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- HEMMED N ON MT. HAMILTON, Murderer Dunham’s Trail Found by a Party of Searchers. ESCAPE IS IMPOSSIBLE. The Fugitive Breaks Into a Woodchopper’s Cabin to Steal Supplies. WEARS POINTED-TOED SHOES His Footprints Easily Followed Through the Brush—A Scent for the Bloodhounds. SAN JOSE, Can, May 80.—District Attorney Herington reports to-night that he was unquestionably on the trail of James Dunham, the sextuple murderer of Campbells, to-day. Had be and his companions who formed one party of searchers on Mount Hamil- ton had horses, they could have over- taken the fugitive. Herington, with Juan Edson and Plum- mer, went up the mountain on foot. Near a cabin which had been broken into dur- ing the night they discovered the prints of a pointed-tee shoe. They followed this trail down the main road for several miles to where it turned off to the cabin that had been robbed, and on beyond it for some distance. They saw the woodchopper who owned the cabin, and he told them that the door of his dwelling bad been pushed open by some one during the night. He called out to know who was there and the person went away. He rose and went to his work at 3 o’clock. When he returned he found the cabin had been broken into, but nothing was taken. Herington is certain he was on the trail of the fugitive, and that it can be taken to-morrow and successfully followed. Sheriff Lyndon says he will place the hounds on the track in the morning, and there is little doubt but that the fugitive will be overhauled. WS 28 SEARCHING IN THE BRUSH. Hundreds of Armed Mew Ave Camping on Mount Hamilton. SMITHS CREEK, Can, May 30.— Smiths Creek Hotel to-night presents an appearance of life thatit has not known for years. Besides an unusual rush of visitors armed men have been arriving all day long. Most of the Sheriff’s posses, with the exception of those under the di- rection of Sheriff Lyndon, have come in, but report no success in their search for Dunham. The country between here and Mount Hamilton, for two or three miles each way, has been thoroughly guarded, and to-night the officers are no nearer the fugitive than they were Thursday evening, when Dunham was seen at Oscar Parker’s cabin. His borse has been found, but his whereabouts rémains a mystery. There are at least fifty well armed and determined men bere, ready to take the trail as soon as Sheriff Ballou’s blood- hounds have secured a scent. So far the hounds have proved a disappointment, but this is due to the fact that Dunham’s feet are encased in sacks, which are con- tinually being made wet by fording streams. During the day armed men have been continually coming ana going. The hills have been thoroughly searched, and if Dunham is not lying dead in Indian ‘Gulch he is undoubtedly making his way southeast through the San Isabel. The hotel here to-night is crowded, and while the weary officers are sleeping visitors are making merry with songs and other en- tertainment, Sheriff Lyndon's posse arose about 4 o'clock this morning, and by 5 o’clock, after a light breakfast, was scouring the gulches in every direction. The country hereabouts is rough, and it is impossible to see a few feet away through the under- brush. Indian Gulch is about two and a half miles long. Itstarts at the summit of Mount Hamilton and follows almost a straight line to Smiths Creek. Branching from it are many gulches, rugged and almost impassable. This moining Lyndon divided his posse into two squads. The first consisted of Lyndon, Ballou, Parker and Jim Edwards. They had the hounds with them, and went to Deep Gulch. They followed the gulch to its head, but found no trace of the murderer. They returned about 1 o'clock. The second posse was in charge of Con- stable Daley, who rode the buckskin mare which Dunham had ebandoned. His com- panions were Harry McClintock, Al Hanks and J. E. Atmore. They went to Indian Gulch, where Dunham’s horse was found yesterday, but were unable to find any traces of the man. They followed up the gulch and near the head a large number of buzzards were seen circling in the air. This is considered a sure sign that there is carrion in the gulch anad it is thought that the pistol shot heard shortly after the | finding of Dunham’s horse yesterday may, after all, have sounded the hour of Dun- ham’s suicide. A careful search failed to reveal his body. The search will be re- sumed in the morning. A great many hold to the belief that Dunham killed himself. When the posse was up there yesterday no buzzaras were observed. : Just before the departure of Lyndon’s party this morning Detectve Irwin Frost, Seth Churchill and Sam Bane left for Mount Hamilton and went over the ridge in the vicinity of Wandell's ranch. Here they met Juan Edson, District Attorney Herington, Georze Sweigert and H. F. Plumm 1, who left Smiths Creek last night at 11 o'clock for the summit by the trail. At Wandell’s the fresh prints of a boot with pointed toe were discovered, similar to those seen about Parker’s cabin. Edson returned this afternoon and said the tracks were fresh and puzzied him, as few men in this country wear pointed shoes. Now, that the funeral of the victims at Campbells is over, the young men of that vicinity are comiug up in numbers and Noted California Marksmen, THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 31, 1896. as They Were Seen by a “ Call” /"~ oG Artist at the Stockton Meet. joining in the search for the murderer. Joe Smith, Thomas Lovelady, Herbert Jaynes and John Houghton, all of Camp- bells, arrived to-day, and say they will stay until the murderer is found. They join the Sheriff's posse. They will be joined by George Whitney, James Ken- nedy and Howard Buffington, and Joe Herring of Los Gatos has also enlisted. These Campbells boys have been staying at the McGlincy place since the murder. J. E. Allen, Ed Sykes and G. Pruett, all well mounted and armed, went through here about 8:30 this morning. They searched all day in the vicinity of Kin- caid’s ranch. They went up the ridge to the summit of Mount Hamiltor, down into the San Isabel and over to Five Springs. They report having not seen or héard anything of the fugitive. Van Drankin of Black Mountain, about six miles north of here, called at Smiths Creek. He says the ranchers in that dis- trict are on the lookout and that the ave- nues of escape are closed. J. R. Kincaid and William Harney, as soon as they heard thata man had been seen in that district, went out and searched the coun- | try until 10 o’clock and were unable to find a trace of the man. William Fay, Samuel O'Toole, William Staten aud Crit Gruell started from Madrone as soon as they heard of the mur- der. This afternoon they went over into the San Felipe Valley to resume their search. They left Madrone three days ago, and have been in the Pacheco Pass | and to the hot springs and in the San | Isabel and San Antone valleys, They came through the Morrow ranch. They report that thirty vagueros were rounding up cattle, but they haa seen nothing of Dunham. Most of the vaqueros are armed, and if Dunham should be seen in the locality they would be prepared for him. A report reached here this afternoon that Dunham had been seen at the Little ranch, southeast of here, and had a lunch about 2 o'clock. Edwards, Hanks, and McClintock left for that place. Lyndon, | Ballou and Parker went back of Kincaid's ranch, and will work out through the San | Isabel. | Everett Snell has been out for two days and returned to-night. He has been down | about Divide Springs, San Isabel and through the Morrow ranch. The Morrow ranch, by the way, includes about 35,000 acres, Deputy Bheriff Reynolds and Bryon Cottle returned to-night. They have been down about the Summit mine, Red Creek and San Antone Valley guard- | ing the passes there. Constable Coschina was left on guard at the Summit mine. It is possible that Dunham is making his way along the San Isabel and will come out near Soda Springs. It is a rough | country, but there are plenty of cabins where he could get supplies. If he gets supplies he could retire further into the mountains, and if well and able to travel it would be difficult to overtake him. One party that has taken the trail over Mt. Hamilton will go down into the San Joaquin and come out about Tracy. The members of the party are familiar with that part of the country and will make a thorough search. W. H. Haun and Charles Davidson came up from San Jose to-night and will join in the chase. The searching party is now well organized and the pursuit will be con- tinued with a system and method and | thoroughness that will leave the chances of the fugitive for escape almost nil—pro- vided he has not already gotten out of the country. SRR el SECRETED TWO BICYCLES. Dunham Had Carefully Arranged for a Hurried Flight. SAN JOSE, CaL, May 30.—The scent in the search for James Dunham in the ra- vines of Mount Hamilton grew decidediy cool to-day. The Sheriff's office here has an air of depression and all-round unhap- piness. Telegrams have piled thick upon one another from every point of the com- pass reporting ihat Dunham had been seen, sometimes on foot, again on horses of various colors and again on bikes. Every traveler of an unfrequented road has become a suspect, and in the mind of the anxious denizens of the community through which he passes wears the lik - | ness of the desperate fugitive. Instead of | stopping these suspects, however, the | people allow them to passon, and then hasten to the telegraph office and notify | the Sheriff's office, fifty miles away, “that Dunham passed through this place two hours ago.” Under Sheriff Benson looks a shade unbappier than before, warns | by wire the authorities in the path of the suspect and places the telegram on file, The reporis from the mountain have furnished nothing encoura:ing to-day, whatever. The number of the searchers has increased, for volunteers have been going forward from all points every hour, and it is literal truth to say thatthe woods are full of them. They are searching pa- tiently and energetically and with consid- erable method, but they have found noth- ing. The excitement in this city has consid- erably abated under the long postpone- ment of the climax, but the interest is as quick as yesterday, and it would only re- quire a word of hope of the capture to fill the streets with people. The streets have been full of people, to be sure, but it was a Memorial day crowd, and the bands of music constantly pass- ing, served to divert their thoughts from the one thing that has occupied them these several days. It is accepted as reasonably eertain that the fugitive has passed the guard linesand is in the open somewhere beyond the area under especial surveillance about Smiths Creek. Still, until something definite is learned 1n proof of that, the Sheriff will keep his forces centered there. Since the abandonment of his horse by the murderer men on bicycles have taken on a new interest in the eyes of the resi- dents along country roads around. The mystery of Dunham’s bicyclealso assumes importance. Dunham was an expert rider. He had two bicycles and neither of them can be found. Up to the very day of the murder the bicycle formed a large figure in the rontine of Dunhawa’s daily life. He was going or coming somewhere upon it or tinkering with it in tie barn. Two weeks before the murder he took a wheel to M. H. Osgood’s cycle establish- ment on First street to have the pneu- matic tire replaced with a new one. The tire was sent to the factory and Dunham has since then been riding another wheel supposed to have been borrowed from a friend. On Tnesday morning he came to the cyclery and ‘asked Mr. Osgood about the tire and learned that it had not ar- rived. He said, “Very well,” and made no other comment. Jimmy Wells was in the cyclery at the time, and Dunham helped him to put a pedal on a tandem belonging to Weils, After they had gone Mr. Osgood noticed that Dunham’s wheel had also disap- peared, and was much surprised, as there was no tire on the rear wheel. He asked his clerk, and the latter said he had noticed Dunbam taking the wheel away. He had come to the cyclery on another wheel. L. C. Ross, a neighbor, either on the day of the murder or the day before, assisted Dunham to repair his wbeel. The reports of Lis having two wheels probably ‘come of his having borrowed an- other. At any rate, neilier of those wheels can be found. They were unques- tionably taken to some place which he thought would be convenient in his pian of escape, providing, perhaps, against con- tingencies by placing one at one point and the second at some other in a different direction, and thexl hid them, On the morning of Tuesday, the day of the murder, Dunham went to the San Jose Bank and drew all the money he had there, something over $1000. This fact is known and has been known by Sheriff Lyndon since the morning after the crime. These circumstances taken together prove the premeditation of the crime, while they also show the resources at the command of the fugitive m making good his escape. It is this circumstauce, too, that makes the flying wheelman over each remote road 80 much an object of interest. A wheel on Mount Hamilton is not of much use, perhaps, but if thereis a wheel Patchen, the Pet Marc Owned by the Late James Wells, One of the Victims of Murderer Dunham. The Fugitive Escaped to the Mountains on Patchen After the Sextupe Tragedy at Campbells, and the Animal Was Found i Grazipg in Jndian Guich Toirty-Six Hours Later, | hidden in some safe place on the levels of the other side the murderer might ride at his ease the:e moonlight nights down the San Joaquin Valley. Dunham’s wheel is a low-handled racing Ontario. The tire arrived at Osgood’s | Tuesday night and is still there. The tan- | dem belonging to Jimmy Wells is also standing in the rack there—the same upon which he and nis murderer were at work on the day of the slaughter. There 1s a story relating to all these arties and this wheel. A few weeks ago immy Wells fell from the wheel and was quite badly hurt, He was carried to his home and laid upon a couch in the sitting- room, and with everybody else made busy in the house by the accident they asked Dunham to build a fire in the grate. He did so and young Wells remarked that that was the first work that Dunham had done in the house or on the ranch for any- body in manz weeks. 3 The mystery of the wheels stands along- side of that other mystery—as to where Dunham spent Monday night. He was at school on Monday,-but he wasn’t at home Monday night. It was not the first time he had remained away from home over night since the birth of his baby. He had for some time back fallen into'a habit of remaining away from home at night. This circumstance fits to a story that has | been weispered about poiice circles to-day. | It is to the effect that Dunnam has been | paying marked attention for come time to a young woman of East San Jose. | The gossips have been busy with the names of these two people for a long time. The father of the young woman has a big ranch on the other side of the mountain, and it is mooted as an explanation for Dunham’s ride in that direction that he might have hoped to gain shelter there. That the murderer really had in mind the going to Texas across the Mexican border, as 1:e declared to his wife that he had, the police have no doubt. These circumstances all fit together as forming an additional motive for the frightful crime. Late to-night comes the report of the only discovery of the day that indicates- the whereabouts of the fugitive, It comes from Smiths Creek, James Drum and Jake Wandell arrived at the i:otel straight from the vicinity of Wandell’s ranch, two miles east of Mount Hamilton. They fonnd a woodchopper’s cabin that had been broken into. There was no food in the place and nothing was taken. The wood- chopper left his cabin at 3 o’clock in the morning, locking the door. When he re- turned in the evening he found the door broken open. Sheriff Lyndon, who has just returned, says there 18 no doubt that it was Dun- hem, and attention will be diverted to that quarter to-morrow. The mountaia is being thoroughly scoured, but from thre posses reporting frem every direction to- night there is no one that can say an en- couraging word looking to the success of the efforts of all. In this city the air has been filled to- night with rumors of all sorts and condi- ticns. It was reported with circumstan- tial detail how Dunham had been cap- tured on a train near Tracy; but investi- gation discovered 1t was not true. Another man telegraphed to Under Sheriff Benson that a man answering the description of Dunbham had passed through Wrights at 11:40 o’clock, headed for So- quel. Under Sheriff Benson telegraphed for full particulars, and this was the reply he got: Man was on foot with another fellow. He told me Dunham was caught near Mount Hamilton and tried to pick me for news. He had e\'xdenllf’ changed clothing with nis part- ner, as the clothes he now wears are light and too small for him and the other fellow’s too large. He wears a good pair of poiuted shoes. His face was very dirty, but his clothes were very good, gnd 'his description answers ex- actly. Had no guns in sight. The officers down by Wrights had no sooner been notified to jook out fora man with clothes that did not fit than word came from Constable Keller at Concord, Contra Costa County, in a wholly different direction, that Dunham had eaten dinner at his house and passed on. Hesaid there was no doubt that it was Dunham, as the man’s face was badly scratehed and the first joint of the little finger on his lefv band was suiff, Charles Dunbam, the murderer's brother, was asked about the stiff finger, if James Dunhain was marked that wuy, and he said he did not know. This man at Concord had a sorrel horse. Under Sheriff Benson said it was possible that if Dunham had got out that way and pro- cured a horse he could heve reached Con- cord by thistime. He says thatif he got around the mountain he might have passed througn Calaveras Valley, near Sunol station, and ou through the canyon that would lead him to Martinez, within six miles of Concord. He does not believe, however, that the fugilive is traveling in the vicinity of the towns by daylight. ‘While there is not so much evidence of excitement on the streets as there was yesterday, the same deep feeling is mani- fested, and there is little doubt that the announcement of the capture of Dunham will bring lively times to the mountains. The old residents of Campbells say they are ready to take action immediately, and bave so signified to the Sheriff, —_— DUNHAM'S EVIL TEMPER. Gave Way to Malicious Rage Whenever He Was Crossed. SAN JOSE, Car., May 30.—Murderer Dunham told L. C. Ross about two weeks before the kiling of the McGlincy family that he was "‘getting down to cases,’’ as he had only about $800 left. At about the same time, Ross was told by the men.on the ranch that McGlincy bad notitied them that they must pay no attention to any orders issued by Dun- ham, as he did not have any authority whatever there. Ross says that the Me- Glincys were rapidly closingdown on him. Dunbam, he says, was a very secretive Continued on Sizth Page. COMPETE AT THE STOCKTON BUTTS, California Marksmen Try for Championship Trophies. FINE SCORES ARE MADE, Six Men Shoot a Tie for the Gold Dust Diamond Medal. AN EXCITING TEAM MATCH. Los Angeles and Stockton Break Even in the Contest for the Over. land Prize. S8TOCKTON, CaL., May 30.—The State bluerock tournament attracted several thousand people to the Stockton Associa- tion grounds to-day, and they were treated to unusually exciting contests. During the shoots in the torenoon the chief interest centered in the contest for the gold-dust diamond medal. The best squad that shot in this match was com- vosed of Charles Haas, Frank and Charles Merrill, Charles Gall, Len Hauxhurst and H. L Dustin. All but Dustin are Stockton men. Haas madea clean score of 20, ty- ing Martinez Chick of S8an Diego ana 1. A. Barney of the Lincoln Gun Club. The ties for first place will be shot off in the morn- ing. Flickinger of the Lincoln Club won sscond place in this contest; J. W. Shiell of the San Joaquin Valley Gun Club, third place; Fanning of the Olympics, fourth; Van Valkenberg of the Los Angeles Gun Club, fifth; Trombone of the Reliance, sixth, with “Gilt Edge'’ seventh, and Burkhardt, Armitage, Judd and Athertorn next, in the order named. Tkere were so many entries that it was late in the afternoon before the team s hoo for tne Overland trophy was commenced. The chief interest of the day was centered in this shoot, and@ the space back of the scorers’ stand and back of the ropes that separated the crowd from the contestants was black with people, while that in front of the big blackboard on which the results of each team’s work were posted was crowded with spectators, all eager to see how their favorite club came out in the | contest. The Capital City Gun Club was the first to face the traps, but it could do no better than 84 out of a possible 120. Then the Olympic Gun Club took up the fight for the trophy. Fanning, Webb and Naumann started out bravely, but Fan- ning missed his eighth bird in the next two as well as the thirteenth. Webb missed his fourteenth and Naumann the eleventh bluerock. The club’s total was 100, much better than the work at last year’'s tournament at the Oakland Trot- ting Park. The gun club annex of the Stockton Athletic Association next faced the traps and came away with a total of 102, Len Hauxhurst and Frank Merrjil made clean scores of twenty birds each and were loudly cheered by the crowd. This team was tied by the crack shots from Los An- geles amid the greatest of excitement. The tie will be shot off to-morrow, and as the Los Ange'es Gun Ciub has such shots as Mason, Chick, Parker, Van Valkenberg, Ralphs and Leighton in its team the men from the City of Angels are offerin; 5 to 1 to-night that the Southern Califor- nians will win out on the snoot-off. This was by far the most exciting event of the day. Following is the complete score for the Overland trophy shoot: Capital City Gun Club—Stevens 15, Newbert 19, Yoerk 17, Upson 11, Nicolaus 12, Ruhstaller 10; total, 84. Olympic Gun Club—Fanning 16, Feudner 17, Webb 19, Naumann 19, Golcher 14, Haight 14; total, 100. Stockton Athletic Association — Hauxhurst 5, lic}g, Haas 17, F. Merrill20, yelers Gun Club—Carroll 14, Garden City C F, Coykendall 17, Delmas 12, Anderson 18, R. Coykendall 15, Heioelberger 18; total, 94. Stockton Gun Club—C. Merrill 17, Balkvell 16, li:lgsl 13, Payne 13, Jessen 17, Lonjers 15; total, 91 Reliance Gun Club—Cadman 16, Gross 14, Tub?sgg.'), Trombone 18, Kellogg 13, Baker 12; total, 88. Antioch Gun Club—Durst 18, Ross 19, Dur- ham 13, Proctor 16, Remfiree 17, Taylor 11. Total, 94. 2 San Joaquin Valley Club—Fox 18, Armitage 14, .\lc\'en?h 14, C. W. Wood 13, J. C. Rice 17, J. W. Shiell 20. Total, 96. Lincoln Gun Club No. 1—Robertson 17, Daniels 14, Karney 16, Flickinger 18, Barney 18, Bruns 13. Total, 96, Lincoln Gun Club No. 2—Murdock 18. Potter 13, Wengall 17, Cate 16, Eugene Forster 16, Franzen 16. Total, 96. Empire Gun Club—Young 10, King 11, Bil- linger 17, Ardrews 15, Winning 17, Quinton 13. Total, 83. Los Angeies Gun Club—Mason 19, Chick 19, Parker 17, Ralphs 14, Van Valkenberg 15, Leighton 18. Total, 102. Amador City Gun Club—Esola 17, Whitfield %‘8, };r(ac?mr 15, Vorhies 15, Solarl 17, Jarvis 10. otal, 92. Excitement ran hizh during this shoot, and the three men who made glean scores YOU NEVER KNOW The whole-soul blissful happiness of life until after you have suffered and have been cured of nervousnes. DR. McKENZIE’S New Nerve Treatment Will make a nerveless man, a pale, deli- cate woman, or a fretful, fitful creature— sound, yes, as sound as a dollar. JOoy’s BALDWIN PHARMACY Is the place to et Mr. McKenzie's nerve treatment. Call or write. Joy’s, Hood's or Ayers Sarsaparill 85¢ Paine’s Co; 60c Munyon's. 15¢ PERFUMES FROM EVERY MAKER. JOY'S BALDWIN PHARNACY (UNDER BALDWIN HOTEL), Powell and Market Sts. Mai!l Orders Promptly Attneded To, to bet | —Hauxhurst and Mernil of the Stockton Athletic Association and Shiell of the Sl‘n Joaquin Valley Gun Club—were loudly cheered, There will be thousands out to- morrow to witness the shoot-off between the Stockton Athletic Association’s team and that from the Los Angeles Gun Club. The fourth event was at filteen singles, seven money and three merchand se prizes. This was won by Shiell of Visalia, with Fanning of the Olympics second. Trombone of the Reliance third, Liddle of the Olympics fourth, Franzen fifth, Ral hs and Winning tied for sixth place, Billin- ger seventh, Tansell eighth, Anderson and Sharp tied for ninth place, Yoerk tenth. The ties will be decided in the morning. In the flrst event of the day,at ten birds, the following tied with clean scores: F. Foundner and (g Haight of the Oiym- ics, Frank Merrill, C. J. Hass and ¥rank . Nicol of the Stockton Athletic Associa- tion, R. Coykendall of the Garden City Cyclers, E. Summerfield, G. H. Anderson, J. Carroil and 8. Mierson. The shoot for tne E. T. Allen trophy at twenty birds lasted until dark, and the result was undetermined when it closed for the night. Besides the trophy there were eight money and three merchandise prizes in this event. 5 The Stockton Athletic Association gave a boxing extibition to-nightforthe benefit of the shooters. Rufe Turner and Max- well, lightweights, fought eight rounds, and Butler and Lewis, 120-pound boxers from San Francisco, punched each other for eight rounds. Foodland Incendiaris.n, WOODLAND, Car., May 30.—One of the largest packing-houses on the Hood Bros. vineyard, two miles south of this city, was destroyed by fire last night. The confla- gration is supposed to have been started by incendiaries, as the house contained nothing but empty sweat-boxes, raisin- trays and other machinery, and no com- bustible matter had been in the building since_the last crop was harvested. The loss is estimated at $6000, and is partially covered by insurance. The machinery de- stroyed was to bave been used in the con- struction of a new cannery this summer. NEW TO-DAY. THE OWL DRUG CO., 7 CUT-RATE DRUGGIST Roger & Giliet’s Fine Per- fumes and Toilet Waters. Just Received a full line di- rect from Paris. FINEST EXTRACTS. Violette de Parme - 75¢ hottle Peau d'Espague - 85¢ bottle Yera Violetta $1.00 hattle White Iris - - - . . 1.00 hottle Heliotrope Blane . . . 1.00 hottle Ocillet Blame - - - - 100 hottle Marechal Niel - . . . 1.25 battle EXQUISITE TOILET WATERS. Violet do Parme e hottle Peau d’Espagne - 856 hottle White Iris 85¢ hottle Heliotrope Blane 85¢ hottle Marechal Niel 85¢ hottle Qeillet Blane « $1.00 hottle PERFUMED FACE POWDERS. Violet de Parme - B0¢ box Anthea Heliotrope - - 756 hox Pean d’Espagne - - $1.00 box Iris Blane 1.00 hox Harechal Niel 1.25 hox REFRESHING TOILET SOADS, Violet de Parme - ble cake Pean d'Espagne - - - - - 73 cake Heliotrope Blane - - - - 75¢ cake Qeillet Blane - - - - -75¢ cake Marechal Niel $1.00 cake The 0wl Drug COoO., SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES, OAKLAND. FREE DELIVERY T0 OAKLAND, ALA- MEDA OR BERKELE, P STANZED OV A B e LADELPHIA SHOE CL $1.00 9| ! Your trade ?—Is a ?.Ileulon we are asked eve day. and our answer is: Perhaps it does, but you see we are offering such bargains, and giving such Inducements to our customers that they are more than pleased to walk around the obstruction, and 1n consequence our business is more than holding its own. We racognize the fact that we must sell cheap if we wish to do business and we are selling Shoes and Oxiords cheaper than they were ever offered before in this city. This week we are sell- Inz Ladies' Russet Ofords, with Pointed T'oes and Tips and Hand-turned Soles, for §1.00. We have $1.OO We have a solid wearing line of Misses' Dongola Kid Button Shoes, with Patent er Tips and Spring Heels, which we will sell for '$1.00 per peir. " They fic well, wear well, and ‘are well 'wo, much more than we are asking for them. We carry them D and & wi & g e, B. KATCHINSKI, PHILADELFHIA SHOE CO., 10 Third Street, San Francisoo. NEW TO-DAY. A [oocoo) NOVEL N0 0 00 CLC00CC0C000C00) Most parents are getting th_eir little folls ready for vacation and we're going to hold avery novel sale for Monday, Twesday and Wednesday. We'll suffer a little loss through this sale, but you know the big store never stands at trifles when it desires to demonstrate its strength an:i power as bargain givers. T,I e have earned thatname and we're goimg to keep it. Some 1600 clever Suits for short trouser lads, those between the ages of 5 and, 15, as shown in picture above; right clever goods; swell colorings; blues, Scotches, Homespuns, Bannock- burn Tweeds, and those right swell Twill Cheviots; all clev- erly made ; the swits alone worth all the way up to $4. The above includes one of our very clever Sweaters, sailor col- lar, in garnet, white and navy, a real Woolen Worsted Sweater. The Suit, including a Sweater, on any of these three days, Mon- day, Twesday and Wednesday, " $2.85. Some of our smartest of Reefer Suwits ; there’s a big assortment; there are suits in this line rang- ing in valuwe up to $4; pretty braid on collar ; deep sailor col- lar; braid on cuffs; there’s Scotches in bright colorings ; there’s those Homespuns in plaids, in stripes ; awfully swell Soods; then there’s those real clever Tweeds in pretty color- ings, and those pretty blue Rough Twill Cheviots. The Reefer Swit mentioned above includes a very clever Worsted Sweater, made with sailor coliar, in garnet, white and navy. The Reefer Suit, including a Sweater, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, and not after these three days, at $2.85. Of course yow'll be on hand early Monday. RAPHAEL'S (Incorporated), The San Francisco Boys, 9, 11, 18 and 15 KEARNY STREET.