The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 14, 1901, Page 10

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10 T HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1901 10 oo THD SAN FEANUINGE WARIC UODDRT INBGARE 36 . - NEW FEDERATION OF LABOR UNIONS Water Front Organizations All Unite to Advance Their Interesis. CLEVER PEOPLE IN ABSURD FARCE AT THE ALHAMBRA “A Stranger in a Strange City” a Queer Patchwork. Last Week of “Nell Gwynne” at Alcazar. Committee of Nine Appointed to Draft | Constitution and By-Laws for Government of the Association. | a and import- | the water | the Rep- labor or- | shipping | || ngthy together in yward s in- last XD ACT OF “A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND,” WHERE THE DETECTIVE, PLAYING IN FOR A THRASHING AT THE HANDS OF HIS SUPPOSED MASTER, THE AMERICAN t of clever folk up Theater this arce which might ver but ger in a Stran Sidney ind of ¢ fety. W fast Hoyvt Land Wil m and The nenr a kind in the the D e Willie Colli chief Ivks (William Meet and Raise Prices Twenty- Five Per Cer heiping forward with his_sister, that his heathen. ho s al- ing as a nd of Thorndyke's, reasonable gins. An entirely . a disguised de- nd the plausibilities ersonate promise 1's suit hed to the breaking point. The ~ any clal brightness, but : plenty 1ghs coming, and bsurdly funny. = : the | =™ that Josepn | pany and Billy Link are the other head- s B < nd has the | liners of the week. At the Olympia Querita Vincent, Mabel | ma h . o down to 3 fng Hudson, Ouhama and Annette George will | s ook Wt 7 3 a convincing quack | A Breezy Time.' now playing at the | entertain the week's audiences. t 5 dby T. E Z A r Coune | | GS BRUTALLY BEAT AGED MAN Richard Poicher Murder- ously Atlacked in Fion! of His Homse. @ & TH run on pub Shoe Repaire. < E. Perry; sec- easurer, J. D. De- 1. Thomas Beresford r < neil, L. Valan- —_————— ’ Union No. 24 Holds Meeting. | eral n g Bakers’ Union | > ay morning, embers being present f the Assoclated to work har- | Bakers Richard Potcher. an old man, living on | Sutter street, near Broderick. was brutal- | ly assaulted in front of his home late Sat- night by three men. Mr. Potcher been visiting friends in the next and after bidding them good-by, | he walked up Sutter street to his home. king out his latchkey he started to| open the door of his house, when he was | cuddenly attacked by three unknown men, | one of whom struck him en the head with urday had block, ling cards unless ssued by t € a union in Cali- | 5 blunt instrument, presumably a “black 1 = member would be re additional fee of $15 Jack e 2,07 |7 As he fell unconscious from the blow his | assailants repeatedly kicked him. One | the occupants of the house heard the | 0ld man fall and quickly opening the door | te saw the three ruffians leave their pros- | trate victim and hurry down the 'street. | Potcher was at once taken into his house | and as it was thought that he was fatally | union man -four hours witl The membe emselves not to purchase m. on week days or 11 cers were elected for President. Emil | injured the family physician was sent for. | jdent, George Stein; An examination revealed that he old man Paul Eichenberger: | bad sustained an ugly scalp wound in ad- Gition to being internally injured. | _ Special Policeman Joe Doyle, whose beat is on Sutter street, was immediately ap- prised of the brutal assault, and after | obtaining & meager description of the | men he instituted a scarch for them, but | without result. Yesterday he visited po- | lice headquarters and informed Captain | of Detectives Seymour of the ncl::urrefime.‘} The latter at once sent Detective Rey- Early Closing Cards Received. | oids to the home of the aged victim to v closing movement, by which | get a statement from him. Mr. Poteher, clerks have succeeded in induc- | Whose condition is considered serious, in- orekeepers to comply with the | formed the detective that he had left his ey nand o b6 o \tnenaa shortly before midnight and start- demand for the closing of all|.q for his home. He was just about to stores at § o'clock, has gained an addl- | enter, he declared, when he was attacked tional impetus by the reception in this | and brutally beaten. As the men made y of union store cards from the Retail | no attempt to take his valuables, Potcher George Saville; trea corresponding secr. agent, Marcel Wille, ng term. Henry Heller. Peter Lippert, Jack Bec] J. Petersen, J. Rutscl er, C. Nurmberger ani ,conn-s erks’ Association in Denver. The dis- | does not believe that the motive for the tribution of these cards will be taken in | gssault was robbery. hand by the local union in this city and slaced in the store windows of such st B Camtirmm o The raln o closing ot 5 SUICIDE o'clock in the evening. KIN No cards will be placed in windows of BY, DEINEING LYPOL storekeepers who have declined to accede 0 1o The ey closing movement. The clerks | John Cahalan, an Old Cigar Oan- have thirty committees at work agitating | vasser, Seeks Surceas: From their cause before trades unions and fra His Troubl ternal societies. By this and other meth- .. ods they expect to educate the public to| John Cahalan was found dead in -his purchase during the daytime. | room at 2% Kearny street about noon TR AT el T T | yesterday by the Chinese servant. He Hermann Sons Celebrate. | was stretched out on the floor and as The Sons of Hermann held their tentn | there was a suspicion that he had com- annual ball and banquet at Mission Turn | Mmitted suicide the Coroner’s office was no- Verein Hall on FEighteenth street last | tified. ¥ night. During the evening’s entertain-| ‘When Deputy Coroner Meehan arrived ment the presence of Grand President | UPon the scene he discovered an empty el bottle of lysol. a deadly. polson, on_the Omcar s e T, (% ihe | washstand and ‘the odor' from fhe dead P rramiey 16 extend o him & hesges | Mman's mouth Jed him (o believe that be e O shent W Hose of 1L, | had swallowed the poison. The body was | removed to the Morgue. club, ably assisted by a competent com- | Femoved to mittee who had the general arrangements ,O?Qgg,.r;g‘n‘_:m‘xjhu yu:;-log-.r 's'édr in n?nd_hdid P‘\rr\'lhlnx posflbl;l (o’ m::g ‘ 2oF d‘;r Rt "o Blmtlzry .'"eml 134 the tenth anniversary memorable in the - minds of those who were in attendance, | V25 & Teégular frequenter of Otersen’s sa- dcctor, and Frank Gorman is a good Eng- lish Lutler. Alice Wellington. the Ameri- can girl, is well taken by Norman, w much better than she sin 1d rson. Estelle Wilmot and Ot auo are all satisfying in their various Z . . The third and last week of the success- ful comedy, ““Nell ( ne.” will begin this evening at the A r Theater. It is also the last week of Fiorence Robert appearance -at the popular little until her regular season mer months. “Sweet Liia Convere ir Jow the leading ro “Nell Gwynne. . . . Cinderelia,” £ five wee vening at the ‘Tivoll popular “‘Fencing De Koven and Smith, will follow day spectacle ful r The Central Theatar offers a programme of varled attractiveness this week, from which embarrassment of riches it is a lttle difficult to choose the plece de re- sistance. Whether it be “The Two O phans,” with caloric effects by the new “steam heater,” or, as the advertisements would seem to indicate, “‘The New Steam Heater.” with dramatic effects by the orphan duet. Is not quite clear. Nor does it go without saying that the cessation of “Woman and Wine"—a performance quite independent of steam or any other heat- ers—is not chiefest matter for congratu- lation. But the patrons of the “Two Orphans’ are assured of warm feet while they weep this week and of & production cyual in all respects to the original Union Sqguare Theater version Yigo < The Orpheum has an original attraction this week in the first appearance here of Sam Lockhart's “Baby Elephants,” one of the most interesting animal shows on the boards. FEugene O'Rourke and com ALLEGED BOYCOTT 15 MOONSHINE Honolulu Merchants Wel- come Drummers From the Main Lend E. P. Strauss, a representative of a Chi- 1g0 dry goods firm, says the alleged boy- cott placed on American drummers in Honolulu Is a canard. Mr. Strauss ar- rived from the Hawallan capital on the steamship Mariposa and put up at the P'alace. He was the first American drum- mer to travel to Honolulu with 4 line of goods, and he reports that the conditions cxisting there as regards a frigid recep- tion to American business enterprises are greatly exaggerated if not wholly false. He declares that he was grceted cordially by every merchant with whom he came 11 contact and denles that he was in any way shut out by any house he ap- proached. On the contrary, he says that cverything which could be done to facili- tate his work and render his stay a pleas- ant one was done by the merchants of the city. In speaking of his experience as the ploneer of commercial -men from the mainland to:Honolulu Mr. ;Strauss sald that he had heard before he left of the difficulties he might have to face. “I was agreeably surprised,” said he, “to find that the Honolulu firms all ex- tended a warm welcome to me, as my or- der book will show. Of course there are some manufacturing concerns there which do not look with much favor upon an in- flux of States-made goods, but competi- tion and interchange are the life of trade and 1 do not anticipate continued oppo- sition.. The outlook there at present is very prnmlslnf, improvement in though I expect a great a very short time. My business and social relations with every .ane with whom I came in contact there were of the most cordial description, and 50 far as I could see there was no founda- tlon for the boycott stor: Y, which I con- sider one of whole cloth. MRS. CATHARINE McCARTY ANSWERS DREAD SUMMONS Mother of Mrs. W. S. Leake DiesSud- denly at the Advanced Age of 81 Years. Mrs. Catharine McCarty, relict of Dantel McCarty and mother of Mrs. W. 8. Leake and the late E. J. McCarty, died in Mill Valley yesterday morning. Mrs. McCarty had reached the advanced age of §1 years when she was seized with a_sudden fliness that terminated fatally. She was in full posdession of her mental faculties up to the last moment. rs. McCarty was born in Mallow. County Wicklow, Ireland. She resided in dacramento for a number of years and many friends in the Caoital City and throughout the State will mourn her de- mise. Her charitable deeds, always un- ostentatiously don#, brought comfort to many needy ones. The remains will be taken to Sacramento for burial. ———————— Mrs. Julia Carter Dead. Mrs. Julia Carter, mother of Dan Carter, The floor management devolved: upon | 1000 on Post street. and there it was Piue Gfell, who was assisted by P‘“"fifi‘;fl?&g:;;gfi R,“rdyb“"," sufferer from t is su Spelling. that in a fit of despondency he Mpm:: ! the poison. He was a widower and leaves Trepper's Ofl cures rheumatism and neuraigla. | a grown-up soit and daughter. An au- Druggiste, 50c fask, Richards & Co., 406 Clay. * | topsy will-be held. | residence, the well-known tobacconist, died at her 12056 Buchanan street, on Satur- day at the advanced age of 13 years, 6 months and 22 davs. The deceased was a native of New York. Funeral services and interment will take place at Oroville, Butte County. T California, is a vehicle constructed to give the members of the company an opportu- nity to exhibit themselves in their various | specialties, some of which are good and | good The action of the | around the troubles of a | Jack Dauber, who is pur- gued by sundry credite The part s | taken by Billy Williams. who is rather amateurish, and, in fact, his associates in | the farce meed professional brushing up, or else the farce needs retouching. Wil- | liams apparently pleased the gallery last night with his sand jig, while Adelaide La Farve received some apnlause for her ren- | dition of “Old Kentucky Home.” Dave Martin and Percy Owen played well on | | the trombone and saxophone, but Victor Casmore’s German comedy set | the world afire. The semi In number. sang and danc 3 and W. C. West played the old Vermonter, Reuben Merrifield, in a natural manner. Dorothy, Williams' does a Spanish dance ditably. The piece concludes with Cvery Race Has a Flag But the Coon,” which permits the members of the com- | pany to exhibit the flags of all nations. Next week Mrs. Minnie Maddern-Fiske | appear n “Becky Sharp,” which promises to be a notable engagement at | this house, S8 . Among new names st Fischer's concert house this week are Bdyke Leslle and | Farl and Hampton. Cro, Bernard and Cro, Marle D. Wood, Sid Baxter and Mlle, | Atlantis are among the hold-overs from | last week’s good bill. The Chutes announces another strong bill for this week. The new faces are | | John W. Whalen, late of Primrose & | Dockstadter's minstrels, and the God- | freys. aerial balancers. The hold-overs are Dave Barton, Ahern and Patrick, | Hanlon and Singer, Rose Lee Tyler, Hal Conlett and new comle moving pletures. HE FOLLOWS HiS WIFES EXAMPLE William Fitzgerald’s Suicide Prompted by Like Deed of Belter Half. FEESSA A Willlam Fitzgerald, who committed sui- | cide fn a Pacific-street saloon early yes- terday morning by swallowing a dose of | carbolic acid, made a similar attempt to | kill himself in Stockton last June. He was | conducting the “Palace of Illusions” at | the Stockton Street Fair, when he became | drunk and threatened to kill himself and the woman whom he then called his wife. Little attention was paid to his threat until the woman was seen running toward | the channel pursued by Fitzgerald. Af- | ter reaching the channel she hurled her- | self from a pler into the water and sank before assistance could reach her. Fitzgerald saw the woman drown, and, | presumably be¢oming remorse-stricken, | he purchased a phial of carbolic acid, de- termined to end his existence. Taking | un a position in front of the “Palace of Illusions,” he drew the cork from the | phial, after telling the astonished on- lookers that he was about to join his wife | in the other world. Before he had a chance to swallow the deadly poison a policeman, who been summoned, placed him under arrest. Fitzgerald fought viciously to free him- self from the officer’s grasp, and in the struggle he managed to swallow a small quantity of the poison. He was taken to the hospital and soon recovered. Mrs. Fitzgerald, the widow of the dead man, yesterday visited police headquarters and made a statement of her husband's death to Captain Seymour. She sald that when he entered the suloon where he took the fatal dose, he asked her to have a drink_with him. She refused, as she feared that he was bent on doing harm. She belleved that after the drink was served to him he secretly goured the acid into the beer and then drank the con- tents of the glass. Coroner Cole yesterday sent the stom- ach of the dead man to the chemist for -analysis. An autopsy falled to reveal any trace of poison. | { James A, Garfield Post Officers, James A. Garfield Post will hold a camp fire on Tuesday evening, the 15th inst., at its 'post 1oom in Alcazar building, on which occasion the new officers for the current year will welcome all comrades of the Grand Army of the Republic, whether resident of San Francisco or temporarily sojourning in the city. The old soldiers and sailors will be regaled with sand- wiches and the necessary liquid with which to wash them down. The following are the new officers: % Commander, A. E. Cohn; 8. V. C., L. F. Smith; J. V. C., Gustave ' Marck; adjutant, Frank Eiliott Myers; quartermaster, A. . Isaacs; chaplain, J. F. Hilton; surgeon, John Duncan; officer of the day, H. P. Clapp; offi- cer of the guard, John Brockman; sergeant major, Frank A. Kelly; quartremaster ser- geant, Sol Cahen Big Timber Deal Pending. BUTTE, Mont., Jan. 13.—The Northern Pacific Railway Company has given the Amalgamated Copper Company an option of all its timber lands in Montana. Tt is e?g’:fi“:r? th?lt :dhen this de‘n,:"iu com- ra n v R e S R | When men are capable | chows that they | This is true also, JORDAY ERPLAINS BEAL EDUCATION Stanford’s President Speaks From the Pulpit to Vast Audience. American Colleges Produce Class of Men Far Superior to Those From European Seats of Learning. Sk An address on ‘‘Education” was deliv- ered last evening at the First Unitarian Church, Geary and Franklin streets, by Professor David Starr Jordan of Stan- ford University, the address being one of the serles to be delivered on the subject of “The Future of Our City and State.” The vast edifice was crowded to the doors and the representative congrega- | tion listened to the words of the academic teacher with profound interest. At the close of the regular service, con- ducted by the Rev. Bradford Leavitt, the speaker of the evening was introduced by the pastor. Professor Jordan, in opening his address, dwelt upon the manner of university edu- cation as it existed in England thirty years ago. At that time, Latin, Greek and mathematics were thought to be the essentials of a university training and when Spencer wrote a learned essay on the true worth of education it startled the schoolmen of the day, for there were but few teachers. The ideas of Spencer set men {o thinking, and from that time beneficial changes had been effect- "he English universities were gov- erned by tradition, and There was a certain distingtion about a woman who was “well dressed,” though her apparel might not be costly, the speaker sa So it was with a_man who had secured the title of A. B. in England. It gave him a defined standing. Men studied certain things at Oxford and Cambridge because it was a tradition to do so. It was once said that there were two classes at the English universities; the men and the scholars. The men were not scholars and. the scholars were not men. Huxley and Tyndall were self-made men, for they were not graduates of the colleges of England. Self-made men might achleve greater things if they had the advantages of college education, and English literature and science had suf- fered on account of the class distinction ghut(lng out men who afterward had won ame. Professor Jordan then explained the es- say of Spencer in which the writer defined the branches of valuable education and took up each of the Spencerian heads separately. In continuing, Professor Jordan sald: Spencer says that college education has a value in life. Some knowledge has value and scme has not, while some information has no value whatever. People spend too much of their time in securing definitions. To memor- 70 the results of investigation is not worth as ch as making an investigation for yourself. pencer speaks of five lines of educational Value In life. The first is the sclentific knowl- eage dealing with success in life. A success ful life means an abundant life, and no life can be successful without an abundance of Fealth and morality. A sound body means a scund life; unsound morals mean an unsound bedy. The human body is a mere machine, therefore the study of physiology is valuable. Te learn the mere structural parts of the hu- man machinery is not enough; we must learn kow to run the machine, For instance, you may study the nervous system, but Knowledge will teach you how beneficial temperance Is for that system. There ik no such thing as vice, for vice is but the effort to get happiness without earning it. The second and third lines laid down by Spencer are those of education. This will teach one his relative part in the world. Every man should know a skilled trade, for there are hard times ahead for the unskilled man. Andrew Carnegle once told me that he owed his suc- cess in business to the fact that he secured the services of the most skillful chemists, who en- abled him to manufacture steel on’scientific principles. Education means everything. and to have a uni- | versity training was a class distinction. | al- | i | i | ADVERTISEMENTS. BLANKETS, COMFORTERS, PORTIERES, URTAINS. As we find we are largely overstocked in the abeve Four Departments, we will, commencing MONDAY, January 14th, and continuing for two weeks, offer large quantities of above goods at SPECIAL LOW PRICES. FIVE SPECIMEN VALUES. 7 Cases FINE WHITE CALIFORNIA BLANKETS, full size and extra welght, Reduced to $4.00 Pair. 9 Cases PRINTED SNOWFLAKE COMFORTERS, extra size and very handsome designs. Reducei to $!.25 Each. 225 Pairs NEW TAPESTRY PORTIERES, with heavy fringes, full length and width. Reduced to $2.75 Pair. 300‘Palrs WHITE AND ECRU LACE CURTAINS, in Fish- net, Saxony and Madras Net. Reduced to $2.00 Pair. 45 EIDERDOWN COMFORTERS, full sizes, with hand- some French Printed Sateen Covering. Reduced to $4.50 Each. HOUSEKEEPERS SHOULD SEE THESE GOODS WITHOUT DELAY. Olermaoy; m, u3, us, 17, n9, AT 121 POST STREET, the most Important thing to do is to educate | the children. Fit them for their work in life. How glorious it would be if the present genera- tion would quit politics and money making and | | devote itself to the education of the children. The world would jump one hundred. aye one thousand years ahead. We would be rid of the saloons, vice and crime. Khe fourth cate- gory of Spéncer's essay is that of man's rela- tion to soclety. Social and political duties are most important ones and should never be neg- lected. Democracy Is an educational growth, and self-thinking it have advanced in education. It has been said that the mob makes the king. for if no mob existed it would not need a king. 1 come now to the fifth category of Spencer, which consists of the joys of life. These joys are art, poetry, music, literature and love of nature. These are the bright flowers on the tree of education. There are many means of securing a higher education and enjoying the beauties of this fifth category. Education con- sists of real knowledge of ourselves and the real knowledge of things in nature. A great deal of good is accomplished in spending a few years at the universities, but to simply learn Latin and Greek is not real education. ~Thirty years ago, the colleges of America were as narrow as those of England were. They did not teach real knowledge. In the last twenty years, however, a great change has taken place. Colleges of agriculture and mechanical arts sprung up all over the country and one of the greatest advantages enjoyed by Cali- fornia is due to the joining of the State Uni- Versity and the mechanical college. Each class of students and teachers has been benefited. ‘As Aggasiz once eald, “‘A thorough education consists in the thorough knowledge of some- thing.' This thorough knowledge of some- {hing forms the backbone of real education. The value of teaching was of vital importance. Emerson said, It all lles with whom your teacher is."’ It Is far better to study one thing with a good professor than to study many things with a poor one. A good teacher is bound to leave his mark. That is why univer- sitles are always eager to gather ~together great teachers. President Eliot of Harvard Baa done more for education in this respect than any other man in America. His aim has always been to make college men and not col- lege students. He believed In the work of constructive individualism. In England the aim of the universities is to make men ‘‘gen- tlemen,”” well bred in every respect. Germany's ideas are to do the work of the college in a thorough manner, leaving the well breeding out of the question. I have known professors in Germany who have had the manners of bears. The colleges In America are doing the work done in English and German universities; they are producing gentlemen, scholars and men of force. In the old days, the colleges only ad- mitted a certain class of men, there was but one door and it was a narrow one. To-day in ‘America we have many doors to our colleges and they are of wide dimensfons. They let in all men who want to study all kinds of things. Our colleges are brave, broad and free. In closing his masterly address, Pro- fessor Jordan explained the workings in the German universities of “lehrfreiheit” and “lernfreiheit””; the freedom of the stu. dent to select any class of study he de- sired and the e?ul.\ liberty of the profes- Sor to teach without being bound down by any set of rules or authorities. “This,” said Professor Jordan, of every American college to-day. WORK OF THE UNIVERSAL \ BROTHERHOOD REVIEWED Members Will Give an Entertain- ment to Raise Funds for ‘Humanitarian Work. The members of the local lodge of the Universal Brotherhood were addressed last night at the Academy of Sciences Hall by Dr. Jerome A. Anderson, Dr. Al- len Griffiths, A. D. Robinson and H. 8. Cahn, The work of the century just closed was reviewed by Dr. Anderson, who said that the chief victory was had in the everthrow of materialism and the substi- tuti>n of a rational conception of the hu- man seul . A. D. Robinson reviewed the work of the soclety for the past twenty-five years and éwelt at length on_the help extended the sufferers from the Indian famine and the Cuban war. The other speakers out- lined the future of the orgnnlzntlnh and the infiuence for good which it is exerting upon humanity. The society will give an entertainment to-night, the proceeds of which will be devoted to humanitarian work, e Sunday at Pleasure Places. The condition of the weather kept the small crowds that gathered at the park and beach yesterday on the move. No ac- cidents or incidents worthy of - special mention occurred during the day. An un- usually good bill was enjoyed by a large audience at the Chutes and notwithstand- ing the cold weather the Chutes and scenic rallway were well vpatropizad. true SAVING SALE 00°S SPECIAL SAVING SALE | GOLDBERG, BOWEN & C0'S SPECIAL | s sttt e Catalogue free for the asking 432 Pine 332 Sutter 2800 California San Francisce 3075 Clsy betwesn Eleventh and T akland RENOWNED IRAN COLLECTION 0Ot New York Consolidated Company’s On Saturday evenings the Pine street store closes at 6:30—our Sutter sueet store remains open as usual until 9 p m = (ORIENTAL Monday Tuesday Wednesday | B ut t er AT PEREMPTORY Fresh creamery— | ] f ggs | MONDAY, JANUARY 14, nx,]yn;;: g TR 30C AND DAILY AT 11 A. M. AND 2 P. M. Maearoni 1308 SUTTER ST., ~car Grant ave Imported—La Favorita— 1 —Most Heautiful Rugs Ever Seen— reg’ly 15¢ 1b I2,C |wiuw e soLp ovT wrtHOUT RESERVE. Castile soap FRANK W. BUTTERFIEID, Ansoneer French—Eydoux— fz'(v)w]c : 125° 'Broken 1ve 01 Sublime Lucca— - Eyeglass reg’ly 55¢ quart 50¢ 5 mmwbu:-o T for 31.00 Oysters “g_fi;..m.um . e i Oculis Iiptions filled. R T = 5 G | G . T o Asparagus W%fl&o Our Choice PHIC APPARAT s Bouldin Island—reg’ly 25¢ can 20C OPTICIANS Fpy groger SCENTIFIC € ac aa 642 MarkeT St. Instauments Vait Hoden—18 4 UNDER CHRONGLE BurONG. CATALOGUE FRET K S IS reg’ly gsc Ib 8 ocC Whisky ‘Wm Penn—Duffy— reg’ly $1 and 8sc Rock _and Pure—for colds— reg'ly $1 25 bottle Pim-olas Olives with peppers— reg’ly 2oc bottle—baby 3 for SOC Ginger ale Belfast—Cochrane & Co $‘ 3 5 reg’ly $1 50 doz p aper LASHS BITTERS A PLEASANT LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATING TBIS WE‘A.L-KN'DWT:H(D RL{A BLE 0:.]) Speciall 3 hasa, Gl [ oo gl:m:mm)dr‘lmn.(ionorr aBa, Gleet, allied Disorde: 75¢ rye $1 minal Weakness, Impotence and thele rs. Book on Diseases of Men, free. Over20years'experience. Termsreasonabie. Hours, 9t03dally:6:30t08. M ev gs. Sundays. 10t 12, Consule eandsacred!y confidential..Call or P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D. 26! Kearny St.. San Francisce, Osl IERCE'S FAVORITE Toilet reg’ly $1 50 doz $1 10 Bur dilute one-third—reg’ly $1 gal 6 SC Cologne Belvedere— undy Very rich flavor— Johann Maria— i S J Raisins FOR WEAK WOMEN. Imported Malaga 4 Cr 0 ; o . CROSS SPEGIFIC MIXTUR! Clusters—small mnon—-s c JOC nen the c-n“nt‘ logrmm&lou GL];E‘E&, T STRICTURES and anal gous complaints of the 3 5C | Omgans ot Gerieration. Price 31 a bottle. For sale by druggists.

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