The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 28, 1899, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1S899. MANIEA 1S HOW AIRLY CLEAN S Good Work Done American Officers. | | A et . NATIVES AT FIRST OBJECTED NO INTERFERENCE IN KOREA STILL IN EFFEC by Japan’s Agreement With Russia. BHoE S { INTERESTING INTERVIEW WITH DOCUMENT FULLY RECOGNIZES LIEUTENANT EBERLY. ITS INDEPENDENCE. Sl - Aguinaldo’s Supply of Ammunition Under the Circumstances No Fear of a Rupture Is Entertained in Diplomatic Circles of Europe. Being Rapidly Cut Off by the Thirteen Small Gun- boats. ng € has E: recejved N the Philippt w n the. diplomatic qu rings s ¢ letails of the sit- Chiefly ind it is pointed out a. Lieutenant Eberly says | that ordiale was arranged be- 1 the s ditions tyear conc Manila ar s arrangement has b desired AL s ormosa ¢ % hetween them the vernment mutually ga to the counsel not Russia or Japar or the nominati unci Attending of Jar 1 L will' not interf t omme MORTGAGE PLACED ON COLLEGE GROUNDS University of the Pacific Issues 2 Bonds in the Sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars. wan ammu and making impr NO AGREEMENT ON NIGRA’S AMENDMENT Peace Conferegce Still Debating on Privileges of Non-Signatory Powers. UP THE HIGHEST PEAK. Mount Lowe Scenic Railway Will concile the de Be Extended. fote that non-signatory powe S : ] tled to adhere to the arbitration conven L ] 2 ion only by the unanim N o Mou atory powers and t Rai eral Mana Count Nigra, head Torranc to continue the M tion, permitting such z in if nc \e apex of the highe atte however, wer e el ary confere lopted the pre- by next spring and ng with the laws : ad will reach. an aufl the o "‘;\'“,'.”“v]’-‘r’] st This will glve the | fhe two conventions were definitely adopt- still and awa ration scheme 1 PesselS e FISHERMEN FIGHT. General Melee Follows a Quarrel Over Great ¥ sion to the pl SANTA CRUZ, July Z.—Great pr ions are for the entertain- a Woman. be members of, the Young Men's|| | ASTORIA, July A desperate fight 1 ons of the Grand | between Greek fishermen occurred in the which will held in Sunta | Tough quarters of the city shortly before week commencing Au. | midnight. The men, about twenty in committee met last | number, were in a dance hall, and two of crtainment has been ‘pro- | them became involved in a quarrel over i h woman. The others took sides and a yeninE Ciring the e neral melee ed. The men retired 1l of the street, where knives, clubs and fists s been | were used. A telephone messa nas been <quad of police to the scene Stitute” will meet on | all the fighters were arrested.’ B e T o Scat. hibg.| times in the back and nd is report- Bishon Mafi. | €d to be in a precarious ’conditi At Tt P OBt | midnight phvsicans w \ding him pc the evening | Jut i js impossible to state whether or not i y the pe will live ral.other men are said to oung Ladies’ In- have been stabbed, but their injuries probably will not result fatally. e AT Reception to Secretary Wilson. Cambrian Mine Development. JEACI MBNTD. July S ek e SACRRILT . Tuy The stamps e il mber 1 of the new ten-stamp mill at the Cam- it e o Geom A1 | hrian mine near Coloma began dropping A on Dehalf of thy|on Saturday last on ore from the '150-foot B S Ty level of the mi The Cambrian is a nerce and the citizens of | new mine, lying west of the mother lode, invite him to stop over and is both a gold and copper proposition. It he stops It is owned by Colorado people, who have Mr. h done much development work on the prop- welcome a erty during the past eighteen months and on behalf of the | who I opened a large body of ore, and the State much of it of high grade. The situation down the of the mine on the west slope of Mount Runyon of Thompson makes its facilities for the California | hgndling of lo ade « almost ideal. ion. iy NSRS Farmers Tap a Reservoir. GRS G D, BOISE, ldaho, July 27.—Farmers near ~The schooner Se- | yajley have had considerable trouble ob- 1 arrived here | uining enough water to irrigate their s took fire (yone” Much of their land is parched and Is wharf shortly before | crops are ruined. A party of armed was considerably damaged | farmers yesterday proceeded to the res could. ot to her. voir of Tiptop Mill and burst it open, a is not known. lowing the water to run down the cre to the forec to their lands. The mining company louse superintendent says the break will be had judt begun | paired, but the farmers declare they Was not injred. ‘Fhe | not permit the workmen to touch it. Crbdieiil e Bell-Dresser Nuptials. ym $1090 to $000. pite for a Murderer. PA, Jul Sdward S. Bell, the July sistant T rict Attorney of this county Prather at 7 o'clock this evening. g vas around town to-day Teceiving con. ¥ of execution in the case of tulations. He quietly went to San ", who was to have been incisco last night and married one of row morning for the murder of the popular school teachers of this coun p A\splund. Argument of the case con- Miss Jessie er. They were married Sumed four hours, and Judge Prather held | by Dr tephen’s Church. The that the appeal United States left to-day for a honeymoon journey, preme Court from ted . States which will include Monterey and Los An' Hanford's denlal of a_writ of habeas geles and extend over several weeks. corpus acts as a stay. Webster will prob- — ably live another year at the expense of George L. Jenkins Dead. 8 Y e o A MARYSVILLE, July 2..—Word has been Held for Manslaughter. recefved from Oakland that George L. 2 g .. | Jenkins, the veteran mail route contrac- SALT LAKE, July 27.—In the prelimin- | {eP 0% 00 CCTR0 oS olty. T LA is dyin ary trial of J. H. Benbrook, charged with | at that place. He had arranged for his killing Bert Morris last week, Justice | funeral here and named the secretary of Pardee to-day held the prisoner for man- | his Masonic lodge, an old friend, as' the slaughter and fixed his bond at §20,000. _ | person to read the burlal service. ENTENTE CORDILE, MOST IMPORTANT - ALASKAN LANDMA CANADA MAY NOT BE CONSULTED 'IN SETTLEMENT) —S8ir | Lau ier's reply, “I know nothing about to The Call spondent’s re- vesterday that he the proposition to give Canada a free port TTAWA, July Charle Tupper and Senator David Milis Minister of Justice, in interviews | with The Call correspondent, in- | that, quesi corre discuss HELD CAPTIVE IN - MEXICAN DUNGEON ! Justice Demanded for e b | |2 1] H. C. Faulkner. ) ® : —~ | $ i"UNCLE SAM TAKES UP CASE . | ‘ & o | STE | b + | INSISTS THAT HE BE TRIED AT 1 - ONCE. 2 & e A [ % 4 The Prisoner Accused of Responsi- | ! @ pility for the Drowning of | l z Two Men in El Oro p | Mine. | P ® ‘ sl e | 3¢ ;1 Special Dispatch to The .Call. +\ REDWOOD CITY, July 27.—The frienc ‘ | of H. C. Faulkner at this place have just i received intelligence from the Department | : 110t State, Washington, that the American | s @ | Embassador at the City of Mexico had ! € |been given instructions to ' Investigate ! & | Faulkner's case and bring about his ¢ ¢ | prompt trial or release on bond. & | Faulkner is the American who was act- 4 | ing as engineer at El Oro mine in Mexico | i in June last when Superintendent Lloyd | 4nd another man were drowned in the | cage let down into the mine. He was given orders to let the cage down until # | he received a signal to stop and a place 4 | was marked on the indicato which he & | could lower the cage with safety. He + |lowered to this point, but on receiving no & |signal suspected something wrong and 4 stopped the cage. Upon examination it ? | was diseovered that th ntendent 3 ) i thrown the sigi rope md reach Y ¢ | of the cage and that the cage was sub: & |merged in water and its occupants ! drowned. < | “Faulkner was arrested and thrown into a cell with persons most degraded | ! + | type. He was refuse and could 7 < get no satisfaction from the Embassador at the City of Mexico. He wrote to friends 1 P ¢ |at this place and also sent a statement of i i - & | his case to Secretary Hay at Washington. . The New Eddystone. in the Mouth of Behm Canal, as Pictured ;| Redwood "Clty _ friends intercsted | mselves in his behalf and wrote to the ? i i i ® | 8 ie S| zton. answer to | by Vancouver in 1793 (Published in London, 1801). authoriti hington, T answer o . 3 ary Hay E i s been received: ® hadian claim that the framers of the Anglo-Russian treaty of 1825, by which the boundary between what is & | gecn i arlan ey LAl ska and British America was fixed, substituted by mistake Portland canal for Behm ecanal, which lies some ¢ | tier of A et rolatton tonthe ims les to the west, in defining the course of the boundary north from parallel 34 degrees 4) minutes to parallel 3 de- | ment In Mexico of H. C. Faulkner. an ind no good standing. n zen. A letter dated the 19th ultl- iccurate maps made by t explorer Vancouver, based on careful and extended surveys of the three chan- t ]m““:\‘»l‘lu‘h “(,n?\vl‘ v:;})) ;li\:v' h‘:m‘]‘lrx’.’..l _”:\\x:‘(l\h t north from Dixon entrance, througn which runs parallel 54 degrees 40 minutes, from which the bound- ¢ a5 o s cane alen ans O ethe S sce ) the north.” and the pictured landmarks thereon, with fuil and definite description of each, left no‘ ¢ vet rea In _reply to vour r mist the pari of the British treaty kers, who had all this data and had no other from English sources ® ave to \’lg;l,.Y llr'x:;:{)rlmlx\'.‘.; them on which to 1 their agreement with Russia. Vancou sailed into Observatory Inlet, the most eastern and ¢ on Jun, was addressed to Jortest of the three arms of Dixon entrance the north, established an’ observatory station on the shore informing hin A copy of bis letter and made persenally a careful survey of that inlet land canal, lying next to the west, and_of Behm . canal, still | JHneG L e e farthest west. which he found only encircled an island and did not extend into the mainland at all. He found Portland § Slporner e canal, whic \med in honor of the noble fami ntinck, to be about seventy miles long and to reach nearly to { | and meanwhile tor “Mr + parallel rees north (54 degrees 45 minutes he ending in a long marsh, which he did not explore. Behm canal, $ | prompt trial bond - | 7 wh med in honor of the Russian Cofmodore Behm, who had been very kind to them in Kamschatka some @ |dlent servant, SR e put down as running up to parallel 0 minvtes. then southwest again into Clarence Strait at ¢ 4 : : : 5 { ¢ par 30 minutes, mapping and desc terms which in no sense allow the fitting to it of the language ‘a&\-mf.'yl.'{"r:'.lrl \;Tx::'lr\"}?‘..‘:.(ifln:,'-")';;fnt'.x,'.‘.f, 1‘:1 5 in the of 18 hich says that from crees 40 minutes “the said line shall ascend to the north 4 | prisoned is learned from & Mexican news- 4 along the chaunel called Portland canal as far as the pc of the continent where it strikes the fifty-sixth degree of north haper recently received. Faulkner had Ja o | been employed at El Oro mine but a short 5 In the face of Vancouver's maps and picturcs and descriptions thereof the Canadians will have to abandon the Behm- $ | time “n‘»;nil:x.‘.‘l‘.i‘.l]‘p.'\;‘m;.;‘\:lrir\m‘ e was ' lanad changeling story. & | not acquaintec e s of an e Ea 4 | gineer at such a place. The authoriti 5 5 OO0 5 : claim that the deaths were due to criminal (Faaasheasaseaas o *OT OO OO O+ 0400609004940+ -+@|carclessness. When Superintendent Lioyd aft he told the ble to hot- started to go down the s engineer that it would be impc live more than fifteen minates at the and to hold himself in readin tom to hoist the cage as soon as the sig as given. The s was not given and be- cause it was not Faulkner allowed the cage to remain in the shaft several hours. When the body of the superintendent was taken home his wife went hopelessly in- | bury has taken the matter entirely out | sane. Further advices are expected at of the hands of the Colonial Office. any time, | It is thought highly improbable that [l;’x_o British Government is pursuing hi MURDERER LUETGERT | R = ! cou nd the general disposition | dicate that whatever may bethe | |\ 1oy Canal, has been much dis- to inferpret Sir Wilfrid's reply as | DIES IN HIS CELL hope of compromise in London and | cu AR S O e differ. | A1 evasion of adirect answer to the | Washington there s none here ence of opinion as te what interpreta- | Si SWitrian guEh It is evident from | Chicago Wife-Slayer Succumbé {o whatever compromise may be acce > Ao ‘Wilfrid's discussion of the subject g s ki B tion ought to be put upon it. If of arbitration that he is still inclined | Fatty Degeneration of the BypGreat Britain. shop:iof e s Wilfrid meant it to be understood as | to stand up for the Canadian conten- | Heart. f Pyramid Harbor and a v;\;»n!.\' declaring that he really knew: nothing |tion that the entire boundary line ques. | JOLIET, L. July 2 doloh B Tuct strip bacle tq) the undisputed Cax about the pending negotiations between | 10N should be submitted to arbitration, | gert, the wealihy Chicago sausage maker, ritory, will have to be forced doWn | {}0 State Department and the Brit ‘,]ff“.‘{"\‘"f"] that he will eventually | who was serving a life sentence in the la's throat. e W ol oy o e nyeoo i o sr;]chy:.,‘n‘p penitentiary In.‘rv»‘ r.,\lr mrl nmr‘(llvr .‘lr his Jul Sir Wilfrid | nificant and shows that Lerd Salis- srnme T ¥ his h wife, was found dead in his cell to-day | i i 5 SInmentiand the United Stafes Drs. Werner and O'Malley held a post - . : -~ | mortem examination. Dr. O'Malley says 5 pt R 5 . degeneration of | and equip the lattér's proposed railroad | Luetgert dled from fatty degeneration of from Morterey (o Eiollister by Taly 1 do !'ho heart. Dr. O'Malley found that the and the construction company, through | | heart was surrounded by a great m ' its president, C. R. Eager, signed a bond | fat, ».u\r‘l that it w really \r:rhn:[n. for lHquidated damages of $100,000 in case | considering the condition nf' the h ; of nc fultillment of contract. The limit |h’:11 death had not come long | _l'nr:- thi. | of time having expired the ilroad com- The trial of Imf!ur_ V‘ in ‘( hi flf Ahl:i pany is now taking action, and the litiga- tracted wide attention and was one of the | tion will, it is asserted, develop many | most_sensational In the history of the | | facts in connection with the enterprise, St ’Iu‘w\::n;:—il :]~ :”l‘l.a[rhku' W :“\n;.nr‘ which has hung f f.u the past six years. | s e atiaty ind .m.k.’n the hwli\ inav !” | The prosecution hac it ‘ew =£ma i f s bones as evidence that its theory was | Enrigue Rivere Landed BURIED SITTING IN Union Bank Affairs in a | comect but obtained a conviction and a'| in Jail. | HER FAVORITE CHAIR ~ Hopeless Tangle. | """ — . —_—— e = o | Reception to the Boston. | R OF A FAMOUS BAND Mys. George S. Norton Interred in | e | VALLEJO, July 27.—The Merchants’ / 1 LEADE Strict Accordance With Her | " s tion has rted a movement to give | LEITH 0 | Dying Wishes. NO END T0 THE L'T!GATIOan Boston a rousing welcome on her | | PAWLING, N. Y., July_27.—Mrs. George | i s STOLE A SAFE AT MARIEL AND & Norton was interred This afternoon in | PROCEEDINGS NOW BROUGHT ON | seotmmm Camphell. Roe, 1t B | Pawling Cemetery in strict accord, with | sey. Lynch and Devlin_was appointed to | \ DLVADED R CoTy. her strange dying wishes. The body, | ASSIGNED CLAIMS. Toake Arrangements. Various plans were | e A | seated in her favorite rocking-chair an =g suggested. but it was finally decided to | | reception and parade on the | ave a public inclosed in a great square hox of white . Says the Theft Was Planned by | 5t 2 "W lirge family ice. | Under Present Conditions Years Will | day of arrival, with & smoker and vaude- | Major Acosta of the Cuban | chest, w s hn;‘n‘w‘ [r::_mnn:~: 1:\\::“‘_0 _:_::o Elapse Before the Patrons of banquet to the officers in the evening. | L R S B vehicie had anything but a funeral aspect, | the Institution' Get Back From the Klondike. | ‘Was No Danger. | for the body of a rich green hue and Their Money. = e 2 i | | the wheels brilliant yellow, with a striping STANFORD UNIVERSITY, July 27.— TS | of the same bright colors all over the —.— Stuart Cotton. Stanford visited the Special Dispatch to The Call. | 3 =l Bhasla T s | university to-day. He has just returned ped v lx:‘"n'{’!;10':7‘“;"‘_“;‘3" RoEtonie DECIALIT) suetiht opThe- Call | from the Klondike, where he was quite hief of Police > geaal e ¥ 0. SAN JOSE. July 7. - : successful in the way of finding nuggecs. o . appeared in his every-da NS SE. July 27.—Luis Argues, B. 8. | 21 . rapta a0 as captured Enrique | i WREON SOREATCE 1, Monly somber | Hurlburt, F. F. Britton, H. T. Besse and | Cotton was cantain and tullback on the vere, the ringleader of the banditti en- | {ouch to the whole was furnished by J. H. | C. W. Childs, the executive committee of | Yo Gott for the Kiondfie fuct after b gaged in the recent safe robbery at Ma-| Pearce, the undertaker. who sat beside | the depositors of the Union Savings Bank, | graduation, and reports seeing Nat Carle. riel. Rivere was taken In a ruined build- 1‘.{[""?;‘({.{ clad in the customary dress of }ru-dny began another suit against that the famous )z‘:mrd of Stanford teams, in g on a p ,.?:\ll:'”rl\n? ;]m :;‘;:‘m:;:h;;n:;l‘ l':f HElohale o dtennd witn! alwHite ailic | nx;::;.:lxx H’(':Unn{. 1)1 .F‘h,:mxg?( Onithe | Sumeaw Blagias, - S o [ ! Y andit | coverlet with blue figures, which had been | e s of about 700 depositors | o ) % Chief ays he was asked by Major Jose | waried To Mres Noston's. geandmother | Aalnst the Union Savings Bank for about | Santa Clara Mine Improvements. Acosta of the Cuban army to help raid and which she desired to have buried with | $320,00, ranging in amounts from 320 to| PLACERVILLE, July 2I.—Hayward & Marlel, and was told that there was no | her. In her lap was a strawberry shrub, | nearly that many thousands. J. R. Welch | Lane, who recently bonded the Santa | danger in the enterprise. 3t“r_rlt]-ngxult__\mr‘l;u\\‘pr_ddr_:;w;dbw?.lh:‘“;m::;?l is the attorney. The complaint states Clara mine near Kelsey from McGraw & | Acosta, according to Riverc's tale, took | DUt a it the servic ad and | the defendants have demanded this money | C0, for $30.000, are erecting a steam hoist | him to the Cuban barracks, where the | At the geave the ropes became entan- | but have failed to obtain any of it. D et fo . el | plot was arranged with Sergeant Formin | gled, and Mr. Norton cut them to save This is the seventh suit brought by the nuG thorough exploitation of the prope costa iment and five or six oth-| time. Then a lot of earth displaced by | organized depc and the ¢nd is not orty. The mine is a mother lode proper workmen's feet had to be shoveled out of the grave to allow the bluestone slab with which the vault was to be | lowered to its level three feet below the soil and cemented. : . OLYMPIA WILL LEAVE TRIESTE NEXT TUESDAY Dewey’s Health Is Greatly Improved. Funeral of Sailor Isaac Arms wer ph wires were supplied the men and the cut by order of Acos The party arrived at Mariel at 8 o'clock sted in in the evening, and all hand: carrying the safe some distance away, where it was opened with an axe, each man helping himself to some of the money it contained. On their return the Cuban quarters in G in the morning. Rivere arty arrived at the 3 o'clock s that he de- livered a portion of the money he had secured to Acosta and some to Major Bul- | Rack. ner, and he believed that others of the | Special Cable to The Call and the New York party gave money to Bulner. Herald Copyrighted, 1 by James Gor- When the first man concerned in the| don Bennett d was arrested Acosta ordered all the | TRIESTE, July 2.—Admiral Dew ers of the band to get as far away | whom 1 saw this morning on board the anajay as possible. savs that Acosta stole many and hor and also had a plan to rob the hotel at Guanajay. Olympia, is much improved since he came to Trieste. He came ashore for a drive this afternoon.. Some of the officers of | the Olympia_have’ gone to Venice and others into the interior. The funeral of Isaac Rack, a sailor of the Olympia, who died in the hospital | CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SUED. | Monterey and Fresno Railway Al- leges Breach of Contract. | milita Tuesday. honors. The Olympia safls on MONTEREY, July 2.—The Monterey | -— and Fresno Railway Company of Califor- Aeronaut Drowned. nia has, through its president, A. W. HINSDALE, Mich., July %.—Bert Kim- Jones, brought action in the Superior | ball, an aeronaut of North Adams, Mich., Court of Monterey County against the was drowned this afternoon at Bawbees California_Construction Company of San | Park. HIs parachute dropped in the mid- o | dle of Baw Lake. Francisco for §1517 81, and interest from | March 1, 1899, which it is alleged is the preliminary to other actions involving over 3230000 which the railroad company | and_Eastern parties will at once begin | p against the California Construction Com- | pany for violation of contract and fnr-{ R feiture of bonds - | | "In November last the California Con-| quille River struction Company entered into a con-| " Schr Repeat, Olsen, 5 days from Willapa | tract with the raliroad company to build | Harbor. 4 LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Thursday, July 27. Schr Nettle Low, Low, 5 hours from Point aled to be | here, takes place to-morrow morning with | Schr Conflanza, Christensen, 5 days from Co- | vet. Another and others W found in the ortly to be filed shaft recently sunk. 8 and very high-grade ire being considered. Besides, bottom of the 50-foot the stockholders a week ago decided to S investigate the affairs of the bunk with Fowler Elected Commander. | a view to placing eriminal charges against | SAN LUIS OBISPO, July 2i.—The Cen- some of the old board of directors. “ 13 Veteran Assocts : | “Nearly ‘six months have elapsed sinde | tral California Veteran Association has the Union Savings Bank closed its doors, | (losed its third annual encampment at | and the depositors have not yet recefved | Arrovo Grande. J. D. Fowler of San one cent. A 5 per cent dividend has been | Luis Obispo was elected commander for promised on their accounts in August by the ensuing A R. R. Kirkpatrick of the directors. Judgment has been ob- | Estrelia, senfor vice commander; G. A. talned against a number of the small | John of Arroyo Grande, junior vice com- stockholders for their prodrata liability, | mander. | but this will be appealed. At the rate the e | settlement is going cars will elapse Missing From San Rafael. | hefore the depositors will receive .more : FAE o7, : Wals | than a very small part of their savings, | N RAFAEL, July 27—Larry Walsh | No attention has been pald by the | has disappeared and his relatives fear for | stockholders to the $10 a share. levied, and but two men hav a sments, but his safety. Walsh had been working on | the foundation of a building in the Forbes | Addition. Last Tuesday at 10:30 n'(‘lock{ ment | paid their | 210 going into the bank from this sourc | in the morning he quit work and disap- + There is great dissatisfaction among | peared, leaving his coat and lunch bucket | | the depositors over the management of | behind. | the insolvent bank. President J. W. Rea, | | who owes the bank $3000, has not paid*this | indebtedness, nor have Directors Simpson and Dunlop paid the several thousand dol- lars they owe. There is no harmony in | the directorate, and President Rea, who | has been used to running politics, carries | }lh!ngs with a high hand. —_——— | British Columbia Official Resigns. | VANCOUVER, B. ., July 27.—A private | telegram from Victoria says: Hon. Joseph Martin, Attorney General, has resigned | both his office and seat in Parliament as | a result of a Government caucus, last - ~ | night. | STEAMER MISSING. . [ City of Chicago, With Fourteen Men | | Aboard, Is Overdue. | SEATTLE, July 27.—A rumor which has | not vet been confirmed was in circulation | here to-day to the effect that the little | sternwheeler Clty of Chicago, which - | came® to St. Michael for Cape Nome on Will Waive Extradition. | June 9 was missing. She had not arrived | = - g | at her destination on July 19. She had | SEATTLE, July 27.—William Armstrong Sidney Perry of | Stated to a reporter to-night that he had of | decided to waive extradition and that he l was ready to return to Chicago. e i Marysville' Merchant Dead. ‘ | MARYSVILLE, July 27.—N. Schneider, who died in San Francisco this afternoon, | was a pioneer business man of the cit | A widow and large family survive him. cisco. | fourteen men.on board. | S8an Francisco and a man named Smit | Portland were said to be among- them. | were loth to part with her valuable serv. |an t | this branch of dentistry. | The obsequies will be held in San Fran- | MOVE OF ThE “HISH COMBI Would Buy All Outside Canneries. A HARDSHIP TO FISHERMEN S e MEANS AN END TO THEIR RICH PROFITS. SO The Deal Is Being Engineered by A. B. Hammond—Cold-Storage Companies Unwilling to Get in ELine. Vsl e geiis Special Dispatch to- The Call. ASTORIA, Or., July A report is current here thag A. B. Hammond, presi- dent of the Astoria and Columbia Road Company, is in Portland at pr endeavoring to bring about an ama matior: of all the fishing interests of th Lower Columbia Of course thi U be verified, for the deal secretly consummated, . b it car is erally believed in this ¢ in the vear Mr. Hammond engi- scheme whereby several of the packers of this ¢ity combined. It was proposed by the promoters to get all the packing houses on the lgwer river into the combine, but their exp ms were not realized, for only about one-third of the canners were induc t » in the @ tempted mono regarded h comb 1 effort to ¢ tion w rol t immense industry, the output whic amounts to nearly four millions of dollar annually, and then to reduce the pr al. H opé sfully the 400 ermen w oria might to- bt work ¢ inste. a pound he cold stor: have been a thorn in the side of the combine. They have of- fered 1 cent a pound more than has be offered by the packers, and in cc quence have received the fish tak the gill-netters individual fishe In the East n salmon bri cents a pound, while the canners rece a price which enables them to pay not more than 5 cents, although they are pay- ing 5% this season owing to the seareity of fish. Realizing the utter impossibility ~of forming an effective combine without get- ting the cold storages into the deal, an effort is now being made t y canneries not now in also the cold st 3 buy up all e ants t lone the combine w the trust will be abl price for salmon. The ca tal neces to purcha inter would be very gr but the promoters of the scheme have ample backing. Lo- cally the effort is regarded seriously, i the impression prevails that if the deal d_out th successfully carr rich harv of the fishermen will he over. Were tha run of fish good at the present time the boats could easily average 750 pounds a night, for which each would receive $45. This amount would be divided between two men. Should the gigantic combins be effected the fishermen will probanl engage in the canning and cold storage busin for themselves. One outside cannery or cold storage might Kkill the trust by rendering it incomplete. FIFTY DOLLARS FOR A WIFE. Groom Sued for the Money by thas Bride's Parents. PORTLAND, Or., July —Joseph Rooks, a Hillsboro bridegroom. has toler- ably early in the game found married life to be something else besides a dream of bliss. He is now the defendant in a suit brought by his bride’s parents for $0 al leged to be due for their consent to t union. The young womin ‘was under age when she and Rooks made known their passion and was pufting in some pretty good licks on the home farm.. Her parents ices, but Rooks. with genuine chival stepped in and agreed to square matters, offering to compensate the old folks for their prospective which they ap- praised at $50. The wedding then was allowed to proceed That was last Noevember. Having got the girl, Rooks must have thought better of matter, for the plaintiffs allege he has paid no part of the $50 and the court for a judgment against pray him in that amount. LOSS OF APPETITE! LOSS OF ENERGY! LOSS OF STRENGTH! Did tice ar cured Have nated by in Fig. 2 breath, Fig. 3 then take HUDY relieve you Perhaps_you notice fluttering or palpitation of heart, Fig. 4—bloating, or pain in stomach, Fig. 5—inactivity or torpidity of liver, as indi- ou ever experience these? Do you no- such feellng now? If you do, then be HUDYAN will cure you u_hea i > you pale c have you a coated tong It vou observe th for HUDY pells, as desig- emaciated, as e or offensive symptoms, will at once cated by Fig. All these symptoms and the foregoing omes indicate Dy Be cured by -HUDY. for HUDYAN ver fails in Do yvou not know — that dvspepsia and in- MEN AND digestion _ are fore- I WOMEN runners of Ulceration ADVISED of the Stoma of FREE, Heart complication, 4 of Inflammation of Call or Write. | Liver and Bowels ——————# You can avert th serfous and - dangerous - complications, for Sou take HUDYAN now, you will soon entirely_cured HUDYAN was never known to fail in d this nature, for HUDYAN strengthe - glands that are concerned in the dig fion of vour food. and stimulates them to p fect 4 HUDYAN gists—30c keep HUDYAN, N REMEDY CO., llis and Market sts., San Fra al ‘!IL\'\' CONSULT TE - BOUT YOUR CAS CALL OR WRITE. Dr. R L. Walsh, 8153 GEARY ST., bet. Hyde and Larkin. Painless Extraction.. 50c Crowne £2.00 Flesh-colored Plates. . 25.00 Continuous Gum Plates (no bad joints) our epeclalty. Have received TEN first prizes for No students. 16 years' experience. emotosraraED yaon s & - 5t Day. EFiT 10th Day. e Nervausness, Impotency, LI, Metng s and wdiscretion. Restores Lost Vitality, Powe: and Failing Memory. Wards off Insanity and Consump: Cures when all others fail. Insist on having VITALIN o ather. Can be carried in tVe vest pocket. By il $1.06 YITALIS | Jor packase or dx for 85,00 with s guarantes to Cure o 2 d the Money, Circulu CELTIET OFRE €O, 554 Dearborn At., Chicags Sold by Owl Drug Co., 3aidwin Pharmacy. W. J. Bryan (two stores). Craat Drug Co. 1R Oakland by Owl Drug Cou! A S River )

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