Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 1900. _ADVERTISEMENTS. Just Received 1400 Pairs of LAIRD, SCHOBER & €0.’S SAMPLE SHOES! Infants’, Children’s, Misses’ and Ladies’. All the very latest styles, which they shipped us our sale---and they tin time. You all know ality of Sample Shoes are hand-made and fit ti e a glove fits the hand. These shoes will be put on SALE MONDAY MORNING! SOON AS CORVENIENT AND GET THE CE OF THESE FINE SAMPLE SHOES, i TALL THol L 0 Now for Your Summer Vacation] e Want to Supply You With TAN SHOES And in order to do so we will make PRICES TO SUIT THE CUSTOMER. We will not carry over ny Tan Shoes; will close mall out. PRICE WILL NO OBJECT. Be sure nd buy your Tan Shoes 1is week! ) the BE 4 Bear In Mind We Have Made A GREAT REDUCTION - weONeus ALL OUR SHOES!'’ "We cannot take space enough to give prices, but will sell you SHOES AT ANY PRICE! DON'T FAIL TO SEE OUR BARGAIN COUNTERS MONDAY MORNING. WE SELL AND BUY FOR CASH AND GIVE OUR CUSTOMERS THE BENEFIT, WE HAVE NO BRANCH STORES. | NOLAN BROS., 812-814 Market Street, PHELAN BUILDING. BITTERS] JA PLEASANT | LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATING ASH KIDNEY & LIVER of excellence main. s is recognized and minating and fas- > regularly make them ers when in San Francisc lose proximity to wholesale cistricts, places of amuse- the further advantage of ars to ail points of interest pess the entr ce. American plan. Buropean plan. GRAND HOTEL tained by appreciated by ment and w baving stree WTRGTAL Pt [ BARBERS, BAK- bootblacks, bath- biiliard tables, canpers, ., FOR ERU houses, ¥ bookbinders, candy-makers, < foundries, laundries, paper- bangers, printers, nters. shoe factories, sta- blemen, far-roofers, tanners, tallors, ete. BUCHANAN BROS,, Erush Manufacturers, 609 Sacra ere rs, Sourmi BOLD SMUGGLERS MADE A FAILURE ON TRANSPORT Man Who Said He Wg,s Den- tist Christensen and Two Friends Stopped. e Manila Cigars Secreted in Basement of One Man's Trousers and Un- der the Vests of the Others. AEEE tor E. E. Emlow fias “ollector of the Port a A venture that befell him ast Saturday He was on duty at k whore the Government transport up, 2nd sat in a chair at rf the better to observe in order to prevent | e saw three very on the de roaching the ga low at once le said to ntlemen,’ requires me pardon, my duty ed that they had noth- d on their persous, | Maulla | fragrant against th d int ot spere garme a denti he aid of a f smuggl pockets > trio admitted that the four boxes of were tk perty of the man who | ahd that they were ing them n with good ac the trio to go on BATEMANS’ CREDITORS { SIGN A COMPROMISE | | Agree to Surrender Thirty Per Cent | | of Their Claims Against the | Hall of Justice. ’ The mer: ors of Bateman 3 e original contract for Hall of Justice and Morgue in the Mills bullding y 4 there will be the building in the con. ich there have been so hould not be oc- | r future. The latest de- | ed by the Auditor holding up | on the fund because of licns wh ed to a_compromise. d the applied to paying off their of these creditors favored teman Bros. bringing a suit egainst the cf for $30,000 for extras fur- nished, but they were deterred owing to | the probability of a lengthy lawsuRt, with | the chance of an unfavorable decision. | which ADVERTISEMENTS. SUPERIOR MERIT. Remarkable Curative Properties of a Remedy for Indigestion and Stomach Weakness. Stuart’s D pela Tablets, a prepara- tion for the cure of dvspepsia and the various forms of indigestion and stomach | trouble, owes its great success as a cure for these troubles to the fact that it is | prepared for disease and weakness of the stomach and digestive organs only, and is not recommended or advised for any | { other disease. | It is not a cure-all, but for any stom- ach trouble it is undoubtedly the safest, | most sensible remedy that can be ad- vised with the prospect of a permanent | | cure. It is prepared in tablet form, pleas- | | ant to taste, composed of vegetable and | fruit essences, pure pepsin and Golden | Seal, every one of which act effectively in digesting the food eaten, thereby rest- ing and invigorating the weak stomach; rest is nature’s cure for any disease, but | you cannot rest the stomach unless you put into it something that will do its | | work or assist in the digestion of food. That is exactly what Stuart’s Dyspep- sia Tablets do; one grain of the digestive principle contained in them will digest | 3000 grains of meat, eggs or similar whole- | some foods. They will digest the food | whether the stomach is in working order or not, thereby nourishing the body and | resting the stomach at the sdme time and rest and nourishment is nature’s cure for any weakness. - In persons run down in flesh and ap- | petite these tablegs bulld up the strength | and increase flesh,.because they digest | flesh-forming food which the weak stom. | ach cannot do: they increase the flow of | | gastric julce and prevent fermentation, | | acidity and sour watery risings, Stugrt’s Dyspepsia Tablets can be found | at aif drug stores at 50 cents per package. BAJA CALIFORNIA & A GREAT RESTCTATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine. The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special Tonic for the Sexual Organs for both sexes. The Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kide Sells on its own merits, | & BRUNE, Agents, peys apd Bladder. NAE! 8. ¥.—(Bend for 223 Market st., DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATORER WS Five hundred reward for any case we cannot cure. This secret rem: stops all losses in 24 hours, cures Emissions, Impo- PTG iy rITeeai o FOR I YOU Manhood and all w i effects of self-abuse or excesses. Sent gealed, $2 bottle; 3 bottles, $5; guaranteed to cure any case. Address HALL'S MEDICAL IN- STITUTE, #65 Broadway, Oakland, Cal. Also sale at 10721 Market st.. . F. All private ases quic cured. Send for free k. CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES, ous coip pREDaiNG FURES KROGH 2 il By JACKSON et i mintac | both the Atlantic ous seat of the | a shore. | g | was received with credulity on the | irons. | ware of Captain of the Vessel That -Sunk the Steamer La Bourgoyne in Port. B Now Commands the Largo Law, but Was Master of the Cromarty- shire When the Appalling Catastrophe Occurred. e Captain Henderson of the British ship Largo Law, which arrived from Japan in ballast last Friday ht, has through experiences that or afloat have ever survived. He has been shipwrecked half a dozen times, has had several encounters with fcebergs off the Horn, fought fires on board ship in and Pacific and was in command of the British ship Cromarty- shire when that vessel was run down by the French liner La Bourgoyne. The Cromartyshire v years ago in command of Captain Hen- derson. From here she went to Eurepe nd thence to New York. At the latter port she loaded for n and was on her way there when La Bourgoyne came along. her fog signal for an hour before we came in_collision,” said Captain Henderson. Had the mail steamer stopped we could ha saved nearly all the pz engers and i 1y 150 peo- e only ed | port and was repaired, but the litigation that followed kept Captain Henderson ashore for nearly two years, and the | sel he has com-, La Bour- s through Largo Law is the first ve manded since. The owner goyne ught the damage su all but Captain nderson’s owners finally won out. a New Steamers for the Orient. The_Eastern Company of v act on hand, incorporated has the con- long, 73 feet beam p, and will have a They will run be- 1 ttle and the Orient, replacing the Nippon Yusen Kaisha steamers now under charter to Jim Hill. The Pomona and Umatilla. A story was current on the water front 4 that the amers Pomona and ¢ Knots. cino on Thurs- day Y Umatilla sho that on Thurs¢ a. m. she wi venty-five mil ape Me ino. At that tl he Pomona three-quar a mile away on the port bow was no interchange of change of course t the two Captz ul navi- that on nt. e » of the most caref , and the story near to a colli gators on the stea Trouble on the Afghanistan. There w lerable trouble on the age of th h s 2 pe e S: to San F ansen H During a row nate he drew er in three plac d up for fourteen was and Hansen As soon as the 2 anchor night en managed to get out of his con nement and made hix escape. Captain igie in _one of the will be at sea a s Jooking for Hansen, an. Water Front Notes. placed re boats and that hi n in a few days. Ves- ws would better be- desperate _ The United States transport Kilpatrick | being fixed up in New York at a cost of $400,000. The work began June 6§ and in a few months the steamer will be on her way to San Francisco via the Philip- pines. The McKenzie Musical Society will have an outing on the bay to-day. The steamer Sunol has been chartered and most enjoyable excursion to points of "f terest around San Francisco will bg held. Paul Murphy became intoxicated last Friday night and fell out of a window at 66 Howard reet. His friends thought he wi dead, but when Dr. Bauer from the Harbor Hospital arrived on the scene Murphy proved to be very much alive, He had a number of lacerated wounds on the head and some abrasions about the body, but was otherwise uninjtred. ——-—— Ship Senator Fined. VANCOUVER, B. C., June 23.—A fine has been imposed upon the ship Senator, now lying at Moodyville, for contraven- tion of the customs la The charge brought by the department is that the Benator made an improper entry at the customs office upon her arrival here. It appears that certain of the ship’s stores, coneisting of some coal, were gold to the North Vancouver ferry steamer, the amount involved being $25. The vessel's manifest read only ballast and stores. The customs authorities imposed a fine of $400. The matter has been reported to Ottawa. The offense is pot one,that could include the seizing of the ship, o that the report stating that the vessel had been taken in charge is incorrect. CHICAGO TO ENTERTAIN GRAND ARMY VETERANS America’s Most Prominent Statesmen ‘Will Attend the August En- campment. CHICAGO, June 23.—This city is prepar- ing for the greatest Grand Army encamp- ment in August ever held in the history of this veteran organization. It will be the thirty-fourth, and in all probability the last really great and notable ohe. One of the features will be a magnificent court of honor to be erected along Michigan avenue from Van Buren to Twelfth street, a distance of nearly a mile. This is to have great arches at either end, and will cost in the neighborhood of $25,000. Each of the parades will gase through _this court of honor, at a certain point of which President McKinley and other distin- guished guests wiil review the proces- sfon. There will be free band concerts in_the parks and fireworks at night. The committee on invitations, of which General John C. Black is chairman, is now sending out 6000 requests for Promment men and organizations from all parts of the United States to attend. President McKinley has already accepted. Al]l the schoolhouses have been placed at the disposal of the free quarters com- mittee, of which Captain H. Peters, room 617, the Temple, is chalrman. Ap- plications from posts *for these quarters ghould be made early, and gests applying should state what rallroad they will travel on to and from Chicago. ‘The list of honored ests will include Governor Roosevelt, William J. Bryan, ex-President Harrison and ex-President Cleveland. - Rural Delivery for Lodi. Special Dispatch to The Call, LODI, June 23.—Farmers of this section | are jubilant over the receipt of the news to-day from the Postoffice Department with assurances of the establishment of a free rural mail delivery system. A spe- cial agent from the department will be sent here at an early date. His duty will be to draw up a map of the proposed rnutg and appoint a carrier. Drowned While Bathing. Special Dispatch to The Call, SANTA ANA, June 22.—Howard Frank- lin, 17 years old, was drowned this mornm- ing at Newport beach while bathing in front of the hotel. Up to a late hour this afternoon the body had not been recov- / i\ been | ew men ashore | | here about four Ve heard the steamer blowing | 21 Economical Women, Read [his. What a scramble there’ll be for these 8365 Ladies’ Sample Waists, representing samples of two Eastern makers. They are the best waists that are made for material, style and fit. Made of the best Lawn, Dimities and Per- cales, comes in white and colors, made with lace insettion, tucks and plain effects. ; i : Rosenberg’s Hosiery Excels In Wear Money can- and Fit. not buy any 50 dozen TAN RIBBED HOSE, prettieror bet- double heel and toes, full length, at ter waists the exceptional low prlce of 17 cents. o dozen LADIES| POLKA DOT than these. TOCKINGS, navy A v | dots, doublé heel a‘:fd "1‘:22,"'%‘.&“1 V) $1.25 Kind, 98c. are worth When you see them you will say they more The new LACE p X i EFFECT HOSE X MR 810 | {;n- ladies, double others in same proportion. There l:;étgndu‘x:es' Jull is only ome of a kind. First wearing ind. come, first choice—you know what that means. They are not the poor and trashy kind—you than the price we | are asking . for have never seen better. ‘ plh@m—‘hls week's Drummers’ Trunks and sam- LADIES’ FREN toes, the G0-cent kind, selling, 33 cents. We Are King-Pins iIn Children's Hosiery. put 50 dozen Fast sollision in ths | reportea | n| stan came | thinks that he was taken away as he is said to be a| | counters this week. They % Prices Lower Than What You've Been Paying. cease at rice, 19 cents, H LISLE HOSB, fast black, richelieu ribbed, full fin. ished, full length, double 'heel and this week's The kind that wear and fit we will Black on our are the best values that have ever been of- | fered in Frisco for all sizes, 17 cents. Ladies’ White Swiss Ribbed “the price we are selling ple line of Waists are on sale at O’Farrell-street entrance. Tempting Values in Our Neckwear Department, MANUFACTURERS' OF LADIES NECKW are from one of the York manufacturers; 8362 no two alike; we bought half the cost of the material. And_we are going to give -?} our patrons the benefit of this bargain. Among them are JABOTS, LACE and NET TIES JOLLARETTES, NEW and all the newest styles of NECK- WEAR that_are made, SILK 4 Made in MUSLIN DE Lisle Thx;ad Isoll%f.e STLK GHIFEON, Vests, low LIBERTY SILK and in ¥ LAWN and PIQUE, | neck, mno gLk JABOTS 5 | sleeves, neck haige, el_fi | AN BS . [ Y and sleeves GiLARS with J | . 35y crocheted. ed | > 1. g Wondersnever EMB these for. it Ladies’ Vests. bargains, 49¢c. § The wholesalers ask | B $2 a dozen; this week’s price 9c. Made of the best Peruvian cotton, T e SRR e R 5c If we would and enumerate them all this paper would not be large enough. Bargain Counters This Week. Running Through to 11 O’Farrcll Street, Phelan Building. It Is True Rosenberg Is Always Show- ing Something New. \ Do not blame your dressmaker if your dress does not fit you; it might be the fault of your form. Have you secen the new bust per fector? It is the town talk. They are made of summer net- ting and black sateen, neck and arm_ holes fin- ished with em- broidery; the ol garment that will ive you a per- erybody’s reach. Be Ty fect form. Within ev This week $1.00. Just Think! A Summer Corset fer 19c. Ladies’ Corsets, cool and com- fortable, made of the best im- ported netting, strong double side steels, rust-proof front steels, lace top and tape bottom, at our challenge price of Qe None sold to other stores. Sensational prices in Sample Corsets. ‘were a drummer’s sample line; col- ors black, gray and white. These corsets are the stout people’'s friend. because they will make you thin; slightly sofled from being handled. $2.75 Kind, 980 $4.00 Kind, $1.50 If we have your size you will not regret inspecting them. Have You Seen Our New Military not pull your hair; Z” One of the Waltzing Party at Qur Muslin Underw:ar Department. LAD! DRAWERS soft surprised 1 them at voke effect. M with _eleven tched tu sleeves edged with a ruffle of hemstitching T 2 sARGATN “ror A Few Hints That Will Pay You fo Give 00, % : Your Attention. ou know what Latest fad in DRE the. JEATREIDY. st e ke B ik G CORSETS are; olf skirt; it is made of there is not a bet- denim_ stitched bias fold ter corset made o x than them. They them est styles. Corset ? The kind that will be worn for next It is made of the best sate season. double side steels, rust proof fron Side Combs, 15 ¢ steel, embroidered top and bottom; Side Combs with nestones, 5 colors pink, blue, white and black. This corset will give you the new military erectness; a perfect fitting corset. For fit, wear and ease this corset has no equal. . cents. Among_them there are sold as high as 35; others accordingly. Littie lems at Little Prices. challenge this corset against any other §2 corset made. Large squares of cube Pins, 5 cents Your best opportunity In years; Bgok Pins, black and ite, 5¢ a price $1.00. book. Steel Safety Pins, 3¢ a dozen. Pearl Bu X & kind, all $DE eenecenomssnsseacase 3 [ Swiss ribbed, low neck, no sleeves, h . izes, 6 a dozer M full length, colors pink and biue, at o teel B and 7 in ’ an yuial Verin of 125 cente:” - o Steel Scissors, 5, 6and 7 inch blades, S’ SILK VESTS, mads o N - " the best American silk, low neck, no : bJ (SUTlng, Irons. all sizes, best qual sleeves, neck and sleeves she + Needle Books, 225 Needles In a e 816 Market Street, R o & look ‘will convince you that they are est Blac! oy B MNIVERSHRY CF THE FOUNDING OF N SWEDE Successful Colony Planted in the Forests of [ Maine. | King Oscar Sends Greeting to His Former Subjects Who Settled Thirty Years Ago in New England. — N BANGOR, Me,, June 23.—Thirty years ago ‘William W. Thomas Jr. of Maine led a little colony of Swedes over the ocean from their fatherland into the deep forests of his native State. In the north woods thereof he founded a Swedish settlement. This settlement he baptised New Sweden, a name at once commemorative of the past and auspicious of the future. The colony consisted of fifty-one souls all told, men, women and children. Under the su- pervision of Mr. Thomas the colonists went to work felling trees, building log houses, clearing land, bushing out roads and building bridges. Then there was busy work in the woods of Maine. The Ameri- can forest rang with the blows of the | Swedish ax. Extensive clearings opened out and log houses were rolled up on every hand. Odd bits of board and the happily twisted branches of trees were quickly converted into needed articles of furniture. Rustic bedsteads, tables, chairs and the omnipresent cradle made their appearance in_every house, and Swedish industry and ingenuity soon transformed the forest into the abode of man: Mr. Thomas everywhere shared the toils and rivations of the new settlers. Every day e Was among them. On foot of on horse- back he visited them all and every day beheld something tangible accomplished ! in the woods of Maine. After four | of work the colony was fast rootes had become self-sustaining. Bounteous crops had been harvested everywhere, and Mr. Thomas was able then to take a fare- well of the colony, which has ever since Puruued a successful and independent ex- itence. S Fhirty years have now rolled by. Since the "little colony of fifty-one has rown to_a solid community over 2000. q"he Swedes have spread out (hrouththg ew and Thi 1870 woods from the mother colony of Sweden and on adjacent townships have founded the settlements of Westmanland, . Stockholm, Jemtland, Upsala and other small colonies. The log houses have ven way to substantial two-story frame wellings. barns stand near the growing crops. Schoolhouses are placed at the cross roads. Four large, commo- dlous churches have been bulit, and on every Sunday morning the sound of the church bell resounds through the forest. All the colonists are well-to-do farmers, Another remarkable fact is that this col- ony is the conly successful agricultural Colony founded with foreigners from over the ocean in the New England States since the Revolutionary war. Swedish colonists of Maine will, The on day, celebrate the thirtieth an- R &7 the founding ol the Cols with lmch:! t;nd“m\lflfi .nflgh festivities Appro ate to e Y. i A omas, now Rk Wintster of tha United States to Swe- ears | den and Norway, has accepted the invita- tion of the colonists, and has sailefl over | from Sweden to be the orator on the An- niversary day. The American Minister | does not come back to his colony empty | handed. On bidding good-bye to King Os- car a few weeks ago. at the palace at| Stockholm, the King gave to Mr. Thomas an autograph letter of congratulations to the colony on the success it had made | in the virgin forest of Maine, and of his best wishes for its future prosperity | and well being. The King presented to | Mr. Thomas a portrait of himself, clad in the uniform of general of the Swedish army, and charged Mr. Thomas to present this portrait to the colony on its an- niversary day. On arriving In America and paying_his respects to President Mc- Kinley at Washington, the President, in like manner, gave to Mr. Thomas a larga and an_excéllent photograph of himself, signed by the President’s own hand, to be presented to the colony at the time of the presentation of the por- trajt of Oscar, requesting Mr. Thomas to convey to the colony an expression of his kindly regard and his best wishes for its future welfare. | The exercises of the thirtieth anniver- | wijl be conducted in a large open air auditorium. This is situated in a grove of gigantic maples that crown the crest of one of the highest ridges of the town | of New Sweden. Here the American and Swedish flags will float gaily out. It is estimated that over flve thousand people, will be gathered to- gether on that day. The Governor and | Council of Maine, Senators Hale and Frye, and the Representatives of Maine in the Congress of the United States. and other notable persons, have been invited and are expected to be present, The following is_the letter of King Os- car, which r. Thomas will read and present at the anniversary on Monday next: As Mr. Thomas, ervoy of the United States of America at my court, has announced his in- tention to visit the colony of New Sweden. in the State of Maine, founded by him, which | colony - the coming summer proposes to cele- brate a festival commemorative of thirty vears' prosperous existence, 1 wish hereby kindly to requestthe said envoy, Mr. Thomas, to express my warm well wishes both for the still surviving natlve Swedes and their pos- terity In the colony, and also for the con- tinued progress and prosperity of this new home land so vividly recalling the former ‘Old Sweden."" OSCAR, King of Sweden and Norway. Stockholm's Palace, April 2, 1900, Contests Johnson’s Will. A contest to the will of the late Theo- dore L. Johnson was flled yesterday by Mary J. Johnson, an heir at law of the decedent. Phe contestant alleges that there is insufficient evidence -to warrant the admission of a _copy of the alleged last :xvéldl taot prghate. Johnson's estate is val- ————— Colored Girl With a Razor. Emma Jackson, a young colored woman, was fined $100 by Police Judge Mogan yes- terday, with the alternative of $100 days in the County Jall. She had a row with Emillo Branchini, saloon-kezper, 10 Pa- cific street, and slashed at him with a razor. She only succeeded In cutting his coat. —_——e———————— Stenographers Secure Positions. Twenty-seven stenographers secured good, permanent, paying positions with | downtown _ firms. All _were _secured through L. & M. Alexander, agents Smith Premfer typewriters, 110 Montgomery st. — s Alcalde Drill Corps. Alcalde Drill Corps No. 1, N. 8. G. W., will give its first anniversary ball in Na- | The Grand Master Workman and | | as follow: | selected by a committee representing the tive Sons’ Hall next Wednesday evenmg. The grand march will move at 8:45 o’clock. e ————— ‘We save money for amateurs, We loan you a kodak. Backus Studlo, 11 Geary st.; supplies. * WORKMEN WILL HAVE AN OUTING AT LOS GATOS Ancient Order Has Arranged for Reunion and Pienic During July. —_— | Other Officers Will Be Pres- ent—Committees That ‘Will Have Charge. PP SRR, Los Gatos is the place that has been twenty-eight local lodges of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, two locdl lodges of the Degree of Homor and the Past Masters’ Association at which to| hold a pienic on the 2th proximo. The | general committee consists of three mem- | bers of each lodge and a like number from the past masters, with Walter Malloy of Golden Gate Lodge as chairman; M. J. Blackman of the Past Masters, vice chair- man; Frank J. Maguire of Friendship Lodge, secretary, and E. A. Smith ol Harmony Lodge, treasurer. The committee that will have charge o the park is made up of the following | named: William J. Beatty of Franklin Lodge, J. Langensderfer of Prosperity Lodge, A. D. Hawley of Superior Lodge, | M. J. Blackman of the Past Masters, Gus Pohiman of Burns Lodge and 1. A. Smith | of Harmony lodge. The other-committees | are as follows: Prizes L. G. Schord of Burns Lodge, W. H. | Kruse of Hercules Lodge, W. H. Day and J. B. McDonald of Excelsior Lodge and M. Couinhan | of Alta Lodze. | Games—Louis Klein and M. Bowman of Su- perior Lodge, Frank Teremosa of Crocker | Lodge and L. Hamlin of Superior Lodge. | The programme of entertainment and | instruction prepared at the suggestion of | the committee on extension will in- clude an address by Grand Master Snook, | pe District Attorney of Alameda County; an | address by Grand Recorder Spencer, an original song by Grand Recelver Sam | Booth, games and races and music by the Golden Gate Park Band. | ‘A fine souvenir of the occasion is being | prepared. It will contain a history of the | order, portraits of the founder thereof, Father Upehurch, the supreme officers and the grand officers of the jurisdiction of_California. The citizens of Los Gatos have prom: ised to assist the lodge of Workmen of | that place to give the visitors a grand | welcome. The lodge has undertaken the | task of decorating the dance pavilion and the racetrack, where the games will take | &"f The committee on transportation | ai made arrangements to e enouxh | cars to convey twenty-six on this outing as it Is expected that about | that numbeér will on that day gather mn | the grove at Los Gatos, | “The New Yorkers’ ” Society. At a meeting of the executive commit- tee of the New Yorkers held Friday evening in the Occidental Hotel the fol-| 4 lowing cwerxhldmltted to membership: Henry C. 1, Oroville D. Baldwin, Louis H. Bonestell, John A. Bilert, Louis B undred people | § H. Greenhood, Alfred Edward M. Green, Robert W liam B. Latham, David S. Levy McCarthy, Richard 0'Con George Stone and Captain omas. ‘The organization, which is composed of natives or former residents of the State H. reenebau Charles E. of New York, now has 136 members and is rapidly increasing, a num of appli cations being stiil in the hands of awalt membership committee port. —————— Mary McMahon Sentenced. Mary McMahon, recently convicted of embezzlement, was sentenced to serve eighteen months in San Quentin by Judge Lawlor yesterday. Last February the wo- man failed to return $256 to Harry Garcia, who intrusted her with the money for safe keeping. ———— Two Insolvents. Petitions in insolvency were flled yes- terday in the United States District Court E. J. Cate, San Francisco, $7154 63, assets $270; Charles A. Beckman, saloon-keeper, Ban Francisco, liabilities $3449 17. + + : GLORIA + + + + LJ - . + What a joyous name. There is + a true ring to it—a something to : be proud of. We know what it is, true merit. That is why we shout for them, and you will join in singing their praise after yo once wear a pair, for they retai their shape, are easy on the feet, graceful to the eye and guaran- teed to wear. + 2 < * + + + B + + + > 3 Hand-turned or welted, kid or + patent leather, lace or button, in every style, in every size, and the price $ 3.50 Fer Ladles Only. SIND FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. We are Soie Agents Here. PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. B. KATCHINSKL Proprietor. $ 10 Third Street, San francisco. S - pe + L R R R R R R R R R R TR