The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 17, 1897, Page 18

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16 THE SAN FRANC ISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1897. FAIR HEIRS RENIRT 10 NJONCTION The Harbor Commission En- joined From Storming North Beach. JUDGE SLACK MAKES THE ORDER. The Threatened War Will Now Result in Big Lawyers’ | Battle. RIVAL FORCES LAY DOWN TiEIR ARMNS, The Harbor Board Will Convene To- | Morrow Afternoon to Devise a Plan of Action. The Fair estate is now the aggressor in the fight that is pending between it and the Harbor Commissioners over the tide- 1and streets at North Beach. Instead of awaiting the onslanght of Colonel Chad- bourpe and his w ors from the water front, the representatives of the bonanza interests slipped quietly into court last evening, ana beiore the Commissioners knew what had happened they were con- fronted by an injunction preventing them from carrying out the threatened cam- paign of physical force. The battle will thus be fought out by the lawyers, while the water-front sweepers and Warren & | Maliey’s pile-drivers may lay down their arms and fraternize over the foaming steam. ‘While the Harbor Commissioners were yesterday afternoon discussing all of strategies to capture the foriress Nortt the attorneys for the the Fair estate were busy hy recital of protests against the threatened invasion of the submerged flats at the foot of D. tero street. Shortly aiter 5 o'ciock ~Garret | McEnern ppeared in Judge Slack’s court with a petition for an against the Harbor Commissi the officers of the Pacific Gas Improve- ment Company, restraining them from removin of the or material ircm the North Beach mudflats. It was a plain, civil zction in its nature, and by way of filling in a gap at the end the Fair people asked for -$20,000 damages from the oth ide. Judge Sisck at once is d ion, and the boonanza lawyers saw ty it that no time was lost in serving copies of it upon the enemy. | Colonel Chadbourne was found atdinner! in the grill-room, but the service of the order seemed to in no way disturb his | meal. Major Harney was discovered at midnight,and after that the Fair people went to bed happy, while Warren & Maliey hauled out the fires in the tugs and piledrivers at North Beach. Thus wasthe threatened war converted into a court squabble. The c aint hled by the Fair lawyers recital of their claims to title ide flats in the inlet extending Octavia to Baker street. By way of ning it is stated that 1in all the maps of the cily, including the Van Ness, Engineer’s and Humphrey’s maps, the in- let appears as subdivided into_streets in accordance with an act of the Legislature in 1855 author the city to aedicate these streets to the public. Atthough the lands within the inlet have been overflowe i by the waters of the bay, the complaint aeclares that the waters are not navigable for practical purposes, but constitute a submerged plat similar to that part of the city east and south of Webster without the line ot at executors of drawing up a leng h piles original h-water mark and within the line ot the present seawall and water- front line. The depth of the water on the territory on dispute is given as ranging from one to seven feet. The waters are declared to have never been used for navigable purposes except for barges of a very light draft. Accord- ing to the complaint the inlet, as a sub- merged flat, is a detriment to commerce and dangerous to vessels, whereas, if it was filled in according to the plans de- vised by the bonanza king, there would be provided a water front of over one mile in Jength which will be accessible to deep- water vesse!s, Warren & Malley bezan the work of filling in 1895, and the Fair estate has al- ready expended $150,000, according to the complaint. Then 1ollows a recital of various resolu- tions adopred by the Supervisors grant. ing permission to the Fair people to grade different portions of the streets in the tract. In conclusion the complaint reads: That by reason of the threats of the defendants 1t has been necessary for these plaintiffs 1o maia- tain a force for the protection of this property, and that tey will be obiiged te coutinue Lo maintain & force of men capble Of resisting the threaiened unlan fol usurpation aid exercise 0f power by the defensant officials, uid d and abetted by the indi- vidual and corpurate defendants. The defendants are accused of having stories published in the newspapers that tend to cast a cloud upon the Fair title to property worth $1,500,002. The complaint also declares that tne bonanza interests bave aiready been damaged to the extent of $20,000. Then fo!lows the petition for the re- straining crier, which is directed apainst the three Harbor Commissioners, Presi- dent Albert Miller of tue gas company and seversl John Does and Richard Roes, The twenty-four hours’ notica which the Commissioners ordered served upon the various representatives of the Fair estate isstill tosome extent a dormant docu- ment. The work of serving it upon the various representatives of the bonauza interests was intrusted by the board to Chief Whartinger Root, and that official has found that the work of a Deputy Bberiff is something of a game of legging, Some of the parties who should receive a copy of the summons seemed to have scattered like a flock of frightened quail. ‘W. B. Goodfellow and R. E. Carothers, two ol the executors of the Fair estate, were not discovered. Carothers has been in New York for two weeks and Goodfel- Jow had business out of town. Root was on the chase all day yesterday, but as far as actually accomplishing anything he might as well have remained on the water front. Of course the actual service of the order is a mere technicality. The Harbor Commissioners will hold a special meeting to-morrow afternoon to consider the new turn affairs have taken and atthe same time digest the opinions of the Attorney-Geueral anc Tirey L. Ford, the legal advi er of the board, which were filed with S:crelary Keegan yesterday. In some respects these opinions diverge from that o Fred 8. Stratton, the Commissioners are now somewuat at sea as to how they may proceed. A MASS-MEETING THAT FAILED. The Yellow Journal Tried to Get an Indorsement, but Went to People Who Were Fully Aware of the Examiner’s Peculiarities. This is a true story which will expl why the Cuban League of this city is in- dignant, Yellow journalism will be obliged to change its tactics. Once more, in its frantic struggles to cover its sins and its color under the cloak of charity, it has ripped the frail robe from the collar to hem. The ravelation is not pleasing, but it can hardly be ignored. 1i the Hearst and Hearstlings would be content to blow their own horns and sound to themselves the clattering cym- bals of praise, respectable people could get out of the way of the discord, but yel- low journalism’s scheme is to furnisn evervbody borns and wind ana inveigle all into blowine. It has been trying this trick upon a reputable local society—the Cuban League—noping to induce it to do some advertising for vellow journalism; but it bas failed, and there is nv way this time that it can pretend to have suc- ceeded, which makes the case much sadder, The Cuban League of this city wasin the days of its youth indorsed and aided by THE CaLL during the period when the yellow sheet gave no space to its affairs and reported nome of its meetings. Now that tail of the Journal and its understrappers in the lega! pro- fession having been bending all their ener- giex trying to induce the officers of the society to call a meeting to grow enthusi- astic over its conduct in freeing Miss Cis- neros, as described by itsell. Various persons have been induced to address the president in earnest terms recommending his speedy action in the caure of Cubsn freedom. Men never be- fore heard of, and men heard of too often, bave been summoned by the yellow news- paper and urged to do allin their power to awaken to action a body of men who were active for the cause of Cuba before the writers of the letters really knew that Cuba was in trouble. The following is a sample missive of such as are received daily by the local friends of Caba: SAN FRANCISCO, October 12, 1897. Mr. John H. Jones, Presudent of the Cuban League of San Fiancisco—DEAR Str: I have heard it suggested that a public meeting of citizens is 1o be called for the patriotic and laudable purpose of sending a word of hope and cheer to the Cuban patriots, who, follow- ing the sublime éxamvle of our foretathers, are suffering, struggling, fighting and dying for seli-government, for political freedom. I trust you will deem such & meeting proper and :t**‘k*itfitt* t*fitfifi*fiii*: WHEREAS, In the past we have alw found a stanch supporter and bold champion of the rights of the oppressed Cuban in the atterances of The San Francisco Call; therefore be it RESOLVED, That we, the Cuban League of California, hercby tender said newspaper its warmest thanks for its many able efforts on the side ot rights and freedom; and be it further RESOLVED, That the Cuban League of California will ever kindest memory the many good words fir our op- pressed patriots. * e e timely and be disposed, as president of the San Francisco branch of the Cuban League, to issue a call for the same. The universal applause which is being be- stowed on those Who were instrumental in rescuing Evangelina Cisneros, one of the victims of Spain’s oppression and cruelty, attests tnat the cause of freedom is dear to the heart of the liberty-loving world, as I rev- erently belfeve it is blessed and sustained by the approval of heaven. in the hour of the Cuban patriots’ heroic struggle let San Fran- cisca’s volce speak loud and clear in behalf of thoss principies for which this republic bear in e e e e e e ke e e e e e e e e ke e ek e ke e e PERPPRRRETTE R R TP TR stands. I have the honor to remain, very ruly yours, SAMUEL M. SHORTRIDGE. The Cuban League’s officers at once saw through the purpose of the yellow journal and its friends, and in spite of the almost tearful pleas of its reporters and other representatives, they declined to call a meetiug for the purpose of booming the Examiner. Although the sheet and its friends offered to pay all the expenses of the hall and the advertisements of the meeting the otficers of the league main- tained their dignity and declined to piay the part of fiddlers for yellow journalism. The accompanying resoiutions, adopted a few days ago, show that the Cuban League’s officers and members are fuily aware of the residence and occupation of their friends—not friends for revenue, but friends in the hour of need. Still, officers of the league continue to be approached from many directions’ in behalt of the propositions set forth in the letier of the yellow journalism’s new legal adjunct, but they have in a!l instances | refused to lend the nameof the society to the purposes of a faker. In fact, there is a distressing tendency to laugh at the plight of the newspaper which srrove madly to get up a mass- meeting in this city simultaneously with a New York demonstration. The spectacle of & newspaper whose energies are now devoted aimost solely to passing a hat among the people for crumbs of comfort, begging for certificates of 1ts greatness, and eager for any evidence that the masses look upon it as a veritable fetish, is re- garded as too pitiful to be amusing. Its dime museum methods and circus bill claims of boundless virtue may occasion- ally catch the unsophisticated even yet, but the members of the Cuban League, Wwho are known all over the United States | and in Cuba as true friends of the cause of | the little island, did not provose to rush to the aid of a pretender, or relieve it of a burden of woe it has deservedly acquired. RILEY POOL AND DRAW POKER ON THE GUNST PREMISES The Late Isaac Norton, Welburn's Cashier, Lost Big! Money in the Tes-Dollar Limit Game of the Baldwin Annex— A Dollar Limit Racket for Youngsters. POLICE SHOULD MAKE A RAID| The High-Ball Pool Under Com- missioner Gunst’s Cigar Store Is a Quick Per- centage Game, IS CHIEF LEES AFRAID OF WIS JoB? Nightly Exhibitions of Unspeakable Vice in a Cafe on Ellis Street Commissioners Alvord and Tobin Should Investigate. The ten-dollar limit poker game in the Baldwin annex, in which Police Commis- | sioner Gunst is commonly supposed to be interested along with Asher, is where Isaac Norton, the late cashier in the Inter- nal Revenue office under Coilector Wel- burn, lost his money. The hizh iosses in the game caused him to commit saicide. If Police Commissioner Alvord were running a big poker game in a building connected with the Bank of California there would be a great public scandal, and citizens would demand his resignation from the Board of Pulice Commissioners. | If Police Commissioner Tob.n were run- | ning a bigh-ball percentage game of Riley pool under the Hibernia Bank, represent- ative men and women of the city woula petition him to resigu at once from all share in the management of the police. These things are not expected of Com- missioners Tobin and Alvord. Apart from the moral aquestion involved, of which they have ready appreciation, they have regard for what is commonly termed the eternal fitness of things. It does not seem to shock thelcommunity at all that Police Commissioner Gunst per- mits a percentage game of Riley pool to be conducted day and night in the base- ment under his cigar-store at the cornerof Powelland Ellis streets. No oneis stunned to hear that a dollar-limit game of poker for youngsters is in full blast in the same baserment. The big $10-limit game in the Baldwin annex is for high rollers. Thelaw as interpreted by the courts permits the playing of poker, as it has been judicially classed as a game of skill. Poker and pool are not good for the poor and therich cannot stand too much indul- gence of the pleasure, but these gambling games are mild forms of vice compared with some of the scenes nighily enacted in the side-entrance places on Kilis street. In one place there are phases of vice that would put to shame anybody buta police- man. The place ought to have been raided and closed months ago, but the truth is, ola man Lees is afraid of his job. He may talk, for the pleasures of con- versation, about his fearless discharge of public duty, but if he was not afraid of provoking the hostility of one Police Commissioner he would raid the game of Riley pool in Gunst’'s basement and regu- late affairs in the cafe which can be reached from a side entrance on Eihs street. 1f Commissioners Alvord and Tobin do not believe that the town is being run wide open, let them investigate. Lot them inquire about the unspeakable ex- hibitions of human depravity ina place that makes some pretenses of respect- ability. The public impression is that tbei ultra-respectable and high-minded bank- ers on the Police Commission do not know what is going on in San Francisco. It begins to be a question of doubt whether the Chief of Police knows. Some people think that he has lost his old-time cunning and sagacity, while otbers fancy that he has lost his nerve, | and fears to incur the displeasure of a superior officer. According to the judgment of the sport- ing fraternity the town is opening out beautifully. the nickel-in-the-slot to $10-limit poker, can readily be obtained. What is now offered is only an index of wkat is prom- ised when the racing season opens. Whiic | Lees and Gunst are Jawsmithing the town is opening wider and wider The police impart the statement with a great flourish that there is not a game of faro running in thecity. If this state- ment is true the only deduction to be drawn therefrom cannot compete with the robbing devices in common THEIR SILVER WEDDING, Martin and Theresa Bauer Celebrate Their Twenty-fifth Auniversary. The upper apartments of the San Fran- cisco Turn Verein Hall were filled last evening, the occasion being the celebra tion of the silver wedding of Martin and | Theresa Bauer of 802 Hayes street. Twen- ty-five years ago this couple were married in Poughkeepsie, N. Y , and the fruits of the union are three sons—Otto 24 years, George 22 and William 20. Mr. Bauer is the manager of the Boesch Lamp Com- Any sort of a game, from | is that the faro dealer | . pany and he ana his family have a large circle of friends. There were 150 of these | who accented the invitationsand attended | the recepiion last evening. | _ The hall was beautifully decorated with | flowers, and the friendscame laden with | presents and the best of wishes for long | !life and prosperity bave lived ail of the-e years in peace and harmony. Emil E. Leise, the speaker of ’me German Free Thought Society, offi- ciated us masterof c:remonies ana his ad dress was witty and pleasing. Vocal music was furnished by the singing sec- tion of the San Francisco Turn Verein. After the preliminaries were over the guests were seated at a hanquet table, where everything thai wonld tempt the paiate was spread. The feast was accom- panied by toasts, songs and addre and at the conclusion the company enjoved a social dance until a late hour in the morn- ing. e ACCUSED OF TILL-TAPPING James Sademan, a Witness in the Dur- rant Trial, for the couple who Arrested on Two Charges. James Sademan, a boy 18 years of age, | was arrested yesterday on two charges of | petty larceny. He is accused of tapping the till in a restaurant on Mission street, near Twenty-first, about a week ago and | Friday and stealing $12. the thefts. the murders of Blanche Lamont Minnie Williams. Young Sademan was in the church at the time the body of a witnessat Durraat’s trial. ing a Salvation Army ba - AN SECTION. He was wear- when arrested. ‘ OESARI City and County Hospital | Cmsarian section, an operation that sults, was performed at the City and | County Hospital vesierday by Dr. K. W. Dualey, the resident physician. It was performed upon Nellie Kelly of 214 Fourth street, a congenital eripple | St:e cailed at the hospital about noon and said she had been sick for three days. Dr. Dudley warned her of the critical nature of the operation, but she consented to undergo it. The operation was successful, and it was hoped that the woman would live, but she expired in about three hours. The child is alive, healthy and strong. - Father Yorke’s Ghosts. The first lecture in the series on ‘‘Ghosts"” the Rev. Peter C. Yorke will be given io- morrow evening Metropolitan Templ “Ghosts in General” evening. The following musical selections will be rendered: Vocal solo, ‘“‘Ave Maria’ (Peniatonic), Roeckel, by Madame Ellen Cour- | sen Roeckel; chorus, “Halleiujah” (new), ! Roeckel; 'adies’ choral, under the dircction of Maaame Roeckel. A Delicate Operation Performed at the | | is very rarely attended with successful re- | stealing $28, and doing the same thing |judgment was correct. He conlessed to [ 10 procuring them. Minnie Williams was discovered, and was | MR, PHELAN WOULD NOT PURCHASE How. the Mayor Lost the Opportunity of a Lifetime. ART TREASURES FOR A SONG. Critics Who Declared Paintings by Great Masters to Be Spurious. WORTH FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. An Art Firm Bought the Pictures for Only Five Hundred Dollars. In his anxiety to avoid buying a “gold brick” Mayor Phelan lost the opportunity of a lifetime a few weeks ago of purchas- ing two magnificent pictures that wou'd have made him the envy of local patrons of art. During J. W. Winans' lifetime he was a collector of rare books and choice paint- ings. In the year 1854, when Jerome Bonaparte was about te return to France | after a period of exile, he sold his numer- ous pictures, the result of years of collect- ing, at public auction in New York. Mr. Winans happened to be present on the oc- casion and realizing their value purchased two of them, one by L. J. David entitled “The Last Interview With the Con- demned,’”” and *‘Marius at Carthage,”’ by Le Brun, aud brought them to his Cali- fornia bome during the next year. Mrs. Winans, after her husband’s death, found it neces-ary to sell and mortgage many of the works of art her husband had been accumulating for years. Knowing of Mayor Phelan’s love ot the beautifal she invited him to see the pictures, with a view of seiling some of them to zim. Mr. Pnelan, doubting his ability as a connois- seur, asked several of his friends who are proficient in that line to pass judgment upon them. They did so, but all were like Thomas, for they doubted their genuineness. The Mayor was cffered them for $500, but he steadfastiy refused to consider tne proposition vecause his artistic friends hrd frightened him. Messrs. Gump hearing about the trans- action went 10 see them and recognized at once their value, but to be sure they sent a cablegram to Paris and found that their They lost no time Mrs. Winan in the meantime had found among some old Sademan’s father was sexton of the | belongings the papers which proved their Emmanuel Baptist Church at the time of | authenticity. ana | The European critics sawthat they are worih $50,000. The picture by David is over 100 years old, while that of Le Brun was painted about 250 years ago. The former represents & woman con- soling a man, it being her last visit to the condemned. The features are perfect, the hands being particularly lifelike, and the | whole picture true to nature. | ou the belated overland. { Bellamy, J. D. W . | Henry Lehr of Baltimore. The :arty left New- will be the subject of the | The second picture is founded on the ancient story of Marius. When the Lic- tor of Sextillius came to order him from Carthage, he being banished from Rome, be sent toth man’s master the followin message: “Tel! Sextillius thatyou have seen Caius Marius sitting on the " ruins of Carthage.” There are nine figures in this painting, that of the Lictor and Marius being in the fo eground. In the background of ihe picture is a headless statue, whict has been favorably compared. to *“The Winged Vic ory"” in the Louvre. Both of the pictures are cracked with age, the back of *“Marius at Carthage’ being mended with a damask table-cloth. A New York Society Party Arrives Stuyvesant Fish, president of the Illinois Central Railroad, arrived in the city last night Accompanying him Miss Pomeroy, Dr. Russel Cutting of New York and are Mrs. Fich, port & week ago, stopping & nightin Chicago and one in 8alt Lake City. The trip is one for pleasure only, snd the presence of the Santa Fe officials in’ the city has nothing to do with the visit of Mr. Fiah. Aiter remaining three or four days the party will return East by way of the Yosemite. “THE LAST INTERVIEW,” the Valuable Picture Which Critics Said Was Worthless. NEW TO-DAY—DRY GOODS Napkins! Napkins! Extra Values! We announce the arrival this week of SEVEN CASES TABLE DAMASK NAPKINS from the best Irish and German manufacturers, thereby enabling us to offer the largest and most complete stock of Napkins of every description ever shown in this city. Extra Special! 350 dozen BLEACHED DAMASK DINNER NAPKINS (Irish manufacture), pure linen— $1.50 Dozen. Extra Special! 400 dozen BLEACHED SATIN DAMASK DIN- NER NAPKINS (German manufacture)— $3.OO Dozen. Hotels, boarding-houses and housekeepers generally should inspect these bargains. They are the cheapest Napkins ever offered by us in large quantities. TELEFPHONE GRANT 124, Clrmots RPORAY, Qflt&sz, < 11, 1138, 119, 117, 119, 121 POST Slbhkad POLLUTED BY FOUL ODORS Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever and Malaria Are Prevalent. Something Oucht to Be Done Toward Abolishing the Nuisance. Residents of Precita Valley Bitterly Denounce the Disease-Laden Swamps. Tbe Precita Valley Improvement Club is not going to be content with holding indignation meetings and the indulgence in small talk by its members. They are going to give utterance to their grievances so they wi'l be heard by those in whose power it is to abolish the nuisances com- plained of, and the residents of Precita Valley say they are not going to quit un- til the fever and disease breeding swamps in their midst have been filled in and the defective sewerage repaired. John T. Graham, doing business at the corner of Precita avenue and Alabama street, said last night: “Our sewerage out here is something terrible. Diph- theria and scarlet fever have been preva- lent in this locality all summer, and we are liable to have an epidemic atany time. On each side of Army street, from Mission to the San Bruno road, there are great swamps and low lands half covered with water and filth from which come the foulest of stenches. The Army-street sewer is large enougn to carry off all the drainage of the surrounding country, but the trouble is that the side sewers do not all connect with the main one. Take, for instance, the sewer from the City and County Hospital, which runs down Po- trero avenue. It does not come within a block of the Army-street sewer, and all the filth from the sewer, as well as from the Magdalen Asylum, is dumped into one of these swamps, where it putrifies, and in sum- mer gives torth the vilest imaginable odor. All the drainage from the Columbia School also comes into the marsh, which is & menace to "he health of every resi- dent of this part of San Francisco. " Then Bernal Park is one of the worst cesspools 1 ever saw. It1strom sevenieen to twenty feet below the street, and is fiiled most of the time with a slimy ooze, anda is enough to give a man the ague to ook at it. “In the winter time this hole is filled with water, and it is only a matter of good fortune that several of our children have not already been drowned in it. We have petitioned the Supervisors at different times, and before the late trouble and aypointment of the new board they seemed disposed to do something for ns, We are hopeful, now that it has been de. cided they are to remain in office. that something will be done for us. We all commend the action of THE CALL, and are very grateful for the assistunce 1t bas ren- dered us.” Joun E. O'Brien of 3219 Harrison street, secretary of the club, also commended the s'and THE CALL had taken and char- acterized the condition of affairs at pres- ent existing in Precita Valley as out- | | i rageous. Said he: “We pav taxes as well as the citizens of other portions of the city, and it doesn’t seem right that we should be obliged to have this nuisance at our door-yards.” J. Waters of 3278 Harrison street con- firmed the story toid in yesterday’s CAvLL of the practice of Italian fruit and vege- table peddlers of gathering watercress from these disease-laden swamps, and said that he had often seen them gathe ing the stuff at an early hour. R. Stewart of Twenty-fifth and Florida, also a member of the club, and Mrs. Ann Desmond ot 1614 Alabama street, were all bitter in their denunciation of the exis ing condition of affairs, as was also J. W Powers, doing business at the corner of Precita avenue and Folsom street. J. B. Vizzard, vice-president of the club, said that many cattle had been pastured in the swamp on the north side of Army street, between Alabama and the San Bruno road. Said he: ‘‘Life is almost un- bearable here in the summer time. These swamps are full of putrid filth and water. The Bryant-street sewer, between Twanty- sixth and Army, which is a wooden affa; isin a terrible condition. “It is leaky and full of holes and the slime and filth escape and fall to the marsh below, while the Army-street sewer at the inlersection of San Bruno avenue empties right on to the flat of islais Creek, by the side of a bighway traversed every day by thousands of people. We have pe- titioned for its removal and are hopaful our petition will be recognized. Tug CALL is doing great work for us—betier than any of the other papers—and we are duly thankful.”” A committee has been appointed to af tend the next meeting of the Board Supervisors and urge action on the matter, 7 hreatened With a Suit. At the meeting of the City Hall Commission= ers yesterday a communication from John L. n attorney, was read, threatening a ainst the commission unless a royalty 18 paid on the Free Library elevator. Boone claims that the elevator is an infringement on the Hinkle patent and that his clients, the owners of tLe invention, are eutitled to $200 for the use of the pateni. The letter was re- ferred to the contractors and the Library truse tees. e e As fasters the sect of Jains, in India, are far ahead of all rivals. Fastsof from thirty to forty days are very common, and once a year they are said to abstain from food for seventy-five days. NEW TO-DAY. IT’S NOT ONLY WHAT YOU SEE HERE. WE CARRY EVERYTHING. THIS RANGE FURNITURE. CARPETS. BEDDING. SHOWCASES. COUNTERS. ¢/ BARS. CASH OR EASY TERMS. 2 ACRES OF FLOOR SPACE PACKES J. NOONAN 1017-1019-1021-1023 Mission St. 516-518-520-522 Minna St. Above Sixth, Telephone, South 14, Open Evenings. ;

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