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o & 1 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1895 HURRAH FOR DIXEY! HURRAH FOR THE CALL, THE NEWSBOYS ENTER- TAINED AT THE BALD- WIN THEATER, THE GALLERY APPLAUDS. How THE ' NEWSPAPER MER- CHANTS” SWARMED ABOUT THE “CALL"” OFFICE. BEST ACTOR IN THE WORLD. THE ENTERTAINER Has Won FRIENDS OF A LIFETIME IN THE Bovys. “Three cheers for Dixey! Hooray! Hooray!” the matter with Tae CALL? Hooray! Hooray! Hoo- Young America cheered himself hoarse in his gratitude to Henry E. Dixey, THE Carr and their ‘‘friends on the inside” at the Baldwin Theater yesterday afternoon. The famous comed:ian played for the five hundred—no new experience for him— | the distributors, disconraged at the outlook |'and beset by sbrill voices and grasping | hands, threw a handful of tickets into the | air. These tickets were gone in a moment | and forty or more of the more venture- some and still ticketless spirits followed { the retreating distributor into the office, | where a wildly waving arm of one of the | intruders shattered the glass over the i cashier’s desk. | | This was a signal for a retreat to the | | sidewalk by the storming party, but still | the crowd jostled and shouted, and still | | the policeman perspired and 'laid the vitch, which he had substituted for a | I ub, about him on the too eager hands. | | “Here, boss, here!” urchins clamored, | | and some of them called lustily to a dis- | i tributor: “Right this way, piease, Mr. | | Dixey 1 | | | P But the calm came, the distressing calm, when there were no more tickets, and | there was nothing to do for those who had missed but to try again at the next tres But the disappointment was borne very manfully. i { “Some got more'n one. Skinny got seven,” asserted a square-shouldered littie | fellow, as he trudged homeward with an | | equally unfortunate companion. | There was no hint of a whine in the | manly little voice, however. | Buf what of the lucky 500? They strged about the Baldwin at 1 o’clock as they had | surged about THE CALL office at 11. Their experience with the paper-buying | world and with each other has made them a little distrusiful. Mr. Di | tiie last moment reconsider his muniticent | offer and let some of the “swells’ into the gallery. It would be well to be there be- fore the hour for opening, to ensure their good fortune. And they were there, eager, | | expectant; alert, and suspicious. They | | greeted each other jocularl | | They were all “there—the three Mc- | Gintys, Skinny, Mush, Riley, Googy, Chick, | Tapowah, Spider, Beanie, Big Brick, Yel- | | mann.” | Savu thetic strains of which were better suited | to the mood of the contingent that re- | mained at home than that of the triumph- | ant hearers. i The boys grew hysterical over the barber- i shop scene from *“Adonis,” and there were paroxysms of laughter over the country | girlin “Adonis.”” | s Irene Cook’s dancing pleased the | guests of-the day, but they yawned over Mr. Keirns' “imitation.” The programme closed with Mr. Dixey’s impersonation of Sir Henry Irving recit- ing “if I Should Die To-night. | “Ain’t he prime? He’s better nor Herr- | The expression of the speaker | showed how high he considered the | praise. ‘“‘He'sthe bestactor in the world,” and the little fellow who delivered himself of this encomium will probably hold to that opinion as long as he lives. And as the boys left the theater they re- cated their sentiment of the “Hooray for Dixey! Hocray for THE! Carw! ™ | FERRY STEAMER CHANGE | Martin Gilovich, a Cook, Makes a De- mand for Money With a Big Butcher-Knife. Captains McKenzie and Wilson of the | Sausalito ferry line are not in the best of | humor over the recent winter timecard. By the new schedule one steamer, the 3ausalito, will handle the North Pacific Coast business, and the two captains with | their crews will go on duty two weeks and | alternate. This will not only give the | steamer people 1ong, arduous hours every d: but theater and extra night trips throughout the week. McKenzie and Wil- | son are two of the oldest captains on ‘the bay, and the prospect of putting in o“lyi half of a month’s work is not a pieasant | one. However, they may be allowed full pay, but the crews will not be so fortunate, | and will have decreased paydays under the new economical conditions. H Martin Gilovich, a cook at the corner of | Jackson and D. treets, while underthe influence of red, red wine, demanded from | John Mandich a new supply of sequins for 24 2 FREEMAN AS A SVENGALL PECULIAR CHARGE MADE BY A WITNESS IN A PATENT CASE. SPOKE ANOTHER'S THOUGHTS. ATTORNEY H. S. MACKAYE MAKESs SOME EXPLANATIONS OF PER- TINENT POINTS. Considerable of a sensation was created by the publication yesterday in THE CALL of the extraordinary developments in tne case of Walter K. Freeman vs. The West- inghouse Electric Company, in which charges of wholesale subornation of per- jury, of criminal conspiracy and of the use of hypnotism were made. It was also charged that Attorney H. 8. Mackaye, the attorney for the defense, under the alias of William A. Steele, was a prominent factor in this conspiracy, and be and one of his witnesses were disarmed before United States Commissioner Heacock Saturday. | Among other exciting incidents was a fracas in which two of the witnesses be- came engaged in front of the Palace Hotel Friday night. - Attorney H. S. Mackaye stated yester- day that he was fuily prepared to disprove all the charges made regarding suborna- tion of witnesses, etc., when the proper time comes. He may also have something to say on the thrilling intimations of the R Diney A> R e MR Din v an \\\72\ | Sventacs i\ \ SOENE AT ‘THE CALL” OFFICE DURING THE DISTRIBUTION OF TICKETS TO DIXEY’S ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE NEWSBOYS. HOW THE BOYS ENJOYED THEMSELVES AND WHAT THEY SAW AT THE BALDWIN, [Sketched by a “Call” artist.] but by a reversal of the ordinary situation the charmed number sat in the topmost tier, and Dixey really played to the gal- lery. The newsboys of San Francisco were in Y | a state of great excitement, such as nothing but news of a “‘boost” to a theater or circus could produce, when they heard of the prospect of being entertained by him of Adonis fame. When Tue CArn stated Saturday that the generous offer had been made and the galiery was to be their own for one per- formance, there was unmixed delight. Dixey the generous had granted to them their exclusive favorite domain and THE CaLL was to issue the passportsat 11 A. M. sharp. Unlike the fashionables, these keen little mercharts of the street con- strued sharp to mean before, not after, the hour designated, and each resolved to pre- sent himself at Tue CALL business office not later than 10:30. And so he did. Passengers on the Market-street cars craned their necks to learn the cause of the crowd that blocked the sidewalk from Geary street to the oftice of THE CALL. Nobody seemed to be hurt. though there was imminent danger of it from the de- termined policeman and the equally deter- mined crowd of boys, At least athousand boys stood_in lie, according to instruc- | tions, but doing more than the letter of the law required in pushing his neighbor ahead. Boys! Big boys! Small boys! Lean boys! Fat boys! Boys wearing “‘Sunday suits,”” and boys sadly in need of “a change!” Rotund fellows who looked as though they sold papers at a restaurant ‘where the patrons were constant and gen- erous, and boys with pinched faces and shrunken bodies that brought up visionsof scant food and dismal homes. There were the round, jolly faces of boys to whom selling papers was partof the huge joke life has been to them thus far, and the thoughtful countenances of the little fellows to whom it haa already proven a serious matter. alert expressions that augured well for their owners in the tussle for “place,’” faces that set the lookers-on thinking of the early struggles of men who had “made history,” and wondering whether any part of that indiscriminate mass of head and arms would be a factor in such a history. How they shouted and how they pushed, those boy How little they cnredpfor the gibes and laughter of the men who formed & sort of stationary fringe about the crowd ot urchins. Like all who have a single purpose those boys were dauntless. There was only one thing in life for them st that moment, and that was the coveted piece of pasteboard held high in the hands of A. Pincus, the Baldwin press agent, and his aids. They scrambled, and pity ’tis! They fought. They glowered at each other and called names under their breath. Still it was no worse a scene than may be witnessed among the grown-up childaren on 'Change every day. Pincus stationed himself at the rearand some one at the van of the energetic commonweal army, and the cardboard flew, flew indeed, for one of And there were | earnest boys, plenty of them, with keen, | | low, Cockey, Shaugnessy, Barbary Coast | Joe. Jojo the Dog Face, Doughnuts, Sleepy John and Shorty, all with speculations as 1 to the ‘‘show,”” all with wondrous expe riences and more marvelous plans. When the doors were opened at last | there was a wild rush for the gallery. The | stream flowed up, contrary to all natural | laws, and then, remembering its govern- ing principle, rushed down again. There ‘was a sound as of mighty waters and th the boys appeared, jostiing as before, in | | the doorway and the stream was diverted | into various channels. | _Dixey's ‘‘up-to-date’” friends filled the | 500 seats allotted to them in the gallery in | three minutes. Then they looked about them with an air of pride and satisfaction. | There were edifying comments on the ap- | pointments of the theater. | “That ’ere curtain’s fireproof,” volun- | teered one, and another, commenting on | the “‘pretty boxes,” discovered that they | were just like those at Morosco’s Grand | Opera-house. | " “How much do they cost, d’ye spose?”’ queried one, and a sage replied *'$20.” “Catch me payin’ $20 for a seat,” scorn- fully remarded a young ascetic. There was only one complaint: “There | ain’t no hatrack,” grumbled a freckled ten- { year-old. “Shut up! What do you expect for nothin’?” was the contemptuous reply. “Take your hats off, boys. Be gentle- men,’”’ commanded Mr. Pincus, who wasa kind of major domo among the newsboys. The hats were doffed obediently, but one bright-eyed youngster discovered that the | policeman who stood in tie aisle still wore | his helmet, and shouted: ‘‘Make the cop | take his hat off, Pincus.” . Before the curtain rose the cheering egan. . | ““Hooray for Dixey!” *“Hooray for THE | CA1L!" were repeated and intermingled, and when their hast appeared there were wild cheers for Dixey, to which he re- sponded with an upward glance of thanks that delighted the five hundrea. The other parts of the house were well filied, but from no portion came such rap- | turous applause as from the gallery. | ““Ain’t he great?” was the general com- ment when the actor impersonated Herr- mann so cleverly, and there was wild delight at the feat of extracting a rabbit | from the n‘»f)arel of a man in the orchestra. The boys followed the illustrations of each stage of the Seven Ages intelligently, the pathos seemingly appreciated as much as the humor. The festive scene in which the four aged friends participated was the occasion for great glee, and the catchy re- frain, “Understand? Do. you see? Do | you know?” will be whistled for many a | day as an interlude between the shrill calls | of “Paper, sir?” ; They were charmed with the real, live baby that accepted stage caresses so meek- |1y, and a little fellow whispered: “I like | babies, don’t you? Tnat kid’s like our Dottie.” Miss Dean’s song, ‘‘The Soldier’s Fare- well,” and Miss Marx’s “Only a Rosebud’’ pleased the sense of harmony of their young hearers. The same is true of Mr. Keirny’ violin solo, ‘Resignation,” the pa- | | | Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report oyal YA _ABSOLUTELY_ PURE Baking Powder | deadly weapon SPEAK i NicroLas intoxication purposes. He was refnsed, | and forthwith declared a venditta against the refuser. He armed himself with a | rapacious-looking butcher- knife - and | | cleaned out that part of the Latin quarter searching for his enemy. His ran-amuck | stirred up a_policeman, who captured the | knife-man just as he was preparing to cleave Mandich in halves. Gilovich was locked up, charged with assault with a 16 FOR A MEDK. PRIZE ESSAYS READ AT THE RALLY OF THE LEAGUE OF THE CROSS. DENVER OF Mission DoLORES PARISH AWARDED THE HONoORs. One of the enthusiastic district rallies, which are becoming quite a feature of the League of the Cross campaien, was held yesterday in St. Joseph’s Hall. The cadet companies from St. Joseph’s, Mission Do- lores and St. Charles parishés were there, and their red and black uniforms lent a victuresque character to the large audi- ence. A programme of music and recitation had beep arranged for the occasion, with the competitive essays on temperance as its principal feature. These essays were written for the prize of a silver medal and the honor of competing for the gold medal offered at the general rally, which will be held next August. One boy from each parish of the district was allowed to speak on the subject. *“Why Am 1 a Tectotaler?” | _S. Riley of 8f. Charles parish was the first to speak. He read his essay, a care- fully prepared treatise on the subject, and he was frequently mfirmmea with ap- plause. Following him came Nicholas Denver of Mission Dolores. He had nei- ther note nor transcript of his essay, but delivered his address extemporaneously, His was a scholarly argument, forcible, well worded and excellently delivered. After him came C. A. Asmussen of St. Jo- seph’s, who, while his words were well chosen, lacked in force of argument. The udges were Professor Taaft of the Lincoln Bvening School, Brother Lascian of St. Peter's School and Rev. P. C. Yorke. | They were unanimous in their decision | that Denver had fairly won the medal. This announcement was received with great applause. Denver will now have the vrivilege of speaking at the general rally which will be held next August. Among the other numbers on the pro- gramme was an address by Rev. Joseph Gleason, who spoke of the foundation and aims of the league. “The power of the organization,” he said, ‘lies in the fact that it deals with the boys during the | most imp ressionable period of their lives— just when the character is being formed and the foundation for the after life is being laid.” He also spoke of the saloon evil, and soundly denounced the saloon- keepers for the business which thev are in, He said in conclusion that any boy who is temperate until he has passed his twenty- first year will remain temperate during the rest of his life. There was also a solo by Bert Miner, a cadet of Company B, which well deserved all the applause accorded, and a piano duet by the Misses Gadsley. Other numbers consumed the time until lute in the after- noon, and the rally closed with a bene- diction, . . employment of hypnotic influence and the disposition toward violence shown by cer- tain parties. In regard to the story of gun-flourishing before the Palace and disarming before Commissioner Heacock, published in yes- terday’s Carr, Mr. Mackaye had this to say: It is a fact that W. P. Freeman and myself had revolvers with us when asked by Marshal Baldwin before Commissioner ~Heacock whether we were armed or not. The reason is simple. We have been here a month and during that time have been obliged to be out at all_hours of the nightand in all parts of the City, and we carried rovolvers simply as a precaution against dangerous characters at night. We acknowledged at the time that we should not have brought them into court and apologized for heving done 50 and explained that they had been left in our pocket by over- sight and without thinking of the special dignity of the court of justice. They have alleged that we came outas faraway from home as mossible, thinking that the plmintiff in this case was t00 poor to get here. He has the Fort Wayne clectric corporation behind him. It owns all his rights, and its money is run- ning this thing. In the second place we were obliged to come here. becanse one of our wit- nesses lives here, and no judicial process could bring himout of the State. I gave the plaintiff notice on the 14th or 15th of October that this proceeding would take place, and his counsel had at least eight days in which to get here. The rules of the Patent Office simply require “reasonable notice.” The continu- ance, stated to have been a_surprise to us, was asked by me, W. K. Freeman’s attorney, nearly & week before they got here, and was granted with great reluctance. Every day’s stay here is added expense to my company. I always exixecled their arrival here to take testimony— at least the arrival of Mr. Freeman’s counsel, if not of Mr. Freeman—#o I was notin the least surprised when they turned up. I wish to deny in general all allegations in regard to subornation of perjury by me or per- jury by any of my witnesses 5o far as I know. I'al=o wish to call attention to_the fact that the testimony of Wallace E. Freeman men- tioned in vesterday’s CALL is not completea and that the disclosures made by him were made at my request and in answer to my questions, thus showing thatI have no fear of bringing out all the details of my action here in connection with the case. ' I was not presentat that street fight before the Palace Hotel and desire not to say any- thing about it. No allegation has been made of hypnotic influence. Mr. Mackaye would not make any state- ment in regard to his alleged alias in this City, but said that matter would be shown to have been regular in due course. 3 Generally Mr. Mackaye stated that the case was primarily one of “incerference in the Patent Office,” and_involved the title to a patent held by the Westinghouse Com- pany_dating bavi to 1881 for a system of distribution” of electricity. The value of the patent he would not state, but ad- mitted that it was in general use and that five other parties (Bernstein, Hunter, Thompson, Howson and Halleck, besides Freeman) were fighting -for the same thing. Walter Freeman had been claim- ing he origined the invention as far back as 1887, since_when_he has been collecting testimony. The Westinghouse people would have as long to coliect their testi- mony, so that there was no probability of the case coming to actual trial for another six or seven years. “Itisone of thoseal- most interminable Chnncelg ls'.nt:, said al Mr. Mackaye, “and these ifornia pro- ceedings only constitute a small prelimi- nar; sfiirmisnfl' Waiter K. Freeman stated yesterday that the charges and developments thus far made were int a small portion of what had actually developed during the course of the present hearing. It was shown in the testimony given by Wallace E. Freeman, he said, that $5000 had been offered A. H. Freeman to change his testimony, but he was unapproachable by dishonest means and undaunted by threats, and then was concocted the rubber company. scheme, which provided for a E per annum salary for A. H. Freeman. But he was only induced to fall into- line by a dastardly thongh clever bit of artifice, employed by Mackaye. . ““Now in the matter of hypnotism,’’ con- tinued Mr. Freeman, “I must be a_regular Svengali according to my brother Wallace E. Freeman. When on the stand Satur- day he testified that he was first under my influence at Brooklyn, when he testified in my favor, and that he then uttered the words that I thought and that he did not think at all of what he was saying.” _From the bitter feeling that has been re- vived and intensified during the past few days between the various persons inter- ested in the rroccedings it will not be sur- prising should a fatal encounter result and iutimacions are made on both sides that even more sensations will develop in the next few days. e AR TN T Mysterious Injury of a Child. A two-year old child, Frank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Straub, of 105 Twenty-third strect, died at the City and County Hospital yesterday morning as the result of a fracture of the skull. His motherfound the child lying in the back yard of his father's bakery some days 8go, unconscious trom some injnry. A horse was running around loose in the yard at the time, and there was a pite of lumber and cord- wood there. What caused the injury to the child she did not know. -An inquest was waived, — THEODORE DURRANT CASE. STRONG PERORATION PREPARED BY GENERAL DICKINSON FOR To-MORROW. ATTORNEY DEUPREY To BE C oURT TUESDAY—EMMANUEL CHURCH CROWDED. IN When the Darrant trial is resumed to- morrow General Dickinson is expected to make & more brilliant effort from an ora- torical pointof view in the continuance of the plea for the accused than he did in his argument Friday. He was engaged all Saturday and yesterday in preparing his peroration and he is expected to handle his subject rather vigorously. Attorney Deuprey was very much better yesterday, and insisted that he will be in court Tuesday to close the argument for the defense. Both he and his colleague, General Dickinson, laugh at Captain Lee’s story of the Palace Hotel meeting, at which the statement of Durrant is alleged to have been opened and read. They abso- lutely deny that any such meeting oc- curred. Durrant spent a quiet day at the County Jail. The near approach of the jury’s verdict does not appear to concern him, and he expressed himself as hopeful of a favorable outcome of the trial. At Emmanuel Baptist Church last even- ing Rev. J. George Gibson preached to a congregation that filled every seat, the vestibule and even the seats usually occu- pied by the choir. As early as half-past 7 o’clock the janitor of the church was sta- tioned at the door with a policeman to prevent the church from being still further crowded, and nearly as many as were in- side were turned away. It was quite apparent that a large pro- ortion of the attendance was there out of idle curiosity rather than from a desire to hear the sermon, and Dr. Gibson was frank enough to tell them so in the course of his remarks. He said he had no doubt many among the congregation were prompted in cominfi more by curiosity than anything else, but made no further reference to the church horrors or the un- pleasant manner in which his name has been connected with them during the trial of Durrant. The prosecution is already beginning preparations for the trial of the Minnie \Vi{linms case, which is to follow within a month from the close of the present case. The defense professes to be ready and glad to proceed to the trialof the Williams case as soon as the people shall be ready. They claim to have a very strong case and say they can not ohly establish an alibi that cannot be successiully combated, but that they can prove the utter impossibility of the accused student having committed the crime. MISSIONARY FRO]\i INDIA He Tells of the Work That Has Been Done Among the Na- tives. The Rev. Dr. Unangst, who for thirty- seven years consecutively has worked as a missionary of the Lutheran Church in India, conducted the service in the First English Lutheran Church last evening, and instead of a sermon gave the congre- gation a most instructive and interesting talk on the people of India, their customs and their religion. The Rev. Dr. Unangst, who is of German descent, went to India in 18538, and aiter working continuously in behalf of Chris- tianity has been granted a furlough for a year, which may be extended one year if he 'so desires. He decided to visit the United States and came to this country via China. He will remain here for some time and may deliver some addresses on missionary work in the country from which hecame, but he is not commmissioned to enlist any one in the work. In the course of his talk last evening the reverend gentleman gave a brief history of the people of India in ancient time and their religion and then spoke of them from the time of the primary efforts of the missionaries to instruct them in Chris- tianity. The particular field in which he worked was in the vicinity of the Bay of Bengal. The missionaries must first make them- selves masters of the languaze of the peo- ple. For some time past a commission has been engaged in translating the Bible into the Telugu language, and the natives seem to be very anxious that the work be completed in order that they may learn the ‘truths contained therein. The mis- sionaries celebrated their jubilee year in 1893, and received subscriptions to the amount of $15,000 rupees, which money was expended in erecting a dormitory for girls who are taught 1n the college under the control of the missionaries. There are 425 villages in which the mis- sionaries work, and they are forced to ac- commodate themselves to the natives on account of caste. The high class will not associate with the low, and a service has to be conducted in two different places. The lower class is composed of coolies, who work for 3 cents aday. During the time the mission has been established 20,000 natives have been con- verted to Christianity. The speaker told of the customs of the Brahmins, and speak- ing of marriage 1n the high class, said that girls are married when 8 years of age, and several years after a second marriage takes place, when there are festivities for five days. On the fifth day the husband is for the first time allowed to speak to his wife. Just before this is permitted, the lips of the bride and groom are rubbed with honey by the mother of the bride, who says: ‘“May your lives be always as sweet as this honey.” Among the low class, a man who wants to marry announces his intention, then all the girls in the village hide themselves in a tent made of leaves. The lover pokesa bamboo stick through the leaves, and if one of the girls takes hold of it, he pulls her out of the tent, and then they march to the mother’s hut and the two are declared married. If an individual dies in & hut, the corpse is not_taken out through the door, but a hole is cut in the side, the corpse shoved through it, and then death is driven out and the hole closed again. The speaker said that good progress is being made in reformation in regard to child-widows and widows generally. He closed by giving an account of the good work the women of the mission are doing. ——————— That women believe in organization is proven by the fact that America can boast of nearly 1,000,000 club women. NEW TO-DAY—DEZ GOODS. e et B U S SO PSS SPECIALSALE COLORED SERGES! This week we will place on sale 20 cases FRENCH AND ENGLISH SERGES, and as they come to us direct from the manufac- turers we are enabled to offer them at REMARKABLY LOW PRIGES! 1 case GENUINE ENGLISH SERGE, full 58 inches wide (in navys and black) $1.75 a yard 2cases 56-INCH ENGLISH SERGE (genuine indigo dye) 3 cases 50-INCH FRENCH SERGE $1.25 a yard $1.00 a yard 5 cases 48 to 52 INCH FRENCH CHEVIOT TWILLS AND ENGLISH SERGES (in navys only) 75c a yard 8 cases GENUINE FRENCH SERGE, in all the latest Fall shades, also black (goods 45 inches wide) 75c a yard EXTRA SPECIAL! 8 cases 45-INCH FRENCH SERGE, in 25 different colorings, also black, 50c ayard 3 cases 44-INCH STORM SERGE, in navys and black only 50c a yard WRITE FOR SAMPLES. Cigmer ¥ i892. GGORPORATS, g Z ,é 11, 118, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. OCTOBER 28, 1895. THESE PRICES, THREE DAYS Crosse & Blackwell’s Gherkins, Onions and Mix- ed Pickles, quarts 45c. Exquisite Beer—Anheu- ser-Busch, St. Louis, the best American brew. pints, $1.25. Anker’s Bouillon Cap- sules make nourjshing, pleasant Beef Tea, vege- table flavoring, 10 in box, 25¢C. Pine Apple Syrup, for ices, delightful, pleasing, quart bottles, 35c, 3 for $1. West India Pickles, mix- ed, fruits and vegetables, spiced, piquant, 25c. em Goods Rrived— Ferris Hams, Bou g e Turkish Fig’ Paste, Black Currant Jelly, Delicatesse Anchovies, (tins and kegs) French Sauces ( Genovoise, F inanciere, Tortue, Perigueux) Del Monte Preserves, Marrons Glacé in Syrup, Marrons Glacé in Brandy, Pecans, Canned Okra, Six Crown Imperial Layer Figs, Gumbo Filé, Figs in Cordial, Pre served Figs, in tin, Lebkuchen, (Ger. man Honey Cake) Kieler’s Dundes Jams and Jellies. GOLDBERG, BOWEN & IERENRALIM Chestnuts, Italian, for stuffing Turkeys, nothing like them, only one thing better—Truffles, together they are invincible, the deli- cate flavor permeates every morsel. Truffles were worship- ed by the Ancients; they are as potent now when used in stuffing a Turkey. Try Truffles and Chest- nuts. Cider, pure, sweet, apple, made in Marin County: comes in fresh every day. 6oc a gallon. If you do not use Truf- fles or Chestnuts in stuffing turkeys, use pure spices anyway. As small a thing as one impure spice, might spoil a delicate dish. Some Cranberry Sauce is bitter, that is because the berries are not good. GOLDBERG, BOWEN & LEBENBAUM DO YOU KNOW THAT THERE IS SCIENCE IN NEATNESS ? BE WISE AND USE SAPOLIO STHEVERY BESTONE TO EXAMINE YOUR eyes and fit them to Spectacles or Eyeglasses with Instruments of his own Invention, wm.-'. Hours—13t0 4 7. M. THE OFFICE OF THE UNION TRON WORKS ! —Xs— | | REMOVED To No. 222 Market Street, Near Front.