The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 6, 1899, Page 12

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STILLMAN WAS TURNED BY DOWN HUNTINGTON Searles Is the New Director of the S. P. Company. His Former Representative on the Board Wasa Victim of the Railroad Mag- nate’s Persecutions. and more is out, Searles is in path once Collis rked The W whom dislik the directorate und the big r of Mont- | | D s e e e e e e e e e s T R e o R G S O o R SRS SSUSE S = S L e Cam R S e e he was without any experience ad matters, and felt it necessary secure the advi nd_services of gen- tlemen who were quali and able to look after his railroad interests. General Hubbard and Thomas E. Stillman were ners at that time, and he se- m for the responsible trust. A angement was entered into. the Southern Pacific stock being appor- | tioned among the three men, with the understanding that Searles was to be re- | all work in connection with the business. When lieved c railr poration’s d to withdr: from the this partnership was dis- Hale’s. ‘Hale’s. Underwear Excellence. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1899. W///g////%/,/éflmflmw . * JONTTe Ji2 Suit Store. There is one word that must stand out bold from our cloak and must be for all times the watchword of that section of our store. so indellibly impressed upon the public, and so thoroughly drill as “zood goods’ is connected with Hale’s name. ness” (your protection), and if you select at Hale’s rem=mb stylishly dressed, but not uniformad. SILK MOREEN sortment in FANCY WORSTED SUITS G square right of heading) titched finish skirt; vithout a kle or a draw 7 i / ////M it / %MM/”/MM///W/WIWM fl///y///,,,,,,, The Watchword in the ing star to every buyer that searches fashiondom for treasures for Hale’s. That one word is UNDERSKIRT: SILK WAISTS; some swell designs in taffeta; QUE) / I e iy o It It must be as a guid- It must be ed into every buyer for that department, that -for years to come it will be connected with Hale’s wraps suit department. “exclusive- er you are protected, News. Busy days for the domestic store, in exclusive effects; the new spade deep flounce; finnly”rnrdm new yoke ef- and ront: fancy plaid s tat- fect, with button side; ready feta routar kvt " @Y Q55 M vou'a waees 36 or . $4.90 trimmed as shown: a swell o | s 5 Each l little garment S Each | (00 %A~ aic HERRID y IOT, SUITS. a ev | CRASH SKIRTS; a new lot just in; well P in tight-fitting tailored: flat seams, double stitched: full th TR e GrUTE | U, e, Sl st and Other cirele left of he ; lined _all as ever went over our coun- D : through with heavy taff ters .. tesssntstttsarsaccece ch : corded front and pleated back: mostly ‘,'{\:_”. i"'.‘g,f";;q”“fi\ past | BLACK CH awhols flot ol = foiDER; dhout '1?,29" In the €7 .50 |and good reasons too. Here’s a tip. S Stsibuted by biatriend Made in cleanly factories by well- Botinseer L onts e Each | 2400 BIG HUCK TOWELS, gravation he was de to s paid American labor. Worthy gar- swell iittle suit and a perfect <0~ i inches long, heavy absortent, : Sy s 4 | CHILDREN'S JACKETS; ty e s | : Teor ita .h"():‘. B “n\hn‘xlplii\n \‘»;:(;r’\v‘uvpr ments—thoroughly well made. fit; all for. $E‘h501 Tew tchesiots: graviior “llf}fl‘)r:'api— atisfactory, f”"’&'“ila veritable compelled to helple SS pro- 2 = g g 7 | trimmed with combination water drinker. At Hale’s - ceedings to which he was strongly op-| M LADIES' WHITE SKIRTS, fine cambric, deep flounce, | acket that the cloak says| cloth a i deep lace rutfle, 3t vards wide, on sale... 4B QC| e reias okt tiatneldbe b iman ey Gatietibiue ox brovn; fages $fi;h50 | 0 CrROCHET BEDSPREADS: the el wumrm; nhrex-tkh lhicld ‘.; B Lapr KIRTS, umbrella style, good heavy muslin, | inches, hemmed ready f al meeting of the stockholders of | deep ce, with 6i-inch embroidery 15 pieces TABLE DAMASK. - LR L e v $1.25 o Towel Roller, good 10 T e LADIES' WHITE CAMBRIC DRAWERS, extra wide, bell l C 5% SHEETS BLEACHED, o it nvern R b S S i 28C { j and strong, 21} inch, S Sestetn AD: GOW fine ished mu , tucked and lace in- n, tr voke, lawn ruffie ern Pacific Company. ugh Still- ¥ is Hunt came tha some in his op- Southern between them freely Stillmar mself n Pacific | IRISH ARRAIGNS THE POLICY OF IMPERIALISM CONDEMNS EXPANSION AND POINTS OUT ITS EVILS. His Lecture Listened to by a Throng of Enthusiastic So- \ cialists. Colonel John P. Irish last evening dis- coursed eloquently before a half thousand members of the Soc Society gathered at the Turk-street le upon the evils ey o ritorial expansion. He for more than dent that he of procedure which it s evident ny pr that the | powers at Washington are 2 ing in the Indies and the Philippin | Colonel Irish, however, began his lec- ture with a flat den the statement that the Government cided upon | eny such polic ter how hard cer- | tain inter i ap- 1 e Governm r that had nor could it ingugurat xcept by action of Congr 15 his reason for th id d here in the W his desire to show sion really was that Congre: might be forced to act accordingly. E “All over t country,” said Mr. Irish, | “men are arguing that expansion ha been one of the traditions of thi. . They say that from the narrow strip of | colonies on the Atlantic we have expand- | ed until now our standard is unfurled on | shores of both the mighty oc 8. & true, but we have expanded ious territory and in one zone. A aken in no_territory not con- tiguous territory, nor have we invaded a zone in which it ‘'was not intended that a native of the temperate zone should live. If we inaugurate this policy we will be defeated by nature itself, for the men of me cannot exist under the rays of sun, nor can they perpetuate Ives beyond the second genera- tion.’ Colonel Irigh also said that he did not consider that territorial expansion is pos- sible under the constitution. The consti- | tution, he smdAgl\'es certain powers tothe President, but beyond these he could nop 1 | the Southern Pacific Company yesterday, . olution was adopted ratifying and the action of the directors in rection with the consolidation of the Pacific Railroad Company with thern Pacific Company. icket for directors was in the the names of Prince Ponia- spoken of s possible successors to T, E liman, were not even mentioned. The new list of d follows: George Crocker, W, . C. P. Hunting- ton, H. ¥ homas H. Hub- bard, Ju! Charles G. La- arles, J. C. J. Wilson. directors will meet to elect the following vear. It is gen- ally eded by those interested that re will be no changes, though Mrs. d may again instruct her repre- ives, Charles G. Lathrop and R. J. v to cast their votes for General Hubbard for president the election for direc 3 Were repre- sented 71 share: 1 tanding. Collis P. Huntington pre g0, and the right to acquire foreign terri- tories by conquest not among them. He also said r would this coun- t foreign acquisitions bring in sub- stantial, profit unless servile or enforced labor were employed, and the day ery is over. Frequent and hearty applause rewarded Colonel Irish, and he was not permitted to leave the hall until he had answered a volley of questions fi every quarter. CE Valentine, president of Wells- | Fargo & Co., will lecture on the same proposition next Wednesday night. — e — Remember Your Boys. Come and select a box of groceries for your well-earned and brave boys at Manila and we will pack and ship same | free of charge. Former shipments were very successful. shortly. Come early with your orders and avoid the rush. LEVIN BROS. Grocers, 1348 and 1354 Market streef, op- posite Seventh. Phone S. 202. % No branches. o = L= Bacigalupi Arrested. The warrant for the arrest of Peter Bacigalupi, proprietor of the phonograph | pariors on Market street, for having in- decent pictures on exhibifion, was served upon him vesterday by Policemen Tyr- rell and Esola and he was booked at the City Prison. He was released on $200 pted by Judge Mogan. — s e The famous old JESSE MOORE WHISKY is recommended by physicians for family and medicinal use because it is pure. srace G. Platt, who had been | of slav- | fired at him from | The next steamer sails | Inc., Leading Cash | | and w York's inch, just oo 80C | 1 {I“.] X G( was Rm”l“rh:‘fi‘\’“ m"lm high neck. larg 1 Crumb Tl'ay Collar with lawn rufe, House | e And Brush front, on sale | LADIES GOWNs PRINCESS e ambric smbrovtery | BPOOMS | ”& Sc Sct. yoke, turn-back collar with tucked and | Jecoirimmed. . eutts, on sl ' $1.00 10 = (Zrettiy tacquered Jap | Special News—Some New Silks. 2 X 951‘»:‘ 1all udn’mmi for t waists, in late yester afternoos wmnh‘ e “‘, 75‘: bmam;——wor;h a C TAFFETA, popular novelty in new blues, [quarter. etter o e . come early. | 987-947 Market Street. Only one to a cus- e tomer. arrived popular Yard 85c| Good, strong floar ing lot; Special tion all this week Stove Polishing Outfit stove mit and pack- o New York age of Enameline | Polish. cent! country iriends. 9 | ready to-day. Enough said. ch wide. 5c yard Heavy sheepskin | 1% inches wide.......10e yard or plain taffeta. The new catalogue ready. Mailed frece. Some More of Those Ribbons. You remember that lot last week? Send one to your Well, another BIRNIRNINI RN+ NSNS RN NN Ne o 5o eNe N e S}OS.‘OS&O&.’ON 2 Fascinating May Hengler Turns Down a HNoble Prince. HE fetching, fascinating Hengler sters now dancing their way into the affections of the critical Orpheum audienc are marvels in many more ways than those which strictly appertain to their graceful art. Both of the gifted young dancers have been petted I much of by ro; society and made hoth have been applauded by the :ntative au- diences of London, s and Berlin; both have forged their way, uunaided, save by the pluck and grit of a watch- ful mother and the force of their un- qualified talents, to the front rank in their own peculiar line. May, the elder, has refused, politely but firmly to wear the coronet of the royal Rus- slan house, and little Flora h nodded “Nay, nay,” to numberless Johnnies who guarded the stage door. In spite of all these dazzling atten- tions, both the girls are sweet and simple little Americans, free from the afflicting taint of adulation, loyal to their country and faithful to their art. In the East the pretty sisters are known as the favorites of fashionable drawing-room entertainments, and in the European capitals as the “trans- oceanic beauties.” In New York the name Hengler sisters invariably brings to mind Commodore Gerry, and every Gothamite is familiar with the relentless warfare waged between Gerry and the Henglers. 3 B 50545+ R+ R RN RIUIRINERONIUIRIN R4 24N+ R URNeRIRIUILUIRN+ RN+ R e R o Geoto ke WOULD RATHER DANCE THAN WEAR A ROYAL CORONET e e se hetetetieny | R R R R DN N N R A LT 9 . bd . 3 * K3 ¢ P + Fi Mrs. Hengler told the story of how Gerry forced her and her children from their own State to seek more ters to the best people in London and also to the managers of the Alhambra. I went to the manager with the congenial shores and ultimately and They danced, they conquered, and be- % all unexpectedly to win fame and fore I knew what we were doing I had % | tune abroad. While the de signed them for a three months’ en- go mother told the tale “the gir s gagement. From London the girls ¢ she affectionately styles her gifted went to , where they filled a $8| daughters, listened closely, laughing wonderfully successful engagement at $ | merrily ds she recalled incidents of the Folies Bergeres; then on to Berlin, o | difficulties surmounted and looking Wiesbad Leipsic, Geneva and then :‘ tearful and serious as she. proudly back again to Lordon and Paris.” R told of their triumphs. The story of the adventures the % The girls danced at all the draw- pretty American girls met with while g8 ing-rcom entertainments of any note abroad are interesting in the extreme. ¢ in New York City,” said Mrs. Hen- In Wiesbaden Prince Galitzin, of the 3: B B HENGLER 4o INCORPORATION F A GIGANTIC TRUST COMPANY Moneyed Men Hold the Valuable Stock. A CAPITAL OF ONE MILLION | | ORGANIZED TO DO A GENERAL | BANKING BUSINESS. | The “Mercantile Trust Company of San Francisco” Enters the Field With Strong Backers. There were filed in the County Clerk’s office yesterday articles of incorporation of what promises to be one of the larges | trust institutions ever organized in_ th | West. Its name is given as the “Mei cantile Trust Company of San Francisco” | | and its capital stock is valued at $1,000.000. | | The gentlemen who compose the gigan- | tic corporat are famous in the world | of finance and business circl the d | rectors for the first year being: William D. Babcock, George Crocker, Warren Clark, M. H. Hecht, E. W. Hopkins, G. Irwin, D. O. Mills, James D. Phela | N. D. Rideout, Claus Spreckels and Fred: erick W.. Zeile. | According to the articles of incorpora- | tion the company was organized to do a trust and saf sit 2 bapking business for a term of y years. There are sixty stockholders | in the corporation holding in the aggre- | | sate 10000 shares at a p: alue of $100 cach. It is the/purpo: directors | to immediately call in 50 per cent of the | capital and in ten days open up tem- ry quarters in the M building. he initial meeting of the new company | { will be held some time next week, when cfiicers will be elected. | or in the company stated last | that the formation of the com 1s due to the anticipated growth tate and the large field for suck ness. He also said that the cor- | | poration would not remain long in its | temporary quarters in the Mills building, as steps would immediately be taken to purchase a suitable site on which a per- | manent home for the bank could be | | erected. i | gler. “They were the main attraction at parties given by Mrs. Grover Cleveland, and had also the honor of dancing at the lawn party given by reigning house of Russia, fell a will- ing victim to the charms of the fas- cinating May. He followed her from to and finally formally de- UGN NS RN SRNSNENINERNIERERNIRIN SRR RN NERNININeNININININ e R NN+ Mrs. Herman Oelrichs when her ter, clared his passion and offered the be- ir, now Mrs. W. K. witching dancer his heart, his home Vanderbilt, made her al debut. and his coronet. They took part in all the affairs of the ay, nay! Vaudeville Club, that wa omposed “I'm a prince,” argued Galitzin. exclusively of the ver well set. “I'm an American,” retorted May, Commodore Gerry used to see and en- joy them at all these entertainments, but no amount of persuasion any of our patrons could bring to bear could make him consent to allow them to appear in public. “When May was 16 Gerry lost all say over her, but she would not ap- pear without her sister Flora, who is nearly three years her junior. ‘If I can't go on until Flora s 16, why, I shall be an old woman,’ said May, and then I took the advice of friends and went abroad with the girls. I had let- “and a plain American gentleman is going to be good enough for m; Miss May, when she is not refusing the offers of princes, gives her spare time to the financial affairs of the firm in which she is one-half of the at- traction. She *books” herself and s ter, attends to the contracts and keeps the books of the company. In a neat- ly ruled ledger every cent gained and expended is carefully accounted for, and the credit side of the balance sheets shows $22,000, all earned by the clever “gi * o + b 4 bd A Ed 4+ 2 + B + Bt e2e%50%50 502 At Taylor Not Guilty. ‘ William Taylor, charged with having robbed George W. Harrigan of a watch and chain a few weeks ago, was acquitted by a jury in Judge Cook's court yesterds and discharged from Gustody: 4 Flor de Heyneman. Finest pure Havana cigar on the mar- ket. First-class stores have them on sale. If your dealer does not carry them send $3 for a box of twenty-five Flor de Heyneman Deliciosas, expressage pre- paid. State color wanted. oney refund- ed to you if cigars not satisfactory. Hey- neman, Brown & Ce., 17 ataee), #ole sEenLh and 1% Pine | FLAMES DAMAGE THE OLD POODLE DOG CHINESE LAUNDRY AND A TAIL- ORING SHOP ALSO RUINED. Fire last night wrecked the two-story frame building at 322, 324 and 326 Grant avenue. The lower portion was occupied by Wo Lee as a laundry and H. Zimmer- man's tailoring establishment. The upper ortion was a Seven-room annex to the oodle Dog restaurant. When the blaze was first notiged at a few minutes after 11 o'clock flames were shooting from all parts of the rickety wooden structure. The Chinese gathered | been accidentally overturned, and this is generally accepted as the cause. The damage will probably not exceed together such of their goods as they could 't 3 3 lay their hands on and carried them into | Srarthiesn:. S otmudiey G, and almost the street. There were but a half dozen ! o A s the fur- nishings of his rooms at about $800. N | Chinese saved very little from their pl’f.?'; and Zimmerman's stock is also ruined by fire and water. The main building of the | Poodle Dog was slightly damaged by smoke and water. —_——— guests in the Poodle Dog, and these also made a hurried exit, followed by a bevy of waiters. . Just where and how the fire started is a question of veracity between a Chinaman and a Frenchman. Wo Lee says he first observed the flames shooting out of the tchen of the restaurant, and A. Gaud- 'd, proprietor of the rotisserie, claims the blaze started in the washhouse. Shortly after the alarm was sounded one of the Chinese employed in the laundry that & lamp had the statsment a Sarsfield Rheumatic Remedy is an ab- | solute cure for Inflammatory Rheuma- tism. No remedy has been so uniformly successful. For salg by all druggists, * The drtigles of incorporation were pre- pared by Messrs. Morrison and Cope, at- | torneys for the trust company. Real Estate Owners. The regular meeting of the Real Estate Owners' Association was held last even. i at the office of A. M. Speck & Co., Market street. Applications for mem- | ceived from John B. Car- James D. . A. Clinton, ] ; reets; John D. mento street; Charles oadway: Frank W. Butter- | Shrader street. A re i was adopted and ordere or their action in re: ducing gas rates. Prof. 3 Wenzell, formerly Cit Che dre ssed the members as to arte: | at Golden Gate Park and under the new City Hall. Discussions were had on elec- | tric lighting and the park panhandle, af- ter which the meeting adjourned. . —— The Daughter Wins. Judge Coffey has handed down his find- ings of fact and conclusions of law in the matter of the estate of the late Julia A. Moraghzln and finds that owing to the habits of one of decedent's son's, James B. Moraghan, he has lost his right to | nominate an administrator, and conse- quently the court appointed decedent’s daughter, Elsie Moraghan, to administer | | the estate. | | —e——————— | Collided With a Skater. . Ann Cullin, 108 Lil venue, was turning the corner of Franklin and l“nl-} el Sie- of thanks to the Supervisors f ton streets yesterday afternoon, when a boy on roller skates rushing down Frank- lin struck her and knocked her She was taken to the Receiving Hospital, where it was found that her right leg | was fractured. The boy was arres released, as the occurrence was purely ac cidental. | Ladles’ tallor-made suits, fur cap »m M, Rpthachlld, 313 Bugtey, (U N | QOur spe: Specials ! ials are notable be- cayse they show cach week whe re the cheapest buying of reliable goods can be done. WHITE W wine: A Regular p | WHISKEY, b v B licious Regular It 0. ) and $4 00. .40c¢c ot. 75¢, 3 bots $2.00 Gatlon $3.00 WASHING POWDER, 8 pkgs...25¢ Babhit labor sa Regular price, 6 6 great Telephone and Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. 21 STOCKTON ST., | 3253 FILLMORE ST., Near Markot. Telephone M ss22. | Corner Lombard. Telophons West 152. CASH OR LITTLE-AT-A-TIME. Special This Week TABOURETTES IN OAK OR IAHOGANY. 31.50 Our time is yours to show the goods. Your time is ours for pa yment. the advantage of credit. THE J. NOONAN Furniture Company, 1017-1023 MISSION STREET Phone, @Above Sixth. uth 1. Open Even That is EXTRACTED down. | |A TWITHDUT S BETTER Painless Dentistry. Fillings - - 50 cts Crowns - - $3.50 ALL WORK KIONEY ANDT & BITIER FHANPILLS WARRANTED. J|

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