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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1898. NICOLINT, THE TENOR, IS DEAD Being Patti’s Husband | Gave Him Title to Fame. T0 PROBE THE CHARGES OF BRIBERY Senate Committee Be- gins Work at Columbus. CHAMBERLAIN SPEAKS FOR COMMERCE England’s Attitude to Maintain Free Markets. Successor to the Marquis of Caux in the Diva’s Affections. Attorneys Not Permitted | to Take Part in the Proceedings. Threefold Duty in Build- ing Up the Vast British Empire. Hastening to His Bedside She Will Find the End Is Come. Several Witnesses Who Are Called on Refuse to Give Testimony. Repeats Salisbury’s Warning, “There Is a Limit to For- bearance.” ILL FOR A LONG TIME.|{ANTI-HANNA MAN SCORED.|AS TO SUGAR BOUNTIES. Could Not Bear the Absence of the | Burke Declared a Traltor to the Party | Belleves That the Continental Na- Woman He Loved, Yet He and Unfit to Serve Among Dies Alone. tions Will Soon Realize the Bad Investigators. Policy of the System. Epectal Dispatch to The Call. COLUMBUS, Ohlo, Jan. 18.—The Sen- ate Committee to-night began its in- vestigation into the charges of bribery | made by Representative Otis during | the recent Senatorial contest. The members of the House Committee ap- pointed to investigate the same charges were invited to be present, but they | Epecial Dispatch to The Call. LONDON, Jan. 18.—Nicolint died to- day at Pau, in the south of France. PARIS, Jan. 18.—Patti left Paris sud- denly to-night to hasten to the bedside | of her dying husband. As it has hap- | pened. she will arrive to find him dead. W YORK, Jan. 18.—The late Sig- nor Ernest Nicolini married Mme. Patti | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LIVERPOOL, Jan. 18—The Liver- pool Chamber of Commerce gave a Chamberlain. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal were also present. Mr. Chamberlain was greeted with an ova- tion and a special cheer was given for Mrs. Chamberlain, who was with him. banquet to-night to Right Hon. Joseph } CHINA'S BIG CONCESSIONS T0 GERMANY The Trouble Between the Two Nations Settled. Kiaochau and a Large Belt of Land Is Leased. Punishment of Murderers of Missionaries and a Heavy Indemnity. WILLIAM HAS HIS WAY. Every Demand Made by the Kaiser Seems to Have Been Com- plied With. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. JOHN DOE WARRANTS DENOUNCED Stanford Professors on the Arrest of Dudley. Styled an Outrage Which | Is Sanctioned by the Law. Portions of the California Stat- utes Vigorously Assailed in Lectures. SCRAMBLE FOR FAT FEES. How Constables Take Advantage of Their Prerogatives at Public Expense. NEW YORK, Jan. 18.—A Washington | speclal to the Herald says: Official an- nouncement has at last been made that | the controversy between China and Germany has been settled. The an- nouncement was recetved to-day by Minister Wu Ting Fang, the Chinese did not participate officially and there will be two separate investigations. J.| _ J. Sullivan, H. M. Daugherty and Cy- | Y/80rous and important rus Huling were present to represent | f7Téd to the great changes in com- Senator Hanna, Major Dick and oth- merce during the last twenty years. in 1896. She had been divorced from M. Louis Sebastian Henrl de Roger de Cahuzac, Marquis de Caux. Nicolinl’s health began to fail him in the early pam of last year, and it was reported that he was suffering from a cancerous affection and from a complication of other disorders. He went to Brighton Cralg y Nos, Mme. Pat st allowing any counsel to par- | bitten with the | which the Germans are accustomed to ngland, from | s residence in adopted other rules of procedure. It | creased six fold and the French four was decided to hold executive sess! fons | fold, while England has only added a for business and to take the testimony | modest third to her colonial empire.” in public. The committee went from > the committee rooms to the Senate| APSWering the argument that it 1s | useless to colonize barren wastes he chamber when it was ready to hear witnesses and a crowd awaited them. | Ppointed to the magnificent enterprise Wales, and then to Langl where his health improvement wed sor d gave hi for his recovery. wever, he had been He finally be- ted and was con- | » his rooms. to Pau his malady veloped more serious symptoms. 1 Mme. Paitl were now al nature of his illness, | a Robertson, Finck and Long, Demo- | had opened up a vast country of the | crats, and Senators Burke and Gar- | 2 € | S, greatest wheat flelds, and was about field, Republicans. Senator Burke was o & one of the leaders of the opposition to | 1 OPen what was, perhaps, the gold Senator Hanna. Senator Garfield is | fields in the world. the only member of the committee who | ‘“Looking to the certainty,” he said, voted for Hanna, and the votes taken | “that we are likely to be excluded by were 4 to 1. | Senator Burke presided and Judge Robertson examined the witnesses. In the executive session Judge Robertson | was appointed prosecutor. All mem- | bers of the committee answered ques- | > absolute devotion of the | g in the extreme. Nico- | cely bear to have her out | t for a moment. He did not d to, or sung to, or talked | iply to lie listlessly with his | ving her about the room. | the British flag does not float, our present policy is to take a very firm attitude and to maintain free mar- kets. atti of late has rarely left | tiOnS except Senator Garfield. There|tors has done for us in building & t for fiying trips to fill a few | Were four witnesses examined to-night | o109t empire, we must continue to do T e s T as follows: Samuel Pentland, pro- for ourselves. This is not the policy | of aggression nor lawlessness. We have prietor of the Neil House, where Sena. #h Nicolini was at one time a | tor Hanna had his headquarters; k, and made a | Shepherd M. Dunlap, manager of the |a three fold duty: First, to keep what in Italy and | Western Union Telegraph Company; | rightly belongs to us; second, in Lord operas, his ttle to | W. ’,}‘,Z;,“i‘:},mlf',,;n::‘:\wri-‘gfar:{m}i(";:," Rosebery’s admirable words, ‘to peg “f & ;1126“{:\5 m;‘m‘:k manager of -the Telephone Company. ~| ©ut claims for posterity,’ and, third, if any one tries to rush those claims, gently to prevent them.” ([Laughter and cheers.] othing new was developed during | ssion of four hour: The wit- refused to answer some ques- tions and to produce their books and | coples of messages. Mr. Pentland re- | fused to produce his books to show | who paid for rooms at the Neil House | and for other expenses and was given | until to-morrow night to do so. Manager Ross wanted to consult his oon after the diva's quis de Caux she arriage from Nie- had a few 1f in trous sympathy, and an affection that ance and deference to the sensibilities of our allies have only resulted in our | being told that we are the best hated b; was said to be sincere, even if platonic, - 0 sult his | nation in Europe,” he repeated Lord e L had Ieaamiots. apart. | Superlor officers before telling who was | Salisbury’s warning, “there is a limit at Cralg-y-Nos and | Connected with the private telephone | to this forbearance | in the Neil House by their long dis- | tance lines, and he was given more | time until to-morrow night. Managers Dunlap and Truesdale | were given until to- morrow night to produce copies of telegraph messages sent by the managers of the Hanna campaign. In the Senate to-day there was a sensational and somewhat unexpected | outcropping of the bitterness engen- dered by the Senatorial fight. When ¢ the standing committees were report-| Then came the weightiest portion of ed Senator Alexander presented a for- | the speech. Mr. Chamberlain reviewed mal protest against the placing of | &t length the West Indian question and the name of Senator Burke of Cuya- | the report of the Royal Commlssion: hoga County, the only Republican |thereon, and emphasized the “great in- | member o the Senate who did not vote | jury of the bounty-system which, while for Hanna, on the committee. In his| ruining the West Indles, brings a gain | protest Senator Alexander among | estimated at two million pounds yearly | other things said: | to Great Britain.” “I hereby desire to record my earnest | The Government, he said, believed the protest against the placing of the | country “generous and just enough to name of Vernon H. Burke upon com- | remedy this crying injustice.” He was | mittees of this Senate upon which |glad that Belgium had anticipated | honorable gentlemen ' have been se- | Great Britain in calling a conference | lected to servé. To force by the ma-| on the subject and hoped this might | Jjority votes of this body the assocla- | succeed better than former conferences. | tion of this betrayer of party trusts There were many objections, he con- | with those whose honor and sense of | tinued, to countervailing duties, which | duty would shrink from such conduct [ would “involve us in commercial treaty | to have her own sweet | thing. Patti was not sat- | er marriage to the Marquis | X, and so when she wedded Niec- | had the marriage ceremony | d four times—a civil one, Ro- man Catholic, Greek Church and Angli- can or Pr nt Episcopal. born in Italy about fif- | ty-two years ago, but lived for a long time in Paris. There he met, wooed and won his first wife, who died just at the nick of time so that he could marry e greatest cantatrice of the century. his first wife he had three children, two boys and a girl, and it is to the credit of Patti that she adopted Miss Nicolini and aided the two boys to en- | ter a military school and so secure their | present rank of captain and lleutenant | in the French army. GEORGE M. OYSTER SEERS 4 DIVORCE, After a repetition of the old Zollver- ein operations, which he described as ess absurd than somehavesupposed.” . Chamberlain said: “We must seek in our own family the strength and support we shall never find from for- eign nations, and with this in view we must be ready to respond to any Colo- nial overtures, without seeking pecu- niary recompense, but !ooking to the wider interests of the futura.” P Mr. Chamberlain in the course of a | speech re- | ers, but the committes voted 4 to 1|}1® 8ald: “Since the great powers were | megalomania with | The committee in executive sesslon! taunt us, as if it were our exclusive | decided rot to hear any attorneys, and | Peculiarity, the German empire has in- The committee consists of Senators| of the Canadlan Pacific Rallway that | What the foresight of our ances- | WASHINGTON, Jan. 18—Washington | City has another divorce sensation in high life. The parties are well known in San Francisco, where they formerly re- sided. George M. Oyster Jr., one of the | prominent business men of this city, in- | stituted a suit for divorce, asking the District Supreme Court to sever the tles At bind him and his wife, Eva H. Oys- What caused the estrangement | h has culminated in divorce pro- | ceedings is not stated, as both parties to the sult have carefully avoided discuss- ing their domesti s even to thelr most intimate . The grounds up- on which Mr. C bases his claim to | ree of divorce are with- the public, he having availed of the privilege of having the rs in the case placed in the safe of | erk of the court, o petition_was filed late yesterday Oyster's attorney, Jo- All who are familiar of the complaints whic er makes against his wife d of them. It is known. Shillington. 2 natur cline to is to offer a reward for treason to party, to principle and to American manhood. I protest against the viola- tion of party and personal pledges, and I hereby declare it my duty to hold the party who voluntarily placed his pledges before the people in securing their votes as fully responsible to them as he is morally responsible to his Maker. And for these and many other reasons dear to American citizenship I here and now enter this protest against the enforcing of this political traitor into the presence and company of honorable men.” DEMONSTRATIONS CONTINUE IN STREETS OF PARIS. In One Encounter the Police Are Roughly Handled and the Guards Finally Charge the Mob. PARIS, Jan. 18.—There were renewed differences with foreign nations,” but the main objection was that while the trade they wished to save amounted to 260,000 tons, Grat Britain's own sugar imports amounted to 1,500,000 tons. It seemed unscientific to benefit the former by injuring the latter. “Therefore,” he said, “the Govern- ment has decided to exhaust every al- | ternative before having recourse to such drastic measures, and feeling that the recommendations of the commis- sloners, though good, would not work quickly enough, the Chancellor of the Exchequer has consented to propose to Parliament a very large grant in aid to the West Indies. The grant will not be so large as the incidental gain Great Britain derived from the bounty sys- tem, but it will be large enough to en- able the industry and the population to tide over a crisis, until Continental natlons recognize the impolicy of the bounty system.”” Mr. Chamberlain expressed his con- viction that the immediate relief meas- | to be proposed in addition, which however, % ho has oont | attempts at a student demonstration in | ures 3 cl step for'somne tme and her e (% | front of the newspaper offices and the | he said he could mot as yet explain in a 7 conclusion. Mr. Oyster was to the woman from whom he now divorce about nine years ago, the place in New York. She a C her maiden name_being La Farge. Theéy have lived in Wash- ington since the date of their marriage. CHILE'S PRESIDENT PLACES MILITIA IN ACTIVE SERVICE. Indjcations That the Relations With Argen- tine Are Such That War Is Not Improbable. Copyright, 189, by James Gordon Bennett. | VALPARAISO, Jan. 18.—President Er- Tazuriz signed a decree yesterday calling Into active service all the National Guards of Chile and youths of 20 years or more. According to conservative organs in San- tlago, Senor Joaguin Walker Martinez, Chilean Minister in Buenos Ayres, Ar- entina, who has just reached that’city, eft his'family in Buenos Ayres. This 18 taken to mean that the relations of Chile and Argentina are of a nature which nliBg'?\ lead to war. ENOS AYRES, Jan. 18.—Advices just been sold at $1.50 each. Now an edition recelved from the Herald' many &rrests. a part of the time, and received the con- have boen grani fol- 3 i in Rio Janciro, Bragh. sters thor tns | =20 TR gratulations of hi3 friends over his ‘ele- | lows: Callfornia, OHBInalCharles 3v A | in strong A vl ne e gale of the crusers Abrou, De Odorg and The Sugar Conference. fation to the Supreme Court bench. The | Cartiidge, Mentone, $8; Edward P. Warner, | FREE. Send 21 one-cent Buffal Floriano to Chile is announced. These McKennas are ]unux proud of their | Ventura, $5; Willlam Park, ckee, Di Medical Associ , 10, e e NS CHNE Stk | e mugar canference comvanad by e | bottuia) o7 TSRS, duEhiety o e | Xelieug'and ineretie Fotel LT | Siadat amee fr ok Sindine ™ " . 4 ac ave en . n ose, v i y Aar _trangferred to Chile. glum Wil meet at Brussels next mon! soclety. ln. Davidson, Woodland, $8, 1 TS Military Club, but the police dispelled the crowd. There was much agitation in the Latin quarter, but the police barred the bridges and all attempted demonstrations were suppressed. e organtzing committee _of yester- day’s meeting at the Tivoll Vauxhal has decided to hold another meeting on Sat- urday next and a public demonstration on Sunday afternoon in the Place de la Con- corde.. Meanwhile the effervescence in- creases in the provinces. Shops of Jews at Nantes have been stoned. M. Clemenceau’'s paper, the Aurore, was publicly burned in front of the Military Club at_ Bordeaux. The police were roughly handled and the guards finally charged the mob. Thirty-two arrests have been made. Telegrams from most of the large towns show that the anti-Jewish crusade is as- suming most menacing proportions. The Government is seriously alarmed. An- other attempt, it is said, will be made in the Chamber of Deputies on Saturday to overthrow the Cabinat. LYONS, Jan. 18.—lo-day the students made a riotous demonstration in front of the synagogue and the Jewish shops, breaking shop windows and ralsing men- acing shouts. The police had great diff- culty in dispersing them. Hand to hand encounters were frequent and there were detail, would “stimulate the sugar in- dustry and enable all well-managed es- tates to hold their own, while tending to the ultimate prosperity of the col- ony.” MISS MARIE McKENNA PRESENTED AS A DEBUTANTE Tea Given at the Attorney-General's Resi- dence in Washington at Which His Sec- ond Daughter Entered Society. WASHINGTON, Jan. 18.—The tea given by Mrs. McKenna, wife of Attorney-Gen- eral McKenna, this afternoon to present Miss Marle McKenna, the second daugh- ter, as a debutante. was largely attended. Mrs. McKenna, Miss Marie and Miss Isabel McKenna received the guests. Among those who assisted in entertain- ing was Miss Barbour of Canton, Ohio, a niece of the President, who is visiting at the White House. iss Hildegarde McKenna, who is yet a schoolmiss, and who has not yet formally entered soclety, assisted her mother and sisters in enter- taining. The receg;lon lasted from 5 to 7 o'clock. Judge McKenna was present diplomatic representative in Washing- ton, in a cablegram from the Tsung Li Yamen, dated yesterday at Peking. A statement given out by the Minister in regard to its contents reads: “A settlement of the difficulty with Germany has been effected. Kiaochau ;Bay is to be leased, a belt surrounding the bay extending 100 1 (about thirty miles) to be the boundary. AH the German troops outside the prescribed limits are to be withdrawn. Two of the culprits charged with the murder of missionaries are to be punished with death and the rest with Imprisonment. Permission will be granted for the building of churches in the cities of Tsi Ng, Tsao Chow Fu and Chu Yeh, and dwelling houses for missionaries in seven places in the districts of Tsao Hien and Shan Hien will be erected, for | which purpose the sum of 225,000 taels | will be allowed. This amount is to be i hostile tariffs from any country where | taken also as a compensation for the | | killing of misslonaries. The sanction | of the throne has been obtained to the | above mode of settlement.” | Minister Wu declines to discuss the terms upon which China has settled | her trouble with Germany, but it is | generally believed that he has felt all along that the Berlin Government, | while ostensibly seeking redress for outrages perpetrated upon her mission- aries, was really after a port on the | Pactfie. In official circles the Indemni- |ty which China has been compelled to pay Germany is regarded as excessive. | The aistribution of missionaries Referring to the fact, “our sacrifice | throughout the province of Shan Tung | of territory and our general forbear- |Shows conclusively, it is believed, that | Germany proposes to fly her flag over the entire province in the course of time. At present she is restricted to “a belt surrounding Kiaochau Bay, ex- tending about thirty miles.” Where this belt shall be measured from and what steps have been taken by China to prevent encroachment by the Berlin Government are questions that are be- ing asked by officials and attaches of the Chinese legation. It is said at the Chinese legation now that if Germany has formal possession of Kiaochau, she | will be the one to make the necessary | regulations for the government of the | port, and it must be to her that the United States must make any repre- sentations it may desire looking to the | free access of its commerce to that| port. LONDON, Jan. 18—A special dis:. patch from Peking says: China is| ready to open three new treaty ports | and to agree to an extension of rail- | way into Hun Nan province, but de- clines to agree to the exclusion of other | powers than England from the Yang Tse Kilang valley. The Peking corre- | spondent of the Times says: “The Rus- | sian charge d’affaires, M. Pavloff, pro- | tests strongly against the opening of Talien Wan, but China is apparently anxious to obtain British financial as- gistance and will give ample security for the repayment of a loan. She will | also permit the extension of steam | communication on inland waters and will grant Increased trade facilities at all open ports.” INTERESTS THE PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST President McKinley Asks Congress to Make an Appropriation for the Heirs of Luis Moreno, Who Was Lynched at Yreka. WASHINGTON, Jan. 1..—President Mc- | Kinley to-day sent to Congress a mes- | sage asking an appropriation of $2000 to | pay the heirs of Luis Moreno, a citizen of Mexico, who was lynched at Yreka, Cal., in 1895. The President asks this ap- propriation out of humane consideration and without reference to the question of liability of this Government. The following California bills were in- troduced to-day: By Senator Perkins, appropriating $2%0 to pay P. F. Dundon o? San Francisco, being the penalty im- posed under the contract for the con- struction of the light in Grays Harbor, ‘Wash.; to remove the chary tion from the military recor McMullen; to pension James M. Jackson. By Representative De Vries—To re- | move the charge of desertion from the | military record of Francis M. Lyles. By Representative Barlow—A bill pre- red by,the National Horticultural and ?«‘ururymen‘s Association of the United | States providing for the inspection of fruit and fruit trees; to pension Silas B. Root. %Tc!flc Coast patents were issued to- day as follows: California—Lewls Boles, San Francisco, pneumatic bicycle brake; | * 2 ing to what H. Carpenter, Stockton, screw pro- | of fever. The ‘ordeal’ was mothi 33':3;’-; Frankpec. Chapman, Los An gles, 1 expected.’ prune-dipper; James M. Dyer, San Fran-4 The woman who owns a copy of Dr. cisco, wave power, two patents; Clinton J. Pace, National Military California, ore concentrator; Clarence Quinan, Pin- ole, making gun-cotton; Low W. Rhodes, San Jose, combination bedstead and man- 1; Albert A. Russell, Grass Valley, sink Sttainers = Sarah Swain, Los Angeles, safety accouchement chair; Willlam ‘Wilkins, Grlmfe! L&:;din 3 5rain»shalv1n‘ ttachment _for as] machine: Jimes M. 'Wishart, Oakland, god sepa: rator. Washington—E. D. Kellerman, Monte- sano, attachment for. hose nogzles, Bpectal Dispatch to The Call. PALO ALTO, Jan. 18.—The arrest of Professor Dudley at Santa Cruz on | the 6th of this month on a charge of | passing counterfeit money was made the occasion for lectures to-night on the laws of California, which make un- just arrests and prolonged detentions of this description possible. The speak- NEW TO-DAY. OUR GOLDEN WEDDING! THE GOLDEN-JUBILEE! San Francisco’s putting on her holiday togs. All California rejoices in the Golden Jubilee—50 years of un= exampled progress and prosperity. No other State in the universe can show such progress within so short a period of time. We're proud of our native State. 0+0+0+06+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0+90+0 0+0+0+0+0+8+8+d o+o+e+0+0+0+e+0 ers were Dr. Jordan, Professor Abbott, | head of the law department, and Pro- fessor Brun, until recently attached to the French department, but now an at- torney of San Francisco. The title of the lecture was “Lettres de Cachet in California, Better Known as the John Doe Warrant, Which Al- lows a Constable to Make Arrests at Pleasure,” or, as Dr. Jordan expressed it, “a writ used in Californfa which enables constables to reap fees.” Dr. Jordan first gave the circum- stances of the arrest and detention, and commented on the disgrace and in- Jjustice of the entire proceedings. “The noticeable point of it all,” gald Dr. Jordan, “is that a man within forty miles of his home could be legally ar. rested without any suspicious circum- | stances and detained not only a few | hours, but days. on continually. be h ble.* The president spoke of the efforts made by a certain constable to steer the professor into the hands of a Santa Cruz lawyer, who would defend him. “These alliances,” he said, “are ex- tremely detrimental.” Professor Brun first reviewed the ons of the county government specially those sections of the fee em which dealt with the salary of Justices and constables and which gave | the latter offi mileage. He showed | the “expensive of the system and said there was redress for false im- prisonment except by knocking down the constable as Phileas Fogg did the detective. “The courts,” he asserted, “stand by the officers of the law."” Professor Abbott first spoke on the expense of this part of the fee system and asserted that it would be cheaper for Santa Clara County, for instance, to pay the transportation of all vag- rants coming within its bounds than to arrest and rearrest them. “It is not the constables and jus- ives,” he said, "‘who deserve criticism, but the system.” He thought the only way to remedy the matter would first be to repeal the vagrant law and put the Justices of the Peace on a proper and sufficient sal- ary, for they are very necessary of- ficers. He would leave the constables as they are. The nature of their du- | ties, he believed, was such that they would not be so efficient on a fixed sal- ary. ‘With this change he thought the expense would be decreased and many vagrants saved from becoming ecrimi- nals through contact with convicts. This thing is going | A man would as soon held up by a footpad as a consta- prov act, | Auditor Miller Arraigned. SALINAS, Jan. 18.—County Auditor George S. Miller appeared in court this morning with his attorney, S. F. Gell, in response to the summons commanding him to appear and answer to the charge preferred against him by the Grand Jury for willful neglect ‘of office. The com- plaint was read. Then Attorney Geil ad- dressed the court and made a motion to dismiss the case, alleging lack of jurisdic- tion on the part of the Grand Jury. Judge Dorn took the motion under advisement. —_— NEW TO-DAY. Making the baby happy is a woman- ly woman's best | pleasure. It is easy to make a £ healthy baby hap- s ~py.b Snchha baby >y 18 born happy. ¥ Smiles and - dim: ples are as natural to it as fretfulness is to a puny, sick- 1y child. It rests with every woman wheth- er her baby shall be healthy and happy, or puny and miserable. If during the period preceding maternity a woman takes proper care of the organs upon which the perpetu. ation of the race depends, she insures the | health of herself and chi It is easy to do this. The proper medicine is at hand. Over go,000 women have testified in writ- to the value of it. e organs that make wifehood and moth- erhood possible are directly acted upon b, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It makes them strong and healthy. It cures all weakness and disease. It prepares for maternity. It does away with the discom- forts of the expectant period. It insures baby’s health and makes it and almost painless. D: £ of the ‘' Favorite Prescription’ than of all other similar medicines combined. “I am apxious to add my testimonial to your “Favorite Prescription,’ " writes Mrs. C. G. don, of Fort Grant, Graham Co., Ariz. “I had ‘been using the * Prescription ' for several months revious to my confinement, and I am sure I ave been benefited tl’!nllly from the time I com- menced to use it. I feel fully as well as ever I did in my life, Up to the very day when the baby was born I did all my own housework; and during confinement I had not the least symptoms ©+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser probably does not realize at once al that she gave in exchange for it. There was the price of $1.50. That paid for the large vol- ume of 1,003 pages. Then, as day by day she looked into these ?':M by one she gave away her anxicties for her family's health. e learned how to make her chil- dren well. In the chapters especially treat- ing of her own weaknesses, she learned the causes and the cures. 680,000 copies have If San Fraxscisco puts on her holiday togs we want those togs to come from us, and we have gone about it in a fashion that will leave no room for the most captious critic to say that San Fran- cisco’s men folks are not the bestdressedintheland. We have filled our big corner window, the Golden Jubilee window, with the choicest and rarest specimens of the tailor’s art in both suit- ings and overcoatings, the wvery swellest and choicest stuff, garments that will compare with anything in town at $22 and $20. During Golden Jubilee week. beginning this very morning, we say for .pick of any of these garments, and it’s a royal pick, a golden pick, at | $1.85. en Chunks The Overcoats are pretty specimens of high- class tailoring; they’re dress-up garments— they’re holiday apparel. Nothing that’s ever been offered to the buying public under $20 will compare with them. There’s blues, browns, blacks—a royal assortment and a golden oppor= tunity for you. It’s our Golden Jubilee special at - $I1.85. en Nuggets! The Prince Albert Suits are truly Golden Nuggets—they’re the real thing, the real dressy garment. They’re in this offer at $11.85. DOTOCTCOTOTOOOO00 Had we the desire, we might say more, and speak in louder terms upon the excellence and merits of these high-class garments, but we rest our case here. We call your attention to our window, which is filled with these handsome specimens of fine tailoring. Let that do the rest for us. 3 % 1 Q 0+©+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 |jummmi +0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0 ©+0+9+0+9+0+0+0+6+0 0+98+01+9+0+6+0+9+0+0 0+0+0+9+0+0 jummud 0+9+0+0+0+0 ‘0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+0 0+0+0+0+0+9 (/L1 9-11-15-15 KEARNY ST, KING-PINS FOR OVERCOATS.