The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 8, 1899, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TROUBLE ON THE NUE CUTTER RICHARD RUSH Officer Paul Court-Martialed. e HE INSULTED HIS SUPERIOR . “SPLICED THE MAIN BRACE ONCE TOO OFTEN.” oS Second Engineer Runs Amuck Aboard Ship and Attempts to Strike the Executive Officer, Lieu- tenant Dodge. H. Paul of the rev- , who, according to the been w dis- co he is to be court- orders and at- » executive officer, »w practically in v officers whom t the Ru refused to ot sald to have los ve made Several ar by am recorder, ant D. J cute the offend al will be held on board as soon as Captain Hooper, foned at S selects the arrange to e. when seen last even- ed to enter into a of the trouble. He es had been fued but nature of them. t the crew, however, members o He . ship. the ntin > for him in his crew state that deserts he ficers had d been d that on the Rust been court- @ppotnted p; would try the charges THE FIRST CONCERT OF HOLMES’ QUARTET GOOD CHAMBER MUSIC PLAYED INTELLIGENTLY. hat he boar DMrs. Charles Olcott Richards Was the | Vocalist and Fred Maurer Played Accompaniments Very Well. The local musteal geason is particularly mrosperous this year, both from an artistic mnd financial standpoint. Follow- 4ng the tremendous success of the Minettt Quartet comes the Holmes Quartet, and proves by its careful work that it i en- titled to a prominent position in musical circles. Henry Holmes is one of those reverend musicians whose respect for the ©ld masters 18 80 profound that t rather mskance at the modern composttion. This revere lior not, er, interfere with the fine taste and acy of execution which gene companies the recital of such 1o the old school, and it w ot surprising to f formity of a k sion whi « g perience (14 first ap- Pearance), was Ind table. The programme ‘A, No op. 41 (Sc mann of a string quartet (Mendel string quartet in C, No. 3, op. 33 (Haydn). The Schu with its expres- | Pres perhaps wdpoint. Its beauty that imity which sur- | compositi that express emotion. v emotional sristics, which Schum knows ow to obtaln, make the deepest impression upon the careful listener, and arr Shen that movement in whic out as if to seek the the quartet @ 1810, emotion broadens d in eatest 2 (;l:)\lle Mr. Holme an intimate acquaintan of work, the quartet ficlent experfence to of tone W narrow requisites of an adagio movement. And 1 might even restrict somewhat harsh intonation to the s, for the icello and viola gave quite a smooth tone. The best work of the g sohn pr n de- to behold. The Haydn quart 100, received a creditable interpretation’ The first concert of the quartet entitles lightful it to further encouragement, the audience present accorded it a hearty ovation. The vocallst of the evening was Mrs, Charles Olcott Richards. I do not kno Whether Mrs. Richards is a professional singer, but her appearance in a chamber music concert subjects her to se eriticism. Her voice is flexible and clear, but it is more owing to the excellent man. ner of her execution than to the quality of her voice. In fact, Mrs. Richar voice appears to be built, and whoev aid this bullding knew his business thor. dughly. Mrs. Richards would find it a reat improvement if she would use a etter diction. For Instance, If she would let her lips get into a natural position in- stead of stretching them across her nect pronunciation would cer- result of such improvement. Richards sang ‘“Mignon’s Lied” and “Gehelmes,” by Schubert, and “Dormi Bela, Dormi Tu,” by Glf; Bflt(!s(n:‘:‘!lfl:‘: sani. Fred Maurer was the accom ALFRED METZGER. ———————— A Sailors’ Night. The entertainment by the young men of the United Siates tralning ship Hart- to Bev . Foley has been | at Paul has not been a | 1 form the main | w | r 'UNCLE SAM'S BOYS FOUGHT THE POLICE Regiment | them cam ha nteers, iy ywn the aring gre the houses in that sel at the C: street police s was motified by telephone that a riot w progress, and he at once dispatched his whole BHEURUNN to be given n Associatic Ellis streets, a will be a most el affair, as they unique and ‘taking” programme. entertainment will consist of solos, ts, choru rumental morous songs’ and programm r of the ship, and e Young atl for a ‘“real” c i m of th for their WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE CONVENTION TO-DA Election day ordin, very favorable occa or the of a convention of people with: but in the case of the Woman's Suffrag Cogvention, which g afternoon in Golden proved to be a fair on the convention also, for it w of fair ones. There was but a short sion of the reading of reports and ad- dresses and exercises. The best part of the programme has been reserved for to-day, when there will be two sessions, one in ‘the afternoon at 2 o'clock and another at 8 in the evenin the same place. At the afternoon n there will be several bright : taining talks by several bright and en- taining and papers pertinent to - {seue wi > apman Catt, Mis jam Keith and Miss Solomons. the evening Mrs. Carrie Chapman 1l delfver a_lecture on the subject of *‘Chestnuts widely extended and favorable reputation as a public speaker. Notwithstanding the title there will be nothing chestnutty about the lecture. ALEXANDER D. KEYES BECOMES A BENEDICT | ATTORNEY WEDS KATE THORN- TON SALISBURY. | The Nuptials Are Celebrated Very Quietly at the Home of the Bride on California Street. wedding took place ternoon at the reside e of 1414 California cet, Salisbury and Alexander united in marriage in the ence of about one hundred and fifty the best | guests. Mrs. Sallsbury, the mother of the bride, received the guests in a very handsome aret colored gown of heavy silk, made en train and embellished with wine col- ored tulle. Promptly at 4;30 o'clock, to the music of “Lohengrin,” sung by the Berkeley Glee Club, the wedding party entered the > the brid Miss oom; Miss Holbrook s Jusephine Longborough. After the bride, I of her uncle, Neal Robinson, and follow- ing them was the maid of honor, M garet Salisbury, sister of the bride. infield Scott K was_the best man. The costumes worn by the bride and her attendants were artistic and very ele- gant. The bridesmaids, two of them, Wore gowns of pink crepe de chine over Jink taffeta, and carried fmmense bou- Quets of white roses. The other two were lttired in white crepe de chine over white tafieta and carried pink roses. The maid g Men's | organized | YiArriva | | iment arrived Mrs. Catt has won a | second half w! | | target practice which kept back the regi- ) the arm | of honor was arrayed in an exquisite con- | fection of fine white Swiss, covered with initesimally small tucks. as lilies of the valley, and a spray of w these delicate flowers decorated her hair. | ment. Miss Salisbury’s gown was of white satin. It was made with a full, long train, and the corsage was finished with a trim- ming of superb lace. The bride wore a iong tulle wedding veil, and a bouquet of lilies of the valley completed a very ex- quisite costume. The room in which the ceremony was performed was a perfect bower of roses and chrysanthemums. During the cere- mony, which was performed by Rev. Father Prendergast, the couple stood un- der a canopy of pink roses, with huge | B. chr)'snmhemumst . shaggy headed white banked at either sid After an_informal ding supper wa war prettily d roses were candelabra were bri, At the bride’s table were honor, the bridesmaids and th reception the wed- ved. The bride’s table orated in pink. Duchess eral selections while the sipper was served. The bride has been ‘a very *p:')oelirrllfi {1}:1& men;b‘eg fil soéle!)" and the ‘oom son of the late General Keyes, i known.. i 5 ve“ Her bouquet | | anked on the table, and the | Tegiments have been attended to by or- ght with pink shades. | ders the maid or‘;nflrl!:l,l A e members ourt! nfantry: of the Berkeley Glee Club, who sang sev. ‘ S, p | to appear flable force of rtillery infantry, cavalry scene. The patrol the artillery, be- seen service in firing s into the s fon. Jerry Dinan and George McMahon galloped and trotted to the scene on foot as did Roosevelt's Rough Riders at Santiago, ORTY-SECOND INFANTRY FROM FORT HIGAR 1. of the [East Battalion. —-— TROUBLE FOR MEN OF THE VOLUNTEERS. . Desertion the Principal Offense of the | Privates—More Official In- vestigations as to Fitness. e The other half of the Forty-second Reg- | vesterday and joined the dy at the Presidio. The | s the one delayed by the | accident, and besides the story of the ac- | cident it brought in a story of a deraliled | train, twenty men slightly injured and one man suffering from concussion of the brain. The man suffering from concus- sion of the brain was left behind in the | hospital. The second section of the Forty-second came in under command of Lieutenant | Colonel Beacom, who, until the regiment | reaches Manila, will be senior officer o the regiment. Colonel J. Milton Thomp: son is colonel of the regiment, but he is already in Manila, and not until his twelve companies arrive there will he come to the duties of the spread eagle. companies alr Lieutenant Colonel Beacom reports a quiet trip out from Fort Niagara. He takes pride in the fact that there was not one man missing, not a man under arrest, nor a man chargeable with any minor infraction of the military laws. He | brings forty-five officers and over 1200 men, all well drilled, but a little lacking in target practice. It was the lack of ments alr here, and it is plain that the Forty-second will have to spend a good deal of the time left it before de- arture for Manila on the ranges at the >residio. One thing the Department of California demands from the men who go from it is accuracy of fire, and whenever a regiment lacking in target practice ar- rives it must put in at least a certain amount of practice at the ranges before it is even spoken of for a transport. There is more frouble about incompe- tent or apparently incompetent officers among the regiments arriving from the Sast. The latest orders have another batch of officers to appear before the | mental examining board and a second lot e the medical board. The board, by orders, is the same as before— Colonel "Freeman, Colonel Rawles and Captain Pratt—and it is supposed to in- quire into the fitness in every way of the officer ordered before it. The latest or- ders to appear before the board include Captain Paul B. Lino, Captain Willlam J. "Valden, First Lieutenant Andrew J. Brown, Second Lieutenant Frederic Hus- man, Second Lieutenant Charles J. Wein- heimer and Second Lieutenant Daniel G. Mendel, all of the Thirty-eighth Regi- L There is also an order that the following officers appear before the medi- cal examining board heretofore appointed to be examined as to thelr physical fit- n to perform the dutfes attached to their rank: First Lieutenant Thaddeus B. Seigle of the Thirty-eighth Infantry, U. S. V.; Captain B. F. Patrick, adjutant of the Forty-fifth Infantry, U. §. V.: First Lieutenant A. R. Castle of the Forty- fifth Infantry, U. S. V.; Second Lieuten- ant F. G. Kellond of the Forty-fifth In- fantry, U. S. V.; Second Lieutenant A. Jories of the Forty-fifth Infantry, U. The officers named will report to the I\reslden( of the board, Major Philip S. arvi surgeon, United States army. The offenders of the recently arrived appointing the following courts- Court-martial for the Forty- Lieutenant Colonel V. Scott, Major H. McCoy, Captain Thomas Leonard, Captain A. Cross- field, First Lieutenant W. J. White, First Lieutenant O. R. Perry, Second Lieuten- ant F. L. Dengler, Second Lieutenant A. J. Cadden, Second Lieutenant W. E. Par- LATEST NEWS FROM CAMPS AND TRANSPORTS 0000000 0000609860QF X TOXTXTATRXIIINATET ¥ SRR ¥ ATATHESHTES I TATRTETETESETH D ¥ 0000 a club and laid him low. Then the fight became general, the soldiers pil- ing In upon the police with great alacrity. 2] Lieutenant Esola guarded the sta- tion, and from his watch tower seeing that the officers were surrounded by the enemy, telephoned to the Central Prison Keepers Callinan and police station for reinforcements, and Dwyer, with Patrolmen Doud and a detail of nine men was sent up in the go Tuchler, marched to the battlefield in Harbor patrol wagon. The fifteen .o > patrol wagon. made a flying wedge into the crowd of ¢ linan, with a volce of thunder, drunken soldfers and soon had nine- g 1 upon the rioters to surrender, teen of them sprawling in the dust. ., 8. received for roply & swat on the. | Tus tomalpder made fhelriescape, . % jaw from a young ranch hand in blue. fornja-street station and registered as o Callinan, staggered but unconquered, lain drunks, with lumps on their 8 swiped his assailant on the head with Feads. o ERBRNNANNRNRS RUVRBURURUNNNRRNRINS sons, First Lieutenant M. C. Rayson, judge advocate, all of the Forty-fourth Infantry. Court-martial for the Forty-fifth In- fantry: Major Theodore K. Birkhaeuser, Captain Daniel W. Hand, Captain James oss, Captaln_ Adelbert W. Cogswell, Captain Tom J. Rogers, Captain Frank E. Artand (assistant surgeon), First Lieutenant Arthur S. Tibbitts, First Lieu- tenant Allan G. Blaker, Second Lieuten- ant Edward P. Barber, Second Lieuten- ant Roy I. Taylor, Second Lieutenant Albert 5. Ogell, Second Lieutenant Edwin C. Long, Second Lieutenant John ,B. Shuman, First Lieutenant George 'P. Tyner, judge advocate, all of the Forty- fifth Infantry. There is no offense in either regiment graver than attempted desertion, but the trials will go on just the same and the offenders will have to stand whatover penalty the military _court may direct. Major Folliot A. Whitney, Sixth In- fantry, has been ordered to proceed to the Philippines by the transport City of Sycney. ptain John Newton, Sixteenth Infan- try, has been assigned to duty as quar- termaster and_commissary on the trans- port Duke of Fife. First Lieutenant Hamilton A. Smith, Third Infantry; Captain James A. Arra- smith, Thirteenth Infantry, and_Second Jieutenant Emory S. West, Eleventh Cavalry, have been ordered to report for | temporary duty with the casual detach- ment at the Presidio pending their as- signment to the Philippines. Acting A stant Surgeon Herbert T. Thornburgh, Acting Assistant Surgeon Donald P. McCord and Acting Assistant Surgeon Thomas S. Lowe have been as- signed to duty at the general hospical vending assignment to Manila TUpon the recommendation of the chief surgeon of the department, Acting As- sistant Surgeon Robert E. Willlams, now on duty at Angel Island, is igned to duty at the detention camp on Angel Island, relieving Acting Assistant Sur- geon Villlam Grey Miller, who will re- port to the commanding officer Forty- fourth Infantry, for duty. The United States army transport Wyefleld arrived from Manila about 11 o'clock last night. She brought no pas- sengers or supplies and is expected to load and return to the Philippines in a short time. NANCE O’NEIL WANTED BLOOD There was a difference of opinion behind the scenes at the California Theater the other night. It happened between the acts of “Oliver Twist.” Miss O'Neil left the star dressing room and started for the wings in response to a *“hurry up” from Mr. Gleason. The spirit of Nancy Sykes had descended upon her, and she swashed her brown calico and rolled, hands on hips, according to the slums of London town. She stopped on her way to give an order to a maid, and it was at this point that Mr. Duval, a person of some authority, stopped her. “You are not going to put blood on your face to-night, are you, Miss O'Neil?” Nance stopped and turned toward him by means of her neck alone. Her eye- brows were up. 3 “You are joking, Mr. Duval,” in mutter- ing_thunder. “*No, I'm not. (!;ie mgrden'(l without on’t do it.” “And why, may I ask?’ Nance Sykes was translating herselt into Magda. “It'll spoil your complexion. Then the storm burst. The eyebrows came down, but the chin went up, and Miss O'Neil's large arm gesticulated side- ward as it is wont. In the most booming kind of thunder she broke loose. & “Mr. Duval, you must be insane. Not ut blood on my face! Spoil the per- ormance? Do you suppose I care for my coraplexion? 17" Do you? Mr. Duval, un derstand that I will give an artistic per- formance if it costs me my complexion forever.” Mr. Duval became so small that he was neither heard nor seen. Nancy Sykes swept magnificently past trunks and fur- niture and scenes and entered fiercely at her cue. That is why she was_so drenchingly gory in the last act that Mr. Oppenheimer said things under his breath about spoil- ing his new stage with red paint, and two members of the audience were carried out in hysterics. And that is why Mr. Duval is recalling all the proverbs he ever heard about perversity and women. SARAH COMSTOCK. ———————————— New Drydock. ASTORITA, Or., Nov. 7.—The Astoria Progressive Commercial Association now has under consideration plans for the construction of an immense drydock here. The estimated cost of the dock is $700,000. The commerce of the Columbia has grown to such proportions that a large dock is needed, and funds will prob- ably soon be raised to commence the wor! Don’t put it on your face. the blood. Come, 10 DISCHARGED SOLDIERS CAME ON TH . POL Transport Brought 10 Passengers Only. MAILBOAT AUSTRALIA ARRIVES e A CROWD OF HONOLULU PEOPLE CAME UP ON HER. e Curacao Departs for Mexican Ports. Plans for the New Wharf at Howard Street to Be Adopted To-Day. e The transport St. Paul arrived from Manila yesterday afternoon, after a good pi e of twenty-seven days. She would have been here Monday night had it not been for a slight break in the machinery which prevented the engines being run at full speed. Captain Hays reports leaving Manila on October 11 and making the run to Nagasaki in five days. The Indiana, with the Tennessee troops aboard, left Nagasaki a few hours ahead of the St. Paul, bound for Yokohama. The St. Paul overhauled and passed the Indiana the same day, and the officers of the trans- port think it will be next Friday before the Tennessee boys reach here. The p: ngers on the St. Paul were: Mrs. C. H. Andrews and Myron Andrews the wife and son of Lieutenant Andrews of the medical department of the army; R. S. Chamberlin, a mining expert; James Gillies, ex-quartermaster sergeant of Company C, First California; Joseph M. Ross, ex-sergeant Company C, First Cali- fornia; O. C. Heise, assistant surgeon, Twelfth Infantry; ph A. : Fourte n Infantry; George H. paymaster, U. S. N.; Matthew Burke, Ed Arnold and F. L. Lowell of the quarter- master’s department. Mr. McGeary was formerly in the office of the postoflice in- but when the call to arms came S enlisted Gri sick man before leaving Man: now well on the road to recoy X The St. Paul came into port in splendid order. She does not look like a troop ship and everybody aboard has a good word to say for Captain Hays and his officers, The ship carried the Third Cav- alry from Seattle to Manila and Captain Hays brings back a very handsome re- minder of the trip. It is a decanter of cut , beautifully chased with silver and ing the following inscription: *‘To ptain G. M. Hays, 5. §. St. Paul, from the officers of the Third Cavalry and med- ical staff, October, 18 Purser 2. L. Gool usual, had every- thing in readiness for the quarantine offi- cer, inspectors and, last but not Aiper men, SO N0 One was reports that the Indiana, s ‘the Tennessee Regiment, had 100 prisoners aboard when she was at Naga- saki. They were all in charge of Lieu- tenant Desmukes and have from three to ten years' sentences to serve. At Naga- saki one elght-year, one flve-year and one three-year prisoner escaped and were not recaptured. As soon as the Indlana ar- rived the quartermaster's steamer Mc- Dowell will take the prisoners aboard and land them on Alcatraz. Mr. Goold says that the day after St. Paul left Manila they passed a derelict barge No. 17i9. Early in Oc steamers Esmeralda and Lagaspi Hongkong for Manila with launc barges in tow for the United State: ernment. _They were caught In customs typhoon of October 1-3 and the Lagaspl | lost_her tow. The barge passed by the St. Paul is supposed to have belonged to ber. : The Oceanic Steamship Compan 's Aus. tralla arrived from Honolulu yesterd after a i age of six days el hour: uld have been made in an six days had it not been for the heavy fog which caused Captain Houd- Jette to slow his vessel down when he was approaching the coast. The Austra- lia brought up 63 cabin and 35 steerage Those in the cabin were: less t passenger . B. Rose, wife and son; Miss E, . Chaffee, O. Eastwood and wife, Miss E. G. O’Connell, Miss L. C. O’Connell, Mrs. W. H. Hamiiton, Mrs. C, H. Bishop and son, D. R. Emery, W. H. Lowden, Miss F. Lowden, Miss J. A. Shearer, Mrs. L. P. McIntyre, Miss O. Sheridan, M} oz Sheridan, D. J. Rod E. R. Fraser, gers, S A * Coleman, Miss N. McPher s V. Chandler, 'J, H. Crawford and wife, R. C. Medcraft, Cap- tain J. Peterson and wife, W. B. McLean, A. Friedenthal, R. H. Pratt and wife, F. Curtis, Clay Clement, Mrs, C. Clement, J. E. Crew, D. Mullen, J. Hardy, Ed Felt, M. de Roco, H. D. Roberts, ‘wife, two children and mafd, F. McQuarrie, 0. Nor- flect, Miss B. Foltz, Miss M. Marshail, J. Williams, E. M. Bell, F. L. Hoogs, Mrs. Gwynne, Mi M. Kennedy, H. G. Lonsdale and wife H. Wise, C. Winston, E. Walton, C. . Grave, P. Peck, R. B. Hogue and J. 3. Dunn. Clay Clement and hts company of play ers came back. Their season in Honolulu was not a success, strange to say. Cap- tain Peterson and wife also came up on the Mail boat. Captain _Peterson was master of the bark Lady Lampson when she was lost on Palmyra Island. He and Mrs. Peterson and five of the crew were for twenty-eight days in an open boat and finally reached the coast of Hawall. The steamer Curacao sailed for Mexican ports with 17 cabin and 5 steer- age pas The bark James Nesmith, which arrived from Newecastle, Australia, last Monday night, has been chartered to carry lumber | to_Delagoa Bay. The Harbor Commissioners will to-day decide upon the plans for rebuilding How- ard street wharf N Owing to the ad- vance in the price of iron the chances are a new wooden cylinder patented by Chief Engineer Holmes will be adopted. TOO MUCH FILIPINO. Mechanics’ Institute Has an Ele- phant on Its Hands and Writes to Washington for Assistance. A meeting of the “Board of Directors” of the Mechanics' Institute was held last | night. Ernst A. Denicke called the meet- ing to order.. The most interesting trans- action of the evening was a resolution to send an appeal to Washington in regard to the disposal of the Filipino acrobats now in the city. These men and women are being kept at the expense of the institute, and tne ap- peal forwarded to Lyman J. Gage, Sec- retary of the Treasury, Elihu Root, Sec- retary of War, Allen Hitchcock, Secro- tary of the Interior, and President Mc- Kinley, is to petition the Government to make some arrangements for their trans- portation to Manila. Many of them are willing to work, but are unable to fnd employment here. W. R. Williams, former assistant 1j- brarlan of the institute, resigned his position and wil in future be librarfan oi the Mercantile Library. One hundred books have been given to the soldiers’ library, and more magazines to be bought for the perfodical room President Denicke, at the close of the ;‘ne:flng.t Sip(fléc |fl( l(‘.l"le loss the institute ad sustaine n e death of James H. Culve frides e din TS DI T A Desirable Pamphlet. §. N. Wood & Co. have just fssued for the fall and winter of 1589-190 a very at- tractive catalogue, containing fllustra- tions of the styles of suits, furnishings and hats carried by them, together with a number of late patterns in tailor-made suits. The booklet is excellent typograph- fcally and of value to those so situated that it is inconvenient to come to San Francisco to make their purchases. It will be sent free of charge on applica- tion with full directions for - - et G self-measure in | s al oo oe s S cod s o GLOTH, ADVERTISEMENTS. BUSSUSETS FLANNEL and LINEN DEPARTMENTS. SIX EXTRA BARGAINS. CLOTHS, full 54 inches shades. .. backs and full 56 to 62 colorings and best qual plalds. el ail handsome designs (I ARGETEingeds Z oot o 35 pleces VENETIAN AND ENGLISH COVERT 2 cases NEW GOLF CLOAKINGS, in Navys, Greens, Browns and Tans, with plaid 2 cases FANCY EIDERDOWN FLANNELS, latest 10 cases GERMAN DUVETTE FLANNELS, in a full assortment of stripes, 40 pleces 72-INCH BLEACHED SATIN DAMASK, 500 dozen Extra Heavy BLEACHED LINEN HUCK TOWELS, hemmed, hemstitched $1.25 wide and all new $3.00 inches in width.. Yard. 75¢ Yard. 12:¢ Yard. 75¢ Yard. $3.00 Dozen. ities. figures and rish manufacture)... R, 1892 MURDERER DE BAUGE SHEDS BITTER TEARS MAKES STATEMENT DETAILING THE DEATH STRUGGLE. His Defense Will Probably Be That He Was Temporarily Insane When He Committed the Deed. Paul de Bauge, the cook who murdered Della Tracey, alias Reynolds, allas O'Con. nor, in her room at 14 Turk street ear! yvesterday morniflg, was taken before to his rights. He asked for time to com- municate with his friends, and the Judge continued the case till to-morrow. | De Bauge is suffering from the effects of his struggle with the woman and yes- | the Re- had terday morning was ta celving Hospital for treat an incised wound on the little finger of | his right hand and was otherwise jured, besides being scratched r on the face and fc the woman had made a despe: gle for her life. He had to be taken back again to the hospital yesterday after- noon. De Bauge made a full statement yester- day Captai recital he was in tears. born in Meaux, France, ago and came to this city of age. He had worked nearly all the leading was married in 1584 and lived with wife at 1010 Mission street. In March, 1888, he went to the Klondike with his adopted son Charlie and returned about four weeks ago. He had been drinking before he met the woman. He detailed in full the quarrel with her over the missing $10 gold piece and the death struggle. He claims that she took the dirk out of his pocket and tempted to use it on him and he suc- ceeded In wrenching it from her, the han- during i Bohen, and s. He said he s a aurants. his dle remaining in her hand. He hecame crazy and used the dirk on her neck. | When the policeman arrived he strug- gled with them and got a black ey De Bauge's wife called at the prison yesterday morning and there was an ef- fecting Scene between them. They em- braced each other and both shed tears. After she left him she was utterly pros- trated. Mrs. de Bauge IS a handsome ladylike woman. 7 e autopsy y showed _that L on the woman's there were besides others on her forehead and hea Tt Guest oIl B Tl ke o & oads = e Used Illegal Nets. The State Game and Fish Commission- ers recently received information that the law was being violated by parties near Chico, fishing for salmon with nets of S hibited by the statutes. Deputy . J. Hall and the Chico officers found the illegal fishers, who we a net with a 4ie-inch mesh, 7% in ing the smallest permi d. There were four of them, G. and W. Thomas, Charles Batchelder and John cGin all of Chico. The accused were held by Justice Collins, and their trial will take place next week. e Sued the Wrong Party. In the case of Thomas Gallivan executors of the estate of Henry son of Colusa, United States Circuit Judge Morrow yesterday rendered a decision ranting the motion of the defendant for udgment on the pleadings and dismissing the case. Gallivan is a physician. He brought in a bill of several thousand dol- lars for medical services rendered to Henry C. Nelson before his decease. To recover the amount he sued the executors and the decision of the court is that he should have brought suit against the estate. — e e—————— Two Sudden Deaths. TLazarus David, a native of Poland, aged 62 years, died suddenly at 7 o'clock yester- day morning at his residence, 7 John street. He had been ailing for two weeks. Michael Smith, a_native of Ireland, 58 years old, died suddenly of apoplexy yes- terday afternoon at his residence, corner of Seventeenth and Douglas streets. He had been weak-minded for a long time. The cases were reported to the Coroner. prititvsi e e e Dr. Parker's Cough Cure. One dose will stop & cough, Never fails, Try it, 2c. All druggists,* Judge Mogan yesterday and instructed as | twenty-eight | wounds In her neck, which cansed. death, | I | OIL! OIL! OIL '® “A Good Strike in Oil ‘# Will Reduce Your Toil” : It you are looking for an oil in- vestment you had better procure tock in the CONTINENTAL OIL AND DEVELOPMENT COM- PANY now, as we have sold half of the shares placed on the market | the first week. If the demand con- { @ tinues ten days more stock cannot | be had at any price. Our lands are right in the “oil basin”” and sure of good results. An order has been nlaced for the | latest improved machinery that will enable us to go any depth necessary to get the oil. Prof. W, , an oil expert of many years’ experience, says that this district will be the greatest oil- bearing section in the State. “Shall T cha a few dollars to make myself comfortable for life, or be satisfied to labor for every dollar I receive?” For particulars call Ay or address A. E. RUDELL, Secretar: 2 ansome Stre WM. CORBIN, President. COURIAN’S NEW RARE COLLECTION Just cut of the Custom House. TURKISE RUGS PERSIAN WILL BE SOLD AT PEREMPTORY AUCTION THIS DAY. Wednesday, Nov.8th, AT 2 P. M. DAILY. Goods on view Monday and Tuesday, Oct. and 81, at ART ROOMS, 125 GEARY ST. Adjoinina the City of Paris, NOTE—Mr. Courian, realizing that nothing | was too fine for his patrons in San Franeiseo Instructed his agents in the Orlent to secyrs the rarest and T perfect antiques obtair bl This collect] “asents twn yenrs their labor and was made speci his zle A W. LOUDERBACK il enduct eale. 30 vesscoseses Transcontinental tourists and trav- : elers from all over the United States , BUUW LNCI apbivcitiion b s vee lence of the ' + ¢ ' PALACE ano s GRAND } by making these hotels thelr headouar- § ters while in San Francisco. Foureed § hundred rooms. 800 with baths—le-gest ¢ and finest tn_the world. : JOHN C. KIRKPATRICK, Manoger * > - P RUPTUR USE NO MOR Hoops or Steel Rupture retaincd ! and comfort and th E,. cally CURED by DR. PIERCE'S Magunetic Elastic T);u. g7 Call at New Pamphlet office or write foi No. 1 5 MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS €O. 620 Market st., opp. Palace Hotel, 4 : W, T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus spreckels Bldg. Tel o 931 g Beatdence, e rare st below, Powelly

Other pages from this issue: