Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
- THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1902 “Society | ORCHESTRAS ALTERNATE FOR DANCES Guests Partake of a g Splendid Supper at Midnight. 5 Braces tbe Flnnual Mdardi Gras Festival oo A ENASSO CARE AL TABER PHeTe STUNN 1 i NG COSTUMES. From Page Four. CRACK | | ers covered O'Malley with their weapons Watchman Is Killed Dur- | ing Fierce Battlein | Chicago. i 1 a fight with | followers Iving along aristo- | i Kirk, | claimants, illed s ! thorn in t wners because of his 1 vac ground | | rights 1 small and asserts s it not_originally vernment survey of the | it does mot belong to c property open to ant th Hen been L. active Cooper, a lawyer, in his opposition to | icine in the world ve you of constipa- d all disorders of the »mach and Liver like Hunyadi Janos One-half glass taken on aris- n morning will give sfying results that 1l take no other rem- d be convinced that ill cure all forms of CONSTIPATION Be sure and GET Hunyadi Janos It you simply ask for Hunyadi water you may be imposed upon. DON'T BE PERSUADED T0 BUY SUBSTITUTES. THEY ARE m AND OFTEN HARMFUL. ‘ QUESTION FREDRICK’S | & | to-morrow morning at 10 o’clock. Mrs WH SKITTRICK TARER Pusro- LU \ — Miss Rey Janet Peck represented Sir Joshua ds and was a very interesting feature. s Roberts was a Colonial dame; nt lace and pink brocade; pink and ers in hair. wore a blue satin domino and maid Mr Ryer happily represented Stars and stayed very close to Stripes. Reed wore pale yellow domino over | at- decollete gown, with gar- oses in her hair. Salisbury was handsome lace over white silk. in Mrs. Willlam Sherwood was a Colonial dame in a white satin gown; powdered hair. Mrs. E. E. Simmons appeared as a capti- vating Carmen in an artistic _costume of white and red satin, Spanish turban and fan; red roses in hair. green chiffon embroidered over taffeta, a Paris creation. Miss Taylor wore a rose domino over a cream brocaded satin ball gown with spangled em- broide: Mrs. Joe Tobin wore white spangled net over pink silk; diamonds and roses for garniture. Miss Maude Taylor wore a pale yellow dom- Miss Rowena Thompson wore a dainty Nile | + | Mrs. A. B, Willlamson wore a Nile green | domino over mauve silk:. pearls. | Mrs. Walker was in white satin. | Mrs. C. E. Worden was in an original cos- tume as Stri Stars was her companion. Miss Williar wore a yellow domino over a be- coming ball gown. Miss Watkins wore a yellow domino over a handsome gown. - Mrs, Washington Dodge wore a black dom- ino over a black net gown embroidered in jet; garniture- of: green mroir ivelvet; red -Ameri- can Beauties; pearls in hair. | “Miss Marfe Wells was chirming as Tommy | Atkins. Mise Dickinse was a white soldier with gold | ino, under which was a beautiful historical Mrs. Whiting wore white lace over blue silk;. appings and military hat. ball gown. Her hair was powdered. garniture pink roses. Streetor, accompanied by Policeman | "Malley, went on the ground of the district” and was attacked by Streetor, | who knocked him down with the butt of a revolver. Several of Streetor's follow- nd he was ordered to leave or be shot. Shortly after Cooper and O'Malley had | left the ground a pitched- battle began | between three of = Streetor's followers, | William McManners, William Blokie and 3 Hoeldtke, and two watchmen em- ployed by Cooper, Frank Kirk and Sam- uel Porterous. Kirk and Porterous were nding outside a small shanty of their and one of the first shots fired Kirk on the top of the head. Por- terous entered the shanty and returned the fire of the Streetor men with a rifle. A riot call was hastily sent to the East Chicago-avenue police station and a wagon filled with policemen was sent on the run toward the place. When the officers arrived Kirk's body lay in the snow outside his shanty, while from the | window Porterous kept up a steady fire | upon the three men in the house, who were returning his fire with all the speed with which they could work their rifles. The police arrested Streetor and all the | participants in the fight RIGHT TO THE OFFICE Attorneys Petition That a Summons Iesued by Justices’ Clerk Ap- pointed by Mayor Be Quashed. Cabaniss yesterday afternoon. The com- plaining witness was A. Newman, man- ager of his wife's millinery store at 130 Sixth street, who alleged that he bought from Jens for $500 one thousand shares of a company having mines in Calaveras County on the representation that they were very valuable. The Judge decided that the alleged misrepresentations were opinions rather than assertions of fact. vk e e el PREPARING FOR BANQUET TO GENERAL ‘JIM” SMITH Committee Meets to Discuss Event, Which Takes Place Next Sat- urday Night. A meeting of the general committee having in charge the banquet to be ten- dered Judge James F. Smith was held last evening at the law offices of Sullivan & Sullivan. The banquet will be given in the Maple room of the Palace Hotel on Saturday evening of this week, beginning at 7:30 o'clock. The committee that had arranged for a banquet at the time Judge Smiith ar- rived home, but which was postponed on account of the death of President Mc~ Kinley and again because of the death of a brother of the Judge, was in attendance at the meeting last evening and assisted in the deliberations of the present com- mittee. A number of letters were received from prominent citizens, including army and navy officers and National Guardsmen, The question whether Powel Fredrick | or Joseph Windrow is the legally consti- | tuted clerk of the Justices’ Court was | raised yesterday by Attorneys Eugene W. | Levy and Andrew G. Maguire, represent- | g defendants in a suit filed with Clerk | Fredrick. | W. J. Thompson and John N. Ross, de- | fendants in a suit brought against them | by the National Law and Collection Com- filed a demurrer and a notice of to quash the summons and di miss the action with Clerk Windrow yes terday. The ground of the demurrer is | that no summons has been properly is- sued by Clerk Powel Fredrick of the Jus- tices’ Court or legally issued at all, and | upon the further ground thgt no com- | plaint has been legally filed in said ac- | tion with the clerk of the Justices’ Court. | The papers in the suit were filed with Fredrick January 3L The motion will be based upon the pa- | pers and records in the case and will be heard before Justice of the Peace Dunn Since Clerk Windrow opened his office on January 31 there have been filed 170 complzints, while Clerk Fredrick has re- corded only twenty-one for the same period. Of the twenty-one filed with Fredrick fourteen are duplicates of suits | filed with Windrow. ———— Grand Jury Demand Rejected. The Supervisors' Printing Committee yesterday rejected a demand of Brown & Power for $11 for sundry supplies furnish- ed the Grand Jury. A communication was sent to Foreman Sonntag announcing that the goods were ordered without a requisi- tion for them having been made on the board as the charter provides. bt Mining Expert Exonerated. The case of John C. Jens, a mining ex- which, taken into consideration with the enthusiastic meeting of the committee, in- sures a pronounced success for the ban- quet, which is intended to be a fitting | tribute to a son of California who has achieved much distinction in his career in_the Philippines. The following named compose the com. mittees: Executive—Frank J. Murasky (chairman), | Colénel W. D. McCarthy (vice chairman), Colo- | nel H. I' Kowalsky, Judge J. F. Sullivan, | Charles J. Heggerty, Judge A. A. Sanderson, | Judge J. C. B. Hebbard, Frank J. Fallon, | Thomas D. Riordan, | | { Edward Lande, Daniel Ryan and Joseph C. Campbell. Invitation—Frank J. Murasky (chairman), J. C. B. Hebbard and Frank J. Fallon. Banquet—H. I Kowalsky, Edward Lande and Judge J. F. Sullivan. Reception—Chiet Justice Beatty, Hon. Hor- ace G. Platt, General W. H, L. Barnes, Judge J. C. B. Hebbard, Hon. Matthew Nunan, Gavin McNab, Thomas D. Riordan, A. A. San- dersorl, Edgar D. Peixotto, Willfam M. Ab- bott, Colonel A. A. Andrews, Joseph Kirk, Hon. William_P. Lawlor, Hon. Thomas J. Geary, Hon. Henry E. Highton and Herry Eickhofr. Press—Judge J. C. B. Hebbard. Acquitted of Burglary. David Wells and Charles Lornetti, long- shoremen, were acquitted of a charge of burglary in Judge Mogan's court yester- day. They were accused of breaking open a nickel-in-the-slot machine in the saloon of Judnic & Perich, 201 Brannan street, who said they would not prosecute the ;:a.se.“l:ntd tretgudxe dismissed it, remark- ng that af e most the charge should have been maliclous mlschiel.m —_—— QUARREL BETWEEN WAT Maurin and Edward Fennossy. waiers. oo’ Polk ployed in @ restaurant at the' corner o quarreled yesterday, with and Austin streets, the result that Maurin went to the Emergency Hospital for treatment of an ugly wound on the side of the head, said to have been In- pert, charged with obtaining money by false pretenses, was dismissed by Judge flicted by Fennessy with a dinner plate, Fen- nessy was arrested and charged with an as- sault with a deadly weapon. TRODPERS RIDE ~UPON RIOTERS Cavalry Required to Sup- press Brussels So- cialists. BRUSSELS, Feb. 11.—A detachment of cavalry had to be requisitioned this after- noon in order to disperse the Socialists, who made a demonstration in favor of universal suffrage. All the approaches to ‘the Chamber of Deputies and the palace were held by armed guards, but bands of Socialists, | bearing red flags and singing revolution- ary songs, paraded the streets. A strong body of agitators, led by a Socialist Com- munal Councilor, reached Prince Albert's palace shouting “Long live universal suf- frage!” and continued its demonstration until a force of cavalry, with drawn swords, charged and routed the rioters. The exit of the Socialist Deputies from the chamber was accompanied by an en- thusiastic demonstration upon the part of | their adherents. A mob marched to the office of the Soclalist organ, Le Peuple, where the Socialist leader in the cham- ber, M. Vander Velie, addressed the crowd from a window. He declared that if the chamber persisted a few days longer in withholding universal suffrage the present agitation would develop into a revolution. The announcement -was greeted with cheers. 5 — — Must Assess Grantee of State. City Attorney Lane advised Assessor Dodge vyesterday 'that ‘land sold to the State for delinquent taxes and afterward deeded by the State to a thira person must be assessed to the grantee, as the original owner loses all interest property. When such owner z:l!a.ln:l: ‘gfi interest in the property and desires to be assessed h:\nall?etmfl.yhhe inserted in the assessment book, together with of the grantee. Db tame —_———— Journal of Commerce Sold. The Daily Journal of Commerce has been purchased from J. S, Waddell, who has been, publishing the. paper for the last six months, by a corporation organ- ized in this city. The new, publishers will make a number of improvements at once. The paper was establl James O'Leary in 1872 as a umalslh:v%ek?; publication. —,— . Assaults a Child. Sarah Fitzgerald, aged 5 years, and liv- ing on MeAllister street, near Steiner, was enticed into a stable at 674 MecAllister street by Roland Edwards, a hostler, yes- terday afternoon. The screams of the child attracted attention, and Bdwards was arrested on a charge of felonious as- sault. o i PHOTOGRAPH OF WELL KNOWN ARTIST OF THIS CITY WHO IMPERSONATED KING CARNIVAL AND 80- | CIETY PEOPLE WHO WERE GUESTS AT THE MARDI GRAS BALL HELD AT THE MARK HOPKINS IN- | STITUTE OF ART LAST NIGHT. — Complete List of Socigty People Who Attended the Carnival Ball Given by San Francisco Art-Association Last Night. Continued From Page Four. Allen Perkins, Miss Alice Sprague, F. J. Caro- Mrs. ‘Alexander D. lan, Mrs. Frank Carolan, Keys, Mrs. Henry Page, Kenneth Page, Miss Ruby Page, 1. W. Hellman Jr., Mrs. I W. Hellman Jr., Albert L. Bhrman, Mrs. Albert L. Ehrman, ‘Dr. Winslow . Anderson, Mrs. Winslow Anderson,” Mrs. Urlel Sebree, b Follls, A. Sbarboro, Walter E. Dean, J. D. Grant, Mrs. J. D. Grant, O. W. Farenholt, Mrs. Tobin, Joseph §. Tobin, Mrs. Jarboe, Miss Clement, John A. Sanborn, L. M. Over- street, T, K. Perkins, George A. Pope, F. C. Deering, 'S. Sprague, Mrs. C. B. Hahn. Dr. J. Dennis Arnold, Mre. Dr. Arnoid; F. A. Merriott, Miss May Wallace, Willlam F. C. Peterson, Mrs. F. C. Peterson, George Stone, Mrs, Robert Oxnard, E. S. Burns, Mrs. E. S. Burns, Fred Fenwick, Charles McCormick, Wil- ltam Armsby, L. Woods, Miss L. Woods, G. A. Woods, W. A. Newbold, Frank Jones, W. W. Willlams, Mrs. M. L. Gallen, Carry Buckley, Leretta Kirk, Dr. Southard, Mrs. Southard, P. C. Hodge, Dean Durke, James A. Code, Mrs. J. A. Code, James C. Sweeney, Willlam Harrison, Miss W. F. Somers, Captain Barneson, Miss Hooker, “Miss 'Land, Miss Charlotte Land, E. H. Tricou, Captain ‘Johnson, Mrs. Washington Dodge, Mrs, Jonathan Curtls, Paul Bancroft, Gilbert H. Russell, George T. Marye Jr., R. M. Fitzgerald, Mrs. B. F. Smith, Harold E @ ittt @ PERSONAL MENTION. L. T. Hatfleld of Sacramento is at the Occidental. E. E. Bush, a real estate dealer of Han- ford, is at the Lick. Ex-Congressman J. Hamilton Lewis of ‘Washington is at the Palace. Railroad Commissioner N. Blackstock of Ventura is at the Grand. J. O. Hestwood, a mining man who re- | sides at San Jose, is at the Grand. ‘W. I Roberts, the well-known mining | man of Selma, is a guest at the Lick. | M. Biggs Jr., banker and mining man of Oroville, is registered at the Grand. N. E. De Yoe, a furniture dealer of Mo- desto, is among the arrivals at the Lick. F. E. Dawd, a_county officer of Sonoma, is registérd at the Lick from Santa Rosa. Bishop Mills of the Episcopal diocese of Ontario, Canada, is a guest at the Palace. C. A. Canfield, a well-known oil man of Los Angeles, is at the Palace with his wife. John F. Colburn, an attorney of Hono- lulu, arrived here yesterday. He is here on business for Prince David. E. D. Terry, a well-known attorney of Honolulu, arrived on the steamship Ala- meda yesterday and is at the Occidental. B. F. Dillingham, sugar planter and | railroad man of Honolulu, arrived from | the East yesterday. He is en route to the | islands. | A. H. Schnabel, a fruit-grower and ox-] tensive land-ownér of Neweastle, IS here | on a short business trip. He is registered at the Grand. R. B. Milroy, secretary of.the Califor- nia Jockey Club, who was injured recent- ly in a streetcar accident, is slowly re- | covering. His physicians report him out of danger. ——— Californiang in New York. | NEW YORK, Feb. 11.—The following | Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—M. Lavell and A. Roulller, at | the Manhattan; T. A. Stetson, at the Park | Avenue. ——— Well-Known Draper Passes Away. Charles W. Ives, an old resident of this city, died yesterday. The deceased was employed for seventeen years as head graper for the firm of J. Sloane & Co., and was very popular because of his generosity and genial manners. Count Tolstoi Is Dying. ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. I1L.—Count Tolstoi has suffered a relapse and is dy- ing. * O’'NEIL SEEKS DAMAGES—Edward J. | O'Nell, guardian of Willlam J.~O'Neil, filed a suit’against the Thomas Day Company yes- terday for $20,000 damages for injuries us- tained by his ward at the factory of the firm in July last.__° TELEGRAPH NEWS. MANTLA, Feb. 11.—The United States trans- port. Wright, which was wrecked ‘November .28 jast by striking an uncharted rock at the en- trance. of San Jacinto harbor, and, sinking m fifteen feet of water, has been raised. LONDON, Feb, 11.—While docking at Havre, the German steamer Bolivia, from Antwerp for Mexico, was damaged by collision with a pler. after which she collided with the French steamer Labrador, from n}ha ‘West Indies, and damaged the latter's sterd. LONDON, Feb. 11.—The British steamer Knight Companion, from Portland, Or., for Hongkong, which went ashore at Inudoye, on the coast of Japan, is regarded as a hopéless wreck. Salvaging of the cargo has been un- dertaken on the basis of ‘‘no cure, no pay."* ward Smith, Stewart M, Anderson, E. S. Pot- Tuttle, Mrs. W. H. McKittrick, Marco Benguiat, Mrs. Benguiat, ter, Thomas J. Barhem, Heien B. Cosgrove, | iat, Miss Laura Prather, Knox Maddox, J..Paulding Edwards, Roderick | Miss May Morrison, W. E. Lester, Mrs. W. E. P. Hughes, Miss Jewel Peet, S. H. Boardman, | Lester, ‘George Hoyd, Mrs. Miss Milton Unger. | Georgina Jones. L. S. Adams, illlam T Dwight “Porter, A.'A._ Watkins, Mrs. A. A. | Goldsborough, Mrs. F. 8. Moody, F. S. M Watkins, Miss Mabel Watkins, Miss Bessie | Miss Joan M. Hadenfeldt, John B. Lelande; Wilson, 'H. H. Kipp, Frederick H. Coon, | Miss Wanda Hadenteldt, ~George H. Aspen. James 'W. Reid, J. Finiay, Phillp W, Tomp- | B. S. Bonelll, Mrs. E. 5. Bonelll, Mrs. Fred- kins, . Willlam B. Culleen, Sarah | erick W. Zeile, Frederick W. Zeile, Henry T. Florence Yates, Elizabeth Faulke, Scott, Mrs. Henry T. Scott, W. Preston § B.. Colller Jr., John M. Klein, H. H. Scott, Walter L. Dean, Mrs. Walter M. Klein, ‘Charles Field, Mre. Charles L. | Dean Miss Alice Hage Field, Miss Fleld, Mrs, George H. hauncey R. Winslow Rice, C. Van Ness, Miss Van Ness, | Winslow, Colonel Charles A b Tallant, Mrs, Tallant, Percy L. 3 l“‘rl!h(. W. V. Huntington, Mrs. W. V. Hunt- gardt S. Salisbury, H. Melane, D. Atherton, ; ington, Miss Edith Huntington, Willlam H. B.'R. Dri Duporite Coleman, S. Cush’ | Taylor Jr., Mrs. William H, T: Mrs. Cushing, T. D. Boardman, A. | Cyrus Walker, Mrs. A. H. Voo O. Tobin, T. Morri Monroe Salisbu Frederick C. Hotaling, M Dohartey, Baldwin, 'Miss Florence Wade. Aibert A. nett, Hal C.. Peters, Miss A Miss ) B. Hartwell, Miss Lola Davis, Mrs. James Hall Bishop, Mrs. E. J. McCutchen, Miss Page, R. E. New- man, George W. McBean Jr., McBean, Irs. E. D. White, Worthington Ames, Mrs. Worthing- | Edmund Baker, R. Emerson Warfield John Wil ton Ames, Lewis Gerstle, n Lawson, A. B. Willlamson, Mrs. A. B. lamson, Thomas P. Gower, Julien Hart, J. C. George L. Calwalader,” E. G. dell, Mrs. E. G. Schmiedell, Lansing Kellogg, A. McIntyre, Charles R. Lioyd, T. G. P. McL. McBean, Miss Edith McBean, Athole S. Kiersted, Thomas H. Miss O. M. Holbrook, Mrs. Latham McMullin, John Herbert Mee, M. Hall | Wilson, McBean, | Pike, Ray Mrs. M. Chabot, Miss® Claire Chabot, Dr. Claire Miss Winfleld S. Jones, Hen M.. Pike, ith Stmpson, Miss F. Hammond, Miss E. Hammond, Miss C. Noble,. Dr. J. Williams, 5 repholt,” J. Kruttschnitt, Mrs. J. Kruttschnitt, Kathleen Chabot, Miss Emma C. Holmes, Hartland Law, Miss Jane Peny . Black, W Mrs. D. Marquis, Stephen Schmie- Roberts, | Ella Hotaling, Dave T. Murphy, Mrs. Murphy, Miss Nora McNefl. Frank L. Owen, Mrs, Gaston Ashe, Mrs. Lucy Weill, Miss Nicholson, John C. Hampden, Mrs. Hampden, H. Waterman, F. W. Stephen- son, Mrs, George R. Wells, Miss Mone, Ge vieve Carolan, Miss Emily Carolan, Charles Sutro, Edgar Rickard, Stanley Easfon, Miss Duff, Walter McCormick, Nella McCormick, | Lieutenant Lowenberg, G. Hall, Mrs. Wal- ter, Mr. Walter, G. B. Knott, Mrs. Captain ‘Whitney, Sophie Kobicke, Mrs. J. Metealf, Zelda Tiffany, Pablo Sanchez, D. Spear, F. Sackett, R. N. Marble, Tracy Cummings, M. Eyre, Prince Poniatowski, Princess Po: latowski,” George Parsons, Miss M. A. Harring- ton, Miss L. Harrington, Evan J. Coleman, Miss Eophie Coleman, Miss Lucy Coleman, C. J. Hepburn, Dr. Stone, Mrs. Dr. Stone, N. D. Rideout, J. H. Hetherington, Clement Tobin, George W. Lewls, Walter Magee. Mrs. Walter Magee, J. H. Rossetti, T. J. Grace, Joel H. Hecht, Miss Florence Greembaum, Baron vom Hoist,” Baroness von Hoist, Mrs. George A Pope, George H. Lent, Mrs. George H. Lent, E. W. Hopkins, Miss Georgia Hopkins, Carter P. Pomeroy, Mrs. Carter P. Pomeroy, Dennis arles, Eugene Murphy, Fred W. McNear, Willlam Alvord. Miss Elizabeth Z. Ame Augustus Taylor, Mrs. Joh Augustus Tayl F. Merrill, Mrs! John F. Merril McAllister, Alexander D. Ke: Merrill, Miss M. Gladye Merri W, b’ William Hubactk, L. P. Latimer, Miss M. | Thomas_Magee, Mrs. Magee, de Neale Morgan, Mrs. S. M. Farnam, Dr. | tenant Robert I. M Greenleat, E. Alanson. Dr. Gardner. Mrs.’ Gardner, |S. H. Emrich. W o, J. B. Murphy, Wallace A. Sabin, W. M. Klink, Benjamin | James Hall Bishop. . © Special for To-Day. Sofa Dillows. Begi until sii many on hand. Here are the special prices: Pleasing effects in denims and tapestries at Velours, tapestries and damasks at Velours, tapestries and damasks at ......,.. A better grade of the above materials........ Extremely choice patterns in rich effects Come early and get first choice. or mail orders honored—you must come in person. (Successors o California Furniture Co.) 957 to 977 Market Street, Opp. Golden Gale Avenue. nning this morning at eight o'clock and continuing o'clock this afternoon, we will offer a line of about three hunidred sofa pillows at greatly reduced prices. are all of good size, averaging 24 inches square, and are cow ered mostly with remnants of high-grade upholstering mate- rials, the exception being a number of stamped poster effects. Every pillow is well filled, some with feathers and some with floss, according to the price asked. “Reasqn for the sale—=too They Positively no telephone