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THE SAN" RANCISCO OCALL, WEDNESDAY, PRODUCES TR0 |POPULAR SUISU WILLS LEFT BY SANUEL PAGE RO \ CEERE e et Eern County’s Clerk S,ur-:I" prises Litigants and | Gounsel. | FINDS FO.GOTTEN DOCUMENTS Practically Disinherit he Widow, the Daughter and One Son of the De- | ceas=d. — cial Dispatch to The Call on has fol- ) nsat n the fight for t ut 1t tion IN THE SNARES OF CUPID William Pierce and Miss Lottie Bauman to N COUPLE SAN DIEGANS FIGURE IN THE DIVORCE COURT| Mrs. Lottie A.. Garretson Begins Suit Against Her Husband. MAKES CHARGES OF CRUELTY S o Defendant Is Away on a Hunting Trip, but Will Return in Time to Receive W ed. | Summons. | PEHEE | Mrs. Lottle A. Garretson flled suit in { | the Superior Court vesterday for divorce | from her husband, Frederick William | | | Garretson, a well-known business man of | | | San Diego. She charges cruelty, alleging | | many specific acts. In addition to the de- | | cree of divorce, she asks for a division of | | | the community property and for perma- | | |nent alimony. The complaint was filed with the County | Clerk during the afternoon by Mrs. Gar- retson’'s attorney Bishop & Wheeler. | Summons mailed at once for service | | on the defendant at his home, | | | The news of the.divorce proceedings will | probably come as a surprise to San Die- ording to a dispatch received | | from’that city last night, not the slightest | | sound of any family jar had reached the | public ear. | |"The Garretsons were married about | | three years ago, Mrs. Garretson having | been Miss Lottie Curiis, a pretty voung { | woman. There #re no children. "Garret- | son is manager of the San Diego Cycle | |and Arms Company. One of his brothers | | is cashier of the First National Bank of | Ban Diego and another is president of the Gas and Investment Company at the same | place. | It was not known how long Mr. and | Mrs. Frederick Willlam Garretson had been s 1. The defendant, who was in the East for some time on business, re- turned to his home a few days ago, but is at present said to be on a hunting trip, | entirely ignorant of the summons that will reach San Diego by the time of hi return. Mrs. Garretson has taken up her resi- | dence in this city. T e g INTERESTS THE COAST. Postoffice Changes, Pensions Issued and Patents Granted. i % | Spectal Dispatch to The Call i Faoat e WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—Postmaster ap- | MISS LOTTIE BAUMAN AND WILLIAM PIERCE OF SUISUN, WHOSE pointed: California—Elizabeth Kennedy, | MARRIAGE IS TO OCCUR AT THE HOME OF THE YOUNG LADY'S | | Chardon, Butte County, vice J. A. Ken- | UNCLE IN SAN FRANCISCO. | nedy, deceased. | | “Pensions issued: _Californta—Original, —¥F | Vernet Tracy, Galt, $8; Hiram M. Van Ar- | | man, Oakland, $6; George A. Vice, Dur- | Special Dispatch to The Call. hem, $. Additional — Peter Garrison, | Azusa, $8. Increase—George Vogelgesang, | Plerce | 3oth Mr _I‘ln ce and his bride-to-l are | Sacramento, $10; George W. Purdy, Peta. two of of Suisun Valley and hav pent | Juma, $10; Albert Skelenger, Veterans | mos nent young | ¥ itire lives here. The groom is the | Home, Napa, $12. Reissue—Frederick L. will be married in Ban | fnhoriteq a o5 r%'\‘:‘l '{e"lxu‘r':is;hla’xi‘fl":w“?d':'l Jones, Sacramento, $10. War with Spain | werited a fortune o a quar- | | . =, 3 S T to-morrow afternoon at | ter of a million dolla b I s But | o L DEVLAS S oner (Rl biran. of the bride’s | sun ‘\uwi\ 1= m.u\ul m:-( most beautiful Oregon: Supplemental—Axom D. Far- DISE = 1508 Pacific ave- country places in Solano County. He has | mer, Hebo, $2. Increase — Francls A. DISEASE CLAIMS SCORES aony will be performed by | Managed his large holdngs successfully | }afnes, Hilisboro, $8; David N. Catterson, OF POINT HOPE INDIANS jsun. Willlam | foF, Seyeral vears and enters his married | Lawen, $8; John Jacob Guyer, Carus, $12} Barley of Oakland is E > be best Man | wealth can suppl ss inc; W or, ¥ P anws Writes Th_a( There Are he “bridesmaid will be l‘:{‘\‘s SU:Af;l” Miss Lottle Bauman Is the only daugh- Ru‘;‘i’}&’.’%z in {‘e;;n Q}[x}l‘uaéx;m‘sgafiaz#: Not Enough Survivors to en. .\I;1 nn::(:n A\?]ra‘n Blerce will ::rflnfm.\l'r! rx]l'nd );r::.h J. Hil Baugnn, pio- ( Ora H, Laws, Oregon City, $12 their honeymoon | o ] sidents of the valley. § a | Washi b R 7 __ Bury the Dead. S foe. ok a_will take r departure | charming brunstte and isuanehc(‘nn}l‘;l(:;o;"l (-f,‘,:::’"',f;f" #OriginaloAmigng B Quapt, shop Rowe of the from San Francisco on Thursday morn-| vocalist Bhe ls one of the most popular | “Patents issued: California—John Bul- P . n Alaska writes from Ing | young ladies of this section. | lock, Manvel, hotel register; Edmund C. gions, where he has been all e — | Burra, 8an Francisco, J. C. H. Stut, Oak- revenue cutter Bear. BT AT land, and J. W. Atkinson, Santa Maria) . WIL B L1NCERD Assailant of Little Grace Gamble at | E. San Jose Appeals to the Court for a Change of Venue. ch to The Call 9.—"Jack” Ortega, the Oct = < 3 *| SAN DIEGO, Oct. 9.—E. W. Wilson, a | land, track cleane: d ofling devi W s T 5 and, track cleaner an ng device: Do n ?a.,&ame{xt._Divssolved: i in § lx‘.")”m:z',.m, ; ‘l‘n‘fh} recent arrival from Bolse City, Idaho, is | Thomas F. Osborn, Oakland, sheet meta | C N0 B ey = e N mie Missing, and his almost distracted wife, {ramework for. partitions; Charles W : believes there is an organized mob-in this (SRR BEC 08 & HOT CISIcted s | Richards, San Francisco, toothbrushi , Pariiament city awaiting iy ito dpmch X bt he hen »o William H. Smyth, Berkeley, means for b moral dhen- | Sk e 8ot s in danger. Station, fears that he has met foul play. applying fluid metals. also soldering ma- BY donc fled a number | He was well supplied with money, having | chine; Frank G. Snook. Sacramento, . i, Cwndils e Eheuld he about $600 on his person, besides consider- | checkbook: Charles Staniey, San Fran- | p 2 ber. The an- | granted s change of Ve to some other | able jewelry, | cisco. assignor to Stanley Aerial Naviga- N T. (The an- | granted a change of venue to som ol ] tion Company of California. airship: Mary ! he w1 n‘” “ -3 B stated that while the of- " 3 e e Welkee, Oakland, dinner pail; Harry C. x on by botk S were taking every precaution to hunting, had hecome acquainted with a | williams, Pasadena, trolley fender and 3 the defepdant, they were in sym- man whom Mrs. Wllson recalls by the | guard 5 pathy with the allcged mob movement. | name of Jasper, though she is not sure | ~Orekon-Willlam Anderson Scapnoose, r or these reasons, the afidavits declared | o 50 " op e Too”or petyan PR S machine for pitting frult; James McCor- 2 artial jury could not be impaneled 3 to t ame. wo men 0 8 McCor- | : an tmpartial jury couid not-be’im 'S | had been talking of hunting for some | k&I and N. McEachem, Helix, weed cut- 1 signed by Joe Tockunod, L. Berryessa, P. | time, and on Saturday Wilson announced | = Washington—Benjamin F. Nedrow, Ana- 1 & major- | §. Lucero. L. W. Weber and three others | that he and Jasper were going hunting | cortes, drag sa | g g :\i;‘r;“sr' sented to substantiate these| ¢,ward False Bay and would return on Ry .nTETs Tu , s lle: jons s 0! nd cites ances el eels 24 n. 1C ¢ : A e fnk mojcstod on the way | IS departure he has not been scen. | Child Who Murdered His Father Sen- . 7 Yo and from his preliminary examinations. | The police have been unable to locate | tenced to Reform School. Incendiarism at Woodland. ! He presented a number of affidavits to the missing man or learn anything about | PENDLETON, Or., Oct. 9.—Artk Kel - AND. Oct. ther barn was | Support his statement, one of which was | his traveling companion. One report re- Al G a3 sntima® Derios < e A T paTn WS eigned by J. M. Gambie, the father of the | celved to-night was that the two men BRa: alEyen. EHC: contetaidh Baing t oo This girl Ortega assaulted | were seen on ‘their wheels going up Rose | murdered his father two weeks ago. was er, all of them ®I5 L IeEe SN continued the case until | Canyon, which Is considerably farther | to-day septenced to the State Reéform | ! places that o408 0 hear more affidavits and ar- | rorth than the piace at which Wilson said | School at Salem. The Grand Jury re- ig in this | o VT he was to hunt. | turned a true bill against the boy, but < ¥ will in- BURCRTL, 1s declare there never was - recommended that he be sent to the re- - £ . & danger of Ortega being lynched, al- | WOODLAND, Oct. 9.—Lieutenant Willlam | form school instead of the penitentiary. ough to prevent an atiempt Sheriff | Rawson of this city and Miss Effie Marshall | The lad said in his confession that he e Langford took Ortega to the Redwood jof Colusa County will be married on Sunday, killed his father because of the brutal ADVERTISEMENTS City jail the night of his arrest. Consid- | October . treatment of his:mother and himseif. i - o | erable #ndignation aroused a e -, 3 e e people were satisfied to let @ ieimieiieinieei ettt the iaw take its course. Ortega’s crime was an especially atrocious one. After the attack on her daughter, Mrs. Gamble went into hysterics and died that night. RESERVATION OPENED FIVE ‘DOLLARS A BOX. The Price Cut No Figure With Him. T want to say fer the benefit of some : tiat’ Stuact’s Dhymocpsta TO HOMESTEAD ENTRY T e mfort d a < oy s o6 SRS 2 Box won) Hundreds of Home-Seekers Will | Take Up Claims on the Col- - | ville Tract. | SPOKANE. Oct. 9.—At noon to-morrow the north half of the Colville Indian Res- ervation will be thrown open to homestead entry. It lies on the northern border of this State and has an area greater than of Delaware. For weeks hundreds omeseekers from the East and Middle assing through here en and scores of *'soon- have already selected chojce loca- Armed with Winchesters, they say intend to hold these claims against comers. There will be none of the rush s the border that marked the Okla- | for the reason .that the e for years been open to min- asing them should I ev, as 1 did for a week before -cent box T bought 3 the work, and my diges- t again ijghbors have also tried d found them to be just a: r er a Mr. Ellms aiso wants m x indorsing Stuart's th h ns. posed was biadder and and one in the guise of a pros- ¥ k medicine from roam at will within the reser- | without any sign | TS, ed men left Republic to-day ' teads on different parts of | reserve. In the last few days many have been filing placer locations | gents on choice farm lands, at way’ to become sucecessful | S i hundred placer location | Ldank notices were sold at Republic to- ay. WILSON-SKINNER NUPTIALS. Pretty Wedding Ceremony in Calvary Chufch at Santa Cruz. SANTA CRUZ, Oct, 9.—Charles J. Wil- son and Miss Carolihe Georgia Skinner were married this morning at Calvary st I was hardly a box of Stuart's sce if. they would ver really think- it after only three n all the acid 1 T discovered a. while the doc- me for kidney and nd one of them treated ine. my complexion | » do my work, and | n to me. { for finding a cure so » take as Stuart’s m surprised at the | Je in me. Episcopal Church. Both are members of seil and recommend Stu- | Jeading families here and prominent in P Tablets, because they | soclety. « tural digestives, | It was a qulet yet a very pretty church prevent acidity wedding. The decorations were beautiful. tion and assimila- The bridal party entered the church to the strains of Lohengrin’s wedding march, played by Miss Ida Wilson, a sister of the E'Phe bride & tive of this e le s a native o social Tavorite. Bhe b5 e toZ, daughter of Mrs. F. G. Menefee. | son aleo is a native of this city, w8 safe for the child as theyr are invaluable for ach, nervous dys; la, neart- s on stomach an wels and ¢ry form of stomach derangement. and est ar. Wit Iife with ever; 'GOES HUNTING AND | Spectal Dispatch to The Call comfort and luxury that | Samuel K. Thornton, Gold Beach, $12. carbonation vat, also releasing mechan- ism for diffusion ceil doors; John S. But- ler, Palo Alto, step ladder; Edward O. Carvin, assighor of one-half to T. J.| French, Valley Springs, bench plane; Al-| bert 8. Dixon, assignor to Asphalt Paper | Pipe Company, Los Angeles, pipe-making | apparatus;: Joseph V. Elliott, Santa Bar- | bara, and C. Idlor, San Francisco, bath | FAILS 70 RETORN Wowapper cabinet; Michael Gratz, (I.ns Angeles, | . W. Wilson of Boise City Mysteri- | YUY .cooler; John 1 Sresory, lone. rn‘)er for cleaning d lfam R. Hale, ously Disappears at San Diego tobacco pipe; eph 8. Hill, Los schedule in- | and Foul Play Is Sus- dicator; Francls assignor to | pected. Climax Manufacturing Company, San | | Francisco, machine for sewing on but- | (s = tons; Charles T. Meredith, San_Diego. machine for computing numbers; William Morck, P. Krieckau and W. Boehle, Oak- | SAN QUENTIN'S NOTED MALTESE CAT GIVEN T0 GOYERNOR GAGE “Paul Boynton’’ Makes Rough House in an Express Car While Being Shipped to Downey. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN QUENTIN, Oct. 9.—Despite his desperate resistance, Paul Boynton was deported from the prison grounds on the 12:15 train to-day. Paul is a cat of the Maltese variety, with blood as blue as his shiny coat. Some days ago Governor Gage and his wife saw and admired Paul as he was doing his tight- rope act on the railing of the prison wall. After their departure ®Warden Aguirre, in his generous way, laid pians for the capture of Paul, with the re- sult that a snarling ‘bundle of blue fur was this morning intrusted to the care of Wells, Fargo & Co., to be delivered to Henry T. Gage at Downey, Los An- s geles. On the way to San Rafael Frank Treanor, the brakeman, sat down on the coop where Tabby was imprisoned. This was too mucH for the outraged feline to stand. A sharp claw reached between the slats and Treanor soared up- ward, leaving in,Tabby’s clutch a portion of his trousers. Not content with this, the infuriated feline tore the slats from his coop : andpproceeded to make rough house in the baggage car. He did the giant swing on the bell cord and tore up and scattered waybills as he raced about the speeding car. He defied the law of gravity hy sprinting across the cefl- ing. Now and then Treanor and Messenger Gee relieved his hide and tail of handfuls of blue fur in their frantic efforts to effect his capture. Just before the train reached Ross Station Treanor lassoed Paul with an old bell cord ana after tying his forefeet and manicuring his extensive toenails he wag again placed in the box and boarded in. The heavy planking, however, couls + not down Paul's indignant voice. He roasted the railroads in general ana % Messrs. Treanor and Gee In particular. Captain McKenzie of the steamer San Rafael sald: £ “I thought the box was a phonograph, into which a thousand cats had warbled.” Paul will be fegretted at the prison. He obtalned his name last winter. One morning he was noticed walking along the rocky beach east of the prison. A wounded canvasback duck was resting on a rock close to the water. Tabby spled it, but before he could make the capture the duck took to the water. L] Here is where Paul did his most famous stunt. He sprang into the 'waves, and after a forty-yard race returned to the shore with the canvasback, i i e e e | the jury was discharged. This necessitat- | nes: | Thousands of Visitors Attend the | OCTOBER 10, 1900, | | | | | "[SWEARING IN A JURY TO TRY EHLERS FOR MURDER One Special Venire Exhausted; Six Talesmen Chosen. FAGING VAR ON TRE CHINESE HOUSE SERVANT Vancouver Laboring Men Have a Plan for Driv- ing Him Out. —— FAVOR TAXING MALE MENIALS i ——— : Strong Pressure Being Brought Upon | the Provincial Government for the Enactment of Leg- ! islation. ———— Spectal Dispatch to The Call. VANCOUVER, Oct. 9.—Laboring men i+ | of this city have instituted a movement | having for its object the driving out of Chinese and Japanese who are employed in large numbers in British Columbia. citles as domestics. Their method is bor- rowed from home legislation in the Brit- L sh Isles. Strong pressure is being brought to bear upon the vinelal Government CAESAR EHLERS, ON TRIAL AT REDWOOD CITY FOR THE MURDER ' an endeavor to ¢ the statutory im- OF ELIZABETH MITCHELL AT COLMA ON THE NIGHT OF THE | ition of a heavy tax on male domestic FOURTH OF JULY. | | servants, most of whom are Mongols. The 5 | x has long prevailed in the United Ki R dom, where it — method of iz - do. Here its o Special Dispatch to The Call. | protection of white labor than the raising of revenue. » EDWOOD CITY, Oct. 9.—Caesar | the road to S8an Francisco by some person It is hv!lv\'?.d"".‘p mn\‘p-nlsv'nl_‘! success- an aged negro of Colma, accuses | "¢5t€d, but was afterward released. | ties. of having murdered his wife on | = July 4 last, is now on trial for | - his life. Ehlers is charged jointly with Frank Lemoscher and Albert Gayer witn | the murder of Elizabeth Mitchell. He is | the man that Mitchell swears he saw fire the shot from Imsand's kitchen window that killed his wife. When Judge Buck called the case this morning the defendant's attorney, E. F Fitzpatrick, entered a challenge to the en tire panel of jurors. After a short ex- amination District Attorney J. J. Bullock admitted that the challenge was good and | | ed the issuing of a special venire for twenty-five talesmen, returnable at 1:30 o’clock. | Out of this number the following_six were sworn: Alexander Gordon, John Poole, D. J. Leary, Charles E. Knights, P. McCarthy and FI. Crowhurst. A special venire for thirty talesmen was issued for to-morrow morning. Out of this number a jury probably will be se- lected to-morrow. A few years ago the prosecuting wit- . Willlam Mitchell, was tried for an sault with a deadly weapon upon Joseph 1. Imsand, and the jury disagreed. Mitch- ell was turned loose. Some time after | this Imsand was shot and killed while on @ e s eb e eseieie@ HIGH DIVER'S PLUNGE 10 PROBABLE DEATH Street Fair Viditors at Santa Rosa Witness an Accident That May | Cost F. B. Raymons | His Life. | o | SANTA ROSA, Oct. 9—F. B. Ray-| mons, the high diver, met what probably will prove a fatal accident this morning | while making his spectacular plunge as | part of the day's programme of the fair. | Morning. noon and night Raymons was to have dived from a ninety-foot tower into a tank constructed for the purpose at the corner of Fifth and Humboldt streets. He carried out his programme yesterday, but this morning, just as he left the top of the tower his foot slipped, and hs | struck the water with his body in a hori- | zontal position. He sank and remained under water, but was fished out by by- | stapders and taken to his rooms in the | Eagle Hotel. Physicians were sumgioned, but it is not believed he can recover. He is injured internally and about the neck. The accident was witnessed by a great | throng of people. Raymons is from Los Angeles. CENTRAL SONOMA’S DAY. Santa Rosa Fair. SANTA ROSA, Oct. 9.—This was Central | Sonoma day at the .Fourth Agricultural District and street fair, and thousands crowded the thoroughfares and pavilion. One of the most novel exhibits at the r is the dried fruit display. In_ the | ::I‘dst of the dried fruit table is a huge | bear, five and a half feet in height and made of dried prunes. The base on which it stands is made of dried peaches. with an occasional star of prunes. The border | around the base is of dried apples. | Another fruit plece worthy of note is an | apple six feet in diameter, composed of | as beautiful apples as ever are put on ex- hibition. The pedestal upon which it stands is made of bunches of grapes. The Itallan-Swiss Colony of Asti dis- plays wines and brandies. | David Hetzel, the tobacco grower *of Guerneville, has a fine exhibit of tobaceo. | Tie shows cigars made entirely of his to- bacco. At the livestock )'nrdsAcan be seen some fine blooded animals. W. Foster has two Percheron stalllons from his Hop- | land stock farm. James B. Chase of So- | noma stock farm, W. P. Henshaw of | Bloomfleld and J. J. Summerfield also | have stallions and mares on exhibition. — KILLING OF A TRAMP LEADS TO INSANITY Oak Run Farmer Broods Over a Trag- | edy Until His Reason Is Dethroned. REDDING,. Oct. 9.—Through continual | brooding over the killing by himself of a | tramp two years ago, Charles Thomas, l.; er of Oak Run, has become violently | f:::;m. He was taken in charge to-day. | Thomas was returning to the house on | his farm, where he lived alone, when he | saw a tramp entering the window. He had a rifie with him and shot the fellow dead. NOT GUILTY OF A FELONY. Man Accused of Having Stolen a ‘House Is Acquitted. | SAN RAFAEL, Oct. 9.—R. Lynch, a res- jdent of Larkspur, was acquitted to-day by Judge Rodden of the charge of steal- ing a building. Some months ago a man | named Savage leased a tract of land from | James McCue. Savage constructed a building on the land. t.e afterward sold | the structure to Lynch, who moved it to | Larkspur. McCue caused the arrest of | Lynch, charging him with larceny. Judge | Rodden held that Lynch committed no felony. X Alviso Harbor Improvements. SAN JOSE, Oct. 9.—The improvement of | Alviso harbor under the Government con- | tract is being rushed, gand Contractor Aiken hopes to complete the work by January 1. The dredger has already cut | out many of the turns in the slough and | has reduced the windings of the channel | over a quarter of a mile. Another dredger will be put at work the last of this week. When the work is completed vessels draw- ing eighteen feet of water will be able to load at the Alviso wharves. —_——— Weds a Santa Cruz Miss. SANTA CRUZ, Oct. 9.—George E. Ever- ett of San Francisco was married this | f oon to Miss Myrtle Wright, daugh- E:\Sezg (fil:yl Clerk Wright. The at ng ergyma: Rev. Mr. Bro f Sani gaun. fl.‘;‘:«mn’--qfl.‘{ gomo a‘tl’ sNWo0D 5 (0 A good union-made suit $10 Ours is the only union- made clothing onthiscoast. Pictured here isourready- made union-made sui: for $10 co—the best suit for the price we ever <old reg- ularly for $10.00. The suit comes in all the popular and fashionable cloths. We fully guarantee money returned if you are not satisfied. Suit kept in repair free. We employ only union men—the btest workmen in America—and manufacture our -own clothing. Overcoats Of course, our overcoats are all union-made. We are showing some fine ones at $10.00 in the most i | popular materials. Sup- | po<e you see them, as the i season for a new overcoat i is now here; youneed pay i 3 || but : il N $10.00 Boys’ Clothing - | We carry in this department more than twice the stock we §! used to. Mothers can get what- || ever they wish at very reason- | able prices. Here are two typical values: | Three-piece Suits | For boys from 10 to 15 years old; pattern is an Oxford gray$ which, as you know, is quite popular; round-cornered, three- button coat; double-breasted vest ; knee pants; goodsuits for dress or every day, like the picture ; price, i $4.00 a suit Middy Suits | | For boys from 3 fo 10 years old; Scotch cheviot material in checks, stripes and solid blues; some with vestee in fancy patterns ; separable shield that can be left off if pr eferred so that the boy can wear a col- lar and tie; $5/00 and $6.00 values, only | $4.00 a suit Out-of-town orders filled—write us. SNWooD 718 Market Street.