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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1895. - HUNTINGTON'S BIG SALARY It Is Shown by Documentary Evidence to Be Nearly $50,000. STANFORD'S SPIRIT INVOKED. One of the Late Senator’s Works Furnishes the Important Testimony. On no less authority than the late Senator Stanford’s sworn testimony, taken in 1887, it is shown that the testimony of Secretary ing before the Board of Railroad Com- that C. P. Huntington’s salary i $10,000 a year, was erroneous, and that his 5 close to $30,000. The following letter to Commissioner La Rue was written by J. M. Bassett of Oak- and, and is dated September 8, 1895. It is of a personal but not confidential nature ads: e of New York, May 12, 1887, the s Pacific Railway Commission ‘sub- land Stanford some fifty odd ques- These questions came in advance of ion. 5 rd took the questions, Henry Vroo- man and Jim Brown to Palo Alto, and after » weeks a work of 267 phges entitled wer of the Central Pacific Railroad Com- eland Stanford, president, 28 _and 29, 1887, to the An R ,” was produced. This book was thought to be such a crusher of Congress and the commission that the Southern Pacific had it printed at its own ex- S and 29, the commission or A, Palace Hotel, San a, president of the Railrond Company, being duly red the book in testimony, which he 5000 or more paid by the rond Company_ since its officer or employe,” ap- FINANCIAL ibsequen E deemed it ¥ 10 de- of its president wherever tis perhaps due to Mr. Lansing to ever have had the pleasure mony_of ‘the late president > company of which he is the accom- 1 etary. I happen to have a copy which may be the only copy of ng work not reduced to ashes intington read_ this testimony he, for undredth t applied his pet name of ¥ to Stanford. In order to show clearly the duplicity that was practiced by somebody during the recent investigation, that portion of the testimony bearing on the question’ of Mr. Huntington’s salary is here repro- duced. On the 4th of September, in answer to stions as to what compensation Mr. i eived for his services to the Company, Secretary Lans- n: I think T can make an ex- of the salaries of Mr. Huntington other officers which will be satisfactory to the commission. Mr. Huntington and his as50¢ X tneir own_ salaries, probably as Teprese he board of directors. The sal- aries were fixed by them practically years ago, when the y commenced its business. perty among five inter- es at a certain rate and it has been maintained since. Huntington Teceived the same rate as three or four others who represent the ownership of the company. His salary is a fixed salary. Now, I may say further the amount of the salaries these gentle- | men spoken of, and Mr. Huntington among | the others, receive is considerably less than they pay t0 some of the other officers. It is not enough to be considered a fair compensation for their services if they were employed by the company. It is an amount that is consid- imply as a nominal rate. They agreed | between themselves, and this has been g on to my knowledge with the Central > and Southern Pacific companies for ty-five years without change. Chairman La Rue then asked the ques- i [he compensation is the same as it was twenty-five years ago?”’ sif,’’ answered Lansing. hey fixed it then, and they have several officers who receive much more each.” Further urging to secure the exact amount paid Huntington only elicited a fiat refusal on Lansing’s part to state. But on the 5th a return was made to the same question, and Secretary Lansing, with a show of frankness, answered it as follows: Mr. Huntington receives $10,000 a year for his services for all the lines of the Southern Pacific Company, including the Pacific and the Atlantic systems. It was merely & per- sonal consideration that prevented my stating | Mr. Huntington's salary, but I have since been | told that he has no objéctions to my doing so. | According to the testimony given by Secretary Lansing three important points are covered that have a most important bearing on the letter received by Chairman The salary of $10,000 paid Mr. Huntington was for his services to all the companies embraced in the Southern Pacific Company, not for services to one or more of the subordinate companies, but to all of them and to the parent company. Nor was this salary paid him for his ser- Vices in any one or more particular capa- cities in connection with the Southern Pacific Company, but it was paid him for all his services to the Southern Pacific Company and to all its adjuncts. Another point is that such salary was fixed twenty- five years ago and has not since been changed. It will be seen that the letter was not received by Chairman La Rue until the hearing before the Railroad Commission on the question of rate reductions had been closed, and hence it was not permitted to cut any figure in that matter and was not made public earlier. A LOCAL SOAP COMBINE The California Manufacturers to Meet in Conven- tion. They Wish to Regulate Prices and Drive Eastern Brands From the Fleld. The soap manufacturers of the State are preparing to hold a convention or meeting in this City before long for the purpose of agreeing upon a plan of action for conduct- ing their businesson this coast. They also propose to make a vigorous fight to place their goods before the Western public and get back some of the trade taken from them by Eastern soap-makers. It is claimed that besides the better grades of soap made in the East and sold on this coast, the Eastern manufacturers are sending out a lot of cheap, highly perfumed stuff in order to compete with the cheaper California- | took with them stores of California fruits T advance the interests of home-made soaps | in preference to the Eastern-made article. | At present there are about fourteen soap | manufacturers in San Francisco and the | bay cities, besides those in Sacramento. Stockton, Fresno, S8an Diego and Los An- };e]es. There are about twenty of these actories in the State. The local dealers | have invited those in the other cities to attend the meeting, and nearly all have romised to attend. The time and place ave not yet been selected. | HON. JAMES KEIR HARDIE. The Prominent Scotch Socialist Ex- | pected to Arrive To-Night. Hon. James Keir Hardie, the ex-member | of the British Parliument and a prominent Scotch socialist; is missing—that is, the | San Francisco section of the Socialist Labor party don’t know where to find him. | Heisdue in San Francisco this evening, | but nothing has been heard of him since he left Chicago. On his departure from that city Thomas Morgan of Chicago tele- graphed 1o the socialists in this City that Hardie would speak in several cities be- tween there and Denver, and he would | reach San Francisco on the evening of the 10th inst. That was the last heard of him, but he is expected to arrive as per pro- gramme. At a meeting of the section last evening it was decided to send a man to Sacra- mento to go on board the overland trains | and telegraph back when Mr. Hardie | passes through Sacramento. ! A reception committee consisting of | Messrs. Garrett, Beresford, Seltzer, War- necke Jr., Lewis, Stubenrauch, Laccuse and | Copeland will meet the socialist ieader at the Oakland mole. He will be conducted ' END OF ADAMIC TIME, Rev. J. H. Allen of Oakland Will Undertake to Prove This To-Night. IS SCIENTIFICALLY CERTAIN. The Millennium W1l Occur Before the End of the Present Century. A strange, and to the average thinker, weired service will be held in the Asbury Methodist Church, Oakland, to-day.” A sect, not altogether new, with a large fol- lowing across the bay and in S8an Francisco, will celebrate the beginning of the end of Gentile time, which event according to the teachings and belief of Rev. J. H. Allen, the particular apostle of this new doctrine, is scheduled to take place some where near the year 1900. Mr. Allen candidly acknowledges that he cannot name the exact day or hour when the millennium will come, but is con- fident that ere the next century is ushered in Christ will have appeared again. Biblical, astronomical and scientific REV. J. H. ALLEN, [From a photograph.] to the Windsor Hotel and in the evminfi | given a reception at the Temple on Turk street. In consequence of not hearing from Mr. Hardie, that gentlemen’s engagements are a little uncertain. He is expected to speak before the Federated Labor Union of Oak- land on Friday evening. On saturday or | Sunday evening he will speak at the Temple. Arrangements are being made for him to speak in Sacramento, Los An- | geles and San Jose. i THO UNCRONNED KNEHTS | Caps That Strayed on Ne- braska Prairies Find Their Way Home. Where Track-Walking Is Done With Electric Lights and Fine- Tooth Combs. Following humbly as well as figuratively in the footsteps of Peter the Hermit and Richard of the Lion Heart, California Knights Templar made a pilgrimage last month. They went not to Jerusalem, but to Boston, which was far better. They and wild cat yarns, and brought back fond memories of a great time. These Knights from out the West went overland in great style and with great speed. Because of the speed at various stages of the journey there was consider- | able more distribution of California prod- | ucts than was down on the programme. | Of the corkscrews and. hairpins, can- openers and shirt-buttons. that blazed the trail of the Knights through the country between here and the Missouri, no record has been kept,but two caps have just LuIrned up here around which hang a pretty tale. It was somewhere rear Red Cioud, or McCook, Nebr., that Sir Frank W. Sumner of Golden Gate Commandery of this City lost his fatigue cap. The train was going at a sixty-one mile clip and Mr. Sumner felt so foolish at having ventured where it could be blown away, and so thankful that his head or his whiskers didn’t go, too, that he said nothing of his loss. Abont sixty miles from Omana, out where the corn grows nearly as high as a ‘California redwood, one of the California Com- mandery Knights 1yst a similar cap. More may have strayed, but these are all of which there is record. Sir Knight Sumner’s cap was found by a blue-eyed Nebraska maiden who was trudging along as an escort to her father, a trackwalker for the Burlington roaa. It was a black silk cap, with silk trimmings and a tiny red cross on its front. The Iittle girl, so the story goes, took posses- sion of the find and wore it home, because it was so pretty. She will robably be a new ~woman when she grows up because she wanted to keep that treasure for her personal useand adornment. But her father would not per- mit any such fancy, and following the rules of the company he sent his pick-up to the foreman. The foreman duly for- warded the cap to headquarters, and thence it was sent here to Agent Sanborn of the Burlington. The California Commandery man’s cap, which was also found by a trackman, was forwarded with the other. Both arrived here yesterday. Colonel Sumner looked blankly amazed when he saw his property, and he thinks the world is gétting smaller all the time. The other lost cap is await- ingits owner. Mr. Sanborn is as proud of the incident asa hen with ducks, and he is now telling all about how fine-tooth combs are used by all Nebraska track- facts, according to his interpretation, give evidence of the correctness of his views. “The Watchers,” as the new sect is termed, will begin their devotions at high noon to-day at the Asbury Methodist Church, and at night Mr. Allen will give a lecture explanatory and corroborative of his vie He proposes to give seven chronological reasons why the resurrction of the righteous dead and the translation of living Christians to heaven may be ex- pected to take place any time between 1896 and the first half of the year of the present century. He said yesterday: 1 propose to demonstrate scientifically, as- tronomically and irom a Biblical standpoint that the Adamic or Gentile truce ends with the present century. There are seven reasons for this which may be briefly told as follows: First, the 2300 years referred to or prophesied by Daniel as the cleansing of the temple ends in 1896. This took A\lncc at a certain period, beginming with the daily sacrifice in the tem” ple, which was dedicated to God by Zereubabel on the return of the Jewish people from Baba- Tonian captiyity:: Whis wks S0k vears before Christ was crucified, which, takén with the 1 years since the crucifixion, gives the 2300 years spoken of by Denie The second point involves another prophesy of 120 years, and that also expires in 1896. The people of the United States are directly re- ferred to, but I prefer to give the details of this in my lecture. The other points I shall con- sider may be briefly termed the alpha and omega of the world; the midnight cry, chrono- logically considered, in which the parable of the fen virgins cut'an important figure; the seventy weeks of Daniel; jubilees and their significance and the three'and & half years re- ferred to in the Book of Revelations. The figure seven which occurs so often in holy writ has more than a numerical value. I hold it to be a shadow of consummation or per- fection. In Leviticus there are many sevens, and this is equally true of the Book of Revela- tions. Scripture history is also replete with the suggestive number. The cycles of the Bible are cycles of sevens. The first cycle is that of days—six days of creation and one of rest. The second isa cycle o(iesrs—slx years for the cultivation of soil and the seventh a Sabbath rest for the land. The third is a cycle of seven-year periods, seven of them coming to the year of jubilee—a year of more complete rest from cultivation. The science of astronomy has fixed it beyond dis“ue that Adamic time began in September at high noon, and this is the reason the record in Genesis puts evening before morning in the account of the first day. ‘THE ROMANCE OF AW LEEN. How a Chinese Girl Can Be Made Love To at the Missions. Presents of Jewelry Are Frequently Glven, but Sausages Are Not Seorned. Many and unexpected are the ways by which sinners are sometimes led into the NEW TO-DAY—DRY GOODS. ress (Joods and Silks! this week only=-= smaller profits than others. SEE THE GREAT SPECIALS for to-day, Friday and Saturday. Domestics, Fancy Goods, Underwear, etc., etc. proclaim us the bargain makers of the city. Ol o By far the most interesting offerings we have ever made. that the looms are still working on. No reason for the little prices well, we are selling so many we can afford to take Superb values that Styles New_S_ilks. SATIN STRIPE PLAIDS, newest fad for ladies’ waists, eight swell 1-°0 color combinations, 20-inch Yard FANCY GROS DE LOURDES SILK, ribbon grass on fancy net pattern, new color effects, 21-inch......... FANCY JACQUARD ALL SILK, new designs and colors, 19-inch. 60° Yard LACE-EFFECT SILK, new designs and color effects, 21-inch gL Yard BLACK TAFFETA, colored satin stripe, in pink, lavender, light (o] blue, red, cerise, pretty for skirts, 90 20-inch.......... . Yard FANCY TAFFETA, all sk, 100 750 color combinations, 20-inch Y. = STRIPE PEAU DE _SOIE, in new 900 shadow eftects, 20-inch, bought to sell for $1 ayard... Yard FANCY TAFFETA, all silk, plnk,$1.00 light blue, nfle and corn shades, = good, heavy quality, 22-inch . Yard BLACK FIGURED TAFFETA, 50 7’0 styles, all new patterns, 21-inch.. YOM BLACK GROS GRAIN, ALL SILK, very heavy, for skirts or lining, very special, worth oné-fifth more, 20-inch. .. 69° Yard BLACK FRENCH GROS GRAIN, ALL SILK, an excellent dress fabric, worth $1, 23 inches wide, and this week it Is.. 75° Yard BLACK GROS GRAIN SILK, an ex- cellent fabric for a stylish and serviceable dress, very heavy, 23 inches wide, an d easiiy worth! 0 Yard SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. < [INCORPORATED] 987,939, 941 MARKET STREET, San Francisco. DT New Dress Goods. FANCY MOHAIR SUITINGS, 3:50 several lines in pretty patterns $ and colorings, 37 inches wide.. Suft | See Show Window." SILK AND WOOT, STRIPE, new color effects, 38 inches wide. ] g 3 Suit See Show Window. TUFTED SCOTCH CHEVIOT, fancy mixtures for stylish street wear, 33 inches wide : See Show Window. BOUCLE POPLIN, all wool and the very latest color combina- tions, a tasty dress fabric, 44 inches wide | See $72 | Suit STRIPE NIGGERHEAD, new ef- fects in rough suiting, stripes of curly mohair on colored grounds, 45 Inches wide See Show Window. $7o0 Suiy SATIN FINISH COVERT, black stripe on colored grounds, with dainty scattering silk drops, a yery preuy patcern, 43 inchies wide. 887" Suit BOUCLE WORSTEDS, six new and stylish color combinations, 45 inches wide. . See Show Window. $10:=e Suit SILK MIXTURES, serpentine ef- fects in gold sk on different colored grounds, a new lot just arrived. . ow Wind: $1020 Suit HEAVY BOUCLE NOVELTY, the swell est fabric of the new season, elegant color combing tions. $14°° SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. eI e %rmconpomml 937, 939, 941 MARKET STREET, San Francisco. Great Specials In Domestics. 3 bales 4-4 BROWN MUSLIN, close KC thread. good quality cotton. Spe- cial price this we -~ Yand 8 cases BLEACHED CAN EC FLANNEL, very good quality ) to be sold this week Yard TWILLED UNBLEACHED LINEN CRASH: pure flax; a heavy 1c grade: imported direct from Ire- O3 land; 17 inches wide; very special Yard HUCK TOWELS, size 19x41 inches, bleached and all linen: we Lave ] 4C about. 50 dozen and will close them out at a big bargain......... Each DUCK SUITING, in navy, cadet blue or tan, with dots or stripes; /T1C 8£00d. picKing for poor people’s |2 purses at . Yard 86-INCH CURT SWISS, in ]O10 stripes and dots: always useful: 2 g0od to have and very special at.. Y ard PURDAH DRAPERY: floral de- signs on difterent colored gronnds; desirable for curtains, clothes bags, lounge covers, etc., etc 1210 dark and light color: was 20c; 2 special now at. Yard 10° Each c 19 Each PENCILTABLETS: 200pages; ruled £C or not 5 i Each PRETTY PAINTED PICTURE () ¥ (ES, gl n: Each DOLLS' TRUNKS, brass tipped, painted wood— Size 18x10 . ®1 35 each Size 16x8 . 90 each Size 12x7. 60 each We cannot evengive you an idea of the multitude of bargains that await your visit to our bazaar. When you are in step down and look around. @%: z (INCORPORATED] 937, 939, 941 MARKET STREET, San Francisco. Great Specials In FangX Goods. 4 good line of EMEROIDERY, edge | ()0 in white and colors, was cheap last week at 20c, nov Yard | A cheaper line of EMBROIDERY, (310 edge In white and colors, would D4 be a leader at 10c, a special at. Yard | LING, In navy, 10 bi e et L2 for them to get away at. 3¢ Yard derwear. fERINO UNDERWEAR, 1 el’s-hair color, heavy quality, silk-bound neck and front, draw- ers to match, good value at 50¢, 3'0 special. ....... e ) 50° Per Garment MISSES' and BOYS' PANTS and drawers, all wool, in wh'te, scarlet or red, sizes 2 0-32, regular value 75¢ to $1, t to close at.. e lot, any size, 5° Per Garment In Hosiery. CHILDREN'S BLACK COTTON HOSE, narrow-ribbed, high-spliced heels and double knee and toe, extra fine quality, sizes 6109, the leader to-day in hosiery, every Ppair worth at least 40c f 25° Pair COTTON or wide ribbed, heels and double knee and toe, made of fine Macco yarn, sizes 6 to 9, about 300 dozen 335° Pair to close out. Pair CHILDREN'S RBLACK WOOL X0 HOSE e-ribbed, Merino heel &0 and toé, special to-day at.. Pair and MT narrow-ribbed, ne than 75c or $1, 50¢ very special value Pair | CHILDRE BLACK WORSTED | WOOL HC high-spliced heels and double knee and toes, every 30IC pair worth 50c, to o to-da; .. 903 These are the Best Values in the market. {(INCORPORATED) 937, 939, 941 MARKET STREET, San Francisco. world. Every Sunday, however, she goes religiously to church along with the other irls who have been rescued by the kind- Bearted ladies of the Occidental Board. The passing of this procession is an oppor- tunity eagerly seized by the eligible bachelors of Chinatown, who turn out en masse and line the sidewalks along the route, each good one cherishing the inten- tion of asking Miss Culbertson for the hand of the gir! who strikes his fancy most. As for the wicked, they know that it is useless y . one gay and sprightly bachelor was particularly struck a couple of months ago by the beauty of Ah Leen. He watched the procession pass with eyes only for her, and when she had entered the sacred edi- fice, instead of resigning himself to go home, he made a mighty effort to over- come the prejudices of early education and followed her into the church. From that date a change has come over the bachelor. He no longer burns punk at the shrines of his countrymen, nor does he dissipate money in having his fortune told; in fact, he has become in every way worthy of Ah Leen, to whom he is soon to be united. During the present strained condition of things in Chinatown, however, he shrinks from the notoriety of having his changed condition commented on by his friends and foes. Courtship, as it is understood in Chinese circles, is a somewhat tame and practical affair. There is a regular routine at the mission, in wkich a compromise is made between American and Chinese customs. The bridegroom-elect may see his future bride, he may even converse with her from opposite sides of the room, but the propri- eties would be completely outraged if the betrothed couple were to shake hands. Two or three times a week the fiance makes a call of from five to ten minutes’ duration, and if he is desperately enamored he never goes empty handed. “Sausages are u gift that is highly appreciated, and Chinese vegetables are also much esteemed. Fruit is frequently brought tothe engaged ladies, both in the Presbyterian and the Metho- dist missions, but" it would outrage Mon- golian etiquette to bestow candy. The love-making is generally monosyl- labic on the part of the young laay, and even the man finds his gift of conversation languish. At the Presgyterian mission a charming young Chinese girl named Ah Cheng, a professional interpreter, satisfies etiquette by being present during all the interviews. Many Chinese merchants have offered to lay their handsand heart at Ah Cheng’s feet, but she has seen so much of love-making as an onlooker that she re- fuses to go through the ordeal of entertain- ing a fiance on her own account. Even the touching romance of Ah Leen has not nclined.the little interpreter to follow her example. ———————— To Lecture at Atlanta. The State Development Club has at last ob- tained money enough to send three men to the Atlanta Exposition to advertise California by stereopticon lectures. The Board of Trade was unable to handle this enterprise, and the Half- million Club refused to do so, but the De- velopment C iub took the matterin_band, and through Mr Carman’s efforts found the means. The men will 70 to Atlanta next week. They have mearly 800 slides or pictures from afl arts of the State. Many have been contributed ¥ the San Francisco Camera Club, ————————— Mrs. McKay’s Funeral. The funeral ot the late Mrs. Rebecca McKay, widow of Allen McKay, took place last Sunday from her residence on Shotwell street. It was THEBALDWIN'S NEN HOST. A Lease of the Hotel for Ten Years Was Signed Yesterday. O. B. Stanton Gets It—Mose Gunst Wiil Open a Branch Store. Other Changes. A lease of the Baldwin Hotel for five years, with the privilege of five more, to health, and for several years has run the Southern Hotel of Bakersfield. Marcus Stone is a wealthy wholesale butcher and milk dealer. The ‘‘company’’ of the firm is Charley Asher, who is asso- ciated with Mose Guost. Gunst will open a branch cigar-store un- der the hotel, on the corner of Powell and Ellis streets. This will do away with the cafe located there. The bar, billiard-room and the inner cafe will remain. The bar and billiard-room will be run by Charley Asher and M. Katzenstein. The offices will be changed considerably, as the Market-street entrance will be en- larged, and a_separate ladies’ entrance to the elevator will be made. The offices and in fact the whole of the lower floor will be newly furnished and redecorated. The whole house will be newly wired for . 2 — W y N 0. B. STANTON, THE NEW PROPRIETOR OF THE BALD WIN HOTEL. PLATEDWARE AT LOW PRICES. Silver-plated Napkin Rings 15 Silver plated Nut Cracks 15 Silver-plated Dinner Bells. 15 Silver-plated Salts and Peppers, per set 25 Silver-plated Child’s Knife, Fork and Spoon.. 25 Silver-plated Butter Knives L BT Silver-plated Sugar Spoons . 25 Fancy Pattern Spoons, per set of 6. 25 Silver-plated Fancy Pattern Table Spoons or Forks, per set of SiX...,........ 50 Silver-plated Table Knives, per set of six 75 Sfiver-plated Butter Dish, glass base. 75 Silver-plated Pickle Castor 8100 Silver-plated Berry Dishes. 150 Silver-plated Soup Ladles. 150 Silver-plated Five-bottle Castor. Silver-plated Cake Basket.. ENDLESS ASSORTMENT OF FINE PLATEDWARE, In Tea Sets, Berry Dishes, Castors, Trays, Butter Dishes and Fancy Noveltles. Electrical Construction and Repairing of All Kinds. Estimates Given. NOTE. — Special attention given to Grinding Razors, Shears and Edged Tools by skilled mechanics. Prices moderate. 818-820 Market Street Phelan Building. Factory—30 First Street. largely attended by her personal friends, The Rev. Leslie W. Sprague officiated, and the in- terment was made in Odd Fellows’ Cemetery. The pall-bearers were: John Dolbeer, G. K | eleetric lighting, which will be extended to all the rooms. The house will be reno- vated and many changes made to bring it made article. The competition with the East has led to local competition. The proposition now is to meet and come to an 10DIDE OF IRON. walkers. Stone, Stanton & Co., was signed yesterday vening by the representatives of E. J. Baldwin. The lessees will take possession e - Will Advertise the ““Call.” understanding by which local competition | Mr. and M. A. W. J. Gibbs of Alsmeds. are ShinfS A Week, E. L Cullen, A. . Fuglor | October 1. The new proprietors intend to | “pio ghe times. - S to regaining some of their former business preparing for a trip around the world and will Ah Leen. ———— . make many changes and improvements in | cellar similar to the Louyre, Thisgv:ill ex- start early next week. The journey will occupy over eighteen months, during which time the Pprincipal cities of the world will be visited. Mr. Gibbs is president of Derby Lodge, Sons [From a photograph.] A Word With the Wise. Beautiful Decorated Breakfast Set, 24 pjeces.$1 85 Decorated Tea Set, 18 pieces, a 100 tend the full length of the Market-streot side and eighty feet on Powell street. On | Powell street will be a fine marble en- | that now goes to the East. One feature desired is that prices shall be established upon ail grades of goods put upon the the big hostelry. et 0. B. Stanton, who is the moving spirit in the firm, and who will have charge of i ¢ 1 ' Il 1 t Specialiy recor ded Dy tde medical obritieh of e Worid for Serofa, (o : market, of St. George, and his friends in the order will | 101, and the approaching marriage of Ah | Cuspidore, Majolica Decorated, each 20 b e | trance near the drugstore. | a, (Tumors, | Another move will be to make wholesale | Buch regret his long sojourn away from home. | Leen furnishes an instance of this. Gold tluminated Lunch Set, 18 pieces....., 160 | Lh© Dotel proper, is known as one of the | Among the many attaches of the house | § SIEREV a8 tnecarly ssges ot Cotoumption; ‘ perfumers, druggists and dealers in chem- | ;#7198 fn'g g;:zfim«}n ;g!}ezlgr-.f;xgtg: Ah Leen is a good little girl who lives GBI‘.‘:X"‘[““" duplicate for double the money. ig hotel men of the country. g iu:ere 1s much speculation as to how sweep- | ! and for stimulatiug snd regulating its periodic ' icals, und in fact all materials used in the | trip wifi be the advertising of THE CALL by in the Presbyterian mission, away from BRA&%&';‘.;’OA;E;%?:;{,%‘H?;& 08| 8 Hme; &t Criesgo, and Jaser T18Cek e iy e ”&u"}znmumm‘?-v 5 n; :’x“nruxc?lnd: 3 0. N. Y. large numberhave been in the house many large hotel in Kansas City, but was forced years. %o come to California on account of his 4 manufacture of soap, patronize, carry and | means of slereopticon views, the pomps and vapitigs of this wicked Headquarters 52-58 Market street, San Francisco,