The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 5, 1899, Page 8

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1899. RETAIL GROCERS MAKE MERRY AT SCHUETIEN PARK e Their Outing Was a Decided Success. . — GAY COSTUMES NUMEROUS e MESSRS. NOBMANN AND POWERS DANCED A CAKEWALK. SRR The Affair Was Perhaps One of the Most Enjoyable Held at the Park Thus Far This had just made his i{nauspiclous maiden speech; Season. | Ma ¢ was in India and Rowland Hill was working out his plan for cheap postage. e, As the decades advanced to this galaxy of | & hess were added Wellington and Havelock | and Livingstone and Palmerston, Derby and The Retall Grocers Protestive Associa- | Peel and Bright, Salisbury and Richard Cob- z Y 3 r. ‘Then there were Southey and Campbell + € tw th anniversary | 4nd Tom Moore, Swinburne and Rossetti, Jean E: Epa ces- | Ingelow, and Wordsworth, Darwin and Huxley 1 : e .r,ki" 3" | &nd_Epencer and Tyndall many other ter attended Te-| prygnt Juminaries in the political and intellec- T homi« ied with the y tual and religlous firmament. families, sweet-| There have been unexampled triumphs! Vie- i were | tories for e, for popular education and hear T€ | for personal freedom. The corn laws were r g in | yholished; the ballot was adopted: the aboli- t P about the | tion of purchase in the army; the extinction of | the Irish state church; the treaty of Berlin . 5o & o454 | the establishment of free and universal educa 6--0=-0-¢0-0-6-0-0 bt B i e ekl kel splen- 3 @ | did reform of hous d suffrage, and the sub- - | | stantial disappearance of sectarian and de- = M | national antagonisms. Truly this Viector- 3¢ A \ an reign has been a period of victories for a | broader and brighter civilization. *‘Righteous- . @ | ness exalteth a nation! . . The whole trend of Queen Victorla’s relgn s been toward the universal peace which B @ | hall some day burst in gladness over the whole 3 o |earth. When, at the Queen's jubilee, in 1387, ? | the Governor of the Colony Victoria asked the 8 @ | Queen to select a passage of scripture to be i ¢ | vlaced in a copy of the New Testament, which was to be presented to all the children who 5 ® | participated In the exercises of jubilee day, her i "JPETAYLOQ o | Majesty wrote: *On earth peace, good wiil to- BROUG T | ward men.”” A graterul American people will > BROUGHT @ | never forget the almost disastrous Trent epi- 4 | sode, which, at the breaking out of our civil . war would have involved us in bitter struggle i @ | with Great Britain, had it not been averted by 1 B peace-loving Queen. assisted by amiable 6 L e T E D S . . . . . . . . -+ V.HASSMER ® __TRIED HARD 3 TO WIN THE ! TARGET 4 SHCOT B ® C-A DARK ROR MWON THE . FAT MENS RACE 2o~ . © o000 0-00 republics it will be particularly appropriate to study carefully the life of Victorla, because since the coronation of the child queen, more than three score years ago, the English Gov- ernment has, in a remarkably impressive man- ner, emphasized the poetic words of Israel's warrior king, ‘‘Righteousness exalteth & na- tion!" From Victoria’s birth, on May 24, 1819, In Kensington- Palace, to the night of June 20, 1837, when she was declared queen, and on to her’ marriage te Prince Albert, February 10, 1840, the young ruler's life was radiant with peace and happiness, which continued with in- creasing sweetness and joy for twenty years. The noble prince was a gallant and tender husband and father, and an example for hnK'_ lish and American youth which has rarely been equaled and never been surpassed. Nine children blessed their hap home lite. The “‘good prince’’ filled his o ate position as husband of the Queen of E 1 with an ap- preciation of his official relationships, which attracted to himself the loving admiration of the entire nation. He was a brilllant man of strong mind, a born statesman—‘‘every inch & king’—a wise counselor to the Queen, who never distastefully projected himself into the counsels of, the nation; and, when in 1861, Prince Albert was suddenly gathered to his fathers, not only was the broken-hearted Queen enveloped in a dark shadow f{rom which she never emerged, and the whole English nation prostrated in overwhelming grief, but the Christian world mourned the loss of one of the erbest Christlan noblemen of the most ex- quisite type which this old, einful world has ever known. No one has taken his place. Prince Albert is the ideal Christian man. Marvelous and unprecedented have been the achlevements of these sixty-two years. What ave been turned! What mighty men builded! At her coronation George was perfecting his rallroad: Wheat- stone was experimenting with electricity; Dick- ens was publishing ““Oliver Twist’’; Carlyle and ng and Thacke were already dis- \ed; Tennyson was having a favorable | introduction; Father Matthew was preaching total abstinence to the Irish people; Gladstone had been in Parliament five vears and Disraeli +OOe OO e 0 e D et 0bebedb eI e @ SCENES AT THE GROCERS’ OUTING. neighboring games. I girls arrayed in their | t brightest su were as plen- titul as Us gard rong ot ft the returning home s perhaps one 1 at the resort In addition attended the ple- were n from ) San Rafael was 1 and so was San Quentin, Kelly, he of herculean house mustache, was in evid nd he mingled throng just is if he were a s grocer or a_dispenser of palat- Judge Sweeney was also several persons who were un- enough to fall victims tora clever pickpockets who plied rious trade on the boat coming ught Judge for consolation. Nobmann, he of Filimore stre cake walk with Aaron Powers, needless to mention that they hit. All in all the grocers® lite a success. The crowd who attended were a most nd the two policemen who ce were not called upon uring the day to quell a disturb- The following were successful in zames: race, 12 to 15—First, George Marti hn' Tberg: third, A. Riecke. e, § to 12—First, S. O'Brien; second, George Robinson. race—First, Mrs. Kittie , Mrs. Byrne; third, Mrs. race—First, Mrs. James Franks; s Martin: third, Mrs, Conners. First, Wall; second, i Thomas O'Donnell. to 1 st, Ma Mohrs; Katte Smith, First, Anni _aughlin; third, Belie Smith First, Maggle McGlynn; third, Lyilye Smith Tirst, Henry Me: third, J. Henery celled in the prize- for ladies and gen- ng shooting matches tlemen: Healey, Mrs. Me- Miss E. Lawton, Mrs. Kelly, Mrs. Quigley, M. Foge, I Dick Henning, John F. Graham, L. Cohn, F. Buttleman,” Mr. W K. Luhrs, H." Wilkins, William Boger, ockmann, Val Hasmer, J Hawley, J. F. Hauser, Mr. Fuechler, Mr. Mich: cken and Mr. Robinson. rizes for members of the press the following: F. Kirk, Ex- Powers, Examiner and Retail Mr. Miller, Bulletin. rizes for members of the Com Mr. Peters, ers' Assoclation were won by J. M. Armstrong, H. Mohrs, . P. Schuester and P. J. Kennedy. QUEEN VICTORIA EULOGIZED. Rev. Dr. Locke Discourses on Eng- land’s Virtuous Monarch. The announcement made during the past week that evening service would be con- cd in the Metropolitan Temple during present month by Rev. Dr. Charles Edward Locke of the Central Methodist Church had its effect in so far that cvery seat In the large building was taken as arly as 6:30 o'clock in the evening. The subject upon whic gentleman discoursed the Life of England’ ext, Psalms xiv:24 alteth a Natlon.” He said in part: Ruskin sald that great nations wrote their autoblographies in three maunscripts—the book of their deeds, the book of their words and the book of their art—and then ventured to re- mark that the only quite trustworthy one of the three was the t. I am prepared to agree fully with this statement, provided these three s shall be bound in one volume, and en- d ““Character.” There can be no question at a nation’s place and perpetuity will depend upon the true and noble manhood of its citi- zenship. National integrity depends upon the honor of the individual; and each individual, whether subject or ruler, is contributing to or detracting from the inflience of his nation in the world, I have desired to present to you the beau- tiful life of Queen Victoria because of the prac- tical lessons which may be derived from the sntemplation of the living factors. in the worid's busy activities. Men and women are ““Lessons From Gracious Queen.” ‘Righteousness ex- God's most recent revelations, and the study of biogravhy is the study of God's divinest works. This matchless monarch has just be- come an octogenarian, and is now completing the sixty-second vear of her extraordinary relgn, having passed the record of her grand- father, George the Third, who ruled over Great Britain for sixty years, In these days of the founding of empires and the extension of D T e the reverend | ind participating in the | Prince Albert, who a few weeks later came _the mountain of his translation. The American people love Victoria and join with the great English people in the reverent rayer. “God Save the Queen.” Victoria, queen the grace of God, has contributed vast in- e toward the solution of the problems ges. God has mightily blessed and used English people, and they will continue to | be a strong arm of power as they follow the example and spirit of their graclous monarch Victorla her own incomparable place among the queens of histo There were Deborah, warlike and trustful; Esther, beautiful and brave: Semiramis, brilliant and ostentatious; Zenobla, regal and handsome: Elizabeth, mas- culine and firm; Mary, cruel and heartless; but it remained for this céntury to produce a noble lady who combined in herself the best of all who had preceded her, and, crowned with divine approval, to win for herself an honored place unapproached by all royal predecessors. The secret of her personal magnificence and su- premacy. and the reason the power of Great BEritaln to-day is that “Righteousness exalteth a nation." the American people learn well this simple le8son in these days of our expand- ing power and opportunities’ EDITOR GREENBLATT LAYS DOWN HIS PEN Has Been Chief of Staff of the California Demokrat for Twenty Years. A After twenty years’ active service M. Greenblatt yesterday handed in his resig- nation as editor-in-chief of the California Demokrat, the leading German daily of the Pacific coast. Since Mr. Greenblatt took up his pen as editor of the German paper he has made a host of friends, not only in San Fran- L e R R R SR = 1 H-eeb oo ebed>elesed R R L R R = ] M. GREENBLATT. cisco, but in all the coast States, and his loss will be felt by all the readers of the paper. A few months ago Mr. Greenblutt was stricken with apoplexy while work- ing at his desk. A week ago he was pro- nounced convalescent, though not wholly cured, and he then made up his mind that the work was too great a strain on his weakened constitution. Yesterday he re. turned to this city and handed in’ his res- ignation, but it was only after he had fully presented the case to the manage- ment that it was accepted. In politics Mr. Greenblatt has been one of the Democratic leaders of the State, Last year he was the Democratic candi- date for Treasurer and was defeated by a small majority. At present he holds the office of notary public, and will continva to reside in this city and devote his tiine during business hours to this office. for no tions a ate by th “I canno ‘ary THE GA SE strong frie ure your o s0_you ington. tion as a 1 we will fo! me seated? that. and a States talk. after it. Mr. Quay in L. H. wickets fo! J. Myers, c. C. Simonds, C. P. Coles, Theobald, . Wilding, W L. H. Sandi Wide, 1; leg Total Runs at 21, 3 for 27, § for 93, 9 T Bowler— Saunders . Croll .... Bird Peel . Banner Ward . Saunders | cal problem a direct answer. The against his chances. “Ah, but you must remember that there was another precedent established before What we really ought to do in the Philippines is subjugate the nativi then do the best we can with them. Senator Scott abruptly ject. nor could questionin to the question o meda to the bat. smothers many dangerous balls. bowled quite = successfully, taking three " Moriarty and F. Croll were both lucky at the bat. Wickets should have fallen when they had scored about ten runs apiece. score is given herewith: PACIFIC CRICKET CLUB. J. H. Harbour, b. Saunders... Sewell, c. Stahl, H. P. G. Gordon, b, Bird W. G. Selwood, did not bat SENATOR SCOTT IS HERE FOR ALTH ALONE A e Soigm e He appointed Governor to e be | point,” said he. t OUNCED EPRIZES . DGE Jul SWEENEY KEPT-HI5 EYES. oM GUAR SAN QUENTIN o0 KELLEY OF nds. ywn answer out. yroper representative.” llow precedent.” precedent Concerning Mr. Quay and Mr. | however, Senator Scott merely thinks that many friends” and that there have been “other’ precedents. ENDS IN A DRAW. Call of Time Saves the Pacific Crick- eters From Defeat at Alameda has * Grounds. Sandilands, who s r 34 runs. J. Hellmann, b. Croll. b." Bird b, Bird. 3 n c. Moriarty, b. Croll.. . b. Bird. lands, not out. byes, 2; byes, 3. 4 for 67, or 101. SUMMARY OF BOWLING. B. or. 5 for 79, 6 for 84, 7 Taboos Politics—Will Not Talk of Quay. TWO KINDS OF PRECEDENTS THE PENNSYLVANIAN, HE SAYS, HAS MANY FRIENDS. Thinks the Filipino Should Be Erad- icated From the Domestic Econ- omy of United States and His Country Opened. Senator N. B. Scott, newly elected from West Virginia, arrived at the Palace Ho- | tel yesterday. Mr. Scott comes into the | West “for health, for health alone and | political reason.” last evening when approached with ques- so stated the of Pennsylvania, will have to be seated, Senator Scott had less to say than upon any other toplc. | interviewed upon that | in. “In fact I am a new Sen- | ator, and am really not prepared to say I R O O e e o S o ] ever been to the Senate, and they You know as much about these things as 1 do and will have to fig- But in doing must remember that Mr. will have a great many friends in Wash- Besides he has made a reputa- Asked if indications pointed to the seat- ing of Mr. Quay, Senator Scott avoided “He has many friend: he reiterated, “‘and I think it likely that “By Tollowing precedent, Senator, you n that Mr. Quay will probably not be | established changed the sub- g bring him b: Quay and its bearing upon the hope that is still held out to Dan Burns that he will one day occupy a chair lace on the roll call of the United enate. z Concerning the Philippines and the rath- er expensive unpleasantness just now tached thereto, he was quite willing to Senater Scott thinks the unpleas- antness and the expense should be con- tinued, though he has not as yet outlined a plan of action in his mind's eye to follow The Pacific eleven met the Alameda cricket team yesterday for time this season and succeeded in draw- ing the match. George Theobald, the Pa- cific captain, won the toss and sent Ala- After four wickets had fallen J. J. Moriarty and F. Croll got to- gether and put on nearly a hundred runs between them before F. Croll was caught by Simmonds, having made 49. With tive wickets down for 140 runs, J. J. Morfarty called the innings dnd the Pacifics went to the bat. J. Myers scored 27 and F. Sewel] 29, and only nine wickets having fallen at the call of time the game ended in a draw. The Pacifics have obtained a useful man al He also the second The fell Sen- | | + . o . + T . o e . & T & . & + + @ . + © . & 1 pede e - | anything at all in connection with that | question. | “You must remember, however, that Mr. Quay has a great many friends— more, perhaps, than any man who has | are Quay is and ck ats Burns, and Their b aorncntuleca ALAMEDA CRICKET CLUB. Hellmann, c¢. Harbour, b. Sandilands...... 11 J. Baugh, c. J. Theobald, b. Simmonds... 0 J." Moriarty, not out. 61 H. Saunder, 1. b. w., b. Sa Price, run out.............. Croll, J. R. Peel, not out Bird, did not bat. Stahl, did not bat. A. W, Wilding, did not bat. C. Banner, did not bat Byes, §; leg byes, 1 ndilands. G. G. J. 3 A, i B. F. scoscaben EMPLOYMENT OFFICES. ORPHEUM Employment Office—Japanese, Chi- HELP WANTED—Continue: FIRST-CLASS buttonhole -makers and finishers nese. 425 Powell, nr. Sutter; el Black 121, | - on custom vests; steady work. by the week; wages. 54 t st. CHINESE and Japanese help; established 20 | —5oor "o5¢ i = years; tel, Main 1467, Bradley & Co., 840 Clay. | FIRST-CLASS walst hands wanted at 637 Sut- er st. SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE. | MIDDLE-AGED woman or girl of 16 to assist; e .XM.L G e e 38 to $10. 1021 Van N v 5 T the German Employment Office, MRS. | S LAMBERT, 418 Powell si tel. maln 5332, WOMAN or girl, good worker, as help In din- help of all nationalities await positions. ing room and kitchen. 448 Third st. Total D) Runs at the fall of each wicket—1 for 0, 2 for 24, 3 for 32, 4 for 35, 5 for 129. SUMMARY OF BOWLING. Bowler Byl W e ey Simmonds ... 2 5 aeEiEgy Sewell . 5 Fal s A Saunders . a4 1 3 113 Harbour ..., 3 e Coles /... e ; The Pacific team now has half a point, the Alameda club has one and a half points and the Californias have two poiuts to their credit. The Pacific percentage 1s .25, the Alameda percentage 1s .75 and the ‘alifornia percentage is 1.00. The office of secretary to the California Cricket Club having become vacant by the departure of H. H. Cookson from this city. a_meeting will shortly be held at which F. M. Gunn Wwill be asked to assume the duties of sec- retary. A delegate to the California Cricket Association will also be chosen at the same time. —_———————— GAVE SOUND ADVICE TO PUBLIC SERVANTS Rev. Frederick C. Lee of the California Street Methodist Episcopal Church deliv- ered a stirring sermon on “The Cry of Boodle” last evening before a large con- gregation. He warned the Board of Super- visors against a wave of tion which would follow t“c granting of nchises and Im]|llflrr"l any corporation fi them to keep their “hands clean and their when approached with hearts pure’ boodle. In part it was as follows: It I should change the celebrated sa Carlyle I would put it thus: *‘The ing of United to the numerous peculiar politi- | StAtes is composed of over 70,000,000 of people, that the next Congress will have to solve. Concerning the chances that Matthew Quay, mostly fool large “citfes. payers in to be found principally When will the voters our great in our and tax- American municipalities learn wisdom and depart from folly? The ery of “‘boodle” and bribery will ever be heard in the land just so long as the cities put it within the power of their Boards of Aldermen or Su | pervisors to vote away valuable franchises for which the city receives nothing in return. What Aldermen or Suvervisors recefve—as Kip- ling says—*‘That's another story."” Do I charge our Sueprvisors with having been ‘‘boodleized?’ No. Most emphatically, No! Do I insinuate that they can be bribed or bought? Again I say no. I believe there are gentlemen upon our Board of Supervisors who are just as honest and as truthful as—as— some of us preach (and that’s not ing much)—just as anxious to do the right thing as I am. Look out for the man that is always charging others with rascality. He will bear watching himself. While, then, I do not cry or in any way question the charac- nduct of these men, vet I say to our honorable Board “‘Gentlemen, how You vote away take heed and bewa franchise provided for in our new charter. Give away any privilege, grant any franchise for which our new city charter provides that the municipality shall receive valuable considera- tion, and never to your dying day can you make the public believe that you did so from uninterested motives. You may be as innocent as angels, but you will never succeed in mak- ing the city of San Francisco believe that ean hands and you went out of office with pure hearts.” With only a few months before our new charter takes effect—why any unse ble hasted ~With every- gonable or unreasor of Supervigors thing to lose and nothing to gain, why should any aquestion o vital to all the future life of our moble and growing city be ‘railroaded” through? Our new charter, one of the best and in many ways the most advanced charter of any city in the Union, was drawn up and adopted to cover and control these very ques- tions _—e HOTEL ARRIVALS. PALACE HOTEL. H W Helss, N Y Clara Eisenthal, Ger- L Schilsky, N Y many C Clement,'N Y Emma Wolf, Germany Mrs C Clement, N Y J D Jones, Scranton Mrs Jones, Scranton R D Robbins Jr, Cal J S Burnett, Chicago G Oakland Oakland C Robbins, Suisun R B Mitchell Jr, Cal 7 H White, Cal J McKee, U Mr & Mrs Kleybotle, NEW L Penn Jr, Cincinnati Dr Wandelt, W H 2 J F Farraher, Yreka J G Oxnard, N Y W H Graham, Pa D P Hatch, L Ang W J Hunsacker, Cal S H Westfall, Cal Mrs Westfall, Cal C M Me N Y OAB Mrs Grosser, Berlin E Benson, Cal Mre E Benson, Cal Germany Mrs Penn, ‘Cincinnati |A F Steger, Mo P H Ray, U S A J C Platt, N Y Mrs P H Ray, Cal R W Pary, Reno W L Wagner, N Y L A CraneS Elizabeth Ebeling, Ger- E Winship, U S N many GRAND HOTEL. ublic indigna- | J B Lamkin, M J Carroll, Wash W H 1 H Sims, Conn A F Fr O Dolfinger & w. Ky A Viturn L F Fickert, Cal A Olsen, ¢ F Mugudge & w, | W E [ wcto Vallejo H C Martin, Cal W H Bell & w, Tex F P Burr, Cal C H Reld W A Avery, Cal H M Clair Jr, Pa J Smith, Oakland F_Cutting, Stockton SV Co Miss Montgomery, Cal IMrs’ B Eldridge, Onlo H A Clark, Cal |E G Fraser & w, Cal A H Ha Oor L R Poundstone, Cal A H Holmes, Mich _ [P Cook, Rio Vista M M Wright & w, OriC M Péters & w, Cal Mrs J Pearson, Cal |J Ross, Antloch Mrs M Loases | WESTERN HOTEL. C Pran: |8 Angove, Riverside M H Moore, Mrs Jeneski, S Diego J Norman, § Jose 0 H Buckley, Merced 3 H McNetl, Benicia |W on, Courtland A Triguero, Benicla [F H Fordyce, Stockton F V Barm, § Mateo |3 Warner, Modesto J Culotta, Mobile IN Smith,’ Coltax B Fisher, Fresno |3 W Martin, S Jose 0 Mallin' & w. ValleJo'P 31 Wood, Stock H C Haertel, 111 |3 P Martin, Sacto M C L'Gatos | MEETING NOTICES. GOLDEN Commandery T iate buildine. ter st ssembly THIS E ING 5 Al fraters are courteously invite J 'CAMPBELL, Em. Com. WILLIAM T. FONI2A, Recorder. SAN Francisco Chapter No. 1. Royal Arch Masons, meets THIS EVENING. Business only. A OCCIDENTAL Lodge No. 22, F. and A. M.—Stated meeting THIS (MONDAY) EVENING at § oclock. By order of the W. M. "WALTER G. ANDERSON. Sec. HERMANN Lodge N M. Stated meeting THIS DAY (MON DAY), June 5, 1899, at 8 o'clock p. m. By order of the W. M. L. SCHUMACHER, Secretary. THE regular monthly meeting of the Soclety of California Ploneers will be held at Ploneer Hall _on _MONDAY EVENING, June §, 1899, at 8 oclock. J. M. Hutchings Esq. will address the members. nominating committee will be elected. full attendance is requested. J. I. SPEAR, Secretary. A, O. H. Division No. 2—The regu- lar monthly meeting of this division will be held at Hibernia Hall, 120 Ninth st., on TUESDAY, June 6, 1899, at 7:30 p. m. The annual election of officers will this Fines for non forced. T. L. CLANCY, THE California Debris Commission, having recelved applications to mine by the hydraulic rocess from J. H. Southwick. in the North 1l placer mine, near Milton, Calaveras County, to deposit tallings in Rich Guich: from T. B. Bennett, in the Ohlo mine, near Wagh, Plumas County, to deposit tailings on a flat below the mine: from W. E. Duncan §r. In the York Ranch placer mine, near Spanish Ranch, Plumas County, to deposit tailings on a flat below the mine; and from Alfred Schofield, in the Klondike mine, at Whisky Diggings. Slerra County, to deposit taflings behind the dam of the 'Washington mine. in Slate Creek, gives notice that a meeting will be held at room 59, Flood build- ing, Ban Francisco, Cal, on June 12, 1§99, t1:30 p. m SPECIAL NOTICE—Abandoned children in the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum since January, 1898: Henrfetta_Barraco, aged 9 vears: Anna Bar- raco, §; Gertrude Barns, 11: Anna Barns, 9; Lillfan’ Horgan, 9; Maud Edsberg, Irene Rdsberg, 7; Kath. Sulllvan, 6; Mary Oliver, 10. A A take at place. ttendance will be strictly BARTLY LEE, President. meeting. Secretary. NOTICES. PILES_PETER FREILING'S pile salve, $1 per box; warranted to cure all cases of bleeding, itching, external, ~internal or —protruding piles without fall, no matter of how long standing. 1628 Devisadero st., near Sutter. ROOMS papered from §3; whitened, $1_u painting done. Hartman Paint Co., 319 34 BAD tenants ejected for 34; collections mad city or country. PACIFIC COLLECTION CO., 415 Montgomery st., rooms $-10; tel. 5520. DIVIDEND DIVIDEND No. 4 (30 cents per share) of the Paauhau Sugar Plantation Company will be payable at the office of the company, 327 Market st., on and after Saturday, June 10, 1899, Transfer books will close on Saturday, June 3, 1899, at 12 o'clock m. E. H. SHELDON, Secretary. l | COLORED’ woman_wishes COMPETENT voung German and American cook: $30 and $3 best references. MRS, LAMBERT, 418 Powell st., tel. main 5332, COMPETENT North German nurse, 5 yvears last place; also second girl, best reference MRS. LAMBERT, 418 Powell, tel. main 533 COMPETENT Swedish girls desire situations s cook and second girl; best city referen; MISS CULLEN, 3% Sutter st. T voung girl desires situation as nurse or to assist in housework; $10 to $15. MISS CUL- LEN, 5 Sutter st. COMPETENT German cook desires situatio best references; city or country. MISS CUL- LEN, 32 Sutter st. YOUNG Swedish girl; good cook and house- worker, §15 to $20. MRS NORTON, 313 Sutter. GREEN Swedish girl, strong and willing, wishes place to assist; $10. 813 Sutter st. FIRST-CLASS Swedish girl, with & years' ref. erences; excellent cook; city or countr MRS. NORTON, 313 Sutter s RELIAB! n general housework; clty or short distance in the country; will work for moderate wages; kind to children; references if re quired. 386 Twenty-third st., near Sanche: COMPETENT and reliable woman would like situation as cook and downstairs work: first- class references. Call or address 14 Bridge off Broadway, bet. Leavenworth and MRS. NORTON, ishes a situation to do G girl wishes situation in private fam- ily for general housework; wages §20. Apply 14 Beideman st, off Ellis, bet. Scott and | WOMAN wishes situation to do general house- work in private family; is good cook il do plain washing; moderate wages. 267 Ste- venson st., n ourth. TED—By a young woman from the East, light housework or taking care of chil® dren; good home more an object than wa; Box ‘573, Call office. YOUNG lady with by alifications so- licits a position as stenographer and book- keeper; small salary. Address Diplomacy, Box 579, Call. YOUNG girl wishes to assist in Call 969 Mission st. RELIABLE elderly Protestant woman wishes a position in small family; light housework; Eood plain cook. 254 Fell st. housework. ion_as child tuat ty. boy 4 years old wis tion as cook for_camp, hotel or widower's family. Address 708 Brannan st. sl country or_cf COMPETENT dressn day or at home; 31 2 per day er wishes work by the 124A 1ith st. good stenographer, wants of any kind few hours each Call oftice. YOUNG lady tion b evening. ORTH German nurse seeks position in Amer- 30; best city references. Ad- Pine st. TUATION In small American fami “good home more of an object than wages: will ist in housework. Box 67, Call offic WANTED—By a strong girl, general house- work; city or country, or will wait on table in a _country hotel; 3% vears last place. Call 7i6 Fourteenth st., near Market. LADY would like position to do plain_sewing b3 or second work. $65% Market, room 9. WINCHESTER House, 44 Third st., near Mar- ket; 200 rooms; 25¢ to $1 50 night: $150 to 36 week; convenlent and respectable; free 'bus and baggage to an e Weekly Call, 31 per vea SITUATIONS WANTED—MALB, ESE and Japanese Employment Office; best help. 4141 O'Farrell st.; tel. East 424 B-C 3 Emp. Agency; all kinds EO. AOKI, 30 Geary st.; tel. Grant 5. UPHOLST CHIN nt a German young man, wants work _for $10 Call. 50d barber want; or country. Box 69 GOOD, reliable bar man; Engligh; country preferred erences Box § Call office. STRONG sober man, just from East, desires work in city as quick as possible; do any- thing. LAZOWY, 60 Third st YO a day; any part of State; speaks German and the best of ref- NG man will work on fruit orchard for §1 must be steady place year around; well recommended. Box apable to es, harness temperate; well 945, Call office, and carriages; age 45; single recommended. Address box until Monday noon. and wife, experienced cooks, want posi- tions in hotel, boarding-house or camp; city or country; wife willing and capable to tak position 1n’ any capacity. Call or addre: E., room 6, 714 Larkin st., S. F. MAN and wife wish situations; man is good milker; can drive horses and do general work: wife is good cook and housekeeper. Address 621 Commercial s POSITION as nurse or attendant on invalid gentleman; willing to travel; wages reason- able. Address A. H. A., 1517 Spring st., Berkeley. NGINEER, with license and good recom- mendations, understands all classes of en- gines, wishes situation: city or country. Ad- dress box 1608, Call. office. WANTED—By a practical steam and lager beer brewer, a situation: best references. Address box 1614, Call office. GARDENER, coachman, general utility man wishes situation; city or country; good refer- ences. Box 697, Call office. and wite, youns couple, would ltke din- room work; country hotel. Box 930, Call. CHEAPEST and best in America—The Weekly Call, 16 _pages, sent to any address in the nited States. postpaid. for §1 per year. HELP WANTED—FEMALE. WANTED—Second girl, country, $25; 16 walt- resses, city and country hotels, resorts and restaurants, $20 and $ and §6 a week: two German cooks, $30; girls for housework for Menlo Park, $25; Alameda, $25; Santa Clara, $20; San Rafael, § Redwood City, $20; Mer- ced, $20; Stockton, $25; French second girl, § Protestant second girl, $20; nurse, $2: Eirls for housework, city, $20 and $25. Apply to J. F. CROSETT & C 316 Sutter st. FINISHERS on pants;_steady work. ard st WANTED—A girl to help 530 Howard st. bet. 4th and 5th, over handball 55 How- court. in a restaurant, Call LADIES wanted everywh ples and advertise Cali; 2 per day and expenses paid, cash week. Particulars for 2-cent Stamp. Cali- fornia Orange Syrup Co., San Francisco, Cal. GIRL for general housework; sleep home. 336 Seventeenth st near Valencla. ere to distribute fornia Orang HELW WANTED—Continucd STEADY busheling man at room 1001, Palace Hotel. £ g S GOOD sho anted for repalring. 611 GOOD shoemaker W Laguna_st ik MAN to db light work in lodging house; room, board, washing. § Market st BARBER steady for Wednesda and Sunday. Address E. W ¥ eve, box street East et arrell LUNCH waiter BUSHELMAN tailor wanted at % O street. wanted at 115 st} call Rifth DISHWASHER wanted at early “man, all office BARBER, competent _&ood place. Addre for nd bootblack wanted at 12 Fifth st. PORTER x 3 O | FOR sale—First class hotel barber shop: cheap. ANTED—Good girl for light Kitchen work. | Apply DECKELMAN BROS., 106 Bilis s 1300 1 % = e = 0 Turk it - | $10 DAILY; introducing new gaslight burner 3 girl to assist in housework. 1631 Post | for Kerosene lamps: sample free. Perfection street. Gaslight Burner Co., L. B. 47, Cincinnati, O. WANTED—An elderly woman to cook for 4 or cery clerk with good references. 5 men; wages $10 per month; Swedish or Ger- man. '500 Haight st. WANTED— At young g ing. SCHIMMEL & STOVER, 408 Sutter GERMA! housework. Apply 637 girl or woman wanted for general irl to learn dre st. Pine st. TWO experlenced girls to tory. LEWIS PACKI FIRST-CLASS dressmakes 40-13, 1226 Broadway, Oakland, work in a pickle fac- NG CO., 625 Front st call at once. rooms | 12 to 4. | WANTED—A girl for cooking; 2508 Twenty-fourth st.; no washing or plain_housework and baking; wages $10 bakery. A1 PUPILS for select millinery school; trade thoroughly taught; plenty work; satisfaction guaranteed; terms easy Leavenworth st. ; evening classes. 508 EXPERIENCED shirt_operator: best prices; steady employment. Eagleson Co arket HELP WANTED—MALE. WANTEDYoung Englisman _about _place, references required; young American farmer for vegetable garden, $20 and increase. _J. F. CROS WANTED—Ranch_blacksmith, fare paid; 2 camp blacksmiths, $0; black- smith's helper on carriage work, $2 day; rip sawyer for city; screw turner for mill, $70. J. F. CROSETT >0., 628 Sacrame: st. WANTED-30 laborers for woods, mines, tun- | nel -work and rallroads, §1 $2 and & day; 4 drift gravel miners, $40 and board: woodsmen of all Kinds at going wages: © milkers, $25 and $30; others. J. F. CROSET mento_ st. farmers, choremen acramento st. e , 628 and found, and 'T & CO., 63 Sacra- MURRAY & READY Leading_Employment 12 haymakers, d found; 3 farm, orch found; 18 milkers for $2% and $20 and ranches, etc., $25 2 farmers and wives. Santa 20 BIG WAGES ....... hours, fare $1... 10 hours, fare $1.. San Mateo Co. R T 2 4-horse teamsters, fare $1 30..342 and found 12 laborers for Government Work........... CARPENTERS & carpenters, city and country job T | 2 more carpenters, 10 months’ job, = 12 laborers for a large mine...... . 360 I 2 diamond drillers $3 10 day | il BLACKSMITH: camp_blacksmith shop blacksmiths sawmill blacksmiths 6 ranch blacksmith Young man Machinist, $2 50 day..... £ SR BOILERMAKERS ... 2 2 botlermakers or sheet iron workers, ¥ for a large mine COMPANY.................. | FREE...TO EVERY R. R. IN CAL..FARE. | Driliars . . laborers teamsters Headermen .. pikers .and other help | Wages, 83 5 50, $2 and 3175 da. P Nrg fare, teamsters, Free aay FARE ... TO THE , woodsmen 12 jacksérewers 2 1o fixers 3 spool tenders . Shingle jogger . 16 laborers for ards, woods, etc wages run from $10 fo $26 and found; 188 woodchoppers, tools found, $250 to $1 cord; 264 tiemakers, tools found, fare pald, Sc to 12c each 24" two horse teamsters, $1 7 day a found: 36 laborers, different classes of work. $20 and found, $26 and found and $1 75 and $2 4 stablemen, different Jjobs, $25 found < g2 A 3 .......GARDENERS AND CHOREMEN Gardener, Cathoiic, private place...$30 and fd | Man to milk 10 cows and do chores, private Choreman, no Cow! RE. Division, 9 a. m. Tu We ship.. Drillers Hammermen Stonemasons Laborers, ete Wages $3, §2 50, MURRAY & READY, COOK: . WAITERS 5 hotel cooks and saloon 3 ranch cooks, 3 mine and camp cooks. 3 second and third cooks..$40, $30 and found 3 French second cook... 2 cooks different jobs, 30, $25 Polisher, country laundry.. Laundryman for springs he 2 plain and camp waite MURRAY & READY, 634 and 636 Clay PORTERS helpers and a: also boy BAKERS 3 bakers’ and found; and found.. 3 hotel porters, 27 dishwashers, different MURRAY & READY, 6 _BOYS FOR SAN . good ho! 2 to learn other trades, found; boy around hotel, RAY & READY. MONDAY, 7 A P ard for different places, $30, $26, $25 found; wood worker. ANGELES DISTRICT laborers, AWMILLS "AND WOODS.... | Stearn's blocks. 2 and 4 horse teamsters 7 men onl for £prings, part fare pald; § waiters, to deliver bread, Tearn blacksmithing, 1 to learn baker, ..Phone Main 3843 and Labor Agents. 395 to §15 and found laces, 31 25 day and and vineyard hands nd $20 ar different dairies, $30, 16 choremen for and $15 and found; 340 and $35 and found “lara_Co. and Mine Help ERS .. L84 and found $3, $2 50 and $2 day ..340 and found 40 and found and 330 $40 and found $2 and $1 PAID | icker hand Kk peelers 1S timber fellers .3 redwood peelers 26 crosscut sawyer: 3 screw turners and found fee $1 fee 3L fee $1 fee §1 §tf ...Office Office _.Office . LAUNDRYME:! 50, $40, $30 and fd ..$25 and found | 60 and $40 and found and 40 and found and §20 “and found $25 and found s st. DISHWASHERS ssist, $30, $25, $20, $13 315 tel obs..... Jobs, &2 34 ana FRANCISCO. ... $3 week and §8 and $S and found. MUR- Clay st. “Free Fare Laborers, teamsters, « layers, tunnelmen, $175 ————C. R._HA ———Free F: nerete mixers to §280 a d Free fare & CO. —104 Geary st.- = COOK, boarding house, Rlo Vista, $25 per ~O v = = monih. MISS CULLEN, 3% Sutter st. S e P 25. HOUSEWORK, Sausalito, 325 Sutter st. SECOND girl, Alameda, §25 per month; must be a good seamstress. MISS CULLEN, 325 Sutter st. HOUSEWORK, Belvedere, $2 per month; see lady here. MISS CULLEN, 32 Sutter st. HOUSEWORK, Oakland, $2: Rafael, $20; and severai other towns MISS CULLE: work girls, city, $25 and $20 each: $ young girls, assist, $10 to §$15. MISS CULLEN, 32 Sutter st. COOK and second girl, same house, $25 and $15 per month_each: chamberwork and wafting, Alameda, $20; second work, Oakland, $20; 10 waitresses and chambermaid: city, and $20 each. MISS CULLEN, 32 Sutter s GERMAN or French nurse: must play piano and sew; $25. MRS. LAMBERT, 418 Powell. COOK, must understand_German cooking. $23 6 houseglir] $15, §25. MRS. LAMBERT, 418 Powell st. SECOND girl; must sew: Alameda: $25; see lady at 11 a. m. MRS. LAMBERT, 418 Powell. MAN and wife: man, general work: wife, cook; $30. MRS. LAMBERT, 413 Powell &t. COOK, San Jose, 320, choice place, TON, 313 Sutter st. HOUSEGIRL, two '~ family, $20; nursegirl, 81 middle-aged woman, country, '$20; cool housegirl, Alameda, $20; Oakland,’ $20: - girl to assist, $10 to $12. MRS. NORTON, 313 Sutter st. 3 WAITRESSES, 2 chambermalds for country; 2 ranch cooks; 2 young girls to assist. MISS DILLON, 315 Sutter st., phone Main $04. YOUNG girl; light housework and take care of baby. Call 127 Ash ave, bet 9 and 11. second girl, Berkeley, © party here. MRS. NOR- FIRST-CLASS lunch waitres: 313 O'Farrell st. GIRL to assist in general housework. 737 Mo | Allister st., near Octavia. COOK wanted; boarding house. $2¢ O'Farrell street. WANTED—Middle-aged woman for_housework and cooking; wages $10 and 312. 319 Third. WOMAN to_care for children; $10 a month. r Fifth. Call after 1 p. m., 20 Mary st., ne 466 Clemen- GOOD finisher on custom coats. tina st.; ady work. | s —FOR LOS ANGELES COUNTY— | SELL Magic Heel Protectors . Call office. KPERTENCED man work preferre you or socleties; night Box 1633, Call. NG men and ladies 16 years and over w ing emplovment call at at Hillsdale, 3 Sixth _st., bet. 11 and 2, room 21 EXPERIENCED clothing cutter on ready- made goods. 20 Sansome st 'R musicians to join band for soclal st., second floor, room 4. TO go this weel nearly new lightly dan 00 pa some 2 Mission st., men’s shoes, g pen 5 a. bet. Ist and 2d sts m. to9 p. m COAL miners accustomed to pltching veins can find steady work at g ges at the Tesla coal mines, Alameda ¢ Cal.; sufficient new ground has been opened up during the past ninety days to make room for f coal miners; no other class of labor s required, and miners-unaccustomed to pitching__veins are not_advised to cc SAN FRANCISCO AND SAN JOAQUI YAL CO., R. ¥ NORTON, superintend RAILROAD teamsters wanted on t alley road; apply at camp, near Giant sta- tion; wages, S1 4l ) first-class y at Point Ri nd; wages . B. STONE, San Pablo. arill MEN wanted—Laborers, sters on railroad work; blank free 1 wkale to. S ply to A. E. KMAN, WANTED—Laborers and_mechanics to that Ed Rolkin, Reno House propriet runs Denver House, 217 Third st.: 15 e per night; $1 to $2 per week. 2D—20 men to occupy rooms; loc per ght, 60c to §1 per wk. 105 New Montgomery. MEN to work about steam shovel men, dumpmen and trainmen, Richmond. JAMES A. McMAHC K hoice rooms; gas TSH, 421, above y—C stand; 15¢, 25¢ up. and &tationary w. B LASS tunnel superintendent; good sal. d; state experience. ary; references requires Appl box 7848, Call office. WANTED—3 camp blacksmiths for general work. Apply to E. B. STONE, Elmhurst. WANTED—20 pick and shovel men at Devis dero an ILORS and ordinary seamen for coast and HERMAN'S, 26 Steuart st. carn barber trade at S. F. 138% Eighth Broadway, city. omen to R COLLI RBEF 20 SINGLE ver night. d rooms, 10c, 1sc and . 6th and Howard; read. rm, fur; Lindel (Rosedale Hous ELLIS, 321 )—160 room k' or mo.; rates, to §1 per night; uction to permanent roomers; reading room. HEPARD & CO., attorneys, rst bldg., Third and Market. BARBERS Progressive Union; m't. H. Bernard, Sec., 104 rooms, 15c, k. Elcho H 25c per night; . 957 Market s Zht Islands, Ma- nila, Alaska LANE, 'Ship- ping Agent, 504-606 Davis st. WINCHEST Hotel, 44 Thipd : 700 rooms, 2%c night: reading e and baggage to and from the fer AGENTS WANTED. MEN and women, good ad appoint agents: ' salary month; _expenses; Taptd advancement; unusually brilliant op- portunity. Address, with reference, BUTLER & ALGER, N AGENTS wanted—To sell Leshure's Adjustable Lawn Mower Sharpener; sharpens perfect rapid seller; make $30 to $50 weekly. Ham den Corundum Wheel Co., Springfieid, Mass, el and , to tra v Haven, Conn Leather Lustre; sam. 25c. ————— e PARTNERS WANTED. 2 wanted with $10 akland. A. J., WILL grub-stake a practical prospector to ga to Lower California. Address box 1636, Call WANTED—MISCELLANEOUS. NTED—Bitch 2766 Twenty. immediately. in milk to raise pupples, cond st.; liberal payment; call WANTED—To hire 100 first-class scraper teams with harness and pead bars; long job. E. B. t. STONE, Elmhursf TO trade—High-grade wheel for young horse to weigh about 1000 pounds. Box 302, Call —_— DENTISTS. DR. T. S. HIGGINS' Dental Parlors, Emma Spreckels bldg., 927 Market st. Painless extraction a ~specialty; inferior work done on the teeth s always the most expensive; badly decayed and aching teeth we carefully treat before they are filled or crowned; pure gold fillings from $1; plates from $5." We guarantee to fill sensitive teeth witho Best materials used only. patent—See our new flesh-colored plates; cannot be detected from the natural teeth and gum; thin and strong; much su- perfor to rubber; crown and bridge work; teeth without plates our specialty; plates from $5; crowns, §3 50; fillin; work _painless and warranted DENTAL PARLORS, 24 Sixth st HOU IRL, two in family, $20; nursegirl, § ket st., cor. 4th, rm. 7. Flood bldg have your extractions done painless without plates our specialty; $3 50 up; plates,extractions Crowns, 50 up; of- fice hours, 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. to 4 p. m. G. W. WILLIAMSON aser. DR. GEORGE W. LEEK, 2 O'Farrell &t., ex- tracts and flils teeth painlessiy by his wonder- 20 track layers and laborer: e At mathod; crowns, $2; bridges, $4; B Fee §1 :—uhbeer or flexible plates, $3; received § first C. R. ““"\'FEN & Co.. prizes; no students; guaranteed 12 years. ~104 Geary st.- o — - — : FULL set of teeth, $; fillines, 2% up: gold crowns, $3; gold bridges, up; painless ex- TR tractlon guaranteed; plates repaired. NEW CCOND cook, Lake Tapoe, $50; second cook, | YORK DENTISTS, 99 Mission st., cor. 6th. Santa Cruz, $0; secons second cook, hotel, city, a cafe, $45; cook, smal cook, $10 a week; nig! dishwashers, $25; 5 dish and $20 and room; potwasher, country hotel, 2 dishwashers, country hotel, §20. 20. Working head waiter, fare advanced; room: waiters, $25. Beli boy, with references, $15 and fouad bell boy. $12; porter, family hotel, §15. C R. HANSEN & CO. night ' waiter, $30; night waiter, country restaurant, $30 and 104 Geary si d _cook, springs, $5 , $30; second cook for 1l “country hotel, $30; ht potwasher, $9; 7 hers, $5 'a week mining town, $30 and oyster house, _ LUDLUM HILL, 143 Market st. near Dglevemh; crowns, bridge work and fillings a specialty: all work reasonable; gas given. A FULL set of teeth, £ teeth without plates a speclalty; liberal credit glven. PERRY DEN. 'KPAQL PARLORS, 8 Mason st., corner Market. VROOM—_Palnless extraction by electric euarantee 10 ye lowest prices; 10 no students. 907 Market st. OHIO Dental Parlors—Filling, 50c up; crowns, ; open ev'gs. S50 Market, cor. Stockton. COACHMAN and Indoor in livery stable, $30 and stable, $30 and found and found; milker, $25; and board and $25 and fellers, $40; crosscutters, ers and_pilers, found. C. R. HANSEN $26 and found and servant, horses kept found; hostler, livery farmer and wife, $i0 15 farmers, §1 a da found; woodsmen $35 and found; labor. 0 and & CO., 104 Geary st 4 MORE laborers for mi board. 2 per day. W. D. EWER & CO., 610 CI RANCH Dblacksmith: steady job at $35 and W. D. EWER & CO., 610 Cla ne; good steady | ob; | ay. | st. § LABORERS for city 5 teamsters for city milker, $30. W. D. EWER & CO. WANTED—Coachman near city for references required W. D. EWER & CO., 610 Cla. $1 60 per day $1 60 per day | 610 Clay. | gentlman’s place; ; $30 and found. st. 12 HAYING hands for good long fob; near city; $L2 per day: harvest hands, going wages. W. D, EWER & CO.g610 Clay st. RANCH cook, near city SET of teeth without a plate. DR. H. G. YOUNG, 1841 Polk st. news for 5 cents—The Weekly Call, n wranper. for mafling $1 per ATTORNEYS AT LAW. R. W. King, attorney at law, sixth floor, Chronicle buflding; no advanct charges; estates, mortgages, damages, attach. ments, bankruptey. all cases; wills, contracts, te., drawn; moderate fees; call or write. [AGUIRE & GALLAGHER—James G. Ma- gulre (ex-Congressman) and James L. Galla: ADVICE free gher (ex-City and County Attorney) have moved their law offices to the Parrott build- ing, 825-85 Market st.; tel. South 215. NO charge unless successful; advice free: of- fice open evenings from 8 to 9. HUGH C. GRANT, room 604, Emma Spreckels building. ADVICE free; divorce law a specialty; private; no_fee without success; collections. G. W. HOWE, atty at law, 850 Market, cor. Stocktn. MRS. CLARA FOLTZ attorney at law; pro- bate and guardianship: Sth floor Crocker bldg, Farm hands....... . 326 W. D. EWER & CO., 610 Clay st. MAN about private place in city: §20 and found, and others. W. D. EW & CO., 610 Clay st. DISHWASHER, country: paid. MISS CULLEN, 3 $15 per month; fare 25 Sutter st. VEGETABLE man, $20, GAZETTE, 420 Kearny st. for springs. HOTEL PARTY to open boarding camp: LARSEN, 318 Bush st., bet. 10 and 12 Job. to-day. 5 months" WANTED—Young girl to assist with light housework and care of children. 1649 Mission. FIRST class porter want O'Farrell st. ed; barber shop. 235 WANTED—Woman that _understands cooking o assist in Kitchen. 5 Polk st. TRAVELER to sell shirts on_commlission; side line; state particualrs. N. Y., Call office. GIRL for general housework; apply 9 to 12, 100 McAllister sta . BOY wanted at 1215 Stockton st.; must reside in nelghborhood. N Emma Spreckels building, 921 consultation free: no fees in advance. ADVICE free: no charge unless successtul. W, W. DAVIDSON. 827 Market st CO-PAR HSHIF NOTICES NOTICE of dissolution of copartnership—No» tice is hereby given that WINFIELD §, DAVIS, BURT L. DAVIS and CARL A, HENRY, formerly doing business as co. partners’ under the firm name and style of DAVIS & HENRY, have dissolved such co- artnership and the business heretofore domn y such firm will hereafter be conducted ay No. 215 Sansome st. by DAVIS & HENRY, ag incorporated company. Dated February 25, 1599. CARL A. HENRY, WINFIELD §. DAVIS BURT L. DAVIS.

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