The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 27, 1896, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

8 ufiERRY MAYER” AGAIN 1§ PRINT, Alleged Author of the Val- entine Letters Defends Brown. REPEA'ZES OLD CHARGES. City Editor of the “Bulletin” Declares That the Pastor Is the Penman. MRS. DAVIDSON WILL LECTURE. The Convicted Minister Reminds Her of a Human Rodent—Rrown’s Enemies Confident. The mar himself “Henry May- but who is said t 1e Bulle to te n Rev. Dr. Charles O. ‘another letter, Dr. »ns, everything point- bt on the part of “newspaper man.” SUND. ment full of q ing to a desper he writer x, M s time to let go. man named 11 of Brown alance in m y office. | ade that | Valentine | xaminer > send in and not resort to and malicious lies | and candid ns subteriug )| alged in? of this latest letter show esperate and pulous man Brown has spent much of his spare fime in searching for inside information concerning en and the interior workings of ces. That he may have hired ble creature who has at some | rbeen a reporter on one of the | ere to furnish him with points is | 1t is undoubtedly some man | drink has assailed, and_who has been | dragged down by years of dissipation to a level where he would for a small sum of money be- come & tool of the pastor of the First Congrega- | tional Church. some Within five minutes after Mr. Rader had left the editorial rooms of the_ Bulletin there walked into the private room of the proprietor of the paper & man who bore every appearance of being a “thug.” His menacing manner as he passed through the local rooms_frightened | the lady writers at work there, and_they were elmost jmpelled to sound an alarm. He passed into the room where the proprietor | as, however, and with a murderous look in | es started swiftly toward him. But he quickly discovered that the managing editor was 4150 in the room and had his eye on him. This caused him to halt suddenly, and aiter glariug at the proprietor for a few “seconds | said his journey had been for nothing, and, turning on his heel, left the room. Mrs. Davidson was a bit more commun- icative yesterday than atany time since her acquittal, though it was plainly evident that she still struggled under the restrain- ing influence of Attorney Knight. | “T am not just yet prepared to talk about | the case in all its details,” she seid, “out | | no harm can come from indulging in a few side remarks. Concerning the sudden falling down, o to speak, of Dr. Brown in his prosecution of myself, I have only to say that the erd is not yet and I mean by | this that his troubles have only just begun. “This man reminds me very much of a rodent—in fact he is nothing less than a human rodent, geiting in his deadly work here and there and then barely escaping with his life. “I wish to be understood right here as saying that I never followed the path of one of these creatures without immedi- aiely catching him before he could reach e place of safety. “I presume, now that the case is ended, his partner in crime, Mattie Overman, and the latter’s adviser, Mrs. Tunnell, may ba expected in San Francisco any day. There is certainly nothing to keep them away, and further than this, Matuie Overman is not the woman to go wandering'in a des- ert, when she can lounge in a palace. “The defeat of Dr. Brown in the courts, though I want to be understood as saying that I neverexpected anything else, seems to me to sound his death knell. The beautiful decorations of last Sunday re- mind me of a funeral without the corpse —the latter only srrived Wednesday, but will no doubt be exhibited next Lord’sday with great ceremony."” Mrs. Davidson has received a dozen or more offers from “managers’” who desire to play her as a star attraction on the | Front Elevation Dr - CHINA' TEAS GIVING WAY | The Work of Missionaries | been T | the Ceylon teas are now fast taking tk | details of growing | control the tea business in China. They | | are not skilled in handling them and are | come 1 and run any railroad, and that | as possible. | The Government refused to' take it in that | money, and then they sent a lot of men | who tore up the track and carried it and THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1896 lecture platform. One enterprising fellow declares she would draw *‘immensely’” as r east as Chicago, and if she will but ent to “tour” 1t under his guidance he bedeck ber in fine linen and silks. wil Incidentally Mrs. Davidson was offered 25 per cent of the net profits. u Mrs. Davidson has already determined to give one or more lectures at Metro] oli- tan Temple, but the date has not been selected. Should this venture prove suc- cessful she will probably tour the Pacific Coast States, the subject of the lecture being “The moral side of Dr. Brow= and Martha Overman.” : The oppesition to Dr. Brown in the First church seems to be much elated over the acquittal of Mrs. Davidson—more particularly the manner in which it was brought about. Twenty petitions are being industriously circulated, and when the 200 mark is reached the trusteeswill be asked to secure another pastor. 1f this protest should be put calmly aside it is the purpose of the opposition to call a council to pass on the case of Dr. Brown. This means that the First church must either let the present pastor go or else become a tramp institution BANKS OF THE INTERIOR. Two Examiners Visiting Financial In- stitutions in the Valley. Messrs, Fuller and Magee of the Board of Bank Commsisioners are now at work in the San Joagquin Valley inspecting the interior banking-houses. Yesterday a re- port on the condition of the Fresno banks reached the headquarters of the commis- sion. In this report the two examining Commissioners gave a Verv encouraging of the financial status of the and its suburbs, To-day they k in Merced, whither they pro- yesterday. The examiners intend | nue northward and are expected here early in next week. +0 conti ;0 arrive t Magnificent Plans for the State University’s Main Build- ing. PRESENTED BY J. W. DUNCAN. An Auditorium That Would Seat Five Thousand—To Be Built of Folsom Granite. The plan to give the University of Cali- fornia a magnificent, permanent main hall is as old, almost, as the university itseif, but not until very recently has the plan assumed definite shape and form. At the last Legislature an appropriation of $500,000 was asked for with a view of ex- pending most of the sum in the com- mencement of the great structure. But the appropriation was not allowed and for the time being the plan of the main hall was abandoned. But now another and far more definite plan is produced, the architectural draw- ings of which are complete. These plans are fathered by James W. Duncan of 726 Bush street, this City. They have been examined and praised by several of the A BEAUTIFUL IONIC PILE: | celebrated critic, to whom I was called upon to repeat my statement. They ap- peared as astonished asif I were a native of Ashanteeland and made the statement concerning the natives.” A VETERAN’S SUICIDE. John M. Gray Shoots Himself at the Entrance to the Metropol- itan Temple. John M. Gray, an army veteran, com- mitted suicide yesterday afternoon by shooting himself in the right temple. He had gone into the main entrance to the Metropolitan Hall on Fifth street and shot himself at the bottom of the steps, just behind the door. The report of the shot attracted the at- tention of a passer-by, who on seeing the condition of the old man notified the po- liceman on the beat. The ambulance was summoned and Gray taken to the Recetv- ing Hospital, but he died in a few minutes. His body was removed to the Morgue. In his pockets was a_card on_which he had written: ‘A total wreck financially and physically. A little left in vest pocket. Take something and don’t make wry faces at me. Branch, 861 Market street.” He was a cripple and had been living at the Branch House, 861 Mariket street. He was 67 years of agze_and was born in Ken- tucky. During the Mexican War he served as first sergeant, Company E, Easton’s Battalion, Missouri Infantry, and during the Civil War he was a member of Com- pany B, Seventh California Infantry. Selling Lottery Tickets. H. C. Mangels, proprietor of a cigar-store on East and Clay streets, was convicted in Judge Low’s court yesterday of selling lottery tickets and was fined $100, with the alternative of 100 days in the County Jail. PETITION OF MERCHANTS, Determined Effort to Get. the Wiimerding School Lo- cated Here. JAMES D. PHELAN'S OPINION. Members of the Merchants’ Associa- tion Strongly in Favor of the Project. More of the poor boys in San Francisco will have a chance to learn a trade if the gentlemen who want thc Wilmerding School of Industrial Arts located here can carry their point. For a considerable time efforts bhave been put forth for the practical union of the Lick Technical School with the new Wilmerding School of Industrial Arts. The Merchants’ Asso- ciation, in particular, has interested itself to this end, its members being a unit on the proposition. Yesterday afternoon the sub-committee, to which the engineering of the movement, so far as the association is concerned, has been intrusted, held an executive meeting in the rooms of the association in the Mills building. Alfred Bouvier presided, and | public parks and squar dry Associal tw him that the association ization with a large capi- tensive busiv;‘cssifi He en to four different branch oflices, p him. He th t a :;?oihi%:;stment. and subscrxbefi $100 for stock, which he paid over to Bockman.‘h " Percy said he subsequently learned “e the bundles of clothing shown hmi wer dummies, and that the only stoc! pa;- sessed by the association was 8 second- hand polishing machine, worth $3 75. — e ————— STREET FUNDS EXHAUSTED. No More Contracts Can Be Paid Out of This Year’s Appropriation. Superintendent of Streets Thomas Ash- worth has notified the Board of Super- visors that there is danger of a_shortaze in the funds of his department if any more contracts for street work are made during the present fiscal year. A He stated in his communication that the outstanding liabilities created by the legislative action of the board, in conjunc- tion with the expenditures that must ne- cessarily be incurred by the Street Depart- ment in the reconstruction and repairs of accepted streets, the cleaning and sweeping of the same, the repairing and cleaning of sewers and the maintenance of es would exhaust the appropriation_made by the board for the fiscal year ending June 30 next. ———————— The Fire Department. The Fire Commissioners yesterday afternoon decided to loan Mayor Sutro a cart aud hose for fire protection at the Cliff House. George Duncan, driver of engine 29, was tried ona charge of using disrespectiul language con- cerning his superior officers and making him- self generally aisagreeable. He was found guilty and was dismissed from the department. American Laun represented to was a new organ tal and doing an_ex NN o= AN NN L =" e = —— = AR awing of the Tonic Structure Proposed by James W, Duncan as the Main Building of the State University, to Be Constructed of Folsom Granite, Containing an Auditorium With a Seating Capacity of 5000 and Large Wings for Museum, Library, Engineering and Photographic Laboratories and the Executive Department. Thomas Fairhurst on How They Have Been Supplanted by Ceylen. in and About Foochow Almost With. out Results. Thomas Fairhurst of Foochow, who has sing and handling tea for twenty- five years, is at the Palace, on his way home from London. Mr. Fairhurst says | place of the China teas in different parts of the world. The tea business in Ceylon | isin the hands of Europeazns, who had become expert in blending and in all the and marketing the | On the other hand the Chinese product. consequently losing hold in the markets of the world. San Franciscans as yet drink a good deal of Chinese tea, but in the East. and especially in Canada, where little coffee has ever been drunk, the Ceylon tea is bought to a greater extent than any other. Mr. Fairhurst does not think much of | the Chinese railroad scheme recently ex- | ploited here. He says the Chinese will | not under any consideration let foreigners they will be extremely slow about making any real grants looking to the building of railroads by outsiders. | *“The trouble is,” bhe said, “that those in | authority in China do not want railroads and the inventions of Western civilization. | The people would lixe to have them well enough, but the officeholders are shrewd enough to see that if thev were introduced they would lose their positions. And they | want to hold on to their fat places as long ““This railroad project looks to me like a | mere scheme. Why, to build from Peking | via Hankow to Canton would require 1500 | miles of road. It wouldn’t touch enough of the big ports, and, besides, a very large part of it would be over a very rough, mountainous region that wouldgmake it a very costly enterprise. *Talking about railroads in China, some vears ago an English company was al- lowed to build oue eleven miles long from Shanghai to the mouth of the Woo Sung River. After they had it completed and had rur it awhile they offered to give it outright to the Chinese Government. way, but the officials said they would take it at cost. They did so, and paid the the rolling stock away off to Formosa, where they threw it down and left it as so much rubbish. The Chinese people pat- ronized the road well, and it paid, but the officials didn’t want it. “1t was ninety miles from Foochow that those outrages occurred to the mis- sionaries. Ten persons in all were killed. Of those who did it twenty-five were cap- | tured and beheaded, five being brought | down to Foochow for that purpose. The | Chinese are still bitter against the mission- aries, and, for my part, I don't ses what good the missionaries do. One of them admitted to me not long ago that their | work was of no avail. The missionaries go there at about the same pay as they could get at home, and when the warm weather comes they go and spend three months at the seashore—all excep:c the Catholics, who do not take this vacation. The Chinese are a class of people who do not regard truth, and who are almost im- possibie to reach.’”’ — Michael Coeney Sent to Jail. Michael Cooney, who had been subpenaed to act on the Coroner’s jury yesterday, refused to take the oath until he had been peid his fee, and was sent to jail by Coroner Hawkins. ————— Peralta-Reavis Case. All the evidence in the Peralta-Reavis case before United States Commissioner Heacock 1s now in and argumenis will be heard this morning. ———— Ask Mr. Havens of Con. Virginia what Mitch- | according to an idea which he has long | and including both wings, is 420 feet. | three sides, 1s capable of seating 5000 per- | would be, he delares, an immense saving. regents, and Mr. Duncan hopes to have them finally adopted and the work upon them actually commenced within the next year or two. Mr. Duncan was the superintendent of construction in 1870 of the present uni- versity buildings. He was also superin- tendent of construction of the new Mer- cantile Library building and of the Acad- emy of Sciences building. Mr. Duncan is a man of wide experience in his line and of much taste withal, as a glance at the drawings for the new main hall will evi- dence. While Mr. Duncan is not a practi- cal draughtsman, yet the plans were drawn under his personal supervision and cherished for the main building at Berke- ley. It is plafined on strictly classic lines, being severely Ioaic throughout, and has that splendid massive beauty and dignity peculiar to all purely classical structures. The total width of the building, from In the center of this, extending back a depth | of 205 feet, with a width of 180 feet, is the auditorium, which, with its galleries on sons. The auditorium has a rear entrance and its stage and proscenium front is in the front of the buirding, backing the main vestibule. Each wing has an area of 152x70 feet. It is calculated by Mr. Dun- can that these would be suitable for the museum and library, the engineering and photograpbing departments, the executive quarters, etc. As planned, the great building is en- tirely fireproof. Mr, Duncan, who was su- perintendent of the Folsom prison works, is anxious to have the university buildihg made entirely ot Folsom granite, which As planned now the structure would cost in the neighborhood of $1,000,000. This sum could be lessened by $400,000 if Fol- som granite could be used. Mr. Duncan is not insensible to the fact that there would doubtless be protests en- tered against the useof Folsom granite, but if about $600,000 of the sum needed could be raised by private donation the regents would then be at liberty to use the granite, without which such a magnificent structure as the one proposed could never be erected. Professor Soule, who occupies the chair of civil engineering at Berkeley, has exam- ined the plans presented by Mr. Duncan, and like all who have seen them is heartily in favor of them. ART IN LONDON. ‘Wilbur A. Reaser’s Interesting Lecture at the First Unitarian Church. The lecture on *“What I Saw in the Lon- don Studios,” delivered in the lecture-room of the First Unitarian Church yesterday afternoon by the rising young artist, Wil- bur A. Reaser, was well attended, the fem- inine element predominating. Mr. Wilbur has spent many years of his life in California and returned here a few months ago, after seven years’ study in the celebrated art schools of London, Paris and Holland. The principal part of his paper was de- voted to Watts and Burne-Jones. It alco contained reminiscences of the pure Rhae]ite brotherhood and of Dante Gabriel osetti, their leader. Of them he said: “‘Outof the large body of paintersof whom I promised to talk to you two men rise re-eminent—George Frederick Watts and dward Burne-Jones. What sudden and delightful visions these names recall to our eyes! “‘I resent much that has been written of Burne-Jones. T cannot for. a moment ac- cept the English verdict that he is the greacest of living painters. His work, at est o legendary, so pre-Raphaelite in spirit, seems far removed from our day, and yvet it is linked with English ideals, sentiment and literature. “When I went to see Ford Maddox Brown, who was_in bed nursing the gout, I told him that in San Francisco we had reproductions of most of the pre-Rapheal- ite pictures and an art schooi with a mem- bership of over 100. He fairly gasped in ell's Magic Lotion does for sprains. - his astonishment and sent for Sevens, the I\ BICHMOND DISTRICT. Complaining of the Market- Street Railway Com- pany’s Service. No Relief Yet From the Sewer Nuisance—Improvement Under Difficulties. At a meeting of the Richmond District Improvement Association Wednesday evening the Market-street Railway Com- pany’s service was warmly discussed. Su- perintendent Vining's recent economical changes in the schedule of the McAllister and Sacramento streets lines was especially denounced. The cars are run so far apart that long waits at the crossings are neces- sary, and the last carleaving the ferry a half hour earlier is a source of incon- venience. t After a number of speeches J. G. Ma- | loney introduced the following resolutions, which were unanimously adopted by the association: ‘WHEREAS, The consolidated railroad com- anies have withdrawn car service from their ines leading into Richmond, evidently in the interest of economy and cheap ideas brought out by Manager Vining, who has by his actions proved himself and the people whom he rep- ;eg_e[nu 0 be & cheap and retrogressive crowd; e i Resolved, That we ask all citizens of the City, as well as Richmond, to patronize thos: lines which do accommodate and listen fo the peo- ple’s wishes, the lines deserving of public sup- port leading into this district being the Sutter street, the Sutro and the Geary street railroad lines, &5 those lines know the public wants and do not resort to cheap Eastern noticns and ideasin treating with those from whom they derive thelr support. Resolvea, That we denounce the silurian ideas of the manager of the combine’s lines, and believe that the sooner it withdraws the balance of its cars and allows better and more grozreash‘e lines to occupy the sireets of our istrict the better off the district and its resi- dents will be. Although we aimed to treat all lines alike; the action of the manager of the combine’s lines forces us to denounce its course and ask all persons to assist those lines which are deserving of public aid and support. “This is the only way we can adopt if we would move Vining,” said a prominent member of the association yesterday. “We have tried pleading and argument, so we can only refuse 1o patronize the cars.” The property-owners around Twelfth avenue and California street are waiting for Contractor J. J. Flynn to take up the sewer which he so peculiarly laid several months ago. Itseems to Lave been con- structed for every other purpose than for draining the sewage from the locality. The residents are obliged to dig holes in their back yards where they may im- vound the matter that cannot escape through the sewer. Two weeks ago Flynn was ordered by the authorities to imme- diately take up the piping and lay it down properly. He is taking his time evidently, as only a small excavation has been made in the street over the sewer and the prop- erty-owners are wondering how long the nuisance will last. “The Heaith Officer promptly took the matter in hand,” said J. Baily, one of the sufferers, ‘‘but the contractor seems to be in no hurry about repairing the sewer. Neither myself nor my neighbors can use our closets or sinks. We have to empty ali the sewage in pits dug in the soil. E\ie have all paid for that sewer and get no use out of it. The value of property on this block is deteriorating, because nobody will furchsu under this condition of things. am agent for a number of lots here, and I haye lost sales because I can’t recom- mend the sewer system of this iocality. Flynn did another bad job on Thirteenth avenue and the Street Department won't accept it. Richmond district wants to-be progressive, but between a poor car service on the part of the Market-street Railway Company, the graveyards all around it and choked-up sewers, this part of the City has a hard time.” The Railroad Blameless. The Coroner's jury yesterday held the rail- road blameless for the death of Angus McDon- ald, who was killed on the Southern Pacific track near Randail street on March 22. It was agreed that Bertha L. Bryant, who was found dead in her room in a Sutter-street lodging- house, came to hér death by carbolic .c.§ -g- ministered by parties unknown. In the cases g(l yvvi.xlxlis?o(,ma “v;::u ’I:odthu found in the o who shot himsi & dicts of suicide were returned. S there were in attendance F. W. Dohr- mann, Hugo D. Keil and J. Richard Freud, representing the Merchants’ Asso- ciation; J. D. Phelan, representing the Art Association; and H. J. Crocker, who acted as spokesman for the Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Bouvier performing the same office for the State Development Committee. The session was brief, the participants being all of one mind on the matter under consideration, Mr. Phelan, tc whom the preparing of a memorial to the regents of the State University had been intrusted, made a brief report ana submitted a draft of the proposed memorial, which, with a few additions, was accepted as fully covering the ground. “This memorial,” remarked Mr. Phelan, *‘will be presented to the Board of Re- gents at their meeting on the 3lst of this month. In brief, it sets forth the many weighty reasons why the Wiimerding School should be placed here, where poor boys are so plentiful, and where it could do'so vast an amount of good. Itis dis- tinctiy stated that no corporate union be- tween the two institutions is desired, but | at the same time we lay stress upon the | point that much can be gained by having the two schools near each other, in order that one may supplement and perfect the other’s work, each institution being inde- pendent, having its own faculty and sep- arate management. “We shall further ask, in accordance with this view, that the regents permit | the Wilmerding School to be erected on the Lick property adjoining the James Lick Technical School, the iand for the building being leased from the regents; or if this be impracticable then that the Wil- merding School be located near the Lick School, 50 that the teachers and students of 'both may be mutually benefited by the interchange of courtesies and by working together for tne ends common to boih. ‘It strikes me,”’ commented Mr. Phelan, *‘that this would be a peculiarly happy arrangement. The honored names of two great philanthropists would thus be asso- ciated. Each institution, having the other near it, would be in good company, while neither would conflict with the other. The Lick School, as I am informed, deals prin- cipally with the science of mechanics, the practical, manual work done being chiefly in the nature of demonstrations in class. The Wilmerding School, on the contrary, will take no account of brains, but rather occupy itself with the hands of its alumni. There the boys will be taught to work, not particularly to understand, saving as un- derstanding comes by practical work. This consideration must make it evident how admirably the two institutions would work side by side. In the Lick School the boy would learn the theory of his chosen trade, and as soon as_he should gain a fairly in- telligent knowledge of it he would be trans- ferred. across the way to the Wilmerding School, where he would be taught to turn that knowledge to practical account.” A LITTLE PET TREE. Mr. Craw of the Horticultural Commis- sion Has a Queer Plant. A pretty window ornament is a tiny alligator pear tree which Alexander Craw of the State Horticultural Commission cherishes as the apple of his eve. The tree is about six months old and is large for its age, being about three feet high. No sordid dark-hued earth gives nourish- ment to its dainty thread-like roots which float at will within the crystalline depths of a transparent water jar. Any one, says Mr. Craw, may have one of these graceful and unique ornaments. | The alligator pear is easily procured at | most large fruitstores. One end of the pear should be cut off andthe uncutend allowed to rest above the neck of a wide- mouthed jar of water, the water barely touching the fruit. Every week orso the | water should be changed, the pear being handled as little and as .tenderly as peesible. The germ within the pear will soon commence to swell, and in a short time will rend the fruit assunder, sending up a tiny shoot of green which will grow with astonishing rapidity. Mr. Craw's tree has leaves averaging ten inches in length by three in width, and is much. admired by all who have seen it. A LAUNDRY SWINDLE. ‘Warrant Out for the Arrest of H. W. Bockman. W. R. Percy, of Gough and Lombard streets, swore out a warrant in Judge Con- lan’s court yesterday for the arrest of H. ‘W. Bockman on the charge of obtaining money by false pretenses. Percy 1s another victim of the German- CASE OF THE FAIR WILL The Absence of Judge Slack Will Postpone the Hear- ing. ‘. Lawyers for the Principal Heirs Are Still Undetermined as to Their Future Action. The absence of Judge Slack will un- doubtedly postpone any action in the Fair will case, which stands on the calendar for to-day. All the attorneys in the Cese are absoluteiy mute as to what steps have been taken, if any, looking to & reassemb- ling or a redistribution of the forces to the fight. There was to have been a meeting of the attorneys for the children for the purpose of deciding upon a course to be taken— whether to join ex-Judge Paterson in his opposition to the will of the 2Ist or whether to join Delmas & Shortridge in support of the will. The fact that the counsel for the children presented the will of the 24th to the court as the real and last will of James G. Fair and opposed the will of the 21st and afterward deserted that will and assented to the probate of the will of the 21st leaves their next action a matter of reasonable doubt. ‘What their next move will be, therefore, is a matter of considerable interest to all concerned. As stated, ex-Judge Paterson is in hopes they willjoin him, but to do so they will have to flatly repudiate their previous and recorded position in court. It is probable that some other Judge will call the calendar for Judge Slack to day, but whether a day for the trial may he fixed cannot be said. This extraordinary Rejuvenator s the mos 'ondermldiscovrfi «f the age. It has been endorsed by the leadingscientific mer of Eurgpg 3 and erica. Budyan 18 purely vege- table, Hudyan stops Prematureness LosT BEFORS AFTER MANHOOD ion, Dizzint Falling _ Senszation Qe D O tiching of the eyes and other parte Btrengthens, invigorates and tones the entira Stom. Hudyan cures Debility, Nervousness, ‘missions, and developes and restores weak organs. Pains in the back, losses by day or night are stopped quickly. ‘Over 2,000 private ements. en&%fi‘mmne! means impotency in the first It is & symptom of seminal weakness and barrenness. It can be stopped in 20 days by the Hudyan. u’f‘l?e‘new%iswverywumde by the Special {sts 0f the old famous Hudson Medical Insti. Tute, Itis thostrongest vitalizer made, Itis very powerful, but barmless, Send for circulars and testimonials, HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE Stockton, Market and Ellis Sts,, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. y Cocoa Dyspeptics, brain work- ers, the thin and nervous convalescents and nursing mothers must drink cocoa because it is very nourish- ing, easily digested and nerve feeding rather than stimulating—that is if it’s Wiy (Qhirardelli’s Because it is good—made of the best selected cocoa beans—not small, shriv- eled, half-grown, lifeless ones; pure; and made with skill born of half & century’s experience. All grocers. Take na substitute. Alaska Efifi Mine HE FAST AND COMMODIOUS PASS Steamship, “PORTLAND,” 0. J. HUMPHREY, Master, Will sail from MISSION-ST. WHARF at 10 A, M., SATURDRY, MARCH 28, 1896, For Cooks Inlet Gold Mines via “The Portage,” the only direct route to Cooks Inlet Gold Mines. For pussage or freight apply to PACIFIC STEAN WHALING C0., 30 California Street. GER EST ONE To EXAMINE pectucles and inve: s and fit them to glasses with Instruments of his own whose superiority has not been equaled. cess has been due to the merits of my worl Oftice Hours—12 10 4 ». M. " — /i\smart Broadway, New York, druggist has this sign hanging outside his store; it marks the new era of drug selling, Is it any wonder that he has to enlarge his quar- ters, that his clerks are busy, and that his store is one of the most popular along the leading thor- oughfare? ou can afford to trade with a druggist that has such a motto as that. Wright's Indian Veetable Pills Are acknowledged by thousands of persons who | have used them for over fort; SICK HEADACH. TION, Torpid Liver, Weak purity the blood. Crossmar's Sy Mixtur remedy persons can cure the o Y T o, s v change in application to business. The medicine contains nothing that is of the least injury to the constituti htm“ ion. Ask your druggist forit. Price $1 a Stomach, Pimples, and ears 1o cure GIDD’I§'ES& CONSTIPA- a THESUCCESS OF THE SEASOV THE LADIES' GRILL ROOM ——OF THE— PALAGE HOTEL, DIRECT ENTRANCE FROM MARKET ST. OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT. DR.WONG W00 Chinese Drugs and Tea and erb Sanitarium, 776 CLAY STREET, Bet. Kearny and Du, San l'};mcllmponh I, the undersigned, have | been cured from Kidney I:l;o;ebrneeé f!rom ‘lvhlch T or over By Dr. Won o Dal . Nov. 20, 1856, " Oftice hours: 9:30 to 11 t09 P, Baja California : Damiana Bitters Is & powertul aphrodisiac and specific tonic for the | Sexual and_urinary orzaas of both sexes, and & | Ereac remedy for diseases of the kidneys s Dl greai Restorative, Sells on fts own Merits. mOl{llIs necessary. NABER, ALFS & BRUNE ents, 323 Markeét St., S. ¥oo(vend tor Lrealar) Invigorator and Nervine. —n0 - long-winded testis IRON BEDS, BRASS BEDS, | FOLDING BEDS Wire and Hair Mat- tresses, R Chairs, Wheel Tommodes, Back Rests W. A. SCHROCK, New Montgomer St., under Gran Hotel, 3. ¥ A 1axacve refresning fes trult lozenge, very agreeable to take. CONSTIPATION ‘hemorrhoids, bile, 1088 of appetite, gastric and intestisal troubles and hesdache arising from them. E. GRILLON, P 88 Ru des Archives, Paria, Sold by al! Druggisia. TAMAR INDIEN GRILLON

Other pages from this issue: