The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 25, 1906, Page 38

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ANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1906 88 /ISLAIS CREEHA ISLAIS, T s c 594 K [ K 5 i o w w 5 2 s 2 ] —_ 532 S35 540 . e 76 | 7o0 Foo 78 3 By S 5 3 TP ° 2 QR < o 3 IR N { § o QR , SR % : | b CALAVERAS 536 539 sad 554 LB = I= = i = _— | % X s | > 3 i . | 2 S Warke+ Tide Lands and Mingral 3 e b Ploce by : 3 . 5] 3 Lands for Sale Tide| th : | ot Land SpecialsinBlocks gy —— ) 535 572 |Extra Specials In Improved g = mt’ F e = 836; 6‘8; ] 9| Properties. 2 | Marker 5 B Iy ? s Q | Ploce 3 546 and 79‘. ‘ N. W. corner of Howard and Q 3 | Twenty-fourth. 30x100. Excel- = < § 1 7 75 S. T st,, S @ > i 1; T, L lent frame improvements large V/_Q" 2 3 SOQSI:'X = -uzh ave. S, N. 375, | store ~with entrance on both < s § E. 240, 8 7:5, SW. 35856, | streets. Can !)c better u.se(} as aL———-.: e PLOMAZ - W. 106. two stores. lat above. L_,nder i e = O. L. ggs, S. P st., 107:6 E. 48th ave,, | Jease at $55.00; soon expires— & E. 50 by 8. z00. can be increased. $10,500.00. Old ; A O. L. 995 E. 48th ave., 250 N. Q st, | mortgage of $4500.00. dens in rear of house—I10 or 12 ) 1§ 130 Fifth street, east side. 80 feet|apartments could be added on 2 ° ,E. 48th ave,, 200 N. Q st, south of Mission. 50x74; three-| this space; 12 janitors’ or ser- § | story frame improvement; two | vants’ rooms in basement. $18,000 E . 995, E. 48th ave., 175 N. Q st, J £ F A ddipings ' 2 ; = | stores; cigar stand and lodging-| mortgage, can be increased. Price q houses. Rents about $225.00.| $42,500. 4 r». Price, $70,000.00. - Mortgage Gfl No. 424 Pacific street. San- e e i 500, at 474 net. some and Montgomery; 4o ft. x = IY‘ “"“"-‘C: 5 :1»:‘3:5- 5. W. corner Folsom and Har-|68:5, irregular depth; 3-story T L :"mi x:‘"l'mfr\:c ; riman place, 35x165x25 on Bruce | frame improvements; under lease T. L. 48, lots ‘f"‘““:‘{‘ o place. Two frontages. Excellent|at $110.00 a month; sub-leased at . T. L. 488, o »-;{;rc_w‘s“f:-ac frame improvements. Present|advance; expires in eight months.|T00m two-story house, contalning }; i‘ i&sccxs zu , inc. - low rents, $127.50; store under [ Price $17,500 net. $8000.00 mort- | three servants’ rooms; three . L., lot 112. M. i € > vl e 4 AL B it Wi e aase lease at $42.50, balance very low | gage at 474 net. toilets; wash room; conserva- 6, S. 19129, SE. | . 12776, L. 490, SW. . F st., South, NW. 55:5% NE. 50:11. M.P.V.L, SE. Army and Flor- | 185:434, NE. 219:7%, N. 848, 26th ave., S. 350, | %, S. 8219, - ida, S. W. 200:3 T. L. 438, lots 2 T. L. 20, lots fractional 15 and 16. A full list of other tide and mineral | lands on application. 3 24 inclusive. and no leases. Lithgone Apartments. No. 2034 Sutter, between Steiner and | Fillmore. 35X137. Four-room house and bath apartments, renting for $340.00 | per month. Now rented for $212.50. Ten- ants pay their own light, water, etc. Expenses for hall light, jan- itor, gardener, sashman, about $25.00 2 month. 55 ft. square gar- Price $25,000.00. | { Mortgage of $12,500 at 474 net. K and ], Fourth and Bryant. S. W. corner, $70,000; five-story | tile brick building; rents under IQZH(’, $400.00. Lot 35xI100. Hayes street, south side, 27/x | 120. Two nice flats, five and' six rooms each; baths, toilets and a good basement. Cement floor. $10,000.00. 27%x60 vacant on Hayes f{ronting* south side of street. North street, line of ~ Washington close to Van Ness; 14- tory; hall in good condition; lot 627 feet front by 100 feet deep. Van Ness avenue; price $20,000.00. An elegant site close to the markets on Polk street, where you can purchase from the best stores in the city and where you can get to any point in the city by transfer to six lines of the United Railroads within one block of the property. N. W. corner of Polk street; 200/ 368 Zoe il P DACOTA. s50 $70,000; northwest corners on Polk street. Present income, $310.00 a month. Income with present improve- 62x97; one of the best ments, $3220.00 a year. This is a corner which is growing continu- 3 & 28 S [ S 1DAHO ARIZONA COLORADO ally in value, and it has three sides for light. We have a large list of proper- ties from $100 a lot to $1,000,000. We can fill the bill. We have the largest list in the city. FOR SALE BY. - CALIFORNIA REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE (A Corporation) L. Grothwell & Co. Managers 2 Sutter Street, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. TELEPHONE MAIN 3691 APPRAISERS, AUCTIONEERS, INSURANCE, X | CALL AT THE OFFICE OF THE CALIFORNIA REAL ES- TATE EXCHANGE, No. 22 SUTTER ST., SAN FRAN- CISCO, CALIFORNIA. ROBS EMPLOYERS AND THEN FLEES xas Y,:mkvr\' Son, W nrkmg for Los Angeles Company, | Fugitive From Justice| a i —According ternoon pa- Park Natio: a Los Ange who is preside Assoclation the action of Dr»:mku'.lun. was gi ¢ sympathy, but | efficlency and | everal months | culously re-| The remarkable | wers of speech and | 1»10“"5! in his case| ographer em-| h him. The| until Ra- days ago. two weeks ago applied | nce from his employ- | was dying in| b vanted to go to| Leave was readily granted | The transac- "of the $1800 was 1 several days follow- tion invol ng stolen several articles of to stand trial. She has n during the past week nder obserys by the Insa nissi: who could ais- et 00 Symphons of mentel derangement. | Bavote. | world’s records. | miles | forty-five persons. PLANS A LONG BALLOON TRIP Count Henri de la Vaulx, French Aeronaut, Reaches New York From Europe ERETE G Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March de la Vaulx, the noted French aeronaut, arrived here today on the French liner He expects to make . several ascensions while in this country and is | planning a balloon trip from Denver to Washington, which he says is perfectly feasible. He thinks he could make the trip in forty hours. The Count is six feet two inches in height, strong and muscular, with a heavy blonde mus- tache and looks like a hardy Norseman. He has come to this country at the in- vitation of Augustus Post and Courtlandt shop of the Aero Club to make ascen- »ns in the interest of bajlooning as a pastime. He is the holder of several In 1900 he made the long- est trip ever made in a balloon—from Paris to Klev, Russia—covering the 1300 separating those cities in thirty- one hours. Count de la Vaulx is the only man that ever made a trip from Paris to Britain in a balloon, although several balloonists have made trips from Britain | to France. The Count brought with him to America three balloons, one of which, the Cen- taur, is a monster. It has a capacity of 500,000 cubic feet of gas-and can carry It was in this bal- loon that he made his famous trip from Paris to Kiev., The other balloons—the Orient and Ludion—are comparatively small, carry- ing respectively three and two persons. The Count expects to make an ascension in the Orient at West Point some day within the next two weeks and an ascen- sion later at Pittsfield in the Centaur. _———— Four Years for a Bank Teller. TORONTO, March 24—Banwell, the Crown Bank teller, who pleaded gullty to stealing over $40,000 of the bank's fund, was today sentenced to four years in prison. of any kind. by us. Call and we will give consultation. Fidelity P\upture We treat RUPTURE only. No quack SPECIALISM Hundreds of the best men in this city have been cured you their names, and you can call on them. NO PAY TILL CURED. No charge for COME AND SEE US. Rupture Cure 1344 Market Street,, S. F., Cal 24.—Count Henri DS MURDER BY REQUEST Berlin Man Confesses That He Killed Two Girls at Their Own Solicitation Epecial Dispatch to The Call. BERLIN, March 24.—Carl Brunke, a young bank clerk, has just been sentenced to eight years’ penal servitude here for one of the most extraordinary deeds in the annals of crime. Without hesitation | he confessed to the police that he had murdered at their own request two sis- ters, Martha and Alma Paars, 22 and 21 years old, respectively. The self-confessed murderer has for some time been acting in the capacity of teacher of music to the young women, and expert alienists say that all three had been reduced to a state of extreme melan- choly from the excessive study of Wag- ner. There is no doubt that the two girls' did ask Brunke to kill them. Indeed, Martha, the elder one, gave him the money with which to buy the revolver with which the double murder was done. ‘When Brunke was arrested he sald he was ready to confess and with the utmost calmness said: “When I came back the two girls were awaiting me in my room, but our courage then began to fail us. Martha gave me $15 to buy three bottles of champagne, and after bracing up our courage with wine we discussed all the detalls of our approaching deaths. “First 1 fired a test shot, and we all agreed that the revolver would surely do its work unfailingly. Both girls had put on white waists and black skirts, so as to make as presentable an appearance after death as possible. “By agreement I shot the younger sister first. The instant I fired she fell to the floor dead. We bent over the body, and Martha asked her if she were still alive, but received no answer. Martha then stood up and pointed out to me carefully the spot on her breast at which she ' wished me to fire. I took deliberate aim | and fired two shots. She must have died instantly. 2 “I had agreed to turn the weapon on myself as soon as I had killed the two girls, but weakened at the sight of their lifeless bodies.” e SAYS COLLEGE GRADUATES SELDOM GO TO THE BAD President of Western Reserve Univer- sity at Chicago Meeting Refutes Statements of Reformers. CHICAGO, March 24—Charles F. Thwing, president of the Western Re- serve University, spoke at the annual meeting of the Northwestern Alumni Association of that institution last night in refutation of the statements credited to reformers that they find a large proportion of college bred men among the men with whom they work. “It is seldom that a college graduate goes to the bad” sald President Thwing, “ and it is seldom that their lives or careers are inefficient. Less than five college men out of 100 be- come moral reprobates and I think that less than 10 per cent lead useless careers. Nincty-five college men out of every hundred are reputable and ninety men out of every hundréd are making some contribution .of . wortl for the bettermen of the community.” SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE ‘WILL CONTROL THE SALES Senate Committee om Public Lands Agree Upon Bill to Replace Timber and Stone Act. WASHINGTON, March 24.—After con- sidering various proposed measures looking to the repeal of the timber and stone act, the Senate committee on pub- lic lands today agreed upon a bill which will be perfected and reported Monday. The bill will transfer supervision of sales of timber on lands now being sold off under the timber and stone act, to the Secretary of Agriculture, so that all of these lands will come under thé di- rection of the forest service. There are many amendments to be perfected con- cerning the protection of small pur- chagers, forest fires and other matters. Existing laws regarding the using of timber for mines and mechanical pur- poses are liberalized and applfed to all reserved lands. ——————————— FAILS IN HER ATTEMPT.—Mrs. H. Jor wife of a tallor, drank carbolic acid ve: day afternoon at her home, 87 lvy aves The whisky that she had previously absorbed and prompt treatment at the Central Emer— gency Hospital eaved her life. - COMMON-LAW WIFE SUES FOR DIVORCE AND ALIMONY Legal Problem Raised by St. Louls Wo- man Is Puzzling the Court. ST. LOUIS, March 24—Can a woman be divorced from a common-law hus- band and obtain alimony? This is a question puzzling Judge Daniel G. Tay- lor of the Circuit Court. Augusta Calla, who is suing Andrew D. Calla for divorce and alimony, al- leges that she was married to Calla, in Cook County, Illinols, on February 6, 180%, entering into a common-law agreement to live with him as his wife. Some time ago Mrs. Calla brought suit for divorce, naming Gertrude Thomas as_co-respondent. Mrs. Calla claimed that her husband was worth $100,000 and that he was able to pay her alimony. — e Against Convict Labor. WASHINGTON, March 24.—Repre- sentative Sibley introduced a bill today preventing officers or agents of the Government from buying goods made by convict laborers. PRODUCE ANESTHESIA WITH A BLUE LIGHT New York Dentists and Sur- geons Find New Use for Electricity. Speclal Dispatch to The Call NEW YORK, March 24—New York dentists and surgeons are using a blue incandescent electric light to produce anesthesia. They have a 16-candle- power globe and bathe it in liquid blue pigment. Then they attach the globe to the small end of a funnel, in the mouth of which is a ground blue glass convex lens. The funnel is four inches long and four inches in diameter at the mouth, where the lens is situated. Al- though the lens disperses the blue rays it is of no real value, being used merely to deceive the patient into believing the affair is complicated and mysterious. There are two ways of using the blue electric light.' Dentists make their pa- tiénts concentrate their gaze on it for five minutes, when unconseclousness re- sults and the tooth is extracted without pain. There is believed to be a hypnotic factor in the accomplishment. The surgeons, among them Professor le Duc and Dr. Lovise B. Robinovitch, apply the current from the blue light directly to the arm, in order to produce anesthesia. A current of five voltage is sufficlent. Speech is first lost, then pow- er of motion, then sight and hearing. Thought is abolished last of all. —_————— Norwegian Consul at This Port. CHRISTIANIA, March 24—The State Council has appointed Christopher Rav Norwegian Consul General at New York and Brumel Horst Consul General at Ha- vana. M. Lund has been given the post of Consul at San Francisco. — e Historic Restaurant Burned. MONTREAL, March 24—The Oakhall restaurant, St. Peter and Notre Dame streets, in the bullding which was oc- cupied in 177 as the headquarters of Gen- eral Montgomery and staff of the Amer- fcan army in Montreal, was burned last night. BE A STRONG MAN! ENJOY THE PLEASURES OF LIFE Would you like to have your friends point to you as they used to do and say, goes a strong man?”’ ““There Do you not wish your eye to be so btight, your stepso firm and your form so erect that men and women will admire you and remark at your bear- ing? These are the thoughts uppermost in the minds of modern men—physical and mental perfection, strength and power. _ Who does not like to be strong, to feel that he is equal in strength to any man of his age? You can be if you will obey the appeal here made to you. Drugs have been tried and have failed. You know that; but Electro-Vigor cannot fail; it is Electricity, and ‘‘Electricity islife.” with which toset the machineryof your body in motion, and a few months’ use of it will assure you health and happiness for the rest of your life. *‘Itis worthits weightin gold tome,” says a recent letter, ‘‘I would not sell - lett and Nearly all my curs it for all the gold in this State,”” writes angther grateful patient. cure all Nervous and Organic Weakness, Rheumatism, Lame Back, Kid- ney and Bladder Troubles, Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all ailments follow- It will prove of great value to any man who ing the effects of dissipation. suffers from these ailments. ! give Electro-Vigor credit for saving my life. Weakness which made life miserable for me. After two months’ use of Electro-Vigor the many rheumatic xuammmy llchnml(llnmlhm a ll:::.‘- ery method brought to my notice without rellef. T. s are of men who have dons lots of floctorln me. tried Electro-Vigor as a last resort. When a man study, and common sense tells him that Elects 1l not, That is wi becaus man’ can’t live without Electrieity; I was cured of dropsy. cal J. W, LUNDBEC’K.IOQI‘LN for I have E.m 10!! tired dosin, ricity will cure and when he loses it he gets weak, stupid, nerveless and slowly goe just like a plant without sun and air. A plant canlive wlthonl sun and air if it tricity. That is a scientific fact. Can’t you see that Electricity is life to every 1iv Electro-Vigor will be a boon to you. test it free, or send for my book, finely illustrated, giving facts of Interest to men and women who want health. ELECTRO-VIGOR /18 not like electric belts. It is a dry-cell body battery; does not need to be charged and gives . ten times the power of old-style electric belts, which are charged in vinegar or acid.” pleasure and no trouble to be cured by Electro-Vigor, “send it, sealed, free if you send this coupon. If you can't call, then put your name and -address on S. C. Dear Sir: Please sénd me, I this coupon and send it in. .Alvleo and Consultation Free, | free book, "llmvmn- Office 8, C. HALL, M.D., 1104 Market Street, San Francisco. hours: 8a.m. to 8 p.m.; lnnllr!, 10 to Name . - | Adaress 1 It will tarrh, rheumatism and pains hlch 1 euffered have o & for years 14, Cal. They usually try he begins to fifll tmubh whore drugs f his body, It gives you the oil g thing? It 1s a Try it. Call and Inclose This Coupon When Writing. HALL, M. D.

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