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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 189S. CHLORAL IS DEADLY DRATGHT J. W. Little Makes a Desperate Attempt at Suicide. He Was Found Lying in a Doorway on Turk | Street. Taken to the Receiving Hos- pital and Pumped Out. INLOVE WITH HIS EX-WIFE | | The Latter Some Time Ago Secured a Divorce From Him. | an | Business College on Market | stole a number of books and 1 3 | noon of yesterday, and his men a number of clever crooks were landed in prison yesterday before they had a chance to operate. The head of the detective department detailed his men at every important point along the line of march, with instructions to arrest suspicious characters. Before the parade was over nine well-known crooks were arrested and locked up in the City Prison. Dan Keating, who the police say is an ex-convict, was arrested by Detective Graham and Officer Samuels and charged with burglary. Shortly before noon yes- terday he broke into the San Francisco an riting ma- terial. The stolen property was found in his possession. Subsequent and By- Detectives Silv “working” the crowd in front of the Pal- ace Hotel. Two Eastern bunko men named John Ashton and Willlam Green were appre- hended by Detectives Egan and Tom C son while “steering” a bucolic strang to their room on Geary street, near P ell. A complete layout for robbing un- sophisticated strangers was found im | their room Edward Lewis, James Lawler and Charles Williams, who are said to be Eastern pickpockets, were picked up by etectives Tom Gibson and E 'working”” a crowd in the Chinese quar- ter. —_—————— B'NE B'RITHS IN SESSION. The Van Ness Avenue Property Will Not Be Improved This Year. The District Grand Lodge of the Inde- endent Order of B'ne B'rith was not in | sion during the morning and after- it having been de- cided at the previous meeting of the grand body that the members of the ex. b ecutive committee and past presidents should honor the Golden Jubilee by ap- pearing in the parade. The grand body was In session last evening and it was reported that the fol- J. W. Little, a clerk in the general | passenger office of the Southern Pa- cific Company, was found in a semi- consclous condition in the doorway of a house at Turk and Polk streets yesterday afternoon. He was removed to the Receiving Hospital, where Drs. Weil and Rinne diagnosed the case as one of chloral poisoning. Afterrecover- ing consciousness, Little declared that { he had taken ninety grains of the poi- son, and begged to be allowed to die. When asked why he made an attempt | on his life, Little said that his wife secured a divorce from him about a | year ago, and since then he has been | despondent. “I could not live without her,” he re- marked, “and I determined to kill my- gelf. Yesterday forenoon I purchased | ninety grains of chloral, and, going to | my room at 611 Bush street, swallowed a large dose of the poison. As it did | not appear to affect me, I took the re- | mainder. 1 then left my room and | wandered about the streets until I be- | came weak and fell in the doorway found me.” the hospital say that wk he Th rgeons Little will recov In one of his pockets was found the C document, dated June 22, b< 1 “In consideration of a note made by | lowing named had taken part in the grand demonstration, riding in carriages: | M. Stetn, grand president; Simon Hoch- | stadter and Max Marcuse, grand trus- | tees; Lucius L. Solomon, grand orator; Jacob Greencbaum, E. I Wolf, Joseph Rothschild, William_ Saalburg, H. = Bush J and Felix Merzbach, pas preside Louis Lipman, M. Koll mann, Cohe eir Lindheimer, S| mon Meyerson, H. ks and D. Buch. | 1er, rep atives to the grand body » proposition to improve the property | of the order located on the corner of Va Ness avenue and Fell street was laid over fo > year., The grand body decided to continue the | B. B. library and to that end appropri- | ated sum of $1700. en of respect to the memories of the late Jules Cerf, who was one of the st grand presidents of the order, and of cdward Bare, who was president of the District Grand Lodge at the time of his death a short time since, the grand body. by a rising vote, adopted appropriate resolutions presented by two separat committees. i A great portion of the evening session was taken up in the cosideration of the report of the committee on amendment of the general laws of the order in this jurisdiction, a report that in no way af- fects the beneficlary provisions of the order. The several sections were taken up, but no action taken. The matter wili | be further considered this morning. CALIFORS'IA NS IN WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—R. T. Ashley, Los Angeles, St. James; 8. C. Oakland, bitt House. | | | | Farnham, | J. O. Carter and | ram arrested two pickpockets named Dan Small and Dan Riordan and locked them | up in the tanks. They were caught| an while | (4 | come to San Francisco. THE BRITISH SHIP GLENFINART. Captain Longmuir of the Glenfinart Is one of the best-known masters that Creek. His v He likes San F F el has been tied up there for nearly a month, trying to get rid , but he does not like Oakland of a cargo of coal and coke. The Glenfinart is chartered to take a load of wheat to Europe, and the captain is more than anxious to get away, as he made a long passage out, something unusual for his clipper. A SAILOR'S T | LUCKY FALL Dropped From the Yard of a Bark, but Received No Injury. J. W. Little, payable to me and of even | wife of Honolulu are at the Ebbitt House. | The Willamette Arrived, Dis- THE ONE THAT J. W. LITTLE LOVED. date, I. Ada H. Penders, do hereby re- lease forever and for all time the said J. W. Little, his heirs, assigns and ex- ecutors from all claims of whatsoever kind or nature that may in the future arise, or have in the past arisen, in the case of Little vs. Little, in which I was. plaintiff and J. W. Little defendant. “(Signed) MRS. ADA PENDERS.” Mrs. Penders is the divorced wife of the would-be suicide. On a plece of notepaper, which was found in Little's pocket-book, was written the follow- ing sentence in lead pencil: “If you were going there to avold me, why did you go to the hall up stairs? ““How could you escape me in that way, when you knew I saw you go there “You say he did not know but what I was your brother. “If I was your brother, why did you wish to escape me?” On another scrap of paper was writ- ten the following: “I for, e you all. all human aid.” It is supposed that the despondent clerk wrote the above after taking the poison. In his pocket-book was also found a small photograph of his ex- wife, which be tore in pieces. Last night Littie had almost entirely recov- ered from the effects of the poison. I am now beyond CROOKS LANDED IN PRISON. Captain Bohen and His Men Make Several Important Captures. Through the efforts of Captain Bohen —ZD AT _O0CD NEW TO-DAY. It Valiantly Stands Dr. Miles’ Restorative 'I'he ‘l‘est Nervine bas stood the test of years of the most exhaustive triels. It gives vitality and io- cren-ed vigor. It dispels that wenary sleepless- ness and induces refreshing rest. It maken the weak invalia strong and well It has won its grand reputation by successful re- sults. Its record of sick people restored to hesith is not equaled. It is the prescription of Dr. Miles, the grestest specialist in heart D M,I g #nd pecve d]is;ml. For sale by al drug- r. fies wists under zuarantee to benefit. Book on heart and nerves free parwa e N@PYN@, DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Eikbsri, Ind. Mr. Carter comes to Washington to op- pose the treaty of annexation between this country and Hawail. CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Jan. 24—E. L. Pilisbury of San Francisco Is at the Manhattan Hotel, and A. Bachman of San Francisco | is at the Holland. INTERESTS THE PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST. It Is Probable That President McKinley Will Visit California During the Coming Summer. WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—Tt is prob- able that President McKinley will visit | California during the coming summer. It is his intention, public business al- lowing, to visit the Yellowstone, Wash- ington, Oregon and California. The pension office to-day notified Representative Barlow that a pension would be granted Mrs. Edwardo Ed- wards of Pasadena, Cal., and that she would receive back pay amounting to | $325. Representative de Vries saw the At- torney-General relative to the pardon of E. L. Whitfield of Calaveras County, who was convicted for passing coun- terfeit money. The Attorney-General said he would lay the case before the President to-morrow. - De Vries thinks the pardon will be granted. Californians have been granted pen- sions as follows: Alfred C. Johnson, Cottonwood, $12. Increase—Willlam C. Gray, Nevada City, $8 to $12; Cornelius Sullivan, Soldiers’ Home, Los Angeles, $6 to $8. Original widow, ete.—Lucy Chandler, North Ontario, $8; Norah M. March, Oakland, $8; Annie Lamb, Oak- land, $8;°Nellie A. Osgood, Oakland, $8. The Senate Committee on Education to-day reported favorably Senator Per- kins’ bill appropriating $100,000 for the establishment of a homeé for aged and infirm colored people. Representative Barlow to-day intro- duced a bill pensioning Lucy M. Cleve- land of Los Angeles. | | | | There are sixty different wood grown in Arkansas. kinds of Before cookin, it with Omiah vour steak or choj , du: fat Wavoring. 0 44t | sails. | ward charged and Sailed Again Inside of a Day. Steam Colliers and Coal Dealers Were Kept Busy on the Front ‘Yesterday. There was a most remarkable escape on the bark Harry Morse yesterday. | One of the sailors fell from the fore- | | yard to the deck and thence into the | { hold and yet escaped without injury. | The Morse was being got ready to go | to sea and the men were aloft bending Gordon Howard, one of the crew, was on the foreyard and having more liquor aboard than was good for him he lost his hold and fell onto the for- hatch. The latter was only partly covered and Gordon bounded from it into the hold, bringing up on | the ballast at the bottom of the vessel. He was brought on deck apparently more dead than alive and hurried to the Harbor Receiving Hospital. He was laid out on the operating table, but astounded Dr. Hill and everybody | else by jumping up and saying “Noth- | ing the matter with me. Only drunk.” With that he walked out of the hos- pital and across the street to get an- other beer. J. Falcon of the barkentine City of Papeete was not so fortunate. He also fell from aloft but received injuries to his shoulder and back that will keep him in bed for some time. The only busy vessels on the water front yesterday were the colliers, and it was a jubilee for the dealers when they were able to secure two loads of the black diamonds in one day. At Rosenfeld’s bunkers, where the Burma is discharging, at Dunsmuir’s bunkers, where the Bristol is discharging, and at the Oregon Improvement Company’s bunkers, where the Willamette was discharging, there was a continual stream of coal carts from morning till night. The Progreso, at Main-street wharf, was also kept busy, and the | chances are that the last of her coal | will be out to-night and then she will start for Seattle to be turned into a passenger ship for the Klondike trade. The smartest plece of work done on the front in many a day was the dis- charging of the collier Willamette. She reached port last Sunday about noon with 2300 tons of coal, and at 2 p. m. yesterday she was on her way back to Seattle for another load. Just before leaving her dock one of the waiters named Joseph F. Mellaney met with a serious accident. He was carry- ing a tureen of soup aft to the cabin when he slipped and fell into the scup- per. He was scalded by the soup and when examined at the Harbor Receiv- ing Hospital it was found that his ankle was sprained as well. Another waiter was secured to take Mellaney’'s place and the Willamette went to sea. Asthma and Bronchitis cure Guaranteed. Dr. Gordins Sanitarfum. 514 Pine. nr. Kearny, S ¥.,Cal —_—— ROBBED OF HIS MONEY. Lulu Meyers Arrested on Charge of Grand Larceny. the TLulu Meyers, a woman well known in the “tenderloin district,” was arrested vesterday morning by Policeman Whalen on a charge of grand larceny. The com- plaining witness is James McMonigle, a visitor to the city, and he alleges that while in a saloon on Stockton street the woman robbed him of over . When she was searched at the City Prison $180 was found in her possession, which Mc- Monigle claimed was part of the money stolen from him. —_——————— A Fatal Hunting Trip. John Croden, the man who was acci- dentally shot in the leg by his friend, Richard Busfiend, last Sunday while hunting jackrabbits, died early yesterday morning from hemorrhage from the wound. The body was removed to the Morgue and an inquest will be held. Busfiend made a_statement to Coroner Hawkins to the effect that he was walk- ing ahead of Croden and that he slipped and dropped his gun, which was Bie- charged on striking the ground, the charge entering Croden’s leg. AUGHTY GIRL FROM PARIS Lingerie and a Dutch- man Are the Sensa- tions of the Piece. Harry Hermsen’s Innkeeper Practically Saves the Production. | The Human Lizard Wriggles a Good Turn at the Orpheum—The Other Theaters. A funny and different Dutchman and a wholesale exposure of ladies’ un- derwear were the conspicuous sensa- tions of “The Girl From Paris” at the Baldwin last night. The piece itself is a musical vaudeville farce in two acts, the first of which is elaborately dull, the second fairly funny. The plot deals in an English husband, who becomes entangled in the graces of a giddy girl from Paree; she takes his ardent promises to the courts and is granted a verdict of £10,000 worth of consolation, whereupon he flles home and damages, disguises himself as a kilted Scot, takes®up his abode at an | inn in Schoppenbyrgen and has it given out in the newspapers that he is dead. To the inn come his wife, his friend, the French girl and everybody else. The friend and the wife b&come dangerously affectionate, and he, in a rage, gives away his identity and an- swers the reproaches of his wife with a few gentle remarks of his own. The music is auxiliary, the situations number precisely one, the plot itself, as I have suggested, does not matter much. Personal ginger of the com- pany and fleet stage management are responsible for all the fun that passes the footlights. The first act is so ar- ranged that nothing happens in it. It might be less tame with a more spirit- ed young woman in the title part than Miss Mamie Gilroy; but in last night's performance it was merely a postpone- ment of the fun in the second act; for that fun, being mainly of a vaudeville nature, hardly needed an hour or more of “preparation.” However, not even to point the dullness of the first act will I say that the second was wholly galvanic. Harry Hermsen's German innkeeper could not be the center of the scene all of the time, and there is a limit to the excitement to be got from the raw point-blank flour- ish of feminmine under garments— and I think this limit was about reached in the first act. The second act was valuable so long as Mr. Herm- sen was the dominant figure of it. He has made a study of a Dutchman that is copiously unlike anything we have seen here before; may be it is an imi- tation of Louls Mann (who created the part) and may be it & Mr. Hermsen's own—I cannot say. There is no sane reasén, though, why there should not Le a little versatility in the Dutch comedy business, and no one will withhold praise from Mr. Hermsen merely be- cause he is so unfortunate as to have had a talented predecessor. His part and his playing of it saved the show last night. The house was crowded to the walls with good people ready to have a good holiday time, and more than the usual first night reserve was expressed in that bodeful silence which greeted the close of the first act. Mr. Hermsen does not appear until the second. He is the keeper of an inn and the in- ventor of a mineral spring. Evidently he has diagnosed the smell and sub- stance of mineral waters. He manu- factures his by mixing salt, old horse- | of last year's water. Out of and around this tank is the potency of the the play. The cast is a long one, and includes many women, most of whom, from the the stage at all, should be shown coyly and without effort. Miss Carrie Behr is the slavey, a somewhat dull one, I thought, until she sang “Mary Jones" Top Note” with a good touch of com- fcality; but even then it had not real character. Miss Gilroy seems to be badly out of it in the prominence of her part. She lacks enterprise and insin- i’s Com,| a soft and beauti Powpeg produces e :ru hhk.hs shoes and a delinquent egg in a tank leading lady to the lowly slavey, make a wild and obvious exhibition of that bifurcated garment, which, if shownon uation, and her singing is anemic. Of the men, Edgar Halsted was mod- erately successful as the erring hus- band; J. C. Marlow did a pouty mili- tary figure with good spirit; Philip Tomes played a young barrister with affable conviction, and Charles Drake was excellently legitimate as the friend of the principal culprit. The staging and tailoring were especially attract- ive, and Mlle. Fleurette executed a most engaging double back-action kick. ASHTON STEVENS. Orpheum. Of the newcomers at the Orpheum a human lizard and an almost human Dutch dialecticlan are the hits. Car- letta, the lizard, does a twisting, wrig- gling act that is boneless and extraordi- nary, and Al Wilson, the Dutchman, has a large fund of old and new jokes and songs, which he unloads with_enthusi- astic effect on the audience. By omit- ting several of his indelicate allusions— notably the one to his feet—his engage- ment should do the Orpheum good rather than harm. Dolline Cole is a “lady barytone,” who takes fairly well with the crowd; Crim- | mins and Gore, the “what-are-the-wild- waves-saying'’ persons, have been here before. Thefr act is anclent and uncom- ical. Really, the best of the bill is to be found in the hold-over turns. The little De Haven boy is a wonder and Rice and Elmer's_horizontal bar fun is good enough for any one. Alcazar. Benjamin Webster’s good old curtain- raiser, “One Touch of Nature,” and Grun- dy’s farce, “fThe Arabian Nights,” make an Interesting double bill at the Alcazar. In the Grundy adaptation Mr. Hunting- ton plays Hummingtop with a farce- comedy youthfulness that gives a some- what new idea of the part; Mrs. Bates sets it off with a_good old-school mother- in-law, and Miss Kingsley makes a bound- ing “Tndia-rubber girl.” Judging from the plays Mr. Belasco se- cured during his recent visit in New York, the little Alcazar will bid high for attention this winter. The list includes: “Charlie’s Aunt,” “The Gay Parisians,” “Thoroughbred” (the piece in which Dixey made a big success), two Nat Goodwin pieces (“The_Gilded Fool” and “Ambition), “Victor Durant”; Bob Hil- | lard’s farce, “The Mummy"”; Roland Reed’s success, “The Politician™; *“Fern- cliff,” a_melodrama; “Unclid Dudly,” a farce; “Lord Chumley,” “The Social Highwayman,” and others. It Is also rumored on the rialto that the Alcazar is about to band a No. 2 company for road purposes. Morosco’s. “Brother for Brother,” a stirring Eng- lish melodrama, pleased an immense crowd at Morosco’s last night. California. Marfe Dressler and the other clever people in *“Courted Into Court” played to a packed house at the California. Chutes Chiquita, the “microscopic marvel,” is breaking the record at the Chutes. Tivoli. “Brian Boru” had a big audience at the Tivoli last night. It will give way to “The Pearl of Peking” next wee! . A FATHER HAS A The Boy Broke Into His Home During His Parents’ Absence. Frank A. Sademan brought his 18-year- old stepson, mes Sageman, to the Cali- fornia-street Station and had him locked up on a charge of burglary. ‘While the boy’s mother and father were away from their home at 367 Nine- teenth street yesterday young Sademan, who had not been living at his home, broke the back door of the house open with a hatchet and stole $36. On his return home the stepfather sus- pected who the robber was and found the boy at the Eureka Dance Hall, from where he took him to the station. Young Sademan had no money in his possession, but acknowledged that he had broken into the house and robbed his parents. |, The elder Mr. Sademan says that the boy has caused him considerable trouble nd is continually getting into some scrape from which he has to be_helped. The mother feels that she has done all she could to reform her recreant son and h consented to his prosecution by her husband. Sademan, who had his son_arrested, was at one time a janitor of Emmanuel Baptist Church and an important wit- ness in ‘the Durrant case. el e S a0 DEFENDED HIS SON. Andrew Foster, 420 McAllister street, saw a strange man whipping his boy yes- terday afternoon and went to his son's assistance. He and the stranger had some words over the whipping and a fight was imminent, when the stranger pulled out a knife and stabbed Foster on the head and neck. He then disappeared among the crowd on Van Ness avenue. Foster went to the Receiving. Hospital and his wounds were dressed by Dr. Ed- wards. They were not serious. Foster will swear out a warrant to-day for the knife-wielder’s arrest. TEN MILLION POUNDS OF SMOKELESS POWDER ORDERED BY LONG. The Secretary of the Navy Calls Upon the Duponts for a Big Supply of Needed War Material. WILMINGTON, Jan. 24.—It became known here this afternoon that the famous powder firm of Duponts, whose works are located near this city, to-day received an order “rom Secretary of the Navy Long calling for 10,000,000 pounds of smokeless powder. The Du- ponts have for more than a year been supplying the Government with pow- der, but to-day’s order is the biggest ever sent to it. The powder mills have been very busy recently, and in view of to-day’s order an extra force was put to work to-night. The greatest secrecy is maintained by the officers of the powder company con- cerning the order, and they decline to discuss it. With the improved and en- larged facilities of the big Dupont mills the order, though .immense, can be filled in a very few weeks. The news of the receipt of the order by the Du- ponts caused a big flurry in local finan- cial circles in view of the departure of the battle-ship Maine for Cuba. ", i | NEW TO-DAY. DR. S If you are suffering from the results of indiscretions of youth, or from excesses of any kind in maturer years; or if you have Shrunken Organs, Lame Back, Vari- cocele, Rupture, exhaustive drains, etc., you should waste no time, but consult this Great Specialist; he speedily and perma- nently cures all diseases of Men and Wo- men. Call on or write him to-day. He can cure you. Valuable Book sent Free. Address . 37 “The District Attorney,” | SO ARRESTED The Pets Of Every Klondike Camp. No outfit complete without one. Strong, light-weight models for miners. Send name and address on a postal card for 148-page logue. illustrated cata- It is free. Winchester Repeating ArmsCo. NEW HAVEN, CONN. 418 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. GOOD TIMES HAVE COME. You can afford to indulge yourself or your | tamily in the luxury of a good weekly news- paper and a quarterly magazine of fiction. You can get both of these publications with | almost a library of good novels for §s per year. AUCTION! REAL ESTATE, | Probate, Partition, Foreclosure and Commissiones’s Sale, MONDAY, JANUARY 3ist, 1898, At 12 o'clock M. At Salesroom, 14 Montgomery Street, the Following Properties: PARTITION SAT E. Southeast corner of Drumm and Cotwmercial streetsy old improvements; rents $124 50, 30x75with an L 25x29:9. PARTITION SALE. on street,T5 fect westerly from Firss sed for manufacturing purposes; portion of lot unim:proved; size, 9:3x%0. PARTITION SALE. 206 Devisadero strect,between GoldenGate ave MeAllister stroet; clogant new modern restdenee of 15 rooms and bath, including billiard room, laundry, ete 25x100, PARTITION SALE. Market and 15th s fine busil coruer of Market <nd 15th streets; 50; COMMTSS world-famed for its brightness and the most complete General Weekly—covering a wiaer range of subjects suited to the tastes of men and women of culture and refinement than any journal—ever published. Subscription price, $4 per annum. TALES FROM TOWN TOPICS, a as6-page Quarterly Magazine of fiction, appearing the first day of March, June, September and De- cember, and publishing original novels by the best writers of the day and a mass of short stories, poems, burlesques, witticisms, etc. Subscription price, $2 per annum. Club price for both, $5 per annum. fou can have both of these if you subscribe | NOW and a donus of 10 novels selected from | the list below. Regular price for each, 50 cents. All sent postpaid. Remit §5 in New York exchange, express or | postal money order, or by registered letter, together with a list of the 10 novels selected, | by numbers, to | TOWN TOPICS, 208 Fifth Avenue, New York. TreT. By C. M. S, McLelian. ING. By A. S. VanWestrum. | | | | | | ness lot; southeast %100, S SALE. Jommissioner of the estate 3 lnb;. l‘mlthvclv. corneg ets, as a whole or i fous; sizes, 37:62115:6 and 2 each 35 by H12g, - TrITe: TO CLO-E AN ESTATE. Northwest corner of Third and Silver strects; Improve- r:;<Aut:,luhsmnudahbnck building, stor: d flats on 3rd street, store and flat on corner and three flats on Sih Stroot; rents, $23 per month; 7375 g7 THEO. L SCHELL ESTATE. . By Clarice 1. Clingham. 9107.73 Websterstreot,between Sacramento and Clay CE. "By Captain® Alired | streets; 2 flats of 5 and 6 rooms and bath; rents, §35 pew | month; 25x80:6, to an aliey. THEO. L. SCHELL ESTATE. As a Whole or in Subdivision. 1—Northeast corner of Broadway and Octavia street; residence of § roomsand bath; rent,$50 per me nth5x100, 2—Lot east side of Octavia street. 100 feet north of R Vansers | Broadway; 253112:6. e Leon. | MICHAEL HART ESTATE. A il 5 3 L | . 40 Natoma street, between First and Second : U R HAPPINESS. By Auita Vivand | g40ry and basement of 14 rooms: 34x75; rent, 830, #1—~AERSTRANGE EXPERIMENT. By Harold R Vynne. | MARGARET TOOMEY ESTATE. | 32=ON THE ALTAK OF PASSION. By John Gilliat. %—& MARTYR TO LOVE. By Jogn 1121 Treat avenue, between 2ith and 25th streets; cote tage of 4 rooms; 25x1 MUST BE SOLD. 3450 Missfou street, wesside, 40 feet north_of Brook street, fronting on Mission strect and old Sap Joseroad; cottage of 4 rooms; mortgage, #4000, Hibernia Bank, caa remain; large lot, 60x173, in na E. Wood. R. HALL’S REINVIGORATOR ve hundred reward for any c: wELS Ml we nnot cure. This secret remed: egular. stops all losses i TO CLOSE AN ESTATE Emissions, Impo! Sonorrhoea, Gleet, Fine Mission building lot; west line of Nos street; 51 [l MEl i oct Manhood and o . | feet south of Ienry; street bicuminized; 25296, fectsof self-abuseor ex: Sent | GOOD INVESTMESNT ON EAST LINE OF Ve B - clcd 52 bottic: 3 bottles, 857 suar | ERODERICK STREET. | anteedtocure. Address HALL/ EDICAL IN- | Between Scramento and Clay streets; old house of 5 | %;lr“;fi]-fgixgfinimfi:;fii ey g vlri? | rooms and out-buildings; lot 55:44x110 fect; strect ac- tone sidewalk laid; convenient to several lines of cars; magnificent location for flats INSIDE CORNER. Northeast corner of Pacific and Jones streets; doubls vate diseases quickly cured. Send for free book. or FADED HATR RESTORED to T 1 eottage of 6 and 5 rooms and bath each; rents §35; 45x60; RAY o b b D | oy e o Feni 5 46260 oves dandruff and scalp aisease. Don'r stain | BN (overs BALD spyts, Absniutely harmless Further pacticulars, catalogue, oto., cheerfully given les 50 cents, at druggist at our office. ENTAGE v HARM ¢ G. H UMBSEN & CO., Auctioncers, o ok Gl 14 Montgomery Street. NEW TO-DAY—AMUSEMENTS. 0+9+0+0+ PACIFIC COAST JOCKEY CLUB (INGLESIDE TRACK). Six Running Races Daily, Rain or Shine. . PROGRAMME FOR JUBILEE WEEK TUESDAY—Special for Three-Year-0lds, 6 Furlongs ; Two-Year-0ld Race. WEDNESDAY—LADIES' DAY ; ADMISSION FREE TO LADIES— Special Race, 1 Mils; Steeplechase Over the Short Course, THURSDAY—Three Races of Mils or Over, Including & Mile and & Quarter Handicap. FRIDAY—Special, 1 Mile and Race for Two-Year-Olds. SATURDAY—Lakeside Stakes, mile and & half; Special for Three- Year-Olds, 1 Mile, and Mile and a Half Hurdls Rase. FIRST RACE AT 2 P. M. o3 E:»"BR ¥ holesal AEL: Ce Southern Pacific Railroad Trains at 12:45 and 1:15 P.M. leave Third-Strest Station, stoppinga Valoncia stroet. Retuning immediately after the last race. Electne Car Linos—Kearny and Mission Street Cars every thras minutss, direct-to track without change. All cross-town lines connect. The track is reached by all routes in from 30 to 40 minutes. MACK & CO. ° ¢ + e -+ @ ‘ F. H. GREEN, Secretary. S. N. ANDROUS, President, > TiVOI;l OPERA-HOUSE. Mgs. ERNESTINE KRELING, Proprietor & Manager pe EVERY EVENI THE TRIUMPH. A HIT! Edw. B. Rice’s Superb Spectacle, G. The Musical Event of the Season, e GIRL FROM PARIS OUR JUBILEE PRODUCTION, “IT IS TO LAUGH.” The Romantic Comic Opera, A magnificent presenting company of fifty. “BRIAN BORU.” Beautiful Chorus. Elegant Costumes. s GREAT CAST. Every Evening, Including Sunday. Special Scenery, Correct Costumes, Appropri= ate Acceseories, Enlarged Chorus, Aug- FRIEDLANDER GOTTLOB 8 C° wessirs amum mented Orchestra. “The Harp That Once ThroughTara's Halls." SECOND AND LAST WEEK. = “Please Marry Me—It Won't Take Long NEXT WEEK-—The Merry Fantasie, Rich & Harris' Splendid Company, Headed by M MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. ‘Walter Morosco........Sole Lessee and Manager Grand and Elaborate Production of Frank Harvey's Sensational Melodrama, *‘ BROTHER FOR BROTHER. SPECIAL HOLIDAY MATINEE TO-DAY. Sensational Fire Scene. Iron Foundry in Full Operation. New Scenery, Comedy, Pathos, a Thrilling Plot. A Great Play by a Great Author. Evening Prices, 10c, 25c, i0c. Matinees Sat- urday and Sunday. CHIQUITA THE ‘' CONDENSED CUBAN PATRIOT,” “THE PEARL OF PEKIN Song—Dunce—Humor. . 2%c and G0o arie Dressler and John C. Rice, in John J. McNally's Latest, COURTED INTO COURT. Coming—Black Pattl’s Troubadours. GRAND JUBILEE BILL. AL WILSON, German comedlan: CRIM- MINS & GORE, comedy duo: CARLETTA. ar- . L. SWHANY, M.D. Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. | tist elastic; DOLLINE “OLE, America’s bary- tone; THE BIOGRAPH, new life scenes: CAR- TER DE HAVEN, boy comedian; RICE & ELMER, horizontal bar artists: PROFESSOR GALLANDO, lightning clay modeler. Last Woek of the Knaben Kapelle—New Selections Reserved seats, 2c; Balcony, 10c; Opera Chairs and Box seats, Scats by Phone ALCAZAR *302t THIS WEEK ONLY! The All-Laughing Farce, “ARABIAN NIGHTS!” “It Will Make You Snicker.” A Great Nerve Tomie. © Next Week—VICTOR DURAND. OLYMPIA— Comer of teson nd s 0 - Eddy Siedie America’s Most Beautiful Music Hall. KIRCHNER'S LADIES’ ORCHESTRA! And a Great Olio of Artists. ADMISSION FREE. House Thoroughly Heated As Called by The Call, Is the Smallest Woman on Earth! She Recelves EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING at the CHUTES, Rain or Shine. 10c to all, including Vaudeville; Children, 5. BUSH-STREET THEATER. The Thalia German-Hebrew Opera Company, WEDNESDAY EVE, January 2, “EZRA, THH WANDERING JEW.” Saturday and Sunday Nights, January 20 and 30. “FALL OF JERUSALEM.” Box office open dally from 10 3. m. to 5:30 p. m. i K CYCLE SKATING RINK, 'l'llgo'l;:rdBE’E between Third and Fourth. Moving Pictures and Opticat Illusions. ORCHESTRA MUBIC, it Open daily from 9:30 8. m. to 12 m.; 2 to 4 s 9 7to 10 p. m. General Admission, 10c; Tadles’ Skates. Free.