The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 12, 1896, Page 14

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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1S96. HUNTINGTON T0 BUY THE A, &P, Proposes to Make It a Link in Another Through Line. AWAITING FORECLOSURE All His Arrangements Said to Be Made for Purchasing the Insolvent Road. WILL EXTEND IT TO SAPULPA. St. Louis Will Be Entered Over the St. Louis and San Francisco Railrcal. C. P. Huntington is said to have his plans all laid to control another through line to the I S new project con- templates St. an Eastern termi- intendent Kennedy was wild when he neard the news. He did not hesitate to state that if he had his wish he would | bave Editor Whitney among those who are endeavoring to dissover the north pole ina balloon. The directors held a meet- ing and decided that the boxing carnival on May 7 will be for professionals only, and that the proceeds will materially strengthen the treasury of the club. course the Green and Ziegler bout of ten rounds will be the star event of the even- ing. Altogether there will be five or six | four-round contests between the best box- | ers attainable. A first-class enterisinment | is promis | “The young men of East Oakland and vicinity have organized an athletic club which gives every promise of being among | the leading athletic clubs of the West. | The club’s present place of meeting is on Park street, East Oakland. It will be | known as the ion Athletic Club, with | the following officers: President, George | C. Banes; vice-president, William J. Bray; | secratary, Walter Clough; treasurer, Harry Bray. Board of directors—Theo G. Bur- { ling, William Rowe, Harry Fox, Fred | Barker and Louis Frazer. : The Rusbers, champions of the Pacific | Coast basket-bull players, will meet the | German team in a series of five games, one to be played each week, beginning on next | Tuesday evening at 8 o’clock sharp in the | gymnasium of the Y. M. C. A., Mason and Eliis streets. The public are cordially in- | vited to attend. A committee consisting | of F. L. Shaw, Rushers, J. Auger, Busi- | ness Men’s, and J. Pfarrer, German team, has been appointed to organize a league | among the Bay sociation of the Y. M. C. A. and arrange series of games for a | yaluable tropk The follow: letter concerning artificial- bird shooting at Antioch is seli-explana- | tory ANTIOCH, April 10. Sporting Editor Call: At a meeting of the Antioch Gun Club which took place here on April 9 the coast record_for pluerock shooting was lowered by Len Hewkhurst breaking 96 out of 100 at known traps and unknown | angles. His shooting was something phe- GUTIERREL HEMMED IN AT RIS HOME. |Four Sentinels on Guard at His Door to Pro- tect Him. ’ PEOPLE IN i':MI-REVOLT Dr. Pena and Dr. Keith Say Either Ezeta or Alfaro Will Be President. THE YELLOW FEVER IS RAGING | The Deaths So Far, They Say, Are About go Per Cent of Those Who Are Attacked. Dr.J. M. Pena and Dr. B. Keith of Sal- vador, who arrived here yesterday on the Acapulco, report that that country is on the eve of a revolution. It is like a vol- Map Showing Some of the Links of the Additional Through Line C. P. Huntington. Said to Be in Contemplation by nus with the Atlantic and Pacific and a branch of ti Louis and San Francisco roads as link When h was appointed re- and Pacific Railr h baving secured th through the influence of who is credited with y of the bonds of the At- c. Since his appointment who had always been ited w on on lantic and Pac Rece: S known as nta Fe man, h tually sev the close relations that had vreviously existed een the Atlantic and Pacific and the Santa Fe in hisen deavor to secure a more advantageo ngement for the road he repre- ts. The signiticance of this to railroad men is that he is evidently strongly an- agonistic to the road of which he was formerly first vice-president. His present attitude is attributed to his not being elected president under the re- cent reorganization scheme, an office he bad confidently hoped tc given instead to Juhus Rheinhart, who was form auditor, but who has since baen superseded owing to alleged misman- agement. As a result of this course of the new Santa Fe airectorate Mr. Smith is now reported to be bending all his influence to m further the interests of the president of the | Southern Pacific Compan be Atlantic and Pacific is to be sold under foreclosure in a few months and Huntington, it is reported, is fully pre- pared to attend the sale and buy in the property. His purpose is to then extend the road toa junction with Sapulpa, Indi Territory, the western terminus of the St. Lous and San Francisco road, which had originally been projected to run to Cali- fornia. It is claimed by those who are familiar with the situation that Huntington is in | the best position to secure control of the Atlantic and Pacific. The Atlantic and Pacific proper ex om The Needles to Albuquerque, a distance of while the section from Mojave to The Needles, a distance of 241 miles, thongh popularly supposed to be the property of the Atlantic and Pacific, is in reality owned by the SBouthern Pacific and leased to the Atlantic and Pacific with the privi- | lege to purchase under certain conditions. This would therefore leave only 578 miles to be purchased, Huntington would have to purchase in addition the 241 miles between The Needles and Mojave. An- other point in Huntington’s favor is the possession of the majority of the bonds of the Atlantic and Pacific. It was the original intention of the 8t. Louis and San Francisco people to build to a connection with the Atlantic and Pacific, and the line was extended west- ward from St. Louis to Sapulpa, in Indian Territory. This idea was abandoned, however, when the Santa Fe entered into a combination with the St. Louis and San Francisco whereby both roads jointly constructed the Atlantic and Pacific. The Bt. Louis and San Francisco is now said to be heartily tired of the regime of the Santa Fe so far as the Atiantic and Pacific is concerned and to be willing to make a satisfactory arrangement for the use of its Jine from Sapulpa to St. Louis by an inde- pendent line that would build from Albu- querque to a connection with Sapulpa. The gap to be thus closed is about 600 miles and is through New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory, a section | that is said by railroad men to be most promising for railroad exploitation. LKTE. SPORTING NEWS, Olympics Must Not Give Profes- sional and Amateur Box- ing Bouts. Oakland’s Newly Organized Athletic Club—Basket and Hand Ball Contests. The Olympic Ciub directors were given a surprise yesterday when William F. Humphrey, the president of the Pacific Athletic Association of the Amateur Union, informed them that he had received a let- ter from Caspar Whitney which stated that if the amateur boxers of the club should take partina boxing tournament §n which professional boxers also partici- pated they would forfeit their standing as amateur athletes. Itis hardly necessary to say that Super- 578 miles, | | nomenal, and his missing the four shots was caused by defective cartridges. William Rem- | frec Sr. broke 89, William Proctor 83, William | Remfree Jr. 54, Joe Ross 87, Bil! Hand 69, James Bacchus 64, Dominoco Visalia and Pat O'Brien 45 each. The handball games that will take place to-day in the San Francisco ball court are as follow P. Ryan and J. Rodeers to play G. McDonald and M. McNeil; J. Nel- son’to play P. Hutchinson a single-handed J game for $10 a sid Slattery and P. | Kelly to play D. Connolly and J. Lawle: A er and G. Hutchinson to pla; and J. McEvelley; P. Donnelly, | the amateur champion, and R. Linehan to play T. F. Bonnet and J. Feeney. deferred match between T. J. . Nealon the crackerjacks of the | Union court, will take place in that court | this afternoon, weather permitting. It will be | in this City, as they are all expert players. | Leniban and Feeney will have the ad- | vantage of being familiar with the court, and their friends are sanguine that they will win. The greatest interest is being taken in the coming match between Bonnet and J. | Harlow, the coast champion, to be played Sunday | in the San Francisco cou | The match will be for a | presented to the winner by Phil Ryan, the proprietor of the court. A good deal of | money bas already been wagered on the | result, each having numerous backers. ; STREET PAVEMENTS. A New Kind That Is Meeting With Marked Approval. The problem of street paving is one that every city, both great and small, through- out the civilized world has wrestled with | at one time or another. It is a question that concerns San Francisco deeply at this time, for this City has some of the worst paved streets in the country and none that are entirely satisfactory. This important subject has recently received much atten- | tion from the State Board of Harbor Commissioners and with apparently satis- factory results. About two years since they allowed the Williams Asphaltum Block Paving Com- | pany to lay a sample of their work on the seawall in front of pier No. 6, Howard street, which proved so satisfactory that the board has since ordered several pieces laid at other points on the seawall, and | Tecently at the encrance to the ferry land- | ing at the foot of Market street, as a sub- | stitute for the bituminous rock, which had failed to give satisfaction. The Williams | Company in that instance furnished a | satisfactory guarantee that their work | should be kept in good condition for a term of five' years, despite the immense | amount of heavy teaming destined o pass over it, The new Pacific-street wharf, 50x600 feet, which is vastly superior to any other wharf structure ever erected on tae water | front, has just been paved by the Williams Block Company under a guarantee to be kept in repair for the term of five years free of charge to the State. Such evidences of merit have induced several of the City officials to thoroughly examine this style of pavement. The great claim advanced by the Wil- liams Block Company is that they possess skill in the manipulation of their aspnal- tum, which enables them to produce re- sults as much superior to the old style of work as steel is better than the iron” from which it is produced. The surface-cover- ing for their pavement is almost like sheet lead. It dints slightly, but does not abrase, and in that consists its superiority and great wearing qualities. ——————— Young Men’s Christian Association. Next Tuesday evening there will be a bicycle exhibit in the Young Men’s Christian Associa- tion building, Mason and Ellis streets. Twenty-five or thirty different bicycle agen- cies will display their wheels, the exhibit to continue for three d: xhibition free to the public, and it will probably be one of the most attractive exhibits in San_Francisco. It will comprise ladies’ and gentlemen’s wheels end tandems. The attendants will appear in | riding costume. The directors and trustees of the association will hold their regular meeting to-morrow (Monday) evening at 8 o’clock in the directors’ room, association building. The total amount of the subscriptions has now reached $90,500, and it is very probable the entire sum of £100,000 will be reached before the end of this week. The meeting to-night will be large and enthusiastic, as the splendid success attend- ing the efforts of the boards of management is exceedingly encouraging. e . Music at the Park. The Golden Gate Park Band will render the ting, at 2 P. M. “Hallelujah Chorus”. Overture, *Un Concert P Overture, Selection. “Traviata’ .. Ballet music in “Willlam Teil 05ulight on the Rhine" . (a negro oddity | Volistedt Dacsiis H. Zickel HAVE you heard about Mitchell's Magic Lo- tion? Magic, because it cures all pain so quickly and surely. L and R. Lenihan | ae of the finest games ever seen | following programme to-day, weather permit- k | Baldwin. cano that is liable to break out at any mo- i | ment. | The whole country is armed. There are so many sentries on duty thata man is not safe to venture forth at night. | Dr. Pena, who lives at Sonsonate, did it | one evening before he left. The wind was blowing and he did not hear the shout of the guards. The next moment a rifle bail whizzed past him. The country is so perturbed, so the two medical gentlemen say, that no doctor will venture out after 7 o’clock at night. This, | too, at a time when yellow fever is raging, and when 90 per cent of those attacked are dying. | Tue people want a new President, so the | two physicians assert. “They are very tired of Gutierrez,” said Dr. Pena. ‘“He has not fulfilled his prom- Gutierrez 1s in such danger that he does not dare venture out of his house day or night. “Four sentries are standing and keeping guard at his door. His own army is ready | to desert and to take up arms against him. | I General Ezeta, who is lying by at | Panama, was only in the country be would | be President in fifteen minutes.” The only difficulty is that he can’t get up there, 1if he was he would have thearmy and every- thing at his disposal. ‘“‘Editor Ezeta or Alfaro will be the next | President. Gutierrez will have to go. Alfaro is now Vice-President. He has gone over into Nicara:ua to adjust the boundary difficulty between the two coun- tri Alfaro would like to be President. Otto Muchmuier, the United States Consul, who came there some time since from Pennsylvania, has lost his wife, sister-in-law and all hia children. He got changed from the coastand now the fever rages where he is, and the revolution is under full sway. He hated to see us leave there and, like others who desired all the physicians possible to stay, offered almost any money to remain. “We couldn’t do it. We preferred to get out. It is a wonder I did not get killed when shot at in Sonsonate. I was walking along briskly, but owing to the rustle of the wind I did not hear the chal- lenge of the sentry. He never waited a second, but raised his gun and fired. Luckily he just missea me. “It is this way prettv much in all the towns of Salvador. Everybody is armed. The grievance against Gutierrez is that he has done nothing that he promised to do. He knows his peril, too, or he would not have four sentries on guard constantly out- side his door. He never ventures out either day or night. ‘General Jeffers told me,” said Dr. Keith, “that in his opinion the Govern- ment couldn’t last over two or three weeks. And heisin the service of the Govern- ment, too. He isan American and has been down there for many years and has been through many of the wars of Central America, Hewas in the warin Honduras, and in many other wars there. He isa shrewd military man, the best there is there, and told me this the last thing he said before we left. “It 18 Ezeta’s country,’or Alfaro’s just whichever gets there first and asserts him- self. In any event Gutierrez can’t hold on. He has got to quit. Yes, the belief is that he has been putting money ‘aown’ since he got into office till now he probably has all the money he wants.” Dr. Pena and Dr. Keith are at the Occi- dental. They intend to stay here for some time. They believe that Manuel Casin, ho furnished the sinews of war for Ezeta till his exchequer was exhausted, is now in Mexico. Casin was the bold mariner who has made a byplay of tighting duels on several occasions. The theater of his heroic achievements has been in this theater for a part of the time. He was at the Palace Hotel a faw years ago when he challenged Senor Andrea to mortal combat. The senor was his old enemy in Salvador and was on a visit here. The two succeeded in much horse play, but never fought. Casin next blossomed out as the manager for General Ezeta and sailed with him in the Barclay Golden. WANTED TO VISIT HIM. c. Chamblin’s Deposition in the Ashley-Baldwin Case. The deposition of H. C. Cbamblin of Whitby farm, near Richmond, Va., has been received and added to the papers in the Ashley-Baldwin case. Chamblin says in his deposition that he one day received a letter from Miss Ash- ley asking leave to come and visit him. He declined the offer, and soon after, as be was riding along the road, he meta young lady who was looking for Whitby farm and who proved to be Miss Ashley herseif. He took her back to Richmond and sent her home, but on the way she asked nhim to buy her a ticket to where she said she wanted to go and meet “Lucky’”’ The ticket wasrefused. This is the substance of Chamblin’s deposition. Miss Ashley is suing Buldwin for $75,000 for betraying her and Chamblin’s deposi- tion will be a8 material feature of the case. —————— Increase in the Revenue. The increase in United States revenue stamps for this district for the nine months of H. the fiscal year has amounted to $600,000 over the same he m““::r:od ‘t‘:t year. Iltlli! m%uzm that SiinTonse for the year will reach upwaris HAD A NARROW ESCAPE. Stanley Lytton, an Electrician, Whirled Around a Revolving Shaft. Stanley Lytton, an employe of Paul Sei- ber, electrician, 406 Market street, had a narrow escape from death yesterday. A_bout 5 o’clock he was engaged in the California Wire Works, Bay and Mason streets, fixing up electric lights. He was working on a ladder, close to a revolving sh_uft, which was about two feet from the ceiling and twenty feet from the floor, when his clothes got caught in the shaft and he was whirled round and round, his body striking against the ceiling at each revolution. His clothes were torn almost in shreds and in_desperation, to save himself from being dashed to the ground, he clung to the shaft with his left arm, which had been broken. The friction on his band from the revolving shait was causing him great pain, and he had just made up his mind to let go when the engine was stopped. His vells for help had attracted the attention of the employes in the works and they had run and notified the en- gineer. Lytton was released from his perilous stmon and was hurried to the Receivin, ospital in the patrol wagon. Drs. Weil and Rinne found that both bones of his left arm were broken, and_his right arm, both shoulders and’ neck were badly bruised. OPPOSED TO HUNTINGTON Mrs. Stanford's Representatives Vote for General Hubbard for President. The Senator’s Widow Not in Accord With the Policy of the Present Regime. In the election for officers of the South- ern Pacific Company, which took place on Thursday, Mrs, Stanford, the widow of Senator Stanford, took special pains to be placed on record as being opposed to the regime of C. P. Huntington. 1t was given out at the railroad offices on Marketand Montgomery streets, where the election was held, that all the proceedings had been of a raost harmonious character and that no opposition of any kind had developed. But it has since been learned that just the contrary was true. Shortly after the arrival of General Thomas H. Hubbard from the East he bad a conference with Mrs. Stanford and that lady asked him to become a candi- date for the presidency of the Southern Facific Company, but despite the tempta- tion thus held out the general declined to stand. But not discouraged b: secure an ally in the representative of the Searles interests, Mrs. Stanford instructed her representatives, Russell J. Wilson and Charles Lathrop, to vote for General Hub- bard. Influence had also, apparently, been used on the Crocker interests, but as events showed, only with partial success. Charles ¥. Crocker voted with the Hunt- ingtons, but bis brother, Will H. Croceer, refraned from voting. Had the Crocker, Searles and Stanford interests stood to- gether the regime of Huntington wculd have come to an end. This was the first time since he was elected to the presidency, six_years avo, that there has been open opposition to the re-election of C. P. Huntington. her failure to BETTER STREET PA\}EMENTS. Letter of the Merchants’ Association to the Cycle Board of Trade. The Merchants’ Association bas ad- dressed the following cordial letter to the lately organized Cycle Board of Trade: SAN FRANCISCO, April 11, 18986. : The Merchants’ Association bids 3 vly organized board greeting to the public-spirited “work of securing improved pavements, better roads and attractive boule- vards for the City and County of San Fran- cisco. Assurances of the encouragement and operation of the Merchants’ Association in vour worthy efforts have been given alrendy 10 the committees of your board, who person- ally called upon the officers of this association, The board of directors desires, furthermore, to extend a cordial invitation to the members of your board to avail yourselves of all the privi- Jeges of this association, inciuding the use of its offices and library in the Mills bullding. One of the cardinal principles of the Mer- chants’ Association is the improvement ot the highways of 8an Francisco, Correct drainage, clean sireets, noiseless pavements, adequate illumination’ and beautiful boulevards are among the most potent factors of municipal progress. No city on earth has ever atiained a nigh degree of permanent prosperity without these fundamental requisites. It is most gratifylug to witness the recent awakening of the citizens of San Francisco to the vital significance ot these questions in the present and tuture welfare of our City. It re- quires oniy the concerted action of the people 1o bring ‘about these beneficent results and place our metropolis in the vanguard of the progressive and prosperous cities of the world. ——— Inter-University Debate. A debate between the University of California and the Leland Stanford University will be held April 25 at Metropolitan Hall, beginning at8 P. M. The question will be “The Popular Election ot United States Senators.” Arthur M. Catheart, John M. Ross and Henry D. Shel- don will speak in the affirmative, while Joseph O'Connor, F. Herbert Dam and Martin C. Flaherty, U the negative. The judges will be Juage Joseph McKenna, Judge W. W. Morrow and A. C. Free- Uovernor Budd will probavly” preside. inning team will get the Perkins prize iversity of California, will take | THE KINGDOM IS LEANING Attorney-General Fitzgerald on the Police Commis- sioaers. SAYS THEIR - TERM IS TUP. When He Gets Through His Pressing Present Affairs He Will Look After It. Attorney Wirt still keeps busy in his ef- fort to secure the ousting of Police Com- missioners Alyord and Tobin, who claim to haye a life claim on their jobs. Speaking of the matter yesterday Mr. Wirt said: “We shall have a walkover in this matter when it is brought to a test.” He said he had just called on Attorney- General Fitzgerald and informed him of his having secured important records re- lating to the appointment of the ofiicers named. The Attorney-General, he said, declared himself as opposed to the life tenure and beartily in sympathy with the movement to terminate the long term. “But,” said Mr. Wirt, “everybody knows that the Attorney-General has been en- gaged in a very important legal contest for several weeks, in the United States Court, in which the people of the State are greatly concerned and interested. He snguested for me to call on him as soon as he got through with the case there, and bring the facts and the records for consideration. I shall do so. “William Alvord and Robert J. Tobin took the oath of office and were sworn in by E. Burke, a Justice of the Peace, on the 5th day of May, 1885, as Police Commis- sioners of this city and county,”’ said Mr. Wirt. *It will notdo for them to say that they made and filed the oaths of office in April, 1878, or at any time in that year. The Justice who took the oath of office is now dead, the old City Hall is torn down and the Governor who appointed them in 1890 is dead, too, but many people know and the records will show that the Justice of the Peace was not elected and did not file his oath of office until December 2, 1884, after he got notice and a certificate of his election. This clearly setiles all this | proposition which is involved. They filed the oath on the same day of the year. On the 11th day of July 1890, they abandoned the oid fortification, songht a new one and then procured ex-Governor Waterman to appoint them and grant each of them a commission, and thev filed their oath of office on July 14, 1890, in this city and county, as the book of original entries of official oaths fully shows, although the oaths cannot be found in the County Clerk’s office. “I bave two certified copies of their official oaths, which were filed in the office of the Secretary of State on the 14th day of July, 1890,” said Mr. Wirt. “These rec- ords, with the big gold seals of the State on them, are conclusive presumptions that each of them by their act and declaration accepted the appointment and commis- | sion, and have acted under and by virtue of the same. The record which I have here, and certificd to by the secretary of Governor Buad, shows by the entry of record of July 14, 1890, entered in the offi- cial term of ex-Governor Waterman, that he appointed each of them for a term of four years, and not for their natural life. “This makes it clear that their appoint- ment and term of office and commission wholly ceased and expired in July, 1894. That “since that time they bhave been merely locum tenentes holding over ana waiting till some one should be appointed to fill the vacancies, for the Constitution provides that the term of such municipal officers shall not be extended beyond the period for which they are elected or ap- pointed. The Jate decisions of the Su- preme Court will sustain the propositions here presented. These facts being true, it scems that they filed their oaths of office | in Sacramento so as to make the matter appear easy and seem a little quiet. The legal counsel who advised them saw the dancer and advised them to abandon the old fortification. ‘The records make it the plainest case. It appears that the perpe- tuity of the kingdom is leaning over and about to fall.” AT THE SUTRO BATHS. Tightrope Walking, High Diving and Good Music. Colonel Robinson has arranged a fine list of events for visitors to Sutro Baths to-day. The programme is as follows: Afternoon—First Infantry Regiment band, N. G March, “*New Bully” (F. Boyer); over- ture, +“Orpheus” (Offenbach); “Iropical Dance (Moses); operaticselection, “‘Rigoletto” (Verdi avotte, “Minnie” (Brooke). Intermission. Med- ey, “‘Braham’s Latest” (Muller); “Danse Fan- tastique” (Le Thiere); solo for cornet, “Sere- nade” (Missud); waltz, “Amelia” (Rosas); galop, “Demon” (Rollinson). 5 Evening—March, “Buffalo News” (Beebe); overture, “‘Lastof the Hogans’ (Braham); two songs, *Only a Dream” and Happy Moments” (Wallace); selection from Audran’s operas (Kap- pes); patrol (Ascher). Intermission. Priests’ {Var March (Mendelssohn); Around the City’ (popular songs), (F. Beyer); waltz, “Dreams on the Ocean” (Gungl); gavotte, “Loving Hearts (Herman); galop, ““Through the Surf” (Wi hams), Hieh wire and slack wire, by Professor Seal illi the world-renowned tight-rope walker: boys’ 50-yard race, open toall; youn men’s 100-vard race, open to_all; for specia. rizes offered by Hon. Adolph Sutro; highand ancy diving by Messrs. Thompson, Rosenberg, Green and Gay, chempion Amateurs of Cal fornia. NEW TO-DAY. & & T h (Sl Spring and Summer Designs, from Paris, London and New York. PP RRPPR R VR P SRR PR BRI RRR IR R PP R R PP DRI R R RRR R RS @ X ’(;Qbii‘iiii'iiii)i)ii‘i‘?)iiiiiiii)?))i”?i?iiii? Wonder HATS, LACES, FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RIBBONS, 1026 Market St. At T e T S T T e e L The Prices are Low. The Largest and Best Selected Stock Ever Displayed “in This City. NO BRANCH STORE IN THIS CITY. %l((t(ii(t!(&tt(fi!t@QQQQQQ!Q&QQQ(QQ!QQQ!QQ(QQQQ(& LINENS! NEW TO-DAY—DRY GOODS. LINENS! SPECIAL SALE OF 25 CASES (Jerman Linens Our customers are respectfully informed that we have just opened an immense shipment of GERMAN LINENS, consis g of TABLE DAMASKS, TABLE NAPKINS, TABLE CLOTHS, DINNER SETS, DAMASK TOWELS, HUCK TOWELS, DOYLIES, HEMSTITCHED SCARFS, LUNCH SETS, LINEN SHEETS, HEMSTITCHED NAPKINS, LINEN BREAKFAST SETS. LINEN PILLOW CASES, and Many of the designs in these goods are confined exclusively to us, and the goods will be sold at the lowest Francisco. prices ever known in San EXTRA SPECIAL! ~In connection with the above sale of Linens we will offer this week 9 CASES WHITE BLANKETS, size 74x82, SUPERFINE CALIFORNIA PURE AUSTRALIAN WOOL, Price $ 6 .00 Pair TELEPEONE NMAIN 8777. Ci@mes ‘gRP"RAr \a 1892. = 111, 118, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREET. BUY DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. "Pm REFINED BAR IR/ -$1.75 base | ANGLE IRO . 215 flat | BAND IROX 2. o Round Edge Tire Stee g flat Toe i 2 . Plow o il “ German Hammered ‘¢ . 3.75 base Pick “ vy “ Machinery 3 o “ Spring “ 3355 Cold Rolled Finished Shafting Terms :—Cash. F. 0. B. Cars JUDSON W’FG, CO. AN FRANCISC . 3.25 or Steamer. THE DEIMEL Linen-Mesh Underwear Healthy. Comfortable, Cleanly, Durable. FOR SALE AT THE STORE OF The Deimel Linen-Mesh System Company, 111 Montgomery St., Opp. Occidental Hotel. THESUCCESS OF THE SEASON THE LADIES' GRILL ROOM ——OF THE—— PALAGE HOTEL, DIRECT ENTRANCE FROM MARKET ST. OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT. PRIVATE DISPENSARY. PECTALTY—DISEASES OF MEN, INCLUD- ing el forms of Blood, Skin and Nervous Dis- eases. Over 20 years' experience. Book sent fre Patlents cured at . Terms reasonable. Office Hours, 910 3 dally; 6:3 ¥, 10 to 12, Consultation free und sacredly confidén tial. Call, or address P. ROSCOE, McNULTY. M. D., 26} Neearny Street, San Francisco, Cal. NOTARY PUBLIC. (HARLES I PHILLIPS, ATTORNEY-AT. law and Notary Public, 638 Market st., oppo- site Palace Hotel. Telephone 570. Residence 1620 Fellst. Telephone. “Pine” 2591. LADELPHIA SHOE CO. STAMPED ON A SHOE MEANS STANDARD OF MERIT. | — 1f s0 we can sell y: in thiscity. We are the agent Ball-Bearing B Snoes, which, rs in this country. They are made ine Kanguroo Calf and are unlined, and they are so cut that they fit the feet perfectly, and wiil not tire a riaer even after a long journey, and wish- ing to thoroughly introduce this line we have de- cided to sell the high-cut for $2.50 Per pair and the low-cut for $2 00. Here 1s chance to invest, as very ordinary bicycle shoes, much inferior to these, are being sold eise~ where for $3 and §3 50. Co.'s celebrat v on the to wear when riding in Popular prices, $1 50 per pair. feet. and are just the thin; the country. A&~ Country orders solicited. @ Send for New Lilustrated Catalogue. Address B. KATCHINSKI, PHILADELPHIA SHOE cCoO., 10 Third Street, San Francisco. COAL! COAL! Wellington. $10 00 5 Southiield 950 Genuine Coos Ba; 6 50—Half ton. 3 50 Seattle. 8 00—Hali ton. 400 Bryant. 700—Half ton. 4 00 Telephone—Black—35. KNICKERBOCKER COAL CO., 522 Howard Street, Near First. FOR BARBERS, BAR- BRUSHESZ- 3 xx | houses, _billiard-tablos, brewers, bookbinders, candy.makers, canners, dyers, ls, foundries, laundries, Dy hangers, printers, painters, shoe factories, maen, tar-] 1 rootars, tanners, tailors, etc. BUCHANAN BROS., ! Brush Manufacturer-. 609 SacramenteSte; RAMBLER OFFER No. 4. $300 IN GOLD. This amount will be presented to the individual rider having to his credit the greatest mileage be~ tween April 1and December 1, 1896, on & Rambler Bicycle fitted with G. & J. TIRES, RAMBLER OFFER No. 5. $200 IN GOLD. To the individual rider having to his credit the greatest mileage between April 1 and December 1 1896, on any bicycle other than a Rambier, but fitted with G. & J. TIRES. FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS SEE THOS. H. B. VARNEY, Agent for the Gormully & Jeftery Manufacturing Company. RAMBLER BICLORAMA, Market, Tenth and Steven« son sts., BAN FRANCISCO, California, DO NOT FORGET THE OTHER OFFERS: OFFER No. 1-$1000 RAMBLER BICYCLE for the Fastest Amaf Mile. teur Rambler OFFER No. 2—$500 GOLD for the Race Meet Where the Fastest Amateur Ram= bler Mile Is Ridden. OFFER No. 3-$400 GOLD for the Club Having the Credit Between April Greatost Mileage to Its 1 and December 1, 1896, on Rambler Bicycles Fitted With G. & J. TIRES,

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