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‘THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1901. HARRY HOTCHKISS GAIKS FREEDOM Jury Acquits the Lad Who| Shot His Intoxicated Stepfather. ‘ e Star Professionals Now WHEELMEN PLAN TO INCREASE THE SAN JOSE CARNIVAL FUND Riding in California Will Compete in a Tournament, the Proceeds of Which Are to Be Contributed Toward Entertainment of Mr. McKinley. NORMAL SCHOOL OPEN TO MILLER Judge Hyland Rules That the - Former Student Must Be Admitted. Quickly Decides That in Protecting | His Mother From Attack He Committed Justifiable AN JOSE, April 3.—The fund of the Carnival of Roses is to be augmented by a benefit bicycle meet given under the auspices of Homicide. | Orlardo Stevens and the Garden e | City Wheelmen. The date has not been but it will be on a Saturday after- Dispatch to The Call. | fixed, Epectal | noonearly this month. The proceeds are to be turned in to the executive commit- tee for the entertainment of President Mc- Mr. Stevens is preparing an elab- ir 1.OS ANGELES, April 3—Harry Hotch- d his stepfather, | tee Monica on the | Kinley. Jast, was acquitted | Orate programme, t‘\;hich wmf . jor | S0Me events among the star profe ler In the Superior| now riding in California. ry returned a Ver-|jand, in training for his trip ter deliberating five | abroad, will give an exhibition of the rid- | | ing which has made him the champion dicted to the drink habit | middle-distance wheelman of the world. Cooper and Freeman, Hardy Downing and lude - threatened to cut his | a his rapid young brother, Burton, will be The shooting occurred | among the attraction: 5 at night. Thomas was on | The pians for the first day’s parade are e © his wife's home, intoxi- bfiu‘nz ra}p;d v matured under the =uncr} ol S o ooy . | Yision of Captain A. B. Cash, marshal of cated Sene B ere. Thomas | ihe day. It will be divided into five di- g ust as she shut | yisions, and President Mc: ley, escorted ace Harry, who was in | by the reception committee in carriages, | ged a revolver through | will head the procession. Seventy floats | bullet entered the man's | from all parts of the county wiil be in n - me out at the top of his head. 4 i She 2o o The bicycle bovs will own the city the 3 e o ung that Thomes ! second day. Wheeimen from every city ater. The defense was Justl- 4, ‘the contral part of the State are ex- pected to be present, and prizes will be offered for the largest club and the best uniformed ciub in the bicyele parade. o1, to-day upon the the tragedy. had seen him | e boy. “She ! > always treated 1!"11;& PLAYS WITH MATCHES il Sl AND LOSES HIS LIFE though L e a1t unti the night | Three-Year-0ld Baby Sets Fire to His | L He came up about N : o s reading in the house. 1 Clothing and Is Horribly r with my mother. He Burned. the back door and cali- | LGS ANGELES, April 3.—Lloyd Spiro, > bck door and oall- GELES, April Lioyd Spiro. three years old. diad early t morning und in front. I went by front side of the | 2% @ result of burns. Yesterday afternoon 1 went there, | the little fellow left his mother's room my mother names. | in the Orlando Housc without her knowl- sed to cut her throat. | edge. Climbing betwcen the Orlando and defend my mother. I|the Byrne bullding he began lighting of Mr. Thomas. | matches and was eviuently much amused h his form. 1|at the sight of the burning lucifers. Sud- as he said, and a e side of my bed I picked u nd as he stepped inside I fired." denly there was heard a heart-rending shriek and several pedestrians rushed to the place. intend to kill him? The child was lying on his back and the flames were rapidly eating into his flesh. wanted to protect my moth- | His clothes were all ablaze. A man pulled and hi embled. | off his coat and wrapped it around the boy's body in an ecffort to smother the flames. Despite his CHIEF RED BLANKET | extinguished until 1 had burned little v | Lloyd’s head and to a crisp. DENOUNCES TIMBERMEN | “Pio Cufterer was carried info the hotel and medical aid amoned. He died th Leader of the Bear Island Chippewas Files a Vigorous Protest With a Governor. finn.. April 3.—Red Blanket f of the Bear.Island ipal chief of the Chip- | ied by a substitute mor; ness ing, not having regained consciou: The father of the boy lives in Crip- ple Creek, Colo. Of Interest to the Coast. WASHINGTON, Ap partment order: il 3.—Postoffice announce: P Washington. De- to-da ned, G. Gah Bow (Man Who | bt North Bend: appointed, and an_interpreter, ap- J. F. Denny. Imnaha, Walowa | 3 , viee O. M. Chase, resigned ner in which, as Red sions issued to-day were: Califo the Chippewas are be- | nia—Rent Walker, John Hewitt, Los mber cutters on [ Angeles, $5. Increase—Charles Whitmore, Red Blanket declared | Los Angeles, $5; John Hayworth, Los eter that white and | Angeles. $8: James A. Wright, Chico, $12; en are now destroy- mes Tul Rescue, $10. Oregon, orig- timber by assuming iral—Addison Potter, Portiand, $6; George provisions of the law | I. Dashel. Portland. $6. Increase—John persons to cut the Portland, $10; Hubert Bascomb, * timber. Moreover, t v Park, $3). ' Washington. orig- cut large quantities of liam Smith. Vancouver, $§. Major Frederick Hadra, surgeon, and sald that although the | Captains Francis Pursell and Thomas W. Jackson, assis teers, now in Sar . are ordered | to Manila for assignment to duty. | | e | Will Build Sugar Factory. | PHOE Ariz., April 3—A sugar fac- | tory with a capacity of tons is to be | built between Glendale and Peoria at a cost of $250,000. Delo: V. Brown, a cap- italist of Peoria, Ill., and others have en- | tered into an agreement with the farmers to construct v, the farmers donat- ing a certain amount of land and agree- | ing to supply an ample tonnage of beet: allotted land in sev- do not know where their | ted and cannot find — FLAGSHIP OF A PRINCE RUNS INTO AN ISLAND Vessel of Henry of Prussia Sustains Severe Damage as Result of Faulty Steering. 3.—The flagship of Prince he turretship Kaiser d vesterday east of | owing to some unexpected cause. She arrived here under her own | steam and was docked. The damages she | ustained appear to be so extensive | he may have to be put out of com- 2 -+ FAMOUS TEMPLE I FRES GRASP |Ancient Japanese Structure | Is Destroyed by a Conflagration. PP E t the accident was caused e vessel running into raholm Island, to ap- ic forbidden to warships. the batileship went aground ke out from some cause un- the engine-room and it was not d until after two hours fighting, the room was placed under water. The dam serious and several montus for repairs. SCANDAL IN HOSPITAL RESULTS IN A CLOSING Affair in Which a Novitiate Was In- | volved Moves a Bishop to Severe Measpnres. TOUNTAIN, Mich., April 3.—The known here as the ill close its doors rder of Bishop Els, and the »een ordered to leave the dio- VANCOUVER, B. C., April 3.—Oriental advices to-day recount the burning of the celebrated temple Hommongi at Ikegami on the night of March 9. The fire started in the students’ dormitory. where seventy | students were reading late at night for | a pending examination. No supply of | vater was avallable, the buildings being and althovgh about 1000 firemen awa and the neighboring dis- tened to the scenme their exer- | cn a hill from Shi tricts ha of an ecclesiastical arred last January. 'H»";fl‘fl a n \xl;a(e 'in lhehh s- | tions were of little efficacy. rrested on an insenity charge| pew et ) | - N nsenily Chal®e | Tew of the renowned places of Japan mothe 3 2 d ne by the Probate | 3r¢ more fami r to foreigners than was rior also charged X v situated temple, ing released from | Standing in a grove of noble trees and ge Bergeron, Miss | commanding an exquisite vista. 1t stood charges against the | oD the spot where the Buddhist saint of which was drunk- | Nichiren died in 1282. Originally erected n by hop Eis | in the vear 275, it was re-crected after | to close the institu- | & conflagration in the days of the third | | Tokugawa Shogun. Nothing now remains of the imposing pile of edifices except the | Soshido _(founders’ hall), the Shakado | (hall of Shaka), the hoso (treasure house), the daidokoro (kitchen) and the gojunoto | (drum_tower). | Sparks from the burning building were carried to the temple Myokyo-Ia, which of Jud, Death of Ame: icans in China. I 3.—General Chaf- | the following | Peking, Private | v B, Ninth In- 3 In-lies at a distance of about 120 vards to O eiian aaf Tuhe- | {he southeast, which, too, was destroyed Gepartment feamiieri | A few days later the famous temple Sei- e R T ing, Privats ken-Ji was destroyed by fire at Okitsu. rton Stalmaker, Company B, Ninth e ol RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION pous pneumonia —— Famine and Fever in Russia. | ODESS4, April 4—Famine and typhus are raging throughout the Governments of Kherson and Bassarabia and portions of the Government of Kieff and Taurida The mortality is 30 per cent of the e; tire population TO COMMENCE AT ONCE Trains Will Soon Be Running Be- tween Vancouver, Wash., and Kalama. VANCOUVER, Wash., April 3—Ed- & R mund Rice Jr., secretary and manager of Music Hall for Memorial. the Washington and Oregon Railroad CINCINNATI, April 3—Mrs, Fred 3. Company. which recently purchased the ims to-@ay announced that she desireq | TiEht of way of the Portland and Puget { Sound Railway Company between _this city and Kalama, said in an interview to- night that the company was making ar- rangements to commence the construc- tion of the line at once. The company ex- pects to advertise for bids on April 15 and to Lave the line completed by Septem- er.s A double crew of surveyors is at work on the line setting grade stakes and cross- sectioning and it is the intention to have this work finished by the last of this week. Regular trains, he says, will be operated to and from Vancouver after the completion of that porticn of the road un- til the bridge across the Columbia River and the connecting line across the penin- sula to Portland is completed. — Ends Fight for Mines. PHOENIX, Ariz., April 3.—The bitter fight over the Cobra Grande mines of So- nora, Mex., has passed into history. A compromise entered into three montbs ago was carried out to-day, when the Greene Consolidated Mining Company pald the stockholders of the Cobra Grande Com- pany about $3000%, taking up the shares at par value of & Altogether a half- e memory of her husband by the grounds of the Univer- at a cost not to exceed hall to be devoted to mu- Pears’ Only they who use it know the luxury of it. Pears’is the purest and | an inquest over the body of Albert 3 — Says the Trustees of the San Jose In- stitution Exceed Their Author- - ity in Arbitrarily Ex- cluding Him. s Sl Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, April 3.—Henry E. Miller, a pupil of the State Normal School here, who was refused a diploma by the fac- ulty because it was claimed he lacked the necessary qualifications to become a suc- cessful teacher, to-day received a deci- sion in Judge Hyland's court compelling the faculty to admit him as a student in the school. About a year ago Miller completed his course of study, but he was refused a diploma. Mrs.’ Place, the head of the training department, declared -he was unfit to become a teacher. He preferred charges against Mrs. Place at the time, alleging that spite work was her Incen- tive, but the board sustained the teacher. Later the case was taken into court on a writ of mandate directed against Pro- fessor McNaughton, who was then prin- cipal. ~This action' was defeated on de- murrer. Subsequently she trustees of the school passed a resolution refusing Miller admis- sion to complete his course of study. An- other writ was then obtained against Principal Dailey. i Judge Hyland holds that the board of trustees did not have power or authority to pass the resolution excluding Miller from the school, as it deprives him of a legal right in an arbitrary manner and | that it is unreasonable and oppressive. | ADVENTISTS INCREASE, THE H%HBMIP ROLL | Report of the President of the Gen- eral Congress Gives Evidence of Much Progress. BATTLE CREEK, Mich., April 3.—The biennial report of Elder W. G. Irwin, president of the Seventh Day Adventist General Congress, which began here to- | day, was presented. Elder Irwin said that during the two years the Increase in membership had been 12,504, making the total membership for the world 7563. Continuing he said: ¢ The tithes for the same period amounted to $1,005,951, an Increase over the former two ars of §205,341. Donatlons to carry on mis- sionary work amount to $151,000. ~Books in fourteen different languages have been fssued by the Hamburg Publishing House. Since the last general conference nine sanitaritims have been established, two in Germany, two :n Australia, ofte in New Zealand and five in the United States, a total of twenty-four in all parts of the world. The educational work is successful, there be- ing six colleges, four academies, ten training and industrial schools, one intermediate school ‘and 228 church schools, a total of 263 schools, with 281 teachers and 6600 pupils. POLITICIANS OF CUBA CAUSE THE DIFFICULTY | Representative Dalzell Returns From the Island and Explains to Presi- dent Causes of Trouble. WASHINGTON, April 3.—Representa- WOUEST FLS T0 YIELD CLEW Mystery Still Cloaks the Murder of Anderson Near Winters. \ Special Dispatch to The Call, SUISUN, April —Coroner J. J. Mec- ,Donald, accompanied by District Attorney F. R. Devlin and Court Reporter T. H. Hyatt, went to Winters to-day and held nder- son, who was murdered last Sunday/night near that town and just within the border of Solano County. No evidence tending.| to fasten guilt upon any person was ad- Z. T. McGill, who performed testified that death was caused by severe blows upon the head. The testimony of the other witnesses re- to their having seen Anderson places nd evening preceding his death The verdict of the jury was that Ander- | son came to his death from a fracture of the skull, caused by blows with a blunt weapon in the hands of unknown persons. Under Sheriff T. L. Robinson and a dep- | uty from the Sheriff's office will revisit the scene of the crime to-morrow and | make a further investigation. The officers | are credited with having some informa- tion hich the; noi willing to make *public, and_th e said to_have certain persons under surveillance. It is expected that arrests will be made within a day or | two. i Crushed Under Falling Glass. LOS ANGELES, April 5.—Frank Engals, eri- gals was unloading of- a larec 12 feet, at the firm's The glass- was on blocks and En atched one of the men for more attempting to sustain the entire himself. It proved to be wo much for him and the glass fell in his directio crushing him with its great weight. TI glass was shattered as 1t fell. Engals was seriously injured internally. Four ribs were broken and his 1ight foot terribly cut. foreman for W. P. Fulier & Co., ously injured this afternoon. superintending the plate glass, 10 by store. Inspecting Nanaimo Mines. NANAIMO, B. C., April 3—C. H. K. Smith and C. J. McClaine of San Francis- co, accompanied by J. D. Lynch of New York, inspected the new Vancouver Coal Company’s properties to-day in the In- terests of an American syndicate, which is opening extensive coal fields in North- ern Washington. The visitors were shown around by Manager Thomas Russell agd were much impressed with the excellente of the arrangements above and below. They left for the Sound to-night. | Rl cand Fathér Sesnon Injured. SAN RAFAEL, April 3—Father Robert Sesnon of this parish and Mrs. Henry Boyle to-day met what might have been a serious accident, ‘While decorating the church Father Sesnon fell from a step Jadder and sustained several sprains and bruises. Mres. Bovle was struck by the fallilng ladder and was considerably shaken up. The injuries of neither are serious. S Applies for Franchises. SAN RAFAEL, April 3.—Application was to-day made to the Board of Super- visors by the Central California Electric Light and Power Company for franchises to permit the erection of poles along the county roads. e company’s plant is at Marysville and the object is to supply light and power to the bay cities. The board deferred action until next month. S, s Crushed by Falling Roof. SAN JOSE, April 3.—Coroner Kell re- turned to-night from a three days’ trip in the hills back of Mount Hamilton, where he held an inquest over the body of Jesus Higuera, an aged Mexican herder, found dead in the ruins of his burned cabin. The jury believed the shanty caught fire while Higuera was asleep and that he was crushed by the falling roof. million dollars in cash has béen paid over, covering attorneys’ fees and running ex- penses. Shareholders in both companies are located all over the country and par- #ieularly in New York and Arizona. best toilet soap in all the world. France Orders Submarine Boats. PARIS, April 3.—The Minister of Marine, M. de Lanessan, has ordered the construc- tion of twenty additicnal submarine boats. tive Dalzell of Pennsylvania, who has just returned from a two weeks' trip to Cuba, saw the President to-day and talked with | him about conditions there. Mr. Dalzell sald he thought there was hardly a man in the island, except the politicians, who did pot favor the acceptance of the con- ditions of independence imposed by the Platt amendment. * “But the politicians are disposed to play a walting game,” he said. “I believe they | will stand out until Congress meets and then, finding that we will not modify our terms, they will accept the conditions. The better element in Cuba favors ulti- mate annexation to the United States, but I believe a large proportion agree that it would better come after a trial of inde- pendence has been made.” MARSHAL OF THE DAY FOR SAN JOSE'S ROSE CARNI- VAL. 2 - THIRTEEN DOCTORS FAILED. Mrs. M. A Close of Nebraska Was Cured of Incipient Consumption After All Medical Aid Had o Failed---Read Her Letter. Kearney, Neb., July 8, 1900. Dr. S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio : Dear Doctor—*I desire to express to you my sincere thanks for the interest you have shown in my case, and for the timely aid and advice which has effected a cure of as bad a case of consumption as could be w: imagined. " ““Peruna and Manalin have done what thirteen of the best physicians in the country have failed to do. For more than three years | doctored for consumption, and spent thirteen weeks in a Pulmonary Sanitarium at Milwaukee, Wis.; but finding myself growing worse, as a last resort | came West, where | was bedfast for many weeks, and the FOUND HERSELF GROWING WORSE. | L | physicians which my husband called gave no hope but said, “She cannot possibly live mora than a few days.” fooled them all. the hemorrhages stopped. | began to mend slowly at first, but the im- provement became more marked, and now ! can truthfully say that there is not the slightest trace of my old complaint. Is Catarrh, But thanks tc Peruna, | In an incredibly short time after | began to take Peruna “‘I would have written you a long time ago, but have purpesely waited to see if the effect was lasting; and in conclusion | would say, God bless you and keep you with us that you may go on with your work of mercy for many years to come.”"—Mrs. M. A. Close. P. 8.—‘] am going to visit friends in Wisconsin who never expected to see me alive again, so please forward mail to me at 579 Pacific street, Appleton, Wis.”"—M. A. | not rest easy until the catarrh is entirely | curad. Thousands pay no attemtfon to and Catarrh Leads to |it until it is too late. Consumption. | 1t Peruma is used the coid mever be- | comes chronic, and hence catarrh is pre- The tendency of catarrh of the head is | P! AN OLD COLD vented. But after catarrh has become EATTLE-SKAGUAY RHTES ARE FIFED BULGARIA NEEDS | to pass dewnward through the bronchial tubes to the luugs. Any one who has had catarrh of the head for a year or more finds the disease gradually progressing downward. Tn some cases the progress is rapld, 2nd in other cases it is slow; byt sooner or later if catarrh is allowed to run, it will go to the lungs and set up the disease known as consumption. It is doubtful if consumption is ever caused by MD OF RUSSHA thoroughly established Peruna will cure | it, but it will take much longer. Even in | cases where catarrh has attacked the lungs and the symptoms of consumption | have shown themselves, the Peruna will |'cure. A great many cases of genuine con- | sumption have been cured with Peruna |after the patient had been given up to die, as in the case of Mrs. Close. If you do not derive prompt and sat factory results from the use of Peruna, | and Skaguay and through rates to Daw- | definitely Passenger Fares Will Re- main as They Were Last Summer. —_— Disturbances of Macedonian Committee Become More Serious. \ any the head cr throat, and is neglected until it becomes chronic: dawn on the victim that he has catarrh. ng except catarrh. | write at omce to Dr. Hartman, giving a The catarrh usually begins as a cold in | full statement of your case and he will | be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice grati 3 Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tha Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. then it begins to less he is very foolish indeed he will e ODESSA, April 4—It s asserted here that the Russian political agent in Bul- garia has sent to St. Petersbyrg a very pessimisitic report regarding the situation in the Balkans, declaring that’ the Bul- garian Government is quite incapable of coping “effectively with the agitation of the Macedonian committee and that there is constant danger of some untoward in- cident leading to a conflagration. The report emphasizes the ominous fact that Turkey will listen to no foreign in- tervention with regard to Macedonia, be- cause any concession of Macedonian ter- ritory would lead to a holy war. It de- clares that the only thing is for Russla to help Bulgaria to suppress the Mace- donian committee. SEATTLE, April 3.—The Alaska Steam- hip Association met to-day and decided upon the summer rates between Seattle | son. The meeting was called to discuss passenggr business only and lasted nearly all day. Conclusions were reached on the rates between Puget Sound points and Skaguay and agreed to as follows: First class, $25; second class, $16. The cuestion of a through rate from Puget Sound points to Dawson was not settled, but it was generally conceded that the following figures prob- ably would be adopted as uniform rates by the association: First class. $105; first s, continuous trip, $100; second Taies adopted for the coming sum- schedule . to Skaguay do not differ me: from those in force last summer, but the through rate, if adopted, at $100 for a con tinuous passage, will make a reduction of $25 on the rates that prevailed last sum- | KAISER DOESN'T KNOW OPINION OF THE PEOPLE mer between Seattle and other Puget | Sound points and Dawson. Newspapers Declare That His Trips i Through the Country Omnly Create False Impression. BERLIN, April 3.—The German press s still busy discussing the recent speeches of Emperor William. The Westphalen Mercur and the Cologne Volks Zeitung as- sert that the Kaiser is greatly mistaken if he thinks his trips through the coun- try enable him to know the real opinion of the German people concerning him. “‘On the contrary,” one of these journals remarks, ‘‘these trips only serve to create within him a false notion, for he seldom hears anything but laudation and flat- Fighting to Save His Trees. | SANTA ANA, April 3.—S. Hill to-day brought suit against the City Trustees and the Superintendent of Streets for $10,000 damages for alleged malicious pros- ecution. An ordinance requires certain trees to be removed from streets in which sewer mains are laid. Hill refused to re- move_his shade trees and was arrested and fined. Again he was ordered to re- move _the trees, but refused, whereupon he was rearrested and tried before a jury. At the trial it was shown that the prop- erty had been deeded to C. W. Damerel, and the jury returned a verdict of acquit- e There seems no doubt, however, that his Majesty told the delegations of the .| Catches the worm—if you've been caught on poor laurdry work drop us a card or call us up on the 'phone and we’ll call for and return your next bundle in a condition that'll make your Easter outfit doubly pleasing to you. you order it. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Aulomobile Spectacless SOMETHING NEW IN EYB PROTECTORS, prescriptions filled. Factory on Quick repairing, Phone, Main 10. Oculists’ premises. HIC APPARAT OPTICIANS 4, proGraPHiCAPPARATLS, 642 MARKET ST. “InsTRuments unoer cmomcie sunome. (ATALOGUE FRee.: “THE EARLY BIR Domestic finish for full dress shirts if No saw edges. Office 1004 Market Street, SONOMA COUN- SKAGGS HOT SPRINGS Telephone—South 420, SRAUYS LOL DIRINGD. cv; oniy 434 hours ] 'rom H 11 staging : Oakland Office—54 San Pablo Ave. | waters noted for medlcinal virtues: bost aat: urel bath in State; swimming and boath et it % Amnaheim School Bonds Sold. SANTA ANA, April 3—Twelve thousand five hundred 5 per cent ten-year bonds for the High School building at Anaheim were sold here to-day by the Supervisors for par, accrued interest and $1000 pre- mium. This is the best sale of bonds ever made In the county ! Prussian Diet some severe things dur- ing the recent audiences regarding the self-seeking policy of the Conservatives and Agrarians. Gas Aflame in the Air. BEAUMONT, Tex., April 3.—A fire is In | progress in the flelds. The Woods well | struck a heavy flow of gas to-night and | it caught fire from a torch n the hands ' of a workman. The flames shot in the air high above the derrick. This well is | 150 feet from the Hamill well, which de- | veloped the same gas feature a few days | ago. Water, mud and rock are shooting | out of the pipe sixty feet high and con- | t%ct with the flames makes a cloud of steam, | Three Boys Disappear. SANTA ANA, April 3—Roy Barker and Roy Catland, aged 13 and 11 years, re- spectively, have disappeared .from Orange. The lads have been absent since Monday. When theysleft home theéy had little or no money. : Treasurer of Whittier School. Tooth Powder Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century. g : good trout strears; telephone, telegraph, daily mail and express; first-class hotel and stage service; morning and afternoon stages: round trip from San Francisco only $5 50. Taie Tib. uron ferry at 7:30 a. m. or 3:3 p. m. Terms, 32 a day or 312 a week. References—Any guest of the past six years. For further informa- téin address J. F. MULGREW, Skaggs, Cal. LAUREL DELL LAKE OST ATTRACTIVE County to spend a bathing, bowling, tenni: ete. Write for ecircular. Laurel Dell, Lake Co., Cal. GOOD FELLOWS’ HOME, Dr. Lyon’s ’ PERFECT PLACE IN_LAKE vacation. Boating. lvery, new walks, H. WAMBOLD, LOS ANGELES, Avril 3—At a meeting to-day of the Board of Trustees of the ‘Whittier Reform School L. 'R. Garrett was appointed treasurer of the institu- tion. GEORGE W. WADE DIES l OF ACUTE ALCOHOLISM i { Former Secretary of the Board of Education Expires Suddenly in House on Eddy Street, George W. Wade, a clerk in the Fulton | Iron Works, formerly secretary of the | Board of Education and well known in | political circles, was found dead in a chair | in_a room at 106 Eddy street last evening. ' Wade had been drinking much recently and was intoxicated last night. He called on a woman acquaintance at the house mentioned. She left the room for a few minutes and when she returned she found Wade seated in a chair dead. e A Sl Marseilles Strikers Submit. MARSEILLES, April 3.—About 5000 dock laborers presented themselves for work to-day. Of this number 4000 were em- ployed. ————— HANCOCK WINS A POINT.—Judge Kerri- gan has ordered the allegations of cruelty and inflgelity made by Mrs. Ella W. Hancock against Robert J. Hancock in her action for maintenance- stricken out of her complaint. This leaves but one allegation, that of deser- tion, against the defendant, and upon this complaint the suit will be heard. MID THE MOUNTAINS OF MENDO- . gino. Visit his quiet little resort for e GREAT @ | solid comfort. _For particulars apply to S. visir DR. JORDAN’S STRATTON. 3 Eighth street, City. HOTEL MOUNT VIEW hands. Will hereafter be open the year round. Bus meets 11 o'clock train from city until April 15, then meets all trains. The culinary department will rec=ive special atten- tion. For rates and particulars address HOTEL MOUNT VIEW, Ross Valley, Marin Co., Cal. RANCH in Santa Cruz mountains to rent; suit- able for summer boarders or chicken ramch. Inquire 237 Twelfth § to 8 p. m. Weekly Call, $1 per Year