The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 31, 1903, Page 25

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. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 31, 1903. GRAND CIRCLE 0F COMPANIONS MOB'S VOIGE C 0 T o TAIL | Twin Valley Farmers Talk of Lynching John Heyhal. | Information of Threats. e LEGE. B atch to The IDDING, May 30 ed tc was where . from Twin Valley formatior day John Heyhal shot and killed Willlam Morgan a few days ago, that the citizens there continue to threaten ve ance, and ma come to Redding secret to take Heyhal from jaii and lynch him It is stated on good authority here that the als are a bit fearful of an at- tack lay 1l where the mar ed table k. who br Heyhal from Twin Valley, has stated that it would not surprise if the prisoner were disposed of by a mob. { Heyhal was interviewed by a Call repre. sentative to-day. He refused to say a word about the killing of Morgan. He ered why he is in jail, and at fre- tervals he repeated the word rt. Twelve years ago 2 man named Stewart weas found near Whitmore with a bullet hole in his head. It is now believed by officers that Heyhal knows the ] select six men as victims, one of whom he killed. He will be exam- ined to-morrow ————— Effect of Good Training. A regulation has just been put into ef- % fect in Washington against expectorating essl1or on the sidewalk Adm Dewey utant General Corbin were standing front of the P ess .G r- | gtate, War and Navy building chatting ~ = of the wpen several times the admiral left the - n fence against which he was leaning * a s and walked to the gutier in order to re- lieve himself of the surplus juice of the weed I see you are bound not to be haled o court for violating the anti-expecto- rating ordinance,” laughed General Cor- Oh he law has nothing to do with o explained Dewey I believe I can % 2 SREHE. estly say that never once have I spat endered | ) the sidewalk in the last forty vears . at this | ang 1 don't belleve you ever saw an old e orde ie & net r against whom complaint could be his score exempt from quired the general. replied Dewey, “‘the rules on s shipboard are so strict about expectorat- & on the deck that they soon learn to walk to the rail. This habit sticks to hem ashore, and the a S =hip's rail to them, that’ Inter Ocean ——————————— Golden Rule Jones’ Way. Golden Rule Jones, Mayor of Toledo, Ohio sited Mayor Low not many moons - =t ago. He walked rapid ough the c ridor of the City Hall to the door of the There he met Secretary Mayor's office. Morar id Jones Low is Cartwright Card please,” Modesto, s , Mayor Moran “I'm Jones, id the Mayo “Walk right in, Mayor Jon The secretary had never seen the Golden sald Mo- n, Sa sco; Mrs. | pule not even 2 picture of him, but by 2 Rose Jor-| one of the lightning mental calculations geles . \irs, | fOT Which he is famous Mr. Moran worked . Davis, Oakland: Mrs out the identity of the man who had said, “I'm Jones.” The Golden Rule and May or Low had a long talk.—New York Even- under the direction J. 8 of nd Mrs. Mu Lodi—Lodi Circle, Mrs. E: Los Angeles—Union Circl Jordan and Mrs. Ella Nelk. a Wood. Mrs. ist of the delegates n Gate E a; Loreley Cir- | Marie Seith Rose | Redding Authorities Receive | | Imprisoned Man-Slayer Refuses to Talk of Recent Crime, but Mut- ters Name of Person Mur- dered Years Ago. this hu- N { f Toledo. Mre. | * Marysville—Yuba Circle, Mrs. §. J. Fin- Mrs. an and Miss Nellie O'Nell. Roth | Modesto—Modesto Circle, G. H. Ber- Diana Circle, | ¢ram. Circle, Her- | Nevada City—Freedom Circle, Mrs | muzzle of a large revolver to her temple . Oak Circle, Mrs Oakland—Oakland Circle, Mrs. A. Davis; J. N. Btelnweg; | Verbano Circle, Mre. D. Reboli; Sadi Car- | W. A. Atwood, | not Circle, Mrs. M. Calou ! r and Mrs. L. von Putt-| QOroville—Orange Blossom Circle, Mre. | me Cirele, Mre. 1. Baston; | M. E. Crum and Mrs. Nettie Thunen. den cle, M. Le Bonita Cir- | Petaluma—American Circle, Mrs. M. | e Pride of the For-| Hickey. Rose and Mrs. | Sacramento—Court Concordia Circle, cle, T. F. Blake | Mrs. C. Helm and Mre. Anna Kuchler. rancisco Circle Salinas—Santa Lucia Circle, Mrs. Emily ! an; Ferruccio Cirele, | Christensen s and Miss Mary Scola;| San Diego—Silver Gate-San Diego Cir- es ton Circle, Mrs. M. Kas- cle, Mrs. Minnie Butler and Frank X sie Kragen and Charles L.| Wallace; Palomar Circle, Mrs. Mary M. mond Circle, Mre. Rose Mc- | Welsser Circle Burnes and Mrs. A. T. Singleton. Santa Barbara—Ocean View Circle, Mrs. E. A. Gibbs; Castelar Circle, J. F. R. Areilanes. Banta Rosa—The Rose Circle, Mre. Hat- | tie Fechtelkotter t and Mre. P. Kiles rcle, Miss Irene P ngels Camp—Manzanita Circle, T. F.! gSoledad—Violet Circlp, Mrs. Anna Olson. aird | Stockton—Stockton Circle, Mrs. H. Gold- och—Con cle, Miss Ada | stein and Miss Ellen Haley. Tiburon—Buena Vista Circle, Miss Kate Miss Pansy | Doran | Vallejo—Farragut Circle, Mrs. Flora & Knights 1 ling—Queen of | Solomon Rive Mrs. P. H. Dixon Watsonville—Pajaro Valley Rose Circle, Court Pride Circle, Miss | Miss M. V. Marshall and H. T. Rogge. Woodland—Marguerite Circle, Mrs. Lil- aye ds-Haywards Circle, Mrs. C. B. | lie Powers. i a rndike Santa Ana—Fidelity Circle, Mrs. Isola « Mrs. H. G.| Murray and Mrs. Mary Parker. DR. HOLSMAN ihe World’s Greatest Specialist. are 1 have been successful 1 abrojutely cure )US BLOOD POISON. CON- TUR ILES, FISTULA, WEAKNESS peculiar to men. 1f vo ve ans in the above list you can ceme to me with the positive o a man who is ailing this means every future health. happiness and possibly life depend ing cured. I am here to do just that work—to do it and to effect a permanent cure. Any case that comes reatment can surely depend on being tored to & mormal condition unless the case is incurable. My henomenal success in curing men's diseases has brought to me - business that ] am justly proud of, and has proven the correctness and truthfulness of my motto, that NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE HONEST TREATMENT. If you cannot el write for question list and FREE BOOK Aescribing my speciaity. Correspondence confidential. Charges Reasonzble. Consultation and Advice Free. c K HOLSMAN' M' D. 720 MARKET §T., €. F. TOP FLOOR. Hours—9 to § daily: | morning she arose as usual and prepared San Jose—Heliotrope Circle, Miss Joste: breakfast | She complained of feeling ill and refused , =ofa in the parlor. | - MAY S00ND JOE ROSENBERG'S. | This Store’s Policy Is based on the theory that it pays to be honest, exactly hon- est, with every customer. If a piece of goods is part cotton, we believe it pays to say so. If some JOE BOSENBERG'S, JOE ROSENBERG'S. 1 JOE ROSENBERG'S. Emma Sebring, the 18-year-old daughter | of former Policeman Sebring of this city, other store is sel ta custemer back in time. make a sale. at times be mistaken. make it right. confidence. ity. know how to-day. do better to-morrow. sl — Sale in Corsets. FIRST —— Here's _ busted, straight long over the bias cut and gored, lace trimmed. front There is only one store for =i these—Joe Rosenber; cutter ... ; COND—-LADI black imp: sateen, Princess hip, straight fron: hand-gored: hose supporter attachmen with hose supporters attached, with but ton clasps. supporters. ...........%, ANOTHER, and a m 2o0od one. too—It is a LA DIES' CORSET,made of linen batiste crash, front, double side trimmed, extra inside at the be prevent stretch s0 as E ANTOINETT made of genuine hair natural looking form very light in weight in price Sale O'Farrel Bustle, most made ligh cloth and street entrance. wear, and We Challenge You to Buy Them at These Prices, LADIES' VEST—Deep, square slecves: made of g part wool geods for all wool, we may lose a sale, but we have kept our repu~ n, and will probably get the Our in- structions to our clerks are to never misrepresent an article to Of course, we may If we are we want to have a chance to We want your We aim to serve the publicto the best of our abil- We are doing the best we We hope to military; and hips. hand- blas cut and Corset and hose B¢ ighty ust the thing for summer wear; low V-cut lace tape 1 o ing. Ourf\rk-— . R1.00 the New builder very 5e You Soon Will Need Your Summer Under- lace yoke effect front and back; low neck, no velvet finish cotton, Stout Women, Attention! Why not reduce your abdomen? You can if you wear the new Andy Smith Gotham HOSE SUPPORTER and abdominal reducer: made of curvedy shape sateen pad, with patent Flasped : hose supporters attached; iIn pink, blue, red, black and t while; the price-cutter's price There's Every Element of Worth in Our g dies’ Muslin Underwear, Made, as they should be made, in our own factory; Qe nothing skimped; all made generously. First—LADIES' GOWNS, made of Masonville muslin, Empire style; square neck, neatly trimmed with em- broidery insertion; large re- veres, made of embroidery: neck and sleeves trimmed with embroldery edge; voke lined in back. You'll appreciate the value when YANOT (hel'xn LADIES' Gow\'s"}.?gx': nf&‘\sg—{flgnlshvd Lonsdale cambric, Square neck; voke trimmed with five rows of torchon lace insertlon and six clusters of minute tucks; neck and sleeves trimmed with fine torchon lace. Our money-saving price 05¢ More Good News From Our Muslin Under- 1 Richelieu ribbed Note the low price LADIES' VEST—Made of wear Department. pure Vega silk: low neck 1 pigg’ GOWNS. made of soft fin- and no sleeves, Swiss rib- ished Fruit of the Loom muslin, neatly Stitched tucks, e Fihn. matute, Bk O with a neat ruffie. Price.....45¢ LADIES' VES mg CORSET COVER, made of colored neck and - long . sleeves; 1awn: to wear underneath your shirt- made of XX Vegs silk, Waist: high neck and long sieeves: in ¥ Swiss ribbed: in pink, biue. Ted: pink. blue, green, vellow, black and white and cream. No: ‘ 3 s white; sizes 32 to 42. Price ........ 45¢ SUITS, made of silk LADIES' UNIC and lisle mixed; low meck and no The Latest Fad in Chains, slecves, ankle length, Jersey knit and = 5 = kid fitting; in pink, blue and white Not from a jewelry store, but S SR B .$1.00 from the small store 'whh the Just received—A 1 SHELF or small price; the new Indlan NOTTINGHAM LACE, full six inches beads in crystal, amber, tur- wide; eight different patterns to cho quoise, pearls. agate, etc.: from. Our price, per vard............ fifty-eight inches in length with the extra large crysial , i tassel; you will appreciate Kieinert's Trufit Dress Shields. these when see see them at Nainsook covered, washa the low price of ............ 75¢ and adjustable: does not wrin- kie; fits snugly to the arm: Why Not Have Your Hair Look Chic? Aress shield made: made with The. LADY PRTITE patent cap so as to fit underwear. preciated than these are: when them you will say so. Our price Joe Rosenberg's, The Money-Saving Store. 4 Packages Sharp’'s best NEEDILEE, also ferent variety of nicely in a case. Our price over arm and looks like part of the We do not know of any dress shields more ap- u_see .25¢ Here's What You'll Get for Five Cents at BODKIN and DARNING NEE- DLES. shawl and toilet pins, in a dif- colors. all put up BACK COMB and HAIR RETAINER, curved back and shaped so as to fit snugly to the head: highly polished teeth: it retains all the Joose and short hai made of real Italian shell, tortoise shell in looks. but not in price ....... The Latest Fad in Buckies. . _From the fashion center of the world: made of German metal oroide gold: Floral, Egyptian, conventional and Gre- cian effects, in gun metal and gold; full value for your money. Our price....25¢ Ma 15 gore o Joe. Roserbergs- the Morey Saving Store JOE ROSENBERG'S. The discouraged purse will re- ceive comfort here. What you see in our ads you will find at our storc. Polka Dot. a here are s of all =ik polkadot taffera and ring A Sal2 in Real Hand-Made Scarfs, e . Battenberg Eightee and 34 inc heavy i trimmed wide hat berg lace, in scroll and hand-made effects member, this is a bargain from a_ go SLOre ..ivcrs $....81.15 Hlppity -Hop! Te CUTTING PRICES Slightly Damaged on the Steamer From from Be LADI IEFS, full size Our price A Sale of Hosiery. all pure line Japan THE GOOD KIND AT VERY LOW apiec 10¢ n . PRICES. 1 HANDKERCHIEFS, made LADIES JAPANESE LADIES' HOSE., made of f of reat. narrow COATS. made of extra heavy Vvptian cotton, new openwe wit) inittal; af The smal India silk, quilted in different combinations of colors. . in gr nunn s double hee nd toes, fu Insurance man's loss—your fuill price; per pa . - i gain. Price .. £3.25 LADIES HOSE. made of Eight Packages for Eight Cents, HAT PINS—Seven inches fast black English thread, HAIRPINS, mad long, good jet heads, needle the openwork stripe, lace high polished. hard enam- pointed. made of rust proof effect, soft as velv Sale eled wire; they come in steel; twelve pins for...... S5¢ price, per pafr. 12he erinkled, straight SKIRT BRAID—AIl stores keep braid LADIES HOSE, made of ble 1 heavy and We only keep one kind—the best; ma soft Sea Island cofton,stain- @ ferent lengths: eight of steam shrunk yarn, extra hea: less black with white feet b cabine (3] brush; all colors at one pric just the hose for soft, ten SAFETY PINS—Why not der feet. Extra special. per pair e buy the best. Capsheef CHILD'S STOCKINGS, kind that ‘it Gome Once, coilers are the best; made and wear: made of Sea Island cotton, AND IT WON'T BE OUR of extra tempered steel, jersey ribbed, medium weight fast YOU DON'T COME A » wire needle point: a con- ‘black, double heels, toes and knees N ND ILLUSI tinuous curve, so it cannot made different from others: all sizes at i wide, catch in the fabrics, in gne price 12¢ b mak in pink, steel or black enameled. and black. On sale M large or small sizes: all one 10 ...Dozen Je Here’s Where We Shine for Good Gloves for a Little Money. GLOVES, made of suede lisle hed back, with two fancy pat- ent clasps; in tans modes, grays, a black and white: suede in looks and fir The Warm Days Are Coming. Why not prepare and be ow Our Jac > prices are more so. FILET LACE—In such a great demand for dress trimming, 2% inches ish, but not in price 25¢ offe wide, in square and star finished with a 4 effects. Our price, per Fownes ka dot band down ard . Te bty Y or POINT Is the name of the very best wearing and fitting giove made extra fi English thread. two patent gun metal clasps, double woven. ias the appearance of kid: it comes in tan,gun metal, cham NORMAND DE PARIS LACE, six inches wide; in tulip, fleur de lis design, all good pearl edge. Sale price. e POINT DE GENE LACE, 3!; inches Just Received express e, black and white They ask 3 e, in a new round of pointed pat- FAER® R i terns; just the lace for ml|léner\é or shillings in London; our price EFS. ar AN dress trimmings. Now, per vard....30¢ " s hgt 2 e~ WOOL LACE—The new kind. that we “Dolly Varden jersey. Kalt; deep ol just received from the lace center of the | .. s R S =R . R A 0 > . e latest craze in LADIES' MITTS: down the t, made with worid, in sqtare and point lace pat(erns, . 1n.de’of funcy openwork lace mesh, sol- pouch Tront, with Ughi-iit el mp rice. cutter's price...10¢ !d silk palms, with two pearl butto ting bay it nugly at &, the p! aichin: in white and black; low in price for a waist; ir white novelty like this. Our price......81.04) black. We to have Veils. NEW HAT DRAPE VEILS, the latest fad for hat trimming, 54 inches long, fast black, made of extra fine chiffon, and Six Cents Instead of Twelve, DRESS SHIELDS—The Vassar make, with double and triple hemstitched bor: (oW1, o A, SIClS, Nataok covered Hair Necessities at Low Prices, ders. Sale price.........oooiiiii, T5€C ation proof a Jvashavle: for'Monda 1st—SHELL HAIRPINS, in black. and Tuesday sale ..... . 6¢ amber and and four Beautifiers. ng. Tkled o MADE VEILS—Made of beat Are You Going to the Country? fe hiy polished and smooth teeth tuxedo net, chenille dotted bord £ £ = twelve for reeee D¢ black and white and black with white Why not prepare now at these very low 0 ch i flfl » B i TM " dots, and white with black dots. The e NGRS | small store with the small prie . 38¢ LADIES WHITE PIQLU KIRT, cir ur L] e"gl !I’Iugs .‘ S cular flounce, steam shrunk, tailor Yfl“ c.u Good Elastic, ot g o T One inch and a quarter wide, fancy colored Marseilles frilled edge, satin corded effect in the _ Shirt Waist Sets : colouod Muieiien Soll havint Mt new combination of colors: just the ARE ALL THE VOGUE NOW Jan Oty {0 S0, IS Toud A3 N thing for garters, in pink and white, Here are some in gun metal and pearl, all day at this price; anticipate your Phuetand white, Ted and white, etc.: no thres and four pleces o & set. 'Very wants early. Top and back now... B¢ chie, but very low in price for these: better elastic made. The small stor 5 e Hogss G 25¢ Are You Going to the Country? D BACK, made of nd basket cioth; in price Se Are you going traveling? Here's some- 816 MARKET STREET. 11 OFARRELL STREET. fec:i. it itk curs” sig? MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. lengths. Qur price....... 1. 83.50 ENDS HER LIFE WITH R BULLET Redding Girl Uses Her Father’s Revolver for Buicide. Special Dispatch to The Call REDDING, May 30.~While despondent TACOMA, May 30.—Dispatches from Daweon state that the most sensational and romantic case ever before the Daw- DAWSON YIELDS A NEW ROMANGE Legal Proceedings Make Changes in Love Affair. Special Dispatch to The Call. | of killing himself with the weapon that | trouble. | a leg. Later his wife died and he has went into her father's room, placed the and blew the top of her head off this morning at 6:45 o’clock. The girl lived with her father and brothers in West Redding and since the death of her mother and the marriage of an eclder sister had kept house. This for her father and brothers. Her father told her to lie on a Instead of doing so the girl went into his bedroom, took the revolver from beneath his pillow and im- mediately committed suicide. The father ran into the room to find his daughter on the floor with his r volver still smoking in her hands. Neigh- bors ran in, and not too soon, for the sor- row siricken parent was about in the act to eat. had deait destruction to his daughter. Mrs. Ziem grabbed the pistol from him an@ concealed it. The girl had been hysterical for six or seven months and had told her sister that she was tired of living. She had alto remarked to others that she would, kill herself. The father has had much Some years ago he was shot by a robber who resisted arrest and lost been grief-stricken ever since. ————— Couldn’t Express an Opinion. At a social gathering, when he was still Bishop of Lendon, the late Dr. Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, was approach- ed by a lady, who came to him In great excitement and said: “Oh, Bishop, my aunt has had 2 wonderfur escape. She was detained yesterday, or she would have been killed in that terrible railway accident. Was it not providential?"' “Ma- dam,” replied the Bishop, “I do not know your aunt, so. I cannot say.'’—Montreal Star. —_———— Press-Gag Law Dead Already. The press gag law in Pennsylvania is a dead letter already. Governor Penny- packer says that editors would once have been hanged, drawn and quartered for what they do nowadays. He refers to an editorial denunciation of a Senator as “a yokel with a sodden brain,”” and want to know what we are to think of tha If the Senater is that kind of a yokel we think well of it.~Brooklyn Eagle, son courts has been absorbing the inter- est of Klondikers for the last several days. Characters prominent in lande be- yond the seas, as well as in the Klon- dike, have figured in the stellar parts and have furnished as much real romance as half the modern novels, Alice Rollins Crane, whose writings have appeared in magazines and who has written several books, is the woman in the case. Within seven days she has prosecuted a casge in the courts against Captain William Galpin, an Englishman, charging him with threatening to kill. Count Moraczewski of the Russian no- bility has been the lady's chief witness and has become her legal husband. The evidence shows that the woman switched her affections from the English- man to the Russian Count. No sooner had the charge of threatening to kill been dismissed {n the Dawson Police Court and Mrs. Crane found herself defeated in the first legal battle than she -marched straight from the court and in less than an hour was married to the Count. An- other charze will be heard later. Mrs. Crane and Galpin fell out over the au- thorship of a book. ——————— CANNON BALLS MADE OF GOLD Used in India About the End of the Sixteenth Century to Repel Invade: Nat long ago an old peasant was wan- dering in the jungle about half a mile from the city of Ahmadnagar, in India, when he found a round ball of metal. It was black and looked like an old iron round shot, but when the old man lifted it he was struck with its immense weight. He carried it home and found, on scratch- ing it, that it was a lump of solid gold. It weighed eight pounds and its sale made the finder rich for life. There are many more of these cannon balls, each worth a small fortune, lying hid or buried in the recesses of this jun- gle and their story is a curious one. At the end of the sixteenth century Akbar, the greatest emperor Hindoostan ever saw, was at the height of his glory. At the head of his conquering army he sum- moned Ahmadnag: to surrender. The city and its rich treasyre were then un- der the rulé of the Princess Cande. Knowing that resistance could be but short and in bitter rage against the op- pressor, she caused all the treasuré of pcse however, totally forgotten. It is only known that they are very old.—Chi- cago Chronicle —_—— A woman named Durian, living at Hou- which cannon ba of gold have been cast is proved by the fact that in the treasury of the Shah of Persia there may be seen, in the same room where nds the famous peacock throne, two small gold and silver to be melted down. She cast the metal into cannon balls and en- graved upon each maledictions against the conqueror. These were fired into the jungle and when Akbar entered the city, instead of the rich hoard he had hoped | globular projectiles of gold. They were | deng, dreamed the other night that she to win, he found a treasury absolutely | estimated by a recent visitor to weigh [ was being murdered. She awoke in so empty. about thirty-one pounds each and are | great a fright that she only survived the That this is not the only occasion upon made. Their origin or pur- two da The Walk-Over has all the charac- ter and dignity of style, the same ex- cellence of leathers, the same faultless workmanship that characterize your favorite five- dollar shoes. Not a detail about the construction, nothing about the materials that won't permit of the closest inspection. Rigid comparison will prove that the Walk-Over is Seldom Equaled, Never Excelled at $5.00 —— Walk-Overs for Women. Styles for every service, from danc- ing to tramping, cach with a distinc- tiveness that marks the work of high- 1y skilled shoemakers. Every high- class leather suitable for women’s wear. Walk-Overs for Men. Styles as snappy, swagger or con- servative as you like. Lacker calf, vici kid, broncho coit, patent calf— all high-grade leathers in oxfords as well as high cuts. Sent, charges paid, o any address in U. S. for $3.75. Walk-Over Shoe Co. F. F. WRIGHT & SON, Props. 924 Market, opposite Emporium.

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