The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 5, 1899, Page 4

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4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5 N 3 celved t kull sent from company to take other proceedings, if he e D Toning e e tnax 0 sl 1t waw 396 te Lend’ Mayos may be Dunham's. The local officers are ewton, he declared, to say that he had L | puzzled to know how y are to identify successfully resisted the attenupt of Pro- e bone e lower v Do a ster Mendel to appropriate £2800 fo skull is inta save there are only three clation, however, according to Justic l upper teeth left. None of these show any ;L;;fix"ull constituted nothing ehort of a | it work the skull. % < k] L SN PR e Tty M s KILL AN EMPLOYElKentucky Election Com= | This was found in the cave in Lower Cal- | Bisl Tree | RANCHER TRIES TO ifornia with the remains. It Is of silk or ; | on Their Persons. | | i double bow! 2 p arer might | 2 A $ : } 4 . Fiscal Year. see "\‘: ]{!‘lfvz:fv](-flrn\‘»'h::\:‘ found on | T. Cigalotti of Olema Fires Twice at missioners Meet . e : ss may show som & e > A 3 1] U l h B RBDU D] ] B a n M e mDBPS ll‘hlnn 1!:1’“(;‘;‘“:119 ’fl? ;...-m, ]':enlls(sx and B. Locatelli When His Back i —— s Speclal Dispatch to The Call, doctors will be called in to view the frag- Special Dispatch to The Call, | Is Turned. Special Dispatch to The Ca¥l wy ments, but the officers have no hope of | — & Dec. 4—The Secretary | ideatification, They think it unfortunate | SAN QU IN PRISON, Dec. 4—In nsmitted to-day to the | that the southern officials did not make a | their gesperate efforts to smuggle oplum . careful investigation, when, months ago, | 4nq morphine Inside the prison walls the presentatives estimates of ap- i i requirod for the fiscal year | e Skeléton was found in the ca | convicts have resorted to methods that o . he ' 8 - is | have caused the officfals amazeme e e e | REICHSTAG DISCUSSES | customed ‘as thes ‘RKe; ta extibit ent fiscs of $3%,033 ingenuity on the part of the priso: s e L e e FINANCIAL LEGISLATION | the’endeavor o obtain their seguiar - OLEMA, Dec. 4.—A shooting scrape oc- curred n r here on the T Cigalotti last Saturday even talls of which have just become property. From the information of | an investigator to District Attor Isaac at San Rafael to-day It = Cigalotti attempted to kill an e WASHINGTOM Treasury t House of E NGTON, D OF YTES—TE: this act at _from U a of the Finance Committee. 4.—The text| 1 NATION 1 be * loye A . Eragivee ot fiacal year of $84,2%,004. ‘ o ply of the banetul drug. Warden Agulrre s eIt e IRROReE Mo - 1 B pragrs e Enation by | o has lately been kept keenly on the alert | oVAroly. | e shot twlice at o t und the as : 2 fiene of the ‘estimates for next | Bill to Increase the Silver ColnAge g has succeeded in baffing the plans | g °t" DUl . o g s £ | \"?” et aatiten Referred to a Special | of the “flends” and their accessories, with | Locatelli and Cigalotti got into . 3 e Ko r redecmed be s Legislative, $9,9 ! Committee. | the result that large quantities of opium | gument as to whether or not eigh Mee and e tions of $10 or | | BERLIN, Dec, 4.—The Reichstag to-day | have been seized within two weeks, the foe d h:;ul f.-u; ¥ 1 { lumber r i T . | discussed the Government's currency bill | ;';Ihie of which will aggregate more than lina 3‘"“5’ ue;‘ffil ’r‘; g 1 clk ¥ providing for an increase of siive 3 b . . it ended In abuse and a fis . : About two weeks ago the Warden found until the ameunt reaches the PrOBOrton | o ‘Ui ®oF Gpliuit “worth nearty Sis, In which the ra of fourteen marks per head of the popu- | cached near San Clemente, where the al into th e ation. Dr. von Thielman, Seerefary of | “road gang” has been ut work on the | CWred a rifie and when 3 Rites the Treasury. sald the increase was im- | Tiburon boulevard. It was put up ir about fifty yards away fired at ) i Legisiative, perative, adding that other s would | & manner that the men could easily M'u € Yoty de of }!'w rf\"nrl;’ a o . s r at the same time be withdrawn from cir- | ceal it on thelr persons. e Lt by “ = eulation Oer e T continued, | _Last Saturday evening, as the same | been meant for him. His form m- Tmporced 40.000 10 and in 1599 up to Sep. | GANE of prisoners was passing the Ward- | ployer laughed -humoredly and sald te g e B R B en’s office on the way to their cells, he | he had shot at a stump. He then walked tember 30, 47,000,000 marks m gold more ton ‘o than she ARCoN | noticed one of the convicts throw his right | into the house and returned with a hand- e Regarding the maintenance of the golq | hand care cssly ‘about. As all prisoners ful.”nL coin. « of v«h;nnnf‘ paid - Loca- - . as 38, z mainten £0ld | are under orders to keep thelr hands | telll his wages. The men pa “ootn B Hhe e o o wons | clasped, Wil movement excited the offi; | fairly good humor and Locatelll wai stimates for the next fiscal b IR A ult if the war lasted | ¢lal's suspicio He ordered the gardener | down the road. . following: longer.than: ‘f'\,’“ ‘Herr Weltzelen, Con- | t0 make search. A small quantity When albe two hundred away . umep-& 2 year. 5 » ZO0 | oplum, d up in tinfoll, the he was again startled by the crack of a 5 - $184, servative, remarked that the Boers were | {) ' . vy h : | belng "of the circumference of a rifle and a_bullet w close to his n not et of thelr Iih- 3 . : erty, but alko held the keys of their gold | piece and about three times as thick, w Seeing that treacherous em- Tandat . ) ‘7")‘\.:\1( ofr ‘muich. of Ger- | 20UF A watch was kept and a box of ployer meant to kill h'm, Locatelll dodged -mxm .‘"””r;..nlzll Ay j;:mxsch packa, -.-ad was unearthed who-rlr- it brush and piroceeded t . w A ¥'s <mail gold supply. | had been cached near the line of the bou- . informed & number of aceuaint ner butidtings | Herr Koch, director of the Relchatug. | levard. There was enough opium in the affalr, and one of them sent tory Marine | Polnted out that all the great states had | boy (o be warth £, Tr s ihay um In the information to-day. Tt Is p - - - TN he yoid [’;:3““;“,"2“,0‘;"&“ b s iarms placed in a strait- alott! will be arrested to-morrow b x Abilens, Texas, | regardel s - | jacket, and on second day of his | on a charge of assault with intent to com- them « 5 . »: Butte, M metallism. | punishment cor EOHAL-the’ DRCKASES | sait o rahs O assault with intent to Com--| o' ey olact. . I am a 50,000 Chicago, 5 meta s aecretary of the Serman Bi~ | bad been made of a size convenient to | ¢ ™UFder- __ _ should be joint cust 3altimore, $100,00 etallic League, attribute s t C outh and that s few - S et : Sinanpons, S0 scount Tate to the searcity of gold. D | had been smugsied miids. the prison oo | NEW FRATERNITY HOUSES. 79, Dox 1 sorsid e Siemens, director of the German Bank, | fore the Warden di : St | cession upon the par , 1d e considered that the internatiopai | “Furtfer osiEationy. have el irick. . | Sororities Will Erect Two Handsome | **igion upon the p money conventions, anticipate by Dr. | the fact that the convicts have been car- i Mr. Finley's reply Arendt, were imposstble of realization and | rylng oplum through the gates in small g Dulldings at Stauford, consult with my that there was absolutely no prospect of | quantities by gluing small packages un- | _STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Dec. 4— | Afr Ellis wals the restoration of the silver standard. der the armpits beneath thelr clothing. A | TWo new fraternity houses will soon be | after a short . wing The bill eventually was referred to a|copy of an Eastern paper was examined | added to those already bullt on Lasnen | of Loufsville v et and fog special committee | the other day and found to contain astrect, the ave which Mrs. Stanford | Republican = 5 Hum- | — - | B0OC quant of morphine. he con- has designated as her raternity row.” | 8round, re I re not allowed to read coast papers, | o> 368 ol e G AR Ly S B “1 will wa torn - DEFRAUDED PERSONS but the mailing of Eastern publieations The curious part Is that both parties who | g it Lot L o them by Chelr. friends s’ permitied nning to build are Sororities, or girl | “7f, e Feturns SEEKING COMPANY Where the different sheets of this part Hhe Delta Caman oot ot falied:q | that occurred during the same, | ar paper had been glued together the kne Deita s L A carried on with bitt | — space glued was an inch broad, and be- | bullding first, as they already have an | ,urtesy on efther si Important increases in appropriations | Trying to Prevent the Return of Un- (‘_“r""";""‘{"!!“"‘m“'l"‘*)'“:f the mucllage. was | Z05" (00T, SRR TR will ‘commance’ shortiy During the day ¢ P asked fo! iprovemen exten- on he rp 5 - s g A cepting the five of o T lat opened Letters Sent to the | Since these discoveries the Warden has | &{1er the beginning of the new year. were canvaseod v naval stations: | Franklin Syndicate. | lssued orders that every conviet work- |, The other party of ambitious 15 | again at 9:30 o'c norrow morning . VAL o5 TR Vil o {Ing outside the walls shall be stripped | the newly formed Alpha Sororty: | "It will proba the board the o - yard at Portemouth, NEW YORK, Dec. 4—It 13 expected |and searched before being allowed inside | THoush they only recelved their c 1aster | greater part of t anvass the -~ e nearly $300,00 e that a petition will be made by attorneys | the gates. This Innovation began yester- {rom the nationa ralernity Jast May | ctarns of the eqse about $1.400,00 2 ; o they are already one of the largest and n ' 3 claiming to represent a large number of startling discovery was made . y ¢ rge will then ,resol : ey S ey Rinber of e first Search, One | Srongest of the girls’ organizations at | Will the 1 == - e et e [ o th e oo ad been supplied with a | Stanferd. It is rumored that thelr house ot it e h to Judge Thomas of | Pajr of art ads for & IVes of |15 to be the most elaborately planned of . ASURY NOTES— ted States Court, enjoining Post- his legs, ough opium was found in- | 80y of the fraternity houses vlf‘h‘h",‘;’“' h master Wilson of Brooklyn from return- | side the p to have supplied the prison [ PV WWOrk Wil commente Jiinin & few | electio . ing to the senders the mass of letters sup- | for a week. months, as the location is definitely set- | election of ¢ C posed to contain a mount of funds | _-We have kept g close watch on the | tied: SR oA | to-day that wi ! reccived in his office . the collapse of | Smugglers,” said Warden Aguirre to-day 3 a8y : p Fin., 8250 | the syndicate and here by means of | “and are confident that we have disee Next Year's Captain. Jrahes tewa e he Tre 3145.00; nav¥ | @ fraud order from the Government pro-| ered who is supplying or trying to sup-| STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Dee. 4— | orgf r : with the : naval sta- | hibiting the delivery il to Miller's | DIy the ‘flends’ with the drug. He Is an | The football men will meet next Thursday | Hog. eog on : tion at Puget Sound . §2 concern. The motion will be based on an | €X-convict named James Harrison, who 3 . es . the Dry Tortugas, Fla.. $200,000 ATARVIL RIVinE. the Bint of anhod on & served a five-year te night to elect a captain to lead them next | without hi of naval station at Havana, € With | Poatmaster Goneral Wilkan ' | Los Anee les and w year. Burnett's is the ”1[1\' name men- AN 5 R & 1 e £ hich ke is sald to have set the value of er 22 last Th | tioned for the place, an¢ s likely that | Sparks s Cov f reta Fortsmouth, N. I, | FRICh he 1s fald to have set the value of | o oleh not to com the glant tackle will be unanimously | militia, but they did d g L eaEe Taland, | OF the Dustoffice Department ui | ing the drug on the elected on the first ballot. He is the only | They came, I he $200,000. the | Zeom 575,000 o g100 000 iR popartment at | we' fntend to, prosecute the cony player with the credit of having played in | Colller, as o a lets’ quarters at the 1 590,000 comin o n eanb an ge make them feel that the risk of smug- | tWo Thanksgiving games who will be in | was going on. act sha t_to exceed | §2 ing ir 2 ling is too great for the continuance of | college next vear. — This, together with | of a row of - 1 For power It will be urged he senders of & nt! 3 4 v fing RGP Ayt b Tt A A L the practice.” the fact that he is a general favorite with | Mayor Dehoney swore e -~ ath s Y 10 ONMING. Sneomns his fellows. makes him the logical candi- | licemen, but they we YR e | aredizory. of ¢l e 10WnN _as A date for this the greatest of all college t of the ¢ of seawall at | J 3 v._);.m‘ .~3;v dicat 1 are therefore en- LONDON LORD MAYOR'S CASE. | honors. . and the ¢ titled only to such share of i s | - o Unde !‘M(hl'”l‘v:anlr'uw‘»(’,‘. }__m' ,_'{‘fl"-’_ peling | Justice Wright Says It Constitutes | Hayden Leaves Stanford. T oy hyrfl;:«rl | & shall be able to distribute to them. Nothing Short of a Scandal. | STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Dec. 4.—| Surdette Returns. pries r‘!‘]:““ S aal ttorneys for the depositors claim| LONDON, Dee. 4. | Carl T. Hayden '00, one of Stanford’'s best PASADENA, Dec. 4—Rev. and Mrs at (e Lnited States postal authoritles | day of the Investigation Into the concern | d¢baters and sub-center on this year's | Robert J. Burdette returned vesterday in returning funds are making, themselves | iy, which Lord Mayor Newton was eatq | VATSity football team, left college for his | from a 15.000 mile lecturing Mrs r n » O ynahite liable for the assets of the syndicate. | IO m A home in Arizona to-day. The very serious | Burdette also lectured, and her husband $100. on of range and position — | to have heen unfavorably mixed, Justice | decline of his father's heaith, which was | boasts that she can get ready for a tr . 00; sites for fortifications and sea | GENERAL HARRISON | Wright said he had no judgment to give. | the cause of Mr. Hayden's withdrawal | on as short notice as he can. Mr. Bure : % coast o armament of *fortifications, | anaded Ahat e investigation was | from college, may prevent his finishing | dette will resume the pastorate of the 2 e 16.035; total amount asked for fortificatiens solely to enable the official receiver ot the | his college course, | First Presbyterian Church other works of defense, §! 5. ! ON THE ROBERTS CASE | — - — — = For the n of bnildings at military | posts, barracks, etc., for artillery in connection | with project for sea coast $2,000,000, for constiuiction of lee plants at military posts | Declares It Would Be a Shame to Let | in Cuba. » Rico, Hawail and the Philip- | the Polygamist Sit in ines, 35 | — P por improvement of Yellowstone National | Congress. Park, 1000 Chi INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 4.—Ex-President B amin Harrison was asked to-day if 16 would assist the Anti-Roberts League Among the river and harbor improve- | {n its efforts to the seating of imated for under continuous | Congressman-elect Roverts. He said: s on which the sum asked for is | “Over s h; been made to me b r over are the following with the 1 . but . were tative. 1 was asked i could league. I replied that my time (I having just returned home) would be too much “occupied for river and harbor im-| me to go into the case., The matter was th of Brazos River, Texas, | not pressed.” K CLARK ACCUSED OPEN BRIBERY ments e trac es was pro- fon of the Legislature from mill to man. Carter Presents a Me- the treasury of Mon- er Willamette River. below Port- | ““What is your opinfon of the case?” 2 tl ns | un- R e et te Coaz| “As for myself, I share with .the whole morie to the Senate. um of $35,000, was to be paid for the votes country th who is livl 1 ling that to allow a man with plural wives to sit in Sound with Lakes Union and Washington, ) v AL e Soom s out o Snal TRt Bhiews; 7| hot be Kmerican. it would be s mavion i ing of the middl e pi rhs m Tn.v:num amount estimated under the General Harrison was not backward in | The ,moderqte prlces_thi savmlg Odt etml e : e charges | il of publle works 1e Sledlo s, us | Indicating his entlre sympainy” with tne | i R v B s B < h e charges are signed by | AEAINSL WA, the amount of the eur- | pii SR (il e seas. B offer you. It's worth something to be sure of ! members of r members of the Mon- | Of the sum appropriated during ’I‘;;’,,‘;‘;i:} KIDNAPED HER CHILD. first-class materials, correct styles and faithful ment $20,000,000 was the tre pald to Spain under 5 ty of Paris Mrs. Isenberger Did Not Want Him to Be in His Father’s Care. nd made a part of the rial § port of the Investigation f the election of Senator Clark by ture of Montana. workmanship ; and, above all, A PERFECT FIT, which is assured by our wholesale assort- e is € outcome of a low condition of adegnate ot es col- 1 but ir SNt.0 W cures discases of th utrition, purifies 1e weak body w very bad case of indigestio d liver, by the use of D tical Discovery,” writes pyroside, Putnam Co. W use of ‘Golden Medical T ot sleep, . ed, and life ppetite; cor er tak Ues 1 well that 1 went to work soon got 5o 1 uned it about cight weeks longer, 1 was permanently cured.” Medical Adviser is sent 1 receipt of stamps to pay cost of g only. Send 2r one-cent s Pierce | da | that Senator Cla ted a petition s, State Treasurer; 3 T prominent an early aga t out fully in are set . which T clares that r the pur- securing the support of members bly to vote for m A. Clark he rate and conspire with parties named by the petitioners to bribe the members of said ative assembly and to thereby sc- votes in behalf of the candi- o k.” It is al- leged that Clark did In the furtherance of his desires pay large sums of money to the members of the Legislature for their did confec corrupt an legi votes. The petition then names a num- | ber of members of the Legislature, with the sums they are alleged to have re- celved set opposite wllllaelr names. The sums aggregate, according to about 250 000, L] the petition, In addition to the sums alleged to have been paid by Senator Clark to members | for thelr votes or influence it is asserted for their votes or influence sums ag- gregating $175.000. Those persons also are named fn the petition. The petitioners aver that many other sums unknown at this time w ald out corruptly by Sen- ator Clark cing his candidacy the Senate i A OBJECTS TO THE FRENCH TREATY- WITH AMERICA Member of the Paris Senate Attacks the Course of His Gov- ernment. PARIS, Deec. 4.—In the Senate to-day M Fresneu protested against the signing of the Franco-American convention of Tuly ¢ without the knowledge of interested | John Koster, pre ] >aciic Arcade depot. Koster 1s agricultural assoclations, He | 0, Pact ¢ D a parties, such as the Chamber of Com- ana 1 the Senate ought to demand a the interested parties bad r observations on the subject. erand, the Minister of Com- ed that the text of the con- by which satisfactis used to agree to it n of the budget, the House, at refec against 2 Lt N Election at Ventura. 1cld to-day J. F. Newby was elected City Smith, Governor of | k offered to various per- | ment and an examination of the e would be communicated to the Chambers of Commerce and Agriculture, n would be given to rsneu wished for a further Afs. the convention, but the Sen- 1 the Chamber of Deputies, during the st of the Premier, M. Waldeck- 4 a proposal to suppress service funds by a vote of 312 FIXING BOUNDARY LINES IN AFRICA Object of the Conference at Rome Between the Italian and English Representatives. ROME, Dec. 4.—The conference here bhe- | tween the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Marquis Viscont! Venosta; Commissioner Martini; the British Embassador, Sir Philip W. Currie, and James Rennol Rodd, the British Consul General in Egypt, who was speclal envoy to Ki Menelik of Abyssinia in 1897, was solely concerned with the delimitation of the trontiers of Erythrea and the Soudan and the details of frontier arrangements affecting intercourse between the two territories. It was the presence in Italy of Commissioner Martini, who 18 Gov- ernor of Erythrea, which suggested the expediency of Mr.' Rodd’s visit In order to_rapidly and verbally arrange matters. The Assoclated Press is officially in- formed that Emperor Willlam of Ger- many was neither consulted nor Inter- |ested in the arrangement, which was urely one of boundaries, upon which taly, more as a matter of cnunsu?' than anything else, was consulted. No element of offensive or defensive alllance was considered, and the reports to the effect published in the United States are offi- cf; characterized as absolutely un- tru . POSTMASTERSHIP CONTEST. Koster's Chances for the Position in Los Angeles. LOS ANGEL) sonnel of the Rivers and Harbors Com | mittee of the House of Representatives | will probabi depend the Postmasters of Los Angeles. Among the candidates is nt clerk in the South- brother-in-‘aw of Speaker David Hender- son. district desires to serve as P representative on the Rivers nd Harbors Committes, and it is understood that it Speaker Henderson accommodates the 1os Angeles Congresman the latter will get in behin¢ the Postmaster of Los An- 1f Waters s turned down some other man may be Mathews’ successor. Speak Henderson is said to be fond of his broth- er-in-| visit three on the other hand, sald, is not enam ored of Congressman Waters, who in the carly stages of the Speakership contest tied himsel? at the wrong time_to boom Congressman Sherman of New York. g | . Dec. 4.—Upon the. per- | w, whom he placed with the | Southern Pacific when he was here on a | years :uer The new Speaker, | t is STOCKTON, Dec. 4.—Mrs. Louise Isen- berger, who is sulng for divorce from zra Isenber kidnaped her child to- a posed to have left with it train for San Francisco. or left her husband and chil- or five years ago and has Itving In San Francisco. Isen- berger, who i= employed in Troy Laun- his old affection for her and L ree of divorce. He has been supporting the children, of which the youngest Is seven years old. This morning Mrs. Isenberger came up from the metropolis. She went to Jackson School this rnoon and told Principal had come for her boy, ungest, who was attending the The principal could not prevent her from taking the child, but he imme- diately telephoned to the father. A few minutes later Isenberger, with his sleeves rolled u{) and soapsuds on his halr, rushed into the office of Attorney Me- Noble and informed him that ‘“‘she had taken the boy and gone.” He wanted to get out a search warrant or an attach- | ment or some legal paper to stop his wife from spiriting away thelr chil Isenbérger threatens to follow her to San Francisco and take the child by force if necessary.” There promises to be some- thing doing when the case is called for trial on Wednesday. b Ser bl NO CHANGE CONTEMPLATED. Offices of the Oregon Short Line Not | to Be Moved. OMAHA, Dec 4.—General Auditor | Young of the Union Pacific sald positively to-day that the auditing department of the Oregon Short Line would not be moved back to Omaha and consolidated with that of the Union Pacific, as was | the case before the recetvership, but that it would remain where it Is at prosent. other general officer of the Union Pa- cific sald that the same was truc of the general offices of the Short Line. They | were at present admirably organized. and | the disadvantages of removal wouid be greater than the the advantages. The talk of removal was largely due, the ofl- cial said, to the fact that they were for- merly here, but the forced change when the roads were segregated under the re- ceivership had demonstrated that it was a good move. SO = FUNERAL OF J.J. REED. Hundreds of Sorrowing Friends Fol- low the Remains to the Grave. SAN RAFAEL, Dec. 4.—The funeral of John J. Reed, which occurred under Ma- sonic auspices to-day, was one of the largest ever Masonic Temple the service was read by Master Mason W. F. Jones and_ at the cemetery by the Rev, Dr. Marshall, In the cortege the Native Sons led, with n in the county. At the | ment of shapes and sizes—for MAN, BOY and CHILD. Brown Bros. & Co., Wholesale manufacturers—selling at retail only in San Francisco and suburbs, 121-123 Sansome St., near Pine. - VENTURA, Dec: 4.—At the city election THE SKULL IN SAN JOSE. the Odd Fellows second and the Masons | — - - third. The palibearers were W. N. Ander- r City Marshal, and J. | Officials Have Little Hope of Proving | son, James Watson, Stephen Richardson, L. Shaw. Jules Feraud, Nim- It to Be Dunham” | Thomas H. Hansen, Ira Parks and Wil- | and Nick Hearne elected . | lam Glindermann, = The Interment was BAN JOSE, Dec. 4.—Sheriff Langford re- | at Mount Olivet Cemetery. Clerk, J. M. Kals 8. Collin: Y. | rod Vickers | Councilmen, »er covered book, or 31 stam to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo,

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