1
EDBROOKE IS HERE He Will Plan the New Postoffice. A SIX -MILLION ESTIMATE. He Arrives From Washington Fully Empowered to Consider the Best Building for Our Needs. \u25a0W. J. Edbrooke, th9nupervisine archi- tect of the United States, who will draw the plans for the now Postoffice, has ar- rived. When seen by The CAXX repre- sentative in his rooms at the Palace last night he was not adverse to giving his ideas on the building which lie willsupervise. "Being: in the city only one day," said Mr. Edbrooke, "and not having had time enough to inspect your Postcffiee and see the business done iv it, I cannot give my ideas on the improvements which I will make. ".My duty ts to go down to your Po?tof- fice, together with the Postmaster, and see the business that is dune there; also the way in which it is done, so that, if neces- sary, we can improve upou it. "One thing Hint 1will liavo to make room for iv tlie new Postoffice is the pneumatic tube, which will be usrd for the speedy de- livery of mall fioui the main office to the sub-.-tiUior.s throughout the city. From what 1 have learned in the short while that I have been here, I tt.ink it is essentially necessary f or the residents in the outside ' part of the city to have a quicker delivery of their mail, and as this is the latest mod- ern improvement in that line you will have on* in your new Postoffice. "Ac for the building itself, it will be of the latest architecture. I cannot say whether It will be built of granite, sand- stone or brick, as that depends on the ap- propriation Congress will allow. My idea is to have the whole building built of grnnite, <<r if not that, to have at least the basement ti'.ii two sturies of granite and the rest of sandstone, if the whole building is to be built of granite it will require a much lareer appropriation than if built of land* stone. V3I "To-day, togetlier with Mr. Backus, your Postmaster, 1 will go and sea the *ie, .is 1 will have to take measurements. "'Jlii! principal thing 1 will hnve to look to on what street the Pcstoffice will front. That will nave to bo decided ou before 1 go ahe (1 with any of tho plans. "Another thinp," 6aid Mr. Edbrooko, Will be to make gtiod provision for plenty of 6pare room in t:ie building, as your city is growl ue very rapidly. "According to my present ldea«. I will ask CcaiEress to ai-propriati* not less than S6,COO,OCq. if not nior*, a-. 1 do not think Ibat \u25a0 suitable postoflice, withevery modern cquiprLent, such as a srrowhm city li^e this requires, could bo built at a less UgafL Any way the site cost over a luiliion dollar:?, and 1 do not see why you should not havu an appropriate buiUlng erected upon it. "But ail Ihi.s trouble, time and iabor that I shull pxpecd," edded Mr. Edbruoiir, "may be all for naught.; "You kiu>w that 1 am a Republican, and as the Democrats n int- into full power soon 1 may lose my position and a Democrat be placed in it in my stead. If that Is the case he will l.uve to go all over the same grcund thnt 1 shall have done, and that wil make more delay. After ail thi>, remember, he may turn out to have totally different ideas from mine iv legurd to the building." Along with Mr. Edbr><okt> came Frank Grygln. Inspector of Public Buililings, \yho wili a^sidt Mr.Edbrooke in his undertaking. MUST PAY THE TAXES. An Oregon Railroad Law Declared Unconstitutional. Sai.km, Or., Jan. 2. —In the Supreme Court 10-dßy the case of T. E. Boge, re- ceivr of the Oregon Pacitie, vs. Willidiu Mackey, Sheriff of Benion County, on ap- peal from iienton County, the decree of the cc urt below was reversed and the complaint dismHse'l. This was a suit to enjoin the sneuff from collectin?, or attemptlii^ to collect, the State and county taxes assessed acd levied upon the property of the piaiu- tiff for MBs\wd involves the construction of the act pr'Vilinß for the construction of the Willamette Valley and Coast Railroad, approved Octuber 2J, IS7I, as extended by the act approved February 5, 1885, which net provided that for twenty years follow- ing its imTTim no taxes should be assessed or collected by the State upou the railroad company's property. The decision says that th!» Bee* tion iv violation of the provisions of the constitution of this State tnut "all taxation shall be equal and uni- form." The decision is in favor of the de- fendant. The taxes involved amount to $00,000. HIS CAREER CUT SHORT. Capture of an Eastern Crook at Los Angeles. Los Ahobum. Jan. 2.— The California career of a dangerous Eastern crook was to-day nipped in the bud. The man, whose n^meis Frank Bart, is said to have oper- ated extensively throughout the E<st, ar- riving here a few d;iy§ago. Oil Friday he burglarized th»* residence of S. B. McClure, securing two gold watches. On offering the cases for sale to a jeweler to-day the latter recognized them from a description fur- nished by the police and at once placed the man under arrest. liart had a full kit of burglar's tods with him, and was evi- dently prepard for \u25a0 long campaign. CAUGHT IN THE MACHINERY. Frightful Death of a Fireman at New Whatcom. Xkw Whatcom, Wash , Jan. 2.— Wtiile oiling the machinery yesterday at the Blue Caojoi coal bunkers J. H. McGee, fireman wn* rsught in the nuichinrry and killed His clothing was torn completely off liitn, and wiien picked up he was naked. Both bis ornis were broken. Deceased was about 35, and leaves a wife. Be has relatives liv- ing in Oregon nnd iv Seattle, Wash. Accident to a Child. San Dieoo. Jan. 2.— The five-year-old daughter of K. Schulte, a carpenter, was to-day frightfully hurt. Mrs. Schulte was driving in from Linda Vista when a audden lurch threw the child between the wheels, whii h snapped the tender bones of her le?; in two places above the knee. The little one's condition is critical, but hopes are eu- icrtatned of saving her. Football at San Jose. San Josk, Jan. 2.—A pioked eleven from Stanford University played football with the local Y. M. C. A. team at the recreation grounds l.ere tins afternoon before '2000 spectators. The Stanford boys won by the score of 10 to 4. The Stanford* made two touchdowns and a goal kick, and the Y. M. C. A. tcjp.m trade a touchdown. The Steamer Tacoma. Vi<to hi A, h. C, Jan. 2—The steamer Taroma left to-day for Tacoma in com- n.a! (1 of Captain Bucktnan. She will pick up her own captain on her return, he and his offirers not being able to land in the United bta'.e». owing to the quarantine laws. The Tacuma has on board a larfio cargo of Oriental goods. Neither Side Scored. Nlw Wuati -dm, Wash., J;in. 2.— The came <>f football between the Portland and Seattle elevens t>laye<l here this afternoon resulted in a tip. The score stood 0 to 0. The ball was n*-ver out of bounds. Four thousand people witnessed the game. Not the Murderers. Arr.rr.N, Jna. ti.—The two tramps ar- rested by Sheriff Conroy have been proved not to be the miudnrers of the lady station agent at Brighton, Sacramento Coun;y. Hunting for a Lost Man. Viotoima, li. C, Jan. 2.— A party starts this morning on the nteamer Joan in search of the young man named Stark who is lost iv the woods Lear Courchan. Football at Victoria. Victoria, 8.C., Jan 2— Ttie Seattle and Victoria teams played n football match at Caledonia lark this afternoon which re- sulted in a draw. American Sheep Industry. Washington, Jan. 2.— One of tbe most valuable publications ever issued by the Government Is the report on the sheep In- dustry of the United Mates, prepared under tut direction of the Secretary of Agncul- lure. It treats of the history and condi- tions of the industry from the early settle- ineut of the country down to the present day and is handsomely illustrated. It is for distribution by the Secretary and through members of Congress. RICH STRIKE IN THE UTICA. A Pocket Opened on the Four Hun- dred-Foot Level. Stockton, Jan. 2 —Reports have reached here of a wonderfully rich strike in the old Utica mine »t Angels. Cal.iveras County, owned by Alrinza Hayward, the estate of W. S. Hobart and C. D. Lane. The strike was made in the 400 level last Thursday, and the pocket is so rich that a 28-ponnd piece of rock yielded sixteen pounds of gold. Another piece of rock weighing five pounds held three pounds of gold. It is said that the pocket is quite large and that it was not cut through in twenty- four hours' work. Miners say that it is the most valuable find ever known in that rich section. The mine is a steady paying prop- erty, yielding regular dividends to its rich owner?. The veiu furnishes good rock for IGO stamps, being from forty to seventy feet wide, aud the present fiO-stamp mill is not large enouch. A new 100-stamp mill is iv course of erection. MISS CUMMINOS' ASSAILANT. The Identity of the Fiend at Last I. os AHOXUCB, Jau. 2.— The fiend who outraged Miss Georgia Cumminys last Thursday i.s now known. He is Henry J. Farber. H* first appeared in Los Angeles a year ago, coining from Portland, Or. He claim? to be a printer, but has not appeared sinco his stay here in any of the union oflioes. He also claims to be the inventor ot a typesetting machine. His fatber is said to be a wealthy wholesale butcher of St. Louis. Portland, Or., Jan. 2.— Henry J. Faber, wanted iv Los Anpele3 for criminal assault on a young lnuy, was well known in this; city, having served a *even-year term in the penitentinry for burglary and shooting Offi- cer Barry in the arm while attempting to arrest him. Ho esciped from prison, but was recaptured after a year, aud was re- leased in IMW. CONCLUDED HE WOULDN'T. Desperate Determination of a Divorced Man. Los axoeles. Jan. 2.—Saturday morn- ing .Vred M..yue got a horse, and bnitgy iroin the Tally-ho livery stable. Afterward he sold it to a ticket broker. Tliif> morning Chief Gla<»s received tlie following letter: "I engaged a horse and buggy. at the Tally-I:o stable, on Broadway, and subse- quently disposed of it to Mr. for S , which amount I herewith inclose aud wish voutoHtonr.e notify the Tally-ho stables so that they eati obtain the rig and refund the mi'Uey. Tho reason for this is that my wife obtained her divoice to-day (ou wrong- ful reasons), and I threatened when she did ttint 1 \rouid dn something to send me to the penitentiary. 1 am heartbroken and she lias robbed me of all she can. Her allesa- tlouH in the divorce matter are a lot of lie", but I \>ill not contest them. Plenso attend to this and oblige yours faithfully. "Fi:i:i> M avni;." » A Slow Track. New Qbi.eaks, Jan. 2.— The track was slow. Five furlong*. Little Addie won, Joe I.po second, John Harper third. Time, 1:1' Five and a half furlongs, Sanbaba won, Virgin secoud, Longbroeck third.- Time, l:lC*_. FivtJ furlongs, Angeree won, Ansel Jr. second. BsrkiT Harrison third. Time, 1:07^. Mile, Dixie V won, Bonfire second, Henry O^^^ley third. Time, 1:55. Seven furlong?, l'ekln won. Beeswing second, Alphonse tnird. Time, 1:37%. Halford Does Not Know It. Wasihn c.io.N. Jan. 2.—The report was published this morning tl'at the President had decided to appoint Private Secretary ILtlfonl a major in the pay corps of the army provided a vacancy stiall occur before the end of the administration. Private Sec- retary Half* il was questioned oa the sub- j«Ct to-day and saia that he wa» certainly uot aware ol any Mich intention on the part of the President. Kenna Has Heart Disease. Wash:v,t<>n, Jan. 2.— Senator Kenna of West Virginia, who has been seriously ill for several weeks, had a relapse yesterday and Jho family believed he would not sur- vive the nicbt. This morning he was slightly better, but not sufficiently to allay their fears and tho gravest appreheuslons are felt Kenna is troubled, witti heart dis- ease. Trouble With the Arapahoes. Washington-, Jan. 2. Persons here familiar with tue situation do not anticipate any serioui trouble betwi nn the Shoshone and Arkpahoe Indians in Northern WjO- lnine. It is believed by some that an at- tempt is being made to compel the Arapn- hoes to sell a valuable tract which they have been heretofore unwilling to part with. Trial of the Vesuvius. Ni:\v Yokk, Jan. 2. The dynamite civi v er Vesuvius left the Brooklyn Navy- yard nt an early hour to-day. The ve^spl willgo direct to Port P.oval Sound, where the Onnl tests of the great dynamite guvs will be made early next week. His Creditors Secured. AtCHJSOH; Khi?., Jan. 2. -- Dr. V. L. Challi*, father-in-law of the late John A. Martin, failed this morning for £l-'O,OCO. It said that most of the creditors are secured. Corrugating Works Burned. Coi.TMi-.rs, Jan. 2.— Caldwell & Patter- son's corrugating worka at Wheeling, West Virginia, were burued this morning. The loss is $100,OCQ and the insurrnce $50,000. Sawyer's Will Sustained. Sai.em. Mass , Jan. 2.— Tiie jury in the Sawyer willcase returned late ti>is afler- noon with a verdict sustaining the will. PERSONAL NOTES. Hon. David T. Ham ol Spokane i 9 at the Palace. Jii.ige O. E. Williams of Tlacerville is at the Grand. Senator F. Jones of Orovilla is registered at the Grand. Judge John Mcßride of St. Lake is a guest at the Palace. D. B. Fairbanks a Petaluma banker, Is registered at the Grand. J. W. Houston, a prominent merchant of Courtlaiui, is at the Grand. Andrew Mnrkham, a Santa Rosa capital- ist, is registered at the Lick. Dr. M. A. Soink, a prominent physician of Indianapolis, is at the Lick. 11. \V. Crabb, a well-known Oakville rineyariiitt, is a guest at the Grand. John Tneioan, a mining man from Sui- te r Crerk, is registered ut the Grand. Dr. Richmond, a prntninent physician of Salinas, is stopDlng at the Occidental. Cliarle3 Ericksun, a prominent railroad contractor of Portland, Or., is ut the Grand. D. M. Il.mspn. a well-known atlomey-at- law of Clear Lake, is a guest at tho Grand. A. W. Simpson, a lumber merchant of Stocktou, is registered ut ttiu Occidental witii bia v. 11. W. E. P. Deal, a well-known attorney-at- law from Virgiuia City, Nev., is a guest at th« Pabce. Mr. Forsyth, a popular vlneyardist of Fresno, is stopping at the Occidental with his wife. Mr. Ike Rosenthal and his wife (nee Fieel) hiiTe returned from their southern bridal tour and will receive their friends at the residencn of Samuel Figel, 2415 Wash- ington street. .John F. Pinkham. marshal of the Society of California Pioneers, who has been nick at his rooms at the Windsor Hotel during the past moutl), is considered by his physician out of danger. Mr. Coates' Affairs. The friends of Francis C. Coatei i\re very explicit in their denUis of the reports that that gentleman left the city for Mexico under a cloud. Mr. Coates is now in San Francisco. It is said that the reason of his leaving for Mexico was that he had busi- ness tn attend to down them. While there he was also attending to the interest* of Junes & Co., silling goodft, whirl) statement is corroborated by the linn. 'J lie city of New York cares for 18,000 lunatics at a cost of $1.25,000 a year. I)ib«nloro<l Ktopucb cured by Mroino-Seltzsr-lOc a bottl* AT THE THEATERS. AH Baba Closed in a Halo of Glory. ANOTHER SPECTACLE INVIEW Crowds at the Stockwel! and Tivoli. Slender Attendance at the Bush -street Houses. Last evening was the finale of the "Alt Baba" spectacle at the Grand Opera-house, and there was a greater crush to bid it fare- well than tl.ero was a month ago to wel- come it. What is unusual in even such a popular entertainment as Manager David Henderson has been treating us to duriug the holidays, the taper end was the bigsest. The company go East by a special train this morning, and we presume the happiest man on board that train will be Henderson himself. And why? Ho carries with him some $60,000 a3 the result of a month's work, aud leaves behind him a pleased pub- !ic who have but one wish, aud that is, to see him and his company soon again. He will be back in a year's time from now to brighten the holidays of 1893 with an- other spectacle, more brilliant, if possible iv the grasp of the theatric and scenic art, than any of those with which he las already favored our public. He informed us last evening that he ba<l his next attraction al- ready in motion. Without mentioning tho title, we were led to inter it would be a raro novelty. "The name, you know," he added •in his quiet Scotch way, "is a secondary con- sideratiou. The infant is not chri6teued be- fore it is born." Fanny Rice and company, and Fielding, the manager thereof, liave reason to con- gratulate themsrlves with the success met with at the Stockwell during the last f«l» nighr. They have had packed houses every performance and last night the attendance was what would be called, in the argot of tue street, "a corker." No seats to be had for love or money and Manager Eilingiiouse wild with anxiety to suve the necessity of turning anybody away, a necessity to which he was reduced, nevertheless. Verily have our public, more than on any previous holi- day season, patron zed, at the close of 1892, tho popular theaters. This engaging little romedieune. Funny Kicp, mignt, from present apDearuncei, pack tho Stoekwell lor another fortnight, hut it cannot be. Dates must be filled. The company must leave lib rich claim witii the ore still in light. The favorite comedian, Mr. Lovel R. Stockweil, will make his ieniperirance :it his own theater in Mr. A. W. Pinfcro'ssuc- ce-->fui couir.ly, "The Mojiistrate." This will be Mr. Stockwell's first nrpearnnce iv s. vend months before a San Francisco au- diencr*. Theater-goers wll! remember the gentleman in the piece mentioned vvnrnla!>t produced here as jiivluga very <:!evrr ren- dering of the principal part. "The Magis- trate" wiil be well cast and presented with new sceuery. Mr. lingo Toland, a young Califoruian with cousider&ble experience. baa t'teu -specially engaged for this produc- tion. Th« piece will,no doubr, draw well for a week. Sale of seats begins to-morr- ow (Wednesday). Mr. Hi'zigrath's earnest efforts to keep alive the interost of oar German theater- goers in his enterprise at the Baldwin de- serve all the encouragemeut he receives and even more. lie is not met by oar German public with the auiDle recognition -that is called for by his exertions for their enter- tainment. The production of the farce-* comedy, "Der Lnewe dcs Tages" (The Lion of the Day), ou last Sunday evening, whs in the company's brs: style and was rewarded by effusive applause. Miss Marguerite Al- brecht was especially charming and efficient in her role, She is always good, but in this particular part she was more thitn usually excellent. As for the orchestral part of the periormancr, it may be mentioned that Mr. August Ilinrlch*, the leader, won crrat ap- plause lor bis execution of a violin solo. The Tivolihad 8 New Year audience be yond (X)i<*ctatn>n. Every seat in the large auditorium was filled, wi;n a four-deep crowd standing in the rear. Surely this popular plnco of amusement is becoming , theVcustoni . of the time, and Is gradually gaugins ivprice and quality of the e.nter- laihint-iit ( ffered th«* wants of th<> average SauiFrauclsco theater-goer. Mr. Jo Holz, the treasurer, is slowly convalescing from bis recent serious ilines?, and will probably sho* his thin but yet pleasant fact* at the box-office window about Friday next, be- fore "ATrip to the Moon" is completed. It was not a pleasant way to bridge the old year to the new—in a sickroom— the sweet and bitter of life must be txkfn to- gether without repining. By such experi- ences we grow philosophic, and we presume hi* recent severe lesson will net be lost upon the popular Jo. The managers ef the I3u9h-9treet theaters are beginning to think they are too far downtown. Notwithstanding tup close of the New Year festival time both the New California, with "Incog," and Leavitt's Bush-street Theater, with Lrderer'a comio players in "l'ou and I,"showed a beggarly account of empty benches. Particularly was this the ease with the Bush-street, where the auditorium was empty enough to mnke the alleged fun on the stage merely hollow echoes. Of durjc, a good deal of the non-attendance must be attributed to the fact that notwithstanding the presence of Mr. George P. Murphy "You and I" is a chestnut of many sea&ons and iU moldiness is repel iant. M. B. must look to a re- arrangement of managerial condition* if he expects to derive income from this dilapi- dated amusement factory. The Grove-Mreet Theater, situated as it is in the heart of a close family population that do not care to go far from home on a holiday niglii, was filled to ccc "Cinder- ella." Adults, adolescents, '-ladies and chil- dren were there to the auditorium's ca- PHCitv to enjoy this Christmas and New Year's spectacle as tbe managers have staged it, and it is useless to aay that youne and old all enjoyM it in common. They taiked alt ut ii when. they reached home, and congratulated themselves on havinir such seasonable amusement at their own doors. "Cinderella" will run all through the New Year week. Mr. Adolph linuer, the accomt lished leader of the Tivoli orchestra, will give his fourth symphony concert at that theater on Friday afternoon next, January 6. Miss Josephine God< haux, soprano; Mr. S. G. Fleiohman, pianist. "Olivette," Audran's beautiful opera, will be sung at Charles Meyer's Wigwam r l heater all this week. Mi-. General Tom Thumb and company will bid farewell lo the San Francisco pub- lic at Irving Hail this evening. A STRANGE CASE. A Man Who Lived Sixteen Years With a Hole Through His Head. Rutland (Vt.) Letter to New Orleans Tinsea-Dcmo- cnt. The recently reported narrative of a mnn who died iv a Newark (N. J.) hospital with a knife blade protruding into his brain sinco his boyhood (his death having be«n pro- duced from entirely dilTereat causes) calls attention to a remnrkable occurrence in Vermont. Iv the New Jeriey case an* autopsy revealed that the blade of the knire extended nearly ono iuch beyond the out- side of the brain, while its broken extrem- ity was on a line with the interior surface of the rrKiiium. A still more remarkable accident of a somowliat similar nature occurred more than forty year 3 neo.'and is well authenti- cated. Pliiiieas C. Gage, the victim, was in one way the most remarkable in a v whoever lived, so far [as is* known, the Now Jersey case Ocmn the nearest to a parallel on rec- ord. It is certain tt:at Mr. Gage was the ouly riuin uho ever bad a iamolng-bar shot through his brain and who recovered. :v The circumstances were such that the at- tention of physicians and surgeons of both continents whs attracted, not only while Hit; man was suffering from the effects of the wound, but after he recovered. Surgeons refused to bellevo the assertions of the' nt- tendiug physicians, and required attested statements from prominent clergymen,' law- yers and others: who actually s.iw the cr.se before they wcul'l accept the statements made. ' -:'.; \u25a0\u25a0.. -.:* v * *\u25a0.*., ~t . \u25a0*.*- . . *.'\u25a0\u25a0*'. * , The accident which made Mr. Gago fa- i mous l occurred at Cavendish, Vt.. Septem- ber 13, 184S, while blasting wns going on in a cut in tho rocks through which the Rut-' land; division of / the Central Vermont lUilroad now passe?.' Phineas Gage, aged 25 year*, wu9 foreman of a gang of men who were employed in blasting. Gage hnd never bad a day's illneis from childhood and was, ns far as could be determined, perfectly healthy. Althe time of the acci- dent he was charging a drill hole for blast- ing and sat upon a shelf of rock just above, but -\u25a0 a little *to ,• the ; right of the bole :' as he faced it. The powder and fusewero' in Vpcsi lion and he was la the act of tamping it in. Ho turned his head for. an instant to look at his man at work behind him. His Iron struck fire on the edgo of the hole, an explosion followed and the tamping bar, 3 feet 7 Inches lon?r% of an inrh in diameter, and weighing 13% pounds, was projected upward obliquely in the line of its axis, passed completely through his head and nigh in the air, falling several rods: behind him, and was after- ward picked up by one of the men, cov- ered with blood and particles of brain. Mr. Gage was thrown iiDon his back by the force of the blow, and hU extremities inured convulsively a few times, but he spoke in a few minutes. His men carried him to the road, a short distance away, and he rode home ionn ox cart sitting up by being supported. When he arrived at his destination be got out of the cart himself with a little assistance, and an hour after- wark walked upstairs with slight aid and lay down upon the bed, when bis wound was dressed. ile was conscious, but very wpak from loss of blood. The examination of the wound showed that the iron entered the left side of the face by the pointed end; immediately anterior to the angle of the lower J«w", passed obliquely upward and obliquely backward, emerging in the median line back of the frontal bone. Tb« bones were broken in small fragments and forced upward and outward. The bole had much the shape of an inverted funnel. The frontal bone wa3 badly fractured, leav- ing »n irregular oblong opening in the skull two inches one way and three aii.l a half the other, through which the pulsations of the brain were plainly seen and felt. The wound was dressed, and the man showed no apparent signs of serious injury, ; excepting a curious agitation of the Ip&j which were alternately retrncted and ex- tended. Then began a battle, the natural consequences of such an accident against the strong constitution of n healthy mnn. No one thouzht it possible that he could recover, but after a few days he began to improve, and ou the fifty-sixth day from the accident the patient was up and walking about the house and piazza. T!;e sixty- fourth day he caught cold, and serious con- sequences were .for a time feared, but he recovered. Ten A days afterward he was taken in a carriage to Lnbanou, X. 11., a distance of thirty miles or more. Mr. Gage passed the winter months in Lebanon, but returned to Cavendish the following April. lie was then in (rood health and flesh, but his mind was weak and childish, and the sight of the left eye was entirely lost. He visi'ed South Amer- icn, passing some time In Valparaiso. Then be went to San Fra"cisco, and (lied there of epilepsy. May 21, 1861, nearly sixteen years after the accident. The skull and iron are now in the museum of the Medical Depart- ment ol Harvard University. Swallowed Chloroform. Prompted by jealousy, Mrs. Etta Emer- son drank a bottle of chloroform shortly before midnight last nicht with suicidal in- tent. She Is the wlfo of Dr. Edward Em- erson, a dentist doing business at 137 Sixth street, where the couple live. During their three years of married life Mrs. Emerson was always jealous of her husband's female patients, aud often threat- ened to killhim and end h<-r own life. Late last night the deintbt returned home and joined his wife in i he (flice. lie ut - braided her, and in reyly the woman took up a three-ounce botiln of chloroform »nd swallowed the coutent3. She was taken to the Keceiving Hospital in an unconscious condition. Mrs. Wallace Is Wanted. The police are anxious to ascertain the whereabouts of a woman who was robbed by two potato peddlers at the corner of Fell and Steluer streets on the afternoon of De- cember 8. Tue men snatched her salcliel containing $8, and with it jumped into their Wiicou aialdrcve awny. The woman r©i>ort*d ncr loss to the Cnief <•{ Police, to whom she said that her i i r. n: e wa? Mrs. Fred Wallace and that she iived on Dott street, Berkeley, near the nar- row-gauge railroad. One of the thieving peddlers whs arrested a lew days ago and placed in tho City Prison tanks. Ever since then the detectives have been scouring Berknley for Mrs. Wallace, but they are un- able to find her or the street on which she said she lived. _ Drowned in the Bay. Tn« body of a man about 32 years old was found late yesterday afternoon near tho Bryant-street wharf. There were no signs of decomposition on the corpse, which bad evidently been in the water about twenty-four hours. It was taken to the Morgue, where an autopsy snowed that death had been caused by drowuing. The deceased woi e a suit of black diag- onal cloth, a bite shut and collar and a black cravat. There was a plain gold ring bearing the initial!' "P. C." on cue of his bands, lie had a while silk handkerchief, on which the letter 'TV was embroidered. Ti:e body was the tenth which bail been taken from the bay since Christmas. The Fire Record. The alarm from box (i 4 at 9 o'clock yester- day morning was occasioned by the burn- ing of the stable at '.VA) Natoma street. The building was owned by Miller & Lux. Loss about SI'KW. At 4:'jr» o'clock yesterday af'ernoon an alarm was sent in from box G2, Fourth and Mission fttretta, and proved to be another of the many false alarms that have been turned ie of late. A heap of brooracom in front of the Chinese broom factory at 10 Virginia alley was fired at midnight last night and caused an alarm to be sounded from box 255. The corn was owned by Wong Bins, who esti- mates his loss at S'_'s. Creed Haymond's Condition. There was no change in the condition of Creed Ilaymond uo to a late hour last night. lie lies in the same semi-conscious condition as reported before, tfla physi- cians say tiuit he cannot linger very lout;. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Tlie town of Forsytli, Mo., is 50 years old ami m ver had a church. The rice crop in the South this year is estltuated'to be 223,000,000 pounds. The Swiss and German pikemen were during the fifteenth century esteemed the best in Europe. Intoxicating liquors have been mada from the sap <>f t lie blrcb, the willow, the poplar and the >ycamore. Kentucky will try the experiment of per- mitting three-fourtha erf a jury in civilcases (nine jurors) to render a verdict. Unbiokeii four-year-old colt?, suitable for military purposes, can be bought in the Australian colonies at from $50 to $75 each. A sawmill was stolen bodily.ln Hancock County, Ky., a few days aco. Xot a traco of the machinery could bo found. Finlnnd lias just been celebrating the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of printing n; that country. Itis expected that 16.000 carloads of ex- hibits will be received at tho ground of the World's Fair betneeu now and the Ist of >L.v. , Ithas been discovered that n manufnetory of "relics" has been in operation in Edin- burgh, Scotland, for some time, llelics of liuriis were the staple product. Miss !Maud Ziovierzchkowitinskis, of Chicago, was married recently. It took tho minister so long topronounce the name that * they had to have the wedding tuo day be- fore. An advertisement for a school teacher in nn Indiana paper reads as fo-llows: "He must be a man sound in body aud intel- lect; not ftfrnid to use the rod; wages $10 per month and board around." A study of a German map, nn which is plotted the stations of tlm troops in their huge army, shows that the majority are so placed as to be conveniently moved in sec- tions to the French frontier. Probably the most interesting section of tin* transportation building at Jackson Park will be that devoted to primitive methods of transportation and the cauoes and sleds of uncivilized tribes. The Athenian Archaeological Society has carried out some excavations on the site of ancient Corinth, which have resulted in the discovery of a considerable building belong- ing to the fifth or sixth century B. C. Many of the so-called hotel Lnllboys in this country are fathers aud some are grandfathers. San Francisco lays claim to three who are over CO years of age, one of : whom recently, retired from business rich. ': Vanilla is an orchid, which in the West Indies, creeps over trees and walls like ivy. A substance callnd "salep," aomowhat re- sembling arrowroot or sago, is obtained from the tubers of a variety that grows in Turkey and Poieia, where it is highly esteemed. \u25a0 . Hungary is sratod to bo the country where railway traveling is the cheape&t. Itis said to be possible to journey fn in Buua l'estli to Krunstadt, a distance of 500 miies, for 6s Bd, being at the rate nf six miles a peony. Low as this price is itis liable to a reduction of one-half in the case of laborers journeying in partita of not fewer than ten. The latest feat in spoon-carving is re- ported from the capital city of lowa, and was accomplished by S. E. Wilcox. lie took a common lowa souvenir spood, one bear- ing the luwa coat of arms on its handle, and wrote the whole of the Lord* prayer In its Dowi. Every letter and comma Is in its proper piace, mid can be easily read with the naked eye. Mlsi Mary Moore fennel, aged G5, living In the neighborhood of Fourth and Townsend : Atie«tß, was knocked down yesterday afternoon lat Flltl) and Mmket stieets by a team. Mie was taken Into a drugstore, when It was found she bad received a severe cut on11 lie back of trie liead. - Aiier ttie wound was dresheu she was >ent to ncr lioim*. The team wm dilYea by Joliu Lo.vnianolGsUQnai<l stu-«i, -. s OVER IN OAKLAND. Threats to Enjoin Any Boulevard Job. THE NEW COUNTY OFFICERS. Preparing to Place the Largest Dyna- mos on the Pacific Coast— The People's Party Ticket. There Is a lons serpentine line off >. .ay, dull rock lining the eastern shore of Lake Merritt that Is the sul jeet. of inquiry on the part of strangers, and pointed out as a relic of the monumental follyof thepresent City Council. I f . was put there at a cost of $19,000. paid by the taxpayers of Oakland, aud was intended aa the Gist sectioo of a boulevard to be built nereis the Jake at the cost of hundreds of thousands of d \u25a0•liars. It was so much money sunk, as the pres- ent pile is absolutely useless. The citizens, when they got a chance, condemned it unanimously. The Council sought to issue bonds for carrying on tlie worK, but the proposition was overwhelmingly defeated at the polls. There was so much evidence of unfairness and scheming for boodle that those who had to bear tLo expense nut the Btamp of disapproval on it so forcibly that it was stopped. The Councilmen who started it. however, were balked for only a little season. In snite of protests and overwhelming opinion they have made another appropriation, and the Board of Public Works, following tlieir bidding, has called for proposals for dredg- Ihk nnd fillingin another section of the lake. These will be considered at a meeting to be held to-night, aud the contract will prob- ably be awarded. But tlie work will never be done— under present conditions. There are a number of iufluential men In Oakland, capitalists every one of them, who have made ready to bring an injunction suit restraining the wnik the moment the first stone is dumped. The opposition is so general and the in- dignation so great that the rine of pnliti- ciuns, Kirlud'ug the solid six, has been forever condemned, and this is the chief reas<iii of the starting of the Non-Partisan movement, which is gathering force and which promises to sweep everything be- fore it. Itis the purpose to bold off the boodling, sctiemine cliicauery brought about aud now attempting to be enforced till a Council is elected representing the people which will carry out their wishes in the matter. Yesterday being a holiday, the new county officers will assume their duties at 12 o'clock to-day. The ouly change atrong the deputies of the officers re-elected will be by County C erk Crane, who will appoint a son of Judge Greene in place of Harry BeUlen as clerk of Department 2. Tteas r urer Chase will n:ak* CvWhipple, a book- kpeper In ttio Union National Bank, his dep- uty. District Attorney Snook will retain Li. S. Church ami A. L.Frlck. EiuilNusbaumer will retire with Mr. Reed and become his law partner. His successor lias not been announced. Tax Collec'or Rosborou^h will appoint Fred English, sou of Johu M. f^nzlislu Sheriff McKillican will retain W. S. Har- lpw and R. C. K. Adney. while bis other dfiMities will be Andrew Hollywood, George S. Hunt and Edward Gillegan. Tbe largest dynamo on the Pacific Coast will be put in at the power-liouse of the Oakland, Saa Leandro and iiaywards elec- tric road this week. Itis of 450"horse-power and will he run la connection with the 500 horse-power engine to futntsb electrical power for tlie entire system, including the Washington-street extension. By to-morrow there will be a municipal ticket in the li«td for the election to be held next snriug. It will be nominated by the People's party at a convention to be held at Liberty Hall, 865 Broadway, to-night, a: which seven delegates from each of the eight wards will be present. Next Friday ni?bt the Republican City Central Committee will name its nominat- ing committee that will select the delegates to the municipal convention. Alameda. The litigation that has been pending for several years over the Arff estate has finally come to an end. O. S. Meysel, who con- tested the will of the deceased on behalf of his son, has consented lo a compromise and the matter will now be settled out of court. Mr. Meysel has agreed to accept £5000 as the sliHie of bis son ja the estate, aud the other heirs are willing to give that amount. 'iLo Alameda Improvement Association will hold a meeting on Thursday evening in the City Hall. Yesterday was observed as a holiday in Alameda,' nearly all the stores on Park street being closed. Alex Buchanan, who has been acting as extra conductor on the Alameda broad- gauge 1< cal train the past year, has been , appointed to fill the vacancy cauaed by the death ol Conductor D. \V. Jlartin. An Article on Table Waterg. The New Yorit Medical Journal recently pub- llsbcd an interestlug Item on mineral waUrs. It seems tbat the lay public is nicely to confound table waters with medicinal waters, containing active chemical substances which cannot safely he Included ss part or the ordinary daily diet The article says that greater attention Is being directed to dletftic waters, more generally called table waters, which. i? pure, are of irreat value as hy- glrnfc itxeuts, and it recommends waters like Apolllnarls, which Is regarded as the leading diet etlc table water.— York Triburre. Bertkmng lias the only rellabla methods to Ct dt-fpctUo «igin. 427 Kearny street. THE MOBXIXG CALL, SAN FRAXCISCO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1893-EIGHT PAGES. 7 . : pry goods. \u25a0 ' '\u25a0.\u25a0 '. p yji, V- ' ' - / WNCORPORATEDI ." *• . ..*-\u25a0••-.•• .\u25a0 \u25a0 ' .. .. '- \u25a0\u25a0. Our Store Closes Every E«n!Dg at .6 o'cloti. ''"".°.- H &. M " %.JS M& 1M ' To-day (Tuesday); J^mid.ry;.V 3d, ' commences our FIRST:/ GRAND ANNUAL WIN- TER CLEARANCE SAtE : ; : "; in San Francisco. .'. ; - '• Have II Ever Attended a GENUINE Clear- ance Sale ? Not the ordinary: •• sort, but a bona-fide one, where prices are actually cul ' to bedrock and just as adver- ; tised in the daily papers? '• It not, don't fail to come to: .. this one, for you'll find here., some of the most STARTLING BARGAINS Ever offered to an apprecia- f; tive public. . For particular's.-' see last Sunday's papers.- .. " .'. Everything Guaranteed as Represented. ' . . or Money Re:unded. . . *•-'-. 937, 939 [incorporated] Street,. ' 937, 939 and 941 Market Street, . •Am fkancisco. . . ' AMUSEMENTS. STOCKWEL!7S_ THEATER. ]jOLLY[SURPR^Er FANNY RICE And the Entire Great Company. MATOfsa SATUKDAY »t 3p. M.« ' EVtXLVGS ATB— ; Next Monday, January 9ttt—Reapp?arance of L. R. STOCK THE MAGISTRATE! KUELi.w -iJKO4.........rropriet«>rt aua aUaiittt TO'MICHT I "TiilRll \VFFK GRAND \u25a0 OfhEMiACU'S Ol'liKAllC SUCCESS! I sraoTACLK. crowlld I TFJ.IP FVFPY I THE EVENING ! I ILfIIOOISr ! Popular Prices— 2sc and 50c. . TiYOU OPERA-BOUSE! \u25a0\u25a0 ' FOURTH SYMPHONY CONCERT Cader tbe Dlreciioa of ' MR. ADOLPH BAUER. FRIDAY. JANUARY 6TH, AT 3 P. M. MISS JOSEPHINE GODCHAUX.... ..SOPRANO ME. S.G. FLEISHMAN.. - ...PIANIST \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0... ]«1 6t . : GEOYE-STREET THEATER; Crota street, aboTe I'ol'i. THIS week; - THIS weeic A Br:lllRnt Spectacnlar Frodnctlon of ~ ~ CINDERELLA! . ge2ott < BLOOD-HORSE RACES! : BAY DISTRICT TRACK. THIS -XKnnttJ^ ; MONDAY, WKDNESIUY.TH! FRIDAY and SATURDAY. Races Start at % P. M. Sharp. % . *jr.MfAlll»ter»Dd Searr street cars^pasi t'n '. Gate. }:tl Ot- -TWESTI-SEVESTH INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION S.OV THK .. ''. . ;.".'. MECHANICS' INSTITUTE AND PKEUMIXARY ;. World's Fair Exhibit of California., Ops Jaimary 40, Closes Febrnary 11, 1893. ; NKW FEATURES! SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS!* Among which Will be tbe annaM tfxhlbUlon or toe Northern California trus fair AMnetatlon, a gruiitl display ot natural products of tbe various ' counties* of tbe 9t4te, tb« lar£?si collection v< r ' seen In this city of valuable ntntuary »i..l point- lncj. an orchestra o' fifty musicians, lucrndlhy nota<S soloists ami Mis» May t'< i>k, the yoiius CaH- > fornla cornetlst; six large aqtiarltntis, ni ie 'nerv In motion, «bjccU of. art, ti.dustry auU ui*uti c- . ture. - \u25a0 \u25a0 ' , ; .U)Mi>snv. Adult's slnele admission In dartlme'23c, evealiie > ' 60c. ChllU'n slnglo adrniision In day. lisa* 15c; \u25a0.- evcnluK '2bc. Srascn tickets Issued ocly to raein- 5 bers of tbe Mechanics' Institute. * ' . Double season ticket J-'«J CO. single season $1 SO. ;*• Season tickets may be obtained ny non-members-. .. at tbe following rat*: Double* neason $5, >tt)(H« , " season $4. which iurluttes merober^nlp Itittiolaatl tute, suiject to coiiririiutum by tiie maiutijtinent. and dues tor the present quanrr. v V \u25a0 deSOtf IR\yi.N I. STUMP, PresMcnt. , . = \l E.ASDMRS. DRKWS UANCIS3 ACA.B- »O ! i»I •my, 121 New JlorUjoumjr st.— Stiv »r- *<l / raaeeaieatt; tuition reduced; daneln< le»rn» 1 '/-^H *. ' 6t tittle cost: Ueuls e.xoioslT*lr baglaajr<i, L-ia ; Mondayf. Wedaasaays; l.a.'.i** (h«.{laa»rj>. 1' ;•;•', dajit, ThursiUjrs; soirees Mtartlajr e»oalai«, \u25a0 \u25a0 PKIVATg I.KSSON4 DAILY. « T'i ; - m tH£ WEEKLY CAU :at $1 par . .; year affords aa opportunity l.?t> ' \ every person who desires to , informed on the events of thar " day, or to read choice literature > r to keep constantly a supply ot . fresh and interesting readia ; matter on hand. Sot -* mSSb kflfv ~*--* '-_ V;*^r 2.00 w. L. Douglas S3 SHOE nol'^p. Best Calf Shoe Intbe world for tfc« price. W. L.Uoug!a?Brice3Rr«Bold everywhere. Everybody ohonld wear them. Xtlsadaty yoa owe yoursell to got the beat valtie for your monsy. Eoonomlre In your footwear by : pmohasiag W. L. Douglas Shoes, represent the best value et the prloes «d- TexUsed above, e.B thousands caa testify. asr Take >'o Subatitnto. «£tr ; Beware of frnuil. None irenuine without "W. L. PougUs namo and price stamped on bottom. - Look tor It whenyou buy.) , XV. I>. Donglas, Brockton, Mass. Sold b/ JO?. KOHLBECKER, 123 Fourth Street B. K4TSCHMSKI, 10 Third Street. i R. PAHL, 324 Keamy-Street j«3Tu 22t - YATBS4 CO^ MANUFACTURERS OF PAINTS, OILS \u25a0.' \u25a0 -\u25a0 ' "\u25a0'\u25a0. \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0--. : —AND- - VARNISHES, HAVE REMOVED To the Large Five-Story Building, 709and 711 Front Street, BETWEEN PACIFIC AND BROADWAY.. i^Thc office of BERRY BROS, of Detroit, Manufactur- ers of Varnishes, Japans and Hard Oil Finish, hare Removed to 709 and 711 Front Street. del 3 TuTUSa lm f ; _;___ ___ __^ MISCELLANEOUS. . 1 Saying and Doing Are Two Tilings! What the public sees in print and what it sees in reality is the bane of most clothing advertising. It is bad when a divorce occurs between words and facts, and yet in dees occur every day. SENSATIONAL ADVER- TISING in one form or another cannot create a healthy business, although it may ensnare for awhile. The fixedprinciples beneath this business are our reliance. We try to make them plain and execute them. '. "... Established .-OYer 25 Years on These Same Premises, Onr experiencß and the magnitude of onr business enable ns to give yoa such extraordinary inducements, as follows : January, 1893— Tuesday, 3d, ; Men's Suits and Overcoats 111 T VALIIS >^|lik ifllPh I" i% Tlie Scits come iD SaciLS and EYERMERED I 1™ IFV 1^ 1 I Frocks, in dark aE(I medium . LULuHIKEO;gg^M|| 111 I shades! Good styles. IX .. . : - ]|i|! a%f Ihe Overcoats come in Helton, w»vrt>n7KrA SIB C^B Worsted and Cassimere.in regular weigbt, vit!i M*riiAAimu. :^|Br tBKw cr without silk lapel. Ihis season's styles. '. '. ;S^i r? ~ : ' ! Sold Elsewhere" as a Bargain at S14.85. ; ; v •^S^TKB LEADERS!*?^* . REGULATORS OP XjO'W PRICES ! V. 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37 KEARNY STREET, S. F. Tainted Milk is the natural result of sick, ill-'' r^^^^^^§ kept cows vile stabling city-limits air and ' water germ-charged typhus laden. Don't take it as a gift it only means doctor's bills. Sound Milk) w^L^v^Q^g^^^ is obtained from" healthy, ' nay-fed ; t)^m3§-svv cows , in roomy, ? well-drained and Dn^J^Gurt ventilated J surroundings; by neat y- handling aud prompt delivery. VUse cP^vtj^DG on^y sound milk. His:hland Evaporated (ream ~*^_- is pure, sound daintily put . l|g|sg|j up in sealed cans freed from JP^II^ its bulk of water— delicious— i^^^^j convenient. \u25a0.:^^^^ For Sale by All Grocers. Send name and address for "Dainty Dishes" and Babies' Pood pamphlet. F. H. AMES & CO., Agents., 216 Front St., San Francisco. BIG BARGAIN !] j<oLDEH%n New Modern . Cottage rW gv i y AARr V OF SIX ROOMS. k OAiLAAi\ %FJF£?t£ r°oS HICiIEMC RIISBER GOODS LOT 331x1 50. TOILET ARTICLES Eoomy stable. All street and cement >^^^- work done. ; , \u25a0 . c: ~TTI PRICE, $3500. gpß- :fl^l: TERMS TO SUIT. ?s** BS!S Address A. 8., Box 38, CALL Office. W^SSS t iOMLANDJIFFIOE |Q|Jl| I; : : .902 BROADWAY. '^W^ * H EnbscriDtions and advertiseaiea*! >yS^-^^^^ received for the Sia Francisco Diil/ j : and Weekly CALL . ***• >\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*»*\u25a0 «n*— . wtt> «mi f^w.Mn ", r , \u25a0in-. in hyrmge »Oe P. G. THOMAS. Mana-er j £^uj-yggj:::::: £«• .. \u25a0 . . 902 Broiiway. tssz g«^ ESfttEE^SS S' \u25a0- , __^ ; ; liiTtrrnilr ftrrinft. t pipes...... Sfrf .: \u25a0•-.- . V.ail) Sirij.?c. w'.l: rubber or metal pirei.SUe THE CELEBRATED No - 10 IJn b s J r^ lu Ce . ftr <JB«!Hy rubber mufl TUbD«r flttlnrii .......... .'...,, ,75c {C DX. »•! IT^ SJ ffc Fi SI © I! 8 I ST(? So.V, sau.eas No. 10, metal littitiss 75c pnrn M H irArAIJ feS - No »»np»mi»i»«wii'o« ......sia» I IlkllWll yni VUbliVl riT— wttrt tiltii climubera^wltu OK tlirre b»rd rnboer tubes..... ... tl09 MATHEY-CAYLUS '^^I^SL'SSSSkm A test <f 3O YEAKS ha^ pro»«4 the great merit of ( UllUtlclf' Sldfli ftf Tftllpf srlir^('*C Uilspopnlar reiue.iy. by tue rapid lucrease Ja fa»or VVIII|MU.C mUI * Ul J Ulittrll llli^ . leading ruysUl«u»e»ery*a— It U»aperlorta AT LOWEST PRICES .Uothenfor saf«. prompt and complet. cur© of <nv "t miijit f\u25a0 \u25a0 "-T*?' - Jo»f »U»udtiig or x*ceat ca»e». .Not only Uit tb*T>«st, siiiska .n l ":'<• i'« r »-<>py \u00845r fcßUnecn*aj>wt,a».*.LIf I>itiJUUISTS«»U it lofr 75 _*" r _ ..,__\u25a0*•__. ___ ' ""— W - u> " wtui(l ' itittgrti^ cLui^<w.yAau \ BAVIS-BROTHERS* If - ir^ d \ 718 MARKET ST. ano---/ jJa.Uiia.lia \—™mmiy/ S^??^\ ~W\ •ii ' : a -lii±iiUi}^ 111 m®h J>lltCrS U/ftrtLßla-^STAVT RELIEF. W?M^V The Grekl Mexican R«»«i y . .. Kf 6 S ff M 9 fl g™.» V^lKd?. SSS Wgr&2* Glvr* L-Wltli artel aureuglh to Bff OUII IfiOll cnCßUiSytoitt!SS '"••/•\u25a0 -sV '•--- ">^- C)^- oexu*i organ*- \u25a0 ftrersapre»crlpUonto«nlarserfitt«maU^iS i^. 'l ; NABER ALFS&BRUNE VSn^SSSFST?^"^ nAßcn, alts « cnunc, fc. a. tixmukim. mmc ij^Smmjk jri<a. UlytHl di.viijmrbr. t 8. r., JLUHSC4 mu9 TBThBa ly. : S- : *

Morning call (San Francisco, Calif.) (San Francisco, Calif ... · EDBROOKE IS HERE He Will Plan the New Postoffice. A SIX-MILLION ESTIMATE. He Arrives From Washington Fully Empowered

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Page 1: Morning call (San Francisco, Calif.) (San Francisco, Calif ... · EDBROOKE IS HERE He Will Plan the New Postoffice. A SIX-MILLION ESTIMATE. He Arrives From Washington Fully Empowered

EDBROOKE IS HERE

He Will Plan the NewPostoffice.

A SIX -MILLION ESTIMATE.

He Arrives From Washington FullyEmpowered to Consider the Best

Building for Our Needs.

\u25a0W. J. Edbrooke, th9nupervisine archi-tect of the United States, who will drawthe plans for the now Postoffice, has ar-rived. When seen by The CAXX repre-sentative in his rooms at the Palace lastnight he was not adverse to givinghis ideason the building which lie willsupervise.

"Being: in the city only one day," saidMr.Edbrooke, "and not having had timeenough to inspect your Postcffiee and seethe business done iv it,Icannot give my

ideas on the improvements which Iwillmake.

".My duty ts to go down to your Po?tof-fice, together with the Postmaster, and seethe business that is dune there; also theway in which it is done, so that, ifneces-sary, we can improve upou it.

"One thing Hint1willliavo to make roomfor iv tlienew Postoffice is the pneumatictube, which will be usrd for the speedy de-livery of mall fioui the main office to thesub-.-tiUior.s throughout the city. Fromwhat 1have learned in the short while thatIhave been here, Itt.ink it is essentiallynecessary for the residents in the outside'part of the city to have a quicker deliveryof their mail, and as this is the latest mod-ern improvement in that line you willhaveon* in your new Postoffice.

"Ac for the building itself, it will be ofthe latest architecture. Icannot saywhether Itwill be built of granite, sand-stone or brick, as that depends on the ap-propriation Congress will allow. My ideais tohave the whole building builtofgrnnite,<<r ifnot that, to have at least the basementti'.ii two sturies of granite and the rest ofsandstone, ifthe whole building is to bebuilt of granite it will require a muchlareer appropriation than if built of land*stone. V3I

"To-day, togetlier with Mr. Backus, yourPostmaster, 1 willgo and sea the *ie,.is 1will have to take measurements.

"'Jlii!principal thing 1 will hnve to lookto i» on what street the Pcstoffice will front.That willnave to bo decided ou before 1goahe (1 withany of tho plans.

"Another thinp," 6aid Mr. Edbrooko,Will be to make gtiod provision for plentyof 6pare room in t:ie building, as your city isgrowlue very rapidly.

"According to my present ldea«. Iwillask CcaiEress to ai-propriati* not less thanS6,COO,OCq. if not nior*,a-. 1do not thinkIbat \u25a0 suitable postoflice, withevery moderncquiprLent, such as a srrowhm city li^e thisrequires, could bo built at a less UgafLAny way the site cost over a luiliion dollar:?,and 1do not see why you should not havuan appropriate buiUlngerected upon it.

"But ail Ihi.s trouble, time and iabor thatIshull pxpecd," edded Mr. Edbruoiir,"may be all for naught.;

"You kiu>w that 1 am a Republican, andas the Democrats n int- into full power soon1may lose my position and a Democrat beplaced in it in my stead. Ifthat Is the casehe willl.uve to go all over the same grcundthnt 1shall have done, and that wilmakemore delay. After ail thi>, remember, hemay turn out to have totally different ideasfrom mine iv legurd to the building."

Along with Mr. Edbr><okt> came FrankGrygln. Inspector of Public Buililings, \yhowilia^sidt Mr.Edbrooke in his undertaking.

MUST PAY THE TAXES.An Oregon Railroad Law Declared

Unconstitutional.Sai.km, Or., Jan. 2. —In the Supreme

Court 10-dßy the case of T. E. Boge, re-ceivr of the Oregon Pacitie, vs. WillidiuMackey, Sheriff of Benion County, on ap-peal from iienton County, the decree of thecc urt below was reversed and the complaintdismHse'l. This was a suit to enjoin thesneuff from collectin?, or attemptlii^ tocollect, the State and county taxes assessedacd levied upon the property of the piaiu-

tiff for MBs\wd involves the construction ofthe act pr'Vilinß for the construction ofthe Willamette Valley and Coast Railroad,approved Octuber 2J, IS7I, as extended by

the act approved February 5, 1885, whichnet provided that for twenty years follow-ing its imTTim no taxes should be assessedor collected by the State upou the railroadcompany's property.

The decision says that th!» Bee*tion iv violation of the provisionsof the constitution of this State tnut"all taxation shall be equal and uni-

form." The decision is in favor of the de-fendant. The taxes involved amount to$00,000.

HIS CAREER CUT SHORT.Capture of an Eastern Crook at Los

Angeles.Los Ahobum. Jan. 2.—The California

career of a dangerous Eastern crook wasto-day nipped in the bud. The man, whosen^meis Frank Bart, is said to have oper-ated extensively throughout the E<st, ar-riving here a few d;iy§ago. Oil Friday heburglarized th»* residence of S. B. McClure,securing two gold watches. On offering thecases for sale to a jeweler to-day the latterrecognized them from a description fur-nished by the police and at once placed theman under arrest. liart had a full kitof burglar's tods with him, and was evi-dently prepard for \u25a0 long campaign.

CAUGHT IN THE MACHINERY.Frightful Death of a Fireman at New

Whatcom.Xkw Whatcom, Wash , Jan. 2.— Wtiile

oiling the machinery yesterday at the BlueCaojoi coal bunkers J. H. McGee, firemanwn* rsught in the nuichinrry and killedHis clothing was torn completely off liitn,and wiien picked up he was naked. Bothbis ornis were broken. Deceased was about35, and leaves a wife. Be has relatives liv-ing in Oregon nnd iv Seattle, Wash.

Accident to a Child.San Dieoo. Jan. 2.—The five-year-old

daughter of K. Schulte, a carpenter, wasto-day frightfully hurt. Mrs. Schulte wasdriving in from Linda Vista when a auddenlurch threw the child between the wheels,whii h snapped the tender bones of her le?;in two places above the knee. The littleone's condition is critical, but hopes are eu-icrtatned of saving her.

Football at San Jose.San Josk, Jan. 2.—A pioked eleven from

Stanford University played football withthe local Y. M. C. A. team at the recreationgrounds l.ere tins afternoon before '2000spectators. The Stanford boys won by thescore of10 to 4. The Stanford* made twotouchdowns and a goal kick, and the Y. M.C. A. tcjp.m trade a touchdown.

The Steamer Tacoma.Vi<tohiA, h. C, Jan. 2—The steamer

Taroma left to-day for Tacoma in com-n.a! (1 of Captain Bucktnan. She willpickup her own captain on her return, he andhis offirers not being able to land in theUnited bta'.e». owing to the quarantine laws.The Tacuma has on board a larfio cargo ofOriental goods.

Neither Side Scored.Nlw Wuati -dm, Wash., J;in. 2.— The

came <>f football between the Portland andSeattle elevens t>laye<l here this afternoonresulted in a tip. The score stood 0 to 0.The ball was n*-ver out of bounds. Fourthousand people witnessed the game.

Not the Murderers.Arr.rr.N, Jna. ti.—The two tramps ar-

rested by Sheriff Conroy have been provednot to be the miudnrers of the lady stationagent at Brighton, Sacramento Coun;y.

Hunting for a Lost Man.Viotoima, li.C, Jan. 2.— A party starts

this morning on the nteamer Joan in searchof the young man named Stark who is lostiv the woods Lear Courchan.

Football at Victoria.Victoria, 8.C., Jan 2—Ttie Seattle and

Victoria teams played n football match atCaledonia lark this afternoon which re-sulted in a draw.

American Sheep Industry.Washington, Jan. 2.—One of tbe most

valuable publications ever issued by theGovernment Is the report on the sheep In-dustry of the United Mates, prepared undertut direction of the Secretary of Agncul-

lure. It treats of the history and condi-tions of the industry from the early settle-ineut of the country down to the presentday and is handsomely illustrated. It isfor distribution by the Secretary andthrough members of Congress.

RICH STRIKE IN THE UTICA.

A Pocket Opened on the Four Hun-dred-Foot Level.

Stockton, Jan. 2 —Reports have reachedhere of a wonderfully rich strike in the oldUtica mine »t Angels. Cal.iveras County,owned by Alrinza Hayward, the estate ofW. S. Hobart and C. D. Lane. The strikewas made in the 400 level last Thursday,and the pocket is so rich that a 28-ponndpiece of rock yielded sixteen pounds ofgold. Another piece of rock weighing fivepounds held three pounds of gold.Itis said that the pocket is quite large

and that it was not cut through in twenty-four hours' work. Miners say that it is themost valuable find ever known in that richsection. The mine is a steady paying prop-

erty, yielding regular dividends to its richowner?. The veiu furnishes good rock forIGO stamps, being from forty to seventy feetwide, aud the present fiO-stamp mill isnot large enouch. A new 100-stamp mill isiv course of erection.

MISS CUMMINOS' ASSAILANT.

The Identity of the Fiend at Last

I.os AHOXUCB, Jau. 2.— The fiend whooutraged Miss Georgia Cumminys lastThursday i.s now known. He is Henry J.Farber. H* first appeared in Los Angelesa year ago, coining from Portland, Or. Heclaim? to be a printer, but has not appearedsinco his stay here in any of the unionoflioes. He also claims to be the inventorot a typesetting machine. His fatber issaid to be a wealthy wholesale butcher ofSt. Louis.Portland, Or., Jan. 2.— Henry J. Faber,

wanted iv Los Anpele3 for criminal assaulton a young lnuy, was well known in this;

city,having served a *even-year term in thepenitentinry for burglary and shooting Offi-cer Barry in the arm while attempting toarrest him. Ho esciped from prison, butwas recaptured after a year, aud was re-leased inIMW.

CONCLUDED HE WOULDN'T.

Desperate Determination of a DivorcedMan.

Los axoeles. Jan. 2.—Saturday morn-ing .Vred M..yue got a horse, and bnitgy irointhe Tally-ho livery stable. Afterward hesold it to a ticket broker. Tliif> morningChief Gla<»s received tlie following letter:"I engaged a horse and buggy. at the

Tally-I:o stable, on Broadway, and subse-quently disposed of it to Mr.

——for S ,

which amount Iherewith inclose aud wishvoutoHtonr.e notify the Tally-ho stablesso that they eati obtain the rig and refundthe mi'Uey. Tho reason for this is that my

wife obtained her divoice to-day (ou wrong-

fulreasons), and Ithreatened when she didttint 1\rouid dn something to send me to thepenitentiary. 1 am heartbroken and shelias robbed me of all she can. Her allesa-tlouH in the divorce matter are a lot of lie",but I\>illnot contest them. Plenso attendto this and oblige yours faithfully.

"Fi:i:i> Mavni;."—»

A Slow Track.New Qbi.eaks, Jan. 2.—The track was

slow.Five furlong*. LittleAddie won, Joe I.po

second, John Harper third. Time, 1:1'Five and a half furlongs, Sanbaba won,

Virgin secoud, Longbroeck third.- Time,l:lC*_.

FivtJ furlongs, Angeree won, Ansel Jr.second. BsrkiT Harrison third. Time,

1:07^.Mile, Dixie V won, Bonfire second, Henry

O^^^ley third. Time, 1:55.Seven furlong?, l'ekln won. Beeswing

second, Alphonse tnird. Time, 1:37%.Halford Does Not Know It.

Wasihn c.io.N. Jan. 2.—The report waspublished this morning tl'at the Presidenthad decided to appoint Private Secretary

ILtlfonl a major in the pay corps of thearmy provided a vacancy stiall occur beforethe end of the administration. Private Sec-retary Half* ilwas questioned oa the sub-j«Ct to-day and saia that he wa» certainly

uot aware ol any Mich intention on the part

of the President.

Kenna Has Heart Disease.Wash:v,t<>n, Jan. 2.— Senator Kenna of

West Virginia, who has been seriously illfor several weeks, had a relapse yesterdayand Jho family believed he would not sur-vive the nicbt. This morning he wasslightly better, but not sufficiently to allaytheir fears and tho gravest appreheuslonsare felt Kenna is troubled, witti heart dis-ease.

Trouble With the Arapahoes.Washington-, Jan. 2.

—Persons here

familiar with tue situation do not anticipateany serioui trouble betwi nn the Shoshoneand Arkpahoe Indians in Northern WjO-lnine. It is believed by some that an at-tempt is being made to compel the Arapn-hoes to sell a valuable tract which they havebeen heretofore unwilling to part with.

Trial of the Vesuvius.Ni:\v Yokk, Jan. 2.

—The dynamite

civiv er Vesuvius left the Brooklyn Navy-yard nt an early hour to-day. The ve^spl

willgo direct to Port P.oval Sound, wherethe Onnl tests of the great dynamite guvswillbe made early next week.

His Creditors Secured.AtCHJSOH; Khi?., Jan. 2.

--Dr. V. L.

Challi*, father-in-law of the late John A.Martin, failed this morning for £l-'O,OCO. Iti« said that most of the creditors aresecured.

Corrugating Works Burned.Coi.TMi-.rs, Jan. 2.— Caldwell & Patter-

son's corrugating worka at Wheeling, WestVirginia, were burued this morning. Theloss is $100,OCQ and the insurrnce $50,000.

Sawyer's WillSustained.Sai.em. Mass ,Jan. 2.— Tiie jury in the

Sawyer willcase returned late ti>is afler-noon witha verdict sustaining the will.

PERSONAL NOTES.

Hon. David T. Ham ol Spokane i9at thePalace.

Jii.ige O. E. Williams of Tlacerville is atthe Grand.

Senator F. Jones of Orovilla is registeredat the Grand.

Judge John Mcßride of St. Lake is aguest at the Palace.

D. B. Fairbanks a Petaluma banker, Isregistered at the Grand.

J. W. Houston, a prominent merchant ofCourtlaiui, is at the Grand.

Andrew Mnrkham, a Santa Rosa capital-ist, is registered at the Lick.

Dr. M. A. Soink, a prominent physicianof Indianapolis, is at the Lick.

11. \V. Crabb, a well-known Oakvillerineyariiitt, is a guest at the Grand.

John Tneioan, a mining man from Sui-ter Crerk, is registered ut the Grand.

Dr. Richmond, a prntninent physician ofSalinas, is stopDlng at the Occidental.

Cliarle3 Ericksun, a prominent railroadcontractor of Portland, Or., is ut the Grand.

D. M.Il.mspn. a well-known atlomey-at-law of Clear Lake, is a guest at tho Grand.

A. W. Simpson, a lumber merchant ofStocktou, is registered ut ttiu Occidentalwitii bia v. 11.

W. E. P. Deal, a well-known attorney-at-law from Virgiuia City, Nev., is a guest atth« Pabce.

Mr. Forsyth, a popular vlneyardist ofFresno, is stopping at the Occidental withhis wife.

Mr. Ike Rosenthal and his wife (neeFieel) hiiTe returned from their southernbridal tour and willreceive their friends atthe residencn of Samuel Figel, 2415 Wash-ington street.

.John F. Pinkham. marshal of the Societyof California Pioneers, who has been nick athis rooms at the Windsor Hotel during thepast moutl), is considered by his physicianout of danger.

Mr. Coates' Affairs.The friends of Francis C. Coatei i\re very

explicit in their denUis of the reports thatthat gentleman left the city for Mexicounder a cloud. Mr. Coates is now in SanFrancisco. Itis said that the reason of hisleaving for Mexico was that he had busi-ness tn attend to down them. While therehe was also attending to the interest* ofJunes &Co., silling goodft, whirl)statementis corroborated by the linn.

'J lie city of New York cares for 18,000lunatics at a cost of $1.25,000 a year.I)ib«nloro<lKtopucb cured by

Mroino-Seltzsr-lOc abottl*

AT THE THEATERS.

AH Baba Closed in a Haloof Glory.

ANOTHER SPECTACLE INVIEW

Crowds at the Stockwel! and Tivoli.Slender Attendance at the

Bush -street Houses.

Last evening was the finale of the "AltBaba" spectacle at the Grand Opera-house,and there was a greater crush to bid itfare-well than tl.ero was a month ago to wel-come it. What is unusual in even such apopular entertainment as Manager DavidHenderson has been treating us to duriugthe holidays, the taper end was the bigsest.

The company go East by a special trainthis morning, and we presume the happiestman on board that train will be Hendersonhimself. And why? Ho carries with himsome $60,000 a3 the result of a month'swork, aud leaves behind him a pleased pub-!ic who have but one wish, aud that is, tosee him and his company soon again.

He willbe back in a year's time from nowto brighten the holidays of 1893 with an-other spectacle, more brilliant, if possibleiv the grasp of the theatric and scenic art,

than any ofthose with which he las alreadyfavored our public. He informed us lastevening that he ba<l his next attraction al-ready in motion. Without mentioning thotitle, we were led to inter it would be a raronovelty. "The name, you know," he added

•in his quiet Scotch way, "is a secondary con-sideratiou. The infant is not chri6teued be-fore it is born."

Fanny Rice and company, and Fielding,the manager thereof, liave reason to con-gratulate themsrlves with the success metwith at the Stockwell during the last f«l»nighr. They have had packed houses everyperformance and last night the attendancewas what would be called, in the argot oftue street, "a corker." No seats to be hadfor love or money and Manager Eilingiiousewild with anxiety to suve the necessity ofturning anybody away, a necessity to whichhe was reduced, nevertheless. Verily haveour public, more than on any previous holi-day season, patron zed, at the close of 1892,tho popular theaters. This engaging littleromedieune. Funny Kicp, mignt, frompresent apDearuncei, pack tho Stoekwelllor another fortnight, hut it cannot be.Dates must be filled. The company mustleave lib rich claim witii the ore still inlight.

The favorite comedian, Mr. Lovel R.Stockweil, will make his ieniperirance :ithis own theater in Mr. A. W. Pinfcro'ssuc-ce-->fui couir.ly, "The Mojiistrate." Thiswillbe Mr. Stockwell's first nrpearnnce ivs. vend months before a San Francisco au-diencr*. Theater-goers wll! remember thegentleman in the piece mentioned vvnrnla!>tproduced here as jiivluga very <:!evrr ren-dering of the principal part. "The Magis-trate" wiilbe well cast and presented withnew sceuery. Mr. lingo Toland, a youngCaliforuian with cousider&ble experience.baa t'teu -specially engaged for this produc-tion. Th« piece will,no doubr, draw wellfor a week. Sale of seats begins to-morr-ow (Wednesday).

Mr. Hi'zigrath's earnest efforts to keepalive the interost of oar German theater-goers in his enterprise at the Baldwin de-serve all the encouragemeut he receives andeven more. lie is not met by oar Germanpublic with the auiDle recognition -that iscalled for by his exertions for their enter-tainment. The production of the farce-*comedy, "Der Lnewe dcs Tages" (The Lionof the Day), ou last Sunday evening, whs inthe company's brs: style and was rewardedby effusive applause. Miss Marguerite Al-brecht was especially charming and efficientin her role, She is always good, but in thisparticular part she was more thitn usuallyexcellent. As for the orchestral part of theperiormancr, itmay be mentioned that Mr.August Ilinrlch*, the leader, won crrat ap-plause lor bis execution of a violinsolo.

The Tivolihad 8 New Year audience beyond (X)i<*ctatn>n. Every seat in the largeauditorium was filled, wi;n a four-deep

crowd standing in the rear. Surely thispopular plnco of amusement is becoming,theVcustoni .of the time, and Is graduallygaugins ivprice and quality of the e.nter-laihint-iit ( ffered th«* wants of th<> averageSauiFrauclsco theater-goer. Mr. Jo Holz,the treasurer, is slowly convalescing frombis recent serious ilines?, and willprobablysho* his thin but yet pleasant fact* at thebox-office window about Friday next, be-fore "ATrip to the Moon" is completed. Itwas not a pleasant way to bridge the oldyear to the new—in a sickroom— thesweet and bitter of lifemust be txkfn to-gether without repining. By such experi-ences we grow philosophic, and we presumehi* recent severe lesson will net be lostupon the popular Jo.

The managers ef the I3u9h-9treet theatersare beginning to think they are too fardowntown. Notwithstanding tup close ofthe New Year festival time both the NewCalifornia, with "Incog," and Leavitt'sBush-street Theater, with Lrderer'a comioplayers in "l'ou and I,"showed a beggarlyaccount of empty benches. Particularlywas this the ease with the Bush-street,where the auditorium was empty enough tomnke the alleged fun on the stage merelyhollow echoes. Of durjc, a good deal ofthe non-attendance must be attributed tothe fact that notwithstanding the presenceof Mr. George P. Murphy "You and I"is achestnut of many sea&ons and iU moldinessis repel iant. M. B. must look to a re-arrangement of managerial condition* ifheexpects to derive income from this dilapi-dated amusement factory.

The Grove-Mreet Theater, situated as itis in the heart of a close family populationthat do not care to go far from home on aholiday niglii, was filled to ccc "Cinder-ella." Adults, adolescents, '-ladies and chil-dren were there to the auditorium's ca-PHCitv to enjoy this Christmas and NewYear's spectacle as tbe managers havestaged it,and itis useless to aay that youneand old all enjoyM it in common. Theytaiked alt ut ii when. they reached home,and congratulated themselves on havinirsuch seasonable amusement at their owndoors. "Cinderella" will run all throughthe New Year week.

Mr. Adolph linuer, the accomt lishedleader of the Tivoli orchestra, will give hisfourth symphony concert at that theater onFriday afternoon next, January 6. MissJosephine God< haux, soprano; Mr. S. G.Fleiohman, pianist.

"Olivette," Audran's beautiful opera, willbe sung at Charles Meyer's Wigwam rlheaterall this week.

Mi-. General Tom Thumb and companywillbid farewell lo the San Francisco pub-licat IrvingHail this evening.

A STRANGE CASE.A Man Who Lived Sixteen Years With

a Hole Through His Head.Rutland (Vt.)Letter to New Orleans Tinsea-Dcmo-

cnt.

The recently reported narrative of a mnnwho died iv a Newark (N. J.) hospital witha knife blade protruding into his brain sincohis boyhood (his death having be«n pro-duced from entirely dilTereat causes) callsattention to a remnrkable occurrence inVermont. Iv the New Jeriey case an*

autopsy revealed that the blade of the knireextended nearly ono iuch beyond the out-side of the brain, while its broken extrem-ity was on a line with the interior surfaceof the rrKiiium.

A still more remarkable accident of asomowliat similar nature occurred morethan fortyyear3neo.'and is well authenti-cated. Pliiiieas C. Gage, the victim, was inone way the most remarkable ina v whoeverlived, so far [as is* known, the Now Jerseycase Ocmn the nearest to a parallel on rec-ord. It is certain tt:at Mr. Gage was theouly riuin uho ever bad a iamolng-bar shotthrough his brain and whorecovered. •

:v The circumstances were such that the at-tention of physicians and surgeons of bothcontinents whs attracted, not only whileHit;man was suffering from the effects of thewound, but after he recovered. Surgeonsrefused to bellevo the assertions of the' nt-tendiug physicians, and required attestedstatements from prominent clergymen,' law-yers and others: who actually s.iw the cr.sebefore they wcul'l accept the statementsmade.

' -:'.; \u25a0\u25a0.. -.:* v * *\u25a0.*., ~t . \u25a0*.*- . .*.'\u25a0\u25a0*'. *,The accident which made Mr. Gago fa-

imous loccurred at Cavendish, Vt.. Septem-ber 13, 184S, while blasting wns going on ina cut in tho rocks through which the Rut-'land; division of / the Central VermontlUilroad now passe?.' Phineas Gage, aged25 year*, wu9 foreman of a gang of menwho were employed in blasting. Gage hndnever bad a day's illneis from childhoodand was, ns far as could be determined,perfectly healthy. Althe time of the acci-dent he was charging a drill hole for blast-ing and sat upon a shelf of rock just above,but -\u25a0a little *to ,•the ;right of the bole :'ashe faced it. The powder and fusewero'in Vpcsi lion and he was la • the act of

tamping it in. Ho turned his headfor. an instant to look at his man at workbehind him. His Iron struck fire on theedgo of the hole, an explosion followed andthe tamping bar, 3 feet 7 Inches lon?r% ofan inrh in diameter, and weighing 13%pounds, was projected upward obliquely inthe line of its axis, passed completelythrough his head and nigh in the air, fallingseveral rods: behind him, and was after-ward picked up by one of the men, cov-ered withblood and particles of brain.

Mr.Gage was thrown iiDon his back bythe force of the blow, and hU extremitiesinured convulsively a few times, but hespoke in a few minutes. His men carriedhim to the road, a short distance away, andhe rode home ionn ox cart sitting up bybeing supported. When he arrived at hisdestination be got out of the cart himselfwith a little assistance, and an hour after-wark walked upstairs with slight aid andlay down upon the bed, when bis woundwas dressed. ile was conscious, but verywpak from loss of blood.

The examination of the wound showedthat the ironentered the left side of the faceby the pointed end; immediately anterior tothe angle of the lower J«w", passed obliquelyupward and obliquely backward, emergingin the median line back of the frontal bone.Tb« bones were broken insmall fragmentsand forced upward and outward. The bolehad much the shape of an inverted funnel.The frontal bone wa3 badly fractured, leav-ing »n irregular oblong opening in the skulltwo inches one way and three aii.l a half theother, through which the pulsations of thebrain were plainly seen and felt.

The wound was dressed, and the manshowed no apparent signs of serious injury, ;excepting a curious agitation of the Ip&jwhich were alternately retrncted and ex-tended. Then began a battle, the naturalconsequences of such an accident againstthe strong constitution of nhealthy mnn.

No one thouzht it possible that he couldrecover, but after a few days he began toimprove, and ou the fifty-sixth day from theaccident the patient was up and walkingabout the house and piazza. T!;e sixty-fourth day he caught cold, and serious con-sequences were .for a time feared, but herecovered. Ten Adays afterward he wastaken in a carriage to Lnbanou, X. 11., adistance of thirty miles or more.

Mr. Gage passed the winter months inLebanon, but returned to Cavendish thefollowing April. lie was then in (roodhealth and flesh, but his mind was weakand childish, and the sight of the left eyewas entirely lost. He visi'ed South Amer-icn, passing some time In Valparaiso. Thenbe went to San Fra"cisco, and (lied there ofepilepsy. May 21, 1861, nearly sixteen yearsafter the accident. The skull and iron arenow in the museum of the Medical Depart-ment ol Harvard University.

Swallowed Chloroform.Prompted by jealousy, Mrs. Etta Emer-

son drank a bottle of chloroform shortlybefore midnight last nicht with suicidal in-tent. She Is the wlfo of Dr. Edward Em-erson, a dentist doing business at 137 Sixthstreet, where the couple live.

During their three years of married lifeMrs. Emerson was always jealous of herhusband's female patients, aud often threat-ened to killhim and end h<-r own life.

Late last night the deintbt returned homeand joined his wife in ihe (flice. lie ut

-braided her, and in reyly the woman tookup a three-ounce botiln of chloroform »ndswallowed the coutent3. She was taken tothe Keceiving Hospital in an unconsciouscondition.

Mrs. Wallace Is Wanted.The police are anxious to ascertain the

whereabouts of a woman who was robbedby two potato peddlers at the corner of Felland Steluer streets on the afternoon of De-cember 8. Tue men snatched her salclielcontaining $8, and with it jumped into theirWiicou aialdrcve awny.

The woman r©i>ort*dncr loss to the Cnief<•{ Police, to whom she said that heriir.n:e wa? Mrs. Fred Wallace and that sheiived on Dott street, Berkeley, near the nar-row-gauge railroad. One of the thievingpeddlers whs arrested a lew days ago andplaced in tho City Prison tanks. Ever sincethen the detectives have been scouringBerknley for Mrs. Wallace, but they are un-able to findher or the street on which shesaid she lived. _

Drowned in the Bay.Tn« body of a man about 32 years old

was found late yesterday afternoon neartho Bryant-street wharf. There were nosigns of decomposition on the corpse,which bad evidently been in the waterabout twenty-four hours. It was taken tothe Morgue, where an autopsy snowed thatdeath had been caused by drowuing.

The deceased woie a suit of black diag-onal cloth, a bite shut and collar and ablack cravat. There was a plain gold ringbearing the initial!' "P. C." on cue of hisbands, lie had a while silk handkerchief,on which the letter 'TV was embroidered.Ti:e body was the tenth which bail beentaken from the bay since Christmas.

The Fire Record.The alarm from box (i4at 9 o'clock yester-

day morning was occasioned by the burn-ing of the stable at '.VA) Natoma street. Thebuilding was owned by Miller&Lux. Lossabout SI'KW.

At 4:'jr» o'clock yesterday af'ernoon analarm was sent in from box G2, Fourth andMission fttretta, and proved to be anotherof the many false alarms that have beenturned ie of late.

A heap of brooracom in front of theChinese broom factory at 10 Virginia alleywas fired at midnight last night and causedan alarm to be sounded from box 255. Thecorn was owned by Wong Bins, who esti-mates his loss at S'_'s.

Creed Haymond's Condition.There was no change in the condition of

Creed Ilaymond uo to a late hour lastnight. lie lies in the same semi-consciouscondition as reported before, tfla physi-cians say tiuit he cannot linger very lout;.

ITEMS OF INTEREST.Tlie town of Forsytli, Mo., is 50 years old

ami m ver had a church.The rice crop in the South this year is

estltuated'to be 223,000,000 pounds.The Swiss and German pikemen were

during the fifteenth century esteemed thebest inEurope.

Intoxicating liquors have been mada fromthe sap <>f tlie blrcb, the willow, the poplarand the >ycamore.

Kentucky will try the experiment of per-mitting three-fourtha erf a jury incivilcases(nine jurors) to render a verdict.

Unbiokeii four-year-old colt?, suitable formilitary purposes, can be bought in theAustralian colonies at from $50 to $75 each.

A sawmill was stolen bodily.ln HancockCounty, Ky.,a few days aco. Xot a tracoof the machinery could bo found.

Finlnnd lias just been celebrating the twohundred and fiftieth anniversary of theestablishment of printing n; that country.

Itis expected that 16.000 carloads of ex-hibits willbe received at tho ground of theWorld's Fair betneeu now and the Ist of>L.v., Ithas been discovered that n manufnetoryof "relics"has been in operation in Edin-burgh, Scotland, for some time, llelics ofliuriis were the staple product.

Miss !Maud Ziovierzchkowitinskis, ofChicago, was married recently. Ittook thominister so long topronounce the name that* they had to have the wedding tuo day be-fore.

An advertisement for a school teacher innn Indiana paper reads as fo-llows: "Hemust be a man sound in body aud intel-lect; not ftfrnid to use the rod; wages $10per month and board around."

A study of a German map, nn which isplotted the stations of tlm troops in theirhuge army, shows that the majority are soplaced as to be conveniently moved insec-tions to the French frontier.

Probably the most interesting section oftin* transportation building at Jackson Parkwill be that devoted to primitive methods oftransportation and the cauoes and sleds ofuncivilized tribes.

The Athenian Archaeological Society hascarried out some excavations on the site ofancient Corinth, which have resulted in thediscovery of a considerable building belong-ing to the fifth or sixth century B. C.

Many of the so-called hotel Lnllboys inthis country are fathers aud some aregrandfathers. San Francisco lays claim tothree who are over CO years of age, one of:whom recently, retired from business rich.

': Vanilla is an orchid, which in the WestIndies, creeps over trees and walls like ivy.A substance callnd "salep," aomowhat re-sembling arrowroot or sago, is obtainedfrom the tubers of a variety that grows inTurkey and Poieia, where it is highlyesteemed. \u25a0 .

Hungary is sratod to bo the country whererailway traveling is the cheape&t. Itissaid to be possible to journey fn in Buual'estli to Krunstadt, a distance of 500 miies,for 6s Bd, being at the rate nf six miles apeony. Low as this price is itis liable to areduction of one-half in the case of laborersjourneying in partita of not fewer than ten.

The latest feat in spoon-carving is re-ported from the capital city of lowa, andwas accomplished by S. E. Wilcox. lietooka common lowa souvenir spood, one bear-ing the luwa coat of arms on its handle, andwrote the whole of the Lord*prayer InitsDowi. Every letter and comma Is in itsproper piace, mid can be easily read withthe naked eye.

Mlsi Mary Moore fennel, aged G5, livingInthe neighborhood of Fourth and Townsend:Atie«tß, was knocked down yesterday afternoonlatFlltl)and Mmket stieets by a team. Mie wastaken Into a drugstore, when Itwas found shebad received a severe cut on11lie back of trieliead.

-Aiier ttie wound was dresheu she was

>ent to ncr lioim*. The team wmdilYea by JoliuLo.vnianolGsUQnai<l stu-«i, -. s

OVER IN OAKLAND.

Threats to Enjoin AnyBoulevard Job.

THE NEW COUNTY OFFICERS.

Preparing to Place the Largest Dyna-mos on the Pacific Coast— The

People's Party Ticket.

There Is a lons serpentine line off >. .ay,dull rock lining the eastern shore of LakeMerritt that Is the sul jeet. of inquiry on thepart of strangers, and pointed out as a relicof the monumental follyof thepresent CityCouncil. If. was put there at a cost of$19,000. paid by the taxpayers of Oakland,aud was intended aa the Gist sectioo of aboulevard to be built nereis the Jake at thecost of hundreds of thousands of d\u25a0•liars.Itwas so much money sunk, as the pres-

ent pile is absolutely useless. The citizens,when they got a chance, condemned itunanimously. The Council sought to issuebonds for carrying on tlie worK,but theproposition was overwhelmingly defeatedat the polls. There was so much evidenceof unfairness and scheming for boodle thatthose who had to bear tLo expense nut theBtamp of disapproval on it so forcibly thatit was stopped.

The Councilmen who started it.however,were balked for only a little season. Insnite of protests and overwhelming opinionthey have made another appropriation, andthe Board of Public Works, following tlieirbidding, has called for proposals for dredg-Ihk nnd fillingin another section of the lake.

These will be considered at a meeting tobe held to-night, aud the contract willprob-ably be awarded.

But tlie work will never be done— underpresent conditions. There are a number ofiufluential men In Oakland, capitalistsevery one of them, who have made ready tobring an injunction suit restraining thewnik the moment the first stone is dumped.

The opposition is so general and the in-dignation so great that the rine of pnliti-ciuns, Kirlud'ug the solid six, has beenforever condemned, and this is the chiefreas<iii of the starting of the Non-Partisanmovement, which is gathering force andwhich promises to sweep everything be-

fore it.Itis the purpose to bold off the boodling,

sctiemine cliicauery brought about aud nowattempting to be enforced till a Council iselected representing the people which willcarry out their wishes in the matter.

Yesterday being a holiday, the newcounty officers will assume their duties at12 o'clock to-day. The ouly change atrongthe deputies of the officers re-elected willbe by County C erk Crane, who willappointa son of Judge Greene in place of HarryBeUlen as clerk of Department 2. Tteas rurer Chase will n:ak* CvWhipple, a book-kpeper In ttio Union National Bank, his dep-uty. District Attorney Snook willretain Li.S. Church ami A. L.Frlck. EiuilNusbaumerwillretire with Mr. Reed and become hislaw partner. His successor lias not beenannounced.

Tax Collec'or Rosborou^h will appointFred English, sou of Johu M. f^nzlislu

Sheriff McKillican will retain W. S. Har-lpw and R. C. K. Adney. while bis otherdfiMities willbe Andrew Hollywood, GeorgeS. Hunt and Edward Gillegan.

Tbe largest dynamo on the Pacific Coastwill be put in at the power-liouse of theOakland, Saa Leandro and iiaywards elec-tric road this week. Itis of 450"horse-powerand willhe run la connection with the 500horse-power engine to futntsb electricalpower for tlie entire system, including theWashington-street extension.

By to-morrow there will be a municipalticket in the li«td for the election to be heldnext snriug. It will be nominated by thePeople's party at a convention to be held atLiberty Hall, 865 Broadway, to-night, a:which seven delegates from each of theeight wards willbe present.

Next Friday ni?bt the Republican CityCentral Committee willname its nominat-ing committee that willselect the delegatesto the municipal convention.

Alameda.The litigation that has been pending for

several years over the Arffestate has finallycome to an end. O. S. Meysel, who con-tested the willof the deceased on behalf ofhis son, has consented lo a compromise andthe matter willnow be settled out of court.Mr.Meysel has agreed to accept £5000 asthe sliHie of bis son ja the estate, aud theother heirs are willing to give that amount.

'iLo Alameda Improvement Associationwillhold a meeting on Thursday evening inthe City Hall.

Yesterday was observed as a holiday inAlameda,' nearly all the stores on Parkstreet being closed.

Alex Buchanan, who has been acting asextra conductor on the Alameda broad-gauge 1< cal train the past year, has been ,appointed to fill the vacancy cauaed by thedeath ol Conductor D. \V.Jlartin.

An Article on Table Waterg.The New Yorit Medical Journal recently pub-

llsbcd an interestlug Item on mineral waUrs. Itseems tbat the lay public is nicely to confoundtable waters with medicinal waters, containingactive chemical substances which cannot safely heIncluded ss part or the ordinary daily diet Thearticle says that greater attention Is being directedto dletftic waters, more generally called tablewaters, which. i? pure, are of irreat value as hy-glrnfc itxeuts, and it recommends waters likeApolllnarls, which Is regarded as the leading dietetlc table water.— York Triburre.

Bertkmng lias the only rellabla methods toCt dt-fpctUo «igin. 427 Kearny street.

THE MOBXIXG CALL, SAN FRAXCISCO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1893-EIGHT PAGES. 7

. : pry goods.

\u25a0

''\u25a0.\u25a0 '. pyji, V-

' ' -

/ WNCORPORATEDI • • ." *•...*-\u25a0••-.•• .\u25a0

\u25a0' ... . '-

\u25a0\u25a0. Our Store Closes Every E«n!Dg at.6 o'cloti.''"".°.-

H &.M"%.JS M& 1M'

To-day (Tuesday); J^mid.ry;.V3d,

'commences our FIRST:/

GRAND ANNUAL WIN- •

TER CLEARANCE SAtE:;:";

in San Francisco. .'. ;- '•

Have II

EverAttended a GENUINE Clear-ance Sale ? Not the ordinary: ••

sort, but a bona-fide one,

where prices are actually cul'

to bedrock and just as adver- ;

tised in the daily papers? '•Itnot, don't fail to come to:..this one, for you'll find here.,some of the most

STARTLINGBARGAINS

Ever offered to an apprecia- f;tive public. . For particular's.-'see last Sunday's papers.- .. "

.'.Everything Guaranteed as Represented.

'

. . or Money Re:unded. .. *•-'-.

937, 939[incorporated]

Street,.'

937, 939 and 941 Market Street,. •Am fkancisco. . .'

AMUSEMENTS. •

STOCKWEL!7S_ THEATER.

]jOLLY[SURPR^ErFANNY RICE

And the Entire Great Company.MATOfsa SATUKDAY »t 3p. M.«

'——EVtXLVGS ATB—;

Next Monday, January 9ttt—Reapp?arance of

L.R. STOCK

THE MAGISTRATE!

KUELi.w -iJKO4.........rropriet«>rt aua aUaiittt

TO'MICHT I"TiilRll \VFFK

GRAND \u25a0 OfhEMiACU'S Ol'liKAllC

SUCCESS! I sraoTACLK.

crowlldI TFJ.IPFVFPY I THE

EVENING!IILfIIOOISr!Popular Prices— 2sc and 50c. .

TiYOU OPERA-BOUSE! \u25a0\u25a0 • '

FOURTH SYMPHONY CONCERTCader tbe Dlreciioa of

'

MR. ADOLPH BAUER.FRIDAY.JANUARY 6TH, AT 3 P. M.

MISS JOSEPHINE GODCHAUX.... ..SOPRANOME.S.G. FLEISHMAN.. - ...PIANIST

\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0... ]«1 6t . :

GEOYE-STREET THEATER;Crota street, aboTe I'ol'i.

THIS week; - THIS weeicA Br:lllRnt Spectacnlar Frodnctlon of

~ ~

CINDERELLA!. ge2ott <

BLOOD-HORSE RACES! :

BAY DISTRICT TRACK.

THIS -XKnnttJ^ ;MONDAY, WKDNESIUY.TH! FRIDAY

and SATURDAY.

Races Start at % P. M.Sharp.% .

*jr.MfAlll»ter»Dd Searr street cars^pasi t'n '.Gate. }:tlOt- -•

TWESTI-SEVESTHINDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION

S.OV THK . . ''.. ;.".'.MECHANICS' INSTITUTE

AND PKEUMIXARY ;.

World's Fair Exhibit of California.,

Ops Jaimary 40, Closes Febrnary 11, 1893. ;NKW FEATURES! SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS!*Among which Will be tbe annaM tfxhlbUlon or toeNorthern California trus fair AMnetatlon, agruiitl display ot natural products of tbe various 'counties* of tbe 9t4te, tb« lar£?si collection v<r

'seen In this city of valuable ntntuary »i..l point-lncj. an orchestra o' fifty musicians, lucrndlhy

nota<S soloists ami Mis» May t'< i>k, the yoiius CaH- >fornla cornetlst; six large aqtiarltntis, niie 'nervIn motion, «bjccU of.art, ti.dustry auU ui*uti c- .ture. -

\u25a0

\u25a0• ' , ;

.U)Mi>snv.

Adult's slnele admission Indartlme'23c, evealiie >'

60c. ChllU'n slnglo adrniision In day. lisa* 15c; \u25a0.-

evcnluK '2bc. Srascn tickets Issued ocly to raein-5

bers of tbe Mechanics' Institute.* • ' •.Double season ticket J-'«J CO. single season $1SO. ;*•

Season tickets may be obtained ny non-members-. ..at tbe following rat*: Double* neason $5, >tt)(H« ,"season $4. which iurluttes merober^nlp Itittiolaatltute, suiject to coiiririiutum by tiie maiutijtinent.and dues tor the present quanrr. v V \u25a0

deSOtf IR\yi.NI.STUMP, PresMcnt. ,. =

\lE.ASDMRS. DRKWS UANCIS3 ACA.B- »O !i»I •my, 121 New JlorUjoumjr st.— Stiv »r- *<l /raaeeaieatt; tuition reduced; daneln< le»rn» 1'/-^H *.

'6t tittle cost: Ueuls e.xoioslT*lr baglaajr<i, L-ia ;Mondayf. Wedaasaays; l.a.'.i** (h«.{laa»rj>.• 1' ;•;•',dajit, ThursiUjrs; soirees Mtartlajre»oalai«, \u25a0

\u25a0 PKIVATg I.KSSON4 DAILY. « T'i ;-

m

tH£ WEEKLY CAU :at $1 par ..;year affords aa opportunity l.?t>

'\

every person who desires to ,

informed on the events of thar • "

day, or toread choice literature >r

tokeep constantly a supply ot

. fresh and interesting readia ;

matter on hand.

Sot -*mSSb• kflfv ~*--*'-_V;*^r2.00

w. L. DouglasS3 SHOE nol'^p.

Best Calf Shoe Intbe world for tfc« price.W.L.Uoug!a?Brice3Rr«Bold everywhere.Everybody ohonld wear them. Xtlsadatyyoa owe yoursell to got the beat valtie foryour monsy. Eoonomlre Inyour footwear by:pmohasiag W. L.Douglas Shoes,represent the best value et the prloes «d-TexUsed above, e.B thousands caa testify.

asr Take >'o Subatitnto. «£tr ;

Beware of frnuil. None irenuine without"W. L.PougUs namo and price stamped on bottom.

-Look

torItwhenyou buy.),XV.I>.Donglas, Brockton, Mass. Sold b/

JO?. KOHLBECKER, 123 Fourth StreetB. K4TSCHMSKI, 10 Third Street.

i R. PAHL, 324 Keamy-Streetj«3Tu 22t -

YATBS4 CO^MANUFACTURERS OF

PAINTS, OILS\u25a0.' \u25a0 -\u25a0

'"\u25a0'\u25a0. \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0--. :

—AND--

VARNISHES,HAVE REMOVED

To the Large Five-Story Building,

709and 711Front Street,BETWEEN PACIFIC AND BROADWAY..

i^Thc office of BERRYBROS, ofDetroit, Manufactur-ers of Varnishes, Japans andHard OilFinish, hare Removedto 709 and 711 Front Street.

del3TuTUSa lm •

f ;

_;___ _____^

MISCELLANEOUS. . 1

Saying and Doing AreTwo Tilings!

What the public sees in print and what it sees inreality is the bane of most clothing advertising. It isbad when a divorce occurs between words and facts, and

yet in dees occur every day. SENSATIONAL ADVER-TISING in one form or another cannot create a healthybusiness, although it may ensnare for awhile.

The fixedprinciples beneath this businessare our reliance. We try to make themplain and execute them.

'. "... Established .-OYer 25 Years on These Same Premises,Onr experiencß and the magnitude of onr business enable ns togive yoa such extraordinary inducements, as follows :

January, 1893—Tuesday, 3d, ;

Men's Suitsand Overcoats

111 T VALIIS >^|lik ifllPh I"i% Tlie Scits come iD SaciLS and

EYERMERED I1™ IFV 1^1IFrocks, in dark aE(I medium. LULuHIKEO;gg^M|| 111Ishades! Good styles.

IX .. .: - ]|i|! a%f Ihe Overcoats come in Helton,w»vrt>n7KrA SIBC^B Worsted and Cassimere.in regular weigbt,vit!iM*riiAAimu.:^|Br tBKw cr without silk lapel. Ihis season's styles.

'. '. ;S^ir?~: '! Sold Elsewhere" as a Bargain at S14.85.

;;v •^S^TKB LEADERS!*?^*. REGULATORS OP XjO'W PRICES !

V. 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37 KEARNY STREET, S. F.

Tainted Milkis the natural result of sick, ill-''

r^^^^^^§ kept cows —vile stabling —city-limitsair and

'water

—germ-charged —typhus laden. Don't take it as

a gift—it only means doctor's bills.

Sound Milk)

w^L^v^Q^g^^^ is obtained from" healthy,'nay-fed ;

t)^m3§-svv cows ,in roomy, ? well-drained and

Dn^J^Gurt ventilated J surroundings; by neat

y- handling aud prompt delivery. VUsecP^vtj^DG on^y sound milk.

His:hland Evaporated (ream~*^_- is pure, sound

—daintily put

. l|g|sg|j up in sealed cans freed from

JP^II^ its bulk of water— delicious—

i^^^^j convenient.

\u25a0.:^^^^ For Sale by All Grocers.Send name and address for "Dainty Dishes" and Babies' Pood pamphlet.

F.H.AMES &CO., Agents., 216 Front St., San Francisco.

BIG BARGAIN!] j<oLDEH%nNew Modern .Cottage rW gviyAARrV

OF SIX ROOMS. k OAiLAAi\%FJF£?t£ r°oS HICiIEMC RIISBER GOODS

LOT 331x1 50. TOILET ARTICLESEoomy stable. All street and cement >^^^-work done. ; , \u25a0. c: ~TTIPRICE, $3500. gpß- :fl^l:

TERMS TO SUIT. ?s**BS!S

Address A. 8., Box 38, CALL Office. W^SSS t

iOMLANDJIFFIOE |Q|Jl|I;::.902 BROADWAY. '^W^*H

EnbscriDtions and advertiseaiea*! >yS^-^^^^received for the Sia Francisco Diil/ j

: and Weekly CALL . ***•>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*»*\u25a0 «n*—.wtt>«mi f^w.Mn", r , \u25a0in-. in hyrmge »Oe

P. G. THOMAS. Mana-er j£^uj-yggj:::::: £«•.. \u25a0 . . 902 Broiiway. tssz g«^ESfttEE^SSS'

\u25a0-• ,

__^; ;liiTtrrnilrftrrinft.t pipes...... Sfrf

.: \u25a0•-.-• . V.ail) Sirij.?c. w'.l:rubber or metal pirei.SUe

THE CELEBRATED No- 10 IJn b s Jr l̂uCe. ftr <JB«!Hy rubbermufl TUbD«r flttlnrii .......... .'...,,,75c

{CDX.»•! IT^ SJ ffcFi SI © I!8IST(? So.V, sau.eas No. 10, metal littitiss 75cpnrn MH irArAIJ feS -No »»np»mi»i»«wii'o« ......sia»IIlkllWll yni VUbliVl riT— wttrt tiltiiclimubera^wltu •OK • tlirreb»rd rnboer tubes..... ... tl09

MATHEY-CAYLUS '^^I^SL'SSSSkmA test <f 3O YEAKS ha^pro»«4 the great merit of ( UllUtlclf' Sldfli ftf Tftllpf srlir^('*C

Uilspopnlar reiue.iy. by tue rapid lucrease Ja fa»or VVIII|MU.C mUI* Ul J Ulittrllllli^. leading ruysUl«u»e»ery*a— ItU»aperlorta AT LOWEST PRICES.Uothenfor saf«. prompt and complet. cur© of <nv "tmiijit„ f\u25a0 \u25a0 "-T*?' -Jo»f »U»udtiig or x*ceat ca»e». .Not only Uit tb*T>«st, siiiska .nl":'<• i'« r »-<>py \u00845rfcßUnecn*aj>wt,a».*.LIfI>itiJUUISTS«»U it lofr 75 _*"

r _..,__\u25a0*•__. ___ ' ""— W-

u>"wtui(l'itittgrti^cLui^<w.yAau \ BAVIS-BROTHERS* If-

ir^ d \ 718 MARKET ST.ano---/jJa.Uiia.lia \—™mmiy/S^??^\ ~W\ •ii

' : a-lii±iiUi}^

111 m®h J>lltCrS U/ftrtLßla-^STAVT RELIEF.W?M^V TheGrekl Mexican R«»«iy... Kf6Sff M9flg™.»V^lKd?.SSSWgr&2* Glvr* L-Wltli artel aureuglh to Bff OUIIIfiOllcnCßUiSytoitt!SS'"••/•\u25a0 -sV '•--- ">^- C)^-oexu*i organ*- \u25a0 ftrersapre»crlpUonto«nlarserfitt«maU^iS i^.'l;NABER ALFS&BRUNE VSn^SSSFST?^"^nAßcn, alts « cnunc, fc. a. tixmukim. mmc ij^Smmjk jri<a.

UlytHl di.viijmrbr.t 8. r., JLUHSC4 mu9 TBThBa ly.:S-:*