The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 29, 1900, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1900. 'JAPANESE VICTORS IN FIERCE BATTLE Terrific Onslaught on the Chinese Fruit=Packers on a Ranch Near Novato. Brown Men Attack the Yellow Foe With Hay-Hooks and Clubs and the Blood of China Flows Freely. Special Dispatch to The Call . Aug. 28.—A flerce bat- mber of Japanese a the Novato Land Com- this afternoon re- ing of four escape of the young ladies f ury is regarded as marvelou The packing-house looked like a slaugh- ter-house, blood §tood in pools about the floor and the boxes and w tered with the red blood of China The injured Chin Chung F Sam, serious s 1 injuries. Ah Chung, fracture of the skull. George, the cook, fractured skull and in ernal injuries, See, a few cuts n were attended by Dr. p wounds and in- aken vato by is Devoto s Jail here. - DRIVE OUT JAPANESE. Brown Employes to Leaye Hdgewood. Aug. 28.—Eight recently employ brown at 10 p. m. Tacoma. s were spat- | The Japanese, elghteen | after- White Men Force Southern Pacific’s | ) violence them stop this | a_dense | B i || | | n THE WAY HE LOOKS TO U. S. - ces sho UNCLE SAM: What a funny little fellow. —Salt Lake Tribune. ) T e circumst es the | ! + s an employe of Seropian Brothers, the SCHOOL LAWS RE OBSOLETE, | SAY TEACHERS fm = WEE GIRLS S0 the Superintendents in Tots Travel on Foot by Convention Propose Night From Watsonville New Measures. to Castroville. ues From Every County in e Are in Attendance Daylight Reveals Their Plight and They Are Taken in Charge. Claim They Were Mis- treated at School. | —_— Spectal Dispatch to The Call. tors in A ATGORNS | FLEE. A CONVENT High Mass at Hotel Del Mar| They were brought CRAND COUNC L1 A S, NEETS AT SANTA CRU Precedes Opening of the Convention. | —_— | Father McNamee Welcomes the Dele- | gates—Reports of the Grand Of- | ficers Show the Good Work | of a Year. CE LAY Special Dispatch to The Call. and smil. | | SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 28.—The Grand SAN 3 Aug City and Hutchinson | Council of the Catholic Ladles’ Aid Soci- s s of Caii- girls § and 10 | ety began its convention this morning at fon at the n away from the | the Hotel de! Mar. 8 Hall morning in the dead of| This morning the spacious parlors of the s school lJaw and nightgowns and | hotel were transformed into a chapel. At of the stroville, a dis- | the south end of the room an altar had and discussed. ; peen erected. It was beautifully decor- ttendance. Sheriff Wallace | ated with the cholcest of flowers, ferns perinten € ents rge A. Gordon, the Ca Both a “seve termined to es retired earl but cape. ke. were a They being caught. After al rough the children efr was v superintend- detained eighborhood condition ckton: course, seen an ty sheriff, being in the ised of the girls' > custody and br ungst n when found t roving on over th »wn and being cared for and the ma after having Opening of the Convention. J Kirl = I'NTEBE?I‘S THE COAST. Mr. ¥ of Kirk deli missioned, Pensions Granted. | A brief svn 5| WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.—The following postal changes have been made: Post- | offices ¢ Coun Discont}, Serena Summerland Lucind. Postmaster. ptember practica ad been Is, t lives with her par- | o child and that on | Plans “with the balance of 3 dia v of their daily wearing ut of bed and by a building were in shoes scaled sonville by back direction of | to they The took t them to were in a most pitiable spent Postal Changes, Postmasters Com- | olished—Oregon—Bruce, Benton | ; 5—California— a Barbara County, mall to | A high mass was celebrated by Father O’ Reille ssistant priest of the loca parish. Thesmusic was especially good, being by a cholr selected from among the delega ent at the Grand Council. The Grand Council convened this after- noon at 1 o'clock, at which time Father mce delivered the opening address. ald in part: Worthy President and lady delegates: I am glad to have the honor, as well as the very great vleasure, of greeting once more in our beloved Del Mar the s representatives of your hy organization—the repre- sfety highly deserving all the ragenient, moral and mate- that can be given it. While every lover harity, every friend of the poor and dis- tressed to whom your soclety is known, is Iy interested in Your charitable efforts, we of Santa Cruz are more interested still in your prosperity for the reason that you have established your home ng us and have thus brought our fair city, already remarkable for health and beauty, and for many other speclal favors conferred upon it by nature, into still greater promin- ence Of course, we are all aware of the absence and regret it, of one who for many years has been vour Grand President and has always herself worthy of the honored position ich you placed her. We feel and regret the absence of Mrs. Margaret Deane, but we bhave her chair filled at least pro tem. by one who in my humble opinion is inferior in no sense, but ls aiready well known, Miss Mar- cells Fitzgerald, who brings to her position intellizence, culture and talent After Father McNamee's address Miss Marcella Fitzgerald responded in an ap- propriate manner. The Grand Council then organized as follows: most Mies Marcella Fitzgerald of Gilroy, as grand president. Mrs. M. F. Dorsey of San Francisc & Senior vice: Mrs. Julia Weber of Stoc on, grand junior vice; Miss Maria Flynn of Oakland, grand marshal; Miss Jennie Mitchéll, d guard. The following committees were then ap- pointed: Committee on credentials—Mrs, Samuel Me- n Francisco No. Miss Minnfe n Francisco . 11; Mrs. A. B. tiroy No. 6; president, Miss Lizzie San Francisco. Horn, Grand reports—Mrs, J. Weber, Stockton; Miss our welfare and proud of" ACED WOMAN MEETS DEATH THE BREAKERS Mysterious Is the Ending of Mrs. Broadwell’s Life at Santa Cruz. Visitors at the Seaside Find Her Body on the Sands and the Coroner’s Verdict Is Ac- cidental Drowning. p AT A Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 28.—At three-score and ten Mrs. E. A. Broadwell met her death in the sea. The aged woman's life- less body was found om the edge of the breakers on the sands under the cliffs near the Free Museum at 7 o'clock this morning. Why she went to the beach and | how she came to drown will never be known, but the Coroner’s jury gave its verdict of “accidental drowning.” rly this morning a visitor, Mr. Van- derhoof, with two young ladie: strolling along the CIff drive. Th above tne cove between Vue de I saw the body of an aged beach. Rev. R. phoned” to’ town. heriff Alzina went to the beach. v was brought further ashore, There was a contusion above the eye and short time. The clothing and rolied to and fro on the beach. The body fied by Mrs, Currier. The last seen of Mrs. ‘Hufl‘m:mn. but her non-appearance not cause any alarm, as here the sea is tr al persons have been coa sev t ashed off the years and was 70 years of age. two daughters residing here—Mrs. Pilkinton and Mrs. F. J. Hoffmann. THOUGHT THE BONES H. B. Near Alum Rock Causes a Sensation at San Jose. Special Disvatch to The Call SAN JOSE, Aug. 28. C. Dunham, who Kkilled the on the Grant ranch, in the hills { miles back of Alum Rock. was found by Frank Higuera, a cowboy. He took Chris Rolling into his confidence, and the latter came to town and reported the matter. Before making it public, nsulted Attorney 8. G. eight however, Rolling was | ; were | i1 Half prices till the sale closes We are thinking of closing our Remodeling Sale on Septembe 8th. During the Native Sons’ celebration we are going to have a grand opening—will want the people—the ladies in particular—to call and see our new juvenile department, which occupies one A new fall stock will be in to await their inspection. Until the sale ends we will be interested in selling you some good business suits and other apparel, for men and boys, at haif u and | *h beyond the Free Museum when woman | z at_the edge of the breakers on the Vanderhoof went to the home of | McHatton, near by, and tele- Coroner Morgan and on the lip, and from the appearance of | the body it had only been in the water a pockets were heavy with sand, caused by being was brought to town and later was identi- | Broadwell allve was the evening before, when she was at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Frank did was | away visiting friends and s night. She has_friends that_ reside near the floor. beach where she was found. Along the e acherous, and She has WERE THOSE OF DUNHAM Finding of the Remains of a Suicide | onsiderable ex- citement was aroused here this afternoon | by the report that the remains of James McGliney family at Campbell in 1896, had been found The skeleton packers, died from injuries received in an elevator accident this evening. He jumped | on the elevator after it had with two or three lady fruit packers as | passengers, and then stuck his head out girl working on the floor. caught between the elevator and the ceiling. R d Y THE MEXICAN WAY. | | How Opposition at Elections Squelched at Hermosillo. Svecial Dispatch to The Call. TUCSON, Ariz, Aug. 25.—The bitter of public office by one set of men, broke out Sunday when municipal elections were held in that State. At Hermosillo the { fight was extremely bitter. Two hun- | dred men were placed in jail for vigorous opposition to the Governor and his candl dats for President Among them was sus Santa_ Cruz, leader of the opposi- or the Peole, as the faction is called the The editor of the Herald at Her- mostllo is also behind the bars, and the who has escaped is Dionicio s, candldate for President of the seople, who made a hard fight for victory. The result of the election fs not_known but it is safe to predict that Vicente calante, father-in-law of Ramon Cor- ral, Governor of Sonora, is elected. started up | Is| feeling of the people of Sonora, Mexico, | | who have opposed the constant occupancy | “Jack™ Ortega identified by s her assaflant id he is now with a charge the County Jall felony agains | The identis to be complet of him. ation of Ortega is be He had been suspected of being the brutal ilant this morning he was taken | to see if the 1itt Ortega. with some half-d in an adjoining room and each of t | el and to girl could e Instructed to call out Is tk ' This was the called to the g suspect was rnext to 1 heard his voice she the man who had aitacke.l her. Later she picked him group o al men. The buggy wore a white his coat when he with him and ¢ 1 o'clock that night wore Pis buttonhole Ortega denies his The girl's father. present at the identifi in | F “| he will be kept fc > + _JOHN ORTEGA. WHO IS IN | | ® AS THE As |* GAMBL AN R- | ® OLD GIRL OF THE GARDEN + CITY. (Photo by Bushnell.) ACCUSES PUGILIST ORTEGA OF CRIME e E N 1’—0—4}0—@-0—@-0—9—0—0*—9—0—*». Grace Gamble Is|! & 3 Sure He Is Her E . Assailant. : Identifies Him Both| $ by Voice and Fea- 3 tures. s 1 |HIS DENIAL OF GUILT b The San Jose Prisoner E Claims He Can Prove 5 an Alibi. s b - Do o e eieisreiel® bowed head. weary ané e at heart, for a's_crime had wre his ilome. of Kidward told Mr he evi- 2 t to Ortega’s Kidward - O'Neal rime Ja years h He | chances. At | took Ortega. tc jail, iays. several FUSIONISTS 1§ - WASHINGTON AT LOGGERREADS Nothing Is Certain but That Rogers Is Practically Defeated. | —_—— | | SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 2 conventions now sembled The three in this city | a union ticket to oppose the Republicans in the coming elections transacted little { more than routine business to-day. Th | scene of activity has been tranaferrec | frgm the larger bodies ch conven- ed sessions | of fitteen chosen five from: tion, which after two protr to-day and several conferences to-night | has not reached any agreement satisfac- | tory to the conventions. In the Democratic convention the forces of Governor Rogers sustained another de- for the purpose of putting in nomination | e | to the committee | when the five members of the were appointed. A'L jovernor. The | teat to-d | conference is also anti- licans are he committes against Governor thing decided by the | all elected delegates be entitled ats and Pop agreed that a two-third: union convention shoull be a nomination; against this the Si publicans protested Governor Rogers h: On the other hand the | ver Republ agre Pop d that the ticket ‘o | be mamed should be officially recognized as the People’s party he Demo- cratic conferees also but on reporting back to their convention the action was repudiated and the conferees instructed to inst | »m_the Democratic | name as first precedent to any action looking toward a union corrve . - - Stanislaus Demoecratic Convention. MODESTO, Aug —The Sta Democratic convention County rominated Hos p C. W. E E. M was indorsed for Congress for the Seventh District For Bupervisors M. A. Lewis, w. Davison, W. W. Coffea and A Clary | were nominated. rocks and carried out to sea near by be- fore. 5 | Mrs. Broadwell had resided here twenty . prices. | Ready-Ilad to this sale $12.50, no | Fancy cheviots of they are gone Suits of all-wool cheviot in desirable | patterns, gcod, long-wearing material [fall shapes and colors; hats that you of rather rough finish; price previous have paid $2.00 for many a time—our $6.85 $1.30 tharn the above in a number of pleasing | patterns—actually worth $15.00; until | $8.45 MMade-to=-Order Suits e Suits w | price | vetter material | Previous to this sale we were making Tompkins about securing a firm hold on the $10,000 reward that the citizens of this county promised to raise for the capture of Dunham, dead or alive. 3 Rolling, his attorney and a special of some $1 suits, but for the sake a Deputy we are making them n Coroner made a trip to the scene, when | a_thorough investigation of the remalins | $10.00 A last two L Emma Russell, San Francisco; Mrs. A. B. e D lures for the cause Pcstmaster commissioned—Charles Ellis, | Ward, Gilroy; Miss May Hudner, Hollister; m. The legislators claim the California. Appointed: Califor- [ Mis Mary Carr, Hollister. - Torces. s Hughes, Pleasant Valley, El| The reports of the grand president and o m»H:; ho u. ¢ vice 8. A. Long, resigned. | grand secretary were read by the grand P t "n:- ':'rh”"‘i 2 hington—E. D. Morrison, Dalsy, | secretary, Miss Margaret Curtis. od. The school e ) . vice Emeline Yeuter, re- | The prize offered to the branch that . Chay S8 ot 1w ullivan,” Spangle, Spokane | gained the most members during the year O et pooks. compulsory | County. vice 8. F. Parker, removed. Was awarded Alameda No. 13, which e i The fullfiwmg pensions were issued to- | gained thirty-six active members. San . day Callfornla—Original—George Step- | Francisco No. 19 gained thirty and San first took up the discus- $8; Joseph Boob, Sol-| Francisco No. 2 twenty-six members. sents to the present Los Angel 5; Robert A. Angeles, Wiillam Clark. ng to the powers of | ; John Chamberiin, Eureka, q uxu,rimv'm!bnldfi \:F:: $6. John Higgins, San Fran- Hl\[\d ‘,’:glwl".nmva mmnn- ;A-|\r ued—Stuart H“Bun reached. the ame E. Yative form and to be were chosen honorary | Se convention The following patents were issued to-day 4 of Eaucation, | California—John H. Batcher, assignor 1o et Bamcation: | Scha gram .satcher & Co., Sacramen- - e & Hol. | 10, by lic plate closing and riveting de- endor B3 P, Cubberly, | Vice; rles Dodge, Davisville, baling . nor Schaw, .’ Sacramento, hy- ulic riveting apparatus. Oregon—Ross H. Pratt, Portland, gauge teeding jobber. Wills, Professor M. | P W. D. Kingsbury und‘ évz . ram. Rec e Visitors. ors were tenderei St. James by the fessor M. E. Dailey * Bchool is chairman. clivered .an address f the city and Pro- f Stanford spoke on € Superintendent rancisco respond- e Nordica Quartet =8 Hortense Ham- rs. Mary Weaver solo, Professor solo and a selec- monia Quart o ts and dancing Kol:uv:ed.eL ncrs. eption 10 th San Diego Republican Convention. | County Convention held at Coronado this | morning indorsed J. C. Needham for Con- ssman, nominated_Eugene Daney for &iperior Judge, F. W. Barnle of San Diego for Assemblyman in the Seventy- ninth District and C. H. Stuart of Nestor for Assemblyman in the Eightieth Dis- trict. For Supervisor in the First District C. H, Swallow was renominated; for the Second District H. M. Cherry was - nominated and in the Third District George Hoskins was nominated. er ¢ visitor m 4 | cas SAN DIEGO, Aug. 28.—The Republican | | _The reports showed that during the year | Mrs. Deane gave six readings for the ben- | efit of Del Mar in San Francisco. A new clothes guild was organized on February 1in San Francigco, with Mrs. M. H. Smith | as president. Rellet during the year in K amounted to $2082 51, rovisions | 52827 23, medicine 35890, fuel $198 25, new clothing $115 98; total 87. Other items of interest are* Membership—Active, 554: contributing, 241; honorary, 208; total, 990. Initiated, 136, Visits fo the needy were 1904, to the sick 2719, | Physicians’ visits were 200. Children found homes, 45. Aged persons found hom: 28. Individuals assisted, 1172; families assisted, 1029; persons and families assisted, 2105. Found empioyment for 269 persol | Pleces of old clothes distributed, 7510; books und muzazines distributed, 3627. Visits to hospitals, 561; to almshouses, 122, ! This charity is bestowed by seven branches in | san Francisco and Oakland, Gilroy, Stockton, | Santa Cruz, San Luis Obispo, South San Fran: | cisco, Hollister, Santa Rosa, Petaluma, San | Rafael, Lompoc. Greetings were read from Father Fole; of Alameda, Santa Cruz Branch No. 13, S8an Rafael Branch and congratulations from the grand presidemt of the Young Ladies’ Institute. Mrs. Deane has been grand president for ten years, but is now absent in Europe. revealed the fact that the bones were not those of Dunham. e case was evi- dently one of suicide, and the man had been dead nearly a year. Beside the body lay a Smith & Wesson revolver of 38 caliber. Twenty paces away was the head, with a bullet hole in the forehead. The ‘remains were dressed in a brown suit of clothes. The man had evidently been middle-aged. In the pockets were found 60 cents. A 10-cent piece bore the date of 1897, the year after Duhham dis- appeared, and this is conclusive proof that the 'remains were not those of the Campbell murderer. The bones were brought to San Jose, and the inquest will be held to-morrow. ot et “Placerville Fair Opens. PLACERVILLE, Aug. 28.—The twenty- sixth annual fair of the Eighth District Agricultural Association opened this even- ing. There was a large attendance at the avilion. Sigwart's Opera-house, situated n the center of the city is being used as a pavilion and is crowded with magnifi- cent exhibits from the orchards, farms and mines of the county. Never in the history of the association has there been a finer horticultural display. The fair will continue until the evening of Saturday, September 1. ’ e ST T Politeness Proves Fatal. Spectal Disvatch to The Call. ; FRESNO, Aug. 28.—Edward “Harrison They are good suits, | to get them out of the Youths’ them in the store since spring; prices were $7.50, $8.00 and $9.00; stock we have cut them all to $5.85 3.50 and $r15.00/ of a good value | ow for { have just come in Suits but we have had | the | haterial, in sizes ; road for the fali Viscs bt are naw 718 Market Strect. Hats Dearbys, fedoras and graecos in the Golf caps, made from remnants from | our tailoring department; cloth would | otherwise be a waste—we charge;you ifor the making only— lsc each; 2 for 25C Shirts - ! Garner’s percale shirts—very latest | deslgns, in colors for the fall; shirts and are well worth $1.00 Golif shirts, made of good fast-colored to fit the majority of fpeople; the former prices were 50c and reduged 35C cach NWOOD 5 (0-

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