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THE AN FRANCISCO UNDAY CALL, 3 MAY 31, Mo O 2 3 2 >0 DO ADVERTISEMENTS. GREAT REDUCTION $10, $9 and $7.50 NOVELTY DRESS (This season’s importaticn ) PATTERNS reduced to $25, $22.50, $20, $17.50 and $15 75 cents a yard NOVELTY WAIST M $1.00 a yard NOVELTY SILK STR! CiTY OF G i Sy A vl R . . of the council in National Union. sonis egth N GATE COUNCIL, at its las en meeting the council = ree menibers didates. f = rizers have been appointed the Pa- also been z g Ca aia ( cil € ts have been cc ded e his Af he t to be given in Gold L was several councils ¢ S “ _| om the encour- ot P € t it will be a great € i m ecretary Duden to the ., rece ted the Su S t i peet in this cit w s year have twelv 3 gates. The reports to presented ; t at body will show a in member- m = fir e The 1 of new coun sentat s is not as during the current g » endo vear the efforts of the supreme of- aley, who made the speect ers have been along the line of increas- Frie Stock of California g existing subordinates rather than es- | NOVELTY DRESS PATTER duyced to RIALS reduced to CHALLIES reduced to REMNANTS. Our entire accumulation of short lengths (from 1 plain ard fancy materials, at HALF PRICE. Geary 2nd Stockton 1 Mrs. . After th B Heald with e ¢ m ad; to 5'; yards), in utine t ATE- 3¢ PARIS DRY GOODS COMPANY, reets, Union Squ AS TOLD IN THE ANTE-ROO ng of the bership was entertained with 1 w S0 OO0 BOTBOHO OO0 JUDDOL0 CLOON0 OOO00T ARIS Company SALE, Commencing TO-MORROW (MONDAY) COLORED DRESSGOODS $5.00 SN OO GO OO OIS OIHIN0 GO M. Ladies’ 'Au:iliary. Ladies Command- Templar, in the building Mrs president, and ali present West were elect Mrs. Gates to member recitation 0 for an encore favored Mrs rendered in a pleasing manner several vo- s Logan , and Miss Alvina Woo! B recital in a very ar & > T After that a luncheon a S which was partaken of by the fol- Order of Pendo. owing named ladies OLUNTEER COUNCIL of the O Mrs Jones, president: @irs. S. A < McD 1 Mre. Val Schmidt » presi- Pendo elected t follow dents Willlam Martenst: secretary; ned as office for tk ensu Miss Bragg, assistant sec ary; Mrs, r Dr H. Walworth, C.; Lil- lien E. Tugwel C.; Mrs. Mindia Dem- m Ch.; Mrs. Anna Smiley, G.; A Wickersham, W.; J. J. Joalle, §.; O. L. | rics, B Ecott and J. W. Tarpley, trustees; Verona | Redke, Lengee, O.; Dr. Walwc physician. At | & Dor the last held session o! s council two | Barbier strangers were initiated Eupreme Councilor Tugwell was pres- | 7 Moorehou Co: « D. 3 McJunkin, B Mre. Gr Dewitt, Dr. es, Fra, Mrs. Mrs. . treasurer; Mre. Fred Marsh, Mrs. James Young, Mrs. | ke , Mrs. Heald. x. Mre. George “harles Humph- Nickols, Mrs P. F. Ferguson, Crowley ser, « FORCED SALE For One-Third Their Actual Value. HOUSE, BUT WE Fine Black Cloth Skirts, trimmed silk Fine Hang ( e’sewhere before visiting us. ack Peau de § sth Pedestrian Skirts, assorted Elegant Etamir forcing ou Our 1500 Fine Tailor-Madec Suits. 1000 Fine Woolen Dress Skirts. 1200 Pedestrian Skirts. 900 Lace and Silk Skirts. 1000 Silk Monte Carlo Coats. AT NOT P THE BIGGE GIVING THE BIGGEST VALUES. IPARE OUR PRICES WITH SALES Over Lace and Silk Applique Skirts bands £ Linen and Duck Outing dkirts . e Silk Monte Carlo ts, with stc ome Blouse casiest OUR PRICE TELL “H 800 Black and Colored Corset Jackets SO-CALLED CLEARANCE TALE. THE PACIFIC CLOAK HOUS mg & 1142146 MARKET ST., Between Mason and Taylor. 000000000608000202503020006990020020000 ARE shopp MILLIONAIRE HUNTING FOR 15 GRANDSON suis Bonestell Will Go to Texas in the Search. Letters Say Young Whitewell Has Bzen Seen in Lone Star State. PR I S California Pioneer Is Grandfathsr of Harvard Student Whose Strange Disappearance Puzzles Col- lege and Family. PAES Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW tell, the YORK, M 30.—Louis £ Bones- father of William Scolley Whitewell, the Harvard student who mysteriously dis- appeared from Cambridge on February 2, will start for Waco, . Monday for the purpose of investigating the report that grandson was seen in that town a th ago by a lawyer who had made acguaintance on a train. Bonestell is president of a rubber com- pany of Mexico and has been a resident of San Francisco since the early days of 1549, when he went there and fortune. He has absolute faith that the man will yet turn up scmewhere und. because, as he said this evening, when seen at the home of the y's mother: William was sound as a dollar ment- morally and physically and there is to believe that he met with ally no reason any sort of violence, Two years ago he spent a year abroad and when he re- turned to college last fall he tried to make up two years in one and it is just possible that he overtaxed his mind by hard study, but T feel certain that he will yet turn up all right. It 1su't in the race to do foolish things or to fall by the wayside. 1 am golng to Texas to find out for myself what foundation there is to the letters we have recelved from a lawyer who says he met a young man there who said he was my grandson. I haven't much faith in the clew, but I shall follow up every report of the boy that comes to me.” ng Whitewell left Cambridge lest February he was in the best of health and spirits and told his companions he was going to New York to visit his par- ents. From the time he left Cambridge all trace of him has been lest. Since that time his father has dled and his moth is nearly heartbroken over the loss of her husband and the mysterious isappearance of her eldest boy. Her second son, Cutler Whitewell, is connected with the International Banking Company, 1 Wall street, and the other son, a lad of thirteen, 18 i1l in school. Mr. Bonestell, the widow's father, said this evening he had received rumors that his grandson, who was of an adventurous disposition, had determined to get a view of tife from the workingman’'s standpoint and had gone to work on a ranch in Texas. “That may be true,” he said, “and if t 18 so we will all be very happy. In { any event 1 shall not rest untii T am satisfied what has become of the boy. ‘He is tco noble a fellow to be lo >4 owe, Mrs. A. A. Bad- Miss Alvina Woolruth, Mrs. George Heaas. Mrs. Cummings and Mrs. Eichel- Eva Power, Miss Susie 1 A. Hromada Jones, Mrs. baum The meetings of the auxiliary are be- coming exceedingly popular, and under the direction of the very active president are made exceedingly interesting. Order of St. George. HE second anniversary entertain- ment and ball given by Empress Vie- toria Lodge, Order of the Daughters of 8t. George, in Union Square Hall, May 2, in aid of the widows' and orphans’ . | fund of the lodge, under the direction of | M. Fuller, Mrs. H. Willlams and Mrs. | Witis, was a great success, being well at- | tended and the programme being an en- | tertaining one. It was made up of the | following numbere: ’ Remarks by chalrman, Mr. Fuller, grand president of Sons of St. George; overiure, or- i tra; song, Mr. Gerrans; fancy dance, Fran- | Robinson; solo, Miss Richter; song, Mr. quartet, the Willlams quartet of Oak M. Williams, :_ song. Miss Zetta Henry; | fancy dance, Master J. Trevethick; vocal solo, | Mr. Yates; Mr. Gerrans, planist. The hall was tastefully decorated, the | American flag being gracefully draped | over the stage in the center, and on each | side was the Union Jack of old England. | One of the flags was presented to the lodge | by the officers of his Majesty’s cruiser | Grafton. There was also flowers in pro- | fusion, which added much to the deco- rative feature of the evening. There were | a number of the officers of the Grafton present. After the programme there were dancing and light refreshments. Bentley: and—Mies A. J. Williams, Williams, O. | Independent Foresters. 1 HE board of deputies of the Inde- lT dependent Order of Foresters of i San Francisco has decided to have | a day and night at the Chutes on the first Friday in August and it is expected that the committee that will have charge of the matter will present an attractive pro- gramme. During the past week the members of the board of deputies have visited the various courts of the city and have been talking up the order, with a view to en- thuse the members to additional activity. Last Wednesday General Deputy High | Chief Ranger Cameron assisted Court i Preeita in the initiation of several candi- dates. Court Golden Gate has moved from For- esters’ Hall to Golden Gate Hall in the Franklin building on Fillmore street. Deputy Supreme Chief Ranger Stewart has gone to Petaluma to work for the order in that cit, —_——— The Native Sons. | HE Native Sons’ literary and social ' committee has selected the follow- i ing named as officers for the current term: W. P. Johnson of Sequola Parlor, president; Henry Dahl of Pacific, vice president; Dr. E. L. Betterton of Niantic, gecretary; Dr. William Martin of Golden Gate, treasurer; N. W. Hall of Mission, Wiiliam Kaiser of Presidio and F. P. Cushing of Hesperian, trustees. The com- | mittee has adopted a resolution that in | future no wines, malt or spirituous liquors will be served when there is an enter- tainment. This was adopted by the rep- | resentatives of twenty-five parlors, and | it was further resolved to abolish return checks so that those who may desire to go out for something stronger than lemonade or soda water will have o pay to return. It has been the custom in the past v have a different parlor take | | ] | | | | | | 1 white-haired millionai-e grand- | made a| RESEMBLANGE 10 ANOTHER HI5 UNDOING Buspect Proves to Be a Noted Fugitive | From France. 'i | 1 | |Man Arrested in Alexandria | Is Not Bosdari, but His Doubl.e, f Former Canon Rosenberg Owes Cap- ture to Remarkable Likeness to a Count Who Attempted Frauds on Morgan. e | Specia | Cable to The Call and New York Herald, Copyright, 1903, by the New Yori Herald Publishing Company. LONDON, May 30.—Information | | reached London this afternoon that | the arrest of a man at Alexandria this | | week on suspicion of having been con- { cerned in attempted frauds on J. Pier- | pont Morgan has turned out to be a |case of mistaken identity. Therefore the report published that Count Bosdarl, | the man who is wanted on the charge, | | has been caught is incorrect | By an extaordinary coincidence the person who was arrested at Alexandria i turns out to be a former canon, named | Rosenberg. of Tours, France, who is| | wanted by the French police on a charge of obtaining 70,000 francs from a di-| vorced French lady under pretext of | | obtaining for her permission from’ the | { Pope to marry again. Rosenberg had | been acting suspiciously in Alexandria | and by his manner brought himself un- der the scrutiny of the police. As he answered the description of the missing Bosdati in every particular he was ar-! cested under the impression that be| | was Bosdari. It was not until witnesses | failed to identify him as Tosaarl that | | he was recognized as Rosenbers. ! he strange resemblar~e which must | exist between the two fugitives is re- garded by London police authorities as most remarkable, and the capture of | one notorious fugitive in the belief that he was another equally notorious ab- ! | sconder is probably unique in criminal records. | @ ettt oo o charge of the monthly entertainment. Atf | the functions presided over by Stanford | | and Pacific parlors the buffet was done | | away with and this met with approval to | such an extent that the committee de- | clded to do away with it altogether. The | resolution was warmiy advocated by W. { H. Hazell, F. H. Dam and H. Dahl of| | Pacific Parlor. | | The Native Sons’ Literary and Social | Club is arranging a programme for the | benefit of the Landmarks League, to be | presented at an entertainment to be given 1 in Native Sons' Hall on the evening of | June 10. s The Maccabees. RGONAUT HIVE of Oakland, La- | 6 dles of the Maccabees, has decided | that hereafter it will initiate candi- | dates on the first Tuesday of each month | | and have a social time after routine busi- ness at other meetings. Tuesday, May 2, the losing team in the blue and gold con- | | test for membership—and it was the ,‘gald team that lost—entertained the | winner in ‘its meeting hall in Oakland. There was a large attendance and all had |a _‘i:‘il_lyululod élme. o Adjutan eneral telzer, T Rank, K. 0. T. M., will arrive in lh’;;’LZIS | from Cleveland, O., June 1, and on June 3 will commence an inspection of the Uni- form Rank of the order in Northern Cali- fornia. Colonel Jones will arrive June 2 and will be the guest of Golden West Division No. | 13, and on Thursday will be the guest of | honor at a banguet. | { Rathbone Sisters. OYAL TEMPLE, Rathbone Sisters of Oakland, at its meeting last Mon- day entertained the officers of the Grand Temple on their return from the annual convention held the previous week at Santa Cruz. There were a number of congratulations and an excellent pro- gramme of entertainment. The monthly whist party given by this lodge, which was postponed on the appointed date in May on aceount of the death of Past Chlef Annle Samuels, will be held June 3. —_—— | Knights of Pythias. UREKA LODGE NO. 9 of the Knights of Pythias is moving steadily along and striving hard to be in the very forefront not only as to membership but as to the ritualistic work. In view of the great interest that the lodge members have taken in Pyth- ianism lately it has been deemed advis- able to get up a degree team and pro- cure for it a set of beautiful robes. The matter of securing such a set has been placed in the hands of a committee with full power (o act, which shows that the lodge means business. It is expected that the team will appear in the new robes on the evening of June 14, when a number of eligibles will have conferred upon them the knight rank in the long form. Knights and Ladies. T a meeting of the propagation A committee of the Grand Lodge of the Knighte and Ladles of Honor held last week it was decided to appro- priate the money allowed by the Grand ADVERTISEMENTS. YOU'LL LOOK WELL And feel well, too, if you will only take a dose of Hostetter’s Stom- ach Bitters before each meal. It will aid digestion, prevent the bowels from becoming . consti- pated and the blood impure, steady the nerves and stimulate the Liver and Kidneys. These are the secrets of good health and must be observed. Hundreds of sickly men and women have been made strong and healthy by the Bitters. Be sure to try it. HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS. AUWD oWV AOWTUWIGY The Other Name. Attractiveness is the other name for beauti It requires gréat care and perseverance® in the treatment, but the wonderfully that follow fully justify to say nothing of the future, when the h its abundance and glossiness, even to a ripe old age. | Like a plant, the hair must have plenty of air The roots must be entirely free from ease breeding germs, for if the dandruff microbe has entered the hair follicles all the sunshine in the world The hair will appear lifeless, dull lusterless, followed by itching of the scalp, and, finally, which every woman may have. s pleasing resul sunshine. is of no avail. | blood tingling tothe hair roots, where nat. | tion must begin. As a delightful hair dressir | Herpicide easily leads the world, especially and fiminating people. I 4 tidious most charming distinctiveness, while i the trouble t sting ess, W s makes it the equal of sunshine in its hie-g r will retain | tigs. Try it; a single trial is convincing. and | The Man in the Case. dis No woman should be satisfied to stop wit . vation of her own hair, while a brother. fatl or son is losing his. Whirling through the vorte iness strife. thoughtful and considerate of all bu frequently exposed to “infected” hair-brushes and and w falling hair. The first trcatment is to destroy theling a hat that could not be improved upon as a microb dandruff microbe, at once, with Newbro's H_crpu'ulc. incubator. this person certainly needs the thought car The healing and beautifying influence of this won-}of some one. if baldness is prevented. Try a e of derful compound is little short of marvelous; clear apd pure as the mountain snow, it cools the fevered sca destroys the enemy of hair growth, MR. F. A. SEXTON, the well-known architect, of Seattle, Wash., writes as follows until two years ago, when your Herpicide was first in' east, and as mine was a very bad case, I take pleasure in recommending Herpi since I can remembe: been troubled in th similarly affected.” A Delightful Hair Dressing. WARNING! The success of Newbro's Her- e has caused the market to flooded with so-called dandruff Don't expect saisfactory resuits from some- germ destro.eis. Newbro's Herpicide; it has benefited thous S { the first application is not satisfactory we will refund your monev direct and sends the “I had dandruff ever troduced. Since that time I have not cide to others (Signed) F. A. SEXTON. It Stops Itching of the Scalp Almost Instantly. Get & Sample Direct from the Factory C4810€CUT THIS OUT. 1 inclose 10 cents in stamps to pa, packing upon s sample of Newbro's ~ postage and Herpicide. Name thing the drugeist ussured you was “just as good sub itutes. tious druggists never recommend bt Applications of Her- irber sh piside at principal ba tice $1,00 at leadin stores, or direct from THE HERPICIDE CO , Detroit, Mich. Consclen- Street and No.... City and State...... 2 AddressTheHerpicideCo.,Detroit, M ops druz 1 TLodge at its recent session for the pur- pose of the extension of the order. Mrs. H. W. Quitzow was appointed State organizer for the order. A new lodge of the order is in process of formation in this city. It is to be composed of young people. It is expected that it will be instituted in a short time with twenty-five members. The names of nearly that number have been affixed to | a petition for a charter: GOSSIPOF THEATERS The new theater at New Rochelle, New York, was opened and formally dedicated Monday night by’ Primrose & Dockstad- er's minstrels. George H. Primrose, who for the last twenty-five years has been prominent in America’s minstrelsy, made his last appearance in that line, and he received an ovation. Lew Dockstader and all the other performers were also loudly applauded. “Yes,” said Primrose after the perform- ance, “‘this ends my connection with min- strelsy. I've been in it since '6S, and I've been a manager for twenty-five years. I've had enough of the one night stands, and I'm through with it. Luckily, I'm one of the fortunate fellows and I've laid by enough so that I can go slow now. “Don’t let the public think I'm an old man or that I've quit the theatrical busi- ness. Nothing of the sort. I've quit min- strelsy, but I'm going to stay on the stage. What am 1 going to do? Oh, I'm not ready to tell my plans just yet. But I'm going to ke-.p be.lore. the public.” A letter has come from Naples, Ttaly, in which the genuineness of Alice Niel- son's success in the lighter grand opera roles there is confirmed. Mrs. A. D. Gian- ninni, known professionally as Mollie Faust, has written Kansas City friends of the small prima donna as follows, and whether it be exaggerated or not, it is interesting: Alice Nellson's name appears here in big type on the billboards (Alice being spelled ““Aliss,”” for the reason that the correct way is the name of some sort of a fish, in Italian). She has been singing in Naples since Decem- ber 20, when she e her debut in ‘‘Faust,” at the Bellini Theater, where she made an in- stantaneous succ singing the same opera twenty-four succ times. The next opera she appeared in was Verdl's “Traviata,’ in which I heard her April 19 The Crown Prince of Germany, with his broth- er, Prince Eitel Fritz, occupled one of the incognito, and jolned the enthusiasm of the audience In giving our American gir! an ovation. The Princes remained to hear th. entire opera, which is saying a great deal for members of the roval family, especially when one considers the late hours of Ita ing performances beginning at s cailed here 1:30 o'clock. 5 her English studies under the famous Russell, who wrote *'Ci ;' and “'Old Black Joe." She says t “his wenderful method of voice training’’ that she has been able to make a suc- cess in grand opera. He is now located in Rome and_comes twice a week from therd to eilson leasons. She is now rehedrs- and ‘“Rigoletto” with the Italian gnani, the man who trained Patti and Chiistine Nilsson. < Miss Neilson has had several enticin, by cable from America for light npe’-.ml:;: she has decided to continue her studies two years longer in the land of song and music She has signed a contract for next season with the San Carlo Theater. Her voice has improved wonderfully, = cially in her high notes, which are ciear s strong. sings with' great case. « pearance has 4180 (mproved, as she has eainrs {n feah. Long-trained drsses have ‘adacy height fo her dignlty. | Andreas Dippel sailed with Mr. on the Kaiser Wilhelm der Groue?o;‘lzfi going to Budapest to sing Siegfried in the opera of that title, and also in “pjie Walkure.” These performances must be given in French, and he has learned the role in that language for the pu vy Mr. Dippel will be in Mr. Conried's com- pany in New York next season, and wil alternate with Mr. Burgstaller in Parsi. fal, a part he h. never sung. o To make further engagements and to perfect his plans for the Metropelitan ra-house and the Irving Place Thea- ter, Heinrich Conried salled for Euro Monday on the Kaiser Wilheim der Grosse. He will be away until the middle of August, and during his absence expects o close a number of important contracts r which negotiations are already under way. Just before he sailed Mr. Conried made an important addition to his operatic forces by the engagement for three years of “a New York born and a New York educated singer,”” Mme. Josephine Jacoby, a contralto of great reputation, who for the last five years has been on the con- cert stage and for nine years has been the contralto sololat of the Temple Emanu-El, Forty-third street and Fifth | Urbano, Erda and Lola, and avenue, receiving there the largest sal- | next season several other ary paid any woman church singer. The| Her contralto is recogni Temple Emanu-El is famous for its cholr, | world’s great voices, and on which it expends $15,000 a year, and has | heard with the Boston S; just installed a $30,000 organ under Gericke. the New Mme. Jacoby will be the first American | monic under Seidl, with singer without any European training to | Thomas, Damrosch, Cincin T take a prominent place in grand opera on |and Pittsburg orchestras, being = the New York boards. Instead of the | engaged by Thomas to sing with ti usual course of a few years abroad and a | most European artists at the grea European debut, Mme. Jacoby has studied | cinnati Music Festival of 159. grand opera diligently under New York €. masters. Her appearances at the Wal- dorf-Astorla performances of 1501-1902 in | the title role of “Carmen,” Azucena in I | Trovatore” and Amneris in “Alda,” con- | firmed what Frauleln Marie Brema, the ‘Wagnerian singer, zaid of her, that such a singer and actress as Mme. Jacoby should give herself wholly to grand opera. | there will be Ben Greet's company, whi Her repertory now includes Carmen, Am- | will play the West. Every manager will neris, Delilah, Azucena, Fides, Siebel, | want “Everyman” now he w ed am: she ha The strange announcement (no: wholly strange, perhaps, the shee mental methods of managers are ¢ ered) is made that Frank Murr: out two companies in y season, with male actor part. addition to g ADVERTISEMENTS. The Wonderful Success of The Electro-Chemic Free X R AY Examination and Treatment. This free Electro- Chemic X-Ray Exami- nation and Treatment has been taken advan- tage of by a great many sufferers. It has been the means of demonstrating to many that Cancers which were not curable by surgery and other means were curable the Electro-Chemic Ray. Great cat Cancers have been cured; internal Can~ cers and Tumors have been cured. It has shown Consumption to exist where it was Consumption. It has o exist where it was suspected, and a weight of by X not suspected, and the patient has been cured of shown Consumption not t mental suffering has beer. takem away<irom quite a number who had almost given up hope. It has demonstrated to many women that sur gery was -not necessary after they had been turned over to the sur geon by the family physician. Electro-Chemistry keeps women off the operating table. It has cured deafness and stopped car and head noises ait all other older systems of tréatment had failed. It has done this because the Electro-Chemic treatment is applied directly to the ears. We do not treat the throat and nose to cure deafness, but we treat the ears direct. and if the !hroathand nose alr:_callarrha!. complicating the trouble. we of cour catarrh, as catarrh is also promptly cured by E o- s Bronchitis and Catarrh of the Lfmls are cu)rledlg:y"it. et o . Men “:}“i: have becv:i duped and quacked to death, een ruined by strong drugs and medicines, are cured by Electro-Chemistr of Prostatitis, Weakness, Stricture, Specific Blood Conn;ion and all diseases peculiar to them. These cures are quick and permanent, and while it costs nothing men. no matter what their trouble may be. should come to us ior free examination and demonstration. In Rheumatism, Locomotor Ataxia, Par- a!yni and all diseases of the muscular and nervous systems, relief is imme- diate and the cures by Electro-Chemistry are permanent. These cures are permanent because new, freshly oxygenated blood is forced inte the weak ened muscles and nerves, and new life always comes with new blood. when it is forced by Electro-Chemistry into the affect s s is just what Electro-Chemistry does. affected parts, and this is ju FREE TO AIL.L.! This Electro-Chemic X-Ray Examination and Treatment is still free to everybody. To those who have doctored in vain, to those who are tired of swallowing drugs without much benefit, this free offer should appeal with greatest force. We cannot afford to coptinue this free offer much longer We are now overworked. We are busy from eight o'clock in the morming to ninc o'clock at night, but we are rewarded because we are proving to the San Francisco public that we can do what we claim and we are doinz it and our efforts are being appreciated. Come at once while it is yet iree. i you live at a distance try to come for personal examination. Many can ret home the same day, taking = necessary home course of treatment with them We loan outside patients an Electro-Chemic Apparatus for home treat ment, free. The Electro-Chemic Institute 118 GRANT AVENUE, COR. POST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. Office Hours—o9a. m. to 5p. m. and 7 to 8 p. m. daily: Sundays, 1@ a. m. to I p. m. Separate apartments for ladics and gentlemen. se cure try. Asthma and whose stomachs have