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4 b HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL WEDNESDAY MAY 3 GAGE AND BURNS IN A SENATORIAL TRUST Governor Slated to Succeed Perkins, in the United States Senate. Major McLaughtin Is Not in the Confidence of the New Alliance—How the Secrets of the Combine ere Divalged to U.S. Grant. went south to FY\HERE is r i ng I s of lebration. | % t 3 ight to hi l 2 5 (y—.~. Ev Al but after es ‘,“m«h took n Pacific. ns received an banquet does in political S. Grant Jast, and a have bee: 1 not create in- s rated as a 41 work and propos heme to elect of the Legila- KILLING OF SEALS STILL CONTINUES POINT REYES HERD PICKED OFF ONE AT A TIME. Many Half Grown Animals Attempt to Reach the Old Rookeries | Only to Be Sent to Their | Death. | e gea lions at the Point | still on merrily. | v Al Wilson telephon; k that he is find- | h killers at the | 0 their nerve recovere ez ly they Good Groceries in t = herd. sDNESDAT, May New prices Sunday. ) ited in The Call ¥ the | s proper are inacc t the water tion supplies here. ¢ r one > oo nt s from he tides the c . rookeries from the south through a el close to the foot of the ly all of the prowlers appre ough_this chann th an side run e rices yood goods and good —outings m:edn't' st so much as you think. 4 bars 23c‘ xnl ) mck 25¢¢ e to the snrf‘\,te to watch nd to see if any ccessful in get- , sharp r by the st the fac over de devel- | to this dan- driven by the male monarchs of the herds, are compelied to seek some place for resting, and they run risks that in_most cases prove fatal T rm-x are just as gree i their destruct s much importance as any. So far | it s difficult to tell exactly the number of sea lions killed, but with the 130 | slain two mc d what have been | shot in_the_ pedition it is safe ), and_the game ot been very plentiful either. Mr. n will likely keep banging away for so longer. —— | AN INCORPORATED CLUB. o | The Sunnyside Hall and Improve- g ‘1 Sih 7 b’lrS 25C' ‘ ment Association Organized | Under State Law. EIGHT SAVING STORES: 0| 3 aa e e e baretor 1311 Polk St. 8. P. | the Sunnyside Hall and Improvement t rkeley € | sociation to bring their organization un- Alameda, r the dignity of a corporate body. With this object in view articles of incorpora- | tion will be filed with the County Clerk Ly anl Anchovies to say ha X famous ; as they are dr by the at- the baby organization.” The sum 32000 is set the working mount There are . . | B m'. }\ H. Ew hrll{" higher prices it il d John Johnson, | e first acts of the corporation » to build its own hall, which had ided on at the first meeting held. d for this site is on Sun- ‘butnot higher grades colate and cocoa than | (;H rardelli's. Even if you pay 50 | per cent more you will get none ¥ pass street, and ‘ IBues theonk n Francisco } | ana s €o clectric car line. ‘ | 5 ovement club, previous to its vnru')ymr\Hun did_ considerable for the | progress of the Sunn district. It | took a leading part in the sewer agitation, which has for its object the constructing | ding outlet from Ocean View to | n Bay, following the course of | eck bed. Th nd bringing to the | | notice of the City Hall officials the neces- schoolhouse and portection against fire in the section represented by it have been the means of drawing offi- | cial s to this promising suburban part of i c —_———— C. L. A. S. Bazaar a Success. better | | The Catholic La Aid bazaar, which none as | | Closes on Saturday ajght, Is now an as- lavored sured succ Mrs. M. Deane, who i3 the FRESH as the home made ‘ president the society, so announces. Ghirardelli’s w There was another'large crowd in attend- | last evening and the booths, voting s and auctioneers did a lively busi- | | Cocoa, Ground Chocolate, Monarch Ch One of the feacures of the p\oumg, At all fair dealing grocers. D. GHIRARDELLI €0. contraito. N Deane | B wiets & 1d last night that no attempt being | President. rer, none stronger or avored—and above all of made toward giving a long musical pro- | | gramme for the reason that it interfered with the business of the bazaar. | The ladies of the society are dee grateful to their many friends and the public generally who by thelr generosity | | e contributed to the success of the | bazaar. The lunchroom as usual did a large busin The indications are that the crowd will continue to attend the bazaar until it closes. —_— e “99" Cleveland bicycles, $40 and $50; *'99" Crescents, $35. Leavitt & Blll, 309 Larkin.* e [ J | order in this | be Q@040+ 0+ 0+ 0+ O +04CH040+ 0404040+ D40+ O+ O4C+OHTH0+ CHOHTHO 4+ O+ 0O+ O+ 04040404040 PROFESSIONAL BEGGARS CAUGHT PLAYING POKER Last Week ULIUS mar LEIN and Herman Hoft- two of the gang of poker arrested during the . week ago last Monday ppeared before J Ay were each Klein, who y into tears recefving his sentence and was >m the courtroom in a lachry- fon. They were arrested at McAllister by Policemen iman, who had going from house to ing for money or clothes. The money they received and the money obtained for clothing which they sold to secondhand dealers was utilized in playing poker at the resorts on Market street. They were so en- gaged when the police raided the re- sorts last week. Klein was among the men arrested at the Metropole and 0104040+ B+0+ 04 0+040404+0+ 0G40+ O 1 O+O4+0+0+ d#o +0+0 qmooéomoommo 1010404 04+040+0404 401040+ 0+0+ 0+ 0+040+0+0+ mo. last Thurs Buch house b Julius Klein and Herman Hoffman, Two of the Gang Arrested in the Market- Street Resorts, Get Six Months for Begging. Hoffman was at the Palace saloon. They will be defendants in the poker c when they d for trial Klein was arre January by Policeman Daly g, and got thirty i him a bad char Judge Conlan, , said they themselves. They bodied men, but instead o working for an honest living they pre- ferred to impose upon charitable peo- ple by t g and to spend the money they received at the poker tables. It frauds like them that prevented many ch: bly inclined people from helping the really deserving poor, and he would give them the full limit the 1 him. If the police had harge of vagrancy against which should have been done, he would e given them the extra six months each. Both Klein days in sentencing the two ought to be were ggin them, and Hoffman claimed that they were forced to beg in the first instance, as they lost all their money at the poker tables. They got so infatuated with the game that they lost all desire for work d hoped to always win back the money they had lost with the money they got by beg- ging. They had a regular system and had a list in their pockets of the houses they had called at, so that they would not make a mistake in going the gecond time with probably a different story. .mO‘O‘O‘O#M’O‘ew’o&ooo‘O#O0000#0’0‘000000060‘0‘0'060*040004000. SPREADING THE GOSPEL OF THE to This City. There are a thousand acres of land up in Washington which is peopled by the mem- bers of the Co-operative Brotherhood. They clear the land themselves, they will run | nm sawmill which will cut up the timber they have alread tory, which is adding | materially to the wealth of the little com- munity they are rapidly forming. Mem- bers are being enlisted from all over the country, and they have grown in number from the beginning of February, when the scheme was launched, until now, w number over 4000. ident of the Brotherhood is now Ingalls—and his mission y and lu!wd a cigar f: in e e > * oe e iibe et i S. INGALLS, President of the Co-operative Brotherhood. ation of new hranches of the State. He has already ap- pointed Joseph Asbury Johnson State or- ganizer, and the first steps toward or- ganization will be taken at a meeting to held next Saturday night. Then the plan will be explained to the public and the proselyting will begin. The method of operation is through a fraternal body, but this has reference only to the social side of thée plan. The is the form real idea is emhodied in the colonies to be | is found possible o | formed whenever it profitable to its members £and acres now in the hands of the Broth- erhood it is hoped to establish a woolen mill. The sheep will be raised on the | ground by members of the order, the wool will be carded and spun in the mill on the farm, and the work will be done by mem- | bers of the order, and it will be taken to market in a vessel belonging to the order and manned by members. That is only a start, however, but it | to_show what the plan contem- . The order is divided into two s of membership—the resident and the non-resident. The resident are those who are on the farms and who do the work; the non-resident are those who be- long to the order and pay a monthy due for the purpose, and who at the end of ten years are entitled to a place in the fac- torles of the Brotherhood and support for themselves and their families. It is one of the rules of the organization that when a member has kept himself in good stand- On the thou- | { | | | ing for ten vears the order is bound to, take care of him and give him a chance | his own living, whatever hap- | r compensation the plan provic the working members shall r checks, the value of which will be mined by the income of the colony. | by contemplate such an equall- zation of work and hours that one ocecu- | pation will be as desirable as another, | BROTHERHO0D | Mission of J. S. Ingalls We beg to apologize to were unable to deliver o This due to the extraordinary yesterday evening. establishment yesterday, patronage has thus been ¢ more prompt attention. May 3, 1899. | for the labor he Annonncement and in that way the time checks will qual value. more to the plan, but ple is one that s horer the expend its infancy and the shingi 1o #he brly ond so. far sstabliahed; by it prove successful others will be e lished as the growth of the members w. rants. the large number of our patrons throughout the city whose purchases we n our 5 o'clock delivery inability on our part was rush of business at our and we earnestly hope that it may be excused by those whose generous onferred upon us. A special delivery of all such delayed packages will be made at 8 o'clock this morning. We also rely upon the kindly forbearance of the large number of our patrons to whom at our coun- ters yesterday we found it impossible to give Market, Jones and McAllister Sts., San Francisco. be thn ton t if tab- ar- 990900006000 0-0-06600000 00 O4+O404 4040+ 0+ 0440440+ T HO4TH404040404 040+ 0404 OI0+D40 404040404 040+ O 40 + O4OI040 404040404 0+ O 4+ QIO 4040404 | by the Great Northern and Northern Pa- | doing so lifted the unjust burden of East- ADVERTISEMENTE. " DRESS GOODS! \ EXTRAORDINARY OFFERING! On Tuesdau, May 2d, we will place on sals our entire stock of GENUINE FRENCH ETA- MINES and GRENADINES at about one-third former prices. NOTE THE REDUCTIONS: $1.75 per yard Reduced to 50c e~ S et BT S $2.00 per yard - - - Reduced to 75¢ $2.50 per yard - - - Reducedto $1.00 The above goods are warranted pure wool, are full 48 inches in width, and are in the following colors: GRAYS, HELIOTROPE, BROWNS, TANS, NEW BLUE, PLUM, GREENS and NAVY. We will a]so‘offer our entire collection of FRENCH SILK AND WOOL NOVELTY GRENADINE SUIT PATTERNS at following reductions : $20.00 Suits, Reduced to $7.50 $25.00 Suits, Reduced to $10.00 $35.00 Suits, Reduced to $20.00 All of the above ETAMINES and GRENADINES. We have in Blacks also. Ladies desiring a genuine‘_bargain should not fail to see these goods. ’ 1892, i, 13, NORTHERN LINES CAPTURE COAST- BOUND FREIGHT Local Merchants Lose Their Fight. 115, N7, 119, 121 POST STREET. yesterday afternoon Southern P. with Mr | meeting urning io for consultat | thority on fre | intri; > question w over pro ind L <|u~ merchants here have no fear that the Southern Pacific or southern tems will follow the lead of the other lines The question resolves itself for the pres “‘m into a proposition co solel | the dealers in Seattle, Tacoma, ¥ sriland and Spokane, but the business men of | those towns have stood so stanchly witn the local ‘merchants in their fight that the local dealers will now st ith them carries expected it will not be lon Northern and N gain swung into the line stern competition. as a_result of and if the combined influe weight COMPETITION FOR PULLMAN. Wagner Sleepers to Come West on New York Central Routings. REDUCED RATES OFFERED| The cut made by President “Jim" Hill lnt the Great Northern on sleeping car rates from Missouri River points is to be not the only competition that Mr. Pull- and his porters are to have in the nittent snooze business westward. ‘anderbilt people, operating the New itral line and routing through to Los Angeles and Portland, have announced that after the middle of the | month they will operate through sleepers to the W BARS ARE DOWN TO A FLOOD OF EASTERN COMPETITION. Great Northern and Northern Pacific Go Back on the Agreed Sched- As the New York Central hauls nothing but Wagner sleepers the conclusion is ule on Less Than Car- that the pa like Wagner is to enter the load Lots. Western on Vanderbilt routings at , 2nd railroad men are looking to the breaking up of the cinch that the and friendly have d for so long on sleeping car accommo- The big hardware and grocery jobbers of the East are again free to send their men and their goods into the West to enter into active and ruinous competition | S been a fact for months past that el was routed an over llw S lines in_which line with the wholesalers on this side of the | «t" i profits 1t been Rockies. { to get at_call choice sections These 1 roac advance unless a . wheels or vacancy he his routing its division, in the Pullman 1to chart | rooms on Pullman sleepers been permitted to chart i nt accommodat erson cared -to sleep wait a tedious length was compelled to so chang | the Southern Pacific y the system in VOgUC The bars that for nearly held out Eastern dealers a year have from Pacific Coast territory were let down on Mon cific railroads by the adoption of a creased tariff on les: freight of mixed cl de- than carload lots of sifications. 5 ALlon es these roads were permi In an exclusive story in The Call on | ‘,’,‘“, h,\'l';; up to within forty-eight hours Friday last it was stated that the mer- | of leaving time every section and state- eastbound trains, practically weommodations stern rout- chants of this city had been given the tip | room on ! that the two big northern roads were | Creating a premium o g northern roads were | STeALIE 2 o everage on E ahout to throw down the agreement en-|{ia hot held by other lines tered into by them last May with the | ‘The invasion of the Wagner will likely other transcontinental lines that met in | put a stop to such practices and may in Milwaukee at that time. They pledged | time result in a reductlon in —the rate 'S themselves to a higher rate on less than D on b At anthined portes: carload lots on westbound freight and by c-- Nickel-in-the-Slot Cases. Eleven cases of saloon‘keepers, charged with having nickel-in-the-slot machines ern competition coast merchants. that the merct from the shoulders It was further ants here had every r of told son to belleve that their information ‘was au- | o, their premises, were called befor thentic and that, working upon that be- | {ng Judge Groezinger yesterday. lief, the different associations were h The s ‘were made some months ago ing almost daily meetings to discuss | and Judge s sted that the de- plans for holding off the threatened in- | fendants shou ad guilty and he would vasion. inflict nominal fine. Prosecuting Attor- Their agents were in constant commu- | ney Carpenter objecfed to such a propo- rication with the influentia! jobbers in |sition, but the Judge continued the c Seattle and Tacoma, and with | " to-morrow ‘to enable the defend correspondents in the north to come to an understanding and prom | days ugo a concerted move > on | not to use the machines a the two roads. To no avail, however. The | —_——— big firms of the East swung, too, a great | iy pest bieycle and ba power, and yesterday the reduc B “| foor and _hou: 1ints, chea ule went into effect. material department at’ Sanborn, When the Trans reau met in Milw: vided freight into fi nmmflnml ’I'y'lfhz 11 Market street ————— The Pool-Selling Cases. When the pool-selling caseof H. T.. Jones 1 from $2 40 to $4; on c 2 60: on class 3 from 52 was called in acting Police Ju roez- 4 from $170 to $1 9, and on ¢ ser's Court yesterds ¢ $160 to $1 65, a schedule bt Sroiise. Mok S shut out the Eastern firm Etho Sheri SRy smanuicask: It prevented the retailer e R ber on the coast putting in hi 5 10| fhe police, but Prosecuting Attorner G the Bastern firms and the coas wholo- penter_objected the Judge sustaine of a r}r;?ss?‘;wm:“‘k“l the business| ;jvy " The police will serve the veni .:hj::fi:na adopted Monday by the | the case W e Al northern by no means the old sl s Tate, but another just as bad. Tt lumps freight now running under schedules of Counterfeiter Arrested. from $170 to $3 the hundred pounds into| Maurice I has been arrested in Se- a general rate ofs JLELS Hnder:, 1o l‘”'“ attle by Secret Service Detective Ha alers may mix a cargo ¢ i et o Rag S lon Gty m:"xr" dealere R trelght with a con. | °f thp ‘4“;‘ shan JuSRlson of being a Sienment of tinplate or other shelf goods | partner of G. M. Long. now awaiting and ship the stuff in under the one ra ‘U a "kx B n this city of a asllar and a half a hundred for making and passing counterfelt five- N Although the merchants. of this city ‘;‘( a8 r‘){jlr will be brought to this deny that the new rate will have any local | CIt¥ for tr appication or Influence, the matter was —_———— Sohsidered of sufMclent importance to| ‘*Pegamotd” gold, latest, best. perfect patnt; of them holding a warrant a number sample bottle 2ic. Pegamold, 6 Chronicle blag.e