The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 15, 1900, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1900. ALLIANCE AGAINST ANGLO-SAXON RACE Possible Result of the Hispano-Ameri-| can Congress Soon to Be Con- vened in Madrid. Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. aboard, has rom the west- 1\ America has dia rol, | the | ns, and she | and Snmdh n of the Nica- ited States Is | complete su- Not only in well have | unde: 2 h of th SAYS WEBSTER DAVIS WAS PAID BY BOER GOVERNMENT s That the Former Ameri- Douglas Story Charg can Official Received $125,000 at Pretoria. | B Special Dispatch to The Call. MUTILATED BODY OF A DESERT OF COLCRADO CEILD FOUND IN A BARN Mar y. n Wells Ha Been : Brutal C Committed by Some a Goo of Unknown Party or Parties ter Fi at Dayton, Ohio. few MEXICAN TROOPS ‘Will Take Many Weeks of Campaign- ing to Overcome Barriers Erect- ed by the Red Men. CHICAGO, [ £ MORTALITY AMONG INDIANS ve Died by the Copper 1 these derable I take man WOMAN CYCLIST STILL OUT FOR A RECORD °:"(; | Miss Margaret Gast Pedaling Away at Mark Made by William Brown. Margaret break Will finished (.. to-day in PRISONER BREAKS JAIL. A DEMENTED WANDERER. Believed to Be Isaac Shadd of Center- ville, Ia. apes From the Bas- at Hollister. AMERICAN RIDERS WIN. Willie Sims and Cash Sloan Finish in Front at Longchamps. Oc Arizona. + 15—Reports from ern Arizona state n in grazing as the pro- ) meters, was ged ” 1 the pine for- Quartier Latin, ch had Kiss, g ; ‘ ds of dol r Free- n » e Moulin, of 240 meters, MeCook TIL. v . Fair Boy with Oct. 14.—John C. Me- | ———— ¢ at Dawson, | Injured in a Runaway. on his way ] PENNGROVE, Oct. 14.—Mrs. C. E. Par- wife of Justice of the Peace C. <ly injured on 4 was driv- 1 near Cotati ding a paper. y_bolted, getting be- yond r The rig eollided with a barb e fence. Mrs. Parkinson was thrown on the top of the fence. Three ribs were broken and her left hand bad- Iy cut. sence until i Embezzlement. ct. 14.—George Odell on a war~ embezzling $1300 om Mre. Martha s of an employ~ | The h: —_— Overland Delayed. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 14, —The Santa Fe Overland, due here from the East at 7 o'clock this morning, is delayed by a washout between Barstow and i‘l a({ It is not expected that the train will arrive here until some time to-morrow, Accidentally Killed. Oct. 14—A i5-year-old was killed to-day at the accidental dis- The bullet penetrated ik by a gun. B charge his heart. aspirations | beneficial | not po- | | rease the | ! | ha g versation in Santa is the Taylor-Martin g episode of yester- minence of both par- | nusual interest. Pro- sworn to a complaint | charging Mrs. Ta with battery, and | the prospects of having this soclety lady | figure in the police courts only added fuel to the flame of gossip. A Call representative had an interview with both Mrs. Taylor and Professor [ Martin to Mrs. Taylor said she had | e “fence, and had done but & When a teacher, she said, | goes so far as to beat a boy until he is | black and blue and the court does not h that teacher, it is high time the| tople of cor tles making it of fessor Martin ha s it in her own hands. She gafd her boy had never been a bad boy in school and ant in his life. She had waited for an opportunity to get even with professor, and when she noticed hi the crowd she took 3 nd walked up 1 hes the if BUCKINGHAN TOSSES ABOUT ON HIGH SEAS PR aA Steamer Almost Founders : 0ff the Coast of Japan. g MATE STEVENSON IS DROWNED =Py Waves Sweep the Vessel From Stem to Stern and Carry | Away the Lifeboats and | Geer. | S | tch to The Call VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 4.—With her decks swept of all but one of her life- boats a 11 the movable gear carried y ner Buckingham from the Orient. Java, on had one of ptain Wil- a typhoon of the 16th. 15 Ub toward the Japan micircular steam- . Pacific. All night rm continued, one of | 2 by those on board. of the 17th, when | ing through the | seas, great damage nes were reduced to | camer was not mak- lifebcat were swept off within other wert a v half of the shig four minutes. t > no_attempt to | grasp a life buoy t I within four feet of him. He was a native of Glasgow and 3 age. Captain ( places the damage to his vessel at between $3000 and $10,000. Dur- ing the remainder of her lonz voyvage the | ship met with very hea head seas, and | more than her of bad weather. | TYPHOON ON FORMOSA. | Vessels Damaged and Hundreds of | Houses Destroyed. | TACOMA, Wash.,, Oct. 14—A typhoon caused great damage last month on the coast of Formosa and Southern China. | (umerous villages were destroyed or | badly damaged. Nineteen hundred houses were washed away or inundatel at Talpah, Formosa, and many 1i were lost. The Japanese steamers Teaichiu Maru and Selko Maru went ashore and sustained serious damage. Much damage Sas done to villages in the Riukiu Isl- ands. This _storm raged between Sep- tember 12 and 15, at almost the same time as the hurricane which 8wept over Texas and Cape Nome. It struck the coast of Chekiang, and made an Incursion Into the Asiatic continent, after which it countermarched to the southwest, and, emerging from Chekiang at a point near- iy opposite Ishigaki Island, the most southerly of the Riukiu group, it im- pigned upon Formosa, where it blew with great violence from the evening of the 14th until the morning of the 15th. The French cruiser Kersaint was badly damaged by & typhoon while acting ms uardship in Holhow harbor. She dragged er anchors, and was stranded on a sandbank, damaging her rudder to such an extent that it became. useles: At the same time fire broke out, caused by spontaneous combustion of chemicals. By bard work the crew extinguished the | flames before great damage was done, | and | tional As 'MRS. TAYLOR IS GLAD THAT SHE HORSEWHIPPED PROFESSOR MARTIN Says She Did Her Duty as the Mother of the Boy Who Was Misused by the Pedagogue. A ROSA'S AGRICULTURAL DISTRICT FAIR. DREDS OF VISITORS TO as to have a physician called to see him that evening. Professor _Martin Mr: 5. Taylor's att ¥ bugsy- vhip was h said the cause of|he whipped the child in the presence of | ack upon him | two other teachers, the | dried palm weighing only six ounci > t % to get the best of these boys or lose his grip with the school. Mr. Martin said | and the stick was a and | Pr or s acted a gen- | . but she had | toward him. et long. o 15 ructed, permi proceed to Honga were made, e Saigon GALVESTON POSTAL CLERKS GET HELP FROM WASHINGTON Department Employes Contribute to a Fund for Aiding the Suf- ferers. Oct. 14.—Postmaster received a letter v and personal loss the emplo: of h 1t of the storm of Septe: fearful strain under whicl they had been work day and night since then and of the admirable spirit mated the men notwithstanding Postmaster Grifin sug- y of postal of- ber 8, of the the true men at ( ton. A small-amount from _eac cheerfully contributed and wou . needed relief, otherwize it was to be hoped a beneficent Government, “to w! we are loyal, will hear and answer ter General Johnson sent reply: “The department is in full sympathy with the appeal of the Postmaster at Gai- veston in behalf of the emploves of that office who have suffered through the ter- le calamity which has overtaken them, hopes t onse by those who have not a v contributed through <ome other channel will be generous and prompt. I am gratified to learn that the act} s direction by the Na- ter Carrlers is the following meeting wi ¢ response. ““Contributior ay be addressed to John_A. Merritt, Postmaster. V i ton, D. C W. M. JOHN “Acting Postmaster General THREE KILLED BY A TRAIN. Farmer and His Two Young Daugh- ters Meet Sudden Death. NEWCASTLE, Pa., Oct. 14.—John| Korbie, 8 farmer, Ellen Korble, his daughter, aged ten, and Annie Xor-| bie. another daughter, aged seven, while crossing the Pittsburg and Lake Erle tracks near Carbon last night in a wagon, were struck by a train and killed. Oscar Kospi was seriously injured. Coal and Gas Found. ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Oct. 14—Coal and gas In paying quantities were found eadt of this city to-day at a depth of a little more than one thousand feet. The gas will be piped to the city at once. A vein | of coal that may reach two feet in thick- ness was found. - King George in Paris. PARIS, Oct. 14.—King George of Greece, accompanied by General Reinrek, his aid- de-camp, and Nicholas Thon, intendant of the civil list, arri~ea this morning to | visit the.exposmon, TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. BERLIN, Oct. 14—Lieutenant Commander William_Eeeler, naval attache of the United | s Embassy, is suffering severely from Ineumonia. HAVANA, Oct. 14.—It is generally admitted | that yellow fever will increase in Havana | when the streets ar. ned for the {nstalla- n: tion whicu_will proba- bly require thres years, Major Lodge, pay- master for the division of Cuba, is down with the fever. CINCINNATIL, Oct. mittee of the Second District Grand Lodge of the B'nal B'rith met to-day In this city and elected twenty-nine trustees for the new home for consumptives at Denver to serve one year, among them being Dr. Albert Abrabams of San Francisco. of the sewers, a 14.—The executive com- To Lose a Fine Domain. Yet another of the princely domains be- longing to the Napoleons is about to pass out of the possession of this family; for the Chateau de Pranginp, which was for- merly the residence of Jerome Bonaparte, and afterward that of Prince Jerome Na- poleon, is offered for sale, together with the magnificent estate which surrounds it. This is due to the fact that Prince Louls Napoleon, who has been ever since he came of age the scapegrace member of his family, has recently lost such enor- mous sums of money at cards that he can only find the wherewithall to pay his “debts of honor” by selling this’truly regal estate, of which his father ani ndfather before him were so proud. e Empress Eugente, who, if she had so willed it, could ve with the greatest ease helped Prince Louis out of these new financial difficulties, is by no means inclined to do so; not only because she is the reverse of generous, but also because she simply abhors both Louls and Victor Napoleon.—Pittsburg Dispatch. . T0 WIN VOTES ‘this | To this communication acting Postmas- | the fourth occupant of the wagon, | UOSPER SET iTH TRmERD | 5 . | Kings County Candidate Has | a Grudge Against All i Mankind. ABUSE AND MISREPRESENTATION | Makes The Call a Target for Lying | | Shafts While Attempting to ! | Explain His Vote for Dan Burns. | | e gl Spectal Dispatch to The Call. HA 'ORD, Oct. 4.—E. T. Cosper, Re- | | publican nominee for Superior Judge of | | Kings County, delivered a spech here last night that was confined almost entirely to those whom he calls his enemies. He commenced by giving his opinion of The Call and trying to explain how It was that he voted for Burns for United States Senator. He said that Bulla was his man for Senator and he voted for him until | Bulla himself requested him to desist. Af- ter leaving Bulla he went to Scott. At | that time, Cosper declared, The Call be- gan to urge upon the Bulla and Scott| men to vote for The Call's candidate. At first it cajoled, then it begged and finally The Call began to threaten and tried” to coerce the Representatives to vote for its man. When he refused to! support or have anytaing to do with its candidate, Cosper declared, The Call threatened to ruin him. ..ow well it was | keeping its word could be seen, he sald, in an editorial recently publisned by that | paper, which was nothing more than an | article_written for the purpose of re- | venge because he refused to vote for The | Call's man for United States Senator. To show The Call's bitterness, Cos said, when Bard was finally mentioned it | used every means to block his election, | so that California would be under a cloud and the Republican party would be | censured for gross dereliction of duty, and The Call could then spring that old but homely phrase, “I told you so.” Cosper roasted one of Hanford's lead- ing merchants, saying that he was giving out Calls containing the recent editorial. | He also went after the Republicans who | are not supporting him for Judge and specially bitter against Republican | als who are supporting Judge Short, | ring that two years hence they | would be looking for a place to light. | The speech was confined almost exclu- sively to abuse of his enemies and it will | act as a boomerang, as men who were n!s | supporiers before the speech was deliv- | ered are now working for his defeat. Sr e B s RALLY AT MAYFIELD. | Made by Frank McGowan and Others. | MAYFIELD., Oct. 14.—The Republican rally last night at A. O. U. W. Hall un- | der the auspices of the Mayfield McKin- |ley Club was a rousing success. The hall was packed to the doors. The speaker of the evening, Hon. Frank McGQowas | was escorted from the depot to the hali by the club, with anvils, torches, col- ored fire, fireworks, etc. The town was ablaze with bonfires. Short addresses were made by Dr. F. W. Knowles, can- di.ate for Supervisor, and John S. Tor- rence, for the Assembly. Mr. McGowan's address was enthusiastically received, especially when he referred to Mr. Bryan as a “shirt-waist politician.” 2 Monterey unty Fair. SALINAS, Oct. 14—The Monterey County Falr is now assured. Owing to the continued dry seasons for the past several years it was thought a creditable | Addresses | 'RICH TRIBUTARY OF THE KOYUKUK Valuable Finds on Emma Creek Dis- TACOMA, Oct. 14.—That the middle fork of the Koyukuk River will become famous diggings is claimed by Thom- Ore., another is for its gold as E. McNamer of Forest Grove, who has arrived rich creek there stream velopme clates it b great tr tributary kuk. tle Creek, which is re Dorado of the new d and u nine miles g. with a number of gold producing “pups.” or short o as tributaries. McNamer brought out about §i0 worth Along the of nuggets, which he and his friends took | Seacd 11 gett! from Emma Creek gravel. They com storm of a mont tute as pretty a collection of gold spec mens as ever came from the nor ing in value from $5 to $10 nugget is a curious product of erratic gla- cial action fantastic shape district June outside. under which he labored, Koyukuk district more remunerative. and six other men took $9N No. some distar cereal and fruit exhibit would be impos- sible, but the agricultural association has sec some fine exhibits, and the dis- play will be a one. The falr begins esday, October 15, and continues one week. Mon! County has not had a fair llncstw and {he accumulations of To; me shows Pave entered, and that each race has a A full entry. covered and Named by Thomas MeNamer. Special Dispatch to The Call. with news of Emma Creek ted by him. Through work and of ounce, making it kan geld save the de- It lies ir t Ellfot, wit e gone East tc , rang- largest = Tt is their intention t It is bent and twisted Into | aoel o o Lo McNamer reached the nd left August 20 for the | dering the disad his wor uld harc In twe Gold From the North. SEATTLE, Wash h Con 2. They pected t Ten Dollars We know that our ten-dollar, union-made, ready-to-wear suits and overcoats are the best values for the money on this Coast; and we be- lieve them the best in all America. Every garment is made by us in our own work- shop, where only union men are employed. A union-made suit or overcoat has a finish, a style, a ceriain dash of its own, is well made and gives long wear. These suits and overcoats come in all the fashionable weaves of the season. We guarantee every one of the suits or over- coats : If there is any fault in the making of the clothes, and you want your money returned, you can have it; clothes will be Kept in perfect repair free for one year. ’ . Boys’ Suits We have one large floor devoted to boys’ clothing, - furnishings and hats. We are giving strong values to popularize this department with the mothers. Boys’ suits, ages 8 to 16, double-breasted coat and knee pants, stripes, checks and plaids in new fall mixtures of all wool gooc}s: our manufacture. Price to you the same as retailers have to pay— $3.5O a suit Boys’ Vestee Suits Ages 3 to 8 years double-breasted vests, some fancy, some not, separable shield, to be worn or not, as it pleases you; kn=e pants, strongly made— 82100 a suit Out-of-town orders filled—write us. SNW0OD 5 (D 718 Market Street. = = = ———rr———y e — e

Other pages from this issue: