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THE \Y ADVERTISEMENTS. After all, the thing'I like best about “FORCE” is the enjoyment I get from eating it. It makes little difference how “good” a food is if you don’t like it. I’'ve met mighty few people who don’t like “FORCE. o relish “FORCE " for a longer time, without change, than any other food I know of. But it iso't such a bad notion, now and then, to switch off onto something else for a day or 50— Even though you can't change to anything quite so good. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER ARE HAPPILY REUNITED { SAVINGS BANK'S COLLAPSE AFFECTS WORKING PEOPLE Funds of Fin- an Ohio Alleged Shortage in the ancial Concern in Girl Who Was Kidnaped Eighteen Years Azo Locates Her Parent in the City of Demver. ty. -Miss Alberta; NEWARK, Ohio, May 21.—The New- girl, who was ark S Bank did not open fits g to-day doors to-day and the court has ap- mother, who she has not se pointed 2 receiver. The bank has was one year of age. When not quite | thousands of depositors gmong work- & year old, the child says, she was|ing people here, and there was great kidnag r f s her, who excitement. Discrepancies are said to di have & 1 discovered in the books of was pla a ' be officers. Cashier Lingerfel- PR " ter lay to enter a s said to be de g b and the mother = Park ve : this city to-day. t his son said Sl President L. P. g Y sign notes for a Court Dismisses Mrs. Weinzeirl, LOUIS, » dismissed in ¥, Judge Mec- > evidence was State's case. in " beer. BLATZ method is generally commented on as most remarkable and unique, for the reason that in most every par- ticular it is original from a brewer’s point of view. The very choicest of every com=- ponen: _part of the Blatz brews is the invariable rule. Only the best of Mother Earth’s crop is ever con- sidered. The result is a beer of honest quality with a goodness all its own. Akvays the Same Good Old “Blaiz” BLATZ MALT-VIVINE - (Noclatoxicant) A MALT TONIC For Comyalescents and Run-Down Systems. VAL, BLATZ BREWING C3., Mivwauxee SAM BIBO & CO., WECLESALE DEALERS, 212 BATTERY STEIET, San Trancisco. Tel. Main 5859. FUNSTON'S NAME 10 BE DROPPED i Bag River to Be Expunged From High School History | il | KANSANS TAKE ACTION iSmte Texthook Commision- | ers Say They Will Give | the Credit to White PR i TOPEKA, Kans., May 21.—Pupils of | the Kansas high schools will no longer | | the Bag Bag River in the Philipplnes Incident of Swimming BftgI { be {aught that it was for swimming | ! and in the face of a hot fire from the | enemy that General Frederick Funs- | ton wae promoted from colonel of vol- | | unteers to be a brigadier general in the | regular army. | A sub-committee of the State Text- book Commission has ordered the ac- { count of the incident expunged from ! the history, which has been readopted for use in the high schools for five | years, When General Funston was | promoted to the place he mow holds | | his commission declared in expleit | ! terms that his promotign was earned | by his 2ction In swimming the Bag Bag | | River in the face of a severe fire from | | the enemy. ‘We will give the credit to Private | Trembly White, to whom it belongs,” said Commissioner McCray, a member of the sub-committee. “The misstate- | ment that General Funston ever swam | | the river will be dropped now, while | | there are men living in the State that ; know it is not true.” | PORTLAND, Or., May 21.—The Ore- | | gonfan will to-morrow print the follow- | ing account of the swimming of the! Bag Bag by Genera! Funston at Ca-| | lumpit, Philippine Islands, April 26, {1899, mnd the swimming of the Rio Grande the day following by two sol- | diers of the Kansas regiment. It was, ! obtained from General Funston him- | self and probably is the first correct version ever published: | body of some 4000 Filipinos who were on the far side of the Rio Grande had been harassing the American forces, On April 26, 1899, General Fun- | ston, accompanied by a skirmish par- | , swam the Bag Bag, a small, slug- sh stream about 100 feet wide, which ributary to the Rio Grande. This act hag been confused with and magni- | fied into the swimming of the Rio Grande the following day, April 26, by two soldiers from the Kansas regiment, which preceded the routing of the 4000 Filipinos by forty-five American -sol- | se soldiers carried a line with| them with which they drew across a| heavier one. To the Jatter a raft was fastened and drawn across. When the forty-five soldiers and General Fun- | ston had been ferried over the detach- | ment routed the Filipinos.” General Funston concluded: | “It is true I swam the Bag Bag, but the event was of no importance. The swimming of the Rio Grande by the Kensas men was an entirely different event. The Rio Grande is a stream fully hailf a mile wide with a current) running s=even knots an hour, and to| have am it would have been a physi- | cal 1 y for me. The whole| trouble bheen occasioned, I suppose, by confusing the two streams and the proximity of the events. | I am glad to present the facts as they are and clear the matter up.” ——— e | SGET-RICH-QUICK” CONCERN'S PRESID! I' IS CONVICT! Arthur F. McIniyre Must Pass Eight- cen Months in the Missouri iary. LOT Arthur F. Mec- | re, pres of tha defunct Mer- nts' Brokerage and Commission N Company, orne of the “get concerns br to prominence by J. Arnold and John jund guilty of using the ud by a jury in the District Court to-day | ed 1o the penitentiary the do all « | and was sent { for a term cighteen mionths. | 1 —_— COMPLAINANTS WITHDRAW CHARGE AGAINST RICHARDS San Dicgo Resident Who Was Ar- | rested Recently in New Jersey | Discharged From Custody. ELMIRA, N. Y., May 2L—Edwin L. | Richards of San Diego, Cal, who was arrested at Newark, N. J., recently on | complaint of four Elmira men, who med he had sold them land in Geor- ia which existed only on paper, has ‘hvrn released, the complaint having | i been withdrawn. Mining stock traded | | for 18,000 acres has been returned. | Richards asserted he bought the land | [ from a Chicago dealer in good faith. i e —— 1 {‘HEA“&T FREE LIBRARY | IS CONVEYED TO ANACONDA | | Deed to the Building Which Was Ac- cepted by the People Last April | Is Placed on File. ! ANACONDA, Mont, May 21.—The | deed which conveys the Hearst Free | Library from Mrs. Phoebe Hearst to | the people of Anaconda was filed to- | day. | %nq library, which cost about $75,000, was accepted by the people last April | at the municipal election. P AL S ASHBURY HEIGHTS WANTS BETTER FIRE PROTECTION | | | Buena Vista Park Improvement Club | Will Appeal to the Supervisors | on Monday. | Three hundred residents of Ashbury | Heights attended a meeting of thej Buena Vista Park Improvement Club Friday night and passed resolutions | requesting the Board of Supervisors to | | give thes better fire protection. A committee, consisting of T. J. Koster, W. G. Farren, Thomas S.\ Mailoy, F. E. Beck, G. C. McDonald, | A. S. Page, W. P. Levy and A. J. Fritz, was appointed to present the matter to the board on Monday" and ask that sufficient money be appro- priated to establish an engine-house in the district in order that better pro- tection may be assured. ’ The action of the club was taken as a result of the destructive fire that recently burned a number of -dwell- ings on Ashbury Heights, / l.a shooting affray n | Andrew Combination Sideboard and China Closet—Quarter sawed oak. golden finish;j high plano polished; ample room | fshed; for china, linen and silver:| pioee top decorated with b French plate mirror. ‘Terms, $1.00 a week. 81. ed stock of Curtains, fail lease. merely as a guide to price, Nottingham tains vard, Rococ al per palr, $1.50, Rococo and Pt. the figured centers. Spe Soutache effects | Maryland Lace Curta thing in the marke ue. Prics, per pa A vast assortment « tains, All colors. Chiffonier— Soliad golden finish; Draperies—Magnificently Draperies and Couch Covers at prices that cannot ‘We employ experts always willing to advise you \ your draperies. e a few specials Lace Cur- Full width. Three 1g. Several exqui- site designs in Floral and lesigns, plain and ADVERTISEMENTS. If in nced of Furniture, Carpets, Draperics or Kilchen Furnishings you will find the Store on the Square ihe place lo buy. Liberal Terms, High-Grade Goods, Low Prices, A ] Parlor Suit—Mahogany fin in figured tapestry. Best tionally graceful design. Terms, $1.00 2 week. oak, 1y pol- bevel mirror. 00 a week. Call any afternoon between assort De latest make this the Store of the People. Do not fail lo ca > a p and see the Regal in actual operation. minutes demonstrate its marvelous baking qualities as well as economy in the consumption of f you need a Regal we will place one in your home for $1 down and $1.00 a week. Il before purchasing. 10 ished frame. Upholstered steel springs. An excep- Thoroughly well made. S, Dreswer — Solid golden finish T bevel ror; cabinet finish of Terms, $1.00 a w =3 the hours of two and five 7 Biscuits in We carry a mammoth L1 ings. Every knowr th heavy effects fi t T g8 to the de s s r of excl scheme are constar ket to bu and w Cottag side a e Carpet—Reversible: each L FATAL: FIGHT OVER A THORSE i Rt Montana Stockmen Engage in a Battle With Revolvers| and All of Them Are Shot e Special Dispatch to The Call. RUTTE, Mont., May 21.—Meager de- ed in this city of r Dore, in the eastern part of the State, in which it appears four persons engaged, all re- ceiving wou ing fatally red. The trouble oceurred on the ranch of Nohle, a well-known stock- man, over the attempted seizure of a horse bought by Nohle at a forced sale from & man named Sanderson. Nohle with his hired man and San- derson ith his brother-in-law drew revolvers during the row and the firing became general, Nohle being shot sev- taile have been rec eral times, though not seriously. Hisg hired man, however, may die, being shot through the abdomen and the hips. The trouble originally had its incep~ tion over a land contest case, and the feeling between the two stockmen had become almost feudal in character. VANCOUV , May 21.—The sur- veyors and_construction engineers of the Great Northern Raflroad are In Fernie, B. C., with instructions to proceed at once with the build- ing of the cxtension of the Jennings branch from Morrissey to Fernie and Coal Creek. ADVERTISEMENTS. SMITH'S $6.00 TRUNK Is now the talk of the town. We've plenty for every one. This §8.50 SUIT GASE for $6.00 This unequaled offer is just an inducement to have you call and inspect our large assortment of leather goods. A carload just received. Don’t buy before you see our line. A. B. SMITH CO. 128-132 Ellis St. one, it is thought, be- | STRIKERS TAKE PIRATES' ROLE lote . {Seize a River Steamer at| Chicago After Driving the Non-Union Crew to Shore | ———— Epecial Diepa! Y:‘Qo The Call. i CHICAGO, May 21.—Comic opera pi- rates invaded Calumet River to-day when with wild shouts and cries of “‘Seize the ship” a crowd of nearly 100 men, striking stevedores and sympa- thizers, took possession of the grain steamer Nottingham, lying at Ningty- eighth street. Before this fifty non-union men, who had contracted to unload the steamer, were driven to shelter in an elevator, together with their police guard. Sticks and stones were thrown, but no one was hurt. The victors hooted and jeered the non-union men and then | made their raid on the ship. The crowd later attempted to force | the engineer and firemen to get up | steam so that the boat could be taken down the river, but the men refused to obey. There was no attempt made to disturb them and at a late hour to- night the strikers had possession of | the vessel. The captured steamer be- | longs to King & Co. and has a full cargo of grain. s e Longshoremen Join Strike. NEW YORK, May 2l.—About 1000 longshoremen employed in the marine district of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad at the com- pany's elght plers on the East River, quit work in a body to-day. Work on the nlers now is at a standstill. The strike is a sympathetic one, originating from the trouble at the Fall River Line pier on the North River. The leaders threaten to extend the strike on Mon- day to the Long Island Sound ports and to Boston. This would bring cut 5000 additional men. e ! FARM LAND SLIDES ON A RAILROAD TRACK ;Somhcm Pacific Acquires Real Enau=| | by an Objectionable Process Near Cantara. REDDING, May 21L.—The Soythern i Pacific Company is gradually acquiring | fine farming property in the- Sacra- | mento River Canyon near Cantara, but | in a manner that is distastetul to the i corporation. : The farm of W. L. Bran- stetter is sliding down upon the rail- road track by degree. There were nu- nerous slides there du: .3 the winter, and it was thought they would cease with storms, but such is not the case. A slide Friday morning delayed traf- sa five hours. One this morning will elay trains a longer time. —_———— NEW YORK, May 2l.—Ten officers and 104 sailors and marines of the Mexican navy ar- rived here to-day to take charge of the Mex- ican crvisers Tamnico and Vera Cruz, buiit ).ql ;hz Crescent Shipyard at Ellzabethport, i f I s & ! i 7 T ONNT | | [ ©0aa bits of turniture can be | I\ILLS Hls 50\ bought cheaply—furnish flats | L and houses, t0o. i T o e Bargains daily in our FURNI- | | | TURE FOR SALE columns. | [ 4 | I al L 4 Ppeamtn -!-" Bk | FEAR FOR THE SAFETY Manager of a Lumber Com- VISITOR FROM EAST | pany Commits a Terrible Crime at Home in Pasadena OF F. Bohannan Disappears While Hunting in Colorado and His J. Friends Are Anxious. oS s s CHASE, Colo., May 21.—J. F. Bohan-| PASAT May 21.—Terrell B nan, an Eastern sporting man, while | Tho local manager of the Kerckoff- hunting on Mount Evans and Twin | Cuzner . Lumber C killed Peaks, near Chase, became lost, and it | his §-year-old son Pau alytic. by is feared that he has perished. A |Stabbing him in the ba a hunt- searching party was organized by Bm;x’ng knife, and hannan’s brother, and the horse which | by shooting hi wn If in the head with a the hunter rode was found tied to a|Tevo tree. Farther up the mountainside were | Thomas is supposed to have sudde found his coat and rifle. The ground in | become dem 1. He attacked the vicinity showed evidences of a|bPoy as he ng shortly struggle and bear tracks were also dis- | ;‘\‘;:-nT:l“"‘_*n:\f._:_n'» 1M~[ r‘hfl‘ house, cernible. Near the spot is a high preci- | FASH 1 reiuined an hour later pice. It is feared the hunter has been | fOURd th th omas was killed In a fight with,a bear or by fall- | Years of age. and had been engaged the lum at various points ing from the precipice. —————e DALLAS, Tex., May 21.—The delegates to the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian church dismissed church matters to-day and spent the day at Waxa v miles distant, where & pienic was tendered them by local in Sou years. Sale of Silk Shirt Waist Dresses $17.50 Black and White Silk Shirt Waisl Dresses—Will be sold while they last at less than - you would have to pay for the making $12.50 alone. Other silk shirt waist dresses $22.00 to $40.00. $27.50 All Wool Cheviol Tailor Madc Eton Dresses—The very Laltestérimm:dsiylesmb'a;k. ue, browns, we will close out at $20-00 Cotton and Linen Shirt Waist Dresses—In white, blues and tans, just the thir g for warm weather comfort §9.50 to $6 $1.25 Trimmed Whitc Lawn Shirl Waist 95¢ $2.75 Black India Silk Waist. . . Country orders satisfactorily fi KELLY & LIEBES sU75- KEARNEY STREET S.F