The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 1, 1901, Page 14

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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1901. FEAR TROUBLE F HE RETIRES Unionists Alarmed at Prospect of Salis- bury’s Action. —— Members of the Premier’s Family Urging Him to Resign. LONDON, Aug. 3L—Rumors of Lord Salisbury’s retirement are due to the ex- istence of an agitation within the Pre- mier's own family that he take the step in order to preserve his health. His sons and daughters believe the strain of con- ducting the affairs of the empire is bound to shorten his life. In this they have been opposed by sev- eral less closely related members of the Cecil family and almost all the leaders of the Unionist party. The latter, so far as can be learned, are likely to prevail r the present, at any rate in their con- tention that relief from the dutles of Premier would be a very doubtful bene- fit to Lord Salisbury’s health, which, just now, is not bad, considering his age. In’ former times when his retirement was mooted the opposition to such a step was_based on the absolute necessity for Lord Salisbury’s presence in the Foreign Office. Thanks to Lord Lansdowne's apparent ability to handle that depart- this necessity no longer exists, but the cry has now changed and the Union- ists admit that the selection of a suc- cessor to Lord Salisbury would perhaps precipitate an internal struggle. Hence, the extreme, and as some of the mem- bers of Lord Salisbury’s family consider, almost inhuman pressure on the Premier 1o retaln power, which, for him, has lost all attraction. —_— TURKEY TAKES NEW OVERTURES| | Requests a Resumption of Diplomatic Relations With France. ——— CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 3L — M. | Bapst, counselor of the French Embassy, | has received from the Porte a copy of a telegram sent to the Ottoman Embassy at Paris for communication to M. Del- casse, French Forelgn Minister. This telegram, while giving vague as- surances, formulates nothing concrete. It requests a resumption of diplomatic re- Jations between the two countries with a view of reaching a satisfactory settle- | ment of the matters in dispute. | L o o e o e WITH MUSIC AND RED BLALE | | Continued From Page Thirteen. | will be a good representation of ploneers. At the close of the parade literary exer- cises will be held in St. James Park. W.1 A. Beasley will deliver the address of | welcome, Grand President Coombs will be qreeidem of the day and Grand Orato: McLaughlin will deliver the annual ora. tion. The Native Daughters will receive at | Turn Verein Hall in the afternoon and the | Pioneers Hall. at Odd_ Fellows’ will be held in the | * Park. | conclude the main fes- | f bration. The ball will | e held in Turn Verein Hall and the grand | march will be led by Grand President | Coombs of the Native Sans and Genevieve | TW. Baker, the grand president of the Na- | e Daughters. | y morning an excursion will be to Mount Hamilton, permission hav- will Bicycle_ra st of the week the decoration of | will begin. Each business house | will deck its front, and across the streets will be strung American and bear flags. et el G Beaten by Strikers. O. Walton, & striking teamster residing | at 235 Eleventh street.was treated at the | Central Emergency Hospital last night for bruises and contusions received at the a number of strikers who at- m at the corner of Third and streets. ——————— | want a positive answs M Jones. 1ll “you marry me?”’ ‘That's | hardly fair. 1 asked for a positive answer | and you have given me a negative.’— | Philadelphia Tim: |to an LAYING ST. PAUL’S CORNERSTONE WITH SIMPLEST OF CEREMONY Archbishop Riordan ‘Blesses the New Sacred Edifice Already Being Erected. BRITISH LAUD LABOR UNIONS Organized Workmen De- clare They Advance Industries. WASHINGTON, Aug. 3L—The Ameri- | can Federationist, the officlal organ of | the Federation of Labor, and of which Samuel Gompers is editor, to-day prints replies from a number of prominent labor organizations advocates in Great Britain inquiry from Gompers as to whether- it is true that England’s indus- tries are seeking other fields, and. if so whether this is the fault of the trades unions. The replies are all negative as to the influence of the unions. George Barnes, eneral secretary of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, Manchester, Eng- land, says that “those industries which are best organized on the workmen’s side are the most prosperous_industries of the country. The shipbuilding, engineering, coal getting and cotton spinning are well organized industries and were never so prosperous, whereas, on the other hand, the heavy textile industries, shoemaking and several other industries that might be mentioned, and which are but indif- ferently organized on the side of the working people, are dwindling.” Chief of Eagles Arrives. Del Carey Smith, grand worthy presi- dent of the fraternal order of Eagles, arrived in the city from the East last evening and registered at the Palace Hotel. A delegation of deputies, headed by James F. Cheetham, State deputy grand president, met the chief officer and is wife at Oakland and escorted them to Arrangements will be mads to-day for the entertainment of President Smith. The president is return- ing to his home in Spokane, having made an extended fraternal tour throughout the middle and Atlantic States. The organi- zation of which he is chief is rapidly gaining in membership and prestige. ————— One of the curiosities of Cuba is a Quaker meeting-house which has been erected at Bibara, near Santiago. The congregation of Friends is said to number San Frarcisco. Jover 200, 7 4 Good times, Munyon’s Soap 10c The soap that Dr. Munyon sclls for 15c. Florida Water 45¢ 65¢ urray & Lanman's 75¢ size. Hermitage Whlskey The regular pfice of thls good whisicey s £1 2ot neust piceiye Packer’s Tar Soap 2 for25¢ How often have you pald 25c bar x this Calder’s Dentine 2 for 25¢ Our regular price 15c, Sozodont, small 15¢ Regular 25¢ size. fresh, pure drugs, etc. We do such a big business our goods never §\ have time to become stale h'flrd times or dull times, there is always a crowd in the Owl Drug Store—our low prices bring and hold customers, prices good until Saturday night, September 7th : or shop worn, These special Pozzoni’s Powder 25¢ A soc powder we usually sell for 35c Camelline 30c Regular price 4oc. Pear’s Soap 10c ¥ :',;vf, cents less than our regular Cuticura and Churchill’s Soa!)—l cake each 25c¢ cst_skin soaps made—sell The regularly for 25c each, Epsom Salts 1 Ib. 5¢ _ Regularly 1oc a pound. o RCHBISHOP RIORDAN yester- day blessed the cornerstone of St. Paul’s Church, in course of erec- tion on Church street, near Twen- ty-ninth. The ceremony was sim- ple. The pomp and ceremony that usually attend such an event were lacking. Ow- ing to the advanced condition of the work and the space surrounding the church be- ing occupied’ by stone and steel, it was found that the public could not be accom- modated, and therefore no invitations ‘were issued. The simple ceremony was performed shortly after the noon hour. the Arch- bishop was attired in stole and surplice and was attended. by the Rev. Father Mulligan,- priests of the-parish -and -aco- lytes. He first blessed the spot where the -altar -of the church will be erected and then the doors, vestibule and other points of the sacred edifice. In the stone were placed United States coins, the names of those who took part in the ceremony, the name of the Pope and a short history of the parish. ‘When completed the church will be one of the handsomest in the city. It will be bullt of granite and_ steel. of the building has been highly satisfac- tory to the parishioners. B e e e i o] ’ MacArthur Visits President. CANTON, Aug. 31.—General MacArthur, returning from the Philippines, stopped over in_Canton to-day to pay his respects to the President, and went Iast to-night. Other distinguished guests at the Mc- Kinley home to-day were George L von Meyer, United States Embassador to Italy, and Curtis Guild Jr. of Beston. ST. PAUL'S PARISH'S NEW CHURCH AS IT WILL APPEAR WHEN COMPLETED AND THE PARISH PRIEST WHO HAS LABORED EARNESTLY TO HAVE IT ERECTED. JERONALT FALLS WTH BILLOON Explosion of Gas Terri- fles’' Thousands of Spectators. — STERLING, Hil., Aug. 31.—C. Simmons, a young aeronaut of Evansville, Ind, was fatally injured last night by a fall from his balloon while making an‘ascension at this place. In the presence of 5000 people the mon- ster bag, with car and parachute at- tached, shot up into theair. “A cheer fol- lowed the Intrepid aeronaut, but died on the lips of the spectators when with a resounding clap the blg gas bag exploded. The balloon was 300 feet in the air when the accident happened and it began to descend rapidly. Simmons, with rare presence of mind, desperately endeavored to cut the para- chute away from the debris, but though he succeeded the umbrella-shaped con- trivance did not have time to open and thus break the fall. Man and parachute shot down to the earth with terrific rapid- ity. Hundreds sickened at the sight and many women_fainted as the man struck the ground. He was carried senseless to the hotel. Physicians examined him and found severe internal injuries and a fract- ure of the spine. THOUSANDS WILL PARADE. Five Divisions, Each to Be Headed by a Band. The Labor day celebration committee of the Labor Council was busy all day yesterday making arrangements for the Labor day parade, which, it is predicted, will be the most extensive procession of laboringmen ever held in the West. It has been estimated that t.ere will be from 25,000 to 30,000 union members in line. The parade will be in five divisions and each ‘division will be headed by a band. Drum corps and bands will also march with a number of the unions. head of the parade will form at the corner of Mission and East streets and will commence to move at 11 o’clock The line of march will be as fol- From the corner of Mission to East street to Market, from Market to Mon:- omery street; from Montgomery to Cal- fcrnia street; from California to Kear- ny street; from Kearny to Market street; from Market street to Van Ness avenue; from Van Ness avenue to Bush street, countermarching down Van Ness avenue to Market street; from Market street to Larkin street and thence to the Mechan- ics’ Pavilion. —_————— Room Thieves at Work. Lester Francis of 550 Mission street re- ported to the police last night that his room had been entered and clothing val- ued at §50 taken. The thieves gained an entrance by opening the door of the room with a skeleton key. v g CAMBLERS MAKE CRENT FORTUNES Records of Season at Saratoga Show High Playing. SARATOGA, Aug. 31.—The season of gambling in Saratoga ended at midnight to-night, and shortly after 1 o’clock on Monday morning the season of carnival will begin. The gamblers have had a short but, generally speaking, a profitable summer. There are just, four places which properly may be called gambling houses— the Saratoga Club, Chicago Club, Man- hattan Club and United States Club. There are two or three other cheap af- fairs, but they cut no figure. Big money has been staked at these four houses and all but one of them have made money. The play has been light all summer at the United States Club, and for that reason its profits have been of the kind which gamblers find fault with, But, as for the rest, Richard A. Canfield of the Saratoga Club, James Kennedy, ©‘Big Jim” his friends call him, of the Chicago Club, and Westcott and Tom Jolly of the Manhattan, will be richer by many thousands of dollars when they get back to New York than when they came here early in the summer. The feature of the gambling here has been the high play at the Saratoga Club. Nowhere in the world, and this statement is made on the authority of those who know the world's great gambling houses and business they do, has there ever been scen such high play as has been seen at the Saratoga Club this season. A lit- tle over $1,000,000 has been won and lost there in little less than four weeks and a fair estimate of the net profits to the house, including to-night's play, is $125,- The: Chicago Club, it is sald, has cleared about $25,000 and the Manhattan about $15,000. What is considered high play by gam- blers of Canfleld’s measure is that in which the player stands to lose from $10,000 to $15,000 on the turn of a card at the faro table or a turn of the wheel at roulette. There have been many such players at the Saratoga Club this summer but, strange as it may seem to some per- sons, they have not been professional gamblers. And another strange turn which fortune has taken at the Saratoga Club is illustrated by the fact that, with two exceptions, the " house has lost to heavy players right through the season. Two exceptions are a Baltimore lawyer and a New York wine merchant. The lat- ter lost $13,000. The biggest winner at Canfield’s place as a New York man who fills a large place in the financial world. He played with chips which cost him $2000 a stack, or $100 apiece. He played perhaps half a dozen times during the summer and gui* a winner of §25,000. Another large winner was a man who sold his seat on the Stock Exchange last winter and retired from a very well-known brokerage firm. Two ‘weeks ago to-night he played for rn hour and cashed in in chips, making nim winner at one sitting. Kirk Gunn of S‘hl‘c!lrgno ‘won $15,00 of Canfleld’s money The progress | G2 T0 WG WARM WELGOME Enthusiasm in France Over the Coming of Nicholas. Hecligaicd Extraordinary Precautions Against Attempt at Assassination. g PARIS, Aug. 31.—As the day set for the arrival of the Czar in France approaches interest in his Majesty’s visit is quicken- ing into excitément.- The newspapers are devoting columns daily to the various ar- rangements under way. The official pro- gramme of the fetes is still unpublished, but it is now known that the Czar will reach Dunkirk during the morning of Sep- tember 18, He will proceed to Complegne the same afternoon and will go to Riems the following day to witness the sham fights, with which the grand maneuyvers wiil close, from Vitry Fort. Finally, Sep- tember 2i, he will 3o to Beetheny, near Riems, to'be present at the review of the whole army ~engaged in the eastern maneuvers and wili probably start’ on his way home early the next morning. In order to make the naval display at Dunkirk more imposing the French northern squadron will be reinforced by three battleships and a cruiser from the Mediterranean fleet, giving a total of thirty-nine warships, including eleven battleships, five cruisers, three torpedo- boat destroyers, seventeen torpedo-boats and three submarine boats. The Czar will be on board the imperial yacht Standart, which will be escorted by the Polar Star, unléss *he invites the grand admiral, the Duke Alexis, to ac- company him, when the cruiser Svietlana will join the escort. President Loubet will arrive at Dunkirk September 17, accompanied by the Cabi- net Ministers, and will open the new City Hall there during the afternoon. The fol- lowing morning President Loubet and family will embark on the forpedo-boat destroyer Cassini, which will proceed to | the three-mile limit, where the President | is expected to greet the Czar between 10 | . ADVERTISEMENTS. JUETOR FALED TO HELP CATARRH CF STOMACH. ¥ PE-AU-NA GURED. T MRS. LEONE DOLEHAN, OF MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. and 11 o'clock. M. Loubet will go on board the Standart, which will then re- view the fleet. The Standart will after- | ward go to the dock near the railroad and | there will be a luncheon given in_the hall | of the Chamber of Commerce. Then the Czar and M. Loubet will proceed by sep- | arate trains to Compiegne. M. Loubet will arrive there first and will greet the | Elests. T}&ere will be a ?anquel in the | ning and probably a gala performance at the Castle Theate)r. = L i Elaborate precautions to insure the Czar’s safety during his stay in France are being taken. All undesirable foreign- ers have been expelled from Dunkirk and the Chauteau at Compiegne is closely | guarded by troops. Each house has been | examined and the occupants have been | compelled to give detailed information re- | garding themselves. All access of visitors to the Chauteau at Compiegne is now for. bidden, except to holders of special passes. @ ittt @ PASSENGERS ~ MEET DEATH, Continued From Page Thirteen. | hurt. The remains of the dead recovered, together with the injured, were taken to | Kalispell, and the injured are now in the hospital in that place receiving medical attention. The body ' of Superintendent P. T. Downs was recovered late to-day. It was so badly charred that identification was possible only through articles found near the body. The body of his son is yet unrecovered, and it is feared that it was completely ing ated. No list of the dead, other than that already given, has been received. The others killed were Scandinavian laborers, and it is impossible to identify them, ow- ing to the condition in which their bodies were found. — PLACES DEAD AT FORTY-ONE.| EKalispell Account Says Colonel Downs’ Body Was Recovered. KALISPELL, Mont., Aug. 3L—The wreck at Nyack last night was the worst in the history of the Great Northern, in that more lives were lost than ever be- fore in a disaster on that line. Forty- | one deaths have been reported up to the present time, and in all probability more will follow. Five dead were brought to Kalispell, together with thirteen wounded and seriously hurt, one of whom has since died. Of the forty-three men in the day coach on the rear of the train, only thirteen were saved and only five dead were got out of the burning ruins, the remainder being completely consumed. It is impossible to find even their bones, as nothing remained but ashes when the fire had burned out. There were many poor creatures pinned under the wreckage whom the passengers and trainmen did all in their power to extricate from their frightful position. The wreckage took fire immediately after the collision and it was with the greatest difficulty that the few saved were taken from the-ruins. Several men were loud- Iy calling-for help, begging that if they could not bé got out they be killed rather than suffer death in the rapidly approach- ing flames. Would-be rescuers were com- pelled by reason of the intense heat to stand aside and see the victims burned alive, powerless to lend aid or assistance. Ten cars of shingles were on the rear of the freight that caused the wreck. As soon as the freight struck the standing passénger traln the cars burst and the shingles were thrown in all directicns over the wrecked passenger cars. Almost in an instant the whole was a mass of | flames and the work of rescue was ren- dered dangerous. It appears that the wreck was caused by an east-bound freight train of twenty- eight cars, which was at Bssex, and that the head engine went forward, leaving a helper engine in the rear to hold the train. The helper engine set the airbrakes and left the train standing on the track and went to coal up. Conductor Matthews was in the office getting orders and both brakemen were with the engines. It is believed that the air leaked and that the train slipped away | without the train crew knowing it and dashed down the mountain at a tremend- ous rate of speed, variously estimated at from seventy-five to one hundred miles an hour, going down the hill a distance of seventeen miles before it overtook the passenger. This train was moving in the same direction as the runaway, otherwise the disaster would have been greater. The men on the passenget train had not the slightest warning of their danger. There is nothing of the wreck left but smoldering ashes and bent and twisted iron rods and chains. The body of Assistant Superintendent Downs, supposed to have been cremated in the wreck near here last night, was identified at the Morgue here this even- ing. The identification was made positive by the finding of a watch bearing Mr. Downs' name. The names of the laborers who are at the hospital here follow: Peter la Chance, Dan Machan, T Rhodes, August Rolff, John Zaliard, Louis Miller, Arthur Platts, Dan Hope, D. T. Olson, Charles Gallagher, John E. Erickson. Of the forty-seven laborers who were in the car those named are the only ones Who escaped aliy Dhat are Humors? They are vitiated or morbid fluids cours- ing the veins and affecting the tissues. They are commonly due to defective diges- tion but are sometimes inherited. How do they manifest themselves ? In many forms of cutaneous eruption, salt rheum or eczema, pimples and boils, and in weakness, languor, general debility. ‘How are they expelled? By Hood’s Sarsaparilla which also builds up the system that has M jup my mind that he was simply unable | and there the young couple w RS. LEONE DOLEHAN writes from the Commercial Hotel, Minneapolis, Minn., as follows: “For two months my physiclan experi- mented with me, trying to cure a hard cold which settled in my stomach causing inflammation and catarrh. I then made to help me, and reading some of the flat- tering testimonials to the value of Pe- runa in such cases, I thought I would try it ‘It was six weeks before I could eat a meal Wwithout unpleasant effects, but I have now been well for six months and I give all the credit to Peruna.”—Mrs. Leone Dolehan. b, ‘Wm. Henderson, Bordulae, N. C., write: ““/ was troubled with very serious female weakness ; had spells of flow- ing that exhausted me so that I feared I would lose my mind. I sufferea un- told agony with my back, the pain ex- tending down my left les. My pain was so severe that I would have welcomed death at any moment—so no_ome need wonder that I recommend Peruna so highly, for it cured me entirely of that. Not a sign of pain has ever returned, and that will soon be two years now. “I am glad that there is a way I can speak, trusting that many a sufferer will read my testimonial. and not only read, but believe.”—Mrs. Willlam Henderson. Women are extremely liable to catarrh of the stomach and pelvic organs. These diseases, especially in the depressing weather of summer, are very hard to bear. Happiness and good heaith are in- separable, and with catarrh no woman can be happy or healthy, Mrs. Curry, Petersburg, IIl., e been troubled with female trou- ble since my girlhood, and was sick in bed with suppressed menstruation for three months. [ had bearing down and cutting pains all through me. When | was able to get up | was so weak and thin that/ could hardly walk. What / ate disagreed with me; | had stomach and liver trouble, and my feet and limbs were swollen solcould scarcely drag around. “I took Peruna and it has dome won- ders for me. My cure was a surprise to my friends forthey never expected to see me well again. 1 just took two bottles of Peruna after doctoring for five months and growing worse the time.”—Mrs. M. P. Curry. Mrs. Mary Teskey, Bayard, Ia., writes “After I received your letter of advic I followed your instructions as nearly as I could, and am flad to say that am quite well now. I am not troubled with emale weakness any more. I do all of my work, and we live on a farm.”—Mrs. Mary Teskey. Mrs. Mary Crailg of Remmo, S. C., writes: “I took Peruma quite a while before I was confined and find that it helped me a great dea.. 1 am the mother of four girls, and thi« last one was a boy. I had no trouble at all, had the easlest time I ever had., ard the baby has not had a day’s sickness since he was born. Folks say he Is a regular Peruna baby.”—Mrs. Mary Craig. T. S. B. Hartman, president of The Hartman Sanitarium, ‘olumbus, Ohto. the famous gynaecologist, has announced his willingness to direct the treatment of as many women as apply to him during the summer months, free of charge. Ad- dress Dr. S. B. Hartman, president of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohi e ee—————————————————————————— GENERAL’S DAUGHTER WILL BE THE BRIDE Miss Young and Dr7 Gibbon to Be Married at Fort Mason on Monday. The wedding of Miss Marjorie Young and Dr. John H. Gibbon will be celebrated on Monday at noon at the residence of the bride’s father, General Young, at Fort Mason. Elaborate preparations are be- | ing made for the happy event. In the| conservatory a raised platform has been | erected which will be screened off with a | trellis work of ferns and white flowers, | 1l stand be- | fore Rev. Dr. Clampett of Trinity, who | will make them husband and wife. The bride will be attended by her sister, Miss Elizabeth Young, who will officiate | as maid of honor. Robert Gibbon, | brother of the groom, will be best man. _ | The bride will wear an elegant gown of | white panne satin. The skirt is made en | traine and the high-necked corsage is | trimmed with point lace. A veil and | orange blossoms will complete the cos- | tume. | Elizabeth Young, the maid of | (=} Miss honor, will wear a dainty gown of white | silk mull, trimmed with white lace. She | will carry a bouquet of long-stemmed American Beauty roses. Invitations to the | ceremony have been limited to the im- | mediate friends of the couple, but for the | reception and breakfast which will follow | 200 invitations have been issued. Dr. Gibbon and his bride will leave on Monday afternoon for their future home | in Philadelphia. They will go by the northern route and visit many places of interest on the way. | it S S AL PARISHIONERS TO JOIN IN A GRAND REUNION Members of St. Joseph’s Parish to | Enjoy Labor Day at Schuetzen | Park. Labor day has been selected by the parishionegs of St. Joseph's Church for their annaplcnic and reunion this year. Schuetzen Tk has been selected as the place, and it Is expected that every mem- ber of the parish will be on hand that day. A programme of rare excellence, embracing games of all kinds and for ali | ages, with a little terpsichorean divertise- ment in the main pavilion, will serve to make the day pass most pleasantly. The price of tickets, including fare, admission to the grounds and a participation in the distribution of hundreds of gate prizes, has been fixed at 75 cents, with half rates for children. | The committees in charge are as fol- lows: Reception—Mrs. Denney, Mrs. Mley, Mrs. | Black, Mrs. Derham, Mrs. Smith, M. Ang. lin, Mrs. Bayreuther, Mrs. Silk, Miss Josie Diilon, Miss H. Casey and Miss Sinfers. Floor—G. Bayreuther, manager: P. Kelly, assistant manager: Ed Lucett, E. Broderick, | J. Miley, W. E. Gantner, W. J. Lawlor, H. | Tlfixrbler, };l' sg‘nh.n' Thomas W. Hickey. lusic—Rev. Father Keane, Fran and T. E. Tracey. % lle Games—T. E. Tracey, J. Curtis. T. T. Otis, P. M. Lawlor, E. Asmussen, H. W. Silk_ T. McKeon, J. Tamony, J. P. McGuire, P. N e Frank Snm a rizes—Fran! ng and J bY 2 Prees F. Schilling, C. Asmussen ana B Kelly. The members of the committees feel that they have arranged a programme of unusual excellence and one that will in- sure the presence of a large erowd. —_—————— MRS. RUDOLPH FORMERLY LIVED IN SAN BERNARDINO Her First Husband, Charles Garner, Secured a Divorce on the Ground of Desertion. Mrs. Arthur C. Rudolph, who killed her husband and then committed suicide Fri- day at 8313 Howard street, was formerly a resident of San Bernardino. She was a sister of T. A. Carter, formerly a police- man of that city and now the proprietor of the Basket saloon in Los Angeles. In 1896 she married Charles Garner, an em- suffered from them. It Is the best medicine for all humors. ploye of the Santa Fe Company. They lived together for several years and then a separation came, and it was claimed that Rudolph, whom she after- ward married, was the cause of her trou- ble with her first husband. Garner was granted a divorce on the ground of desertion four years ago at San Berrardino. His ex-wife and Rudolph im- mediately left for Seattle and later came to San Francisco. The remains of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph were taken to San Jose yesterday after- noon by Otto Rudolph, brother of the murdered man. —_————— The most realistic performance on rec- brd was when Samson brogght down the house. (4 B.KATSCHINSKI PHILADELPHIA SHOE cO0. 10 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. What's More Up fo Date Patent Leather Oxfords? Ladies “know what a stylish shoe means. It tones up the en- tire costume and stamps the wearer -as being well dressed. Patent leather Oxfords are the favorites, but in the past have been held so high as not to. be within reach of all. But we offer a special. Just for this week: La- dies’ Patent Leather Oxford Ties, coin toes and tips, hand- turned soles and French heels, for $1.95 a pair. Sizes 3 to widths A to E. 7%, D Little Gents’ Vici Kid Lace Wide coin toes and _tips; 'double :nles ar?%omz:' :;naldsh;e 's; reduced rom AT pair; sizes 9 to 13%, widths B to E. Agents for W. L. Douglas unfon- stamped shoes. ‘We have no branch stores nor traveling salesmen. Country orders solieited. PHILADELPHIA SHOE GO, 10 THIRD STREET, San Francisco. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, J{EARNY AND WASHINGTON STS o modeled and hn-r!m"!.d. . European pl 80e to §1 50 day: $5 to §8 week; §8 to $20 month. Free baths; hot and cold water every room: fire grates in every Toom; elevator runs all might.

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