The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 6, 1904, Page 33

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, ARCH 6, 1904 ADVERTISEMENTS. — The WHITE HOUS ~ > S Dressmaking Announcement. I'he above department is prepared to fur- on short noticz, Gowns for both day ' ear. A most complete line of k :n, Cotton and Woolen ma- .nq \‘hown with an CXCCPUOH- fl velities : terials is now Lace Depagn_léfit Pf'v\l n designsz. Skirts st pattern. They aind are shown in -_'t ctive Repousse, effects. Prices range from ......... . $25.00 to $75.00 ROIDER[ES S*ock is complete in every =———————————==(etail and contains many Aliovers with sets to match in Swiss, 1 Car and Lawn; also a large line of “\nd Point Venise combinations in galons ide 1d¢€ nd Bretonne e S S A S S SO ) NEWEST LACES A superb collection of =———————=—————Lierre. Repousse, Oriental, h Poht Poim de Gaze in bands, Gal- A full line of Allover ists in all th’ popular makes. Venise, o fo Lace NECK \’EAR Strictly up-to-date ideas in —_— Sro l\s of washable materials, enue Bows, Collar and mas. hand embroidered sand Top Collars in lawn a SPECI AL Mull Ties, embroidered and hem- =——=—==—==—= stitched; Lace Ends, printed and n, 60c. gular price $1.00. Whlte Washable Novelties. Persian and Victoria Lawns, Chiffon Finish, French Organdies, amines, Heavy Coarse Mesh Linen for , Plain and Fancy Linens. s’ Linen, in all grades. ... ....40¢ upward sk,specially attractive for waists, 40¢ upward Cloth, new patterns........75¢ upward , various attractive designs....30¢ upward Wil G S R n Lawns, Mull Et Cor.PosT & Kearny 373. —s ity in damaging a war | CALEDONIANS ASSEMBLE .ir was recently shown | ROUND FESTIVE tests mede in Austria. The ex- ers anchored a balloon at a BOARD | Enjoyable Time Spent in Scottish Hall at the First of a Series of Stag Parties. The first of a series of stag parties i to be given this year by the officers of | the Caledonian Club to the members held in Scottish Hall on Friday .lnzh! after the business meeting. The " | hall was crowded and three or four ‘vhours were thoroughly enjoyed in | song, music, speech and dance. Chief A. M. Macpherson presided and kept | the fun from flagging. The literary committee, headed by First Chieftain McGregor, had charge of the refresh- ment tables. 4 not been given the distance, It required twen- | even and not until the sixty- h ry to disable it ty-two shots to find the range, approximately | Among those that contributed to the | success of the event were Pipers Lind- | ;say, Murray, Burnett, Kenzie, A. Ross, | ! E. Ross, James R. Watson, Andrew | McNair, Horace Cookson, Hugh Wil- Scotchman IS GROWING FAST | liamson, Richard Barlowe, | McDonald and Alexander | with songs; Kenneth Morrison Professor Fairgrieve and James Cameron with instrumental | solos; N. F. McPhee with humorous remarks; Allan McNeill and D. R. McNeill with speeches. Toasts to the | ex-chiefs, Superintendent John Mc- Laren of Golden Gate Park, Chief B | Macpherson and First Chieftain S. McGregor, were proposed and re- sponded to. Sprigs of heather were presented to the members. —_———— Charged With Burglary. F. E, Morgan, ex-soldier, was arrested | vesterday by Detectives O'Dea and He will be in full bloom 2 on March 12th. ] - gk 3 D nt’ forget » attend the BiG OPENING MARCH 12th. | booked at the City Prison on a charge | of burglary. He is accused of break- 1035 Mission street, on January 16, | 1903, and stealing four suits of clothes, | two overcoats and 4 gold watch and chain. He left the city at that time, | but returned a few days ago. The po- ET =5arm_v he embezzled moneys belonging 1009 MARK to two officers who are at present in the Philippines. { ———— e ——— Nealon Pleads Guilty. | Michael Nealon | Judge Dunne yesterday to plead to the | charge of assault by means and force | likely to produce great bodily injury. He was allowed to plead guilty to sim- ple assault and was ordered to appear for sentence on March 10. Nealon | was one of the four men arrested for severely beating Thomas J. Jordan, a newspaper man, on January 7, 1903, owing to his criticisms of the sport of coursing. —————— Some men marry because it is cheaper to keep a wife than a ser- vant He is the largest Scotch- man in the world. DIRE CTORY UF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. izlalogue and Frice Lists mailed cn Appuon.hm. FRESH AND SALT MEATS. iAS' BOYES & CO. ‘mw‘ng Hutchers. 108 ¢ ELLIS, Phone Main 1718, ‘PRINTER. 611 Sausowe st., 5. F. P L C. EDGHES, Mulcahy and Policeman Chapelle and | ing into the room of Philip G. Kratz, | lice say that while Morgan was in the | appeared before | wM.mmmw}UTTLE BROWN BURGLAR | DOES INLP_ERFECT WORK |Shrewdly Plans and Burglary is one of the thriving local ies to which the enterprising se has turned his attention and his deft hand. Policeman to whom the tricks of the trade are as an open v that the job performed Makimishi in the boarding- ' house of his countrywoman, Mrs. Y. Simoto, at 465 Jessie street last Thurs- night was almost artistic enough to be of high caste Caucasian execu- tion. The only defect in Makimishi's work was neglect to completely cover his tracks and destroy the materfal evidence of his guilt, but that is an oversight of which the most careful and experienced American practition- ers metimes guilty, the police- man s Makimishi was one of Mrs. Simoto's boarders and the prosecution alleges that he took advantage of ‘the facili- thus afforded him to plan and te e robbery of which he stood accused before Judge Con- exec lan. The door of the landlady's boudoir and the lid of her trunk were securely locked when the thief entered the room by means of a and with the aid of a similar device he opened the trunk and abstracted therefrom the sum of $150 in gold and silver coins and paper currency. Then he relocked both box and door and quietly departed with his plunder and not for quite a while did Mrs. Simoto learn of her less. Polic 1 Small investigated the robbery and his suspicion turned to Makimishi, but that person could not be found. So the policeman engaged a \Oux-‘h of small Japanese boys to ; Makimishi and on Friday he found his man in Chinatown and ar- rested him. On the prisoner's person were found duplicate keys to Mrs. Simoto’s room and trunk, also $91 in hard money and $6 in bills, which the lady positively identified as her prop- erty. After hearing all the foregoing facts Judge Conlan continued the case till Tuesday. duplicate key . Lulu Simpson married one Miller on June 16, 1901, at Paso Robles and without undergoing the legal prelimi- nary of being divorced she was wedded to William F. Eichler last Monday in this city. She thus committed bigamy, but as Mr. Miller cannot be found to clinch a conviction she is likely to go unpunished for that offense. All this was developed yesterday be- fore Judge Fritz. Lulu, who is under 18 years of age, was arrested about a week ago and charged with vagrancy by a policeman that found her in a Barbary Coast dance ha nd while the charge was pending Eichler went to the front and married her. Then her mother, who lives in Salinas Coun- ty, was heard from to the effect that the young woman was ineligible to en- r matrimony with reasons- , that she was under legal age; second, that she had never been divorced from Miller. Police in- quiry at Lulu's home. fully corrobo- rated the mother’'s assertions. Clerk Henderson of San Luis Obispo County said his records show the marriage to Miller and contain no entry of a di- vorce. Lulu is still in custody, but her dis- missal seems inevitable. Eichler wants to have the vagrancy and bigamy proceedings quashed and Lulu awarded to his protectorship and she is perfectly willing to regard her latest wedding as binding. For stealing John O'Donnell’'s watch ADVERTISEMENTS. SLEEP IS PRICELESS. But It Can Be Obtained by Simple Methods. Are you a hard worker? Are you overcome with fatigue at the end of each day’s labor and instead of retir- ing to bed with a feeling of satisfac- tion at the prospect of a night's re- pose do you wait the hour of bedtime with dread and shrinking? Is it your unhappy lot to be awaken- ed every night, just after you have Enterprise, but Fails to Hide Trail. and; . Is Caught With Plunder on His Person ichler for two | dropped off to sleep, by an intense, un- controllable, itching of the rectum? Do you then endeavor to relieve the | sensation by scratching so desperately that the skin becomes raw and lacer- ated and you finally sink into the sleep of exhaustion? If so, yo do not need to be told that you are afflicted with itching piles. You have probably tried every rem- edy you could hear of, with but tem- porary relief, if any, and have con- cluded there was nothing left for you but to drag out a miserable existence. As a drowning man grasps at a straw, so should you eagerly devour the words of W.. O. Milbury, 70 Pearl street, Reading, Mass.: “I.am pleased to state that I bought one §0-cent box of Pyramid Pile. Cure at the drug store and used about one- halif of it, and it not only cured me of itching piles, but also of constipation, ! a trouble of about fifteen years’ stand- |ing. I have tried almost everything | without any lasting benefit, but I can honestly and truthfully state that | Pyramid Pile Cure has entirely cured | me, as I have had no return of that | terrible itching, which used to keep me awake by the hour, night after night. If the old trouble should ever return I will know just what to do, but I guess it won't, for it is now six or seven months since I first used this wonderful remedy.” We vouch for the authenticity of this testimonial, and, as Mr. Milbury found reliefanda cure, S0 you may also. Do not delay, but buy a box and try it to-night and do not allow any dealer | to sell you “something just as good.” { You will do well to write Pyramid Drug Co., Marshall, Mich., for their little book on the causes and cure of | piles, which is sent free for the ask- | ing. INCOMPARABLE, MAGNIFICENT ‘White Touring Cars for Rent. ‘Will Sell if You Insist. Telephope South 305. WHITL GARAGE, Market and Franklin Streets. l Neatly Executes Hisi | Frank Quesner was sentenced to six | months’ imprisonment by Judge Mo- | gan. | . . { Morris Auerbach, who has attained | police notice through his penchant for accosting strangers and abusing them i orally, was caught performing his act Friday evening on Point Lobos avenue, | far from his usual haunts, dnd yester- | day morning Judge Mogan ve him three months to ventilate his vitupera- | tion in the County Jail. | o e Two pleas for leniency in behalf of | as many youthful lawbreakers as- cended to the bench of Cabaniss. John H. O'Connor, aged 19, was convicted of having obtained goods by falsely representing that he was an employe of Jepson Bros., whip manufacturers. His petition for mercy might have been more successful if the court had not remembered that a few months ago he worked an exactly similar game by naming Nathan Dohrmann & Co. as his employers. At that time he and his mother begged tearfully that he be given another chance and he was given it. As the lad’'s attor- ney claimed that he was mentally un- sound the court has passed him up to | the Lunacy Commission. | Grand larceny was the charge against William Connelly, aged 21, ac- cused of stealing anvils from the Wil- merding School. William asked per- mission to plead guilty to petty lar- ceny, but as he had been convicted of the minor offense on a previous occa- sion " his request was firmly declined and the case continued. o el e Politics figures in the complaint of M. Jasper McDonald against William Bell and threatenidg to kill is the charge on hearing before Judge Ca- baniss. McDonald was a member of | the Board of Park Commissioners when that body decided it had no fur- ther need of Bell's services as a paint- er, and Bell ascribed his removal to McDonald's influence. So when Mc- Donald was retired from the board Bell exulted, and when the two men met on the street a few days ago the painter uttered remarks that led to his arrest. McDonald alleges that Bell among other offensive things: “Now we are on terms of equality, and I have a good mind to cut your throat. You cut my throat, and now Mayor Schmitz has cut yours.” Mr. Forbes a friend of McDonald, intervened be- fore Bell could execute his cutting; threat, if its execution had ever been seriously intended, and the arrest was made. i Judge Cabaniss continued the case for a week. Bell is active in Butche: town politics and once was a candi- date for, the State Senate. o sk Mrs. Mary Davis informed Judgs Cabaniss that W. F. Burke had mali- ciously cut down some carpets which she had just washed ‘and suspended from a clothesline to d@ry, and that he had added insult to injury by Lalling her a murderess. W. F. Burke informed Judge Ca-‘ baniss that Mrs. Mary Davis had hung| her soggy carpets in such a way that ! soiled water dripped from them upon his freshly laundered linen and that when he protested she sneeringly re- marked that none of his children looked in the least like him, thereby insinuating that they were not his children at all. | The parties are separate occupants of a tenement at 436% Sixth street and their mutual antipathy is said to be | said, 231 Volumes in AllL 25 Volumes Ninth Edition. 5 Volumes American Additions. 1 Volume Guide to Systematic Readings of the Whole Work. J Secures This Entire Set of the New 20th Century Edition You can pay the balance at the rate of only 1l0ca day for a short time. Times Are tlrrmg' Keep Posted! 31 Massive Volumes. Weight Over 200 Pounds ADVERTISEMENTS. e e The theater of the world contains many things of inter- est nowadays. Another war has arisen which threatens to change the aspect of the Far East. The politics of England are undergoing upheaval. The United States is taking more and more part in world affairs; is preparing to dig the Pan- ama Canal; and is facing another political struggle. In chemistry, surgery, inventions, discoveries and every line of human research and endeavor startling changes are being made. This means that the successful man of to-day must keep posted on world affairs. He can do this only by tracing pres- ent results to past causes and reading around his subject. The one great reference library for his needs is, of course, The Encyclopaedia Britannica! It is the one comprehensive work which gives both the earliest and the latest word on EVERY subject. Take, for example, the Russo-Japanese war. What an array of important topics BRITANNICA immediately pre- sents to the observant reader! Here you find the ablest ar- ticles and the finest maps of Russia, Japan, Korea, Man- churia, China and Siberia, together with the latest phases of . warfare, torpedoes, Maxim guns, cruisers, battleships, trans- ports, heliographs, smokeless powder, the Red Cross and kin- dred topics. These articles are Written by Authorities! And may be relied upon to maintain the high :tandard of merit® in the new Twentieth Century Edition of the Ency- clopaedia Britannica. The same may be said of the multiplicity of subjects dealing with political affairs and with recent progress and opinions. This is pre-eminently the year to study politics; and BRITANNICA alone will give complete and impartial studies of every party and creed since the art of law making and changing began. If BRITANNICA has been found a necessity in many thousand homes since the present book distribution began, how much more is this true in the present stirring times? You will make no mistake if you get it now, for the Price Will Soon Advance! On account of the increased cost of materials and labor the price of this Encyclopaedia must be advanced at an early date. We have, however, arranged that this increase in price shall not. go into effect until the present printing is ex- hausted. But prompt action is needed to obtain a set on the pres- ent advantageous terms. Cut out the INQUIRY COUPON before you lay aside this paper, and send it AT ONCE. WHAT IS SAID OF IT: “It is without a peer in the whole noble army of encyclopae- dias”—LYMAN ABBOTT, D. D. “The Em’sc)nnned)a Britannica of PROF. DAVID SWIN “If all other boolu were destroyed. world would lose but little of its information. BOOKCASE FREE A limited number of Bookcases will he given fres of charge to San Francisco Call readers who respond promptly. The Coupon below will be known as the Bookcase Coupon and should be mailed at omce. 58 Cut Out and Mail This Coupon To-Day For Particulars of Our Great Offer to Call Readers. 3—6—04. The American Newspaper Association. Parrott Bullding, San Francisce, Cal. is king its tribe."= the Bible excepted SPURGEO:! the Please send me free of charge sample pages and full particulars of your Encyclopaedia offer (Bookcase Cou- pon). TERHIE oy vse sB s s s SN oo S8 SR N e c e nle TR ads T o0 s s COMBEY <o 2o v aaio ragae R0 o o 4o SAN FRANCISCO CALL BUREAU Towrn . fierce and of long standing. Mrs. Da- vis was tried and acquitted several years ago on a charge of having cures a divorce from her dissolute caused the death of Mrs. Klein and mother and can provide another home her child, who were killed by an ex- | for the little one. i ploding lamp. It was this mpme“[; Mrs. Fontana was stupidly drunk and that probably prompted Burke to call | her child was crying bitterly when a Mrs. Davis a murderess. { policeman met them last Thursday After hearing both sides of the night on the San Bruno road, miles case Judge Cabaniss decided that the away from their home near the water honors were about even and ordered | front.” Cold rain had been falling stead- a dismissal. ily for hours and the garments of the woman and the little one were satur- ated. When taken to the police sta- ticn the mother refused to disclose her jdentity, but the following morning Judge Mogan compelled her to tell who she was. Then the case was continued she will be kept until her father se- . e e The two Rooney brothers peddle fruit in a single wagon, and so closely do they resemble each other in perscnal appearance that the naked eye expe- riences difficulty in determining which one of them is James and which one till yesterday, when the husband and father, an industrious mechanic, ap- peared in court and stated that his wife was a hopeless inebriate and that for the sake of the child he had de- cided to divorce her. The Judge com- mended his resolution and allowed the unfortunate woman tQ depart. —_—e———— MORE GRADING BEING DONE WITHOUT PERMIT roadway, of Twenty-sixth street, tween Diamond and Douglass, below the proper level. It was ascertained that no permit had been issued for the grading of the street. The workmen were taking rock from the middle of the street, which is now thirty inches below the official level. The ‘police’ were directéd to forthwith put a stop to the grading operations. Officer Beach Informed the workmen that he would arrest any one who persisted in grading, as he had-done in the case of John Kelso and four workmen, whom he arrested for grading without a permit on Lom- bard and Montgomery streets. be- Complaint was filed yesterday in the office of the Board of Public Works by J. M. Manning of 2711 Bush street that certain parties were grading the John. At least that is what a police- AD7ERTISEMENTS, . man yesterday told Judge Mogan, be- fore whom James was accused of ply- ing his calling without a license. The policeman also opined that the two Rooneys had only one legal permit be- tween them and alternately used it when occasion demanded. Each of | them had been overhauled before, but not until Friday did the asked for license fail to materialize. James was unable to produce when requested to show his warrant for hawking cranges. “James, you must get a license if you intend to peddle fruit,” said the o 71//:;‘ . court. “This two-Dromios business | cannot be worked with impunity any longer, for the argus eye| of the police is fixed on you and your brother, and you might as well suc- cumb to the inevitable.” James promised to equip himself with a license forthwith, and he was allowed to go free. / ! ol a ) George Guerin and Frank Carroll, who stood up and robbed a man named Joyce ore night last week on Bryant street, were held to answer to the Su- | perior Court by Judge Mogan, with | bail for each fixed at $4000. John W. Aiker, a pantryman aboard the river! steamer Constance, who entered state- rooms with evidently dishonest intent, was also held to answer, the bail in his case being set at $2000. o e Mrs. Maria Flores exhibited to Judge Mogan a locket containing a portrait | of her 17-year-old son and also a like- ness of Miss Labrada Morales, who is | accused of having enticed the youth to | abandon the maternal roof at 217 Val- | lejo street and dwell with her on Hinck- ley street. Miss Morales has been ar- | rested on a charge of vagrancy sworn to by Mrs.’ Ficres, who confessed that her motive was to sever the illicit re- lationship between her son and the de- fendant. As the boy was not present to explain his conduct the case was continued till his testimony can be ob- tained. . e.ow Three-year-old Olive, Fontana has been sent to the Infant Shelter, where [mmense Cui in Carpets While they last we will put on sale 6 good selling patterns of 10 wire Tap- estry Carpet, laid and lined for 80c Get in line before they are gone. In every other department our prices are equally low. ‘We didn’t locate ourselves at 1017 -Mission street, out of the “sky-rent” location, and cut down our expense ac- count, buy furniture by the.carload for cash, getting every discount, to be un- dersold. @We located here for your benefit. The benefits of our location are in our price list. Every day is bar- gain day with us. Do you need any- thing for “home comfort.” Buy of us now. Pay Little-at-a-Time. NO COUNTRY ORDERS FILLED. he |.Noonan Furniture Co., 1017-1023 Mission St, above Sixth.

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