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FAIR EQUESTRIENNESUNII]N PflINT[RS W I B MAIOR KEENE IN HUN TING FIELD.-. S e e O SESE S eSS SSOSSSSSS IS S S S W 2Rl ERRRILRRA &< 2 the mem £t the clubhouse along n side ot} Y w ’t ! the golf lnks. The 7 bent to cough Jong if you use-Shiloh’s Consymp. | heading = for the William tion Cure, the Lung Tonic. It cures | place. They passed-the Hooke Colds, Coughs, and all imitations of the | galloped back of the Tevis s passages almost instantly. thence into the Howard woods You won't lose anything if &t fails to COYOTE 15 cure_you, for then your mfinlerwfllw X sveie was BB you back what you paid for it. M you | soon killed by the pack use Shilch the hounds ac course. The hounds._still lack the music You Wil ngm-utnndmegaflnu&melm; Cou(h- and Colds in the world. “We remefies on the market. — Gouz, Cal.” i ecommrnd Shiloh's Consumption Cure as mTwLb.’ couth mediciaes —A. A. Glick, H--e med Shiloh's Consumption Cue coughs and colds vmxu nu-n-q sed Shiloh s Consumption Cure for the last twelve years, and think nmd the best cough Mrs. A. Schmaye, Seata PP 222722, \\\\\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ s T s s 2 2727722 ‘/ N S SSSS Gl Gl SISSNSSSSEESESSS 22 Zr L ! \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ ———=. Tz 7o/ 7 ) SVIE OF THE, SIELD THT, HOUNDS THE TERDAY ON THE OP! COYOTE - WAS KILL MATEQ ING RUN JF 'S of the run carried » the north of > line 'which adds so much to the pleasure of im- hunting. ve apparently proved in pace |~ Colonel Dunn came 3 severe cropper at | the first fence. He was the only rider to | go dowr. Beyond a bad shaking up he seemed noneé the worse for his mishap when he joined the other members of the field later on at luncheon on the club- house veranda. Captain Seymour, the Engli had the mount on Del Mont for Mianie Howe, Pont tive hunter, on which clever Charley Dun- | pby has digtinguished himself on 2 mum- | 2 safe conveyance across country. : . o wney Harve: the master, rode 25c. per bottle, Al deslers guammmtee i.*{ | 3 DOTIEY LS e Fawn: | Miss by THE OWL DRUG OOk 1128 | Anita Harvey was out on Jaybird, Miss Market st. and 80 Geary st Genevieve Harvey on Cedtic, R. M. Tobin has had atremen- ring the past four ere is a reason: s because this Knife qua to any other 1t is of graceful venient size tor gentleman. s to give entire : s price s 00 1ail orders promptly dlled. Ragors Honed and Ground. in ite nd cor PITTS ationer, THAT o \x,»r’k’«-: St.. San Franciseo. (" DR.PIERCES GOLDEN DICAL DISCOVERY BLOO I.IVER.I.IJ GS. THE | on Cross Country, Colonel Dunn on Texas, J. F. Sidebottom on Reelia IL *Captain Archibald Seymour en-Del Monté, Jerry Keating, the huntsman, rode the Bell mare, while Willfam Oatg, "thé whipper- in, had zhé mount on & .thorgughbred from Mr. Harvey's stable, WHITES SUCCESSFUL AT POLO. On Charles W. Clark’s private polo fierd in the afternoon the White: triumphed over the Reds by a scere of five goals to three in-the presence of the: largest gal- lery of the season. The sides were made up: Whites— Paul Ciagstone, Bulkelgy Joh Captain Seymour, John Lawson, | " Reteree, 3. 0. Tobin; ‘l?fllrkr(p-r Mr, Wat- | erbury; score—Whites '5, “Rede | “The game was 1ot as desperatély played as the one of the previous day, the holi- day festivities possibly taking- some of the edge off the riders. T'he winners tried | some effective team work, Paul Clagstone | being delegated to ride oft Waliter Hobart and thus reduce fhe efffefency of his play. He Xept ‘between the Burlingame man and the ball ‘and blocked much of his lay | PFhe Whites started with a dash, scoring | within a few momens after Referee J. O. Tobin tossed in the first ball. Johm Law- <on sent the ball a third of the length of the field. Cyril Tobin made a brilliant stop, but Lawson followed the bdll and Scored. The Whites were playing an ag- | gressive game, their opponents sending | &he ball outside twice to prevent being i scored against. Lawson picked the ball | out ©f a scrimmage and scored again. Walter Hobart scored the first goal for the Reds near the end of the first period, picking up the ball when it was tossed in and placing it cleverly between the posts. - Peter Martin made it two all by scoring for the Reds in the second period. Captain Seymour put the Whites in the lead by sending the ball through with a back- hand stroke. R. M. Tobin duplicated the play shortly afterward, Walter Hobart -placing the ball. John Lawson found the eds S, Hobart, L3 LAND BARS 00T CERAKS ,Pmplu From Kaiser’s Land First of Ne to..-Feel -Effect LONDON, Jan. 1.—The, alien law na.!scd at the last sessioni of Parliament went inito force to-day.. The first effect of the new law ‘was that the immigration offi- cers refused to permit the landing of twentyafour out of forty-two immigrants from (_'orman) The alien act prohibits immigrants from landing in Great. Britain extept at ports where an immigration officer {8 stationed: and only with his consent and after a medical ifispection.’ Immigrants may _be refused permission to-lafid if unable to shiow that they are in a position to ob- tain mearis.to keep themselves decently, if insane, If on account of disease or other causes they are likely to become a charge to the taxpayers, if they have been sep- tenced abroad for an extraditable crime not of-a political nature, orf jf they have previously been expelled from Great Brit- ain. The Home Secretary may also order the expulsjon of an alien on a certificate from a court of lasv. The bill, however, provides that an alien |} shall not be refuged’ pérmission to land on Account of want of means ff able to prove that he or she is seeking admission 10 Great. Britain solely to avold prosecu- tién for political, offenses. RUSSIANS DENIED LANDING. LONDOX, Jan. Z—Most of the aliens arriving at British ports vesterday sue. cessfully passed the medical éxaming. tion under the new immigration act, but many were rejected through .thefr non- possession of the qualifying $25. Num- bers of thenr werg Russian refugees and these protested volubly in aston ishment <&t being refused admission. Fifteen such rejected Immigrants were subsequently passed by the alien board on the ground that they were politjcal | refugees; but the steamship ‘companies were wirned that no more would be admitted. A somesvhat unforeseen effect of the act js the virtual abolition of third class_tréffic between Gteat Britain and Belgium, owing to the Belgium state railway refusing to adcept, the Fespon- sibility of carrying’ third class passen- gers with the liability of being saddled with the cost of their return. “Hemce the British companies are comgpelled to refuse third class bookings. It is not unlikely that the same result may hap- pen with regard to France. o & Dall unprotected and scored after Walter | b | { 1among | 1 | | workday. . These firms, however, are mwot members of the Typothetae, the | | | master printers’ organization. . ‘The {in the city.. ew Jmnuglatwn Law. *| of the. haliday" the full extent -of- the., STRIKE TODAY _Fight‘ for an -Ei‘ght-Hour Day On in Cities of United States and :Canada MANY FIRMS VIELDING In New leflg Liess Than Nine Hundred Men Will Be Obliged to Quit Work NEW YORK, Jan. 1.—For the first time since-the organization of the In- || ternational Typographical Uition a gen- eral ‘strike will go intg effect to-mor- | row in every shop in the United States and €anada where the employer refuses to grant an eight-hour day. Seyeral times beforé the unjon’ print- ers in various parts of the country, have | | ordered strikes to enforce a betterment | | o their condition, but these sumes[ | Uhave always been” sectional . and * | {maily cases have been won by the em- | | ployers. Now, with a treasury fund of more than a quarter of a million dol- lal obtained by ' an assessment on y union printer, a determined ef- |mrt is to. be made to establish the | | cignt-hour day unimersaily. Out of the 6000%#embers of Typo- graphical Union No. 6 in New York it | | was estimated to-night that fewer than 1000 would be obliged to strike to-mor- row. The Typothetae emplayers have | | jestablished a temporary home for an |"tarmy of about 700 non-union printers [ | an old schoolhouse in West -Tenth street, where lodging and meals will be provided. - Union officials said tosnight that .many New York.firms had agreed | |10 the vight-hour day. BALTIMORE, Md., Jan. 1:—Contracts that exist “between the employing | 4| printers “of tHis city and the Typo- graphical Union’ will not expire until [I'the 1at part of February and no trouble expected . before that . time. {The mn;?usuors here make $15 20 in week and work nine hours a day, and there is said to be much dissatisfactioh the men.. No predictions are ventured, however, as to what will fol- low the expiration of the present con- tract. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. four of the 1.—Twenty- one hundred printing firms giving. their employes an _eight-hour irms belonging to ‘the Typothetaé re- fuse to concéde the shorter. workday. -Although the printers’ strike, .which is national in’scope, was begun to-day, its €xtent will not be known until to-morrow, because .of fhe holiday. There are 1200 members of the Typographical Union em- ployed.in the book and job printing offices Recently -¢ighteen TVpolhelae firms-anticipated ‘the strike by focking out, their hands, and they .claim to hove .more llhln ed the places.of the unfon men. ery- one of our 1200- members, -with the exception of .twenty-five, answered to the eight-hour- day roll call,” was the jolnt report given out to-day from'three union meetings ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.—Because. Uf -a special agreemént, between the Fypothetde of Washington and the local .Typographi- | cal’ Union January 4 und not January I is the date-When the demand of the union that all shops shall be closed to’ mon-union | | men and. placed on an eight-hour basis is be enforced -here. ‘Most of the. printing establishments in Wasmng!un are stand- I"mands of the union. PROVIDENCE, R. I, Jan. 1 Aslrfl(? of ‘the union’ cumposlmrs of .the book and Job ’pr!nlh‘lg shops, about fortysfive in niumber; _occurred to-day because their (l('rnnnd for an eig}\t hotir dsy was re- IOL ISVILLE, Ky, Jan. “printers, members of, the Louisville Typo- graphical Unlon, went cut on- strike to- day for wii. eight-hour day and union fices. b ‘COLUMEUS, Ohio; Jan. 1. —Twenfy-ove [ unfon job printing offices In Columbus [ to-day granted the eight-hour. day. : STRIKE IN LOS AV(;.::'LES. 2 Printérs of Southern City Dm.nfl al -Edght-Hour Da; LOS ANGELES Jan, 1.-~On Bccuunt printers’ strike ih Los Angeles will not be known until to-: morraw It is"esti: mated to-day that 125 printers and about 100 apprennceg will fajl to.re- port for work to-morrow unless their demand for. an - ’eight-hour " dlf s granted. . . STOC}\TO\ Jan: .1.—At. a meeunz of Stockton Typographical Union No. 56 yesterday afternooh the announce- ‘ment was made thdt the employing printers arid publjshers ofStockton have conceded the eight-hour day, et- fective' from’ January 1. 1906, . The Stoekton printers and, publish- ers some time ago conceded nine hours, The new:order of things ap- plies to the job printers and floorfen (advertising and headsetlérs and, for men), the pressmen and the bookbind- ers. The linotype. operators have been werking on, the eight- hour sched- ulé for sdme time. o W. H. Atkins was elected dele‘ate to the California State Fédetatiop of La- bor, which meets this week at Oakland. COLD ‘WEATHER MAY . " HURT' CITRUS FRUITS|x i Lhis city have signed the agreement | | | ing together:in their’ opposmon lo the de- I Heavy Wind All That Pre- vents Tmmense Damage . “to €rops. ¢ ] LOS ANGELES. Jan. 1.—For threg days 'past thefe ° has been 'continued cold.i weather in Southern: California and con- sequeént danger of, disastrous troqt. The prevalence of an unusually strong wind lone has prevented freezing. The wind itself is decidedly cold and raw. . The tem= perature at midnight to- nlxht w 450and i growing gradually colder.© If the wind ghould dfe oul’ toward mornlnx a_ heavy frost that would-cause immense, damage ,to the citrug fruit and éthex— crops is cer- u.ln © Arizonans Take Office.” PHOENIX? Jun. 1.—R. L. Long, Ter- ritorial Superimendent of Public, Jn- struction,and John H. Page, Territorial Auditor, were to-day installed in_nflice by appointmen fo Govermor Kibbey to sucdeed N. G. Layton and Wesley Hill, who recenfly resigned thelr l‘espectlve 1 positions. The Pieture Business is & pecullar one. It is divided into pictures Hobart and Cyril Tobin of the opposing | and framing and art and artistic framing. Our team had each had a crack at it and missed. Ceptain Seymour elinched the victory for his team by scoring in the fourth an? last period. FOUND Dw art gallery continues to h the attraction for flnmhfl ‘about N art lovers and our ng department dled exparts, Who do your work M?{dflnn——m an artistic % e invite your ln-muom T41 Market stree viewpolnt. ‘We Sinborn, Vall & Co., | @eath ; she ek OLGANETHERSOLE IN ROLE OF SAPHO JV[])YEFJG ACTRESS WHO ‘'WILL NQT BE-AL- LOWED TO PLAY SAPHO IN, NEW: HAVEN. kX i)fanfia "Must Changed ¥ Edict. - % _0-_-.__. M-:W HAVEN," Conn., -Jan. 1.—Chiet| of Police .Wrinn - to-day notified Man- |- ager Rowland of .the. Myperion Theater that the play of “Sapho,” by Miss Olga Néthersole, will'not e permitted here. next.Wedneésday evening.unless certain changes be made ifi it. " Thé chief says | the matter ls in .the hand: of the Cl!y Attorney. : . George Berhard Shaw's comedy "Cush- €] Byron's-Profession,” was. given its first. presentation on.any stage at, the Hype-— rion Theater this afternoofi. Miss Mar- ‘garet. Wycherly, who:played the role: of |. Lydia Carew, was supported by a strong ‘company, and considerableé ‘incidental, in- terest was attached to the appearance of | James J. Corbétt in thé part of Cashél ‘Byron, thé gehtleman pugilist. At the evening performance, which was a formal one;- the matinee. being practically a re- hearsal,‘the audience enthusiastically” re- céived the pYay. PAYNTER \TER LEADS INTHE CAUCUS| : Sku‘m_ish .in. Battle| - * Blackburn’s - Seat - in ls for "th‘é-.. United States Senate PPANKFORT I\ , Jan. L.—When ad- Journment ‘was reached in the Democratic Housé and Senate caucuses of the Kep- [* tucky Pegislature -té-night the supporters of Judge Thomas H. Paynter,” who aspires to succeed J. C. 8. Blackburn as United States Senator, ‘apparently dom- inated the situation. In the House cau- cus a Payhter-map was elected chairman of thé-caucus and a Paypter man -was nominated for Speaker by A voté .of 39 to 30. In the Senate caucus the Paynter eandidates for chairman.and president pto tém, were nominated by a vote'of 18 to 13. Adding the votes polled for Payn- ter candidates in“the two branches gives a total of 57, or four votes more than enough to nominate Judge Pdynter if he receiyes a vote equal to shat for the two men he put forsvard® to-night. His® sup- porters also point with jybllation®to the tactical advantage they have gained in arganizing ‘the two houses. Set over against these claims are “the flat assertidns of the managers ‘for Sen- tor Blackburn and.W.-B. Haldemarr of Zoul-vllle", tle opposing candidate, that a.number of legislators who -voted for Paynter candidates will not vote for Judge Paynter for Senator In joint cau- cus. With these “cross jvers” they also include sjx members who did not vote in the caucuses® for Speaker and president pro tem. [The Paynter managers, how- ever, say that their candidate also will’ receive the votés of several “‘crods overs. Neither side showed any sign of giving, ground after the caucus,’ the Paynter managers elilmlng his ° nominatipn d4n | join® caucus on’the first baljot, while the Haldéman and Blackburn forces, “which combined In an effort to organize the two houses; steadfastly . asserted thy.t thm would be a deadlock. The Democratic joint caucus on’ UnlM Senator will be held to-morrow night at 8 o’clock. " The Republicans, who are in a hopeless minority, also will hold thelr caucus to-morrow. - Try the United States Innd(y 2004 Market street. Telephone South 420. * postacin s <hossanthn g ON SIDEWALK.—An unl- found dead Ofl Sras taken o the' s ‘R. M. BISSELL, Vice-President. ACCUSES WIFE Husband of Providence Heir- ess Files Sensational Count- er Petition for a Divorce| SEQUEL TO ELOPEMENT Negleet and Cruelty Charged by Both Principals in Their Appeal to the Court Special Dispatch to The Cail. PROVIDENCE, R. I, Jan. 1.—Unless some effort is made to bring about a reconciliation, Providence expects a sen- sation at the trial of the divorce suit of | Major and Mrs. William Fairtout Keene. Keene has filed a counter petition, mak- ing serlous charges against his wfe. Mrs. Keene is the only daughter of the late Frank F. Olney and has been living in the Olney home on Hope street with her mother. Her husband’s home is in | Central Falls. Both the major and his | wife are prominent soclally. Although her marriage to Major Keene was favored by her mother, her father strongly objected. The couple éloped and were married in Christ Church, New York, in 1896, On the death of her father, Mrs. Keene received a fortune believed to have been between $300,000 and $400,000. Major and Mrs. Keene engaged a coun- try house in Wickford, which they oecu- pled early last summer and where they | entertained thelr friends until September. Mrs Keene did not reopen their home on their return, and society learned the rea- son when a divorce suit was brought by Mrs. Keene on the grounds of cruelty, faithlessness and neglect to provide. Mrs. | Keene filed on the same day a bill for an injunction against Keene and the Paw- tucket Safe Deposit Company, charging that Keene had in his pdssession securi- ties, stock certificates, bonds and jewelry belonging to her, which he was withhold- ing from her and keeping in the safe de- posit vaults. The bill asked that he be compelled to give them up apd that he be restrained from committing any 'as- sault upon the petitlener and from haradsing her. Major Keene has now flled a counter- petition in which the sensational charges are almost by his wife. identical with those made TRIES T0 KILL FAIR CLAIMANT Attempt Is Made to Slay a Woman Whoe Is Fighting for a $500,000 Estate BULLET HITS A CHAIR Ball Crashes Through Win- dow of Room That Litigant Had Spent Many Hours In Special Dispateh to The Cail SEATTLE, Jan. 1.—An unsuccessful attempt was made at 11 o'clock last night by some unknown individual to murder Marie Carrau, the ex-flancee of the late ploneer John Sullivan, for whose $500,000 estate she has fought in the courts for four years under an alleged oral will. A bullet, believed to have been mieant for her, was fired through the front window of her home at 102 Sixteenth avenue North. The bullet came through into a drawing- room in which sae had been sitting all evening. A few minutes before the shot was firéd she left the room to g0 upstairs. The room was still lighted. The police at first were inclined to be- leve that it was a stray bullet from the revolver of some New Year's reveler, but Investigation showed that it was the only shot fired in the neigh- borhood. It passed through the win- dow and lodged In the back of a heavy upholstered chair. All last week Judge Frater heard evi- dence on the admission to probate of the oral will giving her the entire estate. He took it under advisement. ———— s Somoma Courts Kept Busy. SANTA ROSA. Jan. 1.—There were 264 civil actions filed in the Superior Courts of Sonoma County in 1905, 145 proBate cases, 38 criminal complaints. Of the 264 civil actions instituted - 75 were divorce cases. The County Clerk issued 353 marriage licenses during the year. —_—— Stabbing Affray in Vallejo. VALLEJO, Jan. 1.—James F. Rayer, a United States marine, was stabbed in the arm this merning during an alter- cation with E. Togue outside of a sa~ loon. Togue has been arrested. What Makes Good Beer? 'd!‘ el A-m:n Conm N | ’ . with & flavor all its owa. 16-18-30-22 Fromt St., nthwm? . Or is it the combination of all four of those : ime elements converted into the finished product Ethmhndohhkner? Moetlein's beer is a better beer than because it is brewed of the finest hops and the best of barley malt moacy can buy, pure water, brewed by the master brewees of the Moetlein's Extra Pale Beer is a beer par :x:dlna the choice of connoisseurs of the 'orldnnh A Beer at once a beverage and & tomic—wholesome, "JOHN H. SPOHN CO: (lncorporated), Pacific Coast Agents, San Franeisco, Cal. . It is the best brew that makes the best beer—Moetlein’s. THE CHRISTIAN MOERLEIN BREWING CO. CINCINNATL, OHIO : OLDEST INSURANCE COFPANY IN HARTFORD. Nmety -Sixth Annual Exhibit —OF THE-—— HART JANUARY Total.- Assets...... 3 Losses Pald (5 (-] B i Capital Stock............. Reserve. for Reinsurance. epesen s Reserve for All Unsettled Claims.... Net Surplus.... Surplus to Policy-Holders. FORD - FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ;e OF HARTFORD, CONN., 1906. .$18,061,926.87 97,000,000.00 1,250,000.00 10,097,401.46 1,563,828.93 5,150,696.48 6,400,696.48 B GEOQ. L. CHASE, President; CHAS. E. CHASE, Vice-President. P. L. ROYCE, Secretary. THOS. TURNBULL, Assistant Secretary. PACIFIC DEPARTMENT : " 313 CALIFORNIA STRE ET, San Francisco, Cal. PALACHE & HEWITT, General Agents. J. J. DENNIS, W. 0. MORGAN, W. W. GROVE, JOHN M. HOLMES, . C E. MILLER, ; P.B.GIIFHTI. GEO. E. DEVINE, Special Agents and Adjusters. ADAM GILLILAND, Manager San Francisco Department.