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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1900. LDVEB.TISEHEI‘!T& Anheuser—Busch Bottled Beers are without a peer— Budweiser, “Te origisar” Black & Tan, “Tse American Porter” Anheuser-Standard The Faust Michelob Pale-Lager Export Pale Exquisite, “Anerican Pisener” The materials used for these brews are the very best obtainable. but How Good” is the motto of “Not How Cheap; the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louis, U. S. A. SAaltNutiéne the famous food-drink that physicians recom- mend to nursing mothers, the convalescent, the aged, the feeble, is made by this association. AXUEEMENTS THE BEST THAT VA HOWE, WALL AND WALTERS. Gertrude Mansfield ani Caryi Wilbur, Westman and Wren, Frances Keppler. THE YOSCARY TROUPE. Lavender and Thomson. Mr. and Mrs. Tobin. LEW HAWKINS, AMERICAN BIOGRAPH. Seats Balcony, 10c; Opers Reserved ——Next Weelk: JESSIE BARTLETT DAVIS. SPECIAL JUB|LEE MATlNEES MOROSCO’S GRAND CT‘ERA HOUS v AT MONDAY ’”‘FQA\N I.EY“"' LACKAYE. of THE GHETTO Balance of Week, “TRILBY 4 VAD; ~ and smc!kwfl A GREAT OB_S_"IZACLE !\FW SHT. “CARMEN 5 1TS, '“ERNANL” NEXT SAT. MAT WEEK—EVERY EVENING, na" and “‘Pagiiacel.” Apcnz i} THEATR AR *‘II\EE‘ SJU( )Y and SUNDAY. “The Macqupraders THE GIRL | LEFT BEHIND NE. 9’—,‘\’?‘"" IA: EDDY ST., COR. MASON : SHOW IN PROFESSOR conn;u;w LIV A.h *Tlt'l UARY 'h()l\h -’\Ng Artists, Portrait of Wm. Greer Harrison. ¥ & NIGHT! Fo!som and' Smoenlh Sts. Grounds. FOR 10, LLE AFFORDS. a tew INEE and Soc } ‘ AMUSEMENTS. WITH FERRIS HARTMAN And a great cast. Attractive chorus of 50 sing- ing_ vou Elaborate costumes—magnificent | stage settings. Up to the moment ats now ready—lic, e, He. CHUTES axo ZOO! EVERY AFTEP.N’MN AND EVENING. BIG VAUDEVILLE SHOW! SPECIAL TO-NIGHT! THE AMATEURS In Their Latest N “FUN ON A FARM.” Saturday Nicht—Jubilee Cakewalk ! ephone for m. t CHI admission, 2 DR 5 Children, 26 S040404 040404 040404040404 'V!!:HY . is A Natural Mineral Water known for centuries and ¢ imported ONLY IN BOTTLES. For Disorderzd Stomach d Indigestion Its value has been testi- fied to by thousands. So-called Vichy in Sy- phons IS NOT VICHY, Get the Genuine. Your physician ekt Lo Eeod A VIGNIER, Distributtag Agent § 04-00 C*0e0e0 O’O?O +0*0e0e S 04040+ . 20400 | 4040+ 04040+ 04040 : + : 5|3 | 14 : . i KIDNFV &' LIVER BITTERS A PLEASANT® LAXATIVE NOT PALACE HOTEL 1t is universally acknowledged that these h )ssess the attributes that appeal ular people—undoubted luxury and unsurpassed cuisine and service and superior appointments and location. Connected by a covered passageway and opercted under one management on the American and European plans. GRAND HOTEL INTOXICATING | DR. BENNETT'S ELECTRIC BELT | Makes weak men and women strong 2nd stronger. Adress 47 6. San Francisco, Cal. | Hltchcock School, | SAN RAFAEL, CAL.. | FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS. qu-u Fooms, Gymnastum, Military Drilt, BTMAS TERM BEGINS AUGUST 1T | cumwTuaS THRM BEges Av Principar 25TH j TRINITY SCHOOL.. &% It is desired to correct an erroneous impres- | sfon that Trinity School has been discontinusd. It will open as usual MONDAY, August 6. Only boys of ‘uodsmor-l character are taken. FISCHER Olive Vail 'S LONCL—.RX‘ HOUSE. wion 10:. Amcs . (aI . Anna Miller, ffor- ace ¥ Pearl Hickman, Dutch Walton, Howard & Campbell and New Moving Pictures. Beserved Scats, ; Matinee Sunday. | POLYTECHNIC. BUsINGE® he largest and best equipped departments T the West. business and shortband | course. Students may enter at any time. All ‘ E‘.:mm in mp&nzlblc positicns. Free cata- SEABURY, High Diver. -1 DA DA TATA A AT ADAD R D AT R AOA AR AT A h TR AR TSR TSROk ¢ 0 5 : HAY ASSURES PORCUPINE 3 X 0 [/ * * 2 MINERS OF PROTECTION | 0 : : ¢ x * { Present Boundary Only Temporary and Interference § 0 Wit i Canadi Offi 4 ¢ With Americans by Canadian Customs i= 5| ¢ cials Will Not Be Tolerated. * ¢ -——— xz‘ s ) 3 Special Dispatch to The Call, i I * EATTLE, Sept. 5.—The miners of the Porcupine district, Alaska, have recelved from Secretary of State Hay definite () | 0 his Government foregoes ro part of its right and power to protect its citizens in the Porcupine X , whether they be temporarily within American or British jurisdiction, tn the full enjoyment of all rights Y ) Hag -s which they had before the modus vivendi was concluded, and to see that their freedom of access and (/ Y 9\‘| with their goods, is not unrea. * 0 This announcement is the result of the ent McKinley from 140 American miners in the Porcupine ) () country, who complained of being brought wi and under the laws of the Dominion of Canada, and es ' & pecially protested against the location of the lmu!\xl.xr,\ line along the Kiehini River, by which American mimers wers % ) forced to enter British territory in carrying supplies to their camps. Secretary Hay discusses the proposition at length. /) § He assures the miners that the modus vivendi is merely a temporary proposition, to be abrogated without prejudice to L X cither party when a permanent settlement of the boundary is declded upon; that in the meantime the rights of all miners X | () temporarily within the Canadian control will be religiously protected, and that miners desiring to carry goods through the (/ & disputed territory will be permitted to do so without interference from the Canadian customs officials. * ) Mr. Hay gocs on {0 say that the argument of statements presented in {he petition were fully discussed, and the circum- () % stance that the negotiation of a modus vivendi was prolonged for two Years before an agreement was reached was due to | 7 the insistence of this Government that no solutlon was admissible which should not recognize and guard all rights and (/ privileges gained by the American miners and other citizens who had scttled in the disputed territory. He says: 0 x I inclose for your information a copy of modus vivend! of October 20, 1539 I beg you to observe: * | ) arranzement is provisional merely and without Drejudice to the clalms of elther party in the permanent adjust- () * Second—That the Inconvenience of a provisional line crossing and recrossing the shifting waterway is foreseen and expressly | 0 provided for by the agreement that persons proceeding to or from Porcupine Creek shall be freely permitted to follow the trail between & the £aid creek and the sald junction of the rivers (Kiehen! and Chilkat) into and across the territory on the Canadian side of the tem- ) porary line, whenever the trall crosses to such side, and subject to such reasonable regulations for the protection of the revenue as * ¢ the Canadtan ernment may prescribe, to carry with them over such Dart or parts of the trail between the said points as may () | % lje on the Canadian side of the temporary line such goods and articles as they desire Without being required to pay any customs Q on suc! rticles. X e Fiay etint 15 its salutipovto the Erounds OF yous beotest : ERatit 16 eipuiaten that e sltiens o ‘subiasts ot U 7, either power found by this agreement within the temporary jurisdiction of the other shall suffer no diminution of their rights and % (/' priviteges which t now enjoy. A * In closing Secretary Hay says: % The rizhts e United States in the matter of the treaty boundary are absolutely Intact, and their assertion in due time wiil & be earnest and ¢ gh. 0 GOLD STRIKES ON HEADWATERS OF COPPER RIVER Miners Find Rlch Pay Dirt - Two Hundred Miles From Valdez. { Fourteen Pounds Taken From a Claim in Forty Days With Crude Outfit. Former Chief of Police Brenning of San Diego Returns From Daw- son With $20,000 as His Season’s Profits. ESRNCIR R Specfal Diszatch to The Call. 5.—News from Skag- E ner Humboldt, arriving , tells of a rich placer strike which has be. ust made on the head- waters of the Copper River. Two men fo vmn pounds of gold from one than forty days. overy on July 4 During the next forty they . Eot their Jumber and carried it nine ake the sluice boxes they used gravel. At the end of their food gave out anc to leave for the coast. They in new supplies over the trail aldez in winter he news of the strik received in Skagua ] Mile count t was brought by Seorge Steel Smith, J. H. McCourt and others of Forty-Mile. The news was carried to | them at Forty-Mile by Oscar Fish, the | mail carrier on the Valdez-Eagle trail. F d the new diggings while bring- has just been agle. location of the new strike is on the Chistochina River, one of the | rorthern tributaries and formativ branches of the Copper River. The Cig- | gings are 200 miles from Valdez and 240 miles from Eagle. The Humboldt brought 143 passcngers and about $60,000 in I\awsm\ gold. The largest treasure holder is J. W. Brenning, who had $20.000. He was formerly Chief | of Police of S8an Diego, Cal. - REVERSES DECISION OF JUDGE NOYES TACOMA, Sept. 5.—In five cases involv- ing the title to and possession of the most ADV‘-‘BTISEMENTL - Baker's Chocolate or Baker’s Cocoz EXAMINE THE PACK. AGE YOU RECEIVE AND MAKE SURE THAT IT BEARS OUR TRADE-MARK “La Belle Chocolatiere ” Under the decisiocs of the U. §. Courts no e:!m Chocelate or Cocoa ls eatitled to be labelled or sold as ** Bakar's Chincolate” or * Baker’s Cocon.” Walter Baker & Co, Limited f Estasiisues e, e S DORCHESTER | wa/klle/ma/flqoa/flm-flb of the U.S.ARMY & NAVY Service WILLIAM WOLFF & co. T SAN FRaNCiSCO, DISTRIBUTORS. Beware of imiations or rejilted Bottres. DEEDSESEDED ¥ R A SETS USRS RS EDRD N of Yellow Metal | v of the Forty- | I from Valdez through to \h“1 1 valuable mining claims in_Nome, United States Circuit Judge W. W. Morrow has reversed the rec ul\ appointed District Judge, A. H. Noy a5 reversed the re- ceiver, Ale: er McKenzie, appointed by Noves; has granted an appeal from the | order_appointing the receiver and has di- rected that until the matters at issue be decided there shall be no interference on the part of the court in Alaska or its ap- | ointees. Porhe attorneys representing the men who applied to Judge Morrow for these orders make charges to the effect that a big political conspiracy has been formed, as the center, to gain rf~||lrnl nf \a!udlllt, mining property at A\nm . The action before Judge Morrow | was brought on an appeal from the juds- ment of Hume as Deputy United qlatcs | District Attorney and McKenzie as re- ceiver. THOUGHT THEIR FIND WAS A SACK OF GOLD | Workmen Uncover Midwinter Fair Souvenirs at the Bottom of Lake Lagunitas. Dispatch to The Call N RAFA Sept. 5—Four men why are taking advantage of the low water a this season in Lake Lagunitas to the bottom of the lake of rushes and leaves yesterday thought that their for- tunes were made when they discovered a sack of what appeared to be §20 gold pieces among the rushes at the bottom of the lake. Thomas Hollowan was _industriously mowing the rushes wh heblade rang against someth Upon investigation it proved to be a salt sack full of shining pieces similar in appear- | ance to Uncle am’'s double eagles. The heart of Hollo 1 beat faster and he was | joined by Lawrence Welch and >n. The sack was removed to = bank and its contents emptied into a =t. The supposed colns proved to be souvenirs of the late Midwinter How and whi the souvenirs came 10 bo | planted in the lake will perhaps never be known. From the appearance of some of the pieces it would appear that a clumsy attempt at milling and gold-plating had been made. Several pieces of broken plaster of paris were found on_the bottom near the sack and the theory here is that some would-be counterfeiter, disgusted with his workmanship, concluded to bury the evidence of his wrongdoing in the waters of the lake. CRUSHED TO. DEATH 3 IN SUGAR FACTORY Awful Death of Head Machinist Rob- ert Staples at the Oxnard | Plant. | Special Dispatch to The Caily VENTURA, Sept. 6.—Robert Staples of Chino, the head machinist, was instantly killed in the Oxnard sugar factory late yesterday afterncon. He was repalring a mammoth idler of 1600 revolutions per minute, when it suddenly started, crush- Ing his head. taples was 35 years old. mother and brother in Chino. Coroner Reilly shipped the body to his home to- night. PR IR T INTERESTS THE COAST. | Postoffice Changes and List of Pen- | sions Granted. Spectal Dispatch to The Call WASHINGTON,, Sept. 5.—Postmasters | commissioned—James E. Hall, Chowchil- la, Cal.; George A. Larrabee, Sara, Wash. Rural free delivery will be established on tember 15 at Orange, Cal. The post- co at Villa Park, Orange County, Cal., Mll be diseontinued. Mail should be sent to_Orange. Penclons were issued to-day as follows: California: Increase—James Habarlin, Veterans’ Home, Napa, $10. Original widow—Jennie Goodrich, Los Angeles, $8. Washington: Relssue—Solomon R. fred, Centralia, $6. The Comptroller of Currency has au- | thorized the organluuon of the First Na- tional Bank of San Pedro, Cal; capital SRt o FIRE IN A HOSPITAL. Discipline and Courage of Nurses Prevents Loss of Life. PORTLAND, Or., Sept. 5.—Fire was dis- covered shortly after 11 o'clock this morn- ing In the roof of the Good Samaritan Hosplital, directly over the Kitchen, which is on the top floor. The structure is a large three-story frame building. For a time after the discovery of the flames | there threatened to be serious loss of life, Owing, however, to the perfect discipline and courage displaved by the nurses and other hospital employes, assisted by many | persons who were in the vicinity, the pa- | tients were all removed from the building, | The Fire Department soon gained control | of the flames. The property loss is nomi- hal. ~ s Takes Overdose of Laudanum. REDDING, Sept. 5—Only lack of knowledge of the.properties of laudanum prevented Henry Ehrmann from now be- ing a subject for the Coroner. He took an overdose of tie polson to-day and will recover. Ehrmann is a laborer at Paul- | sen’s ranch in Trinity Countz The cause of his rash act is sald to be unrecipro- cated love. P U District Fair for Santa Ana. SANTA ANA, Sept. ond District Agricultural Assoclation to- day decided to hold a race meeting and agricultural fair in this city from Oct. $¥%o the 20th Inclusive. This mnun‘f"v?fi'i S precede the Los Angeles falr and it |s ex- g ected that some of the best racers in the tate will be there. The track is in splen@iid condition. Rain m Shasta County. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. KESWICK, Sept. 5.—General rain pre- | vailed over Shasta County all last night and to-day. It harmed neither rancher nor fruit raiser and was a blessing to placer miners. clear | He leaves a | Al-| 5.—The Thirty-sec- | * S H AT ATAS KSR A O MURDERS MAY HAVE FOLLOWED DRUNKEN ROW ‘Neighbor of Hans Ras-j | mussen and William ] i Taylor Suspected. —_—— Revenge the Probable Motive for | the Double Crime Committed | Near Folsom. ‘ Sheriff Johnson Amused by a Lurid Tale of Some “Mpysterious Man, Manifestly Insane,” Seen Near | the Ranchers’ Cabins. i e | Faecial Dis, tch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, Sept. 5.—Sheriff John- son, who has complete charge of the in- vestigation into the sensational Folsom murders, reported to-night to The Call correspondent that there were absolutely no developments touching the motive or identity of the assassin. The Sheriff was amused at a story which ared in a San Francisco newspaper about ome ‘‘mysterious man, manifestly insane,” wandering on a road near Folsom without shoes and wrapped in a quilt, and with an ominous dirk se- cured to his waist. “‘As a matter of fact,” sald Sheriff John- son, “I heard of this man being seen and | had one of my deputies look him up. He was found to be a hobo, who had taken off his shoes in order to wash his feet. This was on Tuesday, nearly a week after the murders.” The field for speculation as to who mur- dered Hans Rasmussen and William Tay- lor in their lonely and mr -separated | abodes is practically limitl but all the theories advanced do not avail to clarify the perplexing mystery. No man knows more about the investigation than Sheriff Johnson, but that official is unwilling to commit 'himself unequivocally to an ex- planation of the crimes. As has been saia in The Call, the most definite statement | | that can be made in the case is that the | double crime bears every evidence of hav. ing been committed by some one not only well acquainted with the lay of the coun- | try, but having a thorough personal fa- \m(“-lrll\ with the premises occupled by | the victims. The thought that robbery | was contemplated is not to be considered | | for a moment. Nothing was disturbed at | either house, though the isolation of both | would have permitted of their being ran- | sacked without fear of interruption. The suicide theory is equally as absurd. The number and location of the wounds | |and the absence of weapons remove all | likelihood of self-murder. the single mot revenge, | Both men were given to the use of | liquor. When last seen allve in the town of Folsom, three miles away, | indulging in liquor. One of’ them pur- | chased and carrled away a bottle of whisky. It is not hard to believe that while in this condition one of the men quarreled with a third person, who may or may not have been under the influence of "liquor also; that this third person | killed Rasmussen, and afterward, to in- sure his own safety, took the life of the | only witness to the deed, Taylor. | It may be said at this time that one man is suspecred of the crime, that he lives in the locality of the murders ana +that he will be watched. To cause an ar- | | rest at this time in the absence of rea- | sonable evidence would be (nnllsh and | Sheriff Johnson will not act hast The | | scene of the murders is not a place visitea by strollers through the country, and this | \fact tends somewhat to confirm the beliet | that the murderer, whoever he Is. does not live very far dlstant from the scéne of his | crimes. P | SUSPECTS ARRESTED. Alleged Slayers of Indian Louis Ochoa Now Behind Prison Bars. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, Sept. 5.—Deputy Sherlft Jennings, who has gone to Bear Valley to investigate the rumor of the finding of the body of an Indian on the road, re- ports that the story is correct, save that the Indian, whose name was Ochoa, was' choked to death, Instead of having his head crushea, as at first re- ported. Ochoa, who was about 45 years | of age, belonged to the La Joila Indian Reservation, which iz ‘at 'the foot of | Smith Mountain on this side. He was seen near the James Brundson place in Bear Valley in the evening with Mataho | Subish and his son, both of whom are La | Jolla Indians. Théy were quarreling ail the next morning Mr. B Ochoa lying dead in the mad The In- dian police arrested Subish and his son, | KENTUCKY CO. NUMBERS. MONTREAL. Sept. 5.—The regular monthly | drawing of The Canadian Royal Art Union for the month of September, by which the winning numbers of the Kentucky Lotiery are decided, wag held here to-day. The first thirty-six |vrlln nre as follows: 66,376, mooo 7»:"9-\ 98s, $2000: 55,959, $1000; 89,115 eact There remains ach: 61,150, 57,830, 41,288, syn nsfi" Sl!fl"!‘! 49,820, nus fl 1, umkwm o821, 5673, o%0d, 7, 5645, 97,13 2, ‘:cgo' 2, 421, 28874, | pottery, they were | j LAMPS, LANTERNS AND CANDELABRA. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. HISTORIC STUDIES IN HOME FURNISHING., —_— BY MARGARET AINSLEE. VIIL It is a far cry from the most form of lamp—skulls of animals fat was burned—to the modern ctr light, yet while the recent contrivance un- doubtedly holds the palm as an illumin its dazzling glare lacks utterly the duing poetic effect vesled in the older- fashioned light-give [nfl‘ re m than the seashell, a suspended as a lamp in many a northern peasant’s cottage. The artistic possibili- ties of the hanging s appealed to t! early Greeks and Romans, who copled i in bronze and precious metals for th lamps called “lucernae.” At first thes “lucernae” were made of the common. with but onme wickhole. so feeble was the light emitted by the flax- | tow or other vegetable fiber used as wicks | that their number was increased so that as many as twelve tributed to the lam; The Romans observ: vicks frequently c light-giving power. the custom of ex- changing New Year's gifts all coin for good luck or hon mb as an e blem of sweetness; but the favorite gift was a golden or bronze lamp, which by iis richness or novelty should commend itselt to the recipient. Consequently neither expense nor ingenuity was spared in the search for unique “lucernae.” The mus- eums are filled with rare Etruscan iamps of bronze, richly adorned with relief sculpture. From the excavations at Her- culaneum and Pompeii we find lamps even more delicate and tasteful than the Etru can specimens. Some were tall and state- 1y, reminding us in general proportion of the plano lamp, which we fondly imagine a recent institution. Among the wealthy Romans, the lamp generally hung from or rested upon the candelabrum, and F any articles of furniture were moi tifully wrought than these Roman lamyp stands. They were generally of architec tural design, columnar in form. quaintly and elegantly carved in marble. They usually stood on the ground and were & THE GOLDEN CANDLESTICK. | (From the Arch vrl( Titus, Rome, D.) m six to ten feet high, the base often sisting of three feet of lion, g grifin. As the monastic establishments the workshops for all form art and as their b dedicated to the c lowed that the gol o smith and other worl ers in metal made some of the finest designs for lam nd gandelabra to be used in the se the sanctuary. Besides the nece use of lamps in a subterranean churches and in the cata- combs, where rude vessels of unglazed | pottery guided the early Christians to ! their secret religious -m‘\lrr- there was always an ol lamp hung in the Roman Catholle churches of Europe, indicative | of the presence of the Host in the taber- nacle upon the altar. For this purpose every church was furnished with large standing candlesticks or coronas for hold- | | WAR ROMANGE ENDS IN WEDDING RITES Charles A. Erwin, Formerly of the | Eighth Volunteers, Weds Miss Oceana Dillingham at Benicia. Special Dispatch to The Call. BENICIA, Sept. 5—A pretty wedding ceremony was performed at St. Paul's Episcopal Church at noon to-day, the con- tracting parties being Miss Oceana H. Dillingham and Charles Arthur Erwin. Rev. J. H. Waterman officiated. The bride was attended by Miss Carrle Sutherland of San Francisco as mald of honor; Misses Ria Weinmann, Elsie Sleeper, Ida Cowley and May Sutherland as bridesmaids and little Hazel Sleeper as flower zirl. The best man was Forest E. Erwin of Red Bluff, brother of the bridegroom. Messrs. Phil R. Weinmann, . A. McEwin, Theodore Bandell and Philip Baker acted as ushers. The bride is the youngest daughter of the late Captain and Mrs. W. W. Dil- lingham and was born in Benicia. Dur- ing the Spanish-American war she was an active member of the Red Cross So- clety, and while in the discharge of these duties she met Mr. Erwin, who was then a member of the Eighth California Ve unteers. Charles A. Erwin, formerly of Red Bluff, has resided in Benicia the past hteen months. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin ? on the afternoon train for a short honeymoon in the southern part of the State. - WINS A SAN EAFAKL BELLE. | Oscar T. Sewall ‘of New York Weds Miss Josie Crosby. Special Dispatch to“The Call. SAN RAFAEL, Sept. 5.—Miss Josie Crosby, one of San Rafael’s charming so- | clety belles, was united in marriage to Oscar T. Sewall at the home of her pa- rents in this city at 3 o'clock this after- noon. The wedding was private, and the ceremony was performed by the bride’s father, Rev. Arthur Crosby, principal of the Mount Tamalpais Military Academy. | Mr. Sewall was attended by Warren | Dearborn of New York and the bride by Ler sister, Miss Louise Crosby. Mr. Sewall is the New York manager of the shipping house of Willlams, Dimond iss Crosby was reared in this clty wheére her beauty and talents have | won for her a hont o( friends. The cou- le lett immediately after the ceremony ¥0r a short tour of the State_and in a| w days they will depart for New York, | where lhelr future home will be. !‘iuhburno-‘.l‘oles Nuptials. | Spectal Dispateh to The Cail. SAN DIEGO, Sept. 5.—J. E. nphbume,l for many years cashier of the First Na- tlonal Eank of this city and now vice | resident of the Bank of California at | DS Angeles, and Miss Gertrude Toies. eld- est daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Toles | of this city, were married at noon to- | dn) in the parlors at the residence of the parents, Sixth and Maple stree:s, | Peve B R “Watson. pastor of the U nita ian church, officiated. Only the relatives | and intimate friends were present. | SAN RAFAEL, Sept. 5.—At a meeting of the | R Gity Trusteen last night it was decided to pur- | hace a site for the pro new municipal bullding. The one selected s owned by Mrs, At H. Jenks, at the corner of A street and Fifth avenue, and opposite the Courthouse. a deside m th is a study in overelabor the smallest space on t stick | | | | | | | | | | | Is were the stapie »d by vegetat edge of the 1 tion or spo the c mosqu Th are h srigin Shakespe the most cel tern of St. Angelo. rm of lanterns, in tha modern acceptation of the word, are ez ily akin to swi & metal lamps, and, like their Oriental ives, admit of rich ana unique ornamentation. As a rule, how- ever, as the Inward ism of ow lighting appar: decorative effec teriorated. s has been perfected of the exterior has « AMERICAN HISTORY TOLD IN TABLEAUX Feature of Bed Men’s Day at the State Fair Witnessed by a ge Gathering in the Pavilion. fal Dispatch to The Call. NTO, Sept. 5.—There was a attendance at the State d the thousands localities expressed themselves as delight- ed with the attrac K and night had been de t of Red Men and its auxiliary bra of the Indfan occupancy and the landing of the Pilgrim fathers and thence on to the present time. The occasion called forth the attendance of nearly every mem- ber of the Order of Red Men in Sacra- mento and the surrounding neighborhoods and a pleasant reunion took place. To-morrow will be given over to the Order of the Maccabees, and they promise to make the event memorable in the his- tory of their organization. This afternoon the bench show opened with several hundred entries and many of the finest bred dogs in the State were placed on exhibition. The musical feature at the pavilion adds greatly to the enjoyment of the visitors. The dispiay as a whole is most diversified and very many of the most important in- dustries of the State are represented in attractive exhibits in the vast exhibition building. From now on a great attend- ance at both park and pavilion is assured. —_— ADVERTISEMENTS. e et Pears’ What a luxury Pears’ soap is! It is the cheapest and best toilet soap in all the world. 1 All f X it, all sorts of stores PR G e ?;OE e use i N. S. G. W. and N. D. G. W. Emblematic Cards. All new and original designs. 100 Ca: s i y' N , Parl nd ot o e vnd s el THE GABRIEL PRINTING CO., 419 Sacramento street, San Franeisco. DR. . CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE For the cure of GONORRHOEA, GLEETS, STRICTURES and analagous compiaints uf the Organs of Generation. Price §1 & bottie. For sale by drugeista