The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 24, 1899, Page 7

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THE SAN YRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER' 24, 1899. Ve C P 1 i Pres " REPRESENTATIVE 1AY BE W. R. WHEELER dent to B(?A&ed to Make Him Successor to Calhoun. Jobbers and M;iitfacturers of Pacific | Coast by Committee Select Him as Choice of Thglr As_sociation. g + @ $ @» ! + & WILL SEE PRESIDENT WHEELER INSTALLED IMPORTANT RULING IN THE FA IR WILL CASE Judge Troutt Sustains Mrs. Nettie Craven’s Demurrer. In Addition to Hastening the Hearing of Her Petition His Questions of HE fighting chances of Mrs. Nettie R. Craven-Fair for a slice of the Opinion Opens Up Probate Law. sald W. W, Foote, senfor counsel for Mrs. raven i “‘will be that we will now | NEW ADVERTTSEMENTS. Mr. E. A. Earnest of Hassler Mills, Ga., writes under date of August 21, 899: “I am a merchant, 60 years old, and i have had kidney trouble. I took three !bmtlvs of Warner's Safe Cure and it worked like a charm from the first dose. I take great pleasure in recome mending it. Mrs. C. Isenhower of this place, who was cured by it ten years ago, is still hale and hearty, and always praising Safe Cure to her friends and neighbors. I think it is the finest prep- aration in the world for kidney and bladder troubles.” THE CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF DENTAL SURGERY WILL OPEN for the admission of students MO! October 23. address M.D., D.D.S., Dean, 416 Parrott bullding, d ale | Proceed to try our action to determine 1 millions of the late Senator Falr | the widowhood of our client in the Pro- | GILBERT M. BARRETT, A.M. M.D., Seo- « have not only been Increased by a | casding for family allowance. That 18 | reibr o AitoARRETT. AM., MD., A ruling made yesterday by Superior | set, I belleve, for the Imh of next month, e i t McKi B R T o e B A B S SCRS SCas SRCS = Judge Troutt, but, if his opinion is good law, questions of probate long since con to torment helrs and make fat fees for lawyers. Judge Troutt's ruling was made as part of the proceeding on “Mrs. Craven-Falr's petition filed some time ago for a family allowance of $5000 a month, pending the determination of her claim to wido idered settled will undoubtedly arise | f the court had ruled against us we could not have gone on with that action until after we had secured a reversal from the Supreme Court. That would have taken great deal of time. This decision of s Troutt hastens matters wonder- ADVERTISEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. The Popular CALIFORNIA THEATER 25 SEE BURT HAVERLY IN HIS IMITATIONS OF SOUSA. IN THE FUNNIEST FARCE THAT EVER { HAPPENED, i e Inley. R hood.” To this petition the Fair children 1 e TR T T TR S & | —Mrs. Herman Oelrichs, Charles Fair and | A Breach Uf Pmmlse : e eva S ¢ | Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt Jr.—filed an an- | WE HAVE \ ) 1 Hol- @ | swer, in which they set up that Mrs. | —_——_ alde 1 . Ev- £ g5 Craven was estopped from claiming heir- o The audience yelled with laughter.”—Ash- Sy & the | crett and an Francisco;| PROF. D. C. GILMAN OF JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY. |ship by the decree of partial aistribution | STRUGK 0"_ ton Stevens (Gxaminer) - TE T | granted In April, 1887, by Superior Judge | ] NY, MAG T COSTUMES, RESIDENT DANIEL COIT GILMAN of Johns Hopkins University ar- rived in this city last evening from his home in Baltimore, and i{s now P they stay in this part of the State. evening President Gilman proved to o chief characteristics were his great President and Mrs. Wheeler as long as When seen In his apartments las be a dignifled, courtly gentleman, who: in a similar length of time resting and ached -at- Slack, in which the decision wa that the next of kin and sole h tion or by a special proceeding, which cannot be brought within less than a vear after the issuance of letters of ad- ministration. n the first and the second ‘separate claim that the decree of partial | Unlike other companies, we first sunk small test wells to determine positively heart of the Bakersfield district, des- TO DO THIS QUICKLY } We are going to gell 10,000 shares of treasury stock at 25c per share, after which there will be large advance or must be made quickly if any of these PANY, FICE! SONGS. NEW Presented by the Original Cast. at the Palace, accompanied by his wife. He comes to witness the formal law of the late James G. Fair were the D OPULAR | Evening, Tic, 600 and 25e. i installation of Profe: Benjamin Ide Wheeler as president of the Uni- three children. To this answer Mrs. i ol Ve ol RICES | Mat. Sat. & Sun., 0o & 20 | versity of Califorpia, which ceremony is to take place next Wednesday after- Craven-Fair's attorneys—W. W. Foote, | October 28—The Extraordinary Farce, | © moon on the Berkeley campus. Pence & Pence, Judge Denson and A STRUCK OIL | “BROWN'S IN TOWN."” | President Gilman will witness nothing new in the ceremontal, as he him- Ruef—demurred.” Argnments on the de- In our test wells, 740 acres, in the very [ | ! | self nt of the same institute of learning, serving | % | 3 # - tioner and Charles Heggerty and W. S. | tined to become one of the greatest ofl- from 1872 iring the latter year to accept the position at Wood, for respondents - were concluded || producing districts In the world. e | ¢ the head of the great university over which he has ever since ruled. last Friday and the demurrer was su- WE HAVE A CERTAINTY | THEATER | Upon his arrival President Gilman was met at the Berkeley station by talned yesterday by Judge Troutt, who | . RN . Jee B | President Wheeler and at the Oakland mole by Regent Hallidle, and by holds that the question of heirship can | It is necessary to lay a pipe line UP TO & INCLUDING SATURDAY NIGHT! | f only be finally determined either upon about two miles and put down a large DUNNE AND RYLEY PRESENT | Q both of these gentlemen escorted across the bay and to his hotel. To-day he § | GO be frafly dererminec efther mpon Sol when “wa' can cdmmenos payiig Hattaid : | will leave for Berkeley, where he ar wife will remain as the guests of & i g dlvidens | 1 S Most Celebrated Farce. A Milk White Flag N E E personal magnetism and his pleasant willingness to extend courtesy to his R e e A L ) which there will be & large & | visttor: swers of the children of decedent to the At this low price you have the cer- N CES: | He spoke of a pleasant trlp across the continent and of the plans he and petition of Nettie R. Craven-Falr for an | tainty of realizing from 20 to 50 times NOTE, PRICES: his wife had made to enjoy a short vacation, which embraces a two weeks’ allowance to her as the widow of de- amount of your investment within BARGAIN AND | Entire Lower Floor. | ¢ stay in the vicinity of San Francisco and then a trip to the southern part cedent,” says Judge Troutt in his opinion, | ty days. Application for shares PROFESSION A L WA TTN Remainder of house WEDNESDAY, 25e. of the coast, where they will put dstalb 2 ¢ b e deaired d ¥ stribution, made within five months shares are desired. | & enjoying themselves. Their subsequent movements have not yet been defi- after the lssuance of lefters testamen. | et i i | O nitely settled, but they will probably return home via the southern route. tary on their application, estops her from B M | e r—— Gilman refused to express his views on the question of annexa- claiming to be the surviving wife of de- WIIl recelve prompt attention. For fur- NEX 3 0404 04040404 0004040904040 40940+0404040404060+ thing before it leaves for Man a banquet last Sunday and iny officers and the field officers ment to the feast. and roast pork, and sweet po Irish potatoes and fruit, pie . sald he was reserving them for his speech next Wednesday, when would be fu ffered many public posi- Boundary Commission. his works in particular—his He tions, anc President Gilman is also an author, received many honors & is at present a member of the V' 1 two « @+ 0404040404 0404040404040404040404040404040+@ nment straight | arranged lurl ited its own of the regi- Gove better than CURTAL EXPOSED 10 SHAME IN A cedent, for the reason that she knew of | such application, and that in said decree there is a recital that sald children are The head of Johr was born at Norwich, Conn., in R i e e PETHULEUM GENTER UiL GO 1831. He graduated from Yale nd then spent several years in fur- “‘The aforesaid contention of decedent's | & | & ther study attending lectures at various seats of in this country children is, in my opinion, unsound; for | 20 MILLS BUILDING, THIRD FLOOR. 'S aan theneotng toitinn re he graduated from the Berlin University. I take the view that on the hearing of | the application for a partial distribution | the court had not the power under the | statute to determine who were all of the persons entitled by law to share in the a court of probafe, has onl ch powers as are given it by the statute, and such incidental powers as pertain to all courts for the purpose of enabling cise the jurisdiction which is c them. Although it Is a cc Jjurisdiction, vet in the ex: ther information and prospectus write or call MATHEWS and BULGER In “BY THE SAD SEA WAVES.” | ® “Life of President James Monroe” and “Introduction to Democracy in O | final distribution of decedent’s estate.” NEW BILL ENTHUSIABTICALLY RECEIVED. | 9 America’—have succeeded in placing him among the foremost literary men Continuing the court sai WRIGHT HUNTINGTON | b0 ry. Proceedings for the administration of the bz o > s |10/ of enisicountrys estates of decensed persons and for their MISS ADELE FRANCIS and GEO. FARREN. Be distribution to those who may be entitied From the Firs 3040404040 404040404040904040404040404040 4040404040+ Lot I ST e e L L A BURT, SADA, VD £ s heirs of the decedent, are purely statu- LTON'S AA:I(UBATIL 1 determined to have a good meal of some- tory. The Superigr Court, while sitting as TRICK AND MUSICAL tion of the Season. THE FLORENZ TROUPE. DO THE HEGELMAN 10¢; The Sens TOM BROWN, THE MONK BROTHERS' ACT. Reserved Seats, “ ] - balcony, opera th and e . ;. Myier a powers its jurisdiction is 1 G s Al 0 5 !:uir - Lew- T”r’j,";?“x‘: ‘“x‘rf»‘éi‘u“«;?l’ in churg @ sl gand il L‘r’rgfil}o Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. 2 ] TE o ‘o been in exces X Y A de Hart of | fairs. Music) was furnishod by Comnery Upon It or without the Hmits of this spectal ' S AIYSVLLS; § Arcliie iBrauer onsthe JMANTE. T 3 Jurisdiction such acts are nugatory and have R. L. |Vate McKeen with the guitar. Captain no binding effect, even upon those who TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. 1ds and | W °H. Gillenwater of Company B was have’ invoked'Its duthority or submitted to ‘ ese suest of honor. B emiom. - The Mataie pormits the dues: EEEER E Ces L of the larg- | "R0% H1° EYoines I, Hughes of the e e helrahip. and the rights and inter- | GRAND AND ENGLISH OPERA SEASON. Phouses on the coast Fouht Cavairy has been detailed to act extn Of il petaons to be feerminea unly L R nr.gu‘tiunu;;ué]el.. to h‘{lnx ml(‘ch‘e | as quartermas e :\n{(énl‘:;mmlssur) of the . upon the, fnal dletribution, of the cstate Pach Evenine und Satustay aince, T ]S i ansport Cen y i y r om he s p O ffenbach’'s F Comie pert sub-committee the mo el O L to sail on the His Wife Secures an Inpse of one. vear: from_ the _msuance of A MAN WHQ IS NOT i Offenbach’s Famous Col pera, - I be the committee on t transport Manauense has been reduces Letters Testamentary. (Sec. 16, C. C. P. FASTIDIOUS ! uirman of that committee Wil | from 275 to 17, First Lieutenant Howard arat K e ‘ ettty T i | SR I e i e hs Absolute Decree. | h Gave and v stiormers i | about i tnundry work wi take i t : vich will p Dares | gned to the troteP tommissary e Y K Miows them to proceed at | “any old place” but those who are | - bl session of the com- | P ent ofi gned recrults once to trial to establish her claim of | well bred and want their linen to be | Presented With an Enlarged Cast, Orchestra A deta have been ordered to the Pennsylvania. Benjamin A. Curtaz has been divorced, his suffering wife being granted an abso- and Chorus. v of go- i & Scenery and Effects! widowhood, without the necessity they would ready to sail s & " | ke LTy be faultless in its color and finish will seek | yoqs Gorgeous Costam erday afternoon was | R Pillsbur has ing to the Supreme Court, on v ics | lute decree upon the ground of his sh: - | have been compelled to do had the de- | out the United States Laundry in time, i i x % ey to a; r for battalion of two compani € pon g nd of s shame- a T i B POPULAR PRICES, 25c and &0c, the Interstate Com. | o0e4 Y9 Howing officers: Captain Ed- |less fmmorality and infidelity. Superlor | murter been overruled on this point, | just as water finds its level. Our laun- Telephone for Seats, Bush 9. o sait | ward T, Winston, nth Infantys | judge Daingerfield, before whom the| Ihe effect of Judge Troutt's ruling,” | qry work is incomparable, and is the — ouls jo! to make | g, T ant William _ D. Pascoe, | T 2 % 5 , Special!! Meyerbeer's Greatest Opera, E ouls jobbers to make | Second Lieutepant Willlem, O, PRl | wite t for divorce was tried, granted | @ o ¢ —4-6—+-&—4-&—4-&-4-6—-6-+-@ | Derfection of the laundryman’s art. | i CARERICAINE." 1 ol ey wiast g0 | Eighteenth Infantry; 807 fe Twentieth | her an absolute divorce, awarded her $1%5 Try us! T b T T 0 T nich all the Tostly Bnaice tioy)| tenantizion a month alimony and gave her the cus- | he would take his bables into the home S e e b ODS e et wUE Aiptes. ess of the Pa- "A“.’l‘{,,g‘ Assistant Surgeon Wwilliam D. | tody of the two minor children, Benjamin | 0f a woman whose actions prove her to x SEATS NOW BEING RESERVED. ry attended upon | giemen has been assigned to duty on the | “ag0q its, and Albert H. Curtaz, | Pe among the last among women with| United States Laundry. Offlca whom innocent children should be allowed to associute. association and tuation took pla a 1004 Market Street. Pennsylvania. aged 4 year Charles E. Marrow, GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. R Ry : e. |~ First Lieutenant signed t The testimony in th vill Teleph South 420 elected t Mr. Pillsbury made many va g i e s been assigned to stimony in the case will not bear elephone Sou . ! ra pchnrj az»w} illsbury made many valuable sug f::l;‘;:—gtr\ ‘Qrfif,‘vméth‘afie general hospital | repeating. It was sufficient to prove every SPHONE MAIN 532 allegation of the wife and to reveal the husband as one false to every vow of - married lite and dead to every principle | Women's Press Association Holds an | signment to Manlla. pending his as CALIFORNTA. . 7 e LITERARY LADIES' SOUVENIRS. | 0akland Office, 514 Eleventh St.i OWANS MARCH T0 THEIR CAMP AT THE PRESIDIO Were Warmly Greeted Along the Strests. » men marched out to the Pre- terday and were met at the camp who had the gton men, omers over to dinner. It was a seal, and the men from across ater, with appetites keenly whetted month on the transport, did it full he way from the transport residlo crowds gathered to A Good | nvestment, in this company pre- 1 means or the greater opportunities than snything before ted rties representing va s have made ex- am 5 of Costa prop- i Teport e of ofl in abundan. OIL STOCK AT $5 PER SHARE. The 1 rica of stock, large area, | | con: close prox- {mit great demand proposition ge have hored €00 feet and expect to > ten 4 ek that s ren be worth tions. American 0l and Refinery Company Rooms 822-323 PARROTT BUILD- ING, SAN FRANCISCO. Oakland Agents—O'ROURKE & JACKSON, 1002 Broadway. | e L | The funeral will Y | Bergeant Walter B. Steve: | of Compan | fantry to Manila. get a sight of the last men from the war. There were cheers and handshaking and greetings from every one, stranger or | triend, for everybody wished to rush out into the street and clasp some soldler by the hand, regardless of whether or not he was an acqualntance. The regiment was reviewed at Bush street and Van Ness avenue by General Shafter and Gov- ernor 8haw of Icwa, assisted by a crowd of citizens that blocked the street. The men were assigned to one of the hill camps, that adjoining the old California and Montana camp. T lowa regiment comes home with a full list of officers, all vacancies havin been filled just before the men slules | from Manila. The lucky ones were Sec- ond Lieutenant L. A. Williams of Com- pany E to be first lleutenant of the same company, First Sergeant E. Over- holtzer of Company E be sec- lieutenant, econd Lieutenant Villiam 3. Mensor of Compal D to be captain and regimental ad- jutant, Fred P. Woodruff of Company D to be second lleutenant, The papers of the regiment are in excelient condition and there is not much work on the muster left to be done. The funeral of Mrs. Collins, the widow of the late Captain Collins of the Twenty- fourth Infantry, was held vesterday from the post chapel at the Presidio. She was buried in the National Cemetery. The pall-bearers w Major Cowles, Seven- teenth Infantry; Captain W. N, Hughes Thirteenth Infantry; Captain H. C to Danes, Third Artillery; Captain Bork miller, Captain Gale, Fourth Cavalry, and Captain D. Leitch, Twenty-fitth In- fantr: The body of Lieutenant Colonel Miley, which was sent home on the transport Senator, was lald out in the Presidio chapel yesterday under a_guard of honor. be beld this afternoon at 3 oclock. He will be accorded full military honors for his rank in the regu- Jar army, which was that of a first lleu- tenant. He will be burted in the National C etery. Fifteen men from the Towa regiment were sent to the general hospital Sunday as Boon as the vessel had been passed by the quarantine officers. The sick_men were: Homer W. Read, Harry N. Wood and Corporal Arthur A. White of Com- any A, Roland Mills of Company B, Ira Patia, Wiiltam A. McLean and Sergeant Frank A. Buker of Company E, Joseph Dewhirst of Company I, Musician Riley Stevens and Alfred H' Lovely of Com- pany G, Lorenzo D. Bates of Company H, nson of Com: pany Dailey, Edward Wood, < al Hugh Goss and Willlam E. Hosse of Company L, Samuel J. Tilden, 3 rusholts an win J. Stotler Y any M and Allen O, Garrell & musician of the band. All but five are convalescent. Second Lieutenant James W. Lecrome of the Fortieth Infantry reported for duty at the Presidio vesterday. He was a private in the Washington regiment and has but recently received his pro- motion to a commission. The transport Olympia will Jeave this morning for the Sound, from where she will take part of t Thirty-ninth In- 'he Pennsylvania was o have left with her, but the recent discovery of a suspected case of small- 0x on that transport has held her here. t is not known how long it will be before she joins the Olympia. Company E of the Thirty-first Infantry K, R. L. | e [OWA BOYS® RECORD IN THE PHILIPPINES , Fifty-first Iowa, the last except (h:h;‘(rs( T)enncssee of the volunteer reg- fments to return from the Philippines, has had an experience that fell to the lot of none of the others. More than one- third of the whole time since they left here has been spent on board of a lran.s- port—ninety-three days on the Pennsyl- vania going out and thirty on the Sen- ator returning. The regiment arrived in San Francisco on June 9, 1888, and after being three times dlnum:)olul(‘d finally got away for Manila on November 3, ar- Vi December 5. “:rix?g 1‘12?1{? expedition was in expactancy and the regiment was kept on board the ship with a view of sending it to tf\al place, for which it sailed on December 5. The men were not disembarked there, however, but returned to Ca on Jja uary 31 and disembarked on February 5, having been continuously afloat for three months and thres days, during all of which time there was not a single death and but two men sick in the whole regi- ment. They went into camp at Cavite and Colonel Loper was put in command of the district. On February 8 they took part in the capture of San Roque and in the sharp fight of the 15th, but lost no men. On February 18 Major Duggan was ordered with the first battalion to the south line below Manila, near Pa: There they were on constant duty a in much sharp fighting until March 28, when they were withdrawn to Cavite. On April 16 the entire regiment joined MacArthur's division at Malolos by way of Malabon, and were assigned to Hale's brigade. From that time until the end of the campalgn their movements were jdentified with those of the brigade. They were under fire fifteen times, and the casualty lists will tell the story of their battles and losses. At the capture of San Fernando the Towans charged across the river in the face of a heavy fire, and driving the en- emy before them were the first to enter the burning insurfient capital. When withdrawn from the front the regiment had but 218 men fit for duty out of the 1020 enlisted men and fifty officers. Fifty- one were invalided home, forty dis- charged at Manila and seventy-one men and two officers revolunteered, leaving 769 men and forty-nine officers to return. The regiment never set foot in Manila until it was ordered home. Altogether it has had a unique experience, Of Course The Cafe Zinkand is the place to go after the theater for a little supper and excellent music.® ———— In the Divorce Court. Decrees of divorce have been granted Emma Olitzsky from Frederick Olitzsky on the ground of willful neglect and Lillie Mehler from Max Mehler on the ground of cruelty. Suits for divorce have been filed by Herman Engel against Annie Engel, for infidelity, and Mary E. Butler against Benjamin Butler for failure to provide. —————— Funston's Fighting Regiment at Me- chanics’ Pavilion to-night. Tickets an reserved seats at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s. * that men of honor respect. Witnesses were summoned to the stand to tell the sto of the husband's of- fenses in many places and at many times. The disagreeable story traced the shame- less husband from house to house, in the city and out of town and back again into his very home In his violation of the vows that decency alone might have made him respect at his own fireside. Hotel pro- prietors, servants and lackeys told the story and linked the name of the derelict husband with that of a woman known as May Schribner, who figured in the com- plaint as co-respondent. This concluded the testtmony of the witnesses summoned to substantiate Mrs. Curtaz's charges and the plaintiff was then cailed to the stand. In a gentle tone of voice she told the court the story of her sufferings, snd sald that she had al- ways tried to be a true and devoted wife and could find no excuse for her hus- band's shameless actions. She said that after her return from Oakland she was unaware of her husband’s degraded ac- tions unt{l the woman in the case called him up by telephone. “I insulted her,” saild Mrs. Curtaz, “and then my husband flew into a rage and left the house.” At this point Judge Daingerfield interrupted the proceedings by asking that the prayer of Mrs. Curtaz's complaint be read, which was done, and without delay the court anted Mrs. Curtaz the desired relief. irs. Curtaz then spoke up and asked the court to make an order preventing Mr. Curtaz from mmlng to the house after dark to see the children, and also begged that the court make an order decreeing | that Curtaz_was not to take the children out of the house unless accompanied by one of Mrs. Curtaz's friends. “My reason for this,” sald Mrs. Curtaz, “is to pre- vent my husband from taking the chil- dren to that woman's rooms, as I know he has done In the past.”” The plea was %xran(ed and It went on record that Ben- jamin A. Curtaz, vice president of the firm_of Benjamin Curtaz & Son, reached the depths of degrad: had so ion that Blectricity for Weak Men.: 5 r : Enjoyable Social. Yesterday was souvenir day for the — o o m Pacific Coast Women's Press Associa- | }ORI UNES rozae tion, and each member who contributed in to the afternoon’'s entertainment had something interesting to say or exhibit in | connection with her travels. Mrs. Alice Kingsbury Cooley opened the programme with a collection of Ph':_l}l‘pplno e re- souvenirs, collected by her son. mainder of the programme was made up Barbara of the following: ““Mementos of Hayti,”” Mrs. Knell; “An Unconscious Hypnotis! Percy Weelms; piano solo, Profes “The Necklace of a of Blam,” Mme. Guido Spitz; ‘‘Alaskan Curios,”” Miss Augusta Friedrich; “A Sampler,” Miss Harrfet M. Skidmore; “Old Things,” Mrs. Emeline M. North; song, “Ninon,” Mrs. Leopoldine Steffani. Refreshments were served after the en- tertainment. Prior to the rendition of the | heid, programme a business meeting w: at which it was settled that'a reception | be tendered to Howard Malcolm Tichnor, | M. A., at the Berkshire Hotel, early in November. The meeting was presided over by Miss Augusta Friedrich. AR S e T Dr. Parker's Cough Cure. One dose will stop a cough. Never falls. Try it, 2%c. All drugglsts.® Suicide in Jail. REDDING, Oct. 23.—A stranger occu- || pying a cell In the jail at the town of Shasta, where he was being held await- ing examination as to his sanity, was found hanging in jail this morning. The unfortunate man had applied for admit- tance to the County Hospital about mid- night Sunday. After being taken in he created such a disturbance that the Shasta officers were sent for, who placed him in jail. He was evidently insane. —_——— Brown is in town. Thers 15 mothing Nke ELECTRICITY to put lite, vim and vigor {nto weak men or women. Drugs glve but tomporary reifet; t merely as a stimulant, but Rloctricity es to all Wweak parts bf the body in- stentenecusly, imparting nature's force thereto and doing the required work sure- ly and in a permanent manner. If ‘run " in health and strength you had better try electricity, Use an Elsctrio Belt, for this fs the bost method B PIERCE ELECTRIC C0., 6820 MARKET 9TREET, Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francleca -0-0-0-0-9-0-8-0-0-9-G Cannibal | Chlef,”” Mrs. Mary E. Hart; “A Memory Big Panoche OIL STOCK Prospectus and Maps Free 206 Kearny St. San Francisco Listed on California Oil Exchange {or by mail. All letters confidential. 731 Market St., San Franeisco. ST - Transcontinental tourists and trav- elers from all over the United States show their apprectation of the excel- lence of the PALACE ano GRAND by making these hotels their headquar- ters while in San Francisco. Fourteen hundred rooms, 900 with baths—largest and finest in the world. JOHN C. KIRKPATRICK, Manager. Blg & 11 a non- Gleot, Bpermatorrhoa W Ill_lnulrtflll diz~ i iRl 1 irritation or alcera. plyifig §t, but be sure you get a o @ i takon et nicerar Bl nean e apt dhiitn ot tep i T ricEvans CiEwno o, branss. Nom-astringent. best Blectric Belt on earth. QINGIKNATL,O [ERERY Bold by Druggists, 17 “Booklet No, 3, fres at office or : g¢ sent i plain wraspor fo stamp, tells all 1 ropaid ex b3 g.w. or 3 bottl esat fil’eak Men and Wb:fléfl | Hom{n USE DAMI:NA“BITTERS. THE great Mexican remedy; gives health and #trength to eexual organs. Depot, 823 Market. Ey Genuine and Unanimously &onceded Triumph of H. J. Stewart's and Clay M. Greene's Comic Opera, TS CONSPIRATORS ! | Which Will Be Presented Every Evening Till Further Notice, A FORMIDABLE RIVAL TO “ROBIN HOOD." POPULAR PRICES—50¢, 85¢, 2e¢, 1ic and 10c. A Good Reserved Seat at Saturday Matinee 25c. Branch Ticket Office—Emporium. ALCAZAR THEATER. REMARKABLE PRODUCTION, EVERY NIGHT AT 8. MATINEE SATURDAY AND SUNDAY AT 2. THE THREE MUSKETEERS! THE TALK OF THE CENTURY! EXTRAORDINARY SCENERY! Costumes made especlally for this presentation. RACING! RACING! RACING! 1899—CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB—1800 Winter Meeting, beginping SATURDAY. Sep- terber 23, 1899, OAKLAND RACE TRACK. Racing Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday. Rain or chine. Five or more races each day. Races start at 2:15 p. m. sharp. Ferry-boats leave San Francisco at 12 m. and {12:30, 1, 1:30, 2, 2:30 and 8 p. m. conmecting with trains stopping at the entrance to the track. Buy your ferry tickets to Shell Mound. All trains via Qakland Mole connect with San Pablo avenue Flectrie Cars at Seventh and Broadway, Oakland. Also all trains via Ala- meda Mole connect with San Pablo_avenus cars at Fourteenth and Broadway, Oakland. These electric cars go direct to the track in fit- teen minutes. Returning—Tralns leave the track at 4:15 and 4:45 p. m. and jmmedfately after the last race. THOMAS H. WILLIAMS JR.. President. R. B. MILROY. Secreta CONCERTS AND RESORTS. OPEN FROM 1 UNTIL 12 P. M, STEEPLECHASE—CENTRAL PARK. Is now the funniest resort in America, Coney Tsland transferred to San Francisco to make | every one laugh: everything new and novel. | Pronounced by _thousa: to be the real thing. | PROFESSOR HILL, King of the Wire, is a wonder. Adm on to all attractions and ride, 1fe. DSOME PRESENTS FOR A | { Weekly Call $1.00 per Year

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