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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1899. EAK SHOWING BY ST. LOUIS JOBBERS Vitnesses Admit That They Are Simply Fighting to Get More Coast Business. PLANNED TO IRE A STORE Golidsworthy Arrested in Stockton. DISCOVERED JUST A8 PROMINENT IN POLITICAL AND BUSINESS CIRCLES. Bt g Had He Succeeded in His Plot at IN TIME LOUIS 14 > resumptio: efore the Inter- | ) S : (BoaL s repumpton ol e ® | Least a Block Would Have Been 0 v eppointed £o 8ucoesd W, d, appeared ok the 9 | Destroyed and Many Lives Nothing occurred sturb the representativ T n; 3 Endangered. ¢ S of the ffs on local shipm westward ¢ New ¥ « Louis and other Eastern and middle West jobbing o | ———— pe s nation developed the fact that the jobbers of these ¢ | Special Dispatah to The Call. aterially larger percentage of diffe en carload O ¢ ipme than those which the jobbers ¢ | STOCKTON, Nov. 14-W. J. Golds- ATe eiving 9 | worthy, a prominent politiclan and pro- ¢ s case quickly became apparent, namely, that 1t 1s a & | prietor’ of the American cash store, a t bbers of nd those of the coast, the Q| large grocery, is in jall here and the Dis- * n incident was frankly admitted by the g | trict orney has charged him with e ainant to- that their clients were after ¢ | burglary, fixing ball at $00. C. C.| lers of the cos aflroads must be the m to o | Anderson, a colored porter in the | . s ide for the welf f the Paci retafler was ¢ | employ of Adkins & Co., wholesale liquor AT fts true light when a jobber, under O | dealers, had occasion tp go to the awre{‘ + x SMils c for the Pacific Coast Job- 4 |last evening about 8 o'clock. Hearing a | fa n, a he prayer of thc O | noise in the basement, he entered and . 5 s st retailers any 3 | struck a light, and there found Golds- . W ss-than-carload ¢ | ;anumu- lu“!ue uukof xlr;\elx:fi. 1\1};31;;& z | moved with a jackscre: e s s of 5 Q | the floor under the barrels of alcoholic | ¢ B more will be con- ¢ | jjquor and substituted boxes, which he | & the case of the O | had saturated with coal ofl, after which | ¢ d doubtless @ | he had piled other boxes and straw | at some Pacific O |around, and paper, straw and boxes led | . ¢ S sidl - of the coast ¥ |to the outside of the building through a { 7 = evidence of the coast ¢ | hole in the basement. On discovering + 1 4| Goldsworthy Anderson grasped the iron | s ¢ 1 s nd far reaching in its ef- O | of th kscrew and told Goldsworthy he | * i Commission, &nd th 4 | would brain him if he tried to get away, | T3 evaOreaeoto wh oh Q | to,which the man replied, “You have got | 4 of the Pacific Coast can: 0 | Goldsworthy's gr store adjoins the | ‘ . r house, and his plan was evidently | o se the destruction of both buildings, | Qe0e0e0 404040404040 40+ 04040+@ |50 as to avert suspicion. His stock was insured for $10,000. Anderson procured a IS, N Interstat from the East to St. Louis and drove Goldsworthy to the resi- s % he wan ce of H..}; Adkins, proprietor of the g asked by Attor where Goldsworthy requested S > it would be Martin, publisher of the Daily | king a full sent for. Martin is his merchar L R IE X miss ¢ the retailer and consumer | o A e s B ex w Coast would be b isworthy with him. Goldsworthy made | S mination the ‘was @ a piteous appeal to Adkins and 1| R for mercy and begged them on his knees M ywer his price to and with tears in his eves not to inform | £ s S oL ot upon him. Both men were obdurate, how . H s Rt by oitine oo er, and District Attorney Ashley was | R Pkl ial| sent’ for by telephone about 3 o'clock in S s 1 to amidst a general laugh the morning, iwhen Goldsworthy fwas ers C nati rtridge i3 nfo vi x s B jobbers did not T tead of gong ited it adjusted 1 selling tc Pacific 1gh he admitted that west jobbers emed to mer- made ia were alw reflect people there ¢ ornia, an nd left t wn m k iess, and the scales would + their eyes, ceeding has simme; yber i ast merck ir at- | s ne with hi Louis | s *ohe | 5 e ur ative men of ffair. Speaches N nd the best of M centennial exposition wan » celebrate the Louisi- The Paci Coast men help him 1 and it two sections would en if they coul > relat S, Gove ember of Preside: ri: his was a "abinet 2 of the Demo the conrage is courte: BOLOLY SOLD HUMAN BODIES — The City Undertaker of Memphis Arrested. Special Dispatch to The Call. : ST. LOUIS 14—Four zinc-lined runks, such as are used by traveling men to carry samples, each containing a )se, were taken from the baggage- room at the Union station to-day, and Frank Thompson, city undertaker of Memphis, Tenn. der arrest. Charges against Thompson are being formulated some time the police have been "\I 1 '( it a traffic in human bodies has l( 4 been going on through this city, and they i i have been on the watch for the guilty . Recently a shipment of four bodies in trunks was made to W. H. Hamsen, at Keokuk, Iowa, for whom those captured e TAKE to-day were aiso intended. The expres \ who hauled the trunks from the | /1 1\ kuk depot told the station master 5 that he belleved they contained / | A HUDYAN An investigation was started, [4) ~\377 and this city was notified to look out tor J<) H—- CU RES shipments, with the result taken to police headquarters your Thompson made a clean breast of the whole affair. He said he had the con- | tract for burying the city dead of Mem- phis, For some time he the hodies to medical c this part of the country. His method was pack them with excelsior in drum- mers' zinc-lined trunks and take them with him as baggage as far as St. Lous. From here he shipped the trunks to their had been ng lleges throughout destination by expre Thompson said that he had been paid all the way from $50 to $200 per body. He said the name W, H whom the trunks w Keokuk, is a fictitious d to state who his cons trunks are the bodie s, two men and a boy, and a white woman, Mrs. Jennie R. McGuire, who d in ‘the Shelby County Insane Asylum Friday_of cancer of the stomach. MEMPHIS, Nov, 14.—Frank Thomp; who is under arrést in St. Louis, is w known in.Memphis, being the county un- | dertaker. ther, Thompson, | has been tw arges of im- | proper burial of pauper On both oecasions, however, Thompson gave a sat- isfactory explanation and was released. The detective force of the city is at work Hamsen, t addressed in but refu In th m, on dead. DYAN cures 4 g { made b\ oF rmalx\ng u)\m:lel to Mulvany's all these dis- A o | testimony, but Attorney ' questions _conditions, {(.r' Miner’s Sudden Death. were genérally favored by Judge Angel- AN, itrengthens | 10S ANGELES, Nov. 14—At an early | lottl o A hour this morning the dead body of C. R. | 3ugbee, a Colorado mining man, was found | on the sidewalk on Broadway, between | First and Second streets. There was a | pool of blood under his head, and it was at first supposed the man had been as- | saulted, but investigation shows that he | excitat 1 generally 4 Hu uggists ges for hppidyan | gied of' heart disease and must have in- | Y ‘& jured his head by falling on the side- ¢ - 840 | \walk. He was about 40 years of age and well to do, apparently, though little is T HUDY. CALL OR DOCTORS-FREE WRITE. OF | known of him here. ver a month ago, He came from Den- urned over to the officers and placed in Jjail He has engaged an attorney to defend him, and to-da ed to be interviewed. Goldsworthy had_alwavs been regarded here as a law-abiding citizen and w one of the leading members of the Mer- | chants’ and’Manufacturers’ Association, besides being a member of several fra- | ternal orders. His aged mother and his | wife arly prostr ited with grief and | the affair hz s created quite | igers whio have investigated the the plans of Golds- | - most complete, and that the | »t only have destroyed the | k but endangered the lives of | - who were occupying rooms on or. The falling of the spirit- would have made a fire with Fire Department could have cope with successfully. as defeated four years ago n on the A. P. ticket. sefalist, and it was di B sement that the Social- party had been holding meet- ising empty boxes for chair: hment was placed on Gold: tore this ng by San Fran- Joldsworthy W Assemblyma was alsc He covered in ist Labor ings there, nd the place Is in | MOLINEAUX'S TRIAL FOR MURDER BEGINS Prosecution Will Attempt to Prove | That the General's Son Sent Poi- “ son Through the Mails. { NEW YORK, Nov. 14—Roland B. Mol- ine was put on trial for his urt of General charged day with the Katherin J, Adams on De- 9. Mrs. Adams died after swallowing what was believed to be a headache powder that had been sent to | irough the mail in a sfiver mateh- | s it to Har- or of the| "lrm ker -\H\I tic C , and by him | inistered to Mrs. Adams, with whom | he resided. A chemical analysis deve oped the fact that the powder contained | a deadly combination of cyanide of mer- cury. The inves gation which followed ulted in developing that Henry G. Bar- another prominent member of the ickerbocker Athletic Club, who hdnl cently died, had received a similar pow and that it contained cyanide of mes Molineux was among the | on the stand at the Coro- where the testimony went to show that Molieux bor | toward both Cornish and Barnet. A after nsiderable been in the Tombs ever rand Juries considered hi B witnesses put ner's inquiry et Three | . and the | | third brought in the present indictment against him. Both sides have fought bitterly ever since Molineux's arrest, a to-day, after eral hours were occupied in an attempt to select a ju not one man had been found suitable to occupy a chair in the vbox. the ca illed this morning Barlow S. Weeks, counsel for Molineux, made 1 and desperate effort to have it t rred to the Supreme Court, but th corder ordered the trial to pro- ceed Mr. Weeks also made a lengthy argu- | ment on a motion to dismiss the indict- ment, but Recorder Goff several tim.es told him that his talk trivial and that he wa sting words Toli father, General Molineux, at beside him throughout the day. Har- | ry Cornish present, and the court- room was crowded with people. The p ame air of confidence | ry public appearance oner displayed the that has m | either at the | titled BOERS ARE HAMMERING AWAY AT BELEAGUERED KIMBERLEY British Are Rapidly Landing Troops and Their Commander in Chief Is Reported on a Secret Mission. ) o IMMEDIATE RELIEF EXPEDITION PROMISED BY THE BRITISH WAR OFFICE ONDON, Nov. 15, is no additional news regarding the progress of hostilities In South Africa this morning except a dis- | patch from Mafeking forwarded by a runner, dated October 31, which says {hat during the afternoon General Cronje, the Boer commander, sent an envoy to Colonel Baden-Powell under a flag of | truce to declare that he did not consider | the Geneva convention authoriz the of the Red Cross Societ fly several buildings onc the and that in his opinion the employ- natives against whites and the were both opposed trom town, ment of use of dynamite min: to the rules of war. Colonel Bad -Powell replied that the Geneva conventicn did not stipulate as to the number of Red Cross stations permi ible, and that the Boers were t;nl_\'P re- quired to respect the convent, the ho; ) d e omen’s laager, all of which pital and the B Swn limits. The British Sommander aiso pointed out that mines were 1 )gnized adjuncts of civiliz: d war- fare, and the defenses of Pretoria extensively mines. —Moreover, he mind eral Cronje that the Boers upon natives burned their Sed their cattle, and that the na- ed their lives and prop- fired defen jite three” warnings from Colonel B D welr the Woers continued delib- | erately to shell the hospital and the women's laanger. The sendin of the Boer envoy was regarded, the dispatch s, as o mere pretext for penetrating the British lines at Mafeking. According to the latest reports the town is confident Gt 'its ability to hold out until the end "Yb“)l‘}_Lr”.‘n‘wpul‘:mlurl<‘\ is concerned the mental condition of the British there must be good from the fact that three weddings | Bave taken place since the slege began, the last having been celebrated on No- ember S Y the absence of fresh news the morn- ing papers are driven to di s Lord Salisbury’s letter regarding misinterpre- tations of utterances at the Lord Mayor's banquet and President Kruger's at to exccute British officers now in han 1 athan Marks, a sup- s released by Sir George nier's deliverance meets yproval, although the no way nec Ty, ¢ Chronicl no one words could bear the Boer sympathizers had to read into them. ger's threat has ex in~d The Daily S should promptly T and_that Transvaal State Secre- held responsible for any the elementary rules of \\!nh with xplanati universal supposed i whic civilized war For once s blamed on erted that the the fact gion, which is onl that no a either B tish or Boer sour 4:30 a. m.—There | ing from being heard here, | | censor ought to kb d the story of Father Matt ug th render at Nich which while too vague to b ed _evidenc must cause une e feeling 1s that until the facts can be ascertained it would have been wiser not to circulate | Mfhe great delay on South African cables, | now amounting practically to five d and the lack of any definite news from | Ladysmith, give rise to some appreh tidings have come from | Nothing is known as to the where- abouts of General Redvers Buller. H. M. | 8. Powerf arrived at Simons v from Durba un to coal ecruiser will r urban immediately Lord George Hamilton, for India, announced 1ing that a relief force dysmith immediately, othing is known of th and _equal of the B with mo Secretar £ in a speech las would be sent to I but bevond that British campalgn, yuds the moveme ate The Morning Post, which complains it was unwise tactics on the part of the British off rs to leave th ailway Intact in thefr retirement to Ladysmith, says: “It 1S a illustration of = British contempt for the Boers that they treated the retirement h it were l’dn .ul; ance and pres ines o vommunication as caref it it had | )een our Own. Do Cameson, the hero of the raid, left Cape Town for England last Thursday. ALLEGED DEMAND AND THREAT BY THE BOERS LONDON, Nov. 14.- Nothing is known War Office or the Colonial garding the alleged official s eme! bled from Cape Town say- e ate Secretary Reltz, in behalf of the Transvaal Government, has al White immediately Office here a supposed spy, who dysmith, the dispatch adding that ident Kruger threatens ruted to h officers further if Marks Z r shooting six Brit of the Boers It ‘ape Town that smith after th with the suppe erted from Marks went to Lad nvestment of that pia. ed object of obtaining in- | formation for the Boers, and one version is that the Transvaal au- threatened to ;M'l‘ulv‘ six <h officers if the supposed spy is not ;:"]fi“ A e hich Genetal Buller is said to have replied that the British were e to retain the man until he should \der a satisfactory account of himself. of the story thorities hav t demanded | release Both stori it Is a r the 1m- | print of improbabilit noreason to think that the B bhe guilty of such a complete change from their pr of him since h rrest, and after ad- 1 A manner of con- = s ) . kel Vious correct attitude and marnner of con 1 e sorurtroom for ome time, whote ha | ducting the hostllities, Nevertheless. the talked pleasantly with his counsel “and | Sensational afienien, B o RePy estdent the court attendants. The case will be | {5, ST 4l the members of the execu- euninued K0 TARIEaNYS tive council be ruthlessly handled as the OPENING OF THE | & GRIFFIN WILL CONTEST SAN RAFAEL. Nov. 14.—The prelimin- | | ary skirmish in the Griffin will contest be gan to-day before a jury in the Superfor Court. Attorney James W. Keyes and General Cobb appeared for Patrick Mul- ind his two children, John and Gen- eyieve, the plaintifis in the case, and At- | torneys Jones & O'Donnell, Mullany and James W. Cochrane for the defendant, | Mrs. e O'Connor. ch side will pre- | :nt the testtmony of about twenty-five en Griffin_ died last April and the bulk of which beqleathed 't0 Mrs. O'Connor, her | Ta Mulvany, her son-in-law two children only $300 was b . A contest was filed in the fol- Jowing month, and it was alleged in the | complaint that Mrs. Grifin was of un- ! sound mind prior to her death and had been unduly influenced. i The plaintiff testified to-day that short prior to her death Mrs. Griffin fre came Into town dressed so carelessly | to present an immodest appearance. | morrow Rev. Father Rogers and Cashier | | Bostick of the Tomales Bank will be the Mrs, E left a fortune of $75,000, wa | queatt Brakeman Killed. STOCKTON, Nov. 14.—The first killing of the Valley road In this vicinity o curred this evening when George Wilcox, a brakeman on the gravel train, was run | over and killed at the gravel pit near the Stanislaus River, twenty-seven miles | frem Stockton. Wilcox tried to get on the train when it was in motion and fell | under the wheels. He was 8 years of nfie and leaves a widow and child in this city. | of ‘the | vestment 1 the event of State v fitting reprisal R belng carried threat KIMBERLEY BOMBARDED FROM THREE POSITIONS | 10 (afternoon).—An eived from Kimber- undated disp: ley say “The ed shelling November 7 oers cea B ed at intervals all about 1 p. m., having fi day long some seventy shells, a majority m falling in debris heaps and open Sl range was space The average One cooking pot was injured. i brisk market for fragments, | {mens bringing £€2. The Boers were shelling at the extreme Yesterday's attempt ntly | range of their guns. appar was regarded as ludicrous. was splendid (lnnm{ briskly on the morning of Novem- ber 8. One shell narrowly missed the There were no casualties. v inferior quality amateurs. One, It welghs Dutch church. The shells are of a v and seemingly fired by almost intact, was picked up. ClENE and b Guarter pounds. | have been firing from three positions. | far the Boer activity_causes little alarm.” BELEAGUERED ) FORCE HAS AMPLE PRQVISIONS LONDON, Nov. 15.—The Dally graph publishes these advices from its special correspondent: ESTCOURT, Natal. Friday, Nov. 10.— None of my messengers sent to Lady- | smith have returned. Doubtless the in- of the town has now become closer, but General White communicates the information that the bombardment | does little damage, and that there have been hut few casualties. The beleaguered force” has ample provisions and the in- trenched position grows daily stronger. A contrary wind prevents the cannonad- i | | he weather | The bombardment was con- | The Boers | So | Tele- | ing of the ship. ng her route and A | tination, hav is said a_definite_determination | ages will be complied with promptly. The Institute is desirous of reaching that reat class of men who are unable to but the smoke firing is proceeding as | usual. There are no Boers nearer Est- court than Colenso. The Boers have to send a number of civil refugees from the Transvaal into town under a flag truce. | SEIZURE OF WIRELESS TELEGRAPHIC PLANT | indicates that the LONDON, Nov. 15.—The Daily Mail has | this dispatch from its special correspond- | ent: | CAPE TOWN. Thursday, Nov. §.—Prep- | arations for the reception of the army corps are being continued with unabuted acti Camps have been formed and railway transportation has been thor- oughly organized The authorities at Cape Town nave eized a complete wirel phic plant on board a vessel. Saritas | was consigned to a private firm ‘n Di goa Bay and was obviously destined for the Transvaal. The iment offic suspicion was g to the fety of certain Transvaal sympathizer, obtain the in particular But for h tain Burop sympathizer would hav 5 - | ADMIRAL SCHLEY'S MISSION. ‘ WASHINGTON, Nov. Schley, who is about to me of the South Atlantic squadron, the Navy Department to-d: long conference with Acting Secretary Al- len concerning the general ¢ cter of the trip on which he is about to embark It was the admiral's Al call before leaving, as he goes on Thursday to New York, where on next Saturday he will fi his flag on the cruiser Chicago, The Ge been arresie and had a been reached on this point. | The admiral’s visit led to renewed con- | jectures as to the probability of his going to some of the South African ports. As | to this. however, the admiral declined to ¥ a word, and there was the same reti- nce throughout naval circles. It is un- | stood, however, that the Government's al line of policy as to the South n war will be made known to Ad- miral Schley before he sails, as_there- | after he will be the executive officer in closest touch with that field. e Ao SALISBURY PROTESTS. LONDON, Nov. ilisbury has written to the #ewspapers protesting ainst Lord Edmund F auri quotation from his recent Guildhall hquet, a that he not to dis rangements which, under conditions are yet in the future, the Government | may ‘think desirable." | he latter refers to the phrase not seek gold fields or territory intended as a disavowal of the Chronicle’s interpretation that the ment does not intend to nex nsvaal. We do | and is Daily | Gov- | the THE MAJESTIC CHABTEBED LONDON, Nov. 14.—The Admiralty chartered the White Star Jo to convey troops to South Afric inuneciately after she returns from her sent trip to New York. has steamer M The Majestic sailed from Liverpool No- | mber § and from Queenstown Novem- | er 9 and is due to arrive in New to-morrow. York - | WOULD FIGKT FOR BOERS. PARIS, Nov. learn on good poleon, who is army, asked les hority V]LI( Prln(»- Louis | colonel in the Rus ve in order to volunteer for service in the Transvaal army. E peror Nich refused the reques ause his Majesty wishes to observe the stri neutrality. The Prince will leave | Paris for Russia to- .1 ay. ARRIVAL OF TROOPSHIPS LONDON, Nov. 14.—It was offici nounced this afternoon that the troo at Cape Town, Lismore Castle d at Durban. SHARP ADVANCE IN ] PACIFIC MAIL STOCK Rumors of a Prcbable Increase in the ly Britannic has arrived the and troopship and e arriv Dividend Rate the Cause. NEW YORK, Nov. 14—Rumors of probable increase in the Pacific Mai dividend rate at a meeting of the direct- ors to-morrow were responsible for an- | other sharp advance in that stock to-d President Collls P. Huntington's state- ment that whatever is done regarding the dividend will be in the interests of the stockholders was construed as a bull- | ish point on the stock. No intimation of | what is likely to be done, however; could | be obtained from the Insiders, who scemed | inclined to discourage the expectations of any definite action at this time. - PRISONER ON THE ALPHA. John G. Unwin Accused of Shooting Two Men. VICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 14.—The Alpha, which arrived in port to-day, brought from Cape Nome John G. Unwin. who had been given in charge by the United States Marshal to the s 'S officers, He is accused of shooting two men, although | — not (.uull\ On the down passage one of o ADVERTISEMEXTS. “SENT FREE T0 MEN A Most Remarkab]e Remedy That Quickly Restores Lost Vigor to Men. A Free Trial Package Sent by Mail to All Who Write. Free trial packages of a most remarka- ble remedy are being mailed to all who will write the State Medical Institute. They cured so many men who had bat- | tled for yvears against the mental and physical suffering of lost manhood that the Institute has decided to distribute free trial packages to all who write. It is a home treatment and all men who suffer with any form of sexual weakness resuiting from youthful folly, premature loss of strength and memory, weak back, varicocele or emaciation of parts can now cure themselves at home. The remedy has a peculiarly grateful | effect of warmth and seems to act direct | to the desired location. giving strength and development just where it is needed. Tt cures all the ‘ills and troubles that come from years of misuse of the nat- ural functions and has been an absolute success_in_all cases. ~A request to the State Medical Institute, 328 Elektron building, Ft. Wayne. Ind., stating that you desire one of their free trial pack- eave home to be treated, and the free sample will enable them to see how easy | it is to be cured of sexual weakness when the proper remedies are employed. The | Institute makes no restrictions. Any man who _writes will be sent a free sample, carefully sealed in a plain package, so | that its recipient need have no fear of ‘EAFE HUYAL the Alpha’s saloon passengers, Henry , Field, died and was buried at sea, He | was unmarried, about 30 yvears of age and came from' Fergus Falls, Minn. He had been very successful in the gold fields and had a sack full of gold dust Woman | Shouts Herself. ANGELES, Nov. 14—The wife of | an TItalian rancher named Gaier, living near Tropico, this county, shot and killed herself last night on the way home from a social gathering at a nelghboring h. No cause is known for the act. ST e e A man usually finds it a hard job to get a soft one. ADVEBTlSEMENTS. When it comes to the question of an overcoat y ouare confronted by hundreds of stylesand makes. ove gua We cffer you a ‘‘Yeargood” rcoat—an overcoat that we rantee—a year’s repairing on it free of charge. If you should be dissatisfied you always get your money re- turned. Price $12.50to $25—all over coat cloths. Blue Serge Suits $§10 Blue makes a very dressy suit for business if you get the right serge. into the cloth to stay—it never fades—it is constant to the last —you can buy blue safety. The cloth—it withstand business suit is sure to get. Dark rough ‘w.ll large lapels ; lined cheviot—round cornered vests—light blue material—s=parable shield ; taped seams, e'astic waistband ; $5.00 asuit, kind such as our blue The coloring is dyed he = with is just the serge is a wearable the thing to service that a Ours at $10 will prove to be a wise and economical purchase because you will get your ten dollars worth. If we don’t agree on this you get your money returned, Boys’ Middy Suits. coat—short collars, pants— ages 309 yea 718 MARKET ST Out-of-towa orders filied—write us for our new illustrated catalogue No. 2. 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Transcontinental tourists and v- elers from all over the United States £how their appreciatis = e T o0 of the excel: PALACE ano GRAND by making these hotels thel uar. ters while in' San Francisco, | Foutinn hundred rooms. 90 with bath —largess &nd finest in the world. ‘ JOHN C. KIRKPATRICK, Manag: Oppression, Suffocation, Neuralgia, etc.,ured by ESPIC'S CIGARETTES, or POWDER Paris, J. ESPiC; New York, E. FOUGERA & co. __ BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. BRUSHES! brewers. bookbinders, r’mJ,\»makor.«, dvers, flour mills, foundries, laundries, hangers, printers, painter h stablemen, tar-roofers, tanne BUCHANAN BROS.. Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. FOR BAR ers, 1HE CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF DENTAL SURGERY, Corner McAllister and Larkin streets, open for the admission of D. is now students. D. S.. dea: , D. D. 8., assistant COKE! S. W. DEX M. D. college, or A. D. GLEAV dean, 412 Parrott bullding. COKE! P. A. McDONALD, Wholesale Dealer .and Shipper of Coke. OFFICE §13 FOLSOM ST. Big & 17 & Don-porsorony ‘rclml‘drs for Gomorrieay Gleet, Spermatorrho: Whitea, annatural * charges, or any inflammas tion, irritation or uicerae Pravents contagion. tion of mucous meme TieEvANS CHEMIOAL (o, branes. Nom-sstringent, Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain Wuv'-ea by expmsbobfl‘vmd 1 zlm or's hettion 82 5 ner‘. Weak Men and Women SHI\L LD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE reat Mexican remedv; gives health and nrvnzlh to sexual organs. 'Depot, 323 Market. Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year