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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JULY 23, 1900. FATHER AND SON MEET DEATH IN THE BAY OFF LIME POINT B+ttt ettt 0000000ttt 00e0t0e000000000000000000000000000| TWO SCHOONERS WITH CAPTAINS . * ¢ © . é ® t| —_— . | $ |Free Trade Damaged in a . ® | : +| Southwester and the - & . s Master Injured. . | - - 4 4 | Mary Etta Towed From Bowens Land- 2 | 5 s | ing by the Navarro, the Skipper " ®| Being Too Sick to Navi- . t 1 : . gate Her. 3 TRty : 4| The schooners Free Trade and Mary Et- ¢ | ta both arrived in"port yesterday with 2 & | their_captains sick. One of the masters : o | Was injured while his vessel was loading. The other was taken sick three days agn . ® | and had to be removed to a hospital as | & # soon as the schooner docked. b ® | The ree Trade left here on the 3th . and made a long trip of it up the g She was bound for Coos Bay, bu- . s winds delayed her and 11 p . before a southw The * S v and head gear were car- v nd_the. schooner had to_be & for San Francisco. Two ) ¢ later Captain Thorson was taken 2 ¢ | sick and was still in a_precarious con- + | dition when the Free Trade came to an 4 anchor. Captain Thorsow was then taken p( and his fric expect that a few of caretul nursing will see him FOUGHT SEVEN HOURS WITH SEA AND WIND FOR HIS LIFE e S S SO PP PP PP PR S - > ~reseieg + - L 4 5 1 . 1 > . L 4 ¥ - @ ’ * ® * ¢ . ; . . 2 . - b | . : . ; . ; > 1 - b 4 - T - ® > ; . 1 s PY . T 42 . * N RESCUING THE MAN FROM * 14 MUSSEL ROCK. 5 e @csiosisisreisisiosiece® * bt ? | the ocean boulevard and started south- | % £ ® | ward. At the end of the boulevard he | & 4 L3 4 | turned down onto the beach and rode as | ¢ N . @ | far as the cliffs that block further pro- & - = o | Sress, just where Mussel Rock stands | o & | Poldly out about 100 yards from the| g > | ¢ | shore. Mounts was tired and hot and a . & ¢ | good swimmer. At that time, about 12:3), | ¢ & 3 & | there was not much surf running, and so | & he decided to take a swim in the breakers. . ® ¢ Mounts swam out as far as the rock | ¢ - - & | and tried to land upon it. but he could g ® & 1 find no foothold, for the waves played ¢ | with him and brought him out and threw ¢ B . & | him back until one, bigger and whiter | Ps than the others, caught him and threw '@ —4->4->-4 9+ &+ 6+>+@ him against the side of the rock with ter- @ ¢S+ 3+ S+ b +d s+ s sie@ : und_again. . ¢ | ‘The Free - s tfe famous vess: )¢ @ | that went in s ¢ an island of goi . st of e English cap b ¢ ¢ sts who went Vi * ? oned on . a Seatt ® 4 » of the Alaska Commercial < pany’s peats and told a story of mutiny ® 4 | and extortion he captain who was in . & | command of the vessel ed her down o 1o a small port in Ore where he soid o ? r and then appeared. . ® | The Free Trade kept up north for a . finaiiy back to San Fran : D time past has be * lumber tra . . tta came In from tow of the steam 1 vesterda While ® * a was loading, Captain Ander ) ¢ © struck on the head by a falling 14 lumber and had his scalp badly ¢ There wa the brain . 4 | and other inju o | ter to have t ? down. Captain 4 son is still suffering * @ | from his will not be abld to é ¢ | take th ) sea on hey next trip - ® Busy Times on Transports. PS 4 There will be busy times around the p & | transport whart for the next week to come. The ancoc ocks this morning . Voreay Sl Dol 4 | and the work of loading her will begin at & | once. She is scheduled to sail next Sun- 1 + | @ay and will carry % marines, three bat- * | teries of artille nd 330 recr: all for . | China. From here the Hancock will go ars + | to Nagasaki and from there to Taku. It HIN TY THROWN ? | the trouble in China is over before the 4 FISHING PAR T: INTO THE WATER BY CAPSIZING OF THEIR BOAT. ? | transport reaches saki the men will . ¢ | be sent to the Phi % @eteireteseieieieieitieieieie S S ) As soon as the Hancock is away the Mead will go into the berth and she will nere h ¢ clasped in arms, slipped from | be rushed WThe Warren is ex- ny bottom and disappeared fi pected in about August 1 ath the waves. He had pr and if it will sail ag ed by turns and struggled August 15. antime the ser discove death, but when the time Strathgyle, e and Belgian yvertufned t t down' without a murmur. will be joading mules and horses and suy e was seen of the bodies plies for the soldiers, so that the quar- swallowed them up and the | master's department will have its hands at drifted ¢ full for some days to come. arkr opy ben ne noat F. M. Somt! Breaks Down. Haltzheuer discovered the plignt | The Alviso steamer F. M. Smith broke > men. He put off in his boat and | her shaft Saturday in the slough and had had McWhirter and Makoveli | to be towed back to San Francisco by the aboard. They were so exhausted | tu& Annie. It will be several days before | )t speak, and the keeper | Sh€ can be put on the run again and in them direct to Sausalito, | the meantime another sternwheeler will e matter. assistance be out 3:45 . The could 1 too sick to say much about the ient. | Gueldner, who was a carpenter, leaves a wife and one child, a little girl about 5 years of age. They are left in destitute circumstances by hi v death. The ene at their little n the new keén #o the wife and mother was ng. M Gueldner, her was s ng with and lttl husband and son for whom she was walting would return. The news was broken to gently as possible, but she refused Her cries for “my hus- poor ' were the tide, d e one arm he other to hoat. Eagerly rizon, but there Far away . d “my hearthreaking. Makowski is a painter and resides with his family at 617 York street. MeWhirter is the proprieter of an_electrical shop on stfeet, near Seventeenth ttle possibility that the bodies ner and his son’ will ever be re- The tide was ebbing when they 1d still had some hours to | a late hour last night they [+ be secured to take her place. Walla Walla Sails. The Pacific Coast Steamship Contpany’s Walla Walla finally got away for Puget Sound por esterday morning. She was to have sailed Friday at 11 a. m. with over 300 passengers, but when she got out In the stream a gasket blew out and she had to return to the wharf. While | docking something went wrong with the piston and It took two days to repair the damage. In the meantime many of the passengers got tired of waiting and went nerth on the train. Those who re- mained by the ship were fed and cared for by the company. Water Front Notes. Cohen, better known among the men and along the front as Duma,” will not be seen around rry building any more. The au- ities have refused to i e him a li- nse and the police refuse to allow him near the depot. On July Cohen showed rgeant “Tom’” Mahoney a license which purported to have been issued by the Tax Collector. It was to run from July 1 u N. transfer “Duma an hour a ances are tha rr b Guelc 0 ihe hances are that the bodles | 0\ 7er'y and “Duma Duma said he pald NG £ the regular fee of $15 for it. Saturday = = - = =— - — = == = — | License Collector Scott wak around the et ferries rounding up the runners and de- hased from manding to see their license. Cohen had iy no license, but said it was at home. He 4 was sent to get it, but came back and N sald it was lost. Sergeant Mahoney had o the number and particulars in book STACENT 1S | ooz ATTACKED BY A KING AT NOME »vov sy 2 e VICIOUS CROWD | Friends Say There Is No Truth in| Tale of His Asphyxi- that he ps_for reference, but S ich license had ever been issued and no s that the one Cohen had shown_the polic officer was a_counterfeit Cohen then ited to pay $15 for another licenise, but Scott would not accept it and warned ‘Duma Duma’’ nev to solicit business on the water front again. Now Commands the Planet Mars. Captain John A. Bromley, who is well known in San Franclsco, ing been here hav | ation. | ’ 5 ~ o = e SRt Ji gt i s i 4 | many times in the Brit %h ships Cressing- George Baldwin Establishes | Tnhe tricnds of James v. col General Mix-Up During & | are" g S{Simer P M the P e £01 X . nant over a story printed in a ng latter is a new vessel, on her maiden voy- a Successful Business in | JiiL 5 (e chac Coteman nad ens | DanceattheOcean Beach | ase and is 52 feet long, 4 teet brond and the North = siofftd P rmtinone g S 81 feet deep, with a capacity of 7000 tons tne orin. uminating gas and wou have t PEVIIIOD» i1 be lcased fo bear of his ;i-nmo{nlé;:.ds | asphyxiated b the timely assistance . L hagel i —_— guest who chanced to smell the es- | res;:a k:y the L;Wl;ss Elemer;: He ‘r,\,,”g.r{‘z,f;,,anl,,;" for the mine early n | Officer Herlihy Knocked Senseless n| a8 & eader—Churches the week, and is st absent, else he Would himself have denied. the apeurd | And Patrolman Graham Roughly ate friends of the gentleman | Handled and Bruisgd Ba- <olutely deny the st They Land-Grabbers. Fomgt i A s B fore Aid Comes e R | —_— Captain George Baldwin, one tme ser-| SUDDEN DEATH OF A [ Eighth California Voluatecrs, WELL-KNOWN CITIZEN | Are Guarded Against Inti There was a “hot time” at the Ocean Beach Pavilion yesterday afternoon. The usual Sunday dance was in progress when one of the waltzers objected to a slurring John A. Jackson, better known to his | remark hurled at his best girl by a jealous intimates as “‘Colonel” Jackson, and for | Suitor. ~Without waiting to finish the many years watchman and janitor of the | dance the girl's protector, after divesting % | Mechanics’ Pavilion, died last night from | himself of his coat, proceeded to ‘annihi- o sudlen aftack of heart talltive, late her calumniator.« The latter was ac- | Shortly after 9 o'clock Mr. Jackson was | Companied by several friends, who, on | stricken in his apartments in the pavilion. | Be€ing him put to sieep by a well directea | A doctor was summoned and every effort | blow on the chin, started to wreak venge- | was made to revive the patient without | @hce on his conqueror. In a few min- | e Eig! wn in Nome as the greatest b He has succeeded in overaw bullies on the beach and feared by the lawless eiem: ding to the stories told by retur seekers. not without difficulty that Cap- iwin attained this supremacy than one hard ‘fight rest is actions in insisting upon just 15 n ployed for a long time in the Palace . Hotel as spectal officer and detective. De- | {18 down a number of the toughest of the ceased was a native of Ohio and 8 | crowd they werel suddenly surrounded | < Yars | gnd their clubs taken from them. Heriihy | was struck over the head and knocked | | senseless. Graham, who was in citizen's | clothes, was roughly handled, but escaped | with a few bruises. At this juncture Sey. eral other police officers appeared on the » under arrest and took him Soon afterward the word the prisoner was an d the Mayor immediately h an apology for his ar- ptain Baldwin demanded that the carried’ out and that he be given but the Mayor discreetly took no | Nappe, a native of Germany and a painter by trade, ended his earth! tice of his demand and disappeared I ‘ 0 Ro0s T ol £ K e Ba | career by hanging himself in a woodshed | SCene and soon dispersed the crowd. Al Captain Baldwin did not go to Nome to |at an early hour yesterday morning. | dter by occupation, was recognized ae trs | £ E0id. He is the manager of the big_ | Nappe, who has been somewhat dissipat nardware store in the camp. e | of late, returned to his home, at Chen- | arrested. At the City Pri 1 supposition is that he never |ery and Miguel streets, at 11 o'clock last | charged with an assat’xlt wi‘flfumahcele:fll , for ln; se m’blw be everyl;where n‘;. ilaturdasr‘ nigrman(d :mm; ]conv rsing with | weapon. Peter Shewbridge, a blncksmllhy 1 res. Being a man, and as Zoo s wife until after midnight said | wa ¥ & : tured as be 15 Dig, he Claime the figat | was going to retire. His wife, however, | Ganp >0 arrested and charged with being take part In any dispute in which he | suspecting that he had gone out, went in | The wounded policeman was taken to a that the weaker party is getting the | search of him. She found his body swing- | doctor’s office In the vicinity, where two ed | individual who struck Herlihy and he was of it, without fear of personal in- | ing from a rope in the woodshed. Mrs. | ugly wounds in his scalp w | o Ta fact, thany people say that he is | Nappe notified Mrs. Harcmann. 4. nelgh: | 1n his. report of.the feht Hean icned. | © king of the Nome beach fo-day. | bor, Who in turn notified Deputy Coroner | that HIll was ejected from the Saneass | ; ! reports the three churches in | McCormick and the body was taken to | pavilion three times for making himses t me were locked up and wunder | the Morgue. ~Nappe leaves a wife and | obnoxious, but refused to go away, guard. The Jand upon which the sacred | five small children. | Feturning the last time he Started the gen. edifices are built is. like nearly all of the | | eral mix-up and was rewarded hy being 1 —————— Bound for Yosemite. struck on the head with a ciub In the YOUNG BOY ROBS HIS . FATHER OF MUCH GOLD of Which They Claim to Be Ignorant. of Pacific and Jones streets, was robbed old son on Saturday. According to the conspiracy In which himself and two other youths were involved, but those whom the lad charges with complicity deny their guilt. As yet the police have been unable to learn what was done with the money. About 1 o'clock Sunday morning Gian- reported his loss to the California- he had seen the money in the bureau drawer in his home and had told a num- ber of lads In the neighborhood about it, He claims that the two other boys, aged 8 and 10 vears, suggested that he take the coin and that the trio would have a good time with it. The police interviewed the accused boys and they emphatically deny voung Gian- nini's story. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL'S SOCIETY HOLDS MEETING The quarterly meeting of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul was held yesterday forenoon at St. Paul's Church, on Twen- ty-ninth and Church streets. Satisfactory reports were received from the parish workers of the society, showing the amount of good work done during the last three months. D. Giannini, a fruit dealer at the corner | of $150 in gold coin by his little elght-year- | No arrests have been made. | rer in the famous camp, clatmed | resent, besldes th by many different parties. The strongest | . Daaipg % | hands of Herlihy. It was at this Juncture | ymmediate charge of SRE o Claimants, at last accounts. were holding | CHINESE CAMI 2—David B, | that Hill and his friends attacked thé of. | HameC Machers Connolly, Fenmessy o \e property by force of arms. Ministers | Henderson of Dubuque, Towa, Speaker of | ficers. Kgn.ngdy pastors of St. Paul's Church were not even permitted to hold services, | the House of Representatives, accom- | d parish. ! e because the men in possession fearsd that | panied by his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Smith | Hon. L. E. Chittenden. "-'rh& socfety has for its spiritual aa other claimants would carry concealed | {cPherson and Marion de Vries and wifs,. &rme into the churches, and fortifying | arrived here this evening by private car. the buildings In every themselves within possession by main force. in- uecureid'rhey were enthusiastically received and epa stance the church people claim to have i the Big Oak Flat route for Yosemite. rted this evening in a six-in-hand via BURLINGTON, Vt, July 22.—Hon. L. E. Chittenden, Registrar of the Treasury during the Lincoln administration, died here to-day, aged 77 years. viser Rev. J. J. Prendergast, vicar general of the archdlocese. John M. Burnett is g_resldent and P. J. Thomas secretary. he soclety is organized for the purpose | | | i Implicates Two Other Lads in Theft, boy's story the theft was the result of a | | | | mself and people who were not a e e int e o Praseqves. Dufing his | reault, as death ensued in a few minutes, | Utes nearly every one on the floor was | Police Station. Poll | k'in the camp He got into & dis- | Decased was a famillar fgure in the (mixed up in a general “scrap. | ke Ateral tath o uan. Hon & restaurant man over a ham | cummunity and an active member in the | Policemen Herlihy and James Graham | fastemed the erime. on *Hadind 298 it is said, and the Mayor of ) um; A Institute. . Before taking | were present, and with drawn clubs start- | eight-year-old _son of the ' fruit is the biggest man in town, | of the big pavilion he had been | eq to quell the disturbance. After knock- | dealer. The lad confessed. He sald Lot glving relief to worthy poor families. rific force. He clung desperately to the s Then the two men sent USSEL ROCK came near claim- | siime and seaweed, and it was well he ing another victim vesterday. | did, for his thigh was broken and he was up the beach to the life sav For sevdn hours the sea fought | helpless. As the wave drew away he|and went themselves over B e poure fhe sea fought |lifted himself by the moss and the points | whers *they telephoned in to v bo h o f the of rock, and gradually worked his way chant Exchange that th was lay helpless just about the sweep of the | ou¢ of reach of the rollers that tumbled | on Mussel Rock in need of heid breakers. The spume of the incoming | in after him. It was his only chance and | The life savers lost no time in rollers dashed over him and the waves | he made the best of it, but when he had | ing to the rescue. Captain Henry reached the top, sixty feet above the surf, | chief of the station. Ole Bowling reached for him, but never succeeded | he could do no more and he lay exhausted cey Woodruff, Charles Peterson Cie il v R e B i and ungble to move. It wa$ then about | Felcher were the men who we . i o1 t + o'clock. Mounts. They tool v t 8 side Life-saving Station took a line |1 FEOCL ¢ 0ot 3 the injured, freesing | and line and a breeches b when out to the rock and brought the man In | man lay there in the wind and spray and | they got rock they fou through the surf. He had been for a swim | then two pedestrians passed and noticed could not w em, as Mounts was in the treacherous breakers that whiten | him. They were Willlam F. Delaney of less. A below the | the American Biscuit Company and E. H. | The rock is a long way fro s themselves against the cli 0ld Ocean House, and one of them picked | him up and flung him against the rock | like a chip on the surface@¥f the sea. His | thigh was broken against the jagged and it was late when t upon for assistance when the life savers reac Ole Bowling and Cha are the men who swam ¢ There was no such thing as having t Twight, a chemist in the employ of the California Wine Association. They were attracted by the peculiar actions of the man on the rock. He would sit up and wave his arms and signal to the shore and then he wouid fall back as if over- at points, but he managed to hold on and e b - fhen to climb above the reach of the | come by his own exertions. They watched | injured and benumbed man swi < freen swells that swirled around the reet, | him for some time. It became more and | through the surf, so while Bow 1 o 55 ud one saw him | More evident that he was in dire need of Woodruft lowered him_ down and there he lay until some one saw him | O SRECHC I T S0t 1o devise some | wash of the breakers Pe and called the life-savers to his assist- | manng of getting him off. They shouted | cher made their way out ance. to him, but he could not answer. or if he | and caught him and brought him L. S. Mounts is the man who came so | could, what he said was drowned in the Mounts was put into a wagon at And so, as there was | and was hurtied up the beach to the roar of the surf. 1 nothing else to do, Twight threw off his clothes and bravely ventured into the near being drowned in the surf. Hels a visitor in the city from Modoc, and during his stay here he has been rooming at 5 ~Palk - break He swam out to the rock and 910 "Polk street. Yesterday morning he | coim“Tound it, trying to find some way started for a ride on his bicycle, and, | to get up its steep sides, but he could find afteg doing the park thoroughly, he took | none and had to give up the attempt. saving station. There he was given a cup of coffee and more blank e about him and he was hurri Ingleside. The ambulance phoned for, with directions 3 | there, and he was taken to the hospit Remodeling Sale Noise and confusion have a tendency to keep customers away==but low prices are sure to bring and hold cus- tomers. < These reductions are what Kkeep us busy during the progress of our alterations., <« <« <« = = [Made-to-order suits which cost you $13.50 and $15.00 a short time ago are now made for $10.00. o o o o o o Ready-made suits: Blue serges which sold for $12.50 and $15.00 can now be had for $685. « « Ten-dollar cheviots are going at $5.25 . « Fancy cheviots, value $i5.00, arereducedto $8.45. « w4 w « Boys’ suits, formerly $2.65 and $2.85, are now sold for $1.70. « «= =« Fedoras and Graecos, all colors, goc. « Silk front golf shirts, worth $1.00, present price 60c. & SNWOO0D (- 718 Market Strect.