The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 9, 1904, Page 4

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1904. BY MASKED MEY Murderous Assault Is Made on a Mine Employe in New Camp in Tonovah District WOUNDED IN THE THIGH PRSP RN, Vietim* Is Taken Out on the Desert and There Left to Die by His Assailants Special Dispatch tg The Call. CARSON CITY, Nev., June 8.—News has just reached here of a murderous assault made Saturday night by mask- men at Goldfield, one of the new mining camps in the Tonopah district. The men, who were all heavily armed, entéered the engine-room of the Combi- nation shaft at Goldfield shortly before midnight and shot Engineer Robert Dempsey in the right thigh, inflicting ful wound. An old man wit- nessed the shooting. The masked men then ordered both witness and vietim to leave with them and the party started northward in the ed pai direction of Colombia. After walking about half way to that town the as- sailants turned back, leaving the ounded engineer on the desert. Dempsey, bleeding and faint, made | his way in the darkness to a house in lombia and aroused the inmates. He| as given er until morning and | ‘uring the was taken to Tonopah He is now in a hospital | The shooting is belived to have been | prompted by Dempsey’s refusal to join 2 unfon. The ers of the union de- nounce the murderous act in unneas- d terms —_———————— ATTORNEYS FOR RAILROAD ARE CITED FOR CONTEMPT Allegation Is Made That Southern Pa- cific Company Has Disregarded an Order of Injunction. RAMENTO, June 8. —William F. E o tment ¢ s brother have r Judge and i been < Shields on Prosecution Proves by a New Witness That Prisoner Was in the Vicin- ity of the Josshouse. BAKERSFIELD, June 8.—There wae a n the Hulse Irene Craig, ase to-day when a new testified that ten or fif- he shooting Hulse entered nk with her and then This would take Hulse reach the josshouse and the rectly confiicts with the testimony mer trial and which tended M street SOLANO COUNTY FARMER IS ACCIDENTALLY KILLED Falls From the Top of a Wagon Load of Hay and Strikes on His Head, Breaking His Neck. ana band w read ng with the g jotic songe will be sung will be athletic sports Degrees Conferred on Graduates. SANTA CR June 8.— addressed Father Gleason Jose ADVERTISEMENTS. FREE T0 MEN: Do you want to be with vim and power tion, with courage, self-confidence ambition to “do things”? Do you want to get rid of that feeling of gloom, that | nervous, | weakness in your back, that worn-out feeling which unfits you for business or pleasure? Do you want to feel like a man. all over, to hold up your head with the knowledge that you are the man that nature meant you to be? 1 don’t think the man lives who would not like to feel as big and strong as a Bandow, and I know that if you have a reasonable foundation to build upon 1 can make you a bigger man than you ever hoped to be. I want you to know that, you who can't belfeve it, and I want you to have my book, in which I describe how I learned that strength was only electricity and how I learned to re- store it; also I want to tell you the names of some men who will tell you that when they came to me they were physical wrecks, and are now among the finest specimens of physical manhood. Don’t wait a minute. Send for this book now. If you will inclose this ad. I will send it sealed, free. Call for free test. Dr. M. C. McLaughlin, 506 Market Street, San Francisco. Herrin, ENGINEER SHOT |GREAT SHIP. FROM THE ORIENT BRINGS R DISTINGUISHED PEOPLE FROM PORTS AFA HUSBAND GETS COLD-RECEPTION £ - . I 4 g 1 | Returns Home From Alaska . ! J 1 g el gty {[ After Nine Years’ Absence [ and Is Shown the Door | —_— | N STN(L | {[WIFE IS UNFORGIVING R, | | | Daughter ~Asks for Arrest | { | of the Prodigal, Fearing He May Murder Her Mother ! — | Special Disp to The Call. PORTLAND, Ore., June 8. — After hunting and trapping for nine years in i the wilds of Alaska, J. A. Hockenberry | | returned to Portland to his family. But | | he got a cold reception and was told ~! | by his wife that he had better go back [to Alaska. Hockenberry left the house | without making .any trouble, but on Monday night he returned during his wife's absence, loaded a rifle in ‘the presence of his little son, and then | waited for her to return from prayer ! meeting. She learned that he was In [l the house, and being afrald to enter telephoned to the police from a neigh | [ bor's. A married daughter, Mrs. Lottie | | Warner, obtained a warrant for her father’'s arrest this morning on a | charge of threatening to Kkill her mother. Hockenberry has not yet beer | found. RIS SR YOUNG WROTE TO CAVANAUGH. 1' Sacramentan Receives Letter Outlin- | ing Plans of Dead Turfman. | BACRAMENTO, June 8—B. W. Cavanaugh % ; SR —ofs | of this city has received a letter written by | “Caesar” Young, the well known turfman 1 ‘ ini H H bookmaker, whose tragic death In New York Arm of Federal Law|| Mining Experts Come |East Indian Girls Seek | & i i fhatte ¥ i { )hetl!r Ilkf‘.l‘!d Jun; 2 Anfl’&‘gill”\::urzl“:!l«y‘ B H < !VW"\: !flvc.nrv d L. hw“w‘v: Impedes Daughter || From Concessions Wisdom of the Gay, Tyainein August, Then b, ven | - anaugh about making a bid frf'r the betting i privilege at the coming State falr. of the Afongs. ! in- Korea. West. e —_— FRAUD 1S CHARGED C: i ‘ N S| G SUIT Mre. Carrie Riggs, a young and| | | Four American mining engineers,! Two young ladies, natives of, India, - P.l_" — s osgpeerips PR v et B Who have been working on the Leigh |in search of education as they expect | Handwriting Fxpert Declares That mde :l:m,):;. ,U(i \l Xl:e'c\' fi\l‘P::dO'\" rl::n- i Hunt concessions in Korea, returned ! [” g"d 1; In America, arrived here yes- | (peck Stabs Submitted by Woman A A 5 o ¥ ke | ’ yesterday on the liner Coptic. They | t¢7day from the Orient on the liner Plaintiff Are Bogus. noon by the exigencies of the Chinese \ M; lare M. Gallagher, F. W. Deal, C. G. Coptic. They are the Misses Ethel and PI BURG, June 8. sensation was fhalmpos Net N 2z Dennls and B 1 Stoner. Before they | DOra Maya Das and afe’daughters of | ceuses tn the Orphe rt to-day during The lady arrived with Toney C.|| left Korea many Solaters, both Cos- | & high caste East Indian, who holds | the hearing of tn Afong and Chun Wing Sen Afong, her | . g 5 Sack o Tapanese had passed through | @ high commission in the British army. | former stenograp i g e s O e Ly T e Topamcas, mow. | Miss Ethel is somewhat of a dazaling | deceased. . to_ recor Shanghai by the steamship Siberia 5 x ; J i Prisns ; & | o - and stopped over at Honolulu to ac- | Mrs, Carrie nggs Is ever, were in the majority and latterly | ety and bfi;h SEW SRR, i | e A company their sister hither. Dr. John | the troops of the Czar were mot vis-| 7} St Y SFE (IMVEIIRY Ser (A | O ot | were bogus Endicott Gardiner, a Chinese in!p(‘a'-‘ H T H & ible. chaperonage of Rev. F. S. Hatch, M. |the paper on e v tor, was at the gangplank and stopped | eld hl'ee ours ’ From both Japanese and Koreans,|A: WHO I general secretary of the |and that of the alieged stubs the party. The brother and nephew safa B L.’ Stones.. thiy” reciived the | Christian Endeavor Society in India. | rent pr exhibited papers signed by the proper i i 4 : ] C2° | The rever & officials at Honolulu, certifylng that | as Chinese. | most considerate treatment. There was | The ';:‘a:[“r‘grct':;i’”;‘e:;s :Z;"d":‘r;:: BULLFIGHT FIASCO they were American citizens under the 228 s | no interference with the property of R L DS Tl Tt i RESULTS IN MURDER ot Sipmine Tl 107 the Diitea ] ¥ |the concession and where they came | (o U BAS i ngrmestbomg States. Immediately upon the produc- | pis gquty, but he appeared #g be very [into contact with the soldiery they | ([TERR Endeavor Society 1o India, |yap who Was Known as Spain's tion of the papers they were allowed | ;ych nettled because the ry had | found the milifary men courteous in apan, traveling, in so do- Pavorite Matadow Killed to land. Mrs. Carrie Riggs, however, | 5 . ic. H o ing, more than 40,000 miles. o >r. Gardi o | Pecome public. the éxtreme. Work is still going on g at St Louls. had no papers and Dr. Gardiner, who | "“3re~ Garrie” Riggs is well known e 4B fom but Tabor 1s growing | The home of his pretty charges is in Ko is one of the most courteous officials | oy iy {in the concession, but labor L3 g | the Punjab, T 3 ST. LOUIS S in the Federal service, fnformed her |Dere and has come to visit her DISTINGUISHED P WHO scarce, as the $3 a day offered by the | the Punjab. The young ladies profess | , siantard, who was 2 n lsis(er. the wife of Admiral Whiting, ARRIVED HERE YESTERDAY {st the | CDristianity, greatly to the disapprov- | whep the bull fight that under the law and his instruc- - 5 ON THE STEAMSHIP COPTIC Japanese for labovers. 1o ssaat the] . " o o etary Hatch of thel favdry ts tions he had no_discretion, but would | commandant of the Yerba Buena naval s 4 |army has attracted many of the Kor- | %" 5 O DocTatary: TRV, OF (Bain Shih- | e have to report her arrival to his su- | tralning-station. =Toney C. Af?ngr,’ a eans formerly emploxe®iin. the mines. ;;”c papa. uThPY:Xm“ to enter some | §hot through the | perior officer. brother of Mrs. Riggs, and son of Chun 13 3 Stoner has a good -opinion of the | Eastern college, but have made no se- | five other builfight Mrs. Riggs was inclined to be sl Afong, the venerable head of the nu- Phlllppme Delegmes T drehad: wiih hmi, beenpdeuride by | lection vet. They go from here to Bos- | In& were ar dignant, but after the situation had | merous and well known Honolulu fam- 3 RO velovs os raore. siuners dmong | 1o, Where they will remain until they | das- when g u":",{;::‘;,‘?(’ e acknowledged | jly, has not been in America’ since he Arrive for Great men. Stoner has worked among them | find a college which will accept the |and the ansr proved tg her, the Tnsp:cm'}"’:-as shme | Was a little boy. long enough to speak with authority | BIrls upon their educational qualifica- | " ply doing his duty and in the least of- | Toney Afong was taken from Hono- Conven“on of their worth. They are patient and | tons. They speak English with a | agiN0 ESPANOL WILL fensive way possible. Dr. Gardiner at lulu to Chink by his father fiftess yea's ¥ faithful workers, he says, and proper- | charming accent, are on intimate terms CELEBRATE THE FOURTH once communicated with Charles Me- | ago and has since made his home In . ly directed are capable of great accom- | with the intricacies of mathematics | PR han, inspector in charge of the Chi- Hongkong, where he is interested in * ¢ v |and are both well versed in the| . anila i e i A lishments. They laek Initiative, he | Spanish Club of Manila Will Re- nese bureau, and Mr. Mehan directed | the Douglas Steamship Company. ‘He| Four delegates to the natlonal con- ;anw but in time, under- proper guid- | Mysteries of Sanscrit and Persian. Of| * turn Honors Given to Heroes that the usual statement should be|jeft Hongkong on the Siberia and|yentions from the Philippines arrived | 58%% B0 IV, Che, OOV PEREE B0 | Tatin ana Greek, however, they have| - Gleas Birtiniase, ste s Wiy dony a5¢ |stopped over . at - Honolulu to yesterday on the liner Coptic. Two of | saor B0 ™ 20 orce in the paths of | none and Rev. Mr. Hatch fears that| yiniv\ June S The Casino Espanol, the when Immigrant Commissioner North | visit his mother and renew his ac-|theé delegates are Judges of the Court without this knowledge they may have - bas decided to pa: arrived at his office shortiy after 9 a. m. Mr. Mehan laid the facts before him, whereupon the Commissioner or- dered that she be landed without fur-| ther ceremony. An inspector was sent to the steamer with the order and the lady was released at once. [The steam- er arrived at the wharf at' 7:45 a. m. and Mrs. Rigge went ashore at 10:45 a. m Dr. Gardiner made the following statement regarding the affair 1 was on duty at the gangplank when Mrs Riggs came down with her brother and nephew the proper signed by which had no pa or any law Both the men ¥ uly to 1a t th euch as are required by at_all them lady law, In such matters the official without any discretion, exempt any persons of the Chinese race from and it does not ts requircment matier whether they are married to A ns or not. The momeM that the steamship company notifies us that Chinese or descendants of Chinese are on board it 18 our duty to stop them until they prove that they ‘are entitied to land. If we did not do it we would be liable to prosecution Every courtesy was shown the statement was taken, as required by the law. 1 found her to be & lady of refinement and culture. Commisesioner North said that Dr. papers | leayes the | lady and her | Gardiner had acted within the line of. | 4 | quaintance with his boyhood home. He has with him his son, Chun Wing Sen Afong, whom he is taking East to have prepared to enter Harvard University. This youngest Afong was born’ in China and although he speaks fault- | less English is, according to his father, | & thorough Chinaman. Young Afong has been carefully educated by privatd | tutors and his father expects ' that | about four years in an Eastern school | will equip the youngster with enough | education to qualify him for admission | to Harvard, which is Toney Afong's | alma mater. Chun Afong, the founder of the fam- { ily and fortune of the Honolulu Afongs, | lives at Macao. e is now 88 years | 01a and, according to his son, is enjoy- | ing the evening of his life tottering f around smong\the friends of his youth. Toney and his son will visit the St. Louis Exposition and other points of interest in the Bastern States before the son settles down to school and the father returns to his business in Hong- kong. 3 | WOMAN OF THE HALF WORLD | TRIES TO END HER LIFE | e | Tillie Ardaga Swallows Dose of Poison | . After Writing Two Notes Explain- | ing the Reason Why. | Tillie Ardaga attempted to commit ! suicide in her room at 18 Mason street early yesterday morning by swallow- |ing a dose of lysol. She was sent to the Central Emergency Hospital and { was soon pronounced out of danger. A note was found in her room writ- ten in pencil and addressed to “Mr. | Sexton.” It read as follows: “Good-by, and I hope you happy. You want me to do this and 1 am going to die Yor you, and you {don’t care. So let my father know it. | S0 good-by. Leave your picture on me and let it go with me. Be happy. | Let my father know this to-day so he | can bury me.” | In the envelope | lowing note: “My Dear Father—This is the last | thing that I ask you to do, 1o take me home and bury me with my mother where she is. Good-by.” The girl has been twice arrested for | grand larceny, but each time the charge was reduced to petty larceny. Op the first occesion, in January, 1902, she was sentenced to ninety days in the County Jail for stealifig two gold watches and $80, and on the second occasion was sentenced to six months for stealing a watch. ——— Boy Says Cook Kicked Him, Morton L. Cook, printer and adger- tising man, was arrested yestertiay afternoon on a warrant issued by Po- lice Judge Mogan charging him with battery. He was released on bail The complaining witness against him is Leslie Herbert, 1473 Oak street, whose father is chief steward on the transport Thomas. The boy said that he and Cook’s son had a fight at Page street and Central avenue on Tuesday afternoon, when Cook ran up to him and kicked him on the groin. —_————— are was also thé fol- A woman five feet two inches high should weigh 120 pounds. e DRUG SAMPLES KILL ANOTHER LITTLE. CHILD Four-Year-0Old Theodore Flatland Fa- tally Poisoned by Pills Léft on His Parents’ Doorstep. Another victim of drug samples was, recorded at the Morgue yesterday when the body of 4-year-old Theodore Flatland of 911 Churc¢h street was { brought in by Deputy Coroner Fen: nell. The child picked up an envelope on the doorstep last Monday afternoon | containing samples of patent pills dis- | tributed as an advertisement and ate them. He was taken sick shortly | thereafter, and, his parents not sus- pecting the cause, did not think it nec- essary to obtain medical aid until yes- | terday morning, when he grew worse. Mrs. Dr. Wells was called and diag- |nosed the case as one of poisoning. Suspecting the soufce of the poison, Mrs. Wells questioned the child, who admitted that he had eaten the pills. He died at 1 p. m. This i{s the second | similar case reported this &veek. Dr. Bacigalupi, who performed the autopsy on the body of Iitt] four- lyenr-ol‘d Theodore Flatland, does not believe that the child died of poison- He found that the boy had peri- tonitis, adhesions of the intestines, | with a large swelling of the mesen- | teric glandd, which were apparently | undergoing degeneration. The stom- ach and a portion” of the enlarged gland were sent to the City Chemist. ————— ing. Salmon Fishing at Monterey. This is salmon fishing time in Monterey Bay and many fishermen who enfoy this exciting sport are at Hotel del Monte, Here is a novel vacation, offering a peculiar combination of, at- tractions. The salmon fisherman may leave his wife and famlily at the hotel in the enjoy- ment of every comfort while he spends his days in angling luxury on the. bay. have taken advantage of.ihis outing and others are plann Monte is more popular than ever this season with golf, bowling, tennis, automobiling, rid- ing, driving and fishing as the chief allure- . ments. e e ‘Will Not Marry Divorcees. ROCKFORD, 111, June 8.—Ministers of the Swedish Free' Church of 'Ameriea, iniconfer- ence here to-day, voted to marry no divorced persons hereafter. Rey. A. C. of Greeley, Colo., was elected president. for of First Instance, one of them Is a Ma- nila merchant and the other is Deputy Collector of Customs at Manila. None of the dalegates |s sure of & seat at the convention. This is the first time the Philippines have been in line for repre- sgentation and the question of recogniz- ing the delegates will be one of the | | earllest problems before the commit- tees on credentials. Judge A. C. Carson is a delegate to the Democratic convention and Judge Trent has been sent to represent his constituents at the Republican gather- ing. Deputy Collector J. S. Stanley and J. M. Switzer will also, if the con- vention decides to receive them, attend the Chicago meeting. T. C. Reiser of the Manila customs service, comes as an alternate to the Republican conven- tiom and also as a deiegate to the Elks’ annual gathering. o Judge H. C. Bates, also of the Court of First Instance, was another passen- &er on the Coptic. He is home on a leave of absence. According to the judicial trio peace is a permanent institution in the Phil- ippines. The recent outbreak in Min- danao, they say, while serious in itself, was purely a local affair and in no way indicative of any general feeling of unrest. -1 xd Tobelmann Is Arraigned. Fred Tobelmann was arraigned be- fore Judge Dunne yesterday on a charge of murder and the cfse was continued till June 11 for him to plead. Tobelmann had been living apart from his wife, Mary, who re- sided with her brother-in-law at 608% Minna street. On April 1 Tobelmann went to the house and asked for a pri- vate conversation with his wife. Dur- ing the conversation he pulled a re- volver out of his pocket and fired four bullets into her body, killing her in- stantly. R RERR i TN Sailors Held for Trial. United States Commissioner Manley yesterday held B. W. Nelson and John J. Johanson for trial on a charge of having solicited on the high seas Eric Gustaffsen to neglect his proper duty as a member of the crew of the steam- er €oquille River. Their bail was fixed at $500 each. Jacob Swei and A. Larsen, charged with the same of- fense, were discharged, the evidence not substantiating the charge. —_————— Woman Has Costly Sleep, Mrs. Netta Vayle, 1215 Oak-street, while seated on a bench in the wait- ing-room at the ferry depot shortly after 10 o'clock on Tuesdzy morning fell asleep. She awoke about 2 p. m. and discovered that her leather grip ing the trip, -Del [ and contents had disappeared, as had ‘her purse, containg $20 75. She noti- fled the police. WANTS. HI§ MONEY BACK.—J. H. Mo- Callam has sued to recover $1400 from C. E. Platt; @. W. Smith and J, E. Platt. He pur- chased 4000 shares of stock in the Park Lum. ber Company from the defendants and they guaranteed, he claims, that it would pay him per cent on the Investment the first year. They “also, it is averred, took nof that the &:{n;ddnntln h::o n:: Itved also ve re- 2osed to boy Bl stocke o ™ peace, for they are not fighters. Stoner and his companions are home on a six | months’ leave of ‘absence, at the ex- piration of which they expect to re- turn to Korea. g ETTLES DISPUTE OVER BIDS FILED FOR CEMENT ° g | Supervisors’ Committee Favors Divi- sion of the Contract Between Two Rival Concerns. The Supervisors’ joint Building and Street Committee yesterday settled the protest of the Henry Cowell Company to the contract for cement to be fur- nished to the Board of Works being awarded to the Western Fuel Com- pany. It was decided to split the c8n- tract so that each company will fur- nish 500 barrels at $1 80. The Cowell Company objected to the Western Fuel Company’'s bid because it did not in- clude cartage, although James B. Smith, president of the company, filed a letter subsequently in which he agreed to deliver the cement. The price is 15 cents less than is being paid in open market. The Cowell Com- pany had bid $1 86 per barrel deliv- ered. The representative of the West- ern Fuel Company offered to withdraw the committee thought its action as noted would be fair to both parties. . . MANY PROPERTY-OWNERS OBJECT TO BLASTING Supervisors’ Street Committee Refers Complaints to Board of Works for Investigation. The Supervisors’ Street Committee yesterday heard the protests of a num- ber of property-owners in the vicinity of Seventeenth and Ashbury streets and Uppér Terrace against further blasting or quarrying in the district. The committee referred the protests to | the Board of Public Works for investi- gation and report. The petition of the Standard Oil Company for permission to carry petroleum through a pipe lide in Six- teenth street was referred to the Fire Marshal. The committee reported in favor of aceepting Dorland street, b en Church and Sanchez. Action on the acceptance of Harrison street, between Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth, was postponed on account of protests that the work roperly done. _Milk Is Worse Than Sewage. - City Bacteriologist Canney reported to the Board of Health yesterday that bacteriological examination of sam- ples of milk from the dairy of Stone & Co. disclosed the presence of 14,365,000 germs in each cubic centi- meter. Health Officer Ragan states that this number of germs is in excess at found in average sewage. —— CHINESE GAMBLERS - GIVE IN.—Judge Murasky yesterday discharged the alternate writ of mandate he had previously -issued to prevent the Police Department from trying Ah Tong and a dozen other Chinese gamblers o with violation of the ordinance of the of Supervisors declaring it a misde- meanor to have gambling appliances behind closed doors. discharge was with the consent of attorneys for the its bid if the committee so desired, but |, some difficulty in securing admission | to the kind of college they desire. They come here as. students, but hope to return to India as full-fledged mis- sionaries. 2 & _— Charges Against Dairy Inspectors. Health Officer Ragan yesterday flled | charges with the Civil rvice Com- Health. The inspectors are accused of dereliction of dufy in having re- ported dairies to be in first-c¢lass con- | dition which on subsequent investi- gation were found to be unsanitary. e e GENTLEMEN'S SODAI ehip of the Gentlemen's S f the Immac- ulate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary will meet at the chapel on Hayes street Sun- day morning, June 12 at 7:20 o'clock. Dressed in the regaiia of the sociéty and headed by thelr cfficers and banners they will march in solemn procession to the Church of St. Is- natius, where they will recelve haly communion in a body at the 7:30 o'clock mass. The member- mission against Dairy Inspectors | Smith and O’Connor, who were re- cently suspended by the Board of | Spanish club of Manila, | ticipate in the forthcoming Fourth of July cel | brations The decided on this course because of the honors paid by the e and navy to the dead Spanish s sailors burfed at Manila and Baler ew Span latter place, in Northern L a soldiers during the native Insurrection agajnst th most heroically nsurgents. | i Spgin _defended | against a large force of | —_——e———————— | | SWEDISH CHURCH WINS | IMPORTANT LAWSUIT | cmicaco, | Nets O. Huitber; Swedish Evangelic June brought ywing out ska gold jecided nt for y | Anderson. | straining him { was denied e | Atlantic Lines Cut Rates. LONDON, June 8.—The White Star, Dom! jon and Allan lines have decided to cut stee | age rates from Liverpool and Glasgow | Amertcan and Canadian ports to $15, commenc- ing June 11 The il be met by the Canadian Pacific Ra the from collecting judgment Northeast carner California ft. Improvements, three-story Annual rents $13,390. Nos. 34 to 53 Ellis street. modern four-story ment t inereased remt. Nos. 318-320 Nos 9-11 avenue and place (off street). per annum. NOTE.—The Incomes on all of ‘The “NMeredia Placer County, For further par- ticulars avply at the office of . . Oalife PUBLIC AUCTION SHAINWALD, BUCKBEE & CO. Thursday, June 9th, At!2 0'Clock. Noon BUSINESS PROPERTIES OF THE JOSE GUARDIOLA ADIINISTRATOR'S SALE —1— No leases. o, Lot 90x137:6 ft. Improvements, and basement brick building. and offices above. Annual rents $17,800. 2.4 Nos. 117-119 Pine st. Lot 50x91:8 ft. brick building; just ':‘n?-..:tm - num. Reasonable amouat speat h’i“-:-m m'tu ::dn‘:o o 0 O’Farrell street, near Magon. Lot S5xl Rent l!le-.‘ “I lease. Presen by annum. . 't nmmn&mm sie basement brick building, rented as & piano warehouse at $1800 increased immediately by giving leases. ‘Tract,” containing scres of 1523 land "SHAINWALD, BUCKBEE & C0. 218-220 Montgomery St. Mills Building ESTATE and Sansome streets, lot 45x90 and basement brick bullding. es, lofts o leases. (Palo Alto Stable.) ominal. Can Lot 42:6x60 ft. Four-story and the above properties can be largely

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