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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1899. ORI Market, Jones and McAllister Sts. RN 1 ORI ORI ORCHOROR AR 1 0 ROSOAORHCHOFOROHCRORORORCAOHOACROACAONORT: £ 0 EREMPTORY MONEY-RAISING SALE Further Sweeping Reductions in Prices of New and Seasonable Goods. A Splendid Opportunity for Obtaining Bargains in Staple and Fancy Lines, Including HOLIDAY PRESENTS. TO-MORROW, MONDAY Murphy Building, Murphy Building, Market, Jones and McAllister Sts. Consisting of Black and Colored Dress Goods, Silks, Velvets, Laces, Trimmings, Embroideries, Ribbons, Gloves, Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Hosiery, Neckwear, Muslin and Merino Underwear, Z5) Corsets, Blankets, Sheetings, Comforters, Umbrellas, Mackintoshes, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing, Ladies’ Tailor-Made Suits, Jackets, Capes, Skirts, Furs, Feather Boas, Fancy Wools,Yarns, Embroi- dering Materials, Rubber Goods, Toilet Articles, etc., is now being sold at a great sacrifice, mostly will be a red-letter day in our PEREMPTORY MONEY-RAISING SALE, and we respectfully urge our 9 patrons to come early and thereby escape the afternoon rush in the aisles of our establishment. Murphy Bullding, Market, Jones and McAllister Sts. FOODOOOON O O DOV CLRECLIROININ0 O CHIO0IOIHHIOI0 D000 DIRECTOR KEMP STARTLES THE GRAND JURDRS ol Admits His Part in a Crooked Deal. CRIMMINS’ ORDER OBEYED LIGHT ON TEE SCANDAL. X ¥r ! I Sej ESTATES OF THE DEAD. M X The Wills of Peter V. Stone and James e Gafney Filed for Probate. 1 w The wil! Peter V. Stone, who dled pur 1 leaving te valued at : for probate yesterday. | e levised in equal X aymond V. and Uen S e H very w the 4% 5 ! 1 queathed t s a. H Young Ifen’s Mass Meeting. - ) A mass meeting for men only will be held at the Young Men's Christian Asso- | t clation Mason and Ellis w Boa t E , at 3 o'clock, and w Kemp was « 1 - Then he gan 10 hedge, as de promised m to Chri anytt comf f. Helti young men. 09600000000 90000000000 STATIONERY | ¥ Wwas not ¢ RIFLES DANCE IN MOTLEY. Masquerade at Saratoga Hall. ey crowd danced last eve on, offered ek the 1y expectat “orporal Charles Stau. Mitchell, H H. Iverson, 1 H. Marzoff, Li srdecks arles Meye H. Bither, H {A BELT WITH MERIT! 00000000 : PIERCE E 0000909 That's the kind of a Belt you want if you expect it to cure you. When you buy a Belt, buy a GOOD one or none at all. Go where BELTS ARE MADE— to & firm of established reputation, whose word and promises amount te something, and then you will be able to get what you want and at a fair price, too. There is no humbug about Dr. Plerce’s Electric Belt. Any one who has ever tried it knows that. It does not fall to pleces in a few weeks as others do. It is warranted to be as represented. Buy no Belt tll you see “DR. PIERCE'S.” Call at office or send 2¢ in stamps for our “Book No. 2. Address LECTRIC CO., 620 Market Street, Opposite Palace Hotel, San Franclsco. at compromise | m- that Hold Their Twenty-Second Annual neath a revolving canopy of pink and the Twen- querade ball of the and the crowd assem- t elbow this » costumes showed king were OLYMPIC CLUB IS BARRED T0 COLLEGE TEAMS Ingratitude Displayed by Managers. NO FOOTBALL TICKETS SENT| | MANY COURTESIES WERE NOT ACKNOWLEDGED. — e When the athletic teams of Stanford and the University of California come to this «ity in the future for baseball, | track and football contests they will s of the Olympic Club clo Hitherto it has been the custom | the Olympic Club to offer the "col- lege athletic teams the use of the club- | | house for dressing purposes_ whenever | they came to San Francisco.” No more | will the offer be made. | The reason for this is the treatment ac- | corded the board of directors of the club | gers of the two col- | and by he football mana; . All season bo Stanford ifornia teams have come to pic Club, dressed for the turned, usin and all the privileges allowed the mem bers of institution. In the future | the coll must_look elsewhere for a | dressing grcund. At least so the di- | rectors und officers of the Olymple Club. it six or seven days before the iving football match, thinking | that they were overlooked by accident, | the Olympic Club officers sent letters to Maj r Mumma of the Unlversity of California_eieven and Manager Berry of the Stanford team calling their attention to the fact that no tickets to the big game had been sent to the club. To the letter addressed to Manager Mumma no | | reply was received. Berry answered his letter and both the absence of a roply from the former tnd the answer of the | latter have stirred up a wrathful indig- | nation among the club men. Berry's rote stated that the compli- mentary list was already made out ani that no more tickets would be distrih- | uted. In the face of all the courtesies that had been accorded them by the club this came as a blow of ingratitude to the Olympic officers and they are now going to adopt retaliatory measures. | President eer Harrison is among | those specially agerieved and he will vise radical measures, such as barring the athletes of the universities from cluh privileges. The tickets were not ‘orth- coming when asked for and now no ex- cuse will be accepted by the injured par- tles. It nas always been the custom of the college managers to allow the atth- letic club team, which played during the season in the league games, a cerain number of complimentary tickets, but as | the Olympic eleven was in Portland on the date of the big game these were not even sent the club this year. What this rupture in the friendly relations of the (‘oflexes and the athletic club may resuilt in is not yet known. It may mean that the Olympic Club will not place an eleven In the field next year. The excuse offered by the collegians for not sending the complimentaries is { that the Olympic team was paid $1500 ous- right to equip a football eleven for the playing of weekly games with the uni- versities. CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Dec. 2—S8. D. Rogers | of San Francisco is at the Ebbitt House; Rev. Barton W. Perry of San Francisco, private secretary to Hon. Victor H. Met- calf, arrived in Washington to-night. Chinaman Wields a Club. Ah Hung, a Chinaman who was liber- ated from the Stockton Insane Asylum about three days ago, struck Chew Sue | streets last evening, cuttin Hing, another Mongolian, with a club at the corner of Washington and Dupont his left Jip and cheek. It Is supposed by the police that the act was that of an insane man, although Hung clalms that the man | whom he struck first attacked him with | a knife. The bloody club was found in Hung’s room —_——————————— PRECITA VALLEY CLUB FAVORS THE BOND ISSUE' The Precita Valley Improvement Club last night, at Graham's Hall, Alabama street, placed itsef on record as favoring the issue of bonds for the contemplated betterment of the clty. After disposing of the routine business | of the club, the following resolutions were | unanimously adopted: | Whereas, The bond 27th and 28th o p 1 election to be held the ent month is of para- f Precita Vall ouraged perny and recognize the great ¥ of better gewers and more commodi- Ihouses; and, whereas, the residents | by tho ¥ a Valley Improvement Club recognize in the present proposition to bond the city for the purpose of acquiring the | necessary land to extend the panhandle and to_provide better sewers and schoolhouses; Resolved, That the Precita Valley Impri ment Club fully endorses the {ssuance of b and pledges its members to do all in the power to assure the success of the bond issue. ds YORKE TO CHAMPION [ CAUSE OF IRELAND | | WILL FEARLESSLY DISCUSS HER | PRESENT CONDITION. The Popular Pastor of St.Peter’s Will | Relate Some Varied Experi- | ences of His Recent Trip. | old Treland and how does she a question that every new ar- | rival from the old country is called upon to answer. Father Yorke will answer it in his lecture at St. Peter's Church this evening. To many who are long absent from Ireland the situation there is but little known. To give publicity to Irish | news 18 not profitable to the telegraphic | agencies, hence their silence regarding Irish happenings. For those, however, | who wish to be informed of the real con- ditions existing at present in the. old country a rare opportunity is in store this evening. Father Yorke has been in Ire- land recently and he intends to state its | case just as It appeared to him. | “How is stand?” is Fver since his first advent in San Fran- 15 cisco Father Yorke has been known as a | fearless advocate of truth and justice, | and his statement of the case of Irelan may be looked forward to with interest as coming from one who is not ashamed | of the land of his birth nor afraid to | speak the thought that is in him. Rarely does a visitor to Ireland receive the attention accorded Father Yorke. His was the privilege last summer of address- ing the Irish Bishops and the students of | Maynooth \'ulloTe. the largest ecclesias- tical institution In'the world. So original and progressive were his views on educa- tion ‘and church government that Car- dinal Louge, who presided at the meeting, thanked him warmly for his suggestions and bespoke a brilliant future for him in | the American hierarchy. At many other dlsnnfuxshod gatherings Father Yorke was the honored guest during his stay in Ireland. His views as to the best method of bet- tering the condition of his native land | were pronounced and are ever since the | subject of much discussion. In his lecture this evening Father Yorke will carry his hearers back into the “old land,” and open to their view once again the blue skies and fertile valleys that many of them looked upon In the days of their youth. The sale of tickets for the lecture is enormous and those who wish to secure seats should immediately take the necessary steps. —_————— Fractured His Skull. P. McColan, a laborer residing on Bran- nan street, was struck by a falling plece of coal on the colller Miami last nigit and sustained a laceration of the scalp and a fracture of the skull. He was treated at the Harbor Receiving Hospital by Dr. Robinson and was later taken to a&;e City Hall. It i{s feared that he may e. | on the stage, which had been converted | State has been written,” said Dr. Minton, | ceased husband. She has given fifty years land, Mrs. Mills herself is one graduates.” Profe: r Jordan then spoke of the ne- of the higher education of women as well as of men, and expressed his = isfaction that the broad course of stud: in the institutions of to-day were open to both. This higher education, he con- tinued, could be acquired in one of four MRS, C. T, MILLS 15 HONORED BY of the carly| NATIONAL LEAGUE OF REPUBLICAN CLUBS ‘ PLANS FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN OF 1900. ways. The first was in the establishment - of special colleges for women. Again in annexes to colleges reserved for men, in | Colonel George Stone, President of men's colleges, where women are toler- the League, Leaves for Wash- ated and in out and out co-education. - “I belleve heartily in the ter ington, D. C., To-Night. method,” said Dr. Jordan, “but they are L all good so long as they serve the pur- | o ’ 3 S | There is room on this coast for col- | _Colonel l;"wru- Stone, president of the 113 | for women alone. have tw tional League of Republican Clubs. Tendered a Brilliant| fvesities where women are simittad, | eaves the city for Washington, D. C., this R ¥ | ‘l‘:’:u .l’htifiv are lmm. 3 ‘:,umm’mg Jver- | evening. He goes to attend a meeting of owded, and would urgently recom- pxecutive co e o ague to eception. At o A ey the executive committee of the leag g of Mills College, which has so many advantages, and which if properly sustained will be- better in many ways than Smith, Holyoke or Vassar.” | ANNIVERSARY OF HER BIRTH | Professor Wheeler was recefved with | re hffll'l()' {uhr‘lunsv. and h 180 h-h;]wd' his | meed of praise to what dy been GLOWING TRIBUTES PAID TO |(\(indea'to Mre. Mills 1o recognized in HER PERSONAL WORTH. the education of American women the remedy for materialism. 0 e “In this country,” said he, “we are as- | c suring ourselves a_continul tion in offering the best advantages of edugation to women. Any one engaged in the work is blessing himself and his y of civiliza- A brilliant reception w: given last night at Sherman & ( s hall by the board of trustees, faculty and alumnae of ve ments were served and the evening came | V¢ ¢ to a pleasant close The hall had been beautifully decorated In yellow and white bunting and a pro- fusion of chrysanthemums and ferns, and e Oklahoma Indians have developed a | craze for the mescal bean, a littie-known Vi vergreens, weri e lato a bower Of evergreens, were seated | narcotic of wonderful properties, produc- | the Mills College string orchestra, under the direction of Professor Rocco Laraja, and composed of the following _youn st e held December 12, Committee. tend the meet ceived recentl cate that the tion of Republican clubs to be held the au: next Ma; vention will be determined at the meeting | president of the league Stone. carrying out rush contracts for the cor ing marvelous color visions. ot two days prior to e meeting of the Republican National Thirty-four members, repre- enting that number of States, have al dy given notice of their intention to at- 5. telegraphic messages re- by President Stone indi yublicans throughc the nt of success The national conve Letters nd puntry are yming campaign. pices of the league will assemble The time and place of the con- Solle, 4 3 country. Mrs. Mills has been a blessing | in Washington this month Mills Collego to its president, Mrs. C. T. | {;"tha State and nation for many years, | Republican leaders representing every Mills, in honor of her birthday. The af-| and I am glad to pay a tribute to her de- | State and Territory of the United States fair was strictly informal in character | votion and unselfishness in the cause of | will be at the nation's capital_about the and was made the occasion for expressing | higher education for women. Would | middle of thissmonth he Republican the high regard in which Mrs. Mills s | there were more hearts like hers, warm | National Committee will soon decide when d by s v v to the demands of education. am al- | and where the convention of the par 5 B D those ladles who were at one thme | uys ready to bow before any one who | nominate President and Vice President charge, and also by men promi- | gives herself as Mrs. Mills, has_done to | shall be held nent In educational, commercial and pro- | the public good. Godspeed to Mills Col- | The convention of the Republican fessional circles. At least 500 guehts were | lege and God bless Mrs. Mills.” League will no doubt be held at least present to wish Mrs. Mills a happy birth- | Rev. C.'R. Brown and Horace Davis | thirty days before the mominating con- | aay, ana apeec . ellv - Dr. | also delivered eulogistic speeches and re- | vention assembles. The cities o - B o et ot (he bourd o7 | Peated appiause greeted their efforts. nat, St. Paul, Chicago, Indianapolis and i PTECHIPONS 0% 2 A After the speeches the guests repeated | Galveston are on the list of available trustees of Mills College; Professor David | triair good wishes expressed carior 1a tha | meeting places. Colonel Stone fs not wde Starr Jordan, Professor Benjamin Ide | evening to Mrs. Mills, and many who | ¥ised of the preference of committeemen, Wheeler, Rev. C. R. Brown and Horace | came late likewise shook hands and ex- | but forms the impression from letters and Davis. tended congratulations. Light refresh- | telegrams that the contest for league con ention honors will narrow down to Cin- nnati and St. Paul enator Hamiltc It is probable that 1 of Ohlo will be elected to succeed Colonel ctively engaged in The latter s ruction of the S nta Barbara extension the Southern Pacific Raliroad. ladies: First violin, Miss Millie C. Finley mandola, Miss Elna Miller; first mando- lins, Miss Lulu Bothin and Miss Clara McNear; second mandolins, Miss Hazel Kline and Miss Della Zimmerman; gui- tars, Fraulein Wolf, Miss Loulsa Wolf and Miss Mattie McCullough; pianist, Miss Alice Connelly. The orchestra_rendered a number of se- lections, while Mrs. Mills took a position under a beautiful flo plece in the center of the hall and received the congratula- tions of her friends for an hour before the chmaking. Mrs. Mills was assisted in elving by Mr. and M Warren C. Ol- 'y, Mrs. R. Barstow, Mrs. James Mc- auley, Miss J. 8. Krink, Profes: The Great Chinese Spec phine, Laudanum, It ne they may be. terly impossible. To p that my sta are absolutely truthful, I will deposit In any one addicted to thé drug and desirou Yen She and Everett, Wendell Easton and Professor and Mrs. Keep. Professor Jordan stood at the side of Mrs. Mills and was introduced to the guests as they advanced. Mrs. Mills was the recip- fent of a number of beautiful floral offer- ings, with accompanying good wishes. At 9:30 o'clock the speakers of the even- ing gathered on the stage, where Dr. Min- | ton began his introductory speech. He | stated that the occasion was a personal one to testify the affection of those as- se; for Mrs. Mills. When the educational history of the $100.00 If it fails to cure perfectly in glw;,m if 1t fails to prevent all pain o 100 tion. If this is not sufficient to conv! or ?undruple the amounts. f any one thinks that I am merely will not antidote the drug in the above, then I invite that person “there will be a Foperovs chapter reserved for the work of Mrs. Mills and her de- of her life to the educational interests of California. Three thousand of our best young women have come within the sphere of her noble influence. Mills Col- is not a private institution. It be- lon?s to the ple of California. What Wellesley and Smith is to the East Mills is to the West. We value the gifts she has given and look for the kindly help of the other big universities in our midst.” During his speech Dr. Minton read a telegram from Emma Nevada, in New York City, as follows: “Tender love. Am with you in spirit.” Professor Jordan was next introduced and pald a glowing tribute to the per- sonal worth of Mrs. Mills. *It is not for me to sa; has done in the cause of Professor Jordan. amount. Patients need not pay one penny cure is effected and they are entirely smail fee, Is my motto. Patients are not ill or co: there is no restraint whatever. = NO. 2 CURES IN | No. 2 is particularly suited antidotal properties of e o Sent by express free from observation what Mrs. Mills education,” said “You know the his- tory of Mills College better than I do. Ing every point. it Collagn 1 reco i e & oo T Call or write in confidence. Hours—10 scendant of Mount Holyoke College, of DR. GEO. W. WILLIAMS, which _splendid institution, founded' by Miss Mary Lyon on the gifts of thou- sands of the common people of New Eng- GI YONG YEN, ature's Marvelous Antidote, Cures Mor- $100.00 if it fails to cure the drug habit. 0 if it falls to remove all desire for the drug. it it fails to leave the patient in fine mental and physical condi- ince any particular person I will doubls “bluffing”” and that my system so as to fulfill the conditions named to deposit an e " 1 fall to fulfill every condition to the very aual amount with me and it 1 mean just what I say, and any one who de r ci bave no reasonable or legitimate excuse for i G ek oum until after a satisfled PAYABLE WHEN CURED NO. 1 CURES IN 8 of the No. 1 and never fafla ore; and 216 Kearny Street, Cocaine Addiction. s, no matter how bad such precision, that failure is ut- tements are based upon facts and respontible hands as & forfeit to s of being cured » 3 to § days. or suffering. eat remedy letter he may take the whole not being cured thorough and perfect A that they are curad. fined to their beds a moment and TO 5 DAYS. 4 DAYS. . nhpnsnuu the full 0 cure when properly taken. Wwith explicit instructions cover- &mtodp mandTtosSp. m