The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 30, 1906, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, i T W 252, 03D 382 SHAW FNORS \INCLE SAM e ROl 0 3TATE Urge Revision in Big Sums for California two well-known lTowa politicia who have | Speeches. Said to Have the Sanc- Favored by House returned from a visit with Sl‘\'retnry; Commlflee' tion of President Hall Million Available Roosevelt. for Work on the Custom-House. two men, one of them =2 Des! i RO Matwes man vl s o Shurye 30 e o RO TANTROE S iy Pedro Total of $290,000 the other a resident of this ¢ Shaw | Is Urged. sects to make a qumber of speeches be-: WASHINGTON, May 29.—The sun- | MEAT NOT PROPERLY INSPECTED System in the Packing Houses Denounced | as Farce. | Special Dispatch to The Call SIOUX CITY, Yows, May 20.—Through | Flaws Picked in the Laww Shaw and the lowa delegation in Congress, the it has become known that Shaw is pre- parir o abandon his radical ‘position as a “standpatter” and publicly express modified views on the tarif in the hope of appeas tariff revislonists in Iowa and se- r support in the national conven- Proposed in Senate. ing th curing t tion "These Municipal Abattoirs the Remedy, Declares Expert. n now and August 1, when the lowa | vention is to be held, in which he will | that “he' has never said that the | 2ght mot to be revised - when the | came, and that, in his opinion, is at hand. [ ] tood his proposed utteramce, i is unde iy | —“Govern- .on submitted to President Roosevelt | dTY civil appropriation bill reported | farce, so ctioped by hiu to an extent. that | to the House toddy provides $500,000 concerned forecast that the tariff for the continuation of the construc- on as (he rate legisla: | 1ion of the San Francisco Custom- neats bearing ily concluded. It is the L house. For the improvement of San Pedro harbor $290,000 is granted; for San Pablo Bay, $53,168; for Oakland harbor, $81,000; for Wilmington har- bor, $100,000. ling_to the Iowa delega- s will adjourn In three without disposing of the pure food, canal and & number of other important leaving this work fo be taken up and a i upon at the short session in the fall. But the featute of the fall session, tlie; will an administration tariff | mp from wagons, packers closely man Tawney was authorized by the/ be appropriations committee to report it | . “which will occupy the time of the [to the House today. o session and much more. Indeed, it]sundry civil- appropriation-.bill ever | understanding that to certain Con- | reported, carrying $J4,346,573, ong-whom is Hepburn of Iowa, | which ,460,991 is fér work on the | y been delegated the task of Panama candl. The #mount carried | rought draft of a révised tariff is. $11,070,003 less than the estimates ais work will be intrusted to|from the various departments. The | “standpatters” rather than | canal appropriation is to be reim- | tle revisionists and réciprocity bursed to the Treasury from the pro- | ccording te the information | ceeds of canal bonds, swhich have been | ght by the two politicans in question. | authorized to the aggregate amount | hey decline to permit the use of their of $130,000,000. Deducting the canal names, but It cannot be questioned that appropriation, the bill carries $1,- | tuey got their information first-handed 721,980 more than the current sun- » less 2n authority than Shaw and dry civil act. made was side one « ® K e foremost members of the lowa For river and harbor work hereto- - nply that Shaw has re- | fore authorized and contracted for € € d in anarrangement there is . appropriated $17,318,976, | !which is $6,774,844 in excess of the amount available this year. For new public buildings heretofore ssitates the abandonment of his ndpat views, but that in at least eches within the next two months five sp ol he will promulgate the new doctrine. authorized and the repair of buildings F d —_— O $5,170,583 is appropriated, a reduc- tion of $2,806,601 from the current appropriation under this head. Some of the more important ftems of appropriation are: Constructiof of WOULD RATHER DIE | = National Museum building in Wash- | t 3 ington, D. C., $500,000; for the Inter- - € ew | state. Commerce Commission, $375,- thrown in 000, an increase of $10,000; complet~ ing immigrant station at San Fran- cisco,” $100,000; Bureau of Fisheries, $670,970, reduction of $44,950; for enforcement of the Chinese exclusion act the appropriation is reduced from $600,000 to $500,000. R e L L R S OB IN SOUTH GDES - T0 A LYNGHING 1N I SPECIL ThAN Hangs a White Man Convicted of Murder but Later HAS NO LOVE FOR dio) d:d Girl Takes Poison Because She Could Not Marry to Suit Self. Special Dispatch §o The Call LOS ANGELES, May 29.—Rather| than marry a man whom her mother had selected for her and whom she hardly knew, Ensign Etella Phillips of the vation Army:tried to end her life vesterday by taking carbelic acid. She was found unco ous on the floor of her room and conveyed to a hospital. small ir urt it | make | except | P ol ‘down- stion or tion in al in- w. any of food | | \Democrats of Tennessee | fights were numerous and it was with' {leaders of opposing 1actions- that the DAY OF FUROR IN CONVENTION Keep Force of Po- lice Busy. Compromise Effected Af- ter Hours. of Fight- NASHVILLE, Tenn., May '29.—The State Democratic Convention, which met here today to nominite candidates for Governor and Railroad Commission- ers, adjourned at 6:10 o'clock this even= ing until 10 o'clock tomorrow morning | without haying effected a temporary | organization. It was decidedly the| most turbulent body of the kind that| ever assembled in Tennessee. Free | the utmost aifficulty.that any record of the proceedings could be made, Adjournment was taken after an un- | derstanding had been'reached between | three gubernatorial candidates—Gov- ernor John 1. Cox, Congressman Mal- | com R." Patterson and- Judge John R.| | Bond—each name four: representatives | { who shall constitute’a committee to de~ | cide on a temporary chairman. Before this agreement was effected the battle | over contested delegations occupied tite | entire time of the convention. The ser- | | vices of the police were necessary from | of Guatemalan the outset. Vice Chairman Aberhathy ‘called the | meeting to order at noon. There was| roll call of counties for selection' of | temporary chairman was:begun the up- roar steadily increased. When David- The bill was completed and Chair- | son County was reported a battle royal | Francisco. was on, the wildest excitenient prevail-| ing. The county was finally passed.| It is the largest the contest going to the committee on | fles. credentials, yet to be named, @nd slow- | of | 1y the roll call proceeded. every move tains, marking a fresh contest. | Chairman Abernathy was often swept | | aside by the tempest and, with many |Sti speaking and . shouting froni various| parts of the hall. none could be recog- | nized. Once the chairman’ laid down the gavel and advahced toward the front of the stage, as he says, to make | himself heard. When he went back: for | the gavel Luke Lea of Davidson Coun- ty. a Patterson supporter, had it and was essaying to act as presjding offi- cer. Abernathy proteésted. Lea was obdurate and from then on there were two presiding officers and pandemo- | nium on the.floor. ¥ | At length a council of war betieen | the leaders brought about a temporary | truce and adjournment followed. | MUTUAL LIFE FIBHT TRANSFERRED FROM GOTHAM TO LONDON Battle ‘to Be}&:ght for the Business of Insurance Corporation. | | LONDON, May 29.—The arrival in London of ‘Emery McClintock, vice | president of the Mutual Life Insurance | Company of New York, has renewed | the interest in the fight for the busi- | ness of the Mutual Life. He is spend- | ing his time with the agents of the| mpany, going over: their books. It is learned that the report pub-| co 15 FORGED - TORETIRE Gu&temalan Troops Turn - Back One Army of Invaders. San Franciscans Fighting With Isthmian Rev- olutionists. Whole Cou;;y Ripe for President -Cabrera’s Overthrow. ‘MEXICO CITY, May 29.—Major Castello, commanding one detachment revolutionists, after taking the city of Ocos, was forced to | retire before superior forces. Castello is now reported to have taken a new | confusion from the start and when the | base and will be reinforced tonight by several hundred good fighting: men from the steamship Empire State. The Empire State is from San She.léft that port on May 14 with 200 desperate fighters re- cruited in that city and some 300 ri- eneral Barillas is in the moun- making his way to Quezaltenan- 80., Barillas' has with him a fine body of picked men. and is reported to be 1l recruiting his force. No news has:.been received here from Salvador, but the invading force should by this time be well advanced in Guatemala. Resident Guatemalans here say that the whole country is ripe for . the G TOLEMANSNE | { FOUND BY 30N Remains of the Third- Street Pawnbroker Are Recovered: Nine Other__Bodies Are Taken From City’s Ruins. When the temblor of that awful Wednesday morning of last month rat- tled. the town, Andrew Coleman, who | had been in.busin as a pawnbrokcr‘ on Third. street for®thirty years and was known to half the South Side, was !sound " asleep - with his clerk, David | Cook, in a gallery about the store he| then occupied at 114 Third street. His | store, filled with second hand clothins‘ and containing three safes in which | were $15,000 worth of pledged valua- bles, was in an old two-story frame building. The quake sent down a flim- | sy brick wall that stood behind it and| the ald pawnbroker and his faithful |employe were buriéd and crushed to ideath, perhaps without realizing what {had happened. John T. Coleman of 1666 Goldén| Gate avenue, son of the pawnbroker, | hurried to the place immediately after ' {the quake and saw that his father and| |the clerk were beyond aid. The fire swept the scene and as soon thereafter as he could reach it, the son went, hop- | !ing to .begin the work of taking out the bodies. Only within the last week | /have he and the men he employed been able to_handle the bricks, so hot| were they from. the burned clothing, some of which is still smoldering. Yes- terday they reached the remains. Only| some-bones were left. Those of the pawnbroker were recognized by an indentation he had always had in his forehead. The three safes were looted soon after the fire. had passed:. It is sup- posed that some .of the jewelry in them remained . intact. Nine other bodies were recovered from the ruins in different localities yésterday, bringing the death list up| to 418 at the morgue. Five of the| bodies ‘were taken from the ruins of the Kingsbury House. The first four | were those of Lonis Stambler, a tailor, | 34 years of age, his wife, Celia, their | { overthrow of Cabrera. The season of rains has set in and the roads are bad in' Guatemala. . Jlelegraphic commu- nication is difficult, owing to the cut- ting of wires on the Guatemalan side. WASHINGTON, May 29.—Guate- malan revolutionists who attacked Ocos have been driven back across the Mexican border, but small parties of revolutionists are appearing at va- rious other points along the Mexican border and threatening the Guatema- lan Government. This informatien | was contained in a dispatch received | The at the State Department today from Mr. Combs, " American Minister to Guatemala ‘and Honduras. % NEW PLANS FOR PAGE HOTEL Sharon Estate Pebple Come to Look Over the Field. « Fred Sharon, Senator Newlands, the young son of the Earl of Hesketh and- H. L. Wright, solicitor for Lady Hes- keth, arrived in this city yesterday to | daughter, . Rosie, 10 years of age and | | Stambler’s niece, Miss Fannie Weiner. |23 years of age. The remains were | |located and identified -by - Miss Sadie Stambler, a sister of .the tailor, who [came from Los Angeles soon after the |fire. . The fifth body taken from this ill fated building is unidentified. | | The remains of two Chinese were | |taken from ruins In Chinatown. The remains of Frank Prochaztia, formerly | a waiter at 405 Washington street, were found in a lot near the old pestoffice. dy of a man supposed to be {Fred Kennel, a coffee peddler, was {found in the rear of 515 Third street. The Coroner’s office received a piti- ful message yesterday from Mrs. D.| McDonald, whose.two daughters, Mrs. | |May Irwin and Mrs. Maud Johnson, | | perished in the fire that destroyed the | Brunswick House at Sixth and Howard |sn—eets; The mother begs to be per- | mitted to search the ruins in which the | bodies lie and she seeks information as | to what manner of death her offspring | suffered, whether they were spared the | torture of the flames or whether their | |lives went out-when the splintered tim- |bers were.reduced to ashes. The story told in the missive is ex- | tremely. pathetic.. Both of the unfor- | tunate women had been deserted by | their husbands and were -obliged to| earn livings for themselves and for two children, each four years of age. These orphans are now with Mrs. Mc- | Donald. 5 | Neither of the bodies has been.re- covered yet. 2 % AL N BISHOP McDOWELL'S €ALL | SPRING - V. havi | the ¢ity and county. of San Franecisco, SPRING VALLEY WATER WORKS (A CORPORATION). Notice of Redemption of Second Mortgage Bonds. Notice - is ' hereby given _that _the VALLEY WATER WORKS. a cot ration o and existing e Tawa ot i "Siate ot Calitorgia. and its principal place of business im State of California. has elected and does hereby elect t0 redeem, on the first day of September, A, D. 1906, and at its of- fice, No. 126 Stockton street. in the city and county_of San . Francisco, State of California, United States of America, ALL outsan and unredeemed BONDS of its SECOND MORTGAGE bend issue, Xhich original second mortgage bond, is- sue . consisted - of five thousand ¢ » bonds of sald corporation of the demom- ination of one thousand ($1000.00) dollars each, umiform in form and date, and numbered from ome (1) to five thousand (5000) inclusive and consecutively, and payable at the office of the corporation, in San neisco, thirty (30) years after date, but redeemable at the pleasure of the corporation on or at any time _after the first day of September. A. D. 1908— all of which bonds bear interest at the rate of four (4) per cent per annum, payable quarterly at the e of the corporation in San Francisco, and all of which bonds are dated and bear date on the second day of May. A. D. 1887, and of which said original second mortgage bond issue there are now outstanding and unredeemed four thousand nine hundred: bonds of the ag- and ninety-one (4991) gregate par value of four million - nine hundred ~ and = ninety-ome thousand (34,991,000.00) dollars. And notice is further hereby given that, in accordance with the terms of said bonds and _the mortgage securing the same, dated May second. A. D. 1387, INTER- EST on said four thousand nine hundred and ninéty-ome (4991) outstanding and unredeemed bonds, and on each and - all thereof. WILL CEASE on and after said September first. A. D. 1906. y_order of the Board of Directors of the Spring Valley Water Works. Dated San Francisco, California, March th. 1906 > SPRING VALLEY WATER WORKS, rate Seal) SEAL.] By CHAS. WEBB HOWARD; President. and by PELHAM W. AMES, Secretary. OFFICE OF THE Northern California Pover Company 1100 GOUGH STREET MAY 25, 1906. Dividend Number 27, of five cents per share on the issued capital stock of the -Northern California. Power Company has been declared this day. payabl: omsand after May 31st, 1906, in coin at the office of the Corpora- tion, 1100 Gough street; transfer books will remain closed from May 26th at 4 o'clock p: m. to May 31st at 9:00 o'clock a. m. WA HALEY ‘The Smith Premier Typewriter Company 1929 California Street San Francisco 878 Broadway, Oakland |lished in London and cabled to New | 100k after the interests of the Sharon | York that the Duchess of Marlborough estate. If the general plan that they |had transferred her policy to the North | are now discussing is carried out the RECEIVES HEARTY RESPONSE She will probably die. The young man has been a member of the Sa Typewriters in Stock Discharged. Graham Brings Good Sum From East e . Sove SO S ottiar N:;‘;;iuorsmh\fze”ni.:' Spectal Dispatch to. The Call | British and Mercantile Insurance Com-| 13 pajace Hotel will not be restored for Relief and Promises to g higher authorities of the army fpine-| _ 5 o g [Py e e AN e lo,not e | along its former linedand the world- | Build Handsomely. THE TEMPORARY. OFVICE 14 ferred him .10 ‘another part oi the| ~AMONROE. La., May 29.—At Tallu- that the policies of Lotd Wharneliffe| fmeq hostelry will undergo a change | E. R, Graham of Jennings & Gra- (45 country. Then the young woman’s lah, Madison Parish, La., aboat mid- |2nd those he Y Mave taarnerford, | of style and architecture that is likely | ham, of the Western Methodist Book | -—Q - mother commanded her to marry an- other man and threatened to turn:-her nut” of the house, it is said, because frequently overnment - e ok 203 <hé refused. Her attempt at suicide ot followed. thet the. st T kill the 3 ed and 1 er met ng a side of MARRY AMIDST CHURGH RUING tcher's shop.” Tt was m had an umnatural er told me the dealer| e sausage: | aps some the export ‘tagger e and| American side for “home - § = | Wedding Ceremony Held W TO! May 9 —Representa- | vork oy miro-| - Over Ashes of Sacred calling wupon the .pe - patible with: the | Edifice. nd to the House . Ne and .l,.n*a'~ l‘r rnfi::u\ Amidst the ruins of what was once onnection with their ti-Ithe. First Christian Church at Twelfth the weat trust,’ the stock and Mission streets, two devoted lovers. stood sterday and received the nup- tial ‘rites. - On the site of the altar where so many had knelt before them land heard the words of the minister {making them man and wife these two | were united with only the gray ashes of the incinerated edifice under their the meat packing-hous other p respondence ir e same Representative arolina will introduce on Minerity Leader Wi night last night, occurred ope of the boldest lynchings in the history of| lynch law. R.T. Rogers, a white man, | once convicted of the murder of Jesse {Brown, but whom the courts declared | |free last. week, because of former jeopardy, was taken from jail by a| mob and hanged to a telegraph pole. - It is said that the mob went from | Monroe on a special train over the| Vicksburg, Shreveport sand Pacific Railroad and numbered twenty-five men, that the men forced the jail, | seized the prisoner, accomplished their | work before their presence was known | or any alarm could be given and yle- | |parted as quietly and quickly as they (came. There was no excitement and /no other lawlessness was committed. |A rope was placed around Rogers' k and he was dragged from the jail | |through a hole made in the rear wall| and. hanged -within .a half mile of the | tcourt house. Few people knew that lanything unusual had happened. | From investigation it is learned that the train was made up in Monroe, but {that the mob was organized here and {composed of Monroe. people.is denied. | The supposition is that the men were | picked up at stations along the.road in |this and Richland Parishes, where the | |murdered man had relatives and friends and was well known. . An in- yvestigation by the Coroner is now on. | The murder with which Rogers was |charged occur CORPORATION TO €ONSTRUCT | MANY HOMES IN MONTEREY | feet. ted on the night of Feb- It was Van Arsdale Allen and Miss|ruary 19, 1904. : Wilma Pape, well known in the Mis-| sion, wqere they have lived for years, Town Provides Comcern With Bullding | who sought this novel setting for their Lots and Bonus of Several Thousand Dollars. MONTERE Y, M A company is| city for the building small homes for for sale to fam coming to Monterey A bonus of al thou- and dollar§ and twenty building lots been placed in a pool to give the a good start. The homes will old on the installment plan. It is proposed to have a number of the cot- completed in time to be used this | of sever il b CANAL ZONE SAFE. Stevens Thinks It Will Not be Affected | by Disorders. WASHINGTON, May 2 p ‘Although have little time 16 Took into politi- al conditions in Panama, I do not k there is danger of any serious; revolution on the Isthmus of Panama,” | Chief ngineer Stevens of the Isth- mian Canal Commission said today. “The Panamia Railway w never af- fected serjously by reyolutionists on the isthmus, and even if there were to be an insurrection I do not think the canal zone would be involved in the disorder. _ Any _encounters -would{ doubtiess be without the zone.” Stevens, since his arrival imr Wash- ington, has been in conference with the members of the- commission and | appeared before the House committee on appropriations. Stevens urged the | desirability of the lock type and made | it plain that the commission_ shemld | know at once what type was to be con- | day, including Lady MacDonnell, structed. 3 4 half-of the Countess of Aberd: |around. |place and -watched with interest ‘the| wedding ceremony. Her love for the sacred edifice where she had wor- shipped nearly all her days was so strong in the pretty bride that even when the structure. lay in dust she chose its site as the place for her mar- riage. The Rev. Frank S. Ford, pastor of the church on Fourteenth street] per- formed thé ceremony. There was a| merry party of friends and relatives in attendance. The bright. afternoon sunshine,the flowers carried by many | of the guests and the happy smiles of | all the party mocked the sombre ruins; A crowd of curious specta- tors gathered in the streets about the :‘_Premony with such. an unusual set- ing. Mr. Alien and his bride have both been connected with the relief work | carried on at the Mission station. Among - the guests at - the ceremony | were Lieutenants F. E. Murphy and | R. V. Venable, U. 8. A., who are also | on duty at the station, the former act- | ing as best man and Mrs. A. P. Ajlen | attending the bride. ! A dinner was served after the cere- mony at the home of Mrs. A. P. Allen on Lisbon street. . S0, PARIS, May 29.—Ever; 'y detail of the | | legal fornralities of the Castellahe case was completed today. to appoint the day for the hearin :in(-h probably will be within a few 2ys. 2 DUBLIN, May 29.—Michael Davitt's condition tonight is unchanged’ There were many callers at the hospital to- ., on be- leen.’ <. - \One Miner Is Beheaded | and crushed, to death. though the engi- T MEX KILLED ~ INMINE SHAFT .and the chef to Death TONOPAH, May 29.—Vester Morten- son and-Tony rioftstedt were kilied and C. Mayer injured this morning by an accident . in -the - Tonopah - Extension mine. As eight men coming off a shift were in a cage ascending ‘the shaft Mortenson leaned out. His shoulder struck a timber, forcing Hoffstedt, who was opposite him, off the cage. Mor- | tenson caught the timber and hung on till the cage passed, when ‘he dropped to the first levél. His head was cut off and his body badly mangled. Hoifstedt was caught between the cage and shaft rushed: neer stopped the cage as soon as possi- ble. It was necessary to cut away five =ets Of timbers to release. the body. It is not known whe: formerly, resided. ORK, ed re.the men kill e sum o '..b‘r‘pg LR 29.—Th by b NEW by Mayer suffered a dislocated shoulder, | iR M. P, for friends, have .been trans- ferred. NEW . YORK, May 29.—Presiden! Morton of the Equitable Life Assur. ance Society ‘announced tod: that, owing to an injunction against .the| mutualization of the society, obtained by Franklin B. Lord, the board of di- rectors of the Equitable cannot take formal -action in approval of its| amendéd charter at their meeting on| Thursday next. Morton. said, how- ever, that the amended charter will be submitted to them for informal ‘con- sideration with the request that they authorize the calling of a meeting of stockholders for some day near the middle of June to dct formally upon the amended charter provided in:the meantime the injunction is dissolved or modified. — YMNKEE WORSTS FOUR MENCANS Kills One and Wounds - Threeof Quartet That - Attacks Him. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SAN BERNARDINO. May 29.—One man was killed and three wounded, one fatally, | in a desperate fight at Afton this morning between Foreman Willlams of the Salt Lake Railroad, in_charge of g section gang there, | and four cholos, who had just arrived from | Los Angeles. The three Mexicans were sent out from | Los Angeles on.train No. 2 last night, Wil- llams- was attacked at 5:30 o'ciock (iis morning by- the taree men, who used | knives and stones in.an effort to kill him. | Battling for his 1ie; Williams finally drew | a revolver 'and ‘began shooting. When the smoke ¢lear away it was found that one of .the Mexicans was dead, Killed outright, another fatally injured and the other two hadly wounded. o Williams ‘was injured about the head and shoulders, but it is not thought that the wounds will prove of a serious nature. — e BOY OF FIVE IS CRUSHED TO DEATH UNDER WAGON | ‘Little Fellow Falls Beneath Wheels of Vehicle Loaded With “ Gravel. MONTEREY, May 29.—Bmmett D. ‘Weymouth, the 5-year-old son of B. L. ‘Weymouth, was crushed to death today beneath a gravel wagon. The lad was riding on the .wagon Wwhen the wheel struck a,stump. throwing him off. The zvliel passed over his head, crush- his and causing instant death, At the inquest a verdict of accidental death was rétul g = s o be unwelcomed in the affections ourt and the gaiety that there. Financial interest is to take prece- dence over sentiment, and the: new Palace Hotel is to be structure, covering possibly only half the block and towering high into the air, maybe twice the height of the old structure, which was but seven sto- ries. The remainder of the land, it is said, is to’ be devoted to a business “structure. The Sharon estate people are anx- Jdous to rebuild along lines that will produce the greatest amount of reve- nue. Many propositions confront them. What to do with the Grand Hotel site is a subject engrossing their intention. --One suggestion that has .been made is that the new Palace be | tiring the following principal placed on that corner. ‘What the definite plans. will be ‘will not .be known for some time, how- ever. The people of wealth who con- trol the Sharon estate have come from afar.tp investigate the situation, so important do they regard the steps that are now to be decided upon. The visitors are halding conferences The only form of food . made .a narrower | | Concern, Cincinnati and Chicago, sustained losses, and others Methodist B urgent relief. of | Bishop . McDowell of Chicago, ‘gives promise of*large propeortions. | Mr. Graham expresses the greatest confidence in the future of San Fran- determination to -erect a handsome | structure upon the site .recently pur- chased on City Hall avenue and Mc- | [Allister street” for the Methodist Book | Concern buildin ' | |t BELGRADE, May 29.—King Peter oday signed a-decree which will ap- pear in tomorrow’s official gazette, re- regi- cides: Colonel Dumian, Colonel Popo- vics, Colonel Alexandér Maschin, Lieu- tenant-Colonel Peter Mischies.” Lieu- The fund is the result of a call by and| has | housands of people held for the com- arrived from the East and has brought | modious caravansary; with its great |with him -$5000, which is part of an centered | emergency fund. for pastors who have the piscopal’ -body = needing | Newman & Levinson, ine. Is Situated at | | eisco, evidence of which is seen in his : 1 1707 OCTAVIA STREET NEAR BUSH. ARRIVED OUR STANDARD REMEDY : CURE FOR tenant-Colonel Nuka Lazarevics and | Major Lubomir. Kostics. } | e 1 | with Celgnel J..C. Kirkpatrick, the | | general manager, and with other di- | rectors of the estate, W. F. Herrin and | Judge J: P.-Allen, & from wheat that is- all. nutri- ment is the soda cracker, and which this is ~ Uneeda ‘ The [only] soda The |onty The |only ‘ yet—the only soda cracker of Biscuit THe |only | soda cracker good NATIONAL tm:vg: <ot . RHEUMATISM At Temperary Office H. PLAGEMANN & CO., ‘Wholesale Cigar Dealer 837 FILLMORE ST. FIORD'ITALIA Open Again for Business 434 BROADWA. ETWEEN KEARNY ND ‘MONTGOMERY STS. . " .A. DELMONTE CO. UNION IRON WORKS ' POTRERC Residence 1460 PAGE STREET, -Near Masenic Avenue. Moore & Scoft ‘Iron. Warks w

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