The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 25, 1900, Page 22

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& 2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1900. ANNIE THOMAS 1S NOW GIVEN UP FOR LOST King David That Sailed Four Months After Her Has Reached Port. — Tramp Steamer Benmohr to Have Permanent Repairs Made in Eng- land—Hospital Ship Missouri’s Doctors Ordered to Manila. e Thomas, now out for Acapulco, has been t derwriters. She 't been heard near the Horn foretopgallant offered 85 t to reinsure the o takers. s left Cardiff for Aca- g p r e SR AP AP A, LA S e e o B S RS T R R S T TS S SN, 355 Bt 6000080000040 0+0000000000000000+000000000 Ihl! balance and went overboard himself. Then Captain McGregor lowered a boat, |and both men were picked up and put | aboard the whaler, The State tug Governor Markham made {an excursion around the bay yesterd with Attorney General Tirey L. Ford an a party of his friends aboard. All the | points Of interest were visited and every- ody had a most enjoyable time. Harbor Commissioner Herold made a | thorough inspection of the water front terday. From Melggs wharf to_ the hina basin not a wharf or bulkhead es- caped his notice and in consequence he will suggest several improvements at the next meeting of (ie board. The commis- sion has now a double force of men work- ing on the front and the improvements in the facilities for handling shipping will be noticeable next week. Major Gibson is the only medical officer |left on the hospital ship Missouri. Cap- Duval tain Kneedler and Lieutenant have been ordered to Manila and will leave on the Grant. Their instructions are to report for duty on the Missouri when she reaches the Philippines, so from that it would look as though the hospital iip was_going to be remodeled and sent k to Manila. {ing Leary”’ was released from quar- vesterday and Dr. Kinyoun made special trip from Angel Island to put iim aboard the transport Warren. The king is & young pig which Purser Frank Bucklin purchased in Guam. As soon as the animal appeared on deck the crew adopted him as a mascot and the grief of the sailors was consequently great when his majesty was placed in quaran- tine. Yesterday “King Leary” was pa. rading the deck of the transport with the Stars and Stripes around his neck and “U. Transport Warren” on his back. The tug Sea Witch started away from Vallejo-street wharf yesterday with three barges in tow. The tide caught the barges as they were passing the end of the whart and each one of them bumped into | the steamer Aberdeen, but did not do D e FEDLANDERS WEDDING_ MORN NOW BECALLED His Wife Sues for a Di- vorce on the Ground of Cruelty. e !Ade].tn Gorman Vainly Searches for Her Personal Effects—Decrees Granted and Suits Filed by Unhappy Couples. ALl | Albert Abraham Friedlander, attorney at law, is now looking backward upon the day when bride and he climbed with great | loss of dignity through a window in Judge | Groezinger’s courtroom and wended their | way to liberty through the coal corridor of the City Hall, while Mrs. Stanton, the bride’s mother, held the officers and citi- zens at bay in the corridor above and | heaped prophecies of woe upon her new- | made son-in-law that have now come true. Friedlander's wedding morn was a night- mare. The setting sun upon his wedded | life 18 now touching the horizon, for yes- wmflfl—o«om»oflflwflw—o—o, -\'-‘ c—l | NN R e eoe® Novel Scheme for Handling Freight at Nome. The barkent nize the away o ndling of freight the hold. i at Nome. ested cable will be stowed in the hold. e to the beach. e Catherine Sudden is now being made ready for a voyage to the gold flelds and her owners propose A donkey engine has been placed amidships on the vessel and two more Six surf boats, each capable of carrying thirty tons dead welight, are to go on x ape Nome the can buoy will be securely anchored about a mile from the beach. ngines will be landed and placed in position on the beach and then the cable will be lald. es to the buoy, and while the engine is paying out the other will be hauling in. . gured that a vessel once securely tied up to the buoy will be able to unload about It will In this way the barges no passengers and only about 500 tons of freight outside of what her owners are made no report of having nie Thomas. Captain er vessel is a very and no one surmises wrecked. The general cargo of coal 1 burned to the Meredith was of the ship Domin- married, and while ng his honeymoon the Do- m Honolulu for Victo- never been heard from the Dominion was given up e An of the Dominion tramp steamer Benmohr temporary repairs here. out of Oyster Harbor with a cargo ick an uncharted rock and ed. She is now on nt drydock, and will be she can carry out her en- st. After that she d and be thoroughly was almost a fatality on the haler Karluk yesterday. One of ell overboard, and L. Levy, n clothier, attempted to res- e throwing ng in the water Levy lost aptain Meredith took com- | je Thomas, and now it | a rope to the | | much damage. The Sea Witch is taking the barges to San Diego to carry rock for the breakwater. Harbor Commissioners Harney and Herold are enga~ed in a test of will power, which Secretary English hopes will last indefinitely. The question to be decided in which can refrain longest from smoking. Every time Major Harney smokes a cigar he has to buy Mr. Herold ! a new hat and vice versa until the con- test is called off. In the meantime both gentlemen have turned over their respect~ fve stocks of the fragrant weed to Sec- retary English and that gentleman is getting all the enjoyment possible out of the situation. - Oil Notes. To those contemplating the use of crude petroleum for making steam or for other purposes Mr. D. C. Wilgus of the Wilgus Manufacturing Company, who are manu- facturers and patentees of the Wilgus ofl burner, i{s now stopping at the Grand Hotel, ‘this city, and would be pleased to | meet those interested in this line of busi- ness, to furnish ofl burners and make es- timates on oil burning plants. The ad- dress of the Wilgus Manufacturing Com- pany, 126 East Third street, Los Angeles. * ————— A modern Atlantic liner must earn about $50,000 per trip before a penny of ! profit 1s made. ADVERTISEMENTS. For the Complexion To purify and beautify the skin and prevent pimples, blotches, black- heads, redness, roughness, yellow, ofly, mothy ekin, chapping, tan, sun- bumn, and many other forms of skin blemishes, noother ‘ skin or complexion soap is for a mo- ment to be compared with CoTicUma Soap, because 1o other soap reaches the cause, viz., the clogged, irritated, or in~ flamed condition of the Porrs. For Hair and Scal BrAMPoo with Cuticura Soap, with warm water, dry and apply a light dressing of CuTicrrA, purest of emollients, gently rubbed into the scalp. This simple, refresh- ing, and inexpen- sive treatment 3 will soothe frri- 4 4 tated and itching surfaces, stimulate the aair follicles, clear the scalp and hair of crusts, scales, and dandruff, supply the roots with energy and nourishment, and make the hair grow, when all else Complete External and | CUTICURA Consisting of CoTiCURA BOAF THE SET g1.26 Ykl = often sufiicient to. Axn Cux. Conr, Bols Frope Bosion: -lnn_c':‘ A A A A A 4 F or Soax Red Rough Hands the hands, on retiring, in strong, hot lather of Curi- CURA Soar. ‘Thoroughly dry, and anoiat freely with Cut- CcurA Ointment, | the great skin cure and purest of emol- | lients. Wear during the night old, loose kid gloves. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, and feverish | palms, shapeless nails with painful finger ends, th::“m night treatment is simply ‘won For 8anative Uses Iss romarkable emollient, leansing, ying es, de- m from %mu the t skin cure, warrant the use of CUTICURA BoAr, in the tor? "?l llndn ::x annoyin, tations, in- nmmmnfm,-ndch.éng-. for too free or offensive perspiration, and also in the form of in- ternal washes and solutions for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative anti- septio 'pnrposel which readily themselves to women, and especially to mothers. The useot Cuticura Ointment with Coricura Soar will also be-of advantage in the severer cases. m:‘l' Treatment of Every Hum: ciganss the skin, Comicons Orniment (.} 1o allay = et o w e sl el fule Porrek Deng very Hismor,” Te” terday Mrs, Friedlander sued for divorce, alleging failure to provide and cruelty as | causes of action. | In her complaint Mrs. Friedlander al- | leges that on June 28, 189, she abandoned her maiden name of Miss Nora Agnes Stanton and by_virtue of the decree of a Justice of the Peace became Mrs. Fried- lander. Subsequently, she says, her hus- band began to neglect her, and when on the 4th inst. he struck her 'she decided to ther, aged 2 years, fled from the home he had ‘provided. Friedland - claims that his marital woes are the resuli of his wife's relatives’ de- sire to interf re in his family, which, he says, have owen plainly manifest ever since his m tner-in-law compelled him to | escape wit nis bride through a window at the conusion of the ceremony mak- lnx them man and wife. fter looking vainly throughout the length of the city the Sheriff has made re- turn in an order to show cause in which he says that he is unable to locate John Gorham, whose divorced wife, Adelin L. Gorham, alleges has made away with her portion of the community property, con- sisting of a black dress, a silver-plated clock and two rings. Mrs. Gorham se- cured a decree cf divorce from her hus- band a few months ago and was awarded the custody of her property. The cus- tody of the property, however, rested with Gorham, and he failed to obey the decree of the court. Mrs. Gorham was confident that she would see him go to jail for con- tempt and also recover the property, but her hopes have been blasted, for Gorham has evaded the Sheriff. Gretchen Ebeling has sued Heinrich Ebeling for divorce on the ground of cru. elty. rs, Ebeling alleges that she mar- ried her husband two years ago and that of late he has treated her brutally. She says that on August 6, 1899, at their home, 709 Point Lobos avenue, he cruelly beat their child, and on August 10 took a horse- whip and attempted to drive her and her child from the house. Judge Hebbard has ordered Andrew L. Hall, cngtlln of the steamer Walla Walla, to pay his wife $60 a month pending the final disposition of her action for divorce. Eugene gfl St. Paul was granted a divorce Friday from Ambroise M. St. Paul for de- sertion. Suits for divorce have been flled by Min- nie M. Neuman against Edward Neuman, for failure to provide; Annle Handel against_Albert E. Handel, for desertion, an ‘W. Marks against Mary D. Marks, for desertion. ] ON THE PRESIDIO LINKS. Tournament for Caddies of the San Francisco Golf Club Again Postponed. The tournament over elghteen holes, medal play, which was set for yesterday, among the caddles of the San Francisco Golf Club did not take place. The caddies are In disgrace, and as a means of disci- pline were deprived of the honor of con. tending for the sets of golf clubs present- ed by C. R. Winslow. The tournament ;vill u.kte place later, but no date has yet een set. Many members went around the Presidio links yesterday,among them being Charles Page, J. W. Byrne, Severance, War- ren Gregory, H. Goodwin, nard Chenery and Mr. B(nnax. The course is in excellent condition, the fair green be- :’::t well turfed and the putting-greens ————— Fischer’s New Concert House. Never was there a more auspicious open- ing than that of Fischer's new concert house last Monday night. Those who were so fortunate as to secure entrance de- clared the appointments perfect, the ven- tilation and acoustics splendid and e uartet of artists who presented the ourth act of “Il Trovatore” great in every sense of the word. Badaracco is a tenor robusto, possessing all the qualifica- tions that make the tenor so dear to the heart of the matinee girl. A giant in stature, with a splendid face and a voice melodious and well trained, he made an ideal Manrico. Signorina Barducci has volce of great nrenrh and brillianey, nn: her art and method are ‘perfection. The students and music lovers, of whom there are many in San Francisco, will find in Barduccl the true artist, and her duet lwlth Badardcco {nvariably fouses the house to great enthusiasm. Signorina Pol- strike for liberty, and with her child, Es- | littina _and Senor Vargas complete a finished quartet of artists. ur- ing the engagement of the quartet the operes of “Cavallerla Rusticana,” “La oheme,” “Faust” and ‘La _Traviata will be presented. For the ensuing week Miss Agnes Fried,'a talented New York soprano, will be added to the roster-of vocalists. There will be matinees Satur- day and Sunday afternoon: H. S. FOOTE MAY NOT BE REAPPOINTED A REGENT E. A. Denicke and F. W. Henshaw Mentjoned for Long Term on the University Board. Henry 8. Foote's term as Regent of the State University expired on March 1, but Governor Gage at last accounts had not appointed his successor. A short time ago John E. Budd of Stockton was reappoint- ed for a full term of sixteen years. Hl commission was presented at the last meeting of the board. There seems to be an jmpression that Mr. Foote will not be reappointed, as there are several candidates mentioned for the position which he now holds. For example, Colonel E. A. Denicke, Regent ex-officio by virtue of being a;;resldem of the Mechanics’ Institute of San Francis- co, desires to be a real, live, full-fledged sixteen-year term Regent. A petition _long enough to span the dis- tance from The Call bullding to the water frout has been signed by Mr. Denicke's fellow citizens and in due time will be presented to the Governor. But Colonel Denicke is not the only man mentioned to succeed Mr. Foote. Judge F. W. Henshaw has many earnest sup- porters in San Francisco and Oakland, who have resolved that the Governor shall be enlightened as to the special and general merits of their champion. It is sald that Judge Henshaw is not seeking the appointment, but nevertheless his friends insist that the university shall have the benefit of his experience and Judgment. BURGLAR HELAKER IS FOUND IN COUNTY JAIL Crook Located by Detectives While Serving Time for Vagrancy—Ad- mits Two Robberies. James Helaker, alias the ‘‘Woodland kid,” who, according to the police, is one of the most skillful room thieves in the country, is locked up in the City Prison with two charges of burglary recorded against his name. On March 11 Helaker entered the room of J. Jordan at 208 Post street and stole a quantity of clothing. Subsequently he visited the apartments of S. Fidelle, at 1151 Market street, and got away with several suits of clothes. Yesterday Detectives Harper and Sulli- van and Police Officer Hines learned that Helaker, for whom they were hunting, was serving a twenty-day sentence in_the Branch County Jall for vagrancy. They at once went to the jail and took charge of the prisoner. He was taken to the City Prison and formally booked for burglary. Helaker readily admitted his guilt, and announced the determination to plead gullty when the cases are called in the uperior Court. —_———— Solution of Life’s Problem. The concluding lecture of .the Y. M. L lecture course will be delivered by Rev. Joseph Sasia, S. J., in Metropolitan Hall to-morrow evening on “The True Solution of the Greatest Problem of Life.” Grand President A, F. St. Sure will preside and a short programme will precede the lec- ture. Complimentary tickets may be had on application at the rooms of the Y. 1., 24 Fourth street. DELIGHTED WITH CALIFORNIA. Mr. D. H. Fanning, president of the Royal Worcester Corset Company of ‘Worcester, Mass., is registered at the Palace. He has been leisurely tour- ing the Southern part of the State with his family and expresses him- self as highl}! delighted with Cali- fornia. Mr. '‘anning notes wonderful changes and improvements on the coast, rticularly in San Francisco, since his g:mer visit twenty-one years ago. He DAVID H. FANNING, is one of the East's most representative business men and is recognized through- ‘out the country as the leader in the corset world. The history of his life is most _interesting, covering a period of over fifty years of business activity and success. He is the founder, owner and president of the Royal Worcester Corset Company, the largest Institution of its kind with the most perfectly appointed factory in the world. The daily output is over a thousand dozen corsets, and more than one hundred and seventy-five shay are made. The company produces goog:’of so superior a style and quality that European manufacturers are unsuc- cessfully striving to imitate them. Mr. Fanning will leave shortly for the East via the Ogden route. AROUND THE CORRIDORS E. H. Cox, a banker of Madera, is at the Palace. D. Clark, a well-known miner of Spo- kane, is at the Lick. H. D. Robins of the United States navy is a guest at the Grand. P. Charleboys, a prominent merchant of Ventura, is at the Lick. E. Dinkelsplel, editor of the Suisun Re- publican, is at the Grand. L. C. Bunker, a well-khown merchant of Ukiah, is at the Russ House. R. L. Peeler, assistant adjutant general of California, is at the California. A. G. Hubbard, a prominent capitalist of Redlands, is at the Occidental. Douglas 8. Cone, a prominent rancher of Red Bluff, is registered at the Palace. Dr. H. E. Lacy, a celebrated woman physician of Chicago, is a guest at the Occidental. J. F. Rooney, a prominent attorney of Sonora, Tuolumne County, is registered at the Occidental. Bishop Spaulding, head of the Episcopal church of Colorado, and family are stay- ing at the Occidental. C. H. Miles, local passenger agent of the Chicago, Minneapolis and St. Paul Railroad Company, returned last night from an extended business trip. F. E. Fisk, general agent of the Chica- g0, Minneapolis and St. Paul Railroad Company at Los Angeles, is In the city on business connected with his company. Percy L. Sinclair, Pacific Coast freight and passenger agent of the Chicago, Min- neapolis and 8t. Paul Rallroad, who has been here for a week on business, returned last night to his home in Tacoma, Wash. —_———— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, March 2%.—Judge Curtis H. Lindsley of San Francisco is at the Fifth Avenue. Thomas Well of San Francisco is at the Empire. ———— ‘Trapper’s Oll cures rheumatism and neuraigla. Druggists, 0c flask. Richards & Co., 408 Clay. M. | .| friends immedia‘ely went to ner assist- MUCH TROUBLE OVER ARREST OF MOON TONG Fear That the Warrant Was Merely a Cloak for Kidnapers. Highbinder Trouble Becomes Serious and Chief Sullivan Details an Extra Squad for Duty in * Chinatown. Serious trouble, it is feared, will result from the arrest in Chinatown last Tues- day of Moon Tong, a Chinese woman, by officers from Visalla. Friends of the Woman i this city are decrying the ac- tion as the work of kidnapers, and a clash seems Imminent. Advices received from Visalla, where the woman was taken, say that the same condition of affairs exists at that place. It is alleged that the chacges on which the woman was arrested were trumped up solely for the puropse of getting her out of San Francisco and then kidnap- ing her. Several Chinese left for Visalia last night to look after her interests. On Tuesday of last week Deputy Con- stable M. F. Janes of Visalia took the Wwoman out of a house on Sullivan alley on a charge of grand larceny. leged that the crime was recently com- where the warrant was procured, but the woman's friends ciaim that she has been a resident of this city continuously for nearly two years. When the woman arrived at Visafia_under ar- rest she was released on bonds and her gnce to prevent any attempt at kidnap- filghblnden were conspicuous in the streets of Chinatown last night. Most of them were members of the Suey Sing ton and they were after a wealthy lenser o the Hop Sing tong named Gow Chung, proprietor of a resort known as the City of Peking. The police were immediately notified, and Sergeant of Police Mahoney watched the place for several hours, searching all suspicious parties. The Suey Sing tong has recovered from its crippled condition, due to the arrest of several of its leading hatchetmen, and yesterday a number of professional mur- derers from interior points arrived in the oty to take their places. They started out to do business early, but were all soon under police surveillance. A Suey Sing man pointed out three Chi- nese, Wo Such, Wong Yo and Hong Fook, as being the murderers of Chan Sue, who was killed on Jackson street on March 1. Detective Ed Gibson arrested the men and placed them on the small book at the Californja-street police station pending further investization, The highbinder condition appeared so serious that Chief Sullivan placed a heavy detall of officers in citizen's clothes in | Chinatown ‘to watch the quarter after midnight. Three Days’ Snap for Shrewd Buyers. Beginning to-morrow morning Marks Bros., summer outfitters and manufactur- | ers of ladles’ and children’s wear, throw out an assortment of bargains. Note a few of them: Ladies’ vests, fleece lined, 19 cents; ladies’ vests, all colors, 15 cen: ladies’ lisle thread vests, 49 cents; white skirts, three yards wide, 39 cents; ladies’ best muslin drawers, trimmed, wide em- broidery, 33 cents; children's musjin drawers, 81-3 cents; pleated satin stoek collars, 10 cents; children’'s pique coats, reefers and capes, elegantly trimmed, | $149; Dbig bargains in confirmation | dresses; 100 other articles at proportion- | atel cheag rices. Marks Bros., retail goods at wholesale prices, 1212-1214 Market Styeet, between Taylor and Jones. * ——— Tries Hard to Kill Himself. A. T. Smith, 76 years of age, used a Jackknife on himself with terrible effect in an endeavor to end his life last night in a room in the Pioneer House, 48 Fourth street. The old man hired the room early in the evening and was discovered soon after walking about the hallway bleeding profusely from wounds in the abdomen, arms and throat. He was taken to the Receiving Hospital, and Dr. McGettigan, who dressed the man's wounds, sald his injuries would undoubtedly prove fatal. 8mith was discharged from the City and County Hospital a few days ago. Savings and Loan Society Solicits loans on mortgages or trust deeds at lowest market rates. 101 Montgomary. * —_— Gossip s often used by those who want to get even because of a fancled Injury. ADVERTISEMENTS. LATEST PARIS . NOVELTIES IN BLACK FABRICS. During this entire week we will have on exhibition in our large show windows the latest importations of BLACK PARIS NOVELTY DRESS FABRICS. These goods are from the best manufac- turers in Europe, and we ask the special attention of our customers to this displau. We will also place on sale this week another large importation of 52-INCH HOME- SPUNS and CAMEL'S-HAIR CHEVIOTS, in Oxfords, Castors, Shepherd and Light Graps. Price $12 Yard. %- i, u3, us, uT, 19, 121 POST STREET. COURT NOTES. Edwin A. Smith was arraigned in Judge Cook’s court yesterday on a charge of burglary for having entered the station- ery store at 225 Post street. Smith pleaded gullty and asked the court to immediately pass sentence as he was 11l and wanted to go to prison. The case was continued until Monday, however, that witnesses might be called to testify as to the char- acter of the prisoner. Matthew Kutshera has filed suit against J. 8. Kimball & Co. to recover $10,000 damages for the failure of the defendant corporation to land him in Dawson City. He ll;l he bought a ticket to that place, but the company put him off at St Michael and refused to carry him farther. L ther and white ki New Spring Belts We have just received a large shipment of the stylish dog collar belts; also new styles in the Zaza pulley belt, which is the latest fad; it prevents the skirt band parting from the waist and can be tightened or loosened at will; the assortment consists of black and colored seal leather, morocco, suede, black patent lea- also silk, satin and velvet. 28c for 50c hose OASH OR LITTLE-AT-A-TIME. Buy where you can get values like this for $2.00 little For ——— Cobbler seat money. oA RocKer An unusually fine valus even for a place that is always offering unusu- ally fine bargains. THE J. NOONAN FURNITURE COMPANY (lac.), 1017 - 1033 MISSION STRE ABOVE SIXTH. Phone Bouth 14. 8an Frazelseo. GLASSES. LONDON SMOKE On Monday and until sold out we shall have on sale a special purchase of ladies’ superior quality black cotton hose, guaranteed real maco with double soles and extra spiced sel- vage. These goods are a regular 50 cent quality and will be sold at the extremely low price of 28¢ca pair Children’s . Underwear This week we will close out odd sizes in children’s imported sanitary natural wool com- bination suits. The regular price of these garments is $2.50 a suit; to make a quick clearance we have marked them down to $1.00 asuit New shipment of the best $1.00 glove in San Francisco Our two-clasp glace kid gloves with the newest style of embroidered backs are the best gloves sold in America at the price ; eves pair guaranteed arid will be fitted if desired. S o S o 129 Kearny St. Write for our illustrated catalogue. Eye protectors for the Dusty Season—they can be had in any style or shape, including those Wwith the new clip—never slips, tilts or wavers. Bausch & Lomb-Zeiss Stereo Fleld Glasses. Oculists’ prescriptions filled. Factory on prem- ises. Quick repairing. Phone, Main 10. OPTICIANS MR 13 1 642 MARKET Sv. “sThuents TURBER CHOMICLE Sun Die STEINWAY Pianos USED AT ALL PADEREWSKI RECITALS. SHERMAN, CLAY & Co., Pacifi oprasentatives.

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