The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 2, 1905, Page 24

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SU AY. APRIL 2. 1905. BOOM IS PROMISED IN BUTTE MINES Quartz Ledges Beyond the Feather Are Favored. PICTURESQUE OIL DISTRICT GOING| ng the com- the yrbestown and s X are scores of - ledges about By s 0 the Oroville ! Registe e worth prospecting. n the same re- | of Oro- 3 e been ’e-’ 1 . DERRICKS. fea- vement der the | of mining discoveries on ng « he Pacific Coast € 1apter of ps have eady, with es are borax cons Borax Com- a survey for 100 Sode Lake, on the Road and run- 1 of the Goldfield John Ryan, 4 general manager, is needed by the | which is producing | borax a day from h Meadows. The e the entire min- which it is sur- Builfrog tender ns of d es would seem to be re- The Los An- t the news is pumps are 2 ,000 gallons ~-four hours and show that the wa- the district at the twenty feet a month. Tombstone. ng out a station on one of the pumps from the moved to that station and is installeq, | of 1000 reet mping appa- 000 = reached a large : A will be placed on | 2 mew cne that has | ntly been made in the t which h pr Regula: Thread At t since that mine was recently and Lucky Cuss veins. ere has been opened up & high-grade lead ore. tement was caused during sale by the Sheriff of sev- in Nevada County under e suit of the Sultana inst William Be ADVERTISEMENTS. INSOMNIA '] bave been using Cascarets for Insomnis, with which 1 bave been afflicted for over twent, and | enn s | old C ity County. five aims. not The first figure ra la: small ze: yunty h. tensive operat ers is substanti at belonging to Gulick, and this company | Gulicks have now joined hands, o & under the nmame of the Trinity cld Mining Compan arr : | 4 PR M e e which is in- | often wen re. ORTS fe iinols. ~ The | Tis ‘,Oungést‘h;m_ ST. SAVIOR™ CHURCH IN ENGLAND, WHERE A ME- to develop the ¥ MORIAL WiNDOW TO THE FOUNDER OF HARVARD i= miven out that work will | ther, Edmund UNIVERSITY WILL BE PLACED. I is possible to get into the | Shakespeare, — - —e s tat 1t | _Plaver and poet,” sortant mot only in th Lo i o 5 5 X g reievr Gulck arir 8 long sruggte wnd . | 1® (LCE] X eronien wers - aiso- laia]| O UPEE. INDIANS DEAW sures him a rich reward for his patience and | > 4 { TH NE work, but also in the respect that it will | at rest there. Lawrence Fletcher. one E COLOR LINE CLOSE ® u bearing on the matter of proving the | of the old shareholders in the Globe, aracter o The Amador Ledger reports an im- in po It says: d Gover properties. The offer was the Congo e bids on which opened at $i00, but which the o the plaintift compan® holdings embrace development jry and the United Tunnel Corporation. The suit was to foreclose a mortgage Valley | Grass says that each claim was sold | wab Cpaiy: | Wi O parately, although ail were united | MO8 POTR, In the one mortgage. Attorney Larue, | Faped in the presenting the plaintiff corporation, | RS9 TR THE at_ the conclusion of the separate | St Hartholomeonrn | sales, tried tg bid in ail the properties ! 55" one of the finest in a lump. This was protested on the | ¢yacimens of old ground that all the properties had al- | ceclesiastical arohi- | | ready been sold and the group could | be sold over again. Jsed 1o $250. and for $350. e Governor Perkins and the Good- , fact that American brought $500 each. Fu e South End the | visitors show much iding began at £300. which figure was raised | ke e n er apprecia- e it war sera to ihe Buls | tion of its beautles | s the p for $450, the Bultana buying it % { It was founded | some littl> hesitation before the | eayrly in the | offered. the bidding starting at | ¢ 00 and finally the property was | (Welfth century by rney Larue for the Sul- (| two Norman $ ‘Now I offer $3420 85 for | knights, but little p of L;‘!alrm-' said Attorney l;a | of the original t is where the protest came in he claims in one lot was not made. | structure now re- mt offered by Attcrney Larue is the ;| mains. It was mount of the judgment, incluiing prin- i burned a hun- interest. costs of court and costs of | dred years later | and rebuilt. At MINES IN THE NORTH. the beginning of After some months of timbering | :hE_flIllleem_h cen- | nd pumping the 500-foot level of the ; tury '“‘as re- Maryland-Idaho mine in Nevada | Stored by Cardinal s been reached. Ten stamps re dropping on the ore from the old | | dumps. ions ally as follows: p chemistry in the University of INi- | has since been is, at Champaign, IIl, was president, and | pulled down and s represented on this coast by T. owned some mining lands adoining | and the mineral district an old, unwritten law, which has been respected by all successors of George shington, with perhaps cne or This restriction is not im- President McKinley this rule It he meet President Diaz of Mexico somewhere near the boundary of that to whether Mr. McKinley might properly crose the Mexican line, even for a few Early in May, when he x., where he was e exceptions. posed by statute. emphasized his re: on his tour to the South and West. was unofiicially would an sister republic. A hours, arose. visited El Paso, T\ greeted by Preside representative, he 1o teke a look into From ning the Rio Grande. Whether the President would dare to cross this structure or mnot was the auestion which members of his party asked one He went to the bridge and caught a view of the Sierra | Madre. Half way across the bridge was Stepping over this was putting another. a line. foot upon Mexican President H Fl Paso there Mexico the International bridge span- He did not. ca +two feet wide, and persisted to be be- | in the priory and was buried in the ! the 1000-toot level. The present company | church in 1402. There is-a full length | week ago a miner who formerly worked on | Winchester, who died in 1626, His - d of ite whereabouts. Follow- | epitaph ciaims for him “a superior re- he ;ul’-A““}' ]‘flt‘flfi";_“"g; ward in heaven on account of his celi- O e 00 Jeebyoise Is bout | bacy.” A rueful recumbent figure in = i v kled with the north transept perpetuates the t it in None | memory of Lionel Lockyer, an impeni- mi ck | tent quack who flourished in the reign N | of Charles II and died in 1672. Run in PRESIDENTS RULED with his epitaph is an advertisement BY UNWRITTEN LAW for his pills, stating that they | Survive his dust and not expire | | E | Till all things else at th’ universal fire. They Must Not Leave the Country,| 1In 1424, the marriage of King James Even for a Day. | T of Scotland to Johanna Beaufort was | The President must not leave the | celebrated there with great pomp ‘and | Unitea States even for a day. This is | CCremony Something over a century | spect for nounced that controversy as Diaz’s nt expressed a desire Mexice. extends territory. Tison had ventured as | 2 half-claim, Manhattan was | will soon be- gin on certain mining dlaims in Trin- | The story as told by local in- Ks as well is the the Fremont 1 | Philip Massenger in 1638. two personal into | | dle of the St. relie? than sny other remedy | have ever tried. fhail certaity recommend them to my fr They ave represented. - 4 e hos. Gillard, Elgin, I Bes! for The Bowels CANDY CATHARTIC (easant. Palatable. Taste Good, DoGood, e e on enken or Gelpe, be, Be.bbe. Never nld in bulk. The ge tablet stamped CC Ellieihioed to cure or yOUE money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicagoor N.Y. yo7 |“wedding ceremony AKKUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES far as this Jine ten years before. But President McKinley did not so much as place his foot upon the bridge. Pres- | ident Arthur was accused of violating this unwritten law in October, 1883, | upon a pleasure trip to Alexandria | Bay, Thousand Jslands. His political enemies accused him then of venturing across the Canadian line on a fishing excursion. The boundary between Can- ada and New York extends to the mid- Lawrence River. Cleveland was similarly accused. On one of his hunting trips to North Carclina he sailed by the ocean route past Cape Hatteras. His | enemies contended that he ventured outside the three-mile limit. According | to international law a country’s pos- | sessions extend for three miles out- side ite coast line. Plying the seas far- ther than this is leaving hume terri- tory. { The President must not accept gifts | of great value from inferiors in the Federal service, but he may accept gifts from foreigners. Grant, McKin- | ley and Roosevelt have received gifts from foreign rulers. Several gifts have | been sent to Mr. Roosevelt from the West.—BExchange. | —_—— | President 3 Known by Thelr Company. Hotel patronage In New York seem- ingly distributes itself according to certain rules. The Albemarle has all! the diplomats and big lawyers; the Holland is a favorite stopping place for solid business men who despise the | stock market; the Imperial attracts men of means who go in for sports; new hotels are the favorite lurklng‘ places for wine agents, and so it goes. The corridors of the Waldorf have long been known as the uptown stock ex- change, and schemes have been hatched and deals consummated there as im- portant as any that are brought to fruition on the floor of the building on | Wall street. That gay crowd in the palm room thinks little of it to-night, yet the ghosts of a legion of hopes and fears are stalking among the tables; and just there, where the laughter is merriest, black care is perched, an un- bidden guest.—Pittsburg Dispatch. ———— Paradoxical though it may seem, a isn’t coneidered a success unless there is a hitch in it somewhere. | criminate against women dining alone | in the evening. | desirable places. Glass Will Be Placed LI LONDON. March 30. — St. Savior's Church. South- wark, where Em- bassador Choate is going to erect a memorial window to John Harvard. founder of Harvard tecture in London.. In his book on “South London” Sir Walter Besant comments on the than English folk. Beaufort. A later day restorer did his | best ‘to spare the Cardinal’'s work by rebuilding the nave in 1838, It cost | $40,000 but was such a hideous an- reconstructed after the original plan. | Although the church contains no relics of the great bard, it is certain that Shakespeare MEMORIAL WINDOW 1O JOHN HARVARD in Quaint Old Church — { was buried there in 1608. |later Philip Henslowe; the manager of the theater, followed him. John| Fletcher of Beaumont and Fletcher | |fame was interred there in 1625. and | Seven vears | Among its monuments is one to John Gower, the poet, who ended his days later a very different scene was wit- nessed in the church. Bishop Gardin- er presided over the trial of a batch {of heretice and some half dozen of | them, including Bishop Hooker, were condemned to be burned at the stake. None of those buried in the church or who figure conspicuously In its his- tory have wrought a greater work for posterity than the Southwark butcher’s son who emigrated to America and started the institution of learning 1 whose graduates have played such an important part in the history of their ;country. Tt is eminently appropriate | that a memorial to him should have a place in the old church. .And the be- stowal of it by Choate brings to a fit- | ting close his diplomatic career in Lon- | don which has won for him none but | golden opinions in England. The window will be placed in a chapel ! to the left of the choir and will over- | look the main road that runs over Lon- | don bridge. Heréafter the chavel will be known as the “Harvard Memorial Chapel.” ————— Catering to Women. New York's newest hotels have set an example in chivalry to the other restaurant which these many years have refused to serve meals after 6 p. m. to women without male escorts. Hotels. nowadays cater to women in every way. They have luxurious dress- ing rooms and maids in attendance. Even the tollet articles are provided— powder and perfumes, smelling salts, pins, ete. The restaurants abroad dis- In London and Paris it is possible to get served only in un- But life abroad is a very different proposition, and women cannot go about alone as they do in America without occasioning remark.— Pittsburg Dispatch. —_—— His Ruse Forestalled. Bishop Ellison Capers of South Carolina, addressing a recent gather- ing of Confederate veterans, spoke of the excuses husbands give for not getting home to dinner, pretending to be detained in their offices by busi- ness, when really spending the even- ing ‘at the club. ‘“These men,” he said, ‘“‘are . fewer than the comic writers of the press would have us be- lieve, but, nevertheless, here and there they do exist. I wish they could all be caught as nicely as one of them, a resident of Columbia, was caught the other day. He said to his wife, as he ‘was leaving home in the morning: ‘Oh, by the way, my dear, if I find I can- not get away from the works in time for dinner to-night, I'll send you a note by a messenger.’ The wife, in a tart tone, replied: ‘You needn’'t bother. 1 have already found the note in your coat pocket.” "—New York Tribune. ———— A Timely Warning. The Jamestown, N. D, serves its name. “This paragraph, it says in a recent issue, “refers to a certain young man in this town (he knows we mean him) who has a rep- utation that is not the best reputa- tion which a young man could have. This is not libel, it is only fact, when we state that he has been seen with as many as three different young la- dies in one week, making love first to one and then another, as if love was a light thing to be laughed at. The best citizens of the community do not like such proceedings and we hope this article will be noticed and heeded by the voung man before he loses the friendship of all good people.” Won't Have Negroes Formerly Their Slaves Sit in Council. The, color line is being drawn in the Creek council for the first time in the history of the Creek nation. There are a number of negro members of both houses of the council. who were elected by their negro constituents, who were formerly slaves of the In- dians, The negroes have equal rights as| citizens of the Creek nation with the Indians and these rights have never | been called in question until this year. A few of the Indian members of the council take the position that the ‘Creek” negroes are no longer wards of the Government, since their re- strictions have been removed and they may dispose of their land at will. They argue that with the removal of restrictions comes relinquishment of citizenship and therefore their right ceases to assist in making the laws of the Creek nation. As evidence of the feeling among some of the Indians, negroes who have been making speeches on the floor of the council have been called down by Indian members and reminded in various ways that their solicitude in behalf of the Government is not ap- preciated. The more conservative members in the council, while they admit that they would prefer that their member- ship should be confined to Indians, say that there is no means by which the negroes can be excluded, and they do not expect d&my attempt in that di- rection. The race cuestion is as vital to the Indians as to the white people and most of them look upon the negroes as their inferiors. ‘ Creeks nor the members of any other- tribe in the Territory will send their children to school with negroes, and separate schools are provided by the Indian governments for both races. Their oresence in legislative halls is the natural and unavoidable result of the action of the Creeks after the close of the war in allowing their freed slaves to stay in their country, making them citizens. This gave them a communal interest in the common lands of the Creeks and car- ried with it the right to vote and elect representatives to their councils. There are a number of highly edu- cated negroes in the Creek nation who have had considerable to say about runnring the Creek Government. These negroes talk Creek and English with equal fluency and are not opposed in their ambitions except by the South- ern element and descendants of old slave-owners.—Chicago Chronicle. —_———————— Longevity of Several Races. Of European nations the Norwegian and Swedish are the longest lived and the Spaniards the shortest. Accord- ing to a foreign statistical return re- cently issued, the average duration of life is as follows: Sweden and Nor- way 50 years; England, 45 years and 3 months; Belguim, 44 years and 11 montbs; Switzerland, 44 years and 4 months; France, 43 years and 6 months; Austria, 39 years and 8§ months; Prussia and Ttaly, 39 years; Bavaria, 36 years, and Spain, 32 years and 4 months. (OURT DECIDES A NOVEL CASE Holds: That Pearl Found in Oyster Does Not Belong to Man Who Sold Crustacean | PURCHASER GETS GEM Opinion Results From Suit Filed by Restaurant Man Against Woman Customgr HAMBURG, April 1.—The Supreme in the case of a pearl, valued at over $750, found in her mouth by a woman who, accompanied by a male escort, was eating oysters In a restaurant. The woman claimed the pearl and her escort supported her claim, proprietor of the restaurant.sued to recover the gem on the ground that shells, like chicken bones, were by tra- dition left by customers and were a source,of profit to the proprietor. The‘court decided that the pearl did not belong to the woman who found it, or to the proprietor of the restaurant, but to the man who paid for the oysters. In rendering its decision the court pointed out that if the ownership of the pearl were to repose in the restau- rant proprietor instead of the person who paid for the oysters, then its ownership might as well be carried back to the oyster dealer who sup- plied the restaurant proprietor with the oyster and thence to the fisherman who took the pearl oyster from its bed. —_— e STARTLING BUT PLAUSIBLE THEORY OF SHIPWRECKS In a recent note on the loss of the Norge on Rockall Island, attention was called to an inquiry started Professor Krogh of Copenhagef, whether the compass of the Danish stgamer had been disturbed by some mysterious magnetic influence. It was compasses of steamers in the neigh- borhood of Rockall had been deflected as much as ten to twenty degrees. this subject Mr. Arthur Harvey, F. R. | 8. (Ca.), writes to us from Toronto to say that he investigated the question some time ago, and in a paper on “Ter- restrial Magnetism” he quoted a state- ment that “‘the influence on the com- | pass of a great mass of basaltic rocks can be traced at a distance of fifty miles.” This dictum, he says, rested on high authori and there are besides “authenticated instances in many cases of the influence being felt for twenty miles.” Mr. Harvey was led to ask whether masses of rock which ordinar- ily have a slight effect on the compass could set it all wrong during a mag- netic storm, and whether at such times submerged reefs derange the needle? He was assisted by the officers of the Allan line steamers, who reported cases of extraordinary compass deflections near shores, one of the worst being the south coasts of Devonshire and Corn- wall. This peculiarity, if confirmed, might explain the otherwise unac- countable stranding of one of the American liners on the Manacles. A great number of wrecks have been piled up on certain parts of the island of Newfoundland, especially near Cape Race, also in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and on the Atlantic Coast of southwest Nova Scotia. The navigators usually ascribe the losses to erratic currents, but Mr. Harvey thinks they may be due to compass disturbances, as the rocks and headlands are mostly primi- tive basalts. Messrs. Allan and oth- ers have urged the Canadian Govern- ment to make a complete magnetic survey of these coasts. It seems to be certain that there exist rocks and shoals where there is a constant de- flection of the needle. One such is the region of the Niagara Falls, “around which the magnetic lines curve re- spectfully, and in several places north of the great lakes the compass will scarcely work at all.” Rockall may be a similar spot, the influence of which is possibly much increased during magnetic storms. Our correspondent makes the valuable suggestion that ships approaching such places should be warned by wireless telegraphy, ““Magnetic storm prevailing.”—London Telegraph. —_—— Senator Cullom’s Insurance. Some Washington statesmen wers foregathering, and the talk turned on personal experiences, according to the Troy Times. “I have been in public life for fifty years,” said Senator Cul- :lom, of Illinois, “and never have been ’rich but once. It was last summer. I had a tontine insurance policy that I had been paying on for a long time. It came due. plans of settlement, but I decided to take all the cash they would give me: That was a little more than $3400, and it was more money than I had ever seen all in one time. 1 was rich for three or four months, and then I be- ame poor again, for I spent it all.”"— ew York Tribune. —_———— In a memorial to the throne the Governor of Shantung complains that, notwithstanding the issue of the Em- only about one in ‘gvery ten families in his province has obeyed. They fear that if their female children are al- lowed to have natural sized feet it would bé impossible to get them mar- ried. ADVERTISEMENTS. Removal Notice. The Singer Store, located for many years at 22 Post Street, has been removed to No. 210 STOCKTON STREET, where our patrons will receive careful By this sign youmay know and will find These machines are mw any other. attenti Singer Stores Everywhere sold atlcwer prices, quality considered, than Needles and Repairs for All Makes of Sewing Machines SEWING MACHINES RENTED AND EXCHANGE! singer Sewing Machine Company Court here to-day rendered a decision | but the | | shown that in two other instances the On | STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION AND AFFAIRS SECURITY TRUST AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 0* PHILADELPHL), IN THE STATE OF ber. A. D. that day: made i | of the Siate of Californ: Puonsylvania, on ihe dlat day of Decem- 1904, and for the year ernding the Insuranes COmumissic . pursua>: fu the quirements of on 61 the Political Code of said Stat CAPITAL. vaid up Amounc of Capital St 10 C0AI Ui e nni s ASSETS. | Net value of Real Estate Owned by | | the Company .... $1,554,500 00 | Amount of Loans secured by Bond a and Mortgage on Real Estate. 145,100 00 Amount of secured by Loans pledge of Bonds, Stocks and other urities as col- marketable “‘When & man who has heavy work to do | lateral 6,063 00 finds that his back is giving out he is in a | Loans to Pol pretty bad fix, Nothing takes a man's strength | bany's polic} o 4 and courage quicker than a weak and pain- lateral .o - ceemnanad 167,159 & ful back. I suffered with rheumatism and a | Premium notes and loans in any lame back to such an extent that I could not | form taken in payment of prem- 4 possibly :do my work. I called in several | Iums on policies now In force. 68,118 13 doctors and took lots of medicines, but doctors | Cash market value of all Stocks and medicines did me no good. I decided to| #nd Eonds owned by the Com- 80 to the Electro-Chemic Institute to undergo | A Pany ............. ceeeacees 300,735 00 a thorough examination. I read in the paper | Amount of Cash on hand in Com- Where the examination was free and I had | Dany's Office ................... 3,152 40 | heard of so many people who had been cured | fiflount of Cash deposited in banks 73,736 78 Of bad cases that I wanted the opinion of the | Intetcst due the Company and un- S84 Electro-Chemic s lalists regarding my con- . { dition.. T called at the Electro-Chemic In. { nterest accrued but not due 21,024 14 stitute, 118 Grant ave., on December 20 of | NCf amount of premiums in process of collection, and of deferred careful examination | pronounced rheumatism and | {last year and after a my case was | lumbago, complicated with overworked and | The examination showed Contingent. reversion ! saturated with uric ac! and that I was throwing out phosphates, | To'al Assets . which accounted for my weakness. My other LIABT 158, | doctors fafled to discover this fact, but this [ ci\ny gor geqen losses and ma- is what the Electro-Chemic examination | showed. 1 was so well pleased with the ex- | LYSd Shiowments in process of amination that I started the treatment at| it y 31,951 08 .once and in one month's time at a small ex- fms restated by the ¢ Company | T was perfectly cured by Electro-Chemis- | {22 Isisted by the Company .. 14,099 56 try. It gives me pleasure to make this public | © gt TR TRIE S By statement of my cure and to sllow the pub- | CCUCIE, PoUCien. cemputed ac- lication of my picture to prove to all In-( COTCIE U5 the Lmeflcan Experi terested people that what I say fs the truth | nor cont joteosed y 1,951,788 08 | and to show that this testimonial is genuine. | o sener Linnuiice’ P 352 43 s I am very sure ali other testimonials pub- | - | lished by the Electro-Chemic spectalists are | Total Liabilitien .......... o4 genuine. My name is Philip Braun and live at 226415 Filbert street, San Francisco.” | The Electro-Chemic treatment cures the worst | | cases of lumbago. rhefmatism and weak backs | INCOME. Cash received for premiums on new volicies during the vear.... $237,960 17 quickly, and when there is a kidney complica- | Cagn receiy ceeoe tion, as in the above case. the treatment cures | ‘lums qurieg the soer O. U™ 125 w0 08 these bad cases when medicines have abso- | Cauly received for saie of ¥ 5 | lutely, no effect upon them. Any one suffer- | Cagh received for interest 33,057 87 ing as Mr. Braun suffered is Wasting time | Cash received for romts F- (o A and money and is needlessly suffering when | Cash received from endeavoring to find & cure through medic sources = . 144 53 | treatments. Such a sufferer will find quick | " relief and a quick and permanent cure at a etal Incoms ....... eeeenee. SL2I0TE2 17 small expense through the use of the Electrs a2t 17 Consultation and exa; nation is free in all cases and any ome i terested s welcome to call at the Electro- | s Chemic Institute to investigate these cur Pt due and in all probability some one he knows 1iv- | Cash paid for surrendered poilcion. ing right here in San Francisco who has been , Cash paid for dividends (o policy cured can be given for reference.’ There Is | holders . e no treatment so successful in the cure of | Commissicns pald to agents. .. ... . consumption, catarrh, asthma, bronchitis, deaf- | Salaries and : ccmpensation of ness, ringing ears, discharging ears, cancers, | officers and employes, ezcept | tumors. eczema, blood poison, skin diseases, agents and medical examiners. .. | locomotor ataxia, paralysis, special diseases oi | Salaries and traveling expenses of | women, ements, painful | _managers of agencles ,..... periods, weak backs. | Medical ezaminers’ ovarlan pains, ulcerations, . ete, I arfes ......... diseases affecting the stomach, Iliver. ‘-:Ilh pald for rents . and bowels bloating. belching of gas, con- | Cash pald for Insurance Depart stipation, piles, fistula etc., etc., special dis. l"l:ent fees, taxes, etc.. gates of men, prostatitis, stricture, varicocele, | AL other cash payments. loss of strength, merve exhaustion, weakness, | etc., etc. T’Ae Electro-Chemic treatment is | Total Expenditures during tha the most successtul treatment known for homs | vear o 31,046,572 a1 application. An expensive Electro-Chemic ap- | ozl —_—— paratus is loaned free to patients livink at & PREMIUM-NOTE ACCOUNT. distance. They should come for a personal | Premium notes and | exanitnation when possible or write for full | Other premium obli- | instructions regarding home examination and | Kailons at beginning reatment. which will be promptly forwarded, | Of the year......... $15,348 48 free of charge. The Electro-Chemlc Institute mium notes ' and is the only one in San Franci Other premium. obii- trally located at 8 Grant a gati.ns received dur- Chemic treatment. EXPENDITURES. Cash pald for losses and matured o hdowments < . st There are separate and privaie apartments | 1 INE the year....... 104200 37 set aside for the accommodation of male and | FTRIum = notes ' re female patients. For the past four years tes- | oo B o == timonlais from cured patients living right here | Policies .. g 153 00 in San Francisco have been published weekly s Total ...... 4120400 53 in the leading San Francisco papers. Every | one ot these testimonials have been gentne | i Suring O and many have been given by well-known | ymoin: oo nop business and professional people, whose testi- | omel;‘p?:ml?x:ofif mony is most reliable. The office hours| CU0C DESTRNE OBM- are from 9 in the morning until 5 in the | §aon" used o pays afternoon and from 7 to 8 at night, every | Zent of ! 8565 47 day in the week. and on Sundays from 10 In | smoune of nates and the morning until 1 in the afternoon. other premium obli- gations used in pur- chase of surrendered T poitctes ... o7 8 Amount of notes and NOW ISYOUR CHANCE TO || “siizsmeti 55 gations volded by lapse of policies.... T7.372 51 Amount of notes and BRING YOUR FRIENDS OR | “:u st c50 1 gations redeemed by malker in cash...... 43,977 09 RELATIVES FROMEUROPE || s Premium - te 92,282 Account . 282 71 Through Rates to Californla From: || .. sote assets ot ana o the year . prowmeBes R || QUEENSTOWN...... $71.25 LIVERPOOL.......... 71.25 LONDON . ............ 74.25 GLASGOW . .......... 74.25 /| pUBLIN crereee. TA25 || COPENHAGEN. ...... 75.00 1 ceene. TB.00 || GOTHENBURG ........ 75.00 Proportionate low rates from all other [ e Tareas ona “Quichest hine across the Atlantic. These rates good only for IJmRt'(; . BRADLEY I €. GARVERICK, Secretary. Subscribed and sworn to befors me, this 1Sth | day of February, 1905. WILLIAM J. RAFFERTY, Notary Publie. They offered me several | press’ strict commands forbidding the | practice of foot-binding, he finds that; time. Purchase tickets at once. | ] you can’t call, send the money and we | { will furnish you with the tic! 4 || s. . BOOTH, — { Gen. Agt., U. P. R. R. Co., Port Townsend, Seattle, Ta- | Cunard 8. 8. Co., coma, Everett. Anacortes, South Bellingham, No. 1 Montgomery St.. || Bellingham—11 a. m.. April 5, 10, 15, 20, 28, San Francisco, 30; May 5. changs at Seattle to this com; . { California. ]| steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at or RMM to N. P. Ry.: at Vanvouver to i P._Ry. For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—] 1:30 p. m. April 5. 11, 17, 28, 20: May 5. - j1:30 5 m. Ape 2 & 14 20, 26; May 3. . or zeies (via Port Los Angeles and % n Diego and Santa Barbara— /| Dr. Wong Him, Herb Doctor, || soonecid san biesoand | | State of California, lmu i it. He ‘which him. on the worst cases in old or y condition, quickness of the oSt wanting per bottle. any case. Wong tion by case_ fully. 518 South 224 YELD 667 GEARY STREET, Between Jones and Leavenworth sts., . F. Chinese Legation, Washington, D. C. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. voy to the United States of America, and Pery, do here by certify that Dr. Wong Him fd bone. in China and regu- larly qualified as such. WU T. FANG. September 16, 1902. Best of Certificates in His Office. Omlhi- (Neb.), April 23, 04 To Whom It May Concern: ng eitn the best physicians and specialists for the past six years I called on Dr. a simple examina- B HrmlmHLm- eeling the p! T asked him if sald yes, I can thfully say physicians here think hlm & wonder. one writing me I will be only too glad and thankful to answer. ommend him In the very worst cases of a. as my case was known to bs one of the most stubborn on E Xeray was also & fallure. 1 think Dr. W Him one of the best in the United States and owe my future health to Very truly, DR. HALL'S to do, and Iou ean't le; three bottles, $5. potentiary and En- n-from six to eight weeks, The 1 can ¢ A. F. GRIFFITH, street, Omaha, Neb. WEAK ME REINVIGORA' the under- Extraordinary Spain s a physician After treat- my he could cure he did. Any lly ree- TOR m%y&i&hs orders HALL'S ISDI%LL Also for for free sale at 1073% Broadway, Market st., S. F. Send {vi and . Santa Barbara, Santa Crus, teroy, San Simeon., Cayucos, Port Harford (! Ventura and Hueneme — m. Los Rosa- |ta, Guaymas (Mex.). 10'a._m.. Tth each monh. ALASKA EXCURSIONS (Season 1905} —The tial excursion steamship Spokane will leave a. e and 6. 20; Aug. 3. 17. Victoria. June 8, 22: July For further information obtafn folder. Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates. TICKET OFFICE—4 New Montgomery at. (Palace Hotel). 10 Market st. and wharves. FREIGHT OFFICE—10 Market st. C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, 10 Market st.. San Francisco. DIRECT PASSENGER SERVICE TO NORWAY, SWEDEN & DENMAR ”m every Thursday instead of Saty . a8 10 a. m., from Pler 42, North River, foot of M :

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