The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 16, 1897, Page 14

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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1897. AN THE WHALE EVERSED Poetic Blubber-Hunter Whom No Fish Could Silence. ROLLED UNDIGNIFIED TO EARTH, Quotations From Julius Casar in Defiance to His Foes. WITH SCALY Baw GAGGED ROCK(OD. The Whaler Crunched Them, Ground Them, Swallowed Them and Kept Up His Bawl. Had Jonah been sfilicted with tne ma- ic abdominal capacit; of one Carl Jes- occupation, itis safe to a whaler and each turned to ask the other why he had thus been looked upon with angry eyes. Anapology came not from the lips of either and they closed in combat. The man with the appetite was tall and strong, while his opponent was built for | the arena. The fight, in consequence, re- | sembled a combat of warring bears. The sailor began to force the whalerinto the street. Carl saw that defeat was to be his | and he set up a roar that made the welkin | rin | | | | lood and destruction shall be so in {use that mothers will but smils when thev behold their children quartered with | the hands ot war,” he howied. *‘Domes- tic fury and fierce civil strire shall cum- every highway and every bvway in Frisco,” he wailed. “I've cried havce and let slip the dogs of war, but now thev turn with demon strength to throttle me,” he roared, ~but 1 will down them.” As | these last words issued like the bursting | of a boiler from h.s lips, a fish wagon, | driven by a swarthy Italian, turned the | corner of Jackson and Kearny streets, the | scene of the battle. | The ltalian was in for peace and he | bounded from his wagon to part the com batants. Before he reached the curb- stone, however, Carl had lowered his | sinewy arms and relied solely for victory on his megaphone voice. The fish man determined to head off the rekearsal of Julius Cmsar and the sailor was his willing ally. A large and bony herring was se- lec gag, and the two men with a common | purpose advancei toward the Shakes- pearian whaler. They hurled him to the pavement and thrust tne berring's head between his bawling lips. There was the sound of crunching bones and in an in- stant the herring disappeared and the howl kept up. A larger fish, a scaly, wiry rockecod was selected, but as a gaz it too was a failure. A chew or two, a spasmodic gulp and_the rockcod rested beside the herring. Non- plussed and startled at the rapid deprecia- tion of his stock, but game and deter- mined that peace must supersede chaos, another native of the sea was dragged | forth by the fish vender, but like those of its kind it went their way and stopped no sound. Atthismomenta policeman hove | in sight and those who had intervened in the interest of p-ace and society began a | hasty but orderly retreat. The officer, with a whirl of his cluband a resounding whack, brought rest to the busy tongue and silence rested o'er all the ted from the fish wagon to be used asa | WIKE 1P THE WRONG PASENGER | Through Travelers Made a Gallant Fight for Their Rights. {LOXG DELAY AT GRAND JUNCTION. Passengers Refused to Leave the Pullman, San Vincente, When Ordered Out. {POINTED TELEGRAMS AND LETTERS, Local Railroad Agents Called Down by 0. T. Sewall—A Graphic Ac- count of the Dispute. It is now obvious to the officers of the Denver and Rio Grande nd Rio Grande Western railways A 150UTON A I'M A WHALER BOLU ASCANFILL MY HOLD WITHQ {)BY GEE AND1LOVE TOFIGHT WHENM Yy PPETITE JAMBOREE. Carl Jessen's Song. lUI\IERIN(A EI9H— And It Came to Pass That Neither Herring ) Nor Cod Could Halt at he would never have reposed mach of a leviathan, but the po- gry monster of the deep ble morsel would un- sume ti he st pala have been reversed. is not only gifted with an rpetite, but behind his mouth there is a voice that wou!d shame a lion. He also possesses a knowledge of Shake- speare that would asiound that illustrious writer, were he e to-day, into the be- lief that he was a plagiarist; that he owed his all to the man of the sea, and he would perhaps surrender to Cwsar those things be beiieved 1o be his. Carl is also a scrap- per afier a fashion, but take his accom- plishments, join them together, set the machinery «1 the mind that directs their actions whirling, give Carl all the terri- tory he wislies, turn him loose ana he will astonish into hysterice or delirium tre- mens a much more experienced audience than the one he stampeded on tne Bar- bary Coast yesterday morning. Witn the t herald of dawn yesterday C e loose amcng the wicked of the tenderloin. He was looking for some one ““o'er whose wounds he could proph- esy atter sen g his soul hurling Lot to hell to tell its tale of woe 10 Ate, Beelze- bub, or ary old body.”” Fortune was with him, and he met a numan soul that was being carried around the coast in a nar- row cell of tiie caliel man, and the man was called a saiior. They passed and each observed the lowerir srows of the other, NEW . TO-DAY. HAIR HUMORS itching, Irritated, scaly, crusted Scalps, dry, thin, and falling Hair, cleansed, purified, and beauti- fied by warm shampoos With CUTIOUEA Soap, and occasional dressings of CUTICUEA, purest of emollients, the greatest skin cures. (liticura Treatment will produce & clean, healthy scalp ‘with luxuriant, lustrous bair, when all eise fafls. Sold throughont the world. POTTER DEUG AXD ChEM. Cokvr-, Soie Props., Boston. > 87~ How to produce Luxariant Hair,"" mailed free. SKINS ON FIRE ™3 camsirrimizsnier 1 coast. The policeman continned on hi< way and likewise did Carl, tossing 1o the | sidewark the scales of fish and pointed bones he picked from his teeth with that spirit of abandion that character:izes him who has made a noole effort to win, but who has ignobly lo WILL OPEN THURSDAT. {The Art Exhibition at Hopkins | Larger Than Ever This Year. Many Rare Paintings Loaned by Wealthy Residents of This Oity. | | | | | | | | | The exhibition at Hopkins, which will | open Thursday pight, will be larger and better this year than eve It will not only inel e the works of | local artists, but also those of noted paint- | | ers, loaned by various peopie. For thelast two years the art exhibit has been running down, but this year the | painters have seemed to recover their in- terest, and the resuit is evident. The Gold and White Room, in which is exhibited the photogravures atthe Hop- kins-Searles museum, has been lighted up so that the pictures may be seen to the best advantage at night. tion umong the artists about the people neglecting to buy the pictures they exhibit at the Art Association. tures is one of the main reasons for giving the exhibits at the Art Association. This year it is thought, however, there will be &n improvement, and the people will pur- chase a large number of the works. The exhitit will ie open every day for | six weeks, and Thoursday and Friday nights of each week. Friday will be a free | day for all wishing to attend, ana also for | the school children. There will be no “mardi gras” at Hop- | kin« this year—it is 100 expensive an ex- periment and it always approaches very close to a failure. D Charged With Burglary. | Edward Iverson, 21 years of age, was booked | at the City Prison yesterday by jdetectives Rran and O'Dea. Whale living at 900 Brynnt strest, ou Ociober 15, he is accused of entering the rooms of Mrs Massney, by means of a false keéy, and stealing a_diamond pin, gold brooch and severairings. The pin and brooch were recovered in pawn shops where lverson hed disposed of them. Tnere has been considerable dissatisfac- | To enable the artists to sell their pic- | that they woke up the wrong passenger at Grand Junction, Colo. The accounts of the controversy, which are now at hand, | show that O. T. Sewall and twenty-three other passengers, westbound from Den- ver, made a gallant and Successful fight for their rights on the rail. It 13 true that they were delayed twenty-four hours and put to much v-xation and annoy- ance, but they refused to leave the Puli- man car, in which they; had paid for ac- commodations from Denver to San Fran- cisco. Mr. Sewail was seen yesterday. He ao s notpropose to allow the Rio Grande | Western’s version of the deliy, as given by the San Francisco agent to THE Cary, to passunchalienged. He insists that he and twenty-three other passengers were ordered vut of the car and that they wer: deiaved twenty-four hours, instead of eighit hours. Tne fact now comes to light that the | Denver and Rio Grande official sought to | exclude the passencers from the Puliman car San Vincente in order that the car stould be returned to Denver with the | eastbound p ngers from San Francisco and Ogden. The tesiimony of the de- layed pis-engers c early established the fact that the San Vinc-nte, after the pas- sedgers had been delayed twelve hours, was coupled to the outgoing wes:bound train and then uncoupled and left twelve hours longer at Grand Junction, because the passangers insisied, asa condition of leaving the car, that they should bave the accommodations west of Ogder whi | their purchased pr.vileges in the San Vin- cente entitled them to enjoy. The local oflicers of the Denver and R'o Grande and the Rio Grande Wes ern re- ceived the following spirited letters yes- | terday: «co, November 15, 1897, Montgomery street, City— DEAR SIR: | luke eXCeplion 1o your statement reported in the San Francisco CALL of Novem- ber 13, in which you scem to make I'ght of the deiny 0f the weslbound paSSeNgers Over your tine. Your road. as well as all the roads in | ihe country, is eutirely dependent upon the | public for support, and thuerefore the public are entitled to some lttle consideration, and certainly courteous treatment at your hands and from every official and employe of your company. The stalement purporiing to come from you 15 cither a deliberaie misrepresentation or else you have not been informed of the facts of the deisy, and therefore are notuble to make Any repori on the same to anybody. I order that you may understand the par- ticulars of the delay on your rosd and the Denver and Rio Grande, I beg tn inclose here- with copy of my respects to W. J. Snotwel! gencral agent of the latter road, to which | respecttully refer you. As the responsibility of my delay rests also with your road, my re- marks to Mr. Shotwell will apply to your com- pany aa well. T demand that you retract the and shall be pleased to have an early explana- tion from you. Yours respectfully, 0. SEWALL. SAN FRaNcisco, Noyember 15, 1897. Mr. W. J. Shotwell, General Agent Denver and Rio Grande Railyoad Company, No.31s Caiifor- nia Street, City—DEAR Sik: Referring to the re- DOrt in the San Francisco CALL of Noyember 13,1 beg 10 state to you that I held three first-class tickets from D:nver via your road and the R o Grande Western, together with through ticaets for drawing-room and one scc- tion 1 the Puilman car n Vincente,” from Denver to San Francisco. Train 1 of your rocd left Denver at 8:45 A M Wednesday, November 10, with -the through car San Vincente. On the aiterno on of thesame day an sxle to the engine-iender broke, making an unavoidable de:ay of about two hou concerning which the passengers sty and d:d not complain. We were dueut Grand Junction,Colo , at1:18 A. M. November 11. but arrived at A about two hours iate, and jound that the Rio | Grande Western train with which we were to | connect had leit. The passengers did not ob- | ject to this, not knowing the arrangements be- tween the Denver and Itio Grande and the Rio Grande Western; but when, shortly before 4 A. . November 11, the Pullman conductor | aroused all ihe passengers, twenty- fodr in number, ana stated’ that - he had orders from the division superin- tendent to put us out and that we coull | stay in the station—a place not large enougn | 10 accommodate even tne second-class pass gers, aud the temperature out of doors below Ireezing point—we did seriously obj:ct, and finally, after being dressed and holding a meeting, we declined to leave the car; the | conductor wasduly notified, and he in turn notified the division superiniendent,who sent orders to put _us out by force. The conductor replied that if there was any force to be used the superintendent could do it himself, which he fuiled to do, however. | The statement in the press that the passen- | gers were not ordered out by your officials is false. We were ordered up andou. We got up, but notout. We were then given to un- derstand that your train, No. 3, which arrived | a1 10:40 from Denver and connects with train | arriving in n Francisco Saturday morning | at 9:45, would 1ake our car: and under the circumstances, this was satisiactory. ‘Itain 3 arrived on time and after much dis- cussion and another refusal on .our part to leave the car unless we could be given the same accommodations from Ogden—which was refused by your agents—we were coupled on 1o train 3 and presumed we were to resume our journey. Another ram was received, however, from the officials of your rond und We were' again offered accommodation iu an- other car to Ogden, but not from Ogden to destination according to our tickets. We again declined to leave the car, and without further ceremony it was uncoupled and we were left at Grand Junction until 1:30 A. », | November 12. u de.uy of nearly twenty-four hoursand not eignt, a3 stated, which is false, The passengers had made no complaint of the deiny up to the time train 3 leit us, as the accident was unavoidable, but after that th following telegrams passed between your gen- eral passenger agontat Denver and mysell: 3 ‘ngers. car | 5co cars left here 4 a. M All pas fered trausfer 1f offered swme sccor through to destination, which your uge todo. We demand immediate traisportation to destination and hold your road respousible for all delay and damages. TWENTY-FOUR PASSENGERS. | (By O. T. Sewall, Wiilisms, Diamond & Co) | DExvER Nov. 11, 1897. Wittiams, Dimond & Co.. Twent Grand Message re e regre excecdingly the deiny on our 0. T Sewall, four Puassengers, ived. ¥ Junction : une, which was unavoidable.” The Rio Grande | Western tral No. 3. which left Grand Junction this forenoc: €3 not carry through Sau Francisco cars. We have requesied the Kio Grande Wesi- ern to haul the sledping-car which you are inou 20. 1 to-night. and tuls train is the San Francisco rour golng connection and will doubtless insure ihrough w.thout transfer. Will wire you st P. M., 83 5000 45 We can see the Rio Graic ern officials. 5. K. Sewall T (o Williams, four Passengers, Grand Junct, STABBED A PRIEST IN A JUSSHOUS Bloody Work of a Chinese Highbinder on a Hierophant. LYING AT THE POINT OF DEATHl An Unknown Assassin Enters the Temple of the King of the City. PIERCED WiTH TEN WOUNDS e W The Assault Said to Be an Outgrowth of the Recent Boycott on Pork, One more victim has been claimed by the murderous knife of the Mongolian highbinder, and a priest of one of the joss- houses now lies at the point of death with ten wounds in his body. At 4 o’clock yesterday morning an un- known assassin crawled through the win- dow of the priest’s room in the tempie on Stockton street, between Washington and Jackson, and stabbed Koong Sang, the Nam Moo of the Sing Wong Mew, or priest of the Temple of the King of the City, in- flicting cuts that will undoubtedly cause bis death. As usual when a serious affray occurs in Chinatown the Chinese are very reticent, and would give the police none of the de- tails of the trouble. Ttose interested pro- fess to know nothing about the case, and tell conflictinz stories concerning the at- tack and its results. It is claimed at the temple that the man who did the murder- ous work wasa common tobber who brok into the room for the purpose of stealing clothing, and that he stabbed the pries: dent of (be 1iiv Grande Weste me that the delayed sleeping-cs varty will go West on their (No. 1) to-night RAND JUNCTION eral Pusse cived. Rio G.ande 3 connects a Ogden with tran arriving San Fran- cisco saturday morning. Your agentdeclined io give accomm.odations on LL:ls tram from Ogden. “ntermediate pussengers were LOL EIVen proper opportumty to transfer to No 3. We were all or- ered up and out of cur at 4 0'clock (11% 1w orning, W.th N0 gu.rantee of accommudations, and we de- €a 10 %0 fOF (his reason. My mother, accom- panving e, is sick, and requires drawing-room, as puzchased. My time and (Lt of oLners is valn . and & protest agaist this uncailed-for de- lay aud the treatment we have received Le | bur representatives In ermediate pas mand immediate transporiation T. SEWALL AND LWENTY-1HREE PASSEN- DENVER. N and Twenty-three Pa deluy in your journey, rs referred (0 in° your te.egram, movement bayoud the ‘erminus of our Grand Junction is no under our control. as we learned of the difficuity and commuicated | it 1o Colouel Dodge, vice-president of the Rio urande Western, he immediately ordered vour sleeping-car to be taxen west to-night on his first train from Grand Junction. S, K. HoOPER, P. M. We finally arrived inSan Francisco at 1 A, x November 14, having beeu delayed twenty four sours by the D. and R. 6. and Rio Granae Western railweys and three and a half hours | vy the Central Pacific. The foregolng are the | facts of the case.and will be corroborated b the passengers, & list of whom I have, also by your conductor, the Pullman conductor aud porter and by your agent at Grand Junction If this ;s the trentment these roads propose to | uccord the public it1s the duty of the public to nvoid them. I awuit your explanation as to why lam subj ctea by your company to such inconveu- wence, deinvs and extra expense and ulso what'settlement you propose to make. Inclosed you wiil find copy of my respects | to W. H. Suednker, agent of the Rio_Graud Western, to which 1 beg reference. Yours re spectiully, 0. T. SEWALL CRAZED WITH POISON. George Thomas, a Ketired Soldier, Jumps From a Three-Story Window. George Thomas, crazed with the ex- cessive use of cocaine and morphine, jumped from & three-story window of a lodzing-house at 154 New Montgomery <treet yesterday morning. He was taken to the Receiving Hospital in the ambulance, where it was found that ne had escaped with a sprained ankle, | Thomas in 1872-74 held the responsible | headquarters and a in order to escave, The story is fortitied by the assertion that the assassin carried away with bim some of the garments of the wounded man. Another story given out is that the priest had interfered between his assaii- antand agirl and the deed was commii- ted in revenge. But both of these stories have evidently been manufactured for the | occasion in order to throw the police off | the scent of the real cause and to keep them from tracking down the real as- sassin, According to information secured from a4 Chinaman who is not connected with either of the warrinx factions the attack | is a part of the boventt thar is on betw: the Sam Yups and See Yups, notwith- standing the assertions that the boycott 1s off. The Temple of the King of the City is a public josshouse, but the priests in it have fal en ‘under the ban be:ause they have permitted m-mbers of both Tongs to worship there. Both of these associations have wurned the priest not to perwit the members of the other toag toenter the temple but he reiused to ac- cept their dictation and he was then | threatened with punishment if he per- | sisted. The murderous attack of vesterday morning followed his refusal, but who the assailant was or to which association he belonged is unknown, unless possibiy to | the highbinder sociation itself which planned the mur At the See Yup <o at the Sam Yups aill knowledgze of the attack was dis- claimed and at both places it is said that if there had been an assault it was un- doubtediy for the purpose of robbery. As the priest is known to be very poor, Ul I CHOW KOONG SANG, the Chinese Priest Who Was S‘abbed, Officiating at the Altar of the Temp'e of the King o! the City. position of quaartermaster in the United States army. During the last vear of his | ~grvice his physical powers commenced to | f1il, and he was retired on a pension of | $36 per month. 2 | He began soon after to use cocaine and | morphine, unti! now he spends $1 daily for cocaine and 25 cents for morphine— enough 1o kill a horze. - Irving M. Scott’'s Lecture To-Night. All young men will be welcome at the lec- ture to be delivered this evening at the Young | Men's Chrisilan ‘Asscciation Auditorium, Ma- son and Ellis stree Irving M. Scott of the making his living by the sale of joss sticks and sacred paper used in sacrificing before ! their 1dos, the robbery story receives little or no credit, while the story of interfer- ence between the assassin’ and a girl i discredited, a8 it 1s known that tho priests of the temp.e never interfere in private affairs, confining all their minisirations to devotions at the temples and to pray- ing for the dead. A Chinaman who is weil acquainted with the trouble between the factions saiu last evening that the recent rerort that the boycott was off and that peace had been declared belween the tongs was sent out in order to allay the vigilance of the volice, and that while it was quiet now In Chinatown trouble of a inostserions na- Union n Works. His subject will be “Trade and Industry. ———————— Low's norehound cough syrup for statements given to the San Francisco CaLL, | hoarseness, price 10c, 417 Sansome st. * ture was liabie to break out at any mo- ment. He said there would be numerous » | L e e O A T T Ty the mnatural STYLES AND EXTRAORDINARILY 140 picces b - ; 20¢. 25¢. 50c. - = effects, good value for a yard. - =+ and shadings, wi b —+ at 75c a yard. joe -+ at 7oc a yerd. At 90e. v Bt e a yard At $1.00. N e R D 2- 1D 39 pieces [ ! Murphy Building, Market and Jones Streets. = W JO-DAY — mnmmmrmmmmmmm%nmmmmmvmmrmmw COLORED DRESS GOODS SPECIALS— FOR THIS WEEK'S TRADE That our Fall Dress Goods business to date has been the greatest in years is but result of the PEERLESS NOVELTIES SHOWN and the MARVELOULSY LOW PRICES RULING, for our display is so extensive and varied as to satisfy the most diversi- fied tastes, and the figures quoted make the goods doubly attractive, as witness the following examples of this week’s 35-INCH PLAIN B ack will be offered at 20c a yard. 83 vieces 40-INCH FANCY 125 pieces 39-INCH WOOL DRE be offered at 50c a yard. 61 pieces 46-INCH NOVELTY DRESS GOODS, raised effects, a full line of shades, good valus for $1 a yard, will be offered ieces 52-INCH FINE ALL-WOOL ENGLISH BROAD- CLOTH, new shades, extra value for $L a yard, will be offered pleces 46.INCH SILK MIXE CH ALL-WOOL COVERT CLOTH, two- cts in a great var ety of colorings, good valse for 1, will be offered at $1 a yard. OUR NEW CATALOGUE Is now ready for distribution to out-of-town resi- dents, to whom it will be mailed free on application. PPY coons AR \ mmuumxmmmmmuuuummmumuumunmm i 1 EN! SERGES in Navy blue and CHOICE VAL STRIPED SUITING, shaded 50c a yard, will be offered at 2ic S @OODS, new designs D NOVELTY PLAIDS will CLAEREIRIOARIUNIB RN AR IR ERN AU LR RN SR UARAI RN IR T AR EARIIA TR AR LA Market and Jones Stregts, Ay Ty Ty Ay YT TP T YIRS murders, and in every instance the report would be given that the attacks were made for robbery or for private revenge. | A Chinaman seen at the josshouse last | night told his version of the’ affair, which | differs from the other stories in many | points. He said that there wers two men | | implicated in the *‘robberv,” as he calied | it. They entered the josshouse over the | roofs of some adjoining buildings, and | | while one kept watch the other went toa | room where the priest was in bed ard de- | manded of him the keys of his trunk. | The priest refused the request and the | robber assaulted him. The cries of the wounded mean awakened Yep Wo, an-| | other preacher, who lives upstairs. He | | immediately started down to find out the | trouble, but was stopped by the second | robber wha stood on the steps with a re- | volver in his hand. ‘After ransacking the room the men made their escape the same way they | came in. They left behind them the wooden sheath of the knife with whicn | the assault was made. From this sheath the knife is thought to have been one used by fishermen and the Chinese think {Lie robbers are men who have recently re- | turned from the Alaska fisheries. | It is claimed that the ‘‘robbers” got | away with $120 in gold, some articles of | wearing apparel, an_opium pipe, a regis- tration certificate, a Chinese bracelet’and a diamond riny. ‘CALLED “AN OLD AW Mrs. Ellen Furlong Thought the Expression Savored of Vul- gar Language. Trouble Between Her and Peter Mo- Devitt Over the Ownership of | Some Fowls, Judge Campbell had a search warrant case before him yesterday afternoon, and (he usual babitues of the court, which was crowded, were kept in a hilarious condition while it lasted. Mrs. Ellen Furlong, wife of Policeman Furlong, who lives at Alvarado street, ac- cused Feter McDovitt, 1208 Twenty-third | street, of having unlawfully in his posses- sion six Black Spanish pullets and a gray ben that belohged to her. When Mrs. ¥urlong procured the search warrant she acc mpanied an officer 10 the bome of the McDevitts to point out the | low!s. Assoon as Mr. McDevitt saw them What's that ola ham talking about?’’ The offic r asked him what or | who he meant, and he replied, “Oh, that red dog.”” McD:vitt owns a red dog. Mrs. Furlong thouzht McDev:itt meant her and <he had bhim arrested for using vulgar anguase. Mrs. Furlong had ber husband with her in court, but she scarcely needed bis as- sistance and was a match for the attorney hat represented the other side. M cDevittdeclared that the fowls were not Black Spanisb, but B.ack Minorecas, and that he bat bougnt thim from Mr. Walters, the court stenographer, and raised them himself. The gray hen he solemnly declared was also raised by him. Several wiinesses were called on both ides and it was evident there was no love ost between the two fa-glies. Among tue spectators the questions and answers provoked mersiment. The Judge critically examined the black birds and with a profound air of wisdom astonished the Furlong faction by raying: “These are Black Minorcas. I have sowe of the same kind at home.” His decision, therefore, was that the nlack fowls should go to McDevitt ana the gray hen to Mrs. Furlong. One of the iowls had died in the City Prison and Mec- Dev:tt threatened to bring suit in the he said, Justices’ court aga nst Mrs, Furlong fof its value. The charge of vulgar language against McDevitt was dismis<e . BOTH LEGS CUT OFF Tananofhin Tori Falls in Front of a Mission-Street Car. Tananofhin' Tori, employed in a Japanese garden at Ingleside, had both his legs amputated at the City ana County Hospital yesterday bv Dr. Dudley. Tori had been to the city and was re- turning to the wardens. At Twenty- ninth and Mission sireets he left the car and ran to caich the Ingieside car, which was just siarting. While attempting to jump on the car he slipved and fell. An inward-bound car was rassing at the time and the wheels went over Tori’s legs below the knee, crushing them terribly. Georee T. Woodcock, the motorman, surrencered himself at police hea i ters and was released on his own recog- nizance by Judge Campbell. Last night Tori was resting easy, and Dr. Dudley thinks he will survive the shock. NEW TO-DAY. Why . not dress mp don’t be a fop but look well dressed $10 buys a first- rate business suit—over-coat or ulster here See them in the window ROOS BROS 27-37 Kearny corner Post g

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