The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 2, 1900, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1900. BLUEJACKET FORCE ARRIVES AT THE CHINESE CAPITAL Twenty-Three Foreign can Warships Now in the Harbor of Taku. WRPPUPAIRP AP PEOUP DD R SOC S B e S0 SPUp DI APt SE S 88 S s e T e e e PEPDIEODI IO EIHIGIIIDIPIOOIIDO DeDOe@ beD eD se PebeDebebeIeDE “ei e WITH A NEW KIND OF “BOXERS.” e = The detachment of the rnational blue- Peking. warships Boxers T give the text of a order sent to Governdr Yuan, in, mer secr Shantung: In t G reply to. th < that he has found it necessary to e ress the patriotic Boxer Soclety with a strong heavy hand, we remark that it ‘cannot be ese and one 1 n In pected that such simple people can. know that b Th- Stindiais he ey have 4 nything am £ a strong rews the Rus ns have hand is i1 4 there will be a permanent | eir warships ps from ige against the Governor. We assure the | r. with equipment. Fourteen tif re trouble arises he him- nsequences. Let the good alt with in a merciful and gener- to the benefit of all. Arthur. »ps are held in read- i The streets were ; sians as well as the | ch were forbidden to land Wednes- | b he Tsung Li Yamen has apolo aining the mistake.” NGTON, June 1—Minister Con- | ger at Peking reports to the State Depart- | gave | mong the great pow = colossal superiority at Tak The triple ce ted action by Europe to pro- interests ation rd publishes the following ment to-day that the arrival of 350 guards . dated April 29: As a sam- for the legations of Russia, France, Great | Chinese Government's treat- Britain, and the l'nltedl Japan vernor of Shantung, who | * lral on board the Newark, | assumed that t and Ameri- B R S R R R I § & * e ~—Pjoneer Press, D POEDEDISDEDODEOG-DPHHD i e e ete@® States. has ~had the effect of improvin, the. :situation says that Peking i the Boxers are surrounding countr: Ainl: ic_circles “here s ity on is nothing more vart of a. well-conceived plan by nd -or: one of the great BEuropean | < to secure a permanent lodgment in Peking and to seize a position giving it full ¢ontrol of the great Peiho River, the approach to the Chinese capital. It is fur- her intimated that the plan has proved bortive, owiiig to the alertness of the other European powers represented in Chinese waters, but particularly to the readiness of ‘the United States Minister, | Mr. Conger, and the Amer n rear admi- | ‘gave the movement an u: tional aspect, and so tended to prevent the particular nation concerned from ag- grandizing itgelf at the expense of the in- terests of other nations. Therefore it he excitement will rapidly abate, and the Boxers will disperse, tem- porarily, at least. | SAN FRANCISCO FREE FROM ALL DANGER OF CONTAGION Continued From Page One. wn 4 ring the quarantine. It was es- | mission was refused, notwithstanding 1 40 Chinese persons would | lh.’i;l }{l)rfiklx'lllshuryh had lbeendlrlx]ocdulated Jire assistance, a1 the rete of 2 eents | With Haffkine prophylactic, and had com- e e e of & onts | plied with all the other conditions im- per Ga une sta at there | ;oced by the board. The letter continues: section of charter which au- e We understood at the close of the meeting of ©d the board to make expenditures | the Board of Health on Thursday afternoon for the food supply. This view was not | that Dr. Pillsbury would be given every facil- @ontested by the various counsel present, | ity to Vieit suspected cases of plague in the B stentroll the Tatiati strict and to attend all autopsies held under L . . "% | the auspices of the Board of Health: also to n to the Board of Supervis- | make bacteriological examinations and obser- it to take steps to meet | vations in connection with the bacteriologist of your board and in the laboratory in which his bacteriological work is carried on. If this | was not the understanding of your honorable board at that time we were greatly mistaken, | and if any reason for changing the course of the board with respect to the matter arose after adjournment we would be pleased to be advised of such change and the reason for it, so that we may meet whatever new conditions the Dboard hae decided to impose upon representa- tives of our clients in: the work for which Dr. thereby coufined withi rict more than are I m foed upon their daily wages. Nearly all of these Deopie | piiotory g o antine, . oVi® | pilistury was employed. 1If. as we believe, Dr. B ot el orom every | Pillsbury’s exclusion from the quarafitined dis- gl 17 oF them are alreagbort: nd | trict this afterncon was due to & mistake, we 'l g d B Bty trdeieaty Trauted | ez your honorable body to take immediate ac- | o oo On their behalf ang | tion to give him access to the district .and g e and | cvery factiity consistent with your pubiic func. | 4 to the Board of . to have provision made titute people during the the guara We' are in- ons and tions and duties to make his invest] 2xaminations. Dr. O'Brien explained that he had re- t he finds no | fused to permit Pillsbury to pass the | of the city and county | lines because he had understood. that Dr, T which the Board of | Pillsbury had been given authority . to vision for feeding the pec- | represent the Six Companies -only at the | 4. hoidiag that the power | zutopsies performed on dead Chinese. The er entirely 1o your hon- | bourd informed Dr. O’'Brien -thbat -Dr. | Pillsbury had been ‘accorded the: privilege | of ajso attending sick Chinese now in the quarantined district, and the Health Offi- cer was directed to grant Dr. Pillsbury a permit to enter the lines for that pur- pose. Health Officer O'Brien was directed to notify Postmester Montague that the let- ter-carriers working in the quarantined district of this city must be inoculated with the proph[lucuc against plague, if it is necessary for them to continue work in the district. AUTHORITIES OF EUREKA MODIFY THEIR ACTION Drastic Measures Are Rouhdly Con- demned by the-Angry People of the Northern City. EUREKA, June 1.—The City Board of Health met last evening after attending the Chamber of Commerce meeting and modified the prohibitory quarantine re- strictions passed the night before. The action is contained in the following reso- lution, which was u’xu.nimuly adopted e sde at :;:qmn\ ed district a proper supply of wh Some food. The estimates which we have r. Cetved place the number of people in the quar- antined district already requiring such assis:- ence at about 4000, In view of the limited 3.cans pf most of the other residents it ‘s probable that the number of indigent persons wil) in a shor. time be increased to $000 or more_ i the quarantine should continue for any considerabie length of time. The smaliest es- timated cost per day for feeding these indig=nt ¥ is 25 cents per ca) involving, accord- ing to our information. a probable expense of Letween §1600 d $2000 per day during the 0d of the quarantine. A copy of this letter was sent to Mayor Phelan, with 2 request that he call a spe- cial meeting of the Beard of Supervisors 1o make provision for the pressing needs of the indigent people now suffering for inck of food in the quarantined-district. The attentlion of the Board was also cal to the fact that Dr. E. 8. Pillsbury, the hacteriologist emploved by the Ch nese Six Companies, bad been den Taission to the quarantined district, -and was refused permission to enter the dis- trict by Health Officer O'Brien. In a nication from the attorneys of the mpanies it i alleged that per- | undoubtedly: will be by the board: “Resolved, That all vessels arriving here from San Francisco after this date shall be detained in the bay suf- ficiently long enough ta be boarded by the health officer, and if they show a clean bill of heaith that theéy be not quaran- tined, and that a request be sent to the | several steamship companies that they {61!150 to carry Chinese or Japanese pas- s s port.” Will be detatned in the | only lon,; £no o | satisfy the health officer that fhes poi | sess the proper health cn-dmuaf and will then be allowed to dock at the wharve: Just before the adjournment a motion was | passed to inform the steamshif, companies that the board had reconsidered its action had modified its quarantine restrictions. and that quarantine regulations were only a bugaboo, as there is no suspicion of the Bowra resciiding ith Focmes ason oot its former ge%ie:al apprio\'al hex;e. M bis eveniug a. citizens' meet a held in the Chamber of Commer’c%‘ro;’x:i to protest against the action of the city | Board of Health in placing quarantine re- strictions on_vessels a.rrfirmc from San Francisco. The meeting was largely at- tended and there was a consensus of opin- fon that the action was_hasty and i advised, as there are no Chinese here and as no s‘milar action had been: taken by any ports on the coast. The telegrams from the merchants of Ferndale and Ar- cata, entering protest, were read. The Board of Health was invited to.the meet- ing ‘and responded. - The members said that. the action takem had been precau- tionary. One advanced the reason that the San Prancisco Board of Supervisors had quarantined Chinatown; another de- clared that rats'were the meaas of con- veving the plague and they sald they were afraid that rats would go from-Chinatown to the water front; board vessels and car- Ty the plague here. - Business men entered their protest against -restrictions, and many addresses were made. After a reso- lution urging: the Board of Health to re- consider its acti, was adopted the meet- ing adjourned and the Board of Health went .into session. The action taken is disapproved generally, as it threatens the cessation of commerce between the two ports, and Eureka is dependent upon the metropolis for supplies and for the ship- ment out of port of large quantities of butter. There is no - suspicion .of the plague here. . MILITARY SURGEONS. San Francisco May Be Namied as the Next Meeting Place. NEW YORK, June 1L—At to-day's ses- sion of the military surgeons-the follow- ing officers were placed in nomination and confirmed at the sas- sion to-morrow: . For ident, Brigadier General A. J. Stone, Minnesota; first vice gmdzm. John C. Wise, W.-Ihlnf(on D. .; seécond vice president, Brigadier Gen- eral J. A, Calef, Connecticut; seéref % Lieutenant Colonel Charles Adams, I1ii- treasurer, Lieutenant Herbert A. nois; Arnold. Penn: ia. “The time an pfi’ee-vf the next meeting rrow, and . the cholce -, Francis and ° wilf be selected to-mo will lie between ‘San- g il:fi‘h with the chances in favor of the er. £ i ‘end the woman obje | at a distance not to exceed 150 ¥ | Clute.. | on ¢ MURDERE AT HEHT 1 * LOWELY SPT Lifeless Body of Mrs. Naomi Moss Found in a Port- land Park. Was Last Seen in Company of Her Husband and It Is Believed He Fired the Fatal Shot. AT A PORTLAND, June 1.—Mrs. Naomi Moss, wife of Riley M. Moss, was shot through the heart and Ikilled near Willamette | | Heights Park, 1 | o'clock. Suspicion rests upon the woman's last night, at about 10 husband and jealousy is believed to have been the motive. Officers are looking for Moss, but at a late hour to-night he had not been arrested. Moss was seen in this city this morning about 9 o'clock and it is probable that he is in hiding here. Moss and her husband rode to the scene of the tragedy on a street car, of which C. H. Knudson was conductor. The couple hoarded the car at First and Washington streets about 9 p. m. “I remember the coupie well,” said Knudson. “They boarded the car on When we got to the ‘Washington street, 3 cted to leaving the car. The man very gruffly ordered her to get out. The couple left the car and sat down onga bench. Shortly before it w time to/eave I looked out and they had disappeared.” Henry Knudson, conductor of the next car to reach the Hefghts, said: 9:30 1 heard two pistol fired at an interval of about four seconds, apparently vards from where the car was standing. I heard loud talking, but could not . distinguish what was said. Upon reaching the door I plainly heard the screams of a woman shouting ‘Murder!” ‘H 1 telephoned to the- police statfon and soon two offi- | | cers s | ground searching for evidences of a trag- | d and several clvil were on the e search was kept up for two hours and finally abandoned, the night being ark. ark. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Carter, who reside near the scene of the tragedy, discovered the body of the murdered woman.about 5 o'clock this morning. e rs. Moss' maiden name was Naomi She was the daughter of Charles Ciute, a piloneer newspaper man of Port- land. ried Riley L. Moss in this city. The couple moved to Tacoma, where they re-| sided until two weeks ago, when Mrs. Moss came home, it being understood that Moss was in no-condition to support her. Moss arrived in Portland. Wednesdz esterday. was in_the company of hi: wife nearly all day. Friends of Mrs. Mos. repeatedly warned her not to go out with feared that he might do her him, as the some Injury Moss is a native of Virginia and served with an Ohio - regiment in :the Spanish war. Since coming to the Pacific Coast and while residing in Tacoma he made an unsuccepsful attempt -to kill htmiself. HASTEN TO THE DEFENSE OF MAJOR !OHN G. DAVIS: Secretary Root and General Ludlow Declare, Charges Against the Officer Were Unfounded. Special Dispateh. to The Call. WASHINGTON, June 1.—Official circles outside of the War Department and mem- bers of Congress were paintully shocked to~day Dby the published - announcement that an officer of t#ie army had been charged with blackmailing business men in Havana, and that army autharities had tried to shield him from punishment. to prevent the scandal from” becoming pub-| pro- | lic. The sensation was the more nounced because the news followed so closely on the revelations of postal scan- dals in the island. Secretary Root has- tened tc G. Davis, brigade surgeon, who had béen neral Ludiow's staff as sanitary in- had been - engaged in corrupt dealings, had been brought to the at- tention of the military authorities and had heen investigated and: found to be groundless, Gener: to the same effect. He said that; although the rumors were publicly circulated, titey would be privately = investigated. Army officers say Government, in justice to the a ed officer, should have ' made the inquiry public, so as.to have-effectuall spector, Lecy i | cleared him from any charge:of Wwrong- doing in Havana. General Ludlow sees in the: attacks made upon the officer ‘a desire on the part of certain persozns in Havana whom the officer offended to obtain revenge. He safd the officer was unpopular in Ha- vana because he relentlessly earried out the orders given him and his rigid en- forcement of the sanitary rules prescribed by General Ludlow and Colonel Black, engineer officers in Havana, incurred for him the ill will of many persons of prom- inence, who, “with their perverted views of public morality immediately declared | that the officer was acting from corrupt motives."” CONSUMPTIVE TEACHERS WILL BE DISCHARGED School Board of Los Angeles to Fol- low the Precedent Set in Other Cities. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, June 1—In keeping with the policies adopted by the school boards of Arizona and Eastern cities, by which teachers afflicted with tuberculosis shall be excluded from the schoolrooms, the Los Angeles Board of Education has set in operation the same methods. For several weeks the teachers have been quietly watched to discover whether any are afflicted. It transpired to-day that two teachers are suspected. Should these conclusions prove correct they will be honorably discharged. 'his determination has created a de- cided sensation, but as Charles Cassat Davis, president of the board, and W. J. ‘Washburn of the teachers’ committee fa- vor this method, the teachers, however much they may oppose the matter, will be gompelle to submit, Parents are t!l‘n e earty sympathy with the action of board. A CANCER RASH AT NEWPORT. Three Deaths Occur Within One Week From the Disease. NEWPORT, Vt., June L—An epidemic of: black cancer rash prevails at West Derby, a suburb of Newport. Three deaths have occurred within a week. The victims had beeén i1l but two: days when ‘fatal symptoms appeared. About. fifty houses have been quarantined, the schools have been closed and everything possible is be- ing done to prevent further spread of the disease. i Auditor Morrison Resigns. Special Dispatch €o - The. Call: SAN JOSE, June 1—Thomas F. Morri- son, who was appointed County Auditor a year ago to m? the vacancy caused by the death of Alcilde Veuve, has resigned his office and left for Manila to-day on the transport Sherman. Several months ‘ago Morrison was appointed auditor in the Postal Department -of the Phili, glne TIs- lands. His departure. was sudden and none but his closest friends. knew of. it. Morrison did not wait for his successor to be appointed, but left his resignation in the hands ‘of his deputy. An Auditor to serve until the next general election will beé appeinted by the Supervisors Monda: i patantls oo 2 Cut His Throat.. “‘About | About seven months ago she mar- v that rumors that Major John | Ludlow gave out a.statement | CONFEDERIES SHOW _HHTRED OF THE YA Uproar Follows Proposal to Send Greetings to the Northern Veterans. me General Gordon’s Gallant Words Quell the Storm and the Dissenters Put Aside Their Time-Worn Prejudices. e LOUISVILLE, June 1.—The tenth an- nual reunion of the United Confederate | Veterans adjourned sine die at 6 o'clock { to-night. The meeting of 1901 will be held |in Memphis. The annual parade of the | veterans was abandoned on account of the inclement weather. The morning session ended in a state of great excitement and confusion. The trouble arcse at the conclusion of the pre- sentation of-the report of the committee | on resolutions. A resolution had been in- | the convention of Confederates recognized | | with appreciation the language of Gen- | eral Daniel E. Sickles, the orator at the | | annual reunion of the Army of the Poto- mac at Fredericksburg, in which General | Sickles had: mentioned most kindly the men of the Confederacy, and the resolu- tion sald the Confederates reciprocated the feeling shown toward them by the men of the Army of the Potomac. | General Gordon put the question of the‘ adoption_ef the report. There was a chorus of * and when he called for | the vote ““The | ayes have After he had announced | the vote there came a few cries of “‘n General Gordon said: ‘I did not think.that there would be | any negative votes on such a question, | but ‘as there were some after I had de- | ciared the vote, 1 will now resubmit it.”” The author of the resolution, W. H. Bur- | ynn, ‘mz\ds' a strong plea for its adoption. | He sald that he had been present at the | meeting at Fredericksburg and had heard | the Kindly sentiments expressed by the | soldiers of the North, and he desired the passage of the resolution merely as a mat- | i ter of courtesy y: | Shephard (15‘ Richmond, the’ negative he said: i | __Colonel .J. H. | Va., secured the floor and sai T want no coquetting | Kees: who defeated us don’t accept anything from their hands. | Don’t accept anything from Union sol- | diers. Vote it down, comrades! Vote it down!" | Instantly there was. a terrific uproar. [ Dozens of delegates were on their feet de- manding recognition from the chair. Gen- eral Gordon finally. restored order, and in response to-a call for his opinion said: “]-trust the time will never come, while | I stand on Southern ground or among the chivalrous men of the South, when I will | refuse to send a kindly message to an en- | emy."” | Then, coming down to the front rail of | the platform, the generxl raised his voice | in_emphatic earnestncss, saying: ““I'know the.sender of this message. On | ‘fhe heights of Geftysburg he stood gap% Jantly in front o my lines, and it was my bullets that sent him to the rear with | & leg off. - For me, L-am going to recip- rocate the kindly message of the North- | ern soldiers.” it Wild cheers greeted. ‘the declaration. | General.Gordon yielded the: gavel to Gen- | ‘eral Cabell-of Texas, who made a short addtess”In . favor. of ‘the resolution. He |’put.-the question ‘fn the midst of. such | great confusion: .that. his voice . could scarcely beé heard. .It was adopted with a._roar of .assent. : Biscoe Hindman: of Lonisville was elect- | | e@ commander of the Department of Vir- | ginia, George B. Myers commander of the i epartment of Tennessee and B. H. Kirk | | ré-elected . ¢commander of the Transmiss- issippt Department. “AIRY FAIRY LILLIAN” SOON TO WED AGAIN Breaks a Theatrical Engagement to | Keep. One With Cupid and a Rich Widower. Spacial Dispatch to The Call BOSTON; June 1.—The Tremont Theater of this-city, which is.ran by John Schoef- fel, has been obliged to close its season a week in advance of the original date because Lillian Russell of Weber & Fields “Whirligig"” company has an appointment in New York rext Monday which she is determined to keep'.at gll hazards and in | spite of the combined protests and en- treaties of Mr. Schoeffel and the repre- seéntative of Weber & Flelds. Miss Russell's contract at the Tremont Theater, which was to run for another | 'week after Saturday night, was canceled | westerday. Mr. Schoeflel made a personal | (appsal to Miss' Russell, but the latter re- | | plied: wp“n's no use, John; I must be in New | | York Monday, and 1 am going."” | According to Miss Russell's friends in the company, she has been the recipient of marked attentions from a wealthy New | York capitalist who was made a widower | for a second time not long ago by an ac- cident. It-is whispered rather openly in | the company that Miss Russell's pressing engagement in New York next Monday is with this New York capitalist, who, it is said, has been particularly prodigal of his attentions lately. Miss Russell ad- mits that her contract in Boston ends to- morrow night. PROMINENT RAILWAY OFFICIAL PASSES AWAY Demise of S. H. H. Clark, Director of Missouri Pacific, Formerly Manager of Union Pacific. ST. LOUIS, June 1.—8. H. H. Clark, a director of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, its former vice president and general manager, first vice president of the Texas and Pacific and “the Interna- tional and Great Northern and formerly eneral manager of the Union Pacifi¢, ed to-day at Asheville, N. C. Mr. Clark had -been ailing for several years and since the reorganization of the Unjon Pa- cific road had remained in retirement at his residence in this CH?’. He was ad- vised to go to- Asheville early in the nging, but his relatives and friends felt that the end was near. e passed away in the presence of his wife and son. Mr. Clark was in his sixty-eighth Lea.r. OMAHA, Nebr., June 1.—S. H. H. Clark, formerly president of the Union Pacifi¢ | Railway, who died at Asheville, N. C., to- | day, will be buried at Omaha. _Elaborate | preparations for the tuneral will be made. . Clark began his service with the Union Pacific in 1867 and was promoted to the gufluon of general frei K( agent. In 1878 he was apointed Eers manager, a position he held until 1884. After an in- terval of six years he returned in 1890 and | was made president, a position he held until the close of the receivership in the spring ‘of 1898. Ruiz Hanged. | ALBUQUERQUE, N. Mex., June 1.— Joseph P. Ruiz, who shot into a group of small ® children and killed Patricio Channon here on May 28, 1898, was hanged to-day. He was pronounced dead in 23 minutes. Pimples Are the Danger Signsis That Cve Warning of Impure Blood. They show that the vital fluid is in bad condition-and that health is in danger of ‘wreck. A vast majority of the most seri- ous diseases, like scrofula, salt rheum, corporated in the repoit to the effect that | B s AVERIO ARRESTED FOR LUCCATELLI MURDER Captured by Officers in the Black Canyon, but edge of t . S . @ + @ ® * ® + + ® . ps . [ Special Dispatch to The Call. ANTA ROSA, June 1.—The shocking story of the murder of Joe Lucca- telli, the tanbark contractor, in lonely Mission Canyon, near Guerne- ville, early last week, seems likely to be unraveled after all. G. Baverlo, his partner, who will be implicated by the verdict of the Coroner’s jury, was arrested to-day in Black Canyon, near San Rafael, and brought here by Sherift Grace to an- swer to the charge of having made away wifh his late business associate. The story of the crime s a sensational one. Luccatelll, who was known around Guerneville as “Black Joe,” and Baverio were partners. The two men often had trouble. About ten days ago both men suddenly disappeared. Wednesday afternoon Frank Manticelli PPN S PSS SN SR SR S S S e e e o o 4 MURDER SUSPECT BAVERIO RESISTING ARREST. 1040000060003 00e>edsiededededressieied Denies Knowl- he Crime. L R e R R B e I N S R R Y jand Charles Walls of Mission Canyon, discovered the dead an | mutilated body of Luccatelli, buried be- neath a huge pile of brush and cordwood. The man's head had been split open, ap- Guerneville, while in parently with an ax, and the face was frightfully mutilated.” The condition of the body was sickening, and the horror of the disc v was intensified by the utter loneli of the hastily constructed tomb. News of the find was brought to Guerne- ville, and the Coroner’s jury summoned to handle the matter found that Luccatelli was murdered , under _circumstances strongly pointing to Baverio as the author of the crime. The arrest fo-day was made by Sheriff Taylor of Marin County a* the | request and as the result of a_description | sent out hy Sheriff Frank P. Grace. er when seen to-night denied ge of the crime and stated that ft his partner the latter was in | his usual health. Both Luccatelll and Ba- verio were will known, and the murder and_arrest naturally caused a sensation in Northern Sonoma. SHALLPOX CASEFOUND AT BEDBLUFF Patient Removed Outside the City and His Residence Quarantined. e RED BLUFF, June 1.—The rumor that | a case of smallpox had been found at Red Bluff has this morning been fully con- firmed by the Health Officer. The patient has been removed from town. The pa- tient's name is Brown. He is about twenty-four .vears of age, and for the past t’wo months has %heen employed in the Sierra Lumber Company's sash and factory. 909T Hias Taken sick Friday last, and last night his case showed evidence of being smallpox. He has been removed outside of town and placed in a tent. The McCarty house, where he has boarded, has been placed under quaran- tine, and every precaution will be taken to prevent the spread of the disease. The health officers state that titere will | probably be other cases among the em- | ployes in the Sierra Company's larmr&: ’bu! think that they can prevent it spread- ng. — BANDITS WILL CONFESS. Arizona Train-Robbers May Impli- cate Well-Known Citizens. Special Dispatch to The Call TUCSON, Ariz., June 1.—Word was re- ceived here from reliabie parties who have just been with the Arizona train-robbers, Salvord, Stiles and Bravo Juan, that they are ready to make a statement regarding the robbery. If they do there will be | some very semsational dvelopments, as | they say that a number of well-known persons are involved. including several officers of the law. They claim that the | piot that ended in’ their escape from the | Tombstone jail was originated and car- | ried through by a well-known ex-Arizona officer. The bandits have been out for several months in the vicinity of the mines and | ranches. They have several times made their appearance in small towns, but no effort bas been made to capture them. e | Directors Resign. | Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, June 1—A clash occurred between President “Jim” Rea and Dic rectors Jones and Calisch of the insolvent Union Savings Bank to-day, and as a culmination of a characteristic harangue by Rea the two directors handed In their resignations. I CUT THE COST 0f family and other expenses. You can do it in buying. The difference between cash and credit buying is a profit; why not earn it? Fair and right to do so. Just now our red-tag sale is winning careful cash buyers to our store by scores. It pays them close out many things for good and $3.50 FINE SHOES . . ... .. v+ .....red tag price, $1.50 square toe, mostly button, last ,.".'5‘.".&‘}'5; sizes 214 to 6%4; all first quality Zif you can wear square toe you save half and more. Ladies’ shoes, widths D and E. $2.00 SHOES, STRONG . . ... «+.«...red tag price, $1.10 These are goat and kangaroo calf, square toe, button; sizes 3¢ to T: closing because going out of style ‘WOOL SUITS . . re(i tag price, $3.50 One hundred and fifty of these; sizes 33, 34, 35; also for boys, 16 to 19: no large sizes good '$10 value; mostly dark colors. CARRIAGE PARASOLS . . . . .. 75¢ These are with the folding bandles; black, beautiful high-cost goods, $130 to $2 25 closing at 75 cents for choice. e e....red tag price, 50c This embraces 20 kinds of fancy waste baskets, marked down from $1.25; the choice at 50 cents. Turtle Neck Sweaters . .. ... ?.......redtlgprice,75c y irls e are navy wool for big boys or m’{hficycnnz-a. 30, 32; the price to-day, regular $1.50; we cut it in two. and it pays us, as we are anxious to reduce overstock of others. CHATR SEATS . . . red tag price, Sc Regular 15 “:}:.r 14 and 15 inch, perfo- rated seats: popular kinds; 50 dosen only to move at red tag prices. Red Tag Prices. Imported school sponges s o1 $10_tolding rockers, 1.50 75 ko o 5¢ packages of mince meat 3150 cooking stoves for children 1.00 1XL kitchen sets, child's; not 3c 15 Fine old gold T-in. feit, now <3 Gents® 3 hose: credit price 10c. o5 Twa-bit stencil brushes: closl 10 Glass candlesticks; 3¢ kind. 15 Grocers' and store passbooks, doz. o Soapstone slate dencils: 100 for 1z Marbles, adobe; 100 for. - Blank memo. books, 333x8. oz White chalk crayon; gross. iz 36- Jedgers, $5x13% . e paper, assorted cols.: § dos. 10 Lace shelf paver. 10 ¥ 3 o5 BLACK SATEEN . . red tag price, Sc This is excellent value at 15 cents; mostly hlack and white stripes; credit stores get 25 cents for It. WOOL YARN . . . red tag price, 75¢ This is the dollar grade this year; we close 100 Ibs.. mostly black, at above price; see to it at once. | Lawn Mowers . . red tag price, $3.25 | Just the time and fust the chance for fust the mower to do the work: easy to rum; | used to bring $10 each; cheaper now. Room for Rent on Fifth and Sixih Fioors for Storage or Light Manufacturing Other Red Tag Prices. $0.85 TACOMA, Wash,, A sores, boils and all eruptions exist because | 23-in., dpll, kid body.. + 1.15 the Ledger fram SWisiock sava: A W, |of impuries In the blood. Hood's Sar. | fin wAnied 1ol i UL By May, a well-dressed stranger, waiked into | saparilla :makes the blood pure, cures | LAURITY oG, (TP 50 ;:em gf.?:l thgl :":“?Z"'.’.‘,‘r:n?% m« ,a"‘{d pimples and all eruptions and gives a fair | 2.wheeled horse and cart, 3¢ article. g«o ear. He then walked into the street and | and healthy complexion. Bt e e T o 18 il BERS WA RS ol e Sarsaparilia) s S o R i &'fi"’d{ u.,“,,’."' e m?"x’n‘gney = dupv- " L s oa apariia ;[ o s ;: 1 1s the Best Medicine Money Can Buy. | Album, celiuloid cover, & pletures SMITHS CASH STORE 235-27 Market St., 8. F.

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