Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
8 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1896. KOWALSKY MADE A STIRRING SPEECH Protection and Coinage Is- sues in Plain Saxon and Logic. O’BRIEN’S QUESTIONS. He Wanted to Know What Con- gressman Maguire Had Done for the State. RISK OF JAPANESE INVASION. Mr. O'Brien Suggests a Danger to American Workingmen and Dwells on Protection. There have been many good audiences in the Auditorium, but not one of them was larger or more intelligent or enthusi- astic than the audience which assembled | last night. It was one of the largest be- cause many hundreds of late comers were unable to gain an entrance. It was also one of the most intelligent audiences that ever assembled at any political meetingin this State, and the spontaneous and long- continued outbursts of cheering showed that no audience could have been more enthusiastic. The fair sex lent its presence in goodly numbers in the galleriesand applauded as liberally as did the men. The meeting was opened by Chairman Charles M. Shortridge, who made a brief speech, in the course of which he said that he had made a pledge here not long ago which he desired to repeat, and that was that he pledged the people of this State that if San Francisco, his adopted City, did not give its vote for McKinley he would undertake, by way of penalty, although not a swimmer or an athlete, to swim from the foot of Market street to Goat Island on the 4th of November. But be believed that 1t would be much harder for the Democratic pnrt{' to swim out of the sea of despondency into which it will have peen plunged. Chairman_Shortridge then introduced Thomas B. 0’Brien, nominee for Congress from the Fourth District. Mr. O'Brien made a brief but logical and convincing argument on the necessity for protecting American industries. He taxed his oppo- nert with having done nothing for his district in the past four years, and pointed out the fact that Sacramento and San Jose were enjoying their new postoffices, while San Francisco had nothing but the site full of Democratic auger-holes. His ovponent hLad been an advocrate of free trade, which had opened up British mills and factories and closed American hives of industry. Mr. O’Brien followed by complimenting Irish-American citizens on their loyalty to the land of their adoption. With re- gard to the Democratic flourish of trum- pets on the railroad funding bill, he said that the Republicans of California had proclaimed themselves in their last State platform in favor of compelling the rail- road corporations to pay their debts to the Government in the same manner as every man who owes it a dollar. Mr. O'Brien was frequently interrupted with rounds of applause, and left an ex- cellent impression on his hearers, Miss Ella Ellis, one of the sweetest sing- ers at Republican meetings during this campaign, entertained the audience with topical songs. Colonel Kowalsky began as follows: Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen and Fellow-citizens: The momentous question is, Do you want the mines of the world opened for the millionaires of the world? or, Do you want the factories of America opened for the millions of laboring men of America? Do you want iree trade, free silver, dishonor and unhappiness? or, Do you want protection, honest money, prosperity and happiness? Answer with your votes in November, and tell with no uncertain voice the loyal people in every other part of America that California is in line for the Naiion, having done her duty in sustaining the banner of_protection, givin Teverence to the memory of the late belov James G. Blaine and likewise honoring the living apostle of this great principle, the Hon, William McKinley of Ohio. After charging that the Democracy was a failure on financial matters the speaker said: As loud as any other man in the Democratic party at that time to insure prosperity through the medium of free trade was the voice of William J. Bryan, the Democratic. Populistic Watson-Sewall candidate for the Presidency. Four years ago he promised with allthe earnestness of his nature and all the eloquence of his speech to give to the great American people better prices for their crops, more wages for their daily labor and a general glow of prosperity to the entire country, if the Democratic party were permitied to carry out the doctrines of free trade; and if the ultra- Democratic members of the Democratic Con- gress that passed the Gorman-Wilson bill had been in full sway and could have controlled to the full limit of their wishes, in place of hard times from which we are now suffering we would be in a state verging on ruin to-day. The few sensible: and conservative Demo- crats who live in a country where protection is absolutely necessary, and whose constitu- ents insisted that the products raised and the articles manufactured by them must be protecied, together with the Republicans who were members of the House of Representa. tives, as well as of the Senate, stood by and forced at Jeast some concession in the interest of American products and American labor, Imegine, if you can, how much more ter- rible the whole situation would have been if they had exercised to the very limit, in all of its intentions, the doctrine of free trade. Let me show you a picture: Come with me to Bir- mingham, Manchesier and the other great manufacturing cities of England. Eight years ago—yes, even four years ago, their factories were closed, their capital was unemployed and their workingmen at home. Come back to this, our own dear country, at the same period of time: Go down through the valleys of Penns lvania, along the Hud- 8on, in New York, and through the spindle factories in New England. See the smoke {from those chimneys and the lights of the fur- neces, making night seem almost like day, 2ud the hum of the spindle and the sound of the anvil can be heard 1o ring unceasingly from early morn until late at might, Every one of our pcople employed ut good wages the product of their labor being consumed here at home, sold ata price that makes it possible for the manulacturer to earn & profit and to give to his workingmen a like profit; to the producer of the raw material a fair profit; the consumer able to pay a reasonable price, because that which he does—the occu. pation in which he is engaged—is equally lu- crative, and he is aple to give s part of the profit which he earns to his fellow-man—to the man who produced the raw material, to the man who invested his capital, to eaéh and every one of his fellow-citizens who, like him- self, are toilers, and make up & part of the great commonwealth, There was a singular and p:mlllu reciprocity of prosperity between them. What is the difference to-day? The w; that went forth from the throats of tho‘":ill:f- otic Republicans who sought to stem an stay this awful condition was unheeded. It was thought there must be some truth in the splen- did promises made by the Democratic party— promises which fairly illuminated the skies Wwith their brilliancy. The great American people—those who voted with the Democratic pariy, and the workingmen particularly—said t was impossible for a party made up of great men, for a party made up of men of education and of brains to be so lbwlnwl% mistaken as they have proved themselves. . They conld not believe that the Democratic party was telling and promising that of which no part could be carried out; and when they were told that they woula be the sufferers, that the workin, cissses of the country would suffer, that th! thing wasdirected at them, that the rich had nothing to lose, that it was the poor man who COLONEL HENRY 1L KOWALSKY, Who Made -a Telling Speech at the Auditorium Last Night. would receive the thrust, the same arguments, | the same kind of promises were renewed to | the workingmen until they were lured away. | And I ask you, my fellow-citizens, who has | received the blow—upon whom has’ it fallen most severely? The workingman can answer | this—he, his ‘wife and his children are the sufferers. The rich can live anyhow; the rich | cau live on what they have laid the rich | can draw from their stores. The poor man has | to earn his sustenance, day by day; and when | he does not labor he does not carry home food to the wife and to the children who are wait- ing there for it. | And now we are confronted with another | picture—the result of the broken promises of the Democratic party. Let us look once again at Manchester, Birmingham and all the other manufacturing cities of England. Let us traverse Germany and France. There we find that the furnaces which were silent, the chim- neys which were smokeless, the spindie which was falling apart from nonuse are again in sction. Their furnaces are burning; their chimneys are giving forth the light that is making night as day. They are prosperous and are growing rich. The workingmen of England, of Germany, of Scotland and of all the other countries lying within thatgreatand broad land where labor is cheap and plentiful are now employed. And who are their customers—for whom are they laboring to-day? They are working every moment for the American people; they are working for the workingmen of America; they are working for the middle classes oi America they are working fo? the rich of Americs; they aredoing our work, while our factories areidle, our furnaces are cold, our spindles are still and our workingmen are out upon the high- wey, and we can hear their murmur and their cry for bread. ‘Ten millions of people without wo Ask the Democratic pary why; ask William | J. Bryan why; ves, ask this Democratic-Popu- listic-Silverite if this is what he calls a redemp- | tion of & promise; ask him if this is what he | calls good faith; ask him if he expects you to | believe in him again! Ask yourselves, with this experience in the past, can you dare to believe him in the future? Forget, if your h\lnger will permit you, to consider 'the rem- edy he offers you for the mistake he has made. Let us look at the perscription which this in- | competent doctor ventures 1or our now im- | verished and weak frame: ‘“Free and un- imited coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1,” which means when analyzed, the open- ing of the mints of the United States of America to the silver of the whole world, irre- | spective of the place whence it comes; the silver product of Mexico, dug from the bowels of Mexico with 30 cents & day labor; from South America, with labor &t 15 cents a day; and from all over the world. The mints | of America, maintained by the workmen of | America, maintained by the middle classes of America, maintained by the rich' of America, the American taxes, levied uvon the American eople, aTe to maintain mints to coin every- y’s’ silver into American dollars—inio American dollars only in name, and not in value—a dollar only in pretense; the worst | kind of a dollar, the poorest kind of a dollar—a | goHar worth 47 cents less than & genuine gold | ollar! | After showing some of the commercial | and natural absurdities of the single silver | standard plan the colonel went on to ex- 1 plain about the ratio. To-day in the market the ratio is more than | 31 of silver to 1 of gold. That is why lhe' lars in this country just the same as they have in Mexico. On this proposition the speaker paid his respects to the silver millionaires—the Haywards, the Newlands, the Stewarts, the Joneses, and tha others who are at the bottom of this agitation. The colonel’s speech was a fine and well- studied effort, and would occupy eight columns of THE CALL in small type. Mrs. Addie L. Ballou followed with a few witty remarks, after which the meet- ing adjourned THE END IS AT HAND, The Marceau Suit Said to Be Nearing a Compro- mise. Necessary Papers in the Case Are to Be Filed in a Day or So. It is understood that a settlement of the Marceau case is near. The cash is at hand and all dificulties have been ad- justed. Theo Marcean sued for $106,000, the amount he claimed was owed to him, and | a divorce. The case bas dragged wearily along since the last of September, 1895, for it was in that month that Mrs. Marceau de- serted him. Soon after the separation Mr. Marceau by the aid of a nurse stole one of the children, which Mrs. Mar- ceau obtained again by legal proceedings. ince then the case has assumed a very | bitter turn, and promised to last longer thao now appears, It seems now that all the difficulty has been adjusted, and_that papers have beea signed entirely vindicating Mrs. Marceau. The $106.000 ther Mr. Marceau sued for in the beginning has been cut down to $30,000 by compromise, which appears to bz a very advantageous one for Mrs, Marceau, | who bad to mortgage her Fisk property and the Allen block in Fresno to obtain the cash. As the case now stands Mr. Neville and Judge Short bave loaned the money to Mrs. Marcean, and the case will be settied to-morrow, or at least in a few days. Mr, Marceau was ordered by the court to pay Mrs. Marceau $10 a day alimony, but it appears that up (o date Mr. Marceau has only paid into her hands $300, which went HON. THOMAS B. O’BRIEN, Republican Nominee for Congress man in the Fourth Congressional District, silver dollar of Mexico is only worth 50 cents in gold in America. Now that it is more than 81t 1itis worth orly half the price. Yet the silver-mine owner insists that he only ought to be made to give 53 cents worth of siiver in_vlace of a full dollar's worth fora dollar, Is this honest? Is this fair? Does the Government protect your commodity, your labor, with & guaranteed profit of 47 ceuts on each doller? 'If it does not why then should this preference be given to the silver- mine owner? 3 Naturally you ask: “Why is our present sil- Yer dollar possessed of the purchasing power that the gold dollar is possessed of?” The-answer is simple und plain: It is be- cause, first, you can take five of our silver dol- lars to the United States treasury and cets five-dollar gold piece for them. The Govern- ment is behind our silver doliar under our Pmm system, and the way ‘our Government s able to make good the difference between the value that is contained in the silver dollar and the lack of value to make i: a dollar is be- cause there is behind the Government the gold to redeem with. If the Government had noth- ing but itself—no go'd with which to take up the silver—you would very soon find silver tumbling over, and the American dollar would not be worth any more than the Mexican dol- ty cents. We would have fifty-cent dol- in settlement for rent of a residence she then occupied. Just before that time Mr. Campbell had loaned her $800 to satisfy the demands of certain creditors, and for which Mrs. Mar- ceau gave a wedding present as a pledge. The mutual friends of both Mr. and Mrs. Marceau are very anxious that a settle- ment oceur as soon as possible, and they aver that such a settlement is soon to take place. The papers in the case will be filed to- day or to-morrow. PR Dl il Union Mass-Meeting. On Sunday aiternoon next Miss Anna Shaw will, by special request, preach a gospel ser- mon in the auditorium of the Young Men’s Christian Association, Mason and Ellis streets, 8t 3 o'clock. Mrs. Saran B. Cooper will preside and introduce Miss Shaw. There will be spe- cial music for the oceasion. The main body of the hall will be re‘erved for men and the gal- lery and balcony for ladies. —————— LoANS on diamonds. luteresi low. At Uncle Harrigs 16 Graut avenue ¥ DECAPITATED BY A STREETCAR Burglars Interrupted Their Early Morning Work. in HAYES-STREET CAR 207 Catches a Telephone Wire and Cats Off a Lamppost’s Head. A CRIME WAs PREVENTED. Early Morning Roof and Porch C'imb- ers Who Were Foiled by the Detective Cable-Car. A cable-car, in the role of a detective, is something out of the ordinary. Yet there is such a car running on the Market-street system, and until yesterday morning this fact was unknown. It is car 207 on the Hayes-street line. [t is one of the only cars in the entire service that has not, at some time or other, run over gome infant or winged an adult. This particular car, quite evidently, has been silently bent on doing work in an- other way, protecting life and property instead of sacrificing the one and allowing the other to be despoiled. It was on the down trip—meaning east- ward—on Hayes street, shortly after 5:30 o’clock yesterday morning, that car 207 ‘“showed its hand,”” as parlance goes. On the down grade between Buchanan and Laguna streets it encountered a swaying telephone wire reaching from the roof of 615 over to the other side at 624. The wires caught in the roof of the car, where the ventilators are located, and by it was dragged along down grade like a bull would plunge away with a riata. As the wire became taut on the port side it caught up the lamp of one of the very few gas company’s posts in that neighborhood. The tension was so great that the lamp flew off and hung limp on its post, and the wire was carried on a dozen feet more before it snapped under the superior power of the cable and the detective car. ‘Without details as to the fright of the passengers who were rudely awakened by a succession of joits and jerks from the semi-somnolent state following the recent exit from a pleasant couch, the detective feature of car 207 may be briefly gone into. Unlike the members of Captain Lees’ so-called ‘“‘npper office,”” who await the commission of a crime and then try to arrest tne criminal, with frequent mis- carriage of result, the car broke right in | on one or more burglars, routed him or them in short order and went its way. The report of the affair was made at headquarters before noon yesterday, and an investigation followed, resulting in the disclosure of a plan to rob the house at 617, on the south side of Hayes street, There is every indication on the roof of the building—a two-story modern house— that one or more persons had reached the roof by means of the Jadder in the rear of the water-tank. The supposition is that the burglar, in lowering himself to the front porch so as to gain admission to the second story through the hallroom win- dow, broke the telephone wire from its insulator, and it hung in a loop across the street. The wire originally was strung east and west from 615 to 617 and thence across to 624, and the sageing allowed it to hang just low enough to be caught by the roof of the detective-car. “'There was no robbery or burglary on the premises,” Captain Lees said yester- day. “A wire caught in the car and broke a lamp-light, that's all.” Captain Lees, however, has a number of his best men out scouring Hayes Valley and the Richmond district, where bur- glaries have recently been numerous and undetected. NEW TO-DAY. ' THEY TELL HIM THAT HE IS growing old fast. Other things, too, make him realize that he is not what he was. Youthful excesses bring their fruit, and what ought to be vigorous manhood at sixty is old age and debility. Vitality wasted in youth is missed at forty and mourned at fifty, Old men who find themselves weak in vitality, especially in sexual ferce, con- clude that it is but the natural result of old age. This is not always true. While there is a physical constitution there should be good sexual vigor. Dr. San- den’s Electric Belt has restored many old men to vigorous manhood. Here is one: 0ld Age Recuperated. Home Mutual Insurance Company, L. D._Holbrook, Resident Agent, Watsonville, Santa Cruz County, Cal., April10. DR. A. T. SANDEN—Dear Siz: Feel that ou are nufacturing an article that is of recommend your Belt for the renewal of vital- ity that has been wasted. Up to two years ago Iwas fast losing my vitality and menrh but 1got oneof your belts at that time and 1 f:us since then béen a new man. 1am 62 years of age and have found your Belt & wonderful remedy for rejuvenating old age. I feel ten {un younger since I got your Belt. I cheer- ully give my experience for the bemefit of those who need your aid. Yours '"i truly, L. D. HOLBROOK. As long as there is otherwise good health Dr. Sanden will guarantee to renew vital and sexual force in men at any age. This weakness is unnatural and can be cured. There are hundreds of letters like the above to prove it. Dr. Sanden’s Electrie Belt Cures This waste of power in from two to three months. Call and see this 1improved method of treatment, or get the new pamphlet, “Three Classes of Men,” free. SANDEN ELECTRIC CO., 630 Market Street, San Franocisco, Opposite Palace Hotel. Office hours: & 4 i .3 8150 ». &.: Sundays, 10 to 1. Consultation Free and Invited. NEW TO-DAY. RPARIS! From MONDAY, Sept. 21, ~@SGREAT SALE OF~Qv NEW MUSLIN UNDERWEAR AND BT AT 3 B GRS Corset Covers from 30 cents and upward. Night Gowns from 60 cents and upward, Drawers from 25 cents and upward. Skirts from 30 cents and upward. Chemises from 35 cents and upward. \ Unique Opportunity. Unequaled Values. SE X ABL.A BESPANOIL. G. VERDIER & CO., SE. Corner Geary Street and Grant Avenue. VILILE DE PARIS. BRANCH HOUSE—-LOS ANGELES. MISCELLANEOUS. To MORROW To-morrow in this paper Lyons, the clothier, will have something to say that will be of yital interest to EVEry mam who wears clothes. S THE VERY BEST (GNE TO EXAMINB your eyes and fit them to Spectacies and Eye- glasses with instruments of his own invention, whose superiority has not been equaled. My sace cess has been due to the merits of iy work. Office Hours—12 to 4 P. M. Weak Menand Women SHOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE great Mexican Remedy: gives Health and Strength to the Sexual Organs. RAILROAD TRAVEL} SANFRANCISCO & NORTH PA- (IFIC RAILWAY Co. Tiburen Ferry—Foot of Market 3t. San Francisco to San Rafael. WEEK DAYS—7:80, 9:00, 11:00 . M.: 12:33, 8:30, 5:10, 6:30 . M. Th Extra tri} P. M. Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:5( and 11:30 r. . BUNDAYS—7:30, 9:30, 11:00 A 1130, 3:30, 5:00, 6:20 P. 3. g San Rafael to San Francisco. WEIE’K‘BDA_YB—GX:&% .-:WE..tDzlo. llfilo A M S e T k] 3 3] A 3 1 B 5:00, P. M. TS ‘Between San Francisco and Schuetzen Park same schedule as above. Leave Arrive San Francisco. | Ineflet | gon Francisco. 596, Wenk | Sux- Sox- Dava. | pays. | Vestination.| U0 7:30 AM|7:30 AM| Novato, [10:40 Am 8:30 Py 9:30 AM| Petaluma, 5 P | 1! 5:10 P |5:00 Pu | Santa PM| Fulton, 7:80 anc ‘Windsor, Healdsburg, Geyserville, 3:30 Px|7:30 Ax| Cloverdale. | 7:30 rx| 6:15 »x Hopland & 1 0] 10:10 A 7:30 ax| Ukiah. | 7:30 x| 615 ok 10:10 ax 7:30 4| Guerneville. | 7:30 px 3:30 ruc €:15 pu 7804|780 ax| Sonoma |10:40 x| 8:40 Ax 5:10 Px|5:00 Px| Glen Ellen. | 6:05 rx| 6:15 px T30 A% (730 Ax 10740 Ax| 10:10 5130 7a|5:00 pac| Sebastopol. |1§:50 AX|10:10 4% Stages connect at Santa Rosa for Mark West Springs: a: Geyserville for Skaggs Springs: at loverdale for the Geysers; at Pieta for Highland Springs, xflu‘y‘vme. Soda and Lakeport; at H d for Lakeport and lott. Springs: at Ukiah for Vichy Springs, Saratoga S rrm Blus | Lake, Upper Lake, Pomo, Potter Valley, Jonn Day's, Riverside, Lierley's, Buck- nell's, Sanhedrin Heights, Hullvilis, Rooneville, Greenwood, Orr's Hot Mendocino City, Fort Wi Bragy, Westport, Usal, ets, Canto, velo, Laytonville, Harris, Scotia and Eureka. Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets atreduced On Sundays round-trip tickets 10 all polnts be- yond San Rafasl at half rates. pe Ticket Offices, 650 Marketst., Chronfcle buflding. H, C. WHITING, R X. RYAN, Gen. 3 Gen. Pass. Age! NOUNT TAMALPAIS. Trains connect with North Pacific Const Railroad. WEEK DAYS_jeave 8 F. Returning—Arrive S. F. 9:15 A m. 1:45 p 3 M 6:20 P M. RAILROAD TRAVEL. S. F. AND PORTLAND EX- CURSION TRAIN. SEPT. 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, And Every Fifth Day Thereafter, Leave from S. P. Co’s Ferrv Landing, foot ot Including Berth, SPEG'AL) Tourlst Sleeper. | RATES ’ $19 "mentaniad Sleeper. street (Grand Hotel ticket office), S. F. RICHARD GRAY, T. H. GOODMAN, Market St., av 8:00 2. First-class, including For further information apply at 618 Marke: Gen. raffic Mgr. Gen. Pass Agt. SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY. (PACIFIC SYSTEM.) lenve nud are to arrive at SAN FRANCISCO. Trs LEAVE — Frox SEPTEMBER 24, 16%. — *6:004 Nilcs, San Jose and Way Stations. .. 7:00A Atlasitic Express, Ogden and Last.. 7:004 Benicia, Vacaville, Rumsey. Sacra- mants, Oroville and Red ARRIVE Davis .. €:45r 7:00 Martines, 8an Hamon, Naps, Caiis- toga and Santa Rosa. ... €a5p 8:304 Niles, San Jose, Stockton, Ione, Sccramento, Marysville and Red *7:15p pr ield, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, miug, Bl Paso, New Orleans aud 9:004 Martinez and Stockton. 9:004 Valleo.......ouv... 00 Niles, San Jose and 00 River Steamers. t7:452 4:00p l‘“flt!,c.lfl[;\a. “-I!l‘il!lol‘ll, Vallejo, ap, : erao an Banta Ttosa. ... S sic MAISA 41007 Benicia, Vacat Wobd- wille, Esparto, and, Kuights Landing, Marys- ville, Oroville and Sacratento. -, 101454 4:30¢ Niles, San Jose, Livermors and % GOREOD oo oo TIBE :30P Merced, Beren yIon: for Yosetaite) and Fresno, vis Niles.. 11:454 5:00r Los Angeles Express, Fresno, Santa Barbara and Los Angeles. . 10:154 5:00r Santa Fe Loute, Atlantic for Mojave and East . 10:154 8:00 Vallcio... ? 11:454 8:00¢ European Mail, Ogden and Tast.... 9434 6:00 ¢ Haywards, Niles aud San Jose. 71454 12:00¢ Valicjo . 17:452 7:00P Oregon 1ixpress, Sacramento, 3 villo, Redding, Portland, Sonnd and Tast . . 1154 SANTA CRUZ DIVISION (Narrow Gauge). §7:454 Santa_Cruz Excursion, Santa Oruz and Principal Way Stations ... 18:057 8115 Nowari Centerrlo San ose tations. T siser Bati +2:13P Newark, C 3 . New cA‘;’mmlcn. Felton, Boulder Creek, Banta Cruz and Principal Wa Btations ... 4:157 Newark, San Jose and 1.os Gatos. COANT _DIVISION (Third & Townsend Sts.) *8:434 San Jose and Way Stations (New 2 j iden Wednesdays only)...... . 9474 17:30a 80 /1y Excursion for San Joss banta Pacific Grove, and Principal Way Stations.. . 18352 $:154 Sau Jose, Tres Pinos, Santa Cruz, Paciic Grovo, Paso' Robles, San Luis Obispo, Guadalupe, Surf and Principal Way Stations 7:05r :47 & Palo Alto and Way Stations 11:30p 0:404 San Joso and Way Station: . B:oop 11:304 Palo Alto and Way Stations.. . 3:30p *2:80r San Mateo, Menlo Park, San Jose, § Gllroy, Tres Pinos, Santa Cru Salinas, Monterey aud PacificGrg *@:%0p San Jose, Pacific Grove and W Melrose, Seminary Park, Fitchburg, San Leandre end i Runs through to Niles. 1 {493:35% ) ¢ From Niles: t #12:002 CREEK ROUTE FERRY. Prom SAN FRANCIS00—Foot of Narket s_:r: (8lip 8) *7:18 9:00 11:00a.M. 31: *2:00 $3:00 o400 ® 15:00 *6:00r. ~ From OAKLAND—Foot of Broadway.— *6:00 8:00 10:00a.x. $12:00 *100 ~ $3:00° *3:00 $4:00 “5:00Pa. Morning. P for Aftern » Beitags canbpaet " {Eaturdays only. 8 ly. it Monday, Thnrx!d:‘:m‘g:tmd.y nights only. Atlantic Pacific RAILROAD Trains leave and arrive at Market-Street Ferry. SANTA FE EXPRESS. To Chicago via A. & . Diract Line Leaves every day Palace Drawing-roo; LT S.P. M., carrying Fullm Sicepers, alao M i holstered Tourlst Sleeping-cars, with u".“.'i,“.’-fi.n and bedding und in Shurgeof & porter, run dally roug| 20 via Kan; cars R R sas City. ‘Annex ersonally conducted Boston Excursio Kansas City, Chicago, Montreal and the n\.vnm y. Mouutalns leuve every Wednesda; The rallway from California to the East. DOdust: interesthug scenery; New rails, new iles; | questioned, whose ability is 4:15e | 'DR. F. L. SWEANY, and good meals In Harvey's dining.rootms. San Franoisce Ticket Ofice, 644 Ma; 8t., Chronicle Ruilding, T-unhon-m“"ln 1531. Oakland, 1118 Broadway. HORTH(PAGII’I0 COAST RAILROAD (Via Sausalito Ferry). ¥rom San Francisco, Commencing Sept. 13 1893 WEEKDAYS. ¥or Mill Valley and San Raiael—*7 b T1:00 A 20, S1:48, 3:45, 95515 93 140 0130 Bip: Extra trips for San Ratael on Mond: Wednes- days and Satardays ac 11:30 », 36 10 :00 SUNDAYS For Mill Valley and San Rafuel—*8:00, * *11:30 2. M. #1120, 3:00, *4:20, 6:16 2. M. Tralns marked * run to San Quentin. Th n-:mwvfln TRAINS, T Point s and way stations—7;25 Weekdays, 8:00 4 3% Sundsys, 145 o & Satan For Cazadero and way stations—7:25 - days; 1:45 7. x. Gaturdays. b Mt NEW TO-DAY IF YOU FEEL SICK, WEAK AND TIRED, If You Are Downhearted and Discouraged Through Repeated Failures to Get Help, DONT GIVE UP. 2 DOCT He Can Give You Advice That Will Benefit You and a Treatment That Will Make You Well and Strong, He is a physician whose rep- utation is established by the in- disputable evidence of ten years of successful practice in San Francisco, whose skill is un- ! rec- ognized, whose cured patients are scattered throughout the city and vast land as living monuments of his noble work and successful practice. Med- ical institutes have risen and fallen ; specialists have come and gone ; others will come and go the same as those before them, leaving their patients poorer and uncured, but Dr. Sweany, the reliable, honorable and skilled specialist, will al- ways be found at 737 Market street, San Francisco, extending to the sick the best, safest and most successful treatment which the ripe experience of many years’ practice can furnish. Diseases of young, middle-aged and old men which weaken the body and the brain, causing nervous debility in all its distressing forms, such as wasting away and atrophy of -the organs, night emissions, drains which sap the vitality, weak and failing man- hood, aching back and diseased kidneys, a tired feeling, fear of danger or death, difficult breath- ing, dizziness of the head, pal- pitation of the heart, despon. dency, poor memory, a wander- ing mind, inflamed glands, vari- cocele, hydrocele, inflammation and irritation of the bladder, difficult urination, enlarged prostate gland, and all diseases and weakness of the generative organs fully and permanently restored to natural strength and vigor. Diseases of women scientif- ically treated and invariably cured. Write if away from the city. Valuable book,. “Guide to Health,” a treatise on the dis- eases of all the organs, free on application. Address 787 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. it The Subscription List Of the | Weekly : Call Has More Than Doubled Within the Past Year. Big & is & non-poisonous for Gonorr Bpermnogfi:‘:.' h, unnatural dis- charges, or any inflamma. tion, erevents'somiagion. $01 of aeio® o0 o TICSER- THEEVANS CHiwioa O, Braves. Non-astringens. GINCINKATI,O Sela by or sent in plain wrapper, expreas, ? u vant, ular sent or K T u——