The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 12, 1904, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY APRIL 12, 190: SENDS BULLET AFTER BURCLAR Policeman George Thompson Fires at Retreating Crimi- nal, but Bullet Goes Wide FELLOW MAKES ESCAPE Another Knight of the Dark Lantern Steals Valuable Watches From a Jewele R ‘ Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, | 48 Center Street, April 11 were rife in Berkeley last Burgls to be in night, the town seems for & siege from the plundering knights of the dark lantern. Onme of them veught in the act of entering the store nite A *utzke shot the man never Town Marshal Kern deputy, Bert Howard, were sur ®cene nd a close watch k f the pre A search was ? the basement with no succ st in it in a If the burglar would have had elry and watches £ je access ¢ The burglar entered the Gentry tore got in through a broken window. Once in, he wess to a case of watches value which he This proceeded to tak glary was until this morning. —————— SMALL BOY BADLY HURT IN OOLLISION Lawrence Downey Receives a Broken Leg in Mix-Up of Hack and Car. OAKLAND Apr 11.—Lawrence Downey, a 14-year-old schoolboy, was thrown from the driver's seat hack driven 1 was struck b afternoon car tracks at T streets when the Just before the and saved himeelf, b could not get dowr rash Norwood jum t young Dowr of the collision threw boy te th ground. He suffered a compound frac- ture of the w he knee one of the ste The inju rick Downey, a conductor ploy of the Oakland Tr and resides with Linden street B AN B ed boy is the son of P. a n the em- Scavengers’ Cases in Court. OAKLAND, April 11 of scavengers charged with violating the garbage crematory ordinance were dis- cussed to-day in both Police courts. Attorney J. H. Creely, representing the Cases scavengers, flled a demurrer to the complaints Attorney I. S. Church was associated with the prosecution representing the Pacific Incinerating Company. The cases before P e Judge Smith were continued until April 13 and those before Police Judge Samueils to April 15 The cases will be argued on briefs, the question being the constitutionality of the ordinance. - Ohooses Primary Date, OAKLAND, April 11.—The Repub- lican County Committee this afternoon issued a call for a primary election to be held, May 3, outside of Oakland, Alameda and Berkeley, to elect dele- gates to the State Convention, which will choose delegates to the Repub- lican National Conven The date is the same as that fix tion in the ecities. The Supervisors to- day appointed election officers in fifty- five precincts. ADVERTISEEMENTS. In the Spring is when you notice it the most.- The system is full of impurities that have accumulated during the winter months, which must be dispelled at once. The quickest and safest way is to take Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. 7, | has been digg i for the elec- | L RUN DOWN KLONDIKE MAN DEFIES WOMAN Andrew Hunker, Discoverer of Rich Creek, Also Dis- covers a Healthy Nemesis rnpo it TAKES HER FOR COUSIN | | 4 i | { [ | AR il [Goes to Court and Secures | Her Ejectment From House | He Had Spent Money Upon i Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, 2148 Center'street, April 11. | Andrew Hunker, the man that dis- covered the Hunker Creek mines in the Klondike and dug three or four millions in gold but of them self against a is guarding him- woman. He is not ex- {actly undergoing a siege, but he expects 2428 Bancroft way to be minute and he swears he to take any be altogether unn i his castle at stormed any sn’t going way sgary. The millionaire miner, for he is rated Carroll's actions the aforesaid castle on ed him awhile her to go. She aled to the law. It ution, backed by Ily accomplish her eject- sted whole case was fought out in ourt last Friday. Hun- uity in proving that in question is his own. In behalf M Carroll sought to that it had been given to her by Melvin's ker had no diff her owr Hunker as an engagemant present Hunker ed that matrimony ever figured in the tr ction at all. Any- way Judge Melvin said that Mrs. Car- rell was wrong and gave Hunker pos- house. FURNITURE. satisfied with d not go near the He let two Deputy take REMOV vas t day to go ou n the Deputy Sher- und that Mrs. Car- re before them. She most of the furniture acked rived the ad been sman. The window . bed covers gone, as € that could be moved 1n ¥. Some of the things that could carted away e were stored neighbor, who had the strength of Mrs. that they were for 3 course when Hunker was notified of this sacrilege be hurrled to.Berkeley post He was angry. clear >ugh and swore vengeance. The ext day mc ared » expressman showed up to thin away, but he was when Hunker saw him. Since then Hunker has been expecting a vis- itation from Mrs. Carroll any time and on guard ks upon Mrs ungrateful ays Carroll as person he ever came to him a with the claim that she was she her claim to relationship, t was the first time he knew it. He assisted her in a material EXPENSES INCREASE. she h | but when First dgin wanted him to buy her a se and he gave her $3000, hey inspected it he declared t not worth Then he proposed E t and build a house for her Berkeley, €0 that she could take She was agreeable to this put $10,000 in the bank for her. of the house costing $10,000, has cost $20,000. Hunker & down In his pockets ften of late. This was too good though, and finally Hunker. de- get rid of the woman. I wanted to help this woman out,” | he said to-day. She was poor and 1 didn’t know anything better to do for her than to start her in business. I set $10,000 aside for her for a house and now that house has cost $20,000. I got tired of the graft at last and went to the courts to have Mrs. Carroll ejected, as she had refused to leave the house. She thought she could ‘beat’ me out my house by claiming that I was | engaged to her. But that sort of thing | didn’t go with the court and I won out. ‘Thfln she stripped the house of the things. I think that that is stealing Instead however, it | quit t las cided t of bouts of Mrs. Carroll is »wn. The last seen of her was on v she last visited Hunker’s house. SITY MEN ABOUT FRATERNITY LIFE J. Gustav White, Editor of the Maily | California, Seeks Data on Im- | portant Questions. | BERKELEY, Apri' 11.—J. Gustav | White, edi or of the Daily Californian, | the publication at the Uni- | versity of California, has written nine- !v_\»fl\l- letters to fraternity men in the ] u ersity in an endeavor to secure | data on the advantages or disadvant- of fraternity life. Here are the ions he asks: Vhat, in your opinion, are the dangers or disadvantages of frater- nity life? Do you consider house club’ fraternities an improvement over liv- ing in dormitories? From your ob- servance what kind of men do frater- nities rush? For ‘what qualification do they look? At what time in your college career would you advise men qu Nothing else is so good to cure' to join a fraternity? Are you in fa- Spring Fever, General Debility, Slaq?lmen. Indigestion, Dys- pepsia, bles, La vor of an agreement among fraterni- ties to refrain from rushing a man until his sophomore year? Does fra- ipation, Liver Trou- | ternity life make men exclusive and c‘m Colds or Malaria, | narrow? What do you think of the Fever and Agne. We urge you to influence of fraternities in college pol- try a bottle to-day. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS itics? Have you noticed any tendency of fraternity men to live beyond their means? What benefits come to a fra- ternity man after graduation?” . Editor White is not a man himself, but he feels himself qualified to precipitate a discussion of chances that | possession of up for future de- | BODIES, DISMEMBERED BY GREAT HEAT, FOUND IN ASHES OF OAKLAND FIRE Two Unfortunates Meet Terrible End in 'Flames That Sweep at Night Through Rookeries at Ninth and Franklin Streets. Loss Is in the Neighborhood of Thirty-Six Thousan d Dollars || {1 I | |1 {1 B [ 1 — | | | | | b E oA : PHOTOGRAPHIC VIE THE BUILDINGS DESTROYED BY FIRE SUNDAY ‘NIGHT AT NI D | FRANKL > FROM WHICH THE CHARRED BODIES OF WILLIAM DUNN AND WILLIAM 1} DAVIS W ED BY THE POLICI | 4 . e 23 { OAKLAND, April 1.—William Dunn, , the charred remains, which were iden- | stopping place of the flames eastward. | Strangely enough he did |a plasterer, and Willlam Davis, a la- | tified by some of the former compan- | fons of the two men. Search through the mass of debris borer, 73 years old, were burned to | death last night in the fire that swept | through half a Block of rookeries at| a8 commenced at daybreak by the po- 3 5 lice, because it had been feared that Ninth and Franklin streets. The bodies | gor's fatitios might have resulted ruins. Both men, it is supposed, were | house. asleep in the Model lodging-house | during the fire to account for the lodg- | when the flames swept through the|ers, for they were, in the main, tran- flimsy, ramshackle frame building, cut- | sients, and unknown even to the keep- | ting them off from escape. er of the pi which was of the The bodies were dismembered by the | cheapest order. intense heat. Their position showed | All that was left on the half block be- that the two victims had occupled | tween Eighth and Ninth streets, facing rooms in the rear of the lodging-house, | the east side of Franklin, was the large over the end of the Japanese club carriage factory of J. F. W. Sohst, at rooms, in which the fire is supposed to | the northeast corner of Eighth and have started. So swiftly did the fire Franklin, practically intact; the gutted eat through the wooden building that | cottage adjoining on Franklin street, the imprisoned men, it is believed, per- [that had been a Japanese lodging- ished without a chance to escape. | house, and the ruined Chinese lodging- Coroner Mehrmann took charge of | house on Ninth street, that marked the It was impossible last night were recovered this morning from the | among the occupants of the lodging- | | ip Considering the character of the struc- tures and the temporary lack of water, Fire Chief Ball accomplished a good piece of work in checking a possibly | serious conflagration. ] OF LOS! Revised estimates of property loss foot $36,650, divided as follows: Timo- thy Donohue, Model lodging-house and Savoy lodging-house buildings, $12,000; John Avan, stable and two dwellings, | §5000; Dr. J. Ambrose Sander, furniture and fittings in lodging-houses, $45 Chin Fook Company, $4500; Jeremiah | Wise, saloon, $3500; J. F. W. Sohst, damage to, carriage factory building, | $1500; Conrad Goebel, carriage trimmer, $1200; Alexander Hoensch, upholstery, $800; Miss Mary Keane, cottage, $750; A. 8. Hanks, stable, $300; Ah Loy, chant, $500; A. S. Scott, paints, $250; F. H. Sniveley, harness maker, $250; A. S. Gibbs, horseshoer, $500. BADLY INJURED tion with a university students’ club, which does not differ very widely from Past Grand Patriarch of Odd Fellows the fraternity. He will publish some Seriously Hurt in Oakland of the data he receives. UNIVERSH!EVENTS BERKELEY, April 11.—A farmers’ insti- tute that will eclipse anything for size and fm- portance ever held in Californla will be con- vened at Sacramento on Friday and Saturday of this week. It will be conducted under the auspices of the Sacramento Valley Develop- ment Assoclation, the Sacramento Grange and the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce. The agricultural depgrtment of the university will send a large number of its staff and other prominent agriculturists will come from differ- ent parts of the State. One of the features of the meeting will be open discussions of each address delivered. President Wheeler will deliver an address on the afternoon of Satur- day. The addresses will be on the follow- ing subjects: *‘Co-operative Experimentation,” ALAMEDA, April 11. — C. H. Wever of this city, past grand patriarch of the encampment of Odd Fellows of California, was knocked from an elec- tric car on New Broadway, near Web- ster street, in Oakland to-day and seri- ously injured. His left kneecap was Protessor | Padly fractured and his scalp was C. W, Woodworth; “Organizing Agricuitural | Stripped from the back of his skull for | Education,” Professor E. W. Hilgard; ‘‘The | eight inches, He also sustained | Beet-Sugar ndustry in Callfornia and Its Pos- | poroe o €0 | sibilities in_the cramento Valley,” Pro- ous bruises. fessor G, W. Shaw: |"\'|||r;l||;r.! Pr;bler&s Wever was going on the car out to the Sacramento Valley,” Professor E. H. 3 Dwikht, “The Future of Animal Industry in | the Oakland Crematory to direct a Northern California,” Professor E. W. Major, funeral. When near the junction of nd the ‘‘Comparison of Irrigation in Italy ‘Webster street and New Broadway he leaned over from the car step to look back to see if the funeral cortege was coming. Wever did not notice a car approaching in the opposite direction and he was hit by a hand rail and hurled between the cars. After being picked up Wever was carried into the Sisters of Providence Hospital and treated by Dr. E. N. Ewer and Dr. T. P. Tisdale. This even- ing he was brought to his home here. —_——————— Lidenses. ith the Possibilities of Irrigation in the Sacramento Valley,” Professor Eiwood Mead. ‘Samuel Stow. the big left guard of the var. sity football eleven and president of the Agri- cultural Club, will address the institute on “The Needs of the College of Agricuiture, From a Student's Standpoint.”” Professor E. J. Wickson, superintendent of university ex- tension. will preside, and Professor Warren T. Clarke, his assistant. will_take part. At the last meeting of the Academic Coun- cll it was voted that N‘nfllnf with the next academic year the deans shall issue no ex- cuses for absence on account of iliness, unless | the student presents o cert! by one of the medical examiners of the university. This system will make it possible for the gen- eral public health to be safeguarded, for con iaglous diseases to be detected promptiy and Marriage for the kygianic Candition of the usivemity o | . o Ay AND, Afifll 11—The :follow- R o i N TS ing marriage licenses were issued by Arraignment Postponed. the County Clerk to-day: B. Lincoln OAKLAND, April 11.—The arraign- | Towns, 26, Oakland, and Amelia Tell, ment of Edward Morton, charged with | over 18, San Francisco; Horace W. At- grand larceny, has been put over for | kins, 29, and Wilhelmina Steinkoenig, a week. Recently he sald he would | 21, both of San Francisco; Jesse Trax- defend himself. To-day he asked for |ler, 27, and Jeanette Halstead, 21, an attorney. He once escaped a ten- | both of Oakland; Albert S. Briggs, 30, year sentence from San Quentin on a [and Clara L. Field, 27, both of San :mflbmhmhmdo Jose; Joaquin Roderick, 27, Liver- of California Is| + Gustave A. Welsse, 30, Monterey, and Emma I. Field, 24, Alameda; Lee C. Anderson, 23, San Francisco, and Katherine B. Payne, 24, Oakland; Roy S. Handy, 23, Angels Camp, and Jes- sie T. Palmer, 20, Oakland. ———— DESIRE TO S..VE MONEY COSTS SAMUEL COHEN $75 Samuel Cohn, a grocer at 1043 Fol- som street, reported t~ the police last night that he had been the vietim of a confidence man to the extent of $117. Cohen made arrangements with a man named Mosher, who lives at the corner of Bush and Franklin streets, to procure for him a railroad ticket to New York. Cohen had known Mosher for several years, through Mosher's being his customer. Last week Cohen informed Mosher that he was contem- plating a trip to New York. Mosher volunteered to secure a scalper's tick- et at a low rate, and $75 was the sum agreed upon. Friday Mosher called at Cohen's house apd told his little girl that her | met his wife, | twenty members, were Mrs. J. H._Dieckmann, father's ticket was “staked out,” and that the money was needed. Mosher was handed the money by Mrs. Cohen and he left word that Co- hen could call for the ticket on Sat- urday. Cohen called, but Mosher put him off until yesterday morning, ex- plaining that he had met with some setback: ‘When Cohen called for his ticket yesterday morning Mosher's wife in- formed him that her husband haa gone to Oakland. Then the grocer. be- came suspicious and sought police aid. He says Mosher also owes him $42 for groceries. Detectives were detailed to locate the missing man. ——— Check Passer in Trouble. OAKLAND, April 11.—A. J. Steel, who passed many worthless checks in Oakland, was held to-day for trial in the Superior Court on a third charge lodged by M. Isaacs, a Broadway MARITAL WOE REACH COURT Couples Set Forth Their; Many Grievances in Their | Solemn Legal Allegations PLEDGES ARE FORGQT Young Mrs. Page Finds Life| a Burden With Old Hus-| pand and Would Be Free| —_——lie Oakland Office San Francisco Call.; 1118 Broadway, April 11. | Slow starvation and crueity in a va-| ! rety of forms are the causes for which | Mrs. Jennie Page of San Leandro asks | to secure a divorce from R. B. Page, a well to do resident of that place. She was engaged in telling the story of her wrongs to Judge Melwin to-day. Mrs. Page is an attractive woman, about 30 years of age, and she was married ten years ago. The wife has learned that Page was older than he appeared and that, although he put his age at 50, he was nearer 6‘).. l»hsil promises, says the young plaintiff, | turned to gall after their marriage, and she discovered what it was to be tied| to an old man. Page was for many years in th‘»mA ploy of the Contra Costa Water Com- pany, and he earned a fortune. IHe| who was then Jennie Davis, just after she had finished a| course in a San Francisco businessc 1= lege. He promised her a life of ease. She says he became cranky and almost | starved her to death, and that he in- sulted her friends, refused her money | and abused and swore at her. Louis Thima, an employe of the| Alaska Packers' Association, filed a| complaint in a divorce action to-day | against Birdie Thima, in which he al-| leges that his life has®been threatened | by his spouse. They have been mar-| ried a little more than a year. He says | that in January she threatened to} poison him. She wanted his wages, and | if he gave them to her she spent the | money for drink. She threw his meer- | chaum pipe out of the window and | broke it and threw a water pitcher at| { his head and broke that. - Bertha Weisshard has instituted di- vorce proceedings against Carl F. A.| Weisshard on the ground of cruelty.| She alleges that he has sworn at he'r and treated her so that her life is filled with unhappiness,: until she was, forced, finally, to leave him. A decree of divorce was granted Jessie M. Pratt from Frank A. Pinnl on the grounds of desertion and willful neglect by Judge Ogden this afternoon. The plaintiff was awarded the custody | of the minor child. Louis’ Goz was granted a decree of divorce from Mary B. Goz on ground of infidelity and awarded the custody cof the three children. EVENTS IN SOCIETY| OAKLAND, April 11.—The Wheelock Club c ctor these days, The | is an active social factor these The | members enjoyed a delightful meeting last Friday at the residence of Mrs. A. F. Coffin. on Perry street, Mrs. A. Fine winning the prize. On April 18 Mrs. club and Mrs. k! Chabot will entertain the y is planning to receive | the members il 2 Neither Mrs Bulkley nor M: Chal fs a member of the eclub, but | both have f acted as substitutes 1 The members of a Tuesday afternoon five hundred club enjoyed a pieasant outing Satur- day, They first lunched together at an up- town restaurant and later witnessed a per- formance of ‘‘Divorcons’” by Mrs. Fllk!.l Among those in the party, which lnc.uded] iss Margaret Sinclair, Mrs, J. P. H. Dunn, Mice Mona Creilin. Misy Emma Mahoney, Mrs. Robert Fitzgerald and Mrs. Willlam Hamiiton Mordeon. ..., e “minstrel show’ which will be given h)”na“nur:l::\r of clever amateurs in East Oak land Saturday night promises to surpass any- thing of the kind that bas taken place! re- | cently in this c The proceeds are to swell | the St. Anthony's bazaar fund in general and Mrs, A. M. Rosborough's booth in_particular. Her sons, Joseph and Alexander Rosborough, have arranged the programme, which fact in stires the success of the affair as an entertal Alexander Rosbor “Billy Hynes will be the ‘‘end *and_ twenty- five other well-known fun-makers and singers will participate. Kendall Fellows and George Walker will give their inimitable Chinese im- perso . “With new features; James Keene %Il appear in monologue; Miss Mary Sullivan and 1o Cooper Will present an amusing sketch. and & short comedy will be enacted by Mra Brown, Mrs, Sage and George McKinnon. Altogether the programme is especially at- tractive and many have signified their inten- tion to be present . Thg concert of the choral section at Ebeil| Saturday night was the first large event given by this section, which is a comparatively new department of the club. eir artistic ren- deting of an excellent programme was flatter- ing not only to their director, Robert Lioyd, but to their own ability. The soloists were Mr. Lioyd, who sang two admirabie numbers— “Phine Only,” by Bohm, and “Nightfall,” by Metealt—and Mrs. E. L. Dow, who rendered three of Metealf's compositions in a delightful manner. Mrs, Dow was accompanied by Miss telle Drummond, e quartet of ladies, e Mrs. A. E. Nash Carlton, Mrs. Edgar L. nd Miw, Frank 1. dall, were heard in two pleasing the choruses by the section were “'Gypsy Life,” by Schumann, and "§t, John's Eve,” by Chaminade. Mrs. Dudley Kinwell was chairman of the evening, assisted by Mrs. M. F. Jordan, Mrs. Melvin Chapman, Mrs. William Colby, Mrs. Wiehe, Miss Grace Burrell, Miss Mary Alexarder, Miss Mary Bar- ker, Miss Adeline L. Blond. Miss Adah Brown, Miss Alna Brown, Miss Eliza Porter Brown, Miss Florinne Brown, Miss Ella Bullock, Miss A. A. Clow, Miss Evelyn Craj iss’ Julia Crane, Miss Mona Crellin, Mise Mary Donaid- won, ties Eleanor Drussel, Miss Marian Kay Everson, Miss Annfe Farrier, Miss Julta Fra- ser, Miss Henrletta Fear, Miss Addie Gorr! Miss Carrie Gorrill, Miss Elizabeth Gray, Miss Janet C. Haight, Miss A. M_ Hambley, Miss Mary C. Heaton, Miss Grace Holt, Miss Mamie Huff, Miss Leontine Jansen, Mist Ami Jones, Miss Mary Keene, Miss Pearl King, Miss E. F. Knight, Miss Eleanor Machin, Miss A. E. Miner, Miss C. L. Morgan, Miss Carrie Nich- olson, Miss Elizabeth Packard, Miss Etta Pen. Mies' Charlotte Playter, s E. M. Scupham. Miss Jennie Stone, Miss Flor- ence Stone, Miss Georgie Strong, M Sutherland, Miss Emma Swain, Miss Mary B. Varney, Miss Antoinette Gardiner Wilkin- son and Miss Bertha Youns, Mis Eleanor Warner, whose engagement t Stuart Rawlings was recently A Mrs. Harry P. rs. | night at the Alhambra Thea! «NEWS OF THE COUNTY OF ALAMEDA » BRANCH OFFICES OF THE CALL IN ALAMEDA COUNTY OAKLAND. Telehone M 2148 Center Street. Telephone North 77. ALAMEDA. 1435 Park Street. Telcphommu PERSONAL. Dr. J. H. Tebbetts of Hollister Is at the California. Lieutenant Governor Alden Anderson is at the Grand. L. Blasingame, a stockman of Fresno, is at the Grand. Rev. A. 8: Clark of Stockton Is stay< ing at the Grand. Former Congressman Frank Coombs of Napa is at the Grand. Bishop W. H. Moreland of Sacra- mento is at the Occidental. A. B. Shaver, a lumberman of Fresno, and his wife are at the Palace. MecDonald Bird, a traveler from Lon« don, is registered at the St. Francis. Dr. Carroll Thrasher has been ap- pointed surgeon of the Alaska Salmon' Packers’ Association and leaves shortly for Bering,Sea. H. H. Yard, who is building a rail~ toad along the Feather River, arrived from Oroville last evening and is stay- | ing at the Palace. A. B. Newell, vice president and gen- | eral manager of the White Pass and Yukon Railroad, arrived from Van- couver several days ago and is stay- ing at the St. Francis. John Sloane, the well-known million< alre carpet manufacturer of New York, who has been enjoying a vacation at Monterey with the members of his family, arrived in this city yesterday | and is staying at the St. Francis. John Rosene, general manager of the Northwestern Commercial Company, and who is prominently identifled withs the Northeastern Commercial Com- pany, which has several valuable con- cessions from the Russian Government in Stberia, arrived from Seattle yester- day and is at the Palace. —_————————— Elects Rev. W. K. Guthrie Moderatory The spring meeting of the San Fran- cisco presbytery was held last nigh at Howard Presbyterian Church, Oa and Baker streets, when the election of a moderator in place of the Revy | John Hemphill, D. D., took place. There was a sermon at the begin< ning of the meeting by ex-Moderaton | B. K. Strong, vice Dr. Hemphill, who# {is fulfilling a special call to Sydneyy 5. W. On motion of the Rev. George G Eldredge, pastor of St. John's Presby« terian Church, seconded by ‘the Rev, Mr. Bevier, the Rev. Willlam Kirk Guthrie, pasior of the First Presby- terian Church, was unanimously cho« moderator and the Rev. T. M. Boyd and the Rev. Moses Bercowita | were elected temporary clerk.. The choir of Howard Presbyteri Church was in attendance and, joined by the large congregation, rendered | several hymns. —_——— St. Mary’s Entertainment. Arrangements have been completed for the entertainment to be given to< under the auspices of the Alumni Associationy for the bepefit of the science depart« ment of St. Mary's College. A proe gramme of unusual merit has béen prea pared. Judge Murasky will deliver o short address on an interesting topic. Kolb and Dill and Barney Bernard, latq | of Fischer’s, arrived in town yesterday, having shortened their sojourn in the East in order to tell some of their dia« lect stories on this occasion. ' Among | the other artists to appear are Mrs, T. T. Bonnett, Miss Sannie Kruger, tha Tobin sisters, Jean Logan, Nate Lands« berger, Andrew Bogart, Signor Abram- off and rtin O'Neil. Harry Jamecg will be musical director. Tickets maw be obtained at the rooms of the Cathe olic Truth Society in the Flood bullde ing. ————————— Teachers’ Club Meets. The Teachers’ Club of San Frane cisco met at the City Hall last evene ing and listened to an address by Proe fessor Mann on “The Tenure of tha Teacher in office.” Harold Forema the boy soprano, entertained the semblage with several renditions, among them “The Palms” and “The Message of the Violet.” Miss Corinng &yle also sang. Frank Merritt, Charles and Orfe Blome, Carl and Theodore Will, Frank Trahan, Miss Pink- ney, Mrs. Schwartz and Mrs. Trahan. . . A reception will be given at the home of aA‘. Jn&obl. le :llrrhnn street. next Sun- y afternoon in honor of the A engagement of Jacobs and Ben Harl young business man of Fresno. o ADVERTISEMENTS. Plates at Cost Made by the professors of this collegs a'ngl guaranteed a perfect it We so- licit the most difficuit cases and make a specialty of natural looking and ser- viceable teeth. Painless Methods—Extraction Free. Week Days, 9 to 9; Sundays, o to 1.

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