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6 THE SAN FRANC1 CcCO C MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1897 LOST 70 SIGAT 0N A WILD SEA Probable Disaster to a| Schooner Off Gos- | chen Island. | { | S i Diszppears Suddenly While a Terrific Storm lIs 1 Raging. Belleved to Be the Janus, Carrying | Gold-Seekers to Cop=- per River. i cial Dispatch to THE CALL | PORT TOWXNSEND, Oct. 31.—The fish I hooner Pilot returned to Port Town- from an unlucky vovage to the ha it banks of Southeastern Alaska, | crew of four men having been on short tions for two weeks, subsisting on quar- r-rations for the past eipht days. The left Port wnsend eight weeks ago, ee weeks’ provisions on board, but contrary winds from that time Fair su et wit ntil she arrived home to-dav. cess was had on the halibut banks, 11,000 ds being i ter start the Pilot putn Lsla re there is a small store, and a #mall amount 1S was p ased. Passin Entrance three weeks ago countered, and Johmnson the t his little craft never reach .For twenty- s the Pilot stood in the storm h bare poles and was tossed about like rovi rough Dixon terrible storm was port. = a chip. When the storm was first breaking Captain Johnson sighted a little schooner wward with the American She appeared to be wanting but gave no further indication Love nearer, and Capt stood off. The next mo 1ad abated somewhat and r was notin sight. At en again and several times oon. n the evening the storm broke out newec gor, and every wave reatened to send the cratt to destruction. The othe er was 1n sight until re disappeared suddenly, considers the the other schoon oon she was ch , when hnson nst her. ime could he distinguish her several men were seen on her description answers that soner Jenus, which left here on with a party of twelve C ait in distress, which 1 whether or not it was aze the Pilot agai N and the stock of pro- was practically exhausted. The became spoiled and had to be bard, the men having noth- to eat but short rations of bread. VETERAN ENGINEZR BEAD. visions Passing of Fowler Fope, Who Handled the Throttle on the Famous Fowle: ia since 1861, and of 1874, died at 5 o Pope was a locomotive en- s working days. He handled t engine from San Francisco Jose, and was one of the first pas- gi s of that1oad. He was en- famous *‘Betsy Jane,”’ the | n between Watsonville and was engineer on the tion train in the building of the | tween here and Felton. since the World’s Fair, ere he had an attack of la grippe, from | ch he never recovered. He leaves a widow and one son, Norris Pope, a stu- | dent at Stanford. Sy mmes WATEK FOR MSALINAS VALLEY. | Work on an Extencive Irrigation System Will Soon Be Bagun. MONTEREY, Oct. 31.—The Salinas Val- Company bas at last succeeded £ right of way for its irrigation m King City to Monterey, a dis- nce of seventy miles, and will at once commence the construction. The com- y provoses 1o tap three streams—the linas River, Arroyo Seco and San Lo- sufficient water to re section through which rea of about 150 000 acres. estimated cost of the system of 1t §600,000, and employment will bz g.ven 10 large numbers of men in constructing it. The section through b the ditches will run is one of the richest of this portion of the State, and be greatly enrichea by the constant ply of wa gvmmmvmmmmm'mnrwrnihmr AMOUS IN FOODS ..« DOMESTIC SCIENCE. «ARLINGTON HEIGHT ARMAMAMAMAMAMAMAAUALANAHANANAMANAUAI R CAMAVANALATAVALALI Food Coffee to give it a bitter or In the desperate attempts of Drugs are used in imitation of Postum Cereal take the public money thsy resort to ingredients that are harmful to the human stomach. N THE CLOTCH OF AN ABDUCTOR [ Santa Rosa’s Mysterious Criminal Again at Work. Attempts to Carry Off Young Daughter of J. C. Martin. Screams of the Child Attract Her Father and the Culprit Makes His Escape. Epecial Dispatch to THE CALL SANTA ROSA, Oct. whose mysterious work has struck terror into the hearts of many BSanta Rosa | mothers during the past few weeks made last night, | his presence known again when he attempted to abduct Charlotte, the 14-year-old daughter of J. C. Martin, a prosperous carpenter and builder of this city, who resides on Riley street. Lita and Charlotte, Martin’s two daugh- ters, went from the house last night into the back yard to getsome wood. After they b been out a few moments Martiu and his wife heard both girls scream in a terrified manner. Rushing to the coor, Martin saw a tall man pursuing the elder of the two girls, both of whom were run- ning toward the houve. He had snatched a shawl from her shoulders and was en- | deavoring to throw it over her head as he ran. As soon as the mysterious individual saw the father of the girls he turned and ran ip another direction, pursued by Mar- tin. Owing to the darkness it wes impos- sible to catch the cuiprit, but from the description given 1t is believed that he is the same man who has atrackea two women on the public streets during the past week. VICTORY ASSURED 10 REPUBLIGANS Sacramento Citizans Figuring on the Size of Land’s Plurality. Special Dispatch to THE CAL SACRAMENTO, Oct. 31.—The *‘rodeo” has commenced and the political “‘round up’’ promises to be an interesting one. But one more day is left for those whose scattered votes must now be segregated from the rest and the result of their month’s labor ascertained. Here, there and everywhere promises have been made, pledges of support given and an eternal fidelity sworn. When Tuesday comes the | integrity of these pledges and promises will bave their test—and how few will stand ! Said a candidate to THe CALL correspon- dent last night: *If I am not elected there are more Ananiases in my ward than in all the rest of the world.”” He will find that to be so, as his hopes are about as forlorn as those of Mr. Stepheu’s. William Land, at the head of the ticket, will sweep the town, and in the wake of his victory will come the balance f§of the Republican ticket to a man. The t at the Capital City this year presents a phase differing in many re- spects from those in vears gone by. In the first place, the Republicans o! the city are without a single breath of discon- tent, and there 1s not a wrangle in any ward. The fact that Sacramento County, | at one time the tanner Republican county of California, fell last year into the hands of the Populists, has awakened many an old Republican to the necessity of a re- demption. That, taken in connection with the results which have flowed from Washin ton since McKinley went in, has brought many a wanderer back to the fold. On the other hand, to the utter amaze- ment of old Sacramentans, there is not a paper published in the town that is not standing up for the stanaard-bearer of the Republican ticket. The good old days when every nominee of that party was | elected are coming back, and Sacramento will again take her place among the prozressive, banner countias of the State. The Republican candidates have made a quiet, gentlemanly, yainstaking canvass. Not a single one of them has engaged in versonal ribaldry or permitted an advo- cacy of his cause at the expense of an- other mar’s good name or reputation. There has not been a breath of scandal connected with the name of a single gen- tleman on the Republican ticket. There is not one af them who would shrink from any light that might be thrown upon | his private or public lite. It is a clean ticket of clean men, and the future of Sacramento is as bright under the man- agement of such men as the future of the nation is bright under the control of the present administration. The question now in Sacramento is, What will be the majority for the Repubii- | can ticket? the | —The tndividual | (OXYTUBERGOLIN - FOR TRE PR | Great Philanthropic Scheme | Planned by Rich Men. | | | Chicago's Department of Health | Makes Eager Inquiry About the Discovery. | | | | Dr. Rirschfelder's Remedy Is . Being Tested in Hospitals-of Paris and Brussels, | Dr. Hirschfelder’s oxytuberculin is, in | the not very distant future, to be given free to victims of consumption all over the United States who may be too poor to buy it. This is a remarkable scheme of benevo- lence in the line of giving medical aid to suifering humanity. Its only likeness is the action of the Staie Board of Health of California, and some similar boards, in se- curing for distribution, free if necessary, supplies of anti-toxin, the great con- queror of diptheria. Thedetails of this philanthropic plan are not ready to give out, and they are | not even worked out, but it is known that men of large means, who have acquired full faith in the efficacy of oxytuberculin have decided to see that there shall be no victim of the dread tuberculosis so poor that he may not have any salvation that there may be for him in the San Francisco discovery about which the whole world 1s talking and about which doctors are clashing, ‘as doctors generally do. Dr. L. C. Lane, president of Cooper | Medical College and founder of the Lane Hospital, is one of the active planners of TROUBLE this interesting enterprise. He yvesterday confirmed the repori, put said that it | would be premature to now give any de- | tailed information. “An enterprise of that sort is planned and will undoubtedly be carried out,” he said, “but it is too early to say anything about it yet or even when it will be done. “I have complete faith in oxytubercualin, | especially if used in the first and second | stages of the disease. I have sentseveral | | patients to Dr. Hirschtelder to be treated | by him,and have watched the cases until cured. I havea patient in my office now that I am going to send to him. Did you ever see the tubercle bacilli under a mi- croscope? I have some in here from the sputum of this patient.”” An assistant had been exploring a freshly prepared slide in the process of diagnosing the case, and a look througn the powerful microscope at once showed a little colony of the bacilli bunched to- | gether in the field of vision, ana colored red by the staining fluid, which they alone | would absorb It was positive proof of | tuberculosis in the victim who is to join ‘ the patients into whose bac! Hirsch- | felder is daily injecting oxytuberculin. | The department of heaith of Chicago, | through Acting Commissioner of Health F. W. Reilly, hes made an eager inquiry | here about oyxtuberculin, asking for a full report on it and how it may be ob- tained and at what prices. Dr. Reilly | writes that from 2200 to 2500 people die in | Chicago annually of consumption, and tbat it i« the duty of this department to | | investigate any method which promises, | prima facie, to reduce the mortality in the | degree that antitoxin has reduced our diphtheria mortality.” | Since the publication a week ago of the latest established results, comprising sixteen cured and marv “much im- proved,”’ the interest in oxytuberculin has | become widespread. It is much discussed | in Eastern papers, and a flood of inquiries has begun to arrive addressed to various | physicians here as well as to Dr. Hirsch- felder. Dr. Hirschfelder maintains a dignified | silence in the face of the ridicule ana op- | position that come from some other doc- tors, and his friends make little reply, | saying that the hostility comes from men who have never investigated it at all, that it was to be expected, and that time will prove its worth or its failure. Tne charge that Dr. Hirschfelder is | making it a commercial fake is the most | absurd of all,” said one of the faculty of | Cooper Medical Collegs yesterday. He | has in repeated publieations given every | | detail of its preparation to the medical | world, and while with the success he has attained with it he could easily have a| rich monopoly of oxytuberculin, he has made it a giit to humanity, for he has given every detail of its preparation and use. Dr. Koch has never revealed all the details of the manufacture of his tubercu- | lin, and it is sold through agencies of a | monopoly at $3 for about a teaspoonful. | Oxytuberculin is now being thoroughly | tested in Paris, Brussels and elsewhere, | and reports from there will b» unblased.” | e e e | | | | | | | Strack With a Bill J. W. Blunden, an architect, was arrested early yesterday morning on a charge of s8- sault with a deaaly weapon. He was playing billiards in the saloon, 12 Mason street, when ne had a dispute_with W. L. Horton, living at 24 Mason street, and struck Horton in the face with a billiard cue. Horton had a con- tusion on his face dre<sed at the Receiving Hoepital. Blunden was released yesterday morning by Judge Coflan on his own recog- nizance. FOOD COFFEE. e *l am having a delightful time with it (Postum) personally ; had two cups of it for breakfast, and have recently converted a musical friend who said ‘I will not even try cereal coffee.’ spenft several days with mes and DID drink Postum, and when she went home ordered some for herself. It is ver ‘“*MARIAN A. McBRIDE. S, MASS.” DD coffee taste. “ and the words "I counterfeiters to grades of Java. AORUARTRRATUMALTRMLUMAATAOEE ST BRI AT LTI T B At b L A R e All genuine packages of Postum, the absolutely - pure and healthful cereal coffee, have red seals ‘When boiled FULL fifteen minutes after the boiling point is reached it tastes like the better S But she y fine, we think. t Makes Red Blood " thereon. UGB LM ik | demnation. i board 15 IN THE SISTEN Maledictions From Thoughtless as Food for Quivering Nerves, 100 FEW OPERATORS EMPLOYED. Annoyances Caused by the In- novation of the Party Line Scheme. PETTY [MANAGERS IN KINGLY ROLE. Individual COases of Harshness and Spitework—Why Subscribers Make Complaint. There are individual instances of op- pression that have aroused people to pro- test and action; action that placed the | victims of cruelty and persecution upon the pedestal of popularity, and con- clusively demonstrated that only a little publicitv is necessary to fan the spark of human sympathy into a strong and vigor- ous flame. Right herein thiscity existsan industrial evil that would, were the whole truth known, draw down upon the heads of those in authority the severest con- It is the bondage in which are placed the female employes of the telephone system. Not only is suffering caused the opera- tors by this system, worthy of perpetua- tion only under the reign of a Manchurian dynasty, but the public is forced to put up with annoyances well nigh unbearable. They pay for a service they do not get in many cases at all, and pay well at that. In other instances the progress of their business is retarded and their own per- sonal convenience and comfort made sub- | sidiary to the desire of a corporation to | lessen in some degree the expenses of their pursuit, monopolistic though it be. In a nutshell, the cause of this existing evil—detrimental to the health and nerves of the operators and a prolific sourcs of the third commandment being so often broken into smithereens—is tha fact that a few eirls are expected to do the work of | a multitude ior an insufficient remunera- tion. Yet if they fail in their task, make some trivial biunder, and some |etly manager discovers the fact, grievously are they made to pay the penalty. The principal oflices of the corportion are the Main office, thé Kast oftice, the West office, the South cflice, the Mission office ana Grant ottice. All these are kevt open day and night—that is, operators are kept on duty at them constantly. A larger force by far is maintained during the davtime 'han at nightat them all, After 9 or 9:30 o'clock—the «:me varies with the office—one pirl is expected to answer all the subscr:bers of the Mission office and two of those of the other branches, except the Grant office, where a boy is kept on account of the fact that it is oven to subscribers all night. From 9 or 9:30 ». M. until nearly mid- night these girls are kept constantly on their feet, running from oue end of their to the other in order to make switches. Someiimes so many of the in- dicators fall at one time that a few min- utes elapse before asubscriberis answered. Then there is a *“kick’’ coming and per- haps a threat to call up the chief operator and report the poor ‘hello-girl.” No maiter whether she is to blame or not, if several of these complaints are made the girl is fined by bein. laid off or forced to work overtime by some pelty manager. Not long az0 one of the girlsin a branch office fell ill and sent word to the mansger of that branch she could not come to work. He ordered her to do it anyhow. Shedid so and was a few minutes late. The manager gave her nine hours over- | time, despiie the fact of nerillness. Yet| this same manager, who used to be a com- mon “switchboard man,” and 18 accused | of petting a bad case of ‘‘swelled head” | over his promotion, is also accused of | other things, which, 1f known would | cause him to lose his position instantly, | But the girls keep these facts to them- selves, airaid of complaint and summary dismissal if it were known they had com- plained to their friends. | Another girl, consiaered one of the best | operators on the sysiem, incurred the dis- pleasure of tha same tyrant, who had once | attempled undue familiarity with ber and been verbally castizated. He proceeded to encourare herin talking to certain of her subscribers when che was idle as & means of amusement, though he well knew she had never neglected her board while so doing. Next came a complaint and her dismissal, with that of her as sistant, Then there is the *party line” nuisancs, for which the girls are in no wise to blame. That is an innovation ot the company. In aparty line there are many subscribers on the same circuit and if one of them happens to be using the ’phone the othiers have to wait. 1t is not to bs wondered at that subscribers lose their tempers when they lirt the trans- mitier off the "hook and fina some youthful emulator of Romeo lisping in dulcet strain to his Juliet, the wire suppiving a modern subsiitute for the trailing ivy of the balcony, and both lling to permit a busy man to use ine for a commercial purvose. In- stances are plentifnl where oniy one tele- phone of a party line could be reached lateat night for a person wishing to call up a physician in a hurry being forced to lose valuable time in hunting another one because those using the line refused 10 re- linquish it. Of course, keeping a sufficient force of girls at work could not obviate the incon- veniences of the party iine—that would require such a:radical measurs as total abolition—but it would give subscribers something like the service for which they pay, would doaway with a prolific source of profanity and vulgarity, would insure prompt service in the commercial and meuical world, and would reiieve a large number of girls, sometimes the sole sup- port of a family, of worry, pain and al- mOSL Nervous prostration. A Bicyclist Injured. E. Goldberg, 531 Natoma street, was coasting down the hill ou Fulionstreet yesterday after- noon on his bicye'e, when he lost control over the machine. At ths corner of Steiner street the bicycle struck the curbstone and threw Goldberg with great force against a wooden feuce. His nose was fractured and his lips and left arm were badly cut. Dr. Fitzgibbon dressed his wounds at the Receiving Hospital. The bicycle was smashed into pieces. A Musical Evening. A concert will be given by the Irving Insti- tute Mandolin Ciub on Wednesday evening, November 3, in the school hall, corner of Va- lencia ana Hill streets. A first-class programme has been arranged, and a pleasant time is ex- pected. | them nearly twenty minutes to get to the | | debt and declined to go. | see the name of . ihe club disgraced. | feet and offered 10 bet that it was not | pirformances are permitted. | WHALE BLOWS NEAR SWIMMER High Diving, Swimming Race and a Capsizing at the Cliff. ‘ | | Schulte Claims the World's' Record Over Baker, the High Diver. | | | Reckless Feats in the Surf Without a Lifeboat Lannched During the Contests. There was a great deal of amusement at the Cliff House yesterday afternoon. It was advertised that there would bea high dive and a swimming match, but nobody foresaw that a swimmer would be pursued by a large whale, caught in a dangerous | eddy, and finally driven to seek the| sheiter of a rock over which the surf broke with thunderous roar. Such was the case, | however, and it looked at one time as if | R. B. Cornell, who had these strange ad. | ventures, wouid perish in the waves before | the lite-saving crew could reach him. Tne chief event advertised was a bigh | dive; It was billed that A. B. Baker, the world’s champion high diver, would dive | 125 feet from a plank suspended from the | veranda of the Cliff House and swim | around the seal rocks with other swim- mers. He did not dive, however, and the leap was made by O. Schulte of tne club. | Baker claimed he did not dive because he was not sure of his money, but Schulte and his friends haveannounced that they will claim the world’s championship *be- | cause Baker had cold feet and threw up' the sponge.”’ 1t was long after 3 o'clock when Schulte leaped from the springboard in front of | the upper windows of the Ciiff House. A | shout went up from the muititude when | it was seen that ne came up all right, | swimming vigorously around the rocks, accompanied by balf a dozen swimmers and a number of seals. Cornell undertook to lower hi min- ute record around the seal rocks. He went over half tae distance, and would have | finished far ahead of his other swim but | for the fact that he was caugat in an eddy that comapletely baffled his progress. He | made no headway whatever, whereupon he became quite exhausted and began to signal for help. No one seemed to under- stand his meaning, most of the muititude imagining that he was waving his hands | because he was having a good time. | About this time a monster whale spouted near him, and he took fright, thinking he was pursued by a shark. Finally he siarted for a rock and some one familiar with signals of distress tele- vhoned for the life-saving crew. It took rock, as they had much difficulty in lauoching. When within about a hun- dred feet of the rock Cornell swam fo the boat, while the crowd cheered. In at-| tempting to get ashore the lifeboat cap- sizad and atl were thoroughly soaked while she was righting herself. Old swim- | mers said it was a reckless thing to have no boats in the water during the contests. There was an exciting swim of 700 yards along the beach. The following entered the race: George Luacoste, A. McBinne R. Danl, F. Burnett, R. B. Cornell, F Durant, d~ McClearnon, A. H. Hanton, Joe Phillipsand Mr. Wilmot. Lacoste won the race in 914 minutes, with Wilmot sec- ond and Hanton third.. The third man came in in twelve minutes. ‘Ihere was a great deal of delay and dis- puting over the diving. When it came to the scratch Baker claimed that he saw no ready money and that he was not going to dive for his health. The manager of the event said the money was secur., but Baker would not zccept his word for the It was then that Schulte stepped up and said he would not I make the dive if I die for1t,” he said, and | at once tripped up o the veranda and | made the leap to the great satisfaction of | the thousands assembled. Baker after- | ward sa'd the distance was but eighty-six | miore, but Schulte and his friends said the distance was all they had billed it, and on that showing they claimed that Schulte had won the world’s championship for highdiving. Schulte’s highest dive before this was fifty-1wo feet in the Sutro baths. Two Additional Concarts. By special request Mr. and Mrs. Henschel, the English vocalists, will give two more recit- als in ‘the Y. M. C. A. building Tuesday and Thursday of this we- at3:30 p. M. The best numbers in the repertoire will be rendered. B et In St. Petersburg no outdoor musical | Because it is the only pure and | fresh Vanilla Chocolate sold on the | Pacific Coast you want it for your table drink-—- e e Because it is so deliciously. mellow | | and free from any acrid taste, your | | cook will find it far superior to any | premium or unsweetened choeo-1 {1ate. 30cIb. ‘ To acquaint you with its merits |a package given with each purchase | ‘of GHIRARDELLI'S Cocoa. DR. MCNULTY. "HIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLL Spevialist cures Private,Nervous,Blood and Skin cured at Home. Terms reasonable. Hours, 9 to3 daily:6:30 t08.30 ev'gs. Sundays, 10{p12. Consulta- tionTree and sacredly confidential. Call oraddress P. ROSCOE McNULTY., M. D., 26} Kearny Street. San Francisco. Cal | OUTSIDE NEW TO-DAY. CITY OF PSS SO0 8 SO The City of ‘P_ar;s VDry”Goods Co. ARE OFFERING ON MONDAY AND ENSUING WEEK — Al TEE — LEADING NOVELTIES N EVENING WEAR, now the rage in Paris and New York, —INCLUDING — s4-inch SHIRRED LIBERTY CHIFFON, in green, white, black, Nile, lavender, pink and blue. 36-inch SHIRRED LIBERTY CHIFFON in black, Nile, pink, lavender, blue and mais. 20-inch HONEYCOMB PLAITED LIBERTY CHIFFON, in lavender, blue, green, mais, Nile, pink and black. 24-inch TUCKED AND LACE TRIMMED CHIF- FON PLISSE, in white and black. 45-inch APPLIQUE MOUSSELINE DE SOIE ROBES, in cream on white. blue and pink, black on Also a complete assortment of CHIFFON MOUS- SELINE DE SOIE, and EMBROIDERE SOIE, in all shades. LIBERTY CHIFFON D MOUSSELINE DE COR. GEARY AND STOCKTON STS., UNION SQUARE. HE OLD RE (POCers. ABLISHED 1875, NOTICE. These are mot specials, but every-day prices at our stores. Choice Creamery Butter, square 40c Salinas Burbank Potatoes, 100 Ibs 85¢ All Brands Best Family Flour, 50-pound sack New California Figs, per Ib__ . Kingsford’s Gloss Starch,6-1b bxs 55¢ Columbia River Red Salmon, can 10c New Dried Fruits, all kinds . . : ... .5¢, 6c¢, 8c, 10c per Ib Best Cranberries, Genuine Cape Cod, per gallon . . . . .. 40c Gold Medal Salad Dressing, bot 15¢ Choice Port and Sherry Wine, bot 25¢ Send for Catalogue. Goods Packed and Shipped Free. STORES. 40 and 42 Fourth Street, 9 and 11 Montgomery Av. 401 Hayes street. TELEPHOM Man 1820, Main 1800. Mint 425, Signature is printed in BLUE diagonally across the wrapper. of every bottle of (the Original and Genuine) ‘Worcestershire SAUCE ‘A8 & further protection against all imitations, ‘Agents for the United States, JOHN DUNCAN’S SONS, N. Y. EASTERN PRICES WILL HEREAFTER APPLY TO AT CHAMPAGNE . PALAGE HOTEL Pints, $2. Quarts, $3.90 AT AUCTION TUESDAY ... ....NOVEMBER 2, 15897, At 12 o’clock noon, AT OUR SALESROON, 638 MARKET ST., Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco. Sixth-Street Investment _ Easterly corner of Sixth ani Shipley sts.; lot 75x125: (0 be sold as a whole with_improvements | or subdivided as foillows: Corner, 75x75, with in- provements. sultable for a market; lot 50x75 o | | of the city; 1his propercy is v populated sec can be improved 1o pay good inte: Plerce-Street Improved Property. NW. corner (No. 915) Pierce st. ant (Nos. 1106 | and 11(8) Elm ave.: a substantial 2-siory bay- { window house of 8 rooms and bath on P.er ) #nd two 4-room flats on Elm ave; corner 25x110. Modern Flate—Laguua Street. West Ifne (No: 717 and 2719) Laguoa L soutn of Gr —Two eiegant modern fl. 7rooms ani bath; nearly every convenience: Western Addition Flats. North line (Nos. 824 and 526) Page st. feet wast of Scott—Two hundsome weil-b { ern flais of 5 and 6 rooms ana bath ; | tlon; brick foundation bituminized; lov 25x157:6. moii- n good condi- cement sidewalk; street Pacific Heights Residence Lot. Bouth line Jackson st., 156 feet west of Baker— An elegant lot: street bituminized; cement side- walk: lot 25x127:814. | i | | | | Improved Pacific-Street Corner. Northeast corner Pacific and Jones—Two cot- tages, 5 and 6 rooms and bath; rents for $440 per annum: lot 45x60. Mission Rusiness Property. West side Mission st., 40 feet north of Brooks, | throush to San Joses an becutupinto 4 flais opposite Cortland ave.: improvements, a good 4-room cottage; loi 69x178x52x168. Western Addition Lots. North line McAllister st., 131:3 west of Lot:— Three desirable lots, only &' short dis:ance from Golden Ga e Park; three lots, 26x13 R'chmond Lot. East side Four:h ave, 250 feat south of Deeth or ~outh California Level and ready for building; Fourthave. sewered and macadam;zed lot 25x100. Excelsior Homestead Lots. _East line Lisbon, 150 feet sonth of France si.— Fine double lot, only a short distance from Mission road aud electric cars; lot 50x100. EASTON, ELURIDGE & CO., Office ana salestoom, 638 Market st., t Palace Hotel. opposite Sama F(‘ PRACTICALLY A NEW RAILWAY. Trainsleave from and arrive San Frincisco Ticket Offico—644 Mar- ket street, Chronicle Building. Tele- phone Main 1520 0 nd, 1118 Broadway ‘The Best Kallway— neisco 1o hicazo. LOOK AT TH . TIME: Teave Daily l San Francisco.. 3| Monday a Sacrvmento. 0 P3| Monday 5 J 0 P | Monday I sno .. 5 x| Tuesduy | w5 Varstow B 5 PM | | uesday e o Ash Fork | 7:40 A% | Wodiesday | 2 < Alouquerque \ 5 PM|Wednesday | = | = a8 Veges .. U AM|Tharstay | @ Q B Deuver 0 x| Toursday | & & Newtoa 12:35 A Friday = Kansas City. 5 axi Friday 5} Chicago.... | 9:30 pu|¥riany | 3§ New ralls, new ties, now ballast, new bridges. The shortest crossing of the desert and a countrs that interests by its varied and beautiful sc-nery, The hizhest grade of passenger equipment and weals at Harvey's famousdining-reoms. when “ unwell,” n " for pains, and irregularities pecuiins 5 obstructions, 'S peculiar to the sex, Recommended f_pecx!nh’srzs for di Jor to Tansy, Pennyroyal and i ?a‘;‘:gsh One bottle of Apioline ‘&psulcs ot three monthy. Soid by all druggists, y mail, §1. Box 2081, N. Y. Post Office. by the leading Fres seases of women ; Supe: