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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1903, ADVERTISEMENTS. THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. Few People Know How Useful It Is in Preserving Health and Beauty. Nearly everybody knows that charcoal is the safest and most efficient disinfectant and pur- r in nature, but few realize its value when to the human system for the same ng purpose. edy that the more you take is not & drug at all, the gases and impurities always e stomach and ingestines and car- system. them o Charcoal sweet nking or after eating onions and other odor- veget cleers and improves the s the teeth and further tnently safe cathartlc, us gases which collect ; it djsinfects the 4 other harmless an. rm or rather in the these lozenges will soon on of the gen- eweeter breath y-of it is th from thelr con . great benefit of the bene- suffering .from end.to clear the ges than in any of [WILLGIVES1000 IF WE FAIL cer we treat be- fore it has pol- soned the deep glands NO KNIFE OR PAIN, NO PAY UNTIL CURED An isiand plant makes_the cures. Any Lumpina WOMAN'S BREAST 15 GANGER A lump or sore on the lip, face or anywhere six months is near} ¥s cancer. 120 page f estimonials of lhounnga cured you D see. The Dr. S. R. Chamley Cancer Cure Co. y Reliable” Two lady assistants. 23 and 25 Third St., San Francisco SEND TO SOMEONE WITH CANCER | Famous the Worid Over—Fullg Matured., _Jol{ E! orywblu.co 5 § M HI SPECIALTIES Advertised by Responsible Firms of S.F. =ve JELASTIC ~ MORPHINE rters. The Willow Bark Lo 9 Pal [ J st Bt., PEWELL, e COMMISSION TO INQUIRE INTO DETERIORATION | ™% ¥ at | Stuart's Ab-. to cure any can- | OCKINGS TER WEDS FAGTORY GIR Address in Package of | Pillow Cases Begins [ Romance. PN |Small Chance in Future for the Boys of Port Chester. —_—— Special Dispatch to The Call. PORT CHESTER, N. Y., Sept. 6.—The | wedding - hers to-day of Miss Amelia Heyel, a pretty 18-year-old girl of East | Port Chester, to Willlam P. Manigault, & wealthy planter of Memphis, Tenn., re- veals an interesting romance. The first | time the planter ever saw bis bride was | on last Monday, when he arrived here from the South. | About a year ago Miss Heyel, In & | spirit of fun, Inclosed her address in a package of pillow cases which she was | folding es a part of her duty at a large | linen factory. Later she received a letter from a young man in Tennessee. The letter led to correspondence and an ex- | change of photographs. *Finally Mani- gault proposed and was accepted. Miss Heyel learned afterward thet he was | wealthy. The wedding was performed at the | home of the bride by Rev. T. E. White, | pastor of the Presbyterian church. The | groom gave the bride a costly diamond | locket, and diamond pins to the brides- malds, ushers and best man. When the couple left for Tennesses this evening a crowd of the girl’s friends from the factory where she was employed gathered at the rallroad station and treated her to a shower of rice. The | irls say that Miss [Heyel's experience has taught them a lesson, and they in- tend to inclose their addresses in all of the sheets and pillow cases they turn out and see if they cannot get rich husbands. —_———— BLACKEDAMP IN A WELL CLAIMS THREE VICTIMS | Overcome by Gas, Two Men and a Boy Fall Into Water and Drown. SHARON, Pa., Sept. 5.—Three men lost | their lives in a well at Neshannock, sev- | en miles east of Sharon, to-day. They | | were Joseph Spencer, 35 years old, a well- | to-do farmer; his son Walter, aged 12 K , and August Miller, 22 years. Spen- | cer and his son were engaged in cleaning | out a well near their home. The well is | thirty feet deep and had been drained ex- | cept of & few feet of water. Spencer and his son had descended to the bottom of | the well, leaving Spencer’s brother, who | cripple, above the surface to take ou the buckets of dirt as fast as they | came up. had been at work only a few minutes when the crippled brother saw | that something was wrong, and called for er to come to his assistance. Miller descended the well to investigate and | was not seen alive again: When further Istance was ured the men were sed with grappling hooks, all of them ng dead. The theory is that black vercame them and they fell into . which was sufficlently deep to b NORTHWESTERN SECURES CALIFORNIA MIDLAND Harriman’s New Line Up the Coast | to Portland Is Taking Form. NEW YORK, Sept. 5—The California Midiand Railroad has been trgnsferred to | the California Northwestern, which will be the foundation of H. Harriman's new line up the Pacific Coast from San F cisco to Portland. 20,000. ———— The price paid Physical Unfitness in Lower Classes | FIRE BURNS UNCHECKED of Great Britain to Be nt Secretary are physically f the army medical ser- man in every to be rejected. g 60,000 chil- y three IN AN ILLINOIS TOWN { Roanoke, With 2000 Population, Is at the Mercy of the Flames. PEORIA, TIl, Sent. 6.—The town of Roanoke, thirty miles east of this city, is reported to be on fire. The blaze start- ed in a brick block owned by Rosenbeck & Co., and has spread to six adjoining buildings. munication has been broken off, and no | further particulars are obtainable. The town has a populatibn of 2000 and no facilities for fighting fire. Was awarded highest hon- the Paris Exposition, he Pan-American Ex- position, Buffalo, 1001, and at he_Crystal Palace Exposition in London last year. The history of the LUD- WIG PIANO is a history of repeated triumphs. Its supe- rior sweetness of tone and its extraordinary durability make it a popular instrument wher- ever it is known. Our liberal terms make it easy to own one. Basement Bargains This Week. An elegant Mahogany Hardman Piano sold when new for $650; in perfect condition. A fine Upright Kingsbury, almost new. Now. EASY PAYMENTS, Now .. . $375.00 vt 5 $190.00 “Wiley B Qllen 6, 931-933 Market street, SAN FRANCISCO. Corner Ninth street and Broadway, Telephone and telegraph com- | Foreign Office that the German Govern- ment regards Turkish Balkan affairs as having entered on an acute phase. The Porte’s inabllity to take energetic hold of the Macedonian insurrection is the worst feature of the situation. AR BURNING ALL VILLAGES Turkish Forces Devastate the Entire District of Kostear. BOFIA, Bulgaria, Sept. b.—Reports of the proceedings of the Ministerial Coun- cil at Varna indicate that there has been no change in the attitude of the Govern- ment on the Macedonian question. For the moment the dissolution of the So- branje forms the chief subject of discus- slon. The council is supposed to be de- voting itself chiefly to internal affairs. The coming elections probably will afford quite as much excitement as the proceed- ings of the insurgents. Bands of revolutionaries continue to cross the frontler, but_scanty news of fighting in Northern acedonia is re- celved here. The insurgents are belleved to be walting until a larger force shall have assembled. The Turkish forces are reported to have devastated the entire district of Kostear, in the vilayet of Monastir, and to have burned every village in the district. The Autonomye states that the inhab- itants of fourteen villages around Pros- pan and Okrida have joined the revolu- tionaries, and that bands of insurgents numbering 1500 are ocupying strong posi- tions in the mountains. The numerous rumors of the mobiliza- tion of the Bulgarian army which have been in circulation here are declared to be absolutely false. The Government is sending troops to strengthen the frontier guard, which action, according to a dis- patch from Rila, is likely to cause trou- ble between the troops and the Insur- gents. RUSSO-BULGARIAN ALLIANCE. Alleged Treaty Agrees Upon Co-op- eration in War., PARIS, Sept. 5—A dispatch to the Temps from Sofla, Bulgaria, confirms the report that the officlal journal, Dnevnik, which enjoys the confldence of the pal- ace, had pubdlished the sensational infor- mation that a treaty of alliance exists be- tween Russia and Bulgaria. The Dnev- nik claims to possess a copy of the treaty, the terms of which guarantee that in case of war between Bulgaria and Turkey the former shall have the co-operation of Russia. The Temps emphasizes the statement and declares that the officials in Bulgaria timed the announcement so as to give Turkey a final warning of the danger of further menacing Bulgarians. Embassador’ Constans’ latest report from Constantinople says the embassies there are constantly in danger of being attacked by agitators or fanatics, but it does not mention the landing of marines. The officials here say that if marines were landed they would be from the small guardships maintained at Constantinople for police purposes, but which do not form part of the regular fleet; that the landing of marines, if it has taken place, would not be considered a naval debark- ment in its serious sense or a preliminary war measure. By agreement with Turkey each of the powers maintains two guard- ships in Constantinople, France having two small gunboats. It is said that if the United States de- sires the gunboat Machias to go to Con- stantinople for guard duty it will be wholly a question between Turkey and the United States, as certajnly France, and probably the other powers, would interpose no objection to the Machias passing the Dardanelles. TWO BLOODLESS EXPLOITS. No Loss of Life in the Taking and Retaking of Neveska. LONDON, Sept. 5.—Mail advices from Salonica says that the selzure of Ne- veska by the Bulgarians on August 25 and its reoccupation by the Turks on August 27 were bloodless exploits. The Turkish garrison, consisting of about 200 men, was surprised and did not resist. About eighty of the soldiers surrendered and the remainder escaped without their arms and fell into the hands of another Bul- garian band. The prisoners were not harmed, but were utilized to carry the captured arms and ammunition to the mountains. They were then liberated. When the Turks reoccupied Neveska and Klissura, on August 27 and 28 re- spectively, the fears of the inhabitants of a repetition of the Krushevo excesses were not fulfilled. The conduct of the sol- diers at both places was correct. It is supposed that the official Turkish report saying 200 soldiers out of a gar- rison of 240 were killed at Neveska was due either to the unwillingness of the au- thorities to admit that such a large gar- rison was so easlly captured or to the belief that the insurgents would certainly kill their prisoners. DECISIVE MOVE EXPECTED. Action Will Follow Conference Be- tween Nicholas and Francis Joseph. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 5.—Although n high Turkish official circles the ten- dency Is decidedly against war, the un- rest among the military element and in certain sections of the Mussulman civil population has increased markedly dur- ing the last few days. Considerable sig- nificance is attached to the Sultan’s gift of woolen coats to the troops and the appeal to the public for similar eontribu- tions. The local papers are further in- flaming the Mussuimans by publishing highly colored accounts of the fli-treat- ment of Mussulmans by “Bulgarian bri- gand bands.” The opinion of the foreign diplomats here ig divided regarding the issue. Great importance is attached to thé coming meeting between the Czar and Emperor Francis Joseph, which is expected to be followed by decisive steps in the direc- tion of guaranteeing the Macedonians radical reforms. Minister Leishman has received a tele- gram from United States Consul Ravn- dal at Beirut saying that the puthorities at that place apparently have not yet ar- rested the man who fired at Vice Consul Magelssen, and adding that the arrest, among others, of a 15-year-old boy seems to indicate that they do not realize the gravity of the situation. Ravndal also re- fers to the general state of insecurity at Beirut, and suggests that the assailant of Vice Consul Magelssen was the same who attacked Magelssen one night about a year ago with the object of robbing him. The man was imprisoned and re- cently was liberated. ppss S N Armenian Dragoman Arrested. VIENNA, Sept. 5.—The correspondent of the Neue Frele Presse in Constanti- nople telegraphs that the assistant drago- man of the Russian Embassy there, an Armenian named Hadjebian, has been ar- rested by the Turkish police. —_—— ‘Will Protect Women From Insults. BERLIN, Sept. 5.—The Minister of the Interior has directed the police presi- dent to organize special police in plain clothes to protect women and girls from the attention of men on the streets, These daylight insults are probably prac- ticed more in Berlin than in any other continental city, SULTAN'S TROOPS CROSS FRONTIER BEFORE HOSTILITIES ARE DECLARED +# ( Continued From Page 21, Column 7. L ) LEADERS OF OB ME COMITEL Woman Heads List of Assailants of Dan- ville’s Jail | Verdicts of Guilty Against Twelve Would-Be Lynchers. PSS DANVILLE, II., Sept. 8.—Verdicts ot gullty were returned shortly after mid- | night against twelve rioters who attacked | the Danville jail on July 25. The follow- | Ing were found gullty: Bessle Dodge, Winfleld Baker, Jack Alton, Willlam Red- wine, Minnle Mibaken, John Isom, Isaac Newton Blade, John Robertson, Thomas Bell, Horace Murphy, Adam Merry, D. L. Menitee. Richard Roberts and John Kess were found not guilty. The charge was: “Assaulting the Dan- ville jail with intent to commit murder.” The trial of the fourteen defendants has been on for four days. Most of the de- fendants have trled to prove alibis or | that they were innocent bystanders. Sheriff Whitlock and his deputies, who defended the jail against the attack by | the mob by the use of shotguns and re- | volvers, thus saving & negro prisoner from being lynched, identified all of those ! convicted. | During the afternoon Richard Roberts turned State's evidence and identified five of tho defendants as persons whom he saw in the mob. He identified Bessie Dodge and sald that she stood on a wagon and urged the mob to lynch Sheriff ‘Whitlock. Eight other men are under indictment, but they may not be tried, as those found guilty are said to be the ringleaders. The convicted persons are subject to a penitentiary sentence. ——— . THADDEUS WILL PAINT PORTRAIT OF PIUS X Irish Artist Obtains the Privilege and Begins Work Upon the Studies. ROME, Sept. 5.—H. J. Thaddeus, a well- known Irish painter, whose portraits of | Pope Pius IX, Leo XIII, Gladstone and | other prominent personages have won him considerable fame, obtains the privi- lege of being the first to paint a picture | of the present Pope. To a remark of | Thaddeus that he always heard the Pope | had dark eyes, while really they were blue, “llke those of the Irish,” the Pon- tiff replied, “Then we are of the same race.” The Pope has expressed himself as be- ing most satisfied with the studles, which Thaddeus expects to finish before Christ- | mas. —_—————— Loanshop Robbed of Diamonds. COLUMEUS, 0., Sept. 5.—Diamonds valued at $11,000 were stolen from the | loan shop. of M. J. Daniels on South High street at 11:30 to-night. Daniels was taking the diamonds from the win- dow, when two men walked into the store, and pushing revolvers into his face, ordered him to throw up his hands, One of the men grabbed the diamonds, which were in a tray, and both then ran out of the door and disappeared in an alley. —_—— Protest to Governor. | him at the door. RICHMOND, Va., Sept. 5.—An indigna- | tion meeting of about 2500 citizens at ! Chase City to-night adopted resolutions | harshly calling the Governor to account iting for thirty days Doc Bacon, condemned to be hanged with colored, Anderson Finch last Thursday for an at- tempt to assault a woman living near | Chase City. The resolutions, among other | things, implore the Governor “not to ! make it necessary for good citizens to take the law into their own hands for the protection of their wives and children.” DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. ONE STEP MORE Will be fatal to the sleep-walker. Will he draw back or will he take the final, fatal step? A great many people are in ril like the sleep-walker. ey are * iseased. The disease is progressing day by day. The time comes when one more step away from health is fatal. The man who has suffered from indi- gestion or gastric trouble s some night to a inner and returns home to find he has taken that last step from health which can never be tak- en back. To mneglect the cure | of indigestion or some other form of stomach trouble is dangerous. It is also inexcusable. Dr. i Pierce's Golden Medical | Discovery cures diseases | of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. t purifies the blood, stimulates the cliver, cures biliousness, and, eliminates bilious f:-i‘sonl from the sys- «The 14 ingdon, with what nysicians' said was indigestion, T dociored with Uhe best aronnd here and found writes Jas B. Ambrose, Mifflin” 8t., Hunt- e “n “1 was taken no relief. I wrote you, and you advised me to use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery: 1 took three bottles and I felt so good that I stopped—being cured. 1 have no symptoms of gastric trouble or indigestion now.” If you ask your dealer for "Golden Medical Discovery” because you have confidence in its cures, do not allow yourself to be switched off to a medicine claimed to be “just as good,” but which ou did not for and of which you ow nothing. You can get the People’s Common Sense Medical Advlnra‘lwfl peges, pa covers, free by sending 21 one-cen Ly ps, to pay e of mailing only. Address Dr. R, V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥. e —— adway’s R Pills 1y vegetable, mild and reliable. Causes ngn};m.uu‘#bmflm absorption” and ire of ail disorders of the For the cure Liver, Bowels, % v box. HADWAY & OO Now I MRS, GRIFFITH INSISTS, | Continued From Page 21, Col_umn 3. i it was not, they advised that he leave the streets at least for a time. They did not know whither he had gone and the of- ficers who had the warrant searched_for hours for him. It was reported that he| had taken a Santa Monica car and a de- | tective was sent to that city in quest of | him. Not the slightest trace of him could be found, and 1t was not until 11:30 o’clock | to-night that he was located and the| warrant served. Through Griffith's sec- | retary, William H. Knight, Deputy Sher- | iff Longfellow was informed that the much sought man was at the home of | a relative, Dr. Griffith, at Sixteenth and | Valencla sireets, and thither the officer | went. He found his man there and Grif- | fith himself was the first man to meet | He had been notified by | telephone that the officer was coming and was ready for him. As he opened the door he greeted the officer with utmost cordiality. “Come right in and sit down,” he said. “I know, your mission and you have only to do your duty. No, I don't want to read the warrant,” he added as the officer produced the paper which meant the loss of Griffith's liberty unless a bond was forthcoming. “That would be only a mers form,” he | sald, “I waive that. Here is your bond. Please examine it and see that it is cor- rect.” With this he handed Longfellow a bail bond for $50,000, prepared in regular form and bearing the signatures of John S. Slauson and Robert Hale, who made af- | fidavit that they were worth $100,000 and $150,000 respectively. “Don’t think I have any the less re- gard for you because you have had this unpleasant duty to perform,” said Grif- fith. “I knew you only did your daty. Good evening, sir. If I can be of service to you command me.” He then closed the door and the officer | proceeded to the Sheriff’s office and made due return on the warrant. | PHYSICIANS HAVE FEARS. Although Mrs. Griffith’s condition is not such as to Indicate that her injuries will result fatally, it is not at all satisfactory to her physiclans. She was conscious all | day and to-night went to sleep early, but | there has developed a feverish state | caused by the excitement incident to having given a sworn statement | to the deputy District Attorney, which | the physicians think may cause a decided | turn for the worse. At midnight her fever had not fncreas- ed, but she had not slept more than two hours during the night. What her phy- siclans fear now is that meningitis will develop, and there are also indications that the injuries received when she jump- | ed from the window to escape, as she | says, a second shot, are much more se- rious than at first supposed. One of the physicians who is attending her made this statement late to-night: “Mrs, Griffith is*far from being past the danger point and we cannot deter- mine what turn her condition may take. It all depends upon the next forty-eight | hours.. At present there are indication that {nflammation may develop in the in- jured eye, but we are trying to prevent that. We consider her condition serious, very serious, and for one I do not wish to make any predictions as to the result, al- though we all hope for the best.” Much, it is claimed, will depend upon the very nature of the wound in Mrs. Griffiths’ eye as a means of determining whether her statement that she was shot with érous intent or whether the statement of her husband, which he still adheres' to, that it was an accident, is really the fact. He has also made the statement that the weapon was dis- charged while they were scuffling for its possession. NATURE OF THE WOUND. This fact, then, is highly important. That an examination of Mrs. Griffith’s face immediately after the shooting showed as follows: The upper portion of her left cheek was powder burned, and powder marks were well scattered in and around her right eye; the bullet struck against the inner and upper portion of the bony wall of the orbital cavity; the bullet split as it struck the hard, sharp edge of the bone and one part of the lead passed downward to the right, lodging behind the eyeball, while the other and smaller part passed upward, groéving the eyebrow and forehead and lodging un- der the scalp. . Mrs. Criffith’s supporters claim that the foregoing facts show conclusively that the firing of the revolver was done by Colonel Grifith exactly as described by his wife: while the husband's friends claim that the facts are proof that the ‘weapon was discharged while its posses- sion was struggled for by both. One point appears evident, viz.—that the re- volver was fired at very close range, oth- | that he has the greatest attachment for | known banker of this city, became sure- erwise there would have been no such powder marks. Attorney Charles Silent late to-night prepared the following statement for publication on behalf of Colonel Griffith | with reference to the arrest of the latter: | “From my personal relations with| both Colonel and Mrs. Griffith I know his wife and has at all times respected her religious preferences. un more than one occasion I have heard him say that | he respected her greatly for a devotion | she has shown to her church and that | he felt she was a better wife and a bet- | ter woman because of that devotion. | STATEMENT FOR GRIFFITH. “With reference to the complaint issued this evening for the arrest of Colonel Griffith on the charge of assault to mur- der, he heard of it for the first time at | about 5 o'clock this evening. He at once | instructed me to prepare & bond for the amount of'$15,000 required, and J. S. Slau_ son, a retired banker and one of the best known and most highly respected citizens of Los Angeles, and Robert Hale, a well- ties. “Judge B. N. Smith of the Superfor | Court consented to come to his chambers | in the Courthouse, where he approved the | bond. Colonel Grifith immediately went | to the Sheriff's office to answer any war- | rant that might be In the Sheriff's hands, | he being ready to surrender the bond as soon as the warrant was produced. Not | finding any one at that office, I advised | Colonel Griffith to retire for the night and | he went to the home of a relative. At no| time did he seek to evade arrest.” | FOR THE FIRST TIME ON THE ROAD TO ZION Israel Zangwill Addresses English Federation on the Work of the Recent Congress. LONDON, Sept. 5.—A meeting of the English Zionist Federation was held at Whitechapel this evening to receive the report of the English delegates to the | Zionist congress recently held at Basle, Switerland. Israel Zangwill, in the course of a speech, said his co-religion- ists were now, for the first time, on the | road to Zion. Whether the proposed | East African colony was or was not es- tablished was a small issue, he declared, | compared with the fact that theirs was a serious political movement, officlally recognized by two of the greatest powers in the world—Great Britain and Rus- sia. R S Will Pave Pantheon Piazza. | ROME, Sept. 5.—The city of Rome has just received the offer of a curfous gift, which, while it has been accepted with gratitude, has created amusement. The commune of Buenos AyTes as a token of Argentina’s friendship for Italy and a tribute of affection for the late King Humbert, whose remains were burfed in the Pantheon here, has offered to pave the plazza of the Pantheon and the sur- rounding streets with Argentine wood, which will be kept-in repair by the do- nors. | buld in such manner as to shade | eyes of the sleeper while his face was | and Meyers was OUT OF TRANGE GLEANLY SHAVEN Skeptics Doubt Genuine- ness of a Six Days’ Sleep. R — Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Sept. 5.—Hmeiging from a six days’ trance, Edward Méyers rose to-night from an earth-covered coffin in Columbia Hall, Mount Vernom, and faced ‘the skeptics. Meyers is a brass founder who last Monday made an agreement with Pro- fessor Herriman, a hypnotist, that he would stay in the coffin for six days with- out food or drink for the consideration of $25, which he Intended to expend for a uniform. He has aspirations in the di- rection of the “Huckleberry” trolley line and has already qualified as & conductor. Meyers to-night showed no trace of the ravages of hunger, for his cheeks were full and rosy and his appearance was en- hanced by a recent shave. That there might remain no doubt of the presence in the coffin of the subject, Proféssor Herri- | man this afternoon exhibited Meyers. The professor removed the canvas flap and through a netting of wire The Call cor- respondent saw the man's face. The sleeper was cleanly shaven and he wore a blue shirt. His breathing was free and | regular, and a scent of bay rum floated up from the wire netting. The professor held an electrie light the plainly shown. The flap was then closed left to his hypnotic e thstanding the professor's as- severations and the apparemt genuine- ness of the “trance” there were many sceptics who are wondermg where Mey- ers got his clean shave. —————————— Reduced rates on household goods to & from the East & South. Bekin's, 11 Montgomery. * bR v S Imperialists Seek Union. PARIS, Sept. 5.—The Francals says the two wings of the Imperialist party, head- ed respectively by Prince Victor Napo- leon and Paul de Cassagnac, are seeking a rapprochement. Prince Victor has an- nounced his desire to retire from the leadership of his wing in favor of M. de Cassagnac, or if the latter is not ac- ceptable, he will favor the leadership of Prince Louls Napoleon, now a general in the Russian army. ADVERTISEMENTS. A FINE LINE OF FALL mo WINTER WOOLENS JUST RECEIVED. Stylish Suits made to orderfor ........ Perfect-fitting Pants to order for ... . .$15.50 to $20.00 ....$4.50 to $10.00 Fine, dressy Suits, latest style cut, of first-class unfinished worsteds, piques, cassimeres and Scotch goods in all shades for $25.00, $30. 00 w $35.00 A SUIT These cannot be duplicated - B15.00 more. Stylish Overcoats from....... elsewhere for from $r0.00 to ceseseesnseses.$20.00 to $40.00 The best of workmanship, linings and trimmings, and per- fect fit guaranteed or no sale. JOE POHEIM -THE TAILOR.. 201 and 203 Montgomery St. y 1110 and 1112 Market St,, SAN FRANCISCO 143 S. Spring St,, LOS ANGELES, CAL.,