The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 31, 1903, Page 19

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THE SAN FRANCISGO CALL. SUNDAY, ADVERTISEMENTS. Business Clothes The kind that interests every man HOUSANDS of professional, business and workingmen buy their clothes here. physicians, jurists, ban We sell to cers, merchants and mechanics. A great number trade with us because they save money; many who do not need to consider the price wear our suits becaus e they get good clothes. Whether 2 man has $8.350 or more to spend for a suit he will get fuil value for his money and the clothes will fit and wear to his entire satisfaction. This is everybody’'s store because anybody can to pay. the particular clothes he likes at the price he We save vou money because you buy direct from the makers at one fair profit. Our clothes are stylish because they are tailored by craftsmen—workers who combine intellect with their work—men whose minds have been trained to think as wel The clothes we make are making us. Y'rom v r to vear. Good clothes, a c for the growth. Our retaining customers is increasing our stock of boys' and as their hands to work. Gaining business t prices are the reasons vouths’ clothing will nterest every mother because we can save her money. u staty-four page illustrated catalo SN stomers should woite for our ne e— free. 0D Market Street Bruce Price Dies Paris - -Story Window. : M M T™h s R £y » e 3 Three Trainmen Injured \ ¥ w s M ment. write. DR. A. J. BHORES. Do not despair because ores’ mnew es it easy at home. nd treatment which enables t tell you what for you. and what the WRITE for their new vantage of the FREE cost vou mothing. Weak Men iy of the weak- by ignorance, J ARE 7] L WE WANT 1f you suffer from nesses or diseases caused excess or contagion VERY PERSON TALK TO. . We have proved our skill in curing CHRON diseases by publishing the many voluntary testimonials of bome people, giving names, pictures a addresses. WE CAN'T PUBLISH OUR CURES IN PRIVATE DISEASES, se it would betray confidence. we have to prove our skill In ihis class of troubles in another way. This is our plan: © = TO Becaul He Permanently Located in WE low fee, quick cure, mild and painless treat- me Cures by Mail you live at a our case vhat can be done cure will mptom list and take ad- EXAMINATION ou take treatment or not, the advice costs | i | ncinerat Indicted for Peonage. Ala., 3OMERY, ictments a2 and Ta or hc The Doctors Who Cure San Francisco’s Leading Physicians and Expert Specialists TREAT AND CURE ach Troubles, Nervous Dis- ses, Bladder Troubles, Heart eases of the Stomach an: a and Rectal Diseases, onic Diseases of Women pinal Troubles, Skin Bronchial and Blood Diseases. Pri the Prostate Gland, e curable). CONSULTATION )R WRITE. Call or be. Wheth- DR. G. W. SHORES. Pay When Cured We cure you first and then ask a REASONABLE FEE when you are cured. You can depend upon our word; thousands of patients have indorsed us. NOW=WE WANT TO CURE YOU—with the distinct understandin; that we will not demand a FEE_until we cure you. This applies to LOST MANHOOD, Seminal Weakness, Sper- matorrhoea. Gonorrhoea. Syphilis and all “WEA ESSES” of men. We ab- solutely cure Varicocele, or it don't ('réstl )'oirx‘RaEgegnyi 't(é‘unlultrt!on and advice 2 by letter or in person. CALL OR WRITE. Office Hours—0 a. m. to 430 p. m.; Evenings, €:30 to §; Sundays and Holldays, 10 to 12. DRS. SHORES & SHORES, Specialists, Wiley B. Allen Bulding, 933 Market Street, (Third Fl 3 San li‘r;nd:::.’ Cal. ‘The British « arrived at D has been fou affected with. f will be 1 forms of Nervous and Chronic WOMEN AND CHILDREN WITHOUT SHELTER OR FOOD ON HOUSETOPS Continued From Page 18, Column 7. in the city limits. From Fort Dodge, above here, the Des Moines River is re- ported to be two feet higher and still ris- ing. The weather forecast is for contin- ued rains. The Raccoon River above here is at a standstill. At noon Governor Cummins authorized | the throwing open of the State Capitol to flood refugees. Cots were placed in the building and food provided. two different instances babies were born in flooded houses. The mothers and r infants were removed to places of in boats as s possible. { s and churches | thrown open to | | : engaged in an attempt to | rescue household goods from a house near | | the East Ninth-street bridge, were thrown current and quickly drowned. E. Kingman, was f the accident. th Des ) from 4 to 9 o'clock yrning upward of a score of strand- lood victim: on the roofs of their | houses 3 piteousiy begged for boats. When rescued they were half dead from exposure to cold and rain | Marshalltown i learned that the Towa River pread out over a “vast territory and the Towa Central Railroad | has been practically doned ed THOUSANDS LEFT WITHOUT HOMES AT ARMOURDALE RIS CITY night t he May e Kan rate of four Inches an packing-house has | estimated at | and a loss already & urger’s be a million A b Ly ween the two plants. It is estimated that the Armcurdale to | will exceed timated t from t It is a ir homes wi tes mouth of the Kaw River. haps 2000 of this number are at Ar- | surdale, whose citizens mostly are work- | g pe The streets in the greater of Armourdale are from two to thrée | ep In water. All last uight the | s, aided by police and firemen, were sehold eifects, rescuing | and providing shelter | . occupled and packing-house big lake, ana at that | % persons are without | only houses and of ground, clear of Argentin than nere eleve e on | the Kaw | during further | base- | and the | 2 num- and water was bascments o both ¢ w ms ter beginning the Liv pens w ) the change Sl gs e BEATRICE UNDER WATER. | | Only Roofs of Houses to Be Seen in Some Sections of City. | BEATRICE, Nebr., May 30.—Blue River as been 1 adily for thirty-six ¢ hours. W running over Court | Cartoonist Bowman Dead. street 1 o'clock yvesterday after-| NNEAPOLIS, ) May 20.—Row-| noon the er has riscn at the rate of ¢ wr vears, cartoon- | four inches an hour. The south and west M une t. au-| sldes arc cut off from the main part of t ¥ In some places scarcely more than ) gt Tt ond of the houses are to be seen. | - E @ - Soung dn Juis, < moved out of their homes | y e IR, Syercomec) “ T v day before. Some who Y Festve Mim ot e water would reach them o . o to move out during vh»‘l e come Instances their escape be- P e v windows Infected Cattle Shipped. e N afternoon and the water works topped at 4 o’'clock this morn- having flooded the build- | small houses, barns and outbuildings al- | | plantation emploves, | the Towlands: | water. o porarily held up by the Kansas flood, the eastbound at Newton and the westbound at Emporfa. Early this morning all of the wires of the road in that section went down and it was impossible to get detailed information. s R HOUSES BURDEN TORRENT. Churning Waters. LAWRENCE, Kar May 20.—The river here rose several feet during the night and practically the whole of North Law- rence is under water. The Bowersock mill collapsed early to-day and the miil, with its valuable machinery, was carried down the river, causing a loss of $50,000. Houses and livestock are going down the stream in large numbers. The water ex- | tends miles in every direction and many | ready have been swept away. The Union Pacific freight and passenger depots are surrounded and there is practically no train service out of here. Sixteen Negroes Drowned. MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 30.—Sixteen ne- | groes, composing two families of cotton | were drowned last night in the Mississippi River near Pe- can Point, forty miles north of this city. | They left the Chiles plantation after dark in two skiffs. Waves from a passing ves- sel capsized the frail boats and all aboard save one went down. A lad, Will Bell, es- caped by clinging to an oar. Seven bodies have been recovered. Residents Rescued With Boats. LEXINGTON, Mo., May 30.—The Mis- souri River here is within four feet of the highest point reached in 1881. Thousands of acres of land are covered with water and residents are being moved out in Lo The crops are all ruined and the ferry-hoat is busy getting people out of The river is still rising. b T S Be e Overflowing Lincoln Lowlands. LINCOLN, Nebr., May 30.—Salt Creek is overflowing the Lincoln lowlands. Thir- families have taken refuge with friends d quarters for more are being provided in the County Courthouse. it esainnt o Buildings Demolished. LINTEN, 8. D. May 30.—Reports reached here from Pollock, S. D., of a heavy windstorm last night. Several tuildings were demolished, including the Soo station. Several persons were in- Jured, but no one fatally. LL Iowa River Is Again Rising. MARSHALLTOWN, Towa, May 30.—The Towa River is again rising and is two miles wide at this point. Growing corn and oats in the lowlands are all under CONFESSES HIS GUILT | TO POLICE AT PORTLAND | Firm Tells of an Em- bezzlement. | while employed by the firm of Branden- stein ‘& PORTILLAND, May 30.—Herbert BrCZ:fiA‘ who says he recently arrived from San Francisco, to-day surrendered himself to | the police, claiming that he is wanted | there on a charge of embezzlement. He | said that he had committed the offense | | Co., tea importers. When seen last stated that Broza w ht, Mr. Brandenstein employed by him about six months ago and that he had | stolen a letter of credit amountin t g to 00 and had fled to Ogden, where he had | cashed it. The gentleman added that he | AIM‘nnl want Broza, for the bank had made good the amount. It is possi that the ; i Xt Odgen bank may seek to have | the prisoner taken to that city - secuted. ey —————— E. L. Whittmore. Mont., N—E. L. W more, one of the best known mining BUTTE, itt- inge. The Burlington and Union Paclfic 3 ok : \'::n!- are der water. The engines were | ineers of the Northwest, died sudden | taken out of the roundhouses last night.| to-night while talking to ¥. A gustus s is flood- | Heinze. Whittmore ol » *The Bur n passenger station s flood- | more w seized with ed and part the platform is washed | hemorrhages and before assistance could away. All railroad bridges across Blue be secured he passed away. Whittmore River are threatened and canmot ‘much | Was connected at the time of his deatn | No-loss of life is longer stand the strain reported. ol et s el ALL CROPS ARE RUINED. Hundreds of Cattle and Horses Pey- sh Around Abilene. ABILENE, Kans., May 30.—The. flood s 1 in this section is practically un- ¢ t0-d Business is suspended people are engaged pumping out basements and removing goods {rom store | buildings in danger of collapse. On the| bottom lands all familles have been res- | cued, but hundreds of cattle and horses perished 11 last night in a tree A cold rain teli stead- The Smoky Hill | 11y most ght. | River, we f here, is nigher than yes- | terday and the r begun here. Crops | of the entire valley are ruined. Through- out the county corn has been so washed a1l must be replanted. There prospect of a railway train here for In places the tracks are half a from the roadbed. Woodbine, Chap- lomon and Herrington have been by the highest water ever known, but are now in better condition. that pearly | mile | SR ]’RA[LROAD BRIDGES COLLAPSE. | Fleod Does Great Damage in the Vi- | cinity of Atchison. ATCHISON, Kans., May 30.—One of the floods in the history of Atchison occurred here early to-day. The water followed a steady and very heavy rain, | which began at midnight and continued for three hours. White Clay Creek, which runs through the center of Atchi- is out of its banks, flooding many in the business part of town and damaging stocks to the amount of thou- sands of dollars. The raiiroad bridges of the Santa Fe and the Missouri Pacific at the western limits of Atchison were car- wagon bridges, Scores of Families Homeless. OTTUMWA, lowa, May 30.—Within less than two feet of the high water mark, the Des Moines River has flooded the lower part of the city, driving scores of families from their homes.. Last niglt merchants in the three blocks nearest the river cleared their basements, fearing a flood. Heavy rains fell last night and | contipue to-day. Hundreds of acres of farm land in the river valley are under ater. The river ig rising rapidly and is expected to exceedlast year's flood. PREST orl Cloudburst Near Sioux City. | ment with the Montana Mining and Develop- the famous arysville, Mont. Company, operating Drum Lummon mine at M. —_———— Gould Offers Reward. NEW YORK, May 3.—Edwin Gould to- | day offered $1000 reward for the capture of John Heffernan's murderer and said | nine other members of the Ardsley Club | would offer a similar amount, making the total amount* $10,000. i —_— Count Bigera Resigns. VIENNA, May 30.—According to the | Neue Frele Presse, the Itallan Embassa. dor to Austria-Hungary, Count Blgera, has resigned. ADVERTISEMENTS. ROSENTHAL’S THE HANAN SHOES $ FIFTEEN STYLES LADIES' ind MEN'S i The best $5 Shoes in the world. Made expressly for m's to‘l nflcct a big, emand for a really fine Shoe at this price. Other makers charge $6 or more for shoes of equal quality, But they cannot duplicate the Hanan style—individuality— character—at any price. SIOUX CITY, lowa, May 30.—A cloud- burst occurred yesterday at Westfield which will cause a still higher stage in the river, already out of its banks. The Northwestern Railroad has been com- pelled to abandon the old Sioux City and Pacific on this side of the river at Omaha. i T Santa Fe Trains Held Up. CHICAGO, May 30.—At the general of- fices of the Santa Fe Railroad it was stated to-day that all trains were tem- Country Orders Solicited. Catal N Bt Aoy X 9, Former Employe of a San Francisco | | ;and was « | £1000 was also raised. MAY 31, 1903. 19 ADVERTISEMENTS. GRATEFU L, HAPPY WOMEN Thank Pe-ru- na for Their Health and ROSE FOWILER There is a sense tn | MY threat and lungs sore and I was In 3 which the blood is | Pretty bad way out of order when| I then consulted a doctor, but after pimples appear, | taking his medicines for over a we That is to say the | STiving o fit from blood contains too | Mined to try alt much nutritive ma- * Patent medict f How a Handsome Detroit Belle ——— Regained Health and Beauty. | Fac'al Blemishes—How to Re- move Them Permanently. 303 Second ave., better than a paint or powder, for it gives you that clear, smooth complexion and the glow of heaith which no cosmetic can ever imitate. I was troubled for sev eral years with humor of the blood, which inflamed my face with had pains pimbles and blotches. 1 v head, back and limbs, ated. T took Peruna and in a short ti... all was changed. All the impurities of the blood were cleansed, the pains relleved and I was restored to per- fect health. My complexion is fine and clear, and T do not need any powder to cover up the imperfections.”"—Miss L. F. Aker. People generally think that pimpies are a sign that the blood is out of order LSS L. AHER beautifier, | the skin and at times covered | terial. bless the = Blood is the pro- |y gig duct of digestion. | noyieoq Digestion may be X - deranged or it-fmay N cold fa be in excess of the | 3 - e by D nie | zerous than to catch cold T ™ ‘| first warm da nd to s of May n will lead to pimples, exaggerate and skin affections and the like. | Excessive digestion leads to| p¢ o p:“us‘ ”»1": s 1d. : thickened blood, coated i,y oo qTn Aoy cold in January nhe tongue and the like. There can be no ’ he’ invigor: but to catch cold in May is un dount of it that a cleansing of the sys- e - as tem is necessary. weather tends invigorate. In to dep than The question arises, “What is the rem. | o= [U&0ral - that will best accomolish this pur- | (U¢ncy happens that : mething that will cleanse 2o ol and stimulate the mucous membranes | Ot GTTES OB wee | of the body. Peruna is exactly such a | Eul Temedies seem | remedy as hundreds of women can [P “"};\“"‘m"““* las: | truthfully testify. ody. Red, puffy eye: | S ness of the nose, 1 hoarsene w | Catehing Cold the Bane of Women i few of t - But should During th»Fi st Warm Wea. her. | i, spité of precautions to get settled. Begin a at | The Changa From Warm Flanne's | {5 2P0rarance o Destnning e beginning ny quinine. able to take @ cold without to tha Thin Muslin Underwear of Summer is the Cause of lany.’ gt | damage to the syste: Lingering Colds. If you do not dertve srompt and satis- % factory results from the use of Peruna, write ‘at once to Dr. Ha A }w?‘x‘fiq; Rose - Fowler, Bussey, Iowa.|full statement of your case, and he Sint which I neglected and which went: from | The - Hartman 's‘ffiiifi?:?‘;m.""fiffl&’;bu"sf bad to worse. PREPARING HOLY OIL A SOLEMN WORK Highest Ecclesiastics Work for Days With Costly Ingredi- ents. An interesting ceremony, which is only witnessed once in every twelve years, was held on last noly Week, old style, at the Greek patriarchate—the prepara- tion of holy oil for orthodoxy, which is the exclusive privilege of the church of Constantinople. The preparation of holy oil is a costly operation, and the patriarch therefore appointed a commission to col- lect subscriptions to cover the expenses. There was a generous response to the ap- peal of the commission, and contributions, both in money and in kind, flowed in from all sides. The patriarch of Alexan- dria sent most of the perfumes and spices required; the Greek Archbishop of Phil- lipopolis supplied attar of roses, and -oil merchants in Mitylene, Aidin and other olive-growing districts sent many barrels of the purest and finest olive oil. About Another commis- sion, composed of ecclesiastical dignita- ries and chemists, made arrangements for the operation. At tne conclusion of the service In the cathedral of Phanar the patriarch, accompanied by the members of the synod and several other ecclesias- tics, repaired to the courtyard of the church, wh a special altar with six caldrons had been set up, His Holiness sprinkled the vessels with holy water, incensed them. poured into them oil and wine, and added the per- fumes. lie then set fire to the fuel un- der the cduldrons and filled them. In the meantime the choirs sang hymns and the grand archdeacon incensed the Patriarch Joachim IIT, read a gospel, and was fol- lowed by the Archbishop. The patiriarch and the metropolitans then retired, and the patriarchal and parish priests in their hierarchical order, took their turns, the reading of the gospels and prayers going on without intermission until Maun- dy Thursday morning. On Tuesday and Wednesday mornings the patriarch add- ed perfumes to the boiling oil and with the metropolitan too. his turn in the reading of gospels. On Thursday morn- ing Joachim TII, assisted by the mem- bers of the synod and some three score priests and deacons, again went to the courtyard and recited a last prayer, after which the six caldrons were borne by priests processionally into the church and placed around the altar, on which was another vase containing hety oil. The patriarch invoked the divine help on all who contributed to the expenses, and then the Maundy Thursday service be- gan, at the conclusion of which' the holy ofl, which had in the meantime been transferred to sacred vases, was taken to the perfume store of the patriarchate, My head was stopped up, ' Ohio. every Archbishop holding a small sitver | or glass vessel, while the larger vess were carried by priests or deacons. Pieces | of cotton dipped in the impurities or ret- | use which remained in fhe caldrons were | distributed to the thousands of faithful | in the church, by whom they are held to | possess curative powers against all ail- ments.—Constantinople correspondence of the London Chronicle. | NEW YORK, May 3.—The Eagle to- day says that $2,500,000 per annum is paid in New York State in excess of the nor-| mal rentals for postoffices. The Eagle | adds if the leases run ten years the total | excess will amount to $5,000,000. Oregon University Wins. PORTLAND, ( sity of Oregon track team to-day de the Multnomah Athleti The s All of the e produced keen competition, with the ception of the re ex- ay race, which was con- ceded to Multnomah —_——— General Weston Seriously Il BALTIMORE, Md., May 30.—The physi- cians at Joh Hovkins Hospital to-day reported the condition of General John F. Weston, commissary general of the army as serfous. They say he has unde no change for the better. This Week’s Specials. $12.50 EXTENSION TABLE for $8.95—6 feet long, fluted legs, 44-in. top. $3.50 ROCKER, oak or mahogany, handsome and strong, $2.00. BOOK CASE $20, 3 com quarter sawed oak, adjustable shelves —5-ft. wide, 4{t. 6-in. high. Beautiful 3 Piece PARLOR SET $15. Covered with a beautiful Carona cloth. A splen.dfl bargain. Reduced from $27.50. A $15.00 COUCH reduced to $7.50. $12,50 DRESSING TABLE in either oak, mahogany or birdseye maple for $8.50. $5.00 MATTRESS on legs—strong and substantial—only $3.25. All of the above are on sale this week only. The time is limited on account of the great reductions made. Come early and take your choice. Faa ituare Co. 558-42 POST ST o UNION SQ:

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