The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 8, 1904, Page 40

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THE SAN FRANC ISCO CALL, SU ¥, MAY 8, 1904. «~ NEWS OF THE COUNTY OF “ALAM EDA < = ot > - 4 * 1\ 2\ T ! 2 ice SFLLS SALARY [BLAZING SUN AN EFFECTIVE ALLY SATS POLITICS [CANNOT LOCATE [T muasew orrrers e . : g . {|_ OF THE CALL IN U 1 T 1 Al 7 | c B 3 OTNTV W ARRANT TWICK OF FOURTEEN OAKLAND CHARITIES| IS THE CAUSE - MISSING GIRL' = awvwenscorsry WARNAL 4 o : i I 2 ToAF ‘ ? ().\K!L\Axu | ST R ¢ 1118 Broadway. » theriff Roac : Supervi i res | Police Endeavor to Trace a| | Telephone Ma Deputy Sheriff Roach Loses| Demand for Cooling Beverages Augments Income of Booths! Supervisor Rowe Declares| Police Ende: g S O ERELEY. Position on Account. of Villa M D F 4P .| Accusation Against Him| Young Woman Who Re- 2148 Center Street. .l - . . . N | ) North 77. | Financial Irregularities at Arbor Villa May-Day Fete an atronesses Are De-| to Be Campaign Materlal[ cently Arrived From East| | e e - } SIS il : . = . . . PRl — - | 1435 Park Street. ‘ e B ed With Financial and Social Succ e, sy e Swsa el g S BISHOP FILLS PLACE| lighted ess of Function|pexigs ALT, CHARGES|LAST SEEN AT DEPUI | A ) R | 4 — - Sty STERET 5 f— el | < e = ¢ . | ARE ‘ES SUPPORTED Two Assignments for May| | 'Pomts to Trifling Nature| Miss Mabel ArmstrongComes AT Ve o cmaxDs? Pav Signed by Officer| | of Items as Evidence of| to Reside With Unecle, bui | gz, ” P o . |1 % ? Hir i 4 | Unfair Way of Putting Efforts of Presented to the Auditor | ! | Absence of Good Faith| Never Reaches His House the Home End of the iy P | P ity P = } R Ti Vg \ Busln.c«. akiand Office San Francisco Call, | | Oakland Office San Franciseo Call,| Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | | TJ',',,' ";‘:‘:‘H“\'"F‘r‘h‘;"al"‘: :l::d“:wr: 1118 Broadway, May 7. | : " 1118 Broadway, May 7, 1118 Broadway, May 7. | °%¢ s‘,!mp“i'\irf‘" migh wang: b e o el For selil his salary warrant for! “Polities, nothing but politics,” de- +Th lice of this city are seeking | 4 > > efini g - ' . Tooath 4F Rty 0 T oo rovglee 5 | P clared Supervisor Harrison D.. Rowe|Miss Mabel Armatrong, 17 years of | ";"f’:"; = i'u;’; = dwg{;“:fl a:;::“‘: e Shastit A) Thitich ‘wai- @i to-day on his return from an up-coun-|age, who is supposed to have arrived | & fox Tyt e b sse Sheriff John Bishop to- try trin, to be confronted with an ac- | here last Wednesday. s [ty rJtus'tl“ha} " m‘ean(‘ by ;he tfi’rn(\ siigation by Bitho i cusation that he had mulcted the coun- | Though her relatives have made "supported” Wives are in the great Ro: financially | ty of $38 50 in excess ‘mileage fees dur- | diligent search they have yet been | majority of cases dependent upon thei SANS 10 SECHTE MONEY { Rowe says he does not know James |land train at the Sixteenth-street Sta- | .o.o o ieqv sy the sense that children b . T E. Gui iy st P fon. The y lady stranger in | ° Rl fontrmes & - & B e e s | understand what relation Gunpasl | (he city and 1s ot known to have any | 87, oF pensioners, or objects of publi an the troubles nr‘ i'un‘slahl\' 'h:‘ars‘ to those the Supervisor thinks, “C(-}-‘,’ mta\l:—(r':\::(r}-]-‘i\r;,' uncle of the girl, aud’ wife are equal partners. Two de- " wh has assigned his J aroslxl;lnd the :tmvk on him. police headquariers this | partments engage the energy and at- - | “S8o far as the specific C Ng @ ported the case. Arm- ention of rm—the In depart- . |1 can-and wil mest them in court.|®ides at Allendale, He stated thot (he by os important as the other. Each be handed actice of selling ¥ month to 4 his if- | o light Reach’s { bills have never reached the legal limit They are so trivial that of themselves they show that something more than a mere bpro bono publico spirit has actuated my prosecutors. My mileage Milwaukee | Some the Miss the brother and has lived in for the greater part of her life. time ago her mother died and family decided to fnove West. Mabel was to come ahead of othérs. Armstrong awaited a letter contain- ing information as_to when his niece might be expected, but that letter was of $100 a month. They average about $30 and they are less than those of any other member of the board except one. requires an expert, industrious, watch- ful manager if the firm is to be sue- cessful. The manager of the earning depart- ment may bring home a pocketful of money every Saturday night, but with- out the intelligence and economic co- operation of the home department man- \ s ach on May 1 as-| | h But that is no criticism of the board. | delayed and did not arrive until yes- | ager will find himself ere long a bank- sigr s salary to H. Davis and a | ) “I have not overcharged Alameda |terday. i @ rupt. The money he earns fs not all ter he sold again to E. Bar-| ’l County one cent, and 1 defy Guilbault| Armstrong was ;‘“";“f" ... ",“""Af" his. It belongs to the firm.” In man- Roth presented their orders for | or any one else to prove it. after reading it that the girl was due | oo "o} ome, superintending or pre- £ 3 and Barnett | | /] | “The discrepancy in my mileage bills | t0_arrive in this cit Lo . ending his clothes, order there | | ] | | to Sacramento is easily accounted for. | May Fhe letter BT ] o, Ay g Pt s vy changed | | g | My travel does not limit itself to the , Quest that Armstr his niece | to say nothing of caring for the chil- : . distance between stations by rajl. I|at the depot. Armstrong hastened to | gren and performing the thousand and have to- g0 and return to the station | the Sixteenth-street depot to Iearn | gne arduous and nerve-wearing tasks from my home. When I go to Sacra- | What he vould\, The only tdt;‘s":’x}:_"__: | that fall to the lot of the busy house- | | mento on official business I have to “:}“sh‘s;‘”;}:’jsfi:s:lflm‘f ad blonde hair, | keeper, wife is doing just as much travel about a good deal in its trans- for the eess of the firm as he is, | | ection. As I only charge for t 5. ' and blue eyes and that she was small e h r the. SR il i g s Ll hfnm'(l,‘,: for her age. : | if not more. ~ And if we mean by “sup- - i g amount of the mileage charged. It is' One of the railroad officials ported” that she is an idle departme 1 e true 1 charged forty miles for a trip Station said that a girl answering that | supsisting upon her husband's merci- B = [ | to San Francisco to see about repairs description had alighted from train | gy pounty, them the term canmot in 3 e e e | | for our read scraper, but that trip in- A NO- 3 on the date stated in the letter. | . ;o0 be"abnlied to the average Amer- Booi- 1 after making a | | | cluded much " traveling on both sides ' She had inquired the way to Twenty- | Justice Be appiied o the avers % L X = sevene- | | [of the bay. I had to make two trips | third avenue, and the official requested | i . R Ny £ &nd Bave 8P~ | | | from my house in Brookiyn to Clare- # Young man who was s 3 e B ment three of t s has been wi mons In his place he th mont. All those incidental fo.show her to 3 cal, Journeys last seen or heard of the traveler. Chief of Police Hodgkins, were charged in a single bill “If my accusers had been acting in SICLONE CLARK, [ 10N : 5 T £ e 7 =N ¢ formed of the case, detal he past year doing general| | 4 W 1D / AT ., ¢ | s00d faith, why did they not present (07T LEASG, Cf & By Frank H..Spearman. 1 have now assigned him to | | "\ W f \\,e‘\\§ al, their evidance before the Grand Jurs | DIS men to make a search | ¢ - < e. I don’t see what Roach | | 7S instead of vparading it as a public| 5 One of the Weirdest, Most Strik- : e. He never spent R2r e ey record? The question answers itself.| A wireless telegraph plant of the | ing Stories Ever Told by - R MILLERS tself. | 2 . 3 H ing Stories Ever Told by t he has borrowed They simply desired to make political : Marconi Company will be placed at | i Dot Sulheh in Passing a Bill Cannot Be ’ FAODE VIELE SKOW. | A WRETCHED HOVEL | | s 3 he boys in the office ;nm)‘;fl!n }:mw‘l;m out of it well lthe foot of Fulton street, New York, | e | | xnowing that the Grand Jury would | op; o vith stes s lustv | never give the stuff a second's consid- | "Hich Will work with all steamers | ___Exclusive in the : — { B aiid o {naving apparatus. This will enable NEXT SUNDAY CALL. SCHOOL TRUSTEES ARE B b i 2 4| Superior Judge Melvin has set the | Ships held outside the harbor by fog | | HELD TO BE SOLE .'l“DGlS’ Ve hearing of the accusation for May 16. to communicate with the world. | - . e FOUND STARVING IN { APPOINTS COMMITTEES District Attorney Decides Their Action | FOR ENSUING YEAR Reviewed. | Aged Paralytic Who Had Been With- | President Capwell of the Board of | e % {LAND May 7.—District Attor-{ out Food for Several Days Is | | Trade Names Men Who Will i o —y % 3 B 3 n rendered an opinion to-day Given & | Conduct Business. ! : 4 - 2 hict 1 t the action of a| ALAMEDA, May Ren- OAKLAND, May 7.—President H.| piee 4 % bod of ees in passing a | nell, an early resident, was to-day re- C. Capwell of the Oakland Board of o SR 2 of e question was brought Schools ported to the Alameda Charitable As- sociation as being in 2 siarving condi- Trade appointed the following stand- ing committees at the regular meet- | who stopped the payment | tion in a hovel at the e. end. ing of the board of girectors last of H. C. Petray 3 y- |eral dadies of the association night: | 8 th of November on ‘h:‘ 013”':;“"‘ and found him In a pit- | % = —F| Executive committee—D. Edward | Zz not been | ‘20 o 11 THE GREAT MAY | | . = | b had not been|'*Le B BN en without food for sev- L e M | nol::;xs. JLAlJ. Heeseman, George H. | 2 e Smith, J. B. eral days and as he is partially paral- ntage eyed the crowd in a decidedly Richardson, William J. | | C. J. Heeseman, A. J. Snvder, J. J. : i Petray was sick that month, but the | ;03 "\as ‘unable to move out of his | % —- i | Laymance. & rustees decided to pay him his sal- | 263, Was | Harbor and water tront—Hugh Ho- b4 rawford contended that the "R,y has a son, Bdward Ren-| OAKLAND, May 7. — Although|gan, Edson F. Adams, James P. Tay. 3 - ~ The opinion_of | ;" d in the local postoffice, {Shade trees are plentifyl in the |lor, E. P. Vandercook, R. Whitehead. | j i e e O 1B r, Mrs. Edward Griffiths, | grounds about Arbor Villf, the resi-| Auditing committee — George 3 e e | v e e that they have als-|dence of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Smith; |[Falmhlld, R. P. M. Greeley, B. Lehn- | § . he hoids that a board | CReT I 1 o Charitabe | here the great May fete took place | Mo . o 3 “geller, Duncan| # A tagy fer this decison. | \ssociation. |to-day. sheltered nooks were at a |ycDuffie, Jullus Abrahamsor, J. Tyr- | 3 the judges of the services et 3 G TP | premium, for old Sol had come to 8ee | rel, Irving C. Lawls, - { T nd t B dicial capacity Marriage Licenses, the fun, too, and from nfs superior | Publicity committee—Stuart Booth, sl R S | | ] | | 3 e OAKLAND, May The following |, % Warner, George T. Forsyth. 3 OFFERS OUIDA'S FAMOUS marriage licenses were issued by the | Locor o enle manner | In Ol T T mprovements—J. _Tyrrel. “UNDER TWO FLAGS" |County Clerk to-day: Adrian Wilkin- [ o 'qe 1t Was hot as & day 'n 9 ® | James S. Nalsmith, Hubert Bryant, F. § eros ot son, san Matea, and Louise Sanlire, “ “dg“im{:’d fax e et ke foe | C. Turner. Dr. C. C. Shinnick. i s : Oakland; Macpherson Harrison, | “ceded the expectation: ven the | ~ yMembpership committee—Dr. H. G. oyl \”',',,.::, WO o e C",:' In| 2> and Elisa E. Hoffmann, 20, both of | ISt sanguine of the fair workers that | Thomas, E. J. Stewart, W. E. Logan, mic uction at the Lib- West Berkeley; Willard £. Bower, 21, | ®IIply. one's pocket in charity’s name. | P. N. Hanrahan, C. H. King, Myron T. E erty Theater. | and Marguerite R. Strauss, 15, both of ‘The Central Free Kindergarten, the | Holcomb, Em!l Lehnhardt. \KLAND, 7.—A dramatic | Alameda; Walter H. O'Gara, 2 East Oakland Social Settlement and | Judiciary committee—Charles E. 2 o A of “Doder Two | Mary; B, .Dunning, 18, bothier New century Club were all made | Snook, George W. Reed, G. Russell p: production. He | chou, sk years of age, was run over | day, raged fast and furious:down by'|board a special committee to arrange - _dramatic interest |, a horse and buggy on PaPk street | the enth-avenue gate, where two ! for the affair: Charles E. Snook, E. ,, Il be s throughout the six| .4 Central avenue this afternoon. |rival vaudeville shows faved each |P. Vandercook, Charles J. Heeseman, “ o itened by elabo- | rhe child was severely cut on the other. Josenh Rosborougl and Ray | Emil Lehnhardt and Frank K. Mott, * steg | head, but his injuries are not thought | Baker “speiled” for the V(ncenurn‘ ——————————— =P to be serious. C Bray, driver of nce and their wit- T Footb: i L ~ POLICE SFEK A WOMAN | the vehicle, ie exonerated by the tes- drollery ar-| , \‘ery‘h:m'el d:zn:,el a“:: of com- AKLAND, 2 7 he police of | \l;AKLA.\']I; Ma_\' Ti_‘—‘i?fli;llin C. P. | “the greatest on earth,” from many a ; the Nouveau Cirque, it is already be- 2 or Mrs. Rose | Welch, president of the Independence | pocket. The immense programme, N . = | \ I N ~ J siven as 40 |Square Improvement Ciub, has been | posted sideshow fashion outside the [ “OMiNg popular in goclety, and has FpEt \‘/I H NE/\ \\LINDA\/’b LL - anted by the Po- |appointed af street inspector by the |enclosure, promised much and the been a feature at several private an Francisco | Board of Public Works to see that the pronmiise was creditably fulfilled by the | dances. . n, will be t ON KIDNAPING CHARGE ion of Mrs. Rose Jackson When Found. Robert a lam J The father, Robert | ! is illustri i R hen she painted th bl i ckson, a San Francisc 3 Hnd of & Scastial some black satin kimona, and Miss |SIX couples, three on each side, can take ga}lery of the ages as did his il us}noul sister, Rosa, when she pain at superbly colored revelation of aime he is entitled to the b‘:)yst;‘:\‘:!perr The ‘bt esens ‘dn : Cekotan ¢ | Knox, as Wun Hi, wore the conven- | part in the dance at a time, and the | animal power and physical beauty, “The Horse Fair.” Both pictures are so perfect that they seem to surpass decree of divorce. “ COUrt | tional Chinese costume. Oscar Frank, | object of the game. is, of course, to| the power of mere art, for they possess qualities of realism which actually fool the senses. | ————— Will Heold Cottie Debate. he ties Request the on Jackson has nd OAKLAND, May 7.—The final con- 3 he Cottle elocution medal will ke place Monday ry's College. evening at St. The contestants will be James F. McCue, Willlam McStay, Andrew F. Burke, Vincent C. Derham, N " B. Hinkle, £. Mc¥Elroy. ierce, F. J. Sullivan, Dr. C, tigan and Dr. T. D. Maher. J ~—— = | and with success.—London Dally Mail. 1IF YOU WANT TO LAUGH UPROARIOUSLY DON'T MISS MEN, WOMEN AND CARNI- VALS. One of the Brightest, Wittiest, Jad. I used to know him whin I was | siter Mikel, Lellied(‘:liiver. Fred Moller | left behind a welcome uld;uo;:t to the . ] T D e e en | | o m it b aous o 5 | To8 o, Siowas who were o8 consiie. | Osjient's pot coaniiiass & o 18 | = e Slr I [ i i b Naiol e JUNDAY. MAY . — e ey DT T O O Ind Diok Belcher, - < | tavtain’ theta: Whils. the 2’4‘:5‘.:3.'2;{ P Paper of the West. 0 Lo poare. Sua Exciutve . he o e v e Bt Vi th et | bl tound sisument 203 o FOR SALE BY ALL AGENTS, ETC. The judges will be Judge Ty A. Melvin, G. R. Lukens and assisted by B. P. Oltver, D. Francisc: M. Svenson, 4 richer by the tropical temperature to- ! o the fold many would imony of several eve-witnesses to the | accident, who say that the little boy | ran direetly in front of the horse. et > S Appoint Street Inspector. lamb heve wan- dered by. Across the way Bernard Millér, in a | costume as “hot” as the weather, lurad | | the price of admission to his show, | that else | street work ordered on East Four- | “talent.” "Miss Georgle Cope and Miss |teenth and East Fifteenth | Margaret Knox repeated some of the e and that the g i | prettiest songs and dafces from “The s make proper repairs | Geisha,” in which they recently made wherever they tear up the streets. !such a hit that people are still talk- | —————— ling. Miss Cope wore a very hand- | scandal has just been enacted at Basle, | who has an excellent voice, sang where Countess Wedel-Berard, the au- | “Only a Bowery Boy,” and Kendall thoress of the book “My Relations | Fellows gave some of his ever enter- | With the Emperor Wiltam I1” ha;’tal;ll;ag fesie o fasy] (s m. ! ss gnes Marie oonan won e B e e e aeyIum. | mearts of ner hearers by her original | character sketches and impersona- persona grata at the courts of Berlin | tions. True to life was her character and Vienna, but she lost the friendship E sketch of an old woman. Her other of the Kaiser after the publication of | yuymbers weré “Dixie,” “Down East™ her book. and “Irish Dialect,” She showed It is stated that she intended writ- mgl_-:(ed \'eirslatilll)'wael;: :rtlt)flc -Iblllly» ¥ e ‘“‘spielers’ conspicuous P . four 8 A " land theyspleled in doze wore quaint ! coming known great pressure was|. . .gicylous costumes and they kept |‘"‘°"‘bl to bear on her rélations to!ine air filled with plaintive appeals have the Countess put under restraint, | to “Come in! come in!” and see the “only place on’ the grounds.” Ben e ———— e —— Woolner led a hand of leath unged Pat Knew Him Well. rooters for the California Girls' Train- “Say, Pat, bave you ever read any ; ing Home and few could recognize be- of Macaulay's poems?” hind their make-up the genial visages “I have.” !ot Lou Kennedy, Buck Ward and Wil- “Have you read ‘Ivry? " j “Yis; ivery one. Mac was a foine iam Lomax Jr. For the Mutual Benefit Club Ros- to the Museum of Parls refused all the crowded ¢ars and the ladies in food for twenty-six months. 3 \ | six semi-circles, two at each end and Lukens, “John McDonald, Cary How- bination’ of a waltz and a game of foot- ball, is arousing much interest in Paris Just now. Produced first in a musical sketch at The floor is specially marked out in| rectangular form, inside the lines being one at each side in the middle. The goals are marked by wide hoops. Only score as many goals as possible, the bali being driven by the feet only while dancing. The couples are, however, confined to | their own particulax semi-circle, and; must not move out of it unless they have the ball in play, when they can move anywhere until the ball is taken from them by another couple, or until a goal Is scored. ¢ ‘Waltzing goes on the whole time, an as one cpuple becomes exhausted an- other palr can take their place and continue - the game until “time” is called, or the best out of a given num- ber of goals is scored. At times this dance becomes quite exciting, and the sitters take a keen interest in the score.—London Dalily Mail. RN P i SN bt SR L RS 2 faction that the fete was over and had in the games, the ponies and charge of the various beoths counted donkies and the scores of other attrac: weut their money with’‘a sigh of satise "tions. . A FAMOUS BONHEUR PAINTING Playhous | Franc day, for in their respective booths !ard. % ayhouse, opening | 1.'3" Otto Welter, 30, and Op were to be found delicious icecream | Delegate to State Board of Trade— 3 1 Jumes Nelll as! ' Pa? bt of San Francise and the coldest of cold drinks. The | Edwin Stearns. R . (a!»r.ledo l(_igs | o, 3 sodawater headquarters, run in behalf | TIgwas voted to hold the annunal ban- 3 Wil preae: uida’s . 2 - of the California Girls' Training | quel on Wednesday evening, May 25, b of Cigarette. Buggy Runs Over Chiid. Fome, was simply, Gacked Al Ghse . IRt Maple Hall. Preaident Cenreil st b4 given special ALAMEDA, May 7.—Albert Mou- But the fun, the real fun of the ! pointed the following members of the 24 Bonheurs. Auguste Bonheur is the author of the picture, which equals the Auj the father, could produce only one phenomenon. the esthetic world at the time of its first exhibition. ceded that Bonheur's “Highland Sheep” is far superior to the works of BY E. L. LOUYOT. It is the reproduction of a superb painting by one of that world-famous family of art creators, the brated sister, Rosa. This art piecs will be given away, free, with each copy of The Sunday Call. ste Bonheur in presenting “Highland Sheep” to the world made as fine a contribution to the art Auguste’s climb into fame was even miore arduous than that of his si capped him. In 1845, when all Paris was talking about .the remarkable exhibits in the Salon by a young girl. named Rosa Bonheur, who had elected to become a painter of animals, another Bonheur made an appearance in the galleries. This time it was a man, Francois Auguste by name, and a2 man ambitious to be a painter of genre. His pretensions were laughed at. It was critically concluded that the Bonheur family. taught by . But the following year this genre painter exhibited a landscape which attracted attention. more he was a landscape and cattle painter, esteemed but Mtle less than his gifted sister. found his successive medals and his red ribbon of the legion. It is quite possible that the sister overshadowed his and that he might have won 2 higher position in art under another name. “Highland Sheep” is probably the most noted canvas of all Bonheur’s art career. hibi Now that sheep pictures have bec: most to the extent of a craze—the great paintings of this animal and its environment and large sums of money are paid for the mere privilege of copying the original picture. study their specialty. The only artist who ever equaled Him was his own sister, «“PLAYMATES” best work of his even more cele- er, for his very name handi- In a few years Auguste Bonheur greater fame of his It was the talk of ome a popular fad—al- have doubled in value All critics have con- all others who have made animal 45 OB PR PSS GG GGG SeG00 5555554 GG B S S R S S S S S S L R G S T R S R S % POTO P VT TIrrRrees

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