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s THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1899 T he was placed in the custody ing process’ j ates Marshal John H. Shine. of United OPENED LETTERS OB SIX MONTHS 4 TOOK MONEY Railway Mail Clerk Blake Trapped. He will be taken before Commissioner | Heacock to-day and a date set for his | examination. | Mr. Blake's disgrace Is a surprise to his | friends, for he has betn thirteen years connected with the Postal Department in | various -apacities. His salary in his last position was $1150 per annum. —— CABLE-CAR ACCIDENTS. Three Occur on the McAllister-Street Line Within an Hour and a Half. There was a chapter of McAllister street line yesterday all occurring within an hour and a half. i [ | 1 ccidents on the | v afternoon, | About 2 o'clock car 257 was crossing Leav- | enworth street when a Post street car | came down the hill t speed and with A lt- latform of car 2 rly overturn it. struck t | such fo GOOD FOR THIRTEEN YEARS \ [ l | | —_— tle girl was thrown off, but was not in- Sured, @ 1l the passengers were shaken TEMPTATION SHOWED HIM |up. S ant 2 -|lx and Dete ‘ll\'s Crockett were among the passengers an EASY LIVING. Jumped off, thinking the car would topple HTADRNRG Half an hour later J. E. Grady of Stoc ton was crossing Jones and McAllis | streets, rolling a_cigarette, when car struck him, knocking him down. He was | Caught by the Clever Detective Work of Postal Inspectors Erwin and Bricker, Who Have a Clear Case. S T A. Blake, rallw: Sanchez str ne wrong and taken to the Receiving Hospital, where cut left eye was stitched and | ised. About over his ssed. His left leg was b 3:30 o'clock a McAllister street car struck the rear platform of a Larkin street car | at the crossing of the two streets, and J. | F. Briscoll of 2 Golden strect, who was | ding on the platform. was thrown oft 1to the mud. He was taken to the Re- ceiving Hospital, where it was found that d escaped’ with the hands belng d. v ma s now weak He was arrested ispectors Erwin and ROBERT DUNCAN MILNE SERIOUSLY INJURED WELL-ENOWN WRITER STRUCK BY A CAR. | His Skull Badly Lacerated and the | Injury May Prove Fatal —An Operation Deemed Necessary. Bricker work r plans t or. Their vigi- | ¥ by the dis- Robert Duncan Miine, the well known writer of short stories, met with an accl- dent last night shortly after 12 o'clock which may cost him his life. Mr. Milne was crossing Market street, between N Montgomery and Second., | 1 he was struck and knocked down | car 251 of the McAllister street line. He was taken to the Receiving Hospital by Officer Meye aind it was found that Blake broke begging for e told 1 his crime, ama time s beg New L sweat- | Genuine CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS must bear signature of Zo. o FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS, FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CORSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TME COMPLEXIOR GIENTUDNR woer mave NATURE, 24 Eoes | Prely Vegetable, e PRINTED ON RED PAPER’' SEE GENUINE WRAPPER SEE GENUINE | WRAPPER | \ STATEMENT CONDITICON A | | | | | Mine had re back of the heac the ved a severe gash in the 1 and probably a fra & examining ph to call in assistance victim | oman of the car, P. Healy, was, statement of witnesses, allowed to on his own recognizance on the theory the accide was t due to his ¢ He will appear in cou ND AFFAIRS| FIREMAN'S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY | it wi this morn NEWHOUSE WAS NOT WILTSEE'S PARTNER HIS DECISION. Judge Seawell has decided in favor of | in the & of Oscar New- i & t E. A. W in which the | w % © | Plaintiff sought to establish his claim that | he had a partnership interest in certain | i groups known the Providence, Goig Blossom, El Oro and Drummond. o e for several years acted as ; xpert for Wiltses, and he ol > . his services in locating and de- es Wiltsee agreed to give him ; erest In all of the er- | him. Judge Seawell said | : el _ ment set up by Newhouse < the statute of frauds. It o p the creation of a trust In such as could only be done | ument or by operation of ; ¢ g the question the o N y pasd said that while the preponderance of erj | 5 | dence showed that Wiltsee had give | Newhouse interests in properties "xn:rxy:‘ et 10 time there existed no partnership | 2 8 96,207 ment between them, as there was no . . Provision by which Newhouse was to pay nosr 20 | '.‘1;;‘:‘“« of any Ic that might be in- During the trial of the case certain mat- ters developed that led Wiltsee to cause 466,055 43 | the arrest of Newhouse, and the case wiil | fome up before Judge Dunne in the near 720,504 g | TULUre On habeas corpus proceedings i P2 | #tituted in behalf of the defend 4 —_—— Your Name in Gold. Your name stamped in gold letters free | of charge on all leather goods trom Sanborn, Vail & Co. Foc0® bought —_——— On account of the time neces- sary in the preparation of the Christmas edition of THE CALL, to be issued Sunday, December 17, NO ADVERTISE- MENTS for that issue will be received AFTER 9:30 P. M. SATURDAY. SEE I Marine OUR new stock of PIANOS 279,175 48 Premiums sring Risk the Rigks the unt Aduring - o incomparable Risks and Premivms. | priced Boudoir. AN e EBYERYTHING NEW, ‘ ’;'“;;l:n::‘. 100,423,454 T8 08 162,258 62 6,941,668 J. STAPLES. President. D. NARD FAYMONVILLE, Secretary. ribed and sworn' to before me. this Mth of January, 1899, M. M. RHORER, Deputy Insurance Commissioner. KOHLER & C EVICT]MS S Such Declared to Be| doubtedly be voted upon favorabl and critically examine and more attractive prices; from the no old stock to work off on you. Lowest prices for Standard Pianos. OPEN EVENINCS. Cable Cars Crash Together at Sut- ter and Powell Streets and Seri- ously Injure Two People. car. home and at ECAUSE of a gripman’s bad fect brake—circumstances which in street railroad com- pany’s loglc are the direct result of a shower of rain— two cars crashed into each other at Sutter and Powell streets yesterday noon. One victim s at his home with judgment or an imper- not a ged kneecap, a lad is badly bruised and a score of approaches down a steep grade. The dummy crashed into it passengers are suffering from shock. with great force, and a moment later I was picked up, dazed The force of the collision was so violent that the dummy of and with fearful pains in my left side. I have suffered for the Sutter-street car knocked the Powell-street car clear some years from sclatic rheumatism and now my knee is across_the track, the blow doing serious damage to both. The numb and swollen considerably, and I also received a blow | cars were crowded, and in addition to those injured many were on my back, which is causing considerable pain. A lad who thrown to the street. Had the cars crashed into each other was standing by me was also knocked down and carried Into a moment earlier the Powell-street would have been struck a drugstore. Several passenegers were thrown from their | in the center and ity could hardly have been avolded. seats, but not The dummy approached the crossing at a lively speed, not killed.” struck the rear end of the Powell-street car, on which Joseph nd threw them heavily to the ing that The dummy should have waited but the brakes were not used in Kahn and a boy were floor as the car was de; until the car had erc time to prevent the Joseph Kahn of 1 and crippled, was on the rear pl afled. sed, ision Jackson street, a man of middle age atform of the Powell-street asked h passengers being treated in a He was so severely injured that he had to be conveyed once put to bed. “It appeared to me that the gripman of the dummy could | ve been attending “for at that point Sutter street is nearly level, while Powell seriously hurt. The gripman of .the dummy explained the accident b: the slippery condition of the tracks was alone responsible for the accident. lowance for a slippery track, but received the reply that ich affairs are unavoidable accidents. AY CARELESSNESS; GRIPMAN SAYS ACCIDENT to his business,”” said Mr. Kahn, Iam only surprised that I was | due to the rain, One of the shocked im if a gripman is not supposed to make The injured boy, after was taken home. one-half of that city would have been re- duced to ashes. We want to live here and enjoy life here, and our children want to do the same. It is our duty to | see that these Improvements are carried | DREWG LY T0 & PALL OF SLEEP speaker. He said that he does not own a foot of land anywhere near the line of the | proposed park improvement, but was con- | vinced that by extending the park and | building the sewers every inch of the city would be directly benefited. The adoption of the new charter has | made it perfectly safe for the city to Issue | bonds, for every dollar that will be spent will g0 into the proper channel for which | it was intended. ‘ “This is not an election of bdsses,” said | aker, “‘but an election in which the | and the artisans are to determine | . whether they are to insure an era of pro- | gress or whether they are going to allow | another Coxey army to march out of this | State because there nothing to do here. | 1t 1s a question of whether you will allow | t'e city to sleep as she has slept for 1he| pust five vears or whether she is to be put in a position where she can double her | population and importance during the | next fifteen years." Cheers greeted Mayor Phelan as he arose to speak. “Ordinarily we are divid- | ed at elections,” he said, “but-at this time | we can be united. We are to build a city for the future. The ploneers, noble as | they were, only cared for their present | and made no plans for the future. They intended only to make their money here and go somewhere else 1o spend it. We | do not feel like that. It is true San Fran- clsco is out of debt, but If we have no | debt, it is equally true that we have noth- | ing for which a debt may stand. It is only our climatic favors that prevent this city from being very unhealthy. Our schools are a menace to child life; our hospital is a4 menace to the health of any who go there. Oakland, Alameda and Los An- eles put us to shame with their beautiful ools, and they acquired them all by ing bonds. ““It 1= sald that we should have necessi- ties before luxuries. This is true. but where 1s the man who does not have both if he can afford them? And is not San | Francisco wealthy enough to have both? We have had the four walls of a house long enough; it is now time we put a little furniture and a few pictures and_carpets the Real Issue. BONDS WARMLY ADVOCATED MAYOR PHELAN APPEALS TO CIVIC PRIDE. If earnest work on the part of improve- ment and district clubs can insure suc- cess, all of the bond propositions will un- Last 1ght meetings were held in many parts of town. All were well attended, and but | one spirit was manifested—the spirit of civic pride and progress. Mayor Phelun visited several meetings and gave short addresses in advocacy of the bonds, but although he asked his hearers to question him freely regarding any objection they might have, no one was found who was not in accord with his Honor's arguments. Pixley's Hall, at Polk street and Pacific avenue, was crowded by members of the Forty-first District Improvement Club and voters when ex-Supervisor Denman called for order. In opening the proceed- ings he =aid that some of the bonds need- ed no explanation, but regarding the pan- | handle there is still need for some popular 1 | education. “We need schools, and shall in it. 1 would not vote to make San Ra- | have them,” sald he. “We need s, | fael, or even Oakland, a world's resort. It | and shall have them. We certainly need a | would be f h, because they can never | hospital, and we shall have it. We want | be aught but suburban places and will get what we leave. With San Fran- 5 it s different. We are bound to grow and the more beautiful we make our city, the more quickly will it grow. If the acquisition of schoois, parks and sewers would retard the obtalning of our water | and light plants we might hesitate, but | these Improvements we propose to acquire | now will but help us in the near future to own all our gas and water plants and per- haps other things. Precita Valley Club. | The mass meeting which had been an- nounced for last night was unavoldably our park panhandle extended, and we should have it also. Every great cily ex- tends and maintains a creditable park and boulevard system. We must have it too and we certainly shall have it it our cit izens realize the value of it and their re- spensibility. This extension will act also as a great firebreak between the north | and south sections of the city, and this is | 2 new idea that should not be lost sight | of. 1 expect to see all the bonds passed by much more than the necessary two- ote."” 1 hraY Wieiiin spoke in detail of the var- tous bond propositlona and nt'tar;"!;‘oxd Jome es cone em. 'l'irel::.va‘:;)‘—:‘[lfif T Cant The sewer aystom | postponed. untll Monday Tight Ia ‘Sousen would result in tearing up all the streets, | quence of other pressing engagements ot destroying existing systems and taxing | the speakers who had been scheduled to small owners out of their property. e | qdress the meeting. explained how the various sectlons of the | 7y Tl T/0 VAT MBS procseded to ity would be benefited and stated that clty would iabe very small compared | transact its regular business. John T. N Graham, chairman of the executive com- with the tmmense improvements. Mr. Wellin said that the labor question | mittee, offered a resolution Indorsing the bond issue for all of the teatures em- was disposed of by the charter, which fixed the hours and the pay of laborers. | bodied in the proposition. The scheme for It will require from 500 to 1000 men, prob- | ewers was indorsed in particular, as the ably for two years, to work on the park | section of the city in which the club is extension, and all the money spent will | Jocated and for which the property own- merely change hands right here In our :ers have been contending ever since the own city. He referred to the opposition | organization of the improvement club is to Golden Gate Park thirty years ago and | in sore need of sewer improvements to the many arguments that were ad-| President J. B. Vizzard spoke of the vanced against it at that time and showed | dilatory tactics of the contractor who has how they had been proved fallaclous and | the fiiling in of Bernal Park. This brought forth additional remarks from leading. Was there ever a time,” he askea, Secretary Young, who announced vhen obstructionists did not arise when- | that the Supervisors had extended 120 more days to the contractor without any seeming justification, thereby protracting the work, which should have been com- pleted months ago. It was shown by the statistics of the number of families with school children that there is a necessity for another chool bullding south of Twenty-fourth street, and to have such a building erected will be the alm of the property owners as #00n as the bond election so decides. The club has made ample preparations for the mass meeting on next Mon®ay night, at which there will be able speak- ers present. Park Sentiment. The mceting held at Devisadero Hall under the auspices of the Panhandle and Ashbury Heights Improvement Club to discuss the bond issues was largely at- tended. A number of speakers presented strong and convincing arguments favor- ing the proposed improvements. In call- lni the meeting to order Chairman C. D, Salfield ~xpressed the opinion that there would not be 5000 votes cast against the bond measures. He had made a hoase- to-house canvass and found that business men, merchants, lawyer® and laboring- men gencrally were going to vote for the bonds. Henry N. Clement, who was one of the first Park Commissioners, stated that he and his colleagues, Frank McCoppin and Charles H. Story, had upon the need of a park at least 1000 acres In area. It was 1o extend west to the ocean and €ast to Van Ness avenue. As the charter line extended to the west line of Devisa- dero street the city had no power to make any reservation outside of its limits. He contended that the only way to acquire parks, sewers, schoolhouses and hospitals was bg' the issuance of bonds. A. S. Baldwin sald that it was not a question of squandering money but to buy some valuable land that will afford pleas- ever a_public_Improvement was suggest- ed? They will always be with us, but | must not blind us nor stop us. If “hicago had had a park running through her midst at the time of her great ffre not | attractive styles In KNABE to the low- 26-28-30 O’Farrell St. HASE, | at 3 per ure and comfort to the people and bs a well-payving advertisement for the entire city. There would be no troublé to secure | & syndicate to buy the property intended | . for the j nhandle on twenty vears' tine nt. It is a cold business propo- sition that will be of great profit to the community. Charles Sweigert, State Senator Wolze As blyman White, Charles Alpers, G B. Perkins and D. C. Henderson also spoke of the benefits that would accrue to people in all walks of life if the bond elections are favorably voted upon. ADVERTISEMENTS. Greatest Nerve u___g.' M [ ] I [ ] I have given persomal inspection to thie wor RHRUMATISM, no matter how lorg stan der or Eniarged Prostate Gland. no matier if a catheter. SYPHILIS IN ANY STAGE vitality. Itis no sumulant. STRICTURE without local treatment. Will tirely from the system Cancer and Cancerous In addition to the above. M. 1. S. T. No.2 Ataxia, Spinal M. 1. S, absolutely safe. write 10 uk, 50 matter bave tried without r That you may judge we will send you one | when cured yourself you will recommend it u department, giving symptoms. $1 per box. or IN THE CHRI Point Lobos Club. The Point Lobos Improvement Club met | 8 last evening to consider the bond issue: George R. Fletcher presided. The attend- ance was large. Resolutions were adopt- ed that indorsed the act of Mayor Phelan in calling for the bond election; invited all | improvement clubs and citizens to vote | for the bonds; approved of the action of the Merchants' Assoclation, and also pledged the club members to do all that they could to carry the elections on De- cember 27 and 20 In favor of the three Ppropositions, President Fletcher said that the reports he had received from different_quarters had convinced him that all of Richmond favored the bond issues and w prac cally a unit. The Point Lobos Club was the ‘first to take up the bond issue, and was proud of its record in that connection, tension of the panhandie and the evard would be of Incalculable value Richmond. President Fletcher also to named committees to work for the bonds, as follows: ‘mance—Willlam A. Deane, C. R. Han- son, Volney E. Winchell, John J. Cassidy, P. J. Ward, William P.’ Johns on, George Magoonis. tions—James M. Wilkins, D. L. Fitz- gerald, E. E. Glllon, Fred Glander, Claus Giese,” Fred L. Jones, Emile Sérveau, George R. Fletcher. Visiting—John T. Williams, Samuel Mec- Kelvey, P. M. McGushin, L. G. McMuljin, l:, U. Jaudin, Charles Goodall, 1. C. Cog- gin. Press—Walter T. Lyon, J. J. Dufty, Charles Constant, onel Charles H. Murphy, Robert Jordan, E. L. O'Connor, Chris Bunger. Literature—Edward Ginley, 1. Green, A. L. Halder, Nick Hesse, A| Hemenover, J. H. Sivers. The other speakers were D. V. Kelly Curtis Hillyer, P. H. Wellin and Mayor Phe mentioned. Mayor Phelan'said that the only question was whether the improve. ments were desirahle. If they were, the were wanted; if they were not desirable, | they were not wanted. He then exptained how necessary they were, ab some length. The meeting was enthusiastically favor- able to the bonds. McCarthy, P. M’ an, in the order En Route to South Sea Islands. HONOLULU, Dec. 8.—The missionary echooner Hiram Bingham, In charge of Rev. A. C. 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FU €O., Pacific Agents. 5 Mo Coast San Franciseo | Steamer “‘Monticello.” MON., Tu . Thurs. and Sat. at 9:65 a m. (ex. Thurs. night), Fri days, 1 p. m. and §:30: Sundays, 10:3 & m., § g.‘ 3 X lon-street Dock, ler No. 2. Telephone Main 1505, . FARE