The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 28, 1898, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1898. WRECK OF THE CITY OF DULUTH Big Grain Steamer Disabled in Heavy Storm. Strikes on a Sand Bar While Entering a Harbor. Passengers and Crew Sent Ashore One at a Time on a Life Line. SOME ARE BADLY FROZEN. Valuable Cargo Lost and the Big | Vessel Is Rapidly Going to Pieces. Special Dispatch to The Call. ST. JOSEPH, Mich., Jan. 27.—The big grain steamer City of Duluth arrived off this port from South’ Chicago last night at 8:30 o'clock, and attempted to enter the harbor during a tremendous wind from the northwest and while a rolling. The steam- , but at the mouth of the struck a bar, and was thrown inst the North pier, ately. rches on elther bow and the th > side of around, and m in an hour, and part of her Morford and Pro- ed the made her ving ached the in quick time, con- had dis -q for midnight they had shot to the boat and the res- tugs had n. st to be taken ashore was Au- in, a business man of this the water several lous trip, and was was pulled cut e dipped int ng the | ; frozen when he he rest of the passengers shore in this manner, one There were nteen pas- and twenty-three of the crew. as the last to leave, being taken off at 5 o'clock this morn- ing. There were several ladles on board, and of the life-saving crew going out in the car after then William Tryon is now dying ts of the trip. condition, and seized with is no ous prostr hat she v live. Duluth had a heavy cargo r and load of There vthing of the v high sea roll- ach her, and she is jumped & torn to pie put out the ghty he rs were thrown into the wildest of Duluth was an old but - She was under char- Morton Trans- , carrying princi- t from Chicago to ection with the Big was owned by the 1 Superior Company ain McLean. 1000 tons, and ut § She w laden freight and grain. The | s well insured and it is un- | - is $10,000 insurance on On several previous trips s < : on the bar while entering this harbor 70 DISCUSS ANNEXATION, SACRAMENTO. J 21— The Sacra- mento Lecture its roll of m Association, comprising on mbership many of the lead- ire making preparations for public entertainment. They resident of the terestin co Chamber of Commerce, to e annexation of Hawali, he tak- ing the affirmative side, while a similar invitation has been extended to Colonel John P. Irish., who will take the The date for the discussion has not fixed, but elaborate ange- ents are under way, and there is no t that the debate will be ned to a large and iatelligent audienc Lol Another British Gunboat for- Esquimalt. SAN DIEGO, Jan. 21.—The British gun- eria arrived here nega- noon from the south, en route gland to Esguimault to join the British squadron. She stopped last at Mazatlan. All on board are well. HISKFY FOR MEDICINAL USE NO FLUSEL OIL An aid to WOMEN. A help to MEN. It counteracts the dan- sers of the Season and preserves the health dur- ing the Winter. Send for illus. pamphlet to DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO., Rochester, N. Y. unexpectedly | CLOSE OF THE FIELD TRIALS Warm Weather Mars the Final Work of the Dogs. L0S ANGELEY DELIVERANCE [S IN SIGHT People Will Win the A Few Clever and One Clear Case of Runaway. Protest. Spectal Dispatch to The Call BAKERSFIELDifJan. 27.—This was the warmest day since the inaugura- dogs that were ordered down in the forenoon suffered In consequence. The contests were .opened on new grounds, | but they did not prove any better than | the territory traversed vesterday. | It was 15 a. m. when Nimrod, | | handled by Allender, met the ranger | | Valiente, handled by Walters. When | cast off Valiente cut out a fast pace, | covering much ground and finally dis- | appearing from view of his handler. He never returned. He was on a race | to no particular spot on earth and may | be going vet. The judges gave him half an hour in which to return, but the dog which may prove to be a brilliant star or plains of Nebraska falled to put in an appearance. The judges ordered the mext brace down at . m. Luke, handled by Couts, and Cuba of Kenwood, handled | by Dodge, were cast off in a sage coun- try. After traveling half a mile Mr. Pyle of Bakersfield flushed a good- sized bevy and the birds scattered on nice open ground. Cuba was first to locate and point. The bird flushed wild. Luke roaded several yards and pointed. He was nicely backed. Both steady to shot. Cuba again pointed and the bird flushed. The quails were lying close and acting well. The dogs made several stops on birds that had moved from their positions, but dis- covered their mistakes in good season. So far as points were concerned the dogs scored about equal. Cuba flushed two birds, for which an excuse could not be offered. Neither of the dogs showed good nose, running birds that should have been inted. Cuba was certainly the most ish ranger and better worker. Dogs ordered up at 10:55 a. m. Dona Alicia, handled by Walters, and Peach Mark, handled by Allender, were cast off at 11 a. m. Dona proved to be a very merry worker, covering ground fairly fast, but lacking good bird sense. She was first to locate a bevy in a field of stubby willow and light cover. The birds were runners, and the little bitch roaded them several yards. In the meantime, Peach Mark pointed, and Dona, rounding to a turn, backed beau- tifully. Both dogs were steady to shot. Dona again drew on point, but the bird | flushed. The handlers then passed from the fleld into higher ground, where scattered birds were found. Peach came to a steady point. The bird was shot by Allender and retrieved quick- ly. The dog was steady to shot. Re- turning to the ground where the birds were found, Dona came to a pretty point, dropping on her stomach. _She as nicely backed by Peach. Both to shot. Dona, after roading rards, pointed falsely. Passing r a mound, Dona roaded and point- nd Peach ran in and flushed, for which he was chastised by his handler. Peach, ranging out into the fleid, point- ed beautifully, and was handsomely backed. Allender shot and killed. Peach retrieved quickly. Dogs ordered up at 12 o'clock. After luncheon the great Dash An- tonia, handied by Couts, and Alex C., the young and dashing Derby winner, handled by Lucas, were cast off at 1 p. m. Dash quartered and ranged over considerable territory in a short space ot time. His beautiful stride and hand- scme appearance when in motion were much admired, but Dash paid not the least attention to his handler, and whistle as the latter may. Dash kept on going until he ranged out of sight. he did not return in good season mrod was ordered down with Alex steady C. at 2 p. m. After forty minutes of hunting, birds were found on high ground, where the sagebrush was low and thick. Both dogs showed poor nose, but con- sidering the heat of the day and the exceedingly dry nature of the soil, some excuse was due to them for their poor behavior. Passing into lower land, where Luke scored several easy points on the previous morning, Nimrod came to a stanch point on a bevy and was stylishly backed. The birds were run- ning and Rod broke and roaded slowly. The pointer rushed, passed him and came to a grand stand, Nimrod back- ing in good style. Both dogs now started to road, and finaily they pointed side by side on birds that were hiding in a dry ditch. It was a very pretty picture as setter and pointer stood al- most touching each other. The dogs were.next ordered by their handlers into a field covered with low sagebrush. After working it carefully for considerable time they were or- dered up at 3:35 o'clock. Alex C was down two hours and 35 minutes. He had the hardest work of any dog in the trial and was invariably cast off in the heat of the day, but his beautiful style in the field combined with his fast | | ranging ability and good bird sense re- | | turned him numerous admirers. In fact, | he was selected by many who had no | interest in the dogs for competing for first or second money. Cuba of Kenwood and Peach Mark | | were the next and the last brace cast | | off. They located birds after a ]ungi run, and although they had the cover of evening their work was of the most | ordinary kind. They were on birds not | more than ten minues when the judges | | ordered them up, resulting in the finish of the trials of 1898. | On returning to Bakersfield the| judges consulted and decided on giving | Peach Mark, now the property of Em- | met Sullivan, first prize: Cuba of Ken- wood, the property of Mr. Tevis of Ba- | kersfield, second prize, and Luke, the | property of C. Young of San Francisco, | third prize. Three out of every five people who witnessed the trials said | that Luke should not be placed ahead of Alex C. LAUNCHING AT EUREKA. New Steam-Schooner For Coast Lumber and Alaska Trade. EUREKA, Cal, Jan. 21.—The new steam schooner Fulton was launched from Ben- dixson's shipyard this afternoon. Gray & Mitchell of San Francisco are the man- aging owners. While she is Intended for the coast lumber trade, she will be put in the Alaska trade immediately. he Fulton will be loaded with lumber here and towed to San Francisco, where her machinery will be put in. The dimensions are: Length, 152.7 feet; breadth, 33.15 feet; depth, 11.35 feet; imu tonnage, 398.42. Captain Victor Johnson of the steamer Hueneme is superintending her fitting up. | Performances | | | The Prize Winners—San Frencisco | Pointer Gets Third Place Under | tion of the fleld trial meeting, and the} Great Water Fight. Under the Pressure the City Council Is Begin- ning to Weaken. | { | pAAT R L | | Passes a Resolution to Investi- gate the Mountain Water Source. MONOPOLY TO BE BROKEN | If the Company Refuses to Arbitrate Then a New System Wiil | Bs Constructed. Epectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27.—Seldom has | a sharp and vigorous newspaper fight, | such as The Call has waged in behalf of the people of Los Angeles against the water company and its hydra- | headed syndicated press, been product- | ive of such great results. Less than two weeks ago the people of this city lay helpless in the grasp of the mo- nopoly. There were gloom and discour- agement in the ranks of the fighters | | for the people’s rights, while the syn- dicated press carried out the orders of its masters and pursued a policy of si- | lence. | To-day there is hope in every heart, and as a result of the fight waged by The Call there is a bright prospect ahead of deliverance from the clutch of the corporation. | the pressure that there are visible signs | of weakening in the City Council, and in at least one of the combined news- | papers. The first victory was the pass- age of the resolution providing for a committee to investigate and report on a mountain source of water supply. It now looks as if a greater victory will be achieved at next Monday’s meeting of the City Council. On that day a resolution will be introduced giv- ing due and legal notice to the water company of the city’s desire to arbi- trate the price of the plant in accord- ance with the contract. The city will appoint the arbitrator and call the water company to do likewise. There are indications to-day that Ash- man and Mathus will certainly sup- port such a resolution, while the friends of Blanchard of the Ninth Ward say he can be depended on to fall in on the side of the people. These three votes with Grider and Hutchison, the original fighters against the water company, will pass the reso- lution. If the company follows usual course and pays no attention to the offer of the city to arbitrate then an election will be at once called to vote bonds for the construction of an entirely new system, independent of the old plant, and the contract with the company will be declared void. This will bring the water question to a head right speedily, and will place the final settlement of it in the hands of the people. The mass meeting called for Satur- day night at Music Hall bids fair to be a rousing one. The people are eager to gain full information about the water question, and are seeking all sources of knowledge. It is intended at the meeting of Saturday night to perfect an organization to battle on the side of the people. It will be in the form of a committee composed of representa- tive men who will organize the people by wards into committees of public safety. Heretofore all the organiza- tion, all the money, and all the di- plomacy have been on the side of the water company. The people now in- tend to do a little organizing on their own account. The best of speakers will be in attendance at the meeting Sat- urday night, and many of the repre- sentative men of the town will act as vice-presidents and occupy seats on the stage. The most notable effect of this fight | is the total lack of confidence expressed by the people in the three syndicated daflies. They are wild with rage and frothing at the mouth at having been detected in their dastardly attempt to betray the people. A vote of the town shows that 90 per cent of the people sustain th' May- or's position and favor municip... own- ership of the water plant. while only 10 per cent uphold the policy of delay which has ruled a majority of the City Council. T0 SOON SPAN THE CONTINENT Vanderbilt Lines Preparing to Reach All the Way to San Francisco. Speetal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Jan. 28.—According to the Press this morning Vanderbilt lines are to span the continent, and San Franclsco 1s to be brought a day nearer to New York. The paper says: “William K. Vanderbilt is at the head of a syndicate which has for its purpose the ownership and opera- tion of a rallroad from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. nental system. What,are known as Van- derbilt lines will become one great proper- ty and one railroad after another will be absorbed by the New York Central Rall- | road. It may be sald authoritatively that the New York Central officials have been | talking with bankers as to the advisabil- ity of an issue of $100,000.000 4 per cent de- bentures. When certain negotiations have been concluded the reorganized New York Central will absorb the lines from Chica- o to the Pacific Coast which are now either controlled by the Vanderbilts or else by ‘friendly’ finterests. These rail- roads include the Chicago and North- western; Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis | S: and Omaha; Unlon Pacific. and_through Oregon Rallway and Navigation Com- any. P4 hen, too. there is the Northern Pa- cific, which is controlled by voting trus- tees. of whom J. Plerpont Morgan Iis chief. The holders of stock of that road hold large blocks of Great Northern, of which J. J. Hill is president. These rail roads, therefore, when bound together, would control all the transeontinental traffic_in the northern half of the coun- try. Yesterday it e known that the time for a trip across the country would be reduced twenty-four hours. The change in running time will be made in the early part of February. Already there have been changes in freight traffic that have attracted attention of compet- ‘"fi lines, but freight agents have been at a loss to explain the situation, as ne schedules have been arranged so quietly.” FROST IN THE CITRUS BELT Coldest Snap in South- ern California for Years. Considerable Damage Is Done to Orange and Lemon Crops. Gentle Rain Now Falling in Some Sections, With Indications of Its Continuance. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27.—The past two nights have been the coldest ex- perfenced in Southern California for years. In some localities the mercury | | dropped to 25 degrees. and in low places it even went to 20 degrees. There is| no doubt but serious injury was done | to citrus fruits, and in some instances | young trees were killed to the ground. This latter is especlally true of young! lemon trees. The freeze did not re- sult in great loss, as oranges in low | | places had been pretty generally pick- | ed and shipped. On high foot-hill| | ground the oranges were not injured, |and a large proportion of the groves here are planted on high ground. A gentle rain is now falling with indica- | tions that it will continue for some | da; | RIVERSIDE, Jan. 27.—The past week | | has been a cold one in this part of the | State, and the visit of frost has done some damage to citrus fruits in the more exposed portions of this valley. Just what this damage amounts to it | would be hard to estimate, but a care- So great has been | upon | its | It will be a transconti- | that railroad the Oregon Short Line and | ful canvass among the fruit growers and shippers would indicate that the | loss was probably not more than 5 per | cent of the crop. Riverside was par- ticularly favored in this last cold spell by the prevalent south winds, which prevented the thermometer from fall- ing much lower than it did. Tuesday | night was the coldest for the week, and then the glass ranged from 30 degrees | in favored places down as low as 24 in | | exposed points. | One thing that beyond doubt saved | the fruit was a change in the wind| |about 2 a. m., which brought up a heavy lot of clouds. Since Tuesday | | night the cold has moderated and all| danger of further trouble seems past. The past two months have been cold all over this part of the State, fruit has | been damaged everywhere and River- side has not es 2 Good judges of the conditions of things estimate the total damage to the orange crop here | at from 5 to 15 per cent, most of which occurred in the lowlands. SAN BERNARDINO, Jan. 27.—The thermometer reached the lowest point for the season last night throughout the valley, and, if all reports that reached the city to-day are true, the frost was heavier than it was two years ago. E. J. Underwood, who rep- | resents the Haight Fruit Company at Riverside, is responsible for the state- ment that not an orchard in that col- | | ony escaped. The mercury registered 23 degrees In the orchards while the | smudging was going on. ‘ Special reports made to the Horti- cultural Commission state that the more elevated groves at Highlands were only slightly injured, while the| fruit and the trees on the lower slopes of the town were dameged 20 per cent. Special reports from Rialto place the damage to the navel oranges in that | vicinity at 5 per cent, while the other | varieties suffered more. i Prior to last night the fruit at Colton | was not thought to be damaged more | than 2 per cent, but a considerable | quantity was injured last night. It is| feared that many of the small trees | are extensively damaged, but the| larger trees have in most instances es- | caped. The most conservative men do not estimate the loss of the orange and lemon crop above 25 per cent, but state- | ments have been freely made on the streets that haif the crop is frozen, | REDLANDS, Jan. 27.—That the | oranges in Redlands suffered from the drop in the temperature of this morn- ing there can be no doubt, but to what | | extent it is hard to say. The early part \ | of the night and up to 3 o'clock the | thermometer did not register lower | than about 32 to 24, but from 3 umlll about 7 the temperature ranged some- what lower, readings ranging from 24| to 26 and 28, according to locality and exposure. It is almost safe to say that | the average temperature in Redlands | was about 28 degrees. [ As to the amount of fruit injured it | js difficult to say. It is not thought that navels and seedlings are hurt to | exceed 10 per cent, while the sweets | and St. Michael's are damaged not to exceed 15 per cent. Smudging was done by some, and it is claimed by those | | who smudged that it caused the ther- | mometer to raise from 2 to 4 degrees. | Packers are not shipping beyond the | | average for this time of the year, and | the growers seem to be confident that ! a minimum amount of damage was | done. At the present writing it is trying | hard to rain, and the indications are | that by morning a long-sought rain will be on hand. SACRAMENTO'S BENCH SHOW. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 27.—The Bench Show of the California Poultry Associa- tion is in full blast and boasts of this annual meeting being by far the best one ever held In all respects. There are mas- tiffs, St. Bernards, Great Danes; blood- hounds, foxhounds, greyhounds, pointers, Newfoundlands, setters, spaniels, collies, beagles, bulldogs, terriers, poodles, and almost every other Kind. Among those on exhibition are many which are_ séveral-time prize-winners. There are R. Burr's male mastiff Duke, which won first prize at the Sacramento Bench Show last year; H. M. McCrack- en’s St. Bernard bitch, which won first rize at Stockton last year; W. H. Col- ins’ St. Bernard bitch, Lady Butte, a three-time prize-winner; G. "'W. Whit- more’s St. Bernard bitch, Montana Queen, which won first prize In San Francisco in '97; E. P. Schell’s St. Bernard bitch Samona W. Z., which holds the St. Ber- nard Club gold medal; R. E. Savage's St. Bernard dog Roxie, a five-time first-prize winner; Mazzini Bros.” St. Bernard bitch Vienna, winner of first prize at Stockton in 1896 and at Sacramento in 1897. Other prize-winners on exhibition are: P. W. Sheehan & Sons’ pointer bitch, Eva .; F. B. Adams’ male pointer, Doctor; | Kimbal & l'guon's pointer dog, Jack: Phil Wand's English setter bitch, Flora W.; Miss Ethel G. Craegh's setter Irish bitch, Queen of Kildare; O. J. Albe's coi- lle, Alto Clifton; E. C. Plume's cocker spaniel bitch, Portia Pastime: H. A. Weg- iener's black cocker spa?lel bitch, Polly Pastime; Willlam B. Godfrey’s fox-terrier bitch, Golden Dirk; Royal Kennel's fox- terrier dog, Warren Crack; J. B. Martin's fox-terrier dog, Golden Flash Second; Mrs. E. M. Simpson’s fox-terrier bitch, Golden Restless; H. A. Wegencr's J?anes« span- fel bitch, Yum Yum: F. C. Gifford's field spaniel dog, Rex Gifford. The attendance was good to-da; from mow on until the close will, mo doubt, increase dally. e ——— To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. druggists the money if 1t fails | 25c.” The genuins has L. B. Q. on All to cure. tablet. {of the kind of bon T0 BE LIBERAL T0 CANADIANS Regulations to Govern Transportation Through American Territory. Goods for the Klondike Will Be Sent With All Possible Dispatch. The Collector at Dyea Is to Be Given Discretion in the Matter of Bonds. Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. Call Office, Riggs House, Washington, Jan. 27. The Treasury Department will soon issue the regulations governing the transportation of Canadian goods for the Klondike through American ter- ritory. These regulations will be as| liberal to Canadians as the regulations | of Canada are to the men of this coun- try who pass through Canadian terri- tory. 3 The regulations will prescribe two | ways of taking goods in bond through American territory. One will be the payment of duties on the goods at the port of entrance, either Dyea or Ska- guay. Upon the payment of the du- ties a certificate will be given. If the goods pass inspection at the place of | exit, near Lake Linderman, the cer-| tificate can be returned to the port-of | entrance and the money will be re-| funded. Another way will be the fur- nishing of a bond. The goods will then be accompanied by a manifest. If they are untouched when examined at the place of entrance into Canadian terri- tory, the bond will be canceled. It is said that several surety companies are now forming. at convenient places. The treasury officials have not been officially informed that there is extens- ive or formidable protest from Cana- dians over the present arrangements for the iransportation of goods. The | Chamber of Commerce at Vancouver is | agitated upon the subject. As the mat- ter stands now, a deputy collector ac- companies the goods of Canadians | through ~ American territory, amiI charges them $6 a day for his services. | Canadians object to this as exorbitant, and want it stopped. A cry is going | up from Vancouver to close the passes | of Canadian territory to Americans. | 1t is thought that the treasury regu- lations on the subject of bonds for goods going through American terri- tory will be as lenient as possible. The collector at Dyea will be allowed to use considerable discretion in the matter he may take. OVERCOME BY THE ‘ HOSTILE CRITICISM. | Hallie Erminie Rives, the Young Southern Author, Removed From the Wal- 1 dorf to a Sanitarium. | NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—Hallle Erminie | Rives, the young Southern author and | cousin of Princess Tecbetzkole, formerly | Mrs. Amelie Rives Chanler, is a patient at a sanitarfum in Brooklyn. Unnerved | ¢ hostile criticism of her recent work, | “Smoking Flax,” and overtaxed by the | effort to get out another volume dealing with Southern problems, was re- moved from the dorf yesterday and taken to a sanitarium for treatment and res NEW TO-DAY. The drowning of a woman is a shudder. some sight. Yet it is swift and compara- tively painless, and blissful, compared to the pain and agony suffered for many years by many thousands of women. Most of the suffering endured by women may be traced to one great, aggravating set of disorders. The woman who does not take proper care of the organs distinctly feminine is sure to | be sickly, nervous, freiful, and racked with | pain. She is unfitted for wifehood and | motherhood. Every woman owes it to her- | self to be strong and healthy in a womanly | way. She may insure ghis if she will use the proper remedy. \The greatest of all medicines for weak | and_suffering women is Dr. Pierce’s Favor- | ite Prescription. It acts directly upon the delicate organs that make wifehood and | motherhood possible. It makes them healthy and vigorous. It cures all weak- | ness and disease. It allays inflammation, | soothes pain and stops weakening drains, | The nerves become steady, and calm, and health resumes its natural sway throughout the system. It prepares for wifehood and | motherhood. Over go,000 women have tes- | tified to its marvelous virtues and all good | druggists sell it. | Ignorance of her own physical nature is re- sponsible for a great deal of the pain and suf- fering that woman undergoes. ~ Dr. Pierce's | Common ense Medical Adviser is the best | medical book for the home. It is now on the bookshelves of over a million American households. Several chapters of the book are devoted to the diseases and weaknesses of the organs distinctly feminine. Every woman should read it. It coutains over 1000 pages. Any one may obtain a paper-covered copy, absolutely FREE, by sending 21 onecent stamps to cover the cost of mailing only. to World's Dispensary Med- ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. If a handsome, durable cloth binding is desired, send ten cents eatra (thirty-one cents in all). SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, With Every 25¢ Purchase— A 25¢ Guaranteed Toothbrush, A 25¢ Package Pure Sachet, A 50c Handsome Calendar, Or a 35¢ Children’s Picture and Story Book, aller Bros., Leading Cut-Rate Druggists, 33 GRANT AVE., COR. GEARY. jacket. Now we have taken a big lot of our | L0 0ppoSits. Two Jubilees! One occurring to-day on our second floor, Juvenile Depart- ment, the other occurring to- morrow at the park. For our Juvenile patrons we have prepared a big lot of those Brownie Lunch Boxes. We propose to dive ‘em to all our little folks Friday and Satwr- day. (00,000 00000000000C00000 ® ® 2 Some 300 dozen Heavy Derby Ribbed Fast 8 ® Black Hose for Boys, all sizes, in our Juvenile @& Furnishing section, second floor, at 8 ® 3 3 8 S Per Pair. 3 ® q @ ® [00,0000000000000Q000000d000000000000000000000C —_— Jubilee Special! |Jubilee Festivall For the bigder boys we have taken somz 300 of our pretty | Blue Cheviot Suits, dressy fab- | rie, in fact the sam> fabric as | the Reefer Swit which we men- But they’'re for prettiest and dressiest of b'ue Suits in the ‘\ boys between the ages of 7 and recfer fashion, with deep sailor collar, collar | 75 Thyy’re 4 pretty Lot of suits. handsomely braided, suits that we sell requ- | o hievs addsd toth larly at £3.60, which means that other stores | !/ ¢ 1VVe adCed Lo these an ex- get $7.50 for *em. These are forlads between | tr@ pair of trousers. It's one of the ages of $ and 10 years. We nave added | our Jubilee specials. We will offer the two, the swit and extra to these an extra pair of trousers with little pair of trousers, to-day and buckle atthe knee. These trousers sell singly at 75c. | ) 3 | Satwrday only, including a We say for the suit and extra trousers, | Brownie Lunch Box, at but on Friday and Saturday only—this also includes a Brownie Lunch Bor—at Suit and Extra Trousers. Most boys wear out two pairs of pantstoa $2.30 For Suit and Extra Trousers. 9-11-13-15 KEARNY ST. THE FRISCO BOYS. * For a long time,” said the farmer's wife, ** I suffered from gastric troubles and dyspepsia. Alter all my meals 1 expericnced a disagreeable, heavy sort of feeling and oftentimes in the morning my tongue would be coated ; in fact, this would be the case for whole days at a time. I had recourse to the whole cate- gory of correctives, aperients, laxatives, etc., but the relief 1 found was only temporary. Indeed, in most cases, after I had taken them for any length of time, the early efiicacy seemed entirely vitiated. I had so often seen in the ad- yertisements of Ripans Tabules the statement, onc gives relief, that at last it so impressed .itself upon me that I decided to give them a trial. A trial was entirely convincing and in a short time T was well. While I have now no regular use for them I always keep them on hand, to be used in case of emergency.” visit DR, JORDAK'S Great Museum of Anatom 1061 RARZET ST. bet. 6tb & 7t3, 8.1, The Largestof its kindin the World. DR. JORDAN—Private Diseaseg, Consultasion free. Writa for Book Philosophy of Marriage, MAILED FREE. NOTARY PUBLIC. A. J. HENRY, NOTARY PUBLIC 638 Lo CTeiepnons cm, Residends 308 Valencia street. Telephone, ‘‘Church” L DR.MCNULTY, l‘“lswl‘:l. OWXN AND RELTABLE CLb Speeialist cures Private,Nervous, 13:00¢ and Skin of Menonly. Manly Powerrestored. Over 20years' experience. Send for Book, free. Patients T T B g S R O G 3! 3 8. Sundays, 12, Consuli tlontree aud sacrediy confldential. Cuil or address P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D., 26 Kearny Street. San Francisco. Cal |ASH 3= BITTERS BETTER THAN PILLS. | | | i | | i

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