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San Francisco Chronicle from San Francisco, California • Page 3

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3gSr3ir SS5 B8 FRANCISCO OHnoyiOLS SATURDAY DECEMBEB 1 1888 BOARDING AMD BOOM GOLDEN DATE A SUNNY I bay wiaaow rooms wiw ww 0OFRASKLIN 0E IIAlr i LS Lttam Haaeest cable cars SI1 bnl JONES BLNNV CORNER bay OUl window roomreference nnn EDDY SlNNY 8ISOI BOOMS OUJ ery reasonable board reference ROOMS iii tarnished with board reasona ble also table board referencea iTroTcRK fCNNY LTOVE eCIT ajlO with or without board fnPOUJ COR SLTTER NICa OU suuny suits aad single gQJd boarJ COI IWTELVOANTRiiOM parlor 0Z1 door lo Englishmen srlh nners rflTfvFA LLWIAXr FLR ntshed suit Brat class boird rM ILLIS A FISr fee NY ROOM two tl board flut claw re cren es LONDON MURDERS Strange Confession of a Clairvoyant IMPELLED TO COMMIT CRIME OU nlsret tnisl rro it room lor gentleman private amin board 0 Uonal 1 NTIXkTOV OK CiUtUKMA 010 Private nun ly boarding tHUhn The VV hit ler Changed liends ecnnrsu tsanuaingie roouwa ui tj newlyl rn bed an reiov eted Mrs Sw eer rTTlINE DlMr lHANJfcD 4 SO band i boose completely renota ed plumb new tin lent board onnyrocms view unsarpataifd terms reason ble elevator IIVE I I EAHAT bw vis wn 40 excel ent boed troui SJO to S30 per xnonln cable cam casf Ibe door ATIKIV ROOMS reirreaces OttTfti OltPlVE SUT8ASD8LNOLEH0CMS Jl wd board 0 AN NEbS AVE ROOMS AND board also table board TnTUE NEAR TAILOR NEWLY 1037 iurntsbsd rooma with board ret RUOXa AMD 1 tine MARKET HOTEL MAKslUASll a LZIR a lew cnolc suits or special Induce ments lo tourists A Bit of Fiction as a Theory of the Whitechapel Atrocities OI CALIFORNIA PINNY rRONTI OlO atove and other rooms toard table unexceptionable prlsale lemily reierencei 7otCAI IIORNIA FRONT 1JU parlor sniiable lor two reaiuuable 1 liNtlK I NNY PAKIOIW HUOtwo cr thru roon ilngls room hrst claa board pn ate lam lj IHr Mil MHCI NT i spec al ra es by Ibe is term reauable sen bet llcnien I rl a la mil bit Mason Djiter and Bust i MIL lliMtollTABI I HCM1 IN A priTate am 1 for a uir njan lrm Ci Kleraie refe enc reuirea 105J 41c Alltaert Ito private beapen pll naL BtALTIFlI el VM i boa conjf ru Loarl use 60 liarr on si invu i LTON FAM11 Jl JTLU Ol POSITF new llty Ha 1 lara si resptK able bolvl i tu ru or mouth uiisfTuiij 1J tKl II OTLI BRl NbV Howard I luonlb i DKer MONrodMlRlS 11 MP RAN HO ld iil and li econl Boarl aid roomier day 6c ek 4 5 nile meals 5c roil per nLb 2i and 60c free cuacn loan ro me eu nny lrt to 15 i i orisui A ill UK AI A i NLW 1 RO rSI DI Mw Kcte i lor lr rga or IU nil I a er lr ni aae Djo ib per 1 stu tMcnen tbree daj i safe in ei eo EKED DR lit a piis can ruo er i ble laU ta ons i i viPi Hi 1 OLAUANTLr A Ui il larules moulbl pfr sae all ces 1 he sen to reg sol cond i Uio tin iue lad of i reiml rtba pooudof ture 1 lit also a aliutl tone lor panlul an 1 ece uens ll on leu orrbfa sju nhlles itRij UK UAUt OH aienc a su ALL rhMAl larl les are i lml safe Arj real procas to rena al vritbcut meJlcli I tvtj disease ol the lemale sytem at o1wur ty letter ptll orpow air MRa UK rKAS MAN illS los Su TTfDTrJhASFN MLN MIATI Tr A cause rcce or I qulckes ermsnent ctrM I JotiNiluN old st liable special it 101b Manet St oip ilth ATTrNTI lUIl SFKaMH Ft male lls rwjuUrlt of monthly periods irwn colJ it spun 111 lorlaies ilf II ate I ra lb a otl er cut tois ue lor al ituaran erJ 3 MRa DA Is iid Kearny si HAOrN IB TV FIFTH mHlctU cart worn ias a specially a id a ure si ill for uly Irregu ar lies tbrec dlplomai at I er lice 1JRIV rpuE HRhAT tNULI OI i 1J ifi IIFMLD1 MIXTlRh tssrta teil to eanse the bl Kd iroci all Impurities Iroiu I ate er ca tse ar Ing from a lulairy sorw all dv sk and blood Lsease Its eflectt are mar Telous tboassnls if tetlmonlaa Afieuta LAN0LE AillCIlAklJ ban lranco I1AM1AL STnn ANTtD 8E FN Til Jl llAv aanl lle hu idreddol ars for two years 111 par 1150 pr month Interest an i the jool seiur trior tba loan AQdress box Uiis otnee AT LOW EST RATES ON inlry real eatale In any amounts A HI LLr loo Leldsedorffst S500000 CrU AH1 TO LOAN ON RANCHES tJfJVVVFV on morteace large sums ts low market rtaev UHO S30 Plnesv 11 MOlttAllirl alontgomery St BORROW M1NF AT FRANKLINS I oan office HOtJ Market st bet Msaon andlaylor private entrance 7 Tntlc it AITOltNtV AT LAW EV BIANEY ATTORNE i AT LAW practices In ail ctartA 60 Call ornUjt SStYINO MACHINES LEADINQ MAKES AT RFDCCFD PRI ees supplltnforaU uaHAWL5uecond I rented and repaired reedlea 145 PUth si MISCELLANEOUS THE CHRONICLES Premium Pistol 3 90 jrear Inelodjag azpreas cbarrsa on the RstaL for 3 Etstt Farmer Miner or Mercian IraTaUngsBoald kae one of the Cnostf iCf AJlKKlbAN DOUBLE ACTION PISTOIA TJZ VXXKLT CHJtO ICLXfet iu yss for 3 90 I armorers asA fa fnll olcttr Brttab 3lldaft tb warkmaatolB bailf carta krozes auk duplicated si once a arsaa are auw ffl tba eSaiu Vasaoa reTolTers a4 sue la iTtrywr eiBPno wto QSSgSBJB Lottos Vovember 24 The TTute cbapel murders have Melded numerous theories emanating from the police and others but nothing conjectural has taken snch readable form as an article the Pall Mall Gruette It is a piece of fiction avowedly and yet its in genuit seems to recommend it to the Londoners alxrot as stronpy as though it were the truth It makes out the A mtechapel asapin to be an jnen can his orn confeaon and it 13 compleve as follows Jly name is Charles Kotvlder and I am an mencan I hare come to Lon don for rest and recreat on I have a Usiness errand hon ever else I would nrobabh not be here for a New Yoriter engaped a hurried pursuit of fame or oney is not apt to lose time without making some ort of excuse to himself But the trivial niisMon ls alreail as good as done and on this daj and hour in August 1993 i am waiting a pny sician anti room I desire to be told what is the matter with me and I hope to eet the information trnstworthur and beneficoallj Others have brought in their ailments ahead of me and still otners come alter me so mat we are a party of a dozen or more seated in a dismal wooden room for the walls are paneled heavilv in oak I overhear one wou an say to anotLer that she feels as though she were in a big box and the re pone is the suggestion that we ae all in a huge oo hn The joko is grim and the rual er of it is lugubrious I uraii that he has a fatal malady and that uicloure for bunal is to her an earh certainty are a cheerless group exceptir ruj elf lheomber nt of the room and the loom of its oc upanU do not wevh down rm pints I am mentally Luoj aht Tue trouble Vi th me freeuis tooephjical tatigae 1 eore taking the present relief from erv buv emrlojmenti 1 nent home from everv da sorko neary that my leps nereatnleun certain indnn nerte anlmu tleswtre liglitlj beyond control bomeUnies bram was exhausted too but the depreion of prints was so transient that with an hour or two of ret I would rebound into higher animation than before cmd it eenied folly to waste me in a acition Itwasonlv when a matter came up that no ess tated a tranat ant trp bj onielx dv From fur etahh hnient ard when 1 tthoaht me that I ciuld the penod phj ical relaxation without ui a atomentof mental ten it that I Ueti led upon the voiage hat I ean is tliat I intended to occup mj me lewing hemes a laing out Ian that rav neglect oi Sew i rk laU uld jos3ibly be a gain in rt iftcr al hilt I Mt an mg mv turn for an interview with tin plijK an I am not thinking of hiath 1 uri project in ni nu ometling to do when Ietla to menca Tie cakula lion trra uall di tra xiie fry mi urroun 1 co that he tl erant an It i loj turn tov there 1 a laze 1 tant 1 efore I ant aware of tl pK ar 1 wh 1 am here 1 enter nan un apartnjent lie is i idite clean ha en oil nm and he ear I a lotl es ot ciencal in a pi 1 11 at I feel 1 ke a Roman Catholic it i i na He motion me to a eat at cm lc a tab and takes one at the tin Ho lo ou do heinqure3 i ir trit In pond with ankec i ine never better Then it st ike me that I must seem ab urd for call ng on a doctor without an complaint to make lit he ex pn no urpriie He is miperturb ul He gais crit callj into face an 1 wait lltnth for nie to explain To tell jou tl tru I go on I sliou 1 hae Hited ou at all if I had rot ed im fin llv rhyi ian do I am a Vew orker and I hie come a road to re But I in concehe that I require an thing eel fiel as we would say In nn county like a ghung cock like the mencancale rtaU lo ttap his ings and crow a challenge to the Bnti Even vour foe doen depress ne It rati er exhilarates me I think nho I was neer 1 ghter hearted ihter minded or more volatile than 1 am at this minute I feel like apologising for this need es intrusion I it mg our fee and getting out i am tutomanl a wvaeious man tut now I am uncommonly olubie an 1 exclamatorv Cut the physician doen show that he is impreed any ingulantj in address He etlv and tersely puts many que lion wluch I answer th loquacious rea lin and I am conscious of rising into a gat etv of manner not to be ex pectod ui a patient while consulting a doctor I erhaps bouyancv puzzles vou I at length remarked 1 hae heard of malingering patients but don think I am the reverse of that that I am forcing an appearance of feeling remarkably well It is unaffected and spontaneous I assure you I am afraid it is saj the doctor grat ely Afraid it i I amazedh echo i that is hat I mean oar exaltation is unhealthy mental excite nient It is one of the sjmptonis which undoubtedly led your physi cian in New ork to send you to me I am a specialist in nervous diseases ou did not know that Well my fame is not worldwide but I kno as much about human nerves as can be learned i ou manifest what may be tarh symptoms of general pareis hj that is softening of the brain I exclaim half amused and half amazed Nonsense I beg your pardon but it seems absurd to cay that my intellect isn acute Too acute my dear sir Exhflara tron of the mfnd Is a bad sign taken connection with the physical fatigue uncertainty of motion and other things that vou have described to me ou are thriitened with general paresis in duced by thnt overtaxation of brain wmen is so common you Amen cans 1 And is it incurable General paresis is incurable ves I do not say that ou have it It is impending our onlv escape from it in im opinion lies in absolute reU By mat i aon mean auioaiiceoi pujsi cal fatigue as much as respite from mental activitv It would be well if ou could think of nothing whatever during the next three month I sometimes think that we shall discover a means of suspending mentaht or der to recuperate brains by positive disuse but we haven hit upon it vet The best we can do is to advise our patients to ease their minds to permit to themselves no fixedness of thought to abstain from planning devising and executing to keep out of troubles to occupy their minds as trivially as possible ou must do that A smile of incredulity is my silent response That is an offense to the physician and for the first tune in our dialogue he looks and speaks as though personally Interested If you nil act on mv advice and he rises to hu feet rests his hands on the table as he leans over toward me and emphasizes every word you may become a well man in three months If you disobey me you will by hat time be well along into a hopeless im bealitv which will rapidly develop into insanity and lead quickly to cer tain deatn Now I am shocked indeed and I am conscious that my amile only remains as a sort of facial paralysis So volatile my lancy Dowever uuwnui the words of a nossible doom still in my ears my humor floats lightly off to a recouecaon oi ue uxeu nnrnran ical mans diagnosis had Impressed me deeply and yet the upward tendency of my good spirits fights against the tense oi peril mat wouiu sins uieiu down into reasonable depression I comprehend tour au mat nas oeen said to me and 1 go over in my mind the symptoms upon which his warning is based I feel as though I have brought away from his office some weighty burden in place of my unladen condition on gmg there But the sensation seems physical rather than mental and I detect a tendency to be jocose with myself on the subject On coming into mv room at the hotel I am reminded by the sight of a Lon don newspaper lying on the table that I have neglected to order a ew i ork journal to be mailed regularly to me as I had intended So I srt down to wnte the necessary letter For what term shall I make the subscription Three months will cover my stay in London as 1 have planned Besides and the thought conies like an un pleasant blow shall I be able longer than that to read at all onense Medical specialists are alwas alarm ists 1 am all right or shall be as soon as rested But I shall keep obedi ently quiet Alter wnting the brief missive I am inclined to ue my pen further bo with a flrt light motive of recreation and a second one of senouslv making a record I write this account of the daj episode fter that is done I pick up the London newraper carelessly and glance over the columns that are manv respects s0 dirlerent from those of New ork journals Then my eye fixes upon head ines that are quite sjiierican style Thev belong to an account of the murder of Polly Vichols in Whitechapel I read the narrative interestedly because it reveals to me not onlj an uncommonly brutal murder but gives to me an in rignt of such low life in London ashas no counterpart in the greatest city of the other hemisphere II It was vestcrdar that I made my visit to the phician It is to day that 1 am thinking how I shall keep my business projects out of mt mln 1 in order to get the mental quietude which if the specialist is not mistaken alone can save me from madne ion can lav down our handi and say to them that they shall lie idle They will obey rour will But yoj cannot compel vour brain to cease action rational or otherwise as long as jou live hat ihftll I do as a means of distraction The account of the mur der of Polly Nichols still lies before me I read it all over again bhe was a vagrant ot the etreets of Whitechapel In mcnca wo would have called her a tramp from her homeless mode of life Tut we have no female tramps in this connt Our unsheltered and sodden anderers are men The worst and poorest of our women are not 1 ke these techapel wretches 1 make un i ly mnd of a sudden to spend tne i In seeing tho neighborhord of Bu Kow where Pofly was slaughtered The White chapel road ah ng wliiji I walk in my quest of gnm diversion is in some re spects like the Bi werv a thoro ighfare hi runs tnroupn tne mo i popmou and inipoverabed part of New York I find a similar rush an 1 whi 1 ot retail trade and a like variegation of people but moe of personal i The zig zni and puzzl ot small streets an 1 intrcate con ts too are strange to a Ne orkers ejes In andering throurh tHem I come across exhib ts of squalor a id dc 1 ravin such as are happily scarcer in New York and where when the do exist they are kept more neirlv out of itht At leigth Imilem wn to Bu row The pi ice are in poises sion of the place ail 1 am rr isqaeii exclaled but I obtain a igl of the rll bood tamed patpment where the bod of Follv was li nl an ex ercie of ankte ir i itneness and perseveranci I at lentth pet at the policeman ho di oered the remains I put to 1 mi in the form of le bon sect ms of the account that I have twice real of the crime and get an swers in monovllal les of a ent or dennl The insinuation leaes the murder a nnsten The officer in his patrol passed through Buck a Kow as ne iiau aone a quarter oi an hour previous Then he saw nothing unusual ow he found Polly lying flat He kicked her and said Come old girl vou can sleep here ou know lie could not awaken her On the trumpet of Oabnel can do that forshewa leal Her mur lerer had stabbed an i lashe I her unonl Her front teeth we knockelout too an I her face bail brui ed Her han is bore the marks of a lc rcrate struggle The accei ted theorv I learn rs th it lolly quarreled with some drunken man was struck hmi and when she fought back was ut to death with a knite wielded a suddenl mfuiated scoundrel The hou spent in Whitechapel will surely relieve ne oi the mental stress of preoccupation for an equ it number of dat The general scenes in that quarter of London the hases of un lucky he the special commotion caused bv the murder are all new and strange to an mencan There is something hornblj engrossing moreover in the extravaeant violence of the deed The honu ide was uch a lutcberj and there was in it suih an expenditure of fien 1 sh frenzj that one feels he mustcontnlute something toward the detect on of the perpetrator It no more had been done to PolU than to kill her there woul I be nt thing in the matter to make a foreigner think twice about it but the either wanton or mystenouslv jurposed mutilation makes it a terrible fa cintion I am sure that I do not at this ntmp lack a subject outside of mj ow affairs for thought able impression when they awate Did mv mental being go to sleep walking in Wlirtechapcl last night and witness the killing of Annie Chapman Ridiculous I have had this Yague sene of prior experience before It is a sensabonary freak that is not uncommon to persons in good health and why should I be axaxxnea Dy it unless i accepa sign of progress toward that abbena bon of intellect which the diagnosis by the physician pointed out as a possibility That view of it startles me and I consider the matter as carefully as I calmly can I cannot persuade myself that my mind was quite normal while reading the newspaper report of the Annie Chapman case 1 am sore that mv cognizance of the printed lines outran my perusal if only for the space of an eye glance This was certainly a more acute manifestation of reflex mentality if that is the clearest phrase to use than I had ever known to happen in myself Is this proof that I am in an unduly impressionable state That my brain is alreadv diseased That I am well along in the penod of unhealthy volatility which precedes the lnsanit ot paresis na reaa some of the literature of that malady since my interview with the expert alienist and have therefrom learned that on ex reedm delicacy of psychological activity is apt to precede the first stages of imbecility Instances are on record herein the victims became clairvoy ant secmingl and performed won ders of second sight more inexplicable than any of the tncks of the showmen What am I to do othing as nearly as possible That was the physician a Ivice I cannot take oil my head put it eafely aw ay from consciousness and so let it he oblivious until rested I must carry it around affixed to the top of my spinal column connected with ever nerve in my organization aware of even thing that goes on around me and thoughtful ail the time It is only in this last respect that it can be controlled I can fix my mind on something else than affairs ot selfish consequence and thus displace worry by a less exhausting kind of thinking I will pay attention to the Whitechapel murders IV t7i CMowoLa bjmaXL wre jj whi we see in the ballet ta3JiiaA tntwnaymmf Sri But I stop my smibag neYerthe oa Kixi nuftieaiD aiiuuuiuKiuviuHsr Wsauaot cjtn accounts wua less and promise to do as this profes tknaJ adviser tells me to ituaxucxum I pay nlm and bid bun good cuy Then 1 walk to avy hotel Ihemed yr BeBtraaasi acoemjeay tresainast i tia a I II lines chsU totnto 5 i in My mind has not been of the siaugh ter of Polly ichols I have engrossed myself completely in the case The theories of explanation that I have read have multiplied into others of my own I have studied the murder everv accessible detail cnticallv exam ining everything pertaining to it that could be seen or heard separately considered part of the crime has yielded anything definite as to who was the murderer or wh I have spent days in iutechapel seeking original sources ot information but without avan I have been able by special favor to ee the maltreated corpse The sight made me shiver but conveved nothing to my intelligence Returning to my room after these vain detective eTorts I have viewed the case at a distance and as a hole trying to deduce something at least credible as an explanation To day I take up a London paper and see that Annie Chapman has been murdered in much the tame manner as Poll ichols She was a courtesan too and she has also become a dissected corpse I read how she had not the 4 pence last night with which to pay for a bed in a miserable lodging house how she ent into the street to get a pittance by customary degrada Uon and how she was found early this morning dead like the other woman The similarity of the enme strikes me strangely As 1 glance along the account the new murder seems ex actly a counterpart of the other that I instinctively look at the date of the journal to see I have not picked up a back number by mistake No this is a duplication of the other crime I perue the matter rapidly but carefully As my eyes go from word to word and sentence to sentence comprehension seems to keep ahead of perusal Are tne lacts so precisely repetitions that the second narrative Is substantially a fresh tersion of the first Thai docs not nrove so on read ing again The generalities of the dreadful deeds are the same but the particulars are not The sensation is peculiar Hke that which most persons have experienced when upon seeing or hearing something they feel as though they have seen or heard precisely that thing before Scientific men hare explained these mental phenomena 1 believe by telling that they are a kind of reflex action of the mind The mental comprehension is quicker than oar consciousness of It Sound reaches the brain sooner than we physically know it by means of eyes or ears like a flash uguuuaj auu iw uiviq Mwnij ii4T ine peal of thunder That may be the right theory or not Xess rationalistio is the belief that the souls ot men sometimes quit their bodies dorms sleep and go with their thoughts to distant claces to return with Knowl edge thai fades to the slightest imigin I have witnessed four murders in Whitechapel The assertion is here set dovn solemnly and for the present secretlv although I hope to soon make a safe and sure disclosure I could not expect under the circumstances to convince the authorities or the public of a truth which has but slowly com nianded my own credence The revelation came to me dimly in the case of Annie Chapman and has become clearer ard clearer until to daythe2d October I wnte the declaration posi tivelv that I have seen four of the hltechapel tragedies My knowledge so marvelously acquired enables me to say that the murders of Emma Elizabeth Smith in Apnl and Martha Tabram in Vugust do not belong to the series that have become shuddennglv famous They were doubtless homi cides by separate men The butcheir of Polly ichois was the real orujin of tne suosequeni ones tnwut wuicii i know The faint conviction of the murder of nnie Chapman was already in mini iise a snauow ot memory as I have aiready descnlel the instant that I caw tho published account 1 was puzzled by it and I attributed it to in peculiar mental condition but for awhile it was not followed hv any intellectual di turbance and I began to believe that all danger to san had pa aed awa 1 devoted myselt assiiuousl to the scant evilence left for dete tne work in the Nlihols and i hapman cases not because I antici patei su ies ful results but in order to ircur mself wnth a abject whiih uld not tax me overmuch I am now aw are that I made a mistake 1 more deepl al orl 1 than I im iV nc 1 hat I regarded as a pastime letame a fa cinat on and 1 lutigued in bot with investigation while I i erw rou lit I ndn it theorizing 1 ossessing nivsclf ly individual effort with all the facts that could obtained Iv patient energv and en pla mg them under minute con ideration I worked harder than I il me in tho New ork occupa on from whiih I ha 1 fled for respite Ihe murder at Gateshead in the north of Lngland with its peculiar mutila on ot the body has convinced the police that the han 1 of the hite cnapei nenu wieiaeu me Kiuie mere That ma or ma not be the fact I ill not make a journe of invesfrgs tion and 1 had no etond sight it It was not urtil NTtember 2Clh sev eral days after the Oatehead happen mg that anything singular happened to me On awakening in the mornng 1 recalled a dream in which I seemed to 1 ave found nuseif in a place that was entiren st ange am now aware that it was the sjte of the projected Metropolitan Opera house The vision was lund enough for realitt hich I now know it to have I een 1 ut it as left to me fragmentar llv hat I retained when an ake was like a senes of instantaneous views taken ith winks of the es wtead of the fashes of a camera but separately dear and distinct The represented a woman of the pave skulking into the lark shadow of the abandoned foun dations of the opera house Fhc was a slatternl sot and her varrant person aim waseharplj impressed upon me vhe had a man for a companion but he as indistinct as though out of the locus in rhiih he was centered There as maudlin en learment the woman for he seemed drunk ani he clung to her companion for support as much as for roueh caresses suddenh a knife was reached into the pace covered clearly bv mv lens sight and it as held by the hand of the shadow man which extended out of gloom like the materialized member of a ghost in a spiritualistic seance The weapon was struck straight into the heart of the woman and her fall had barely brought her to the ground before the man sit about his awful mu illation The dome was in the light and I saw it distinctl but the doer as in the dark so that his deed was stamped upon mv mind while his identity made no mipres I had never dreamt so startlmgly It was almost a surprise to me that I did not find in that dav journals an account of an assassination hke that of my dream which thereupon I pronounced an mi aginary experience of a sleeper The murders of Elizabeth fctnde and Catherine Eddowes both tho flrt hour of Sunday morninsr beDtember TOth brought a well nigh paralyzing shock which at first made me believe that I had reached the threatened dementia but a visit to the phjsiaan and a demand of him to seek carefully for signs of hallucination assured me that I was not yet a maniac He was surprised by my questions and I did not hint to him my reason for making them That can here be told I awoke that morning quivering in mind and body with a second dream in which I had seen one woman throat cut in Berners street and an other butchered with dreadful elaboration in Miter square In my frequent visits to Whitechapel I had seen these places and so they were not new to me in my dream as the Thames embankment had been Again my vision was astoundingly distinct as to the women and what was done to them but no more than in the previous instance did I get other than a vague view of the perpetrator of the deeds Regarding it all as a nightmare wrought dv my excited imagination and caused by what I now regarded as too close application to my amateur detective whim I resolved to ease myself of concern in the Whitechapel murders I fell asleep again and did not reawaken again until nearly noon Then 1 had a breakfast in my room and was almost through with it when there were cries of newsboys in the street below Another WTiitcchapel horror they shouted I got a paper and there read accounts of two murders exactly as I had dreamed them I was amazed and stunned As soon as I recovered a degree of Keif possession made the call on the doctor after which I tried to convince myself that the whole matter of the nightmare was fanciful that the reading of the newspaper suggested it to a mind diseased and that the printed narrative was really what first brought the facts to me Indicative as this was ot mental unsoundness it was less revolting thah the idea of super naturalness Bat the demonstration that has Lrre ruiaoiy come to oay mages me out a equally certain that the cause of my resorting to him was my supposed dreams one of which had not been realized But here in print is disclosed the discovery of a womans remains on the site of the Metropolitan Opera house a place which knew nothing about but which in the description agrees exactly with my ndon The position in which the body lay when found and its wanton disfigurement were precisely as I had seen them in my sleep It must be that my discernment was there when the tragedy happened although I lay here abed three miles distant What shall I do with this knowledge If I go with it to the authorities 1 will be deemed a lunatic or else suspected of complicity in the crimes I am the Whitechapel murderer The woful character of my confession should carry conviction of its truth But I have a mind diseased and therefore must prove that I am not an imaginary assassin Let me go on then as calmly as I can with my self condemnationcondemnation In already excluding from the senes of Whitechapel crimes the isolated homicides of April and August I was right As to the murderous dissection of Polly Nichols that was tho single deed of an undiscovered man bo far as can tell But the appalling use ot tne knife on Annie Chapman Elizabeth btride Catherine Eddowes and the unidentified woman at the Thames em bonkment was my work The evidence against me in those cases is drcum etontial I admit but it is not so in the instance of Alary Jane Kelly who was killed In Martins court on the night of November 8th You wiH doubt and marvel as yon read but yon will be finally convinced Would to God you could find reason to acquit me but that 1 impossible Another dream An awakening before it was all over leaves it more clearly in my memory than its predecessors I witnessed the encounter of ilary Jane Kelly and a man in a Whitecliipel thoroughfare The time was about 2 clock at night but the street was still peopled and everybody was in my view clearly except Mary companion I eerued to recall my pre vioua failure to discern the face of the assassin and to endeavor this time to descry his face but although his form was palpable his head was invisible My sight followed the pair as they went together to the court and into the woman poor room and it remained with them during two hours It was all pantomime I saw her lips move in speech and laughter for the caroused over a bottle of gin but not a sound did I hear My vlson was re stricted to my eyes seemingly and was not accompanied by anything auncular Conscious of a desire to see the man face I strained mv eyes for it but his countenanie was the one blank spot in the picture I was expectant of the climax of thAt miserable mocking rev elrv 1 knew that the poor creature was to be slain bv her fiendish visitor toui i dui look into ms lace thought or fol ow him clairvoyantl after the deed what a triumph for justice wcull be mine Mvdetesta tion of his purpose and nn dread of witnessing the stabbing were real as life But the astral illumination would not fall upon his features ightly as it revealed everything else in the room The covert preparations of the murderer to stnke the mortal blow wore dimly revealed to me and I vaguely saw him drawing a knife stalthil from his pocket The pair were on the low rickety bed that formed a pa of the scant furniture The woman was unsuspicious the Ld no detect his design and probably was never conscious of its execution for 1 er heart was pierced the lirst stab and she ed wnth a few ci nvul sive struggles Then the bisection characteristic of these crimes was begun I gazed in terror and revolt at the sanguinarj work The hands and forearm of the in famous operator were in jain view Looking at them keenl with an mten on of nndmg marks of possible iden tohcation I saw that there was a ring on one of the fingers It had an amethyst set in pecuhar fashion I recog nized it instantly It was my own As bv a stroke from an electric bat terv I as aw akened I was not abe 1 in my room but was there in Mary Jane Kelly apartment with a re dripping knife in my hanl and mv own atrocity lying hideou lv before me I had found the hltechapel murderer There was no gudt mv deds Thev were not committed bv my own voUt on Too intense study of the murder of lolly Nichols at a time when mv mind was In an abnormal condition produced hypnotism I have reasoned that out easily enough since my discovery Just how I perpetrated the murders I cannot confess because 1 know no more about them than I have here wntten They occurred hen I was in a curious state of som nambulism and lunacy My actions were umtative evident of what I had conceived of the manner of the assassination of Polly Jtichols It is th oagb no fear of earthly punishment that I try to make out this defense of irresponsi jihty for I shall be lcv ond the reach of human justice betore this writing becomes pubdc What I did immediately after rry arousal to normal consciousness a to escape from Martin court return to my hotel ana take my uepanure from London FACING UEATU TWICE TAJIK IS CHpAP How It May Obtained Tnrouxh New rk OaUla New York Mafl sal Express He who is thirsting for fame let him come to Hew Yorki put up at one of the leading hotels and then get on good terms with the clerk who has charge of itsiiterary department When I say fame I reckon that newspaper notoriety counts for snch That being the case the literary bureaus of the hotels have a system try which fame is easily manufactured These bureaus are new attachments to the machinery of well regulated hotels and considering the tune they have been in operation they have done remarkable work Many a man has gamed by them especially politicians and a conspicuous example among the latter class is Postmaster General Don 11 Dickinson What does a hotel want with a literary bureau yon will probably ask Because it is the best means possible of advertising the hoteL One hotel having adopted it the other were compelled to do so The genius who invented this system is Wall himself one of the best advertised men In Vew York lie is connectedw ith the Hoffman House and the system has become known among hotel men as Walls perfect system So far as known this is the only aty in which it is in operation The circumstances existing here are peculiarly favorable to it In the first place the New York papers have a great partiality for news of the character usually picked up about hotel corridors Besides this the news center of the country and correspondents of out of town papers make a rDeaaltv of this matter The system had got in full working oraer aooui tne time oi we uiauguxa tion of President Cleveland DonM Dickinson was then little known outside his State except among the lead ing ponnaans or years ne naa Deen comlne to New York almost every month without attracting a passing notice in the newspapers Ail of a sud den he began to loom up as a national character Every tune he came to New 1 ork some ingenious story was worked UDSoas to trive it a news color which I would act as an excuse for a hthlv complimentary sKeicn ot tne Michigan statesman It was ow ing to the efforts of this bureau that Mr Dickinson name was mentioned for Vice Presi dent The mot rotable case that of Myron Bangs whose name has recently appeared in every Democratic paper in the land as the bosom friend of the late Roscoe Conkling who had given 10 000 to the Democratic campaign fund Two years ago Mr Bangs name was hardl known outside of the Lttle vil lage in which he lives in Central New iork The literary bureau took hold of him and to day he is ono ot the most conspicuous figures about Jew York early every newspaper has con tamed something of Colonel Wilson of Denver as one of the leaders of the American party and the owner xf the birch rod which bent beneath stonewall Jackson a weight as he fell to the ground mortally wounded lie was astonished when he returned home and found that his visit to New 1 ork had made him famous The people of mv own town said the Colonel laughingly did not know lwas a great man until they learned it by wav of New York Colonel William Wade of fct Louis now one of the be known men about the resorts here is seldom mentioned by the papers of his own aty eixcept when they copy what the ew York papers say about him Here he is known as a double millionaire and the man who took the last drink with Jesse James Francis the Democratic candidate for Governor of Missouri in one visit here la winter achieved more newspaper nooriety than he ever did be fore and be is now receiving the ben ent of it Ceneral William alsh ex Mayor of Hot Springs now lives here an 1 not a week passes that wo or three araeraphs do not appear in tne trers about him I left Arkansas becau I was a plain cvery dav citi zen hesavs but living 5 ere at a leading hotel I can be one of the con spicui us men of the metropolis of the country And so it eoes It is likely to become general said the father of the system repeating my question 1 es in ail the large cities for it pavs the hotels here The average man is fond of newspaper notoriety only he may differ as to the kind If he is much of a politician it is a necessity to him Of course we can only have men wntten up that have some standire at home even if he is from a small city ard is Mayor of it Fveryman has had some interesting event in life paragraph about it in a New 1 ork paper is nre to be copied in the local paper at his home and his reighbors conclude he ntust be a man of some consequence to attract atten tion New A ork This pleases him and he liecomes a drummer for our hotel and as a general thing he will remain loncer and come oftener than he would otherwise AKOENTINE ENTERPRISES Uemarkable herve lo Tim or Oreat lerll Times of IndJL The beaters had been at work half an hour when wc heard a cry announcing that the man eater was making his way toward the plain hustled somewhat by the volleys of stones but sharpening his claws and growling defiance In taking up our positions it so happened that Lieutenant Farrington was on my right in hne with the mouth of the gully and not more than twenty feet from my elbow lie had a double barreled rllie of heavy caliber while I hod a repeater In three or four mln utes after the cry of warning the tiger appeared in the mouth of the gull head on to Farrington and looking him straight in the face 1 Hold on 1 Hes mymeatl shouted the officer as he brought his gun up and it became a point of honor with the rest of ns to hold our fcre He took cool and careful aim but the bullet simply touched the skin between the tigers ears lie dropped hke a stone but was up in an instant and with a roar to shake any mans nerves he sprang forward at the Lieutenant In tne tcntn 01 a sccono a iumea my vee from the beast to the officer and what was my horror to see a serpent twining itself about his leg and rearing its head to a level with his shoulder I forgot ail about the oncoming tiger and for the first time in my life my blood seemed turned to ice Farrington stood with bis left foot ahead and his richt braced and as the tiger touched the ground tor nis ias spring ine rifle spoke again and the beast rolled over with a dou inrougn ms brain men wmie we an Kept our places like so many blocks of stone he dropped his rifle seized the snake jnst below the head with his right hand and came walking toward ns The serpent writhed and twisted about in his rage and as it uncoiled itself from the mans leg he flungt thirty feet away It was rushing back at him when one of the party with a shotgun at his shoulder blew its head off Good shot remarked Farrington as he walked back and picked up his rifle We ran after him and shook his hand and showered unstinted praise on him tor his nerve tmtJie would not be a hero It was the presence of the serpent which was of a highly poisonous species which had disturbed bis first aim He felt it under his foot and realized that its bite meant death but a maddened tiger was before him and he did not give the snake a second thought Tjimtenant Gotdbraid who Is enlor ing on the porch delightful conTersa tfnn with Mlii Smith txitvho is same what annoyed by the presence of young Bobby Dont you get tired at times 01 piaywgiwiwji ir tired of the game lm playing now 1 nla clairvoyant witness of the Whitechapel lientenantdbrsid Whatgame it muruers jay visit to tne pnyjioan 1 tnaw jjobbj vvyjl WUsnxelytaiiglbleoccniTence ttUIJfot r1 ImproTements in the South American 11 public Buenoi Ayres Corr New York Trl nin The improvements on the river trort and at tho Boca arc being pushed with some vigo Tho former are solving the problem of lessening the distance between the city front and the point to which vessels can approach by trans forming the shallow water into dry land This is being effected by build mg a wall of solid masonry some dis tance outward and dividing the space thus inclosed into regular streets and building blocks Each block is then surrounded with a bnck wall of equal height with the outside embankment and the street spaces between the walls are filled with earth and paved with cobble stones like the other streets of the at Thus in the reclaimed sec tion purchasers of building sites find their cellars already dug The Grand Union station of the several railroad centenng here is to be one of the first magnificent buildings erected on this new addition to the city The improvements at the Boca the mouth of the Chuela river are to supply the long needed port for steamers and remedy the mistakes Mendoza made 303 ears ago when selecting the site of this aty Already an almost fabulous amount has been expended for a harbor and a great amount will yet be required But the work goes forward with no evidence of dlscour agement The advantage it will be when completed can hardly be overestimated and its importance In view of the rapid increase of marine commerce is fully realized by the national Government which is borrowing the money to do the work hat this Government would do if it had the overflowing treasury of Amencs can onlv be corijectured by the improvements of the last twelve year made under the pressure of onerous interest Within five yeara the number of steam ers from Europe stotmmt here each month has increased irom sixtv to 100 An Austrian hne is soon to be added lareehr occupied during the winter with railroad schemes and concessions have been granted for a number ot main lines ana numerous extensions ana branches of lines heretofore chartered many of which are already in operation This is pre eminently xne raiirooa building era of Argentine history There is a noticeable difference in the applications for concessions now and those of ten years ago Then the Government was forced to erant almost un limited privileges to induce capitalists unaertaxe tne enterprise now applications for concessions are numerous without guaranty and in a few instances companies have not even asked the usual land grant The largest number of concessions havtv been given to British capltohsta who already have an mmniM of several millions invested A few Americans have railroad projects among them tne ex iiinister irom me United States General Osborne who was here from 1872 to 1334 The General has been confined to his room for some days with a severe attack of rheumatism The present Minister Judge Hannaof Indiana is also a Yktim of the same disease to nehr an extent that at times he is almost blind It may not be amiss to say nere tnai fn srlaw of tha amount of European capital already invested here and the i fn4natia srritri rill nat uriiiyeaxsrcisedinfaYoro Europeans it is absurd lot any Americans It mayor may not already be well known in the United States that Minister IJ nna has found if necessary to in form the Department of State in Washington of the nnfortunate influence of an article which appeared about a year ago in an American magazine in consequence of which he had alrerdy been called upon to furnish means of getting back home to several disappointed Auiencn youtus American schooLteacheTs however employed by the Government do well ana mere is no reason to suppose that anv such persons bavin contracts be fore leaving home will fall to find profit able wotx nere But tne opportunities of securing such lucrative positions are fewer and fewer year by year The object in view in importing normal teachers from the United States was to raise up a corps of Argentine teachers From the normal schools already in operation each graduation day brings an increasing number of native aspirants for good places manv of whom have political friends ready to help them Into such places Within a comparatively short time the demand for for eign normal teachers will cease and only those of superior qualifications will be in demand Bnt this does not mean that in the future development of this country the foreign educator laborer or business man will not have a chance of competing just as foreigners now do in the United btates Republics are proverbially ungrateful Yet as regards its pioneer teachers this Government seems to be an exception to the rule By an existing law the foreign teachers now in the normal schools will receive pensions when they have taught twenty years on condition of their becoming Argentine citizens An exception is made in favor of Miss Clara Armstrong formerly of Buffalo to whom the pension is voted at the end of the present year which is the tenth of her labors in this country This exception is in recognition of her signal services in elevat ing tne standard of education and in securing on efficient corps of teachers for the normal schools 0 HOTY TO DUE TBK EAIIT0 Whit Milt Be Dene to Blalnlaln a Prorfnctla Koll Boston Globe It was a common remark of Prof Ouvot the eminent geographer that tnis eartn tnouid be considered as one grand individual and it is manifest that as an individual its resources are not inexhaustible The present popu lation of the elobe mav be 1200000 000 but its capacity for furnishing subsistence is adequate probably to three or tour times tnat number ihe so called savage races are to disappear and their places will be taken by those who are further advanced in what we call civ illzatlon With the proirress of the race the ratio of increase of population diminishes but there is some compen satlon for this feature of social existence in the fact that with civilization there are better ways of living and the average length of life is on the in crease The problem is this How shall each portion of the earth surface be used so as to furnish the means of supporting the largest population We have now put so many girdles around the earth not only over the land but over the sea as ell that it is no longer necessary for each section or nation even id produce everything which it may have occasion to consume It wid never be unwise however for each community to use its own resources and facilities for its own wants Speaking gen erallv the land everywhere is capable of producing some products but unless it is refertilized bv arts the yield will diminish and in time it must be aban doned to nature and the forest The result is that man becomes a nomadic being and the population of the globe decreases with the means of subsistence The first step the process of re sisttng this this tendency to waste is the care and preparation of animal ma nures It may Be asnmed of Western Europe and of the parts of the United btates east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio that reasonable attention is given to the care and use of the ma nure of domestic animals but the sew age of cities is ever where neglected except in parts of Pans Berlin Dantzig and Breslau In those cities the expen ments for deodorizing the sewage and for precipitating the solid parts have all been abandoned andthe practice is to apply the liquid at once after its delivery at the reservoirs some of which are ten miles from the cities and all of which are in the agricultural district It is stated in the reports that the health of the inhabitants living in those agricultural districts has not been af fected unfavorably and that the productive power of the lands has been in creased matenaliy The process com bines irrigation and fertilization and the results could not be otherwise than highly benefiaal The custom of depositing the sewage of towns and aties in the nvers and lakes must be abandoned in all the populous parts of the world A full supply of good water is a prime neces sit and that supply cannot be obtained if the lakes and rivers are made the receptacle of the sewage of cities And after further experience it will be regarded as a great waste to transfer to the ocean that hich is needed upon the land It mav therefore be assumed that the time is not far distant when the sewage of cities which indi cates but does not fully measure the impoverishment of the sod will be used to reinvigorate the land It is however doubtful whether the economical care and use of these means of fertility when added to the aid fur nished by nature in the decomposition of vegetable and animal matter will prevent a decrease of production hen ever the population of the globe shall have reached a maximum The area of Jorth Amenca has been ascertained with an approach to ac curacy it is estimated at somewhat more man 8 uuu square nines 1 ne area of orth Amenca is about one fifth of the area of the globe less rather than more This estimate would give a total of 40000 000 square miles If one fourth of this area be excluded as uninhabitable and the remainder should become as densely populated as Massachusetts the population of the globe would reach the enormous aggregate of 9 000 000 000 souls or more than seven times the present number In whatever voca hons men are engaged the sea and the land ore the only sources for the supply of food As population increases supply furnished by the sea wul be proportionately less and the demand upon the land proportionately greater It is in this view of the possible facts of the future that the discovery and use of artificial manures assume a degree of importance which cannot be accorded to any other of the wonderful mystenes and discoyenes of the ace For the supply of the materials for the manufacture of fertilizers mankind must depend chiefly upon the deposits of potash phosphates and ammomacal substances upon and beneath the rur face of the earth These deposits especially of potassium and phosphate are now known to be very large and it is probable that others are yet to be discovered ature has made liberal provisions for the subsistenco and welfare of mankind in these deposits and in the vast fields of coal that are found in every quarter of the globe While thee sources 01 suDsistence ana camion are adequate to the demand made upon them there would seem to be no reason whv the human race should not in crease In numbers and advance in civilization and when the exhaustion of these resources begins there would seem to be no apparent means by which a retrograde movement could be arrested UAJIK TTTAIHS COCBTSHIF Trias Tkrast Times matt YVM Maeeesef I New York Mai aad Express Mark Twain If he is in the mood will tell the ztoryTDl his own courtship in a manner orthv ot the neatest of living humorists When he first met the lady who afterward tjecame ms wife he was not so distinguished as now his oric in was humble and for some years of his life he hail been a pilot on tne Mississippi river ine future Mrs Clemens was a woman of position and fortune her father was a Judge and doubtless expected family and social importance in his son in law Clemens however became interested in his daughter and after a while proposed but was rejected Well he said to the lady I didnt much believe youd have me but I thought I try After a while he tned again with the same result and then remarked with his celebrated drawl I think a great deal more ot you than if youd said Yes hut its hard to bear A third time he met with better fortune and then came tha most difficult part of his task to address the old gentleman Judge he said to the dignified millionaire have you seen any thin going on betw een Miss Lizzie and me sWhat What exclaimed the Judge rather sharply apparently not understanding the situation yet doubtless getting a glimpse of it from the In quiry Have youseen anything between Miss lizzie and tne No no Indeed I replied the magnate sternly No sir I nat not Well look sharp and you wiu said the author of Innocents Abroad and thats the way he asked the judicial luminary for bis daughters hand Mark has a child who inherits some of her father brightness Ehe kept a diary at one time in which she noted the occurrences in the family and among other things the sayings of her parents On one page she wrote that father sometimes used stronger words when mother wasn by and he thought we didn hear Mrs Clemens found the diary and showed it to her husband probably thinking the particular page worth his notice After this Clemens did and said several things that were intended to attract the child attention and found them duly noted afterward But one day the following entry occurred I don think I nut down any thing more about father for I think lie does things to have me notice him and I believe he reads this diary fche was AiarK own cniia going on XLTSX Ia Berkeley KoTenbe 29 EUL wsKt is JUJiev ana years 8mootlaiKll3ilaya Sr taneral eriu sate oUsa this day 2tofrJ from tho residence ot ber par D1SL DtrurSt War intarme nptraia BHF IbJrir November 58 NriBa AsoTSidaajntr of Edward aad Lydla rs Ta Konert aad caris Blanop eaaUTeof Ctevelaost a axed 30 7eaeoatbsdax JeBde and aci ualntaoess are reeoeet j2SUItW wneral to ioorrow HaJL5rXM street corner oT KarrlMB Inurmeav Odd fsuiow ceme SlIEPPABp tn SJaa BaSseLTTovempw 29 tov husband of jl rLjZ pantaad the second saa of Mr a Hawkins a native or uaa FrsjidscoVatel SI years aad 4 months it IffTi JawasJataBeaaareTesrsvsj fullr InvUed to attend the ar eral to morrosr Sunday at 1 oclock from his late reat denca oa street teurtea Third aal Fourth Baa BaaaL tVUUam beloved nsbaod of Adette Mebeas moa a naUva of Illinois aged SS years Belatlvn and Mends are respect follTlsrtwd to attend tbaajr KKnorrew Bandar at 140 oclock from Haoak Temple corner of Montgomery and Post street S0REN3ESJ Tn this ettr November S3 Annie beloved wife of William and mother of Beraert WILDam Keooen aad llarry Dorcases anattre or England agal 41 yeara swaths aad 10 days asTlYlends aad acaaajstaarti ars ramaat fully mvttsd to attend toe funeral to morrow ac a 1 SOAdarh 1 deacc 1013 McAllister street latermeaa 1 oclock from her lata real HOTEL ABB1TALS PALACE HOTEL MrsEJ Davis Mian story Wi Story Sullivan ralmer Cblcaxo I Weston Tome kins Long lid a jeweu uaaio GUette Jr Bostn Gillette do Mrs Stewart Cola CSrnhh Chicago JWertbeimer tinDiec 2icvormicxiaia atrOormlck do II A haw Stockton Laxmin Or ass Cowiea Iiew 1 ork Coie Keokuk PUlett Helena CFTomnier Cb cj EC link do Cbsppell York Cbase Rochester BALDWIN HOTEL It Webster Stocktnl SI Kerneman city Eaton do 3 Ha ran do Stuart ew York Mrs Requa 4 dr Caa A Harry Boston Kiss Gillette do White Bta Clara A Frohelmer A wf Moble Ettlnicer Pennsylr Brde Oula 8 Bernardlu Bernstein York Byrne Calllbrnta Reel 8aa IMezo Rengstora iwl Brllton A sapa Mrs Kennedy Llv ermore 1 RHstll eacto I WGra do Smith Cooper Chicago eUl A Napa oodcraft Cal JODennr do U9 Moral Banta Row Zorella Stockton II Clark Oatlinl DYanCuUn a AMERICAN ETCHAKOE HOTEL Cooper Menlo Park lArllsie eresno ERodgers I Tafcoe tlss Ohio asset Lona 1r Sweeney civl iniLips uaiies Pearson Taboe OUlertson do Zanolll Maria i rancktoa Jose Bowen Oakland Maple anta Rosa Maple co A Trenton rituourc DeL aatn California rmerson ind er Maiier Cal i Tbaver Sacto Ball 48 Crnx McDermht Jose Mbs II Hall co Miss nail da Hewitt Texas Hewitt do Wilson Stockton II Brown do FF Hatchings do Itarron Chicago TMcSalty Enreka Klrina 11 2 Jansea rruckee 3 Clasacoca do Blice Kansas Lee Sew York Lnndeo do Green do Mann da Oreer Boston Cook Duncans Odd rulowg CemsUrr OTTO In this dtr Hovstoberao Marr Jaaa wtf Richard Otto and sister of Joan end Thomas ti Andrews and Mrs Sarah Porter anahreot Baairaoclaooarl S3 year i ne rnneral will take place to morrow JENBOS Ia Oakland November 29 Itrv JrJiVn0 behrred mother ot Mrs a Held of JnueaAlAtlaap Uveoi Deo snark aired 62 yea a aar rleoi of Mr and Mrs I Held are lavusd to aueal be ruaaral to morrjw tsunday at a clock from tie rastdeaca Of Mra Molmaa 1930 Filbert street Oakland OIIHOK lathlsdtyNovemiar 39 Edward bllaon formerly of BalUmare MdL a native OX Ireland agal etreara awTTberuaeral wUl unilsu to morrow Sunday I at 9 oclock from his lata reaV deacav 1910 Lyon street between Bacra menlo and Clayi thence to et DomhilcJf Churchcornnoftttelner and Push streets atlOOOloea tbeoc brlaoclocxtrainta Holy Cross cemetery So flowers SEGCZEE In Oakland November SO at hit residena717 Center street Carl Whas band of Carolina Imguaee a luur es torn WntljlesaereXj 1 months and dare Erie nds and acQosiatances are reipeat fnlly Invited to attaod the funeral to morrow lSi m1 S0 doe orn of Malt loss UroidYir OsJtlAnd naJer tha aotplcas of rftusa lata Lodge Ma 2007 ti RIWA In this city Jiovember SO Manael itdeUos Sosa a native of Aioroia sa 43 year SsT Friends an acqnastannea are reapeci roliy la vnad to attend tha funeral to morrow Ifenoday as 1JO cAock from In ull iiau 41S Sutter street under the assplte of asos do llama Urova 4S A a rx Ketnalnj at Charles Meniere undertaking parlors 33 Washington street interment odd eiiows Cemetery DKCM InthUcity November S3 VniUam Prnmamemberof BrracrueLodce No a and a it and or central uty Com maodery Na 4 racase Si a native of Mkhlgen aged 47 jreaxs and 11 months Friends are respectfully Invited to attend tne funeral service to morrow Sunday at 1 JO oclock from his late residence 101s Sutter street thence to Masiuki Temnla corner ef Poet and Moatgomscr streets at 2 coed Interment Masonfa Cemetery DWYiR Inthla dry November 30 Baa oran beloved mother ef Mary fora aad launieDwyer and sister of Dannie and John Asaae of iJerkMry a va ve WOOdfhrd near 4JatowaL county Marry Xreiaad aged Co yean eser The funeral win Ute nlacs to morrosy fSondar at 10 clock trom the Chapel of tery Oakland Please omhTdweri BTMON laihlicuy November S9 EUzaastb Bymon a native ot Dundee lata of Brought Ferry Scotland aged 83 yean asT Friends and acquain aaceearerespect rolly invited to attend lbs funeral to morrdw Sunday at 2 oclock from her late rd deaoa Mississippi street between banta Clara and Mariposa Potrero AOUORN Inthlaetty Norember 29 Albhm AChortL a native of Uocklln a mssn ber of Unco a Fost ha la A tt agsdei years I Kockiin Me papers please copy 1 a Frlenlsanl acouainancpaar anjt fullJiirUl 4tf 11 as fdasrai lo lnoro Sunday jsl 2 oclock from Ibe undertaking parlors of Hals ed A Co 810 MisJfoa street euneimluaderLhe ausuice oX Xaa coln i oat A LIMOX8I In this dty November Eugene Limons a native ci SU Junto Department ot Haute Vienna franca agal 7 years a Friends ar resDeettuliy tnvltel to attend the funeral to morrow Sunday at 10 oclock from the undertaking parlors ef IConnor A Ca 767 Mission street KX IathljcHy KoTember 34 John Knox a nstlTftOf Oalaihteis Scotland aged 44 years and 3 months The funeral services win bell Sunday at 12 dock at bis late residency RCTR3 MOUSE Stackpole Lathrp Jones Oeo Worlev Sae small Han Karael McLaogulfn do ti Long Bonora lmpson Oakland Norton Jtirjao a I Barker Aw Mad Uon 1 BrbiUn Rdwood i Clara Santa Rosa Peterson do Cboser Dakota i LA kins bseNtl Aklns do I Bar Lltte River ThosFldredfe LA Mlnter 3 Uregorto fc A lor raio Alto Kavanaugb Salinas TTur erAw Modsto Deane Merced Page Coll nsmie uihbs Petalnma WUHrlDibr Nasa Haloe ber 8 Brbar Mrs A Buckley Mrs AO Baas tt do A Buckley Is Orgn DTcnsalhSpkne Jells I awson orejon Stanger do HnlL Centervftle all la Mrs Townsend Biver elde Mrs BB Decker LA vv atson Man Jose 3 PhUllpi lorest Cliy JC ACarpenter Hnm bollt MtsO Lengdon do lOordouw 8 Jose Hunolt a Yesse Atlta JAW tlson A Avery ban Jose OKAVD HOTEL A Bradley Colorado Wood at sonXspa arfiuitr ty oacto sot redoricks Bostn A Pico A Ban Job Cants Cal fitch city VV tt CaiUDJ WUiFKB City Morrison lllinoU MrtMhUestrnCal lain Susan vh Halo do Hnrt Arizona Mowry Loll oory oa RRMi Davidson do Wctnrelch Bacto TWfidl4w do Co A wf vftooaourn CA luller Randolph Cn tmo VV rtghbaebastopi Kline Ueveland0 John Price do Hall Vallejo Blank Ban Jose A Townsend Uklah aieimen uu Haverlv haw York Pitcher Lrrermre Canty Tulare ll ttltcncocK reestne evteby Benlcla Eteffen do Barnet Santa Crus Miss BawettAecavlJIe Alcvietcay recto Mlsa Douglas Vallejo Uifta RublnaoDu do Mrs Townes Trockeej Mrs rerun xtocxnn Mrs Jones Bacto Griffith Berkeley MlsiMEJspton Vacav At ureocr ione Mrs RThocxiaswcJKta rl Kyarvran Jose Mtss AnilowJ do A Duvsll Llvermore Miss A Monday Peta Miss Kennedy Napa Miss Good Eta Rosa JPachecoAwfCe 11 Droits Ht LOUIS rt Beacu Ancaster it uacner coiusa Meyer Anueob AEldn et Helena Miss tltln do Miss Elgin do smltb do McUautheviRosa 1 Johnson AtCelrei Banta Rosa si Barry vaue A Morris Fresao Hamilton do uarron reiaiurra mum saanoay ao FE Tabor Areata MontOILM tltlanS Denson Sacmento A Hellbron do A Spring Stockton Ttmberton Beach tend AELEXDER ln this city November 30 at the residence of Jacob Rosenberg 22DS Be chanan street Mra i Ailenlera natira of irglnla aged ed years and 10 luunUts BEBAKD In thli city ovember 20 Berard native of son FnncLcT aged 1 day TOOHT Ia this aty November 29 Thomas Tooby a native of San A ranJsco aged month aad 4 oars dLAZIER In this city November 30 ASc Olaxler a native of Baa 1 re Cisco egad 8 years 1 month ant 1 daya EDWABl InthUcltyK0Te3iber2Mary Elsie moor Edwards a native of Cahioraat aged 3 months McCAFFKKY fa this tty November 28 Elenor McCaffery a natlte of Ran Francisco eged 11 months and 17 daya KERBAlOH In this dty Aovemher 27 Joseph Kerbaugh a satita of Mas Fraar clscu agad 9 montns RAD In this city November 27 Rossoae Braly a native oi Ban Arancisco eged 8 liars OA BlLYA In this elly November 33 lrr mllde Im enva a native of Ban Francisco aged 4 years and months McOILLICUDD In this dty Ncember 29 JuIUMcOllilcuddya native of Ireland aged 64 year BARCLAV In this city November 27 Char es Jones Barclay a native of Prussia aged SS years CABTER In tht dty Kerambsr 27 Carter azed SO rear a BCBkE In this dry ttovea ber 23 Berah Burke a native of Ireland as ed 60 years years 8ALM0N Tn this dty Norember 28 lam Salmon a native of Ohio aged SI years BOWAKD Ia thli dty November 28 lames Howard a native of Baa renclcoasei month and 14 daya MCNBON lathiecltyNovtmberZV Nathan lHgCEtTAUE0CS BIBTiI4 McALLI3TIE In thb dty November 24 the wife of Cr McAllbtu ot a ttangnter KELLY In Ibis dty Kovemher It the wile ot John Kali of a son HABBIS tn tint dtr Xorembet 26 lb wife of fiarrla of a wt HAddAHKi MORBILL OTJOXNELL rB this dty vemaer23 brFir lather Mahoney bt A atorrui to atey a vumutu iscarusj Boussel to Boson Eersnaw both of that dty THOllAS HARMS In this dty November 29 ty Bev McCrrary Dr a Thomas of Saa Bazael to Annie Harms of Ban Frandsco WARD ROSS In Los Angeles November 23 Irank Ward of Baa fraadtco to tsrrii Bras of Oakland RTROTtUEIFR NOAKErt In this dtr No vemlstt 2a by Rev a a Foot Loull Btroh meier to laij Atvasea una ot lets tuy COCUBAK COSaZLL Is IUi dtr NoTm Ir29 by Rev Maoksnile John Cocn ran to Mary a ajunneu PEPPER BNYDEB Ia this dtr Norember vt Drawlac tha Color Line Detroit Journal What Is a irrem trrocer nana asked Jones youngest son as the two passed a Woodward avenue store this morning A ween grocer my ian ts one who advertises to sell thirteen pounds of 10 rent sugar tor a dollar and then trusts the customer to be paid in a day or two yon know But my son the grocer gets oyer this greenness if he With a rashness which he never realized until too late he had kissed the Boston girl right on the mouth Never do that atrain sirC she said Miss Waldo said he if the Lord lata me thaw out this time I nerer will attempt the like again at least without an OTercoa Tm eave capitalists to Yenture competition RvOt Sxftm rs Ait aaaM aiaauill 28 by Bev curtj Frank Pepper ajnriauae cnyaer osaui 91 wis cuy OBIFFI BALDWIN In this dt ber 28 by Bev Dr Bcndder erifSn to Mabel tt Boldwla WILLIAMSON SMITH In this dty No srember 0 bv tuv Davis David AC WUllamsoo to Flcrence smith hath ef this dtr BILVA rASERBEBO IntMs dty ICovem bet 28 by Rev Bushier Joseph SQra to tea sagerDerg KTJFKE HARSlSCn In this dty November 25 by Jtev Buehlsr AnhurRapke to Mary itamlecb vnnruurvLiiti iMt dtv November 24 by Bev Bnehler Thomas Frahm so aorouieai aieyrr McHtJOH HEALEY laaAltdtyNovemoer 27 Coraeains atcunga to uuei atrnmn P0ND5vTltAGr IiTala llt for Fiks Cairns rUetsv tiso Braise fon SoMEyts irvatcanLx ion BCBIS SCSBUB58 PUBBrfCSa CDAP 1XUS STlSG OV LSSECrS PILES S02E EYES SOKE FCST The Wonder of Healing For FILES BUND 8LEEDEM or ITCH ror slwA UJSVWraDSBRtrre3Ea and sfSAld It is aneuaaled stociplng pala end heallnale a marTaloav planner ForiSliLAMED and BORE IYJ IM eCect upon these deUcata organs la simply FEMALE COMAtSrTS FOSTB EX TKAOT as to well knowals need with the MtMt baaeflt I ror CLcERB OLD BOBEa or OfEY 1 woCDTobTKACHE FA TEA CUE BITES OS Aaaovia suns ua ao Uon spoa these Is most remirlahle BECOKJIENDEO MrruYSICIANS USED IN HOSPITALS HEYWOOD SMITH MrxMRdPtiJ Eng And I han natl It with marked beaa PRESTOWl It Df BrooklyaTIT 1 know of no remedy so gasra iy tteefuk AKTH0 OUIHNEaa IX Jr 8 ef EpjUnl I have prescribed PONira SX tsau whi grees DEirais ENOEBBETSETf Jn th dtr Nov at tne tne cms osnis vm a A ni 1 VnKbrptaan asa Mrs Agnes Thomsen native of Xierway aged ASl The funaral wUl take place this day Saturday at Cdock from the OU re pits Bom Francisco sUKt Detweta Stockton and Powell jr DEVOE In this dty November 22 suddenly Senlamto Devoe a native ot New York City aged 71 rears nrlnendsaad acdualntAncai art respect fuuymvtted to attend the rnneral eervicae thi day iBatarday at 12 oclock at his lata residence 1118 PowHt street UleTment vnvateht Moonuia View Cest tery Oas lead FleaM soli flewiia wrotet Fot Bora Throat neoally what teodlBr to sletratlon I have lanndlt Very benetlolal ANDBE vY WHITE ex resident ofCor all CnlTersltysays One of the absolute neceesttlea of hottekisseni aasJB ra I oit oxirt EMMA ASSUTT toe ceieoratets pruuaa donna Valuable aad teosflcial la Bottles ealy Prtets Wc 1 KoU ear name a every wrapper and label rrtsartd ealy T03V iXTEACr CO NEW TOBt AND LONDOS UNITED UNDEKTAXEBS EMBALMING PARLORS Everything retmlsU mr nrstsaajs laaaran at raasosaoie raaea TrtghoneJlsrJaadWFJjgJgeeA yssrB8fe aiS SreJ vj5S sV ewwaSss jtauatfii Jfea 3rji ajPrsfeKfefc vj ag.

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About San Francisco Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
307,400
Years Available:
1865-1923