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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, N COURT OF APPEALS PRESENTED WITH PORTRAIT E. S. Pillsbury Makes | Presentation Speech | on Behalf of Widow of Deceased. Judge William R. Gil- bert Delivers Feeling | Address in Reply for Bench. HERE was not even “‘standing n the courtroom of tes navy, cay & nephew Mrs. on such an occa- nt of the life of this hick he wide world—he was have com: son consent, gives hall the first place among ntradic- se who Petere practice. He labyrinths of the dch And while the bar | OF LATE JUSTICE FIELD SUPREME JUSTICE FIELD, AS HE APP PRIME OF HIS ARED IN THE His greatest work was done during the re- . n perfod which followed our unfor- egretted civil war. The was then brought 3 important or diff- ) taxed the ge of & y manner in which he great national regard is the nob in the performa That brutal precept * ment in his reason or tempered the har: g the season of bitterness jon to see then, hat this strong, happy and and of his char- His bitterest with coward- ence ana blood- t hadowed the e was frequently never flinched or wavered. as well as his intellectual su- low men were brought to re- and awe. Divested of he was affable and acter was absolute cou enemy never charged J' Son. Asnong the woanes periority, k gard him with the ermine of pleasing to : erate to those about He was generous to &ll in the humbler walks of life and mind- ful of thelr needs. He was known and hon- | ored to an especial degres by the colored peo- ple of Washington, by reason of his watch- ful regard for their rights, end thelr respect for him on this account grew to reverence during his declining years. Justice Field was blest with a long life, golng to his grave “in a full age like as a shock of corn cometh in its season.’” MANHOOD AND AS HE IS PICTURED IN THE PORTRAIT IN THE COURTROOM. o | stren; sh his judictal monu- | not the genius to acquire mere wealth, nor ments. to organize or conduct some one of the stu- pendous worldly enterprises of this age which by thelr vastness tend to overshadow the work the individual mind, however able, and threaten the possibilities which have hereto- fore stimulated individual undertakings; but i he was master of a great intcllectual power | 1ike One of his last official acts in the Ninth Cir- | cut, where he had so long presided, was to assist in the organization of this court. It | 1s proper that his likeness should be preserved in the place where the duties of the court | 1aw, are performed, to the end that those of the bar | who come after us may know how this great man looked, and whose decisions they will do well to study and to follow. | It 1e becoming that his greatness should be | mentioned in this presence, because his was by which he was ensbled with unerring view to scan and comprehend that almost bound- less region of the law, so vast that the ordi- nary mind may hope to explore but a limited portion, and through love of the law—while one of his brothers projected and put in opera- tion an invention for the transmission of in- telligence beneath the waters of the Atlantic and another attained great eminence as & prac- ticing attorney—he gave his life work to his country in the study of those great questions which were the burning issues of his day and time, and in molding to the ordinary com- prehension those great legal principles by whose 21d those {ssues were resolved and upon which the fat >t our government 18 founded. | Justice Field's influence as a jurist will live, 1d, 80 long as the admin- all continue among Eng- Centuries hence when that of Man ation of the law lish speaking peoples. have turned to dust, his great opinions will be considered by the legal profession with an awe and reverence akin to those with which to- day the followers of Confucius regard his teachings. ‘William B. Gilbert, senior Circuit Judge, spoke on behalf of the court as follows: The Circuit Court of Appeals gratefully ac- knowledges the presentation of this reminder of the life and work of a great lawyer—one | who was a member of this court at the time of its organization and who will always oc- cupy a conspicuous place among the distin- guished jurists of tho present century. To the bench and bar the memory of the life of Justice Field will always be revived in his decisions, those models of the clear and stren- uous eluctdation of the principles of the com- mon law and of American constitutional law. This auspicious occasion should serve not only to enhance our respect for one whom in honoring we honor ourselves, but also our respect and reverence for the sclence Of the which in its ramifications touches every interest of mankind and through which so- clety itself coheres, and which has been made luminous and str § by the minds of such men as Justice Field. We are also reminded anew of the Auty of the bench and bar to | see that the law shall be upheld and enforced and that its equal protection shall extend to the strong and the weak, the poor and the rich. COMMISSIONERS TO PARIS EXPOSITION UNDER FIRE Are Sharply Criticized for the Manner in Which They Disbursed State Funds. — . — in certain quarters return. es two of them and also rious offenses. It is m 3200 to $60) mmissioner Run- Paderewski to Steinway. Steinway & Sons, New emen—Before leaving your 1 must convey to t thanks for the 'yl Steinway upright plano ou placed in my private car. the fact that in my recent concert tournee we covered over 22,000 miles, and that we went sugh many changes of climate, he most severs cold to tropi cal hest, 1 was surprised beyond words that this little plano did not show the slightest changes in nction, mechanism and tone under trying ordeal. The beauty of + tone, the power of its resonance and the perfection of its mechan- ism were a source of dally delight to me, as I had the instrument in constant use practicing far my con- certe ncerely yours, 1 J. PADEREWSKL May the 15, 1600, Mr. Walter Damrosch and other fessional musicians play exclu- pon the Steinway piano. inways are sold on easy terms. Sherman, Clay & Co. Steinway Piano Dealers, Cor. Kearny and Sutter sts., 8, F. Cor. 1ith and Broadway, Oakiand. or. Third and Morrison, Portiand. 711 Second avenue, Seattie. rmissioners to the | A letter pub- | mento Record-Union | | yon left Paris on July € “‘and never came back, and the question is raised what he Aid for his salary of $5000 and for the | $4000 or $5000 of expenses drawn from tha treasury of the State.” | A charge 1s also made In the article that, while Gaskill has been drawing n salary of $600 per month, he has been ting in his time securing an agency a French champagne, some of the champagne which he has sold to tha for State. He is also represented to have spent considerable time in London en- deavoring to get the agency for Bass' ale, | Then there is 2n allegation that the Sac- | ramento River Salmon Packers’ Assocla- | and the Alaska Packers' Association was | glven a gold medal, the decision of the | judges being reversed because of pressure brought to bear by Commissioner Foote and Secretary Gaskill, although the Alas- ka company “was outside of their juris- diction.” Commissioner Truman is also repre- sented as saying that Gaskill is seeking to delay the report of the commission so that he can take several months and draw more pay and also to delay it so_that it | cannot be reached by the next Legisla ture. The statements concerning the champagne and Bass' | attributed in the letter to Commissioner | Truman. Incidentally the statement ls made that the commissioners have been having & cat and dog time abroad, Run- yon and Foote running things and “Tru- man sitting in the gallery looking on.” W. H. Mills is the editor of the Record- | Unfon. Concerning the article in his pa- per Mr. Mills sald yesterday that it was published under the direction of the managers of the paper at Sacramento and that the paper wis entirely responsible for anything that it published. All that he knew about the facts or the publica- tion of them was that the correspondent was known to him and that the opportu- nities of the correspondent for knowing the facts were first class. No error would occur in his work by reason of any lack of information, for he had an intimate connection with all matters referred to in the article. Mr. Mills also said that the correspond- ent .of the Record-Union was perfectly reliable and that the matter was pre sented not in malice but as a truthful representation. Other matters of a simi- lar character had been sent by the sama correspondent to the Record-Unfor bat had not been published. Mr. Mills also said that he knew notiing personally of the allegations, but that, knowing the correspondent, he believed them to be | true. Matters referred to by the Record- Union took place after he left Paris. “I am making no war upon the com- missioner: sald Mr. Mills, “but will be | commissioners and also to himself and | | paid for the same with the money of the | tion was turned down with a silver medal | ale agencles are | | | pleased to see a detailed statement and classification of the cxpenses because 1 am thoroughly persuaded, from personal observation, that the money appropriated by the State was disproportionate to the exhibit made by the commissioners In Paris. When I first learned that the com- missioners would not make an exhibit for California I stated in a published inter- view that the best course to pursue would be not to draw the appropriation at all. The result of the exhibit made by the California commissioners in Parls does not justify a retraction of that state- e Ended Her Life With Acid. Mrs. Annie Fahey, aged 31 years, drank carbolic acld in a lodging-house at 317 Third street yesterday evening and died. from fits effects soon afterward. Mrs, Fahey was divorced from her husband some time ago and since the separation | has been despondent. Her ed the attention of other house last evening and when her room was entered she was found writhing in agony with an empty carborile acid bottle beside her. An ambulance was called, but she expired before it arrived. The body was taken to the Morgue by Deputles Flynn and ith, —_———— Don’t overlook Dr. C. C. O'Donnell's name on the ballot to-day. His name is grosos attract- odgers in the | in the last column of candidates on the ticket as independent candidate for Con- gress from the Fourth District. Stamp a cross after his name and you will never regret it. . —e—— Fidelity Lodge Entertains. Memorial Hall in the Odd Fellows’ bufld- ing was crowded to its 1imit last night by ladies and gentlemen who accepted the invitation of Fidelity Lodge of the Odd Fellows te attend an open meeting. The committee on entertainment, through Dr. W. B. Curtis, the noble grand, offered a rogramme of high-class numbers as fol- ows: Instrumental selections by J. E. and Miss Liille Spink; whistling solo, E. J. Wales; recitation, Miss E. Lowenberg; vocal selections, Robert Sachs, Miss Em- ma Glovanett! and Messrs. Jones and Ed- minster; tinker chorus in costume by Messrs. ' A. Moore, W. Olsen, O'Neil, W. Warden, V. Baker and J. J. Phillips. Dancing followed." —_———— See that you vote for Judge Willlam P. Lawlor, who has proved himself worthy of the support of all citizens, irrespective . of party. —_———— Serenaded The Call. Employes of many big downtown houses took the last opportunity of the campaign last night to show their devotion to Presi- dent McKinley and the Republican party. They formed a parade and headed hy a band marched along the ernclpal streets. A serenade was given The Call, and the Republican State Central Committee was similarly honored. —_—— All your money refunded by any dealer if not tisfied with a smoke of the *‘American™ clear Havana cigar. - Circuit Court of Appeals. The United States Circuit Court of Ap- peals vesterday affirmed the action of the referee In the matter of A. P. Scheld, bankrupt, and affirmed the judgment in the case of Andrew Lochbaun nst the Oregon Ratiway and Navigation' Com: Trunks & traveling bags. Before buying see our “‘bureau trunk.” A. B. Smith Co., 128 Ellis.* ¢ the wearing waste of time this canvas may | Litigation Over Jump- | ers’ Titles Ruin- Compan;s NEake Spe- cialty of Com- . Fromises. 2 e HE Ilitigious contingent came | down from Alaska yesterd | bringing tales that | middle ages. There law in Nome anyw is working more harm to the | n if there were none. It has | e to pass that when a man f | clatm is paying well he cove | lives on the hope cf the fortune that 1s | awaiting him, for so =ure as his golden spoiis a lawsuit and follow. Hundreds of fine pre | | Iying idle to pe the law t | | protect t and hu were paying pou | shu n with the | been d out. | s of ¢ | of gold port the The 1 Golden warr: not retrea ing untoucie ss where hard and lor ed mselves recelvers with scores of | workmen and -priced ma ms, and what | being turned await the gat t will end only in a compromise | or defeat for the min And the most significant fact of the | whole situation is that if a miner will compromise before suit has been filed he | inds himself receiver proof. He may do | as he pleascs then and squatters and | claim-jumpers pass him by | The sult of greatest importance in the northern gold flelds has transferred ftsell to this city and here it wiil be fought out before the Circuit Court of Appeals. It | is the trial of Alexander McKenzie for contempt of court for having refused to obey a writ of supersedeas issued out of | the Circuit Court of Appeals command- | ing him to deliver to the defendants in an action in which he was appointed recelver | all property of thelrs which was placed | in his charge; and also all the gold dust | he took out of the claims during his un- interrupted recelvership. The dust amounts in value to over $300,000; the | claims include some of the richest on the | famous Anvil Creek. The course of the litigation reads like | & romance. It includes bodies of armed men seeking by force what the law would | not give them. It includes threats of | bloodshed, of forcible dispossesston and of | wholesale murder, and it cnds with the breaking open of a safe deposit vault and of big boxes of nuggets and carting them away In the sight of & whole town fuil ot people, who cheered as they looked on. The trouble began on July 23 of this year, when Judge Noyes, the new United States District Judge, had been but two days in Nome, and the first move was the appointment of a receiver for the rich Discovery claim owned by the Ploneer Mining Company. There was no notice to the owners that such a proceeding was pending. The recelver stepped in and commenced to run things, and when the owners applied to the court they were told thers was a prior claim by one Robert Chipps, who settled on the place in 1899, and also that the owners were allens and therefore were not entitled to hold the claims under any circumstances, It was shown to the court that the own- ers, Lindeberg, Lindblom and Brynteson, located the claim in 1595, six months be- fore Chipps was in the country, and it was further shown that Lindblom and Brynte- son were naturalized, one in 189 and the other in 1888, The law requires but one of the locators to be a citizen. Despite these showings, however, the recetver held pos- session and took out nearly $15,000 every day from the Discovery claim and those he had gathered in with it under the same rulings of court. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals in this city and a writ of supersedeas commanding the recelver | to give up the properties and the gold he had taken from them was fissued, but when the writ was received in Nome the recelver would not obey it and the court would not enforce it. So it became a question of physical strength. The own- ers gathered around them a body of men and prepared to retake the claims and also to wrest the gold from the vaults, but to this the military officers in charge of the troops stationed at Nome would not assent. It would cause bloodshed, they sald, and so the receiver worked on. The Court of Appeals was sought again and McKenzie was cited for contempt in hav- ing disobeyed the writ of the court, Un- | der that writ he was arrested and was brought here for trial yesterday. According to the story of those who came down from Nome, the gold hunters are the victims of a conspiracy that mav end in an investigation by the President and Congress and the ruin of more than one reputation. The clalms are being gathered in by receivers upon the suits of jumpers. All are backed by the Alaska Gold Mining Company, and many of the jumpers have been'proved to be among its stockholders, The Alaska Gold Mining Company is a corporation formed under the laws of Arizona and having its office in New York and its principal place of business in Alaska. A man named McCormick, an old friend of McKenzie and a resident of Alaska, is its vice president. O. P. Hub- bard of the law firm of Hubbard, Beman & Hume, is its secretary, and Robert Chipps, who jumped the Discovery clalm Todd, a banker of New York, and Blatch’ ford, a lawyer of New York, are among its directors. Its stock is curlously dis- tributed. Chipps has 300,000 shares; Hub bard has 300,000 more; 2 man named Blakesley, of Chicago, has 200,000; Fisher, Leonard and Kester, who jumped claims that the company s now litigating, have among them 150,000 shares: a man named Slade has 300,000 more; a Mrs. Requa, also one of the plaintiff jumpers, has 50,000, and a man named Jacobs, another jump- er, has 100,000, and there are more who jumped and sued and held stock whila the recetvers dug the gold from the soil and the owners fought in the courts and refused to compromise. The remainder of the stock is held in the name of Me- Kenzie. It was a source of concern to the stockholders that he held the bulk of the stock until he is said to have explainea to one of them that he had “to take care” of some friends of the company, and the friends he is sald to have mentioned are Senator Carter of Montana, Senator Hansbrough of North Dakota, Senator Davis of Minnesota and Judge Noyes, the District Judge at Nome. The Golden Sands Company was formed of the same people, but there were two differences—it worked the claims along the beach; the other worked the claims in the interfor and on the creeks. It attained possession by arresting the miners for trespass and by threatening arrest; the other uses sults and receivers and the slowest processes of the law. Judge Noyes, McKenzle and a few oth- MINERS HIDE THEIR GOLD, FEARING , COURTS WILL SEND RECEIVERS AFTER IT <+ WILLIAM H. METSON, ONE OF THE ATTORNEYS WHO HAS BEEN FIGHTING | HOME ON THE ST. PAUL FOR THE MINERS AT NOME AND WHO RETURNED | YESTERDAY. | ers arrived in Nome on July 21 last. It was a Saturday. The following Monday the company got to work and the court | appointed McKenzie receiver of several | valuable properties. There was no notice in any of these ca But the work of the company did not stop there. Withiu | a few days more than one hundred suits | had been filed, all tracezble to the com- pany and all of the same character. Some one claimed he had located before the owner and he wanted a recelver appointed to look out for the property until his rights could be determined. It did not take a month to raise a crop of receivers | one hundred strong and more, but with | their advent came the ugly rumor that| if the offers of compromise that were continually flying round were accepl there would be no recefver. It is known where men compromised and went free it 18 also known that men refusec to com promise and were entertaining a receiver | before the words had grown cold upon their lips. The offers were not alwa definite. but they were availaole, and man had only to say he was willing and he was let alone. Under the circumstances there could not be much done on the clatms and it gave time to the miners to wWaich the Hfi- gation and the stormy scenes that fol- lowed its course. The whole town of Nome turned out to see the, men from the Ploneer Mining Company break open the boxes of gold in the sife deposit vaults and carry the nuggets away. This was done after the order for the arrest of McKenzie came up from here. The gold had been located by a stratarem of the miners, and from the time it was located an armed guard watched over it for fear that it would be taken away. Then when the order for the arrest of McKenzie came, the company and its retainers an- nounced that they were going to have that gold. The writ of supersedeas had not seemed sufficient to the miitary au- thorities, but the order for tre arrest was, 80 they said the miners could go ahead. When he was asked for the keys of the vault where the gold was stored, McKen- zle said he had given them to Joseph Woods, the United States Marshal for Nome. Woods was asked for them in the name of the writ, and he refused to give them up. He was told that if he did not the vault would be broken open, but still he refused, adding to his refusal threats that there would be bloodshed if such an attempt was made; threats in which Mec- Kenzie heartily joined. But nothing daunted the miners and thelr friends sought the vault and with axes and bars they broke into the safe and then knocked the hinges off the boxes until the whole gleaming pile was disclosed. There was $30,000 that belonged to Charles D. Lane; there was $113,000 that belonged to the Ploneer Company and $40,000 that belonged to the Andersons. be- sides much more belonging to other claims. The Lane gold was $10,000 short and the Ploneer gold was $15,000 short. McKenzie was charged with the shortage and he admitted that there was a deficit. but he declared that when he arrived in San Francisco he would make it good. The gold was taken from the vaulis where it had rested and was stored in the vaults of the Alaska Commercial Com- peuf to await the outcome of the litiga- tion. And while this was being done in the town, a force of armed men went up to the claims and gave the men working there for the receiver fifteen minutes to leave. The order - was obeyed. And at the courthouse a motion was belng made that the bonds of the receiver be made larger. It was pointed out that he had charge of hun- dreds of thousands of dollars in gold dust and property, and his bonds were but $5000, but Judge Noyes refused to raise them and the air of the courtroom was blue with the arguments and the plain statements of fact that went from the bar to the bench. : This ended the fight in Nome, and mar- shals, lawyers, witnesses and the pris- oner took the steamer for San Francisco. The getting away was not so easy as it might have been, however, for Willlam H. ‘Metson, who was fighting the legal bat- tles of the Ploneer Company, was warned that he would not be allowed to leave the city, and Sam Knight, who was with him, was cited to appear for con- tempt of court for having procured an af- fidavit from a man named Reese which contained the statement that Reese had given Noyes $2000, in consideration of which Noyes was not to appoint a re- celver in his case. It was claimed that the statement was false and that Knight knew it, and that therefore he was in contempt. Knight was missing when the steamer time came, however, and a diligent search of all the steamers in port failed to bring him forth. But when the St. Paul was well out in the ocean and on her way home, a small boat crossed her path and a man in it halled her. It was Knight. A rope was thrown to him and heclimbed aboard. Metson sent word to the court that he was going home on the St. Paul and that if he was wanted he would have to be sent for, but he was not molested. The situation in Nome {s strained. Ru- mors affecting the new court and its of- ficlals are flying thick and fast and the 1 open disregard of the orders of the Court ‘ of Appeals has done much to help along | the feeling of distrust. When the writ of | supersedeas arrived in Nome Judge Noyes was heard to say, so it is alleged, “Our | company made a great mistake not to have had some one to look after the San Francisco end of this litigation; if it had these writs would never have been | issued.” It was not until then that the | Judge was supposed to have any Interest whatever in the company. And then peo- ple began to talk when he referred to “our” opponents and “our’” antagonists whenever he had reason to speak of the miners who were fighting for their claims. | And he was heard to say, too, when the | writ came to Nome, so it is declared, that Judge Morrow had nothing to say in the matter, and he was ably backed in th pinfon by Hubbard, the secretary of the | aska Mining Company, who is reported | to have sald: “What do we care for Mor- | row anyway. What does he amount to? | Noyes is the Czar up here. He is the one who will look out for us.” And when Noyes was bemoaning the fact that no one had been retained to look out for the “San Francisco end,” he did | not know that a mission of James Gallen, United States Commissioner and a brother-in-law of Senator Carter, had | borne frult. As soon as it was known | that an appeal from the decision of Judge | Noyes would be sought, Gallen left Nome | and the next thing was the employment of Gunn of the firm of Kellogg, Davis & | Gunn to look out for the “San Francisco end.” And soon after a telegram came from Senator Davis In Washington say- ing, “I have seen our people here and théy are all right and everything here will be all right.” The Washington end had been looked after, téo. The litigation under way here includes but a few of the claims which have come under the notice and the litigations of the Alaska Gold Mining Company. Just as the St. Paul sailed news came from. Topkuk, a place sixty miles down the coast from | Nome, that a receiver was working one of the richest claims in that region. The clalm was about to be opened up when one of the residents there was approached with the offer of the receivership of the mine if he would divide. He declined, and aid not get the place. It was not known | to any but the insiders at the time that there was to be a receiver, but one was put in, a man named Cameron, who was | a friend of McKenzie. Within an hour after the appointment was made a barge | loaded with mining machinery was sent | down the coast to Topkuk, and the ma- chinery which it carried was marked “Alexander MecKenzie, Nome. MecCor- mick went down to work the machinery, and he took with him twenty or thirty men. The owners of the property offered to give a bond; they offered to work the mine themselwes and turn ‘n all the dust they took out of it to the court; they pro- posed that if the plaintiffs won they would turn over all the dust, not reserving even what they had paid out for the working of the mine, but to all these propositions a deaf ear was turned. The mine is being run by the receiver, and there is no repre- sentative of the owners to say a word as to how it shall be run. In all there are more than five hundred suits filed by squatters and jumpers, and more than one hundred receivers have been appointed. The receivers are almost to a man friends of McKenzle, and in the cases of the richest mines he himself is the lucky man. Those who have come from Nome de- clare thaf the legal tactics practiced and allowed are ruining the country. A man dare not admit that he is getting an ounce of gold from the ground, for if he does he | will have his claim under & receivership at once. The aim of the company, it is | declared. is to freeze the miners out by | tormenting them with the law’s delays or | to force them to compromise, much to the | profit of the company. The jumpers are | doing a rushing business, and the pros- pect for service for the troops increases with every new clalm jumped or recefver appointed. McKenzie was brought to this city by Deputy United States Marshals Shelly Monckton and George H. Burnham at 8:30 o’clock last evening. He was allowed the freedom of an ordinary passenger. The accused receiver towered high above the officers, his blg frame and broad shoulders making him appear like a verit- able glant. McKenzie is a fine specimen of man- hood and is a picture of health. He h‘:s a well rounded face with a heavy, neatly trimmed dark mustache. He wore a heavy black stlk-lined overcoat and black derby and carried a cane and valise, At Oakland the officers were met by Chief Deputy Ferrish, who relleved Burn- ham, the latter remaining in Oakland over night. The deputies had no trouble ‘with their prisoner. He was arrested in Nome at 8 o'clock on the morning of October 15, just as he had finished breakfast at the Golden Gate Hotel. He offered no re- sistance. Four complaints were filed against him, two being sworn to by C. D. Lane and two by the Ploneer Min- ing Company. The prisoner was taken to the Palace | boro says the large cities of Europe, ——— Writs From Higher | CourtsSet at Naught and Ridiculed by the Officers of Justice. Gold Taken by Force by Men Who Hed Writs C rdering That It Be Turned Over. Monck- formal urt denled the d that Mr. McKenz of the Marshal ou shal chose to take was made fixing to- 11 a. m. for McKenzle's appearanc the court. Ladtes’ taflor-made suits, silk skirts, fur capes; liberal eredit. M. Rothschild. 526 Sutter. * —e————— A. Sbarboro Returns From Europe. A. Sbarboro and family have returned from a seven months' tour through E | rope, having visited during that time the principal cities of France, Italy, Switzer- land, Germany and England. Mr. Sbar- es- pecially Italy, have museums filled with works of art by the great masters of priceless value. The cities are also beau- tiful adorned with monuments and statues of their great men. Wide ave- nues and green lawns and trees and beau- tiful gardens may be seen in the heart of the ecities, but in commerce, manufac- business methods, conveniences for and Hiving, our country is far in advance. - ee———— ar sideboard at home is incomplete if it Moore “AA whiskey. ¥ is not stocked with Jes: Faulkner Is Acquitted. The charge against A. G. Faulkner of stealing a watch from the rooms of Julia E. Dall of 108 Eddy street was declared to be false and unwarranted in the Police rday and the defendant was released. in Lucke's Shoes." The style pledases And so does the price. Picture shows a patent - leather lace shoe, with French heels and cloth tops, the latest in style and design, price, $3.50 a pair. ) _You have paid more many a time for just such a shoe as ours. Youths’ and boys’ satin calf shoes, fine uppers, good, heavy soles— sizes 13 to 2 sizes 235 to 5 r free if they don’t ...81.28 ..81.50 %.. A new pa wear well. AUFMANNS 832 MARKET st.SF wvisir DR. JORDAN’S sazar MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MARZETST. det. 24T, S.0.Cal. WindWosknesten cc. a3y comracied disease ‘cured by the oldes: Speciaiist ca tn Coast Est 3 ysars. OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES Cooeulzation freo and privare DR.MCNULTY, "HIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE OLD T S pociaiiat cares lood Poison. Gonorrhen, Gleat, Stricture, Seminal Weakness, Impotence and theis allied Disorders. 0ok on Diseases of Men, free. OverXyearyexperience. Termareasonabic. Hours, 9to3daily, to8. Dev'gs. Su %,10t0 12. Consul- tation freeandsacredly confidential. Call or address Hotel, where he will remain for the pres- P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D. 265 Kearny St., San Francisce, Cal. \