The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 5, 1903, Page 22

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o 2 ADVEETISEMENTS. ° @HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 1903. NOW Thousands of people have been visitl'?ug our store M. S. Kohlberg has retired and ONE-THIR Spr being sacrificed. (First Floor.) hyd 75c Scotch Cheviot Suitings for 43c. | $40 Walk The newest spring styles in pinhead mix tures, every thread wool, 42 inches wide, all * with small mottled effects in white, pretty for outing suits and separate skirts. Dissolution sale price «eeee-e.-.-436 yd. 40¢ Oxford Cheviot Waistings for 21c a Yard. A fine heavy quality in the new dice weave, f mercerized and washes perfectly; comes in pink, baby blue, new blue, cream and ivory white. One of the greatest reductions we have ever made. Dissolution sale Price vowees eemv216 yd. 785c Metal Dot Sicilians 49c a Yard. One of the most popular materials of the for fancy waists and shirt waist suits, in- ding some new effects in colored dots and ground, and some new figured.and splash jite or. black ground. Warrant- st dye, 38 inches wide and guar- trimmed with nazments. Fini colors, Drop skirt. Dissolutios Trimmed fectly; one of o During di i $ 3 e $ $ i e $ i : $ $ $ Made with duchess front, v 1 e designs 1 esig ectly f the best make of English alpaca. big saving during dissolution sale, 49¢ yd 1e three specials above may be found in first aicle to the left of entrance, ground to be sleeves. These popular $3.50 Two Dissolution Sale Bargains in the The first is a beautiful wash taffeta in blue, light pink, colors. ons. Both of the above silks have sold at 6oc a yard. I'o be sacrificed during dissolution sale at e Kohlbera ' Dissalution of Parfnersh OF THIS STOCK MUST BE SOLD AT ONCE. A dissolution of partnership sale has been started, which bids fair to be the shopping sensation of the season—Thousands of dollars’ worth of the best of new ing goods, particularly ready-made waists, suits, dress goods, etc., are simply An eclegant and postilion back. box - pleated effect, tucked up and down. A $7.50 Dress Skirt for $5.95- ished with a full flare at the bottom. an elegant all-wool broadcloth; and fits per- A $3.50 White Alpaca Waist finished with slot seam back and full pouched Dissolution sale price ............$2.50. The second lot is a lace-striped pongee in eight different patterns—all this season’s -Strauss § Frohman ~105-107-109 Post St .’ £60CC00FOC00000000000 ip Sale during the past week—Mr. (Second Floor.) ng Suit for $27.5 broadcloth suit prettily peau de soie, fancy braid and or- shed with the new fu]l sleeve Skirt cut in the latest n sale price ...........$27.50 with bands of taffeta and fin- This is ur most popular leaders at $7.350. ssolution sale ..........$5.95 for $2.50. 1 new slot seam voke and trimmed with pearl-buttons and waists are lined and were very waists. Second Floor, Rear. Siitk Section. reseda, old rose, etc. Guaran- White Lawn ones, wide embraold- regular dissolution 40c; sale price. 25¢c each turing Company having been organized and machinery contracted for. The proposed factory town will prob- ably be lald out on a tract of land re- | cently purchased by Huntington near Al- | hambra. Dolge has been in Southern Cai- ifornia for the past scveral years regain- ing his health. He states that the manu- facture of felt in this State can be profif- ably carried on despite the long haul to market because of the avallability of ‘the raw material and favorable weather con- ditions, MAGNATE TURNS T0 FELT-MAKING Huntington to Build a Model Manufactur- Docia Nolan’s Bonds Reduced. | Attorney E. R. Thompson of Stockton ing Town. | made an application to Police Judge Ca- i | baniss yesterday for a reduction in the bonds of Mrs. Doela Nolan, charged along S JELES, April 4—It was an- | with Michael Nolan, Bernard Whitelaw | and Jobn Davis with robbery at the resi- lda Tuttle, 543 Haight that preliminary step aken by H. E. Huntington, | dence of Mrs. magnate, to found a model | Street, on March 24. The bonds were . . | originally fixed at $5000, and the Judge iring town in the vicluity of Los |, oroeq to reduce them to $3000. The wo- enter the business of felt | ;pap was released late last night. St Garad cdea he enterprise is to be in the direct | Tt is said upon reliable authority that arge of Alfred Doige, formerly one of { when J. P. Morgan and King Edward the 1 producers of felt in the United | went to a pleasant little game of bridge Binics : der of Dolgeville, N. |at Embassador Choate's recent affair, dertaking is well 504 Save the the band began to pla Dolge Manufac- J King. Stunning Hats for Easter I'he beautiful and ex- e showing of Easter nery in our greatly en- larged millinery section makes choosing your Ea: task. We can furnish from our immense stock the hat that will be becoming, and that will go best with the cos- tume you desire to wear, at prices that have made this the busiest millinery store in the city. Spring Styles, Coats zifid Suits Our efiorts in securing for this season’s business the new- est creations in suits, costumes, coats and separate skirts seem to have met with popular favor. A look through our immense stock will convince you that stylish garments here are always modestly priced. Lace Stockings 3 pairs for $1.00 Special for Monday, fifty dozen lace open work stockings, all black. in six beautiful paterns. These are what you usually r. Sizes 8 to 10, 3 pairs for $1.00 R D Davis & Co Cor- Geary St and Srant Ave. Agents for Royal Worcester Corscts. er hat an ez most PARDEE STIRG THE TRUSTEES Governor Presides at | Brisk Normal School % Session. ial Dispatch to T! SAN JOSE, April 4—Governor Pardee inspecied the Stdte Normal School here from cellar to garret to-day, investigated various matters, and then presided at the meeting of the Board of Trustees, and gave school affairs a considerable jolt. He went about the matter quietly and while there was no sensational feature, he evidently has given the trustees to un- derstand what he wants. There were also | present State Superintendent Kirk, Trus- tees Short, Jacobs and Dow. Leavitt and Addison were absent. The case of Miss Mary Pierce, who claimed she was forced to resign from the kindergarten department on March 1, was Cajl considered. The board decided to take no action. At this point the Governor exploded a bomb. He asked Trustee Ja- cobs to explain his connection with Miss Blanche Sherwood, the agsistant librarian of the school, who has been accused by Mrs. Jacobs in her divorce suit filed this week as being the cause of wrecking the Jacobs home. Jacobs declared Miss Sher- wood innocent of the charge of alienating his affections from his wife. Governor Pardee stated the school would suffer from the matter and wanted the woman's resignation. It was finally un- derstood that Miss Sherwood would quiet- ly resign. President Dailey recommended that a continuous school year be arranged with twelve weeks of a summer school to be- gin June 2. Tt was adopted. The janitor matter then came up. Paul Arnerich had been and doing nothing. The position of jani- tor being vacant, C. H. Ashworth was elected to the position at $60 per month. Two assistants are to be furnished him at a cost of $00 per month. 5 Dr. Dow then wanted the kindergarten department abolished because of the ex- peuse, but nothing was done in the mat- ter. Dr. Thomas Addison was elected chairman of the board. Trustees Dow and Short were clected delegates to the joint board meeting and Df. Dow. an the executive committee. The board then went into executive session. Governor Pardee and State Superintend- ent -Kirk jeave here to-morrow for San Luis Obispo, L.os Angeles and San Diego. ARTISTS CONTRIBUTE MANY CLEVER POSTERS League of Cross Cadets Actively Working to Make Coming Car- nival a Succe: The coming poster carnival of the League of the Cross Cadets promises to be a novel and successful affair.. Up to the present time the committee in charge has received more than 3000 posters. Artists from all sections of the State have sub- mitted designs. Some are in pen and ink, but the majority are in water color. The posters are of all sizes, varying from twenty-four inches to six feet in length. The designs are artistic and will prove ex- tremely interesting to lovers of art. The committee will arrange them in the Pavil- ion next week and more than half the space of the big structure will be utilized to show the posters. Judges will be se- lected next week and they will award a prize of $100 to the successful artist. The poster drawings will be but one fea- ture of the carnival. A poster parade has been arranged and the popular posters will walk the floor each night. The c: nival is given by the cadets in ald of their building fund. They plan a midway, which will be a scene of amusement. No articles will be raffled and no tickets sold on the floor, subletting the work, pocketing $40 | LABOR QUESTION GONCERNS MINES CountyDwellersonl.ode Are Now Actively Engaged. Statements Supply Details of Operations on the Ledges. The news of greatest interest of the { week connected with mining in Califor- nia was that of the Amalgamated Copper Company, otherwise known as the copper | trust, was concerned in bringing about | the second strike at tne mines and smel- | ter of the Mountain Copper Company at Keswick. The exclustve story in The Call | to that effect was copied hy the Redding | newspapers and displaved under large headlines. ! The situation at Keswick has been de- | scribed in the daily dispatches, and so | is well understood. Interest is largely centered in developments on the mother lode in the forces that are lining up| there. The Mine Operators’ Assoctation | is pledged not to discriminate against non- | union miners. The Amador Ledger, pub- :'l’ah"ed in ‘a mining scection, says edito- ally: Now the mine owners have started a protec- tive zation. It is not to fight the labor unions; not to make aggressive warfare upon | employes whether union men or not. It is an alliance for mutual protection. It means that with the might of numbers the federated work- | ers shall not be allowed to encroach upon the | rights of the employers in detail. A contest at | one: point means a united front in defense of their right to conduct their business according to their own notions and to employ whomso- ever they ploase, without dlctation or coercion. The Amudor Ledger also says: As an ezample of the timidity of capital to invest in mining operations in the face of the possibility of labor trouble, no matter how re- mote, We may cite the erection of the proposed mill for the Bunker Hill, This property has been developed to the point that the erection | of a twenty-stamp mill was decided upon at | the last meeting of the board of directors. A contract for that number of stamps, with the option of twenty more at the same price, was | let to a San Francisco firm. Owing to the un- ilellled conditions in labor circles, word was | sent to the firm to hold the order in abey- ance pending further instructions. The pros: cution of the work will depend upon develoy ments. The labor union movement counts for | little in Amador County at present. Neverthe. | less, ill-statred as the movement Ie, it has had, | and’ is still having, a depressing effect upon | the staple industry of the county. It is more than likely that several other enterprises in | this neighborhood would be in active operation | to-day were it not for the agitation of the | labor question, the worst feature about which CREAT SILK SALE One of the Greatest Silk Sales Worth and 81 ERWEAR from $2.50 to Black Silk - CLEARANCE OF FRENCH UND $10.50 Ever Held in San Francisco We Will place on Sale MONDAY, April 6th 7500 Yards of Elegant Fancy Silks 65c $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 .78, at.........Yard Our Annual Clearance of Hand - Made Underwear... Commences Monday. We will sell at exactly one-half the marked prices all odd sizes and individual garments which have accumu- lated through the breaking of sets. This offering comprises rich and dainty Gowns, Chemises, Drawers and Corset Covers, which sell throughout the year at $25 per garment. To Be Closed Out at Half Marked Prices Petticoats. 250 Splendid Black Silk Skirts, the best qu our regular $10.50 Petticoats, at........ vy silk, alit -....Each $7.75 $10.50 Silk Petticoats At $7. 75 Each HVIMUIANN HON3YA 40 IONVHYINO =~ - - who worked but a couple of months in the is that the prime movers arc not the under- ground toilers themselves, but mischief-breer ers who never saw the inside of a mine. The miners have held a meeting at Jackson, Amador County, and have ar- ranged to hold a convention at Stent to form what will be, known as the Mother | Lode Federation of Local Unlo HAVE SIGNED STATEMENT. In the local papers of Redding has ap- peared a statement signed by about 130 {old emploves of the Mountain Copper Company, addressed to the public, in | which are the following statements: The Mountain Copper Company bas never, | to our knowledge, discriminated against any yorkman on account of his affiliations. It has been at all times just and courteous in its dealings with the employes. Unfon'men, who | in the past have been thrown out of employ- ment by reason of industrial disturbances, have found the smelter and mine havens of refuge. | About 80 per cent of those working on the com- pany's local rallroad were strikers In the gi- gantic strike of 1894. During the trouble in San Francisco two years ago, hundreds of men of varlous-affected trades came here seeking work and found it without questions being asked about thelr sympathies or labor connec- tions. A few months ago the Western Federation of Miners of Denver organized a union. This local association elected as its president a common drunkard who had been twice in the hospital for treatment for injuries received in saloon frays. It had for vice president and | secretary two non-emploves of the company. the former a barkeeper, the latter a barber and reporter on a county paper. One of its exec- utive committeemen was, according to his boast, a “floater,” and another was a man e —— ADVERTISEMENTS. ONLY PARTLY TRUE. Popular Ideas Regarding Catarrh. = It is the common belief that what is popularly known as catarrh is simply a | chronic cold in the head. This is true as | far .as it goes, but as a matter of fact catarrh is by no means confined to the nasal passages, but extends wherever the mucous membrane extends, which means nearly every part of the body. The mucous membrane is the inside ekin of the body and is nearly as ex- | tensive as the outside skin, and any in- flammation of this membrane causing an extra secretion of fluid is really catarrh. Catarrh is, therefore, an old enemy dis- guised by many confusing names, for in- stance: Rhinitis is nasal catarrh; laryn- gitis and pharyngitis, throat catarrh; gas- tritis, stomach catarrh: cystitis and neph- ritfs, catarrh of the bladder and kidneys. Therefore, although the location of the trouble gives it various names, in reality the sum total is catarrh and nothing else. Do not make the mistake of thinking you have no catarrh because the head and nosc appear to be clear. If there is a cough, tickling in the throat and boarse- ness you have throat catarrh; if there is no appetite, but nausea, gagging and dis- gust for food, especially in the morning, you have catarrh of the stomach. The surest treatment for every form of catarrh is an external remedy which acts especially on the blood and mucous mem- branes; such a remedy Is the new prepa- ration sold everywhere by druggists under the name of Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets, a medicine in pleasant tablet form and con- taining all the best and latest specifics for catarrh. . Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets contain, in highly concentrated form, bloodroot, red sum of the eucalyptus tree and many other equally valuable curative elements, and no one who suffers from any form of catarrh and has seen the inefficiency of douches, sprays and powders will ever go back to them after once trying so pleas- ant a preparation as Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, and one which gives so much relief in so short a time. All druggists sell Stuart’s Catarrh Tab- lets at 50 cts. for full sized package and the regular, daily use of them will ef- fectually cure this troublesome and dan- gerous disease. (11 7,, OR GRIP At Drugglsts’, 25 cents, or L - Humphreys' Medical Co., cor. Willlam and John sts., New York. smelter and who openly stated that he joined for what was in it; that he was out for the job of organizer at £ per day. These drunkards, grafters and non-employes gathered together a motley crowd of men who | were for the most part of Latine, Slavs and | Subsequently five men were discharged | for neglect of duty. They had been on a con- | tinuous spree. The ‘‘union,” without consult- | ing the “‘allled interests’ the big majority | of company’'s employes, demanded the imme- | Qlate reinstatement of those habitual drunkards and the recognition of its order, Both de- | mands were refused. The “‘union” was not a representative body either in the quantity or quality of its members. It had but a quarter of the emiployes of the company. In this mi- nority was only a very small number of the skilled or. “old-time’ employes. We saw that this body was neither respectable nor responsi- ble and that whatever it would do would be the voicing of the mind and sentiments of llle‘ radical, ignorant foreigners. 1 There is a prospect of activity at Doug- | las Flat, Calaveras County, according to | local advices. One writer reports: More active onerations will soon be inaugu- | rated in the deep gravel mines at Douglas ! Flat when sinking in the compartment shaft | will be accelerated by steam. To the present depth sinking was done by the old method with windlass and muscular power only. Unques- tionably the reopening of these gravel mines, known to be extensive, will be the initial step | of the resumption of work on mines all along the line from the Wild Goose and Texas, where the operations of Mr. Evans commence, to th well-known vlacers of Vallecito. A rumor is'| afloat that work may be resumed at any time | Middle Fork Water and Power Com- pany’s ditch on the Stanislaus. This consum- mation of the wishes of the people of this sec- tion would give an impetus to mining and busi- ness prospects astonishing in its results. IN NEVADA COUNTY. The Grass Valley Union reports a strike of importance in the North Star mines. A statement is published over the sig- nature of James D. Hague, president of the North Star Company, in which the following assertions are made: A financial statement, setting forth in detail the general operations of the company during 1602, shows that the total value produced from the Mine amounted to $411,147 98, with operat- ing cost of $154,227 68, and an operating t of $256,920 32, which has been sufficient to cover outlays, during the yvear, on development and equipment accounts ($112,396 47), and, after paying the balance of the company’s in- debtedness for borrowed money and interest, to leave about $100,000 cash in the treasury at the beginning of the new year. A statement Is also submitted herewith, set- ting forth general results of the existing North Star enterprige from its reorganization in 1 to end of 1902. This account shows a produc- tion of, over $4,230,000. To its earlier owners the North Star had already yielded $3.000,000. The New York Hill, y Bar, Massachu- setts Hill and Gold HIll are credited with an aggregate yield of $10,000,000 to $12,000,000. The total production of the mines now bejong- ing to the North Star combination and prae- tically consolidated into one single and com- pact property may be estimated at $15,000,000 to $20,000,000. The Cosmopolite quartz mine at Grove- land, Tuolumne County, has been deeded to Joseph M. Merrill of San Francisco. The consideration mentioned is $10,000. Frank Plummer has sold a half inter- est in the Nightingale quartz mine, about two miles northwest from American Camp. J. G. Fritz has deeded to Arizona and German parties the Temple gold quartz mining claim, and the same parties have bought the Barmen mine from John M. Happ of San Francisco. These properties are all in Tuolumne County. The Tuolumne Independent says: W. 8, Estey is in San Franclsco this week, buying pipe for use at his gravel properties on Table Mountain, near Springfield. Mesars. Stanford and Estey purchased the Woodsids placer mine bhoys. El at Springfleld, down in cash. A payment of made & the Doyle ‘ranch gravel mines by the same parties. Both these mining clalms will be consolidated and worked under one management. d ROAD TO TONOPAH. Engineer Griswold reports at Los An- geles that the railway line surveyed to Tonapah is of easy grade. The route of the line for the aid of the latest Nevade mining district is as follows: From Daggett, San Bernardino County, a point on the route of both the Santa Fe and the Salt Lake road, about seventy-five miles north of San Bernardino City. due northeast along the side of the Death Valley country to Tonopah, Nev. Its direct route from Dan gett north to Tonopah will be a trifie less iles, which, with the connection to over either the Salt Lake or the Santa will not make the total haul much over 320 or 350 miles. The Amador Ledger reports that Judge John F. Davis has succeeded in obtaining for the Kennedy Mining and Milling Com- pany from the General Land Office at Washington, a United States patent for Lot No. 8, the heretofore unpatented portion of the Clyde qudrtz lode mining claim. This clears up a tangle on title that has lasted for a long number of years. The directors have levied an as- sesgment of $1 per ghare to meet the judg- ment secured by the Argonaut, and also to pay for the improvements now near- ing completion. Several transfers of mining property are reported in Tuolumne County not previ- ously mentioned. Among them are the fol- lowing: The Rose Creek Mining Company has deeded td E. A. and J. 0. . O.°Hayes of San Jose the . Oristamba, DeMill, Blue 3 Startne, Outside, or o A K e L Y, X dumps apd chiorination plant, G BOULEVARD Inmvmit'r CLUB HOLDS BIG MEETING Residents of That District Are a Unit for Many Needed Utilities. James Humphreys, a civil engineer, who is a large propertv-owner in the Ocean boulevard district of this city, addressed the Ocean Boulevard Improvement Club last night. The meeting was held in the schoolhouse at the corner of I street and Forty-eighth avenue and was largely at- tended. The club, which was recently or- ganized, has a membership of more than 100 names, and every membver is a hard worker for improvements. Professor W. T. Wenzell, who is a large property holder in the district, and who was formerly a professor at the University of California, also addressed the meeting, urging the residents to con- struct earth cesspools in lleu of those im the sand in order to avoid the pollution of well water. It was decided to urge the ecity to con- struct a sewer from H street along the boulevard down to the creek beyond W street. Plans and estimates for sewer age and street work will be submitted by James Humphreys at the next meeting. The Board of Health has served notices upon every resident of the distriet to con struct concrete cesspools, and ur some device is suggested and adog many arrests will be sure to follow. ——— Stabbed in a Drunken Row. James McFuedd, a bartender wa stabbed in the thigh during a Arunke Tow in a saloon at Seventh and Marke streets yesterday afternocon. He wa treated at the Central Emergency Hos pital, but refused to give the name of hi assajlant, saying that the row wa * “family affair.” ———————— Three hundred shoemakers who sir for higher wages in Philadelphia in were the first workingmen to adopt s tactics in this country. Quartered Oak and Stylish This Dressing Table depends entirely upon finish, selected wood and design. No amount of embellishment could add to its beauty. The large, daintly shaped mirror is almost as effetive as a cheval glass. $23.00. Same in genuine mahogany for $26.00, Ar 3.75 Our East India drapings and decorations embrace some of the most alluring material for dens and cosy corners you ever saw. 233 235 237 Post Street ranged for the home. look, in finish and design, that will please you—the pretty oval mirror will confirm that on the spot. Convenient size and conveniently ar ! | | | In Lace Curtains. 3’12.50 Arabians With heavy borders. An early chance for summer curtain changes. This week, per pair for $4.00 Arabians Handsome corded patterns. Very stylish effects at the price of common curtains. ;1.50 Scortch Net Ecruandwhiteina great variety of patterns at but little more than doing the old ones over —pr. Reversible Couch Covers Many handsome pattstns and | bright colors. Fringed all around. $5.50 to $7.00 values, This week 23.00 e Solid Oak ! Parlor Desk $7.50 It has a parlor Golden oak. | Bargains ‘5 795 | 225 75¢. | Per pair for and 4.75

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