Newspaper Page Text
SAN JOSE. May 21. — The annual bac calaureate services of the University of the Pacific were held in the chapel this morning. There were elaborate floral decorations and a large attendance of students and their friends. President Eli McClish delivered the baccalaureate sermon. > rJnJrmtty of Pacific Service*. BOSTON. May 21.— 1t develops 'that 150 fake rubber' plantation companies have been operating throughout the country }n the last two or | three years. All are of the same general^ character and, many are organized in the; face of such con clusive exposures as given by the United States consular report in which, \u25a0 under Government sanction, it .was^declared that rubber culture by planting has never succeeded and j probably ' never \u25a0 would. : The facts gathered prove : that- over $6,000,000 of American money ; has been paid into speculative plantation com panies,. Many of "them : have ; gone out of existence, others are now 1 In the hands of receivers and still others are reor ganizing to get more money" out of the community. ;"'... It is - understood that : a general investi gation of all these > concerns) has been started by the United . States authorities and some action against them soon " is likely;. '" - \u25a0-\u25a0-.- '-._; ; " .- : ; ~ •. / \u25a0 Scores of Fake Plantations Said to Have Looted People. Specta.l Dispatch to The Call. COXSTANTINOPLE. May 21.—Rou m&nla insists upon reparation for the act of the Va.lei.of Tanasia ta arrest ing several Roumanian school inspec-> tor* In spite of the privileges conferred upon them by the Porte.. The Rouman ian . Government declares that unless the demand for reparation is complied •with relations with Turkey will be broken oft Objects to the Arrest of School Iniipee tors and Demand* Reparation From the Porte. .*':' ROUMAXIA SEXDS ULTIMATU3I ) TO TURKISH GOVERSME.VT GOVERNMENT AETEIt RUBBER COMPANIES TACOMA. May 21. — Attorney General .* tvhieon has notified British Consul LrfXidlar? at Portland that his office can not \\ ;rfere with the six-year sen ti froJ i is*n<3 upon William Smith, now Jr. . Walla Walla penitentiary for i/urgtary. Smith recently addressed a lonr; letter to Laidlaw. claiming inno cence and claiming that the Judge was intoxicated during his trial. Laid law was informed .that Smith undoubt edly had a fair trial. E*itac Consul cf Portland Falls to Se -tire Release of a Prisoner In Wa«hincrtou. • XiIST .SERVE HIS TIME SAYS STATE'S ATTORNEY The mob attacked the building and soon every window and fixture in the place was shattered and demolished. While the disturbance was at its height three negroes, who had followed Tinsley into the saloon, dragged Bernstein" into, the basement, and, armed with clubsr stood ready to defend him. In the mean time two patrol wagons and an ambu lance filled with policemen were hurried to the scene. It was only after a desper ate fight, in which several of the rioters were badly . bruised by the policemen's clubs, that the mob was forced back from the saloon, shouting for Bernstein. . The police told them that Bernstein had been killed and "to' make good the re mark the bartender, ' who was uncon scious, was placed on a stretcher, a cover thrown over his face, and brought 1 to -.the door of the saloon. This had a quieting; effect on the mob and it soon dispersed. Late to-night Charles Poske was . shot in the shoulder by a' colored. man during a disturbance at . Twenty-third street and Stewart* avenue. Poske is watchman in a coal yard. ' \.^ The trouble started when James Gray accused Bernstein and a white companion of being trouble-makers. Since the team sters' strike Gray has been employed by a coal company as a driver. The merits of the strike and the shooting of young Carlson were up for discussion, .\nsry words soon led to blows and in tho fight that followed Gray drew a knife and at tacked the men. Bernstein, who Is a bartender, drew a revolver and fired four phots. Two of the bullets took effect In Gray's body. He fell unconscious and died while, .being removed to a hospital. As Bernstein and his companion were leaving the scene two coioree men seized the bartender and a scuffle for possession of the revolver began. Special Policeman Tlnsley, colored; came runnmg up. See- Ing the colored policeman approaching Bernstein, swung- the- revolver toward him and, according to Trnsley, discharged the weapon twice.- Tinsley returned the fir.*, shjooting four, bullets Into Bernstein's body/ 1 Bernstein fell unconscious and a crowd that had gathered made toward Tlnsley and the wounded man. With the assistance of another, negro Tinsley pick ed Bernstein up and ran into a nearby saloon. Tlnsley stood in the doorway with drawn revolver. The crowd, which was composed of negroes, was crying for vengeance for the killing of Gray and Tinsley, seeing that unassisted he would not be able to keep it back, shut "and barred the door. , In a riot that broke out in this district to-night between the whites ajid the blacks James Gray, colored, was killed, Harry Bernstein was mortally wounded and a building in which Bernstein, a white man suffering from four bullet wounds, was being held a. captive, was stoned and partially wrecked by a mob of 1000 . persons. CHICAGO. May 21.— Chicago Is threat ened with a race' war of serious propor tions. Embittered by the shooting of Enoch Carlson, an eight-year-old boy, last week by two negroes, the resi dents In the vicinity o£ Twenty-ninth and Dearborn streets have armed them stsives and clashes between white and ccioied men have become so tnfqupnt since the Carlson murder that it nas be^n found necessary to detail stores of police men ia the district to preserve peace. £yen this precaution has bee:i unsuccess ful in beeping the opposing factions apart. STRHCE LEADS TO A RACE WAR. special Dispatch to The Call. California!! Said to Be Slated < for Presidency of Wa bashLine. ; SAN JOSE, May 21.— A fire in China town early this morning destroyed a half dozen • buildings and caused a loss of $50,000. All- the buildings were owned by the Heinlen estate of this city. ,-The mer chandise ptores of the " Sing Kee 'and Quong Lung companies, a crug store con ducted by Lee Chang, two lodging-houses, the Baptist Mission,, the Chinatown, jail and several pother [ small business places were destroyed. .', About a year ago a small nitro glycer ine bomb was exploded in the block burned in an attempt to kill one of the lodging-house keepers and the fire is be lieved to have been the -work of ' his enemies.'-." 1 : \ ST. PETERSBURG. May 2L— The desir ability of securing, the revocation of the Imposition by Russia of the maximum duty on American imports, levied in re taliation for the imposition of a, counter vailing duty by the United States upon, Russian sugars, which Embassador Mey er is trying to adjust, is assuming addi tional importance owing to the fact that the new Russo-German tariff, which goes into effect at the end of the year, will form the basis for a **most favored: na tion" clause. ,That treaty raises the duties on ma chinery and other articles in which American exporters to Russia are espe cially interested and the new general. or maximum, tariff, with corresponding increases, goes into effect simultaneously. Consequently unless the Russo- American tariff dispute be adjusted American Im ports are destined to bear still further burdens. If the dispute be adjusted the United States will get the benefit under the "favored nation" clause, not only of the reduction accorded to Germany, but also under the new commercial treaty about to be negotiated. with France. • The Russian Government seems to be sincerely anxious to again place the Unit ed States on the most favored nation ba sis; but naturally would like to see the old status quo restored. SACRAMENTO, May 21.— 1t is cur rently stated in railroad circles In this city that B. A. Worthington. who recently resigned as . head^ of the Harriman lines in Oregon, will succeed J. Ramsey Jr. as president of the Wabash line of the Gould system and his headquarters will be either, at Pittsburgh, Pa., or St. Louis. 'Mo. The Wabash system embraces more than 3000 miles between Pittsburg and St. Louis and is one of the most important lines of the . Gould system. The position is understood to pay $10,000 a year salary. CAPTURED SPANISH CRUISER " NOW FINE RECEIVING SHIP MAX WHO TIED HANDKERCHIEF FOR CZOL.GOSZ IN TROUBLE TACOMA CHI LDREX^ GUESTS OF TIIK SIAYOn AT CIRCUS TURKS A?n> MACEDONIANS TS SANGtItVARY BATTLE PORTSMOUTH/ N. H., May 21. — The cruiser vßeln;iv Reln;i Mercedes, captured .at Santla'go^ during the war with Spain, sailed to' day " f or . Newport; R. L,'. after having, been remodeled as a receiving ship.. The cruiser has been undergoing repairs for : nearly j five years : and is said to be one' of tho best equipped receiving ships in "the navy. Relim Mercede* £ Takes Her Place. In American- Navy After Years of \u25a0 V .Work- on Her. " > ' Take Advantage of >tne Executive's Offer. Boys nod Girta Under. Fifteen Quickly TACOMA, May 21. — One hundred and six boys and girls under fifteen years of ase' wero taken to a circus yester day' by Mayor 'Wright- as the guests of himself and -his five children." The [Mayor; announced first that he would take the first fifty boys and girls to ap ply. Thepe. came so quickly that he In creased the number to one hundred." Violate* lIIm Parole After Having Been • Convicted of - Petty Larceny in Illinois. ST. LOUIS, May 21. — Edward Saf tig, who gained notoriety after the assassi nation^, of President McKinley because of his' assertion that' he r had tied the handkerchief around th# pistol hand of Czqlgosz. will be taken -to the/State penitentiary at Joilet, 111., to-morrow, where he \u25a0Is wanted for ".. violating parole. ' He" was cbiivicted of --having committed petty larceny. - Fifty Of the Sultan* .Men and Eleven Insurgent* Said to Have Been Killed. . ATHENS. May. 2l. — An encounter be tween Graeeo-Macedonian hxmdUs an< * a strong: Turkish detachment lis re ported to have occurred in the district of Langadina. in Macedonia. Eleven insurgents and fifty Turks are reported to have been killed. WORTHINGTON MAY TAKE RAMSEY'S PLACE FIRE DESTROYS SIX BUILDINGS Russia Anxious to Restore "Most Favored Nation" Relations. "The employers propose to do business and will continue to invoke every legal avenue for the protection of their men and property. That the employers are right in the attitude they have assumed in the controversy was demonstrated by the fact that every term and condition they insisted upon was agreed to by Shea and his committee^ Notwithstand ing this, however. ' "«i now .insists that the express compan at shall be boycotted by as in order to bring about a settle ment of the strike." . \u25a0\u25a0 • The first spread of the strike is expect ed to come to-morrow morning, when the Lumbermen's Association, an .. organiza tion employing J<oo teamsters, will issue an order to its men to make deliveries to all .business houses regardless of v.-heth er they are involved in the strike or not. In anticipation of such an order the teamsters met this afternoon and voted to go on. strike should any teamsters be discharged for refusing to obey. Levy\Mayer, chief counsel for the Em ployers' Association, gave out a state ment tb-night m,which he said: Nothing can prevent a general indus trial upheaval throughout the city unless something unforeseen occurs to bring about a settlement of the teamsters* Ktrikei The express companies udhere to their determination not to give employ ment to any of their former employes, and the rirm> involved -in the difficulty declared to-night that they would stand by the express companies. President Shea said to-night that the union would never call off the Btrikc until the express com panies came ta terms. CHICAGO. May 21. — "Should there be an extension of the attrike am! Ihr riot- Ing- of trro vrcek* aero be rrnumed. troops vrlil be celled upon to maintain order.*' This was the positive assertion made to-night by Mayor Dunne. Sheriff Barrett said to-night that he would continue swearing in deputies to morrow, and would make special efforts to Increase the number. "The Mayor and I are determined." he said, '•that the peace of the city shall be maintained." WOULD END TARIFF WAR WITH AMERICA According to a member o». the class young Rockefeller while in Cannes some time a?oa ?o was under the care cf a spe o«;iii. '.. who told him that unless he BfWteii great improvement this summer -lit- "...ruild have to return to Europe in .\s lor young Rockefelier"s hoaith. it was s-aid to-day that his real ailment had proved to be nervous dysptp.sia, of a type similar to that which aifected his father for years. The trouble is at tributed In large part to the cars and worry growing out of the great respon sibi«t:.- that had developed upon the young ma-j since his father transferred to him actual otScia! contro. of his share in the Standard Oil Company and the various banking and railroad corpora lions affiliated with the great kerosene monopoly. Although outwardly the Rockefellers, father and son, have appeared to be much a!i«te in a certain placidity of tem pormeiH, it is said by those who know the son that he is in reality of a nervous disposition. Young Rockefeller has devoted himself with every stow of enthusiasm to his Bible class, and has withi i the last few months gone publicly on record as say ing some sharp things about modern business men. He has preached absolute poverty. He has said thst a corporation that did not do pood tP others as well as to itself would ultimately fail. All of Ida lal.'s to his class have bi.en marked by earnestness. RorkoWlcr Jr.. according to this mem ber of tho Bible c:a*s, had made it cicar to Rockefeller Sr. that he did not ap prove of all of the Standard Oil's raod:s of dotes business, but regarded them as affording at the Jeast an exct:se for the dry which had been raised against '*iaint ed money." It nui iurtlirr said, and sold sprcia cally, by a nsrciUer of Ihe Xible rlas* at the olomc of the nicotine o/ torn body (o-ilaj. thai be uniiorr.imxJ that ?oung n<».k«;v;;rr ttnd Ueld itcrera! h<-:;trd istrrvlcriK with lilt fsthrr on the general wubjret of Mamlard Oil nclfaotfa. NEW YORK. May 21.— John D. Rock efeller Jr., according to statements made by members of his Bible class to day, intends to follow his action of re signing the leadership of the class by withiirawing from all official connec tion with the Standard O?l Company. Thjs detpriKinat'on. it was said, is due only in part, if at all, to ill health, but is largely the result of the great pub lic outcry against "tainted money," 1 re cently raised !>y a number of Congrc- ETGtional clergymen in Now England and taken up by clergymen of other denominations and by the people at larf. b'pecia.l Dispatch to The Call. Sp«Ci&! Dispatch to The Call der in the" Event of a Resumption of Rioting Troops Will Be Called to the City to Maintain ' Or- Younger 3ian Said to Have Decided to Retire From His Connection With the Big Kerosene Monopoly General Ybarda. the Venezuelan Min ister of Foreign Relations, declared that not even if tho army and navy of the United States -came to, the shores of Venezuela would the Government consent to arbitrate the' case until it had been decided, in the courts. If the concession of the., asphalt company has been - an nulled as reported. \u25a0 the Venezuelan: Gov ernment will be requested to arbitrate the question of the rights of the company. In Vofflcial circles- i£ is stated that Venezuela is now deprived of the excuse hitherto urged against arbitration. The New .York and Bermudez Company has convinced Mr. ' Roosevelt and Secre tary Taft that it has suffered great wrong at - the hands of Venezuela, . that] the receivership , and Ithe seizure of the' property ordered several months ago by the Venezuelan courts were unjust. and that Castro exercises j such an influence upon the courts that.no equity has been possible for them in" the republic. Acting upon this conviction, the State Depart ment made, through Minister Bowen at Caracas a request, which was .nearly an ultimatum, that Venezuela; agree to sub mit to' arbitration* the- controversy con cerning the asphalt company. The Venezuelan Government responded that this could not be done, that the case was stilJ pending in the courts of Venezuela. '\u25a0 CARACAS, Veneauela, ' May 21.— The New 1 York and Bermudez . Asphalt pany will appeal; to the rull court', of the second '^instance' 'from \u25a0 the decision ren^ dered yesterday declaring. void the Hamf ilton concession and ordering the com; party to: paydamages'to Venezuela. .It is held \u25a0 that the company, '. under the expor tation clause of the. -"contract, is liable for the . natural products exported. It was through the ' Hamiltcn concession that the New York and Bermudez Com pany obtained .the asphalt property^ ' WASHINGTON, May 121.1 21.— By the re ported .decision against the . Americans, the controversy between ' the United States: and -Venezuela may be brought to a critical stage: The difepatch . from Caracas is somewhat' confusing to the officials here, as there are in reality two suits ..-pending: -V SHARP INTERVIEWS OX "TAINTED" MONEY MAYOR GIVES A -FINAL WAENMG TO LEADERS SANTA ROSA, May 21.— Windsor, a "small town on the California Northwest ern Railroad ten miles' north of this city, , was almost completely destroyed by fire to-day. 5 Flames broke out in Reimann's $10,000 hotel . at ; 12:45 / o'clock "and the en tire building was burned. The flames spread -rapidly-^to - adjoining - buildings, and_befdre,they were extinguished caused a loss of fully $40,000. The sufferers by the tire and their losses are: : «Packwood & Lindsey, barber.-sh op, loss $750;; M<> Clelland brick building, the upper floor of which was j used as a Masonic hall, loss $3000; Hrarik Pool; grocer,' loss $6000; Odd Fellows' Hall, loss $3500. - The Foresters' Hall was j saved by Ar thur. Cochrani' of Healdsburg. ; He climbed a flagpole with a hose' thus gaining a positionVwherehe could keep a stream of water playing on the building. '• : \u25a0 Members"..: of the ;Santa r 'Rosa;Fire De partment,, with 'a" steam fire' engine and hose truck,' were sent '.to r Windsor. They rendered valuable aid. The cause of the tire is unknown." I > :^']i;\ r l LONDON, May 21.— Arbitration 'is to settle a strike at Belfast, Ireland, be tween an American contracting firm and its employes. Eleven hundred men em ployed by J. G. White & Co. of New York and London and engaged in the construc tion of the electric street railway system of the Belfast corporation recently walk ed out because of dissatisfaction wtlh their wages. They had been getting eleven cents per hour. The contract amounts to $2,675,000 and the work must be completed by September 1 under heavy penalty. Tho same firm has been paying from fourteen to sixteen cents an hour in Lon don for a similar sort of labor. The con tract made with the corporation of Bel fast expressly states the minimum rate payable. A representative of the con tracting ftrrri says that for the first time in Great Britain they were able to secure a strike clause In the orlgriial contract: allowed in view of the requirement for rapid construction. : ' Laboring men here are greatly sur prised at the employes' agreement to go back, under the old terms, pending the outcome of the arbitration proceedings, which are to be conducted solely by rep resentatives of the . men and the con tracting firm. "What connection do you charge that Secretary Loeb had with what you say was a conspiracy, to get possession of the manuscripts of your book and of the Platt letters?" she was asked. "In answer to that I will simply say that J. Martin Miller, a poorly-fed, , in conspicuous correspondent for a country newspaper, * was made a secret service agent and acted under instructions from higher authority in the part he played In the conspiracy. I never talked with Mil ler about my private affairs and he could not possibly have had any personal in terest in them. Someone else must have talked with him about them and in his efforts to get my manusenpr and J letters he must have acted under instructions from some one in authority. Whorwaa that some one? When the case comes to trial I shall- be glad to tell the -whole story." . „ . . .. - '\u25a0 . \u25a0 "When Senator Platt was in New York after our engagement ho used to write and wire to me in his autocratic way to come to New York to spend Sunday with him, he being too old' and decrepit to make the journey to see me. On numer ous occasions Wynrfe and his friends used to order me to New York to secure for them some favor from Platt. I \u25a0 recall that once I was ordered there by J. J. Howley. Wynne's chief clerk, to ask Senator Platt to back Wynne for Post master General Payne's place in the Cab inet.. Wynne was resolved that Payne should go, and he: was hot after his job. In time these attempts to use mo to fur ther the political inteiest3 of Wynne and his gang grew very tiresome, especially' since I was always under the espionage of secret service men from the' depart ment. "In April, 1903. I was sent to New York to intercede with Senator Platt in behalf of Wynnes chief clerk. On my arrival there I found. a state of affairs so dis gusting that 1 balked right then and there. When Platt came to see me 1 told him I was done with him and the whole disgusting . business, and r I told ; him ' why. He .at once flew into a rage and demand ed to know what 1_ proposed to do about it. I told him I "had as much • temper and determination as he had, and masked him what lie supposed wou.'u happen if we should clash. , ."'Why, you would be relegated to the rear very quickly,' said he. SENATOR ORDERED FROM ROOM. "I talked with him a few moments, and then opened the door and ordered him to leave the room. He was very angry -and very surprised at my action, but 'went.'* SCMMOJfED TO NEW YOKK. • - Special Dispatch to Th« Call. .• \u25a0 '. -a*. '' \u25a0 : M - \u25a0 \u25a0 OMAHA, Nebr.. May 2L— "Were you ever in love witn Senator Platt?" Mac C. Wood,' who in the : petition in her damage suit against them charges William L,. I.#oeb Jr., secretary to Presi dent Roosevelt: Robert J. Wynne, Consul General to" London, and J. Martin Miller, Consul at Aix-la-Chaptlle, with, having obtained from her by unfair means the manuscript of a book she proposed to publish under the; title, ,".L.ove betters of a B6ss," and certain love Ittters written to her' by Senator Thomas, C. Platt; of Nf w YorK, thought a moment before an swering this Question. "When 1 first met Senator Platt," she finally said, "a'hd h« began paying me h.s extravagant attentions, I naturally (nough was pleased and flattered. He was known to me simply, as a big politi elaJn and a projn'nen't public man. and I think few giria of my agre and occupying a humble newspaper position would not have been pleased and flattered at the at tentions of a man of "his- eminence \u25a0in public life. - . "That I respected and tsteemed him must be true, for I became engaged to him, and I should scarcely have dono that if I had not respected and esteemed hiVu. When' I discovered that he was leading a double life; when I discovered that he was destitute of honor; when 1 discovered that when he was engaged to me he was maintaining, an establishment for and payhig attentions to another woman, and when, .finally, my eyes were opened and' l saw what sort of a man ho was, I quickly ceased to respect and esteem him, and- came to look upon him with contempt. Special Dispatch to The CalL. Special Dispatch to The Call. Special Cable to The Call and New York Her ald. Copyright, 1905, by the New York Her- Md Publishing Company.: Desultory fighting continues to the islands south of Jolo. Major General Leonard Wood, who recently conducted a campaign against Moro outlaws, has ar rived in Manila. MANILA, May 2L— Colonel Wallace Taylor of the constabulary was severely wounded In an engagement with the Pula janes on ifay 17 at Magtaon, on the east coast of Samar. One private was killed and ten were wounded in th«s engagement. Many Pulajanes were killed. > -\u25a0-.' Aid has' been requested- Two \ com panies of the Twenty-first Itfantry will leave \u25a0 Catbalogan to relnf orc« the con stabulary. and 3[asons Are-Gutted : by Blaze of Unknown Origin Halls oorf r the Odd Fellows She Is Made the Dupe of Ambitious Men Seeking Favors From the "Boss" Electric Railway Employes Desire Increase in Salary From Eleven Cents an Hour Philippine Yorce Engages the Pulajanes in Island of Samar. Slaying Several American Government Will Now Seek to Have Matter Adjusted by Arbitration Rockefeller Sr. Is Told by Rockefeller Jr. That the Latter Disapproves of Standard Oil Methods Spread of- Chicago Strike Will Begin^To-Day With a Walkout, of .Teamsters Employed by Lumbermen ONE PRIVATE KILLED SOCIETIES ARE LOSERS WERE ONCE BETROTHED ALSa DEMANDS DAMAGES MEN RETURN TO WORK Flames x Destroy Hotel and Several flther -Buildings in Little Town of Windsor His Courts declare Void the Big Concession G ranted to the Asphalt Company Young Woman Tells of Her Falling Out with Sena tor Platt of New York Colonel Severely Wounded and iv Request Sent to 3lanila for lieinforcements American Finn Puts -Quick End to Strike Over Wages in Big Belfast Enterprise UN VERGE OF LABOR UPHEAVEL OIL BARON IN QUARREL WITH SON REVELATIONS BY MAE WOOD CASTRO DEALS A FINAL BLOW FIRE CAUSES $40,000 LOSS TO ARBITRATE WITH LABORERS NATIVES PRESS CONSTABULARY THE SAN/ FRANGI SCO CALL! MONDAY, MAY 22. 1005; HAVANA, May 21. — The i Medical Consress to'day discusEed ' favorably.' a - reeolution - sug- Kertlnß the creation of a branch ' of ; the • Health Department devoted wholly, to the extinction 1 or infection-carryins tasecta. ? PHILADELPHIA.' May - 21.— The , annual meeting > of , the Jewish Publication 1 Society ; was held \u25a0 here -. to-day, and i was addressed by Rabbi David Phniipsonifof: Cincinnati. * Rabbi rM." M. Eichter, of this', city j and! others. V Thei society decided >to \u25a0 co-operate : with :the Axaerican : His torical * Society. : in > the "- celebration next S fall -of the: two hundred >* and '-'fiftieth .anniversary ; . of the settlement" "of" Hebrew* ;ln " the \u25a0 "United .(States. " . . ' . TACOIIA, May '2l.— ln 'some mysteri ous manner the Alaska cable : was ; cut Thursday at a point oft , Shilshol c Bay. Communication with Alaska by? cable is .'stopped [until; the- cable ship Burn side can return, from Alaska, . find the break and repair it. Alaska Cable Is Cat. ; TACOMA. ; May a.— Tanana miners have been stirred | ut> by : the robaery of a. Jap anese Friday by . three masked men.'iwho secured StQOO . in - duat: . A The I robbers S e« eapedin aiboat secreted on a river bank.' The v Fairbanks' vigilance committee is . preparing 1 to arm ; a hundred 1^ of i its j mem bers and drive but suspicious charactera. 1 Three Masked -Men Steal • SlOOOWorth of Gold Diist. BANDITS OF; TAtf ANA EOB JAPANESE MINEE 2 ADVERTISEMEyrS. C fiats Wltss sometimes are aven« to Ufa insurance. Widows- «n<J orphan* never are*. Test too statement for yoursrlC Walter Koff Seely, Manager, San Francisco Branch, Pacific Mutual Ufa Insurance Co., Crocker Building. ' : t t i i : - ' '-"'\u25a0';\u25a0.'"\u25a0'/ -' - -.- . ;;' \u25a0 \u25a0;' : \u25a0"'\u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0.-.':_. .;'.' advertisements. . -.- . ' '"" ' . -. :. " -\u0084_ fy^CJI «t I Blbs bBB I \u25a0Bis I^K i H9 I nB^K (*\u25a0" " '"""••'"" n|BB IyUB I Brl nflfl 1 03 1 .^nffHSnttl^^ •;£ " Any typewriter looks pretty when new— "'•-» -\u25a0\u25a0 C*3k j^S^ wjxtk any typewriter will do good work for * little. . : <^ WsM -^d&r^ Hra \u25a0•'\u25a0/-- But true typewriter worth is fband only irter k| years of "test and service. : - , GJm — H^kß -''-\u25a0:: -' \u25a0 .' \u25a0' " .'\u25a0•• \u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0.- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' ' - *^ '-\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 v^&m^^^ I \u25a0.£ tf ; "'^% d[ f"%4T "% H USC it. There mUSt DC Please note change of address B I \u25a0"\u25a0';• \u25a0'- \" ' ".*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.: \u25a0\u25a0' * \u25a0 -- * "\u25a0•"'- •'\u25a0-"\u25a0 C? \u25a0 * - * ' ; * v -*\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 fIHSi s\j* QT T r nr*"C T? CT"DXTTTT \u25a0BIK9V '- \u25a0 ' - \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 . ' . '..-• ..-\u25a0-\u25a0. I ,c \u25a0 ..." -^^ - \u25a0 ' vfii£**ar*^r*'~ " - ' • \u25a0 » » k m . \r A JL Ed X% k? L J>> CV "\u25a0# !\u25a0 % ; .... - ..... . , »i«ir iiinnmiiiniiii - 1" - 'i -r| 1 1 - nrn-i mm- . . ' ' ' . • s.