The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 7, 1897, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1897. 5 ANOTHER BRACKET FOR OLD LOGAN Took the Last Race of the Day at 0dds of 10 to 1 turiman now feels as though he has lost his nearest and dearest friend. It looked as though Nuncomar should bave shown some sort of speed in the opening dash. Snider got a half-Nelson on him early in the game and never let up until both shoulders touched the mat. George had one siege of it on the ground, but it evidently did n t have the desired effect. One or two books in the ring seemed to take much delight in laying prices sgainst his mounts. Following are to-aay’s entries: First race, three-quarters of a mile. 969 Hueacme........1 14| 377 Marcla . 11| <19 Bine Beil 76 Billy Vice. 958 St Aignon . Hotspur “ 9.7 Jack Richelieu.109 Jumes Poriens 968 Halleiniah ..... 90 Mary Nlevez..10: 47 \ike Kice. )1 Philip H. 9’ 21 68 Alma ambea in the Betdng First on Four Different Oc- casions. 850 Claudians 930 Tempestuous. Second race, five-elghths of a mile, two-year-old maidens. 108/ 978 George Lea..... 3 101 Jusn der Ri0 | 96 Miren . | 958 Eroica Eismore L:d Salabar Past the Wire. Lucky Star Was Finally | Given His Head 1109/ 938 Lena.........- trank Jaubert,109 905 San Tuzza s Inflammator...100 (69: 16 Kutaiba. .. 878 Fortunate. 575 Cheridali, ¢ mark in his | 958 Lady Hursi.. 975 Cogent.. 1 d victories, The | “yyy iy race, fivesights of amile . who is known . §1/(055) Yemen... he country to the other 2| &5) t ourbon neariy every railroad Qi re land, will probably in : aveearned a well-deserved Alex Shields, has ving that when Logan ie hundredth race the turf h . The aged rwasallto 1 ot in the betting inal race of the day at ard drive, ridden by Mike Hen- t Montallade out haif a length iron horse, is slowly but : 934 Miss Kuth 83U rter miles, selling. 837 Volt S 30 Tniti... billy McClosky 94 land........ 98 9 Vinctor. %;5 Emeryville | (352 Tmp irance - : 18 108 race, eleven-sixteenths of amile, sell- e of the sport was marked by of the ordinary groove of Favorites were in much better uring four of the six purses, y day with the ope le and backed down from 6 1o 3 Tuck gelding led all the wa d look like “yaller dogs.” 109 Midus Morven CLECTIONS FOR TO-DAY. First race—Alma, St. Aignou, Blue Bell. Second race—Zapata, George Lee, Los Prietos. Third race—Frank Jaubert, San Tuzza, Fortunate. Fourth race—Zsmar, Quicksilver, Tea Rose. Fifth Race — Judge Denny, Peter the Second. Sixth race—Colonel Whesler, Satsuma, | Vinetor. Seventh race—Midas, Refugee, Rienzi. FIRE DEPARTMENT. A Number of Fines Imposed Breaches of Duty. ) 105 orite, made a | " 5, \wo-year-old spin at | The Fire Commissioners met vesterday ongs, leading the sec- | afternoon when the resignations of C. J. alabar, past the judges a | Nagle, truck 3, H. 8 Cleveland, engine Dousterswivel, resurrected, | 14, and A.J. Riley, engine 10, were ac- cepted. The winner's ridee annexed the next A be distance e first part, but )r the wire he took handily two lengths 0 1 shot, well ridden ook third place in Unity, mile, was taken v, which led from Two came fast , over 8 2 for xt the rail toa flying ) othing much to beat in | “F! ; . o i Gix forlongs, decided under | Fines were imposed upon the following and coming outa 4 to | members: William Ward, hoseman > the way, witt Ricardo, a | engine 5, three days’ pay for neglect of 1 cuoice, taking the place from Our | duty; Charles Montague, enzineer engine i . The latter received a | 10. fifteen days’ pay for negiecting to light hands of stable-boy | the fire under bis engine while going to a | fire; Frank McDonald, hoseman engine | 33, ten days’ pay leaving the City without permission; William Murohy, | hoseman engine 33, ten days’ pay for nez- lecting to observe the 11 o'cloc rule, e Suing M scorched while ng barn de- k on Wednesday that | t n end to his suffering | The Mission Turn Verein, the Hibernia Say- ings and Loan Society and the San Francisco some years the aged |’ : SEl el g2l mited) have been sued by J. S has been a bread-winner for Wil- e iyebeen loombaugh, and the gray-haired on Lupidge street in thi | THE *CALL” RACING GUIDE. (~ ALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB, Oaki of the winter meeting, 1896-07. d Racstrack, Thursday, May 6. Weather fine, track fast. Seventy-ninth day aths of a mile; selling; three- se $300. | Betting. Jockey. |Op. 3, be 4 Stuflett CoonElzane: Ho mes. . Mitchell Bragg nider 1son Winner. A. Dolan's br. g, by imp. Friar Tuck-Kerpsake. quarters of & mile; : three-year-olds and upward; purse $300. | Beting, op. ¢ Landily THIRD KACE—One 971 | Thompson. ¥60 | M s I 5 Jenkins.. 5 9yl 1 3 3 6 5 I Woods. 974 5ir Stont a:t vin P enthaler's b g. by Imp. Mariner-Maranet FOUKTH BACE—Nipesixteenths of & mile: seling; two.sear-olds; purse §500. ( Jio: A BATTLE ROYAL WILL SOON BE ON California Cyclists Will Fight the Wheelmen's Lrague. Over Five Hundred Riders Al ready in the N:w Organ- ization. Ex-Chief Consu! Kerrigan May Tour the State—D-:fianc: Sent Back to the East. The gauntlet thrown down by the Na- tional officers of the League of American Wheelmen to the Caliiornia cyclists who have seceded to form an organization of | rates and methods she did not like, It struck me that I was being imposed | 8 their own has been taken up with a will, and hereafter it is to be war—war io the | knife. The many members of the California Associated Cycling Clubs, under whose banner the seceders have ranged them- selves, who read the dispatches n yester- day morning’s CALL, are ready and willing 1o begin the battle at cnce, and point with SHE PAINTS IN SHORT SKIRTS | (UNPARALLELED Mrs. John Martin Fights the Oakland Painters’ Union. She Does Not Believe in Bloom- ers, But Feels Easy in a Sweater. Holds That Tiere Is Nothing Undig- nified in Hard Manual Labor for a Woman. Mrs. Tsabella Martin returned from Oak- | land yesterdsy weary after her first day’s | i struggle with the Painters’ Union, whose upon,’’ she said last night as she satat| her home on Van Ness avenue, “and I de- | cided to put on short skirts and a woolen | sweater and do the work myself. I| painted five rooms to-day and 1 propose to raint my three cottages at Twenty-first | and West streets before I am done. I!E wear a Maxine Eliiott hat to keep the sun | § EX-CHIEF CONSUL KERRIGAN'S Card of Memtership in the California Associated Cycling Clubs, Under Whose Fanner 500 Wheelmen Have Already Ranged Themselves. pride and confidence to the fact that sev- eral bundred men have already joined the new organization as Inaividuals, and pledged themselves to support it to the utmost extent. They have no fear of the reprisals that are threatened, or that the secession movement will be disrupted by | anything that the Eastern people may do. The appointment of George H. Strong as chiet consul, to sncceed Frank Kerri- | op “jorghead with a Iace handkerchief | [ gan, who resigned to become a member of the California Associated Cycling Clubs, does not worry them at all, because, while they have much respect for Mr. Strone as a veteran cycist and a man of sterling character, they realized that he is far past the prime of life and that he will not Lave {he energy and strength to stem the tide of discontent and secession that has taken such a strong hoid on the rapidly failing North California Division of the League. Ex-Chief Consul Kerrigan has shown his confidence in the new organization by joining, and his card was banded him a few days ago. He is outspoken in his be- lief and vredictions that the California Associated Cycling Clubs will eventuaily —and in the near juture—usurp ali the functions and power of the division and it will open a new era for California wheelmen “The new organization is bound to suc- ceed,” said he, yesterday, ‘‘because we bave the strongest wheelmen in Calitornia | Just | in our ranks and our cause is just. look at the progress we have made. With- in thirty days over 500 wheelmen have joined the asscciated clubs as individu- and several clubs in this City and interior have sent in their appiications. “We will give Mr. Potter and the rest of the leaguc officials all the fight they want if that s what they mean, and it would appesr from the disuatches that they mean to down us if possible, “If it becomes necessary I will take my wheel this summer and put in my vaca- tion touring the State, talking secessiun and the new organization. I can get a dozen men who are well known and good talkers to do likewise, anu I am sure this will bring a great deal in ihe way of prac- tical results. They cannoi drive us out ot the field, and while we may not entirely drive them out, we will certainly make our organization the great power in Cali- fornia. We will run cycling matters to suit local conditions and for the benefit of | California wheelmen and not tor the pleasure of a few people in the East who do not understand or care much atout us. “Itis probable that one of the early steps will be to ciange the name of our organization from the California Associ- ated Clubs to California Associated Cyclists. This will keep the initials and emblem the same and make the name more comprehensive—show that it is an organization of individuals as well as s corge H. Strong, the new chief consul, is a good man and s0 is Dwyer of Sacra- mento, the new vice-consul, but they will have a hard time holding their disgruniled and disconcerted forces together and we will have half of those who are left before they get fairly to work. “The day of Eastern domination in Cali- fornia wheeling matters is past and we see the dawn of a new e A number of other cyclists, including Captain Day of the Bay City Wheelmen, George P. Wetmore, one of the “vets,” and others expressed themselves in like terms, PR fepg ey s /8 |stevens.... 1 Powell .. erhouse s b ® Gocd siart. Won c everl -, & Wi by More.lo-Eisle & }';"fl FIFTH gh:h miles; purse 1400. feree P ECdoameanmn oo Hennessy. Snider Cinwson . Jones. . Bez man. G. Wison Bergen. Manchester. 5 G 4. buch. nao, Fru 1 ey . 100 Thomyson 92 b. b, by VoltigeurPert. Goad s ar for al but Alvarado. Won driving. Winner, A. Shieid's Time, 1:43. CANCER KILLED HIM. P. McGillen Expired While on His Way Home From the County Hospital. P. McGillen of 1718 Leavenworth street was taken sick on an Bilie-street car yes- terday afternoon after returning from a visit to the City and County Hospital, whither he had gone for treatment of an old case of cancer of the throat. He was taken from the car at the corner of Van Ness avenue and O’Farrell street and expired when he reached the side- walk. He had been suffering fora long time with cancer of the throat, and that disease was the cause of his death. The deceased was a steam-fitier by occu- pation and wasa merried man, 50 yvears old. Sl ot PAYMENT WAS REfUSED. Grocer A. H. Merten Was Made the Vic- tim of a Spurious Check. A. H. Merten, a grocer at Hyde and O'Farrell streets, has complained to the detectives about one H. Jeffery Tinling, a piano-tuner, who, be cimims, defrauded him out of $23. He states that Tinling presented him with a check purporting to be signed by R. J. Stewart of 1126 Hyde «ireet, drawn on the Angio-California Bank. He received the coin in excnange, hut when Merten presented the paper at th: bank payment was refused, off and I find the short skirts very con " venient. 1 do pot believe a modest woman would ever wear bloomers. are ugly and offensive. If skirts will not do she ought to wear trousers right out.” | N#W TO-DAY— LOTHING. GIFT! (500000 00l000C000CI0000000: 000000 We Have Now On Sale 2600 Men's Late Style All-wool Spring SUITS AND OVERCOATS! Regular $17.50 and $15 values---not fictitious omes, but honest ones---and invite the public at large to come and take their pick and choice of these Princely Garments at the gift or.next-to-nothing price ofe=- They | § Mrs. Martin was also seen in Oakland | % by a CALL reporter yesterday and she said | she inten 6r. M. dailv. d to work from 8 A. . until | § “[shall finish the inside work soon,’” | I8 she said, “wiping the perspiration from rendolent with helictrope in one hand, whils sbe dauved paint with the other. “I have paintea the panels beautifully, | and when ready for the outside I shali| wear a modest cosiume, I believe thata | woman can do anything that is right and | g womanly despite world. Tam a refined, educated woman, | the comments of me" % a graduate of Vassar, and enough of a new | & woman to be independent. There is no reason why I should not paint my houses, it will not detract from my womanlines never; that would show an .utter lack of delicacy.” TROUBLE AMONG BARBERS, A Member of the Fraternity Is Ac- dling. Secretary L Less of the Free Employ- ment Bureau, an institution attached to the Journeymen Barbers' International Union of America No. 27, has sworn to a complaint in Police Judge Campbell’s court charging S. Fuchs, a barber at 3 Grant avenus, with conducting an em- ployment office without a license. Less claims that Fuchs represents him- | self as a member of the Barbers' Associa- tion, and by virtue of his alleged position induces postuiants for membership to de- posit with him a fee of 25 cen!s. | Less says Fuchs secures employment | for these men, and after he hascharged them each from $1 to $11 for getting them e Gl i) Clocks Still Stopped. The clocks at the City Hall are still stopped, and Supervisor Shechan, chairman of the | Committee on Public Buildings, has decided | on a new plan of action. He has employed a | skilled clockmaker to make an attempt (o wind the timepieces, and if this effort is no; | ssful will introduce & Tesolution in the ext meettng of the board 10 have (hem re- placed with ciocks that can be more easily un. derstood. | 4 job the men lose their sitnations. ‘ 5 i | FEVERED BROW. Made Manifest Long Before the Diseaso | B Has Been Fully Developed. YOU CAN WARD IT OFF. If You Have Any of the Symptoms It Ja Best to Take the Matter Up at Once—No Time for Trifling, So Say t'“’A Doctors. EVERED BROW—BY THE TERM FEVER is meant that abstract condition which is common to all so-called febrile disorders, and the presence which gives them their claim to that designation. Essentially it means undue elevation of the snimal hest, the immediate or proximate causes of that eievation, and the consequences which these conditions entafi. The presence of abnormal or febrile tempera- ture fs usually attended with various symp- toms and phenomena more or less character- c of the febrile state. he skin gets hot. The pulse and breathing quickened. Gastro-intestinal function impaired. Headache and muscular pains are frequent. rst—Chilly and cold sensation. Second—The skin dry and hot. Third—More or less abundant perspiration, When you have fever— YOUR BLOOD IS POISONED, YOUR BLOOD IS THIN. YOU& LIVER IS TORPID YOUR STOMACH I8 FOUL. YOUR BOWELS A RE CONSTIPATED, YOUR HEAD ACHES. YOU BONES ACHE. YOUR SKIN IS DRY. YOUR SRIN IS HOT. Every organ and tissue in the body 1s in a condition below normsl and is erying for hetp. JOY'S VEGETABLE SARSAPARILLA Will prevent this condition. It will so regu- late the system that all the various organs of the body will act with life and energy, | | | B4 cused of Doing Some Swin- ’ 5 | Never beforz and never again will such Stupendous Bargains be given the people of this State. dished up at fake bargain banquets given by Russian Exiles or “Con Men.”’ Nothing but straight ‘‘up and up’’ business We have but a short stay here at our present Temporary Quarters and must unioad our Big Stock of FINE CLOTHING, HATS AND FURNISHING GOODS regardless of Cost, Loss or Worth. Our Losses will foot up into the Thousands, but we can’t help ourselves. No Fakes run riot here. methods prevail at our store. This is no buncombe or chaff, such Hence, the goods must go. is usually TREMENDOUS BARGAINS —_— N THIS WERIK. Child’s $4 2-piece Suits will go at - Child’s $5 2-piece Suits will go at - Boys’ $7 Long Pants Suits will go at - Boys’ $8.50 Long Pants Suits will go at BOYS' CLOTHING S 3 $3.75 $4.95 95 43 500 Dozen Latest Style Neckwear, just received, which were made to sell at 75¢, will go into this Great Compulsory Salerati...... . o. o0 /oo il i Ay 40C Dealers are welcome to participate with consumers in sweeping off our high-piled counters, loaded with the Greatest Bargains on top of God’s green footstool. TEMPORARY QUARTERS, 220-224 S UTTER ST., THREE DOORS WEST OF OU3 GLD STAND GN KEARNY ST.

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