The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 30, 1900, Page 5

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THE SAN,FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, AFPKIL 3V, 1900, X MISCELLANEOUS. LET N THE LIGHT, Have No Secrets in Business. Sincerity, Simplicity and Honesty Make Pattosien's Name a Houschold Word i CUT PRICES LING e the HIGH QUALITY ar AMUBEMENTS. *TIVOLI* AMIAWIZ? YOU BET I AM! ENORMOUS . SUCCESS oF coM1 The Wizard __of the Nile, THE THIRD WEEK. cEs.. 2 1E INS 544 50 C ents Special Matinee Dewey Day, _ To-Morrow, Hay 1 GRAN OPERA P RS RS HOUSE IN GAY NEW YORK Gorge MR. JAMES NEILL MF HIS SUPERE C( N eatest ¢ 2D TR0 siore "“vr Every Act sday and Sat: ‘A GIL , Curtain Calls The Same P NEXT SUNDAY At SECOND and LAST WEEK! Every night including Sunday. Matinee Sat- WARD and VOKES, 2 EVIL EYE. RACING! RACING! RACING! 1800—CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB-1800 APRIL 21 TO MAY 5 INCLUSIVE. 0A Races start at 2 . Ferry-boats leave San Francisco at 12 m. and 32:30, 1, 1:30, 2, 2:30 and 3 p. m., conmecting with trains ntrance to the track. Last two on train for ladies and their escorts; no smoking. Buy your ferry tickets to Shell Mound Oukland mole connect with eleciric cars at Seventi land. Also all trains via 5 nect with San Pablo a rs at Fourteenth and_Broadway, Oakla (il | pptped 80 direct to the track in fifteen minutes. Returning—Trains leave the track at 4:15 and . G&mr and immedistely after the last race. (OMAS H. WILLIAMS JR., President. R B. MILROY, Becretary. nd Broadw meda 1 e HITE CASE ENDS N COMPROMISE - FOR A BIG SUM Indian Lucy Will Receive Twenty-One Thousand 1 Dollars. —— Some of Her Attorneys Squeezed Out of the Deal and Legal Com- plications Are Likely to Ensue. >~ Special Dispateh to The Call. 29.—The . Lucy a division of the celebrated for sum of $21,000. nd of a lengthy litiga- 1t by the Indian woman's represented by W. W. > un of San Fran- brought abc ms of wifeho Hite wWas ot an n R. erso; wreh and Chal Arthur s Han- compromise eftected eys of the de- don and W. B, It was reported last night that t Rodgers and Paterson C rles Hanlon, W. n: ng _as the sole San attorney. The Indian woman sk the courts to substitute W. for all her former counsel. For the Indian woman will lease John Hite from all may have against him. ariposa miner in the pio- W fortunate in striking arried Miss Nougues of in 1567 and a year uit for absolute di- of the community tried be: tting in were e prepared he died plications developed 0 the attorne; pulation OO CapeNome, Blankets : AND nd and heavy weights, ito Canopies. our goods; e prices right. C. CURTIN, 811 and 913 M RKET STREET. RO SO0 COOD OO0 0000 DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Mails! cn Applieation. COAL, COKE AND PIG IRON. LG ‘_ILSUN & 00., e e ke » Telepbone Main 1364 COPPERSMITH. FPH FOX, Supt. H. BLYTH. Mgr. s P) CW. SMITH, &Peniy Work & speciaity. 14 and 15 Washinston st. Telephons Main 5641 FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & CO., &P, Paaie ™ WILLAMETTE *U 4P omey st F. C. FUGHES. S‘l’;TiONE’Q AND PRINTER. Telegrapnic PARTRIDG 306 California Codes. street. WHITE ASH STEAM COAL, Y155, 2% DIAMOND COAL MINING CU.. at its GREEN HIVER COLLIERIES, is the Best Coal In the market Office and Yards—50 Main street. PRINTINL PRINTER, 511 Sansome st.. 8. F. MINED BY | AMUSEMENTS. BESREAR - SUE] PICTURESQUE PRODUCTION Of Bret Harte's Beautiful Story of the Early Days of California. SEATS—15¢, 25¢, 85¢, 50c. EXTRA MATINEE TO-MORROW, TUESDAY, DEWEY DAY. fCHUTEgAND Z00 | EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. | MABEL LE CLAIR, THE ) MAITLAND, ALICE > NPORT SISTERS, DAVIS AND HEARD, NEW MOV- FAIRBANK BROS. L , EVA | Amateur Night, Thursday, | (Cakewalk Night, Saturday. | Order Seats by Phone Park 23. FISCHER'S CONCERT HOUSE, 122-124 O'FARRELL STREET. E. A. Fischer, Prop.; George Mooser, Mgr. GREAT LOMBARDI OPERA QUARTETTE. | “LA TRAVIATA” (Camille.) 1e——ADMISSION—100 Hite sued | s come to an end | woman employed as | made him a m naire. he were on intimate terms for s the testimony showed. s visits to San Franelsco | & DL OGO GOV OO0 GOOTI DOOUD EMBEZZLER INGERSOLL CAUGHT IN THIS CITY The Defaulting Treasurer of Tompkins County, N. Y., Locked Up in the City Prison. it | | é : R AR an el 2 S SRCRY SICRE SRS S I SEOR S A S 2 R e e e e 2 CHARLES INGERSOLL, THE EMBEZZLER: L e ] D R R S o B 3 /S HARLES INGERSOLL, the ab- dropped in the street. He was arrested { conning T of Tompkins | and taken back to llhnc:ni, Where he was N o s arres charged with forgery and embezzlement \_y Count w2 a a.‘rf;(ft.irntv He pleaded guilty to the charge of em dy and Poll ts vesterday | pezzlement, but not guilty to the charge Jetective Ross Whittaker | of forgery,' which argse from the alleged ki ts tha ity t the | manipulation of his books. He was re- Cival Of b officer ir 4 Y., | leased on §10.000 bonds about three weeks With the papers for his extradition. He |50 and again fled, coming direct to this 5 t He was located in a house on Eddy accused of embezzling $15,000 belonging 'r Polk, two or three days ago tendent Vannatta of the Pink- a prominent politician in who wired the fact to the ble were in Ithaca and dition proceedin: mortgaged money He says he took the to tide over a temporary financial ich d over $6000 deposited in bank. embarrassment and if he ha ¢ bee, tween the c y and his other creditors friends he would not have been compelled for possession of this money. After his | to take refuge in flight. He Is extremely disappearance eve ing bDelonging to nervous and says he has been almost him was sold by his creditors. % razy since December. All the money he _Ingersoll w n Iola, Kans., | took with him when he fled in December last_ month letter " written | was $255. When searched at .the City to him by er, which he had ' Prison he had $1 50 In his pockets. ! SHAWS STILL SAFE . {g!‘l[’xg with them are a large number of IN THE MOUNTAINS The summit of Mount Brandon, where the Shaws are defying the county, is cov- gred with snow. This cireumstarice 5 3 nterfered seriously with the work of th Hounds Thrown Off the Trail by the | dogs. Late yesterday afternoon a muf(‘ picked up the traril and were leading traight up through a ravine when a Melted Snow. h of melting snow and water in the of a brook confused the dogs, and no | Presence of Quantities of Half- amount of urging could induce them to re- Spectal Dispatch to The or the third time | sume the chase. Vermont began, The crowd began to gather last Friday, hounds and the 'a few hours after the shooting of the Bintdrs iwene 4 -d by Dunston , deputy sheriff. All through that day, yes- terday and to-day the man hunt has been continued with increasing vigor. The search to-day almost proved the death of and Frank Shaw, escaped from the count and son, who jail near Pitts- field. Late to-night, after one of the most | Sheriff Chapman of Woodstock, who was exciting day e police annals of New | thrown from his horse during a_mad England, Thaddeus M. Chapman | scramble down a ravine, and was badly admitted that the chances for the capture | hurt about the head and shoulders. of the Shaws in t re slight, and | ————— ing dogs are thirst- blood hundreds of ba »f Brandon Moun- in e on the summit a native of New York and served with distinction in the clvil war. He was bre- most of them an shot at the sed convicts, and co-oper- | Treas: OPEN SAN FRANCISCO TO CHICAGO Santa Fe Route The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Kailway System begs to announce the completion of its railway from San Francisco to Chicago—2550 miles. - It is the only railway which owns and controls its track from the Pacific Ocean to Lake Michigan. It proposes to furnish prompt and satisfactory service, and it hopes to reccive a generous proportion of the public patronage May 1st freight will be handled regularly to and from the East and all points in the San Joaquin Vailey and Southern California. Freight Depot: Corner Spear and Harrison Streets. The date for inaugurating passenger train service will be announced later. JOHN J. BYRNE, | EDWAGD CHAMBERS, General Passenger /Agznt, General Freight Agent, Lines west of Albuquerque. W. A, BiSSELL, Assistant Traffic Manager, Santa Fe System. O R T R e Y T G NI S o ... Tompkins County and was four times in | New York office of the asency. The Pink ] County a1 S o reae. | ertons then communicated with — Sheriff | n elected to the office of Treas- | geaman of Tompkins County and he wired h term being for three years. He f Sullivan to arrest Ingersoll and an r for the fourth | officer would be sent on at once with the ard it was dis- | papers for his extradition. Cap was wrong with | mour detailed Whittaker on the ¢ on December 12 the arrest followed Docember 12| Ingersoll, who is 4 man 57 years of age, ere admits his ide and says he is willing wbout $15,000. He | to return without the necessity of extris it is proba will make the way fnto New ¥ Py General Rutherford Dead. officers almost able-bodied | WASHINGTON, April 20.—General Allen | male population of Wood- | Rutherford, clerk of the Maryland Court stock and Middlebury have joined in the | of Appeals, died here vesterday of con- grim sport. The father and son for wWhose | sumption, aged about 80 years. He was tain, which connects with New York State by a number of imp: b All | veted brigadier general of volunteers for about_the base of the mountain cor- | gallantry. During Ceneral Grant's ad- | don of me a ministration he was Third Auditor of the OPENING O THERUSH 10 CAPE HOME Steamer Jeanie Will Be Laden With Passengers and Freight. e Thousands of People Waiting for Ac- comodations and but Few Tick- ets Are Unsold for Vessels Sailing in May. FEIRRD SEATTLE, Wash., April 20.—The formal rush to the gold fields of Cape Nome will be inaugurated to-morrow, when the steamer Jeanie of the Pacific Steam Whal- ing Company, the first steamer to start on the trip this year, is scheduled to sail, from San Francisco. This vessel will take eighty passengers and 400 tons of freight the first to reach Nome when the ob- structing ice has broken up. been arriving here by the hundreds to get ready to make the northward trip, and have filled all the hotels to such an extent that it has been difficult for translent travelers to get accommodations. The steamship offices have been crowded with applicants for berths and freight room, and many of the companies have been re- fusing nassengers for several weeks. It is more than 200 tickets available on all the steamers that are scheduled to leave here in May, and most of the freight room has been sold. This means that all those wish- ing to go to Nome, except those who se- cure the few berths left, raust wait until the June sailings, unless they embark on sailing craft, which are leaving this port at the rate of two a day and have been doing so for the last week. Twenty-five steamships are scheduled to leave here for Nome in May, two prom- ising to get away tne 1st, seven on_the 10th, three on the 15th, one on the 17th, two on the 15th, five on the 20th, one on the 24th, two on the 25th, one on the 30th and one on the 3ist. The vessels to sail on the 20th have booked 1675 passengers and 4300 tons of general merchandise. This will probably be the liveliest day of the year, as several that ‘day for Skaguay The most conservative estimates of the traffic to Nome this year, based on actual returns, show that 583 persons have al- ready engaged passage for the first sa ings of the twent and that these vi for 25,230 tons goes. Taking the av per passenger and $40 | and 1t is seen that the steamships | get a total gross revenue during the mext | month of §1 0. teen of the v 1 ve steamships, els state that they intend to make four trips each to Nome during the season, five will make three trips each and the remaining six one trip each. The net registered tonnage of the steamers to ail next month s 25,625 tons, or a quarter of the entire tonnage departing last year. The value of the fr e for the May saill estimated at $100 a ton, which is a conservative figure, will be $2,562,500. B’NAI B'RITH GRAND LODGE IN SESSION Sixteen Proxy Delegates Denied the Right to Vote in the Con- vention. CHICAGO, April xteen delegates to the seventh general convention of the Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of | B'nai B'rith, which held its first session at the Auditorium to-day, were the right to vote in the deliberations of | that body, though the privilege of the floor was given to them. [The declston was arrived at after a spirited discussion of the question, after the com credentials reported that the lodges in Ger: 1 had not be | elected, required by the con: { tion of 't nizi The majorit the delegatesswere Proxy representat All the dele who have been prever ed from v are from the Unit States, s t them living in Denve isco. 1t appears that th 1tes appointed to the pr the lodges in the eign countries named, with the exceptic of one—Siegmund Borgel of Berlin—and proxy delegates were selected from the lodg s country without the formal ity ction. d San Fra were no delez ent convention £ Victor Abraham of Cincinnati was elect- an el | ea chairman. Among_the vice presidents named was Jacob Greenebaum of San Francisco. A message from the president of the executive committee, Julius Bien, dwelt at length on the past work of the organization. The conventlon will revise the laws and pass legislation for the va- rious subordinate lodges. President Bien | occupied the ¢ FOOTPADS AT WORK IN SAN RAFAEL Nathan Strauss Attacked and Robbed by Two Masked Men on Mis- sion Street. Special Diepatch to The Call. SAN RAFAEL, April 20.—Nathan Strauss, a prominent young society man | of this place, had an exciting adventure his presence of mind, might have resulted | aore seriously than it did. Strauss was on his way to his home on | Mission street and was within a block of | his house when two masked men stepped { from behind a_tree and called on him to throw up his hands. Instead of obeying Strauss gave one of the men a stiff uper- cut. He was outmatched, however, for | the footpad struck him a violent blow on the back of the head, knocking him down. Strauss did not comé to_himself till some | hours later, when he found his money | gone and a severe contusion on the bacl 8¢ his scalp. No clew has vet been ob- talned to the cowardly assailants of Strauss, but the authorities are hopeful of apprehending the miscreants In a few days. —_—————— FIRE IN LOS GATOS. | Portion of the Masonic Block Com- | pletely Ruined. | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS GATOS, April 20.—Fire was discov- ered in the store of F. A. Bogart on the first floor of the Masonic block a little after noon to-day and before the Fire De- partment arrived had swept up to the sec- ond story, where the Masonic lodgerooms are located. All the archives and para- the Masonic and Eastern prornate, ot e, Masorle, Shd BAFIETE otal wreck. o e Ntock of hardware of Mr. Bogart is almost a total loss from fire and water, and the Farmers' Union, next door, suf- fered severely from water. The buildin is owned by the Farmers' Union Stocl Company and was fully insured, as was the stock in both stores and the para- phernalia of both lodges. e REV. J. S. EASTMAN DEAD. Was Formerly Pastor of Franklin- Street Presbyterian Church. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN LUIS OBISPO, April 20.—Rev. J. S. Eastman, for several years pastor of the Presbyterian church of this city, died t about noon to-day. ?or from 1882 to 1885 of the Franklin-street (formerly Larkin _street) Church in San Francisco. He was 54 years_of age and a native of Indiana. Rev. R. S. Eastman, while occupyin father's pulpit, was called to the bedside of the dying pastor just before his death. Increased Output. During the past year the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n, St. Louls, U. §. A., reports a gain, their bottled beers alone having ex- | ceeded thirty Jfl' cent increase over the year wious. E. G. Lyons Co.. Wholesale Dealers, | Ban Francieco, Cal > providing she arrives in the meantime | | that South Carolina should in convention | impose the veto of the State upon the re- from this port, and expects to be one of | For the past several weeks people have | conservatively stated that there are mno | vessels will also leave | The operators of four- | denied | with footpads last evening, which, but for | § Deceased was pas- | Presbyterian | his | V. PARTIES DURING THE JACK- SON PERIOD. (Continued.) BY JESSE MACY, LL. D. Nullification. The spirit of the angry Southerners in view of the passage of the tariff of 1528 | was set forth by Calhoun in the Exposi- tion and Protest of December of the same vear. This paper declared that the sov- | ereignty of the States was clearly estab- | lished by constitutiongl precedents, and that the constitutional relation of the | States to the Federal Government plainl¥ | implied “a veto or control on the action | of the general Government.” It suggested | cent action of the central Government and “decide in what manner the tariff act| ought to be declared null and void.” Noth- | ing followed at once upon the announce- | ment of this bold proposition. A President | chosen by the Southern States was about | to enter upon the duties of his office. It seemed wise to wait and see what he | would do for his outraged friends. | It was soon clear that President Jackson would brook no infringement upon the rights and powers of the Government of | which he was the head. Personal ill feel- | ing between Jackson and Calhoun helped | R e e R S i o o e o ] | | & I i ®| Y * | B¢ d e b+ | * - 3 : 1 IR 3 >1 [$ )| s b * . 34 | * & 1 ‘ R 3 ¢ WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON. ; | @ R e e e e - I to embitter the political quarrel. Tn No- vember, 1832, the State convention was | held and South Carolina de d to | 1f acts of 1528 and 1832 null and void | forbade the payment of the duties. This forced such an issue as delighted the Pres- ident’s soldierly temper. He replied with | a proclamation declaring, “The laws of ‘xhe United States must be executed,” and | denounced disunion armed force as treason. Land‘apd naval forces were d | patched to Charleston, and the cu ties, | vigor of Jac truck a pepul than ever the nation's »f the nullifiers met a operation of and after the tariff act on episode rupture in the Democ and his_sympathizers e Whigs. Oppo: 8 various Sout n States contribute building up of the Whig party throughout the South. Jackson and fhe Bank. It has been characteristic of American | democracy to look with suspicion upon the son's treatment of null r chord and mad: ywer of mor ither in t ndividuals orporated i Jackson popu zainst the and his first annu question of its consti | pediency, and suggested an | on by Coi of the granting of a | new charter wh should be asked for. | The constitutionality of the bank had been repeatedly affirmed by the highest judicial authority in the land, ile the present charter would not expire until| Professor Sumner te us that the bank was now under most wise and care- | ful management and in_excellent condi- tion. The country was tranquil and pros- | | perous and the currency was good. All this was upset by the Presideny’s me ge. The currency became disordered | and the banks were troubled. while the | general feeling was one of uncerta nd uneasine he vague recommendation by the President of a bank “founded on the credit of the Government and i enues” as a substitute for that devi the great Federalist financler seemed to point toward dangerous paper money schemes. ST Congress was asked to recharter the bank, and the bill passed _both Houses. it was promptly vetoed by the President, and the National Republicans were not strong enough to carry it over the veto. The question was now made a party issue. Professor Sumner says of the President’s supporters: “The bank nuestion one of the great questions | through which Jackson’s popularity and | his will hammered them into a solid party | phalanx.” The campaign of 1832 = was | | fought for “the bank or Jackson,” and | Jackson won by an overwhelming major- ity over Clay. Henceforth he could not | but feel that in fighting the bank, as In | jutting down nullification, he was carry- [ag out the wishes of the people. One of the principal functions of the bank was the furnishing of facilities to | the Government for collecting and pay- ing out its revenues without expense to | ftself. It was an arrangement not only | economieal for the administration but ad- Vantageous to the bank and to the peo- ple, as it kept in circulation the money paid into the national treasury. But it was true, as its enemies asserted, that it gave the bank great political power; that it might use its great sums of money for influencing elections. It might favor the friends of the Government and oppress its enemies. There seems to be no room for doubt that in the election of 1332 the bank dia so use its financial power. Jackson had always regarded it as a strong agent in the hands of his opponents. A clause in_the charter permitted the Secretary of the Treasury to deposit the revenues in other banks at his discretion, Jackson having by repeated removals and w appointments secured a pllant Secre- Tary “WWho would do his vidding, caused the deposits to be gradually with- drawn ard_placed with certain banks in the different States, which were called the *“pet banks.” The national bank, in consequence, became seri- ously embarrassed, and was forced to stringent measures to protect its credit. Loans were called in, and great scarcity of money resuited. Friends of the bank in Congress were much exasperated. Web- | ster and Clay succeeded In getting a vote | of censure upon the President passed | through the Senate. He replied with an | Arrogant assertion of his own right—to his own interpretation of the constitution. The unsettled condition of financial af- fairs, when the conservative infiuence of | the national bank having been destroyed there was nothing to check the wild spirit of speculation which overran the country, at lastalarmed the President. The national debt_had been paid, and even the reduced tariff of 1833 brought in annually many millions of surplus revenue. The Jackson | Demiocrats denied the constitutional power of the Federal Government to use | | the national funds for internal improve- | ments, declaring such undertakings to be- |long to the States alone, and the Pres | dent vetoed or “pocketed” bills for such | purposes. What should be done with the | money which continued to pour into the treasury ? 3 According to a plari proposed by Cal- houn it was finally decided to loan the surplus without interest to the several | States In proportion to their Congres- sional representation. Nothing more was needed to set the States off upon a course of extravagant expenditures. The fever for speculation became an epidemic. | Banks had multlplied inordinately through the country, all eager to sh: In the favors bestowed upom the “peis The country was flooded with ‘“ra; | money,” cheap and abundant. One ol | of the spoils system, | Captain Gillin of | the AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES. Copyright, 18900, by Seymour Eaton. Jackson's last official acts was the fssu- ing of the “specie circular,” by which he vainly hoped to retrieve the tinancial dis- aster which had befallen the nation. This provided that only goid and silver and s of specie-paying banks should be ved for public lands. The effect was almost instantaneo came scarce an oney at once be- st enormously high and t lowed tit sis of business and seric interruption to the ment of the deve, ss Jackson's attitude country, Neverth toward the bank did on the whole com- mand the popular approval and continued to do so, and so deeply did he impress upon the Democratic party his hestility to a national bank of the sort which & had overthrown that opposition to such institutions has become a permanent party ‘he National Republi- cans were forced to bear the odium of tr evils resulting from the struggle with th bank and never again dared to §o into a campaign on that issue Abolitionism. Jackson's time witnessed the rise of a new movement for the destruction of sla- very. After the adoption of the Missourt compromi 0 the opposition to sla- v for more than a ted up with new Abolition soc there had been from early colonial . Slavery was deprecated and apolo- Zed for by the thoughtful and humane vigor and determ orth and nd nearly all looked for its ult appearance through dual emancipation. It was thus dying out in the North, slowly indeed, for as late as 1540 a few siaves were still to be Hampshire, Northern ind is, tes. in_Connecticut, New Wisco and other In 1 am Lloyd G printer in itimore, p id for immediate abol of every effort to bring iless of the interests or it about, re- wishes of the slave owners. This has kened to the hurling of a firebrand into a pow- der magazi Public feeling from one end of the country to the ot re. Garr f e Liberator in B n Janua: ywing_year New to_labor e abolition of me in the British stimulated inter United States. plied _rapidl subjeet in th d earnest men Ay orthe y into the erus: ; further tolerance they led as a national sin. But slavery I now be so thoroughly intrenched and so interwe istrial ax ancipation ag lently aggressive atti- toward their peculiar do- n by new school of 1 the se indig- out th r two points this 1 of p holding inflam- master ver such appealed " by J sympathy - Presid ter a law prohibf the malils o South. Calh with the could not empt to es- tablish a eensorship of the press in the interest of slavery come to naught, but a bill was p d the same year forbid- ding postmasters uniawfully to retain any mailed letter or parcel “with intent to - and delivery of the n and Arkansas entered John Quiney admission ate of Arkansas was implied in the provisions of the M souri comprom and no serfous opposi- tion could be made. Summary. Glancing swiftly over this momentous , We see “popular sovereignty’ domi- nant in the person of the President, and Congress subordinate, while the Demo= cratic party is consolidated as never be- fore. We recognize henceforth as Demo- cratic principies opposition to national banks, to al improvements and to protection ational poljcy: while the party is united in its adoption n its support of the | veto pow h Jackson freely used throughout his “reign’” as President had never used it before, and united in gen- eral in its etrict construction views of constitutional questions, though deter- mined in resisting State assaults upon Federal rights. Charged With Vagrancy. The opening of Glen Park yesterday af- forded the bunko steerers an opportunity to ply their trade, but their operations were cut short by the prompt action of the Seventeenth-street police station. With the arrival of the improvement clubs at the park came also about a dozen of the sure-thing frater- nity, among them_ being Edward Gray and James Wilson, known to the police as “Golden brothers.” They were recog- nized by Detectives Fitzgerald and Gra- ham and Sergeant Shaw, and Captain Gil- len ordered their immediately arrest on the charge of vagrancy. A dogen more of the fraternity were brought before Cap- tain Gillen, who informed them that their absence would be appreciated. They left on the first city-bound car. Gray and Wilson were bailed out. FRESH AND NEW! NEW STORE. NEW GOODS, EVERYTHING NEW! O CONNOR L BROS. ~ rocerd 122-124 NINTH STREET, Have Opened ANOTHER STORE at 1226 SIXTH ST. Compare Our Prices With and Be Convinced. 20 pounds Best Granulated Sugar Best Flour. any brand you wish. Best Washington or Oregon Flour.. Large _box Soda Ci ’ Best rn Sugar. Our Competitors’ ed. 25 pound Pickles, half-gallon or chow. A Eastern Oil, od Tomatoes, per c Macaroni and Vermicell & pounds Ri & pounds Fre: Corn, 3 heese, per pow Rolled Whes TEAS A Chotee Family Mixed Tea, per pound Good English Breakfast, Oolong or ored . Best Java Ct 25 Pest Costa Rica Coffee, per pou 200 Faney Costa Rica Coffee. per pou: 150 Mixed Coffee, 3 pounds ... 28e SCLALTIES—Best Old Kentucky per _gallon, Good Nine-year-oid Port or Sherry, per gailon, $1. Best Zinfandel Claret, per gallon. 33e. REMEMBER THE STORES. Satisfaction and Promptness Ninth Street—Telephone South 636 Sixth Street—Telephone South 2. Good Family LIQUOR _SF Rourbon W hisky. Whisky. per_gallon,

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