The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 27, 1900, Page 10

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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1900. BISHOP MOORE HAS FAITH IN THE FUTURE OF THE CHINESE Delivers a Brilliant Sermon on the Conditions in the Flowery Kingdom—The Right Rev. J. W. Ham- ilton Preaches to a Large Congregation. PRISON YAWNS FOR BOSSES’ HENCHMEN Returning Board May Cause Arrests. If No Returns Are Received No Credentials Will Be Issued. busy day. What with kes and well wishes nds and admirers and s each, Y were re, who departs on preached in e's church and in e congregation of Epise Church | | K ng trou- | | p Hay addressed i the Howard-street Church in the morn- | | livered a b: congregation of the | | urch, presided over o— BISHOP HAMILTON ADDRESSING THE CONGREGATION. B TAT AT AT AT AT AT AT AT AT AT A TR AT AT AR + MEMBERS OF REPUBLICAN RETURNING BOARD. HENRY E. HOLMES, carriage manufacturer, 209 Castro street. GEORGE D. CLARK. pottery works, 120 Frederick street. T. H. M'CARTHY, vice principal of Washington Grammar School, 317 Hyde street. WILLIAM METZNER, manager of Monatuck Silk Company, 1231 Guerrero street, H. C. HENDERSON, coal dealer, 1809-1815 Folsom street. GEORGE W. PENNINGTON, street worker, 936 Shotwell street. NATHAN W. FRANK, attorney, 2114 Central avenue. JOHN R. HILLMAN, insurance, Hotel Ramona. A. RUEF, attorney, 422 Lombaid street. AUGUSTUS JOHNSON, hotelKeeper, Contra Costa House, Jackson and Drumm streets. L J. TRUMAN Jr., attorney at law, 3540 Twentieth street. JOHN F. M'GL/ N. Wells-Fargo money order clerk, 1216 Howara street. A. B. TRUMAN, 1425 Stelner street. JOHN F. AHERN, soap manufacturer, 6 Boardman place. H. J. M"MAHON, Deputy Sheriff, 1414 Sumner street. J. J. MOREHOUSE. contractor, 1030 Mission street. JOHN B. M'NAMARA, Clementina street CHARLES F. ENGELKE, liquor dealer, First and Howard streets. AT A AT TS T AT S AT AT RS A, * TR Q > B N D R FOR DR RO RETE D KD R KD RS s AN ENE S ENT e | i men who ignored the regular return- It was an assurance that their crooked | work would not be able to pass muster. The returning board < | termination not to i | returns of eight districts and those of one precinct of another to Shiels Hall after the polls for the Republican Friday were closed may be awrested on a | criminal charge as a result of their ir- | regular proceeding. Members of the re- | turning board have discussed informally | the advisability of taking such a step, but have postponed action until the meet- ing of the board to-night. The election paraphernalia was all se- cured from the returning board of eigh- teen, members of the County Central Committee either taking the ballot boxes, | | tickets, tallysheets, etc., for their respec- | tive districts or writing orders for mexri delivery to some of their political friends. The property, for which the returning | board is responsible to the Election Com- mission, was*signed for by those to whom | it was entrusted. In consequence, what | is virtually a trust contract exists be- iween them and the returning board. | In some cases among the eight and a | half precincts the ballet boxes were re- | turned, but in each of them some portion of the’ election paraph lfa is still not | { accounted for, and the responsibility for | its safe return'to the returning board rests | with the men who received it. | The Herrin-Kelly-Crimmi ognized the authority of the returning | ‘| board by coming to it for ballot boxes, | | tickets, “tally sheets and returns blanks. | Having done so, they were under the ue any of the delegates the return election of whom have not come board's hands. Even where there is no contest they w: oy delegates, unles them. denti: returns were s will be {ssued to-night to all the delegates of whose electjon the board has evidence in the way of returns, except In the ce unsettled contests, When the County Convention meets it will be called to order by Chairman Bou vier, with Secretary Wilson acting as tem- porary secretary. | cons whom credentials have been issued by order of the returning board, and no oth- ers. The names of tne Kelly-Crimmi delegates fn districts from which returns s where there are s <rol‘use to issue credentials, as t not appear on it. Those delegat tee on credentials, and if they are ad- mitted to the convention at all it will be upon their producing unquestionable proos of their election. BERNSTEIN HAS SWINDLED NUMEROUS BUSINESS MEN men rec- | necessity of bringing the returns to the same bo’ard, In gmfi to Shiels | with | Has Been Engaged at the Work them they ignored the provisions of the Since He Was 14 Years stated th | returns showdd be taken to the Central Committee headquarte Market street. The envelopes o By of Age. S. Bernstein, the young man who tried to “fiim-flam” Henry Wolff, manufactur- at 3 provided for enclosing the ballots, tal ets and ! Rides ot S | lists of voters were addressed to John R. | IN& Jeweler, 120 Sutter street, Saturday Hillman, chairman of the returr poard. | out of four watck was released on bonds vesterday. Wolff admitted that he had learned of Ber that what he gave works. May Be Prosecuted. ein’s intentions ana The returning board will meet to-night m_ were gold probable that steps will be taken to pre cute the men whose signatures show that | they received the property. Application | for search warrants will probably be made cigars from S Bachman & Co.. Pine an | in order to recover the missing property | Battery streets. He was 1dentificd | and also for warrants for the arrest of | Tewis Levin in the City Prison yesterds | the gulity henchmen of the Mint saloon | pefore being released. It is probable that bosses. If that action is decided UPON, | the victims will swear to complaints not only will the men who received the | paraphernalia be prosecuted, but also the | 2§20t him to-day cigar men by makin to them. He secured 500 cigars from Lev- in & Posener, 106 Clay stree:, and 1500 false representatio: 1 @ | dlection officers who - took it into their m;"é‘je',’,‘"e,’,ié’é’lfl anyifiigfin}""l;\};‘{ée’éi * 1| fact the tragedy of the nineteenth cen-|were spoken very long ago. They EaTer its returnoming Jolntly respon- | men since he was 4. He has been arrest- | tury. It is tmpossible for any man to be [ were spoken to a woman-a low woman | E’E-‘fi 5 ‘]‘]’ gl the districts from |4 before for the same offense, but his 90 Jitnd that Db Deubt e God's finger | at a well, a disreputable woman and a | b ol o e AT neistricts from | friends came to his rescue and hé escaped £t | coming out of the darkness and writing | Samaritan. Thay weére Spoken by o Jew. Dulch SIL Or & Dart of the. elsetion PAMR [ punishmant. outhern | on the western sky the wonderful things | Now the Jews have no dealing with ihe | Pherna Lot » i < A nd New Mex- | that are transpiring in Eastern Asla by . Samarit 3 pelyed. - Twentyglgnth,. TN ink, | ? Why are we in the Orlent? was that day in May prophetic of L ter day in May? y was this earlier relation between America and Ja. > ehow linked with this later devel- between America and China? t that the island empire, the Eng- the Pacific, stretches along our 1 now from our southernmost she looks across upon our zired territory in the Philip- b was this conflict so held k until America became a world pow knowledged as such by the great ;i e there on tial empire arts of war army of picked men under of- who command the hosts of mighty his providenc Wh, 4 to a large con- Methodist Church spellbound with lendid array of s in the Orient peace confer- the storming of t be called the were it n ., my friends, there is a destiny that ADVERTISEMENTS. | rules. a providence that never 3 e ~—— | varies. There is no power to call America back from this theater of activity. The idle rumors that Germany, Russia and | Japan have decided to on the war- | fare with China and to ask the retirement | of England and America is absurd on its r . ve facy Amer] to retire when the \\l e AI'C Se"lng | cause ¢ y is at stake? England | to withe e ‘banner that stands for tection because a_comb s it? China Crockery Why, the sug- s rdity. id the bond between Eng- although unwritten, is Glassware hations will Silver Piated Ware s Loty the gid Gt | ‘gafewape man can tell there is this trouble | Jardinieres, Lamps - another Stll another re these reasons are invaluable as a part of | the great answer.” | Missionaries Are Accused. The speaker charged that the trouble was due to the interference and arrogance of power by missionaries, and he laid stress on ‘the fact that the Jesuits, who riven out of France, wege primarily { the uprising. He sald that “hinese pation saw the nations—Rus- Japan and Germany-—grabbing its and anger smouldered in the the natives until it became a Kitchen Ware at Away Down Prices COME JUST TO SEE Good Time and Place to Buy Great American Tmporting Tea Ca. MC of his sermon was taken from the fourth chapter according to St. John, and the latter part of the twenty-second verse: “For Salvation Is of the Jews. PAINLESS DENTISTRY ! No Plates Reguired. > said ment. A paradox Is a truth con- i or disguised in what at the tim may be doubted—may seem to be untrue; but which time demonstrates varily to ba truth. The most widely known and widely scattered people of the earth have been the Jews. For this reason the Bible stu- dent has been led to exaggerate number and importance to neous people. v many Jews, and there are not many Jews now. There are more people {in London and New York than there are Jews in all the earth. In Russia, whera there are the most, there are scarcely more than 4,000,000,"and in Austria-Hun- gary not more than 2,000,000. According to PMOVABLE BRIDG: durable. War: a glove less extracting is patenteq other dentist on the Pacific contempora- PRICE LIST FOR 30 nars;s ainie ras o $3.00 50¢ “will attend to the chil- B5% GEARY STREET, between Hyde and |ihe‘last census there ‘were more Mo == S & k Tmon: i Larkin. Telephone Polk 1135. | than Jews in this country; but the grel: e | persecution which has pursued these peo- [l5 o5 Jhe other side of the Atlantic has ed them to come to this country more & v A Irapldl_\' during the past ten years, and T presume that the census now will Teport instead of 300,000, | ber given in 1890, possibly. half, showing a most rapid increase of the Jews in this country. M"Another feautre connected with their VHIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLD “tcures Private, Nervous, and Blood Dis- “n only. Book on Private Diseases and cnesses of Aen. free. Over 2035’ experience. ntscoredat Home. Terms reasonable, Hours9 8:30 ev'gs. Sundays, 10 to 12. Consul- reewnd sacredly confidential. Call.oraddress being taken as the num- a million and a In part | | _“This is one of the paradoxes of the New | their | The fact is there have not | 3 lly burst, causing jeath and sands of people and 218 Third & operty = speaker drew a beautiful 121 Montgon ration of China. } tha the Aagel of fn hover over the t that nation, whicn nas for past been sluggi would awaken and the march of civilization would pass through the land, and soon | | again the missionaries would be trodding | the streets of Peking and Tientsin in safety Bishop Hamilton delivered his initial; sermon in his new field yesterday mornin, TS Popr Tash v at the Howard M. E. Church. The dis: | tinguished visitor prov ed a forcible talker and impressed the large congregation SR ————— | which listened to his discourse. The text story is that they have bee tempt- uously regarded. ® were the Jew spoken—to F. ROSCOE McNULTY, M. D. When were the Jews ‘rancisco, whom and by ifiunt They, £63; Kcarny ®t., San F. CalL ! work in the bombardment | were Christian Chinese, n._ It would have been as peril- Samaritan to sit down to dine ith a Jew as for a black man the h a white man. It | The Jew who epeaks n of man, son of God, and at one Operaia Society Picnic. The annual picnic of the Society Operala | of this city was held at Schuetzen Park yesterday. The picnic was well attended Thirtieth, Thirty-first, one precinct of the Thirty-seventh, the Thirty-eighth, For- tieth, Forty-third and Forty-fifth. These are the districts the returns from which were taken to Shiels Hall, the ballot- = = ey boxes, tally-sheets, etc., being afterward nction betwesn Jews - and " Samaritens | ghtted arodnl according (o thecwidmurod | L RET o i L 0T e dyvan o, the world long and earth over. Nay, he | {he individuals who had possessio assistant, G. Peirano; floor committee—E. smites all distinctions between all classes and races the world round and the world | long. | The Salvation of God. | “That may serve as a more simple ex- | position to the c 1 student of the | scripture I have just read, but there 1s suggested to my mind some more pro found truths which [ desire to impress upon your mind this morning. First, if the salvation of God is from the Samar- itan, the salvationof God is from one one man to another man, and all men be- come the gavers of men, and there are no men saved who are not saved by some esponsibility that leaves in other man. “What a Y your doorway and mine! Not only is the | present generation charged with the re- sponsibility of its own salvation, but | through itself of all generations that are | to come, and the individual is made re- sponsible while he lives not only for part- nership—the high 1d holy partnership with God in the salvation of the world— but for a personal individual duty that holds that individual for the salvation of another. None are too old to be relieved | from the responsibility; none are too young not to inherit the privilege.” Cebuti, A. Schivo, A. Gaspari, F. Marsini, | G. Luporini and A. Benassini; refreshment | sommittee=R. Glovannoni, Y. Doth, L. o rmination of the use for | Digrazia, Riccomini, R. Allegrini. G. BRIk It was Shor one Pie Heer| B o Al Drasdsoat mod o X Kelly-Crimmins henchmen might as well | ei: door ;’"P“}' iy Dot &, have taken the ballot-boxes and returns | Righito and G. Leonardini. direct to the Mint saloon and there have e surrendered them into the keeping of the Swim at the Crystal Baths. bosses as to have made Shiels Hall their ; ; Recommended by physiclans. Water always Y O | e o v des st by e is known to the contrary, the missing e property may now actually be in the pos- session of Kelly and Crimmins. Talks of Capital and Labor. The returning board of eighteen is stand!nf firm on one proposition—that no credentials will be issued to district dele- gates whose election is not shown by re- turns made to the board. The high standing of the men composing the re- turning board, whose names and occu- pations are tabulated above, was a guarantee that fair dealing would have been accorded the candidates no matter to which faction they belonged. Heelers Were Afraid. Fair dealing. however, was not what the Herrin-Keily-Crimmins heelers want- ed. They were afraid for their returns to go before a board that would not wink at documentary evidence of ballot- box stuffing, repeating, and stealing in hem. The implied trust contract between the returning board and those who received the property would require its prompt re- ular weekly meeting last night at B'nat | B'rith Hall. E. T. Kingsley of San Jose | was the principal speaker and addressed the club on “Capital and Its Relation to the Working Classes." —_———— Trapper's Ofl cures rheumatism and neuralgia. Druggists, 50c flask. Richards & Co., 406 Clay. —_———— Carpenter Missing. sides at 135 Eleventh avenue, has been God’s Business; Man’s Business. the Morgue. Rev. Dr. Easton of Washington, D. C., | e e tatetots 2 focupled the pulpit of the Westminster | @ sfeimffoirfeiriejnioffofufeiufuiofminmiieini D el T‘rT " ’H:mi( hurr}i\l vesterday ;nnrnlng\i L3 and preached an able sermon. He took g for Hig text Luke iiwe it venot '} T BOY FATALLY INJURED AND i must be about my er's business?” | & ‘ath, At s d nounced as his theme Man's Best Business,” the outset ourse he an- | God's Business; A Missionary From China. - | The Rev. Dr. Peck, a returned missfon- | ary from China, delivered an interesting | and stirring sermon last night at the | Richmond Congregational Church. To What Purpose Is This Waste?" was | the text he seiected, and his address was | Little Elmer Locke langled by an Electric Car While Devoted Canine Playfellow Meets With Death at His Side. on the present crisis in China. “The eyes of the civilized world are at | 5 present centered on Ci he sald. “The different Governments are anxious for ILLED with the glee of careless childhood, Flmer Locke, aged 8 years, ;'cvl‘:'i‘l";fhl’lrl" 1[‘;»"1“;.‘:'9 x;‘lljxe r.hll:'rcihl‘s are | residing with his widowed mother at 858% Folsom street, was disport- 1t onght 0. be ‘of Intarest o tesy ot ing himself with his favorite playmate, a pet dog, late yesterdas af. what will become of China, Christians es- | ternoon when an electric car bore down upon him and fnflicted injurfes pecially. China wilt be a great factor in | that will likely prove fatal. Usually dogs are wary and exercising the won- the future history of the world. She has | i sessed by them escape all threatened onslaughts from ve- A derful agility poss Y 8! a number of religions. The Buddhist re- | hicles. In this case, however, the devoted canine went to death beside its little master. The child called and the little one’s dumb playmate ran to his side, as If feeling that the boy needed protection from the electrically propelled monster that was about to grind him to death. Several of Elmer's playmates, seeing the car approaching at a lvely rate of speed, shouted to the unfortunate boy to “look out,” but too late to save him from being mangled. Elmer was picked up in a semi-conscious conditlon and immediately re- moved to the Receiving Hospital. An examination by Drs. Dray and Irones revealed the fact that the little fellow's skull was fractured and his right leg mangled to such an extent that it was found necessary to amputate it. At a late hour last night the doctors entertained little hope for the child's recovery. Tt was shortly after 5 o'clock that the unfortunate boy left his home to take his dog “for a walk,” as he expressed it. After performing several tricks to the delight of its youthful master, the canine started to cross Fol- som street between Fourth and Fifth. Elmer, after vainly endeavoring to call the dog to him, started after it. According to several eye-witnesses, he walked to the middle of the street and stood on the car track, as if deliber- ating whether to continue the pursult or not. Just then car 1014, which was In charge of Dennis Flynn, came rumbling along at a lively rate of speed. Realizing that an accldent was inevitable, the motorman applied brake, af- ter reversing the current, but too late to save the lad from being injured. The dog, which had returned to its master just as the car struck him, ran afoul of the fender and was killed. A sad scene was witnessed when Mrs. Locke visited the Recelving Hospital to see her mangled offspring. On learning that he was fatally injured she uttered a plercing scream and sank Into a chair in a state of collaps: Through the ministration of Mrs. Swett, the kind-hearted matron of the hospital, she soon recovered sufficiently to see her child. After passionately kissing him she begged the doctors to tell her whether his injuries were fa- tal or not. On being told that he might dle she again collapsed and it was with difficulty that she was resuscitated. Flynn, the motorman, was arrested i 5 5+ ligion has seen much persecution similar to Christianity, but it is a dead issue, The (-‘m‘)h‘.~ are all falling to decay and are‘ thinly attended. Mohammedanism was | forced on the Chinese by former rulers of | the people, and that also has a very poor | outlook. T read recently in a paper of the | Jecture that Ho Yow, the Chinese Consul, | gave, and his great excuse for the upris- | ing is that the Christian missionaries force | religion upon the natives, whether they want it or not. I have lived in China for | the past twenty vears and have never | once seen a misisonary force religion on any one. T was in a hospital as a physi- cian, and even there we did not talk re- igion to the patients If they did not wish | to hear it. American I also do not think that the ress are giving the native con- verts to Christianity the credit that is due them. I know for a fact, but I never | saw it published, that the men that hauled | that big twelve-inch gun from the English | ship Terrible, that did so much effectiv of Tientsin The young Em peror of China was most progressive and | was anxious to have all the young men | that surrounded him well cducated In modern science. The Empress of China on her sixtieth birthday was presented with a beautiful bound co{w of the Bible, the young Emperor read it and sent down to the misisonary headquarters in Peking for several more coples of the . He afterward read several scientific books, which no doubt opened his eyes, and it was for his desire for reform that he was overthrown. en peace has been restored there will edlately after the accident and Efo :"lf;aw"gflf(oi‘m%fi':: “‘A‘d fg: gr(e‘n.t mis- locked up In the City Prison. He claims 'that when he first saw the boy have to be ordained to £o over thae doy on the track he rang the bell, and as the child did not move he reversed the o work. There are a large number | *k Current and applied the brake. of flelds open In an educational and medi- . cal way in with the mluun.“l HE Herrin-Kelly-Crimmins hench- j the count. The character of the eighteen | men appointed by Chairman Bouvier was | ing board of elghteen and took the altogether too high to suit the push, for ey have no legal information of the election of | The temporary roll will | st of the names of the delegates to | were not made to the returning board wi'l | s will { have to present their cause to the commut- | q; @ jat 8 o'clock. If by that time the para- | without _the This brought | phernalia and _election. —returns of | charge down to a misdemanor and his | each district have not been re- ponds were fixed in $300 turned in full it i3 _extremely | The young man has also be:n swindling | | and the pleasant day was spent in dancing | The Socialist Labor party held its reg- | Bernard McDonald. a carpenter who re- | missing from his home since Saturday. | His disappearance has been reported to | - NEW DRESS GOODS We have now on displag our first shipment of NEW WOOLEN DRESS FABRICS FOR FALL, and invite an inspection of the following EXTRA VALUES. 54-inch CHEVRON CHEVIOT, in all the new Gray, Tan and Brown Mixtures, latest material for short skirts $1.25 Yard 48-inch CAMEL'S-HAIR STRIPE, in all the new Fall BOIOEIES . i e ....i..$I.50 Yard 52-Inch PEBBLE CHEVIOTS, in Navys and new Porcelain Blue—only................ S $2.00 Yard 56-inch ZIBELINE CHEVIOT, in Quaker Gray, Brown | and new shades of Blue, very sultail: for tailor op [ outing dresses $2.00 Yard 54-inch extra heavy CAMEL'S-HAIR ZIBELINE, in Grauys, ! Browns, Green and Blue, suitable for short skirts. .. $1.50 Yard 48-Inch FRENCH ZIBELINE, Camel’s Hair, in 10 of the | new Fall colorings $1.50 Yard | 52-inch ENGLISH VENETIAN, all the new Fail colors for tailor-made costumes. $1.75 Yard 5 cases NEW FRENCH CASHMERES and NUN'S VEIL- INGS, in about fifty different shades. | Samples forwarded to any address, and all orders, either | for samples or goods, filled and shipped the same day they are received. Clevnos g 1, 13, us, 07, 19, 121 POST STREET. JGED MAN DIE ON STREET FROM [ highest quality. We guar- antee every article we sell SPECIAL SAVING SALE Monday Tuesday Wednesday Claret—zinfandel OLDBERG G ‘!Mystery Surrounds Death at | Midnight of Edmund Williamson. e Taken Home in Feeble Condition, He Wanders Out Again and Is Found in State of | Collapse. i iy f o .. 35¢ |+ Pure California product—rich’ body— | reg'ly soc gallon | a Sardines—Beziers s 20¢ Superior quality—imported fish— reg’ly 25c—a well known brand Peaches—alealde 3 cans §OC Delicious—lemon cling fruit—heavy syrup—reg’ly 20c—2% Ib can—buy your winter’s supply now Oysters—our Choice 2's | Edmund Williamson, an old printer, dfed | under pecullar circumstances early this | morning on California street and Pratt | | place, a small alley above Stockton street. Willlamson resided at 816 California 25¢ Eastern—extra selected dozen 2 | street. At about 11 o'clock last night he 275 | went to his home and calling the landlady 3 - | told her that he nad fallen from a car and Whlskey—s.»uhmd Irish D C L had recelved a few bruises. reg’ly spec w claimed t his wounds had_been | Killy Croy 8 85 d In Jo: drug store on Kearny Hi 7 Clud 4 and California_streets. He showed her Zigniand Clul 1 85 a wound over the eve and unntherdon l‘h: Caledonian 135 110 , bot f whic were covered wit e b iy Wiltisee Dies B0 The landlady Highland Club (gal) 4 50 350 and she thought that he was about to! Salmon—rt Ib can 10¢ retire. 3 At about 12 o'clock two well dressed Tender red fish— delicate flavor— o tered John Lackmann - ly 128c—aui lace, and said that an old man who had ti i fold ibein he lived i the Delghborncod %aE Sa "}“’“""Z 4o0¢ was lying outside and was hurt. efined quality of sand soap— Several people in the store went out to | reg’ly soc doz—cleanses and polishes— see the man, and the two young men were | without scratchi heard to rvm:n-k‘_‘l “We h“’h brfiughz him | Cratching so far and have done enough. e Is with | > .o friends now: let them look out for him." | A”\ethfc“‘pta—chocolate 25¢ They then left the scene. The man lay propoed up against a gar- | den fencg and seemed to be breathing faintly. The Receiving Hospital was no. tified, but when the.ambulance arrived the man was dead. Exhilerating—digestible—exquisite flavor—reg’ly 30c can Mackerel—messed o : e X X X—12 Ib kits—a treat for Judging from remarks of the young men - < it is"thought that Willlamson_ left ‘the | breakfast—reg’ly $3 house after interviewing the landlady and ish—. o 24¢ had started to go downtown. His wound | 5}18_?33(])]“5,]3 ish m,“.;nz h;:;b' ter-pre sh—lasting s was probably more serious than he at firsc § , supposed and he suddenly collapsed. for men’s women’s and children’s shoes—reg’ly 15¢ bottle The body was removed to the Morgue. Toilet paper $1 10 | An autopsy will probably show that the fall from the car had resulted in a frace Belvedere—1oco sheets—fine tissue— | ynad reg'ly $1 50 dozen | NURSE SIMPSON PUTS - | $2 50 ture of the skull. | Willlamson was about 55 years of age. Candle stick 25¢ | UP A STRONG DEFENSE Wrought-iron—fancy designs— | —_— something new and pretty She Claims Mrs. La Roche Was In-| Match safe 25¢C debted to Her and Gave Her the Jewelry. | #Miss Mae Simpson, the nurse who is ac- Wrought-iron tray—rubberoid cup— latest novelty | cused of stealing the diamonds and other | SINK Strainer—sanitary 20¢ | Jewelry that belonged to the late Mrs. Modern kitchen necessity— | Jea(nnet-tjeys? Rochs, made a statement Mrs Vrooman's—reg'ly 25¢ to Captain Seymour yesterday. She said : . Mrs.“la_Roch: 4 —Pinaud 5 e ianeed i ot st ‘ot | TQUCL Waler—Pnaud 65c Nairisa—pleasing, odors—double strength—reg’ly 75¢ bottle nurse, and had given her the elry before her death to liqy S, uidate her ‘indebt- edness. She has engaged Garret Me- 3 | Enerney to deteda ‘et When x?;gl’p.,. is| Roseandcucumber jelly 15¢ ing. She positively refused to be seen Keeps the hands white and smooth yesterday. —reg’ly 2oc bottle Deputy Coroner P. J. McCormick dentes . < the Statement that he has been in the | UUnea=da biscuits our ines Yweck. He foss moeaeny e | Uneeda ginger w f . He not deny vis- iting the nurse on official business. Mr. I;I ‘gk o aiers g’gngmrl‘ckultnhn}une ludignant over the resh sto arrived Other than an official manuen, (he case in O ccaalogue Is a complete patorama of our four busy steres—it you c.n’t call send your addre s ¥ s 432 Pine 232 Sutter 2800 California San % » 1075 Clav between Eleventh and Tuctie O i) Swiss Rifle Club Shoot. At the Swiss Rifle Club ranges at Har- bor View the following won medals yes- ;le‘-;‘:.c}'l;i.ChAl.mvy!?:nvsl-.u' A. Gehret, 423; AR . . Croce, 7} thira cass, dos Fureer, 36 | W 00Ky Call,$1.00 per Year

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