The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 2, 1906, Page 16

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MARCH 2, 1906. . . McClure’s Magazine; ‘ for March contains The Railroads and the Newspapers; the Pass; the Packed Conventions; the Senate Commission, by Ray Stannard Baker Escagpe from a Foriress and Military- Execution, — a narra- tive that rivals the “Prisoner of Zenda,” — by Carl Schurz The= discovery for Augustin Daly of two actors— hitherto unkrown in America — Irving and Coghlan, by Clara Morris * Machiavelli’s “Prircz” ard some modern business and political principles compared, by . THE SAN. FRANCISCO CAIL OPULENT VAGABOND CHIDES PENNILESS CHUMS IN BOXCAR = Delivers ."Eloqfiént -~ Oration Anent Laziness. l_]ingles Cash Until| Audience Rises in Anger. . FRIDAY, 16 J— $1.00 Soft Bosom Shirts 75c¢ New golf style scft bosom shirts with cuffs attached or I separate. New patterns and SRS s e colors, tans, pinks and blues. Dozens and dozens of patterns of this regular one dollar shirt riday i S - (dia;‘y doan'xyain:l 3“-“' 75c Men’s Soeks, 3 Pairs 50c Men’s 25-cent Socks. Fancy dots, plaids and colors. This Friday and Saturday...... : 3 pairs for Soc Three Dollar Hats for $2.35 | New telescope and dent crown soft hats, black, brown i | and pearl. Regular three dollar values ....... $ 2 35 % . Flat brim derby hats, brown or black, with band and | trimming to match. These hats are new and up-to-date B/ BY JAMES C. CRAWFORD. Hires Attorney in Court and Is Dismissed. SN S, riday and Saturday ........ BROWNS STANDARD(S QUALITY'S will rews Beauty an Quality and rare toneis the tandard we have for everything we will sell in the new store we have secured for our piano customers at 721-723 Market St. 7 e set THE BIG PIANO STORE. (o ORDINARY DEPOSITS The Renters’Loan & Trust Co. Savings Bank 222 Montgomery St., San Francisco Receives Deposits of $i up Interest Compounded Semi- Annually N et TERM_DEPOSITS (o) (o) VALUE yCan Be Had at Marty Bage Suit Cases all_prices. k and prices Wholesale and Retafl Repatring. TRUNK MANUFACTURER 22 Turk Strect. Phon: East 9224 A R AR TR I R PR THE MILL TO MAN durable | THE PRICE IS THE SAME BROS. ESTABLISHED 1867 IFISK BAKES * SIME CHARGES | Postmaster Takes Opening Step in Betterment of the Mail Delivery System g Fisk yesterday made pub- of promotions and s h went to effect yester- increases and in pay, the bal- the two items increasing somewhat, but not ma- Fisk that with the or premotions en no change be made and nt have been although esent positions, ecome superan- to their duties e have been reduced on. This is the first s anization of the Postoffice in bring it to the highest point of y. Some of the persons whose have been reduced are super- | p is taken they will be deposed and assigned to dutieés more in line with their capacity and industry | naster Fisk refused to make the names of unfortunate ight whose pay has been cut. He is determined that the San Francisco | Postoffice shall not be second in ef- y to-any other -in. the United , even if he has to use 3 mea spper. e following is a list of the for- ninety, many .of whom will be within the next two weeks: assistant cashier, from $1400 to son, assistant superintendent of 15, $1400 to. $1500. T. Gould Jr., assistant ‘superintendent $1500. endent Station B, $1300 C. Morrison, foreman, $1200 to $1400. William L. St. Amant, clerk, $1200 to $1500. J. J. Handley, Bart Mahoney, Douglass Zir- kle, W. W. Waters, foremen, $1200. to $1300. Daniel M. Fitzgerald, superintendent ation K, Henry C. Behre David F. Foley, John R. McGee, Martin J. O’ Donnell, clerks; Simon Green and Willlam P. Mull, distributors, §1100 to $1200. S. Wands, superintendent Station J; Wes- Wise, registry clerk; F. L. Kielmann, Snyder Jr., D. E. Lawton, W, 5. Payn- cr und Moses Kleinhaupt, distributors, $1000 to_21100. b=y un J. Hennessy, Charles S. Le 3 aughton, Charles P. M. Quedens, Joseph W. Zowasky, Harry Curley, James J. Glover, Joseph G. Freechtle, Oliver J. Hall, Theodore ohn, Asa E. White, C. J. Bellman, Frank Frank [Isaacs, Anne’Attridge, clerks, Olof J. Olsen, John T. O'Neil, Danfel M. Ritchie, Thomas F. Flaherty, Madeline E. v J y_H. Mull Edward J. Bammann, Louis A, L. Czinger, Seam Reinhold Kaulfuss, Joseph Lee, Ed Sorley, Fioyd O. Nelson, Robert E. | Saxe, Thomas Wallace, Thomas M. Welch, Austin 8. Welch, Willlam Corcoran, Max Co- hen, Edward Graff, Hans Graff, William May- Wyhs, George B. McCarty, clerks, Frederick G. Baumeis- Stephen F. Carty, Charles Redmond, James M. Lanthier, 700 to $800, V. Kinrade, Lauren C. Ward, James The promotions were: Othel Camp- bell, sub-clerk, to distributor; George W. Hull, sub-clerk, to mailing clerk: | Julia M. Danahy, eligible list, to record clerk; Frederick R. Gordon, to mailing clerk. All these will receive $600 per annum. —_——— | The Newslext of Mazazines. | That i= what you will find Town Talk to be; not this week only, but every | week. The Spectator gives some more | exclusive news about the astonishing | recenciliation of two distinguished citi- zens brought about by the Gaelic move- | ment. He tells how Henry T. Scott per- = d the management of the St ¥ cis not to lease the Fairmont. He | relates an amusing story of the faflure | of a club woman's satire because her es lacked a sense of humor. He ome of the jests of the ban- ' : assoct 0S ANGELES TIMES § :: A | quet given by the bar in honor of Judge SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE ROOM 41, CHRORICLE BLDG. Telephone Main 1472, Arthor L. Fish, Representative The Times is the advertising medium of the Southwest. Cah BRONCHIAL %ot Contain nothing injurious, Relieve bronchial irritation. -Cure sore throat, 1nboxes only. Sloss. Herman Scheffauer’s latest poem is in this week’s number. Theodore Bonnet analyzes Florence Roberts’ lat- est play. The paper abounds in topical | tilustrations. —_—— Sue United - Raflroads. Buit for $20,000 damages was filed yesterday against the United Rallroads ”)y Edward C. and Elizabeth Elling- house. It is asserted that on October 12, 1905, Mrs. Ellinghouse was thrown l!rom a car and severely injured. —————— | Pure food Jaws are good. Burnett's Vanilla is pure. Insist upon having Burnett's ¢ License Collections Increase. Tax Collector Nichols yesterday is- sued a statement showing the receipts for licenses during last month were $26,620.50, a gain of $3824.50 over those | for February, 1905. The wagon licenses aggregated $2926.50, a gain of $1292.50. There were 1707 slot machine tags is. sued during the present quarter, repre- senting an income to the city of $17,070, nd ~ when the | Peruana Petit, Frank Roche, | . {vice of the Southern Pacific Rallway | Company were nocturnally patrolling the freight yards of that corporation their ears, trained to acute hearing by long experience in the detection of sounds émanating from hidden . tramps, - were visited by the muffied murmur of a mas- culine voice. - They traced' it to the ‘in- terior- of a sidetracked boxear, and ere entering therein they stood at ‘the door and listened in silence. - The tone of the speaker was that. of chiding, and these were the words: *Youse pore lazy bums gives me a pain, allus kimplainin’ dat youse ain't got erough teh eat an' dat youse air cold. | Wyinell don’t youse git out-an’ bring in de cush, de same ez I does? (Jingle, as of small silver coins. shaken in pocket and accompanying murmur of many | voices.) . Wy, ef I didn’t hev no more git | up dan de binch o youse hez I wouldn't | be in dis car. Naw; I'd be-out dere lyin’ |on de track an’ waiting fr a train teh | kim - ehlong an' put out -me light. Wotinell's de use o livin’ ef youse don't | live like gents? _(Repetition of jingle. and iuugmnmu!im\ of murmur) Ez 1 -sez shapes. Regular three dollar values, special $2 35 | While two special policemen in the ser- ° afore, youse pore mutts make me tired, an’ widout ’pologizin’ f'r me deparchure | T now goes an' wraps meself 'round de | best meal dat money kin buy in de swell- est eatin’ joint en ‘dis burg.” The responise was an angry growl, and | there is no telling what would have hap- pened to the orator if the policemen had | not flashed their bullseyes. when the | doors slid open.and he.stood. revealed, with a number of tattered men behind him. Their menacing mien, however, in- dicated that his' contemplated Lucullan feast would have been. postponed, ‘even if he had not been arrested with thirteen others. In the court of Police Judge Conlan he was registered as- James .Clark; and he was the only. one of the fourteen who declined. to-plead guilty on condition that the punishment prescribed would not ex- ceed twenty-four hours' imprsonment. “I ain’t no vag,”’ he said, “an’ I doesn’t propose t' perjure meself by: sayin’ dat I am. I hev money in me jeans an’. I wants t'. hire a lawyer t' see me troo.” “Where did you .get the money?” his Honor inquired. “Ef I tells youse I woiked f'r it- youse | don't b'lieve me, an’ ef I says I didn't |'woik: £'r it youse send gie up on s'picion. | So wat's de use o' me sayin’ anyt'ing | enbout _it?” % | An able and- eloquent young attorney | leaped into the breach and for a morie- tary consideration, paid on' the spot, | talked Mr.. Clark back to freedom. PR | Mrs. Clementina Langenbach of 1130 Kentucky street, who accused Mrs. Belle | Jacobs of having battéred her, ex- | perienced the twofold humiliation of hay- ing her complaint dismissed and being ubjected to sharp ‘repreof from Judge ogan. | The testimony went to show that Mrs. | Langenbach provoked the- battery by cir- | culating scandalous gossip ' concerning | Mrs. “Jacobs, which: was absolutely un- | founded in fact. | “I can hardly blame Mrs. Jacobs for | what she did,” said the Judge, “because | a woman's good name is a priceless pos- | session, and the law s sometimes slow ADVERTISEMENTS. TERRIBLE ECZEMA ON LITTLE BOY Mouth and Eyes Covered With Crusts—Face ltched Most Fear- fully—Hands Pinned Down to | Prevent Scratching MIRACULOUS CURE | BY CUTICURA:REMEDIES —_— “When my little boy was six months old, he had eczems. The sores extended so quickly over the whole body that we at once e&hd in the doctor. We then weat to acother doctor, but he could not help him, and in our despair 'we went to a third one, s a finger, and :'lunemluo nsd the and s ) a8 did also ‘\’:‘?cln:yu. Hands, chest, an ‘back, in short the whole , Was over ‘over, We had no in rebuking the malicious slanderer.” Mrs, Langenbach and her young and unmarried sister and Miss Ethel Rundle lingered long in the corridor and unre- servedly expressed their-indignation over the unlooked-for turn taken by the case. « s Mrs. Tipman, middle aged and mild mannered, told Judge Shortall that she and Jawmes Camipion, also close to the half-century mark, were playmates in Collier’s, by reporter and a wreck, by 3= i3 their childhood, and that the friendship thus .-formed - was cemented by .the years, despite the fact that she married another and he had varied marital ex- perience. - He was accused of having broken down the door of her apart- nient in the home of Mrs. Angel Forget (prenounced For-gay) at Ninth and Folsom strects, where he, too, lodged. “He ‘must a-bin jealous,” Mrs. Tip- man declared, “althougi I'm sure I never gave him any cause for feeling that way. But when the drink is in the sense is out, as my mother used to say.” Mr. Campion, who is a marine-fire- man, did not -demy that his affection was monopolized by Mrs, Tipman—in- deed it - mever had been " entirely re- moved from her keeping since their childhood days, although strenuous ef- fort to-alienate it had oft béen mads. And if he did love her, what of it? Or if he was jealous, could he help-it? As for breaking down the door, his- ‘ex- cessive indulgence in drink had much to do with that. He will be licious: misch Stories by.Jeannette Cooper, ntenced to-day for ma- . . . 5 John Kennedy had just been sen- tenced to sixty days’ imprisonment by Judge Shortall when Alexander Hag- gin, awaiting trial on the charge of having peddled without license, volun- tarily informed the court that Charles Cole, the complainant againgt Kennedy, was an ex-convict. $ “How do you know he is?” the Judge inquired. “He and I were prisoners together in San Quentin,” was the reply. “He was sent up for attempted robbery.” ‘Without ascertaining the crime for which Mr. Haggin was incarcerated his Honor set aside the sentence he had imposed on Mr. Kennedy and then or- dered that Mr. Cole be subpenaed to reappear today, but just for what pur- pose was not- stated. Mr. Haggin was not asked to disclose the felony for which he had “done time,” nor was he requested to explain the motive that prompted him to .expose Mr. Cole’s rec- ord at the sacrifice of also exposing his own. periodical in which to announce their tains ' over 200 leader in thought. 10 cents a copy Id? M. Tarbell The pathetic and terrible adventures of the second Bald- win-Zeigler Polar expedition, fully illustrated, by 2 Anthony Fiala “The Remittance Man,” a thrilling Arizona story of cow=- | boy life, Indians and the fascination of the desert, by Stewart Edward White “A New York Street Waif's™ story, powerful in its way as Mr. Adams’s great scries on Patent Medicines in Samuel Hopkins Adams “The Last Pilot Schooner,” a 'xgewspaper story of a Ralph D. Paine = « A Grief Deferred,” a story of great living and great loving — with pictures by W. L. Taylor—by / Alice Brown Harvey J. O'Higgins, poems by Florence Wilkinson and others, and illustrations by Fogarty, Shinn and Wyeth. But whether Mr.,Cole ever wor < felon's stripes. or was maligned by Mr. | year-old daughter, a stalwart, red- Haggin, Mr. Kennedy's offense, as re- | haired maiden, were drunk and disor- counted by Patrolman Kavanaugh, | derly when arrested on complaint of fully earned .the punishment awarded | Mrs. Ruby Richards, .in whose honse, him. The policeman arrested him in | $30 ¥olsom strect,.they. lived with the Golden Gate Park for obtruding his | husband and father, a longshore la- society on persons who did not desire | borer. They resisted Patrolman Small's it, a misdemeanor for which he had | effort to place them in the patrol previously been punished by Judge | Wagon, and the vile language they Cabaniss. used was whisperingly repeated to Mr. Cole, who is'a night watchman | Judge Shortall, who glanced at the at the Russ House, was seated upon | Younger wbman in horror and then or- one of the park benches with a young | dered that she and her mother Be de- City Chemist Files Report woman when Mr. Kennedy squatted | tained in custody until further order is e B 2 -- beside them and attentively listened to | 15sued by him. o of Violations - of Ordi their conversation. They retired to .['y m another bench, and when he followed | Deputy Sheriff Jesse Galland was (STIRECE by Some Dai o them and insisted in remaining within | Walking downs Pine street, between 2 P earshot of what they were saying Mr, | Kearny and Dupont, at a late hour on | = City Chemist Gibbs yesterday filed a Cole asked him what he meant. Wednesday night, when three young|report on his anlyses of 366 samples “Oh,” was the reply, “I guess I have | fellows: jostled him and one of them |of milk taken from several dairles, of as much right in this park as you |!#n away with his watch and chain. | wpjech 222 were found te be below the have.” Patrolman Teutenberg gave chase and | pytter-fat standard of 3.2 per cent. A “That's -so0,” rejoined Mr. Cole, “but | captured:Frank Auburton, who asked | pergistent offender in that regard is J. you have no right to thrust your com- | for and was granted a continuance till | Kennel, proprietér of the New Boss panionship on persons who do not de- | to-morrow by "Judge Mogan. " | Dairy at the Six-Mile House, who is sire it.” e e W, Ch Y now. on trial in the Police Court for Mr. Kennedy was uttering an impu- | Many soldiers from the Presidio mur-| gimjjar violations of the ordinance. dent retort when Patrolman Kava- | mured disapproval when Judge Mogan | gamples to the number of 203. taken naugh, who had been shadowing him [Wronounced Private George L. Blowett, | s1om Kennel's wagons on various dates, for some time, made the arrest. Tenth Coast Artillery, guilty of ma-| wore 311 below the standard, and steps “I do not work at anything,” Mr. |liclous mischief and ordered him to PAY | wij) phe taken to revoke his license to Kennedy told the court, “and I have | 325 to P. Schainman, clothier at 2818 { . n myp - been spending most of my time in the | Greenwich street., in payment for the| "'mpe City Chemist reported that a park because T liked the fresh air.” window of that gentleman's store| ., ...1. of cream from the Belmot and But the policeman hinted that Mr, | through which he had hurled a rock. | gan Carlos Dairy of 347 Fourth sigset Kennedy’s real purpose in frequenting | The “rookies” assembled in the cof-| o i2ineq borax: four samples of midk the big public playground was to play | ridor and u)mmlmoufly pronounced the from the Guadaloupe Dalry of 1514 San eavesdropper and levy blackmall. punishment’ of their comrade several|p. . “avenue, O. Crook. proprietor, o5 W h kinds of outrage, but their indignation [ DTHRQ SVERNE L, 0 ree of them Tony Aramata, accused of having at- | WeNt no further than that. N coming - from - unlabeled cans of tempted to murder ~Stella Petro by | Several witnesses testified that thev | inneq milk; ten samples from H. shooting at her one night about two | SW the soldiec throw the vock as hely, ., chet, Alameda Farm. and two from weeks ago at 673 Geary street, was|9t00d upon the rear platform of &|p v, el were below the standard. 0F HILK B dlsmissed by Judge Cabaniss, the prose. | Passing streetcar, and Mr. Schatnman | =0 0¥ ¥ B00ra, atter a public | cutin, opined that the act was committed In rmit to sell Sustity any otror gestsion.melent to| {Uiterul retaliation of his refusal to be | Bearing, xevoked tre Wert O SO 7 o srosated el involvine '}"’d;"“‘,‘" on the alleged ground that his dairy . | fer of a military blouse. The Judge de- ithy condit) am Tane on T4 stvect would ‘ot | clared what civilane: resing ot doing | ) 3% SN 07 ehe mapectore. o- oblige Mrs. Alice Russler by searching | Pusiness in the vicinity of the Presidio | 0 "iome time ago created a small the rooms until he found her h‘lm:fl‘ are entitled to protection from mili- sensation . when he accused deputy whom she belleved to be there con- | WY Towavlem. | poundkeepers of holding him up for cealed, she created such a disturbance A immunity from impounding of his cat- that her arrest was ordered. But when The Pyrography Fad. tle. : the case was called in Judge Mogan's The board appointed Dr. J. A. Had- court she failed to appeur, =0 her $10 voluntary school inspector. bail money was forfeited and a bench warrant jss for her 4 “I have a ch that he's here,” sl informed the clerk. “and my hunches never fool me.” some street and 629 Halght street were given one month to put the places in sanitary safe condition. A. B. Clute was until July 1 to abate a nuisance caused by his stables at Nineteenth street and Potrero avenue. e S e < Mrs. Margaret Conboy and her 17- For ten years the leading merchants and manufacturers of the United Stdtes have distinguished McClure’s Magazine as the best ‘The March Number con- setting forth the principal products o{ American enterprise. McClure’s is the Marketplace of fler.V?rld. It is the lead- ing exponent of American business energy and activity as well as the Only $1.00 a year ° Buy the March number—now on sale at twenty thousand news stands MANY: SAMPLES |zee ?pwy and investors to secure Lots in NEW Gity of Balbea P JORDAN 638 Market

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