The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 5, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1902. STOCKTON NOW [MIRERS QUICKLY ON THE MAP”| “AAMASS WEALTH Southern Pacific Routes|Many Rich Strikes Are Travelers Through Reported in Thunder Mill City. Mountain. —_— Gives Stopover Privileges to Overland Tourists From East. and Prospectors Are Crowding In. The Call, Special Dispatch to The Call 4.—The Southern Pa- | - that the holders | go left here to-da the Wefser rou y for Thunder 1 the only one from the south that it is pos e to go through at this time, as the trail break out from Boise to go in over t Valley route have made it as far as Penn Basin, si miles from Thunder Moun tain. are building cabins as th he south. nd have stopover he completion of the nto to San Francisco ers routed to San uthern Califor- nd central lines Since tk completed all rted from Stock- he her tion for alley has bee: 23 the travel comung hat way. The subs: road from Bear Val d and the work on it will be ed soon. Thirty thousand dol- 1as been received for that purpose twenty thousand in_Pittsburg and the balance in Boise. The necessity for get- ting heavy machinery in will hasten the project a hecting o San Fra it thick $16,000 a ton. from a chute that has been up near tne Dewey mine. The average of the chute is not less a ton as far as uncovered and her from the surface. to-da over received here ¥ is gold and runs wag h ther routed the ¢ I J. C. Crowley, who arrived from Thun- | - Tmedi- | ger Mountain to-day, via Courn and B as the option | We reporis the trail in fine c ion kton, with the He s reports of strikes keep the camp ing here five days. n a turmoil the time and miners rush | i~ {from on n to another as fast as MILLIONS FOR IMPROVEMENTS. they can te claims, braving untold dangers and privatior Harriman Talks Fgrther of Southern 2 Pacific "Plans. . One is named Roosevelt two Thunder Mountain. rs of the tw atter are about 10_go in court over a question of property. he 1irst mining acciden n the Thun- M n gold fields reported in ived to-day. Iman, who narrowly had put in five shots them at i ght He spit the E ndi The fifth did not nd dallied with e fi ot went off, of roc! down on him. ng away when the second off, s ng down another m The bulk went one side and an managed to creep afety, eding and half dead, before the other nt offt. He will recover unless it s he is injured internally d death. He fi fuse spit too it at deal of rn line she develog REDDING HOTEL MAN Innccent Bystander Barely Escapes Stopping a Charge of > be built t I can't sa e and h le is there Shot. ¥ REDDING, April £—Almost a tragedy E ccurred in the Temple Hotel this after- | noon. I ineschmidt laid open dlord H. C ple H. F. i with the muzzle ith hammers - weapon it was discharged throv and the charge of four inches of Cons ums’ right temple ble-barrel As he lowe d S TELEGRAPHY ALONG ENTIRE COAST General Ma WIRELES: h the goose Al Ir- n door ger New Maps Out the ive Plans of His body bie William arrest board bill stopping a & ANG - Geneal Ma Accor to Willlam: nd- R > vice president nidt became said he - il ANieion s arted in P ntal Wireless Williams on Cline- e Company, is in eve with his fist. P final preparations a knife and the Co « drawing his pistol. « dlord ran the_hotel office, and g back with a double-barrel shot- rec llowed the Constable around the T to the barroom door. Swinging fr with hammers cocked, he dealt C ms a terrific blow on the right tem- 8 a gash to the skull three the As he lowered the gun it er arged v hmidt was disarmed and led into e, Los 2 s 2 m there work our v stretches, finally the officer was taken to His wound may prove says he offered to pay that Willlams_insisted arrest. MINERS TO START A RACE Braun's bu upon making t Facts Explode a Sensation. KTON ithout s ce. each being under sion that the other had ob- Will Travel by 'Dii!erent Routes to Trail Is in Good Condition| Somc of the richest ore yet brough: out | e now three townsites in Thun- | ictim was | rted to | ASSAULTS A CONSTABLE | hot- | MOTHER FINDS“SON AFTER PURSUIT FAR INTO HEART OF THE MOUNTAINS Mrs. Nellie VanderV\’/erker Follows Clew That Leads to Whereabouts of Her Boy Who Was Kidnaped by His Father---Country Aroused and Chase Ends in Recovery BOTH BROTHERS “LOSERS IA Sl Sequel to Strife Over Aged Mrs. Piercy’s Estate. — * morning as usual to go to school. Court Appoints Guardians for Her Person and Property. — braved so much for him. The father, according to the explana- tions made in Oakland, had ‘been working at Sacramento, but had left a mill there and secured employment at Bella Vista. He had long desired to get possession of his son, who had been living with the mother and grandparents in Oakland, and attending a parochial school at Seventh and Grove streets. On the day of his dis- appearance the boy left home in the Failing to return gt noon for luncheon and re- maining sent after school had ad- Journed for thé day, his mother became | thoroughly alarmed. She could find no trace of the youth, however, until the message from the kidnaped youngster came rrom the north. The folks suspected that Vanderwerker \ Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, April 4—Mrs. Mary Piercy, an aged ploneer woman of this county, over whose possessions her sons hav been fighting in the courts, is guardians for both her person and her estate. As a result of the seasational hearing a few weeks ago of the petition of Andrew Plercy to be appointed guardian of his mother Judge Hyland to- day appointed Mrs. Mary Martel, a daughter, of San Francisco guardian of Mrs. Piercy. Kell was named custodian of her estate, FTER a tedious trip of four hun- dred miles into the heart of thes— A\ Sierra Nevada Mountains, Mrs, A Nellie ' Vanderwerker has re- covered possession of her 11-year- old son, Thomas, who mysteriously dis- appeared from his home, 20 Fifth street, Qakland, two weeks ago. The boy was abducte by E. J Vanderwerker, his father, the parents having been separategd for five years. T sent to his he had been taken to Belia V hamlet near Redding, in the lumber counr that she got the first clew to her ng boy's whereabouts. Nothing daunted by the problem ahead, Mrs. Van- derwerker, accompanied by her father, Thomas Lane, ted immediately upon the trail. It was a long, hard, perilous trip, and its successful culmination is due | alone to the hardihood of the mother, who had husband until The mother and her father Bella Vista and enlisted the s the Sheriff and the local peace officers. The boy was espied by the officers in the town, but upon their approach he fled determined to pursue her fugitive " he recovered her boy. | and started off into the mountains, fear- FOR THUNDER MOUNTAIN ! ing, as he afterward explained, that the officers’ were sent by his father to over- haul him. It was a boylsh vagary based on the exciting adventures he had passed through since his parent took him away from Oakland. Then the country was aroused, The story of the mother's pursuit enlisted the T X% which is worth more than $100,000. Mrs. Piercy, who is 8 years old, will now be removed from the Stanford lodg- ing-heuse, where she has occupied a suite Francisco. The contest of the two sons, Edward M. and Andrew J. Piercy, for guardianship of their mother has been very bitter. Some time ago Mrs. Plercy deeded to Edward Plercy $30,000 worth of property, and this started the strife. In his petition for guardianship Andrew alleged that Ed- ward was Keeping his mother practically a prisoner and refused to allow any one to see her. E. M. Piercy retaliated by declaring that Andrew J. had mistreated his mother. TELLS INTERESTING STORY OF THE SIEGE OF PARIS Count de Knra.try'Gives Details of His Perilous Trip From City i ,in a Balloon. PARIS, April 4—An interesting histor- ical revelation has been made by Count de Keratry, a former Prefect of Police, at a banquet given by the Aero Club in honor of the thirteen surviving aeronauts who left Paris during the siege of that city in 1870-71. The Count, who descended at Prillon, near Bar le Duc, Department of Meuse, after a perilous journey, sald he was intrusted by the national defense with a mission to go to Madrid and per- suade Marshal Prim to proclaim a repub- lic in Spain. Keratry had in the balloon captured. equip and pay an arm men, which Spain was to place France's disposition. Marshal' Prim re- fused to undertake the task, although Senor Castelar and other Spanish Repub- licans supported the preposition. Marshal erward and his murderer was never dis- covered. ALLEGED ENCROACHMENTS || UPON AMERICAN TERRITORY Congress Requests Secretary of Stats to Furnish Information on the Subject. WASHINGTON, April 4—Representi- tive Cochran of Missouri to-day intro- duced the following resolution: That the Secretary of State be and he hereby is requested sentatives whether the State Department has recetved from official or other sources informa- recently appeared in the public prints to the effect that In American territory near the bor- der of Alaska British and Canadian officials (exercising authority by an agreement entered into by the Government of the United States and British Governments) are making surveys &nd encroachments upon territory not included in said agreement: and are removing and de- stroying ancient landmarks and monuments long ago erected by the Russian Government to mark the Alaskan boundary. And that the Secretary of State be also requested to inform the. House what steps, if any, the State De- partment has taken to ascertain the facts\as to the alleged fresh encroachments upon Ameri- can territory and the alleged removal and de- struction of landmarks and monuments, and to prevent the same, - e NTAINS AND RECOVERED HER CHILD. 2= Carter’s Condition Is Improved. LITTLE BOY KIDNAPED BY HIS FATHER, AND BRAVE WOMAN LEAVENWORTH, Kans., April 4.— WHO PURSUED THEM INTO THE HEART OF THE SIERRA NE- | |Warden McClalighrey of the Federal Sy prison said to-night he belleved- Oberlin M. Carter’s condition was somewhat im- proved.- His temperature s 102. and cattiemen joined the SKeriff's depu- ties and Mrs. Vanderwerker in the hunt for the child, who was only found after the whole country side had been scoured. The frightened fugitive youngster wa half starved and well nigh exhausted when the searching parties came upon him. There was a joyful reunion of the ympathy of the country folk. Farmers lad and his ha zed mother who had @ i 20 3 2 e a2 - ‘WU TING FANG HEARS THE E XCLUSION 2 5 had a hand in the disappearance, but | could not get a clew to the parent’s loca- tion after he left Sacramento. “The boy is safe at home again,” said Stone, Carter’'s attorney, arrived this morning from Chicago and spent the en- the papers for the pending suit about which Carter Is so anxious. Mrs. Vanderwerker yesterday, “‘and that SR B is all there is to it.”’ Avery Known in Sausalito. “Yes, I went aftéer him,” she added r SAUSALITO, April 4—Lieutenant How- ard S. Avery, who was drowned near De- troit, Mich., yesterday, ip this city. He was a son of Francis Avery and a brother of Mrs. H. C. Camp- bell. ' His body will be brought to Cali- fornia for interment. @ el @ y, “and we shall try to keep him i @ ARGUMENTS Continued From Page One. | whica seeks to throw the folds of protec- : b mmien oy Determine Which Is the divorce before Shortest. appears that| ~BOISE, Idaho, April 4—A couple of e oy epeide: | miners from Wood River made the state- - HCFEElyS' | ment in a hotel lobby to-day that the ——— | Ketchum route was the best. They were | es Life in the Surf. | willing to wager, they said, that if two SAN ONICA, April 4—James A, men left Bojse for Thunder Mountain, ; wimming from the Ocean | ONe going by way of Weiser, Council and . : morning, He aig | Warren and the other by of Ketch- « % . € did |, and Cape Horn, the latté® would get ' eved he was jnio camp first ’ithin fifteen minutes I as found in the | gy raised by Thunder Mountain £ . Bennett was miners who had come out by the Weiser and about 28 route. The Ketchum men have sent home for money to cover the bet. The Boise money is on deposit in the Overland Hotel - safe. If the Ketchum pot is raised one of ___ DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. the most unique races in the history of the Northwest will take place. Falls Under the Train. SAN RAFAEL, April 4—John Riley, a en of Ban Francisco, but formerly a resident of n Rafael, lost both of his legs in a rallway accident this evening. Rilev, it seems, was attempting to board | a California Nerthwestern train. He waited until it had geined considerable speed and then, calling out to some ac- quaintances *“Watch me jump her,” he swung on. His foot slipped and he went underneath, but still heid to the guard- rail and was dragged for nearly a block. Being unable to regain his feet or board the train, he became exhausted and let go. The train ran over both legs. | — | Extension of Time Is Not Desirable KINGSTON, Jamaica, April 4—A-dis patch has been received - at Barbadoes from the Colonial Secretary, Joseph mberlain, stating that fn consequence of the abolition of sugar bounties it is not desirable that the West Indian colonies further prolong the period allowed for the ratification of the reciprocity convention with the United States. This view is gen- erally accepted here. - i ma Manila Editor Is Fined for Libel. MANILA, April 4—8enor Valdez, the | editor of a Spanish weekly paper here, convicted of libeling two Filipino mem- When the young mother is allowed to get up for her | first mezl, even though she takes it alome, it seems good to her to take thisone step nearer the family circle, and she counts the days un-"| til her strength will be g fully restored. But | very often strength does not come as ex; and she lingers in lan- | liers of Plh%lppl}l;m \_‘on:imls_l.fmn‘ Benito oy 4 agarda and Dr. Pardo de Tavera, for- or and weakness. At | JERU0CGont Of the Liberal party, has such a time there is need of an invigo- rating tonic, and the very best tomic which a nursing mother can use is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It conm- tains no alcohol nog narcotics. It gives real strength. / “Favorite Prescription” is a reliable woman’s medicine. It establishes regs- larity, dries weakening drains, beals in- flamgnation and ulceration and cures femdle weakness. I cannot praise Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- tion 100 highiy as & tonic for tired. worn-out especially those who are afflicted with weakness. ” writes Mrs. Ira W. Holmes, + Rapids. Jowa. It has heiped me very and & skiiful physician said to me in an- o my question as to its efficacy, ‘I know es where it has really worked wonders,’ * The Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 large pages in paper covers, is sent Jree on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to cxpense of mailing only. Address . R. V. Pierce, B o, N. Y. been fined 4000 pesetas. The Judge said that the offer to provegthe truth of the assertions made aggra®ated the original offense. Haytian Exiles Reach Kingston. KINGSTON, Jamaica, April 4.—A second batch of Haytian exiles arrived here to- day from Jaomel, Hayti. The Govern- ment of that republic is ordering scores of suspected conspirators to leave the country. The eonditions in Hayt{ are re- ported to be very disturbed. — e Parisian Artist Hangs Himself. PARIS, April 4—F. H. Kaemmerer, an artist, committed suicide here to-day in his studio by hanging. M. Kaommerer was a successful exhibitor at the Salon and a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. His suicide Is attributed to private troubles. California Optical Co. will formally open their new store at 205 Kearny st. Saturday evening, April 5. You are cordially invited.* | w tion around the laborer of this country and also to protect from pollution the morality of the republic and of the people which otherwise must inevitably result from an admixture with our people of un- limited numbers of a race wholly incapa- ble to assimilation, who never can be- come citizens and whose vices are a dead- ly and dangerous menace to our people and our Government.” In conclusion Mitchell warned the Re- publicans of the Senate that if they failed Lo pass the propcsed bill, which had been agreed upon by a non-partisan commis- sion, and insisted on fercing the passage of a statute “‘which is inadequate and in- efficient, then at the coming election leok cut for such a vote of condemnation of the Republicah party on the Pacific Coast as you have not heard since the over- throw of the Republican party in 1834." The reading of the exclusion bill was begun and various committee amend- ments and amendments on phraseology were agreed to. QUAY’S AMENDMENT. Quay gave notice of the following amendment as an additional section: “That nothing herein contained shall be construed to exclude. Chinese Christians, or Chinese who assisted in the defense or | relief of the foreign legations of the Pe-tang Cathedral, in the City of Peking, in the vear 1900.” In response to an inquiry by Quay, Pen- rose, in charge of the measure, sald he =ould not accept the amendment, as not a member of the Immigration Committee in faver of it. “How many Chinese will the amend- | ment let in?" inquired Mitchell. “I hope it will have the effect,” replied Quay, “of Christianizing the entire Chi- nese Empire.” “It would let in at least a million,” sug- gested Mitchell. “Quite likely = 350,000,000,” Hale. Platt of Connecticut introduced the fol- lowing as a substitute for the bill: That all laws now in force /prohibiting and regulating the coming of Chinese persons and persons of Chinese descent into the United States and the.residence of such persons there- interjected in be and the same are hereby extended and continued In_full force and effect until the 7th- day of December, 1804, and so long as the treaty\between China and the United States, concluded March 17, 1804, may be con- tinued in force by virtue of the extension thereof. V ‘Without concludlng the reading of the bill the Senate, at 3:25 p. m., went into executive session ahd at 5 p. m. ad- Journed. —_— — ARGUED IN THE HOUSE. Kahn ¢f California Makes a Strong Plea for Exclusion, WASHINGTON, April 4—The House to- day began consideration of the Chinese exclusion bill. No opponents of the gen- eral principle of exclusion appeared, but members were divided in their subvort of the two bills presented. Hitt of Iliinois, Perkins of New York and Adams of Penn- nia supported the majority bill, and k of Missouri, Kahn of California and en of Massachusetts spoke for the minority substitute. Hitt, chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, who had charge of the bill, said the committee was unanimous in the opinion that the admission of Chi- nese laborers into this country would be a serious evil. One of the main problems which the committee had to solve, he said, was in connection with the admis- sion of the privileged classes, merchants, travelers, otricials, teachers and students, 80 as to prevent fraud and at the same time to avold harassing and tormenting bona fide Chinese merchants. Perkins of New York, who drew the re- port upon the bill, explained the measure in_detail. Clark of Missouri, a member of the committee, who made a minority report in favor of the Senate bill, which is more drastic than the House measure, followed Perkins. He predicted that if the Su- preme Court would decide that the citi- zens and subjects of Spain ih the Philip- pine Islands became American citizens by annexation, thus allowing the free entry of Chinamen into the United States from ]thedf‘:;fllh)mnes‘ the islands would be un- oaded. Clark maintained that the geople of the Pacific Coast understood the Chinese prob- lem better than the people of the other sections, just as, he said, the people of the South were more competent to deal with the negro question than those of the North. For that reason he favored the bill which the representatives of the Pacific Coast had prepvared. If the sub- stitute bill failed, Clark said he offer the provision to prohibit Chinese crews on American ships as an amend- ment to the majority bill. He character- ized the threat of the Pacific Mall Com- pany to sail under Enghsh register if the provision went into the bill, as a “bluff, pure and simple.” % After some remarks by Adams of Penn- sylvania in favor of the majority bill, ahn of California made an exhaustive speech in support of the minority bill. He reviewed the whole history of the Chi- nese exclusion legislation and concluded as follows: We of the Pacific Coast are perhaps more deeply concerned in this 4uestion -then any other people. We feel their presence among us more than any other section of the coun- try. Under the census of 1900 there were 4,- 091,549 inhabitants west of the Rocky Moun- tain: Included in this population are 67,729 Chinese, while but 22,134 Chinese are di tributed among the 77,004,445 {inhabitants throughout the other States of the Union. We have probably “Tearned to know the Chinaman better than our fellow-citizens else- where. He is a present, living, vital problem th us and we feel that our cause is)also the cause of the labofer and the wageworker in the Eastern States. It is only the sordld and the selfish who prefer a low standard of wages and a low grade of morality—men whe want cheap labor because it will increase lhel}* Indlvidull profits—who uld open loopholes in the barriers we have erected after many years of hard, bitter, practical ience. 1 had hoped that the committee would have seen fit to allow the section giving to Amerfcan seamen that sume measure of protection against Chinesa acmnetition +het wa mnaed would |- The American laborer and mechanic in his new and comfortable home, seated at his fire- side, surrounded by his wife and little ones, is er of any wage-worker in any part of the Let us keep him so. Naphen of "Massachusetts, the last speaker of the day, also supported the minority bill At 5:15 o'clock the House adjourned. maker, the tallor and ali other skilled and unskilied mechanics. When the bill comes up for discussion under the five-minute rule I shaii, have something to say in favor of such a pro- vielon. In conclusion let me say that our exclusion laws have been a wreat boon to the laborers of this country. They now ask-us to continue extending our sheltering aegls over them and I feel that there is not a patriotic, loval, liberty-loving American who does not h to see the workingmen of this country, “‘hewers of wood and drawers of wate this WASHINGTON, There was a slight improvement in the condition of Rev. T. Dewitt Talmage to-day. April its protected against unequal competition. to have | Public Administrator M. D. | of rooms, to her daughter’s home in San | 60,000,000 francs in treasury bonds, which | a detachment of Prussian Uhlans nearly | The money was intended to | v corps of 50,000 | at | Prim was assassinated three months aft-| to inform the House of Repre- | tion as to the reliability of reports which have | tire day at his client’'s bedside, preparing | was well known | GOULD BAGKING SENATOR CLARK I Railway King to Utilize New Road to Los ! Angeles, Will Soon Have a Great Route Stretching From Coast to Seaboard. Spectal Dispatch to The Call, LOS ANGELES, April 4—Los Angel will be the Pacific Coast terminus of the Gould railway system. The Gould and Clark interests have combined at ecither side of the continent, Senator Clark hav- { ing joined Gould in the building of & road from Pittsburg to the Atlantic sea~ board and Gould having become interest- | ed in the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake road. These additions will give the Gould system a continuous line of roads across the continent, beginng with the Salt Lake, then the Rio Grande ‘Western and the Denver and Rio Grande to Denver, the Missourl Pacific to St. | Louis, the Wabash to Pittsburg and the Virginia Central with the projected ex- tensionsy to_the Atlantic. Charles W. Clark, the Senator’s som, who has been visiting here for several weeks, and J. Ross Clark, who has the local management of the Salt Lake road, would only partially confirm this report. “l am net free to discuss the matter now,"” said Charles Clark. | .“I haven't received any direct informa- | tion,” vouchsafed the Senator's brother. The announcement is made that Gould will visit Los Angeles within the next month. Local raflroad authorities belleve that the combination of interests between Gould and Clark Is all that has saved the | Salt Lake road; but for Gould comiug in, | it is contended, the Clark road would | never have become more than a system of short lines about Los Angeles. J. Ross Clark believes that the Salt Lake road will be constructed within a couple of years. He said to-day: “I cannot see that anything will stop us. The time will depend only on how successful we are in getting materials. The tangle of surveys has about been straightened and we will soon let the con- | tracts and start work from the Salt | end.” | | Miss Stone on Way Home, | LONDON, April 4—Miss Ellen M. Ston | the American missionary, sailed for Ne | York on the Hamburg-American steamer Deutschland, which left Souti- ampten to-day. Her departure from Lon- don_was quiet. She was accompanied by R. B. McClure and R. S. Baker. She will begin lecturing, in aid of the missions, al- most immediately after her arrival in the United States. The rest which Miss Stone had in England has improved her health, though she was obliged to refuse coun less invitations to speak. Mr. Choate, the United States Embassador. and Mrs. Choate, entertained Miss Stone at the em- | bassy at tea Thursday, and she gave the diplomatic party a graphic yet simple ac- count of her experiences. M. Santos-Dumont, the Brazilian aero- naut, was also a passenger on the Deutschland. | | | e | Murderer’s Speedy Conviction. | PHILADELPHIA, April 4—Willilam H. | Lane, the colored servant who on Tues- | day last murdered Mrs. Ella J. Jarden | and her daughter, Madeline, and so badly wounded another daughter, Eloise, that she died to-day. was convicted of murder n the first degree this afternoon, after a trial lasting less than one anda half hours. Lane pleaded guilty yesterday afternoon and was placed on trial at 1 o'clock to- day. Because of Lane's plea of guilty no jury was drawn and only three witnesses were called for the purpose of determining the degree of murder. At 2:30 o'clock Judge Biddel sentenced the murderer to | death. The date of His execution will be | fixed by Governor Stone. | g .ot | Railroad Man Receives Promotion. CHICAGO, April 4—Howard Elliott, for | seven years general manager of the Mis- | souri lines of the Burlington road, has been made second vice president of the Chicago. Burlington and Quincy Railroad | Company, with headquarters in Chicago. As second vice president Elliott will sue- ceed George B. Harris, who left the posi- tion in February, 191, to become presi- dent of the company. Eilliott will have charge of the operation of the entire | Burlington system and will report direct to President Harris. Despondent Youth Commits Suicide. KANSAS CITY. April 4—John R. Cason, aged 13 yemps, committed suicide here to-day by hanging. He left a note | saying he had taken his life becauss of | his inability to get work. He was found hanging to the rafters of a barn on the lot adjoining his mother's home at 2112 Woodland avenue. Cason’s mother is a | widow. He has two sisters, who are clerks in the Treasury Department at Washington. Manchurian Treaty Concluded. | PEKING. April 4.—The negotiations con- cerning the Manchurian treaty between China and Russia have been concluded. The terms of the treaty are understood to be satisfactory to the United, States, | Great Britain and Japa (N B T LOS ANGELES, April 4—The woman who | was cut to pieces by a Southern Pacific tfain sevaral days ago and whose body was buried by the county to-day was identifled as Juana Tapaya of San Gabriel. RAILWAY TRAVEL. B o e ; TR . °; / % . R PE CTRICHGHT S FRANCISEG ~ Vl » .\ : S LT ».‘, e VI L.HF{‘F;‘H YL FQu } - L7 7 7 Fip AR I AN (2 IR .’Aw ‘S.,./ w4 e it S T 0O OUTHE Hl '/ CAGO & NORTHWEST " AVES L_t/’\J~ I “NEWOVERLAND LMy D G 55 THAN 3 DAY S 7 PM ENT ST: NEW TRAIN \Y A FIC Y RN,PACI NitON.- PACIFIC ERN |

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