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12 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEFTEMBER 14, 1898. KNIGHT ARRBRAIGNS POLICE METHODS Scores the [dentifyi Bot Dramatic Scen Manner of ng Mrs. Kin. e With Candy Girls in Courtroom and Prison. Thursday there will be a hearing which whether or not Cordelia taken to Delaware, there for her life in a community eports be true, has already de nd declared her gutl Little mar- if the blood be on her soul or it of this stain, she al the outcome of which rdly be other than conviction. Through sel she will make as hard a fight ning of the law can devise st being transferred to a distant nd hostile commonwealth. Extradition is it will be combated, and to-mor- rugele is to open. r ce the arrest of Mrs. Botkin, ed with double murder, the assump- at she is the malign wretch who n t committed the deed has been apparent in almost every act of official precedure, ¢ enough, some of the papers of have taken a similar view, and of setting forth dispassionately facts as they have been developed. or rmises as the detectives chose to e them currency, have steadily tried to he outlook for the prisoner, to be- yurs igence. no warrang for the de- Mrs. Botkin had been d. There are things explalned away, for they r and the hope of free- not follow that these Much has who has mit_this. of ‘the of some candy ng an s. Deane, of Dover, with ev symptom of arsenical A e candy showed in deadly quan- igati ablished that the been received through the the fatal package had been that it had August 4. > a note only signed ss of the po- fafled to estab- C.” with any e was also In er The pur- y at the tionery Haas has been confirm- found that the box was of a in this city Haa boxes have sold. box of can large voted to this purpose s not One girl thought she Te g that ticular box. T etails of th transaction w be called to her mind by a had apparently taken a Bt sale so common. Th from the stock of “pae e sale, the lay There can be no de- place to secure a candy-store, and that one in erchief would turn to a » one at either con- , and there tion that on other women city, and 4 number of went ‘sh Suspicion toward Mrs. Botkin becau with Dun- ning were ki n intimate. They be the race letters, every line . Yet he had a wife she a husband. At the & made long-distance writing to Mrs. Dun- aithful ~woman never lot had been cast with a and died not knowing Dun- hy. For this episode fn Mrs. e can be no palliation, would think of framing an is a woman of mature yéars, 5 years old. All her life she s to have been frivolous, with an in- clination toward a series of experlences such as soclety classes among improprie- tles, It would seem that a carousal has o her fdea of Joy. She appears to lack s and to be devoid of the instinots which make clear to ord perception the niceties of life. ain im- n shown to ver felt in her heart the f murder. That she is now in a s herself to thank. Had she vife and mother is supposed to been less open in the di play of her mode of life she would not have been singled out as a monster and an effort been made, not to find if she is guilty or innocent, but to make plain that be has nothing bee mpulse ce she is guilty. That this is the accepted clief of the uthorities must be acknow|- edged. In a measure, as intimated, they are b sted by’ the press. In this, much work has fallen to women 1 that they have cheerfully ask of giving a_member of n impetus toward_a felon’s ally recognized. Mrs. Bot- n ‘pculcuntfl‘l pests,” and blamed. 1In their analyses of ve been unfeeling and iilogical, r bitter. - public mind, aside from the nat- ural prejudice created by the exposures of the past of Mrs. Botkin, there is a single gircumstance which weighs against her. 'This is the purchase of arsenic. There was | no et about the purchase; she made a ation of the use to which she ex- d to 'put the drug, and is understood im that she can demonstrate that it ployed In the bleaching of a hat, importance can attach. to_the occasional hysterfa which is credited to Mrs. BotKin, with intent to damage. One of the pri\'lle%(‘s of femininity is hysterics. The value of eertain anonymous letters will depend upon the possibility of tracing the authorship to the prisoner. In this ;)Tu{’(‘.‘%s the word of Dunning will cut a igure, and the word of Dunning, the man who has acted In a way so despicable as to find not 2 single defender, is at a dis- count. These truths are cited to show there are two sldes to the question. One side has been overlooked. As to the tendency to exaggerate trifles, there needs only to be mentioned an arti- cle in the Chronicle of Monday, wherein was much ado about the finding of a string and seal such as are used to dec- orate Haas' boxes of candy. These art cles were found in a room once occupied by Mrs. Botkin, but in which she had not been for more than a month. Such a slrlng possesses no more significance than Wwould a burned match or the butt of a clgaratte. It is as common as a scrap of shrinks from | could | sibility that she may be a of circumsta ,» to exaggerate scrap of evidence tending to make d shadows about her, to h information pointed e ce of innocence. Two women »een murdered, a sacrifice was de- nd here was a convenient vic- altar. The animus of this may be left to the con- | pect AN MR MRS. BOTKIN TURNS ON HER TORMENTORS. paper. Hundreds like it are sold every | week, naturally finding_their -way ulti- | mately to the dust bin. Yet the Chronicle | wouid take this string and therewith hang | Mrs. Botkin. The necessity for this is not plain. That paper already had her gulity, condemned .and only awaiting the for- v of a judicial approval of its ver- It had her guilty because somebody. bought a 2-cent handkerchief, be- cause a pretty clerk thinks perhaps she | sold a box of candy; because in ma respects Mrs. Botkin has not been above | | reproach; because the prisoner, conined, | | harassed’and subject to the hounding of | gossipmongers does not maintain an as invariably sunny. And, after all, | the reported finding of the string was a fabrication, Nevertheless, the intricate story woven | by the police is one of thrilling interest. | If they can esiablish its verity in detali the chain will be compiete and strong in | every link. People do not seem to reflect upon the magnitude of this task, but, o | the contrary, to regard as accomplished.| | that which fs scarce begun. It remains | | to be proved that Mrs. Botkin bought the | had | candy or had knowledge of {t; that she ever saw the _andkerchief; that she | | wrote the superscription on’ the box or | sent the anonymous letters. In fact, | h\;r\d allegation remains still to be estab- shed. | Whatever the outcome, Mrs. Botkin has | passed under a cloud from which she m | never emerge. ~With pitiless exactit: | her character has been portrayed; the | cloak of respectability has been torn from | her, her secrets laid bare. To be an out- cast will be her punishment for evil asso- clations and flagrant disregard of sacred | canons, the rights and dignity of wife- hood. There is a wide différence between | being a wanton and belng able to plan | and carry out a horrible, motiveless mur- | der. Yet the conclusion seems to have been jumped to that because she was.one she did the other. | There is a Mrs, Edwards, who may | thank her lucky stars that she did not fall | into the hands of the police before they | had decided to place the crime upon Mrs, Botkin. Mrs. Edwards sustained associa- tions with Dunmnfi. She sold candy, she Wwrote letters, she knew all his family af- fairs. Her reputation, possibly, was not of | the best. Altogether, there Is 86 far as the public can judge, a’stronger circumstan- | tial case against Mrs. Edwards now than | against Mrs. Botkin. Yet the former even escapes suspicion. The story to be entire must begin back at the time the Botkins lived in passable accord and Dunning was a hard-working All this has man, happy in his family. been incldentally brought out. It is not erhaps, but in it is a theme for the vital, moralist. The Botkins became estranged: the Dunnings drifted apart: and b g:gév | merest accident Dunning and Mrs, Botkin became friends. Soon there were drinking bouts, days at the races or at wayside resorts, nights of carousal. Dunning went East to become a correspondent on the field of battle or brave the perils of the sca. Then a letter from Dunning broke had been sustained, e otne Timkacli the Shitn hasn cod yand e chain h te‘s‘ted rflolr soundr}xless, s e ccording to the detective all Mrs. Botkin bought poison J:ngg?uonu about a month later was raving over {he effects of arsenic. The last day of July they have her buying candy; August 3 the handkerchief; August 4 mailing the pack. age. Then followed in quick succession the arrest, the arrival here and_the dreary round of existence in prison. Now is the hearing, when rumor must assume ine solidity of truth or be dissipated. Throughout the days since her arrest Mrs. Botkin has deported herself with the utmost coolness. An effort has been made to turn this against her. Had she been er, | condemned in adv | tion she has been looked upon as nervous, tearful, that also would have been turned against her. The conduct of a person charged with murder is always to be construed as damning. It is for tie purpose of thus construing it that it is subjected to such close scrutiny. There is in the story of Mrs. Botkin an opportunity for preaching a Sermon, an opportunity already seized by one pulpit orator. In the tributes of the woman there is a study—a chance for the analyst hts in writing fine phrases about his own notions, usually erroneous. The simple truth is best, and requires. no adorning. The simple truth is that a woman accused of awful murder is about to be placed virtually on trial; that repre- sentatives of the law declare her guilty; that they intend, if possibl to Delaware, wh e has been all but Since her deten- the slayer of two estimable and inoffensive young women. There is nothing in the anc | evidence thus far made public to warrant this view. Perhaps the police are holding something in reserve. A life at stake. There has been one tragedy; there is vague promise of an- other. ~ Curiosity has taken the form of a clamor for justice, and is willing to be appeased by injustice. There are many to whom the contemplation of suffering | seems to be a pleasure, and who delight in the unfolding of any situation which blasts a reputation or crushes a hope. These will watch keenly the proceedin, in behalf of extradition. But there wil be others conscious that the law may have made a mistake and not ashamed to confess to sympathy for the woman in whose vislon, sleeping or waking, there must appear the grim outlines of the gal- lows. ese do not belleve in conviction without trial. They want the assassin punished, but recognize that first the as- sassin must be caught. . KNIGHT ATTACKS THE METHODS OF POLICE Objects to the Manner Adopted by Chief ' Lees to Connect Mrs. Botkin With the Purchase of Candy. The Botkin habeas corpus proceedings have been postponed by Judge Carroll Cook, this time until Monday morning of next week, and again upon the request of the prosecution. The case came up regularly yesterday morning, and It was evident from the mo- ment that Mrs. Botkin and the others of the defense entered the court room that there was something more in sight than the usual routine. It was not many mo- ments before Attorney George A. Knight injected into the proceedings an episode that almost attained the dramatic in its intensity. It was evident that Knight was angry, angry clear through, and Judge Cook had scarcely granted the. prosecu- tion’s request for a further continuance when, in a caustic arraignment of Chiet Lees for the police court methods he has pursued throughout the case, Knight made the reason for it known. It had been nrn.cucnlly&rurnnged be- tween prosecution and ‘ense ‘that the hearing due for yesterday morning should be again continued, and the defense had expected that the mere formality neces. sary would occupy but a few moments time. They were ucordlnrla' surprised when Chief Lees appeared and demanded that, though her presence was not naces- to take her | sary, Mrs. Botkin should be brought into court. After some argument Mr. Knight agreed to the plan, and with Attorneys McGowan and Wheeler went to the City Prison to get the prisoner. The secret of Chief Le desire for Mrs. Botkins’ pres- ence was soon apparent, as just outside Captain Seymour’'s cozy office sat Miss Heney and Miss Dettmer, the candy girls, who were there to attempt, for the third time, the identification of the pris- oner. Mrs. Mi. Botkin, accompanied by her sister, Dora Brown, and the three attor- scarcely left the prison door Knight discovered that they were closely followed by the two candy girls. Angry.to a white heat, he clutch- ed Mrs. Botkin's arm and quickly brought to face with the two startled Botkin,” said he, *“do you know these women?” “I do not,” replied the prisoner, “but I I)resumu they are the candy girls who followed me last time. Have you brought me another box of bonbons?”’ Knight was fairly good natured again, and with a laugh the party resumed its way to the court room, closely followed by the two persistent young women of the prosecution and by Captain Seymour. The chase was continued into the court room, where the two witnesses took seats within view of the prisoner. Upon discovering this Knight's anger went up again, and in consenting to the continuance of the case he took occa- sfon to grill the prosecution. fl?&idressing himself- to Judge Cook he A “Your Honor, I object to such a pro- ceeding on the rt of the police. It is reasonably well known that those young ladies are here this mornipg to identify the prisoner. Now, I c¢laim that suc identification is part of this case and should be done {n open court. Let those ladics step to the front right now. Mrs, Botkin is not afraid to confront them. She will take off her hat, her veil and anything eise these ladies may require to be taken off. Let them identify her open- ly. This secret business is not to my lik-~ ing. I request your Honor—" Here Mr. Hosmer felt called upon to interrupt and for a moment the voices of the two attorneys were merged into a harangue that even Clerk Tolle could not Interpret. It was only quieted by the cool tones of Judge Cook, who arose from his bench and said: ‘‘Be seated, gentlemen. Just a moment, Mr. Hosmer. 1 don’t see how this court at the present time has any business to take the testimony of these young ladies. We are not trying a question of fact. It is purely a matter of law before the court n;xd t‘lile point raised by Mr. Knight is out of order. ‘It has been ordered that the hearing of this petition in habeas corpus go over until next Monday. What is next, Mr. N Knight subsided with @ look of a . Knight subs wi a look of duty dtfi’l{. Mr. Hosmer unhooked his arm, which he had ready for more serious business, and the party filed out of court, followed as faithfully as before by the prosecution and its string of witnesses. Mrs. Botkin, aside from a natural irri- tation, the result of three weeks' close confinement in the City Prison, is in good mental andBphysical health. Her sisters— Miss Dora Brown and Mrs. N. C. McClure are with her every day. Yesterday Mr, Botkin came down from Stockton, and was with his wife from early in the fore- Doon until 3:30 p. m., when he took the train to return to his business. Mr. Bot- kin would not talk for publication fur: ther than to say his wife was well and Dot at all apprehensive regarding the out- il ik come of the case. He expressed deep in- dignation at the exaggerated statements regarding the findlng of a piece of a candy-box seal in the room at the Vic- toria Hotel which was formerly occupied by Mrs. Botkin. It is intimated that the candy girls have identifiad Mrs. Botkin as the purchaser of the hox of bonbons. The case against Mrs. Botkin will be called in Judge Joachimsen’s court this morning. By consent of all the parties at interest it will go over for one week. The public will soon know the evidence which Chief Lees has guarded so jeal- ously in the case. Governor Budd goes to Sacramento on State business this morning and will return on the late train to-night. He was notified yesterday by Chief Lees that all papers and affidavits in the extradition proceedings will be de- livered at his office in the Palace Hotel to-night. Copies will be given to the press at the same time. The inquiry will g0 on at 10 o’clock to-morrow morning in the Maple room, Palace Hotel. Chief Lees received the following tele- gram yvesterday: “GEORGETOWN, Del.,, Sept. 13.—Ex- perts positively faentify handwriting on paper inside candy box as Mrs. Botkin’s “WHITE. Attoruey General.” Specimens of Mrs. Botkin’s handwrit- ing were sent to the Delaware officlals, and the foregoing is the result of their Investigations. HE BELIEVES IN HER INNOCENCE Captain Taylor Has Xnown Mrs. Cordelia Botkin for Twenty- Five Years. Captain Charles Fletcher Taylor, the well-known capitalist and member of the Bohemian Club, is an old friend of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Botkin. He believes Mrs. Botkin is innocent of the crime charged against her. The captain has just re- turned to the city after an absence of sev- eral weeks, and he called to see the ac- cused woman early yesterday forenoon. Captain Taylor says: “I knew Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Botkin over twenty-five years ago in Joplin, Missourd, and have been extremely friendly with them and their respective families ever since. The Browns, Mrs. Botkin's family, always moved in the best society, and un- til the present time their name has never been tarnished by even a breath,of scan- dal. Mr. Botkin conducted a bank in Jop- lin, and I was also in the same business. We had many business dealings together and I can freely say that I always found him an honorable man in every sense, His wife and her sisters were respected by every family in their neighborhood. Years ago Mr. Botkin and his wife moved from Joplin, I think to Kansas City, and about the same time I came to California. Some time later I ain met the Botkins here and our families re- sumed the friendly intercourse which ex- isted back in Missouri. “During all these years I never heard one word against the unfortunate woman now under suspiclion of a_crime which awakens a thrill of horror whenever men- tioned. “I do not believe for an instant that she is gullty. She is a bright, well-educated woman, of generous impulses and sympa- thetic instincts, and I believe her version of her relations with Dunning. She is the kind of a woman who would go out of her vay to assist any one in gls!resa, and when she says she gave this man money and endeavored to straighten him up by friendly and s*—]mp:u.hetc counsel I be- lieve she tells the truth. “‘Mrs. Botkin's demeanor during my visit to-day was not that of a_guilty per- son. True, she is worried, and it is quite natural she should be. Her every move- ment is watched closely by the lynx- eyed matron, and she is not left alone for an instant, day or night. This sur- veillance would try any one's nerves. “The accused woman did not go into the details of her case. My visit was friendly, and I assured her I believed in her innocence. I am confident she will be completely exonerated of the accusa- tion against her. I cannot imagine she is ecapable of committing such an atro- clous crime. Her antecedents, her edu- cation, her temperament and her social surroundings, as I have known her, are sufficient to convince me of her inno- cence, ““The accused woman feels very bitterly toward some of the newspapers of this city, because of the distorted descrip- tions of her actions and the exaggeration of incidents in her life. She feels an at- tempt is being made to railroad her to the gallows either here or in Delaware.” Bubsiis b MRS. EDWARDS DOES NOT SEEK NOTORIETY Regrets the Prominence VWhich Her Acquaintance With Dunning Has Thrust Upon Her. Mrs. Frances C. E¢gwards, whose name has been mentioned in connection with the Botkin case, is incensed at the efforts of the Examiner to connect her, by infer- ence, with the Dover tragedy. “They sent a female reportef to me,” said Mrs. BEdwards yesterday. ‘“This ‘woman, who is conspicuous owing to the eccentricities of her attire, plied me with questions for over two hours. I gave her a plain statement of what I knew of the case. This she distorted from first to last. She said I passed variously under the name of Parker and Barnes. The former was my maiden name, and the lat- ter the name of my guardian, which ex- plains why people called me by those names at different times in my life. “I have never concealed the fact that I have been a candy maker. ‘that arsenic is sometimes manutacture of chocolate creams. I know better than this. I did say that it was used in wafers for the complexion, and that tannin and other poisons are }meld to preserve the color of candied ruits. “I explained that if I contemplated such a l’rlfihtful deed I would have cho- sen some less easily recognizable candy than chocolate bonbons. These are hand- made, and there is an individuality about them by which any candy maker can pick out the product of his shop. ‘““The woman reporter quoted me as say- ing that I had been a visitor at 927 Geary street, where the Dunning-Botkin orgies took place. I was never there. I have never sought notoriety in this matter, and have shrunk from publicity at all tinfes. When employed by the Market- street Railway Company I learned all about police methods. I know if they once undertake to convict a person of crime they will go to any extreme in the mat- ter, T I did not say used in the ~“I have received a lefter from Dunning since he left here. It was written in Por- to Rico and mailed in this country—I think at Key West. For personal rea- sons I will not make public its contents. Mr. Dunning was evidently angry when he wrote it, and I do not wish the noto- riety which would attach to me if its contents were displayed to the world.” ADVERTISEMENTS. ; NEW DRESS FABRICS FALL - - 1898. Our customers are hereby informed that commencing Mondauy, Sept. 12th, we shall offer for sale the most elegan t variety of NOVELTY DRESS PATTERNS at the following prices, Viz, $17.50 $10.50 $12.50 $15.00 $17.50 $20.00 $22.50 per Dress Pattern per Dress Patters per Dress Pattern per Dress Pattern per Dress Pattern per Dress Pattern per Dress Pattern The above are EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS and comprise 30 DIFFERENT STYLES,. SEE EXHIBITION IN OUR SHOW- WINDOWS. TELEPHONE GRANT 124, m, u3, us, uT, 19, . 121 POST STREET. WHY EVELYN HOLT LIVED WITH HER AS HIS WIFE AND MARRIED ANOTHER. He Was Saved From Answering Deli- cate Questions by the Objec- tions of the Prosecuting Attorney. The preliminary examination of Evelyn Holt, the girl who fired a shot at Charles Fecker, hypnotist, real estate agent and insurance broker, on the night of Sep- tember 5, was commenced before Judg Low yesterday afternoon. Attorney Bell conducted the prosecution, and the de- fendant was Lepresented by Attorneys Barrows and Boyer. The first witness was Dr. Galvin, who treated Fecker for the wound in his shoulder. He testified that after probin, for the bullet for two hours it droppe: out. on the floor, where it was found by the janitor. The wound was not serious, and ‘did not necessitate Fecker taking to his bed. Fecker testified to the shooting. He had received threatening letters from the de- fendant, and once she had tried to poison him with icecream. He had known her for about a year. In cross-examination he said he knew . of no reason why she should want to kill him. Attorney Barrows introduced four let- ters which Fecker had written the de- fendant while she was in Los Angeles, and wanted to show the relations that had existed between them. . ecker and the defendant had lived together as man and wife, and she had been introduced by him to his friends as such. Then he sent her to Los Angeles, and a few days later married another woman. After considerable argument the Judge sustained an objection by the prosecu- tion to the relations of the pair being in- quired into, on the ground that it would be time enough to do that when the de- fense was entered upon, George E. Roy, an undertaker, who saw the shooting, and Policemen de Blois and McLane, who arrested the defendant, were examined and the prosecution rest- ed. After consulting with the defendant her attorneys asked for a continuance till next Tuesday to enable them to prepare their defense, and it was agreed to. SUTRO’S ENTERPRISES WILL BE KEPT UP MONEY WILL PREVENT THEM FROM DEPRECIATING. Judge Coffey Authorizes the Execu- tors of the Millionaire’s Estate to Make Certain Expen- ditures. The executors of the Sutro estate do not propose that its varied interests shall de- preciate In value if care and money will serve to protect them. Through their at- torneys, Lloyd and Wood and ex-Judge McKinstry, they appeared before Judge cmfi' yesterday in the Probate Court and asked for authority to make cer’ain out- lays with which to continue the enter- Enses controlled by the estate. Judge offey fl'a.nted the desired order. Mrs. Hattle Trundle, or Allen, as she was also known, died two years ago in Washington, D. C., and the executors have instituted a search for her heirs, if any exist. She will be remembered as the beneficlary under the millionaire’s will to whom he_ bequeathed $50,000 as : public acknowledgment of injustice cone her many yeard ago. FREE PUBLIC MARKET. Chamber of Commerce Urges Harbor Commissioners to Take Action. At the meeting of the Chamber of Com- merce yesterday the principal subject dis- cussed was that of the Free Public Mar- ket. A resolution was passed settin, forth the advantages of the projecte: market and re-esting that the Board of Harbor Commissioners assign the blocks of State property bounded by Davls, Pa- cific and East streets for the use of car and sheds required vy toe market, the same also to be used for the réceipt and delivery of ordinary merchandise so far as it may be practicable and the most convenient to the producers of the State. A resolution of aporoval and support was Clzwsr'tl with reference to the California Manufacturers’ Exposition of Home Prod- ucts of Oakland. It was decided to requsst of the Board of Regents of the Stsie University to make the study of the Spanish language a greater feature in the university. The reason for the request was-that the Uuit- ed States is very likely to acquire large esslons recently held by the Spanish many of the students now attending college are sure to go Into these new fields, and the knowledge of the language spoken there will be of great benefit to them. Resolutions memorial of the late J. W. H. Campbell, who for thirty vears was a member of the chamber, were passed. The following new members were elected: The George F. Eberhard Com- pan, Hooker & Co., Samuel Huboard, Bis- singer & Co., Telsutaro Aoki, Garcia & Maggini, Henry Cavell & Co., H. Taylor and Wilson & Brother. ————— Harry Jones Loses an Eye. Harry A. Jones, official stenographer in Judge Hebbard’s court, has lost the sight of ene eye as the result of an accident. While splitting kindling wood yesterday morning, at his home, a splinter imbedded itself in the ball of the eye. ADVERTISEMENTS. SRS Sy % s s oy _,s‘:e LEND US YOUR EAR. We want to tell you of the fine laundry work we are doing, and all who appre- ciate a beautiful color and fine medium finish on their linen can get the bene- fit of our experience and expert work- manship. There is no laundry in town where you can get such perfect satis- faction as at the United States. The United States Laundry, office 1004 Market street Telephone South 420. BRIV ER = NEW ARRIVALS IN DOLLDOM ! We have a full line of dressed dolls. A samplé price to show what great bargains they are : 15-in. jointed body; bisque head; curly hair; satin ‘dress and hat, S1.50, Mail orders filled promptly. 8 WILL & FINCK CO., & 820 Market St., San Francisco. g8 RURLIRRBRERNBUURR RUPTURE. USE NO MORE IRON Hocps or Steel Springs. Rupture retained with ease and comfort, and thousands radl. cally CURED by DR. PIERCE'S Magnetic Elastic Truss. [>Call at office orwrite forNew Pamphlet No. 1. MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS CO., 620 Market st., opp. Palace Hotel, San Franclscq 8 2 8 8 e 3 8 8 2 8 2 LRI I8S