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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1904 RAPHAEL WEILL A GEMIAL HOST MR.AND MKS. J. C. WILSON ARE HONORED AT LUNCHEON AT THE BOHEMIAN CLUB|®™:its frow Feinds C. Wilson, who ients of much r departure from of honor yester- given by Raphael at- decoration, pink careless profusior .was and many health .and ed extremely attrac- wn of brown. by Mr. and to be envied racing as it does Suez, with insportation through besides the tour of t points. ke Mr. and Mrs. Miss Helen Wagner, Jdgar .Mizner and E. > amoéng those who ity of Mr. Welll -2 ilson leave here on 5th, going to Chicago sailing from Boston on I e PERSONAL. low of Boston is at the Oc- rer and wife of Chicago d J. N. Gillett of Eureka { New Orleans is regis- Palace ¥, proprietor of a hotel the Grand. rominent lumberman is at the Grand. who Is interested in s at the Palace. State Superintendent at the Palace. Campbell of the Lick Ob- s registered at the St. Fran- a prominent min- , is at the Pal- f the United States loch is at the Cali- r A. C. Irwin is and staying at C. Dawson of the latest ar- wood of ada State = Grand y: d, . &' capitalist of bride are spending the coast and reg- Palace. een years man- Hotel in. New ed manager of this city. r chief clerk of Court, whe is now d.in mining in Nevada County, s wife are guests at the Lick. represents the and railroad lines d yesterday from Wis Exposition and gham who st. 1o at Palace. He leaves for Japan tk ext steamer. ven Pfeil, a noted professor of and a 4 ate from Ger- Louis, arrived at ay. With a number n scientists he has been and is now making a California. : s King Leéder of Sydney ar- yesterday and is at the Oc- Mr. Leeder.is & Judge and has traveling through’this tountry for t ing- the various iminals in the leave for Au- and Frank a woman 24 were booked Two GRAFE-NUTS. THIRTY YEARS WAR. Peace Declared When Right Food Was Adopted. 1 will fnake a man's tely and cure the old m&n went through an g how true this is. I had been stomach so-bad at unendurable. go I had an attack of heart so bad my wire altices there for two *Took a lot-more medjcine and d I could eat nothing, Id eat it but would throw n in a few minutes. I tried but got worse all the > be taken home from lifferent times. I was so zzy 1 11 know what it is to have acti and ‘the strong medi- made miatters worse. om getting weak and poor ing much of the time and warm milk until y s0. that all the clerks in t me .to die. I tried e way of diet without il two.years. ago, when Lo give Grape-Nuts ten days’ ed with two teaspoonfuls Nuté and cream three times three teaspoon- and from the very commenced improve, weight all the time as well h.- From that time it was progress with me, for all froubles disappeared; I got well and now weigh 190 feel as young as I did go. X e in my nerves and brain is wonderful because my memory was very bad before and I was 8o nervous t1 ¥ had to keep the children still all the time, but when brain and nerves as well as stomach got exactly the| urishment they needed from Grape- Nuts they built up stromg and hen.ll,l:'. of my family eat Grape-Nuts now nd the children are well and remark- ably sturdy on it. We eat gix boxes of it every week.”- Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in each pkg. for the famous ittle book, “The Road to Wellville,” luncheon | an Club. The Red ! turesque. | r Canopic on No- | | AR AND CHARMING WHO WAS GUES f RAPHAEL W ITALIAN BANKER WANTS DIVORCE —— Italo A. Calpestri, a clerk for Fu- gazi says he was a banker in yut was driven from ness by the cruelty of Yesterday, through Soderberg & Walsh, he divorc in the land were married in er, now five years , them. It is said that the wife scratched her e and “threatened other & Co € In August following, be- cause of her circulation of false charges against him, he was com- to abandon his business and or the United States. Schmoll, who on May 17 husband, George Schmoll, month separate mainte- nance, yesterday dimissed the and sued him for divorce on the ground of cruelty. They were married at Reno in April of last year and she LITTLE WILLIE, action | gaid his abuse began a month later.| In a cross-complaint to her former | suit Schmoll accused his wife of fre- | $100 u ng dance halls. demand of Lucy Loupy for 2. month pending the trial of her s for divorce against Jean Loupy, one of the proprietors of the Pup ro- », Is resisted by the defendant, quen The d an affidavit yesterday de- aring the restaur to be worth | only $30,000, instead of $50,000, and its income $150 a month, instead of $2000, as alleged by the wife. He also says that the fittings are mort- ould not walk a step. | gaged for $9000 and the indebtedness of himself and partner is $19,155. He Loupy owns $8000 worth of with an income of $81 A sk of wedded life for Williamr and lie Baconie was ended by the sudden unexp ned desertion by d the husband now seeks Bacome complains the bride, a divorc al | was that | they were married on August 31 last | and one night a week later he came home and found the house deserted. | His wife had taken his five-year-old son with her and when he located them she declined to return, although he offered to take her home in a hack. in marrying him. Eva Frances Frodsham wants a di- vorce from her husband, William because of his crueity, she s consisted of threat- e, choking her, whipping o’-nine-tails, throwing Frodsham, which, a loaf of bread at her and slapping | her with a folded newspaper. ot suits for divorce were fll?dK by Benson E. Lee against Sarah M. Lee, desertion; Yetta Glassman against Louis Glassman, desertion; Lola de Luca against Alfonso de Luca, cruelty; Palma C. Parkin against S. H. Parkin, desertion and neglect; Lucy Hadley Kelsey against Nicholas E. Keisey, neglect; Walter S. Johnson against Alice M. Johnson, desertion; Sarah McPherson against Osborne McPherson, neglect. A divorce was granted by Judge Hébbard to Ada A. O'Brien from James A. O'Brien for cruelty. ——————————— Suspected of Burglary. The room of Philip Hinkle, 435 Push street, was entered early yester- day morning while he was absent for a few minutes and his gold watch, valued at $90 was stolen. He observed J. B. Cannon, another lodger, crossing the hallway from his room as he was returning. He notified Policeman Max Fenner, who found the watch in a lot adjoining the house underneath Hinkle's window. ‘enner arrested Cannon and Henry Daley, his room« mate, and locked them in “‘the tarles” pending further investigation. | ys that she had ulterior mo- | ARTFUL DODGER An 8-year-old boy, one of a gang of young crooks, was arrested last night for robbing penny-in-the-slot machines | at Bacigalupi’'s penny arcade on Kearny street, near Washington. The lad’s name is Willie Salzmann, son of Peter Salzmann, a baker residing at 1 Kent street. diminutive size would lead one to be- lieve that he is not more than six vears of age, brazenly admits that he was a pupil of a gang of other small boys and | & girl Dickens’ characters in his book, “Oli- ver Twist,” the “Artful Dodger” and | Charley Bates, had but one preceptor, | Fagin. Little Salzmann says that he | was trained to steal by four other small boys and a little girl, whose names, he alieges, he does not know. For weeks past the gang has stolen more than $100 from the machines, open the lock boxes with keys when the place is crowded and extract all the pennies they can carry. It was while engaged in breaking into one of these devices last night that young Salzmann was caught. He was detected and captured by George Adams, one of the clerks. The little fellow kicked and fought for his liberty like any adult crook would have done. He had his pockets jammed with the coveted coppers. The other youngsters made good their escape. The youthful ‘“burglar” over to taken to was turned the Central station. When questioned by Lileutenant Green Willle | admitted that he and “the gang” had | been stealing for weeks past from the | penny parlors. He denies that he ever lowed to keep any of the money, but was made to turn It over to his teachers, one of whom was a girl. He does not know what she did with the pennies. He says that the other boys used to give him a few pennies to pur- | chase candy with, and then took the rest home to their mothers, saying to the parents that they found the coins. The proprietors of the musee have ved by small thefts for some | been an time. Gum machines have been stolen and brazen robberies committed in the presence of a house full of persons. On account of the extreme youth of Salzmann the charge against him was reduced from burglary to petty lar- ceny. position. The police have good descrip- tions of the other boys and the little girl, and expect soon to arrest them. —_————— Nude Morning Stroller, J. E. Heath, an Englishman, who is the owner of considerable real es- tate, residence at 3024 about the hour when business people were leaving their homes and rushing for street cars. After Heath gained the sidewalk he =mbulated in the most reckless manner, totally unconscious of the ridiculous figure he cut, as he strolled along clad in the scantiest of apparel. He was coaxed into engine house, 23, where he was detained un- til the arrival of the patrol wagon from the O'Farrell-street police sta- tion, when he was conveyed to the Detention Hospital at the City Hall, where he was recognized as being a parole patient from the Stockton State Hospital for the Insane. —_———— DISTRICT ATTORNEY RETURNS.—Diss triet Attorney Byington returned from his long vacation yesterday afternoon. He well le time. doing. the exposition he visited Cincioaatt and Cleveland, From there he went to the Thou- sand Isles and down the St. Lawrence River to Montreal and Quebec, thence home. The little fellow, whose | The little thieves | Policeman Hennebery and | He was later bailed out by his | father, who feels keenly his small son's became suddenly bereft of his reason yesterday morning and left his California street APPROACH THO GRAND JURORS of Election Commission IR AL MAY BE INVESTIGATED —s Matter of Accusing Board of Malfeasance Will Be Taken Up Again To-Day Another effort will be made at the meeting of the Grand Jury this after- noon to present an accusation against the Election Commissioners in an en- deavor to have them removed from office. Those urging prosecution of the board believe they will have a majority andsthat they will finally be successful. Matthew I, O'Brien, one of the nine jurors who saved the commission at the last session when the vote was a tle, has gone East on a business trip. Wakefleld Baker is expected to be on hand to-day, and if all the members | attend a vote of ten to eight is looked for. According to the advice of As- sistant District Attorney ‘Whiting twelve votes are not required for an accusation to remove from office, as for the finding of an indictment. The Grand Jury will probably also devote its attention to a report that an attempt has been made to exert im- proper influence on two of its members— Milton H. Esberg and Otto Jungblut— to induce them not to vote for the pros- ecution of the Blection Commissioners. | Two men called on Jungblut yéster- day and sought to have him promise °| that he would either vote against ac- | cusing the board of malfeasance or would remain away from the meeting, so that a majority vote could not be | obtained. The same men called on Es- | berg, but he refused to see them, In- | asmuch as they announced that they | wished to see him on business connect- | ed with the Grand Jury. | Esberg is treasurer of the Mose Gunst | Company. The visitors came to his | office in the Kearny street store. Jung- i blut is associated with his father in the billiard table manufacturing busi- | ness. | It is said that the efforts to in- | fluence Jungbiut have been carried so | far as the making of threats against his_business interests. | *“Yes, it is true that two members of | the Grand Jury have been approached within the past twenty-four hours,” said Foreman Lilienfeld last evening. | “We know positively that the men who tried to intercede in behalf of the com- missioners came as the representatives of the administration. .That is all I | care to say of the matter.” | 'The foreman made this statement on | information furnished him by the two jurors in question. “There {8 no use of their trying to influence me,” declared Esberg. “I am |on record as voting to take steps | against the Board of Election Commis- sioners and I shall vote that way every | time the matter comes up. I believe | that the commissioners were guilty of malfeasance in their failure to comply with the requirements of law jn ap- | pointing precinct boards for the re- to be ousted from office. They may as | well talk to the Rock of Gibraltar as | talk to me about changing my attitude i the matter.” e Schussler Describes Pipes. Hermann Schussler, chief engineer | of the Spring Valley Water Works, | occupied the witness stand in United | States Commissioner Heacock’s court | vesterday afternoon and described from blueprints and his own gray cerebral matter the aqueducts, reser- ! voir and pipe line systems at Sunol and Niles. He said that the Niles sys- tem used in supplying water to San Francisco was abandoned on Novem- 4 ber 27, 1900, and the newly construct- | ed Sunol system used instead. If you desire the appetite and diges- tion of early vears, take Lash's Kidney and Liver Bitters. - Found Ptomaine in Clam Soup. Arthur Wallace, a carpenter resid- ling at 1126 Howard street, has taken a vow that he will abstain from clam { soup Por the balance of his days. This vow followed after his having ab- | scrbed sufficient ptomaine poison in ‘!hp last feast he enjoyed in a neigh- boring restaurant on Tuesday night. A hurried trip to the Emergency Hos- | pital saved his life after the doctor used the stomach pump. POSTERS and BANNERS.—Gabriel Printl Co. print anything. 419 Sacramento st. ¥ = B Gl i SR B L5 Knocked Down by Wagon. John McHugh of 1011 Polk street | sustained serious Injuries yesterday afternoon by being knocked down by a wagon while crossing Geary and Powell streets. He was removed to the Emergency Hospital, where Dr. Pinkham diagnosed his injuries as | fracture of the skull, together with several lacerated wounds of the hands and face. i | WILL REPRESENT THE VATICAN IN THE PHILIPPINES! e e e —————— P | ! { d NEW DELEGATE WHO WILL BE SENT BY THE POPE TO THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. +- o ROME, Nov. 2.—Father Ambrose; cent primaries and that they deserve | Agilus was recently appointed papal| | delegate to the Philippines. He has led | !a busy, varied life, in which he has learned to take a broad view of persons | |and things. He was born in Egypt on| September 17, 1856, but was educated in | England, where he took the habit of | | the Benedictines at Ramsgate in 1871, | taking his next degree at Subfaco, in | Italy, where is the chief house of the | Benedictines. This degree was conferred { by Cardinal Monaco La Valletta, who climbed to the Holy Speco, which all | travelers know, to celebrate the inter- | esting symbolic function. | | Some time afterward Father Ambrose, | together with the two brothers Serafiri, | aleo Benedictines, founded a house of | | their order at Malta, and as they had! | neither money, position nor influence {llved there as real hermits. The holy | work, however, seems to have blessed them, as they have all risen to high! positions in the church. One Serafiui is | apostolic delegate in Mexico and the other general of the Benedictines. : A few months ago Father Agius hud‘ to go to England, and Pope Pius X in| taking leave of him said, “We will meet | again soon,” and, in fact, two months | later, just as Agius was about to board | a ship to go to America, he received a | | telegram from Cardinal Merry del Val saying, “Drop every engagement and| | come to Rome.” | ‘Wondering and mystified, he arrived in the Eternal City and immediately asked an audience of the Pope. The Pope met him smiling and said, “I con-| gratulate you most sincere!y,” and sce- | ing Aglus’ look of bewilderment added | laughing, “I will not tell you wha* for; | I wish to leave that pleasure to his Em. | inence Cardinal Merry del Val. Go to hime ; The secretary of state soon enlight-| ened the astonished father, who, not-| withstanding his great modesty, was obliged to end by accepting the position | of apostclic delegate to the Philippines. —_—ee—————— The Inter Nos Club will give its sec- | ond annual ball Thursday evening, Nn-]‘ vember 3, at Native Sons’ Hall, 414 Mason street. Music will be furnished by Fitzgerald's orchestra. The committee in charge has spared neither time nor expense to make this affair a grand suc- cess. —_———— . Electrician caught by Cogwheel. Frank Bills, an electrician residing | at 317 Mississippi street, while replac- | ing an electrical brush on the over-| head trolley at the Union Iron Works | had his right leg badly lacerated by a revolving cogwheel. While Bills was reaching upward to make fast the brush the running gear caught the cloth of his overalls and hoisted his limb up to the teeth of the wheel. The injured man was treated by Dr. Buell at the Potrero Hospital, after which he was removed to his home. TO-DAY On Every Purchase of $1.00 or Over There Will Be “Something Doing” To the Amount of $1.00 FREE RAIN COATS. Misses’ and Children's Rain Coats and Mackintoshes; made of fine navy blue Cashmere. They have plaid linings and a detachable cape. comes in all sizes and is one of the swellest coats shown this season. Its real worth is $15.00; §10_95 QU DRI S - iveme = o 9 9= Dinner Plates—Full size deeorat- 00 wpecisl sale. fo-morzow 32.23 ed porcelain dinner plates A AT s different floral designs; they are sizes, made in sz 75 | very dainty and pretty and have a the same style as above... - gold line on the edge. There are TOURIST COATS. positively a dozen 6 for 59° values. Special. ‘Women’'s Tourist Coats; made of fancy mannish mixtures; cut 42 Tea Cups and Saucers—These are inches long. They have pleated | a splendid shape and will match the backs, are belted and have the new § plates. They are worth at least sleeve with narrow cuffs. This coat § $2.00 a dozen, but are special to- has a collar and double-breasted | morrow . 6 for 59¢ front; it also has patch pockets; it Special Reductions in Superb Millinery (Second Floor) The reductions we have made throughout our Millinery Department have saved considerable money for the lucky buyers who have attended this sale. Every woman can see the values for herself. DRESS NAT. A fine fancy dress shape; elegantly made shirred silk. This hat is worth at least $6.00. of Chenille Special at braid and - $3.48 TRIMMINGS. Fancy Feathers, Haeckle Breasts all colors; value $1.00; special at Military Pompons in all colors; worth 75¢; now Spangled Breasts; real extra special at .... Natural Wings duced from 75¢ to Fine Chenille Braid in all regularly sells for 40c; now .. Extra wide Chenille; worth $1.00; special, yard colors: 39¢ We will trim any hat free to-day if the trimmings department, which means a saving of 6§0c to T6c. It are bought in this is a most liberal offering. LARGEST visrr oUm DEPARTMENT ragtr COMPLETE STORE GROCERY WEST OF AND LIQUOR CHICAGO. ALWAYS ILE DEPARTMENTS 1236- 1250 MARKET ST. & AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. SAN FRANCISCO'S LEADING THEA: BIA iiow'vaz ——THIS WEEK ONLY— Nightly, Including Sunday—Matinee Saturday. John C. Fisher and Thomas W. Ryley present ISADORE RUSH And a Superb Company In the Farcical Comedy Success, Glittering Gloria Efiulgent_iiudevflls! ‘Watson, Hutchings, Edwards and Com- pany; the Misses Delmore; Halley and Meehan and Orpheum Motion Pictures, Showing “The Widow and the Only Man.” Last Times of the Petohing Brothers; Three Dumonds; Sullivan and Pasquelena; Marvey Comedy Com-~ pany and Owley and Randall. Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- day, Saturday and Sunday. Prices—1i0c, 2%¢ and S0c, Commencing Sunday Matines, JOHN T. KELLY & COMPANY And the 12 NAVAJO GIRLS. Beginning NEXT MONDAY NIGHT, George Ade’s Quaint Comedy Drame, Tee COUNTY CHAIRMAN Presented by a Powerfal and Perfectly Bal- anced Cast of San Francisco Favorites. SEAT SALE BEGINS TO-DAY. GRAND “ ‘Pratty Poggy Ploases Audionce.” —Blanche Partingtes, in Call. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. This Weck and Next JANE CORCORAN Supported by ANDREW ROBSON And an Excellent EJ OPERA HOUSE H. W. BISHOP, Lessee and Manager. TO-NIGET AND ALL THIS WEEK. 28 Cents | 755055 | 25 Cents E, TO-DAY. OLIVER MOROSCO OFFERS In_Frances Aymar |( MOWARD GOULD and J. X. GILMOUR Mathew's Pictur- AND THE ue play, — S In the Most Popular of the Shakespearean PRETTY PEGGY POPULAR PRICES. NIGHT PRICES, 25c to 7. CAN NEXT—“AN AMERI A The only stock house In America carrying two high-salaried jeading men. CALIFORNIA WHERE THE CROWDS ARE GOING. HAVERLY’S MINSTRELS ‘With the Funniest of All Minstrel Comedians, Company. Belasco & Mayer, Proprietors. E. D. Price, ALCAZARF5" TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEBK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAT. Franklin Fyle's Realistic Drama, DRUSA ‘ WAYNE A Story of Absorbing Interest. Lillian Lawrence, John Cralg, Biizabeth Wood- son and all the Alcazar Fayorites. Evenings, 25c to 76c; Matinees, 2%¢ to 80c. Next Monday—First Time in Btock, A. C. Gunther's Merry Comedy, PRINCE KARL The Play That Made Mansfleld Famous. een “The Assassin of Sorrow. And a Host of Other Big Features. Next Sunday Matinee—The Big Pas- toral Comedy Success, “SWEET CLOVER,” With OTIS B. THAYER. First Time Here After Five Years of Enormous Eastern Success. Is a rattling this one. The artist, too— and verse by well-known Thanksgiving Number SEND IT TO EASTERN FRIENDS ‘ SOLD BY ALL ADVERTISEMENTS. “LOCOMOTIVE JONES” have never enjoyed a Hopper football story, read illustrations are by a football And They're Good! Read “Grown Folks at School,” “The Girl and the - Story” and pages of other interesting articles, stories good story in November Sunset Magazine It’s by James Hopper, the famous football expert, who is now the coach of the Berkeley team. If you writers. Richly Mlustrated NEWSDEALERS Premiere In San Francieco of the great London and New York music- -+ al triumph In two acts, entitled: First Time Anywhers at_Popul. A ~=—-TO-NIGHT-— GALA AMATEUR PERFORMANCE ——Concluding With—— «NEW LIVING PICTURES.. LOOK OUT FOR THE JOHNSTWN FLOOD SEVEN BABY LIONS IN THE S00. TH MESSENGER a Prices. E AUTHORS OF THE TOREADOR, BY THTTH AN UNRIVALED CAST. Now _Selling—Usual Tivoll Prioes, e Boe-7he—Omty Matines Saturday. CENTRAL=Z: Market st., near Eighth. Phone South 533. TO-NIGHT AND ALL THIS WEBK. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. First time here of the sensational melodrama, THE WORST WOMAN mnnnn ADMISSION. ......10c | CHILDREN ‘When Phoning Ask for The Chutes. San Francisco vs. Portland. AT RECREATION PARK, Eighth and Harrison sts. TO-DAY and all week days, 3 p. m. SUNDAY, 2:30 P. M. LADIES FREE THURSDAY AND FRIDAT. g Advance sale of seats at § Stockton st.