The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 20, 1904, Page 7

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{ FRANC THE: SA ISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DECEMEER 20, 1901, [NCO to Fellow .“i\ux‘ Ministers of and Debaucheries -~ — I'INGS MANY MEE ~ays There Are Upward of 1000 Societies Holding| for Extension of Shrader| Pian to Improve Bad Con-| Be Washed and Fumigated | Wish. ® ® € ¥ @ ¢ . | Y ~ | oy & = 4 % i Weekly Gatherings Here| and Cole From Parnassus| dition of Thoroughfare Adopted by Supervisors An Absolute Guarantee. — | —— i Py il San isco’s slums, its dives, its| The Board of Supervisors yesterday The Finance Committee of the | The ordinance requiring suitable ts vaudeville shows, its ciubs, s bor unions and | Attorney to begin condemnation of ence late vesterday afternoon with the | for the purpose of preventing ofl drip- es, were some of | forty-seven acres of land on TWin Board of Public Works for the pur- Dings being deposited on the public . . e sor s escrvote it Yot the Bro- | pare ot e e e mest e | Moo e poenst s yitit 3 e [ 1 St@nces umtil you Rave calied on us. . The redason mpleton before & poged high sure water supply S¥S- . work of repair . Sl s gt gl S 3 N e b . < epairing bituminous pave- Board of Supervisors yesterday. u .[l l = h 2 3 -m\.v r.;vv‘(;l {1:“’:"‘! tem for beiter fire protection. The TeS-| monts. The Supervisors at their meet- pervisor Lunstedt contended that the Wl be p ain when you come. o - k) ) ) presic Temple. | Olution recites that the Golden Gale g naq deferred action on the final noise made by automobiles while, s had experience in many | Park Land Company has ':“““d to sell| hossage of the ordinance authorizing Standing still in the public streets, e Unio part: the site to the ooy for $2000 an acre,! the payment of the September de- OWing to the machinery being allowed apirit of ap- | DA it 15 advisable that a judicial Beterc | e S s e e not o VERS VICE [WOULD ACOUIRE OF THE CITY| RESE Rev.Samuel Templeton 'l‘alks:Super\'ism's Order Condem-| Alleged Threat of Member Ordinance Is Passed Requir-| RVOIR SITE . . | . nation Proceedings for| i Large Area on Twin Peaks HELD TO OPEN TWO STREETS|TO PAVE PHELAN BLOCK | R e fl)ve(l Accepted to Property| ! adopted a resolution directing the City mination be had of the value of the iand under the law of eminent domain. Chief of Poiice Wittman explained to the Finance Committee that two bills for harness had been incurred without requisition being first filed for the same to the committee’s order that must be filed before the of any goods. Wittman agreed purchas: gine-house onr Twentieth street, near Connecticut, as asserted in a communi- cation from the Fire Commission. Sul- livan sald that the existing companies could protect the territory in the Potrero as soon as the Santa Fe road’s bridge on Eighteenth street was com- | pleted. This would be in about sixty days. The committee decided to defer action until ocular demonstration was were equal to WILL HASIEN SIREET REPAIR of Yorke Company Blocks Payment of September Bill Finance Committee Hitson a | Board of Supervisors held a confer- for street repairs. An erroneous report had been cir- culated that the company had filed a notice with the Board of Works that it would refuse to continue the work of repairs because an inspector was ' not measuring the surface covered with bitumen according to its lik- been stopped. The September bill was passed to print under an agreement that the Yorke Company would re- sume the repairs. The threat that the work would be stopped was unoffi- cially made by a member of the con- | tracting company. i Commissioners Schmitz and Mae- stretti urged that an understanding be had as to the computations and al- OIL DRIPPINGS | UNDER THE BAN ing Devices to Be Put on| Automobiles to Stop Leaks MUST KEEP CARS CLEAN | Measure Compelling Them to ‘ devices to be attached to automobiles | dripping oil and suggested that an- other ordinance prohibiting the noise be passed. He promised to submit such a measure. . It was resolved that the city and county disclaim all interest in the land in 50 vara block No. 115, which is now in litigation in the courts. | tween Lake and California streets. An ordinance was passed to print’ requiring street cars to be washed at least once a week and to be disin- fected whenever the Board of Healtht notifies the companies to that effect. The ordinance requiring gongs to | be rung on street cars when crossing streets was amended so that the gongs | need only be sounded when the car ADVERTISEMENTS. an d Styles. (Established 1850.) PIANOS FOR CHRISTMAS Greates-t Dariety of Prices JSmall Months Iy Payments for Those lDho Do not purchase a Piano under any circums Kohler & Chase (The Largest Music House on the Coast) 5 Gainly LI e ing. Commissioner Schmitz said no; Street and sewer work was ordered S Chief Engineer Sullivan informed the such notice had been filed, and the on Parnassus avenue between Clayton committee that he had never recom- Commissioners of Works had no and Cole; Sixteenth avenue from H to cor post, and Keam stre ';s mended the erection of a chemical en-; knowledge that the repairg had I streets and Twenty-first avenue be- L] y e CONVICTED OF MURDER IN THE SECOND DEGREE Jury at the Second Trial of Harry Radcliffe Renders Verdict Which 'SEQUOIA CLUB TO ENTERTAIN CELEBRITIES POSTOFFICE CLERKS FORM AN ASSOCIATION Will Co-operate With National Asso- ciation and Work for Betterment ¢ made that the engines lowances for depth in resurfacing starts to cross.in order to prevent con- I1ooks Like Compromise. of Existing Conditions. he the task of easily reaching the dis- pavements, ! tinuous ringing. The jury in the case of Harry Rad- ——— Sunday afternoon representatives tricts to be protected. “If Inspector Boone has allowed the | The ordinance prohibiting the | cliffe, charged with the murder of An- from the following e 3 v " \: postoffices met in Action on the bill of A. Carlisle for | company more than he should, he is ccnveyance of bread, cakes or Pastry drew Riley, a holl carrier,-at Ninth| To-nightat the St Franels the Se- | o, pyncisco and formed a State as- ~ $400 for printing the “Guide to Voters” not doing his duty and should be dis- | through the public streets in open bas- anq Sheridan streets, on the morning duain CIn emerfunn . :s ofw;l | sociation of postoffice clerks: San for the Department of Elections was charged” said Maestretti. kets or exposed containers was passed/ of June 26, after being out for about | informal and therefore delightful } L =\ 0 \1ong Tos Angeles, Sac- deferred one week, the Finance Com- mittee expressing the opinion that the charge is exorbitant and the printing of the pamphlet was unnecessary. City Treasurer McDougald filed with the committee a letter agreeing to waive the statute of limitations in the matter of his claim for $6000 in fees on collateral inheritance taxes collected by him. The Superior Court has decided against the claim of ex-Treasurer Brooks for similar fees, and the City Attorney was requested to ascertain if Brooks intends to appeal the case. Mc- Dougald was asked by the committee to consult with his attorney as to the advisability of accepting the Superior Court decision, especially in view of the fact that the Supreme Court has de- cided in the case of a San Diego Treas- urer that he is not entitled to the fees. The committee postponed action for three weeks on the resolution to memo- rialize the Legislature to pass a law permitting banks to act as depositories for moneys collected by the city for taxes. An ordinance was passed to print ac- cepting a deed from Emily F. Pope to lands for the opening of Shrader and “We want to have the streets put in | gcod condition, for they are in a deplorable state,” said Schmitz, “and | we think something®lefinite should be done.” It was agreed to have another con- ference, at which F. M. Yorke and Boone wili take part and some defin- ite arrangement be made to hasten the repairs. TO REPAIR PAVEMENT. The committee also agreed to hold a conference with Auditor Baehr for the purpose of using some $2000 out of the $40,000 appropriation for street repaire to put the pavement in front of the Phelan building in good condi- tior. “It seems to me,” said Schmitz, “that Mr. Phelan, at whose instance the pavement was put down as an ex- periment, and who is receiving reve- nue from the rental of a restaurant under the sidewalk, in space properly belonging to the city, should pay for the repairs.” It was explained that the block had been accepted by the city, and the contractor had kept it in repair for to t. | The amended ordinance prohibitin; the keeping of swine within the boun daries of the city and county, except | that part known as Butchertown, was referred to the Health Committee. } Grades were ordered changed on Vicksburg and Jersey streets. . | The following ordinances were final- | ly passe: ‘ Granting permission to O. McHugh to lay a | temporary track on H street, between Four- teenth and Sixteenth avenues, for grading pur- poses only. Prohibiting persons from driving over hose belonging to the Fire Department. “iking grades on points on Carmelita, Plerce and Portola streets. epting the roadways of blocks on Cle- 1, Lyon and Church strgets. ment, Amending the ordinance refhiring the con- sent of property cwners to permits for livery stables so that any existing bullding used as a stable nay be rebuilt on its present site with- out such cons Charles Welch objected to the pas- | sage of the last bill saying it would | enable the San, Francisco Laundry to | move its stable next to residence flats | belonging to him on Eddy street. A reprepresentative of the laundry said it | was intended to erect a modern, brick structure on the site and the vote on three hours yesterday afternoon brought in a verdict of murder in the second degree. It was reported that the jury on the first ballot stood ten for murder in the first degree and two for acquittal. The verdict was appar- ently a compromise. At the previous trial the jury stood nine for acquittal and three for conviction. When the case opened yesterday morning District Attorney Byington made the closing argument. He de- livered one of the most powerful and scathing arraignments against the de- fendant ever heard in the court. He {urged the ‘theory that Radcliffe held {up Riley, intending to rob him, and during the struggle deliberately shot Riley. He believed thag the story told by the young wife that Riley made an insulting proposal to her was invented for the purpose of shielding her husband. There was no scene in court when the verdict was -rendered, although the defendant’s wife, mother and some other women relatives were present. The defendant will be sentenced on December 31. fashion two distinguished visitors to San Francisco, Miss Hallie Erminie Rives and Howard Malcolm Tichnor. These Tuesday evening at homes of the club have become charming in- stitutions, following somewhat the lines of the Twentieth Century Club of New York, thus putting to rout the suspicion that men of the West are not social creatures; likewise that men and women are nhot mutually | clubable. Thus are these Tuesday nights good fun. But whether the club will prove as strong an attraction for the men to-night as the little affair out at Woodward’s remains to be seen. The club or the fight? That will be the question. The women members of the | club are marveling at the poor judsg- ment of the gladiators in choosing Tuesday night for their little affair. The cards announce the reception at 8, the unusually early hour being necessitated by a business meeting to follow. At this meeting the. future policy of tHe club will be discussed. ‘With both a reception and a busi- ness meeting on the cards the fore- gathering of the club promises to be ramento, Pasadena, Santa Cruz, San- ta Barbara, Berkeley, Stockton, Ba- kersfleld and Riverside. The object of the association is to co-operate with the National Associa- tion of Postoffice Clerks through the Postmaster General in obtaining need- ed legislation for the betterment ol the service. The United National As- scciation of Postoffice Clerks now has pending before Congress two bills rec- ommended favorably by the Postoflice Department, namely the classification bili and the eight-hour bill. As it is now, the postoffice clerks have to work as many hours a day as the work necessitates, in some offices as high as twelve and fourteen hours a day, and their Increase In salary is dependent entirely upon the appropri- ation made by Congress. The pos office clerks, through the recommen- dation of the department, are al tempting to remedy this by having a classification bill passed, allowing each clerk an increase of $100 a year until he obtains $1200 a year, and | also to have the department run on an eight-hour basis. 4 AP the ordinance was unanimous. L e 3 s iy for clube. | Cole streets between Parnassus avenue fvegyears. It was decided that, In| ne Hayes Valley Club obtalned a! NEW ALASKAN RAILWAY anusually Interesting. And all male| The meeting was a very successful 1000 meetings | and Grattan street, and of Grattan cuee the demands on the repair fund permit to hold an amateur boxing ex-i members not present will be accredit- one. e executive committee was s worship lleges and Brown spoke before Association Comstruction dison Slaughter ad- Relation of the and Social Prob- to Political ¥ White reported to rch Ministers’ Asso- g names for the 2 . W. Darst, vice . L. E. Scott, secretary. committee: Dean Van , and the Rev. P. C. Mac- JUDGE IS DETERMINED TO STOP WHITECAPPING Will Enforce the Law, Though Every Woman in the County Is t Ministers’ Meeting ! street to Cole street. —_—————— OSTROM IS SENT TO A PRIVATE SANITARIUM Man Who Forced His Attentions on | Pretty May Foulkes Is Adjudged an Incompetent. { Nels Ostrom was adjudged to be of sound mind by the experts on insan- | ity yesterday at the Central Emer- gency Hospital. It was ordered that he be sent to a private sanitarium for treatment. Foulkes of 1925 Octavia street, who sald that the man had been annoying her by writing love letters and taunt- ing her in various ways. Ostrom was painting a flat belonging to the Foulkes | family when he saw the young woman. |He immediately became infatuated with her and insisted upon forcing his attentions upon her until she became | alarmed lest he do her violence. Ostrom | had never before shown any mental exceeded the appropriation, the $2000 would be taken out of the urgent ne- ceseity fund. The petition of the Excelstor Home- | stead Association for the establish- ment of a firehouse at Ocean and San ‘JOFE avenues was referred to the Fin- ance Committee to be taken up when the next budget is being framed. Chief Sullivan strongly recommended the hibition on January 13. | P — SUPREME COURT WILL NOT RELEASE LETCHER WILL BE CONSTRUCTED Chicago Capitalists Are Preparing to Build Line Up the Copper River. Among the latest arrivals at the Pal- State's Highest Tribunal Says Prl!onel'i ace Hotel is John T. Evans, a well- Has Recourse to Proceedings { known young attorney of Chicago. He Before Federal Judges. is on his way to Seattle to attend an ourt has refused as- | 8nnual meeting of the Hubbard-Elliott The Supppe & - | Copper Company, which controls large project and the committee agreed | sistance to George E. Letcher of San with him. { The petition of B. T. McBain for the return of $32,907 71 paid as col- ground that it was illegally collected was denied. Similar petitions of Phil- ip I Fisher for the return of $40,- 155 43 and of Charles R. Allen for $3189 13 in the estates of Levi Strauss and Edgar Allen were also denied. A dethand for $6270 was ordered drawn in favor of Victor Albauze and ' others, who obtained judgments against the city in suits for condem- | nation of lands for St. Mary’'s square. Jose, the slot machine man, who is making a fight against being extra- dited to Ohio, where he is under in- the prisoner’s petition for a writ of | habeas corpus, says: | Indictment charges a public offense within the statute of the State of Ohio. The regulari- ty of the proceedings had before the Governor of the State of Ohlo, culminating in his requi- sition for extradition, are rot reviewable by us in this proceeding. Upon the proposition as to whether or not the petitioner s a fugitive from justics within the meaning of the consti- tution of the United States, that question seems to be absolutely decided against peti- | tioner's contentlon by the Supreme Court of the United States in Roberts vs. Reilly, 116 U. S., {1y by Chicago capitalists. interests in Alaska and s backed main- The com- pany owns forty-two copper claims on Elliott Creek, ninety miles northeast of the Covper River have been proposed, but up to the present time none of the promised enterprises has taken shape. Attorney Evans, who is treasurer of the Hubbard-Elliott Company, said yesterday that the franchises for two of these roads would exvire this year, and it is the intention of his company, assisted by the Havemeyers, who own valuable properties near the company's ed with being at the fight. —_——— Tennis Club Directors Meet. The regular monthly meeting of the directors of the California Tennis Club held last night was the most satisfac- tory one held in many months. A new set of by-laws, drawn up by the committee, met with the approval of the directors. Several changes were made, but they were slight. They will be voted upon by the club members during the next two weeks and it is safe to say will be approved by them. ing of school boys on Saturday after- noon. They will not be allowed ta occupy the courts after 3 o'clock to | the exclusion of the other members. | Much credit is due the by-laws zom- | mittee, composed of Dr. H. P. Hill, Lloyd Baldwin and G. H. Busch. Many improvements on the clubhouse and grounds were recommended andi will be made at once by the grounds committee. The directors prasent empowered to call a State convention at some future date. The visiting delegates were the guests of the San Francisco branch at dinner. The following officers were elected: President, James E. Power, San Fran- cisco; first vice president, F. J. Meyer, Les Angeles; second vice president, James Longshore Jr.,, Sacramento; third vice president, Miss Carrie Swank, Santa Cruz; secretary, Ralph J. Faneuf, Oakland; treasurer, D. B. Dwyer, San Francisco; sergeant at & £ " s, W. J. Wikon, Berkeley. ee for the ensu- | lateral inheritance tax on the estate dictment for defrauding insurance The rule productive of the most dis-| 2T ™% g Ostrom was arrested on a warrant = = 3 Valdez. Three railroads from Valdez to | v N e R Frank S. Ford, | gworn out last Saturday by Miss May of Henry Pierce, deceased, on the|companies. The court, in response to the Teabbasi-Iltets st by Wiy of cussion was that in regard to the nlay- Wanted in Los Angeles. John C. Olson was arrested last night by Detective Taylor and held for the Los Angeles police, who want him on a charge of embezzlement. Olson is accused of making away with $1000 worth of diamonds which” were given into his care by two women with the understanding that he was to place them In a safe depbdsit vault. The pris- oner will be held until the arrival of Widowed. | | | 90 ana She apeen of that court upon this claims, to construct the railroad imme- e 3 detectives from Los Angeles. ras ey ac-| WILL NOT OSE STREET. onal estion is absolutely bindin v W. S. MacGavin, F. S. Mitchell, BROOK HAVEN, Miss, Dec. 19— | disorder, Saitl i wns Axceed hy 4a o TSk S ® »fi?f»:.""'p’fl teibunal, Whether o not the Yacts diately in the event of the promoters| .. o and makes every ow, the law will be enforced. ve ot to quit. i You The next time we if it takes every man in Lincoln | woman a | quaintances and by friends of the wom- an to send him to a private sanitarium. | ——————— ! POLICEMAN WEDS.—Policeman John | a. | The petition that Beach street, | westerly from Laguna, be closed was ' denied in view of the City Attorney's ' in the case of petitioner are such as to call for a modification of the views expressed in Rob- erts vs. Rellly is a question which can only be | decladd the Federal courts, whose writs | and processes are open to petitioner. of the other lines failing to get to work before the end of this year. One of his purposes in attending the meeting in Seattle is to lay ‘before the directors Dr. W. R. Lovegrove, Dr. H. P. Hill, C. G. Kuehn and Grant Smith. Ab- sent, Dr. Noble. ————————— A dream of pleasure, the new two for quarter size American, $2 75 box 2. . FIRE IN CHINESE THEATER.—#lames out early yesterday morning in the 2 P ee. who guards the peace at the City | OPinion that the charter makes pro-! CAUGHT IN ELEVATOR.—Charles Reldy, | brok treat you with a Sorry chastise- | sy Swa incidentally keeps an-eve on the | vision for the closing of streets less| Superior Judge Cook remanded| the plans for the new road. Tt 10 Branaan sirest, was catons | Samey “giactes 15 the seer of thw Chinsse just as you would correct an | funds in _the City Treasury, was married Sun- o v | Letcher on another writ yesterday. T. S A R S in an elevator in the Union Trust building, | theater Jackson street for & few unruiy child with & strap, and. with: | oy to Miss Eadie F. Boyd. Attridge went |than forty feet in width only, and Montgomery and Market streets, yesterday and | minutes the greatest excit out e&ny desire to threaten, the ltu; | ety quietly about the matter and went away ‘I Beach street Is sixty-elght feet wide. | W. G. Lyons of HB' Henry street, & | QFFICERS ARE ELECTED severely injured. He sustained a fractured | among them. The wag then will ‘Bust the hide.’” | o tts bomeymoon trip to'the Mefthern part & | The roadways of Plerce street, be- | friend of the prisoner's wife, asked for BY FOUR LABOR UNIONS | skull ad other injuries. oA, SNty g S Judge Wilkinson, in the Clrcut| = @ e ! tween Vallejo and Green; Laguna & warrant yesterday for the arrest of delivered this warning to the en on trial for conspiracy to ate the negroes of Lincoln They were banded into the * League and were accused of Lash’s Kidney and Liver Bitters expel | street, between Washington and Jack- [ Garret Fox, an officer from Ohio, who | a1l poisons and impart renewed life and | son; Clayton street, between Freder- | IS here to take Letcher back for trial. S ot | energy to the whole system. | ick, Carl and Parnassus avenue; Scott | EALVAGE ALLOWED.—In the libel of A. | Street, between Fulton and McAllister; | Anderson as the owner of the steamer Rival | Central avenue, between Golden Gate notices, threatening the | j? United States Di: Thomas: A--DOIR Was agrested yes- ers for the ensuing term: [ . T * 1f they d1d not leave the couns | Se sk dir 4o Hiaven sve’ Judgment yesterday | avenue and Turk street and between |terday on a complaint of Thomas e e - d of burning the negroes’ cabins, | ir favor of the libelant for $200 and costs for | Grove and Fulton, were fully ac-|Kelly of Kelly & Sons, livermen at| , “Shiliaber: vice president, R. Whitlock; Ter s - nto the houses as they blazed. | salvage. cepted. 1629¥ Pine street, and charged with' cording secnmry[, Eé g Cock; financial secre- - School Director Boyle agreed to|arson. Dolan is accused of trying to [y, Mite SUne OPomion tessyion (oia ADVERTISEMENTS. urge the Board of Education to pay set fire to hay in the barn. Kelly Frances Dillon and Thomas Garrick; trustee, « Sets Fire to Stable. Organizations of Tollers Name Men ‘Who Will Lead Them During the Next Year. 3 The following unions have elected William Collopy; business agent, Joseph A. Shillaber; delegates to Labor Couneil—J. A. one bill of $570 for portable school- | says Dolan was discovered in the act, houses to M. Anderson, who com-|Jjust in time to prevent any damage. Shillaber, R. Wiley and E. W. Garment Cutters’ Union 45—President, Cook. AUCTION SALE! 200 Vehicles of All Kinds The balance of carriages and vehicles damaged by fire at O'BRIEN’S CARRIAGE FACTORY, corner Golden Gate avenue and Polk street, will be offered at public auction Thursday, December 22, at 11 2. m. This is a compulsory sale not of cheap work, but of the best makes of stylish vehicles, which will have to be sold ir- respective of cost, without reserve or limit, in order to enable us to make room to put an extra story on the building and re- construct our basement fioor. . Chance of a lifetime to buy, nine passenger brakes, coun- try club wagons, high-grade Surreys, Toomey Bike Carts, Ball-bearing Buggies, O’Brien patent spring business wagons, 2 number of children’s pony vehicles, a lot of light express and delivery wagons, finished and unfinished, whips, robes, etc., etc., etc. O’BRIEN ® LONS, Golden Gate Ave. and Polk ‘St. JOHN J. DOYLE Auctioneer. plainped that his bills aggregating $1354 were overdue. The Finance ! Committee promised to pay the other | bills after further inquiry. The board defeated a resolution re- pealing a permit granted to C. C. Gro-* ther to maintain a boiler for a laun- dry at the corner of York and Twen- | ty-sixth streets. Protests against the | permit were flled by more than 100 | | property owners and residents in the | vicinity, some of whom appeared in person and addressed the board. Dan- iel A. Leary said the waste matter and water from the laundry would flow into the unhealthful swamp at the | end of York street, making the nui-{ | sance much worse. Grother admitted | i that he was forced to leave his old place at Twenty-fifth and Bryant! streets because of the nuisance caused | by smoke from his laundry. | The board adjourned to meet next ! Tuesday, as Monday Is a holiday. | | { ———— SUFFERS_INDIGNITIES.—For alleged in- dignities suffered on a broad gauge boat and on the traln between Oakland pier and West Oakland, C. H. Ross yesterday sued the South- | ern Pacific Company for $4000 damages. Fe alleges that on November 28 he was a pas- senger on the ferry. As the boat neared the | mole he was twice struck from behind with missiles. He made a complaint to the servants on the boat, he says, and they knccked hin. down and handcuffed him, in which condition " he was carried to West Oakland and given his release Dolan has been a hanger:on about the barn, and the proprietors have driven ! him away from the premises several times, but he continued to come’back. —_——e——— Don’t Give Trash. Give her a Light Running Domestic, the sewing machine for the home. D mestic Co., 1021 Market st., near 6th. * L e ASKS FOR ALLLOWANCE,—Augusta Me- Kenty, who is contesting the second will of her late husband, Jackson MecKenty, yesterday ap- | plied to the Probate Court for an allowance of | $S000 & year for her support, alleging that her only source of maintenance is from the estate. P - = FREE FREE PLUM PUDDINGS MINCE MEAT. ITH SUNDAY CALL SMALL ADS. ARMOUR PACKING COMPANY'S FAMOUS BRANDS. Free With Eyvery Small Ad in Sunday Call. See Small Ad Page for Furth Particulars, i - ! Los Angeles next month of the State Building ® E. Corpe; vice president, Young; re- cording secretary, Louls Frazier; financial sec- retary, Hugh Foley: treasurer. R. Corpe: ser- geant at arms, Mrs. Harris; guide, W. R. Corpe; board of trustees—C, Wiseman, Samuel Beamish ard R. Frawley: executive board— Louis Frazier, R. Corpe, W. R. Young, George Higgins, 1. Cohen, E. Ferrier and B. Such- flower; finance 'committee—Joseph Madden, J. ©O'Cennor and B. Rosenberg; delegate to Labor Council, E. Corpe. Longshore Lumbermen's Protective Associa- tion No. 224—President, Joseph Downham; vice president, Bdward Schnefger; Jecording secre- tary, George A. Hansen: finghcial secretary, Reuben Curtis; treasurer, EdWard Jones; ser- geant at arms, Thomas Cummings; sentinel, M. Dalton; trustees—J. W. Sullivan, T. Col- iins D. K. Commins, Louis Freitsch, T. J. Lynngreen, Abel Petersen and Miles Kehoe: business agert, J. C. Willlams: delegates to City Front Federation—J. C. Williams, T. ynngreen and Louis Freitsch. Lithographers' Union No. 17 has elected the tollowing officers for the coming six months: President, Charles M. Krieger; vice president, W. T. Ward; recording secretary, Charles M. S. ‘Nelson; treas- Jobn Schramm; inside sentinel, Morris Chair Solid oak, golden velour cushion. To-night,, only Thrall, financial secreta) urer, . V. Olsen; statistici; outside sentinel, H. Giima A. Thrall; inspector, Charles Rollet: executive Voard—P. E. Wilkinson, Charles ¥. Traung and D. V. Olsen. . C. M. Hauby! will'be the delegate from Var- nishers' and Polishers’ Union No. 1i4 to the Los Angeles convention of the State Building Trades Council. I J. E. Baker has been delegated to represent | Tilémakers' Unlon No. 48 at the convention in l Trades Ceuncil. —_— e SUES FOR INJURIES—Matthew J. Breen has sued the Unketli :z#l:ou&a for $25,000 “dl.m. for-injuries alleged to have been sustained o June i last In a collision at Taylor and | Market streets. His leg was in the accident. 1

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