Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1903. = p—— | | SECURITIES b0 CRASHING DOWNWARD y Enormous Slump in Shares on Wall Street. SHAROT i T Full Effect of Decision in the Merger Case Is Felt e bt Lo Values of Twenty Stocks e the \-Water Mark of .st September Reaches $400,000,000. MISS OURI'S BOODLERS MAY YET DON STRIPES Grand Juries in Two Cities Are Conducting Sepa-| rate Investigations and Colossal Bribery Conspir- acies Are Very Likely to Be Brought to Lig! ht —o ! tremer ni- prices of to- On Septem- the cl cks W verage of the twer f the market t w ay 166 different stock not to mention bond ¥ great de- STEAMSHIP RAMS AND EINKS THE SCHOONER Two Children and a Sea- of the Margaret L. Ward Perish. STON, Texas, April 13.—The 1 was ramme ¥ E f« e vessel g « : »wn all of his Mghte we htly and every possible de to avert the « bore str vessel & b er to b liate W ™ & ir 1ié e sea. Mrs. Mq Kow 1 to one of the sail - trying to sav Rer B ¢ 5 hundred { | Of pain is generally the first warning of u attack of rheumstism. It feels as if sease were in the bones or muscles, put real camse of rheumatism is | found in impure blood. In order to cure | rhenmatism the blood must be cleansed | the poisonous impurities which are cause of tise disease. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery peen very successful in-the cure of rheumatism, be- cause it entirely cleanses the blood from the poison- ous substances which are th cause of the dis- ease. It not only urifies the biood | ut by increasing the activity of the blood-making lands, it increases | the supply of pure, | rich blood which adds to the vigor of every physical | organ, | M: R A McKaight of Cades. Williams | burg Co.. §.C., writes - | of [ | | | | with rbeumatism for twelve years, so bed uot leave my bed. 1 was badly | ried many doctors and two of them die one of them did me much ins is my back, hips and } u my head), would mearly kill as very bad. Everybody i ust die Golden Medical Discovery,’ and four and to-day my health is good sufiering Lwelve years with rheumatism.” The sole motive for substitution is to ermit the desler to make the little wiote profit peid by the .sale of less eritorious medicines. He mm; you jose. Therefore accept no substitute for *Golden Medical Discovery.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cleanse the bowels aud stimulate the sluggish Lies i 3 ) 4434 - | preme Cou 1 been troubled | | ever, —The investiga- of beodling m: with baking f tion 1 ate Leg s beit by grand j < 2 is and Jeffersc Circuit Att Joseph W. Folk, er whose direction the St. Louis nd Jury has been at work during the t week, has obtained important infor n.ation d, that will"be used before ity body, which re- s s ‘morning. Folk ar ral E. C. Crow is e Jefferson Cit of the investigation, are working to- ether and the fact that the evidence given_before the grand juries is avail- le for comparison makes the situation ious for thoke who may not e tald ie truth. It & that. perjury indic ments may be, found even before the re- of actual bribery indictments, tur €peaker Whitecotton of the lower hou of the Legisiature held long confe erce with Circuit Attorpey Folk yester- ¢ 1 it is understood he gave valuable information to that official ‘olonel William H. Phelps, railroad rep- resentative in the recent Legislature, vho was expected to be the principal wit- ss befc is Grand Jury to . did that body con- 1 issued for the not Inforn reached Circult Attorne; t t Senator John P. Col seven $1000 bills put ad fter the rnment of Attorne at once issued f e inforn t who saw the bills display summoned t nator Collins will be account for the bills to the Grand Jur here. He could not be found to-night. P. fams, Treasurer of the State , informed the Grand Jury to- 0 $1000 bills had been changed to any of the State Senators tatives by him. tures of the lleged bood- re brought to it to-day by the Grand Jury. The slot hine bill and two bills introduced in ¢ interest of St. Louis County are now der investigation. In one instance, it alleged, $1000 was placed in the hand of a “distributor” to secure the passage DURTS FORGET THE PRISONER Inmate of San Quentin Penitentiary in Pre- dicament. Special Dispatch to The Call a man convicted of robbery in Merced County, languishes in the State prison at San Quentin, although the Su- the lower court. The matter was brought up to-day before Judge Lennon by Attor- Robert Duke of San Franeisco. Duke argued that Richards should be set at lib- ney erty; victed the Supreme Court had granted a AN RAFAEL, April 13.—James Ric h~‘ ! | | | INDIANS SLAY | | | [ | | has reversed the decision of | that even though he had been con- | new trial over a year ago and that he had | not been tried within sixty days. offered testimony to corroborate his asser- Uons, clalming that the remittitur had been sent to San Bernardino County in- stead.of to Merced County. “This is a peculiar predicament,” said Judge Lenmon in rendering his decision f this matter is not cleared up Richards emain in San Quentin the balance of his life. He has been convicted of rob- bery and it is quite evident that the Su- preme Court reversed the decision a year ago, but it is also quite apparent that the remittitur has never reached the County Clerk of Merced County. I cannot send the prisoner back to Merced County, as the officers there would have no power to hold him, and as he has been convicted of erime I cannot set him at liberty for the reason that the matter of his guilt is not | yet setiled and is in the jurisdiction of | gjviduals who committed the murd Therefore I will re- | 165t S mand him back Into the custody of the | 1o Redding and to-night Deputy District the Supreme Court. warden at San Quentin. This matter, how- should be immediately brought to the attention of the Chief Justice and this man either set at liberty or sent to serve his tirfe” Duke 1 | around and saw lying in the path the 1l 11 I | -l CIRCUIT ATTORNEY WHO IS ON THE TRAIL OF MIS- SOURI BOODLERS. An- of one of the St. Louis County bills. other man is said-to have attempted to stribute $5000 among the legislators to : the second county bill. | bill regulating slot machines was backed by a local promoter, and it is al- | and indeed usual, after a ship is out of dang NEW ARMORED CRUISER AGRICOLTURISTS WINS B”; 5”” Eldest Daughter of Governor White Is Officlally! G" I H[ . . o Sit-Sicigy | it ot Dt Invited to Christen the ‘“West Virginia at!i ternational Congress edera. I ecldes In 1 s ey Newport News Yards on Saturday Next!™ . . m. ¢ Session Against Ownersof |, k] olds ' 45 ! itol Nevadan. . \ at Capit I B A . | i it Plans Finds That Steamship Was in | | Germany Will Submit | ti- Danger and Must Pay the | to Meet the Compe Salvors. I tion of America PASRTT TS Special Correspondence of The Call, ROME, April 13.—The International Ag- | ricultural Congress was inaugurated at | HONOLULU, April 7.—United Smtul Capitol to-day before King Vi | Judge Estee yesterday decided the libel | mmanuel and Queen Helena. - Al | case of J. D. Spreckels & Co., owners of | 1500 delegates were present. The Amer | the tug Fearless, against the steamship | can representativ Dr. Daniel E. Sal- | Nevadan. Instead 'of $5000, which Captain | men, chief of the United Sta t | Olsen of the tug swore he agreed to pull | | Sed ; ry E 1 { L i Animal Industry, and Henry E. { the Nevadan oft the reef for, the court | 4:13 of .l;\.‘ qu:nv division of the i | awards $6213 72, valuing the Nevadan at | Btates Department of Agriculture, have | $414,248 and allowing 1'% per cent of ‘the not yet arrived | value. The Marquis di Capelll, president of t The court holds that there was no congress, in his opening speech criticized jflZreemont as to the terms, and awarcs | the “ultra protectionism of eertain | the salvage on the basis of 1% per cant | | American countries,” and said he fore | of the value of the freighter and her | aw that their attitude would Increas | cargo. The court also overruled the mo- | with the population to the average of | tion of the defendant for a dismissal of | those of European countries | the complaint on the ground that_the | Count von Schwerin Loewitz, a leading plaintff had not complied with the Ter- | member of the Relchstag and president of titorlal laws affecting forelgn corpora- | the German Agricultural Congress, ar- tions. Judge Estee holds, however, that | rived here to It has been sald that this act relates only to Territorial courts | ke will present a proposition to the agri- and “in no event could a law of that cultural congress for a European agricul- | character affect the jurisdiction of the | tural commercial zollverein to meet iUnm’d States District or Circult Courts | American competition. The Count said | in relation to admiralty cases.”” The law | to-night; {1s upheld as to Territorial courts, but | | ey ftion does not exactly contem | the court holds that if it was held to ap- | | & “Buropean soliversin but mercty an ply to the United States courts *“it would | standing between the Buropean countri o | be a restraint upon the jurisdiction there- I put themselves in a position to safeguard their of."” .. agricultural interests through a combined sys- " | tem of tariffs. I shall submit my proposition | “The decision of the court, which is of | | interest to all shipowners and navigators, | is as follow { | It must be admitted beyond a doubt that the Nevadan was in danger when she lay on this rcet with her valuable cargo aborad; ships are made to sail the sea and not to navigate the | would be likely, if she remained long on the reef, to pound to pleces. Fortunately, thers Wwas no unusual sea on the night the vessel was stranded, sistance of the Young Bros.’ gasoline launch, but she remained fast for anotner full hour or more, and she only came off when the tug changed her relative position to the ship by veering across the channel a little more at right angles with the Nevadan. It is easy, | for the officers who are most to blame in in- | curring such danger, and when it is a thing of the past, to claim all the credit for relieving | the ship. The iact that the engines were started astern just the time the vessel came off the reef may have had some influence in the final moving of the ship and may possibly have contributed to that result, but this can never ba absolutely demonstratéd. It remains true that the Fearless bad been working from 7:46 p. m., as appéars bythe shi log ‘book, un- til 9:05 P n‘.'”hd in a series of Jerks, pied but a short time after she had made | fast to the Nevadan in accomplishing the pur- | pose for which she had been sent, but as to | this shortness of time the Nevadan should not | complain. It would seem to have been a mat- ter of congratulation. Now as to the danger of the night when the tug reached the made fast; there were no lights It was tug. Nevadan and on the buoys $5000 was handed around to make |in the harb And right here I would add | the bill a law. | that tht a matter of surprise to me. It ohn Schuettler, former fis appears that when the regular pilots take | John Schuettler, former member of the | ¢nip, out of the port of Honolulu at night House of Delegates combine, indicted for | they place lights on the buoys along the chan ery in connection with the Suburban ilway boodle blll, was sentenced by | Judge Douglas to-day to serve four years the penitentiary. Schuettler's attorneys argued a motion for arrest of judgment, which was overruled. - Schuettler then made a motion to appeal his case to the | Supreme Court and his bond was fixed at $10,000, which was given. { CARTHAGE, Mo, April 13.—Colonel | Phelps reached here yesterday after hav- | | on the reef herself that night, for, nel, but when a ship goes out without a pilot, she must either go in the daylight or run the risks incident to the darkness, as no lights are on_the buoys. It seems to me that this looks a little like a premium on the services of the local pilots. The channel is & narrow and tortuous one, bounded on each side by coral reefs, and there was the possible danger of the Fearless going in manipu- lating in the dark, the hawser might have | broken or got wound up on the propelier of | the tug, and in the shallow waters near the | | bullding company, will conduct the party to the christening platform. staff, | gressmen from various States, officers cf the army and navy and prominent eiti- zens of the two Virginias. cutt will be toastmaster. Hon. Alston G. Dayton, Hon. H. G. Davis, Messrs. George W. Stevens, Decatur Ax- tell, L. F. Sulllvan, Joseph Bryan, H. T. ‘Wickham, E. D. Hotchkiss, C. E. Doyle, | Major E. T. Meyers, John Skelton Wil- | liams, C. D. Langhorne, Virginius New- H at_to-morrow's session of the congress and it EWPORT NEWS, W. Va,, April | will explain my idea: 13.—The armored cruiser West | My scheme is based on_ differences in the Vi | natural conditions of production which will rginla will be launched at the | | have to be leveled by protectionist duties. yards of the Newport News These differences are considerably less be- states and the over-sea competition of the non tween the European countries, The unequal Shipbutlding and Drydock Com- sond and corar, ane waders spme’3ed,of | pany next Saturday, 110 Timrmution (e cxgenge of (Tanoite | ull of boulders. “The seet hus u gradual siope | Miss Katherine Vaughn White, eldest [ e o e o By i e hoa o ity feet till it rises ‘like a precl. | gaugnter of Governor Albert B. White of | | clally “America "and the British colonies. = T has testified to by the wiiness Willlams. who | West Virginfa, will be ‘the sponsor, of- O % e g o g e e B foore to having been often round this reef | ficfally invited by the department to | | nomic comiition. hence a coalition of the E No vessel lylng on a reef Is in a position of | Christen the ship. She will be attended | e s e o Triny M e common knowledge of all sea- | by three maids of honor, her sisters, the | Cagse: o ‘government. wishes. o abandon 165 & heavy sea. if thers in any sea at all ran. | Misses Grace and Ethel White, and Miss [ tepuiieton 5 e AUS I SN 9. S0 & ping.- Indeed the official map of the har. | Achton Wilson, daughter of former Gov- e Rt . | e Tocints copar e if ceviaehes i | ornor Wilson. Governor White and Mre. ibe difiarent Cocntrien Su3 & Cockmom GatiE | With the following words, “always breaks.” | White are also included in the christen- 8 gt i T L o W |1t falls she would strike heavily and thus she | Calvin B. Orcutt, president of the ship- Sk B T Mt e of a European customs union | and instead it must be re concluding comme After the ceremonies Orcutt will con- | | duct the guests, numbering some 500 per- s, 5 | ropean states a cl l NEVADAN WAS IN DANGER. |gons, to the steamboat Newport News, -| T | soode exported tror | | coh %stdea eftort was made at the trial of this | which will carry them to Old Point Com- WEST VIRGINIA BELLE WHO A {rcet by her own efforts, This is not borne |1Oft- A banquet will be served in the WILL CHRISTEN NEW AR- Eurcpean countries. T i cut by the facts. The Nevadan had been on ‘ulnlng~rnom of the Hotel Chamberiain. MORED CRUISER. way to the future formation ‘ ein the reef for some time, a fuil hour, before th: | Among the guests will be Governor White e - customs union. i tug taok hold of her. and she had tried to get | of West Virginla and military staff, Gov- e | Count Loewitz a oft by all means In her power and with the as- | Grnor Montague of Virginia and military T ** | a_propesition with non-European goc try from being criginating from they were first United States Senators and. Con- the load water line and will have a speed of twenty-two knots. She will carry forty-seven officers and 783 seamen and marines. An armor belt will extend five feet below and four feet above the nor- President Or- | Among the guests who have accepted mal load line from stem to stern. It will We are closing out some 1 lots of invitations are Hon. Stephen B. Elkins, ic six inches thick at the top and five | framed pic s, suitable f s, A Hon. Nathan B. Scott, Hon. B, B. Dove- inches thick at the bottom. The main | {ng-houses and private families | ver, Hon. Joseph H. Galnes, Hon. Harry battery will consist of four eight-inch |ly one-half the regular price. N. C. Woodward, Hon. James A. Hughes, breech-loading rifles, mounted two in|time for great bargains. Sanbo & Co.. 741 Market street —————— COMMITTEES PLAN FOR RECEPTION OF PRESIDENT Decide That Roosevelt Should Visit each turret on the center line of the ves- sel. There will be fourteen six-inch rap- id fire guns and a secondary battery of eighteen three-inch and twelve three- pounder guns, besides four one~pounder sutomatic guns, four ®ne-pounder rapid The danger af the Névadan was admitted by | ton @nd Arthur B. Clark. fire guns, six Colt aufomatic guns, two | the attempt of Percy Morse. the agent. to se- —— machine guns and {wo three-inch fleld | Berkeley and Oakland on cure the services of the IroGuois, this indicat- | The new cruiser will be 502 feet long on guns. May 13. ing that he (hought that the Peatless would b O LR AL A s T . unable to pull_the Nevadan off unaided by | e enfocforfonforfonfofonfocfonfonfofonfoonfonfoonfonfofontofonfoc oot fnfe | B g g R e £ other vessels. "The Fearless was not occu. | @ J-iimisimieieiriuinieiuininiriulinldning LR SO0 ielbi-l-F@ | ot the Oakland, Berkeley and Ala committees for the reception of P dent Roosevelt, presided over by Pre dent Wheeler of the State University night decided that the Prestdent should | visit Oakland on May 13, the original date decided upon, and that the following pro- gramme should be carrfed out: That President Roosevelt and party will leave the tramsport dock in San Francisco promptly at 9 o’clock and upon arrtval at the mole the party will take a special train for Berkeley, arriving at Berkeley at 10 o’clock, and at'10:30 o’clock promptly the commencement exercises will =begin, which'will Jast until 12 or 12:30, and then Président Roosevelt and party will dine with President Wheeler of the Untversity of California. Promptly at 1:30 o'clock the President and party will board the elegantly ap- pointed car provided for his trip at the to- DIVORCES WIFE WEDDED T0 ART Benjamin Smith Secures Decree on Ground of Desertion. OPEN SESSIONG OF CONFERENGE Adventists Assemble in Their Annual State Meeting. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, April 13. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, April 13 s 2 reef. the tug might have been drawn on the | - ing x;.’-pn .v.yl,«,.u‘x‘ since Mu_uhh lz;: musll‘:‘g reef. Saya Murphy. the mate of the Fearless: | The annual session of the California | Benjamin I. Smith was granted a di- ;{':r’:f;;?F""‘_;t‘n‘;’:“:n‘;"L?'c‘co:v;;ed"".i (;“"k' e time In Arizona with his fnval “If the hawser had carrled away,_ we were 1r 2 ’ 4 - S - £ s A s - daughter Helene, He sald: close In; e would have sped dead dhead upon | Union Conference of the Seventh Day |vorce to-day from Margaret Cameron |, .y o rivingin Oakland at 2 o'clock and I have never been served with a subpena. | the reef like a shot out of & gun; nothing | Adventists was commenced this morning | Smith, the authoress, on the ground Of | ramaining here until 5 o'clock, at which though one was sent here for me some days | “0uld have saved her. | at the Adventist Church, Twelfth and | desertion. The couple were marrfed in | time he will be taken on one of the Gov- ago. If one was lssued for mne to-day In St. | Louls T know nothing of it and 1t will be time 4 enough when I am served to say what I will | do. I did not leave St. Louls on Saturday. i oot e @ | "MEDICINE MAN" Atrocious Murder Is Committed in Bur- ney Valley. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, April 13.—Acting on the old | Indian tradition that a bad “medicine | man” should be made a good Indian and | sent- to the happy hunting grounds, a | company of Hat Creek Indians early this morning filled the. body of Louis Thomas full of bullets. They then cut his head from the body and Kicked that member | around the neighborhood to drive out the devil. Last night a large crowd of Indians, men, women and children, gathered at the rancheria about three miles above Burney | Valley and spent the night in dancing. | About 1 o'clock the dance was ended and the Indians in a body left the place for their varlous homes, Among the number was Louls Thomas, an influential “medi- | cine man.” The residents of Burney Valley were awakened about 1 o'clock by the reports | of pistols and the wild cries of the red | men. Several of the male part of the population hastily dressed themselves and went in the direction of the nofse. When they arrived in a dense thicket there was | not a sign of life and the nolses were stilled as if by magic. One of the search- ers threw the light frcm a dark lantern headless trunk of Thomas. The grewsome find was the explana- tion of the noise. There was not an In- dian in sight and all clews as to the in- Word was Immediately telephoned | Attorney Estep, Coroner Bassett and Court Reporter Browulee, accompanied by a physician, hastened to the scene to conduct an investigation and hold an in- quest. | both vessel and the cargo, | erty, or $6213 and so hold, the same to be distributed as’ follows: | To-the captaln of the Fearless. $350: to | cott, the chief engineer, $150; to Murphy, the | | aplece TUG ENTITLED TO SALVAGE. It must be admitted that the danger the tug was In arose from her employment and was | a _consequence of her efforts to assist the ship | of the reef, and was a part of the res gestae It was evident that the Nevadan was not deemed quite out of danger when she started out of the channel, moving at the rate of from three to four knots an hour, and continued to | haul the tug stern foremost after her. Says | Herbert Young: “She pulled the Fearlesr | stern first until she was outside of danger.’’ While Captain Weedon testified upon this point as follow ““The Court—It was not seamanlike, was it, to pull a little boat astern?’ *'No, but under the conditions, we cou avold it.” The ohly natural inference to be drawn from this is that In his anxiety for the safety of his own ship the captain of the Nevadan was re- gardless of that of the tug. i The court also says that the Nevadan exercised no undue haste in relleving the | Fearless from the danger of dragging her | astern. In conclusion he holds: The single question s, in view of all the ! circumstances of the case what amount of | salvage is reasonable, for the court holds that | the Fearless and the owners thereof are un- doubtedly entitled to a juagment of salvage As was once said by the Supreme Court ofy the United States, ‘‘Salvage should be sed- | ulously fostered and the salvors’ compensation | not as mere pay for work and labor done, | not, indeed. limited to the precise quantum of | benefit in the particular case, but on a scale %0 liberal as to best encourage such services.” The Comanche, 8 Wall, 465, he value of the property sgplved herein, s admitted to be | worth some $414,248. T think a reasonable | salvage award would be an amount equal to 11, per cent of the value of the salved prop- | 1d not ate, $150; to the assietant engineer, $100; to the two seamen, Willlams and Hearst, $75 | and to the firemen, $50; the balance of | to go to the libelant herein as the together with the ! $5263 owner of the tug Fearless, costs in this sult incurred. Let judgment he entered accordingly. MORRIS M. ESTEE, Judge. April 6, 1903, In a separate decision the court over- rules a motion to dismniss the libel. — e Catholic Ladies’ Reunion. i The sccond annual renalon of the Cath- olic Ladies' Ald Soclety, for the benetit of the relicf fund, *»ill be held at Shell Mound Park Saturday, May 16. Thoss who have the arrangements In hand are: Miss Mary Carr, president; Miss M. Conlin, secretary; Mre. O. (. Kirk, Mrs. M. McAleer, Mrs. M. Halton, Miss L. Knorp, Mrs. 8. Mc- Fadden, Mrs. A. Collins, Mrs. C. Hagan, Mrs. | P. J. White, Mrs, D. Ragan, Miss M. Don- ahue, Mre. Hugh Hogan; J. E. McEllroy, J. J. McDonald, B. McFadden, P. Flynn, H. Hogan. P. Hanrahan, G. Beyreuther, 1. Curtis, S. ‘h‘;lri;egflf;‘n. A. B. Maguire, P. J. Moore and Now Is Your Time. Ladies’ and gents’ regular $3 50 shoes can be had for $1 65 air at the shoe sale of “The Lyceum, Market street, annosite Mason, g | Brush streets. | mother is dying in the East. | VICIOUS DOG MARKS Elder A. T. Jones pre- ernment boats to San Francisco. sided and M. H. Brown was secretary. As treasurer of the conference, the Pa- | cific Press Publishing Company reported I’ouply producing the well-known farces that the regular tithes for seven months | “The Iceman” and “The Kleptomaniae.” had ylelded $27,000 from 3888 contributors. | Mrs. Smith’s literary duties were absorb- The following committee of twenty-five ing, and she did not return to her hus- was appointed to report on standing com- mittees of the conference: M. C. Wilcox, chairman; M. H. Brown, W. 1598, but the wife’'s deyotifon to her art soon led her from the domestic fireside | o 2 to New York, where she worked assigy- | @ FHH-HERRERRRMEFRERH-HE O bend's home. He brought suit for aI- | vorce, but was not opposed by his artistic wife. The property interests were set- tled out of court. S. Sadler, H. G. Thurston, A. Boeker, C. M. | ardner, B. F. Richards, C. N, Marfn G G. Rickard, G. W. Mlills, R. P. Gra: C. H. Jones, J. D. Rice, F. A. Lasher, Wililam Mogl€, Teanc Morrison, M. E. Cady, Andrew Brorsen, D, T. Fero, C. L. Taylor, T, H Davis, A. §. Kellogg, A. T. Jones, P. Scaz- ighini, J. B. Dymiot, Responsive to an appeal from Elder | George 1. Butler of the Southern Union Conterence, the California Conference made & donation of a meeting tent and $605 was pledged to-day toward the cost of the tent and its equipment. ¢ The comference expects to complete its business to-morrow night. J. H. Ralstin, one of the followers of II. T. Nelson, the self-styled “Third Angel” prophet, has been released from custody, because he has received word that his - LITTLE GIRL FOR LIFE SrorRel | Dorothy Squires, Three Years Old, | Set Upon and Wounded by the Brute. BERKELEY, April 13.—Little Miss Dor- othy Squires, the 3-year-old daughter of H. J. Squires of 2100 Vine street, received two wounds on the face and head yester- day from a viclous dog that will leave scars for the rest of her life. The girl and her father were out for a walk on Dela- ware street. While they were looking at some flowers opposite 1611 Delaware street a Gog came sneaking behind them and pounced upon the littie girl. It bit her first on her forehead just above the right eye, and then on the scalp, lacerating the skin terribly in each case. The screams of the child attracted her father, who Instantly turned and drove the dog off. It was all done so quickly that Mr. Squires did not see the brute in time to prevent its attack. He carried the child to Dr. F. R. Woelsey as soon as he could, and there it was found ncces- sary to stitch the wounds, the one ia the scalp being three inches long. The dog Is & setter and belongs to George S. Sherman of 1611 Delawar street. It recently attacked a man and is considered a menace by the neighbors. The owner refused to accede to Squires’ request that it be killed For lévery Day Wea As a hat for every day wear, ours at $1.30 fills the bill t not only looks well, but wears well. It comes in all the fash shapes and colors, and each hat bears our guarantee. If the hat does not wear satisfactorily return it and try anothér at our ex- pense. The shapes are Derbys. Fedoras, Graecos, Tourists. Colum- bias, Sendias and Dunlap Crushers. The soit Rats come in colors such as pearl, steel, elm, otter, silver, cedar, brown, black, etc The reason why this hat is so popular is bec a e dollar hat in every respect, while the price is $1.30 Out-of-town orders filied— write us. SNWO0D (D 718 Market St.