The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 31, 1897, Page 28

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 31, 1897 28 HALE BROS. ! HALE BROS. i HALE BROS. 1 HALE BROS. 1 e e A s e e e e HALE BROS. ! HALE BROS. HALE BROS. 1 7 (L/A\STG/ALLY e asjasasasie £ FOTORO8 | IN DR Come to around. Coy don't co shefrsasioshs 2 s 24 asiael King Clearance rules, and prices bow ana bow until they break in two. SILK WAS & Ll SPECIAL GINC HAM IC AY SALTS or Po; mouth LA VENDE | |52 5 bottles 1o be ciosed out at 24 SALTS WERE 35¢ reserve 8 NCY PLAID ILKS, small plaid all desirable 990 23 Botle 89° CO0C < . LAST WEEK LAST LAST WEEK —_— Come to look o2 BETTER VALUES THAN EVER. JOIN THE CROWD—ADD favendér to-mor CEEPEEEETPEEEEEINETTOPPETTOEE CATETOIIEOECOPOEDOEEEDOOEED Nothiog. tao! gooili for. ehe, fifial LAST WEEK! LAST CHANCE! LAST DAY OF CLEARING SALE ST WEEK ; IN DOMESTICS. IN BAZAAR! as, Come to look B m‘m‘ A NOT A YARD-NOT AN ARTICLE-NOT AN ITEM—HAS WEEK IN = TO THE ENTHUSIASM—BRING YOUR FRIENDS- TELL ' ‘ THREE SPECIAL TABLES! clean-up. The torrent of clearance ). 00C00CIO00000000N G000 000CCOC000) @@@O 000000 0000000000 o) CO] = ® ® ‘ SPREAD THE NEWS. S ESS GOODS! the crowds. TS . that's afl.- come. Wi oot e potnted] ESCAPED THE FINAL CLEAN-UP. CLEANER GOODS AT YOUR NEIGHBOR AND SPREAD THE NEWS! > piain pink, and gray aod L (O has swept the entire store. YOUR PICK FROM ANYTHING ON THE TABLE. et [ 19° Bottle o FLAD — The lot we sola special as bc 0 on sale to-morrow About 18 bottles o our 25c FLORIDA WATELR to be closed FLOR- iDA WATER SPECIAL Fiannel- | S8c TABLIE. 10c T ABLE. 5c Yard | Windsor Ties. .. 5¢ Dozen | Ruflled Ribbon. yard | Pen Wipers. ch 5S¢ Yard | Svlashes 10c Euch Yard 24 Bone Buttons.10¢ Dozen Pair | Mohair Braid. 10c Yard ach 10c Yard i ach 100 ¥ ard Each ).10¢ Dozen 69° Yard lc TABLE. | Tc skein | Velver Ribhon ..1c Yard | Peari Buttons... . lc Dozen | 24-Inch Silk Braid. Ide Yaurd | nch Mohair Braid 16 Skein | Sitk Trim ming {1¢ Skcein | Hose Supporters. Koll | Carset Steas c Each | Pin Books. Spool | Bone Casing. lc Pair | NEW THI lc Paper 2: LAST WEEK IN FURNISHINGS! Good-by to Clearance. Good-by to these Stocks. Good-by Prices for Good-by Week. Wouldn't a *‘good buy ' suit you? Here are some. HDEFS WERE Tae SFS—1f inch hem, colored border: only 50 dozen to go on the tables ut. 4 Ropf s s whreirals walss, esses, etc. evening a genu tion. To close Everything We Say Is So—The Reduc- tions Are Actual. 29-INCH FLANNELS— C: fleece back. very dark stripe éffects; o cl 2 ROSE BOWLS Darning Darning Wool. Black Tape. Featber Quilis. K-itting Cotton Corset Laces.... s of |stylesto choose from: | 34 in all: this 10t (© |close at... e prejaefaeianl; Jet Trimming. Jet Bu.tons (Line J, 50° Yard GLASSTOWE FANCY 1es, pure flax, TONED JAC t 3 TWO QUAR yards hes wide About 85 F A 3 PUFF NOVELLY BOXES 3 CLOUD PEAU DE st Fects, 4 buttons, tans laree siz d black 0 close the Lat & barzal GLOVES ACK e SOIE, 2 col from, 1 Not an Article Overestimated or Pair rQc = AL 58 — | CALICO 700 Yards of our Tan Col- WAS ored CALICO to be 15° Pair 10° L Hundreds of Values Just as Good Not Advertised. $aef remaining | 5 e of SILK | GLOVES be closed Children's Flannel 89° Yard CHILE WaoolL H. X Swansdown tte TaM RS The eo: line to be on sale FANCY JACQUARD, co, flora geable. rable, FIGURED FLANNE ANTON For drapery 9 inches wide: sold yos. terday for 20c; t0-mOrrow t Will'bes: s .o, oo escne | INOw = 5107 > oirom 750 | 48 according | Each ¢ 1ot at. " IMPORTED |- S — 8 dozen Now DRAP- WERE SIDE COMBS Yose {refaeias tire 2: at ae r for (We'have 37 of these). be on pa FRENCH FLANNELS— Indots sad strioes, light or dark; window, 1o ciose the lot at e Goods This Week at Half o . Price of Last Week. HAIR ORNAME ally sold last week for 15 and 20c: to close A ALe i 24 29° Seid HAIR WERE 50c. FANCY P = ch, eavy spri The e IMPURTED ING, was a barcain at 75c; this seasons 1ofcest stylesand ail pure wool. T to %0 at ALDS, 87 rely too to keep for all pure wool. ire lot to go at | 9 CALEN- DARS present for an for drawi WOOLEN WAS 50e Qe o) Yard und others at 7 | 10 85 oaly. LADIES' CAMBRIC| GOWNS—Sligatly solled | NOW and mussed, elaborately Y&C trimmed. Some sold as| ¢ high as $2 50, on+ in the | Eaoh lot §s marked $2 90. The | irs pile at .8 Al TALTL S TSORT SFIN. e ol HED MUSLIN bejagid il e GOW N=—~2bout 3 dozen turndown collar. V-| shaped neck. The $1 50 lot are soiled, and to be closed out at e NT'S WOOL UNDER: kind e Every Price We Quote Is New. L WERE 50¢ red band, feather |in side, jaunty & closa at Our assortments are limited; there= e ~ fore, these prices. SUTL > < WERE WOOLE 2 WAS $1.75. 75¢ 50° Yard OO 24 In Some Cases the Assortments Are Broken. NOTTINGHAM L CURTAINS, \CE white or inck Notice the Price These Goods Were Re- duced From. RT $1: Now = 79° Indiev ALL-WOOL VESTS, an actual reduc | tion from $1 2 H. s, | 52 Richetten ribhed. siz: | 7o close on | | account of timited sizes. (No vinck r this week IMPOR ali-| FRENCH Each WOOLEN POR B e ST reireiaets 50° T [pirEEome TIERE POR- terns, ple TIERES | yaris lo REMNANTS. Now 69° Each CLOAKS. Bring this ¢“ad’’ for comparison. s Now 4y° kach EXTRA The mos: WOOLEN 1 of t WAS $1.00 er to-morrow &t HEAVY des rab) n would un restimate it. Ask Last week. They mustgowithoutreserve. MAIL ORDER. edonls WOOL | good i | Now |sizes 3 und 4 only. To| ZEC Ic | cose on account of lim-| (O Pair 8 JACKETS, size 3 30 JAC! 40 JACK (INCORPORATED) 69° 39¢ Each Yard [GEST'S NER | DERWEAR Only a few of each line advertised, so order as early as possible. Assortments are speedily broksn these days. Sl o [INCORPORATED] 937-945 Market Street, NoOw 450 | sarments in o 0 b closed on a | sizes, sairts 34 and drawers 32 and 34 on GRAY MERINO| SHIRT=—A few in sizes | | 35 and 38 oniy. To ciose. (35 in the lot). E CRU KIBHED COT A Big Remnant Sale the last of this week. Prepare for it. actiovs are bona-fide, honest, ticle in the list has been aad see for yoursel?. (INCORPORATED). 937-945 Market St., ouut of Now /, &7 e/ {INCORPORATED] Now 25° Sach Now 20° Pair | About 38 pair 1 S | hidrws - woor, Vi STS Sizs 1 and only, only 34 of them, | |Somé marked 45e aid Some the lot to be Sold 0 5 Now 29¢ Each TS DRAW- ‘We want you to doubt. Bring this ‘‘ad” SAN FRANCISCO, 937-945 Market Street, The original price appears on many gar- | SAN FRANUISCO. ments. Every reduction is bona fide. and see if “'what we say is so.” SAN FRANCISCO. 987-945 Market St., SAN FRANCISCO. oo dfsfecsiodss SAN FRANCISCO OF TO-DAY It Beats the World Cheapness of for Glimate, Health, Living, Schools and Libraries ", HE special advantages or disadvan- ;T tages attaching to any locality are M/N generally supposed to be known and understood by the inhabitants of the locality, and yet no greater fallacy exists than such belief. It is extremely doubtful if one man out of a hundred could give prompt and intelligent repiy fo the query, What advantages in life do you possess by reason of your present residenca? How many of San Francisco’s dwellers are aware of the exceptional advantages conferred upon them by their residencs in the City of the Golden Gate? How many have compared the cost of living here with the cost of living elsewhere? As a matter of actual fact—not sentimental pride ina renowned locality, but hard, positive facts, proven by careful comparison—the San Franciscan 1s surrounded by a larger ca- pacity to_enjoy life, because “of greater ease in the attainment of its purposes, than is his less favored fellow-citizen of other great cities. In no other city in the world can the necessities and luxuries of life be obtained more cheaply thanm in-San Francisco. Rents are lower here than in any of the | stern cities, and owing to the phe. nomenal character of the climate—its re- le habit of eyenness, not too hot nor too cold, but “‘just right,” the item of fuel 18 one of the smallest which enter 1nto the consideration of the total cost of living. The conclusion tnat San Fran- cisco is the best city for the economical to dwell in is proven by a comparison of the prices of the necessaries of life here | and elsewhere. The following table is compiled from the retail market prices | published in the daily papers of the cities meniioned on Janury 15, 1897. the reader may form a correct judgment as {0 the foundation upon which rests the claim for San Francisco’s superior advan- tages as a residence for the thrifty and economical. Chicago..... Denver. Ban Francisco. | 5.00 445/ | 5.10/%5 The differences in prices of the articles quoted form a powerful argument in favor of San Francisco. Not only is the “poor’” man interested, so the man of moderate means, and equally so the man of large means. joy the fullest possible pleasure of living at the minimum cost. But not alone in the matter of physical needs is San Francisco superior in ease of attainment, but also in the possession of all which ministers to the attainment of the highest intellectual improvement and consequent enjoyment of the esthetic she stends pre-eminent. Her schools and colleges challenge, without fear of con- tradiction by comparison, the ability to All are seeking to obtain and en- | confer upon the seeker after advanced knowledge the fullest possible reward | which comes of enlightened investigation runder the highest advantages cognizant to modern science. In the domain of natural physics, covering all of its many | branches, the California University stands supreme. | In everv department of scientific re- | search relating to the phenomena of isting life, this grand institution has made | an enviable record. In matters extrater- restrial, dealing with things affecting our | earth, but located beyond its narrow | boundaries, the maggificent astronomical | t Hamilton is the Kquipped not only | observatory on Mo | finest in the Nation. with the best mechanical appliances and | instruments known to modern scientific research, but also with a corps of skilled | observers of reputation for learning, in1ts broadest sense of the present time, it is universally recognized as of the very | highest. An Academy of Science graces with fitting place the great city of modern 1deas. Not one of those time-worn and dusty ageregations of obsolete learning— amuseum of back dates—but an mp-to- 1dflle school, where the student of nature | study | and investigate the marvelous ferces and | (may with profit and Batisfaction | powers of the world he lives in, and beled | to the formation of intelligent conceptions | that shall aid in the betterment of his fel- low-men. A great library offers the priceless treas- ures of its shelves to the acquaintanceship of all who desire to guench ‘their thirst | after knowledge with grateful and re- freshing draughts. A splendid art school | Teveals to the searcher alter the beautiful | From it | unparalieled opportunity to acquire that facility of fixing for the enjoyment of | others the grand conceptions of inspired mind. The stabilily of all future greatness is dependent upon. the training of the | present child. San Francisco early recog- nized this important truth, and in her ad- mirable system of high standard public | schools is found the assurance of the pes- petuation of her marvelous growth in all that marks progress and cultivation. And each and all of these priceless possibiities of improvement and cnjoyment are the property of the citizens of San Francisco. | There is no price attached to the acquire- ment of the privileges of employing to the | fullest extent any of the exceptional ad- vantages I here oimmarize. But, says the stranger, does not the pres- ence of all these pubiic institutions entail expense? And does not the citizen have to contribute more largely to the genera} | fund for their existence? The best an- swer to such inquiry is found in the fact that 8an Francisco has the smallest public rate is lower than any similar city; not- | wiihstanding she has fine publc buiid- ings, whose grandeu: and dimensions will not suffer by comparison elsewhere. That the true spirit of modern improvement is understood and applied by her is evi- denced by her low death rate. The excep- tional salubrity of her climate, its healing qualities and marked uniformity have debt of any city of her size, and her tax | O I T o o e an el | tens of thousands of broken-down | valids from the older Eastern and | dle States, many en Gate in such enfecbled condition that exhausted nature succumbs tothe exhila ation of real life, the frayed thread of ex- | istence being unable to stand the vigorous in- Mid- vibratious called into play in the pres- | ence of pure air and absolutely healthful surrounding: Were the deaths from causes originating outside of the City to be eliminated from the tables of mor- tality San Francisco’s death rate would stand lower than that of any other city upon the globe. So much for San Francisco as a dwell- ing place. Whatof herasa business city ? During the year of our Lord 189, just past, California stands upon record as the largest producer in the Union of goid, wine, honey, beet sugar, figs, ralsius, oranges, lemons, olives, walnuts aund aimonds. Her wheat crop amounted to nearly 29,000,000 busnels. In a book published in London, England, in 1876, entitled, “History and Descrip- tion of Modern Wines,”’ the author, Mr. Cyrus Redding (reparded in Europe as | competent authority), gives very full sta- tistics regarding the matters of whick he treats. He prints, among other lists, one of the countries producing liquors and wines, aud the list contains but one men- tion of the United States, and that as the producer of “Peach Brandy."” | Since then, in two decades, what mar- velcus growth has been attained in wine production in California. ‘The product of mated by very conservative authority to exceed 20,000,000 gallons, in addition 1o | the production of 84,000,000 pounds -of raisins. Is it good wine? Let those whose peculiar educational training. fits them to be competent judges reply. One of the best qualified judges of wines, and one whose opinion isof world-wide recognition and who is now with us engaged in an ex- haustive examination of our wines, says unreservedly that “no finer wines are pro- duced than those of California.” The | production of fine wine reqaires certain special conditions. For the ‘“dry” wine there must be valleys into which the sea fogs and mists penetrate; for “sweet wines there is required inland regions, ap- proaching a degree of aridity. Moreover, there is required a peculiar soil. Italy and Southern France have long been recognized as the natural growing grounds of the wine grape. The special conditions there found are the result of geologic action—known as voleanic—marked by the presence of soils due to the decomposition of basalts and lavas extruded over the face of the country during periods of vol- canio energy in the past. Precisely similar conditions of the earth’s surface are found in Western Cali- fornia. No region upon the face of the globe exhibits more emphatic evidence of volcanic 2ction than does the Pacific por- tion of California, and nowhere in the United States can be grown with equal success the true wine grape. For every productof the State 8an Fran- cisco is the natoral’ market. Some small proportion of the produgts find their way to less favored regions of the interior of the continent and de not‘make their ap- pearance in San Frane'sco in actual pres- ence; but the transaction of their sale and transfer is accomplished bere; the business of the transaction is conducted here. The Board of Trade, the Merchants’ Exchange, the Produce Exchange and numerous lesser institutious of a similar character control and really handle the vast masses | of California’s bountiful harvests. Other y of whom reach the Gold- | the California vineyards for 1896 is esti- | | i | long made her the *City of Refuge” for |lands than our own enjoy the fruits of | China, Japan, Australia | our production. and India are eating our cereals, building th our woods, luxuriating on our fruits. | It is not essential In this latter day that | man should confine his labors to the pro- | duction of the necessaries of his immediate surroundings. Man often makes use of a country with- out any reerence to its agricultural capacities. He seeks the minerals under its soil; he turns y into pottery; he | utilizes water-power for his factories; he seeks barren coasts for fishing—in other words, he seeks his gain without reference to climate or soil. Improved means of transportation have increased his com- | mand over nature. He is no longer held torivers and valleys as natural highways, | but can seek anu use the most direct and | speediest routes. The cheapness and | celerity and certainty of modern trans- portation give him command over the re- | sources of the world. He is able to carry | on his work of production without regard | to individual food-production, and is thus | enabled to choose as his workshop and dwelling - place climates and locations agreeable to his health and fancy. His | intellectual and emotional desires lead | him to seek large cities, and this he is en- abled to do by the fact that he can carry on his occupation independent of his awn | inz’ Still he is in a measure suvject to | his environments, dependent upon nature; but the development of his powers has | rendered more elastic the cord which | must always bind him to nsture’s caprices. Here is the cord more flexible. It has often been expressed by many { that the mantle of inspiration occasion- | ally falls upon the shoulders of the | mortal and that there is given forth to men a foreshadowing of the future. In the early days when human longings |sought their fulfillment an unknown | provhet conferred upon our State 1ts sym- | botic title, “El Dorado.” Every succeed- | ing year from that day to the present has but strengthened the belief in | genuineness of the inspired exclamation as applied ‘to California. The mighty apacs with the sturdy development of the happy title. Commerce, heaith, pleasant living, literature, art, science, progress have each and all maintained their steady march to the creation of the ideal city. Wealth has come, but without oppres- sion. Citizenship reigns supreme. The foundations laid fifty years ago show the wisdom of the builders, for upon their broad bases has arisen a metropolis which 10 its natural zrowth shall soon eclipse the proudest city of the world. F. M. Crose. The sie Mutineers. The Uniteg States Grand Jury yesterday found a bill of indicunent agains: C. Mann, C. Henry, R. Johnson, J. Frasher, G. Moore, T. Graurs and A, Olsen, sailors on the sealing schooner Elsie. The vesscl left Port Townsend early in this month for a sealing cruise for the hunting grounds in toe North Pacifi After a week at s:a the seven sailors, according to the complaint, refused (o obey the orders of the master, F.'W. Currie, who desired to go to the Japan waters to hunt,so the Elsic was brought into ihis port and 'the men put under arrest. The indiciment containg four counts, in which the saiiors are accused of Tefusing to obey orders t ligat side lamps and to set sail. JEWELRY store, 5 and 7 Third street, removed to 303 Kearny street. e e —— Increase of Oapital Stock. E. A. Green and George A. Gott have filed a certificate setting forth that the capital stock of the American Condensed Mili Company has been increased to $50,000. It was for- merly $15,000. e . — FINE hali-tone printing by skilled men and wodern machinery. Mysell-Roilins, 22 Clay.* | particular effort in the line of food-gather- | the | | city at the gate of the Orient has kept| FAINTED IN COURT. Chita Jackson, Alias Emma Cleverly, Overcome by Judge Dunne’s Decision In Her Case. Chita Jackson, alias Emma Cleverly, fainted in Judge Dunne’s courtroom ye | terday when the Judge decided that she | must go back to court and stand trial for grand larceny. Miss Cleverly or Jackson attracted con- siderable attertion at the time of the murder of Eugene Ware by declaring that | she saw ‘a mysterious woman in black” | leaving the premises soon after the crime was committed. Her story was found to | be untrae. Subsequently she frequented | disreputable resorts and has been seyeral | times arrested for petty crimes, but hitberto has escaped punishment. After her commitment in the Police Court she applied to Judge Dunne for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that she was illegally held to answer. His Honor gave the testimony a careful ex- amination and concluded that no_error had been made in the court below. When be announced this decision and ordered | the prisoner. remanded to the custody of | the Sheriff she shrieked dismally and fell |in a faint. Bailiff Sullivan applied re- storatives, and as soon as the lady recov- ered her usual composure gallantly escorted her to her seat in the Black Maria. e BIG MONEY WANTED. | | | | Butler, Tuck ana Oblandt Sued for | Nearly Half a Million Dollars. | John L. Haskell, as receiver of the prop- erty of the 8. 8. Construction Company, bas sued C. C. Butler, John A. Buck, Nicholas Ohlandt and the S. 8. Construc- tion Company to collect unpaid capital stock of the 8. 8. Construction Company | as follows: From C. C. Butler, $250.000 | from John A. Buck, $125,000; from Nich- olas Ohlandt, $75,000. The complaint sets forth that the plain- tiff is informed and believes and therefore | on information and belief alleges the fact | to be that all of the other owners and holders of said subscribed capital stock are wholly insolvent, which is considered suf- ficient reason for not <ning them. | The action herein is begun under and | by the written direction of Judge Heb- bard of the Superior Court. NEW TO-DAY. ANOTHER UNEQUALED $2.50 M e . ROMAN CHAIR IV MAH0G: _ AND FOREST GREEA. SAMPLES OF OU MONEY-SAVING CHAIRE, braced. ENAMELED BEDS, brass mounted. 4- ROOM GUTFIT COMPLET Kitchen, parlor, bedroom, dining- Toorn. “$75.00 Ytove Department, Second Floor. &%~ Country Orders Filled Promptly. M. FRIEDMAN & GO, 33-235-237 Post Street (Near Stockton). 130-132-134 Morton Street. OPEN EVENINGS. 338 KNIT; 103 and 105 Post Street. Take Elevator. Formeriy at 120 Suiter Street, WILL KNIT | [T0_ORDER f UNDER NEW TO-DAY. ING CO. YOUR SILK, WOOLEN, LINEN, MERINO and COTTON WEAR! PHIEH PRICE KNOCTKED 0,0 DRUGS, PERFUMERY, PATENT MEDICINES, RUBBER GOODS, FINE WINES AND LIQUORS, DO YOU SMOKE?| 1t’s Expensive, But Here's a Snap: Belmonts, 1214c size La Rosa, 121 General Arthur, J0c straight neral Burnside, 10c c straight. , 5¢ scraight. RETAIL AT WHOLESALE PRICES. LOUIS ZEH, 1330 Market ., | Oppozite Seventh, CUTRATES, TOILET ARTICLES, HIGH-GRADE CIGARS. cut to 10s cut t0 100 cut to 103 | cut to 1 -cut to 3 for 250 -cut to 3 for 250 ut to 6 for 25¢ .CUL 10 6 Tor 20 raight THE PAINTER HAS REMOVED TC 379 MISSION sT. ANE. e Philadelphia Shoe €0, No. 10 Thio $1 R ——— STAMPED ON A SHOE MEANS STANDARD OF MERIT OUR GOOD NAME Has never been questioned. We have denlt honestly with the public and thrived, Do youdoubt that we are blockaded? 1 so come to the corner of 1 hird and Market streets and_judge for yourself. We must sell cheap to do business. We never de- celve the public. What you buy ofus we suarantee. Special for this week: Ladies’ Cloth or K1d Top Button Shoes, polnted or mediium square toes and V-shaped patent leather Ups: straight vamps: best vicl kid: cloth warranted fast; will be sold ac $1 50 apair. Children's and Misses' Cloth or Kid Top Button Shoes, medium-square toes and Patent leather tips, spilug feels, same ma- terial 8 in ladies’ Shoes, sold as follows: $1 00 Sizes 11 to 125 TULE INSOLES, 15¢ a Pair. TULE INSOLES. #5r Country orders soficited. %5 Send for New lllusirated Catalogus. Address B. KATCHINSKI, PHILADELPHIA SHOE co,, 10 Third St.. San Franclsco. L. A, Berteling Pres. A, W. Kirk, Sec. H. Nordman, Vice-Pres. Jos. Nordman, Treas. 427 KEARNY STREET, I8 the very best place to have your eyes examiaad and fitted to glasses with instruments exclusivoly our own, whose superiority Las hOy yei beea equated. We Rave no rivals, We vaiue our reputation; we gnarantee satisfaction, and depend solely upod ork for saccess. ROSLYN COAL! THE NMOST ECONOMICAL Try & sack or ton fro Tel. Black 2341. THE MARKET. . 1dc . %8.00 oliable yard. GEO. JON 251 Stevenson Street, Between Third and Fourth Speclal Rates to Hotels and Resiaurants. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, K EARNY o, o0delad and renovated. KINU, W ARD o) 0. Kooms 80C to per day, 31 10 80 por Dok, §8 56 550 por mOACA:" fFee bAity: Lot and cold water every rool every room: AND WASHINGTON STS.—R] , WARD & sre grates (4 elevator runs adnighi. NRESS SE2 °PATENTS o = 20 MARKET ST.S.F. DR VIRCHOW'S ELECIRIC BELT, Y| By 50 per cent the best I Belt made. Has cured s combined. ht as well have the best, as it costs no more. Call or address THE VIRCHOW ELECTRICCO, 100 Stockion St., SF These tiny Capsules are superio 1o Balsam of Copaiba, Cubebsor!njectionsand| CURE IN 48 HOURS the same diseases withoul inconvenience, Sold by all druggists,

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