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THE NEGADS DEED " BRINGS QUICK PUNISHMENT Mother and Daughter Are Most Brutally Murdered. JURIST SCORES MARIN SALOONG | Judge Morrow Speaks of [ the Evil Existing in i San Rafael. | Citizens Are Urged to Vote | for an Increase in the | $ License Tax. i e AR i S report Woman of Wealth | s B¢5 Ehe Canl. | - SAN RAFAE April 11.—-The Good | the Victim of a Black Government Ciub of San Rafael held a | Man's Crime. most enthusiastic ral to-night. The in which the speaking oc- Do was crowded with represer u(l\'e; 29 inches wide, of pretty end Is Promptly Hunted Down aud while many prominent business | floral designs and scrolls. San Prancisco who reside in Ma- Malke i i 3 to Death Whan He rancis b ide in Ma: | M ake pretty kimonas, ok B t upied seats upon the stege. dresses and wrappers. 15¢ Makes a Break for Calderwood presided, introduced | value. . Liberty. veral speakers and announced | English Long Cloth. V. W. Morrow s the cnisf orator | S S T Judge Morrow - for | #$1.10 a piece—A fine SHREVET T April 1L—Mre » hour, vehemently upbraie the | soit finish material, one » ews vears, wife of | people for allow the existing in vard wide. Suitable for K ws -known civil e this municipality and® expounding the | underwear, ctc Regular 4 e g principles of the Good Government Cit § value $1.43 . . haustively, showing that organization's | 7 ) « s > gr Shni Sor Tt B of these evils House Furnishings. man's Aline, aged ten, Prohibition,” said Judge Morrow, “does | Sheeting. Sheets. An ax was the not prohibit. It Is the mighty law we 10¢ » X e 18c—Double sheets, extra “9 in both cases. Ed Want, and to have that law we must have g Lo o heavy quality, for double bed. A e soted of the the right men to enforce it. Here in inch bieached sheeting. Good DEAVY quaily, 20T ible bed. / 4 8 A REge Rafael we have forty-three saloons, many quality and free m dressing. Yyajue. me s deat two police . of them pitfalls and a disgrace to tho Special < Blankets. serge s w attempting to es e. He community. Saloons here pay as low a Bed Spreads. A 1l assortment of white & S 855 Polat: ahent 5o § Home 8 Ehe sy o Heavy large size bed- blankets of summer weights. F es rt B e e S for double bed: Mar double bed. $1.25, 81 scover the crime was made b TP FOUY S0P Ao 70 tterns. Worth $1.35 and $2.2 r - you elect Charles Christensen, Robert rns. Worth $1.35. ? 5 clock this morning by a servant : Mrs. , who oom ¢ nate wom: there were fifteen suspicious of | Rafael,’ Trumbuil and George T. Page on Monday next as Trustees of San Rafael, they will see that the law is obeyed and that to in San Rafael is no would have upon San Rafael. “The whole State is looking upon San continued Judge Morrow, *‘won- dering what wiil be done on Monday. If we purge ourselves of that infamy exist- PRAGERS PRAGERS SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1903. PRAGERS PRAGERS. 23 PRAGERS $3, $2.50 and garfls wide. ! have been marked to $1.59. These wash goods have bee lot as we have had. T Colored Dress Goods. inch colored BO0ec a yard—46 to 356 The different Brown and dark gr: and ¢ Great, Lace Cyrtain Special. 2 Values for $1.59. For this week ONLY we will give you the selection from cn im- mense lot. of white and ecru lace curtains, 3 1-2 yards long and 11-2 There is a great variety of patterns and all Wash Goods. marked for specials and are as dainty a hey make into ne, cadet and roval cheviot, three prices pretty summer garments—ask to Linen Cresh. 1-3¢—Linen crash natural color, 30 wide. Suitable for summer dresses, etc. Worth 15¢ a yarc 10¢—Washable challies, to pleces, had bes TP“ liquor lO(mlllO 4 i e | D d silk Fabrics e mnehter way | longer an industry as heretofore. | _Her daushter was; Uppe jurist gave many facts and figures | ress an 5 g ey corroborative of his assertions, as well as | A selected lot, of excellent. after Ecster specials cted through a side | gemonstrated the good effects high license consisting of the newest fabrics. = nitings s are as follows— taners 3 ALWAYS' RELIABLE 1238~ 1250 MARKET SToww Country Orders. We have been compelied to en- large our mail order department and are now prepared to handle ail orders with even more promptness than heret.ofore. Under the new system each order is filled and sent out, by the first express or mail after it has been received. § Boys’ Suits. Best, workmanship and latest styles. $3.00—_Boys' sailors of good quality of serges and unfinished worsteds in red, French blue and two shades of brown. Ages 3 to 10 vears. Regular $4.00 and $4.50 val- ues. On sale for Monday and Tu day only. 9 Tpree-piece knee pants They come in blues and fancy Well worth $3.00 da suits all-wool cheviots. Special for Monday and Tue $6.35—-We have selected several lie of boys’ long pants suits and marked them down for Monday and Tuesday. Ages 12 to 19 years. This is a regular $8.30 suit. Washable Suits. 48¢ and 72c¢—Washable suits of linens and madras; many s and patterns. Very attractive. VERY SPECIAL. atthews \\.\z.n(:u;&:e‘ .:li ‘wnhm our bounds others will do lik : gray and l”?“““ mixel chuymx. melnge suiting in i *“5-50—Styli<h fid’s skull | The Low License League, consisting of | gray, tan, blue and green mixtures, cardinal melrose broadcloth blouse 53 chest crushed and | ihose favorable to low license, at present | and armures, Every yard worth from 75c to $1.00. Sl aingte Gl Mrs. Matthews wore | $30 per year, had several lieutenants near Back Dress Goods. o = £ and diamond earrings. the ojcra-house buflding so as not to in- £1.00—46-inch etamine. Sells regularly| | €2Pe;: silk collar and by the murderer |jure their cause by allowing any over- secial for Monday. reveres. Both jacket at $1.25 and $1.35. aining money 3 83e—43-inch blac covered with the kitchen. 1 but lost zealous saloon sympathizer from causing a disturbance during the rally. The cam- palgn between the two factions has been a most bitter one, and on Monday it is | ax nd in Peau de Soie. A Kan- noti- of a tted the of the ERTISEMENTS. P?mple; and B!_ackheads AHom:Rem=dy That Cures Pimples, Blaeckh sand Acene Quickly and Permanently Has Beesn Por- fectzd by a Dist nguished Chemist. Together With the Fre: to A1l Who Write Method is have r skin n ut all that after special study public press of the coun- - his method free to The readers of th Dermal Institute, 206 Ohio, with a certain- ceive prompt atten- at well-known inst The method, medical principles, n use It and cure -\‘? . 'S T ther wn ho “s 7 7” breaks up Spring COLDS . 25 cents, or maile e5's Med.Co.,Cor.Wm.& John Sts,N.Y. JUWEAK MEN DR, HALL'S REINVIGORATOR ps ail losses and unnatural die rges in u feel un n the urine, & tate glands and al X and aeath. Positively Call or P HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE Broadway, Oakland, Cal Also for sale Sor tree bovk has at last | expected that the largest vote ever polled in Ban Rafael will be counted. Several of the large stores have signs in their win- they dows announcing that will keep closed all day Mor e e e e ) Matthews home. nd he wi His na:ne is Ed Porter a well-known Shrevepor: negro. SHREVEPORT, La., April 12—At 1:30 ock this morning the body of the negro Porter was taken by a mob of about 100 me o the head of Texas street, placed funeral pyre and cremated. There s no noise or demonstration. The po- attempted to bury the negro’s body | before the crowd could get it, but falled. The city has been in a state of intense e: i‘(‘flfm(‘nl all night, but it is quiet now. MINING PROPERTIES. A somewhat radical proposition was brought before the newly organized Brit- ish Columbia Mining Association, which was presented in a resolution calling upon the Government to appoint an expert commission to examine and report upon { the prospectuses of all new mining com- panies. Possibly the British Columbians had In mind the output of fraudulent prospectuses sent East from California and other Pacific Coast States by mi ing fakers every vear, the principal pur- pose of which is to rob the unwary mgn | > lives in the East. However that might have been, the resoiution was lost. But the fake mining prospectus is a mat- ter of great concern and a menace to egitimate mining enterprises on this coast There are several schemes in this city | devised ly to fleece the confiding, and | the mails are flooded with such absurd Trepresentations that the wonder is that eny one pays any attention to them. The proof that the frauds pay is the cos uance of them vear after year by same parties. Mining men know all about them, but the frauds still thrive. Possi- bly the British Columbia Mining Assoca- | tion can protect its own country by act- | ing united This may be the view that actuated the delegates. The necessity for | exposure of mining frauds is just as ob- vious in California. The general method of ensnaring the tern man is the fs- | suance of the misleading prospectus; the fraudulent claims contained in so-called | “descriptions™ of properties that are so good that the owners hasten to throw on them at the heads of the public; the purchase of pages of so-called mining journals for advertisements of mining fakes. The resolution that in the Brit tion conven was defeated h Columbia Mining Associa- ion was as follows: y recommends the Government of an expert to examine and consider all newly found mining com- That the convention he: appointment b mi the ng commission sspectuses of 8 Leedv makee several interest- ing statements concerning mining at Nome and on the Seward peninsula. Three r districts have been discovered, says Leedy, on Ophir Creek, on Salomon River and on Candle Creek. The Seward peninsula, being flat, Is not favorable to mining development, because it lacks fa- cflities for dumps and has not sufficlent water. Nevertheless invention is over- coming natural obstacles to the recovery of the gold. Hydraulic gravel elevators and cxtended systems of dftches are proving successful means to | be employed. Every water course in a | district twenty miles square, the territory being that which has produced most | 1argely, has been staked. Mining opera- tions, with the exception of those on the | beach, | tundra along the coast, a strip from three { to four miles wide. The period of operat- | ing with sufficlent capital and efficlent methods has been reached in the Nome | district. The Los Angeles Journal reports that | the deal for the purchase of the Sheeptall | group of mines on the Colorado River, in | Mojave County, Ariz., has been closed. This group, consisting of five patented claime, was owned by G. Otis Draper of Boston, who acquired the property some months ago from the Arizona end New England Mining Company on & mortgage of $100,000. It was first opened up by Colonel Thomas Ewing, and it is reported that over §300,000 has been expended in devel- cpment and equipment. The group is situated ten miles north of the Gold Roads property an is believed to be on the same strike. The ore body consists of a forty-foot ledge of low grade, free milling gold ore, and on the various claims a mile of development work has been Besldes the mines, the company has ac- quired the equipments. consisting of a twenty- stamp mill, cyanide plant, hoisting works, alr compressors and power drille. Tt s the inten- tion from the mines to the mill, which s situated the river a distance of six miles, and to work this property on a large scale. e . April 11.—The announcement to-night that the cigarmakers' and tobacco strippers’ strike, which has been in progress for several weeks, has been settled, the strikers belng granted their entire de- mands, —————————— PORTLAND, Or., April 11..-The ship C. F. f- cl Saigent will sail for Bristol Bay, Alaska, to- | mailed In plain, sealed envelope. 0735 Marke', st € ¥ Send morrow with 105 Chinese and supplies == the | Portland Packers' Association, l ntin- | the e | are carried on only back of the | of the new owners to construct a rallroad | | ! Alleged Progenitors of| { | | | | | | | | 98c—Guaranteed black peau de soie. ss than $1 Taffeta. Be, S5e and 98ce—Bla quality. Every yard guaranteed on the edge face. Never sold for" Notions. Be—400 steel Fine All good points. pins. 5 bags for 10€—Red M cleaning. Sold regula Belts. 25¢ and all colors. Very sty sh. satin prunella. ck peau de soie; heavy, double 5S¢ a card—Capsheaf safety pins: 2 pairs for 25€—Fine stockinet shields, No. 3. for window and m t 5¢ a bag. »¢—A pretty line of shoestring belts. Worth $1.10 and skirt tastefully trimmed with black novelty braid. Flare Sold reg-§ ¥ ckirt, kilt percaline drop. skirt unlined. bottom; $19.75_Fine tailored suit of taffeta, extra heavy| | & bl o Our name wover grnsacan oolen Mills cheviot: blouse jacket with 8 inch peplum. Jacket and skirt finished with tailor stitched all sizes. straps and piped for dressmaking use with peau de soie. Seven gore flare (Bargain counter main aisle.) Women’s Tailored Suits. These suits are a wonderful exhibit. of American ingenuity and work- menship. They are not. importations from Vienna, nor are they the most. expensive garments of the season, but. they are absolutely the best. values offered anywhere. Eton Tailored Suits of broad- cloth, cheviot, voile and eta- mine. Twenty’ styles to se- lect from; mostly all have silk drops. worth $30.00; some.as high as $35.00. $1.50 Shirt Waists for 95c. Fine white lawn waists, embroidered front, tucked back, collar and cuffs, very full sleeves. This is a good value at $1.50. $25.00 wiil be very attractive. clusive styles. hats as can be found in the city. $1.50—A ready-to- wear turban in black with white pompon or white with black pom- pon and velvet trimmed. A $3.00 hat. £2.00—Ready-to-trim Liberty hats in shirred effects in black and white. ur different shapes. Misses’ School Hats. O8e¢—10 dozen misses’ school hats; assorted col- ors. Very ncatly trim- med in bands of black velvet and steel buckle. Worth $1 Special. B 19¢—Hair bows of all colors; 35¢ ribbon. inches wide 15¢—Cam Sold _else Camb wide. Blouse and 25e—W, Specials in Stylish Millinery. The rush to prepare for Easter is over, and to stimulate the nat- yral falling off of business for a few days wea have ulect:d several lines of hats and made specials on them. They are hats—the latest, creation of spring—and with the big reductions Besides these specials, the stock of ing replenished every day by shipments § ber of hats now in the cases that have not been displayed. And the fea- ture of our millinery which has been most noticed is the number of ex- We have probably as large an assortment of exclusive Ribbon Roses and Bows. 19¢—Ribbon roses with foliage for the hair in all colors. Made while you wait without other ¢ worth from 2 nd nen’s popular made er, more expensive hats is be- om the East. There are a num- Worth Special. rge than the cost of the rth 1 Embroideries. 14¢—5000 yards of cambr edgings, a grd 5to 14 to bric galoon beadings, I to 2 inches here at 25¢ and, insertions, I t valu edgings; a yard. 2 inches wide. many patterns to select and 10c a yard values. For Women and Children. Aprons. aprons, made of fine lawn, fin- at bottom w Large size h four-inch hem and two one-inch An extra value. 5¢—The button garment on ti chambray; They are dress shoe. famous simple fast 33c¢—Children’s bonnets, made trimmed with two ruifles edged with nar- row valenciennes lace Women's Shoes. $3.50 — Ultra patent colt oxford, light welted soles and French heels. Sold elsewhere at $5.00. $3.50 — Ultra patent colt lace shoes. dull matt tops. high military heels and turned soles. 2.50 — Vici kid tan oxfords, chocolate color: turned soles and French heels. Infants’ Wear. Vi ests. Rubens vest. made without ning. The most periect under- e market for the infant. Bibs. 10e—Made of Marseilles and trimmed with nar- row lace and embroidered me Sun Bonnets. of percale and Poke shape. Special value A swell Special. STRANGE WNDS ISLAND the Races of the Old World. -— Startling, to say the least, is a theory newly formed by ethnologists and now for the first time promiulgated, to the effect that the Ainos, the famous hairy people of the island of Yezo, north of Japan, are in reality the sole surviving representa- tivees of our own ancestors—that is to ¥, of the early progenitors of the peo- ple who now inhabit Europe and America. The idea is that these remarkable semi- ages are the deseendants of the race that peopled the caverns of southern Eu- rope 50,000 or perhaps 100,000 v That race disappeared so utterly lezve no trace, save in the evidenc long occupancy which the caves afford, ard the puzzle as to what became those palaeolithic folk, who left behind them so many sculptures and etchings senting animals and other natural will probably never be solved. But for this very reason a greater inter- est attaches to the discovery, If it be truly such, of a reminder of that ancient peo- ple in the dawn of the twentieth century on an-island of the Japanese archipelago. Ancient Cave Dwellers. If the Ainos be the modern représenta- tives of the ancient cave dwellers, who in- halited Europe tens of thousands of yeara before history had its beginning, the first Guestion that suggests itself is, naturally, How did they get so far away? The an- swer is that they were driven by strong- = ADVERTISEMENTS. CURES WEAK MEN FREE. Insures Love and a Happy Home for All How any man may quickly cure himself after years of suffering from sexual weakness, lost vitality, night losses, varicocele, etc., and en- large small wenk organs to full size and vigor. Simply send your name and addfess to Dr. Knapp Medical Co., 1516 Hull building, Detroit, Mich., und they Wil gladly send free receipt with full directions so that any man may easily cure himself at home. Thig I8 certainly a most generous offer, and the following extracts faken from their daily -mall show what men think of their grtinernflly: ; “‘Dear Sirs—Please accept my sincere for yours of recent date.. 1 have m\v,,',":f‘,:: treatment a thorough test and the benefit has been extraordinary. It has completely braceq me up. T am just as VIgorous as when & boy and you cannot_realize how happy T am. > ““Dear Sirs—Your method Worked beantifully Results were exactly what I needed. sstrengin and vigor have completely returned and. on Jargement s entirely satisfactory.” 3 X Sirs—Yours was received and I had no trouple In making use of the receipt as directs ed, and can truthfully say it is a boon to weak men. 1 am greatly improved in size, strength and vigor.” AN _correspondence is strictly confidential, The receipt wont avery is free for the agking and tha man to bave it. er tribes gradually eastward across the whole of Asia, untll at length they reach- world to-day except on the island of Yezo, where about 17,000 of them survive. They ed the jumping-off place, so to speak, |are diminishing in numbers and before which was Japan. long the race must become extinct. Ap- There is no doubt that they were spread | parently they are incapable of advance- pretty much all over the archipelago |ment and after centuries of acquaintance when the modern Japanese first conquered the coun The history and of the Japar tell of their encountering swarms of flerce hairy men, called by earth spiders,” because they lived in the ground, who resisted the s as best they could with bows arrows and axes of stone. Characteristics of the Race. Nowadays the ethnologist, in trylng to e tionships of.a race, more atten- tion to the shape of the . the charac- ter of the hair (kinky or otherwise) and traditions | with the Japanese have learned no arts and adopted few new improvements, Like most savages, they are extremely superstitious, and an Aino never thinks of going anywhere without a number of “god sticks' ' —pieces of pine wood so whit- tled as to leave them covered with curly shavings—which represent dlvinities and are supposed to ward oft danger. To please the gods it is also necessary to drink much rice brandy, and so nearly all the men are confirmed inebriates, though the women are comparatively sober. be- cause the beverage is deeméd too sacred | and precious for consumption by persons cther physical traits. All such evidencas 7 - ; of the gentler s appear to show that the Ainos, by de-| ppo Ainos use implements and dishes of gseent, are not Asiatics, but Buropeans. | (04 and wear shoes of fishskin for tras Their faces are not at all like those of the Japanese; their hair Is very soft and wavy; thelr complexions are brownish rather than yellow; their foreheads are broad and massive; their frames are strong and well knit, and their mustaches and beards are thick and heavy. Undoubtedly primitive man was much more hairy than s descendant of to-day, and in this respect the Aino suggests a keness to the early white man of the caves as the latter is pictured by the im- agination. Some of these savages of Yezo are almost as hairy as bears and indi- viduals among them are covered with halr as with a garment. Hairiness among them is considered a great beauty and persons exceptionally gifted In this regard are speclally ad- mired. The haly of the head and of the beard is allowed to grow full length and is never combed. Although the Ainos now eling in the snow. Their cooking is done mostly in an fron kettle (bought from the Japanese), hung over the fireplace, and into this receptacle goes every imaginable edible substance—fish and fowl, \PgemPlc tops and roots, etc.—to be ladled out with a wooden spoon. Old women who have survived the affection of their relatives sleep with the dogs In outbuildings. Mor- ality is not very strict and polygamy is permitted, but not much practiced.—New York Herald, ———————————— Suicide by Drinking ’s Water. One of the strangest verdicts ever re- turned in the State has been rendered by a corone jury in Roberts County, in the case of Charles Horn, a full-blood Sisse- ton and Wahpeton Sfoux Indian, who was found dead on the road between the town of Peever and Sisseton agency. Horn was dwell in rude huts of thatch, with a tramework of poles, their formerly ob-|an habitual drunkard, and died while on served habit of living In holes In the|jjs way home in his customary intoxi- und strongly suggests a survival of the cave-dwelling custom, inherited, if the new theory of their from the prehistoric people of European caverns. origin be correct,’ cated condition. When a coroner’s jury was summoned for the purpose of ascer- taining the cause of his death, an autopsy revealed the fact that the dead man's stomach was filled with water. Doubtless e Ainos are found Vi o S nowhere In the | Pecause it was so-unusual for the dead man to drink water during the latter ADVERTISEMENTS. years of his life, the jury returned a ver- WORMS I yrrito to let you know how I appreciate your Cascarts. | commenced taking th e ber and took two ten cent bfl!el‘ln‘?m i worn 1 G, long, Then | commenced toniag thoe taking thom dlct to the effect that he had commitied suicide by drinking water.—Sloux Falls Argus-Leader. ————————e Music in the Park. The Golden Gate Park Band will ren- der the following programme to-day at the park, commencing at 2 p. m.: March, “Tale of the Seashell, "Prince Pilsen” ednesday, April 4th, 1 ” iepe worm a8 1. Tong and over ' thousand seal] | (Luders); overture, “Euryanthe” (Web- worm rovious to my munf Cascarats 1 didn't . waltz, “Promenade” (Gungl; ipeiute o & tepeworm. Talways bad a small | S Mool the Alps” 1ay1 for flugle ! ou » Alps, Win!¥. Brown, 18 Frankitn St., Brookiyn, N. Y. | povn "anlo | (Gungl), Cari Kietze; selec. Best For The Bowels CANDY CATHARTIC ]hEY WORK WHILETO! sttt Pleasant, Pflwnblu Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, on, ken or Gripe, 10¢, 25e¢, 50e. A muine tablet stamped Og r your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 594 ANHUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES tion, *Pagliaccl” (Leoncavallo, over- ture, “Orpheus” (Offenbach); descriptive fantasla, “A Summer Evening in ‘the Alps” (Kling); song, “WViolets,” first time (Roma); mosiac from “The Sing- ing Girl” (Herbert); grand fantasia frem “Rigoletto” (Verdi). —_——————— <TO, April 11.—Governor Pardee has reprieved Bert Ross_under sentence of death for murder, until June, to allow time for the Supreme Court to pass on his appii- cation for & new trial, —_————— ST. LOUIS, April 11.—State Sénator Schoen- laub, who conducts a saloon here, was ar- rested to-day on a charge of running a policy game o his saloon. 1 Rice Cooking in Persia. A woman who ed in Persia for teen years is in despair because the rice which she buys in this country refuses to puff into the snowy mass that it so read- E umes on its native shores. She to the Persian method of preparing fter putting it through s in cold water, remove ail the loose flour on the outside of the grai the rice is placed in a large quantity of nt- | eral rin- | cold water and put over the fire. It !s al- | lowed to boil ve: until it is swollen to its full size to soften. Then It is turned into a colan- der and cold water is turned over it.until it is dry. The last step is to put butter into the bottom of the kettle, turn in the rice and leave it until it is heated through but not browned. In Persia mass will respond to this treatment by swelling Into a light foamy consistency. When the rice is turned into a dish the Lutter goes with it and permeates every kernel. In Persia no one thinks of throw- ing away the water in which rice is cooked. Tt is used in the preparation of tomato sauce, in stewing prunes, apri- cots and other fruits and for variou iinary purp —_——————— A raindrop one-twenty-fifth of an inch in dlameter cannot fall at any greater speed than thirteen feet In a second. Rain- drops rarely exceed one-eighth of an inch in diameter. the entire | ‘Washing Embroidery. Bran washing may be used with great advantage for cretonne, colored muslins - »mbroidered work. dirty no p is needed, and the only soap permis- sible in any case is curd. ‘Boil two hand- fuls of bran in a quart of water for fit- teen minutes, strain through muslin. Put the bran on to boil again, as you will want a ond supply for rinsing. and it the article be very dirty mere than one supply water will be needed for its washi Make the hot bran water cool by adding one quart of cold water. Now wash the articles and you will be sur- prised to see how the dirt comes out un- cer the influence of the bran. When all dirt is removed rinse first in tepid bran water and then In plain water. Fold the articles, pass through the wringer and iron while still damp. They must be ironed on the wrong side. A thick pad of felt put beneath embroidered work will make it stand out well. If there is any fear of the color running a tablespoon- ful of salt may be added to each quart of water. No starch is necessary, as the cu- | bran gives the slight stiffness required. g it oot Henr: Rochefort, editor-in-chief af the Intransigeant, has summarily dismissed hree members of his literary staff be- cause they attended the funeral of a de- ceased colleague at which a religious cere- mony was performed. s The brand-new stock that we intended to sell at our new building, 104-110 Geary Street, has been opened up at 740 Market Street. Handsome and Striking Models fhe beauty and grace of these shoes are very notice- able. They have been built with a view to style, com- fort and wear. The price is right—even _mali, consider- ing the valu= of the shoes. Some “short lots” at re- duced grices. Common Sense tells you that when you want a good article go to a good place get it. We have a reputat 1 for Lav- ing fir-t-class shoes. If you need a new pair let us show you what we have—let us please you with a pair of “Better Shoes.” 740 KAST & CO. masiczr .