The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 4, 1906, Page 12

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1z ATALLY WOUNDS FORMER BOARDER Fight Over Bill'Leads to Shooting of R. Wendt by J. H. Diamond. of 75 Cents Cause of Tragedy. vesterday r John relter Tea a was consumed t. set out He found dollars sent ¥ but to locate the bullet nt Dis- ST an ex- i taken Wen e eff mond dur- station Dia- but not he think Is how the vic- after t Wendt he says taken as aw the ADVERTISEMENTS. SIVED BABY LYON'S LI Suffering and Constant Misery—Awful Sight From that Dreadful Complaint, Infantile Ec- zema— Commenced at Top of his Head and Covered Entire Body. MOTHER PRAISES CUTICURA REMEDIES “Owr beby had that dreedful com- int, Infantile Eczema, which afflicted im for several months, commencing at the top of his head, and at last covering his whole body. His sufferings were untold and constant misery, in fact, there wes nothing we would not have done to have given him relief. The doctor seemed to be wholly incapable of coping with the ease, and T various experiments of his, which ted in no benefit to the child, we sent to Mazon, TIl., to = druggist and got a full set of the Cuticura Remedies and applied as per directions. and he began to improve immedistely, and in about three or four days began te show a bri r spirit and really laughed, for time in & year. Inabous ninety he was fully recovered, with the exception of & rough skin, which is gradually disappearing, and eventually be replaced by a healthy one. “Praiss for the Cuticura Remedies has slways been our greatest pleasure, and there is nething too good that we could say in their favor, for they cer- tainly saved our baby’s life, for he was the most awful sight that I ever beheld, orior to the treatment of the Cuticura §<rm0dies. Mrs. Maebelle Lyon, 1826 Appleton Ave., Parsons, Kau., July 18, COMPLETE TREATHENT §t Complete external and internal treat- ment for every humor, consisting of CuticuraSoap, Ointment, and Pills, may now be had for one dollar. A single s¢t is often sufficient to cure the most uring, disfiguring, itching, burning, 'nd scaly humors, eczemas, rashés, and jtations, from infancy to age, when else fails. uticura Sosp, Olntment, and_Pills are sold throughout e T T gy e e e | MAGNIN & GO TEMPORARILY LOCATED 1482 PAGE STREET, ELLIS STREET CAR TO DOOR. While at the above address we will sell all Merchandise at actual cost, in order to keep in touch with our customers. Until we are per- manently located we will not do any charge business. ailure to Pay Balance and wind that drove sed to' magazine AND VALISES ARE AWAITING IDENTIFICATION MANY TRUNKS Property Clerk Dinam Has Large Num- ber That Have Been Recovered by the Police. Clerk Dinan Property has since the and fire and are awaiting recovered by the police been number of sewing ma- ere are also . telescope baskets, nes and other articles. Among the nks and valises having identifica- a UALL, MUNDAY, JUNE & 1906, (JAMES J. SMITH, Committee’J. P. FITZSIMMONS, {FRANK BILLINGTON, Secretary. DRPHEUN BILL EXGELLENT ONE Three New Acts Are Replete With Good Entertainment. he following: Mr. Settle Moneyen R Wolf House Mrs. : Mrs. P y end, E. on card adelphia; Gunt I , star on front, J. B. Clarke L. H. on end, L. Houghton, | Grand Hotel; DeWitt; Matt Theatre, street on tag: Bre- e Willards Theat 301 Jones B. Cooper. . on card: ks of Charles Clarke, Au : Mrs. Fred Archer, 114 r The Great Onzo. Clarke S Innis Street C . 118; 5-133. paint; Milla B.: Tom Mack: Fox; Riley Lavigne; Clipper ette; Fa worth Theatre; L. H pner, Room Higgins; ; Lagomodius, 683 Howard, S. Joe Roebac P. Johnson: n S E. D. and Dam- V. [ M. W. L.; Wellish, E. King. Arcata 1. care of Westingho: Market street; Lowe; T. H. Zulliger 5 Howard, S. F. Signor Maskeni_ Gui- Stevenot: Tannte Guido, >a.; John J. Pap, tool chest; 3, Miss Raymond, Cherry- vale, Kan H. Craig, Melbourne; Mrs. McCullum, bundle of clothing P. A ame Borguna; M. Ga escope basket; M. Schnider eet; N. Brann;, A. Gustafrau; wal, N. K. on side, canvas; Rior on nela arantida; Canello Guido; Pa Lt POLICE ASKEDsTO ARREST MEN FROM OTHER CITIES | Chief Dinan Informed That Three Crim- imals Who Are Wanted May Be Here. Chief Dinan yesterday received circu- lars and letters asking him to look gut for and arrest the following persons who were believed to have fled to this city Arthur G. Reinke, bank teller from Milw: fled from there on May him about $2000 and a valuable di mond ring and gold watch. Chief Jans- sen wrote that he was a spendthrift and sporty” and occasionally . used the name of A. G. Barr. He is 22 years of , age, feet 10 inches tall, sHm build, fair complexion and has a heavy growth of dark brown hair. Louis Macharovsky, wanted in New York for stealing $5000 worth of dia- monds from his employer, Isaac Wolf, 118 Bowery. He is ‘18 years of age. 5| feet 2 inches tall, slim build, dark hair | | end eyes, smooth face and long visage George Knapke, wanted in Los An-! geles for grand larceny for stealing two valuable carvings from the place where | he was employed. He is 2o years of | age, 5 feet 7 inches tall. light complex- ion, blue eyes, light-yellowish hair and | clean shaven. He wears clothes of ex- ceptionally fine quality, which were given to him. | an absconding kee, Wis. He and had with | | [ th | Breakers Repay Visit and Bring In | Flotsam for Man In Search { | =i s ilal 4 GOODLY CROWD GOES 0UT TO BEACH TO BEHOLD STORM | of Wood. Despite yvesterday’s storm there was | a fair crowd at the beach. Visitors| and old Californians alike went forth | to hear the music of the breaking surf. | | perchance to behold the breakers comb | {high up on the shore, but in this they | were disappointed of their hopes. | | The wind blew up a fine mist, the | | white caps rode in with pulsing regu- |larity, but the ocean in a rage was| not seen. 2] 1 Half a dozen long, clean, red looking telegraph poles, escaped from a storm- |tossed barge, were strewn along the |sands just below the Cliff House, and |a solitary beach-comber, armed with a saw, passed the afternoon sawing his | flotsam of pine into firewood. But for his mule, to which was hitched a chain- drag for hauling away the wood, the |picture would have been Crusoesque. | Residents of the beach said there was @ high surf last night, but the storm abated toward morning. | oA 2 Two Men Drowned in Bay he scow-schooner Nimro on the bay on May 15 dl'm\?fll;z.gp.é:;'5 tain Hans Gerbard Guiliksen and an unknown sailor. The scow was found, Pottom up. vesterday on the mud flats |near Berkeley. The Nimrod left Pre- sidio whart on May 15 with a load of gravel for Mare Island. She did not reach her destination and a search was |at once begun for her. A. H. Johnson |of 1884 Ninth avenue, Sunset, discov- {ered the capsized boat on the flats and notified Coroner Walsh ts | lookout for the corpses. SRR —— | Radke & Co., t 1813 Devisadero st., silversmiths, are l'ull. el | Your watch repairing, diamond setting, and fill your orders aj 1&!10 Jewe{eu' craft, . P aining s and y equipped to do | San Jos Three new acts are on the new bill at the Orpheum this week, and the four | hold-overs are so freshened up with variations that they hold the charm of old acquaintance whose welcome is not vet worn out. Among the new per- formers are Foster and Foster in a musical comedy called “The Volunteer Pianist.” The volunteer is the funny man of the team, and, coming on in such queer guise that he Jooked quite impossible, he soon astonished the peo- ple by making stirring music come out of the piano, which he plaved with perfect ease though with his fingers cased in ten pairs of mitts. Another new act is that of “The Great Francelias,” a pair of athletic jugglers. The man is of Herculean mold and the woman with him made by nature ex- pressly to mate a giant. Franeelia catches on thé muscle of his right arm | Edward Leopold, Messrs. Paul and Maz | a big cannon ball hurled by a spring | Leder, UNION MEN SPEAK PRAISE FOR THE CALL FOR ITS FRIENDLY ATTITUDE TOWARD THEM Highly Commended for Having Emergency Work Done in an Office Where Union Labor Is Recognized. The following resolutions were unanimously adopied at a meeting of the Stereofypers’ and Electrotypers’ Union, No. 29, I. S. and E. U.: Whereas, During the trying hours of the recent conflagration in this city it became pecessary for the San Francisco daily newspapers to have a whole or part of their work performed in printing establishments outside this city, John D. Spreckels, proprietor of The San Francisco Call, employed the services of a Union Labor printing -concern, the Portland Telegram, of Portland, Oregon, to meet his requirements in the publication of the pplement of The San Francisco Call, thus showing an appreciated considera- tion for Union Labor, notwithstanding that certain other daily papers, competitors in the same journalistic territory of his own daily newspaper, turned their work of a similar character over to an avowed enemy of Union Labor, The Los Angeles Times; therefore be it Resolved, That Stereotypers’ and Electrotypers’ Union No. 29, I. S. and E. U., do, in a formal meeting, testify in this manner, its full appreciation of John D. Spreckels’ action, and that it is the sense of this union that John D. Spreckels receive from the members of Stereotypers’ and Electrotypers’ Union No. 29, through a committee appointed for that purpose, a unanimous vote of thanks. » | MAIL IN OAKLAND AWAITS MANY CITY REFUGEES Chamber of Commerce Invites Those Addressed to Call for Their Letters. The following letters have been left at the Chamber of Commerce, Twelfth land Franklin streets, Oakland. It is | desired that the addressees either call jor send for their mail. R. B. Boehnke, Arthur Boetner, Mrs. | { L. Braun, Joe Beer, Vincenz Bertucevic, | Dr. Paul Busu, Johann Brandstetter, A. | Burger, Mrs. Maria Brook, Franz Bock- sleitner, A. Beer, Franz Bauer. | M. G Coter, Mrs. M. G. Cofer, | dolf Czermak, Miss May; Carson. Bert Depew, D. David, John Dabco- vich, Mrs. and Mr. Anna and Josef Dinic, Sam Dicker. Mrs. Antoine and Mr. Sam Fischer, Sigmund Fischer, Rudolf Feix, John P. Fitzgerald, Miss Marian E. Farbar. Miss Evelyn Gillies, Siegfried Grun- berg, Siegmund Grosslicht, Mrs. Rosa |Goldmann, Captain Gifford. 3 Otto Hennings, S. Honig, Miss Her- | minn Ifarreisser, Mrs. E. W. Heggum, Ludwig Honig, Charles Heimel, Otto | Hueber, Julius Hecht, Mrs. Elise Hofer. Ru- R. P. Johnston, Victor Jurdan. Armin Kohn, Josef Kepes, Julius Kelz, Rudolf Rupert Klausner, Mrs. and Mr. Maria, Doris and Leo Kraker, Mrs. Marie Kapler, Mrs. and Mr. Maria and Joe Kaindl, G. H. Kahn, Mrs. Terez Karoly, Sigmund and .Gabor Konig- stein. Mrs. Freda Lehmuth, David Landan, Helen Leyon, Mrs. 1. D. Late, gun that goes off with a cannon-like|Louis Lewitus. bang. The throw has impetus enough to shoot the great weight clear across| Mr. Paul:Meinhardt, Gustav Mechtler, Then he plays with the big | Grace Martin, Mr. Mills. the stage, ball by letting it seem to crawl along his immense biceps and around his neck like a live thing. weighty plaything is announced to the audience by its being dropped occasion- ally with a thundering thud. The solidity of this| Francelia gets under a heavy auto- | mobile and, lifting it on his shoulders, carries it around the stage. The third new feature is the Scipio Argenanti trio in selections from Ital- ian opera. They were well received | and in addition to the good singing fur- nished some beautiful tableaux. Valerie Bergere in her new act of a “Bowery Camille” does, as usual, good work. The playlet represents a pa- thetic scene from the life of a young| struggling art student. Katherine Dahl has varied her songs a little and was quite entertaining. She | comes upon the stage with a smile of triumph born of an assurance of wel- | come, and she wears with that smile a | resplendent garment of light gold trimmed with deep and glittering am- ber. On it are woven autumn leaves of glorious tint Elizabeth Murray goes into her sec- ond week still a strong favorite with | her dialect songs and stories. Gayety at Chutes. The Chutes were looking gayly fresh after the showers of Sunday morning when the crowds began to fill the pleasant space in the afternoon. The, 8irls shot the chutes with the cus- tomary squeals of little terror's big de- lights, and the boats shot across the lake as if the water were slipperier than it is in dry weather. In the Zoo the family seemed happy, save for the elephant, who has a bad cold in the eyes. By the door the python lies in big coils of content, the handsome silver tipped bear is playful as if the rainy weather there just uited his constitution, and the Bengal tiger, indifferent alike to earthquake disasters and the supposed bitter pangs of imprisonment. lies dozing on his back Mke a contented household cat, who feels that the house is his whether he likes to play or to show his graceful poses in contented sleep: PERSONAL. C. A. Lull of Manila is re, the Hotel Crellin. R. J. Millett of the United States navy, is at the Touraine. J. Langston and wife of Portland, Ore., are guests at the Athens. . J. M. McGee, a mining man of Oro- ville, is a guest at the Hotel Crellin. Mrs. Kate G. Ham, who is esgaged in the insurance business at Los An- geles, is a guest at the Athens. Louis H. Sullivan, an architect of Chicago, who drew the plans of many of the large buildings of that city, is visiting in Oakland. He is being en- tertained by Walter J. Mathews, a local architect. Among the day's arrivals at the Hotel Crellin are O. B. Edwards and wife, San Jose; Miss Mae Thompson, Lillian Cooke, San Francisco; Victor H. Woods, Sacramento; G. W. gistered at Bennett, Oroville, and F. B. Fenton, Los Angeles. OAKLAND, June - 3.—Mrs. M. A. Knapp of Denver, one of whose sons, a commefcial traveler, was killed by the earthquake while at the St. Rose Hotel in Santa Rosa, is a guest at the Hotel Crellin, She is accompanied by another son, E. H. Knapp. ) —_— e May Locate in Flood Building. James E. Walsh, agent for the James Flood building, when questioned about the rumor that the Southern Pa- cific had rented it, said last Saturday: “The Southern Pacific has not rented the James Flood bullding, but has been looking at the upper floors for its offices. Nothing further has been done. I will know this coming week if the railroad decides upon taking it. It will take three or four nths to place the floors in condition.” Mate Mattarolla, Mrs. Amelia’ and Mrs. and Mr. Charles and Anna Niel- sen, Con. M. Nolan, Nicolo Nikolotich. D. H. Oliver, Mrs. Amelia O'Connor. James E. Porter, Pierce Peterson, Hugo Pulitzer, Kamillus Pomeisl, Aug- ust Peter, John Paternost, Ernest Purt, Victor Papper. John C. Quinn. Chris Rosen, John Ritter, Rottbauer, Herminn Roth, Mrs. Franz | and | Mr. Anna and Franz Rainer, Lewis B.| Rogers. { A. F. St. Sure, Mrs. Elizabeth Sour- | dry, Dr. Desider Sikora, Karl Stapler, Nogu_Stenson, Mrs. Stone, Messrs T. Scheff & Bros, W. W. Scott, Alexander | Smielowske. Jacob Schmit Schoenduby | family, Henry Schwarz, Miss Madge | Sandison. Gertie Thieler, Mrs. Klelia Testa. Luka Vlajki. Messrs Heinrich and Richard Wer- ner, John Dryton Whitney, Charles | Wellisch, Mrs. Thomas Williams, Otto | Wild. ~Josef Wiedermann, George W achiler. Carl Zukermann, Mrs. Maria Zischkaj A. Zaskovsky, Mrs. Helenn Zilmor. o JUDGE COOK MAKES PLANS FOR TEMPORARY CITY HALL | | Designs Structure for Marshall Square to House Twelve Superior Courts, Sheriff and County Clerk. Judge Carroll Cook is engineering a plan for the erection of a temporary City Hall, which will house the twelve Superior courts, the Sheriff and the County Clerk’s office. Judge Cook, as chairman of the committee of the Su- perior Judges, interviewed the Mayor upon the subject and received that of- ficial's assurance of hearty assistance. Various sites were discussed, among them being a - section of Jefferson Square Fark. several schoolhouse lots and Marshall Square in front-of the City Hall. The latter has met with the most favor. Judge Cook has also turned archi- tect and laid out several plans for the various prospective sites. The favored plans are those designed for Marshall Square. These plans provide for an office for the Sheriff and one for the County Clerk, each being 40x50 feet. There are to be nine courtrooms, 20x30 feet, 'with chambers .and Jjury-rooms, each 10x15 feet. It also provides for three large criminal court rooms, two of which respectively measure 30x60 feet and one of which measures 34x54 feet. The plans Wwill- be submitted to the committee at a meeting to be held in the near future. The structure is to be built around the monument, leaving an ‘open court in the center. Narrow streets will be left on either side for traffic. The whole building will be 92x264 feet and one-story in height.- @ | ARG e i TETS L st WHEN SLEEP FAILS Take Horsford's ‘Aciil Phosphate. Halt a tenspoonful in half .u_ glass of water Just before retiring brings refreshing sloep: + Caswell Company to Build. Henry E. Bothin nas leased to the George W. Caswell - Company a lot ¢cighty feet front on the north side of Folsom street, between First and Sec- ond, for ten years. The Caswell Com pany will erect immediately a four- Story and basement brick building, class B, and expects to be permanent- ly located in it with in four months. Its enterprise is born of faith in the city, members of the firm say. At Child Accidentally Smothered. The infant child of Mrs. Mary Bald- Win was accidentally smothered in bed early Saturday morning. Mrs. Bald- Wwin says the child, which was 1 month 6. days old, was all right about 3 o'clock in the morning when she went to sleep. When the miother awakened three hours later she found the little glelsmunder the bedclothes dead. The occurred at the Mary Critten- tan Home, where the child was born. Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes, Red, Inflamed velids, i S St g P Soped at Druggists' Frederic E. Magee William A. Magee Thomas Magee THOMAS MAGEE &SON REAL ESTATE AGENTS _ \ TEMPORARILY AT 2550 PACIFIC AVENUE WILL RESUME BUSINESS AT THEIR OLD OFFICE 5 MONTGOMERY STREET LOCATIONS FOR WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BUSINESS FOR SALE AND TO LEASE ‘Will Build to Suit Responsible Tenants London Assurance Corporation SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE, 2321 BUCHANAN STREET. Loss Notices have been acknowledged. Proofs of Loss, time for filing extended until the 18th of August, 1906. Policies Lost or Burned please report, as we have com- plete records and will furnish copies. ; Policy Holders are advised to avoid Collection Agencies of every description; also so-called Adjusters for the Assured. We have ten Adjusters (and more are coming), who will facilitate the preparation of Proofs of Loss. San Francisco Losses amount to less than one-quarter of the Corporation’s Cash Assets, and under Head Office instructions the same will be paid without drawing upon the Corporation’s Funds in this Country. The London Assurance Corporation has been in busi- ness without interruption for nearly two hundred years, and proposes to move right along, in spite of the tremendous dis- aster which so recently overtook our beautiful city. LOSSES PAID IN CASH WITHOUT DISCOUNT Branch Sevrcincy. POLIGE MOURN FOR OLD DAY Patrolmen in Fog Belt Now Laugh at Down- town Men. Wrecked Brewery Is the Only Oasis in Thirsty Stretch of Ruin. The policemen who had beats in the fog belt before the fire are the envied ones of the force these days. Th |downtown. patrolmen who just a few | Weeks ago looked with contempt upon | the man who had to keep goats out of the front gardens during the cold nights and keep cats from committing breaches of the peace are lonesome and | thirsty these days. There are no back doors, there are | no generous cigar stores. The tender- | loin squad and the Barbary Coast squad are monarchs without kingdoms. They have begun to realize the full meaning of the word thirst. There is only one oasis east of Van Ness, the remnants of the Chicago Brewery, but the beer that | still remains in the vats is not the kind ithat filled out the graceful curvss in |the anatomy of Policeman Fatty Col- | lins. It lacks the piquancy of the bev- | erage that Policeman Nelson used to !blow the foam from with a grace that | made Delsarte seem awkward. But it has power. Weird tales are told of the brewery. The neighborhood is shunned now by passers-by on their way to the fer- iries. The legend has gone out that it is haunted. The Spooks that linger in the | vicinity are reporteéd to have twice the | normal lung power of ordinary ghosts. But the abolition of the joints has | had one good effect. Since the fire there has not been a man on the carpet. The | patrolmen account for it in_this way: | The sergeant has to carry a lantern to | pick his way througn the ruins and | |they can see him coming. Besides, there is no place to go to sleep. even if | the patrolman feels drowsy. | But the application of the Knights of | the Royal Arch for an early reopenfig of the thirst parlors has caused an ex- | pectant smile to appear upon the faces of the men of the force. When Fatty | Collins, who is believed to have the in- side on the steam beer industry, whis- | tled “Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie, |at headquarters yesterday, the rest of | the office detail joined in the chorus. | They believe that his gayety means that | there will be something doing very | soon. ] GOOD TEETH Give comfort—bad teeth give trouble—nobody’s teeth are so bad that they can't be improved a great deal. ° » WM. J. LANDI F. W. TALLANT. 7 Marine. B.F.Davis & Son Insurance Brokers... Fire Casualty. | | | b 4 ‘ Prces , Removed to 1224 Buchanan Street ‘ Reduced 4 | Until ll:ly 1. Telephone West 5190. Southeast Cor. Eddy Street Full Set of Teeth $2.0 GOLD CROWNS. £2.00 BRIDGE WORK cees 1.00 All work done by Graduate Dentists. Bring this ad with you. Be sure you are in the rirht place and that your dental work is being done by the Hale Dental Co., formerly of 702 Market st. We have no branches, and no other dentist is authorized to use our name. Beware of any frauds and impostors who are try- ing to build up a practice on our past reputation. When Plates b('lre:dud m[ Are Ordered We are now prepared to do BET- TER WORK AT LOWER PRICE: than ever before. All our TWENTY- YEAR GUARANTEES of work done in the past will be carried out to the letter: Phenix Insurance Gompany Of Brooklyn Time for giving notice of loss or filing proofs wili be extended on request. Our adjusters will make up proofs of all losses adjusted | without expense to claimants. Call or address at new location, POLYTECHNIC BUILDING Cor. Twelfth and Harrison Streets, Oakland. 'a) Will have our offices in Kohl building ready for use in a days. A. C. OLDS, State Agent, San Francisco, Cal. J. H. LENEHAN, General Agent, Chicago, Ill. The Gontinental Fire Insurance Co. OF NEW YORK. All persons holding policies in the above named Company are hereby notified that the time named in the policies for filing of proofs is hereby extended for sixty days, to 17th of -August. Policy-holders are also notified that losses are now being adjusted and pai@ as rapidly as possible. BRING IN YOUR STATEMENTS. NEW BUSINESS ACCEPTED. ARTHUR G. NASON & CO. METROPOLITAN MANAGERS. OFFICES: 1931 Sutter St., Near Rooms 89-91 Delger Bldg., Oakland. San Francisco, Cal. Helping the Homeless. - The Continental Building and Loan Asseciation +Has helped buil‘cf;_lipgs.éverél‘iritefior-towns “ “and cities in California, but for the next -- few years its funds will be used to help restore the burned homes in San Francisco. DR. WASHINGTON DODGE, GAVIN McNAB, WM. CORBIN, President. Atforney. Sec. and Gen'l Mgr. Title| - and Trust Company | OFFICE HALE DENTAL (0. 1756 fillmore Street, Corner Sutter. Grocery Specials. [ cans 25C-CONDENSED MILK-25¢ caus Made by Borden's Condensed Milk Co. | 2 DOZEN BEST EGGS. ........45c¢| No better laid; received direct from | Highland Poultry Farm. 2-Ib SQUARE BEST BUTIER. . .. .45¢ All we ask is a trial order; rich, grassy flavor. COFFEE, Vory Best Javaand Mocha, b 30 | Others might ask you 35c and 40c, but try this. TEAS, OurRegular 60c Quaiy, b . 45¢ Formosa, Oolong, Green Japan, Uncol- ‘ored Japan, English Breakfast Ceylon and Family Mixed. Goods Delivered Free. Our Motto: Good Goods, F’;g Weight and CORCORAN'S. 1201 VALENCIA STREET, SE. Cor. Twenty-Thicd PRINTING IN ’FRISCO Greater San Francisco Printing Company. We the largest outfit ESSy ety 4 Leavenworth Street | 3 1 Bet. Golden Gate Ave. and MeAllister Summ er Gamp lor‘fli_s_: : HAVE RESUMED BUSINESS AT THEIR Francisco ‘No. 410 Montgomery Street

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