The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 25, 1904, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1904. » ALL FO0D il lers, Who Have Him I'hat He Has etite and Requests vot Disturbed s Jai FICERS LOOKING FOR HIS WAISTCOAT sve That Garment Worn by Prisoner on Night of Tragedy Will Show Blood Stains if It Can Be Found bel ADVERTISEMENTS. Strictly Winter Talk.... Swagger and swell. Girls’ Tourist Reefers are being shown to-day by us. JUST WINTER TALK FROM THE BOYS’ STORE. ter. the season. to SCOTCHES. boys from 10 to 16 years at 5.00 anywhere in town at $20.00. of age at - $10 AT RAPHAEL'S ions Are Shown The new Winter Models Concerning boys who want to be properly dressed for Win- Opposite is one of the cleverest Winter Overcoats of It is to fit lads up 16 years of age, in the handsomest and most striking We are going to sell the $10.00 grade on Friday and Saturday, in the prettiest of col- orings, smart and snappy, to fit We are going to sell another grade in the Double-Breasted Fashion, with a Belt Back as you see in the picture, that for snap and style have no equal Also to fit lads up to 16 years Where the Smart, Fash- A Winning Winter | Overcoat Fashion That Will Prove a Winner The sweet little Winter Coat which you see pic- tured above, to fit young hopefuls from 234 years to 8 years, in three distinctive shades, military buttons on the front, a double row of them, velvet collar, a coat that you would never hesitate to pay $5 for. This little Winter Coat will be special on Friday and Saturday at .$2.50 AT RAPHAEL’S The Home of the Overcoat St St St St S St K JIWdC] a b"f_p The Student Norfolk Double Breasted Model That new and is our very latest model of the Norfolk Suit —Knick breeches if e r you like, or straight pants as you see pictured. In the handsomest and toppiest of SCOTCHES. Colorings that are simply beau- tiful. Suits you would pay for at any time $£6.00 and never regret it. To fit chaps from 8 to 15 years. They us will be special on this Friday and Saturday at 98 2 AT RAPHAEL'S - The Boys’ Store Girls’ Peter Thompson Sailor Suits The only genuine English Model. Man tailored. In fine serges. Ages 6 to 16 years. SATS CHARGE S RIDICLLO Labor Leader Accused N FIRE IS DEVASTATING MONTANA RANGES | | Thousands of Acres Bare and | the Loss to Sheepmen Will | Be Enormous. HARLEM, Mon | prairie fire has been raging for s reral of | davs forty miles north of here ”‘"E\dirondack still is burning flercely. Thousands of Nov. 24.—A large | MOTHER OF ASSUMES CARE WAYWARD DAUGHTER POACHERS FIRE | | Takes Back Into Her Home Girl Who | | I I o | Attempted to Poison Her ! U | Last Spring. | VANCOUVER, B. C. Nov. 24.—| Georgianna Hewitson, the 15-year-old | girl who was convicted last spring of | an attempt to poison her mother by | Mountaineers | JOKE PROVES TOO MUCH ! FOR JAW OF THIS MISS MUMMIFIED REMAINS ARE FOUND IN CAVERN Funny Story Causes Her to Laugh So Heartily That Dislocation Results. ST. PAUL, Nov. 24.—M tover, daughter of Mr: E. Stover, laughed so heartily at a story Miners at Work in New Mexico Find Bodies of Members of a Prehistoric Race. EL PASO, Tex. have broken ing two dozen mummies near s h the mummnies putting carbolic acid in her teapot, was | told by one of a party of friends at|City, N. M. Buried given into her mother’s care to-day ' her home that she dislocated her jaw. | were stone weapons and instruments, by Chief Justice Hunter of the Su-| While the merriment was at its height | sbowing that they belonged to a pre- e When the Chief Jus-|Miss Stover suddenly ceased laughing | historic race. The mummies were ap- and sat with her mouth wide open and | parently about five feet tall in life. Complicity in Cineinnati|acres of grazing land have been swept | Object to William Rocke-; i . A ppect | OVer and thousands of dollars’ worth | s . =t Outrage Angered by Arrest | - T s destroyed. George | feller's Private Game Law | | | preme Court. SRSl a P ST S MEN INTENDED O WRECK THE EXPRESS Tells of His Adventure strangers on Railroad k Near Keswick. 24—What is alleged Mar ks of dyna The matter nvestigated. ——— Death of Mrs. Harriet Wilkins. N RAF. Nov. 24.—Mrs. Har- at her home in this e age of 83 the mother had resided in ADVERTISEMENTS. Dizzy Spells art—a plea for help. £ this me receives attention ers come nortness of breath, palpi- weak ting spells. smother- ensations. pains around ders, essary and o on, elp, or is we read of sudden deaths lisease. yet it is a fact that had been pleading for help, and the struggle only when it had d the last spark of vitality—and t sudden. re than six years I was trou- i I would have dizzy in breathing, chok- rt. ulty painful. y r I commenced taking Dr. Miles’ Jeart Care. and in dows a 1 I was entirely wr"—-fl!‘g! JOHNSON, Olivia, Minn. t disease In every stage. | CINCINNATIL, Joseph F. ers 24 —President Vaientine of the Iron Mold- Union of North America, who was eveland on a warrant out by President Gosiger of the Eureka Foundry Company on the arge of aiding and abetting in the icious destruction of property, ar- d in Cincinnati to-night, accom- nied by Detective Callahan. police headquarters Edward J. 7, secretary of the Iron Molders’ a, awaited him with , signed by Michael Lul- nan, and on which Valen- ed to appear in Police Monday. President Val- Nov. c Court next tine said: The first news of the alleged pilot reached me in Cleveland, where I had gone on official business. I then, as I do now, er the whole thing a trumped up plot to persecute and in- midate innocent® men. I am deter- mined that the whele plot shail be re- vealed and the public shall know who he real conspirators are. The idea of the executive head of a great organiza- a conspiracy with an to eommit a felony is As a matter of fact T do not know the boy who is alleged to have made a ion and never heard his name d until this thing came out newspapers. I will not talk now, but I shall have much to say 4n the near future. I shall issue a state- m in which I will tell things that may cause another sensation. The treatment which I received in Cieveland at the hands of Mayor John- son I deeply appreciate. I was shown consideration that any man should be | proud of, and though I rested in the afternoon I was permit- | ted to fill an engagement which I had to speak before the Molders’ Union in Cleveland last night.” It developed to-day that another dynamite explosion at the Eureka foundry occurred at the same time young Rauhauser was making his statement to the detectives. foundry people suppressed the fact. The prosecution anticipates some dif- ficulty in sustaining the charges made against President Valentine and others ! in connection with the dynamite plot | from the fact that the Rauhausers, ing defendants in a criminal case, cannot be compelied to be witnesses, and also because young Rauhauser has made statements that his confession was obtained through coercion. Thomas Bracken, accused of complic- v in the murder of Weakly, October was brought here to-day from De- | ¥ y- | troit. | Petrie, leading sheepman, whose | range is in the devastated portion, is | | reported to have lost all his hay, his| pTICcA, N. Y., Nov. 24—Willlam { residence and all the buildings. | Rockefeller, of the Standard Oil Com- It is said that the fire started across | pany, who owns 33,000 acres of forest Spectal Dispatch to The Call. tice found the girl guilty he ordered her into the custody of the Children’s |2 pained expression on her face. She |Their heads were small and their arms could not close her mouth until a sur- geon was called, who reset the jaw. Aid Society of thid city. Later the| society found the responsibility of the girl's safekeeping too great a burden | | long. The cavern is about 100 feet below the surface of the earth. and the girl was transferred to the was ar- | The | the Canadian line on Monday after- noon and during the terrific wind- |storms of Tuesday and Wednesday | moved with startling rapidity over into | the American possessions, from which |all kinds of antelope, deer and other { wild animals have fled. The fire was | plainly visible to-night and the sheep- men in its path will all be heavy lcsers, for their winter range is de- stroyed, together with all of their hay for winter use and outbuildings. | Large numbers of men have been | fighting the flames ever since they | started, but have not been equal to the | task. There is talk of lynching the | man who started the fire if he can be | found. —_——— CONGRESSIONAL PARTY WELCOMED IN PANAMA Delegation From Washington Is Re- ceived by President and Mme. Amador. PANAMA, Nov. 24.—The American Congressional party, which arrived at Colon yesterday on the Sumner, reached this city to-day and was met at the station by a committee of resi- dents. General Davis, commander of the canal zone, and John Findlay Wallace, engineer in charge of construction of the canal, were among those at the | station. The party called upon Presi- | dent Amador, to whom the members were introduced, as well as to Mme. Amador and other ladles, the Secre- tary of State and other high govern- ment officials. | At noon they took luncheon at the American legation, where, later, they met twenty-five representative Pana- mans. After a drive around Ancon Hill and through the hospital grounds the Congressional party returned to Colon. e ———.—— PASSES THROUGH TEXAS ON HIS WAY TO MEXICO Vice President Corral Proud of the Feeling of Friendship Displayed During His Recent Trip. EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 24—Vice President Ramon Corral of Mexico, ac- companied by Jose Munoz, Sub-Secre- tary of the Treasury, and. General Canedo, Governor of Sinaloa, passed through El Paso to-day, en route to Mexico City after a visit to the United States. Corral said the relations of the United States and Mexico were gradually becoming closer and that he was proud of the friendly feeling that he found in this country for his peo- is reciprocated e ple and was sure it in has again | provincial jail Recently the girl's |land in the Adirondacks, i r b 4 i v _| mother applied to have her r aroussd the ire of the nalfves by en-} (o bir own care and’ Chief Justice | saging dozens of guards to patrol his| g, or fesued an order to that effect. | vast preserve in Great North Woods. AR U R RBES | Several guards have been fired at dur- | BRITISH BARK ENGLEHORN | ing this week while watching would-be | DAMAGED IN A COLLISION | trespassers. As smokeless powder was | used in every case all efforts to locate | Runs Into Another Vessel at Anchor |and capture these ‘“snipers” have Off Port Townsend and Mizzen | proved futile. Topmast Is Carried Away. Rockefeller, with his family, 1s at| PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Nov. {present staylng at his magnificent |24 "4 collision occurred hers at 19 | lodge at Bay Pond. He is bitterly op- | posed to poaching and vandalism on | | his premises. | The natives maintain that wild deer | cannot be bought with land, nor did| Rockefeller acquire the fish which, at| the expense of the State, had been| o'clock to-night through which the | British bark Englehorn had her miz- zen topmast carried away. The En- glehorn, which belongs to the same line as the Silverhorn, now in San | Francisco, was in command of Cap- tain Gibson of the latter vessel, her | placed in streams running through own master, Lovett, being ill in Vie- | Rockefeller’'s land. They have shot and ' toria. She was in tow of the tug| fished on the land as far back as the | Lorne and ran in too close to the Brit- | oldest Inhabitant can remember, and |ish bark Arracan at anchor on the | see no reason why the arrival of Rocke- ‘ ballast grounds. The Arracan es-| \ feller among them should change their | caped with slight damage to her bow- custom. sprit. An old trapper who has lived near| =T < Bog Lake for many vears says the feel- | SITE OF TRAINING STATION ing against Rockefeller by hunters and; ON LAKES 1S SELECTED | | —_——— | | | | | woodsmen is extremely bitter. e R Petition for a Railway Franchise. SAN DIEGO, Nov. 24.—A petition for a franchise for an electric rail- road from this city to Old Town, six miles north, has been filed with the Board Chooses Spot North of Chicago | and Report Is Approved by ! the President. WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—Secretary of the Navy Morton announces that | the board appointed to select a train- City Council. The road will be an ex- | ing station on the Great Lakes has | tension of the San Diego electric sys- | upanimously recommended that the | tem and it Is believed it will later be- | 14ke Bluff site, thirty miles north of | come a part of a line which will con- | Cliicago, be selected. The President | nect this city with Point Loma and|has approved the selection. Ocean Beach. | The initial appropriation for this A T T work has already been made and it/ San Diego to Hold Special Election. | wij| pe the polic;—r of the Secretary to | SAN DIEGO, Nov. 24.—The City| push the work to completion as rapid- Council has adopted an ordinance |y as possible. i calling a special election on January | e i g ‘ 7 for voting on twenty-seven proposed | Young Hunter Is Accidentally Killed. ' amendments to the city charter. | RIGGS, Nov. 24—William Baynon, | full | I the gun was discharged. the charge of shot entering his left side. — > ST LOUIS, Nov. 24.=Sir Wiifrid Laurier, st hed HIGHESTdQUAL:TY TOILET SOAP. Your Choice of Four Odors. Free With Everv Small Ad in Sunday Call. + —. | aged 12 years, ihe only child of James | FREE FREE FREE | | Baynon, a prominent farmer of this, WITH ¢ommunity, was killed this afternoon ! SUNDAY CALL l by the accidental discharge of a re-| SMALL ADS. | peating shotgun. The boy had climbed | — ! over a fence, leaving the gun on the | A BOX opposite side, and then reaching ! CONTAINING 3 CAKES through a crack grasped hold of the of the weapon. In drawing it toward him l;;'- Weathered oak with leather seats Designed to match those massive dining tables on our second floor. Substantial, effective and some- thing new. Oak, weathered finish, with Spanish leather seats—studded with large nails. Other new dining chairs, equally as pleasing, came on our floors at the same time. Breuner’s pay the freight for 50 miles if you live out of town, remember. (Formerly the California Furniture Co.} 261 to 28! Geary St.. at Union Square

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