The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 9, 1900, Page 30

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30 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1900. BONANTA MAY B OURD If DUSKY OWENS LAKE MUD Chemist Reports That It Has a Large Percentage of Aluminum. D Canadians Adopt System of Report- ing Mining Statistics Under Oath. ~ Ditch to Be Nineteen Miles Long. g The Caneda Chamber of| . iquarters at Winnipeg, g t o show that reports that attention is ) the fact that by us under letin has just e chamber, which atistical analysis up e Central Canadian gold are pub- the figures the report. a over $100 er $11 per e manager of metal- t rtage. Tuere is A. Weir, man- Bank of Canada. ris is quite are pages r the mines and h the ores were $5 08 per whi nown as the is now belng explore the avines ada Power-and build a ditc a point nin: the North water uba that the in the en bond- e vicinity of surves longing to W h He bes b 10w being a. Mou Investment iims have been little » Independent s aims b low townsman, Judge X o students, ates or hired sub- “a limited field and “hronic and He cures ervous Secret Impotence Manhood e Secret and Errors rible effects, Loss f the Heart, Loss and other Consumption, ve Brain and afflictions ses and Dis- ram nd Manly Pow- | restores_the cures Dis- d other Poi- mproper treat- ghly qualified, a d practice’ in ges ‘and Great Licentiate of of Tllinols and He is prac- y the Supreme Court of honorable Judges having the evidence of his skill and complete, and rendered a de- worizing him to advertise his iph th He alifornia y is aut aARASE has been engaged in an i permanent practice in San many years. His meth. nd sclentific. He uses no s or ready made prepara- tment let on Private Diseases men who call or write troubles. All letters and pack- PLAIN covers so as to excite cured at home. Terms reason- sultation Free and Bacredly Confl- ial s ndays, 10 to 12. €all or address— P. ROSCOE McNULTY, M 26} KEARNY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. trBeware of strangers and confidence men who may try to talk to you about elsewhere. rour @i e on streets or }r‘ey are own as medical cappers or ‘Goctor-steerers.” e mineral re- | Swell- | disease by | > ase by thoroughy cen®transterred from tne S to 3 dally; 6:30 to 8:30 evenings. | * || aleErT DEMER Louis GOZ,THE DISMISSED HUSBAND DRAMATIS PERSONAE IN A LOCAL IBSEN DRAMA. CLARA DEMEK has ap- iled to the law to rid her of hateful bonds that bind her Albert Demek, her husband ears’ standing. e prays for a \ the ground of infidelity, nam- Maria Goz as corespondent. ( husband of Maria, has 1it for divorce from the woman ar vears has borne the ging undue intimacy her part with Albert Demek. hese the plain and simple facts porting pillars of 1ble homes to crumble away, but v that would fire the or Tolstol and make a that would hardly pass a Mariz 21 years of Goz Is a comely Hungarian, age, and with a residence at reet, where up to Tuesday ifs Goz, her taflor hus- th her. On Monday evening Goz and Mr. Demek met in street flat for a short confer- Goz told her husband that she ¥ Demek declared he urn d Goz to his spouse, not got two hearts, so vou both of us. If you don’t want sreupon Goz retired, leaving his wife the man she sald she had e at first sight. Tuesday ilor removed his belong- | Goz_summoned Demek. 0 ings from the house and Demek moved in. This arbitra urrender to the dictates smoothly to the end t Demek had 1 who refused to let ave him all to herself. evening Mrs. Demek went to and, entering unannounced. ilor’s wife and her faith- band seated at the dinner table. Goz was singing and Mrs. Demek’s spouse was accompanying her on the violin. The sight of this domestic bliss was 400 much for the deserted wife. the Goz the G She natched the violin from her hus- band’; hands and smashed it on . his | head. Then, having put a stop to the music, she returned to her room on Ninth street. Mrs. Goz discussed her unusual position in the most matter of fact manner ves- terday. She spoke of her love for Demek, to whom she referred proudly as “‘a musi- cian and a barkeeper”; said she loved him and he her, and that without love she could not live. Yet she told this burning tale in‘a very matter of fact manner, her cold face never once showing the slight- es trace of the passion she claimed to so | keenly feel. ““My husband was cold,” she sald. “He chilled me. I cannot live without love, so when Demek told me that-he loved me T went to my husband and sald: ‘You do not love me. Demek does. I love him also. You had better go and leave me with him.” *Very well,” said my husband. He went away and Demek came at once to live here with me."” In corroboration of her statement Mrs, ‘The “barkeep,” however, was not, so glib with his facts little god would prob- | wife who also loved | LOVES ANOTHER MAN AND SO | HUSBAND GIVES HER TO HI Tailor Goz Surrenders His Spouse to Barkeepcr Demek, Who Won Her at First Sight, and Then Forsook His Own Lawful Wife to Come to Her. M [d o as the lady whose hospltality he enjoyed. “I've nothing to say now,” said Demek. ““When it comes to court, I will be on hand to speak.” Goz was found at the ladies’ tailorin, establishment where he works, and told. as his wife had, the story of their mutuai agreement to separate. Goz was quite as cold and indifferent as his' wife. Only once did his voice break and that was when he mentioned his little two-year-old son_and told how he had heard that lit- tle Louls was asking why “papa’ did not come home. “It Is true,” sald Goz, “‘my wife told me she loved Demek and that he loved her. | ‘You can’t love two men at once,’ I said, | | and so I went a and left her to| \l])cmvk. I would not force myself upon | her. married,” went on “I had a.somewhat similar experi- We were just marrfed one wee when she told me of a man who was call- ing upon her and who told her that he had | | money and asked her to fly with him. | Then'I persuaded her to stay with me. | | This time I let matters go as they would. | I am emploved all day and I have been told that for more than three months | Demek has been a continual visitor at my | home during my absence. That is why | | I am doing nothing to keep my wife with me The only one who seems to be suffering | at all by this change-around experfence is | | Mrs. Demek. Driven from her home on | | Wildey avenue by the husband who found | | & vounger and a comlier woman to love, | she has taken her little 7-year-old boy to | | & rooming-house on Ninth street and is | trying to provide for herself and him by working in a fruit cannery “I am earning about $1 20 a day,” she | sald. “I work from 6 in the morning till | 6 at night. When my husband told me | | that-he was going to desert me for Mrs. | Goz 1 begged him on my knees to stay | | with me. "He sald ‘T can’'t; I must go to | Mrs. Goz.” Then I told him he need never i’expvcl to come back to me. He did not The night T went up to | care, He went. | the Goz home, T, don't know why I went, but when I saw my husband there with that woman, I could not restrain myself | and T smashed the violin on his head. All the parties Interested in the sults are Hungarians, and with the exception of Demek they ‘find it difficult to tell in English the romantic tale on which they ibase their claims for divorces. €hores of Owens Lake and hearing of its operties, predicteg that at some clay on the shores of the lake would uable than the soda that is being ely produced from the lake waters aporation and cryst zation. In orde ¥ 1o & test he sent specimens S Various points to have It an- find o if there was any min- ¢ marketable value therein, and also to apital in the property should al value. For a long time h o success, but at last a sample of the clay to Wil- a capitalist and one of the prin- wners of the quicksilver mines of Lake ¥ i= also a practical chemist tely became clay’ contains ject, as the wough aluminum to properties in the State, ly worked on a large scale. be successf! dave ag received notice to t Keeler, where n. Mr. David- the i meet M Judge and Be r the s they w #on show them the extent of the count from which the mud gould be taken. They were much pleased ook and located They also have res in pl A Mono correspondent of the Sonora TUnion-Democrat writes: , and naturally e Valley 1 have been greatly in- nd I will tell your readers some- as never falled yet to interest and There is no ocoasion for Eoing to me or the Kiondike. I was never more eutprised in my life to hear of the new and | rich locations in this part ofeMono County, and laced little credence in the reports. But see- fng i belioving, and I must say that I have nenough to convince the most skeptical as he great value of the ore deposite here. Mr. Carier has a vein near Little Antelope that takes the cake. It is 20 feet wide and gives free milling tests of $50 01 per ton has a very fine prospect near the han sawmill, in the same locality, i rich in both gold and silver. In an dirsction and_zbout five miles from alities Mrs. Haslam of Carters has a e “The Queen Bee, on a vein 40 feet Jt prospects exceedingly rich in coarse The lady is camping on the river near mble's place, where we prospected of the rock which I brought from the | w | four in number, | 150. a few days | T think, taking it straight across d mot sorting in y way, that it Wil y121a at mill from $40 to $45 per ton. On or | | near the southern boundary of this location the parties ha overed a vein about elght 1 ‘wide running parallel with the Queen Bee = well in free gold. John Trum- rn extension of the Queen s found the entire length of that prospe ble has the nor Bee and gold Judge Gr: suits brought by varfous ers along the Feather River against Biggs, Bates & Freeland. In each case the judgment is in faver of the plaintiff. Biggs and his associates located claims in the river bed mear Oroville for dredg- ing purposes. Actions were brought to recover the property. The decision was sed on the doctrine that the boundary in such cases extends to the center of the channel when nomotherwise stated | in_patent or deed of conveyance. Th rangements have been made for the contlnuance of work on the Hite | mine, in Maripssa County., which has a great record as a gold producer. Captain A. H. Ward, the Miners' Loan and In- vestment Company of Boston and Cap- | tain H. H. Todd of Alameda-age in_the deal that has been arranged. The Hite Cove Gold Mining Company pays $46,000 | to Hite and takes possession. The 1100- | foot shaft will be put down another 200 | feet. The ore chute will be drifted on and new appliances will be put in. Cap- tain Todd will probably remain at the | mine as manager. | The following mining proj property own- | 1 rties _have nta Ysabel Gold Mining Company of Wyoming to the Santa Ysabei Gold Mining Company of Colorado, all being in Tuolumne County: Miller & Holmes, Knox & Boyle mine and mill site, Gray Eagle quartz mine and mill site, Wyman Consolidated quartz mine and eighty acres of adjoining land, also bufldings, tools, etc. The considera- tion is $70,000. These properties are known as the Santa Ysabel group. They ;a!e ‘cqulnped with electric and steam ants. Dredging on Weaver Creek at Weaver- ville will begin about Thanksgiving time. C. D. Galvin, who will conduct the opera- tions, has the dredger purchased. It has a capacity of 2500 cubic yards per day. Callustro Window and Mjrror Polishers—They do the work quickly and do it weil. They clean the glase and give it brilliance. They are last- ing, convenient and economicsl. Avall your- selves of a good thing. Ask for them at the Emportum. - -9 | kind of real estate. |E ; at Oroville has decided six | & : ANSACTI R HE sales of realty in San Francisco last month amourted to $ and numbered 244. Tne distribution by districts and the amounts received were as follows: Fifty-varas, value $131.83¢ number thirty, value, $134,58; and water lots, number one, value $5000; South Beach, three lots, value § Potrero, gleven lots, value $29,600; Mi sixty-six lots, value $153454; Western dition, sixty-seven lots, value $3 South San Francisco, twenty-four $13,130; outside lands, cighteen lots, $38,- The total of the loans during Au- gust amounted to $953,676 and the releases in total were $1,192, The mortgages numbered 257 and the releases numbered 229, Magee's Real tate Circular reports that there is more demand in this city for sites for factories than for any other There is some in- quiry for fine business property and for property vacant or improved on Pacific Heights, but the demand is not very ex- tensive. Deeds have been recorded this week In which the consideération, figured on the basis of the internal revenue stamps at- tached, was as follows: Joseph P. Stearns to Albert Heyer, lot on south line of Page street, 106:3 east of Shrader, 2 by 137:6, $10,000; Patrick and Annie Larkin et al. to Ellen’A.'Glynn, undivided two-thirds lots, of the property on lot on the east line of Va- lencia street, 173 feet south of Sixteenth, 32 by 0, $500; estate of Mary L. Fiinn to Eilen A. yEn, interest in the preceding, $2333; Eliza- arris to George B. Cordano, lot on north. of Twenty-second and Capp stree north 120, west to Capp street, 117:5. Benjamin Healy to Mary S. Moulton, south line of Union street, 91:8 east of 10 by 50 by 25 by 10 by 20:10 by 60, rgaret Nolan to William F. Breeze, st line of Jones street, 112:6 north of by §7:6, $10,000; Hibernia Savings and oclety to Daniel Gallagher, lot on east Second street, 137:6 north 'of Harrison, $4000; estat den,’ lot on. east line of South northeast of Center place, also 197.6 northwest of Brannan street and 3 vest _of Second, 20:6 by 137:6, $2675; Willlam Matilde Noonan to Henry and Catherine Jenkins, Iot on southeast line of Natoma street, 275 northeast of Sixth, 37:6 by 80, $5000; Calla- ghan Estate Company to David Lewls, lot on west line of Eleventh avenue, 1 street, 50x120, $1600; Henry F. Jr. and Clara H. Blanchet to Isaac and Mary Comann, lot on_northwest corner of Salinas and Crane streets, 100 by 100, $1000; Elizabeth M. Charles C. Wilson to Henry Mangels, lot on north line of Page street, 131:1 west of Clayton, 50 by 137:6, $5000; Edward J. Vogel to Bernard and Amilda Gaffey, lot on south line of Bros- nan street, 285 east of Guerrero, 20 by 30, $1000; Glovanni and Louise Talerl to Paoli Barozzi, 1ot on west line of Ohfo street, 57:6 south of Broadway, 20x52, $3000; estate 'of ~Constance Kreuser to Edward Rowland, lot on south line of Union street, 63:2 east of Jones, 22:6 by 120, $2000; Willlam H. Horan et al. to Louise E. and Rose Barton, lot on north iine of Natoma street, 100 feet west of Seventh, 25 by 75, 33500; William W. and Carrie ¥. Rednall to George and Annie C. Sherman, lot on northeast corner San Bruno avenue and Twentleth street, 50 by 100, §1500; Rdith C. Sedgeley et al. to Joseph McDermott, lot on west corner of Fourth avenue and M street, 111:6 by 36, $1250; Charles J. Lin- der to David Emerson, lot on east line of Shrader street, 125 feet north of Frederick, 25 by 134:8%, $2000; Louls Metzger to Louts P. and Caroline ‘Meany, lot on east line of Bryant enue, 55 feet morth of Twenty-second, 30 by 100, $2000; Dorothea and Heinrich Landschnelder to George and Mary Hotte, lot on_east line of Mission street, 220 feet north of Twenty-fifth, 40 by 115, ; Charles and Marle Kiein to Hugh ‘and Bridget Boylan. lot on _north line of Natoma street, 150 feet east of Sev- enth, 25x75, $3000; Frederick E. and Carrle M. Wadsworth to Ernest I and Charlotte Johan- sen, ot on west line of Mississippl street, 125 feet.south of Solano, 25x100, $1000; estate of Juan M. Aguirrs to J. H. northeast correr of Turk and Webster and porth line of Turk, 26 feet east of Web- ster, 25:9x137:8, §7500: Willlam and Jeanette Wolt to Orel M. Goldaracena, lot on southwest corner of Ellis and Jones streets, 87:6x50, $35,- 00; Willlam W. and Carrle F. Rednall to Oli- ver J. and fenfeonfonfeefonfe e ONS IN REALTY | [T . of Willlam Quane to | 5 feet north of | and | et eirlelnloiieiniel- @ 5, due east 3958, due south 55 Association to Willlam due north Paul Tra E. 376, northeast Homestead Elwell, lot on north- east corner Mansell and Berlin streets, 50x: | $500; Samuel R nklin to Sarah L. Key | ot 3, block 4, or Homestead, $430: Glo- vanni and F ippari to Frank Peilcano nd Glanbaptista Gionchle, undivided three- fourths of Iot on the northeast corner of Hano- | ver and Guttenberg streets, $1%00; America and | Angela Suacei to Angelo Devicenzi, Jot on south line of Vallejo strect, 137:6 feet east of Montgomery, 26x57:6, $2500: Rebecca Carson to Marcus A. Delfs, Jot on south line of Linden avenue, 110 feet east of Octavia street, 27:6x50, $1000; Laura H. Blake to Otto T. Hildebrecht, lot on east line of Belvedere street, 135 feet north of Frederick, 25x121:10%, $1500; estate of | Richard Plummer to Mary E. McHugh, lot on | | Bouth line of Washington street, 155:7% feet west of Cherry, 66x57:6, §1330; Eugene Kelly to Josephine G. Kelly, lot on southwest corner .of Guerrero and Eighteenth streets, 100x90, $5000; estate of Juan M. Agutrre to R. M. Aguirre. lot on east line of Powell street, from 65 south of Broadway to 117:2 south, irregular shaped plece, $7000; Ferdinand B. Hesthal to Willlam J. Hesthall. lot on southeast corner of Green- wich and Jones streets, 22:6x60, $3000; Frederick | and Louise M. Bonn to the Southern Pacific | Company, 1ot on corner of West Rallroad ave- | nue and Thirty-eighth street, $1500. It an owner desires to have a basement six feet high, in connection with a three-story building to contain flats, he wil] be compelled to carry out the conditions of the law, which requires him to have the walls, footings, etc., the eame as if it was a four-story building. He can only override the law by having half the hefxht of the basement under ground. If | an owner leaves six feet of clear space above | | the ground for basement purposes the powers that be clearly say that they will consider that a story. and framing and construction gen- erally Tust correspond to the law. If on' the | same 1ot the owner digs down thres feet in the cold, cold ground, well, then it will only be a basement. So in order to have basements here- after half of the contemplated height must be under ground. 1f you go above the ground six feet your walls must be four inches thicker, your ‘studding must be heavier and generally the cost greatly increased. The Hageman Brewing Company has made contracts for the erection of a three-story brick bufiding adjoining the malthouse and storage building for -the brewlngoé)[:mt on the cast line of Eighth street, 100 feet south of Harrison, the con- tractors being R. Keaiinge, Western Iron Works, Adam Beck and Robert Trost, tha cost to exceed $16,900. Other builders’ con- tracts have been placed on record this week as follows: Isaac Comann with Erik Brothers, for a five- Toom cottage on the Garden Tract, Homestead Assoclation, cost $1200; James L. Flood with Electrical Engineering’ Company, for electric lighting, etc., for a three-story and basement | residence on ‘the north line of Broadway, 137:6 west of Buchanan, cost $3675; Miss B. Eels Colby with [ L. Arthur, for a two story, base- ment and atfic frame building on the west line of Taylor street, 55 feet south of Washington, | cost $5700; Caroline Wingertnet with Ferdinand Wagner, C. Krecker and Duffey Brothers, for @ two story, attic and basement frame resi- dence on the south line of Clay street, 95:2 west of Plerce, cost $11,233; Edward F. Delger with W. B. Anderson for alterations and additions 10 a frame residence at the northeast corner of Falr Oaks and Twenty-fifth streets, cost $4262; the Methodist Book Concern with An- drew McElroy, for alterations and additions to bufldings on the south line of Market street, between Sixth and Seventh, cost $2471; St. Luke’s Hospital with Cahill & Hall Elevator Co., for passenger elevator in pavilion on the west line of Valencia, cost $179%; San Fra cisco Settlement Association with Frank A. Howkins, for alterations and additions to a two story and attic brick building on the east line of Center place, between North Park lane and South Park, cost $12,2%. Bovee, Toy ‘& Sonntag will auction at Los Medanos station, on the Southern Pacific road, at noon of the 224 inst. the L. L. Robinson property, the Los Medanos ranch, and also town lots in Antioch and New York Landing. The ranch consists of about 8000 acres. It has a large front- ag.on the San Joaquin River. vid Bush & Son rej sales of lots in the San Martin ranch in Santa Clara County for Phillj & Va- chel. The largest parcel sold consisted of 680 acres. This was purchased by John | C. Atwood at the rate of $125 per acre. The lots embrace ten acres. Ladies’ tallor-made suits, silk skirts, fur capee: liberal credit, M, Rothschild, 62§ Sutter, ¢ | has decided that there will be no puts and | after, the members of the board being of | ofl. CALIFORNIA DI BACTEMENT BhS STRUCK CHICAG Western Exchange Has Sent Agent to Look Over the Field. ——-— Solid Capitalists Are Investing in Various Parts of the State and Large Enterprises Are Talked Of. . The ofl excitement has extended from California to Chicago. ,In the great West- ern city an ofl and mining exchange has been organized and an agent has been in this State looking into the subject of California oil stocks to be sold in- the new exchange. There have been fraudulent performances in connection with certain alleged California cor- porations in the East that have | tended to cast discredit upon the legiti- mate oil-producing companies. Joseph L Ball, who represents the Chicago Oil and Mining Exchange as secretary, says that it is the intention of l.s associates to deal in only reliable companies. Chicago will be willing to supply capital to assist in the development of the California oil fields when the facts are well known there. He is also of opinion that the Chi- | cago exchange will be able to prevent the marketing in the East of worthless of stocks. | “We shall require companies that we list,” he says, “to send reports of field progress and we will exchange quotations with the California oil exchanges. In this way we will be able to keep the public | properly informed.” Louis Blankenhorn describes what he has seen in the Kern River field as being something to astonish any one. From many commanding points one may see a | tract now six miles long and about two | miles wide on which within one year‘there have been drilled one hundred wells. All | but a few of these are producing. Many wells have also been drilled outside of the | defined territory. The supply is hampered only by the facilities for transportation. In the past month mule teams have giyen place to oflcars and railway accommo@a- tions. There is still a lack of tankage. The clearing-house of the Los Angeles Oil Exchange is about ready to operate. The board of governors of the exchange | calls on the floor of the exchange here- opinion that they hurt cash business. A tract of 800 acres in the Sunset district has been_brought under the control of Clark & Bryan. No stock will be issued | nor will there be articles of incorporation | to_file. There is a well in the McKittrick district | that is reported to be spouting at the rate | of 500 barrels of oll per day and shooting up. the greasy fluld to the height of forty | feet. The whole tract has been deluged | and every crack and crevice Is filled with | The reassuring words of C. A. Watson of the Standard Oil Company to the produc- ers of the Kern River district to the effect | that his company is in the field only to handle the output has not prevented the formation of the Producers’ Ofl Storage Company, which has for its aim the han- dling and marketing of the oil produced in the district. Considerable discussion preceded this action and conflicting opin- | jons wereexpressed concerning the benefits and possible damages to come from the entrance into the field of the Standard Ofl | Company. The plan of organization | adopted by producers of oil is about as | was foreshadowed in this paper. | On the first day of August there were | 280 rigs and drilling wells reported in the“ oil fields of California. Thirty days later there were 439. Attention is called to the fact that no district has yet been fruitless- | ly exploited. Capital is going into the | enterprise with augmenting speed and | some_of ‘the foremost moneved men of the State are largely interested. Three large enterprises have been financed In Southern’ California within _a very few weeks, these including the Bard property in Ventura County, the Piru and the Olinda ranches, all 'of which have called | for the expenditure of large sums or money. The Redding Free Press reports that | drilling is about to begin in Shasta County. | August was a record month for the Los | Angeles Oil Exchange. There were sold on the floor of the Exchange 344,087 shares for the sum of $110,780. Of unlisted stocks there were sold 150,450 shares for $3981 25. | Jumped in Front of a Car. James Tierney, who iives at Hayes and | Laguna streets, while under the influence | of liquor yesterday afterrioon jumped from | an eastbound Hayes-street car in front of a westbound car at Hayes and Market streets. He was knocked down and dragged along for a few feet till the car Was stopped. He was taken to the Re- cefvin: ospital, where it was found that he had sustained a lacerated wound of the forehead and possible fracture of fhe skull, besides abrasions on his hands and legs. e Special Corset Sale. Another lot of travelers' samples and odd corsets, all colors and sizes, value from 75c to $4 50, will be sold for half price and less. Also 100 dozen 75¢ “Coutil” corsets—five-hook, spoon steel. silk flossed—at 25c per pair. Chester Wright, 6 Geary street, corner Kearny. ¢ st Shoplifters in Court. Teonora Stewart, alias Ruby Smith, and Minnie Munson, allas Mary Edwards, | ghoplifters, appeared before Judge Conlan yesterday on wue charge of petty larceny, | Several Salvation Army women were in court looking after Minnie's interests. The cases were continued till September 13. Mrs. Mary Anderson, 2218 Hyde street, was arrested In the Emporium yesterday morning by Special Officer Tilton. She had stolen several cheap books, which she | the specimens of monogram stamping on at Eureka, for Humboldt Count; ADVERTISEMENTS. Fall Novelties SEASON 1900. We Are Now Showing Elegant Lines of the Following New Goods. Ladies' Silk, Cloth and Flannel Walsts. Ladies’ Si1k, Moreen and Sateen SKirts. Sacques and Bath Robes. Ladies’ Elderdown Ladies’ Feather and Fur Scarfs and Fur Couarettes" Ladles’ Fine Muslin and Wool Underwear, Corsets, Gloves and Umbrelias. La- dies’ Fancy Neckwear, Fancy Ribbons and Noveltg Handkerchiefs. A Magnificent Stock of New Dress Fabrics, both Colored and Black, New Silks and Vel-_ yvets,-New Laces and Trimmings, Lace Tidles, both Real and Imitation, Lace Scarfs and Bed Sets, Im~ ported Cloths for Tailor-made Suits, French and Ten- nis Flannels and an enormous stock of New House- keeping Linen Goods. Orders by mail receive prompt attention. Samples sent iree to any address. m, u3, us, T, 19, 121 POST STREET. satchel. She was booked R:dam?fi:?g'en:t petty larceny. She had $16 in her pocket and as she was in a delicate conditionp Warrant Clerk Peery accepted $10 for Ner release. Causes Husband’s Arrest. Mrs. H. Emerson, 109 Ninth swore to complaints in Judge Cabaniss court vesterday for the arrest of her hus- band, E. W. Emerson, on charges of threats to kill and battery. She showed a badly swollen eye as evidence of the battery. charge and said = her l;‘lusbnnd. after beating her, had left the house to purchase a revolver with which to kill her. They. had lived unhappily together for the past five years. —_——— Artistic Effects in Stamping. The Native Sons are invited to inspect street, r at Cooper's, 746 Market street. and a visit here repays one. —————————— Newspaper Thief Sentenced. C. Christer was sentenced by Judge Conlan yesterday to thirty days in the County Jall for stealing a newspaper from a deorstep on Larkin street about | ten days ago. It was thought that he was {nsane and he was sent for examina- tion before the Insanity Commissioners. | They decided that he had sense enough to know right from wrong. —_———————— Trapper’s Oll cures rheumatism and neuralgia. Druggists, i0c flask. Richards & Co., 408 Clay. — ce———— Referees in Bankruptcy. United States District Judge de Haven cesterday appointed the following refer- 3:5 in hn’nkrupl(y: William T. S, }!(\'dlg\y} Coulter at San Jose for Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, and Charles A. Bliss at Sacramento, for Sacramento, Yolo and ‘El Dorado counties. it i S — Your bosom friend, Gibson's $1 shirt. Market st.; white or colored: just in. e g The bells of Peking, seven in number, | welgh 120,000 pounds. 1204 . Misi make our store their he will be pleased to give a Visitors desirin logue can have entrance. Invitation to Visitors to the city are cordially invited to Our fall stock of novelties in goods and art materials is now co of particular interest to ladies, wish to purchase or not. g our new illustrated cata- it mailed name and address at the 129 Kearny Street beds. The above in particular—of polished golden oak, is a favorite style—prices from $12.50 to $50.00. Send 5 cents in stamps for postage on new furniture catalog. THE J. NOONAN FURNITURE 00., Ino., 1017-1023 MISSION STREET, Above 6th, phone South M, S. F PALACE HOTEL It is universally acknowledged that thess hotels possess the attributes to particular people—undoubte: comfort, unsurpassed culstne and and superior appointments and | Connected by a covered passa operated under one manageme American and European plans CHICHESTER'S ENGLISN tors adquarters; where we ny information desired. fancy dry mplete and Whether they free by leavin desk near thg NAVEGYAL PiLt e CHICHESTE! NGLISH & ani Gold me ik b ivhn. Fake mo other: Refusa Pangerous Substitutions und Laitar tlome: Buy of your Dracgise. or send de. for Particulars, Teatimonials i Leier, by pew aimoaiais. Soid by heater leal € Hitchcock School, SAN RAFAEL, CAL., FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS. Separate Rooms, Omu AMuitary Drul, CHRISTMAS TERM BEGINS AUGUST WMTHL. C. HITCHCOCK. Prinoipal. REV. ., 2203 Central ave. POLYTECHNIC BUSINFSS COLLEGE

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