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THE SAN FR CISCO CALL, WEDNESDA MARCH 29, 1905. MONTGOMERY’'S AEROPLANE WONDER OF THE A SRS | Creates Sustaining| Power That Is | Marvelous. USES AIR’'S MOTION BRSO : 1 Peculiar Surface of] Wings Big Point | of Invention. i CONTROL ABSOLUTE | | 1 navigation at last assured?( cblem solved that has fasci- | ugh the centuries usion of wonder t of man to fir ent, its most an's ingenuity hard by San| man from re- s like the adding ut r nature’s Properl; is an a ot ES MAK R»;«TIONAL TREATMENT Stomach Diseases | scerd Injurious Drugs |&lycozome { A Harmless Powerful Germicide | Endorsed by Leading Physicians. Send twenty-five cents to pay postage on Free Trial Bottle. Sold by leading druggists. NOT GENUINE WITHOUT MY SIGNATURE: Quf ettt €10 PRINCE ST., NEW YORK. W yT rom FuEx BOOKLET ON RATIONAL TREATMENT or Distase. » Bt o o ] wisir DR. JORDAN'’S crear MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MARKET ST. bet. 6th& 7th K F.Cal. atemical Museam §u the irmase positively emred by the idess ‘ot the Goast. Bat. 36 yeara. OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Comsitacion Gee and erricily privms Trentien: persooaily or by letier. & poeities cure (s c1ei; czse EBderaken. Wrte far Book, PRILOSOPEY of SARRIAGE, MAILED PEEEL. 14 waiuasie beck fer mes. ) DR.IORDAN & CO., 105 Market St 8. F. -t e Prescriptions 34,406 and T, GUARANTEED CURE FPOR MEN. HARMLESS INTECTION. Cures ordinary | cases in o few Jays. Warranted to cure TREA' e 5 = 2 worst cases. NO OTHER TMENT EEBQUIRED. Prevents and Cures Strie- PREVENTS CONTAGION. Harm- =ss. $2.00 for both bottles. For sale only P. 8. KELLY'S PRARMACY, 102 Eddy. ey Cures aCold inOseDay, 2 Days i C Frmn =2 Rad 7 way'’s | Bowele_Kidneys, Bi Female irregular- les. Sick uuamm.“lfl-m Constipation, aiscrders of| the St.mach. Liver, | or by mail | 'NEW YORK | 25 cts.,e box. At FADWAY & CO., &5 ST.. | 3000 | tempts to fly. dE. + ‘ HE aeroplane that Professor Mentgomery of San- ta Clara College has invented bids fair to be a signal triumph in the problem of aerial navigation. The dirigibility ot his winged craft is perfect. Demonstra- tions of this point have been most satis- factory. By a pecu- liar construction of the sustaining sur- face, motion of the air is made use of, and herein lies the principal point of success of this aero- plane over all others, flights of which have been sorry failures. Professor Montgom- ery is carefully guarding the secrets of his airship until it shall be completed and the protection of patents assured. | But enough of its merits are known to | 2 A h 1 Col})mtyl-l e A | Suddenly he remembered that he had | stify the onclu- espite e denial al nkerton | g pottle of medicine in his pocket that oy e | headquarters that Charles Hedty (alias contained arsenic. He drew it out and sion that he has | Mulcahey) is a leading spirit in the grqined its contents. ! affair, he was seen by reputable wit-| A policeman found him lying in a | made the greatest pesses several times ‘In conversation | goorway near the corner of Pacific and e > ¥ith Zimmerman and Collins at Rich- | Davis streets. An ambulance was stride in aeronautics mond for a long time prior. to the rob- hastily summoned and Rinaldo was the world has yet known, and the prac- | ticability of a flying machine now seems established. | —~3 entatives will be invited and the allowed to know of his machine. MAKES NO IDLE CLAIMS. a h avi cannot su se to making claims that he tantiate. His caution, his and all the circumstances h his work give assurance ship is utterly free from humbuggery, as has so often been the case. Associated with him in exploit- ing and building the winged ship is Father Bell of Santa Clara College. “1 will make no prediction as to pos- sibilit declares Professor Mont- gome; He. maintains reservation of speech, even when his hopes are at their highest point. Continuance of flight has not been entirely solved. But Professor Mont- v has been industriously making nents along this line very suc- cessfully. How to raise the bird from the ground and gain the altitude where the wings will do their part is an- other problem to solve. At the recent flight of the aeroplane at Leonard’s nch in the Santa Cruz Mountains a balloon lifted the craft to a height of the wish of the aeronaut was obeyed iw every particular. cled and took directions as the rudder and the tilting of the wings directed. The following is all that Professor Montgomery will say in explanation of the construction of his invention: ““The principal difference in my aero- plane from otl ers lies in the constru tion of the swmface that gathers power from the air. I have taken into con- sideration the movements set by the surrounding air and have made the surface of my aeroplane take advan- tage of these movements by a peculiar form of conmstruction. Not alone is the sustaining surface to be taken into account. The agitation of the air is reckoned with in my contrivance and that force is made good use of.” GREAT SUSTAINING POWER. Loosed at an altitude of 3000 feet, the sustaining power of the wings will give power of fiight for a considerable length of time. By manipulation of the wings the aeroplane can go against the wind as well as follow it, and the man suspended in the light frame-work below is complete master of the winged craft. Professor Montgomery has succeeded in setting at naught the theories of a large part of the scientific world. The late Professor Joseph Le Conte of the University of California was among the leading men of sclence whose opin- ions Montgomery has now upset. ‘Aerial navigation is an impossibil- Professor Le Conte was free to assert to his classes. He had his rea- sons and his judgment was well thought out. He drew analogy from the condor, and pointed to the failures of the centuries of all of man's at- In some particulars, at least, Professor Montgomery has dem- onstrated that the distinguished scien- tist and the men of the sciertific world who have shared this opinion were mistaken. He has proved that wings can be constructed of such a form that man can fly with ther:, that the craft can be controlled and guided with precision among the air currents, and that the. biggest stride the world has vet known toward sailing the skies was yet to be made. This is not the only wonderful thing that Professor Montgomery has done for science. The much-heralded dis- covery recently of the “keeling over” of planets has quietly been taught by |’ him at Santa Clara College for many vears past. He had himself worked out the proposition and years later it dawned upon the men who make more noise in the world. Imagination runs riot when it con- templates the success of aerial naviga- tion, id if Professor Montgomery brings to realization man’s most fanci- ful speculations it is not likely that his name will remain in the obscurity of Santa Clara College many years, and the credit-due him for secientific research and discovery will not be withheld. B ALBANY, N. Y.. March 28.—Superintendent Hendricks of the State Insurance Department to-day post for one week the hearing on the protest of the so-called Crimmons t- tee, representing many oolicy holders of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, agalnst the pian for “mutuslizing” that Society &t the recent meeting of the STILL LOOKING FOR ROBBERS Police, Sheriffs and Pinker- | ton Men Continue Hunting for the Stege Highwaymen Although the police of San Fran- | ties of Contra Costa and Alameda counties and the men of the Pinker- ton agency are hunting for Thomas A. Collins and John A. Zimmerman, ac- béry at Stege, they have as yet failed to find a clew to the whereabouts of | the much-wanted men. in Richmond, ! Where the men made their headquar- ters prior to the robbery, nothing has been seen of them since and the local | department has sent for men to assist | Sheriff Veale in hunting them down. | The first clew obtained relative to | the identity of the meg wanted for rob- | bing Daly and Roche came through | bne Morgan, a buggy-washer at Aber- | nethy’s stable, who identified the photo- ! graph of Collins as that of tke man | who hire@ the buggy in which the rob- | bers made their escape. In Oakland at | Daly's stable Collins was identified as | the man seen hanging zruund shortly | before the robbery. Subsequent identi- | fication has proved to the satisfaction |of the officers that Zimmerman and | Collins are the robbers. | The chances of apprehending them are considered very good. Their op- portunity of escape was practicaily | done away with by the prompt action of the Sheriff's men immediately after | the robbery, and with exits closed the (work of the volice will be narrowed |down to finding their- hiding place within a circumscribed limit. Although it is believed that the two men are | being concealed by criminals in San Francisco, the police are working on | the theory that they separated a short time after the crime and one may be still in Alameda or Contra Costa bery. He, it is understood, was to have a share in the active consummation of the crime and the division of the pro- Jail awaiting transportation to the pen- itentiary. It is from him that Sheriff Veale ob- tained his clews that led to the nam- ing.of Zimmerman and Collins as the cisco and Oakiand, the Sheriffs’ depu-! cused of the Central Bank $10,000 rob- ! ceeds, but made an unfortungte visit to S8an Francisco and received a sen-| tence of fourteen years in Folsom for an old crime, and is at the Broadway SEEKS RELIEF FROM SORROW Artist Who Takes Arsénic Declares He Will Employ Surer Means Next Time MOURNS WIFE'S DEATH {E. M. Rinaldo Loses Ambi- | tion and Desire to Live Aft- er Woman He Loves Die | | i , | “I'll try a bullet next time. Poison is uncertain.” That was the declara- ! tion of E. M. Rinaldo, the artist, who | attempted to end his life yesterday by taking arsenic. . There is a pitiful tale behind Rinal do’s determination to die. Two months ago his wife, whom he idolized, passed away suddenly. Her death killed the artist’s ambition. She had been his in- spiration, his all, he said, and when she was taken away there was nothing left. “Why should I work now?” he mut- tered as he tossed on his cot at the Harbor Emergency Hespital. “She used to look over my shoulder and "watch the pictures as I put them on the canvas. She was my inspiration. ‘When I lost her I lost everything. Why should I paint now?” Mrs. Rinaldo died about two months ago. - For weeks her husband brooded ! alone in his studio near San Rafael. He tried to work, he says, but his dead wife's face flitted before him in a mist. He cculd not see the green Marin Coun. ty hills, he could not see the canvas. He could only see his wife beckoning. He came to the city yesterday to drown all his deep trouble in an orgie with some brother artists. He sought a restaurant where Bohemians congre- | gate and tried to forget. But even when the merriment was wildest, when strident voices were raised in song, he could hear his wife’'s voice calling, calling. % He could stand it no longer. He made up his mind to dle, and started toward the water front. The vision of the sad face of his wife that was always be- fore him grew stronger. taken to the Harbor Hospital, where prompt treatment by Dr. Hill soon placed him out of danger. But Rinaldo is determined on self- destruction. “I will use a pistol next ! time,” he declared. “I don’t expect to ! join my wife. I don’t believe that there is a hereafter. I just want to die jand forget everything.” Rinaldo has two grown children, a son in Oregon and a daughter, who is feet, when it was set adrift and | The aeroplane cir- | | < | ness to sgrve his sentence and save his Professor Montgomery is apparently the wife of a prominent lawyer of Baltimore. He is a native of Spain and | is 57 years old. ! B — | LORING CLUB MAINTAINS confederates. ITS HIGH REPUTATION Miss Mabel Perry of Stege, who saw s a part of the holdup through fleld | Again Heard in Vocal Gems That Ap- glasses, has identifled the horse and peal to the Lovers of buggy that were hired at Aberpethy's Music. stables, in Oakland, by Colling as the | 3 same rig she observed leaving the| The Loring Club proved itself scene of the robbery and following | strong enough to draw a crowd of behind Daly’s buggy that was driven ; musical enthusiasts last night to Na- tive Sons’ Hall in spite of one of the away by Zimmerman. Miss Perry had heaviest downpours of the season.; no trouble in recognizing the horse, and she was quite as positive of the And well the large audience was re- | buggy, because of its peculiar con- | paid for its loyalty to the great musi- struction. | cal organization. Indeed, it -were The Pinkertons have evidence that worth braving a thousand such storms while Collins and Zimmerman occupied | if only to hear so fine and bold and the flat at 1070 Seventh street, Oakland, | complete a rendition of Johann they arranged all of the detalls of the | Strauss’ “Wine, Woman and Song” as robbery, and there manufactured the | was given last night by the Lorings. | gags, masks and other paraphernalia| No less effective wias their singing used in securing Daly and Roche after | of Brewer's “Break, Break,” and perpetrators of the crime. Despite all promises of a lighter sentence, Henry refuses to make any statement to im plicate his pals, expressing a willing- they had the two Central Bank mes- sengers under range of the persuading rifie and revolver. The bank officials are hopeful that the reward, aggregating $2250, that has been offered will lead to the arrest of the fugitives. The Oakland police are clearing up local ends of the robbery to get into shape such evidence as can be collected for use in the event the suspected men are captured. To this end the statements of all persons con- cerned are being whipped into shape. Photograrhs of Collins and Zimmerman have been gshown to employes at Daly's stable in been identified as a man who was seen hanging around the place. The authorities have evidence that Zimmerman was seen near the Central Bank one morning when the coin sacks for shipment to Richmond were being transferred from the bank to Daly’s team. May RBrown, an Oakland woman whose mame had been connected with the case, denied to the police yesterday that she had any knowledge concern- ing it. ——————— WETMORE-BOWEN CO. £ VICTIM OF AN ERROR Board of Health Seeks 'to Make In justice to the wine house of Wetmore, Bowen Co., the following letters, correcting an error made by the Board of Health, are published: Department of Publie Heaitn =~ Otfice of the Board of ity ; Ee‘rulcl-ee, Cal., March 28, 1905. Metsrs. Wetmore-Bowen Company: An un- fortunate error in checking the tabulated re- port of the chiet of the pure food laboratory made it appedr that a sample of claret wine obtained from your stock of red wines con- j tained an sdulterant. The Board of Health hastens to acknowledge this error and makes this official statement that the analyses of your wines (thres samples) showed a product up to standard in every way free from itios in any form. R D. F. RAGAN, M. D., Health Officer and Executive of the Board of Health. Office Board of Health, City Hall, San Fran- cisco, March 28. Messrs. Wetmore-Bowen Company, 410 Post treet, clty—Gentlemen: In tabuiating the Trent of the chief chemiat & mistaks was made by me In stating that the ‘‘Cresta ] ine sophisticated. Trusting this S traction will shest. Mith. your lon your nppmlv:l‘, 1 am, very truly LBVY, Deputy - Health Officer. fl'o Mining Engineers. The representative of an Eastern min- ing syndicate desires the services of three competent mining engineers to ex- pert mia properties; a copper pi erty ;u-gmtga in .giliiv:lfil:."lpgnld lg% :’rt 5 experts in these ylvc_ classes v g ‘w R Experience and erences required. dress box G Sioe 9161, Oakland, and Collins has | | Leach’s “The Shepherd’'s Farewell” and Dr. J. G. Humphrey’s singing of | | the bully song, “King Charles.” | The programme fairly teemed with | gems, all grandly rendered under the | direction of W. G. Stadtfeld, with Frederick Maurer Jr. at the piano |and J. G. Fyfe at the organ. Several | of the numbers had the advantage of the accompaniment of an orchestra. —_————— Postal Clerks Appointed. The following persons were taken | from the civil service eligible list yes- terday by Postmaster Fisk and ap-| pointed sub-clerks: Charles P. Row- ley, E. J. Blanchard, Jacob H. Stein- man, Edward C. Wright, Martin H. | Kuenstlo, Charles W. Kuirado, Her- | bert S. Kitts, James H, Nagle, Harry | Travers W. Crowe, John B. Muller, | George M. Yore and Lauren C. Ward. S —— ADVERTISEMENTS. How Is YourHeart? Is your pulse weak, too slow, too f’;st, or does it skip a beat? Do you have shortness of breath, weak or hungry spells, fainting, smothering or choking spells, palpitation, fluttering, pains around the heart, in side and shoulder; or hurt when lying on left side? \ If you have any of these symptoms your heart is weak or diseased, and cannot get better without assistance. Dr. Miles Heart Cure strengthens weak hearts, and rarely ever fails to cure heart disease. Try it, and see how quickly you will find retief. H. Ware, James H. Beresford, John L. Madden, Vernon D. Libbrandt,| Louis M. Russell, L. P. St. John,| Stores Forced _to Close by We have leased th $2.50 $4.50 outdoor wear. Very fine storm coat, plaid lining, value $8.00. Fancy Tweed, Serge, value $10.00. ADVERTISEMENTS. Women’s Mackintoshes Cape and Coat Styles LB B ), o wien | §150 Yeme $2.50 $4.00 B e or GOODYEA RAINCOAT CO 1047 MARKET ST. SALE STARTS THIS MORNING AT 9 e*two buildings, 1047 Market street and 13 Xearny strect, for a short time and will of all their 33 stores at the above places at 25c to 40c on the dollar. Men’s Mackintoshes All Colors 12 KEARNY ST. All-wool Serge Box Coat. Value $8.00. All-wool $15.00. $1.25, $1.50, $2.00 Sale price. Girls’ and Boys’ Mackintoshes, formerly sold at 33 and $7.50 If prices are an inducement to the California public we will have no trou- ble to dispose of our entire stock in & short time. Ladies’ Cravenctte Raincoals | Men’s Cravenelle Raincoats Smart Wear for Rain or Sunshine. $2.00 for $6.00 Garments $3.50 for $10.00 Garments $5.00 for $11.00 Garments $6.00 for $12.50 Garments $7.50 for $16.00 Garments $9.75 for $18.00 Garments $12.50 for $35.00 Garments $15.00 for $30.00 Garments * Worn Iustesd of Overcoats. $4.00 for $9.00 Garments $5.00 for $12.50 Garments $7.00 for $16.00 Garments $9.75 for $232.00 Garments $10.00 for $33.00 Garments $11.00 for $25.00 Garments $12.00 for $26.00 Garments $15 for $30 and $35 Garments These coats are made of the choicest wool materials, thoroughly taflored () and scientifically water-proof; contains no rubber; no odor; guaranteed rain- proof; the dressiestovergarment forladies and gemts for evening, opers and Box Coat. Value //// ’ Melton. Value Mail orders must be accompanied by cash, check or momey order. State bust and height. GOODYEAR RAINCOAT CO. @ OPEN EVERY EVENING DURING TEIS SALE. $000000000003009000000009000000000000006000000000900900000000000090 1047 MARKET STREET i2 Kearny St., 3 Doors “rom PLATT AV GET [THREE ROBBERS [FERRY STEAMER A PLACE HERE] ATTACK DENTIST| NEAR DISASTER The presence in this' city during the last two weeks of Howard V. Platt, superintendent of the Utah division of the Oregon Short Line, has given rise i to several rumors all of which are to the effect that he is to receive an ap- pointment from General Manager Cal- | vin of the Southern Pacific Company. Letters received here from- Salt Lake by local railroad men also say that be- fore léaving that city Platt intimated to 2 number of his close friends that he would probably soon give up his of- ficlal duties there for more responsible ones on this coast. Since his arrival here Platt has been out on the road a great deal with General Manager Calvin and was the latter’s guest on a recent trip in the private car Houston down the coast, and also to Nevada a week ago, when General Manager Calvin went thither to personally investigate the freight traffic congestion on the Carson and Colorado road. At the railroad build- ing in this city no one seems to know just what purposes brought Platt to | this city at this particular time, but the fact that he has spent the better part of his stay In the company of Gen- ' eral Manager Calvin and has been pay- ing a great deal of attention to the { operating affairs of the Southern Pa- | cific, has caused many of the officials of the/road to strongly suspect that there is more truth in the rumors con- cerning the Salt Lake man’s future than the local heads of the company | will admit. Yesterday there was a report in cir- culation that Platt is to be appointed to a position in the operating depart- ment close up to the general manag- er, but whether he is to succeed some one or will fill some newly created | place is a matter of speculation. Platt is regarded as a clever operating de- partment man and one likely to re- ceive promotion any time. —_——— CONTENDS WIFE TRUMPED UP CHARGE AGAINST HIM Gustave Ahlstedt Says Spouse Placed Strychnine in Her Coffee to Injure Him. Martha Alice Ahlstedt, who caused her husband to be taken from their home at 331 Jessie street on a charge that he had attempted to kill her by placing strychnine in her coffee, is de- fending herself as best she can against the charges of cruelty her husband, Gustave, makes in an action for di- vorce mnow on trial before Judge Troutt.” Gustave is engaged in an ef- fort to prove that it was his wife that put the strychnine in the coffee for the purpose of trumping up a charge against him. Though she firmly de- nies the allegation, he has succeeded in establishing the fact that she pur- chased a bottle of strychnine for some uncertain purpose and that she had the same in her possession up to the 11th inst., when she moved away from the house of trouble to new quarters. Her husband’s charge of cruelty is based on this accusation he brands as false, and on a general statement of nagging. She denies, however, that she treated him cruelly, but says he treated her so unkindly that her nerves are shattered and as a result she is subject to fainting spells. She | is also engaged in an effort to prove that he has property, which he denies, and withal the case presents unusual evidences that the marriage was a failure from first to last. Judge Troutt will probably decide the case to-day. Decrees of divorce ; were granted yesterday to Hannah Goldstein from Marks Goldstein for cruelty, Ruby May Carberry from David J. Carberry for extreme cruelty, Charles S. Dick- inson, from Edna A. Dickinson for ins temperance, and Delia Johnson from D. Johnson for willful neglect. J. J. Gibbons has sued Sarah A. Gibbons for divorce, alleging deser- tion. Evelyn Zinn asks for a divdrce from Edward A. Zinn for desertion. Josephine Braham complains that Os- car Braham has failed to provide her with the common necessaries of life and she asks for a divorce on that ground. Jennie A. Duggan asks for a divorce from Edward F. Duggan for extreme cruelty. Eugene Mechan claims Wilma Meehan has treated him cruelly and for this reason he asks! for a divorce. Martha Jane Watkins has sued her husband, Dudley R. Wat- kins, for maintenance. He keeps a grocery at 500 Shotwéll street. —_——— Arnold Petri, a laborer, employed by the Queen Lily Soap Company at the intersecti teenth and i Another robbery, the victim of which, after being deprived of his money and watch, was viclously beaten, took place last night {n an alley next to 1411 Mason street. Dr. George Bennett, a dentist who is here from Sacramento on a visit, was assaulted there by three highwaymen. Bennett told his story to the police. At first it was not credited, as he ap- peared to be under the influence of intoxicants. but later when E. Syl- vester, who lives at 1411 Mason, told of having seen three men running from the alley, and upon investigation finding Bennett lying on the ground in a semi-consclous condition, the police concluded it was a holdup. Bennett, who is stopping at the Strathmore, 207 Larkin street, was visiting some friends in the northern part of the city. On returning to his lodgings a man suddenly stepped from the alley and dealt him a blow on the head. This man and two others pulled him in from the street and, after taking his watch and $35, they, dealt him several blows on the head, knocking | bhim to the ground. After being discovered by Sylvester, Bennett's head cleared and he made his way to police headquarters. He then went to a hospital for treatment. His scalp is lacerated and it is feared that his skull is fractured. Detective Cody was detailed on the case, —_—— Card and Loose Leaf Systems. $2.00 buys a card index drawer, 500 record cards, alphabetical index and 25 guide cards. Twinlock and Moorehouse loose-leaf ledgers and Shaw-Walker Fil- ing Cabinets. Complete office outfits In our stationery department, including printing and bookbinding. Sanborm, Vail & Co., 741 Market st. . THIEVES BREAK INTO SCHOOL.—The police were notified vesterday that thieves had broken into the Laguna Honda School on Sev- enth avenue, between L and J streets, by forcing opep a rear door. A thorough search had been made for plunder, but only a number of small mineral spectmens had been stolen. e et HENRY QUEEN DIES SUDDENLY.—Henry Queen, formerly a shippig clerk. dled sud- denly of heart disease yesterday in the Brook- lyn Hotel. He was 55 years old. The care and promptness of Captain Leale of the ferry-boat Newark last night prevented a collision with a de- relict dredger near the mouth of the narrow gauge slip on the 3:30 trip from San Francisco. As it was, the boat escaped ~without even t.pping the dredger. The Newark was plowing along in the heavy southeaster that was blow- ing and was rolling heav Captain Leale was watching everything him- self and was holding the boat well up into the wind. Suddenly everybody, and varticularly Engineer Scott on the lower deck, was startled by the ex- treme danger alarm of six bells. Scott threw the engines back in an instant, and the Newark began fighting to re- duce speed aad start backward. Right across the bows of the New- ark loomed a big dredger, without light or manager, drifting heiplessly and dangerously at the mercy of the wind. The dredger had been at work upon the new construction at the egd of the \Alameda mole and in thé gale had oken loose and drifted into the path of the Newark. There was nothing except the dark outline of the big iron-covered machine to warn Captain Leale, and that was almost hidden in the flying scud. When the Newark finally stopped, her bow was hardly a foot from the drifting dredger. Captain Leale took his ferry-boat around the dredger. but it caused a delay of half an hour in making the landing. When he arrived at the mole he sent help out to secure the machine that was rapidly drifting across the track of the broad gauge ferry route. Few of the passengers knew what a narrow escape they had.had, for most of them were seasick. B — Try the United States Laundry. Market street. Telephone South 420 —_———— O’'CONNOR TRIAL CLOSING —The trial of Frank O’Connor, a soldier. charged with maur- der, is drawing to a close before a jury im Judge Cook's court. There is only one more Witness to be examined for the prosecution, and the defense will probably not call amy wit- nesses. O'Conner had a fight with Arthue Oliver, a colored pugilist. at Pacific and Kearny streets on the night of July 4 whem it is alleged O'Connor fatally stabbed Oitver. 1006 ADVERTISEMENTS. and room for gent " Goes witly you. . LIMITED BARBER SHOP AND BATH ROOM GOLDEN STATE LIMITED. Leave San Francisco daily 5:00 p. m. for St. Louis and Chicago via El Paso and Kansas City. train, with all the latest comfort: . h new scemes. Buffet-library cars. observation cars, standard sleepers and dini: to supply every want. The Ask Southern Pacific Agents, 613 Market St., San Franci:co. Southern Pacific & Rock Island . - A swift and nalatial over a new route -car all the way. Smoking- to read, courtequs way