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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL SUTNDAY. MAY 10, 1903 s’ San Francisco, Sunday, 10 May, 1903. This maple rocker, $6.00 Dozens of rockers in line—few, if any, priced as temptingly as the one pictured above. Has the ap- arance of a ten-dollar rocker and is of thoroughly substantial construction. The seat is in saddle shape. panel in back is carved. In maple, at $6.00, or in e small library tables in weathered oak with tops have just arrived. In two shapes, round and oblong. The leather is finished in two colors, green brown. The edges of tops are studded with large ized nails. Prices, $18.00 and §25.00. Birdseye maple desk chairs. Also used at the toilet table and in the hall. A very pretty pattern for $8. $5.00 couch covers. Reversible oriental patterns with fringe all around. Three yards long and 60 inches wide. Sty Beewnet (Successors to California Furniture Co.) 957 to 977 Market Street, Opp. Golden Gate Avenue. JTAIKE PROBABLY WILL BE AVERTED Southern Pacific Boiler Makers Postpone Action. Truce for Two Weeks While Differences Are Being Considered. N R Special Dispatoh to The Call. SACRAMENTO, May 9.—It was given out to The Call correspondent at a late || hour to-night by officers of the Boiler- ||| makers' Union that the strike which was ||| to have gone into effect on Monday even- { ing, and which would have included the | entire Southern Pacific system, had been | postponed for two weeks, with every pros- | pect of a satisfactory settlement in. the | Interim. The news came in the form of a dispatch from H. McCrackefi, the delegate from the local Bofler-makers’ Union, who, with two others, had a con- ference with officials of the Southern Pa- cific Company in San Francisco to-night, at the request of H. J. Small, general su- | perintendent of motive power. This dispatch was recefved at a confer- ence of a committee of citizens of Sacra- mento with the local Union. The committee was organized to avert if possible a strike on the Southern Pacific system and what, it was belleved, would be disastrous consequences to the | mercantile interests of Sacramento. It consisted of Frederick Cox, H. Weln- stock, G. W. Peltler, Right Rev. Thomas op of the Catholic Diocese of and Rev. C. L. Miel, rector Episcopal Church. i aid that the vote in the local union in favor of a sympathetie strike wag very close, being 19 in favor of the strike |} and 15 against. Members of the || said their understanding was that any settlement reached in San Francisco dur- | ing the next fifteen days meant the set- | tlement of the strike which has been in || | effect on the Union Pacific for nearly a | | year. || The threatened strike on the Southern | | Pacific system was to have been sympa- ||| thetic and to have had for its basis | the alleged assistance given by the South- | ern Pacific to the Union Pacific in the use lof locomotives. It is claimed by the | Boiler-makers’ Union that the Union Pa- cific has in service at present only forty- five out of about eight hundred of its own locomotives. || A meeting of the Machinists’ Union was | held here to-night at which a strong sen- | timent was manifested in favor of a | strike in sympathy with the boiler-makers {in case any attempt were made by the | railroad company to fill the places of the | bofler-makers with machinists. Such a | contingency, however, has been averted | by the probable settlement to be reached I | between the boiler-makers and the Union fosfefofofel il Bofler-makers' | unton | ANKENY TABLE NOT FOR MOORE BRARSAE A Senator Puts a Slight Upon the Former Governor. el Factional Quarrel Bids Fair to Mar Reception of the President. —_— Special Dispatch to The Oddl. WALLA WALLA, Wash.,, May 9.—Be- cause the long-smoldering hostility be- tween the factions whose heads are I!.'nitcd States Senator Levl Ankeny of | Walla Walla and ex-Governor Miles C. | Moore of Walla Walla, both bank presi- dents, has broken out into open rupture, Governor Moore is not to eat at the An- keny table when President Roosevelt is | entertained by the Senator May 25. The enmity between the two faetions is being | shown in_every possible petty way and has crept even into municipal and school | politics. | The rupture became open when the An- | keny leaders left Governor Moore's name off the list of the reception committee for President Roosevelt’s visit. This was the | first outward demonstration, though the Ankeny people were angered at Moore for | alleged underhand work during the Sena- | torial campaign, when Moore was sus- pected of knifing the successful can- | didate, In revenge for the slight Governor | Moore organized the “Boxers.” The anti- | Ankenyites of Walla Walla deposed An- | keny from #he presidency of the Com- | mercial Club in the annual election and | put in an official of their own. The new officers promptly added five to the Roose- velt reception committee, principally prominent “Boxers.” The Ankeny lead- ers hurriedly telegraphed their previous | 1ist to Roosevelt and sought his final | indorsement before the other names | could reach him. The question is still in | doubt. | The rupture has pervaded every por- tion of town, even to the homes:. So- clety ladies of one faction will not en- tertain those of the other, and every- | thing is divided on what promises to be the bitterest political fight in the his- tory of Washington. i | @t i b @ LINDS AT P KO IN DEMANT | Hot Springs Indians Are 19 ADVERTISEMENTS. WOMEN SAY OF PE-RU-NA “] am ‘Healthy and Happy Once More.’ Miss Hattie Grace, %4 W. Forty-sixth street, N. Y., writes: i ““Peruna has changed me from a fretful, irri- table, nervous woman into a healthy and happy one. Nothing seems to worry and (o fret me any more. Since early womanhood I suffered with bearing down pains and nervous- ness. Iwas thin and wor- ried, but Peruna restored me. Those who knew me before cannot understand the change, but I can sum it all up in the blessed F all the sick mothers, invalid daugh- ters and diseased sisters in this broad land would take the following ladies’ simple and direct testimony to heart and do as they have done no pen could de- scribe the benefit that would follow. There are so many women, especlally married women, who drag themselves wearily around from year to year with- out any particular disease, and yet mis- erable beyond description. They ache and tremble and throb, grow- ing tore nervous, tired and debilitated | Eager to Make ‘ Settlement. | the Santa Fe Pacific, the Southern Cali- fornia and the Southern Pacific Railroad | companies, alleging that the fruit rates | on dried fruits from Southern California | to the Missouri River and Eastern polnlti‘ are unreasonable and unjust as compared | with the rates on lemons and green ap- ALLEGES DRIED FRUIT RATES ARE UNREASONABLE every day. For this class of sufferers Peruna is the most perfect remedy in existence. It relieves, it soothes, it quiets, it strength- ens, and no tired, overworked woman in the land should be without Peruna in the Riv CILADYITE County Grower Files Com- t Against Santa Fe and Special Dispatch to The Call. | SAN DIEGO, May pl 9.—The removal of Southern Pacific. s & house for a single day. Pl somccge gy I et SuSStite Iwoult - ObtION | the Warner Ranch Indlans, with all the Those women who desire to consult Dr. ¥ 3 : : | pitiful side lights made more notable by Hartman may do so in all confidence. € ! ST ] He has an experience of over fifty years th t J. F. Stevens, the general manager of | the heart-rending apeals that the Indians in the treatment of women's diseases and gives his advice entirely gratis. Thou- the Great Northern Railroad, says the | Canadian Northwest will soon’ produce a Fe Railroad, ' biilion bushels of wheat a year. Bartender Makes At- Good Clothes ! tack Upon a Youth- ' ful Rival | Special Dispatch to The Call. GILROY, May 9.—Following close on the rawhiding of Editor Milnes yester- | day by Mrs. J. M Mullen the town was again thrown into excitement this even- |ing when it was learned that Charles might be allowed to remain at their own homes, has some amusing features. | For instance, last“hight there appeared at the réservation in Pala Valley elght | of the Hot Springs Indians, representing two families, who had come om ahead of the others. They were looking for the | man in charge of the new place and said that they had frequently been at Pala at the fiestas and knew what the land was. | They plainly stated that they had come early hoping to get the pick of the land | for themselves. The wagons on which the Indians are to be moved have reached the Springs, or rather are just at the outskirts of the Indian village. There are thirty-seven dence. cially for this class of women. sent free upon application. sands of women have been cured by cor- re?pan Dr. Hartman has written a book espe- titled “Health and Beauty,” and will be \ ) It gives in- | AU AL valuable advice for the mald and matron. eI L GAARRGRWY It is en- Fithst AL A Letter From Minnesota. Mrs. Pauline Winters Hausen, 211 Twen- ty-ninth avenue West, Duluth, Minn., writes: “I want to say a good word for Peruna, as it has cured me of severe female trou- ble combined with nervousness. For two yvears I used remedies without lasting A Letter From Missouri. Mrs. Martha Frederich, Cole Camp, Mo., writes: “I feel it my duty to write and tell you of the good your ,Peruna has done me. I was subject to female weakness. For six years 1 suffered more or less. We have consulted various doctors, who had for twelve years. I began taking Peruna the 18th of last August and have taken five and a half bottles. I am per- fectly cured and feel as though I were only nineteen. I only weighed eighty-four pounds, and now I weigh 133. My case | was catarrh of the bowels; and I hope that any who are suffering with the same will give Peruna a trial. Thanks to Dr. Hartman, as I would have been in my grave had it not been for Peruna.”—Mary 4 . < | Pollard, a bartender, had assaulted Har- ::-fma:;lvetrc:;rth:r?:uce«:‘nv‘ehs;andc'e:c‘m;l;org: benefit. Four bottles of Peruna cured me | gave me relief, but no cure. JETS A little talk on a blg subject | vey McCutchen, a 1ad 16 vears old, with | them covered to_fossen To CRCOIOTIS | entirely. I feel better than I ever did| “I have suffered a great deal, and my {@ horsewnip on the outskirts of town. | 30, L0% 0% 1 "; "early start can be made | before, which T owe to Dr. Hartman and | husband had very large bills to pay. In A Letter From' NC’WJ 5 Y MecCutchen was out ridi vith i Peruna. Dr. Hartman has answered ev- | my despair I declded to try Peruna, and asey oung MecCutchen ng w on Monday morning they wil try to go Mrs. Sarah Frye, 204 Sylvan avenue, OULD vyou like to dress well at a third less than it costs you at present? Maybe you are buying from a dealer who in These middlemen certainly increase the cost of clothes. turn buys from a jobber or 2 manufacturer. They make 2 good profit and you pay for it. If you purchase here you buy direct from the makers and only one fair and honest profit is made a prominent | when Pollard rode up on a wheel and | commanded him to stop. The former | complied, and a word followed between Pollard and the young lady, and later between Pollard and McCutchen. The men came to blows, when Pollard ‘suddenly seized the buzgy whip and [ struck McCutchen several times on the | head with the butt of the whip, causing some bad gashes, which had to be sewed | up. The young woman drove away with the rig. McCutchen grabbed Pollard’'s wheel and came to town, teaving the lat- | ter to walk home. Pollard was insanely jealous of the at- | tentions of McCutchen to the young woman, and for that reason followed the couple and attacked the boy. was,caused by an article in Friday's Ga- young woman of Gilroy | through in a single day. | The movement was scheduled for to-day , but after a pow-wow yesterday afternoon, | the Indians requested that the start be | | delayed until their captaln returned from | San Bernardino, where he had gone to interview President Roosevelt. The re- | quest was granted and-the exodus will not begin until Monday. At the same time | Special Agent Jenkins asked for permis- | | sion to grant the request of the Indlans, he | telegraphed to Washington for more | funds as it will require more than he had | anticipated to take the Indians to tnelr | new home. | SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR | VETERANS GIVE A BALL Success. /T am constantly troubled with ery letter that I sent him free, and does for every one who applies to him."”—Mrs. Pauline Winters Hausen. A Letter From Mrs. Senator Warren. The following letter from the wife of the late Governor and now U. S. Senator F. E. Warren otM vg{o‘min was received Peruna Medicine Co.: L Washington, D. C., 1848 Wyoming street. To The Peruna Medicine Co.: Gentlemen: In the sacred cause of hu- manity I wish to bear testimony to the great efficacy of your valuable medicine, Peruna. 1 am never without it, either in my home or in my travels. It is truly a great triumph of scientific medic:ge, colds, cure. 1 have recommended it my friends, every one of whom reported most the first bottle taken according to direc- tions gave me relief. “I bave had no backset since then. Since we have used Peruna a doctor has seldom been in our house. “It would take a book if I were to tell | all the good that Peruna has done in our family.” A Letter From Ohio. Mrs. Mary J. Houston, 213 Washington avenue, Columbus, Ohlo, writes: “It is through the mercies of God and your Peruna that I have been cured. I and stomach trouble for the last years. Last winter I was better, then took worse. I sent for a doctor and re- quested him to tell me what was the mat- I took three kinds of patent medicine, have been a constant sufferer from bowel | five | West Asbury Park, N. J., writes: “I have not words to express my grati- tude for the wonderful cure that Peruna has done for me. It is a godsend to all suffering women. “Peruna has done wonderful work for me. I was sick over half of my life with systemic catarrh. I want this letter pub- | lished far and wide, as I was a great | sufferer; but to-day I feel as well as any- | body can feel. Nearly all my life T have | spent nearly all I could make and scrape for doctors, but none of them did me any good, but since I started on your Peruna one year ago I have at last found relief. “I had begun to think that I was not going to get well, but, thank God. I am all well to-day. I hope and pray you | Mrs. Mullen’s attack upon J. W. Milnes, | Pleasant Evening Is Spent and Af- | ¢ 3 = .. but, thanks to your good |ter. He told me I had bowel consump- B 1 ¢ = editor of the Gilroy Gazette, yesterday T A Uabel & Geent ::elag‘g‘sagegem“a' I'always find & prompt | tion. I then consulted with six physi- mal) Ll\e long to help others as you have A to clans; and at this time was almost dead. | helped me. “Instead of being a walking”drug store I am growing fat and doing well. I will zette. Mrs. Mullen confronted the edi- | 2 v th v roief 1 i % anish- ican War Vi thusiastically of its good work. but_without any rgliet. vi on the goods. The profit is small because our tor in his office and lashed him across| L ® s""““hl“m", A h"e"‘"‘ R N atably. one gentleman in my home, | “The minister at’ West Jefferson called | never be without Peruna and Manalin. the head and shoulders with a small raw- | 82V¢ & "":\ ast e‘“;‘"' & ; “'GF“"‘ { Cheyenne ‘who had tried many medicines | to see me and seemed fo_ think T had | "7¢"you do not derive prompt and satis- - 3 3 3 o 3 Regiment rmory, 'age an ough der different physicians and had given | bu e longer to live. was then sen! bt th e of Peruna besne s Lkl It o i vl . hide. The foreman of the office came to un. 3 t | uctocy vesults from the us B g § volunie of S the rescue of Milnes and prevented fur-| strsets. The aflalr was & ereat success | up Bope snd i3, DUABCES. iy ok | vined e e Beruna T Bid-"IF B | write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will R ther _izevbie. . Minas. toll hwe Shit- shefAd Svory cas Sesent SPASE /S WIS vn- le at a time and has [ Hartman can cure me he can raise the we can sell at small individual profits. bad the privilege of answering the article | Jovable evening. The ~committees in | enabled to W I e et T beltove o |dead. I think he-cam, for I am cured: | be pleased to §ive you his valuable ad- in her own defense, but that he reserved | charge of the ball follow: medicine ever brought before the public can eat f{u{: or anythiing T want. This | vice dmm- e it s the right to publish what he considered| Arrangements—Thomas W. Costello, | has effected so gnany permanent cures as ave not been able to do for years. I H‘n‘.gm‘;ea'n’ e (fomlumbul. ohio. Our clothes are thoroughly up-to-date—they are stylish, dressy and well made. As we make them we know what they contain and can guarantee legitimate news. The article in question related to the daughter of Mrs. Mullen, who deserted her husband, Joe Mathies, May 1 and was found a few days later at a Bryant-street lodging-house in San Francisco by her chairman; Frank 8. Drady, secretary and treasurer; Paul Langer, Richard Collopy, T. P. O'Brien, Edward T. Mullaly, F. Figueroa, Jacob J. Mahr, Colonel Thom- as F. Barry, Claire Knerr. Floor—Captain Thomas W. Costello, director; Richard Collopy and A. J. Nich- Peruna.”’—Mrs. F. E. Warren. am also cured of heart trouble, which I The Junior Order. HE next session of the National Yale and Princeton Athletes Meet. PRINCETON, May 9.—Three thousand persons witnessed the Yale-Princeton ath- letic meet this afternoon, the first held run and the hammer throw. The feature of the meet was the shotput by Glass of Yale of 45 feet $% inches, which smashed the intercollegiate record of 44 feet 3% inches. In the 220-yard dash Moulton of . husband and Detective Gibson. Mathies every stitch. in his interview with the Gazette accused | 0lson assistant directors; Leonard B. Si- Councll, Junior Order of Unled |y many years. Yale carried off the hon- | Yela broke both the Yals and the Prince- J his mother-in-law of being the cause of | mon, Captain Thomas W. Sparrow, Dr. American Mechanics, ors by the score of 75 to 2. J&)geton | ton records of 21 4-5 seconds by going the his domestlc infeliclty, as did also the|T. A. Rottanazi, Dr. J. A. Bason, Henry |in this city in Pythian Castle, commenc- | yon on)y two firsts, capturing mile | istance in 21 2-5 seconds. All our ready-to-wear clothing bears our “Yeargood " label. You are sure of a year's wear out of the garments because we repair, sponge and press them free of charge. You will save money in buying here and be well dressed too. We carry a complete stock of men’s and boys’ ——r———e . PR HE membership contest between the | Falace. . Patrick’s Alliance. in picture. Fr nch Bevel 2 clothmg, furmshxngs and hats. “Blue” and the “Gold” in Gclde: Surgeon Morgan of the U. S. S. Boston St & 20x24, top of Bureau 20x42. Cast Brass Trim- West Tent No. 5, Knights ‘of the | ”5"'°”‘f;' é’“ e T a recent meeting of the St. Pat- mings. Our regular price $17.50; for this Maccabees, closed on the last Tues-| Dr Howard CTameron WL Cepart to- rick’s Mutual Alliance Assoclation Wik ‘oaly day in April. This has resulted in the| 5 . of California a committes of the If you live out of San Francisco, write for our new Jwstrated catalogue. SNWOOD. 740 Market Street prssriont XS R il 2 A N : When a Congressman plants gard annual outing and picnic, conjunction | PARIS, May 9.—A number of Caupachin and J: secds among his rural constituents in the | With an athletic and shooting festival for | Oblate fathers have been Gned §5 each at An- Al Cars Lead to Our Store. pive, Furnish Houses Complets. young wife. The Mullens were very much opposed to the marriage of their daughter to Math- ies on account of his being under arrest at the time. Mathies and his wife Roth stated that Mrs. Mullen had tried to sep- arate them. The wife and her infant have returned to her husband and she has received for- glveness. Milnes did not suffer from the effects of his punishment beyond a light abrasion of the skin, Knights of Maccabees. addition of a large number of names to the membership roll and proving that the *‘Golden Westers"” are fraternal hustlers. The tent is devising ways to still fur- ther increase the roll. Golden West Divi- —_——— The total apple receipts for the Christ- mas trade in the United Kingdom ex- ceeded 500,000 bushels. The best came trom Nova Scotia, California and other American centers. spring he expects to harvest a Votesin the fall. oir sion No. 13, Uniform Rank, has secured | Bucking C. Wiseman, F. W. Dohrmann, C. E. Johnson, Captain John F. Miller, Dr. E. K. Johnstone, Sylvan Newman, Peter B. Kyne, John E. Webster, Julian Aitken and Colonel Charles A. Boxton. Reception—James S. Mulvey, J. B, Heim, Colonel T. F. O'Neil, Captain G. T. Ballinger, Major Willlam = R. Robertson, Joseph E. McEvoy, H. T. Larkin, Colonel J. F. Connolly, Max Horn, Major H. T, Sime and R. W. Ent. PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. W. S. Taylor of Liverpool is at the East. Captain Murray F. Taylor, manager of the San Simeon raneh, is at the Occl- dental. 1. Prager of the well known firm of Pra- ger & Co. will leave for the East to-day on a business trip. who has been inspecting the s ing May 20. This will bring representa- tives to the national body from every State in the Union. The convention will last not less than three days, and the rep- resentatives and national officers will be entertained by the committees from the local councils and committees from the councils of the Daughters of Liberty. It is expected that the councils of both or- ganizations located In Alameda County will assist in the receptions and enter- tainments. The representatives to the national body have been allowed the same rallroad rates given delegates to the Presbyterian convention. officers of the Celtic Union addressed the membership in the Interest of a hall for Irish socleties, and the remarks were en- thusiastically recelved. The committee on picnic reported that everything was in readiness for the reunion, which will be to furnish dance music, Irish jig and step interests here and in Southern California, returns to-day to his headquarters in Se- attle. ——— e ——— Mission Turn Verein Picnic. The Mission Turn Verein will hold its valuable medals and prizes, to-day at ! Glen Park, dancing, racing for old and young, and it is expected that there will be an ex- hibition' of old-time Irish games under the direction of a local athletic club, and for these a trophy will be offered. for Fm SRR vt AR each for the sama reason. | ! 19800000000000000000V00D0000800000000008 headquarters at 28 Gold - . where it will meet e\':l";' (Eral::s;.\;en::; J. C. Ford, vice president and general ;‘e ?:“'fl::::%l:“ gx’:d‘l’t‘ll:: ;::. ,‘_’::ku'c’.l,l_ — 1 Cross Legged Canvas Cots. Regular price drill, manager of the Paclfic Coast Company, | (° " There will be a first class orchestra e $1.25. Only 75¢c. We Trust the Peonle. This Week’s Special SOLID OAK BUREAU, same as shown EASTERN OUTFITTING COMPANY. 1320--1328 Stockton Street. Looking Glass, $12.00