The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 28, 1900, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1900. SIX HUNDRED (ILLED IN THE PRIAMA FIGHT Liberal Rebellion in Colom- bia Is Now at an End. Many Foreigners Who Participated in Movement Have Already Left and All Will Be Banished WOMAN DRINKS POISON IN A NEW YORK HOSPITAL ed Ostensibly to See Wi Y I THE JESTER CASE INSTRUCTED MEXICANS DEFEATED BY MAYA INDIANS Trops Under General Were Outnumbered roment vo red t modern T BATTLE WITH ROBBERS. itizens Attack Men Who Had At- tempted to Rob a Bank. SOND, Kansas, July 27.—Cltizens aged in a strect who had at- ted to réb t of Richmond. ral shots were e nged und it is th one robber was wounded. hounds have been put on their tracks. The robbers had blown the safe door into the street, and the noise of the ex- pioston brought & crowd to the scene. No Toney wWas secur I with a gang e = WORSHIP ON THE CLIFFS ‘ BY THE SEA AT SUNRISE REV R.L- M< HATTON the cliffs be- levotional exer- iristian Kirk, dean of the cavvemaim, PROMINENT DELEGATES AT THE CHRISTIAN CONVENTION. %\ | } } $ $ i i | Declare They Will Never Recognize PROF. AMELETON B R e SRCRL SRy S TWELVE KILLED IN k NEW ORLEANS RIOTS Wood. in , and armed In a lit- ar crowd time Father Fitzgerald of rch was summoned to ad- o the police of- the aller. ]’rne the window. The la begged the desperado not to , however, fired his and Bloomfield fell . left the scene, o the alley and bring £ Lally. They entered, and were attempting to take the dead officer from that of his ha red again. 3 out and after- body out also. In the nse crowd had gath- and schemes were “harles out of the Fusillade of Bullets. not propose to be his life deasly. came to the window, te after time he one. er hem. and George goods Banville »f the head of a dry were wounded. extra police began to i he returned their Andy Van Kuren, keeper of the po- 1, got a bullet in the body and fell Just afterward H. H. Ball, aged €5, dead working for the Mutual Benevoient Asso- clation, was hit and mortally wounded. About the same time Frank Bertucci re- ceived a shot in the left shoulder and J. W. Bofel one in the right hand. | Ultimately 1t was decided that the only way to get Charles out was to burn the | building in which he was intrenched. | There were, however, some scruples aboat | resorting to this method, the district be- | ing densely populated, Refuge in Flames. But it was determined that the fire de- and sent to jail in a patrol wagon. | chesters Vand re- ed into the body. t to pleces. After dead a mob ice and the ¢ s into the while a son of one of the mur- nen rushed up and stamped the face beyon . There were loud should be taken to At this instant, however, a of police arrived in a patrol ight for the Body. Thousands of persons congregated in the vicinity and it looked as though there would be a clash. The police somehow seemed to h regained their courage and promptly pushed the crowd aside, picked up the body and threw it into the patrol wagon. The driver whipped up his horses the wagon started off, with 500 peo- nnirg after it and clamoring for the cremation of the body of the desperado. The wagon s faster than the mob and made its way in safety to uarters. There an immense crowd had gathered and great difficulty | nced in taking the corpse of e wagon into the s’ body was stripped found to have been literal d from head to foot by the bullets er the body had been p! on the marble slab in the morgue, a who was alleged to have es intim: ¥ came to the after regarding the body lared it was not that . of that of his brother, r, however, Joseph Stassi, Italian, positively identified the murderer of Day and a responsible it as that of Iy after the body of Charles had been taken away a report spread that, there were still some negroes in the ng building. The square was quick- rounded by a guard of men with nchesters and a special squad made its | way into the burning building. In a, room which the fire had not , reached | three negroes were found dressed in| women’s clothes. They were hustled out | Mob Justice. Subsequentiy, a fourth person, a mulat- to, was discovered in the building. He | made a desperate resistance and while in | the hands of the police was killed by a shot from 4 pistol in the hands of one of the disorderly mob that had congregated in_the vicinity. Just about the time that Charles’ body | they immediately mobbed him. TI CARNERS WILL “NOT TREAT WITH THE FISHERMEN Reject the Overtures Made by the Commissioner of Labor. r — the Union, and as a Result There May Be Renewed Trouble. SRR Special Dispatch to The Call. VANCOUVER, B. C., July 27.—The Ste- veston salmon canners to-night refused to | proposition of Labor Com- er on behalf of the fish- are done with the RRRRARRERREREVRRERRRRARR Wmnmnfinmn ists, e union striking red that the members of orrowing t . and < much right to to_form PRERRERREERRRRE tely dectded to y night, even it the mean- fishermen from the that the sirike may be over by probable that the militia will be 1 ston on Saturday 5t ed breach i S SOUND CANNERS ANXIOUS. Run of Salmon Is Light and the Sea- son Will Be Unprofitable. 1al Disoat REERR R ERERRERE PR R RER IR RN RERRER RN, SRR July 27.—The on Puget Sound are| over the run of fish this me last season they had pack = WCRK OF CHRISTIAN UNION CONVENTION Rev. J. L. Cook, a Colored Preacher, | Delivers an Interesting Address on the Race Problem. | R, July 27.—The forenoon ses-| of the twelfth annual conven- | People’s Christian BEvRRREy ake rega grant ed of the sectional he foren & RREARONNANRIERZIBRAMB RN ERRRVRNN W1 IRNNWNY HOME FROM SOUTH AFRICA. Duke of Marlborough and Lady Wil- son Reach Southampton. | LONDON. 2.—Among the arrivals from South Africa to-d: were the Duke of Marlborough and Lady Sarah Wilson. They e met at the docks at South- ampton Consuelo, Duchess of Marl- borough ( § lerbilt), and Lady Geor- ? Senor AntonioVar-. gas, the famous, bari- one, and Madame Marquardt, cele- brated harpiste, at Em- porium Concert to-night. o Sensational Saturday Sales! Close buying, immense sales, department store methods are the facrors that e oo | Blue kne day, with a watch.. fo 0. books, bou strong c'oth, printed , open-faced t for-23c. in every way suita for library and const: use; 185 works of tith fam> h Bargain Tables—Main Al the au- Bargais in Impe- Ladies’ Heckwear. [ ! Persian and floral eff ets, i range of colorings; regular va ani 35¢ each; & big special purchase, on sa'e Saturday. Bargain Tables—Main Alsle. To- B B S b 75¢ Books St | Bargain vrice | Bargain in ecial price EMPORIUM. | THZ EMPORIUM. EMPORIY) and GoldenRule Bazaar. CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST--AMERICA'S GRANDEST STORE S make these o3 el With Every School Suit Bought Here To-Day We Give Free a Reliahle Watch. Boss' Al Wool 2-piece Suits, Bors' St made «f pretty Cassimere and Fast ot, double seat and double <, sizes for 8 to 16 rears. [ $3.45 Eigh y otker stvles >-piece Surls, ranging in price from $2.45 made of All-Woo! Fancy Cassimera or Fast Biuz Cheviots; some very pretty patterns; pants have double seats and knee: To - day. with watch.... Twenly other styles 3 - piece Suits from $3.95 io $10.00. We cffer for Satur- | = z day on'y 2)00 yards in Ribbons. . 133 15c Je Ribroas, plain, fancy, moire and Per- sian, from 2 to 4 inches wide, at the vary special price per yard - 9c| Bargain Tables—Main Aisle. To-day only (Satur- day), 150 Ladies’ .eather and Ladies’ Belts. cial purcha new style goo black, seal, tan and brown M rocco; ina geod assortment of new to-day, each | Bargain Tables—Main Alsle. prices possible. vish J=piece Swuits, Bovs' made exactly like a man’s, for ages 13 to 19 years; A!l-Wool B'us and Fancy Cheviot. $4.95 DMore than fwenty other shiles S a o o o o PERRERRRRRRRRERRRRERREERRRRRY, School Children Unaccompanied by Parents Given Careful Attention in School upply Departments. ,, i Pants Suits, AAARNRRANE ARATH ST AR A To - day, with 85 Long Pants suits fo $15.00. jrom $6.00 e S R A o i R e Men’s All-Wool 7 orking Pants, $1.45. ™ fabries, in dark and ligh well made, serviceable $25 Bargainr in 0 ém & tain Ends, froi Curtain Ends. - g e long, in all widths; suitable for sash, door or ws; at special prices to-day, ranzing from 25c t0 $1.25 Each. —Back of Elevator. HARAAARRANAAASE caaneannage Francisco Ber- raldo Imported Itali: Ca Soap for the toilet and b ight 2-b 20c bars, on Specia! Sale By School| Hoys’ Golf and (7 Co i Saiior Caps. colors and fancy pleids, regularly Z5ceict, g gy on special sale 10-daY..ccrerem- Boys’ Sailor Cavs, Fe't Telescope Hats and the large Felt sample line, worth $1.00 to $250 each, special sale to-day... Hat Department—Main Floor. Bargains in Me':?’: Furnishings. °*, on ary va'ues and Boy<' Nackwear. MED MERCERIZED COT- |4 OCKS - B.ack, tans, cardinals and elate, look just like silk, 35 dozen Pairs on sale to-day oniy— 3 pairs for 50¢C MEN'S (RETE GOLF SHIRTS —G:nume $1.5) ger- m bought from mporter wao closed to us hi ntire out s stock of this line of g00ds, on special sale Saturday on'y # 2C MEN'S PERCALE GOLF SfHIRTS —Ia striped heli - trope color, the | balance of a| large special | on rday— ... 43¢ Boys’ Ties— attractive p terns, just ¥ind for school boys, onspecia: sae fo-i-y (3aturday) a-ch a drumme in nice, bright, Some at- the £ s Furnithing Dep't— Seet Special Chiliren’s 1x1 rib- ted extra heavy, Saleof = U5 cotton Chifdren’s hose, dcub'e knee, Cotfon heel and scle, Hose. made of adoube twisted Maco yern, soft and elastic, sizes 6 to o for this day oni dozan $1 .65, per pair . Second Aisle—Left of Entrance. % T 142 | ing terms; also all kinds of 3 ]'AHOTHER BUT 2 Not more than 3 squares fo a customer. School Books | and Schoo! Supplies. | A Special . School| Book and Supply Department---Seli-| ing all of the au-| thorized textbooks| that will be used| in the Primary, | Grammar and High Schools for the ensu- school stationery and school supplies at department store prices—on main floor, back of rotunda. | s Great S2fe of i Ladies’ Shees :F Made for K ngman & Fox, . ; Eought by us at * : 65¢c on the $71.00. : 4 New stylish shoes just from the fac- & * tory; complets iines of siz>s and & + widths in all of the 77 stylese :i; ; The bect that can be made at the e re; { & 82 50 Shoes. T o % @il b Q| PPPPPPPP PR S B P P e ek D 2 2 o e P e B P s r e e s T $13.90. The Round-Cor- nered Sack, Cutaway Frock and PrizesAlbert Suits sold regular’y by us at $21 made of the very best of imported black wor- fin>st all special sale fo=day. . $13.80 Second of En Bargains in Best 5 » o articles made of the heaviest and best quality enameled ware, on sale to-day at fully 3 third less than our regular low prices: 5-quart 27c Milk Pan-, - 189¢c 2-quart Ciffee _Pot, 33 nans, to-day. 28 fce Cream Freczers—W hava too mmv of the 4-quar sizes of the f2 Wh Mountain Frecz aturday on Main Floor—Rear. Barga;'; in Playing Cards. equal to any 85¢c glazed card on the market, on sale to-day oaly. per pack Oc Bargain Tabl Main Aisle. b4 000 packs § 800" packs 3 of Emporium '; Curzon. A large crowd awaited the v at Waterloo station and heartily arty cheered the heroine of Mafeking. Railway Mail in Hawaii. WASHINGTON, July 27.—The Postoffice Department has announced the establsh- ment of the first railway mall service in Hawail. The line runs around the island of Oahu, carrying the mails between Honolulu and Kahuku, via Aleak, Pearl City, Waipahu, Honouiuli, Walanae and | fhahua, a distance of seventy-two miles each way. Mails are carried six times a week, or_as much oftener as| trains may run. The service began June SACRAMENTO, July 27.—Dr. H. H. Look, commissioned by the State Board | Bryan Notification. of Health to visit the districts where | CHICAGO, July 27.—The Central Pas- senger Association has granted a rate of | one fare for the round trip from all points in Indiana, Ohio, Michigan and Illinots | to the Bryan notification meeting in In- dianapolis, ts will be sold on all trains on August 7 limited for return Aug- ust 9. The Central Passenger Association has given the Western Passenger Assocfa- | tion those States as a basis for making their rates for the same meeting. @eisiedeieieiriog reached the morgue the body of an uh-| wn negro who had been shot and four-score of cases which have created so much alarm were tra the fact that a cigarmaker infected with URGES THE SMALL TOWNS TO SEE TO SANITATION Jackson and Cther Points and Says &mallpox Is Stamped Out. Special Dispatch to The Call. Dr. Look Discusscs His Visit to Dr. Look insists that the disease has been practically stamped out. Dr. Look advanced bv State Board of Health, that the recent | appearance of the disease was due to its| having been brought from the East | Look has made a painstaking search for t6 oppose the the W. J. Hanna, of seems Dr. the facts and has ascertained that recently | ble 1o | ory the Dr. the X atat , he disease had gone from San Francisco stabbed to death on Gallatin street v\us::': Marysville and eommunicated the carried in. a fellow workman. The cigar- This negro was passing the French mar- ket when he was seen b men, ali intensely exeit the killing of Porteus a crowd of white by the news of | d other: n negro ran for his life and ngry mob kept at his heels, the crowd increasing in numbers every minute. The negro finally succeeded in entering a house on Gallatin street. He ran upstairs and jumped from the gallery to the | X ground. Before he could rise the mob | shot and stabbed him to death. After midnight a mob which ha the militia and the citizens' police at- tacked the Thomin Lafon school house, Sixth and Rampart streets, upon the sup- | position that negroes had stored arms and | ammunition in the building. Unopposed | they had no difficulty in gaining posses- sion and firing the structure, destroying it completely. | erected a few years a2go by the city and, | being devoted exclusively to the educa- | tion of the negro children, it was named for the well known col No negroes were found in the school house, but 2 number who emerged from houses in_the quite a distance. 4 evaded | w! maker s00! 2 2 3 3 Yista. few weeks later he had the That was before the disease had umbed to the strict quarantine. Forty-two persons yn with it ‘l";&"mmmlmng itself upon having |V e om Rio Vi dent of Ji ed to Galt. n betock hims smallpox K journ: ana_the Marysville, | effected cures in all the cases spread | the cigarmaker, from Rio Vista disease a fresh s all places the malady | wiped out. when another arri ap| Dhfl-nlhmgln_ Jackson, 42 cases. ber of the smaller t:wu lathe m‘h‘o e matter of er vicinity were pursued for y“umendon to tl e tion. Improve fellow work- se to one or sta ‘When he returned to Jackson a smalipox. | uc- o | m ched sixty-two, as follows: affected e Mases: Marysville, 16 cases: Dr. Look declares that smallpox has broken out, has fulfilled his | mission and returned to report. in Jackson were ! meanwhile, | and gave the | tart in the town. But in | has been practically There were but two deaths— a jo Vista and one at Jackson— | The school bullding was | one at, T0, per of cases in all the towns | tion would do much, he declares, to re- move the dangers of disease epidemics. | \ Dr. Look spoke highly of the pubiic | spirit of the people of Jackson in comply- | ing with the necessary quarantine regu- lations which he established arbitrarily, and, as he admits, without authority of law. JACKSON, July 27.—Another case of | smalipox was reported here to-day and | another house quarantined. Miss Rose | Green, emploved as a_ printer on the Ledger, is the victim. She lives with the family of Undertaker Huberty, who has | buried the two victims of the disease. | Miss Green is a sister of Mrs. Peek, who | | suffered the most viclent attack of any | here. but Miss Green has not been in the neighborhood of her sister's house re- cently. Kent, the other undertaker, will not handle the remains of those who die of smallpox, and Huberty 1S now under | quarantine. | POSTAL RATES TO THE ISLAND PCSSESSIONS Mail Sent to Philippines or Porto Rico Subject to Domestic Classification. WASHINGTON, July 27.—Postmaster General Smith has promulgated an im- portant general order giving the postage rates between the United States and 11 mail sent from the h Island of Guam, the ipelago, or Tutuila, in- cluding all ad. of the Samoan group which s fons of the ted from ail these to the United States, from one island to another, shall be subject to the United States do- mestic classification, conditions and rates of postage. The term United States in- cludes Porto Rico and Hawail | " All mails sent from the United States its island possessions to Cuba or_vice ersa will be subject to the Postal Union rates and conditions, except that the do- estic rates, etc.. will appiy to mail sent by or addressed to persons in the United States military. naval or civil service in Cuba, if properly indorsed and marked ally prepaid. 0il Exchanges Consolidate. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, July 27.—The California | Oil Exchange held a meeting this after- noon at which it was voted unanimously | to co date the two excha: on the terms offered by the Los Angeles Oil Ex- charnge. - United States Phillppine A | and postage is FLAMES SWEEP BUCKLEY, A TOWN OF WASHINGTON I P Destruction of Scven Business Houses, Burning of Twelve Horses and Narrow Es- cap: of Laundrym:n TACOMA. Wash,, July 27.—Fire at Buck- ley destroyed four buildings and the greater portion of their contents, caus- ing a loss of $20,000 with little insurance at 1o'clock this morning. The fire started in Bank's Livery Stable, where twelve horses were burned, and spread to the Standard Hotel and the Pioneer Restau- rant. By hard work the fire was under control at 4 o'clock. The Or brothers had a narrow e ver the ir la have time Summit Saloon T. Rogers, MARSHAL OSBOENE WINS. Secures the Express Package Con- signed to Sigafus. SELE u A vear ago * ensational rob- bery a¢ a Chicago railroad depot. The valise of J. M. Sigafus, alleged to con- tain papers and securities worth thou- ands of dollars, having been stolen. Siga- fus’ ereditors began an investigation and tracked a parcel to Los Anglese which had been sent through by express. An attachment suit begun in the United States Circuit Court, and later the ex- press company began a suit in Inter- pleader against J. M. Sigafus and United States Marshal Osborne to determine who had right to take delivery of the parcel. | Judge Allen to-day gave judgment in fa- vor of United States Marshal Osborne. Whether the package contains bank notes or linen nobody seems to know. ———— ST. PETE! Czarina received 'RSBURG, July 27.—The Czar ana mage to-day at the Peterhof Palace.

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