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CISCO CALL, FRIDAY. APRIL 1 1904. Y «NEWS OF THE COUNTY OF ALAMEDA SPECCLATION FACELIY MEN ML HER WEAKNESS SAVE 4 €00 . ———— —_— Professors A. O. leuschuer Police Find That Missing and Thomas W. Page In- Lillian #eald Was Given! 1 to Plunging in Finances’ 2t | | IS THICKER terfere With Tormentors Y INSIST TUPON ARRE Appeal ‘to Officers of Ferry Steamer and One of Gai Is Landed in City Jail » 1 NYST 1 to D Detectives Tnable cover Trace of Woman Who | Strangely Left Her “t)lll(fi‘ - Office Broadway, 3 made to Berkeley Office 8 sco © Oak 2148 14, | April police from crowd t renth ence in not the first during M residel with still, Miss Heald 1 after these unex- s with the story of in speculations. T restments > Mrs. Blanch- h mystified by | 3ut this does not stre m years ang has has been given by the str: xious sister. De- | gle Kyte, E after care- | ation 4 satisfied them- | Miss Heald wrote the m: was signed “Mrs. Williar and purported to tell o the foot of B street ey embling Mise searched the -t and the mud e that no per- | drowned at the | the letter \miir‘ > was out. A gang of | as working close by none of the men saw | abouts during the aft- | thai the pr followed toughs to r r speculating propensi- es the detectives learned that once | Miss Heald lost $1500 during a period —_— absence from home. Realizing that | v ight have overcome her | Mrs. Blanchard inquired | e's bank account and | money had been drawn | Among her checks was | 19, and reading, | Mrs. Blanchard, the | . r ny account.” Miss Heald | d ad a balance of $564 in bank. She | har secy had declared that this should go to | ser sister in the event anything should | SOCIETY MEN WILI AP But Mrs. Blanchard had re- | APPEAR IN MINSTRELS cept that disposttion. | r police can learn, Miss Vaudevilie Show to Be Given To- ) S A r | Morrow Evening for Benefit of St light g’mrh:fl‘} dress St. Anthony's Parish. e & y . ss | OAKLAND. April 14.—A str | d vau ville sho will ¥ Sat- Y & Do Ny SHcuAL 4t S Anth il BECOMES BRIDE e s e | OF PROMINENT excelle f t ) B pood =z COLLEGE MAN shows, botk which : By Sally Sharp. | St. Luke’s Church was the scene last | night of an exceptic pretty wed- | e became the bride ne Whitmore of Oxnard. | ‘ chic little maid with nut- | Walker. | hrown looked charming in her | Kinnon. | wedading robe of white chiffon cloth, | h luminous veil enveloping her | She atfended by | ' as matron of honor, who | Funeral Is Stopped also was smartly gowned in white | OAKLAND, April 14.—The fune sth of Mrs. Augusta Storch of Alameda| Mr. Whitmore is a clever newspaper was stopped th n or- conducting the paper at Oxnard. der from the ney's of- well known on the Stanford | s Ena b el om which university he took e DI Attor " ae number of invitations were | ceased had died fro: t of in- the church, but only relatives juries received from a fall from z ends were bidden to the in San F An investigatior the home of the bride, at was s H. B. Meh ess avenue. mann and v und that the| ©On the return of the happy pair from | woman died frc pneumon The | their post-nuptial trip a reception will funeral was then allowed to proceed. | be given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ———— Wayte in honor of the young folks. The Y future home of Mr. and Mrs. Whitmore N Whar Moot - will, of course, be in Oxnard, where are ALAMEDA. April 14.—William M. | Mr. Whitmore's interests. Bowers, chairy of t S Light Com the Cit) To-night the Entre Nous Club will with Ci ctrician G. A - and | give its last cotillon of the season in an experi ineer, is inspecting the | the ballroom at the Palace Hotel. A Jocal plant view to installing | delightful dance is anticipated, and it day power for local consumption, |is whispered abroad that many stun- Whether this will be genernted at the | Ning toilettes will be worn. municipal works or purchased from S Btiw an outside company and d yuted by | This afternoon a reception will be the city is yet to be decided. The held at the Franklin Grammar School mand for elec power for day v in the newly decorated hall, that is at rapidly increasing he once the pride of the California Club, —_———— led by Mrs. J. W. Orr, obairman of the Wife Reconsiders. department of education, and of the 3 -~ Board of Education. Here are four OAKLAND, Apri Mrs. C bare walls transformed into a pleasing Younger dismissed e s meeting-room, with tinted walls, cur- against Joshua M. Younger to-day and | tains, pictures and plaques of artistic the pajr have come to a solution of | worth placed therein, thus opening up their troubles outside the courts. They |a work of practical worth in cultivat- have been married for many y ing in children the sense of artistic but lately the wife charged t values. This work is in practical oper- had been treat her cruelly. She|ation in New York, Boston, Detroit and filed her action vesterda nd dis- other progressive cities, therefore is the California Club, and Mre. Orr in par- ticular, to be congratulated for lifting | San Francisco into the vanguard of Taking School ¢ OAKLAND, April 14.—Census Mar. | Progression. Between the hours of 2 shal Mailler Searles and his deputies | *14 5 o'clock to-day the public is in- will commence to take 1t S vited to visit the school, when the Cali- vensus to-morrow for Oaklany, 00! |fornia Club will receive,. assisted by . Mr. Faulkner, principal of the school; e —————————=s=e | Mr." Langdon, Superintendent of ADVIRTISEMENTS, | 8chools, and members of the Board of ducation e T RUNS HIGH PROSPECTORS’ FIND | | EXCITEM ov Your Nerves Are the life. your body the vitality, the energy of | - the brain to direct the m of Ferry Guieh Astonishes Trinity organ ?r the body, the stomach to dig County Miners, food, e live 0 s r e dile, 0 i s 5 Miber the o e, bl REDDING, April 14—Alex Saunders, <ls to carry oif the waste an inexperienced miner, recently from When the nerves of the stomach be- | Orégon, has, with his partner, E. B.| come weakened or exhausted, Indige Channel of Minersville, Trinity County, tion, Constipation and Inflammation re- | revealed the source of the gold that has sult, because the stomach is inactive. | made Ferry Gulch one of the rlchestf This ie true of all the organs of the body, and proves that to cure disease | You must strengthen the nerves | Dr Miles’ Nervine Is the great specific for the nerves, ana in_bringing them back to health fever | fails to cure all cases of Nervousness, | Slecplessness, Neuralgia, Headache, | Spasme. Backache, Musculir Twitchings, | t. < placer diggings in Trinity County. Ex- perienced prospectors have unsuccess- | fully sought this source for fifty years. The finding of it by Saunders and Channel insures wealth to them. From the rich body of ore on the' mountainside they pounded out $400 1nI a hand mortar in one day.\In tracing Vitus' Dance, Epilepsy, Stomach, | the ledge higher they uncsvered an- Liver and Kidney Troubies. *| other rich streak from which they took “For 2 years physicians und health re- | $500. The camps in the vicinity are worts feiled to relieve me of a complica- | wi vith excitement ove tion of stomach. liver, kidney and neset| o whbed affections. Six bitles of Dr. Miles' Ner. | vine cured me”—G. W. ARCHBOLD, s ur, ln'dr' first e feils to benefit, w’ ey e PITTSBURG, Apri®14.—A settiement was reached to-day in the sheet and tin plate wage dispute between the manufacturers and the Amalgamated Association. Wages are re. Quced 18 per cent. back i ceived abundant applau NEW BELL TOWER AT MILLS COLLEGE DEDICATED WITH SOLEMN CEREMONY El Campanil, as Stately Home of Historic Chime Is Named, Is a Gift From Mrs. F. M. Smith and Is Only Structure of Its Kind in America---Thousands Attend Services at Lisser Hall | | | LIOUOR DEALERS 0L BANOUET lembers of San Association Gather in the| ’alace Hotel Maple Room PRESICIPI B The third annual banquet ofgathe California Liquor Dealers’ Assodtion was held in the maple room of" the Palace Hotel last gvening. When the gue filed in, P. Weniger took his seat at the head of the table with Mayor Schmitz to his left and Pres- | ident Thomas H. Lindsay to his right. After a sction from the orchestr: Mr. Lindsay, the newly elected presi- dent of the association, responded to the call for a toast He told of the efforts of the associa- tion to further good citizenship and ex- plained why liquor dealers, paying a license of $260,000 a year, should be treated with the same consideration as men engaged in other lines of busi- ness. Mr. Lindsay was followed by Frank W. Thompson, who entertained the assembled guests for fifteen min- with comic selections. “The Lost Chord” Chairman Weniger then introduced Mayor Schmitz, who spoke of the efforts of associations to further the interests of n Francisco, and dwelt in particu- - upon the work of the liquor deal- to build up the city. Mayor Schmitz ated that he believed that the liquor dealers of the city and county of San Fran » were a body of men who had the interests of the people at heart and that their efforts were directed to- ward the advance of business enter- prise. 2 He predicted greater things for the ity, and stated that he felt the united ion of the various associations would n the future, as in the past, lead San Francisco onward to the goal of great- er commercial supremacy than that experienced at any time in the past. Hon. M. J. Hynes, Public Adminis- trator, rendered several vocal selec- tions, after which Abe Ruef was called upon to respond to the toast, “Benefits of Organization.,” He made an able address, saying that the California Liquor Dealers’ Association was or- ganized by men who expected the trade and liquor traffic of San Francisco, men who are willing to observe the law. “There are those,” he said, “who would reform the world without first reforming themselves, who complain against this organization, but I con- sider that the better line of citizens understand that dealing in liquor calls for no condemnation, but rather for respect.” Sam Braunhart spoke for the Board of Supervisors. The gathering was voted a pleasant affair by the 200 members and guests present. —_——— TROOPS ARE DUE TO-DAY FROM THE PHILIPPINES The Eleventh Cavalry is due to ar- rive to-day from Manila on the trans- port Sheridan. They will go into the model camp at the Presidio for a few days and then proceed to their dif- ferent posts. Major Samuel W. Dunning, the new adjutant general, Department of Cal- ifornia, arrived from the East late yesterday and is visiting his brother in Oakland. Brigadier General Frank M. Coxe, who has been seriously ill for the last month at the Lane Hospital, has re- covered to the extent that he will be moved to his apartments at the St. Nicholas Hotel to-morrow. The Filipino constabulary will not g0 into camp at the Presidio, but will start for St. Louis immediately after arrival here. Major Albert Todd and family will depart for Washington early next week. er —————— Marriage Licenses. OAKLAND, April 14.—The follow- ing marriage licenses were issued by the County Clerk to-day: Manuel D. Arouge, over 21, Niles, and Mariana E. Gomez Centerville; Ralph L. Phelps, 24, San Francisco, and Flor- ence A. Boone, 22, Berkeley; Alex Hammar, 36, and Myrtle Boceman, 23, both of Oakland; James T. Lantry, 28, and Katherine Baine, 40, both of San Francisco; George A. Deweese, over 21, and Lillian C. D’\'Il, over 18, both of Oakland. Will Build New Church. ALAMEDA, April 14.—Delanoy & Randlett of this city have been award- ed the contract to build the new First Congregational Church. They will be- gin work as soon as the old building nawdoc;;ligymx‘ the site d?‘ the pro- pose ice is remove The new church is to cost $35,000. deserved and re- | ! | b e OAKLAND, April 14.—The new bell tower at Mills College was dedicated [ to-day, and the fact that it is the only | one on the continent makes the event | one of impressive interest. Hundreds g'-r people from near and far were pres- ent at the dedicatory services at Lisser | Hall and at the tower. The chime of bells which has been given a final resting place in the tower is of historic importance. The bells were sent by a Cincinnati firm to the ‘World's Fair at Chicago, and being pur- chased by M. H. de Young were brought to California for the Midwinter Fair. | David Hewes, a brother of Mrs. Le- land Stanford, bought the bells and presented them to Mills College, where they have reposed for several years, earning from the students the nick- name “the silent ten.” But they are silent no longer, for Mrs. F. M. Smith, at an expense of al- most $10,000, has just completed a most artistic bell tower, which will be a last- ing monument to her generosity. The tower is of old mission architecture and is built of solid concrete. The door came from the old mission at Mon- terey. Being the gift of a woman and dedicated to the higher education of women, it was fitting that a woman should furnish the architectural design, a work most admirably done by Miss Julia Morgan. The greater part of the dedicatory exercises took place in Lisser Hall, and at the conclusion of Rev. C. R. Brown's address the crowd formed into proces- sion and, led by the students, wended its way to El Campanil, as the bell tower has been named. There the dedi- catory prayer was repeated by Rev. E. E. Baker, after which the chimes rang out in patriotic tunes under the skillfui manipulation of Wallace A. Sabin. The programme for the afternoon was as follows: Organ prelude, Wallace A. Sabin; in- vocation, Rev. Raymond C. Brooks; psalm one hundred and fifty; hymn, “Joy to the World”; statement by Mrs. C. T. Mills; address, “Belfry and Bells —Their Story, Meaning and Message,” F. M. Damon of Honolulu; ode by Miss Julia Tolman Lee, read by Miss F. B. de Forest; address, Rev. Charles R. Brown; organ postlude, Miss Zueletta Geery; dedicatory prayer at the Cam- panil, Rev. E. E. Baker, D. D.; chime of bells, played by Wallace A. Sabin. During the course of his remarks Dr. Brown announced that the trustees of Mills College had decided to raise the endowment fund to $1,000,080 and that already more than $42,000 of the $100,000 which they intend to raise every year has been subscribed. George W. Scott gave the first $10,000 and Edward Cole- man the second $10,000. The Mills Alumnae Association gave $21,800, which, together with numerous small sums of §10 and $20, has started the endowment fund well on its way. ' The finance committee which has this mat- ter in charge includes George T. Haw- ley, F. M. Smith, Captain Charles Nel- son and A. J. Ralston. Mrs. Mills and Professor Lisser have been appointed a committ: on sub-committees, and *,Rev. E. E. Baker, Rev. R. C. Brooks and Rev. C. R. Brown constitute a com- mittee on endowment literature. ———————— Mrs. Reeves Restored. Judge Hebbard made an order yes- terday directing the Board of Educa- tion to restore Irene D. Reeves to her position in the Polytechnic High School. She was placed on the un- assigned list last November, restored and again dismissed. Since then she has been making a determined effort to be restored. Judge Hebbard's latest order not only restores her, but gives her her salary for the ti that she was suspended. . \.' — 3 BELL TOWER AND i "1 p COHIMES 3 l BELL TOWER AT MILLS COLLEGE AND HALL WHERE THE DEDIC TORY EXERCISE: E HELD. WITHOUT FOD FOR FOUR DAYS Mrs. John Carter Is Found Siek and Starving by Dep- uty Sheriff of Haywards > 3 Oakland Office San Francisco Call, . 1118 Broadway, April 14. Helpless and alone, awaiting the slow approach of death by starvation, Mrs. John Carter, proprietor of a little res- taurant in Haywards, was found Tues- day evening by Deputy Sheriff Sim- monas lying on a cot in the rear room of her establishment, where she had lain for four days without food. So weak was the woman from lack of nourishment that she was unable to notify the neighbors of her plight. Mrs. Carter was suffering from ery- sipelas and had she been left without aid but a few hours longer would cer- tainly have perished. The attention of the officer was first called to the case by Mrs. Peter Jack- son, who notified him that Mrs. Carter had not been seen about the restaurant for several days. Simmonds found the restaurant front door locked and was obliged to force his way into the place. Mrs. Carter was in the rear room and so weak 'that she did not recognize DANGLES BABY BY ITS HEELS Mrs. Joseph Enz Taken Into Custody - While Carrying Her Infant by Its Feet THOUGHT TO BE INSANE o TR She Was Among Engines at Switeh Yards and Child’s Head Bumped the Rails it Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, April 14. | Dangling an infant child by its heels{ as she walked the tracks leading Inlo' the West Oakland yards of the South- ern Pacific Company, Mrs. Joseph En®! of 828 Twenty-ninth street was taken| into custody to-day by William Clark- son, a yard policeman, and a charge of insanity placed against her. The moth- er was carrying the child in one hand by its heels, its head occasionally strik- ing against the rails. The policeman says he thinks the mother intended to | kill her child and possibly herself. 1 She was unable to give any account) of her wanderings or how she came to be down on the network of tracks: Later her husband went to the police station where she was being held and he was ellowed to take her home. He is a brewery wagon driver, and stated that about a year ago she was peculiar for a short time and locked .up her children in the house, and the police had to be called in to straighten out the trouble. AGED FRIEND OF LINCOLN . PASSES AWAY Special Dispatch to The. Call. POMONA, April 14—Dr. Ephriam Parsons, one of the best known men in Pomona Valley and formerly a famous horticultural authority in California, died here to-day at the age of 79 years. He had been ill for weeks and his death was not unexpected. Dr. Parsgns was the plonecr grower of navel oranges as an industry. His navel orange grove, planted In 1878, was pictured and quoted all over Eu- rope and America for a dozen years. He was a wealthy man twenty years ago, and gave thousands of dollars to the spiritualistic faith for years. The death of his wife and daughter chang- ed him, and he lost all his property by unwise investments. For ten years he lived in poverty, and had been pension- ed by his friends. Half a century ago Dr. Parsons was a close friend of Abraham Lincoln. Parsons was reared near Springfield, i, and Lincoln was a frequent visitor at Parsons’ father's house. For nearly a year Dr. Parsons read law in the of- fice of Lincoln & Herdon in Spring- field: He subsequently quit law for medicine. When he became President Lincoln made Dr. Parsons head of the Federal hospital at Columbus, Ohio, and sent him to inquire into certain army hospital administrations in France and Germany. riRpsr S Mrs. Konigsberg Buried. The funeral of Mrs. Charles S. Kon- igsberg, wife of the superintendent of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, who died in this city last Monday, was held yesterday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock from the mortuary f secured to the agreement 1 BRANCH OFFICES OF THE CALL IN ALAMEDA COUNTY OAKLAND. 1118 Broadway. Telephone Main 1083 BERKELEY. 2148 Center Street. Telephone North 77. ALAMEDA. _ 1435 Park Street. Telephone Alameda 4592 ey UNIVERSITY EVENTS BERKELEY, April 14.—Owing to the threat- ening weather the Prytanean fete, which was to have taken place In Co-ed Canyon this after noSn and evening for the benefit of the stu dents’ hospital fund, was postponed until Mon- day next. Fortunately. the workers the soclety had not begun to drape the skeletons of the booths that are to be a feature of the fair, so that no loss will be suffered on ac- count of the little rain that feil Dr. Lymap Abbott, editor of The Outlook and E. T. Earle, lecturer for 1904 for the Pactfic Theologicai Seminary, will occupy (he hour at the university meeting to-morrow morning in Harmon gymnasium. It was at first intenwded that Alvord W. Cooley, ome of the two members of the United States Ci ervice Commission, should i Dlan was abandoned because Mr. is engaged to address students in th afternoon in the observatory building. M Cooley will talk upon “Civil Service Reforfh.” The College of Commerce Club was ad- dressed by W. in North Hall on " £ the Hawallan Isian ‘The signatures of forty students have bern to_go on the trip to the Lick Observatory. The party will leave to-morrow morning at 8:30 ¢'clock and W. Bristol this_evening ommercial Resources arrive at the observatory in the afternoon It will be in charge of Professor A. O. L h- ner, director of the students Observa ———e———————— SEATS FOR BENEFIT SHOW ARE SOLD AT AUCTION More Than a Thousand Dollars Taken in at the Alhambra Theater Last Evening. There was quite an audiefice at the Alhambra Theater last evening, where the aiuction was held of the boxes for the forthcoming production of “His Royal Nibs,” which is to be given for the benefit of the California Women's Hospital on next Thursday and Fri- day nights. A large number of so- ciety people were present, and Wil- liam. Greer Harrison, who acted as auctioneer, soon had the audience ac- tively bidding for the choice of loca- tions. . The premiums realized aggre- gated more than a thousand dollars. During the several intermissions that were declaréd, instrumental and vocal numbers were rendered and altogether the evening was very pleasantly spent and the novelty of the affair was thor- oughly #njoyed. Among those who secured boxes at the sale were ex-Mayor James D. Phelan, Mrs. A. N. Towne, Governor George C. Pardee, Mrs. W. G. Irwin, Mrs. Francis Carolan, Henry T. Scott. D. Hewitt, Mrs. Isaac Hecht, Charles J. Heggerty, Mrs. Joseph S. Tobin Dr. \'Kl\\'lm‘k!‘l, Shafter Howard and Mrs. Walter Martin. Several hundred seats in the orchestra were also bid in for a premium —_—— DIFFERING ACCOUNTS. British War Writers Give Versions of Petropaviovsk Disaster. LONDON, April 15.—A news agency dispatch from Port Arthur by way of St. Petersburg says that after a fierce fight between torpedo-boats on the night of April 12 the squadron went out in the morning to the roads and took up combat with fourteen large Jap- anese vessels. At 10:20 o’clock in the morning, as the result of an explosion, the battleship Petropavlovsk sank with her crew. The dispatch then gives a partjal list of those saved from the vessel. | 5 The battleship Pobieda, to whi h Rear Admiral Prince Ouktomsky h;d chapel of the Golden Gate undertak- ing parlors. Interment was in Odd Fellows’ Cemetery. _———————— STOCKHOLDERS OF BENEFIT SOCIETY HOLD A MEETING Affairs of Italian-Swiss Mutual Loan Association Are in a Flourishing Condition. The stockholders of the Italian- Swiss Mutual Loan Association held their seventeenth annual meeting yes- terday at their office in the Italian- American Bank building. Secretary A. Sbarboro presented his financial statement, which shows that the cor- poration has been remarkably success- ful in its long career. It has assisted 275 of its members to procure homes for their families, having loaned them $635,007 87, and 254 of these homes transferred his flag, the dispatch con- tinues, is damaged on the water.line. The enemy, the correspondent con= cludes, attempted to escape an open fight, remaining at a distance of forty- five cable lengths. The Russian squad- ron ran back into the harbor .under command of Prince Ouktomsky. The Daily Mail's Chefu correspondent detlares that advices from both Rus- sian and Japanese sources indicate that the battleship Petropaviovsk was tor- pedoed. By a pretense of an attack on the harbor by the enemy Admiral Makaroff, says the correspondent, was enticed outside for the Japanese tor- &erdo-boals, which crept behind him and aited his return and dealt blows as he was nearing the harbor on the re- turn. A special dispatch says it is rumored in Brussels that several Belgian and French bankers have been summoned have already been paid for and their either Mrs. Johnson or the officer. Dr. Alexander was called and ad- vised that the woman be removed to the County Infirmary. She was taken there yesterday afternoon, but was in such a critical condition that the doc- tors hold out little hope for her recov- ery. Mrs. Carter is nearly 50 years of age and has lived in Haywards for ten years. She was deserted by her hus- band in 1892 and has two sons, who lived with her in Haywards for some time, but have since gone away. —_———— IMPROVEMENT CLUBS PLAN GRAND RALLY Public Spirfted Citizens of Three Cities ‘Will Meet and Boost in Ala- meda. ALAMEDA, April 14—Preparations for the big rally of improvement clubs of this city, Oakland and Berkeley, to be held here on Thursday evening, the 21st, are well in hand, and the indica- tions are that there will be a great crowd of public spirited and progres- sive residents of the county in attend- anca at the joint affair. The meeting is to be held in the West Epd Wigwam, and extra seating accommodations are being installed. Among those who have been invited to address the assemblags are Presi- dent J. F. Forderer of the City Trus- tees, Mayor Warren Olney of Oakland, Rev. Peter C. Yorke, President Ben- jamin Ide Wheeler of the University of California and the ladies of the civic section of the Adelphian Club, A feature of the occasion will be the turnout of the Oakland Boosters’ Club. Before the speech-making there will be a brief musical programme. ——————— Bullds New Rallroad Trestle. OAKLAND, April 14.—The South- ern Pacific Company has commenced the reconstruction of the long trest] across the north arm of the estuary :.i Seventh street, between Oak-street and Clinton stations. —_———— Disappears From Home. OAKLAND, April 14.—J. L. Warder, 32 years old, has disappeared from his residence, 1014 Seventh avenue. The police have been notified that the missing man is mentally feeble, mortgages released. The investors who did not build homes, but used the association as a means of saving their monthly earn- ings, have received the handsome sum of $706,291 76, including $155,284 26 earnings, which gives the shareholders a liberal rate of interest on their in- vestment. The following officers and directors were re-elected by ’unanimous vote: President, P. C. Rossi; vice president, P. Barbieri; treasurer, A. J. Merle; secretary, A. Sbarboro; assistant sec- retary, A. E. Sbarboro; attorney, D. Freidenrich; directors, P. Barbieri, A. J. Merle, C. A. Malm, A..Sbarboro, P. C. Rossi, A. E. Sbarboro, D. Paroni, G. B. Cevasco, G. de Luca. The secretary was then authorized to open his books for subscription to 1000 shares of stock of the eighteenth series. —————— BRUN FOUND HIS LOST DOG AT THE BENCH SHOW Owner Secures a Search Warrant to Recover Possession of His Great Dane. B. J. Brun, one of the proprietors of the Poodle Dog restaurant, called at the bond and warrant clerk’s office yes- terday afternoon and secured a search warrant to recover possession of a Great Dane dog valued at $100, which he claimed was on exhibition at the bench show in the Mechanics’ Pavil- ion. Brun said he visited the bench show yesterday and recognized his dog, which was lost eight months ago. The recognition, he said, was mutual and the dog manifested every sign of de- light. Brun made inquiry and dis- covered that the dog had been entered by S. Barnett of the College Kennels, 115 Haight street, who claimed that it belonged to him and that Brun was mistaken. ——————— Dr. Lyman Abbott to Speak. On next Monday evening Dr. Lyman Abbott, the well-known New York di- vine and successor of Henry Ward Beecher, will deliver an address before the Unitarian Club of California in the American dining-room of the Palace Hotel. His subject will be “American Ideals and Traditions.” e Reyv. Dr. J. K. McLean and the Re?. Charles R. ‘Bfl:‘wn ot“ %..kwl:x!lm and the Rev. Brad- ord Lea respond to Dr. bott's a?dre-. S to St. Petersburg to confer with the Ministry of Finance with regard to ar- ranging a new loan. ———— Renaissance Club Entertains. The Renaissance Club gave its firs¢ entertainment last night at Native Sons’ Hall. The programme opened wlth’selections by Orpkeus orchestra, Elks' quartét, William A. Butterfield, L. A. Larsen and Mrs. M. E. B. Robin- :::;luvg M.Daogiilvie acted as stage T. ncing closed the even- ing’s festivities. A large crowd was ?n attendance, which thoroughly entered into the spirit of the occasion. ————— Has His Clothes Stolen. 'Sam Snapper, who works at the Novelty Theater, reported to the po- lice last night that some one had en- tered his room, 359 O'Farrell street, during his absence and stolen his wearing apparel, valued at $150. —_——— Munroe Defeated at Wrestling. ST. PAUL, April 14.—Jack Munroe, the heavyweight list, was defeated in a wrestling bout with Jim Me- Cauley of St. Paul to-night. McCauley won the first fall in 11% seconds: Munroe took the second fall in 17 minutes, and the local man took the deciding fall in 8 minutes. z —————— President Nominates Hunt. WASHINGTON, April 14.—The President to-day sent to the Senate the following nominations: United States District Judge, Willlam M. Hunt, District of Montana; register of land office, Albert D. Ch: e B A amberlain, — e FREE—FREE > “TO WANT ADVERTISERS IN NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL _THE GLOW NIGHT LAMP, . A SCIENTIFIC, WONDER. Invaluable for Bédrooms, Sick Chambers, Hall, N ‘Bathrooms, STATRCASES, ete. BE SURE TO GET ONE WITH A WANT AD IN ° NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL. Premium cannot be obtained in