The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 18, 1903, Page 27

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL; SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 1903. RTISEMENTS. e T B. KATSCHINSKI FRILALELFHIA SHOE GO, 0 Tilk ’.‘?_EEI, SAl FRANCISC W INING L BUILDING. 2 U RUSSIR ANGWERS s KIDNEY s LIVER CURES DVSPEPSIA Druge do pot scre Cal e aend 1 B our oo wrins vo-dey Tape Pierce Electric Ce., 33 West 24t Btreet, Now York or 206 P et & Gan Francisce, Cal NAYHOYAL PiLLs 1 T I H BT Eh e ) & & Danrerme Subsiimiions ani falis | & wampe tor Py . Testimontals A¥ Torm Mol 16,058 Totncsins SAL% s s s Sadtese Ganare; PUL 1o £3° azten tis vaper » THE WEEKLY CALL $1 per Year. | [ - soles, She A R. ' Sizes . Ladies’ Patent Leathers R1.85 ¥ ta S N S rok sizes in B. KATSCHINSKI, iladelphia Shoe Co. rd St., San Francisco MARVEL S2R55"C D e new Vaginal Syringe. | ection ”f’,‘%fif\m' | | | BRITISH NOTE Resents England’s Con- tention on Sugar Convention S ST Declines Further Exchange of Views Until Com- mission Acts issia has November cor 1, any furth comimission n in Mrs ied from wom a sev- entions hal 4 inate Sentences. George o and Willlam Given Indeter CHICAGO. Jan ‘Captair 3 aptain » Chet- stay was granted to higher court. In the men will remain in eal 1o a ADVERTISEMENTS. WORTH KNOWING 2 ¢ caution to ¢ possible, not &0 " moment, but wh neglected. ¥ is so safe, reliable p a cold or obstinate t's Catarrh Tablets. f blood root contained in th the red gum of the ems to put the mucous hrow off t »nchitis and con: taken internally they seem to circulation place the fon of health which re- s off the germs of dis- e germs of mption, and erfect health rarely catches « 4 does throws it off in a day two, but, where the cold hangs on, . nostrils, irritating the | ¢ a persistent, annoying « it that the system for to throw off the e the trouble; a > is necessary, and this is e use of some harml antiseptic like Stua r children and adults. =ell these tablets at 50 cents pac wes and cheap cough syrups, but Stu- ri's Catarrh Tablets contain antiseptic ually cure colds, ca- lung troubles, while fact that cough drops are largely composed of imilar drugs that ie that many popular liquid 1 tonics for catarrh depend v contain, which gives a timulation of no real y trouble, catarrhal or other- Famous the ' World Over—Fully Matured. Sold Evergtwhere. - breaks up Grip and COLDS HEMORRHOIDS “THE ONLY WAY.” IT IS WORSE THAN USELESS For any case of Fies fo be cut Or g0 1o & hospital, take chloroform or lie fn bed for weeks under opfates, when nearly 6,000 men and women have been cured without pain or detention from labor, by this treatment, which must be given at the office. Many of these cases were from 20 to 40 years standing. Treatment absolutely certain. Names furnished for investigation. No nostrum proposition. For garticulars cull on oc write THOS. J ., Room 81, Columbian Bidg., #t., San Francisee v | particulars. ose, mouth and throat | which are also palatable | 1 age, higher in price than | A ER, 16 mtl PASSES BILL - CREATING NEW Measure Large Majority. | Substitute Adopted Differs ! Materially From the Senate’s Ideas. 3 | Proposed Portfolio Embraces Juris- diction Over Immigration and Includes a Bureau -of Manufactures. e WASHINGTON, Jar At the end of | a struggle which prolonged the day’s se sion until after § o'clock the House pa the substitute for the Senate bill to e | tablish a Department of Commerce and | The vote stood | eans and twen | tor the bill 1 committee of the whole the Demo- crats and a sprinkling of Republicans, led by Corliss, Republican, of Michigan, struck oug the portion of the bill provid- ing for a bureau of insurance. By a piece of parliamentary strategy Hepburn, Republican, of Towa, chairman of the In- terstate Commerce Commission, sought to have this provision restored, but the op- position The Democrats then attempted to recom- mit the bill, with instructions to report { back a separate bill for the creation of a | Department of Labor, but the motion was st. The only other substantial amend- ment was one to authorize the President 37 to 40. All the Repub- -nine Democrats voted to transfer the Interstate Commerce Com- | | mission to the new department. The substitute as passed by the House differs from the Senate bill in fmportant 1t leaves the life-saving ser- | vice, the marine hospital service, the steamboat inspection service, the bureau of navigation and the shipping commis- sloners under the control of the Treasury | Department, but authorizes the President | in his discretion to transfer other bureaus | for the colfection of statistics and the In | terstate Commerce Commission to | new department. It places under the con- [ trol of the new department the national | bureau of standards, the coast and geo- | survey, the bureau of statistics, the bureau, the bureau of foreign com- nd the bureau of immigration, in- jurisdiction over Chinese immi- n. and creates the bureau of manu- factures and corporations. | _The following Democrats voted with the Republicans for the bill: Brantley of Louisiana, Breazeale of Loulsiana, Coney of Massachusetts, Feely of Illinois, Flem- ing of Georgia, Glass of Virginia, Gordon of Ohjo, Griffith of Indiana, Johnson of h Carolina, Lamb of Virginia, Liv- ton of Georgla, Lloyd of Missourl, ) ndrews of Illinois, McClellan of New ork. McCulloch of Arkansas, Mahoney of Illinois, Maynard of Virginia, Mickey of Tilinois, Moon of Tennessce, Nappen of Massachusetts, Padgett of Tennessee, Patterson of Tennessee, Robertson of Louisiana, Ryan of New York, Small of North Carolina, Sulzer of New York, | Thomas of North Carolina, Wiley of Ala- bama and Williams of Illinofs. PLANS QUICK SERVICE TO YOSEMITE VALLEY Indiana Corporation Desires Fran- chise From the Tuolumne Board of Supervisors. ORA, Jan. 17.—Herschel F. La- motte, representing an Indiana company, filed a petition to-day with the Tuolumne County Board of Supervisors asking for a franchise to conduct and operate an electric railway system between Chinese Station, on the Sierra Raflway line, and | the western boundary of the Yosemite National Park. The route surveyed for the proposed rallway closely follows the course of the Lig Oak Flat stage road to the park lim- from which point the heart of the valley could be reached in a few hours® ride by vehicle. The survey for the pro- posed raillway was completed some | months ago, and many rights of way | through private lands have been acquired by the compan, Y e Czech Obstructionists Capitulate. VIENNA, Jan. 17.—After a continuous session of the Reichsrath since 10 o’clock yesterday morning the Czech obstruction ended at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. An urgency motion to proceed with the im- mediate reading of the budget was de- feated by 3 to 72 votes and the House proceeded with the regular business, s b e Murderer Dies a Suicide. CHICAGO, Jan. 17.—Eugene Conlon, who last night in a fit of jealousy shot and killed Miss Jennie Dwyer, painfully wounded her escort, Frank Fay Merritt, and then shot himself, died in the hospl. tal at 7 o’clock this morning. ————— . | NEW TRUST THREATENS | CONTROL OF TOY TRADE Thirty Manufactories With Annual Output of 87,000,000 Value Form Combination. Advices from New York convey the in- formation that the octopus has droppea steel ralls, gum shoes and bicycles long enough to fasten its long tentacles about the Chirstmas tree. It has already reached to the toes of the little stock- ings that are hung from the mantelpiece as receptacles for Christmas sweet. meats. From the “candy trust” Santa Claus is now brought face to face with a “toy trust.”” The flaxen-haired doll that gazes down from the topmost bough of the Christmas tree upon the radiant face of the little tot who has been wait- ing for it must wear the trust tag. Hobby horses, wagons, carts and ‘‘choo. choo cars” are all to be gobbled up in the capacious maw of the new octopus. Details of the big consolidation, wired from New York, disclose agreements for combining thirty toy manufactories, which turn out % per cent of all the toys sold in this country, the value of which amounts to about $7,000,000 annually. In the plans for eliminating compeution it is reported that all the hobby horses will be made in one factory, all the dolls in another and the mechanical toys in another. A few years ago the bacteriologists ad- vised us to boil the toys. Sterilizing them detracted much from thelr beauty and usefulness. Now we are Informed that they are to be controlled by a trust. The bewhiskered jack-in-the-box and the sad-eyed sheepie With wheels on its feet are in the cold and clammy grip of the octopus. But it is too late for the *benevolent purpose” of this consolidation to cast a gloom over the coming Christmas cheer. By the time the next Christmas comes around the “toy trust” may have been smashed into smithereens.—Chicago Record-Herald. - -~ DEPARTMENT | House Gives Commerce | | stood firm and he was overcome. ! the | By been phenomenal. our watchword | RS T 7 1B The % | Up-to-the-Minute i | Store Cordes Furniture Co. ysces | 245-259 Geary Street _ &md~ THE DAYS OF 49 .~ - Times Have Changed Housekeeping methods of only twenty years ago are old-fashioned now. Just the same with store keeping. Last year’s methods are behind the times to-day. the hearts of the people bv i We have won a place in Keeping a day ahead of the times. anticipating your wants. Giving You a better value than you expected Not only serving you with the best selected from the leading factories of the world, but by placing these goods within your reach by our policy of liberal credit. Our success has 1 We can attribute it to but three things: square dealing, best of goods and ‘ YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD. Which do you favor, the methods of to-day, or the days of '49? DON’T FORGET THE MOTHER GOOSE CONTEST B On the Square! VAT RESERVOIRS 1N THE PROJEGT Bay Cities Water Com- pany Makes Large Purchases. SAN JOSE, Jan. Deeds to large pur- chases of real estate by the Bay Clties Water Company, which i on big developments at C ten miles south of here, have been placed on record in the County Recorder’s office. These, with other sales already made and the immense amount of work being done, would indicate that the Bay Cities people intend to become active competi- tors in the water market of Santa Clara, San Mateo and San Francisco counties. Probably half a million dollars has al- ready been expended in acquiring land for watersheds and reservoirs, and thousands of dollars are being expended in sinking wells and building flumes at Coyote. The latest acquisition of the Bay Cities apany is the purchase of the Fiacro Fisher ranch, near Coyote. It contains 516 acres of the Laguna Seca ranch, right in the water belt, and the price could not have been less than $35,000 or $40,000. It was first conveyed to B. G. Wheeler, who bas had an option on the property for g vear, and a second deed transferred it to the Bay Citles Company. It includes the Laguna Seca, a sort of lake, which is to be transformed into a big reservoir. Colonel Wheeler has also filed an agree- ment for the purchase of the entire Gilroy Hot Springs property at a cost of $30,000. The hotel property contains 400 acres. A sale of the bulldings and other property on the land is also provided for. Options have been secured on the blg Webber ranch and other pleces of property, and the purchase of the Fisher ranch and the agreement to sell the Gllroy Hot Springs place give Wheeler and the Bay Citles people a watershed surrounding the Coy- ote and some excellent sites for reser- voirs, The plan of the company is to dam the Coyote Creek near Covote and turn the flood waters into a big reservoir. Be- sides this wells are being sunk to pump water from the natural underground res- ervoir in that vicinity. Further than this the company has not yet disclosed its in- tentions. e RISTORI’S TROUBLES IN PLAYING MEDEA The first item on the long roll of Buro- pean triumphs is “Paris, 1853,” when Ade- Jaide Ristorl ¢reated Medea. The part had been refused by Rachel, and the Itallan actress, out of delicacy toward her great French sister artist, declined to undertake it. Legouve, nothing daunted, sent her the MS., but she would not even read it, so re- pugnant to her was the scene in which Medea kills her children. He assured her that the action need not take place before the footMghts; but she remained inflexible, until one day, when her hair was being dressed, she took up the MS. and could not put it down. She sent for Legouve and expressed her readiness to undertake Medea. The costumes were designed by Ary Scheffer, who himself on the even- ing of the performance arranged the folds of Medea's mantle, and the play was a triumphant success. The children were killed on the stage, and the process was always a trouble- some one. First one would try to run off the stage; then another would pull his mother's mantle to make her go too; a third was frightened at the people and tried to hide; a fourth was afrald to come down the “‘practicable” hill; but the cli- max was reached when a child, who was already slain, got up again and ran roar- ing into the slips, to the no small delight of the audience.—N. Y, Times, a fortune in a few month that she got a bargain i her leases. As a sampl ness she leased one for | which there are several she became thoroughly posted on the present crop. Feeling confident that pecans would eccmmand a good price, she set to work n t Girl Corners the Nut Market. Bernice Bardine, a pretty Texas girl, who Is yet under 2 years of age, has dis- piayed judgment and business acumen of It is know 2 high order. Last vear Miss Bardine and her brother, younger than herself, made a little money gathering pecans. Since then she has been studying the business and laying plans for future operations. During the last summer she carried on some weeks ago and quietly leased every pecan grove and forest of any value in the Colorado Valley. When buyers ap- peared, startling the ranchers by offering to engage pecans at 7% cents per pound, those who make a business of gathering will yield twenty bushel of pecans. At a low e 8 P from this single transaction will fal t | tle short of $000.—Chicago Inter Ocean, ————— the puts were astounded to discover that | Miss Alice Rigg has been for s a girl had cornered the crop so far | An engraver of tombstones in the shop of as this particular region is concerned. A | her father at Windsor, Canada. Miss little investigation showed that this en-| Rigg has become an expert in her strangs ergetic woman is in a fair way to make | occupation. an extensive correspondence, not only LR with mercantile establishments in various citles that handled pecans, but with re- liable people who reside in regions where the toothsome nut grows. In this way Electricity Has Many Proven 'Advaniages Over O!der Methods in the Treatment of Chronic Diseases. The ease of application and the cure of disease with- out operation give electricity a decided advantage over older drugging methods. The rapid development of this powerful agent has given to the physician who has kept abreast with the times immense success everywhere; not alone in San Francisco but in every center in both the old and the new world, electricity has come to be an unfailing source of relief to the invalid public. The Electro-Chemic Specialists, first to grasp the immense possibilities of elec- tricity in medical practice, have more th:n kept abreast with its development in every quarter. Their combining the use of electricity and chemistry in the powerful Elec- tro-Chemic X-Ray and current gives to them success in the treatment of many patients who have failed of benefit in other hands. The apnvlicat on of electricity to secure its full benefit must be in the hands of Specialists who have made a thorough study of its uses. There are thou- sands of physicians who have taken up the electrical idea who have as yet failed to secure its best results. To properly apply electrical treatment tions as the Electro-Chemic Institute have a decided advantage. place it means the investment of large sums to secure perfect equipm the second place it means that its practice must be confined totally to : practice. There must be many cases for this line of work to allow of the proper experience. The physician who treats one cancer case in & practice cannot hope to be as successful as he who treats many. It is for this reason that The Electro-Chemic Institute was brought into existence. It was founded with the idea that patients would receive better treatment at a nominal cost than through other sources. It was for this reason that in r ing a large number of patients that it came to make its announcements in the public press. Practically upon the same lines as a sanitarium. It should be un- derstood that the Electro-Chemic specialists are men who 1 y perience in general practice. Each specialist showing some they find a chance to gain the fullest development upon their treating mgny cases each day they must become adepts in that par ease. That the Electro-Chemic Institute has been successful in the treatment of many diseases supposed heretofore to have been incurable has been proven beyor t. Such malignant diseases as cancer and consumption have been et tism, failing of relief through drugs, has been brought to bay locomotor ataxia have been mastered. Tumors have been abso 7 treatment of the special diseases of men and women many gratifying s h?vetbeen achieved. Ample proof of these facts can be had by calling stitute. The Electro-Chemic X-Ray in the diagnosis of disease has also bee: n impors tant factor. Intricate diseases, the cause of which has puzzled the best phyvai- y results cians_have been accurately located. At the Electro-Chemic Institute ea are obtained in treatment because the seat of the diseas immediately attacked by the permeating Electro-Chemic Current. If your physician is in doubt as to your disease you should consult the Electro-Chemic Specialists. THE Wfl INSTITUTE MAKES A SPECIALTY OF THE CURE, WITHOUT OPERATION, OF CANCER, CO: , DEAFNESS, CATARRE, NEURASTHENIA AND NERVOUS DISEASES, ASTHMA, PAR- ALYSIS AND LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA, SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES, REEUMA' DIS- BASES OF AND WOMEN. MEN 3 If you are affiicted with any one of these diseases you should go to this modern institute of healins. recelve consultation from men of years of experience in the practice of medicine. You will be able to s« own eyes the tacilities of the Institute for the application of Electro-Chemic tréatment. You will be able t yourself whether or not this method of treatment is practical. You may learn of the cure of many others upon simi jar lines that they would treat you. THE BLE! ES Al : INCURABLE ES, N IT O YOU “FPREE TREATMENT.” It gives you the services of specialists at a less cost than you can obtain equal services for elsewhere. Will you go to-day to them? A special department is maintained for the treatment of out-of-town patients unable to come torthe cily; ful consultation i{s givén through the mails, and the case may be handled as successfully as if you were there in person. A special patented Electro-Chemic apparatus is given to the patients for their use while under treatment. Its results have been especially gratifying, and throughout the coast Electro-Chemic influence is being felt everywhere. If vou will write to-day your case will be given as careful consideration as if you had applied to the Institute in person. You will secure the services of physicians whom you cannot find outside of the larger centers. Office hours Electro-Chemic Institute are from 9 a. m. td 5&. m. and 7 to 8 p. m. daily. Sundays, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Separate departments are tained for the accommodation of ladies and gentlemen. THE LEcThmfiic EMIG lNS’"'I‘ 'I' 118 Grant Ave., Cor. Past St., SAN FRANCISCO4

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