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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1900. and vigor. is a liquid food that tones the sys- tem. Its use brings appetite, health, Aids the nursing ADVERTISEMENTS. ANHEUSER-BUS wuliine mADE MARK. mother and the baby, the aged, the k Druggists sell it. ill, the convalescent. now and recommend it. Physicians All Prepared by Anheuser-BuschBrewing Ass'n St. Louis, U. S. A. Brewers of the Original Budw: Pale-Lager, Export Pale, AMUSEMENTS, FGREAR THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND S SA ME! n a w sale, Beats for all pe PRICES—1 5—1. “THE WIDO WEEK, W’S HUSBA GREAT “ADMISSION WEEK" BILL. World-Ren JESSIE BAR wned Contralto, TLET © Best, the RDAY AND SUNDAY. HARTMAN CL MENT s MAi 1 HIAS, “NA:OLEON'S GUARD.~ MOROSCO'S = 20 OPER2 ) T A THé ¥ "‘T\ ‘ . COoM- QUO VADIS. 'S LIUNS, "Cavalleria Rusticana” “l Pagliacci” APPE o SRNOON AND EV BIG VAUDEVILLE SHOW! SEABURY, High Diver. SPECIAL TO-NIGHT! THE AMATEURS ‘-FU[’\’ 7(‘Nl-.x<>t Nowelty, “A FARM.” SATURDAY NIGHT—BIG CAKEWALK ! e for Seats, Park 23. 3%, RD'S great Bor- the fron- Next—"Bottom of the E‘ISCHER’b CONCERT HOUSE. Admission 10:. MAE TUNISON. EUDORA FORDE, J. F. VIACO. L. E. BEHAN. HOWARD and CAMP- VAIL and DUTCH WALTON. T DAVIS g ser, 'Faust, Michelob, Anheuser-Standard, Black and Tan, Exquisite and Madt-Nutrine. TANFORAN PARK Sepl. 24 1o Oct. 6, 1960 UNDER MANAGEMENT OF THE SAN FRANCISCO AND SAN MATEO | } - ! S | AGRICULTURAL ASS'N 1 To the live stock breeders of California, as | well as to the lovers of out-door sports this E on is dedicated. actions will include A High-Class Open-Air Ho'ss Show. Select Herds of Prize Cattie. | _A Complete Exhibit of Swine, Sheep, Goats, Poultry and Belgian Hares. es and manu- Games hi Pony = 5t GRAND ATHLETIC FIELD DAY CLUB HARNESS RACING TilGH-CLASS TROTTING AND PACING East and West ords. regular ance. HESRY J. CROCKER, President GBORGE ALNER NEWHALL, EDWIS F. SNITH, General Manager TO-NIGHT! Best Seats i1 Graamd ttand Oaly 5fc. 4,88 Good Sc:ts Oaly Zic and 3°c TO-NIGHT—MILITAZY NIGHT A¥ L LY NEW! m and Sixteenth ‘ts. Grounds Folsor S AT SE AN, CLAY & CO.'S. SUTRO BATHS., to 11 p. m to 10 p. m. REN. & hifldren, 20c. Nothing el It does the w: 7 Call for * 2 cents in stamps. [ ELASTIC TRUSS CO., rket Street, 5 Broadway, San Francisco, New York City. Big & 17 & non-potson edy for ort Whit . annateral lie ) charges. or sny infiommas o tion, ,arritation or uiceras erovcats oontaglon. tion of MuCoUr meme r:Evins OHEmion Oo, branes. Non-astringent, cncemar,o JEEE] S°'d by Drazxists, Nl 7. ‘ HEUMATISM weeeCURED==== by the waters and the mud baths and the hot mineral baths of BYRON FOT SPYRINGS Acdress A. BETT Manager, Hot Spring 1 Byron MBARD & CO., 3 Geary st., City Agts. 'PARAISO HOT SPRINGS, I {4 10 KLAMATH KOT SFPRINGS. the prettiest county in ing— finest in the Stater Tor casting. Hunting— rounding mountains— bear. EDSON BROS.. kiyou County, Cal. LAUREL DELL LAKE. “ine most attractive place in Lake County to epend your vacation. Boating. bathing, bowl- e tennis, livery, new walks, etc. Wrlta for circular to H.' WAMBOLD, Laurel Dell, Lake County, Cal. *S new summer Cazadero, Cal. A otine, cavaniet Aehing atd Rt ing: general cholce liquors, cigars; popular prices. n. oty G - Gonorioay | @ Gloct, Spermatorrhma | | d Central | hip. Races. | 5 miles by noted riders. | iutull view of Grand | ill be clean, | CUT RATES 3 Attacked With a Bottle. H. Wiruck was booked at the City Prison yesterday on a charge of assault to murder. Early Monday morning Wiruck attacked D. Dickinson of 98 How- rd s t in Annic Zimmerman's room, 16 Sixth street, and inflicted several wornds on his face and scalp. It is thought that Dickinson's skull is frac- tured, but he was able to appear in court vesterday and swear to t against Wiruck. ADVERTISEMENTS. Electric Seal Collarette A swell little collar- ette just like the pic- ture—Of electric seal with sable opossum collar and border— Just the thing for win- ter weather; very styl- ish. Not many—So or- der to-day. $19.50 ]2 each ELECTRIC SEAL COL- LARETTES, with Astrakan yoke. ..$35.00 ELECTRIC SEAL COL- LARETTES, with river mink yoke..$5.50 RIVER MINK COL- LARETTES ....$9.00 H. Liebes & Company Incorporated, 1£3-187 Post Street, SAN FRANCISCO. YES, IT WILL PASS MUSTER. Every washable garment a man wears, | 1f sent to our laundry. will afford not only action but gratification to the owner. can’'t afford to return your linen to you in any other way than “well done,” and it's extremely ‘“rare” that we do. Domestic finish for fulldress shirts if you order it. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street Near Powell. Telephone—South 420, Oakland Office—~62 San Pablo Ave. PALACE HOTEL It is universally acknowledged that these hotels possess the attributes that appeal to particular people—undoubted luxury and comfort, unsurpassed cuisine and service and superior appointments and location, y TONG PO CHY, Successor to Dr. LAI PO TAL graduate of Canton Medicai College, after a very success- 1ul practice of many years in China, located In San Franclsco. The surprisi; marvelous cures effect herbs rbs cure over 400 different diseases, including Bright's isease, Diabetes, Consump- Annml.”'mhmfi and Fei All_persons afflicted with any kind of m-hd*w are in- vited to call. Office, 727 Washington st. Offive a. m. to 12 m., . 1t09p. m.; 10 gratetul ‘thanks * PRte s Ao ‘A. DARLEY, San Brain, Nerve, cers, male Maladies. e complaint | STEAMSHIP CCPTIC, WHICH WENT ASHORE NEAR NAGASAKI, IS REPORTED OFF, HER WAY TO THIS PORT. » UNINJURED, AND ON l NEWS FROM THE - OCEAN AND THE WATER FRONT Wteck of the May Flint Will Be Blown Up by the Government. Ship Wachusett Is Overdue at Kahu- lui and May Be a Total Loss. Attempt to Commit Suicide. Sl Just what will be done with the May | Flint is still a matter of conjecture. | | Judging from the expense that was en- | | talled in the ralsing of the Earl of Dal- | houste and the Blairmore, the May Flint , will never be seen afloat again. There is {only the small sum of $12,000 insurance on her, so that the only losers will be the | shareholders, and they have practically decided to abandon vessel and cargo. Now comes the question as to who is to remove the “menace to navigation.” The underwriters will take no hand in the matter, as their risk is small. The own- | ers of the vessel do not want either ship or cargo, and the captain and crew are willing to allow thefr effects to remain at | the bottom of the bay. to be “up to Uncle Sam’ to remove the wreckage. The California Ship Company held a meeting vesterday to discuss the situa- tion. Among those present were W. E. Mighell, Charles Budrou, Willlam Bab- cock, E. Kentfield and W. J. Gray. These men’ are among the best known and wealthiest of the ship owners of Califor- Ma: I'ne captain of the wreeked ship was before them and told practically the same story as published in The Call. He was questioned and cross-questioned by Captain Gray and Mr. Babcock, but failed to give a sati:(flctnrf’ explanation. He admitted that he should have remained in | the lower bay, and sald that no instruc- | tions had ever been given him to anchor | in the upper bay. The Overdue Wachusett. W. E. Mighell, president of the Califor- nia Ship Company, is a henve; loser on the loss of the May Flint. He is also managing owner of the ship Wachusett, now out 124 days from Newcastle, N. 8. W., for Hawaii, and on which 45 per cent reinsurance is being offered. Mr. Mighell and those associated with him never car- ry a cent of insurance on their vessels, 8o the reinsurance on the Wachusett must | be on the cargo and the freight. In the case of the California Ship Com- pany there has been enough money saved in insurance on the milllon-dollar invest- ment to buy a better !hl? than the May Flint, while in the case of the Wachusett there is more than enough in the Insur- ance fund to make all the owners even should she prove a total loss. Few peo- ple on the water front, however, think anything has happened to the vessel. Want Remains of Barge Removed. The. captains and pilots on the narrow- gauge ferry steamers want the remains of the barge that was burnt Saturday night removed. They say the planking of the lower floor is held in position by the anchors and the whole is in a position to cause damage after dark should a ferry boat run down on ft. Too Much Celebration. J. F. O'Brien tried to make a spectac- ular ending to the Native Sons' celebra- tlon yesterday. He went into the ferry cafe, wrote on the back of a card ‘Life ADVERTISEMENTS. Gures Blood Poison A Trial Treatment Sent Free to All Who Suffer From Any Stige of the Diseas>. Cures Cases That Hot Springs and All Other Treatments Fail=d to Even Help. There has been discovered by the State Medical Institute, 208 Elektron building, Fort Wayne, Ind., the most remarkable Blood Poison cure ever heard of. It has cured all such in- dications as mucous patches in the mouth, sore throat, copper colored spots, chancres, ulcergtions on the body and In hundreds of cases where the hair and eyebrows had fallen out and the whole skin was a mass of boils, pimples and ulcers this wonderful specific has completely changed the whole body into a clean, perfect condition of physical health. Every raiiroad running into Fort Wayne brings seores of sufferers seeking this new and marvel- ous cure and to enable those who cannot travel to realize what a_truly marvelous work the in- stitute is accomplishing they will send free to every sufferer a free trial treatment o (hat Gvery one can cure themselves in the privacy of thefr own home. This is the only known cure for Blood Pofson. Do not hesitate to write at once and the free trial will be sent sealed in plain Dll:ll&ll!: visir DR. JORDAN’S crear MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 105 UAREETEY bk BRAT, 1.1, RDAN & CO., 1051 Market St., 8, F. It therefore seems | ¥ | DELIBERATE ATTEMPT has lost all charms for me,” frozen absinthe and then went Soard That ferry steamer Berkeley. A few minutes after the ferrv boat left the wharf (.) Brien jumped overboard. He was re: ;_ur:’r] an taken to the Harhor Hospital, Pihere Drs. Robinson and Baver soon had out of danger. The unfortunate fel- | low seemed to be crazed from liquor, = Water Front Notes. e Harbor Commissioners held a shor: session_yesterday. The contract for the | purchase of old lumber on the front was | let to William Swift & Co. for $327 per ;,Y;gusag_d feet. Last week William Hogge' 1 8255 for the same privilege, but ev-| erything was called off because & number | of people said they had not been notified. | The matter was then advertised, with the | g::l';lzl[ ‘Ihr;.ltpr Hodge bid $2 621, the City | X ovement C any c Swift 3327 per 1000 feet o> 50 and | The river steamer Apache broke her | esterday. Her pas- shaft near Riverside Vi were brought here on ‘ngers and cargo the steamer Fruto, CROOKS WHO HAVE BEEN CHARGED AND RELEASED Bunko Men Regain Their Liberty,:' but Others Arrested Are Not So Fortunate. The bunko men and other characters who were suspicious | arrested and de- | | tained in the tanks at the City Prison till | the close of the celebration were released by Captain Seymour yesterday morning on their promise to leave the eity, with | three exceptions. “Tommy” Wallace, the | notorious crook who made himself fa- | mous by stealing the valuable painting “Elaine” from a store window on Kearny | street about twenty years ago, was booked | on charges of vagrancy and having burg- lars’ tools in his possession. George Col- ter and George Collins, two notorfous pick- | ckets, were booked on charges of | ancy Three ‘of the pickpockets arrested dur- ing the celebration appeared before Judge | Conlan yesterday. Simon Wenne of the | Nincteenth Infantry, who was accused of ing a watch from F. P. Day of Baker | ty, Or., in a saloon at Grant avenue and | Moarket street, had bis case continued till | to-day, as Day had not appeared to swear | to the complaint. George Downs of the | fhirty-seventh Infantry, who is accused of stealing a purse from a lady at Geary and Kearny streets, had his case contin- ued till next Monday. Joseph Sullivun, the ex-convict charged with attempt at grand larceny and battery upon B Dy Nicholson, had his cases also continued till Monda: — e Notice to Native Sons. Keep your baggage checks until you reach San Francisco. You will save one- | half in the transfer of your baggage. One trunk (round trip) 50 cents. Morton | Special Delivery, Oakland ferry depot, | 630 Market street, 408 Taylor street, b | where Helen | tapestry when visited by Venus | Brussels, Valenciennes and Bruges. day by the carpet weavers of the East was known to the naticns of antiquity is proved not only in the pages of Homer, is thus victured as weaviag during ! the siege of Troy, but also by the designs on the old Greek vases, in one of which, from Chinsi, Penelope is represented as weaving beautiful hangings upon a “high warp” loom. Also in Ovid's ‘Metamor- phoses” there is a description of the weaving combat between Pallas and Arachne in which the methods employed | correspond exactly to those used by the | Gobelins in making thet largest and most important tapestries. Tapestry weaving takes greater expert- ness and more years of training on the part of the workman than any other branch of textile manufacture. So much depends upon the weaver's taste and judgment in the selection, juxtapositiun and harmonizing of the shades and tones to be used that he musi needs have e instincts of an artist iu_order to produte a satisfactory copy of the cartoon or working model. An unsympathetic work- man, laboring undgr the disadvantage of operating from the wrong side of his pic- ture, is not likely to produce the desired transparency of the usual minute hatch- ing and stippling of colors, and his work, consequently, presents a harsh or mosaic- like appearance. This effect is especially to be avoided in the execution of “storfed’’ tapestry, which is woven direct- ly from a cartoon designed with special reference to the limitacions of the weaver. Some idea of the bewildering infinite gradations of color forming the palette of | the loomworker may be gathered from the fact that the late director of the dyeing | departments of the Gobelin factories com- | posed a chromatic prism of 14,420 different tones. The best wool used in the Euro- pean tapestry works has always been im- ported from Kent in England. It was in the East, the cradle of dec- orative craftsmanship, that the art of tapestry weaving sprang into being: and in spite of the political and artistie fluc- tuations which so strongly influenced the other arts the Oriental influence upon tapestry design remained through many centuries persistent {n Europe. This was undoubtedly due to the skill with which the Old World craftsmen adapted design to technical necessity and yet achieved effects instinct with natural life and sub- dued overflowing splendor of color. Tex- tile fabrics reached their highest develop- ment under the Saracens of Egypt. who taught their arts to the subject Sicilians. When the Norman King of Sicily took Corinth and Argos he _imported many weavers from Greece to Sicily, where thes quickly assimilated the Sicilian style, and many of the finest examples of Siculo Saracenic fabrics belong to this period The Crusades also modified the decora- tive arts and caused the introduction of heraldic badges and armorial bearings into the designs of the beautiful Sicilian textiles. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries Bruges and Antwerp were the greatest ports in the world, and it was but natural that Flanders should take the lead in exporting industries which would extend her commerce. Consequently the earliest tapestries woven in Europe were the Flemish, made toward the end of th twelfth century at Arras, Oudersarde, This product of the Flemish looms was ex- ported to all parts of Europe, and in ex- cellence of workmanship and flat treat- T Copyright, 1800, by Seymour Eaton. HISTORIC STUDIES IN HOME FURNISHING. ——— BY MARGARET AINSLEE. ment of decorative subjectss has never % been surpassed. A because of its pre- o stry, | eminence in the facture of storied |70t an the textile fabries. tapestry, | TCISIE® plcime o synonym in England ancient of arts, forms the most poetic of | forFRE: PECRIE & oy nd was so under- hangings, the most romantic of back «d by Shakespeare when he made Polo- grounds, the most artistie simulation of | nius the painter’s handicraft. The difficuity NI TS A of understanding the rechnicalities of this noblest of the weav 3xig .18 of the various uses of Arras by its cla: ation into ‘‘high may be gathered from the illus- “low warp" tapestries. As it is manufac- n of the medieval chateau. Here tured upon the warp of wool, thread, cot- hurg the favorite local epics, that ton or silk, the weft is worked in with who saw might read of their mas- coirbeh $ R it And his prowess in the short lengths of the gesired co B e e bt shading. The loom is formed of two yrsted intended “to cylinders or uprights, around onme of r adorn a tale. " he which the warp Is rolied and around the erstood thoroughly during other the web. The uprights are placed | CC¢ v e yxf(‘:rhfl':‘};‘.fl?‘:,l";.)y [;‘,’;;:‘"e vertically in “high warp" and are parallel | ;5 L (0 e g sy Bt B o - with the ground in “low warp.” That the | defined expre of countenance and high warp method similar to that used to- | such skillfuiness of grouping that the eye embrace the general effect. pleces are still remarkably and singularly harmonious in despite the fact that the sub- longer clearly discernible. the most beautiful tapestries re those made at Arras from of Raphael. Rubens found ose cartoons which Leo X had commissioned Raphael to paint for the decoration tine Chapel cut info strips for venience of workmen and rotting in a wooden box in a Brussels easily might tive Perforated by the needle of the coarse brown paper, faded, there was stiil enes from the Acts of ble the genius of one the master genius of enough left the Apostle artist to re another. Rubens therefore induced Charles 1 to buy them for Whitehall Cromwell afterward purchased them, and, after many vicissitudes, they are now in the South Kensington Museum, through the courtesy of Queen Victoria. The tap- estries from these cartoons were woven in a tissue silk and gold, and reached w_months before the death of the artist who had designed them. After many wanderings these tapestries are now in the Vatlean, but are less valuable than the cartoons from which they were worked Four splendid cartoons by Raphael's pupil, Guilio Romano, found their way into France, whither they had been soid as rubbish and where they are now great- ly treasured, of -them having been copied by the Gobelins in the reign of Louis XIV. It is supposed that some of the original tapestries from these car- toons were i urned for their golden bord- ers. # When Louis XI of France took the town of Arras it was practically the deathblow to the tapestry-weaving industry of this far-famed little place, and Brussels, under the Burgundian rule, soon became the center of Flemish weaving. The most ex- tensive col ion of Flemish tapestries in existence is now in Madrid, acquired dur- ing the Spanish occupation of Flanders It was Francis I, the French delegate to the far-famed Fieid of the Cloth of Gold, who_first e ved the idea of meeting the immense demands for the enrichment of his royal palaces by uniting at one center at Fontainebleau both the fabrica- tion and the designing of tapestry, Henry IV also protected the industry, removing the manufactory from one place to an- other until it finally settled down at the | Gobelins. This place Louis XIV bought thirty vears later, uniting there all the principal industrial centers for dyeing, embroidery, tapestry, jewelry, ironwork. cabinet-making and engraving, under the name of the Royal Upholstery Works. The Gabelin brothe: had. in_the reign of Francis I, introduced into Paris from Venice the art of dyeing scarlet, an en- | terprise then considered so impractical that it was known as the Gobelin folly, | yet which became, notwithstanding con- temporary scorn, most successful. Their | larger pieces of tapestry to-day command fabulous prices, because of their world- famous brilliancy consummate technique and fine texgureé, many of the oldest pieces still béing in excellent condition, despite the mellowing of their tints | through age. Colbert, Minister to Louis X1V, also ordered of them the manufac- ture of a low-warp tapestry suitable for | furniture, in which they became excep- tionally successful. Note—This study will be concluded next week. TO COMMIT SUICIDE ‘William Bartlett, While Despondent, Cuts His Throat and Wrist With a Razor. William Bartlett, a young married man living at 2005 Powell street, attempted to commit suicide yesterday morning by cut- ting his left wrist and throat with a razor in front of 245 Chestnut street. Miss Louise Bundschu, who lives in the house, saw him stagger along the street and fall to the ground. Thinking he was dead she telephoned to the Morgue, but finding there was still life left she got a nurse from the Pacific Hospital, who tried to stop the flow of blood. The ambulance was summoned and he was taken to the Receiving Hospital. Dr. Bunnell found that he had cut to the bone of his wrist, severing the tendons and muscles. The wound in his throat was an extensive one, but was only superficial. He lost congiderable blood, but his chances of re- covery were good. he should recover he will not have the use of his left hand again. Bartlett has a young wife and a girl baby a year old. Since he was a boy he had been employed in the mailing depart- ment of a newspaper, PGt lost his job a year ago through his intemperate habits, The loss of his position made him de- spondent. He had not been working for some weeks. His attempt at suicide was a great shock to his wife. ey were not without means, she said, and there was no reason for his rash act. —_——————— BLOOM AND MONTAGUE CHARGED WITH FRAUD| Harry R. Cooper Alleges They Took Advantage of Him as a Surety. Harry R. Cooper of the firm of Cooper & Co, hes sued David Bloom and Phil 8. | Montague of the Patriotic Publisking Company to recover judgment for $900 and $131 25 interest. In: default of pay- | ment Cooper asks that the defendants be committed to the County Jail for fraud. In his complaint Cooper avers that on July 21, 1898, tke defendants prevailed vpon him to execute a contract of surety- ship guaranteeing the defendants’ account with the Sunzet Photo and Engraving Company. It was understood, Cooper says, that the defendants, in addition to a bill of $30 50. were only to purchase goods of the further value of They ran | the account up, however, to $900, and, it ! is alleged, refused to pay the bill and the | plaintiff was held lfable. Hence the suit. | —————————— Stealing as a Fine Art. Rev. Herbert 8. Bigelow of Cincinnati, Ohio, will speak upon the subject “Steal- ing as a Fine Art" at Metropolitan Tem- le to-night. The San_ Francisco Single x Society has the affair in hand, and the public is cordially invited to attend. There will be no charge for admission, — ee————— Callustro Window and Mirror Polishers—They do the work quickly and do it well. They clean the glass and give it brilliance. They are last- ing, convenient and economical. Avall your- selves of a good thing. Ask for them at th Emporium. . — Agda Anderson’s Suit. DR. CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE For the cure -o.(. GON(¢ G% e For sale by druggists. The action instituted by Agda Anderson against the Market Street Railway Com- I $10,000 damages f - Eonan Ingiries went (o trial betore Judge Daingerfield yesterday. ‘Wanted—Optician: Al refractionist: elderly person; salary §30 week. Box 4920, Call . TWO PINK I-\iNib’ WHITE WEDDINGS Hamilton-Martin and Jack- son-Deahl Nuptials Yesterday. Miss Clara Florence Hamilton and George A. Martin were married yesterday | afterncon at the residence of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Hamil- ton, on California street. Rev. Dr. Mac- kenzie performed the ceremony shortly before 3 o'clock, the happy young couple standing in an exquisite bower of pink and white lilies, The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Laura Hamilton, who officiated as mald of honor, and Miss Ruth McNutt, Miss Florence Josselyn, Miss Olive Holbrook, Miss Adelaide Mur- hy, Miss Frances Moore and Miss Edna Hamilton, who acted as bridesmalds. Latham McMullin was best man_and William H. Hamilton, John Ralston Ham- ilton, Nathaniel Wilson, Harry Houghton, Willard Drown and Gerald Rathbone were the ribbon bearers. The bride was attired in a ragnificent gown of white satin. The maid of honor wore a dainty gown of pink crepe and the bridesmaids were attired alike in white chiffon over white silk. Mr. and Mrs. Martin left yesterday aft- ernoon for a bridal trip, keeping their destination a secret. They expect to re- turn within a few weeks and will then take up their residence in this city. Miss Hattle Gertrude Jackson and John L. Deahl were married last evening at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. A. W. Jackson, 1300 Page street. It was a very quiet weddln{. only the im- mediate relatives and a limited number of intimate friends. being preserit when the Rev. Dr. Church pronounced the happy couple husband and wife. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Alice Jackson, who officiated as maid of honor. Grant Laughlin acted as best man. The home was prettily decorated for the occasion with a profusion of choice pink blossoms. The bride was attired in an exquisite gown of white satin. The maid of honor wore a dainty gown of pink ‘chiffon over pink silk. Mr. and Mrs. Deahl are going south for a honeymoon trip, and on their return will make their home in this eity. — e Printing and Stationery. ““Marshall” “Waterman” Ideal Fountain Pens from $2.50 to $7.00 each. Largest assortment in the city. Commercial stationery and of- fice supplies at reasonable prices. Print. ing and engraving of invitations and visiting cards a g Vail " €o. i1 Market street. s s arket street. s g Sk daiii Supreme Court Decisions. The Supreme Court yesterday handed down decisiors in the following cases: J. H. Maddux vs, County Bank of San Luis Obispo, judgment and order reversed; J. i“, and J. Mabb vs. H. Merriam, udgment affirmed: Levy vs. Board of Po- ice” Commissioners of Y.os Angeles. writ denied; Mittendorf vs. Board of Police C&l&:mlssloners of Los Angeles, writ de- nied. R BT Drink Rainier Beer, the only beer on the Pacific Coast that received a medal at the Paris Exposition. . —————— Saving in Feeding of Prisoners. Commissary Shaw of the City Prison re- ported yesterday to Chief Sullivan that the total cost of subsistence for the feed- 1 of 2734 prisoners confined In the Ci é‘gnn !orp the month of August -‘d Fountain Pens for $1.00. | $201 84. The cost of feeding 2732 prisoners for the month of August, 1889 under the old system, was $567 30, a difference of | $355 46. o S—— Julian Arnold Has Appealed. Julian Tregenna Biddulph Arnold has been granted permission to appeal to the | United States Circuit Court of Appeals. | The appeal will be heard in October. Pears’ |+ Itis a wonderful soap that takes hold quick and does no harm. No harm! It leaves the | skin soft like a baby’s; no alkali in it, nothing but soap. The harm is done b |*alkali. Still more harm is done by not washing. So, bad soap’is better than | none. | What is bad soap? Im- perfectly made; the fat and alkali not well bal- anced or not combined, What is good soap? { Pears’. | 2 4 All sorts of storessell it, especially druggistsy | all sorts of people use it. , | | | | Hitcheock School, SAN RAFAEL, CAL.. FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS. Separate Rogma. Gymsasium, Military Deut, CHRISTMAS TERM BEGINS A ey T CHCOCK, Priacier | TRINITY SCHOOL..Z% an erroneous impres- It s desired to correct sion that Trinity School has been discontinusd. It will ooex; .:od un-lfllgl:m!. .A““ & 3 '0. 8. MEAD, 2203 Central ave. i SINE POLYTECHNIC g8P:es Has the e