The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 21, 1904, Page 33

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’fI{E SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, 1904. vww';;wkeaders of the FRANCISCO CALL ‘Did it Ever Occur to You that the Genuine Cost No More than a Substitute? Readers of this paper can gel the genuinc frec. Read carefully. $250.00 REWARD for information leading to the conviction «f any dealer or manu- facturer having refilled empty bottles of ED. PINAUD’S World- Renowned Hair and Scalp Tonic, Eau De Quinine, or adulterating and tampering in any shape or form with the original contents of the same. This offer is bona-fide, and is made in order to protect the consumer of ED. PINAUD'S Toilet Preparations. To avoid imitations see that the name ED. PINAUD is on every bottle. Any communication relative to the detection of such frauds will be treated in strict confidence. ED. PINAUD’S (Er:nounced Pee-no) Eau de Quinine Hair Tonic is the orinigal hair and scalp tonic, and on account of the growing demand some manufacturers and dealers have counterfeited our bottle and label, and are palming off an inferior article on the pub- lic. The only safe and sure way of getting the GENUINE is to see that the name ED PINAUD (pronounced Pee-no)‘is on each bottle. ED. PINAUD'S EAU DE QUININE HAIR TONIC is the acknowledged standard of all such preparations, and will cure dandruff and stop falling hair where others fail. Once used always used. (Beware of substitutes.) READ THE FOLLOW- ING TESTIMONIAL LETTERS FROM PROMINENT PEO- PLE OF RECENT DATE WHO USE AND INDORSE ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC, EAU DE QUININ b. July 15, 1904 uinine a very re- Yours truly, ! s C1 WEBER & a Br New York, June 15. onstant user of Pinaud's Eau that can equal it s is formed efter many years of truly yours, JHotel Victoria. June 14, 1904 You ean ng Pinaud Bau de Qu for ye and would not use | N. E. Corner 107th St. & Broadway, { New York, Aug. 2, 1904. In my opinion Pinaud's Eau de Qui- nine is the most refreshing. invigorating and beneficial hair preparation. e Hotel Marlborough, July 31, 1904. 1 can recommend Ed. Pinaud’'s Eau de Quinine Hair Tonic as the best Hair Tonic I have ever used. As an accessory | of the toilet it is superior to everything | T have tried. July 31, 1904, experience with Pinaud's Eau de ne has been most gratifying consider it the best Hair nic on the market and the only e cerely, hair from falling out. / v TR A ot THE ORCHID, | 2rneo ? b New Rochel ¥. Y., June 14 :nnd after using | the invigoration > . Sore B Sihsien DUSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA, Eau de Quinine. BEAUTIFUL VENICE, g wyed | Square Garden, it has been unsolicited. | Night Festivals. Direction Loudon G. Charlton, rnegie Hall. New York, July 11, 1904. { . I find Pinaud's Eau de Quinine a won- | derful Hair Tonic—refreshing and invig- | orating to the extreme. g. - il n Sincerely | the most satisfactory. | Office of FRED R. HAMLIN, JULIAN MITCHELL, Knickerbocker Theatre Building New York, June-9, 1904. I have used many preparations for my hair, but none has been as satisfactory Ed. Pinaud's Eau de Quinine. As an cessory to my toilet I conmsider it in- dispensable. Mariborough Hotel, Aug. 4, 1904 Pinaud's Eau de Quinine is the best ir Tonic I bave ever used, and I have -236 a“’afl 45th St, July 30, 1904. Pinaud’'s Eau de Quinine the ing Hair Tonic there is. 2. 2 vay. New York, June 10, 1904. I find that Ed. Pinaud’s Eau de Qui- nine is essentially a preparation that has no superior as a Hair Tonic. It has my indorsement. ——————— = JACOB LITT'S THEATRES, o 2 Broadway Theatre, 415t & B'way. ¥ Jacob Litt, Proprietor. New York, Aug. 2, 1904. I"have used Pinaud's Eau de Quinine for five years. I began its use to cure a case of dandruff, which I did. I still continue to use it, because it is an in- vigorating and refreshing Hair Tonic. Sincerely yours, Office of AMELIA BINGHAM, 11‘33 Broadway. E New York, Aug. 2, 1504. Pinaud's Eau de Quinine lgs the most em?ctolu tonic for the hair I have ever used. venting the hair from falling out. THEATRE, g!'iALL CONTINUS 0 VSE B, Pivai A ] f . PINAUD", IT IS THE BEST I EVER USED. e CHAS. FROHMAN'S CRITERION 5 Cor. Broadway and 44th I HAVE I DO NOW, AND EAU DE QUININE HAIR TONIC. o SAMPLE of Hair Tonic, including sample of 1 RE our latest creation in perfume, mailed on receipt of 10c in silver or stamps to cover postage. TRY IT AND BE.CONVINCED. ADDRESS ED. PINAUD’S AMERICAN OFFICE, care ED. PINAUD ‘BLDG., sth Av. and 14th St, NEW YORK CITY. We are the largest manufac- turers in the world of high grade perfumes. Our name is @ guarantee of highest quality. ~ Parfumerie Ed. Pinaud, I8 Place Vendome, Paris. -_ - - I see pages W0 to 46 BUSINESS CHANCES, MONEY TO LOAN, ROOMS T O LET FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED, HOUSEKEEPING APARTMENTS TO LET, SITUA- TIONS WANTED, HELP WANTED, AND A THOU- S AND OTHER WANTS FULLY DISCUSSED— PAGES 40 TO 46 INCLUSIVE, TO-DAY’S CALL. = —_— Weekly Call, $1.00 per Year It is especially valuable in pre- | SEEKS JUDICIAL DETERMINATION Mayor Schmitz Says Dispute Over Charter Amendments Will Be Taken to Courts CONSTITUTION IS CLEAR — His Honor Declares Super- visors Acted Illegally in ‘Withholding Resolutions S A The fact that the Board of Super- visors refused to send to Mayor | Schmitz certain proposed amendments for his signature because he saw fit to | veto several which had been forwarded | { to him will undoubtedly result in court | proceedings to determine the legality | of the board's action in the premises. Aside from a judicial determination | of/ the point noted, the courts will also | | be asked to decide if the Board of Su-! | pervisors in fixing on November 8 nextg for the submission of charter amend- ments is not violating the constitution | of the State, which provides, according | to the opinion of eminent attorneys who | have bheen consulted, that charter amendments shall be submitted at in-| tervals of not less than two years, the| last amendment having been submitted | on December 4, 1902. Mayor Schmitz expressed himself as| rather chagrined at the publication in | The Call of yester of the article pointing out the constftutional provi- sion for biennial amendments to the| | charter. His Honor stated that he did | ant to make the matter public for , at least, for obvious reasons. ror admitted that in all likeli- hood a court decision would be peti- | tioned for on the legal interpretation of the constitutional provision and also on the validity of the Supervisors’ ac- tion in not sending to him their pro- posed amendments, as they had start- ed to do. The Mayor contends that the amend- | ments should be adopted by resolution, | and not by roll call of votes. He points | to the fact that Judge Hebhard during Phelan’s regime decided that all resolu- | tions must go to the Mayor for his ap- | proval or disapproval, and, in fact, the business of the Supervisors must be done by resolutions or ordinances. The only ~amendment -which the Mayor approved was “that modifying the dollar limit of taxation by provid- ing for a tax of 85 cents for municipal expenditures and 15 cents for public improvements. He vetoed five others, and was not given an opportunity to act on nine or ten others. | The Mayor has already evidenced his | intention to direct the Election Com- | missioners not to place upon the official ballot the amendments which he has vetoed and those which were not sent to him. On the other hand, the Super-| visors threaten mandamus proceedings | to compel the Election Commission to | place all the amendments adopted by | them on the ballots, and the clerk of the board is preparing a draft thereof | to be served on the Election Commis- | sion. At all events complications are sure to arise which will throw the dis- | | pute into the courts for adjudication. —_—e——————— MISS WALTON DEMANDS REASONS FROM GUTTER | ——— | Woman Wants to Know Why She Was | Arrested for Obtaining Money Falsely. Lena S. Walton, the Nome woman of mines and litigation, is not going on to Washington with her budget of | sensational charges and evidence against pérsons in and out of official life without taking due care of the B proceedings brought against her by | Max Gutter, charging her with obtain- | ing money under false pretenses. Through her attorney, Wal J. Tus- | ka, she filed in the Superior Court yes- | terday a demand for a bill of particu- | |lars from Gutter. She was arrested | |at his instance and on Friday the| |case was continued for hearing on | | November 15. Immediately afterward | | Miss Walton announced that nhet | would go on to Washington and pre-| sent her evidence of misdoings in the gold fields of the north. She sold Gutter an interest in the Gold Bug| claims at Nome and declares that she | | did so in good l§nh and is able to|of national reputation and the great- | She made the state- | est living authority on Kymric muslc.{ | prove her title. | ment that he is under the influence of | {hr-r legal opponents and is trying to| | bar her progress to the national cap- | | ital. | —_—————— Arnold Daly Arrives. ! Arnold Daly, who would “rather be | a mick than a king” and who inci- i’denlally is going to produce for the |first time here on Monday night/ | George Bernard Shaw’s brilliant com- | edy, “Candida,” arrived in town yes-| | terday. Mr. Daly’s early struggles to | | produce “Candida” in New York make | | one of the liveliest chapters of current | { dramatic history. Beginning with a | borrowed $400 in a tiny theater on the edge of nowhere, the players fin- fally ended in the Vaudeville Theater, | New York, filling the theater at every | performance. Mr. Daly is much {pleased with the local interest in Shaw and thinks that of all the Shaw | plays so far produced “Candida” will | be found the most fascinating. The | play is styled on the programmes | Bernard Shaw's ‘‘delightful comedy,” | “Candida,” Mr. Daly quaintly putting | it “that there are more laughs In | ‘Candida’—if you want to laugh— {than in any musical comedy.” The | company in support is identical with | that of New York and includes Miss Dorothy Donnelly, whose Candida was | one of the remarkable features of New York's last season. —— e c— Severely Injured by a Fall. A woman who is known as Etta Gordon, -allas Etta McHenry, residing at 717 Howard street, was severely injured by falling downstairs yester- day. At the Central Emergency Hos- | pital it was found that she had sus- tained a fracture of the right thigh bone, with a possible fracture of the skull. Her condition is such that she | may possibly die from the effects of | her injuries. Overindulgence in stim- ulants is attributed to the cause of her falling downstairs. ———————————— New Pictures and Frames. ‘We have a world of new things for the {:n tn;ie n;vd‘.r‘n:vly nt::d rooms to;!;'w em in. ors welcome, Sanl | Vail & Co.. 741 Market st. il [Rev. B. M. Kapla NEW RABBI INSTALLED IN TEMPLE COLLINS RAISES A NOVEL POINT Argues That Repeal of Or- dinanee Practically Aects as a Legislative Pardon e sty FOR A DISMISSAL ASKS Case Is That of Valentine & Burke, Bucket Shop Men, Convicted Four Years Ago ———— A case that has been stubbornly fought on both sides for the past four | years had another hearing in Judge | Cook’s court yesterday. It is the case | of W. D. Valentine and M. Burke, who | were arrested in 1900 for running a { “bucket shop” in this city. They were | tried and convicted before Police Judge ! Cabaniss. Valentine was sentenced to pay a fine of $300 and Burke $100. They | were represented by Attorney George !D. Collins, and Attorney Joseph F. | Coffey conducted the prosecution. | Collins appealed to the Superior Court ! and Judges Cook, Lawlor and Dunne, ! sitting in bank, affirmed the judgment of the lower court. Collins immediately ' applied for a writ of certiorari, and ar- gument on the application was heard i | before Judge Lawlor, who declined to ! interfere with the judgment of the ap- { pellate court. ‘When the remittitur was received by | Judge Cabaniss the defendants did not s > 4 pay the fines and they were ordered YOUNG HEBREW DIVINE, IN- into custody. Collins applied for a writ o RDAY AS RABB of habeas corpus before Judge Cook, s OF THE BUSH-STREET TEMPLE. | | g5q at the same time filed an appeal to the Supreme Court. When the ap- | plication for the writ came up before | Judge Cook for argument Collins ar- | gued that the defendants could not be | compelled to pay the fines until the { appeal to the Supreme Court had been | decided, and the Judge agreed with | him. The defendants were released on With interesting and impressive cere- | $300 bonds each pending the Supreme mony Rev. Bernard M. Kaplan, the Court decision. newly elected rabbl of the Bush-street| The Supreme Court has decided % against the appellants, and yesterday Temple, was installed yesterday morn- o cage was called betore Judge Cook ing in his office. The addres was de- | g0° 050 on “on e writ of habeas n A sumes Duties at Bush- Street Synagogue. S S= | livered by Dr. Voorsanger of Temple corpus. The court was informed that ADVERTISEMENTS THE WHITE HOUSE Monday, August. 22d. Latest, Novelties Silks ,‘ | and Dress Goods ——NEXT WEEK—— New Laces, Trimmings, Etc. Woill .G S Cor.Post & Kearny: 373, the office of the company to secure the job, but the representative of the em- { ployment company, Rible alleges, into the employment office of Costigan | P s = | ju h M & Co., 624 Clay street, on Friday ENSE U e dnxi 3t e Se and | ana gisappeared. Rible complained to saw on the wall a placard which read | the police yesterday morning and was “Wanted, Fred Rible, boilermaker, to | instructed to swear out a “John Doe” call on the clerk, ag there is a job for | warrant for petty larceny by trick and him.” Rible was told that a job had i device. Detective Ryan arrested J. been procured for him with the Santa | Costigan and booked him at the City Fe Raflroad and a demand was made | . 0% on the charge. He was released | on $50 cash bail. for $3 commission. A compromise was | i P made for $2 50. Rible and the clerk; The average young man’s object in got on a Kearny street car to go to ' life is to become some girl’s subject. Alleges He Was Tricked. Fred Rible, a boilermaker, strolled | | Emanu-El, who outlined the functions pending the decision of the Supreme | and duties of rabbis and teachers in Is- Court Defendant Burke had died. Col- rael. He laid special emphasis on the lins now raises the point that as the educational requisites as well as the ordinance under which the defendants ADVERTISEMENTS. necessity for great piety in a rabbi, because upon him devolves the duty of preserving the learning handed down by the Jewish sages. Dr. Voorsanger welcomed the .new rabbi to San Francisco and to his con- grégation and expressed a hope that all in the community would be bene- fited by his coming. Dr. Kanlan made a short reply, man- ifested his gratification at the cor- diality of his reception by the congre- gation and the people generally. He agreed with Dr. Voorsanger that Juda- ism stands for higher learning, and quoted Dr. Voysey of the Theistic church of London, who referred to mod- ern Judaism as the religion that can| stand unarmed against the weapons of modern science. for self-control, Judaism ethically is said he, and for the building up of the character of the in-| dividual, and in this upbuilding every one must be his own savior. Dr. Kaplan is a fluent talker, using no manuseript and speaking with great | clearness. More than 700 persons crowd- ed into the temple, among whom were many old Sacramento friends of the rew rabbl. The doctor will deliver his iraugural sermon next Saturday morn- ing. The Songs of Wales, ‘William Ap Madoc, the music diree- tor of the Chicago high schools and adjudicator of the great choral con- tests at the St. Louis World's Fair, will give a song recital at the Academy of Sciences Hall on Tuesday evening, under the auspices of the local Cym- rodorion Society. His selections will consist in greater part of the harp melodies of the ancient bard harpists of the principality of Wales. Some of these melodies were composed in the first six centuries of the Christian era. They will be sung to English words. Mr. Ap Madoc is a musician Emlyn Lewis will be the pianist. ————— Petitions in Insolvency. Petitions in insolvency were filed yesterday in the United States District Court as follows: Henry D. Corbett, salesman, San Francisco, $1741, no assets; Fred N. Edwards, locomotive fireman, San Francisco, lia- bilities, $1087, no assets; O. W. Peter- son, merchant, Berkeley, liabilities, $2593, assets $218. e Noble B. Young Indicted. The United States Grand Jury yes- terday brought in a true bill of in- dictment, charging Noble B. Young with forgery of a postal money order. ADVERTISEMENTS. $1.50 for 75¢ —Special Sale at— One-Half Regular Price “Crescent” Pump 0il Cans... ‘Wil either fill or empty a lamp without spilling a drop. of heavy gaivan- izediron. Capac- Safe, Clean and Convenient CHAS. BROWN & SON 807 Market St,, Near 4th, S, F. H eepers’ Headquarters fo %n and House l::frnhh- ing Country Orders Solicited. liabilities, | were convicted had been repealed this has practically acted as a legislative pardon, and the surviving defendant should be discharged. | Coftey contended that after the juds- ment had been affirmed and action taken by the arrest of the defendants the repeal of the ordinance was inop- | erative. He promised to submit author- ities on the point, and the Judge con- | tinued the case till September 2. —_—————————— WARRANT OUT FOR ARREST OF DAVID J. MAKEPEACE Paint and Oil Merchant Accused of Obtaining Goods by False Pretenses. C. C. Boylan, manager of the West- | ern Paint, Oil and Glass Company at 525 Front street, secured a warrant from Police Judge Cabaniss yester- day for the arrest of David J. Make- peace of the firm of Makepeace & Co., at 308 Market street, on a felony charge of obtaining goods by false pre- tenses. It is alleged that on June 9 Make- peace rpurchased five barrels of lin- seed oil of the value of $125 96 trom‘ the Western Company on the represen- | |tation that he was worth $3000 and "had two carloads of linseed oil in tran- | | sit and unincumbered. Boylan alleges that these statements of Makepeace were false; that instead of being worth $8000 he had at that time made an assignment to his cred- itors and he did loads of the oil in transit and unin- cumbered. Makepeace formerly lived at 620 Oak street, but has recently re- moved to San Jose. — e WILL LECTURE ON CITY’S ORIENTAL INTERESTS San Francisco’'s Far Eastern Trade | to Be Shown at the St. Louis . Exposition. A communication from the cus- [todian oM the San Francisce building | at the St. Louis World's Fair says that a great many St. Louis people who have visited the building have shown 2 marked interest in San Francisco. A list of these people s being made and it is the intention to give an oc- casional evening lecturegin the build- | ing and send out special invitations to | the same. The plan is to deal with | San Francisco and its Oriental inter- | ests on such occasions, showing some ©f the best pictures of the city and bay, and then take up on one evening Japan, on another China, another the Philippines and another the Hawaiian ! Islands, in each case showing their | intimate connection with San Fran- | casco. Tribute to Fellow Clerk. At the close of business in the freight auditing department of the Scuthern Pacific Company yesterday the clerks assembled to offer their | well wishes to Mortimer M. Dodge, who yesterday severed his connection | with the company. Mr. Dodge has | been in the employ of the Southern | Pacific for the last seventeen years {and leaves to accept a position as | treasurer of the Majestic Theater. W. | R. Jones, on behalf of Dodge's former fellow employes, presented him with a handsome gold watch. Mr. Dodge in a neat speech thanked his friends for the tribute and the meeting broke {up with an informal reception and the singing of “Auld Lang Syne.” ————e——————— ! Archbishop Will Lecture. “Faith: Its Dangers and Safe- ! guards,” will be the subject of a lec- | ture by the Most Rev. George Mont- gomery, Coadjutor Archbishop of San Francisco, on Thursday evening, Au- gust 25, at St. Mary’s Cathedral. The | proceeds of the lecture will go to the fund for the Children's Day Home. —_— Rich Man May Not Enter. man, who arrived from Victoria, B. C., [ cn the steamship Queen, was denied a landing yesterday on the ground that | he was suffering from tuberculosis, a ' contaglous disease. not have two car-| Henry Agnew, a wealthy English- To every subscriber of The Bulletin is given for $1.25 a Columbia Graphophone and one record. In retail stores the Graphophone sells for $7.50 and the record for 25¢. The machine is perfect in every detail and the records are loud and clear. The amount you save in getting the machinz on The Bulletin’s plan is sufficient to pay your subscription tq The Bulletin for ten months. New records can be had as desired. There is a large selection of records to choose from, including bands, orchestras, duets, solos, mon- ologues, etc. The Bulletin is the best newspaper on the Pacific Coast. It prints in full, dispatches from every corner of the globe, 14 hours ahead of the morning papers. Special articles by Grant Wallace, Lowell Otus Reese, Dorothy Dix and Roy McCardell. Society by Mme. La Bavarde. Subscription price, including Sunday, 6sc a2 month. Sunday Bulletin delivered, sc a copy—best Sunday paper in San Francisco. Subscribe at once. ‘The Bulletin Business Office, 233 Kearny Street, S. F. | Tourist Sleepers Without Change To St. Louis §cptmhr ,25671,38, 19, 20, 28, 29 October 3, 4, 5, 6, 19, 20, 26, 27 Through the Sierra Nevadas, Salt Lake City and the famous scenery of Colorado by daylight. Standard Sleepers daily to St. Louis on the Overland Limited. Rock Island trains stop at the main entrance to the World’s Fair Grounds. Rates—Round Trip: ST. LOUIS, $67.50 CHICAGO, $72.50 For further information call at or address Rock Island Office, 623 Market Street, San Francisco. C. A RUTHERFORD, Dist, Pass’r Agent., ommmw ' Rock island System i | I

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