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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDA GREAT RALLY T0 OPEN CAMPAIGN FOR McKINLEY A Joint Ac State Committee and Union League. | If De Vries Is Appointed Appraiser, Colonel Forbes Will Probably Run for Congress in the n of Republican CAPTAIN GEORGE MOREHOUSE KILLS HIMSELF ABOARD SHIP zln a Moment of Temporary Insanity, Caused by Disappointment, He Puts Bullet Through His Head and Ends Existence @O0+ 000000+ 00+000sb4000@ + Second District. dy to hold a n Thursday tional Conven- | Philadelphia on is expected be renom- t the can- | committee on ight con- 1din r the auspice: he committeemen | Jooth, president of Ford, chairman Cole, chairman. The ent from e had in the sentiment ng to join Committee meeting on cess. It their As t is recom- will_leave Ph ace brings to Street-Sprinkling Contract Let. The street kling contract was let f Public Works ement pe two otk high ympany were both were > year John The | 1 covers Dis- | IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR | HOSIERY, CORSETS or UNDERWEAR, | It will Pay You to Drop in at And See Their Values for TO-DAY AND MONDAY. HOSIERY. < HOSE—White foot price, HILDREX'S 21-THREAD g ey et 18e pair. UNODERWEAR, " BLE ELESE VESTS—All colo THREAD RIBBED VESTS— bt sold eiscwnere Pink, Blue, @mewhere for $L lar makes and ACH PAIR W NCH CORSET, at 4me pair. ON PULLEY BELTS, n Ribb all silk; sold cvery- sur price to-day, 2Be. days more and our LACE, EM- Y and RIBBON sale will be at an sty L. ord 1o the wise je suf interésted in LADIES OUTSIDE 8, CAISTE OR WRAPPERS, ¥ money spent at our place TO-DAY il go ONE THIRD further than usual. MARKS BROS 1212-12i4 MARKET ST. Bet. Taylor and Jones, Manufacturers of Ladies’ and Children’s Under- wear. Sell retail at wholesale prices. Thought He Would . Be Made Captain B¢ of a Steamer, but $ 9 Another Man Got the Place. L O O S O o Y Scene of Captain Morehouse’s Death Aboard Ship. L e e AR S S S8 AKLAND, June 8.—Captain George )| F. Morehouse, master of the bark Diamond Head. committed suicide | by shooting himself in the head this morning in his stateroom on the vessel, which is lying at Long Wharf discharging sugar from Honolulu. L 4 . @ + § . 3 ES s i © ! + ® i ? b Nd 2 ® % ¥ o handed man. The bull®& was fired into his mouth. There was nothing in the shape of letters found save one from the captain’s wife written while he was at Honolulu and telling of her illness. That had no bearing upon the cause of death.” Captain Morehouse was a native of Massachusetts, 42 years of age. He was Boly Wee ¥E o s | & son of John Morchouse of San Leandro. e O e o e e cioton, | Deceased was a member of - Excelsior the bed in the room. A pis “ | Lodge of Masons of San Francisco. ed in the dead mariner's left hand, and | , The wife of Captain Morehouse, who be- there was a bullet hole through his head. | fore her marriage was Miss Minnie Cor- R IR S SO X been nearly a year withouta command and Jas somewhat despondent in consequence. Coming when he had just completed his first voyage as master of a fine iron bark, when his salary had just been raised, when his wife was recovering from two serious operations for appendicitis—in fact just when all his troubles seemed over the news that he had taken his own life constituted a mystery that no one on the front could fathom. Thursday morning Captain Morehouse was laughing and joking with Captains The weapon must have been placed in the | bett, was so badly shocked by the news | Perriman, Erskine and MecCulloch. At captain's mouth when the shot was fired. | Of the death that she had to take to her | that time he did not scem to have a care Deputs | Coroner Quellen, who took | bed again. She insists that the captain|in the world. Yesterday morning when 2 was murdered. he left home he was in the same cheer- charge of the body, found nothing among The mother of the deceased, now Mrs. | ful frame of mind, yet an hour and a the dead man's effects to tell the cause of | Lambert, lives at 316% Devisadero street, | half later he had died by his own hand. his suicide 1d the statement sent | San Francisco. His brother-in-law, Will. | Captain Morchouse’s first command was from his residence in San Francisco did | lam Corbett, is cashier of the Selby | the old brig North Star. He made a not clear the mystery. According to the | Smelting Wor number of trips in her and then took com- entemonts of o abaard the vessel, Cap- | , The, probable cause of Captain More- | mand of one of Nick Bichard's ships. Af- ments of men aboa g house’s déath came to light at the inquest | ter a few voyages to South and Central ain Morehouse left it yesterday afternoon | held here to-night. W. C. Corbett testified | America_he was given command of the to go to his home, 1344 Hyde street. to| that the deceased had been troubled with | clipper ship Dashing Wave. He was in visit his wife ar ghter.” He remained | insomnia and some of the dead man’s | her for years and made some of the best there over night returned on the first | friends said he had been greatly disap-|records on the coast while in command boat from neisco this morning. | pointed at not having received the com- | of that vessel. e went dire to the vessel and to his | mand of one of Goodall, Perkins & Co.’s| After sailing the Dashing Wave for stateroom. About 5 o'clock the cabin boy | ships. He had expected this position, but | many years Captain Morehouse decided went to call him for breakfast and found | Jearned only yeste: that another man | to g0 in for steamboating. He was made the captain dead 2 | had been named, th testifled. chief officer of the City of Puebla by the In the light of the Morgue deputy’s fail-| "A verdict of suicide while temporarily | Pacific Coast Steamship Company and ure to find any cause for suicide, & sus- | insane was returned by the Coroner's |later s transferred to the Corona. Fi- picion arose that tnere might have been | jury. nally he came to, the conclusion that he oul play, but < was dissipated by & was not cut out for a_stea s. Depuly Coroner Quellen's statement. He| ,San Francisco Friends Shockedq. | RO3.000CHtout for 4, steamboat man so said: Tke suicide of Captain Morehouse was | he was made master of the bark Diamond | a startlin is ata g surprige to his former friends Did Not Get Ship He Expected. | and associates on the water front in this “Captain_Morehouse undoubtedly killed | city. d he committed the rash act a few {7 "T'he pistol was gripped’ tightly | months ago they would not have been 80 clenched left hand. He was a left- | much’ surprised as he had at that time Head. He arrived from Honolulu with her on May 31 and after being released by the quarantine officer she was taken to Oakland to discharge her cargo of sugar. |DAVIE MENTIONED FOR CONGRESSIONAL HONORS people are wondering what is keeping the | schooners- Americana and Mizpah. ~ The | Americana left Caleta Buena with a cargo | of nitrates on February 23, while the IiE | Italian ship Franecisco Ciampa id not leave Iquique until April 8. The Cilampa | arrived in port on the 3rd inst., but noth- | OAKLAND, June 8.—The name of John | ing has been heard from the Americ: ice she left Caleta Buena. The Mizpah now out eighty-four days from Central left San Fran, cember 15 last |in port. Captain Ryfkogel reports that ' | the vessel sprang a leak during a north- | | wester and he had to come back for re- | L. Davie is belng mentioned for the Dem- \m‘r:\flc nomination for Congress in this district, and some of Mr. Davie's friends tare working quite earnestly in his be- half. Mr. Davie was given the Demo- cratic nominantion for Mayor during the has been heard from She ailed from this port. sco for Amapala on #nd started for home a on March 18 from Punta Arena Ilfl‘ municipal campaign and_ seems to Siton ; | have ‘cast his lot with the Democratic chooner Prosper Returns party, in which he has considerable The little schooner Prosper is opce more | strength. Hiram Luttrell, an Oakland attorney, has been a candidate for the ‘Democratic nomination for some time, Tt looks as if this place on the Democratic ticket will Prospects of Early Arrival of Argonauts at Nome pairs. The Prosper left here for Cape | R s s A P i ki ion %h‘_ She ke attad oo | be sought by several mes 2 a party of young men who were eager | R T re 00! | to reach the ‘;oldgflelds and make a (%r-\ Fire Board Again Sued. | tune. When the schooner got outside it | A second sult to compel the Board of | was blowing a gale and instead of mak- | ing any headway the little craft’ was driven back and finally her crew ran her the ice in Bering Straits are not good and | {RF€R ROCK SNG TRally Bor CX o Ko ; the chances arc that from fifteen to twen- | (3in Helander left her and Captain Ryf- | ty thousand gold hunters are now aboard | kogel was sent down to take charge of | ships in Dutch Harbor and Unalaska | affairs. He brought the Prosper back | awalting an opportunity to reach Nome. | to San Francisco and she will now go on | Advices from Unalaska dated May 17| the drydock for an overhauling. state that there was an unbroken barrier Registry Granted to Foreign Vessels. of ice clear across to the Siberian coast | Collector of the Port Jackson has re- | and that navigation was impossible. The | cetved a telegram from the Commissioner British steamer Alpha reached as far|of Navigation stating that Congress pass- | morth as latitude 61 degrees 30 minutes | ed an act on the 6th inst. authorizing the | and then had to put back to Dutch Har- | forelgn built ships Star of Italy and Star bor. The passengers were almost in al‘é{ l?ennl&uvfi?ed by :lfl!en!fi"tlhgel?n‘l‘e‘l v ates and cltizens o awall, to regis- state of mutlny, and in order 10 JXeeh|tered as vessels of the United States. them quiet the Captain had to start out| These vessels were not included in the again on May 9 in search of a passage | list of vessels. granted American registry to the goldfields. by the act (which takes effect the 14th On May 11 the Steamer Portland arrived | inst.), providing for a government for the . -4 . Territory of Hawall. at Unalaska. Four days later the schoon- | ¥ er Kodiak and steamer Albion put in an | Water Front Notes. | appearance, and on May 17 the steamers | The British ship Amazon was released Dora and Thrasher anchored in the bay. | from quarantine vesterday. She arrived By the end of mext week nearly every here from Kobe on May 28 and was com- $3 steamer that has left S8an Francisco and | pelled to discharge her rock ballast before Seattle should have reached Duteh Har- r. Kinyoun would allow her to dock. 3 bor, and if the ice has not broken up _The Kosmos liner Luxor will sail for $8 there, will be some lively times among | Hamburg via Central and South Amer. | { the fleet. There is no doubt whatever | can ports next Monday.. She takes away | about the richness of the Nome, Golofnin | an unusuaily large cargo of wheat, flour g8 Bay and Cape York, but even now there|and beans. 12 are more men than can get work, 8o what | The Mail steamer Mariposa came back | ¢ will the state of affairs be when the fleet | from the sugar renn‘&q’( yesterday. The in- | g8 with 25 000 men abonrd reaches the scene. | ward cargo was alekly dlscharged and A well-informed_shipmaster writing from | work of loading her begun. Captafn How- | TUnalaska says that the scramble to get | ard says he will have her ready to sail Fire Commissioners to revoke the con- tract awarded to John O'Rourke for shoe- ing department horses was filed vesterday by J. F. Kennedy. Kennedy alleges that the board acted unlawfully in awarding the contract to O'Roucte. The prospects of an early break-up of Ledgers, Patent-back Blank Books bound by us are all right. Mysell-Rollins, 22 Clay. * | (@ etietiotiototiotiotiotio | 1 | —=HE joyous days of that brand o through the park on the Sabba and then *does” the liveryma GeBeken ization, with downtown offices, and i the objects thereof in detail. It rea The objects of the association are to b, men and protection to the livery and boa. Francisco. These results are to be attained by u organizaticn to be known as the Liveryme to classify stables or to control the pricd list of bad debtors—livery stable dead beat heme will be even worse than the rush | next Wednesday and she will leave on K 80 v embers Immediately when | | Fr obin of Colma_ will not sam - | Big Overdue Fleet. | an unknown patent. medicine again in a | ¢ Patronage. s 12 | _Vessels from the islands are making | hurry. Somebody gave him a small vial | It 1 kiso the. intéritiqu: o Bave the very long voyages and every day there of a cough cure Wwith Instructions to take | onsly all’ cases |15 a crowa of people on 'Change asking | a drop every hour. | If such and such a vessel has not been | town to be (n‘om ten hours, so he took | heard from yet. The ship Emily F. Whit- | ten drops and started. st che corner of | nev is now ‘out thirty-four and the bark | First and Mission streets he became vio- | Hadyn Brown thirty days from Kahului, ' lently sick and had to be hurried to the the schooner O, M. Kellogg is twenty- | Harbor Hospital. Dr. armisted treated nine days out irom Mahukona and the | him for poisoning and in half an hour schooner Alice Cook is twenty-nine. ship | bad him all right again, E. B. Sutton twenty-five, schooner Transit | The oldtime schooner Sophie Sutherland Bark 3. G PHiuger twenty-two And Dark: | north yesiorday Oh @ hunting and frading al £ - = | nor este! Ly ading entine 'W. H. Dimond twenty-one days | cruise. * 8 Pease, W. E. Bridge and A. F. Jacol from Honoluli. 4 e 4 ings on the first Thursday of each m Over the safety of these vessels there| Ladies' tallor-made suits, silk skirts, fur is very little anxiety, bowever, but the capes: liberal credit. M. Rothschild, 526 Sutter.* | @—-23-0-230-£3-+- 85230230 8-+ 83+ Fred was going down in addition to their regular licenses. i . Z l )é 8. W. Morshead; vice president, Ale: ’ 8 507 Jessie street; treasurer, Joseph G ¢ pointed by the members. Those ap : LIVERYMEN ORGANIZE TO UNDO ALL “DOERS” Ll The Lfverymen's Board of Trade, having as one of its principal ob- jects the undoing of this species of “doers,” has effected 4 permanent organ- immediately benefit its members by the publication break rigs and injure horses through reckless or careless driving. wherein members receive damage to their rigs through ‘“‘bumping’ by cars, and in general to look after the legal interests of the business for the protec- tion of members. Also an attempt will be made to add new business to the stables by having coal dealers and others renting stalls or boarding horses licensed as liverymen, A meeting of many liverymen of the city was held Thursday evening and the following officers were elected to serve for the first yea Y, JUNE 9, 1900 UGLY SCAHDAL BISING 0UT 0F THE QUARMTINE Chinese Merchants Asked for Ten Thousand Dol- lars as a Bribe. e | Money Promised and Seven Thousand Raised, When Offer Is With- drawn, With Statement That It Is Too Late. — the great sale of enamelware still co o rst quality g0Of being th will vie for popular favor with lh\P ltunw) o expensive but good shirt walsts and sl tion. " the best $1 glove is the famo Hte Jpuvin is very [‘”Plll:\r» w made from selected skins. Wi quirked fingers—all the lat dressed or suede, per pair.. neckwear X another lot of the popula of heavy taffeta stik, with &.,npf-l stoc! fringe and juby trimmi each.. hosiery 100 dozen children's fast bl tic, full length, extra doubie he "120 dozen boys’ extra heavy for rough wear: extra double knee, Japanese crepe 30 pleces gold tinseled Japanese crepe, good variety of patterns: you little money re-cover a screen Parisian r Nethersole ne The inevitable is happening and scandal ‘ls rising out of the quarantine of China- town. It was rcported at a meeting of the | Chinese Merchants' Exchange last Sun- | day that for $10,000 the quarantine would be raised and a large amount of goods, arrived from China and held under sus- picion and for fumigation, would be re- | leased. Part of the money was raised and word was brought back to the go-be tween that the remainder would be forth- coming, but by that time the scheme had fallen through and the Chinese were told that it was toc late, that matters had gome too far for a settiement and the | quarantine would have to stay. The offer came the day after the second quarantine had been put in force. It was brought to the merchants by one of their number, described by the Chinese Consul as one of “the first merchants of China- | town.” He told the members of the ex- change that he had been approached by a man, whom he would not name, who made the proposition to raise the quaran- tine for a sack of good red gold. And to make the merchamts secure in anything they might do to raise the money, it was stipulated by the proposer that there need be no pay until the quarantine had ac- tually been raised and the goods in_de- tention on the wharf had been let go free. Would Put Up Blackmail. | . To merchants suddenly shut out from lucrative trade the prospect was alluring, for it seemed to reduce to a certainty the loss the plague scare would bring upon them, and the Chinese have always been keen business men, preferring a cer- tainty to a chance at all times. The prop- osition was therefore received and a list was passed around to see what prospect there was of raising the money. The list showed conclusively that if the offer had been made in what might be called faith” there would be no difficulty in find- ing the money, for right there in the meet- Ing $1000 was promised. There was no effort to canvass the dis- | trict or to see any one not at the meeting. The list was simply passed around and re- | per yard absc ostrich feath are sold with beautiful glossy 3 A blac black, 36 inches long.. black, 45 inches long. gray, 45 inches long natural, 45 inches loi black and white, 36 inches black and white, 45 inches long waists and skirts 120 dozen ladies” percale shirt waists in eolo brald, others made plain, all sizes 25 dozen percale shirt waisi new collars, all colors i 20 dozen ladles’ crash outing skirts, and all round bottom with straps of tember 1. present premises to rent. suit tenant. at Hale’s to-day s H. B. with overseam, wh also recommend Hale's th two metal clasps, k—bow Jack cotton hose, good heavy weight, fine rib, very slas- 1 and toe, sizes § to & bicycle ribbed f heel and toe; 26 in make a neat and silk che- ived it by ex- lutely new. pel er hoas the ones we offer are rich and fin being made from selected the guara made with French or yoke back, some trimmed with A= with white yoke and trimined down fr hite pique, aii icnat we remove to grand new store about Sep- will subdivide to apply to 6. H. Umbsen & Co. the 15 to 20 per cent under regular r own workrooms of just received by kirts will be found entitled chic neckwear express, while to best atten- le_for $1.50 the celsbrated al French kid pique gloves e-row embroidered backs and ckwear fresh fro and tab end: our workrooms, made th white silk I8¢ value; 1 hose; a stocking ma: per patr. 19 ; excell black cott sizes 6 to 10 t it th t athers. ee that not b k will $9 and $10 ... $13.50 to $20 $12.50 to $16.30 light and dark ..50¢ 5.9 turned to the president with the subserip- | tions upon it. It was evidence that the Chinese had faith in the proposition, in- | to secure some daring plumbers with a | courage equal to a desire for busine famous as It was on its face, and that | Yesterday nearly twenty-five men en- they were willing to back their belief in | tered Chinatown to erect a crematory for the story brought to them by one of their | the destruction of garbage. They were in | number with_their coin. There was no | the employ of W. W. Montague & Co.. | uestion of the morality of the transac- | who hold the econtract. ~All of them | tion. What the merchants wanted was to | worked during the day and pa: out on | get out of their plight and then consider | Pacific street in the evening. the morality, if, indeed, they had not for- | Last evening the Board of Health got gotten it by that time: and so they sub- [ another idea in regard to the electric scribed their money as good white citizens | light men, and the order went forth that would subscribe for a Fourth of July cele- | none of them should be allowed within the bgation or to help keep out the plague. barbed wire. This was all right until the e action of the merchants was re- |lights of Chinatown went out, and there ported back to the “promoters” and the | being no expert available to fix them the next day, Monday, or the Tuesday fol- | section ran the remainder of the night lowing, the answer was returned to the | With gas, kerosene or candles. | merchants that it was too late to continue | Having closed out the electriclans an- negotiations and the deal would have to | other order was issued that practically | be called off. restores all the passes the board ordered vo days ago. It was announced | Consul Investigating. taken up tWo days agc that every one who had been inoculated | The truth of the proceedings before the | and who had a certificate certifying to Chinese Merchants’ Exchange is vouched | that effect, countersigned by the Chief of for by Ho Yow, the Chinese Consul. He | Police, could go_through the lines and | | does not undertake to say who the pro- | come out again. This puts the quarantine | poser of the scheme is, but the matter is | back to the point where it was when the igelng investigated. It was thougnt at | merchants raised such a protest on the | first that some one was trying to play | ground that it had leaks. the wily Chinese merchants for gulleless s children of trade, bul the proposition that there should be no money paid over until the quarantine had actually been raised and the goods under detention had been released lent to the scheme a semblance of authenticity; besides the man who made the report to the meeting was of such standing_as to_carry weight enough to | balance $7000. The matter is being quietly | worked up with a view to using such In. [ formation as is gained in the suits now | | pending before the courts. If the Consu | can verify the information he has a nasty scandal will be the result. It was reported in connection with the case that the subscription list was a check for $6000 made out to one of the physicians of the Six Companies, who had agreed to raise the quarantine, or have it aised, for that amount, but at the time the list was made out the Six Companies had retained no physicians at all, nor did they do so until two days after the offer was made in the meefing of the Mer- chants’ Exchange. Loosening the Lines. The quarantine situation is at a stand- still, or nearly at a standstill, for there are 'signs of loosening in the strict lines that followed the second application _of ropes and barbed wire to Chinatown. The first sign of weakness was an order al- lowing men of the Fire Department,’ to enter Chinatown after extingulshing the fire to re without Interference. Then some ric lights got the plague and it w: cdecided to allow a few, just 3 few, clec trictaans to enter the tabooed district and | To Inspect Trains. | BAKERSFIELD, June s.—S. J. Quint, acting assistant surgeon of the Uni | States Marine Hospital, arrived here to- day and assumed authority as sanitary | inspector of the city and vieinity. He will inspect all trains arriving from San Fran- | | cisco, whether regular or special, pr{-‘ | mariiy for evidences of bubonic piague. s most of the southbound trains reach Bakersfleld during the night Dr. Quint’s | duties will necessarily c | annoyance to the traveling publi ause :‘nrcfd-‘rablel | |SOUTHERNERS HAVE A HAMMER OUT FOR PHELAN| ) Specfal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, June 8—The breach that occurred two years ago in the State | Democratic Convention is likely to prove | | fatal to the aspirations of James D.| | Phelan, who seeks to go as delegate at | large to Kansas City. While the attitude of Los Angeles and San Diego delega- tions, with 102 votes, is not fully defined, | knowing ones assert that the Southern | California delegates are a unit for Sen- | | ator White, and that he is not favorable to Phelan. Should White throw his influ- | ence toward Phelan. the statement is e that the delegations from the outh- |Jand will join the Budd-Rain arr forces and ~urb the Phelan ambition. retaliation for the chasing an alarm, and i v This combination is “plrf"x‘ul”!‘: ‘;/‘fir:hfil’r;(.’r“ulf,‘n:":.ltzteP:e““}'fl‘t(;‘:! methods pursued by Pheian in zhnmigfi‘ mains burst and some men from the|down Judge Hughes after San Spring Valley Company were allowad to cross the deadline with a horse and wagon and some tools to fix the break. And now a, squad of plumbers, presum- ably immune, will be allowed fo scatter themselves among the pipes of the quar- | —— | Sons of Vermont Social. | The Native Sons of Vermont gave an | entertainment. soélal and dance at Odd | Fellows' Hall last evening. An enjoyable | helped ‘seat the Ph ter, fixing what they find needs fixing g Sdf o o firs | and nosing around generally in the pur- | programme W rendered, the first .‘n" suit of their craft. consisting of a fancy dance by Miss May T soprano solo. Miss Annie Roney, | ,2’&{0? Siano and banjo duet by Miss fomma Hicks and George Bramhall. “The | B aan's Bride.” a comic operetta, com- Dleted the programme. It was well acted And sung by Miss Edith Welch, Miss Nel- | Jie. Minna, James O'Donneil, Dennis Scheerin and J. W. Griffing. Miss Weich is to be congratulated on a pretty turn for | comedy and a clear, flexible soprano | volce, which, however, is in need of com- | petent training. James O’'Donnell made an exceilent Tosser. After the programme @ancing was induiged in tili a late hour. o Hickman and His Shotgun. N.' H. Hickman, the lumber dealer charged with assault with a deadly weapon for threatening to shoot three deputy poundmen with his shotgun be- | cause they seized two of his pet fox-ter- riers, was set at liberty by Judge Mogan | vesterday. The Judge held that the charge could only be exhibiting a deadly weapon in a ruge and threatening manner, | and if the prosecution cared to do so a | warrant could be sworn out for his arrest on that offense. B —— It you travel, fish, hunt or play golf vour constant companion should be Jesse Moore. —_——————e Merchants’ Association Review. The Merchants’ Assoclation Review for June contains the annual report of the Board of Directors of the association, “an appeal to butchers” by Richard T. waccus, a report of the sixth annual meeting of the association, an article by Marsden Manson on the topic “How to Tmprove Telegraph Hil” and an address by the association to the Board of Su- pervisors concerning the utflization of the sweepings of Golden, Gate Park as fer- tilizing material. Of course, all these are necessary ad- juncts to a properly quarantined district, | but the fact remains that they will be allowed to come and go with a few min- utes in the fumigator to purge them of all external germs. They will not be inocu- lated and the board cannot compel them to be inoculated and while the fumigation will kill the germs that may lodge in their clothing there is nothing to prevent some of the bacilli, should they strike them, from entering the plumbers’ sys- tems and making _themselves evident outside the lines. No attempt has been made to get men from the light. com- panies, the water company or any other of the supply corporations to take their place inside the lines and do what work is necessary and no attempt has been made RoReEReRNeRIN RN eReQ f ‘‘dead beat” that whisks his lady th behind a steed of speed and beauty, n out of his lawful charge, are over. ts prospectus, recently issued, sets forth ds: e the advancement of the interests of livery- rding stable business of the liverymen of San l"llnl the liverymen of San Francisco in an n's Board of Trade, which shall not attempt of livery or boarding. It will, however, hrough its collection bureau of a 1ist of ‘‘bad drivers’—those that The secretary will ever any customer is reported as having ount, thus saving loss through undesirable s—and al $1 50 misses’ kid shoes for 50c a pair at | the Beehive Shoe Co.. Market st. * A T el Grand Jury Working on Final Rzport. | The Grand Jury expected to get throusgh | with its final report at yesterday's ses- slon, but Captain of Detéctives Seymour brought up a matter that occupled the i whole afternoon. The jury found nothing | in the case. A special meeting will be | called next week some thme. When the work of the body will be closed up and the final report and petition for discharge ; presented to the court on Friday. Took His Friend’s Coat. Jack Van der Bergen and R. D. Stokes, | two teamsters in the employ of Gray | Bros., roomed together at Sixteenth street | and Hardy avenue until yesterday morn- | ing. At that time Van der Bergen disap- | torney for the organization prosecute vigor- President, xander McCord; secretary; J. M. Breen, uanassio. An advisory board was ap- pointed are: James Hurst, Walter bs. The board will hereafter hold meet- onth, HeReRNoRNeReReRNsBeKeg B R e A R R B B Rt B - B peared with Stokes’ overcoat in his pos- sessi Stokes reported the matter to the police and Officers M. Brady and W. Dinan recovered the coat and arrested the teamster last evening. ——e—————— Edmund Brown Released. Edmund Brown, the colored lad arrested for passing a bad dollar upon a bootblack last Th v, was released yesterday by i S Seeret Service Agent Ha- Several street car conductors were en to the prisoner in the office of the United States Marshal for the purpose of tifying him as the man who passed bad dollars upon them, but while he look- ed somewhat like the man wanted they failed to identify him. CNGORPORATED Bnos SPECIAL BARGAINS SATURDAY AND MONDAY! 1 FAIRBANKS' S'¢ 3-lb pke- - - I5¢ Baltimore Cove Oysters, 3 cans 25¢ Extra Creamery Butter, square 35¢ Market has advanced. Regular 4c. Best Retole== Egos, doz.....IT%¢ Guaranteed. Regular 22%ec. Best Rolled Dats, 10 Ibs. . ...25¢ Unusual Bargain. Regular 4c Ib. Macaroni, Vermicelli, box- -..20¢ Spaghettl. Regular 25c. French Castile Soap, 3-Ib bar 25¢ Imported (Virgin Brand). Regular 3c. Port, Sherry, Angelica, bot . .. 25¢ Vintage 18 Bots §1.00. Regular 4c. Best Table Apricots, 23:™. .. .10¢ Cutting’s Packing Co. Regular 20c. | Ghirardelli's Breakfast Cocoa.- - 20¢ 1b cans. Regular Choice Family Fiour, 50-1b sack 80c Regular % sack. 'Pure Cal. Olive Oil, gt bot. ... 75¢ El Pear! Farm. 'Regular $1.00. Regular 60c. TOURIST AND PICNIC SUPPLIES. Just Warranted. Pint bot 4e. Received—Full Assortment of Potted Sardines, Pate de Fole Gras and all Delicacies at Lowest Prices. Send for Monthly Price List Free. Country orders promptly attended to. Freight pald by us when within 100 miles. 1348-18354 Market Street. Opp. 7th. "Phone S. 292. No Branch Stores. Glassware At Greatly Reduced Prices. Come Just to See. Great Amerin [mporting Tea Ca. MONEY-SAVING STORES. Grant Ave, (Bet. Sutter and Posth $61 Market St. (Opp. Powell). 140 Sixth X Ses pEes . 16 Mission St. 5 Larkin St o 8006 Sixteenth St 1519 Devisadero St 146 Ninth St. 475 Halght St 2008 Fillmors St 226 Mission St €2 Market St. 2732 24th St OAKLAND STORES. 1063 Washingtoa St. 615 E. 12th St 1237 Broadway. 1185 234 Ave. 1510 Seventh St. 135 Park St.. Alameda. CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. OUR GOLD DREDGING PUMPS Were successiul at Nome KROG“ year. All cthers fafled. In — = lk'n daily. § Stevenson st.. ¥ SAND CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS. JACKSON Gold dredging pumps, the only successful pump manufactured. 625 Sixth st, San Franeisco. Denrt v (GOLD SAVER. 't rush fF to Nome w sota chine: examine the Common. sense Gols Sam JOHN M. MOONEY, 64 Eliz 3 o 24 Elizabeth st.; Cas- =y PORTABLE . OUSES. CRNHAM-STAN DEFO! .." Washingto: and 1st su QAIllAnflF. (nlbwichoh."'n. s '- ~ MEDICINS CASES. FERRY DPUG CO s 500,