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4 THE MORNING CALL H&3 a larger circulation than any other newspaper published in San Francisco. PUBLICATION OFFICE I 495 Montgomery street, near Clay, open until 11 •'rlocfc r. m. BRANCH OFFICES: 710 Mattel street, near Kearny, open until 12 o'clock mMntgnt : 330 Hayes street, open until 9:30 o'clock; 60S Lark in jtreet, open until 9MO o'clock: 2518 Mls-lon ■treet, open until 9 o'clock p. m.: and 116 Ntmn street, cpen until 9: "I) P. «. SUBSCRIPTION BATES:. DAILY CALL (Including Sundays), *6 per yew by null, postpaid; 15 cents pel werk, or 05 cents per calender month, through carriers. DAILY CALL, Bt« oople*, three months, as '25. SUNDAY CALL (SJiciu ■ 5!. SI 50 per year. postpaid. SUNDAY CALL and WEEKLY CALL. ?1 60 per yrar. po^ paid. WEEKLY CALL pases), $1 -Jpcryear, "postpaid. Clobs ten (sent to one address), #10. CFECIAL NOTICK FOlt TOE SUM PMKK MONTHS. Sabsorfbers who Intend s"' n to trie country duriofr ih<> summer montha can ..,.,_ THE :.A II V (All mailed to them for a nrok or longer nt regular subscrip tion raten, Ific. per wt-ek. GiTe order to «■. ni.i or send to boelnoH office. PAI'CTION t SAI.ES I TO-DAY. ruKNJTi —By Geo. F. Lamsoo, at 321 Me lt., at il u'ciock. i, , k , aijtlt. Etc— By Via, ltutterneUi, at 412 ,it il o'clock. Estath.— By Wm. Dlnsre*. at High st. and ■ I ay«., Al ; me I i. »1 2 n'cl.xu. VEATHKK I'OKECAST. P Ji •-•US. (IK \- Sl'-fI.TfKK, ) Wl ii an KaRRAP, J- Pan Kraxcisco, September 11. ISM I—s P. m. ) Weather Conditions an i General Forecast. [i,,, eydoule alstaruanca nolftd ibis morning is niovins steadily eastward near Vancouver 1-iainl. intended l>y cloudy weather ami rain tnroußbont Nortuern Oregon *iid washmKton. The barometer Ills fallen ighont the entire Pacific Siope, especially In Nnrinern California, KortnerQ Nevada ami Oregon. i be weatber baa I>een decidedly cooler in Soal&ern Cal forma ami Arizona and slightly cooler In ihe. Sacramento ... Tlie temperature has remained . mary in Washington. It has. warmol up -, little In Oregon, -Nova.la and Utah. ■Ihe weather has been more or less ttogy ana cloudy .it all l\ia-<t stations. Fair weather tins pre valled iv tho Interior or California, Nevuilaanil Alizoua. Local rains have c -aseil in mountain dis trict*. Storm signals continue at Nor:a P.ifino Coast stations. Tbe weather will become unsettled unit thrcateulni in Northern California and Nevada ana rains will continue In Oregon and Washing ton. The weather will continue to grow cooler in i-onthcrii California and Arlzina. Forecast Till s I". W. Saturday. Fit >orttitrn iMlir.irnia— Kalr weather.except llcht rain?* t»n northwes: co.t.*t: south to e-.i winds; liearlv stationary - • Dperatnre, except cooler alonft tue coi<t and in the San Joaqtno Valley; slichtly wanner In W«iern Neva.la; igi and clou Is alon* toast, moving In the valleys with overcast Mid threatening weather. For Southern California— Talr weather; south to west winds; nearly stationary temperature, except i miler on th»* sot.Thwest ■■■s-t. For orecon and Washlngton-rClondy with llgnt rains, except la S.>utheaster;i Oregon; sonl beast to northeast; uimls; nearly stationary temiicratura, except warmer in theeasiern portion and at Olympla and Portland. JOHSi P. r ism-, Lleutcnaut Ninth Infantry. A. S. V., in charge, THE CALL'S CALENDAR. SKPTE>nr^r. 1891. Hu.i.M. |Tu.| w.|TH.j f. ja j Moon's Phases, f I li 2| 3 1 4 1 5 £H BeptemDer 3d. ! L_J ' 1 1 — t& New Moon._ «| "|. - * ■'■•■■■ 1 1-i September lllT ] : . . ■ . , \J- rirs; Quarter. 1.MJ14 1>|1« 17 18 19 1 i I I AiS>e?temt»er lath. •JO 1311231 23 !24 25 -o ; '& full Moon- 38 j 29 1 30 j I I I \s Last gu^rter. I i-ATLKUAt SEPTEMBKB 12. 1891 NOTICE! I j,< . who fail tojind THE 210RSiyG CALL for sale by train-boys j ing this ojjice oj nd Irairu NEWSPAPER SI.ANDEK9. Friend Hearst of the Examiner blames us for the failure of a prominent merchant in .^an Francisco. We are not much surprised at this, lor .Mr. Ilenrst has permitted the paper which lip assumes to publish, to attack us upon various occasion* ev.T since he came into its possession. We do not know that an hi nest failure under our system of laws, is a rime. If this be so, however, the young man's fnther must have been nnfor tunate in this respect, fir it is said he f.Uled in business several times. As to young Hearst, who now owns the Examiner, if half the reports about him which we have heard be true he would be quite likely tv tail if he had any money; but as he has none except that which his 'estimable mother deals out to him, perhaps lie may not fail. Jut had not young Hearst, after all, better attend to his own business in stead of attacking us? Would It not be as pleasant for him to publish a decent newspaper and devote his time to runninz a yacht and in using a portion of the money with which be is supplied so as to benefit the public instead of slandering others? A BIII.IIEK'S LIEN. The judgment of th« Supreme Court in to Hinckley case will startle those who i.re interested in building. The facts were : Fields Tracker Company was put . Dp R building aud contracted with a builder to erect if. Simultaneously the cracker company arranged that Hinckley, who represented the Fulton Iron Works, . sui ! Ij a certain quantity of steel to >ed in the building. The contractor g to pay Hinckley, he sued the cracker any and claimed to hold a mechanic's The company de- lien on the building. i.iurreii to his suit on the ground that the iien had not been filed. To the demurrer ; that under the law ro one the principal cotitractor was bound to - lien, and thnt the party who fur - was under no such obliga ti in. The Supreme Court has sustained this contention and ruled that Hincklcy's lien will hold. The decision will add to the confusion which prevails in the law concerning build ing. The doctrine of the common law is •ie. who furnishes "supplies or labor to the construction of a building can bold the building itself for his pay. This doctrine ■en modified in most of the States by statutes which require a party claiming to iiold a lien on a building to record it as no tice to purchasers. When the lien is not re corded it is of no validity as against a third party. Under tbis law the owner of a building is frequently placed in a position of f Kibarrassment. He may pay the con tractor in full when the building is finished, but if the contractor has not paid the mason ami carpenter and plasterer and pointer jind plumber and other mechanics who have worked on the building, or has left the lum berman's hill or the brick-yard bill unsatis fied, his house may be held for the debts. The only safe course for him to pursue Is not to pay the contractor until tho latter 1 resents the receipted bills of every one wbo has worked on the building or contrib uted materials for its construction. In nro-t of the States the rule regarding liens is vigorous. A lien which is not re corded is no lien at all. It is like an unre- coided iniv^e, and h of no avail as against an innocent bona-fide purchaser. Xlut iv tlits J-tate, under the drclsion of the Supreme f'onrt in the Jliuckley case, it seems that a sub-contractor can hold a lien on a building without recording it. It is hardly necessary to observe that this ruling will expose In. use-builders to serious aunoy ance and, perhaps, loss. A man maj build a house and pay the contractor to the uttermost farthing, yet he lias no guarantee that when he tries to sell the house, tome purveyor of materials, or goniß mechanic who has worked on the . house will not turn up with a lien, of which .lie has had no notice and no knowledge. That is manifestly unfair, and suggests that the law stands in need of modification. Jt is plain tnat the mechanic who puts his labor and the merchant who puts his goods into a new building should have a claim on the building for their p;ty, and should not be forced to chase a debtor who may turn out to be insolvent. But it is atao ]>lalu that there should be some device by w Inch n party seeking to buy a house should be r-.ble to nscertain whether or no there is any ii:< unibiance on it. In tin's State aitfinpts have been made to overcome the dfnciilty by re'inirirje bonds from tie builder. Hut » security Loud is proverbially a poor ' lellancc. Bondsmen become insolvent, or leave the State; when suit is brought on the bonds, the plaintiff finds limiself dragged into an erdless law suit which limy cost nii'ro than the claim against the builder amounts to. A betln plan would bo to stipulate, in every builder's contract, that cayments lor material and labor t-boold be made at regular periods, and that on the expiration of tho 5 e periods, where defaults in payment were made, the default should be r< corded by the debtor under penalty of a f.rfvitnre of the lien. Tliat plan would arrest the attention of the parly at »hose cost the bouse was beiug built, and would enable liim to protect him self acaiust a fraudulent contractor before the default became so large as to be worth a lawsuit. It would probably save the mechanic from loss, aDd would enable a buyer to effect a purchase without running the risk of having to pay for his bouse twice over. .________. ■•CKAMMI£G H IN «>l'K I'IBLIC SCHOOLS. A lady who has been a teacher in our public schools, and is now sending her cbi dren to them, submits lie following: Editor Morning Call: 111 answer to the <|iies tiou, "How doe* it happen that Hie proportion of pa i eats wlio prefer to pay tuition lor their clnl mil. is >ie.ulhv increasing?" I would levly llMt it is one illieclly to Hie terrible system of "criim nilnn" which lias prevail d during Hie las) Tew yean tv our public schools. Parents, nutting nil protests unavailing, have been forced, In order to pioieei then cliildien from the bad ef fects of ibis process, to place Hum in private In stitutions having a nioie judicious management Superintendent swell. In Ms new couise of study, aims at the correction of this evil, and should his Idea; be carried out according to the methods lie suggest", our schools would ino>t certainly be placed on a broader plane of useful ness. This course ol suiuy extends over the I limaiy and grammar grades, but Hie ltd .1 wave of reform does do! rracti the high schools; Mr. Swett does not appear to have been consulted. Why should the High-school course overlap the University couiee? Wliy not elve our girls and boys an all-round liberal education which would not i> quire Hie umeasonable amount of study at present dem.n.dea? Why tint leave something totlie i ersonal c-floit of Uiose students who ate ambitious to enter Hie University— lke one sixth of percent? Why Impair the strength of our grand, free public schools by this unen lightened policy of everlasting cramming? San iVimcivo. Sept. 10. ML A T/.\ I'avkb. "Cramming" may be the result of under taking to teach too much or of defective methods or of the two combined. JoJiu Stuart Mill says: "The aim of nil intel lectual training for the mass of the people, should be to cultivate common sense." There is much reason to fear that thi-* pur pose of our public school system is partially lost sight of. The aim seems to be to teach something that the mass of the people do not know. The few years the average child has to devote to school are occupied largely with laying the foundation of an university education. The school authorities might perhaps do well to bear in mind the words if a distinguished writer as quoted in the course of study for our San Francisco schools, as follows: "An educational course may be packed so full of work that one piece crushes out another; and then the pressure is an obstacle against which both teacher and taught beat until they are painfully bruised." This condition is reached when pupils are required to de vote lour or five hours to study out of school. It is a question if crowing children should cc given tasks to commit out of school. Study out of school hours should be voluntary if permitted at all. The school day is between live and six hours long, which is about as much time as chil dren from 0 to 16 should devote to mental work. School authorities will say perhaps that there are no branches now taught lv the primary or grammar grades that are no', es sential. Essential, however, is a relative term. Xo tiling is more essential than physical and mental health. The aim of the school authorities should be to teach as much as the average pupil can master with out overstudy. Neither the especially bright nor the especially stupid pupil should fix the standard. One would say in glancing over the branches of study adopted that all ought to be within the range of the ability of the average pupil. But there is something in method. The branches may be simple aud the method complex. Too much study of non-essentials may be required. The practice of committing pages of history to memory lends to elevate the faculty ol arranging words in the mind so that they will come out in order at the expense of the facts which these words were written to convey. THE SALVADOK EABIHQVAKJL It will probably Drove that the stories which have readied us regarding Wednes day's earthquake at Salvador are exagger ated. There is always a disposition to over state the damage done by such catastrophes. But there appears to be no doubt that the little republic has had a pretty thorough shaking up. Salvador Is to the manner boru. Four time!, since the historical period began, has the capi:al city been destroyed by earth quakes, and the survivors vnong the people have been forced to rebuild; the last de structive earthquake was in 1854. But the earth is always quaking there. A traveler who visited the State in 1879 counted GOO shocks in the course of ten days. Back of the city, in the mountains, are a. score or more of volcanoes, some of which are con stantly, while others are intermittently, active. The natives believe that these vol canoes act as safety-valves for the subter ranean forces. But a careful study of seis mic phenomena does not sustain the theory that volcanic eruptions obviate earthquakes. On the contrary tho two sets of phenomena are often simultaneous and apparently caused by the same agency. The Cala brian earthquakes which Involved a heavy loss of life were accompanied by periodic eruptions from Vesuvius. Seismology is so voting a science that it Is more fruitful of conjecture than anything else. Nobody knows the cause of earth quakes; every theory which has been ad vanced to account for them is open to objec tions which seem fatal. It is certain that they are most frequent in our day within the limits of a belt between about 36° north and 15° north. But there wasnu earthquake a few years ago in Chile in .Jo° south, which raised the whole littoral several feet; Hecla is in Gs° north ; Lisbon is near the line of 40° north, and on the same meridian lies that rang* of country in Asia Minor and Syria which was devastated by earthquakes jnst before and at the beginning of the historic period. It was supposed that the United States was free from destructive earth quakes until the catastrophe at Charleston in 188«. That occurrence required a revis ion of current theories. It appears that you find earthquakes as the minors say you find gold, where they happen to occur. A theory which has gained adherents of late years is that all or nearly all earth quakes are of submarine origin. The idea was suggested by the fact that the phe nomena never occurred far from the sea board, and it was confirmed by study of the tidal waves which accompanied the earth quake at Lisbon in 17."..", and that which de stroyed Arica in 1868. The tidal wave at Lisbon was sixty feet in height, and swept in from the, Atlantic from some seismic focus perhaps far out at sea. No survey of the bottom of the sea has yet enabled us to locate centers of seismic disturbance; but it is known that there Is a volcano or system of volcanoes, whose action is frequently ac companied by earthquake shocks. in the South Atlantic, about midway between Guinea and Brazil, and another in the Bay of Bengal, off Madras. Vessels sailing over these spots have felt earthquakes or rather waterquakes quite frequently. The bottom of the Pacific is supposed to be full of them. Another belief, which originated after the Calabrian earthquake, is that the dis turbance originates much nearer the surface of the earth than has been supposed. Mr. Mallet made a thorough study of that phe nomenon, and by a series of Ingenious calcu lations was enabled to locate the seismic focus from which the disturbance arose at a point five and three-quarter miles below the surface of the earth. Perhaps the crust of the earth in Southern Italy as on the coast of South Carolina is unusually thin. It has been observed that few earthquakes ever cross a range of mountains, which is explained on the theory that the mountains must rest on a very solid and deep base that offers resistance to the subterranean force. At San Salvador there appears to have been bit one shock, and that only of twenty seconds duration. Destructive earthquakes usually involve a series of shocks, sometimes lasting for several hours, with brief inter missions. The earthquake which destroyed THE MOKNING CALL. SAN FRANCISCO. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 1891-ETGHf the old city of Guatemala extended over two days, which the people of the doomed city spent on their knees in the plaza, praying lor mercy. It is hardly likely that a single eafthwavß could have caused the wholesale destruction repotted in the dispatches. It may be hoped that the current stories are exacgerated-like most of tlie historical accounts of disasters from earthquakes. ONE CAUSK OF COMPLAINT. Special Aeent Bernard for the United States Department of Labor has been some weeks in this city investigating into the cost of manufacturing compared with the East ern cost. There is a general complaint among manufacturers of woolen and cotton poods in California that they could not com pete with Eastern manufacturers. One cause of the higii cost of production on this Coast is attributed to the high price of fuel and water, another to the system of long credits and another to high taxes. There does not seem to be much complaint of the cost of labor, the reason probably being that whatever extra rate may be paid is made up in the greater efficiency of laborers in a climate that has no extremes ol I.eat or cold. The complaint of bich taxes is en tirely within our control. There is no rea son why taxes should be high In this State. On the contrary, there ore good reasons why they should be comparatively low. There is no State debt to speak of and In this county no municipal debt. Kiotn a quarter to a third of the revenue of Eastern cities is devoted to the payment of interest on one form or other of debts. The. fuel and water difficulty is not so easily over come. So long as we have to import most of our coal it will be higher thau in the countries we import lrom. Water rates are not necessarily high, but are made so by the exactions of a private company, which, in spite of law, establishes its own rates. It appears that about 30 per cent is to be added to both State and city tax. The men who have been declaimiue against the dollar limit have found a way to Ret around It without submitting the question to the peo ple. The boodleK ai.d their newspaper or gans are unanimous in the opinion that the S'2W),o<)o for State purposes and the SoOO.OCO for city purposes imposed by the Stale Board of Equalization must be paid. WOI'I.D IT >tLL? The French authorities, it seems, are about to enter upon a crusade, apainst vicious lit erature. A newspaper contemporary says Ft does not believe that any considerable number <>f persons desire vicious litera ture. Perhaps this Is true, but if there were no restraints to the publication of vi cious matter in some cities In the United States we apprehend that our contemporary would soon change its opinion. There are numbers of persons who can scarcely Ret along withe lit some of the stuff which may be termed " highly spiced." If a news item is published that class of readers wish to have fiction mixed up with it. There are people even who are pleased to read vicious at tacks upon their neighbors. They do not care how seriously that neighbor is injured, but they say the spicy fiction is entertaining reading. The Call fears if all restraints were taken from the publication of unwhole some literature, even in Sin Francisco, that we should be. Hooded with that class of stuff and that it would si 11. AN' IMI'KUVEMt.Vt DKSIBBD. It Is Pta'ed that a driveway is to bo con stiu t ihl on the ocean beach, extetidin^ from the Cliff House rocks (or some three miles southward. Should this be done aud the driveway lined with evergreen trees a por tion of the park which has lacke i im provements will bo appreciated. EDITOKIAE, NOTJES. Arcoidingto a Treasury Department official, the Chinese smOKglloß operations are rapidly in creasing, th- difficulties thrown la Hie way ot the sinuffiiers by its Government officials liav luk only seived to raise trie price per bead to get coolie* lv tills country aud tons to stimulate the smugglers to greater cSoits. Seven months aco lie taiiff was Sit) to SIS per man safely brought acioss I lie border. "There were," says this official, "a number of well-recocuiz-d routes by which they were brought over the border, and a dozen Chinamen In a skiff from Smnia to Port Huron, (or Instance, was a very profitable fare fir the skill. Tbe American oDlceis fell upon the routes hi about i hat lime. I: was tlie open ing of : tie season ou toe Northern border, and we made extra efforts, with success. By the Ist of May $25 was the pi ice, and there was no falling oil c f unlawful emigrant*. The month of July •■aw ihe pi Ice at from j.">o to $00, and Dow the men who nave made reputations as successful smugglers nave no difficulty m obtaining from $75 to $100 | er bead, according to the physical dlOculUes of tlie route. Moreover, a very large number of new routes have been opened." Con«ul-Ueneral New, when a-ke<l recently what were the effects of the McKiuley tariff on the cxi nit Hade in London and (ireal Britain said: "lean only give the fads that have come under my observation In my own office and those that have been reported to me by the Consuls un d-r my jurisdiction. For the nix months ending June 80tU of this year there was a falling off of lv per cent in the number of Invoices at my Con sulate-lieneral and a decrease of from 10 to 15 per cent in the value of the exports as'conipared with the corresponding month* of 1890. During tut! same period the reports from all the Consu lates In Great Britain show a marked decrease In exports of such ai tides as silks, fine worsted dress goods, tine union*, which are cotton and linen mixed good*, wool, camel and goat hair goods and manufactures of steel, Hmoui-tliig ap proximately to BO percent, while the decrease In the value of cutlery exported amounted to About CO per cent." The deliberations of the Irrigation Congress at ball Lake City will be watched with con sluerable interest. The call for the congress de clares that Its sole purpose ii to induce tie National aud State Governments to enact laws whereby the arid lands can be best and quickest brought Into the market, settled and developed. It further »ays: " Without i.lieiluK any sugges lion whatever as to the plan to be pursued or the legislation to be suggested each delegate Is re quested to form his own Meal as to the most beneficial and feasible legislation calculated to bring about the development and upbuilding of the agricultural lands of the Western States and Territories." It Is expected that there will be delegations in attendance from California, Knn"a», Nebraska, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Washington, Arizona, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico and possibly the Dakota*. The Court of Private Land Claims lias organ ized and adopted certain rules of preliminary procedure, but so far It Is said that not a single petition has been filed at Us office In Washing ton. They inu>t. however, be filed within two years or be forever barred. A plausible reason given for the delay of claimants in getting their cases before tbe new court Is the stringent pro vision of the rules Insisting on a full presenta tion of a claimant's 'Hie in bis petition. The settlement of these Mexican land grant contro versies would result in vast tracts of land being brought under cultivation. Berlin has a novel rapid-transit proposition under consideration— the construction of ele vated railroads with electricity for the motive power. The system Is to Include eight lines, the estimated cost of which Is nearly $17,000,000. BEATTY IS DEAD. A Nevada Paper, However, Inil»U That He I- Still .\iii.-. The Carson (Nev.) News, in a recent issue, stated that there were doubts its to the re ported death of George Beatty in the Ger man Hospital of this city. Beatty was shot by William Booth at Candelitria recently aril brought to this city for treatment. He was received at the German Hospital here August 2!ttli. and died September 3d. O. G. Brown at Candelaria was notified of the death by Superintendent Fahrbacn of the hospital, who received adispatch telling him to hold the remains until further orders, lie held the body five days, but hearing nothing from the dead man's friends it was turned over to an undertaker. Superintendent Fuhrbach was very much surprised when shown tho News' clipping which cast a doubt on Beatty's death. No More Delay in Oregon Freight. The Southern Pacific Company lias in augurated an Improvement in the freight service between this city aud Portland. The schedule of the line north of Ashland has been made to connect with the schedule south, and there is uo longer any delay. The schedule time from tbis city to Port laud fur freight is now only eighty-two hours. Bay your stockings at 105 Fifth street • A Divorce Grantei>.— Judcs Bubbard yes terday granted Robert F. Capllnger a divorce from bis wife Kate on account of tint infidelity. Largest manufacturers of California glaoe fruits lv United Stales, COc a ft. Towiisend's. • Hank Examinations.— Knight has examined the Bank of St. Helena and the Sonoma Valley isnuk at himnma, me resources of which he reports at $180,841) Cl andslsß,'J3B 71 respectively. ■ . . ■ _ -■■■■-..■ . ,t. • . More than 200,000 people are confirmed in the English Church every year. .ITEMS OF INTEREST. A Lebanon (Pa.) policeman has been fined for profanity. Thieves mowed n Germyn (Pa.) meadow at night and took the hay. Never indulge in habits for which it is an effort to discover an excuse. A liughxsrille (Pa.) man was recently robbed of £100 while at church. In Spain an infant's face is blushed with a pine tree bough to bring good luck. Droughts and frosts have nearly de stroyed the Khine-wine harvest this season. A foolish girl at Helena, Ark., who was jilted by her lover, has suicided with mor phine. • An immigrant recently arrived at New York with 24 children, ranging in age from 1 to 25 years. Women in Sweden have obtained official permission from the Government to be re ceived as pupils of apothecaries. The first alligator seen in the Arkansas Rrfai for many years has been killed at Little liock. It measured five feet. A self-opening envelope has appeared which operates by drawing two projecting ends nt a string so as to cm its edges. The Altoona (Pa.) School Board has had the Mayor and City Council arrested be cnuse they related to abate a sewerage nui sance. Helen Ki»l!ar, aged 11 years, a pupil in the liiisioii Kindergarten, ran play the piano fairly well. The child was born deai,dumb anil blind. The cotton worm is creating great devas tation in many counties of Mississippi. One field of twenty-two acres has been entirely stripped of its lmives. A St. Louis father and son, separated for ten years, iiave been reunited. The boy ran away fruni home when ten years of age, and had l>een in Dourer. An automatic machine has been made which forms nils, weighs and seals pack ages in those establishments where large quantities of goods are constantly put up. 0.-k»lon8», lowa, has a thrashing ma chine haunted by spooks, which put out the fire 111 the OMrioa and abstracted tools from the work-box, which four men were watch in?. It Is the intention of European engineers to store the waters of th« Nile to such an extent us to enable a greater extension of the cotton aud -iigir-caiie crops in that re gion. Mrs. David Kichanls of Evansvilie, Ind., whose hn<bmnd i- a poor man, employed as a rarpxnti'r in a railway shop, lias fallen heir to £75,000 by the death of a sister in New York. A babe born at Danbury, Conn., weighs tf-s tlmti iwni'nnii'ls. When born it weighed one pound and two snnces. Its li-iutli is that of an ordinary pencil. The child is in pel feet health. Tlie finest sapphires in the we rid are owned by the Countess Hranicka, a Polish woman. The finest diamonds Id the world are owned by Mine. Andre, and her pearls are alto considered beyond all comparison. l>v. M. O. .larvis of Kajiletown, Ind., i* aged 70, and throughout Ins long life he boast* that ln> never »worn an oath, drank a drop of liquor or smoked a cigar. He has been preaching since he was 14 years of age. A Lyons anatomist tia^ examined the skeletons of eighty-six monkeys—chimpan zees, gorillas ami orang-outangs— has found diseases of the bone to be. as frequent as in man. and of a utriklngly similar char acter. The detonation of a now heavy caliber gun at ingolstadt, Bavaria, recently smashed all the windows of a railway train that was pasting the artillery ranee at the lime. Fortunately uone of the passengers were Injured. The granting of permission t<l the starving Russian pe.isanty to use the imperial forests has led to many burglaries and depredations on the. imperial farm, the famishing people fighting and in some cases shedding blood over the spoils. A few bights ago a wagon drove iin to th« hospital in Plashing, L. 1., and after deposit ing a box of clothing on the sidewalk drove hurriedly off. The hospital malingers have no Idea who the donor was, but they are very grateful fur the timely gift. .Mrs. Withereli, An old lr.ily who lives at Glenns Palis, N. V., is the thirteenth and youngett child and the seventh daughter of her parents. Her hatband, recently de ceasd, was the thirteenth and youngest child and seventh son of his parents. An examination of th- Crotnn-water stand, through which New York City receives its drinking water, discloses that nuisances of a dangerous character are maintained from which the streams are polluted, and the health of the consumers of the water thereby endangered. Memphis, Tenu., has the finest orphans' asylum fur the care of the orphans of de ceased Odd Fellows. It is complete in all of its appointments, finely situated, well constructed, and has ample farm room to mnke it almost self-sustaining. Accommo dations are offered for 150 children. A great many more young men and women are sent upon the road to ruin by money titan by poverty. As a rule the devil wants no belter chance at a boy and girl than to have their pockets full of money and then set them down at wine fashionable resort. Ilest Is all right; revelry is all wrong. While a Ken v military company was on its way to camp, one of the members jumped playfully into the air for an apple and in coming down was impaled on the bayonet of a comrade. The weapon caught him behind the right ear and went clear through bis head, inflicting fatal injuries. Indian Agent Leahy baa gone to the Fond dv Lac Agency in Minnesota to investigate the illesal cutting of limber. Over 10,000, --000 ieet of timber has been cut during the year from the reservation. The farmer at the reservation has been removed and wholesale arrests will follow the official in vestigation. The cave-in In the bank of the Mississippi Kiver below Plaqnemine, La., has reached olatming proportions. It is over 1000 feet loin and about 350 feet wide. It has taken in over 300 feet of the levee and half of the pablic road, and nlso pirtnf the old em bankment that whs used by the Union soldiers as a fort during the late war. There is a present disposition toward what Is 'ailed "common-law marriage." If the maiden moved to matrimony will take a hasty glance at Blackstone's Commentaries she will discover that, under the common law, the husband had a right to whip his wife, provided the stick used in flagellation was "not larger than his. little linger." A honey bee's sting has caused the death of a Williamsport (Pa.) man within fifteen minutes after its infliction. The physicians who were called wore mystified, but ex pressed the belief that the bee's sting had entered. a nerve or blood-vessel, and that the poison was quickly carried to the vital organs, causing almost instant paralysis. The pencil business in Maryland this year is a bigger failure than last year. The crop is too large and prices are away down. Many grjwers are diguing uc their orch ards. Local canning-houses are buying peaches at live cents a basket, and have had to relume offered invoices at that price because of the lack of labor to handle them. Martini Ferry (Ohio) farmers are on a still hunt for a mysterious wild animal that has made great slaughter of hogs and sheep. Several men who have seen it at night de scribe it as walking sometimes on all four* and sometimes upright. Country people all over the county are in continual dread of it. Near St. Louis, recently, after the death 01 a man thought to be in destitute circum stances, his relatives were cleaning up the house mhl discovered an old trunk contain ing 817,000, of which 512.000 was in green backs and $5000 in gold and silver. Jin left a widow and three children, none of whom suspected that In- had any money. lie was a farmer, and very miserly. Charles Cuppa, while walking on the rail road track near Alliance, Ohio, was struck by a fast freight and fatally injured. Cuppa had served five terms in the Ohio peniten tiary, from which ho was released in July. When run down he was visiting the spot where in lKXti he robbed a man and tied him on the railroad Track 10 be killed. The man escaped and had Cupps convicted. The excessive us« of morphine has caused tint downhill of a hitherto prominent and skillful New Orleans surgeon, who is iv jail at Houston, Tex., for stealing a valu able let of surgical instruments, which he pawned to raise money with which to gratify Ills passion. Despondency at the loss of his wife and six children within ten days in duced him to partake of the drug. ET.OOD*! Sarsaparllia, the most popular and suc cessful blood puriher before the public. Is pro pared only by 0. I. Hood A Co., Apothecaries. Lcrwall, Maas., and Is sold by all druggists. The Dlning-Car Llue. For comfort take the Union r.iclllc Railway, the only line running through Pullman sleeping-cars without change between flan Fi aur-isco and Chicago, with dining-cars the entire distance, ai riving la Chicago and all Eastern cities twenty-two hours la advance of all other transcontinental lines. Tourist excursions leave every Tuesday and Saturday with through Pullman tcurlst sleeping-cars to Chicago without change, Ticket office. No. 1 Montgomery street; D. W. Hitchcock. General Agent. Grand OvArlnnri Kkcumlod. Shearer's autumnal overland - excursion will leave tan Francisco September '_".*tii (or Chicago, Boston and all , Eastern cities. For particulars address F. E. Shearer, 2 New Montgomery at,, or 1 Montgomery St., San Francisco. I'"on ladles, the best and purest tonic is Angostura Bitters. It effectually cures dyspepsia, and tones up the system. Dr. J. O. B. Slegrrt * Sons, m'f'rs. Those who seek relief from pain and weakness should use I'mikiii I',1 ', Ginger Tonic. I'AitK Hair Balsau never rails to please. FOR TIIK I'll! OF A Coooh oh boRK Thboat, "Jlrotm'B JJrondttal Trochet" are a simple remedy. J- .mi: a mince pies. owai.Vs. 213 Sutt«r street.'. CHIISCB notices. R-7B* First I'resbyteriun I'liuhli, Corner 836' of Van Ness aye. and Sacramento st. — The Hey Robert Mackenzie. D.D., pastor, will preach at 11 a. M. and 7:45 r. m. In the evening Dr. Mackenzie will begin his series or lectures on '1 volution In Its Present Relation to Religious Beliefs." Sunday-school at 12:45 r. v. Vouug People's Society or Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p. m prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:45 f. m! All are welcome to these services. It B^S* WooclbridKe Presbyterian Church, 32? C or. of Twentieth and Capp sts.— Rev. T. .J. Curtis, pastor. To-morrow, at 1 1 a. m. and 7 : 15 p. M. Evening lecture. "The Witch of Endor." Sabbath- school and pastor's Bible class at 12:30 o'clock. Gospel meeting Wednesday evening. Visitors al- ways icordiallywelcome<L^^^^^^^^^^_^__lt^ OTIC OF MEETINGS. -V-3P ortircm and Members of ,^uiC|'^, j -& Walhalla Kutickah Degr ee§/^^ I mice. No. IHO. I. O. O. F., are re- -ij^^sfe" quested to meet at Odd Fellows' Hall ■ Wlv, NEXT SUNDAY. September IMb, at 1:30 p.m.. for the purpose of attending the runeral of our late brother P. G.. K. E. BEHRMANN. By order of .MARIE FROST. K. G. Matiih.l'B Pf.tebs, Rec. Sec. ■ sel2_2t ■K^k> C'oncMirilia Loilsr, No. 122, -^ ii^- nr-iS' I. (>.'>. F.— 'lbs members of th " °^TissT?l*'" Funeral Committee lire requested to -V>^Bfc-^ assemble at their hall on SUNDAY. ' September 13fh, at 1:30 o'clock, to attend the funeral of our late brother. Pasturand F. E. BEIIR- %X.N. JOHN 111LLMANN. N. O. C. J. Wkd'l. Ret. Sec. «el'i at f»— 3r=« Ophir l.oder. No. 171, I. -S^Si^ tVv o. O. F. — The officers and "'""l'^v^sSsS hers are hereby notilie.d to assemble in ?35<X>iSr tbe lodge-room at 1 :30 o'clock r. M.. on ■ ''' N SUNDAY. September 13th. for the purpose or at- teiKling the funeral of our deceased brother, GEORUE MADISON. DAVID KEKK. N. O. A. HOVEV. K. S. ttU lit o*-:^= <» id Follows' I.lternry «ml <-*igsKfe. LtCiy Social Club ineeu TO-NlGHT.£iggpfe Brethren of the ordercordlally invited. O.J. KING. President. -Vm^ H. J. Ddncan. Secretary. It r»-535=> Trin|il«r liHx'liah IJeicr-e .^SJ^. &civ Lodge, No. IK. 1. O. o. P., meets^*g^S THIS (SATURDAY! EVENING ill Me- %?*2%S? mortal Hall, I. O. O. F. Building. All -"%/ll^ members or the degree cordially welcomed. De- eo work second and "-'Voßa'baKK... N. O. Mattik UrswKi.i*. K. S. au2W tf b» lf^sr=» .'aiir.>riilH Itehekuli He- <? v U^£l", Lfe^^gree Lodce, No. 1, 1. O. O. •*■— = j£Z3®£^ The lodge meets every HATUKUAV <<•=.- KVKMMi In Friendship Hall. New Odd " '/''^ Fellows' HuiKiiug. corner Market and Seventh sts. oflleers and members are requested to attend. AU members of the degTee are cordially Invited. FANNIEADLER, NobleOrana. 1. 1/7. ik R. Nov. Rec. Sec. au!s Sa if rr--3p St. Mary** Catholu: TiitJtl \b*ti- Lfr^v nence and Benevolent Association— The reg- ular monthly meeting of the association will be held SUNDAY, September 13th, at 2 r. m. , In the usual place. BuslooaS of great Importance will come uu for action. Fines for non-atteudance will be strictly enforced. ED. LKONARD. President. P. 11. M« Ginkktv. Recording Secretary. 12 2t ■> j\j The County >i i>:i.i^ li.ni Social and It-^ 1 Benevolent Clvb — The Committee of Ar- rangements for the seventeenth annual hall at I'dd.reiNiwa 1 Hall on October 7ih will receive bids for ball: also music. Mall bids to JAS. hIU.N.S, Secretary. Hl9 Howard st. , §el 3 13 1 1* 'JO 4t T. CALLAN*. Chairman. ff-^S" Tailor*' JI,»H-M««-tine Thin l-Ai-ninc Wr~& at B o'clock, Elntracht Hall, 31B|l'ost St.; all tailors iuvlled. fit) S. . I KN SEN, Secretary. g^S* Welt Oakland" Mutual i.oini A«n<>- fifr-j? elation— Annnal meetlfig. Notice Is hereby given that the slxteeiitb annual meeting or the stockholders of the V> KST OAKLAND MUTUAL LOAN ASSOCIATION will be held at the office of the corporation, cor. ot Willow and Seventh its* West Oakland, on the 1 Itli day of September. 1891. at 7:30 o'clock r m.. for the purpose of electing Directors, presentation of the sixteenth annual re- port and lor such other business as may properly ooo.e berore the meeting, and further notice Is also given that one of the objects of such uitMetiug to be submitted to the stockholders and to be voted upon by them will be ths question: "Whether the cor- poration shall co t'mit- its existence under the pro- vision* of Title XVI of I'art IV. Division First of the Civil Code of the State of California and the sertions thereof, numbered from 633 to ';;h>- 3 In- clusive, as tin. 1 said sections were amended ai.d adopted by act of the Legislature of the said sute, approved March 31, IH'.il, providing for the forma- tion and government uf mutual buildlug and loan associations." Hooks for a limited number of shares in the Fifteenth Series ere now open nt the othce of the Secretary, cor. of S-veuth and Willow bis.. West Oakland, bet tbe hours of 6 and 8 v. v. on Monday ami Thursday at the office mi San ran- t-lsro, 524 Montgomery St.. during business hours. Loans are made by this association ouly In Alameda and San Francisco counties at 0 per cent per annum Interest, free or mortgage taxes. My order of tne Board of Directors, t<IJ a. SBARBORO. sec g^TlS 2 * Hi, fur San ltuf;t«'!~ ■! A at^Mtk i*-^ A cead imli.l falith.i to 71 is^vVniA? Irishmen all, from the Cove or d. ,tA . \ -. *mPT » Rebel Cork to Douegal. The fifth «;.A\ WrsVv« annual (.lcu;»" ami en ur.>lou of ".. »«*g\jJSyV.-> S ltebel Cork Benevolent Society h^VV9C*Si will be held at California Schurt- * la»>^-r^ * zen Park. San Kafael. on Sunday, September 13, 1891. HeflVrnsu's relebrated band will he In at- tendance; also Professor McCarthy, the noted Irish piper, will discourse music for dancing. Games of all kinds will be contested for, tor which valuable prlz'swhlbe glveu. The Committee of Arrange- ments has exerted Itself to make this one of the grandest excursions of the season. Adults' tickets, 75c: children, 40c. Kuala leave Tlburon Ferry at »:30 and 11a. and 1::;U r. m. <e6 8t CVJt^» Annual Heel ni^ The Kc^n.ar An* Ci^-*' nual meeting of the stockholders of the I*a- clflc Coast Borax Company will be held at the office of the compacy, 230 Montgomery St., Room 11. San Francisco, California, ou MONDAY. September 21. IHPI, a: the hour of 1 :30 p. v.. for the purpose of c erilng a Hoard of Directors to serve for the en- suing year, and the rriniaatlan of such other busi- ness as may come before mo meeting. ■e6td ALTON H. CLOUCiII. Secretary. EfJ^s* Annual M«m ti>*K--Tha Keirular An- *?•& nual meeting of the stockholders of tbe Mouo Cold Mining Company will be held at the office of the company. Room 62. Nevada block, 309 Montgomery st, San Francisco, Cal., on THURS- ! DAY, the 17th day of t'cuiember, 1891, at the hour of 1 o'clock p.m. for the purpose of electing a Board of Directors to serve for the ensuing year and the transaction of such other business as may come before the meeting. Transfer-books will close on Monday, September 14, ik'.U. at 3 o'clock p. m. 11. D. WALKER, Assistant Secretary. Office. 62 Nevada Block, 309 Monigomrry st, San Francisco. Cat. an 23 t.i SKT3J* A:> hum) Mevtins— Die liririilar An- H"-^ hunt meeting of the stockholders of the Grand Prize Mining Company will be.heldattbe office of the company. Room 20. 331 Pine St. San rranclsco. California, ou 1 DK-li.W . the fifteenth day of September. l sin, at the hour of two o'clock r. m., lor the purpose of electing » lizard of Direct- ors to serve for the ensuing year anil the transac- tion of such other business as may come before the meeting. Transfer books will close on SATURDAY, September 12th, at 12 o'clock m. K. It GRAVSON. Secretary. ORlce— Boom 20. 331 Pine st, San Fraucisvo. Cal- ifornia. »u2t> iti W^r* Lodec-ltoomA to I>et— l.»rsr»-; Small. JS^ Grand Opera Hall. 737 Mission: .cheap.3o It gl^fcr* A AV«»«k** >ewn for 5 ('mw- The ss^»y Wkkklv Call, in wrapper reailv lor nialllug. HPKOIAX NOTICES. W^^^x* Charles A*htoti. 411 Montgomery IHr-JS' st; rents collected; general charge of property; no needless expenditures and no percent- ages on repairs. nelO cod it^S* To I.et— For Sli,r:ii;», or Stable, or Hr^es factory, etc., brick building 60xb4. No. 11 Webb St.. near cor. California and Kearny; rent $150. Apply 604 Commercial st. se9 I4t Br^sS* <ient«** Slwie* Sole,!, ?Oo.; l,;i<llfit' B^_SLo.-t. 60e; will you unit. 787 Market. a 7 3m BT^* V«k Your Drn^-UI for i' R I.iul- tK*' incut. Latest and most wonderful discov- ery. se9 3ot* tj^LJ "WhitfniMif K«i»rn«, 91 Up; I'aperliisr u>-*/ rooms. ■•■:> up. 513 Third »i. J025 3in n^^=* l*rlYAte Home In Confinement — Ot-& Monthly Irregularities restored tv one day without medicine: competent phv<ii(-tan In house; strictest discretion. MRS. C. SCHMIDT. German MldwHe.grad. Unlverjlty Heidelberg. 1879. Ili 1 1 Vii Mission st se2 ly ■ yK^=> Atleutt'tn— Ladles* Preventive Sup. '~x~*s posltorv; harmless, sura; cures female coin- plalnts. Address DR.CHnWN.I'.O.Box 2^67.a201m* Jtt^Jy 5 l*:i(lit % if I i-r«"^iil;ir, See .>lr*. I'uelz Lfr^y and be content at once. 205 Fourth St. 1 lm* ■T- .. Uookh boatrht ami aoltl. ikJiitf ltro«, »-*" M-ourib St. near Market tnrV7 tf ¥'W Had Tenant* KJerted for %*. Cnlloe- Br--*^ tlons made, city or country. Paoluc Collection Company, 528 California st. Room 3. ttt22 tt ar"?s" All Monthly lm -^iilnritl, ■« and ttfr-js' other conditions restored at once, from what- ever cause: ladles, If you wish Instant relief consult the only reliable female physician of 40 years' ex- perience; my remedies will positively cure after alt Imitations giveu by quacks and Impostors have failed: pills #1; also latest invention without medi- cine. DR. M. STRASSMAN. Ul6 Post st. Dei tl HiS» Can ion to I.adien— l>i» N-t Be Im- »-«' posed upon by quacks who copy part* of the advertlsemdnts of Dr. and Mrs. Haven, and are pre- sumably too Ignorant to writs their own; $100 will he paid for any case of female irregular! ties they can- uut cure. (mice. 228 Post st, 8. P. ; 9 a.m. to Bp. M. R3S" Alameilst Maternity Villa- Strictly B^ private. MRS. UK. FUNKH. I4IH El»hth.B tf ■""3*' I>r. O. C. O'Donndl— and Res. m^r MV.cor. Wanhingtou and Kmray gta, niytfsf ~£r* Try Oreen'd *. v r.wn - ««i Cur*, Only ■ft ■& vital restorative mid system regulator, posi- tively guaranteed to cur* or money refunded. L box, $1; 6 boxes. $5. For sale at KKLLY'S. 102 Eddy. Try KELLY'S CORN CUKE, haj-mles*.2ftc, KKLLV'S. ly fO 1 Bad Tenants I Jrrl.-d for Win »nd at^ all costs paid: collections city or country. COFFEY'3 COLLECTION CO., 619 Montgomery, « R^S» Dr. Word's KmlurHtive I'llls; S|>e- TBr*& clfic for exhausted vitality, physical debility, wasted forces, etc.; approved by the Academy of Medicine, Paris, and the medical celebrities. Sold by J. G. s I'EhLIC * CO., 635 Market st, Palace Ho- tel, San Francisco. Sent by mall or express. Prices: Box of 50, $1 25: OI 100. $2: or 200. 9.1 50; or 400. »ts. Preparatory Pills, $2. Send tor circular. lyr JfTiS'" A Kleaaini; to Ltillea— luMnnt Ke- ar^*^ )tef for monthly Irregularities (from what- ever cause); patients who have been Imposed upon or unsuccessfully, treated by others especially in- vited: hoard and skillful attentlou during conflno- ment: advice free. Pit* MRS. HAVEN. 228 Post »L |£pS> Th« KT«ninir Bnlletln. Price Ke- )Sb~~&' duced to 15 cenU per week*, delivered by car- rier to auy part of the city ; the Bulletin Id tbe best, oldest and largest evening paper published on inn coast; orders by postal-card or otherwise will re- ceive prompt attention. Ofhee62°J Montgomery at. ■~~~ SITIAIIONS-rKMALK. AN "t KD^bTrESI-EU rA^ILE^iIRIToiK^4,' J i Vt position to do light housework : no washing; sleep at nome; wages $8. Call or address EL.SBB Hayes St. ■■■ till 3t* ESPECTABI.E WOMAN WOULD LIKK To work by the day; washing or honse-cleanlng. Address 319 Fraurlsco st. gel 1 2t» ADY WISHES GO OUT BY DAY, DO PLAIN i sewing or mending; would stay with children evenings during parents' absence; reference given. Apply after 6 o'clock p. h., or address MBS. W. ( 822^ Post st. . ... . • _^____ seia 2t* 11EL1A1ILE MIDDLE-AUED WOMAN WISHES XX position as first-class child's nurse or Invalid'!. Address Nurse. Box 110. Call Branch Oluco. 12 2t* OMPETKNT WOMAN WANTS WORK BY THK " day washing. Ironing or house-cleaning: Is good sewer: wages reasonable. Address 8. w., Box 58, this office. se!2 2t* SITUATION WANTED IIY COMPETENT GIRL for upstairs work: state wages. Address H. 8., Box 157, Call liranch otllce. . ;, set 2 at* V\ OMAN WANTS SITUATION, COOKING OR ** housework, where she can have her baby (16 months old) with her. Call or address 7 < (1 - Teliainast. ■ ■ - . . . »e!2 at* \- Ol'NO MARRIED t.KKMAN WOMAN WISHES 1 Koine kind of work through the day ; good ueedle woman. Apply Sole Minna st., bet. Fourth and Fifth. ■ . ..- ■■'.., . . , it* VODNO UIKL WOULD LIKE TO DO FACTO KY •, 1 work. (.lit!, W(H'!.[> I.IKK TO DO FACTORY . work. Address K. T., LfttO I'owell st. It* SITPATI»>N9-COXTINt'EP. __'__' 7T2kmTn~ljirE^vvishi-:s situation for VJT general housework or upstairs WOK. Apply 504 Ninth St., near Bryant, rear. ■ _IL_ /-URL 21 THAT KNOWS HER BUSINESS \J wants situation as waitress or lanch-waltress. Address Worker, Box 20. this office. 11* TMRST-CLASB GERMAN COOK; GO4)D PRI- V vate family: flrst-class references. 311 Vi Jessie St.. near Fourth. ' ll nOMPETENT YOUNG WOMAN WISHES A VJ situation to do general housework: Is a good cook; willing and obliging. Call at a 63 Jessie near Fifth. , " IJESPEOTABLE WOMAN WISHES SITUATION li as housekeeper: is good cook; arst-class washer and Ironer; understands thoroughly all kinds of housework. 11-J6 Mission st. It* 1 iI'.K.sSMAKER: FINE FITTER; SEWS MY J / day or week : city or Oakland: »4 per week. M. C, Box 129, Call Branch office. It* INTERESTING WIDOW WISHES POSITION" AS 1 superintending housekeeper; widower or bache- lor. 32 Ueary St.. Room l l_ VOUNO WOMAN DESIRES WORK BY THE I day or part of each day. Address Work, Box 154. Call liranch (irtlce. »* I IOMI'ETENT WOMAN WANTS SITUATION AS \J working hoiueiieeper: caoahle of taking charge of young or grown-up children. 1024 Howard St., Room 5. , *'* VOUNIi GERMAN WOMAN WISHES WORK BY I the day: good laundress. 1326 Howard at. It* LADY WOULD LIKE POSITION AS COPYIST or Is qualified for most any kind of work. Ad dress MISS L.. 1015 Market St. sell st* - GOOD COOK, WASHER ANI> IRONER DE- " JT sires work, city and couutry, or cook In private boardmg-house. A. 8.. 549 Howard it. sell 3t» AN ELDERLY LADY. COMPETENT. INDL'S- i"V trious. Is a good seamstress, will assist in light housework, for » 10 per month. In city or Oak- land. Address Work. Box 127. Call Branch. 11 31* /•OMI'KTKNT WOMAN WANTS WORK BY THE \J day or week; house-cleaning, washing or Iron- Ing: good references. Apply 924 Mission st. sll 3* OWEDIBH UIKL FROM THK EAST WISHES I s place in an American family is root. 9 Meadow place, off Filbert, bet. Stockton and Dupont.^ll at* COMPETENT DRESSMAKER DESIRES EN- g.igoments; first-class cutter aud fitter. 1016 Twentieth si. «ell ANTED— BY A REFINED AMERICAN LADY a place as companion for Invalid. orwonld go as housekeeper where uothiug menUl Is required; good references. Call or address MBS. ETTA Jii.v I_S, 709 Diamond st, near Tweuty-fourtb.ll 3* / IRL WANTS SITUATION TO DO GENERAL ' ' housework; private family. Call 1772 Poison street. sell at* STEADY YOUNO WOMAN. LATELY FROM I HE East, wants a situation to do general housework In American family; no postals. Call 51 Third St., Room 8. sell '2t« SCANDINAVIAN GIRL WISHES SITUATION 0 to do cooking and general housework In a good fain ily. Please call 222, Chicago Hotel, cor. Pacific and Battery sis. sell gt* OMPKTtNT DRESSMAKER WANTS ENGAGE- _ m entsbyday. 1822 a Howard. sell 8t« OMAN WISHES WORK BY THE DAT: '' washing or home-cleaning. 775 MUsion.ll WISHES 'SITUATION TO DO \-OLN i GIKL WISHES SITUATION TO DO upstairs work, or would assist with housework. Please call ICON I'evlsadero st., near surtT.sll at* Tv OMAN WANTS SITUATION IN SMALL PBl- *■ vate family; assist in general housework. 602 Howard st., cor. Second. cell *Jt* SCANDINAVIAN tTIRL WISHES SITUATION in small family to do general housework. Ap- ply 617 Second, bet. Hraunau and Townseud.il 21* i-MAN WAN IS SITUATION !O DO CiEN- ■' eral liou>ew.<rk; good plain cook; no objection to short distance In country. Call 4 Buss st., near Howard: nopostals. sell 21* hT.SSMaKEK. GOOD CUTTER AND FITTER; «1 per day. 1318 Hyde St. selo 7t* Vf IDDLE-AQED WOMAN WISHES POSITION ill as ;In keeper or bou<e-clcanliii; by the day: city or country. Apply 7 Oak it., nr. Van Ness. 10 4* ( '.>MI ; ETE>T RDBBE WISHES Wnlik IN HKK \J line; good housekeeper and cook. -61 Inth st. near FoKonu solo :it* \HU.N<i GERMAN GIKL WISHES SITUATION I as second work or lady's maid. 3U6 O'Farrell street. selo 3t» I/AI'KRIENCEU HOUSEKEEPER WOULD LIKE 1 * position either in city or country. Address or can 1.. 1... 307 Hayes st. selo 3t* L'IHST-CLASS DRESSMAKER WISHES FEW i more engagements by the day, Address 1023 Ml^luii st. selO 3t» -OTa UKAKY; A LADY. EXPERIENCED •* — I 4 rrench embroidery, knitting, crocheting, wishes a few engagements. MRS. RUBURIi. 10 3* \\- ANTED -SITUATION AS WORKING MOUSE- « • keeper; has bad experience with children : good reference glveu II required. Address J. 11., itox 75, tills omce. se9 7t U'ANTED-SITUATION BY WOMAN D.NUKK middle age as plain cook, penerai housework;, satisfactory referdt.ee given If required. Addrets A. It.. Hox 13. this office. se9 7t li' ANTED— BY YOUNG WOMAN, PLACE DO *' chauiberwork In lodging-house: must sleep at home If possible. Address Work, Box 128, Call Branch umee. ■ se9 st» THE EVI.NINU BULLETIN, PRICE REDUCED 1 to 15 cents per week, delivered by tail lei to any I«rtofthe city: the Hulletlu Is tne best, oldest and largest evening paper published on the coast; orders by postal-card or otherwise wilt receive prompt attention, Offire t>22 Montgomery 5- SITUATIONS— COMPETENT MAN WANTS A POSITION IN private family; can take care or horses and cows: can sweep ami clean and make himself gen- erally useful: can give good references. Address I*. A., Bex «9, this trfltce. se!2 lot* /"•OACHMAN AND GARDENER — SITUATION \J wanted; Is first-class on horses, harness, car- riages: is careful driver: willing and obliging: has nm-rlass city references. Address J. K. Boi 12, thlsoflice. »el3St« U an: I HY A SOBER AND INDUSTRIOUS man. who is a good farmer, a place to work on shares or a steady place. Address H. S., Box 10, nils office. sel'.'Jt* COACH WISHES A SITUATION: IS A J first-class driver: city preferred. Address Care- rol, Hox SB. this office. sel2 3t* |>OY, 15 YKARS OLD. WOULD I.IKE TO GO ON I-> a ranch; will ,lo any kind of wort:. Addr ss It., Box 58, this omce. sel2 3t* SITUATION WANTED BY DRAUGHTSMAN of good experience and technical education. Address 11. k.. >■■ x 1»1, Call Branch Ufllce.sW St* YOUNG MAN WISHES SITUATION TO DRIVE 1 delivery wagon; good horseman; first-clais city references. Address S. Box 151. Call Branch.* , mill HOUSE AND CARRIAGE PAINTER '• wants work Immi d:atelv; any w-ges. Call or address 1411 Folsoiust It* V'OUNG HERMAN BUTCHER WUSUIiS SITUA- I turn 631 Stevenson St. It* (•EKMAN MAN WISHES SITUATION FOR 1 > hotel, as bed-maker, porter, or any kind work. 620 Stevenson st. It* BAR-KEEPEK, FIRST-CLASS, BEST REFER- bbcb*, wants position. Address CIIAKLKS WELTZ, lSlSPulli st. sell at* STEADY YOUNG MAN WHO KNOWS AIL O about driving would like to drive a delivery wagon ot nay kind; security If required. Address P.. Box lor. Call llr.tnch office. sell 3t* V'OBNO MEDICAL STUDENT FROM THE EAST 1 desires position as nurse; understands applying electricity 10 rheumatic diseases, etc. Address Medical. Bom 92, Call Brauch office. sell 2t* IV ANTED— SITUATION BY YOUNG MAN IN << hotel: :ti,2 years' eiDerlence: first-class refer- ences. Address American, Box 111, Call Branch Office. Bull 2t* MAN A.ND WIFE WI.NOT A POSITION ON ; I*l ranch; man as rou^li carpenter and teamster, wife good cook, Call or addres Farmer, 212 N l ue- tcentn st. selO st* youNt) man wants A job; experienced X driving 1 or '1 horse wagon. Address Driver, Box 92. Call Branch Ofllce. se9 4t* L* MA 1:1: II I' MAN WITH 12 YEARS' EX- -1 perience would like a position with a good general dry-goods store In the country: best of references. Address Dry tiuodn. Box 51. this office. scBs *_ COBEB, INDUSTRIOUS MAN WISHES SITUA- -0 tlon In some mercantile capacity: understands boob-kteplng and short-hand: familiar with Cus- tom-house and shipping matters. Address V. s.. 150UB Taylor st. sett 7t* . SITUATION WANTED BY A YOI'NO GERMAN 0 and wife on a ranch, vineyard or private place: will be at liberty by the 10th or 151U of September: wife good cook: no children; best of reference! given. Address X.. Box 46. this office. *, -i 2»t* rpHE EVENING BULLETIN, PRICE REDUCED - 1 to 15 cents per week, delivered by carrier to any 1 art of the city; the Biuietlu is the best, oldest and largest evening paper published on the coast; ordeis by postal-card or otherwise win recaive prompt attention. Offlce 622 Montgomery at. . FEMAI.K lIUP WANTED. TT~ANTED —IN FANT'S NURSE. {COUNTRY^ '' J-'.'i, call early; second girl, couutry, $25; waitress, country hotel, $20; waitress, restaurant, $25; German nnrse and seam>tress. country, $23. DELOIiME < ANDRK, 321) Sutter si. It 0 WAITRESSES. COUNTRY HOTEL, *20 EACH. — sre party here this morning; cook, boardlng- houss, *30; faintly cook, S3O; second girl. ¥20: waitress, $25. and glr:s for housework: mother and daughter a; cook and second girl for country, $35 and fare paid. It T. WARD & CO.. 610 Clay at. It ll' ANTEI)— 3 COOKS, GERMAN STYLE. $25 •' and $30; Protestant cook, $:fO; second girl, same house, $25; 5 second girls, $20 and 925: German seamstress and chambermaid. sf.'J; Invalid's nurse, $25; 4 cooks, hotel and boarding-houses, fll, $30 and $35: I*2 waitresses, city and country, $20 and $25; chambermaid, assist waiting, $20; kitchen helper, $20; girl tor cleaning, etc., around hotel, $18, and a great many girls for cooking and housework, city anil country, at $20, $25 and $30. J. l . CBOSETT A CO.. ti'2(f Sacramento st. It \l' ANTED— WAITRESS. COUNTRY HOTEL; '» $20; tare paid; see party at our omce at 10 to- day. J. F. CROSKTT ii c..'.. 628 Sacramento st. It 11 ANTED — 2 WAITRESSES FOB MKRCEO. ' ' $20: chambermaid to assist waiting, country hotel. $20 and tree tare: waitress lor private fam- ily. Merced. $25; 4 hotel and restaurant waitresses for city. $25 ami $20; cleaning girl for hotel, $18: dish-washer for restaurant, $16: waitress, same place, Stt per week: German au-t Scaudluaviau girls for cooking and general housework, city and coun- try, $30, $25 and $20. C. K. UANShN'.t CO., 110 Geary st. - It U' ANTED— COOK FOR FIRST-CLASS hIIARII- Ing-uonse, wages $35 : 3 first-class second girls, $25 each. Apply Ml.-S 1 1.1 .NKtIT. 4.'4 Sutter.lt tI'ANTKn — LAUNDRESS, COUNTRY, $25; '' eh tmbermala and waitress, $*-0; scrubwoman, city. $18 and board. HOTEL gazette, 420 Kearny st. It l\- ANTED -GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE- * work: small family. 1015 Flllmorest. 13 if "yOUNG GIRL, LIGHT GENERAL HOUSLV I work and companion to elderly lady traveling. Address H. 11. Box 151, Call Branch oince. m 3t« GIRL. WAIT AT TABLE; $20. CABLE HOUSE, Valenela st. - seia 3t» Y-OUNG GIKL, LIGHT HOUSEWORK: GF.K- innn preferred 1010 ruchanaii st. sel2 3t« U; ANTED- A TIDY AND INDUSTRIOUS GIRL "" for general housework: good wages; good treatment. Apply 1812 Howard st, from 9to 11 a.m. ■■.■■• sel2 5H* GIRL FOR SECOND WORK. 652 MISS ON ST.. upstairs. , . seia 3t* 1* ANTEI>-FIRST-CLASS WAITRESS AT MRS. *' 111 11 restaurant, Jones st. sa!2 31* / -IRL FOR IIoI'SEWOKK; PLAIN COOKING; >VJ family or % Apply MRS. O. LAMBURTH, Pc- trero aye.. near Kl^ntoent 1 St. ' '^ - sel'J .:i * OPERATORS, FINISHERS UN CLOAKS. «OLD- KltRO .<-- i;AIU. 019 Harrison st. soli St* O GIRLS: UKNESAL. ' HOUSEWORK: - GOOD — wages. 709 Mason st.: Swedish orUerntan. It" AMERICAN GIRL; LIGHT: HOUSEWORK: i A wages 9 IS. 2523 McAllister it, -. : It* help y~'A" l :r) ~ roN II? i: SJ?: "j^EAT YOUXii '"■ WOJIAN DESIROUS OF A IV good Borne and piano lessons part payment for services. 2816 Sacramento st. se 1 a Jt* TNVALID LADY WISHES COMPANION; GOOD I home. 821 Filbert st. It* .1 FIRST-CLASS WAITRESSES WANTED. 821- Z 828 Kearny st. "* (-(OODTAILORESS ON CUSTOM COATS. 825 T Eddy st. _^_ ll /~( OOD WAITRESS AND DISH-WASHER, BOTH, Lr at 639 Howard st. "' YOUNG GIRL TO MAKE BEDS. WASH DISHES 1 arid assist In housework; must be owl 9J4 Twentieth st. "* GOOD WAITRESS IX KESIAUBA.M. 104 Seventh at ; If U'AITKXSa WANTED FOR RESTAUUANT. II 816 ramento St. It* 'ANTED-A YOUNI* GIRL TO TAKE CARE of. a baay. Apply at 1601) Post. cor. Lsgnna.lt* ■ AXTED^RESPECTABLE «h:l FOR plain •* cooking and general housework la family of 3; wages »la. 1010 Jones at. It* VV ANTED— A NEAT (iIRI. AS COOK AND I' laundress. Address 1123 Suiter st tell tf \-OCNG HERMAN OR AMERICAN GIRL TO AS- I sist at general homework. Call at 1010' . Va- lencia st. ; sell tf ITXPJERIKNCKI) CLOAK- HANDS ; ALSO 1 Fj first-class machine operator, at California Cloak Company. 589 Market st sell 3t* "~ IRI. FOR I.I'.HT HOUSEWORK. 2002 MASON " * st. near Greenwich. sell 3t* /"'EKMAX OIHL-LIOHT HOUSEWORK AND VJ cooking; small family. 15J5 Howard, sell 3t* MALL GIRL— ASSIST LIUHT HOUSEWORK; sleep home. Call 4 6 South Park. sell 31* VI'AIST-TKIMMEKSJ. 119 STOCKTON ST., V' upstairs. soil 3t» Vciinc, LADY WAITRESSES; GOOD WAGES. X 218 Kearny st. after 7 r. m. sell 31* II ANTED— GOOD HAND ON VESTS AT 2105 V' loweil st. sell 3t» SMART DANCE-HOUSE GIRL; *2 A NIGHT. 511 Jackson »t. sell 31* ('EKMAN OR SWEDISH GIRL; GENERAL *' housework In American family; no children; $20. 2ilu WBibirigivu st. sell at* U' ANTED— FOR ROLTAIR'.S PALACE OF 11.- -• * luslun), w th Sells Bros.' great shows. 'JO hand- some yoaug ladies. Apply at ticket office. Central Park. cor. Eighth and .ilarxet sts., from 10 a. m. to 12 m . Saturday, Sept. l'Jtli. sell 2t» U ANTED— GIRL FOR UEXERAL HoCSK- work. Olive Branch. Golden Gate Park, sell 2t AA'-l MCALLISTER— UIKL FOR WAITING AT i'lO table aud general housework In Itrst-claiis boarding-house. selo 31* <<EKMAM IiIRL; HOUSEWORK AND C 'OK- VJ lug, call at i:m Pine, aeli) 3t» OPERATORS OX CLOAKS AND MACHINE sewers. 636 McAllister it. selO 3t* MUMSKULLS TAKE ti MONTHS WHILE i.l bricbt youths graduate In 3 mouths at Burgess' Business College, BW Montgmy; luveitigate.seti 7t* (> IRLS WANTED AISKW ROSE BUD SALOON. IT 311 Grant aye. s<:9 7t* V'OUMi GKRMAN (HIM. FOR HOUSEWORK IN 1 German family. 18U3 Devlsadero, cor. Uusa.7 tf I 'OMI'KI'KNI SWEDISH OR GERMAN GIRL; V- cooking an I hjusework. 303 Scott seß 7t» 4 DVICEMtKE. READ AD. PERSONALS. G.W. 1\- HOWE A it.. attonieyi-at-law. Hi» Market, tf : MALi-J lIKI.I' HAMI.D, Ut ANTED— COOK A SMALL RKSIAU- ran!, (50; cook and baker, plain hotel, ¥50; waiter for oyster ami chip Uouae, ¥33 to $40; waiter. *35: French waiter, small restaurant, $30; knife-cleaner. $30; paiitryuiau, ■t-'S: 2 di>ii-w:i.:>- ers, f3O and »-»; be*i-boy, »16; eievator-buy, Jill, etc DELOBMit & ANDttE, 3-'O Suiter st. It ' AXftD*— FARMER AMI Wilt. FRESNO County. f.'U, see boss In town: Frenchman, handy with carpenter's tools, to work on a farm, »,10; you.iii Frenchman : • work In a cae< s.- factory, *-'O; jabbing gardener. $30: English butler. (10; waiter, private family, $30; etc. DELOKME & AN DUE. 320 Sutter -:. It .-- CARPENTERS, COUNTRY, $'J 50 TO $3 50 •-' per day: 2 car-tlrlvrrs, city: trover furcountry lauuury, $3j, free fare; butcher, country shop, $40; butcher and book-keeper, $50 to $60 null found; 20 farmers, orebanls, vineyard*, potato ranches and grain rancbei. $J5. $2ti au-l * .0 and round: 3 teamsters fora vlneyarl, $Jt>: 10 J labor- ers; si-bone Ifimiieii iinrt scraper teamsters, elty and country, $10 aid iM."> and board; H Italian laborers. #30: 5 more wood-choppers, $. .C- M per curd, 4-foot fir and pine weiMl. tools fiirnlslwil . 2 stablemeu, $30; stableboy. $15; 2 bay-balers, 20e ton. P.. T. IT ABU Jt CO.. 80s and 810 Clay St. It BUTLER IN PRIVATE FAMILY. CITY ; 5 HO- tel waiters, $3) and *:I5; rrstaur^nt waiter, $40; 3 hotel ( ks. $50. SbO and $70: 3 boarding- house cooix, $3O and $40; 4 Kitchen hands, $20, $-sanU $30. li. T. wakii ,v r.i.. BUS and 810 Clay. 1 U- ANTED — 3 LUMBER FILERS, $30 AND found: '.'5 laborers, Beat city. *1 25 a day and board; 9 laborers, long job. $2 a day: sttblemen, S3" and found, and $15: 2 coopers. $35 and board; •(uarrymen, $M to $40 and fuiin 1; ston*--.i. eft makers, US per 1000; 50 laborers ami ti.-ain-.terii. for city, $1 75 a day: Gerai.tn ci.ore-bo> , $15 and found, a.d others. Apply to J. F. CUOSEXI A CO., b'2M sacramcpto fet It UANThii- KAN, COOK. AND WIFE FOR dining-room and Kiti lien work, $50 and In- caease; meat cook, $35: cook, private boardmg- houie, *■■". French or Hal. an night-cook, couutr> , $30; American baker, $16 a week; 2 hotel waiters, rare advanced, $30: y»un« kitchen man, couutry chop-house, $-5 and found, and others. Apply to .1. F. ( 'l.hm.l 1 i CO., 628 Sa.-ramento st. It AKER. COUNTRY HOTEL, $UOT FIRST-CLASS bar-tender, country hotel, fttO and found; head waiter and 2 waiters, country hotel. $50 to $JU and 4,>0: cook, small country hotel. ?b*o; second cook, resuuraut. city. $60; European waiter. $40; French waiter, $.0; waiter, country hutel, *.*5; waiters, country restaurants, $40; waiters, hotels, country, $30 and ?-.->; kitchen help, *-0 to $.)U: clerk, uier- chandl<ie store, country, *00. C. it. HANSEN A CO., 110 Goary^t It lASCBAPES TEAMSTERS, SJ2B AND POUND: XU 5 scraper teamsters >r city, 61 75 a day; 10 wood-choppers, $*J 50 and -til a cord; 100 laburera city, SI 75 a day; 3 laborers for the woods, $30. C. K. HAN »EX a Co., 110 Geary St. It •■"""sTAIU-IiUILDERS: 3 BKNCH-HAN I.S. SEE 0 boss here; camp cook. $35; 1 milker, $3J 50: 25 miners, $3 50. steady work, see boss; 5 freigut- handlers; $3; li)r-rt nan, *- 50; 20 laborrrs.'s2; 25 laborers, city, $175 day: 1 atone-cnttur, $2 50, and others. Pioneer Employment Office, 6 summer St., between Pine and California. It* V\ -ANTED— WAITERS, $3-1; WAITER. $35; »» cook, small bot;l. *10. HOTEL GAZETTE. 420 Kearuy st. lt_ U- ANTED— GOOD INSURANCE solicitors for a first-class compan ; liberal terms to good men; must have had experience. A. B. C, Box 101. Call Branch Office. se!2 61 CLERKS SEEKING POSITIONS AS SALESMEN J la ■ copyists. book -keopers.steuograp.'iers. obtain them Clerks' Bureau. 30 Kearny. X.l. 12 3* Ul ANTED— SOLICITORS; LADIES OB GEXTLE- nn'ii. Apply Great American Importing Tea Company. A 2IH Third st and 522 Koarny st bc!2 3t V OUNO MAX FOR FANCY-GOODS STORE. 14V4 1 Sixth St. It* BARBER SATCRDAT AMI KUNDAY. 228 l> First si. _ It* BAKBI-.R WANTED SATURDAY. 105 FOURTH street. It* BARKER FOR SATURDAY 10 A. 11. 427 l> Third st It* 1 ) ABIIEK FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. 728 X> Jlotitgomery aye. ■' - .-»- It* 1 ARBEIi— SATURDAY AN SUNDAY. 734 • I Fcurth st. bet Berry and King. It* B ABBEB FROM SATURDAY NOON TO SUN- _ day at 117 Valencia st. ; good wages. It* ■JABBER— SATURDAY AND SUNDAY; WAGES 1> $6 50. JR'M' ■_• Hill, St.. Potriro. It* I ABBEB WANTED FOX SATURDAY AFTER- P noon; good wages. 959 : a Miwiou st. It* GOOD BARBER, BATI H PAY AND SUNDAY; wat.es, $5 50. 1646 Polk St. lt» V\ ANTED - UISH-WASIIKi; AT LINCOLN " Hutel. 431 Fltthst It* PKII.l; AT YOSEiUTE HOUSE. 1015 MAR- . ket: $9 per week. ___^ It* \V ANTED— A GOOD DISH-WASHER. 518 TAY- '' lorst It* GOOD COOK. BALTIC RESTAURANT, ILLl- nois St.. Potrero. It* ■ .""XFEKIENCED DISH-WASHER. 1819 POWELL J-i street It» /■•OOD PAINTER ANll W HI TENER; SOOTHER VJ need apply. 307 Montg aye. lt« QHOEMAKEK ON Rl'-PAIIUNG; CALL EARLY. 0 USB folsom St.. near Twellth. It* 1-, ANTED— GOOD RESTAURANT COOK. 1239 '* Market St.; good wages; eail eary. It* ANIKO-f.OOD DISH-WASHER IN BESTAU- '' ra:,t. 416LarkIust n« GOOD STEADY WAITEK AXD EXTRA waiter. 239 OFarrell st it* C II AMiKLIKK - MAKERS. SAN FRANCISCO \J Novelty and Plating Works. OS First st. It* PAIXTERM WANTED; INSIDE WORK. APPLY JOHN li. EUMONUtiON. 220 Branuan st. It* bOY LEARN PAINTING. 928 WASHINGTON i-> street It* InAXCY DRY-GOODS SALESMAN' FOR THE _ country. 305 Kearny St.. Room 1. It* 1 • ENERAL MERCHANDISE SALESMAN; COIN- '» try position. 306 Kearny St., Boom 1. It* FFICE-BOY WASTED; GOOD REFERENCE reqnrred. Room 81, Flood Bonding, soil tf \\ ANUFACTI KING CLERK, STATIONERY lllhuslneiis. Address Paper, Box IB, this otßce. 113* COOKS AND WAITERS ARE WANTED IN V ' Fresno: every restaurant aud hotel Is short of help. sell «* 8 TEAMSTERS FOR QRADIXG-CAMP IN THB country. 420 Sansoine st. . sell 'Jt* BARBER-SHOP AND SHOE-STORE TO I.XT; good location. 207 (Irant i>.\ sell 7t* SECOND-HAND BOOTS AND SHOES BOUGHT and sold. 254 Eighth st. sell at* L 'IRST-CI.ASS TRIMMER OX THE BUSSEL P edge trimming machine wanted. P. F. NOLAN •V CO., 71 Stevenson st. selo 3t It' ANTED— AX OVEN-BUILDbB. 1139 FOL- l' som st. - selO 3t* »> GOOD CANVASSERS WASTED. 1368 MAR- • > ket St.: apply bet. 8 and 9 a. m. or 5 and 8 p. K_ Wheeler & WIUou Manufacturing Co. seS 7t» SKAMhN AND ORDINARY SEAMEN WANTED at Shipping Agency, 311 Paclnc. sc» lm \\' ANTED— SEAMEN FOR SOUTH SEA ISL T ' amis, lion lulu md Europe. 11)3 Berry 7t* L.OYS wan ; APPLY AT 200 SUTTKRST., ' > San Francisco District Telegraph. au2li lm VEKSLEEPbHS CAN GET AX ELECTRICAL alarm at R.G. WEN/XL, 607 Montgomery. JO lm ADVICE FREE. KcAII AD. PERSONALS. G.VY. /V HOWE A CO., attorueys-at-uw. WiO Market tf \V ANTED — SEAMEN, ORDINARY SEAMEN. II at 313 Pacific st . - ]al« tf <I.N«LE FURNISHED KOQMS 150 A NIGHT. ■ - Lludell House, cor. Sixth ami Howard. Jyll t£_ \ I ANTED— SOO MEN, HOWARD AND THIRD. ' ' basement. Bee Hive. to eat free home cooked hot lunch, with beer or wine, 6c; open day aud night tf I C\(\ i\(\(\' ilL^ s WANTED TO LOAN MONEY XVH/.UUV on all articles at low rates; square dealing. UXCLK JACOBS, 613 Partite st. aui tf BOOMS W.iM'KIl ANTED- BY COUPLE, WITH NO CHILDREN, ' * 3 or 4 unfurnished rooms, with bath, for house- keeping: runt must ;be reasonable. Address A. T., 522 Third st. sell 21* BOAItUINO HVNIED. I\'ANTED-3 SUNNY ROOMS WITH FIRST- T * cl»» board for 2 ladle*, on Uue of cable-cars; references. Address IV. . & R., Box 110. Calx, Brunch omce, - ■ . sell 2f i - - ■■■ ■ rEKBO»AH. KIND AFFECTIONATE GENTLEMAN Wl.-.lr.s to meet good girl without means. Address Matrimony. Box 141. Call Branch OlBce. It* _ WILLIAM THE LEADING GROCER' ■II 953 Market st.-We are gathering strength (lay by day; honest goods: honest values, aud son- est weights speak volumes. Goods bought at our store not satisfactory, money is cheerfully refund- ed. We claim that wo soil you goods cheaper thin any bouse In the city: one trial will convince you. White granulated sngar. --'0 IDs for $1 ; cube sugar. 17 IDs for $1: light brown sugar, 25 lbs tor $1; good brown sugar, 30 lbs for $1; Cross* ft BlacKwell's celebrated Jims. 3 Jars Tor 50c;- Crosse A Blackwell's mlied pickles, 15c a bottle, rega'ar 35c size; fancy braid" im- ported French sardines. 12Vicacan; I gallon cans choice table syrup, 45c: good fresh ground cnftV... 6 IBs for $1: choico Iresh ground culfee. 4 Ids for $1; good English breakfast tea, 5 ff.s for $1; good uncolored Japan tea. 4 ltd lor $1 : good value green Japan tea. 5 Its for $1: choice English break- fast tea, 4 mi for $1, yon pay 50c a in for no better; creamery butter. 25c a th; •25 lbs rolled oats for $1; new mackerel, very choice. 8 for 25c; «uaker roiled oats, 13' jc a package: write for a catalogue. Goods delivered to any part of the city. Oakland. Alameda, or Bert- ely free of charge. No charge for packing or ship- ping. A trial order will secure your trade. WILL- IAM CLINE. wholesale and retal grocer. 953 Mar- ket street, between Fifth and Slitu streets. Tele- phone No. 3050. sell 4t © 1 r A FOB CABINETS; FULL LENGTH-" tJpl.UUooilens' Art Studio, 10 Sixth. 9 cod 8m BOARD AND HOME DESIRED FOR 3 LI TTLE girls and father; home comforts. Audreys Home, Box 93. Call Branch Office. sell 3t» LAIN SEWIXQ CHEAP: CHILDREN'S clothes and wrappers a specialty. 613 Steve i- son st. . soil 3t* / ■ IVING IP BUSINESS — GENUINE ■ EYE- v) glasses. 15c up. 65 Fourth st, nr. bakery. Sun- days, "'.!» MarKet.frontglove-store.open9 to 2.117* ISS KELLY, ELECTRIC HAXD-RUBBER. 121 .Montgomery St., Room 10. sell 2t* T 120 A KNV. ROOM 9. YOU CAN BORROW money at low rales; private rooms for la U--s; pledges for sale; cake elevator. mrl if ©9 C/|FOB A DOZEN CABINET PHOTO. •^—..♦JU graphs; one colored free: first-clxss work guara teed. WILSON'S Gallery, 23 Kearny. j.-j : r MRS. M. E. BASCOM. WHO FORMERLY DID business of dressm.ulng at 115 Geary St., has returned from Europe and will resume business at 1610 California st. se3 Ist* NICE QUIET HOME FOR INVALIDS WITH - » pbyslclau's family: good nursing: kind ait'-n- -tlou. Address Physician, Box 93, Call Branch. 7* f"OP. A LADY OR I L! MAX: FOR SALE, r a new, first-class safety bicycle; nickel pi ate I. ball-bearlßff, well-geared and eavy-rldlng wh-ei; owner having two wheels, will sell one of them at less than store price; can lie tried any evening by making appointment Address J. h. L., P.O. Box 2520. San Francisco. seB 6t KOEXIG'SCURTAIX-CLEAXIXG PLACE, WOBr merly 5-' l Geary St.. Is now at 917 Post st. : »ir- tains cleaned at 50c and 75c. ac7 7f* ON CLOAKS. JACKETS OR WRAPS I WILL save you from $5 to $15. and give you nine mouths in which to pay for any article you buy; save time and money by coming direct to me: op.-v evenings. .1. HOOKAH, 1017 to 1083 Mission, 6 In ALL PERSONS. SIFIKKING FROM CATARRH will bo treated for $5 a month until cured if they commence before October Ist. at the Caiiror- iila Infirmary, 216 Ke.irni st, S. P. seß 71 PIANO LESSONS BY GERMAN' LADY: BA] X hour, 25 cents. 931 Market St. Room 32. set) 7* f'LW Li. FT — SLIGHTLY SOILED SAJIPI.U _ cloves. 11. M. HEIN EM AN. 35 Sutter st. ad H:» SIMM'S FAT REMOVER SEVER FAILS TO RE- move fr in 2to 4 pounds a week. MME. HUN- TAKiNK. agent. 12-28 Market St.. Room S. aeS tr TOP Rh.NTIN.i ROOMS; YOU CAN BUY A 0 bouse fit I of goods on easy terms for less tbau your rent: save tiros and money by coming direct to me; 1 keep everytnlug re-mired for a home. J. noon AN, 1017 to 10J3 Mission st Open evenings." s"5 lin MATIKKSSES, PROS $1 M TO «30; BEST i'l curled tj.iir; see before purebaitlng and save 30 percent: open evenings: cash online. .1. NOON AN, 1017 to 10.' . i Mission, but. Sixth and Seventh. -.:» lin CIXOLE BEDS, WITH MATTRESSES., ..SS HS 0 Thrce-iiuarter bods, with mattresses B -5 Double b.-ds. with mattresses 7 85 llest value id trils city. .1. NOONAN, 1017 to 1023 Mla-slon; easy terms; open evenings. 803 lin I ADIES' S A FEG C AKIiS: SKNIi FOR ILLCSTRA- Xj ted catalogue. Acme Rubber Co., 235 Kearny st A HIGH PRICE FOR CAST-OFF UL'iTHING; send postal. M. RAPHAEL. sO3Slxth.anJ7 : m 1 CST RECEIVED-FULL LINE ALL STYLES «l millinery goods. MRS. It H. JONES. 12(14 and 1208 Stockton st, and 'JOOO Fillmore st mM 3uio OIITBB CUCKOO CLOCK AT STKATTOV3 0 Carpet Cleaning Booth at the Pair. au23 tr IDA — FINE PIANO MUSIC FOX PKIVATE parties; $2. P.. Box 9, this OlBce. au!9 6m A- DO YOU WEAR PANTS? MISFIT PANTS . PARLOR. 513 .Montgomery st. au!B 3mo GET MY PRICES AND rRRMS D OOI.NQ housekeeping, bed-room sets, $J0 to 9170; par- lor goods of all kiu-N, carpets, stoves, etc. in fact everything relative to a home; largest slock and store In this city: save time and money* by calling on me first; open evenings. J. XOONAX, 1017. 1019. 10'Jl. 1U23 Mission, bet BthanA7th. an!3lm MERCHANT-TAILOR SLITS. MISFIT PANTS iM. PARLOR. 513 Montgomery st aulB3mo pOOD CHANCE FOR EVERTBUDY; CIGAR- * ' making in alt its branches taught Apple to HBS.C.C. TASCHNER. 3I2 Chestnut.nr.Powell.ini* ADVICE FREE ON ALL LEGAL MATTERS a specialty ;m.irr -ages aauulied. quick, quiet: pro- bate, insolvency, collections, claims, damage}, liens, attachments, etc., enforced: legal documents pre pared: suits of every description defended or prose- cuted vigorously: success assured; terms reason- able; no charge unless successful; 8 criminal an I civil lawyers practicing in all the courts; estab- lished 10 rear*; references, banks and business houses. G. W. HOWE * CO., attorneys and emuiset- ors-at-law. BJO Market st. corner Stoc.vton. au'J tf A UKRICHTIG, THB WATCHMAKER ANDJEW- ■t\ eler. removed to his old quarters, 108 Slxth.Btt X~KGa SHAMPOO FOX THS HAIR: LA X\. Verite steaming treatment for complexion Is what every la ly needs: bangs trimmed and curled. 25c. La Verite 1 oilet Bazar, 325 Vi Geary. Jy Is tt 1 nA REWARD FOR A CASE OF KHEC.IIA- -1 I V'U tism, neuralgia or gout that WEBB'S li.-EMo.N V wont cure: $1 per bottle, 6 tor $»: send for circulars 40 O'Farrell st. S. ¥.: all drugjists.3in IT DON'T HURT— OUK SPECIALTY THE PAlN- less hlliug of sensitive teeth: charges reasouaoie. Boston Dental Association. 21 Powell st Jy2s 3 in I pOLIiING-liEDS— EXAMINE OUR NUMIIKH ' 2005. mirrored with lar.-e plate 18x40: walnut. oak. cherry and lOth century; cash price elsewhere $60; our installment price only $45: country orders packed, shipped fr. eto any depot M. r RIKHM AM * CO., '---. -'30 Stockton st and 237 Post Ist tf YOU CAX BDY YOUR FURNITURE ON IN- X stall-unit*; easy terms. BARE BROS.. 323 an 3'J4 Hayes st. bet Franklin anil Gungh. mr!s tt HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOX CAST-OFF CLOTH- XX ing. gold jewelry, books. KLEIN. lot Sixth, if BUTION-lloLhS ANll MUTTONS MADE, PINK U log latest style, plaiting. IS O'Farrelt scJD • MONEY LOANED ON ARTICLES; KVERY D* scriptlon oi collateral; eld gold and silver bought. CULEMAN'S. 41 3d st. San Francisco, ml > II INDOW SHADES MANUFACTURED Will rt Her by WILLIAM MePHUN. 1195 Market il:: r\NTUEINSTALI.MENT !'LAN-I)KES*GO;jD-l" KJ silks, sealskins and sealette cloaks: also carp fumltnre, lace-curtains, blankets, and f.- .1::.^ :. is atM. FRIEDMAN & COS. 228 and 230 Stockton St. Why pay ready money when yoa can buy )n« as cheap by making a small cash payment down, balance weekly or monthly? An Inspection of our stock Is respe tfnlly solicited; orders Dy mall for goons or samples promptly attended to. -_"..' an 1 ii3O Stockton, an 1 237 Post: open eveningn Ist tC |>EVELATIOX TO LADLES: DR. KIRKWOOD'J J l Safeguard: Infallible, beueft.'ial, healthy: »,'ii:r,i wanted. KlrkwuoU Uard-Kuboer Co., Murphy 801 l I- Ing, S. F.. Cal. la* " THE EV ENING BULLETIN. PP.ICE JHSblc-jj 1 to 15 cents per week, delivered by carrier to auv part of the city; the Bulletin Is the best, oldest and largest evening paper published on the coast; orders by postal-card or otherwise will receive prompt attention, omen 822 Montgomery st intKs->i aki;ks. UITsI?iFtOM~93 50 UpfsTrLl"si*iTY~r>RAPEO. 119 Stockton st.. - doors fro 1 Geary. [ell Bin Al.l.M's WANTED. .-;.-- CTLEK'S BOOK— APPLICATIOXS FOR TKR- rltory must be made at once to secure choice ' field tor Grneral Benjamin W. Butler's book: it is needless to suite it will be a bonanza tor agents, and therefore a rush for territory. THE J. nF.W- ING CO.. 813 Market st. au2s tr 4 GENTS WANTED TO SOLICIT FOR POII- . v traits in ail styles of the arc; liberal commis- sions. Room 4.'. Donohoe Building, 1170 Market street. au!3tt VV AXTED-IN KVERY TOWN OX THE PACIMC II Coast, agents; live men can make $50 a wee*. Address A. 8.. Box 2. tbis office. Jel9 tf 1 \\" ANTED— SALESMEN OX SALARY OR COM- »' mission to ban-lie the NEW PATENT CHEMI- CAL INK ERASING PENCIL: the greatest selling novelty ever produced: erases Ink thoroughly In .two seconds; no abrasion of paper: 'Joti to 300 per cent profit: one agent's sales amounted to $620 in six days: another, $32 In two hours: we want MM energetic general agent for each State and Terri- tory. For terms anil full particulars address IUK MONKQK ERASER M F'l. <O. l.al'r.'«s- Wis. It tf WVUITtXVKm WAXTED. IUH PRlciirpAil' FOR HOUSEHOLirFURNI- rare. GALLAGHER. 1241 Market, nr. Mntn. tt MJ. SIMMONS * CO.. AUCTIONEERS. WILL . buy your lurulture. pianos and books. 1037 Market st. a»9 v \l CCABB, 128 FOURTH ST.. PAYS THE HIGU- IvI est price for fnrulture. stoves, ranges, carpets. riIOHEST PRICE FOR STOVES, RANGES AND XX furniture. URKV'S, 155 Third st. ]e24 lira AL. CKESSWELL, AUCTIONEER, OFFICE . Hoom 54. Murphy Building, will buy or Ml your household furniture for cash. 19 tt A LA KHI-: QUANTITY OF SECOND-HAND FUR- Btture wanted ; in per cent paid more than eis*- where. MALONE. 138 Fourth sr. : new store, in-'' ' ANTHOLOGY. M~~ ME." MOREAU. 73 FOD R-nTTfrTIsEvTEALS past, present and future; fee 25 cents. seta Be* WONDERFUL SEEK AND REVEALEB, OF II past, present and future; is clairvoyant. T.ul Howard St., upstairs: fee SOc sell 3t* HE. EXODIUS, CLAIRVOYANT, HAS RE- move.l to lUnk Sixth St. Room 7. - sell st JUST ARRIVED FROM IXDIA-GYP.-Y QUEEV derives her phase of medluiuship through th« spirit or tbe Great Indra; celebrated throughout the world : see Sanscrit : fee $1. 1126 Market. -'6 tf ;i M" ME. DR. THOMAS ,S( 'IHNTIKIC REVBALSS by eigs and cards: tells entire life, past, present, . future; consultations on all affairs, nothing ax.- cepted: name given, valuable advice and sure holp; ' restore* lost lov* by sympathy: mistake iiupossluie: <ll»ea>e» cure-1: feesl: letter *± 33 Kearny st t£ MM All I . l: Ai 1 TEHAMA S.T., NR. 4TtI; fortunes to d: ladle*. 2or: gems, bue: open Sa i. BJPIIUTI VLIsM. "TX-GUSTA LEOLA.* FORTUNE TEIXER; M AGIO -.'V charms: love tokens; true pictures of Intur.) husbands and wires free: teaches fortune. 'J.fJil Mission at., Twentleib; fee $1. Je37 »m MBS. J. .1. WHITNEY. CLAIRVOYANT, TK.St medium and life-reader. d TnrK st. ap'3s If BUSS AUK. R^TtHOJISON^HAND RUBBING; SWEDISH movements; baths. 118 Grant aye., K. '21.11 7* YOUNG LADY GIVES ALCOHOL BATHS AND X massage. 33 u. O'Farrell St., Room 4. sell 7t* MISS ANDERSON AND ASSISTANT, ALCOHoT aud Arabian baths. 311 Suiter at-.Rm. 3. ill 7* MISSION-EDITH ROBERTS; BATHS; Out massage attendant; day aud Sunday. ld:u" VOUXU WIDOW GIVES MASSAGE AND AL- X cohol baths. :t3'.j o'F.-,rrell St.. Boon.' 2. aS 7t* LOUISE JOHN- MEDICATED AND VAPOR baths. 105 Stockton st. Room 37. seS 7t '