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SAN -FRA: THE NCISCO - CALL, -SUNDAY, VERTISEMENTS. ge of their pre it depar n the city and visit where vou will fi iced, read TO-WEAR GARM AUTUMN DRESS 62073 Kew Styes Galore | Ground Floor—Left cf Entrance Ven':';a'\_ ] * 96c EATS bit Cuaants d — Expert Fiters | - Front red Suits sh eed: T ayd. = wort e o Luster Sicilians— A colors in black, ky ve; $woo 49¢ ayd. Expesition Suiting: inches, all weoly 75¢ v Etamines - ol, ol all me em- d fancy cord 3 s, mannish | ¥ Gr 4l Toeed Suiting, | § DC . S e S175) sl Mohair Traveling Coats—Full | te your ength, new style: black, brown | choice A 3 A se. The best thing for | EXTRA—Tweed Suitings—One g h ever thousand ya Skirts—Worth $5.00 2 £ 9’" s e “ 39 FILK SP_CIALS Black Taffeta—23-inch, 83¢ qual- ist the right weight for skirts Special, a vard 59c Black Peau de Soie . 0 inches, Q h H , heavy quality gy -y P isome black. #.2 . $2.9 i 75c A New Arrival -We have just Waist—Rea very choice assortment the Another Autumn pa P tyles in new Persian and Sc d = $1 to $1.50 50c | rgest assort- | d ens. Soe- §13 35 MPLAR SOUVENIR ve terns tht Te iingled wit 1d must be seen Kn emblems inter vl NOT ENOUGH EVIDENCE | 1 VT AT O FORMULATEg VERDICT | l< “[ R I< 14 [ “ \\ Coroner’s Jury Unable to Fix Re- | D A e <ponsibility for the Fearful Death - y Large. Mrs. M Lel = of n inquest Mary | < f Mrs. » County, on August | |, am 2icharde Trie P b being stk by fonive o Edwand Richands, Tried for phor : ¢ ot aeer | Murder, Convieted of Man- From lack of evi-| slanghter, Gets Ten Years g unable to fix the re- | e f Mrs. Large was| Judge Lawlor passed sentence yes- , oty on the steamer | tergay upon three defendants who had Pomo: As incorrectly M M ® | been convicted by juries in his court. Freida Fredell, a|The Judge denied the motion for = who was killed on | new trial in the cas f Edward Rich- | ards, tried for murder and convicted b electric car, a|of manslaughter, and sentenced. him verdict the motormar returned and was exon- 1o serve ten years in Folsom Peniten- tiary. which is the limit. Richards came to the city from Vi- salia and on the morning of January 6 went to the saloon of Joseph Martini, 623 Pacific street, with a woman. Richards and the woman drank three | botties of beer and when Martini asked for payment it was refused. It was alleged for the defense that Martin: advanced upon Richards with a club and Richarde pulled a revolver out of his pocket and fatally shot Mar- tini. The Judge in passing sentence said he did not agree with the verdict of the jury. He considered the defendant committed a cool and deliberate mur- der.’ There was not one palliating cir- cumstance, but the jury had evidently thought there was. The demeanor of the defendant during the trial was re- markably cool, showing that he was not in the least disturbed by the grav- ity of the charge against him. Paul Loudick, convicted of assault with intent to commit murder, was sentenced to serve twelve years in Foisom Penitentiary. He stabbed Wil- liam Krigke in a saloon on Broadway, Hinckley alley, on March 6. Lou- ick was arrested in October last for robbing Kriske in Berkeley, but in- fluence was brought to bear upon Kriske to keep out of the way and the charze against Loudick was dismigsed. The bbing was the result of Krisle having Loudick arrested at that time. H. A. Parks and Thomas McMahon, who were convicted of robbery, with a recommendation to mercy, owing to their youth, were each sentenced to serve five tiary. On the night of June 27 they knocked down Louis Young, a stranger, at Pacific and Montgomery streets :nd took $2 and a cheap watch from im. ning away from the scene of the rob- bery and McMahon was taken into custody on the following day. —_—————— Charged With Stealing Lead. John Robinson, a teamster driving for McNab & Smith, was arrested yes- terday morning at the Amerfcan Can- ning Company’s place on Seventh and Townsend streets by Special Officer Bevan and charged with burglary at the Southern station for stealing 500 pounds of lead. L i A Yount Tamalpais Military Academy Russian. Invalid Missing. SAN RAFAEL, CAL, The Russian Consul reported yes- | term begine Au"ll(rday to the Coroner that Dimitri 1.D. Head Master. | Paskan, a Russian whom he had been e 'befrieuding for some time, was miss- hiléhcoék Hlllfi_’y my ing. Paskan was afflicted with tuber- " Franciseo, Cal ntire year, day & night. ). Polytechnic ness College School of - veering, Oakiand, Cal. — Largest and | school , shorthand cring west Perfect . Expenses for free 109-page Cata.ogue CTEUM. ry school for the unl. 1 colieges, is well horough work. Come are you well; refer- Stanford pro- THE LY dited Ph. D., Principal. INSTITUTE, pd day. echool for young ladies and G California street. Will roopen Accredited 1o the- universities. CHURCH. A. M.. Principal. IRVING Eoarding S s most practical; recommended by ex- pert court reporters. % Send for Catalogue. 1282 Market St,S.F. culosis of the lungs and had been an SAN RAFAEL, CAL. inmate of the City and County Hos- WILL REOPEN ON AUGUST 16, pital for some time. He had threat- Apply to the Pr eped to kill himsels, Sali years in Folsom Peniten- | Parks was arrested while run- | for Habitual | i | | COMPLIMENTS TO JUDGE FAIL TO AWAKEN MERCY Mrs. Nellie Bernsrd Is Given Six Months’ Imprisonment Drunkenness After She Has Told His Honor Mog:n His Vaication Had Improved His Looks Police Judge Mogan returned to his | bench yesterday morning physically and intellectually strengthened by his six weeks’' vacation and the first de- fendant to greet him was Mrs. Nellie Bernard, an old acquaintance. “My!” she exclaimed, “but you are looking weil, Judge. If ever a man needed rest and recreation that man was you and many’s the time I said that before you went away. The last time I stood here—you gave days, you remember?—I ncticed how tired you were and when I went back to the cell I says to M Gonzale: you gave her sixty—says I, ‘If that Judge Mogan doesn't lay off work for a while he'll find himself sick in bed. Mrs. Gonzales said the very same thing and we—" “Same old charge, 1 suppose?” was the Judge's ungallant interruption. “Yap—drunk on Fourth sirect. But 1 was sayinre when they told u s morning tha t you had come bac han—" fect in interrupte: “and I think I'll proluong the dose thi time."” “Stronger and handsomer than ever, they said, and I was the well-pleased woman. ‘I hope,’ 1. to Mrs. Gal- lagher, ‘that I'll be tried before Judge Mogan, becaus “Six menth; was the m the pronouncement fi ench. Mrs. Bernard nd would have fallen if Baili s strong arm ha® not anticipated such a move- ment. . P W. Tracy, alias ed of petty J. W. Stacy, W. Raineer, ceny, hoped that the court would with- pre- hold its judgment until he could B proofs of gcod character. I'm afraid you would keep me ing too long, aid Judge Mog besides I'm already satisfied crook who came to town to purs calling while the Knights Templar Con- clace is on. So to save time and trouble I'll now proncunce you guilty and fix your punishment next Wednesday."” The man of several alia w ar- rested for tapping the till of Super- visor L. A. Rea's paint shop at 1318 Stockton street and purloining there- from five silver dollars, while he was waiting to reauest the Supervisor to sign ‘an application for a free license to peddle Knights Templar badges. In court he stated that he came here from Medora, Iowa, but afterward id his ace of residence was New York s3session contained documentary evidence that he traveled under vari- ous several tenderly worded pi from women being addressed to his different allases. He explained name with the ob- luck, but the court ject of changing his appa ascribed a more fei motive his frequent nomenclatural mutations. Half a dozen milikmen—E. P. Walsh, Samuel Marron, Cha s Paul, Charles Evans, J. M. Turner and G. L. Perham —were before Judge Cabaniss on the| charge of adulterating cream with “thickening” tinued till the defense. and their cases were con- entember 10 by request of one of Chinatown'’s fair- s daintily trinping across street, between Washington when a horse driven Magee, real estate agent, her down, soiled her new mauve kimona, disarranged her coiffure and smashed a jade braceiet to which she attached great intrinsic and sentimental value, inasmuch as it was a betrothal gift from Wok Foy, an opu- arver of nork. She was en route from her barber to her affianced when the unfortunate accident occurred, and, of course, she could not think of such as pursuing her journey iwhile Chang She. est belles, Dupont and Cla by H. C knocked a disheveled condition, for is a stic for feminine neatne of appearance. So her dis- tress was enhanced by fear that Wok Foy might be uneasy over her failure to materialize at the appointed time in the pork shop. Magee did not annear in court to de- fend himself, but that he was not ex- clusively responsible for the upsetting of Chang s person and nlans was v his counsel. If the maiden naid attention to Mr. Magee's warning shouts as the buggy ap- proached her, argued the attorney, she could have averted the collision. But she walked with bowed head and ap- parently was oblivious to her environ- ment. “That not s0,” contended Chang She in fairly decent English. “Him .no shout. Hoss him come too quickee.” The case was continued till next Wednesday and orders were given to have Magee in court on that date. P e Martin T'vessi, restaurant cook, paid $2 50 for a new pair of pantaloons, and the first time he wore them he slipped and they ripped at the place where such garments always do rip. Hasten- ing to his tailor, whose shop is on Du- pont street, near Green, he doffed the damaged trousers, donned substitutes and instructed the sartorial artist to be sure and have the rin repaired not later than Friday evening, as he was scheduled to lead a cotillon. With as- surance that the instruction would be obeyed, he went away with easy mind. At the anpointed time, however, the trousecrs were not mended. nor did there seem to be any possibility of the mending being finished In time for the dance. The argument that ensued was terminated by Firessi drawing a knife and threatening to slay the deceitful tajlor, and Patrolman J. W. Davids arrived just in time to prevent a trag- edy. . “I'd like to get out for Sunday,” re- marked Mr. Firessi to Judge Mogan, befors whom he stood accused of wield- ing a deadly weapon, “because I have a very important engagement for that afternoon.” “With a lady, I presume?” | *“Yes, sir.” “Well, it would be disgraceful to go a-courting in those trousers,” said the Judge, “and as your other ones remain unrepaired I don’t see any use in let- ting you go till Monday."” : sk Ah Wan, foreman of a coolie gang employed in the Tesla coal mines, came to the city to engage a cook and dishwasher and was arrested for vio- lating the ordinance which prohibits the posting of placards on China- town’s dead walls. As translated by Interpreter Gong, the yellow sheet which Ah Wan inscribed with black hieroglyphics and stuck where his com- patriots could see it reads as follows: 2 Wan. You sabee? Cook. ‘Washum. Any man wantee job come to me.” That was all. No signature or ad- dress was attached as in ordinary ad- vertisements and Chinatown’s unem- ployed were aflutter with curiosity as they clustered around the poster and asked each other who put it there. That was how the author's identity i". detected by the pol W] prevented the crowd obstructing the ) sidewalk. When ignorance of the law me thirty | seem to have your ' sententious | A tattered pocketbook found in‘ was pleaded by Ah Wan he was dis- missed by Judge Mogan. e e Patrolman Gable testified that he played several games of hide-and-seek with Otto Schultz, painter, before le finally succeeded {n arresting him for violating the boulevard ordinance by driving his- business wagon on Van Ness avenue. Schultz, the officer said, has a paint shop at Fillmore and La- | guna streets, and on several occasions ' he was seen steering his wagon over ! the proscribed roadway, but each time | quickly turned into a side Street as soon as he saw that he was pursued. By adroit ‘maneuvering the policeman cornered him last Friday afternoon be- Sacramento and Jackson streets. “m to be guilty as charged,” said the Judge to Schultz. ““With #iolating the ordinance which was adopted for the preservation of the city's boulevards by prohibiting vehicles being driven upon was the ~-swer, “lf’s that the law it's a funny one,” Schultz. fail to perceive its humorous myself,” €aid the ‘Judge. I don’t think it's right,” sald “Then you'd better go before the | Board of Supervisors and request that it be repealed,” said the Judge. “Mean- |stime I will give myself till next Mon- you.” wie Joe Fugita, a diminutive Jap, was onmbarding the residence of a Chinese nan in Bartlett alley when Police Cerporal Frear stopped his operations ard took him to prison. The missiles mployed by Fugita were less damag- han those used by his compatriots r nttacks upon Port Aurther’'s they consisted of cobble- s and barrsl staves, but they huried with sufficient force to lish almost the entire front of the He was fined $10. | | 1 | b NT ENDED IN CASE OF RAILROAD VS. BROKERS Judge Murasky ow Considering Mo- tion to Dissolve Injunction Against Scalpers, Judge Murasky yesterday morning heard the conclusion of the argu- | ments on the motion to dissolve the injunction obtained by the Southern | Pucific and its connecting lines pre- | venting the local ticket brokers from dealing in the special excursion tick- ets sold for the Templars and Odd | Fellows’ conventions. The court took | the matter under advisement and an early decision is looked for, as the Templars' Conclave opens to-morrow and day is important to the brokers. Samuel Shortridge, representing the several dealers in cut rate tickets, gitacked the right of the plaintiffs to foaintain an action in a California ccurt on the ground that those named as connecting lines of the Southern | Pagitic had not complied with the | statute of 1901, requiring foreign cor- | porations to file articles of incorpora- | | | | | cedent to gaining a right in court. This contention was aimed at the Northern Pacific, Oregon Short Line and Burlington and Rock Island sys- tems. | + The evidence of Deputy County Clerk Charles Morris was taken, show- ing that he could find no record uf the articles in question having ever been filed by the two roads named In | this county. On the other side of the question, Foshay Walker, repre- senting the railroads, examined Charles A. Rutherford., district pas- senger agent for the Rock Island, and E. A. Mudget, passenger agent for | the Burlington, each of whom testi- fied that the only business they did {in California was tp solicit the pur- chase of tickets that would take the passenger over some portion of their | respective lines. Upon this gr that und Walker declared he roads were only engaged in 1saction of ans interstate busi- ness and -that therefore the applica- tion of the law quoted by Shortridge was unconstijutional in that it inter- fered with inferstate commerce. DT R A Hotel Man Wants Damages. S. Truman yesterday began suit against Harvey H. Dana for $12,835 damages and the re-formation of a ten-year lease on the seven-story hotel at the corner streets. Truman wants the rental cut from $1445 a month to $900 a month on account of the failure of Dana to complete the building according to agreement at the time the lease was made in June, 1903. The chief item is charged to be Dana's neglect to put in a cold storage plant on time, and finally, when the plant was in- stalled, it would not work, all of which, it is alleged. was of great dam- age to the perishable goods kept by the hotel. For this item Truman de- mands $9000. The lesser sums mak- ing the total asked for include Dana's alleged failure to pay $635 for a kitchen range. ADVERTISEMENTS. —————————————— 14 K. $1.00 per WEEK ‘Watches and Diamonds Sold on Small ‘Weckly or Monthly Payments. Goods Delivered on First Payment. DEREMER’S “What am I charged with?” Schultz | X day o think over the matter of fining | tion in this Ststecas a condition pre- | of Hyde and Geary | “built. in-a “".... SEPTEMBER 4, 1904 medicinal whiskey. / | | | | | { | | | offer | ESTABLISHED | 1866. 41 ST. LOUIS, m 1flsWe have one nlf dtbe# ‘whiskey in the world. e any othyer distiller in the world. There is ‘more HAYNER 1 brand of whiskey in the world. We have been in business for 38 years and have a capital of $500,000,00 paid in full, so you run no risk when you deal with us. at once if you are not satisfl express charges. - [Ehat. FREE | Remember, a Hayner quart is an honest quart of 32 ounces, 4 to the gallon, just one-fourth | more than 1n bottles of other brands, really reducing our price just that much. THE HAYNER DISTILLING GOMPANY DAYTON, 0. ADVERTISEMENTS. United States Senate, Washi: . 1 have used HAYNER WHISKEY for medical purposes in my family and have found it very satisfactory. Ibelieve it to be a number one ~ SENATOR MARTIN SAYS: , D. s £ Bor e TU. S. Senator from Virginia. THE ONLY WHISKEY WITH A NATIONAL REPUTATION FOR HIGHEST QUALITY AND PERFECT PURITY. Don’t forget that distilleries in the world. We are the largest, bottlers of ve more whiskey in our eight Bonded Warchouses than HISKEY sold than any other Your money back [AYNER WHISKEY goes direct from our distillery to you, with all its original strength, richness a;d ?]av;)r, thus assuring you of rfect purity and saving you the enormous profits of the dealers. Eythin§ pttyrer. better or more satisfactory than HAYNER WHISKEY, no matter how much you pay. DIRECT FROM OUR DISTILLERY TO YOU You cannot buy Saves dealers’ profits. Prevents adulteration. HAYNER HISKEY ULL EXPRESS R OFFE over. How could it be fairer? ST. PAUL, MINN. ART PAID BY US We will send you FOUR FULL QUART BOTTLES of HAYNER SEVEW-YEAR-OLD RYE for $4.00, and we will Try it and if you don’t find it all ri ever used or can buy from anybody else at any price, t! ! expense, and your $4.00 will be returned to you by next mail. 1 If you are not perfectly satisfied you are not out a cent. We ship in a plain sealed case, no marks to show what’s inside. A BEAUTIFUL GOLD-TIPPED GLASS AND CORKSCREW SENT WITH YOUR ORDER SSA ay the ghl and as good as you en send it back at our Just think that FREE DISTILLERY, TROY, 0. ATLANTA, GA. SPECIFIES WIAT IS CONTRABAND Secretary of State Replies|Serious Accusations Made| to the Petition of San | Francisco Commercial Men | : I —— A meeting of the representatives of | the commercial bodies of this city was held August 12 in the rooms of the Chamber of Commerce to consider the matter of the seizure of shipments from this port by Russian war vessels. A communication was forwarded to Sec- retary of State Hay through United States Senator Perkins in which they called the attention of the department to the refusal of certain - American steamship companies to receive for shipment to Japanese, Korean, Manchu- rian and Siberian, ports freight de- clared by Russia to be contraband of war. As a result other vessels flying | the British flag, relying on the protec- tion of the Government of Great Bri- tain, were receiving such goods for shipment and thus trade was being di- verted from American to foreign bot- | toms at a loss to the American steam- ship companies. | After citing the work of the Russian | raiding fleet in the waters of the Qrient | the petitioners in a set of resolutions called upon the United States Govern- | | ment to take such action as will prop- | | erly protect and conserve the peaceful l-commerce with all Oriental ports and | | that the State Department be requested | to issue a broad statement as to what ! shall constitute contraband of war and give assurance of immunity to the shippers engaged in peaceful com- merce. Under date of August 23 Acting Sec- retary of State Adee replied, inclosing | !a copy of the department’s circular of | June 10, 1904, showing its general atti- tude as to conditional contraband”and | stating that special cases as of the { Arabia and the Caiches were being pressed in detail. He also stated that | the Russian Government conceded the right of appeal to St. Petersburg and | consequently it was imperative that { American owners whose property had ! been confiscated by the prize court at | Vladivostok should take an appeal to ! the higher court at St. Petersburg as | the founflation of a claim for indem- nity for seizure and confiscation. | In the department's circular of June 110, issued to the Embassadors of the | United States in Europe, Secretary | Hay began by saying that coal, | naphtha, alcohol and other fuel have | been declared contraband of war by the Russian Government. These ar- | ticles, continued the circular, enter into | general ccnsumption in the arts of | i peace, to which they are vitally neces- | sary. s | The test in determining whether ar- ticles are contraband of war is their !dcstlnation for the military uses of a | | belligerent. . Quoting from Dana in his | | notes to Wheaton’s International Law, | the department says: | “The chief circumstances of inquiry would naturally be the port of destina- tion. If that is a naval arsenal, or a ort in which vessels of war are usual- y fitted out, or in which a fleet is ly- | ing, or a garrison town, or a place from | which a military expedition is fitting | out, the presumption of military use | would be raised more or less strongly according to the circumstances.” The department concludes that an extensien of the principle of contra- band by treating coal and all other fuel and raw cotton as absolutely con- traband of war, simply because they are shipped by a neutral to a non- blockaded port of a belligerent, would not appear to be in accord with the reasonable and lawful righte of a neu- tral commerce. ———————— Clement School Scholars Entertain. The Clement Grammar School last Friday closed the brief quarter term by a number of interesting pro- grammes in the different grades. Many of the pupils possess excep- tional talent in vocal and instrumen- tal music, making up entertainments that are thoroughly enjoyed by teach- er and pupil alike. { : The lazy man never loses 'g.n_,;'am- ‘to_ tell you that Rome wasn't ELDERLY WOMAN CHARGES FRALD in Suit for the Recovery of Spring Valley Stock 7 ek Ay Old, partially paralyzed and bedrid- den, Wilhelmina Rosenthal came into the Superior Court yesterday with a complaint charging a long time friend, whom she had trusted, with having appropriated 306 shares of Spring Val- ley Water stock belonging to h The suit was begun through Emilie A. Dierks, who, on August 26, was ap- pointed guardian of the plaintiff upon a showing that Mrs. Rosenthal was unable to care for herself or look after her business. Robert J. Woods and the Spring Valley Water Company are the defendants. The plaintiff is seventy-two years old | and it is alleged that she has trusted vears. She was unable, it is said, to comprehend business matters and cn August 5 Woods called at her lodgings and represented to her that it was unsafe for her to keep the shares in her possession. On his representa- tions, the complaint states, she turned the stock over to him, with the under- standing that he was to collect the dividends for her. At the same time, she says, he submitted a document, which she signed, ignorant of its con- tents. On the strength of the docu- ment. it is claimed, Woods had her shares transferred to his name and has collected $189 78 in dividends. Woods for It is alleged that he now claims to | be the owner of the shares and has de- clined to surrender them upon the de- mand made by Emilie Dierks. The court is asked to decide that the docu- ment by which Woods got the stock is void and that the shares be retrans- ferred. —_——————— AGED CHINESE KILLS HIMSXLF WITH RAZOR Poor and Sick, He Writes a Farewell Note Explaining That He Was Tired of Life. Impoverished, old, wasting away with tuberculosis of the lungs, Wong Quong Yip cut his throat with a ra- zor four or flve days ago. The body was found yesterday in his room at 812 Clay street. He had cy Hospital, where Dr. Glover treated him. —_—————— Falls From Scaffold. Nick Commata, a painter residing at 511 Broadway, fell from a scaffolding at the Six-Mile House on the San Bruno road yesterday, sus- taining serious internal injuries. He was treated at the Potrero Hospital by Dr. Buell. & tad “When a person has been told that they are in the last stages of consump- tion and that no treatment can help them, it is surely a wonderful relief, both physically and mentally, to find a treatment that has curative effects. My condition was a very serious one, and all the medical treatment that I used did me no good. I heard of the success of Electro-Chemistry in serious diseases like my own and I went to the Electro- Chemic Institute, No. 118 Grant Ave., for a careful examimation. This examina- tion was free and it was so thorough that I had great hopes when the Electro- Chemic specialists told me that Electro- Chemistry would cure me. I begam the treatment immedijately, and in a short time my condition was greatly improved in every way. When I first went to the Institute my breathing was so short that I could hardly go up the stairs. very serious cough and I expectorated horrible looking matter from my lungs. I had fever in the afternoons and had night sweats. I had lost a great deal of flesh and was so weak that I could scarcely get about. I feel like & new woman now. 1 feel stronger in every way. The cough has disappeared. The night sweats and the afternoon fevers have both disappeared. I do not expecto- rate bad looking matter from my lungs, and all of this has been accomplished in a very short time and at very little ex pense. I feel it my duty to tell other sufferers of the wonderful effects of Elec- been missing for four or five days and | the door locked on the inside and the window tightly closed. He notified the police, who forced an entrance. dead man lay in his bunk with an opened razor by his right hand. On a table was a note in Chinese written by the suicide, in which he | his cousin, Wong Chung, went to his| | room yesterday to see him. He found The | stated that he was old, sick and poor | and was tired of living. Outing in Redwoods. A day in the redwoods of Santa | Dizziness, Cruz @ounty has been decided upon by Ignacian Counecil, Y. M. I. Admis- sion day has been selected for the | gious Diseases, Blood and outing, which is one of a series of an- | | nual excursions‘given by the council. | Judging from the advance sale of tickets the excursion will be well at- tended. Special arrangements have | been made with the railroad company for extra trains to accommodate the crowd. . Trains will leave Third and Towns- end streets at 9:15 o’clock a. m. and will make a brief stop at Valencia street station. Many prizes will be distributed and among these are two round trip tickets to Lake Tahoe. Mu- | i | tro-Chemistry in bad cases like my own, My name is Mrs. M. Macdougall and [ live at No. 400 Oak St. San Francisco.” 1t is cures like these that is making the Electro-Chemic treatment famous and it is because of such cures that in less than three years' time the Electro- Chemic practice’ in Sam Francisco has become the largest special practice in the West. Electro-Chemistry Is curative in all long-standing and chronic diseases and it is the most successful treatment yet discovered for the cure of Consump- tion, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Deaf- ness, Ringing Ears, Discharging Ears, Painful Ears, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Locomotor Ataxia, Paralysis, Wealk Heart. Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Headache. Nervousness, In. somnia, Epilepsy, Falling Sickness, Con- stipation, Piles, Fistula, Prostatitis, Stricture, Blood Poison, Specific Conta~ Skin Diseases, Joints, Weak Eczema. Goitre. Swollen Back. Kidney Diseases, Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Inflammation of the Bladder. Special Diseases of Women—Irregulari- ties, Displacements. Ovarian Pains, Tu- mors, Abscesses. Ulcers, etc., ete. The Electro-Chemic X-Ray Examina- tion is the most rellable examination that any sufferer can have and it is ab- solutely free to all. Patients living at a distance should try to come to the office for this examination. In most cases the patient can take the course of Elec- tro-Chemic home treatment and return home the same day. An expensive Elec- tro-Chemic apparatus is loaned to out- sic will be furnished by Hynes’ or- | Side patients. free of charge. The Insti- chestra. furnish the latest musical selections on the occasion. Left the Gas Turned On. Robert Lockhart, a machinist at Leader Hynes promises to tute is provided with se, | parate and- pri- vate apartments for its male and femals patients and everything is retired, qujet and pleasant. All classes are now L:L!n‘ the Electro-Chemic course. There are lawyers, ministers, priests, physicians, merchants, mechanics, laborers, and there are 'society ladies and there are 157 Minna street, went to sleep yes-| housewives. all receiving the same care. terday - afternoon and- left the turned on in the room. His life was saved by the fortunate arrival of a yisitor, who discovered the man lying no~rdoll on a couch. Lockhart L] ful. conscientious treatment at the hands of the Electro-Chemic specialists. The Electre-Chemic Institute is centrally lo- cated at No. 118 Grant Ave. corner of 8t.. and the office hours are from nine to five and seven to eight dally, and on Sunday from one.