The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 4, 1906, Page 32

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—— (RA RN RS EEARBER HARRET e e 3,‘,, o 4 JOHN HOEY COMPANYS OUCHE f this issue vou will find an article headed, “JOHN HOEY’S Read it. It is the greatest offer that a manufacturer ever ler. And none but the verv largest of manufacturers could back it beginning to-morrow morning, over two thousand couches at It’s big. > Covered in strong ticking. Sample Box. Couch § 553 oo vered s f.gured or plain denims for $6.25. This one in ticking a $9 value for $5.85 sample handy Couch Iop an extra strong ooe. the Hoey surplus Not the common *%$3.85 Sample Derby Couch Foev, ok o Sorerst tapestries, $5.35. Indamasks, $4.65. A $9 $4 65 value for > Hoey stock. A biscuit egent Comch (7o, . et ample R value ves 4 in velours for $7.65. Also $6‘l oosd Hoey stock. Imitation olive Sample Pantasote &5, oot "Wl it ke the real skin. A $27.50 value. This week, $l7 85 only a few of them g Covered in as- $11.15 Hoey stock. sorted figured ue for In genuine olive leather, b L' B oo i oc | SAMPle Padre Couch e — of the most beauti- ittle money. regular couch for. ... oo AT SO o .50 CARPETS AND DRAPERIES Hoey stock. of special inducements for the coming ial values in quality as well as price. Rezular $1.20 and ine D } RUSSELS— $135v ipestries. Parlor, Bedroom, Hall and Stair patterns. A good ich to choose. Regular $1 values, sewed and 65(: ................................................. s yards wide. Made from the best linseed oil and $14.25 L'NOLEUMS—T pulverized cork. Regular 80c values. By the square yard, laid. ... BRUSSELS RUGS—A lot more of these $22.50, g9 by 12 feet, size, extra heavy Brussels rugs, special again this week XMINSTER RUGS—27 by 60 inches. In all the latest designs. DRAPERY CLEARANCE—A clearance of many of our medium and high | de couch covers and Portieres at from one-third off to..... Lo nan and Harry Hurst temporary Among those at the meet- P. F. Adelsbach. Kingsburg ; W. R..McIntosh, Valley Far- DEFAULTER’S BAIL IS FIXED AT $25,000 JOURNALISTS TO FORM PRESS ASSOCIATION |! T ner, Fresno; Harry Hurst, Al - T Meet at Visalia to DiSeuss| secc. Dinuba: W. % Barnes nont os- | Treasurer of Madera County, oS er; Ben M. 1 Times; “ nization snd PIAN | e mavn e o mmec: 1 “Whise Son 18 Mindug Dockham, Lindsay Gazette; Rev. F. L. Platt, Visalla Courier, and John Falir- weather, Reedley Exponent. Faces Court. for the Future. MADERA, Feb. 8.~Willlam Amer,, the s F —The npwsr\:\per‘ PR AR Y defauiting treasurer of Madera County, 5 vart of ralley met in | Machine' Shop for Woodland. was held to answer on a charge of em- se the organiza- | WOODLAND, Feb, 3.—Woodland is to | bezzlement, at the preliminary examina- o A. T.|have a big machine shop in the near [tion held before Justice of the Peace future, B. G. Peart, P. T. Laugenour »d D. A. Faulkner will file articles of corporation with the Secretary of ate on Monday. The concern will be known es the Faulkner-Laugenour- Peart Company. New machinery will be installed as soon as it can be ship- ped from the Bast. Thé company in- tends to manufacture all kinds of ma- chinery and farming implements. Barcroft to-day. His bail was fixed at $25,000. Amer was represented by At- torneys Estander and Smith of Fresno and R. E. Rhodes of Madera. District Attorney R. R. Fowler was assisted by F. A. Fee, and Judge M. K. Harris of Fresno and Woodleigh Smith of San Francisco represented the bonding com- pany. Mrs. Amer, her three daughters and one son were in court. The examina- tion wag devold of sensationalism, as the prosecution did nothing more than prove the shortage. Auditor Honeycutt and S. Sledge, chairman of the Board of Buper- t also temporary Is an ordeal which all THE SAN FRANCISCO C. | her SHITH'S SLAY WILL BE HANGER Death Sentence Is Passed Upon Half-Breed Who Shot. and Killed Brave Sheriff CROWD FRIGHTENS HIM Murderer Nearly Breaks Into a Run at Sight of People Gathered for a Last Look Sl R O UKIAH, Feb. 3.—Frank Willard, the balf-breed, who murdered Sheriff J. H. Smith of this county on December 22, was sentenced this morning by Judge A. G. “Burnelt of Santa Rosa to be hanged at San Quentin on April 27. Formal motions {for new trials were made by his attor- neys, but were denied by the Judge. | The announcement that the murderer would be ‘sentenced this morning created quite a stir in town, and by 9 o'clock peo- ple had commenced to crowd into the courtroom, and long before court was called by Sheriff Gibson standing space Was at a premium. The prisoner was yought in between two deputy sheriffs | nd was closely watched by them during "the proceedings. He looked at the floor and never moved a muscle when the sén- | tince was pronounced. 7 When Willard was brought out of the | courtroom a large crowd was walting for a last look at him. When he saw the gathering his face changed for the first time. Apparently he thought another at- tempt to lynch him was to be made. He quickened his pace and was dragging the officers nearly into a/run when the jail was reached. He was taken to San Quen- tin this afternoon. “ABDUCTED” MAID A WILLING VICTIM Charge of Kidnaping Dis- missed When Santa Rosa Girl Tells Story. | Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA ROSA, Feb. 8 — Charles Smith, the young man charged by Mrs. Froma Eagleson with having abducted 16-year-old daughter, Geneva Eagleson, was dismissed this morning by Justice Atchinson at the prelim- inary examination owing to the insuf- fclency of the evidence. The only wit- | OHIO LEGISLATURE women approach with indescribable fear, for nothing comdp-m with an: ECOMING A MIOTHER 5= ifiering and danger in store for her, robs the expectant m pleasant #nticipations of the coming event, and casts over her a w of gloom which cannot be shaken ofi. Thousands of women found that the use of Mother’s Friend duri px;fnmcy-ob- ement of all pain and danger, and insures nfngw ife of mother child. This scientific liniment is a god-send to all women at the of their most critical trial. Not only does Mother's Friend women safely through the perils of child-birth, but its use stly prepares the system for the coming event, prevents ‘‘morning kness,”’ and other dis- Lii% MOTHER’S by all druggists at $1.00 per bottle. Book containing valuable information free. The Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, 66 visors, were the only witnesses. Amer's son Bert has disappeared from this sec- tion. The opinion is expressed that if the son has left the country the conviction of hig father will be improbable/ —————————— READY TO COMMENCE WORK ON THE SEVEN-MILE TUNNEL Representatives of Risdon Iron Works Leave Bakersfield for Scene of Gigantic Operations. BAKERSFIELD, Feb. 3.—D. and G. Dorward of the Risdon Iron Works of San Francisco, which has the contract fo rthe steel work in the seven-milé tunnel of the Hdison Power Company in the Kern River Canyon, arrived in Bakersfield to-day and left immediately for the canyon.” They stated that work will begin this month and that half of the material will be ready in San Fran- cisco next week. The tunnel will be completed by July. The plant will be of 40,000 horsepower capacity, and will supply power for Los Angeles and other southern cities. ness was the girl herself. She testified that she had of her own free will left home with the defendant for the pur- pose of getting married. She sald the only reason for thelr failure tb get married was the fact that Smith re- fused to swear falsely as to her age in order to get a marriage license. When they found that there was no possibility of getting a license, it was decided to return home and awalt either the consent of her mother or the time when she would be of age to act | without the mother’s consent. R LD T SENATOR Oregon’s Governor Regeives Word That Buckeye Solons Will Pass Law Granting Privilege. SALEM, Ore, Feb. 3—Goverhor Chamberlain has recelved a communi- LET PEOPLE EL | cation from Ohio stating that the Leg- islature will pass resolutions inviting other States to join a movement to se- cure an amendment to the national con- stitution providing for the election of United States Senators by a popular vote. Governor Chamberlain replied that he is heartily in favor of the move- ment and will co-operate in bringing about the conclusion sought. —_——— THOUGH ONLY NINE YEARS OLD HE ADMITS HE IS A THIEF Son of Healdsburg Teamster Is Ar- rested in Salinas for Taking Another's Bicycle. SALINAS, Feb. 3.—George Ginter, aged nine, claiming to be the son of Frank Ginter, a teamster of Healds- burg, Sonoma County, was arrested this morning by Constable Cano, at Pa- jaro, and charged with having stolen a bicycle. The boy does not deny the theft. He says he left home a month ago on a vacation. Since then he has been roaming the country. PORTLAND, Me., Feb. 8.—A petition for the appointment of ‘a recefver for the Char- tered Company of Lower California, which was organized ,in Maine four years ago, With a capital of $10,000,000, was denied by Judge | Willlam L. Putham in the United States Cir- | cult Court. John E. Blackman, the petitioner, alleged the officers’ had wrongfully withheld from him a large amount of stock held in trust. ———— e e ADVERTISEMENTS. STOMACH ON THE BRAIN. ‘What If & Man Gain the Whole World, and Lose Hix Appetite? The man with a well-behaved stom- ach never thinks about it. He eats what he likes and likes what he eats. He knows he'll enjoy it, because he knows he has a stomach that will, eas- nr digest it. All things look good to him: he will sit cloze to the table, and with a merry twinkle in his eye and a world-peace expression, he will “start” on_the delicious meal before him. But the man with the bad, brashy, gurgly stomach is the man ' who 18 always thinking about it. He can sel- dom eat what he most like: dom likes what he eats. worries him before meals, after meals and between aeals. It is on his brain. It robs him of his cheer and interferes with his dally work. Around him is a dark spirit which presses itself for- ward in his thoughts, crying: “I am uon{. I am disgust, I am nausea. 1 am sickness, languop, worry. I am con- celved in quick lunches and pappy food, and nourished by gulpy meals. I reb brains of their force and bodies of their life. I steal away nerve and vim. I bring heart disease and npo‘»luy. I make the world a pit of weariness and darkness. I am woe, I am death. dyspepsia. .But yet, I bring also hope, light and future health, because by my gloomy presence I give you warning and a chance to escape me.” This is a bad dream, but it is the daily dream of the dyspeptic. If ft were not for the white we couldn't tell the black. If it were not for dyspep- sia, we couldn’t know the joy, the fi' ¥lnens of a well-ordered digestion. All he world looks bright to a man of good health, and good health is impos- sible without a good, hardy stomach. And any Sick or weak stomach can be made a good, strong one by just takin, namethh\fi which will digest your foo for you, Instead of letting your tired stomach do it. Stuart’s D”Pfl’“' Tab- lets are the most effective little tablets in the world for this very thing. If ou feel bloated after eating, or you ave nausea, aversion to food, brash, irritation, sour stomach, heartburn or dyspepsia, Stuart’'s Dyspepsia Talf:leu will Stop it because on: an 1 am ALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1906. 1 SR SRS 0000 PEOPLE TURNED AWAY SATURDAY 00 Exira Sales People For This Week $74,200 Fine Clothing O F B GREAT SALE and Furnishings The United Fire and Marine Salvage and Adjustment Company 405 and 407 Market Street, Below First Street Worth of Highest Class Suits, Pants, Overcoats and Craven- ettes, Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Etc. This entire fine stock must be sold within 15 days to adjust the losses, on the basis of 29 per cent on the dollar. Sale lasts 14 days, no longer. The goods are of the best qualities and latest styles and must be sold to adjust losses be- tween insurance companies, boat, railroad and bankruptcy claims. Open Fridays and Saturdays till g p. m. to give those an.opportunity that cannot anend‘ during the day’s labors. COURT'S ERROR SAVES NAPA MAN Convicted Felon Is Granted New Trial Because Trial Judge Made Grave Mistake SACRAMENTO, Feb. 8—The District Court of Appeal for the Third Appellate District to-day.handed down a decision granting J. T. Morris a new trial. Morris was convicted in Napa County of felo- nious assault and was sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment. He took an appeal. It appears from the decision of the ap- pellate tribunal rendered to-day that the trial court erred in permitting the asso- clate counsel for the prosecution in ad- dressing the jury to emphasize the fact that the defendant had not taken the wit- ness stand in his own behalf, using that fact as an argument against the défend- ant. The court also handed down a decision denying the applieation of Dennis Cleary, now confined in the State Asylum for the Insane at Ukiah, for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the Superior Court of Mendocino had no jurisdiction to commit him to that institution. —————————— STOCKTON BELLE WILL WED PROMINENT VALLEJO MAN Miss Rosa Newman of Slough City to Become Bride of Louis M. Schwarts To-Day. VALLEJO, Feb. 3.—The wed of Louis M. Schwartz, a well-khown young business men of this city, and Miss Rosa Newman, the daughter of & prominent Stockton family, will be solemnized in San Francisco to-mor- row afternoon. The groom’s . former home was in San Francisco previous to his engaging in business in this city two years ago. After a wedding trip to the southern part of the State the young people will make their home in this city. ———————— SAN FRANCISCO JOURNALIST DYING IN “SAGEBRUSH” STATE Frank Jenkins, Who for Several Years ‘Was Conected With the Chron- icle, Tll at Reno. RENO, Feb, 3.—Frank Jenkins, for several years with the San Francisco FOUR-YEAR-OLD BOY IS KICKED BY HORSE Lad Is Found Unconscious in Yard in Which Ani- mals Were Loose. SALINAS, Feb. 3.—Arthur, the four- year-old son of Samuel Pierce, a well- known resident of this city, was found unconscious te-day in the front ‘yard of the Plerce residence. When examined it was discovered that all his teeth had been knocked out, his palate torn and skull badly fractured. He was still un- consclous at 7 o'clock. As several horses were loose in the ward, it is supposed that the boy was kicked by one of them. —_———————— TWENTY-THREE BIG ENGINES DUE IN OREGON FOR HARRIMAN Locomotives Will Be Immediately Pressed Into Service om Freight and Passenger Trains. PORTLAND, Feb. 3.—Twenty-three new freight and passenger engines for the Harriman lines in Oregon, repre- senting an expenditure of more than $400,000, are expected to reach Portland within the next two weeks from the shops in the East. Ten of the number are freight locomotives for service on the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company's lines in Oregon, while ten more will haul Southern Pacific freight trains on the Oregon division. The re- maining three are passenger engines for the Oregon Railroad and Navigation lines. They will be pressed into ser- vice on the Oregon roads at once upon their arrival and will be put. on the mountain division, where heavier hauls occur. A THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD BOY AMONG MISSING Leland S. Wallace Disappears From His Home in An- gels Camp. ANGELS, Feb. 3.—J. M. Wallace of this place is anxious to learn the whereabouts of his 13-year-old son, Leland S. Wallace, who left his home last Tuesday and has not since been seen. The boy is large for his age and weighs about 100 pounds. He has gray eyes and dark halr, and when he left home wore a gray cap, dark coat and vest, dark shirt, blue overalls and heavy shoes. He carried a pocket com- pass, a harmonica and an anerold, watch size, capable of measuring up to 10,000 feet above sea level. Ome of his upper teeth on the right side is out of alignment. —_—ee———— REVENUE CUTTER RUSH WILL SEARCH FOR LOST STEAMER Government Vessel Starts for Valdes im Quest of Vessel Overdue Many Days. SEATTLE, Feb. 3—To search for the steamer Dora, now long overdue at Valdez, the United States revenue cut- ter Rush sailed from Juneau to-day for a cruise along the western coast of Alaska. While local officers of the Northwestern Steamship Company be- leve that the Dora will turn up all right within a few days, it was thought to be a good plan to send the Rush in search of her. The last reports from the Dora sald that the weather in the north was stormy. The Dora has cargo and malil for many small towns beyond Valdez. Last Week ~ Liebes’ Fur Sale Chronicle and for a long time editor of the Winnemucca (Nev.) Silver State; Is dying here to-night, the result of heart failure and pneumonia. He was taken suddenly 111 Monday and has been ‘grad- ually sinking sthce. His wife and child are with him. His parents, who are well-known and prominent, reside on Leavenworth street, near Union, in San Francisco. 7 20%t060% Off Regular Prices Don’t miss this last opportunity for a splendid muff, scarf, jacket or cape at prices that 4re absolutely the lowest ever offered in this city. SEARCHES IN VAIN FOR HEIRS FOR A VALUABLE ESTATE | . e grain of ingredient of these tablets will digest 3000 grains of food, Your stomach is overworked. Let it take a rest. You're not yourself when you have a bad stomach. ese tablets will do the work that the stomach has to do and make you feel brlrht. think clearly and give you ambition and power to concentrate your attention on your work. You'll feel g You Should always have a box_ of s Tablets on your di - R RN LR R evi wou'll enioy ik ne 3 i Large Holdings Await the Relatives of Redding Woman. REDDING, Feb. 8.—The administra- H.LIEBES & CO. tor of the estate of Eleanor C. Wilkin- -~ 133-135-137 Post, Sta 'on,wnodlndlnu\umunuludlm. g yaluable estate, has devoted much time Rt and expense in endeavs to locate . the heirs of the deceased. - was the | # f last of a family of brothers g o < ;s . RS ’ and the more distant rela

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