The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 5, 1903, Page 5

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THE SAN Franvirvu UALL, MUNDAY, JANUARY 35, 1903. MISCELLANEOUS. GREAT AND and 00’ ODDS At 407 "PATTOSIEN’ ENDS SALE 5 Reduetion The Most Brilliant Display in the City! 500C Articles to Select From. Carpets, Furniture, Lace Curtains ant Draperics ore for your money and better values than ever before. NO OTHER STORE IN THE WORLD GIVES THE BARGAINS that are Dmmq Ro:m Fmttnre. 824, (m "'i\ 00 521.25 > Melal vBeds. shape, pretty Combination Bookcases, $45.00 ln:k Rich Quartered Oak large £30.25 k Desk, with hi ceeee B8 and elabo- - §49.25 00 Desk in Highly Polished Golden Oak: NOW &t wcereen-nn £17.00 Sixteenth and Wission Strests ¥ @ PAYS TO TRADE PATTOSIEN CO to be had at our Establishment. Beantiful Center Tables $15.00 Birdseye or la Table for parlor arber le price 8.25 Center Tflhl(’ 85.50 $10.00 dainty 317.00 $35.00 Rare F ()lk new design Hardwood Center Table. a splendid value ... - 90e Leather Goods. Arm Chair, large griffin on arms; our make .... 847.00 00 mel)mr (nuuh made in ur own factory and guaran- teed ... - 855.00 $60.00 ’rurMuh Chair, far superior to E: uct our make, tern Fro(l Made-Up Rugs. $14.00 Tapestry, finest grade, 8:3 x10 and §:3x - H10. $27.50 Axminsters, highest rade, v , great wear- ing Q\Lfllnti, choice pullr‘rn now 60¢ $1.15 Tapestry I’r'x sels, in vari- ety of colo high pli now BEraR S5e I./ Curtains and l)rapenes. I $7.50 Ar: ace Curtains, 3 \ odd p )lr« to sell at. 00 French Ci rmm.nr-s and Taf- fetas will be closed _vard at ... haif-inch " _” 51 1l 00 Bagdad Pomores are e closed out this week at. 0dd Parlor Pieces. ‘ lece Parlor Suit, velour or tapen ering; our make . £18.00 k Cov- 87250 and rich -831.00 Suit guaranteéd uphol: $40.00 Divans in various des velour coverings ) Odd Chairs i Rockers of different designs as low moamas 4.00 $30.00 Couch, best tapesiry, made in “our own factory .. 00 and Sixteenth Streets IN THE MISSION OCEAN STEAHEBS ADVEB"'ISE/MENTS‘ b 52 T ularivm Patented. ’\ Near and Far Eye 3 Glasses With Invisible ! eporat.cn at Seattle for Ta- aver to C. P. RY. Prfl'urL 1:30 Ry Van Giz MARKETST £an Jose del Santa Rosa- further Information obtain folder. ht reserved to change steamers or salling FFICE —+ 10 Market street Montgomery | tion, Hunting and Goods. Largest est prices. Send , 18, , 13, 23, Feb. 2, 12 ORTLAND. OR. rtiand to all points OCEAN x BAVEL olulu, Saturday. ammhs-ms ll..ln: Tickst Office, 543 MarkotSt, wlm 32 Iamflt , Pier Ns. 'l Pmfill. AMERICAN LINE. NEW YORK. SOUTHAMPTON, LONDON. Cam Friesland Jan. 28, 10am am Kroon!'d.Jan. 31, P OSTAR s+ IN { NEW YORK, ANTWERP, PARIS. Zeeland .Jan. 10, 10 am Va 24, 10 am | Friesiand.Jan. 17, 10am Kroonl'd. ,«'HAC D. TAYLOR,G.P.A.C.,30 Mont (ORTENTAL EAMSHIP €O.) leave wharf, corner Pirst and | . for YOKOHAMA ling at Kobe (Hiogo), and _connecting at | for India, ete. No\ om O of failing. Saturday TOYD KISEN i, board AMERICA MAF ¥ A & Ty March 8, 1903 | Roundtrip tickets at reduced /ght and passage apply at Com. A2 Macket strest corner First. w. AVERY. General Agent. TRANSATLANTIQUS mry st BAY AXD RIVER STEAMERS {FOR L. S PAVY YIRD AKD VALLEJD Sieamers GEN. FRISBIE or MONTICELLO. CMPAGNIE CENERALE LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS, € every Thursday, instead of et & S foot of Morton street. Havre, $70 and upward. 9:45 a, m., 3:15 and 8:30 p. m., except Sua- u n.\n $45 and upward. Oxhl‘.lu. 45 &, m,, 8:30 p, m. ves _UNITED STATES and CAN- | m., 12:30 Doon, 6 p. m. exoeyt (Hudson building), New | nday, 7 8. m., 4:15 p. ™. , 30 GAZI & CO., Pacific Coast | cents. Teiephove Main 1508, Landing and ontgomery svemue, Sen Franclaco. CH office, pler 2, Mission-street dock. BROE. kets sold by ail Refiroad Ticket Agents. T DB [¢HUSEUR OF ANATOMY 10 am | " 10am | @(JIIEMIAN o TTLED OF ALL BO KinG BEERS" soLp l‘.VllY'H!ll. Vit VIGOR, VIT ALLTY for Mt MORMON ' BISHOP'S PILLS bav: been in use over fifiy by the leaders of the Mormon Church and thelr followers. Positively cure the worst cases in old and young arising from effects nf self- ipation, e: Smoking, Mankood, Impoten; Power, Night Losses, nia, Pains in Back, Evil Desires, La ervous Debility. Headache, Unfitness to Mar- 55 of Varicocele or Con. vous Twitching of 1 cigare! Er By > immediate. m- igor and puw CENT®5cy 1o every func. tion, Don't get despondent, a cure Is at hand. Restore small, undeveloped’ orga the brain and nerve centers: GUc A box; 6 for §250 by mall. A written guarantee to cure or | money refunded with 6 boxes. Circulars free. BISHOP. REMEDY CO.. 40 Eills st., Cal. GRANT DRUG CO., 28 MO RRIAGE, MAILRD FREE: (A valable book fof mien) BDAK & O.. 1051 Market St.. 8. P, (/ DB D DD Stimulate visitr DR, JORDAN'S creat 1051 MARZET O7. bet. R TR, 8.1.Cal, ) The Largest Anatomical Museum iu the Worid. 15 o, ay commaesed oy paciet w17 cmred by the oldat Spaciaiist on the Coast. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and strietly prirste, Trosiment pirsonslly or by letter. sitive Cure in every case un m.m, Weice for ook, PRIL@NG (Bl & s 0 non t, B runonh- wfl ' Wtural i m or any Illlu-v Guarasteed “u"’;; l:;n;un ulcera- E e s cous mem. . branes, Non-astringent. Sold by of :3x10 and larger size: s eseiihenne QIN.OO $25.00 Body Brusseis, Bigelow | Lowell, guaranteed the best, | same sizes ... 817, New 1903 Carpets. $ M Quali A minsters, beau- d lors, sewed 81.10 SAFECRACKER IS CAUGHT IN STORE BY POLICEMEN Burglar Uses Nitro-Glycerin and Explosion Is Heard by Officers on the Street, Who Find the Cracksman, George Rllev Crouchmg in.Corner, Where He Had Tried to Hlde« GEORGE | | * | EX-CONVICT CAPTURED IN CROCKERY STORE AFTER HE HAD BLOWN OPEN A SAFE. BILEr ol HE police south of Market street agaln distinguished themselves yesterday morning by capturing a safe-cracker. The place entered was Henry O. Wiedero's crockery cutlery store, Fourth and Mission treets. The sting officers were J. H. Sullivan, T. Murphy and Corporal Wall, and Chief Wittman expressed his commendation of the good work done by them. Shortly after 3 o'clock Corporal Wall left Murphy at Fourth and Mission streets and walked along Mission toward Fifth, when he met Sullivan and spoke to him. A minute or two later Murphy heard a sound as if an explosion had occurred. He crossed the street-mnd examined the front door of the crockery store, but found it fastened. He went downstairs to the basement and discovered that the basement door had been opened from the inside. He ran upstairs and covered both dcors p and TORRENTS POUR ON RAILROADS Passengers Are Pris- oners in Trains in Washington. TACOMA, Wash.,, Jan. nothing done on the Nort to-day, not a train leaving the city and the railroad officlals are unable to make any definite statement as to the future. The chinook still prevalis and water Is pouring down the Cascades in torremts. At Martin, on the east sid f the tunnel, there 1s a washout of rly 200 feet, while ,several places between the tunnel and Ellensburg are under water or the 4.~There was ern Pacific line in the State may reach $1,000,000. To sum up the difficulties the Northern Pacific s now struggling with there are five washouts on the main line between Castle Rock and Kelso. There are in- numerable slides all the way from Cos- mopolis to the terminus on the Grays Har- bor branch. The Auburn cut-off is under is gone in one place on Green River. Five or six other minor washouts are reported between Lester and Palmer. The big washout at Martin is fc sion of washouts and way to Ellensburg. South Bend branch is under water and covered with slides from Willapa to the terminus. The company has two passenger trains tied up at Maywood and Is taking the best care possible of the passengers. There are slides ahead and washouts behind and ar- rangements are being made to get more supplies to the trains as needed. There is no way to get the passengers out at present, owing to the washing out of ail road bridges in that section. Not a county road can be followed a single mile in any direction. One passenger train is bound up at Lester, where the passengers are also being cared for by the raiiroad. communication is possible either {vay until the water shall have abated. The Great Northern is exactly in a like predicament with the Northern Pacific. The first effects of the chinook were to again carry away the bridge at Meadows Creek. Trains were then directed over the Northern Pacific, but before they could be dispatched east the Northern Pacific was blocked, as stated. SEATTLE, Jan. 4—White River over- flowed Its banks near O'Brien station, fourteen miles below Seattle, at 3 o’clock this morning. The peopie of the town were awakened by the water, in many cases creeping into their beds. A relief { train was ordered from Seattle and on ar- riving with boats the rescuing party found several families, the women and children of which were huddled on chairs and tables in ordef to keep from the water that was more than two feet deep on the floors. All persons were taken to places of safety. No lives are reported lost, but much property has been ruined or lost. To:night the floods are subsiding ple of any other nationality. water for one mile, Nearly a miie of track | No | B B R S S 1 tracks covered deep in mud. The damage | 3 Wall and Sullivan had also heard the explosion and hurried back. Wall re- malned on guard outside while Murphy and Sullivan broke the glass in the front dcor and effected an entrance. They found George Riley, a former convict, crouched in a corner near the safe and ordered him to throw up his hands, and he instantly obeyed: He was handcuffed, and then the officers made the discovery that the knob, handle and combination had been blown off the safe, in §ront of which a pile of books had been placed to deaden the sound. Near Riley was found a sledge hammer, brace, several drills, punches with sticks tled to them, two sticks of fuse, caps, a package of nitro- glycerin, soap and cotton. Riley had made up two rolls of cutlery, ready to be carried off after he had robbed ‘the safe, He was taken to the City Prison and booked on a charge of burglary. Riley, who is ears of age, began his criminal career as a boy, and about five vears ago was arrested on a charge ot raurdering Willlam Hennessey in the St. David's House, on Howard street, but was acquitted by a jury in the Supertor Court. Two months later he was arres ed for breaking into Rudolph Bartl jewelry store, 141 Post street, and was sentenced to serve five years fn San Quentin. He was discharged about five months ago. When arrested he told the officers that he was sick and had broken into the store to get money enough to take him to some springs, and he wished they had killed him instéad of arresting him. There is a strong suspicion that Riley is the man who cracked the safe in the office of the Buffalo Brewing Com- pany, 125 King street, about two weeks ago. FIGHT FOR TOGA 6ROWS EXCITING Senatorial Situation in Colorado Is Badly Complicated. DENVER, Jan, 4.—The Senatoriul situa- tion in Colorado is becoming dectdedly complicated and should present declared plans be carried out the contest over the selection of a successor to Senator Henry M. Teller, which will begin in earnest with the convening of the Leglislature on | . | Fifth st., Wednesday next, will be, to say the least exciting and more than likely spectacular. The solid support of the Democratic wing of the Legislature for Teller is stiil main- tained, while the Republican strength is parceled out among four candidates, of whom former Senator E. 0. Wolcott is the most consplcuous. At a meeting of the Democratic State Central Committee the matter of the threat of the Republican majority in the House to unseat the en- tire Arapahoe Democratic delegation was dlscussed and resdfutions adopted to the effect that it is “the right and duty of the Senate to utilize the same constitutional right and authority and restore the equi- librium." The majority in the Senate being Demo- cratic, should their threat to ‘meet revolution with revolution' be carried out, it would bring about a condition rendering a gelection of a Senator impossible. With a solid Democratic Senate it is clalmed a deadlock could be maintained to the end. It had been practically agreed that on next Tuesday night a caucus of the Re- publican members of the House would be held to select a Speaker, but it develops that several members have refused to be bound by the actions of the leaders, claiming that they were nominated and elected on an anti-Wolcott pledge and they fear that a caucus selection of a Speaker would be made to appear as a Wolcott victory and would probably be really such. is said, remain away Tuesday night. They number seventeen, enough to defeat any action the caucus might agree to. A sensation was created by a cireular just issued from the headquarters 8f P. B. Stewart of Colorado Springs, who is supposed to be the spokesman of the ad- ministration at Washington. The circular charges that coples of letters, supposed to have been recelved from Senator Lodge saying Wolcott was the choice of the ad- ministration, have been circulated among i the members of the Legislature and de- nounces them as forgeries. The circular declares that the wish of the administra- tion was only that a Republican should be chosen Senator without regard to any particular candidate. One Way Rate for the Round Trip. Passengers to Kansas City over the Southern Pecific can buy tickets on January 8 and 9 for §60 for the round trip. Call at the In- formation Bureau, 613 Market street for par- ticulars. | sence the till was opened and 7 | rest may | day evening and For this reason they will, it | OPERA TIVOL ROUSE. ! EVERY EVENING AT 8 SHARP! ! MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2 THE GREATEST OF HOLIDAY SHOWS! [ JACK AND THG BEANSTALK. POLIGE ARREST okILLED THIEF OB 5 hom's Transtormation. “THHBB'B?’Pfl Ta,ppmg AT, Afar) At o T el e | POPULAR PRICES—25c. 80c and 7Sc. Sending People Out- | Telephone Bush 9 side, His Game. SPECIAL. Thursday Afternoon, January 8, at 315, FIRST STEINDORF NOVELTY CONCERT With DR. EDWARD MACDOWELL and Orchestra of 50 now on eale at Sherman, Clay & Co.'& 50, $1 and Se. Frank Maguire, Who Has‘ Committed Several Dar- ing Crimes, Caught. ats An important capture has been mate ’fl"f'," $1 by Detectives Dinan and Wren in the) taking of Frank Maguire, who is one of CENTRAl THEATRE: the two men who have been for weeks, Phone South 533, driving around in a buggy and robbing tills of their contents. While one would remain outside in the buggy the other| would enter the store and say th | companion wanted sometning. ‘As soon | as the proprietor went out the till would | be tapped and the pair would drive off | before the theft was discovered. Dinan and Wren arrested Maguire Sat-| urday afternoon. Yesterday he was posi-| tively identified by two of his victims, T AND ALL THIS WEEK. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Sensational Melodrama of the Day, THE Tlde of Life. [ The starai ng Exciting Climaxes. and more wiil probably follow. December | The Novel Positive Stage 17 the pair drove up to a sub-postoffice at | X e s Castro and Elghteenth streets and one of # aBverybods. P told the ¥ ady in | M rem entered and told the young lady | PRICES e R charge that a man in a buggy outside| » Matinees 0e. 13¢, e wanted to purchase some stamps. She| y went outside, and during her absence a | Next Week—‘The Cross Roads of Lif sack containing $55 was stolen from the stamp drawer. She positively identified | Maguire yesterday as the man who went | inside, and so did John O'Connor, who has a grocery on the opposite corner and who saw the two men in the buggy. SAN FRARCSCUY LEADING THEATRE i 'rm “e»kr—vBo‘hM'\g TO-NIGHT, Maguire was also identifled by William nday, Kruger, grocer, 51 Jackson et. About SEE SATURDAY. a month ago Maguire’s companion en- K‘rk( La Shelle Presents tered the grocery and told Kruger that a man in a buggy outside wanted a drink. Kruger went outside, and during his ab- stolen. | Both men drove away in the buggy. Ma guire’s companion Is known and his ar- e effected at any moment. At least two charges of grand larceny will be booked against Maguire. He has been arrested several times for petty of- fenses, and has recently completed a six months’ term for vagrancy. FRANK DANIELS And His Comic Opera Company in the New Operatic Comedy, MISS SIMPLICITY. Eugene Cowles at the Y. M. C. A. Tu Wednesday afternoon. Seats on sale at Sherman & Clay’'s and Y. M. C . A_M‘!SEM.ENTS. BETTER THAN EVER. The Favorite Sw-dish Dialect Comedy Next The Telephone Girl A BI5 NEW SHOW ! Cressy and Dayne; Tom Nawn and Company; Edith Helena; Wood | and Bates; The Four Garganys; The Marvelous Livingstons; Mc- | Intyre and Heath in “Dr. Lamnz- = breakabone,” and the Biograph, N GRAND: showing, for the first time, a MATINEE SATURDAY ONLY. TO-NIGHT and Every Evening This Week. at the coronation of King Alfonso. e e e s W res | MIISS NANGE O’NEIL —IN— “OLIVER TWIST.” NANCY SYKES. s BILL SYKES. THE ARTFUL Balcony, Reserved Sea and Opera C) STOCKWELL DODGER. Notwithstanding the great cast the folllowing 10 Saturday Matinee, Evening. Jan. e R Ceematten Monday and 12. Dress Circle, 285c and 80c. and $1 50. MR. EDWARD MACDOWELL =S _Columbia. University | NEXT WEE ACBETH" High-Class ?peclaltles in the Theater EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. SPEND “A DAY IN THE ALPS.” . 7S¢ and Box Seats, 75¢, $i er Thoroughly Heated. MRS. M. Rescrved Seats—§1. Wednesday. BURTON HOLMES LECTURES Magnificent Colored Views and Motion Pictures. Grand Canyon of Arizova......Jan. 13 at 8:13 Portugal « . Jan. at 8:15 —_— Py e See the Two-Pound Baby . i £ in the Infant Inecubator, NOW ON SALE e Tickets, $4, $3 and RARE A\I\i.\h‘ in the ZOO. Single Ticket Be and Boe. On sale sday, Jan. S, at S MECHANICS’ PAVlLION FAREWELL NIGHT ELLERY’S ROYAL ITALIAN BAND BENEFIT BUILDING FUND YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION WM. TELL—NORMA—LA BOHEME. HYMN TO THE SUN—LOMBARDI LUCIA. Hacing%fladng! EVERY WEEK Di'._ RAIN OR SHINE. New California Jockey Club Oakland Track SIX OR MORE RACES DAILY. Races start at 2:15 Ferry-voat leaves San Fray 12:30, 1, 1:30, 2, 2:30 and 0-. ight it's Vory Funny ALCAZAR™™ BELASCO sad MAYER. . Managers MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. THIS WEEK ONLY, HENRY ARTEUR JONES' FAMOUS COMEDY, THE CASE OF REBELLIOUS SUSAN sharp. \pcisco at 12 m. ang . connecting with - tiains_ stopping at m entrance to the track. Last two cars on train reserved for lagles and their escorts: = smuting. Buy your ferry tickets to Shcii Mound. R.tnmlnl\-—‘l'rllu leave the track at 4:16 BEATS NOW SELLING. :‘n:;.c 45 p. m., and immediately after the last THOMAS H. WILLIAMS JR., Presiden PERCY W. TREAT, Secretary. - o 22e ARE YOU | coms READY? | TO-NIGHT. Another new production One of the big hits of Weber & Field's Music all. Desirable location, unsurpassed cuisine, unequaled service and modern conveniences are the attributes that The same FUNNY COMEDIA JOLLY GIRLS, GORGEOUS COSTUM ELE- have made these two GANT SCENERY, and a laugh from ra hotels popular with the rise to the fall of the curtain, in tourists and travelers who visit San Fran- cisco. | BARBARA FIDGETY ||| Hotels Samne popular prices—Reserved, night, 25c, e Weekly Call 81 ver Year 80c and 75c. Saf. and Sun. inees, 25¢ and 80c, Children at Matinees, 10¢ and 25e. ;‘WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS INFLOWER'NEXTSUNDAY

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