The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 3, 1900, Page 2

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© THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 10 NEW YORK N AN RIRSHIP Trip Projected by Enthusi- TRYING TO CORROBORATE | THE JONES CONFESS!ON Several Men Implicated in the Conspiracy to Get Possession of Rice’s Property. astic Party of ! Texans s == Have Full Faith in Their Craft and Call It the Most Wonderful Invention of the Age. MASCH SU MISREPRESENTED FACTS I ner Tag tt Comments on His er Trademarks terfeited. 2 ner Tage —e STOMACH OF MILLIONAIRE MATION T DER R1 OF RATLROAD V}'.XTFNIV)S PENSION G e e o SYSTEM sylvania of 3 1 I 5 WALDECK-ROUSSEAU DISPLEASES VATICAN Rice’s body was treated.—Un: N at Paris Is Modify His Co Attitude. Instructed atory A EW YORK, Nov vt F. J s, the pers 1 attend- o t--of the late William M who attempted to com- mit suicide yesterday, was vis- 4 ted in the hospital to-day by Dr. Chris- g e tlan, who has him in charge. Dr. Chri NOTED TEA TASTER ian said that Jones was very much im- s proved DRIVEN TO SUICIDE The hearing of the application of the Abe - n . | proponents- of .the “Baker” will of the A P, Upham, Ill and Despondent, y,,. w. M. Rice that the later will, which Takes Fatal Dose of Carbolic s alleged to be in the possession of Al- Acid. T: Patrick, be placed on file in the My 3 th rrogate, was to-day ad- ember 20, ex; Attorney Osborne s - g e t at more vould be first neces- idence y steps until T have cor- confession,” he contiz busy for five or si - 4ll the details of the - Assistant District Attorriey Osborne, in & further statement given out this after- - says that Dr. Bull, th reeon, operation -on Rice's face months: before he died. . As an . ‘,.w:‘flv ':r»;&" rjh:fi Die ,,;; r\'l‘w Harris Is Sentenced. o the case, con: v K. No¥: 2.—Arthur Harris, hat Patrick gave -Rice grayish og 5 b v sica s o The tablets prescribed by Dr. f-a grayish color. Mr. Osborne riger d that Professor Witthaus knew mothing of this in making his an- who performed the operation £aid later Rir n, =light The operation nd did not even require ADVERTISEMENTS. REWARD OF MERIT. R. J. Evans. Dr. Bull's head office . who had charge of the operation, A Xew Catarrh Cure Secures National 1 did use chioride /of mercury, but T Popularity in Less Than One Year. | [20K 47a%, Stery tablet not used. T di- the sol 0! S achieving popuiar fa: i1 ‘contimucs. by syine: “rhcce | 2blets of this sort, but I never them. 1 myself am not °an | acquainted with the effect n every drug store through. found s out | would have when taken internally. I know the United States and Canada. they would ca: Sl g To be sure, a large amount of adver- g cause extreme congestion of very well the ‘tablets e na to-d; the bowels and severe inflam tising was necessary in the first instancs | do not know whether they wonid bl o the remedy to the attention of uniess taken in large quantities every one ‘familiar. with | The tablets R TN LU were sold at drugstores like PROFESSOR R. A. WITTHAUS, WHO! MURDER THEORY FIRST CONFIRMED BY REPORTS I found a slight trace of mercury in i gquantity equivalent to 17-1000 grain per ounce in the intestines and an amount equal to 23-1000 grain per I would infer from the very small quantity of mercury found in the stomach and the relatively large amount found in the intes- tines, and particularly in the kidneys, that the metal in some form of soluble combination had been introduced into the body during the life of the deceased, probably several hours, possibly days, pre- vious to his death.—Professor R. A. Witthaus. There was no mercury in th: embalming fluid with which Mr. dertaker Charles Plawright. There was no mercury in any of the medicines which I pre- scribsd for Mr. Rice in the five months preceding his death, dur- ing which I treated him.—Dr. Walter Curry. —Charles | headache drops an MICAL ANALYSIS OF THE | j g | { | | | CE LED TO THE FIRST CONFIR- 48 1 e ] Mr. Rice's stomach, a ounce in the kidneys. 4 other articles, with- o ny tape, and in that way they could be easily secured. As @ face wash they are perfectly harmless.” Fred B. House, counsel for Jones and Patrick, accompanied by Former Assist- ant District Attorney George Battle, went to Bellevue Hospital this afternodn and were admitted to the prison ward to see Jones, They talked with Jones for over hou hen leaving, Mr. House said that he «imply to visit Jones, seeing that i in such trouble. He called him r young man in hard luck.” Effort to determine the exact condition of the of Willlam M. Rice, the million- after his death. Jones, his valet, in made before he cut his ombs, said he saw Albert Patrick holding a towel in the shape of a cpne over the aged millionaire's face. nt District Attorney Osborne, o said he \would communicate with or Witthaus concerning the mat- clared that the autopsy had re. vealed a state of affairs consistent with smothering. Whether the lungs have been preserved was not known at the Dis- frict Attorney's office to-day, but it is be- lieved that they, with other organs, were removed before the milllonaire’s body was cremated David L. Short, who executed the will of lungs Mr. Rice, the one in which the million- alfre bequeathed the bulk of his fortune to Albert T. Patrick, to-day for the first time consented to be interviewed regard- ing_ the incidents leading up to the exe- cution of the document To a reporter, Short said: “I went to Mr. Rice's apartments at the request of Mr. Patrick. Patrick sent a messenger to my office. I went over to Patrick's office, Patrick gaid to me: ‘You are wanted up tecwn to execute some papers.’ “Morris Meyers went with me. He went us ¢ ry, T as commissioner of Jones in and escorted us to Mr. Rice’s room. Mr. Rice was sitting at his desk and from a sort of cabinet compart- ment that was over it he drew out his papers. He said to us both: ‘This {= my will, gentlemen. T haye sent for you to witness my signature.’ ‘‘He asked Meyers to read one particu- lar paragraph or phrase in the will. T do not remember what the subject matter of the clause was. T 414 not-pay any atten- tion to it. Mr. Rice seemed to have much confidence in Meyers. He consulted him ahout his aff frequent!: I did not know the contents of the will, which was not read aloud. T frehuently execut papers for Mr. Rice. T executed the signments to Patric! Mr. Short further sald he never talked with Meyers or Patrick about the will or assignments. He known Mr. Rice for about a vear befors his death. Mr, Rice had not sald anything to him about another will. v article permanently sue- SRR st have in addition abso- the new. s in A art’s Catarrh Tablets the most prominent NEW YORK. Nov. i at Paterson, N. J., to-day handed up in- convenient form all the really efficient ca- | dictments against Walter C. McAlifster, tarrh remedice, such as red gum, Guaacol, | George J. Kerr, Willlam A. Death and and Sanguinaria. Andrew Campbell, who.are charged with no cocaine nor%plats and to e children with entire (N¢ murder s 4 bene J. - J. Reitiger- of Covington, Ky., 1 suffered from catarrh m my head throat every fall, with stoppage of 1 in the throat af- often extending to | atarrh of the stom- | "ot fhese tabléts contain in_pleasant, were two indiciments against each of the young men—one for murder and the other for criminal assault, the first, it is said, also embracing the latter. : Judge Barkalow received the indict- ach. I bought a fiftv-cent package of Stu. | ments and instructed County Clerk Win- art's Catarrh Tablets at my druggist's, | field that the indictments both for murder carrjed them in my pocket and used them | anu assault be transmitted and delivered faithful and the way in which they | io the Court of Over and Terminer, over v head and throat was certainly | which Supreme Justice Dixon. presides. rkable. I had no catarrh last winter | It is not known when Justice Dixon will spring and consider myself entirely | arraign the men. They cannot be ar- from any catarrhal trouble.” raigned before any other Judge. It is Ellison of Wheeling, W. |improbable that he will go to Paterson be- uffered from catarrh near- | fore the January term. e and last winter my two | It is =aid that while the Grand Jury was hiidren also suffered from catarrhal | considering the case some of the members and sore throat o much they were | were disposed to find an _indictment of school a large portion of the win- | against Schulthorpe, who, by his own ad- My brother who Was cured of ca-|mission, Was an accessory to the assault, deafness by using Stuart’s Ca- | but they wers in the minority. The hack- i Tablets vrged me 10 try them so | man claimed to know nothing about the *h that 1 @id so, and am truly thank- ' condition of the girl when she was bun- they have dene for myself dled into his rig and that when he ar- sildren. 1 always keep a box | rived at the Rock road he was coerced ts in the house and at the by two of the men into doing as he was nce of a cold or sore throat | told. It is said that in the course of the ke bud and catarrh Is no | discussion of the case among the members longer a household affiietion with us. | of the Grand Jury it was stated that Jen- Full sized packages of Stuart’s Catarrh | nie's heart was weak and that it was Tablets are sold for fAfty cents at all | possible that this may have been the druggisis. lcause of her death. There was no evi- we nip-it . There | | Jennie, w] su@ ARE INDICTED, . —The Grand Jury |dence that chloral was administered, and this point can only be determined by the analysis of the stomach or by a confession from one of the accused men. The phy- sicians could not say positively that death was due to a poisonous drug, but this matter will be cleared befora the case comes to trial. It was sald in support of the statement that death may have been ue to a weak heart; that on one occasion hile standing on a street corner talking to two youns men, fell in a faint and remained unconsclous for half an hour. The vote on the indictment is g; aid to have been unanimous. Chemical un-i’vs‘ls of the dead girl's organs is being made at a laboratory in New York Gite o$ which Professor Witthaus, who has fig- ured in the Molineaux, Rice and other cases, Is the head. The analysis has not yet been completed, and no report has been made to the County Physiclam On this report much i3 said to depend, It may also be needful to accept the confession of Campbell or Death or hoth as witnesses, and accept pleas of guilty from them to the crime of criminal as. sault only. If the anlysis is strong enough the confessions may not be used. Tven if the analysis does establish poigon, it'ls said that the State may elect to elim- inate that feature and proceed to trial upon the assumption that the violence of the assault caused heart faflure and death and that would entail the death penalty, ———— To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Quinine Tablets. All druggiets refund the oy ey Siamatire e o8 ek ben ur; were being made this afternoon | we reached the apartments | SATURDAY, P DOES NOTFOLLOW THE CONSTITUTION Decision of Judee M. M. Estee at Honolulu. YL A 'Refuses to Release a Pris- oner on & Technicality 0f Legal Procedure. DIVER | | | i | | | | 1 | | i NI OPINION RESDERED. U; ’S(é\'fi Cut His A P erm ellant Dicid Than Appeal to the Supreme Court. HONOI Distrfet decieion (o the effect that tlon does not foliow ! late Weekly Volcano, will prob to se hard labor. have Marshall was s tor ‘eriminal thel on account of p wtions he made about the late Chier Justuce Judd. He | made an appeal to the Supreme Court of | Hawali on technical grounds, alleging methods pursued auring hie trial tnac ! Wwere not in_accordunce WILD Anlerican procedure. ‘1he lower couri was sustained 4ud Marshalt turned with a wrii of haoeas corpus 1o Judge Estee. Judge Estee heid that the laws of He wail allowing conviction of defendants upon & Verdicy by mmne jurors were stii ia force at the time of Marsnall's trial, which was long after the passage of the resolu- tion’ anvexing Hawali to the Union. Judge sald that Hawaii before being an- nexed “was a free, enlightened state, pos essing all the attributes of sovereignty, and when with its consent the isiands were annexed by the United States sot only the lands but the people with thelr laws and customs were annexed; an the well established law of nations these {laws and customs remained in force until Lew laws were enacted for the govern- ment of the Territory.” Estee heid that the pecple of Hawaii were regarded by Congress as somewhat ver: ciplzs of self-government, so inuch so that Congress waited for nearly two yvears after actual annexation before providing a law for the government of the Terri- tory. Marshall's only recourse now is the Su- preme Court of the United States, but he 125 declded to serve out his sentence, and the editor is now one of a gang of striped convicts working on the public streets. The question of whether the constitution followed the flag to Hawail is one which many people would like to have decided by the Supreme Court of the United States. One of the Circuit Judges here, taking a view opposed to that of Judge d.by | d in the prin- | | Estee, has already released a prisoner who | was convicted of an infamous crime with- cut a Grand Jury indictment, but the Cir- cuit Judge to whom Marshall's appeal went held the other wa the release of one man and the confirma- tion of the sentence of another. though both appealed on exactiy the same points. Signcr Marconi has sent to Hawaii a new expért from London to investigate the cause of the failure of his system here.. The Hawallan Wireless Telegraphy Company cabled to London, stating that the system would not work, and one of the leading experts was at once started to Hawail. The distances over which it is necessary to send messages In connecting the islands are not as great as have been covered in Europe, and it is thought that the new expert will be able to make the system a success HFUL TORTURE 0F CHRISTINS Details of Murders of Mis- sionaries and Native | | Converts. | R [ | VICTORIA, B. €., Nov. 2—A number of letters from native Christians, written last August and September, describing the massacres in the Shansi province and translated by Mrs. Archibald Little, ap- pear in the Shanghal papers received to- day. One writer says the Governor of Shansi issued the following proclamation: “The foreign religion is detestable be- cause it despises the gods and harasses the people. The Boxers will burn the houses of all Christians and kill them." On July 16 Mr. and Mrs. McConnell, with their little girl, Miss King and Miss Bur- ton, together with Mr. and Mrs. Young, came from Kikichow. On arriving at Si- kiao they were surrounded and on July 16 were decoyed to the banks of the Yellow River and killed. On July 24 the mission premises were burned and the next day the Pinglang ladles’ home was burned. The Chinese took Mr. Peng and killed him and burned five houses of the Christians, uging vio- lence to make four men worship their idols. The Christians sought the protection of the local officers, who commanded them to recant The Boxers ordered them to draw lots before the idols, and if came upward they considered that they in_recanting, but if insincere | | | had been sincere downward they considered them and killed them. On the west side of the Fen River, near Pinglangfu, the people took Christian men and omen and with knives cut a cross on their foreheads, then tortured and killed them. On August 22, the writer gays: “The hiding_place of Dr. McKay has been found. Some local rebels, pretend- ing to be Boxers, captured him and are holding him for a ransom. August 7 the Governors of Yushien, of Shansl, ordered the people in every town and vi ractice the Boxer arts, and now racticing. The persecution of native “hristians in Shansi are indescribable. All the homes of the Christians and in- quirers in the country about the city have been destroyed. The wives and daughters of the Christians have been shamefuliy treated and tortured. “No s!egn have been taken to punish the Taotai who handed over for slaughter the ons and their children, the Wards and their children, Miss Mancheuter and Miss Desmond; and now he holds in Krlson the evangelist who saw Dr. Ward illed, lest he should give evidence against him. That official is forcing the unhap- py man to write false letters, distorting the facts of the massacre.” Bishop Favier, who reached the coast after his successful defense of the Peitong cathedral, estimates that 200 native Chris- gnnl were killed in the reking division one. There are fears of a famine In Tientsin province and the Viceroys - rl.lchsd delegates to the Consuls, propos- ng the formation of a_relief committe and have offered for distribution 50,000 bags and 75,000 piculs of rice. The Chi- nese refuse fo give the rice up to the mil. itary committee. The Consuls do not fall in with the proposal, but issued a procla- matlon saying that all would be fed. SE—— | et o T rovam or uda ot The result is | present city. | NOVEMBER 3, 1900. WILLIAM L. STRONG GOES TO HIS ETERNAL REST Was the Last Mayor of New York City Before Its Consolidation With Brooklyn. THE LATE WILLIAM L. STRONG, NOTED INDEPENDENT POLITICAL LEADER OF NEW YORK, THE LAST MAYOR OF THE OLD CITY AND A FOE OF TAMMANY. +* EW YORK, Nov. 2—William L. tendance from the beginning of his {llness. Strong, the last Mavor of the | About an hour after he had gone to bed | Mgr. | in the | Delloleo ELEVATION OF FOUR PRELATES Important Announcement to Churchmen Comes From Rome. PO St Cardinals’ Hats Await Mgrs. Dola Volpe, Tripepi, Generi and Del- loleo, Who Now Hold High Offices. —_——— under- WASHINGTON, Nov. stood that at the next consistory held in Rome, probably this month, Mg Dola Volpe, Maggior Domo of the V. can at Rome: Mgr. Tripepi, Assista retary of State of the Church at . Generi, Assessor of the Holy Offic d Mgr. Delloleo, an rthern Italy, will be ‘Washingtor Mgr. Dec the your presen bent of th fices in the church has the disciplinary n others. stroyed. o-day ‘Warehous e De PARIS. Nov = Fire O it of Now <ud- | he awoke and told one of the nurses that | " ldenca | he was very weak. He asked to have his denly at 3 a. m. at his res! s wife and, son, Major Putnam Bradlee | in this city. Mr. Strong had not | Strong, called. They soon came to the | When Mr. Strong saw his wife he | is arm about her and said: “I am y weak, I am very, very weak.” { Mr. Strong grew a little better, and as | condition did not seem alarming the R ician wa t sent for. His daughter, | Mrs. Shattuck, and her husband were | called, however. A little befere 3 o'clock | | Mr. Strong seemed to have a decided | change for the worse and his physiclan | was hastily summoned, but he did not ar- rive urtil after the patient’s death At a mass meeting in_Madison-square Garden in 184 a non-partisan committes of seventy was appointed to organize the | opposition to Tammany Hall, to frame a | platform and select candidates for office, and it was this committes that selected Mr. Strong to run for Mayor on the re- form platform. His opponent was Hugh J. Grant and the contest was a bitter one. The outcome the election of Mr. Strong by a plurality of 47,1%7. The administration of Mr. Strong was |an eventful one. Mr. Strong was avow- edly independent in his views in city pol ti In the municipal campaign of 1897, | | which resulted in the return of Tammany | to power, he took the stump for Seth Low | | as against General Benjamin F. Tracey, | ‘At the time of his death Mr. Strong was | the regular Republican ecandidate. After & member of a number of societies, in- | this election he virtually retired from ac- cluding the Ohio Society. American Fine | tive polities, due to failing health. Arts Soclety, American Museum of Natu- It was announced at the residence to- ral History, Metropolitan Museum Asso- | night that the funeral arrangements had | clation and American Geographical Soci- | not been completed, but would be made Sy, | public to-morrow. Mr. Strong had been in poor health for | Cornelius N. Bliss, chalrman of the ex- about six weeks. He ate supper as usual | ecutlive committee of the American Pro- last night and did not complain of any |tective Tariff League, to-night announced pain or weakness at that time. At about | that a committee representing the league 11 o'clock he retired to his bedroom, as- | would be present at the funeral services sisted by two nurses who had been in at- | of the late ex-Mayor. been at his place cf business for several | room d:vr;. but no ‘one suspected that his condl- put h tion was alarming. Mr. Strong took an active part in the | present campaign, and it is ~a‘(d that his political labors, combined with his at- tempts to retain supervision over his busi- ness affairs in the face of impaired health, brought about the illness that resulted in his death. William L. Strong was born in Ohio In 1827 and came to New York when a young man. He found employment with different firms until January 1, 1870, when he or- ganized the firm of William L. Strong & Co. The firm soon grew to be one of the prominent business houses in the city. He 2lso interested nimself in banking mat- ters and was president of the Central Na- tional Bank. Mr. Strong was one of the leaders of the reform movement in this | city and was elected Mayor on the Repub- lican-Citizens’ Uniocn ticket in 18%4. He s the last Mayor of the old city of New York before consolidation with Brooklyn and the other boroughs composing the | tin GOULD WILL PAY CASTELLANE'S DEBTS Richard Cachard WA;‘:pointzd Counsel for Countess at Her Own on the most affectionate terms with other and it was the Countess her- | elf who took the initiative in seeking | counsell judiciare.” | All_debts will be pald immediately by | | the Gould estate, with the exception of a | |tew claims from antiquity and bric-a-brac Request. | dealers which are deemed absolutely ex- NEW YORK. Nov. 2.—Resnecting the | OThitant. Castellanes’ financial affairs, Richard | : I | Cachard, counsel for the Countess de Will Witness the Parade. Castellane, is qupted in a Paris dispatch | CHICAGO, Nov —The Republicar | to the Tribune as saying that a mutual [ National = Executive Committee, com- agreement was arrived at last July In ;vlnsvdh ot 8 toe f}((flnna, ’S\:cr!!ar‘_\' s by T Castellane fam- | Heath, Commissioner Kerens of Missouri, Sl ks s i e G. A. Stewart of Iliinois and Assistas flies In a purely amicable way to obtain a judicial council for Madame Castellane and this is the first instance on record of Treasurer Foster, will accompany Vice Chalrman Payne to Milwaukee to-morrow eigner being appointed in such a | to view the Republican parade in that 25]!&5(\"!)\' a French court. city Saturday night. There will be no Count and Countess de Castellane con- speech-making. ADVERTISEMENTS. DRINK HABIT CURED Mrs. May Hawkins Will Help Every Woman Save a Drunkard. A Trial Packag e of Her Marvelous Home Treatm FRBE for the Asking. - Any true woman might well be proud to have | cohol upon a husband, father or son. With saved one poor soul from the shackles of drink, ':htllniltmre of others she perfected the orig- treatment and now offers t. but Mrs, Hawkins has redeemed thousands by | !7a! o send this her nobl and practical work among those who by free to any distressed wite, mother have been victims of intemperance. Mrs. Haw- ":l z:a;' Ol‘"th write for it. Mrs, Hawking' Kins for years suffered the grief and anguish | & re is thaj every woman who needs shared by so many trus and faithful women \;'e"" ":'Mlfllu will write at once to her and Mra. Hawkina treasure mionlals received from !h.nn’l‘lm“r:l.m:: ";:; holds each grateful letter sacred, but the fol. luwing are published (by the request of the writers) in the hope that they may be the means of hastening others to writ, the treatment: bl Grand Ra, You ‘have been bringing sunshine into my home. 1 got your reme husband, Dids, Mich.—My the means of what your remedy has done for me and it as a helper to any e AR who shall need it "Yours sincircint®r O Wife East Hampton, M MRS. H. A. LANE. I am very Mybntar Friend: you brought happiness to our h band has never drank a drop of beran taking vour treatment. His Appoiis fio k has entirely left him and he says he wil} ich a dro) I thank God for ':hT:un i drinking he is altoget pleased to say lome. My hus- her a Dear Mrs. Hawkins: turn thanks to you for t of Amerlea to-day who have drink-affiicted |1t was through your futhers, husbands or sons, and seeing nothing but a lifetime of misery for herself it some- thing was not done, she determined to over- ccme this fearful evil If possible. Her search for a harmless, perfect and secret home cure was at last rewarded when an old friend came to her and gave her a remedy which had never been known to fail. Mrs. Hawkins gave the remedy seerotly and In a few weeks, to her great joy. her dearest relative was entirely cured of his appetite for drink and was again pupers that I first heard and God will hlu“ Paterson, N. J, Many other letters simil; be given, b have saved their homes remedy and you can be i3 rth. orth dof 'S you. Your friend, M. ANDERSON. ar to the above might I suffice. = Th and loved ones by this restored to health and manhood. You only wish it Ty e wumber f After this wonderful result Mrs, Hawkina de- | letter she recely, “-'.‘m’}'fiy' g e cided to devote her life to the work of helping her sisters everywhere whom she found suffer- iug as she had suffered from the effects of al- ou heed h Ber. for aasircanees™ itaney whatever in writin, Do not delay. Wrice het ‘Grand Rapide, iieh. l Mothers, bring the children to the new shoe store to-day—it's children's day, and we made shoe prices particularly at- tractive. We want you to become bet- ter acquainted with this big. roomy, convenient store, 8o we offer bargains that must appeal to all careful buying mothe: Chila Lace Shoe, kid, spring heel, rawhide tip for better wear—aizes 8 to 8. $1.20 - S5 Children's Dress Shoe, lace, kid. | cather tip, extension 1n heel—aizes §'3 to oo 843 4 size, 11% to 3....$1.70 { Our Iron-Clad School Shoes for boys and _ youths — strong, ‘ hoe, but natty pleasing—sizes steady, durable god Size 23 10 b... LIPPITT & FISHER R { Up-to-date Shoes of Quality, \ 945 MARKET ST., S. F., Cal, VOTE FOR Senate Constitutional AmendmentNo.i5 THE SEVENTH AM MENT ON THE TICKET—PROWIDING FOR THE PAYMENT OF TEACHERS SALAR- IES AND OBLIGATIONS DUE TO Merchants of San Francisco v S KIDNEY & LIVER BITTERS A PLEASANT NOT LAXATIVE INTOXICATING PALACE AND GRAND HOTELS evidence of the popularity of :nfi: h:‘,',f, be found In the continued se who on some previous made them their head- Y visiting San Franciseo. od by a covered passageway and e management oa the pean plan. quazters COoned 17 * oo cperated under o Ameriean and Eur NOTICE ! eeting of the Board of Directors of the Pacific Coast Jockey Club, held on the 24th {nst.. 1t was unanimously-fesolved ‘that on and after the 15th day of November next a fee of Twe dollars (82.00) per month shall be charged for each box-stall used at the Ingleside Race Track, the proceeds to be used for the main- fenance of the race track. F. H. GREEN, Secretary CHICHESTER'S Ei NY Dr. Bennett's Elncfrie anlt?' Makes weak men and women strong and strong en and women st . Rcoma 5 and §, & Post st., San Francisco, Cal b

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