The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 22, 1901, Page 15

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1901. 15 JOY IN THOUGHT | BEARS SORROW OF MEXICO FREE| WITH FORTITUDE Patriotism Exhibited by Children of South- ern Republic. Day of Nation’s Independence Celebrated With En- thusiasm. ——e Liberty-loving sons and daughters of sister republics united last night in cele- brating the ninety-first anniversary of the independence of Mexico. Odd Fellows' Hall, where the official celebration under the auspices of the Mexican Patriotic As- soclation was held, was radiant in the col- ors bf Mexico. It was crowded to the doors with an audience that rapturously applauded the utterances of the orators, who dealt mainly upon the intimate re- lati between Mexico which have developed in recent years. . Out of respect to the death of President | M nley the exercises had been post- poned for a week, but they lost nothing in fervor or enthusiasm. When the curtain rose it Gisclosed a circle of the prettiest senioritas the Mexican colony could pro- duce. In the center was the honorary president, Hon. A. K. Coney, Consul Gen- eral of Mexico, flanked by Dr. D. Trevino, the United States and | Mrs. McKinley's Condi- tion Is Satisfactory to Physicians. Her Desire for Driving Indi- cates That She Is Improving. ey CANTON, Sept. 21.—Mrs. McKinley was one of the’first in her North Market street house to arise to-day. She sald she had enjoved a good sleep and that she felt better than at any time since the fateful night in Buffalo when her husband was shot. To Dr. Rixey she expressed a wish | to take another drive to-day. “Mrs. McKinley is improving rapidly,” sald the doctor. *‘This matter of driving | out is a solution of the problem, I think. | She needs little or no medicine, but ex- | ercise and good healthy mental occupa- { tion will work a great change. I feel a high degree of confildence in her ultimate recovery, and am almost certain that the | areaded collapse will not come. “Mrs. McKinley's grief is intense. She is doing as well as could be expected, how- ever. Too much encouragement should not be taken at this early day regarding her.” - president; Gustavo Levy, vice president: A. de la Torre, secretary, and Hon. Sam- uel M. Shortridge, the crator. The declaration of independence was read by A. de la Torre, who prefaced his reading by 2 brief sketch of the causes leading up to its promulgation by Hidal- g0, whom he termed the Washington of co. Seventeen misses, including Zell Elvina Meganon, two years old. were seen in a number of fanc followed by Mrs. Guadaloupe M. en in a con- tralto solo. Glowing Tribute to Race. A glowing tribute to the Mexican race Samuel M. Shortridge, worthy of admira- t of heaven, as the pressed people to be ey mean denger and sacrifice, the agony of tears and te and ennoble ‘bscure heroes of mankind ion has her natal meets_resistance sword. Such a day nd walk under her rate. For the cry 16th of September, wae the cry of freedom ded to her appeal were mory of whose deeds of her preclous s_tribute a bless and 4 an oration in 1pon the fea- for existence OFFICER JOHN EKELLY | Mrs To all outward appearances the McKin- |ley home this morning is but_one of the | pretty comfortable homes of North Mar- ! ket street, Canton's most desirable resi- dence section. No guard surrounds the beautiful Jawn and no doorkeeper stands at the door to greet and hold in check | the steady stream of callers that was | wont to seek admission during the life | of the late President. | ‘There was no material change in the | condition of Mrs. McKinley during the | day. Those about her say that she is holding her own and that this is as much | as can be asked. To correct an impression | that has gone out in some quarters, Dr. | Rixey to-night authorizes this statement: | © “Mrs. McKinley is not being kept up on | opiates or other artificial ‘stimulation.” | 'Crowds continue to visit the church, the courthouse and the cemetery. The court- | house will be kept open Sunday to accom- | modate the people. FRIEND GIVES FIGURES ON McKINLEY INSURANCE | Total Amount Is Bixty-Seven Thou- sand Dollars, Placed in Several Companies, NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—In view of the exaggerated reports of the amount of in- surance policies on McKinley’s life an authoritative statement was made to-day by one of the late President's closest friends in New York City. He sald: “It fs not necessary to mention any | name, but all of McKinley's friends in | Washington will understand who is speak- |ing. The exact amount of McKinley's | policies is $67,000, and not a penny more. | Of this amount $50,000 was carried by the New York Life urance Compas which John A. McCall is president, “The remaining $17,00 was carried by smaller companies. This statement is ab- solutely correct in every particular.” McCall for many years was a warm per- sonal friend of McKinley. It/was ascer- | tained to-day that it was McCall and Sen- ator Hanna who induced McKinley to in- crease his life insurance in the last few years. The President had many expenses during his life and he had not been able to save much. ance policies McKinley pblicies, the pe aggregated about $12,000. income from insurance ion of $5000 a year which | Congress will grant and the money saved DIES AT ST. MARY'Z. Was Formerly a Well-Known Ath- lete and Noted for His Superb ; Physique. | Police Officer John Kelly died last even- | i o . the cause of which he nad fr than a year. The Gc- | ars old at the ti had been on the pol being attached to der Captain record for himseif ral regret was ex- and superior offi- ed of his death. married and a 'hen he came to Irela The dece native of W youth he located in Sacr: he secured a position_with ty G B, Kicks a Police Officer. omew Caville, who was arrested ~ arge of assaulting Police Offi 1 Owens with murder- ous intent loon at Market and Brady streets brougit to the Recciv- ing Hospital st suffering fromn delirium _tremens. Officer John Ryan, who arrested him at 22 Colling- wood street, was badly kicked by Cav lle and had to be relieved from du ADVERTISEMENTS. Cured—3 2 Years o Awful Pile Agony. ALLS, S. D., Feb. 18, 1901 s I suffered constantly from protruding piles and finally had to aban- don my trade of stonemason. Four months ago 1 began using Pyramid Pile Cure, and before 1 had used up one s0c box ihe disease had entirely disappeared and there is no sign of its ever return- ing. 1 am completely 216 N. Minnesota Ave. gists, 50c a box. Book, Cure,” mailed free. Marshall, Mich. SIOU “For 32 Sold by all drug- fles, Causes and amid Drug Co., Rupture Cured. The celebrated Californis In- ventor, Dr. Pierce, discovered that the only remedy for Rup- ture is El , and in per-| fecting bis wonderful Electro- Magnetic Trussand estab- lishing its salethroughont " the world, he gave to suf- ferers from this 3 dangerous 8% 1malady the relief and se- rity vainly sought for o X appliauce is radically dif- others and its action on the e | VANCOUVER, B. C., cured. F. Capps, | by the President will be about $13,000 a vear. e Accused of Libel Against President. VENTURA, Sept. 21.—Morrison 1. Swift, who has lectured throughout the State on socialism, was arrested to-day at his Ojai ranch on a warrant issued on two com- plaints charging him with criminal libel against the dead President. The alleged libelous statements are contajned in a book published by Swift entitled “Liberty and Imperialism.” Swift was heid to answer in $5000 bonds. —— | Cardinal to Visit Mrs. McKinley. | LONDON, Sept. 21.—A dispatch to the Central News from Rome says the Pope has directed Cardinal Martinelli, papal delegate to the United States, in his name to pay a special visit of condolence to | Mrs. McKinley. His Holiness will also allow many Americans to be present at a special mass in the Pauline Chapel to- morrow. RAGE OF A DAWSON MOB. Anarchist Sympat?flzer Is Rescued by the Mounted Police. Sept. 21.—News was brought by the steamer Hating this evening that a citizen of Dawson, sup- | posed to be an anarchist, was given rough | usage at the hands of a small mob on Dawson's streets on Wednesday after- noon. The dispatch relating to the death | of Pr(—s!dientl McKinley had been received y ague Dawson is a Canadian town, but probably more than half of its population is American, and the grief of countrvmen on both sides of the boun- dary line at the loss of the great Presi- dert was intense. Everywhere was the feeling of regret and sorrow expressed. One man—a foreigner, whose name it was impossible to learn—was bold and foolish enough to say within the hearing | of people on the street that the assassina- | tlon should have been done long ago. | Two or three miners jumped at him and | dared him to repeat the remark. This he | doggedly did, and then for a moment he was lost in the scuffle. A couple of | mounted policemen ran up, and but for | their interference it would have fared ill | with him. | " Both Canadians and Americans were in- tensely angered. There was talk of a lynching by the big crowd which soon gathered, but the man was safely cared for by the police. -— LIBELS DEAD PRESIDENT. Yale Graduate a Prisoner in the Ventura County Jail. VENTURA, Sept. 2L.—Morrison I. Swift, an alleged anarchist, is in the County Jail charged with libel for having de- famed and blackened the memory of the late President McKinley. Swift is charged with having used in part the following | 1anguage: “1t has been our charge throughout that | this insatiable murderer at the White House never intended the American peo- ple to decide this question of expansioa, that he intended to saddle imperialism on to them and buckle it so fast before they felt its weight that though they bit and kicked and rolled later it would et come | off. When warsot McKinley brought this | wanton conflict upon us did he know the | horrors he was calling down on our brave men? | “If he did—we say it deliberately—he ought to be hanged. If he did not, he ought to be dressed out as a fool, and, with fool's cap on his head, carried uj and down the country to establish tradi- tion for those magistrates who would hereafter trippingly force this country into criminal wars.” It was a crowded courtroom which greeted Swift when he appeared with Con- stable Russell. His bonds were fixed at $10,000. City Clerk Newby and Contractor Giddings swore to the complaints. Swift ie well educated and a graduate of Yale, class of '89. The feeling against him is strong. He has resided in Ojai Valley four years. He came from Boston. Body From the Hudson Found. SAULT STE. MARIA, Mich., Sept. 2L— All doubt about the fate of the steamer Hudson was removed when the steamer J. B. Ford landed here to-day with the body of Sherman G. Brooks, one of the Hudson’s wheelmen, aboard. The body was picked up seventy-five miles from where the Hudson is supposed to have foundered last Monday, in the pilot house of the wrecked craft, which was floating bottom side up. - Up to 1897 his life insur-| the morning over the wire | RUNS FROM TAR ~ AND FEATHER Redlands Anarchist Es- capes Wrath of Citizens. Goes Into Hiding to Elude Crowd of Indignant Patriots. REDLANDS, Sept. 2L.—At the time of the assassination of President McKinley Granville Cox, a laborer, working for H. H. Garstin, one of the wealthy citizens of Redlands, made the remark, “I am glad of it.” And later said, “It's worth $100 to me.” Not much attention was paid to him at the time, but on Thursday aft- ernoon, when the people of Mentone, a small town three miles east of Redlands, returned from memorial ‘services held in the Congregational church in this city Cox asked several of the party, among did you A commit- " tears This enraged the residents. tee consisting of J. H. French, J. C. Christie, P. \W. Thompson, J. H. Tyler, H. Bartel, J. F. Collins and E. C! Morse, prominent in business circles, called upon Cox and requested him to make a retraction of the statements made by him or leave the community. He re- fused to do either and said that he would be at home in his cabin with three Win- chesters. ‘When the report of the committee was heard in Redlands by those interested a tar-and-feather project was arranged and last night a goodily crowd went to Men- tone to witness the ceremony. In the meantime Cox had fled and no trace of him has been found. Cox is a member of the Redlands So- clalist Club. Mr. Garstin, his employer, who is in Bear Valley, heard of his utterances and immediately’ telephoned his discharge. It is sald Cox had several friends in readi- ness, who claimed they would protect him lfrom bodily danger. | A Mentone carpenter named French came to blows with a Soclalist named Hamilton to-day because of the latter de- fending Cox. Hamilton was severely dealt with and came to Redlands for medical assistance. The ecitizens are greatly aroused. REVILES DUKE OF YORK. American Police Looking for Maun Accused of Treason. VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 21.—A man whose name is said to be Martin or Far- | rell is being sought by the police in this | city because he made a remark alleged to | be treasonable last Sunday evening dur- ing a public meeting. The orator of the evening was referring with regret to the assassination of President McKinley when this man shouted that the same thing should be done to the Duke of York. No |action was taken by those present at the time, but to-day instructions were issued to the detectives to apprehend the fellow. Revolution in Brazil. RIO JANEIRO, Sept. 21.—A revolution | has been declared in the southern part of | the State of Matto Grosso, near the fron- tier of Paraguay, against the government of the State. The rebels have occupied Bellavista, San Carlos and Taruma. The Government forces, assisted by the gun- | boat Caricoa, succeeded in expelling the | rebels from those points. A brother of | the Governor, who was pursued by the in- surgents and who succeeded in crossing | the frontier and entering Paraguay, ar- rived to-night in Asuncion. 1 WILL BE AN IMPORTANT FACTOR IN THE EPISCOPAL CONVENTION Bishop Doane of Albany, Who Represents the High Church Wing, Will Champion the Proposed Canon Regulating Divorce — \ RIGHT REV WM. CRESS\WELL— Soamt. NE of the most remarkable per- sons who will be seen at the com- ing geaeral convention of the Episcopal church is the Right Rev. William Cresswell Doane, D. D., LL.D., Bishop of Albany and leader of the high church wing of the church and champion of the extremest views re- garding the rights and prerogatives of the episcopate. Dr. Doane is chairman*of the house of =B LEADER OF HIGH CHURCH WING OF THE EPISCOPAL DENOMINA- TION AND CHAMPION OF EXTREMIST VIEWS REGARDING THE RIGHTS AND PREROGATIVES OF THE EPISCOPATE. =5 Bishops, and by virtue of that office and his ability as a controversialist wields a vast influence. He is known to favor the proposéd canon of marriage and di- vorce and. can be counted upon to favor its general adoption. No Bishop has pro- voked more argument by the advanced position he has always advocated on ec- clesiastical subjects. . Dr. Doane is the first of American Bish- ops to adopt the distinguishing costume of Anglican prelates. He has built a fine cathedral in his See city, and in addi- MAJOR PRESCOTT DEFENDS SLONT Will Be the Captain’ Counsel Before -the Court-Martial. Veteran of the Philippines ‘War Takes Up Cause of Old Comrade. —— Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 21.—Addi- tional interest attaches to the forthcom- ing court-martial of Captain O. P. Sloat of the Seventh Infantry, National Guard of California, because of the fact thut Major Prescott, who has just returned from two years’ service in the Philippines, will act as Sloat’s counsel before the mil~ itary tribunal. Major Prescott has been for years a close friend of Colonel Berry of the Seventh, who preferred the charges upon which Captain Sloat will be tried, but on behalf of an old comrade in arms he has decided to oppose his former com- mander. He has had much experience in the Philippines as provost judge and as a member of military courts and commis- sions, and is likely to put up a strong fight for the accused captain. The court-martial will open in Los An- geles on September 28. The charges em- brace twenty-nine specifications, are pre- ferred by Colonel John R. Berry in person and are elaborately and skillfully drawn. They relate entirely to the paper work of the service and involve no hint at moral lassitude or conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman. The judge advocate who will prosecute the case is Major Jones, a lawyer of Los Angeles, who is on General Last's staff. POACHER TAKES SHOT AT AUSTRIAN ARCHDUERE Bullet Passes Through the Sleeve of a Cousin of Francis Joseph. LONDON, Sept. 21.—A special dispatch received here to-day from Vienna says that Archduke Frederick, a cousin of Emperor Francis Joseph, was shot at by | a poacher at his country seat in Hungary yesterday. The bullet traversed the sleeve of the Archduke but did not injure him. MacArthur Going to Denver. MILWAUKEE, Sept. 21.—Major General MacArthur announced to-day that he would leave for Denver in about ten days to take command of the Department ot Colorado. Owing to the fact that a num- ber of generals will be retired within the next year, General MacArthur expects to be ordered to Chicago within the six months. @ i e @ tion his diocese .is well appointed in church schoools, hospitals, sisterhoods and other institutions of a churchly char- acter. Bishop Doane will arrive in this city on the “Bishops’ special,” which leaves Naw York on the 27th inst. and reaches this city the day before the convention meets. Word was received at Southern Pacific headquarters vesterday that a private car containing thirty-one delegates to the con- vention would leave Raleigh, N. C,, in a few days. . ‘Ambng-the deiegates will be Bishop Ar- thur H. Hall superior of the Cowley Fathers in Erg- land. J. Pierpont Morgan will also be in attendance. H2 will occupy the Crocker mansion during his stay here. Bishop Pot- ter of New York will be his guest. Special Offer. Cut this ad out and send us an order amounting to $5 and we will deliver it free to any railroad sta- tion within 100 miles. Special wholesale prices made in lots of six to twelve bottles of any medicine. Allcock’s Porous Plasters 15¢ Abbey’s Salts 20c, 4oc, 85c Acker’s Cough Remedy 20¢, 40c Allen’s Foot Ease - 20¢ Allen’s Hair Restorer $1.00 Angier’s Petroleum Emuyl- sion 40¢ Ayer’s Hair Vigor 75¢ { Aycrvs Sarsaparilla 75¢: Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral zoc Anita Cream 40¢ Bucklen’s Arnica Salve zo0c Bucklen’s Electric Bitters 4oc Bromo Seltzer 10c, 20¢, 40c Benson’s Capcine Plasters 2oc Boschee’s German Syrup 6sc Bovinine 85¢ Blue Grass Bourbon | Whiskey * $1.00 Borax Powder—pound 10¢ Box Seidlitz Powders 15¢ Bath Sponges 5c Beecham’s Pills 20¢ Carter’s Pills 15¢ Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy 40c Chamberlain’s Pain Balm 4oc Chamberlain’s Diarrhoea Remedy 40c Castoria 25¢ Cuticura Soap. 15¢ Cuticura Resolvent 40¢ Cuticura Salve 40c Carlsbad Sprudel Salts 8s5c Perry Davis’ Pain Killer 2oc De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve 40c Ely’s Cream Balm 40¢ Eskay’s Food 20¢ Epsom Salts—pound 10C Fellow’s Syrup of Hy- pophosphites $1.25 Green Mountain Asthma Cure 20¢ Green’s August Flower 635¢c Green’s Nervura 85¢ Glauber’s Salts—pound 10c Hall's Catarrh Cure 65¢ Hood’s Sarsaparilla 75¢ Hood’s Tooth Powder 20¢ Harrison’s 4-Day Hair Restorer 8¢ Hostetter’s Stomach Bit- ters 8sc Hay’s Hair Health 40c E /mahe b night, September 28th. i Yvette Face Powder 25¢ \‘," Regular 35c—save Toc ! Malvina Cream 30c We usually charge goc—others soc Hoyt's Cologne 15¢ "The regular 20c bottle Hunter Baltimore Rye $1 Sells everywhere for $1.50, quart bot. pint 30c \ W\ Pure Glycerine %y Regular price soc il P 5 ot Brosdwey & 10 Hamlin's Wizard Oil 40c Halpruner’s Pain Remover 40c Hoffman's Headache Cure 20¢ Hor;iord’s Acid Phosphate 40¢ Owl's cut price We prefer quick selling and large sales witl} b small profits to high prices and slow‘sellmg. That’s why we cut the prices of everything we sell, and 0 that's why you save here on every purchase. This list of special prices good until Saturday | 1 FBge ,“ The Owl Wanls 1000 Extra Mail Orders This Week. No matter where you live you can buy drugs, medicines, chemicals, toilet articles, soaps, etc., cheaper from The Owl Drug Co. than you can at home. We can sell you goods at lower prices than your local druggist pays for them. the original cut-rate druggisfs—we have three stores and sell to over 1,000,000 customers annually—we buy in carioad lots direct from manufacturers, pay spot cash, and sell so much we are satisfied with a very small profit. at Jower rates, but our goods are the very best you can buy—we guarantee everything we sell as the very freshest, most de- pendable and purest in quality. We will fill your prescriptions at cut rates. N s W S ig sale Open night and day. Strychnine oz. 75¢ "A 1-0z. bottle sells regularly for $1 Camelline 30c For the face—30c below regular price Granular Phosphate Soda 15¢ One Ib. tins—regular 25¢ Listerine Soap Good soap at small price Tuscan Olive Oil 35¢ The regular soc bottle v/ Java Face Powder 25¢ A splendid powder—regular 35¢ /7 .. Qaltland Hoff’s Malt Extract 25¢ Jayne's Pills 20¢ Jayne’s Tonic Vermifuge 30¢ Kilmer's Swamp-Root 4oc, 85¢ We are ‘We not only sell Special Prices. Prices printed inside the Owl pictures are special cut rates offered for one ‘week only. No orders filled at these prices after Saturday, Sept. 28th. But prices outside of picture prevail at all times. Listerine—large bottles 65¢ Liebig’s Extract of Beef 4o0c Lyon’s Tooth Powder 20¢ Lablache Face Powder 35¢ Laxative Bromo Quinine 20c Mellin's Food—large 35¢ Morse’s Pills 20¢ McLaine’s Pills 20c Malted Milk 40¢ Miles’ Nervine 85¢ Mexican Mustang Lini- ment 40¢ Merchant’s Gargling Qil 4oc McBurney’s K. and B Cure $1.00 Maltine Preparations 8s¢ Modene 8s5¢ Munyon's Remedies 20¢, 40c, 85¢ Ozomulsion 85¢. Our Native Herbs 85¢ Pierce’s s 20¢ Pierce’s Prescription 75¢ Pierce’s Discovery 75¢ Pierce’s Smart Weed 40¢ Peruna 8s¢c Pears’ Soap 15¢ Pinkham’s Pills 20¢ Pinkham’s Compound 75¢ Pozzoni's Face Powder 35¢ Packer's Tar Soap 20¢ Piso’s Cough Cure 20¢ Paine’s Celery Compound Radway’s Ready Relief 4oc Swift’s Specific 75¢ Skookum Root Hair Grower, 8s¢ Seven Sisters Hair Grower 40¢ Shilo’s Consumption Cure Syrup of Figs_ 35¢ Scott’'s Emulsion 40¢ Santal Midy 8s¢ Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets Stearn’s Headache Cure 20c Smith’s Dandruff Pomade 4oc Schenck’s Mandrake Pills 2o0c Sozodont 20c St. Jacob's Oil 40¢ Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient 4oc Trask’s Magnetic Oint- ment 20¢ Vin Mariani $r.00 Wyeth’s Vichy Salt 40¢ Wyeth’'s Malt Extract— 3 for 65¢ William’s Pink Pills 40¢ William's Shaving Sticks 2oc of Vermont, who was orce | ISMAR. DMAR S True Prophecy. A Prominent Soelety Woman Ad- mitted to Friends Predictions Which Came Too True. There was a social gathering the other evening, and among other topics Ismar was spoken of. Said one lady, who has a very large acquaintance and stands so- claily high, “Ismar, the Egyptian Gypsy, is a most remarkable womaz. I called on her some time ago, and she told me among many other things that on the 2d of September my house would be broken into and many valuables would be taken. I scarcely could give credence fo her statement, as I have always been some- what skeptical, and accordingly paid no attention to the warning. I am sorry now that I did not, for, true to this remark- able woman's prediction, on the 2d of September burglars obtained an entrance to our residence and got away after se- curing a large amount of valuables. It's strange, but it's the truth, nevertheless. If I had taken Ismar’s advice it would never have oecurred.” Several others re- lated how the Egyptian had correctly foretold some remarkable happenings ine cidental to their lives. The evidence of those who have called on this wonderful woman is of such a nature as to convince the meost skeptical that the past, present and future can be told. Don't let any foolish sentiment prevent you from finding out what the future holds in storeyfor you. Forewarned Is forearmed. Ismar can be consulted daily from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. at her office, 1148 Market street, two doors below W. & bin's, ‘opposite Sixth stree For the benefit of those who are unable to consult her during the week Ismar has consented to give readings on Sundays, from 10 to 12 a. m. AUCTION! Referee’s Hsfion Sale BY ORDER OF COURT. FINAL OFFERING OF Grooks' Estats Properties, Monday, Qctober 7, (301, 12 O'CLOCK NOON. At Salesrooms of G. H. UMBSEN & GO0, Nc. 14 Montgomery Street. Prominent Third-Strest Corner, 200 feet of Market Street. Largs frontages on Third, Stevenson and Jessie Streets. The largest available eorner left in this see- tion of the e.ty. Cffered inthree subdivisions— 1. North corner Third and Jessie sts., e on Third st., 83 ft. on Jessie st. Stores and offices; rents 35220 per annum. 2. Three-story and basement brick b and lot fronting 60 ft. on Stevenson s ft. east of Third st., and fronting 27 Jessie. 3. Three-story and basement brick building and lot fronting 60 ft. on Stevenson st, 117:8 ft. east on Third st. and fronting 47 ft. om Jesele st. WAnnual income from these last two pieces $000; can be separated and increased with small outlay. stock & Lu- Choiee Piece of Business Property. Nos. 910, 912 and 914 Kearny street, between Jackson and Pacific, _extending through to Moutgomery avenue; two frontages, 49:6 feet earny and 60 feet on Montgomery avenue; will pay well when properly improved. Brieck Building, Nos. 915-917-919 Dupont Street. Between Washington and Jackson; lot 47:8 feet by 137:6 feet: best location in Chinatcwn: present rental $155 per month. Nos. 832-834 Washington Street. Large, centrally located corner brick bulld- ing In Chinatown, northwest corner of Wash- ington street and Stouts alley, between Dupont a1d Stockton streets; 64:6 by 137:6 feet; rents $250 per month. Three Large Pieces of Property in Potrero Distriet. Coming manufacturing center of the city; described as follows: Almost entire block bounded by 18th and 15th, Wisconsin and Arkansas streets. Arkansas street frontage of 200 feet, from Arkansas to Wisconsin_streets. Nineteenth street, 8. W. corner of Wisconsin, 96:10 feet on 19th by 85 feet on Wisconsin st. See diagrams for further particulars, or the Referees. » J. T. HARMES, 626 Market St. 6. H. UMBSEN, (4 Montgomery St. P. J. SULLIVAN, Parrott Building. CALIFORNIA LIMITED “‘THE SUPERIOR OF THEM ALL" Everything that tends to speed, comfort, pleasure and luxury unlimited. 887.00 Buffalo and Return. October 3 and 4. Reserve berths for this famous train at 641 Market Street. IT LEAVES-EYERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, 9.00 A. M., ON THE SANTA FE Corner Fourth IM\ Market, S. F. Try our Special Bi Steam -and Lager. 5¢. Overcoats and valises checked free. U RO Weak Men and Women sHOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS. THE great Mexican I remedy; gives health and strength to sexual organs. Depot, 323 Market.

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