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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDA 1897. JANUARY 31, ¢l | AMUSEMENTS, DWIN THEATER.— Macbeth,” to-morrow LironxTa THEATER.—Mile. Antoinette Tre- T night. ©TMEIA T niaTER—"Devil's Auction.” os CrEma-Housx—-Orphans of New | | | | i | | | AZAR THEATER.—“All the Comforts of | Tivor: Or¥RA Housk.—“Aladdin; or, The we il Lamp. | Oxpmxvy—High-Class Vaudeville. | 135 AUDITORIUM—EIlls and Mason streets— | Concert, Sat rnoon, Febr: 6th. | HE CHUTES AND SKATING RINK—Dally at | stry block ewst of the Park. UTO BATHS—Bathing and performances. CENTRAL PARK. ebail. | UOLDEN GaTe PARK—Golden Gate Park Band. HACIFICC 0aRT JOCK Y Crirn.— Races 1o- MOITOW | i12 o'clock. OITY NEWS IN BRIEF. 1 for $2,000 by the villlam J. Price rbach for & rovide. een_placed of the New Cream- | a petition in . Hyde replies to ses various Boards ce men of San Fran- to some insurance their seventr n in conjunctio | bolic acid la: and Howard ie. be heard in be held o’clock to- The funeral of Prentiss the reside The in nore rain to-day. ed all along ty and County of San Francisc demande Company ha: n, Andrew W been . A, is anxi- e action of the Legis- | hopes indire to | are expected to deli e jecton Saturday and Sunday next. art of the United States ha: Morrow’s decision in th that sailors who fail 0 80 may be impris.ned. n Naumburg and others | he Hiternia Savings and | 3,000 with interest from | and for $1200 with interest 92 184 SHAKING UP THE SCHOOL JANITORS Democratic School Directors Caucused and Then Voted. Waller's Proposition to Drop Special Teachers Did Not Go Through. Superintenient Babcock Thinks the Grand Jury Guiity of Unwar- ranted Meddling. The various resolutions submitted by School Director Waller for the considera- tion of the Board of Education, having for their purpose the dropping of special teachers and an apportionment of the funds of the department among the com- mittees of the board on his plan, did not | doubtless now on their way to Mr. Hearst. go yesterday afternoon. Mr. Waller And still these ‘‘Creelmans’ disinfectant. { and tell of the crime. the Grand Jury. for Chinatown. | this.” I never gave the al | | for the purpose of enabling some im | the Police Gazette long enough to ANOTHER EXAMINER “CREELMAN.” headlines a story of how Dr. Williamson had been offered a big bribe from a mysterious man on condition that the Board of Health compel the Chinatown property-owners to fumigate their premises with a certain The story was played up as red-hot news stuff for two days. ment was dished up in a narrative of the circumstances attending the offering of the bribe. morning came a sequel narrative that the Grand Jury was about to ask Dr. Williamson to appear before it In this instance the bribery story, which is palmed off on the readers of the paper as fresh news, is as musty as many of the other fakes that mark the management of the paper. Williamson can hardly now, after trying two days, recall the incidents. a few days after Dr. Williamson’s appointment to the Board of Health by Governor Budd and was printed at that time in the newspapers for what it was worth. Now it comes up in a new dress and is palmed off as fresh news and hung out with a flare to startle “The story is so ancient,” said Dr. Williamson, yesterday, ‘‘ that 1 remember very little of it. Shortly after my appointment by the Governor I believe some fellow called on me one day and talked about paying me $600 a month or something, if the Board of Health would recommend a certain disinfectant The story was printed long ago by the Examiner itself, and is probably revamped at this late day | the Examiner with the word * exclusive’’ written in bold blue letters over the reborn bribery story are continue. For two days the Examiner has been printing under lurid On Friday morning the- first install- Yesterday It is so ancient that Dr, It happened almost two years ago, ffair a second thought, and have heard nothing of it from that day to pecunious space-writer to square accounts with his landlady. Copies of He, when the papers arrive, will forget his bitter rivalry with give the tribute of a smile—that witching smile—to the genius and made a little speech in which he said that | H A'torney Cassius | ! Girls' E | L the special teachers whom he proposed to drop were doing good work, but that they ought to be dispensed with and the posi- tions abolished in the interest of economy, The board listened and voted to refer ail his recommendations concerning the dis- missal of special teachers to the Classifica- tion Committee, which puts the matter over. The special teachers whom Mr. Waller wanted to dismiss are the teachers of drawing, cooking, singing, manual training, history with the stereopticon, free-hand drawing in _the Polytechnic Spanish :n the Polytechnic High and Lincoln High and physical culture. The sense of the board was ascertained through the proposition to declare the po- sition occupied by Miss K. M. Ball, her of drawing, vacant. Miss Ball aws $150 per month. When the board voted t0 refer the other propositions tooi the same course. The messenger of the board, Frank W. Yale, was superseded by William Tobin, the sppointment of the latter to take ef- fect February 1. Mr. Yale, who was very 1ighly complimentea by Superintendent | Babcock for long and efficient service, will continue two weeks to instruct his successor. Before the board got to work the mem- bers met as a committee of the whole. Then the Democratic members caucused. This took up something over an hour. When the caucus was over the janitor pro- gramme was well made up and it went sh with some speed. The following nts were made fi H Cooper Primary, vice Mrs. K. A, Cavauaugh, Humboldt Primary The following transfers of janitors were also made: ts G 1 mmar, u Gate lagher, . Hunter, Pacific Heigh M. r; J. Crok: James Lick Mrs. Flynn, Letis; Mrs. M! , Winfield Scott Primary, vi Mrs. H. Mourm, Col edy w Burns, Harrison Mre. L. Cooper, School, vice Mrs. Hartwigsen; Hartwigsen, Stanford Primary, vice Marply; Mry. Burns, Bugna Vista Pri- e Mrs. M M Lawton, rammar. ce Mrs. H. Langle 3 ¥ onth, Denman Grammar, vice M F. , Hawthorne Primary, vice Mrs _T. Keily; Mrs. McCullough, Douglass Pri- ry, vice Mrs. Breen; Mrs. M. A. Usenold, Moulder Primary, vice i(rs. M. C. W.E. C Sh, n Gram- y, Bernal ¥ Rosalic Lichtenberg of the Emer- chocl was granted leave of absence for one year from February 3 On motion of Direcior Ragan, a com- mittee of three on legislation was ap- Cloaks, Furs Have just finished tal clean out quickly. TAFFETA STLK WAISTS, with linen collars, all sizes ALL-WOOL CLOTH JACKETS, tan or black, high collaz, new sleeves and best styles... . $3 'S, all wool, neweat " co lar and but- KERS! . cloth strap in 'tront, uttops. the iatest style $7= T, tans, greeus, gant'dress garments, the bes: NEW TO-DAY. STOCK-TAKING SALE. g stock, and find too many Cloaks on hand, and we will sell them at bargain prices to good things we offer. and Dresses. Note a few of the ALL-WOOL BLACK CLOTH CAPE, beaded and fur trimmed, 24 inches deep, 120~ inch sweep, a $10 Cape for... $325 TAN CLOTH CAPES, all wool, 24 inches deep, 120-Inch Sweeh, a 510 Cape for... bl BALTICSEAL FUR CLLAR. KETTES, fine satin lined, a __good §12 60 Fur Collarette for e ELEGANT FROCADE DAM- MASSE SILK SKIRT, all lined and veivet bound, $22 50 Skirt for. ? ALL OUR FINE IMPORTED VELOUR DU NORD CA PE eezant embroldered or jet trimmed, floest siik Lining. Cnpes worth from $45 to $30 3750 STYLISH TAILOR- MADE TO $2250 DRESSES, ready (0 wear, in Deviest effects & best st.les. $ - stvie of thix season, & 825 Q»] )50 o et B 220 ELEGANT BOUCLI K SKY CLOTH JACKKETS, ik lined and for trimmed, e Imporied styles. no two alike, B th $16:=° 2l sizes, & fine 850 J acke: for KELLY & LIEBE Dresses worch from $30 to $25.00 § Cloak and Suit House, 120 Kearny St. enterprise of the-only Long Green. ointed, consisting of Directors Ragan, Waller and Drucker. Superintendent Babcock criticized the Grand Jury. He said that what the Grand Jury has to do with the policy of the Board of Education isa conundrum. He particularly scored the Grand Jury for the recommendation concerning the teachers in the department who live in Alameda County. ADDITIONAL LIGHTS. Precita Valley and Mission-Street Im- provements Are Up to Date. The public-spirited storekeepers and residents of the Mission and Precita Val- ley are pushing their sections to the front on theimprovement lines with commend- able energy. 3 Mission street, from Twentieth to Twenty-second, has added electric lights to those two blocks, which were bril- iantly illuminated last night for the first ime. It was originally intended to celebrate the event last night, but the threaten- ing condition of the weather interfered { with the plans and the demonstration will } take place some night next week, probably | Thursday evening. The celebration com- | mittee consists of 0. Waibel, R. P. Kava- naugh, H. E. Snook and 8. Lippman. Those gentlemen met with every en- couragement from the residents on the blocks mentioned, and it is predicted that the gap between Sixteenth and Twen- tieth will be spanned ere long with the white current, which will give one contin- uous stream of light along that portion of | the street. | In the meantime the peopledown in the Precita Valley have not been idle in bring- | ing their section to the front. | Ata meeting of the Precita Valley Im- provement Club on Friday nieht, at Gra- bam Hall, on Alabama und Twenty-sev- | enth streets, the executive committee re- | ported that the petitions of tne club to | lay sewers on Bryantstreet, from Twenty- | sixth to Army, and on Precita avenue, from Alabama street to the junction of Army and York, had been granted by the Board of Supervisors. A petition was forwarded to the Board of Bupervisors, requesting that no exten- sion of time be granted to the contractors who have been awarded the contract for grading Precita avenue. The contract was awarded three weeks ago, and since that time no work has been done. The contractors are relying upon two waysout of their dilemma, one being the chance of subletting the contract and the other to obtain further time from the Supervisors. The residents and property-owners in the valley want the work done, and that quickly, as the condition of the valley re- quires immediate attention to get the | streets into condition preparatory to im- | proving Bernal Park. e MR. GUNST IS HOPEFUL. Expects That the Legislature Will Yot Consent to Eis Prolonged Absence. Police Commissioner M. A. Gunst is casting longing eyes toward the giddy capitals and the soothing springs of Europe, and some day he hopes to be joy- | ously pacing the quarter deck of a trans. | Atlantic licer and seeing, through the blue wreaths of Lis cigar smoke, the justly cel- ebrated charms of the Old World. Time was when the Commissioner conld see a panorama of European delights in his cigar smoke, even as he paced the ultra-American thoroughfares of this City. But that was many moenths ago, when the hopes of & trip across the pond were new. Of late all he has been able to discern in | the biue vapor of his Havana wasan in- | flexible provision of the State law, which i reads something like this: *‘No member of such commission must absent himself | from the State more than sixty days, un- | le<s upon business of the State, etc.” | "~ A bill was introduced by Senator Boyce | to get an extension of sixty days, and this | was referred to the Senate Commitiee oh | Blections, and Friday that committee was | unkind enough to reject it by a vote lack- | ing one of unanimity. | Commissioner Gunst is in no wise dis- | couraged by this circumstance. “The bill was rejected, why?” he asked. “SBimply because it was not referred to the right committee. Besides, the man who intro- duced it was ill and could not be there to explain it. Itisa perfectiy just measure. It is designed for cases of sickness. There is Justice Garoutte, who is in Honolulu now. He cannot return within the re- quired sixty days, it 1s said. The late Lieutenant-Governor was trought back to the State while at the point of death to | escape thisenactment. Many other States { have provided for a like contingency. ! “In'my own case, I would have gone to Europe, as advised by my physicians, several months ago but for this law. 1 expect to go in April now, for I am confi- dent tiis bill will pass. Ihope to be gone four or five months.” VOLUNTEER FIREMEN. The Veteran Fighters Held Their An- nual Banquet at the Lick House. The annual banquet of the Veteran Vol- unteer Firemen's Association of Califor- nia took place lest night in the dining- room of the Lick House. About 100 per- sons were present, among them bsing some of the best known of fire-fighters. The banquet-room was handsomely decor- ated; there was good music and consider- able speech-making, nearly all the speeches dealing with reminiscences of the early times in battling with conflagrations. Among the many prominent persouns present were: I ti president; Stephen vice-president; George Carlisle, second vice-president; James Hayden, third vice-president; James Pennycuck, recording secretary; Gus Pohlmann, financial secretary; William Fahrenkrug, treasurer; Colonel A. Andrews, John Satchweil, Jonn Foley, Henry Kohn, John McGreery, board of directors; Fred J1. Will, L. Selencer, R, Harrold, trustees; Jumes C. Carroll, sergeant-at-arms. The menu_ was elaborate, and the ban- quet lasted for several hours. MRS, EDGERTON MKES HER DEBUT She Wins Success as Queen Elizabeth at the Baldwin. Modjeska Is Herself Again as the Unfortunate Marie Stuart. A Notable Performance in Which Consistent Playing Won Gan- eral Applause. Mrs. Frances Edgerton is so well known and has so many friends in this City that there was standing room only at the Bald- win last night for those who had not taken acting role proved that there can be brilliant exceptions to the rule, so often laid down by actors, that elocution is not the best stepping-stone to the stage, Mrs. Edgerton was as much at home on the stage as one to the manner born, and her fine voice and perfect enunciation did bher excellent service. If she felt any tremors of nervousness she betrayed none. In her make-up the debutante had evi- dently followed the famous Holbein paint- ing of Queen Elizabeth, though ber face is rounder and prettier than the deter- mined courtenance that the Flemish artist gave to England’s Virgin Queen. Mrs. Edgerton has an imposing stage presence and in the matter of dress she was fully as magnificent as history re- cords her prototype to have been. When the curtain went up on the audi- ence chamber of Queen Elizabeth that monarch was discovered on her throne in a dazzling costume of yellow and white satin, with a jeweled stomacher and a court train of sapphire-colored velvet lined with ermine and embroidered with the lilies of France. The scenes for which Mrs. Edgerton was especially applanded were her meeting with Mary in the park at Fotheringay and the scene whera she signed her cousin’s death warrant. In the park she assumed the studiously insulting and haughty demeanor of Elizabeth very cleverly and never showed by a tremor that she was a novice. In the scene where Leicester and Bur- leigh urge Elizabeth to sign Mary’s death warrant Mrs. Edgerton was strongest, in- deed she gave an admirable portrayal of the woman in Etizaveth struggling for supremacy with the Queen in her; she toyed with her love for Leicester, refusing “Idon't believe there ever was so £ood a pill made as Ayer's Cathartic Pills. They will do all you recom- mend them for and even more. ‘When I have a cold and ache from head to heels, a dose or two of these Pills is all the medicine needed to set me right again. For headache, ¥ vvvervesvvvvrrrvvvves the sensitive palate. Some won't dissolve, and the pill: the laboratory. Ask your druggist for AAAA. AN hundred others. Free. Address: J. C, the system, harmless as a bread pellet. are too light, and permit the speedy deterioration of the pill. After 380 years exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills have been found as effective as if just fresh from It's a good pill, with a good coat. Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. : A . AAAAAAAA * This testimonial will be found in full in Ayer’s “Curebook,” with a Pill Clothes. The good pill has a good coat. The pill coat serves two purposes; it protects tbe pill, and disguises it to coats are too heavy ; they s they cover pass through Other coats AN Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. R Y T0 DEVELOP MARIN COONTY. A Boulevard Projected From Sausalito to San Rafael. It May Also Run to Tiburon if the Conditions of the Bond- Issue Allow. A Large Number of Improvement Clubs in the County Are Infer- ested in the Project. There is a project on foot in {Marin county whereby the promoters lope to derive lasting benefit. Briefly statéd it is a boulevard to run from Sausalito ip the coast to San Anselmo, thence to Ssn Rafael and by branch lines to San Quen- tin, trending southward by Reeds to Tiburon. The project is considered by many im- provement clubs in the county es likely to prove of immense benefit, and a bill1s now pending before the Legislature caicu- lated to promote its consummation. The Northern California Division of the League of American Wheelmen is said to strongly favor the project. Among those who have indorsed the enterprise are: Marin Development Asso- ciation; Ambrose Harris, president Lark- | spur Club; B. Allen Brown, secretary | Larkepur Club; E. Steele, Mill Valley | Club; W. A. Boole Jr.,, Ross Station | Club: C. A. Harmon, Larkspur Club; | Hepburn Wilkins, San Rafael Club; Edgar C. Chapman, Larkspur Club; S. Sylva, Corte Madera Club; Commo- dore C. Harrison, Sausalito Club; Judge Thomas H. Fottrell, Mill Valley Club. Ambrose Harris, president, and Morris Schwartz, secretary of the Marin Develop- ment Association, were talking yesterday about the proposed idea and the best means for bringing it to a successtul con- clusion. Speaking of the plan snd its develop- ment Mr. Harris said: The Sausalito-San Rafael boulevard move- ment inangurated by the Marin Improvement Associstion seems destined to extend into a chsin of roeds reaching to ell parts of the county. The association has been &t work de- velopiig feasible plans to follow outin the 700d roads movement, and from information given out by the executive committee after cousultation with & number of leadiug people and carefully working upon the proposition it is thought that the best plan .o take up is one con(cmyuliuqns road system beginning at Sausalito and Tiburon, running thence o San Rafael, and from there branching outto Bo- linas, Tomales and Novato. The reesons that argue for this are several. In the first place any improvement of consid- erable dimensions in one part of the county must have an important influence on all other arts, by reason of their interdependence, Furthermore, a plan like this being completé in establishing the main arteries of a road MRS. FRANCES EDGERTON. time by the forelock in securing tickets for her professional debut with the Mod- jeska company in ‘‘Marie Stuart.’” The performance was a notable one in many respects. Modjeska, whose radiance was dimmed in the part of Magda, showed almost her old-time power to thrill ber hearers in the role of the unfortunate Queen of Scots, Haworth and Louergan were both on their mettle and did bril- liant work, and Mrs. Frances Edgerton, in the role of Queen Elizabeth, won sev- eral curtainj calls and the unstinted ap- plause of friends and strangers alike. The wily Queen Elizabeth is a difficult and ambitious part for a debutante to essay, but Mrs. Edgerton’s success proved that'she had formed no exaggerated esti- mate of her powers in undertaking it. Although last night was her debut as an actress, she has had plenty of experience in reciting in public; indeed, she has been for some years one §of the best- known elocutionists in the City. The ease with which she fell intoan NEW TO-DAY. Money back i. you don’t like Schilling's Best. Tea and money at your grocer’s. A Schilling & Co San Francisco to believe him guilty though she knew him to be so, and she_toyed with her ae- sire for revenge on Mary in so cleyer and Elizabethan a way that Mr: ton more than deserved the he plause she received. A little experience will soon teach the debutante a few tricks of the actor’s trade in which she was lacking, as, for instance, a greater sweep of gesture; but tricks such as these are a mere matter of practice and experience. Mrs, Edgerton’s debut was a brilliant one, worthy of the brilliant au: pices under which it was made. Modjeska was herself again as Mary Stuart. She entered with bher old-time feeling into the dignity and pathos of the part. Her voice was sironger than it has been this season. Her interpretation of Mary is well known, and 1t is bard to be- lieve that she was ever more appealingly patbetic and queen-like withal than she ‘was last night in the park at Fotheringay scene. Her farewell in the prison also brought tears to the eyes of some of her admirers, and they were not, as on Monday night, tears that Modjeska was no longer herself, but were spontaneous tributes to her art. Haworth, as Sir Edward Mortimer, lived and died in _a noble, manly way, and Lonergan made a brave appearance as the wily Leicester, and won the admiration of the audience as a most accomplished traitor. The rest of the cast was fairly satisfactory, though there was nothing to call for special comment. It gives us pleasure to call oir readers’ attention to the value of Brown's Bronchial Troches as remedy for throat aff ctions. The that these troches have been ufactured sold for over fifty years s an evidence of their real merit, ‘While it is true that Nature does not endow every one with a sweet, well-modulated voice, ye there is no voice so discordant but that by care and tralning it may be renaered pleasant, if not sweet and musical. The greatest artis: could not hope to entrance us with his musicif his instrument were out of tuue; and so the larynx must be kept In tupe, or it will not send forth pure, swes Singers, speakers—in fact all persons who mak: an abnormal demaud on the vocal chords, will find Brown’s Bronchial Trocl ing and healing, quickly sore throat. system for the whole _county is entitled to be considered us much more valusble than o de- tached and fragmentary proposition. A further consideration, and a consideration of great importance, is the {act that the money for road purposes must be raised, if the plan which has met with the greatest approval be followed, by the whole county. 7The com- promise plan, to consider only the first portion of the system, the remaining portion to be provided for at a later date, will meet and has met with opposition which is not wise, and which it s not necessary, to create. A plan which provided'for an equitable and full consideration of all paris of the county obviates this objection ana should receive the support ot all sections without dissent. ‘rom preliminary estimates made by the engineer of the California Development Asso- ciation, it is considered that the sum of $100,000 will be suflicient to construct a wide 4na substantial roadwsy from Sausalito to San Rafael and at the same time cover the cost which will be necessary to put the other roads in good condition, and it is believed that an equitable aisposition of the funds will accom- plish tnis purpose and will build the various lines indicated in a thorough aud substantial manger. Mr. Schwartz added: The next question is raisiug the meces- Plan Showing the Proposed Bou- levard Between Sausalito, San Rafael and Tiburon as In- dorsed by Many County Im- provement Clubs and the Northern Division of the League of American Wheel- men. i SAUSALITO sary money. The plan which seems the most feasible and the one which is the most favored is a bond issue. This will enable the early completion of the whole work and in a manner that will make a very small tax ample to cover the expense of the work. A bond issue of the required sum would call for an in- terest and sinking fund charge of five to six thousand doliars a year, covering iuterest on | same and s sinking fund sufficient to mature in thirty or thirty-five years. The assessed valus of property in the County amounts to twelve and a half millions, so a levy of 4 to 5 cents on the $100 will fully cover the issue. Consider- ine the importance and the far-renching bene: fits of the pian ouilined this would be a very small sum, It hes been suggested that it conld be saved out of the present road fund, by reason of the fact{hat new construction would be provided for by the plan for some time. Aside from this, however, it {s quite clear that the 1ncrease in population and values from its successful completion will result in n short time in increasing the venues of.the County by a sum more than sufficient o cover the few thousand dollars & yenr which it necessitates. Fate of the Worthington Babe. The Worthington infant, whose mother re- cently Wwentto San Quentin, has been given into the custody of the father of Sheriff Whe- lan. The baby, whose name is Ellen Worth- ington, has never breathed free air until yes- terday. ———— There are more than ninety-nine differ- ent companies in London. ettt e, U NEW TO-DAY! SPECIAL FOR This ‘Week CATSUP-° 20 urtice Bros., Blue Label, a bottle. . WHIS KV—,‘?;'fiilia?f_"" or Seoten, e TDMATflEs—ffbieEffod. 3-1b canq. [T TOBAGLO—Dixie Queen, per pkg.... 56 JELLIES—A1 Kinds, New Pack, 2- BUTTER-Gisteee™ IWHESRY S5 e v HAMs_Entern Sugar-cured, per Ib. 710 HAMS—Eicnics, Sugar-cured, per Ib, 5ig RN ey B“TTEH_Squms;nm 9% SLIGED PEAGHES—vr erea= P B¢ MONTHLY CATALOGUE SENT FREE EVERYWHERE, WMCLINE Wholesale and Refail Grecer, 949-951 MARKET ST., Between Fitth and Sixth, San ¥rancisco, Telephone South 50. A Brilliant Record, HE RECORD NOW BEING made by Doctor Cook has no varallel in the history of San Fran- cisco medicine and surgery. He has accomplished greater good, relieved more suffering, gladaened more hearts and made happy more homes within the past few months than other physicians bave been able todo in years. He makes no pretensions to verform impossibilities, but some of his cures do seem but little less, than miraculous. Many of bis most bril- liant triumphs are in chronic, long lingering cases which other physie cians bave pronounced hopeless. Always in touch with the progress of his profession, Doctor Cook has every appli- ance, apparatus and instrument essential to the most modern methods of practice. Doctor Cook cures Female Complaints, Failing Man: hood und Men’s SecretAilments of every name and nature, Ca- tarrh, Piles, B Rupture, Rheu- matism, Blood and Skin Dis- eases, and Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Brain, Nose, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Liver, Stomach, Kidneys, and other Internal Organs. Doctor Cook’s mail treatment is very large and highly successtul. To every one describing their troubles ne sends, free of charge, his new and valuable book on Men's Diseases. He is in his office daily from 9012 A M. and 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P, M., except Sundays, when he may be consulted from 10 t0 12 A. M. only. Address DOCTOR COOK, 865 Narket §t., San Franciseo, Ca), oS { (DOCTOR COOK).