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[ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 4, 1903. C 33 URGLAR BEATS A SLOT MAGEINE e L = Himself Into Saloon and .Empties Nickel Device. ard Operating and Is Police ——— BETSY WILLCUTT HONORED IN MRS DEATH a was #iree € . w gt f ofte - K. McLean s & old pas conducted the . ! ng friends were pall- H. H Castle Dies Suddenly. s a resid . @ tr . e of Wells B. KATSCHINSKI FHILADELPHIA SHOE GO, £IRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCD, OINING CALL BUILDING. OES SO CLOSE th our customers to buy e for future use. Extra Opera _Slippers es, turned sol REDUCED TO ble that price. A'to E. ONLY T5¢ and Lace Shoes, nes of kid and box calf, worth to %5 REDUCED TO Sizes 3 to §, widths AA to B. adles S ONLY $1.45 ate, me- straight eavy soles, with fairstitched edges and military heels F m,\}'.s 81.45. Sizes 0F LAD.Es' SH HOES CNLY SLI5 short lines of Lace and Shoes, all bunched to- Worth from $2.50 to $5.00. SOLD A ®1.15 A MEN'S S g the follow sizes: to 10, D wide—10 to 11. to 11. E wide—§ to 11 to 11 wide—Si5 to il KATSCHINSKI, B. PHILADELPHIA SHOE 0. E 10 THIRD STREET. fan Francisco. 'HAPPY OAKLAN ARE WEDDED | —_—- Carrie M. Washburne and Charles'A.! Hahn Join Hands and Hearts. E Miss D PAIR } N SACRAMENTO| AKI cons ers Tues pals being Charles AND, J ble place 1In v at high noon A 3—A wedding of | Oakland- | Sacramento | the princi- Hahn nterest to took is Carrie M. Wa bur The bride has mzny friends in this city, where she has frequently been a \d on th £ her marr! d girl maid of ho v ar ks being The groom cessful you ness man of o. The wedding angements ecorgtions, though aracterized great simplicity, we te shburne home y adorned with The bride and s Fredericks, t made gowns of which the Rev of the West tated, a , and then e bride Is a daughter of M. A. Wash- | ne, a ploneer druggist of Sacramento, MESSAGES CROWD FOR PLACE. Merchants Are Eager to Exchange Congratulations. The third day of the inauguration of the cable service between this city and Honolulu found cefving in- struments working wi t a hitch. The operators were busily engaged in sending the many cablegrams which had been filed for transmission by the mercantile firms in this city and the East and a large message from the Assoclated Pres newspapers the island Terri- the delicat: n with the installation of the duplex system in the year future, whereby messages can be recelved and sent over the cable simultaneously, the Postal Telegraph Company is putt in a number of light and molsture proo: zinc-lined lockers In a speclally con- str room in the Lasement of the b Market street. The room to be s been bricked on all sides and a fireproof door guards the only e The instruments to be installed are ver: valuable and it Is designed to make the apartment thoroughly fireproof. I to have a lex system it is nec: y to duplicate the cable electrically. In other words, a counternart of the cable from an electrical standpoint must be had before the duplex system will work, ana in each of the lockers in the basement will be placed a large number of speclal- ly constructed boxes, known to electrical engineers as inductive resistance coil | Only thirty-six volts of electricity. are | being used for the transmission of mes- | | sages over the cable, with the ampherage | very low. Eighteen two-volt /bichloride cells furnish the power. Congratulatory messages from many of the larger business houses in the United States and Hawali were sent through the cable yesterday, and when | operations ceased at 6 o'clock to allow the | contractors to have the cable for testing | purposes many were still unsent. Some were transmitted later in the evening. In reply to a message sent by the | Board of Trade of this city to Clarence | Mackay the following message has been | received: NEW YORK. Jan. 2. 1903. Preside: Board of Trad San Francisco: I wish to thank most sincerely on behalf of myselt and assoctates for your kind mes ations, and my only regret is | * have bean present when the were flashed between Honolulu | San Francisco. | CLARE H. MACKAY | The Merchants’ Association of this city | | s in receipt of an answer to a message sent by that body to the Merchants' As- | sociation in Honoluiu as follows: | HONOLULU, H. I, Jan. 3, 1903.—The Mer- hents' Association of San Francisco: Our | “rnal greetings upon the completion of the fric bond of communication. between the s of the Pacific Coast and the capita ocean. We extend to your our fe du; -A._A. Watkins, | and iC n the increased trade facllities | ened by the Commercial Pacific | Fraranc belief that | w develooment of the commerce of is ocean the merchants of the Pacific Coast the brunt of battles and wear the tory. The closer relations pre- | saged by new union we consider of the | first_imoortance as bearing upon our future | as weil as your own, and we express anew our ulations. SOCIATION OF HON- Licensed to Marry. | OAKLAND, Jan. 3.—The following mar- | riage licenses were issued to-day: Ru- dolph Wriedt, aged and Minnie Allie, both of Oakland; Willlam F. Flelds, { and Leonia Scirllace, 28, both of San Francisco: John Sihger, 52, Los Angeles, and Florence A. Flowers, 49, Oakland: Minord T. Arey, 31, and Olga Schnitzlein, both of San Francisco; Albert S. Pel- | , 20, and Annie E. Simpson, 17, hoth | of Oakland; Emanuel Nunes, 24, and Mag- | | gle H. Rogers, 23, both of Oakland; Man- | uel ¥. Perry, over Zl, and Mary S. Rod- | ericks, over 18, both of Alvarado; Julius Aronson, 28, and Frances B. Lewin, | both of Oakiand. WP e - | May Have Been a Murder, OAKLAND, Jan. 3—Rofino, an Indian, %) vears of age, was found dead in his | cabin on a ranch between Pleasanton and | | Sunol this morning. A bruise or sweiiing on the right side of the head tiiat :night bave been made by a blunt instrument | indicates that the Indian may have been | murdered. 1f it was murder there Is ap- parently no motive for it, for Rofino, was poor. He was in fairly good health when, last seen last night. “Coroner Mehrmann s investigating | ating department | crush on the Seventh-street route will be PRINCIPALS | MAID A1 | DING AND A F IN SACRAMF WEBSTER-STREET BRANCH BEOPENS Railroad Compafiy Or- ders Resumption of the Traffic. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Jan. 3. The Southern Pacific Company has an- nounced that the trains on the Webster- street line to Alameda pler will resume operations ‘on Monday morning. This branch has been shut down since the | burning of the depot at the end of the narrow gauge mole. Orders were issued to-day to the oper- to have englnes and ready and to have train crews report | for duty. The track men have recelved instructions to put the disused roadbed | and tracks in shape for the resumption | of travel on Monday. It has been known for several days that | the company purposed an early renewal | of operations on the Webster-street line, because the fifteen-minute service on the Seventh-street local road has been dis- continued. In order to accommodate the | ca heavy commuter travel, the Webster- street road must, of necessity, be re- | opened. There is not sufficlent train ser- vice under the half-hour schedule to handle the travel from Oakland on the Seventh-street road with the Webster- street branch suspended. The company chooses to resume the lat- | ter service rather than to continue the | fifteen-minute boats and trains. Rallroad officlals, in exvlanation of the abandon- ment of the extra boats, say that the facllitles at both sides of the bay are in- sufficlent to properly safeguard !ru\el%‘ With only one slip at the Oakland broad | gauge mole, much delay and some danger have been occasioned during the opera- | tion of the extra schedule. With the reopening of the Webster- | street line, local travel conditions are placed on their former footing and the greatly lessened. PLEADS POVERTY WHEN SUED FOR DIVORCE Elkan Lipka Does Not Want to Pay | Alimony to Bride, Whom He Deserted. OAKLAND, Jan. 3—Elkan Lipka, a jeweler, who imported a bride from Ger- many, only to desert her, according to her complaint, four days after the wed- ding ceremony, has filed an answer to the suit of his wife, Martha Lipka, for ai- vorce. He alleges that he s too poor to pay her alimony and prays that the| Lride he left among strange people | in a strange land take nothing by her ac- tion. Lipka estimates the net income of his jewelry store at $30 a month and val- ues his stock at $400. Lipka divorced by another wife on the ground of crueity before he sent to Cermany for his second bride. ———l e Rooster Severely Spurs Woman. BERKELEY, Jan. 3.—Mrs. Mary N. Ol- son of 1513 Fifth street, West Berkele while beheading a chicken in the back yard to-day, was attacked by one of the roosters of the flock, who objected to the proceedings and severely spurred her about the face and hands. Mrs. Olson was stcoping and did not notice the rooster until he thrust-his sharp spurs into her cheek. In striking the rooster from her she was again cut on the hands. The spurs were long and made deep gashes. — e A regiment of 1000 men could readily find shelter under a single banyan tree. In India there is one of these trees which has 4% main trunks and over $)00 smaller ones. | rendered all |4 LIVERMORE GARS AGAIN IN*PERIL Trackwalker Flags Train in Time to Prevent Disaster. | [ i Finds a Horse Wedged in a Track Trestle in Niles Canyon. Oakland Office San Francisco Cafl, | : 1118 Broadway, Jan. 3. Vicissitudes of the Livermore local traln, | which was fn two wrecks within forty-| elght hours, have cast an uncanny speil | about that particular train, which was, the more gloomy when a third disaster was averted this morning only by the quick action of Trackwalker Willlam Crane. While on h inspecting tour this morn- ing Crane came upon a horse that had fallen through a trestle in Niles Canyon, | between Niles and Sunol, and was hang- | ing by its shoulders and fore feet when the trackwalker met the obstruction. | Realizing that the train bound from | Livermore was due within a few minutes, ne hastened on and flagged the local | in time to prevent what might have been | a very serlous wreck. | The animal was caught in such a way | | as to become an obstruction, which would | easily have wrecked ghe train had the en- gine struck it. Aftéer a quarter hour's| work, in which the train men assisted, the horse was extricated and the local re- sumed its run. Close behind the passen- ger train was the wrecking outfit which | red the tracks of the de- | et engine and cars that were ditched near Pleasanton. | This morning’s local left Livermore at o'clock and arrived In Oakland a little buf otherwise unijured. | late The rairoad officlals are investigating the cause of yesterday's derailment, but | have not reached a decision. Because of | the reports that the rails had been tam pered with the Southern Pacific Company has had its detectives making a careful inquiry along those lines. Call for a Labor Convention. OAKLAND, Jan. 8—The Alameda County Federated Trades has lssued a call for a convention to be held January 12 at 7:30 o'clock p. m. at California Hall to formulate a plan of organization for a central body with which-all of the trades unions of Alameda County shall be af- fillated. Every bona fide trade or labor unjon@hall be entitled to one delegate to the convention. According to the call, the main purpose behind the move is to heal the breaches which have existed be- tween the Building Trades Council and the Federated Trades Council of Alameda County. —_—————— Why Ora Viva Did Not Start, A writ of attachment issued at the request > of the track policemen prevented George from starting Oro Viva in the last race, Some time ago Webb purchased Rose of Hilo from the of and the latter clalms Webb as as yet falled to settle. A fortnight or so Webb claimed Oro Viva out of a selling for man named Ward, but vesterday e thre r as entered in the name of eorge Webb. This complicates matters, and dges have asked the last mentioned turf- to explain away the entanglement, or trouble may result PRERRRERERELRXEERLRRE LA HALF OF VOTES PSS REVEWERS Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | 1118 Broadway, Jan. 3. With half of the 159 precincts in this county reviewed in the shrievalty con- test, Rogers has accomplished a net gain upon his opponent, Bishop, of only six- teen votes, leaving him to gain 325 votes | in the remaining precintts in order to overcome the majority ' Bishop got at the polls. | The recount has proved so unsatisfac-| tory that Rogers will quit soon unless it shows greater gains for him. He held a cenference with his attorneys and depu- | ties yesterday noon to talk over the a!lu.i ation, when it was decided to go on a few days longer just to be sure that no mistake will have been made in retiring so soon. Rogers’ attorney, A. L. Frick, | has said that his client has no chance, | but Rogers himself wants it proved to | him beyond doubt that there isno chance, | and that is why he is staying to the last | ditch. | Ten small precincts were counted to-| er, | day and Rogers gained 30, thus obliter- | ating Bishop's gain of 14 up to -yesterday | and going himself.to the front with a lcad of 16 votes. Only three of these pre- | cincts were Rogers', so naturally Bishop | suffered the greatest losses. Bishop had the largest vote in Fruitvale Precinct No. | 3, the precincts at Corral Hollow, Alta- | mont, Emeryville No. 4, Fruitvale No. 1 and Fifth Ward Precincts No. 7 and 3, while Rogers had the largest in Mount | Eden Precinct No. 2, Berkeley No. 17 and Emeryville No. 1 | —————— | “But I will have revenge!" exclaimed the precocious young girl. “How will you get it?” asked her chum. “Do you notice how she's growing?"' “She’ll be tall and stately, will she not?" ¥en." “Well, T'll start In now to fasten the nickname ‘Dot’ on her and then what a burlesque she will seem to be!"—Chicago | Post. Late Shipping Intelligence. | PORTS. Sailea Jan 3, bktn La- FOREIGN PORTS. VICTORIA—Arrived Jan 8, Br stmr Moy- une, from Liverpool, via Hongkong. ISLAND PORTS. HONOLULU—Arrived Jan 2, stmr Korea, from Hongkong, etc., and sailed Jan 3 for San Francisco. Arrived Jan 3, stmr City of Peking, hence Dec 27. to sail Jan 4 for Yo- kohama, etc. PORT TOWNS haina, for Di The Call’s Great Premium to Its Subscribers, CRAN'S SuPERIOR ATLAS A ear-load of Call Superior Atlases has arrived and they are mow ready for distribu. tion. All subscribers to The Call are entitled to a copy of this great book at the prem- fum rate of $1/50. Out of town bscribers desiring a copy of this splendid prem. fum will be supplied on re- ceipt of 8$1 50. All mail orders will be shipped by ex- press at subscriber's expense. Terms of this great offer: Subscribe for The Daily Call for a period of six months and you will be entitled to a copy of this splendid 88 00 Atlas for $1 50. — Yteihria P | lying crushed and groaning between the | fate of his son. DEATH SUDDEN GENERAL R. A. FRIEDRICH United States District Attorney of Alaska| OTHER RAISES GRY FOR CHILD LY CLAITS l | A, Jan. 3.—General Robert A, Friedrich, United States Dis- trict Attorney of Alaska, whose | home is at 2117 Buena Vista ave- nue, in this city, died suddenly WVednesday at Juneau. News of his de- mise reached his family in a dispatch re- ceived here to-day. In the telegram it was stated that his death followed a brief | attack of kidney trouble and was unex- pected. Robert A. Friedrich was born in Mount Vernon, Kentucky, about fifty-five years ago. He enlisted in the Unlon army as a drummer boy with a Kansas regiment in the Civil War and was retired with the rank of captain. His title of general was acquired through his connection with the Grand Army of the Republic and the milltia. After the close of the Civil War he took up the legal profession and filled | er the Federal m_personal ernment. He d of the late President Willlam Mec- v and was by him appointed United for . States Attorney laska in 1598 and re- @ il it B0 15 CAUSHED BENENTH FENDER | Ulrica Rossi Dies From Injuries Caused by Electric Car. e While playing with a companlon last | night on Kearny street little Ulrica Rossi, the 8-year-old son of Dr. Mario A. Rossi, who resides at 517 Montgomery avenue, was fataliy crushed beneath the wheels | of an electric car. He was so badly in- jured that he died In half an hour while | his injuries were being examined on the operating table at the Central Emergency | Hospital. Passengers on the car that caused the | lad’'s death and people who were passing | along the street at the time had to turn their heads away when they saw the boy | fender and the front wheels, The accident, according to the story told by the boy’s brother ana A. F. Darling, the motroman of the car, was due to young Rossi's carelessness. John Rossi, a 12-year-old brother of Ulrica, works as cashboy In Roos Bros.' clothing store About 5 o'clock Ulrica carried his broth- er’s supper to the store, The brother was then busy at his work and little Ulrica began to play tag with a companlon on Kearny street, near Post. He evidently was so absorbed In the game that he did not see or hear the car approaching. He ran directly in front of it and was knocked down and dragged beneath the fender. When the car was stopped It avas found that the boy’s body was caught between the fender and the wheels. It required some little time to extricate it from its cramped position. The car had to be par- tially lifted from the rails. Although the wheels did not pass over little Rossl, his body was badly bruised in the abdominal region and his left leg | was lacerated. Despite the severity of his injuries, he did not lose ‘consclousness. Officers Bakulick -and J. J. Reaves sum moned an ambulance and had the little fellow taken to the Central Emergency Hospital. He was attended by Dr. Ed ward Bunnell, but he died aimost as soon | as he was placed on the operating table. | Death was probably due to internal in juries and to the shock which his system sustained. A pathetic scene occurred when Dr. Rossl,: the father of the dead child, reached the hospital and learned the sad He broke down complete- ly. John Rossi, the 12-year-old brother, to whom Ulrica carrled supper, was heart-brokeh. The car which struck young Rossl was No. 1175 of the Mission and Kearny | streets line. It was northbound at the | fime. The motorman, A. F. Darling, and the conductor, C. A. McArthur, were ar- rested and taken to the Central Station. Darling told the police that the boy ran out from behind a southbound car direct- ly in front of his car. He sald that he[ did not see the little fellow until the car | was upon him and that he stopped the | car within six feet. Motorman Darling has been in the service of the company for a number of years, but this is his first ac- | cident. He 15 about to leave the employ | of the company, as he has completed a | eourse In dentistry and is about to enter that profession. Patriotic Hibernians. The representatives of the several branches of the Ancient Order of Hiber- nlans at a meeting held in Hibernia Hall on last Friday decided to hold a monster meeting of a patriotic character In the Al- hambra Theater on February 19 in cele- bration of the anniversary of the birth of George Washington. That date was chosen, as the 22d falls on Sunday. Branches of the order outside have been communicated with and it is expected that there will be present at that meet- ing representatives from many of these. The Order of Hibernians has a member- | the intention of those at the head of the organization to- endeavor to double that number during the current year. —————— ship in this city of about 5000 and it fs Men attribute their overstrained menmll eandition to brilliancy. |Mrs. T. H. Parish Cyno- I sure of Dramatic Court Scene. | Daughter Testifles Against Parent and in Favor of Stepfather. Oakland Office n Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Jan. 3. udge; oh, Judge! (3 he take my d after all the at I have received? I cannot stand it; I will not These words were the prelude to a dra- matic exhibition of mother love this morning in Police Judge Smith’s court | where T. H. eman in the employ of had just bee from a battery complaint preferred by his wife. As soon as he was released Parish grabbed his 9-year-old son, Gussle, who was with his mother, and tried to get out of the court- room. Then the mother sprang between the child and its father, and throwing her arms around the uttered her { frantic appeal to the court. Having no power to say which should have the child, Judge Smith ordered the boy tumult to cease and the courtroom cleared Out in the hallway the scene was renewed, for Parish had seized the child again against the protest of the mother, who cried out to the spectators | for help. In the midst of it Policeman Jacobus arrived and threatening all with arrest succeeded in leaving the cus- tody of the child with Mrs. Parish. One of the strange features of the case s the decided Miss Mamis v preference Parish showed for the defendant, who is her stepfather. She testified in his be | balf, and after kissing him’ in the court. S taneny) TroTo/ room left in his mother to shift for om herseif. leaving her THIEVES ROB A DYING MAN OF HIS JEWELRY | | Widow and Son of William Searing | Assert His Ring and Pin Were Stolen. Jan. 3.—Whil U. 8. ATTORNEY OF ALASKA, || OAKLAND a ay H WHO DIED AT JUNEAU ON | | dving on sidewalk at Thirteenth and ! DECEMBER 31. | | Washington streets on the evening of De- | | | cember 2 ¢ i his body of two e % | valuab e Police Depart- appolnted in 1900. His district, which | Tent 1 e ¥ R formerly Included the entire Territory of | Searing, who"was overcome by heart dis. Alaska, was recently divided into three 'ease while walking along Washington Judicial div street in col ¥ is friend, F. A General Friedrich came to California | Carrash of Eleventh street. He was as- sisted into a nearby swwoon and Carrash twelve years ago, took up his residence in Alameda and practiced law in San Fran- went for a de the meantime sev- cisco. He was prominent in military and | eral men worked ove e stricken man, social life and served a term as president | trying to him. Later he was of the Union League Club of San Fran- | taken the & Hospital, where he ciscos died He was a gentleman of impressive personality, warm heartad and sympa- ring’s widow son informed the thetic and possessed of ull the courtly | police to-day that a ruby valued genlality characteristic «f Kentuckians. | at $65, and a t Te hen he Since his appointment to the United | left home were missi his person. States WAttorneyship of Alaska, General | Neither Carrash nor t ndants at the Friedrich had interested himself in the | Receiving Hospital remember seeing any weilfare and improvemen® of the Indlans jewelry upon i the: with the of the Territory and in several tribes was | police, are i he hat it any it was taken before he was re- moved e hospital. Detective Denny Holland is estigating e matter. AL ST e TR OAKLAND, Jan. 3.—Davis Anderson, an aged inmate of the Masonie Home at De. coto, was found dead this morning in a llway of the home. A erson was &) cars of age. Heart disease Is ascribed < the cause of death. Coroner Mehr- I mann will hold an inquest. respected and honored as the “good white chief.” He also did much to give tone to the lega' profession in Alaska and in 190 was elected president of the Bar | Asscciation. Deceased is survived by a wife and daughter, Miss Augusta Friedrich., Ar- rangernents for the funeral will not be | h made until the arrival of the body, which is to leave Juneau by steamer on nex Tuesday. he b DR. JOHN L. KELLETT, The well-known California specialist, saygy DEPEND UPON COMMON SENSE IN CURING FHEUMATISM And all kindred ailments. by the soul and divine power, created by nourishes the whole system through the ' functions of the arteries and veins which is kept in action by the sald power. Nature has provided an outist for each and every organ of the body. The alimentary canal carries off thick mat- ter from the bowels, the kidneys throw off floating matter, the emunctories carry off all impuritis through the pores of the skin. When the liver becomes sl gish the kidneys are overtaxed, which cuuses a retarded action of the whole nervous system, allowing floating matter, uric acid and other impurities to be carried out into the circulation of the bicod of the-external system. which then accumulates in the cells of the tissues, along the bones and muscles, and 'n the merve centers, for the want of proper action of the emunctories in behalf of the nervous system, which has been retarded by the overtaxaticn of the kilneys, and it is from this complication of impurities that all pain and diseases are created, regardless of name or locality. Cfl of Eden relaxes and opens the pores of the skin, penetrates to the bones, disscives and removes all impurities to the surface. Sweet Soirits of Eden increases the circulation of the blood, strengthens the nervous system, regulates the liver and kidne: stomach and bowels, re- ores life and strength to all weak and deranged organs. The above statement is indorsed by the California Co-operative Medical Com- pany, which has a capital stock of $1,500,00, divided into 50.000 shares of 338 each, the membership now numbering over six hundred, who are entitled to free rredical advice and treatment and an equal part of all profits gained from tha sales of medicine and curing of those wko are not members. The company cures all curable diseases, regardless of name and locality. Shares will be increased to $30 on January 1, 1903, All honest and best druggists will supply you with Kellett's OIL and SWEET SPIRITS OF EDEN. If they do not have it in stock they will order it for you. Should they not do so, if you will.send your name and address of the druggist that refuses to get it for you to the company’'s office, 27 E street, Eureka, or 457 Ninth street, Oakland, you will get full particulars. DISHONESTY IN THE DRUG TRADE. The process of substitution is a swindling process pure and simple and every purchaser should remember that fact. The merchant who palms off inferior goods, calling them “just as good,™ guilty of double dishonesty. In the first place he swindles the manufacturer whose energy Lelps build up the retailers’ business. In the second place—and tLis is the more serious offense—the man who substitutes swindles the publg and often swindles dangerously. Kellett's Oil of Eden _trade-mark Is the name, together with a picture of Adam and Eve; all others are counterfeits; infringements will be prosecuteds Our Creator invented anatomy, which is governed the circulation of the blood. which st