The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 21, 1895, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1895. fiot produce enough wealth to pay the epormous usury on a debt that was grow- ing greater and greater all the time and at the same time decently feed and clothe all the people. That was one plain statement of the case. Any measure that should promise genu- ine relief from this condition of labor slavery must be put in plain and compre- hensive words. There were now just two things to be done: Let the Government be- come bankrupt or let the Government in- flate the currency. Bankruptcy of the Government meant starvation and com- plete slavery for the masses. \Were the currency to be inflated the great National debt could be paid and the ruinous usury be stopped. They talked of honest money. "Sha\rm:m be more honest than God?” he asked. What money could be more honest than that which enabled the farmer and the workingman to pay his debts and feed and clothe. his babies? Every policy was di honest that robbed the laborer of the re- wards of his industry. What weapons should be used to accom- plish: the desired results? One, at least, should be the demand for the abolition of the National banks. Every oneof these banks. constituted armed fortress with guns. trained on the silver propagandist A man who had not yet recognized tl truth of that stateme 1yettogain a clear conception of the t conflict. It would be a serious = ake if the silver men did not u s point and face the issue National banks squarely. In .concl urged upon the “plain and simple contained in the Alliance, ¢ their o conscient reat & “We SIVR CONEHTO Continued from First Page. :ss Mr. Cator the convention ement of fact” of the Farmers’ em to so frame : farmers counld them in the W without the sa s Thomas Jeffer- 'k paper must be lating medium re- e control of the Na- Later on Jefferson were more dangerous and he never uttered What was true then is Our greatest foe to-day a member t passed the bill for the T rin 1873, and he was y Chairman Baker as ‘‘one d been sorry for hjs sad mistake ever sifice.” Mr. Catton said in part: I am glad for the privilege of address- vention for it will afford me an explaining the great mis- voting for the demonetiza- silver in 1873. This bill was passed and contained the repealing orked so much disorder stem of our country. ize at the The bills no prominence ker that was des- eate such a stir all As an example of how f this bill I need ver had been passed. spondents present not ingle line on the sub- how little was thought he time of its occurrence. bill T apologize to the 3 nvention. policy now. being pursued 1 will eventually ruin the coun- al of good. It will result fisst of :ore critical consideration of the ion by the people at large. It - 3 potent factor in educating the hen the people understand it ultimately triumph.” THE EVENING SESSION. interesting Addresses by Miss Pheebe Cousins and Morris M. Estee. The evening session was very largely at- tended and a great many ladies were in the i|burg during the strike. | t their convictions at the ballot- | dependence of the States had been estab- | box there can be but one result—right wall | 1 | she said, as to have attracted attention ‘ from all over the country. But the patri- | otic speeches were all for naught, she de- | clared. While they were in progress Wil- | lism E. Curtis and Logan Carlisle of the treasury were speeding across the ocean, | carrying six million dollars’ worth of golden bonds with which to further strengthen the golden yoke that England | is now fixing upen this Natfon. | ! ‘I came from the Atlantic to the Pacific, starting a year ago,” she said. Then she | told of the strange things she had seen in New York—the great destitution of the slums and the wanten luxuriesof Fifth | avenue. In Central Park she saw a silly | dude in a tandem behind a liveried | flunky, while just outside tire park she | saw an old woman harnessed with a big dog to a slop cart. Such scenes, she declared, were familiar enough in Europe, but what was America drifting to when they became prevalent here? Later on she saw women evicted from miserable hovels they called homes—this in Pitts- And when she | thing which Thomas Jefferson had given warning would lead to the overthrow of the republic. Now, what was the remedy for all these financial and industrial evils? she asked. Say to England that she must immedi- ately surrender her control of our Natioral treasury and immediately redeem silver. Add to this one more desired law and the problem would be solved, said Miss Cousins—the initiative and the referendum. “ The great hope is in the common people,” she said. “To them we must look for the victory in the revolution of 1896. The question at issue was: Sbould Great Britain make our financial laws, or shouid we make them for ourselves, for the benefit of our own working people? There was great applause when Miss Cousins concluded. Immediately the band played “O Say, Can You See?” and duging the mingling of the music and applause Delegate Welch of Orange County pre- sented the lady with three huge bouquets, “The compliments of Nevada and Cali- fornia to the champion of Silver Dick.” Chairman Baker said Mr. Estee needed went to Ohio she was met by Governor Mc- | | { [Sketched by a THOMAS V. | “Shall men be more honest than God.”” CATOR. “Call” artist.] | | Kinley’s militia engaged in suppressing | | riots. Even in the Golden State she had | found men out of work and tramps in | vernment is wrong, and if in- | plenty. What was it caused all this havoc? | rising of the Napa statesman. The gold standard, the manipulation oi" cve that this convention will do | the currency by the Wall-street bankers | said it would be in bad taste for him to | and the British bankers. | | It was Thomas Jefferson, Robert Morris | | and Alexander Hamilton who founded our | | monetary system after the liberty and in- } lished. It was their aim to give the Na- | tion a financial policy that would last for | | all time; that should be as firm and as last- | | ing as the constitution itself. They laid | | down the gold and silver standard, and not | | till an unconstitutional act was passed by | | Congress was the Nation in danger from | the money powers. | Peter Cooper said that all the financial | | laws were being made for the interests of S. W. HOLLADAY OF SAN FRANOISCO. “You can see by my hair that I'm for the white metal.” [Sketched by a “ Call” artist.] audience. There was an excellent band that rendered patriotic music; there were filowers for the lady speaker, Miss Cousins; there was enthusiasm throughout. Morris M. Estee was the second speaker of the gession; and his appearance was roundly applauded. It wasin the nature of a lit- erary entertainment--this evening session— and the literary committee had performed its labors well. Miss Phoebe Cousins was. introduced as the first orator. after the opening overture of the-band. Bhe brought with her greet- ings from Richard E. Bland, known in his own State of Missouri as “Silver Dick,” ghe 'said. She had hoped to read a letter from: this distinguished leader, but the 1mails had delayed it. Miss Cousins then spoke of San Fran- {"-cisco’s ‘recent Fourth of July celebration, »wmh was on such a magnificent scale, the few and rich against the interests of the poor and many, and that we were rap- idly drifting to the conditions that Eng- land suffered from when she demonetized | silver. Miss Cousins laid the blame for most of the evils of the present financial system on the Senate, which she characterized as the | American House of Lords, and declared, amid deafening applause, that it ought to be abolished. She believed with certain | French statesmen that two houses had no place in a republic. Either the upper house agreed with the lower house, and then it was superfluous; or it disagreed with the lower house, and then it was dangerous. In 1863 the National banking act—that ought to be called the National swindling act—was passed, said Miss Cousins, and then it was that Congress did the very | of the people will be prosperous, that no | ment is wrong or right or that they have | The question is, how to remedy the evil. | they tell us, too, that it can’t be the de- | ceeded our imports and we have kept the | affairs prevails and we begin to relize the no introduction to a California audience, and this was apparent enough to any one who heard the applause that greeted the Mr. Estee started out in a light vein. He begin now to talk back to a woman. For thirty years he had been trying to edu- cate himself not to talk back to a certain little woman. And the joke and the compliment over Mr. Estee said he considered he was ad- dressing not a political body, but an indus- trial couvention whose purpose was that of economic education. “Credit makes the stability of the Gov- ernment and vice versa. Credit is what is wanted,” said Mr. Estee, ‘‘and credit is the child of confidence, and confidence the child of prosperity. So prosperity is the one thing we want and must have at all cost. We want laws so framed that the masses man shall want honest labor and be un- able to find it; and no man, woman or child go hungry or illy clad. How to bring this about is the question. Now, it is worse than nonsense to tell a hungry people that this or that theory of govern- been robbed by some law thirty years old. This is what the hungry man wants to hear. “In three years the product of the farm and factory have depreciated in value nearly 30 per cent. Yet they tell us noth- ing is wrong, nothing the matter. And monetization of silver that’s responsible, because silver has been demonetized these twenty years. And so it has, but I'll tell you why we're just beginning to feel it now. Heretofore our exports have ex- money &t home. Now a different state of evils of our financial policy. “Last winter the administration of this Government went to three bankers and secured their protection of the National treasury. Imagine three bankers protect- ing 70,000,000 people, and imagine the kind of protection they would get! And the three bankers made $10,000,000 out of their protection of us. They borrowed $100,000,000 of us, sent it over to England, and then the English bankers sold it back to us at their own figures, and cleaned up $10,000,000 on the transaction. That’s the kind of protection against bankruptcy we got. “Now the redemption of greenbacks was all right in its way—that is, the law pro- viding for the redemption was sound. That law said they should be paid in silver and gold. How have they been paid? In gold. We haven’t obeyed that law. The Government says that silver won’t main- tain our credit abroad. Let us have some credit at home and we will stand well enough abroad. Let us .make our laws for our own people first and for the people ‘abroad’ afterward. “And yet we do use silver. Everybody uses silver in the ordinary transactions of life. Why, when I went to the Pennsyl- vania station in the East to get my sleep- ing-car accommodations home and tend- ered the agent two $20 gold pieces he made{ me wait till he had sent a messenger to the bank to have them weighed. Oh, silveris good enough for the smaller transactions of life, good enough to pay the farmers for a bushel of wheat or a dozen of eggs, but when it comes to the bankers, the;Wall- street speculators in money, then we must have ‘sound’ money. “A man said to me that the free coinage of silver would drive the gold outof the country. I told bim it couldn't drive it any faster than it is now going. It is going now faster than we can berrow it. 4 “Gold and silver is the money of the constitution, and so great a constitutional lawyer as Daniel Webster saia that to de- monetize either gold or silver would be un- constitutional.” ‘When the applause that followed Mr. Estee to his chair had subsided Chairman o Baker adjourned the convention till this morning at 10 o’clock. TO-DAY’S PROGRAMME. _Report of the Committee on Resolu- tions, and Mr. Bartine’s Speech, To-day—the last day of the convention— will be the most important and most in- teresting of the entire three days’ session. In the morning General C. C. Powning of Nevada will address the convention at 10 o’clock. He will be followed by an address from Mrs. Frona Eunice Waite, .R. Guy McClellan of California will be the last speaker prior to the noon adjourn- ment. In the afternoon will come first the re- port of the committee on resolutions, of which Henry J. Willey is chairman, This committee will report for adoption by the convention a preamble and resolutions that shall embody the declaration of prin- ciples of the Bimetallic League. Succeeding the discussion and adoption of the platform will come an address by Frederick Adams, after which the reading of letters and telegrarus will be the order. A. W. Thompson will open the five minutes’ speeches order, which will con- tinue till the afternoon adjournment. In the evening there will be a stere- opticon exhibition illustrating very ad- mirably and entertainingly the doctrines of the free silver advocates, What is considered the heavy gun of the convention will be fired when Con- gressman H. F. Bartine begins his oration. Congressman Bartine left a sick-bed at his home ineUtah to be present at this as- semblage. The trip to the coast has done him a great deal of good and a great speech is expected from him. R. C. Chambers, president of the Bi- metallic Union, who accompanied Mr, Bartine here, will be the last speaker, Bartine's Views. Congressman H. F. Bartine arrived in the City yesterday from Salt Lake to attend the Bimetallic Convention. Up to within four months ago Mr. Bartine was a resi- dent of Nevada, where the battle began, but of late he has been using his forcible arguments for free coinage in Utah. Mr. Bartine says: “The people there are beginning to see light ahead, and the best supporters we have in advancing the silver cause are men who understand it. We have organized a bimetallic league there, and when the time comes we will send siiver orators all over the United States, and particularly into the sections where the voters do not understand the importance of the issue. All the neo{)le need is education in the matter, and thatis probably the best way to spread it. Thousands of voters are just in that condition where they can be won over to the silver cause if it is put to them squarely and by men who have investigated and comprehend it in allits details and side issues. There are a great many arguments to answer, and one must be informed to state it clearly. Utah expects to do her share in righting the wrong of 1873, and with that end in view we are marshaling all the forces at our command.” The Sliver Advocate. The Silver Advocate, a weekly San Fran- cisco journal devoted to the remonetization of silver and the promotion of the indus- trial interests of the Pacific Coast, is a creditable paper. The editor, Robert Dun- can Milne, is a scholarly writer, who can present lucid arguments in behalf of the cause which his journal espouses. J.C. Fitzgerald, the manager, is a well-trained business man of newspaper experience. McKENNA NOT CONCERNED The Ransom Decision Not Applicable to the United States Circuit Judge. His Appointment Was Made In the Fifty-Second Congress to Fill Judge Sawyer’s Place. The ruling of the United States Attor- ney-General in the matter of the position of ex-Senator Ransom as Minister to Mexico has no effect on Circuit Judge Me- Kenna’s position on the bench of the Cir- cuit Court of Appeals. That court was created, it is true, in the Fifty-first Con- gress under an act approved March 3, 1801, | and there is a constitutional provision in section 6, article I, which reads: No Senator or Representative shall, during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil office under the authority of the United States which shall have been created or the emoluments wheregf shall have been in- creased during such tume, ete. But this bhas nothing whatever to do with Judge McKenna, and whatever fears may have been entertained by attorneys or ! others are wholly without foundation. | ‘When asked yesterday bow thislaw and the decision of the Attorney-General would affect him Judge McKenna said: “It does not affect me at all. There ap- ears to be an absolute misapprehension in the matter. I was appointed a Judge of the Circuit Court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of .Tndfe Sewyer. He was a United States Circuil Jud%:, filling the office long before 1 was in Congress. There was no Judge ot the United Stater Circuit Court of Appeals. The Circuit Judges, with an_Associate Justice of the TUnited States Supreme Court from that bench, or if the Circuit Judges should be disqualified, the District Judges, shall act, “So, the office I occupy was not created in the Fifty-first Congress, theugh the Court of Appeals was. But even had such | office been created during the Filty-first Congress it conld not_affect me, because 1 was not a%pointed till the time of the Fifty-second Congress—after the Fifty-first was'a thing of the genst. 8o, in every aspect from whicg it can be viewed the matter of this ruling of the Attorney-General in the Ransom case affecting my position is en- tirely without foundation.” FATAL ACCIDENT, Lorenzo Chellini Crushed Between His Wagon and Team on Church Street. Lorenzo Chellini, a teamster living at 64 Henry street, met with a fatal accident last night about 7 o’clock on Church stréet, be- tween Nineteenth and Twentieth. He was driving down the steep grade there when his foot slipged from the brake and he fell forward. The wagon crushed him against the horses, which started the animals off into & run and Chellini was thrown down the embankment into the old Jewish Cemetflg. 4 He was picked up unconscious and taken, to the City and County Hospital in the pa- trol wagon. It was found that his hipsand head were badly crushed and he was also suffering from internal injuries. He died shortly after 9 o’clock, and his body was removed to the Morgue. DEATH OF MRS. VAOHELL. San Luis Obispo Loses One of Its Promi- nent Soclety Ladies. Mrs. Horace A. Vachell, daughter of C. H. Phillips, died at her home in 8an Luis Obispo last Friday after an illness of sev- eral weeks. For many days her life had been despaired of by the grief-stricken family, though the blow_when it fell was none the less severe. Mrs. Vachell was highly accomplished and ranked as a social leader in San Luis Obispo. She was 25 vears of age and had friends all over the State, by whom her untimely demise will be sincerely mourned. The funeral was held on Sunday. ALONG THE COAST, Progress of the Valley Road Graders at Stockton. INCREASING THE FORCE. Workmen Are Now Throwing Up Earth Between the Two Channels. RAILS FORTHE CORRALHOLLOW. Arrival of Seventeen More Carloads of Materlal for the Line to the Mines. STOCKTON, Car., Aug. 20.—Superin- tendent Wilbur of the Valley road will to- morrow begin throwing up a grade east of Sacramento street to a spur track to run from the line of the Southern Pacific Com- pany to the main line of the Valley road. This will be done for the purpose of mov- ing the engines to the tracks of the latter railway. The work of grading between Stockton and Mormon channels for the Valley road was commencee yesterday. This section will require a great deal of filling, but the contractors expect to complete the work in considerably less time than the sixty days specified in their contract. Grant Bros. began the grading southeast of the city yesterday. They put fifty men and forty teams at work. The graders’ camp is located on the land. of D. A. Learned, about two miles from the city. About a third of a mile of ground was broken yesterday. No effort will be made to push the work until the men and teams get hardened somewhat. The grading be- tween the camp and Stockton will be com- menced in a day or two. The pile-driver to be used in building a bridge over the East-street canal is about completed. Cotton Brothers have the contracts and will begin on this one first. The last of the piling for the trestle bridge over Mormon Channel was put down yes- terday and the timbering will be begun ut once. Charles Btein, representing the Crescent Tieplate Company of Chicago arrived last night. This firm has a contract with the Valley road to sypply it with 500.000 service tieplates and he is here for the purpose of instructing the workmen how to place them in position. The work of placing the tieplates on the ties began to-day. The track-laying on Weber avenue is progress- ing rapidly. The specifications for the bridge to be built by the Corral Hollow Railway over Mormon Channel have been forwarded to the Secretary of War at Washington and as soon as they are returned approved, which will be some fifteen days from now, the work on the bridge will be commenced. Seventeen more carloads of rails for this road arrived here yesterday. Over 1000 tons of rails have arrived for the road upto the present time, . A CaMP OF INSTRUCTION. Two Companies of the Sixth to Ocoupy Goodwater Grove. STOCKTON, CaL., Aug. 20.—It has been decided by companies A and B of the Sixth regiment to establish the camp of instrnetion which the guardsmen have been talking about for some’ time. Good- water Grove has been selected as the place for the camp, and it has been decided to name the camp in honor of Colonel Nunan of the Sixth Regiment. The companies will march from their armory to the car house on California street on Saturday evening at 7 o’clock, from which place they will be taken to the grove in cars. The camp will be immedi- ately formed and a guard placed on duty. The place selected will be lighted with electric lights, so that drills may take place in the evening. On Sunday after- noon the battalion will be reviewed by Colonel Nunan, and on the following Sun- day Adjutant-General Barratt and Briga- died-General Muller and staff are expected to visit the camp. An invitation will be extended to Governor Budd and staff, but itis not thought the Chief Executive will be wall enough to accept. After the drills each night the Sixth Regiment band will furnish music for dancing. Captain Johnson of Company A said this morning that great preparations were in progress to make this the best of all en- campments for years. The bluecoats will do considerable entertaining, and intend to fix the camp up accordingly. There will be 150 incandescent lightsamong the tents, and from tent to tent will be swung strings of Japanese lanterns. About 500 of these will be used in decorating. Crushed by a Falling Rail. STOCKTON, CaL., Aug. 20.—D. L. Lind- ley, who has been in the employ of the Valley road in handling rails, bad his fin- gers 50 badly crushed this morning that it may necessary to amputate them. While he was unioading some rails one of them fell on his leit hand, mashing three of his fingers to a pulp. A BLAZE NEAR NAPA, The Borreo Dwelling at Bayview Vine- yard Destroyed. NAPA, CaL., Aug. 20.—The dwelling of Mr. Borreo, at Bayview Vineyard, his mountain ranch, a few miles from town, occupied by Mr. Arata and family, was totally destm{ed by fire last night. Mrs. Arata was in front of the house when her child came running to her, glvini an alarm of fire. She hastened to the kitchen to find it full of smoke, and at once gave the alarm, but the fire had gained such head- way by this time that nothing could be done. Besides the house and adjoining build- ings Mr. Borreo lost twenty cords of wood, which was near the house, and a fine arbor, which he prized very highly. There was only $750 insurance on the house, and Mr. Arata had $250 insurance on his furniture. P S The Monterey at Port Los Angeles. SANTA MONICA, Cal., Aug. 20.—The Monterey is anchored off the Mammoth wharf at Port Los Angeles, where crowds from Los Angeles and neighboring towns are visiting the white monitor. She will remain over Thursday. Take No Substitute.. Gail Borden Eagle Brand s CONDERSED MILK Has always stood FIRST in the estima- People. No other is E?'minr& x NEW TO-DAY. Phillips Brooks Says: “To do a splendid thing is simply to do a common _thing bet- ter than othersdoit.” That is just what we are doing. We are making just as good picture frames at a moderate price as can be made any- where. We give employment to over 100 sober, industrious hands in the making of frames and mold- ings alone, which shows that the ple are willing to patronize ome industry, providing that home factories give as good an arti- cle at as low a price as can be ob- tained elsewhere. Six years ago, when our factery was initsinfancy, thirty-one traveling salesmen, rep- resenting thirty-one picture-frame molding factories in the Eastern States, arrived in this city (one each day) during the month of January. During January of 1895 only three came. For the THINK- ER, comment is unnecessary. Our factory is equipped with all the best and latest machinery and can turn out molding for the mil- lion just as good in quality and lower in price than it can be landed from factories on the other side. Our pine lumber is cut to size and to order in the mountains, and our plain and quarter-sawed oaks come in carload lots from the mills in the woods where the oak tree grows. In buying of us you not only give employment to a large number of your own people, but you get every- thing at first hands and at lowest prices. v The things we make besides mold- ings for picture frames are room- moldings, mirror frames, drawing- boards, wood easels, artists’ stretch- ers, palettes, T squares, pine back- ing, plain and ornamented cornice- poles, screens, hat racks, towel racks and swinging mirrors. Our factory is located at 710 to 720 Minna street, and our Store and Salesrcoms are located at 741, 743, 745 Market street, opposite Grant avenue, with Branches at Portland and Los Angeles. Visitors always welcome. SANBORN, VAIL & GO0, ¢RS FAIL NP NG DOCTOR SWEANY, 737 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. OPPOSITE EXAMINER OFFICE. This learned specialist, well known by his long residence and_succéssful practice on the Pacific Coast, guarantees a prompt and perfect cure of every case he undertakes. YOUNG MEN if you are troubled with night emissions, exhausting drains, pimples, bashfulness, aversion_of soci- ety, stupidness, despondency, loss of energy, ambition and ‘self-consciousness, which de- prives youaf your manhood and absolut ts you for study, business or niarriage—if you are thus afflicted you know the canse. Get well and be a men. MIDDLE-AGED MEN 562 of Fou tiow Dled with weak,aching backs and kidneys; fre- quent, painful urination and sediment in urine; impotency or weakness of Sexual organs, and other unmistakable signs of nervous debilit and premature decay. Many die of this difi- culty, ignorant of the cause, which is the sec- ond stage of seminal weakness. The most ob- stinate cases of this character treated with un- failing success. PRIVATE {iseases—Gleet, - Gonorchea, Tn- ‘flammations, Discharges, Stric- tures, Weakness of Organs. Syphilis,” Hydro- cele, Varicocele and kindred troubles—quickly cured without pain or detention from business. CATARRH Iict potsons the Breatn, Stom: ach snd Lungs and paves the way for Consumption, Throat, Liver, Heart, Kidney, Bladder and all constitutional and in- ternal troubles; also Rupture, Piles, Fistula treated far in advance of any otler institution in the country. BLOUD AND sKIN Diseases, Sores, Spots, Pimples, Scrofuls, Syphilitic Taints, Tumors, Tetter, Eczema an other impurities of the blood thoroughly eradi- cated, leaving the system in a strong, pure and healthful state. LADIES 72, Tecetve spectal and osrefal treatment for all their many dis- tressing ailments. Doctor Sweeny cures when others fail. FREE TREATMENT office on Friday afternoons. WRITE jour, rouples it living away from the city. Thousands cured at home by correspondence, and medicines sent secure from observation. A Bqok of important informa- tion sent free to those deseribing their troubles. OFFICE HOURS—9 A.M. t0 1231, 2 t0 5 and 7 to 8P.M.; Sundays, 10 A. M. to 12 ¥, only. ¥. L. SWEANY, M.D., 737 Market Street, S. F., Cal. O_posite Examiner Office, FOR FIVE DOLLARS And upward we will guarantee to farnish the A\ Best Electric Belt on Earth! Buy no belt tiil you examine Dr. Pierce's, Pamphlet No. 2 tells all about it. Call or write for a free copy. ddress: \ MAGNETIC TRUSS CO. (DR. PIERCE & SON), 704 Sacramento st., 8. F. for the poor who call in person at BIG SLAUGHTER SALE —OF— SILKS! Commencing Monday, August 19. We must have room for our Fall Importations. SLKS SACRIFICED! The Cost Not Cons_idered. 8000 YARDS GERMAN TAFFETA SILKS, in pretty plaids, checks and stripes, our regular 50c and 60c quality— REDUCED TO 37:C a Yard. 120 PIECES FRENCH TAFFETA SILKS, comprising the choicest patterns shown -this sea~ son, our regular §1 25 goods— REDUCED TO 75€C a Yard. Brocaded Duchess, In choice designs. Gros de Londres, In brocaded designs....... French Taffetas, 1n newest floral patterns.. [} A YARD. None of the aboye have ever been sold at less than $1 50 and some have sold as high as $2 a yard. Remnants! 2500 SILK REMNANTS, ranging in lengths from one and up, comprisin§ the prettiest and best designs an weaves ever shown. These we will sacrifice at, Astonishingly Low Prices ! SEE DISPLAY IN O_W SHOW-WINDOWS, NOTICHE! Our regular patrons are advised to embrace this opportunity of securing the greatest bargains we have ever offered. NEWMAN & LEVINSON, 125, 127, 129 and 131 Kearny Street, and 209 Sutter Street. LARGE RANCH WELL RENTED. For Sale Cheap Notice is hereby given that in pursu- ance of an order of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Fran- cisco, the Executors of the last will of Jose Vicente de Laveaga,deceased,will sell at private sale, to the highest bid- der, for cash in gold coin, subject to confirmation by said court, on Monday, . the 2d day of September, 1895, the Rancho Real de Los Aguilas, situated in the County of San BEenito, State of California, containing 23,650 acres. This ranch has been for fifteen years rented to one responsible firm, and is now held under a lease for the unex- pired term of three years at $6675 per annum, payable quarterly in advance. Bids in writing may be delivered to the undersigned Executors personally at any time before making the sale. For further particulars and descrip- tion of the land apply to DANIEL ROGERS, M. A.DELAVEAGA, THOMAS MAGEE, Executors of the Last Will and Testament of Jose Vicente de La- veaga, deceased, 604 Merchant st., San COAL! 'ngAL ! Wel"l’:‘fll?’n. .oe South: . nuine 700—falf ton 3 §00—Halt ton 4 00 850_Halt ton 435 Genuine Coos t Redwood, $1.00. KNICKERBOCKER COAL CO., 522 Howard Street, Near First. SUNPRITR Gr. A. DANZIGER ATTORNEY - AT - LA’ . 21 CROCKER BUILDING. Seven 1845 PRESTON R AL BAKI & AR = THE STA NG POW MERRI, [ DARD DER DORAXA SOAP POWDER is NOT PEDDLED, but is for sale by =l Grocers. HOUSEKEEPERS,+do not be deceived into purchasing inferior washing compounds under the impression that you are getting the latest and best. Secure an “AID”—a 20-mule help for the kitchen and laundry—no# a package of Caustic Soda to ruin your clothes, your hands and your temper. See that the famous 20-mule team is on your purchases of BORAX, (with book of 200 best recipes in each box) 2z and 5-Ib. boxes, 25 and 50 cents. BORAXO Bath Powder, for Toilet and Nursery, ‘2 and sb, boxes, 35 and 75 cents. BORIC ACID, for Preserving Fish, Meats and Milk, 2 and s5-lb. boxes, 50 cents and $1.00. BORAXAID, for the Kitchen and Laundry, 1 and 3-Ib. packages, 10 and 25 cents, t

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