The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 29, 1904, Page 7

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 It seems the great furniture and carpet sale at Patto- sien’s, corner Sixteenth and Mission streets, keeps cash buyers of this city and State POLICE COURT BY A WOMAN’ |For Ten Consecutive M Winifred Norton, a buxom negress, was a most voluble witness in the as- sault case of Daniel Freeman, colored, against John Garider, white, in the court of Judge Cabaniss yesterday. She talked and talked and talked, th | recklessness of pronunciation and pau- city of punctuation, while bench, attor- neys and chair-warmers sat spelibound by the oral flow. At the end of ten minutes, during which period she had seemingly not effected one intake of breath, the Judge managed to cast off his thralldom and stop the torrent. very busy. The store con- tinues to be as busy as ever. The public buying now save fifty cents on every dollar at Pattosien’s, «# « & « | the parties, AMTU szmn Detroit Sails for Santo Domingo. e COLON 28.—The TUnited ' States it coaled and left “olon ¥ to Domingo. is coaling that she Domingo. 9 PAYS, Starting SATURDAY, April 2. NEW BIG SHOWS CIRCUS, MENAGERIE MUSEUM, HIPPODROME Just Twice Larger than Ever Before 2= RINGS ®'s7i6e™ RINGS-2 STAGE A NEW CIRCUS THROUGHOUT ARENIC ARTL AND Al ACTORS s got it, for Hills . AMUSEXENT& SAX FRANGISCOS COLUMBIA INEE SATURDAY. MARY MAI\VERING ank McKee.) w Modern Comedy, HO EY 'VIO()V LAST 5 NIGHTS — MA fll\RRlET'S oPERA House 0 SEAT SALE GRAN MAM'SELLE ¥ WILL OPEN ! - Figkp|"0A ., Aonctt e !s e GABLEH HANDSOMEST CHORUS IN THE WOSLD BIG ACTS. ~ C 5 NEW Five Mowats; Mazuz and Mazett; Coakley and McBride; Wesson, A NIWTERY £ Waiters and Wesson; James H. Trat Completely Baffies Solution. Cullen: ANNA EVA FAY er & SOW\OLE\ICY" La Belle Guerrero: Taffary’s Dogs: Billy Clifford and Adelina Roattino and Clara Stevens. Regular Matibees o 50 OPERA TIVOLI&SE: SECO \D WEBK NDOUS st ALCAZAR =52 AT 2 TO-NIGET—Mats. Sat. and Suxz. LAST WEEK ©f Wagzer's Impressive Miracle Play, ...PARSIFAL EENTRAL~ AVE & ~ WE HAVE | ANOTHER MAD: HIT! {OAKLAND RACE TRACK‘ NEW CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB, ‘ Racing Each Week Da-. Rain or Shine. i Six or More Races Daily. | Races commence at 2:15 p. m. sharp. For special trains stopping at the track take | Clark's Comedy Dog Circus 4 a Great Show Every Aftermoon azd | | S P. Ferry, foot of Market street, at 12, 12 Evexing in the Theater. & — | 1200, 1:30 or 2 0’clock. No smoking in last two ARABET DE LA |cars, which are reserved for ladies and mlr escorts. Returning trains leave track at 4:10 nfll 4:45 and immediately after the last race. THOMAS H. WILLIAMS, President. i PERCY W. TREAT, Secretary. | MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. SCHUMANN- HEINK |SEATS_READY NEXT_ THURSDAY mm—-fl-u $1.50 AXD llfl. | Concarts Alhamara, Eve. Apr, 5-1. Mat. 8 | man's re | only provocation for the offense being | his ankles, | Mogzan In the complaint Mr. Garider was ac- | cused of having assaulted Mr. Freeman | in the back yard of the latter gentle-; dence on Jessie street, the the complainant’s mild expostulation| against the kieking of his two-year-old | puppy and other canine treasures by the defendant. The kicking was not denied, but in justification of it Mr. Garider displayed a wound on one of | which he averred had been inflicted by the teeth of the two-year- old puppy prior to his assault upon | that animal. Miss Norten had not witnessed the quarrel between Mr. Garider and Mr. Freeman, but she did know something of the character respectively borne hy and she could also vouch for the calm temperament of the Fre man kennel as a whole and the peace- able disposition of the two-year-old puppy in particular. A more amiable enimal than that two-year-old she had never met. As friends of Mr. about them the high-; nd in the esteem of Freeman himself was o pectability. n being a woman of few words, and her abstention from over-indul- gence in language was, she felt certain, | her salvation from slaughter at the | Hands of the Gari es. They were a | malicious, quarrelsome lot, and her only wonder was that Mr, Freeman and his dogs had escaped bodily injury at| their hands so lonz. She could keep| that court interested, although in-| cre for a week in recountal of | ges against the peace and dig of the neighborhood committed by of Mr. Garider—out- ly were of his on. It was at s recital Judge the brake. witnes herself o the rlrflmw»i hfi nore obnoxious man | ey had never met. every means of a spark of ous to fire. They had into consideration and and to treat him but he haught g to forget and r—than whom 1hv'!‘ = shatge e R urt In sheer self-protection the Judge dis- missed the case. the severity of the 1t to previous offend- Richard streets, and his tem ) thirty days was made h) 'hv‘ut a - v street, failed n foto the court of it was judicially an- he does not appear next n the sun of $100 will fehed The police opine that the inventor of the alleged gout cure has departed from the city avoid imprisonment, and | this opinion is shared by the boy who runs the elevatcr at 628 Montgomer: is office traps have been taken out,” aid the conductor of the lift to Judg flew the coop.” “I'm an ac-tor,” was Harry Harms’ deliberately delivered answer to Judge Mogan's stereotyped query as to occu pation. “Legit or comedy?” inquired the court. “At_present I'm doing a monologue (n a Ma street theater.” “And what did you mean by ge: inside ire lines on O’'Farrell st and resisting the officer who requested you to go outside?” “My presence within the ropes was unintentional, and the officer addressed me in 2 manner that was unnecessar- ily discourteous. I'm not accustomed to being bullied.” Patrolman Murphy stated was ordered to expel the monologist by Lieutenant Gleason, who shouted, “Murphy, chuck him out.” When hs attempted to obey his superior office the defendant ‘“sassed” him and re- sisted arrest. Taken under advisement. ting That the police are keeping a sharp lookcut for violators of the curfew or- dinance was demonstrated in Judge Mogan's court, where three Cancasian youngsters and half a dozen Asiatic juveniles were accused of hav- ing been on the streets after 8 o'clock p. m. without escort or good excuse for being away from home. The white Jads were arrested at Brannan and Gil- bert streets and the slant-eyed boys in Chinatown. All were sent up to the JU\ enile C ourt . ok aboard the FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY She prided | , but that organ was ab- | overtures. | iation he had visited | unday Cail from | >riber at Califor- xudge ~and it looks to me as if he has | t | that he | vesterday | SPELLBOUND S BUSY TONGUE —— inutes a Colored Witness Testifies Without Apparent Intake of Breath, While His Honor Cabaniss Helplessly Listens ;coast steamer Rainier, was walking a large quantity of choice provisions. when he was overhauied by Manager A. J. Pollard. given the edibles by the steward, but as that functionary was net authorized to give away the ship's property the cook was arrested and charged with larceny. His defense will be heard to- | day by Judge Mosgan. o el S Three emall boys were caught in the act of playing craps last Saturday in City Hall Square, and in possession | of one of them, Danny Williams, were found two dice that had been made ex- pressly for cheating. One of the cubes | bore three fives and the other was marked five fives, whereas one five only Is allotted to each cube by Hoyle and other {nfaliible guides to square sport. | Dnnny will be sentenced to-day by dge Mogan, and the other two of- (ender! were sent to lhe Juvenile Court. FR Daniel Hennessey, a bookkee;\er out of a job, ate $1 10 worth of choice vi- ands in a Ninth-street restaurant and | then tendered one dime in payment of | his blil. The restaurateur testified that | | Daniel’'s order embraced the reguiar din from soup to nuts, and di- \gr> sed occasionally to take In dainty | e dishes. en cents was my sole cash cap-! ital,” pleaded Dantel to Judge ¢ unlsn. and once I got started eating I could not stop stomach’s craving | was satisfiec soon as I get em- ployment I pay for all I con- | sumed.” ‘A quail-on-toast appetite and a cof- tee-and-doughnuts income form an un fortunate combination,” commented the court, “and as you do not look or speai like a habitual meal-stealer I will let you go if the complaining witness is willing to accept your promise to pay.” The Dmm:se as flccenled | . alias Gaynor, made twenty-fourth appearance before Judge Conlan on the same old charge of drunk and disorderly and she was remanded fo) tence tiil to-day. \\'hen she bec inebriated Nellie has a habit saulting her six year-old fath , who resides on Minr street, near S th. | | | Pat McMahon, aged and combative, was transferred from the County Alms- | house to the County Jail for ten days by Judge Caban In a quarrel with another inmate « tion last Satu fought with all | the nce or pun o | Edward Britt. Mr 1e earne hing power of James McMahon When she was arraigned for neglec h fire escapes the O : treet b £-house rented and ma ged by , Mrs. Annie Peyser ed up the blame to the owner of premi Architect S. Kohlberz, and yesterday that gentleman appeared before Judge Mogan and declared that he fault lay with the electrician of the building. ‘Bring in the electrician and let us find out to w e switches th sighed th»ek?u ~ bpena issued a rent of responsib | to the bailiff, and a s cordingly. John Swanson, bartender, struck | Charles Sastrom. a payior, on the head with a club in a Fourth-street saloon Sunday night, and he has been in- structed to explain the assault to Judge Conlan next Wednesday. Sas- trom dwells at Shipley street, but his cranium was so badly smashed that he was taken to the hospital in- stead of to his home, for treatment. mOorrow. | “I'm an .ex-professional catcher and have a chance to play with | the Leavenworth team this season,” | said Albert T. Kelley to Judge Caban- iss, before whom he | stealing a lot of towels and bed linen from the Perry-street hotel in which he was emploved. “You don’t need towels or bed sheets your athletic capacity, do you?” queried the court. “No,”” answered the defendant; ‘I needed them to raise money to buy booze, and if you let me go to Leaven- worth, I'll tell where every rag of hem can be found.” “I'll take your offer under considera- | tion till to-morrow.” said his Hono: “but in the meantime you would be foolish to bank heavily oh going to Leavenworth before you go to jai.” P i in Mabel Wallace was fined $100 for be- ing concerned in the drugging and rob- bing of George M. Wilkie, a soldier, in a Stockton-street lodging-house on February 16, last. Katie Donovan. who | | turned State’s evidence against Mabel, for vagrancy. was arrested was discharged | will be sentenced to-day { Night Clerk Cleal, who with the two women, viet. Jugge Mcgan hflard the cases. Mpyrtle and Francis ,allagher an agdd counle accused of stealing $60 from a railroad laborer in a Minna- street lodging-house, created a little scene in Conlan’s court while they | were awaiting examination. The man | was among the prisoners in the cage ceptacle, her back against the ba As the serfousness of her pnosition be came apparent, she began to sob and | wail, and her spouse thrust his arm | between the bars and patted her gray | head soothingly. while = sympathetic | tears coursed down his own furrowed | cheeks. Court officers tried to quiet the woman, but their efforts were availing. and when svmptoms of hy: | teria began to appear, the judge hur- | riedly ordered her removal. “Don’t hurt her, gentlemen; | don’t hurt her!” implored th man. The policemen handled her tenderly ! enough. v please : e old grie Sixteen times had James Phelps, sol- dier, slashed Fred Rolander, a com- rade, before he was disarmed of the ' knife with which he evidently intend- | ed to kill, and Judge Conlan yenerdav held him to answer for assault with intent to murder, with Dail fixed at $1000. The stabbing took place in a | saloon, where the men had heen drink- ing before they began to quarrel. s e - Mrs. Smith Must Refand. Judge Sloss yesterday gave Annie | Freese judgment for $1300 against Adelalde Lloyd Smith, the woman who | was arrested a few months ago on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses. Mrs. Freese. gave Mrs. Smith $1300 to invest in oil stock and never received any return. Mrs. | Smith did not appear to defend the suit. —_——— ‘Wants Pay for Use of Play. The Fischer-Rebman Theater Com- i pany was sued for $600 vesterday by Harry K. Wolff, who claims that the defendant owes him the amount sued for under an agreement to pay him for the use of the play, “The Round- g:.; which he had leased from A. W. ' down the gangplank of that craft with | ‘Wilfred said he had been | he former institu- | ness if not | He will be able to appear in court to- | baseball | was arraigned for | for lack of evidence sufficient to con-) and the woman sat outside that re- | ATTACKS SOME GOSPEL HYMNS S g Professor Buck Strongly Objects to Sacred Songs of a Weak Construction | | CONDEMNS QUARTETS :Dr. Adams Speaks of Saints Who HaveGone toOakland, | Leavi ing the Smners Here | | | i | Quartets in churches and the ;ospel, | hymns were attacked by Professor | Charles G. Buck of the San Francisco Seminary in a paper he read before lh! | Presbyterfan Ministers’ Association | | yesterday morning. Professor Buck' has before registered his protest; | against the gospe! hymn, and his eriti- | cism was given full report in The Call { The poverty of the poetry and the com- ! position of many of the hymns came in | for severe handling in the hope that| the Presbyterian body would take care | to adopt the standard hymns which have been officially recognized. The Rev. E. K. Strong joined in the| criticism and agreed fully with Pm- fessor Buck. He gave it as his opinion | .xrat the quartet is “absolutely worth- i less.” He considered that the gospel g)mnal was made up generally by pad-_ ing. Then the Rev. James Woodworth ex-| | pressed a leaning toward some of | hymns which were the subject of dis- | cussion, but advised that while there | were a number of them worthy, there | were others, he thought, should be dis- { carded. “Throw out the rubbish,” he said, “and there will still be good ones left.” | The Rev. Mr. Woodworth then came | | to the subject of doleful hymns, and de-| clared that when his time came to die, | he would not wish that “Out of the Tomb” should be sung at his bedside, but rather the inspiriting and lifting gospel hyma, Jesus Loves Me.” The Rev. J. M. McElhinney in gh.n“ support to the paper took occasion to} condemn anything that was not of the| highest and most reverent in worship. | He took exception to what he consid- ered was levity indulged in some in- stances of service. He had no sympa- thy with those who joked with their| congregation, and declared that where it was resorted to it only aroused dis-! gust. He considered that levity is hurt- ful to the Christian servic: The Rev. C. C. Herriott took part in the discussion and was of the opinion | that while some of the gospel hymns should never be sung there were th that to his mind were worthy comp tions. { The Rev. H. N. Bevier, in asking that the committee that was appointed o make arrangements for the return to the city of the Rev. Dr. Campbell Mor- gan be discharged, informed the min- isters that Dr. Morgan had, he believed, accepted a call to Westminster Chapel, | London. i OAKLAND CITY OF AINTS. ive committee of the Evan- ! n met yesterday afternoon, | George C. Adams, D.D., de- livered an address and made particular ellusion to th# evangelistic work Dr. Campball Morgan while in the eit Dr. Adams paid high compliment the dignified, thoughtful method of Dr. Morgan, whose ideas were those thut reach the thoughtful men and women of a community. herings in the city were | h ol \apaflir v of his capacious | gregational Church, still the mee {in Oakland, sald Dr. Adams, brought out greater assemblages, which he attributed to the home life, the families of Oakland and also, he said, “to the fact that the saints had gone to live in Oakland. while the sin- ners remain in San Francisco.” Dr. Adams, in speaking on the sub- ject, said that in San Francisco mar-| ried couples live in lodging-houses, apartments and boarding-houses, where | | there were no children and where chil- | dren were not aliowed. MISSION WORK IN INDIA. R J. W. West, principal of Reid | Christian Coliege, Lucknow, India, ad- | dressed the Methodist Ministers’ Asso- ciation yesterday on “Christian Pro- gress in India. During the meeting the following of- ficers of the Ministers’ Assoclation were | chosen for the next six months: Presi- dent, Dr. W. S. Mathew; vice president, | tev. Clarence Reed; secretary. Rev. i R. Walton; executive rommntee Drl F. M. Larkin, Rev. C. K. Jenness and | { Dr. E. R. Willis. | At a meeting of the executive com- | mittee yesterday, which has in charge | the arrangements for the forthcoming great missionary convention of the Methodist Episcopal church, it was de- cided to give the sixteen bishops who will attend a receptiom at the Occi- dental Hotel on Monday evening, April %. Dr. G. B. Smyth presided at the meeting. i Members of the Christian Church' | Ministers’ Association met at the Y. C. A. building vesterday afternoon. Dr. W. M. White announcesd that the new West Side Christian Church, | Bush street, near Det‘madero, will be | dedicated Sunday, May 1 A general invitation will be extend- | jed the congregations of all the churches of the city to participate in | (he exercises. TO PRINT ADDRESSES. A wish having been expressed by| numerous merchants who attended the service last week at the Chamber | of Commerce under the auspices of| | the Brotherhood of St. Andrew that| | the addresses be printed for distri-| ! bution, it has been decided on the ini- tiative of Robert Braden to consider ‘(avorablv he suggestion. The Episcopalians of the city are looking with great interest to the ar- | rival this week of the Rev. David J. | Evans, D. D., who comes to take | charge of Grace Church. The new rector will deliver his initial sermon {at Grace Church Easter Sunday. ' A reeeption will be tendered Dr. Evans next Tuesday evening. April 5, by the members of Grace Church at ! the Century Club. | The Rev. George W. White will de-| | liver his lecture, “The Black Napo- leon,” at Simpson Memorial Church Thursday night, March 31. The Rev. B. F. Sargent read a pa- per on “Evolution” before the Con- 'grenncual Ministers’ Association yes- | terday. { —_—————————— Traveler's Outfits. i Dress suit cases, traveling rolls, trunks, valises, combs. brushes, lap tab- lets, pocketbooks, card cases, bill books, | cameras and _toilet articles. All fine | leather goods let:z«l in_goid free of | Best and Shnborn, Vail £ 1 Market st. lowest prices. | - “EASTER MORN,’ A Beautiful Colortype, FREE WITH THE EASTER CALL, OUT NEXT SUNDAY. ! { | I Am So Gilad That - | compiied with that subpenas be issued | its neglect in the premises. | on reports being furnished when asked GREATER.\by nearly 20,000 cases than the importations tions of any other brand. { The Extra Dry of the superb new vintage now nrnvmg \ is conceded to be the choicesty Champagne / produced this decade. UNION - SOUTHERN" PACIFIC You reach Chicago .- St. Louis Swiftly, smoothly, serenely without fret or jar in SPECIAL PARTIES TO THE EXPOSITION Call or send postal to S. F. BOOTH, General Agent, U. P. R. R. 1 Montgomery St., San Francisco days+ or any Southern Pacific Agent ORDER FOR THE GREAT TWENTIETH CENTURY COOK BOOK. Mail This Order to The San Frazeisco Call With TSa The San Fraacisco Call, San Francisco, Cal: Inclosed herewith please find ?sc, for which send me ome eopy of The Call's Great Twentieth Century Cook Book. (Fif:p Cents is The Call's Premium rate tc all its six-month subscrid- ers to the daily and Sunday paper, and the additional 23c is to prepay shipping charges.) STREET ...ccccvccevccmccscccccccccccen CITY .cicceececccccnsammectccaccsccssaca STATE ..c.ccececcsercccaccccncnccccccccn MAY SUBPENA WORKS BOARD .-=22 =2, n | Morrow was unable to take up» the | case of the stri Rawhide miners, Supervisors Will Insist o Compliance of City Depart-|who had been summoned to appear | for contempt of court for violating a ments With Its Requests|strixe injunction recently issued by crrersssssssenscnmnn srssssstsscnsenssann ceeevmasssccsenseman D 4 | RAWHIDE STRIKERS GET ANOTHER WEEK'S DELAY | |Case to Be Heard Next Monday. Showing That Mountain Copper Company Can Destroy Fumes. Owing to the pressure of other mat | Judge Morrow. The matter will be (CE DR ST A | heard next Monday. The Board of Supervisors vesterday | _ Assistant United _States Attorney directed that a third request be made | Fickert read portions of a voluminous on the Board of Works to furnish | =3 of afdavis i the mefter of the plans for the proposed widening of |jynction to restrain the Mountain Cop- Dupont street, from Bush north, and | per Company of Keswick, Shasta in the event that the request is not | County, frem continuing to discharge sulphurous acid from the works and |des(r0} ng the trees and other vege- {tation for miles around. The gist of these was that it would not be nee- | essary for the copper company to go out of business in order to abate the nuisance, because processes were n use in other parts of the world where- by the suiphurous acid fumes were eliminated and prevented from es- caping. The matter went over until next Monday. citing the Commissioners of Works to appear before the board and explain Brandenstein explained that resolu- tfons asking for information referred to city officiais and departments by the board had often been ignored and allowed to slumber in many instances, but that it is now proposed to insist —_—————————— Pattosien’s Selling Out Prices. Solid Oak Folding Book Cases. former- Iy $6.09: closing-out prices, $3.25. - ner Sixteenth and Mission streets. ——— Values His Fingers Highly. Montague F. Salmon, who, while employed by t Standard Biscuit Company, lost four fingers of his | right hand in a dough roiler, sued the corporation «yesterday for $50,000 damages, claiming that the company, knowing that he was inexperienced. was guilty of negligence in placing -him in charge of the machine. ————————— Meoney for Depositors. Judge Murasky made an order yes- ]terday directing that the receiver of | the insoivent International Bank and Trust Company set aside the funds row in his hands for the benefit of the depositors. The amount approximaltes for, even if it is necessary to subpena the heads of departments. Relative to the request that Mayor Schmita report the status of the pro- posed litigation to collect the amount of ex-Cashier White's shortage from the members of the Board of Works the Mayor replied that the matter is in abeyance, as no funds had been | provided by the board for the coilec- | tion of the shortage. “I understand,” said Brandemexn.[ “that the claim against the late Com- | missioner Mendell’s estate has been | outlawed because it was not presented in time." “I do not think so,” said the Mayor; “and I will take under ndvuemem whether I will turnllh the repon asked for by the board.” Regarding the request that the Board of Works furnizh a report on the advisability of the city doing its own street sweeping, a second request was ordered sent to the board asking for an early reply in view of the fact ’" ARty that the award of a contract for street ! sweeping will be made in Jume. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. The petition of citizens that the so- . called pound ordinance be amended so ' AMENT. as to permit horses and cows to be = staked upof;lnn:fl;ud lots, dhhunt at | Would -d‘r Be If One Was | least one locl rom any house or ’..fl Sins of Others? dwelling, was referred to the stmt' “Oh! I m: ey e of those hair tonles ‘-0.'1’“:;{::_' p « | some time ago an and it never did me & Bt U Baehr filed statemen! of good.” showing that $15,666 45 was expended That’s what many people are saying for extra ‘filerb in his oflk::‘, “;: ‘ov:;- to-day when they refuse Herpicide a draft on the appropriation 166 . - I( would be, as sensible to say: T e Enealiotion 1o raiqe thig | never travel on & railroad beeause I often city's assessment roll and the Supreme | % Sohine Herpicide 1 R Court decision declaring that separate | 1o destroy the germ that is living on tl' valuations and taxes fox city and State | roots :l.y-n; ‘l‘v.u o - purposes must-be shown on the roll Tha why The ordinance establishing free pub- | cacious—it is there for the sele purpose lic flower markets on certain desig- | °f mn:flm b;':;' of 'hhm nated sidewalks was returned to the | Siomr it board by the Mayor without his signa- | * gold by leading dru Send 10¢ in ture and under the charter is now a | stamps sample to Herpicide Co.. law, the Mayor not having vetoed it. Detroit,

Other pages from this issue: