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THE SA) FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY; JULY 18, 1904. 3 ARMY OFFICER INCURS REBUKE Slight Upon Negro Soldiers Merits the Displeasure of President Roosevelt PROMPT ACTION TAKEN Aid to President Francis of the St. Louis Exposition Is Forced to Resign| LOUIS, July 17.—Lieutenant C.| ney Haight of the Fourth United Cavalry, military aid to Presi- t Francis and director of the mili- ry camps at the Louisiana Purchase on, has tendered his resigna- the board of directors of the pon the request of the War De- which acted after hearing f an investigation into the em at the exposition. This wes ordered by President tment egT vesti esighation of Lieutenant Haight ed to have been the direct re- ble created over the regiment from y assigned camp at the ght wrote to Colo- commander of the c him if he would con- y a camp in a remote sec- of the grounds. Colonel Marshall ply mnotified Lieutenant Haight regimen abandoned its visit the fair. Friends of the regime called President Roose- to the matter. | —— { CALIFORNIA AT THE FAIR. ’ | Many Residents of the Golden State | Are Visiting St. Louis. | LOUIS 17.—The following | ifornia visitors have registered at State Building at the World's Fair: July 1 and E. J. Brelling iemin Jr m Attendance at the Fair Increases. July 17.—The attend- | d’s Fair for the past re than a half mil- VIS, he W, ———————— | SOCIETY GIRL FORGIVES ERRING IOWA | LOVER Goes 10 Texas to Marry Lawyer Who Got Drunk on Day Originaily Set for Weddine. S MOINES, Jowa, July 17.—Leve after a trying 1 ap A. G assistant attorney general nd Miss Maud Utect, i 1 of Ottumwa. Palestine, eks set at got drunk and the court house engagement. in vain, and threatened three weeks in a deplora- then pulled himself home. Miss ably impressed at she has gone him. ———— ASK MEXICO FOR SUBSIDY FOR NEW STEAMSHIP LINE Britsh Columbia Capitalists Propose to Establish Freighter System on Coast. 17.—George C. W. Ward, of here for the g the government 1o give iy to a line of steamers they propose to establish between Canad ports on the Pacific Coast end Mexican ports. They propose to a feature of their business the coal into Mex- ports and for the sup- railway. y of the Tehu epec John Whittaker Is Mortally Shot Seeking Game in Berke- ley Hills. EERKELEY, July 17.—While hunting the Berkeley hills this afternoon, hn Whittaker, 12 years old, was a y shot. He was carried for sev- miles to the station by Dr. Farrar | rought to the Fabiola Hospital, | he died at midnight. The entire | the gun entered the little | had been living with his | Louisa and Rose streets. and T mother are heart- broken over the tragedy, as the boy was exceptior nd lovable. | tion stopovers ninet Folders and 613 Market street. . —_———— Females Pirst; Males Second. One spring I observed with much in- terest a phoebe d building her nest not far from my cabin in the woods. | The male locked on approvingly, but | did not help. He perched most of the | time on a mullein stalk near the little #pring run where pheobe came for mud. In the early morning hours she made her trips at intervals of a minute or | two., ‘The male flirted his tail and| called encouragingly, and when she | started up the hill with her load he | would accompany her part way, as it were to help her over the steepest part, | then return to his perch and watch and call for her return. Mor an hour or more 1 witnessed this little play in bird lite, in which the female'’s part was so primary and the male's so secondary. There is something in such things that seems to lend support to Prof. Lester F. Ward's contention, as set forth in his “Pure Sociology,” that in the natural evolution of the two sexes the female was first and the male sec- ond; that he was, in fact, made from her rib, #0 to speak, and not she from his—Harper's Magazine. —_——— No man holds a principle unless it is the principal thing he holds. | the Santa Fe. HEAT CAUSES MANY DEATHS Chicago Experiences test Day Recorded by the ‘Weather Bureau Since 1891 SUFFERING IS INTENSE While Easterners Die From Sunstroke San Francisco Enjoys Bracing Breezes i Temperature of San Francisco yes- terday: Maximum, 66; minimum, 52. CHICAGO, July 17.—This was the hottest day Chicago has experienced in years and three deaths and a score of prostrations was the result. The maximum temperature of 94 de- grees beats any record in the weather bureau since 1891, corded. There was scarcely any breeze and the suffering was intense. In the down town district the heat was sev- eral degrees greater than the official record shows. At 10 o'clock to-night showed little abatement and the opin- ion of the weather bureau forecaster was that no marked decrease would be noted for a day or two vet. ST. LOUIS, July 16.—The hottest weather of the year prevailed here to- day, the thermometer registering 93 de- | grees. Two deaths and eleven pros- trations resulted. DETROIT, July 17.—This hottest day of the season in Detroit, the temperature reaching 9 degrees. ———— COLUMBIA PARK BOYS PLEASE THE VENTURANS San Francisco Lads See a Baseball Game and Give a Concert at Congregational Church. VENTURA, July 17.—The Columbia Park Boys’ Club of San Francisco completed the four hundred and eleventh mile of their march to Los Angeles to-day at noon. The boys, in charge of Sydney Peixotto, Harvey Loy and George Schlitter, are en- camped in the Tent City and are not unlike real soldiers in their bivouac routine. They were the guests of Man- ager Frank Daly at the baseball game to-day and this evening gave a con- cert at the Congregational church, as- tonishing their listeners with their ex- cellent renderings of sacred songs. The club’s exhibitions here, vaude- ville, athletic and military, will be held under the auspices of the Country Club House Association. In marching down Main street, after the game, th little fellows were enthusiastically cheered. The organization will leave here Wednesday for Los Angeles. KILLS MAN WHO DISPLACED H1N Husband of His Divorced Wife on Street of Colton —— COLTC July —Pedro Charez, a Mexican 25 yvears of age, to-night shot and instantly killed Clato Avila, a Mex- ican of about the same age, in front of the First National Bank building in this city in the center of the to After shooting Avila, Charez tur the weapon upon the wife of Avila, who accompanied him, slightly wound- ing her in the head. The murderer then fi and has not been captured, although the officers believe they will e sle to apprehend him within a few hours. The wife of Avila was the divorced wife of Charez and the couple had been married but a month. Charez had been driven away from the Avila home several times recently. Avila and his wife were walking along the ‘street when Charez crossed the street behind them, and walking up to within three feet of the couple placed & revolver close to the head of Avila and fired, the latter falling dead. He then fired at Mrs. Avila at close range, but she escaped with a scalp wound. —_———— DIRECTIONS FOR FUNERAL AFTER SUICIDE LEAV Pioneer of Kansas Becomes Despond- ent Over Ill Health and Ends His Life. ST. LOUIS, July 17.—After leaving a note containing directions for his funeral and requesting that files of newspapers he had edited in Kansas in pioneer days be sent to the Kansas | State Historical Society, Frederick W. Braunhold, 70 years old, a former nter and publisher, committed sui- e to-day by shooting himself. He s despondent over ill health. Pre- vious to the civil war, he published a German weekly. ——e————— TO YOSEMITE VALLEY. | Grand Personally Conducted Excur- sion Leaves Saturday, July 23; $28 60 round- trip. In one way and out another, around the famous “double loop.” Passes direct- | 1y through two groves of giant sequoias. Special care for women and children. You will get the best of everything on A rare chance to visit the famous valley. Inquire at 641 Market street, Santa Fe office. . —_———— On July 24 there will begin in The Sunday Call Magazine-a new series of the famous Mr. Dooley articles. Finley Peter Dunne, the creator of Mr. Dooley, is under an exclusive contract with Mc- Clure’s, and The Call, in the face of keenest bidding on the part of other large newspapers on the coast, has se- cured the sole right to publish these articles north of Los Angeles. —_——— Money and the War. Neither Russia nor Japan has an extensive foreign credit, and both have borrowed pretty freely when there was no war on hand. Both have recently had more or less financial panics followed by depression. Both met with discouraging receptions in the financial centers of Europe and in New York before there were any signs of the present war. Each government had a fair amount of money on hand to begin the war with and each can borrow some money at home. But war is not only the last argument of kings; it has also become the most enormously expensive of their indul- gen and there is a good deal of doubt whether either power can keep in the field for the two years that both of them talk confidently of fighting.— Philadelphia Record. Hot- ' when 103 was re- | the heat | was the | IWEIRD MIND READING ACT 3 H | g £ H | | | | | 1 STARTLES ORPHEUM PATRONS {Zaney Team Gives an Exhibition That Sets the Audience to Wondering—Rose Coghlan and Support Make a|chinese Woman Accused of Decided Success in Vaudeville—At Other Theaters i 23 . - e EBRATED ACTR SRTED THE LEGITIMATE FOR THE VAUDEVILI T, AND WHO NOW APPEARING WITH HER | COMPANY A . PLAYHOUSE. | = = MR RTE % It is lucky for the Zancigs—at thejockey and a The scene Orpheum this week—that San Fran- cisco is not old n/ It it were, | this weird couple would be concerning | themselves with another sort of | | “steak” at breakfast s good Mon- | ! day morning. After terday after- | noon Salem would have given them a black cat a tick—to fly abroad o' dark nights, and indeed one wouldn't blame Salém over much. We call them telepathists to-day, and take | twenty minutes of 'em at the Orpheum | —it's a long lane that does not lead to the Orpheum. But there were those at the show vesterday with a dark advocacy for | old Salem methods. “N telling where this sort of thing will er said th “The male Zancig says any one can do it. Suppose the missus were to take it up—what in thunder would a fellow do? The woman knows what the man’s think- ing about before he knows himself. | Christopher Columbus! It's danger- | ous, man It certainly sets one to wondering whal would happen if society were en | rapport in the Zancig fashion. As the | “professor” claims, Mme. Zancig seems | to “see what he sees’ , indeed, only | s0 can their wonderful performance be | explained. Madame Zancig, a little | |lady who looks even as you and I, | | stands upon the stage with a black- | board. The professor, who is at the transmitting end of the Zancigrams, | | wanders among the audience. He giv some of it slates and the arithmet sharps fill 'em with figures. Puncturing his temples with a weird forefinger, the professor then says ‘“now!" and Madame Zancig chalks up the answers, and quite frequently more quickly than Mr, Zancig gets them. A man at the back of the house show his visiting card to the masculine Zancig, ‘the lady instantly calis out the nar She calls out instantly the name of anything the professor touches, and he touches| things at the rate of ten to the second, | apparently. It is all done in a flash, in fact. It's quite weird, and if an { body has any other explanation than | telepathy I'd be glad to hear it. The rest of the bill is on a par with | the Zancig turn, that is to say it is of | the best for many a moox. Rose Cogh- | lan, with her voice of a thousand, makes her debut into local vaudeville. The distinguished actress brings a playlet—that were better a play, en- titled *“‘Between Matinee and Night.” ! In it Miss Coghlan appears as an act- ress in a particularly engaging desh- abille. The play was written by Miss Coglan and Clarence Harvey, and | though overcrowded with Interest for | its length, gives the actress many at- ‘tracth-e acting opportunities. Agnes Roslyn, of Miss Coghlan's support, acts | | charmingly a stage-struck girl. Then the “Musical Kleist” has the cleverest and most original musical turn that has perhaps ever been seen at the | Orpheum; Cunningham and Smith are outrageously funny acrobats; Julian Rose, the most humorous of Hebrews, is another light of the week, and what more could vou ask? BLANCHE PARTINGTON. “A Thoroughbred Tramp” at The | California had every situation in it | that ever appeared in melodrama or | “rough-house” comedy. T. Rush| ! Thompson P. B., brake-beam jockey |and many other things, played by Harry Lewellyn, drew a full hand of ! Jaughs every time he appeared. P. G. McLean, billed as Bill Griffin, a “heart. less rascal,” was a successful villain, {or a villainous success, as you please. Though Harry Von Meter, the hero, had a few quarrels with his accent he was all there when it came to double crossing the arch villain. There were a couple of cheap-skate villains but no villainess. Teresa Belmont Walters, the heroine, was very winning and Maude Monroe, ingenue, was “too cute for anything.” Zhe latter is a cow girl, an improvised \ { Vassar girl. of the play laid in Colorado before the Bibl wa introduced into that region. The play is full of thrills. 54 v is James Neill and his company start- ed In on the third week of their well- acted and completely staged plays with 2 pr 2 ¢ de Fitch’s drama in the part of " cowboy who £ covers the love on the wit- ness stand, xceeded Miller Kent the part faverably compared Nat Goodwin. Edythe Chapman, he Lad: showed gr: and in- tensity.' Her work in the courtroom was especially good. Following close on t W. Burton as Joe. comedy of the character to a nicety leads comes the work of John Burton handles the and does not make the mistake of overdoing it. Faye Wallace made a lovable Midge and Lillian Andrews was sufficiently coy and Kkittenish as the clephantine pi-anist of the dance hall Scott Seaton handled a rather color- less villain well, while Sheldon Lewis a. the Indian was quite dramatic. Frances Slosson was a pretty and graceful dance hall proprietress. In fact, not one of the east was out of the picture at any time. Next week Mr. Neill will present “A Gentleman of France.” —_—e—e————— Food of Japancse. Rice and dried fish is the uniform food of the Japanese army in cam- paigning times, says the Paris corre- spondent of the Springfield (Mass.), Union. The rice is cooked as follows: It is boiled until quite thick and glutin- ous. Next it is placed on a ceramic slab, rolled out and cut into squares. The squares are then placed in the sun to dry and often turned. When hard as sea biscuits and greatly reduced in | weight they can be stored. A certain number are allowed each day to the soldier. All he has to do is to break up a square in boiling water and add the dried fish. In a few minutes he has what seems to him a delicious thick soup. If he canot produce boiling wa- ter, he simply eats his rice cake dry. In the fruit season he substitutes fruit, when he can obtain it, for the fish. The Japanese soldier, M. Pichon tells me, has muscles like whipcord, is a sure shot, has an eye for, landmarks and a memory for locality. He can do with three hours’ sleep out of the twenty- four, is cleanly, attends to sanitary in- structions, is ardently patriotic, holds his life cheap and runs up hills like a goat. He costs the State about nine shillings a day, and thinks himself well off. —Baltimbre American. — e ———— Peru to Build Man of War. The Patriotic League (Junta Patriot- ica) of Peru has already collected nearly $414,000, which has been de- posited with banks in Lima. The pur- pose is to raise a sufficient sum where- with a man of war is to be built and presented to the Peruvian Govern- | ment. Our shipbuilders should try to obtain the contract for this vessel.— New York Commercial. B According to an estimate of the Southern Pacific Railroad the fruit crop of California this year is worth $60,000,000 in round numbers. [ g an s R AT T S e DON'T MISS Yours Truly, MR. DOOLEY, In Next SUNDAY’S CALL. A0 SOW TELLS SHIP STRIKES HER OWN TALE| 0N THE ROCKS Attempt at Poisoning Hushand Talks Freely) STILL LOVES THE MAN S Declares She Was Faithful to Fong Ling Throughout, Paying for His Support e ‘With tears in her almond eves Ah Sow, the Chinese woman accused of being a disciple of Lucrezia Borgia. em- | phatically denied through an inter-| preter yesterday that she attempted to poison her husband, Fong Ling. Clicking her jade bracelets nervously to ' emphasize her words, she claimed to be the one injured. Her story, if true, throws a light on the standing of the Chinese wife that reveals conditions startling and pitiful. Ah Sow says that for years she has | been supporting her husband on her earnings as a “Sing Song” girl. Despite | the life she was forced to lead. she declares that she has ever been faith- ful to her husband from the Chinese point of view. She was wont to leave feasts and hurry to Fong Sing and give him the tributes showered upon her i because of her beauty. All the time she smiled upon other Chinamen she | had at heart the interests of her hus- band. who accepted and used the wealth that her charms won. | _She bows her head to the will of | Fong Ling with the dog-like submis- | sion of the women of the Orlent. “I {cry to see him every day,” she says. | “He may do with me as he likes. even ‘to finding me guilty. I have no one | to depend upon but him and look to | htm only.” i " Following is Ah Sow’'s comnblete' | statement, given through an inter- | | preter to The Call. | | I have taken food to my husband many times, and we have been the best of friends. Last Friday night 1 was arrested at his hid- | ing place at the headquarters of the Educa- | tiopal Society. When I returned to my hus- | band’s aunt's house late In the afternocn Fri- | | day she told me my husband had been after | | me_several times. “What can he want with | | | | me?” I said, and went immediately to him. | He, with Lee Soot and Lew Ying, accused | me of putting arsenic in the soup 1 had taken He sald, “'Now | tell us who told you to do it and we wiil do | { nothing to you. Who put you up fo it?" | 'No one had put me up to anything. and T| | said so. Then a pollceman showed me hls | star and brought me to the prison. I put no poison in the soup. I drank some of It the | day I took it to him and I swaliowed what [ drank. If I had put polson In it would T have stayed around here to be arrested? T never thought anything further about it, for there is no evil in my heart toward husband. | | "1 wanted a divorce only because I did not { wish to continue to earn money for him in the | | same way 1 had been doing. | | him on the Tuesdav before. 1 do not know where Wong Ah Dow !s. | on Stock- stayed with my husband | in_Spoffora alley. | I am not afrald of my husband. me food every day. | 1f only let alone. | 2 | KILLED AFTER -~ ESCAPING M0B He brings He would be kind to me | | penetrated for hundreds of years, and | bours arrived at quarantine to-night | the winding is done by the light of a | | Detective Pursued by Riot-| | ers Falls Vietim to a| i Policeman’s Deadly Aim NEW YORK, July 17.—=After shoot-, ing William Gorricy and Alonzo Do-| rondo of Manhattan during an at- | tack made upon him to-night by a crowd of men at Schurer’s picnic park at Corona, Long Island, Charles Con- ran, a detective on duty in citizens’ | clothing, sought refuge under a danc-| ing platform and there was shot and killed by Policeman John Gerrity. Conran’s fight with the crowd caused a call to be sent in for police reserves. When they arrived several in the crowd told the officers that the man who did the shooting was under the platform. Nothing was said about | Comran being a detective or of his hav- | ing shot in self-defense. Gerrity crawled under the platform and ordered Conran to come out. Re- ceiving no answer, he fired and Conran was instantly killed. | Neither Gorricy nor Dorondo, who | were shot by Conran during the at- tack, was dangerously wounded. —_—————————— Inadequate Telephone Service. | In New York City there is one tel- | ephone subscriber to every 500 of ! population. There is but one tele- phone company serving this city. In some Western towns the ratio often raises te one in twelve, and these towns, many of them quite small, of- ten support two (or competitive) tel- ephone companies. Again, New York City, ten times the size of San Fran-| cisco, has only four times as many telephones, when its varied business and social importance (unequaled by any other city in the country) demand that it should have not merely an equal proportion but a use of tele- | phones at least ten tfmes greater than | the ratio of any other city. | Another statistician tells us that less . |than 2 per cent of the residences in | this metropolis and less than 12 per cent of the business houses have tele- | phones, and yet the company operat- | ing here pays its 10 per cent annual | dividends, and frequently declares ex- | tra dividends. Continuing with the il- | lustration we learn that rates of ser- vice in this city, with no competition, range up to 12% cents per call, and seldom, even on the largest contracts, fall below 6 cents. A very careful es- timate shows that the present or a new independent company could do business in this city profitably at & cents to 2% cents per call. These low- er figures, it is interesting to learn, are based upon the employment of apparatus performing a far larger percentage of the work automatically than is now employed by the present company.—Cent Per Cent. Origin of a Family Name. C. P. Reddrop of Chicago knows where his family got its name. Just under his left eye is a red mark, look- ing much like a strawberry. “Every member of my family as far back &s.can be traced, had such a mark on the left side of his or her | body,” sald Mr. Reddrop. ‘“We are | convinced that the family name camg from the fact that our ancestors had a red marks on their bodies.”—Louisville Herald. e It's no use talking about loving God | when your children are afraid of you. | parts of the clock are Canadian Pacific Steamer Crippled as She Enters Harbor at Prospect Park | SUSTAINS MUCH DAMAGE In Bracing, Heavy Current Vessel Goes Ashore Before Engines Can Be Reversed VANCOUVER, B. C., July 17. —The steamer Princess Victoria, from BSe- attle and Victoria for Vancouver, ran on a rock at Prospect Point, at the entrance to the barbor here at 11 o’clock this morning. Two plates were stove in on her starboard side and two blades of her propeller tere broken. The steamer was brought to her dock and during the afternoon, although her pumps were Kkept going steadily, she sank two feet by the bow. Officials of the Canadian Pacific Navi- gation Company explain, the accident by the fact that the vessel was travel- ing twenty knots agalnst a swift out- flowing tide, when she suddenly took a sheer to starboard, shot off at a tangent straight into the rocks and that, owing to her high speed and the suddenness of the sheer, it was absolutely impos- sible to reverse the engines or put down the helm hard enough to port to counteract the sheer. The steamer struck heavily just above the place where the steamer Beaver was wrecked. The Princess Victorla will come to Esquimalt drydock Monday for repairs. The officials say the damage Is very scrious. The steamer Danube took her place on the return trip to Victoria and Seattie this afternoon. The Princess Victoria is the crack ehip of the Canadian Pacific fleet. e ol SCHOONER ZAMPA FOUNDERED. Vessel Loses Her Rudder and 1Is Driven Ashore. ILWACO, Wash., July 17.—The three-masted schooner Zampa, en route from San Pedro to the Columbia River in ballast, lost her rudder at sea and drifted ashore at high tide this morning at Leadbetters Point on the North Beach, about ten miles north of | Cape Disappointment. ‘When the tide ebbed about noon to- day the Zampa was left about 300 feet from the water and her master, Cap- tain Kellenberger, his wife and crew of nine men, were taken off in safety. The vessel is a total loss. —_———— England’s Oldest Clock. Peterborough Cathedral has the oldest working clock in England. It was erected about 1320, and is prob- ably the work of a monastic clock- maker. that is wound up over an old wooden wheel. The wheel is abqut twelve feet in circumference, and the gal- vanized cable, about 300 feet in length, supports a leaden weight of three-carat weight, which has to be wound up daily. The clock chamber is in the northwest tower, some 120 | feet high, where the sunlight has not | Louis from candle. The gong is the great tenor bell of the cathedral, which weighs thirty-two etweight, and it is struck hourly by an eighty-pound hammer. The gong and the striking some communication being by apart, slender wire. The time is shown on the main wheel of the escapement, which goes round once in two hours. —New York Globe. ——ee——— The outfit of an English Judge costs about $2000. He has to have at least | five gowns of silk, besides a girdle,.a scarf, a casting hood, a black cap, a three-cornered cap, a beaver hat, a cocked hat, a silk hat, lace bands and two full court suits with swords. It is the only one now known | yards | al The ciock has no dial. | CADETS ATTEND MILITARY MASS League of the Cross Lads March to Church, Where Impressive Service Is Held ATTIRED IN UNIFORMS Many Visitors Enliven the Camps of the Soldiers at the Seaside Resort SANTA CRUZ, July 17.—Sunday has been a quiet day at Camp Dowdall Guard mount was held at 7:40 this morning. The church call was sounded at 8:30 o'clock for the grand military mass, which was held in the Casino auditorium. Five hundred cadets in khakl uni- forms with Colonel Power and staff marched to the auditorfum. During the mass the band gave the following choice sacred selections: “Rejoice “The . alto solo, B. Bisset; “The barytone~ solo, Mr. Kemp: ‘Vesper Hymn,” trombone solo, E. Shramm; “Te Deum.” Father O'Ryan gave a short address, The cadets had many visitors in camp to-day. —_———— SETTLERS MUST WAIT FOR YEAR AND A HALF Opening of Flathead Indian Reserva- tion Postponed on Account of Late Start Made With Survey. BUTTE, Mont.. July 17.—According to word from the Interior Depart- ment received at Missoula, the survey- ing of the Flathead Indian reservation will not be begun until late in Septem- ber, delaying the opening of the In- dian lands to settlement untll about a year and a half from now. Approxi- mately 1,000,000 acres of grazing and mineral land and one of the largest forest reserves in the United States are embraced in the reservation. —_—— CAPSIZING OF SKIFF COSTS LIVES OF FOUR | Disaster Overtakes a Rowing Party [ in the Blue River at Sheflield. | KANSAS CITY, Meo., July 17.—Four | person were drowned to-day by the | capsizing of a skiff in the Blue River | at Sheffleld, near here. They were Miss | Hester Howell, aged 20, and Miss Kate | Calvert, 19, telephone operators: A. R House, aged 27, a railway clerk, and Elmer C. Guild. Guild was the senior partner in the firm of Gutld & Loeb, brokers. House and Miss Calvert were soon to have been married. —_—— DELAYED LINER ST. LOUIS ARRIVES AT NEW YORK | Breaking of Cylinders Cause of Her Fallure to Reach Port on Time. | ¥ YORK, July 17.—Delayed | ever twenty-four hours by an accident | to her machinery, the steamship St Southampton and Cher Captain Jamison said that th: | high pressure engine and after | pressure cylinders on the starboard | gine were broken on Tuesday af | noon. There was little excitement on | board among the nassengers. | e PO e Jockey Succumbs to Injuries. NEW YORK, July 17. | Green, the jockey whose skull i fractured by a fall on the track a | Brighton Beach last Wednesday, died to-day. He was the regular steeple- chase jockey for the Hitchcock sta- ble. ~George ———————— First-class railroad passenger cars |are so little used in South Germany | that the authorities in Bavaria and | Baden have decided to abolish them | except om fast express and through | trains. Cut, , ing. GEOCERIES. STANDARD TOMATOES..can 5S¢ Extra qualtiy. “To-day only. SOAP..3 bars 25¢ rbank. Pure tallow Reg. 5c. WHITE STAR Made by Fal soap. Extra size. BARATARIA Dry or pickled Reg. 2 for 25c. GARDEN JAPAN TEA...Ib. 25¢ | A great Tea snap. Heg. 50c. | FRESH RANCH EGGS Guaranteed fresh....2 doz. 43¢ MARTIN'S N.Y. m’ CHAEESE | 25¢ Fancy brand. SEED. .3 Reg. 10c. FRESH Y BUTTER .. Fresh churned...2 squares 65¢ Ours is genuine creamery qual- ity. | | { . 12¢ ual good qual- HAM. . Sugar cured. Us ity. Reg. l4c. SCOTCH OATS... KINGAN'S BOILED HAM 35c everywhere Ib. 10-1b. box SODA CRA! American Biscuit Co. l wholesale before mov- A few more days and wewill be established in the Big Store, 911 and 913 Market, St.., with everything to eat,, drink and smoke. We have named it Olson’'s Market.. Il "' Good Wine. Reg. 40c. ...TELEPHONE SOUTH 1082... 915 MARKET ST. ADVERTISEMENTS. AST SALE AN THE OLD STORE prices by the LIQUORS. MARYLAND CLUB RYE WHIS- XEY bot. 7 0c genuine Baltimore. No Extra special. _Th Cohn-Belt Co., limit. Reg. $1.25 CREAM RYE WHISKEY....O5e¢ it Reg. $1.25. | " Reg. $1.00........ g 6o0e | Mild, smooth and delicious. ©0.P. 5. WEISKEY...... Bot. 50e Red label. Full quart. High proof. Bourbon. Reg. 85c. | HERMITAGE OR OLD CROW - 1804...... .00; bot. < gal. §7 Full quart. W. A Gaines distijlers, Ky. Reg. $1. ; gal. 25¢ ™.