The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 28, 1905, Page 4

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4 TOUTH SH GIRL HE LOVES Angered by the ()ppomuon of Her Parents He Fires U'pon Her annl Dl*.l])]i?fll‘* HIS Bllll"l NOT FATAL Father of Lad Fears He Has Committed Suicide. but No l\ld(‘)lu' of It Is Found ST A search made about m Smith, 17 i dangerously Alice Ohl- ay night. The he has com- there March 2 arrived Chicago 2*“11‘ from love with Alice i aithough he mar school to store, he began The Ohlsens e yreak the boy’s infatua- refusing to admit him to the he lay wait on Saturday nd as Alice was starting for at her mother he fired at bullet struck her in the e boy fled. His victir > a hospital, where it is id she ¥ bly recover, al- though badly wounded FEDERAL JURY INDICTS HOGUE turned Against the Former Deputy Revenue Collector i FRESNO, March 27.—Former Deputy Collect. of Internal Revenue Samuel L. Hogue was to-day indicted by the United States Grand Jury on two sep- arate charges, embezzlement and de- #troying put scuments. Hogue has been under a September His defalcations were covered dur- made - into the Thomas H. Lynch an investigation zzlement charges reported six counts of $135 42 Four for embezzlement for special is acc taking two Japanese of this riminal actions. f destroying the of the two Jap- are T. Matsuda accounts, it is destroyed by Hogue the nternal revenue omcers mination of his books. eleased $5000 bonds. Judge Olin Well- ag- of the taken The ir exa ITMPORTANT IN WITNESS BEEF TRUST CASE Former Employe of the Armours Tes- tifies Before Federal Grand Jury. March 27.—J. E York City, formerly t the westigating CHIC New AGO Shields an em- Federal the ngs of the K so-called beef trust Great developments are expected as imony Shields is? morrow -night that much of viously taken by the es only as a schooling d meat to- the will is rumored t secre facts reaching a conclu- nd Jury. n v by his arrival k e is s hotel is said that 1y underwent a severe tion by District Attorney 1as charge of the estigatior —_——— HAWANAN LEGIS PLANS ATURE REFUNDING BILL Territory Hopes to Call in Its Bonds and Issme New Omes on Better Terms. HONOLULU, March 27.—The Ha- iian Legislatbre will soon be at' work on a re ling bill under which, is "hoped, Hawaii will be sible: toi ke up its bonds issue new ones | plan is ‘a re- given by Dillon & | \u)k that the bonds H ‘\ bea e not tax Had this ct beer when the sales wer made much better terms would have been secured, saving a large sum in; unding bill will be general in its provisions and will authorize 'the | refunding of the bond issue ‘at any | ti If it becomes a law steps will | be taken under its authority to take up the loans now outstanding ‘and i sue new bonds the amount. i TURBULENT Civic vice Federation, was also denounced. Crooked : the steamship FLAY BELMONT FA ARG Also Denounce Gompers and the Civic Federation as Result of Subway Strike FEET N O MEETING Interborough Company Will Not Re-employ Men Who| Lost Jobs in the Walkout —pa NEW YORK. March 27.—At a meeting of the Central Federated Union a resolution has been adopted calling upon every union to withdraw | from the Civic Federation. ‘It was further resolved to call a mass meet- | ing and fight against giving private corporations any more franchises for subways, | Adoption of these resolutions fol- lowed the reception of reports from a committee sent by the Central Fed- eration to confer last week with Pres- ident Belmont of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company regarding the re-employment of men who lost their jobs as the result of the recent strike. This report showed that Belmont declined to make any concessions, say- ing that the road was equipped with all the men needed and that the for- mer employes could only be employed when vacancies occurred. Recogni- tion of any union also was refused. When the delegates representing more than 150,000 workers heard the report pandemonium reigned. ' Dele- gates arose and shouted at the top of their lungs against Belmont. Attack after attack was made against’ the Federation, while some of the delegates Joudly demanded that every labor leader should resign from-that body Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, who is president of the National Civic TAKES WINNINGS FROM GAMBLER Give Up Coin by Croupier Who Caught Him Cheating Special Dispatch to The Call. RENO, March After winning nearly $100 on a roulette wheel in the Pyramid saloon to-day a gambler was forced to hold up his hands by the dealer, who then proceeded to take all the coin, claiming the gambler had won it unfairly. The sputtering and trembling gambler could not defend himgelf and had to watch the dealer take his money. After getting posses- sion of-the coin the dealer drove the player -from .the gambling . hall and threatened to have him-arrested. The gambler told the pelice of the matter. and arrested, but later was allowed to go. He claimed that the visit@g cheated the game and that he also nearly broke the crap game in the gambling den by using loaded dice. A search of the player's clothing revealed the crooked dice he was accused of using. g i STARTS FIRES FOR SAKE OF Pl’l'l‘l\(. THEM OUT Member of |he nep-nm(-m of a New Jersey Town Admits His Guilt. YORK, March —After a| investigation into a series of in- cendiary fires the police of Bayonne, NEW long oF N. J., have arrested James McInerney, 22 years old, of Bayonne, N. J. The prisoner belongs to a volunteer fire company and it is alleged by the po- lice that he admitted, having started fires for the sake of fighting them. McInerney has a record of 100 per cent for attendance at alarms and frequently when hig fellow members reached the engine-house in response to an alarm they found him with the horses hitched and ready. For more than six months fires in the vicinity of MclInerney's district have been numerous, and he is charged by the police with having caused fifteen of them, none entailing much loss, however, owing to the quickness of the department in reach- ing the scene. e LR o OF WHALES S IN HAWAIIAN ARMY WATERS Fifty Counted in One Day by People on the Steamship Mauna Loa. HONOLULU, March 27.—The whai- ing barks left here too soon and a for- tune is awaiting -any whaling outfit that reaches here quickly. Mauna Loa are tha scores ‘of “whales are spouting in th waters of Kau, Kona and the Hawaii- an, Molokai and Oahu channels. The water ms to be alive with them. Fifty were counted in one day by the people on the Mauna Loa. A great [ many whales were also seen in the vi- cinity of Lanai. —————— NASHVILLE, Tenn.. March 27.—The Yesig- | nation of United BStates Senator-elect James B. Frazier as the Governor of Tennessee was Sormaily _delivered this afternoon to Spealer ohn 1. Cox of the State Semate. Speaker Cex| at once took the oath as Governor. 1 Removal Notice. The Singer Store, located for many years at 22, Post Street, has been removed to No. 210 STOCKTON STREET . where our patrons will receive careful By this sign you may know and will find These machines are now sold ztlower prices, quality considered, than any other. Reedles and Repairs for All SEWING MACHINES RENTED AND EXCHANGED attention. { ‘ Singer Stores ! Everywhere Makes of Sewing Machin=s Singer Sewing Machine Company‘ | to our ‘receiving this money, the roulette dealer was | GOLD 1S FOU | So favorable were these | Peter Colombet, ranch, put a force of men to work. | Frmay afternoon when the tunnel had : THE SAN FRAN CISCO CALL, TUESDAY, 00TS fLNlON WORKERS |THINKS ROCKEFELLER GIFT IS ACCEPTABLE DR. PRTTON EXPLAINS ITS USE! Committee Accepts the Cash With Gratitude Congregationalists Remembered Before. AN G AR John D. Rockefeller’s donation to the Congregutional body was accepted and has been disbursed in spite of the op- | position, which materialized too late to prevent the reception of the sum. The gift was not tabooed by all in the Congregational fold, apd there were men of influence among the flock who were satisfled that the educational de- partments of the church should be en- riched. Dr. Cornelius H. Patton, home secre- tary of the American Board of Com- missioners for Foreign Missions, who is making a tour of the Pacific Coast, is in S8an Francisco and said yesterday regarding the matter: The ift of $100,000 by Mr. John G. Rocke- feller was not contributed to our regular ex- penses, but was designated for certain of our educatioral institutions in India, Japan and Turkey for buildings and equipment. They are institutions devoted to the training of na- tve converts for evangelistic and other forms of Christian service, It does not help us on our regular appropria- tions, but is of very great value in improving our educational plant. T do not wish to eriticize those who object as they are en titled to_thelr own opinions, which are un- donbt. " given with the utmost sincertiy. All aspects of the matter were carefully con- sidered over a month ago by our prudential committee at Boston when the money was first oftered, and the gift was unanimously ac- cepted with gratitude under a sense of its en- tire propriety. This is not the first time Mr. Rockefeller has contributed generously to Congregational in- stitutions. Tn recent years he has made hand- some donations to Oberlin University in Ohio; to Mount Holyoke College, Mass., and to Wellesicy College near Boston. It 1s, of course, known- that Mr. Rocke- teller has contributed to the Baptist Forelgn Missionary Board something Itke $200,000 a vear. Those who would have us refuse this money would practically require us to take the position of censors of these other institutions and the whole Baptist demonination. of which | Mr. Rockefeller is a member in good and regu- {lar_standing. The gift has already been appropriated to the institutions designated by Mr. Rockefeller. PERRY MAKES FINE RECORD Discharges Six Torpedoes at Rapidly Moving Target and Five of Them Score S Epecia) Dispatch to The Cail SAN DIEGO, March 27.—Officers and men of the torpedo-boat destroyer Perry are elated over the record made by their vessel at Magdalena’ Bay, when all records for accurate work with the torpedo were broken. The Perry discharged six torpedoes while moving at the rate of fifteen miles an hour at a’target which was being | towed at the rate of ten miles an hour. The target was made of three boats and was towed by the Bennington. The three boats together represented the length of a war vessel and the middle bhoat was the object of the gunners’ aim. Of the six torpedoes five were planted against the stern of the craft fired at. It is claimed that this beats all records ever made at torpedo prac- tice. The Perry arrived in port to-day, having on board about fifty men and officers of the San Diego and Los An- geles divisions of the naval reserves, who went south with the vessels of the squadron upon the invitation of Rear Admiral Goodrich. She brings the news that the monitor Wyoming has sailed for Panama to relieve the cruiser Marblehead, which will come north with the Chicago and Benning- A J\PA Iahlu TO PEATH Awful Fate Overtakes Son of Nippon at Work on a Santa Clara County Farm. SAN JOSE, March 27.—Isaku Ten- aka, a Japanese ldborer, was dragged to death to-day at the Swickard seed farm near Edenvale. He was at work in the field with a cultivator. At noon h2 unhitched a span of mules he was driving and mounted one of the ani- mauls to ride to the house for dinner. the animals became and the Japanese was thrown off. He became entangled in the lines and was dragged for a quar- ter of a mile. One leg was broken in three places and half a dozen of his ribs were fractured. His head was badly battered. ——— ON RANCH ON THE MONTEREY ROAD Ledge of Valuable Ore Is Uncovered on the Murphy-Colombet Farm. SAN JOSE, March 27.—A rich gold ledge has been discovered on the Mur- phy-Colombet ranch on the Montereys | road, fifteen miles south of this ecity. A month ago outecroppings that indi- | cated gold was found in the foothills. prospects that the owner of the penetrated the hill 175 feet the ledge was struck. It is about 100 feet be- low the surface. B o e INDICTED EX-ALDERMAN IS FOUND IN ARIZONA Former Milwaukee Official - Who ‘Jumped His Bail Pcreuaded to Return by Attorney. - TUCSON, Ariz., Mareh 27.—Charles Cooke, a former Milwaukee Alderman, did not turn up for his trial on charges of crookedness preferred against in several indietments and was tm’l’lle,: to Arizona by George Schoperle, a de- tective. The sleuth shadowed the ex- Alderman until H. L. Eaton, his bonds- | men’s lawyer, arrived on the scene. Eaton persuaded Cooke to return with- out extradition and the three left for Milwaukee this morning. Cooke had béen here since last November and went under his true name. -— DR. PATTON. WHO DEFENDS CON- GREGATIONALISTS FOR Al CEPTING RO(‘KEI- ELLER'S GIFT. —_— % FOLLOWS FRIEND T0 THE GRAVE Chinese FO()k Commits blll- cide Rather Than Live Without His Employer L o It Special Dispaich to The Call. SANTA CRUZ, March 27.—Because of the death of his master, Moch Yet, a Chinese cook, committed suicide to- day. For twelve years he had been employed at various logging camps as a cook by William Baird. Baird died Saturday and the Chinese cook was no come back any more; I no work no more, not for $500 a month; I go toe. This morning he was found hanging in the cookhouse. , He dig not cage to live without “the old man. - - | SIX MOTORIST BADLY INJURED Tire on Machine Bursts as 1t Speeds Down Hill and — WATSONVILLE, March 27.—This afternoon: an automobile containing George Jessen, D. F. Ring and Charles Peckham, prominent merchants of this city, and J. C. Rigsby, an insur- ance sblicitor, with H. P. Tichnor of San Francisco as chauffeur, met with an accident hy which all the occupants of the machine sustained injuries. While coming down a hill at great speed the tire on one of the wheels exploded, causing the auto to turn completely over. Rigsby's leg was broken and his back wrenched. Sev- eral of Jessen's ribs were broken and he received numerous other bruises. Pw'kham and Ring escaped with slight njuries. The * chauffeur re- cdived internal injuries, the extent of | whuh are not known. —_—— e BIG PLANING MILL WILL BE BUILT IN RYSVILLE . Prominent Contractors Purchase Site on Which to Erect a Modern Plant. e MARYSVILLE, March 217. Through a deal just closed here a large planing mill will soon be estab- lished in Marvsville. Swift Bros., prominent contractors, have pur- chased a lot at Second and E streets on which to erect a large plant for turning out all kinds of mill work. This plant will replace the one that was destroyed by fire a year ago. The Diamond Match Company of . Chico will establish lumber vards and offices throughout the Sacramento Valley as soon as the great manufac- turing plants at Barber are completed. Representatives of the company have visited Marysville to select a site for lthe branch to be located here. X S ———————— { SPECIAL TRAIN STRIKES AND KILLS A VETERAN Mutilated Body of an Old_ Soldier Is ' Found Near the Yountville Station. YOUNTVILLE, March 27.—Early {this morning the mutilated body of T. W. Kenny, a_member of the Veter- ans’ Home, was found lying on the railroad track pear the Yountville sta- [tion. It is believed that Kenny was killed by a special train about 9 o’clock last night. Coroner Kyser of Napa removed the remains to the Vet. erans’ Home. i R AT O U R NEW LAW BRINGS CHANGE TO EMPLOYE OF STATE -dsaac Is Appointed Secretary to Horticultural Commissioner Elwood Cooper, SACRAMENTO, March 27.—John Isaac was to-day appointed secretary to State Horticultural Commissioner Elwood Cooper, under the law ap- | proved by Governor Pardee granting @a secretary to the Commissioner. Isaac was formerly clerk to the Commts- sioner. _..~.4....-—._- ltyounemnxdownmnnhnnmu- lflt&ewfimmmflamm agent for . IJohn MARCH 28, TWO PRISONERS [RUNS SIX TINES By, overwhelmed with grief. He could not be comforted and would contin- ually cry: "Por old man, he die; he Occupants Are Thrown Out | 1905. ARE SENTENCED of Murder in the Second Degree, to Serve 17 Years 1 2 | Ernest Moore Chadwick Will | ‘Spend .the Next Ten Years ;in San Quentin for Perjury MRt 2 -Harry Radcliffe <was sentenced by Judge Cook yesterday to serve seven teen years in San Quentin for murder ' !in the sscond degree and Efnest Moore | Chadwick, alias “Sir”. Harry West- {e ¥ | . Wood Cooper, was sentenced to serve | | ten years on a charge of perjury. Both | ,wlves of the defendants were in court | iand Radcliffe’s girl ~ wife went into { hysterics and was led out of the court- :oom by her sister and her mother-in- aw. Radcliffe shot and killed Andrew , Riley at Ninth-and Sheridan streets on the morning of June 26. He said Riley had insulted his wife and during a . struggle Riley threw him down, and, being afraid of hisslife, he-fired in self-defense. The theory of the police was that the defendant attempted to hold up Riley and when Riley showed Witnesses were called | testify as to'the defendant’s good char- !acter. The Judge in passing sentence aid that he had to accept the Verdict ‘of the jury as far as acquittal on the robbery theory was concerned. The defendant’s ' previous character had been good and as’this was his first of- fense he would fix, the punishment ac- cordingly. If the defendant's conduct | was' good in the penitentiary he might be paroled. Chadwick was conv.lcted of perjury in falsely teutfly\ng in"his ewn behallt at his trial in Judge Lawlor's court in 11901 or. a charge of sending by tele- . graph g’ false and forged message pur- porting to be ‘from another person. He had eloped in Februafy, 1901, with Norine Schneider from Vallejo Junc- tion ;shertly after his release from San Quentin after serving a term for utter- ing and passing a fictitious draft in 1897. He represented to the girl and her family that he was a phHysician of wealth and induced her to become his wife by showing her telegrams purport- ing to have been sent by her mother, consenting to their marriage. He was rrested on the arrival cf the train at I'Ogden. He was convicted on the charge of sending the forged tele- | grams, but took an appeal to the Su- preme Court and was granted a new trial. Meantime he had been tried and ! convicted by a jury in Judge Cook's court on the perjury charge, but sen- | tence was deferred pending the result i of the appeal to the Supreme Court on the forgery charge. When sentence was to be passed upon him Chadwick begged the Judge to take into consideration the fact that | he had already spent four years and stwo months in jail since his arrest in Ogden and that there was no possi- bility of obtainjng a parole. He did ot add that he had been married in T'the County Jail. | After sentence had been passad upon | Cooper his attorney, Frank J. Mur- | phy, said he was ready to proceed | with the trial of the forgery case. The Judge remarked that he thought the one sentence would be enough for both cases and the forgery case might stand till it' was seen whether the sentence was final, as an appeal was to be taken | to the Supreme Court. . Assistant District Attorney Ashe sald he would need to consult with the District Attorney and the case was continued till April 1 to be set. s LR FINDS VICTIM OF FOUL CRIVE Street Car Conductor Makes Discovery of a Bratal Murder in Heart of City ks BAKERSFIELD, March 27.—One of the most brutal and cold-blooded murders ever committed in this city came to light at 6 o'clock this morn- ing when a man who ha# not yet been identified was found by a street car conductor, lying face down on the sidewalk on Nineteenth street, in the heart of the city. His skull was frac- tured. A club, covered with blood, was found lying a short distance from the body. The pockets of the overalls which the man wore were turned in- side out. KEven his shoes had been taken. The police have as yet obtained no | clew to the identity of the murderer or murderers. tion has been aroused in the city. ——— DEATH MAY CLAIM TWO MORE VICTIMS OF AUTOS Persons Injured by Machines in Los Angeles Yesterday Not Yet Out of Danger. LOS ANGELES, March 27.—Sher- man Pease, vice president of the Niles-Pease Furniture Company of this city, who was seriously injured yesterday in an automobile collision with an electric car at Hollywood, has not recovered consciousness. His wife was killed in the same accident. Mrs. | Decatur E. Wellcome, who was also injured in the accident, is in a serious condition. Migs Margaret Birtwistle, who was run down by an automobile driven by | Barbee Hook, son of the late Million- alre. Hook, . and death. — e MISSING MAN LOCATED ON WASHINGTON " FARM SAN JOSE, March 27.—Henry M. , Aiken of Morgan Hill, who, according to a dispatch from Spokane yesterday, disappeared from Davenport, Wuh.. several weeks l‘o is not Ibst, a; supposed by his Washington fre His wife at uomn Hill recelved a letter from him Friday. He is at work on a farm near Herrington, Lin- coln County, in Washington. He went north a few months ago. ——o‘o——— Disle as loft Monte Criedt fo x e ti Tigle fary te for Colon to take of marines now mum«l Inlmn- to th' n-w naval e Harry Radcliffe, Convicted | GIRL WIFE HYSTERICAL The greatest indigna- is hovering between lltel T0 YLADIVOSTOK German ,bteamer (Cassius ~ Earns Russian Gold and Is Then Sold —_— |HIS GARB OBJECTED TO —— It was in the steerage that the steam- hip Dorie, which arrived yesterda§ from the Orient, brought the most in- teresting passengers. There ‘was fine | raiment in the cabin, and a Britisher who is said to have participated in the | work preliminary to the | raid in Seuth Africa. The men in the steerage did not say as much as those | in the cabin, nor did they say it in such well-chosen language, but what they had to say was more interesting. In the Dorie’s steerage were three seamen and the second mate of the German steamship Cassius, which ran | in and cut of Vladivostok with coal un- til she was so badly in need of repairs that she was no longer useful as a blockade runner. Her captain patched ner up, ran her to a Japanese port and sold her to the Mikado's Government tor a good round sum. The owners of the Cassius reaped a golden harvest from the Russians, then got a fancy price for the broken-down steamer. This Is said to be one of the few in- | stances since dapan found herself in which the little brown men have been outwitted all around. The Cassius made her first Vladivostok last July. for the last time in February. first occasion she carried a cargo coal from Barry. trips between Viadivostok and Sag- halien Island for more coal. There are few prisoners left on Russia’s prison island, say the sailors of the Cassius. Gradually they have been withdrawn and taken to iffe front for soldiers. In February, when the Cassius limped out of Viadivostok, provisions were getting scarce at the Siberian port and prices for all necessities ruled high. FEARED THE JAPANESE. visit to On the of The crew of the Cassius did not want | to go to gea when the time came to leave. Their vessel was not too sea- worthy and they had the idea that the Japanese, if they caught the Cassius, would string all hands to the yardarm. The German Consul at Viadivostok is also the Russian harbor master. He told the unwilling mariners that if they stayed ashore he would have them sent to prison. The Cassius’ skipper, Cap- | tains Hans Hansen, promised to add a | bonus to their double wage and finally the men agreed to stay by the ship. Although the Cassius was under the German flag, Captain Hans Hansen Is a Dane, and all but two of the men under him hailed from the land of the Vikings. The odd pair was German. Hans Hansen sailed his ship out of Vliadivostok and, in the veil of a thick mist, eluded the Japanese cruisers. Once past the danger belt, all hands were set to work repairing ship. Putty was used freely and hidden “under lavish layers of bright, new pdint. The engineers extemporized a -temporary wheezing | cure of the coughing and with which .the Cassius’ engines had become. afflicted. and .when the Ger- man tramp . reached - Kotk she logked smart as the day she launched. And | before the newness wore off Captain Hansen sold her to the Japanese and left the island kingdom before prying brown men discovered the putty under | the paint. Captain G. Davis and Chief Engineer D. L. Malcolm of the British steam- ship Sidonia were also steerage pas- sengers on the Dorlc. They took the Sidonia from England to Japan and there sold her to the Government ‘of the island kingdom. Theirs was a | purely commercial transaction with | never the sight of a Russian flag on | | the voyage out to add spice to | transaction. | . ADOPTS THE PIGTAIL. | Rev. Noel Got, a Roman (atholic the China as a missionary for seven years, was also a steerage passenger on the Dorie. Although a priest and a Frenchman, he traveled by preference | in the Asiatic steerage among the Chi- nese and Japanese. While in China he adopted the dress of the country and was still wearing it when the Doric docked. tail and long finger nails, he had lent hiniself to the fashions of the land in which he had worked so long. His eyes were of the Occident, however, and, with an aquiline cast of feature, spoil- | ed the harmony of Father Got's other- wise Oriental appearance. *The Chinese do not like foreigners,” he said in explanation of his attire, “gnd when 1 adopted this dress they accepted me as one of themselves, which was a great help in my work. sorbed -the manners of the Chinese that he will stay while in this city, he says, with some Chinese Chinatown hotel. He was not allowed to land in his | Oriental garb, however. Immigration ' Inspector Crawford, after questioning the missionary, informed him that he would be allowed to land, but not in those clothes. . nd befora he was al- | lowed to go ashore Father Got was compelled to don European dress and | pass a sartcrial indpection before In-| spector Crawford. Dr. Rutherford Harris, one of the Dorie’s cabin passengers, Is sald to have taken an unfighting part in the ' Jamieson raid in South Africa. Dr. Harris did not make himself popular with the American passengers on the liner. He has a grouch against United States and is said to have lost ! no opportunity to swing his little ham- mer, using any old American institu- tion as an anvil. He likes San Fran- cisco only because it is near Vietoria, British Columbia. —_——————— ul'.\YAQl‘IL. Eecuador, March ko | Sxaeitive power, Promdent. Plasa s, the town 'of Palmisawi for ninety a:';'-‘ §° account of the delicate state of his healtn. | It is belleved that the Vice Presid recognize the republic of Panama. . 0! 13641:5 world is so cheap. " No sodp in all the world is so good—none mhstmg o mmnm-fi. to Japanese| French Priest Compelled to Discard’ Chinese Attire Be-.‘ fore He Lands From Dorie | Jamieson | She left there | She made six other | priest frem France, who has been in! Even to the shaved head, pig- | So thoroughly has Father Got ab- | family or at a‘ A spien Al Knite, of hast workman - ship and high-grade make olades are of finest razor steel, pearl 1 You couldn’t get a better knite #1.50 LAZOR. allowance WHI make you a liberal for it on a new une. I have good razors at $1. and_up. GILLETTE with 12 double-edged quires no honing or stroj Better ones at $1.30 SAFECY RAZOR, blades; in; re- | “ETAR SAFETY value at $2.00— m»’rmuar J}rn» My price mhumm Honing 25¢. Mail orders promptly filled. THAT MAN PITTS. F.W. P‘(u. the :muon- | Ficth st. TO REDUCE STOCK ‘SECTIONAL FILEGASES Bl 60 DAYS CABINETS 335 % | GEO. H. FULLER DESK CO. | 646-650 MISSION STREET. ~ Dr. Lyon’s | PERF!G"’ Tooth Powder | Cleanses and beautifies :ao | teeth and purifies the. Used people of refinement | brove?'ya. quzneerofa. century. | Very convenient for tourists, ! PREPARED B3Y When the little folks take colds and coughs, don’t neglect them and let them strain the temder membranes of their lungs, Give them 3 0 o ‘Cure | It will cure them quickly and stren; their lungs. Itis plnunt to take, | ! Prices, , 50c., and $1.00. visit DR. JORDAN’S anear MUSEUM OF ANATOMY n.l-—nn-d-‘!——hh- '.!d_ ".‘l— or r~ .—d-nm_ Bat. -.m-m'-l Consaltation free and strictly private Treacment Eflnub o by e positve cureid every osse ander'akem. MARRIAGE, 'AIL- FREE. ‘ valaadie book for Mea. D.-lon‘!.l?.—- mm« l.. .3 | | b i‘lolel St. Francis | A FAVORITE LUNCHING PLACE. Fashionable set gathers here for afterncon tea. Most unique dining place tn San Francisco. Convenient for after-theater supper. e S the | i MAUVAIS MUSIC = CO. §33 MARKET ST.. OPP. MASOM. 1 89.75 for Violin, Box, Bow-and Book ettt Bhhomssncs e st oo h) N\

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