The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 11, 1903, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, STORM CAEATED BY CLUB WOMEN Members of Sempervi- rens Allege Unfair Discrimination. o, S Aver That a Favored Few Camp in Big Basin and They Are Deznied. a direction of t well-k ety folks com- rising Semy ns Club the State, as ex- Mcio = Park Commission- . asin Reservation, the . - « their com- T against the al- S > al par the « ow ew des the nch w — STREETCAR MEN SWEAR THEY ARE NOT ROBBERS » Puzzled Over Case of Philip ; and George P. McCarroll. lent .DVERTISEMENTS. Life Caused Chronic Headaches. Stomach Trouble All His Life. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills Cured Him of Both. As is very frequently found the stomach touble and headache in the foliowing case ca m the same cause. Dr. Miles' Anti like all of Dr. Miles’ Remedies, ned to cure the disease, not the This readily explains why these jicines can cure such a vanety of There is mo remedy, formula or n which in any way equals Dr. Pamm Pills for the speedy cure icf of headache and kindred ailments. ) the age of twenty-three my son was led with severe pains in the r he had served his term of th the army in the Philippines and was unft for anything sle headaches. He found Anti-Pain Pills not only re- ¢ beadaches but would pre- if taken in time. He contin- ir use for some time and to his sur- delight he found they had cured prescript S enlistment w he came because of te that Dr. M iseved vent a ued the stoma how g th he and myself feel to you for the g -Pain Pills have done him. Im hat I have used your med- for many years and keep 1 the house all the time. 1 thiek it an ideal household remedy and all the remedies are just what you recommend them to be. You have my permission to "—Mgs. M. L. FARrAR, Walla h. 2gists sell and guarantee Dr. Miles” Pills. They are non-laxative; con- tain no opiates, never sold in bulk, 25 doses, 25 cents. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. g storm have a om- pite com- 1 Jose people— (FORMER CONVICT IS ARRESTED | FOR ROBBERY OF MRS. HUGHES ‘Fred Zimmerman, Whose Unsavory Record Stamps ' Him as Dangerous Character, Is Supposed to Be a Participant in the Brutal Daylight Crime | 11 - & sobery of Mrs after- Go w Detec- will be ther in- day immerma 13 by He til fu rday Zimmerman last Det n the cor- near st he ence in | 1Gbeen r his arr his pre he m remi he steward den; Tt FORMER CONVICT ARRESTED B FOR BRUTAL ROBBERY OF z i MRS. HUGHES, « city He tealing remas T g the plundered woman, on the of the robbery underwent a to | " the police and for a time it > . 5 155 County ; W t he might know more about | on J rrested for en. the crime than he was willing to admit A ore of Willlam He is a bricklayer and quit work on Tue: Seataie w00n. He arrived at the hou after the robbery and explained his esence there by saying that he had a t his wife. that he ugust 2 to ser He same year in R was premonition pen to This atfected him so determined to DISTRUST HUSBAND. is story, taken in connection v th the sen responsible the robbery was committed by the house of William possessing s to the flat on the and that their r of seeking the he irglar evidenced a rfect knowledge of of Phillip Mrs. Hughes usually carried her ave- v rendered the po keptical reg, Hu “premonition T} sband did not know that Mrs. Hughes had t ing left for ed nked the money the morn- its receipt. As soon as he had rk she went downtown and d without telling him of her in- w it cording to the neighbors the frequently quarrel over money Although Hughes says that and girl knew the money, those | who 1 oorhood aver that the fact nown to most of | them. The little of it man times during the mates, | who repeated i th the fcturesque ions of child- rt fre he shock, was hood, until the sum had grown to be a! us injury e received. She fortun H tement that three men Last night the police pretended to be-| bbery, but police lieve that es was in no way impli- two were engaged in cated in the crime and stated that he seen leay the would not be arrested unless some new developments ar to change the prese nts of Thomas Hughes, aspect of the case. s G e il @ WANTS PORTION ~ READY TONAME OF THOROUBHFARE, — PRISON WARDEN According to documents filed yesterday |. The State Board of Prison Directors before the Board of Public Works, a por- | will meet at San Quentin to-day and for- tion of New Montgomery street does not | mally elect a successor to Warden Martin belong to the city, but to private parties. | Aguirre. The outcome of the meeting isI A petition has been filed by a number | awaited in political circles with the keen- | of property owners of New Montgomery | est interest, for not the slightest intima- | street, asking that the street be dedicat- | tion has been given by the directors as ed for street purposes and accepted for | to who their choice will be for the im- that purpose. portant position, This petition Rumors have been circulated persistent- | | is signed by the Sharon Estate Company, Harbert E. Law, Hart- | Iy to the effect that the members of the land Law, J. H. Spring, Steger & Ed- | board had agreed to defer action in this wards, Thomas Crellin and the Pacific | matter until Director Devlin returned States Telephone and Telegraph Com.- | {rom the East, but these stories are with- | out foundation. It was announced last | pany. evening from an authoritative source that | Opposed to these petitioners are Mrs. | nothing will further deter the members | ,Minnie L. Selfridge and Lydia of the board. from making a change in | fridge, who filed a protest yesterday, the management of the affairs of the pri- which they claim that a portion of New | son to-day. Montgomery street, for a distance of six- ty-eight and a half feet north of Steven- son street, is their private property and has belonged to them for the last thirty years. The property owners who petition that | New Montgomery street, from Market to Howard street, be accepted by the city for street purposes recite that for the last thirty years the street named has been paved, sewered and kept in repair for use as a public highway. On December 2, 1 the Montgomery Real Estate | Company deeded what is known as New | Montgomery street to the city. This deed was recorded on January 21, 1885, at the request of William Sharon. The claim of the present representatives of the S:ifridge estate is that the por- tion of tne land on which the Gragd Ho- tel now stands was leased by the Sel- | fridge estate to the Montgomery-street Real Estate Company and that it did not | include that portion of the street which belonged to the estate and which Is now in contention. Chief Deputy Donovan of the Board of { Public Works has recommended that New Montgomery street be accepted as a pub- lic highway and, if the claim of the Sel- fridge estate stands good in law, the city will be obliged to purchase the disputed portion of the street. The directors, fully appreciating the | demoralizing influences prevailing at San | Quentin—results of the unsettled condi- | tions there—have deemed it their duty to | abandon all partisanship that may exist | among them relative to candidates for warden and unite upon some man on | whom they can count for a clean admin- | istration, That further delay in the war- | denship matter is dangerous to the in-! stitution the directors readily realize and | they will at once bring about a much needed change and see that the rules of the prison are enforced without fear or favor. The directors insist that they have not united on any particular candidate. With- out political prejudice when they meet ! to-day they will consider the qualifica- tions of all candidates, especially as to | competency in the disciplining of crimin- | als and managing an institution of the character of San Quentin prison. They will then decide who is the most capable of those nominated. —_—— NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 10.—The na- tional division of the Soms of Temperance, which has been holding its sessions in this | city, has adjourned and will meet next year | in Philadelphia. The action of the l(n!ll Worthy Patriarch in suspending the Ohio | s‘l"l")d Division was sustained by the national vision. | under w burglary. He will be sentenced to-day. | On April 13 he entered the vacant house ! at 2118 Pacific avenue belonging to Charles | K. Harley. Entrance was gained by opening a window, and Bays stole a num. ber of glass globes, which he carried something would hap- | return | | gate and game prizes will be given away. | of the day. | mond des Planches, arrived at 2 o'clock | was taken to the German Hospital, where ' he lingered until yesterday, when he died. | George Johns DERRICK FALLS WITH A GRASH Guy Rope Snaps and Big | Boom Demolishes Sidewalk. One Man Is Injured and Many Miraculously Escape Death. ——— The snapping of a guy rope caused a | giant derrick at Third and Mission streets to topple over yesterday afternoon. engineer of the machine, J. H. The Smith, was severely though not seriously in- jured, and it was only by a miracle that the lives of a score of other workmen were spared. In falllng tae immense boom struck a temporary sidewa'k and | demolished it. Fortunately no one hap- pened to be nassing at that particular spot when the ¢ sands side of 2 building and ripped it to splin- ters. Again good fortune prevailed and no cne w injured. The derrick was being used in the con- h came, although thou- of people were on building on the northwest ston and i eets. It in the center of the lot upon improvements have just commenced vy steel girders, fresh from the | y, were being lifted about and placed in position. One of the gi-ders eleven B welg tons, h. ension, d s rone guy rave way and beem topp'ed over donkey cngin h rested on rick platform 3 over also neer Smith w hrown into an excava- tion id rendeied unconscicus, On the Third-street side, where t { boom struck, is an clevated wooden slde- walk. This ‘s usually crowded with hu manity, and esnecially the hour of | the accident mas ruck the side | of the Cc Tailoring Compa and snanped tructure w: a show cs y damaged La ( I bert are the contractors in charge of the work. They have ariy unfortun cently accident - lay them a couple of days further. A carload of stcel, which has been badly needed for some time, was lost some- where en ronte from the East and only arrived Thursc The iron bases wer Louls tor two weeks in and were : FORMER CONVICT PLEADS GUILTY TO BURGLARY Henry Bays Was Tried and Acquit: ted Years Ago for a Sensa- tional Murder. alias “Lucky” B: pleaded guilty terday to a charge of Henry Bay: alias on, Lawler's court away in a sack A quarter of a century ago Bays was the principal figure in one of the most sensational trials ever held in the crim- inal courts here. He was tried for strang ling a Mrs. Drell, who kept 104 d Dupont streets. vith towel tied ng-house She tightly at California s found dead around her was one of her roomers and pected of having stolen money He > was s from her arrested quitted, on several occasions. for the murder, tried as the evidence s purely cumstantial. After that s called ky” Bays. here are two prior convictions against was d ac- he him for burglary in the first degree. On September 23, 1882, he was sentenced to serve one year in Folsom penitentiary, and on April 21, 1885, he sent to the same institution for fif ars, et D PRE-ARE FOR FRENCH NATIONAL CELEBR’TION Anniversary of the Fall of the Bas- tile Is to Be Observed ‘With Fete. The fall of the Bastile wil ed by the French and French-American citizens of San Francisco on Tuesda; July 14, at the Chutes under the auspices of all the French societies of the city. The arrangements are exceptionally elaborate for the occasion and the com- mittees are composed of influential men connected with the IFrench colony The Consul General of France, M. Hen- ry Dallemagne, will be president of honor be celebrat- | and M. P. A. Bergerot will be president of the y. V. Gardet Is vice president; O. Bozio, second vice president; J. 8. Godeau, treasuree, and A. B. Richet, sec- retary. SATURDAY, JULY 11, the thorough- | The mast of the derrick struck the | in Judge | n old German woman, 1903, | { “LOVE’S CONFIDENCE.” P e S ——. Be Sure to Get This Beautiful Picture FREE With Your Next Sunday’s CALL. OCEAN TRAVEL. | ADVEKTISEMENTS. OCEAN TRAVEL. leave San Fran- Steamers AMERICAN LINE. w York—Soutiampton—Londen. St. Paul July 22, 10 am | Philada.Aug. 13, 10 am ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINZ. EXCURSIONS e New York—London. 3 Niceor Min'ha.Jul. 11, 6:30 am| Mi s For_-Victoria, Meaaba. Tuly 18, 8 am Minn Aug. 1 11:30 am Port Townsand coma, Everett, Whatcom—11 a. m., July 10, 16, 20, 25, 30, August 4. Change Oniy First Passengers Ca DOMINION LINE. reted. at Sedttle to this company’s steamers for Alas- : Tacoma to N at Vancouver to C. P. Ry | —_————— Going to Yosemite. | Hundreds of people who will visit Cali- | fornfa during the G. A. R. Encampment are already booked for the Yosemite. | They will visit the valley during August, me rush is anticipated as early | . Ry. For Bureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona, 1:30 p. m., July 9 15 21, August 2: Corona, | 1:30 p. m., July 12, ‘18, 24, 30, August 3. | _For Los Angeles’ (via Port Los Angeles and | Redondo). San Diego and Santa Barbura—Santa Rosa. Sundavs, 9 a. m. and the y s s ¢ 2 . m. in June. A whole month now intervenes | F*L‘r“m"'- :::;’:::’:‘ (v;l;hu;;-;’tdgo. nd East before the Eastern hosts reach the coast, | San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Crus, Mon- 4nd now is the time for San Franciscans JULY 12th, 13th, 14th, | terey, San ayuces, Port Harford (San to take advantage of the lull in travel | to make this wonderful trip. The Santa | Fe Merced route is via two groves of Big Trees. Full information at 641 Mar- ket street, Santa Fe office. . —— e Butchers Ready for Frolic. All final arrangements for the butchers’ pienic next Sunday at Shell Mound Park | have been made and the pienic no doubt | will be a successful affair. Four hundred Luls Obispo), Ventura and Huenem: Coos Bay, ® a. m., July 8 16, 24, August 1 For Ensenada, Magdalens Bay, Sat Jose dei Cabo, Maszatian, Altata, La Pus. Santa Ro- salia, Guaymas (Mex), 10 a. m. Tth of each month, ror further Information obtain foider. reserved to change steamers or sall- 15th and 16th. AUGUST 18th and 19th, 25th and 28th. | THERE AND BACK ONE FARE. STOP-OVERS 90-DAY LIMIT. bl date R TOW BT ATTTOFS_4 New Montgomery (Pals Hotel), 10 Market street and | Broadway wharf. Freight Office, 10 _farket street. C. D, DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, **San Francisco. OC. R. & N. CO. A tug of war between the different branches of the union will be a feature The members In uniform will Ask Agents - | - e N **Col bia’* sails July 12, 22, Aug. 1, 11, 21, leave Butchers' Hall, corner of Eighth SAN I A F E: | 31 CoGroree - Fider eatis July iF, d5. Aok and FoElsum streets, at 9 a. m., march | 6. 18, 26. Only steamship line to PORTLAND, al \ OR.. and short rail line from Portland to all M‘;?: t 1““: s;ree!‘ to Market and down For Particutars || points East. Through tickets to all points. all £E 0 the 180y rail_or steamship and rafl, at LOWEST P i A A 641 MARKET STREET RATES. Steamer tickets include berth and | meals. Steamer sails foot of Spear st. at 11 a m. € F. BOOTH, Gen. Agt. Pass. Deot. 1 Montgomery st.; C. CLIFFORD, Gen. Agt. Frt. Dept.. 3 Montgomery st. Framing Materials. The new styles and colors in picture frames, mat boards and binding papers please all who visit our store. Sanborn, Vail & Co.. 741 Market street. . e e———— Italian Embassador Arrives. The Itallan Embassador, Mayor ASHs KIDNEY & LIVER:® BITTERS A PLEASANT,.UAXATIVE NO.T INTOXICATING (ORIENTAL’ STEAMSHIP CO.) Steamers will leave wharf, corner First and Brannan streets, at 1 p. m., for YOKOHAMA Ed- this morning from Los Angeles. He was and ‘HONGKONG, calling at Kobe (Hiogo) at once escorted to the Palace Hotel. | Nagasaki and anghal, and connecting at Count P. L. Grimani, Vice Consul, came Hongkong with steamers for India, ete. No cargo recetved on board on day of sailing. §. S. NIPPON MARU....Friday, July 31, 1903 8. S. AMERICA MARU ........ .. Wednes: to the city from San Rafael to greet h Excellency. A Southern Pacific freight train was derailed at Salinas. This detained the Los Angeles train several hours, —_————— Kuehne Dies of His Wounds. The death of Gustave Kuehne, a patient in the German Hospital, was reported yesterday to the Coroner. Kuehne on July 4 was In the act of removing the loaded cartridges from his revolver for the purpose of substituting blank cart- ridges when one of the loaded shells ex- ploded, the bullet entering his side. He : y. August 26,1908 s. 8. HONGKONG MARU (Calling at Ma- nila) ........Saturday, September 19, 1903 Via Honolulu. Round-trip tickets at reduced rates. For freight and passage, apply at Com- pany's office, 421 Market street, corner First. W. H. AVERY. General Agent. occanics.$.Co. i ot ® DIRSGT LMIE 10 TANITL. §S. SONOMA, for Honolulu, Samoa, 'Auckland and Sydney......Thursday, July i6, 2 p. m. SS. ALAMED. for Honolulu, July 25, 11 a. m. 8S. MARIPOSA, for Tahitl, Aug. 15, 11 a. m, &0, SPRECKELS & BR03..80., Agls.. Tickat ffice, 643 NarsatRy. Freight Offise. 329 Market SL., Pler . 7, Pacific St HAWALL 8AMOA, NEW TOYD KISEN KAISHA, Boston—Queenstown—Liverpool. New England. ... July % New England, .. Aug. 8 Mayflower July 14 Mayflower Aug. 13 Commonwealth.Juiy 30! ‘ommonweaith. Aug. 27 Montreai—Liverpool—Short sea passage | Canada July 18/ Dominion Aug. L Kensington. .. .July 23! Southwark Aug. 8 Boston MEDITERRANEAN | " Asores, Gibraltaz, Naples, Genoa. Vancouver Sat. July 18, Aug. 29, 10 | Cambroman. .. . Aug. 8 ‘Sept. 3t 1 HOLLAND AMYRICA | Wew York—mMotterdam, via . | Salling Wednescay at 10 a. m. | Noordam S T Rotterdam ...Aug. 13 | | Now Yor:—Antwe LJuly 11, 10 am/ Vadr'id.July 25, Jooiand-Jaiy 18 10 am! Krniand. Aoe: T' 10 o WHITE STAR _INE. Wew York—Queensiown—Liverpool. Safling Wednesdays and Fridays. | Arabic...July 10, 6 am( Victorian.July 21, 6 am Germanic.July 13, noon| Majestic.july 32, noon Cedric.July 17,10:30 am| Celtic. .July 24, § pm C. D. TAYLOR, Passenger Agent, Pacific Coast, i 21 Post st., San Francisco. | | famburg-##merican. | For PLYMOUTH—CHERBOURG—HAMBURG Twin-Serew Expross aad Passengar Servies. F. Bigmarck. ...July 16 Moltke .o Patricia Bluecher 3 2 8 ¥ HERZOG & CO., 401 California st., Gen. Agts. COMPAGNIE GENERALT TRANSATLANTIQU: DIRECT LINE TO HAVEE-Pas Saturday, at 10 a. m., rom Pier czfi North River, foot of ‘Morton street. ord-class to Havre, 346 and uoward GEN- ERAL AG CY FOR UNITED STATES AND New York. J. F. FUGAZI & CO.. Pacific Coast Ngents, 5 Montgomery avenue, San Francisco, Sailing every Thursday, instead of First-ciass to Havre. and upward. _Sec- CANADA. 32 Broadway ~(Hudscn building), Tickets sold by all Rallroad Ticket Agents. Mare Ilslasd sad Vallejo Steamars | _Steamer GEN. FRISBIE or MCNTICELLO —9:45 a. m.. 3:15 and 8:30 p. m., ex. Sunday. Sunday, 9:46 a. m., $:30 p. m. Leaves Vallejo, 7 a m., 12:30 noon, 6 p. m., ex. Sunday. Sun. day, 7 a. m.. 4:13 p. m. Fi 50 cents. Tel-. Main 1508. Pler 2, Mission-st. dock. HATCH BROS. THE WEEKLY CALL $1 per Year. i

Other pages from this issue: