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THE SAN FRANCISCO CAL.L, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1900. (IDRAPING OF MILORED ERAY CAUSES EXPDSE Troubles Between Contractor and His Former Wife Grow Apace. BOARDING-HOUSE KEEPERS ACCUSE WIDOW SRUNDERS Wealthy San Rafael Woman Faces Creditors in the ‘ Police Court. L bl | Gossip Says Her House Is Barred Against Constables and That Supplies Are Hoisted | Through Windows. | e | | Mrs. Helen Saunders, alias Emerson, | alias Watson, stood at the entrance to the Hall of Justice yesterday morning with | er purse in her hand, ready to settle with | the landladies she is alleged to have de- | | frauded, so as to prevent them appearing | | against her in Judge Conlan’s court. How many she settled with is not known, Mrs. | 8. Bigler of $31 Chestnut street being the | i otis who admitiad that whe had beea | | She Charges Him With Having In- structed Keeper of Her Deceased Mother’s House to Annoy and Injure Her. - 4 Iw:mu on, abuse and the paying hired hands been charged agal ., & mémber of the ng firm of Gray Brothers, by Tmer wife, Margaret E. Gr. The seiz- | ying away of Gray by the accused contractor S aflernoon was the outgrowth of the o Gomestic discord between the child's p: The other charges are t paid. She recelved $1750 for board and | | due since last May. | Saunders later appeared in Judge s court on the charge of defraud- Lizzle Kearns, 1401 Leavenworth , out of a month’'s board and lodg- for herself and daughter, a girl about lodging dr; e, yvears of age. She was represented by orge orney Hawkins. The front row of yr)orv to s in the courtroom was entirely oc- | will, cupied by ladies, and when Hawkins asked for a continuance till Thursday and | ed all witnesses in the cuse he could notify them | on that day the entire front row | old gentleman with gray crs stood up in the rear of the court- the Judge as | to stand up so tha as Mrs. Haight | | She kept | | this | | and Mrs Saun- as then known as Mrs. Wat- daughter left without paying | i1l of $40. Mrs, unders was | that time arresied by Detectives Bee 2 but Mrs Haight did not ray ecute the case. She owns property in arry We “an Rafael, but it is homesteaded. [ s. ‘Gray Mrs. Saunders, it sesms has set her eurs M s in San Rafael to talking, shs | | nished what they look upon as OLD COAST STEAMER GIPSY HAS A VERY CLOSE CALL Swept From Stem to Stern by a Sea That Strikes Her on the Port Bow and Washes Away Her Deckload. Cargo of Lime Also Becomes Ignited. g material for gossip. A dispatch from there s “Mrs. Helen M. Saunders, the wealthy woman of this city who has demanded ¥y 1 in San Fraucisco on a charge ding an innkeeper, is well known After two days patient walting | . toffice Constable George Agn ’ served the _warrant Saunders to San Francis ED HER UP. FTER being in continuous service for thirty-two years and on the eve of completing her 1717th voy- age the old steamer Gipsy came T o - P to grief on the bar late Sunday < ,.,.ck"zh,“;,';;.e‘?J‘fi:nedm;fl‘b,:”:;‘f, night. It was blowing hard and suddenly interviewers and peopie who have disa- & DIg sem struck the steamer on the port greeable papers to serve have learned bow and A few seconds later another that to reach Its interior is out of the roller swept over the stern. All kinds of g oo | damage was done and some ropes coiled umor has it that several constables | on deck were swept overbdard. These ve camped night aft ight in th :Y:;Eow of me" nund‘pr:rhsd!f:ss 1:1 :l;: swept aft and caught in the propeller and vain hope of Spla,« ing & summons in the4 the Gipsy was as helpless as a hulk in a hand of Mrs. Saunders. A year or 80 ago cross sea in a very few moments. a constable after trying to effect a service | The Gipsy is schooner rigged and with rom George F ot been on d George ¥. his power your peti- bLeen a hard problem to the local process servers. Btanding in a grove of , surrounded by hedges and ap- our petitioner terms with him ary L. Cur-| ouse at 16e8 ! r owned ber last e of ec . - Seorge F- o e e e Er oo e e oul | what sall he could get on her Captain . trator, illegally ing. As he passed he managed to have Leland managed to clear the Seal Rocks. fre boarders there and 18 NOW | pio” porse hecome trightened and a sack Danger signal lights were then burned £ he board 1g~‘kiluuse in de-| of coal was thrown out upon the side- | 204 lndw> 1seh the tug r}el‘lamtwent a is unduly exercis- | q out and towed the steamer into 3 = Rt et walk, Not appearing to notice his loss | UL @nC IOWED 100 SERMET g, At Crus he drove on for a distance, when he jumped from the cart and ran back. After a few minutes he was able Lo ders with the summons | and when pretty well up a breaker from the bar struck us on the port bow,” said Mate Richardson yesterday. ‘‘The sea stove in three planks between the first and second chain plates and knocked the end | out of the deckhouse. The starboard rail- |ing was carried away and almost every- thfng movable on deck was washed over- board. Another roller pooped us and for a few minutes it looked as though the old Gipsy was gone. Ropes carried overboard by the water got into the propeller and we were helpless. Luckily, the tide was ebb and with the sail we were able to set we got as far as Point Pedro, where we anchored_in eighteen fathoms of water. The tug Rellance came along in answer to our signals and towed us into port.” The bulk of the Gipsy’'s cargo was lime and some of the casks got wet. For a time it looked as though “old perpetual motion” would go up in smoke. Captain Leland got the smnkrns barrels overboard and the Gipsy was once more saved. FIRST OF THE WHALERS IN. 01d Bark Charles W. Morgan Arrives From the Okhotsk Sea. The whaling bark Charles W. Morgan arrived from the Okhotsk Sea yesterday with 1400 barrels of sperm ofl, 270 barrels whale oil and 3000 pounds of whalebone. She had a very uneventful trip and only spoke one other vessel of the fleet. The, latter vessel was the California and cn September 9 she had 200 barrels of sperm and 270 barrels of whale oil and 3000 pounds of whalebone. The work of get- ting the Morgan ready for another cruise will begin at once. W Water Front Notes. The American bark Alex McNeil has ar- rived at Freemantle, Aus., and the hearts of the reinsurance’ gamblers are corre- spondingly fzmd. She was out 178 days from Port Blakeley for Freemantle and 50 per cent to reinsure risks was being | made by the underwriters.. | The McNeil was caught in a_storm and had her rudder head damaged. Part of her deck load was also carried away. The British ship Cortez arrived from Antwerp yesterday after a run of 152 da: while the British ship Silberhorn took days to come from Hull, via South Shields, 145 days. | The following notices to mariners have ;h(wn ssued by the Lighthouse Board: | Lime Point Light Station.—Notice is hereby | given that on or about November 26, 1000, a | fixed white lens-lantern 1ight will be estab- lished at this station, on the extremity of Lime Point, northerly side of the entrance to San Francisco Bay. The light will be located on the southeasterly corner of the gallery of the fog- signal house, and its focal plane will be about 19% feet ebove mean high water. | " Angel Island Light Station—Notice is hereby | given that on or about November %, 1900, a fixed red lens-lantern light will be established is com- n to go | | CAPTAIN E. 5. MORINE DIES AT SANITARIUM Well-Enown Master in Coastwise Trade Contracts Illness While Frozen In on Yukon. Captain Edgar S. Morine, who diea at | the Homeopathic Sanitarium, 2110 Central | avenue, last Sunday night, had been as-| | soclated with coastwise vessels for several er alleges that all the| vears. A native of Port Medway, Nova o Shie 1o | Scotia, he early sought a maritime life. | | and at 21 passed the British Board of Trade and became qualifed to command sailing and steam vessels. He became a | citizen of the United States in 1888 and | b ght the ship General McClellan to | this port in 185, | Captain Morine was well known in lum- | ber circles on this coast and for many years was engaged on the vessels of the | Simpson Lumber Company of this city and the Victoria Lumber and Manufacturing Company of British Columbia. During the goldg excitement in Alaska he com- nded the steamer Yukoner and passed winter frozen in on the river. 15 a ate | during this period that the symptoms of | ar ig- | the malady that ended his life first ap- | peared. At Nome Captain Morine was engaged in managing the interests of the | Nome Beach Lighterage and Transporta- | the Shark. tion Company, the stock of which is| = = | owned principally in this city. | f harbor police | " (aptain Morine was & prom{nem Mason, | a member of Mission Lodge No. 169, and | had been an Odd Fellow for many vears, being a member of West Lynn (Mass.) | ©odge No. 69. The funeral will take place t 2 p. m. to-morrow and is to be con- ducted by the Masonic order. ¢ 3 for the interference of ot He Shot fternoon it tc ugh it | ark is now o n set wharf, | i ekl o acsiin and ———e—————— g Anti-Poolselling Mass Meeting. A mass meeting will be held to-night | in Odd Fellows’' Hall, under the auspices of the ministers of this city, to protest rth of diamonds are | against the pool-selling amendment to be the th African | voted on at the coming election. Promi- o | nent speakers will address the meeting. at this station. on the southwesterly extremity of Angel Island, San Francisco Bay. The light will be located on the southeasterly corner of the fog-signal house, and its focal plane will be about 34 feet above mean high water. NEWS OF THE OCEAN., The Atalanta ioads lumber on Puget Sound for Callao, owners account; the Najad, salmon at Victoria for Liverpool, 45s, prior to arrival; the Pallas, lumber on Puget Sound for West Coast, 5. A., 628 6d, prior to arrival, . —_—— “Large Shipment of Canned Goods. The British bark Strathdon cleared yesterday for London with the following cargo, valued at | 735,080 cs canned fruit, 100 cs canned aspara- gus, 62,777 cs canned salmon, 15,000 gals wine, 5578 ctls barley, 10,000 feet lumber dunnage. e g oies A Cargo for Clipperton Islands. The American schooner Una cleared Saturday for Clipperton Islands and Panama with a cargo valued at $3926, including the following: For Clipperton Islands—12 kegs sauce, 37 pkgs erfes and provisions, 12 crs potatoes, 7 crs |onions, 450 Ibs beans, 6 bbls flour, 2 cs coal oll, 2 cs dry goods, 5 cs lemon julce, 42 08 canned goods, 500 1bs sugar, 4000 1bs rice, 400 Ibs bread, § cs cocoa. ForPanama—204,673 fest lumber, 20 cs brooms. Departure of the Panama Steamer. The steamship Colon salled yesterday for New York via Panama, with a general cargo, valued at $101,717, mlnl(el;:d s follows: For STEAMER GIPSY BEING SWEPT BY A BREAKER ON THE BAR. SOME ROPE GOT INTO HER PROPELLER AND SHE DRIFTED WITH THE EBB TIDE DOWN THE COAST BEFORE A TUG CAME ALONG AND PICK- ©s wine, 67 sks scrap leather, 11 kegs dry paint, 148 gals brandy, 60 bales cattle hair, 40 bales rags, 263 bble asphaltum. . —— Merchandise for Victoria. The steamer City of Puebla sailed Sunday for Victoria with the following cargo, valued at §11,727, of which $500 was for Australia, $20¢_for Manchester, N. H., and the balance for Victoria. For Victoria—2 drums acld, 51 cs arms and sammunition, 45_bdls building materfal, 381 cs cannea pkgs Chinese provisions, 350 Ibs coffee, 21,569 Ibs dried fruit, 2 cs drugs, 7 cs drygoods, 1056 bxs fruit, 150 pkgs groceries and provisions, 88 bdls fron, 19 cs lemons, 2340 lbs millstufts,” 31,00 1bs malt, 15 pkes machinery. 500 tins matches, 84 crs onions, 36 cs paste, 563 pkgs raisins, §00 1bs sugar, 6 bdls spices, 35,000 Ibs ealt, 34 crs vegetables, 8 reels wire, 3 crs wagon material, 53 gals 2 cs wine. Australia—3698 1bs hops. Manchester, N. H.—346 cs salmon. Notice t6 Mariners. NORTH HEADLIGHT STATION. Notice s hereby given that the color of the tower at this station, on the extreme westerly point of North Head, Cape Disappointment, northerly side of the entrance to the Columbia R{‘\;Fr. has been changed from stone-color to white. This notice affects the List of Lights and Fog Signals, Pacific Coast, 1900, page 30, No. 135, and the List of Beacons and Buoys, Pacific Coast, 1900, page 61. By order of the Lighthouse Board, FRANCIS _J. HIGGINSON, Rear Admiral, U. S. Navy, Chairman. Notice {s hereby given of the following changes in the aids to navigation in this dis- trict, which affects the List of Lights and Fog Signals, Pacific Coast, 1900. Beacon No. 3, post light, Columbia River, page 24, No. 81. (List of Beacons and Buoys, Pacific Coast, 1900, page ©4.)—On October 25 this single pile beacon, crowned with a triang- ular box, pained red, ‘with figure 3" in white on two sides, from which a fixed red light was shown, close to the edge of the sandbank on the east side of the channel from Tongue Point to Jim Crow Point, was carried away and the light extinguished. The beacon and light will be re-estabiished 3 Umatilla_reef 1 67, Coast of ‘Washington, page 32, No. 145. (List of Beacons and Buoys, Pacific Coast, 1900, page 63.)—On October 23 this light vessel went adrift from her station about 2y miles §. W., % S. from Umatilla reef (Flattery rocks). making off from Cape Alava, Washington, and about 41§ miles west southwesterly from the cape. £he is now at Neah Bay, Washington, and will be re- placed as early as practicable. By order of the Lighthouse board, . P. DAY, Commander, U, 8. N., Inspector Thirteenth Lighthouse Distriot. Office of United States Lighthouse Inspector, Portland, Oregon, October 27, 1900. dbai s Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Monday, October 29. Stmr W H Kruger, Krog, $0 hours from Grays Harbor. Stmr Mineola, David, 82 hours from Tacoma. Stmr Noyo, Johnson, 13 hours from Fort Bragg. Stmr Gipsy, Leland, 2 hours from Moss Landing. Br stmr Wellington, Salmond, 3% days from Chemainus. Br stmr Robert Adamson, Morgan, ¢ days trom Nanaimo. Br stmr Wellington, Salmond, 3% days from Chemainus. Br ship Port Patrick, McLellan, 153 days trom Liverpool. Br ship_Silberhorn, Gibson, 170 days from via South Shields 145 days. bip Cortez, Hawken, 152 days from Ant- Hull, Br werp. Whaling bark Chas W Morgan, Scullun, % days from Ahkotsk Sea. Schr Maggie C Russ, Kallenberg, 12 days from Grays Harbor. CLEARED. Monday, October 29. S{gmr Colon, Mackinnon, Panama; P M 8§ Co. Stmr_Geo W Elder, Randall, Astoria; O R N Co. Stmr Norman Isles, Pettersen. Comox; J D Spreckels & Bros Co. Bark J D Peters, Townsend, Chemalnus; Pa- cific Steam Whaling Co. Bark St Katherine, Saunders, Honolulu; Welch & Co. Br bark Strathdon, Walker, London; G W McNear, SAILED. Monday, October 29. Stmr Colon, Mackinnon, Panama, etc. Stmr Point Arena, Hansen, Mendocino. Stmr Geo Loomis, Bridgett, Ventura. Stmr Polnt Arena, Hansen, Mendocino. Br stmr Victoria, Blakey, Chemainus. Pattie, Chemainus. sc e, ‘Johnson, Eureka. Schr 1da McKay, Johnson, Eureka. SPOKEN. Sept 1, lat 3 §, lon 27 W—Br ship Crown of Engl from Antwerp, for San cisco. and, Francisco. Oct 14, lat 5 10 S, lon 30 50 W—Ship Henry B Hyde, from Honolulu, for New York. Oct 17, Tat 27 67 N, lon 132 38 W—Br ship Mor- ven, from Acapulco, for Oregon: all well. lat 5440 S, lon 63 40 Per whaling bark Chas W Morgan—Sept Ohkotsk Sea, whaling bark California, 1200 bbls sperm and 270 bbis whale ofl. MISCELLANEOUS. LONDON, Oct 2—Br ship Maxwell, from Iquique, landed at Dover to-day the crew of Br bark Bretagne, from Antwerp for San Fran- clsco. Crew was picked up on Aug 16 after abandoning vessel off Cape Horn. Vessel had lost rudder and all safls. VI RIA, B r stmr Amur reports Br 9, in with PREVENTED BY CUTICURA SOAP. Certral Afi'ose?c'fim“:&:m sancxico, $8584; South ca, 5 a, ; New 73 TREATMENT, — Cleanse the scalp and hair with warm shampoos of CoTicURA fi'z'.“ "The ' following were the pnnmf:xk' -fl; ments: For Central America—5200 BoAP, rinse with warm water, dry carefully, and apply a light dressing of CuTicURA, purest of emollient skin cures, gently rubbed into the scalp. This simple, refresh- ing, and inexpensive treatment will clear the scalp and hair of crusts, scales, and aandrufl, soothe irritated and itching surfaces, stimulate the hair follicles, supply the roots with energy and nourishment, and make the hair grow upon a sweet, ‘wholesome, and healthy scalp, when all else fails. gals 35 cs beer, 90 coal ofl, 128 bbls cement, 36 cs canned goods, 48 cs drygoods, 4 cs vg&ln, 10 kegs grapes, 911 pkgs groceries and istons, 40 cs hardware, 120 feet lumber, 5365 Ibs lard, 24 kegs white lead, 3 pkes machinery, 29 cs 9 bbls ofl, 11 cs paint, 5 cs photo goods, 1000 feet pipe, 69 crs potatoes, 8 cs paper, 150 cs soap, 1250 1bs soda, stafionery, 1140 1bs sugar, 15,034 Ibs tallow, 4 o8 5 tea, 51 cs whisky, 2088 20 cs wine. stopping of falling hair, for softentng and whitening red, hands, in the form of baths £ chests Ue; ol g T sunoying D R S aa e s s sucreion o s S s Vegetabied 1t o, s The wvin, 1 e dry 6 cs drugs, 9 pkgs machinery, 13 cs ware, 200 car wheels. Penama—8 druths acld, 6 cs ekin and ‘sosp, and the Bust tollet and baby soap In the world. 4 . o7 g . INTERNAL TREATEENT FOE EVERY HUNOR, PRICE 8§ ine, 150 cs salmon, 250 Ibs dri fruit, mw‘.fi: Copovas Rysorvaiy Gre), ' m‘ Gy [ DA Boods" 400 Bhs four, 100 sariic, 1% humm Frope, Boston. Car ey Hamer on Cor New Tork—s% ca salmon. 117,461 gals 17 reels barbed wire, 798 1bs 68 cs bread, 410 cs | stmr Tees at Vancouver leaking; struck at Kitkatlach. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, Oct 29, 10 p m—Weather hazy; wind NW, velocity 16 miles. DOMESTIC PORTS. PORT TOWNSEND-Passed in Oct 20—Stmr bark Coloma, Ohio, from Nome, for Seattle; from St Michael. Arrived Oct 20—Stmr Robert Dollar, from Nome; schr Alcalde, from Nome. Oct 25—Stmrs City of laska. Arrived tmr Ohio, from Nome; schr Alcalde, from Nome; stmr Robert Dollar, from Nome. Sailed Oct 28—Br ship Palatina, for Oct 29—Stmr Humboldt, for San Pm #tmr Signal, for Portland. NOME—Sailed Oct 20—Stmr St Paul, for BEND—Salled Oct 30—Sohr ‘Bend, for San Francisco. Mog NEWPORT—Arrived Oct 26—Schr Execlsior, from Port Blakeley. COOS BAY—Arrived Oct 20—Schr Monterey, | hence Oct 2. { ASTORIA—Sailed Oct 29—Stmr Alllance for | San Francisco; stmr Despatch, for San #ran- gisco; stmr Fulton, for San Francisco; schr e for San Francisco. EUREKA—Arrived Oct 20—Stmr Pasadena, from San Pedro; stmr South Coast, hence Oct 27; stmr Eureka, hence Oct 28. N WHATCOM — Arrived Oct 29—Schr ‘Wing and Wing, from Port Clarence. FOREIGN PORTS. MAZATLAN—Sailed Oct 26—Stmr Acapulco, for San Francisco. | SANTA ROSALIA—Arrived Oct 25—Schr W F' ‘Witzemann, hence Sept 27. Oct 26—Schr Ex- pansion, from Chemainus. HAVRE—Arrived Oct 20—Br bark Ludgate, from Orezon. SOUTHAMPTON—Arrived Oct 2/—Ger ship Peru, from Chemainus. CARDIFF—Arrived Oct 2%—Br shij bie, from Tacoma. Oc® 29—Br bark Orezon. YOKOHAMA—Arrived Oct 25—Br ship Coptic, hence Oct 10. Sailed Oct 3—Br ship Rathdown, for Portland, and not San Francisco as before reported. ENSENADA—Sailed Oct 25—Stmr Curacao, Francisco, via San Pedro. 5l ex for San FREMANTLE—Arrived Oct McNeil, from Port Blakeley. NANAIMO—Sailed Oct 27—Nor stmr Titania, for San Francisco. GIBRALTAR—Passed out Oct 27—Aus stmr Burma, for Mani la. FALMOUTH- 'nllled Oct 27—Br ship Forth- — 51 bank, for Cardiff. SHANGHA]—ArerEez prior to Oct 27—Br stmr Dt 12. SS—Arrived Oct 26—Br ship In- dore, hence May 3. VICTORIA—Arrived Oct 20—Br schr City of San Diego, With 413 skins; Br schr Bibble, witn 428 skins. QUEENSTOWN—Arrived Oect 27—Br Bardowle, hence June 6. Sailed Oct 27—Br ship John Cooke, for Ant- werp; Br ship Nile, for Birkenhead. OCEAN STEAMERS. KOBE—Arrived Oct 20—Stmr Thyra, from for Manila. s’ NCENT—Arrived Oct 29—Stmr Abydos, from San Francisco, for Hamburg. GLAEGOW—Arrived Oct 20—Stmr Pomeran- tan, from Montreal. Bailed Oct 20—Stmr Sarmartian. BREMEN Luitpold, for New Achnas- orthbank, shio York CHERBOURG—Salled Oct 26—Stmr Deutsch- land, from Hamburg and Southampton, New York. NAPLES—Sailed Oct 26—Stmr Ems, from Genoa, for New York. KUCHINOTZU—Sailed Oct 27—Stmr Carmar- thenshire, for for San Francisco. GHR T o Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE. Steamer. W. H. Kruger. Tellus Alliance laqua .. Crescent City Eureka .. Columbla x Titania . L1 Point _Arena oF Coos Bay. Newport. Nov. 1 Acapulco . New York. [Nov. 1 Zealandia |Nov. 2 Rainter Nov. 2 Pomona. . Nov. 2 Umatilla Nov. 3 Coron .{San Diego. ov. 3 Hongk’ng Maru,China and Nov. 3 i Nov. § Nov. § Steamer. Destination. Il Balls. | Pler. Pomona_...[Humboldt..._.|Oct. 30, 2 pm|Pler 3 Newburg ..|Grays Harbor{Oct. 20, § pm|Pler 13 G W Eider. 4 Bonita lamed: 3 W Rrliger. (Grays Harbor(Oct. 31, & pm|Bler North Fork|Humboldt.....[Oct. 31, 9 am|Pler 2 Arcata ....|Ce o Empire Santa Rosal| Australia P v. 5 11 am/Pler 11 Nov. 8, 2pm|Pler 2 Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Coast ai Geodetic S Times and Heights of High and Waters at Fort Polnt, Francisco - Publish thority of the Superintendent. NOTE—The high and low waters occur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about twenty- inutes later .than at Fort Polnt; the height of tide Is the same at both places. “|Point Arena. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 30. ! HEAVY SENTENCE FOR SOLOIERWH HOBS COMRADES Gerald Scott Will Spend Next Two Years in Alcatraz Prison. | Steals From Comrades Who Be-| friended Him—Amateur Mule Drivers Arrive at the Presidio. e Gerald Scott, private in the Eighth In- | fantry, the story of whose escapades was published in The Call some time ago, has been court-martialed by the board ap- pointed, found gullty and sentenced to be | dishonorably discharged from the service | and to be conflned for two years ut Alca- traz. Scott’s proper name is Quigley, and under that name he enlisted in the Sev- enth Artillery. He was invalided home from Honolulu and became the protege of a prominent member of the Red Cross So- | clety. She procured his discharge and supplied him plentifully with money. | When his money gave out he returned to the Presidio, enlisting under the name of | Scott in the Eighth Infantry. A few of his former comrades recognized him and gave him a bunk in their quarters. He returned their kindness by robbing them, but was caught before he disposed of all the booty. The recruits at the Presidio have been organized into a battalion of three com- | anies and will be sent to Manila on the herman un¢ r command of Captain Dan- fel L. Anglum, Twelfth Infantry: First Lieutenant Isaic A. Saxton, Twenty-third Infantry, and Second Lleutenant George A. Herbst, Twenty-third Infantry. A shipment of 289 mules and two horses arrived at the Presidio yesterday from St. Asaph, Va. They were cared for on the trip by a party of foung business men from Middletown, N. Y., who offered their services to the quartexmaster and were hired for the trip. Theg‘renor( having a good time en route, but say that the ‘wages received from Uncle Sam will hard- ly pay thelr expenses, owing to the preva- lence of many unfortunate poker parties. They will return in a Pullman just to e joy the contrast. The names of the am: teur mule drivers are T. C. Rodgers, A. M. Ambler, H. B. Royce and M. Startup. John P. Magee, private of Company M, Thirteenth Infantry, died of dysentery vesterday at-the general hospital. Major Charles Newbold, paymaster, re- ported at headquarters yesterday. He will sail with his clerk on the Sherman, having been assigned to duty in the Philippines. Two Deaths From Alcohol. Louls Fagan, a shoemaker at 807 Bryant street, was found dead yesterday on the floor of his shop. He had been drinking to excess lately. He was a widower. Nicolas Harder, a painter, 49 years old, died suddenly yesterday morning in the rear of 673 McAllister street. He had been on a spree and was a widower. We intend to retain Lucke's former customers by selling the same high-grade shoes as he did, only at lower prices; we intend that the low prices will bring us many new cus- tomers; we have resolved to sell our shoes at less than the usual retail prices for shoes of like quality. « Sometimes this difference is 50c on a pair of shoes and sometimes $1.00. Above picture shows a lady’s kid or calfskin shoe with heavy extended soles, fash- ionable toes, excellent wear 4 to be had from them, good to wear with short rain skirts. Price, $2.50 a pair. Misses” and children’s lace or button shoes in kid or box calf, very stylish, guarantead to wear to your satisfaction— a new pair free if they don’t. sizes 6 to 8........$1.00 sizes 8% to 1r1....81.25 sizes 1135 to 2....$1.50 AUFMANNG 832 MARKET st.SF COLUMBIA 2= No Half-Hearted Success Here! Company and Play Fully Appreclated! Every Night This Week—Matinee Saturday. STUART ROBSON OLIVER GOLDSMITH WITH THIS MATCHLESS CAST: John E. Henshaw. Stephen Grattan, H. A. | ‘Weaver Sr., Beaumont Smith, Maude White, Jeffreys Lewie, Ellen Mortimer, May Ten Broeck and 20 others. i Comedy Triumph. [ 14 4 mmn Matinee Saturday. tic Success, CFOR HER S=K= " This Week Only. ‘The Melodramat £ g : EiEE?' ge g ¢ : ‘waters, Next Sunday An-rnoo'at"wnosn BABY ARE FIRST DAMROSCH EXPLANATOR ANA ™ CITAL AT THE PIANOCR Y RE: “DAS RHEINGOLD. | ALF ELLINGHOUSE. ADVERTISEMENTS. SICK HEADAGHE -Positively cured by these “They also relieve Distress from Dyspepein, fndigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A pen fect remedy for Dizsiness, Nausea, Drowst. ness, Bad Tasten the Mouth, Coated Tongue. Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. Small Pill, Small Dose. Smaf Price.’ 90909090 0090900 SVICHY s meumm A Natural Mineral Water ) $0 9040404404060 40940$0409090006090¢ with medicinal qualittes, O For Indigestion and 3 Stomach Disorders. 3 So-catlea VICHY g B N SIPHONS 3 b4 SN YIEHY Get the Genuine § VICHY CELESTINS A. VIGNIER, Distributing Agent Cv-v0800000008 *TIVOLI» FOURTEENTH GRAND OPERA WEEK. The Sensational Operatic Triumph, “CARMEN” TO-NIGHT. Thursday. Sunday Nights, Satur- day Sact COLLAMARINI AS CARMEN. Russo, Ferrari, Nicolini, Repetto, etc. Waednesday, Friday, Saturday Nights, “AIDA.” BARBERESCHI, CASTELLANO, BALASSA, LUCENTI, POLETINI, SCHUSTER. POPULAR PRICES .. BEST SHOW IN TOWN. BEST PEOFLE VAUDEVILLE. | DOLAN ANDLENHARR, PRELLE'S TALKING DOGS, JOHNSON, RIANO AND BENTLEY, HOW- ARD AND BLAND, GEORGE EVANS, LES FRASETTIES. WORLD AND HAST- INGS, BLANCHE RING. LIZ RAYMOND. Reserved seats, 25c; Balcony, o; Opera Chatrs and Box Seats, Se. Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. MOROSCO’S GRAND OPERA HOUSE MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDATY. nexFRAWLEY Y NEW ONLY THIS WEEK, Gilette’s Greatest of All American Plays, SECRET SERVICE T. DANIEL FRAWLEY as LEWIS DUMONT. Next Week—" NELL GWYNN OF DRURY LANE." EVENING PRICES.. A MATINEE PRICES....... Branch Ticket Office~Emporfum. THONT SOt s nd Men Our Capacity Is Being Tested to the Very Walls of This Big Theater. At Every Performance People Turned Away. : Seat Sale Goes on With Great Rapidity. THE KING ——OF THE—— OPIUM RING! THE_GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH. Matinee Saturday and Sunday. ST “GOOD MORNING!™ IT PLEASED mg\sl% FAND PUBLIC LAST THE ROMANTIC DRAMA, NORTHERN LIGHTS. EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEK. MATINEES SATURDAY amd SUNDAY. NEXT WEEK—"LOST PARADISE.” SHERMAN, CLAY & C9°S HALL. Direction S. H. FRIEDLANDER & CO. SEATS NOW.ON SALE A¢ Sherman, Clay & Co.’s Music Store for PIANO RECITALS BY THE WONDERFUL CHILD ARTIST, LITTLE ENID BRANDT. Thursday Night.. SHERMAN, CLAY & C0.’S HALL, 23 SUTTER STREET. PIANO RECITAL —BY— MRS. OSCAR MANSFELDT. TUESDAY EVENING, OCT. 30. FISCHER’S SONEERL QVs= Al 3 Lunette. Fourth act of “ERENANI! Facel Frades