The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 13, 1899, Page 12

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T HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1899, ADVEBTISLMENTS ITCHING Burning Scaly HUMORS Instantly Relicved by One Application of Bathe e affeoted parts thoroughly with Hor WaTER and Cutr s ‘ep CURA BOAP, to remove the crusts and scales, and soften the iutlawed. 2d Ste soothe and heal. Lastly, take a full dose of CUTICURA REWOLVENT to cool and guring, itching, burning, and scaly skin ard scalp huwors, rashes «nd irriia- tions, with loxs of hair, when all other remedies sud even the best physicinna fail, cracked, bleeding, or thickened caticle. 3d s ap cleanse the blood, and expe! Humer GErMS. SAVE YUUR HAiR HANHS And Skin by using CUTICURARSBOAP, greatest of ¥ Next apply Curicura Ointment, the great skin cure and purest This SINGLE trestment affords instant relief, permits reat-and al op. snd Skia Puritying dud Benntifylug Sosps, as well as t50ld throughout the world, Price, Tie 8 925 orm:,‘?zugv{u-nun l:.-yg‘v:n.‘mnm“ of emollients, to allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and goiuts to @ speody, permanent. and economical ire of the most torturlug, dis- purest and” sweetest for toliet, bath, and bursery. 32 D200 AXD CHER. COBE., Solo Frops., nts owned by th the first mor! rs all the land g poration not speciiice record where- .1.«1 was also place ; to Melone MURDERER HUNT PROVES 10 8 x A DEGENERATE | Makes Another Complaint Against the Union Iron Works. Rosenber; the Federated erday upon As- Attorney Banning ROSENBERG'S DEMAND. g nsane Behavior at Secretary the Inquest. @i e Application for a| EXAMINER HAS 10 TAKE ITS OWN MEDICIN Crawfishes on One of | Its Fakes. APOLOGIZES TO OCCIDENTALS e |SAYS THE LARKSPUR “ORGY” [ WAS A PIPE DREAM. =L | The Author of the Zolaesque Fairy | Tale Hauled Over the Coals for His Full-Page “Inadver- i tence.” L Persons picking up the Examiner this | | morning and finding little news will please excuse that paper. It hadn’t time to get any yesterday as it was so busy apologizing to the people of Larkspur for its frantically endeavoring to take back all it had published concerning the alleged indulgence of Occidental campers in “bac chan; It w “inadvertence,” miner in explanation of its Zolaesque portrayal of saturnalia that refused to v nailed. Of course the people of " Larkspur believe that statement. Look- ing through a pair of Examiner specta- | cles they can readily see how an inad- vertence can be spread all over a page. With the same eyegla es they can con- jure up a camel doing a flipflap as he passes through the eye of a needle. It's | all in the point of view, as some phil | osopher has safd; all in the point of view. Sunday morning last, viewed by F. Bailey Millard, who had an ax to grind 1 no water with which to grind it, the point of view was different. He took up almost a page of the now tearful Ex- aminer in telling what a bad lot were the young men of Occidental camp. ‘‘Bac- hanalian .’ “Neroites of Baltl- rampant, were added to his book of for the unsts- led their brand- y and a dilapi- sald thelr Da ng campers. He c pilano a hurdy-gur - machine; he ditties were ragtime _diableries; most wonderful of all in that ;n—he said that they * while enjoying satisfled to vent alone Millard was not n “He unloaded is spite on the cs 1 on th that ci at was not enough. He ln\\-rv«l l‘lm\nf on the newspaper lad- der—stooped to conquer, as it were—and, | as “a reporter for the Examiner who vis- ited the scene terday,” lashed into i S attack on their characters and so | says the tor of the Examiner | WEDDED UNDER A CANGRY OF LILIES B o O R R o e e o ] R SRR SRR SR SRR S SRCRY SROR RO SR e { R S o o o S SRCES SNOSS SR W by ® * ® S + ) @ * [ ! + [ 4 | @00900000-00¢0¢C 40400000+ 0+0+0-00+0+@Q ° TANDING under a canopy of bamboo, all wreathed In pink and white @ 3 lilies, J. Athearn Folger and Mrs. Clara Luning Cunningham plighted ¢ g thelr’ (roth yesterday afternoon at § o'clock at the home of the bride's & ; lx(nrg.v Whittell, 1155 California street. o £ Rev. Rand performed the ceremony in the presence of eighty In- & ¥ Vited guests. The bride had no attendants and Ernest Folger, brother of & the groom, officiated as best man. After the ceremony the newly married & couple received the consratulations of the invited guests and then led the § way to the dining hall, where an elaborate supper was served. The elegant g& Whittell home was aglow with flowers and foliage In honor of the happy & event. The hall was gay with brilliant hued autumn leaves and the recep- ge tion room looked like a forest of glant paims, amid which, in some unac- & countable wa blossomed roses, lilies and carnations. In the dining room g8 only the bride's table rejoiced in a floral decoration and there pink carna- & tions were used with the happlest effect. The bride wore an elegant pearl-gray silk gown completely shrouded in an overdress of old white lace. The halr was dressed high and ornamented with a white aigrette. Mrs. Whittell wore a magnificent pale-blue satin confection trimmed with exquisite point lace. Mr. and Mrs. Folger have chosen to let no one into the gecret of where the first two weeks of their honeymoon will be passed. Af- ter that they leave for the East and ultimately sall for Europe, where they expect to p: year in travel. DIEICIO0 8 O 8 0 83 SN O R R fed e Hes C(S- .D‘"O‘MD QROROBOROLON Smilh T. M. Starkey, H. G. Spencer. \1r Steinhart, Mrs. C. D. Wakefield, C. F. as stated by »- V ‘ Tgnatz Steinhart returns after a visit to Honolulu in connection with the establiskh it of the First American Bank of Ha- rs. W. G. Irwin comes to San 0 in connection with the erection | palatial home on Pacific Heights | 150 to look after the education of her | aughter, Miss Helene Irwin. A. F.| | Afong, brother of Mrs. Captain Whiting | of the ted States navy, is going w‘ uf he Yale to complete his studie | “Harry Nichols, a_l13-year-old lad who | | returned from Honolulu on the Australia, | {has an ardent desire to get to Manila. | ? | He left his home in Missourl over six | | months ago_and made his way to San | Francisco.” When the transport Penn | vania sailed Harry w. | away. When discov, : | Snder arrest, but before he could be 1 | ed over to the United States Consul at | Honolulu he made his escape. After the Pennsylvania got away young Nichols | | got work on the United States steamer | | Troquois_and finally a passage back here | on the Australla was arranged for him. | When Harry walked down the gangway | of the steamer yesterday morning he had {8140 in his pocket, but he says that is | enough to keep him until he can stow | | away cn another transport. Three of the salmon fleet are making | long pa The bark yphene is now out s, the Merom days and | the ship W. H. Macy 31 days trnm Bristol | v Head winds and caims have prob- delayed them, and to-day or to-mor- | | Tow they may show up off the heads in a sunch The steamer Nippon Maru sailed for the for a complaint st of the man- of tr n Works on a of viclating the Federal eight-hour working more than eight hours per “Banni: g was willing to swear ated 1 VALUABLE DOCUMENTS PLACED ON RECORD |} | THE CENTRAL PACIFIC Rm-‘ WAY MORTGAGES FILED. | cy. It appearec ing that the fitting ut of transports in time of war Was a atter of emergency, and that being the asc & prosecution would not hold. Rosenberg left a the necessary investigation. INTEREST IN LOCAL POLITICS REVIVING le documents | ternoon in the | REPUBLICANS TALK OF SIDNEY M. SMITH FOR MAYOR. Call for $125,000,000 and Covers the Lines in California, Utah and ada—Huntington Buys a Lot. Nomination for Auditor—Demo- crats Are on Still Hunt for Supervisors. £ delegates to the Republican local fon there is a good deal of talk sminating for Mayor Stdney dent of the Cutting Pack- Delegates who are advo- assert that his ability that his character is unquestioned, hout a blemish and that his knowledge Francisco affairs cannot be dis- p! Night before last the Thirty-ninth As- bly District delegation of the Repub- an convention held a meeting. The | delegates had the pleasure of listening to a talk from W. G. Doane, who would nomination for Auditor. In e influence in the affairs 6. tHe lemyettlbnitiie Aelexates canres ing the Thirty-ninth will endeavor to vote as a unit This evening the committee of perma- nent organization and order of business of the convention will meet at the Grand Hotel. Friday next there will be a meet- ing of the executive committee of the City Republican League. The chairman of ‘the committee, Bheldon G. Kellogg, will probably receive a hint from the ex- ecutive committee as to the proper time for calling another session of t. inating convention. rtes to the Democratic local | still hunting for accept- nemes to place on the ticket for | the Board of Supervisors. The committee of seve in the law office of met yesterday | next s > place in Mr. The Democ to get on the ticket Whit- who are anx- an hardly keep A long lh-l been submitted to the com- h dis Invited to rec- | only eighteen ontpd m m. convention. track of the wandering seven of names ha names will be pre Mmmwmmmm SUNDAY’S CALL can bo pur- § chased from all agents and newsdealers at 5¢ per copy. nce Ban- | fter promising to make | W. G. Doane Would Not Decline the | e nom- | Thompson. The | SEARCHIVNG FOR THE DERELICT LOG RAFT. | them for half a column. Even then his rage was at the boiling point and it was | nol until he had ripped the rev: elers up the back as a ‘‘cottager” and ripped Khem down again as ‘“a resident of Baltimore | Canyon who lives on the hillside just above the camp grounds,” that he stoppe the as the xaminer calls its nad vertence.” On numerous occasions during the week ding the publication of the “inadver- Millard gloated publicly on the age he was about to hand” the campers. He boasted to several employes | of the North Pacific Coast Railroad Com- pany that he had ‘‘a roast prepared that ould peel the skin from the campers, advising those to whom he spoke to watch for the following Sunday edition of the Sxaminer. Millard was huay explalning veste: 0 the managing editor how the “in- e’ had been allowed to take on large proportions. At a late hour ht the returns were not all in. . 1aging editor, however, was rest- ing somewhat easier than he did the night before while sup ing the building of a | retraction that might retract as little as hossible. In his inside pocket the manag- | ing editor of the Examiner had the letter written by Miilard to Will Moore, business | manager of the Monitor and manager of | Occidental camp. Moore “inadvertently” loaned it to the managing editor, who in- | timated he needed it in the business of iimadverting the Millard _‘‘inadvert- enc Yesterday afternoon Mr. Mooré, repenting the fact that he had given the etter to the managing editor, tried to get it again. He was unable to see the man- ing editor, but was told by one of his resentatives that they wished to send it to Mr. Hearst. In writing the letter threatening the Oc- cidental campers with all sorts of terms in San Quentin for their alleged felonies, Mr. Milard had “inadvertently” used an aminer letterhead. Twice again last night a representative of Mr. Moore tried to secure an audien: with the managing editor of the Exan iner, €0 as to come at the letter, but time was informed that that functionary was out. Mr. Moore begins to think that not the managing editor but he himself is out—that letter. Foster Azevedo, the lessee of the ground upon which the fake bacchanalian orgies were alleged to have taken place, was in this city yesterday in consultation with an attorney, bent upon bringing an action against the author of the defamatory article in last Bunday's Examiner. ‘It was nothing but lies,” he said, “from beginning to end. That man Mil- lard did it out of spite. The Occidental boys are not the only ones from whom he | tried to collect money for water from the spring I lease. When I allowed him to connect his pipe with the spring I told | him that the fact that he paid $4 a year rental would not warrant his interference | with any campers to whom I might rent rounds. I made him understand distinet- |Ty that the campers were first as far as that spring was concerned, How did he |live up to that agreement? Last season he allowed the owners of two houses, Shultz and Kiillp, to tap his pipe and use my water, for which he charged them $2 | @ month apiece. He made the same deal | with John Gormley. This vear he tried {t | on Gormley and when I heard of it T told Millard he was no gentleman.” James Shultz, one of the proprietors of the Larkspur baths, said yesterday that he intended to sue Millard because of the false statement in the sensational story that campers of both sexes were in the habit of bathing together at his place without bathing suits. | | | | | | “‘Cars stop here, this is the sign | The Market-st. Raflway wish to define. | Pesamotd Aluminum does it for them; ' Opposite “Call Bldg."” ’tis & gem. ach | Orient yesterday with a valuable cargo | and a fair passenger list. There was the | usual crowd down to see her off. The British tramp steamer Glenogle, that has lately been carrying merchandis from China for the Pacific Mail anfi{ Northern Pacific, arrived from Tacoma in | ballast yesterday. She Is under charter | | to the Government, and will be turned | into a transport as l]ul(‘k! possible. Joe Fountain, a new SR the Harbor Hospital erday by Drs. Robinson and Murphy for a serious cut in the leg. He was sitting on a doorstep on Stevenson street, between Second and Third, when a band of young hoodlums came along. Their leader was John Wel- don, and he had an open pocket-knife in his " han atch me make this guy Jump remarked o his companton, and with that he stuck the blade of the knife into Fountain’s thigh. With that the crowd ran away and Fountain was taken to the Harbor Hospital. The police are lmvkmg for Weldon. The San Francisco owned ship Eclipse is back in Sydney harbor, much the worse for an encounter with a hurricane. She sailed from Newcastle, N. S. W., for Hon- olulu with a cargo of coal, and soon after | she got out a terrific storm came up. The cargo_shifted, the seams opened and at one time it looked as though the vessel would go down. When the storm abated she was leaking pretty badly, but the LEET OF TUGS ARCHING FOR THE LOG RAFT Insurance Men and Owners Anxious. e The derelict log raft is giving shipping out men and the local underwriters a great deal of uneasiness. The big mass of piles | araw finally managed to get her into Syde is somewhere right In the track of ves- ney. | sels bound up and down the coast, and is | There are only three disengaged vessels therefore a serfous menace to navigation. | il port, anc u e idle a mo- There Is over six million feet of lumber [ M¢NL 'ghf“l‘{';fi ;’;‘{;‘;’”T‘}‘,Q“’fir;‘“fifg"sfiflf in the structure and there is about 000 | jsh s ips British Isles, Cambrian Hills insurance on it. Hence the uneasiness of [ and Claverdon. All of them are holding S et out for 25 61 n'ton more than the offering If the raft is to be picked up it should | rate. At = }"“ erecWore be heard from within the next forty-elght | ©Ver twenty disengaged vessels in port. hours. The Fearless may have picked it up, and if she has will bring it into port. | HOW ALFALFA LAND IS | Early - yesterday morning, the Czarina | Went out again and later in the day she ASSESSED IN MERCED was followed by the tugs Rescue and Sea Ty e | Queen. The latter vessel will tow the | 7 schooner Norma to Fort Bragg and as;d'“j“!’X aoees ‘:‘l‘f’“"e jand <veryelow soon as that job is accomplished she will { down n Merced Gounty, and the State | join the Rescue, Fearless and Czarina in | Board of Equalization does not know of the search for the derelict. The steamer |it. Samuel O. Crittenden, a respectable | President of the Alaska Pack: flect | farmer whose place Is near the thriving will probably %:: out to-day, so that five | hamlet of Ingomar, let the cat out of the steamers will be searching for the raft| bag yesterday morning when giving tes- by this afternocon. A number of vessels | timony before United States Commission- reached port yesterday, but none of them | er Heacock in the matter of the San Joa- | saw a trace of -the derelict. It is still| quin and Kings River Canal and Irriga- | | somewhere between FPoint Arena and|jon Company against the County of | | Point Reyes, but no one has been able | Stanislaus, its Board of Supervisors and | positively to'say that he saw It since the | gthers. The Supervisors fixed the rates | ship Orfental so nearly ran it down. Yes- | {q be charged by the corporation at a fig. the steamers Robert Adamson, | yre which the irrigation company declares State of California and Glenogle all | yirtyally amounts to a confiscation of its arrived from northern ports, but not one | prosdh of them caught sight of the raft. Mr. Crittenden corroborated the testi- | Captain George Harvey went In| mony of the other witnesses as to the al | o, o e B conai Queen, as Cap- | fa)fa (ndustry in that part of the countr: ftein e .»m_‘t}l“ dpRconiucdite ™e | He told how it cost about $7 or $8 per acre With a serious linese. o4 was towed to | to prepare the ground and put it in al- | a S Taand by the navy vard tug Una. | falfa, and 25 cents an acre to keep the L e i & (ama- | checks in order and put the water upon dilla yesterday. She will &0 o0 th® come | the land, exclusive ‘of the ‘cost of the| dock for an overhauling and will come | yaeer, "and that for the first five years of out of retirement some time next month, | oyjijvation the vield was from seven o The Oceanic Steamship Company’s mail | (oy ™ ong of alfalfa hay per acre, the steamer Australia arrived from Honolulu | PIEht SO8% Of WUre T8 ol B O rom yestex;da)n fl;:he blr:mght up a full CArgo|eito $4.60 per ton. | and about fifty cabin passengers and over| T.gpat is the average value of land with 100 in the steerage. Hhe passase was 2| J1falfa on it in your nelghborhood?” was iwn pleasant one axl1d l;xe run ;;}w m.i’((le gakea in six days and twelve hours. The cabin | asked. & i injSlx daveraniy ‘About $100 per acre. T'd hate to have » §100 per acre for. mine.” Mr. and Mrs. Atwater, five children and | to, take §100 per i servant, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Atherton, -ime‘}‘i‘::‘ (‘]-ug;‘l’l"o' land assessed for?” was Atherton, A. F. Afong Mr. and Mrs. H. blushed sligh: = G. Boswell and daughter, Mrs. E. Benner, N’mf}fi‘zl"cgacr\;fl ightly as he re: Miss Benner, Miss Burns, Thomas | ®ry. ¢mile that went round the c ourt- Buckley, B.'R. Banning, Mayor G. RE room was an Indication that the land of Cornich, Mrs. 8. L. Dexter, Mrs, Mr. and Mrs. A. Enos and son, C. Eccles, H. P. Frankiin, Mrs. C. Graham and two | children, L. T. Grant, W. B. Godfrey Jr. the other witnesses had been treated equally as leniently by the Assessor as Mr. Crittenden’s. The taking of further testimony in the L L Howard, A, Haszard, J. M| 5 fii be ‘continued during the next Miss Helene Irwin, Mrs. Keating, Mr. | W0 days. Kirkland, W. Lucas, Dr. and_Mrs. Mour- RS October styles Standard Patterns, the only high grade, low priced seam-allowing patterns. Domestic Office, 1021 Market st., near Sixth, itz and three children, J. E. Murphy, Mr. Marion, . Ray, W. T. Rawline, Mr. and Mrs, George W. Smith and child, C. ADVERTISEMENT: B e A e e HOUSEKEEPING GO0DS! During the past week we have opened up large shipments of TABLE LINENS, TOW- ELS, NAPKINS. TOWELING, BEDSPREADS, BLANKETS COMFORTERS and SHEETS; and quote a few special items. 9 cases Fine White CALIFORNIA BLANKETS, full size and extra weight. Price, $3.28 pair. 5 cases Extra Size WHITE ENGLISH MAR- SEILLES BEDSPREADS, veru handsome designs. Price, $2.50 gach. One case (300 dozen) GERMAN DAMASK NAP- KINS, full 26 inches square, extra double satin damask. Price, $3.50 dozen. 25 pleces Extra Quality BLEACHED SATIN TABLE DAMASK. full width, in 9 differ- ent designs. Prlce, $1.00 yard. 175 dozen Extra Size Full Bleach=d HEM- STITCHED HUCK TOWELS, very fine quality. Price, $3.50 dozen. We will alsohave a special sale this week of 700 pairs very handsome SAXONY and FISH NET LACE CURTAINS, all new goods, both White and Ecru. Prices, $2.00, $3.00 and $4.00 per pair. NOTE.—SHEETINGS and BLANKETS less than present mill prices. ui, 13, 15, 17, 19, i21 POST STREET. ONE WEEK FREBB Treatment and Medicine FOR | Catarrh, Deafness, NOISES IN THE _EAR AND THROAT D! given to show the merit of v Invention and ANTISEPTIC treatment; that glves many marvelous cures and so easy a child N can use it. In 1200 test cases N all CATARRHAL patlents re- lleved and S0 per cent Deaf- ness cured. Best of references and hundreds of indorsements. But the fo try it and be convinced while you cas superior |3 ) Call at once or write. DR. COTTINGHAM, 6 32 Market St., opp. Palace Hotel. Hours—9-11 a. m., 1-3 and 7-§ p. m. TWO POINTED FACTS Are always observable on a critical ex amination of our laundry work, and that is that the color is perfect and the finish beautiful on all linen done up here, Shirts, collars and cuffs are laundered here in a manner that gives all the beauty and freshness of the new article. Good Coffee More You Prink More You Want United States Laundry., Office 1004 Market Street. Telephone South 420. At Oakland Office, 514 Eleventh St. (rreat American [porting Tea (. | < Big Presents Free STORES EVERYWHERE. 100 STORES. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO o PALACE ***5 °GRAND HOTELS 9 ° SAN FRANCISCO. ° Connected by a covered passageway. 1400 Rooms—900 wi'h Bath Attached. @ All Under One Management. [+] NOTE THE PRICES: o EuropeanPlan.81.00 per day and upward @ American Plan. $8.00 per day and upward Correspondence Solicited. (<3 [ JOHN C. KIREPATRICK, Manager. ©000000000000000900 BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters Invigorator ana Ner- ‘OO‘DDOO ALL AILMENTS OF MEN CURED.§ Is a Great Restorative, vine. The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special | Tonic for the Sexual Organs of both sexes. The Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kid+ neys and Bladder. on_its own Merits. ALFS & BRUNE, Agents. S. F.—(Send for Circular.) AB] DR. MEYERS & CO. have the largest prac- o tice and best eguipped medical institution § | S “”km trese. on the Pacific Coast. Established 17 years. § | ~ FOR BARBERS, BAK- ¢ra. booiblacks, baih- e PRIVATE BOOK and advice free at office BRUSHES | billiard * tables, or by mail. All letters confidential. 781 Market St., San Franeisco. bookbinders, cnndy-mlkeu, canne foundries, bangers, printers, palnters, stablemen, tar-roofers, tanners. taflors, ete, BUCHANAN BROS.. Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacrameato St. brewers, dyers, flour mills. VOV VBBV E visir DR, JORDAN’S creat g | MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MARBET ST,bet. 6:247:0, S.1.Cal, The Largest Anatomical Museum in World. “Weakneses or any comtracied disease pesitively cured by he oldest Specialist cn the Coast. Est. 36 years. | OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES § | Consulfation free and strictly private. § | Trenment personally or by Jetter. & tive Curein every case undertaken, Wik for Took. PHILOS PR of o MAL valuable book for meny | (& DR.JORDAN & CO., 1051 '\hrkpmz S. F. ' INJECTION. A PERMANENT CURE of the most obstinate cases of Gonorrhea and Gleet, guaranteed in from 3 to 6 days ; no other treatment required. Sold by all druggists. W. T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, EHHYRBYAL p!u_s oSt Tioe T o G v emin, Bt R Telephone Brown 3L {dence, $21 California st., below Powell, Francisco. % | GOLDEN WEST BOTTLING WUHKS ——Bottlers of— ANHEUSER-BUSCH BEERS. Goods delivered to any part of the city, ’ Phone, Jessle 1522, bl iona and imitati. ns. At Druggists, or sen stamps for prticulars, testi Keliet fox. Ladloas i orier oy rotarm Ohl;ll-‘uliu a DTntmo-n\- 3 = mrf-'«--’-}

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