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12 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1895 MOTHERHOOD NOT LOST IN THE NEW WOMAN. The Women of San Fran- cisco Protest Against Vice. | AN ACTIVE CAMPAIGN. The Police Force Should Be Sup- plemented by One of Their Sex. THE BARBARY COAST INFAMY. | | Resolutions Presented to Those in Au- | thority—Another Mass-Meeting Sunday. i Yesterday was a memorable day for San | ancisco. The spectacle was presented of | ¥ a busy metropolis touched to its mother’s heart by the sufferings and wrongsofa few of its children; awakened to a realiza- tion of its responsibility for the future; aroused to the highest indignation by the abominable crimes of which Lane, Meyers, Ratz, Pardini, Hinshaw and others still at The most important eventof the day was the mass-meeting of San Francisco mothers I héld in Central Methodist Church, on M street, between Sixth and Seventh. erday was also an active day in police circles. Chief Crowley was at his desk betimes. ‘‘No possible effort will be | spared by the department to bring these n to justice,” said Le. ‘“There aremore | of them than have yet been apprehended, but we have strong hopes of being able to | reach them all.” It is known that two other men in par- i are being sought for by Officer | e, who has charge of the case. Yes- terday Rourke and Secretarv Kane spent | a good part of the day on Telegraph Hill | searching for the Desmond girls, who are wanted as witnesses against Lane. The | girls are being hidden somewhere in the City. Lane went to them immediately upon being released on bail, and since then no one has seen them. Late last night an important bit of evi- dence came to light. Hinshaw sent a note | from the City Prison addressed to Mathilda | Brizzolara, a thirteen-year-old girl who lives at 1217 Kearny street. The note wids promptly intercepted oy the police. It contained a request for Mathilda to tell nothin bout Pauline, a twenty-one-year- old grl who, it is thought, has played the role of procuress for Hinshaw and his ac- complice Mathilda Brizzolara was taken in charge ke and will be held as a witness. | ) hile several officers are searching | for the girl Pauline. The motherhood of San Francisco has opened a crusade against vice. | It was proven concl vely yesterday | that the regnant grace of her sex has not | been lost in the new woman. The mother | heart ruled at the big mass-meeting at | Central Church. Women who want the ballot and women | who do not, women who find the round of | domestic duties their most congenial oc- cupation, and women ‘o whom so-called | public life has a zest that nothing else can supply, entered with one voice a protest, the most earnest of. their lives, against social vice. he recent exposure of .the Barbary Coast infamy had brought home to them the need of protection of their own loved ones. [t made them look with fond, | frightened eyes upon their own little daughters whose tender age would prove no protection from such monsters as had | wrought havoc to innocent childhood in other homes. And, if able to take a more general view of the situation, they realized | that following the unparalleled atrocities | of the murdersin Emmanuel Church, these crimes would fasten a stizma upon San Francisco that only a concerted action for | the creation of & proper sentiment would | remove. So the womea, new and old, met | yesterday afternoon fo ask and answer the | question: “What shall we do?” i The Women’s Christian Temperance | Union Jed the movement, and was joined | by the Woan’s Educational and Indus- | trial Society and other philanthropic or- ganizations, all of which were represented by the throng of women who filled the | seats and aisles of the auditorium, the | gallery, the organ loft and the vestibules, and even the scores who turned away from the stairs, discouraged by the poor pros- pect of either hearing or seeing the speakers. Contrary to the libelous proverb, the women worked as well as talked. There were spirited addresses, many of them bitter words of denunciation of the de- spoilers of childish innocence, but there were likewise committees appointed to drafta plan of organization and arracge for active work. Contraryto another saw | of childhood. detained in_prison, often merely as wit- | tl.at arrangements be made for mothers’ there was harmony in the meeting, except as to a slight difference of opinion in re- gard to phraseology in one instance. They were assured of the co-operation of | other~ organizations and individuals of | prominence by communications stating | that their sentiment and action were | heartily indorsed. 7 The mothers’ crusade has had an auspi- cious opening. ‘Women prominent in reform movements were among the speakers. Mrs. H. H.| Luce, president of the San Francisco W. | >. T. U., presided. Mrs. Henrietta E. Brown and Mrs. David acted as secreta- ries. “Break thou the arm of the wicked,” Mrs. Sturtevant Peet read slowly and im- pressively from the Tenth Psalm, and the tense stiliness, indicative of strained at-| tention, was broken by a unanimously murmered “Amen.” Mrs. Frank J. French prayed that ‘“the divine would hear and answer the suppli- | cation of motherhood and wifebood, the | petitior. of those who knev the beauty and | blessedness of home, of those who remem- bered that ‘it were better thata millstone | be hanged about the neck than that one of | these little ones should be offended. “O | Holy Spirit,”” she pleaded, “save the chil- | dren of this City, the little ones who have | tasted the forbidden fruit and found it | bitter as the apples of Sodom; the little ones who had been driven out of the Eden | Answer our prayer through | the channels of justice. “‘Let a noble spirit pervade the press and and the mothers of San Francisco. When we band together to protect the children and bet- ter the conditions of our cities we_will ac- complish wonderful things. Organized mother- hood is needed In our municipalitics, 30 God speed you and sustain you in this effort. Sin- cerely yours, SARAH C. SANFORD. Mrs. Lydia F. Luse—MY DEARSISTER: Though living remote from the metropolis I cannot but be interestea in the object lessous of morality or vice therein enacted, nor can the whole State tall to be Influenced thereby. With deep satisfaction, therefore, I noticn that the good women are rising in their virtuous indignation ani maternal horror and dread at the reported wholesale debauchery, not of young girls only, but of children—I was about 10 say infants. May you arouse throughout the State & wave of ontspoken protest that shall lead officers of justico to see that neither wealth, previous soc.al position nor age shall be allowed to shield any guilty ones,and that shall make | other would-be “perpetrators of outrage on childhood or youth tremble and refrain. Yours for soctal purity. JAMES W. WEBS, Grand Chief Templar. Mrs. H. H. Luse, Chairwoman of the Woman's Mass Mecting—DEAR Mapax: The women of the San Francisco branch of the Christian Alliance are with you, heart and hand and pravers in the good work to be inaugurated | to-day, and we pray God speed it. Yours in Him, Mgs. L. A. KELLEY, Sécretary S. F. Branck Christian Alliance. OAKLAND, Nov. 15, 189 The Federal Labor Union of the City of Oakland. To the Good People of the City of San Francisco and others—GREETING: WHEREAS, Crimes have been committed in our midst ‘which not only cause_us to blush with shame that such deeds should be perpe- trated among a civilized people, but also to shudder for the safety of our own darlings, and whereas, we belleve that not depraviiy’ but poverty is the direct cause which induces or forces our feliow beings into such debasement, therefore, be it Resolved, Thag we deprecate and abhor the socfal conditions which surround nsand which are forcing our peopie into poverty so abject that “onor and virtue and all that makes life worth living are being sold for money, parents i WOMEN HASTENING TO THE MASS-MEETING discussion, saying it was not worth noticinfi should hang his head 1n shame. Mrs. Rose M. French talked at length of her six years’ experience gmqnf girl pris- oners and paid a tribute to Chief Crowley, whom she pronounced the best man that had occupied his post in this City. ““He is as honorable a man as I'am a woman,” she said, “and I, like Cmsar’s wife, am above reproach.” She had been excluded from the court- room the day before, while Rev. William Rader and Dr. C. 0. Brown were permitted to remain. This, she believed, was be- cause “Carroll Cook knew she cauld get things from the inside some others could not.” She was quoting the language of an attorney for the defense in a similar case when she was interrupted by the presiding officer, who said she objected to the quo- tations on the same principle that she never tolerated any profanity from her husband. i The audience did not indorse the presi- dent’s action, however, for there was a loud chorus of “Go on, Mrs. French: we want the trnth,"” and the speaker finished her story, in the course of which she re- called an occasion on which the word of the proprietor of a low house had more weight in court than her own. . Mrs. Ballou moved that a committee be | appointed to frame in a petition to the | Board of Supervisors the wishes of the | women in regard to the pending case, and | Mrs. Ballon, Mrs. Eyster, Mrs. Kincaid, | Mrs. North and Mrs, Rose M. French were | appointed to that duty. On motion of Mrs. Henrietta E. Brown, | a committee was appointed to draft a plan of work and arrange for another mass- meeting during the week. The president | appointed as members of that committee | Mrs. H. E. Brown, Mrs. N. E. Richardson, Mrs. Judge Lane, Mrs. R. L. W. Davis and Mme. L. A. Sorbier. £ Dr. C. 0. Brown's offer of the First Con- gregational Church for s mass-meeting Sunday afternoon, was accepted. An invi- tation to all who are inadjacent cities, who are interested, will be extended. Mrs. Eyster called attention to Rev. N. E. Boyd’s pamphlet on kindred topics, which ‘she pronounced invaluable. A Mrs. Oatman made a stirring speech, in which she said no language was adequate to describe the horrors of the recent crime. A suggestion that the Police Commis- sioners be requested to appoint Mrs. Rose M. French an aid to the police force met with hearty approbation. A collection resulted in raising a nucleus to a fund for the prosecution of the work, AT CENTRAL and donations of $5 each were received M. E. CHURCH. inspire itto aid in this needed work, and grant that from the black soil of these in- | iquitous acts may spring the fraits of | righteousness.”” She prayed that the one | who was being so bitterly persecuted | might have strength to meet her cruel as- 5 ilants, the reference being to Miss Mars- en. Mrs. Luse said the assemblage was not | of the usual type of indignation meetings. It was for the purpose of aevising plans which would make such crimes as_that of | which the public bad been reading last | week impossible. It was designed to ar- range that the women should assist in the | administration of justice in this and simi- lar cases. It was thought incongruous that girls nesses, should be in charge of men steeped in sin, in the sense of being familiar with all its phases. *‘Think whatit is best that a federation of the women'’s societies shall do, to assist in reaching the ends of jus- tice,”” she concluded, and recommended meetings and classes in moral reform for children. Mrs. Sturtevant Peet, president of the State W. C. T. U., was the first speaker. She had thought when reading the Friday morning papers that the Breckinridges are not confined to Kentucky. The meet- ing had been called In His Name. It was not to give publicity to revolting crimes, nor that women miht hear each other talk, but that an effort be made to secure the betterment of social conditions. The social purity movement was but thirteen years old, but it had made wonderful progress. She said: “The women stand shuddering on the brink of the river of social vice flowing through the land,” and quoted in reference to false delicacy the woman who pronounced it ‘‘pureness that had its root in impurity.” “‘The social vice is not confined to the slums,” continued Mrs, Peet. “It climbs marble stairs, throws its shadows across palaces. It is ofttimes coroneted and may even be found in the palaces of kings. “Women must be prepared to tear into shreds the arguments that claim the evil | is a necessity. They must demand that the bridegroom come to the altar as clean as tbhe bride. Among the reasons why girls fall is that there is not enough con- fidence with parents, too much familiarity | with young men, improper diet, impure literature and pictures, low theaters and lack of proper training of boys as well as irls. ‘Almost a Mfin’ and ‘Confidence estowed’ are books that all boys should read.” In conclusion she said the ballot in the hands of women would be a great help to the race, and that it was a notable fact that the first bill introduced by a woman member of the Colorado Legislature was in the interests of purity. *‘If the world is what we make it,” she said, “let us make it pure.” Mrs. Rose M. French read the following communications: My Dear Mrs. French: 1 send greeting to you Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking —God save the mark—permitting thelr children to be led astray for a few paltry pennies. And be it further Resolved, That this union extends its sym- pathy and hearty co-operation to all efforts to strike down this curse, that all may be per- mitted by honest effort to supply themselves with the nepessary comforts of life, and wherein none shall be permitted to thrive upon the labor of individuals or communities. L. M. FRICK, President. E HouGH, Secretar: Mrs. H. H. Luse—DEAR MRs. Luse: Your note of yesterday justat hand. I only have time to say that I heartily approve of your meeting to-day and trust that through ifsinfluence a public sentiment will be created which will compel the conviction of the rascals who are guilty of the heinous crime and show to the Mrs. B. Sturtevant Peet. worh;l that this City is not void of moral senti- ment. You may be sure thisinstitution is with you in your every effort to suppress vice and pro- tect our youth. (God bless and give you courage. Yours very truly, H. J. McCoy, Secretary Y. M. C. A, Mrs. R. L. W. Davis, president of the board of directors of the Girls’ Training Home, spoke earnestly of the offense which had awakened motherhood to the dangers lurking about the path of her dar- lings. She gave a touching description of the appearance and Plinht of the chiidish victims and spoke of the rescue work rep- resented by the Girls’ Training Home. ‘God lives and rules,” she said in an im- Eg’esaive manner, “and we must look to im as never before.” Mrs. M. E. Richardson brought a mes- sage of cheer and encouragement from the good citizenship meeting, and, in behalf of the teachers of the publ: schools, said the influence of those institutions was the op- posite to corrupt, as had been stated. Mrs. Henrietta E. Brown, Mrs, Nellie Blessing Eyster, Mrs. North and others repudiated the statement in. one of the morning papers that the schools were nests of vice, and all paid a high tribute to the teachers of Ban Francisco. Mrs. North made a pungent and half-humorous ad- dress, in the course of which she sald “artists should dress their subjects,” and that the verdict in the cases unéer discus- sivn should be the noose. Mrs. McFee of the Salvation Army told of the orrors that Lad been unearthed in this City, claiming that similar circum- Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE stances had often come under her notice. She spoke of the necessity of a single standard of virtue for the boys and girls. _Mrs. D. J. Spencer spoke on the same line, and said the business man who had made light of the circumstances under from Mrs. Ballou, Mrs. A. B. Shepard and an unknown friend of the movement. Mrs. C. J. Napel, a United Brethren pastor, and president of the Portland W. C. T. U., broucht greetiig from the northern city, and Mrs. Jolidan Croake of the Alameda W. C. T. U. was present. A mass-meeting will be held during the week at a time and place to be announced. ARt DR. CASE BIBLICAL. Refers Strongly to the Horrors of the North Beach and Dur- rant Cases. ““And it came to pass that in the days of the reign of Budd, the Stocktonite, that God said to the Yerba Buenaites: “‘Curse ye, the slayers of men and women. Build platforms and gallows and put cords around their necks and hang them up until they bedead. And the num- ber of the outlaws was one hundred and iwenty.” “And God commanded all the gentle- women, both great and small, and the young men and the hoodlums and the saloon-keepers and the politicians and the the bankers and the merchants and the schoolteachers to stone them until they shall die. And the people set their teeth and clenched their fists and said: ‘All this will we do; not a guilty, red-handed mur- derer shall escape.” And they did asthe Lord commanded.” supz‘ wer2 the closing words of an im- passioned address delivered by Dr. W. W. Case last night on _the subject, **‘New Les- sons From the Durrant Case, or the Crookedness of Public Sentiment.” The Howard-street Methodist Church was more than comfortably filled, for the sub- ject of the evening’s discourse had been vreviously announced, and in consequence all expected to hear a scathing arraign- ment of the moral status of S8an Francisco. And they were not disappointed. Once during the address, when the rev- erend gentleman denounced in eloquent terms the Barbary Coast outrages, the vast congregation™ burst into m}:‘plan;?, which for the moment drowned the voice of the speaker. Among the things Dr. Case said are the following: “If you do not hang him we will hang you.” 8o spakea million people, butonly one was fined for sayingit A lady on a streetcar said: “I would like to see the guilty wretch torn limb from limb; if the Jaw does not hang him the mob will."” What does itall mean? Righteousness, jus- tice, order, good government, or vindictive- ness, vengeance, bloodthirstiness or murder? The accused has had a fair trial. The Judge lt:lns presided and ruled with wisdom and jus- ce. The counsel was able and alert; the jury candid, capable, conscientious,and the verdict prompt and positive. Public sentiment gen- erally approves their findings. The people speak out in positive abhorrence of the crime. They say let the slayer of these girls die the death. ‘To this We say amen. Shocking as death is, disgusting as the gallows is, revolting 8s hanging must be to every refined nature, we ;:ienevertheless compelled to say amen, 50 let But stop a moment! What are we doing? ‘What is the highest civilization the world has ever reached doing to this accused and con- demned man? What does governmentel jus- tice inflict on the condemned criminal? What? It inflicts nothing less than eternal punish- ment on the guilty wretch. Public sentiment, public morals, public justice ali unite to take away the life that to all eternity they can never restore. Nor judge, nor jury, nor clam- oring populace can éver call that dead man to life again. Though a thousand years should pass and ipdge and jury and maddened populace could ive to see the end of the thousand years ihey could never restore the life they are about to take away. The penalty they impose and in- flict is eternal in its consequences. Can it be possible that the people of California are al- most & unit; indeed, are & unit, in asserting advocating the doctrine of eternal punish- ment that they clamor to have a fellow man cut off forever? Where is love? Where is Se: mpathy? Where has human kindness flown? Where has human pity fled? Hang him! Hang him! Let him hang! Let him die! This is the demand, yea, the clamor of the people of 8an Francisco, of California, of Christendom. Let the slayer of Blanche Lamont and Minnie Williaws die the death. ; “This Barbary Coast case out-herods Herod all the time. Women must get together, for they alone can purify the moral atmosphere. Everybody says hang Durrant. Isay hang everybody who fosters in any way vice. [Spon- taneous cheers from audience.] There are some things that San Francisco must do in earthquake style or else God will do it for them. I ask you all—will you ally yourselves with good women? The tlieaters are corrupt. The dance halls reek with infamy,and the sleuthhounds of hell are on the track of every girl out of a home or employment. o ANOTHER INDORSEMENT. Mrs. Richardson, President of the W. A. P. A. of California, Speaks Strongly on the Scandals. Mrs. Richardson, president of the W. A. P. A. of California, in a meeting at Metro- politan Temple yesterday reierred point- edly to the horrors in the northern section of the City and was instrumental in the appointment of a committee in that con- nection. She said: One of the things that is stated in the Decla- ration of Independence ‘s that mankind will bear evils as long as possible before rising against them. We have had the blessing of God in the past, and the course of divine proy- idence is such that aid is given only to those \\');U make some decided e%'urlwhelp them- selve I believe in God, the Father, Almighty, and in his overruling providence, but he%nsglven us hands with which to work and he does not expect us to sit idly and hold our hands. I rejoice that the time has come in America when we have awakened to the fact that there is work to do. The fullness of time has come, and the patriot’s time is at hand. The purpose for which I was to have your atten- tion this afternoon was with régard to the terrible things that have happened to some of our children in this fair City. Iknow you are determined that the wretches who perpetrated the frightful crimes shall be punished as they deserve. Mrs. Richardson then asked that the meeting form a committee and draft reso- lutions to assist in the prosecution of these men. She made a decided stand in behalf of the public schools, and declared that the; were notall so corrupt as had been said, that the men who denounce the public school denounce the bulwark of our coun- try. ‘In accordance with the suggestiou of the speaker a committee was formed to draft suitable resolutions to show the sense of the meeting refsrding the recent iniquity in this City and in support of the meeting which was being held in the Central M. E. Church. The following were appointed: D. M. Ross, C. A. Rabing, J. E. Elkington, G. C. Walker, H. W. Bowman, G. D. Phelps, Mrs. M. E. Richardson, Mrs. Young and Mrs. Grabam. e Carroll Cook’s Answer. Carroll Cook replies to Mrs. French’s charge, and says he made a motion that all but reporters be excluded from the court- room, and that if ministers remained they did so without his knowledge. His pur- pose, he said, was to secure evidence from the girls without prompting. WEeAR ordinary underwear,keep your cold ;wear Jaros hygienic underwear and lose it; pealth and money saver. Morgan Bros., 229 Montg'y. RV e e A Noted Traveler Coming. Charles B. Flagg of Columbus, Ohio, su preme secretary of the United Commercial Travelers of America, wtll arrive in this City to-night on the overland. His visit, here is for the purpose of instituting a council here, there being none further west than Helens, Mont., and his presence in this City will be the occa- sion of many gala gatberings of the festive brotherhood. A committee will be detailed to meet Mr. Flagg at Sacramento. The organiza- tion has a membership of 3500 and sixty coun- cils,and Am‘“ £6500 to the widow of each mem- ber killed while traveliug and $25a week to disabled brothers. — . Tae whole family kept well with Jaros Hy- genic underwear. Morgan Bros., 229 Montgy. ————————— Intercollegiate Football Game. A football match will take place to-morrow afternoon between the teams of the St. Mathew’ s College, San Mateo, and the Hastings Law College Junior Class. The St. Mathews are the champions of the academic league, | and the Hastings of the affiliated colleges. The City team will leave Third and Townsend streets at 11:15. madefor intelligen stuff and constant rgan’s, 229 Montg. Jaroshygienic underiwea: ople; others prefer chea) pelJ’!. Sense saves dollars. l\g) e St. John’s Presbyterian Church. Rev. Samuel J. Kennedy of Calvary Presby- terian Chureh, Seattle, preached in St. John’s Presbyterian Church of this City yesterday. The morning discourse was from Christ's ser- mon on the mount, and was a forcible appeal for Christians to heed the words of the Divine Preacher. Eleven new members were received into the church. L. — ALL doctors don’t prescribe the same medi- cine; all good doctors recommend Jaros hygi< enic underwear. Morgan Bros., 229 Montgry. —————— The eyes become bloodshot because, while ordinarily the vessels of the cornea are too small to admit the red corpuscles of the blood, when inflamed they enlarge and the red particles enter and give their color to the white. —————— Lives of great men all remind us we coula make our lives sublime, if we had the time. FIRE SALE! As the result of Fire of November 13 Our Entire Stoclk Carpets, Furniture, Linolenm and Upholstery BOTH DAMAGED AND UNDAMAGED, Is Placed on Sale Until Disposed of GREAT REDUCTIONS---ALTERATIONS IN BUILDING. ALEX. MACKAY & SON, 715 MARKET STREET. NEW TO-DAY—DRY GOODS. BLACK DRESS FABRICS TYLISH DRESS PATTERNS LOW PRICES! BLACK FREXCH FIGURED MOHAIRS - - §7.00 Pattern BLACK FRENCH BOUCLE (extra wide) $7.00 Pattern BLACK FREXCH CREPON CHEVIOT - - $7.00 Pattern BLACK FRENCH CREPON (assorted) - - $8.75 Pattern BLACK FRENCH BOUCLE (48 inch) - - $10.50 Pattern BLACK FRENCH MOHAIR CREPOAS - - $10.50 Pattern BLACK FRENCH BOUCLE (50 inch) - - $12.25 Pattern BLACK FRENCH CREPONS - - -« . $14.00 Pattern BLACK FRENCH MOHAIR CREPONS - - §17.50 Pattern BLACK FRENCH NOVELTY CREPONS, in a great variety of styles - - -+« « - $21.00 Pattern SPECIAL! 100 pieces BLACK FRENCH CHEVIOT, wide wale. full 52 inches wide (worth $1.25) - - 75¢ Yard The attention of our customers is re= spectfully directed to above goods. £®~ Samples sent upon application. B @ Country orders recelve prompt attention. E®r- Packages dellvered free in Oakland, Alameda and Berkeley. ’ GQBP ORAz-e ¢ i892. g 111, 118, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. November 18, 1895. NEW EATABLES It is n’t fair; we don’t get complaints enough. What! Is it possible our things are so good? Appetite-makers: Appetit Sild, intins Delicatesse herring or kegs Rolled herring Russian Caviar Russian sardines in Club-house cheese kegs Waldorf cheese Sweetmeats: Stuffed prunes Glacé strawberries Fard dates and oranges Wiesbaden fruits Crystallized cherries with maraschino, by the pound, 5oC. German potatoes and Sierra’ Madre olive oil make potato salad to tickle the palate. Holiday dinners incom-- plete without bon-bons. We ’ve some beauties. New York candies—Ten- ney’s and Maillard’s. Finnan Haddies. Scotch whiskey in jugs, imperial quarts, $2.00; im- perial pints, $1.35; gallon, $aco. o Who likes hot Scotch? Wine—the difference in price between fine and poor wine is n’t half so much as the difference in quality. Texas raises best Pecan nuts. We buy the biggest size,full of good meat. 35c.1b. We don’t sell turkeys, but the stuff to put in them— truffles, chestnuts, and pure spices for dressing. Orders for Alameda, Ber= keley and Oakland delivered from the Oakland Store. City PHEES: -5 O : That something which makes a man ask for a Cigar timeand againis in £l Reposos Cobble-stones, Honey Cake Good 25 Best 40 Better 30 Extra 50 For the asking: recipes for home-made mince-meat, Welsh rarebit, and black bean soup. November cata~ logue. COLDBERG, - BOWEN & LEBENBAUM 432 Pine St. ars Sutter St. 2800 California St. Clay St. x‘Méllfllnl STHEVERY BESTONETO EXAMINE YOUR oyes and fit them to Spectacles or Eye; s, with instruments of his own iavention, whose superiority has not been equaled. My success has ‘been due to the merits of my work. Office Hours—12 10 4 P. M. LADIES GRILL ROON Has been established in the Palace Hotel N ACCOUNT OF REPEATED DEMANDS made on the management. It takes the piace of the dty restanrant, with direct, snirauce from Lad find thisa to luu.:.p pgnn ice and == 1895-TAXES - 1895 OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE first installment of Real Estate Taxes, and al unpaid Personal Property Taxes, including balanco dne from those who have alread: id the \-«4'“)0:., will be delinquent and 13 per cent added on MO DAY, November 25, at 6 o' X vovember 16. No checks received after Saturda, November _ Inpaying by check piease send with your billsa list of amounts. Office open “Thursday, evenings, November 21, 22 and 25, S JAMES N. BLOCK, ty and County 0f San Frane Friday and Saturday from 7 to 9 Tax Collector of the Ci cisco. HAYEENER VAN D CATERRH OPPRESSION, SATION, NEDRALGIA; Ete ] CURED BY NEURAL o ESPIC'S CIGARETTES, OR POWDERy , ESPIC: New York, E. FOUGERA L Barts, " Eold by all Druggisis