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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THUBSDAX;, JUNE 29, 1899, 3 AR LN RS s COLLECT AL [ his Proposition Now ' Being Considered. MAY REPLACE OLD WAGONS . MUCH TIME COULD BE SAVED WITH NEW APPLIANCES. Expects to Use the in Im- ges jeriments in relegraphy. K Automobliles n 1 Tice Depart- Y Washington. A pr & now under con- F rati b epartment. It is be- 1 txic ages will b the s . expedite 1 f mall and lessen the At T nt ns business section. As wre sorted k 1s can nts ont- 2 tr i3 1 1 the energy I >d for light- | ine r rating small 4 ¥ use of th sbiles will = 1 12 all out-of livery at the sta- rst trg chief sig- August n 8o constru the wireless d their use s with the necessity batteries in ordinary used fc th 2le- ! The power employe: aph in- ments will be of Washing- CHICAGO TO LICENSE ALL AUTOMOBILES Harrison artment to operators of vehicles pro- nd in the city of Bos- of the oupied One-half tor is un ADVERTISEMENTS. MEN And WOMEN, o And 0LD, s dlagram, for about one per- | five suffers from trouble, and nearly all such suf- e nature of the nges have taken heart tal error may the following period! cheeks or , fluttering akness of rtness of breath t and pain in side, a positive and has been 0 corrects ve symp HUDYAN s the heart 1s the brok- Men 11 HUD. HUDYA = N often cause func- | N promptly cur not keep HUDYAN, | UDYAN REMEDY 1 is and Market streets, § th Ell !You May Consult the Hudyan Doctors About Your Case Free of Charge. Call or| Write. | board, about a mile off the Point Judith | whistling | Columbia began to gain slowly on the YOUNG ° | of fifteen degrees. P | ATS DEFEND Race Reef to New London. e SHOWS WINDWARD POINTS | | ENTHUSIASTIC OVER EXHIBI- TION OF THE NEW BOAT. Erngo- The Weather Was Very Bad, but the Columbia Floated Like a Cork on Heavy Seas. >~ Epectal Dispatch LONDON, June 28.—In ty-mile beat to windward to- th vacht Columbia beat the old cup champion, Defender, eight minutes, be iving her a two-minute } df- Yachtsmen from New York and cht's to The Call NEW a th new outs are jubilant, for the y: 18 qualitie must come out in a ri to windward. Tt race was from ntons Reef Lightship, off Newport, o New London, a good thirty-eight les. The Defender was given a two- te start. Thirty-two miles of the stretch of water was a beat to iward, with such a Stiff breeze 1 neither yacht cared to ng topsail, and it was in the Colu of work that nbia long of a1 fas ough, but the n and did not buf Defender up quite a squall outsic nd put white crests « y De inner harbor isted anc shortly after 10 o'clock i ran down the east passage under jib. Her ma v out and ( down as far as knocked the Co- . bay while awaiting hauled she was le Hill, and the e lower Bren- along unde for 1 pretty heavy sea, along > crew of the Columbia hor at 11:15 o'clock, and far as C here the hawser was cast o *ht beat out to under tt The Defender lightship 1 and as the two yachts plunged 1 of spray were thrown into the om unde: bows and fell to leev weather was her threat at the start and a ht rain comp: d th crews of the ) yachts to don thir oilskins. The ¢ heavy, but lasted : all day. The Columbia ran up to the Defender rapidly and continued on the starboard tack until the light- | ship was passed. The Columbia v as at | 300 yards to the leeward of nder and half her length At 12 o’clock both boats tacked e ,und the lightship. They continued | along In this stretch for about five minutes, the Columbia luffing up to take a haul on the jib halyards. At 12:20 the Defender broke out her .l and the race was on, with the fender to the windward. At 12:30 both ships tacked to port, heading toward Point Judith and footing very fast. At first the Defender gained a trifle, but as they continued on this hitch the| Columbia crawled up slowly and but| for a shift of the wind more to the | south would have crossed the De-| | fend s bow on the next tack. THe shift in the wind helped the Dm. fender considerably and when at 1] o'clock the Columbia tacked to star-| he could have almost nder about, but the lat- ter tacked within a hundred feet of the | former under her lee bow Captain Barr could not stand having his wind taken by the Defender long, so he fetched about at 1 and stood up along shore on the port tack. Then the buc i1 the De Defender and at the same time got into the wind better. In_ tv e minutes the new boat d ss the Defender's bo With plenty of wind the Columbia and Defender held | n the shore on the port tack, the | inuing to gain. Off Noyes 20, the Columbia was over half mile ahead and steadily in- creased her lead and when she finall came about off the end of Fishers land, the distance between the two was nearly a mile. At 3:28 the Columbia took her final port hijtch, this time fetching well by Race Rock. The De- fender held on the starboard tack and then turned in after the ader. The | boats proceeded up the harbor and anchored. | PRINCE OF WALES acr the windward of her. LONDON, June 29. — The = Dally Chronicle this morning announces that the Prince of Wales has challenged Sir Thomas Lipton, the owner of the Shamroek, and that a race will be ar- ranged for the third week of July in| the Solent. OUTHAMPTON, June 28—At low tide this evening the Shamrock was apparently aground, with a list to port 1Will Open the Phoenix Mine. PHOENIX, Ariz., June 28.—The Phoenix | Gold Mining Company has made arrange- | ments to begin work upon the Phoenix | gold mine, located eighteen miles north of fhis city. This mine was worked years | ago and through poor management it was not successful. The ore is of a low grade, but the veins are iarge. The mine has not been developed to any depth, the work be- ing confined to a tunnel, which is run on a vein exposing a good body of ore. There is a seventy-stamp mill on the property and a small cyanide plant, which will be used in the operation of the mine. Colo- nel Willlam Christy of this city is presi- “tention betwec | until dent of the company which now controls the mine. ERRY FIGHT AT SM PEDRO Losing Side. g DEFEATED AT EVERY TURN SUCCESS WOULD KILL OTHER ENTERPRISES. | — | & People, Backed by Judge Stephens, Appear to Hold Winning Hand in the Struggle That Is Going On. SS o) Special Dispatch to The Call. St | LOS ANG SLES, June 28.—The vnn-: n the Terminal Railway Southern Pacific Railroad that is being fought out at San Pedro, that in its ¢t seeks to prevent the Hunt- ington interests from obtaining a ferry | franchise and a foothold on Terminal Island, this morning received a new | impetus in the hearing before the Board of Supervisors. The seaport | town of San Pedro entered the arena and jumped with bewildering sudden- ness into the very thick of the im- broglio and made an unexpected slash at the Huntington corporation that proved disastrous to the octopus. | and tk Jud A. M. Stephen: on behalf of the people of San Pedro, led the cru- sade. In his statements before the Supervisors the Judge referred to the legal features of the d cited the | ijx'.\ to show the in the event of the Ty franchise being granted another ¢ could not be operated within a bove or below, which he asserted considering the topographical feat- Pedro harbor amounted to ling over to Company an absolute monopoly. 1id further that San Pedro w operate a ferry across the bay and is about to begin proceedings to condemn L lan place on Southern Pacific per The granting of the proposed nel m{ would, he said, interfere with hi .” Judge Stephens said, “is osed to be fighting monopolies, not ring them. This franchise would absolutely clude any other ferry, | even a free one. Another could not be granted unless the grantee owned the landing place Opposing counsel regarded the grant- ing of this franchise as one of a public | character. | “I do not,”” replied Stephens. “I| should not consider it public unless it | were open to all the public all the time. | I think that a ferry operated for the | benefit of the passengers of one par- | ticular railroad could not be considered | as public.” | e efforts of the San Pedro people | avalled and the hearing was set over Friday. So far in these many contests for this franchise the Hunting- ton effort has at every stage been de- | teated. | FAVORED BY LOWNDES. Maryland’s Governor Will Attend the Anti-Trust Conference. ATUSTIN, Tex., June 28.—Governor J. D. | Sayers to-day received a letter from Gov- ernor Lowndes of Maryland on the sub- ject of the proposed anti-trust conference of Governors and Attorney Generals to be held in St. Louis September 20. He says “I am imp d with the importance of the proposed conference for the purpose | of taking Into consideration the effect | the business interests of the country | m the formation of trusts and to de- f possible, a line of legislation to dy the evils which it 1s generally | ed have resulted from such com- binations. I hope to be present at the conference with Attorney General Gal- ther. the Southern Pacific He suj fos 2l [ trol of the rafl KRUGER INSISTS ON ARBITRATION From Brentons|C. P. Huntington on the |Says It Is Essential to Any Settlement. Gisky CONTINUES PLANS FOR WAR — e IS BUYING PROVISIONS AND NEEDED MATERIAL. s HE | | Orange Free State Makes Sugges- tween the Transvaal and Great Britain. e " tions for a Compromise Be- Special Dispatch to The Call. LONDON, June 28.—The Johannesburg correspondent of the Standard : “President Kruger, it is understood here, persists In his demand for arbitration as an essential condition of an ettlement. In the meantime the Transvaal continues buying provisions and war material, and ranged with the etherlands Company to have absolute con- ay lines in the Orange e event of war.” é : Rallw ree State in th 1 Mall London el in th who are en route to the and trying to enlist money and men in support of the F PR between Pres member of th Orange B of « ‘it has dis- June 28.—The conference dent Kruger and Flischer, a ecutive council of the ate, who was the bearer ymise suggestions from the Free » in the matter of the disputes be- n the Transvaal and G Britain, 1s been concluded The 1 im- ssion {8 that Fischer's ission has been successful. He afterward conferred with Conyngham Green, the lomatic agent here. CAPE TOWN, June 28.—A meeting of four thousand_loyalists under the pre: dency of the Mayor of Cape Town was held here this evening and adopted with the greatest enthusiasm porting Sir Alfred Miiner, s eral of the colony, and British High Com- missioner in South Africa, In_his recent negotiations with President Kruger, and thanking the Canadians and Australians for their offers of assistance. An immense overflow meeting was also held. Right Hon. SIr John Gordon Sprigg former Premier of the colony, addressad the meeting, declaring that uniess Sir Al- fred Milner was absolutely supported there was danger that the Cape Colony would de from the empire. He do- clared himself convinced that Great Brit- as solldly behind the Imperial Sec- ary of State for the Colonles, Joseph Chamberlain, whose recent spe re the Unionists of Birmingham, dealing with the Transvaal problem, he warmly commended, JAMES DIER HAS FLED. Disappearance of the Wocdchopper Suspected of Killing Lorraine. SAN RAFAEL, June who was recently arrested on suspicion of murdering old “Pete” Lorraine in Car- son Canyon, the “Black Hole of Marin,” British dip- befc has managed to evade the vigilance of Deputy Sheriff Charles Allen, fled the country. Dier was re leased because the evidenc not strong enough to con Lorratne's body ered. He the was placed under charge of Deputy Sheriff Allen and permitted to re- | sume his work on Laguitas Creek. John Enos came to town to-day and Informed Sher!ff Taylor that Dier had taken belongings and fled late last evening. This act of Dier has convinced the authorities more firmly than ever of the man’s guilt, and no effort will be spared to apprehend nd bring him back. The search for the m resumed. A, Reconstructing Yuba’s Courthouse. MARYSVILLE, June 28.—The work of reconstructing the Yuba City Court- house, destroyed by fire two months ago, commenced In earnest this morning. Contractors have most of the new lum- ber on the site, and by to-morrow will have a large force of men at work. his | sing man’'s body will also be actively | England, | 28.—James Dier, | remained undiscov- | e i CROKER'S FIGHT AGAINST SHEEHAN Office Holders Have Been Threatened. SR LAW R DISTRICT ATTORNEY WILL BE ASKED TO ACT. Ll If He Does Not Governor Roosevelt May Be Requested to Remove the Derelict Official From Office. R PRIMARY VIOLATED Speclal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, June 28.—The fight be- tween the Croker and Sheehan forces has become so bitter, it was learned yester- day, that the legal machinery of the county may be invoked to see that both sides have fair pl Tt is openly as rted by Mr. Sheehan's friends that they are being threatened with rem from office unless they join in an effort to depose him as Tammany District. are being Assembly it is added, leader in the N The same methods, resorted to by Croker men in’other dis- | tricte, where the fight is on. Under the corrupt practices act, as it | now stands, it is a crime to attempt to | dictate the action of a voter in a primary election by using influence either for or against that voter with those who control the city departments. Mr. Sheehan's friends declare that this openly, however, that they to invoke the prosecuting power of the county to interfer Colonel Attor- iner as District or fails to prosecute tb will be made against holders and leaders it is & 1 positively that Governor Roos velt will be asked to remove the Distri Attorney for neglect of dut Friends of M: gaged In the work mentary evidence aga < and office-holde I learned yesterday, 2 Grand Jury's consideration affidavits many persons who declare they dered to join in the fight against Sheehan’s friends under penalty of be dismissed from public service if they fa ed i do SHOT BY HIGHBINDERS. SAN JOSE, June 28.—In a battle with highbinders in Chinatown about midnight Deputy Sheriff Bache was shot in the left side and severely wounded. Late last evening word came Sheriff’s office that a party had come down from San Fr: the purpose of killing Lee On president of the Sing tong. ford, with Deputies Anderson and Bache, went to Chinatown and secreted them- selves in Lee On Poon’s house. When the highbinders arrived the tered the house by means of an alley when they caught sight of the officers ai Lee On Poon they opened fire. In an in- he lights in the place went out and a fusillade followed in the darkness, the highbinders finally dispersing. Blood stains where they stood showed that some were wounded. One was seen to fall be- fore the lights went out. Later five Chi nese were arrested on suspicion. are believed to be part of the gang that came from San Francisco. e St Does Not Favor Hoarding Gold. If ne: Ga r. Sheehan are actively en of obtaining docu- Tammany lead t . It is their purpose, to prepare for_the o to the for the \isco LONDON, June 28.—Sir Michael Hicks- | Beach, addressing the London merchants and bankers to-night, said that although alarm was expressed that the fe d_passed from 1 States and Great Britain to the of highbinders | | world-wide interest will be made in thi E CALL AND THE NEW YORK HERALD . ] WILL FULLY TEST SIRMELIS SERUM Louisiana Health Board to Use It. — | Special Dispatch to The Call NEW YORK, June 28.—Through the | agency of the Herald experiments of | country with Dr. Giuseppe Sarane serum for prevention and cure of yel- low fever—experiments the usefulness | of which are doubly great from the standpoint of the United States now that it is necesary to keep American troops in islands where yellow fever may be a greater menace than a hos- tile army. The Herald received some days ago | a cable dispatch from Count Malherbe, | Russian Consul at Montevideo, who has acquired Saraneli's serum, and offered to the Herald 300 or more bot- | tles of it to be used in experiments in Louisiana with a view to having its properties subjected to a test under Qherift Tang. | Proper auspices, and in hope that the | great claims made for the serum might They | Russia, he did not acquiesce in the sug- gestion that steps be taken to accumulate | and hoard gold in Great Britain. -—— Indictment of an Attorney. SAN JOSE, June 28.—This afternoon the | Grand Jury found an indictment for em- | bezzlement of funds of the Faull estate | against S. B. Terrill, an attorney. Four other. indictments for forgery and em- bezzlement had previously been returned, and Le is now in jail awaliting trial. =l Yol Tl 17 a7 Vel Yal YU Yot Ye¥ Yef Y=f Jet Yol Yot Yt 1=l Jot Yol Tal ¥oi' Yot ¥e¥ Jo¥ a0 el 3el 3=l = el jel el el fel } WHY DREYFUS HAS NOT YET BEEN LANDED. P e B AR G S O e A o ] ONDON, June 29.—The Paris corre- spondent of the Daily News says: An official of the Navy Department tells me that the Bfax, which {s bringing Dreyfus back from Devils Island, has been kept going to and fro like a phan- tom ship. It would never have done to 4land Drevfus until the Ministry was well . ¢ (5 “““%@3” Rennes, Where Dreyfus Will Be Tried. S S S e O S e e i e S o o in_office. RENNES, June 28.—The official list of the composition of the Dreyfus court- martial, which is to assemble In the Army Service building for the re-trial of the prisoner, is ag follows: President, Colo- nel Jouaust; Major Brongniast, artillery; Maior de Breon. artillery; Major Profllet. artillery; Major Merle, artillery; Captain Parfait, artillery; Captaln Beauvais, ar- tillery. All” the members of the court-martial have passed through the Polytechnic School. Mme. Dreyfus arrived here to-day. There was no demonstration on the part of the inhabitants. be justified and great benefit conferred upon the world at large. Realizing the importance of the mat- ter the Herald at once accepted Count Malherbe’s offer and communicated in turn with the Louisiana State Board of Health. | Dr. Edmond Souchon, president of | that board, it is said, will accept the serum and use it when an opportunity affords. He does not believe, however, | that yellow fever is a great menace | this summer, and that if the fever does break out there may be a diffi- | culty in properly testing the serum’s | efficiency, since he regards it as a pre- | ventive on] Nothing would be | i e the patient to whom it tered escaped the scourge. In view of the importance of losing no chance to enter upon experiments | which might prove of priceless value, he says the board for which he speaks will undertake the work. When Surgeon General Wyman of | Washington was interviewed by a Herald reporter regarding the use of the Saraneli discovery as a protection against and cure for yellow fever he | expressed great interest. As to the effi- cacy of the serum he does not feel at liberty to speak in advance of the Yel- low Fever Commission appointed by | the President, consisting of two bac- | | teriologists of the Marine Hospital ser- vice, who have just completed their | work and are now preparing their re- | ports. Rights of Way Deeded. | MARYSVILLE, June 28. — James O’'Brien, S. M. Call, John Walsh, T. W. | Peckham, W. F. Foster and Gus Nie- | mann have deeded rights of way to the Yuba Electzic Power Company over their fcothill lands. e Grand Jury Report Circulated. MARYSVILLE, June 28.—One thousand | copies of the report of the Grand Jury | of Yuba County have been printed and | are being distributed throughout (the county at the expense of the Taxpayers' League, a reform organization. S SV Cyrus Wakefield in Distress. | LONDON, June 28.—The ship Cyrus | Wakefield, from New York for San Fran- cisco, put into Stanley Islands June 18, slightly damaged, and it was reported that Captain Henry, who had sailed in her, was dead. | and a special | barn on the Woodward SQUARE . NEW _YORIK, B o e . ADVANCE CUARD OF TEACHERS One Delegation From Colo- rado Has Arrived at Los Angeles. S Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, June 28.—The advance guard of the thousands of teachers and others interested in educational matters who are coming to this city to attend the Nationa! Educational Association's con- v i areived w-Gay. The delegation which arrived consisted of 125 people, principally teachers of ths schools of Colorado Springs and Puebl Col. They comprise about half of the Colorado delegatio: Professor H. ' S, Phillips of the Logan School of Denve : ¥ was In charge of the delegation. t consisted of five Pullman touri [ es. One of the coaches was dropped at Santa Fe, N. M., for a slde trip, and will arrive here to-morrov The remainder of the Colorado delegs tion is expected to arrive here t also by way of the Southern Ps cutting off at Sacramento and coming di- rectly here. The train which arrived to-day was met at San Bernardino by a delegation from the Chamber of Commerce of this clty and arrangements completed for their en- tertainment. The trip was made without incident ‘aid the members of the party enjoyed greatly: the ride over mountain and plain. During the convention the city is to he decorated in a lavish manner in much the same artistic and effective manper as. it has been during the annual Fiesta de Las Angeles. Delegations are to meet each incoming train bearing delegates at the depots, and distribute among them fruits-and flowers, and accord them a heart ome. The city has been canvassed and.a generous fund raised, which is placed in the hands of the Chamber of Commerc tional Educational Asso- ciation Committee, for the entertainment of the visitors during their stay here. The Colorado delegation will open head- - quarters at the Hotel Westminster. Pro- or Phillips, the Colorado State Direc- | tor of the National Educational Associa- pull to have the enver. tion, will make a hard next convention held in GOEBEL HELD UPPER HAND TO THE LAST LOUISVILLE, K June 28.—The Dem- ccratic State Convention adjourned to- night after nominating the following ticket: Governor, William Goebel of Kenton County. Lieutenant Governor, J. C. W. Beckham of Nelson County. = Secretary of State, Breck Hill of €lay. County. Attorney General, Judge R. G. Breck- enridge of Boyle County, Auditor, Gus Coulter of Graves County Treasuzer, Judge S. W. Haeger of B County. : Commissioner of Agriculture, I B. Nall | of Louisville. mmissioner of Public Instruction, H. McChesney of Livingston County. William Goebel dominated to-day’s pro- ceedings, as he has those of every day since the convention began. / i it i Fire on Victoria Island. STOCKTON, June 28.—Fire on Victoria Island this morning destroved a large ranch, togeéther with about fifteen tons of hay and twenty head of horses. The animals belonged to Chinese who were farming the land. ottty Advances made on furniture and pianos, with or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission, 0000000000000 000090 0000 WHAT for the administration of chloroform, have given universal satisfaction. thing up to date. license to practice. Of late we have seen destroyed and mouths disfigured for life, AYS, commencing June 17: EXTRACTION, 23¢;: CR¢ PAINLESS TLLI F R. R. L. OWNS, D OBDONTUNDER! It Is a Safe and Dead Sure Remedy for the Painless Extraction, Filling and Treat- ment of Teeth. We know you have been seversly shocked by electricity. ‘We know you have felt the evil effects of gas. ether and other anaesthetics, ‘Why not discard the whole lot and adopt some- Beware of students and men running dental parlors who have no people on flle in our office, also the fakers who performed the work. mit to you at our office a list of the unlawful practitioners, so you may be protected against these fakers. For the purpose of guote below @ few prices to jnduce you to try our methods. . 82.00 to EXTRACTION, 50e; PLATES, NGS, 25¢; REMOVABLE BRIDGEWORK, WALSH, 8153 GEARY ST., Bet. Hyde and Larkin. Office hours, 9 a. m. ISIT? We realize that you have paid dearly @ none of which numerous cases where teeth have been | and have the names of these unfortunate @ We can sub- introducing our painless dentistry we PRICE LIST FOR %0 10.00; £3.00 to 812.50; .00 per Tooth. to 5 p. m. | oo 00000