The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 16, 1906, Page 2

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RULERS' GREETINGS VERY CORDIAL London Thinks William and Edward Will Dis- Grave Matters cuss MAY ADVISE CZAR J, Aug. 15 at K today It will ning of Lor visit | Saviors of the Nation ~ March in Proud Array Veterans of Civil War Parade Streets in Minneapolis. Several Old Soldiers Prostrated by the Heat. INNEAPOLIS, Aug. 15.—For the fortieth time since fits work was finished and fits glory won, the Grand Army of the Republic was in line today. There been many processions more gor- gecus, spectacles more dazzling and be- wildering, but never has there been in this country a parade more appealing d impressive than that which passed through the streets of Minneapolis dur- have | | i | | \ | | | ing the greater part of this morning. With the head of the column, which | moved promptly at 10 o'clock, was a mounted platoon of police. Directly be- | hind the police and at the head of the parade proper, came the magnificent Cook drum corps and band of Denver, its showy uniforms making a splendid rance The twenty-two young en wha form the drill corps and portion of the organization, were lly favorites with the multitude were given a continuous ovation g the parade. t came the chief marshal of the parade, ex-Governor Van Sant and his chief of staff, General Fred B. Wood, tant general of Minnesota. Then |, i TROUBLES BEGIN. xt rching in splendid even rank, heir formation superbly Kkept oughout the entire parade, came the Young Officer Accused of Scandalous Conduct Faces a Court-Martial t of the old soldiers—Columbia Post SPECTAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. of Chicago—acting as the principal es- cort of the commander in chief. Be- hind this post came Commander in Chief Tanner, mounted and attended by tafr. VALLEJO, Aug. 15.—Lieutenant Ed- ward Dunn, United States navy, at- tached to the receiving ship Independ- ence at Mare Island, the young officer his personal sta actions have brought wo! espect e’ - Following the officers of the organi- zation came the men who were the life guard of the nation—the heroes of the Civil War. The States marched in order of their admission to the Grand | Army, Tllinois having the right of the| line followed by Pennsylvania, Wiscon- sin and Ohio in the order named. Twen other States followed these. i In the band which preceded the Roc! , TIl, veterans, were represented the extremes of enlistment in the Civil War—the one being Anson M. Hubbard Moline, w , although 90 years old, ed in as sprightly a manner and | Whose erratic fife as shrilly as he did dur-|him into such unpleasant notoriety, ng the r; the other,Lyston D. Howe, | faced a court-martial on a charge of Streator, Ill, who was the youngest|of scandalous conduct at Mare Is- man to entist diring the Wer. land this afternoon. Dunn is accused After the men from New York came|2f having taken -a woman named bt Banhiy 0 M hurchill aboard the ship and and Maine, after oused with her. While the S o o Tar Vot ion of the court was brief, interest tes, Calif ev massed | 0 the proceedings was not lacking. the Their men were few in num- In order to sustain his position as - England came to the front the presiding member of the court- . the men from Rhode Martial board, Rear Admiral Merrill Island, New Hampshire and Yermont. | Miller, retired, was forced to take the witness stand to swear that he weould not be prejudiced because the defend- ern soldiers of the armies of the Cum-| 2Nt I8 a drinking man. Commander beriing and of the Tennstbee, ahtohing Dodd, another member of the court, er see, | was also put on the grill by John T. Maryland had a small detachment and then came long ranks of the West- under the banners of Michigan, Inamana, | 3 ) ] [ Towa, Missouri and Kentucky. The last | RYaN. Dunn’'s attorney, and forced to {of the line was Minnesota. Its soldjers 50 through the same proceeding. ‘This unusual conduct on the part of the de- USE BALL CARTRIDGES. GCUARDS recelved hearty greetings as they|g ... caysed the entire board and the A s, closed the long fhe column was naval officers and civilians who lpvestigation Imto Attempted Assassl-|about three hours in passing a given ... ;regent at the proceedings to sit nation of Duke Reveals point. The line of march was two|,, ang take notice that a most desper- Plot. ate effort is to be made to savé Dunn ERSBURG, A vice com-|from aisgrace. bk of the Po- unn's request for the services of ke N erk. o the utenant John P. Morton of the U. | ishington, S. Boston as assistant couns¢l has | 3 s e and died as en denied and Lieutenant John | - ospital ites who himself recently escaped | Gax during ous charges only through his bra- | fe . » and Women very during the San Francisco fire, has s and | peen assigned to assist Ryan. ’ g them to the hos-| The only witness called this after- to these prostra-| non was B ain Retty, but before litary guards a refused today at Tiflis. were made. FILING FOR LAND B IN SHOSHON RESERVATION No Trouble Expected in the Allotments in the District Just Opened. Aug. 15.—The fil- Shoshone in at that place. One ive people will day, names t draw at Lan- >rmation has been receive@ in which would give any color » the sensational report sent ander that trouble is im- r the proposed new tow veen factions from Lander and ng and drawing for home- and townsites there will be no ion of the troubles incident to rush in Oklahoma in 1890 and all | ) will probably be settled in a perfectly peaceful manner. S REVOLUTION IN PERSIA PRECEDES THE REFORMS Concessions Granted by the Shah Fol- low Severe Fighting in Which Many Were Killed. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 15.—In ad- dition to the details of the sweeping change of the regime presented by the reform party in Persia and to which e h has given his tentative con- as announced last night, another telegram today says the Shahs action 8 eceded by fighting of a revo- ,ary character, during which many »ns were killed by the troops. The -spondent evidently was prevented sent telegraphing the particulars. e sStandard Ofil Dividend. W YORK, Aug. 15.—The directors Standard Oil Company today de- ared & dividend of $6 a share on the wpany’s stock. This compares with vidend of $9 three months ago and $6 a year ago. b £ BN ST T To Cure a Cold in One Day Take ative Brome Quinine Tablets. Druggisis refund money if it fails to cure. k. W. Grove's sig. on each box. 356, Al Under the present arrange- | ses of exha serious. CONTRCTORS FACE ShEAT STAIKE SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. LOS ANGELES, —“Effective September 1—No member of the Broth- | 18- | he could give his testimony adjourn- ment upon the request of the defend- s counsel w granted. Dunn asked time to prepare a defense be as Lieutenant White had only 1lled Into the case this morning. irnment was taken until 10 o'clock { tomorrow morning. There was some beilef held here that the court-martial | would not be held until next week, as the additional charge of breaking his | liberty, preferred against Dunn and | forwarded to Washington, had not been returned. | | { Joiners No. 158 shall quit work at noon | charter from the National Structural|ville Transportation Company, was ar- AT e AN | erhood of Carpenters and Joiners \O:B|G FHA”" A‘_ EG[“ {158 shall work on a job with a non- | . union carpenter.” | Effective September 4—Members of | n the Brotherhood of Carpenters and | b on Saturday and shall work for no less [l { than 50 cents an hour, or $¢ a day. SR | “That committees appointed be em WATSONVILLE, Aug. 15.—H. H. | powered to take action to procure a|Maine, former secretary of the Watson- Building Trades Alliance.” | rested last evening on complaint of A. The foregoing are resolutions which |N. Judd. It is charged that Maine |have been adopted by the Carpenters’|fraudulently kept the books of the cor- and Joiners’ Union and concurred in | poration, and that local stockholders | by the Plasterers’ and Lathers’ unions. | were swindled out of $100,000. Maine |1f the demands be not granted the|was released on $5000 bail. | leaders of the unions declare there will — ;:,:fl;:eneral strike here in the building | Aot Wavid: | . | | The daisposition of the contractors| OMAHA, Aug. 15.—A telegram to large numbers of men is | Senator Millard from General Bell, | to resist the demands. The employers chief of staff, announces that Captain | almost to @ man assert that,they will | I D. Wildman of the Signal Corps has |let the men strike before "they will | been directed to report as commanding grant any concessions. Among the |Officer at Fort Omaha as soon as pos- ranks of union labor generally it is | Sible. The order relieves Captain Wild- belleved that the demands will be|man from duty on the Pacific Coast. greatly modified before the time an-| S — nounced for them to go into effect. To-| VOTING MACHINE INSURANCE. |night the first modification was made | it by the carpenters, who decided to make | The finance committee of the Board the change apply only to bouse carpen- | of Supervisors reported yesterday in | ters and not to mill workers. |favor of bringing suit against the W7 205 S 5 B Phenix Insurance Company of Brook- MAY GO INTO INSOLVENCY, {lyn, N. Y., for $5000, the amount of an s |insurance policy on forty-five voting Banke's Say At Birmingham I8 machines which were destroyed by the Down and Out. | fire. At a meeting of the policy-holders of | The company notified the Election the Atlanta-Birmingham Fire Insur-|Commissioners that it would not pay ance Company at 811 Turk street yes- tle face value of the policy because the terday afternoon a letter was read from Voting machines insured were sup- a New York firm of bankers stating posed to have been contained in the that the company would probably go warehouse at the corner of Eighteenth into insolvency. The assured appointed |and Division streets, whereas they a committee to take steps against the |Wwere in fact stored In the City Hall company. and burned there. | The company took exceptions to the |proot of loss furnished by the Elec- tion Commissioners, and denies any and all liability for claims under its policy for property destroyed by fire |in any other location than that named ! therein, The finance committee directed that | who employ i S ot Quake Clause Knocked Out. Adelbert Cronise, attorney of Roch-| ester, N. Y., has written to Insurance Commissioner Wolf that it has been held by the Court of Appeals of New York that where the renewal of a pol- icy carried a clause that was not in the |3 sommunication be sent to the Blec- original policy, the insured neverthe-yion Commissioners to furnish the in- less had the right to assume that the gurance policy so that the City Attor- terms of the renewal were the same &S ney may be enabled to institute pro- those of the original policy. In Call- ceedings for the recovery the fornia many policies that were issued|amount for which the voting machines without an earthquake clause when re- | were insured. newed were put on forms that had| i earthquake provisions included. ’ Golf at Del Monte. | For the go'f tournament at Del Monte 5.—Fdward N. Koch, for-|ninz next Monday, e Uniofi Tee Company, wi | Francisco to Del Monte is four dollars, arrested in Fl Paso, was brought back this Friday preceding. Special hotel rates of in- round trip rate from San for by Office He is alleged = dol! d 2 balf & d d. u“": noun by er Coutts, He al W be dol and & @ day wnd up. &o- | siast about 32000, = | phics, e . N ONGHF AUGE Inflammable - Material Sur-| rounds P,apers in New Quarters of the Recorder 'DANGER FROM FIRE EXTREMELY GREAT Documents of Priceless Value to Owners of Property Are Carelessly Exposed EARLY four months after the great San Francisco fire the most valuable records of the city, 800 books of deeds and | more than 5000 deeds to real estate, all record of which has been destroyed, are daily exposed to danger. They are in a wcoden building that is surrounded by other wooden structures. The books o! records stand on wooden shelves, with wooden shelves above them. They are in rooms in which all the partitions are of wood and the desks and counters of seasoned lumber, inflammable in the highest degree. The deeds, to the number of 5890, are partly to be found in thin tin boxes, piled up In bundles. The 5890 separate papers represent deeds to the number of more than 5000. The remainder of the papers are bullders’ contracts, lis perdens and similar writings. Millions upon millions of dollars— perhaps $100,000,000—of San Franclsco res)] estate and improvemernts are repre- sented by the unprotected papers and books. The deéds are in a great many cases practically thé only official rec- ords existing that would enable prop- erty owners to prevent land grabbers from establishing adverse titles to their holdings. They are the best evidence that could he set.up in case of attempt- ed land jumping to show that fraudu- lent claims of actual and peaceable pos- session on the part of real estate graft- ers are baseless and untenable. SURROUNDED BY WOOD. The greater part of the saved records of San Franeisco deeds and all the old deeds that have been brought in to the Recorder's office to be rerecorded in the new deed books that have been opened to take the places of burned beeks are in two back rooms in the syn- agogue of the Congregation Beth Is- rael, on Geary street, between Octavia and Laguna. To the cast towers a two- story and basement wooden building, thc walls of which, rising almost a high 'as those of the synagogue, ap proach within a very few feet of the syragogue. On the west is a two-story frame dwelling-house that is barely four feet from the house of worship. The houses fronting on the west line of Octavia reet and those on the east side of guna, all two stories in height, with pessibly one or two exceptions, are old and wooden. A row of wooden houses in the rear extends toward the syna- gogue. On all four sides are wooden piles of the kind that. would furnish material for another great conflagra- tion. The remaining records of San Fran- ¢isco were conveyed to this place about a month after the fire. The Recorder's office has been haunted daily ever since by people with deeds and other evi- dences of property rights in San Fran- cisco to be placed on record. Men and placed in half-open tin boxes, there to stay, in many instances, for a num- ber of weeks, every minute in danger of destruction if a fire should break out in the neighborhood. BOOKS WITHOUT PROTECTION. The deeds that were filed with the Recorder in May and June have been copled in new books and have been re- turced to the owners, it is reported in the office of the Recorder. But the books are on wooden shelves, Be- girning the 1st of July, the time when the great rush to have new official rec- crds made in behalf of anxious men and, women who own real property in| thig city began, all deeds that have heen deposited in the Recorder’s oflice are still on hand, sheathed in tin boxes | forithe most part if not entirely, but completely without the protegtion of a safe or vault or any contrivance that could be called fireproof. Consldering that it is estimated that there are 40,000 owners of real prop- erty in San Francisco and that each one of these property holders may be called upon to make a title good at a minimum cost of $50 each, the aggre- gate expenditure if the McEnerney act is held to be constitutional will be $2,000,000. Considering also how val- uable each old deed Is in defending and making up a new title the carelessness displayed In the care of the practically priceless papers is enough to amaze even an indifferent beholder. The buiding east of the synagogue holding the present. Hall of Records towers at least thirty feét above the records, an unbroken, menacing wooden wall with enough inflammable material in it to set fire to a brick block. The same may be said of the building immediately to the west, al- though, being on the slant of the hill descending westward, its top is not so h‘lgh. But the danger is evident. TITLE CONCERNS GIVE WARNING: ‘Why are the records not placed in a place of safety? is the question that owners of real estate in all parts of the city are asking. Title insurance com- panies warn their elients not to con- sign thelr papers in haste to the syna- gogue building. The same course Is taken by some banks. The existing danger is recog- nized by Recorder Nelson, who keeps men in the building all the time and has provided night and day watchmen and a special conneetion with the Fire Department. ‘ The placing of the record books and napers to be rerecorded in the back rooms of the ground floor of the syna- BOgue structure fs explained by the statement that they are near a rear street. But the street is narrow. Filled with smoke and flame it would speedlly become an inferno into which none would dare to go to attempt to save the valuable records. The space occupled by the present Hall of Records i rented from the Con- gregation Beth Israel by the city, which pays $250 a month for it. — Camarillo Case Proceedings. SANTA BARBARA, Aug. 15.—The Camarillo trial, in which the daughters of Juan Camarille are suing their brothers for a share of the $1,000,000 estate, had an uneventful day, the ETeAter part of the day befhg spent in reading into the record certain docu- ments from the Superior Court of Ven- and | | women may be seen every day in the Recorder’s office with their deeds, walt- | ing to have them taken by an official | Hawaiian Classes Them With the Pariahs and Lepers of Humanity. {Coaditions in Islands Said to Give the Lie to Critic. | ONOLULU, Aug. 7.—Hon. W. J. | Robinson, Third Judge of the | First Clrcult Court of Hawali, | and formerly of Oakland, is {in trouble through a criticism made of |the immigration policy that has been in force here, In which he character- ized the Portuguese, Porto Ricans, Koreans and Molokans as ‘“alien pPauper laborers, in many instances so- clal pariahs, moral lepers and religious fanatics in the counfry from which they hall, reared and fostered in lands and under governments to which the jAmerican form of government is an anomaly, possessing no intellectuality and but little intelligence.” The Portuguese residents here are up in arms at what they regard as an insult to their race. Portguese citizens may be found in Hawaii in all the pro- fessions, as doctors, lawyers, editors and clergymen, and scores of them are en- gaged in business, owning small stores while a few of thém have large stores and can be found in the wholesale trade. They have been the bhest class of immigrants ever brought to Hawali. They rear large familles, respect the laws, occupy lands for farm- ing, own their own homes, save money and are economic and law-abiding people. They belong to the Catholic ‘Church, as does Judge Robinson. Their {names are seldom found in the police court records, and ° their general | morality is of the highest. therefore, they object to being classed as soclal pariahs, moral lepers and religious fanatics. Judge Roblnson defends himself from the criticism that has been hurled at him by stating that he had not tended to refer to the younger Poiiu- guese, but to their parents, who came | here without securing the advantages of education a quarter of a century ago, and many of whom are now in California. This only made matters worse, because the younger Portuguese |even more strongly object to any ims putation cast upon their parents. The Judge has been riddled with hot shot in correspondnece sent to the local papers by representatives of the Portu- | guese population. | _An indignation mass-meeting of Portuguese was held here tliis evening to protest against the stitements made by Robinson. The Judge was vehem- ently “roasted” and hissed, a letter of retraction or explanation being re- ceived with mingled hisses and ap- plause. UP AT MIDNIEHT. A terrific gas main explosion at ‘Fourth and :Market streets: at 12:15 o'clock this -morning startled the burned district .residents of the city Tir;d caused apprehension of a loss of e. excavation, sending the heavy timber- ing flying about Market street and tylng up the car service for a few minutes. An iron manhole cover at Grant avenue and Market street was forced from its foundations and broken inté a dozen pleces. There were no pedestrians on the street, or serious injury would have resulted. The gas company is repairing the main at Fourth and Market streets. It is believed that an electric spark from a passing Masonic-avenue car ignited the gas and caused the explosion. e Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—~The following Californians have arrived in New York: From San Francisco—E. D. Drake, at the Herald Square; R. J. Johnson and wife, at the York; M. Moses, at the Broadway Central; Mrs. J. W Salz, at | the Herald Square; J. S, Schwelzer, at | the Woodstock; J. Stuart, at the Savoy; G. C. Hall, at the Albert; Miss G. Salti- man and Miss M. Harkins, at the Vic- toria; G. P. Clark, at the Grand Union; J. L. Green, at the Cadillac; W. F. Har- rison, at the Raleigh; C, H. Kimball, at the Breslin; A. B. Lewisf at the Im- perial; C. M. Tozer, at the Seville. From Santa Barbara—A. E. Daniel- son, at the Wolcott. From Los Angeles—Mrs. F. H. Bowen, at the Victoria; W. H. Eimers, at the Park Avenue; W. B. Hutt, at the Wol- cott; E. H. Tunison, at the Saranac; J. B. Berner, at the Woodward; C. Bleakmore, at the Hoftman House; J. Bryson and T. M. Lamberton, at the Savoy; A. W. Morris, at the Wellington. S S g L g horsepower I'iat automobile. ~ Stirs Portuguese Naturally, | in- | Ao NAIN BLOWS The explosion biew up a partial | Touring Old World in Auto. PARIS, Aug. 15.—Mrs. Frederick Hellman of San Francisco is at the! Schweizerhoff, Lucerne, with her forty- | ERLISON EASES "SI JOSE FIRE *| Watchman Badly Burned | While Lighting His | Coal Oil Lanterns 'DAMAGE IS $15,000 SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. SAN JOSE, Aug. 15.—Pedestriand on Ewst Santa Clara street were startled | this afternoon by a muffled explosion, | followed by a burst o1 flames, from a little wooden shack adjoining the new building being constructed by the Al- Jurist 1 | & | lance Land Company of Oakland at | the northeast corner of Third and | Santa Clara streets. A moment later Jacob Gauthier, with his clothing afire, was pulled from the shack and a half | dozen people assisted in cutting the garments from the suffering man. In the meantime the flames spread with | remarkable rapidity and attacked the | adjoining buildings, causing a conflag- | ration which threatened te wipe out | the entire block and was not sup- pressed until it had destroyed prop- erty valued at §$15,000. Gauthier, who is employed as & watchman on the Alliance building, was engaged in filling and cleaning lanterns which are used on lumber piles in front of the building after |dark. After trimming a wick of a lantern Gauthier struck a match to try it. A violent explosion fellowed and the room was instantly a mass of flames. The watchman attempted to fight the fire and would have lost his life but for the arrival of Michel Uco- vich, owner of a restaurant. Louis Lanthier, Policeman Black. P. A. Cameron and one or two others car- ried the watchman to the street and smothered the fire by rolling him in the dust. { For a time it was feared that the en- | tire Sperry Flour Compary warehousa | would go, but by strenuous work the fire was checked at this point. As it is, | the Sperry Flour Company is the heaviest loser. Two hundred and fifty { tons of grain, valued at $7500, were | destroyed. ADVERTISEIIENTS. The best Old-Age, Out-of- i Work and Sickness Insurance is a Savings account paying you 3.65 per cent interest, compounded Dollar or more. Two per cent in- COIUS&COUthPhySiCiaI\‘convenience of those who can't | PIST”[S MA |twice a year, in the Metropolis. |Start an account today with One GAME Tu K"_l_. [terest allowed on Checking and —_— Commercial accounts. For the | Defends Life A¢ainst come to the bank in the day time | SEN the Metropolis is open Saturday = 5 Notorious Character evenings from §:30 to 8:30; other SPECTAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. weekday evenings from 3 to 6:go. | coLUSA, Aug. 13—S. R. Morton, a| DIRECTORS: A. A. Watkins. Clar- saloon-keeper, commonly Kknown as |ence Grange, John M. Keith, A. D. Cut- “Big Tex,” was shot this morning by |ler, George Boardn James B. Stet- Dr. L. H. Frances at Princeton, this 3w CalémantCarion Haguisier. | county. The bullet struck him in the M & Koshiand, ¥ R | neck and severed the windpipe. He cannot live. Dr. Frances gave himself up and was brought to Colusa. He claims to haye acted in self-defense. | A dispute over the payment of a bill | led to the tragedy.” Morton had re-' | METROPOLIS TRUST & SAVINGS BANK Paid in Capital and Surplus $700,000 fused to'‘settle ‘for medical services rendered by Dr. Frances, and when the physician urged " payment vesterday 5 y Morton attacked him savagely and 1237 VAN NESS AVENUE knocked him down repeatedly, finally Between Post and Satter. putting him out. Morton was evidently more trouble, for when he left his home this morning he took his revol- ver with him. He was in a very ugly {mood and uttered threats ’ Frances' life. He declared he'd him when they met. He went direc looking for | IMPORTANT! Policy Holders of the TRANSATLANTIC FIRE INSURANCE (0. Call Immediately from his home. to Krances' office. When he the doar he was told . but paid no attention to ning. He #*%rted to enter and Frances, fearing that his life was in danger, picked up a revolver from the table and fired. He took good aim and the bullet entered Morton's neck, cut- ting the windpipe. Morton fell in his tracks and was afterward taken to his home. He suffered greatly from the wound, and physicians say his death | is but a question of a few hours. | Public sentiment at Princeton exon- erates Dr. Frances from all blame and his friends say he will have ne aiffi- culty in proving that he acted in self- defense. appeared “Bix Tex"” Morton and his saloon bear an unenviable reputation in ' Princeton. He is a gambler and has | 1100 O’Farrell St. been in trouble before. —_—— LOOK OUT FOR THIS MAN; | HE IS NOT A CALL AGENT | Fellow Traveling Through State With Scholarship Offer Not Connected i With This Paper. | A man representing himself as an| employe of The Call has been traveling | lately through the State canvassing for| | a book, for the sale of which he has | been offering as a special inducement scholarships in different institutions of | | learning. He is in no way connected| with The Call and has not been author- | | 1zed to make any business overtures to | the public under its name. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Sigrature foeaRrrdl REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. The California |y e Don't, Forget, Our Immense Stock of Feolding Beds Mantel Folding Beds at $22.50 and Higher WE CAN LAY CARPETS THE DAY AFTER PURCHASE =] STERLING == FURNITURE COMPANY Sixth Street, from King to Berry Promotion Committee Modern English (The State Cenra Organization Arm Chairs A joy for the present gen- eration—an heirloom for- ever. Built on simple Mis. sion lines, but with all sug- gestion of clumsiness elimi- HEADQUARTERS CALIFORNIA BUILDING | UNION SQUARE. | Reliable information regarding the |1 City and the State. 1 FHONE TEMPORARY 1643 nated. Finished in Weath- | ered Oak. | m Our stock is so large that @ Hy an Bros. we will part with these §| PRINTERS AND LITHOGRAPHERS. DRUGGISTS' LABELS AND FOLDING ! BOXES. 1047 FOLSOM ST, S. F. Are Now Ready for Busin, BURLAPS CARLOAD OF BURLAPS, a Chairs for an exceedingly low price—just $12 each UHL BROS 721 MARKET STREET

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