The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 12, 1904, Page 28

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THE, SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 1904. Mflfi SHATTER of Whitechapel " |With a Proverbial * ‘1", Charles Green \ttracted to America by| : ; ¢ the Cheap Steerage Ratci in Which Miss It was mot his peddling of lottery LINER'S H( )LD CRU“DE]) :n\:kels. nor yet his disturbance of the ,‘ peace, that brought upon Charles Green Nearly One Thousand Per-|(colored) the wrath of Miss Lillian . ni1. | Waterford (also colored). She had been sons Arrive on the Phila-|on earth 1ong ugh to learn that even New 7orlk | the most exemplary character is not - at New York | immune from police attention, and she S | could cheerfully overlook any ordinary al T to The Oull. | breach of the common laws which Mr. Green had committed. But his brand- {, June 11.—With 719 per-| ge, the American liner ed port to- first vessel to arrive o carve her with the” weapon T r be condoned so long as she ed the breath of life. twenty yeahs, yo' Honnah,” sald port since the new Miss Waterford to Police Judge Mogan, rage pas- | B RENone P th ah defendant enjoyed mah es- é has. | teem an’ respeck. I regahded him as dding the low quar-| | £ s undesiral scum of Whitect t countr; who arrived & ot yet been gration off was brought to hour of examination k gen'lem’'n. Dat's wot an- d me.” apel 18| © \yy that on Friday afternoon she was en- ining at her residence,168 Tehama a couple of her friends, and that juring her temporary absence to pur- chase refreshments the domicile was wvaded by Charles Green, who offered lottery tickets for sale. Miss Water-! Aspectors who made & | g, -nds declined to invest, where- €TS8 | ypon Mr. Green “cut up nasty” and was jected. He was pounding the street ded | goor and emitting unprintable language when Miss Waterford returned, and when she asked for an explanation of hés behavior he drew a knife of the pro- 1s of those phia has n D 2 th —e———— OLD-FASHIONED FOURTH SUITS CHICAGO CITIZENS | yerbial “ugly-looking” kind and threat- T ened to slay her. | Plan to Hold “Sane” Celebration| «wjq dat yah knife he held me in Given Up Because of Lack hostage,” the lady continued, “an’ I of Funds. didn’t know wot minit wud be my nex’ sroject | till I ducked an’ dodged an’ got up de ment | back stathway.” of a Mr. Green denied the knife-brandish- | accusation, and sald he pounded door because in his hasty exit it A been shut on a portion of his coat- 1, holding him prisoner. As to hav-| free fireworks by the | ing lottery tickets in his possession, he the supervision of ap- | guessed the less he said about that the ith phy- | better it would be for himself. He was 1ent near | pronounced guilty of both charges, and when the Judge's decision was uttered Waterford chuckled her glee until ff Hickey silenced her with his re- lling gavel. o year-old Sue Anderson of avenue would now be a June| congratulations as if it had not| M Seventee | 223 1v | bride d recelving NATIVES FEAR MASSACRE iy AT HANDS OF THE TURKS|M™ Frank Ben amin Falflure of Sultan's Troops to Reach Rebels Brings Terror to the C Hall and Hall of Justice d the Mogan marriage bureau. derson’s relativ had Vilayet. rrested for assuming the WAS ities of paternity without undergoing the ceremonial prelimi- | t nary insisted upon by common mor- ality and the statutes of the State of California, d he was booked to an- swer before Judge Mogan yesterday. en it was announced that he had | expressed a willingness to rectify the | omission referred to on condition that | 1 not be prosecuted. Miss An- | assacre. | h wo ADVERTISEMENTS. GONSUMPTION Is Cured hy Electro-Ghemistry Another patient tells of her | cure. Her home physician told | her that she would have to go to Arizona and live in that hot, deso- late region. He told her that she could not live many months in this climate. She was cured by Electro-Chem- istry right here at home. She did not have to leave home and friends. Read her own grateful words regarding the Electro- Chemic Treatment. Mrs. Iverson says: began trouble ame frigh tely leave this clima ndition and that I could not e my children and ko to Electro-Chemic treat- my condition a serions I was having frightful the cough. I had such awful as if it had been dipped in ! and 1 had lost about twenty believe that three Electro-Chemic e of two or three weeks the cough i weight from the very start st year. ic treatment I feel very sure °n . T had intended to publish tI tes- but I decided to wait and see If the results hat my cure is a lasting one and for that statement of my cure by the Eleptro-Chemic sufferers who are in need of it."” MRS, A. G. IVERSON, s the best season of the entire hma, Bronchitis it to othe: 2015 Center st.. Berkeley, Cal. ear in which to treat Consumption, Oa- 1 diseases of the air passages. Many serious treatment very quickly at this season even under the Electro-Chemic treat- g the winter months. Nature is doing all she these pulmonary disorders during the ~summer stance of a treatment which is thoroughly constitu- i s di tly into the blood, building it up by am, thus destroying the germs of these re experienced very quickly In far advanced and iring to know more about this wonderful Electro- y_invited to call at the Electro-Chemic Institute, : Post St., for a thorough Electro-Chemic X-Ray ex- horough demonstration and trial treatment, absolutely free of OTHER ELECTRO-CHEMIC SPECIALTIES The Electro-Chemic treatment is just as successful in other serious maladies, axnd the following diseases are quickly. thoroughly and cheaply cured, as by mno other treatment. We extend a cordial invitation to sufferers from any of the fol- Jowing diseases to come for free consultation, examination and trial treatment. Electro-Chemistry cures guickly. cheanly and withont operation: CANCERS, TUMORS, OLD ULCERS. ZCZEMA, REEUMATISM, NEURAL- GIA, LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA PARALYSIS, DEAFNESS, MEAD NOISES, INSOM- NIA, GOITRE. BRIGET'S DISEASE. DIABETES, DYSPEPSIA, PILES, all Dis- eases of the STOMACE, LIVER. KIDNEYS, BLADDER and BOWELS, all NER- VOUS DISEASES and SPECIAL DISEASES OF MEN and WOMEN. HOME TREATMENT The Electro-Chemic home treatment is most successful. Patients living at a distance are loaned, free of charge, an expensive Electro-Chemic outfit. When vossible it is always best for the patient to pay one visit to the ofice for a thor- 1 personal examination. When this is inipossible the patient shomld write a description of the principal symptoms, and full instructions regarding the ome examination and treatment will be promptly forwarded, free of charge. THE ELECTRO-CHEMIC INSTITUTE 118 Grant Ave., Corner Post St., SAN FRANCISCO. OFFICE HOURS—9a. m. to 5 p. m. and 7 to 8 p. m., dally. Sundays 10 a. m. tolp m SBEPARATE APARTMENTS FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. fu b TWENTY YEARS’' ESTEEM E hing of a knife in her face and threat- | Waterford then went on to state | D AT A BLOW§ ‘Ugly Looking”’ Severs the Waterford Held Him, ~ 3 =S @ derson and all her folk were eager to accept Mr. Benjamin's proposal and [one emotional lady averred that even i the week-old baby in the case had | ‘opened its eyes and smiled acquies- lwnca ; So when the case was called and the | | Judge heard of the agreement he ad- | vised the Andersons to hurry up if; g ” they desired to have the knot tied that | | day, as the morning was far advanced and haste was essential to obtaining it is impossible for the elements of risk to enter into your purchases from thet s“;:f on the Square. THERE IS A GUARANTEE back of everything that we sell that protects you. We have a standard of quality to maintain that insures lasting satisfaction. the license in time to have the nup- tials performed at high noon, his in- | variable hour for officiating at such pleasant functions. There was in- stant scurrying between the two halls, | but, alas! 12 o’clock came and went and the license appeared not. His| Honor even walited till 1:45 and then reluctantly locked up his chamber | and went to luncheon. | Subsequently is was ascertained that the officlal who issues the wedding| permits could not be found by the perspiring Andersons until he return- ! ed from refreshing the inner man and then it was too late to have the union effected unless an exploring expedition was sent“out in quest of Judge .-Mo- gan. The marriage will be pulled off to-morrow, however, Mr. Benjamin's incarceration continuing until he is pronounced a husband. S Charles Yehl, a bartender out of a job, satisfled Judge Mogan that in- ability to obtain employment at his regular vocation was the sole cause of his alleged fallure to provide for | the support of his minor child. If there were fewer persons ready to tend bar or more bars in need of tend- ing Mr. Yehl opined his family might have no reason to complain of negli- gence on his part; but the fact was that the supply of mixologists exceed- | ed the demand for mixology. To all of which the court lent attentive ear | and then desired to be informed if Mr. Yehl's apparent reluctance to turn his hand to some other honest means | of bread getting was incurable. Mr. Yehl replied that he did not think it was, and then his Honor suggested that he apply the cure as speedily as | possible. “For,” added the bench, “I don’t think you would sacrifice more | personal dignity by tackling any job you can get than you are losing by | having those dependent upon you for life’s necessaries complaining that you fail to provide for them.” | A | Willlam Wlilson, who attempted to’ transform a Market street saloon into Solid oak, golden finish. Five com- modious drawers. Highly polished. TWO-PIECE BED '—Golden finish. Wood] Thoroughly well selected for its b,aumn grain. Massive $23 50 made.ss 85 o . carving. Highly polished. Dresser has bevel Price plate mirror. Thoroughly well made. Price This department the hands of experts, whom you are at liberty to consult with regard to your draper- Parlor Table—Solid oak, golden finish, turned legs, rigidly braced with shelf. 24x24 inches, box $2 Io top. Price FOLDING BED — Golden finish, paneled front, mantel top, highly polished, complete with woven $26.50 CARPETS An incomparable line of floor coverings, embodying all the worthy makes. Hundreds of magnificent designs, suitable for parlor, living room, din- ing room, hall bedroom. A vast array of color from the gorgeous effects of the Orient to the soft blending of the modern school of de- sign. You will feel well re- is in Our kitchen department is filled to overflowing with kitchen necessi- ties. The chief features of the de- partment are the REGAL and the MAJESTIC RANGES. The REGAL is without question the best cast range on the market, guaranteed in every point. Terms, $1.00 down and $1.00 a week. The MAJESTIC stands without a peer among steel ranges. Built of malleable iron and pure sheet steel, it is absolutely indestructible. Each of these ranges fills a sphere of its own. We guarantee to please ies. We will be pleased to have you call and see our choice selections of LACE CURTAINS, PORTIERES, COUCH COVERS, COzZY CORNERS and cut draper- ies. You are or ays wel- a slaughter-house one night two weeks ago, was fined $25 for carrying brass knuckles by Judge Cabaniss. L Emma Carroll, vagrant, was saved from a long term of Iimprisonment through the mediation of “Rebel George,” the evangelist, who persuaded Judge Fritz to allow the woman to re- turn to the Oakland home of her re- | spectable parents. “When I looked at her face,” said the mediator, “I saw that she was ashamed of herself, and when I learned that her parents would not have anything more to do with her I prayed to the Lord to soften their hearts. Then I talked to them and found that my prayer had been an- swered. I have no fear of her back- sliding. Her repentance is keen, she has found the light and the Lord will help her.” Mrs. Annie Speakman, charged with attempting to murder Mrs. Clara Lefe- vre by cutting her with a carving knife one day about a month ago, was ready for trial before Judge Mogan, but again a continuance was asked for and grant- ed on the ground that Mrs. Lefevre is unable to appear In court because of her injuries. The case will be called again next Saturday. It looks to the experts as if strenuous effort is belng made to effect a settlement out of court. Charles Kady was convicted of bat- | tery on November 18, 1903, and Judge Fritz sentenced him to fifty days’ im- prisonment. He appealed to the Supe rior Court and sentence was suspended. The upper court, however, sustained the magistrate’s action, and now Charles Kady must gerve his fifty days —if the police can find him. The com- plainant was a married woman who ob- jected to his attentions. o 5 REe As a consequence of his once having helped the police, the charge of imper- sonating a licensed plumber on which Willlam Yakowski was before Judge Mogan has been dismissed. It was Ya- kowskl’s information that led to the ar- rest, conviction and execution of three Russian ex-convicts who murdered the Weber family in Sacramento about ten years ago. The assassins boarded at the Yakowskl residence. E R Judge Fritz issued an attachment for the arrest of Harry Mondooly, who ac- cused a Bacon place woman of stealing $40 from him and then failed to appear to prosecute her. Maggie Mowrie, ~/ho spat in the face of a male visitor who declined to trip the light fantastic with her in 'a Pa- cific-street dance hall, was adjudged gullty of vagrancy and will be sen- tenced to-morrow by his Honor Mogan. Charles Mowrie, the woman’s husband, who was arrested for punching the face in which his better half had ex- pectorated, proved that he was not a vagrant, inasmuch as he works every day as & teamster, and he also con- vinced the court that he does not ap- prove of his wife’s calllng and vainly endeavored to get her away from It. The charge of battery remains, how- ever, and on that he will be tried to- morrow. - . - Judge Mogan held Ed Crawford to answer a grand larceny charge in the Superior Court, with bail fixed at $500. The defendant was accused of stealing several rolls of canvas from the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company’s wharf and an express wagon driver identified him as one of three men who transferred the stolen property from a boat to a wagon, in which it was conveyed to the store of a dealer in ship's supplies. The defense tried to show that the canvas was afloat when it was picked up by the men in the boat. Crawford is a remittance man paid for a you, no matter what you wish to pay. come. | {and the police say he is the director general of a band of juvenile bay pirates. Edward Trewin, charged with ap- propriating to his own use certain funds entrusted to his keeping as col- lector for the Bertin Dye Works, plead- ed guilty to misdemeanor embezzle- ment and will be sentenced to-morrow ‘by Judge Mogan. | . | Mrs. Clara Camey has removed her belongings from the apartments at 2827 Sixteenth street, owned by Joseph Enos, and Judge Mogan has dismissed the charge of peace disturbance filed | against her by that gentleman several weeks ago, when he complained that she was an undesirable tenant because | she had presented his potted plants to | her friends after vainly trying to dis- | guise the pots with paint. Mrs. Camey | 1al@ several impeachments against Mr. Enos, and as the honors seemed to be | about even, the Judge wisely con- tinued the case until Mrs.” Camey’s ! month’s occupancy expired and she | could remove her household goods without rekindling the rumpus. —e————— PREPARING TO BUILD ROAD FROM OAKDALE Company Is Incorporated and Con- tracts for Grading the Line Are Awarded. The company that purposes to build |a road from Oakdale to Riverbank, a | station on the Santa Fe's valley route, was Incorporated yesterday under the name of the Oakdale and 'Western | Railway Company. The road, under the present plans, will cover a distance of six miles, connecting the Santa Fe system with the Slerra Railway and thereby affording the Santa Fe Com- pany privileges over the Oakdale route into the Yosemite Valley. A contract for the grading of the roadbed was awarded yesterday. It provides that the work shall be completed by Au- gust 15, when the company will be ready to begin laying its rails. The project is backed by William R. Thorsen and his Eastern associates, who purchased the West Side Lumber Company about a year ago, and is said |to have resulted from the Southern Pacific Company’s attempt to enforce a prohibitive tariff on the product of the big mills bought by the Thorsen syndicate. The latter purpose event- ually to extend the new road south as far as Santa Clara, with a view of sup- plying the fruit growers of that valley with boxes and handling eastbound fruit to its connecting point with the Santa Fe line, —_—— Minnie Adams Again in Court. Minnie Adams, who was granted a new trial by the Supreme Court on the John Richard Gray, on March 13, 1899, by making him swallow a dose of carbolic acid, appeared before Judge Lawlor yesterday and the case was continued till June 25 to be set. She looked haggard and aged. She was convicted of murder in the first degree on July 31, 1899, and on Sep- charge of murdering her infant son, | tember 15, 1900, was sentenced to im- prisonment for life. An appeal was ten days ago she was granted a new trial, chiefly on the ground that the jury while considering its verdict had not been kept together. —_——— Bales of Wool Stolen. The police were notified yesterday that on Friday afternoon three bales of wool, valued at $100, had been stolen from the warehouse of Catton, IBeIl & Co., 438 Townsend street. A wagon must have been utilized to taken to the Supreme Court and about,| carry away the bales. A discharged employe is suspected. —_——————————— Wanted for Forgery. A warrant was obtained from Police Judge Mogan yesterday for the arrest of Roy Anderson on a charge of for- gery. He met John A. Hall of Com- pany L, Tenth Infantry, last Sunday and the following day got Hall to go with him to the First National Bank, where Hall has money on deposit, and indorse a cashier’s draft on the Bank of Woodland. The cashier’s name had been forged to the*draft and Hall had to pay the amount. Anderson has been in trouble before. —_————————— Grocery Entered by Burglars. The grocery of F. Tecklemborg, 1998 Bush street, was entered by bur- glars early Friday morning and a large quantity of canned goods stolen from the shelves. Entrance was effected by forcing open the rear door. 188 DOROTEY CLARK, 9130 Grenshaw it., OHICAGO. qualities of a child of her age in the results they are getting. N ¢complish every result we claim. FOR SALE AND GUARANTEED BY The other two ladies whose . Neither of them having hair T IS POSITIVE AND 1 20 wiing Around Tor wesks d months 40 45 resele ither NOW at all ADVERTISEMENTS. AND WE CAN PROVE IT. Resmits from its use are QUICK and PERMANENT, LITTLE FRANCES MARIE'KNOWLTON whose photograph appears herowith has a most beautiful head of matureé women. Frances is only four years old, and her hair h has grown for this little girl the most that d young, it makes the hair sprout and Any golden halr, thicker than the Aneumlnlzlnehnll AL 3 admiral &1 of bair ever sho S pr et IN IT8 RESULTS. w f':mmum ice it it does not aod in three sizes, muumumdgimwbouh FREE RO ueigylopderieeass T ximds o e oo by o REDINGTON & €O., Wholesale Agents. mall B iu:'m-on;-:'u this advertisement iuSRD MISS LUCY MAY, 8938 Yorestville A CHICAGO. crown of gl of mon of the floor. The nary h;blr ¥y are certainly delighted the beginning the use of Danderine. thick, long and beautiful, and there

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