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OAKIiAND, i May 14. : -^The' baseball team V °f f st -" M _aryJ s t Co hege V \u25a0 defeated the 5 Hay wardslteam^to-djiy l in va!* : fast game -played \u25a0 'on -, the 'grounds > of ; the latter team^i at*" Hay wards. ..The >; game was weir attended ; ahd^was, marked- by fast (work by; both; teams.''. .The " oppos ing ;\u25a0 batteries '< were: * J St. '. Mary's, J - : Fer-, guson and KyanV Hay wards," Hopkin* and'EUU "'"\u25a0". — - - .._..., . St. Mary's - AVins -'Again. \u25a0 WASHINGTON, May 14.— Senator arid \ MrsV- Newjands . of Ke va'da .; gave a dinner/ to-night vto .7 Baron 1- Speck yon Sternberg,* the Embassador, and t his x wife. y^Among^ those r : present were ? Secretary $ and * Mrs. Taf t, /Asso ciate 'Justice : ; Brown \u25a0} of the J Supreme Court and; Mrs ' Brow n; and i Lieutenant and ' Mrs.-" ; von Bredow. c Lieutenant* and Mrs.lvon>BTedow, the': latter'aVdaugh ter of \u25a0 Senator > Newlands, » have just re turned' from : the .wedding- tour, and will sail for; Germany "May -20^'; SENATOR NEWLANDS GIVES : > DINNER TO VOX; STERNBERG SALT LAKE, May 14.— Delegates to the general 'assembly, of i the , Cumber land Presbyterian church, to be held in Fresno, i Cal;, ';' this week, and their, wives, -the whole party numbering about. 3oo persons, spent Sunday in Salt Lake City; fA £ rally lof the * delegates was held this evening in the First Pres byterian" Church. Judge W." E. 7 Settle of the Kentucky, Supreme Court, who is moderator .- of \ the assembly, .;.', presided. Judge s Settle \ declared \ his , belief \ that the i Cumberland conference would I vote for -J the union ; "of the Presbyterian churches.^.' The delegates to-morrow will resume their journey to California In ; their; special train. ; lands and Main Branch of \u25a0 Presbyterians^ Session May Decide to Unite - Cumber- CHURCH DELEGATES OX WAY TO CONFERENCE IX FRESNO Atlile^CTGiYe^the-St.-Lonis Twirlers a ',' ii *:" p. Good Tinie on \u25a0Their'-- ' (, >' , ;' STAKDIKG; OF THE CLUBS.;, \u25a0 , - ' (National- League.) :"'i' ' (American' I/eairae.) \u25a0 •-\u25a0*\u25a0 ;.i :; -uv. v pet. * ; . . -w. v Pet. X«V'-Tork...lS - & .7M Cleveland ...12 8 .000 •Plttsburgr ..'.:i« >9 -.eio Washington .12 11-.522 .Chlcaro.-:..:i4:12 ..VW PhUa. ' .ll;10 .522 ClnclTinatl= ..12,12 '.500 Chtcaco ' 11 10 .522 ".Pblla. *::;;•:.. 10 12 .455 St. Louis ...10.11 .476 Brooklyn: . .'. 12 16 •.\u25a0*^»|l>etro»t > ..„. 810 .474 Boston •*.-.:. .-.10 14 .417tNew Tork .. 9 11,450 St.*. Louli./..*8.13..345»8c8t0n ..... 913 .409 \u25a0,-i: \u25a0'.\u25a0";.\u25a0 '.-AMERICAN 1 ; LEAGUE.* .. V- CHICAGO. * Ma*"' 'li^— Chicayo defeated s Xnr \u25a0YorE '-to^lay. : J Puttmann" was . unsteady. ' allow lnr Chicago five- two-base -hits and glvinsr flVe b.ises \u25a0on \u25a0 balls.'' three . ot ' which - scored. ; Attend ance 15, 4iV. : Score:.; :"\u25a0 •\u25a0i -i .; ..- \u25a0; \u25a0 • R. H. E. Chicago .. : :.';.'.'.. .............ft-- 13 1 Kew -Tprk .^.:.;.r. .-... 3 8 1 \u25a0 *. Batteries — Altrock * and -.'\u25a0 McFaxland; - Putt .nraan'aad^McQirirer' >\u25a0: ; f- '.; i- :.-.. ,»•:. ".i - ST.- "LOUIB. 'May 14.— Philadelphia to-day i 'punished' twp" of..' the local \u25a0 pitcher^ • and. ' assist- i 'ed'byimany' errors.: won ".handily. Attendance i 10.100. -Stor«:v! - • • ; -.. • • Philadelphia-".'.;.... ......:.... I<> 11 0 -^Batterles-^Sudhofr.-Pelty and Weaver; Plank and^PQWfrs. \u25a0"-': .*. . ; .: - - , • "-DAYTOV, -\u25a0 Ohio. \u25a0 May 14-- ;: -The came • that was,' to- have,fb««n. played^ here, between; the Detroit , a3d -"Boston - clubs of the American • L«a?uo waa. postponed on. account of rain. . r -in; v- . -V NATION A L LEAGUE. • — r' BROOKLYN; Hay, 14.— At Washington ; Park to-day the rPtttsburgs won from Brooklyn, by a score 0f ,5 to' V."- The locals were ootbatted and Leaver joutpitched * Eason. Attendance T5OO. Score:.." *; : '.':'- '. - * --.. — : ...v,^ .*- \u25a0'.". . • R. H. E. Brooklyn 1 " 3 • 1 PltteburgV. .'...,-.".-.---.. .....'.".5 8 1 1 -\u25a0 ' Batteries — Ea*on > and Bergen ; - Leever and i Carrl3ch;""Umnlr«i — CDay and Ems He. SPOKANE, May 14— Profits of near ly. $250,000 were made -by owners of .the Hercules .Mining Company aof Idaho, as- a' result ; of : the sale of thsir. tenth interest in the Selby<.smelter^ - near San Francisco. " Two years ago I the -com;' pany bought : a block of Selby , stock to* get I some ' representation in ton"ct on"c of ;€he. big reduction' companies handling Her cules ] ore. /.The * mlne.V.which « has ; 4e-* veloped into one of the greatest silver lead properties" in^ the. whole* world in i four] years/- has • been shipping part of its output. since then. to Selby. ,-.\u25a0. I ._\u25a0"\u25a0 ! Within the last few weeks the Bmelt- t ing Trust; absorbed smelters! of -the Pa clflc v Coast. ; Barney' Baruch i has i been making 'the deal.. In: order; to 1 get ithe Selby j company j he > had £ to | secure ;?',the stock "owned i by , .the : Hercules': : people. Eugene Day/of .thelHercules and;M^ A." Folsom.'attol^iey,; have /returned ; from" San /Francisco, .where; they, "concluded the sale^ for about J500.000.' •\u25a0,-.;. \u25a0 } ' -'. Until four . years ; ago -the v Hercules owners were * all poor; men, , having I to work :the ! mine.;" Edward -Boyc'e. labor, leader, is part-owner. ;< ' ?'p T.T '. " ; v Mining Company Disposes of. Interest In Coast Plant to Recently j Formed Trust. ;'C . •-'. SQX GET- JERRY' ' " '. TO PUTTM AXX'S TWISTS SALE OFjSELBY 'SMELTER. — v ENRICHES IDAHO PEOPLE Former Governor Dead. LITTLE ROCK. Ark.. May 14.—Gen eral Thomas J. Churchill, a former Governor* of Arkansas, is dead in this city after a lingering illness. Pala-was: a noted . slave trader and warrior when the Americans first oc cupied the -islands. Later he escaped with his followers to the Island of Pula Sekar, near Borneo. One; of Pala's leaders deserted and took refuge in the British settlementV of Lahad. • Palo, discovering his whereabouts, landed with a following* and demanded of the British "magistrate that he turn^the de serter over to him... The demand was not, complied with, and Pala ordered n. massacre. " Twenty-five ; persons,' in cluding several British, were ; killed. Pala escaped to the island of Jolo and organized. the present uprising. It is reported that the ;; Borneo au thorities requested General .Wood to capture Pala dead or alive and turn him over; to them. 'v"^:; General Wood, with' detachments from the Fourteenth Cavalry, the Seventeenth. 'Twenty-second. Twenty third Infantry and the Constabulary scouts has driven Pala and his follow ers into a swamp, which has been sur rounded. . - MANILA, May 15.— Fierce fighting has been going on for the past two weeks on the island of Jolo between the outlaw 'Moro chief Pala, with «00 well armed followers, and troops under the personal" command of Major Gen eral Leonard Wood. Pala's losses thus far are 300 killed, whHe those of Gen eral Wood are 7 killed and 19 wounded. Pala and his remaining followers, in accordance with Moro tradition, prefer death to capture. ' v« It had drifted north and east of the park' and when it : descended a great crowd "was collected . In . the neighbor hood. < The balloon dropped in a back yard' on East Twelfth street." Morton struck on a high post used to support a clothes- line and then, toppled over, into the branches of a dead tree. Par achute . and bag settled over him, - but he -was quickly, rescued. ' When picked up Morton' was unconscloous. "The surgeons at the hospital to -which' he was -taken - cannot determine- to-night whether he has any chance ' for re covery. * LOS ANGELES.- May 14.— Stunned and rendered • nearly unconscious by being. <lashed against a high pole at Chutes Park, as his big balloon shot skyward this afternoon, Professor W. M. Morton, aeronaut, dangled, head downward, with feet fastened to the trapeze underneath the parachute, powerless. to help* himself or stay the flight of the gas bag. . Thousands of people witnessed the accident. Women fainted, while men shuddered as the balloon and its help less human freight soared high, like a monster ; bird with its : prey in its tal ons/The spectators watched it until it became a mere speck In the heavens andvthere It seemed to remain station ary. ThenT as the hot air. with which the bag was inflated began to cool, the balloon slowly 'settled earthward. . Special Dlepatch to Th» Call. Third event, six birds — Klevesahl 8. Dearby 5, McConnell 5. Prln<le 4. Murphy 5. Baker 5, Brunner 4, McMullen 4. Shields A. \u25a0 .Second event, six blrda — Klevesahl 8, Dearby 6. Shields 6. Barker 6. Bekeart 3. Prlagle «. Murphy 1. McMulUn 6. Gerstle 5. Schults 5. Brunner 8, Xauman 6, ilcConnell «. Elsemamx 4, Whlttler 2^ Regular club event, twelve birds — Klaves&hl 12. Murdock 10. Whlttier 8. Prior 11. Baker 11. McConnell 12. Schultz 11. Xauman C Shields 10. Golcher 11. Bekeart 11. Dearby 11. Orstl« 10, Dugan 11. The California Wingr Shooting ' Club held its monthly live bird shoot at the Ingleside traps yesterday and quite a number of the devotees of the sport participated. The weather conditions were excellent for good scores, which, prevailed. Klevesahl was the shining light ot the day, as pigeons were as easy for him to hit as the side of a barn, and in consequence the twenty-four birds un trapped to him failed to leave the bounds. N'auman and G. B. McCon nell were also there with sharp eyes and got their slices out of the differ ent pots. Following were the scores: Favorable Conditions. California Wins: Club Holds Monthly 3leet at Injrleslde Traps Under HEAVY LOSS INFLICTED ON MOROS AERONAUT HITS TELEGRAPH POLE • "The ra^e -of the San Francisco Tacht Club J from' Vallejo to Sausalito yesterday proved. somewhat of a fail urei owing? to' arlack "of wind. Four teen, yachts. 'dropped anchor off Mare Island 6'n Saturday night. The yachts men were^most. hospitably entertained by the- members of the Vallejo Yacht ing^ and Boating Club at- its opening jinks.. .A handsome pennant of the San- Francisco- Yacht Club was pre sented to, '' Commodore, W. G. Morrow and Commodore 1 H. E. Chapman re ceived a • senior : : officer's flag. Yesterday.-rnornlng the San Fran cisco yachts,* on signal at 10:20 from the flagship, , crossed the line to race down. to- Sausalito. .-'The flagship Chal lenger soon obtained the .lead and fin ished, far ahead of the rest of the fleet at -1:40:20. .: Dr.. T. L. Hill's sloop Queen'.went ; ; through the rest of the fleet Mri: San Pablo Bay and reached Sausalito.; half .'an. hour before any of the ; other,- boats, but was unable, on account^of;a 'Complete failure" of the wind," 'to = cross the finishing line. It is probable the regatta committee will call " the event* off. : . The' yachts that made -Vallejo on ' Saturday night were the "schooners 'Martha; - Aggie .and Chispa, the; yawl Witch and the sloops Challenger/ Curlew, . Queen, Xautilus, Minnetonka.Merope.vZala, Amigo and White,/ Heather.' The. sloop Sappho reached .Vallejo on. Sunday- morning. 'X' The:. start from Vallejo" was\made when. the tide began to 'ebb.^ but" when the 'fleet reached. Raccoon Straits the tid^'had. turned and- the ;wind was not strong' enough to enable the yachts to make k > much headway against / it. It was late before all. the ;fleet had made its , moorings' at S.ausalito.' Morrow's Clialleriger Ls the Only Boat ."of San Francisco Fleet to. Cross H : i£\ "' : Finishing Line. KLEVESAHL SHOOTS WELIj IN LIVE BIRD CONTEST LIGHTNESS OF. 7WIXD MARS -^ .YACHT RACE FROM VALLEJO THOUSANDS MAY JOIN STRIKERS was employed at the time he was at tacked. « Casey, the business agent.^was taken into an Inner office and | questioned. The police say he confessed.' In this confession he told how Gilhooley, Fee ley and Looney had been engaged by the union. The trio was known as the "educational committee." The confession related to how • Gil hooley, Feeley and Looney, were invited to a meeting of the union and on that occasion the plans were arranged. At the conference, when no fund was found available to draw on. it was de cided to create one to be used by the "educational committee,'* as the "slug gers" were known. Then $150 was voted to the three sluggers In their efforts to "get" Carlstrom. The three . men went to "work" and the result was the slugging of their victim. The testimony promises to be sensa tional. The most secret workings of the labor union involved are said to have been laid bare in the confession. The prisoners will not be Booked until a thorough Investigation is made. Carlstrom was killed because he re fused to go on strike. Champion Walter D. Mansfield Makes a Perfect Score in the Delicacy v. Event. The members of the San Francisco Fly-Casters' Club met at Stow Lake, Golden Gate Park, yesterday, in the first re-entry contests of the season, when members ; cast up some of their back scores. The official results fol low:'" - . - - - .. . . " ~ T~C > Delicacy. ~T : I 8 *5 :& I | CONTESTANTS, j ."'\u25a0' ?« !?£ : ? ; T% .Z I -• r" i? : " . \u25a0 i '• .~. i 3 i Edward Everett.. R8 02.8 »7.0 86. 8 01.10 .... Edward Everett.. 98 .... &4.0 90.00 92.00.... Charles Huyck/.. .... /..... .-....'66.9 George W. Une. ..93.0A4.8 88. 4 06. « .... W. D. Mansfield .; 05.8 100.00 97.10 W. B C. H. Kewell...; 77 77. S 87.0 78.4 82.8 75.6 C. H. Kewell SO 89.0 86.4 73.4 84.1076.4 J. R. Douglass... 77 84.4 86.0 79.2 82.7 |.... T. C, Kierulff.... 85 M.4 89.0 88.4 »8. 8 97.1 F. V. Bell.. 70 66.0 76.4 79.2 77.9 87.0 F. V. 8e11....... 70 .... .... ...r;. ..... 70.8 A. Pperry ....... ..I-. .. 84.4 El. B 53. 00152.5 SATURDAT ; CONTEST. E A. M0cker.... |90|?6. 4 183.0 78.4 80.8 P1. 7 E. A. Mocker. ...|Br>[BB.o 87.0 81.8. 84.4 95.1 .E. A. Mocker...; 9-t . . . . .... ..93.4 H.H. Kirk...... "(7f»j76. 0 80.0 69.2 74.7 .... H H. Kirk J80|74. 8183. 8| 66.8 75.2 .... H. H. Kirk...;.. f«|.:.. .... ...... ..... .... G. C. Edwards.. 70 84.8 91.8 87.6 89.7 93.4 , G. C. Edwards... 80 91.4 89.0 94.2 91.7 93.0 G. C. Edwards... 74 .....:.. ...... ..... .... F. H. Reed ..... .. 84.0 90.8 85.10 88.3 .... G. TV. L*ne...\. .. 87.4 .... ..-;.-.. ..... .... G. W. Lane..... .. 86.0 93.0 91.8 92.4 .:.. J. R. Douglass.. 76 .... .... .:.... . : . . . .... T. C. Klerulff .'. . SO . . . . .... .:...". ..... .;.. C. G. Young...-. . 70 .... J. ' Marsden. ..... 86 .... .... ...' Dr. Brook* ..... 95 ..;-. :... .:....|..... .... FLY-CASTING CLUB MEMBERS - : ; : 0 COMPETE AT STOW LAKE CHICAGO. May 14.— Unless compro mises are offered by all the opposing Interests in the fight now in progress In Chicago between capital and labor the teamsters' strike will spread many fold daring the next forty-eight hours. The refusal of the teamsters' Joint council, representing 35.000 union driv ers, to accede to the demands of the Chicago Team Owners' Association to handle merchandise for all business houses having contracts with the mem bers of the owners' organization with out discriminating against the firms in volved in the present strike has brought the controversy to a point where a speedy settlement will have to be made to prevent an extension of the trouble. After receiving the announcement of the teamsters' joint council refusing to obey the ultimatum of the Team Owners' Association, a meeting of the latter organization was held, and it was decided to give the teamsters un til Tuesday to consider the proposi tion. Information which the Team Owners say they received to-day, that the teamsters' joint council was not a unit last night in its determination to fight the owners, was given by the owners af the reason for the postponement of the enforcement of the ultimatum un ti: Tuesday. That last night's decision of the teamsters will be reconsidered was evinced to-night when a call was sent out for another meeting of the team eters' joint council for to-morrow night. A call was Issued -to-day also for a meeting on Tuesday of the executive committee of the International Broth erhood of Teamsters'. This committee is the controlling body of the teamsters' organization, and it is this 'body that orders or has the final word In the set tlement of a strike of their members. Another death was added to the list of strike victims to-day. In a con troversy arising out of the strike be tween John Cahill and two compan ions, with James Jennings, a negro, the latter was shot In the head and killed^ FUNERAL OF STRIKE VICTIM. galloped on the scene. Then cheers and handclapping, mingled with shouts of derision, broke out along the line for a block. But there was no work for the police. The procession formed in the vicinity ot the Pierce home, 904 South Central avenue, at 8 o'clock in the morning. Immediately following ±he carriage bearing the aged mother, sister and two brothers of the deceased', came thirty carriages occupied by union labor offi cials. In the first was International President C. P. Shea of the Teamsters' Union, with Vice Presidents John Sher idan and E. J. Mullen. Tne succeeding carnages contained officials of the va rious locals of the Teamsters' Union and of other affiliated unions. At in tervals along the line were the ban rers of the different locals and four American flags, each draped in black. Kighi hundred men marched • behind the carriages at the start. All along the way other detachments joined their ranks until, when the station was reached, the column extended ten blocks. A brass band marched at the head. Eight strikers who worked with Pierce were the active pallbearers. Eight other striking teamsters acted as hon orary pallbearers. ; ,- Pierce was an employe of Rothschild & Co. as driver on a delivery wagon. He was shot by Special Deputy Sheriff E. T. Waldorf. He is th« only union man who has lost his lifs Juring the strike and is regarded by other men as a martyr to the cause. % Pierce is said to have assaulted a non-union driver in the presence of Waldorf. Wal dorf was exonerated by a Coroner's Jury. y - At the Cook County Democratic headquarters, where the funeral pro cession halted en route to the railway. President Shea of the Teamsters' Un ion addressed the mourners. All the heads were bared while the address from the balcony' of the second floor of the Democratic headquarters was delivered. President Shea said: The members of the Teamsters' Union do not compose the disorderly element In the present strike disturbance!!. The teamsters are not seeking to do violence in order to secure vic tory for themselves, and they regret deeply that violence has-been done, occasioning such events as the death of our mourned brother. It is our dutr as members of the Teamsters' Brotherhood and as law abiding: citizens to re frain from all acts of violence and to discour age such acts, both on the part of the union men aad their sympathizers, wherever occasion arises. •. We will win the present ftrlke, not through violence or force, but because we are law abid lns: citizens of. the United State* and of this city. t>eeklnr to obtain what is rightly our» by peaceful methods. Deep silence prevailed during the address of President Shea, but at its conclusion he was wildly cheered and urged repeatedly by. the crowd to tell more of the plans and purposes of the strikers, but he remained silent. TELLS OF "SLUGGER'S FUND." MINISTER HERBERT BOWEN GOES TO SEE ' PRESIDENT WASHINGTON. May 14. — Herbert W. Bowen,.. American : Minister.';' to Venezuela, accompanied by Mrs.' Bo w^ en, reached ; Washington : to-day", from New York/ Bowen went to the: White House and • left - his card for 'the Presi dent. He spent the evening. quletlyl at' his hotel.7 where. lie received a number of friends. ". s '; ;-• : ; i . It is expected -that the , President will send for Bowen to-morrow and receive f rom ' ; him his ' statement concerning, the charges which - have ;;.; been £ ' brought against Mr.-.Loorais," the Acting Secre tary of Stat- ; U . : > Hundreds of Workmen in Solemn Pro cession in Chicago. rrn \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0— n «^L « \u25a0 i-- - ** CHICAGO, May 14.— Marching with draped banners and muffled drums more than 2000 union men followed the remains of George S. Pierce, a strike victim, from his late home to the Union station here to-day. The body was taken over the Pennsylvania Railroad to Louisville, Ky., for burial. No funer al services were held here, but the es corting of the body to the station was made the occasion of a labor demon stration in which not only the Team eters' Union, but organized labor gen erally, participated. The progress of the cortege was without incident. The rren marched solemnly, four abreast, each bearing upon his coat lapel a white button with the inscription in black: "We mourn the loss of a mur dered brother." Even the spectacle of three coal wagons manned by non-union negroes rj*ar the Union Station elicited no more than rnutterinKs as the column filed by. The only break in the serious mien of the men occurred when. a patrol wag on, called in anticipation of trouble. The men arrested were • Charles J. Casey, business agent; George - Miller, president, and' Henry J. Newman, sec retary of the Wagon Makers' Union, No. 4. When the three high union officials were taken into the office of Inspector Lavin they. were confronted.; by Gil hooley, Feeley and Looney. three pick ets previously arrested. Besides ' these were* Louis A. .Heile, ,an attorney, and Fred Ll Meckel. by whom Carlstroni CHICAGO. May 14.— Three chief of ficials of the Carriage and Wagon Makers' Union were arrested late last night in connection . with the murder of .Charles J. Carlstroni, who was,, fa tally slugged on April 13.. Casey's Confession Said to Lay Bare "Workings of a Union. THE SAN FRANCISCO^ CALL,' MONDAY, MAY 15, 1906. 7 PACIFIC STATES TELEPHONE AND TELIGRAPI COMPANY'S NEW TELEPHQJNJE EXCHANGE BU^ : : "J" ~ lln the Gityof San Franciscp | ::_.-..^ : -^--;;;-\-:ir::.V:,;-. { _^r_ Uf"lU"Unlt llflr nUVtmLiilu ' •'•- •\u25a0 ™ ~ — '— ~ - — "-^^ — r>-^-~ construction on New Mo nt^oinery street, between Mission'/; ~~~ .• :rr^' - •~^ ::::::: v ::^ :^ L:=^^^^^^^ ;:=z ~ -.•'-" '.- •'\u25a0\u25a0' • V^-v- "A^A-CANTIN* ( A '^' C^jrftc^r : recT and Howard. The buildings are erectc*! and arranged to v \^,.^'^.\ .-r-r-is^'-y^i- :-.:--'- r yr^;. :..^i:^ , , , - -tv.,. _ sorrH telephoxe El ch«g E B^LD^^conxEa wes t M, ss ,ox a S d crock™ handle and expedite any |i|gff;b|ife§i^gt!j|f| W^MW&ol^^^^^M^^^^§^^ SMUVUttOAKOUIiCIiAnV IXSTALI.KD l.\, .VISW WEST TKI.KWIO.MJ KXCHA.NUU iCOiUNER^ rprifurpmMltV^^' ' "**' " rr'ir^"; ; '".-. ; : -"\u25a0r> • ' :" x \. \u25a0:'' '"'"' *' : X' V .^v'.l^tTJtb'' hikJC&S'KJ'.X 't'lVst'^lJaD XE^EJG^TBLEraS^^^6HA^C^B^.IWTfa PL\E A.\D STEI.VERSTREETS). , 1 C^UU Cinema. . .• v --^i 'S'^ ' ' .'.* ;(HYDE STREET. NEAR SUTTER). § Gillette; Safety 'CM A2OR. /^Np Stropping M's or Honinrf $$/ Always r«ady. AI- £«VA7 • ways keen. Ha.» 12 dou- ' k f &l b»«-ed»ed bladea — 24, kr^l razors In one, each blad« Ml Ml uivlnK from 10 tt> 30 £P?*/ *hav#« -without bothßr: fc.'3? ' new blades Inserted In 1 U-ffgJ nrcend. The Ideal Saf»- jfsm " -Price O«>«VIU '.M' STAR BAFETT' W RAZOR — V • r y popular I and satisfactory- , Recular prtc« $-. •/ \u25a0 My price cut to 91J2 S I Regular Razors. In standard I makes. ' Good ones, as law &»..$ I .O»> ; \u25a0 Razors Honed and Ground. Hoa- B Mall orders promptly filled. I That Man Pitts I F.W. PittA the Stationer • 110081 IOO8 MarKrt St . opp. FiftttSL Suhma* i visit OR. JOR DA N ' S gr cat i iHUSEUH OF ANATOMY^ A (^ Mil BiSXET ST. Ut ta*»>.S.F.aL A A -ZMi* VarM. Ww»ntM «r may «MtrMte« A f JHfik dltM« p» »ltr»«ly emr«< »\u25a0» Un »H««« W A iW I CR. JORDAN-DISIASES OF MEN j \ i£W%\ CooMlt»d9» «*• Ml KTletly Vrtrts* \ A j|wl Tr«»taieat permot!!/ »r »T letur. A A ¥ I ]jr^|||»o«ai»«e»f«ia«»«/«»»»«ad«t»k«. W fI I PntiißUGf.. xiiua fsu. uf A & If »»iu»W« boot tor aea.) • . \ f db. JOBDAXit t.O«. ICsl Mart^t St.aF. V