The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 16, 1900, Page 10

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10 T HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1900. TAKEN FROM A PRISON CELL T0 DIE N HOSPITAL Arrested for Being Drunk but His Skull Was Fractured. S, Coroner Probe the Mystery | rrounding the Death of a Named Curley or ° Hurley. but whose be Curley or Hur- « ¢ Hos ,, but! SWEDISH LADIES HOLD ‘ A SUCCESSFUL PICNIC < Distributed to Pleasure- moonlight 1 were won, Otto H. Pearson ADVE RTIS: A;uix'rs. “jfsPrcmiumsl: ¢ Given _ r CC Teas, Coffees, « Spices, Extracts, Soda, Baling Powder 3 times 2s many Premiums with Teas 3 times as many Preminvms with Cotfee 3 times as many Premiums with Spice many 3 times asmany Premiums with Extracts -— 3 times as many Premiums with Soda 3,5ps5, Premisms with Baking Powder Fresh Roasiod Coffees Xo, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 49 Cts. Lb, Pura Teas 335, 49, 50, 60, 70, 80 Cis. per Lb | e s I S Spice. Baking Powder, Extracts,Mush | . X0, 35, 25, 45 Cte. per Can A Big Preminm Given with Every Purchase Good Timec and Place to Buy Frices Never so Cheap Freminms Xever so Many " et Averian Importng T o MONEY-SAVING STORES. 218-212 Grant Ave. (Bet. Sutter and Post). 861 Market St (Opp. Powell). i h 8t it St. 218 Third St. 21 Montgomery Ave, 05 Larkin St. | 1619 Devisadero St. | 22%: 2322 24th St. | 1185 224 Ave. | 1355 Park St., Alameda. | h, San Rafael. Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause portect | CiEcstion. " complete absorption and healthful regularity. For the cure of all disorders of the - Siemngh. Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Female Ir- regularities, Sick Headache, Con. etipation, Piles and all 4 Internal Viscera. Zc a box. At or by mall. RADWAY & CO., New X | ! found that of the SESSION OF GRAND COUNCIL MARKED BY- IMPORTANT WORK Young Ladies’ Institute Officers Expect the Organization to Make Rapid Growth Under Changed and Perfected Constitution. ?*Mfio e R R e e - B S Sy s == the Grand Coun- Instit night f much import- ute, xt two years than brought stitution, a delegate at and one for the past there at large. It large t every fifty 1 as bee is O e ~ 98 ANNIE | i PeTTHefFF SrAnD PRESDENT -0 Envety e 1 THREE !\'EW\LY ELECTED GRAND OFFICERS OF THE YOUNG LADIES’ INSTITUTE. B+ 600 e 0ieieieitsdoiesdoiseioiodesede ebedRied s oi oot , increasing the num- | ncrease interest | aller branches of the Insti- | : of grand marshal was tead of appointive, and | nd secretary and grand | combined. By another nent the restriction of the branches as removed. | and Council, the grand Annie M. Pothoff, ~ was | ppoint two historians. She | £lla Comyns of Branch Helen Winters of Branch thought the ch he retiring grand president, Mrs. Mary | o es® chairman doption of Potthoft wiil Nagle, named Miss Potthoff a of a committee to consider t a new form of regalia. Mi appoint two other members. “The Grand Council just closed,” said Miss Josephine Molloy, the grand and treasurer, last evening, ‘‘was pro- ductive of more good, we all feel, than any ever held before. There was more of Eundrcllowshlp and the delegates all went ome full of enthus m and determined that the Institute shall double in member- ship before the next Grand Council.” “We_are particularly proud,” said Mrs. Mary Nagle, past grand president, “‘of the | changes made in the constitution. As it now stands we think it is an almost per- fect instrument.” DIPLONATS PAID NO HEED TOTHE MISSIONARIES Minister Conger Listened to the Tsung-Li Yamen Instead. — Rev. William P. Chalfant Again Cherges the Foreign Ministers With an Ultra-Conserva- tive Policy. SR am P. ( Ifant, the missi d from China, relterat night at the Calvary declaration that rs at Peking given )ast two years to the warn- als of the missionaries scat- provinces the anti- could have been sup- f the last at United v and >ut tk Chinese Forelgn > miesionaries, and id the penzliy of his has spent fifteen work in China. He r several years pa n was “The Sit- spoke in part as vject of his se: China. He I'stand here to-night and realize I am in my 71 ve land again my thoughts go back to our little adobe ch in lchow Fu, where I so many i behind the little table and » bread of life to the dear o God nded him prog: priests were mur- imperor sent vessels ger thwarted, and the zed and a reign - h was whic Those who had been from e foreigners Christianity s. Attac were. is docile rested in came to the missi es on miesio longer out aman but is a 5 was appealed to. but rather conse and he could not belleve that thing; so serfous as the missionaries rep them. o the Tsung-li and th He vative, province, and he believed arlier outrages were ex- perimental, as it were, and after waiting the effect the Boxers entered upon work. o doubt of the sympathy of nt with the Boxe he aid given the B the imperial troops. “Had the foreign Ministers given,heed to the warnings with which the mission- aries fairly bombarded them during two naries of the Shantung pro- e are all safe.” At Peking there is t terrible sfience, and 1 fear the worst. It ix incredible that so long a time couid have elapsed with no word from the lega- tions if the members had not all been red TEACHERS ARE NOW TO GET NOVEMBER SALARY MONEY The Coin Is Lying in the City Treas- ury Ready to Be Dis- tributed. When Lieutenant Colonel Charles H. Murphy, N E G ed the ' School te Controller's he Sa on amento be distributed among the public schools San Francisco was to get 21 per cent, or 15,523 59. This amount will be available for pay- ment of teachers’ unliquidated demands for salary for November and December, 1 The entire sum will be distributed among the teachers, in accordance with the late compromise between the teach- ers’ executive committee and the mer- chant creditors,which provides that teach- ers shall receive all November salaries before the merchants’ share ig the distri- bution. With what will be received on January 1, 1901, there will be Jess than one month’s salary due the teachers. When this money has been received the total will aggregate % per cent of one month’s salaries, which is a gratifying re- sult of the action of the teachers’ execu- tive committee. =Tho money is now ‘in possession o e municipality, and is ready for distribution. . though not in | jons are aroused he | |LOCAL SINGER TO JOIN MINSTRELS Left Yesterday to Become Member of West's | Company. @i e oeteieteie@ WILLIAM H. HALLETT. | @++0+000-006-00-00-+@ NOTHER local favorite in the person Willlam H. Hallett has come under the admiring gaze of Wiiliam H. West, the minstrel manager, by | whom he has been engaged. Mr. Hallett left yesterday for New York, where he will join West's company as | | principal barytone singer. | * When the troupe was in this city recent- Iy West *“tried out” Hallett's volce and | after hearing him sing several ballads, entered into a contract for the opening of a new season in the latter part of this | month. Hzllett started out on his professional career three vears ago and has appeared with five different companies during that of resonant qualit has o number of fine selections in his repertoire. Mr. Hallett was for many vears a well | known local amateur. He made his firsi | | appearan h the Strathmore Quartet | ago. He was a capable in- - minstrel_shows given ¢ of the Olympic Club organizations. He is the son tain George H. Hallett, who is d with (1hL‘ administrative staff of COUNTY LEITRIM CLUB'S TENTH ANNUAL PICNIC One Thousand People Spend Day at Schuetzen Park Enjoying Games and Dancing. The tenth annual picnle of the County Leitrim Social Club was held at Schuetzen Park yeste: About a thousand people were present and participated in the danc- ing and games. The following is a list of the committees in charge of the picnic: Arrangements—Peter McKeon, Thomas Rooney, Jam Bohan, M. O'Reilly, D. Thomas Lane, D. Tweedie, M. . M. McDermott, James Bohan r.. Grady and William Gilheany. Floor—James Reilly (manager), J. J. Mo. an, James Morton, Terence MecManus and | rank Conlan. . C. Morton, Peter McKeon, | . P. M. McGush- Moran. Jig and Reel Dancing—B. Keville, P, C. | Morton and P, J. Meehan, - Grady, M. J. Moran and Matt One of the most interesting features of the entertainment was the cakewalk, which was won by the two smallest and voungest couple on the floor. Marguerite and Johnnie Cronin, two little tots, won first prize, and little May Ducey and Mas- ter Frank Carroll captured second. The club members had a good time and de- parted for the city on the late trains. ———— Walkover Opening To-Day. Best shoes for $350 you've ever seen. Everything new: to-day's the first day. Glad to have you stop and listen to the music and see the shoes. Walkover Shoe Store, ¥. F. Wright, proprietor, Baldwin Annex. Los Angeles store, 111 South street. —_—— Russian Found Dead. M. Wojwoda, aged 47 years, a Russlan by birth and a saloon-keeper by occupa- tion, was found_dead in his bed at 672 Fourth street at 7 o'clock yesterday morn- ing by Ed Horwege. Wojwoda had been drinking heavily of late. Spring | at the Shell Mound —————— Baby Elk at the Park. A baby elk was born at the park yes- terday afternoon. The little fellow will be numbered henceforth among the “at- e tractions at the glen. eeper porl;-n,_ that “mother and baby are dolrn.; wel | s HOME BATTALION GOES N0 CHP Not Elated Over the Pros- pect of Being Stationed at Fort Kehoe, s Two Hundred Men and Eight Officers L, Return to Recruit Up the Regiment at the Front. A The home battalion of the Eighteenth Infantry disembarked from the transport Hancock yesterday and went into camp at the Presidio just by the Lombard street entrance. There are four companies to the bat- talion, but they are only skeleton organ- izations. Altogether there are not more than two hundred men. made up of the unavailable men from the | Playlet,” “Captain Suzanne. ment—the men | pheum favorite was warmly welcomed, who have but a short time to serve, and | arid the new pl other companies of the officers and non-commissioned officers sufficient to make up the outline of the! n is command- ed by a cap 1 other officers make up th missioned complement. The home battalion of the Eighteenth is destined for Fort Kehoe, Montana, a post ctically away from civili- zation : hilippines. < one of the theor e home lion ~system organization. up the remainder of ‘the regiment, but it is little recruiting the home battalion of the Eighteenth will do up in the ‘“bad lands” of Montana. For that reason it is expected that while the present assign- ment is to Fort Kehoe, it will be changed before the regiment arrives there, or the assignment will be but for a short time. | The officers and the men are not par- ticularly pleased with the prospect, but they take matters philosophically and wonder only how long it will be before they will start for their new home. The luck of the Eighteenth has not been up to the standard, for it has drawn hard pos: 5 since '71. In ‘7l it left the South, whe:e it had been stationed with head- qua-ters at Atlanta and companies at surrounding posts, to take station in Mon- tana. It was there for a great many years and then was sent to Texas. It was in Texas for nine years, and then at the outbreak of the Spanish war the regi- ment was started for Cuba. It got no farther than New Orleans, for when it reached there orders to hold it were re- celved, and after seven weeks of inactiv- ity it was sent to the Philippines. It went out in the gecond expedition and has been in service in the islands for twenty-five months. It was thrcugh the Spanish end of the war in Luzon and has put in the remainder of the time in subduing the insurrection in the surrounding islands. Che home battalion is in command of Captain Edson A. Lewis, First Lieutenant Harold B. Figke is adjutant and the other officers are First Lieutenant Elmer W, Clark, First Lieutenant Murray Baldwin, First ‘Lieutenant Albert S. Brooks, First Lieutenant Willlam H. Jordan and Sec- ond Lieutenant Oliver 8. Eskridge. MEMBERS OF TROOP A AT SHELL MOUND RANGES National Guardsmen Make Fairly | Good Scores With Pistol at Fifty Yards. The members of Troop A, N. G. C., held their regular monthly pistol practice shoot day with the following results: Captaln C. Jansen 24, Lieutenant F. A. Burre 37, Sergeant W. Ballinger 32, Sergeant G. Cooke 18, Trumpeter T. Engle 34, Corporal R. | C. Greeninger 31, Corporal C. Tate 22, Cornoral G. E. F F. Thomason 3%, G. I Drew 33, A. Klung 33, A, J. Martin 2i, J. Dumere 27, W. S. Huggins 21, G. E. H. Schmidt 27, A. Henry 23, T. P. Gehmai Gorsheter 24, nn 25, J. F. Schmidt 23, H. Tiedeman, 21. A. Smith 16, W. Plagemann 12, T. Carlin' 23 —_——————— Olympus Parlor. The following named were installed as officers of Olympus Parlor, N. 8. G. W., by District O'Gara Saturday evening; W. M. Abbott, president: Frank Slattery, Julius Eppstein and Frank Burns, vice présidents; Andrew Mocker, financial secretary ilroy, re. cording secretary; Walter Phelps, treas- urer; R. Tavlor and D. Holliday. trustees; Charles White, marshal; P. Cullin, Inside sentinel; O. Ostrander. outside senfinel. A | Very pleasant oclal followed the instaila- lon. ———— Cut in the Hand. F. A. Brown of 716 Haight street ap- plied at the Harbor Hospital for treat- ment last evening. He had a knife wouna in the hand, and refused to state how he Teceived it. Tt is the opinion of the doc- tors that the young man attended a pie- nic across the bay and received the cut in a fracas. —e Trapper's Oll cures rheumatism and neuralgia, Druggists, $0c fiask. Richards & Co., 408 Clay. il B, British customs and ts for excise recelpf the fiscal year just closed yielded $10,000,- 800 each above the uchoquc’r’ uumfu.m' 1 ard range yester- | Deputy Grand President | cretary | | | b | | | that the battalion sent home will recruit | | conside WHILE FIREMEN WERE 0UT THEIR | HOUSE BURNED Two Men Injured in Fight- ing Flames in Hems of Engine 31. e Blaze Discovered While Men Were Absent Subduing the Standard Biscuit Company Fire on Pacific Street. e While the firemen of Engine 31 wera | fighting the big Pacific-street fire yester- | day morning their own engine house at 1214 Pacific street was burning. “'lwui they returned to rest after a hard struz- | | 8le against the blazing element of de- | struction they found their rooms fillel with smoke, and fhe blackened floor of | the & cccupied by them charrel) and ed. - In fighting the fire in the engine house, | which brecke out about 2:¥ o'clock, o n were painfully Lurned. W. a saloon-kee om the hurned McCarty and leg | hed to the fire which | the about i his Lad arms left ndard Biscuit Factory he second alarm was soun. the firemen connected with the left the house and clo Later.on Cclligan saw de smoke is o) to the place. and the two went int a by McCarty joinec the building. They found the fire in the | ba e where the heaters used In; Sup, h er for the engine boiler re 1t hesitation both set | t the blaze, and wers the attempt. Their injurtes at a neighboring store. S ed in from box 127, at the corner of Pacific and Leavenworth | streets, and Chief Sullivan immediately sent engines from the big fire, which was then under control, to a guishing the flames. The fire is to have started about the heaters, able damage was done to lower portion of the building. burned in were treated An alarm was t ® 5 he AT THE THEATERS HE Dunne and Ryleys are disporting themselves this week “At Gay Coney | land,” and the California Theater packed last night to witness the | performance. | Of course, there is nothing to say of the y. The title labels it, and those who | ili look upon Coney Island when it is gay | know just what they are getting—and de- serve all of it. It goes with a rush and a swing through, with a ‘“‘pat double- | million, back-action” swiftness, as Sam Weller would say. Mathews and Bulger have a tremendously funny specfalty. In| the last act Tony Hart as the musical grocer is delightful, and Phil Ryley makes an excellent medicine n. Miss Maud Courfney, who was on the amme as Daisy dder, just before the performa ry to substitute Miss Adlyn | V! had never studied the part. ce had to read her lines: Every- ill go smoothly in this part to- | night. s Norma Whalley. the new leading lady, also appears. She made a fairly good Della Ware and is certainly one of the handsomest women on the stage. ADVERTISEMENTS. IMPORTANT ANNOUNGEMENT! Commencing MONDAY, July 16th, we will place on sale the following EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS, Our entire Stock of FINE FRENCH WOOL CHALYS, both printed and plain, all this season's importation and all beautiful designs. Reduced to 50c yard. 3 cases (60 pleces) NEW CAMEL'S-HAIR HOMESPUN CHEVIOTS, 54 Inches in width, in 8 different shades G Price $1.00 yard. Regular value $1.50. Our entire stock of cholce SCOTCH CHEVIOTS and MADRAS CLOTHS, in checks, stripes and plaids. Reduced to 8'c. Former prices 15¢, 20c and 2Sc. 2 cases NEW FEATHER BOAS (extra quality), in grags, blacks and natural; 36, 45, 54 and 72 inches in it Prices 87 to $25 each. 500 dozen LADIES' FINE LINEN CAMBRIC HANDKER- CHIEFS, all hemstitched, both laundered and unlflundered, Initialed and embroidered. Price 15¢ each. NOTE. Our customers are requested to write for samples of CHALYS, HOMESPUNS, CHEVIOTS and MADRAS CLOTHS promptly, while the assortment is complete. b4 i, 113, 15, T, 19, 121 POST STREET. Mary Marble is enjoyable, as usual, and Miss Tannehill as Mrs. Payne did good work. The eight mascots have a very clever and pretty though not new sp- ¥ in a skipping-rope dance. Sk s Miss Lillian Burkhart is again at the The battalion is | Orpneum this weck in a new ‘‘costume This Or- | in which Miss Burk- | hart dons tights—an incidental of a sol- | dier’s costume—and becomes them, 0 be a success. There is a fencing n which Captain Suzanne—Mi —does some pretty work, and she is fairly | well supported by Mr. Brewer and Mr. | | on White and Marie Stuart, the Quaker City Quartet and Barrere and Juies are among the holdovers and bid fair to rival other long runs lately fash- ionable among the vaudevillains. = Smith and Fuller's musical novelties, one of which is a solo upon tomato cans—very | good but rather “‘tinny” in tone—were very well received. John Donahue and Miss Mattie Nichols furnish a clever and inal song and dance, and Stella May- hew, the negro impersonator, and Wil- | liamson arnd Stone, the blackface come- dians, add their quota to the evening's fun. T Henry Miller and his distinguished com- pany will present this evening at the Columbla Theater, Henry Arthur Jones' | clever satire on English soclety, “The Liar: hich was given with so much success during the last Miller season. xt week “‘His Excellency, the Go\‘-‘ will be produced. e ernor,” “Wang,”” the favorite comic opera, will | be revived to-night at the Tivoli Opera- The cast will be of the strongest, n house. ncluding all the Tivoll favor! Stevens will appear as the rege: “with an elephant on his hands. Hartman will play the keeper “royal elephant.” Tt is not yet announ 1 erris to the ced - trade from all over the city, | suburban towns as well The! usual summer dull times are not to be found at our stores ' Read and you will see why | |Manday Tuesday Wednesday Hams—Eastern Tea—Reg’ly 60c 1b Beer—Everard pints $1.35 GOLDBERG, BOWEN & C0'S l!ll:l/l’. ll'm./!fi | oql.?l!l’lci(i"l & ({DLI !fl(fllb SAVING SALE GOLDBER Our weekly sales attract 5 Boned Herring—(Bavle) 20c Real delicate—get some for vour next | lunch basket—reg’ly 2s5c jar BOWEN ° oo v Turkish Bath —reg’ly 6oc dozen — don’t miss this x CD- I Brillantine— Violet 20¢ Imparts beauty —reg’ly 25¢ bol nd lustre to the hair pleasant odors 5 - 3 Fruit Press— Henis 25¢ You may need an extra one at this season—reg’ly 3s¢ Coffee Pots— 1 qt $1.00 2 qts $1.25 3 qts $1.50 Kin-Hee— quick—practical —simple— nickel plated—reg’ly $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75—our good coffee will taste bet- ter than ever prepared in this pot— nothing better in the market Otder for the country any- thing you wish and be as- | sured of fresh goods, prompt i delivery, safe packing. 432 Pine 232 Sutter 2800 Califorala San Franclscs 1075 Clay between Eleventh and Twelfth Oakiaad 1875--25=1900 SPECIAL SAVING SALE 14¢ ‘ Sugar cured—corn fed—reg'ly 16¢ Ib s0C Mandarin Nectar—“B"” brand Cey- lon —Foochow Qolong—good enough for anybody quarts $2.10 Reg’ly $1.55 and $2.35 dozen—brewed from Canadian mait—as fine as can | who will play _elephant to Mr. Hartm: be made: reene, Helen ' Merritt, - Anmie Meyers Greene, eler A A e Meyers, . » To— Georgié Cooper and otliers are found in | Sardines— 1's 20C MONDAY - - - July 16, 1900. | the_cast. | | | | | | | | | king. | reported at the California-street “Wang” will run for two weeks, after | which the Tivoli’s sixth annual season of | grand opera will begin. s e The new Frawleys will present “The Great Ruby,” the famous Drury Lane | melodrama, this evening at the Grand | Opera-house. *“The Great Ruby” packed | Daly’s Theater, New York, for seven con- | secutive months. The cast contains Mi Corona Ricardo, who took Ada Rehan's place in the play, and who makes her first | Cocoa—Van Houten | Pinéa This means almost wholesale price | for a single can—reg’ly 25¢ can—ex- tra selected quality # | SOUVENIR Edition in Magazine Form as Supplement to the DZILY COMMERCIAL NEWS. . Profusely lllustrated, together with the regular is: all for Ine, elchs:llnl | the twenty-6fth anniversary of the founding of the paper. Send in orders to | COMMERCIAL PUBLISHING co., pple—Sliced scansfor goc | ¢ SN IRANaSoT =T 8oc | Reg’ly $1 Ib—made in Ho!land—best in the world—!, ¥ and 1-lb cans appearance in San Francisco to-night, | Singapore sugar loaf pines in granu- Other new people are H. S. Northrup and | lated sugar syrup—24 Ibs reg’ly | i m—— Alice Bvans. Wilton Lackaye will ap-| 20c can | P e pear a anl(l)rmrh:a! Prm(l:;;. ;\émgamer! | there are thiriy-five speaking characters &3 e -— — S—— in'the cast. L Lo | Raisins—Fine clusters 2 Ibs 25c | At Fischer's Concert House Miss Le- nore White, assisted by Frank Clayton and Blanche Husted, will to-night present | her sketch, ‘“‘Autumn Leaves” for the | first time. 'Others on the programme will | be Edward B. Adams, Coral Thorndike Lena Johnson and New moving pictures will be shown, cluding scenes from the battle of Mafe- . . “The Brownies in Fairyland,” Palmer Cox's delightful operctta, will be given special productions at the California Theater on the afternoons of Thursday and Friday, July 26 and 27. —_————— A Victim of Thieves. Gottfried Briner, a waiter who arrived | in this city from San Jose two days ago, oli station that he had been robbed of $150 | in some saloon, either on Kearny or Third street, last evening. Briner was partially | intoxicated, and does not remember where | he lost his wealth. He “did the line" | along the two streets, and when he ar- | rived at the corner of California and | Kearny streets the money from his pocket. Native Sons. Mount Tamalpais Parlor No. 64 gave a moonlight outing and hop Saturday at | Escalles resort, near San Rafael, in aid | of its 1900 celebration fund. There was a | large attendance of pleasure seekers, who | enjoyed a° well arranged programme of | dances. The affalr was under the direc- tion of the ninth of September committee, consisting of J. Emmett Hayden, chair- man; W. F. . secretary: Willlam gre “'l:her.:.sl;‘bgocsh&nnfimuhm . es, » Sig. Herzog and F. M. Angellotti. of h) | Whisky— Old Crow Bourbon, 188, Isabelle Underwood. | Oid Crow Bourbon, 188, Cheese—Club House Rock and Rye (G.B.&Co.) $1 was missing . !Gelatme—Hemncb 2 for 2 Prunes— |Ginger Ale—(Variray) $1.10 'Your Reg Special | Eye=G|asses bot $1.25 $1.00 | Are important—even as your evegight is tm- rtant. We mean that every pair bf ey , €31 $5.00 $4.00 | e it shail fit precisely gk o g From Famous Kentucky Distilleries Zflmjagz ll;ve, xggg, bot $1.50 $1.15 | you that we are careful e ermitage Rye, 1 | ew clip is security, §oc ge Rye, 1886, gal $6.00 $4.50 ‘l ; 3:3:1:2" Q,f.;"r.m«‘;:: flih Factory on v ises. ck repairing. Phone, Main 10, Oysters doz $2.75 s Our Choice—extra fancy— Baltimore pack—2-1b cans A o PHICAPPARAT OPTICIANS #p,, 1 qGRA ScENTIFIC 642 MARKET ST. “InstRuments unoer cumomcie sunome. CATALOGUE Fage. \ 30c Rich old Eastern in sealed jars— reg’lv 3sc—serve on water crackers with after-dinner coffes ' DR.MCNULT 'l‘HlS WELL-KNOWN A Specialist cures Private Ge(man rock candy and pure whiskv—quick cough A:ur\.hregr’?)s $1.25 quart bottle 5c % t03daily;6.30t08:30 ev'gs. Sundays, 10 ta 12, Consale tatlon freeand sacredly confidential, Call,oraddress Red and white — trans; t — di parent — d| P. ROSCOE MeNULTY. M. 1. solves at once—reg'ly 15c pekg 3% Ibs for 25¢ Reg’ly 1oc Ib—nice clean tender fruit— good to eat any season of the year 26); Kearny St., San Frane CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. Serve ice cold for a refreshing sum- mer drink—good for the stomach— l Y W mmm'm, R reg’ly $1.25 doz KROGH fir’?‘fil}’ ?c‘m.' e "E ": cnidn &

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