The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 6, 1901, Page 24

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 6, 1901. THE PRIDE, WITH O’CONNOR UP, CAPTURES THE NAGLEE < Ea 3. seven sta - s at New IV AEW RLEANS COMST SURVEYS - Riders=--The Fretter Wins Again. PR, 5 AN S S By ¥. E:LIULHOLLAND. ssuming 1l a Craw- n the rie E CALL'S RACING JANUARY 7 TH LAND RAC! 2600, FIRST RA! RACK, SATURDAY, e big body the Du Po Pst|St Age, Weight tur gh Hoe, 6. Isaline, 4 FORM CHART. Weather cloudy. Track sloppy. . —Futurity course; selling; three-year-olds and up; purse, $330, - Betting ——— Hi. Q PL. the \ g start. Won first three driv ek by ixh m Hoe raced Amasa to u a A4 > Tsaline. poorly. Lomond no speed. ily Lyons rse, Age, Welght.|Ps % Feir start. Won b o by Henover-Tolache turn into stretch, Saintly und Loneline A ee Turlongs Winner Dame >restan will do. ankee Dame. Turlongs: Naglee selling stakee 28, Fair start Dundee-B; piloted ixteenth mil handic ounce Jones Buchanan c no *‘mudder. Orleans. —Resul Mounce Enos Bassinger O’ Connor e Harve 4:0 d a sixteenth— | J ¥ t second, Albert | Lot relan Gooa rinel won Sara Gamp |Buchanan erly. Walsh o awa beat gate three-year. Sec t T t and an eighth miles; selling; four-vear-olds and up; pur art gameness, Second and third Telamon nzarly ¥ poorly. but ran ander 105, out Flora nd up; $1500, Betting p. Hi. Cl ond and third driv- idden after gettl hed—Sea Lion 100, hree-year-olds and Good star ~ Betting Hi. Cl Won first three Lou Rey vices are Races! claimed by Atkins & Races! Races! s on his way here with the n- | oo o) o T z 5.—The Califor- | tention o ing, and ask that he be no- | Overnight San Francisco prices” prob- tified to urn to Californfa within ten | able s jockeys and other infor- ys under penalty of the revocation of K mation Correspondence solic- t license ited. Jackson & Co., 315 Ellis st., 8. F. * (i e e CHARTING NEW | ‘ MRS, LEASE WILL QUIT POLITICS £heriff Dunne Kills For- Bering Sea and Ahskanj]}ecides Also That She Does mer Court Clerk | Data Will Soen Be Ready No! Want a Di- Tompkins. for Use. vorce. Special Dispatch to The Call. )3 The local station of Sta Coast and Geodetic y is finishing the compilation of data obtained during the past season's {work in Bering Sea and on the n and the first charts from the sur- | L er husband, C ited ago unless the e has instruct ced no further wi The reconciliatic coast, vevs are expected from Washington in > cou s se of six weeks. Captain John in charge of the work, says that | a portion of the information will not on account of lack of time be given out in charts. The engraving and preparing of maps will consume too much time for all | the charts to be back here by the opening | mother. tic life. she started. e ground dead. : } - newspapers. =¥ agh the body and | of spring navigation. i e in the ; body wound is se. . - ey By o ki However, this information will be —— e given to the tran rfrla;lnn (‘f‘)m[‘luni(‘ifilnd 1 l(}lflashuf politic - = it _ | to masters of els plying between here | all that. O * man's credit to for- | 0 3'the Alaskan coast in the form-of biue | employmen: prints, which are as accurate as the fully | main there.” ADVERTISEMENTS. SENT FREETO 4 Host Remarkable Remedy That Quickly Restores Lost Vigor | to Men, A Free Trial Package Sent by Mal! to All Who Write. Free trial pa ckag e b ges to all and cele or emaciation of themselves at home. remedy has a of warmth and te. rayne yplied with promptly. sirous of re ed to see how easy it is are employed. strictions, - Any man sent a free sample, carefully Jlain package, so that its recipient have no fear of em ity. out delay. i vl and it has been hoped that a deep water | v "Stare Modical Trokwho | Channel would be Bincovered. Taut snme: | Jpost, B0 cured so many men who had bat. | Mer's work located the deep channel, but | he Tast » chre against the mental anq |28 it has only nine and a half feet of | ering of lost manhood that titute has decided to distribute free any form of sexual weakness result- s youthful folly red location. giving strength | opment just where it is needed. 1i the ills and troubles that come & of misuse of the natural func- nd has been an absolute success in A request to the State Medical 228 Elektron building, Fort ind., stating that you desire one of their free trial packages, will hing that great class of men who are unable to leave home to be treat- and the free sample will enable them 2] weakness when the proper remedies The Institute makes no re- barrassment or public- Readers are requested to write with- prepared,charts and contain the same in- | ifnrmu!h»n The masters of the vessels | of ‘the Nome and St. Michael fleet will | have new data concerning the coast and Bering Sea next spring. | | These new charts convey a vast amount hower, which grain, as the fields. | of information which was hitherto un- known. The data obtained has added be tween 39,000 and 40,000 square miles to the Alaskan coast. Of this vast area 38,000 | square miles is at the mouth, of thel MEN! Yukon The Yukon flats have, for the past threo | years been an object of much speculation 1o navigators and shipowners. They ex- | tend far out of sight of land, and at Jow | water are in_most places submerged but | | a few feet. There has been but one prac- | ticable channel, even for river steamers, | of & most remarka- water at Jow tide and is very tortuous it is impracticable. Furthermore, buoys are | not possible on the Yukon flats, owing to | the masses of ice which come out in the | | spring. These would carry out to sea the buoys or ns. During the it three sea- | sons the Pathfinder and the Gedney have | put in, under Captain Pratt’s direction, temporary buoys for the guidance of the | steamers. The baye and harbor on Norton Sound and Kotzebue Sound have been charted | and much new and vaiuable data given. | The work has been carried on with the ut- most difficulty during the summer. This can be readily seen when the fact is taken into consideration that the coast is one of the worst, 8o far as storms are concerned, that is known. ‘Work on Cup Defender. ERISTOL, R. L, Jan. 5.—A consignment of steel angle lnan It‘:d lack of which work the new cup defender has been g:lzyed, arrived to-day from Pho.g:l‘l‘l‘o, who writes Pa. The work of fa the keel is nd;m lnb. rapidly. Work was to- ¥ m‘ on the steel mast for the new ‘was discovered with the' telescope . i 4 who write. It is a all men who suffer premature loss of eak back, varico- parts can now cure cent—the lar, peculiarly in_the world. seems to ac teful direct be reckoned with be com- The Institute is de- of whom would fair promise to be cured of sex- e The v cens the United States tivel of lfl the civilized or ments of Herald. ses —much sooner—the world in nm.t:‘ of the quall les T qu. n w THE RUSSIAN CENSUS. Czar’s Subjects Have Almost Doubled in Forty Years. Russia seems to hold her place as the ulous of civilized powers, al- ere Is less and less occasion for of the world to stand in awe of her vast population. latest census, the inhabftants of the Rus- slan empire number 136,000,000 gain of ¥l per cent since 1860, taking into account the people acquired by annexa- tion as well 1s those added th excess of births over dcaths. In (he same period, however, the United States #ained, exclusive of an: o upo; o WICHITA, Kan., Jan, 5.—Mrs. Mary BE. ease has changed her mind about suing Lease, for divorce. he suit which was prepared two months was never filed and never will arrel again. attorney to pro- case. brought about by be, their children, ail of whom are now of age and living in New York with their Mrs. Lease will shortly return to Wichi- ta, quit politice and settle down to domes- Her husband sald to-day: “My wife will not push the divorce case _ I never knew she was going to file it until her attorney gave it to the W She will return to Wichita | and live with me. We never did have any | quarrels, although I disagreed with her and reform. She will quit children ali in New York and will re- have steady gl Rain at the South. RIVERSIDE, Jan. 5.—The extreme cold snap which has been in this section for week was broken last night by a heavy was timely for young L - north winds had dried the The indications to-night are fa- vorable for, more rain Rain is falling in According to_the This is a In the same nexations, 140 st gain by far of any power Russia, as a formidab! nations of the earth, sh e force among the ould not, however, n the basi grose population, for the Burels Ronerch rely —the genuinely loyal subjects og K}l}: —do not number more than some 26,000,099 fiople There are 9,0,000 Poles, 8,000,000 nns, 6,000,000 Lithuanians and ' 11,000,000 Turks, all of whom woald hardly give vol- untary support to the crown, and most in fact, be glad of an op- unity to enter upon a revolution that success. also 4,000,000 Jews who are almost in a ser- vile state in the Russian em; ssian Czar There arc us returns indicate that will, in the col near futpre, be the most poj on. ous powers, as she .will nation in [R: and achieve. cago Times- Mis! | tern Jockey Simply Runs Circles Around the Other|g | aw | | | Together. -— The first round of ike 1i2-entry Re- serve stake was run down at Union Coursing Park yesterday. The hares | Were fairly strong and ‘he surprises many, short-enders getting the fiag often | But | out Rosinante. Toll’s Master Clair beat A, Kiein's Coronado; | Curtis & Fagle beat Pasha Kenneis' Rest Assu 1 & Knowles’ a beat Curtis & F. A. McComb's Sir Fasha be n's Honor Brigh man’s Srapsh PCK AR EAGLE TOCPTURESTAKE peedy Hound Is Favored to Win the Open Event at Union Park. AP LY The “Introduction,” Which Will Have Precedence on the Card, Will Bring Eixteen Champions cnough to make the players of favorites dig deep into thelr pockets. The storm of Thursday played havoe with a portion of the grand stand roof and trees on the south side of tha park. but the rain left the field in fine condition for hares and dogs and a goul day’s sport resulted. 'The promise of the sport to-day is of the glowing kind. In the Introduction stak: the champions wili have a chance to distinguish themselves among champions. Then there will be the concluding rounds of :he Reserye stake, a card big in number and quality. War iagle 15 the stake favorite at 5 to L His preference agamnst Rest Assured has set the talent a-scratching heads. War Eagle does not stand alone in prospective giory. Here are others which ure likely to figure for stake honors: Flery Iace, Mac's Melody, Wild Tralee, Royal Anne, Lavender, Sir Fasha and Pleasant Girl. e short-enders wen in small bunctk vesterday. Mountain Beauty started tiiis 4 on the short end of a § to 1 shot | g Tyrone Prince. Then came Racy ote ‘at 1 to 5 azalnst Lilac, Will | Yora at 3 to § against Charta and Minnie | Wa Wa at 2 to 5 agaiust Bowery Boy. Lavender and Walt 4 Little were 2 to 5 in their races and Master Workman and ay won a bye with Vietor Bo, 2. Miss Wilson, 1 to 3, took Fly measure and Wedding Bells, 3 to § 1 Borsia aster Li 8. won from ; baisy Clair, 1'to a Fide: Bell: Clair, 1 to 5, from he scores and winners s St. Michael beat n p beat E. M. Kflllufl"s{ Sone’ Warpath beat#W, Cairn Aeneld Kennels' Fine Fire beat J. : George Sharman's St. I\ & Twin City Girl: A. tain Beauty beat J. P. Thrift's Tyrone Prince: | T. J. Cronin's Vixen beat Sterl & Knowi Rusty Geld; Bartels' Mac' e beat P, Do J. Carroll's Auck : R, Son’s. n's Bowery Boy Achilles beat A. Johnson's Lowlander; Rac H Kennels' lac; C. Anecdote beat Wild Nora? ith Twin City Girl, harman’s ~ Annte beat D. Dillon's Dewdrop; T. J. ittle beat D. Healy's "N <ter Workma < beat Sterl & F : Curtis & Sons’ Cash beat Conn: s’ Mamie Pleasant; Maher & Reid's Uncle Fuller beat J. Swith's Boney Boy; J. ( s away a bye, Della M with- 's Black Flush beat a D. Toland’s Pleasant | Girl beat Curtis & Sons’ Psyche; H. A. Deckel- ot beat Sterl & Knowles' Ripple; Zahl's Miss Wilson beat H. A. Deckelman's Reannex beat A. T. Bid- “urtis & Sons’ Rector beat sell & e Macdougali's Colonel Lopez; George Parkinson's Ben Lomond beat A. Buker's Kanaka: Russell & Allen's Wedding Bells beat Curtis & Sons’ bout beat W. Bonnle Pasha Lande & Gerber's O'Donneil's The Owl; J ma *“We have decided to call all that off,” MOVEMENT OF TERRY McGOVERN IN HIS FIGHTING ATTITUDE. HE HAS DECIDED TO REFUSE THE OFFER TO FIGHT IN ENGLAND AND WILL COME TO SAN FRANCISCO. e X sald Harris. ““We have much better of- fers for a go in San Francisco, and have decided to stay here and take that up. I P yet whom McGovern will g!h( cial Dispatch to The Call. EW ORLEANS, Jan. 5—The Call correspondent saw Sam Harris to-day in regard to the signing of the Jordan articles for the Eng- Jand fight McGovern and his ger have been considering. “You know. there are always lads bob- bing up for a chance to win a lot of fortyne and fame by licking this boy. The¥ can all have a chance. Terry don't have to go out of the feather-weight class B e S e e + IN AND ABOUT SAN of Taylor and Eddy streets, which sold for $167,500; size 137:8x137:6. The Burhham & Marsh Company have also sold the lot 43x80, with thrae flats, on ee pleces of property that were re- ¢ sold at the large combination auc- ale have since been resold at a ) Master Lawrence beat Cur. | Profit to the purchasers at the auctlon. | ihe north line of Clav street, 94 feet east tis & Sons' ( a; J. Dempsey’'s Jingle | One of the buyers cleared $500 by a re- | from Leavenworth, for $12,000, for I. G. Bells beat L. Hodgkins' = King shier; | gale before he received the deed. On an- | Hoffman to V. L. Podesta: also for Mar- Maker & Bad Boy beat P nnels’ resale lias-been made at | tin Nielesen to Julius Miller, for $3 Reid ; oge’s Kid McCoy beat after an undecided; | beat Captaln Cane's Victor | lor's (names) Beauty Spot | McKinley: F. A. M, u: B, de B. Lopez & § & Russell & Alien's Daisy Clair beat F. A. McComb's Bona Fide; Captain_Cane's Greenhall beat Thomas McCool's Fin MeCoo Paeha_Kennels' Belle Clair beat C. O son's Silver Cloud after an undecided; G, non's Half Moon beat Aeneld Kennels' Aethra; Curtis & Sons’ Echo beat Russell & Allen's Scotland Yet. Random H. in ar onl of QUEER TAX SUIT. Won by & Man Who Soon Regretted His Success. The income tax laws are very stringent | in the canten of Zurich. This often causes amusing complications. A short | time ago a physictan sold his practice to another for a certain sum of money. The | buyer sued the doctor a few months later | for exaggerating the value of the prac- tice. 1In court the former practitioner showed by his books that he had had an income of $4000 a r, which was all he had claimed. IHe won the suit, and great waas his happines: A few gays later he recelved a sum- mons to ‘appear in court to answer a charge entered against him by a tax cel- lector for defrauding the Government by ving his income as $600 when it was ately proved to Lave been $4000. He not only was obliged to pay a larger income tax for the future, but he also' had to K‘uy the difference between his stated and 3 real income for eight vears back, as well as the fines, which are very large in these cases, so that altogether his bill amounted to $580, which somewhat di- minished his joy over winning the other sult.—Zurich Correspondent in Chicago Record. — e ENGLAND'S SLOW MAIL, One Latter Was :l‘lxlrty Years Reach- ing Its Destination. A letter addressed to Miss Pocock at Hungerford was posted at ‘Swindon in 1871. It was dellvered the other day, u:ierv‘\ty-mlne Xenrs;n!: 3 'he explanation is that after being past- ed the letter lodged behind woodwfugx at Swindon postoffice. It was discovered ac- cidentally when the postoffice fittings were being repaired last week. Since the date of posting the addressee has changed her name three times, but a iocal postman was able to trace her.— London Mail. What theSea Swallows. The sea is a vast l:bomtor‘z in whi, ta or ing buyers. boo wor int all G. T it to ch other piece an advance of $2500. terms now than it has been at any time | ness the market. lions in the savings’ banks may soon Thomas Magee's Real The outlock for ety real estate is good. The vear 1 that thout any spenk “When are we to have a real, old-fashioned, Jumping market?’ eto.. etc. and we hope there may be none. very rapid growth of business, wholesale business and of .our dwelling districts of the eity. venoss Wil axe place, beginning with this year, and increasing for five or six years to come. characterize the market this year, but we hoj not, real estate market very much. The Real Estate Reécord published by sought after, wholesals that, ha causing the new demands of commerce, and this in turn Gradually also the prosperity district is making itself evid: zections, while there is good Inquiry for valu- able residence prorenln and _An Increasing purchasing of smal Wise hardening in both the business and resi- dence parts of the city, while all of these con- and to be willing to pay improved real estate. have been fully up to the normal of the yea: and it looks as following the lean perfods that have afflicted was going to be a corresponding succession of fat vears. Thi bright, and the aituation of the real estate mar- ket is eolid. . Thera were 3250 real estate sales in San Francisco in 1900, representing $18, an increase over the precedin 4 , the o four flats and lot 25x75 on the north line of Natoma street, 230 feet west from Sixth street. The Von Rhein Real Estate Company report the following sales: Northeast corner of Leavenworth and Clay | streets, 30x94 feet, with improvements, 1300 to | 1304 Leavenworth street, 314,000, William Hencke to the Mercantile Trust Company of San Fran- clsco; north line of Natoma street, southwest of Tenth, thence southwest §0x75 feet, §8000, Thomas Rychold to John Kane: east line of It is easier to make Shrewd men are buying busi- properties. Leases at large figures e the rule for the iight location. Not ly is this true, but there is a shortage flats and other residence propertles in The fast accumulating mil- e vears. turned o the improvement of realily. | van Ness avenus, 7l feet south of Pacifi p! h view rntelligent real es- avenue, 25x100 feet, with improvements, 2 Suon Teife viow el o \'AI:‘“;'QBI avenue, 00, Bertha Schmid to te brokers and of many other onlookers. . ; lo east line of Scott Estate Circular | Henry E. Bothin; lot on the place, between Broadway and Pacific street, 25%56 feet, with improvements, 18 $1600; lot ‘on south line of Vall tween Kearny and Dupont, west feet, with improvements, '513 Vallejo 2 Antonio G. Minore guetino A. Cereghino; estate of Bridget Alvey, lot on the east line of Dupont . 70:6 feet | south- of Filbert, thence south |2 improvements, 153 Dupont etr the north line of Clay street, Stockton, 19:5x68:9 f with improvements, %08 Clay street, 32700, W, H. Hardy to Stephen Lagomarsino; lot on the east line of Stockton een Filbert and Greenwich, eet, - with improvements, 1710 Stockton street, J. H. Gibbons to Mrs. P. Barbett: $4100; 1ot on the west line of Dupont stree 46 féet north of Filbert, 91:6x77 feet, 1605 to 1611 Dupont street, and ‘4 to 10 Medau place, $13,500, F'. Formhals to B. Huth. Sol Getz & Bro. report the following sales: 2x100, with §-room cottage, north line of Rich- land_avenue, near Andover street, $1000: 50x 120, west line of Twenty-third avenue. 150 south of Clement street, for $1000; 25xi06, south 0 closes upon a steady market, but one ems persistently non-speculative and trace of excitement. Investment actupl uge are the legitimate facts actuat- On nearly every hand. when people they ask, ‘‘How about a time begin?" 0 real estate. “When will ., $3300; lot om booming 60 feet west of In answer, we uld say that there i€ no trace of excitement, But the now especially of manufacturing ercsts, fully justify an increase of prices of business properties, and of land in many We believe these We hope these advances will come slow- and not in leaps upward, by booming and citement. Some of these latter features may A heavy winter's rainfall will help the reet, for $100; 50x120, east line of Twenty- sevenih avenue, 200 feet north of C street, for §500; 25x100, south line of California street, 32:6 feet' emst of Fifth avenue, for $1000; Zix100, south line of 1 street, $2:5 feet west of Ele enth avenue, for $300. Shainwald has H. Umbsen & Co. says: nvestment properties are being edxgerly but are difficult to find in the business districts. The great growth taken place in mercantile affairs is desire to spread out in order to meet Herman sold to 1. Schwartz lot on the east line of Valencia street, 350 feet south from Fourteenth, f0x 100, for $6500. This property Mr, Shain- wald bought recently at auction for $6000, Shainwald, Buckbee & Co. have sold lot 25x137:6, on the north line of Grove street, 171 feet east from Baker, o and for this class of realty. producing a dem Siie o8 Teathy, ent in the retafl properties. Rents are like- . Hansen; also lot and resi dence at 3859 Tweng-flrs! street, near Gaatro, the lot belng Sxll4, for the Bafety Mutual Building and Loan Association, to | W. H. Schooler. , | .The Hartland E. Law property on the | corner gf Mission and Annie streets, which has’ been sold by Thomas Magee ns for $100,000, fronts 5:6 feet on Mis- on, 8 _on Annie and runs back to an alley. There is a six-story brick build- sn& rented to the Government, on the lot. he purchaser of the Demin, przyeny on_the southeast line of Mission Street, 45:10 feet northeast from Beale, is J. J. together are compelling buyers tactfcs of the past ir asking prices for December transactions fons taken abandon thefr hn‘llm’. San Francisco property there city's future is extremely < Vet of ber and $3,972,677 in all things are dissolved. It a 1fi- | 206 sales in nui e- | Moore. The brokers were Thomas Ma- cantly curfous fact that of all of the thou- | gate values. Of the total sales T'fi» gee & Sons. sands of dredgings made in the deep sea $29,313 went into 50-varas, $3,166, into | A. Schlesinger has bought the property bottom ngthing man-made ever has been | 100-varas 750 into ity slip and water |at the southwest corner of Fifth and Foi- brought ?. . eXcept some worm-riddled | lots, $126,350 into Soutn Beach. 640 t4 | som streets from the estate Danjel e Pl PSRRI B B fegnms, BIuE s Sl | SR CrR AL BT urray from a -quarters of ) o the b n 2 0 lots on the west line e Cor- a mfle’.’ to the north of B,eoth';\“d‘. durtm; to South San Francisco an méog“ L2 | bett road have been sold by Oscar Hey. although many en in main routes the Triton ex dredgings have n the Atl tside lands. ‘ mfi:-leutau owners borrowed nnlydu,u,_ man for $350 each. ‘The sale of the furniture and business of vessels across . The ocean more last vear than they of the Russ House by Colonel Young to receives what fortune brings, and not oniy real estate mortgages num 10 | C. 8. Harrison for was efleeteg by swallows it silently, but utterly wipes it | and amounted to $17,084.453. The release: | Boardman, Hooper Co. The property out of existence, in its original form, until Wbe s repm!ll{ $14,711,94. | has been leased for five years for upward its substance is a part its own trans building imj ements year §100,000. The Russ estate will expend parent blue.—Exchange. 4 1900 num 1023 and cost uix: 3 ;tlh' ,000 in improvements of the hotel prem- A P enta, conting 34,710,909, " *he Contra_ Costa County s mpros y e nty Supervi . Bamboo Fiber. L. Page has sold, through the Bura- | will again ask for bids for conStricting co%.vf.;c Mflm th‘ne.l.‘h:‘!m":)’:{ e h“: for, $50,000, the lot i on :'::’.fi% .wntyveo t vl.t.l"nl Ts’-‘- Md.t —— o were nof in 0 paper “is mago ‘aimost " exclusively' in fifle of Tavior street, 12:6 Rorth of Turk. | va which he DUl was limitea S “° apan. For mp use | with ements. third e sale of the southwest corner of g:vluudl raw we have mmotvgmgtoe e this street and Chelsea place by the es- —we buy mig .emtgu r in t X 1l L be- | tate of W, to G. Bt astan @ il REOL el | Bl ahpai ds of paper U8 ; the Se ¢ southwest corner | 1108, * Lt REAL ESTATE Scott place, | line of Victoria street, 250 feet west of Shields | GAME TERRY McGOVERN TO FIGHT IN SAN FRANCISCO Offers of Western Men Prove Alluring, but Opponent Has Not Been Selected. for goes. They will always be coming to im MPEW YORK, Jan. 5.—Kid McCoy and Tom Sharkey were matched late this aft- ernoon to fight a twenty-rouna battle at the opening of tne Twentieth Century Club in San Francisco on February 23 Jim Kennedy, matchmaker of the new club, saw the men this afternoon and of- fered them a good percentage of the ceipts. Both men readily accepted and signed articles of agreement White has b(-ends_(x‘_lm‘t»:d“ascre v signed Terry McGoverr T e aties part off May. Nobody has been selected to meet McGovern, but it !s likely that Kid Broad will be Terry's op= ponent. —_—— Choynski May Fight. CINCINNATI, Jan. 5.—Manager Wil- liam A. Brady, who will manage the con- test between Jeffries and Ruhlin at Saen- erfest Hall here on February 13, left for New York to-night. Brady announced to- day that Jack Jeffries, brother of the champion, and Joe Choynsk! would lkely go on in the preliminary. — ee——— POOLMEN ARE BEARING OUT THE STIPULATION Edward Wilson Pleads Guilty and It Is Said Harry Corbett Will Follow Suit. The cases against the poolsellers in Judge Cabaniss’, Judge Conlan's and Judge Fritz's courts were all continued by consent yesterday till next Wednesday. In Judge Cabaniss’ cour® Edward Wils one of the defendants, pleaded guilty was fined 310 e Was I resented by Attorney Collins. Judge Cabaniss also re- the remittiturs in the “‘bucket cases from the appellate court and issued bench warrants for the arrest the defendants, H. Valentine, H. Burke and A. Pritchard. At- cured @ writ of cer- ari in these cases Attorney Collins said yesterday that the Grand Jury would take up the m of the stipulation between Chief Sul the poolsel but he appeared only who knew anyth it. Harry Corbett will, it is said, plead ilty to all the cases now pending of b nst himself his clerks in the Po- Courts, notwithstanding Attorney Collins” decilaratio to the contrary. —— e | TWO DAMAGING ERRORS. SAN DIEGO, Jan. 5.—Two errors in the seventh inning, by which the ball was thrown under the bleachers, first on one side of the dlamond and then on the other, caused San Diego to lose a game to-day to the Maier & Zobelein baseball team of Los Angeles. The game was af snappy flelding and fine work with t stick. Both teams were able to hit the ball, but some fielder seemed certain to be under it each time it came down. The outfielders had twelve chances to pull down long hits and they managed to fi every one of them. To-morrow the t teams will meet again. ‘“‘Dumby” Taylor will be in the box for the locals and Bab- bitt for the visitors. The score: San Runs 3. hits 5, errors & & Zobelein—Runs 4, ‘hits 1 ies—Doyle Umpire—Sylvester. LOS ANGELES, Jan. game here to-day—rain. Matar 8.—No baseball FRANCISCO R:view of the Prevalent Conditions and Some of the Big Sales During the Past Week. | _Building contracts have been placed on record as follows: h‘ugl‘.(l\:l.l J. hlhél » with the McCullough Cont: Company, all work on a 2-story frame bullding on the south line of Twenty-fifth street, 100 feet cast from Dolores. §0x110, $3500; W, J. Dingee with W. C. Watson, for lathing, plastering, frieses, cor- | nices, ete., for a frame dwelling house on the northeast corner of Washington and Frahiiin, *§2000; Herbert E. Law with Kuss & Storz, for painting three 3-story, basement and attio rame buildings on the east line of Van Ness | avenue, 8 south from Green street, 31275; Lewls Meyerstein with H. L Peterson and Donald mer, for excavating, grading, comerete, artfficial stone, etc., l-fllf also for mill work, roofing, plastering, plumbing, gasfitting, eto for aiterations and additions to a i-story and basement {rame residence on the northwest cor- ner of Clay and in streets, §7887; Som- | mer & Kaufmann with Petterson & Persson. | for tearing down and remod. to building, Nos. 532, 334, 538 and §33 Market | street, ; estate of Solmon Adler with M. B Stanford, alterations an ing at t street, $2400. Several quite large mortgages haye been { recorded. Among them is one of ém by Fitel Phillips to the Hibernia Sav- | Ings and Loan ety on the southwest corner of Ellls and Mason streets and the north line of Bush, 60 feet east from Du- pont, and the east line of Stockton, 73:4 feet north from Sutter; one of $53.000 by James A. Oliver to the Hibernia Savin, and Loan Soclety on the undivided north- west corner of Mission and streets; Edgar F. Preston to the nia Savings and Loan Society for $30,000, 37:6x62:6, on the south line of Post street, Fran- Ger- repairs to bufld- east from Grant avenue; sco and Pacific Glass Works to man Savings and Loan Soclety for $58,000, | northeast corner Fifteenth and Folsom streets; San Francisco Coke and Gas “ompany to the Germania Trust Com~ pany for $1,000,000, leasehold interest in block bounded by Beach, Powell, Jeffer- son and Mason streets and all mechinery, pipes, mains, etc., and 200 bonds of 3505 each. The larger releases of the week have been as follows: Hibernia Savings and Loan Soct Frea. erleke G Petore, Southenst tine of Mo ns northeast from le, 45:10X137:6, $83.000; Hi- bernia Savings and Loan Soclety to Sarah B, and Drury Meione. south cia and Quinn, east line o lenct: 80x50, 23:5x80, 47:4x80, three ple:"e:«:n:fu:.‘::; cast line of Valencia, 164 north from Four. teenth, IS0XM6x99:T4XIIST, $40,000: Deaf and | Dumb and Blind Asylum to John and Fliza- beth Staude, 137:6x137:6 on the squth line of Pacific, 137:6 west from Stockton, $1,000; Hi- :'or‘t‘nl':'su‘:px_!“l‘n;l Loan Society to Mary W. et n, 57:6x on the so | 197:6 cast from Powell, gm0 T O DUl | The progress of the Sunset District | shown by the better and more substantial | improvements now being erected. The | requirements of the residents in that f; vored section are being granted by de- n thy s | 8Tees, =0 that they will not have to | U with any more inconveniences, P A drugstore on Ninth avenue, next to Sol Getz & B fice, has been ro-s real estate braneh of- h pened. S reported t the Callagha éstate has in contamprflf tion the donation of a large sized lot on I street, near Thirteenth avenue, for Cathollc church site. Several enterpris- ing ladles of the Sumset District, with Mrs. Angelo at the head. have formea a library_ club with a wew of entert: ing the youth of the district. Sol Getz Bro. are erecting a large building on [ street, between Eleventh and %wemn avenues, which the ladies have leased for a term of years. 1} is intended to have free reading-rooms Tor people of the dis- trict. Entertainments by local talent will also be {}ven frém time to time. This undertaking deserves the com- bined assistance of not alone the dents of the district but all the people at large to help along worthy an enterprise. L. E. Grennan Mttt streets. Mr. and into their purchased ood n so as nearly completed an X rooms tory residence of avenue, between I and J . Mrs. Louis Holz MoV new ("D-l(ol'; .mh" m’% on Ninth avenue, near K

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