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Grrererererererere xon srorrrerere@ The ks (=11 ey d mmmw ges 23 10 32 SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1900. ALL SORTS OF PEOPLE JOIN EXODUS TO THE GOLD FIELDS OF CAPE NOME —_— Monroe Salis- bury Does Not Leaveon the St. for the Dig- 108 as She Had ended. 1!Crowds Were thered on the Jocks to Witness L Argt nauts. he Departure of; [ e e e e § *® é ¢ . i : g + * § * . ® . L 4 ¢ * . D R T D R e L . . //{Zi/Yafl -&, LEQVING 7 &8 wiger @ Two More Great Steamers Go Out Well Laden. “Lucky” Baldwin Sails Off With Outfit for a Gambling Establishment. o B S N R d on- the fail ir semble passengers She sailed he s: spent §0 many 1 litigation with women. With . D. Unruh, A. The former je buildings, d a Foster was to nd taken thirty been employed row, which re- f the compact. It Jones was ger for Foster had stowed knowing the ved. The ship's ms carefully, ated, » man; Dr. uting Attorney 1 Cal Ewing of among the pas- ‘man, and his the Valencia. s McNamara, ing a whitek and forty tons riend and three They took E. Har- horses. king, was Elwood. mine owner, a well Wn _surveyor, t a as did Drs. J. Reeisle, e Childs and R prominent @rreoeereie® ure of A few days ago | AT nEW AsTHE ST ER) LELT Tk Docrs s et et et ebebedei s street pler amid the farewell yells crow de v 1, rlon whose familia over the rail ith one hand while sped a _bottle of L stood “‘Lucky” waving his black slouch hat in , Charles Waltz, Fran C. Bquith, G. A. Lane, M. W. Castle, Mrs. D. M. | McQuesten, Mrs. 'P. Krauss, Miss C. G. Troy, | G. T. Ruddock, ¥. C. Lewis, H. B. Cloak, M. | A. Mitchell, J. P. Patery, A, Harazthy, B. A. | Harazthy, S. Shaen, J. M. Griswold, E. W. Doughty, T. W. Elkington, D. H. Swetzer, C. §. Peek, F. E Vreewink, F. A. Halsey, James . Fairchild, S. A Lowd, Dr. E. C. E._Biddle, Wade Stone, Dr. J. & . W. D. Lawton, E. J. Rice, John A. Munter, Mrs. K. Schuhz, E. J, Baldwin, David Unruh, A. A. Bennett, R. Ring- rose, A. Solano, J las, W. Borrt, V. B. ‘0sad, A. Lascy, B. F. McQuire, Alex Loumor, . Goodfriend, 1. Goodfriend. J. Goodfriend, Aoller, L. Morgant Mre. P. Struken: Struckenbach, T. R. Leahy, W. A O A. Went- H bach, Miss H. Murphy Schofield: The steamer St. Paul left Fremont-street dock at 2:10 p. m. with 436 passengers. W. H. Metson_of the law firm of Reddy, Camp- bell & Metson salled ou ber, accompanied by his sister. ‘He will represent some of the rich alien mine owners at Nome, On the dock to bid farewell to Mr. Met- son were Frank Ames of the Ames Com- mercial Company, John Koster, Rudolph Herold, Colonel F; eck, ' Attorney John Kennedy: G. P. Gow, court re Frank C. Drew and Captain E. A. Mr. Metson will return in the fall, Mrs. Monroe Salisbury did not t Nome. It was decided yesterday morn. ing, her daughter stated, that she should not attempt the trip in her present condi- tion of health. Mr. Salisbury went.” He will represent a machinery firm and min- orter; eddy. 1« Valencia got away from Howard- in s;ndlute in the gold camp. F B Ryan, ex-District Atto of San Fran, safled on the St. Paul. Sena. cisco, - tor (oucher of Fresno and Senator J. J. Scenes a. Sa'ling of Steamers Valencia and St. Paul of the | i | | e following | £ 1s a list of the first cabin pas- | R » the Valenci | Judson, x-Folice Ser- | The deliberations of the Congregational [t Getrge Har Miss Jennie LOBE. | Congress in this clty came to an end yes- | Levy. bookmaker's clerk: Wiiliam Mc- terday, and the delegates, after a luncheon | Clelland, horseman:; Captain 1 for- |Served at the Third Congregational - | merly of the California volunteers; Loufs Church, went sightseeing about the city. H. | tion, which in itself numbers forty-two Alaska Commercial Company's | O O B R S o i e e S g @ reo e L e o Sy CHRISTIANS ARE + NOT CREATED BY SINGING PSALMS > G . ¢ 4 Ge it eieieieieieibeio@ Boyce of Santa Barbara were also passen- | : B libircatin sianpadon ch S Baat | Congregational SpeakersSay Sas. e Prssn Warden of [ Oauanoc) - Thenghbhv Belless tthan ome to get rich Edward Holland along with the others. upervisor and for- mer proprietor of the Commercial Hotel, Excitement. The ministers will preacn to-day in vari E. Hi hett and Walter Gollin. B lanchett & = | ous churches i this ci Tom Ford, formerly jailer at the Broad- | way jail, went up to become foreman |Meda and Berkeley. Th | stevedore for the Alaska Commerciat |? , Oakland, Ala- L four moderators ppointed by the congress have arranged BanbanY. ne following congress sermons at il It is said that no vessel will be able to (& M-: First Church, San Francisco, Rev. reach Nome before June 15. | 8,2, Norton of San Diego; First Church, akiand, Rev. W. H. mple, Seattle; | First Church, Alameda, Rev. I 8. Forbes, | Santa Barbara; First Church, Berkeley, PR AT | 7 THEATER FOR NOME. — | Rev. W. C. Kantner, Salem, Or. This SEATTLE, May 2.—The steamer Santa | evening at 7:45 congress addresses will bes Ana salled for Nome to-night with as |Jelivered in all the ~Congregational churches in San Francisco, Oakland, Ala- meda and Berkeley on the subject of “The Gospel of the Kingdom.” There will be two speakers at each church. Meetings will be held Monday and Tuesday at the First Congregational Church m Oakiand, At the closing session of the congress esterday forenoon W. G. Puddefoot of oston, spenklnf on “The Work of the Church in Winning Souls,” said that win- ning souls was the business of the church. but the church had not always minded 1t business. It had fought against the new astronomy, the new geology, Darwinism and other things. The main thing was not to explain about where Cuin ~ot his wife or about Jonah in the whale's belly, but to persuade men to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. That was the essential point. Imagine a hungry man refusing to eat bread until he had learned all its chemical !froperues. J. L. Maile of Los Angeles discussed “Present and Future Methods of Evan- gelism” and C. 8. Nash of Oakland spoke about “Sources of Power.” Religion, he sald, must be filled with thought. Man would know science and history better than he will religion just as long as science: and history were taught better. Churches contain many puny Christians, vfl.’d it was often the fault of the ministers that the pews were empty. Men must be motley and interesting an aggregation of fortune-hunters as ever. set sail for the new gold flelds. Her departure was the event of the day on the water front. The Santa Ana carried north about 450 passengers, including the Standard The- ater, =aloon and gambling house combina- people. The enterprise, of which the financial backers are John W. Consodine, | Thomas J. Consodine, George L. Abe, Ja| | P. Hosington, Willlam Malloy and Mark Norton, represents an investment of about $100,000. The Standard combination’s home will | be on one of the principal streets of Nome City. The lot was purchased nearly a year ago at an expense of §10,000. On it in a two-story building will be located the theater, gambling house and saloon. The shipment included nearly half a million feet of lumber and thousands of dollars’ worth of scenery, greenroom furniture and other theatrical effects. i Pty Passengers From Seattle. SEATTLE, May 2.—Since the opening of the Nome rush, including to-day’s sall- ings, forty-seven craft have left Seattle for the north carrying cenlfl%dmuuu of passengers . amounting to Five steamers areé yet to in the initial rush. Traffic is in excess of all previous record: and expectations. % teught somethi and the pulpit ghln‘. Thou‘htnind bmdlnp must lead o J the higher life; not tement and BONg. B T D N S A A : ] 2 LOVE FORA BLONDE MAY R Herbert 6. Lowry Wants His | Young Brother Arrested ior Perjury. NOT OPPOSED TO SMALL COLLEGES Jordan and Wheeler Reply ‘'to Father Yorke. President of Stanford University Says He Never Made the State- MARRIES A CONCERT SINGER 8 T R He Says the Youth Swore Falsely to Obtain a License to Make An- nette Lucky George His Bride. e A 19-year-old blonde concert senio boy" to St 0 Herbert ¢ warrar afternoon in Oa brother, Russel cus took out Annette y elalms t i himself when he c ence of Deputy County Oakland that he 1 The irate brc called yesterd otfice, with but 19 years more than eighteen ) his brother's affidavit. he ted that both of the bave been employed as sir but singer his a fections. Finally Lowry was induced to sign an afiidavit to the effect that was being hounded by Miss George. This doc- ument was shown the woman by Herbert Lowry, with the hope that she could thus ke the object of her ed to fors time the couple kept they went to O to the office of voung Lowry asked fo When Lowry, the outh, learnec had became hysterical and now 1 me in a precarious condition. other, Herbert, was more 1o Russell would al, and | betler be the husband of Annette ussell Lowry's arrest f 5 ¥ wds of a Constable (1 that the ¢ yme Oa iled the cer eturned T red the wrath of his relativ ained with his bride but a few hour: he departed hastily for Placer “ounty. The relatives of young Lowry are deter- mined t6 prevent” Aim from living with the woman. After causing a warrant to be issued in Oakland for his arrest, his | brother visited the office of Captain of Detective mour and asked him _to lena his efforts in locating the love-smi ten youth. As it was thought that Lowry mi be with his 't room on I k street Detective 3 sent there to ascertain and_inciden- ¢ to have an interview with Mrs. -. As the detective entered the room was pleasantly greeted by the woman . informed him that her hu band was “ounty and that she was about him. Her trunk was already and as it was nearing train time an s to start for the ferry v insisted that she a him to Captain Seymour's offic 5 she did under protest. By the time she reached the City Hall the train which she intended to take pulled out, compell- ing her to walt until to-day before Join- nd. 5 n outrage.” she remarked to Captain Seymour. “Here T have been de- layed from meeting my dear little hubby by his relatives, who are trying to make trouble for me. I am no spring chick and they will find it out before they through with me.” The brother of Lowry wanted Captain Seymour to arrvest the woman for vag but this he declined to do. Mrs b start for Placer e the threats of the to-day s to detai bride ha inging in local con- t halls and has just completed an en- gagement at the Oberon. DRINE-CRA (0P SHOOTS AT SPECIL Policeman Boukofsky Runs Amuck in the Western Addition. ST A Policeman Boukofsky, while suffering from an overindulgence in liquor, ran amuck last night in the vicinity of Jack- son and Lyon streets. After terrorizing P. O. Driscoll, a grip- man, whom he imagined was a footpad, he took a shot at Special Officer Helbush for no other reason than that the special refused to obey his command to throw up his hands. Fortunately the bullet went wide of its mark. As he again tried to pull the trigger Helbush grabbed the re- volver and valnly endeavored to disarm the frenzied policeman. The pistol shot attracted the attention of Policeman Curry, and seeing the two men struggling for the possession of the weapon he drew his club and cracked Boukofsky over the head, forcing him to release his hold on the revolver. Although partly stunned from the effects of the blow, Boukofsky attacked Curry, but was quickly subdued with the aid of the lo- cust. He was then handcuffed and taken to the City Prison, where he was locked up in the tanks. 'He will be formally charged to-day with an assault to commit murder. Boukofsky, who is attached to the north end station, reported off duty at noon yes- terday. After leaving the station he vis- ited a number of saloons in the Western Addition, and it was'noucad that he was intoxicated. i Shortly after 10 o'clock last nliht Dris- coll, thé gripman, was passing through a vacant lot near Jackson and Lyon streets on his way home when he was startled by a command to halt. Turning around he was confronted by Boukofsky, who wore his star pinned to the lapel of his coat. The drunken policeman had his pis- tol in his hand, and as he was within a | ply personal corruption, and eve Tew steps of the astonished gripman he ordered him to throw up his hands. “I've got you at last,” 1emarked Bou- kofsky as he placed the muzzle of his re- volver in rous proximity to Dris- coll's head. ‘‘Come along with me or I'll blow your brains out.” Driscoll, realizing that the nflqcr was ments Attrib uted to Him. Qieceieieisieie FATHER YORKE'S CRIT > . - - § ) 1 it elaims ) that their scheme may be to prepare plans by which t b4 igh time for ublic schools t D upon educ the sol & are the two es. is a cle ty, a ho s only one way colleges. P >4 dred-dollar edv ten-cent prof . b President David St 4 must be from the gre the great pri 2 . tandard Oil Company is in bu § cators are of the opinion that the prin rence of the politician in the p > ools out of the b ds of th & “Take it away from this elem + [ President Jordan said: [ e aade sl i e e e o g ] + . that the small college has a very B+ eiei00 00 eseee® important place in education, so long as its work is honestly done. If it HE alleged quotations are not from Z anything I have ever said. I believe pretends to do what it has not the means to do it impairs its own integrity. There is no virtue in bigness, but there is virtue in the strength to do what one pre- tends to do. . but poor done u ure that the he slighte<t desir cation or to exclude mer being us auspic universiti onopoliz 1 trs from the privileges of they believe that trained men ones for the It is. their busine they meet son why they have many which h a vard & balance of a at such in It 1s a. mere figure of s ch. The university exists for “the d and dissemination of tr one who comes within s of truth is a better man rience. 1t is, of cour: the God's merc. th,” is ak for some one's des them for himself. What we call in the sch " is simply th or depende teache This is not polities. citizen who und: 1nds whether in a universit ind by the School Board of San Fra co in its efforts to eradicate this evil. choo e not corrupt be- » they are v fail in t regard it is because of the lack of educated public sentiment. The university would be rec- reant to its duty I1f-it did not do its part to form such sentiment. e A e o i g R SR Y ) crazed from the effects of liquor, con- 3 > 'North a o The public short distance, during z kept Driscoll covered with his revolver, the gripman tripped him up and ran into a garden. He took refuge behind a tree, hoping that the liquor-crazed policeman would not discover him. With an oath Boukofsky followed him, and discovering him hiding behind the tree ordered him to “come out” or take a chance on going to the Morgue. As_ Boukofsky kept his revolver trained on him. Driscoll, realiz- ing that he would n_.‘; pgwluuc to shoot him, agreed to go with him. = i hissed the intox- “Run away again,” > jcated copper, “and I'll riddle you with bullets.” Presenting the weapon coll's breast, Boukofsky ordered him to follow him. After walking about a block Driscoll again broke away from his captor and escaped from him by boarding a pa street car. I oo rsky walked up meeting Special Helbu: with his pistol. 5, “Say vour prayers,” commanded Bou- kofsky, “for this is the night you die. Helbush refused to obey the command of the drunken Boukofsky fired at him. steady and the bullet passed harmlessly over the special’'s head. It was at this juncture that Policeman Curry showed tp and placed Boukofsky under arrest. Boukofsky was before the old Board of Police = Commissioners last charged with drunkenness. As it was his first offense he was let off with a $20 fine. Presidio Outing Club. Thg‘l‘esldln Outing Club, composed of men' ‘rs of Court Presidio No. 4 of the Forg ors of America and Presidio Circle of thi: Companions of the Forest of Amer- fca will give Its fifth annual outing to Fairfax Park on Sunday, June 10. ————————— Louis Kahn’s Will. The will of Louls Kahn, who died May 22, was filed for probate yesterday. De- cedent bequeaths his entire estate to his widow, Sophie Kahn. the street and sh covered him The aim was un ‘Will Confer With Huntington. SALT LAKE, Utah, May 26.—A party of prominent Union Pacific Railway officials, including President Burt, General ager Dickinson and Chief En A will hold arrived in this city to-day, President Huntington a_conference wit! f the utl Pacific, who will arrive of in Salt Lake Sunday. neer Be: ieieseie et eies sl sie teieteie beied ICISm ON THE UNIVERSITIES V9V 9900 6040 9007020009024 2 40000042 4302 0000000 R ST S A against Dris- | policeman, whereupon | Octaober, | Man- | and t a e suy State rgyman. Supp: appointed wl would g ake your ubl simply se who favor Qiei00 00004000 0300000000 20d 000 00 eb 00 es® 1 President Wheeler said: | .—m+é—r Cin ot ol ot B e s ] 3 . @ 3 - | ¢ * @ ¢ . 2 > [ 1 13 be }@ : * lo be 18’ e |® . [t RS | & . B4 * 17 he 13 $ : ¥ ° B+ eseoedeseieisl® F Father Yorke has attacked the two California afd the the State I know have not read this know absolutely by either an of Stan- ford Unive I thoro e in the smaller col- ir work as As to the Jordan, if he we remarks m id.make the swer. They S Some of our small col- be chosen Univer: University. T sonable public >msalves. They by their own ery man is and if Dr. po 3 a be filled >rnia. uni- a others, »pinion is > exclu his opinion i ' is only My rwise. is utterly off-hand It impossible for me to give ion of so important a thought of it I am in no rview on the subjects in quest @ o - AUDITOR'S BUDGET f UP FOR DISCUSSION s e b eoeseg The Federated Mission Improvement Clubs Dzbate Matters of 1 Interest. Genera Representatives n Im sston Auditor's budget at a mecting of that body last night. George L. Center, chairman of the committee ap- o nt th - federation before th stated that much good had accomplished in ¢ tailing the extravagance of ‘the B;-ard of poin and Health Depart- v of provisions of the oduced the following. which was adopt w the attention of the Super- visors to the fact that by authority of article 1L, chapter 2, section 1, sub-section 22 of the charter, they are permitted to make a special tax levy for the construction of sewers on & | general’ plan, beyond the $1 limit, and we rec- cmmend that this be done, so that more money may be appropriated for other permanent im- provements. | The following resolution was adopted: Resolved, That the secretaries of affiliated clubs should call the attention of the members clubs to the importance of alding the be engaged in first two weeks h such informa- ng an exact | | We hereby | tion = count of the city’s population. | €. F. Kimball of the Nuevo Potrero Club spoke of the necessity of removing the County Hospital to some other sec- tion of the city. Accepting his views, the Board of Health was urged to seiect the House of Correction site as recommended by the Fairmount Improvement Club. —_———— For Benefit of St. John’s Booth. An entertainment and dance will be given next Saturday night at St. Mary's College Hall for the benefit of St. John's booth, Ladies’ Fair, to be held next Au- ust. Some of the best talent in the city | has been engaged for the sion_and an evening's enjoyment Dancing will commene 10 —_——————— Baker the Gourmand. Frank Baker, who distinguished him- | self several days ago Dy eating a break- fast costing 3275 in Swain's restaurant, was held to answer yesterday by acting Police Judge Barry on the charge of bur- jary. Baker went to Swain's stables at ‘Manning place and stole the hostler's | clothes, which he pawned.