The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 28, 1905, Page 37

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THINK ALIKE ON STATEHOOD Demoerats and Republicans of Arizona Meet to Form an Anti-Jointure League GOVERNOR IS CHAIRMAN Central Committees of Both Parties Agree to Work l'ogether in Harmony e Anti- et here resent Governor the Re- ided as 1 atic C mporary sec- an anti-joint- ub-leagues tory. The th political this morning anti-jointure s Pacific and Atlantie Herring. fish expert who investigated off the Nova Scotia er and who afterward c Coast to inquire into there, reports that in the main, are con- n far more that they g ss of kippers to be | ted time, but are not barrels to com- h or Norweglan n keep so Australia and as well as in the the Pacffic her- s similar to the sold well; but as supposed artiele d. The markets men- so provide an outlet for It is recom- ext fall, haif expert curers ast to put up t Scotch method rsons desiring to X a vaca- Wagg—Ah, gone to his keeps on b she more is a ADVERTISEM Free to Men Man The Medicine Free Power-Proof of Perfect Potency In Every Man Is Now Sent to All Men Absolutely Free. youth again. Prove aged body the potent lous Man Medicine of Remedy Cc dicine in complete test e in plain wrapper ay—not a cent. It will the old-time come and alive and young. New young e and life of first man- ain. Your whole body will strength and vigor 100d. d blood will shout out the neans—every man ull force and fire ash and who lives again f his body-being. hat—does tha to be that way? be a man—man-like, -able? e “game” again—up man-right an Y Medicine w Man T! s yo 1 make you so. rs—the whole cost is Your name - Try y et it. Get it. Ot rd is r guarantee. INTERSTATE REMEDY COMPANY, 284 Luck Bldg., Detroit, Mich. Dr. Wong Him, Herb Doctor, 667 GEARY STREBT. Between Jones and Leavenworth sts., S.F. Chinese Legation. Washington. D. C. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. 1, the signed. his Impe- rinl Chinese Majes— ty’s Minister Pleni- potentiary and voy Extraordinary to the United States of America, Spain 2nd Peru, do_here- by certify that Dr. Wong Him 15 s bona fide physictan in China and regu- WU T. FANG. under- lerly qualified as such. Beptember 16, 1902 Best of Certi es in His Office. Omaha (Neb.), April 23, "04 > Whom It may Congern: After treat- he best physicians and epecaillsts vears 1 calied on Dr. e a simple exsmina- e pulse and explained m; him i h 4 e dld jans here think him a wonder. ing me I will be only Any too glad end eerfully rec- e Very worst cases of vas known to be upe ™ on record. The lure I think Dr. the Lest doctors in the owe my future healts to tdo: tall « A F. GRIFFITH MES $18 Eouth 224 street, Omaha, Neb. and where to send it—all | LABOR LEADERS [N ANCRY MOOD —— ‘Chicago Teamsters Bitterly Denounce Building Trades | | for Withdrawing Support NUMEROUS SMALL RIOTS Several New but Unavailing Efforts Are Made to Bring About Peaceful FRES IR CHICAGO, May 27.—While numerous small riots were in progress to-day, both In the downtown streets and in the lum- ber districts, the leaders of the team- | sters’ strike and the officlals of the building trades were engaged in quarrels of their own. The action of the building trades last | night in withdrawing from the teamsters | theff financial ald and moral support an- gered the teamsters, and they lost no time to-day in chlling upon the repre- Sentatives of the building trades and de- | manding to know what they meant by going back” on the teamsters in the thick of the fight. Then it was made | plain to the teamsters that in the opinion of the bullding trades they had over- stepped their jurisdiction in causing members of their union to do construc- tive work. The particular cause of complaint was that teamsters employed safes and vaults had placed them in bufldings. This part of the work, the building trades contend, belongs to them. Presfdent Shea of the Teamsters' Union declared that he would erder ,out every safe-mover and machinery rigger in the | city on Monday morning and stop ‘work {on all buildings where the members of the buiiding trades are employed. No attention was paid to this threat by tle buildings trades representatives, and finally & committee, composed of Michael Casey of Ban Francisco, John Sheridan of Chicago and Edward Gould of New York, all members of the executive coun- cil of the teamsters, was appointed to r with the bullding trades over the iatter of jurisdiction. No time was specified for the meeting. NOTHING TO ARBITRATE. Several new efforts were made during the day to settle the strike, but none of | them amounted to gnything. The Chicago Team Owners’' Association made another effort to induce the teamsters to arbitrate the question of delivering goods to boy- cotted houses. The Chicago Masons, and Builders’ Assoclation offered its services to arbitrate ail things connected with the strike | The offer was accepted by the teamsters and acknowledged by the employers,- as all other similar propositions have been, with the declaration that there was noth- ing in the strike that admitted of arbi- tration. The labor leaders made another effort to induce Vice President Fairbanks to use his good offices in settling the strike, and a number of the Team Own- ers’ Assoclation members joined them in the move. They were informed by the secretary of the vice president, however, that he could not undertake to interfere in the matter. Levy Mayer, attorney for the ers’ Association, and James B. business agent of the Express Drivers’ Union, both left Chicago for the East to- day. Neither man would state the object of his journey. It was reported that Mayer was to confer with the officials of Employ- the express companies in an effort to in- | duce them to modify thelr stand against the re-employment of their striking driv- ers, but he denled this and declared that he knew that the companies would not recede from the position they had taken. 1t was said of Barry's object in going to New York that he was planning to call out the express drivers In other cities on a sympathetic strike unless the Chicago drivers are reinstated. President Mulligan of the express driv- ers said: “I would not care to talk about the report. 1 have heard of such a thing as an effort to call out the drivers in other cities. I understand that the drivers are well organized in Boston, but I do not know what is the situation in New York.” RIOTING CONTINUES. The general opinion regarding the visit of Barry is that he has gone east for the purpose of securing financial ald for his men. It is admitted by the labor leadgrs that a critical stage in the strike is at hand. Settlement | in handling | Barry, | | | | The Latest At an Exceptional Saving. Point -insertion down ~~_- Point with Valenciennes straps across the front. them. Our price............® ecru and Arabian colors: inches wide; than 15c; Are not one worth Paris Fashions Say That poses. To Mothers mers’ cales and linens. This embroidery, braid the many. 816 Market Street Phelan Building. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. ' | | | white pique, tailor-stitched and double row of Irish running the length of the skirt; suspenders of Irish insertion; trimmed lace _and two The model from which this was copied was $10.00, but these are made in our own factory, so there is no dutg on i 75 n ¥ to 2 less many as high as 4oc. re to be closed out at one VALENCIENNES LACE and INSERTION is just the lace for waists, dress or millinery pur- Here is one of the many of this kind of lace we have to show you; one inch wide; pearl edge; many hundred patterns to choose from. . 12 yards for 40c Who have not already bought their children’s summer dresses. Here is an opportunity they should not miss. Drum- samples that we considered ourselves Music Hath Charms LADIES’ SUSPENDER : DRESS SKIRT—Made of And here is same that will more imported steam shrunk than please your ear and more so your pocket-book, such as “Sally in Our Alley” (Great hit at the Broadwav Theater, New York), that will sound dear to you), “The Last of Summer,” “Scarf Dance,” 7¢ per copy, or still better, will give you 4 for ................28¢ Popular music at % publisher’s price. June Brides It was luck to us and Rummagg Sale \ will be luck to{ou if you IN LACE INSERTIONS and ffffsdl\ i7¢,in need of any em- TRIMMINGS; in Point Venise, //JJRA0N S OICTes HE 2 NEW Cluny, Point de Gene, etc.; in whits, AT arie. TIYEY caine acrasm 73 sample pieces, no two v alike, from 18 to 23 inches wide; made of cambric and lawn: buttonholed edge; in open-work, Irish Point and blind effects. For corset covers, underskirts and other underwear. Not one worth less than 50 cents; we will place them on our bargain counter for....27e Hosiery Don't think because they are low priced they are not the best; no middleman’s profit here; direct from the mill, hence the low price. For stout women; made of Sea Island thread; extra wide; white feet; velvet feeling to the most sensitive feet; fast black, Price.25¢ For Slender Women LADIES HOSE—Made of French thread; fine jersey knit; stainless black; double heel, sole and toes. Price caee. . 2B5C CHILDREN'S HOSE—Made of lucky to get at % off Maco yarn; stainless black; white : the original cost. We feet; just for summer wear; double will sell them the same way. Made heel, knees and toes; all sizes. of wash ginghams, madras, per- Price .........cceuennnnnrn. 25€ season’s newest styles; different colors, in stripes and checks; also some white; T and beading trimmed; 210 different kinds, but as newspaper space will not permit us to describe them all, here is one of Made of colored striped gingham, yoke effect, trimmed with a ruffle and beading. Price....25¢ JOf, Sozeaberg 13 v anell Streat Racine Feet To make your old stockings new; easy to sew on old uppers; made of XX thread; light, medium and heavy weight. Price. 3 pairs for 25¢ to or Traveling Deils Made of all-silk French chiffon; full 18 inches wide; opened edge; satin finished border; in brown; navy, white, cham- % pagne, green ° and black. - Price them elsewhere and you will see what you will save when you come to us. Price 3 Per vard 25¢ “Love’s Old Sweet Song” (A song: NAIL YOUR DOLLARS DOWN Theyre hard to get? - If your wife trades at the Price Cutlers her money will do double duty ANY ECONOMICAL WOMEN have slarted bank accounts since they have traded here. Nothing but the BEST, yov will find, is sold over our counlers. Here arc some of the prools. them. Don't think you are compelled to be a purchaser. We know after you find out al what a small profit we sell our goods you will be one of the many friends of our store. You are invited to inspect In Our Underskirt Dept. We can show you as large an assortment as any place in Frisco, but you will find the rices a little different. ere is one made of b g colored striped wash- able gingham; deep umbrella flounce with ruffle. In blue and gray stripes. It will take 6 yards of material, which you could not make up your- self for this price.............48¢ ANOTHER mthcf !nfi b‘l:‘ckh mercerized sateen—Trimme: t a deep flounce, with two ruffles and five rows of silk stitching; tailor stitched seams; erous in width and length; a e surprise for fiou in good quality and low price.. Ladies’ Wrappers We doubt if any one will show you a larger assortment, but we are tive no one will sell them any ess in quality. Neither can you make them up yourself at this price. Made of colored percale. (The cele- brated Worcester make.) Tight fitting back; rolling collar. Front, back, also ruffles, braid trimmed; de: athered flounce, liberally made. In red, black, navy and gray, in stripes and flower effects. Psn"’ce HERE 1S A COUPON Which entitles those who bring it with them or mail it to us to a pair of “KANT KOME UN- DONE” HOSE SUPPORT- ERS and the new patent ad- dominal reducer for 13e or to the superstitious ones we will give 2 pair for 25¢.- Made with a patént shaped pad; belt attached; also four straps of French lisle elastic. with patent button clasps. Note the price and note the condition. Worth Knowing SOROSIS KID h GLOVES — Second to none for fit and wear- ing qualities, Just re- ceived all our new summer shades. ‘Why not buy them now, when our assortment is complete? Made of picked lambskin. Paris point stitch- ing on the back. In tan, brown, English red, mode and gray; also black or white. Warranted fitted, You Fool Nobody but Yourself When you pay sky-high prices for made-to-order corsets, when you can buy the genuine A VIC- TOIRE at such low prices as these; made of Eng- lish coutile and Italian cloth; dip hip; tapering [ front; new circular cut; aluminoid boning; finished all around the top with wide satin rib- bon; in gray, white and black; ;‘hlflulle &.:- $36 per dozen. It more repay you to inspect Lightweight Corsets For summer wear at lightweight prices. de of imported summer . netting; louble rustproof side MLdADIE_SS ‘.OVERSO_’-LA.R g steels, Princess hip; straight-front ade of Swiss embroidery: steel; low and medium bust; cor- sets for the most exacting. Prg:; No Long Stories No Whys or Wherefores. ‘To-morrow is Monday. Our red letter day in RIBBONS. Silk taf- feta ribbon, in colored and Dres- den effects; four inches wide; re- versible; in pink, blue and green ef- it Prige ..i..l .. 25¢ ALL-SILK TAFFETA RIB- BON—With silk hand embroidered dots, 4 inches wide. In red with white dots, brown with green dots, white with green dots®and many other different combinations. Re- versible and washable. Price..385e To-Morrow’s Prices Should Attract Your Attention If You Are in Need of Waists. To begin with is a LADIES” SILK WAIST—Made of genuine Japanese wash silk; trimmed in a fancy design of Valenciennes inser- tion, also tucks. New full sleeve, detachable collar, trimmed with in- sertion to match; you could not buy the silk for the price we ask for these 31.98 ANOTHER LADIES’ WAIST— At a price you should like to buy them for. Made of black English lawn, tucked front, detachable col- lar. Strictly tailor made and per- fect fitting. Price 59c Ladies’ Gown Made of soft bleached musjin; square yoke; trimmed with tucks; neck, down the front and sleeves finished with a ruffle. Price..35¢ We Insure You Against muslin do we will refund you the bleached cambric; " wide English thread lace insertion; also lace edge; perfect finish. P;vsc; If You Are Going to the stitched cords around the edge: wide strings. Our New Waist Patterns of English the front; sleeves and collar to match; in the in the newest Madeira pattern.... All of our new summer neckwear. Why not get it now while our as- sortment is complete? vided and straight. OVERCOLLAR AND LONG TAB—Made brocaded cloth; long tab trimmed in openwork beading; also piping and pear] buttons. 27e¢ of Paris thread; low neck and ankle length; tight fitting tops; in pink, blue, black. Price 50e band; with a deep crocheted lace; no iron- no ironing and trimmed with 4-inch wide lace; black, blue, pink, white. SUITS—Made of thread; low neck and no sleeves: knee and ankle lenkth JOO Sosenterg Loss, if There Be Any Go anywhere eclse and if they sell in underwear for less than we money. CORSET COVER—Made of soft trimmed with Country And do not wish your face to get tanned or why not get one of these sunbon- nets? Made of colored checked gingham, with seven rtows of tailor trimmed with ruffle; deep cape and Pribe. .. v vee. DO There’s a Distinction in For chic and quality. They come in pieces of 3% yards lawn; five-inch wide hemstitched embroidery to go down also embroidery for .90¢ pattern Just Received di~ Se Price.. NEWPORT OR LADY TEASY of white washable Price Ladies’ Lightweight Summer Underwear LADIES’ VEST—Made of Belfast thread; in. white. 3 12%e VEST—Made ¥ no sleeves; made with 3-inch wide handmade crocheted yoke: swiss il PRICE e ad e <ank LADIES’ TIGHTS—Made of Paris thread; jersey knit; kmee or LADIES’ DRAWERS—Made of India thread; jersey knit; French umbrella shape; trimmed starching needed; n Price. 50e COMBINATION mercerized silk LADIES’ $1.00 18 Market strest (5 O'Farrall Strest Phelan Building. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. cago as long as the strike lasts. What financial assistance the local brewery workmen wil]l extend to the men on strike up north has not yet developed, but that financial aid will be extended there is no doubt. President P. H. McCarthy of the Bullding Trades Council, who has just returned from Chicago, Is of the opinion that the strike there will be a prolonged one and may eventually extend beyond the city of Chicago. He was somewhat surprised on learning that the Bullding Trades Council there refused to join hands in the strife, as all trades unions are more | or less affected by a strike when it en- There were numerous fights between the | police and strike sympathizers in all parts of the city to-day, the majority of the scrimmages being, however, in the lumber district. In ane of the riots in this section a large number of women and made much trouble for the police, by getting In front of them when they charged upon the men who had been hurling missiles. One woman, Mrs. Anna Corcoran, was arrested as she stood with an armful of brickbats hurling them as fast as she could at the police. One of them struck Policeman Christopher Dreseler on the head, knocking off his helmet. He made a rush for the woman end placed her in the patrol wagon. Police Inspector Lavin to-day arrested Nicholas Relichart, James Collins, Jofin H. Doherty and a man named Wahl, who declined to give his first name, but | 1s known as “Shoulders,” on the charge of conspiring to slug W. F. Johngon of | the Wells Fargo Company and W. E. Ellls, superintendent of the city delivery department of the same company. Reich- | art, after being taken into custody, con- | fessed his share in the matter and His statements led to the arrest of the other three. All denied that they had been paid to do the slugging. 4 s TR S UNIONS TO CONTRIBUTE. Will Give Ald to Brewery Workmen and Chicago Teamsters. AN labor unions in this city will be | requested to contribute to both the | Northwestern Brewery Workmen, who | are now out on strike, and also the | Chicago teamsters, in a similar situa- | tion. 8o far the San Francisco Team- sters’ Union has agreed to contribute $1000 a week to its brethren in Chi- WOMAN'S BREAST | WILL GIVE $i000 Ififailto Cure Any Cancer orTu | including testimonials, -m.!. SENT FREE. | ARY LUMP IN il'S BREAST ai ard if veglected | ot 18 G Ratra s o FwSeimplt O &S, Sikin.evs co. e 76 Third St San ranissn | SEND TO SOMEON CANCER children | talls the hauling business of building material. President Richard Cornelius of the Street Carmen’s Union, who had been in Petaluma organizing the carmen In that town, returned yesterday. Other inland cities and towns wul be visited in the near future by Cornelius with the same object. —_———— THAT PLANTS TAKE WINTER REST ADMITTED Many Species Hibernate in the Same Manner as the Animals During the Cold Season. Plants sleep very much the same as animals. Their sleep is quite real and its reality can be shown. Perhaps the best marked form of slumber in the | vegetable world 1s that of the great winter rest, when so many species re- tire altogether under the sheltering soil and lie dormant, side by side with the slumbering animals. How does the long winter rest of animals differ, after all, from the winter rest of the orocus or the hyacinth, which withdraw all the living material from their leaves in au- tumn and bury themselves inches deep in the soil in the shape of bulb tiil February rains or April suns tempt leaves and flowers out again? The whole vast class of bulbous and tuberous plants—indeed, the Iflies, or- chids, daffodils, narcissi, tulips, squills, bluebells and snowdrops—are they not just hibernating creatures, which re- tire underground in autumn with the slugs and the queen wasps, to reappear in spring about the same time with the return to upper air of the molés, the tortoises and the fritillary butterfiles? Plants protect themselves much the same as ingects. One of the uses of the movements of the sensitive plants is to frighten animals. A venturesome brows- ing creature coming near it is atrald to touch a plant which so evidently is oc- cupled by spirits. The squirting cu- cumber of the Mediterranean alarms goats and cattle by discharging its ripe fruits explosively in their faces the moment the stem 1s touched. The ou- cumbers contain a pungent julce, which discharges itself into the eye of its op- ponent and the emarting sensation which results is Bard to bear. The dainty grass of Parnassus beautiful but dishonest. It {s a bog herb, has glossy green leaves and pure white blossoms and is supposed to be the poet's flower. Its milk-white flow- ers are lovely. The drops of hon which bees and insects fancy they inside the petals are solid, glassy imi- tations of honey, which fool the bees, which are lured in this way that they may carry off the pollén to other blos- soms and are held fast until they die.— Chicago Tribune. 18 ——————— The precise number of words in the Old and New Testaments Is 773,692, and by reading something 1fke ten minutes a day at the pace of 200 words a minute one could read the Bible through in a year. § Some men think the world owes them a living, while some others are satisfled if | credit it gives them 4 chance to make an as- signment. POLICE. ADVANCE MURDER THEORY T. B. Cook of Los Angeles Disappears From Wife and Son in a Railroad Depot ALL TRACE OF HIM LOST Relatives of Missing Man Incline to the Belief That He Committed Suicide e i Special Dispatch to Ths Call KANSAS CITY, Mo, May 27.—T. B. Cook, formerly tralnmaster for the Rock Island at Trenton, Mo., but whose home has been at 447 South Daly street, Los Angeles, Cal., for two years, suddenly disappeared from his wife and son at the Union depot and the police have been unable to find any trace of him, Mrs. Cook belleves he has drowned himself. He had $126 and tickets for himself, wife and son to Trenton in his pockets. The police are inclined to the theory of foul play. Cook was 54 years old, had been in i1l health and was on his way back from Los Angeles to Trenton. An en- dowment insurance polley had matured and he had to go there to collect, as he had borrowed money on it. With his wife and son, Paul, 19 years of age, he arrived at the Union depot in the forenoon and was to have left at 6:35 o’clock Friday afternoon over the Rock Island for Trenton. His wife saw him wandering around in the depot about 3 o'clock, but after that all traces of him were lost. “I know he has drowned himself,” sald Mrs. Cook as she sat in the depot matron's office. “He worked twenty- seven years for the Rock Island at Trenton and went up the Iladder steadily. He was a dispatcher and later chief dispatcher for the road and was afterward trainmaster. When the road changed hands he was discharged and that nearly broke his heart. He has talked of committing sulcide. In Los Angeles he told a woman that life was not worth lving after a man had lost a good position he had worked hard to earn, but added that it took lots of nerve to end one's life.” Mrs. Cook tells of & man on the train coming with them whose aoctions led the police to suspect foul play. Accord- ing to Mrs. Cook and her son this man boarded the traln at El Paso and be- gan talking in a boasting way of his wealth. He told thém he owned a big mine in Bisbee and wanted to sell some “He wanted me to buy $3000 worth of mining stock,” sald Mrs. Cook. “He said if I did my son could earn $3 a day working at the mines and my husband could work as book- keeper and get g00d pay. He told of the enormous amounts of money made in the mining business and seemed to show much sympathy and interest in my husl 's {llness. As we came into Armourdale he pointed out of the win- dow to a mill and said his brother was head miller there and that he was go- ing to visit him.” The lice w.h;n &old,af this ais- | the sulcide eory and at once got a description of the man. Cook has a daughter in Los An- HAMBURG APPEARS TO BE FAR IN LEAD German Yacht Setting Pace for Competitors in the Ocean Race. NEW YORK, May 27.—The -German yacht Hamburg was leading the Ailsa by thirteen miles, with the Atlantic, Fleur de Lis and the English clipper ship Valhally strung out in that order far astern, when the yachts were sight- ed on May 238 and 24 by the steamship St. Paul. The Endymion also was sighted by the St. Paul on a course well to the north of that taken by the Ham- burg and the Ailsa. 5 LONDON, May 27.—The American line steamship St. Louis, from New York May 20, which passed the Lizard at 8:05 o'clock this morning, reported to the Associated Press by a Marconi wireless dispatch that she passed successively on Monday, May 22, the schooner yacht Endymion, the yawl Allsa and schooner Hamburg, between 12:33 and 7:50 p. m. The Hamburg was then 930 miles east of Sandy Hook lightship. The Endy- mion and Ailsa were 843 and 845 miles, respectively, east of the same lightship, when passed by the St. Lou! Possibility of Escape. The red-capped attendants at the union depot have to answer some very funny Questions every day. Yesterday a wom- an stepped up to an attendant and said: “I have a ticket here for St. Louls over the Missouri Pacific, but I want to go only to Jefferson City. I understand the train stops there. Now, what I want to know is this, can I get off there?’ The red-capped man looked at her gravely. ‘Yes, ma'am,” he replied, “if you can slip by the conductor and the other trainmen.”—Kansas City Times. —_————— Minerals Discovered in India. According to a German mining journal, deposits of fron ore and aluminum have been discovered in the central provinces of British India. A company has been formed in Calcutta with a cap- ital of $5,000,000 to exploit these deposits and to erect blast furnaces on a large scale. Tt is reported that one fleld alone contains more than 3,000,000 tons of the finest iron ore, and that the aluminum its are so large that they can easily Ll ly the world's demand for this metal.—Baltimore American. geles. Railrond men at the depot Bay that they had kmown Cook, as he had been with the Rock Island many “years. He lost his position not for lack of merit, but because the rallroad changed ‘hand: 2 YOUTH SHOOTS BOLD BURCLAR Whittier Boy Spoils Plans | of Thief by Filling His Leg With Quantity of Shot WHITTIER, May 27.—Lory King, a young man not yet out of his teens, whose | brothers conduct the general store at Los Nietos, last night used his shotgun on a burglar whom he found emerging from the store with such good effect that the fellow is now resting in the county jail, his right leg peppered with birdshot. King after wounding the burglar tele- phoned for the officers. Marshal Way and Deputy Bell drove down at once, and after taking the man to a physiclag de- posited him in jail. The prisoner, who is a Dane, gave his name to the officers as Charles Hansen and stated that he was out of work and BOLD THIEVES HOLD UP TRAIN Cut Out the Express Car and, After Running It Three Miles, Blow Open the Safe ——e MISSOULA, Mont ay 25.—Train No. 2 (morth coast limited) on the Northern Pacific, was held up at Mouth, Mont., to-night. The express car was cut out and run three miles beyond the sta- tion, where the safe was blown up and looted. A Sheriff’s posse is forming here to go to the scene. SSRPCRE e o s i stole to relieve his hunger. A sack which he had filled with canned goods, a hat, a pair of gloves and other things was recovered. Bear [ BLACK VICI One of the many stylish and KID OXFORD beautiful Oxfords for women that have beén reduced from $3.50 to

Other pages from this issue: