The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 26, 1905, Page 7

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THE LL, WEDNESDAY APRIL 20, 1903 WILL NOT WORK LONGER HORS Retail Clerks Declare That I'hey Will Not Consider! Keeping Open After Six| WILL PLAY BASEBALL ——p- o Organizations Connect- | ed With Butchers’ Union,| | o Meet on the Diamond | SR ; | | he Retail Clerks' the proposition of m. is strenuously s of that organiza- official statement 1l last night: open after 6 p. m. any of the Cierks have labored the Bar- Organizer meeting of General of th delegate from the city onal th d Albert Zaborski imittee on arrange- es Kohlberg as grand belonging to the = Drivers’ Branch No. me off in Golden secretary’s t night jten ied to the foll the preced h seven ap- wvestigating the annual at the next ——— Transportation Club Excursion. f t Pacific os Inter- >f the s « nd 1 rip through th rday. A & Los Gatos, where served for the ex- Taken on arising (belf a giass), frees the Bowels — thor- but gently— Constipation gnd cleanses the sys- tem. The superiority of “HUNYAD! JANOS” over other Laxative Waters is acknowi- edged, as it was awarded the Grand Prize at the St. Louls vf»xpo-mm Take the best cure The Largest Anatomical Musevm fn the .mfl. JORDAN'S crear §IUSEIII OF ANATOMY 1061 MARKET ST. bet. 6thi 7th 8.F.Cal. Cisease penitively cure: Specialist o the DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Goveultation free and stricty privats Trescmen: personslly of by lener. & poritive curein every case undcraken. rEiLosernyYer | A MATLED valuabie book for e ) DRE.JORDAN & CO.. 1051 Market 8¢ 8. F. [ o et el for Bosk, Ac BEE. (A Use Big @ for unnatural dischiarges, inflammations, oue or ulcerations . gont or poisonous. Sold by Draggists | y Pills Cue of all disorders of the Stumach, Liver, Bowes Kidneys, Biadder, Female Irregular- jee. Sick Headache, Billousness. Constipation, 25 s @ box. At Drusgists’, or by mail RADWAY & CO. 55 ELM ST. NEW YORE | capture the offender. HABEAS ALICE MASON SUES 0UT CORPUS WRIT Hold-U < G | Lo NVULTINCE loo LI ITTT] LI AR~ 8 'PHHOI&IIHH!ML{)OMIHWHWVIMWmlllllllmfllll i 3 ST 3 P Suspect Seeks Freedom ——p Finy < - N WHO IS BELIBVED G THE IDENTITY OF YOUNG WOMA CONCERNIN: | ! x | ROH BRUTT'S SALOON WHEN THOMAS REILLY WAS KILLED. - TO KNOW SOMETHING CONCERNING THE MEN WHO WERE ATTEMPTING TO Alice Mason, who was drrested by Detective Ryan for alleged complicity in the hold-up of the saloon of John C. Brutt at Second and Brannan streets last Friday night, has applied to the courts for a writ of habeas corpus. The woman was arrested, to- gether with George Hunter, who had been in various criminal escapades. Judge Cook issued a citation to Chief Dinan to produce her in court this morning that she may state her case. Hunter and the other suspects re- main_in jail and the police are still | searching for a woman known as Ida MAKE ARRANGEMENTS FOR OUTING OF PARISHIONERS Sacred Heart Church Will Hold Its Annual Picnic at Camp Taylor on May 13. A meeting was held last night in the parochial residence of Sacred Heart Church for the purpose of arranging details for the annual outing of the | parishioners, which is to be held at | Camp Taylor May 13. A committee | was appointed last night and it will start to work at once to make the event a success. It is composed of the Wilson, who is said to be very friendly | following members: ;“h e Of Detectives | pave supp Sr. chairman; A, J. Hearst, Jurnett still refuses to tell what evi- | gecretary; Father Joseph P. MoQuade, J F. dence he has secured against Hunter | Limurg, T. J. Redmond T. E. Tracy, Joseph and the two women. He says he will A F"zsf\'-r?}flh fi. "'Tnfinf' C.hll. Rl sl t o onnor, A. Cailahan, T. “ranchi, not release them, but the only expla | Homer Rippon, H. Keenan, P. Cosgrove, C. nation he will make is that he 15|G. Gannon, R. Longers, H. Dobel, G. La awaiting further developments. Detective Ryan insists that he has secured no new evidence against the | other two suspects, Ridell and Bkurs. the latter being the man who attempt- ed to hold up a brother-in-law of the murdered man, Riley, about one week before the shooting in the saloon. An inquest was held yesterday by Coroner Leland, but nothing new de- veloped. The jury returned a verdict that Thomas Riley came to his death on April 22 from a gunshot wound in the right breast inflicted by a person or persons unknown to the jury. None of the witnesses were able to identify any of the suspects. ————— AMBULANCE DRIVER HAS MANIA FOR FAST RIDES Joseph Byrne Admits That He Sent In Fake Calls and Then Re- sponded to Them. Driving horses at a furlous speed is the confessed mania of Joseph Byrne, driver of the German Hospital ambulance. He was arrested yester- day on a charge of ~disturbing the peace. During the time that Byrne has been employed as driver the ambu- lance has responded to an unusual number of fake calls from distant parts of the city. Two horses died as the result of his hard driving. Dr. Paul Gretz of the hospital be- came suspicious and laid a plot to He arranged with the telephone company to locate where the false calls came from. He learned that they had been sent from Rayhlil's stable, at 627 Haight street, where the ambulance 1is stationed. Policeman Ziener was secreted yester- day in the room where the telephone | was kept, and during the afternoon he | heard Byrne telephoning for the am- bulance to go to the CIiff House on a call. After being caught in the act Byrne admitted that he was possessed of 2 mania for furious drives and to hear the clanging of bells. —_———————— Card and Loose Leaf Systems. $2.00 buys a card index drawer, 500 record cards, alphabetical index and 25 guide cards. Twinlock and Moorehouse foose-1éaf ledgers and Shaw-Walker fil- ing cabinets. Complete office outfits in our =iationery department, includin printing and bookbinding. Banborn, Vai & Co. . IR AN S A A e Boys Steal Pistols. Clarence W. Tompkins and Henry Dickens, each about 17 years of age, were arrested last night by Detective Cleary of the Morse agency and De- tective Harper of the local department on complaint of the firm of Baker & Hamilton. It is alleged that the youths stole four Colts revolvers. Two of the weapops were recovered by the police. —————————— PARIS, April 26.—The Echo de Paris this moruing requests the French Government to take measures to prevent the entry into France of cerrbro-spinal meningitis, which is-caueing heavy ‘mortalily in Germany ¥ | Combe, J. J. Hughes, J.' Donahoe, J Carthy, W. A. O'Leary, J. M. Kane, E. Dockery, M. 1. Brad H. Donahoe, C. Dona- hoe, E'J. Hughes, R. Crowley, P. K. Farrell, | Ed' Olwell, Frank F. Reppon, Willlam J. Gallagher, 'James Dunre, Captain J. Seymour, | J. Brennon, Lieutenant 3. J. Crowiey, Thom: | Rivers, T. ¥. Dundon, F. J. Mahoney, W. Mc- | Guire,’ F. C. O'Connor, Thomas Brady, J. F. Lynn, John Mahoney, John Dillon, William Riordan, J. Cooney, W. Mor- Cunninghem, T. gan, J. O'Shea, J. Lennon, James Ward, T. T, Buckley McGuire, . | ¢ 0'Connor, v, J. F. Lynn, John Mahoney, John Dillon, W. Cunningham. T. | Riordan,” J. Cooney, W. Morgan, J. O'Sh J. Lennon, James Wa 7. Buckl Thomas Donohoe, James O'Brien, T. J. Wall J. Dillon, Ira O'Brien, Jerry O'Brien, J. Trac; D. Mahoney, W. Dillon, Captain A. C. Freese, J. C. Neehan, P. J. Gallagher, M. J. Hearst. —_———— TRAINING THE MAN BEHIND THE GU! | The Owl Drug Company Adopts New Methods for Giving Better Service. Proof is at hand—if proof were needed of the progressiveness and go ahead spirit which pervades the Owl Drug Company in determina- tion to give the people of California the very best drug store service in the world. Mr. Arthur Sheldon, the famous business butlding expert of Chicago, who has beén g during his visit bere, was secured by the Owl Drug Company to talk to their employes. The retail stores in San Francisco and also in Osklana were closed Monday night and about 100 salesmen sat down to supper at the Red Lion Grill. Representatives of the Los Angeles and Sacramento stores were also pres- ent. Mr. Sheldon gave a most stirring -and instructive talk, which was greatly enjoyed by all who heard if. The management of the Owl Drug Company are £0 thoroughly impressed with the importance of training its clerks along the lines indicated by Mr. Sheldon that they have arranged for fitty of their employes to make a special study of the principles of scientific salesmanship un- der Mr. Sneldon’s guldance. 1t is the public of San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles and Sacramento which' will reap the benefit of these up-to-date methods. ter pervice, greater skill, more courteous tention, a keener Interest in a customer's needs and welfare and a greater appreciation of the importance of Inteiligent service will make trafing at any of the Owl Drug stores a greater pleasure than ever before and the mauagement are to be congratulated upon their progressive up-to-datenees. —_— e —— Switchman Is Killed. Michael McFadden, a switchman, was struck by a locomotive at Har- rison and Sixteenth streets shortly after 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon and died at the Railread Hospital at midnight. —_——————— Run Into by Automobile. SALINAS, April 25.—A. Lang. aged 60, a pioneer baker of this place, had a narrow escape from death in an au- tomobile accident this afternoon. The horse which he was driving took fright {at an automobile. The chauffeur, in- stead of stopping, put on extra speed and ran into Lang’s wagon and upset it. Lang was thrown out and badly injured. ———————— ‘We print anything promptly. The Gabriel Printing Company, 419 Sacramento st. ——— There are many stunning things other than sandbags, ing many instructive talks to business men | Bet- | PEOPLE AWAKE 10 CIVIC SIN No Longer Will Californians Be Accused of Abandoning Their Historic Landmarks INTERESTS WHOLE CITY “Ramona,” to Be Played for! Benetfit of Old Missions, Promises a 'Big Success Bells of the past, whose long-forgotten musle | | _Still Alls the wide expanse, | Tingeing the sombre twilignt of the present With color of romance. | BY LAURA BRIDE POWERS. . . I hear your call, and see the sun descending On rock, and wave, and sand, As down the coast the mission voices blending | Girdle the heathen land. Thus sang Bret Harte of the bells of Mission Dolores—the bells that | rang out the Angelus at morn and at eventide with never a miss for a cen- tury, guiding the affairs of the pueblo | with easy regularity. | Now they are still, but with a voice- | less elogquence they appeal to every | heart that beats true to the traditions | of the West. | . That the mission bells—the missions | themselves—appeal to the patriotism of the people is apparent when a direct appeal is made for their care and restoration. Since the facts were made public yesterday that Virginia Calhoun and her company will present her drama- tization of “Ramona” at the Alhambra for the saving of old San Antonio Mis- sion and the providing of caretakers | at Mission Dolores, scores of good | | people have come to the front to help | —and they came with a will that was ! | good to see. | | __As to “Ramona,” the play is said by | | The Wise Ones to be one of the pret- | tiest pastoral plays ever put omn the | boards of San Francisco, telling in | simple, natural fashion the beautiful tale of Helen Hunt Jackson's—the purest love story of its time. The presentation is coherent and harmonious and breathing in every | line the atmosphere of the days of | old, when California was in truth a land of milk and honey. * And writ throughout the story is the tragedy | that followed upon the heels of the secularization of the missions, when | the Indian—for whom and by whom | the missions were reared in the wilder- | | ness—was shamelessly turned adrift| and his lands were snatched from him, | the desert alone offering him its dun bosom for his weary head. £ | These things are true, unhappily | true. Helen Hunt Jackson builded her story upon these facts—not individual, | to be sure, but collective. ‘And in Miss Calhoun’s play is this tale unfolded with scenic effects and historic properties that bear out the conceptions. Even the little altar that stands in the room of Ramona is cut from a cross that once stood in the old Plaza Church in Los Angeles. Not the least important of the play to be presented in behalf of old % San Antonio Mission, is the music therein —Indian music by Arthur Farwell, he whose weird and exquisite melodies many of us heard some months ago. | “This music has been lured from the | lips of aged Indians—through cajolery, or the potency of a coin—and been Te- | corded in the phonograph. With in- finite care Mr. Farwell has arranged it and it will be heard in a fit setting in “Ramona.” | Now here are some facts to be driven home in your minds—in yours, in your neighbors’—if you be good Californians: Miss Calhoun’s company will present “Ramona,” the California pastoral play, including Arthur Farwell's ex- | quisite Indian melodies, for the pur- | pose of completing the restoratign of.| Mission San Antonio de Padua, now | well under way by the Landmarks League; also to create a fund for the maintenance of a caretaker at Mis- | sion Dolores, that the old sanctuary may be open to the people for all time; and—why not hope high—if there be funds enough left, to safeguard the beautiful old Mission San Juan Bau- tista, near Sargents, San Benito | County. Here the east church wall is threat- ened with falling—in spite of the piti- ful care bestowed upon it by its aged | custodian, old Father Closa, he who | for fifty years has labored alone in the old cleister. The dates of the benefit performances are Friday evening, May 5, Saturday, May 6, matinee and evening perform- ances, prices to be determined later. The Alhambra, remember. The list of patrons—isn't it time we dropped the antiquated word ‘“patron- ess?”’—will be issued in a day or two, | and will include a small army of lead- | Jlng men and women, those who truly | love their State and all that pertains to it. 3 e — ‘!FAMOUS DUB! BREWERS HERE ON PLEASURE TRIP B. 5. and Robert Guinness Return | ¥rom a Hunt With Lord Beres- ' 3 ford in Old Mexico. B. 8. Guinness and his brother, Rob- | ert D. Guinness, members of the world-famous Dublin family, arrived i in this city yesterday and are regis- | tered at the St. Francis. The visitors | came to this country several months | ago with Lord Charles Beresford, vice | admiral of the British navy, and in | company with Bourke Cockran of New | York proceeded south to Mexico, where they were the guests of Presir dent Diaz and other prominent offi- , clals of the southern republie, who af- | forded the admiral and his traveling | | companions every facility for enjoying | | a tour thrqugh the wilds of Mexico, | where they “enjoyed a hunt for big game, Discussing his trip last night, | Robert Guinness said: Lord Beresford and my brother and myself | | have enjoyed our American visit immensely | | and would have prolonged it several weeks if | | duties at home had not compelled Lord Beres- | [ ford to return to England. He remarked | before we parted that he would have bsen | | greatly pleased to come to California, where | | he has many friends, but the fact that he is | due iu England the latter part of May, when he is to assume command of his fleet, made it necessary for him to abandon a trip to the Western States. My brother and myself are undecided how long we will remain here, | but it is very likely that our stay will be sev- eral weeks. Bourke Cockran expected to join | us In San Francisco, but he may change his plans. —_— e Pleads for Fugitive, William Finley, 20 years of age, an escape from Whittier Reform School, | was arrested by the local police Mon- | day evening. The boy was sent from "San Jose to serve a term of nine months for battery. He had been Jn many quarrels in the Garden fmg:nd was regarded as incorrigible. V' days after he entered the reformato! he made his escape. He immediately | came to this city, where he secured organism, the Do not consent formed every year in our great city hospitals upon women afflicted with serious female troubles. cessful—oftentimes they are not. It is safe to say that certainly nine out of ten operations for female troubles might have been wholly avoided. The most valuable tonic and re-builder of the female Thankful are Who Escape The Surgeon’s Knife Thousands of surgical operations are per- Ml < Sometimes the operations are suc- medicine with a record of thousands of cases literally snatched from the operating table, is ; 1 IydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to an operation which may mean death until after you have given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial Note what it did for Mrs. Paul Oliver, whose letter foHows: DeaR MRs. PinkHAM:—I was suffering from pains In my side and womb. The doctors said to get well I must have an operation performed, but I would not consent to that. I heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and sent for a bottle; the first dose did me good, and after taking the first bottle | could sleep all right and I did not have those pains around my womb which I had all the Hime before. returned, and I am full of life. Now I can ride ten miles in a carriage, my color has I owe all this to the Vegetable Compound. It has also done wonders for my thirteen-year-old daughter. [ will never cease to praise it and recommend it to my friends. Thousands of Mgs. PauL OLIVER, St. Martinsville, La. women, residing in every city and town In the Unlted States, bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills and creates radiant, buoyant female health. For your own sake try it. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Cures Where Others Fail SUCCESS LIES IN HARD WORK Herbert B. Law, one of San Fran- cisco's wealthlest business men, ad- dressed a large throng of members of the Young Men’s Christian Association last night, his subject ‘being: “A Prac- tical Business Man to Young Men.” Mr. Law gave one of the rhost inter- esting and instructive talks .that has been delivered from a rostrum in this city for some time. He was introduced by Secrglary McCoy and said in part: Men who have gained position in the world are working just as hard as when they were boys. Most of the successful ones are not college men, but men who taught themselves. The measure of success does not rest on mere opportunity, nor wealth, nor understanding, but on_the ability to use these agencies. Only that which you use is of value to you. You will hear of lots of things that yeu will | mever use. Men can do what they will. The power in men to do a thing is almost unlimited. The fact that you have not a college educa- tion is mo bar to success. 1 have been criticized for saying a boy ls better off with- out a college education. If he is rich and expects to live a life of ease he is better with it_ but if he has to make his own way and you keep him along in college until he s 27 or 28 and then turn him loose with only | an office boy's knowledge he is handicapped. I want to begin when I am 14 and learn ! all the preliminaries while I am young and not line up at a later age against a boy fifteen years my junior with only the knowi- edge of business he possesses. Some of you young men who are listening to me will be great men and millionaires. Your success will not be a matter of chance, but of work. The Whole question is, are you willing to work? The key to success is labor —persistent labor. ~There is nothing within reason you cannot accomplish If you make up your mind to accomplish it. Stay with it. Don't think the men who make successes are genjuses born. They are not. They work | until they feel almost worn out, but they rest and the sun comes out and they get break- fast and go at it again. They make eve succeeding blow stronger and more effective than the one of yesterday and then they suc- ceed. OPPORTUNITIES PLENTY. _There areé' plenty of opportunities. The hardest thing in our business is to find a man who can earn $10,000 a year. We are looking for them. We examine every man in our own employ and every man our nelgh- bor has. Napoleon said he would rather have a half-trained army of 'enthusiasts than a perfect machine. Thdt's part true with us. We want the man You can't shake off, who will come back again and again. Never go away with the idea you can't do a thing. A man must have confidence. You don’t know half what's in you. In our business we used to o to college and get the most persistent boys we could find. Do you know the first boy we would go to? The janitor. It takes a lot of courage and PlUCK to get through college by being a jan- ftor. That is the real badge of courage. These boys who acted as janitors were always leaders. ~They did not drink nor carouse. We had nothing to do with that crowd. We wanted the men we knew were willing to Work and do_ their duty. Lots of men who are worth millions got there with no other Qualification than ability to work hard. You musn't get discouraged at obstacles. —_— Sleeping Car to and From Sacramento A good night's rest may be secured by trav- elers between San Francisco and Sacramento. A comfortable standard sleeper s attached to train leaving San Francisco daily 7 p. m., returning with train leaving Sacramento 3:20 a. m., the latter arriving in San Francisco 8:20 . m. gers to Sacramento allowed to occupy berths until 7 o'clock a. m.; coming to San Francisco, may take possession of berths S tie after 9 o'clock on evening before. * ADVERTISEMENTS. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. employment and for the last eight months has worked steadily and | avoided all trouble, as testified to by his employer. An effort will be made to permit the youth to continue at his work and to have the sentenge to the reform school revoked fhe Kind You Have Always Bought B.fil?‘lu -@iguature of ( a perfect steel I met a man last year who had made 1170 and some 0dd tho s of dollars. He figured that some peopie were injured by drinking coffee and that if grain could be browned so its flavor resembled that of coffee it could be sold. The result was Postum Cereal. In 1890 that business was $40,000 behind. “This year it s $1,000,000 ahead and it has estab- lished a branch in Europe at great expense. Post was only a boy In a flour milk remember when in a town one my pocket. It | They can all be overcome. I I used to sell books I was day with only 25 cents In d1dn’t strike me that I was against a hard | game. I felt that I would sell some books before night—that I had to. You must have enthusiasm. 1If you lack that you are lfke a steam engine without steam. ‘The man who | Bas no enthusiesm in' him will met get very aj DO ONE THING WELL. You must learn to handle yourself. You . * must train your mind and make it do the You must do ome thing vell o g thing you want. This is a day of speciaities, to cover too many fields you will fail. It you are in the soap business be the best soap | B WEich the mind iy carried in a certain direction to success. It is the trained man who succee Any man who makes a great success must, to & certain extent, be marrow. he_must do one thing and do it weil You must carry about you no signs of care- lessness_ which many times show in the ap- parel. Not that fine raiment is necessary at all. Many times when a business man telis an applicant for a position that the vacamey has been filled It is because he has mnoted maker you can. Get books on the business and read them. Strive to improve all ths | time and turn out the flnest article sold. If you have it in you to do the best in your iine the people will find it out. I speak of the soap business because it is generally sup- posed to carry With it a bad odor and be undesirable, but look at the beautiful ma- terial that s turned out by those who have made it @ specialty. See what magnificent 3 things ingenious men in the slaughter-houses | S¢wething in that “'LD““:""' ‘P"‘T:: ce that have developed. The by-products are now the | leads to the belief thet he 1s careless. most_profitable of these institutions. Armour B e Nes o the knowiedgs they Eatned. His Art Objectionable. Carnegle got it into his head there ought Policemen Hottinger, - Meyer and to be some good Way to make steel. He|mpomoeon last night arrested Peter Maguire, the proprietor of the Art | saloon on Market street, for exhibiting figured out that a chemist could discover it and he imported one. He was ridiculed. It an indecent statue of a Japanese. The statue was taken to the Hall of Justice. was said with sarcasm that he was bringing a book man to make steel. Pretty soon, how- ever, through the knowledge obtained by the chemist he was turning out a good ‘and then THE UP-TO-DATE WAY East over a new route, through new scenes, on the luxurious Golden State Limited. Leave San Francisco daily 5:00 p. m. for St. Louis and Chicago via El Paso and Kansas City. Ladies’ par- lor, library, smoking room, observation rotunda; meals a la carte. ' Full particulars of - Southern Pacific agents, 613 Market street. Southern Pacific and Rock Island

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