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FR, THE SAN NCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, ‘JUNE 22, 1904, 1 ALGOA'S HULL | RENT AND TORN| Big Freighter's Bilge Keel [ avis Wrenched Off and She Tries to Turn Turtle in the Dock SANTA CLARA COUNTY'S BIG PRUNE PALACE ATTRACTS CROWDS AT FAR h Display at St. Louis of the California Product Is| Improving the World's Acquaintance With the Fruits| That Grow in Rich Profusion in the Golden State! DIVERS FIND THE CAUSE Will Be Necessary to Clear Away Tangled Wreckage Before PumpingOut Water i S steamer Algoa was PPOINTS TWENTY-FIVE SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS f Board of Edv Contestants peation Selects Highest Competitive Exami- for Extra Duty. nation M 3. okings, George B. B. Osgood, Mrs, L. A. Os- the public Th s VORLD'S FAIR, T = — Unc Jas —————— PREPARATIONS COMPLETE FOR ST. PATRICK'S PICNIC Exception. Arrangements Have Been Made in Anticipation of a Big Party. but the lat- | J G H s k's parish g which minently be- and gives the struc- gas ranges $16 50, regular . price $20, this week only.at S. F. Ga ss ; REBUILDING THEIR BOOTH. | Rrigs 8% thls ek oniy s ias > and Monterey coun- ptinra o B b St el . booth in the CALIFORNIA CAMERA CLUB ornia exhibit. They have decided MAY BE LARG! IN WORLD that the first s unworth ructure erected is utter- of their importance and have torn it down and mpleted a booth that » 0ok upon as any. of Paso Roble: r u Wayback the ex- Mrs. todian of An Important Statement Is Made at a Big Meeting of Members Last Night. Although numerous members of the California Camera Club left last week in a body for a visit to the St. Louis Fair and trip through several States, there was a surprisingly large attend- ance last night at the club’s head- quarters, ‘Academy of Sciences butld- madam,” Childs Good come in and s own. He erected what he calle )5 pe arbor,” but which looked like ar‘ Indian shack on the plains of Ne Mexico. Under this were displayed the jars of fine fruit and other exhibits sent his wife The Agers nment | on by San Luis Obispo and Monterey. | j, G . The other county commissioners looked | 5. .07 1, ombie, the well-Enown e - 1he. atyiokire ARd retevred | PRI, lectured on the subject of to it as the “birds’ nest.” Its roof was| COmposition and criticized lantern 5 wbtalt Shitiai slides which were shown on the ¢ Janney went home, satisfled with his | Screen. wer A few dayvs ago C. A. Black of| In an address A. L. Coombs, the b San Miguel, who is the commissioner | President of the ciub, told of forth- for the two counties, came ‘here with|coming big events and in doing so briskly. “We pipe it all the way from spoke of the California Camera Club | The; wife. had convuisions when 5 San f”"\;' . “birds’ nest.” Black at|2s having the largest membership of - s nf PN o ans drawn for an ornate|any similar club in the United States. to leave g oS Bhn g M ucture. It will have three|Dr. Thomas Fletther and Charles ! s passenge 1 convenient EToans of agony from 2 Pu ner of the palace, or pourri of shrie "at | Goe, however, are of the opinion with others who should-know, that San Francisco's organization is the largest in the world with the exception, prob- | ably, of the new London Camera Club. | The next ledqure at the club will be | delivered on July 8 by Professor O. V. ront, and on top will be two I L% o preserved fruit. It will| v s f in white, wit lecorations | ”vh"'i there "J'-‘"d the four lit-|of poppies and natural logg moss un- 3 ybacks writhing on the floor | g fon of Mrs. Black. The| ir hands on their stomach Be Baitol M & oo Two square feet of prunes were miss- and information M. Pomeroy, 621 ing from the wall, tacks and all | E. Thelen, the National City ban La “ranc Cal | C v ker, nge of Berkeley. Francisco, Cal * AMBULANCE IS CALLED. | and his brothers, Conrad Thelen of Ne- - < “Bring me that tank of spra »|braska and Gus Thelen of Germany,|LEAGUE OF CROSS CADETS oner Hyde of are holding a pleasant reunion at the! shouted Comm GIVE TEN BEAUTIFULLY Chotl Whir Ie: asix Jask th Ak ;mar_‘ fair. They had not met before in many AN ENTERTAINMENT S | years. ILLUMINATED | gency. R. C. Baird of the Bank of Califor- Play by Clever Amateurs Followed by Some one brought the exhibit of fiuid | ART SUPPLEMENTS used to extinguish the San Jose scal Dancing for the Benefit of | Field Music. | nia is visiting the exposition G. W. Marsh of San Francisco is here with Beginning " the issue of | and Hyde pumped the young waybacks ! n July 3, full of it. They sat up, and the emer- ifs‘c 1;5!:1} th: exhibit to be rr;sfie_b)‘ The friends of the I’ague of the THE SUNDAY CALL gency ambulance was sent for. The | Pls firm In the San Francisco bu"dlflg-}Crm Cadets witnessed a clever benefit Wayback family wound up its day's| performance last night at Native Sons’ Will issue a series of the hand- somest Art Sapplements ever issued by a paper in the United States. Look at this agiractive list: C\Lll‘OR\l\ S| DS MANY TORS TO EXPOSITION celebration at the hospital. All this time Childs had been hu!myv at work on -an arithmetical problem. Hi» arcse and addressed Hyde. “It'll take seven union labor men working nine hr)m 2 day four daw and eight hours,” he said, “to replace | those prunes; and, worse than that, I'm Hall. The entertainment was ren- dered by pupils of the Caldwell School |of Acting and was for the benefit of | Fair Records Show Presence of Large Number of Native Sons and Daughters. LOUIS, June 21.—The follow- A rural comedy drama in four acts, | entitled “In Mizzouri,” was the bill and a good cast of amateurs pieased F lt no:(:'llzh( Favorites, by all out of acids for the pr!ser‘mgwln ifornians are registered at the | the large audience. The women were g SRR e fluid.” | Louisiana Purchase Exposition: all good; Miss Edna McClure, as Kate, g R Bryson. Santa Clara County is iVINg tWO| San Franclico—A Koebst, Miss Fannie |aDd Miss Clare Hampton, as.’Lisbeth, S n Yeliow,” by | | cooked prunes each to 2000 people a | Fricdman. Mies le Friedman, Mrs. W. w. | winning great applause, while Miss | | | day now at its prune palace, and (msvflh > B H‘) Fred H. Blackman, Paul | Irene Billings, as Mrs. Vernon, and | ! flood of customers will become vastly|X: Yost. D. Winslow, A““““l‘."‘_d_l‘”"“" Miss Burnella Langdon, as Emily Rad- | | greater as the days go on. The EIVINg | Bailey, 3. 1. Baiier Bichard Schamn :‘m,,r} bourne, deserve mention. Of the men, | .:‘”lg r:‘: this geug:un n—uln is acr‘:]un: Hueter, Mies Weber, Mr. and Mes. 'am.v Victor Smith, .5 Jim Radbourne, and un s to the Palace of Agriculture, | Gutsc ax Schmidt, Mre. Edward Salr Fred Clute, as Joe Vernon, were the | and thousands are learning the excel- |- Saiz, Edward Salz. M. H. Saiz Jr,, Frederici best. Barring a i!mkm'x;’ to speak |lence of California prunes. A box of ! ‘;“‘ cooked prunes lies open for all who Paul Kahdemann, William A. Bauviile, Caswell, H. B. Amidon. 2 Angeles—Jason Rose, H. C. Oakiey and witer Mre: Zenana B, Curtin, F. . Metne oo Baesmtliler, rather low, the play passed without a hitch. The committee of arrangements, having the entertainment in charge, was headed by Captain Benjamin T. Crawford, Regimental Bugler Sergeant W. Buckley and Sergeant J. Kane, regimental drummer instructor. The dance following the entertainment was conducted by Sergeants Bert Poljunelli and James McNamara. | land. sh to taste theg llnadtlut form. The B ) | fas | samplezs are mostiy ladies, and all ex- | 3%, M, E Mate, Al p— thi | press the highest appreciation of the v ephino. R H. " . o eexien. | size and flavor of this California pro-‘f’.‘,':f"‘fl.,fi;‘.f m;,’} %"“&"’G,‘b’:;;:."m EVERY ONE A WINNER. duet. Merchants various cities | mme Mrs. E. Bower, Fred Karch, Miss o bhave watched the demonstration and anu u'i-n& ""l‘fll:lm Mr. '-ndn I:;T unl.” D. | THEY ARE HUMMERs. congratulated the San Jose people on | & Wit Mre. ¥. B. grills, C. € Glbions; their success. “The only way,” thevln. L Hayden, r. Miiler. | say, “to put an article properiy before| Oakland—L.'M. mwnr—.’, the field music of the First Regiment. | UNDUE PRICES ARE ALLEGED Restraining Order Against Napa Insane Asylum Man- awell agers Issued by CITED TO SHOW CAUSE| Aecusation Made That They Rejected Lowest Bid for Supplies for Institution —_— The board of managers of the Napa State .Asylum for the Insane has been | restrained from granting| temporarily to Wheaton, Pond & Haroid a contraet supplying butter, cheese and eggs to the asyium for the ensuing year. The restraining order was issued yes- terday by Superior Judge Seawell, upon | for the application of Louis Titus, who is acting attorney for the A. L. Lundy Company, dealars in produce and pro- vision 121 Davis st at E The complaint is a lengthy one and in effect alleges that awards for the supplie for the use of the institution were granted to Wheaton, Pond & Har- old, aithough this firm's bid was coft- sid higher than that made by the A. L. Lundy Company fo the same produets. The complaint alleges that the A. L. Lundy Company submitted a bid for furnishing butter, cheese and eggs 1o the asylum previous to Jume 15, on which date the advertisement said the bids would be -opened. bsequent to made to As a conse- State will ate an award wa ten, Pond & Harold. , it is claimed the € more than $2000. The managers of the asylum are re quired to show cause before Judge S weil on Tuesday n t why a permanent injunction should not be granted again their making a eontract with Wheaton, Pond & Haroid. Plaintiff's Attor Titus states that the case will be pushed unrelentingly. has secured permission from the torney General'of the ate to proc against the board of managers in the e of the A. L. Lundy Company and stance may be given the complain- t from the legal department of the State. At —————— WHERE TO SPEND VACATION. Hints Given in Free Book Published by the California Northwestern Railway. Of course, you are going to have a pe- riod of rest this year, but do not decide 2s to where you will pass th 3{!0( you have read a book ed annually by California Northwestern Railway pany, which gives information re- garding the many rest sorts to be found on whatever of relaxation attractive featur d by Tes 1! eams from trout may rawn in all its beauty While enjoving these people may live in ents, farm hou or hotels, just as in- Sination sugges these featur vacation 1304 of the Cal or by mal S BEGUN TO TEST OPTOMETRY LAW ACTION THE NEW Board of Examiners Secures a War- | rant for Arrest of Optician In This City. THe first arrest under the new law passed by the last Legislature ap- pointing a board of optometry and empowering it to & ine opticians to determine their fitn: was made yes terday afternoon. The law provides that all optometrists doing business in the State must pass an examination before the board of examiners, which ! consists of F. C. Chinn and Henry J. Cahn of this city and W. H. Hare of Monterey. I. Povelsen, who conducts an op- tical establishment at 1333 Market streat, tion. The warrant was sworn out be- fore Judge Conlan and according to the members of the examining board in optometry was made largely as a test case. It is thought that in the event of a conviction the case will be | appealed to the State Supreme Court to determine the constitutionality of the legislative creation of the board of examiners. Rabbi Myers Goes East. Rabbi Isadore Myers left for New | York City yesterday, the object of his trip being the publication of several | literary works which he has recently | completed. He will also with the aid of a male choir, in con- ducting services at Franklin Hall, Fill- | more street, this city. during the forth- coming high holidays. Already he| ¢ | pistols was the defendant in the ac-| negotiate [ with a prominent eantor to assist him, | KEROSENE RUINS | HIS DRESS ST Odorous Deluge Also Spoils Dentist Aten’s Evening at [ the Theater, He Alleges 8550 DAMAGES | WANTS | | i Trouble Caused by Falling | Lamp in Street Car Owned | by the United Railroads oy e A man's outfit, from hat garments, donned for theater array, worth $300, and such an outfit saturated | with Standard oil has an added v: | of $250—the price that must be pe for the discomfort and humiliation s fered because of an offens odor. a far cry from keros to attar roses, and while the biue book doesn't specify what perfume a man shall use when he goes to the pi . It's a safe guess that the odor of coal oil is pot at all in fashion. These facts, including the values of a dress suit and wounded pride, are set forth in a complaint for damages filed yesterday in the Superior Court by W. O. Aten, a dentist, against the United Rajlroads. Dentist Aten recites, on March he and his wife started fer the Columbia Theater on a Va- lencia-street car. In the course of their trip townawards a lamp dropped frem o mether s pointedly, that its moorings and struck Mr. Atep upon the head. Its contents. he says. saturated his hat and dress suit and penetr: 1 to his under ga ents. Then the lamp started a fir the 1 of the car, endangering the Ii of the passengers, including rh- plaintiff, but he h t 1 the blaze to the everlasting ruin of his dress gloves. In spite of the accident Mr. and Mrs. Aten proceeded to the theater and oc- pied the seats they had r served, b the ¢ Y m mr\r: play- | goers comcerning the redolence c fined oi! were too much for his sensi- bilities and he left his seat and v to stamd in the rear during the mainder of the performance. damaged c¢lothes he asks judg [h-‘ sum. ¢ fi | and hum —e——————— MOVEMENT AGAID DEADLY re- For the T TOY PISTOL | California Club Committee Wounld Pro- | hibit Minors Using Explosives on Fourth of July. A is on foot, instigated by the “toy pistol co ittee” of the California b and of h Mrs. T. J. Johnsc chairman, to educate citizéns to the danger of the toy pistol and all the hands of minors. ' of E every towa reaching who caution effect in tl The |armed v | from the T ¥ | Medical Association, showing tent of the inju istained through % | the use of explosives ere is a city ordi- nance here ag sale of tey and explc der 17, but it i ! y by the fond th who, having no heart te re- offspring anything in the heeds his pleading and plac d to WIDOW DEMANDS DAMA: FOR DEATH l')l HU wB\\D Mrs. Reavey Asks for $25,000 and Philip N. Kelly Wants $10,000 From United Railroads. Mge. Clara Reaw the death of h Reavey. He was run Bryant street 3 juries. accident Reavey approac ip N. Kelly has sued the United Railroads for $10,100 damages for per- al injuries alleged to have been sus- tained on May 15 by his being thrown ifrom a car on Mission road. He savs that the car was runhing at a high speed. —_—————————— Notice to Passengers. nsferred to and from all trains One trunk p 30 cents o5 Tasior st Phone Exchnage 46. Baggage steamers, o trip) 35, Special Delivery, 3 Oukiand Ferry depot A — Drug Clerks’' Moonlight Ride. The San Francisco Drug Clerks’ Asso- ciatfon will hold its fourth annual out- ing on the evenings of June 24 and 3. The outings will take the form of a | trolley ride from the city to San | Mateo, leaving Fifth and Market ‘slreeu at 7:45 o'clock. There will be | dancing and music in the pavilion at ‘qln Mateo. i _——— | FIRE IN THE PALACE HOTEL.—The bar- illroom at the Palace Hotel oming from the basement ck on Monday morning. fied John Connog, the night watchman, ho discovered a fire under the grillroom. An | alarm was turned in from box and the | fire was speedily extinguished. The damage was estimated at $5. pot dymtery cholera, the plague. Little thing is to send all impure and You will stop harsh and violent in its action. All dru; bool .C. Sale Ten Million Boxes aYear. The BEST HOT WEATHER MEDICINE Undigested food in the human body will ferment a hundred times as quickly in summer as in winter. Conseqnenm—mh liver, bowels , thrown out of order; sour stomach, itis, and in some suffer terribly gases, colic, diarrheea, vegmydhwhvwnd here. The proper matter out of the body unnecessary every day—not give it a chance to sour in the stomach and bowels. hot, feverish conditions and keep your insides cool and healthy. To do it, _-M%nnmzmmmm“ in summer, because it will not cause . 10c, 25¢, S0c. Nemnlduhnlk . Guaranteed to cure or S&uflnglmudyCo.. ! | 52 | | | } | | | i i } f | Eastern Excursions August 8, 9, 10, 18, 19 September 3,6, 7. & October 3, 4, 5. 6 LIMITS—Good going on day of s.ue. with stopover east of 3 transit Hmit o davs. 'Good go days for return; stopover anywhere. SEE GRAND CANYON ROUTES—Santa Fe and con- Mections going. Different route returning if desired .ouis and return $67.50 =¥ 72.50 310350 $r09.50 $107. And other Easters Pointa These rates for direct lines TRAINS—Tickets good are SANTA FE OFPICE—£41 Market St OAXLAND—1113 Broadway. BERKELEY —Santa Fs Depot. SANTA FE IS THE WAY. DBAFNESS Of Years” Stand- ing is Quickly Cured by Electro- Chcmistry EXAMINATION and TREATMENT ieaf. FREE all who have head w-,. hava m ccn-m-:mn. c-tarx'h. Amk Bronchitis, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lo- 11 Blood and Skin Dis- Liver and Kidaey Dis- )intz for mc Trtalmmt if You Live at a Distance ELECTRO-CHEMIC INSTITUTE 118 Ofl.l Ave, Cor. Post lt. s ¥F. % a. m. to m. and 7 Sunday 4—1)& m. to Offie daily T DR. JORDAN'S gazar ¢ USEUM OF IIITOIN u&masnm Tl g © Asaccamca: Mseum 3 he DR, JORJAN—D'SEASES OF MEN 0 free 1d swictly private Trescment persamal'y e by letter Pocines Cwre A MEN AN “IEI. Use Big @ for -lnurfl discharges.) tanias o wiesrations 4 sent in plain wrapper, axpross, prepaid, fc8 00 0 3 bottien €275 Circaiar sent 03 Veauest Los Angeles and Santa Barbara— O. R. & N. CO. 26, July & 16 ard June 21 < CLIFFORD, Gen. 3 Montgomery st Agene Mentgomery st Freight Dept. Occanics.s. wAD, SANOA, 479 TG o 310N DRECT LBE g TAsil . S. S ALAMEDA, for Honolulu. June 25, 11 am, £ S. MARIPOSA, for Tahit!, July 2 11 & m, S. SIERRA, for Houolulu, Semocs. Aueck< land and Sydhey, Thursdag, July 7, 2 o m. 1. SPIECHELS & BRI, 0, A, T 022250 - “oMPagNIE EENERALE TRANIATLANTIIIL DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE- PARIS, Falling every Thursday inst Saturday, at 10 2. m., from r, foot of Morton st. EHavre. §70 and upwasd. Secand 345 GE: ERAL AGENCY CANADA, 32 Broadw New York. J. F. '!'GAlllm Pacific Coast Ageats, 3 Montgomery avenu | Hiees soid by ail Rasiread T