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TUESDAY, - E: EBRUARY 16, 1904. MUNICIPALITY (STARS APPEAR WINS VICTORY| IN TRAGEDY | San Mateo Branch of United Warde and James Represent Dis! DUKE OF NORFOLK WEDS GWENDOLYN MAXWELL tinguished Member of the English Aristocracy Marries His Cousin, the Eldest Daughter of Lord Herres, in Presence of Friends, and Couple Receive Costly Gifts upreme the San ' Columbia Theater last evening, despite a paucity of accessories that was pain- fully marked and amid anachronisms | that were rather more calculated to up- et the gravity of the audience than to| | that properly at-| | performance of a Shakes-| | gedy. The support was not | | rean. Therefore all the morel was the superiority of Warde >ught Railroads Must Be Assessed| Mare Antony and Brutus, Re- by the Different Counties! spectively, in “Julius Caesar” | —_— | | JUSTICES CHANGE MINDS RECEIVE MUCH API’LAI'SE“! —_— —_— | Supreme Court Deals a Hard| Aleazar Troupe Well Cast in“; Blow to the Corporations “The Charity Ball”—""he’l and Board of Equalization Men of Jimtown” at Central } —_— RO IV urt has reversed | Warde and James triumphed at the| ‘ ug inspire the dignity tends inties thr the Dyke. marked and James, and the greater, necessarily, | | was the merit that kept up a sufficient semblance audience of reality to provoke the to genuine enthusiasm. was “Julius Caesar,” and | Marc Antony and James| | Brutus. Warde played the role vas his with enough of subtle sug-| | n to make a marked hit in the| | oration over the body of Julius Caesar. Indeed, the audience had the curtain rung up half a dozen times, and would | not be contented until Warde came for- | ward and made a speech, in which he spoke of the pleasure it gave him to find in these modern days the love of Shakespeare had not died among those FRIENDS MOURY | L0SS OF FOOTE Body of Departed Jurist Cre-| mated With Simple Service' at 0dd Fellows* Cemetery | | | CROWD FOLLOWS }{EARSE: P e Courts Are Closed Out of Re-! spect to the Dead Attorney | e and Judges Deliver Eulogies ‘ R 1 | The last words over the remains of | the late William W. Foote were said yesterday afternoon in the ’ presence of a large gathering of { friends amd admirers of the dend lawyer. The hearse on its way to the cemetery was followed by a string of carriages bearing mourners of the late lawyer and hundreds of friends and | relatives crowded the residence of James V. Coleman at 631 Van Ness avenue, where the funeral ceremonies | were held, to pay humble tribute to a | true friend and a great man. All of I'the Superior courts in the City Hall, | the Superior and Police courts and the Federal courts adjourned out of re- spect for the memory of the late at- | torney. Each of the various Judges {in calling an adjournment eulogized the character and worth of their dead | brother. Attorneys in the courts at the time of the adjournment spoke in praise of the life work of Mr. Foote. EULOGY BY HANLON. Charles F. Hanlon, the attorney, ap- peared before Judge Coffey of the Su- perior Court yesterday morning and made a brief address on the life and work of W. W. Foote, the dead lawyer. {lars had appeared in the city. (OUNTERFEITER RIN TO EARTH Andreas Winkelmann, Who Professed to Lead Christian Life, Behind Bars of City Jail DUAL CAREER IS ENDED| B A Employed During the Day as a Draughtsman, and at Night Manufactures Spurious Coin Seagans Draughtsman by day and counter- | feiter by night has been the dual life | led by Andreas Winkelmann, taken | into custody last night by Secret Ser- | vice Operatives Hazen, McManus and | Foster and lodged in the City Prison. Secreted In his room at 1415 Polk | street, where the arrest was made, was found a complete plant for the manu- | facture of counterfeit half-dollars and more than $200 of the bogus coin. Winkelmann, who is a member of the Young Men’s Christian Association of this city, has been under surveil-| lance for ten days and moved to the | Polk-street address two days ago. He | has been employed by Sylvain Schnait- tacher, a well-known architect, as a draughtsman, and among his acquain- tances bore an excellent reputation. Several weeks ago Secret Service Agent Hazen was told that a number of skillfully made counterfeit ha]f—dTr;lh e Government detectives were at once put to work and finally succeeded in obtaining a clew to the identity of the counterfeiter. It was deemed inadvis- | able to make the arrest until the plant who could understand and appreciate. Later on Jam after the ghostly ap- parition of Caesar at Philippi, was sim- larly complimented. He spoke very ¥. James' Brutus was character- by dignity and finish throughout. His natural physical endowments add- to the measure of his success very erially. Thomas Coffin Cooke played the small rt of Julius Caesar. Norman Hackett 1 the role of Cz Somewhat i to tear a pas: theless made a good sce el with Brutus and came in for a of applause. “The remainder st does not deserve serious from the point of Shake- anpresentation with the exception Sumner in the one-scene part alphurnia, and more noticeably James as Lucius, which role she acceptable for picturesqueness fidelity is no TEANING OF DISCUSS M & and desire to detract from that was won on merit by Warde, but if Shakespeare njoyed thoroughly at the Co- here is need of furbishing up ling more ample accessories. instance, the Senate house r is slain having only just size to "aesar and the rs who tc rt in the as- the unitie fact that when 1ate house the or what? Not any tri- old times, but just ““Hail to the Chief” of small beer poi- v are on the circuit, g half a score of As- stricts per night, but decided- incc uous when introduced in an- cient Rome in the time of its greatne: The Roman armies were but a platoon. be ¢ Caes h of - FRANCHISES ARE DIFF hises of stea barnstc sembly ¢ rming in RENT. electri ast nam Hackett ad trick of twiddling his fingers hem of yman vher supposed greatly excited or,enraged. The el may be intended to indicate ¥ anger, but in modern times it f has the general suggestion of an in- IS d satiate v t. who is performing long ment trills v 1 inaudible vio- Angeles might ' lin strings is a good trick to cut f railroads. The out of the performance, unless it is the miles within only way Hackett has to show that rt spur track s nerturbed, The The kept many away, undoubted- yuld was still a ppor- ould have large enough in the trag ere le who were perform € tion of the student ¢ young ould get taxes only in pro- omen from educational in- portion to the miles of track within her who are engaged in studyiag confines courses, were numerously in The court says in conclusion that there are now being constructed some RAE 3 “hybrid ds, which are like street Aleazar. railways in the cit ke steam r The Alcazar players gave an artistic S W The Besision hese are except- il production of “The Charity Ball” Siatsn Moo ) trifie more | 128t night and oughly demonstrated than eighteen miles k in San | their respective dramatic capabilities i Francisce assessed at a the parts » them. valuatior ; ous work by The opinior e n by Justice | Who gave Shaw, with whom J es Lorigan, An-| John Van r - Justice D d Dick Van Buren with intei- Mec- |1 1 th »d graces of his wdience, when, 2 earnest solicita- tion of his or, b greed t had wronged his was perfec > Knox and was mad 1ate friends— > art of an actor. ed Franklin Cru- R S HADLEY SUPPOSED TO HAVE LEFT THE CITY e G i s refreshing as 1 Bookmaker Questioned a plunger in a small t Colonial Robbery Allezed selasco does a fine bit of to Have Gone to Australin. . Betts, the old An- ed im emant in ! th ol t haul a have not yet be: 1 cast and effectively :nqn,‘,? ('h}. o e e i « luction.” They dis- B e ing gowns that are | charm to the ! on plays | ,‘,{;:.,‘;‘ym.”" uld not allow her ] k with her enuncia- who as rigid questioned by the po- i :,‘( \:'””1 n‘(:x tion 'ml‘ ;'Hn‘ i;.vht in the third act. Adele | jice 1 te Saturday n and womanly as Aunn | for Australia on the delayed steamer = Starr is tfu for . ; 1 n es Starr is delightfu! | n ren. The list would not | plete without a mention of Marie | who is admirable as the blind friends a ! aisrated bookr lia. The disappearance has been food for much gossiy tenderloin. has shipped for the An-| hinine. If Hac tipodes his whereabouts will be There is a varied and entertaining | track of by the police in event any of | Programme at the Chutes this week, | the gang are arrested and confess. ircluding Kelly and Violgt, the “fash. The keepers of the club claim not | jon plate singing duo”; Irving Jones, | to know Hadley and say he was not a | the diminutive colored individual, whe | frequenter of their place. No arrests | writes his own songs; Hanlon and Zan. | kave been made. frella, flying aerialists; Mr. and Mrs, D, | M. Hall, comedy sketch artists, and Winstanley and Sullivan, capital dan- cers. Mabel Lamson, the popular con. tralto, in new illustrated songs, and the animatoscope, showing new 'mov- | SACRAMENTO, | to-day appointed he mecond ce Hooper, 3 trict « resigne Claren ing pictures, complete the bill. e POSTUM CEREAL. amateurs will' appear on filhursg;'} | night. g COFFEE ; DOES do work you don’ 8; Central. The audience that filled the Central Theater last night got the worth of its money in the wild west excitement, The attraction is a new border drnmu. “The Men of Jimtown,” and the sc.nq' are laid in the Cherokee strip in Okla- homa. The men, with the exception of » suspect. Quit and try § the necessary brace of villains, are aj) 3 & | brave and daring, rough and reckless, { while the women, as a rule, are para- Postum gons of their sex. The play teems with | thrilling incidents. It starts out with | an express robbery, and after a raid on 10 days and note how 3| the Jimtown bank, a locomotive race in well you feel. §‘ trial govem!:d by frontier rules, winds < | up with a Fourth of July celebratjon. R0 CH0 RO LR ORI ORI ] The story is that of a telégraph oper- full sight of the audience and a jury HORORY DIOIROCHOL0. QIR DO THE PREMIER DUKE AND EARL OF ENGLAND AND THE NEW | DL | LONDON, Feb. 15.—The Duke of Nor- folk and the Hon. Gwendolyn Mary Maxwell, eldest daughter of Lord Her- | | res, were married to-day in the Roman Catholic church at Everingham. The ceremony, which for various causes, had been four times postponed, was very quiet, the only guests being tenantry of the | near relatives, the Duke and a few personal friends. Costly presents were given to the | bride and bridegroom, including gifts from King Edward, Queen Alexandra | and numerous others. The Duke of | | Norfolk presented to the town of Shef- | | field a public park in commemoration ot the wedding. The Duke of Norfolk is nearly double the age of his bride, who is his first | ecusin once removed. | n in 1847 and is_therefore venth year. The Duke, ! was first married in 1877 and his wife | % - o+ died ten . afterward. dlea : He had an only child, a son, who was | §i°0 & Prisoner in ithe Tower of Lon- born in 1879. From his birth the son | was afflicted and his father made pil- grimages to Rome and Lourdes and sacred shrines in the hope that the lad could be cured through spiritual chan- | In spite of persecution the Howards ;nf the Norfolk line held on fo the old | faith during all the changes and. vicis- situd 4 ] v reigns from Richard rd VII. n but without ayafl | 1 A is a most devoted Catholic and was | 3 S Ahe Gatbalic i e ver. S ihe | MOUS for i otion to the Catholic o he Yery bighest esteem by the | cause and the house of Stewart. The et el ;“ Buvkae ¢ Pasr h Lord Her of the day was the pas- S : A 8 ' Peerage the{gonate adherent of Mary Queen cf | ducal and illustrious house of Norfolk |'gcots and was her sole e ‘ head of the peerage of England. H the premier Duke and hereditary Earl Marshal of England. Heisat the head of the College of Arms or. Herald's Of- fice and has the direction of- all cere- monial matters appertainifig to corona- tions, proclamations of war and peacs, royal funerals and all other great state | He begged her on his knees not to take the fatal step of throwing herself into |the cruel hands of Queen Elizabeth. iThf‘ Lord Herres of 1715 took the field | for the old pretender and was taken | Lordship had been created Earl of funetions. | Nithsdale. He was sent to the tower, | The dukedom of Norfolk was founded | tried by his peers and left for execu- in 1483, and the first who bore the title | tion. The evening beforé the execution | Lady Nithsdale visited her husband in | his cell. She dressed him in her own | skirt, cloak and hood and he, holding | a handkerchief to his face as if weep- “Jockey of Norfolk” of Shakespeare and Richard 111, who was an active, ambitious soldier. He was killed with his sovereign, the crookback was the Richard, at the battle of Bosworth |ing, passed the guards and escapéd to Field, August. 22. 1485 | France, where he and his brave Coun- The three next of his line were ex- (tess long lived happy together. The ecuted in Tower Hill and the fourth |earldom was forfeited, but the barony > s ator who “borrows” $40,000 from thel 4 man who robbed him of a valuable in- 4 vention—tk money being removed 4 from an express train without the for- L 08 permit. he yofng man 1 " IVE MILLI A -4 —_— mality of then goes down to Oklahoma, Zrows up with the country, becomes rich, pays the money back and marries the girl who desigifedly misled the pursuers at the time of the express robbery. Her- tle Vane makes the most of a soubrette [ SUit brought in the United States (! cult Court by the Utah-Nevada Com- role. o = pany against Josenh R. de Lamar was Tivoll. ‘very short. Judge Morrow announced | “When Johnny Comes Marching|yesterday that he would sustain the objection of the defendant to the tes- timony of Isaac E. Blake with reforence to an alleged oral agreement between himself and De Lamar on April 1, 1804, by the terms of which De Lamar was to work the Jim Crow. and Monltor dump mines, in Lincoln County, Neva- da, on which Blake had an option, and to give Blake 49 per cent of the net profits. The defendant objected to the admission of parole testimony with ref- erence to this transaction on the ground that an oral contract for the transfer of realty could not be proved by parole testimony and would be of no value. Blake alleged that De Lamar had himself stated that he had taken $13,- 000,000 from the mines, of which about $10,000,000 was net profit. Judge Morrow instructed the jury to return a verdict. for the defendant, which they did, and Blake must seek some other means of getting the $5,000,- 00(1)‘; ?n“apnea} will be taken. similar suit w: y the Superior COurt.as iy i e —— . 1830 and Military styles are latest for ladies' wear. Send for _catalog. Standard Patterns. i g g s. Domestic office 1221 ——————————— John Regle Falls Dead. John Regle fell dead yesterday in Clara Dobs’ millinery shop, 715 Larkin street. He was a native of France, 70 years old, and lived at 729% Minna street. Heart disease is supposed to have been the cause of death. Home" continues to draw at the Tivoli. Grand Opera-House. Weber & Fields commenced the sec- ond week of their engagement in Whoop-Dee-Doo” at the Grand Opera- house before a crowded house last night. Fische: “Roly Poly” entered upnon the second week of its run at Fischer's Theater last night. All the favorites received their usual share of applause. ————————— Lines From the Log Book of the Cal- ifornia Limited. “The California Limited Sshht ifo; a —i when I say that it has Sfi"l:g(‘::‘asgld.a?gr Cflllforllla);\s will have nothing but the best.”—Albert J. Atkins, M. D.. Parrott building, San Francisco.* ———————— Wants Lutz Removed. Agnes E. Wortsmith of this city, the widow of the late J. J. Wortsmith, who recently died in Arizona, yester- day applied to the Superior Court to revoke the letters of administration upon her husband’s estate granted several days ago to W. E. Lutz. She claims that she only recently learned of her husband's death. ———————— ry Hills Bros.' Arabian Roast Coffee. There is nothing better. . WASHINGTON, Feb, 15.—Michael Davitt, the Irish leader, called on President Roosevelt to-day and presented him with a blackthorn stick. | | qays | fghting sword in hand at Preston. His | %} ycould be seized and accordingly every move made by Winkelmann during the last ten days has been watched. Saturday Winkelmann secured the | room on Polk street, but there was nothing in his demeanor to arouse sus- | picion. A trunk which appeared to be very heavy was delivered by an ex- pressman. The Government officers determined to raid the room and ac cordingly swooped down on the place last night. Winkelmann was found in the apartment and placed under arrest. The trunk was opened and was founa to contain everything essential for the | manufacture of the spurious coin and | 400 bogus half dollars in various stages of completion. Winkélmann, who is a German, about 27 years of age, has resided in this city for two years. He says that three vears ago he inherited 10,000 marks as his share of a sister’s estate. He journeyed from his German home He said: | It 1s with feeling of profound grief that I rise to announce to this honorable court and its officers the news of the somewhat sudden death of one of the most prgminent members of the bar of this court, the Hon. Willlam W. Foote Although Mr. Foote had during the last year somewhat failed in health, it was hoped that his constitution, which was of iron: his phy- jque, which was Herculean, and his courage, which was unconquerable, would continue long in the future to carry him f that same illus- trious . career which, commencing thirty-five years ago, will now serve to brilliantly reflect his name in the legal constellation of departed worth. But the ways of the Almighty are in- scrutable. A cold, contracted a week ago, terminated cn last Saturday, the 13%h inst, after a few of bedridden iliness, in the death of Mr Cole- Foote at_the residence of the Hon. J. V man in this city. | Mr. Willlam W. Foote, as your Honor is al- | ready aware, belonged to that old school of great lawyers that reared California from total oblivion {n such a wonderful, such a masterly manner to the very front rank in American ju- risprudence and American civilization. Tt required such a body of great lawyers as that old scheol’ contained to ‘fan the sacred 5 . e B the Sats ot n mew State. which, @ir- to Mexico and there squandered all of ferent to uil her sister States, sprang at once his coin in high living. He became a into matured statehood as Minerva sprang member of the Young Men’s Christian armed and equipped from the brain of al- Aggociation last year and regularly at- mighty Jove, and which then outstripped her older sister States in the fashioning and c tended the night classes in mechanical tallizing of laws second to none among the en. drawing. Secret Service Agent Hazen lightened powers of the earth. sald that Winkelmann had displayed That Mr. Foote by his learning, his elo- great skill in the manufacture of the s honesty, his good faith, his sin- gop.6ug coin and. that the molds and assisted conspicu- ously great school at the San Francisco bar, oun recent, as well as our older annals, bear singularly convincing testi- mony. T now. on behalt of the entire bar of this honorable court, the scene of some of his greatest triumphs, move an adjournment out of respect for the memory of the late William W. Foote, as well as out of sorrow and sympa- thy for the members of his bereaved family: | ana I further move that a copy of this reso- lution be spread on the minutes of this honor- | able court and that a certified copy thereof be | ent (o the family of our depatted brother. | A SAD AUDIENCE. Jammed to overflowing, the rooms the house 6f J. V. Coleman were metal used showed ingenuity and ap- plication. ————— 'BONDED WAREHOUSE LOSES ITS FRANCHISE | South End Company Accused of Hav- ing Repeatedly Overcharzed Pa- trons and Must Close. Advices were. received in this cit yesterday to the effeét that the Sec tary of the Treasury had decided to voke the franchise of the South En {in Bonded Warehouse Company. It is al- [ filled with a sad and silent audience. nmanee Cow K al- [ The ‘services were brief and unosten- '1cE¢d that this c Mo heon mak ing exorbitant charges and that a num- | | with tatious. The Rev. William Carson Shaw of Oakland delivered the funeral ermon. At the conclusicn the Lord's Prayer was said in unison by the as- ber of comvlaints have been filed Collector Stratton. William T. Lemman, vice president e e e e oquest ‘of the | oL the company, when Interviewed re- family the remains were not exposed Sarding T y This comes as a surprise to me. I to view. Prominent men from all over the State were present and those friends | who were unable to attend sent beauti- ful floral pieces. The room in which the coffin stood was filled to overflow- ing with the tributes of loving friends. Governor Pardee sent a floral tribute. The body was taken to the Odd Fel- had never heard of any complaints be- ing filed with Mr. Stratton and he never intimated to us that our methods of doing business were unsatisfactor We have had, like all other busine men, some protests regarding charge but these have always been amicabiy adjusted. “1 have no idea who could have made lows' Cemetery and cremated. The ; - " ashes will be conveyed to Mountain ' the complaint, as our relations with View Cemetery in Oakland, where OUr rivals, our .patrons and the Col- they will be interred privately beside 'lector of the Port have always been | those of Mrs. W. W. Foote, who died | friendl in Hongkong four years ago. St The honorary ~pallbearers were: Found With Legs Broken. | | James V. Coleman, Frank J. Moffitt, | Andrew Hagmann, a carpenter, resid- Judge Frederick W. Henshaw, T. T. ing at 2020 Twenty-third street, v Dargie, A. A. Moore, Dr. E. H. Wool- found near his home yesterday with sey, Dr. D D. Crowley, William H. poth Jegs broken. It is thought he was | Metson, George W. Reed, J. J. Ler-|run over by a wagon while intoxicated. men, Capntain J. J. Brice, Judge J. V. | Coffey, Walter J. Matthews and Cap: tain Edward Hackett. | MOURNED IN OAKLAND. | OAKLAND, Feb. 15.—The Superior courts of Alameda County adjourned | to-day out of respect to the memory |of W. W. Foote, who was a well- known practitioner at the Alameda bar. Sitting in bank to-day Judges | Bllsworth, Hall, Greene and Ogden | listened to a eulogy delivered by Mel- | |vin €. Chapman, who feelingly paid | an eloquent tribute to his dead friend. He said: May it please your honors, ad duty in this plac ADVERTISEMENTS. Liebig Company’s || Extract of Besf See that the label has | this signature in blue : i it now becomes | of his last resi- schel Mayali as the versatile hero was 3 £ z R S T e ADAL NEe B oy A jaching and able.. Henry|J0dge Morrow Decides That " which he o G teltpiuen. Vo aiel - | humer delighted his admirers in a ro- , g o e | nounice “to” thix court ‘the death of a_distin: e medy. part, and Elmer Booth| ~OTal - Contracts Cannot Be | &vished member of the bar of this county and made a very acceptable Hebrew. Edwin Drov o, £ Y | language of another, has taken the few short { T. Emery was the villain of the piece. Proved by Parole Ev idence | steps from the cradie, with its lullaby of love, | There are a dozen imitations, 1 Eugenia Thais Lawton as the heroine SR ;‘l‘fl‘“r:;u!:(‘“;:iv‘l:““m. x“w;ih.‘fn‘:-“' "'lvh-r'; n|llal‘ some adulterated and worthless proved herself an expert bieyelist in| o e o e gl L St B nd i ladii a3 4sis et e one of the sensational scenes, and Myr- of the celebrated $5,000,000 | mourn and relatives must weep. kind naturs the mame *‘Liebig.”” Avoid dis- | that projected us into light and life will one day, if the instinct of man counts for any- thing, save us from mortality. Mr. Foote was | BS years of age at his death. From the stand- | point of infancy and youth fifty-eight years of )ifo seems to stretch out interminably into the appointment by asking for the genuine Liebig Company’s future, but ax we look backward it s but a flash of light in the night, and then darkness, yeas rst Mr. Foote was an eminent lawyer. The ks pietoenatenin amount, . the magnitude and the n he was m success | blace him in the front rank of the bar of this State. In the trial of causes he was im- pelled by zeal unwonted in other men, and | somotimes for the moment angered his an- tagonist, but the anger and the Tesentment | were only for a moment, because we all knew, | notwithstanding his brusqueness. that thers | was in his breast a heart as tender as that of | # woman. Last Saturday he died without a | pang or pain, passed peacefully away as qulet- | Jy us though he had gome to sleep, and the | tranquillity of his death suggests how beau- | titul his death and his sleep. | A few words were spoken by Judge | Ellsworth, bearing testimony to the | regard in which the deceased was held, | and the departments were then ad- ! Jjourped for the day. —_———— Ball Jumper Is Caught. The police were notified yesterday that John Burns had been arrested in Colorado Springs, Colo., and Police- man Skelly will leave this morning to bring him back. Burns was waiting trial on a charge of robbery, and, as he failed to smake his appearance, his bail of $500 cash was declared for- feited last week. —_— e Convicted of Robbery. George Batteate was convicted of robbery in Judge Lawlor's court yes- terday. He held up Luigi Sengali at Dupont and Green streeis on Novem- ber 20. 3 ———————— Benguiat & Son are to leave for the St. Louis Exposition soon—hence the Auction Sale s now on at the Pal- ace Hotel (Marble and Maple rooms). * INSURANCE New York Underwriters Agency Assets $14,500,000 Telegram from Home Office says: “Fol- lowing course pursued by this company in pre- | vious conflazrations, we are already adjusting | l.na paying Baltimore losses.” | | [ Shainwald, Buckbee & Co., Mann & Wilson, City Agents, Managers, ! Mills Building. 322-324 California st. San Francisco, Cal. | @ visir DR. JORDAN'S gagar B. JORDAN & CO., 1051 Market St 8. F. MUNYON'S . EVIDENCE nished by the People Them~ selves Who Have Been Cured of NERVOUSNESS Dyspepsia and Catarrh and Sleeplessness by PAW-PAW Interesting Words From an In- surance Man. Fur MR. W. B. LAW, a well-known and prominent citizen of Cincinnati, who has been in the insurance business for near- ly fifty years, and is now connected with the Royal Insurance Company at 108 st Third street, says: “Munyon’s Paw-Paw is a remarkable remedy. I have been taking it now for less than a week, with the most benefi- cial results. My appetite is improved, I sleep better and feel better than I have for years. My dyspepsia is cured, and now I cannot praise Paw-Paw too highly, and T advise all sufferers from stomach trouble and nervousness to give it a careful trial.” ROSS L. WALLACE, A. M. and A. C, is one of the most distinguished analytic and consulting chemists in the East. His name is near the front rank of the dis- tinguished in chemist This is what he says of Munyon's Paw-Paw: I have analyzed the Munyon's Paw-Paw and can say that it is a highly concentrating vege- ble compound of extraordinary merit as a di- tive and tonic for both the stomach and centers. It contains nothing what- uld be harmful to the most delicats organizations. (Signed) ROSS L. WALLACE, A. M and A C., Philadeiphia, Pa. Paw-Paw will drive out all poisons and impurities of the blood, and con quently is more beneficial in RHEL MATIC, LIVER and KIDNEY COM- PLAINTS. If you are overworked, use it. If you are weak and run down, use it. If you have no appetite, use it. If you feel ‘old,” use it If you are depressed and feel the need of new life and good cheer, use it. If you have rheumatism, use it. If your blood is thin or impure, use it. If your kidneys are ailing, use it. If your heart is weak, use it. If you can't Sleep, use it. If 3 Itver or stomach is out of order, use it. If you have catarrh, use it Paw-Paw is nature's own remedy, im- proved by man’s scientific skill. Munyon's Paw-Paw (large bottles), price $1. Paw-Paw Laxative Pills, 25¢ per box. At all druggists'’. AUCTION! OF THE choice list of residence, investment oved properties of the C. J. Win- e will be held Monday, February 12 o'clock noon, at Golden Gats ect to confirmation Following at SE. cor., Post and Stockton sts., substantial five-story and basement brick building, econ- taining store and 24 rooms above; rented low at $385 per month; lot 25x70. 2. 220-6 Kearn: . NE. cor. of Hardy Sutter and Bush good 3- story and baseme: rick building, containing nd use of 14 rooms; rents No. 3. No, 605-7 Kearny st., W. line, bet. Sacra- nto and Clay sts.; well-built 3-story and ment brick building, containing store and e; 25 per month; lot 23:9x No. 4. No. 1309-11 Stockton st., and Vallejo st.: improvements con frame building, containing stor 50 rooms above occupied as & hotel; per month; lot 45:6x68:9. W line, bet. Broad- st of No. 5. 14 Leavenwort Sddy sts. < 'y bay-window ,residences of 9 ath each: rents $130 per month; o W Turk line, bet | and Eddy sts.; 2-story frame dwelling of 10 rooms and bath; rents $55 per mos t 25x 87:6. No. 7. | | No. 2121.3 Fillmore st., W. line, bet. Call- fornia and Sacramento ats. 2-siory - building. containing store and flat of 7 rooms and bath; rented low at $60 per month; lot 53x106:3. No. 8. No. 2702-6 Sacramento st. and No. 2123 Plerce st., NW. cor.: improvements consist of two desirable residences of 10 rooms and bath each and modern cottage of 9 rooms and bath; particul of rents can be had at our office; lot 137:6x127:8%. Mo. 9. No. 2714 Sacramento st., N. line, bet. Plerce and Scott sts.; a desirable residence of 10 rooms and bath: particulars of rent can be cbtained at our office; lot 68:9x127:8%. No. 10. 35 Clay st. and No. r.; improvements consist nces of §-10-12 rooms and bath ect order and rented low at $363 t 206:3x127:8%. No. 2342-4 Devisadero s son st.; 2 modern residences bath each; rents $133 per month; x110. No. 1a. No. 2321.3 Devisadero st. and No. 2811 Jack- SW. cor.; improvements consist of 3 residences of 7-8-14 rooms and bath each; rents $200 per month; lot 63:9x137:6. No. 13. Pacific ave. S. line, bet. Devisadero and Broderick s choice” unimproved residence site; 135x127 No. Entire block, No. $35, ing of 24 lots, Nos. 1 to'24, inclusive. No. 15. Lots 17 to 20, inclusive, and 29 clusive, block No. 381, O'Neil & Hl;:y Tract. HENRY LEVY ESTA By order of !':xefulor?" N T15-17-23-25 MeAllister st., S. line, bet. Gough and Octavia; improvements consist of store with 4 rooms and lodging-house of 12 rooms and 2 flats of 6-3 rooms and bath; rents $122 50 per month; lot 35x137:6. For catalogue. and further particulars, ap- 32, in- | piy at our office. G. H. UMBSEN & CO., 20 MONTGOMERY ST. o 16 Pages. $1 per Year b v