Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Bt SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 13, 1904. ADVERTISEMENTS. EXPANSION—THAT IS FOR US; and prices reduced one-third with the easiests of payments and credit liberal to a fanit —THAT IS FOR YOU. The combination will take the town. The contractors who are making this into a nine story build- ing have not complsted their work; and we are forced to sail .our samples off the floors to make room for our holday stock. Now is-the time for a beautiful gift for the home—an easy chair, a couch or a table, something that will beaytify the room and last for years. We show but a few of the hun- dreds of bargains we are offering. You must comz and look about you to appreciate what wea have done TABLE BUFFET—Rich d ¢ Vg.'a{n:d, 6. EXTENSION TABLE — Neat square tip; carved legs; great value. Regularly $8.75 $12.50. Now s T polish or dull 4. SOLID O AK SIDEBOARD— Heavy but graceful; French plate mirror; curved top; linen, cut- lery and wine closets. = $1485 Now.... for 5 y made f beautifully lac- quered solid brass, burnished like gold ok ... R (8 week DRESSER — Worth $8.50. 3 draw~* 2. DINING CHAIR p 3. DINING TABLE —Massive oak, perfect leaves; seats Fluted legs. in diameter. -.$15.00 7. MANTEL FOLD- ING BED—Grained a golden oak color, including spring mat- any size; regu- > $12.50 8. PARLOI. ARM CHAIR — Polished 5. DINING CHAIR —Triple brace; square posts; braced back. v 0. tress; lar $17., 10. st pring seat, covers assorted, carved panel back; reg now JENTAL COUCH COVERS bevel plate mir- golden oak fin- '$5.85 ....GAS STOVE.... JUNIOR GAS RANGE One large burner in front, 2 'small burners in rear, large oven. A gas saver. Will guare antee perfect satisfac- tion. Worth #16.50— ers, ror Specia week. ish this 4 TR P B e TN RIS e Q 20x20 inches, pretty color now LS“I()\» effects, tassel on each i fat pi PR B ndy* Couch like cut, special AR W % $12.85 Gas Heaters from $1.35 Up Pl AZ POST ST DELCASSE WINS APPROV ! rapprochement between France and PERSONAL. PRESI WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—-Now thgt |it is all over the Government may be | whether the employes in the navy yard | expected to turn with more or less com- [ are to receive the increase In pay for i plaisance to the consideration of a long | | series of matters of wide general inter- ,est that have been held somewhat in | abeyance. | Secretary Taft will begin the resump- | tion—I was going to say of the ordinary | courge of things—with his journey to | Panama looking to the settlement of the difficulty between that state and | the canal strip. But the dispatching of ;& member of the Cabinet to a foreign | of the ordinary. However, it seems to {be a popular move, so considered at |home as well as in Panama. That | Judge Taft will accomplish the fm- portant purpose of the journey no doubt is felt. Following him goes the Congressional committee to survey the whole fleld of the canal that they may learn at first hand the legislative needs of that big job. The committee will sall from New York about the 14th inst. on the trans- | port Sumner, now being fitted out for ! the purpose. Save for this Government aid the members will pay their indi- vidual expenses. Fhey will study the conditions on the isthmus and will be | instructed in the problems of the great undertaking, so that they may meet its | demands for the years of legislation that are ahead with clear understand- ing. The present system of government in the canal zone will be a subject to study on the ground. If found at faujt the committee will be able to suggest a remedy. 3 Shall- there be an extra session of Congress to revise the tariff was a query raised during the progress of the campaign. The question is now to be answered—probably in the negati Extra gession or not, there is the ques- tion of reciprocity with Canada—and | what is the answer? The new Chinese exclusion treaty— how is it to be framed so as to meet all demands as to granting wider privi- leges to merchants and travelers and | yet preserving the same close rules as against the admission of the objection- | able class required particularly by the Pacific Coast. That is to be determined this winter. The report on the beef trust remains to be acted upon. What may be done | with it is an interesting speculation. Then there is Judge Days’ report on corruption among officials in Alaska— | always a fruitful theme. What will it disclose? ‘Will Mr. Wynne remain as Postmaster General? If g0 what is to be the dispo- is to be done with Mr. Wynne? After | having hbeen Postmaster General his | former job is properly closed to him. There has been a good deal of pub- lished speculation on these points—they | are now to be mettled. ARMY AND NAVY. There are a number of questions of first interest.to the army and some to the navy. General Thomas H. Barry | has recommended the enlistment of ne- groes for service in the artillery corps. | country on a mission is altogether out gition of Mr. Cortelyou? If mot, what| BUSY DAYS AWAIT [ s DENT. Important Matters to Be Decided pereaTs Passing - of Election Clears Way : for Affairs of State. question in this connection: as to which they have made demands. In the diplomatic service there are a | bave more or lgss special interest on the Pacific Coast. A successor is to be named for Judge J. F. Cooper of the Philippine Bupreme Court. The sending of W. W. Rockwell, chief of the Bureau of American Republies, to China to sue- ceed Mr. Conger as American Minister there would he Mr. Rockwell's place to be filled. The promotion of Herbert W. Bowen, Minister to Veneguela, to be Embassador to Mexico to succeed Gen- eral Powell Clayton, still remains, to be determined. Then there is the case of John Goodpow, Consul General at Bhanghal. Will he succumb to the .ltl:n' opposition developed against | 4 1 VENEZUELA TROUBLE. The State Department will also, among other things, have to determine as to what action shall be taken re- garding the confiscation of the asphalt property of American citizens by Presi- dent Castro in Venezuela; as to wheth- er to interfere in behalf of peace be- tween Hayti and Santo Domingo, West India’s warring republies; the Congo Free State question, etc. Pictures of President Roosevelt befere | and after election are strikingly alike. He is always highly interested in some- | thing. A week ago it was the election, of course, though he by no means lost interest in other things during the warm campaign. To-day he turns with an enthusiasm no whit less in the work that ‘has piled up before the adminis- tration. The President is 46 years of age. Hé! carries no sign of a gray halr and is so full of ginger that a fencing master re- | cently said of him that he would fail| to become an expert with the foils only | because he was so fond of making a| “rough house.” As exercise he prefers lively sports, and is given much to ten-, nis and fencing, but these have the fayilt of being too tame for him, though ' he nerforms at either as hard as the| rules allow. The routine of his life has not been disturbed by the stress of the campaign nor by the results of the election. He rises regularly at 7:30 o'clock and sits | down to a hearty breakfast an hour| later. Promptly at 9:15 he crosses at a brisk walk from the White House to his | office, which is a plain little brick building in the White House grounds just west of the residence—a building | which 1s called the “mystery,” because | the large sum of money that it cost| could be put into the little thing. But that has nothing to do with this story. | By 10 o’clock the President has had his interview with Secretary Loeb, dis- poeed of his mail and dispatches and is ready to receive visitors. Except on| Cabfnet days these follow one another in quick succession, each being heard fully, however, until 1:15. Then the door & closed to remain and the Presi- | dent comes under the hands of his bar- | has been talked of. Should this be dene| it s said that no man can tell how | X ADVERTISEMENTS. N'S MYSTERIOUS POWER HEALS WHEN ALL OTHERS FAIL DEADLY DISEASES Cures Hundreds by New and farveious Method of Treaiment MAKES THE LAME WALK AND THE DEAF HEAR And Performs Other Seeming Miracles That Pass Under- standing—No Disease He May Not Cure. HAS HE SUPERNATURAL GIFTS? Discards Useless Drugs and Medicines, Yet Heals Hopeless Invalids Pronounced Incurable by Physicians. Offers Services and Home Treatment Free of Charge to Rich and Poor Allke— Believes It His Duty to God and Man to Labor for the Sick and Afflicted Who Stand*in Need. NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—(Special Corre-|him. I restored him to life and health spondence.)—The mysterious healing | Without his even knowing just how it power of Professor William Wallace | V28 done. Then recently I received this letter from Mrs.E. C. McManus of Elli- Hadley of this city, which enables him to cure hopeless Invalids when doctors, drugs and all other means have failed. son, Ala how my cure. 1 give you an ides of regard 'my power to he writer copied Mrs. McManus* has aroused widespread wonder and | letter, word for word, is as fol- lows t I am free from pain and comment in all circles. physicians and| gisease; ‘at last my health is restored. scientists being-as much in the dark for | ang to me it seems little short of a mir- an explanation as those outside the med- | acl t you could absolutely cure any ical profession. one as sick as [ was. When you made Varlous attempts to discover this|Me Well again you cured catarrh of the man's secret have falled, since he has re- | Giomine’ fomaie eorble eod ",:,‘,‘f,,k“h?fd fused to disclose the source of his most |t red, as 1 am the g wit- marvelous control over disease and his so thankful to for all strange power to stay the cluteh of| death, Yet the proven facts and evidence ! show that in hundreds of instances, when | patients have been pronounced hopelessly | incurable and given up to death by doe- | se tors, Professor Hadley has restored them to health so easily and quickly that it borders closely upon the miraculous or divine. These cures are the more strange and startling since it is known that he has discarded the useless drugs usually prescribed by physiclans and accom- plishes these marvels by a new and won- derful method of treatment unlike any heretofore known to science. Indeed, one woman-§oes so far as to state that Pro- fessor Hadley made her heart heat again in her body when she was prepared for the grave, and he has performed dozens of other seeming miracles of healing in the face of death. He claims that there is no disease he may not cure, and there i8 eyery reason to believe that this claim, startling as it is, is no more than the 1it- eral truth, since the records show that| he has cured cancer, consumption, paral- ysis. deafness, drug and liquor habit, and other diseases supposed to be imcurable with the same ease and certainty that he tomach and kidney troubles, rheu. , catarrh and the more common ailments that human flesh s heir to. Powerful and peculiar as is Professor Hadley's ability,” an almost equally re- markable thing about this man ig the fact that he ?vos his treatment free of charge to rich and poor alike, devoting himself to the retlef of afflicted human- ity Independent of fees or reward. He is quoted as saying that he looks upon this power he ssesses as a divine gift, and that he feels it is his duty as a Christian te help all who stand in need, have do ess drug pinch of salt « t said the next s hey disease, cure.” “But haw about t ford to come treat them ™ “It_does ence. I c Just as ke the slightest differ- m in their own homes ust as surely as if [ Will the recommendation be adopted? Fifteen civilians are to be named as second lieutenants. Their names? The | case of Colonel W. L. Pitcher for jiit- ing Miss Harold—will it be dropped? Shall the name of John J. Smith of the who married a ber there in his office. Luncheon is served at the White House at 4 o'clock. Here there are In- variably several guests. After luncheon the President usually spends a half-| hour with his family on the south por- | army hospital corps, tieo 2! of the regidence in summer, or goes ROBTESE, cien . the Tiat of " army | Lo Dis library o resd unless something of special importance calls him back | 4:30 he turns to the interest is felt here as to what other|to Ris office. At statues are to be placed alongside that| tennis court or goes '°rv‘dfl‘:°7‘_’;o°'h°;’ of Frederick the Great at the new army | exerelse. Dinner is '"}’Ie at 7:30, aun S i g g et bl st | e President is a great reader, de- In the Navy Department there is the vours books and newspapers m.] Jjoys the cartoons—some of them—in which he is pictured. His intersst in | chaplains are to be fllled. Considerable ' ! clans that he had cancer of the stomach, | tW without attempting to extort money for | went to th me to me. “Dis- his services. tance can not weaken the healing power During a recent interview with Profes- [ have. All one who is ill in sor Hadley. the eminent scientist firmly | any way. f to but courteously declined to discuss the seeret of the power that he holds. but finally was induced to speak of some of he almost miraculous cures he has made. jpeaking of the case of Joseph R. art of Camden, N. J.. one of his recent atients, Professor Hadley said: “Mr. tewart had been told by various physi- Stew- complicated with kidney disease and | bowel trouble. that his case was incura- ble and beyond the reach of medicine, and that he must make the best of what little life was left to him before death claimed him. He suffered most terrible agony, and was on the verge of the grave | en he applied to me as a last resort. | Notwithstanding what the doctors had| said, I accepted the case, put him under my treatment and cured him. To-day he is worth a good many dead men, and in a recent letter to me speaks of his cure as write me a4 Wallace Hadley avenue. New York they suffer from most, or their principal symptoms, age-and sex, and I will give them a’course of home treatment abso- lutely free of charg “Do you really mean that any one who is sick can write you to be cured without paying any B “Yes. I mean just that. I bellieve that as a Christian it is my duty to and man to_help all who are in need. When 1 have been given the power to cure I do not believe that I have the right to make 1ling. me any one waste his money on useless drugs when I can heal them without _them. It 1is not alone the needless expense, but medi- cines and the surgeon's knife often do more harm than good, as even ths medical profession will confess if they to secure officers for ships going into !‘Iurr!s' of the Imperial commission. The location is to be de- North China is registered terminéd also of the naval training sta- | tion on the Great Lakes—a question | that was @ebated long and with heat IN CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES at Britain, . The voted closed a t 2 | days’ debate. E. Edgar Galbraith, an attorney of ' type of the proposed new warships to Irench Minister's e resolution approving M. Del-| Los Angeles, arrived at the Oecidental | be determined and the problem of how End of De declarations was adopted b erd Ten to 94 nays. The treaty was| ¥ A. . Nov. 12 tken ratified by 443 to 105 votes. Railways ¢ $ : A . effect of thé Anglo-French | at the Grand. terminate French sover- r. G. B. Wi . X ) ina Dr. G. B. Wilson of Pullman, Wash., g o the Newfoundland shore, ' who is 4 member of the Senate of that out the principal signifi- attached to ADVERTISEMENTS. - Gh> Shoe of the Aristocracy Sveryane can afford to wear Jaros{lr Heaith Lezther Shoss, §3.50 per pair No one can zfford not to wear Sorosis Health ather, which allows the feet to breathe freely, cping them in a cool, dry, wholesome atmos- shere and protecting them against sudden changes of temperature. ¢ : The nobility of Great Britain ‘and Europe wear Scrosis in preference to any other shoes. Two cents will carry a Sorosis certificate good in Sorosis shops the world over. No better or prcr:ier holiday present. 216 POST ST. <= 50 THIRD ST. 2, Is a guest at the Palace. E By chird w87y M. B. Perrin, assistant superintend- : T et '©| ent ‘of the San Dicgo Blectric Rall- proche » | y Company and the Coronado Rail- essmsze | road Company, is in thi®“city for a few days on business. Bank George who will succeed William M. 15 United States Senator from la, arrived tered at the Palace. ted States Senator Francis inds of Nevada, is regi G G. who has been in this city for several days, leaves to- | night for El Paso, where he will at- tend the irrigation congress. RIS B Californians in New York, NEW YORK, Nov. 12.—The follow- ing Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—R. R. Cook, the Astor; Mrs. J. R. Egan, at the therland; G. G. Grant, at the Astor Houce; Mrs. G. Hein, at the Martha Washington; R. Knighton, at the Hotel Imperial; Miss L. Saltonstall, at the Netherland; H. R. Bernard, at the Albert; N. Englander and wife, at the |‘Gilsey House; H. McDermott, at the Rossmore; J. Schmitt and Miss M: Stewart, at the Gilsey House; D. Bellamore, at the Earlington; Mme. Buck, at the Marlborough; J. M. Etienne, at the Broadway Central; Mrs. W. McCarthy, at the Marlbor- ough, and P, Oesling and wife, at the | Cumberland. From Los Angeles—G. C. Briggs, R. D. Brown, W. 8. Hook Jr,, Mrs. W. 8. ! Hook and B. S. Hook, at the Hotel Imperial; F. Mareno Jr., at the Marl- borough; Mrs. A. F. Rosenheimer, at the Park Avenue; L. W. Barnett, at the Herald Square; G. W. Bennett, at the Murray Hill; W. Hendry, at the Grand Union, and J. M. Nissen, at the Broadway Central. —_— ‘Wants Pay for Fingers. Morris Rose, by his guardian, M. A. | Rose, yesterday sued the L. D. Stone Company and R. G. McMoonies for §20,000 for the loss of three fingers. | The firm owns a harness factory in which the boy was employed. He was put to work on a straw cutting ma- chine, the operation of which, he says, was new to him. His left hand was mangled and three fingers had to be amputated. 4 * Nixon of Winne- here yesterday and ! | in both House and Senate last winter. Of interest to labor generally {s the ADVERY L ON: DLLAR FE Extension Dining Teble - S-inch legs, solid oak, 6 feet long, tegu- a5 2800, whil= they 814,00 _Carpet, Rugs — 1% yard lengths — Roxbury, Body Brussels, Velvets and Ax- $1.00 1SEBENTS. 5% Reduction warships and in naval architecture amountg almost to a fad. He can dis- cuss this subject even to minute de- tails with the experts. 1§ ATAVAYS PLEASANT. a ‘miracle.” Then there was the case of Mrs. M. Worthington of Egg Harbor, N. 1 J. For twenty-five years she had been a | hdpeless invalld from complicated female troubles, many long months bedridden in hospitals and pronounced hopelessly in- curable and given up .to die by all her| speak, the truth. We all owe a duty to our fellow men, we must all serve in one way or apother. Where a rich man gives money I give health. I am not a million- aire, but I am able to afford to do my share toward relieving the sufleringl of mankind. And I am happy to give freely ‘With all his tremendous energy the ?hyulclmu. ut she put her faith in me, | of my services wherever they are needed. : | threw away her old medicines, and to-day | and I am especially anxious to cure any = is the picfure and realit erfect | poor mortal who has been told that his of health. I took the case of Lr. E. fl’dm Campo, Texas, after the 8 or her case is incurable, that there is no hope left on earth. Of any one who has grown weary spending money on dry; . Bess | doctors vén him up to death and couv'd do | r :notslfl'l u;’ re&h—e MT_, dBrou:ht to this i and doctn“-l in a vain searc{al for hetut e Worth of Purniture and Carvets for flfl Cagh and 8150 per candition by the combined attack of kid- | if they will write to me and accept my .fld arnd Flats Com! ney and liver disease, dropsy and articu- | offer there is not only hope but an al- s b L e e shemiat | lar theumatism, he siffered the torments | most absolute certainty thet they noed QUE TEEMS AY0 APELY X0 OANLAND.ATAMEDA. | Sih'Tain. Doctors and thelr medicines | that my power makes @ lette S G5 i ain. that power makes a letter to e do BERXELEY AND - | Falled utterly, But T aid not fail. I cured | st as much g0od a3 a personal visit" 3 WEEK OP:NS AN AGSQUNT. ON ALL i President is not irritable, though he re-) The dead body of a woman who had i quires promptness and speed from all| committed suicide having been found about him. He dresses usually In gray | jn one of the reservoirs from which ODDS and ENDS | | —in summer in loose sack sult and 80 Longon fs supplied with water, the o —— ' In conversation he is very animated, mme‘“!"d nm.m:(m!r:o, ;0'4):)0'000 “:' Combination | of course, and {s committed to a long| !°ns had to be allowed to rum to k Py | string of so-called schoolgirl adjectives; | Waste. Bookcase— b | a baby, for instance, is “the very cun- | ningest,” or If not that it is “too cute | for anpything.” He referred to the late ! Postmaster General Payne as “the | sweetest and most lovable.” His greet- | ing, made familiar by the paragraphers s during the campaign, { | is a hearty “délighted” or “I'm mighty, | mighty glad to see you.” As a hand- shaker he {s most willing and tireiess. | Where there is much of it in prospect | he assumes the attitude of a golf player | about to make a drive, with his left foot | | firmly in front, the ball of the right only touching the ground, and is ready | for all comers. He will no doubt be put ! to a severe test in this particular for a. Quarter- sawed | oak, beautiful finish, shelves ! for books; reg. & $25.00 valve, | | iv Pio DEVELOPING & ser- Hights ang to he exiied. F. W. PITTS, The Stationer, i wies éble long time following the result of the |} 1 vouve it M. b 2 ; election. { } Send me a trial order now. hais, 3 S o leased and will order agatn. Evers. | sst, well MEMBERS OF NEW SECT dy likes my work and my prices 1 z s reg. EXILED FROM RUSSIA Roll of q,‘nmma $3.50. ' Spe- Juy Gives Scant Mercy to Those Who || 0l 0f Twelve sey cial, Belleve in Extinction of Sotte Snigh: O o te e Human Race. Velox finish Sl l3e to e RIAZAN, Russia, Nov. 12.—Eighty- || DAYZI¢HT LOADING FInME—In \{tiree peasants of all ages and sexes || 21" POPular sizes and popular prices. | have been tried here for belonging t» .h‘""c‘qz %"X:‘-M’-—ln/m, regular { the Skoptsci sect, the main tenet of o ;x"__‘“ < 3 which 18 the extinction of the human || arSaad T oa=2 by b race. The result of the trial, which | (;‘amf»r:s rep moderate | took place behind closed doors, was prices. | that the jury acquitted eight minors Order by mail if you're aut of tawn. and the" remainder of the accused | were sentenced to the loss of civil THAT ;“AN PITTS —_——— 1 See page 41 for announcement of @ || 1008 MAEEELT STEEIT, Opp. Fifth. great Shoe Sale at the “Rightway.” * 25 FRANC