The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 31, 1904, Page 28

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A Manufacturer’s Sample Line of Ready-to-Wear Garments | HALF PRICES PREVAIL l Omne of the most exclusive and successful makers of lnfih graldc de Suits, Skirts, W, Shirt Waist Suits, etc., close t his traveler’s sampies to our New York buyer. Sale begins Second floor. Take the elevator. INTRODUCTO:Y SALE of DRESS 600DS In order to properly introduce the most extensive line of fall novel- ties now on exhibition in the city we offer a special sale of {o;xr n aists, . M. tO-MOTTow. St atg a2 Ladles' “*Sample” Tailor Made Suits Less Than 63c on the Gollar “SAMPLE” TAILORED SUITS $13.50—In y, black or brco“n - oy chewiots e items beginning to-morrow. e” sale price $13 50 taking advantage of these “spe- cials” we ask that you look at TAILOR SUITS etamines Value $35.00. $19.25 ALPACA SHIRT the novelties. OXFORD AND SHEPHERD CHECKS—In black and white; small and medium size checks 40 inches wide, for shirt waist h h cloth “SAMPLE” suits and children’s schoof WAlaT SUITS 5'95 In navy, dresses; very durable; soc kind. - brov cream and Iya):'rdndudnr) sal c,.,—cc a 25C $7.95 Sample” sale price KERSEY TAILOR CLOTHS— “SAMPLE” TAFFETA SHIRT 15 pieces, in all .colors, includ- WAIST SUITS $17.50—Change- | ing black, and guaranteed all able effects, black, navy, brown wool: sponged and shrunk; full d als variety of fancy <6 inches wide and just the thing e $25.00 and $27.50 for tailor suits and fancy. coats; y e” sale $l750 a grand $2.50 value. Introduc- tory sale price, a "SAN’PLE JACKETS $4.75— gand Sl Do $1-45 black broadcloth, | BLACK MIRROR MOHAIR— heviots and light-weight 10 pieces to be on sale. Guar- in black and gray anteed fast black; iron frame $4 75 weave; suitable for skirts and le” sale price...\. shirt waist suit v!wl« wide; » WALKING SKIRTS the $1.00 kind. .Mon S;:MPLF big variety; colors and day,ayard.....:..... " 50c al ; kilted and pleated s FANCY ALPACA SUITING 20 ate. Worth $5.00 pieces. In brown, blues, grays, ple” black and white effects; lustrous $3.50 price silky finish, shines like silk and “SAMPLE" WALKING SKIRTS wears better; the $1.25 5 $7.50—A big variety. Worth Introductory sale price, a 75C om $10.50 to $12.00 $750 yard i SASPLE" SHIRT WAISTS soc SILK_DEPARTMENT W wn. Valued at $1.00 | NOVELTIES IN FANCY SILKS and S l'fln:e early: you will —Small d fine s ot Caave chance e this in hm;n 5 e, b ample” sale white, blue and green, gre ce Sample” "2 80C| white, etc. Regular Ssc silks. “SAMPLE” SATEEN WAISTS To be introduced at, a 65C $1.10—Value $1.50. $l 19 yard “Sample” sale price . BLACK TAFFETA SILK — “SAMPLE" INDIA SILK | Guaranteed in every respect; VVAXST:. $2.65— White or black. w:\':r‘u‘( ide Re:"flar SI]Z value S C irect from the St $2.65| Lmi i vl 85c :AMPLE PETTICOATS $1.85 . e new jersey effects. Value le” yMail orders filled. Samples sent $1.85 application. o - —— + | see pases T &2 to 7. | BUSINESS Ct{ANCES, MONEY TQ LOAN, ROOMS || TO IE T FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED, HOUSEKEEPING. APARTMENTS TO LET. SITUA- TIONS WANTED, HELP WANTED, AND A THOU- S AND OTHER WANTS FULLY DISCUSSED— als, PAGES 42 TO 47 INCLUSIVE, TO-DAY’S CALL. _— —_— ’SHO(‘KS OF EARTHQUAKE ARE FELT IN. INTERIOR Vibrations Last Long Enough Waken Sound Sleepers, but No Damage Is Done. SACRAMENTO, July 30.—Two sharp shocks of earthquake were felt here this morning at 2:26 o’clock. The vibration was from east to west. No damage has been reported. STOCKTON, July 30.—Shortly be- fore 3 o'clock this morning Stockton was visited by an earthquake shock, the vibrations lasting several seconds. The girection was north and south. It was so pronounced that sound sleepers were awakened. No damage | is reported. | WOODLAND, July 30.—Several distinct shocks of earthquake were felt hera this morning at 2:30. They were hfavy enough to waken people from profeund slumber. No damage was done. —_———— |NEW JERSEY MOSQUITOES | PREY UPON AGED MAN AVE WOMAN PREVENTS WRECK WITH TABLECLOTH Discovers Tree on Track and “Flags” to the Train in Time to Avert a Disaster. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Jaly 80.« having been blown down near e on the Hudson River Railroad short distance from the house of James McKenna, three miles north of this city, Mrs. McKenna real- g that a train was due and thag he engineer would not see the tree in time to avert a disaster, seized a red tablecloth and, frantically waving the oth, ran up the track. She rounded the curve just as the train appeared quarter of a mile up the road and he engineer brought his train to a stop. The woman told about the tree on the track and added, “I hope I did not do wrong in stopping the train.” Not at all, madame,” was the re- ply. “You did perfectly right and you are entitled to great praise.” The crew removed the obstruction | and the train proceeded. | e ——— CONVENTION OF SUNDAY- SCHOOLS ENDS SESSION g | | Officers for the New Year Are | Victim of Insects Found in Dense Woods Near the Town of Mount Clare. ! MOUNT CLARE, N. J.! July 30.— at Last Meeting of Asso- {A man 70 years old, who says he is| clation. | John Almond, but who, because of | SANTA CRUZ, July 30.—At the clos- | weakness, is unable to give any ac- ing meeting of the State Sunday Schoollcount of himself, is in the hospital Associetion at Garfield Park Taber- | here, hovering between life and death nacle, the officers elected to serve dur- | as the resylt of exposure to storm and ;"g‘.t;e (u‘:o;x‘ln: year were: President, | |the attacks of rposquitoes. He was | Rev. B. E. J:;:“Bszg:fl:l'd“ president, | found in the dense woods near the | Rev. Otha Wilkison, Uklah: treacincy. | P2Seaic line. Apparently Almond had | | been in the woods for several days. Mrs. McMillan, Sacramento. Rev. J. A. Helton of the committes on future He Was extremely emaclated and his | were éwollen out of ::;k recommended that 2 Stite Bun [ fece and hants school missionary employed | shape from thousands of bites by mos- rgm chall be a Sunday school evangel- | quitoes and other insects. . ———— Author Dies in Jtaly. | MONTREAL, July 80.—Willlam Me- Lennon, a Canadian author, s dead at Valumbrosia, Italy, where he was stay- ing with his family. ————— The toad is an exceedingly greedy | animal. It feeds continu-usly through- out the night, and in twenty-four hours consumes a quantity of insects equzl to about fBur times its stomach | CA ity. ADVERTISEMENTS, 1 lllIllRlll-ulllllllllllllllIlll-ll : RUPTURE CURED Our cure is safe, no difference. Here is one: certain and practically painless. Age makes We have cured cases ranging in age from 5 to 8o years. San Francisco, Cal., “Our little daughter was ruptured at the age of grew steadily worse. When she was 10 years old under your care and at the end of seven treatments nently cured. She is now very active, running and jumping with- out pain or inconvenience. I believe your treatment will cure any rupmrc that can be held by a truss.” E G HURSCH. 3668 Twentieth street, San Francisco. s Hunch received her last treatment June 13, 1903. i WE CAN CURE YOU. FIDEI.ITY RUPTURE CURE§ 1344 Market St., San Francisco a PEEEESAEARRENERNEREREN v July 24, 1904, 3% years ad we placed her she was perma- & 1 PLACES BLAME ON THE MINERS and sued in Cripple Creek was followed in other parts of the State, and particu- and crimes of the federation had been £till more inhuman than in any other district and more complete. there.” < Creek and the troops withdrawn when the dynamite outrage was committed | at the Independence depot June 6, fol- lowed by the riot at Victor. | Two | two days has the fire Governor Peabody Declares Western Federation Is Responsible for Troubles —iies LONG ADDRESS b Pl Executive Asserts That His- tory of Union Is a Tale of Assaults and Outrages e DENVER, July 30. — Governor James H. Peabody to-day issued an address explaining and vindicating his acts in dealing with the labor troubles in Colorado. He refutes the conten- tion that the strike inaugurated by the Western Federation of Miners at the ore reduction works in Colorado City was called because of the failure of the Legislature to enact an eight-hour law, pointing out that it was called on the 14th of February, some five or six weeks before the adjournment of the Legislature, which then had under consideration an eight-hour law. Lat- er a sympathetic strike was declared by the federation in Cripple Creek to cut off the ore supply of the m! Governor Peabody then goes into the history of the Western Federation of Miners, which, he declares, is re- plete with assaults, dynamite outrages and murders. In affording protection to men who desired to labor, the Gov- ernor explains, “it became necessary, in my !judgment, to confine certain men in military guardhouses, as one of the safest and Jmost expeditious ISSUES methods of restoring order. It was loudly proclaimed that this was with- out authority of law. The question was submitted to the Supreme Court nd ‘the action of the militia in that respect fully sustained. It is a useful necessary power and the class that should dread its exercise is not numerous. The general policy pur- larly in Telluride, ‘where the excesses the reign of terror still Order now prevails Quiet had been restored in Cripple The Gov- ! ernor - places the responsibility for both these occurrences on the feder- | ation. | “When the excitement had some- what subsided and the county was still under quasi-military rule,” the Gov- ernor continues, “it was found that there were several hundred members of the Western Federation in the dis- trict yet who would mot work and had | resolved that others should not if by such methods as those employed at the Independence station they could be driven away, I resolved that they should be dispersed and I dispersed them.” Governor Peabody denies the charge that he is waging war on la- bor unions generally and closes as fol- lows: “I have had to deal with an organ- ization which has no counterpart in this country. Its official proclama- tions, full of defiance and challenge, issued from time to time, have amounted, as has been said, to a ‘dec- laration of war.' “L have met the challenge with a none too vigorous for the out- I wad called to oppose. But lhrough it all I have had but one ob- ject, and that to show the people of Colorado that the laws will be up- held—that a criminal organization cannot dictdte the policy of this ad- ministration and that everywhere within the borders of Colorado prop- erty shall be secure and labor shall be free - —_————— SANTA ROSA MAN IS \1(,'1‘1\1 OF TWO FIRES Blnzcsp “hhln Twenty-Eight Hours Cause Damage and Poliee Are Investigating. SANTA ROSA, July 30.—Twice fiend visited Henry W. Ungewitter of this city. On V\cdn’sda\' at midnight fire destroyed barn, situated in the rear of his dence at College avenue and Hum- | bodlt street, burned one of'his horses | to death, destroyed a new rubber tire | buggy, large quantity of hay and grain. Friday morning about 4:30 o’clock the Fire Department was again called to subdue a blaze in the butcher shop of Ungewitter on Third street. The second visitation came within twenty- eight hours of the first. —_—— e — CHINESE DIPLOMAT CALLS HIS SON FROM SCHOOL Youth Receives Unexpected Summons After Matriculating at Univer- sity of Pennsylvania. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 30.— | Wu Chao Chu, son of ex-Minister Wu Ting Fang, who has been attending school here, has received a message from his father, who is vice president of the Foreign Board at Peking, direct- ing him to return to China at once. Young Wu says that he will start Sat- urday or Monday. The summons was | unexpected, especially as he had ma- | triculated at the University of Penn- eylvania, having intended to take a four years' course there. He says that he does not know why he has been calleg/to China. —_—————— . JOSE BUILDING TRADES ELECTS OFFICERS | Semi-Annual Report Makes Good Showing and Members Are Regularly Employed, BAN SAN JOSE, July 36—The Building | Trades Council of this city has elected the following officers fof the ensuing term: President, B. J. White; first vice president, A. L. Reusher; second vice president, J. Sbarboro; recording secre- tary, Charles H. Harrison; financial secretary, John'Standley; treasurer, R. Yarnall; busines agents, William Har- per and W. G. Mathewson. Reports for the half-year show that the council is growing in strength and that the members have been steadily employed. New Commissioners at Fair. ST. LOUIS, July 30.—Jacob Goeld- berg, Max Berkovitz and L. E. R. Robinson, constituting the new Rus- sian commission to the World’s Fair, arrived torday from St. Petersburg, . in| seven sets of harness and a| ADVER' Tls_{li)l!} TS. OF THE WORLD’S CHO ICEST PRODUCTIONS IN ‘l‘he first showing of the new fall designs bagins to-morrow. Never have the patterns been mor attrac- Two toned Oriental, Floral and Persian and Art, Nouveau. An array of high grade carpets that will “This is a week of special pricing on staple carpets. SUPERIOR QUALITY OF AXMINSTER. Fine deep pile. Floral and Persian designs. With or without borders. Per yard, made, laid $| 25 and lined. ..... tive. appeal to every taste. EXCLUSIVE LINE OF VEL- VETS. Lovers of the artistic will be more than pleased with the soft blending of colors in this choice grade of carpets. Per yard, m.xd:, laid $| IO and lined EXCELLENT TAPESTRY BRUSSELS. With or without border. Hall and stair carpet to match. Dcagn suitable for any room in the house. Per yard, made, laid 750 and lined EXTRA QUALITY OF BRUSSELS. A weave that will give years of satisfaction. Patterns to please every taste. Per yard, made, laid 90¢ and lined ALL WOOL ART SQUARES Reversible. 6x9 feet. Artis- tic designs. A thoroughly satisfactory rug at a little £ $4.50 Each FIBER CARPET. Latest thing in sanitary floor cover- ing. Patterns are exceeding- ly artistic. Fabric is durable. Colors ate pleasing and har- monious. : 7 5 ¢ Fesyardi-.s.7: SMYRNA RUGS. 27x54. Fringed both ends. All woal, Reversible. Oriental and Per- $1.85 LINED WARP MATTING. fiber. Artistic coloring. Carpet pattern. Our 20¢ Good fresh own importation. sian designs. Per yard. . Price, each. FURNITURE 245950 GO cearysT ON THE SQUARE jes DANA IS NAME MAN WHO Cordes MARSHAL TAKES POSTAL OF YOUNG SHOT | DELAWARE CHINA IS TO LOSE HIMSELF : SERVICES OF WU |+ — - TING FANG | CLERK TO JAIL | | If it does not pay to hold your unimproved property EX- Son of Famous l')lplnln'\( Says Father |'Bank Cashier Identifies Youth \\'hn‘ Arrests Homnolulu Postoffice Employe | The cashler said that his name was hat from a Samuel G. Dana, and that the young man had been employed a clerk. ama .'?g(s!l?re‘d Is About to Retire From | Tried to Commi* Suicide in | Accused of Stealing Pfhama Hat | CHANGE IT. GOOD proposi- | Polit | Central Park. | From Registered Package. | | tions offered daily in THE ATLANTIC CITY, N. I, July 30.— | NEW YORK, July 30.—The identity WILMINGTON, Del, July - 30.—| | car CLASSIFIED COL~ Wu Ting Fang, for som vears the |Of the young man who was found yes deputy .\.lnr hal Hawkins brought to | Chinese Minister at Jashington, ac- terday in Central Park with a bullet | Yh!s city to-¢ Edwin Rose, aged 19, | j | ¢ s Wi Chao Chu, has | Woundsin his breast and who refused | late of the Hawaiian Islands, whom he | +* Qoeilg daiages, o R the | to give his name to the police was es- |arrested on a sugar steamship at| MERGER CASE DECREE PEsERa e ¥ioo E" Pr-‘ }1 is u-,mhabllshed to-day by the cashier of the | Del., just in from Honolulu, at | SUBJECT OF ARGUMENT Feoielgn Hoesd i"\,] T pol- | New. Amsterdam 'National Bank, | ti stance of Postoffice Inspector . :a(};jlw\\p‘:r:n;:‘:‘nn(l)‘uu's his father | Where the young man was employed. ‘ W € on a charge of the larceny | Judge Bradford Promises Document | Will Be Filed at Trenton Next Week. WILMINGTON, D has determined to lead a quiet life and has built himself a country home | near Shanghai. The former Minister £ Age. | Rose was a clerk in the postoffice at | as - i ana’'s acquaint- | Hilo, Hawaii, when the hat was re-| r 8 B ok his of. | He knew nothing of Dana's acquaint- | I i, ment wae heard he ¥ T8 g g Sy o {ance with Mrs. Dignon, nor did he |ceived there, it having been sent by |Surdn (::q[‘::’.‘d St s cial business. | have any idea as to what motive the |a New York firm on order. It being | e When young Wu was questioned as to the reason for his’ being called | home he said that as far as he could | 'glean from the communications re- ceived from his father it was because of a desire to have the family reunit- !ed. He is the only son and he thinks his father wants him nearer home. It is said at the Chinese legation at on the form of a d in a mutilated condition, the customer (i, the Northern S refused to accept it and the postmas- | court having decided r ter wrote to Washington for instruc-|order could issue gra tions. The department directed him |rary injunction restr: to return the hat. When he looked |érn Securities Compa for it no hat could be found and Rose |3, P70, Tata distributt had disappeared also. = —_——————— young man had for suicide, if such is the explanation of the shooting. It was said that young Dana's home was in Waco, T where his family is prominent. e T PR A BROKER WOODEND FILES PAPERS IN BANKRUPTCY next s g S = MURPHY IS ARRAIGNED week. t‘?r:;nhi:‘l’u;: i:‘:,‘m‘l“,“ I;‘;‘:fif“‘;}: S e | Pocuments show That Suspended ON CHARGE OF FORGERY | He also notified counsel for Harri- it % o Speculator Owes Almost $200,000 — \mnn et. al '(ha! they ‘\\ s be re- Sfse ! and Has Many Creditors. Former County Auditor of Santa |duired to give a bond for $2.000 PASQ ROBLES TO HAVE | NEW YORK, July 30.—Dr. William Clara Appears in Court for i | | E. Woodend, the broker whose sus- Trial. i | pension a few months ago attracted Proposition to Bond City for Pur-}Much attention, to-day filed a petition pose Is Submitted to Voters in bankruptcy in the United States and Carried. | District Court. An involuntary peti= tion in banRruptcy against him was PASO ROBLES, July 30.—A city elec- | tion was held here yesterday for the pur- | filed several months ago. The sched- | ! : | ules show debts to the amount of pose of voting on a proposition to bond | ¢ % 20T €L 0 S SEOURT of Title to Fair Property. SAN JOSE, July 30.—Ex-County Aud- A suit to quiet title to the property itor Martin Murphy was before Judge)ac the corner of Lombard and Scott Tuttel of the Superior Court yesterday | streets, 126x275 feet, was begun yes- for arraignment on a charge of for- | | terday by the American Spirits Manu- gery. Murphy is accused of forging the | facturing Company against Thomas G. na: of County Treasurer Conant to a | Crothers and James S. Angus, admin- receipt in the sum of $86 65 paid for the |y avore of the estate of James L. redemption of a piece of real estate Fair, the heirs of the estate, and Her- HOT SULPHUR BATHS | the“city for $25,000 to build and equip | from tax sale. He was arrested at El - | a hot ;ulphur bathhouse. The propo- {of the labilities are secured. The l'a‘s-n Tex., and brought back here for | mann Oelrichs, administrator of the sition carried by a vote of 46 to 192, |creditors number 500. trial estate of Charles L. Fair. ADVERTISEMENTS. | %Compare Our Methods You will realize then why Schlitz beer is pure. You wash a cooking utensil once. - We wash a bottle four times, by machinery, before we fill it. i You use city water. We bore down 1400 feet to rock for ours. You prepare food in the air of the room.! We cool Schhitz , beer in plate-glass rooms and filter all the air that touches it. machinery_—filter 1t through E Then we filter the beer by white wood pulp. -Yet your methods are cleanly.- Ours are cleanliness carried i td extremes. | .~Then—for fear of a touch of impurity—we sterilize every : bottle after it is sealed. = We double the necessary cost of our brewmg to give you a healthful beverage pure. " Do you wonder that we sell over a million barrels annually? Ask for the brewery bottling, Los Angeles - SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD -San Francises-

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