The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 10, 1900, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JULY 10. 1900. SICK HEADACHE Yositively cured by these Iattie Pills, “They slsc relieve Distress from fndigest Dyspepeis, ndigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A pen foct cemady tor Dizziness. Nausea, Drowsl ness, bac fasn:mtxzumm__(oa’m Tongu the Siae, TORPID LIVER. They Regu! e towels. Purely Vegetable. S=nal P, Emall Dese. R URE GIRED, 55 Ewall B RUPY 1) Usy MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS C AMUSEMENTS. CCi A2 B L] MATIKEES WEDVESOAY AND SATURDAY, HENRY M;’L_LER A Marriage of ‘ Convenience OPERA ¥ HOUSE ANOTHER £PL"NDID SUCCESS NEW FRAWL-Y COMPANY THE DANCING GIRL Extraon e of Third Act A a e 3 YER YERQ EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEK AL. FLORENCE ROBERTS, E v T WHITTL in a LLE! e ATURDAY. IVOLI+ AND LAST WEEK . WANG ala Opening of the A SEASON. Particulars. T » ext Wee :—Revival of... GRAND A RARE BILL OF WOVELTIES! BARRERE & JUL! CLINTON WHITE by MISS R CITY QUAR- ILY; AMERI- COHANS 10c; opega chairs Saturday and Sunday. nesday, AMUSEMENTS. NCERT HOUSE. P 2 g co FISCHER’S Admission 10z Tuird Act of “MARTHA.” in English. DEETS AN, BABY DOLLIVER, 1SABE ¥OOD_and New Moving Pictures NS PHOIEC SOPE: SUTRO BATHS OPEN NIGHTE. Open Dally From m. to 11 p. m. Filning From 7 & m. b0 10 p.m. ADMISSION 3. CHILDREN. - o, Bathing Including Admission, Sc; Children 20c, ry En- | CATHOLIC WOMEN IN THEIR TENTH ANNUAL SESSION Institute Delegates Lighten ! Their Business With Pleasure. T2, Reports Submitted and Invitations From Sister Societies Received and Accepted—Reception at Loyola Hall. Institute opened its Ay morn- delegates in a t St Ignatius Father Calzia oc- { devotion institute members ere the meet- the grand Nagle's aud- spiritual adviser of the order. to the adjourning of the morn- e following commitices were Mrs, e Hill of Institute s. Leahy of No. Rose affrey of No. 31 ney, No, 12, Santa s Grace, No. 13, Valle eney, No Winters h he after: ed short- eports of the c rters and fin- read and adopted rious committe institutes ha ring the year and that 1s”condition. Father Ramm read bishop Riordan, in : i his absence 1 nis consequent inability institute sessions. were received theater party Ope 7. for a Wednesday: tug ride on n on the McDowell, and a . the park 10 the Cliff House. fore ning in the afternoon the nt Nagle, spoke feelingly of ath of Ma e L. Nagle, s n f Bu ont e pres € ~ception tendered Wa No. 7 in Loyola der the direction d officers: e pre ary and Erand HEALD'S BUSINESS COLLEGE 24 POST STREET, San Franecisco, Establish a century: national rep s one of thy schools seiected ent the development of commercial ed: at the Paris Exposi- tion; over successfully a2 24 . Hitcheock School, SAN P"AFAFL, CAL.. FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS. | Beparate Ra ymn: Military Drill, NS AUGUST 1 CK. Princl g way arge garden. Ky sity of California, and Smith Colleges tion. T ST, MATTHEW'S rm opens MILITARY SCHO0L, SAN MATEO, CAL. For catalogue and llus- | trated circular address i A. BREWER, A. B., Rector. { LYCEUM ) PREPARATOR' Phelan ‘-u\l-lll‘.;’ col- or any IRVING INSTITUTE. Boarding and day school for young ladles, 2126 , will reopen August 6, 190. ' Ac- credited to the Universities; primary department for children; carringe will call WARD B. CHURCH. A. M., Principal. | HAMILIN SCHOOL 2nd VAN NESS SEMINARY, n Francisco. Boarding and 2 1s. Accredited to the sity of California. Leland Stanford Jr. Vassar and Smith Colleges. SARAH D. HAMLIN, Principal. MISS M. G. BARRETT’S SZORTHAND ACADEMY. | 302 Montgomery st., San “rancisco, Cal. Lesscons personally and by mall. Acknowledged by official reporters “'best teachers, best system. * ANDERSON ACADEMY, merly University Academy, Alameda. has to Irvington. Site of fifteen beauti‘ul; climate unsur- men_taught in one ating a vessei around Privately if desired Marine engi- for license. CAPT. VON etc., principal, 42 Market st. | | " Eot. 3557 Men and | month the seience of | the world. | neers _ preparea | ECHOEN. M. E ‘Mll.LS COLLEGE AND SEMINARY | (ZRANTS DIPLOMAS AND CONFERS DE- grees: seminary course accredited to the Universities, rare opportunities offered in music, art and elociiion. Write for catalogue to MRS, €. T. MILLS, Pres.. Milis College P. O.. Cal. | Thirty fifth vear: fall term opens Aug, 8. 1900, S. F. BUSINESS COLLEGE. | l236 MARKET ST.—Actual business bool keepil only expert accountants and reporters as teachers. Gregg shorthand. he easiest. fastest and most readable. Day and evening. | COLLEGE NOTRE DAME | San Francisco. Calif>raia. _STU‘DXES WILL BE RESUMED MONDAY; i | August 6,190, Dolores st., near Sixteenth. | POLYTECHNIC BUSINESS COLLEGE | Great Business Training and Shorthand School. Has the largest and best equipped depts. in th West. 300 youns men and women wanted. Every | graduste employed. Free catalog. Oukland, Cal. == HOITT’S SCHOOL, Menlo Park, Cal. Superior advantages for the care and training of boys and young men. Chiarming surroundings, pertect climate.” Tt 25 IRA G. HOITT, Ph. D., Principal. M- | A REV. EDaj} Bre e 0000000004040 +0+ 0404040+ 0404040+ @ ¢ < 4 @ . ® + PY . ® + . ¢ @ . - -0 ® . ) - 4 . ! ? i * 4 : T + . ey | 4 4 L | ¢ | @ R * i | o4 AUXILIARY SCHOONER AEOLUS BUILT FOR THE INTER- ¢ * ISLAND TRADE. : pd R e e e e e e e e e e e e e e o directors, Misses. Kate Conklin, Mary Donovan, ! Kate Driscoll, Mary MeCarty, Mary Mclner: | ney, Mamie Stein, Mary Sullivan and Mrs. N. | T. Flemin | | The following delegates are attending St San Fi s ncisco, No Migs M ha Coppage, cock, Mrs. Mrs. T. P. Sweeney, Claherty, Miss Kath- Miss Helen R. Winters, Miss Kate Desmond, Miss An< | Mrs. Margaret H!Il.i | M. Mullen, na_Fitzeerald Misses Mary Leahy, | Belle Hoyle. No, i—Miss Fannie Douglass, Mrs. | M. Gallagher 7 Kate Buckley, Mrs. | | e ia Teon Agnes Cooney, rs. J. Rooney. : Jo < A , Mrs. ) vy Dunpl Sast Roia . . i g Geaiies. Mary Fiynn. Sies 31 | Decision Awaited in Case Napa, No. fiss Hilda Fleming, Mrs. N H ke o 2 ate Fikes mieming % | of: Brition ys: leoion Miss stein, Mrs. J. Cowan: Virginia | Rt sses - MeCa o | fisses Rose A MoCaders. | Commissioners. 'y Victoria, B. C. H ck, Mrs. A. Steele. S — Ma- Mary Ma. Counsel Agree to Waive Argument and Appeal From Seawell’s Opin- re, No. 44— A melia Hartman, i i i vdia Stone, Mre, A. Mo- ion Will Be Cons.ldered No. 45—Mrs. Cella Ke on Original Briefs. SET The case of Britton versus the Board of Election Commissioners, involving the validity of the Stratton primary election | TAKEN TO PRISON FOR ‘ CONTEMPT OF COURT | icriay on appeal from the decision of | _— Judge Seawell rendered a year ago. The court agreed to a stipulation of the at- Judge Fritz Orders Former Judge Tresfiwall Tucarcersted Sor Sra- torneys to submit the case without argu- law, was before the Supreme Court yes- | ment on briefs filed when the appeal was | ating a Scene. | taken. Former Judge Treadwell was ordered | Morris M. Estee, Gavin McNab and into s yesterday morning by Judge | City and County Attorney Lane were | empt of court. le was Kept | present as counsel for the Election Com- n till 2 o'clock fn the | missioners. F. P. Deering of Myrick & te nd was then taken to court. | I ng, and L. A. Gibbons, appeared for | Th ked him if he had anything appaiiant - Sehatar JSartiRG the o sav. but he showed no sign of making | 2uthor of the law, ourt, bu to say, but he rhowed no sign of making e e e an apology, a Judge fined him $0, them being with the alternative cf five days in the S salf and former Judge County Later a writ of habeas cor- | Emil Nusbaumer. Iormer Supreme Court Justice Van Fleet and W. B. Treadwell ed ¢ was ap before Judge Murasky | Justice Van Klec it was granted, bail belng fixed at| 'Aj) of the memvers of the court were on Ralf the amount of the fi The bail | the bench )t Jusiices Garoutte and forthcoming and Treadwell was re- | Henshaw. Deering informed the court that in view of the importance of the question involved and the highly tech- ical nature of the counsel had all s defending L. Brogamonte, | , who d by Po. | it, i twith cureying & concealcd | agreed to submit the cause on the briefs Weapon in the shape of a dagger, which he | a:ready .fied, He said those briefs had been prepared with very great care and that no decision of the court had been rendered since they were filed that would make new brie or oral discussion neces- He asked the court to dispose of the water frent on Sun- claimed that the defend. | er and therefore entitied The Judge differea was flourishing day. Treadwe ant was a trav to carry the weapon. H Bt ; | sary iAe will take our sentence now.” shout- | f\"i{fd'c‘{;"L_“Q""&'.’;‘-"iofllm fon cases had been | _“T'll bet you fifty to one that you will be | record had submitted a brief it would be versed to-morrow,” shouted Treadwel “You have no right to speak like that, | necessary for ment in the same form. him to present his argu- id the Judge quietly, but Treadwell re-| jowed five days in which to submit a brief. ated the offer and andished his cane Judge Estée requested that the court in front of the Judge, who ordered Bailiff | decide the question as early as its con- Conlon to arrest him for contempt venience would permit. In answer to “You can't arrest me in court,” roared | a query from the court, Gavin MeNab Treadwell, but Conlon took him by the | said that the date for primary elections arm and led him to the prison. e | Holt in a Critical Condition. und r the law would be August 14. office stated that on behalf of the At- torney General he wished to urge the im- portance of an early decision. "Thelr of- iice, he said, was besieged with from County Clerks all over the State ing advice as to whether they should proceed with preparations for primary elections under the act. Boards of Super- visors throughout the State were waiting for the Supreme Court's decision as to the law's constitutionality. Judge Seawell's decision, year ago, was in upholding the valadity of the Stratton primary law and denying the petition of the plaintiff for an :njunction to restrain the Board of Election Commissioners from proceeding with the city primary election under it. The decision was a pro forma judgment and an appeal was | taken at once and the briefs filed on which the case is now submitted. The at- torneys for the appellants sought to have the case advanced in order to stop the city primary election for which prepar- ations were then being made, but the court did not deem the local election of enough importance to advance the case. In view of the approaching State elec- tion the court advanced the case for the hearing yesterday. The case presents the legal tangle of a Polmon for an injunetion to prevent an ele A. S. J. Holt, Pacific coast agent for the Pennsylvania lines, who had his skull actured by colliding with Dr. E. J. Cree: buggy at Steiner and Post streets mnday, is in a critical condition at the ldeck. Drs. Huntington and Richter, are attending him, refused to express | sterday. Holt's W who an opinion on the case y brother, who lives at Grand Rapids, Mich., | has been notified of the accident and wiil rendered a nay night. The case was called in Judge and continued arrive here Thurs against Dr. Creely ogan’s court yesterday ADVERTISEMENTS. { | | | T TTNE2UST Anita Cream is not a cos- metic fo cover up, buta rem- edy to cure all cutaneous af- K been held, and on the face of it only the fections. It | msls nn\'ln\iah'e't(i‘. 1..{ l;:;‘:xll; however, . P e constitutionality of e W was at- will draw im- tacked, and a decision on that point is 1ti b what is sought. o purities to the tror readwell will have five days P surface, re- to file a supplementary brief, after which the opposing counsel may take five days to file an answer. Counsel on both sides expect an eariy decislon. CLAIMS SHE ACTED IN SELF-DEFENSE Kitty Turner Is Booked on a Charge of Assault to Commit ¥ Murder. Kitty Turner, who stabbed her pseudo husband, James Turner, during a fight in the Topic saloon early Sunday morning, was booked on a charge of assault to mur- der at the City Prison vesterday. The woman made a statement to Captain move the dis- eased and dis- colored skin in small dust- Iike particles, and promote a new growth of skin as soft and clear as a child’s. All Druggists Sell It, or we will send a full sized jar, together with instruc- tions, for 50c. Information and sample for 2c postage. Anita Cream & Toilet Co., 207 Franklin St., Los An- geles, Cal. | AR AR RIS ARK S DU S R A R AN self-defense. She declared that Turner | stabbed her first In the fleshy part of her | right leg and beat her till she was black and blue. He dropped floor. and in his blind_rage grabbed hold of the leather case. thi knife, intending to kill her. chance, and spatching up the Kknife stabbed him. Turner, she said, had lived off her earn- ings for the past three vears, and always ! abused her. She was afraid to leave him, as he threatened to kill her if she did. Leo Franks. proprictor of the saloon, saw Tur- ner strike her, but she could not say it Franks saw the stabbing. Chief Sullivan will ask the Police Com- missioners to-night to revoke Franks' li- cense in view of the way he has acted in ST I T A A T M R R AN D AR KA A UL 2V BV @dvier- OR. JORDAN’S grear [¢HUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1051 MARKET O bet. 6027, 5.5.C2l, The t Anatomicat Museum in the World ~Weatnecses or any contracied iiase peamtiveiy carod by the oldest Specialist cn the Coast. Bst. 3 yeare. OR. JORDAN--PRIVAYE DISEASES § CLoosultation fren and - “Ced wment personally oz b, Pat i Curs in every case und Write for Book, PEILOSOPRY of MARRIAGE, MAILED FRUE. (A valuable book for men) RDAN & ©O., 105 Market St., 8. . CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES, KR OUR uo;.;:"mmmol ‘:I:HNPS i wu successful ome year. All others falled. hw tion daily. 9 Stevenson st., " e A& e T leased f) ttie Turner was released from priso yesterday afternoon on a bond of m@o, mol.l cepted by Police Judge Fritz. Alfred Hubert in Court, Alfred Hubert, the grocery clerk, who shot and killed Luigi Ferrea, alias Frank ‘Williams, who was attempting to break into the store at 149 Fast street, where Hubert is employed, Saturday night, ap- gured before Judge Conlan yesterday on he charge of murder. He was instructed as i to right and the case was con- nued till July 17, pen the the Coroner's ylnque’l’:. pe Fomlt of ction that has already | ing it was the | She Saw her | anal not assisting the police in thelr investiga- | NEWS FAOM THE OCEAN AUD THE WATER FRONT New Auxiliary Schooner for the Marshall and Caro- EXPLOITS OF HAWKINS AND DRAKE. Copyright, 1900_, by Seymour Eaton. 5 DISCOVERERS AND EXPLORERS OF NORTH line Trade. AMERICA. Epidemic Among the Nati Iv. | baps he was the first Englishman who pidem g the Natives of the| . = o .\ +d sought in vain In the far | 32w the Pacific. for the Spaniards had Aleutian Islands—Newport's o e aiasecured I | Bitherto excluded all other nations from that coast. ssible. Drake vowed fo go thither if Engineer Has a Narrow the scuth when she secured a footing He returned to England with Escape there. The natives of Mexico and Peru ich booty, but not without severa ) dazaled their Spanish assailants with | losses. and in' 1577 was n for a su- —_—— - quantities of these metals and the con- = ofuwt. et B e gl Drake set out with several ships, Teach- _Another auxilary schooner for the in- | QU€OF soon laid his hand on the sn:{r;-les ing the Straits of Magelian and salled of supply. The mines, of Peru especially. | through that dangeous channel in six- terisland trade is almost ready to sail for | the Marshall Islands. The Aeolus is 130 | tons net burden, 100 feet long, 24 feet 6| inches beam and 10 feet deep and has aux- | illary gasoline power that will drive her | at least eight knots an hour. She has| been built for the Jaluit Commercial Com- pany of Polynesia and is aimost a sister | were rich. To enable America to pour untold wealth into the lap of Spain only = labor was needed, and it was soon found. greeted him in the Pacific. By this time What we see now in South Africa, where | i€ Bad eniy_one R e T the mining industry is almost dependent | battiing with the winds for no less th upon native labor, was true of America in | fifty-three days. No great continent, the sixteenth century. The Spaniards | was clear, y south of the Straits of Ma- were hard masters; they held the con- teen days, himself gding ahead in a small boat to act as pilot An awfyl storm | gellan hen the storm ended Drake ship to the Queen of the Isles, now in continued his route up the Pactfic coast s quered in an iron bondage and forced 4 port. The latter vessel has been a regu-, o “Bit. | and entered harbor after harbor, to ths @ IeEU" | from them cruel work in the mines. Bit-| g ement of the Spaniards, who had lar trader among the isiands for nearly two years and is now here for an over- hauling. The Queen of the Isles will not be rea to sail for a couple of weeks, so nearly | all her erew of kunakas deserted yester- day and joined the Aeolus. The Ptter | vessel therefore go out fully manned with a crew that wili stay by her, while the Queen of the i will have to hunt | ter was the hatred of these new-made | slaves for their oppressors—a hatred that flamed out sometimes in bloody massacre. Not only in the mines was enforced toil required. In the West India Isiands and on the adjacent coasts it was found that the new world had tobacco and other rich | products of her soll to offer to the old. hitherto found it hardly necessary to pro- tect these ports. It was the precious me als and jewels that he was after, and ha seized them wherever found—to-day rob- ort, t srrow a ship overtaken igh’ seas. hold stuffed with treasure, the prob. or Drake then was how to_get At _the south the Spaniards bing a on the ¥ lem to England. Ie is a crew which will insi Dol DRl Off | L O5% S00 IABGE A A . now were planning to fortify the narrow 2t Jaluit and sent back (o San Fiancisco | & (FAEIC fact that soon nfter the SAVEAT [ places in the Straits of Magellan, and at the expense of the vessel. Captain |°f the Europeans the natives ¢ were waiting to seize him when he should ands began rapidly to die off. Far across o A iantls the viitaes of Heuth | T¥ to Pase through. He was 108 Wealk o Weilbacher will command the Aeolus. | | face them with success, and he Knew it, The Rio Brings Little News. Africa were thronged with black men. | e T > . B The Mall steamer 1o de Janelro arrived | a0 In Africa, even-early in the stxteenth | fog ", 'ad My extérn ‘entrancs. fo. the from Chinese Japanese and Hawailan | century. the Spaniards began to seek the | channel that Frobisher was seeking on ports yesterday morning early. She lert | labor supply for America. Thus arose the | sne Atlantic side and thus to home. PRneiong before the tiota broke out and | nesro slave trade, with its heritage of | \}.n' we think of the thousands of mil Tn consequence brings little or no news | tansled problems so real at the Present | .t ice.pound sea through which he would of the doings of the Boxers. The passen- S35 o o oua e ine of division | have been obliged to pass we smile at so gers tell of trouble anticipated, but the naive a plan. As he went north the news that has since come by 'wire has | from north to Jouth gave Brazil to PO | weather grew bitterly cold. He landed mote than covered the anticlpation. | oo | South America ta Spatn. Philip IT's quar- | SOMEWRere, 21 (e, S095L, 08, Caluc the cabin passengers, thirty-nine second cabin ;‘?,‘w"";“'(‘"f";g:;"‘):’ ;:;;‘;2;;:‘:,‘:" Y caina: | English flag and named the country New thus claiming the western coast Albion untry long be- and 102 Chincse. of North America for She was delayed at Ho- | 8 S0 e 0 unon the seas, he laid hands is ¢ nolulu_owing to the amount of freight - e that had to e discharged. Furthermore, | o8 8ll the English ships in his ports and | tore'she had planted New Englind on the she was seven s coming up, a rather | SHECH NUAEES O any of them perished | fast. Then he made his boide stroke long trip for a Mail boat. ¢ 5 | iy OORE, S He determined to n»?\rr‘x nnn;ohh_\‘ sa.k-u\§ Among those who returned on the ves-| g o o » - across the fle to Asia ar y workin, e Fientausa: Commander Chivies] e 44664 64+ 9-¢ @ | s “way thence around the Cape of Good Sperry, U. 8. N., who has been on duty | [ * i one voyage had a t b n at Manila and at the North Asiatic sta- | $ p - A the world, and leader, tion. Rev. W, P. Chalfant and wife, whp ' & had perished on the way. have spent some time in the Orient, and, k4 out, did not see land for sixty- F. W. Dohrmann were also among the | ! s . nearly lost his ship by run- cabin passengers. 1T + | ning ona'r Ivv\n| in l}:-fi_rr;‘rl ';'Thx : The Mail boat Newport from Central & + | absence of t years, the Golden Hind | America brought no news of the fighting | ¢ e ¥ in England. having made prdb- in the State of Colombia, Everybody had ' T & | T5 the most remarkable ve n rec- to be under cover at Panama before 10 ¢ 1 P rote that On £ the p. m., and ail stragglers were jailed. ¢ English sailor was nclude t Shore liberty on the Newport was stop- | 4 navigable seas of all rth. ped, and not a line on the state of affairs | ¢ | "Drake and Hawkins lived to attack In the country could be gained by either| ¢ & | tigain g, % their ploneer work officers or_me 7Y was over. Th done something to Snrique Pepper, a member of the Ham- o | was orer e better known. Drake went burg-American Packet Company at| ¢ & | farther south and farther north in the Pa- Guatemala, arri on the Newport. H€ & cific than had gone ther KnoOwn mar. s that the coffee season is about over | o ¢ |iner. and ¢ and sc 500 miles and that the prospects for good times “ | of the Nor! coast were first re- were never better in Nicaragua, Salvador | & g § b Yet his school and_Guatemala. ¢ of action reall for discovery. It While the Newport at San Jose, | ¥ L, & »us and na- Chief Engineer Sauben 1 an experience | ¢ 3 LT Deaen To break he will not forget in a hurry. An elec-|g¢ Liner e Ade in America, | trical storm came up whiie the ship wa > ® o Indure profit by her loss, were at anchor and a “fire ball” nearly turned | & | 0 dndure e < Drake and later voyagers the chief engineer's hair white. It was| ¢ & | like Cavendish hara Hawkins had scemed to shoot out of & nearby latd| o 4 | 2 single settlement did they plant and made Sauben's face turn lvid, so @ | " The real ploneers of English colonization close_did it pass to his head. Mr. o ea e e e e s it He would be al- | !N | W. M. Abbott of the Attorney General's | | have lots of school-day sto quertes | avor of the defendant, | Seymour during the day, admitting the | stabbing but claiming that she acted in | iy | Hospital last Sunda 5 4 the dirk on the | | epidemic ben does not want any more “fire baus” | § |@eoeseosteoroeoed ter Raleigh foundland to Raleigh's half-brother, out only part of a great America. The pext year the English flag was raised in Virginia by an exp which Raleigh sent out. Glowing accounts who was carrying schems to eclonize in hi. Eailing of the Nippon Maru. [The departure of the Toyo Kigen Kaisha's steamer Nippon Maru t aftel noon will be notabie for the number of | naval officers who will go away on her. as heretics, condemned by the inquisition. International law had hardly begun to exist at that date, and both sides, in time of peace, did things that to-day we should No less than thirty-seven captains, lieu- | condemn as piracy. No unprotected ship | of the country reached England; a second tenant commanders and lleutenants will | w 3 ' the ocean, and as the sea- | colony followed. but the great naval go out on the steamer and hIirty-SeVen going commerce of Spain was immeasur- | struggle with Spain. which resulted in the Armada, absorbed English defeat of the erergles. The settlers were abandoned and most of them were murdered by the In- dians. Lord Raieigh turned his attention to Guiana, in South Amer! . He, too, | dreamed of finding _in thosa tropical swamps untold wealth in gold. Legend had made the land “El Dorado"—the gold- en—and Raleigh. abandoning his nobler plan of colonization, sank to the level of the mere gold-seeker. He was the last sur- @ o0 eoed R ok e ] - Thore are to follow on the Rio de Janeiro. All of them are to report to Admiral Remey on the China station and later will be assigned to ships at Hongkong and other Chinese points. Among those who will leave to-day are Lieutenant Cam- mander R. H. Galt, Lieutenant Com- mander J. C. Fremont, Lieutepant Com- mander J. Colweil ~and _Lieutenant Commander W. H. Halsey. When Com- manders Galt and Fremont get aboard | the Nippin Maru to-day they will find | two of (Een‘ old comrades in arms await- | ing them—Captain Nat L James of the val Reserve and Captain Fletcher, U. S. N., retifed, and the gentlemen named were all members of the class of the two latter leave their headquarters in San Francisco. There aré only few members of the class of 72 left and these | four when they meet to-day are sure to s to tell. Abbie M. Deering Libeled. John Skinning and five other members of the_crew of the American schooner | ‘Abbie M. Deering filed a libel in the Unit- ed States District Court yesterday against the schooner to recover $361 2), alleged to | be due as wages. Water Front Notes. The United States revenue cutters Golden Gate and Hartley will no longer all be in service in the night time and will alternate week about. The Rio de Janeiro | dropped anchor in the stream near Al-| catraz Island, where she remained until 8 o'clock in the morning, when the Cus- toms officers were placed on board, having remained unguarded for nearly eight hwurs against the possible depredations of smuggler: Captain E. F. Taylor of the well known firm of Taylor, Adams & Pritchard re- | turnea to San Francisco yesterday after | a sojourn of two months in the East. | When he left here it was his intention to be gone three weeks, but the seductions of Cape Cod and the blue-fish kept him in | New England and only gave him a chance for a flying visit to Chicago. Captain | Taylor i still of the opinion that Cali- | fornia is the finest State in the Union and that Maine runs a good second. The steamer Homer arrived from the! Seal Islands via Cape Nome yesterday. | When she got to St. Paul there was an among the Esquimaux so the | supolies could not be landed. At St George a similar state of affairs existed, so nearly all the provisions sent north by the Trading Company are still on the| ship. So many of the natives were sick | that there were none left to handle the boats. The last epidemic among _the | natives was about six years ago and at | thaé time a great many of the Esquimaux died. SULLIVAN'S DEATH DUE TO NATURAL CAUSES His True Name Was Craddock and ably greater than was that of England, the English seamen had the wider range of chances to secure prizes. Spanish gen- temen were in time of peace sold at auc- tion at Dover to the highest bidder—n to be kept as slaves, but to be held ransom, in the manner of the Sicilian brigands of our own days. Spain had declared from the beginning that no other country should trade with her colonies, and rigorously enforced the decree. Men will, however, in deflance of laws, buy and sell where they can make | a profit, and to the Spanish coasts of | ‘America_Englishmen from time to time found their wa e most memorable of these was John Hawkins. Negro slaves were much in demand in America. The Spanish_Government made slave traders take out a high-priced Jicense, pocketed | besides a heavy import duty upon every ve brought into the colonies, and in | 1553 turned the trade into a monopoly ranted to one man. John Hawkins saw is chance, slipped down the west coast of Africa in attacked native villages, not without bloodshed, and, in the end, safled away to America with some hun: dreds of negroes under his hatchways. The Spanish bought the slaves on the.sly, for they were cheaper than the ones upon which the regular duty was paid. Haw- kins got from £100 to £200 for each of his negroes, and went back to England with enormous profits for the sharers in the enterprise. Queen Elizabeth herseif joimed in it. Hawkins rcpeated his e ploit, paid 60 per cent profit to the part ners and became the best-talked-of man in_England. Spain protested: Hawkins, of course, was disavowed, but ne fitted out a new expedition, and ‘on October 2, 1567, secretly left England on a third slave-dealing ex- pedition, With him was a young relati of twenty-two, Francis Drake, destined to leave the greatest name in the naval . *tP e P TP OGP PO P L d . STR FRANCIS DRAKE. - P . - > L 4 . L4 + S B > * Q @ + K ! 4 @ 1 k3 + E % vivor of the great English explorers and adventuters of the !l"l(:‘, h ;k.l tury, and when Elizabeth was dead and James, her history of the sixteenth cemtury: ous fail. | SUccessor. forsaking the traditional fight ure . Negrogs were Indeed secured and [vith Spain, began to coquel and plan al- cartled to America, and some were sold, | lances with her, Raleigh s life was really but the Spaniards were alert as they had | Part of the prize Spain demanded for her not been before. Hawkins, though his | Somplaisance. That pathecic scene in OF country was not at war with Spain, at- | Palace yard on October 29, 161, when his tacked more than one town which refused | head. with its curly gray Balr. was laid to trade with him, and for a time carried | o7 the block. seemed to mark the final tri- matters with a high hand. At last he ap- | Umph of Spain. It really marked not this, peared before the harbor of Vera Cruz, |Dbut the end of the era of adventure and the most important seaport in Mexico, de- | Bold-seeking. Already Erglish colonists manded leave to victual and repair, and, | Were prospering in Virginia and two years to Insure his operations, seized the island | later they voyaged to the bieak shores of at the entrance and mounted cannon | New England to stay. The sixteenth cen- Which commanded the roadstead. Span- | tury voyagers and discoverers had dons ish treasure ships were there, but Haw- | their work. They had not colonized, but kins was no pirate, and apparently seized | they had made English colonization pos- sible by humbling the naval power of nothing but what was necessary for his own defense and to enable him to trade. | Spain. GEORGE M. WRONG. University of Toronto. The very nmext day a Spanish fleet of thir- teen ships appeared before the haven. SURGEON GENERAL OF | ARMY COMING HERE Parleying followed. Hawkins could have Is on a Tour of Inspection of Military | | | kept the Spaniards out. but in the end they entered the port on the understand- | ing that he was to be allowed to complete | his victualing and repairs. | The Spanish fleet once within the port, | what happened was perhaps inevitable. | Upon the English the Spanish looked as irates. with whom faith need not be als of the He Had Been Out on a ept; the English. on the other hand Bes ‘o Spree. rested on the agreément made. In over est. = whelming _strength the Spaniards at-| S [ I George W. St K Autopsy Surgeon Leland held an au-| thcked Hawkins' few ships and there was 1 . ;ffi:nmue:::ablyOarrrrh-e in s;fib:;:. topsy vesterday upon the body of Thomas Sullivan, who was brought in an uncon- ‘condition to the City Recelving night. at death had ensued from natural causes, there being no wounds or fractures on the body. The stomach was sent tp the City Chemist for ysis. Detectives McMahon and Dillon learned yesterday that the real name of the dead man was Thomas Craddock instead of | Sullivan, and that he had been drinking freely for several days before his death. —_—————————— For Having Counterfeit Money. Secret Service Agent Hazen is investi- gating the case of Franciska Zukensky, who was arrested last Saturday night by Officer Cooney for passing a counterfeit half dollar on the conductor of a Valen- cia-street car. Two counterfeit half dol- lars and several lottery tickets were found upon his person. Chief Hazen has not placed any charge against the woman, It appearing that she came into possession of ‘the bad money Innocently. a_ bloody struggle. well sustained by the English. The odds were. however, too great. Hawkins and Drake in the end with difficulty made their way out of the port with two vessels. They lost every- thing else, including many men and much cisco next week. He is on a tour of in- spection. Leaving Washington July 3, he planned to visi¢ St. Louis, the Army and Navy Hospital at Hot Springs. Kan., the | hospital at Fort Bay, the hospital at Los property. | Angeles and the general hospital at the For a_time Hawkins was kept busy in | Presidio. E England as treasurer of the navy, and | The last mentioned is the mostimportant Drake became leader in the attacks on | military hospital in the United States, re- Spain. Hawkins was a trader, and a fair- ceiving all the sick soldiers from the Phil- 1y honest one. Drake. on_the other hand, | ippines and other isiand territory on tha was resolved to rob the Spaniards when- | Pacific mow under American control. ever he could. He was not a pirate, for | There will be considerable to interest Sur- he usually acted with the sanction of his gean General Sternberg here and his stay sovereign and conducted himself as her | may be longer than at any other point. representative. In fact; though not in | ————————————— theory. there was war between England Moody Now in Prison. d Spain duricg the whole of Drake's | active o ke = | Albert M. Moody, the jockey, was suf- active career. He accepted the fact. and did not_trouble himself about the theory. | ficiently recovered to be taken from the Hospital to the City Prison yes- The Spaniards to avoid the dangerous Receivin straits of Magellan were accustomed | terday. Two charges of assault to murder shooting Dr. Lejand foun For Charity. The public arc earnestly requested to notify the representative, Mrs. E. Pearce, 726 Sixth avenue, Richmond district, eity, to bring_the gold and silver from the | were booked against him for mines of Peru up the Pacific coast, across | Mrs. Lulu Roylance and shooting at H. R. :a:ngi();?;x:“otm{'alxmfi c'mm m.:z:h-cll. | Adams in front of the Winchester House gpain. Drake haunted the Gult o!p-gax? ’ R A e S, co, made friends wi e maroons. hal: breeds of negro and indian blood. who at- j Letter Carriers Going to Detroit. :fi‘:f‘! tlr:‘e'"ig:‘l‘lllt;‘?;lrk‘ev‘:ud 'bea.llu‘ The eleventh annual convention of the o s of mules | x. 3 . ;i-'tl:g‘ T ;cde t:‘&‘fi};;“; and e | :fl;‘;:-;nehlfsln‘eaet:‘;{.";(?cn. A::::::::l: ized the town | . of Nombre de Dios. where he Saw 10 less | e Bearol s i ey from Golden of the Prison and Hospital ous As- | than 380 tons of siiver gathered Gote Branch B . eed e couven- Sociation, of any m: Sioth: | rmane. e Ventured far across the jath: | ton:, Louls E. Bowin, Jumes C. Murphy ing, ete., etc., they she will off mus and from an enormous tree in which his maroon friends had built a kind of bower, he looked out u the waters both of the Pacific and the Atlantic. Per- —————— Southfield Wellington is the best coal for your Range call or send for the same. will 1 iindly donats, and “Last. be most “re- 1 ~ @

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