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THE ¢ AN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1836 ZHA “House —+The Runaway on;or; The Man of Captain Dally at Haight street CITY NEWS IN BRIEFE, Frank Walsh was & v shot in the face. v shot on Steunart- 1 Dunn Wvas & was found on f the United 1 a New Year's members. e of the Score, Le: ntury” run Foggy in _the ty h is to be opened the Ice Pal- sts will dis- ads in four strict track yester- . Tee, Joan, imp. 3 A argilla. et, was struck erday bis wif architects in r the new Af- the State Uni- d coursing were polo-play- ated in hauled make & lot for short er Lahor ( AL BHS GRAE PERL The Well-Known. Real -Estate fan Has a Narrow . Escape in the Park. His Team Was Run Into by Another and Serious Damage Was the Outcomie. What might haye n.a serious run- unately resulted rungway horse n. Gate Park Taylor, in-a-disast {i -occurred in ( tly-aftér noon yeste of Point Lobosand s, was ng with a gentleman friend along the b drive in a single v when the right front wheel collapsed i ing, and they -were pitchied ong to the “ground. - The horse once took frightand dashed away dragging the over- ned.bu, behind it.: Park Pglicemen Keénned riding near by and at once gave 1t could not:get closé enough The runaway tur ff the south driveinto the road bel stand . passing the. deer glen and under theisteel bridge to the mamn drive. Here_ i .turned: to I toward: thie “beacl, and ‘directly over the &l .tusnel; opposite Conservatory Rich, who Liad been‘fo the beach walking bis horses homeward. Mr. nd, while the three horses struggled ed among the entangled: harness oon reduced both buggies ta-such a lition that they were ruined.:: At. this: juncture Policeman Kennedy ched “the spot and Mounted Officer r-also appeared, and with the as- of 2 number of bicyclists, who were riding by at the time of the collision, thes” separated:the horses and sted Mr. Rich from his.perilous pos: under his overturped buggy. Mr. vlor’s horse was. found to be badiy cut and: bruised, and the ies are so serious that it may have to be ki Mr. Rich and. his fine black “&pan . escaped with only a few res, but fiis’ buggy bad beén kicked s by the .three struggiing horses, ad'io be tied up with ropes before edoff the main drive. A on bicyeles were directly Mr.' Rich’s buggy when the L supioceurréd, and they narrowly es- caped the general mix-up.. Tue policemen stated it was oue of the worst runawaiys thiere has been in-the park for some time, and it wae a matter of good fortune that uo person was hurt. o .." ‘A Sudden Death. Willard €. Van Arden, a‘teamster 59 years of 8ge, dicd “suddenly at ‘his residence, 796 Jaight street, last evening.at 7 o’clock. The bedy wes taken to the Morgue. H it.cax su 1g in seven | ALONG THE WATER FRONT, The Coast Seamen’s Union and the ~ Coast Shippers’ Association. COLD WEATHEER AT THE HORN. Narrow Escape of Three Hunters Lost From the Sealing Schooner J. Eppinger. The agreement which has been entered into-between the Ship-owners’ Association | and the Boarding-masters’ Shipping Asso- | ciation regarding the shipping of men has | caused considerable discussion along the | watér front. By the termsof the agree- ment the Ship-owners’ Association will | only take men on their coasting vessels out | of certain sailor boarding-houses. These | must be persons who have never been en- | gaged in a strike against the association, | nd whose record, which wiil be kept in wharf early yesterday morninf with several others celebriting thé advent of the new vear, when one of the crowd began to flourish a re- volver. Dunn attempted to take it from him and inthe struggle it went off and the bullet struck Dunn on the back of the left hand, shat- tering the bones. He was taken to the Receiv- ing Hospital for treatment. IS NOT A ROBBER. Pecullar Features in the Case of W. M. Morrison, a Miner From Trinity County. The case of W. M. Morrison, charged with robbery, has some peculiar features in it and the probability is that Judge Joachimsen will to-morrow dismiss it. Morrison was arrested on Christmas night. He was in a saloon on Washington and Montgomery streets when a man named James Kilby from Montana alleged that he had been robbed of his watch and purse containing §13. Kilby was consid- erably under the influence of liquor at the time and he charged Morrison, who had just left the saloon, with robbing him. The watch and purse were found upon Morrison, but he asserted that he got them from Kilby himself, who was afraid of losing them. When the case came up before Judge Joachimsen on Tuesday several prominent citizens testified to Morrison’s good char- more will acter and to-morrow several come forward in his favor. Morrison was, until six weeksago, super- intendent of a quicksilver mine in Trinity County. He was compelled to come to | the City for medical attendance, as the | action of the quicksilver had shattered his | system. He is scarcely able to stand and teeth are quite loose. He is well con- | the shipping office, is good as regards debts for clothing and board, etc. | This combination, which is called the | h e most flimsy | e of the Con- | « the ‘left ‘heading | coHided with'a double team driven | | e NEW YEAR AT THE CLUB, Union League Members Celebrate in the Old-Fashioned Way. ELABORATE NOON LUNCHEON. | An Ancient Member Indulges in a Historical Retrospect Anent the Festal Day. Informal cordiality enthroned itself in the elegant headquarters of the Union League Club yesterday. The clubrooms | in the Palace Hotel looked charmingly homelike, despite their rather imposing | proportions, and many were the admiring | comments on the tasteful decorations of the | dining-hall. This apartment was naturally | the Mecca of most of the visitors. Here | congregated jarists and statesmen, lumin- aries in the social firmament and magnates in the marts of commerce, all enjoying the festal occasion. The dining-hall pre- sented a most animated scene during the | noon hour, when most of the members as- charge of grand larceny. On December 22, about 1 o'clock in the morning, she met Charles Erickson, a glovecutter, who lives at 21 Bush street, on O'Farrell sireet, near the Oberon saloon, and while talking to him is said to have robbed him of a diamond pin’| valued at $75. AT THE THEATERS. What This Week Gives and Next Week Promises. Herrmann continues to present his bul- let-catching trick, as well as his other illusions, to fairly large audiencesat the Baldwin Theater this week. Next Mon- day evening Marie Wainwright and her company will appear in “Daughters ofi Eve.” “The Widow Jones” continues to exer- cise her fascinations at the California The- ater. The May Irwin company will con- tinue the play there till tEe end of the week. Next Monday Louis James will open a season at the California Theater with a classic repertory. *Virginius” will | be nis initial performance. “Nancy at the French Ball” continues to do good business at the Columbia Thea- ter. This is Fanny Rice’s farewell week, as the Frawley Company will return to the Columbia Theater next Monday. The first edition of *‘Ixion’ is still draw- ing well at the Tivoli Opera-house. A sort of appendix to the holiday spectacle is now being prepared, and on Monday *‘Ixion” will be_ produced with a number of new specialties, which will quite alter its character. “The Runaway Wife” is proving a suc- cesstul production at Morosco’s. Butleris Made of pure crystal cream of tartar—a product of the grape and most wholesome. phosphates are cheap substitutes for cream of tartar. No adulteration of any kind in “ Cleveland’s.” NEW TO-DAY. “Pure and Sure.” =, Alum, ammonia and Jose, reaching there at 3:50 a. M. yester-l day. Byrne was twerty minutes behind | him, and the Olympics, who stayed to-| gether and assisted in making their own pnxcc, arrived at 5 o’clock, a very creditable nde. The Californias, though separated in i miles from each other, also got threugh by 5 o’clock. Blakeslee was the first to leave San Jose | and got onto the wrong road. He found | | his way again shortly, but his wheel broke | | down at Irvington and he gave up the | | ride. Byrne came shortly after him, and | | his wheel also collapsed, but he got an-i | other from 2 man named Lyons, a club- { mate, and came through to Oakland, paced | by the Rice brothers on a tandem, in | | about seven hours, actual time. | George Tantau of the Olympic contin- | | gent arrived within ten hours, and the rest | 24 NEW YEAR’S DAY AT THE ION LEAGUE CLUB. | In A. E. Lancaster and Juli | | Coast Seamen’s destined to oppos Union and to preven the part of that org: ““Of course it is an attempt to bar out union sailc 2. Rosenberg, acting { secret. of the Coast Seamen’s Union in { the ence of Anc in Washington, ¢ pping Association, i he Coast Seamen’s y future strikes on tion. e now that everything line, and as the union | ing over low coasting w. | he must create a little exc | his boycott been engaged in strikes cuts no fig “There are only a few hundred uni in port and they are engaged in differ occupations and have no desire to go in association coasters at low wages, and neither do they care who does go. None of those twenty boarding-masters care a fig for the association, but of course th | will enter any kind ‘of a combine if by so | doing they can ship men who are in their houses. The whole matter hardly inter- ests the members of the union and Wal- thew'is welcome toall he can getout of it.”” Yesterday morning Peter Bishoff, | Michael McConnell and Peter Anderson, | three men from ihe sealing schooner J. | Eppinger, came in from sea in one of the sel’s boats. They had left the schooner the Farallon fsiands about 8 o’clock | Tuesday morning to hunt seals, when a suddenfog shut down on them, hiding the sel and every other object from view. | hey fired off their guns, but heard no | answering report. So all day they sat in quiet alon ien are not rescue. A number of seals were seen, and two were shot and secured to break the | of the enforced idleness. { Toward night the sea became rough and | tue boat was 'in danger of becoming | swamped. The waves would break over | them and while two of the men kept the | boat's head to the sea, the other man would bail out the water as fast as he | could work. They had no idea which way | | they were drifting or in which direction | the wind_ was ‘blowing. - The sun went | down and still the castaways hardled the |oarsand bailed out their almost water- | logged craft. They were worn with the | constant labor ‘and’ drenched to the skin | by the spray, but dared not for a moment | stov their constant labors. | | At morning they were scen by the crew | | of a pilot-boat and taken aboard. | “After the fog had lified aud they had | recovered - their strength' they left the | E‘lo tclose in shore and sailed their oat into the landing at Powell street. The men report that the J. Eppinger has been quite successful in her work of fol- lowing the seal herd along the coast and | bad taken eighty-five skins, a number of | them near the KFarallones. They expect the schooner will come into this port be- fore continuing on her way to the Japanese waters, The American ship John McDonald, Captain Storer, 166 days from New York, arrived in harbor yesterday. The captain states in his report that in all his voyages |around the Horn—and they have been many—he never experienced such cold weather as was encountered in the south- ern latitudes. Icebergs were frequently met with, snowstorms were the rule and many of the crew were severely frost-bit- ten. The steamer Enterprise, which has been undergoing repeirs 2and a thorough over- hauling in"Oakland, was brought over to Vallejo-street wharf yesterday. She will take her place on the opposition steamship line to Portland shortly. | | tlhexr little hanting boat and waited for a 1 monoton, "Shot in the Hand. : John Dunn, s longshoreman living at Mis- sion and Steuart strects, was on Steuart-street nected and declares that he was never in trouble before, and that his arrest is all a mistake. ABDUCTED HER SISTER. The Police Requested to Arrest May Wagner, Who Is on Her Way to Alaska. A. M. Brown of Berkeley reported at police headguarters yesterday afternoon that Ma Wagner had abducted her younger sister, Helen, 13 years of age, and she wanted the police to take steps to have May arrested and brought back to the Cit, Helen was living with Mrs. Kenville, a friend of Mrs. Brown. On Tuesday May Mrs. got’ her to accompany her to the City | under the vretext of saying good-by to another sister. May steamer bound for Seattle and detained her on board till the vessel eailed. Mrs. Kenville is informed that May in- tends to take Helen to her grandmother in Alaska, who is 80 years of age. Helen had a good home with Mrs. Kenville and reluctantly accompanied May to the City. The police could do nothing and Mrs. Brown telegraphed to the girl's father, who is in Ran Jose, asking him to come to at once and swear out a warrant so that she can be caught when the boat reaches Seattle. The girls are daughters of C. T. Wag- ner, a former employe of the Alaska Com- mercial Company, who was at one time in comfortable circumstances. He lost his position with the (‘omgany and shortly afterward his wife died, which accounts for Helen having been in the home of Mrs. Kenville, who is a friend of the family. AN ANGRY HUSBAND. e Knocks J. H. Penpr: Slungshot. J. H. Penprase, a carriage-maker, living at 6 Merrith street, called at police heaa. quarters yesterday afternoon and showed a hole in his scalp. “1 was walking along Hattie street,’”” he said, “when a man came rushing up to me and accused me of insulting his wife. I told him he must have made a mistake, that T was a married man myselt and wpiuldn’t think of insulting any man’s wife. “The man called me a liar and struck me on the head with a slungshot. I fell to the ground and the man ran away. 1don’t know his name, but I know him’ by sight. He lives on Hattie street and I want him arrested.” Penprase will swear out a warrant fox the man’s arrest. Died With the 01d Year. Bartly Dutty of 1137 Tennessee street while walking on the beach near the Spreckels sugar refinery yesterday forenoon, found & small bundle which excited his curiosity. On ex- amination he found that the wrappings con- tained the undeveloped body of & female child. He reported his discovery to the Cor- oner and the little body was iaken to the !\]lorzne, where it remains awaiting identifica- tion. Down With a —_——— “The Melancholy Days Have Come The saddest Of the year,” not when autumn has arrived, as poet Bryant intimates, but when & fel- 1ow gets bilious. The “sere and yellow leaf” is in his complexfon if not in the foliage at that inaus- picious time. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will s0on discipline his rébellious liver, and regulate his bowels, besides toning his stomach and healthfully stimulating his kidneys. Malaria, rheumatism and nervousness are also relleved by the Bitters. took her to the | v's arrest on a charge of abduction, | | sembled for a late breakfast, or an early Twenty-four small tables, lunch. disposed | in spotless linen and glittering with silver and crystal, provided ample accommoda- | tion for the guests, by far the greater part | of whom were members of the club. While there was lunch no set bill of fare, the | ious and abundant. s seemed rather to | fly than to run from one table to another, while the steward saw toit that each gues | had his share of the good things. platters of ~salad, rToasts done to a turn, dainty relishes and side dishes and rainbow-hued glasses of Roman punch | circulated freely amid a rattling tattoo of | popping champagne corks and a flow of brilliant conversation. In one corner satalawyer of no iittle prominence, a man well known in polit- ical circles,and two acknowledged social leaders. The lawyer was holding forth to his confreres regarding New Year’s day in San Francisco as it 15 and as it was. | ““Why, I tell you, gentlemen,” he said, “there is nothing like the old-fashioned New Year's day here now. In the fifties and sixties this used to be the biggest day in all the year. Fourth of July was nothing to it. In those days people used | *o keep better hours than they do now, | and we used to commence making our calls | | at 10 or 11 o’clock in the morning. Some- times we would hire a carriage for three or four gentlemen and make our calls to- gether. There was not so much talk about hard times ttien, though everything was more expensive then than now. ‘“‘And then,” continued the lawyrer medi- tatively, as he helped himself to a liberal portion of lobster mayonnaise and another glass of champagne, “nothing can be more charming than the way we were received at the houses of our {riends. If a lady were indisposed to receive calls, a dainty, flower-decked basket at the door pro- claimed the fact, and into this basket our cards were placed, I suppose those cards with their roses, forget-me-nots and bril- liant gilding would be thought in very bad form now, but then they were considered quite the thing, and men used to vie with each other as to who might be able to ex- hibit the most gorgeously concocted New Year’s souvenir. “If the ladies were at home we were ushered in with effusive signs of welcome. The calls usually lasted no longer than ten minutes, though that depended in a great measure upon the ladies, some of whom then, as now, made a man forget that time was passing. ‘‘Before we left it was a cast-iron rule that at least some little refreshment should be partaken of. As_these were frequently of a liquid nature it may be readily sur- mised that many of the gentlemen be- came somewhat dizzy after making twenty or thirty calls. But the ladies of those days, dear creatures, thought little of temperance societies, and readily forgave a little extra jollity on New Year’s day. “The clubs were not so stylish then as they are now, but we clubmen used to have grand times, I can assure you. Every- thing seemed to be managed on a more liberal basis than at present, and we never heard any talk about hard times or finan- cial stringency. It seems to me that this club is more like the old-fashioned City clubs than any other that I know of. At least a man feels at home here.” The old lawyer had struck the nail on the head. The great secret of the Union League Club’s popularity is that it may with truth be called a faithfal exponent of colrdisl, old-fashioned Californian hospi- tality. Stole a Diamond Pin. Stella Brookfield, & young woman who is not unknown to the police, was booked at the City | week. | months. | in local societ, Prison yesterday by Detective Graham on the well able to play the leading man, and the [ other parts are ably sustained. Leonard Grover’s farce-comedy “Our Boarding-house” is not so hackneyed as to have palled upon Alcazar patrons. The | vlay is well staged, and some of the acting is above the average. The Orpheum has a strong bill this Bernard Dyllyn continues to win as_usual applause for his rendering of “Never Take the Horseshoe From the Door,” as if the song were an absolute novelty. The Bush-street Theater will be opened | Friaay night for the first time in several Belasco’s Lycenm School of Acting will give a complimentary perform- ance to Miss Rosella La_Faille, who is soon to make her debutin New York. “A Celebrated Case” is scheduled as the at- traction, the cast including Miss Mabel ocha and Miss Heffron, both well known circles. The best amateur v has been secured for the talent of the occasion and an excellent performance | may be expected. APID CENTURY RIDING. The Olympic, Imperial and Cali- fornia Club Runs on New Year’s Morning. The Contestants Rode a Hundred Miles Around the Bay in Seven Hours. To ride 100 miles on a bicycle within seven hours is a feat not a greac many can accomplish, and it is made the harder when the roads are bad and the weather disagreeable. Still, where club reputation or glory is at stake, a wheelman will do almost anything, and when the Garden City Cyclers of San Jose announced last week that they would be the first ones to ride a ‘‘century,” or 100 miles, in 1896, | some of the local clubs decided that they would give them a rub for the honor at any rate. Promptly at midnight Tuesday three parties leit this City intent on riding to San Jose and back on the Oakland side in as short a space of time as possible. The Olympic Club Wheelmen sent out eight men under command of Will H. Haley. They were George Tantau, H. C. Ramsay, . R. Doescher, M. L. Espinosa, L. H. Smith, J. Waite, George Kroetz and W. H. H. Haley. They started from Ninth and Market streets and were soon off down the San Bruno road. At the same moment F. M. Byrne and B. D. Blakeslee of the Imperial Cycling Club left Van Ness avenue and Turk street, paced by tandems. Blakeslee recently rode from New York to this _point in record-breaking time, and Byrne is a celebrated coast racer. Then from Folsom and Twenty-second streets the California Cycling Club started Messrs. Musser, Boyle, Nason, Hansen, Beliman, Boyd, Williams, Van Dyne, Seipert, Reid Griffiths and Mayer on the same ride, an thewar were soon all together on the bay road. Blakeslee was the first to arrive in San of the Olympic party finished at Four- teenth and Webster streets, Oakland, | within thirteen hours, a tired, dusty, | hunery but well-satisfied party, for they made the best ride of the Auy, being un- paced by any tandems and relving ‘solely upon their own individual efforts. The California Club men came strag- | gling in all the afternoon, but all com- | pleted the trip. Reid and Mayer, on a | tandem, made the trip in ten and a half | hours. i | The Garden City Cyclers rode from San | Jase to Alvarado, then to Gilroy and back | | to San Jose on their century ride, but it | could not be learned last night what time they made. There is considerable rivalry among the | club men as to who shall ride the first | | “century’’ each year. Frank M. Byrne takes the honor this year for an individ- | ual, while the Olympic Club wheelmen get | ‘tllmbcn.dit of the best performance as a club. H The San Francisco Road 'Club held a | most enjoyable entertainment at its club- | rooms on Golden Gate avenue last even- | ing. 1t was ‘“ladies’ night” with them | and the rooms were tastefully decorated, while music and dancing served to make | the evening pass very enjoyably. The park was filled with wheelmen all day vesterday, and it was pronounced one | of the best days for riding that we have ever had at this season of the year or any other. The air was balmy, the roads good and the sun was just warm enougi to be agreeable. Altogether it was a charming California winter’s da; DURRANT'S NEW YEAR. | | The Prisoner Not Taken to San Quentin as Was Expected. Theodore Durrant, the convicted mur- derer of Blanche Lamont, received many New Year calls from old friends and acquaintances at the County Jail yester- day. His parents came with their hearts filled with greetings and good cheer. Dur- rant was in an apparently happy frame of mind. Durrant was to have been removed to San Quentin yesterday, but Judge Mur- phy granted a stay of twenty days more. ‘The prisoner retains his old-time " indiffer- ence. BIG SHOE FACTORY, and save 50 cents to $2 per Eair. ROSENTHAL, FEDER & €0, £81-583 MARKET ST., Near Secona. Open Evenings | Friday and Satorday | Mms. EmNEsTING KRew | Phonedit NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS, E L MAYMIAN: | Ano Co, INCORP'® T M EATRE S\ PROPS. ——ONLY 4 N TS MORE {— Last Matinee Saturday HERRMANN Presenting His Marvelous BULLET-CATC In Conjunction with H of Magic, M THE GREAT MONDAY > And Every Evening, Including Sunday. Saturday Matinee Only. MARIE WAINWRIGHT And Her Own Splendid Company an Magnus' Powerful tional Dram: DAUGHTERS OF EVE® SEATS READY TO-DAY. AR Last Time N unday Night. MATINEE SATURDA Everybody's Favorite Comedienne, MAXY IRWWIN Supporied by JOXIN C. RICE and Her Big Com- pany of Comedians, in THE WIDOW JONES. NEXT WERIK MR. LOUIS JAMES. Monday, Tuesday and Sunday nights and Saturday Matinee. . 4 VIRGINIU Wednesday and Thursday , ts SEATS READY 'l"'O—DAY. 7 2 Lfumbia [Shealie, FRICOLANBER.COTTLOB @ co- (23525 AnD mAMAGLRS -+ - San Francisco's Faverite Comedienne, FANNY RICE As ‘NaNCY” Tn Her Latést Success, AT THE FRENCH BALL SEATS NOW ON SALE FOR THE FAVORITE - FRAWLEY C6NPANY! Monday Next, “THE LOST PARADISE!” Reserved Seats—L5 50c and 75e. TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE Proprietor & Managet THIS ¥ The Gorgeous F ¥ G iday Burlesque, “IXTON” or, THE, HAN OF T WAERL. GREAT CAST! GRAND BALLET! BEAUTIFUL § ERY! ——The Wondroua Transformation. ¢ SHELLS.”” & €8 ALCAZAR SUCCESS oy "|'ll— SEASON! ST DR AR BTV A\I AR OUR BOARDING-HOUSE. Leonard Grover Jr.and Leonard Grover §z. In Their Original Roles. MATINEES .\'AT[‘LUAY AND SUNDAY. Matinea Pricas—10c¢, 15¢. 25¢. Night Pr.lces—lO(‘. 15¢, 35c¢, 50¢. NEXT MONDAY—— “MY PRECIOUS BABY !” MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. The Handsomest Family Theater in America. WALTER MOROSCO, Sole Lessee and Manager THIS E NING AT EIGHT, Rankin and Macder's. Great Comedy- Drama, “THE RUNAWAY WIFE!” “A story of intense interest, touching pathos and inimitable humor.” —New York Critique. N6 PRICE3—2Gc and 500 mily Circle and Gallery. 102. atinees S day ana Sunday. ORPHEUM. O'Farrell Street, Between Stockton and Powsll. TO-NIGHT AND DURING THE WEEK, A BRILLIANT NEW YEAR'S BILL! ~——Introducing Stars of the First Magnitude, s CARON AND HERBERT, BERNARD DYLLYN, MANHATTAN COMEDY FOUR, CLIFFORD AND HUTH, And Our Unrivaled Vaudeville Co. Reserved seats, 25¢i Balcony, 10¢; Opera cnales and Box seats. 50c. MACDONOUGH THEATER (OAKLAND). COMPANY ! ¥ Moths": g, Fare- Ev A Usual M THE FRAWL To-night, “Captain Swi Sat. Matinee, ‘“Lost Pi well performance, * Prices RACING! RACING! RACING! CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB. —WINTER MEETING Beginning Thursday, Decembar 26, BAY DISTRICT TRACK. Racing Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Friday and Saturday. Raln or . FIVE OR MORE RACES EACH DAY. Races start at 2:00 P. M. sharp. McAllister and Geary street cars pass the gate. R. B. MILROY. THOS. H. WILLIAMS JR., Secretary. Pfil‘!uidln‘ SHOOT THE CHUTES!:- DAILY FROM 1 TO 11 P. M. HAIGHT ST.; NEAR THE PARK. ADMISSION 10 CENTS ren (Includi Round Ride). 10e, NOTARY PUBLIC. CBARLE' H. PHILLIFS, ATTORNEY-AT Iaw and Notary Publié, 634, Markes sk, oppos aite P alace Holel, l.lllfin 1630 Fellew {“ Merry