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16 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1896. SEIZED MAYOR SUTRO'S LETTERS, Missives to Congressmen Held at the Post- office. DEPARTMENTAL ORDERS. Senator Chandler and Other Rep-i resentatives Asked for Protection. INSCRIPTIONS OBJECTED TO. | The Envelopes Stated That Hun!ing-i ington Would Not Steal a Red Hot Stove. On orders from Postoffice Department headquarters at Washington a large num- ber of letters sent out by Mayor Sutro’s Burean of Information, which he has been using to warn the Nation’s representatives at Washington of the schemes of C.P. Huntington, have been seized by Postmes- ter McCoppin and refused passage through the mails. Shortly after the story had been printed that the concurrent resolution passed by the last Legislature against the Reilly re- funding bill had failed to reach the eyes for which it was intended the Bureau be- | n sending out fac-similes of a cartoon representing President Huntiugton hold- ing the resolution behind his back to pre- vent the members of Congress from see- ing it. Across the top of the envelopes was printed in bold red letters: C. P. HUNTINGTON WOULD NOT STEAL A RE 2 HOT STOVE. e letters had hardly reached Was | ous and scurrilous matter. | building yesterday afternoon. are under suspicion of railroad influence and that 1s just what we want. We want to scare them into doing what is right and defeat this thieving fanding bill. The men who kick are railroad men and do not want the'public at large to know it. Ifthey were upright men and above sus- picion they would not object to receiv- ing information about Huntington and his schemes to rob the people. . “Bur you can rest assured that we will not stop warning them of their danger 9! being known as railroad tu«{l:, We will go them one better asoccasion requires. Those letters contained cartoons showing Huntington 1n the act of robbing the people of the effect of the concurrent reso- lution passed by the Legislature, and such things have their effect. It is one of the best weapons we have of fighting the oc- topus, and we are mnot going to lose it without a struggle. “Now, I think the Postoffice people are wrong aboat stopping those letters on the ground that the envelopes contained libel- I have con- sulted attorneys on the subject, and am told that there is nothing actionable in such a statement. We shall see whether our bands are going to be tied in this mat- ter or not. ““There are 100,000 men in this State who know that if Huntington would not steal a red-hot stove there are other things against the law that he would do, and we want the members of Congress and the world at Jarge to know just what kindof a man he is.” THE DANIELS TRIAL. Opening of the ¥ xamination Before the Court-Martial in the Federal Building. The trial of Lieutenant Daniels began before the court-martial in the Federal Lieutenant Reynolds acted as Judge Advocate and Lieutenant Ross appeared for the ac- cused officer of the Revenue cutter. Itis asserted that a very weak case was made out against the young lieutenant and there is general belief that he will be ac- quitted. Among the charges preferred against | Daniels was one of “‘nervous disorder.” | This was te be inferred as a mental de- rangement, but Dr. Blue was called and testified that he had examined Daniels and did not find him suffering from any mental disorder at the time specified. The other charges against Daniels in- clude drunkenness and insubordination. A number of sailors of the Bear zave testi- mony. ington when various members of the Senate and House of Representatives sent complaints to the Postoffice Department, objecting to such missives being delivered to them, and asking protection for the | future. | A telegram was at once sent to San Francisco, instructing Postmaster McUop- | pin to stop all such letters delivered at the | office under his charge for mailing. This | was accordingly done, and several hun- | dred envelopes bearing the words to which the department objects are now held in Mr. McCoppin's care. “The words printed on the envelopes of or Sutro’s inclosures to the members ngress were plainly objectionable,” said Postmaster McCoppin last evening, “and are non-mailable under the post- office regulations. *A week ore=0 ago we received word from the Postoffice Department that Senator Chandler and other National representa- tives had complained that they were re- ceiving communications which they ob- | jected to and the authorities at headquar- | lers were requesteda to prevent the delivery of any more envelopes containing such in- scriptions. As the rules of the department not only prohibit the passage of envelopes inscribed with libelous or scurrilous words, but give the person fcr whom they are intended the right to refuse to receive them, we were instructed to see that no more of the kind went through the post- office. “That is whv they were held and, fur- thermore, we shall hold any or all that contain words equally or more objection- able. : 1 do not remember now just what the words were, except that they referred to C. P. Huntington and stealing, butI do remember that I considered the matter carefully when it was brought to my at- tention and that at the time I was satisfied that the letters were non-mailable and 1n violation of the regulations.” Outside of Postmaster McCoppin and the clerks who received the letters few of the postoffice employes were aware that the letters had been seized. When told the nature of the inscription on the letter last evening, however, Night Inspector Alexander M. Cox at once said that enve- lopes containing such matter were non- ble, and that any person mailing them or causing them to be mailed was violating the postal regulations and was liable to prosecution for the offense. He called attention to the following sec- ion of the postal laws and regulations bearing on the subject: Scurrilous matter. All that mat- herwise mailable by law, upon the en- or outside cover, or wrapper of which, ostal card upon which any delinea- tions, epithets, terms or language of an inde- cent, lewd, lascivious, obscene, libelous, scur- defamatory or threatening character, or lated by the terms or manner or style of nd obviously intended to reflect in- upon the character or conductof ther may be written or printed, or other- impressed or apparent, are hereby de- 1 non-meilable, and shall not be conveyed in the mails, nor delivered from any postoffice, nor by any letter-carrier, and shall be with- drawn from the mails under such regulations as the Postmater-General shall prescribe, and any perso o shall knowingly deposit, or cause 10 be osited, for mailing or delivery, anything deciared by the section to be non. take the same, or cause the same =1 from the mails, for the purpose of 17 or disposing of or of aiding in the circulation or d ion of the same, shall for each ard every offense, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than $5000, or im- prisoned at hard labor not more than five years, or both, at the discretion of the court. (Act of June 18, 1888, as amended September 26, 1888.) Mayor Sutro had received no notifica- tion from the Postoflice officials that his inclosures to the members of Congress had been seized when told of the matter last evening. *'L am sorry the letters have not reached their destinations,” said he, “but F am more than pleased at the reasons of the seizure. It shows that we have them scared, They know that if people see such letters addressed to them they will think they UARDSMIEN WERE:RIGHT. They Are Voluntarily Offered the Rebate That Was Agreed Upon. The Southern Pacific Company Not Anxious to Be Sued for Big Damages. The Southern Pacific Company has de- cided that rather than face the alternative of answering seventy-five suits which members of the National Guard threaten to bring because of the treatment received on the occasion of their recent visit to the State shoot at Sacramento 1t will return the amounts paid by the guardsmen in excess of the $4 15 agreed upon as the round-t rip fare. Asthe time for the State shoot ap- proached the company was asked to make | arepate in view of the fact that it was a State affair and a large number of guards- men would attend. An agreement was reached by which the company promised to give a rebate equal to two-thirds of the return fare. This would bring the return fare to 85 cents for each man from San Francisco and make the total fare $4 15. In order to prevent, as the company claimed, residenis of Sacramento then in this City from taking advantage of the re- bate and getting to their homes for $2 10, the company exacted $3 30 for the going trip from each of the guardsmen, giving each a receipt for that amount and an agreement to sell a return-trip ticket for the one-third rate on a certificate from the inspector-general of rifle practice tnat the holder had been in attendance at the shoot. In spite of these facts and the further fact that the certificates mentioned were made out in due form the agent at Sacra- mento refused to deliver any tickets un- less full fare was paid, and the San Fran- cisco boys were compelled to produce $2 50 each or $580 in all for the round trip. Those from distant points were also com- pelled to pay full fare. % The guardsmen considered this an im- position and decided that unless the com- pany refunded the money paid in excess of the amount agreed upon they would sue for the excess and also for damages. These matters came to the ears of Gen- eral Passenger Agent Goodman a few days ago and he promptly began an investiga- tion that resulted yesterday in the guards- men being notified that if they would pre- sent their receipts for the money paid the agents at San Francisco and' Sacramento the amount in excess of $4 15 would be reiundea to them. The Sacramento agent is blamed for not carrying out the agreement printed on the back of the receipts. e ———— LOST HUSBAND AND LOT. Peculiar Suit of Mrs. Josephine Titus Against Her Fiance. Mrs. Josephine Titus is suing James Pedlina for possession of a lot which parted company from ker in a peculiar way. Sae says that in December last Pedlina asked her to marry him, and when she consented he suggested that she deed her lot on Mis- sion street to him and that he would put a house upon 1t. When the house was finisked he would marry her, he said. She deeded the lot and the house was built, but Pedlina has not married her, nor does he seem in- clined to do so. She, therefore, sued for the recovery of her property. HCr i S Passenger Agents in Trouble. There will be an interesting and exciting meeting of the local Passenger Agents’ Asso- ciation to-day. Charges will be filed against H. W. Lounsberry, the Oakland agent of the Burlington and Missouri, for having violated the passenger agents’ agreement. It is under- stood that the Santa Fe is behind the prosecu- tion. Another agent is also sald to have vio- lated the agreement, and the association may have two cases to hear. ————————— Cut Rate From Portland. To meet the cut made in eastbound rates on Monday by the Southern Pacific Company the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company yes- terday announced a65-cent cut from Portland to_the East via San Francisco_on canned salmon, to go into effect on the 7th. As one- third of the pack of the Oregon canneries is sill on'hand it is expected that the reduced rate will move coasiderable of it. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report Re al Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE HOPE FOR THE CITYS LEPERS, They Will Be Treated With the Japanese Remedy. FUND FOR THE MEDICINE Supervisor Benjamin Will Col- lect $200 to Buy the First Trial Lot. THE GOTO CURE TO BE TRIED City Physician O'Brien Favors the Experiment in the Leper Hospita!. The fact that some hope remains for lepers through the efficacy of a compara- tively new remedy discovered in Japan for the dread disease has aroused consid- erable interest among people who read about it in THE CALL. The remedy has been quite well known to physicians, although its character and specific effects on leprosy are as yet but poorly under- stood or appreciated in the medical science of Western civilization. It has proved singularly beneficial in Asia and the Hawaiian Islands, and, indeed, is freely used in the Orient and at Honolulu. But here, in the leper hospital of San Fran- cisco, on the very threshold of the Orient, whence the medicine comes, there are fourteen afilicted human beings waiting for the end and denied the benefit of this last straw. The one serious drawback is, there is no municipal fund from which a sum of money could be appropriated to buy enough of this leprosy remedy for as much as a full and satisfactory test. That is to say, the Board of Health and the Board of Supervisors, willing as they are to make the experiment, can find no way of getting money for the purpose. The total amount needed is about $200, but even that cannot be had through the usual channels. So in the presence of this helptess con- dition of the municipal autnorities to do anything for the unfortunates in the Twenty-sixth-street hospital, some gener- ous and sympathetic citizens have offered to contribute to a fund which is to be used in buying the wonderful remedy from Japan. The following letter was received by THE CALL in response to a letter from one of the lepers to Supervisor Charles E. Benjamin begging for treatment, and to the Supervisor’s reply that as there was no provision foran appropriation he would endeavor to collect $200 and procure the medicine by that means: Mr. Charles M. Shortridge, Editor The Call— DEAR SIR: It would be appreciated if you will have the inclosed $10 placed in the proper nands for the benefit of the lepers in whose be- half assistance is asked. Respectfully, M. R—, M.F. San Francisco, Feb. 26, 1896, The money inclosed was given to Steward Keating of the Twenty-sixth-street hospi- tal and it is held as the nucleus of the medicine fund. Mr. Benjamin has been compelled by an accident to desist in his purpose of col- lecting the $200. He is contined to his room, but hopes to be out in a few days, when he will start out among friends to collect the money required. “I have talked with many physicians about this remedy,”’ he said yesterday, “and they all agreed that the experiment would do no harm,but might result in much good to the unfortunates in the leper hos- pital. Dr. Fitch, who used the remedy in Hawail, told methat it was the only medi- cine he ever found to have done any good for the lepers. He also said that $200 worth of the medicine would be quite sufficient to give it 8 good fair trial and to show the people of San Francisco what it could do. “If it prove to be what I hope it is we might be able to provide for it in the Board of Health appropriation next time it is made. “My idea of handling the contribution fund is to put it into the hands of Mayor Sutro, who could send the money through Wells, Fargo & Co’s express to Japan; or we might get the remedy here, cash on de- livery. I have insight$90. An old friend, a dry-goods merchant on Battery street, told me he would give $20,and $10 has come through THE CALL. If we get a lit- tle more tban $200 the excess can be ex- pended in purchasing many things that the lepers badly need, such as under- clothing and personal effects, which they are absolutely deprived of now. The remedy cannot be got here; it must be brought from Japan. “All" of the members of the Board of Health said to me: ‘Go ahead, we would like to try the remedy.; “My icea is to turn the medicine over to the Board of Health, and let them admin- ister it as they see fit through a physi- cian.” Dr. A. P. O’Brien, city physician, after having seen the condition of the lepers, is deeply interested in the remedy. “It is known as the Goto remedy,” he said, “a Japanese medicine which has been used in Japan with much success; but thereare no authentic reports of cures resulting from its use. It has been used also in the Hawaiian Islands in the Receiving Leper Hospital at Honolulu. Reports from there are that doctors have seen patients get rid of spots on the body, characteristic of leprosy; the thickening of the skinand the peculiar sensation on the soles of the feet have disappeared. So if it does noth- ingelse it makes patients extremely com- fortable. “There are two white bovs in the leper hospital who have been there for ten or eleven years. They used the remedy to some extent about nine years ago, and the disease has maae no apparent progress on them since then. When I was at the City and County Hospital six years ago I saw those boys at the Pesthouse, and I can say there has not been a symptom of develop- ment in their case since. *“It 18 claimed also that in the tubercular form of thedisease the remedy is effective. This form is !distinguished by large nod- ules and thickening of the skin. The nodules are scattered over the face and hands, and in later stages become ulcera- ted. The result of treaument by the Goto remedy is these nodules to disappear and the ulcers are healed. “The remedy consists of herbs, some of combined with sulphur and used in the bath. “The full course of treatment is about one and a half to two years. “One Chinese petient in the Twenty- sixth-street hospital succeeded in getting some of the medicine through friendsfrom Japan, and he undoubtedly shows signs of improvement. Thereis a healing of the ulcers and a disappearance of the itching, the spots; and also of the thickening of the skin. There are three casesin com- parative incipiency at the hospital, and if such good results have been reached in that one I am inclined to believe that the remedy would help these materially. ““The cost of the full treatment for all the lepers would be about $500. But there 1s no fund from which this money can be had, and it would be 1mpossible for the Health Department to expend that sum at present. “Almost everything has been tried at the hospital that has been suggested to the medical profession since the institution was established, but without other results than that of a mere palliative of a tempo- Tary nature. On account of the utter hopelessness and horror of the disease it would be a wise thing to try this new rem- edy if we could get the money to buy it. The remedy should be administered under supervision of a physician, but should not be left to the steward. This is the least that might be done for the unfortunate outcasts, if not to cure them, at least to alleviate their sufferings.” WANT THEIR MONEY. The Creditors of Henry Sherwood Are Suing Him on the Ground of Fraud. The London, Paris and American Bank, MARSICK NOT MOVED, He Can See No Art in the Labors of the Chinese Musi- cians. DIFFERS WITH PADEREWSKIL Says the Instruments Are False in Tone and the Chinese Are Una- ble to Make Music. Marsick shrugged his shoulders when Chinese music is mentioned. Then he says: ‘“‘But is it music?” His tone indicates very decidedly that he thinks it is not. He does not hesitate to assert that such isthe case. What is more, he declares that there is absolutely no art in their .playing, though Pader- ewski was as certain that there was. “There are few ideas that Paderewski has in regard to music and musicians which I will not subscribe to most enthusi- astically,” said M. Marsick yesterday. “In fact, I know of nothing in which we differ widely except his admiration of the Chinese music. “There is only one standpoint from which it seems interesting to me, and that is in the nature of a curiosity. And then it would be more correct to say that it is THE ODD CHINESE INSTRUMENTS WITH WHICH MARSICK WILL EXPERI- MENT, [Sketched by a “Call” artist.] which are taken internally in the form of a decoction or an infusion, and others’ are the American Bank and Trust Company and several other similar institutions are suing the Sherwood estate to set aside cer- tain deeds made by Henry Hamilton Sher- wood to William R. Sherwood, on the ground of fraud. Sherwood filed a petition in insolvency in November, 1893, in which he alleged that he owed something like $30,000, and he had but $1500 worth of property to secure Lis debts. He had just succeeded to a legacy of $150,000, his share of his father's estate, so the creditors hunted around to find why it was his property had disappeared so fast. They found that on March 10, 1895, the day before the will was filed for probate, Henry Sherwood had deeded to his brother, William R. Sherwood, all his in- terest in the property of the estate. Sub- sequently, just fielore he filed his petition in insolvency, he filed a deed of similar import. It is these two deeds that the plaintiffs want set aside. The complaint charges that the deeds were made to fraundulently escape from the payments of his debts. The claims represented in the suit are the London, Paris and American Bank, $6278; D. V. B. Henarie, $7500; Josephine E. Bruguiere, $3943; L. H. F. C. Warneke, $1945; Hugh amusing. We see in it the primitive music. As to modern music, however, there is | nove. How could there be, with those in- | struments? They are as primitiveas the music. The only one that could be called a musical instrument with truth was the flute, and it was but a piece of bamboo, several points in length, pierced with holes. The tone of this was false, though it was not 8o bad as the others.” M. Marsick explained that he was more interested in the instruments than in the results the Mongolian players achieved with them. He, too, intended to get a job lot of them and learn their pecu- | liarities and possibilities. They would be | of especial value in showing from what the finished instruments of to-day had been evolved. “Art? No, no. 1t is not art. Every | effect is entirely mechanical. At least it seemed SO to me. NEW TO-DAY—DRY GOODS, NEW SILKS! SPRING 1896 wear. LONDRES, in designs, both street qualities ranging in $3.00 per yard. |3} shades. STRIPED TAFFETAS, extra value DRESDEN TAFFETAS, extra value. ... STRIPED TAFFETA for Skirting (Hair lines). . . . . .$1.00 Yard EXTRA HEAVY STRIPED TAFFETA (Ribbon effeets). $1.25 Yard PRINTED WARP EFFECTS IN TAFFETA SILKS (strect We take pleasure in announcing the ar= rival of some of the newest and most ele- gant styles of NOVELTY SILKS for Spring The assortment includes DRESDEN TAFFETAS, BROCHE PERSIAN TAFFE- TAS, PRINTED WARP BROCHE GROS DE large, medium and small and evening shades, price from $1.00 to ] $100 Yard « oo $150 Yard PERSIAN TAFFETA (Black Satin Stripes), Evening shades) DRESDEN BROCHE GROS DE LONDRES (Street and Evening We invite our patrons to inspect the above goods at their earliest opportunity. £8- Country orders recelve prompt attention. @ Goods delivered free in San Rafael, Sausalito, Blithe- dale, Mill Valley, Oakland, Alameda and Berkeley. QQRP ORAY, ¢ 1892. . “The men played without conviction. There was no feeling, no soul, in their per- formance. Their stolid faces showed as little thought as would be exhibited 1n whittling a piece of stick. They had just such motions to make and just so many and such notes to produce in a certain way and they did it. Thcre can be no art with- out feeling. “They did not move me in the least. They excited no new ideas. They touched MARSICK’S IMPRESSION [Written for *“The Call’ OF THE CHINESE MUSIC. ? by the great violin'st.) Tennent, $7823; Forbes Bros., Thomas Skinner & Co., $2105. THE BEAR FINDS FAVOR. Design That May Grace the Floor of the Rotunda of the City Hall Tower. City and County Attorney Creswell was smitten with the charms of a mosaic bear at a meeting of the City Hall Commis- sioners yesterday. and declared emphatic- ally in favor of such a design for the floor of therotunda of the tower in preference to the star that bad previously found favor in his eyes. He objected at first tothe absence of a tail in the design, but when the agent of the mosaic manufacturers said that.a tail of any proportions could easily be added, he gave up and stated that he would vote for the bear. It was decided, however, to defer a final decision on the matter until Auditor bB:nderick has a chance to consider the ar. $1572; e —— Lane Was Acquitted. Peter Lane, accused of a felonious assault upon a little girl, was aequitted of the charge by 4 jury in Judge Belcher’s court yesterday. The nothing responsive in my inner self. They aroused no slumbering fancies. Putting no feeling into their music they caused none in me.”’ ‘‘Was there any discernible tune in their music?”’ was asked. “Ob, yes. There was an air, often re- peated, that ran through it continuously.” *‘And what was that?” The noted violinist paused for a mo- ment. Then with head nodding the time he sang the air of the Chinese music as it had impressed him. Asked to put iton paper he complied reaaily, and then added the five notes of the Chinese scalv and: Annotation fantaisiste de s gamme Chinoise. ® M. P. MaRSICK. Transiated this reads, ‘‘a fantastic an- notation of a Chinese air. When this was completed M. Marsick was asked if there was anytbing of bar- mony in the arrangement of the Chinese mausic. “How can there be?”” he asked in return. “They have only five notes in their scale. Their instruments are not trne. That their strings may be faulty and tuned in different kefl! seems not to bother them in the least. Does not that answer you?'’ Grand Concert To-Night. jury was out but a few minutes. There are still pending against him more charges, the sggregate bail for which is Tt i probable that this amount will be reduced after this acquittal. The third grand concertof the Knickerbocker Male' Quartet, assisted by the Chicago Lady Quartet, will take place to-night st Odd Fei- Tows’ Hall, 11, 118, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. STILL TO REMAIN CHIEF. Crowley Will Not Retire From Office for Nearly Three Years Yet. INELEGIBLE FOR A PENSION. It Has Been Decided That He Must Serve Twenty Years Con. tinuously. Chief of Police Crowley will not retire and his resignation will accordingly be withdrawn .at the meeting of the Police Commissioners to-night. This decisign of the Chief has not been caused by the lust of office, as he craves for relief from the cares ana responsibili- ties of his position, but because he is a poor man, and, should he retire now, would have practically noincome on which to live. It has been definitely settled that the Chief’s seven years’ service by election cannot be included in the sum total of his service so as to make him eligible to be placed on the retired list. Ex-Senator Murphy, who was the father of the pension act and framed it, called upon the Chief yesterday afternoon and regretfully informea him that the intem[ and meaning of the act was for twenty years’ continuous servica in the depart- ment. As there was a break of six years between the Chief’s holding office by elec- tion and by appointment, he yet wants two years and nine months for his twenty years’ continuous service. “There isnodoubt,” said the Chief, later, “that Senator Murphy is correct. At lunch to-day a prominent Judge spoke to me to the same effect and told me there was a decision in the Supreme Court which covered the point, “Weli, I must just take off my coat, literally speaking, and buckle to the work again for two or three years more if I am spared. ‘I shall do so the more readily owing to the kindly and flattering way in which the press has spoken of my past services and other tokens of appreciation that I have received. ““I shall continue to do my duty as faith- fully and fearlessly as ever. Of that the citizens can fully rest assured.” Thedecision of the Chief has been hailed with the greatest gratification by the de- partment and will be coraially approved by the citizens at large. THE COMING REGATTA. A Yachting Association Will Be Formed to Compete for the Mac- donough Cup. Representatives from the different yacht clubs met Monday night at 310 Pine street to take preliminary steps toward forming an inter-yachting association. Charles G. Yale acted as chairman and stated at the opening that the principal object of the organization was to combine all the clubs on the bay in the Macdonough cup re- gatta, which is to be sailed every year. It was finally agreed that September 9, Admission day,would be the date set for the race for the '96 cup. A committee of five, one from each club, was appointed upon organization and another committee to draw up the permanent rules for the con- test. ! Joseph Macdonough will prepare a new cup, costing ), every year to be com- peted for by ail the smaller yachts of the association. The large vessels, of the Jes- sie-Lurline-Chispa class, will probably not take part in the races for the tropny, as their class is too high above tne small-fry craft for proper arrangements for fair con- tests. At the next meeting, which will take lace in a few weeks, the organization will perfected and preparations for the re- gatta inaugurated. —————— Barton Was Drowned. The, result of the autopsy by Dr. Barrett as to the cause of the death of A. M. Barton. who was found dead in a bathtub at the Lick baths, on Tenth street, was to the effect that the de« ceased came to his death by drowning. An ine quest will be held. Upson Pleaded Gulilty. Joseph Upson, the lottery swindler, pleaded guilty to using the United States mails in pure suit of his nefarious business, and was yester- day fined $200 by United States District Judge Morrow. NEW TO-DAY. J.E.CUTTER, EXTRA 0d Bourhon has been a staple family and | medicinal whiskey i fora | quarter- century. B, HARTIN & CO, 411 Market $t., DUSTRY. BUY DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER. - $1.73 base 2.25 flat 2.10 ¢ REFINED BAR IROM ANGLE IRON. BAND IRON.. Round Edge Tire Steel. 2.15 flag Toe g 2.40 « Plow ¥ .25 German Hammered 3.75 base Pick 54 4.00 Machinery 5 2.00 ¢ | Spring o 2.50 3.25 « . 3.25 Cold Rolled Finished Shafting. F. 0. B. Cars or Steamer. JUDSON M’F’G. CO. City Office:—Cor. Howard & Bealo Sts., SAN FRANCISCO. COSMOPOLITAN Oppostte U. 8. Mint, 100 and 102 Fifin sr., san Francisco, Cal.—The most select family hotel jn the city. and room, $1, $1 25 and 81 50 e day, Meals 25c. Rooms, and 75¢ & dsy. Free coach to and from the hotel, Look for the coach bearing the name of the Coge movolitan Hotel. WM. FAHEY, Froprieton Terms :—Cash.