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18 THE SAN FTFANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1903. ADVERTISEMENTS. HOW A HYPNOTIST MADE A FORTUNE. The Secret Methods by Which Dr. X. La Motte' Sage, the Greatest Hypnotic Scientist of the Age, Created | a Tremendous Sensation. He Firmly Believes Hypnotism a Public Benefit. Has Donated $10,000 Toward the Free Distribution of a Handsomely Illustrated Book Containing His Views and Suggestions on How to | Acquire This Mysterious Power and Use It in | Business, in Society and in the Home. Motte Sage made a fortune He probably knows t the subject than any living y different otisn rsonal etc., might e globe are liv wonderful power s to be de cquire hyp various uses ong the yna which book velop people | carry out in hence or not PERSONAL MENTION. Macdu contractor of ant of Colusa, ey of Stockton, hotel man attorney the Mexico, at are ap Gol gistered anied by Jack -d yesterday re registered at the United States naval n steamship ered at the ige of the 3 4 ye is T and his on two the arrived steamship Occldental. r & Co. 3 ¥ on the registered at the THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. Few People Know How Useful ItIs in Preserving Health and Beauty. Neai 1e th 1 y everybody knows that charcoal e safest and most efficient disinfe and purifier in . but few rea when taken into the human r the same cleansing purpose Charcoal is a remedy that the more you take of it the better; it is not a drug at all, but simply absorbs 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 improves the complexion, it whitens the teeth and, further acts as a natural and eminently safe cathartic. It absorbs the injurious gases which collect in the stomach and bowels; it dis. infects the mouth and throat from the poison of catarrh. All druggists eell charcoal in one form another, but probably the best char- al, 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 ablet form, or, rather, in the form of arge, pleasant fasting lozenges, the chag- coal being mixed with honey The daily use of these lozenges will soon tell in a much improved condition of the general 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 Buffalo L-hulcluL 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 also believe the lver is greatly benefited iy the daily use of them. They cost but 2% cents a box at drug stores, and, al- though in some sense & patent prepara- tion, yet 1 believe I get more and better charcoal in Stuart's Absorbent Lozenges iu any of the ordinary charcoal tab- . tha: late ile the Special Edition Lasts a Copy of This Remarkable Book Will Be Sent Free to Any Interested Person. of | prom- | den | | tific tests how to pfevent people from influencing you; hypnotic power more fascinating than beauty; the use of hyp- notism in the development of the men- tal facultie: controlling children; re-i moving mestic troubles, etc. The college which Dr. Sage has founded proposes to give away $10,000 worth of the above books absolutely | 1 who is in earnest can get a rely by writing for it. This book | v illustrated by the finest{ i-tone engravings, It tells you how | the marvelous power of hypnotism has | been used to cast a secret mystic spell | ver people without their knowledge | i how they have been for months, | some cases even years, obeying will of another. It gives you the secret of the development of what Senator Ch ey M. Depew calls the money-making microbe. Don’t think | because you lack a fine education and | are working for a small salary that you cannot better your condition; do not think because you are now success-| ful in life’ that you cannot be] wore successful Dr. Sage's book | been read and his methods re to-day being wused by many of the richest men in the world. They | know the value of personal influence, of hypnotic power. you are interested write to-day to the New York Institute of Science, Dept. 117T, Rochester, New and a copy. of Dr. Sage's book will be sent you by retutn mail abso- lutely free. This is a rare opportunity to learn the uses and possibilities of the | most wonderful, marvelous and mys- | terious power known to man. The book | is enthusiastically indorsed by the most prominent business men, ministers of the gospel, lawyers and doctors. It should be in every home; it should be d by every man and woman in this | untry ‘who wants to better his condi- on in life, who wants to achieve greater | =] d the ro; financial success, win friends, gratify his | | tions and get out of life the pleas- es«and happiness which the Creator in- tended he should enjoy l CHILOREN TAKEN FROM WADLEIGHS Pandemonium broke loose in Judge Cof- fey's court yesterday when the Made an order giving into the custod of M. J. White, secretary of the Soclet for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil-| dren, the five youngsters of John and Irene Wadleigh, professional mendicants, | who have traveled from Maine to Cali- fornia .on their ability to tell a plausible | story of suffering humanity and the be g~ ging and thieving qualities of their chil- dren, none of vhom is more than 16 of age The Wadleighs, root and branch, wera | in the court when the decision was ren- | dered. Havrdly had the words consigning little ones to the care of White been | uttered when, with one accord, fathcr, mogher and children rose to their feet | and rushed toward the Judge. “You have | no right to take my children from et shrieked the mother, endeavoring to reach the bench on which sat the Judge. them back to m They are mine. to take them from me.” was seized by White and “Bailiff | Costello and restrained from casting her- | self upon the Judge. In the meantime | the children were running about the Court | vears “Give | 1 defy he courtroom, shrieking and yelling and shouting promises of good behavior if the | Judge would only allow them to remain | | with their mother. The father then join- | ed in the mad race about the courtroom | | i added his voice to theirs, alternately | hurling invectives at the Court and defy- ing him to remove the children from his The scene lasted for several min- and the Wadlelgh family was only eted through the combined efforts of Deputy County Clerk Boyle, Bailiff Cos- tello, M. J. White, Police Officer Scott, who was a witneds in the guardianship | | proceedings, and Special Officer H. Mc- Murray of the society. When quiet oncel more reigned the Court repeated the order and the children were taken from the arms of their parents and sent into an adjoining room, from which they were removed later by Secrgtary White. The case of the Wadleighs has attracted a great deal of attention because of the | character of the parents. They have been known for years, but no attempt was | | ever made to stop them In their career of beggary and thievery until Secretary | White arrested the children a few days ago ‘as the entire family was about to leave this city for Oregon. He took | charge of the children, but they escaped from him the nmext day, and though a | vigorous search was made for them no trace was found, and their whereabouts | was a mystery until they appeared in Coffey’s court yesterday. The case was called at noon, and much to the surprise of White, the couple and their offspring appeared prepared to show that they are fully capable of taking care of their own. For several hours they listened to testi- mony offered by the people connected with the Society for the Preventidn of Cruelty to Children, the Associated Char- itles and the San Francisco Benevolent Society, proving the allegations in White's petition for letters of guardianship. It was shown that Wadleigh had a de- cided hatred for work, and that Mrs. Wadleigh, by representing herself as the mother of a large family in need of as- sistance, had worked upon the feelings of a number of charitably inclined peo- ple. Letters from heads of charitable or- ganizations in various towns throughout the country were read in evidence, the writers denouncing the Wadleighs as im- postors. It was shown also that the chil- dren were poorly clad, notwithstanding the successful begging trips of their mother, and that the young boys of the family frequented the streets late at night and were not above stealing anything they could with safety lay their hands upon. One of the boys, John, the eldest, is at present an inmate of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, where he was sent after being convicted of the charge of assisting in the robbery of a boy named Frank Jacobs in Golden Gage Park. 1 free so long as the special edition lasts. ! | | | 3 | to their apartments, SITES FOR NEW CAPITOL SHOWN TO LAWMAKERS Enthusiastic Garden City Residents Entertain the Visitors and Explain Their Plans. | | 2 = e MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE IN SESSION AT SACRAMENTO, WHO HAVE TAKEN A PROMINENT PART IN THE DEBATES UPON PROPOSED LAWS FOR THE STATE. . < b AN JOSE, Feb. 7.—After a session at the banquet board that lasted until nearly 4 o'clock this morn- | ing the legislators who are here | to look into San Jose's suitability as a location for the State capital retired fully satisfied that in genergus hospitality at least the Gar- den City met every requirement. The banquet developed a hero. Frank | D. Ryan was the one Sacramentan who came down with the lawmaking people to raise a voice in defense of his home city. Before nearly 300 San Jose rooters, including the visiting legislators, T dents of the town and legislative taches, he arose and spoke of the man merits of the present capital. He advised the Jadies of San Jose not to work for the removal of the State House, as the men of thelr ity would never get home nights if the Legislature met there. He said that it San Jose would give Sacramento its Normal School the latter city would glad- 1y give the State House in return. Any- | way, Ryan said, it was not good to turn loose where there was a | a Legislature Normal Scheol. Speaking seriousiy, he said a fair fight should be made and that no remarks should be uttered about mosquitoes, bad water or bad climate in Sacramento. The town was all right in every respect. As far as climate was concerned, there was not a spot in California that was not suitahle on that score for a capital. Ryan smiled when the rain began to fall in the ADVERTISEMENTS. Eczema How it reddens the skin, ltches, oozes, drles and scales! Some people call it tetter, milk crust or salt rheum. The suffering from. it {s sometimes in- tense; local applications are resorted to— they mitigate, but cannot cure. It proceeds from humors inherited or acquired and persists until thess have been removed. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Positively removes them, has radically and permanently cured the worst cases, and is without an equal for all cutaneous eruptions. HOOD'S PILLS are the best cathartie. Price 25c. + COX SEED CO. 411, 413 and 415 Sansome St., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Largest Assortment of Seeds on the Coast. Alfalfa, Clover, Kentucky Blue Grass, Australian Rye Grass, Beet, Garden and Flower Seeds, Ornamental Trees, Roses, Fruit Trees and SmallFruit Trees. Bend for 1903 Annual Catalog, Beautifully lllustrated, Free by Mail, FOR BARBERS, BA- BRUSHES &2 i o houses, billiard tables, bookbinders, bre: candy-J rs, canne dyers, ko..;fl mills, toundsies, hundrlutm‘ ‘aper: ngers, printers, painters, shoe atablemen, tar-roofers, tanmers. taflors, etc: ° BUCHANA~ BROS. forenoon, only a little while after Senator Shortridge's “sunny skies and laughing landscape' oration. At 10 o'clock carriages began to gather i front of the Vendome and St. James hotels, where the visitors were quartered, and the beauties of S8an Jose were exhib- ited during a drive. Paul Shoup, who was recemtly promoted from a responsible position in Southern Pacific employ isco to be division freight enger agent of that company at in | 8an Jose and who has developed into an | Jose. eénergetic boomer of the city, marshaled the guests to the carriages and saw that all got places. Several sites were shogn, the two most important being a tract of seventy-three acres on the Alameda just west-of Santa Clara street, and another of twenty acres belonging to the Naglee estate, on the line between the city proper and East San Both are beautiful and convenlent and either can be had free of cost to the State. Most of the visitors left for San Fran- cisco on the 2:40 traln. A number’ of them stopped over at Menlo to Inspect the Flood tract, on which Assemblyman Erown is trying to have the State Dairy School established. AR SACRAMENTO WANTS COLLEGE. Merchants Desire Removal of Jesuit Institution at Santd Clara. SAN JOSE, Feb. 7.—Frank D. Ryan. Dr. T. B. Reed and L. F. Breuner, representatives of the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce and | who camechere with the legislative party, an- nounced to-day they had submitted a pro- DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. The man on the stage who does the trick of escaping from firmly tied ropes, submits to the bonds with a smile. He knows he can get out of the ropes that are being knotted. Put the same man in the woods and let Indian captors bind him to a tree for torture and he would le to the last against the bonds. en the stomach is diseased there are bonds being woven every hour about the organs dependent on the stomach— heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, etc. ‘The folly of mankind is to passively submit to the fastening of these bonds with no effort to escape until the pain they cause arouses fear. 5 cures diseases of the stomach and other “For a long time I was suffering anc hnfl}y blzla.f:(lbwt,"wflla Mr. Andrew J. Jen: . of Thomas, Tucker Co., W. Va., Box . 794. “Was bothered with kidney trouble Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cleanse Erush Manufacturers, 609 Sackamento St | the clogged system from impurities, S Poruna for coughs @nd ¢olds in children. SISTERS OF CHARITY All Over U ite?i St;tes Use Pe-ru-na | for Caterrh. From a Catholic institution in Ohio comes the following recommend frem the Sister | Superior: | “Some.years ago a friend of cur institu- | tion recommen_ e¥ to us Dr. Hartman's Pe- | runa as an excellent remedy for the infiu- enza, of wh ch we then had several cases | which threatened to be of a ser.ous char- | acter. “We began to use it and experienced such | wonderful results :hat sinc: | has become our favorite medicine for influ- | enza, catarrh, cold, cough and bronchiis, "’ SISTER SUPERIOR. | _ Dr. Hartman receives many States. A Mich., reads as follows: | | Dr.S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: : -“The young girl who used the Peruna was suffering Dear Sir. |4 from laryngitis, and loss ot voice. most satistactory. the medicine we hope to b3 able to This young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Pe- runa for catarrh of the throat with good results, as the above letter testifies. then Peruna Z R e N 3 She found great relief, and after further use of ADVERTISEMENTS. SISTERS OF CHARIT RELY ON PE-RU-NA TO FIGHT CATARRH, COUGHS, COLDS, GRIP. letters from Catholic Sisters all over the United recommend recently received from a Catholic institutfon in Detroit, | Detroit, Mich., Oct. 8, 1901. | | The rasult of the treatment was 1 | say she is entirely cured.”” S/STERS OF CHARITY. 3! b | [$oeeseseressssessccossccsescssssossossesossssssssosss | | Another recommend from a Catholic in-| | stitution of one of the Central States writ- | | ten by the Sister Superior reads as fol- | fictws: | | - “A number of years ago our attention | | was called tosDr. Hartman's Peruna, and | since then we have used it with wonde ful results for grip, coughs, colds and ca- tarrhal diseases of the head and stomach. “For grip and winter catarrh especially |1t has been of great service to the inmates | of this institution.” | | SISTER SUPERIOR. | A prominent Mother Superior says: | | “I can testify from experience to the | efficiency of Peruna as one of the very best medicines, and it gives me pleasure to add my praise to that of. thousands { Who have used it. | ““For vears I suffered with catarrh of the stomach, all remedies proving valu. |less for relief. Last spring I went to | Colorado_hoping to be benefited by a! | change of climate and while there a friend | advised me to try Peruna, After using two bottles I found myself very much im- proved. The remains of my old disease | being now so slight, I consider myself { cured, vet for a while I intend to continue the use of Peruna. am now treating another vour medi¢ine. malaria patient She has been sick and troubled wit with with leucor- |ister to their bodily #eeds. rhoea. I have not a doubt that a cure will be speedily effected.” . o MOTHER SUPERIOR. These are samples of letters received by Dr. Hartman from the various orders of the Catholic Sisters throughout the United States. The names and addresses to these let- | ters have been withheld from respect to the Sisters, but will be furnished upon request \ In every country of the civilized wm:ld the Sisters of Charity are known. Not | only do they minister to the spiritual and | intellectual needs of those with whom they come in contact, but they also min- They are as skilled as- trained nurses in their treat- nient of disease, and are looked upon as messengers of good cheer by countless | patient sufferers. Oné-half of the disedses which aflict | mankind are due to some catarrhal de- | rangement of the mucous membrane lin- ing some organ or passage of the body. A remedy that would act immediately vpon the congested mucous membrane, restoring It to its normal state, would | consequently cure all these diseases. Ca- tarrh is catarrh wherever located, wheth- er it be in the head, throat, lungs, stom- ach, kidneys. or pelvic organs. A rem- that will cure it in one location will eure it in all location: | advised me to give it a trial. I 3 Attending Chapel servic wise and pr ‘ound Peru safeguard. when a disease is nature, Peruna Dyspepsia and f are considered b tirely different diseases catarrh of the stomach and femal ness is due to catarrh of the pels the Sisters are fully aware, o Peruna Is their remedy in bo common and annoying diseases. Catarrh of Throat and Stomach. Mr. J. C Chica Metcalf, No. go. Ill, writes yvears old, have been 3826 Elmwood A am 72 with eatarrh of the throat and a great deal, and have tried alm P kind of medicine, but none have B s0 much good as Peruna. [ was a ing salesman for 27 years, and this is ing better than I have for the pas A years. 1 can heartfly recommend Per + to all who suffer from like diseases . suré and complete cure.”—J. C. Mk CALF. Pelvic Catarrh. Mrs. Ella Martin, No. 706 Monroe St Toledo, Ohio, writes “I had catarrh of the womb and could obtain little or no relief, and a friend of mine who had been benmefited by Peruna never any faith in patent medicines, but I cided to give Peruna a fair trial. I have used five bottles, and now I do not fe a pang or pain such as I bad continua undergone, and my general health is very much improved. I think Peruna A Godsend to suffering humanity."—MRS ELLA MARTIN. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of P write at once to Dr. Hartman, gi full statement of your case and h be pleased to give you his valuable a | vice zratis Address Dr. Hartman Sanitarium Hartman, President of T’ Columbus, Ohio. posal to the Rev. R. E. Kenna, president of | the Santa Clara College, this morning for its | removal. They state that the Sacramentans | will give 200 acres of land near the city | BANTA CLARA, Feb. 7.—Regarding the pro- posal of members of the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce made to the Hresident of Santa ra College Lo remove that fntitution to | Sacramento, no reply has been made by the | Rev. Robert E. Kenna. When seen this even- | ing ‘he stated that he was not prepared to { atement of the intention of the | with regard to the offér ad & the "gentiemen from Sacramento, | The question of removal has not been urged | within the last three years and but little has ; been sald regarding such a step on the part | | of the college authorities. Consequently it has | | been supposed that the talked-of removal had ' been abandoned In 1809 and 1900 there was considerable talk | of removing the college to Aptos, in Ranta Cruz County, where the Jesuits have property | interests. This was deemed unwise and it | has since been stated by those in authority | that the project of removal had been laid aside. By some it is asserted that the offer on the part of the Sacramentans is intended | to offset the bid-of the pecple of this county | for the State Capital. 1 LAWYERS HAVE DOUBTS. Change in the Anti-Injunction Bill | May Be Profitless. | HEADQUARTERS, SACRAMENTO;, | Certain attorneys who are members of the Assembly express the opinion that in succeeding in having stricken from the anti- injunction bill the %ord “intimidation” the Union Labor members of the lower house won | only an empty victory, and unless they amend | .the bill %0 as to make it stronger in their in- terests the measure will amount to practically nothing. The only real advantage gained was that usually short-lived one which follows a | moral” victory. Said a well-known -member of the. Assembly, an attorney, and one who voted | with the Union Labor members, but who for obvious reasons does not wish his name used: ““The striking out of that word from the bill will profit the unlon men nothing during times of strike. It makes the law not one whit bet- ter for them than it was before. Suppose the bill is passed by both houses, which is now extremely doubtful. It becomes a law, and what have they passed? Simply a bill which is Intended to limit the injunction powers of the courts, but which will do no such thing. “‘The issuance of an injunction is a elvil process, and has nothing to do with the erimi- nal law. Now the statute makes it a crime for one man to Intimidate another, and under ordinary circumstances a person Intimidated ‘would not resort to injunction, but to criminal prosecution. There is not the siightest ques- tion as to the powers of the courts in the premises, whatever may be. the fate of this anti-injunction bill. A Superior Judge has the right to take such means of preserving the peace as may to him scem proper and if in- timidation be resorted to, which is likely to result in riot or worse, any Judge in the land would act in no unmistakabie manner. “Iet us suppose that this bill passes and that by reason of it some Judge refuses to give protection to some workingman or men who are entitled to it. The proponents of this measure seem to forget that the Federal courts are always open to the most humble citizen of the land and that they usually act with promptness and fearlessness which commands respect. I cannot see in the anti-injunction bill as it stands and as it will come before the Assembly early next week, anything to the ad- vantage of the Union Labor party or anything which should cause any alarm to those who are not members of that party. Still, for the sake of clearness in_ the law and in order to remove any doubt as to its purposes and scope, I am of ‘the opinion that the word should be Insert- ed in the bill."" LAY ‘Wolfe Favored the Appointment. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRAMENTO, Feb. 7.—Senator E. I. Wolfe of San Francisco denies that he was opposed to the confirmation of the Rev. P. C. Yorke as Regent of the Uni- versity, of California. Wolfe declares that he made a battle for Father Yorke, and that from the very day he arrived in Sacramento the Senator worked energetically to secure the con- firmation of Father Yorke, and voted for him. Adrift in a Squall. A boat from the French ship Geperal Mel- linet, containing the skipper and two sailors, was qarred away yesterday afternoon In a heavy' wind squall.” The tug Lottie picked up the runaway at Arch Rock and brought boat and passengers safely ashore. | tion of Miss Alexander, a Southern lady | an tnimitable reproduction of darky dia- | 1% | centiy | tor a goodly share of complimentary ref- | llana W DINNER IN COMPLIMENT 1 TO WILLIAM D. ENGLISH Raphael Weill, as the Genial Host, | Adds Another Achievement to His Record. A dinner given at Marchand's last even- ing by Raphael Weill to celebrate the ecovery of W. D. English, the accom- plished secretary of the State Board of | Harbor Commissioners, evoked bright speeches, clever anecdote and many trib- utes of good fellowship. The table dec- | orations were a ‘marvel of beauty and he menu gave an example of the host's | genlus in culinary art. An event of the feast was the introduc- of talent. Accompanied by a chaperome, she entered the banquet room and gave lect. Drs. Woolsey and Crowley, whose med- ieal skill had so much to do in preserv- | ing the life of the chief guest, came in | ence, but they did not escape the shafts of the satirists. The company at the ta- | ble consisted of: | Drs. Woolsey, Crowley, Chismore and | Swan; Justice F. W. Henshaw, Thomas J. Clunie, A. G. Hawes, Henry Marshall, Captain 8. A. Cloman, U. 8 A.; J. C. Wilson, Sylvain Weill, James Wilson, Ry- llace, Rudlolph Herold. S. D. Brastow_ Horace Platt, Hugh M. Burke, W. D. Engiish and Raphael Weill. The music was appropriate, the service all that could be desired and the talk throughout was agreeable, with dashes of originality and flashes of felicity. We Begin intwo weeks. | b POLICE CORPORAL JANES ANSWERS FINAL SUMMONS Stays With His Duty Until Fatal Malady Forces Him to His Bed. Corporal Charles M. Janes of the po department dled at his residence, 2403 Howard street, about 5 o’clock yesterda morning from an abscess of the brai His death was a shock to his many friends, as it was entirely umexpected He was detailed about three weeks ago to desk duty at the City Prison, and was at his pest till last Tuesday mornir when he complained of pains in his head and was sent hothe. Corporal Janes was a native son, h: ing been born in this eity May He jolned the department August and was promoted to corporal. August 1802. He le: s a wife and three ehildre of them, a daughter, having bee Z married. He was beloved by his assoclates for his kindly dlsposition and genial ways and respected by his sup riors for his attention to duty ar est and conscleptious work. His cast a feellng of gloom over the partment. Besides his connection with department he was a past Californta Parlor, Native Sons Golden West, and past master of Mission Lodge of Free Masons. —_—— Ransch and Turner Licensed. NEW YORK, Feb. 7.—At a meeting of the stewards of the Jockey Club to-day licenses were granted Jockeys Ransch and Turner to ride abroad. They will both appear on the French tracks. th e the police president of to Move We must occupy smaller quarters until the completion of our new building, Lack of room for our geols will gr We must reduce our result we are selling eatly inconvenience us. stock, and to attain this Fine Shoes at Cut Prices Nt ¢ld style shoes o handsome — seasonable — seryi shoes. Those of latest m r shoes out of date, but ceable — honest »dels and built for wear —some jist from the factory. A few below cost. short lines at special prices—many We have shoes for man woman i > 3 or chil and we can give you a perfect fit, 5 T 738-740 Market St.