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THE N FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1900. SAYS MAS, BINFORD |ELKS WILL HONOR MEMORY IS FORMALLY INTRODUCED INTO SOCIETY'S GAY WORLD| WiS HYPNOTIED OF BROTHERS GONE BEFORE Miss Florence Hayden Makes Her Social Debut at Home|Mother of the Erring Woman |Services of Solemn Magnifieence, With D. M. Delmas as C : ’ / 3 - ttended by Oakland’s Swell Set SANS Sk P Orator, Will B 1d at Grand O H iunetion Attende y Oakland’'s Swell Set. P rator, W1 e Held at Grand Opera-House. Behalf. - Eloping Couple Appear in Court at Phoenix, Where They Are the | Center of Attrac- | tion. { | T | PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 5—C. W. Har- ris came to Phoenix very quietly about ago with C. M. Binford's run- away wife. The palr will probably arrive in Los Angeles to-morrow, but not to- | gether. Mre. A. C. McComas, mother of { Claire Binford, will a be on the train. '}Hsrrls stopped in Phoenix after his ar- | rest long enough to plead not guilty to the | charge of unlawful cohabitation before | United States strict Judge Street to- i when bought a ticket for L.os An- &8¢ Mrs. McComas and Claire left on the same t the former stating that she would go through to the coast, but re- | fused to give the a nation of her | daughter. ar he said, has { arranged for the future disposition of his | wayward wife, and she indicated that Mr. Binford, firmly believing in the innocence | of his wife, has agreed to a family re- Binford’'s original p'an was to secure the acquittal of bis wite and offer no opposi- tion to a divorce. [t now seems probable | that In case of her acquittal she will re- { Join him in Prescott B crowd throngéd the courtroom | { witness the arraignment of | i States prisoners, seven of | d ith violating the ris, Claire and Mrs. ter of attraction. | Harris ple guilty, and his case | was set for December I5. i Clafre, closely followed by her mother, | walked 'down the aisle and they seated | do— | themsely: gpposite i msh They were | ; S i 1 O e i s S C o | MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE THAT IS PREPARING FOR THE ELKS' MEMORIAL SERVICES WHI e ol laire & Tace gave way toa| | . TO BE HELD IN THE GRAND OPERA-HOUSE ON DECEMBER 2. THE EXERCISES THIS YEAR WILL BE { smile as she remarked the reporters, but | MORE IMPRESSIVE THAN EVER BEFORE. | | she resumed her g demeanor after u | | - |1,,x..n g!,mm] 1rum)1 Arlrl:n Her case s | = - | also set for December 18. | ““Although we are all convinced of HE memorial services of San|the eulogy. The committes is trying to | Invitation, cach member of the lodge be- [ Claire’s Innocence,” remarked Mrs. Me- Frandisco Lodge No. 3, Benev- | secure the services of Walter Damrosch | ing allowed fve seats. Tast year the | Comas upon leaving the courtroom, “still | olont and Protective Order of | to lead the orchestra on this occasion, and | Mmembers did not sit fn the body of the |1t is awtul to l‘i:urf‘{v‘wptl&l:ek(:?n fn:;-mq':‘ Elks, will take place Sunday | should he consent, he in himself will be = gOUSC 3R Clte e Pl SHaT onatom. | {deas of my anughters troubles are afternoon, December 2, at the quite a feature In the musical part of the members in the greatly distorted.” Grand Opera-house. The Memorial com- programme. a will call three Harris walked within a few feet of | mittes. having charge of the affair is | The Rev. Father Smith, who Is at pres- | times the names of Brothers Somps, the mother and daughter and looked 8s| yorking hard to make the services | ent the leading representative of the | Frost and Davis. | though he would like to explain to the | hat have ever been given in | Paulist order in this city, will possibly de- | The memorial committee is composed of | couple how it happened. ‘lhfl finest tha has kindly con- liver the benediction. The floral decora- Dr. E. N. Short 4chnlma‘n\. Robert P. | “You may s continued Mrs. M- | this city. D. M. Delmas has 7. | tions on _the "stage will be a special | Churchill, L. C. Iuen, Philiy Bolger, A. | Comas, “that T have been with my daugh- | sented to deliver the oration, and J. J.| feature this year. A prominent local | J. Carmany, Thomas J. McCann and J. | ter constantly since my arrival, and I| Barrett, who is a member of the 10dge | fiorist has already submitted plans to the | N. Odell. = ‘Theodore F. Bomnet, exalted PHOTOBY BEL | to stay with her. I was in San| and who mede such a splendid oration | committee and they have been accepted. | ruler of the order, will conduct the ser- co when I heard of the affalr, and | ¢t year, is down on the programme for | The admission to the services will be by | vices. - G . | although they wanted me to continue my | 1ast year. | trip to New York with my daughter Alice | — S8 FLORENCE HAYDEN, DAUGHTER OF HARDWARE MERCHANT OF SAN FRANCISCO. AT HER PA- | | L Am now more than repald, since [ am | UIL Ml"[Hs WANT EOUITABLE UNABLE TOPAY IS DEBTS A ) E T TER L D RCHANT OF ¢ “F | now satisfied of her innocence. She did | B E EA L SID E IN OAKLAND MI WAS INITIATED 1 THE PLEASURES :‘ :‘kn‘:v“‘ much about lhfl“\":lfld nnd‘wa.s‘ ¥ ETY OCCASION BEING A LARG NDED “AT HOME IRR y susceptible to hypnotism.” L -L Mrs. McComas then proceeded to give was served, of | her views on hypnotism, “Which some people scoff at,” she said, “‘but which 1s Amid a stern reality. Mrs. Binford went to violet partook. The | Harris for treatment when she would foom were green | have been unable to tip the scale at 95 —_— y, Miss Rowena son, i verv fetching. Smi- | pounds. A few weeks’ hypnotic treatment ithemums and white | increased her weight to 12 pounds, al- in the display. There | though Los Angeles doctors told her be- LOWER FREIGHTS w mall tables, besides a large | fore she adopted Harris' treatment that ¢ of the Sons of Oakland Office San Francisco Call,| A conventlon of California ofl miners . b (S Rt bt WL R | 2 e aacpied treatm The California Society of the Sons B g gy g Mg s e re ) assisted Miss Hayden I Ter | o Thon Harrls saven your e asked | the American Revolution gave a banquet 1118 Broadway, Nov. 15. | was held last evening m The Equitable Building and Loan Asso- | rooms of the Mills building, at which two clation of Oakland cannot pay its debts | important decisions were reached. The and Attorney General Tirey L. Ford, for | first was to fix the commission to be paid Frank H. Gould and E. D. McCabe, State | 1o brokers engaged by the California Pe- troleum Miners’ Association to sell stocks he followl named young |the reporter of Mrs. Binford. “Ye: uests: Philo Lindley, Ray | rep! Nicholson, ~Parker | & mert, Barl = Anthony, ell, Wililam King, Thomas | , Aldrich Barton, A. Center. Kay | " ghe | last night at the Merchants’ Club in cele- ed. “But I wish I had died.” | bration of the one hundred and twen'y- ¢ Harrle' admiesion to bail he has | third anniversary of the agreement to l:; galned considerable sympathy and won | articl federation. Women gracs friends. 1t was @ case of INFALUALION MIS: | oo oo e Cheatt Dresence, and song | Bullding and Loan Assoclation Commis- sioners, has commenced suit against it t0 | 5¢ the companies at 10 per cent. The sec has many friends taken for love, think many people, and | ug tved here Lloyd Lacey and William | of t Cxpres: . 1 | and the wit and eloquence of famous post- - filed in the ittee of William H. Jordan presided and acted [ In the suit which was the chairman, to appoint a committee as toast master. The banquet began at | Superior Court this afternoon the com-| q.yan to walt upon the Southern Pacific 6:30 o'clock and at 9 o’clock Mr. Jordan | missioners ask that a perpetual Injunc-| o, nony and also upon the Santa Fe began_his irtroductory remarks. Mrs. | tion be issued against the corporaticn and | poy o’ Company to ascertain if a lower ASSOCIATION EXHIBITION | Jobn Madden sang “My Dreams” by | that a receiver be appointed to take | ... .ortation rate on ofl from the several T e oAty Of DAt | afse of tus pfoperty. districts could not be obtained. In ac Well Dressed Crowd Throngs the Gal- | exqulsite purity and 'sympathy of Ber | " s'oroinds for this action the complaint | Jistricts comd Bot oo O eation Gener Yolce, demanded an encore, and She 84N | go,oo0" that the Equitable Buflding and | W H. H. Hart was made chairman of f . e even which the Her parents wrath of Uncle Sam. Williams-Graham Wedding. BERKELEY, Nov. 15.—Miss Alice Gra- OPENING NIGHT OF ART ham and David 8. Willlams were married y the home of the = hours of the recoption there s. 15. Doud, 2112 Blake ntinuous {ntermingling of call st Minton officiated. Miss murm v A was bridesmaid and B. E. the verandas and gro: was dispensed by me Te & ¥ Eroomsman. lery of the Hopkins “Take Me, Jamle.” A T o T and_ wele gy 3 Loan As: conducting its busi- | committés to wait upon the railway peo- om d, all of ss Graham is well known in this city. | Man Mr. Jordan read a letter of regrets from | Loan Association is cond eo- = which she recefved 1 acknowl- illiams 15 a stock raiser of Gon s van B Paterson, who was to have spoken | ness in an unsafe manner and hazardous | ple and E. P. Heald and E. D. Berri wer edgement Last evening was the opening of the “Confederation to Nation.” The toast- | to those having furds in its custody. It | also named as members of the committee fall exhibition of the Art Association. It | master said he had since learned that lallsu1 says, "'é“ lunlessf eriihol;'lc]? ‘l"n;lm"c.f‘ljrit ;rr:e remaining members will be appointed % v Vi Paterson’s illness was serious and | tinuing the business furthe ater. &".‘”o‘igfiffl‘zfiilfi'enf.akli:vh"fomfz':f'?uflf g::rpwa:f:u that he would not recover. | in irreparable Injury to the people of the | Colonel Crane, in calling the convention | bridge has taken up a medical course, | v. ke with his | State of California. to order, said that one of the most vital ‘ - T gy g o BB est advantage of the occasion. The ex- | ,Ocneral W IL T Barnes spoke v e |~ These allegations are“founded on the | {nings to be considercd was how fo get ' 5 (y.‘»lr“ak-ng alr.\' rest in her hibition this year is limited to the works | ship.” Once he lapsed into politics and | report of the Commlssioners of the | crude petroleum to the point of con- form kland associations. of California artists. received apparently unanimous applause. | Building and Loan Assoclations, which | sumption. He also advocated co-operating : 4 was made after an examination of the ‘With the California Miners' Asso- The main gallery of the Hopkins man- | He sald in part: books on October 5. The commissioners | StionglY % ciation. sion is hung with canvases portraying | Truly when the American citizen looks about | 1pon"sound that the corporation was con- el de bet y = subje S | hi nificent country with its h There was much debate before any con. ”GLY STABB'NG every subject known to the painter's ?fil%fi l;‘"r;:m“:‘! and mot & serf among | QUCtINg its business at a loss. The assets | .1, ¢ione were reached. Among the speak- i iascacas Trowbridge has always been an ac- ¢ woman, and her medical studies are 1 o be more for development than | for_ac I use as her property interests In Oakland are large and valuable. —_— | ST. LOUIS NO LONGER ’ A FIELD FOR SINGERS | he pictures are not particulariy were found m $67,089 21, while D ~ V. m, wn ou school, not a ound to amount to $57. . ers were B, Berri, Dr. C. T. Deane, W. ‘n’um‘ r“roun'i :y;::r:r}i)-&ha\': hl';eenbwell “E 'hh.fm.' w'}\arl;o& }fq m.lfl'éi’ m‘ h'(v(pe- fn“d Tatth, his | the liabilities amounted to %9,240 03 cted an: s a notable absence o Ty fotism. We pletorial wallflowers. Nearly all the local | heof, may, well be fred W P his ‘inn, Sylvain Solomon, L. P. Crane, The cause of this condition is stated to | B & Ehompeen T B Topiits, W. H I Pack. through all our country’'s history of [ be an unwise loaning of large amounts of | pat Dro ) 8 'Potts and D. F. Belden. hievement and It Is the source of our grand- | money on real property which had re- | FRIt, ST 0 o e e epeakers was artists are represented and among them Oakland Office San Francisco Call, |are some new names that may follow the | est and greatest pride and happiness. vert to the corporation In defauit of - 3 s 3 3 g t oving of o e 1118 Broadway, Nov. 15. (worth of their work into public favor.| I have never doubted the aversge common | payment of the loans. The property com- 1} that the :rr?-"\;lftm-rrz’a!r{lrm}:\;\:a":pm«,m. . anager Grau and Madame Schu-| pecause of a quarrsi about a woman | OF the old ones Keith is there and Latl. | sense, of the American people. We have Yot | lng into the nands of the corporation In | 8 TR 00 (% Nyer Tinoke of a pipeline e g man-Heink Speak From a Bit- _ | Virsil Dimmick, a Southern Pacific |Mer and Gamble and Miss EFroelich and | Tany 2ohes), TCU0es, e e doubt this ety Aeprriied e value and, 1o hacd | In_case the rallways should not extend se 3 e oyl At adenasso and Stanton and Mrs. en- | any 1 ‘fight b ded, 1 2 \ the places now lacking s h ter Experience. | switchman, was seriously stabbed this [ GEUCRAES0 AR 0 ERaR B e ot hfls‘;?x:r:l;:“!:::;i.e";::lp:.l:(l':‘:‘l.Pflgel’le!n has ended. | B reallze upon for the reason that It is | thelr lines to p A V' on. General Hart sald that 3 St. Louis 1s no longer a musical town,” | Orning by Oran Watson, a walter, Who | saveral landscapes which attract much at- | b 350 000 ave spoken. The result of this | still depreciating. Besides this large sum f‘g"t‘;l’:"".‘bom he proper rate for bring ) A by 80 savs Maurice Grau. has rooms at the German House, Wash- | tention and Mrs. Chittenden has two | contest has been worth more to America than | there s outstanding on loans on real | (P28 SO0, % Ogon "Francisco, as against 42 public of St. Louis on ihgton street, near Seventh, where the | flower pleces characteristically beautiful | the victory of Dewey at Manila or of Samp- | estate §25, cents per barrel, the present rate. The this mont ned nusic P firay occurred. Watson is in |8&nd a portrait of a little girl which even | son and Schley at Santiago. It has told the There is at present a suit ‘pending ™ filled with representa- Bon. | They Tarranged wii h e Eea | O A e resulte ot the tn | a8 early as last evening in the hum uf | world that this nation moves upon the lines against the assoclation to recover some | 385 e caiapasics. "W Sk ? s Grau_ to include in v g custody to & s N- | the soctal distractions of opening night | of sound money, of political good faith, of ne- | £2700. which was invested by a Mrs. Com- 1 the programme such | juries he inflicted, and Dimmick was re- 1bility mons acted as secretary. ed e > b X amme . an found favor enough to hold tional honor and respons! 2 stock. She claimed that she could not get her part; and | well-known ~artisis as Mme. Nordica, | 108, 1o 197 2400 B20, PHCR CK TRE P8 | found favor enough to & erowd be- | e bert Lioyd sang the prologue of | her money even after repeated demands Mme. Bchumann-Heink, both of whom are accl” and responded to an en-|and was final e many in Oak- 3 h of whom & % el v o 7 - d lly torced to attach the prop- ants give us an example of industry ¢ at present in this cf d Charles G street. She 18 known as Stella Walker, A feature of the exhibition is a number | “Pagl 1 S t s y It ants giv whridge was one of the L present In this city, and Charles Gau. ) Street " sopncy % ’ 5 erty of the sssociation. it's more than a good many uncles do. beau monde of Oakland | tAler and Mme. Lilian Blauvet. Mr. Grau| The row occurred in Watson's room | of designs for the monument to the vol- | thusfastic encore. e —————— ehta | may have a fine ear for music, b i ‘clock. Dimmick he | Unteers to be erected in Golden Gate Park. | Judge John Hunt spoke of the “Influ VeTRON, FE'EL!S. | Gled has a very keen business scnse and | Sy st 1n the wemans plate. Late | The designs are exhibited In the main | ences of Colonial Dames,” and s ¥ .2 as he bade good-by to Mme. Btz * °T | hallway and divide honors with the pict- | dress, adorned with wit and with grace- s Ih ter of the social, philan- | 3 he bade good-b ordica when | tpov” geparated, Watson golng to the 's influence, was in throp rtis 2 7 E ed for St. Louis he also told her ey P . ures in the gallery. ful tributes to woman's 3 n ;rf;n:,{a;’,“t:r that she was not to sing un - saw the | lodging-house. The walter told the de- The opening night was distinctively a | many respects the feature of the ke'venln; : . color of the coin. Her engagement price | tectives that he had trouble with the |social affair. There was soft music to |, Rev. Bradford Leavitt, speaking on She s 0 o1 n P Jew,” made a to0k & of | Was 81900, and when she- a red at the | g, n. d that she ¢ald she was goin; lend its charm to the place and the oc- The Old Days and the New,” mal a e . Cabie | concert Hall she promptly told the man- | v facce an apology. He saw Dimmick ac. | casion. The exhibition will be open every | piea for high living. He said in conclu associa o Windergartens | 2Eement that she would not go on until : morning, afternoon and evening until De- | sion: Shehniens. | she was paid. The management had to | Companying her to his room and departed. | cember 13, and on several of the evenings | Wnat the nation needs fs more men of a s to | Later he returned, to find his unwelcome | hetween this and the closing promenasde | contemplative spirit, more men who have ot 1he 3 L g0 into the highwavs and the byw more la ak An who owned | get the money, but at last they seraped | guests still walting for him. concerts will be added to the general at- | time. it is a shame for a man to have no hap eingle th was in the | oEcther the amount. The othier three | There were words, and Watson says | traction. piness but in money. N e WHAT | SAW IN THE FOR- iy e from his rents | Ay o dar arey. CHunate when they | pimmick knocked him down twice. The e R Dar by yoar you are conquering these ma- - 5 t 4 Arrnidgr S 8, Very | waiter gathere: meelf together, graboed 'RINTHIA: VE o {és, you are preparing a tran- much to the bad. and acting under Grau's | ¥ /ehSaCk Trom under hi piliow and hit | CC. ey ot mowl whioh atier all 15 the onty thing BIDDEN CITY. instructions Gautaler, Mme. Blauvet and Helnk re GREETING TO HYNES | {ir which vou have occasion to be thankful. Mrs. Madden and Dimmick on the head. The weapon was Mme. Schuman a piece of rubber hosc loaded with shot, irned to Chi- BY FRED WEITZENBURG. g £ : e i ot e Setha r. Lloyd sang a R e '!az;n\jn hout the St. Louls public hearing but the f,lug siipped out afid the leaden | Taking advantage of the appearance of duet, ‘“Repeat Again,” by BaYim. %‘hp Trowbridge then | Manager Grau was seen last night in | GUIDE rolled out. Dimmick rushed ugon | “Billy” Hynes the Corinthians thronged | closin address was made by Commander A Califsenian wee' the fivet man to Mrs. Trow- the Palace Hotel, and wee very wiling to | Watson, and then ihe waiter pulled a | the Orpheum last night to the exclusion | ¥ J. Drake, United States navy, on “The eater the Forbidden City, and he tells knife and stabbed nis assailant repeat- and completed e Old World Mrs. rowbridge’s rcturn home a few weeks ago was quiet and she has taken up her resid in San Francisco. The Oakland home cen closed Now GRAPE-NUTS. | “Grateful to the Palate.” Says a Fancy 1 her sister | talk on the subject. “I told all my people to not sing with- | out getting thefr money in advance. Mme. Nordica was paid, but other three art- iete did not see any ney in sight, and acting under my Instructions they did not €. 1 am thé loser on the proposition, s I had to pay their rallroad fares from hicago to SBt. Louis and r v Mme. Schumann-Heink was engaged to | sing one night for $1000. She has this to It is awful. 1 went there to sing and iere is no place to sing. They promised | me $1000, but there is no money. I ring for a boy at the hotel; there is no boy. I » get a train; there is no train. me what is that place San grams from St. Louls say that the | festival was all right, but that the people did not appreciate it. ' The charge is open- ly made that the management to swell ipts sold peanuts and chewing the concert edly. One cut that reached the right lung is very dangerous, according to the Re- celving Hospital surgeons, who attended the wounded man. Watson fled after the assault, but was arrested by Policemen Sill and Lynch at the rear of the German House. He was not regretful, but declared he had been compelied to defend Fimself from Dim- mick, who had been kicking him. The woman's statement to the lice was in the main corroborative of (he walter's story. Dimmick 18 married and has a family. He resides at 1524 Fifth street. Watson has been employed at the Pledmont res- taurant. e ———— SUNSET RESIDENTS WANT THE DISTRICT IMPROVED Have Asked the Supervisors to Help of every one else from fifteen rows of | American Navy of the Revolutfon.” e et the center section. It was a greeting they had prepared for their favorite and they allowed three nights to go by to let him et over any nervousness ihat he might el before greeting his old comrades from the professional stage. Hynes' appearance was the signal for enthusiastic_applause from e\'ery good Corinthian who could stamp a foot or thump his ms, and right well did he respond to his welcome. He talked and he sang and he chose for his songs thosc his old comrades of the yacht club had known and loved and laughed over, so that the applausée had as much of mem- ory as of appreoiation in its racket, and to end it all a huge floral. Corinthian flag was sent up to the stage and passed over the footlights to the new siar of vaude- ville. The yachtsmen were loth to let their favorite go and he would be prob- ably doing his turn yet but for the edict of the stage manager and an unfeeling LOUIS FELDMAN’'S WILL IS FILED FOR PROBATE ‘Estate Bequeathed to Decedent’s Rel- atives—Testament of John V. Ellis Recorded. The will of Louis Feldman, who died Oc- tober 21 last, was filed for probate yester- day. Decedent's estate consists of 4096 shares of stock in the firm of L. Feldman & Co., valued at $105.000; 996 shares of the California Broom Manufacturing Com- any, valued at $15.000; 200 shares In the Bacide "W Wooden Ware and Cooperage Company, valued at $5000; a lot at Shot- well and Twenty-first streets, valued at $30,000; two lots at Fifth and Kirkham gtreets in Oakland, valued at $20,000, and two lots in the Excelsior Homestead, val- ued at the story for the Sunday Call of what he saw and found there. THE SACRED FIRE WALK- ERS OF TAHITI, BY KATE McLENNON, ‘Who has spent most of her life among the strange tribes of the South Seas, and tells of a people who walk bare- footed on red-hot stones. Them in Carrying Through NDIAN WHO GAVE AWAY b G e ral T t decedent’s will, which of G N " Their Projects. dropeurtain that fell and would not ries | By the terme of decedents whil, which rape-Nuts. Butches e Bong Mgy - | Lo FUER AR e D Pl T rate s devised ‘and bequcathed o HIS ENTIRE FORTUNE AT A 1 ~s ol V! - y . Jonging tor B Satic ana Aeiven b Jory | meeting on Tuesday night last at which | Gifts Asked for Hartford’s Crew, |hif widow, Gretchen Keldman, and the H_Germain took fright on Pine street | Augustus Tilden presided. A report was| Ap urgent appeal has been made to the | daughter, Laura R. Peters. In a codicil | yesterday and dached down the steep in- | recelved from the executlve committee Y. M. C. A. by Chaplain R. E. Stecle, U. | dated Aggun( 23, 1900, several insurance cline near Fillmors street. Germain lost | stating that the plan to increase the light- | g° N, of the training ship Hartford, for | policles held by the deceased are be- control of the animals and the team ran | ing facilities of the district by tne ad- | papers, magaszines and comfort bags for | queathed to Mrs Feldman and the por- into a telegraph pole, with fatal results | giion of elght new arc lights and the im- e Men o that vessel. on devised to Miss Peters in the'wfl‘i | to one of the horses. ‘The other was cut | * t of the service already install All contributjons to this cause should |is withdrawn, she “having been provide A SECOND DISH | and bruised. Germain was thrown from | Provemen ¥ Installed | | S0 OO W B, Millar at the Assoclation | for some time ago. Mrs. Feldman, Elsle | his seat and rendered unconscious. He | had been carried before the Board of Bu- | oo, office, 3 West Twenty-ninth street, | R. Feldman and Matilde G. R. Feldman — )wg:r;ega\-es'l to the Recelvin Hospital, | pervisors and that the prospects for a | New York City, before December 5. oy ;fiam::nneg! as executrices and Louls w! T. rr he b ed | g B E m A Showed the Value of Condensed | Nia“th i and broken his: comariae ireg | successtul ::s;x‘ckmw:{:“:o?l?m 3 &l‘l'“}a;luzorwufl& to ‘the Hartford “for | Fgldmn a8 cxscutor of the Wil .~ Food. several of his ribs. Later in the after-| TY:aC':g:mue H strest from F?‘r‘;:"fic; ———e—— at San Fuwlln Pflm{A.(who ldu‘:g Ntovem- i H emov - 1 80 al at _over “It is a_delicious novelty and very | i) h.}i:'r‘éari(;::‘&d1&?5'g§£$gc2vlg::.‘ Nineteenth avenue, converting it into u Dies in an Ambulance. D000, was afso. fled for probate. Mar- rateful to the palate. I found, about i south. fine highway, is well under, way and that | SACRAMBNTO, Nov. 15.—A man named ry Bllis, a granddaughter. is devised fidway in my second dish, that I had R 5P R 1o the consuructlon _of & n_sewer on | willjam Vance was taken suddenly ill in } a note for $340 and 50_shares of pow 7. for a meal and realiséd for | Small Child Injured. fi;“k’é:&'(fl“ex'lfi'?wdri?nf will b placed | & loeal livery stable this afternoon and "{{“"‘é’:‘,’,‘h&‘;’ Shyen dn e e W sufh 5 i 3 the first time that ] was eating a con- | M t Farrell, six years old, living | in the latter district as soon a8 the lay- | dled In the ambulance while being taken | /Ton o hank deposit book In the Savings a & with her parents at the soujheasi corner ing of eight-inch mains is completed. New | 0 e g Hok e, B et Bosiety . of \eaknowis valohs de: densed food that supplies one's wants | 5478, 0romento and Polk strists, was run | fitealarm boxes have been promised for | Stranger in this vicinity, about 45 vears | 808 o "widow. Mrs. Margery Eiiis, is with & few spoonfuls and does not re- | Gown yesterday in front of her home by | the district, the report says. O, e e e muflering with two Debhes | devised deposit books in the Hibernla quire anything like the velume to|a car of the Butter street line. Sbe was | The club resolved to circulate a petition | Some tme S8C FRITRE, TURS, (WG DIOHCR | Bank and Savings Union, an insurance furnish the amount of food required | carried to a drugstore at the corner of | asking that the ovetflow from the Alme. | S8, - policy ‘Tor 32000 and the residus of the as when any of the Oféfinflrnyofm' of | SUILCTTS ser m:h;gfego:?itht}gfi: Borouki llheu‘flllaolrfil('.;’be diverted to sowns o SRR TP B R SRS Serve -Nuts are | ceiving Hospt! 8 was summoned at | iess populo I R gan Arrives. "m;]s are{ }'"eg th ?g'mm Cereal | the Ln'-ume of the company and found | The ladies of Sunset district, headed by | The United States transport ik 2 A Woman Insolvent. an ech 000 and the | that the girl's Injuries consisted of a | Mrs., Wallace Angelo, hava ai ed lo|rived in_ port yesterday from Juliet H. Stark of Oakland filed a peti- Co. Lim, are to be congratulated | [0, and severe contusions of (he | cpen and operate a free iibrary for the | bringing between 300 and 400 soldiers who | ton in insolvency yesterday. Her lla- upon the discovery,” said a well-known | sidge. E “Frciceviti, the gripman, was ar- | residents and the club has proffered its | had been invalided home. She went direct | bilities are 33994 8 and her nominal assets fancy grocer of Grlnd Rapida. rested, but on $100 cash ball. aid to the enterprise. the quarantine station at Island. | are $9908. A POTLACH. : ® £ i P, $ The famous food. i THE STRANGEST BEDROOM Vet IN SAN FRANCISCO. EIGHTEENTH. SWELLEST OPERA CLOAKS IN THE CITY. THE STORY OF MOLLY BIG BUFFALO. I bu