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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1900 DEAD HANDS MAY PROVE HIS CRIME John M. Chretien, the Self-Con- fessed Scoundrel, Accused of Committing Forgery. | ¥ " | i T we d be filed on the various | li v appeared to exist. i ) n M. Chretien there- | o now in the hands of the police. | " ttorney w » L3 X . mitted Chretlen, against whom in- | | tbeiebes e . court of Judge d a bogus heir, court and who re e property which With Chretie; s no further con- ke is punished R R IR SR S S SR g ool :d robbe nt to tunate nte r was E the thorp was forthwith HEAP SABE is hom a comely woman you been doir h pitch of i While noth Judge T evil-d on for con- dal in ear to ity and the ). it any 3 - . . & d¢an man NOW'T SHOGGLE ' comicated by’ bog| 4| WiZ ms weeK's SALAREE!? D e AR A S Chre! schemes ¢ man @ ¢S eE o what he » Call has EO MAURER is the proprietor of a | ; ya hands of T board house at 126 Market o = street, Jout a week ago he en- d George Okazusi, a Japanese, It not long before he at he had taken the Japanese to nis service, as there was falling off the number of dis nd glasses. s blamed for it, and Maurer de- EQUALIZERS PRY INTO JAKE RAUER’S BOOKS in Okaust w JUGGLE, MUCHEE floor. MR. OKAUSI HAD NO RESPECT FOR LANDLORD MAURIER OR HIS D e @—o—@—o—@+@»o«@—o«§—o—@4—@4‘«>»o—©+@+@—fw‘ He remonstrated with Okausi, who , crockery told him that he had been a famous jug- | gler and he need not be alarmed because a plate was broken. Maurer threatenes to dis good. Okausi did not keep his promise, and th cook continued to complain to the “b: bout broken dishes. Wednesday Mau could stand it no longer. He saw Okau juggling with a piece of ice and the ice pitcher. Every moment he expected to see the valuable pitcher broken to-pieces on the floor. He was afraid to interrupt Okausi, but when the performance was over he called him into his office and promptly discharged him. ~He retained $2 50 from his week's wages for the broken harge him and he promised to be | JAPANESE JUGGLER PROVES RANK FAILURE AS A WAITER +-0-4-6-0-6-0-0-060-0000000+0 Heredebebebebeiebeieieieie@® yoYOU SHUGGLE ZE DISH! U BREAK ZE DisH ! VSPILL 2E BULLYONG! YOu Pay zg Mon' i~ AND THE JAP JucaLep WILL JuGoLE THE Jap, B o R o e e e A e e DISHES. and glassware. Okausi de- murred and grabbed hold of Maurer, threatening to juggle him in the air. He lifted him against the wall, Maurer sent for a policeman and Ser- eant Wolfe called and placed Okausi un- | T arres on a charge of battery. When searched at the City Prison a lottery ticket was found in the pocket of the J and an additional charge was placed against him on_this account. The cases were called in Judge Mogan's court yes- terday, and after hearing the evidence the Judge 'reserved his decision till to-day. Okausi will be convicted on the charge of battery, but the charge of having lottery tickets in his possession will be dismissed. at = | Pacific Gas Improvement Company | termined to keep a watch upen him. He o | Granted a duction—Spri was thunderstruck when he saw Okausl | 1 | et B Bednstion Sprng | Niegling with two or three plates. He N | Valley's Modest Request. | would pitch them Into the air one after f t San | Bk the other, catching them as they fell | ss cord, according | Sometimes he would miss his catch and Pe e . Rauer, the| Plate was smashed to pieces on the of A 1 bad bill collector, who B i n estate from John mn-iu \;f his lli‘i sonal . as & O s e Their Places. n d his clerk fi the value of the per- » 3 effects o (hwx Rauer Collection i ar] at $100, but not > x the vast sums of mone Recent Ruling That Grammar Schools - « intere In uxni--r to find May Have but One Assistant mething _about Assessor Dodge Principal May Result in - appear before the Board of | Lawsuits. e sscesor smiled his blandest smile | TS e : . ek 1 g R 2 e S h'”‘)’l’;:} The Board of Education in making pro- i been se & him gilded | vision for only one vice principal in the | v messengers | grammar schools is certain to involve - g hiad.been liusy | iyseit 1n'a peok (of troubls when it pro- | m them. s R o I really can’t say,” was the reply, "but ) their positions in schools where there are > S eoked over the records for some |at present two guch officials. | wios are back and I cannot find any of | The schools and vice principals which | versions r @ em,” rejoined the Assessor. | Wil be affected by the ruling of the board | M r Then Rauer = ught 0, explain, 12 mild | oiude the Adams Cosmopolitan, Miss K. | tones, D e money in veai eatats ana|F- McColgan and L. F. Shuck, vice prin- je returns on chattel mortgages that | cip: of equal rank; Clement Grammar; we Tecord. He was in debt $9000 | Miss N. Mc, , senior vice principal, when the assessment was made— igs Frances Lewis, junior vice prin- “I wish the apher to take this|cipal; Hamilton Grammar, Miss Elia J. down." interrupted Chairman Braunhart. | Morton, r vice principal, and Miss ¢ [&s 1 am satisfied if the Assessor % 1ss, junior vice principal; thinks it 35 all right,” continued the rsi_Grammar, Miss A. J. Clark and ce | money lender, humbly. Miss N. O’Loughl vice principals of Dr. Dodge tnen took a band. “I have | equal rank; John Swett Grammar, Mrs. peen unabie to find any of these chattel | ¢, B. Bigelow and Selden Sturgess, vice sy . n | mortgs s,” he said *I am sorry to s principals of equal rank; Pacific Heights | f 1 have hereunto affixed | 3 o, 55y ing to a decl gl weal, at .y | " replied_Rauer, “and leave it here| na¢ a teacher cannot be degraded in rank S ren ¥ | by 10 o'clock Monday. I thank the gen-| oxcept for certain specific reasons. Even o oan Francisco. | tlemen of the board for their considera- | shouid senlority of service be adhered to, yidaraass | the vice principals who are dropped must to b curt e form, fore me this A. J. FRIT of the City force and uch cases made an ng the same to | and there will et- ixigg ~| not be convinced, but asked to have the | gpother. It is understood that a teacher " .{1";-””_-::*‘1 d‘i'::‘n | matter postponed until this afternoon that | who was recently removed in the consoli- ekbfagta i=| he might have more time to look Into the | dation of classes is preparing papers to es the saia Jobm | )r's figures. The matter was so ar- | {est the right of the board to dismiss her ittes the id the seid accused may and | As soon as the complaint was sworn to mally spent the Since his in clared that the an lice went to his offices removed from the County aken to the City P charged m, where where he in one of the steel tank: | covers such Attorney Alfred Sutro ar;pearcd‘hefnre“he carried on the roll at the salary re- {he board on behalf of the Pacific Gas Im- | ceived while holding the position. n | pro asking to have its| (Chairman Mark further stated that trary personal red before t as- TROUBLE MEAD | OB THE BOARD F EDUCATION Six Vice Principals to Be Deposed Illegally From wpparent surprise, or and board ile, an fully submitted to what he was | amination, | course—had not Dr. Dodge suggested | t the board might ralse his figures if | ey saw fi The board saw fit to order nt to them the | his personal propert cted to present to th = ready by Monc . gen supposed be B axes upon hat sum, and he has | t a ssment of $5000 and ceeds to put the rule into effect. The trou- | { ble will in all probability assume the phasa | | of a lawsuit on the part of six vice prin- | cipals who will find themselves without { atements the A r th the Assessor has not perform-| Grammar, Miss Augustine G. Robertson, i senfor vice principal, and Miss J. Al % Michelson, junior vice principal. Mark sald yesterday that the vice principals would be dropped on the Tecommendation of the principals of the schools. In this manner it may happen that the senlor vice principal will be de- hosed in favor of the junior vice principal. n any event the ousted vice principal will have just cause for a suit at law. accord- sion of the Supreme Court board full duty in this matter. y ent if | right to raise this has the Chairma f “irman Braunbart asked the clerk to | the section from the statutes that cases. He informed Rauer | that the board would require of him the | statement which he had failed to make at | oper time to the Assessor. and ed him to be careful in making it out. am willing to make out the state- | read reduced about $600 aborate table of shares of Central included in the s Improvement | places would be found for the deposed Viee principals, even should they be as- signed as class teachers. This is also in clear violation of the Supreme Court de- cision. It §s highly probable that if places of equal rank are to be provided the vice principals of the other fourteen grammar schools in this city may be in danger if the readjustment Is cacried out on the se- niority of service plan. The specific point on which ousted vice principals will fight the case in the courts is that a teacher may not be deposed to be supplanted by | Company, had been doubly e | Assesgor Dodge replied that he had al- covered the mistake and reduced essment $300.000, giving the com- s asked. He tried to have | stro agree to his figures, and | avery member of the board took nd paper. Attorney Sutro would | summarily. Inquiry failed to elicit the pame of the teacher who is about to brin, cult, but it is certain that the board wil have a case on its hands similar to the so- called Kate XKennedy case, in which a teacher won against a former board for belng dismissed in the same manner as the present board is effecting dismissals, McEnerney appeared for the | Ity C v d_that | ent of $1.; X shares ake Mining stock, | his client be canceled. He | owned pointed out that both were California cor- | by poratio nd he did not_consider it legal | for the stock to be assessed in that man- | ner. He thought an 4 sment on the franchise would be a better way of getting | A Voice for Pure Water. | Among other matters appertaining to ¥ ot I municipal improvements the Market he il the Sthier eSsskAmiat wors | street ana HBureke Vatley - Fuirovessnnt " asked Assessor Dodge. Club adopted the following resolutiol 2 “That we consider the people of this city 3 them and a his pris ey the Commany’ as- | waterobtainable spd tha: foxe weiece ob- sers. The police emphatically deny this | & 500,000 on its franchice,” said | Posed to the DUrchoos of @ ervols for declare that & week ago Chretien | Dodge. “Is that satisfactory to vou, Mr. | which depends on storage reservoirs for went to his place of business and de- | McEnerney?” queried the chairman. 399 mAERINES: s ;!rr ¥ed all the documents which soight| Wil X4 oalher sce it Xxsd at 380.009,° Richer Than “Nome.” ave any in inating influence upon his o > cise. The police have gyne Do Parther | ue Doard Voted fo,make the franchise| . Fepter, & Iovmer peeldent SEEAR SIS0 than to station two men at Chretien’s of- | “rhe Spring Valley Wi v fpwoa 2 Opte AR SWEUR e o 3 Sprir y ater Works peti- fices, with an idea of interrogating any | tioned !Ro Hoard of Equalization ycl’m- :f.(h:'a":.‘:a Eflfc".l:g&'fn?g-{?cx:flm:%emfi one who might apply for admission. day to reduce the assessment on its fran- 3 The District Attor ey yesterday sald that the one charge filed against Chretien in the Police Ccurt did not end the work of his office. He said that he would go chise, which was fixed by Assessor Dodge at $5.395,233, to $3.500,000, The corporation represents that the value of the franchis is represented by and included in the valu. Smuggled Opium Seized. Customs inspectors seized yesterday forty-six tins of oplum on the steamer HIS TEARS DID NOT SAVE HIM ROM DISERACE Trusted Employe of Cahill, Hall & Co. Goes Wrong. L A H. C. Pollock, a Young Man, Ar- rested for Systematically Rob- bing His Employer of Val- uable Property. Dot H. C. Pollock, a trusted employe of Ca- hill, Hall & Co. of 214 Mission street, was arrested vesterday by Detectives Ryan and O'Dea and locked up in the tanks. To-day at least a half dozen charges of petty larceny will be recorded against him. For the past several months Pollock has been systematically robbing his em- ployers of brass and other metals which he sold to various junk dealers south of arket street. Yesterday afternoon he appeared at a junk store on Folsom street and offered for sale a quantity of brass which he had stclen from the shop where he was employed. Detectives Ryan and O'Dea saw him enter the junk shop and noticing the sus- piclous bundle under his arm concluded to make an investigation. Approaching Pollock they asked him how he came into possession of the brass. “I stole it,” he candidly remarked, and with tears streaming down his face he begged the detectives not to arrest him. ““Think of my poor wife,” he exclaimed. “For her sake and that of my dear old mother don't take me to jail.” Although touched by the pitiful appeal the detectives, seeing no alternative, made Pollock accompany them to the shop of his employers. When taken be- fore them he broke down and made a complete confession. He admitted that his piiferings had been going on for over six months and that the amount realized on the stolen property was over several hundred dollars. “I didn’t mean to be dishonest'’ tear- fully remarked Pollock. “I was financially embarrassed and seeing no other chance of getting even 1 took the metals, intend- ing to replace them as soon as 1 was able.” Before finishing his statement Pollock, who is a young man, fainted, and it was some time before he was able to con- tinue. After listening to his confession his em- ployers ordered him locked up and he was at once taken to the City Prison, where his name was registered on the small book pending further investigation. The detectlves have recovered a large portion of the stolen porperty. The Sweeney Fund. Alex Greggains, manager of the San Francisco Athletic Club, sent a check for 3216 to Chief Sullivan yesterday, being the proceeds of the exhibition given by the club Tuesday night for the Sweeney fund. Thanks were tendered for generous dona- tions to the San Francisco Musicians’ Union, Monohan & Co. for printing, Jo- seoh H. Scott, Julius Kahn, Willlam A. Deane, John Conroy of engine 6, Pete Gal- lagher of truck 8, 13d Homan, Dennis Denehy, Ed C. Harrington, Wililam Cleary and Charles Kane of the San Fran- cisco Athletic Club for medals. A check was also received yesterday for $52 75 from the employes of the Occidental Hotel. —————————— Partington Awarded Damages. A judgment by stipulation was entered yesterday In the Superior Court in favor of John Allen Partington and against the Sunset Telephone and Telegraph Com- pany for the sum of $1500 in compensa- tion for injuries sustained by Partington through ant. Partington, who is only 13 years of age, suffered serjous burns through com- ing in contact with a life wire of the de- fendant corporation’s system at East Hieyeuth ‘ageen and tnird avenue, Oak- land. guardian, but it was settled yesterday for the sum named. the carelessness of the defend- ! Suit was filed on his behalf by his | ation of the materfal property, already a sessed by the Assessor as real and per- sonal property. cavefully over the evidence of the case and see what additional offense had been City of Puebla, which arrived last Wednesday from Victoria. The oplum is valued at $416. ———————————— Ladies' taflor-made suits, silk skirts, fur capes; lberal credit. M. Rothschild, 526 Sutter. ¢ +will i filed yesterday. IS THEY WILL NOT BUY THEIR OWN STATIONERY Fire and Health Boards Up in Arms Against Action of Supervisors. Acting Auditor Wells Says Resolu- tion Is Illegal According to Charter and Appropriation Insufficient. EmETar The Board of Health and the Fire Com- missioners are up in arms against the resolution recently passed by the Board of Supervisors requiring them to pay for their stationery and printing for this fis- cal year out of the funds appropriated for their separate departments. The of- ficials in the Auditor’s office will come to their aid by raising the point that in the passage of the resolution the Board of Supervisors has clearly violated a specific provision of the charter. The resolution on the subject reads: Resolved, That all demands for station books and’ printed blanks furnished the Board of Fire Commissioners and the Board of Heaith be presented to sald departments for approval and the same shall be charged to and paid out of the appropriation set aside in the budget for said departments, Acting Auditor William W absence of his father. Nedr is on his vacation, sa has no right to singl ment and force it to pay for its own sta- tionery. He says there has been an ap- propriation of $24.400 for stationery for all departments, and all are entitled to their pro rata of the fund. {r the appropria- tion is insufficient, and Wells thln?;s t is, any excess expenditures for stationery and printing supplies will be illegal. Under the head of ‘contracts,” the charter provides that the clerk of the Su- pervisors shall annually, under the diree- tion of the Supervisors, advertise for pro- posals for supplying the varfous depart- ment officers and offices of the city and county with all statlonery and supplies in the nature of stationery, assessment books, minute books, blankbooks and the printing of blanks. It says: The clerk of the Supervisors shall have rooms in the City Hall for the custody of such stationery, and when purchased the same shall be delivered to him, and he shall issue and dis- tribute the same to the varicus departments as required. It becomes apparent, therefore, that all stationery must go through the hands of the clerk, and that contracts in excess of $24,400 shall not be entered into. The rea- son why the Health and Fire boards have been selected to relieve the strain on the insufficient _appropriation is because the sums of $158,400 and $12.440, respectively, have been apportioned to the two depart- ments for expenses and extra employes. The Fire Commissioners and members of the Health Board will go before the Su- rvisors next Monday and chject to pay- hg any money out of funds which they claim they have other uses for. They contend that they are entitled to a por- tion of the stationery fund and if the fund is _too small that all the ments of the city government should be made to pay for stationery needed after the fund has become exhausted, which is likely to oceuy in about nine months. Another Big Transatlantic Liner Launched. At noon vesterday the new steamship “Vaderland” for thc Red Star Line was launched at Clydebank, Glasgow. This vessel is one of the largest afloat, the di- mensions being 360 feet long. 60 feet wide and 42 feet deep. Its measurement is about 12,000 tons, and when loaded will have a displacement of about 20,000 tons. It is fitted with twin screws and bilge keels; accommodate 300 first cabin, 250 second cabin and 750 steerage passen- gers. A twin vessel. the ‘Zeeland,” is in course of construction. Both vessels are first class in every re- spect. Jennie C. McCauley’s Estate. The inventory and appraisement of the estate of the late Jennle C. McCauley was The appralsers find the $93,700, the real in the the Audifor, who s that the board out any depart- estate to be valued a estate being worth $91,835. from his feet and dashed him | depart- | BOSS SCHEME IN FOURTH DISTRICT Purpose of the Separate Conven- tion Fully Understood by Alert Republicans. HE petition of the Republican party | B'rith Hall last evening was a source of of San Francisco for a place on the | much satisfaction to those present. “Mc- official ballot of the primary election | Kinley and more prosperity” was enthu- was presented to the Election Com- | siastically cheered. Willlam M. Cutter, misstoners yesterday by Alfred Bouvier. | secretary of the Republican State Ce! The petition was filed in accordance with | tral Committee, in a letter urged upon all the law. | the members the necessity of attending Anti-boss Republicans in the various |to registration. Alfred Bouvier made Assembly districts within the boundaries gmn“;z:dr-:lgi fr;‘gr;;sfi_r\:gom;:gc?g;?\_z‘iz;x‘s of the Fourth Congressional District are | ;.. is registered in time. Congressman discussing plans to defeat the scheme of | Juljus Kahn entered the hall and recefv Kelly and Crimmins to get control of the g reception. He was compel new governing body of the party in the e carly. but promised his fellow district. One plan proposed is to nomi- :;”;;’""’l:";:f\*‘_h"fl‘; !hl:]r ;{q;n“mfi»n. nate the delegates to the Congressional|jyigne “C. E_Fredericks, Captain Kin- onvention before any other tickets are| prepared, so that every voter will have cald and Judge Dibble = made _short speeches and their sentiments were heart ample time to identify the anti-boss ticket cheered. ( nnq[;a'.yl\fi)nAannlf ? (:,am:(n,l g 4 dece corps gave an exhib d inst e in each Assembly district. The decent| COTPS Bave ap SXl JoHOR Chrg men who Republicans have the strength and incli- | COmPANY T, COMPICEGE the coming elec- nation to down the Mint saloon gang, but in the juggling of pasters on election day they may be deceived. No doubt Kelly | Roosev tion. The meeting broke up by the mem- S R B R B S S S I BB OBRIBEREN BeBEBENO | EDELMAN WROTH AT THE MAYOR HARLES EDELMAN, the member of the Democratic delegation to Kansas City, who was grossiy insulted by Mayor Phelan during a caucus of the California delegation at the Coates House July 3, ar- rived home yesterday in company with Judge Maguire. They stopped over at Lincoln, Nebr., on the way and had an hour’'s Interview with Wil- Ham J. Bryan. “The report sent by Mr. Carlton to The Call concerning the incident in which Mr. Phelan insulted my race was absolutely correct,” said Mr. Edel- man last night, “with the exception that instead of witnessing the offen- sive gesture of Mr. Phelan in a mirror I was facing him when he made it. My back was turned when he commenced to make the gesture and facial grimaces for the amusement of a correspondent from this city. 1 was ad- ressing the chalr and he had attempted to interrupt me, but I had insisted on continuing, which was parilamentary. While his hands were still raised and his face distorted by a grimace, 1 turned, by chance, and looked the Mayor squarely in tne face. He certainly looked abashed. There was no mistaking the meaning of the gesture. I took it to be in ridicule of my race, and naturally resented it. “‘I demand respect, I command respect and I will enforce respect,’ were the words I used. “The thing was not done in the dark. There were eight witnesses to it that I can name and who will vouch for it. They are: Ex-Senator Del Valle of Los Angeles, Mr. Farraher of Siskiyou, M. F. Tarpey, Frank Freeman, Mr. Justro, Al McCabe and Al Murphy. I had agreed not to say anything about this thing, but when I arrived here and found that Mr. Denman, who was present at the meeting only through the courtesy of the delegates, had made a statement denying the facts I felt that I had to set myseif right. Mr. Denman sitting in such a position in the room that he could not possibly have seen what occurred. His statement is absolutely false. “Mayor Phelan has never attempted to deny t story. He has tried to explain it by saying that his gesture was one of disgust, and that he meant no insult, but I can vouch for the fact that none of the real witnesses took it in that way. Mr. Justro sat next to Phelan and within two feet of him. Per- haps Phelan did not know that Justro is of my . but he is, nevertheless, and he s0 angry over it that it was with difficuity that he was restrained from making a personal assault on Phelan after the meeting was over. Mr. Justro was the only other Jewish member of the delegation, all reports to the contrary notwithstanding. “Phelan afterward accused me of treating him in a ruffianly manner. The Call's correspondent asked Senator White, in my presence, whether I had done so. Senator White replied that if I had he would have called me to order. He remarked at that time that I had not mentioned any name in my remarks. “There seems to be no doubt of Phelan's for he has displayed it on several occasions, despite the fact that 9 per cent of them cast their votes for him at the time of his last election. He seems to have some personal grudge against me, although I do not know what it is, He tried to have me removed as chairman of the committee on transporta- tion, to which I had been appointed by Senator White. “Phelan’s exclusiveness during the whole trip estranged him somewhat from the other members of the delegation. He did not turn out with the Troquois Club when we left, although he is a member of that organization On the trip there were several incidents that caused the breach to widen One day Mr. Justro remarked: ‘This is the last time the so-called reformers will ever carry the city of San Francisco. The people will turn them down next time.’ “The opposition is merely from a lot of whij get places under me,’ was Phelan’s sneering rep in very bad taste for him to say so. “Now I want no apology, nor will T accept any apology of any kind from Mr. Phelan. I will not ever again recognize him in any way nor will I permit him to speak to me on any subject. I would like to think that the PR SIA I I I S O B B B SR [ i ‘[ | | dislike for the Jewish people. | pper;snappers who could not ¥. 1 remarked that it was PURIBIRIBIRIBI BRI BB el eBIRIBIRIBIBIBeBeBeBeloBeBeReB R D . R I e - R Bt R R ADVERTISEMENTS. elect | thelr creatures as delegates to It. main purpose of the side convention ingult he offered was for me personally, but I am convinced that he intended to insult my race. You can mark July 3 as the date of his political death.” and Crimmins will put an anti-boss label ; on the Mint saloon ticket. In order to| diminish the danger of deception the Re- | publican taxpayers in each district should delegates to be voted for. L JUST RECEIVED.’, Republicans must keep In mind the pe- | cullarities of the contest. In the Firth District the delegates elected to the State themselves into a convention to nominate a candidate for Congress in that district. | This convention will also select the gov erning body of the party in the district | =t Different conditions will prevail in the | Fourth District. Delegates elected to the | State Convention may not have the lawful | authority to nominate the candidate for | Crimmins, who now control the govern- | ing body of the party in the district, have, | through the agency of the Congressional | | District Committee, petitioned for a sep- The ‘ is to perpetuate boss rule in the Fourth Dis- . trict. pciies It is of the utmost importance to the clean government in this d\lyx :md‘Sm;‘e‘ plain toes, LXV and plain heels $5.00 that every voter should participate in the | e primary election on August 1% The bat- LAI;!MH hil;:cx KID nxmn.;ni_nnxv and | tle for honest government—the fight to| - . BL50 to $5.00 PATENT LEATHER OXFORDS, —must then be waged. | L. Democratic Clubs. | LADIES" TAN OXFORDS, full assortmen.... Democratic enrollment under the aus-| - e B1.25 to $3.00 pices of the county committee of t TAN and BLACK VICI KID LACE @etistiehieiefotistioNeRetNoeNeNINIReHIKIH+Q prepare in advance a list of the anti-boss convention at Santa Cruz will resolve | o Another New Invoice for the next two years. Congress, because Martin Kelly and Phil | arate convention and they expect to Republican party and to the cause of | LADIES' PATENT LEATHER LACE SHOES. wrest the party reins from odious bosses | LADIES' arty began in this city last night. The Ly g.’:m;mufe provided each Assembly Dis- SHOE:! ... 8350 X trict Club with a set of officers before the | ME o . .“ooox_ to Jjoin the club was issued. There was not a large enroliment in the official clubs last night. An impression exists that the county committee repre- Sants bubonic Phelanism, hence the Dem- ocrats are not tumbling over one anothar to enroll. Several clubs are going ahead with enrollment and organlz‘a(lnn without d to _the county committee. rep e Thirty-ninth Assembly District last night a Bryan and Stevenson Demo- cratic Campaign Club was organized. The | following named officers were chosen: ! mes F. Ford; first vice president. e e ona vica president, C: Koehnke; third vice president, Abe Jacob oerding and corresponding secretary, Jesse A Galland; financial secretary, Albert T Roche: treasurer. Dr. G. W. Leek! sergeant arms, John Skinkwin. Speeches were made by Robert Ferral, Frank Malloye, Major Powell, Clitus Bar- bour and Walter Gallagher. % Democrats of the Tnirty-fifth District organized a club by the election of H. J. Stafford presidsat and Lawrence J. Do- land secretary. Ninety-six signatures to the roll were obtained. In the Twenty-ninth District the Demo- crats effected organization by the election of J. J. Sweeney president and James J. Lynch secretary. The roll bore 161 signa- tures. There was a Democratic rally in the Thirty-eighth District last night. A club was formed and officers were elected. Judge Duffy was chosen president and | Pmfip Donnelly secretary. |~ The Democrats of the Fortieth District held a meeting at Franklin Hall last night and got 125 signatures on their rolls. e b St Republican Leaders Cheered. The meeting of the Bear Club in B'nal 0eoessseseovevecel pEERIESS (1L COMPANY JOHN W. FRIEDRICH { PEE e B SUFFOCATED BY GAS| FUEL OIL ‘Waiter Arose From Bed to Make His | By the carload, In any quantity, at any rafl- rend station. Escape but Fell Un- Address R a, coniselous. g Eighth Floor, Mills Build- Eeeris DR MCNULTY, years old, was found dead yesterday morning on the floor of his room at 423 VHIS WELL-KXOWN AN P e e T AT EFLIARLE oD Montgomery avenue. He had arisen from eases of Men oniy. Book on Private Diseases and his bed in his night clothes. The gas key Weuknesses of Men.free. Over 20y'ry’ experience, was turned partly on and the room was Tull of the deadly vapor. Patients curedat Ho: nabi 103 dally ;4.0 to 815 ey (L Feasonable. Hourss {nvitation POPULAR PRICES. 830-832-834 MARKET ST, 8. F, 1875-+-25=1900 MONDAY - - - July 16,1900. ‘ SOUVENIR Edition in Magazine Form as Supplement to the DAILY COMMERLIAL HEWS. | Over 100 Pages, Profusely Illustrated, together with the regular issue, ail for m.'g'ey:nnm. of the paper. Send in orders to COMM=KCIAL PUBLISHING Co., 34 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO LT 1875--25=(900 in; Young Friedrich worked in his father's restaurant on Montgomery avenue, be- tween Vallejo and Stockton streets. At the inquest held by Coroner Cole vester- day afternoon the evidence justified the verdict of accident that was rendered. ERtion free and nacrediy Contdentinl, Cull ot sdireas P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D, Kearny St., San Francisco,