Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
F RANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE , 18 HARNESS HORSES AT INGLESIDE, Summer Meeting of the Trotting-Horse Breeders’ Association. WILL BE A BIG AFFAIR. Trotters and Pacers From the Entire Coast Will Compete for Rich Purses. | | | T0 BE NO TEDIOUS SCORING. McNair, the K'ng of Sulky Starters, Has Been Engaged to Send the Horses Off | r meeting of the Pacific Coast Breeders’ The summ: orse Association, | h is to be held at Ingleside June 0 and July 1, 2, 3 and 4, promises to be in | | ing fo horsemen of the State, and their best ef- forts are all directed toward making this meeting an event in the history of the | harness horse on this coast. The following is the programme: urday, June 27—2:30 class trot- 5 class troiting purse, 2:25 class Tuesday, June 30—2:40 class 3-year-0ld trotting_ stakes, spe- losea during meeting. pacing cial purse to be Third day, Wednesday, July 1—2:35 class trotting purse, 2:24 class trotting purse, spe- purse, cial purse to be ¢ Fourth dsy, Thursday, July 17 class trotting purse, special purse to be closed dur- ing meeting, special purse to be closed during meeting. Fifth day, Friday, July 3—Two-year-old trot- { ticg stakes, 2:40 class trotting purse, special purse 1o be closed during meeting. h day, Saturday, July 4—2:19 class trot- purse,’ special free-jor-all race, pacing purse, 2:35 class pacing purse, butchers’ race. USED A COBBLESTONE. Trouble Between a Jessie-Street Saloon- Keeper and a Customer. John Conberry, a laborer in a sugar refinery, appeared before Judge Joachim- sen yesterday to answer a charge of an assault with a deadly weapon. The com- plaining witness, J. H. Flynn, a saloon- keeper at 137 Jessie street, testified that Conberry went to his place on Sunday, and aiter having several drinks, for which he | refused to pay, assaulted him with a cob- blestone, which was produced in court. Conberry swore that Flynn and several customers threw him into the street and teat and kicked him. He admitted usin the cobblestone, but said it was in self- | defense. The Judge seemed inclined to believe Conberry's story, and continued the hear- two days to enable him to bring witnesses to testify to his previous good character. . To Restrain Kerrigan. Charles W. Howell yesterdsy applied to Juage Slack for a writ of prohibition restrain- E. P. Heald, President of the Pacific Coa: [From a photograph st Trotting-Horse Breeders’ Association- by J. R. Hodson.] niany respects one of the most important | ing Justice of the Peace Kerrigan from hear. | horse events which this . st trotting meet which has his Caty for two years and the lovers of ky racing are looking fo ward to it with keenest anticipation. The fine new track and the large number of notable entries, which have been hereto- fore published, promise most exceptional sport. The association conducting this meet is ries of harne: v has ever se his is the f been held in the largest organization of 1ts kind in America and probably in the world. It comprises the owne all the leading stock farms on the coast, as well as the proprietors of smaller stables and individ- ual harness hor: 1t has been organized since 1889 and its first meet, beld at the now def t Bay District track, was a remarkable racing season. It was at this event that Sunol, the pride of Senator Stanford’s farm, put the world’s murk for amileat 2: Regal Wilkes made his first bow to horse-lovers as a record breaker by capturing the world’s record for two-y Id stallions. Since that time the association has given meets at Napa, Sacramento, San Jose, Los | Angeles, Oakland and San Francisco, and each meet has been a decided success. An argument sometimes used against the attractiveness of harness races by those who are partial to the gallopers is that the contirued scoring necessarily makes the events tedious for spectators. That tedious scoring is not a necessary | feature of this class of racing wasabund- antly proven at Los Angeles last year, | when W, P. McNair, the famous starter, sent the horses away with an average of less than two scores for the entire six days. This was justly deemed something re- markable, however, and it is generally conceded that few if any other starters could do as well. In order that the asso- ciation’s patrons may have a mimmum amount of the scoring nuisance McNair has been secured for thisuccasion. Mr. McNairisaresident of Wichita, Kans,, but he almost constantly employed in the East traveling from one great race meet to another. His last engagement was in Denver, from which place he is expected to arrive in this City in a day or two. There are at present about 200 horses in | training at the track. Among them are the favorites of the track patrons of the entire coast. The association has just completed making up the programme of events, and it will be seen an attractive series has been arranged for the opening day. For the 2:30 class trot a purse of $1000 has been hung up. While the 2 class is considered a class for green horse: from some of the entries fast time may be expected, and others are very apt to sur- prise even the knowing ones. A purse of $1000 has also been hung up for the 2:15 trot, and this will perhaps be the star event of the day. Such horses as Sam B, Native State, Bruno, Toggles, Maria P, CMico and Jasper Avers have been entered, and a good contest must necessarily result. For the 2:25 pace the purseis not so large, but the offer of $450 has been suffi- cient inducement to callforth seven first- class sidewheelers, and this race is confi- | Jently expected to be oneof the great paces of the meet. i | A glance at the programme will show | that the events have been selected in a manner to insure an interesting time each day. A number of places have been reserved for special races, which will be closed during the meeting. These will be made up 8o as to give races to all the best horses at the track. The Gentlemen’s Driving Club of Alameda is to have a race, | in which owners are to drive, and the San Francisco Driving Club will be similarly | fayored. % | It is expected a long-distance race of | three miles for trotters and pacers wili be | giving during the meeting, in addition to | the regular events on the programme. | The association was never in better con- dition to conduct a successful meet. Its | officers, headed by E. P. Heald, proprietor | of the Napa stock farm, are all energetic, l enthusiastic and experienced. The direc- tors coraprise some of the best known | | night, that | are fairly well provided for. e of D. H. Curtin against the_Deavie neportation Company. Howell the defendants in the case, and ble for any proportion compar ing the ca Ferry an BUSINESS DISCOMMODED. How the ¥rection of a New Building Brought on a Big Sale. The high board fencearound THE CALL'S new building has so shut off some oi the merchants on the west side of Third street as to serious!y interfere with trade. Asa result the Philadeiphia Shoe Company, at 10 Third street, have begun a big sale by marking everything down in their stock. Their first day’s effort to induce the throngs from Market street proved a great success. All day men, young and old, poured in and out of the doors. The sale is very appropriately termed a *‘Blockade Sale” and will be con- tinued for te next thirty days. WAY BE TOOK HS LIF Midnight Attack of Robbers Two Months Ago Unbalanced Schmitt’s Mind. First Chloroformed and Then Left to Die by Asphyxiation—How He Escaped. Augustin Schmitt, street liquor-dealer who committed suicide on Sunday night by cutting his throat with a butcher-knife, committed the rash act while temporarily insane. An experi- ence he had nearly two months ago with acouple of burglars brought about this condition of affairs. Six weeks ago thieves entered his home | on Buchanan street and about the first thing they did was to chloroform Schmitt. After rifling the house of all the valuables in sight they sought to add murder to the crime by turning on the gas in the room where lay the unconscious Schmitt. For tunately, however, daylight came shortly after the burgiars departeda and | Schmitt was rescued. The affair weighed heavilv on his mind and hardly a day passed that he did not make some indirect | reference to it. In a letter to bis wife, written evidently immediately prior to the desperate act which resulted in his death, Schmitt says among other thing: 8 FRrANCISCO, June 20, 189 Dear Wife and Chi dren : It iswith the deepest regret and sorrow that I am about going to take such & step as 1 have contemplated, but not on gccount of you. Iwould like to have stayed with you to the time of my natural death, but I cannot do it. I shall go toan- other place, where there are no burglars, no thieves and no swindlers. The last trouble I had witn that class of people was enough for me. Idonot wantany more. * * * Dear wife, if you only would know haw I feel to take such a step, but I cannot overcome it. 1have no rest at night and eannot sleep; cannot eat. There is nota minute, either day or 1 do not think on it and worry my- * All that Iam glad of is that you That is the best gratification for me. You deserve it. You have worked hard all your life. All I wish is that these fellows, I say these fellows because I think there was more than one, will be punished to the fullest extent of the law. Any man that commits such crimes as that should be put away for all their life- time, 80 that they could not do any more harm. There are a great many more who de- serve the same fate. In conclusion Schmitt tells his wife to “do right and fear nobody.” adding that el on | he would have continuea the fight if he | “bad not met with that unfortunate affair.” esterday women and | the Montgomery- | POPULISTS LOYAL T0 THER PARTY, The Sentiment Here Is Against Sacrifice by Any Fusion. DOUBTS ABOUT TELLER. Both Populists and Democrats Want Genuine, Straight- Out Party Men. WARDALL AND MAGUIRE TALK, The California Delegation Distrusted as the New Democratic Gold Campaign Begins. The confusion of the anti-McKinley ele- ments that has been rushed on the po- | litical stage on the heels of the Republi- can convention presents a remarkable sit- uation in National politics, which is being watched by pol ans of all stripes here as intently as in the East. There has never in party history in America been a time of such complete and fatefnl uncertainty as to what will occur within four weeks. ‘What union or what scattering of silver forces will come forth from the uncertain workings of the gold Democrats, the sil- ver Democrats, the Chicago convention, for the control of which a new battle has begun; the Teller bolt, now ready for co- quetting; the Silver party, which is ready to indorse in all sorts of directions; the Populist movement, which is still at sea, and for the moment divided on Teller, and from the side movements and plans which are cropping out amid a condition of political prospects which offers few gambles at even money ? Will the Chicago convention, which will | meet two weeks from to-day, yield a radi- cal gold or a radical silver platiorm and candidate or a straddle and a compromise candidate? The gold administration | forces are rallying from the apparent rout which followed the Kentucky victory for silver and the predictions that gold will control increase hourly from New York to San Francisco. As this is observed here, along with the news that the administration forces, backed by the banking and other gold in- fluences in the party, will strain every nerve to capture convention votes to be marshaled under the popular leadership of Whitney, there are hourly increasing | expressions of opinion that from one-third to one-half of the California delegation will vote on the side of gold at Chicago. The California delegation is distrusted by free-silver Democrats, and is believed by others to be surely divided on the issue. Dageett will here lead the adminis- tration efforts to convert delegates from the free-silver heresy. The mails will | bring to several delegates with gold lead- ingsall sorts of appeals and arguments from high sonrces, and every possible pull that can be brought to bear will be felt by them. When the recent State Convention was over the leading lieutenants of the Dag- gett-gold forces said: “Ha! Ha! They got a silver plahk and we named the | men."” | The Democratic State Convention | adopted a radical whole-hog, free-silver | plank, and the Congressional district con- | ventions named a lot of goldbugs as dele- | gates to Chicago. The silver men had no | organization and no leaders. The convention went to silver largely because the party tide seemed to have set that way and partly because the Federal brigade had abandoned the fight, which it has taken up again within twodays. One- third of the convention voted for Reed’s gold resolution, and the third would have been nearly or fully a half had the gold | campaign been vigorously kept up. The State Convention resolved that the dele- | gates were pledged to vote for silver, but | the district delezates are free to declare that they were elected by Congressional conventions and are not pledged. The California delegation will not be a corps of silver heroes, ready for the last ditch, and of many such delegations will the Chicago convention be composed, | giving the solid gold forces of the East the fighting chance they are taking and | making estimates of the silver majority in | the convention little more than guesses at | this moment. 1s there any possibility of the Demo- crats and Populists coming to an under- standing? is, perhaps, the question of | greatest moment, for such a union of the | silver forces, backed by the silver party, | presents the only real danger to the Re- publicans. Conflicting opinions come from all directions, but the strong and natural party conservatism, which demands a straight-out-dyed-in-the-wooi party man whom anybody may get in and vote for that wiil, may be seen to be the thing that | will undoubtedly prevent the forming of any bybrid Democratic party. The Demo- cratic party is proud of what cau:es it—its record—and too many Democrats have love and loyalty for the imaginary entity “party,” on which affections come to rest, to nominate Mr. Teller, as the Republican bolters are now pleading to have done. Most local Democrats express opinions which agree on the Teller point with that Will the Populist convention by any possibility indorse a Democratic free silver nominee? The opinions of the Populist leaders here are unanimous in the nega- tive. As with the Democrats the sacritice of “the party” is an impossibility. The Ynny means more than silver, they say. | It is the expression of a revolutionary force opposed to the old parties. There are campaigns beyond this one and the Populist party has cost too much and rep- resents too much to be thrown away by merging with a party that is torn, insin- cere and full of what Populists abhor. This is the general average of Populist sentiment here and it is expressed in the talk with State Chairraan Wardall which follows. The Populists out here are at sea regard- ing Teller and they discuss with care the individual action of Taubeneck, National chairman, and the several other Populists now at St. Louis in issuing an address in- viting the Populist party to take up Tel- er. At the Populist State headquarters it is said that but three or four of those who signed the address advocating Teller are men of commanding position in the party. and that their action is but an expression of individual preference. The Populists here like Teller, but he is not a Populist yet, and they don’t just know about it. Mr. Wardall was one of the committee of seven which went from the meeting of the Populist National Committee at St. Louis to meet the silver men at Wasning- ton, this conference resulting in the ar- rangement to hold both National conven- tions at St. Louis on July 22 that any pos- sibility of union mighs be facilitated. I don’t think there is any possibility of union except with the silver men,” said Mr. Wardall, and his sentiments were in harmony with those of George D. Gil- lespie, A. B. Kinne and others there. | “Idon’t know what Mr. Teller's prin- Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. given yesterday by Congressmaa Maguire. | | ciples are except as to the silver guestion, but T don’t think it possible that the Populists will nominate him unless he comes out openly for the People’s party. He is a Republican and I think we will come to him in the tariff plank I expect to see adopted by the National Conven- tion calling for protection to American labor and producers and the relegation of the tariff to a non-partisan business com- mission. 'The address from St. Louis is non-com- mittal and shows an individual indorse- ment of Teller. Those who signed it are in no position to say what the party will do. Iadmire Teller and it is possible that if he goes to the silver convention at St. Louis and union with the Populists is in- vited I will feel ready to support him.” “‘It seems to me now thatthe chances are that the election will be thrown into the House, There is no possibilty of our nominating the Democratic nominee. The Democratic party may adopt a radical free silver plank, but that is only one of our de- mands. We are the anti-monopoly party and free silver is only part of our financial policy, though it 15 the most important one. *‘Our chances of recruiting from the Re- publican party are too good now to throw away the results of vears of labor in build- ing up the party. To combine with the Democrats would be throwing away the party. We would nov feel able to trust a Demo_cmn_ for Congress even, if we made a combination. We couldn’t afford to elect a Democratic Congressman unless he pledged himself to stay out of a Demo- cratic caucus for the selection of Speaker of the House, and Democratic Congress- men we elected we could not control. 1 have spent years of labor and thousands of dollars without a_dime of recompense in the work of builaing up the party, and if now it was to be disrupted and thrown away by indorsing a Democratic candidate for the Presidency I would feel like going back to work on my farm. “‘We are ready to combine with the In- dependent Free Silver party. We say to | the silver men, ‘Meet us in St. Louis July | 22 and we will divide things on fair and | equal terms.” We will treat the men who | leave their parties and come out and stand Wwith us as well as we do our own people. | I think anyway that this silver fight wiil continue a number of years before it is| settled. ‘‘Another consideration is that the Dem has gone to silver as a mat- | 'y mainly. That is one reason why there can be no union. The Popu- lists are united and sincere in what they believe and will vote only for men they | belicve to be sincere. AS to the Demo- cratic National Convention, my opinion | now is that it will adopt a money plank | tkat is neither fish nor flesh.” *There will be no combinations on legis- lative candidates in this City,” said George D. Gillespie. *‘There will be a straight- out Populist ticket of Assemblymen and | Senators.” Congressman James G. Maguire gave | some further opinions about the National | situation yesterday. He believes that there is no chance of the Democrauc Na- | ticnal Convention takin: up Teller or any- | body else who is not a true-blue Democrat | as well as a silver man. | ‘'It seems to me that the Teller bolt was | a logical and necessary result of the Re- | ublican National Convention,” said Mr. Maguire, “‘and that if Teller should run as | a silver candidate he will undoubtedly re- ceive a very large vote from the silver | Republicans in all the States of the West, | including Ilinois, Ohio, Towa, California, Oregon and Washington. I think the re- sult will be the election of Democratic | electors from all the States west and south of Pennsylvania, provided, of course, that the Democratic party shall, as I believe it will, adopt a silver platform and nominate strong silver candidates. “'1 do not at present see any possibility of Teller’s nomination by the” Democrats. The nominee of that convention must be'a Democrat who stands for the other prin- ciples enunciated in the Democratic plat- form as well as the silver plank. ‘“The chances of the election going into the House I regard as very strong. In fact, it will go there unless the Democrats get a majority of the electoral vote, and as the present House hasa Republican ma- jority of over 100, McKinley would be elected. vote on a gold plattorm.” Clement School Graduates. Following is the roll ot graduates from the Clement Grammar School, received yesterday by Superintendent Babcock: Emile Rector Abadie, Selby J. Bad!, Bertram A. Badt, Dayid J. Baird, Celvin Arthur Berry, Grace M. Breen, Fred C. Bunger, Lillie E. Byrns, Leonide A. Cahn, Henry Cailleaud, William J. Carman, William F. Cody, Charles C. Doble, Rober W. J. Dodd, Berry Dunn, Blanche L, Eagle, Loretta R. Fenton, Mabel G. Grifiiths, Jessie H. Haskin, Peter Jorgensen, Ethel 8. Linforth, Alice E. Lowrie, William Middleton, Edith M, Minor, Andrew B. Moulder, Fannie E. Noonan, Sadie C. O’Connor, Jessie M. Parks, Dorothy Peters, Clara Reichenberg, Victor E. Reichen- berg, John R.Saul, Etta F eehan, William Melander, George Kelton Steele, James F, Sul- livan, David Torres and Bart N. Trobock. I dont believe that the Republi- | cans can get 8 majority of the electoral | FOOTPADS ARE KEEPING [T UP A Japanese Shoemaker Nearly Beaten to Death. ROBBED OF HIS WATCH Lively Experience of Charles Kendrick, Cashier in a Cor- ner Grocery. |HE COMES OFF VICTORIOUS. Two of the Many Cases Which the Police Want to Kzep to Them- selves. Burglars and footpads are taking the fullest advantage of the idiotic policy of the Supervisors in shutting off the street lights to do as large a business as possible. The police are doing their utmost to keep the reports to themselves, but occa- sionally a few leak out, and two holdups are among the number. Handi Naojiro, employed in the Japa- nese shoestore of C. Sekeni at 228 Ellis treet, after stopping work on Saturday night went to a barber-shop on Sacra- mento street. He left there shortly after 11 o’clock to go to his room at 228 Ellis street. He walked along Stockton street, and between California and Pine he no- ticed two men following closely behind him. He paid no attention to them, but | when he reached Bush street they were close behind him, and he was knocked down by a blow on the head from some heavy instrument. After knocking him down they kicked him on the head until he becama uncon- scious. When he regained consciousness, in about fifteen minutes, he found that his silver watch and chain and a bunch of keys had been stolen. His head was cut in several places, and although he was weak from the loss of blood he managed to walk home. A physician was called in who attended to his wounds, and last night he was on a fair way to recovery. He could give no description of the two footpads. Charles Kendrick, cashier in a grocery at California and Fillmore strests, yester- day related his remarkable experience with a footpad on Sunday night. He bad been out with a lady friend. and, after taking her home, e went to the corner of Masonic avenue and Page street to wait for a car to go home. It was not | s0 very dark, as the moon was shedding | her soft light and the electric lights at the | chutes were not far distant. Kendrick heard stealthv footsteps be- hind him. He was not thinking ot foot- pads and paid no attention to the foot- steps. Soon a man, wearing an overcoat with the collar turned up and a black Derby bat pulled well down over his eyes, stood in front of him. The man had his hands in his overcoat pockets, and, after glancing up and down the street, pulled a gun out of the pocket of his overcoat and, pointing it at Kendrick, quietly remarked, “Shell out, young fellow.” Kendrick was startled for a moment and blurted out, “Please don’t harm me.” | | Then, insteaa of shelling out, he regained | 1 his courage and took advantage of an un- | guarded movement of the footpad to | snatch the revolver out of his band and knock him down. When he got the foot- pad down he kicked him on the head and | body till he yelled for mercy, and stru, gling to his feet disappeared in the dnrllz- ness. Kendrick retained possession of the re- olver as a memento of his victory over the footpad. It is & rusty old thing and gave signs of being well oiled. When asked why he did not fire at the footpad when he saw him running away he said he was afraid of missinz him and he | might bave returned with a knife, He said the footpad looked like a *'dope fiend’’ | and he thought he might know him again. | | | NEW TO-DAY $EOO0POEEEEEIEPEODOTEEERRS OO ® OUR GREAT SALE OF LAUNDERED WAISTS ! 1 This is the Grea They are all made Linen Stripes. Ar dered. Have ful of Waists ever seen in San Francisco. cales, Lawns, Dimities, Batiste and They are regular $3 50, $3 and $2.50 Waists, and at this sale they are yours for just HALF PRICE. —DRY GOODS. 2 [0.00000 000000000, test Sacrifice Sale of the finest Per= e beautifully laun= 1 Bishop sleeves. Fit — | 50C pointed 40c Laundered Walsts in | sleeves — finel new, pretty styles, A waist that nq laundered to perfection, fore for less big sleeves, all sizes = 40C | of patterns | from 0 IMPORTED MIXED FA:-'SX 1522 995 $22:5° GEEior reefer styles, for.. DRE °$ pearl buttons, bo: ripple backs, exira wide skirts, lined with rustle 1ining. NOW A ONE PRICE, $15.00. Reefer Dresses $8.50. Blue and Black Serge Reefer Dresses, box fronts, large buttons, all lined Jackets, wide skirts lived with stiff rustle, a good $12.50 Dress. sale price ne Percale Waists, | monumental sacrifice. t_o Iflaflsoc yokes, b:f ly laundered. ever sold be- than $1. A Lots 75C Nothing has ever been offered to match this Waist for the price. It is made up in fine, soft Per- cales and Lawns- elegant- finished and llll-7 ered—all sizes - 45C $15.00 NOVELTY CHEVIOT — TURE _ALLWOOL BLAZER DRESSES, silk llned, for.. MIX- goe Blazer Silk.lined Skirt, wide and lined_with rus’ < ;]“‘1 "Hnlinl. Velveteen /- nish. Every one worth $15.00. i y/l NEW TO-DAY. PUNY MAN Is he who, by burning both ends of the candle, by dissipation, by nights of sleep- lessness, by days of hard mental or phys- ical work, has made himself nerveless, melancholy, weak, vibrating. Why should this be s0? Why should cne of Nature’s | SOLE AGENTS FOR THE MAGGIONI KID GLOVES. best handiwork be a poor, feeble, PUNY MA Whose look is gaunt, whose step is feeble, BATH who is ever and anon compelled to hold | INGSUITS | bimself to pillar, to post, who is ever dizzy, who has flicking specks and glim- mering dots sparking and bewildering his eyes—who sees nature, man, life and all through the smoky glass, despair? Do you want to be always a PUNY MAN | A prematurely decayed man? If you don’t you should at once study over and | "SEE OUR INOBBY BATHING SUITS | FOR 1896 For Ladies, Gents and Children. THEY WILL INTEREST, PLEASE AND SURPRISE YOU. | THEY LOOK WELL. THEY WEAR WELL. THEY GIVE PERFECT SATISFACTION. 'WE SHOW Styles In Our Own Knit Bathing Suits That Cannot Be Seen Anywhere Else. | WE SHHOW EVERYTHING THAT A SWIMMER WANTS FROM CAP TO SHOES. |OUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST. & Send for Catalogue of Bathing Suits—mailed Tee. consult about that which makes sound | men. Itisthe great remedio-treatment— the wonderful specific that has been the highest, the greatest boon to humanity Itis the great Hudyan. This great remedy can be had only from the old Hudsonian | doctors. No one else has Hudyan; no one Hudyan cures i debility, else can give you Hudyan. nervous exhaustion, nervous spermatorrheea, drains, declines and dis- abilities of men. s Hudyan is your true specific. If you wish to learn more about the great Hud. | yan you should call or write for TESTIMONIALS. fudson Medical Institute '™ su ovaee. srmoass st stoocton. Market and s 8ts. | EWWMAN &I_[VINS[]N, IRON BEDS, See Examiner and Chronicle for Values in Other | Departments. 125, 127, 120, 131 Kearny Street. BRASS BEDS, BRANCH STOR s:::.i and 744 Darket FOLDING BEDS' | 5 Wire and Halr Mat. H tresses, Reolin Chairs, Wheel C Commodes, Back Res:s W. A. SCHROCK, New Monigomer: St., under Gran Hotel, 5. F. DOR i $40 BELTS W I for $20.and $30 Belis i3 for $15: also good belus for $5. Latest patent and all A 1axative refreshing for improvements. g~ Call TAM AH ruis losenge. oF Wil for mw pazaphics i reeable Lo take. No. 2. Address DR. CONSTIPATION PIERCE & SON, 704 Sacramento st., cor. Kearny, hemorrhoids, bile, second, third and fourth floors, San Francisco. 1088 of appetite, gastric and intestinal troubles and headache arising from them., Big & is_a non-poisonous E. GRILLON, remedy_ for Gu?:%r:‘hul, 38 Rue des Archives, Paris | Gleet, Spermatorrhaa, 1l ~ Eold by all Druggists. 1n1to5deys. Wl Whites, unnatural dis® Goarantecd or any inflamma- on, irritation or ulcera- tion of mucons mem- rHeEvANS CHEmIoaL O, branes. Non-astringent. Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, fof 1.00, or 3 bottles, 02.75. jircular sent or. EXGURSION AND AUCTION SALE! SATURDAY. weeeeoJune 27, 1898 - Saturday..... At1o'clock P. M. on the premises, of the Choicest Land in the State of California. 350 ACRE 80 ACRES ip"'PRllca(;'%i aidyéflEtlngYp’legIES' In 10-ACRE sWiko TRACTS PWARD Being a Portion of the Renowned MARTIN MURPHY HOMESTEAD TRAGT THE JAMES T. MURPHY SUBDIVISION. The property stands without a peer for richness and depth of soll. olific resources stand at the head of any district in this State. 1ts prolifl Reefer Dresses $13.50. All our $18.00 Fancy Mixed Cheviot Dresses, sweil styles and perfect finish, T $8.50. Country Orders receive prompt a all or KELLY & LIEBES, 120 KEARNY STREET. Largest Exclusive Cloak and Suit House on the Pacific Coast. $13.50. ttentlon. Satisfaction guaranteed ders. Seldom in & lifetime does such an opportunity present itself to the home-seeker, the fruiterer or the person 100king for u family resort whera health combined with profit Is at his command. here are 10 pieces now planted in strong and thrifty one and two year old Apric Cherries and Peaches. The balance of the land is famous for its luxurious growth of oak tr WHERE IT 1S AND WHAT IT IS—About_mldway between San Jose and ord University, fronting the S. P. R. R.; 8 miles from San Jose, 7 miles from Palo Alto, 4 miles from Mountain View, and at the Murphy Station. The soil is 40 feet deep, is alluvial sediment and the very cream of this rich valley. 'Ihis tract fronts on the main San Francisco and San Jose boulevard, and is opposite the Prunes, magnificent prune orchard of b. M. Delmas. valued at $1000 per acre. To any and all persons wanting the best, Tl certainly presents that golden opportunity. £ chest and most productive land inthis State this offering WE WILL RUN A SPECIAL FIRST-CLASS EXCURSION TRAIN To Murphy Station. near Mountain View, on account of this : IMPORTANT AUCTION SALE Which will leave the Third and Townsend Street Depot, San Francisco, at 10 o'clock A. M. SATUR- DAY, June 27, 1896, stopping at_Valencla-street Station, San Mateo, Redwood and Menlo Park, returning leave Murphy Stution at 3:30 o'clock P. M. same day. 81.00—ROUND-TRIP TICKETS-——1.00. Tickets obtainable at our office on Friday, June 26, 1896, all day. and on Saturaay, June 27, day of the excursion, up to 9:30 o'clo-k A. M., and at the depot, Third and Townsend streets, and Valencia street, up to hour of leaving, 10 o’clock A. M., from our representative. From other stations on the train, from San Mateo, Redwood and Menio Park, round trip 50 cents. ¥ree Collation on the Grounds. TERMS—One-Fourth Cash, balance in 1, 2 and 3 years, interest 8% per annum, EASTON, ELDRIDGE & (0., Auctioneers, 633 Market St., Or WOOSTER & WHITTON, Real Estate Agents, 7 West Saata Clara Street, San Jose.