The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 16, 1900, Page 40

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1900 SENT FROM THE | PRESIDI0 BACK 70 CONFINEMENT i General Prisoners Returned to Alcatraz, Owing to o, e ers ey |Flags and Prizes Presented apk Q ; § | Lack of Guards. to Winners in Naval ! eers Reduces the | Parade. [ ilable Men at the - | for Fleet of Salmon Vessels, Coast- and Steamers Doric Sails for the Makes Port. | ers - h Orient. v X - 1 Fleet Axrives. f T Suaz.\ a )111, to .:(ltle a Bet. Ge steamer GUSSIE GOLDBERG WILL LEAD A BETTER LIFE She Will B r From the Effects of i She Swal- A h] «THE CREDIV HOUS. Six Steries High n | HHOSETPE will take ner as purchased the Ame i. She will be t and wi ma when that to the Phil- Morris E Where there t]’1”‘ a Morris Chair is comfort is, 1u succeeded the bark- in Ym'ne or office. Solid oak, well § stuffed cushions. Broad, sociable Morris € arms DOG POISONER IS ABROAD IN MISSION Valuable Animals Are Killed by the Miscreant, Who Puts Strych- | nine in Meat. ! 1 human beings, the | appearance in s i ght, O and several four- < been made hiq vietims. TG fety for the Pr n ’ als have undertaken to far with- 0 @ fine hunt- 1 street hll d a uccumbed to ries M. 2w~ h, but sc was also r to 1t he had found on had evidently purpose of de- h dog. Tnnk Too Much Opium. Market street ture of opium to | afternoon. Her r found her and Alameta, Berke: AN & CO. lthl) t to walk her in the ; eifect left her. Daughters of Liberty Outing. good the order committee of | 1 of the Daugh This eouncil ser. on which occasion a | members will take part in nber of the RADWAY'S nmm LIEF has stood public for 50 years as a antly relieves and quickly r flucnza, Bron- —————— Native S8ons! Your great celebration and | parade illustrated in 3 pages of the finest engravings. Was sale everywhere, for Maiuria and il Bowsl Paibe. Price 256, | English Journals Say It | 1argely in this ¢ ‘ntertainment to | uvenir edition on | this network can be removed and a coal Hale’s. | Hale’s. the new store : and its future our new building with its five large floors— its broad aisles and spacious stairways—its four large easy running elevators—its flood of day- light and scientific ventilation—its waiting and writing rooms, check rooms and lavatories—is the outcome of fair dealing with those who have given us success—the people. 5 we solicit a continuance of your confidence and in return promise to give the most zealous study to the perfecting of our facilities Tor meeting Yyour wants. we mean by this that every advantage we'can gain by bigger buying and bigger selling will go straight to you. Hale's. ! Hale’s. Hale’s. newsy notes of the new store all the elevators are now in running order. the first floor fixtures are finished and in place— all ready for the new goods. they are the handsomest and most modern fix- tures in the country. new goods are being opened, marked and ar- ranged for sale on the third floor. the fourth floor is packed from the floor to the ceiling with unopened cases of new have you noticed the new good. v rrmm_v they are—how handsome they are by daylight— how brilliantly they light up at night. we should be moved now, but unavoidable de- we have no fear but that vou will stand by us as loyally in the fu- ture as in the past—that the new store, with your help, will be but another stepping stone in our onward and upward march. we are moving now. our future is in your hands. week: than we can here—for seeing magnitude. moving burden. it’s moving time for us— buying and saving time for you. lays by contractors kept us back. part of the cloak and suit fixtures were moved to the second floor of the new building yesterday and the department is somewhat upset. but the little prices will more than make amends for any inconvenience you may be put to. we are moving now. final cuts now===deeper than before---for it’s moving time the following urgent instructions were issued to each department manager last “we have only a short time more in the old store—positively close out every=- thing possible now—we have new goods enough for the new store—therefore reduce prices on present stocks—we prefer selling to moving—it saves expense.” simply means additional savings to you, for the department managers have cut deep—on many lines very deep. this our counters and windows tell the story better is believing. every department comes under the edict, for we realize fully what a tremendous job it is to move a stock of such the new prices—coupled with your appreciation—will lighten the this week records the shortest prices on Hale’s good goods in our history—you Kknow what that means—our loss now—means a saving later. last days in the old store— we are already moving. by actual practical trial. first 3 used it was blown with 2 per cent or per cent of generated steam, but this an imperfect flame and set up a | vibration. Now 8 per cent is used and a | | bunsen flame is obtained with little vibra- | tion. The fireroom cost of handling oil is ured at one-third less than the cost of ndling coal. There are no ashes, no ~un nn smoke and less heat is lost by ra- MANIFOLD USES ~ ARE NOW FOUND Jmn nt. As the Pacifie Oil Reporter truly | paints out, the needed tools and machin- M L e r\‘l:nr::“‘he"h:xtt;r"mldlc‘brx‘:’a;‘ ured in this F v that petrole has supplied ay Largely PP | substitute for high-priced coal. h ¥ A | Los Angeles and Fore]gn Coal. |a ng business. Bakerfleld's | shop factlities are about to be increased. | The Ventura Free Press says that Ven- tura County, one of the oldest ofl-produc- ing districts in the State, now one of | the most active. In that fleld the Union | 911 Company ‘cwns large holdings. ~The | | Bard OIl and Asphalt Company s about i | operations tn oil the emplc diverse w machinery to be has come a demand for nent of hundreds of hands in There are tools to be made, and a thou- RN Season of Activity in the Ventura 0il Field—Much Money Was Made by Senator Bard. it e Ub!alned from Thomas R. Bard. Many causes are making a greater de- mand for petroleum as fuel a certainty. The ers, In view of the expecte coal, are favoring | the use of petroleum. The Petroleum Re- view, published in London, miners me eam coal. nd for pefrol ance conditions under availabie for fuel. An 1e Call some weeks | 1 1ethod for utilizing melting precious ores. The wder Works has been burn- ¢ for more than are continually = have f is difficult to i ich it is not count was given of the R leum alifornia T petro decade viding for greater o locomotives. Factories y and are it adopting at other Pacific hops of the South- Coast point ern Pacific recently i Ogden there was -horsepower Diesel ch it is expected machine shops alifornia petro- of coal miners in a factor in suggesting domestic motor, 3 East may be nxlandul use of petroleum for ., discussing in the Mining and Scientitic Press the uses of | ifornia cride petroleum, describes its | application as fuel by the California Pow- | der Works. It is used to make steam and | in the manufacture of chemicals for com- pounding dynamite. The oil is pumped | through an underground pipe from the Union Oil Company's refinery above Ro- | deo and is stored in receptacles made of | old glycerine tanks. These tanks have one end cut out and are loosely closed by a wooden top, covered with burlap. From here the ofl is discharged to the jous furnaces at a head of about twen- | y-two feet. About 5 per cent of steam is | to blow. Saving is effected in both > of fuel and in the amount of labor the furnaces are | ed practically no attention, | except an oc al glance to see thaf the proper flame is obtained. The boilers are of the ordinary tubular make, four in The flame Is shot under them. great manufacturing concern in where 700 barrels of oll are diem, the ofl is pumped from vks, each of 10,000 barrels 5 ‘3-inch stand pipes by The boilers, numbering thirty-two, are arranged in two rows, facing each other, and the oil pipe from the stand pive runs along the front of Each stand pipe supplies a separ- could supply both rows in At a distance of every feed pipes are m pipe, so that ns to one of the be instantly cut | opping the plant for a mo- | ment. This alone is a great advantage ot a coal fire, for it takes some time ‘pull” a big fire. The stand pipe: { are all set up wdup!l(nlt‘ S0 that an accident cannot stop | the plant. A network of firebrick set on | edge is laid directly upon the grate bars, and against this the ofl flame is shot. If anything should happen to the ofl supply There is danger for you. The nly way to avoid it is to keep your feet dry. It's in the scien- tific construction of SORASIS Shoes that enables you to avoid rubbers.” $3:50 aLwavs. SOLE AGENCY: 72 50 THIRD STREET, Second Shoe Store from Market, , SAN FRANCI=CO. CATALOGUE READY. Nghted they pumps. iwo nm to pumps and feed pipes fire started within twenty-five minutes, When oil was | the enlargement of the fleld of | manufactured and re- | Shops at | Bakersfleld have done | tn begin operations on the land recently | In the | 4 the two men. istrict th i Ol Co 2 | 7 i at W. McGa [ feoty S ‘}a‘cfic: (:\:”jl’rl-;ull‘%wnld ’L’r‘.‘“gfiléfigr'\ MANY TENNIS MATCHES > Ftllerrtos g A o ountain, Sast o o 2 0] Ty o Gran 2 it Company 1 Operating, | ON CALIFORNIA COURTS |55 5543 Br phils beat Roy the Bard Company’s pro erty are’ the holdings é" kL, Santa Paula Ofl Compan Th@‘ Capi- | Devotees Are Out in Numbers and tal Crude Oil Company and the Leone | Oil Company are working in the district | several miles north of the town of New- | hall and good wells have been struck still Play in a Series of _Contests. Play was very lively yesterday on the | courts of the California Tennis Club, many devotees of the game being In at- | | tendance. H. N. Stetson played a set with J. D. Beuret, defeating him, 6-4. In dnub!es\ Stetson and Weiner Stauf defeated Drum- | playe berg and lost, One of the best ma was between Drummond McGavin Collier Jr. The score was §-3, &3 in favor of McGavin frandan s O . Fight in the Colonial Hotel. Thomas Emerson, engineer in the ( nfal Hotel, Pine and Jones s farther east. The Los Angsles Times of the 14th inst. had the following concerning transactions | in thé Los Angeles Oil Exchange: Over 71,000 shares of stock were sold on the foor of the Los Angeles Oil Exchange yester- the second largest day's business In the ctory of the local ofl market. Of the 71,000 : -5 ¥ o ay afterncon o that -changed hands, the market vaiie | mond McGavin and J. D. Beuret, 7-5. | arrested y slerdh’x' fon e of which was $5132 ust 25,600 shares were | In the continuous W. H. Crowell, chai- ng him with assa: of listea stocks and 46,500 of ‘unlisted. "Prices | lenger, was defeated by Bob Whitney, | deadly weapon. The complaining w «‘n!{ \hnv\r a downward tendency, and while th 6-2, 6-3. s J. H. Smallbone, a painter declines from day to are small in the ag- George Whitney and Drummond Me- Tha 4l 4 % & = | gregate they have amounted to considerable. | Gavin beat Weiner Stauf and Rob Whit- Who Mleges thal Wvstng -5 S | Scuthern Consolldated now seils for almost | nost g 305 ' Douglas Grant and Richard | Emerson yesterday the latter struck him half the price at which it was once active. | projing played a tie with Dr. Lane and | on the head with a hammer. Emers | The same is true of Westlake, Uncle Sam and many others. Conditions governing the actual value of securities are sound enough, but they are not influential as market factors. In a market that is purely local, and where it ia possible to dispose of 100 shares at a time, | speculative values will always be easily | Mr. Dud}.’P §-6, 1-6. Jack O’'Brien and W.| who was released on bonds, sald that d_Mrs. Kincaid and Perey | Smallboné was L.e agsressor and duri Kahn, 3-G, 6-3, 6-4, 6:3, 6-5. Grant Smith | the fight fell and his head struck against and Walter McGavin played a tie mdu!‘ | a washstand. | changed. e | _Five wells have been drilled at San WWWWWWM% Pedro. At Morena there are two com- anies at work with two others about to egin. The ocean front, from the mnulh' of the San Luls Rey River to La Costa, has been leased to the New York OIll Company. Track-laying is reported to have bf'mln‘ on the spur up Wills Canyon, in the Kern River district. When that is completed | shipments will be largely increased. Lhe Bakersfleld Californian says that in a number of Instances in the Kern River | fleld wells, which were not conside: to | be first-class, have been largely increased, | sometime 'double, by reperforating. The latest report of such result come: from the Mount Diablo Company on 30- No. 1 was recently perforated for the third time. Previously it was inter- | mittent, golng from thirty to eighty bar- rels a day, but never more. After treat- ment, however, it yielded 14) barrels each day for a weeK and has now settled down to 130, A Los Angeles paper tells how Senator Bard has made money in ofl lands as fol- lows: Men who talk ofl and hunt ofl and sell oil and buy oil and ofl lands are still talking of the big deal in which Senator Bard turned over {to Los Angeles capitalists 6066 acres that he owned In the heart of the great ofl belt in Ven- tura County. The syndicate pald $300,000 for this tract of land, and besides gave the Senator interest valued at $50,000, but it is not gen- ally known what this oil right cost Senator ard. He purchased the right in 1577, accord- ing to the records, from J. P, Green, a promi- nent and wealthy lawyer of Philadelphia, who Lad_acquired, with Tom Scott, large holdings in Ventura County, and the amount paid by the Senator to the Philadelphian, according to the records, was exactly $353 33. 'The Ventura man held the land for exactly twenty-three years, but it is plain that he did not hold in vain whken a_comparison is made between the pur- chase and the selling pri As Colonel Sellers once remarked, “There’s millions in it!" This applies to the ofl business in California as well as to other things. The Century Oil Company has pur- chased from Willlam T. Sesnon of San rancisco forty acres of land in the Kern field. It is described as the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of sec- ! tion 24, 28, 27. The price paid was $4000. Fell Off a Geary-Street Car. Mrs, Sarah Cohn, a widow, residing at 'GOLDEN GATE CLOAK AND SUIT HOUSE, 1230, 1282, 1234 MARKET STREET. LATEST STYLE . FALL GARMENTS! Qur study to produce the most pericct- fitting garment, clegantly finished, at prices BELOW COMPETITION. TAILORED SUITS. $7/0.00. PURE WOOL BLACK CHEVIOT SL’ITS Eton effects, well made and finished, positive value $15.00.... Our price $10.00 $l3.50. GRAY, TAN, BROWN GOLFING SUITS, pure vmnl perfect fitting, good value $18.50 Our $15.00. 0N SORORO AONCH HORG OOO'OOQO0.0.0 g 2 BOHOHOICE QRO GO the very latest, price $13.50 : : g & i WO O IO O nue. ~Mrs. Cohn was returning from | the park and was riding on the dummy. When the car, which was going at full speed, suddenly turned the curve the lady was_ pitched off, landing on_top of her head on the hard roadway. She was re- | moved to the French Hespital in an un- conscious condition. This is not the first accident that has occurred at this curve. ———e—————— Injured by a Casting. - William Tremble and Joaquin Fonts, ! laborers employed at the Union Iron Works, were unloading castings from a { car yesterday morning when one of them | slipped from its fastening and fell upon They were taken to the | Recelving Hospital. Tremble had one of ! his ribs broken, his chest contused and was suffering from internal injuries. glunu escaped with a contused chest and D 525.00. HANDSOMELY BRAIDED TAILOR-MADE &L ITS. style, elegantly made and finished, rml value $32.50.. ................................... .- ()ur price $23 NEWEST STYLE JACKETS. 2 ATS, AUTOMOBILES, ETONS. PL—\I\' STITCHED Rgx cOl APPLIQU!-.D A\D BR-\!DP_ LADIES' AND Cnlimws s s 'n STRICTLY WHOLESALE PRICES. ENTIRELY NEW STYLES, RICi COXBINATIONS, $2.00 TO $25.00. NGVELTY SILK MATLASSE SKIRTS, $15.90, $I7.59, $20.00, $22.50, $25.00. exclusive 1450 O'Farrell street, was severely injured BLACK AND GRAY CAMELS HAIR TAILOR-M ADE SUITS, 3§ Sunday last by being thrown off a Geary- satin revers, very stylish g.lrm:nts real value $20.00. o street car at the curve where the car Fusdbadnods .Our price $15.00 & turns from Point Lobos into Fourth ave- % g mmmmmmg

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