Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
; : e i : : e e e e e ad @all, hesioh SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1900, T | | 444400 "0es 31 0 4( DH4444444 + + 4 . 4+ + + + RS + % i % % Otttttteeio e T O e e s B B O A e S A GIVEN GOLD BADGE OF COURAGE BU"'mNE THM][S NEPTUNE FROM THE SANDS QP00 01T 0000+ 0000-0-00000000-000000 -9 STH KE N“w [ e e e e e e o e +o-+04+8 - * $ - ° + ¢ : Daring Breakers 3 . + + 5 ? : S Lif . ) i to Save e : i p i B ht Meed Bt + b rought €e i = Bt $ ; Fully Due Planing Miil Proprietors| e : b Y Stand Firm Against De- |1 . . ps ¢ ® ¢ tremendous breaches over that part of the mand Of Umon. | L4 o J hull that carried tHe foremast. . e { ,Erown saw the wreck from the light- ) | & ' ¢ 4 house and at once went out. eve! un- | \¢ 3 r: b ! drea persons were collected on the beach. | MEN DISCHARGED AXD + ¥ Brown could only persuade two men }(‘m . | ® 4 join him in his first attempt to save the | i r . & wrecked sailors, The four who had es- TOLD T0 REMOVE Tnanl B¢ : caped from thc wreck declared that it ' | & ¢ was madness to put to sea in theh only o le ) @ available boat. Neither of the three heroes | 1 % Zo] + —Brown, Pozondnovich nor Miller—be- | Workingmen Will Uss All Thoir| ¢ longed to the life-saving service. The men et s e el Ac- © + The b containing the three heroes ceptance of Eight-Hour | $ & Was pu through the surf by many | B hands, Brown anding at the steering | | ® © oar and the other two rowing. They jieg - passed the inner rollers and rowed for | ! the wreck. Half of the distance was ac- | @ @ complished when the current swept the | & . b boat to the northward. The men in the SRR S i rigging of the San Benito sent haarue‘:g: HE strike of the Mill- ¢ cheers over the waves, but the first at- | o e : mpt to save them was fruitless. Brown | % men's Unton, as it 15 £! & ) & insisted on a second attempt, and Alfred | X “ B & Cunningham and William Caughen voi- | X calicd by the. mill-own:ers— |+ b 4 Sars mo success was had. " Tn this attempt | ,i: ke lock-out it > oars no ss was had. s | ock- s it is fermed + o the boat broactid o and almost capsized. | 3, A€ [0CK-out, aS 1L 1S ierme 1D ¥ € |+ by their employes—thg re- ¥ ) 4 RS + PPN S oo ! = . Tl g pe » SAGE P oS :F sult of the uniow's fight for %! )¢ & ‘i an “eight-hour da wwill :i;; $ ps + o rrow. Th X | . |§ begin to-morrow. The mill- % % THAE NEPTUNE ***ees ot g g st dng i Bl tnd st ) |+ owners have resolved to * ‘ HIGH ANDDRY. 1 b b !;,: stand by their resolution to ¥ ¢ 13 1'5: adhere to existing hours and i ® L BN . 3 ’ e . i iing pay for their em- E| 3 ; X This decision is re- i Ps :‘;: : the mill-owwners to £ ? % _’} be unanimous. This situa- ¢ ¢ * 1iE tion is the result of notice ; /i T 2|3 i K s [ ol L ? |+ given by the Building |1 > e et RN . + Trades Council some months 3| ¢ :!: ago asking for an eight- I :> - hour day and fixing to- ¢| e 3 : ; +17 morrow as the date for going + > out if their demands are not + : s I e S -y grasited. The employes s -+ _* * ° . [ - o T *+ HE schooner Neptune still lles on > & they will stand firm, and is- + the beach two miles and a half . P oo (binsd S, % below the South Side life-saving & 3 sues arc thus joined. Some REHGT R ahe. ot AiEoce 2 U ST i e work- Friday evening. Buffcted by the ¥ null employes may be work- % * : |brff|lwelrs ?; Biah . the Bitie RS = A BN ‘ s, | vessel is digging deeper and deeper into B I g to-morroww, but only @ % | ine sands, making a bed from . which > RS ] ¥ T e <+ there will be little chance to drag her. % small propartion of the. 4| ‘Caotain Conrad Johnson and his o + - 1 S : {'of #ix have stayed bx the unfortunate - “ whole. Hetodong the strike 4| schooner. Charles Sudden of Sudden & B : < | Christenson, the owners of the Neptune, ; % coulllast is matter for specus | Sutous to'tho betohed sespel yeptegon ? S hdion censure Captain Johnson for his handling 3 i o, | of the schooner. Captain Smith of the > | South Side life-saving station came to the e @ ttetorgriosterde e ofe eliefeofeefeciorfocforfonferorferiee@ | mariner's defense. He is an old saflor ) ¢ ;nnd knows the treacherous current that A meeting of the millowners was held | sets in with the flood :]hie- He assured f T Nag o = o last evening. Willlam Crocker, president | the owner that Captain Johnson had han- ¢ & be able to perform my | § as thrown down and the steer e ranclern prosaa! PIESICENT | dled the vessel as any other master would r future ing oar was broke F Hhe Ben Eraniieo Pl MUy hiave handled her. He haa dropped the 3 * Captain Sebree, United | ~ U'ndaunted and Brown | Association, presided. For two hours the | anchors in good time, but the strong cur- % P& of ‘1.:*v\|h‘¢f ses: ) prop to m Only | members of the association listened to re- | rent and later the breakers had dragged o . e 7"’“{\1' T Miller and Pozononovich would volunteer. | ports and discussed various matters con- | the vessel inshore in spite of them. ‘ P i 3 Four men having failed, it was certain | nected with the situation. During the | _An attempt was to be made to pull the * Ay at two could not succeed, and the Boat | cvening telephonic messages were received | Neptune off the beach at high tide this o ——— 3T vey, Cap: ey of | the in“Henito wera aken” oft *'subscs | from millowners in Alumeda County. | I*3fcam schooner a5 neat ISNOTE 45 POR- THE CREW WORKINS S —— 'j"\.-'f’r Sios - ey "{-nir:‘{ | auently by a passing steamer. These were in reference to the situation | gible and to try to drag the Neptune from X ON BOARD, RALITINR o h T n"-r-l fac! \\'r]v set forth in Secretary s the bay. The meeting was exec- r h"hhed(oé s?‘nd with csi‘l])llebn.r!xdi %mf'?y?' s = ) — | Gage's letter. Only seven gold medals for | Fully a score of millowners were | If that fall, three tugs w P IAE S e ¥ berconally conferred one, | it Was announced that ihere was nothing | she caa never be raised out of the hole pS = are five silver medals ready to he €W to be given out. A press committec | that she has dug. A few high tides with crowded around to s | by M. kenev—on P. An- | had been appointed, but th fierce breakers will open seams in the ¢ | e s l\ir rick: B ¥. Strand, Lars E. | ing for the members to tell, h-"“!‘hm ;fru-‘h!gufi"\!;‘»;e:elm“(.llln;l;n;‘a(.l: w e wo other heroes' who wers | Olsen and 230row O Zeliiand. | the millowners would stand firmiy by the | (i1 ies fails her owners will proceed to % THE BEACHED SCHOONER AND HER CREW. on the recommends fesolution they adopted recently. | dismantle her. & 7 they being | Payn Will Display Fireworks. Individual millowiier who ‘were seen | < ”mr_\"' e s Yorks Lemdon | After the meeting, mide the Tollowing | @ 8660000624080 00000e0s0s0s0s0sts | >, g statements c ecni] h D < - 20 bestow the | and Parls, who stands without a peer in e R e ¥ said, |'vour mill place of employment about | tive council for the cmpire and rem One Is a|affairs pyrotechnic, after negotiating for 1 Te. | 7:50 or a. m. Be ready and, unless | the most flagrant evils. Until this is d Vhen | prevented by your boss, begin work at § | there can be no permanent advance in Y of | 8 and work until 5 p. m.. taking your | Orient. Miller, the 4 were favorable to the SR some months with a number of prominent | quest made by the Millmen ith ¥ ¢ - » fen Conied he e ween the hours of 12 and 1 p. m. S i S Gk DT M~ aas ot Auhore four miles | 10cal business men, has decided to come to y_talked w thouse at 1a. m for a brief period. He will pro- | '€ Building Trad. ‘eptions ic oy ber a union man cannot work tinued Professor Fryer. ~Shortly after The waves ran open-alr spectacle, “The Battle | 5hen s 1t ‘s aliferent mimect o oo, | e than eight hours a day in any mill.) | the first outbreak of the Boxers thers t-the iron hull ‘was the relgning sensation at|The milowgers had all the mills furnish | 1f there are any mon-union men working | was quite a panic among the natives in R L BB el et 4 ch last season. The entire | statements concerning the busiiess they | With you have nothing {o say o them or | that city he ascendency of the for- seople on shore ™ be on an elaborate scale, | Were doing. Upon analysis they found | their employers Ke SRCyous wesk | eigners there is so great that the Chinese he coun- | feared for their lives in case the troubla southward. t the great seaport towns i3 at andstill. Li Hung Chang had not ar- l at the time of m: T g dawned. Four persons were dragged | three hundred performers, athletes, offi- at 48 per cent of the total w not han- | and notify the bu t of t - 3 . itka | ¢l at your earli wenience, and he { m the surf. The remainder of the ship's | cers and soldiers participating in the af- | sthe mauiors of :Phe Juilding ot O them.in due time. ‘Have no ’ fter the bombardment and storm- | pruced the work f hips and the werk | arguments with the bosses, n | ing of Sun Juan Hill, the capture of which | for exportation (o Austrait. Honaiuis | what they sayv. Brother, e, v, with the exception of five ned whil { | |is follow v eview and elsewhete: : 7 s 3 Mway from Infoxicating drinks: be quiet | BT s Seaaar b : e LS U DR T TR T G JETRC IV P et P yourself and ail men who love | | tions. He 1s a Chinese first of all, and - | o e & s : Ve will support an - g >y Ao - | Payn's fireworks, the special featires of | Building Trades Council. On gthe 48 per d fair play. We will supp: anything Is to be done for his coi F P . move for jus- : 3 3 4 ne” fou RAZY R R SEHUOE oAt Ul ol Y | e Soun s vourmove tor 15| pnpipe Wil] Not Be Parti- |55 tmter tremier vl acl On account of the comparative freedom | Ouiside was keen and was based on nine | o 3 ssor Fryer is accompante: C ! Z SA [ LO U N S from ‘fog In_the neighborhood, the Six. | hours work or more per d It they | he planing mill BEOpe e B | Kin How, a progressive young Chine: SCRT resident of the Building 3 | the son ¢ ¢ ne: teenth and Folsom-street grounds. have | were compelled to grant an efgni-hour day | H: McCarthy, president o e Ve on: tioned, Says Professor the new school. the son of the richest m TH E SC H OO N E R CZA R been sclccted for the occasion. The dates | With the b: Trades Counci e A N ¢ . nd-dollar display of | Shipbuiiding are not connected with the | y now given for nine hours | - per y i <- | jef o 0 se fo from September 1 to Septern: | they would lose the trade. That would | dgavped G ‘i:l’.'f‘m‘é‘"u‘,f?p"g"'m John Fryer. | inclusive, omitting Sunday, Sep- | mean that #5 i tor the g bring on a general sirike in the building sald Professor Frye come & trades. That is not the truth of the sit- thoroughly imbued with American ideas g tement was also made by mil. | vation at all. We are only asking that | .| that he had his queite cut off before leav Threatened to Kill Her. owners that. the pay in Sam Croaniill- | the planing mill men give their employ- | In His Opinion Troubles in Orient | ing his home. When you remember < the advantage of the eight-hour day rank of his father you will see how mu na 1s | or5 the A0Xan ePs of labor In the other | Will Serve to Develop Unity of | [RS8 TS fUNeRIA Ut So8 Tomm muel > H Miss Min .V st, 85 = Vel s $3 Gay fc ill hands Terrorizes Captain and Crew, JUMPS |sr s s sompismein st oo | e ieher. oiin T mhe s would not agree to United States is in a better position to get row on the old lin: asked increased 2 S 4 msy 5w tranches of the bullding reparatory schoel until he Is al t i court yesterday for the arrest of | Mith San Francisco. "»We are virtually | (RRUSN, a0ne! Purpose Among Its Snter the University of California. He is Overboard and Repeatedly T“ed aham Tanzman, saloon-keeper, 1044 | 3,Unit" Jas what all the mill-owners as- | ‘"AT50 s it o probabllity that there - Peoples. particularly interested in commercial Folsom street, on charges of threats|eaid, that is_ uncertain. This S [ will_be Y _widespre strike studies. - . ; against life and disturbing the peace. | four hands. Several milis, so it wag alu | DUNAINE trades. BTG =y So¥far as general war news is con- > ; PiivoRs $i1 By thermfllawnets. tai 50 | "iyye are asking_only what is reason- # fental Steamship | cerned, I have ro information. There was to In e 1 Tanzman was recently divosced from his | sald by the m wners, paid off their 28 J. Williams. secretary of | The Occidental and Oriental 2 Hothing. authentie st Shanghal, and the . h hands iast night and dismissed those who | ableC( S 5 < iVe have not | Company's Gaelic arrived from the Orient g . - SRS work to-mor- and we demand | yesterday. Aboard the Steamer WeTe | the truth than people at Shanghai. 1 4 s ! > be o al footing with “hina— le who hurried | I have no oninion on the present situatio The Miilmen’s Union has the supy o | Only to be put on an equa : refuges from China—people 3 o P zation the Building Trad nell, with ont | the other branckes of the building trades. |y o By o Yine clouds of war began to |in North China as to the war itself. ; : . iei | U ovr men have already been paid . Is* affliated twenty-seven bullding fraes Some of oL A i ‘amounts (o 4 | Sather in the Far Bast. Though mnone rived from Al- r a long run of he was locked up and no favors 1 hin r - MRS S v ions, 7 c cs behind the 3 The voyage W i arrived at Altata we o it strike. who returned were caught hind ] GOLDEN GATES L ¢ ntful ever made de ot AT e Park Musi e Millmen's Union held an enthusias. | - There will be only a lockout of the | Boxers' firing live, they saw the mobili- Ge DRILL ; . . Mexican port e T e e i tic meeting at the State Laber Busk | milmen at the preseat time. Ve NODe | zation of troops, witnessed the panic CORPS AT A BANQUET - out from S into the bay Ave Tebcued him | Following is to-day's programme of | last night and reports from the different | it Will go no further, and we feel CON- | mong the Chinese when they began to i v ficulty. A second time he jumped | music at Golden Gate Park mills were recelved. Three of the plan- | fdent that it will not Where IS SCRRCEW | coar for the destruction of their natlon. | s > o 1 had to go after him. When | Overture, “Frelschutz". . ing mills, according to these reports, have | & PReBaviid. o z and knew of the demoralization of trade | Pleasant Gathering of Sir Knights D e ol by BT Bt Aniie it s S | | Burnham & Standeford’s mill in Oakiand | the same demand. with the approval of | professor John Fryer, head of the de- Asylum. it = x s Shey ‘would unol keep ihim, | th i n werd fi the Building Trades Council. Nearly all t t of Oriental guages at the N oun wigs running Gp_sid | bl wish we Wece ready (o ssl} agalh e fternoon that unlees they mere wioraay | of ‘the turniture factories have consented | PAEtMERE o QOSSN (MOCEIET, To (rie| The Drill Corps of Golden Gate Com- ¢ rigging like a monkey, When |Mexicans put ur crazy man back aboard | g Teport for work at the usual time to-mor. | (0,an elght-hour day. P eraess “onthe Gagilc, | He tells an | mandery No. 16, Knights Templar, gave and locked up in the hold he | GGE'e, " /Crance nands, quit, “They re. | .Hungarian Fantasis row morning and to_continue under tpe | , The Building Trades Councll will meet | FUECFhg story. Said he: its annual dinner last night in Comman- . s out and all hands had to | fused 10 go to sea with Thusan again, We | aothesambian Patro) existing arrangements their tools must be | to-morrow afternoon to consider fthe sit-| . Cp n5 Nilvnot be parutioned. This is | dery Hall on Sutter street. The dining % him back in his berth | filica their piace h M 28 & Mot taken from the mills. b uation and discuss whatever develop- | CRhina WIWRQT 0C POl Ol intained. | e s - ot o [ had & lively time of It Betting o tave The union men at these mills afl gtooq | ments the forenoon shall have produced. | o¢ long ago nearly every writer on chmé‘;‘:“ B4z ‘T;'e s o the aham ,1‘2':: i life be- | put Thusan down in the hold, but every Dismissed With a Reprimand, by thefr colors, and in consequence were ——— foretold its_ division among the powers,}banners and emblems of the orde ; . once in a while he would break out. Once | Charles Cutlar, the boy bicyclist, who |pald off and discharged. The lockout or i but they will soon see that recent events | Sir Knights were in full dress and the 7 yesterday. “WHhen |}, jumped overboard. and when asked | collided with W. P. Sullivan, father of | Strike, whichever it may be called, is on Arrival of a Russian Consul. have nuliified their predictions. ladies present were all in evening cos- ¢ he seemed to have | whut he did it for said salt water was | tpe Chief of Police, on Market street Fii. | 0 _[ar as they are concerned. 1In some of| W. Toritch, Russian Consul at Port| “This war has aroused a national spirit | tume. Afier an excellent menu had been e strength of a hundred men and noth- | good for the eyc 4oy night, appeated before Judge Ca. |the other mills notices were posted to the | Apthur, arrived on the steamship Gaelic |in China. It is not that there has been | jjscussed Colonel Willlam Edwards, the c but o could bring him to his and Anderson served with Thu | baniss yesterday on the charge of bat- | Sicct that there will be no work for the | j ot night and is now staymg at the Pal- | 80Y fundamental change In the organisa- | commandart acting as toastmaster, called . \ ago In the ship Cyrus | tory. The Judge, after severely repri- | “en, oo e usual hour b ’ o ¢ | for responses to regular tc . which s | as_considered 2 P . 23 lock. e. The visitor comes from Tientsin. [ $hn¢ was not really a war at all. A few -espon: Temutar Czar left San Francisco on May | te ten s Toh manding the oy £or his.careiessness, dis- Gt (he %25 members of the Millmen's | He left that disturbed portion of China |raw. recruits were siood up before the | meres . Welcome.” (oe foastmasier: “Tho xt n went insane. | intervals on the Czar, Lut toward the ¢nq | issed the case. _ 0 Union nearly &ll were present at the| at the outbreak of nostilities and is in | Japanese guns and shot down. The great | oo™ R . oore; “The Drill Corps,” H. it g~ b e e e et ) Baby Sues for Damages. B b1t loaves, 1t (o oubers, were | this country on business. He has been a | 88 O the Tifiesy REOR'S,fo2, 205 10N | D. Loveland, and “Our Flag.” Colonel F. . P attempted to stop him | ShipD at Altats on June 16 and took four y S e T e i’ the bayimed. less | prequent visitor to America and . speaks | thAt 213 SORTICE, WS In Pro€ress- But | W, Sumner . bhe showed fight. In the melee that fol- | $Cmen® wio jaft us going home on the | SUit Wwas filed yesterday against the| ;o on unton. ¥RO| oycellent English. Ile states that the | spread and the matives are working to- |, After the supper all retived 1o the large ¢ed the captain had his coat torn from | Curacao. Several times on the way home | Market-street Railway Company by Lillie | “'The_executive committee of the Bufld. | Russian Government has 30,000 soidiers | gether as they seldom have before. I |hall where daucing was WCiiscs o updl bis back, but the lunatic was finally over- | Thusan tried to knock a hole in the ship's | Cobb, through her guardian, to recover | jng Trades Council held a short meeting | within a short distance of the empire and | might say that a national spirit is being ln g] S e his back he lunat side. and once he forced his way on deck, | 320,000 for personal Injuries. Lillie Cobb = | and received reports of the attitude of | could land troops without trouble. It is | developed among the Chinese. Huan, Sistants, these bet pow | and'we had to lasso him before he could | the three-year-old child who, on August | the different mills. The -committee ad- | his opinion that it wili take three years| *I said that there has not been any | H. M. F“”';{nb”fi ol g g O was blowing a living gale. | o 1,,t back in confinement. 11, was run over and injured by a Fol- | journcd to the Millmen's Union meeting, | to quell the trouble in China. great change in the crganization of the | Sisted b{( D no:e.;d R ul &. ( was on either one end or !he’ *On July 7 he took command of the ship | som-street car. and several of its members made speeches — empire. It is this fact that is going to | Georse *. r?‘sarf;_:: RS S D, rr y all the time. By some means | and on July 31 he |rlh>dhlwlce to scuttle e A o e urging l}!:etmlllmentic stand by tvlr‘ just | The Young Man and His Strength. nece-li'ul!et !he,‘,{:m;ve::l‘on t:l foreign | the committe ge: . usan mace his escape and | the ship. Friday night he got away, but cause. Intense enthusiasm prevailed a ; governments. e departments are at » with the main topealiant | we catght nim. and. yesterday mesning Piverse “Biits ¥iled. the meeting. t| “ro-day at 3 o'clock there will be a grand | §or ' resant moment Incredibly - corsupt. | Free lectures given under the auspices le s down the rope like a | when I tried to turn him over to the ma- | Sult for divorce were filed yesterday by | A circular of jnstructions to the mill- | rally of young men at the Assoclation |There can be no satisfactory dealing with | of the New York City department of edu- nkey and vbody stood breathless | rine hospital authorities he struck me |Stella Beckstead against Frank Beckstead | men has been ‘issued by the Buflding | Auditorlum, Mason and Ellis streets, | China by the United States or European |cation show an inerease in attendance of ciiing 1o see Bim dashed to death at | with a billet of wood and laid me out. ‘It | for faflure to provide and Arena B. Kelle- | Trades Council. It contains the following | which will be addressed by Mr. McCoy o (lmations until the worst of this corruption | 18,673 during the last winter and spring moment will be many a long day before I make a | her against Thomas F. Kelleher for deser- | injunctions: again.” tion, X Man and His Strength.” A!.lll- stopped It will be the task of the [as compared with the same period of a “When Thusan agaln came back to)cruise with a crazy man o “The Young “On Monday, August 13, you will reach. 101:3 ‘men invited. powers to steo in, form a workable execu- | year before &