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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1900. PETRIFIED BODY UNEARTHED BY SUDDEN PASSING OF THOMAS CUNNINGHAM GREATER SAN JOSE PLANNED FIRST TO RECORD DISCOVERY OF GOLD EXPRESS TRAIN COLLIDES W County Falls Dead. : California, Passes Away Perfect Human Possil Found |~ T|Movement on Foot for at Salt Lake Disaster to the North-Bound rel ound| : . { DIsaster to the Norta-boun g 3 : | : : O + . ) [} 0 in Lime Formation | Annexation of City i | regon in Suburbs of p | | | i Near Jerome Suburbs. - ; Dunsmuir. T A { = | B i — & | | OF VIOLENT DEATH i |COUNCIL TAKES INITIAL ACTION 1 {THREE LOCOMOTIVES WRECKED et W e i 1 e ‘ AEOL L Bullet Wounds rou, eart a i | Avm TN A b B | Extension Would Make the Santa | | | Several Members of Their Crews In- alile SBitier of ‘LD" ! i | Clara Valley Metropolis Fourth | | jured, ,but the Passengers Es- g i | Among California Mu- | | cape With a Slight g | nicipalities. | ‘ | Shaking. | = | | e s i | ! ! Spectal T | SAN JOSE, H | | punsmuir or ! ing to a great, ] insticuted { | cotiston B s | at the meeting of the City Council this { | press with a urve | | morning. Councilman Macaulay brought 1lat 10 ¢ e | it up and Mayor empowered | | were sligh = { to appoint a spe s of three press, draw %o hivve chirge an of extension. | | of Engin ! | The limits of San Jose have not been | 88 : extended since the city was organized, | | with passengers apd the territory encompassed 1is the | | | abrupt cur £ % smallest of any city in the State. Ad- | per Soda Sp: : | Jacent and immediately tributary to the ' | abandoned O 1 ! ity s a population of about 14,00. With i o stene ! these suourbs annexed San Jose would engine No. 1 b — have a population of 35,00, instead or gine No. 1583 | w0 as given by the late census. Thus The terrific sh _— { | it'would rank as fourth city in the State | | from their seats d to extend the limits on | | serfously injure nd west. On the east were bad K ! | the n Jose, with a population b . | | of several the and to the w there eral of t s w H s thick . ndallvilie and | | merous w ndows | | Alameda. Alarse ber could be added | | Albert Schadt escaped w p 1 || on’the north, in the vicinity of the Hotel | | wound. Fireman Frank T. Green sus- v | | Vendome. | | tained a badly crush his boot hav= w r | | " Most of the pecple uburbs are | | ing been gine an sar | | employed in d depend upon it | | tender. E ers of ¢ ; for everythir The localities lack police | | three engine « | | and fire protec sew and it 1s [ | but not enou | | believed the & of these will prove [ |""Fne wreexi 1 | | strong induc to bring them in. | | and the track 3 = | | | afternoon. MAY | COAL ON ALASKAN COAST. | —— EXTEND TO SALT LAKE i Ui R | | WHEAT FOR EUROFE BY | | Large Veins Uncover ear e | WAY OF SUEZ CANAL E any Intends Shore of Chignik Bay. [ 3 ke || Tacoma v. 26.—C iteroppings | | New Departure by the Firm That Has | | have nteen miles | | Chartered the Steamship | !along Chi 525 miles this side of = | Glenturret. { | Unimak Pas: Claims covering | | % 2 s N | | the better part of these vast deposits | PORTLAND, N / have been filed by miners employed by | & o | will to-morrow say — =~ <+ | Thomas 3 The manager of the i |new in t.e wheat expo | | Apoilo gold mines at Unga says the veins e = - st to light yesterd THOMAS CUNNINGHAM, EX-SHERIFF OF SAN JOAQU | |uhcovered to date are four and a half, R TOL SR, SOLE MO W MANTNG. TN FINST FWOUHES G TH British st > WHOSE CATH 1S MOU 3D BY HUNDREDS | | five and nine feet thick, containing ex-| DISCOVERY OF GOLD IN CALIFORNIA, WHO DIED SATURDAY AT & Co. ry » . 2 e cellent lignite and bituminous coals, In ST. GEORGE, UTAH, FROM PNEUMONIA. b ¥ of | | | the spring dlamona drills will be employed « .| |y way ot i to determine the depth and continuity of o & e sh A,'Jm( l'\lt‘l ;\IP 2 Sherai % | the dep n (1(‘\'Piflpm’Fl}:l wn(x com- | [t b et & ey of 1 : . | mence on a large scale. e veins are | A AKE, Nov. %6.—Henry W.| * % e to Eurol by way of t Special Dispatch to The Call. | situated near tidewater and only five A S s G R S e L T e aast week. Our | The Glengyrret, which is the Se PRI | s distant is a sheltered harbor where ot record oF the Eveat Call. | ®old. It iy thought to be rich We Duve | Pacific Const ports, will 1oa3 | and many n OF (dalling NI e & Tornia el dlecovery 1 1845, ated | Picked up more than a hundred dollars | outward trip about 2000 tons of w owe their coval from business 1o him. Y. The ¢ its are so large as to OTRLN ol TTecovery - dled | within the last week.” will fill up the remainder of her Black tart, that accompl e certaln a permanent supply for | at St. George, Utah, on Saturday | "Bigler was a member of the Mormon space with freight for the Orfen ginal methoas, wi Alaskan towns. This alone will affect the | o¢ pneumonta. He was about 75 years old. | Battalion and was working at Sutter's will toneh at ¥okohama Kobe igh the cl Pacific Coast coal supply | His record of the gold discovery reads: |milirace when the discovery was made. we and Cx n that of any other SAN FB-AN(;ISCAN KILLED ‘v “Monday, 2ith.—This day some kind of He and three others were at the California Golden uests of honor derful pedes- ] was found in the taflrace that ‘ubllee celebra- sckton from e o " tion in January, 18%. The other three are | discharge and load at e. of them. morning boat and IN THE REDDING YARDS looks like gold. | yet living, namely, James S. Brown of Freight offerings fr Europe t have walked forty I This entry was made January 24, 134.| Salt Lake City; Azariah Smith of Manti, Orient are always heavy an itains. The next day | James Clancey Is Run Down by a six days later, on the :quml Bigler mm»i Utah, and William J. Johnston of Ramah, | no dlflk:ulti; in obtaining full TOUIA turn i usyar | Freight Car That Is Being* ! the following entry in his dlary: New Mexico. | gges for chesteamers’ pbed. Switched. | — — | freight from Europe t Me s Pr Alleged by a ound as soon as | pEPPING, Nov. 2.—James Clancey | y to enable the steamer t up her - u T lleg y evidence, and his e killed in the Reddl pacity when she leaves the Orient to e - Resident. finally rewarded. | was run over and killed in the Redding e Baate = 2 ge had | raflroad yards last night. He was a mem- | | “'Ihe Gieniochy. a sister ship of tha Gle w 5 cly and ber of a construction gang employed at | = | turret. now en route from the Orient fnally founa u handke . That find | present at Clear Creek, six miles south | the Sound to load wheat for Europs, proo- the marking. Cunningnam vat (heS0& | of Redding. Clancey came to this city to | ably will return in the new service. < Froncisco iaundries and afte spend Sunday afternoon and evening. | —_— - ; mearch Jocaten Black Hars as the orsatoh \{'hl;'e waiting in the vard o ride back Sl | BANK ROBBER SUSPECT d, expir- e | . The hig ’ o8 - | to s employment C ey | . A ind P inen. The highwayman's arrest fol- | to t fi:rfiennc&mn“ ;he‘ e of r?m’r‘n < P t IN uc&g_st JAIL B it Stovkton n the State determined to rid its | CaT. SWItCRINg Was in progress and the L ttl H B t I W h FI d SE & on for Angels Camp. He rs of the terrible bandit Vasquez, unfortunate man was knocked down and | 1ttle neroes ba tle | ames an SACRAMENTO, Nov. %.—A Deputy 2 esent "'x”{" fom Cunningham and Harry Morse rode run u\'or.cfll)'lflg lnsmmly»f i : . 5’13?'5 “{{";:’,,i’.:i”“& m“ms r‘:—'fi":’izm rday night the of a posse. ] follc d th ames ancey came rom San ran- V] S e al stad on <53 2d 0% 8 gosee. They followed the | James Clancey came from San Fran; Smoke and Succeed in Checking |rdsfes Srmemd.e against his ther and farther to the south, | as bookkeeper by O'Connor & Moffatt. but is slispected of being one of the threa The news was immediately rove them into the trap which His father is employed by the Spring 2 | men who_robbed a bank in Winne: family and to the | Was sprung by waiting offl ¥or | Valley Water Company. a on agratlon_ | Nev., of $15,000 last September. It i3 nts were :\rl[k; the posse was in the vaddle, resdy | - posed his wife has informed on him. 0 fight at a s notice. There was A e B | 1o phace"C im Would not ‘expiors | SATLORS IN o;“;“ i Attempts to Break Jail. \caate to Jamestown | Thereisa. at one day, while out | =i 6pecial Dispatch' to The Call SAN RAFAE;;. xnfi-dfi—‘\ bungling at- Rpe le on | On an independent tcout, he ob v i ‘ tempt to open his cell door in the Jou - r transter at Oakdale on | {8 G PR TG Knol| & mah whoe ne (o | Men Lashed to Rigging of Schooner it Nt (odny oy A A . Bl t © nvened at 10 o'clock this | {0 @ cowboy. As there was nothing sus- May Die Before Aid Can SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 2%.—There was a | the basement and had gained great head- | ton, the ex-convict who s awaiting his e = were present and | Picious about the m B :lh:‘lr’\‘ln;z;l‘.lm dh}‘ Reach Them. fire in the Presbyterian Orphanage at San ;”52;:3?‘0": '::;od’lls;o‘;;r:g. Mrl-:hCr:m examination. for having shot Prison ¢ a4 nd at in bank. Con- s man, vas afterward T = == | A 9 e o e in- S .» INTERESTS THE COAST. R 3 oue Wat STnIc s Wwas Vasquez. ‘The Fandit, when | KINGSVILLE, Ont, Nov. 26—An un- | Anselmo this morning. That the Ereat| giuiion savs that the bullding would | week. He damaged the lock of nis coll Postoffio 2 : referring to the magnifi- said he could have got the drop | known schooner is sunk on the middle pyjiding stands to-night is due to the al-| have been a total loss nad it not been for | to such a degree that it took a locksm:th stoffice A ments and List of d and charac- When d why he was | ground off Point Pelee and the saflors are | most matchless heroismof forty little or- | the stout-hearted little firemen who acted | an hour to open the door. The prisoner as gentle & ° made his most winning | Jashed in the rigging, the masts being | phans who risked their lives in the smoke | 80 promptly. —Outside help could never | claimed that Saturday night's earthquaks = fion.” He moved | B9 Bis hand over his heart and | gpove the water. Since Sunday morning | bng g e alles the basement of the | have arrived in time to save the bullding. | was responsible for the damage. His ex- e ointed to arrange | of courte: aracteristic | $.0" %0 3 T heratburg has been trying to :fl“dlflm“ e mion later Durst througs, | The institution is known as the San Fran- | amination has been set for next Wednes- ndpoint of of- | °L.f" Filain, sad (n Spax FeScue "the ‘men, but there It such ' high Duldins and w ter burst thiousk: |cisco Presbytertan Orphanage and Farm. | day. Guard Randolph has recovered court adjourn in re-| x i U UG D€ PUAYe YOUNE man.’ | cea running that her efforts have been | the floor of the reception- emory of the dead. Judge rohber named Dalton, He had cauesq | fruitless. It s feared that the men will | the sole direction of thelr fire chief, Harry spoke brie it to be announced that the *he | die from expc.ure before aid can reach | Gerrold, aged 14 years, they gave battle to Ansel Smith. | officer who laid hands on him 4vas prac. | them. The schooner Reuben Doud is al8o | {he flames like veterans. Two lines Of | e ———————m—m— End court adjourned | et Onn & death warrant for him- | B e PReC,Sition Ut PONIRE 18 | pose were aragged into the basement by nd co! c ed | se dne day duri e falr % 3 ] s o Cuniningham obsersed & i in Stockton | “{p0ue’ fifty boats were anchored west | tiny hands, while a bucket brigade of lit- We want to make your . body arrived here | was sure o Tobber, Standing o | Of Point Pelee to-day. Since the wind has | tle tots swarmed into the reception-room ||| . it 1 b and the dead ex- | Hunter squ chi ame. Without | Eone to the northwest a number of them | and threw all the water they could carry | || winter suit for you, be- to'the family home. | o apagments heeitation wun’nxngnu?; Ve SURS Tl S | upon the leaping flames. The fire was ex-| || cayse we know that you o 3 e o and, covering him with | F v e orphans | || : are 0| 2 pision Fald ety 5 Hover Vit | LEAGUERS MAY CHANGE e e ot e vt E will tiot ‘stop: with'. oe 0 hurch, | then cafled a cltizen, who relieved Dalton | CONVENTION Orry | Seep to-nisht under the foof t1ey Sanas ||| P shine Paan-sater wony od the Shertfr led the | — Somie own burned Jackets, some MPCLIN - order, but will trade here s - So quietly was it onty | CHICAGO, Nov. 2.—The members of | are ""“"'hd ";‘J i‘“‘“:‘d ’:f;‘;y | s s those in th ate vicinity witnesseq | the Epworth League have issued an ultl. yare smoke begrimed ald weers || regularly. Many men buy G e the exhibition of cool nerve and prompt | matum to the Western rallroads. They | The first alarm of fire ;\: & " I e svite Bon s NS HIGHBINDER WAR. |KnizhtT g L S S e | have decreed that unless they are granted | morning when a lad rushed into the pres- | | season ¥ou Tue Succumbs to Wound Inflict- | an Flk, a Red R itoin | TPy mant of & betien s i wats catled ?h::)ru%(lle;‘;'&‘r%#“‘?g“fi?”‘rr;m““i‘l}‘xggg&'g;'"fi""“f”n"lmj‘hxi e Ll A s | after scason—they do ‘it ed by an Assassin. 135 She fan : i, near Stockton. Tak- | held fn San Francisco next July, they , then left to ol & > 1 = 2 -, 4 - fr sin nthe fyneraL BT {50 il 5 write. macoer bun ngham | will hold thelr meeting in some Eastern | ¥&5 ;}{g:"?"";'"wfi{kih;‘L‘;J,’;;f“;;&‘;;_ because they get their - . € a ana starce o Ves! y. Ve ! 2, M | CUNNINGHAM KNEW NO FEAR.| pursull He got over Into the footnills | * o soioting. will be held here next Fri. | had been taken from the building. In the ||| money’s worth—in style, | officer speedily took his place beside them | The Sheriff saw it was to be a fight and,| COLUSA, Nov. 26.—Curry Harrington, fack grown people. The children dragged Ganger “ge | and participated in many of the daring | IBrowing up his revlver, °Re Hed"t5 | son of Colonel John T. Harrington of Co- | tics hose Hght under the burning cel ins, || cause they know that the . = des in which Intrepid officers and | an and at the samc time | lusa, met a serlous and painful accident | n which they poured the streams. e | 3 Besperadves figured. e lved to| CUmb out of the carf: At the eritica| ,P::"d:y ehile hunting ducke. A aia | fire” had made great headway. The || clothes are all made in a PASSING OF JAMES H. ELLIS. Answers the Final Summons. 2 James H. Ellis, , died last ev r the brain. Mr. EI- ving come to the ~ated near Gliroy six owned 1000 acres south of roy and San Jose, wolder in banks at Gilroy, d San Jose. The valus > than $1.000,000. He a widow and five children. SHOT BY A FOOTPAD. a ived by casd came aft TS| by few officers,” said he. “In all of his Citizen of The Dalles Receives a Mor-| pcic Coast, and there is nothing to com- | hunted several dave and finains aricrs | coreer he mever hUrt a man, mor was he | @4+ +++++++++ 4444444440 tal Wound. pare with it _on this side of the Rocky |out on the open country. Coming gver g | wounded himself. This was due to the re- LLES, Or., Nov. 2.—James|Mountains. This gallery has cost fuily | ridge one day Cunningham came upcn|Mmarkable tact with which he arranged Transfer of 0il Property. - A < Smith were held up by | 510000, and contains more than 42,000 pic-,| Willlams, who was carrying a rifie ready | the plans for a capture. Many of the fles. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 26.—A controlling - - P DY | {ures of eriminals from all over the world.'| for action. The veteran called out, “Drop | peradoes when brought to bay showed 3 1 three miles east of this early hour this morning. i to give up his money and His Name One Which Inspired Terror in Criminals. When Thomas Cunningham began his eer California had men Morse for Sheriff, and the young : o wrong way. The Sheriff trioped anc wis | 2- o ¢ fiames. Soon the celling fell and | || light, ai clean work- ays pass away. Notwithstanding all the | sent eprawiing on the ground. “}:inet uili‘:?ltg?lfr:eh’l::g:ghw?:; :?:1:’::5 | :g:e‘flgme: shot upward to the .story | 8 B4 daring arrests to his credit he never re-| Realizing even in his plight that the | DI |.above. It looked for shop, which means a good pleting a sentence Cunningham was in- strumental in giving him. . Cunningham studied the criminal from time he tracked him to his lair until he bade him good-by at the gallows or prison gates, The veteran's work was not all “outside work.” He maintained from the first a systematic record of e and criminals, both those coming his personal observation and those 1l the most successful peace officers in country. Volume after volume was filled with His the stored in his private office, wspaper clippings telling of crime. ogues’ gallery” is known all over the Almost_every visitor to Stockton has looked through the museum the Sheriff gathered during the last guarter of a cen- like | all of his assoclates of those early | and knowing that the man was | mediate vicinity ver pas ticular instructions to turn the w that he could jump out should tr the fellow, fight on the convict, moment the best shot would drive and shot the horse from under It was a lucky shot i to look out his revolver loose at | ninghem got his man and relurned hi prison. terra firma. Sheriff knew he was face he gave the drive Cunningham ~ preferring to e who was mounted and armed, driver turned the wheeis the win he him, as the robber had f instead of turning the Sneriff. Cun- im to for him Advancing age never diminished the veteran's ac upon out. who attemp it a few miles from Stockton. n lo bring in would get his sawed-off shot, 5 A few years ago h SR llams and Siagal, tl tivi If the office was called a desperate man he e wailt, after Wil e young desparadoes wreck a train and rob Willlams ted to was an expert with a gun and wnen the attempted crime failed the to the San that gun, Willlams,” dro; youths cscaped ottoms, send- at they would shoot the first Joaquin River lr;fi word th: officer that and the gun was | | ° | meeting in St. Louls last week brought no | first thing the | to face with | day by officials of the Transcontinental | Passenger Association in an effort to | agree upon the proposed rate. A similar resultse | ! Maimed by Shotgun Actident. zling rain was alling and he attempted to | over the muzzle. The handkerchief caught the palm of his hand. It may be neces- | sary to amputate the first two fingers, Body Found in Cabin. MERCED, Nov. 26.—The body of an un- known man was found in a lone cabin a | few miles south of this city vesterday afternoon. It was so badly mutilated by coyotes that it was beyond recognition. It is supposed to be that of some man who Quring the summer went into the cabin for shelter from the hot sun. @++++ 4+ +444444444440 desperate criminals in the State and ex- hibited a coolness and a nerve possessed fight, but they never had a chance to do any damage, for they were quickly dis- | ception-room Gerrold sent the smaller | | and rushed back and forth through the meantime little Gerrold. being the oldest, collected his fire company and set at| work. | Two lines of hose were unreeled and the | water turned on. The little fellows here forced their way into the cellar. The smoke was suffocating and the flames gave forth a heat that might have driven | walls and ceiling of the basement were a | any minutes u‘ Through all the nolse, heat and_excite- | ment the little orphans never flinched. | Burning brands fell about them and the | smoke made more than one little fellow | choke for breath. When the flames burst up into the re- boys with all kinds of buckets to the :lg- per floor. They formed a bucket brigade smoke-tilled building, each contributing his mite of water to the hungry flames. | After about twenty minutes’ work the ef- | forts of the youthful firemen told and the | conflagration came under ‘their controi and was extinguished. | The fire started from a defective flue in interest in the Union Oil Company, the ceived a scratch and never shed blood. | roiled over and hi | though the building would go. s 5 before the astonished convic in the trigger and discharged the weapon, | thous] ']l deal to people who are . . . a He was the first man the discharged con- ot convict could get | W ,% mb and 2 | The fire gong rang and an alarm was people w re in a ionaire Pioneer of Gilroy Valley | 1o, “aniia aporonch foe 210 sttoe com | Jis weapon into action the Sherift et | Do o e hand. "It may be mareor | sent to San Rafael, two miles away. fit and wear, because they save money, because they are fully protected through our guarantee, and be~ position to know of these advantages. Why not try one of our suits—get some samples— and let us measure you? We make a good suit to oldest in the State and a dividend payer | for twenty years, has been sold to a syn- | dicate composed of the principal stock- | holders of the Edison Electric Company pped. In running down Green, Smi Jones, the confidence operators Wi L robbed Farmer Brack of 32000 in San armed and handcuffed. b “The Sheriff possessed a persistency in tracking criminals which made him his ighwaymen fired, one bullet . ™[t is a_ remarkable collection of Lamb_and inflicting & probabiy | i e grim articles with bloody histories. More $13.50 nd. His home is near Ashland. | than 1000 knives, guns, pistols, slungshots | Joaquin County, the Sheriff got a triy of | fame. He would follow a crook thousands | of this city. The price paid is said to be ers escape and many weapons inconceivable in con-{men whose careers had been one long iist | of miles, and generally land him. Stage | $300.000, and the capital stock will be tm- | |} - struction to any mind but that of the|0f successful swindles. He captured them | robbers held him in terror and nearly a. | mediately increa rom $5,000,000 to $10,- Out-of-town orders filled— Maimed by an Explosion. criminal_are on exhibition. In one case | in Portland. It is said they offered him |of them that committed crimes in San ,000. The company has property all 3, ESCOTT. Ariz. Nov., %.—Carrillo |8 one of the old-time deer rifles, powder, to permit some scheme of cscape, | Joaquin or adjacent countles were event- | over the State, but its principal wells are write for samples and self- e e e B el 3 cap and ball—the kind Boone used on big | but he held on and convicted them. After | ually landed to San Quentin. The farm- | located in Ventura County. measuring blank. and Manuel Herraz, woodchoppers, | 220, 0% 3 redskins. This is the gun which | he was sure they would get their deserts | ers never lost faith in Cunningham. His ———— ng d frightful injuries by an explo- | finished the career of the bandit Joaquin | he solicited, 5o far as it was proper for | strong forte, which won their favor, was Stella Polar Leaves Larvik. n1 powder yesterday in a forest | Murieta in Fresno County many years|him to do go,’the mercy of the court. his skill in utchln, horse thieves. < “outh of here. They used |ago. It was used by J. W. Childs, who | Thomas Cunningham has been identified| ‘‘Many of the famous cases of this| CHRISTIANIA, Nov. 26.—The Arctic ex- ting wood and had placed | was a member of Captain Love's y in | With the police affairs of this city as well | county were prosecuted successfully by | ploring steamer Stella Polar left Larvik | e in logs and had several | the final roundup of the cutthroat. A coat|8s his own county since he was elected | the assistance of the Sheriff. This is also | to-day for I . 'The Duke of Abruzzl Al & around loose. The latter ac- | of mail, e of wire rings and woven | an officer. He worked with ex-Chlef of | true of many cases in other counties of | will leave fania Wednesday. exploded, blowing off Flores' pso closely that lno bli\llfi:hwlflg peu:lnemx; }:‘:‘z‘:«e !»Eexl (-::ldo ;nl a. b&sgfl mandd of the c._ufg:nll. Thso pflnc!lnp‘fide'lkms in wand, breaking his right I and | it, occupies a place in the museum, an - # eep re- | the tterson-Dorsey T case were ! s of " o e present ime may ice B » 3 . becounted by dogens. official career mhfs- generosity in pri- A Brtation. to as pallbearer at the the cement plant of W. A. Cor. Powell and Eddy. Sheriff Cunningham has handled num- | vate life. fineral of Sheriff and will | Kruze & Son at Martins [ bers of the most distinguished criminals, | ‘*‘Cunni) arrested some of the most | go to Stockton to-day for purpose. §200,000.