Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 1901 y <3 Imte Pain in They Small Price. GALIFORNIA LIMITED “‘THE SUPERIOR OF THEM ALL” that speed, comfort, pleasure and luxury unlimited. Reserve berths for this famous train at 641 Market street. Everything tends to T LEAVES EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, 9.00 A. M., ON THE SANTA FE .A'\’ GEI AWAY to work 1 done own story, io the tell- 1 your or- ve ' JUNIT ED STATES LAUNDRY ce 1004 Marke: Strest Telephone—South 420, and Offics—54 San Pablo Ave. tion and colored free on wishing Rupture Cured. brated California In r. Picrce, discovered ' only remedy for Rup- | ture is Electrickty, and o per- focting bis wonderful Electro- Trussand estab- 5 its sale tbronghout world, be gave to & ers from thisdangerons ¥ the relief and se- v vainly sought for Bhere_ Thisrenowned auce is radically dif- d_its action on the 1 effective Cures numbered by the all igate at once. p for new * Booklet No. 58 Mlun'tlc Truss Co.. 1145 Brosdway (n 26th Bt.), New York, or 206 Post 8., blnfnncma THE WEEKLY CALL 3! per Year. VICHY SPRINGS, place in the United Etates where h is esbundant The duly natural p ol ers; C mpagne Baths; Springs Nun suths Uneyunied. Three miles from Ukis 1’ X"REDEMEYER & CO., Prwfluan 1a AND BARTLETT SPRINGS b —Hopland to Bartlett Springs, Vie Laképort, carrying passengers for Lake- | » + wagons, made 1o oraer for this with all the most modern improve- "MILLER & HOWARD, Proprietors. urely Vegetable. | ngers for Lakeport or Bartlets | tickets by Bartlett Springs | 'KING LEOPOLD OF BELGIUN | WILL VISIT UNITED STATES BAOTHER FILLS |, BANITS RN § Sad End of a Buffalo Doctor’s Search for Relative. Riches Bequeathed to Outlaw Killed by Officers in Modoc County. Special Dispatch to The REDDING, Oct. 14.—Dr. Thomas J. Dor- land cf Buffalo, N. Y., arrived here last evening sceking his brother, Ben- Jamiin H. Dorland, of wirom he had heard | nothing in five months. He was shocked | to léarn that his brotker was the outlaw | Dorland, who was killed in a desperate | fight with officers near Adin, Modoc Coun- ty, in _Julyy Accompanied by W. K. Smith, Dr. Dbrland set out immediately for the woods of Modoc to hunt for the shallow grave where the fugitive was | buriéd and exhume the body for shipment | to_the old family home in Ontario, Can- ada. 'That his brother had been killed un- der such circumstances seemed to him al- mpst Incredible. The trip to -he lonely grave will require six days of traveling. It is on the edge of the Iava beds. Benjamin Dorland was a clever young | “"‘“‘.}." man who bought mines here for 'Townsend and Creighton Thorn. ton of Sauit Bte Marie, Mich. He was a cused of mlsnp»mprluung money aad wa convicted of oblalnh\g money under false prétenses. A week before the date of gentence Dofland and Ed lllingsworth, 8 felony prisoner. escaped from jail and Wete pursued for three weeks before the hloodé !hl at_Adin, in which Dorland and Condtable Bert Walker were killed and Sheriff Behrens barely escaped death. Dr. Dorland says that his brother has been left valuable property by a relative who has just dled m— Hermit Found Murdered in Cabin. CHARITON, Iowa, Oct. 14.—Joseph Bu- chanan, an aged hermit, was found dead i1 his cabin near this place, his head be- ing split open with an ax. He was re- (prtefl to have had much wealth stored oul his cabln. *His murder is supposed ,to have had robbery as its motive. — Call. Appointments in the Navy. i ‘WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—The President | | to-day made the following appointments in the navy: Frank Wildes, to be rear | admiral: John K. Craven, lleutenant com- | | mander; Provost Babin, lieutenant; | | Charles E. Milpin, leutenant, junior | grade. | ADVERTISEMENTS. The housekeeper % or the cook who 4 does or doesn’t i kecp a jar of the i | E l company’s | h L Extract OF BEEF always at hand both for fla- | voring soups and sauces as well as for making that handy cup of hot beef tea, will oblige by sending her address to Dauchy & Co., P. O. Box 718, New York, | N. Y. She will receive free, a useful | pant hank, LASHS [ o KIDNEY 8 LIVER BITTERS PLE TUOUAXATIV JNTDAI\,ATINO ¥ || NOTED EUROPEAN MONARCH STATES, WHERE HE EXPE THAT WILL BE OF GREAT BE = HO HAS ANNOUX ED HIS INTENTION OF SOON VISITING THE UNITED CTS TO SECURE VALUABLE SUVGGESTIONS IN SHIPPING ARRANGEMENTS NEFIT TO THE PORTS OF HIS OWN COUX ) i | | || —3 NTWERP, Oct. an interview 14.—Ki A which @ i & HEIRS SETTLE inted to advantages, to get in the | will prove beneficial to t « WITH CLAIMANT —|Young Nebraska Wo- man Receives Share of Large Estate. OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 14.—By giving Miss - Fisner the title “My wife” in a 1 introduction Jacob Byers of Omaha lost for his I $10,000 in | money and property valued at $15,000 more | Byers, a prominent livestock dealer, di a month ago and interested parties have just agreed upon a settlemen: of the es- tate. Miss Fisher advanced the claim that she Lad been married to the stockman at com- mon law, but was unable to produce wril- ten evidence of the union. She produced James Tillotson, however, whom she had first met while she was in the company | of Byers. “Tillotson, 1 wish to present you to my wife,’ Byers had remarked. The girl cherished the acknowledgment | a8 the only outward sign of their matri- ml'mal relationship. The young woman also offered testi- meny to show that she had resided in a brownstone house on Park avenue with the broker and had been known in the neighborhood as his wife. She was ac- customed to appear with him at church and at places of amusement. | The contest was brought by | ers of Aledo, Iil., brother of the decedent, who has now recognized the young wife's | claim. The latter has withdrawn the plea | that she be appointed administratrix of her husband's estate and has taken a lb- eral settlement instead. The estate will | grant her $10,000, diamonds given her by | Byers and a deed to the brownstone front. | About an equal amount in money and | property bas been left for the Illinois rel- | atives. N. W. By- Special Rates For side rides to points on the Santa Fe. | Open to holders of Episcopal Church Con- | ventton _tickets, friends accompanying and holders of nine months’ excurséon uckets. Dates of gale, teraber 23 to * November 10 inclusive. imit 30 days. | full_information call at Santa Fe offices, | 441 Market st.. and ferry depot. | —_——————————— Shipping Concern Fails. BERLIN, Oct. 14.—The United Shipping : | company of Breslau has gone into bank- ruptey. —_———————— The light-running *‘Domesti; highest award at Pan-Americ: | Pl Tor “Best Family Sewing Machibe. ro:-P' L the Burgomaster, Saturd: For time tables, descriptive literature and | R ng Leopold has decided to visit Ney United States many sug 8 he ports of Belgium. STAGE TOPPLES - FROM PREGIPIGE Passengers Are Hurled Down the Side of a Mountain. PR Special T teh to The Call VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 14.—Passen- gers on a stage on the Cariboo trail, twen- ty miles north of Ashcroft, had a thrill- ing experience last evening as the result | of the ‘“‘cussedness” of a horse. The en- tire load went over a precipice, the stage bringing up on a ledge forty feet below, wrile several of the passengers rolled and tumbled down the mountainside 100 feat farther. Three of the unfortunate travel- ers were badly injured. A dozen persons, including the Judge and lawyers and jail officials in a Chinese murder trial held at Clinton, were on the stage and were hurrying down to the coast. Those on board were: R. L. Reid, Dennis Murphy, A. D. McIntyre, George A. Stewart Potts, Deputy Warden Hutch- irson of the Kamloops Jall, Mark Becele- ston¢, W. Oreelman, A. R. Cameron, George Lewls and C. Spriggs. The pas- sengers who rode inside were Messrs. Potts, Hutchinson, Cameron and Lewls. All went well until they were within a | half mile of the Twenty-Mile House, The | stage was then rounding one of the steep | precipices which abound along that por- tion of the road, when one of the horses came unmanageable and, after several | piunges, fell, carrying the others with it. | The stage was upset and the king pin came out of the truck under the front wheels, detaching it from the rest of the coach. The horses in their struggles to regain thefr feet fell from the adjacent ' precipice, taking with them the front ' wheels and the pole of the stage. As the coach capsized the passengers all made a wild scrambie for safety ang those | outside jumped for the hillside. All wers | badly shaken up and bruised and three | were seriously injured. They were: R. L. | id, hurt“internally: George A. Stewart | | Potts, leg bruised, and A. D. Mclntyre, | | face cut. " Of thes< Reid was the most se- | ! riously injured, being pinned under the f His \Iuject\' expects, yestions from the L M 3 20 e e e e . | | overtirned stage for some time before the lothers were able to come to his assist- | | ance, In jumping to get clear of the stage three of the passengers leaped clear over ”ho edge of the precipice. Murphy and | Potts and ome of the others continued tumbling down the slope after the stage | * | had brought up on a ledge forty feet b--l i AMUSEMENTS. NTRY. | “”R mmé‘m On aceount of funeral of Mark Thall the box office will not open till 3 p. m. to-day. He announced this in among other | shipping arrangements | | v York. BEGINNING TO-NIGHT, The Farce that Crazed New York, THE GIRL IN THE BARRACKS, Greatest of all Sensational Farces. | Matinees Saturday and Sunday. PRICES—15c, 35 GD nnmw low the road. They landed finally among | the treetops in an alder swamp more than | | 100 feet farther down. They were picked | { up unconscious, but are not so serlously | injured as Pef On account of funeral of Mark Thall the box office wiil not open till 3 p. m. to-day. BEGINKING TO-NIGHT | Matihées Saturday and Sunday, Jehn A. Stevens’' Successful Melodrama, WIFE FOR WIFE One of thie most powertul realistlc plays ever e b, 18 o, 8, 0 PRICES liet0c, 15c, %e coN FISCHER'S ©ONGRRT. /8y °= Bartelmese; Maud De Alma; Harry Holmes Herr Hubér; Eleanore Jenkins; Sydney Smith VAT e BI* Mncn Impure Blcoi muns an un- healihy stomach. The B tters will set things right in the stom- ach and Purlty the Blood. It will cure Indigéstion, Dys- pepsia, Constipa ion, Liver and Kidney Troubles. Tey it Everiinge. Matinee: Val Vousden: Silvia Puerarl and Lilian Slinkey Matinee Sunday. and Hinrichs' Orchestra. Reserved Seats, 2ic. Pufls under the eyes; red nose; | pimple-blotched, greasy face don't | always mean hard drinking as much as it shows that there is BILE IN THE BLOOD. It is true, drinking and over-eating overloads the stomach, but failure to assist nature in regularly dis- sing of the partially dizested umps of food that are dumped into the bowels and allowed to rot there, is what causes all the trouble. CASCARETS will help nature, help you, and keep the system from filling with sons, and clean out the sores that tell of ! the system’s rottenness. Bloated by bile the figure becomes unshapely, the breath foul, eyes and skin yellow; ln fact the whole body {md of fills up with fifth Every time you to nature you lay the foundation for just “such mnllu. -u mry the pdum oul of the tablet—! p for a week and ' help the liver do‘l will feel m, ym Fulood will be rich, face loolk cl of Cascarets, take as directed. If you ua -ot gati back. Be sure and get what yon ask for— ETS. aad free. "-'amu‘ medy Co., Chicago or New York. ifle——dn "rw s...,.. ADV EB’IIIEHBNT!. HOUSE O1 Monday we will show the mast cemplete lines of TABLE LINENS 7~vno NAPKINS Of Gzrman, Irish and Szotch SCOTCH - - Hand embroilered, in all GERMAN - - In many novel IRISH - - - FRENCH - - Genuine per cent less than our regalar prices for those lines. Round and Square Tab'e Mats and Runners Hemstitched Table Cloths, Napkins and Doylzes Table Linens and Napkins an i Huckaback Towels Imported expressly for hotels and boarding houses, AT GREAT VALUES. Imported Flannels In great variety of figures, dots, conventional patierns, stripes, floral designs and cashmere styles, for home dre-s=s and waists Examine Ahuve Linos and cunpare Prices. $ H LINENS§ makes at prices from 10 to 1§ sizes and choics patterns (n2a) patterns, just recene.l ; : | CITY OF PARlS DRY GOODS COMPANY, 8B, Corner Geary and Stookton Strests, San Pransisss. UNION SOUARE. Mail and Express Orders Re ceive Immediate Attentlon. AMUSEMENTS. in an Act of th SEXTET from “FLORODOR MASON and MASON and LOTT ADOLPH." Scenes from “CARMI CIALTI of “TOO MUCH JOHNSON."” TRA. Grand Parade in Honor of the Eecnelit by the Royal Itallan Band Thursday at Noon. RESERVED SEATS $1.00 and $2.00. GOOD SEATS NOW ON SALH THE TIME DRAWS NIGH! THURSDAY AFTEBERNOON, OCTOBER 17, CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE, Beginning at 1 o'clock. THIRD ANNUAL BENEFIT IN AID OF THE CHARITY FUND OF THE ASSOCIATED THEATRICAL MANAGERS OF SAN FRANCISCO. HALF OF THE GROSS RECEIPTS TO BE DEVOTED TO THE McKINLEY MEMORIAL FUND. MONSTER PROGRAMME. LOOK AT THIS ARRAY OF NOVELTIES! Americin Debut of POLLARD'S AUSTRALIAN JUVENILE OPERA COMPANTY “BELLE OF NEW YORK.' ."" CAMILLE D'ARVILLE. ROYAL ITALIAN BAND. WILLIAMS-SALTER from * and m the ORPHEUM. Act of “THE LITTL LATEST MOVING GRACE DUDLEY and the DOUBLE “RUDOLPH and Tivoll. BRIGHTEST SPE- MINISTER.” Second Act PICTURES. IMMENSE ORCHES- NABUCCO, BOXES $20.00, $35.00 aad $50.00 AT THBE BOX OFFICE. New Vaudevfie Faverites! Monrce, Mack and Lawrence, De Courcy Brothers, Thomas Baker, Maude Sorensen, Tom Dunn, Sis-| ters O’Meers, Mitchell and Bar- nard, Joe, Buster and Myra Kea- ton, Wilfred Clarke and Co. and ) the Biograph. Reserved Seats, 2i¢; and Opera Chai e, Balcony, 10c; Box Seats GRAND::: | MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. TO-NIGHT AND EVERY EVENING THIS WEEK. THE LITTLE MINISTER, POPULAR PRICE: 2 Branch Ticket Of — NEXT WBEK — Perkins in “THE MAN MEXICO." | spectal Matiness Monday fo Friday, Inclusivé, | of Pollard's Australian Juvenile { Opera Company. | Emporium. | | Walter E. FROM A LAUGHING FESTIVAL EVERY EVENING THIS WEEK. ATINEE SATURDAY, First time in this city of Geo. H, Musical Farce, RUDOLPH and ADOLPH With the Two Emperors of Germany, MASAN AND MASON, 4o—coutnm\rs—4o NEXT SUNDAY, October “A EMAL"' DRUMMER” Jonvs'rom: BENNETT. EEATS THURSDAY. Broadhurst's | *TIVDLI* Eveninas at § sharp. S Matinee Saturday at 2 sharp. by TO-NIGHT, Thursday, Sunday Nights, Saturday Matinee “ERNANL"” Wednesday, Friday and 4 Saturday normously Demanded |GAVALLERIA a0d | PABLIAGGI TUESDAY, Octob:r 22d— “LA BOHEME.)” POPULAR PRICES- e, Te! EPhflrFBll'h %e and Tie: ALHAMBRA. A VERY JOYOUS MUSICAL TREAT. EVERY EVENING THIS WEEK. Matinees TO-DAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY. Messrs. Ellinghouse and Oppenheimer sunounce the appearance of MK. CHANNING ELLERY'S ROYAL ITALIAN BAND. 50— ARTISTS —0 816. GIUSEPPE CREATORE, Direotor, Assisted by MME. JOANNA BARILI, Sopramo, MISS IDA B. HEINTZEN, Harpist Friday Bvening—'CREATORE" Nigh! Speclal Popular Night at Popular {ces. Farewell—Sunday, October 20. COLUMBIA &% LAST NIGHT BUT FIVE. LAST MATINEE SATURDAY. | The Greatest xunml Syccess Ever Recorded ere, FLORODOR Farewell Next Sunday Night. Beginning Next Monday, BTU "RT RUBSON | As “Bertie the Lamb” in e HENRIS © T A Veritable All-Star Cast. SEATS READY THURSDAY. PALACE HOTEL. ——. For a quarter of a century thess hotels have been the rters of tourists and travelers who haye all parts of the world ed from ncisco. Guests entere tained on the Amgrican or European plan. GRAND HOTEL. [ SUTRO BATHS. OPEN NIGHTS, Open datly fremi 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. Bathing from 7 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. ADMISSION, le. CHILDREN, Se. Bathing, including admission, 2%c. Children, 20c. C. H. WLL, HILL'S THEATER, ¢} XLt ~) Cor. Ellls and Pow- First-class vaudeville. Ladies’ Orchestra, Matinee Sunday, I p. m. . (R ell. Moving Pictures. Admisston 10c_and S ————— T ——————— Weekly Cail,$1.00 per Year