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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 2, 1908, 818-820 MARKET ST. SAN FRANCISCO. Knives, Razorsénd Shears Ground and Repaired Picture Frames of All Descriptions Made to Order i Ribbons. ! gs. Veilin in _pink, blue, | 300 pieces, worth #c yd. Cutto 3Bc aize nd best | 300 pleces, worth 6c Cut'to 4c 200 pleces, worth 10c Cut to e 10e per yd. | 200 pleces, worth 15¢ Cut to 30¢ dots, and ‘all | 200 pieces, worth 1¢ Cut to 12¢ old at %c and | 200 pleces, worth 20c Cut to 14¢ Gloves. Ladies’ black taffeta gloves; only 100 pairs on hand; worth 15¢ vd. an clegant black and | | At 19e pair. ; special 25¢ ea. , l_-adiés’ Belts. | $c and sold at. Bc Ladiesqlose. They sold for 25c pair, black hose, | with lace effect, but we are closing cut to | them out at. Se pair % belts, nne'q'uggf, | ot L2 Notions. ; peau_de sole and ted back plece rfecting back, large tyles 125; cut to....50c¢ —_— Hose supporters, 200 pairs for ladies N T and misses, plain or fancy elastic; 2 reg. 15c; cut to. .. De Ladies’ Neckwear. primgl g iy c S AN Ssck oy Plam e | fine quality; reg. price 15c each; cut Neckwear at haif prices; a samp e e each € « mer neck pleces, con Linen cuffs, 4-ply, extra fine quality; worth 15¢ pair; cut to 2%%¢ pair Dress shields, silk, good as those usually sold at %c; sizes 2 and 3; on @ | sale spectmymtil 30,0l i7c @ cials From Our B Dept. Medicine Cabinet, 85¢. Made of hard wood, 12x20x6 inches deep, nicely finished. Finer grades | in golden oak up to.... Crokino’e Board, 75¢. Combination Crokinole, Chess and ChecKer Board, size 25 inches diam- eter, beautifully finished. On sale Spe ook @ cale While they last speclal this week......... RER 75¢ Hammocks, 50c. | Cutlery. Temmocies e 2 e Teekbe | Goodell Co. rosewood handle Car- ks T5¢ ver mall e LTl 65¢ | John Russell & Co. 20 Carver and Fork stag handle S | 3 ¢ 3 | J. Ward & Co. Tal ble Knives.... 45¢ set of 6 cut to. 5 De Te T m sale at.$2.45 n frame o CANADIAN YACHT BEATS | AMERICAN CHALLENGER | Final Race for the Seawsznhka Cup Results in Decisfve Victory for ‘Defender. Music at the Park. owing programme will be ren- Golden Gate Park Band this PART I ar-Spangled Banner.” ng. “‘Gallant Boys In B GUARDSMEN MARCH L Continued From Page 21, Column 6. command of the party, said to- | night: “I sent the boys over the hill and took the flank alone. The firing commenced and I saw my men running back minus two or three. I ran at once to tie team land sent word back for help. { Then I returned to the mine and the remnant of my detachment. You know the rest.” Will Rutherford declined to | lead a band of volunteers to the | place where his brother’s body lay, as he felt that the harm was done and that more deaths might { result. William Burgess, a young iattomey of Placerville, is ready | for more fight and will take part in the battle to-day. The whole community is up in | arms. The men are furious with rage and are burning to tear the murderous outlaws to pieces. There will be no prisoners taken at all events.. The plan of attack as already formulated wiil prove effectual. The cordon will ad- vance at daylight very cautiously up the hill and on all sides. Skir- mish order will be maintained. The summit and the three sides of the hill are thick witn brush. A man hidden in the under- growth cannot be seen three feet away. Consequently the outlaws are bound to get some oue. Terrible Fight Is Scheduled for the Dawn It will be impossible for the convicts, single or combined, to get away if they are still there, as is generally understood. Cap- tain Swisler will lead the militia. Sheriff Bosquit heard of the | fight when returning from a day | of fruitless travel and departed | for the scene of action. As chief | peace officer of El Dorado { County he will command the i, Shafter r!;)wzri | forces in battle. He will remain 8 The 1l on the Cl issiger | = M P : a3 Bira “orn | awake all night and be in at the . the Thorella,- the med by D . Rossbrook, o | finish. s Bl s s n from “La Boheme.....Puceini | | The greatest satisfaction is felt a ok cup red by the 1 PART 1. * W7 Sl < Cang b R tromn s g o< Techatowakt that Seavis, the blood-thirsty ne- . ; clection, “A~ Night i New | gro, is in the crowd of convicts gula 1 was Kind to | e Sk Brooks | & 7 from ““The Chaperons” (new) t wag blow> ces of Dronizett] “Am an nd-at the The Kolutoo..had a | shi- twe a ! crossing. the line | i, Sl e i et Californians in New York. it until’ the vachts | ~SEW YORK, Aug. 1—From San Fran. F. Kohl, L. Tozer, at the Hol- co—C. elvidere; B. Hunt, at the Manhattan ". Kohler .at the Broadway Central; Thl Jr., at the Victoria. From Los Angeles—M A. Leuth, Mrs. A. Leuth, at the Westminster. & her past the s and sixtee nge for the cup frem i Corinthian. Yacht ESTED ON LARCENY CHARGE.—T. ployed ae assistant engineer by =1 the [ that the Pa ware and Steel Company, was es Club will chal- night by Detectives Ryan and ge - @ Bear Yacht | Tavlor and his name entered on the detinue ¢ Bt Kook at the City Prison. It Is alieged Paul will also challenge for- | been stealing from the frm f 2 A __ANVERTISEMENTS. aemcuczenczenenen. meWILEY B. ALLEN SPECIALISTS N PIANOS v QUALITY 931~933 MARK LOOK UP! vant anything Bigh-class—don’t-look down. If you want high in- a. piano, don’t expegt to get it at a low price. Quality is ex- ve because it takes 'money and labor to make it. It’s far more #i°10 buy,a good piaho at a proportionately good price than a “cheap” one at-a “cheap” price. In.a good piano you get quality. Ia 4 cheap .piano you.get neither quality nor satisfactory service. fy in stock over a score of pfanos of excellent .construction and tone quality. Our leading lifics drg the Everett, Steck; Hardman, Packard, Ludwig and Conover Pianos. ; You are welcome, to our liberal and casy terms., ——————— -~ 931-933 Market Street ’ -~ . - 'SAN FRANCISCO. . Branch, corner Ninth and Broadway, Oaklan'clv Cal. bk onoNORONeN Witmark | -Godfrey : Miss Goerlich, Miss M. Goerlich, at | | TELEGRAPH NEWS, | SANTA ROSA, Aug. L.—The People’s Church of this city will celebrate its fitth anniversary | to-morrow” with appropriate ceremonics. The | church s one of the iiberal denominations of the coast and the only ome of its kind in Northern California. WOODLAND, Aug. 1.—At a meeting of the executive committee of the Yolo County ex-. i hibit at the St. Louls Exposition held this I"afterncon, Major Barry submitted an interest; ing report showing that he bas already made | duplicate collections of a eplendid exhibit of Yolo County products. T. JOHNE, N. F., Aug. 1.—The Canadian rernment expedition organized to explorc Judson Bay In the sealer Neptune consists of | forty persons, fifteen of whom are scientists. | A pariy of twenty-five of the ship's company will remain one vear, if not longer, in the re- gion 1o be exvlored. R i Torce of Habit With a Cow. The force of habit was very forclbly il- lustrated by an incident recently at the | pumping station of the water works at Enid. A tank standing just outside the building is kept full of water for the ac- commodation of passersby and the neigh- borhood stock. A cow accustomed to drink at this tank came for her morning drink. The valley was covered with wa- ter and stood within two or three inches of the top of the tank, but the cow went over the waste of waters to the tank. | Twice she stuck in the mud and appeared to be in danger of drowning, but by per- | severance she finally reached the objec- tive point. After drinking long and copl- ously she turned about and slowly made her way to land, apparently satisfied that ! she had done the only available thing to find water.~Enid (O. T.) Eagle. ———— Furnishing for Royal Visitors. When a King and Queen honor a sub- ject by a visit the subject has to pay for the compliment, and when the Duke of Buccleuch, who placed Dalkeith Palace at | the disposal of their Majesties during | thelr visit to Edinburgh has settied the | bill he will probably feel that the accounts of the cousins are balanced. (Kings and Dukes are always ‘‘cousins.”’) For, ac- | cording to the etiquette which governs such visits, every article of furniture in the royal apartments must be brand new. There must not be even a windéw cur- tain in the rooms which bas not come straight from the shop.—London Letter, —————— Money in Kansas Fields. It is estimated that during harvest time not less than 25,000 men from the East are emploved in the Kansas fields. They earn an average of $2 a day, making the wages paid out to Eastern men about $0,000 a day. As the harvest lasts from two to three weeks the total amount pald {n wages to out-of-State men is between ) $600.000 and $1.000,000. 1t is estimated that ! & third of this amount is sent away. in money orders, that one-third is carried away by the men and that the ether third ie spent by the men in Kansas.—New York Evening Post. proc s S ATTEMPTS SUICIDE WITH A RAZOR.— | Mre, ‘Annie Strean, wife of a.carpenter resid- * ing ‘al Seventh Lankton streets. tried o end her life yesterday afternoon by cutting herself on the wrist with a razor. - She was re. moved to the Emergency Hospital, where her woynd was dressed. The woman Eoon recov- ered from the effccts of the gash. | INTO AN AMBUSH Two Are Killed and One Fatally Wounded in Battle Near Placerville. T who are to die to-morrow. morn- ing. Every one wants to assist. All along the road the people are congratulating each other that a part of the dangerous gang is rounded up. For six days the country people have been trem- bling in fear of a visit from the outlaws. The country about Grand Vic- tory mine is not so rough or so thinly populated as that in the Lotus and Webber Creek dis- trict, from which the convicts have recently come. They have undoubtedly traveled many and many a weary mile, for all reports to-day ‘indicated that they were able to drop. From the top of the hill above the mine the convicts have seen the militiamen a long distance away. That the outlaws did not fly is evidence that they could go no further. Tt is thought that the rifle ammunition of the despera- does gave out, and for that reason they used their revolvers for the last volley while they fled over | the hill. Wounded Man Brought Into Placerville PLACERVILLE, Aug. 2, 1 2 a. m—A. W. Gill, the wounded ! member of the militia, has just been brought in. He has been taken to the Carey house. Miss Nettie Ball, his sweetheart, is | nursing him. She belongs to Pla- cerville. The latest report from the front is that the convicts are surrounded on a hill and cannot get away. Deaf Farmer Is Killed by Fosse Member PLACERVILLE, Aug. 2. At 2 o’clock this morning it was learned that a man named Will Springer, who joined in the hunt to-night for the convicts, was accidentally killed by William Blake, one of the posse. Blake | met Springer in the vicinity of g the Grand Victory mine, a short distance from the scene of the fight. Blake called upon Springer to halt. Springer, it is learned, was slightly deaf. He failed to hear the order of Blake and Blake fired, killing Springer. e —————— DR. PIERCE'S MEMEDIES, THE FIRST STEP Of the child is an event in the mother’s life. How proud she feels when the attempt to walk is begun so early as to evidence childish courage and “sturdy strength. Such pride should be enjoyed by every mother. But it often happens tHat the child is timid, weak and deficient in vitality, and clings to the mother's arms with no desire to walk or play. Mothers lhonltr learn that to have strong chil- dren they must them- selves be strong, for the child’s strength is the gift of the mother. . The use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription by nt mothers gives them health and strength to ive their chil- dren. It nour- ishes the nerves, strengthens the body and ives great muscular strength and elasticity, so that the baby's advent is practically painless. 1 have been using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre. scription, and can say it is just - T 1 e, and can cheerluity vea oy s writes Mrs. Victor J. Hadin, of ILeonardvilie, Riley Co., Kansas. 1 began taking it just two months before baby came and was greaily bene- fited ? its use. The doctor who attended me said 1 did about as well as any oue he had seen (as T was sick only about three hours), und also that your ‘ Favorite Prescription ® was ' the one patent medicine’ which he did have faith in. *"* We now have a darling baby boy, strong and health ;;)vua eighed nise pounds' when bors (Ju . During this month h i o one-balf pounds " ¢/ 78 Eeined “Favorite Prescription” makes weak women strong, sick women well. Accept no substitute for the medicine which works wonders for weak women. The Peo‘g]::k Common Sense Medical Adviser, a containing 1008 pages, is Fven away. Send 21 one-cent stamps for expense of mailing on/y, for the book in paper covers, or -31r stamps for the volume bound in cloth. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. v. Uniform price and qualit- make them easy to buy, an moneyback makes them sa — Schilling’s Best — at yo. grocers. s 2. — | MEN OF ¢ FORMER GOVERNOR IsAAC SHARP OF KANSAS SAAC SHARP, ex-Governor of Kansas, rmrg Washington, D. C., 1227 I street, N. E., writes: 1 ““I can earnestly recommend your Peruna as an excellent tonic. Its rep- utation as a cure for catarrh is firm- | ly established by my friends who have | been benefited by its use, and the public should know of its great cura- | tive qualities.”’---Isaac Sharp. Congressman Powers from Vermont. | Congressman H. Henry Powers of Ver- | mont writes from Morrisville, Vt.: | *Peruna I have used in my family with success. I can recommend it as an excel- lent family remedy, and very good for | coughs, colds and catarrhal affections.”’— H. Henry Powers. Register of Treasury Judson W. Lyons _Hon. Judson W. Lyons, Register of the United States Treasury, in a letter from | Washington, D. C., says: “l find Peruna to be an excellent rem- edy for the catarrhal affections of spring and summer, and those who suffer from depression from the heat of summer will find no remedy the equal of Peruna.’'— | Judson W. Lyons. Senator Butler from South Carofina. Senator M. C. Butler, United States Sen- | ator from South Carolina, two terms, writes from Washington, D. C., the fol- | lowing: “I can recommend Peruna for dyspepsia | and stomach trouble. I have been using ! your medicine for a short perlod, and I feel very much relieved. It is indeed a | wonderful medicine, and besides a great | tonfe.—~M. C. Butler. i John L. Burnett, member of Congress, | Seventh Alabama District, writes: | *“I take pleasure in testifying to the | merits. of your Peruna. At the solicita- tion of a friend my wife used it, and it improved her condition generally. It is (a remarkable remedy. I can cheerfully ADVERTISEMENTS. NATIONAL FAME “Pe-ru-na. Lucien Young, commander of the boat “Hist” during the battle of tiago, was specially mentioned by Admiral Sampson for_his gallantry. In a’recent letter from Washington, D. C., Be says: ““The curative qualities of Peruna as a cure for catarrh have been fully established by the use of the same most successfully by many of my acquaintances, and | can recommend any one who is so afflicted to try it."" - — Lucien Young. & It is a well- known fact that the-gun- ) boat “Hist” was more effettive in e stroying the torpedo destroyers .of the Spanish fleet than any other vessel. 0 Congressman Sparkman from Florida recommend Peruna as a good, subsunnal, Congressman §. M. Sparkman, from un- tonic and a very good catarrh remedy."—|pimpa Fia., writes John L. Burnett. v = a « Congress from North Carolina, in a re-|lonie ang 4 very effec cent letter to The Peruna Medicine Com- a: : Men of prominence all over the United States are recommending Pe- runa. Over fifty members of Con- gress have written their indorsement of it. Scores of other government officials speak in high praise- of it. Thousands of people in the humbler walks of life rely upon it as a family medicine. Send for frae book of tes- timonials. As a systemic catarrh remedy Peruna eradicates catarrh from the system. wher- ever it may be located. It cares catarrh of the stomach or bowels with the same certainty as catarrh of the head. If you do not derive prompt-and satis- factory results from th se of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, ‘giving a full statement of your case, and he wiil be pleased to give you bis valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President.of The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, Ohio. ““I cheerfuily jein my friend Sena- tor Pritchard in commending Peruna as a very effective remedy for coughs, colds and catarrhal troubles. Many of my friends have used it with excel- lent results.”’— Spencer Blackburn. Congressman Brookshire from Indiana Congressman E. V. Brookshire, from Indiana. in_a recent letter from Wash- ington, D. C., say: “From what my friends say, Peruna is a good tonic and a safe catarrh cur E. V. Brookshire. Senator Maliory from Florida. United States Senator Stephen R. Mal- lory from Florida, in a recent letter writ- ten from Pensacola, Fla., says the fol- lowi ng: have used your exceilent remedy, Peruna, and can recommend it both as a tonic and a safe catarrh remedy.”— Stephen R. Mallory. SALVINT'S SHORT AMERICAN TOUR, {Great Tragedian Will | Give but Thirty Per- | formances. e NEW YORK, Aug. 1—Miss Eleanor obson’'s managers have secured for her use the coming season “La Villlere” and the Engilsh society drama which Mrs. Humphry Ward and Louls H. Parker have written for her, besides a play by | Israel Zangwill, which {s in substance a dramatization of his story, “‘Merely Mary Ann.” Senor Tomasso Salvini will make an | American tour of thirty performances next spring in a repertolre including “Othello,” “King Lear,” “Ingomar” and “La Mort Civile,” Miss Robson being jointly starred with Salvini, whose lines will be in Itallan. The entire supporting company wili use English, as was the case in Salvini's former American tours. Salvini will give four performances a week and his engagements will be con- fined to the larger clties. | Mme. Dusé will return to this country, | but not until the season following this. a-d there is a similar arrangement with Mme. Rejane. Miss Bessie Abbott, the soprano of the Paris Opera, will probably 1 be presented to the American public next season in English opera, though the pre- | cise date for the opening of her American | tour has not yet been definitely decided. | BERLIN, Aug. lL.—Herman Sudermann bas finished his play *‘Socrates and His Hotspur Companfon.” The first produc- tion will be given at the Lessing Theater in October. The play treats of the move- ment of 1848, showing how the tempestu- | ous aspirations for liberty of that period | were transformed into the present day lberalism. Conreld, director of the New York Met. ropolitan Opera-house, has contracted with Mme. Gadski to appear as Brunn- hilde in addition to the previous roles for which she was engaged. Edith Walker of the Vienna Court Opera, whom Conreid engaged for Wagnerian roles, is an Amer- ican woman, who made her debut at the Royal Opera in Berlin several years ago. o | SOME INCOMES THAT REACH HUGE FIGURES Those of Rockefeller and Beit Beat by Far That of Any Monarch. It is stated in London that the Alma- nack Hachette, a s re=ch publication, has been confiscuted in St. Petersburg Le- cause of its statemen‘ giving the _in- comes of the leading European monarcas. If the Almanack’'s data be true the Czar draws from his countless millions of sub- jects £16 4s a minute, £072 an hour, £3,- 328 a day, £8514.720 a vear. | Fabulous as this ¢ m appears, and far asitis: -dof any other European ruler, it does not give him an income nearly equal to that of John D. Rockefeller, the American multt-millionaire, or the South African magnate, Alfred Beit. Both are stated to be equally rich. Their incomes are, approximately: £30 a minute, £1200 an hour, £28,800 a day, £10512,000 a year. There are dozers of Ar rican million- alres who co. 4 Lroduce millfons in hard cash far more ~3ily than the Czar of Russia. Thus Mr. Rockefcller's fortune {s estimated at £60,000.000, his holding in the Standard Oil Company alone—which many would be gl. . to buy—amounting to £10,£00,000. Russell Sage, the millionaire broker of New York, Is worth £20000000. and George J. Gould £16.000.00. On the whole the American kings cf finance receive far larger Incomes than royal rulers on this side of the Atlantic, as tie fcllowing list shows: John D. Reckefeller, £10,512.000; [ Italy £571,600 King =dward, - £470:000; Andrew Carnegle, £5,000,000; Russell Sage, | King of Spain, £28600.—New York Com- £1,800,000: W. A. Clark, the copper king, | mercial. £1§0,000; George J. Gould, £1,200000; J. ——e——— Pierpont Morgan_ £1,000,000. NEW YORK, Aug. 1S hoasand mors The six European mona receiving | aliens entered the United hrough “this the largest incomes are: £8,- | port last month an ng the same month 514720; Sultan of ’r'ume A Em- X'%,l);k ;;‘:’m,l:‘e“‘w:; e hF,;’\v’-‘r w:.:‘ peror of Germany, <£ g of | und 28,000 in the same month in 1901, ADVERBTISEMENTS. School Buttons Free URING the past week we have given away thousands of: buttons to school children each one procuring a button for his or her school. s Several people have asked. us our reasons. The first and. foremost reason is: We want every boy to know where S. N. Wood & Co.’s store is located- and we want him to ses_fur immense Juvenile Department -where ‘we .carry - the finest and largest line of boys™ and. youths’ clothing shown on ‘this coast. We think the boy has some say as Jto where his clothes are purchased. Most. boys will tell their parents about our store. : ‘We will continue to give out the buttons next week. e o We have them for the Primary, Grammar, Evening:-and High Public Schools. : = R e oy [ NWOOD 740 Market Street