Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. SUNDAY, AUGUST 23, 1903. 23 ADVERTISEMENTS. The Clothing StoIg of the West URING the encampment of the G. A. R. we had several visitors in the store from various Eastern cities. They inspected all the departments——- clothing, tailoring, hats and furnishing Before leaving the store, many of them expressed opinions to the effect that they were surprised to find® | good goox such a large establishment «out west.” They pronounced ours not only the largest store of its kind this side of Chicago, but the finest in appearance, light, location and other features. We further informed them of the fact that oursis the only establishment in the United States that makes all its own clothing for men, youths and boys and retails direct to wearer. Our success is due to a large stock, low prices, good merchandise and a liberal policy. Have YOU ever traded here? Out-of-town residents should write fo; our Gg-page catalogue. 740 Market Street ACTOR BARLOW HURRIES EAGT -| Leaves CLEVELAND WOMAN KILLED BY RUNAWAY AUTOMOBILE eable Machine Backs Down 1 and Upsets, Throwing Out Its Occupants. —Wh | | > Sucaangrable Chicago to Es- St et cape Charge of Kirkpatrick, re- : mne, Thas By s ] Bigamy. jured | s were W. H. | 7 ars of age, Special Dispatch to The Call, a The elder ——_ - injured, | CHICAGO, Aug. 22.—Reginald Barlow, N re r. The| whom three women claim as husband, | left Chicago Friday night, pursued by Clarence Merkel, brother of the Mitwau- kee heiress whom Barlow married in Los Angeles after a short courtship on the When Barlow heard that Miss rence Hamilton, an actress at Academy, one of the three woman who | claim him as husband, had written to her attorney at Houghton, Mich., where she says she married, to obtain her mar- riage certificate and intended upon its ar- rival to have him arrested on a charge of bigamy, he became h agitated and with Mrs. Bertha Barlow, his latest wife, hurriedly left for Buffalo. rain , Mrs. Barlow's brother arrived. in Chi- cago to-day and on learning that the man he was pursuing had left for Buffalo Merkel called on Miss Hamilton, com- pared some of Barlow's writing with NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. some letters which Miss Hamilton had in - < . her possession, secured what information he could as to the movements of his sis- ter and the man who claimed her as his bride and left on the first train for the hen asked as to his plans after arriv- \ By he said: “I have no cefi- e I want to see my sister first a after 1 talk to her I can tell better 1 shall do. Of course, I expect to take her away from Barlo; MILWAUKE Aug. 22.—*Reginald Barlow either will prove his right to woo and marry my daughter, unhindered by y previous matrimonial allfances, or he wiil be prosecuted,” declared Mrs. W. J. Merkel, mother of Mrs. Bertha Barlow, the Milwaukee girl who was wedded on August 16 in Los Angeles, Cal., to an ac- tor, who, it has been alleged, had en- gaged in other matrimonial ventures, not vet dissolved by law. Mrs. Merkel THE ANT. About One of Nature's Most Industrious Creatures. - &< alo, s though Bertha is old enough to be able to take care of herself, I will not allow her Bilious f to be duped by an unscrupulous adventurer take | without legal redress at least. But I cannot | believe without proof that Mr. Bariow is guilty of undissolved ces with other women. —————— In several respects the Albanians are the most interesting people in Europe. They commit no crimes but murder. Among them human life has an even smaller value than in Sicily, and the ven- | detta prevails even more rigidly. |law of an eve for an eye, a tooth for a tooth and a life for a life is strictly en- forced, but the laws of hospitality are equally respected, and when once a man has broken bread or tasted salt with Al- Used by American Physicians nearly 60 years. Cleans and settles the stomach, keeps the bowels free, the liver active; it aids 3 **good for children, too. ers as long as he remains their guest. ————— Figures have just been published which the Canadian press clalms as an indica- tion of the military spirit which animates young Canada. THe State of New York has a population of nearly 2,000,000 more than the entire Dominion of Canada, yet Bc_‘[ SIX its national guard has an enrollment of . only 14,468 men. nada, on the other tea baking-powder sploss hand, has 35,000 men in its active militia, coffee flavoring extracts soda and thousands of others who have gone through militia training and are now on the retired list. —_———— “‘Might doesn’t always make right,” ob- served the Wise Guy. “No, but it gener- ally makes good,” murmured the Simple Mug. in which you have no ad- vantage is soda; no less in that. At your grocer’s; moseybask. s the | The old | banians his life is safe against all cofn- | CUP DEFENDE R RELIANCE ADVERTISEMENTS. " SCORES GREAT VICTORY |MANY PEOPLE Continued From Page 1, Column 4. ward In the twelve-knot breeze, pound- ing fountains of spray from their bows and leaning to it until the water swirled and bubbled under their lee ralls. The crews were plled up along the weather side to hold the great racing machines up. OPENING OF CONTEST. The first few minutes of the thresh to windward were watched with intense in- terest. Both were footing like mad. They showed yards of their underbodies and shipped a good deal of spray and some solid water forward. Eut after fifteen minutes of sailing their positions had not varied perceptibly and there was alarm among the experts. Those who had ex- pected to see the Rellance walk away from her adversary as a result of last Thursday’s showing were disappointed. Shamrock hung on and in tack after tack she seemed to be holding her own. For thirteen miles the challenger and challenged fought out the magnificent duel safling between two lines of excur- sion boats as free from Interference as if they had been in the middle of the Atlan- tic. All the time the wind was increasing and the whitecaps were whitening the waves. The critical point in the race came | at 1:40 p. m., a little less than two hours | after the start. The mark was less than | two miles away and the relative posi- tions of the boats were about the same. Both were on the starboard tack, the Re- { lance ahead but to leeward. Suddenly the wind drébped and hauled a trifie to the west. The shift enabled the yachts to head up for the mark with the Reliance in the lead by about two hundred yards. This was the only thing which marred an otherwise truly sailed race. But from that time on the Reliance steadily increased her lead in the wind- ward work until she was three-quarters of a mile ahead. As she rounded the outer mark the whistles, sirens, bands and the volces of the unnumbered thousands on the excursion fleet swelled into a vast ! chorus. j YANKEES SHOW SKILL. Turning for home her spinnaker boom poised along the mast like a lance in rest, fell to port and the big sail burst out like a cloud, while at the same moment her enormous balloon jib topsail bellied out forward. The smart work of the Yan- kees cheered the crowds, but a moment afterward there was dismay when the guy that held the spinnaker pole parted | or ‘was carried away. The enormous sail | soared and tumbled over the jib topsail | s collapsing like an empty mail sack. | But the spar was soon hauled back into place, and then, with her ghree balloon setting like plaster, the stately sped homeward before the wind | like a frightened deer. The fleet remained to salute the Sham- rock as she rounded and then, with a jin- gle of bells in the engine-rooms, scam- pered away for the finish line to be in at the finish. In setting her balloon jib the Shamrock encountered another piece of bad luck. One of the stops would not break out and the sail held for some minutes like a Hmp rag on the stay. When both had been squared away for home it was seen that the Reliance was making a runaway race of it. With her crew aft to keep her head up, she skimmed along the surface of the water like a gyll with outstretched wings, leaving the Shamrock far astern. The pace was so fast that many of the tugs and not a few of the steamers were left behind. | The scene at the finish was soul-stir- ring. Under her towering cloud of can- vas, rolling rythmically in the swell, the Reliance bounded across the viewless fin- ish line like a queen. The excursion boats gathered there fairly awakened the echoes with the terrific din which they let loose. Then the immense’ concourse of boats waited until the Shamrock, ma- jestic even in defeat, swept by between the stakeboats. The reception she re- | ceived was, if anything, more hearty than that extended to the victor. SCENE AT TEE START. A snappy southwest wind was blowing, when, a few minutes after 10 o'clock, the Bhamrock III, followed by the Reliance, reached Sandy Hook Lightship. At 10:30 the regatta committee’s steamer signaled that the starting line would be shifted and the race postponed until later in the day, because of a windward course southwest would have landed the racers on the | beach off Long Branch. | The cup yachts went trailing off to the eastward for about five miles and at 11:10 a starting line was established vetween the Navigator and the Unique and the committee’s tug signaled a course fifteen miles to the windward and return, The wind was increasing, when, at the flash of the starting gun, at 11 both yachts | | | | | | | i lurched across the line, the Shamrock IIT The four seconds ahead of the Reliance. official starting time was: Bhamrock . . Reliance ..... : Both got away on the starboard tack, carrying three lower sails and club top- safls, the Reliance a baby jib topsail. What followed was the prettiest, closest and most hard fought fifteen-mile thresh to windward that has been witnessed in these historic waters for many a day. j For nearly half an hour they held on one tack and during all that time the most acute observer could not detect that their relative positions had varied more than halif the length of either of them. | The Shamrock III held the lead under | the lee bow of the Rellance, but could not | add an inch to it. Neither could the Re- liance, although in the weather position, get past the leader. If Captain Wringe luffed Captain Barr luffed also and one seemed to be &s good as the other at this trick. If Captain Wringe gave his craft a hard full and\tried to run away from the Rellance Captain Barr eased the American boat a bit and went after him. | Boats and skippers were evenly matched. BOATS BOW AND BOW. Just about an hour after the start, when the yachts had covered nearly half the distance to the outer mark, opportunity was afforded to note how close the con- test really was. The-Rellance and Sham- rock III were approaching each other, with the former on the starboard tack and having the right of way. As they necked one another it was a question which was leading. The Shamrock III was forced to go about to avoid a collis- ion. One hour's work had given neither the advantage. They held that tack for twenty minutes. The Shamrock III sud- denly went about and the Reliance fol- lowed suit, only to see the Shamrock re- turn to her former coursé. Plainly it was Captain Wringe's trick to shake off the defender, which must have been threat- ening to blanket the British boat. As soon as the Shamrock III got clear of the Rellance she laid a parallel course. The wind began to moderate a bit, and wise observers asserted that the Reliance had half a minute advantage. When both yachts were about a quarter of a mile apart and a mile and a half from the turning mark the Rellance was ahead, but considerably to leeward of the Sham- rock. They were southwest of the mark and heading toward the Jersey coast, when the wind suddenly shifted from south-southwest to south by west, three points. is placed the Reliance in a windward position. It was clear luck and gave the defender a distinct advantage. The Shamrock III held on her course toward the Jersey shore, and the Reliance crossed her bow a quarter of a mile to windward of her. Both boats then made short hitches to the turning mark and when the Rellance rounded it three min- utes and twenty seconds in advance of the challenger the whistles of the fleet acknowledged her luck and her lead. This OVER THE CHALLENGER e EEE———————————————— with the four seconds less at the start gave the Rellance three minutes and twenty-four seconds clear gain. FEARS IN THE FLEET. Once around the mark the Rellance ‘broke out her balloon jib topsall, swung out her spinnaker pole and broke out her spinnaker for a run dead before the wind to the finish line. Whether her spinnaker sheet parted or siipped from its fastening or the boom lifted was not clear, the pole swung out ahead of her high in% the air and the big sail hung in loose folds across her jib topsall stay. For a minute it looked as though she were in serfous difficulty. The pole was hauled aft to its proper position and her spin- naker began to do its work. The Rellance was three-quarters of a mile away When the Shamrock III turned the mark and broke out her balloon jim topsail. The upper part of it refused to break out and still hung in stops, but only for a few minutes. As with the Re- liance, her spinnaker, t0o, swung across her jib topsail stay and hung empty of wind for a minute or more. When it was sheeted back into position there was a g00d sized rip in the leach of it pear her masthead, and during all the run home it bellied out loosely, as though Captain ‘Wringe would not give it a good full for fear that he might lose it altogether. During all of the fifteen mile run which the yachts covered at a twelve knot clip the Reliance steadily and persistently crawled &way from, the now hopelessly beaten challenger. The smoke of the scurrying fleet almost hid them from the shore as the Reliance swept across the line and into a long line of the faster boats who had got there in time to see the finish and to acknowledge her victory. Eight minutes and fifty-six seconds later the plucky challenger followed her across the line and received the salute of the en- tire fleet. ’ The summary (offictal): Elapeed Boats. Start. Turn. Finish. Time. Rellance ...11:4 1:55:10 3 3:32:17 Skamr'k ITL11:4 1:58:30 8:26:34 8:41:17 Giving Shamrock III an allowance of one minute fifty-seven seconds according to the measurement, acknowledged to have been incorrect, Rellance would have beaten her by seven minutes three sec- onds. The net result of the race shows that, barring the fluke Shamrock III had held her own in the windward work and had been beaten more than five and a half minutes to leeward. It is expected that the next race will be sailed on Tuesday. DA L MUST BTB REMEASURED. Shamrock’s Anchor and Chain Not on Board Before. NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—Shamrock III will be remeasured in Erie basin Monday morning by C. D. Mower, official meas- | urer of the New York Yacht Club, in the presence of a representative of the Re- lignce. Lewis Cass Ledyard, chairman of ‘the racing committee of the New York Yacht Club, notified Sharman Crawford, | vica commodore of the Royal Ulster Yacht Club, to that effect in the following tele- | gram: “Mr. Iselin reports that you informed him, just before starting on yesterday's race, that Shamrock III, when measured, | did not have the anchor and cable on | board before starting. You reported it also to the regatta committee. This, if | true, would require a new measurement | under the agreement before starting an- other race. I appreciate that it would Le impossible now for you to proeure a measurement before starting to-morrow, and understand that the regatta commit- tee has requested that Shamrock III be remeasured on Monday. Under the eir- cumstances, knowing that the error arose | from an oversight, our committee arc willing that your boat shall start to-mor- row, but subject to the new measurement to be taken on Monday next. The vessel on such measurement is to be exactly in the same trim as when sailing Saturday, which fact will be established by your own statement. “LEWIS CASS LEDYARD."” Mr. Crawford's answer was: “Thanks for telegrams. We were meas- | ured without anchor and chain aboard. | We had not an anchor or chain on board | during the first race, and we find they | are required by the rules. We propose, | with your permission, to sail to-morrow | 'DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. i S i S 7, ““He Won’t Die Of consumption” is a remark made of a fleshy man. The remark expresses the recoguition of the fact that | the sign of consumption is emaciation, loss of flesh. On ated Emaciated peo- ple with obstinate coughs, bleeding lungs, night-sweats and weakness, have been perfectly cured by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. The several steps of the cure were re- corded in ounces and pounds of in- creasing weight. When there is gain in flesh the wasting disease is being surely cured. Mr. Will H. Whitmire, of Arkton, Rocking® ham Co., Va., writes: . deep cold about the first of July, 1899, and had a terrible cough. We called a doctor and he pro- nounced it irritation of the bronchial tubes, with asthmatic troubie, and he informed me that my som was liable to die at any time. He told me that if we could keep the bronchial tubes open. he might cure him; but after treating him several wecks and my son growing worse all the time, {) imnclndeel t; t 3 l::el;cfi:t Gokl!cuhncdk;x * Pleasan! el ¢ e St LA by the use of these medicines, and of course I had wonderful faith in them, used three bottles of ' Golden Medical ' at home and one vial of the ‘ Pellets,’ and was then well enough to go to West Virginia, Nlfl: supply ith him. T am just in receipt of a letter from him from which I quote : ‘7 am well and hardy and getiing very fleshy.' ? * 2 The Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 large pages is sent free on receipt of stm‘nlpu to pay of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the_ cloth- bound volume or only 21 stamps for the ‘book in paper covers. Address Dr. R, V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y. son_contracted & Qur adway’s | suggestions we will meet | club representatives FRED R.IPENNELL. DANGEROUS KIDNEY DISEASES GURED, Pe-ru-na Creating a National Sensation in the Cure of Chronic. Ailments of ' the Kidneys. Fred R. Pennell, pianist, Grand Opera House, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: “Two years ago I came to Hot Springs to take the baths and be treated for bladder and kidney trouble. After spend- ing two months here under the care of one of the most prominent physicians apd recefving little or no benefit, I was persuaded to try Peruna. I had little faith in it, but after using one bottle I noticed a marked improvement. Three bottles entirely cured me. I can cheer- fully recommend Peruna to any one afflicted as I was.”—Fred R. Pennell. Thomas M. Hicks, 1131 Thirteenth street, Louisville, Ky., writes: “‘Neglected colds, irregular habits and ok bladder trouble. My blood seemed in- flamed with poison, my stomach became entirely demoralized, a bad odor eman- ated from my urine, and I realized I w a. sick man. The doctors dosed me to their Heart's content, but I kept growing worse. Then fortune brought Peruna to my notice and 1 at once began to mend. 1 kept taking it for five months before I was completely cured. I owe my life to Peruna, and will never cease to be grateful.”—Thomas M. Hicks. S. L. Earle, Superintendent of Streets, Jacksonville, Fla., writes: “I am a firm believer in Peruna. I find rwork brought on serious kidney and s | ——— SUFFER WITH THOMAS M.HICKS. that it has been of practical bemefit to a number of the men employed in the Street Cleaning Department in the city| of Jacksonville. They are especlally ex. posed to the inclemency of the weather, and a number who caught cold, which later developed into pneumonia, kidney or liver trouble, were cured through the use of Peruna.’—S. L. Earle, Superin- tendent of Streets. Mr. J. Brake of Petrolia, Ont., Canada, writes: “Four vears ago I had a severe attack of Bright's disease, which brought me so low the doctor sald nothing more could be done for me. I began to take CATARRH OF KIDNEYS. il ol i it — e Peruna and Manalin, and in three months I feel now that | I was a well man, and have continued 80| heart's action and digestive ever since.”—J. Brake. tem, both of which are apt to fail rapidly in this At the appearance of the first symptom | disease. of kidney trouble Peruna should be | Peruna cures catarrh of the kidneys taken.s This remedyv strikes at once the|simply because it cures catarrh where- very root of the disease. It at once re- lieves the catarrhal kidneys of the stag-| rant blood, preventing the escape 0° serum from the blood. Peruna stimu- lates the kidneys blood the accumulating poison, and thus prevents the convulsions which are sure | to follow if the poisons are allowed to remain. It gives great vigor to the ever located. 1f you do not derive prompt and satis- factory resuits from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a to excrete from the| full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. | _Address Dr. Hartman, President of The | Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. = with the same trim as measured and then | earry out your wishes by remeasuring on Monday with the anchor and chain aboard. If your committee has any more them with pleasure. CRAWFORD."” ‘When Shamrock IIT was first measured the hatches had to be removed and two lightweight men substituted for two heavier ones in the crew to keep the water line inside of ninety feet. This brought her to £9 81-100 feet. The anchor and chain weigh as much as two men, and it is thought that when the yacht shall be remeasured there will be some difficulty in getting inside the water line maximum. A few seconds’ difference in the race to-day might make the result dependent upon the remeasurement. Nobody who was present on either yacht would discuss the measurement of the Shamrock with her anchor and chain aboard. Sir Thomas Lipton said, how- ever: “It was all an oversight, and the yacht were only made cognizant of our being measured with- out them when we told them. Neither the Rellance representatives nor ours su- perintending the measuring noticed the error at the time. It won't make anys difference.” Sy i SIR THOMAS CHEERFUL. Lipton Leads in a Cheer for the Victors. NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—“It cheers me up in this defeat to know that some girl cares about me,” said stout-hearted Sir Thomas Lipton, genial to the last, doing all In his power to keep up the spirits of his guests on the Erin in the hour of his defeat, as he had done to care for their slightest want during the hours when his yacht was vainly struggling for victory. He was as ready for a jest as if he were steaming homeward with the cup one- third won. He had in person, standing on the bridge, led a hearty cheer for the de- fender and her crew as the Eriny her course laid for the purpose, steamed alongside the Reliance, and was sitting in his smoking saloon surrounded by his friends. . Sir Thomas, by inference, scathingly re- buked the crew of his yacht for the man- ner in which they handled her, but not a word of direct criticism fell from his lips, though several questions leading up to such an admission were put to him. Not contrary, he contented himself with heap- ing the most enthusiastic praise on the manner in which the Rellance was handled, and by his fallure to comment on the work of his own crew left to be inferred his own oplnlon\m this direction. e The rallway across the Andes, between Chile and the Argentine republic, which was projected twenty years ago, is at last to be completed, the Chilean Congress having recently passed a bill for the pur- pose, The loftiest part of the pass, which lies not far south of the great Andean glant, Aconcagua, and which has an ele- vation of 13,000 feet, §s to be penetrated by a tunnel, which will serve both to avold snowdrifts and to decrease the maximum elevation of the road. The ter- minals of the rallway on each side of the pass are now within one day's travei by mule caravan from one another. This will be the first rail line to cross the South American continent. e Railway officials differ in the degrees of liberality in which they define the word “family’” when used on a pass. An Amer- ican copled the instructions of the Paris- Lyons-Mediterranean Railway bearing ! upon the subject as a lesson in liberality. On that road a pass for one family is good for father, mother, children, grand- father, =~ grandmother, mother-in-law, fathep-in-law, brother, sister, brothef-in- law, sister-in-law, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece and servants attached to the fam- 1ly. :’ ———— They say an Atchison woman is worry- ing herself to death because she talks so much about other people's affairs. That ! 1sn’t worrying; that is gossiping. | IGHT RESTORED T0 BLIND GIAL Radium and X Rays in Combination Give Success. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—Lizzie Spitz- nadel, a pretty Austrian child 11 years of age who has been totally blind since she was 3 vears old, has been made to see slightly as the result of an experiment in using in combination radium and X rays. The experiment was tried only last ‘Wednesday night, and at the time of ap- plication it gave little or no promise of being even moderately successful. The child’s sight has not béen restored, but she has in three days emerged from a condition of total blindness to one in which she can distinguish moving objects and can plainly discern ordinary electric lights at nignt. Dr. Amon Jenkins of this city, who is connected with the marine hospital ser- vice _and whose patient the child is, and Willlam J. Hammer, a well known elec- trical engineer and expert in radium, con- ducted the experiment on the blind child. e A S A A few years ago, when Czar Alexander III was alive, and his family included three sons, it almost seemed bevond a doubt that the succession to the throne was secured to his descendants, and that it could hardly pass to his brother or nephew. However, the eldest son, now reigning as Nicholas II, though married, is the father of daughters only; the sec- ond son is dead, and the third son, now 2 years of age, is unmarried and appar- ently content to remain so. | | UNION ATTACKS MILLER'S RECORD BookbindersIssueState- ment Concerning Controversy. WASHINGTON, Aug. 22-The Book- binders’ Union of this city to-day gave out an authorized statement regarding the controversy with W. A. Miller, assistant foreman of the bookbindery of the Gov- ernment printing office, who recently was discharged by Public Printer Palmer on the ground that he was a non-union man’ and afterward reinstated upon order of the Prsident. The bookbinders clajm that when Mil- ler first entered the service he had made misrepresentations to the effect that he had served a fuil apprenticeship, which they claim he had not done, and they re- peat the charges of marital irregularities. They explain at length the grounds for Miller's expulsion from the union, which they say was due to the fact that he made misrepresentations to Congress con- cerning the work done at the Government printing office with a view to securing a reduction of the pay of the binders. On th's point they say: He was granted a fair and impartial trial by bis peers. He was given every right and privilege accorded by the constitution he had obligated himself to conform to and support. During the progress of the trial the evidence that he had outrageously violated his obliga- tions was so convincing and overwhelming that he was denounced as unfit for member- ship In an organization composed of _self- respecting men, and they expelled him there- from. They also deny as untrue the claim made by Miller that he has increased the output of his division at reduced cost. ADVERTISEMENTS. l) The Photoscope Is Here Stock $i a Share.. FIRST QUESTION— What is the Photo- scope ? ANSWER — It s a nickel - in - the - slot machine for taking pictures automati- cally. * The working ‘parts of the ma- chine are inclosed in a case 31 inches high by twelve inches wide. A small mirror in front of the case gives the focus for the picture, and a push button attached to_a cord operates the mechanism. The machine can be fastened on the wall or set upon a standard. A smail stool with an adjustable seat is fixed in front of it. It can be quickly and readily set, and wherever crowds are assembled the machine can make pictures. The boldness of its conception and the masterly The Pacific Photoscope Co. FIRST O Prospectus and [achines N THE FIELD. On View. A Limited Number of Shares Will Be Sold at 75c_a Share. Dividends of 200 Per Cent Per Annum NICKEL - IN - THE - SLOT TAKES YOUR PICTURE IN LESS THAN manner in which this machine performs its wondrous duty excites the admiration of every one who sees it. As a money-maker it will rival any of the novel is so simple “and s0 popular a result inventions of recent times. It readily understood and withal posseses that its resources are practically unlimited. To seconds, for a nickel, a perfectly framed, handsome photograph, ready for instant use as a pocket plece, a boutonniere or a gift, will insure its steady lght is used for exposure. is not suitable for daylight work an electric light at- tachment is used. On the front of each case are the following printed Tickel in the slot. Pull lever until nickel appears behind within the limits of a few popularity. Daylight or electric place or time directions Drop a A MINVIE...... produce e o 400 Saa Franciseo It the the glass. Hold push button in your hand. Find your face in the center of the mirror. ute. Sit still while the bell rings. Any person or child able to read can thus obtain ided. The with any exj fon_desired, entir@ly una Press the button and get your picture in a min- "a picture-in any position, general for machines throughout the country, where they are is about $15 per day.