical science. If there is any doubt in your mind as to your condition, take from your urine on rising about four ounces, place it in a glass or bottle and let it stand twenty- four hours. If on examination it is milky or cloudy, if there is a brickdust settling, or if small particles float about in it, your lttlldneys are in need of immediate atten- on. \ Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used in the leading hospitals. recommend- ed by physicians In their private prac- tice, and is taken by doctors themselves who have kidney ailments, because they recognize in it the greatest and most suc- cessful remedy for kidney, liver and blad- der troubles. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles at the drug stores everywhere. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad- dress, Binghamton, N. Y.. on every bottle. p EDITORIAL NOTE—You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful rem~ edy, Swamp-Root, sent absolutely free by mail; also a book telling all about Swamp- Root and containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial let- ters received from men and women who owe their good health, in fact, their very lives, to the great curative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing to Dr. Kil- mer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., be sure to say you read this generous offer in the San Franecisco Daily Cal Kidney, Liver and Bladder CURE. DIRECTIONS. May tako one, two or three teaspoonfuls beforeor after meals and at bedttme. Children lecs according to age. May commence with amail doses and increase to full dose or more, a8 the case would secm to require. This great remedy cures all Kidney. fiver, bladder and Uric Acid troubles and disorders dus to weals kidneys, such as catarrh of the bladder, gravel, rheuma~ tisme, lnmbago and ight's Dis- easo, which is the worss form of Xidney disease. It is pleasant to take. PREPARED ONLY BY DR. KILMER & CO. BINGHAMTON, N. Y. { Sola by all Druggists. STOCKTON ATTORNEY WHO DELIVERED AN ADDRESS ON THE PRO- DUCTS AND RESOURCES OF THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY BEFORE A LARGE GATHERING AT THE CITRUS FAIR LAST NIGHT. e HE Citrus Fair was all aglow last | Henry Newman in the form of Patrick Barry pears, grown in his back yard at night with natural bloom and ar- tificial light. The band played with vigor and the crowd, aug-! mented by the presence of the California’ State Fruit Growers' Associa+ 15 Vicksburg street, this city. Each pear weighs a pound, gnd New- man's reason for showing the great Barry pears is to demonstrate that any one who is desirous can grow the pear in San Francisco without cost or trouble. tion, was lively and appreciative. The good people attending the booths! Oregon Lake Is Disappearing. . EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 2—Sherifft Ford| REDDING, Dec. 2.—Silver Lake, in of Rochester, N. Y., is in El Paso and | Lake County,Or., Is either drying up or identifies Mason and Richardson, against | the water nking. At any rate the each of whom there are two indictments | lake is getting lower daily and people for alleged manufacturing of evidence in | living in the vicinity believe it is only a divorce cases at Rochester and Buffalo.| Guestion of a short time when the Richardson is said to have admitted to- | ters will have entirely disappeared. Over day that he was Jesse E. Hulbert, for-| Lhe lake each morning hangs a heavy fog merly an attorzey at Rochester.' | and whg{x it lifts the water is noticed to - | be considerably lower. SAN JOSE, Dec, 2.—The announcement was | made to-day that a sufficient number of votes | Fad been obtained to dissolve the California Cured Fruft Association. Sheriff Identifies Prisoners. SAN JOSE, Dec work on the ! Ratlway will announced that ratoga Electric January 2. | representing the counties of the northern part of the States were satisfled with and | justly ptoud of the admiration that was | bestowed upon their luscious products and | enthusiastic J. A. Filcher, secretary of th€ | State Boara of Trade, was all aglow and spoke as did others of the marvelous pos- sibilities and the achievements of Cali- fornia from Siskivou to San Diego. It was speech night at the fair and every county, or almost evéry county, repre- | sented at the ferry building was extolled | for its industry in the cultivation of citrus | and deciduous fruits. | FAIR AN EDUCATOR. Filcher said, and he was applauded ! when he said~it, that the fair was a great educational institution fbr the good reason that these of the country and those of the metropolis of the great Pacific Coast were enabled to learn of the fruit growing in- dustry and see for themselves what each county was doing for the name and the fame of the State throughout the uni- verse. Again Filcher made glad and proud the hearts of his hearers, most all interested in the advancement of northern develop- ment, when. he proudly looked upon the shelves of great oranges that the north | produced one month, yea, and even six weeks earlier than the south. It was no new news, but all the same it sounded on the ear like an old song That never grows old or wearisome. SAN JOAQUIN CITRUS FRUIT. Speaking for San Joaquin, W. W. Mid- dlecoff, the well-known attorney of Stcckton, made a plea devoid of legal phraseology but pregnant with common- sense Information, which must have been carried away by native and stranger alike, and to the advantage of both. He dilated on the prolific growth of the citrus fruit in the rich county, and prophesied that that particular portion of the State would still thrive, aye, and even excel its present phenomenal pros- Gowns on “his? present. If you avoid all the crowds and last few days before the We suggest a dressin house. goods doubly interesting. and $9.00. perity. San Joaquin County, with its If ¢loth of fh almond and walnut and chestniy¢ and xtra | grape, and its citrus possibilities ar\y de- i dlot qt exira Cavy. ciduous fruit, would, he ventured to pre- dict, grow to a still wider range. Through | the abundance.and the prosperity ac- | cruing from the grape and the deciduous fruit the county had scarcely gone into the cultivation of the citrus fruit, the people being satisfied, he sald, with their present successful productions. Attorney Middlecoff, as an example, spoke of the profits made by the grower | of the grape, and in going over figures o back up his assertions, stated that one grape grower of the county took no less than 1400 crates of Tokay grapes off 2 acres, which netted the fortunate grower nearly 9 cents a crate, net. FRESNO’S BIG TRADE. Dr. Sherman spoke for Fresno, and gave examples of the raisin industry and { ot the many carloads shipped from there to every part of the United States and | to almost every country in the world. Congressman Daniels upheld the boom- ing industry of Tulare County, and E. W. Maslin, supported by Robert Hector, told of Placer County and its unlimited wealth in mines, in timber and in fruit. He said that ovef 2000 carloads of de- ciduous fruits had been shipped from there this season. Harry Brewster White had charge of the exhibts for last evening, and conduct- $10.00 extensive ever shown here. appreciate. displays. In the afternoon some hundreds of public school children visited the Citrus Fair and with longing eyes the young- sters took in the great and beautiful dis- piay. There was a band which discours- .ed all descriptions of music and to which the children romped and capered. There were several additions to the ex- hibits during the day, and one of thal most noteworthy was brought in by Dressing _ Christmas is just three weeks off-- it’s time you were beginning to figure handsome yet sensible gift. It affords him comfort on those evenings and Sundays when he lounges about the Our dressing gowns are made by us and sold direct to you at a saving of the middleman’s profit. This, together with our immense stock, make the Dressing gowns of soft eiderdown, all woel flannel, in gray, tan, brown, navy and garnet, in harmonious stripes and figures; prices $8.50;. $5.00, $6.00, $7.50 Dressing gowns, of which we show a picture sketched from life, in double faced back forming trimmings for collar, cuffs and pockets, extra length, colors gray, tan, brown; usual price $15.00; our price We also carry a large assortment of Smoking Jackets which for variety’ of pat- terns, scope of colors, assortment of ma- terials and style of garments is the most Our general assortment of materials is golf cloth, tricot, corduroy, velveteen and matelasse; colors brown, blue, green, gar- net, oxford, tan, navy, olive, black and mixtures; prices $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10, 512, $13.50 and $15. Buy him a sensible gift—one he will Out-of-fown orders fi/led— write us. - SNWO00D 5(0 718 Market Street buy now you bustle of the twenty-fifth. gown as a quality, plaid

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