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NEWHALL SUED TAUTHOR'S WIF “ "y LARGE S} Wadleigh Family Demand[ 550.000 Becailse Society | ook Children From Home| ATTACKED | [ LOSES HER SUIT Albert Gallatin Need Not| Pay $10,000 to Daughter, Mrs. E. Seton Thompson ] LOSS WRITES OPINION Interesting Scene Mrs. Sarah Curtis left her Jessie- street residence one day about a fort- night ago and went to the dwelling of Mrs. Emma Fitzgerald, 110 Mh’;‘n: T street, where she deliberately smashe: COllvltt HOI(.lS That Agreement four panes of glass and was arrested With Divorced Spouse IS for malicious mischief. When the case r . B |came up before Police Judge Conlan | Not a Legal Obhgatlonilhere was evident reluctance on the | part of all concerned to say any more than was absolutely necessary of the M. J. WHITE —_— Superior Judge Is Accused | Enacting a Travesty ce in the Court et of on Justi | e " ~ . t of lornce Philbrook filed a complaint | Albert Gallatin, the Sacramento |causes that led to Mrs. Curtis’ ac s fih:fk‘fl;; States (}.)rcm capitaiist, will not have to pay |vandalism and in response to her defi' e e 1. Sadleigh | $10,000 to his daughter, Grace, the |laration of Intention to pay $180, the { amount of material damage sustained by Mrs. Fitzgerald, the case was dis- missed. A sequel to the foregoing case de- veloped one of the liveliest incidents in the history of department No. 2. Mrs. Curtis was again a defendant and wife of Ernest Seton Thompson, fam- ous as a writer of animal stories. The | case of daughter against father has | been pending for some time and yes- terday a written opinion was handed down by Superior Judge .Sloss, In| v § Mrs. Fitzgerald again her accuser and which it was held that the father was | §ItS- Ttzgerald agaln bor aCereel R under no legal obligations to fulfill an | 8 | and obscene letters. It appeared that agreement made with his wife, Nemie o instgad of paying the $150 to Mrs. Gallatin, when they were divorced on | Fitzgerald, as she had promised to do, June 21, 1881. Under the agreement | Mrs. Curtis wrote upon pieces of wrap- Mrs. Gallatin was to have the custody | ping paper and with a lead pencil a Sourt, it having been al-| of (he daughter, Grace, now wife of | number of badly-spelled missives and e children had been sent|the author, and was to pay for her |sent them to Mrs. Fitzgerald, the tenor e streets to beg by the Wad-|support and education. _ Gallaun, |of the messages thus conveyed being 3 however, agreed to pay $66.66 a month |too filthy for publication. Suffice it dwin W. Newhall was president of | towarq the child’s support and fur- |that Mrs. Curtis chirographically ac- the Boclety for the Prevention of Cru-| thermore said that when she reached ~ | cused Mrs. Fitzgerald of alienating the ldren and White was itS|the gge of 18 years he would give her | affections of Mr. Curtis from his law- st Edwin W. Newhall 0,000 damages alleged to | ined by reason of ths | dleigh’s four children by t and M. J. White on 1903. ldren—May, aged 13 years; Sarah, | rs, and Solomon, aged | —were taken from their| he date mentioned by vir- der of Judge Coffey of of Wa aged 15| mecretary. The complaint character-|g59,000. | ful consort and that the writer pro- e proceedings in the Superior| The monthly payments were con-|posed to retaliate by weaning Mr. as “a travesty upon Jjustice”|tinued for a long time and were even- | Fitzgerald's love from the lady who rges that Newhall and White iously and feloniously” at-|to $600 a year. The $10,000 was never d to wean the affections of the | pajg although Grace Gallatin reached their parents. | the age of 18 in 1890. After she mar- g is an extract froi<the | rieq the author she first hinted to ner father that the money would be wel- come, then she became insistent and finally told him she would go to the i courts for her rights. {¥ These facts were set forth in the hed in the said city | affidavit of Gallatin in the t=ial of the tually reduced from 366.66 a month | bore his name. The letters were pro- duced in evidence and while Judge Conlan was examining them Mr. Cur- | tis, who sat among the attorneys, hotly averred that his wife was not their | author and that they were forgeries, | written with maliclous intent to bring | trouble and disgrace upon her and him. At the request of the complain- | ant’s counsel the Judge handed the let- |ters to him and Mr. Curtis suddenly uring about eighteen years next before M. J. White became the secretary and e agent of tie said the California So- the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, been so employed | case and he included the iateresting ; grabbed at them. In an instant - the f-‘afiiy;?‘:-n’;:f correspondence between hims and wyer and Mr. Cartis were “‘mixed” and abusing | daughter. She sent him a copy of jand an instant later Mr. Curtis was ess persons to be published | Thompson's book, “Wild Animals I | helpless as an infant in the herculean grasp of Balliff Laws. The Judge is- sued a bench warrant for Mr. Curtis’ arrest and the case of the woman was continued till next Monday, when her husband will probably also pose as de- fendant on trial. . Have Met,” and referred to the volume in all of her epistles. Judge Sloss made no comment on the | documentary evidence of the wife's de- zht in her husband's works nor upon the couple’s poverty in spite of their literary success. The Judge coldly | weighed the legal propositio~ and held | then goes on to e caused to be pub- three morrping papers libelous and \'nntexnh-l f 7 and maliciously the | children to at Wh the and Judge Cabaniss relieved the conges- | r | that there was no consideration for | tion of the Police Court calendars by | Gallatin in the agreement with his [returning from his six weeks' vacation | divoiYed wife and that in awarding | and resuming business with the physi- her the custody of the child the mother | cal and intellectual vigor of a giant One-Fifth Off | was obligated under the law to main- refreshed. In consideration of his re- edricond tain her. The child herself was not a cent lack of practice, however, most e up-to-date stock of C party to the litigation for divorce and, | of the cases assigned to' him were of ¥ therefore, could not sue for benefits |minor import, it being the purpose of growing out of the agreement. |the official distributor to work his ———— With so man Honor into old-time form by degrees. n ed cure- | After dismissing a number of opium- s being offersd to the public as there ar o 1 amre o e e ns there &re | emoking cases’ for lack of sufficient d a preparat is absolutely reliable | teStimony to warrant conviction, Judge Cabaniss heard the larceny charge against John Schmitt, specifically ac- cused of stealing a can of kerosene from a Sutter street grocery. Mr. Schmitt s the universal in- we had no recollection of purloining the et, | coal oil, as he was intoxicated at the | time, nor did he attempt to prove in- nocence. Indeed, he was rather inclined | to accept the prosecuting testimony as | true in every detail, because he knew | that anything in liquid form had an ir- | resistible attraction for him while he was drunk and athirst. He would not be surprised, indeed, if the policeman Will Be Drydocked for Repairs. The British ship Wendur. from Hamburg for Santa Rosalie, and previi“sly reported dam- | aged by collision, is at London, where srs will | | be dr{ocked for revairs | 2 ot ADVERTISEMENTS. GRAND OPENING TEL. EXCHANGE 222. The Provision Emporiym of the West.. Everything to Eat, and Drink at. Lowest, Prices. MUSICAL PROGRAMM, Special To-Day Some Exceptional Opening Day Specials in Groceries and Liquors KINGAN'S BOILED HAM, sliced FANCY CREAMERY BUTTER, 2 Ibs. full weight, squares.....45¢ 1 Ib. pkg CRACKERS, fresh baked 4= 5¢c FANCY RANCH EGGS, strictly fresh 25¢ doz. 20c bottle CHOW-CHOW .....10¢ EASTERN HAMS, cured, Aflarnoon and Evening. Sc Icccream Soda and All Frvit Flavors To-Day. . FRENCH MIXED CANDY. .30¢ b APOLLINARIS WATER, pints.... ....15¢ doz. LIBBY MALT EXTRACT $1.50 doz MARQUETTE WHISKEY.85¢ bot PRESIDENT’S BLUE FLAG WHISKEY cevenenn....85¢ bot FRENCH VERMOUTH . -50¢ bot MARYLAND RYE WHISKEY, dis- tillery bottling .. ...70¢ bot sugar usual good quality, sizes to suit | GUINNESS'S PORTER, old Eng- ...... Snpsis s s b R lish stout 3165 doz SCHILLING’S BEST BAKING | TABLE CLARET...... .. .25¢ gal POWDER ..............30¢ Ib | TABLE PORT... 528, . /B0p gal PRESERVED GINGER, for confec- P. S.—Complete Cj tionery,. fancy jar..........15¢ | co Department. . Ty THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1904. [ |[HUSBAND DEFENDS WIFE AND GETS She Is Accused of Sending Obscens Let- ters to Another Woman, and He Creates IN TROUBLE in the Police Court were to state that he had found him drinking the kerosene instead of carry- ing it away. Thirty days in prison he did not regard as ultra-severe punish- ment for his offense. = . - For stealing a cheap watch from the person of a sailor ashore Aldoni Loren- Z0 was sent to the Superior Court by Judge Conlan, with bail fixed at $1000. 7w Ellen Kelly’s seventh semi-annual appearance as a defendant accused of | drunkenness was made before Judge | Fritz, who haughtily spurned her offer to exchange $30,000 for immediate resto- ration to personal freedom. Then he sentenced her to six months' imprison- ment. | “Well, I might as well give you the money, anyway,” said Ellen, “for it's of { DO use to me, because you coppers and i Judges won't let me stay out of jail | long enough to visit the bank. I'll send you a check to-morrow morning, and i+ I hope you'll cash it right away, for glad I'll be when I'm rid of the respon- sibility of having a bank account.” Miss Kelly then whispered to Bailiff Conlan that she'd like to borrow 5 cents from him wherewith to purchase cigar- ettes. p o g Otto Artell, a tall and muscular na- tive of Sweden, established his fair young bride in a flat which he had fur- nished for her on Valencia street, and among the necessary housekeep- ing implements which he forgot to purchase was a broom. So on Thursday evening he went forth and bought a dust-raiser, and at the same time procured a bouquet of pinks as a token of his love for Mrs. Artell. Alas! neither the broom nor the bou- quet ever reached the hands of the waiting lady. patriots and accepted their congratu- latory offerings of beer until he forgot he was married, and then he suddenly became possessed of great love of his fatherland and corresponding contempt for every other nation, not excluding the United States While thus fired by patriotic ardor he tied the bouquet to the tip of the broom handle and should- ering the stick as if it were a rifle he sallied forth and paraded Market street between Sixth and Seventh, loud!y pro- claiming his desire to meet and anni- hilate a Native Son of the Golden West. That was how he got into the clutches of Patrolman Dolan, and that was why Judge Conlan sentenced him to thirty days in jail. Both the broom and the bouquet were lost in the shuffle occasioned by Otto's resistance of arrest. e SR In the presence of a prosecuting attor- ney, Judge Fritz represented the peo- ple in the battery case against Angelo Lagnonceili, and so vigcrously did his Honor question the defendant that At- torney Shortall, for the defense, filled the atmosphere with objections, ail of which the court referred to itself and then overruled. When the exami was conclude Mr. Shortall ously asked fhe Judge if he desired to address himself in behalf of the prose- cution, and the Judge not only de- clined to do so, but startled the defense by dismissing the case. S5 e, s Judge Conlan resolutely declined to reduce the $4000 bail under which S. J. Keyes i8 held to answer a charge of threatening to kill his wife, anc. his Honor's decision was probably prompt- ed by the demeanor of the @efendant himself as he sat among the prisoners in the cage. Mrs. Keyes and her son and daughter were in court, and as Keyes glared at them balefully his arme twitched and his hands involun- tarily clinched. “This defendant Is evidently too dangerous a man to be allowed at large,” said the Judge, “and for that reason I refuse the applica- tion for reduction of his bafl.” W Mike Moran was fined $10 for beating Bill McCarthy on the head with a pav- ing implement, after the provocation for the battei; had been fully explained to Judge Fritz. In his eagerness to obtain a job as laborer for the Street Department, it was stated, Mr. Mec- Carthy ingratiatingly notified a certain Mike Moran among them, were in the habit of “soldiering” while at work by surreptitiously smoking and chatting and doing several other things prohib- ited by the rules of the department. It was to punish an informer that Mika applied the paving implement to Bill's skull. Bill, it may not be amiss to add, is still seeking a job. STILL SEEKING TO CHANGE THE CHARTER OF THE CITY Fire Commissioners Power to Award Contracts. The joint Finance and Charter Amendment Committee of the Board of Supervisors yesterday recommended for passage an ordinance providing for the submission of an amendment to the charter repealing the section conferring t!‘le specific power on the Fire Commis- sioners to award contracts and placing the power in the hands of the Board of Supervisors. The proposition to give the Supervisors general supervision of con- tracts for all departments in the city government was seriously discussed, but it was concluded that such a course would be inadvisable for various rea- ns. The fact that the Fire Commis- oners have awarded the contract for shoeing horses to $2 60, when it is alleged that the work is now being done by the city at a less action noted. Brandenstein’s proposed” charter vate attorneys to various city officials and place all municipal litigation in the hands of the City, Attorney was modi- fied so that only the Tax Collector shall be deprived of his legal adviser. City Architect Shea filed a report that after inspection of the various theaters by inspectors he is satisfied that every- thing that could reasonably be done to make the buildings safe from fire and panic has been done by the managers thereof in their efforts to comply with the directions of the Board of Public ‘Works and in accordance with the city ordinances. provements thai’have been made in the nine large theaters, and adds that all reasonable precautions have been taken in the smaller places of amusement to insure the safety of the public. ———————— Order New Classes In Three Schools. School Director Boyle and Superm- tendent of Schools Langdon yesterday visited the Oceanside and Richmond schools and found such a large attend- ance that they immediately ordered | two new classes to be formed in the schools named. were overcrowded and a portable schoolhouse will be provided for a new class. 2 —_—————— Satan is always in sympathy with the self-satisfied man. On his return trip Otto met two com- | foreman that some of his employes, | Supervisors Desire (o Take From the | Eddy Graney at| cost, caused the committee to take the’ amendment to abolish positions of pri- | Shea designates the im-! The principal of the John W. Taylor School, near the Six- | mile House, reported that the classes BRAVE FIREMEN RESCUE A MAN Stan;ling on the Roof They Drag Him Up From Death in the Burning Building MANY NARROW ESCAPES Substitute “Doc” Morrissey, Though Off for the Day, Aids in the Heroic Work | An exhibition of heroism was seen at 1 the fire in the Lynnwood House, 18 Ma- | son street, yesterday morning. James | Price, an elevator man, burned and al- ['most suffocated, was rescued from a window ledgk on the sixth floor. His i rescuers were three firemen and two | | electricians. When they reached him | | the flames were scorching his hands. | He could not have held his perilous po- sition .much longer. | The fire broke out at about 8:45 |a. m. in the bottom of the elevator | shaft, which extends to the basement. | This apartment, a mere cellar, is_oc- | cupied by the Peerless Awning and | Tent Company. 1t is believed that the crossing of electric wires in the bot- tom of the shaft caused the fire, as | M. Lipman, the foreman of the fac- | tory, and Miss Florence Stanley, who i were in the little office adjoining the | shaft, state that they were startled by seeing flames suddenly burst out | from that place. They escaped into the | Street. The flames then had a clear run | | up the chimney of a shaft. At the | sixth story they found an outlet and | plaved havoc in the hallways and among the rooms on that floor. | WARNS THE LODGERS. | James Price, in his elevator, was on | the third floor, and feeling the smoke and flame coming up the shaft below | | him took his car hurriedly to the sixth floor. He knew the building was on | fire and the rooms were fllled with people, many asleep. He stopped at | | every floor and called loudly the alarm. | In a little room under the roof on the | north side of the house was Jonas W. | Attell, an old man, and, in addition to | this Infirmity, a cripple. He' had late- ly procured a pair of cork legs, and, being unaccustomed to their use, was | helpless. Price was determained on his | rescue, and rushed into the apartment. | The room was empty, and when he | started to return to his elevator he { found his retreat was cut off by the| | flames that had followed him up the shaft. Try as he might, there was ab- | solutely no escape. The fire seemed to filll the narrow stairway and the hall, and he was driven back into the room. He climbed out of the window, sat on the eight-inch stone ledge and waited. i Thus caught on his errand of heroic | effort to save life and facing his own | death from a hundred-foot fall on to a roof below, Frice remained cool and | — MARKS_BROS, Five Hundred Automobile Veils (Just Like Picture) ~Regular Prica $1.00 On Sale To-Day 50c They're 3 yards long, hemstitched ends ; come in all the newest colors. Each. Newest novelties in Chantilly and Chiffon Drape Veils, popular colors. ' 25c Ribbon . . . . . . .15¢ | Heavy taffeta highly Ilustrous Wash Ribbon. i All our 35¢ and 50c Venatian Lace Stock || Collars, on sale to-day . ... .25¢ | 85c Women’s All-Over Lace Hose..25¢c || 65c for §1 00 Black Sateen Skirts. | | 10c for 20¢ School Hose. | $1.25 for $2.00 Lacs Collars. || 43c for 75 Children’s Colored || Dresses, sizes 4 to 14. 65c for $1.25 Children’s Sailor Suits, sizes 4 to 14. 50c for $1.00 Peggy Bags. $1.45 for §2.25 Walrus Bags. 9c for 15c Satin Taffsta Wash Ribbon. 10c for 25¢ Women's Half Sleeve Vests. 65c for $1.00 French Lisle Vests, 19¢ for 25¢ and 35¢ Corset Covers. 33c for 50c Muslin Drawers. 45c for 75¢ Muslin Drawers. 39c for 60c Muslin Gowns. 69c for $1.00 Muslia Gowns. 39c for 75c Women's Waists. MARKS BROS.| 1220-1222-1224 Market St. | | | | | | I | as he lay bandaged at the Emergenc | of the people In the streets was drawn | | mund Morrissey | mutual life insurance company in t HALE'S. g HALE'S. Saturday’s News from C. Curtin Sale at Hale's. 50c Lace Stockings at 35c¢ Important News for Women : More Important Than it Sounds Black lace stockings when lace stockings are hard to get at full price. Hale’s have them at 15c less. They are imported Herms- dorff black, made of a fine lisle thread. The zag patterns rur all the way around the leg”” Hale's looked ahead and took all the lace stocking he was afraid he was going to have them left on hi is getting bigger than it has ever been. You w ers will have to pay to-day. 50c la And a limited lot (take note). 25¢ Black Cat Stockings at 12%c Pair Best school stockings for boys. What mother doesn’t know how good th wouldn’t be glad to buy them at this pric The strongest and best stockings for I black cotton with double knees, long and_el: famous Wayne knit Pony stockings. We'll sell them at is importer had wher Now the dem: ? What retailer heavy ribbed come t Some of the B Cat stockings have ribbed cotton legs and n feet. Regular 25¢ stockings at 12%c pr. 25¢ Stockings at 15¢c pr.—They're maco 25¢ Stockings at 180 pr.— cotton, Richelleu ribbed from toe black maco cotton pl m to top, Louis Hermsdorf black, weight, with double sol hee! 1 ; sizes 8 to 10. Sold regularly at 18¢ pr. to-day. Chocolates 25¢ Ib. Hand-Made Bonbons. mouth kind of double soles, heels and toes; sizes 3 to 10. toe ) Men's Fancy $1.00 Shirts at 5¢c Each. Many of them worth $1.25; all good patterns, stiff bosoms, and some negligee shirts with soft col- lars attached; some madras, some in light cashmere, with silk stripes Nearly all sizes, but not an unlimited quantity, so don’t wait too long to share them to-day at 50c each. Chocolates and 35¢ molasses ocolate Chips, ones w 1b.—Those flat enters. Big Lot New Waists Comes to Us To Sell at 95¢. style, but in ma- ave taken New fall things are coming in rapidly now. Have you seen the Women’s Waiking Suits at $16.50 and $22.50? They're equal in style and workmanship ¢ ST and material to suits you would the East It’s F 2 office ew expect to pay a third more for. intezests ‘that Bei _ fir And even To Sell at Less Than the New York Price. Drug Prices To Make Big Selling To-Day. | To demonstrate what a big store For they're waists they are chargt 0 . $1.25 for there even in the big stc ][nlc s have and how economical it Of dotted swiss «i,‘_ y b is to buy here all the time. golden brown ar cream white with Toilet Soap, 20c box—It's Violstte de Pmarme. highly scented; 3 cakes to the x. Bottle’ Hartshorn Ammonia, 9%—A large bottle of the finest quality. Mrs. Cobl®s Panza Cream, 25c jar— Fine for the hands and face. Castile Soap, 15c—A large 2-pound bar white soap. Rubber Dressing Combs, A line, with coarse and fine teeth, 7 Chamois Skin, 35c—For a large piece, 15x20 in., excellent quality. Whisk Brooms, —A good vaiue, Rubber Sponges, 50c—The best quality made. Dandruff Cure and Hair Tonic, tle—Large bottle. nt and back a . As soon \s women as big a_fad 9¢ bot- carefully closed the window hnhm‘ii-;- S— 5 him. SEE S B b ) “I thought if I could keep the flames | FRANK H. SPEARMAN | | and smoke away from me,” he sai Tells One of His Famous Rail- sit there till road Stories | Hospital, “1 could at le: 1 the brick wall got too hot. It was| | In The Sunday Call Magazine | warm and terrible smoky, for It to-morrow. It will amply repay | poured out from the other windows| | your time. “In the Bishop's | and up from beneath and over the edge | | Carriage” Is concluded: W. A. | of the roof above my head. And it even Webster has a humorous story, | came through my window, though I| | “The Luck of the Babe”; there held-it shut with one hand. There was are two pages on latest fem a bit of cloth on the ledge beside me. nine fads; an account of the and I held it over my mouth when 1| | greates® Atlantic liner ever de- signed, now building: a page of storiettes, and in all sixteen pages replete with fact and fic- || tion. was strangling in the thick smoke. I/ | thought of the cripple and wondered it | he had been saved. I hoped he had been.” 4 HAULED UP TO SAFETY. The rescuers were climbing up L the ¥ building. The three firemen—Brown- An ambidextral cultural society has ell, - Raffestin _and Morrissey—with |} .\ ( conized in England. Electricians Edward Mackinzie and | C. Severen, with a line taken| — from the feedpipe of engine 17,/ ADVERTISEMENTS. made their way through the | —~ - - SR, smoke Aas near as they could get to Price. They were still about twenty | feet off, but the rope was thrown to the man sitting on the window sill. He caught it and tied the line around his body with his blistered bands and swung off, and amid the loud cheers up to the roof and saved after ing to his narrow place of refug fully twenty minutes. Price was carried-down the. fire es- cape and into Frank Kelly's drug store, where Dr. A. A. O'Neill attena- him. With Faul Manning, al who was considerably burned ace, Price was taken ng- e for ed lodger, on the hands and e best Safety Razor on the mar- to the Central Emergency Hospital |l y.e Regular price $2.00. Makes Price is a son of W. R. Price, i & Bt cashier of the First Nation 1l Bank BRING ME YO pra - Fresno. His injuries are mot serious. ||, RC0T L =0 T O 1A om. A dispatch from Fresno last evening o n hew tae: Tve Sied eren requested that he be kept at the hos- || PR Foy o0 Raz s I"i;:"‘;;‘fi'““‘:QQ'N‘,‘Z,““ oy My special .high-grade Pocket w rescued by T. J. Dwyer, formerly :‘\ i o «Lt“a#l.(m is a world a fireman on vni'mofil A v hr::‘ " c oy BB i SRS the lodgers awakened rom ep b o . oo B the alarm were carried from the build- m\‘l X : ways m |”r_" - ing more or less frightened and more Razor Strops from 23e up. “Twe or less undressed. bars Williams’ Shaving Soap, 15e. Claude Brownell has been in the Fire Razors honed and ground. Zoning, 25e. fte ne Department about fifteen years, ni of which he has been a member of en- | gine 17. He lives at 28 Harriet street. E. V. Raffestin has been a member of artment for twelve years. E i sey is only a substitute on famous by the deed This was his day downtown when the He could not resist | Mail orders promptly filled. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, the Stationmer, 1008 Market Street, Opp. Fifth St San Franciseo. engine 17—now of her three men. off, and he was alarm rang out. was soon at the scene of | :fi: g';le‘ afi: still followed the cau"u‘p{ CURE S ‘the burning roof, where a life .ICK HEADACHB. :flas (s:\-te}:l, He lives at 119 Clementina | G Must has a wife and child. d garest, an damage was done by The greatest Fac-Simile Signaturs v every floor was flooded, Bodes S Bzxr?: flames burned flercely in Ehous r stories. J. A. McPhee, ‘ e g: 1;::;10‘:?0: the Lynwood, estimates t 6 es. $4000 at about $6000. He carri m:J:nS:ne. The building is owned by the Ruby Hill Vineyard Company, A. | e leh agent. The Peerless Awning | ".d Tent Company holds its loss at | :'32)00 The entire loss by the fire will be about $25,000. o i As an example Of conservative mas of trust funds there is much to int public in another column of this paper wh appe land The Overland Limited | arr Unior n, - i train, via the Union Pacific and the Chicago, Milwaukee § & St. Paul ars the apnual statement of the ‘Mutual Life Insurance Comp of insurance laws Massachusetts ts s holders, and this company, the forms of pol writes all_approved . and liberal annual surrender privileges tions of surplus, making them unexcel Irtbutions life lnsurance contracts upon the | Raitway. Tarket to-day. Henry K. Field is the com- pany's general agen with offices in the Mills Another good train at § p. m., buildina. ~ .1 e —————— Burned by Molten Metal. | While pouring molten metal into a mold, J. Crowley, who is employed in a foundry on Utah street. suffered T! painful but not serious injuries yes-| terday afternoon. The mold broke and the hot metal ran over his foot.| His injuries were dressed at the Cen-| — i HAY FEVER:~ €. L. CANTIELD. tral Emergency Hospital. —_————————— Cavse ramoved. ® » - : Ye Olde English Inn, l aAQT e > Pees. S8 Mraaon vt Eiat nbige 5 wet- a0 1 VRS EUIHL Wone oo o ot drink at Babs & Jules'. P. HAROLD MAYZS, Buffalo, N Y.