The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 26, 1900, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1900. THE MYS ERY OF THE LILLIAN ROSS AFFAIR STILL REAINS UNSOLVED Detectives Completely ct‘ Sea in Trying to Find| Clew to the Cederberg Robber and Incendiary. Graphic Story of @lleged Burglar’s Attack Told by Mrs. Ross to Captain| Seymour. | 90@0@4—4@0@¢00@0©0®0-&0@‘®0@0 @ DA TA T AT AT A AT AT A AIA A SRR SA AT A @ I dosed off and before I knew it a man was at the side of ¥ my bed. He said, “I want your money.” I said, “I haven’t got ) any.” When he came near the bed I saw his face. He was a tail * ! * man with blue eyes. He had no mustache and he wore a brown hat with a wide brim.—From a statement made by Mrs. Lillian Rossto * Captain of Detectives Seymour. ) ‘/,&(,»;/ s e L SR e S e S ® L O e e 2 B e arer ot es Denies I"uphed Charge Statement. Ross’ Tre col- i this bruise Tust below my INDICATES THE FO0A7 WHERE MRS, FROSS WAS FOUND . ! + ront entrance with | pq was a burglar b | { _he might have got | . bedroom windows, of | P , both opening’ o | adjoinin; | b4 £ 11 + : & ; | ks ¢ | Just now th | 4 + | find out who Je | & é f * 4| | . ¢ MRS. LILLIAN ROSS, BABY CEDERBERG AND THE SCENE OF THEIR SUNDAY NIGHT ADVENTURE. ¢ % B N S o SRCSD SR P S eo-ei-e@Q | lar-bone the left breast. My left arm for nine f ve him 1 aid not read to-day. I only a_policeman : when I plcked up the paper to lock at the plotures. My father's name 1s Frank Lopes. | A Veritable Death Trap. & P'l\)l;, ‘ m‘]\P(‘tmn of the premises at fire and up in the fashion that she was found, at least without the aic }of 1nn(h(-'r @ Not only was a fire | started in the back bedroom. but In the dining room as well, for the lace curtains ton the windows have been burned away. JOCKEY WIS APPLAUSE BY HIS GAMENESS - Tommy Brmon Kicked at| the Post by Flop at Newport. PACORIATION OF LOCAL SOCIETY BY 1, A, ADAMS | Declares on Platform That It Is Composed of Bad People. furlongs, sell Dave W ne after the race. 1x and a half furlongs— mecoad, Aunie Taatetta 4nicd Though Stunned for an Instant He Remounts Dramburg and Lands Him in Front by & e Quick wi Tim Highly Sensational Utterances of Lecturer Surprise a Vast Au- dience That Gathers in Metropolitan Temple. S R Henry ropol Austin Adams lectured in Met- Temple last evening under the * - auspices of Pioneer Council 1 of the e — Young s theme was CHAMPIONS DRAWING AWAY. | The hall was 3 filled. is M. Estee presided. Be- Win From New York While Quakers |fore the lecture Miss Timmins and 5 $ Lose to Boston. | Messrs. Stantina and Martinez supplied w At the mext | o cT STANDING OF THE CLUBS. a very agreeable musical programme, ay and Dram- vocal and instrumental. In the d a fier: lly landing mid t the e fro Mr. Adams attacked many existing con- difions. He said at the outset that he was optimist and that he believed because and, more especially, Catholic, that things 21 19 Pitteburg ne crowd POSTON Philadelohias were out all right after a wh the start by their century would be jus was | what the r e of the present made of it. sses | The rapid movements of the time con- tted | vinced him that intellectual proj 9. | down hill. All rapid movements Carl ¢ upward progress was selling—Peter R OHR being turned Sauber third. ...20 13 (3 's clubs were tatlking peoe s & | ture. Ho hopod. thet el women who » Cuppy and Clements: 'l)elunged to clubs would resign to-mor- t Bernha Thomas, Conn and McFarland, Um- | row. Short-haired screech owls were go- “For God's 0 them he would “For God's sake pire—Emsle. ing through the land saying, saKe don’t be narrow. wer, e n : Mizsoura third. Time, - | sT. Lovis. June —The Zephyr stakss | pomenal form to-day . feature made off his delivery. —Powell pitched in phe- But one clean hit was Barrett's in the | ond was of & scratch order. ndance, 2 R. H E|A recent enc Leo XII had S T 1 3| wisely counseled that all teaching be Cincinnat! 0 2 2|based on what was solid and this coun- | sel had been proven good. “Society in San Francisco consists of a lot of bad people, and all the outsiders Brittenstein Batteries—Powell and Peitz. Umpire— Criger; Dare third. ' BROOKLYN, ooklyn played ,,n,.in;: mxn;:g to” get 1§zo l’({ % de‘f“‘;"d ik ik = x % Adams. “So it is in New Yorl s for rity course—Commando won. | around up three | Chicago—good God! Society is absolutely K me. | pitch for a | pagan. g There was not one contented home in th miles—Favonius | run_in by ; third. Time T ine firat, but after that the New Yorks were | the land, said Adams. Women were striv- a half t his mercy. Attendance 2300. Scdbe: {ing for invitations from those whose T i nd, Hardy | names would have caused their mothers Clubs— X % |to blush. College life was a bestial, sk 5 » k Domino won, The | Xew ¥ork 2 3| odorous " existence. The students gd, Efieen Daly third. Time, | Brooklyn tried to do right were regarded as mflk- 4 25 | Batteries—Carrick, Hawley, Logan and Bow- | sops. Politics were a reeking mass. All erman; Kennedy and Farrell. Umplre—La- | knew what Congress and Le x=latur:~s shington Park rack fast won, Silverdale 4%, re- | tham. signified—places to get rich. Men w. drew up grandiloquent political piatforms winked at one another as they schemed. A little money brought religious paraly- sis to Catholics as to others, Adams as- serted. The men attended the sacraments until they were rich. Their wives, when wealth came, liked to dine with Episco- palians and Methodists and Baptists. Chey thought that they were then above rish. If they could, they would change their names so that they wouldn't sound Irish. If they came to church, how !he& swept up the aisle! Catholic millionaires —_— American League Games. MILWAUKEE, June %.—Score: Milwaukee y 5, June 25.—Score: Cleveland 7, A HICAGO. June 25.—Score: Chicago 4, Minne- apolis 3. = AbEs s LONDON, June 25.—The Australian com- monwealth bill passed its third reading in the House of Commons amid cheers. me, 1:9% (F1-by-Night Topmast - won, Patroon 1:4. ; suliing , Great Bend third. Time, LOUIS, June %.—The Falr Grounds Whlt were the - — | churches? If they gave a contribution of $10 they thought they were dbing some- | thing fine. Mr. Adams counseled a return to stm- thought and life and said that prominent Catholics to join with be made toward rendering the United ;blmc< a Christian land. 0¢¢¢¢¢04o¢oo¢¢oo¢+¢¢¢. Jhe Day’s Dead F4EE 4444444444440 . MARTIN J. RUSSELL DEAD. Editor of the Chicago Chronicle Suc- cumbs to Bright’s Disease. MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich., June 2.— Martin J. Russell of Chicago, president of the Chicago Chronicle Company and edl- tor of the Chicago Chronicle, died here last night of Bright's disease. Mr. Rus- sell had been a sufferer from this malady for over a year. On Friday he arrived at this place, accompanied by his wife and son. FEree |+ |+ 5 d ¥ |+ |+ e Mr. Russell was born in Chicago in 1845, He served through the greater part of the civil war, ‘gaining the rank of leutenant. Upon his return from the war he became a reporter and worked his way up to the position he held at the time of his death, He held a number of local political offices and during the last administration of President C sleveland was Collector of Cus- toms of Chicag: Death of Dr. ;msey. BIGGS, June 25.—Last night Bennett Bussey, M. D., died here at the age of 93. He was the oldest physician in’ Califor- nia, having graduated from the school of medicine of the University of Maryland . 1528. He was a nativ, Han- ford County, Maryland. and ex-Senator of that State; also ex-Collector of the Port of New Orleans. Dr. Bussey arrived in Butte County in and has been tly identified with the Demo- ic party ever since, and was the su- pf‘rlnt ndent of the Bufte County Infirm- for a term, He is survi by a wife, a resident of Biggs, and two sons in the East. Fall Proves Fatal. FRESNO, June %.—James Doran of Reedley died yesterday afternoon from in- juries received in a fall from the Santa | Fe bridge near that place. He was, up to the time of death, unconscious from a Doran fell through the bridge at about midnight on Saturday and was found in a dying condition two hours later. b Ll Death of S. P. Kimball. VALLEJO, June 2%.—S. P. Kimball died at his home in this city this morning. Deceased, who was 80 years of age, came to this dity over thirty vears ago. He was a shipwright and opened a yard and repair ways at the foot of Solano avenua. imball's ways” are familiar words to oldithmbrg: 7 v T T Death of James Gallagher. James Gallagher, an old-time resident of San Francisco, died at the family resi- dence, 918 Broderick street, yesterday after a long illness. The deceased was 67 years of age. For several years he held a pusmon ln the Street Department at the C(‘gr Hall. r Gn.“agher was the father John J. Gallagher, formerly autop- sy surgeon at the Morgue, and of George Gallagher, salesman at H. Liebes & Co '8 fur store and well known as a politician, > % | fracture of the spine. PORTLAND, June E-—lh& Omon R.n. way and Navigation Compan e ced that ‘beginning July 1 Tt wiil Traugu rate @ 3-cent per mile passenger rate on its lines in Oregon and Wi tump the country a start_could | R ] Woman De- fies Police to Prove Her Guilt. ‘Unshaken in Her Story of Strange Af- . fair. D R IR SRCSY'S > ed T N perilous posi B oll that was used e back veranda. few * >0 .o & back door a ! These curtains were fully three dow fully twenty feet fro e ou | from the door of the back bedr k o ve s \Ed rr'}-.a”x‘mp?» ';,2:1 ed to dis was_tightly closed, or tne ne if the fire had burst | the public that Mrs. Ross would not ha > door nf V‘v back bedroom. 3,” s alive to-day to tell the stor: u bose that | that the bed desper- | in the narrow - with no ven c for the fact that i age. Mrs. Ross’ bedroom was a trap. Once the fire got a_good the dining room, she would have \m?'\’la of escape except through a label is what clothing you purchase. sure guarantee of good workmanship and absolute HE union you want to have on the You want it because it isa ' cleanliness. When buying clothes, you use your eyes and .fingers to judge the cloth, fit and general appearance, but the union label guarantees all the other requlrements. By manufacturing our own clothing the prices are lower than the usual retail prices, yet we employ union labor— the best paid labor in the worid. This quality is worth paying for. Our store abounds in values. We now emphasize good, well-made, union-made, stylish Suits and Overcoats for $9.85 We have sold these gery suits and overcoats for $12.50 and $15.00, but the sizes were all complete then., Now almost each pattern is short afew sizes, but the ciothes as a whole contain all sizes. When the sizes became incomplete we reduced the price. Now is your chance to save a few dollars on your ciothes. The suits comprise cheviots, serges and clay worsteds—all dressy materials; the overcoats are kerseys, coverts, oxford grays and cheviots—all fashionable garments. Boys’ Suits ERE are suits that can be worn all through vacation and yet be in good con- dition when ‘school begins, no matter how hard the boy is on his clothes, They are for boys from 8 to 16 years; coat is well lined and sewed— double breasted in style—large assortment of patterns—browns and grays in checks, stripes and herring-bones; suits are ali wool, silk sewed, perfect fitting and will give entire satisfaction ; price $3.50 a suit Box of fireworks free with either a suit or overcoat in this department until July 4th. We fill all out-of-town orders with the utmost care and promptness. You can deal with us by mail and be assured of the same treatment as though you bought in person. Write 718 Market Strect.

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