The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 23, 1899, Page 15

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SU NDAY., APRIL 283, 1899. Pulpit Topics Give No|Brandes and Eslabe - ¢ Ginger Snaps & E ¢ ¢Dai ¢ ¢ 735 Market 5. 8. F. 1060 Washington, Oak 9th k Washington, ' ‘el e e easeavsasd Duryea e e e e e e ALAMEDA COUNTY NEWS. * K0 OPPOSITION Y A PECTED TO FABIOLA DAY [ L Suggestion. DEN CALF” DOUBTFUL MURDERERS PLAN AN ESCAPE| DARING JALL DELIVERY NIPPED BY THE SHERIFF CITY HALL 1S DECLARED T0 BE 700 SWALL Prisoners Likely to Be Roasted Alive. SAFETY FROM ‘ Cleverly Foiled. NO FIRE ILLE'S SUBJECT IS ONE OF mACK SAWS AND FRAME FOUND | EVEN PUBLIC RECORDS ARE IN A SOCIAL SERIES. ON THE LEADER. | GRAVE DANGER. Horses Are Bemng Held at the | Ap Unknown Woman SmugglesTools [The Mayor Sees Little Hope of Attracted by the Large | Into the County Jail and Aids a New Hall Until City s to Be Offered | Prisoners in Their Con- and County Are Saturday. | spiracy. United. | nd Office San Francisco Call S ¥ April Twenty - COMPANY. rocersS G New Prices Wedne No Liquors—just Good (iroceries means more r cash: v 15 gal size ] §c . ality guaranteed 1 k. Powd..3() ’s Cornstarch 1b ]1()c 8 1bs 95¢ sraham Cakes ’ilot Bread will receive - el elps to homed ur buying =0 ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ Oakland Office San neisco Call, | Oakland Office San Francisco Call, %08 Bro April | April Sheriff O. L. Rogers frustrated | The Board of Works decided officially well-developed conspiracy which had | to-q that the City Hall is too small for for its prime object two murdere the the delivery of the city’s bus nd also that it is very prisoners at the County Jail, | badly arranged for the comvenience of the ess of which might have re- | public. Mayor Snow's gr | to the ent no other city Brandes, convicted of murder in | of Oaklang : the second degree for beating to death his | prigon, 1 13-year-old daughter, Lillian Brand 1 | Court, th whose motion for a new trial will be gued before Judge Hall next Monday Joaquin Eslabe, the convicted murderer of Charles Gates, the cripple m vender, whom he beat death with a piece of lead pipe. an suc sulted in a wholesale jailbreak The leaders in the conspiracy were Wil- of even a quarter the size is the entrance to the City e Board of Education, the Police Mayor’s office, the taxpaye office and other places where ladies fre- quently have business in one spot. In this city there is generally a gang ot Police | Court loafers and prison frequenters con- | Bregated around the entrance of the City Hall, and Mr. Snow has a plan whereby liam A. nd Eslabe is the instigator and the two | the police feature AR prisoners found a formidable ally in a | Fifteenth street ir aving the simple-minded married woman, whose | front free for the ) s name Sheriff Rogers declines to make [ 1he Commissior are anxious to cen- ter all the municipal dep one rtments under but find that this caanot be i although they roundly condemn Hall, it was the opinion of no new City Hall will nsolidation of a cit ¢ounty, which he places at ten ye the public. This woman has frequently vis ited Eslabe at the C y Jail and she appeared smitten with the murderer, who with Brandes, James Gilligan, the slayer Jockey Epperson, and other importa oners, occupied the Grand Jury cor roof, ri- dor during the day time end Wp to 9| ~City neer Clement has been re- Rmout e \‘)snzlng Sherift Rogers, his Quested illl”"";hu'n o “\;““naf chief ]JH'!'Y. l,tvu1< Eiunn'on«u:, ;1‘1 1 lzfl v the FOBT Sl sl e e This ract they ducation. He has measured and fir acy was brewing. ered through word: in conversation s1 there is much too little space wing requirements of the Engi- cer's office. It is proposed that the Board friend | of Education sha e same ro mall | a8 the City Coun tempt will b 1 | made to secure a reduction of the s | for the quarters now occupied by the En- female nd left equently brought acles | for the T ithnt s passed 10 | Bopy o Commissioners called attention to | B et the fact that the City Hall is an old shack e | and that there is not within it a single Pfihts were_ dropped fireproof room. s MR EhertiDS sars & the city reco S prcbasiiity D be dest for it has long been con- §is cent ceded that the old wooden bullding would hacksaw quickly be totally burned if fire ever got fonted with the e ce a good start. | lies, confessing that ne ! Commissioners very forc 5 EhG He thr he prisoners. The City Prisor 1 Jasement of the City Hall \d-fashioned and geperally con. about thirty In tb event of the rong that at rs would be to death » have been sev- 1l fires a > hall, which have > kly subdu S a gen- e Bk ing among the City Hall crowd g trl d at | that “there will come a time some day’ the jail and in In | when things will be differen fact, Chief Jailer Schoenau v y de- | - —— nied the report of the attempted deliv. ery Rogers, however, though with e pelustanc Anaty verined the siory | UNCLE SAM HAS given herewith. “¥ex. we have besn expeeting this,” | A WIDE CHOICE said the Sheriff, “but I félt confident that pagslod we were perfectly able to cope with it. | We are to handle such | MANY OFFERS TO SELL A POST- matters and nformed as to the OFFICE SITE. We did L , Why, that's | Prices Range From Thirty Thousand out it 5 and Eslabe have \now been ‘ to One Hundred and Thirty laced in solitary confinement and each | Thousand Dollars. his separate cell will so remain until | his case is disposed of. The woman in the = piracy will in ali probability be ar- | Oakland Office 908 Bre Bids were opened at Wa | for a site for the Oakland P | last Congress appropriated $2 building and site, of which mediately The bids are Farmers’ Institute at Haywards. OAKLAND, April —There enthusiastic meeting of farmers a men at the opera house in afternoon to arrange for was d fr nit as fol- teenth streets, § gon, from Twe! west side of M: Thirteenth, $15,000; r of 'Broadway v street, $130,000 . MeDonald (four OAKLAND, April 22.-J. urner, the 000; east side of Jack- 1 Francisco real estate dealer who hi ed in numerous deals across the h: who was interested in the famous | ¢’ Clark case, to-day filed sever deeds in the Alameda County corner in A tute in Eden Townshir lows: H. B ide of W institute will be conduct I street, from al department of the State Mhormas MEHORE hisiNG ot 1 under the direction of Professor omas MphoreYy Ao ot ptafioin t @ | Fowler. The following treet, nth to Tenth, $01,000; Mrs. e | pointed to arrange for the w. n, east side of Webster eedless Rais ' George Gray, James Ramage, street, Fighth to Ninth, $35,000; A. C. a2 FEE Lm 1]<rr;w"nzlng. AHn vrmr'L Dietz (t )—block bounded by Har- s A St Y | rison, We Twelfth and Thirteenth 1 y 4 ssen, Mo M. > chepp’s Cocoanutt....1b ] 3cg | Nisen, Moustipdens a2 - | streets, $100,000; west side Harrison, from s s Shredded Cocoanut in bulk ‘ Alvarado. The committee o "[‘v\rlflh to Thirteenth, northeast sold in packages at 35¢ glected Totry Meek president B. | corner Twelfth and Harrison, $47,000; John save 22¢ this way. * ' >arsons secretary. A. Stanly (three sites)—block bounded Biscuit Bargains: ' Turner Files More Deeds. 1 by Jackson, Madison, Twelfth and Thir- 3 | H. ; the good kind. tack nty Chips .1b ]he A good cracker for salads; well named—dainty and good. EIGHT SAVING STORES!: 1211 Polk 8t. &, F. Bhattnck Av, Berkeley Central Av, Alameds Tth & Wood. Oak 2th & 17th A, ¢ ¢ office_covering property San Joaquin counties. One deed » from Forest S. Rowley to Frank D. Cu Jjunction of Twentieth a and San Pablo aven Jefferson, f corner_Grov ue, § ym Eighth to Ninth, $20,000 street and San Pablo s Rowley fj.uI?-“X.yf’::yn.:i]irmaxi‘l’m"«r | enue, $60,000; east side of Jefferson, from transfer to J. F. Turner title to Fourteenth to Fifteenth, $7,000; H. G. ¥ ‘ of Allen, northwest corner of Fourteenth Excelsior and ty, besides their in- the southwest corner Watson streets, this | terest in the San Joaquin property. The | considerati med in each case is §10. | Sorsfieration pis Y € 0. | furteenth street to Market, $7.600: Mary | M. Brock, outheast corner of Broadwa and. Clay streets, $130,000; Mary R. Smith, | Harrison street, from Eleventh to Central avenue, $100,000; Sarah Weill, north side of When prices are cut wages are often reduced and | business demoralized. | Fair prices means pros- perity. Your grocery bill will be more satisfactory if you deal with a grocer who offers no “baits” — but charges fair, uniform prices for all goods ; such as Ghirardelli’s Cocoa, 1-2 Ib. 25¢; 11b..50¢ Ground Chocolate, 11b. Eagle Chocolate, 11b ., ... Monarch Chocolate, 11b . .35¢ Pure, strong, FRESH, home made. | Stayed the Stroke of the Ax. | and Twentieth, $15,000; Oliver E. Ste ALAMEDA, April 22—The new Board |and others, southeast corner of Broadway of City Trustees held another caucus | street, $72,000;, W. G. Jast night to discuss prospective | Henshaw, northeast corner Franklin and | changes in the appointive offices of the | Fourteenth streets, $90,000; William F. city. The Police Department came in | Barnard (four sites)—west side Telegraph | | for the lion’s share of the discussion.-One | avenue, from Twenty-first street to | | of the Harmonie Hall contingent urged ( Twenty-second, $60,000; west side of that_the position of every police officer | Frankiin street, extending from Durant, | | be declared vacant on ‘account of the | $40,000; west side Madison street, from force violating the rules of the depart-| Thirteenth to Fourteenth, $5.000; east ment and being too aggressive in the | side of Castro street, from Eighth to City Marshal's fight. Joseph Forderer, | Ninth, $50,000; Bacon Land and Loan Com- | who re-elected a member of the| pany (two sites)—southeast corner of board on the Municipal League ticket, {“If(r\nmh and Franklin streets, $45,000; | blocked the wholesale slaughter by call- | east side of Broadway, between Fifteenth | ing attention to an old city ordinance | and Birnie streets, $85,000; Elliot H. Wool- which provides that no city officer can be | sey, block bounded by Jackson, Madison, | removed without being given a hearing. | Eleventh and Twelfth streets, $65,000. Bids KILLED BY A | COIL OF ROPE Peculiar Death of a Laborer on the Mohican. OAKLAND, April 22.—Joe Neves, a Portuguese laborer, was killed on the Mohican, lying off old long wharf, this afternoo In company with Captain C. W. Saunders and First Mate E. W. Kelley, Neves was holding on to a guiderope attached to a yardarm on the vessel, aseisting in lowering a heavy piece of machinery into the hold. y For some reason the donkey engine moved, causing a pecullar noise; which evidently alarmed Neves. Letting go of the guidédrope, he jumped into the coil of rope back of him. The yardarm, being thus suddenly released, swung out, tightening the cofl about Neves' body, hurllng him agalnst an iron water tank and then out into the bay at least a hundred and fifty yards. His dead body was immediately recovered and it was found that his left leg had been broken, also both arms and his back. He was removed to the Morgue. An inquest will be held next Monday night. Deceased was aged 33 years and leaves a large family residing on B street, near Louisa, in the Watts Tract, were also opened for a site for a build- ing at Seattle, Wash. The bidders & follows: Mary A. Denny, $140,000; SALVATIONISTS ENTER | @ man Corcoran Company (two Sites). JOB PRINTING BUSINESS |% 000 and §147,000; Stewart & Smith, $1 { : | —_— e | 7 AN ADJUNCT TO THE WAR S3eR ¢ +R e RN NN NN TWO WOMEN FOUND DEAD. | % —— | CRY DEPARTMENT. % Sudden Death of Mrs. Nunezand Mrs. | Catherine Warham, Two Aged |88 Will Compete With Rival Establish- ments on Equal Terms—No | Fa~ors Asked or Given. Widows. OAKLAND, April 22.—Mrs. Ma v Nunez, By an aged widow, who had been in failing | OTFTTS health for some time past, was found dead at the gate in front of her home in The Salvation Army has decided to en- wards this morning. Neighb ter the job printing field, and the an- fx'\‘:il‘lri‘«f;" dl:"u"“‘ l:-:Pmy]~‘x§;\,\-fi nouncement has caused shivers of ap- héy Yotuih,® THiS “M_"”;;"" preheusion to begin traversing the spinal Iving near the ante:. Freavt tailor columns of the employing printers of the supposed cause of her death, city, while the typest are also ex- | ¢ husband was killed in an accident several | perlencing a feeling of dre But there | 88 ago. She leaves considerable prop- | is no reason for either to be alarmed, for | % aty, )1‘13;\‘743"’\:’“‘A-mhl‘r.vm. u}l“‘l‘;‘:‘u‘:) 1o reld- | the Salvation print shop is to be run for | $ Mrs. Katherine Warham was found dead | [Venue only, paying first class wages and | in'her Bed 11 the roar OF DEY BROHs ., | doing first class work. No wttempt is to | & 601 Sixteenth Street, at noon to-day. be made to secure work by offering to do | § death is also attributed to heart trouble. | it cheaper than anyone else as itisclaimed | j Deceased was a widow, a native of Iowa, | is done by a certain establishment con- | % iler, Prarspand jleaves three sons—|ducted by a religious organization acro % ham, _Inquests will be held o the bay. 'The Salvationists are prepared | ¢ theas. dRach on both of | ;" nter into active competition with the | 83 ————— firms altgady in the field on equal terms, | & | STANFORD-U. C. CONCERT. (]f‘nendilfi on the excellence of the work | | turned out to bring them business. The | | b Musical Clubs of the Two Universi- - ties to Unite Their Talent. BERKELEY, April 22—The musical as- of Stanford University and the | University of California have arranged for a joint concert to be given at the Alhambra Theater, Francisco, next Saturday evening, April 20. Both colleges circular announcing the entry of the Sal- | vationists into the field of job printing, which h ent to a large number of ithin the last few days, is Dear Sir: tion to th first-class connection Wwith our War C With modern type, and other facilitie give you entire satis and workmanship. rtain that our work In itself will merit your patronage, yet desire to call your attention to the fact that all profits accruing from such will be used to assist in our work on this coast, will send their glee, mandalin, banjo and the the ced workmen el that we can both in price r clubs Iln take gui econd time ie and Gold h me programme. carried out four years | very successful. part. This is the Cardinal and e joined forces in similar plan ago and proved bjection is | ance, and he declared that in | rooms | L R R A2 2 Besides tions re | the followin ndered by ie clubs will be put on _the Bd G. Kus- banjo solo, al solo, Allen of California; chalk vocal Frank Argall, University of C fornia. which we believe is already too well known to require further explanation from us. Trusting that we may hear from wer to this, I remain, yours ver v, WILLIAM EV. Lieutenant Colonel. The printing department of the Salva- tion Army is in charge of Charles Dan- ner. Mr. Danner s he proposes to em- ploy cnly first tlass men and expects to B i )ay union wages and in some instances HE Western Athletic Club ! To Rebuild the Comanche. Tiorecite favie showed wise judgment in | OAKLAND, Apr The purchasers of |~ “The job printing department will be matching . “Bllly" TOHE and nln- Uml monitor Comanche have applied (fi‘ run on business principles in every re Charles Johnson to box ten | the wharfinger for permission to dock |spect. It will not be conducted on the | P b Fans 2 their ve for some months at reduced | lines of the social work of the army M“’) rounds on Tuesday evening as a pre- rates_while they dismantle and:rehabili- | 1 to start a_solicitor about liminary to the Neill and Trace tate h The nd to use the vessel | Wi and at first will employ one twenty-round bout. Otts is a gr : oit on the bay, after putting | jobber and one pressma 1 Later, it th favorite with the members of the modern engines aboard. The request has arrants it, I will put on more i i 2 been denied, ough the vessel will be it £ to the cheap class Olympic, Reliance and Ath not cate s there is more money 5 ne of the p 1 the union s letic clubs, and it ean be v said that he will put up a strong argu- ment. Johnson's given a be schedule rates | Advances made on furniture or without removal nd pianos, with 23 Mission. deci ve victory over —————— : 3 % Mulligan has impressed his friends P : on or ¢ : 1t the union, | ge Lecture by Hon. Julius Kahn. oy e, tho uien, with the idea that he is a champion | On Tuesday evening next at Odd Fel- [ majority of job printing firms in this city in the class he Tepresents, and lows' Hall Hon ahn will deliver | are at present employing non-union mern, | ¥ qoubtless he will be a favorite in |'s fa—Past, Present | g5 at least paying less than union wages: 4 E r the ausplees our shop will have a tendenc BN e N+ R L eteReKetis ji S e | wages, and I will be only too glad to com- | oo oer anniversary of th blisk Lk S L oo Pert Schlesin- | pare payrolls with competing firms at | eightieth anniversary of the establishment | m“r‘ ‘]\V]‘”'M\]]( = s‘f‘n ‘v"w n oo € ‘}-"‘\\JI- | any tim, {',r 0dd Fellowship. The subordinate lodges | be a musical programme, which will in- | AT R T | of this city, the Rebekah lodges and the | clude several selections by the Hebrew | 0dd Fellows’ Picnic. | Patriarchs Militant will take a day off | Qrphan _Asylum band, which has &ery | Next Wednesday there will be celebra- [ and celebrate the event by a grand Kindly Vol I e rvioes Jor ihe | tions all over the State. Wherever there | picnic at Mirabel Park, twelve mil plimentary and ‘may be ob | is an organized body of Odd Fellows that | above Santa R The committees 1 ¥ . 1. headquarters, 24 Fourth | body will, in some way, celebrate ‘the | charge have arranged for a plessant day DR. PIERCE’'S REMEDIES. - WILL PUNCH HARD TEN ROUNDS Otts and Johnson Are in First-Class Corfition for a Real Scrap. *%e% Nt » CHARLES JONNSON K P 3 = B 38 h4 > 8 s 3 o3 + 8 * £ B ¥ . B + % . e Manager L f the sport wh will not go ¢ the betting. that lovers the contes appointed, 3% g, and have se h the mu here will be z which is to be neld un the Rebekah drill corps of the Patriar to the fund be jubilee of the f hip in Califorr * THE LAW % LADY ! THE - The Value of Advice Depends Upon the | Qualifications of the Adviser. > <> HE woman who went to her grocer for legal advice, lost her case. The value of advice depends | upon the qualifications of the adviser. Medical advice from one who is not l‘ a doctor is as worthless as legal advice from one who is not a lawyer—and it | is far more dangerous. ; ADVIGE TO WOMEN, the skilled advice of a qualified physician—is offered free by Dr. R. V. | Pierce. It is valuable advice because it is the advice of a competent physician. It is advice of extraordinary value, because it is the adyice of an extraordinary physician, a specialist, one who has given more than thirty years to the treatment and cure of woman’s diseases. | Any doctor can give you medical advice. ‘The benefit of his advice depends on his experience in treating the particular disease from which you suffer. MA”Y WOMERN consult Dr. Pierce after all the available local doctors have failed to give any SemeS=========_help. Ninety-eight in every hundred such cases are cured by him. This is the experience of more than half a million women. Offers of advice that leok like Dr. Pierce’s offer, are made in the press. These offers look like Dr. Pierce’s because they are made fo look like it. No | other offer is supported by a record or reputation equal to that of Dr. Pierce. Investigation will prove these statements. We send pamphlet free. SIGK WOMEN ARE INVITED to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free of all cost. Fach letter is read and answered in private. TIts statements are guarded as a sacred confidence. The answer, is mailed in a plain envelope without advertising or other printing on it. Address, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N, Y. Free! On receipt of stamps to defray expense of mailing on/y, we will send Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, containing 1008 pages. This book will prove a constant friend and wise counselor to every woman. Send 21 one-cent stamps for book in paper cov- ers or 31 stamps in cloth binding. Address as above. Ll ol B e B Bl ] The Woman Who Was and the Woman Who Is. . Mrs. M. F. Long, of LeLoup, Franklin County, Kans., writes: “Words cnnnot express how grateful I am for your kind advice and good medicines. I have been in poor health more or less all my life. In the past nine years grew worse, and two years ago was so poorly could hardly drag around. I consulted a Specialist, and he said I had ulceration, and that an operation would have to be performed. At last I wrote to Dr. Pierce, asking advice. I soon got a helpful answer, advising me to try his medicines, the ¢ Fa- vorite Prescription,’ *Golden Medical Discovery,’ and also his ‘Pleasant Pellets.” I bought two bottles of the ‘Favorite Pre- scription,’ two of the Discovery,” and two vials of the ¢Pellets,’ and I began taking ‘Favorite Prescription’ and the other medi- . cines, as advised. When commencing I weighed 119% pounds, and after taking one bottle of each I was like a new woman. In one month I gained eight pounds. After taking two bottles of each of the medicines named, I began to look like a woman and not like a wasted skeleton. That weary, tired feeling all left me, and it did seem as though life was worth living, and that I had been snatched from the grave, and would live to a good old age.” DR. PIERCE’S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION Makes Weak Women Strong and Sick Women Well | IT IS UNLIKE MANY WMEDICINES OFFERED FOR THE USE OF WOMEN, IN THAT IT CONTAINS NO ALCOHOL, WHISKY, OR OTHER INTOXICANT, AND IS ABSOLUTELY FREE FROM OPIUM, COCAINE, OR OTHER NARCOTICS. -1 SOON 6OT A HELPFUL ANSWER .’M:c/ézé,o— [a/m?/,q/mznw = w—éw»t and toty. cheeked wontan, 7 g e Jasmes

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