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38 THE SAN /FRANCISCO “ CALT, “SEPTEMBER 20, 1903 2 SUNDAY. LIFE OF NOMAD 5 DISTASTEFUL Existencs of “omeless | Interesting Affair in Wanderer Do=s Not | San Mateo Club Suit Sziby. , Gymhasium. AR R | Answers His Wife's 8uit fOr?CIEVSr Olymp ans Display Divorce by a Plea for tkill Before Big At- | He: Love. tendance. = 1 e e Australian minister, | i for divorce by Theresa The bandsome new home of the San | Marvelous Mateo Athletic Club was fittingly dedi- cated last night to athletics. Members of the Olympic Club took a prominent part in the exercises. A large delegation ad who is the plaintiff ! mages for alienfation of Donala McRae, the knowr dealer, is the de- o s © 9| of its best wrestlers, hoxers and gymnasts Jed an answer to his wife’s ac- | 5 i gave interesting exhibitions. e crowd $ - \ crue! hus | Which fliled the spacious gymnasium - £ «d her and 5FeW enthusiastic over the clever worlk. e s President F. P. Howard of the new in- 1 or her as she rges * St stitution opened the evening's entertain- \s she Ment with a short address. In the course s 10 hota | T his remarks he thanked the O'ymple - threaten- | Club for its assistance. He s San ns with | Mateo Athletic Ciub had for what it had accompliched. st ginnings and slow progres acles a few men cf deter had brought the club to ition. It was proposed to is the purpose of making provements, s ¥ =5 as bhis says he brought the ac- his Interests ure and thus rommence action eserving his good name ected their help and c | troducea Wil « dent of the Olympic Ciub, who his joy at seelng an athletic ciub in San Mateo, He advised the members not to go into debt by uing bonds, but gested that a committee of ladies be pointed to secure contributions from the . { wealthy residents of the county. N develoning of | Harrison also took cccasion to lecture the McRae. r sex on their heaith. The wrestling bouts were extremely teresting. Cornell and Phillips pres a realistic contest and the fair sex came nervous, fearing the pair might in- jure themselves The Press Club , and where, he appreciated and a livelihood. d joined him b been any eglected hi to press in- 2ied be- nd love- who is = Selby quartet, compos A E R. Keene, R. H s pray that! Hynt and G. R. King, scored a hit with CRNEE B selections. Schlitter and Cornell on the Roman rings won many plaudits. Miss - gl Cheridah S8tmpson, well known singer, received hearty and many en- < b Park. M. | cores for her sweet singing. Members of g e treet, charges | the Olympic Club under the direction of e AN Bt 'WO | Robert Leando swung fire clubs with obrine e iheb | skill. The boxing bouts were fast and in- ire to provide. "She | teresting. Leonard and Calrns; Murry e rted her-in | :\f.ni Altken and Sam Berger and Jimmy - fie . marriage, Britt put up fast exhibitions. R. H. Hunt ol e <he has had | S80€ himeelf into favor. There were pyr- : 1s for a | 2mids by Olymple Club men and a ciever = Yate Dutch act by Morlarity and Pe luna s | The programme under the direc- | tion of C ain D. W. Donn Joh Gleason, leader of the Olympic Club, also | assisted. The officers of the new club are | F. P. Howard, president; J. T. Cronin INSPECT NEW ~s MARIN COUNTY ROAD GUESTS vice president; H. J. Bettelheim, secre 1 Shore Company Runs Electric | tary; D. W. Donnelly, captain; L. B. Doe, T. R. Turaer, C. J. Brown, C. Kirk- Train to San Rafael and Satis- | ction Is Expressed. the president t the Nori oride, John Morton Jr., E. W. Foster, C. K. Melrose The Columbia Park boys entertained the guests of the club who visited San Mateo by electric car with songs. GOASTIN NEL OF ARTILLER MacArthur Suggests Gun Practice for Militia. alectricity for sieam as a motive charge. of electricity, ing of cars, moved like the e in an incredibly progress of | be completed and through to San Ra of this week, after inders and w ? the past on the section Rafael and the bay stopped at the WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—General Mac- s Arthur, commanding the Department of - Califorpia, {n his annual report says the . importance of an artiliery reserve for the E | Pacific Coast cannot be overestimated and > recommends that the entire organized militta of all arms located within easy distance of San Francisco be invited to participate in a course of coast artillery training at the Presidio. lowing to say on desertions: ne thousapd three hundred and forty-three ¢ this men deserted during the fiscal year. number 914 were irom the garrisons of the department and represented approximately 19.42 per cent of the main strength thercol for the vear. The remaining 430 were from re- p guals and regiments passing to and from the Philippines. It is not apparent why 80 many men resorted to this method of separating from the service | and if the depressing result couid in any way be attributed to American methods it would certainly justify the deepest solicitude on th part of sil concerned in the®milltary admi istration qf the army. As & matter of fa however, the American soldler 1s so well pro- vided for in respect to all his material nec nd his personal appearance and is so safeguarded In respect to all matters seiptine that a conclusion arises spon- taneougly in the minds of experfenced investi- gators to the effect that desertion, to & large extent, is incidental to human nature, rather than an expression of specific defects in the B TN BOX MANUFACTURERS FORM A BIG COMPANY Bixty of the Larger Mills on Coast Are Merged Into Heavily Capi- talized Concern. poration of the Californla npany were filed yes- The corporation of which $3000 is of whom there are ribed $100, are: an Francisco, C. E. Hor- J. F. Condon of Washoe nation muet accept desertion as a nhecessary evil until enlightened public cpinion can be in- A. C. Brubns of Nevada County, f Siskiyou County, G, A. Prati H. P. Martin of Sacramento n Arsdale of San Francisco, nto County, Z. 8. Cather E. Tinkham of Tehamu “ount W army as sequences s a menace to the stabllity of our dling of San Francisco | the military ideals of the population that must Nevada County, F. W. Sisson | fgnish the forces upon which the republic P. Prince of Tuolumne County, | Tust always rely in time of war. E. Read of Can- nd E. J. Hummel, T. Brophy and F. ————— PLIGHT OF THE PORTE. | Will Not Profit by the Conquering of Bulgaria. | LONDON, Sept. 19.—War between Bul- garia and Turkey is not now regarded as imminent by the Forelgn Office or other diplomatic centers in London. It is said turcrs of pine boxes in Arizona Nevada pooled their businese about feven years ago and ha ntained o disbursing agency here un. name of the Pine Box Manufacturers of which Z 5. Cather of this ity Recently it was decided to | nanent concern of the organization. and to this end the hew company was incorpo. Tated yesterdey. The same interests, about sixty box mills, on the coast are merged into | which will have as its sec. r and will maintain offices | territory, hence Turkey has nothing to { gain by hostilities. Tegarding the renewed rumors that a ry a8 o British fleet is going to Turkish waters, OAKLAND. Sept. 18.—The Southern Pa-| the press is officially informed that as cific Company bas filed a notice of appeal | Balkan matters have been left in the trom the decision of the jury which re- | bands of Russia and Austria such action tly awarded Gertrude Johuson a ver-| is not contemplated by Great Britain or, dict of $11,00 damages against the cor-| as far as known, by any other power. poration. In the meantime the powers are daily ex. MEEDERESF - changing communications with the view Says Chinese Shot Him. of determining on some possible meaps AKLAND, Sept. 19.—A complaint has| of restoring order in European Turkey. et 1 to charging You Lee of shoot- | Dalton’s Case Goes Over, Vincent O'Cennor of Golden Gate in | b a small rifie. Lee is in the| QAKLAN A , k it AKLAND, Sept. 19.—Owing to {ll- It ix alieged O'Connor, with | ners Judge Melvin was unable to take up boys. was In some vegetabie | tpe hearing of the case of Dalton against = and that the shooting occurred!(he County Auditor to-day. Dalton Is su- fle Lee was engaged in chasing them ing the county for about $8000 back sal- ary, which County Auditor Bacon has ————— withheld, alleging that be is more than New Letter Carriers Appointed. | this indebted to the county. The case OAKLAND. Sept. 18.—In accordance | went over until October 3. the authorization of the Postoffice | - oct ok "x . tat 1 Jepartment, increasing the local foree b he project of & tax pn fat beople is be- g g 4 followt bstitute m y! ing constdered in Sweden. The advocates Give men, (he Lol on R ted b mall-| o the tax argue that when o man {5 curriers have been appoin v Post- ve 8 o S . Dt T ke e |:2w :nv.eruln weight he is in a well-fed Feige Jr., Manuel J. King., Witliam' and s ard o In a position to contributs y D. Goodwin and Edward D. White. < in iha oublle funds. oy Was the manager e A it Railroad Will Appeal Case. He has the fol- | that under no circumstances will the pow- | ers permit Turkey to occupy Bulgarian | periments together, Dr. George F. Kunz, | DEDICATE HOUSE | MAKES GREATER 10 ATHLETICS RADIUM'S POWER S Discovery Increases Ac- tivity of Mysterious Substance, TS o Results Accrue From Use of Simple Sil'cte of Zinc. o Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—Working in ex- honorary curator of the Amcrican Mu- seum of Natural History, and Dr. Charles Baskerville of thé University of North Carolina belleve they have made a val- in connection with the stance known as radium. is that by uable discover mixing iemite, puiverized, f the former sub- 4 a hundred fold and ent has been devised overy dium with natural probably 107 LCHSURNE the Inc of activity) a thousand fc That, t, is the tem- P citeet of the mixing of the two substances. Time must tell whether one wil rullify the other. Willemite is a comparatively cheap sili- te of zinc. It is le also that is in willemite a substance which urecognized as a distinct ele- hich es _the radio ac- s enthusiasm ut thus far it for xranted that the one sub- stimulates the activity of “but ment tvity of merely ker stance the other, >reparations are v being made for xperiments in nr fon with discases i several mew theories have been ad- anced and will be tested in the near fu- ture plans are piactlcally complete for testing the effect of radium on skin di . including growths of a cancer- ous nature. L e e S e e e e ] NENDS PRAEE WARTIN KELLOGS Memory of Late Teach- er Perpetuated by Old Associates. RN Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, 48 Centcr Street, Sept. 19. Friends who revered him through long years of association, and friends, not o old, but cherishing him for his kind per- sonality and good works, made up the congregation that to-day gathered at Hearst Hall to attend the memorial exer- clges In honor of the late Dr. Martin Kel- logg, once president of the University of California The gathering was peculiarly represen- tative. There were men from every sia- tion life, but notably two, who were assoclate and student, respectively, with Dr. Keliogg when he began his career in California nearly fifty years ago. These men were the Rev. Samuel W. Willey of San cisco, one of the founders of the College of California and the first execu- tive officer of the greater university, and Benjamin Tracey of Sacramento, with one exception the earliest graduate of the university. But there were many more old friends of the deceased educator pres- ent, among them Warring Wilkinzon of { the State Deaf and Blind Asylum; J. B. | McChesrey, Judge John Garber, the Re F. 8. Hosmer and the Rev. J. K. McLean. was present almost the entire faculty of the untversity in cap and gown. DR. HOWISON SPEAKS. The exercises began at 3 o'clock, just | Besides these well known people there | F'rank McGinnis Blinded | after the faculty had marched in a bady into Hearst Hall from the apartments be- low and taken seats on and about the platform. President Wheeler presided and a briet eulogy of the dead. The com- memorative address was delivered by Professor George Holmes Howlison, who said in part: We ere omnce more essembled after what eeeme, indeed, but a short surcease of sor- to g expression to our s*nse of a, great eavement of the university and the community altke. It is only a brief two years since we gathered here to honor the memory of Joseph Le Conte, and now we are sum- moned, tco soon for our wishes, to note the passing and commemorats the services of Mar- | tin Kellogg, the la#t of the three bright spirits to whom the wise judgment of our first board of regents committed the serlous task of inaugurating the internal life of the uni- versity. For three and thirty years he had been our devoted gervant. In these hours of commem- oration, to be sure, we must not and cannot forget the part played by a prominent asso- ciate of Professor Kellogg in the California coliege, Dr. Horatio Stebbins, the last presi- dent of the board of trustees, without whose planning, wisdom and public ‘skill the accep- | tance of the proposals made by the trustees i | factor in the life of the fnstitution, | the college into : vies of Nevada County. | military system and as such is not within the s meda, H. W. Swift of scope of ordinary methods of control. ¥ et Councy. W au B | "TH NG lght of past experiance and conditions | P e ot g County, © T | it meems anzarent that the United States as & | duced to believe that it not only affects the | orgenization, but, in remote con- | institutions through its corrupting effect upon | | | | sequently prosperous condition, { in the past was thumble. would probably not have been gained from the State. But Professor Kellogg was our founder in a yet more intimate and still decper sens>. It was in his person first that the great, the vital principle of comprehensive humane culture, ersential as the organizing passed forward from the narrower field it held in the vastly enlarged ono afforded by the university. Fortunate was it for him, fortunate for us, his successors, most fortunate for the State and its coming genera- tions of youth, that his two eminent col- lengues, John ‘and Joseph Le Conte, though appointed to renresent the sciences of mature, were both men of genulue and disciplined love of man. DAY OF COMMEMORATION. B0 this day Is one of grateful commemora- tion rather than of sad lament, this hour an hour of consslation rather than of grief. Grief at_our profound bereavement we Indeed has for we huve actually lcst the converse of our admirable and revered brother, and long as he had been here, We vet feel as though we had icet him too soon, so intact did he still appear, both in body and in mind, so stable in a quiet maturity that kept Its powers of judgment and even of acquisition quite unimpared. Professor Willlam C. Merrill in his eulogy sald that “Dr. Kellogg was a Ro- man,” for his nature, being sympathetic with Roman Ideals, his character was profoundly affected by his intellectual contact with the works of that great peo- ple, which in turn had affected the con- duct of his whole life. Professor Willard B. Rising read the biography of Dr. Kel- | logg's life and Columbus Bartlett's tribute was delivered by his son, Louls de Fonte- nay Bartlett. A quartet, consisting of Charles Elston, Howard Merrill, Walter de Leon and Melvin G. Jeffries, rendered two songs. e C. L. Crellin Very Low. OAKLAND, Sept. 19.—The condition of C. L. Crellin of the Ruby Hill vineyard, who is critically ill from pneumonia, was such at 1 o'clock this.afternoon as to cause utmost alarm. The patient revived later and gave the attending physicians, Drs. Cope, Taylor, Robertson and Thorn, a chance for hope. “Gold thimbles,” sald the jeweler, “‘are rarely to be seen nov:d.fi. Time was Whetl every young woman had one. They were a regulation birthday or Christmas present. ut the young American girl of to-day would be disgusted with the gift of a gold thimble. She would much rather have one of those long, red automobiles or a g saddle horse. The word thimble It was worn, .""—Philadelphia you know, on the thum! Ronari ntroduced the speakers after delivering | mmmmmmmmw’m“.” ORRCHORCHORCHORI O MILITIA RULES CRIPPLE CREEK Sheriff Fails in Attempt to Arrest a Lieu- tenant. e Adjutant General Bell Says the Warrant Is of No Value There. —_— CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo, Sept. 19. ‘i Emil Petcrson, one of fifty men brought | | from Duluth, Minn., to work in the gold | ran through the militia guard line | this ‘morning, when he learned that a strike was in progress here. Lieutenant j Harting ordered him to halt and as he | did not do so, fired a shot In the air. Pet erson escaped. He sald the Duluth men were promised 3 to % a day In wages. | Most of them went to work in the Strat- ton Independence mine This afternoon Peterson filled a com- plaint against Lieutenant Harting and Sheriff dobertson armed with a warrant went to the military headquarters and cemanded the surrender of the officer. Adjutant General Sherman M. Bell, to whom the warrant was presented, exam- iced it and returned it to the Sheriff with the remark that it was of no value there. He then izsued an order rescinding the passes of Sheriff Robertson and his dep- s0 that they are now denied admis- 9.—Late last ted the meeting of the Free Coinage Union at Altman and arrested scven of the most prominent union men in the district. The prisoners are W. F. Davis, M. A. Shimler, T. C Foster, Victor Poole, P. H. Mullaney, E. | Johnson and C! s R. Beckman. | | A guard was thrown around the meeting place and the offl announced that | { cvery man, before he would be allowed | to depart, would have submit to an| | examination. No specific charge has { been placed against the prisoners. They are held under the same conditions as the | other men who have been arrested since the arrival of the militia in the district. All threg members the executive | committee’ in charge re strike, Ken- | 200 to | nison, Parker and Davis, are now con- | | fined in the military guardhouse, and other men have taken charge of the strike. —_——— TRIES TO PLACE BLAME ON HIS SUPERIOR OFFICER Sergeant in Germen Army Testifies That His Captain Instructed | Him to Flog Recruits. | BERLIN, Sept. 19.—At the second court- | martial of Sergeant Breldenbach of the | Eleventh Infantry, who was sentenced re- cently to three and a half years' impris- { onment for ill-treatment of ‘soldiers, the | sergeant said he had to flog recruits “like | cattle” to make them learn, and added that his captain, Von Grolman, told him | to act as he did. Captain Grolman was sharply questioned by the judge advocate | as to the truth of this statement, but the | officer refused to answer. fe3 Breidenbach was found guilty of 1207 of | hich he was charged | g | ; r | | | the offenscs with w | and sentenced to eight years’ imprison- ment and degradation. @ siiebebeedelmefeieieleleleiufufoleieioie- @ AGID THROWING -~ BRINGS TROUBLE “AN OLD SALT.” H i H 06000006000009000000000000000020000000000080065% i “An Old Salt,” by the Belgian artist, A. Boudry, is not only an ex- ample of vigorous and skillful brush work, but a fine bit of character study. The type portrayed is one of those oid men of the sea, bluff and sturdy, hardened by rude labor, danger, and exposure to the elements. They are apt to be curt of speech and often so taciturn that the appel- lation “a sad sea dog” is fittingly bestowed upon them. In most of them, however, there is generally concealed beneath their rough exterior a large heart and often a vein of humor, which only requires an occasion to be brought out. The effect of wear and exposure to variable weather upon the gar- ments of those who toil on the sea, or in the flelds, is to destroy their | l | ; | | | | | ? and “Sophs” Fear Di° is=aL | color and bring various colors into a harmony of neutral tomes which is 1 Smiss | nearly always picturesque and agreeable to the eye. The broken and sub- | — | dued colors of this picture are well suited to its subject, and the artist has Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, 2143 Center Street, Sept. 19. The chances of Frank C. Mclanes of Vallejo, the young freshman whose eye| | was injured the sophomore-freshman | rush yesterday at the University of Cali- fornia, losing or retalning the sight of the fnjured member are about even. Dr. E. J. Boyes of Oakland, the speclalist to whom he was taken, told his patient to-| day that he wouid be unable to say g whether he could save the injured eye un- | |'et the bandages are removed, in & day or 3 so. McInnes had a very narrow escape from having his entire eye burned out. | Just a little more and he would have re- cleverly compensated for their lack of brilliancy by a vigorous effect of light and dark and the rich imparts of his painting. The last named quality is reproduced by the process employed in making The Call art sup- plements with a truthfulness unapproached by any other. One might readily imagine at a first glance that the rough surface of the canvas had been reproduced by embossing. A. Boudry is a native of Belgium and has his studio in Antwerp. He has made a specialty of pictures which have for their subjects scenes and types of people of the sea. His work is highly apprecifited in his own country, where he has received many honors, and his reputation and the sale of his work in America are Steadily increasing. : § % 2005000000002230%000000000000000000000 e e e e o PR PICTURE WITH NEXT SUNDAY CALL, September 27 | by the water with which he quickly | bathed it. McInnes said to-day: If 1 hadn't dashed water into my eye right | away 1 would have been blind. That was all | that saved me. I havn'e been able to find out | yet what kind of acld it was and the doctors | are not sure, though all the symptoms point to_vitriol. It is hard to conceive of any one, partlcu- | larly & university man, using acid among a crowd of men, but it seems there is such a person. 1 was guarding the ballot box at the time it hapvened As the sophomores closed | in on us I happened to look up a moment and just then the acid fell into my eye. Some of the sophomores acted like ruffians. _ Price 5 Cents. Price 5 Cents. Price 5 Cents. THEY ARE FRAMING THE CALL ART SUPPLEMENTS o The Following Art Dealers Are Makinz a Specialty of Framing Gall Art Supplements: They didmt soem to know any bounds. Why, A g three of them caught a freshman name MENTO—Hevener, Mier street; Gage's art store, 509 East SAN G 3 Kems 404 1 yesterday marning in Noxth Hul Co.s.Accl%AJ street: C. N. Davis, book Main Street; \Weber's art store, 425 71 p‘nfli‘?ro—w' F. Fullie & o 3 T T D store, 817 K street. East Main_ street. FRESNO_Sronce & Dick. oo T o el i L PETALUMA—H. 5. Gutermutes J. gAl?gsI\‘_nLLE—JG.SvZk Hulx. REDDING—W. Bergh, “Bergh # 3 M. Wyckoff. AKLAND—E. J. Saake, 13 Tele- Furniture ¢ any”: "Hot The faculty committee on students’ af- SAN JOSE—George Denue, M. Len- graph avenue: A. A. Barlow, 389 Houston Furninrs Company 000%™ fairs has not yet discussed the rush, but| zen & Son. A Twelfth street. REDWOOD 1:1'1'\'—\\).7 L. Kline. when it docs something surprising will nggoc#'r%fi;t—glog-no?:s: ah!_ag:@(k. P.:“_‘Y;-:gaxl),\% P. Magagnos, 1358 BSA.\';[:,.\ CRUZ—H. BE. Irish, Cooke happen. The committee has the names 3 e e R T S tias & W ros.. F. R Hew, George Hoban. of many of the students who participated R S Ay 3 o N JACKSON—E. G. Freeman Co. E é | g in the free fight, furnished by Professor Charles A. Noble, who was present.’ Pro- fessor C. L. Cory, chairman of the com- mittee, refused to discuss the affalr to- d Wilhelmine Deetz, lot on W line Eighth o e B g 0B B (contractors), architects ; —— work for same on same; REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS. S—— $10. day, saying merely: R 19 Estaie of Ellas Jacob (by S. Mitchell and | | g e S “There wil be an investigation into the| o £d T O T orcumaor o pau | APTL NeTer, S, 1o Core R Biebe | tumerF. Burke tcontusponss acobnest D conduct of the students yesterday, bu‘t & G‘M:‘ e N " of . Webster street. | of xw:xm.-m 2923 by":‘!yfg?»'ilnmm. 200 § | gole‘g‘rv\anfimemnnm and additions to buflding no action will be taken until the students’ | 1o 7% O % ‘6o by’ & 137:6, quitclatm | Teaac and Emily Eliaser o Hosa Cohen, lot | taenin, o' oqty DIAHond street ¢ affalrs committee meets.’” yrossg i o | on E line of Twenty-third avenue, 235 8 of J | Stmon n"hw:h“.n.'.?:,,'“’ - - President Wheeler also refused to_dis-| “Fo0 7. ana Neille 8. Goodlos to Eilse A. | Sret. S 75 & 02 N T8:1is W 0T:4): gti | Works (contractore), archiirers fal cuss the situation, on the ground that it| Drexler, ram 0, Waltew . and Irene M. Phillips | berg—Cast and wrought fron work for a thre i . 3 rexler, et > Sidney V. Smith, lot on | to Walter M. Heywood, Harrlet G. Hunt and | story and basement bulldine on 8 11 c o Loeey is the duty of the students’ affairs com-| Jobn de Vaul’ to BARed O Slrelis N 56 | Harry H. Hoywogd undivided ¥ of follow- | street, 110:6 W of Grant svemue. W o2 o o mittee to investigate all such matters. Dy 15 00 $10, = Fid o TR 20y pav3y et 86 8 of | 106 S350, : 3 00; $10, 5 X . lot 15, Bernal Home- vl 2 Bas R < AT o Hianpas: Lisbes to Eagar . Frest L lot on SW line of Mary street, 35 | sett (contraciors. ermien: g TPmaT B Says Wife Is Insane. street. W 37:6 by N 137:0; $10. - crlrr;lr_g:.rfg“%'f”::mgvznféfl kn.l‘!:“l':t :T;"rbe'nt—r, stair znd irom work, . OAKLAND, Sept. 10.—Mrs. Mary Han-| James J. and Johanna Manseau to James | (g T JCre™ r, CoCr gy e o Dot s dR L ey o ST C. and Mugaret J, Bourbin, lot on 8 line of $0660. sen of 1616 Twenty-third avenue, Fruit- “ % & of Scott, 2 60 by 8 §2:6; | David and Rosle Salfield to Henry and Ma- | square. SW 50 by NW 200: vale, was confined in the Insane ward of [ Fig> **t & : jle Koehler, & % of Jot 23 and " 45 of lot | J. I Stein (owner) with the Receiving Hospital this afternoon on | * John D. and Lillie C. Spreckels to Blia T. | g Uack by SURiCt SRR B, () o o | Seomiragton; arenics the complaint of her husband, who claims | Chalmers (wits of Mo R0 1200 200U "G 21 | line of Sadowa street, 505 W of Capitol, W | building (flats) on hi¢ wite has become the victim of sul- | Fasg strect S0 2 by § 135, lot 1. Bock C, Railroad Home- | E of Sloimer. &35 cidal mania. He says that he just pre- Murray te Catherine Murray, lot | *% SURSiation o, & Siet tion 360; $7400. ; yented her stabbing herself with a large mT;;'lnl :i B;old;!&' 43 KRM Montgomery ..,";;"E..,’l’..’."h ml,nckls"}le!:': a‘;‘hm' -u ..5.";"_',\?1' c\enrrk'l"nz: :-':—m l.:;'x':.‘rv:r ;m?:f;; - butcher knife and a little later found her | street, W 65:9 by b Raiph Eilis to_E, C. McColgan, est: | E line of Steiner street, ¢ Eill eating the sulphur off a large quantity of | _Frederick H. and Mary . Houston and e} W X Mary Ellls, No. 28,977, deed and assi t; ignmen Builders’ Contracts. Charles and Harry Bush (owners) with Hetty Touls and Jennie Friedlander to Mary A, Crichton (wife of Peter), lot on W line of Leavenworth street, 70 N of Washington, N 67:6 by W 137:6; 810, a0 (owner) with A. 3 | (contractor and architect)—Carpenter & two-story frame building on S | street, 235 E of Dupont. E 20 by § matches. She is 49 vears of age. —_——————— Marriage Licenses. A. and Peter Crichion to August and | e - ; Rk oo er s A OAKLAND, Sept. 19.—The following | ., M2 410, Bros. (contractors), architects Salfield & Koh:- ] Marfe E, Schaeffer, same: $10. | berg—1 descent’ marriage licenses were lssued by the | Bilatora P. and’Gertrude G. Piint to E R e E s Te & Suspected Thief in the Toils. Counts, Clerie. o-day:Clgiide 1 Dedall. | san)) C U ttn 0L oy S 25, $i0. | SorT, of O Farrell and Carlos streets, S 117:6| Jumes Eustis a youns man. was arrested 31, and Lucy H. Bates, 26, o - > nd Kro ¢ - last night by Detective Coleman on suspicion James Russell, 35, Oakland, and Ferdinat Same owners with Otis Elevator Company | men who robbed John of being one of the Joe, the gypsy, of $4000 a féw days ago. his guii, aithough he admits meda; Catherine Raber, 31, San Francisco; Joa- quin Santos, 26, and Ellen Rosa, 24, both vi of lot on ;:d'd:;!“‘ 8§ of Twenty-second street, § 33:4 by B 100; gift. | (contractors), architects same—nElectric passen- 8 d sidewalk elevator for same on same; San Franclsco Land Company to Agnes T.| same owners with M. Cohn ( Eustls denfes of San Leandro; Thomas E. McKee, 2, | 00 107 0n W line of Stxth avenue, 208 Mitects same—Painting, eto teorractor). | that he is one of the men who were in the San Francisco, and Dalsy L. Severy, 35, | & or G =t N 25 by W 120; — nting. etc.. for same on | L\l of the camp when the robbery eo- of a street. $1. same ;. ). Berkeley. Emma and Alphonig Harrington to Adoiph i Same owners with W. F. Wilson Company ’