The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 22, 1898, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 22, 1898. ENGLISH YELLOW JOURNALISM IS BEARING FRUIT Relations Between Great Britain and France Becoming Very Stra Press of Paris Reflects the Sentiment of the| People in Intimating That the French | Refuse to Special Cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Gordon Bennett. by James . 21.—English yellow jour- ning to bear fruit here. stion that the relations and France are be- ned. This is simply blustering attitude of the yers over the Fashoda ques- PARIS, O s, however, which shows jer witha mon- which is la- Whereupon But what will I This is not ¢ nt und RGANIZING COAST DEFENSES Te this 21.—The a dispa £ that the fourth battalion comprising n dqus an, it is add- ds of ammu and the o ts of a di- Pr with re . division when 1ps lish IGNORES KITCHENER Baratier of on hia s for the PARIS, Marchand's apt on revictualing hand's report, te 1 g the night, the arrival at Fashoda of Gen- ner, and only gives an ac- menti eral Kitc count of the incidents of the expedition, with an elaborate description of the route followed, th s occupied, th of man of occupati the raising = flag, the force left at each point and the treaties of submis: with the tribes, in addition to g to an encounter with the Der- »d in cert: quarters that atier is the bearer of a which the French au- willing to trust upon aph lines. 1 goes as far as the eptember. and says that \e supplies of the party The reason for the mention of the arrival ner at Fashoda is said ginning of Marchand ¥ not ready when Captain Baratier left Fashoda. When the cap- tain started from that place he did not think he would go beyond Khar- toum. Major Marchand, however, deemed it | fmpracticable to send the finished por- tion of the report, intending to dispatch the remainder of it as soon as Captaln Baratier returned. But the captain, on arriv at Omdurman, found there in- structions telling him to go on to Cairo, from which place he will proceed to rance. CELEBRATION OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR/ LONDON, Oct. 21 eptional in- terest was taken to-du the celebra- tion of the anniversa: the battle of Traf which cceu on October 21, 1805, when the Brit t, under Admiral Nelson, gair ant vic- tory over the fleets of ance and Spain, commanded by Admiral Ville- neuve. The cause of this increased outburst of patriotism here is the dispute with France ove the Fashoda question, which, In some quarters, is looked upon ag a matter that may possibly bring about a war between the two countries, BRITISH ADMIRALTY'S SIGNIFICANT ORDERS LONDON, Oct. 21.—A. dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Portsmouth saye the British Admiralty | December 15. S| the Fash = fact that the report of Major | ined. Be Biuffed. | Copyrighted, 1898, | has issued orders that no dockyard re- i'pairs are to be commenced upon s of the erve squadrons u 23 can be completed within forty-eight hours. —e— |ENGLAND WILL NOT i BROOK UNDUE DELAY | LONDON, Oct | cles here are -Government cir- atisfied that L q not lead to At the same time the determina- reiterated not to budge from the ich has been taken up, no e may be. overnment has k unneces- e event of France ite Fashoda the Mar- emoved from that it is not expected that ry to go to such ex- war. HOME RULERS CHEER FOR MAJOR MARCHAND| DUBLIN, Oct. 21.—Willlam Red- mond, Parnellite member of Parlia- sent for FEast Clare, addressing a me rule meeting here this evening, called for cheers for Major Marchand, which were given with great hearti- ne Mr. Redmond “The sym- pathies of Irishmen are with France.” 'FRENCHMEN INFLAMED AND MORE DEFIANT PARI Oct. 22. — A remarkable change has come over French opinion on the F question during the past forty ours. The attitude of the public s infla nd more a t. This i artly due to the tone of the Briti »Ss, but more to the ng spirit of the sh Chan- | the Excheque Michael ch, which the Autorite calls ation that i{s almost a threat Municipal Council abused on all sides the Government nment circles disposition seems to. be to sist the British demands. It is ported that the policy of France, definitely stated to Great Britain, | cludes the £ of for to Parls | ex- avert the | re- re- | as | in- Ru- | Min- | Foreign Mini | s support in the contro- | 1 the bac hough the 1 s of the ntinue » and d >d to carr ut limits cons rights and dignity. INSANITY AND DEATH CAUSED BY FICKLENESS i North Dakota Volunteer Followed | From Cuba by a Sweetheart, | | ‘Who Goes Mad, and Then | He Is Found Dead. | ST. LOUIS, Oct A special to 4 {v public from Deadwood, S. D., says: e t ent with h the | A ert Martin, a rancher living near the heyenne River in Zicbeck County, en- ted as a volunteer at the beginning of e war and fought at the battle of El y. After the battle he met Ramona | the daughter of an officer of Gar- | a’s command, and they became s carts. Soon afterward he was attacked by fever and sent home on sick leave. He d before his departure for the | of Meanwh of his illness a follow and nurs brother's cloth, : | amaica and secreted herself | teamer bound for New Or- ing there she tramped and to Hermosa, S. D. When ¢ her lover’s ap- » and the shock drove | ne time the Ameri- | ved to h flirtation Martin ppeared. hody was found float- - River. Whether he atoxicated or committed ter of conjecture. S n SECRETARY GAGE UPHELD. | [ Had a Right to Use His Discretion in | the Award of Bonds. | WASBHINGTON, Oct. 21.—Jjudge Cox | in the District Supreme Court, to-day de- | clded the cases of George B. Wightman | and of Willam H. Wharton against Sec- retary Gage in favor of the Secretary of the Treasury. One sult sought an injune. tion and the ot mandamus, the basis | of complaint i h being the rejection | by the Secretary of the Treasury of bids submitted for the recent war loan bond | issue by the complainants. Secretary | Gage refected the bids, believing that the | bidders really represented certain institu. tions. Judge Cox to-day held that, under the | suicide is a | | | act of Congress, the Secretary of the | Treasury had Iscretion in the award | | of the bonds, and that the intent of | Congress was that they should go to indi- | viduals, to the exclusion of banks and | corporations. A i THE POPE CALLS A HALT. | | All Attacks Upon American Catholics | Must Cease. | NEW YORK, Oct. 2L.—A the World from Rome says: The Pope has given orders, the Popolo | Romano announces, that all attacks on American Catholics shall cease and all | complaints against the doctrines of Father | Hecker shall be withdrawn. The report that the Pope has placed Father Hecker's book on the Index Ix- purgatorius is denied. e EXTENDING COAST DEFENSES. Gun and Mortar Batteries for Port Orchard Naval Station. SEATTLE, Oct. 2l.—The Government has decided to erect gun and mortar ba teries for the protection of the Port O chard naval station, contiguous to Seat- tle. Proceedings to condemn acres of land for this purpose were commenced to- day in the Federal Court under ingtruc- tions from the Department of Justice at ‘Washington. Judge Hanford will bear the case on | i | dispatch to li CAPTAIN BARATIER, THE SECOND IN COMMAND OF THE MARCHAND EXPEDITION WHO IS NOW EN ROUTE TO PARIS WITH DISPATCHES FROM HIS CHIEF. REPORTED LOSS OF A STEAMER The Abbie Rowe Thought to Have Sunk. ELEVEN PERSONS ABOARD UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH MADE FOR THE VESSEL. It Is Supposed the Passengers Es- caped, for Indians Tell of a Party Camped or the Beach. Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Oct. 21.—Tappan Adney, a correspondent of Harper's Weekly who arrived here Wednesday from St. Michael on the steamer Roanoke, brings the news of the nrobable loss of the small steamer Abbie Rowe in Norton Sound. The steamer had on board eleven per- sons composing the Abble Rowe party of Boston. The party left St. Michael September 11 for Chingik Mission, lo- cated on Golofrim Bay, about eighty- five miles north of St. Michael. Barring accident they should have reached their destination in three or four day: Dr. Brigham and wife, M Rowe, Miss Blaine and another lady, members of the party, considered the vessel in- capable of weathering a severe storm and took passar- on a schooner which left a few da before the steamer for Chingik Mission, where they were to meet the remainder of the party. After vainly waiting some time Captain Wil- liam S. Taylor, late engineer of the rev- enue cutter Bear, and M. F. Melsing. formerly of San Francisco, began a | search for the missing steamer in the vacht Edith. They followed the coast to St. Michael without success. Just before the Roanoke left St. Mi- chael, Adney says, a party arrived from the north with a story to the effect that the Indians had reported a small steamer wrecked, stating that they ssw a small erowd of around a fire, It w; that this must have been the men on the beacn s generally belleved party | from the Abbie Rowe. Adney also reported that while | searching for the missing vessel Cap- tain Taylor and Melsing picked up a man in an open boat several miles at sea. The man had been without food or water for several days and was Ster- ling Martin of Chicago, who was left adrift on a barge which was being towed from St. Michael to Golofriin Jay by the steamer Fortune Hunter th a Chicago party on board. Fortune Hunter was caught in a storm and was forced to cut loose the barge. Several days afterward the Fortune Hunter was picked up by the steamer Tillamook in a water-logged condition. An unsuccessful search was made for Martin. After being cut lcose from the Fortune Hunter the barge foundered and Martin put to sea in a small boat. ST. JAMES HOTEL AT SAN JOSE TO BE SOLD James Campbell, the Honolulu Capi- talist, Negotiating for the Property. SAN JOSE, Oct. 21L.—The sale of the St. James Hotel to James Campbell, the Honolulu capitalist, is now being ar- ranged, and transfer of the property will be made in about a month. At present Campbell is at the islands, but will return shortly, when the sale will be consum- mated. This report was confirmed at tne hotel this evening. The price will not be made public at present. The hotel Is now the property of the regents of the University of California, who purchased it at public sale a few months ago to satisfy a $75,000 mortgage fven to secure a loan from the Lick trust und Campbell and hig family have spent their summers here for several years past, and it is said they will make their home here in the future. The purchase of the hotel Is believed to be but the first of a number of investments this capitalist will make in San Jose. oo MILLIONS OF ACRES OPEN. | Vast Amount of Land That Remains Unappropriated. WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—A statement prepared at the General Land Office shows that at the present time there are 570,368,274 acres of unappropriated and un- reserved public land in the United States, exclusive of that in Alaska. Of this area 546,549,655 acres, or more than 94 per cent, are in the so-called desert land States and Territorfes. Of the vacant lands in these States and Territories jt is esti- mated that 332,176,000 acres are of a char- acter that may be denominated as “‘des- ert” under the law providing for the dis- posal of such lands. SUDDEN DEATH AT SAUSALITO. Charles Dexter, a Well-Known Resi- dent, Succumbs to Heart Disease. SAUSALITO, Oct. 2L.—Charles Dexter, a well known resident of this town, ex- pired suddenly at § o'clock iast evening of heart disease. For fifteen years he lived at Honolulu and was a warm personal friend of ex-Queen Liliuokalani, who fre- quently consulted with him ox; matters of | state. Dexter was 7¢ years of age OBSTACLES I | | Atlantic Ocean, WAY OF CABLE Line to Honolulu Said to Be Impossible. GLOOMY REPORT | SOUNDINGS SHOW THE OCEAN IS‘: VERY DEEP. However, Military Electricians of High Standing Think a Line to Hawaii Could Be Operated. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—A special to the Post from Washington say: at Honolulu the American Commission ers appointed to arrange the detalls of annexation made some inquiry as to the cost and practicability of a cable connecting the islands with the United States. They bring a rather gloomy re- port, saying there is an almost fatal obstacle in the way of such a cable. Boundings have been taken showing a depth of more than six miles in the Pacific Ocean, along the track of the Kuro Siwo or Japanese current, which corresponds to the gulf stream in the but s From edge to edge they say it is hun- dreds of miles in width and between the United States and Hawaii it ap- pears either to have cut a channel to an enormous depth or else to have sought a natural abyss in the earth's | crust through_which to flow. They say that cable-layers fear lest it may be impossible to anchor cables across this vast water-swept space because the force of the current may part the metal. Cabl have been successfully laid in water as deep as this in the Indian Ocean, but there was nothing corresponding to the Japanese current to contend with. Military electricians of high standing and acquainted with all the detalls of cable-laying do not agree with this re- port. They assert that no particular difficulty is likely to be experienced in laying a cable between California and Hawalf, but that very serious difficulty might be found in extending the line from Hawail to Hongkong. As to “anchoring” the cable, they say that nothing is done in that line beyond weighting with heavy armor, which is expected to carry it to the bottom, where it will lie in place of itself. Al- lowance is made for inequalities of the ocean’s floor by making the cable about 20 per cent longer than the route jt follows &2s m ured on the surface. This margin for slack is the result of averaging experiences with various submarine cabl LILLIAN RUSSELL FREE OF MATRIMONIAL TIES | John Chatterton, Whose Stage Name Is Perugini, Receives a Decree of Divorce. NEW YORK, Oct. 2L.—Lillian Russell is again free from matrimonial ties. Signor Perugini, better known as John Chatterton, whose wife she had been since January 21, 1894, to-day received a decree of divorce in the Chancery Court In Jersey City. Four months after their marriage Miss Russell rushed into print with charges of cruelty, alleging that she had been beaten by her husband in a hotel in Philadelphia. These allega- tions were denied by Signor Perugini, who later brought suit for divorce in New Jersey on the ground of desertion. Miss Russell denied the charge, and filed a cross bill. The petition was heard by Washington B. Willlams, ad- visory master, in Jersey City last month. Among the reasons for their separation which Signor Perugini gave was that hls wife often sat up until 6 o’clock in the morning to play poker. — DREADFUL DEED OF. AN INSANE WOMAN Strangles Her Three Children Be- cause She Did Not Want Them “To Grow Up Wicked.” TORONTO, Oct. 21.—A dreadful tragedy was enacted in the east end of the city to-night, when Eliza Burrill, wife of a well-to-do _mechanic, became demented and_strangled her three children—Ethel aged 8, Stanley, aged 3, and Harold, aged 11 years. The hukband of the woman found all of them dead when he came home from work to-night. The demented woman gave as a reason for her terrible deed that she did not want them to grow up wicked. . TWO THOUSAND STRIKE. Pennsylvania Coal Miners Prepare for a Long Siege. PITTSBURG, Pa., Oct. 21.—Two thou- sand coal miners in the fourth and fifth o0ols on the Monongahela River struck o-day for the enforcement of the Chicago agreement. The strikers are preparing for a long slege and are establishing camps near the mines to prevent non- | union miners l ‘working. WILLING TO IS MADE/ TREATED BY A CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST GIVE UP THE PHILIPPINES Frederic Dismissed the Doctors. But Spain Hopes for Compensation. TIME, HOWEVER, IS WASTED TOOK “ABSENT TREATMENT” PHYSICIANS SAY THEY COULD UNCLE SAM WILL NOT PAY FOR HAVE SAVED HIS LIFE. CONQUERED TERRITORY. Relatives and Attaches of the De-| ceased Author’s Household Give Sensational Testimony Be- fore the Coroner. So the American Commissioners Will Stand By Their Instructions Not to Agree to Spend One Cent. Epecfal Dispatch to The Call. Special Dispatch to The Call. = LONDON, Oct. 21.—The inquest over the remains of Harold Frederic, the newspaper correspondent and author, | who died suddenly on Wednesday morning at Henley of heart disease, was adjourned to-day until Wednesday NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—The Washing- ton correspondent of the Herald tele- graphs: Appreciating that the power of the rebels in the Philippines has in- creased to such an extent that Spain will not be able to reduce them to sub- | next. jection without a large expenditure of The evidence presented was some- | lite and money, public opinion in Spain | what sensational. Mr. Frederic's | into the con- if adequate is willing to see them p: trol of the United State compensation is obtained. The Sagasta government, according to information which has reached here, is proceeding in accordance with this ldea and when the subject of control, | disposition and government of the Phil- ippines comes before the Paris Peace Commission it is expected that strenu- ous efforts will be made to obtain from the United States some equivalent for the territory which this Government may demand. In some well-informed quarters here daughter Ruth said her father did not believe in doctors. She added that it | was with his consent, but under the | influence of others, that Mrs. Mills, a | Christian scientist, was summoned to attend him. Kate Lyon, a_member of Frederic's household, testified that the deceased had asked her to call in Mrs. Mills, and that the latter came to the house and Christian scientists. On the same dayl | Mr. Frederic dismissed the doctors who | had been in attendance on him. Most | of Mrs. Mills’ treatment, continued the the opinion prevails that the Spanish | yitness, was what was known as “gb- Commissioners will continde as long as | gent treatment.” they dare to oppose the acquisition of |~ At the request of friends of the sick any portion of the Philippines by the | man the doctors were again summoned, United States, and when they find that | but the deceased informed them that | | the American Commissioners are firm | when they previously attended him he | in their demand will suggest the trans- | had not followed their directions. | fer of territory on condition that the| John Stokes, Mr. Frederic’s amenu- United States shall assume a portion | ensis, testified that he had informed of the Cuban debt. Kate Lyon that she might be charged It can be stated on authority, how- | with manslaughter if Mr. Frederic| | ever, that Spain will lose time by en- | should die without receiving medical | | deavoring to obtain a money consid- | treatment. | eration from the United States in ex-| Drs. Brown and Freyberger, the phy- change for territory. The American |sicians who had attended Mr. Frederic, | Commissioners have instructions not to | said the deceased had suffered from | rheumatic fever. and that he was para- | | expounded the system followed by the |- much wider. | agree to pay Spain a cent for any ter- ritory nor to assume any portion of the Cuban or other debts which the Span- ish Government has contracted and for which Cuba and the Philippines were surety. Officials say it would be ridi- | culous for the United States to pay a | conquered nation for agreeing to de- mands which as conqueror it has a and secure compliance g SPANIARDS WASTE PARIS, Oct. 21.—The joint session of the Peace Commission to-day lasted { from 2 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. During this time the Commissioners discussed the forward by the Spaniards for the pur- pose of prevailing upon the American | Commissioners to assume the Cuban | debt. No definite conclusion was reach- ed, and the Cbmmissioners adjourned until Monday, | tion will again be discussed. It is prob- | able that this feature of the negotia- | tions will be disposed of next week. Thus far there have been seven foint sessions, four of which have been de- ted to the discussion of the first ar- ticle of the protocol. In this manner two weeks have passed and no result has been reached. The American Com- | missioners have listened to all the ar- | guments of the Spaniards, but they have not changed the position which they first assumed in refusing to take over the Cuban deb.t. | SAGASTA LOSES A FAITHFUL COUNSELOR | Special cable to The Call and the New York { Herald. Copyrighted, 1888, by James Gor- don Bennett MADRID, Oct. 21.—Senor Moret has | become detached from Senor Sagasta, | | | | whose faithful counselor he has been | in the peace negotiations. To-day it | was ostentatiously announced that | Senor Moret had_left Madrid for his | country place. The cause of his de- | parture is political jealousies. For some time the press has daily commented upon the fact that Senor Sagasta recelved communications from Senor Montero Rios, and before he call- ed other Minlisters he Invariably re- ceived a visit from Senor Moret. The latest advices from Paris repre- sent the discussions of the Commis- sioners as more cordial than in the first days. To-day there is no longer talk here of the Cuban debt as belonging to Spain, but the discussion is over the manner in which the United States will guarantee it. EVACUATION DELAYED BEYOND DATE FIXED WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—It is now certain that the complete evacuation of Cuba will be delayed beyond the perfod originally fixed by the administration. This follows entirely without reference to anything that has occurred in Paris before the Peace Commission. The ‘War Department has about satisfied itself that the task imposed upon the Spanish authorities, namely, the re- moval and transportation to a great distance by sea of about 120,000 sol- diers, sick and well, with their accou- terments, is beyond the ability of the Spaniards. Delay in the evacuation of Cuba will cause a delay in the relinquishment of sovereignty by the Spaniards over the entire island, which was set for De- cember 1. It is hardly deemed prudent to undertake to assume charge of the municipal affairs of Havana so long as the city contains a strong garrison of Spanish troops, and it is felt that law and order could be better maintained in such centers by allowing them to re- main under Spanish jurisdiction until they are evacuated by the troops and reoccupied by United States troops. It is not to be understood from this that the American Military Commissioners are in any sense abating the pressure they have brought to bear upon the Spanish Military Commission to secure the evacuation of the island and the relinquishment of Spanish sovereignty. On the contrary, they have redoubled their efforts to secure these objects, but are not disposed to insist upon the per- formance of impossible tasks, and their demands will be largely shaped by their knowledge that the Spaniards are act- ing in perfectly good faith in their ef- forts to carry out the terms of the pro- tocol. TIME IN ARGUMENT | second series of written arguments put when the Cuban ques- | | lyzed on one side. His death, they as- | serted, was due to syncope. Both de- | clared their belief that with proper treatment the patient would have re- | covered. | The Inquest was adjourned until | Wednesday, when it Is expected Mrs. Mills will b i ABUSES AT THE CAMP HOSPITALS | Witnesses Before the War Investigators. | ISUPPLIES ARE DELAYED TROUBLE IN GETTING REQUISI- TIONS FILLED AT ATLANTA. | | Chaplain Nave Tells of Intoxication Among Surgeons and the Theft of Articles From Patients. Special Dispatch to The Call. .ATLANTA, Oct. 21.—The War Inves- two witnesses her: They were Major | Blair B. Taylor, surgeon in charge of | the general military hospital here, and Rev. Orville J. Nave, chaplain of that institution. Major Taylor had, in the beginning of the camp’s history, considerable diffi- culty in getting requisitions filled, al- though he had no difficulty in getting Washington. One requisition made on the 16th of May and another on the 4th of June had not been entirely filled until very recently. These requisitions had been made upon the New York supply depot, while all that were made on the St. Louis department had been promptly filled. One hundred and six- the season had only arrived a day or two since, &nd they were not now needed. Rev. Orville J. Nave, post chaplain at Fort McPherson, expressed the opin- ifon that in the conduct of military hos- pitals generally there was too little of patients. The custom is to put a when he enters a hospital, and Mr. Nave said that the man often neve again sees either his clothing or the articles that may be left in the pockets. | In a word, the thieving which has been going on and the petty specula- tions which have been practiced upon | soldiers, he said. oftentimes by their| comrades, have been some of the sad- dest features of the war. | While the bodies of patients were | carefully guarded, their property was | not; yet these articles were often very sacred to the patient in case of his re- | covery and to his friends and relatives in case of his death. Replying to a question from General ‘Wilson, seen some Of the surgeons at the hos- pital under the influence of liquor, but not to a sufficient extent tu interfere with the proper performance of their CONGRESSMAN HULL’S SIGNIFICANT SPEECH At a Campfire He Declares We Must Keep the Philippines and In- crease Standing Army. DES MOINES, Ia., Oct. 21.—Congress- man Hull, chairman of the national House Committee on Military Affairs, said in a campfire speech here fo-night: ““We must keep the Philippines for the advantage of commerce. Our standing army must be increased to 100000 men, 40,000 for Cuba, 25000 for the Philippines, 5000 for Porto Rico and the remainder for coast de- fense.” The fac-simile signature of Chaplain Nave said he had| | | | tigation Commissioners examined only | them approved by the authorities at | teen cots ordered in the beginning of | care of the clothes and other property | sick man’s clothing under his pillu\\‘; Died of Her Wounds. Mrs. Anna Keenan dled at the German Hospital yesterday morning at 8 o’clock from the wounds inflicted by her husband, who is populdrly known as Patsy Hogan. An examination by Autopsy Surgeon Gal- lagher showed that the bullet passed through the left lung, cut the heart super- ficially and pa on backward, breaking .. The five children of the dead woman will be cared for by the Sisters of the Holy Family on Fillmore street. The oldest daughter, who is about 14 years old, has secured employment with Mrs. McGrath at 411 Lott street. Our Treatment of Spanish Captives. Never before in history where a defeated and capt: such generous treatment as v iards. Other te 5 broug] s there a case ve enemy received ve the Span- 4. Equally ht about by Hos- Never before in hi successful a medicine 1 and nervous, for itatec stomach and liver ¢ like a, in- digestion, biliousness and cc SCHOENFELD’S SHIRT DEPOT. en's & Boys' Clothing MARKET ST., OPP. SEVENTH. OUR BIG STORE CVERCROWDED WITH BARGAINS, Obolosst lines. Fine pure wool MEN'S UNDER< WEAR at 75c sach, worth iwics that. Men's celebrated HYGEIA WOOL UNDERWEAR, Shirts (double front and back), Drawers (double seated) at $1.00 esch ; health presorvers. IN OUR CLOTHING DEPARTMENT WB OFFER WORLD BEATERS. JUST BEE eur $5.95 MEN'S 8UITS and $5.50 MEN'S OVERCOATS, now on display in our shew windows. MOTHERS, come to us for your BOYS' CLOTHING Af money-saving s sa object to you. SPECIAL—Fice lines of VESTEE BUITS st $138 d $1.83 por suit. r your BIG BOYS, age 13-16, we have slegany Buits a8 low as $3.95 per suit. MEDICAL DEPARTHENT UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. THE INAUGURATION of the New Building ‘Will Take Place SATURDAY Oct. 22, At2 P M. The Public Is Cordially Invited. Take Ellis or Halght street cars and transfer at Masonic ue for Affiliated Colleges Buildings, south of Golden Gate Park. ave RTELING 14 and 16 Kearny Street, Formerly 427 Kearny. PEGIALISTS FOR MEN. £ Nervous Contaglous Poison and contracted ailments, quickly and permane ently. Largest prac- tice and best equip- ped medical institu- tion ‘on the Pacifio Coast. s Established 17 Year s BF S Private book and ice free at our 4 office or by mail. All 87 lettors sacredly con- I fdentlal. MEYERS & CO., 731 Market St., S. F. DR. 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