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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY BAY CITIES < = 27, 1900. 11 | baters’ pins to the members of the inter- colleg nd Carnot t President Wh T add! hee sed the meet- FREEMAN SAYS ing. He There ought to be more € ‘xdfl"l‘g We must have one very Fri the students’ hour. must big ra the first € of each month. These worth our whi for they owtk of that student loyalty re all striving to nourish in draw up 2 provid- nt of a graduate lary of $1000. Should - nsome, y receive Only Fears Ex-Wife’s Horsewhip. A WIFE WHO WOULD NOT BE SANCTIFIED i . OAK 2.—Mrs. Olive Thack ) & } husband $1600 to de- . et 3 w she can find neither told to Prosecut- & Attor < Leach to-day she has « . 1 most cr toserted by < ' Jame . a Meth- = icher s ago - s But . and he a s 2 pulpit o anctified after he to n the re street nning ners to upported taking riy .- reatens to Kill Her Sister. Mrs 5 Mary Clynes fagno n to the . rrived whe : ved an < . Mrs + ¢ . 4 . her chil- i_to this ' She call- 1 ice in_her ® Thack is . . 1 1 ¢ for ‘an order » said he Was . lodgings illiam, wno ¢ salary ¢ ward hus by the prosecutor ® thing for him the + * + é - L Wil Va Gent STUDENTS NAME CANDIDATES sey Will Race for the 1 Managership. Muma and S his bed- Lawrence Found Guilty. J 6.—F k 6 a Lawrence, iter's scal of a Shortly ad and was recently. He day by Judge eadly w uit Lawrenc 1 unt d ne quit L = ELEBRATE SERVIANS C conis, whate he | A NATIONAL HOLIDAY e : lieard nothing from him BANQUET IN HONOR OF THE | Alicka. and they understand his MEMORY OF SAN SAVAS. ¥ e. Ko hu (w.’;{m':;yé‘"d his ———e— GIGAX WAS INSANE. Had Attempted to Commit Suicide Two Hundred Members of the Ser- Montenegrin Literary and sanctified | al this evening to | 4 Pa- aseball bat, as- | 40 Br 009+ e PP IPIPIDIIIPID PP ITIDIGIDII0DIPITIDIIITITIDIIeD e WARREN L OLNEY - cHAIRMAT ! Oakland Office San Francisco Call, dway, Jan. 2 Oakland Gas, Light and Heat Company, and @ HE organization of t ' bond committee last cted with propositions for the advance- ¢ evening is the most im Second Vice President J. 8. Wixon lives 8 s ade for the advarcermer in Nort and, whe hant. % | ject was advanced by Third Vice President A, § c0 mer- % | & sage to the City ( f 3 chant and a resident of th he has o | d be a voluntary or: lends additional e interest. D. Edward Collins is the presid | 8 to it, for it then becomes sh and a non-p: 1 fornia Bank, and has been connected with n movement. That there is plenty g ftairs for Oakland's betterment. Secretary H. F. Gordon the members is shown by the larg nce at the first is a prominent tnsurance man | meeting, fully three-quarters of th The plan of campaign that is to be carried out is a very | 8 ent. practical one. Sub-committees will be appointed to con- The committee accomplished a great dea sider each separate proposition that is to be submitted to Dot eieieieiebeiedeied B T e e R S SRCER SECER S JS Wixon 2M0 VICE PRESIDENT, ° o —+-® e S S e o WORKING FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF OAKLAND. I R R e o et ] L A e e S = Y S | a half years, allege WRIGHT MAY GO 'FORAWEEKHIS SACRAMENTO MEMORY PROVED N H STRETCHER A TOTAL BLANK { Thought He Had Been Vivisected. EARETS Assemblyman Struck by a Car. - Oakland Office San Franeisco Call, 908 Broadway, Jan. 2. Howard E. Wright, Assemblyman from the Fifty-first Assembly District, was struck by an electric car near the corner of Fifteenth street and Broadway this morning and so badly injured that he may not be able to go to Sacramento to attend the extra session of the Legisla- ture. His Injuries are very serious and the extent will not develop for some time. Mr. Wright rode from his residence on Oakland Office San Franeisco Call, %8 Broadway, Jan. 26 For the past five days Frank Finley's ldentity has been lost to himself; his memory has been a blank, and during the interim he has been suffering most hor- rifying hallucinations as the result of a sunstroke on the battle-flelds of Cuba. Finley was arrested for insanity last Tuesday night. He had wildly rushed into a shoestore at Eighth and Clay streets, and, crouching behind a counter, shouted Linda Vista terrace into Oakland this | that he was being pursued by men with morning and dismounted from his car in | guns. He was piaced In the insane ward front of the Central Bank building. }i: et xf‘* gt Hospits oLl Dl.l’;‘n: started to walk toward the sidewalk, d not know even his name. He gav when he noticed Assemblyman Joseph | Kepnom s, of Frank Rylands and Frank Kelly of the Forty-eighth District stand- Had he be: 2\ the L ing across the stre Kelly shouted to Commissioners yesterday undoubtedly he Wright, who turned around, waved his | would have been s a madhouse, but slay in his case ning any- To-day he ce his hand in reply and started to re steps across the street to join Kelly In so dolng Wright did not notice an- other car approaching, and as he there was a owing to the thing about h pa experienced a nis reaso % behind the car from which he had just memory returned th hi o Sadienly o alighted he stepped in front of the oih emporarily vanished. car and was knocked down. He was taken over to Oakland last Monday," into a neighboring drugsiore and after- o7 thiv AIVEIEDOR. “16 80 48 Wil ward removed to the Receiving Hospital, 1 was walking along a street where he was treated by Drs. W. S. Por- ddenly 1 realized that | had loat ter, R. T. Stratton and Charles Rowe. s and bundle of clothing. [ Mr. Wright's hip was dislocated and TRERRer SRAt | Rt Sone aith probably fractured, and it is thought that there is an injury to his spine. Assemblyman Kelly notified . suld I remember anything 1 forgot that I was bent ¢ to Pinole, but I imagined tha Mrs Wright, who went at once to the hospital | placed in the (¢ Prison and to attend her husband. ¢ through the h uilet co ~out ‘While the injurifes of Mr. Wright are un- "nh(n An 'Iq.. \:J’.‘r: ufu pTrl(p-vgrm:»‘ certai certain that he will not w skin was grafted on the bullet- be a acramento unless he is wound. Then I thot t I was removed to carr! Such a move is In | coma“Geher place, a doctor cut me contemplation if it is possible to move Mr. ousand piece wuse his vote may be very I nd my h ng my eye- pain I suf- necess on the Senatorial situation was someth terrible. Death Mr. Wright was the Speaker of the last relleved me, and I remained deard Ase who gned when the eX-| g5y week. I was surprised when [ me of his relations with Milton | ;, yoke this morning to find myself in this 0S U g. Green, the manager of the Grant cam- g A place, without pa N 1 and uninjured paign, fron E ) e 3100¢ h ed as Which he changed his vote from Grant | Drs Bufeau and Blood. who acted as to Burns. charged the young man, though marvel- Ing at his strange experience CAME TOO LATE WITH g nd ;:»'gglgl"; 51; HABEAS CORPUS WRIT Ifirecci’s™ Nich Ne attrh it A his strange experience of this week - Howard treet, near LITTLE LEW LIN GIN GOT OFF iseo, and is 27 years old. ON THE CHINA. ON TENNIS COURTS. Attor McKinlay appeared in the U District Court yester- | Three tournaments are on the tapls at day afterr and asked to have the | the California Tennis Club, and the men nger of the Pacific Mail force, mak- Steamship cited for contempt of the round- havir sobeyed the writ of habeas : corpus issued by Judge de Haven requi the club the immediate production of Lew I 5 are a Chinese boy of the age of four an TE Whitney broth to have been secret- s ave been secrel- | allowed all other tea meeting. It not only elected officers but launched it the people. These committees will consult with engineers, €d on steamer China. o and adopted full plans of procedure. All that is now architacts, contractors and men with ideas upon their pe The boy's parents are Chinese residents | best LRt waited for i th suncement of the executive commit- ticular branch of the bond fssue. They will gather data, his y o gEijveg i _Chian | on Febanar tee and the working sub-committees. These appointme fizures and information from all so and will then ot He vae of the w s are in the hands of ( man Warren Olney, who asked ent ir reports to the general committee. When the ‘Chin Presbyterian Mission name o & that a little time be given him to study the list of members is done the general committee will present its recom- for safe keeping . all his legal rights arous t ~.IM 1"“-' of the neral committe s to the City Council, and that body will be aving been exh he was placed on | Ing 2 P ;‘ The officers are men of weight in Oakland. Warren upon them. ard the steamship China “‘"j, 21 R L 3 Olney ts an attorney and a resident of the Second ¥ tve commitiee will pass upon all new mat- on.- The, wezitsof ialiens. “The big meeti | & First Vice President John A. Britton is the general man- ters that may come before the general committee. e B P o T e - B3 5 % | of the Pacific Mall Company, who made | Dual Boteetiotiotieo etio% et D000 000NN e NSRRI NG e 00 e e e e e e e e%e@ | the following return on the Dack of the Trpng"»‘“‘m‘ e e | COURT NOTES | 2 { "“This writ was received by me at the |class event ever aisaiity e i . dock at 13:35 p. m. ‘xr»q;‘rlfll 7, five min o ————— s | utes be the appointed hour of sa Otto Frank, who always claims be | .‘,x; m" China, on ‘which vessel this boy Lecture on Cruelty to Animals. vesterday before the Superior ( | within writ careful and diligent ty to Animals has arranged for a series dge Mogan on a charge of burgle was made on the ship by the company ¥ monthly lectures to be delivered under ¥ bonds for breaking into the ro Louls Simon, Larkin street, stealing a fuil dress sult W. Lakejand., an attorney from M who was arrrested for raising : ance at the entrance the Orpheum Thursday night, failed to appear in Judge M Al ourt yesterday morning. ¥ baii was declared forfeited and a ben and i warrant isscea for his Test Benovolsnt Socisty Make Several Months Ago. In the case of Warren Main, charged Merry. . P h with the killing of Willlam Kennedy on | . PRRE, Who (s § G e temt 1 last, the testimony for the ¥ three days apo, | progecution has been closed and wit- - - at the Morgue | pesses for the defense were put on the « ax of Ashland, a | stand. Officer Tiliman said that he had & the deceased, and by F. D. Orr | seen Kennedy drunk and quarrelsome - ws ? | Several times. Other witnesses testinied 4 on day after Gigax left his home |as to the previous good character of the at Dunsmuir his wife recefved a defendant and the went over till from him stating drowr it her by elry wh money, $170), from a bank in this ter was written in the United ttempted suicide last August by & himseif in the It 1= believed R e iy embower( Thief Sentenced. f the Ame Charles Woodruff g double 01 The tat . ¥ L. ‘\ ¢ ubl 1 n ] in Judge Conlan's court. He . ver belonging to Samuel A of popping at the Cosmopolitan ested was charged M K 1 carrying a con- Dr. V. D The Judge sentenced e Wil 5 months in the County Jail ¥ the or petty larceny and fined him $50, with e alternative of fifty s in jail, for g the conce: pon which he Burglar Held to Answer. ) Joseph Gilligan, alias Howard, a crook from Colorado, was held to answer yesterday before the Superior Court by "abaniss on the charge of burglary Presi- nds for breaking into the Capi- nt, 8 ur: 206 McAllister street. He G. ' A. was also held ‘in amount on a Spiridon | charge of forgery f ng a forged Balich check for $12 on T. ncy, a saloon- M. Bosich, C. M keeper at 222 McAl B. Matcovich A o ee St. Patrick’s Alliance. ; Patrick’s Alilance of America will nual conv pday evening. —_—— QHHH 4L L+ 4044 special _ services Church on at which returned te fon in B'nai B'rith ntly son of 3 Co-ed life at Stanford Uni- 3 was the first | § versity—read about it and see + [haius Ot |+ the splendid photos published + Balkans : in connection with the article + et | 3 in next Sunday’s Call. 3 A Missing Soldier. + . 1 W Andrus, late pri- | @444+ 4444444 44444444440 . Fourth Missour! In- wishing for him to | It is quite natural for a full man to ap- h them. He disappeared | pear occupled. T e e e OVER 6,000,000 BOXES SOLD YEARLY. The reason ’ & Have been Beacham's Pills w= Tzt is simple tried for asABGC. There is reason for everything, and the reason for the of Beecham's Pills is, that v.ni\’l fill all O!Ix. requirements of a general anti: LL BILIOUS AND NERVOUS DISORDERS in a more satisfa manner than any proprietary medicine ever placed before thy 's Pills are brought before your notice, and, vou reguire them or not—if not today. you m"x_:g:mmw—w en the necessity an £ arises you 4, in your own interest, take them. reason for their need is often best Lnn:'m ) vr-u‘rlszfim. be that as it may, will show good judgment by taking them iz reasovable doses, and doing so is as simple as A B C. st Sold everywhere, in boxes, Yo cents and 25 TR UL | this morning Patrick Boland picked up twelve votes yesterday during the recount of the bal- | lots in the contest for .ae office of Pub- lic Administrator insututed by John | Farnham. ‘The recount is proceeding at the rate of ten precincts a day and it will | be several days yet before the result can | be definitely defermined. —_——— TOOK FRENCH LEAVE. Overwhelmed with the desire for free- dom, Private Willlam Johnson, Company C, Ninetteenth Infantry, leave yesterday and he is nowlere to be found. He was In the guardhous ing trial for desertion, and it own fault that he was under detention, for he gave himself up last December just in time to get a Christmas dinner from the Government. He was assigned t0 auty as janitor cf the guardhouse yes- terday, and just at the change of guard saw his chance and left. Sergeant Bavage of Battery O, Thira Ar- tillery, was in charge of the guard, and he was placed under arrest for allowing the prisoner to escape, of his fault. His detention will not for long. The bodies taken from the Peking are all in the storehouses awaiting the ac- tion of relatives. They will be kept for some weeks, and then those about which nothing has been heard will be interred at the Presidio. In obedience to instructions from Gen- eral Shafter, Colonel Long, depot quar- termaster, is preparing a statement con- taining the varlous reports on the fitness of the Manuense for sea, submitted to him before she sailed. These reports will be sent to the War Department. For St. Mary’s Square. The Bupervisors' Judiciary Committee has decided to grant the request of the City Attorney in the matter of advertis- ing the commencement of condemnation proceedings against the owners of prop- erty on the proposed site of St. Mary's square. The Cily Attorney recently fn. formed the Board of Supervisors that summons had been served on all the prop- erty owners and that the first case would be tried on February 26 Many of the owners reside in France and other foreign countries and it is thought that the pro- ceedings will be long drawn out on that account. Attorney Chadbourne was pres- ent when the committee decided to ad- vertise and he expressed his thanks at the action, which means the eventual ac- quirement of the property for the squaro, —_———— be Demand for Symphony Ssats, The second of the series of symphony concerts, under the direction of Henry Holmes, will take place at the Grand Opera-house next Thursday aftern: 3:15. The orchestra will number Ofrfln'-; musiclans for this occasion and the pro- gramme will include works of Tschalkow- ski, Beethoven, Schubert and Cherubini, The sale of seats will begin this morning at Sherman, Clay & Co.'s, and a large de. mand is expected. ————— Champion Cake Walk. There will be a cakewalking contest for the Pacific Coast championship at the took French | await- | his but it was none | o200 000 020200 0NN 4RI 4RIRN SRR IRAR GRS ReNeRIRe N ’3;?;0505\ 200NNt 0NN e e e % D wens LAMEDA, Jan. 26.—The report A of a writing expert, who has been employed determining the authorship of the several anonymous communications recetved by F. N. Delanoy, will be given out for publication Monday. What the nature of its contents are none but in- terested parties know, but it is sald that the direet accusations made against George W. Emmons by De- lanoy are not sustained by the re- port. The expert has been at work in the interest of Delanoy, E. K. Taylor, his dttorney, and Emmons and Charles BE. Naylor, his attorney. The work has been' confined to the comparison of the handwriting in an anonvmous Jetter received by Delanoy's wife ten years ago and the famous “Alameda Highbinder Society’ postal card. It was on the similarity between the writing on these two missives that De- lanoy based his attack by innuendo on Emmons. He declared them to have been written by the same person and that they compared strikingly with Emmons’ signature. He traced a connection between the several typewritten letters he recelved and Emmons by showing that the paper ‘0&08088*&0&0&08905059050390390 BeueReRene Rt RN eReYy Chutes after the regular performance | this evening. Among the contestants will be Bert Stone and Annie Kolly:%p_g ent champions of the coast; verard Brown and Kate Beatty, champions of San Francisco; Harry Segger and Birdie Phloen, champions of Southern Califor- nia; Ed McCurry and Minette Williams, winners of the International contest at Portland; Master Freddie Keene and Irene Wilson, juvenile champlons, and Baby Ruth and Helen Dunn. ttle Miss Ruth is the smallest cake pedestrian be- fore the public, and is only three years of age. B — Mrs. Cahill’s Default Entered. OAKLAND, Jan, 26.—Contrary to all ex- @ bd FRED DELANOY \ they are written on is the kind usual- ly enwrapping newspaper blank, which is hauled by the drayage firm of which Emmons is a member. Delanoy's first experience with anonynmous letters was ten years ago. His wife received one attack- ing the character of her husband. De- lanoy's next similar experience was January 1. A typewritten missive warned him to leave town under pain of death for disobedience. For a period after that he received a letter daily. The final missive came in the form of a postal card by “Tong No. 1, Alameda Highbinder Soclety,” the members of which disavow it. The expert, aside from clearing Em- mons of any suspicion in the matter, does not seem to have done much toward slunng up the mystery. *%+0 pectations, Margaret P. Cahill has not seen fit to answer the divorce complaint of her husband, Christopher C. Cahill. To- day her default was entered and the cause referred to Court Commissioner Babcock for the,furpose of taking testimony. This is the fourth divorce sult of the Cahills. The husband charges crueity. He asserts that his l%ouse is all too ready to hurl dishes at his head when a fit of anger seizes her. The parties reside at Dimond, near Fruitvale. —_—————————— ‘Will Tour the World. OAKLAND, Jan. 26.—Dr. J. H. Buteau expects to leave about April 1 on a tour through France, Italy, Germany and Rus- sfa. me of his objective points will be Siberfa, whence he will proceed to China and Japan and thence home. SRR BN ENIN RN NeReN eRNeR eNeR RN N ¢ | peated c L P e R R R A A A e R e R A e A agent, but no response was made his s ausrices, commencing February 1. The Is of in o | first of the series will be delivered next name the where Chinese passengers congregate. In lay evening by David Starr Jordan view of the failure to locate him I am | InUISGaY CXENNE oY lings of Animals. ' unable to produce the body of the with- | ¥} "¢ Ot the parlors of the Occidental in_named, Hotel has been kindly donated by Mrs. Judge de Haven declined to take any | mojer Hoooper. further \an;-uthr.xls‘ltn the [matter unless | . —_—————————me upon afidavit and Mr. McKinlay retired § to obtain the necessary papers. 1 Eddy Will ?lay. —_— To-morrow Clarence Ec medormn_ i morning and even Pacific Coast Musicians. b B atnetral | Dn Taseses Next Monday evening the Pacific Coast jear at the Templo Musicians’ Unlon of the Knights of Labor on € street. Mr. Eddy will give an anniversary entertainment, on_his si tour through smoker and high jinks in_ tue banquet hall | country. He has always received a warm of the Native Sons’ building. | welcome in this city How Uncle Sam Watches the Immi- grant and Catches the Smuggler. The Shop Girl: What She Earns and How She Lives. Co-Ed Life at Stanford Universit: JANUARY 28, 1900. What Happened at Ra- venscourt. By EDGAR PICKERING. What It Costs a Prima Donna to Dress. San Francisco’s Found- lings. As the Japanese See Us: Socially, Politi- cally and Physically. How a Man Should Con- duct Himseif When the “Only One” Says “Yes.” By TOM P. MORGAN. filhsemmkg::nu- the Standard of Exeellence. RCBOROECHOROROHOHOHCE 108 K0 XHOBORACHBNCE CRMOHOH OE KHOHOCEORCROHCHOBOECHORC KOHCHORCHOUDROHOHORCL 01 10 RRCHOHCHCRCHCHCHCHC o o §Wau = §