The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 10, 1905, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1905. : - AMERICAN: MISSIONARIES VIGTIMS OF FRIGHTFOL ATROGITIES ON PART OF CRINESE MOB. HORRIBLY OUTRAGED BEFORE THE MA KWANGSU, I7LECE &F i i i | | | —_— — - > F IN IONARIES, BOTH WOMEN AND MEN, WERE KILLED BY THE NATIVES ¥ ¥ E ) FRIGHTFUL ATROCITIES, SOME BEING SPEARED AS THEY STRUGGLED TE HEY HAD BEEN THROWN. B * S 3 + MAN WITH BROKEN LROUND OWLS BACK RECOVERS Surgeons Say That Within a Year He Will Be as Strong DAINTY QUAILS Fresno Pothunter Ad- " sz its He Tricked San = " e Franciscans. : . T at th(flil Special Dispatch to The Call. - | FRESNO, Nov. 9—Quail on toast as { e o of o erved at the high-priced restaurants REM San Francisco is nothing more than “Billy” owl on toast. So declares Pat ~Shut your eyes, oper your mouth | B3 i— Hughes, a professional pothunter, who ARE SOLD FOR. and see what luck will bring you.” | Many ndwg_mnn s v_vnkqhmd #ck. nervows an: iscouraged. She suffers from headache, backache and other ills. She wants to be well, but all she does is to flém her eyes and open her mouth for medicine and | confesses to having supplied large quan- tities of that burrowing bird to the San Francisco markets. The revelation came | to-day in the local Justice court, where | Hughes had been hauled by Game War- den E. E. Pedlar for misdemeanor. Hughes admitted he had “slaughtered rlround owls by the wholesale, but made the defense that they were game birds, FIND MOTHER TEY: MOURNED 15 NOT DEAD Brothers Err in Identi- fication of a Corpse. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. WATERBURY, Conn., Nov. 9.—After ! Thomas and Michael McDonald had wept | over the corpse of their mother as it lay on the floor of a public market this morn- ing, and had made preliminary funeral arrangements, they went home to find their mother sitting healthily at a win- dow. Thomas McDonald fainted; Michael thought he beheld a ghost. This was the end of a remarkable case of mistaken identity. Shortly before noon an unknown woman entered the market to make some pur- chases and fell dead before the counter. | Machle, the American missionary i horrifying details of the atrocities | ; exposed them to public view in the Chestnut naked and flung her into SSACRE Clothing Torn Off and| Bodies Thrown Into River. Speared With Tridents While Struggling in Water. —_—— HONGKONG, Nov. 9. —Dr. who escaped the massacre at Lien- confirming the previous the outbreak, adds chow, accounts of committed upon the American women. | When the disturbance com- | menced the mob seized Miss Chestnut and Mrs. Machle and Chinese temple. Amy Machle, the doctor’s 10-year-old child, was | carried off and flung alive into the | § river. The rioters stripped Miss the river. While the two were struggling in the water three Chi- nese speared them with tridents. Miss Chestnut’'s body and Amy Machle’s head were pierced. Mrs. Machle appealed to the rioters, but the mob stoned her brains out, stripped the body and |} flung it into the river. The mob then captured Mr. and Mrs. Peale, stripped them ' naked, exposed them for fifteen minutes, clubbed Mr. Peale to death in his wife's presence and subsequently killed Mrs. Peale in the same brutal fashion. PURCHASES SITE FOR NEW SCHOOL St. Vineent’s College Buys Large Tract Near City \ of Los Angeles. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 9.—St. Vincent's College, a Catholic educational institu- tion, has purchased of “Lucky” Baldwin a tract of eighty-seven acres in La Cienga ranch, lylng southwest of this city, an admirable site for a new school. The place is susceptible of fine effects in land- scape gardening, and work will begin at once on its improvement. A noble group of college buildings will be erected. They will be of brick and commodious and pleasing in their archi- tecture. The first to be built will be the preparatory school, which it is expected will be in readiness for the opening of the next school year. ¢ A new church, second to none in Los Angeles; a fine parochial school build- ing and a handsome parochial residence are to be erected on a new site purchased on South Figueroa street. This tract has a frontage of 360 feet and 18 185 feet in depth. The price is sald to have been $45,000. The new St Vincent's Church, to be erected on this site, will be of stone, and will be second only to the cathedral which Bishop Con- aty will build on his return from Rome. It will be one of the finest church struc- tures in Southern California. ————————— New Line of Empress Steamers. VICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 9.—An an- nouncement is made that a new line of Empress steamers, each from 14,000 to 15,000 tons gross, will be built by the Canadian Railway Company to replace the liners now running from Vancouver to Hongkong. The Canadian Pacific Railway Intends to improve its service and make a great reduction in the time from Hongkong to London. The twen- ty-one days now required from Van- couver to Hongkong will be cut to six- teen days. —————— Money Is Stolen From the Mail. @ The picture shows you the kind of a suit we sell for §11. Note what a stylish suit it The shoulders, lapels, front, length—in fact, everything is correct. is. @ Now, just note how the garments are made. @ Double-breasted (or single-breasted) style in black Thibets and fancy mixed patterns of cheviots and worsteds; broad, military should- ers; Venetian lining throughout, self-retaining hait-cloth fronts, hand-felled collars, hand- padded shoulders, shrunk linen canvas, linen pocket stays, silk bar tacks at all pockets, silk stitched throughout. These points mean much in the making of the suits. Garments with these features sell for $15 in other stores. Our price is $11. @, Should you wish to pay a price other than $11 remember we have suits at $10, :41'8.50, $14, $15, $17.50, $20, up to €§ In sunshine or rain the Cravenette oA A4 is the ideal over-garment for winter. Y '1:'i 1\,; € 1t looks like an overcoat and can be 33 ai §3 worn as such any time. It has all the aal B style and grace of the swellest over- "‘E}i?‘x LB coat. In fact, it is an overcoat. y 1LY €@ A Cravenette is an_ all-wool gar- 37 ‘-7;1 » ment, treated by a chemical process that renders it waterproof. Water does not spot-it or remain on its surface. g We buy Cravenette cloth from B. Priestley & Co., and make the gar- ments in our own workshops. In buy- ing of us you save the middleman’s profit and are assured of getting the genuine Cravenette and the only suc- cessful raincoat. g We sell a good Cravenette for as low as $11. Colors—black, tan, olive and gray. q Overcoats in all the styles, patterns and weaves of the season, $10, $12.50, $15, $17.50, $20 up to $40. § Trousers in stripes/ checks and solid colors at $2.50,”$3, $3.50 up to $8. § Tuxedos in soft and hard finished materials, well tailored, silk lined, new straight front to the coat; we guaran- tee to fit you perfectly ; prices $17.50, $20, $25 up to $40. @ We are the only firm in San Francisco actually manu- facturing our own stock of boys’ clothing, and we thus undersell all others by saving you the customary whole- saler’s profit. @ Mothers find our styles particularly fetching and our prices surprisingly low. They are enthusiastic about our stores because they soon realize that they save from $2 to $4 on any suit they buy here. (. Note the two special offery made merely to get you acquainted with our merchandise and methods. Boys’ Buster Norfolk Suit and Cap § These pretty little Buster Norfolk suits are pictured on the left. You can see what a clever garment it is for boys from 5 to 8 years of age. Note the many style features. S rust o luck {or | e having for two years been In the busi- “doctors” month | ness of furnishing them to San Francisco e month | restaurants, where they had been served often yesr after | #5 quail, a delicacy highly prized by epi- i year,inthissame | cures. The defense struck Justice of the Clerks in the place believed the woman PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov. 9.—It was wag Mrs. McDonald; so did the policeman | jearned here to-fln’y that a registered on the beat. Neighbors made the identi- letter sent by the Home Savings Bank fication positive. Then Thomas and Mi-|ana Trust Company of Phoenix to a chael, who came hurrying from their | merchant in Roosevelt, Aris., contain- lind. hap-haz- ard fashion, and receives no Women take Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prmn?- tion with thelr eves open to the fact that it cures womanly 1lls. y It cures irregu- larity, It dries debilitating drains. It heals "inflammation and ulceration and cures female grustin, to luck by 'Fa\‘ofgln Prescription.” 1003 my_health was poor” Hack, of 22 Brondway, Bui- fored from falling of womb, ischarge, painful mon , becksche and pains in Ivery month was confined to for two or three days. Was weak, nervous end hysters © was & burden to and I made one in the femily nnbappy bec » irritable. r bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- cription, apd before 1 had taken the first ottle I was feeling some relief. The medi- cine made me well and strong, free trom nerv- ousness, aches and pain, and | felt like s new woman. Before 1 used the ‘Favorite Pre- those who use clen’s medicine for nearly three months, but had received no benefit. Your medicine certainly the best in the world.” A man or woman who constipation suffers from slow poj- i soning. Dr. Plerce's Pleasant Pel- lets cure constipation. One little " Pellet " is » geutle l-nuvg,lmd two & mild eathartic. "t'let & el seller over- r- | manent beneg:. | There is no | My husband got | scription’ 1 bad been taking snother Dh{"{ | Peace Smith as being well grounded and he agreed to withhold judgment in the ase until Game Warden Pedlar may com- municate with State Game Warden Vog- elsang and secure an expert opinion as to | whether or not the “Billy” owl is game. |WELL KNOWN SINGER IS GOING TO EUROPE Max Heinrich Said to Have Accepted Offer of Ber- , lin Observatory. 1 Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, Nov. 9.—Max Heinrich, the well-known singer, will shortly leave | for Europe, where, It is stated, he may make his home. It is reported that he has accepted an offer made by one of | tue leading conservatorfes of music in | | | i Berlin. Mrs, Heinrich will accompany her hus- | band and will make her thirty-first trip { across the Atlantic. Mrs. Heinrich was formerly Miss Anna Held, and her wed- | ding with Mr. Heinrich after an acquaint- | ance of only three days, is still talked of in San Diego society cirel ———— Grand Army Men Entertain. SANTA CRUZ, Nov. 9.—Department Commander Dr. Russell of Marysville and Adjutant General Roberts of San Francisco visited Wallace Reynolds Post, G. A. R., this evening. The vis- itors were given a royal reception and were banqueted by the local post, as- sisted by the Women's Rellef Corps, work, wept piteously over the body and | kissed the dead face as the undertaker | bore away the remains. The dead woman was later identified as Mrs. Catherine Stickles. —————— MARRIED MEN MUST GIVE i MOTHERS-IN-LAW HOMES Decision of Far-Reaching Importance Rendered by a Pennsylvania Jurist, MAHONEY CITY, Pa., Nov. 9.—Ac- cording to a decision by Justice Robert P. Wyatt, a mother-in-law is entitled | to a home with her son-in-law, who, he said, was duly bound to provide forl her. Marcella Rink had “her lon-ln-lu'.‘ Louis Peshink, arraigned before the Justice for having ejected her from his home against the pleadings of Mrs. Peshink, the ‘woman’s daughter. Peshink was fined $5 and ordered to provide for his mother-in-law a home under his own roof. —_——— ARMY ORDERS. ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Army or- ders: Major Wiluam L. Kneedler, sur- geon, is relieved from duty at Fort Rosecrans, at such time as will enable him to‘proceed to San Francisco and sail in January for Manila for dut{. Post Quartermaster Sergeant Nathgn Cahn is relleved from duty in the Phfl- ippines and will be sent to San Fran- cisco and report to the milftary secre- tary for orders. el SRR RICHMOND, Va., Nov. 9.—The three-story othce and ; a1 the my-a‘w ire to-dight. Loss u"sf > ing $1500 has been stolen. The bank is secured by insurance. ORIENTAL R UG S Our collection of an- tique and modern specimens is superb and embraces the choicest and rarest in all weaves and sizes. The purchase of a Rug from us is a guarantee. SLOANE’S 1l to 122 Post Street ° . e —— ) 9 The suits come in blue and fancy gray patterns, and the materials are particu- larly good, considering the low price of the suits. 9 You can buy one of these suits, to- ther with a Tam O’Shanter cap, for [ Boys’ TwoPieceDouble Breasted Suit (@ If your boy is from 8 to 15 years of age, here is just the suit for him, because it’s made to do service. (. The style is double-breasted coat and knee pants, as the picture on the right shows. (. The materials are fancy cheviots, in gray and brown mixtures. There is sufficient variety to insure every mother of getting what looks best on her boy. (. We have made a very low price on these suits—one you will appreciate when you see how good the suits are. Get one for your boy-—$2.45. Orders I s Filled— “Manufacturers Wholesalers and Retailers of Clothing. Write Us ® Two Large Stores Free Withn 740 Market Street and Corner Powell and Ellis

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