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- RHEUM THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1897. Franz Wolf; Who - the Police Say Murdered - His Mistress; Mrs. M, Sprinznik; and-Who: Committed Suicide Shortly “After the Crime. | 1 |.bs “identified ~had - been . disposed of and | cysii the marks: in “‘the linings of his coat | | had been fort: ot widdestroyed. Deputy. | F, Hallett su-pected the ideniity of the | | sticide and sent-for Sprinzuik, the tailpr. | ¢ He at once identified the dead man. | In: order-thiat no: mistake ‘should . be | | made: a*careful ‘examimatjon. ¢f _the Te- | yolver was madé, - Jt-was the syme -that | Mrs: Antone of 916 Mon v:street bad seen_in. the house .o Wl aid Mrs. Sorinznik. - Ths bullets which ended. thie:ljves of the two were The b | two empty cartridee-shells.in the cylinder Y i confirmed: the: helief ihiat, tiie man. had Dcuble Duty.- Done i murdereéd the woman-and commilted sui- Franz Wolf's: Ready eide: 7as’ he: hatl: told :Mrs- Hawkins:he would do. Revolver. The. resiing-place.of the dead will prob- Potter’ d. -The woman’s jositively declined to- le.re- her funeral expenses;-and it sponsible. for % is‘doulitial - if .any one.will- come forward Sent * His:- Murderous™ Soul. ‘to |'to save ‘the hody GEeither rom s BAapers Jein " That" ‘ot His j gTave. Victim. ANGLERS ARE UP IN ARMS.| o A Meeting To-Day’to. Protest .\gnin-f The Same- Weapon Bnded the a Chiairge in the Fresent Laaw; Lives | of Mrs: Sprinzaik and Her ! The anglers of {this. City are verv-indig: | Lover: nant . becatss: some medalesome. people, who'have mot €oiisulted the fraternity; are | endeavoringto have a bill: passed in-the Legislatur> which, if it should become & law, woitld:cut.off - e month of April to discovered. in 8 { many lovers of trout fishing. louseat 821 Howard: street early 1. ‘The -anglers -contend, apd. rightly, too, imorning. - THis -ended. the.sec- that i e trout:fishing season opens -on of thie mitrder t:azedy.of-Satar- Mav-1-there will be nothing excepting o it TMrs: Mesie| LDgetliigs. 10~ ca streams which Lo s empty into the ocean, as the poachers witl of 918 'Mon1gondry aureet. Was | catelall.of - tiie fishes of . good size beforé those who.6bserve: the faw will _bave: an oppottupityto cast-a Hne. -Phe.anglers strongly favor protection; biitas. the Fish Commiissivners state_that: their funds are exhausted, awing o *hafchery improve- | nients” - and -“traveling ‘ekpenses,”-ithe trout: ‘of “the ‘mountain sireamy cannot The body of Franz Wolf;; who:endeéd:his by his own: hand, » tie ‘hand “of ‘the .desd man w vicious; biood-stained revoiver rattern and.inhisight i 1gly: powder-burnt. billet worina. is “no -doubt that-ithe same e m. weapon erided bothi -lives, for- thete were | have jrotection during the close season. two empty * and ~recently discharged | .-Anglers. interested. in the matter will cartridge -shelis in -the . cylinder. - The | Mmeet this:sfternoon at.7 Sutter. streef _to - , discuss - the question. and provide . some urdere ! is viet: A y- " Tnder his vietim now ‘tie side by\ 1o iny-by which -the bill ‘can be defeatéd a1dé 7 i in‘the Senate. story of the assassination of .Mra. Sprinznik is still fresiin the minds of the | public. About 6 o’clock Saturday evenirig 1 n’s body discovered lying.on 1. her kitchen: at 918 Montgom- streer with -a bullet-hole in ber left 10 SWARHILDA I SGHT, eve. an, Wolf, with whom she had S been ‘living, was nowhere to be found,| Mdy Easily Be Ten Days Longer although the detectives searc 1 ed through d him. He | seen to teave the house edrty ie aiternoon, and all that could be of the lives of the couple caused the finger of suspicion 0. be pointed at Wolf. Mrs. Sprinznik was the wife of a tailor, | Because of a Foul Bottom. The:Ship Is Now Six.y-nine Days Out | From Niwecastle, Australia, With all bis familiar baunts to tad Franz Sprinznik, who lives at 622 Clay street, but six months ago the couple Murderer Butler. separated beciuse of the busband’s sus- | picions o Woll. = Woli was then em- | vioved at the borax works in Alameda. |* The last towboat came in after dark last | He and the woman at once took apart-| night and: reported that neither . the ments in the 0 three-room coltage | Swanhilda “nor” any ‘other ship was in | where the uniaithiul wife’s Life came to sight, though she could ‘ses in- all direc- tions as Tar s the- Faralioves, A strong wind was blowing. outside, the sea was rough and the bar was. b eaking, | A vilot-boat, ~double-reefed;” was. spoken far out. and - everything -indicated - that should a vessél come insight no- attempt would be mad e to tiring her in: before. this morning because of ths roughuess of the bar, The British bark King ward, spoken | Saturday night twenty-five miles off Point | Reves 1o the northward of here by the British collier steamer Wellington; is now probably. 300 miiles off shore, as she. had | the strong southeasterly .'blow: right | against her and preventing all possibility ! of her commgduown the coast. -She is SR S y-seven “days out from Newcastle ey MmEReAY | to. The Sivanhilda is now out sixty- Wors. Sprnz- | nine dags from Nowcastlé, g volt went 10 & 1" The sieamer course_ botween Newcastle h a yiolent The Crockett for a cause were y suiiden end. first cfforis of Detectives Dillon, Reynolds and Wren was to look r the murder, which ‘they finding. The guilty ot live as happily together as ed. 1t was said, 100, that insanely jealous of the atten- ohn: Schieier, a baker, to Mrs. utten days ago Wolf said to: Mr: «If Mrs, Sprinznik proves un- and bas anything to do with cier I Wil kill her' and kil ‘myself.” Wolf used to haunt.the Bakers’ Home, :on waiching Schleier, and the probability.is that he.became convinced that bis suspicions were'correct and car- ried his threat into effec lock Saturd the mur 2-he Joom Was not. seen again uniil 9:30 | 8 -Ssn Francisco s 7300 miles, but ships | w'cloc! esterday. -morning, at which | i1 OTder to profit- more by the winds fol- LourN. Martin-ensered iie. room to make | 1O% #Jess diréct line, and, countingtacks, over. over veastle and this port: The longest sailing ‘passage Trom New- casile to San Francisco was thut of the Briush ship: Aberfoyle, which .consumed 3 s, the dyerage passage being about days | Figuring on these possibilities it would | | not be surprising. if the' Swanhilda did | not make this port belore ten days more; and yet there is ‘a fair prospect that she | may” come sailing in at-any hour now aiong with the fleet, a part of which has already arrived from Newcastle, i The rainy. murky weather of yesterday greatly reduced the number of visitors to |'Meiggs wharf, where the Australian de- tectives, the United States officials and the representatives of the press form a little colony that for days has been in | readiness to go out at ‘a moment’snotice | in'the United States revenue cutter Rich- i&rd Rush and witness the capture of But- |ler: up ibie gha he dead man presented a ny.acress the bed. ew tne man and Coroner's Dep- miles between | Most torturing and disfiguring of itching, burning, skin and scalp humors is in- stantly relieved by a warm bath with Curr- | CURA S0AP, a single application of CUTICURA (ointment), the great skin cure, and a full dose of CuTicuRA RESOLVENT, greatest of blood purifiers and humor cures, when all else fails. e e THE SOOIALISTS | Will Meet: Noxt *unday in a New and Larger Hal ts held thelr regnlar Sunday | meeting in Crystal hall in Pythian Castle | y 4 last night. here was the vsual large | u lc“ra | attenaance. * ‘The speaker of the evening | | wasD.J. Eilis, whose topic was snnounced 1o be “Subsidies and Conditions.” |~ The Socialists subsequently went into | { discussions. of social theories and prob- | . o1 | lems which passed .off with interest and ALLING HAIR Pimply Fares, Babs Bleminet» | gratitication to all. F uel 2 Begiuning next Sunday night, the meet- e — |ings will be held at 35 Eddy street, owing Weak backs, painful kidneys, |to the extreme tax on the seating capacity sore lungs, uterine pains, muscu. | Of the.hall in which the meetings have SORE lar pains, rheumatism, relieveq | P¢en beld in the past. SPOTS quick as an electric flash by the e Collins’ Voltaic Electric Plasters i | The Eociali | world. POTTER DRUG AXD CHEM. B o o o Care Sut Rneam, free. SEND books, music or magazines to be bound to the bindery. Mysell‘Rollins, 22 Clay, * 'mo: | don’t | and share aiike, Fave s good-time. announces positively in which city the sence in such c: clear to attend the fight he is doing much | | fo the scéne of hostilities and the fact that one of the combataits is a local | other Californian voints. fac, assures.mo that he bas arranged Tor | | THEY WILL TRAVEL IN PRIVATE CARS Some of the Sports Who' Will See the Big Fight in Nevada. Special "Pullman Palace - Car Parties Are Already Being | Organiz:d. Dan Stoart Will, N:xt We.k, Select the C.ty Where Corb:tt anl F !z- simmons Are to Meet. | A month-and a‘balf distant is the date | when Jim Corbettand Robert Fitzsimmons will enter the ring somewhere in Nevada and pummel éach other for the deleciation | of a :few thousand people, the worla’s | hieavy-weight pugilisticchampionsbhipand | some fow thouysaud dollars: Stilltheevent | is_having its cffect rlready in the wusual | affairs. of the: community, just:as water gains speed as it nears-the fall. In the lobby of the Baldwin Hotel, | where the sports gather thickest, the big | fight holds tnare than jis share of the con- 1 I MISS MAY W. GIFFORD, Recently Married to W. B. Gay. Yesterday Afternoon Mr. Gay, Who Is in the County Jail Charged With Bigamy, Made Public a Signed Statement of His Romantic Career. versation as bgainst the probable per- formince of -the. thorougiibreds st the ow’sTaces. verybody “seems’ interested, muchinthe outcome “of “tiie fight, which is ageepted as too ne: rly.an even thing for muck - comment; but in_ the number of people who will aitend from this State. f'he ‘race-track contingent will “furhish at, Iéast 200: men and -boys willing to spenda their tiine and money ta.be in “the -sw of ‘pugilisni. . The full thousand, it is sur- | T1°¢° | wised, will "be' thads .up- by downtown TN sports, business men.and men of leisure. | b o It isexpected that 2000 more : will “leave from different patia of the State, making asim’ Yotal ‘o aboui 3900 man froni Cali- fornia’ Naving ‘enougn_surplus - coin 16 throw awa$~ about §100 each in a little fun: As’ Charley K E sterday; when asked jT ie would beé at thé ringside D1 course TIL b there;" who won't | 1) be ciosan lor the ringsite are Likely to spoit.. . His. world <will be there,. surely, | ;o' noan dacided. and will be left in “the {hie remalnider of she universe, a8 he'says. | hands of Mr. Stunrt, who is expected hers B o 5 ard tlie latter partof this week. How- NEam-goine: there. in a:special. train’| 0 A7 JUS AMEE PRILOLENS RERE, HOR e e tie added | yidign sor the -neeommodation of those Wewil have a. select. paiiy. -aud Will Lop o Sish. 10 see the fight, .and. whetlier sleepnd say abostd: our’ Pullmn. . That (5104 key “place in Rewio.or 1" Carson ths will” save ua‘from the’ discainforts of w | |23 1Hses Bidte I Reno.or I Berien A8 | anaty:- hotel.and of: the : which will not bé siy 06| criish and buetle (AL IS NECOSTIIY- g0 | [oose Finar, e T 8 puy e with -a-trip-on the f i s Lo pénzes of‘such a pool’is-ues, - share with plenty -of comfort, at a very reasonable figare.” irip wrll be; but we ca T 1 & to be clios: = ! Oy { Houseman, the sporting editor of the Chi- | ago Inter Ocean, has wired to say t a train of nine cars will leave from | not .o |th that city alo; **It is also well 10 Temember that llm‘ Jast is the most entire year, and this cir- | upled with the inherent at- ie contest will guarantee an month of M wretched. of cunistance, traction of ne. archin the th me LAGE - LACE CURTAINS! GURTALL purchased from the The above Curtains LIFE'S SECRETS iiflux of the belter class of sporting men N 1o the coa *The n country 1s, Preparations ded report of the elaborate aphic facil specially erected:for the-fi same principals -at Daijus,’ tame off, afforded accommodation for no Jess 1k Mr. Wheelock spoke very el ey, ally of the trom all the Eastern cities. visco s going to derive considerable pe- benetit from the co ity of these Eastern visitorswill | Bigamist Gay- Breaks His nos return to their homes without coming s0 I am ities of wha ) for. the an 53,000." te and San Fran- t, because | paper press throughout the informed, making 10 secure an-ex- and the tele: ver vity. happens een the whieh 2 i g climg Judge. Joe Marphy of the Odkland race- | ¥ W € track, ‘Chari¢s . Bacan. of the _Hoftman,:| ¢ iREFAt S B Biily Keunedy of.1he “Olympic - Cl State shotidd ‘be Callinan and -J; Voss'of Portland s S A b There et i O Eal b join different. nriva Ridnsnony, .| springs ‘there, ~both_ hot and:cold,” -he mI: inédy bas glreaqy secured his r6oms | ygged; “than I have éverseen in my. iife, Son, trusti plice in that cit: oss, Wwho is a bes er of Fiizsim: | | mons; arrived hiére a fow.doys ago to see | ( Brows-wrésueat the Olynipic - Club, He will ‘rémuyin.-liere until e securés: his berth on some one of.the private: trains: J.-8: Purdy,. the ex-railrond ‘mian’ and présent : grain speculator;: will" probabiy g that-the fight will take s | drrange an--excursion . party.’ Charles | Asnér -of ‘the Baldwin Hatel also. has something of ‘the Kind'in view, ‘But noth- e ing-decisive can . be done uritii Dab Siaart | battle w Harry ake place. Corbeit, the ‘brother ‘of Pompa- secure the best possible location in or ! | around Carson for the big fellow’s train- | y quarters. | Poiice Commissioner Moses A. Gunst, whose familiar face ringside of every fight worth witn in the past decade, will not attend the Corbett-Fitzsimmons miil. Mr. Gun: not in good health, and he pro Las been seen at the n: xt month. At present he is busy try to have the Legisi < bill allow ing officiais indefinite of ubsence without.pav instezd of the present law, | which provides a term of sixty days’ ab- | s on full pa But while Ganst does not see his way | 10 assist in seeing that California and this | City are well represented at the ring side. Iris thestr this week, and will immediately leave for East dour Jim, will leave here to-dsy soas to | by {and the weather in hot nor too cold; -but Simply parposes. Faining Jorbett and spectively hear C on'a iis City be! accompany Mr. Stuary to March Zsimmons will is neitheér too perfect. for 1 understand that train re- rson and Reno, though L'can’t say. which of them will go to €ar- d- which -to- Reriv. - Corbett close: engagement at Kansas City re zoing to-Nevada, na of the weelk. Among th is Rufu s. as: assa This is his first v be expresses himself as greatly "8 | with and interested in varied attraction e recent ‘arrivals 18- P Vassar of sar is the son of New . 1 shall Nevada at the | from Rufus B, ar of New York and a grandson of e celebrated founder of Vassar Colle to San Francisco and pleased its many and WEISMAN IS INSOLVENT. | Proprietor of the New Creamerie Not Able to Meet His Lebts. 0. Weisman, Creamerie restaurant, 725 Market street, | bas at Jast filed a petition in insolvency, aiter struggling against the tide as long as it was possible lor him to ao proprietor of the New Members of the Happersberger family seem to huve Tn speaking of the affair last evening hs: F. Hi Williaw K. Wheelock, the partner of Dan | Soms: ¥ Ha rt, saud: ©0. Otbe “There bas never been in the world of f,‘:,‘, 5“,(“,‘"‘ H sport an event of such mugnitnde, nor one | 455 calculated to inspire such widespread terest as the forthcoming contest. S 1cisco, owing to ber clnse proximity man, is | pre-eminently interested in the issie, and | | there cannot fail to be a large. attendance, both frot the City jtseliand from mauy Mose Gunst, i | According that Weisman has his rent for some time. 10 $31.410 40, assets $4000, considerably in- umbered. ANBORN, V owh to th Jepartm: Max Wagner and J 5, E. Whitney & Co. $900. it appears uot been able to pay His debts amount been iet in 52 50, E. creditors are: 10 the account .. . Picturcibuyers. will a private party of at least 100, and Lou | change a great convenienge. 2 P | o quite neat rsberger $9850, A. K. Hap- Happersberger arles Bar- . Clover ALL & Co: hve removed their Re- | tall Picture Department from thie second floor ¢ main floor, adjoining the Framing find the CHIEF JAILER ANDREW SATTLER in One of the New Uniforms Which Will Be Donned by Himself and the Officers of the County Jail on Broadway for the First Time Yesterday Morning. the | York, | who is a friend of Mr. Wneelock and pro- es to witness the fight for the cham- fore returning 1o the matropo- Silenice and Tells a Story Full of Romance. The “Young Lady” of a Marriage Bureau: Was ‘an Aged Woman. | He:: Was Bill Expected to - Pay for Her' Ex-Husband’s Tombstone. the OAKLAND QFFICE SAN FRANCISCO CALL:] 908 Bropdway, Jan. 3L | A strange and romantic mystery. sur- rounds ‘the past life of William B, Gay, who i3 now in the county jail eharged with bigam, Fiom the fifst it ‘has been apparent: to detectives and all whoconversed with “him | that he is a well-educated man, and no one was able to draw from him the history of | the past.- This afterticon he made public adocument that contains some remarkable and interesting statements. Gay declares that he comesof afamily that is influential palitically, and ‘that.-he | was . few years ago a ‘man of Wealth and | commereial standing, He still . refuses to | say where his parents are Jiving, as he de- clares it-would break their hearts did they know he was in distres About ten days ogo Gay was living in | Alameda with bLis wife, whom he married a short time ago. Without any warning a woman from Colorado entered his house, declared she was his wife and a little later caused his arrest for bigamy. Among his other troubles Gay tells of his surprise when tendered a bill for the headstone of his wife's previous hus- band.. Another amusing chapter is his description of the surprise he was treated to when he answered a ‘‘young lady's” matrimonial advertisement and found he bad accepted the provosal of a woman old ! enough to be his mother. | Gay’s strange tale, he says, would never | have been told bad it not beeu for the ! story of the lady from Colorado, which | was published some days ago. Here is Gay’s little romanc “Every man must look out for himself, and I should not have said a word in | | scl-defense had I not deemed it necessary {to speak ana defend myself from the statements of this womai from Colorado. It was in February or March of 1896 while I was engaged in business at Ben- son Mines, N. Y., that a copy of - the | Chicago World fell into my hands. It publishes a free correspandence column, and while looking over this_ columnone day Isaw the following peisonal: Wanted—Correspondernce wonian of xind and lovi must have mean sippi River; abje Mps. NELLIE V. by ‘a Christian g disposition; he and live West of the Missis- matrim N, W shington, Ind. *“In a spirit of fun I answered this ad, &nd received-a letter from the advertiser; |in .which she stated that her name was Mrs. Millié Edean, and that.her home was in- Pueblo, Colo., and -in "her next -letter she begged me to hasten to her at Wash- ington, Ind.; that she had been suddenly calied to Pueblo, and that she woula like to have the question settled before she went home. 1'aid not go, hawever, and our correspondence was kept up. She wrote very sweet and tender letters to me, and praised herself up so very much that I began to think she was a good Christian woman. She sent me references, but 1 placed so much confidence in her that I would not write to them. *‘We exchanged photographs; and her picture was very good and pleasing. It was _the picture of & young-looking woman. - Finally, however, her letters be- gan to assumeé a vulgarity of ' which I did not dream-her capatle, and, although we | were engaged to be married, I did not ap- prove the langnage. We were to have been married in the fore partof Septem- ber, but when I received those letters L became saspicious that all was not' right, and T did not write so often, although re- ceiving ore letter every day from her. Finally I'wrote'to her asking a postpone- ment of the marriage. _She reiused to consent to it for even a day, saying that I must fulfili my pronrise or it would be the worse for me. “Then came mote of th tender and loving letters until about the 20th of June, when one day word came to me that my last venture had failed, and the last cent 1 possessed in the world was gone. Ina moment of frenzy I at once telegraphed to Pueblo that I should leave for there the next morning. 1 must have been crazy, for ail I can remember was that 1 was escaplng from a piace where I had worked hard to live a true, honest and different designs. = At are BONA-FIDE Our customers are informed that we have manufacturer 1500 PAIRS ECRU NOTTINGHAM LACE CUR- TAINS and will offer them, commencing MONDAY, February 1st, at 1 ifl per Pair, measure 60 inches in width, are 3! yards long and come in 27 the price quoted they BARGAINS! & Country orders receive prompt attention. E@~ Goods delivered free in San Rafael,. Sausallto, Blithe= dale, Mill Valley, Oakland, Alameda and- Berkeiey. bad'in:the world. except some good nnd' true friends. ! “After a'veel’s travel I. reached ‘Pueblo, | and “horror of ‘hotrors, what a deception. Instesd of the comely young woman I ex- pected to-find I found instead an old woman, old enouch to be my mother. It made me heartsick. to look at her, but what ¢ould [ do? My money was gone and she had me"in her'power from that mo- ment. Ilived there from about the 26tn of Jine until. July 14,1896, when I went through the mockery of a marriage cere- mony with ner. That day -has been a mockery and a curse to me ever since. Not long after this bills were presented to me for payment, and among them was orie for $30 for a headstone which had been vlaced over her dead husband’s graye. Somehow people seemed to think that I was to pay all of these debts. After that I heard all kinds of storie: and later we separated. She was forever | 1sasing and beseeching me to get my life | insured until I became afraid to live with her. When. her first husband died she | obtained some life insurance which she | told me she spent in one year. “As for myself, I was wealthy at one time. I possessed over $50,000 worth of proverty, unincumbered, in an -Eastérn city, but lost it through the depression in the country and bad -investments' some three or four years-ago. She mortgaged | her household goods'two days after I ar- rived in Pueblo. “The reason she .left me was that 1| attempted’ to make her: little girl mind; | but she would let me have nothing to say | about her—not sven to send her to school. | I was born of respectable” parents, who | stood high in" society and also politically. | That F-do. not give the ‘name:of my former home is on account of my poor old | father;'who is a- paralytic. It would be the death of him." I Liave lived a Chri tian life for five or gix years, and this is the first time I was. eyer. arrestea or ac- | cused of doingz wrong in my lile. | ‘A< to the fuiure, when I get out of here | T'will lfve a-manly life and stick: to May. She is one'of .the nablest little women in | the couutry. I will spend the balanceot] my days in making bér happy.” { Gay’s second wife resides with Salva-| tionists named Knight in Alameda, and does not believe the story of the man she married as told by the lady from Colo- | rado. The Book of Job, i Ttalian Vermouth The seventh of a series of Sunday evening sermons on the Bible was delivered last even- | ing by the Rev. William Rader in the Third | Congreeational Church. Itwason ‘Ihe Book of Job,” which, the reverend gentlemsn de- | clared, belongs to the wisdom literature of the | Old Testament. Reviewing the book at| longth, the speaker said: “Job teaches the | Dossibility of disinterested goodness; of ¢ ing- ing to truth for its own sake. The Book of | Job teaches us to distinguish belween punish- men d discipline, between anger and love, | and that while we do not understand the ways | of the Almighty we should trpst and not- be | afraid.” .- JEWELRY store, 5 and 7 Third street, Teroved to | 303 Kearny siree: 1 A Presentation. | Edward J. Graves, who last Saturday sev. ered his connectio with Newman & Levison | us floor mauager. was presented with a| friendly and sppreciative ‘etler #nd a hand- some cane and umbrella by his former emplos- | ers. CASTORIA | For Infants and Children, The simile Christian life, but. where I had lostall I “oiClar 74 i | & C0. Direct importation, judi- cious buying, ample facili- |ties mean something with us. - We share -the benefit with you. S SPECIAL SAVING SALE. Monday—Tuesday— Wednesday Blend (Improved) Pasha Coffee 1b. 30c Other days 35¢. Eggs doz. 20¢ ‘Warranted all frech. Puree de foie Gras tin 2oc Other days 25c. ; Delicious for sand wiches. ‘A dainty evening bite. bot. 45¢ “Rich and aromatic. Other days Royans a la vatel Other days 20 Packed m pure olive oil truffie and pick.e: can 15c with 1-1b. tins ToC 2-1b. tins 20c Other days and 5 Young, tender, German Schnitf- bohuen Tins double the size ¥French tean tins, Belfast Ginger Aledoz. § Other days $165 doz. Bottled by Cochrane & Co., at Belfast, Ireland. Cranberries Other days 50c. String Beans gal 30c If you cannot order per- sonally use the mail or tele- phone. H. Nordman, Vice-Pres. 3ds” Nordman, Tr L. A.Berteling Pres. AL W, Kirk, Sec. 427 KEARNY STREET, Is the very best place to bave your eves examlasd nd fitted to glasses with instruments exclusively our oWn, Wwhose superiority has DOC ye: been equaled. \We have no rivals. We value our reputation; we guarantee satisfaction, and depend soiely upod the merits Of OUF WOrK 10F SUCCESS. COSMOPFPOLITAIN. Opposite . 100 _and 102 Fiftlist., Naa Francisco, he most select family hotel a the city. 'Board and room $1, 81 25 and $1 50 pec day, according to room.- Meals 25c. Kooms 503 and'76¢ a day. Free cohch 10 and from the po:ek LooK 10T the Coach Dbeariug the name Of -the Lo mopolitau Hotel - WAL' FAHEY, Propriewé