The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 11, 1901, Page 9

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| wHE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, GOUNGIL FXES WATER MATES Majority Passes Resolu- tion Based on Hart's Decision. Minority Makes a Vigorous Protest, but Is Promptly . Outvoted. Oakland OfRce, San Francisco Call. Broadway, June 10. the present Councii- | > criminally negligent in not | rates for the current year, n would not injure the | se of an appeal of the the Supreme Court. the ¥ Council to- g rates for ng July 1, 190, on the Hart decision, Councilmen Boyer, Courtney, Ruch, W affer voting aye, and Counecil- | Dornir nd Fitzgerald vot- | abeent. n ordinance to the passed to print. This ter a bitter fight, dur- accused their col- the chance of suc- w the minority the rate case. Coun- arguing for the resolu- the city had no case ater company and never ad to fight on was a ggled affairs we called a ace said: “Let us not king an action Not a man in e been elected had he would make the majority are ase. ere a; to-night.” i: “Professor Wallace is well as the rest of us. I f inconsistency. He has himself. He talks tem- votes for licenses for rd tzgerald asked why the rushed through in such member of the Ordi- Committee and I had meeting at which this to the Wallace, _said: Seventh Ward | 2 i the other members | He seems to think that every- enth Ward is an angel.” d_an_opinion from At- de Golia, stating that | cilmen sed a water rent vear they $500 each with K s ludicrous. We g0 into effect the first we can't be punished for neglected to do. our City Attorney the matter of the appeal weaken the hands us that if this »uld be a con- ordinance is “We the property donated the money in our high school s resolution we of an emine don't have the attorney that it is and that it can in no f th BODY OF HUGH TEVIS LEAVES JATAN TO-DAY Bride of Few Weeks Will Accompany Husband’s Remains Across Ocean. »w said to have been > death of Hugh Tevis in Word has "been received at cablegram addressed to for- xter from his daughter, an tion for this | . lted in his death. am also stated that the widow husband's remains ving the Japanese port val of the Doric will be ed by all concerned. ion_was conveyed in an ss dispatch Den- ne 10.—Mr. Hugh Tevis of Yokohama on June 6, operation for appen- the information con- message received this vernor George W. Bax- ter, the widow of Mr. the cause of the n partially al- of lls the but a few tragie story. as a wife, none 1 opinfon. Sad as be, she will be anx- Sta he fina arrangements « W of the Sea Picnic. ting of the committee on ar of the Sea par- day. Everything ful out- k to-morrow. One ish s drawn for i n games will be will judge the MacDonald wil avilion. The following committees ill manage the picnic: Edward Leovard (chairman), Thomas John Greely. Floor—A. W. MaeDon- H. Wiegner, E. L. Deane, M. A. Greely, J. Ward, P. H. y, M M." Owens. ell esiding judge), ; Felix McHugh, P. R e * 2 Lynch. ~ Pro- gramme, printing William A. | D Frank J. Shea, Rev. J. P. ne (chair et nquiries After Howard Tuttle. ner Leland received by mail yester- inclosing a photograph of Tuttle, the restaurant man ys ago from his I ce of b =5 482" Geary street the back of the photograph was writ- the following: tle, place of businese 452 Geary e, June Sth. Please no 2654 McAllister street, San body is found Dear Sir resembling this picture please notify Mrs If you should find a corpse in the 4 McAllister street, San Francisco. —_————————— Bunker Hill Celebration. The Bunker Hill Association has com- pleted its arrangements for the celebra- June 17, at Los E. F. Preston will deliver the n of the day. Valuable pri the winners of the various games rranged by the committee in chazge. —————————————————— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. tion of Bunker Hill day Gatos STERILIZED BARBER SHOP. A Famous Shop in the Carrollton Hotel, Baltimore, Maryland. The barber shop in the Carroliton hotel, Bal erilizes everything it uses in the shc he sterilizing is done by heat. The towels, the ragors, the strops, the soap, the combs and brushes are cll steril- being used on a customer. Where there lization, have the parber use Newbro's Herpicide. It iills the dandruff germ, and it is an antiseptic | for the scalp, and for the face after shav- ing. All Jeading barbers everywhere ap- preciate these potent facts about Herp'- cide and they use it. “Destroy the cause, you remove ithe effect. ized before | 2 at this place is again on fire. | whom, it is feared, will never be heard | toliowing are known to be | at West Newton. of the | |ing and had his right leg broken. | man, wais arrested and charged with bat- | tery. THIRTY MINERS | IRE ENTOMBED {Little Hope of Saving, Them, as Mine Is on Fire. 4 (An Explosion Is Thought to Have Caused the 1 Disaster. PORT ROYAL, Pa., June 10.—The Pitts- | burg Coal and Coke Company’s shaft No. { More than the mine, many of | thirty men are in from again. The names of those known to be entombed cannot be learned, but the in the burning B | . married. Frank Davenport, married. Daly. Willilam McCune, superintendent; home Dennis Wortley, pit boss of the mine. Michael Roy, toreman of the KEuclid | mines, and about thirty other miners. | It is thought the fire started from an icsion. Six men were in the mine at time—Jack People: Tony Sickles, | Frank Davenport, — Daly, Lawrence Set- tler and John Stakes. St and Settler were not near the place where the ex- plosion occurred, and upon the arrival of a rescue party they were quickly brought to the surface. They were nearly over- come by afterdamp. They could give no ormation as to what had caused the | fire and told the rescuers that four other | men were entombed. After 7 o'clock Superintendent McComb of West Newton; Dennis Wortley, pit boss; Michael Roy, foreman of the Euclid | mines, and several other bosses, with about twenty men, went down shaft No. | 1, which is just opposite on the Baltimore | and Ohio side of the river, and have not | | been heard from since. About three hours after the rescue party had been in the | | mine more explosions were heard. Mean- | time the crowd around the opening of the t had increased, the crowd including Y mothers, wives and sisters of the m men entombe All sorts of plans have been sugested for the rescue of the men. Some talk of turning the river into the mines, but many are opposed to this for | fear of drowning the miners. All that | would be necessary to let the deluge of | water loose in the mines would be to pull 3 o placed in the mines| The foregolng is part of ¢ tribute pald | afte xplo o ven years ago e ‘ | i g n s by Rev. Peter C. Yorke tc Rev. P. S. S o et ol rush an wheSuines (o S LT 0 St tieeit G ta Y ok Daly, one of the men known to be in| Whose silver jubilee was celbrated yes- the burning mine, went in for the first ! time this morning, and it is not known who he is or where he is from. At 11 o'clock to-night four men volun- | teered to go down shafts Nos. 1 and 2 and one man went down shaft No. 3, but up to this time it is not known whether they have succeeded in making any res- cue. Gas and smoke are issuing from the mine at midnight, and_ over 200 women and children are gathered about the mouth of the shaft. Physicians have been | summoned and every effort is being made | to reach the entombed men. PORT ROYAL, Pa., June 11.—Shortly af- | ter 3 o'clock this morning W. A. Sweene: Harry Beveridge and Frank Stratton suc. | ceeded in working their way to the pit | | mouth _and were quickly put under the care of physicians. Beveridge and St ton are unconscious and the physicians say they cannot live. Beveridge's arms are both broken, his body horribly bruised and it is believed he inhaled the flames. Sweeney rescued Beveridge and literally carried him along with him. Sweeney him ! self is so badly used up that all the in- | formation he could give of the explosion | and fire was that the expiosion came at the time when the shifts were ch: ing from day to night turn. The miner were hurled in all directions, and Sweeney knows of at least three who were killed outright. He it is impossible to tell now just how many men are entombed, | but he thinks there are more than thirty-seven reported at firsf | MISS CAVILL WILL SWIM AT THE OLYMPIC CLUB Champion Lady Swimmer of Aus- tralia Will Take Part in a | Tournament. Miss Alice vill, the champion lady | swimmer of Australia and member of a | family famous in aquatics, is to give an | exhibition to-morrow evening at the| Olympic Club. She will be assisted by her brothers, Percy and Sid, who are also| championis. s Cavill learned to swim when but | ars old and won her first race at 8. | > is the holder of several medals and certificates for saving life in the water, and won the championship of Australia | from a number of clever lady swimmers. She is also a clever diver, and can do | cy stunts from a fifty-foot drop. She | an swim 100 yvards in 1:12, which is re- | markably fast time for a man, not alone | a woman. Miss Cavill will swim a race with her brothcrs. On the same evening the club will_hold its monthly swimming tournament. Some | of the fastest swimmers on the coast will articipate. The races will be under the ices of the Amateur Athletic Asso- | ciatton and all records made will stand. The opening event will be a fifty-yard handicap. Scott Leary, the coast cham- pion, will be on the scratch mark. The other entries are: Dennie Carroll, R. B. Cornell, F. Sherry, C. Clough, C. Braun, C. Conlin, P. Revert, M. Davis, H. Young, C. Long and K. Connors. This will be followed by a twenty-five- yard dash, in which R. B. Cornell, D. Car- | yoll, Scoti Leary, C. Clough, A. Taylor and F. Burnett will participate. There will be fancy springboard diving | for trophies. The entries are: Lester Hammersmith, H. Irving, F. Burnett, A. Taylor, F. Duran, J. Conpors, A. Ortion, W." Byington, R. Cornell, P. Revert, W. E. Pomin and several members of the { Lurline Swimming Club. The programme | will also consist of a blindfold race, | greasy pole event, fancy swimming by the three Cavills, Alice, Percy and Sid, and plunging for prizes. An exciting ex- Libition of life-saving will be given by Professor Cavill's class in life-saving. The following officlals will handle the events: Starter, George James; judges, Alex Pape and J. Geddes: timers, K. Mel’ ]rasu and Fred Butz; announcer, G. Hens- e | H. E. HUNTINGTON ARRIVES HERE FROM NEW YORK H Huntington arrived here on a special train vesterday direct from New York. He has been in the East for the last ten months. | Mr. Huntington does not know how long he will remain on this coast, but says that ultimately he will make San Francisco his home, making trips to New York only as his business interests re- quire. In speaking of his interests in the Southern Pacific, he said the Huntington estate did not hold any of the stock of | that company, but further than that he would not state. still president of the Marketi s been operated that he will changes among the officials. He intends | devoting considerable time to the man- agement of the Los Angeles Street Rail- | road Company. Struck by a Car. | | David Stuart, a satlor, was struck by a | car at First and Folsom streets last even- The | broken bones were set at the Harbor Hospital. - C. W. Hinnenberg, the motor- e Petitions in Insolvency. Petitions in Insolvency were filed yester- day in the United States District Court as follow H. T. Renton, mariner, Oak- land, liabilities $6030 82, assets $380; John Hudépeath, livery stable keever, San Frarcisco, liabilities $5716 66, no assets. e ‘Will Lecture on Boer War. A lecture on the Boer war will be de- livered to-night at Metropolitan Temple by an escaped prisoner of war, Com- mandant Jan Krige, an officer on the staff of General Bothe ants to the Archbishop. At the closc of | the mass the “Te Deum” was intonedhy | Father Casey, and the impressive chm? | us by TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1901 FATHER CASEY'S SPLENDID LABORS WIN RECOGNITION WELL DESERVED His Grace Archbishop Riordan Pays a High Tribute to the Pastor f St. Peter’'s and Compliments Him on the Flourishing Condition of the Parish---Honors for the Young Graduates — IVE AND TWEN'Y YEARS ago his hands were anointed, that blessing he might less and con- secrating he. migt consecrate, and these twenty-fre years have been where his lot was cast andwh: ruled as shepherd of the flog. terday by a solemn high rass in the parish he upbuilt. H The sacred edifice that Faher Casey helped build was crowded withthe people he has learned to love and wo in turn revere him. His Grace Archbisiop Riar dan lent his presence to the ausicious oc casion and praised the pasto for his splendid work. Members of the:loth oc- upied seats in the sanctuary md took part in the solemn services. Speial mu- sic_ was rendered by an _augmentd cho under the leadership of Miss Dsmond and Miss Annie Rocney, the sweetsiuger, rendered some special numbers. The altar had been tastefully deorated by the Misses Maguire and Mrs. D. Kee nan, and with its myraid of lighs pr senfed a striking appearance. A 10:30 | the organ pealed forth a gladsome 3arch, and the acolytes, visiting priests am par- ticipants in the high ma into the sanctuary, preceding the Archbihop, who was attired in his pontificial ro; Father Casey was celebrant of the ua. Rev. P. Lynch of St. James was deicon, deacon and Rey. T. Larkin of St. Peer's Rev. Willlam Lyons of St. master of ceremonies. Kev. Donald_of St. Charles Church and P. P. Powers of Livermore were a: was taken up by the choir. Addresses of Commendation. GRABDUATING CILASS OF . ST. PETERS \\écnoox_. P | * Father Yorke then deliv x appropriate to the occ: c - Dishop followea with a shott gl (7, ETPRECSE SOy, DIGRBE oke in the hizhest terms ¢ GUISHED THEMSELVES y as a man and a priest and JRIN PAST YEAR. of his work in the parish, whicn, he sald DURHG T evidence of the great cire taken|). 2 + Olyh'x - 25 Foilowing is in part the sermon deliv- . = 3 vl on our priests and impresses upon them a ered by Father Yorke: Character that never washes away. Thou art racious custom, instituted by God t in the old dispensation certain vears set aside for rest and rejolcing. The trumpet sounded through the land and proclaimed liberty to all and the inhabitants thereof. The jubllee was a time of rest, of peace, of joy. The old dispensation has been merged in the new. Its rites have taken wider signification. The lemple courts s silent. The trumpet is silent on Zion, but ity echoes roll from soul to soul and grow for- ever and forever. It Is well there should be in this world a season of jubilee. It is & workaday world. We all must labor. In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread until thou return to the dust from whence thou wert taken. The heaviest burden laid upon the command to work is the monotony of w . Hour by hour, day by day we drag a lengthening and a heavier chaln. We need encouragement, we need to break the monot- ony. We must snap the chain. No encourage- ment given is so sweet as the consciousness of work well done by others. We are encour- aged by seeing others bearing their burdens bravely to take up our own and struggle on. Bear one another’s burdens. Therefore, to-day we are met to celebrate the record of the work well done in the priest- hood. This jubilee is for himseif and for us. Five and twenty years ago his hands were anointed, that blessing he might bless, and consecrating, he might consecrate, and these twenty-five years have been years of benedlc- tion for this city, where his lot was cast, and for this people, where he has ruled as shep- herd of the flock. In speaking of the priesthood, the apostle says: No man taketh this honor save he be called, even as Aaron was. It is not a tran- sitory’ office, to be taken up lightly and lald down hurriedly. Thou art a priest forever according to the Order of Melchisedec. The Catholic idea of the priesthood is wholly op- posed to our modern order of viewing profes- sions. A man may be a physician to-day and also to-morrow; to-day a preacher, to-morrow a politician. The Catholic church’lays hands PURSUES THE DENTIST WITH AN EMPTY PISTOL Sacramento Citizen Makes Things Lively for Man He Finds in His House. SACRAMENTO, June 10.—There was a stir in the residence portion of town this afternoon when Louis B. Nichols, a well known citizen, was seen rushing out of hie house, pistol in hand, after a young dentist named Edward Diaz. Nichols aimed and pulled the trigger of the re- volver several times, but the young den- tist, hat and coat in hand, fled with the speed of a greyhound before the wrath- ful husband and disappeared down an 2l ien the police arrived Nichols said he had come home from his place of business and linding the doors locked had. broken in the rear door. As he did so Diaz rushed out at the front. Mrs. Nichols and a young woman ran screaming from the house and sought shelter at a corner gro- cery, whence a hurry call for the police was sent in. Mrs. Nichols asserts that there was no occasion for jealousy on the part bf her husband; that young Diaz has been keeping company with her cousin, iss Costello, who was in the house at the time, and that the young dentist was making himself useful by wringing some clothes that the women were washing. Mrs, Nichols swore to a complaint charg- ing her husband with threats against life, but withdrew it to-night, a reconciliation having taken place. Nichols says somebody had removed the charges from his cartridges, and that he snapped the pistol so many times in an offort to wing the dentist that he had to punch the shells out of the cylinder with a ramrod. RS Admiral Remey Sails for Sydney. WASHINGTON, June 10.—The Navy Department has received a cablegram an- nouncing that Admiral Remey, aboard the Brooklyn, who was invited by the New Zealand authorities to extend his stay in Australian waters, so as to include a visit to their island, left Wellington yesterda for Sydney, 8. W. The admiral wil uhort?’y sail for Cavite and resume active| command of the Asiatic statiogy A ® priest forever. Priest the Shepherd of Souls. ‘herefore, it is an office that may not lightly be\impressioned. - The rude idea of the priest- hodl is that the priest stands between God and mah. He is mediator. In the new law there is bnly ope mediator—Christ Jesus—therefore our priesthood must be and shall forever par- ticpate in the priesthood of Jesus Christ. Chilst is the Good Shepherd. We take pleasure in this office. The priest is said to be the shejherd of souls. There have been other time and other places where priests had dig- nity before the world. There is no record of humin_achievement in which they have not been| distinguished, but in the pastorate is thereitrue dignity. Here we have apostolic lib- erty. We are the servants of the people, but by n¢ means their hirelings. The pastor's work |s with the young, the poor, the sick and dying,| 1 the house of mourning as well as in the'house of joy. In temporal affairs he is the agent of the people. In conclusion Father Yorke said: Your gratitude needs no glass fo behold how well hia jubllee we celebrate has lived up to the twe idea of the priesthood. This is no place for eulogles. In the presence of that God in vhose sight the holy angels are not pure ther & no need of words. His work speaks for him, your heart speaks for him. ray to-dey to the Good Shepherd to add grace to grace, fhat day by day he and we all may more and more transfigure to the image of our master, so that we may serve to stand with one siepherd on the eternal hills when the last trimpet shall proclaim the everlast- ing Sabbath of the children of God. Among those seated in the sanctuary were the fdlowing named: His Grace Archbishop Riordan, Rev. J. J. Prendergast, V. G., and Reverends P. Scanlon, Calzia, 8. J.\ H. H. Wyman, C. 8. P.; J, P. McNally, P. Mulligan, J. M. Cassin, C. Ken- nedy, M. Scatlon, P. Griffin, H Lagan, M. D. ONLY A SMALL AMOUNT Colonel Is Not Much of a Winner in s Los Angeles Lawsuit. LOS ANGELRS, June 10.—Colonel Blan- sought the aid of the courts in securilg possession of certain personal propertqnonne held by his de- ton Duncan, wi ceased wife, from his daughter, Mrs: Katherine D. Lewls, has failed to recover but a small portion of the effects. A de- cision was rendersd to-day by Judge Bal- lard of Orange County, sitting for Judge York, in which a few articles, including silverware, were allotted to the colonel. The property turned over to him is valued at about $275, whereas the coppnel claimed that he was ‘entitlel to property amount- ing to about Colomel Duncan wys greatly disappoint- ed by the judgment pf the court. The lit- igation between th¢ old man and his daughter and son-inlaw, Thomas Lewis, has been waxing warm for several months and bids far to continue. The case’ of Lewis againd Duncan, in which the defendant is askel to be required to convey the legal title to a large tract of valuable oil lands at Fedondo, was called to-day and a continuance was asked by the plaintiff. This mytion proved too much for the colonel, Hllowing the order in the other case. He ranonstrated vigor- ously, saying that everybody was con- spiring to defraud him »f his rights. He exclaimed that he woul¢ fight the cases to the bitter end despite all opposition if he had to live a hundied years. The court was included in the tirade, when the . embittered colonel Was interrupted by Judge Ballard with thestatement that the case would be continuel. plakaiis © ) Chinese Taken l'ron‘l a Train. LOS ANGELES, June 10.~Toy Nom and Hong Hoa, two Chinese, were taken off the westbound Southern Pa:ific overlana train to-day by Chinese Irepector Put- nam and are being detained &!uamdon of attempting to evade the Chinese ex- clusion act. 'They passed t)rough here from San Francisco recentl Mexico and are now returning with tick- ets reading from El Paso to Fran- ciscas Connolly, Philip O'Ryan, C. E. O'Nell, P.' M. Sweeney, E. Kenna, S. J.; P. Power, M. O. Riordan, P. Lynch, Butler, 8. J.; J. Nugent, Dr. Morrison, P. Brady, P. J. Quinn, J. J. Gannon, W. O'Grady, J. Grant, J. Rodgers, Gl e T R. Fughr and O'Con- nor, x —_— BID GOOD-BY TO SCHOOL. St. Peter’s Academy Closing Ends Father Casey Celebra- tion. The closing exercises of St. Peter's Academy were made doubly interesting last night by the entertainment given by the pupils on the occasion of the silver jubilee of Father Casey. Long before the opening of the programme every available seat was occupied and standing room was at a premium. St. Peter's Hall was beautifully decorated with festoons of evergreen and colored bunting in honor of the pastor, who is held in such high regard by his flock. The feature of the entertainment was the presentation of a drama in one act entitled #The Second Spring,” written by Father Yorke as a testimonial to his as- sociate in good works. The drama, which fittingly portrayed the learning and eru- dition of the composer, was in five scenes, the first of which showed ‘““The Passing of the Friars The scene depicted the “Camino Real” leading from San Francisco, in the vear 1838. As an interlude “The Festival Day" was sung by Misses R. McCarthy, M. McIntyre, N. Dillon. D. Driscoll, 1. Farrell and C. Bair. Scene two, “The Vision of the Fu- ture,” showed a hill in view of the Mis- sion’ Dolores and the sea. Scotch dance was_ rendered by Misses I Fop- piano, M. Keenan, A. Guthrie and L. Far- rell. The third scene typified the coming into the priesthood of Father Casey in 1876, Scene four was an eminence in sight of St. Peter's School in 1878, the tableau being “Suffer Little Children.” The last scene was a beautiful picture entitled “The Silver Years.”” The cast of charae- ters was as follows: The guardian angel of California—Miss T. O'Connor; _friars—Misses M. Cooney, B. “oonan, Zella Wilson, F. Innskeep, K. Walsh, C. Keane, K. Daly, B. Doherty, R. McQuade, M. Gallagher, M. Keenan, K. McDonnell, E. Foley, G. Deveny, M. Conneily; Indian neo- phytes—A. Cooney, D. Doyle, A. Pignaz, A. Ryall, T. Ahern, M. Flaherty, A. Collins, E. Murphy, S. Early, A. McDonnell, M. Glimore; spirits of the mountains—A. Fitzgerald, E. Moore, E. Cluny; spirits of the valleys—K. Welch, M. Duffty, V. Kennedy; spirits of the trees—M. Keefe, M. Haley, G. Collum, M. Keane, M. Girot, J. O'Connell; spirit of the ocean—Miss M. Barry; the waves—Pupils of third grade; spirit of the wind—Miss A. Cooney; the winds—Pupils of fourth and fifth rades: the school children—Pupils of sixth and Seventh grades; the five and twenty years—Rita nnskeep, K. Deasy, E. Barry, 1. Burke, K. Clarke, S. Kummerow, A. Guthrie, M. Ashe, M. Baxter, R. O'Brien, R. White, M. Hdrley, G. Doyle, A. Kraft. M. Barry, K. Finnegan, C. Moore, G. McDonald, B. O'Brien. Butte worth, H. Doyle, M. Lyons, G. Guthrie, Deveny, L. Murphy. Graduating honors were conferred upon Misses Mary F, Barry, Alice M. Cooney, Mary T. Haley and Teresa V. O'Conno: who completed the school course. Di lomas were also presented to Misses M. Flaherty, M. Gilmore, T. Ahern, M. Girot, F. Innskeep, M. Keane, E. Murphy, A. McDonald, R. McQuade, J. O'Connell, K. ‘Walsh, M. Connelly, J. Clarke, B. Coon- an, A. Collins, and K. Daley. The rest of the programme follows: “Opes Fantass First violins, XK. Wer e Roche, ‘larke, Cooran. Second violins—V. Kennedy, A. Gut] ., Master W. O'Brien, Master K. Cannon. ;’(:ndo]fi(:m—CA Bair, 1. Morgan, E. Pistolesi. Pianos—G, Collum, A. Fitzgerald, M. Girot, K. Walsh. “‘The rs,’ children of the fi and second srades; ‘‘Marche des V. Kennedy, A. Cooney, K. erald; pantomime, senior pupil: guo de concert—First piano, Mi second piano, Miss M. Keefe; “‘Rol tet”* G. Collum, I. C’*'Z’{;x.fienw:}’&e’%"?‘l‘:. 4 it to Stumberiand, . chlidren of the first, and 1. Burke, K. Clarke, M. Flaherty, M. nd grades; :}el‘l:fhrle, E. McCarthy, L. Keenan, S. Kommerow, Dillon. oo spefeeeferieieirivinieieie e @ SCHOOLDAY SWEETHEARTS ARE MARRIED IN SECRET Unheralded Wedding of Young People of Marin Now Made Known to Friends. SAN RAFAEL, June 10.—Considerable interest was aroused in the city to-day when it was learned that Olivia 8. Jacobs and Egbert C. Burtchaell were quietly married in San Mateo last January in the face of strong paternal qpposition on both sides. The secret of the marriage has been well kept and the parents in the case thought that their wishes had been re- spected until the youthful Mrs. Burtchaell yesterd conflded‘ to her mother the he marriage. Eelcgei's' ?; ptreotly Httleglova story, not new but always interesting. They were school mates and sweethearts. At first their parents paid no attention to the court- ship, but as years passed along the pater- nal eye discovered the germ of true love. Then four parents objected. The girl was too young, she is now hardly nineteen, and the boy is only two years older. The children were advised, coaxed, threat- ened, but to no purpose. Their courtship was not to be stopped. it January they took advantage of a holiday and traveled as far as San Mateo, where they were married. He returned to the grocery store and she to the school. SQUALL UPSETS BOAT AND CHINESE DROWN VICTORIA, B. C., June 10.—The steam- er Kinshiu Maru arrived this morning from the Orient, being the first of the re- organized Nippon Yuesen Kaisha line which has doubled, and now gives two- weekly tflgs instead of a monthly service. She brought the news that a Chinese pas- senger boat bound from Chusan for Ning- po upset during a squall on May §, and out of sixty-eight on board only nine were saved. irty bodies were washed ashore. A powder factory blew up on May 14 at Osaka. The disaster was caused by the tion of one of the grinding machines, h was not vroperl‘{ lubricated. Four men were badly injure: WOULD CONVERT SHAVE ARTISTS Omaha Pastor Believes Barbers Should Be Theologians. —— Could Then Preach the Gospel to Frequenters of Their Shops. Special Dispatch to The Call. OMAHA, Nebr., June 10.—Rev. Mejem- seh Hendricks, evangelist, has launched a unique crusade. He fs carrying the gospel to barbers. Mr. Hendricks Be- lieves that in country towns the barber shop and not the saloon is the demoral- izing influerice among young men. He Droposes to organize the barber shops of Nebraska into an adjunct of the church. “I have been in barber shops before now where the air was so surcharged with Satanic influences that to spit were an act of worship,” is the forceful way in which Mr. Hendricks refers to his mission. “In the country towns young men make these shops their loafing place hour after hour and oftentimes acquire habits that lead to their ruin. They can do this and still maintain their social standing, which would not be rue if they made the livery stable an( the sa- loon their trysting place.” Mr. Hendricks' plan is to establish a missfon or what might be called a chair of theology in the barber colleges of this city. He has already secured the de- sired permission from one college and will set to work at once, assisted by his brother Charles, who has recently grad- uated from a Chicago seminary. “lI am not aiming at the city barber shops,” said the reformer, ‘‘as they exert none of the pernicious influences felt in country establishments. The young bar- bers who are now learning their trades in Omaha, however, will some day open shops of their own in small towns. I want their influence to be for good rather than evil. In addition to converting bar- bers I hope to teach them the funda- mentals of theology so that they them- selves may carry forward the Lord's work.” PRELIMINARY REPORTS OF CROP PROSPECTS California Shows a Marked Increased Acreage in Wheat and Barley. WASHINGTON, June 10.—Preliminary reports of the spring wheat acreage in- dicate a reduction of about 1,200,000 acres, or 6.4 per cent. Of the twenty States re- porting 10,000 acres or upward in spring wheat, eight report an increase aggregat- ing about 34,000 acres and twelve a de- crease amounting to about 1,235,000. There is an increase in acreage of 5 per cent in California. ‘The average condition of spring wheat on June 1 was 92, as compared with 87.3 at the corresponding date last year and 914 on June 1, 1889. The mean of the June averages for the last ten years is 92.6 and for the last fifteen years 92.7. The averages of the principal States are as follows: The average condition of oats is 8.1, against 91.7 on June 1, 1900, 88.7 at the cor- responding date in 1899 and a ten-year average of e acreage reported as under barley is 1.2 per cent smallgr than the area har- vested last year. ere is an increase of 7 per cent in California, but decreases in Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota, | Iowa, Kansas, New York and North Da- kota. The average condition of barley is 914, against 86.2 on June 1, 1900; 91.4 at the cor- responding date in 1809, and a tem-year average of $8.5. The ten-year averages are exceeded by 12 points in California, 4 in Kansas, 4 in South Dakota and 2 in New York, while Minnesota reported 7, Wisconsin and North Dakota 3 and Iowa | 2 points below such averages. The acreage under rye shows a reduc- tion of 1.9 per cent from that harvested last year. The average condition of rye is 93.9, as compared with 87.6 on June 1, 1900, and a ten-year average of $9.4. The acreage and condition of clover for the country as a whole cannot yet be sat- isfactorily determined. prasng = A0 AT INTERSTATE TRAFFIC TO BE THEIR THEME Sixty Railroad Commissioners From Twenty-Three States Arrive in the South. LOS ANGELES, June 10.—Somewhere about noon to-morrow sixty Railroad Commissioners from twenty-three States will roll into town from Santa Monica, and settle down for a day or so to busi- ness and to the good cheer that Los An- geles is prepared to offer. The party num- bers nearly a hundred and it comes well prepared and well minded to find out every need California has In the way of interstate traffic. It comes well prepared, also, to correct such abuses as may exist and to make the most of the good time ‘waiting. The party arrived in Los Angeles to- night on its special train. It stopped at the Arcade depot for only a moment, and then pulled along to Santa Monica, where it spent the night. On Wednesday the party will visit San_Diego, returning in the evening to San Pedro. On Saturday Catalina_Island will be in the itinerary and on Sunday the party will leave for the north, en route to Chicago, via San Francisco and Portland. — Railway Franchises Are Taxable. TRENTON, N. J.,, June 10.—The Su- preme Court to-day decided the case of Mayor and Aldermen of Newark against the North Jersey Street Rallway Com- pany, holding that street railway fran- chises in New Jersey are taxable as real estate, thus adding to the State rewenues several millions annually. s is con- sidered an important opinion, as it will affect every city, township and borough thrcughout whieh a trolley road passes. GANADA TIRED OF GHEAP LABOR Chinese and Japanese Competition in La- bor Market. Dominion Government Gives the Matter a Thorough Investigation. A committee of prominent Canadians appointed by the Dominion Government to investigate and report upon the evil ef- fects of Chinese immigration into the United States and Canada is in this city engaged in gathering facts for its report. ze:t:l;dasy they visited the office of Tnity tates Immigrant Commissioner North and the Chinese Bureau and took & statement from acting Bureau Chief John . Dunn. The questions were as to the workings of the exclusion act and the ef- fect of Asiatic competition upon the labor of the country. The members of the committee are: R. C. Clute of Toronto, Canada, acting chair- man; J. Munn of New Westminster, B. C.; Christopher Foley of Rossland, B. C. F. J. Deane of Kamloops, B. C.. secre- tary, and A. H. Crawford of Torento, stenographer. Mr. Clute is a very.prom- inent lawyer and a King's counsel. Mr. Munn s a wealthy operator of canneries and represents the employing element on the committee. Mr. Foley is a working miner and represents the labor interests. Mr. Deane is proprietor of the Inland Sen- tinel at Kamloops. For the past three years the question of Oriental labor competition has been tated in Canada, and in response to the popular demand the commission was or- ganized. It is the aim of the committee to ascertain, among other things, wheth- er the business industriesof the Dominion would be injured or helped by the exclu- sion of Chinese and Japanese laborers. The investigation will be most thorough. It has been in progress for threc months and the commission has visited British Columbia, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland and San Francisco. HARPER CONTINUES TO PITCH PUZZLING BALL Philadelphia Finds Him for Seven Scattering Hits, but Is Unable to Score. NATIONAL LEAGUE, ST. LOUIS, June 10.—Harper was an enigma to Philadelphla, while Townsend, the young collegian, was given an awful trouncing by St. Louls, hence the whitewash story of 3 to 0. Aftendance 2500. Score: R B . St. Louls .. % %% Philadelphia . 0 7 o Batteries—Harper and Nichols; Townsend and Douglas. Umpire—Cunningham. CHICAGO, June 10.—The visitors hit Eason safely in every inning except two. Donovan held the locals safely. Attendance 4500. Score: R. H. E. Chicago 1 [} 4 Brooklyn . - 3 15 1 Batteries_Eason and Kahoe; Donovan and | McGuire. Umpire—Dwyer. PITTSBURG, June 10.—Van Haltren's three- bagger in the ninth_followed by Selbach’s sin- gle saved the New Yorks from a shut-out. The pitching and flelding on both teams was giit- edge, the errors by New York being excus- able. Attendance 3000. Score: S Pittsburg . 1 [ New York . 8 3 Batterles—Phillippi and Connor; Taylor and Bowerman. Umpire—O'Day. CINCINNATL, June 10.—Miserable flelding on the part of the home team gave Boston an easy victory to-day. President Ban Johmson of the American League witnessed the game. Attend- ance 2000. Score: e Cincinnati 1 ] Boston - 2 3 Batteries—Newton and Bergen: Willis and Kittridge. Umpire—Emsl AMERICAN LEAGUE. BALTIMORE, June 10.—Cleveland had little difficulty in winning from Baltimore to-day. Attendance 1925. Score: R H. B Baltimore . § 12 i Cleveland 13 5 3 Batteries—McGinnity and Bresnahan; Dos ing, Hoffer and Yeager. PHILADELPHIA, June 10.—In the tenth inning of to-day’s game Hayden made a muff of Nance's fly, the latter golng to second and scoring Detroit’s winning run on Miller's hit. ‘The home team played well in the fleld. At tendance 46sl. Score: R. H. B. Detroit 3 ] 5 Philadelphia 7 1 Batteries—Mliller and Buelow; Platt and Powers. BOSTON, June 10.—Boston developed a bat- ting streak in the seventh inning to-day and scored six runs off Pitchers Hawley and Gar- vin. Attendance, 3600. Score: e g Boston ... 7 5 5 Milwaukee 4 5 4 Batteries—Kellum and Shreck; Hawley, Gar- vin and Connor. WASHINGTON, June 10.—A home run with two men on bases to-day gave Chicags the first ten-inning game played in Washington this season. Attendance 4117. Score: H =R Washington 13 [ Chicago 4 3 Batteries—Patten, Gear and Clark; Katoll, Griffith and Sullivan. P— 1 — Chinese Ordered Deported. Toy Nam, a young Chinaman, arrested last Saturday by Chinese Inspector Gar- diner, was ordered deported y“'"“{l by United States Court Commissioner Hea- cock, having no papers to show his right to be in this countr: ————————— Manley Would Be Governor. LEWISTON, Me., June 10.—A special to the Lewiston Journal from Augusta says that Joseph Manley has announced that he is a candidate for the nomination of Governor at the conclusion of Gover- nor Hill's term. Mr. Manley declares that he favors a one-year term for the Governor and the suppression of the whisky traffic. The Skin Millions of little glands or tubes connect thth n i i tmnpmont,ur?mgm‘mxtme. mshonldthepmfio the skin be en !huemulldmnpigs are thrown off by the even a brief sgaceof time, and the tion, instant death would result. provided with certain others which ‘the skin pliable and soft and protecting it from heat and cold. :&:ao cloi:hglny xeel:nt.ed that whatever affects one seriously interf Not only health, but tions of the other. ) skin. between the blood and ive diseases. the character of the b e e e o natve iginating in the blood has its own 1] :H generated in the system, but poisons sore we are enabled as every disease skin is not only without enter through the open Mercury rubbed upon the skin and otherwild plants gain easy access ected by the poisons 5 lands to diseases originate in Pure Blood— o povies Soft, Healthy Skin of the skin. The treatment must mn‘;fidoted or neutralized. S. up the d beauty to a rough, ang uty 3 i"id" lood, such health. healthy action to the skin. > red.%m as §.8.8. S. S. S. contains no mercury, and the safest e‘vfldy vegetal > < Tite our physicians or advice or information; they have and skin diseases, and you can have the best medical THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GA. Blood and Skin Diseases free. ‘When, therefore, ed from any cause, it quickly “will produce begfn ‘with the blood, S. S. does this and purifies the blood and flushes the little glands or pores with kin eads, blotches and irritating, itching eruptions, but improves your general AN INDEX TO THE BLOOD the blood with the skin, and through i ities that y closed for ous matter forced back into the circula- addition to the sweat glands, the skin is it an oily substance, keeping Y The blood and skin feres with the func- out u life itself, depends upon perfect harmony fore, the Internal and of the poison or humor in the blood, = ‘peculiar sore or pimple. or pores and quickly infect the blood. Rheumatism, and mesan' Oak and Ivy the blood h the skin. As so-called e blood, the application , soaps and washes can do no t , but often do immense da by closing the outlet to these little tubes i e viood o the aid o ot poi- or o circulation, builds use of cosmetics never or sallow complexion. What is needed It not only relieves you of all disfigur- arseni mineral, but is a Piad best in all blood and skin troubles. ‘made a study of blood advice without cost. Book on

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