The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 3, 1900, Page 3

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UGER AND STEYN ARE NOW AT BARBERTON THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, DEMAND FOR AMERICAN COAL IN GERMANY {England Will Be Unable to Gene Opinion Is That the War Is at an End, but the rs Can Still Cause Much Troubl ROBERTS SAID TO HAVE NNEXED THE TRANSVAAL OF {URDERS AT FOLSOH R "Y”Tt:{i ued from First Page. CY) Two « ussen’s A MADMAN'S DEED? Sacramento In- That Theory. of ~Sheriff John- « t¢ of a madman. t d the nt te cases T the owner talns men the murdered the p William avlor, on t The ranches are and the house in about or was | ch the craw ave t Slee »een the mo- found his there was her place. nter or Peraz: range, 8s the ea < time of t singular coincider found in corresponding sections of the houses, though a mile apart. There was e, but this was not h and grass are so dry 1 think it is a struggie.” self la ld in neither case the glightest evidence of a Z'fim members and liquor seliers to sup. port the same ticket. Take Advantage of the New Rates. £ e Price of Coal Advances One Mark Per Ton and Burning of Peat on a Large Scale Has Be- gun in Berlin. B, ast week t vemen n industrials , of gains of from also advanced rove- ment in the Boerse was as- easy money ma tlement. Con- rates weakened The financial present situation imn the vear, when the au than t funds week, ation of sheet mil eased orders on for 000 marks, or ar he return would be dis- the large de W M d one, pric lost half s . and Norfolk dy. With untm- s rose 5% of a unt ginning _of 11l Monday on three RAIN CAUSES DAMAGE IN FRESNO VINEYARDS egan to Sent Enough this city rain tc and viclnity MENLO PARK BAZAAR. 1 P-eside “at Hon MENLO l \'.n The n, ¢ wiil b irman of ti the bazaar in and~H A splend i The ¥ vices of the Re ot the the direct h is ph A s under irge, anagement of “be at hom to al icecre Mrs. k there principally o'closk an- en. Saturday and the 4 1l articles place. BOY KILLS HIS}ROTHEB. Fatal Accident Happens While the Boys Are Hunting. | pt Carr, v killed Saturday vear-old brother Burt, ! ety plage near the Car ked in Fol Mud Lake, three n of honest men, who | miles north of Colville, Wash. The boys | I think the erimes must wr*ohhunumz Burt na<] carrying a rifle - o4 Dy Soims Sille _ | which in_some way exploded, the bullet e tand Lraces of Too e oas. | taking off the top of Jay's head g to the open window at either the Car- S Woolley Speaks at Boise. | BOTSE, Idaho, Sept. 2—John G. Wool- | ley, Prohibition candidate for President, | gl | delivered an address here this evening on ih men were | Christian Citizenship. B He devoted to the duty of voters, saying any party that could organize | ,e‘lx | ing large Republican clubs at Cal SIATE FAIR AT SACRAMENTO Will Exesl All Similar f Expositions | SR ‘Pavihon Will Be Resplendent This Evening, and the Races for the Day Will Be High Class. SRR i Special Dispatch to The C CRAMENTO, Sept. 2.—The Sacramen- to State Fair will open to-morrow, ana the prospects for its success are more pro- nounced than in many years past. The opening of the pavilion to-morrow night 1s to be one of the most brilllant in- cidents in Sacramento’s history. The women of Sacramento have bestirred themselves in behalf of the event d have perfected arrangements for the p ence of all the social clubs and organiza- tions of women. This means the guarar of several thousand persons at the outset, that the fair shall open with vim flourish, and it also mea s hibitors will not waste a minute’s time in the preparation and completion of their booths and show of manufactures and wares dents of Oak Park for the purpose of Meetings of th being held nknt wccom those patrio these prepar pavilior odate exhibitors w 1 spoken for, it must racecourse at the Park is Leing overlooke trary, it is the intention to \ t o« f the most notable of the two wee ason. On that day the Occi- dent stz > of the « cs'in the an- als of ra in the West, will be con- tested for. ke is one’of the richest offered the on the Pac ieved from a c ¢ the entries that record not far ne of the entries Santa Rosa but it is dec tly done halves fr her entry, recer 18, with speed he R it is believed, draw a rong to the etrack to-morrow. vestock and poultr are rapidly being put in better this ye the dog number at the pavilion own they Sacramento will be at tion rooms of the pavil- women ho io Monda Mrs. E. Ha Miss E Avvm'l-xl. , Mrs." Bajlew. M s Kelley, Mis: Tozer, Mrs TO-DAY’S ENTRIES. Order of Racing and the Horses That | ‘Will Compete. By F. E. Mulholland. ch to The Call. Epecial Dispa Sent. the 2—The racing opening day of air meet, is one of the at Agricultural Park. are many strangers in town, and wrances over haif zen hoo irms will cut med Oc- ike for trotters will be the fea- of the card, for whict nh Mac is whelming favorite. The runners nted by three fields. superb I race, green pacing, purse $ in five—T! g en, Maud R, Jenn Fredericks Cieon, Tags, Mul- 3-year-olds and upward, run- a For- Jen Re 2-year-olds, elling—I11ilo a (103), F ain War ( mile lo (101 reid ng—Ab: n no Ann Anjoo (101), @n, F Jk Me g (S5). MONTGOMERY SINKING. Cnly Slight Hopes for Recovery of Los Angeles Lawyer. L.OS ANGELES, Sept. of the Hon. Zach Montg: en with | hile endeavoring “The condition mery, who was aturday morning atch a street car - (PENS TO-DAY Assurance That the Event and | that the ex- nging for Oak Park day at the races Gik B e pavilion next It is the intention to purchase a k of 1000 admission tick | he | parish and school, which have since taken MONDAY, HINODE MARU AND_ CREW SINK IN THE OCEAN anese Sealing Vessel or { Her Hunters. e One of the Men Who Went Down With the Craft. e ateh to The Call, | VICTORIA, B. C., Sept ese warship Mu i around the Kuril Island: which went ru, in search of the No Trace Is Feund of Jap-| | Joseph Williams of San Fsancisco Is | SEPTEMBER 3, —The Japan- sealer Hinode Maru, has returned to| Otaru, says the Hakodate correspondent of the an Advertiser, without having found « trace of the lost vessel or of any | survivors. All hope for the vessel and that so! survivors managed to reach | the s and winter there, which impelle apanese Government to send the vessel on her mission of mercy, has been g . The Hinode Maru failed to return with the other vessels of the Japanese sealing | from her win fleet this spri and no report was he er cruise, | rd of Ler since Oc- | when : was spoken off Pera- By, Xt W concluded that she had been lost in one of the winter gales. | sailors of the vessel were rried 2 number of for- ne of whom, a hunt- San Francisco. He was the A part of the CELEBRATION OF GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Willia and was well known to whites lost on W. J. Wilson of and Joseph Columbia Bonin Is] took the | Mr. and Mrs. Hem—y C. Rammers o:" St. Helena Give a Reception in Honor of Lhe E"cnt Dispatch Special ST. HELENA, Sept. 2_Mr. and Mrs Henry C. Rammers of this pl brated the fiftieth annivers marriage on the 29th of Boniface Church, San evening ;ir home and Hel ey tend- their many friends nd good Mrs. Rammer i evening were met at the depot by a delegation from St. Peter's Society and Catholic Kn both of which Mr. Rammers is mber. 8 o'cloc sday morning high mass was ce German Catholic ynitace Church, on avenue, Father Maximilian, assisted by Augustine and Philbert. The couple were which they received th the throng of people pre \g an elaborate bangu Bonifac: >mbly h: remarried, well wishes ¥ In the eve wi rved i | 1900 VICTIM OF UNKNOWN [0 0F G0LD NEVADA ASSAILANTSi FROM PLACERS Hugh B. Gilroy, Formerly of Petaluma, Who Died| []F THE KL[]N[”K in a Nevada Insane Asylum From the Effects of a Beating. | Three-Quarters of a Million Dollars Arrive From Northern Mines. { Lord Minto Soothes United Sta Consul McCook of Dawson, Whose Feelings Are : Ruffled. i | SEATTLE, i i to (.V' | | advices are | | Americans reported to be alleged to hav Consul J. pr _sence. Lord M ering. Lord Mint o and Con: i ‘@'l:‘inmuu i .Id _m HLnUmHlu ~m FORMER PETALUMA BUSINESS MAN WHO MET DEATH BY FOUL ew of the B: PLAY IN NEVADA. and, arrived kS UGH B. GILROY was a short time ago a business man of Petaluma. He left that city to go to Nevada. Hepassed through Reno on the morning of August 20, en route to Winnemuc: He worked two days, when he was arrested and thrown into jail on the c rge of insanity Sheriff McDe! of Humboldt County took the man to Reno on Augu 25 and committed him to the asylum. Superintendent Patterson sald the man was not insane, but delirious and nearly dead from the effect of wounc verything possible was done at the asylum to save the man's life, but the efforts proved futile An autopsy showed that Gilroy died from a bloo dclot on the brain produced by a blow upon the head by some blunt instrument. T body was covered with bruises and discolorations, showing evidences of murder. rigged ship GRAND ORATOR M’NOBLE | FIRE CAUSES SERIOUS PASSES DANGER POINT | LOSS IN ATLIN CITY Sick Stocktonian Survives the Crisis | Business Center of Dominion Town of His Illness and Is Rap- Suffers Disaster, Involving a 444420 +40 444444444440 The Day's Dead * Dresesaarss tHeeee e S SR by the Catholic Knights. Speeches were 2 . Miller. made and & tentered o the idly Recovering. Loss of $40,000. BEREEL. o L bride and | groom ars. | at Osna. | Special Dispatch to The Call | s Dispateh to The Call. e v v September | STOCKTON, Sept. 2—H. R. McNoble, | VICTORIA, B. C., Sent. 2.—The steamer | o¢ his daughter, Mrs mudm school until he was | grand orator N. S. G. W., who was fe- | Amur, from Skaguay, reports that the | Leavenworth. He wa age, which he learned | forteq critically ill last night, is much | business section of Atlin City was wiped the early day 3 fresco painting, at which he worked 1n| ., ,veq to-day and his friends expect | fire on Sunday last. Ten of the | United States t v of the large cities, He came to the T bulldings were desrtoyed. | G States in 1849 and proceeded to St. Louis to meet his father, only to find that his _parent had died the week pre- vious. Mr. Rammers then went to Loul: ere he met Miss Amely Anna | to whom he wd :h of that city on August There were born to Mr. and Mrs. n—four boys and one oungést two boys are 1850. s married in St. | to see him out in a few da tack of congestive chills w 00, with little if any it lasted, but once the danger poln insurance. The citizens worked like Tro- Dassed he began to mend rapldly to save the town and prevented the | lames from Government Monterey Republicans Organize. | rea hing He was a g s 5 [ proverty or buildings. The news reached | cirved as a co PACIFIC GROVE, Sept. 2—The }fsp“‘b‘ | Skaguay by telegraph and no detalls were | army. His w [licans of this city have organized for | ptainable when the Amur safled. world as “Be work in the coming campalgn. Last night | e gt arly in 1575 Mr. Rammers | they m{"fi"d ahlcmn that Is”t]n he(tne ’Fv‘:- Flees th Union Funds. San Franciscan Drowns at Seattls came to California for his health, but |clens of Republicanism in this city. e 2.—A ais 2 LE, Was September firned fo. his family to celebrate his | club s to be known as the McKiniey and | PHOENIX, Ariz, Sept. 2—A dispatch | SEATTLE, Wash. September 2 ding. In October of the same | Roosevelt Club and has begun its career | from Jerome says: Richard Bell, treas- | F. Larsen was drowned to-day in rrived with his family In San | with over one hundred active members. |urer of the Miners' Union there, has ab- | Bay g of a row boat where they lived for seven The officers elected are: President, Judge | sconded with all the funds of the union, ed and rec r. Rammers was one of the |J. A. Pell; secretary, R. C. Wornes amounting to about $500. < of the San Franclsco branch holic Knights and_was one of the | r members of St. ing been active in establishing the In 1852 Mr. Rammers ed to St. Helena, which been their home. - Bell Out of the Race for Congress. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. NAPA, Sept. 2—The Democratic County vesterday a high standing. and family place hz nce Centrol Committee met here and decided to hold their county nomi- { nating convention on August i5. The | ries will be held on the Sth, I 5. Bell, Assistant District Attor County, will be nominated at San t Senator for ais »a_and Lake countles. Armsirong of Calistoga will probab be named for mblyman. J. A. Beil | is out_of the race for Congress in the District. 'ORDERS FOR THE TRIAL is growing worse and his chances for r covery are now considered very slight. He | is only parilally conscious and fs with difficulty aroused to the recognition of those about | - Napa County Republicans Orgenize. Spectal Dispatch to The Call PA, Sept McKin and Roosevelt Club was organized at Courthouse here last night. It number ver 200 memb: 'I‘hore was _enthusiasm and out of Republican was elecied pr 5 Corl retary, and John A. Imrie, treasu The Hon. Judson Brusie of Sacramento was present and delivered one of the be: speches ever heard here. Frank Coombs and T. B. Hutchinson also de- livered addrs es. Mr. Brusie has also isted in nrgamz- stoga | and St. Helena. TMINING WAR ENDS. Mine Claimant Greene Yields to Mex- | ican Troops. PHOENTIX, Ariz., Sept. 2. comes from La Cananea, the mine ownership controversy between W, C. Greene and L. L. Lindsey the Greene-Mitchell faction have discontinued their resistance to the Mexican officials, Recently Lindsey's titles were approved by the Mexican Government and Lindsey proceeded to take possession, but Greene, through his employes, resisted, and troopw were called out to enforce the order of the court. At this time litigation arose with the Cobre Grande Company concern. ing their mines, in the same district, and Greene, evidently fearing the effect of the resistance to Lindsey's title, ordered it stopped. L. | —TInformation | Sonora, that in | | | | t | | | | | | | | | | North Atiantic squadron a TRIP OF THE WISCONSIN | Entire Pacific Squadron Will Assem- | ble at Santa Barbara Channel and Act as Stakeboats. Dispatch e 1. HINGT —Orders have ued by Department di- the entire Pa- ara channel, to act as fal trial of the Spects the Navy | recting the assembling of battie lnp Wi same require- ments that governed the trial of the Ala- | ma will served when her sister hip of the Pacific Coast is speeded over he course, The «bama will be as igned to the A will remain hat command certainly until official trial, which will ary ir ne i tory 5 'Stringham and Gola borough are vy ready for tr 2 e just issued adver- The s Bids ovember pened on Cruiser New York at Bar Harbor. Boniface Church, | | | | | i | R HARBOR, Me. Se~t. 2.—Tha cr New York, the flagship of the | th Atlantic squadron, Rear Admiral | arquhar commander-in-chief, an !mrod outer h of Bar H_rhor at th fte v and | h in her from ewport, | The other ships comprising the squadron to to-morrow are the as, 1 B “husetts {entucky Kearsare The Dolphin the sauadron. R will order all his v side Bar Island, leaving the inner har- bor clear for the —guests, the British squadro which is _expected to arrive ay ‘morning. The hotels and cote with British £nd Ameri- ITALIAN BATHER DROWNS 1N THE RUSSIAN RIVER Maximo Malacarne Perishes in Four Feet of Water Near Swiss- Italian Colony. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. CLOVERDALE, Sept. 2.—Maximo Mals carne, an Itallan residing at the Swiss- Ttallan colony, three miles below here, was drowned in Russian River this after- | noon near the colony. Malacarne, after a hearty dinner, went to the river to bathe, He plunged in and never rose again. The water at this point is only four feet deep, and the squusfllon is that the bather was seized with cramps. An inquest will be held to-morrow, and in the afternoon the remains will be taken to Santa Rosa for interment. As our Remodeling Half-Price Sale ends next Saturday night you had better buy right away. Don’t wait too long—if you want to se- cure any of these values: . Ready-made cheviot suits, worth $12.30, for $6.85 Ready-made fancy chevi for s, worth.$135.00, Made-to-order suits, worth $13.50 and $15.00, now to be had for $10.00 Youths’ suits, once sold at $7.50, $8.00 and $9.00, now reduced to $5.85 Good soft and stiff $2.00 hats for $1.30 Goli caps, made from tailoring remnants, 15C cach; 2 tor 25¢ Percale shirts, colors, fall styles, latest 51.00 esch Good four-bit and six-bit golf shirts, now re- duced to 35¢C cach Sale ends Saturday night at 11 o'clock. designs and

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