The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 12, 1906, Page 14

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, FEBR JARY 12, 1906. SPRING SUITS At Interesting Prices A CASCADE of newy suits keeps tumbling into our re. Just room to-day to three handsome new- are very strong rd renewed proof to furnish suits of taste the most The Suit at $15 is made from a some plaid. Tweed of excel- The nobby little new three-quarter neatly trimmed with tons. Circular $l5 of French The double- ornamented with flat silk braid and New Princess Skirt. is beyond the skill of the T $29 The Suit at $30 is of checked S Tweed. It as a smart d Pony Coat and a grace- mod ar Skirt. En- s tr i with braid and further prettified - $30 Have you seen our new- Evening Garments, Tourist Coats and Cov- ert Jackets? They're great. at $25 is new = GREAT FUTURE RABBI PREACHES | Lresno. M | pressive, the music being particularly OF CHURGH C English Lutherans Make the Day Memorable. SR LR B |Speeches and Music Are Interesting Features. The cornerstone of Trinity English Evangelical Lutheran Church, Howard | street, near Eighteenth, was lald yes- | terday afternoon in the presence of fully a thousand peopled, including members of the congregation and their friends. | The ceremony of laying the stone was | performed by the Rev. J. Johansen of Beneath the stone was placed | a copper box containing documents per- tajning to the church and a photograph | of the edifice, together with. a copy of | the New Testumeni, some coins and | copies of the San krancisco papers. The exercises turougnout were im- | veautiful and rendered by a splendid | choir. The Introductory sermon was delivered by the Rev. B. Hustveat, and; | | the Rev. O. Groensberg and the Rev. J. Bchroeder made addresses. uUne of the very interesting features of the exercises was the reading of the history of the church by the pastor, the | Rev. E. M. Stensrud, which revealed | the faithfulness and determination of the congregation to advance the church. ! The young people as well as the men | and women had done their share in assisting to bring yesterday's happy | proceedings to a successful point in the congregation’s life. The solo singing of Mrs. Peter Paul- sen and Peter Oksen added greatly to the ceremony. The members of the choir were: l.iss Mabel Sonderup, Miss | | Margaithe Sonderup, Mrs. Fred Frank, Miss Ingerborg Larsen, Miss Hannah Selsvold, Miss Agnes Andersen, Miss Ida Broneer, Miss Lillle Schroder, Miss Clara Olsen, Peter Paulsen, John Olsen, Toblas Tillefsen, Anker Miller, George Krull and Mrs. Edward Stensrud, orgap- ist and director. The programme was as follows: Hymn, “Sing Unto the Lord™’; introductory sermon by the Rev. Bernard Hustvedt Oskland; anthem. “‘The Marvelous Wor (Haydn), by the choir; high festival se; Dby the Rev. J. Johansen of Fresno; solo, treat Me Not to Leave Thee (Gounod), Mrs. Peter Paulsen; address by the Rev. O. Groens- berg, pastor. of the Scandinavian Lutheran Church_ Howard street; anthem, ‘O Be Joy- ful,”” the choir; address by the Rev. Mr. Schroeder, pastor of St. John's German Luth- eran Church; solo, ‘The Lord Is My Light, _— BUSHNELL PHOTO - J PASTOR m-- TRINITY ENGLISH LUTE N CHURCI WHICH LAID NEW CORNERSTONE. = = g FRIENDS.MOURN FOR YOUNG BUSINESS MAN Body of James Manning, Drowned in Slough, Eag- FOR PRUNECROP T0' CHRISTIANS erly Sought For. by Peter Okeen; reading of the history of the | church by the Rev. B. M. Stensrud; anthem, H. Cartan, a Large Eastern Dealer, Says Farmers Will Find Ready 1906 Market w lley pr Dr. Jacob Voorsanger, rabbi growers a ver t Emanu-El, occupled Dr. 8 there will be a | George C. Adams’ pulpit at the First g market in | Congregational Church yesterday morn- | the Golden State < ish clergyman to preach in a Christian | tpe architeet and Fred Miller So_declares the larg- | church was an unusual one, and & con- | puiider. es ster rnia dried | gregation estimated at 1000 listened to his | e e e tr is Hotel | subject, ““The House of God and the Gate B Sa— , iness and | of Heaven,” with intense interest, OBTAINS MONEY BY pleas Dr. Voorsanger sald in part: 7 QS ("HECK R out the foreign | The personal experience of Jacob, who in a W ORTHLLES CHECKS v ex ally good this | yision of night comes closely in touch with his ——— P 5 A ge orde h een = perience of every hu- i 3 R Gnie Savs oo Bk g, seerines st ey 22 | Police - Are Searching _for tern dealers by the ation of our kinship to and our com- ¢ and other Buro- has taken th astern repre- 1 import vily of be good this year look rosy for Rev. Dr. Jacob Voorsanger Responds to Imvitation From Protestant Minister ing. The invitation to the eminent Jew- with God. 'f; = fess to teach religion. The . s liscloses God to every ome of has won |his children is 3 purely personal experience, e of Germany |#nd, like unto Jgcob on the way to Haran, e prices | that personal experience becomes Bethel, the house of god and the gate of heaven. Perhaps in'no physical sense sense. but in the true spiritual loses to us a personal companion- ou tell me why the suggestion of this the happiness of the nation, rt of the public education of it demand. With a is it that a system of it can get of ibly designed to secure h enough to and the moral content ers the pagan poetry of ne to the gentle pictures of Bib- which the church declares to be ai- law, vinely revealed, yet which are treated by pub- lic_educators as outcast and rejected? We must yet come to it—to & recognition of the Interposition of God in the life of the na- lical tion, lest some day another generation like t a church experience, nor can it | mempership in organized in- | God to man, nd so creates the touch of di- vinity upon the heart of man and is translated in_human lave and righteusness. Worth cock’s are the original and genuine Knowing interpretation of eclvic righteousness lest tho whole world loses its soul and the absence of God amidst men reduces humanity once again to the state of the unevoived animal. others are imitations. * KE A ROUGH HOUSE.—Five & resort Baker alley rough hotrse stole their | otified and Police- the Chinatown squad house and arrested Ah Gee. their escape ittt sHedak g am Sir John Bingham, a notable member of the British bar, gives advice to young lawyers as follows: “Work hard, have | noble ambitions, be bold, have confidence | in yourselves, get married.” You will scarcely be- lieve a soda cracker can be so perfect until you taste the one perfect Soda Cracker— Uneeda Biscuit So deliciously baked—so tender and flaky—so won- derfully preserved by a moisture proof package. It is the only real Soda Cracker. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY 5¢ better than | that of Nineveh may wake up to find its gods | rowers buried bepeath the wrecks of its churches. et need this teaching, and we need 1t 2d nelghboring | whether we believe in revised Bibles or not, of their ina- | whether we are orthodox .Christians or stu- goods a fair | dents of the higher criticism, whether we be- was the situation that |leve that man was molded with divine hands A s gy g or whether we believe him to be evolved from wers cut down their prune a o an interminable eeries of lower species, P ever ge rea- | whether we believe that the earth is square or for the time a cupd, whether we belleve that the stars are obable that the outlook | Jamps or worlds. The happiness of men will save many orchards | &Ways be incomplete without that dear asso- T ey S | Cfation that creates the Jacob's ladder, brings rwise € been sen- | the thoughts of man to God and the mind of This is & gospel that must accompany every | “The Lord's Prayer,’- sung by the choir. Of- fering and laying of ‘the cornerstone by the Rev. Mr. Johansen, assisted by all the min- isters oresent. | The church building, which 18 on the road to quick completion, will cost in | the netghborhood of $22,000. The style | of architecture is free Gothic. There | will be a seating capacity of 500. The | ground floor will be devoted to the Sun- | day-school room, confirmation room, la- r.ception room and a kitchen and August Nordin 1s the dies | other smaller rooms. | /Tall, Stout Man With Florid Complexion. | John Nichols, hardware merchant, 297 Ninth street, reported to the police on Saturday night that a worthless check | for $24 50 had been passed upon him the previous Saturday. It was drawn on the Crocker-Woolworth Bank, payable to H. | Gundersen and signed “The Tesla Coal | Company, by F. Burgess,” and indorsed | “H. Gundersen.” ichols aid he was in the habit of cash- ing checks for A. I Petersen, grocer, Fol- som and Ninth streets, and on Saturday, February 3, a man about five feet ten inch- es tall, of stout build, florid complexion and coatless, called at his store and said he had been sent by Petersen to get the check cashed. Nichols gave the man | $24 % ana sent the check with others to | his bank for collection. He was informed | by the bank that the check was worth- less. Nichols ascertained that the man | had returned to Petersen’s store after | cashing the check and got the clerk to change a $5 gold plece. \ | Several checks purporting to be signed | by the Tesla Coal Company have been re- | cently passed on storekeepers by a man | answering the same description. Detective Whitaker has been detailed on the case. | The man 1s supposed to be an ex-convict, | who was arrested four years ago for pass- | ing fictitious checks. ———————— \KPORE!TERK GIVE RELIEF { TO MANY SICK MEMBERS Reports of S Francisco Board Show |7 What Assistance was Rendered | in Six Months. | The San Francisco relief board of | the Foresters of America held its semi- annual meeting in the Alcazas bullding yesterday, when the following were elected as the officers for the current term: A, H. Joost, president; J. J. Ryan, vice president; J. Gallagher, treasurer, and Jacob Label, secretary. The reports presented show that dur- ing the preceding six months 130 mem- bers of courts outside of the city were reported sick and recelved the medical care and attention that each case de- manded, and that in the care of these | members and furnishing them trans- | portation to reach their homes, where | such was needed. a little more than $2000 was expended; that the board paid the last sad offices to four mem- bers of the order who succumbed to iliness, and that employment was fur- nished to eighteen Foresters. The meeting was followed by a ban- quet, at which the newly installed president was the toastmaster. In re- sponse to calls there were addresses by Grand Senfor Woodward Daniel Teare, who on behalf of the members of the! board of the past term presented C. R. Heiden, the retiring president, a set of silver knives, forks and spoons; then E. Zion, J. Label, Dr. Maass, J. Gal- | lagher, Grand Recording Secpetary Dr. Troppman, J. J. Ryan, G. W. Lillie, J. H. Imwall, E. Schuckart, J. Foley. Quast, George Ross, and Messrs. M Queeny, Ritzky, Lowe, Candage, Bran- don, Stullhaft, Vasquez, Hearst and Stock. > t To-morrow night there will be a grand ball in Native Bons’ Hall in aid of the board of ¥yelief, under the direc- tion of A. H. Joost, C. R. Heiden, J. Gal- lagher, J. Foley, 8. A. Lowe, E. L. Schuckhart, J. Label and J. J. Ryan, with S. A. Lowe as floor manager. sisted by E. Candage, H. Gunderson and J. Foley. The tragic death of James L. Manning, the popular young business man who was drowned in the Suisun marshes early yes- terday morning, while out duck hunting, has created sorrow among his many friends In this « and vicinity. Man- ning was a very popular young fellow, both in business and socfal ecircles, and leaves hundreds of loss. Manning left this city on Saturday aft- ernoon with a par of about twenty friends iIntent on shooting ducks on the Sulsun marshes. The hunt started late on Saturday night and while in the midst of the sport Manning fell overboard. Sev- aral of the party noticed this and imme- diately went to his rescue, but their ef- forts to save him availed naught. The search for the body has been kept up since, but up to a late hour last night no trace of it could be found. Manning was about 33 years old and a drayman in this ecity. He leaves a wife and four young children. He was a popu- lar member of the local Elks, having held the position of_esquire for the last four | The soclety has organized a party | vears to search for the body and will charge of it when it is found. PERSONAL. J. P. Brayton, a Chicago capitalist, is at the St. Franecis. N. Rosenthal, a prominent merchant of Madera, is at the Palace. Harry Chickering, a Tonopah mining man, is at the St. Francis. ‘W. F. Blair, a millionaire lumberman of take Chicago, is at the St. Francis. y A rd Wilder, a wealthy capitalist of Chicago, at the St. Francis. Colonel Willigm Couch, who hafls from Michigan, but ‘who has extensive Inter- ests in mines near Goldfield, is at the Palace. J. K. Lewls, son of a prominent mer- chant of Johannisberg, South Africa, is at the Palace. He is touring the world and is now on his way home. H. W. Child of Helena, Montana, is at the St. Franels. Mr. Child is manager of the' Yellowstone National Park Associa- tion and has charge of the hofels there. He is in California seeking a rest. Baroness Ward, the yvoung and pretty wife of an English nobleman, is at the St. Francis, “She will sail for Shanghai on Tuesday, there to join her husband, who has been in Vladivostok on a pri- vate venture. Before her marriage Baroness Ward was a soclety belle of Pittsburg. g L e iRy Alteration Clothing S Herman Lesser will sell, beginning on Wednesday, men's $10 to $15 suits for only $7 50 a suit. Do not be misled by ads. of storekecpers who don’t always glve what they advertise, This s a mistake. No' store can_ exist unless it does as it advertises.. No canvas signs. A simple store with willing clerks to sell men’'s ‘good clothing to pedple, for cash, at less than actual wholesale price. Get your clothing where you get the best valua for your money, and that will be on Wednesday, when $10 to $15 men’s. suits will ‘be sold for $7 50, at 1057 Market street, opposite Jones. * Theosophical Society Hear Lecture. +« L. W. Rodgers gave another inter- esting lecture before the San Francisco branch of .the Theosophical Society im the Academy of Sciences hall last even- ing. A large and enthusiastic audience was present and the subject proved of more Interest than previous lectures. During the course of the address Mr. Rodgers explained clairvoyance as a sixth sense, and says the time will soon come when every one will find the ne- cessity of developing and using fit. There is nothing miraculous about this sixth sense, the speaker asserts, and any one with ordinary intelligence can easily cultivate and develop it. Mr. Rodgers will lecture next Sunday even- ing on “Some Practical Phrases of Oc- cultism.” ; ———————— Yon Caknot Cut the Face When you use a Giliette Safety Razor. Treats | all faces alike—same. velvety sensation, stiff, soft or coarse beards. Everything for the man Wwho “shaves in our leather de] nt. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. * —_——————— TESTIMONIAL FOR ACTRESS—At 10§ o the Australaslan Tesidents of ¢ ectded to present Mise Nellle Stewart testimontal on 22 last night of h“:: 1 address. The following a meet- his committse . was ap- Solnled to arrange matters: M, A, . . F. Moore, M. Brodzky, B. R. Mackay | and L. Brookes Burnett’s Extract of Varilla has aken gold medals over all other brands. © friends to mourn his | THOUSANDS WATCH LAYING () ORNERSTONE. - - SUICIDE: MANIA Mrs. Etta Kemmis Makes Her Third Vain Attempt to End Life by Taking Morphine HAS DOMESTIC TROUBLES Former Wife of Ellis Street Tailor Tries to See Child, Possessed of what physicians term sui- cide mania, Mrs. Etta Kemmis, a pretty musician of 25 ycars, attempted \gelf-de- struction yesterday by swallowing a po- tion of morphine in her rooms at 988 Geary street. The attempt was a lame one, the amount. taken being entirely in- adequate to produce death. Mrs. Kemmis smilingly tells of her reasons for running the suicide bluff, and ith an air of bravado says it is her third attempt, but not the last. Worry over her inability to see her 8- year-old boy, Vernon, who is in the cus- tody of her divorced husband, is alleged by the woman as reason for taking the poison. 4 Some time ago Mrs. Keflmis, who as- sumes her maiden name, was divorced from Max Bernstein, a tallor at 115 Ellis street. The custody of their 8-year-old boy was awarded to the wife’s mother. | Bernstein, howevcr, finally got the keep- ing of the lad. Saturday, the woman says, she went to see her child and was refused that privilege by Bernstein. Then, she avers, the monomania of self- murder seized her. She was treated at the Central Emergency Hospital by Dr. Charles Pinkham. Mrs. Kemmis has twice before attempt- ed suicide. One time, a year ago, she went to-Buffalo to visit a 5-year-old child by her first husband, and while in”that city took morphine and gas. As she puts it, however, “she did not sniff out.” e T < SR SAYS RESEARCH SUPPORTS OLD TESTAMENT STATEMENTS Professor Penniman, Dean of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, Lectures at Trinity Episcopal Church. Professor J. H. Penniman. Dean of the University of Pennsylvania, lec- tured at Trinfty Episcopal Church last nighteon “The Old Light of the Recent Babyionian Expe- dition.” - He told of the researches of the unlversity in the city of Nippur and said that tablets discovered there gave support to many of the historical statements made in the Old Testament. The story of the Tower of Babel had been scoffed at, he said, yet cylinders had been unearthed by the University of Pennsylvania expedition that bore an expressed intention of Nebuchadnez- zar to rebulld the destroyed tower. Tablets found at Nippur, said Profes- before Abraham's time a king had said that his Lord had given him dominion over all the world, that world, accord ing to these -tablets, extending- from Sea. This supported the story fourteenth war of the kings. of Joseph, said the speaker, .demon- by which Joseph was sen the land of the Pharaohs. Wherever the researches made brought a light, sald the speaker, it was a light to confirm faith In the statements of the Old Testament, r] down into nary account of God's dealings with an traordinary wayv. —_———— SKULL FRACTURED BY FALL.—A man residence at 84 South Park, was seen to fall o the sidewalk at Third and Mission streets yesterday morning at 2:30 o'clock. Picked up by a policeman he was hurried to the Central Emergency Hospital, where Dr. of the scalp and a very positive fracture of the base of the skull. ADVERTISEMENT, WORST ECIEMA DOCTORS EVER SAW Spread Rapidly Over Body— Limbs and Scalp Looked Dreadful — Suffered Untold Misery for Three Years—Better in Two Months —— MARVELOUS CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES “My son, who is now twenty-two years of age, when he was four months 011;3-@; i pidly o ety L ite ra un was nenlyeov'?od. W:ludall the doetors arms; his scalp was just dreadful. used kinds of patent medicines be!ann:wmnq the Cuticura Remedies, — Cuticura. A time, all to no avail. 5 “A friend teased me to try At last I consented, when and four but Meets With Refusal | Testament in the | | | sor Penniman, showed that 2500 years the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean | in the chapter of Genesis of the Tablets found on the Nile showed that regular communication existed be- | tween Palestine and Egypt at the time | strating that there was a caravan route “which was recognized as an extraordi- ; who gave his name as Clarence Henry, with | | Sharon Tract. and Arms Had to Be Bandaged | When | Goodale treated him for a deep lacerated wound | | } | | mon and establish homes. extraordinary people, written in an ex- | in the deal that broke down the barriers BIBO, NEWMAN (0. POLK STREET, AT CALIFORNIA PHONE EAST 1520 (PRIVATE EXCHANGE). —_— Best Ranch Eggs and Creamery Butler at Lowesl Prices. Wednesday Specials Mopday—'l‘vesday- CGROCERIES N ith Food. . A0e Coftee, Elite Blend, m—‘k Dr. Piice’s Hea Eg' > Ten, Family Mixed... Cocony Lowney's ... Gelatine, Keck’s . Sor Grifin’s 3 E¥ncentrated. Heg. Bacon, Armour’s, Sliced. . .R.th eg. Mackerel in Mustard Underwood's. Codtish Cakes Mrs. Jackson' ~ and Dates...... n small wooden boxes. eg. . Strawberry and _Blackberry me-made. .. qt. bot. Syrup, he: Pure Fruit Syrup. Reg. Thou Marine Teyssomneau . tin Bijou tin. Reg. tins ach ed Ginger In stone pots. Pineapple, Cube . 3-1b. tin. Jell-o . A quick and toothsome dessert. TOILET ARTICLES Colgnte's Violet Tale Purity Olive Soa der A pure Califor The new package. box 3 eakes Reg. Olive Ofl Soap. T5¢ Combs, Hair Brushes, Tooth Brushes, Hand Brushes, Clothes Brushes. HOUSEHOLD Bread or Cake Tins. .. e Good, serviceable boxes. Reg. Clark’s Pyramid Night Light Holders Tav. oot No. 14 . ¢ Reg. 35¢ No. 16 LIQUORS ... $LOO St. Hubert Tonic Po Reg. $1.25 Reg. 16c and $1.25 §. 0. Cognae Imported Calitorala Claret 85, Galvanized Water Pails— No. I¥ ........ Cushendall Irish Whiskey. rt pint . quart Cabinet Cocktalls ... Gl 10-year-old Port or Sherry. gn Reg. Mvet Scotch Whiskey. .. .. tar. Reg. Orange Wine Delleaciés of All Kinds and Descriptions. See Our Hamburs. SHIFTS SOt Abruzzi to Brave African Wilds ROME, Feb. 11.—The Duke of Abruzzi has definitely arranged to leave Im April on an expedition to frica. He will land at Mombaza, cap 1 of Brit- ish. FEast Africa, and afterward it cross ‘Lake Victoria Nyanza and climb the Elgon Mountains in Uganda. They permeate every portlon of system and give it a new life and vi Lash's_Kidney and Liver Bitters. Henry T. Seott Relieved ofI Load of Martyrdom in Mat- ter of Burlingame Deal PNovelfies in EIVA i Bearing upon his shoulders the burden of an unjust accusation, Henry T. Seott has suffered in silence these many days. Mr. Scott's martyrdom was by the storles given out concerning the | recent cutting up of lands near the homes of the consecrated rich at Buriingame that the lowly might creep within ight of the exclusive temples of mam- It was given ut that Mr. Scott alone was to blame | for thus letting . the people who could only afford the steam cars as a means of locomotion build homes so near the outer moat of society's manor lands. Mr. occasioned I have a v Scott frankly admits that he would gladly Il the best and = sufferer all the onus tha¢-could fall on novelties in Valentines ever him were he the sole beneficiary of the brought to this Coast. They deal which opened darkest Burlingame to 1 range in subjects from th the world, but the iact is otherwise. It et bt ans st has developed that the very persons who were reported as being indignant at the | opening of the Sharon Tract upon which | the ordmary homeseekers were permitted | to flock were equally interested in the | deal with him and shared equally in the | profits. When this fact developed, he con- sented to give the names of his associates creations to the mest clown- ish and funny ever seen herc I can certainly suit all t 5 All prices. Call early and get chelce of the best subjects. TPAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Stationer 1008 Market st of_exclusion. | It scems that tnere were six prominent : members of the Burlingame set.who un- | derwrote the project and secured the They are: Henry T. Scott, WEo adr-...s frana.y that he was president of tie iniquitous association of capital; F. J. Caro.an, W. S. Crocker, W. 8. Tevis, Joceph D. Grant and George A. Pope. As- ociated with these and sharing equally n the proceeds of the nefarious scheme were: W. S. Tubbs, M. S. Wilson, Law- rence Scott, Robert L. Coleman, E. S. | Pillsbury, J. Downey Harvey, George A. | Newhall, Walter S. Martin and C. Os- | good Hooker. | Mr. Scott had the following to say yes- | terday concerning the putting of the | Sharon Tract on the market: [ All 1 know about the dissatisfaction of an: members of the Burlingame set is what I hav read in The Call. Nome of them have moved | away yet. The same people Who wera reported as being dissatisfied were in the deal tor the | cutting up of the tract. As matters stand we have control and there will be no Hquer soid and nothing going on that should mot. Ther: San Franeises Renters’Loan & Trust Co. Savings Bank 222 Moatgomery Si., Sam francisco Receives Deposits of 5i up Interest Compounded Semi- are fine sewer and water systemy, and eondt: Anaually tions are in every way excelient. We sold the | “Banking by Mail" an il - b by an Wustrated Burlingame Country Club land enough for a | Booklet, Seat Free. golf links and a polo field at $800 an acre, giv- ing the club fifteen years in which to pay for it and having only the land as seeurity. ~The | Lrice we fixed on the rest of the land was $3000 an acre. We are all members of the Country Club. 1 Notwithstanding Mr. Scott's statement that there is perfect harrony, it is a fact that Messrs, de Sabla, Howard, Bowie, Tobin and Clark, res..ents of San Mateo and members of the Burlingame Club, have bought ground near San Mateo for golf links and a polo fleid. The price pald for the Sharon Tract by Mr. Scott and his associates was 3250,- 000. It is flgured that this sum will be doubled in the sale of it in lots and acre- age pleces. None.of those who were assoclated with Mr. Scott in the purchase stepped forward to assume any of the blame when the matter of the opening of the tract was made public and the consequent grum- bling among the members of the exclu- sive set took place. The talk of securing another tract for the exclusive use of the exclusives has not subsided. —_—e——— FALLS UNDER CAR, WHEELS [ AND HIS LEG IS MANGLED | Fred Pflueger, While Intoxicated, Meets Serious Mishap at Third and Market Streets. When Fred Pflueger, a carpenter, at- tempted to board a west-bound Castro- sfreet car at Thbird and Market streets yesterday afternoon, under the impr 8- rion that he was bound for his resi-| derce at 249 Market street. e~ hesi- tated too long to comvince Grivmuin Pokett as to what he really meant. As a consequence the lever was released and while Pflueger was holding on to a stanchion the car moved forward,. throwing him under the fromt portion | of the truck. The result was that the wheel passed over the inside of the tearing away the muscles An sxamina- TERM DEPOSITS FITTING Eyec-Glasses $2.50 Broken Lenses Repaired 50¢ Telephone Main 1472, Arthur L. Fish, Representa The Times Is the advertish ndh-dml-‘mvn:' bone had been broken in two and re- Guired to be wired so as to save tw " When the contents of the 'S pockets had been inspected by Police R. Proll at the hospital a the state- ! els, mtnm.uucl LENTINES [ 3

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