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L 4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1906. ADVERTISEME! WINTE HUMOUR Eczemas, Rashes, ltch- ings and Irritations Instantly Relieved by Baths With gflflfl'fl | YO0 To cleanse the skin of crusts and scales, and sof- | ten the thickened cuticle; gentle applications of Cuti- cura Ointment to instantly | allay itching, irritation, and inflammation and soothe and heal ; and mild doses of Cuticura Pills to cool and cleanse the blood. A single Set, costing but Qne Dollar, is often sufficient to e torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood hum- ours, eczemas, rashes, itch- and irritations, with of hair, from infancy to age, when all else fails. Potter Drug & | Soid civilized workd. pout the P Sote P | g0 at esteem—by ‘claiming.the authorship | of certain magazine stories that are cap- | either BY JAMES C. CRAWFORD. When the walter approached Miss A. Ackerman of 62 Bedy street, as with head she consulted the printed menu in a second-clags restaurant, she did not look at him, and subsequent| events proved that he had bestowed but slight notice upon her. Having emitted the customary attention-compelling cough behind his napkin, he said in the usual obsequious tone: What may I order for you, madam?” Both surprise and dismay were. depict- ed on the countenance that upturned ang confronted his gaze, and as he fell back with startled exclamation there was de- spair in the voice that rang out: “Good heaven! Can this Chi cey?” Chauncey it was—the very same Chaur- cey Parke who had won her—well, let it bowed be you, y a familiar nom de plume direct means of gaining her re: ¢'been utilized, for she, tc ibbled and mailed, and at the time meeting with Chauncey wus the of re- nt of a regular fusillade of rejected h otp manuscripts. “Be of brave cheer,” after inspecting a gem W said to h had trav he hich > Ths mes in her, and worn “for the r,” he re-{ t hour is that be- morn you W famous and the book issuers grovel feet—as they now grovel at of brave cheer and dow't spare your ink or your postage Stamp: This materialized ebullition of your fancy, o mine. be 6 S Good savings—every reduction i ence between 1 reductions we have ire sale RAINY-DAY SHOES e sa The opportunity of the year o save on good shoes. shoes—reliable makes—desirable styles—real | , shoppers have appreciated week, however, w! Ladies’ heels, regularly $2 ats $1.65. T le absolutely as stated—here this and the ordinary rung inction ! with unqualified s SS. ill be especially memorable—@| made are the most sweeping of this sale, for the during E e on all win- pecially larg like the illustra- ewed soles, large medium_ high beauty and will rubber | lucher Oxfords sion hand 1k ribbon ls is sl is a st fastidious Kid Juliets, plain loe; $3.50 Lace Shoes $2.85 are Women's Box Calf es on a S swing last, LADIES’ STORM RUBBERS 40c A Splendid Value $2.00 Shoes at $1.65 | arraigned for { guess not.” | not | thin' to somebody that's .worth doin’ | sert, | to the theater with a gentleman aftar {a lady.” | ture of a flat were transferred by him | $3.00 Shoes $2.35 | | mounced resolve to go to her husband in MAIDEN'S LITERARY AMBITION RECEIVES DISCOU Young Man Who Fired It Turns Out to Be a Fraud. Instead of an Author He Is a Waiter in a Cafe. though somewhat tattered, shows rare promise. Keep at it and you'll win.” She 'kept at it and he kept at it, and during their literary communings he bor- rowed from her, in small installments, a cash total of $28 and a gold signet ring bearing the sunken initials “A.- the same looking well when transferred in convex form to the sealing wag that pro- tected her mailed manuscripts from would-be plaglarists. He obtained the money loans by telling her that a care- less publisher had failed to remit, and the ring she permitted him to' wear as a, token of her confidence. Was it to be wondered at, thercfore, that astonishment was ejaculated by her when she saw him attired in menial garb in the cafe? Or was there subject for marvel in the fact that he displayed both chagrin and distress when she recognlznd’ him? “Tell . me, Chauncey,” - she moaned, “what this means, Assure me that you: are merely masquephding ‘to obtain ma- terial for your book work.” “What's the use of bull-conning / you any longer?” was his inelegant response. “I'm walting at tablebecause I need the y. ‘What did you say you wanted to mon Tonster!” she shouted, rising from her chair With such abruptness as to start him hastily kitchenward. When absolutely conyinced that she had been deceived the young woman tevisited the restauragt and demanded restoratidn of her ring and the money she had lent to the psendo Kipling. He told her, at fifteen yards' range, that he had neither nor the jewel, the lattér being on of a lady whom he had al- lowed to wear it as a symbol of his re- gard for her. Wretch!” screamed Miss Ackerman. “I'll get you pinched for larceny and Tl get that ring from the hussy if one of her fingers has to come with it “If you monkey with her,” sald Chauncey, “she’ll jab a hatpin-nto your She told me she'd do it.” at was how Chauncey came to be grand larceny before Police Judge Cabaniss. In court was his newer inamorata, and when called to state whether she did or did not! threaten to stab Miss Ackerman with a hatpin, she laughed derisively and | glanced at her accuser disdainfully and | said contemptuously, “What, spoil a hatpin on that thing? Well, I ‘U'm inclined to believe that you did utter the alleged threat,” said the Judge, “because in all my experience on this bench I have never found the winner of the man desiring to slay the | 10 , while many instances of the loser arboring that desire have come to my agisterial notice. It is the woman scorned, not the woman triumphant, | who usually yearns gore.” “When 1 g9 to jail,” quoth Miss Lu- cille Lesetta, for that was the name she gave the clerk. “it'll be for doin’ some- | somethin’ to. With which declaration of principle Miss Lesetta retired from the tribunal. Then the hearing of the charge against Mr. Parke was continued till next | Tuesday. “Ah, enter the green-eyed monster,” murmured Judge Cabanisk when Mrs. Stella Tutsert informed him that jeal- ousy alone prompted Joseph M. Ben- ham to accuse her of embezzlement bailee. ‘He never got sore,” until he dis said Mrs. Tut- overed that I went | 1 had told him I was going there with | Mr. Benham, who is an insurance and mining broker, became a widower last July, and ere his wife's remains were interred her effects and the furni- to the keeping of Mrs. Tutsert.."He al- | leges that she was merely, to keep the | articles in her-home. 530 Walnut uve- | nue, until such time as he should de mand them, but she avers that he gave | them to her outright, saying, “To hf | with the flat,” when she asked him | what she would do with the furniture, | etc., if she should accept his invitation to join him'at Reno. “So long as you come to Reno,” he is alleged by hLer to have said, “I don’t care what becomes of the dashed flat.” When she returned frém Reno, where | she says he made her “the talk of the he followed her and demanded | contents of the erstwhile despised | but not untll after his discovery | that she had deceived hjm as to the sex | of her escort to and frem the playhouse. It was just possible, she opined, that his “soreness” was augmented by her an- | RAGING JOLT l | ! your behavior in the meantime you will | son’s transgressions, but the'court's time. | | outery and gav b IR be sent to jail or to sea—whichever you may select. I believe that a long voyage hefore the mast would enable you %o ap- | preciate the advantagcs You are now | abusing.” ! Mr. Ritter senior evidently yearned to narrate numerous minor details of his was too valvable to be thus consumed. i .t Nicholas Sagalino and John Branhill held up Willlam Kyntowski and robbed him of $25 at 1:30 o'clock yesterday morn- | ing on Eighth street, near Folsom, and Patrolman Cleaver heard the victim's| chase to the footpads. | He captured.Branhill, handcuffed him to | a lamp post and then pursued Sagalino, | ;B rough a pickle factory, doubled | on his pursher and disappeared. When the officer returned to the spot | where he had tethered Branhiil he found | a man who was almost breathless talking | to the manacled one, and suspecting that he was Sagalino the bluecoat arrested | him also, and had his suspiclon strength- | ened by sceing that the knuckles of his | new prisoner’s right hand were cut and | bleeding. Kyntowski identified Branhill and Sagalino as his assailants, and suldi the latter had str him on the head with: the hand tha injured.” Judge Mogan will hear the testimony next Thursday. “Vjadimir Rodzianko, Lieutenant de la Garde Russe,” was the script legend on the card handed to Judge Mogan by S a blondéicomplexioned and natty- garbed young man who was accused gefrauded a hackdriver, | Giusta, out of $650. It was| incidentally mentioned that the de- fendant wa sian Count and stays at the Pala 1. He had sbent the night in prison, because he was either unwilling or unable to procure thg $10 | ball essential to h liberation. | The arrest wa 1ade at a disrepu- | table house on Grant avenue. and the hackman testified that most of his bill | was consumed by waiting for his cus- tomer to exit from places of similas| character. | An attorney put up the necessary ball, and the case was continued till to- | morrow, by which time the jehu's de: | mand will probably have been satt. fied. . Lots Poing at Marks Bros.” To - Morrow B ON SALE k) Coat like cut, made of a splendid auality Melton Cloth. We've placed on xale for to-morrow’s Big Selling 50 Dozen Women's FLANNELETTEPETTICOATS es wide GRAY WORSTE 52 in.d.l igns, for this season’s wear, al both plain and fancy, comprising LADIES’ IMPORTED LISLE HOSE — “Hermsdorff” fast new tan shades; heels and toes; and extra long— 8 Pairs for $1L00 LADIES’ IMPORTED LISLE large variety of heels and toes, and new tan shades— 3 Pairs for $1.00 |JACQUARD * TAFFETAS Alice and helio— An immense importation of Normandy, Mechlin, % and great variety of patterns. | Handkerchiefs—Special Sale ond Men’s Handkerchi Ladies’ Plain Hemstitched Line: Handkerchiefs, one-eighth, one- goc, $1.15, §1.4o per half-dozen. Men’s Linen Cambric Hemssitc half-dozen. | ALL-WOOL INDIAN BLANK SPECIAL—KASHGAR COUCH in subdued shades that will h O’Connor, Moffatt & Co New Spring D A large shipment just received enables us to ;ho pretty novelty suitings in the latest weaves and fabrics, hades. i a fi items. ‘SFXNC(SIY ‘]))VSTmleZ%]I‘:?E]filNOE:InC‘:Hltl?ennew shades, silk and wool, sheer texture. ¥ler6‘l)us$rgfiz ,, Extra value "........ R s mche: wide. ... NOVELTY CHECK SUITINGS—Broken effects, in color combinations. 44 Ingiev ficE - ¢ D SUITING and dark colorings. All new styles ...... 58 inches wide WEST OF ENGLAND AND This, week we have received an’immense assortm made with double soles, HOSE — Lace ankles, or allover lace; patterns; extra dong. dorfi™ fast black, white, new brown New Fancy Silks We have just opened a few of the early Spring Styles in Fancy Silks in a variety of the| | newest colorings, suitable for summer suits. il ud LS N B 90 inghes PIN CHECK TAFFETAS— 20 inches [ W 1th. fine hair hne- F‘hects, in "\ide With = Jacquard effects, also Wide the strongly prevailing gray $1.00 | plain taffetas, with Jacquard ef- $1.25 shades, also reseda, champagne, Yard } fects, in gray, castor, Alice, re- ygpd The New Wash Laces Laces, including Valenciennes, Italian, and thread Lace Séts just received. and inseriions to match, in sev new Wash = e Torchon, Irish Dimities E‘gjogl::;l; Very newest designs in best grade Irish Dim- one-half inch hems ; half-dozen lots. 6oc, 75¢, kerchiefs, 14, ¥4 and 1 inch hems, sold in half-dozen lots. ggc, $1.20, $1.50, $2.00 per Men's Unlaundered Linen Hemstitched and Extensive stock of all the leading evening Initial Handkerchiefs, sold in half-dozen shades, also dark colors dotted and lots. goc and $1.50 the half-dozen. plain Mousseline de Soie.... 25c¢ Yard . i Curtain Department, In this department we are showing an extensive assortment of Net Curtains, comprising t | latest novelties in Cluny, Battenberg, Point de Luxe, Point de Reve, | in white, Arabian and two-toned effects, from $2.50 to $10.00 per Pair. | A large variety of patterns in Ruffled Muslin and Net Curtains, suitable for bedrooms and cot- | tages, from $§1.25 to $3.00 per pair. slumber robes—86.00 each. |BELTS SPECIAL o e 5 J RIBBON SALE ¢ Our stock of We 'ob Gilt and Sil- e place on ver Belts is sale to-morrow | now complete. - about 500 Prices range pieces of hig from 6oc to class Novelty $4.50. Some Ribbon in all very pretty the staple col 2r§x2us now “:;:n hThew‘ eing shown ribbons being a ;n] el a; 't ic tfiTAB LlsHEo ‘E“"I pur belts. Also s chase at much beltings in all 1866 m below the regs Sizes and ‘s lar prices, we weights. Com- are enabled to IVIclc stock of offer this lot at adies’ fancy | L A 0 ost dtrect 30c yard rass Materials w a complete and varied assortment of comprising all the popular and leading In mixe.d”and check effects; light, medium ............. .....81.25 Yard| """" LOR SUITING—New de $1.75 and $2.00 Yard a value 1 pure wool and extr Hosiery ent of hosiery in silk, lisle and cotton, | o match all shades of shoes. i DIES’ SILK LISLE HOSE—Extra long ek et Lfiuulble soles, heels and toes, m “Herms-| ik, 4 dorff” fast black, white, pink, blue, grays, Havana, olive, tan, champagne, navy, etc.—| A Pair 50c | LADIES'’ IMPORTED LISLE THREAD HOSE — Extra long, double soles, heels and toes, “Hermsdorff™ fast black— A Pair 25¢ | all the new colorings t THREAD | a double | cHILDREN'S IMPORTED MACO COT-| “Herms- TON HOSE—“Hermsdorff” fast black and and new shades of tan; double knees, heels and toes; sizes 4% to 9ja— | A Fair 25c 3 - Spring Season 1906 | HAIR LINE STRIPES AND seda and violet. Wash Goods grounds, figures, also full assort- ities, white and colored dots and floral effects; ment plain shades .......... 25¢ Yard Efleyre Chiffon Latest novelty for summer wear in plain and flowered chiffon, beautiful designs exquisite shadings, for dinner gowns and evening wear <eese.. 850c Yard eral widths of l;adies’ efs n Cambric quarter and and hed Hand- Mousseline de Soie he Edwardian and Colonial ETS, very attractive designs and colors, suitable for lap and COVERS, 6o inches wide, 3 yards long, four different designs armonize with all surroundings—88.50 each. Reg. valus 60c | $2.50 and $3.00 Shoes at $2.05 the next forty-five years of his life be- hind the grim walls of Sari Quentin. ‘ale Regubr fri e Fric: |5G 48; Colorado as soon as she obtained the Berkeley D 3 necessary means of transportation. ey Debdters Win. The debating team of the Berkeley PERSONAL. and Cuban heels; a very attractive shoe. . SHOES Sizes 5108 90c Sizes 8% to 11 Sizes 11% to 2 $1.35 These are Kid and Box Calf Lace with extended soles; a strong, stylish L wing. | BOYS' SHO! stout solea, a first-c Sizes 9 to 13 Sizes 131 to 2 Sizes 2 to 5% ass school shoe. If received before CHILDREN'S AND MISSES’ $1.20 serviceable, ES UNDERPRICED Satin Calf Lace Shoes with soft uppers and good $1.10, formerly $1.25 $1.30, formerly $1.50 $1.40, formerly $1.75 Boys’ Patent Leathers and Box Ca.f Bluchers Reduced. MAIL ORDERS FILLED GOOD SHOES Blucher Oxford, plain toe, matt back, Cuban heels, fiexible soles. The other style is a Kid Oxford, with patent leather tips. Infants’ and Chiléren's kid and button shoes, patent leather tips, hand turned soles, sizes 1 t:0 5, 4Dc. Siz:s 5} to 8, spring heel, 60c. Shoes, Saturday, Feb. 17. flat might go to h—] if she would go to Reno, where he said she coulg make gev- eral hundred dollars in two or three weeks by selling mining stocks for him. He also hinted that I could do well in Reno.” “Did you go to the theater with Mrs. Tutsert?” the Judge inquired. “Why, yes—with Mrs. Tutsert and two gentiemen,” was the answer. “That was what made him sore and demand the fur- niture.” It was in Tait's cafe that Mr. Benham ' chided Mrs. Tutsert and askel her what she had done, with the household goods which she had falsely represented to him | were in storage> They had a subsequent meeting in Unjon Square Park that same afternoon, and there she said to him, “T know you don’t trust me and I know ! I don’t trust you, so we'd bectter part: She promised to meet him the next day. but she neither called on him nor commu- nicated by telephone, and her arrest fol- lowed, ‘ Case dismissed. .. Nineteen-year-old Oscar F. Ritter, a se- | rious-faced youth, was arrested for va- grancy on complaint of his father, a jew- eler, who told Judge Cabaniss that his paternal authority was defled in almost every conceivable way. : “He refuses to work,” said Ritter pere, “and he stays out late at night and sleeps until late in the afternoon. I have procured several good situations for him . in my own line of business, but he would | not retain any of them.” ’ | #*What do you mean by such conduct?” the Judge asked the defendant. “I got alork all right,” was the answer, “till a stepmother began bossing me.” “Then why don't you go and earn a lvellihood for yourself?” said his Honor. “A great, big, strong fellow like you ought to be ashamed to depend on any one for maintenance. T'll continue your case thirty days, and if you do »* 7 ==and WHITE LAWN APRONS Cale Reguizr Frice Frice ‘50 2t¢ Come in sizes 4 to 14 years. Womén's Allover Lace Hose 8¢ 11 everywhere at 35c. Come with % Lace Ankles. | ON SALE FOR TO-MORROW 10 Dozen GIRLS' PLAI) DRESSES Come in pretty effect 14 years. ON SALE FOR TO-MORROW 15 Dozen Womsn’s FLARNELETTE WR<PPERS Fezular Price Come in all colors and sizes. Made Rith deep flounce and fitted vest ng. MARKS BROS. » BUSY STORE 1220-1224 MARKET ST. | Francis. | West ana Charles West. Brooklyn, N. Y., are at the Palace. : Schiff, at the Herald Square. Spear are at the Palace. Paul A. Fuss, a mining man of Gran- ite, Idaho, is at the St. Francis. E. T. Sterling, a banker of San Jose, and his wife are at the St. Francis. George E. Cummings of Los Angeles and his wife are at the St. Franeis. Karl G. Roebling ‘and F. J. Newbury of Trenton, N. J., are at the St. Francis. A. D. Stillman, a banker of Philadel- phia, and his family are at the St. Jr P. Churchill, prominent in business circles in Yreka, Cal, is at the St. Franeis. 5 C.r A. McCarger, an insurance man of Portland, Or., accompanied by his wife, is at the St. Francis. E. E. Olding, manager for the Ono- mea plantation in the Hawailan Islands, is at the St. Francis. Registered at the Palace Hotel from Des Moines, Iowa, are Mr. and Mrs. Harry West, Mrs. E. P. Chase, Miss Mrs. James Maxwell, Miss H. Bon- nell and Major Thomas D. Mosscrop of =T , Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Feb. 10.—The following Californians have arrived in New York: From San Francisco—W. J. Kelly and C. H. Lynberry, at the Hotel Cadillac; M. Baggelay, at the Gilsey House; H. E. McAllister, at the Hotel Imperial; J. W. Flynn, at the Holland; P. Hackett, at the Hotel_Seville; L. Hellbroner, at the Salding; F. Older, at the Hotel Bres- lin; G. Lewis, at the Hotel Spalding. From Los Angeles—H. Cohn and S. —e——————— B.F.Stoll. dentist: Haight & Masonic av.” ————— Robber Gets Forty-Five Years. The Court of Appeals decided yester- day that John Zimmerman must spend Betwev}';—yl:r and Jones. May we figure on your booklat? Knowles Co., superior printers, 24 Second st. —_——— Edward o Miss Florence Lafayette Robe: - The, defendant, in :company S Ladies’ Pat e rts, resid pany with | High School, composea N v ent Colt Lace Ur;]ze at'athe Ag;fltnr(um Hotel, testified that Cnme"m Eood, washable stripes. in Dr. W. N. Sherman and wife of | [Romas Collins, held up a Standard Oil | George D. Sm!!hpued oér;a(::al:e?m‘;;.' Button ih “Bfn;;m r:‘;:nw;xh Mrs. Tgtsehrt and all colors—neatly scalloped. Fresno are at' the Lick. ‘,:{n ‘;2083180 nieir lS!esemsnd 8ot away | dridge, last night defeated the Com hoes, 1 : jomse e proposed the trip SR : X n coin. mmerman was i > > T! s, likell- | The drawing shows one of the {to Reno and also derided the flat. “He N nglc}; ;;Lr:(flde l?.;‘lr:ce of Cananed.| apprenended a few days after the rob- rl-l:q;f:;:] L?o:gld 5121’1’32 .:.?rnnl, ’{5”‘;’:’;’ us % ’, E o 4 i P | 1 - - both. rr:‘.]::r; styles—a lady’s Patent Leather [J | 010 Stella.” said Miss Roberts, “that the 35 Dozen Girls J. H Spear and wife and Miss Ida | PeTY. but Collins escaped. , |lom. The question was the P{'o!ec(:avg tariff. Judge Thomas F. Dunn, Justice Frank M. Angellotti and R. C. Staats were the judges. How’s Your Co’mplex‘b? IS IT MUDDY AND SALLOW? Then you are probably trom- bled with a torpid liver and more or less comstipation. You must have a movement of the bowels EACH day, otherwise, the bile from the liver and other impurities become absorbed into the blood in- stead of being carried off through the natural channels, the bowels, The usual clear and attractive complexion is soom sallow, muddy and pimply faces. Take one night before retiring. replaced by “VIGORET” each Are a tiny, chocolate-coated, tonic laxative tablet that moves the jbowels gently, vet thoroughly, each day,’ curin tion, Biliousness and Slick Headache. the blood and improve the complexion. Sold by Never sold In bulk. in 10c and 25¢ packages. g Chronic Constipa., They cool, cleacse and p:::‘ alt drug stores