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14 THE SAN BURGLARS LOOT JEWELRY STORE Watches and Diamonds of Great Value Are | Stolen. ‘ Thieves Enter by Breaking Window and Escape i Undetected. { e broke into the jewelry store of street early g and made away with t of $2000. The ma: o Captain of Detectives of bis men were imm e ofte e exte the loot es fell e a E tering p thei ticed t d window. He immedi- € rs. Chris > ocen- stated. revious occa- tempted to force by prying open as they were marks of thelr RECKLESS DRIVERS RUN DOWN INVALID WOMAN | Miss A. B. Smith Is Badly Injured ile Seated on a Bench | the Park. { T nvalid resid! ceverely 2 bench in Golden morning. Miss the time when two | into the bench cated, throwing The occu- ove away the ecterday ng EEY ascertain aries. fed by a n when a convey eway with two When withir Smith ar orse Miss Sm irse, W was f t here 1sfon shaker After being moved to her responsible for police names s soon as and nothing em. The police now searching | e A R b THIEVES LODGED IN JAIL Eight Boys Are Booked for Burglarizing Store. n J from 10 10 t the City them were Berneheim at 1 robbed of goods ame out $150. Detective Coleman went to work on the case and arrested six 10 were K o be hardened criminals. They ; ph Crocker, aged 13, 1210 Larkin t; Daniel Flamm 1540 Polk ect; George Holmes 14242 Pa- enve, and Fred and Gustave Mul- 13, respectively, of 1: street When lodged in prison the youthful bur- fessed that they robbed the by forcing Entra window in the e were notified and suspicion 4 t0 a gang of small boys who e was » ear. was direct | | were known be thieves, John nd Thomas Collin , each IS f age, were also arrested. hey were mot concerned in Sunday | ght's burglary, but will be sent to pub. c institutions on their former bad rec. TR SRR Sustains Abrasion of Skull, | hael O'Connor, driver of engine No, hile driving to a fire at Seventh av and Clement street last night to by a car and thrown from his scat and suffered an abrasion of the skull, He was treated at the Central Emergency | | { | | | Alleged Doctor Placed | Chester F. Wright, 6 Geary st., upstair POLICE FORMALLY GHARGE CHAMLEY in Prison for Man- slaughter. J. M. Neven Claims Arrested Man Killed His Wife With Knife. { £. R. Chamiey, who claims to be a phy- siclan, was arrested last night by Detec- tive Balley and charged at the City Prison with manslaughter. Chamley is the alleged cancer specialist whom the Coroner’s jury held responsible for the death of Mrs. Katherine Ne of Wells, Nevada Mre. n, who was the wife of J. M Neven, an engineer on the Southern Pa- cific railway at Wells, was treating by mail with Chamley. The alleged specialist wanted a testimonial from Mrs. Neven, and she wrote back and told him she was still suffering with her right breast amley wrote her to come down to this | city and he would operate on her and| remove the cancer without using a knife. The unfortunate woman came here on February 5 and went to Chamley's offices at 25 Third eet. The operation was performed and while the patient was un- der the influence of an anesthetic the man used a knife so carelessly as to sever a ven large arte His medical knowledge was | so scant th: he did not know how to stop the hemorrhage. The patient was | left in bed in a room next to his off and next morning when the nurse called she was dead. Mrs. Neven's husband and her brother- in-law, J. H. Neven, also an engineer, came to the city and at once began an tr- vestigation as to the cause of t woman's deat . Although Mrs. Neven died on February | 6. it was the 9th before the body was brought to the Morgue. Chamley had | signed the death certificate, giving cancer as the direct cause of death When the dead woman's husband went to the Morgue 1 stated that he thought his wife's death was due to criminal ig- ance, the case was investigated and the body autopsied by Dr. Baclgalupi, who found d to have been due to a hem- orrhage of one of the large arteries of the right breast. The artery had been ut during the operation and the flow of blood was not stopped At the Coroner's inquest held on Feb- r 11 it was developed that Chamley did not even know the name of the sev- ered artery. All questions put by Corener Leland showed that the man was utterly devoid of any medical knowledge. The ¥ in the verdict stated that Chamley as gullty of malpractice and willful § norance, and recondmended to the Board of Health that his license be revoked for falsely cel & a death certifica husband and the brother-in-law sed stated last night that they | their best to send the fake Goc- | | w The de yuld tor to the State prison. They clahm he | directly responsible for the woman's | th, knowing nothing about surgery. | ¥y have already begun a clvil | azainst the defendant Phenomenal Champagne Record. The of G. H. Mumm & Co.’s this country dur- importations Extra Dry into ing 1902 were ovey one and one-half mil- lions of bottles, the next on the list be- ing 407,204 bottles behind. . —e—— IGNATIAN COUNCIL TO CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY | | Bishop Montgomery, a Charter Mem- | ber of the Order, Will Be Pres- ent at Banquet. Tgnatian Council No. 35, Young Men's Institute, will celebrate the sixteenth an- niversary with a banquet at the Califor- | | { | nia Hotel Thursday evening, Febru- | ary 19, Among the guests will be Bishop George Montgomery, who is a charter member of Ignatlan Council. A specially arranged musical programme | will be a fec ure of the entertainment, an everal prominent members of the « will respond to the various toasts id J. Mahoney has been chosen toast- master for the occasion. Lady friends of | the members will ttend the banque has been a great demand for tick- | cts for the anniversary banquet, which | it is expected will even eclipse many for- | mer brilllant affairs of the kind in con- 1 1 with the council. > newly elected officers who have the | gements in hand are: ecti Breslin, past president; James president; Matth *arroll, fir Ignatius D. Dwyer, second vice president in F. Linehan, treasurer; Wil liam J. Hamilton, financial tary; Charles L. Ebner, recording sceretary: Francis J. Mc- arthy, 1 ial; Dr. A. P. O'Brien, surgeon; Danicl J. McGloin, John T. Denohue and Rich ard D. Blake, executive committee. An old-fashioned toddy—either hot or’cold is a great drink if made of ‘Jesse Mocre Whisky. A little sugar, a little water, then the pure etuff—'Jesse Moore” Whisky. ——————— County Officers Will Meet. A conference of the Auditors, clerks or chief accountants of the cities of the State will be held at the rooms of the clerk of the Board of Supervisors of San Francisco, commencing Thursday morn- ing, February 19, at 10 o'clock, and con- tinuing during the following Royal Worcester Corsets, style 446, —_—— Music-Teachers Give Concert. The Music Teachers' Assoclation of Cali- fornia held its forty-third concert last evening, in Steinway Hall, 223 Sutter street. A large crowd was In attendance, { 2nd all highly enjoyed the entertaining | musical programme. s Piso’s Cure for Consumption is & pleasant and effectual remedy for coughs and colds. 25c. —_——— | WOMAN BRINGS SUIT FOR HEAVY DAMAGES Considers Alaska Man’s Breach of Promise Worth Many Thou- sands of Dollars. The news of a suit filed by Mary E. Lester against Joseph F. Burke on February 5, wherein plaintiff demanded $75,000 for breach of promise, has be- come public, despite efforts to keep 1t secret. It is alleged that Burke, who is con- nected with the Alaska Commercial Company, promised to marry the plain- tiff on December 15, 1900, Burke has filed an answer denying all charges brought by Mary E. Lester, and the matter will be fought out in the courts. The lawyers on both sides are very reticent and will make no state- ments until the case comes to trial. Mr. Burke, who is a married man, fs staying at the Langham. Mary E. Les- ter, the plaintiff, is said to reside in this city with her parents. —_———— Attempts to Kill Himself. Joe Goldberg, residing at 147 Russ street, attached a tube to his gas jet last night end came near being asphyxiated. He was taken to the Receiving Hospital, where the doctors worked over him. He is expected to recover, though bis con- dition is critical | are three—an { banking bus FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1908. KOLB, DILL AND BERNARD TEACH POKER PLAYING, ALSO BANKING Furnish Usual Fun in *“ Hoity Toity ’--Anna Held Con- tinues Her Success at the Columbia. * | i [ r || l I | L ZOLA YPEREI. OITY-TOITY! Iikewise gad- | zooks! and oh, gemini! that one | pea should be so like unto an- other one. Ten minutes after 11| o’clock last night found “Hoity " at the end of its second act—there with little new to its name and wonderful near- | holds the cast. | Toit: save the weird Beardsley programme tha Kolb, Dill and Bernard illuminate the | ness this time with the art of poker playing, instead of the political or legal games: Winfield Blake has a | white wig instead of a blonde, and Maude a la Anna Amber wears a new gown, Held; otherwise one wouldn't know the child from any of its forbears. Even the | songs—there are unusually few of them, | by the way—bear a strong family like- | ness, and the same limber heels discuss | the me busy ballet s of yore. “Holity- | Coity” is just Fischer xteen ounces to | > pound, fast color, money back bur- sque, and there wasn’'t any one asldng‘ for his money back last might. If you | like it that way, you like it, and there's | an end on't. | I had almost forgotten, and in forget- | ting would have done rank injustice to | those sweet things in riding-trews, truly new and itiful, that kept the house helpless for a full five minutes after Kolb, | Dill and Bernard ambled on the stage. | They are quite as funny as Kolb and Dill not forgetting Mr. Bernard's re- freshing ideas on how to keep a bank; that have all the unctuous authority of Slla Wheeler Wilcox on “How to Keep Your Wives at Home.” Thelr way of playing poker, too, assisted by Maude Amber, appeals strongly; and their “wrastles” with the etlquette of the bong tong, under George de Long’s degage di- rection, lead also to joy., George de Long is new, by the way, and rather looked ‘it last night. But he adda to the cast con- siderably, and will add more when he gets both feet in. Winfield Blake is this time an American billionaire, with four daughters and the trust habit. He is ripely amusing, as usual, in the part, and the author has given him some—what suggests itself noisily as “bully’’—good fun at the pluto- crat's expense. Mr. Blake has also a very | well done and likable duet with Miss Am- ber, “Love a la Mode.” Sunny and opu- lently handsome as usual, Maude - Amber has the role of Lady Grafter, and wears her new frocks most becomingly. You would go far to-fare better than with Miss Amber in your burlesque. She ex- hales humor, as the late Mr. Huntington did not shed nickels by the wayside, They give Hermsen as a makeweight this time as a cannibal “Kink.” He is quite funny. Olive Evans has a song, neither very well set nor sung, nor very pretty, and also takes part as Sophy Ang- lin Fullgauley in the burlesque on “The | Gay Lord Quex” that concludes the show. | (George de Long is Lord MiJer Quex.) | The other people work hard for their money, and “Hoity Toity” is evidently in for a full season of success. GUISARD. Alcazar. *“Peaceful Valley” is one of the *sure thing” plays in which virtue is bound to win and vice to be discomfited; in which coin as well as all other modes of induc- ing happiness go to the hero and heroine, and matrimony Is in the air on all sides in the last scene. Mixed in with grim hu- | mor are streaks of sentiment and dashes of tears and broad splashes of maternal affection and filial duty. All these and the traditional method of making rusticity appear against a background of “city folks” bring “Peaceful Valley,” without any possible plea to be deemed original, fully up to all others of its.class. It has been here before. Last night it was on at the Alcazar, and the company did yeo- man duty in making it interesting. Ern- | week | song, | Huntington,” ‘are very clever. A up- Ana reat Hunt was a dainty Virgie Rand. clever old woman impersonation was plied by Miss Marie Howe. M Osbourne filled the part of Niobe well. The other roles were in t f George Osbourne, William G. very h Clifford Dempsey, Albert Morrison, Frank Bacon, Walter Belasco, and Miss Eleanor Gordon. The work was smooth @t the way from the beginning to the end and the story had a fair chance to show all its merits. “Peaceful Valley” will run through the week, with the customa matinees. California. Clyde Fitch's play, “Lovers' Lane,” a satire upon a preacher’s relations with his flock, is pleasing large audlences this at the California. The play tells an interesting story and the several types of character so skillfully drawn by the author are well interpreted by rather a better company than is usually collected to exploit a great ew York success | Charles Macklin plays the pastor with in- telligenc nd wins the approbation of h auditors by his dignified handling of somewhat trying role. 'Harry G. a Bates does a clever bit of character work as the manager of the opera-house who is his own bill poster. Lottie Learn in the part of Simplicity demonstrates that she is the best girl actor seen here for some time, her acting being at all times natural and pleasing. The representing au- tumn and spring in the orchard are splen- didly executed and the successive changes scen. of lights as the sun sets make a picture xt that is beautiful Thursday a profe ers’ Lane” will thespians will be g in the extreme. N matinee of Lo given, when all loc thered under one roof. Orpheum. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Barry have estab- lished them: es as great favorites at the Orpheum, and lapt night the audience could not get enough of them. Barry's Mr. Dooley,” has caught on and he had to add verse after verse before he was allowed to quit. Their sketch, “A Skin Game,” s very amusing. Lola Yberrl, the Mexican dancer, is very grace- ful, dresses bewlitchingly, and the illu- sions are not only novel but artistic. Franco Piper is a musical wonder and can play three instruments at one time. Miss Fyvie-Dench, the Australian con- tralto, sings charmingly and has made a | most favorable impression. John T. Sul- | livan,. Miss Margaret Atherton and Mis Pauline Billepp in their sketch, “Captain Les Du- monds, the Parisian street singers; the Martinetti troupe of acrobats, and Cole and Johnson, the colored entertainers, make up the remainder of the attractive programme, which s concluded with the blograph, showing some new and enter- taining pictures. Grand Opera-House. “Robert Emmet,” an. Irish patriotic drama, was presented at the Grand Opera- house last night under rather unfavor- able conditions. Charles Erin Verner, who collaborated in the writing of the Plece, stars in the title role. The play Is rather loosely put together, which, combined with a painful lack of famil- farity with the lines on the part of the actors, distracted the interest of the audi- ence at times. Verner did his part of the work well. and was favorably received. Blanche Stoddard at a critical point cried “Woman, I am thy wife,” but otherwise her acting was unusually good. Herschel Mayall handled an unpopular role cred- itably. The rest of the cast could have easily done better. Most of the disaffree- able features will undoubtedly be re- moved before to-night. The play has many good points and should have a fair patronage. Tivoll. Hartman, Cunningham, Webb. Lee and Fogarty are still holding forth at the Tiv- oli as shining lights In the opera ‘Pa- tience.” Bertha DNvis, Caro Roma, Fran- ces Gibson, Hannah Davis and Marie Welch help them make the opera a per- formance well worth seeing. Not the least pleasing feature of the show is the work of the Tivoli’s extremely well-trained cho- e BACK NUMBERS OF ~ THE SUNDAY CALL Fhilippines, Hawail and Guam upon receipt of 5 cents per copy. — Warren, | | ana | Guilty | | and acrobatic work. SCENE FROM THE LATEST WEBER & FIELD ATTRACTION AT FISCH- ER'S, CLEVER SPANISH DANCER WHO HAS MADE A HIT AT THE { ORPHEUM AND NEW STAR AT THE GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. | | est Hastings as Hosea Howe had allfrus. The entire company will present | around applause and two curtain calls, all | “The Mikado" at San Jose next Monday | of which came to him justly. Miss Alice | night, with Editor Charles Williams of that city in the part of Ko will be presented at the night ““Tolanthe ivoli Tuesday Central. Judging from the enthusiastic reception accorded t night at the Central Theater by a crowded house Joseph le Brandt's new melodrama “Not Guilty” will do a splendid week's business. The play is one of the best that has been produced it this theater in a long time and is ex- | | actly suited to the taste of its patrons. 1t contalns a human and Interesting story abounds in sensations and exciting climaxes. The complished at the end of the second act, when the heroine slides down a rope from the top story of a powder magazine a moment before it explodes. the red light district of New York is al one of the successes of the performanec The serfous element of the play is r lieved by a vein of quaint and original comedy. As a scenic production ot cannot be fmproved upon and the which interprets it is excellent in respect. Landers Stevens did an exceedingly clever piece of acting as the degraded detective, Tom Dalley, and the merit of his performance was repeatedly acknowledged by the audience by loud applause. win Emery was thoroughiy satisfactory as Frank Rawdon, and Carl Berch, Judge O’Dowd, had, like the famous Tim Finnigan, a brogue both rich and sweet. chracter sketch o cast every of the racetrack tout, Longshot, Logan. Henry Shumer was ap- propriately sinister as George Dalton. Krnest Howell was remarkably good Jonas Sheldon, and George Nicholls proved adequate as Michael McNamara. John World was excellent as Rube Tur- ner, and Mindell Dreyfus Kingston made a hit as a newsboy. Eugenie Thais Law ton, whi popularity seems to increase with every performance, made a delight- ful impression as Constance Sheldon, while Georgie Cooper’'s natural and vi cious rendition of Nesah O'Dowd con- tributed in no small degree to the general success. At the matinee next Monday “The Queen of Chinatown” will be pro- duced. Republic. Dumas’ ever popular d’Artagnan holds the center of,the stage at the Theater Republic this week. considerable amount of tempting to present “The Three M keteers” at popular prices; their ambition is commendable, and the audience gets a very good presentation of the great ro- mantic drama. When the tricolor of the French republic was disclosed waving over the loyal supporters of the Bourbon Louis XIII of the old monarchy some of the audience were amused. This property and the sea, which arose two feet when d’Artagnan leaped Into {t, might 'be rem- edied. With the touching up' of the ef- fect here and there Mr. Stuart and his company will put on as creditable a pre- sentation of “The Three Musketeers” as has ever playgd before a San Francisco audlence since Salvinl's time. Chutes. Shelk Hadjl Tahar’s troupe of Arabs amazed two large audlences at the Chutes yesterday. with their wonderful tumbling | They are rapid as lighting in their movements and are | veritable whirlwinds.. Tracy Morrow and | Martha Theresa proved pleasing vocal | duetists, Miss Susie Lehman displayed an excellent soprano to advantage and Pompeji and Faye gave a unique musical act. Stellita and - Henrico Garbardon, Spanish dancers; Deas and Deas, colored | comedians, and. the animatoscope, with | new and amusing.moving pictures,/com- | pleted a capital programme. “Down the | the :scenlc - waterway, was as | great an attraction as ever. The amateurs will appear on Thursday hight. Drummers’ Minstrels. Freeman and Lynn's Commerclal Men's Mastodon Ministrels, now on a tour of the' State, will end their season with three performances in San Francisco at the Al- hambra next Friday and Saturday nights, with a matinee on Saturday. The “knights of the grip” composing the or- ganization are made up of representa- tives of the leading mercantile houses of California, and are said to be very clever comedians and vocalists. The sale of seats will begin at Sherman, Clay & Co.’s this Jmorning at 9 o’clock. Mascagni Concert. The scene in | George Webster gave a clever | Although Ralph | | Stuart and his company have shown a |the hoodlums in the balco: daring in at- MAY BE STEINER- | TATTON SYKES . STREET BURGLAR Man Much Wanted by Them. Mrs. Daly Will Call at the Prison to Identify Captive. L e Chief of Police Wittman believes t | Charles Johnson, the burglar who was captured by Policeman Stephén V. Bun- | ner Sunday night, is the man wanted for the desperate attempt to rob the resi- | dence of William Sissons at 2848 Stei | street on Saturday afternoon. Descrip | tions tally, and it remains only for Mrs. | Agnes Daly, in whose face the burglar | held a revolver, to come to the Cent station and make the identification plete. The Chief Instructed his tives to bring the lady to headquarters last night, but she was ill and unable to | appear. The police also think that Johnson, as he styles himself, is the person who has been terrorizing the Western Addition for | the last few weeks. They are close on | the trail of his accomplice and expect to land him behind the bars before many hours. Two crimes have already been traced to the prisouer through the stolen property which was in his possessior nd the sleuths have the names of paw | shops where he deposited more. Mrs. Daly was sitting in her room on Saturday when the burglar made his a , as exclusively told In The C alarmed waen the door slightly opened, and arising from her seat lcoked into the muazzle of a revolver. A battle followed, in which the burglar was forced out of the room and made his cape when M Daly's « for alarmed the neighbors. Mrs. Daly fur- hed a complete deseription of the erim- to the police and it tallies exact nder even to the style of dress and appearance. To-day Mrs. Dal pear at the City Prison and after the prisoner will state whether tional charge should be pia him. DEWEY MONUMENT WILL SOON BE COMPLETED Bronze Statue OIVVictory Arrives in City and Work Will Be Resumed. | i’ detec- was inal | with that of Johnson, now Citizens of and visitors to San Francisco may soon see the Dewey monument com- pleted and standing aloft in Union s in honor of Admiral Dewey, his brs sailors and their vic at Manila Bay The large bronze status of victory, made in New York, which alone stands twelve feet high, has arrived. The work of placing the statue upon the cap of the granite column and the completion of the base will be resumed immeaiately The dedication of the monument will not take place untll the arrival in this city of President Roosevelt, who Is expected to make a trip to California in April. Great preparations are being made by the monument committee for the dedica- tion. Members of the TUnited States Naval Order, the Naval Academy graduates and ali officers of warships that may be | the harbor at the time will take part in X the celebration. are, or GHINESE RIOT IN THEATER Audience Dislikes Me Chung Chen and | Throws Eggs. { A seripus riot occurred last night at the Chinese Theater on Jackson street. Eggs and rotten vegetables of all descriptions were hurled at the actors by an infurfated mob of motley Celestials. Owing to the New Year's celebration, and the closing down for two weeks of the Washington-street Theater, the on Jackson street has been crowded the galleries every night. Last night, shortly after the play began, the house was so packed that to crowd in another man was almost an impossibility The stage and balcony In the rear were | both filled with white people. | There is a Chinesc femate Impersonator | named Me Chung Chen, whom the thea- | ter-goers of little China have no use for | They claim he is a bad actor and ought | not to be on the stage. His appearance last one to ht was the signal for a general shower of the “rotten.”” Me Chung Chen was struck repeatedly by ¥. The audi- ence began to flee right and left and | their haste to escape the storm of eggs | and other vile things created a that for a few minutes looked as though | 1t would end in a general fight. The aim of the egg-throwers was bad, | and many white visitors were struck b, the odorous missiles. The disliked ac: was hustled from the stage, and oulet once more relgned. Several white visitors had their clothes ruined, and complained bitterly to the po- lice. Watchmen were present throughout | the rest of the performance: still cver: | time Me Chung Chen appeared to do his part an egg flew mysteriously from the gallery and spattered on the stage. The Chinese want the bad actor ousted and claim they wiil not stand for his acting. ACHIEVE GREAT VICTORY FOR STATE OF CALIFORNIA At a meeting held in New York yester- | day by the Book Committee of the Meth- | __ odist church it was decided that the next general conference will be held in Los Angeles in May, 194. Eight hundred | delegates will attend and the session will last one month. The Book Committee has worked very | hard to this end and has accomplished a great triumph in having the delegates convene on this coast. | @ iriminiiminimiminlmie il @ | | an orchestra of sixty men and a cho | |of 1%. The following will be the pro | gramme: “Overture to Willlam Teil.” b | Rossini; Tschaikowsky's “Pathetique “aine’ Dance and the Suite to Hall C | Symphony,” " by Mascagni; the | “Eternal Cit of the Dolls’ to the Sun™ from the Japanese opera for orchestra and chorus, e Columbia. Anna Held and her good company in | “The Little Duchess” are delighting th | multitudes at the Columbia Theater this week. The engagement of the popular lit- tle 'comedienne has been phenomenally successful, the house being filled to its ca- pacity every night. “The Little Duchess’ - Mascagni will give his first concert this afternoon at 3:15, at the Alhambra Theater. He will have the assistance of | runs until next Sunday evening. “Ari- | zona,” the charming drama of cowboy life by Augustus Thomas, will follow. Police Think Johnson Is' FamedNobleman Cop | | | Bave p help | | | in | | most thrilling effect is ac- | @ “iimivimieimieieieiiiminieieiieiii=r @ | in scene | { and the wonderful “Hymn | 3c. | l 13 HERE s e eios a as Bscort to Countess. His Presence Recalls the Sen- sational Suit Against His Former Wife. -— r Tatton ubles four years land, Sykes. ago t 1 socie His der former wif Tattor troub} extreme English mment One day big yard Bank In as a of the ri tess him, and car startled 2ppearin, re he wildly t 1gland notes. 1 Tatt Engla ADVEETISEMENTS. TORTURING DISFIGURING ,Scalp and Blood Humours Speedily L‘ur_sd— by Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills When the Best Physicians and Al Else Fail. Skin ng itching a in eczemaj t he loss of hair The agoniz of the skin, scaling, as in psoriasi and crusting of the sealp, asin s head ; the facial disfiguremen pimples and ringworm ; the awful suf= fering of infants, and anxiety of worn- out pareats, as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum,— all demand a rem almost, superhuman virtues to success- fully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointm: and P are su stands proven beyond all doubt. statement is made regarding them :hfl}c is not justified by the strongest evi- dence. v and aweetness, the The pu ] power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absol safety and great economy have made them the standard skin cures, blood purifiers and humour remedies of the civilized world. Bathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, tocleanse the surface of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Oint- ment freely, to allay itching, irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, take the Cuticura Resolvent Pills, to cool and cleanse the blood. This complete treatment, costing but one do affords instant relief, per- mits rest and sleep in the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burnimg and scaly humours of the skin, scalp and blood, and points toa speedy, permanent and ecounomical cure when all other remedies and the best physi- ns fail. -0 RUSS HOUSE American and European plan: 400 rooms; | suites with batk T T e rd| All modern conveniences, U pto-dare pors quarters for mining and eommercial Army and navy headquarters. v rooms. Music at dinner hour. | center o onvenie CHAS. EWMAN s - Prop., forme: prietor ‘of Richelleu - Bush & Pine sts.; Montgom in every room. Dho INDNESS BL - lieves all Mayerle, German O SF. Ge Market