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K THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 8 ADVERTISEMENTS. New Wash Waists. The new wash waists are fast arriving. Sample lots are here in assortment showing many new effects. Among them grape, conventional designs on linen pique or mercerized chev- ¥ beautiful effects in fine linens daintily’ embroidered selling at from $1.00 to $6.00. WAXSE ?JPECIAL—dV\'hue striped cheviot wash waists, nt an ox pleated yoke, ful i ol ouch 150 sl D 50 grade all this week big New Arrivals in Tailor-Made Suits. Tw be a revelation to you to see the styles of 1903. The are different, waists are different, fabrics are different and fierent. Many models now on exhibition being ex- patterns of manufacturers’ samples, now is the time to take ice while these models can be bought. ng them is a beautiful all-wool broadcloth suit with a drop a $45 imported model blue or 527 50 FCR THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL Puse Silk Floss Matiress Double size, best satin tick, = inch box weighing zg Ibs., sold :1l over for $12 oo, tili Siturday nizht, $6.73 A chanc: you will nev.r get again. astern Outfitting Co.’s New Store i320-1828 STOCKTON STREET - b omplete. s-li All cars lead to our store. ted DRONER STOPS UNERAL RITES 5 i 1 4 SIS HER HOME WAS DESTRNE L ' J PREJUDICE DECLINING UNDER INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY Bishop Moore of Shanghai Foresees Wonderful Advancement Among the Native Converts in the Turbulent Empire of the Chinese ISHOP DAVID H. MOORE of the. Methodist Episcopal church, who was elected to the episcopacy in 1900 and had his residence fixed | at Shanghal, is in the city with his wife and will sail on the Siberla Wednesday for the Orient. The noted divine left China in Septem- ber, journeying around the world to America by way of the Trans-Siberian Raflway. He was recalled to this country to participate in a missionary campalgn. During his stay in the United States he has been engaged mostly in what Is called the “open-door emergency movement,” & work that has carried him through twen- States, In which he was constantly reaking and endeavoring to create more interest in foreign missions. “I left all the missionaries in China and Japan in a hopeful frame of mind,"” said the Bishop last night at the Occidental Hotel. “There was no feeling of discon- tent, not even among those whq were run out of China and had the fruits of long years of labor torn out by the roots. They were all confident of a restoration of thelr interests, and they had good rea- son to be, for the tenacity of the Chinese character has had abundant illustration of faithfulness, even with the deaths of thousands of Christianized natives. The world has seen no nobler or higher type of character than the Christlan Chinese. “Their sacrifice of property and liberty !and even life itself has been made willing- 1y | derlying spirit of submission for the newly learned faith. The un- to duty, which at times is almost akin to fatalism, | has promise of spiritual potentcy which Interferes Just Before Wife Sues Parents of | Services Are to Her Husband for " Begin. | Damages. I‘ Mrs. Josephine McDonald brought suit | yvesterday for damages to the extent of $10,000 against Mr. and Mrs. Alexander McDonald, the parents of her husband, | Who reside at 1771 Fifteenth street. She | charges them with maliciously interfering between herself and her husband, Al Mc- | Donald, and with having enticed him away from her. In her complaint she | states that her husband was induced by is parents to leave her about the first of February and that since that date they have persuaded him to remain away from Although she demands heavy damages because of the 10ss of her husband's affec- thc Mrs. McDonald declares that she have nothing more to do with him. She was married to him only three! | months ago, but, she says, he treated her | elly during that short time that she | can never think of living with him again. Mrs. McDonald is a daughter of J. Hanavan, one of the best known contrac- ors in the city. | She is at present residing at her par-| e on Seventeenth street, near d is quite ill because of the atment which she says she re- o but a ring fr e | ®0 cr ificate w nd the s not Health € *, rid for the ssla when tr ceived at the hands of the man w short three months ago had sworn to love | and protect her. Regarding her suit for | damages, Mrs. McDonald had the follow- | ing to say last night: | ““The parents of my husband ruined my | = home. They told him to ill treat me so | that I would be forced to leave him, but | ADVERTISEMENTS. | T stood his cruelty and insults and re- | mained with him until they induced him | | to leave me. Hiss ili-treatment has com- | | pletely broken down my health. We were | married three months ago and since our | wedding he has scarcely done a stroke of R a propitious time | THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. Few People Enow How Useful Itls in Preserving Health and Beauty., |work. He frequently came homé Intoxi- | | cated. He depended entirely upon my | Ngarly everybody knows that charcoal | father to support him. My father fur- | 1d ‘most efficient disinfec- Aer in nature, but few real- taken into the human e cleansing purpose. edy that the more you is not a drug at ¢ gases and im- t in the stomach ies them out of the e nished our home for us and kept us sup- plied with food and fuel. My husband aid | | not have any money at all. While I was living with him he compelled me to give him 25 cents a day to buy liquor with or, to pay for his billiard games. If I did not | g1ve him tais paltry sum he would threat- en to leave me. Some of the things which he is guilty of I cannot mention. His | mother and his six sisters from the very first were bent on destroying our home. Every chance they got they induced my | husband to remain away from me.” | Mrs. McDonald says that as soon as the infu suit for damages is well under way she mach and beosis: WHICh [ intends to have her husband, Al McDon. and throat from the | &ld, arrested for perjury. She says that when he secured a marriage license he, swore falsely that Le was 21 years of age, whereas she claims he will not be of age until June of this year. | AMATEUR SAFE CRACKERS GET ONLY A FEW STAMPS Bore Into a Safe and Then Find It Was Not Locked at All OAKLAND, March 7.—Safe crackers bored a hole into the safe of the Robert Brand Company last night on Third street and after they got it through discovered that the door was not locked. They work- ed at least two hours when they need not bave worked at all. Besides that dis- appointing experience they were further humiliated by getting only a few stamps for their reward. The cashier had left the safe open because there was nothing in it. The robbers got into the place by breaking a plate glass window. < sweetens the breath after g or after eating onions us vegetables. , Iy clears and improves omplexion, it whitens the teeth and, ther acts as a natural and eminentiy charcoal in one form it probably the best char- | raet for the money, is in Lozenges. They are west_powdered Willow harcos iarmless antiseptics in @blet form, of, rather, in the form of \arge, pleasant tasting lozenges, the char- coal being mixed with honey. The daily use of these lozenges will soon teil in & much improved condition of the peneral heaith, better complexion, sweeter Breath and purer blood, and the beaut: of it s that no possible harm can result from their continued use; but, on the con- trary, great benefit A Buffalo ghyuclm. in speaking of the penefits of charcoal, says: “I advise Stu, art's Absor®ent Lozenges to all patients fropn gas In the stomach .‘;‘3‘1:?.“‘ fo clear the complexion an urify the breath, mouth and throat; Euo Enlleva the liver is greatly benefited by the daily use of them. They cost but % cents & box st drug stores, and, al- though in some sense a patent prepara- tion, yet I bellfle.l get more and better charcoal in Stuart's Absorbent Losenges ‘l:ln in any of the ordinary charcoal tab- ~d com | in time to come will be vastly advan- tageous to the cause of Christianity. “While it is true that the Chinese are | opposed to foreign things, it is perfectly natural that they should be. Any sug- gestion of a change in the customs that have lived through centuries in the Orient is bound to arouse opposition. Blood is blood, whether Chinese or American, and a prejudice overcome in one instance is a guarantee that it will be overcome in another. Already changes hdve been ac- ADVERTISEMENTS. To Cure Druflkards A Simple Way to Cure Any Drunk- ard Against His Will. By using the new odorless and tasteless rem- edy, which is placed i the coffes or f any drunkard can be cured. Any one can use it without the drunkard ever knowing it. It does MRS. SAMUEL BOYWD. s work mo silently and surely that while the devoted wife, sister, daughter or mother looks on the drun is cured even against his will Every person who has a loved one who is siave to drink ought to give them this remedy at_once. Mrs. Samuel Boyd says: “‘With Golden Specific 1 cured my husband of drinking, I put it in his coffee and after that he could not drink liquor or'bear to be where he could smell it." Write to Dr. J. W. Haines, 520 Glenn bufld- irg, Cincinnatl,” Ohic, and he will send you & frec trial package, which will show you how simple it 18 to use and how positive is ita cure, EVERY WOMAN s interested and should know S about the wouderful MARVEL YagEye The new Vi yrin; Talction e Sery t—Safest—Most Con- venient, ItCleanses Iastantly Ask your draggist for it. i he_caumot supply the VEL, accept no 3 for fllus-. trat=d bock—momled. It gives full partcuiars and Cirections nvaivable G and FuBOrkic sRLT" dertul Beswrative. b 5 MBTHODIST BISHOP OF BHANGHAI, WHO I8 NOW IN SAN FRANCISCO. o + cepted by Chinese and there are assur- | ances that others will be. They have | had abundant reason to mistrust the for- elgners, for they have received from vari- | ous natfons treatment most unfair. The | collection of the indemnity for the in- juries during the Boxer uprising is being | made by native- officials, which gives | them great opportunitfes for extortion and oppression, and naturally influences | the natives' mind against foreigners. “But in spite of all these things the | | peaple of China are beginning to be able | to discriminate between extortion by na- | tive officials and the just claims of for- | eign nations for indemnity. An honest | administration of public revenues would finally free the Chinese mind of prejudice and open it to the idea of cordial inter- | relationship. “As to the impending troubles, one Wwould be insane to deny the possibility | of a wide open outbreak. Such, I think, may occur. In that event the powers, necessarliy moving slowly, there would be | much loss and suffering. One great mis- take has been made in showing too much lenjency toward admitted leaders of out- breaks in the past, which, I think, has been a lesson to the powers. The arch- fountain of the present trouble should | have been consigned to the shades of his | ancestors 1o.1g ago and undoubtedly he will be tardily remanded in case of an- other uprising, which could have scarcely any other termination than the absolgte disruption of the empire.” ' Bishop Moore will speak at the Central | Methodist Church Tuesday evening. | Arriving fn the Orient, Bishop Moore | | will devote the first month to work in | Japan and in May he will visit Korea. | From there he will return to Peking and devote his attention to the Northern China missions. He expects to return here in May, 1904, to attend the big Methodist Convention in Los Angeles. | @ mivtelimelefedeldr et @ PERSONAL MENTION, | Senator Pendleton is at the California. Dr. Francis of St. Helena s at the Palace. Judge A. Howell of Modesto is at the Grand. E Dr. Murth Page of New York is regis- tered at the Palace. 8. Bert Cohen, a merchant of Carson City, is at the California. / Captain J. C. Callheath, a mining man from Adaska, is at the Russ, William P. Kenny, a hotel proprietor of Philadelphia, is at the Occidental. Louis and Hubert Gundefinger, mer- chants of Fresno, are at the Palace. James Follis, the young capitalist who | underwent an operation several days ago, is up and about again. Major George E. Catts and Attorney George F. Buck of Stockton are among the latest arrivals at the Lick. | Murray M. Harris, the organ manufae- | turer of Los Angeles, is at the Grand, | J. M. Gardner, secretary of the electric i road at Santa Cruz, is registered- at the | Grand. £ | James H. Agner of Superior, Wis.,, de- partment commander of the Grand Army | of that State, is a guest at the Russ. George Kislingberry, the well known | mining expert, arrived from Los Angeles | yesterday and is registered,fit the Grand. E. A. Ford, general passenger agent of the Pennsylvania lines, is on his way to California and will be in San Francisco ¢n March 22. 3 George W. Wattles, a banker of Oma- ha and former president of the Omaha Exposition Commission, is a guest at the Palace. Mr. and Mrs. F. Ambrose Clark of New York arrived yesterday and are stopping 4t the Palace. Mr. Clark fs the stepson of Bishop Potter of New York -and I prominent in the East as a gentleman rider and great patron.of golf and polo. P, Hien of Chicago, who, with Ell Jen- rey, originated the automatic coupling now in use on all the rallroad lines in the United States and which helped to make several men other than its inventors mil lionaires, {s at the Palace. Mr. Hien has invented a number of important imple- ments used on railroads. He Is on the coast for pleasure. —_—————— l OAKLAND, March 7.—Mrs. Elizabeth C. 1903, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 27 o' g L J thorities about diseases of the hair submits the Doctor’s conclusions terse announcement: “Baldness is ease caused by a microbe. So far GINS IN THE YOUNG, and rapidly or men we simply see the RESULT the appearance of d:m(!ruff. sooner or later, by i(chl_ng of the the hair will begin to fall out. hd BRO’S EERPICIDE; read his leuter Messrs. Dyer & Waterhous success. I have used only to try NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE. germ desiroyers. substitutes. icide stores, A Healthy Hair. It, Begins in the Young. raud of 'Paris,‘Francc, one of the greatest living au- cently published the most exhaustive work ever writ- ten upon this subject. Dr. Cartez, himself an eminent investigator, in reviewing this book for La Nature ease of old age, it is an afféction of youth. increases, slowly, up to the fiftieth year.” We'learn therefore that baldness as a destructive malady not a disease of old age, but of youth, for in bald old has been slowly dv»iné its work for many years. The young man with abundant hair may not know that he has the disease that will later produce ba]dnes§; in. fact, the first certain evidence o1 its presence is which Newbro’s Herp Druggists, Gentlemen :—The Herpicide yon recommended to one bottle, and the result is druff; the old hair has been softened and st spots, and I have been greatly relieved from head: (Signed.) REV. R. N. TOMS, A Delightful Hair Dressing. WARNING! The success of Newbgo's Her= has caused the market to flooded with so-called dandrufl Don't expect satisfactory results from some- thing the druggist assured wi tious druggists never recommend, Applications of Her- principal barber shops. rice '$1.00 at leading drug or direct from THE HERPICIDE €O., Detroit, Mich. For Young Men What, Authorities Say About, Dandruff, Falling Hair and Baldness. Chronic Baldness Positively Dr. Sabou- Incurable. and scalp, has re- the hair follicles, in the following | causes the skin to a contagious dis- from being a dis- IT BE- whether case no power on hair. 1 microbic is of a disease that the scalp should be dead hairs and keep cases get a full new i 1 is followed, e g scalp, and finally icide will not grow hair, out it: Charter Oak, Iowa. rising. The scalp Conscien- Later in life the done its work, and chronic baldness, either partial or complete, will be the result. are greatly shrunken in ing a complete atrophy of the If the baldness is acute or only partial, it shows that many of the hair follicles are not badly diseased, for the is confined to the sebaceous glands and has not yet extended to the papilla, or true hair root. Cases of this character are curable, even though the baldness is apparently complete. Newbro’s HNerpleide should be used until the last symptom of parasitio growth has disappeared, and in connection with its use lae. This treatment, persevered in, | partially bald to retain yhat hair they have, and esistance this shrinking process, by restricting the blood supply ta the scalp, greatly hastens approaching baldness. parasite in the sealp and nurses the impov- erished foilicles back to health, thus psrmitting ths hair to grow as nature intended. DOCTOR WATERHOUSE, A WELL-KNOWN FPEYSICIAN OF IOWA, and member of the firm of Dyer & Wa- house, advised the Rev. B. N. Toms, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, at Charter Oak, Iowa, to use NEW- for use as a remedy for dandruff and baldness has proved a great surp: has been thoroughly cleansed from ened, while short soft hair has already appeared the estly recommend all .au&a, Pastor First Presbyterian Church, Charter It Stops Itching of the Scalp Almost Instantly. Get a Sample Direct from the Factory. €5% CUT THIS OUT. I inclose 10 cents in stamps to pay postage and packing upos & sample of Evin’- rlnrp:la. City and State-—eeoeeeeeo oo eoecaee AddressThe HerpicideCo., Detroit,Iich. A A A A A A A A AP, disease will have In chronic baldness which completely fill the scalp, size, and this shrinking stretch and appear shiny, indicat- follicles, in which earth can bring another crop of massaged up & full blood to_remove the 1y ‘to the papil- St Determined I but it destroys the germ or bald been, Tows. = as I have Oak, & Destroy the cause—you remove the effect. xa vsbeatthy Hair TONOPA THIS FABULOUSLY RICH DISTRICT THE GREAT- EST ON EARTH Poor Prospectors Made Wealthy in a Day Is the History of This “Wonderiand” in Nevada. Unquestionably the richest mining dis- trict on the face of the carth is the great Tonopah of Nevada, which doubt contributed more wealth to present supply In the United States t any other camp in the world within the same short perlod. From a howling wil- derness two years 4go it has developed a thriving city of 4000 prosperous souls, and it is growing rapidly every day. Following the world-famous discovery of that matchless Mizpah mine by the oor but lucky prospector, James L. But- er, who fairly leaped from the ranks of the poor to a position of wealth and power almost in a day, come hundreds of other rich strikes in the same mineral belt, each one of which ‘contributes its share to the happiness of the world. he Showrn’efi \ This /_\ Character Represents the Mines Now Being Developed in . the Tonopah District. Of the very first to follow Discoverer Butler into the wilderness of wealth now known as Tonopah, Nev., were a party of honest prospectors, headed by George Grims, who had the courage and endur- ance to brave the :liscomforts and hard- uhlPl of a mining camp, miles from a railroad and civilization. Arriving on the ground early, they of course had the choicest claims in the dis- trict to select from, and that they im- rhroved the opportunity is evidenced by e fact that they were the locators of the only other group of claims in the dis- trict yet discovered, where the rich® ore odies crop out of the lava covered sur- face of_the earth. All the subsequent mines covered were found after the lava covering had been penectrated, some of them to a depth of several hundred TONOPAH MINING DISTRICT = ve localionof H GOLD feet. Of course this rich group was not the | The others, however, were parted with | without miich reluctance at a falr price | | to secure the necessaries of life. hese claims, however, they concluded to hold until the necessary capital could be se- cured to aid in their development, being entirely satisfled to take their pay for| this valuable property out of the profits { of the rich ore bodies after their mineral | | treasure had been subjected to develop- | | ment and dividends were declared. This property includes five clai of | nearly 120 acres in all, and it is sitvated | within four miles of the greatest gong mine in the world, the “Tonopah Mizpah, and in the same mineral district, show- ¥ | The Steam Hoist shown above is tHe one pro- | posed for the immediate development of the | mines of the Tonopah Gold Belt Mining Co. | the ing the same ore croppings and same mineral formation as the celebrated Mizpah, and there are three veins on this property from two to six feet wide, w-l rying values from 340 to $175 per ton o the surface, which is a showing only, equaled in this district b{ the one great| izpah mine, part of which was sold on a basis of $10,000.000, and stock.advanced from 30 cents to $20 per share in less than one year. - No person can realize how hard it is for a prospector to secure money to de-| velop a property, no matter how rich it m'nfir be, unless he has tried. Proof of this difficuity encountered by prospectors the fact that some of the most valuable ‘Jroperlles have been considered worth- less for years until they pass into the hands of capitallsts, like the present own- Ashton of Berkeley to-day filed a peti- tion for letters of guardianship over her b-year-old granddaughter, Atyla Leonie Ashton. The petition will be fought by the mother, Mary S. Ashton, who divorced the child's father a year ago. Testimony involving the name of an admiral in the United States navy is anticipated at the hearing. The grandmother alleges the s mother, who is a full-blooded H. ers of the great Mizpah, and they begin to yleld up millions in gold. Then every- body is ready and willing to help when help is no longer needed. Big cash offers have been refused for this property for the reason that it only requires machinery and development to make it worth a million dollars more than the offers received, and the owners decid- ed to give part of this benefit to the gen- eral public by offering an opportunity to secure a small Interest In a legitimate mine in the great Tonopah district which would be a safe investment for the sav- ings of those of small means. oward this a company has been incor- porated with some of the most reliable men in the West at its head, and a limited amount of the treasury stock was placed on the market within the reach of small investors on monthly payments, If de- sired, on the following terms: Monthly P'm'ts No. shares Price. for 10 months. 100. $30.00 33.00 60.00 6.00 30 90.00 9.00 40 120.00 12.00 500. 50.00 15.00 1000. 300.00 30.00 E: shares 330, payhble Sach {onal either in cash or on the same terms, 83 down and $3 per month for nine months; but this price will continue to advance [apidly as development progresses. Ors bodies of this property will be ylelding up handsome and steady dividends to every stockholder. The stock is absolutely non-assessable, and the directors have exercised every care for the protection of small investors, and this undoubtedly offers the safest and surest investment for small capital in one of the best mines in the richest mineral has bevond | only location they made, by any means. | district in the world to-day. ACTIVE WORK ALREADY BEGUN Active development work has already been started on the property. under the direction of Superintendent Frank Ever- ett, oue of the most competent and reli- able mining men in the: State of Nevada. and a ploneer of Tonopah, who thoroughly understands the formation of the district. Mr. Everett belleves the Gold Moun- tain sectfon of Tonopah, where this prop- erty is situated, is a second Cripple Creek, and the richest portion of the Tonopah district. Many other competent miners agree with him. and results are fast prov- In_g it, absolutely. hat the croppings on the Tonopah Gold Belt Company’s property prove .the rich ore body beneath Is amply demonstrated br the assay results of the following sam- P“' taken on the exposed surface of the ledge now being worked. Only four assays are given herewith, but we have dozens more at the office of the company, and we offer a reward of $500 to any one desiring to investigate if we fail. to show him a good ledge on this property, carrying the same high values as any assay furnished him herein or at the office: Sample. Gold. Siiver. Total No. 1 $57.20 31BVS NB.S No. 2. 40.51 51. 2.37 No. 3. 41.34 52.00 93.34 No. 4 44.12 92.60 136.62 One of the most important matters for & person to consider in any investment is, are the men at the head of the com- pany homest. rellable and responsible? ‘or no_matter how rich a mine may be, if the management is dishonest it is al- ways wise to leave it alone. Offieers, F. L. TALCOTT, Physician an G. W. RICHARDS -Vice President Cashier State Bank and Trust Co., Tonopah. W. C._AMES. ... -Treasurer Manager of Estates. Oakland, Cal. H. HEATHCOTE HARVEY = Erngineering Department. Southern Pacific San Francisco. FRANK EVERETT....... Superintendent Practical Colorado and Nevada Miner, Tonopah. Nev. HON. C. D. VAN DUZER......Tonopah, Nev. 7. §. Congressman from Neva HON. JAMES G. SWEENEY.Carson City, Nev. Attorney General, State of Nevada. In this connection readers of this paper are assured that the officers of the com- pany are responsible men of unimpeacha- e honor and integrity, and all readers of this paper who desire to stand in with the or|qnll owners on the development of this zeh-oroperty are advised to write at once for full information. including sworn statements. maps, pictures and reports. Address all letters and make all remit- tances payable to Lincoln Investment Co., financl agents. Addr Market street, San Francisco, opposite Palace Hotel. wailan, is not a fit person to have cus- tody of the little gh ————————— A woman beggar in Philadelphia owns twenty two-story dwellings.