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TH SAN FR/ CISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1904. CONVICT STROH WAS NOT HIRT den of San Quentin Says Jacket Did Not Harm Him LAUGHS AT EXPERIENCE Walks to His Cell When Re- leased and Shows No Sign of Injury or Discomfort Dispatch to The Call Sept. 28.—Convict whom so much ished the last few days sco daily, whose pun- Warden of San Quen- of a threatened inves- the State Board of Prison i viewed by a Call to-day. The reporter Warden this after- sted information con- ges of cruelty and in- atment of prisoners made 1 the same daily sh, about - the discipl s taken to sup € stated th 1 g to have his actions Iy i ated and fe it would prove to the ess of his actions. W if Convict Stroh was In p ondition from his ex- conduct incorrigible is confined. 10 are suf- t in the iron old factory 1 the prisoner w ne of the sever of great pe oh’s cell was opened ress stepped the of his body free and His he ter he smilir hen very fr iestions put to him at he had been in 1 off for about asked how he felt he was carried from flight he top of but Kket, d Stroh nterview an P solitary rd shows that Stroh ow serving twen- some time the prison Their 1 they 14 onfirmed strait- EXPERIMENT BARLEY ITH PROVES oSS Fresno County Farmer Plants Grain and Reaps a Harvest That Is ishing. Aston George C. three Walter T. Swingle o f Agriculture. The from Washington to inty to experiment a great success. of the matter harvested eighteen David_G. department 1 ser the Wahl Heni y an experiment t se &% a brewing element Fairchild gy for k 1t chevalier barley type. Distinguished Visitors Arrive. VANCOUVER, B. C. Sept. 28.—A d party comprising the tchfield, Lady Litchfield, the 1 of Dartmouth, Lady Dartmouth, Lord Lewisham and Col- W. Coke, arrived here Several of the party are to Japan and others will visit principal American cities. —_—————— Church Wedding at San Jose. SAN JOSE, Sept. 28.—Miss Louise d, a popular young lady of Mont.,, and Robert Page of y were married here at noon The ceremony was performed Joseph's Church by Father After a short honeymoon d Mrs. Page will go to Nevada, where they will make their home. —_— e XD, Ohlo, Sept. 28.—A group of been named by the creditors of Company of Canton, Ohlo, to co- Receiver Sullivan in straighten- f the concern, which made recently with labilities aggre- 500,000, CLEV bankers A ADVERTISEMENTS. Pears’ The skin ought to be there nothing strange in a beautiful face. clear ; is If we wash with proper soap, the skin will be open and clear, unless the | health is bad A good . skin is better than a doctor. The to use is Pears’; no free alkali in it. soap t a paralytic. When | VOLUN ;; O TEERS OF AMERICA LOOK TO THE RESCUING OF CHILDREN pen a Spacious Home in Which Waifsi and the Neglected Offspring of Con- victs May Find Shelter and Protection 2 - + | | | | | | | — — — - o 7 | MAUD B. BOOTH HOME ON BUENA VISTA AV NEAR JAVA STREET, | | | WHICH THE VOLI RS OF AMERICA JUST OPENED FOR THE | | SHELTER OF HELI S AND HOMEL! . ONES. | 5 - & o e | A home for children has been opened The Volunteers have arranged to pur- by the Volunteers of America at :.qw sue still greater efforts in ‘‘tenement Buena Vista avenue, corner of Java|WOrk” in the city and Mrs. Colonel | street. The house contains twenty-one | ’Uncan, who actsas the personal rep- | il s oy Sl any 'lir fl\ resentative of Mrs. Ballington Booth in Eoms e 3 | the prison work, has been put in awn. iarg2 of the children’s and tenement | The institution will be known as the | wor | Maud B. Booth Home for Children, When recently in the city Ballington | and its principal feature will be the| Booth took special interest in the selec- | caring for the friendless children of|tion of the home and laid his plans State prisoners, thus placing them un-| before his representatives here. Th Ade: neces which will benefit them | result is that every care and comfort ! possible will be assured the little in- some will also be used for the| mates whose future career it is hoped neglected little ones who constantly | to guard against the bad surroundings me ur the observatic and temptations which endangered | f the Volunteers their childhood days. WITH HESBANDS Federal Authorities Swoop Down Upon a Gang of Bold | Smugglers Near the Line SEf P Special Dispatch to The Call. —United surprised Sam ates here to- DOUGLAS States Attorney Nav Pepper and his confec day by causing the arrest of all the parties concerned in Pepper’s plot to beat the Governigent by marrying three Mexican women he wished to bring into the United States for immoral purposes to Charles Alexander, Herbert Row- land and Williatn Cummings, all Amer- ican citizens. The four men are in jail charged with conspiracy, while the women were ar- rested on the charge of violating the Edmunds act in or | witnesses and prevent them from es- Sept. caping across the line. | United States Attorney Nave he will vigorously prosecute the cases to stop the fraudulent marriages, con- tracted for the purpose of evading the immigration law. SAN DIEGO, Sept. 28.—Chief Immi- gration Commissioner Frank Sargent | will arrive in San Diego on Friday. He will make a trip overland along the | border line from Tia Juana, eastward | of the Mexican side, quaint himself with the conditions with which the local officers have to deal. —_—ee————— says | | MODERN DAIRY PLANNED | FOR SANTA CLARA COUNTY | Plant Wil 1l Be Up-to-Date in Every Way and Will Cost $75,000. SAN JOSE, Sept. Santa Clara County is to have the most modern dairy in the United States. | be erected by James W. Rea on his ranch a few miles northwest of this city. Its cost will be $75,000, and the contract for the work has already been let. The plans for the dairy have been passed on by the Health Officer of this city and the authorities of San Francisco. Authorities pro- nounce the plans far ahead of any- thing they had ever heard of in the dairy line. The building will accommoate 120 cows of the Holstein breed. All the floors will be of concrete, and a stream of water will continually run through the center drain, and the stalls will be so arranged that they can be flushed every day. Milkers will be compelled to wear uniforms, and everything will be done to insure cleanliness. - GOOSE FALLS AND HITS HUNTER ON THE LEG Nimrod Kills Bird, Turns to Shoot Another and Receives Injuries That Cripple Him. LAKEVIEW, Ore., Sept. 28.—Elden Woodcock, a Lakeview hunter, is walking around on crutches because of 2 peculiar accident. Woodcock was hunting on Goose | Lake when two honkers came flying overhead. He fired at the foremost and then turned to dispose of the second. paying no attention to the goose he had just killed. The fowl's heavy body struck his leg a glancing blow, causing a painful injury. Pears’, the soap that * clears but not excoriates. | % Sold all over the world. BAKERSFIELD, Sept. 28.—Morgan Stewart, a walter about 25 years of age, attempted in order to ac-| This is to | 1 WOMEN [AILED | [ [ | der to hold them as| | good it will do you. | Coroner’s jury. suicide to-day. He took a dose of strychnine because, ns he informed his mother, “he had wroubles.” His death is expected. ! BOY BURCLAR SHOT T0 DEATH | Officer Finds Bakersfield | Youth Attempting to Rob| a Saloon and Shoots Him | { —_— | BAKERSFIELD, Sept. 28.—Alexander | M . an eighteen-year-old boy | who came here a few weeks ago with | his widowed mother trom Salt Lake | City, and who was employed in a local | department store, was shot and fatally wounded by Policeman Bell at 1:30! v'clock this morning while in the act of burglarizing Berg & Smiley’s sa- loon on Nineteenth street. i Myers fired one shot at the officer before the latter shot. He died in a few minutes after declaring that h had no accomplices, but the officers be lieve that another was mmplicated. An-! other boy was arrested on suspicion this morning, but was released, having proven an alibi. Officer Bell was exonerated by the G ————— MINER HELD UP BY FIVE MEN IN BROAD DAYLIGHT Tramps Are Arrested for Daring Crime Committed in Business Section of Bakersfield. BAKERSFIELD, Sept. 28.—In broad daylight this afternoon an aged miner named McIntosh was held up and robbed by several men on the streets near the business center of the city just as he was leaving a sa- loon and restaurant, where he had eaten. Sheriff Kelly late this after- noon captured five hoboes, whom Mc- Intosh identified as the men guilty of the crime. i —_——— Indian War Veteran Dies. PORTLAND, Sept. 28.—Thomas A. Wood, grand commander of the In- dian War Veterans’ Association of Oregon, died of heart disease at his home in this city yesterday, aged 67 years. —————— Vallejo Elk Is Honored. VALLEJO, Sept. 28.—Frank R. Devlin has been appointed by. Grand Exalted Ruler O'Brien of the Elks| district deputy grand exalted ruler for | the Northern District of California. ———— ADVERTISEMEN' IF YOU'RE SICK Why don’t you try a dose of Hos- tetter’s Stomach Bitters before | each meal and at bedtime? You’ll, be surprised at the amount of| It has cured | thousands of sickly men and' women in the past and won’t fail | : you now. It is unequaled for cur-l | ing Poor Appetite, Insomnia, In-‘ digestion, Dyspepsia, Constipa-| tion, Nausea, Female Complaints and Malaria. Try a bottle and test it for yourself. Avoid substi- tutes. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS! !and being looked” during the palmy days when ! | over $3,000,000 was cradled from the G00D SCHOOLS | TEMPEST RAGES NOW ASSURED Citizens of Sausalito Vote to Bond City for $30,000!‘ for Educational Purposes FEW ARE AGAINST PLAN —— Election Returns Show That Only Forty-Eight People Opposed the Improvement —_— Special Dispatch to The Call. SAUSALITO, Sept. 28.—The residents of Sausalito voted to-day to issue bonds to the amount of $30,000 for the pur- pose of constructing two modern school houses and procuring necessary furni- ture. election, as Sausalito has grown rap- idly in the last few years and has felt the need of greater school accommoda- tions. The result of the election was 238 votes for the bonds and 42 against. The election was called by the Board | of Trustees of the Sausalito school dis- W. J. Martin, | trict. Town Trustee Father Valentine, Mayor Thomas and other public-spirited citizens led the fight for the bonds, and it was due to their efforts that the proposition was carried by almost a unanimous vote. Sausalito is sadly in need of better educational facilities at present. The classrooms are crowded and a vote against the issue of the bonds would have been detrimental to the town. —_—— FABULOUS STRIKE MADE IN OREGON DIGGINGS Nuggets and Coarse Gold Found in Quantities on Virgin Placer Claims. GRANTS PASS, Or., Sept. 28.—A fabulous strike has been made in vir- gin placer diggings and on The 8an Francisco Call claim. The ground is being worked by H. L. Lewis and partner, and is yielding handsomely n nuggets and coarse gold. The Call claim is located at the head of thLe pioneer district of Galice, more remote was creek bed in a few months. A water right has been secured for The Call, and it will be worked this winter by sluice and probably by pipe and giant. | RETEL sl OUPERATORS ARE LOSERS. Demands of Telegraphers of Great Northern Are Refused. SPOKANE, Sept. 28.—“Our trouble with the telegraphers has been set- tled,” stated General Manager Ward of the Great Northern Railway to-day. “The road, after several conferences with the committee, has refused rant any of the demands made by the men and all the men have kept on working, making no further com- plaint.” — Strike Settled. B. C., Sept. Vancouv VANCOUVER, 28.— The mechanical strike on the Cana-! dian Pacific Railroad is practically | the and over. An agreement between company and the machinists blacksmiths has been reached on a basis of a substantial increase for these branches. The amount of the advance in wages has not been def- initely stated, but it is understood to be 1 cent per hour. ———e— To Reclaim Arid Lands. SAN DIEGO, Sept. 28.—A gigantic irrigation system similar to the Im- perial system has been perfected for Lower California and work will begin immediately. acres of land just south of the inter- national boundary will be reclaimed The Colorado River will furnish the water. ————— FREIGHT TRAINS CRASH TOGETHER IN ONTARIO Two Engineers, Conductor and Brake- man Killed in Accident on Grand Trunk Railwav. EASTWOOD, Ontario, Sept. 23.— An eastbound freight on the Trunk Railway crashed into another reight train near here to-day. number of cars were demolished and Engineers Kirkland and Heron, Con- ductor Falls and Brakeman Benedict were killed. Fireman Cameron was fatally injured. SACRAMENTO, Cal., Sept. 28.—Charles E. Padilla, an. Indian youth, was to-night found guilty of murder in the first degree, with the penaity fixed at life imprisonment. Padilla, with two companions, beat and shot to death an old man named H. E. McCarthy. Padilla was once sentenced to death, but the Supreme Court_ordered a new trial DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. Backed up by over a third of a centu: of remarkable and uni- , form cures, a record such a8 no other remedy for the disecases and ‘weaknesses pe- { 4 culiar to women . ever attained, the proprietors and makers of Dr. Plerce’s Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in oflerins to pay $500 in legal money of the United States for any case of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Prolapsus, or Falling of Womb, which they cannot cure. All they ask is a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. No other medicine than Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prescription could possidly “win out,” as the saying goes. on such a proposi- tion; but they know whereof they speak. They have the most remarkable record of cures made by tgm wg?d-i;:md remedy ever placed to the credit of any prepara- tion l;pec'inl'ly de: ed for the I:’:m of woman’s peculiar ailments. This wonder- ful reme 'I' bsolutel. alone as_the only one possessed of suci unrivaled pmgeme- as to fully warrant its makers in publishing the remarkable offer above made in the utmost good fai «A short time agol was almost dead with orostration. generai debiy ia 'A" 'dll:.dl:;n Ky., Wort] nia Ave., . Ky., t Order of Good Great interest was taken in the over- | By the system 200,000 | Grand | IN PUNCHBO Growing Clamor Over the Disappearance of Kaiser’s Gift to the Kearsarge INQUIRY BEING MADE Captain‘ Hemphill May Be Subjected to Discipline by the Navy Department Special Dispatoh to The Call. CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTON, | WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—What is now known as the ‘“punchbowl tem- | pest,” in which Captain Jacob H. | Hemphill figures as an important fac- tor, has stirred the Navy Department | to amusement and no little concern. It | has been years since an incident of this | kind has created so much naval gossip. | Already an informal investigation has been quietly begun in the Navy De- partment and, although no protest has been filed, and no orders issued bear- ing on the case, the inquiry may take. on a formal and official character. Captain Hemphill will have to explain why he took from the battleship Kear- | sarge the punchbowl presented to that vessel by the German Emperor. Assistant Secretary Darling, acting as secretary in the absence of Morton, and Rear Admiral Converse, chief of the Bureau of Navigation, both said to-day that they knew of no record in the Navy Department permitting Cap- tain Hemphill to accept a gift from the German Emperor. Both officials, how- ever, were loth to believe that Captain Hemphill had committed any irregu- larity, and it was suggested in the| office of the Assistant Secretary that perhaps he had simply taken the Em- peror’s gift ashore temporarily to ex- hibit it .to his friends. There was, however, only one opinion at the de- partment in regard to an officer of the navy accepting for himself such a gift, and that was that it was unquestion-| {ably in violation of the statute bearing | on the case. { If Captain Hemphill claims the punch- bowl as his personal property and has| | his name inscribed on it, it is regarded here that he has either taken it from the ship without due process or he has violated the statute prohibiting the ac- ceptance of such a gift from a foreign, ruler, On either horn of the dilemma, he may be liable to investigation and | discipline. | —_—————— | CHICAGO SCHOOL CHILDREN DRAW THE COLOR LINE | | Organize Strike Under Belief That | Dark Skinned Kindergarten As- | sistant Is a Negro. CHICAGO, Sept. 28.—Fifty boy pickets stationed about the McAlli ter public school here prevented pu- | pils from entering to-day. age. | Outside the picket cordon a crowd | of 700 boys and girls hooted and | yelled at the teachers looking from | the school windows. Every infant striker wore a badge to show that he or she belonged to a| | “union.” Some of the badges were | merely scraps of paper with the word | “unio scrawled across it. Others| wore union buttons which their fath- | ers had worn. Many of the strike: carried clubs. They threatened vio- | lence against any child daring to en-f | ter the school yard. | | After a detail of six policemen had | | been sent to the school to preserve | | order the “strike” was “settled.” A | committee appointed by the youthful | “strikers” learned that the rumor of a colored teacher having been em- | | ployed in the kindergarten class of | ’lhe school was false. About 80 per | | cent of the strikers went back to| their classes. Truant officers began | ‘a search for the absentees. ——————— TSTEAMSIHP LOYALIST IS ASHORE NEAR CAPE RACE | British Tramp, Bound From Halifax | | for London. Will Become Total | Wreck on Rocky Beach. | ST. JOHNS, Nova Scotia. Sept. 28.— , The British steamship Loyalist, bound from Halifax for London with a gen- eral cargo, went ashore last night at | Seal Cove, Trepassey Bay, near Cape | | Race, during a dense fog. She will be {a total wreck, but a portion of the | cargo may be saved. The crew made | 1 their escape. Y | The steamship Loyalist, formerly the Clan MacAllister, is 1419 tons net bur- i den, is 305 feet long, has 39 feet beam | |and is 23 feet 3 inches deep. She was | built in 1891 at Glasgow and is owned | by Furness, Withey & Co., Limited, of West Hartlepool. | IDAHO OFFICERS SAVE MURDERER FROM MOB Crowd at Blackfoot Fails in Attempt to Take Slayer of Deputy » Sheriff From Jail. BLACKFOOT, Idaho, Sept. 28.— ‘While the funeral procession of Deputy Sheriff Sweet, who was murdered by a man named Conroy Sunday night, while the latter and his companions were attempting to rob some section men, was passing to the cemetery to- day, a mob was hastily organized, a rope procured and a rush made for the jail for the purpose of lynching Conroy. The officers, however, were | too quick for the half-formed mob, | and, with the ald of hastily sworn in deputies, protected Conroy and per- suaded the crowd to disperse. Ll e MANY DUTIABLE ARTICLES FOUND ON FRENCH LINER Stuff Brought From Paris by Dress- makers Is Confiscated by Custom- ‘House Officials at New York. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—Collector of the PortN. N. Stranghan has announced the formal seizure of four cases of dutiable merchandise found among the baggage on a French steamer recently. The articles mostly belonged to dress- makegs returning from Paris and ag- gregale in value about $12,000. One lot belonging to a San Francisco man, which had been released on a bond of $1500, also was ordered seized after the case had been investigated. As the goods had been released, the bond will be seized instead. —_——— —— No Traffic Arrangement. TOPEKA, Kans., Sept. 28.—W. B. Biddle, freight traffic manager of the Santa Fe, this afternoon denied the report that there was any traffic ar- rangement between the Santa Fe and Union Pacific. CHICAGO, Sept. Funston 28, — ' General amived i Chicago.to-dey of the Department of the %"&-.m | victnity. ADVERTISEMENTS. Recommends Pe-ru-na— Other Prominent Men Testify. Rear Admiral Philip Hichborn of the United States Navy, in a recent letter from Washington, D. C., gives Peruna the following indorsement: ““After using Peruna for a short time period, | can now cheerfully recommend your valuable remedy to any one who is in need of 7n in- vigorating tonic.””—Philip Hichborn. Rear Admiral J. A. Howell, U. 8. Navy, writes from Washington, D. C., is fol- lows: “I have used your Peruna with satis- faction and can cheerfully recommend the remedy as an effective cure for coughs and colds."—J. A. Howell The highest men in our nation have given Peruna a strong indorsement. Men representing all classes and stations are equally represented. Pe-ru-nais a Preventative and Cura- tive Medicine for Catarrh. Hon. E. H. Fitch, formerly spectal United States Attorney, State of Vir- ginia, writes from the Census Office building, Washington, D. C., as follows: “People cannot live in the variable cli- mate of the Eastern and Atlantic Coast States and e pe liability to colds and catarrhal affections. The wide and com mon prevalence of these ailments is proof enough of the assertion. [ have been no exception, but I have found a sure means for combating those great- est_objections to this climate, and that is Peruna. Taken as directed. it is a cure for present catarrhal afflictions and a preventative of future distress of that | kind."—E. H. Fitch. “Pe-ru-na a Very Effective Remedy.” Hon. Robert W. Davis, member of Con- gress from Florida, writes from House of Representatives, Washington, D. C.. as follows: “I can_cheerfully recommend your remedy, Peruna, as a very effective cure for coughs, colds and catarrh.”—Robert W. Davis. Colds Not Promptly Cured Are Sureto Cause Catarrh. Peruna cures catarrh. That is all that Dr. Hartman claims for it. But catarrh assumes various phases in the human system. The day was when men of prominence hesitated to give their testimonials to proprietary medicines for publication. This remains true to-day of most propri- etary medicines. But Peruna has become | so justly famous, its merits are known | to so many people of high and low sta- tions, that no one hesitates to see his name in print recommending Peruna. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will | be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, EIGHTY NEGROES DRIVEN FROM KENTUCKY TOWN Black Stabs a White Woman at South Fork and Colored Population Is Expelled by Mob. HARRODSBURG, Ky., Sept. 28.— Eighty negroes, thirty of them women, have arrived here from South Fork, from where they were ordered to leave by the whites because one of the ne-| groes stabbed a farmer’s wife. It is reported that the white woman is dead. The negro men were working on a railroad near South Fork. One of the women at the railroad camp went to a farm house and demanded a lunch. This was given her and while the host- ess’ back was turned the negro woman snatched some clothes and ran away. The farmer’s wife pursued and caught her, but was stabbed by a negro. The news of the affair spread rapidly, and None of | in a short time a posse of 200 white | the pickets is more than 15 years of | men had driven the negroes from the | The blacks will not be per-| mitted to remain in Harrodsburg. ————————— ACCIDENTALLY SHOOTS FRIEND AND GOES INSANE Involuntary Homicide Is Picked Up on the Streets of Peoria a Raving Maniac. PEORIA, IIl, Sept. same through grief at Edward Hartman, whom he had acci- dentally shot, George Brown of Chi- cago was picked up in the streets to- day a raving maniac. So flerce were his struggles that it required six offi- cers to overpower him. Brown and Hartman were examining a loaded revolver Sunday morning. While the weapon was in Brown's hands it was accidentally exploded, the bullet entering Hartman's groin. He died this morning. 28.—Driven in- SACRAMENTO, Sept. 28. — Superfor Judge Hughes to-day sustained a demurrer to the complaint of the Union Trust Company dgainst {he State to recover face value and interest lipon Montgomery-avenue bonds, holding that the Legislative act authorizing the bond issue 214 not make the State liable for the bond: the death of| BACKER OF MANY AROTIC EXPEDITIONS BADLY HURT | gt | William Zeigler Is Thrown From His { Carriage in Connecticut and Severely Bruised. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—Willlam Zeigler, the well known capitalist and Arctic exploration enthusiast, was | quite seriously injured in a runmaway last night at his summer home, Col- lenders Point, Conn. He had just re- | turned from New York and was driv- | ing home behind a spirited team. The | coachman had turned the horses into | the gateway of the estate while they were going at a considerable speed. | The wheels cramped under the body | of the vehicle, throwing it over. Mr. Zeigler, his coachman and his foot- | man were thrown to the ground. The | coachman in a moment had the horses under control, but not before Mr. | Zeigler had been dragged a few feet. The family physician has examined Mr. Zigler and finds that no bones are broken, although there are several contusions and evidence of a bad shaking up. —_—ee——— | SANTA FE PASSENGER | TRAIN JUMPS TRACK Three Baggage and Mail Cars and a | Tourist Sleeper Pile Up in the | Ditch. | ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., Sept. Santa Fe passenger train No. 7, bound, was wrecked about six below Albuquerque to-day by spreading of the rails. Two bay cars, a mail car and a tourist sleeper were piled up in the ditch, but the lo- comotive and four rear cars did not leave the track. A megro tramp, who was riding on the platform between the two baggage cars, was crushed to death. Nobody else was injured. ———————— Death Calls Old Minstrel. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—Milt @G. Baslow, the original Old Black Joe of the minstre] stage, for many years known as “Uncle Tom"” and later with the Texas Steer company, Is dead from cancer, aged 65 years. 28— west- miles the ADVERTISEMENTS greal golden, and the two top Measures 42 inches wide mirror 22 by 28 inches. prepaid. San Francisco, Thursday, 20 Septem It’s oak, and a " .An ideal bureau to accompany a metal bed in & room that is to be furnished economically. Finished out-of-town address within 50 miles, freight charges (Formerly the California Furniture Co.) 261 to 281 Geary St., at Union Square ber, 1904 4 valve, $13.50 drawers have swell fronts. and 72 inches high. Size of Packed and shipped to any