The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 3, 1902, Page 7

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THE SAN FRA FHANTIG PRENTS SEEK FOR CHILD Aub:ry Blaine Lost in a City She Does Not Know, Petaluma Girl Disappears and Mystery Surrounds Case. mewhere in the city of S8an Francisco d girl is wandering, while a mother and a father who would wealth to find her, are enlist- rvices of the police and the pri- etective agencies to ascertain her s ibery Blaine, who came from ma yesterday morning to meet her brother and sister, who were ex- from the East on the overland rain. Her father expected to accompany her, but business prevented him, and as wanted to make some purchases he allowed her to come alone. phed to a friend in this city to meet his daughter at the ferry and send r to the Golden West Hotel on Ellis street. The friend met Mise Blaine at the ferry 2d escorted her to the proper hotel 'bus d sinc which sh tel attac e was bound and none of the ho- es can give any account of her. hour last night no_tidings heard from the missing girl. her, Robert R. L. Blaine, ding merchant in Petaluma. His wife two other children bave been spend- mmer in the East and all the | looking forward to a glad | n their arrival in San Francisco. The disappearance of Aubery is so in-| xplicable to the parents and other chil- dren that they fear something terrible may have ppened her. The police are bending every energy to locate her, but so o ar without . If po tidings of the | girl are had by this morning an endeavor | will be made to find where the girl left the | »us and who the occupunts were, with a | view to locating her and ascertaining the | f her disappearance. “DODO” CELEBRATES SIX HUNDBED’I’H PEE!‘OBmCE Merry XKing and Ku +ssociates Mark Occasion With a Sump- tuous Banquet. hundredth performance of was observed yesterday The six “King Dodo observed in San Fran- to folk who constitute his to meet at the cafe in the Manager Savage issued invitations the flgr. y merry feast there were toasts and and an sbundance of wit and hu- he comedians. Hitchcock got off a pretty when he said, “Manager Sav- ught us 3000 miles to get a After the ongs mor from King D was cheered to the echo. came appreciative 0o and her citizens was drunk in —— e Ball Game for Charity. n in readiness for the benefit tween the teams from the ire departments, which will o'clock to-morrow after- yers have been out practic- and, as both teams are evenly a great game is expected. Frank y of the Fire Department alone ver 1000 tickets and it is ex- | C he pla then nothing has been heard of | not register at the hotel for | building and take dinner | | | is a| - | woman was taken to the Central Emer- | { | | | | the company regretted that | fice | many stood during the exercises and un- WOMAN FALLS THREE STORIES Mrs, Mary Hart Nar- rowiy Hscapes In- tant Death. Loses Her Balance While Climbing Through a Window. LIS RS Mary Hart, wife of Michael Hart, a boilermaker in the employ of the Union Iron Works, fell from the third story of her home early yesterday morning and narrowly escaped being instantly Killed. As it was, the woman received a num- ber of painful injuries, which will con- fine her to her bed for a few weeks. The Harts reside at 563% Bryant street. During Saturday evening the couple visited some friends in the neighborhood and did not return home until after mid- night. Upon reaching their apartments Hart left his wife in the room alone and jokingly locked the door. Mrs. Hart called to her husband to let her out. Upon his refusal she declared that she would climb out of the window into the kitchen adjoining. The next moment she attempted to carry her boast into execu- tion. Opening the window, Mrs. Hart stepped out and crossed on a ledge to the kitchen window. Ag she raised the sash her skirt caught and in trying to release it she lost her balance and fell to the basement below. In her descent Mrs. Hart crushed through a heavy skylight, which broke her fall to a considerable extent. An amublance was summoned and the | gency Hospital. An examination by Dr. Stevens showed that Mrs. Hart had re- | | ceived severe lacerations of the back and | | limbs, a broken hand and possibly inter- | nal injuries. ! BEGS CHBISTIANS TO VOTE. Impure Politics. The Rev. F. A. Keast spoke last night | at Epworth Methodist Episcopal Church on ““The Christian and His Vote.” There was not a vacant seat in the edi- long before the service began and | til the close of the sermon. Mr. Keast said it was not his purpose to sider the merits or demerits of any political party, as such a course would be entirely out of his sphere as a minister and a violation of the traditions of the church. Ministers and churches, he said, in his opinion, ‘'made a serious blunder in pub- licly advocating any political party. If the church advocated any one party it would not be able to effectively condemn what was wrong in all parties. It was, he said, the mission of the church to con- demn sin, to warn against evil as well as to praise and encourage the good. Thrgugh the predominence of evil many i’ he continued, peo had washed their hands of all things political, which he considered a decided mistake. Christian people, he declared, must enter the politi- | cal arena. They must not forget, he said, that the | Government belonged to God. The de: tinies of their Government and the gov- ernments of the world were in His hands | and therefore it was the duty of Chris- tians to work and vote for a pure Govern- | ment. The devotees of iniquity and those who would prostitute the Government for self- | ish purposes, he sald, were exceedingly pleased when Christians kept out of poli- tics. Would he asked, turn the Government over into the hands of de- signing politicians and thieves and thugs? | The ballot, he said, touched the life! threads of the republic and if Christian | and moral peovle refused to use that | power, that which had the power of life | might prove the power of death to all| they held dear. hat Recre: Park will be | when the game is called by Um- | It was at the booth, he said, that they | k O'Connell. The proceeds of the | Were most effective, rather than in their | £ will go to the widow of the late | denunciation from the pulpit and plat- James, Heffernan, who was killed during | form. These statements, he said, were | e drill a few weeks ago. | made because of the tendency of good | e Bitten by a Colored Man. | people to refuse to use the ballot. The Christian voter should be a(‘tuated\ | by the principles of right, justice and | reaue, proprietor of a lodginghouse | truth as well as patriotism and devotion | 407 Pacific street, had a fight with E. | to the Government. | k colored ‘man, early yesterday | The men, he said, who put a party be- ey had to be sent to the »spital. Dareque was treat- d over the left eye and one the head. which he said by Parker's teeth. Parker and booked on a gston or Judge Jenk € iz an ideal choice for Remember the name. * rmeakers Hold Outing. and 205 of the Brotherhood of | i Iron Ship Bullders of pleasant outing at Shell vesterday. The attendance 1000. The amusements and danc- rangements H. Fawkes, G. Morse, , J. Simon, B. Hil- \‘lu‘.zn'v\ T. Mann and T. NEW i.D‘r LB’IISE}IENTS. CLEANLY WOMAN. Erroneously Thinks by Scouring Her Scalp That She Cures Dandruff. woman has an erroneous idea at by scouring the scalp, which re- oves the dandruff scales, she is curing dandruft. She may wash her scalp et have dandruff her life ompanied by falling hair, too. y way in the world to cure dan- to kill the dandruff germ, and here is no hair preparation that will do t Newbro's Herpicide. Herpicide, the dandruff germ, leaves the hair grow as healthy nature intended. the cause, you remove the effect. e dandruff germ with Herpicide. anly S V‘I’SIT DR. JORDAN'S aaear § )MUSEUM OF ANATORY 1051 MARZET OT. bet. 04725, 6.7.Cal The Worid. for Book. PRILOSGFRY of mARRIAGE: NALED FREE. (4 valuabie book for men) DB ZORDAN & CG., 1051 Market St., 8. F. B e R Rty RA: RADWAY’S READY RELIEF has stood yariwaied befors the public for 56 years as a Pain Remedy. It iustantly relleves cures all Colds, Eore Throats, lnu n. Bflll ¢hitis, Pneumonia, Rheumath Neuralgia, Hesdache, Toothache snd all DIlll. Internally Sor Malaria snd all Bowel Pains. All druggists. wounds on nis head. After | < were dressed, Parker was | Who would sell this country for gold. fore purity were the cause of corruption in politics. If a man's life be impure then his administration would be impure | and the man who seeks an office for mer- | cenary ends would not elevate the office he aspired to. It was that class of men e OARSMEN CHEER LOUDLY FOR ALFRED J. FRITZ| South End Rowing Club Holds Higb Jinks to Advance Candidacy of Members. A high jinks was held at the South End Rowing Club, at the foot of Third street, yesterday afternoon. The quarters of the | organization were crowded with mem-i bers and invited guests. The affair was held for the purpose of advancing the can- didacy of Alfred J. Fritz, John J. Van Nostrand and Thomas F. Dunn, members of the club. Candidates of all parties attended the[ “jinks” and delivered speeches. The aft- | ernoon was passed in song and story and refreshments were served with a lavish hand. A feature of the entertainment was the presence of the Dolphin Rowing Club's | band. Six or seven members, with musical instruments of all kinds, * dis- | coursed melodies that wquld have done | credit to a German street band. The musical prodigies escorted Judge Fritz | into the jinks room and the cheers that | greeted the popular young candidate for Superior Judge drowned tlie efforts of the musicians. “Billy” Patch nearly swal- lowed the mouthpiece attached to his tuba and Alec Pape forgot to play the cornet in his wild endeavor to howl louder than the rest for Fritz. The bass drum artist nearly dislocated his arm trying to break a hole in the sheepskin. Judge ¥ritz made a nice little speech, thanking the members for -their loyalty and sup- port. Congressman Julius Kahn, who is a fa- vorite with the members, was unable to attend and he sent a letter of regret. The representative from the ¥Fourth District evidently had many friends in the house, as they cheered his name lustily. Emile glieri recited “The Picture on the Floor” in clever style. Al Ahrens and Joe March engaged in a four-round bout that was strenuous while it lasted. Judge Daniels refereed the exhibition contest and also made a speech. Speeches were made by Thomas H. Dunn, Livingston Jenks, Franklin K. Lane, Judge John Hunt, Isidore Dockweiler, Alec Rosbor- ough and other candidates. e - Ladies Will Hold Bazaar. ‘The members of the Young Women's Christian Association are actively en- gaged in decorating the rooms of the Young Men's Christian Assoclation build- ing for the coming Bazaar of All Nations. The bazaar will commence on next Thurs- day and will continue till Saturday night. It will be given for the building fund of the association and promises to be a great success. e The most inflpentin. State are lending assis ting Amendment No. 8, kn embly Constitutional Amendment c. 28, CISCO CALL, MOXNDAY, OVEMBER 3, 1902 THROWS TAMALE |TELLS OF GOOD |BANK OF LONDON AND 15 SHOT) WORK IN ALASKA| 15 AGAIN ON TOP William Hynes Receives Bullet in Jaw Dur- ing Scuffls, Jacob Reusch Is Held on Charge of Assault to Murder. s gl Bk ‘William Hynes, aged 22 years, employed as a driver in the Phoenix Brewery, was shot and seriously wounded early last evening by Jacob Reusch, a pork packer, whose place of business is at 1121 Folvm street. Policemen Blum and Bates met Hynes, who was bleeding. profusely, walking up Eighth street, and sent him to the Central Emergency Hospital. Hynes stoutly maintained that he did not know who shot him, but declared that it was without pro- vocation. He said that he was standing on Folsom street, near Reusch'’s store, and felt a stinging sensation in the face and realized that he had been shot, but by whom he could not say. Some young men in the vicinity de- scribed the shooter. to the officers and with the assistance of Detectives Crockett | and Braig they arrested Reusch and charged him with an assault to murder. Reusch was brought to the hospital and was identified by Hynes as the man who had shot him. Reusch made a statement to the police, in which he acknowledged that he had shot Hynes, but that it was an accident. He said that Hynes came to his store and asked for some tamales and while they were being wrapped up he grabbed them and ran out. Reusch, so he says, followed Hynes and asked for his pay, whereupon Hynes threw a tamale in his face. Reusch then drew a pistol and struck at Hynes and in the scuffie that followed the pis- tol was discharged. Hynes was treated by Dr. Armistead at | the Emergency Hospital. The wound 1s a serious one, the bullet passing through his jaw. Several pieces of bone were re- moved and it is almost certain that Hynes will lose the sight of the right eye. FOOTBALL ENTHUSIASTS WATCH SMITH’S CASE Much Depends on the Decision of the Arbitration Committee to Be Rendered T is Afternoon. The University Club arbitration com- mittee will- meet again this afternoon at 4 o'clock. to, discuss the case.of ‘Loco- motive” Smith of Berkeley. Manager Decoto of Berkeley raised the point at Saturday’s six-hour conference that the arbitration committee had no power in the premises. This would hard- 1y hold, as representatives of both uni- versities agreed to _submit the matter to arbitration. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Nov. 2— The result of yesterday's game with Re- | liance was a source of both satisfaction and disappointment. The ability of the cardinal hopes of the Stanford rooters, but the fumbling and evident lack of men with punting ability are discouraging both to \the coaches and to those who Wifeh the game from the side lines and the bleach- ers. It is possible that big McFadden, who at right tackle has- proved a tower of strength to the cardindl eleven, may not be able to enter the intercollegiate game. He is confined to his bed with la grippe and was unable to be in the contest against Reliance yesterday. The loss of McFadden to the Stanford eleven would be almost irreparable. Magee, the freshman halfback in whom Stanford had expected to have a star kicker, has also been kept from practice as a result of his injuries in the Nevada game. BERKELEY, Nov. 2.—California’s over- whelming defeat of the Nevada team yesterday by the score of 29 to 0, as com- pared with the Stanford victory over the same team by 11 to 5, has caused much | elation among the Berkeley enthusiasts. After California had rolled up a com- fortable score in the first half the coaches did everything in their power to prevent any further scoring. All of the varsity men save two were removed and their places filled by men from the second half, and yet eighteen more points were tallied ’by the irrepressible colts. —_———— Weight Records Broken. NEW YORK, Nov. 2—James S. Mitch- eli of the Harlem Rowing Club and M. J. Sheridan of the Pastime Athletic Club broke the 56-pound weight and discus world’s throwing records, respectively, at { the Star Athletic Club’s games in Long nd City to-day. Mitchell threw the a distance of 20 feet 2 inches from a stand without follow, beating John Flannagan's world’s record of 28 feet 5 inches, made on a clay floor in Madison quare Garden last December. Sheridan, who is the world’s champion discus thrower, increased his figures of 127 feet 8% inches, made at the Metropoli- tan Amateur Athletic Union champion games last August, to 133 feet 7 inches. i e Golfer Loses an Eye. BOSTON, Nov. 2—A distressing accl- dent occurred at the Country Club golf links in Brookline yesterday, as a result of which Herbert Jacques, well known in society, an enthusiastic golfer and a prominent architect, has lost his left eye. A member of the Royal Montreal Club of golfers was responsible for the accident at the first tee. Mr. Jacques was prepar- ing to drive off when he was struck in the eye by a ball from a distance of forty yards. The Canadian player was trying to play out from a clump of bushes and did not see Mr. Jacques ahead. The optic nerve was paralyzed and it became neces- sary to remove the eye. ki Seek to Preserve the Game Birds. The sportsmen throughout the State are showing a deep interest in the adoption of Constitutional Amendment No. 2, to be voted on at to-morrow’s elec- tion. - The object of the amendment is to divide the State into game districts. Be- cause of the size of the State and the variance of climatic conditions no general law can be framed which will be just to the people of all secticns and which at the same time will give the necessary pro- tection to the game. —_—— Livingston Jenke for Superior Judge is the right man in the right place. Re- member the name. . pritsitaried B ARG Los Gatos Boy Missing. SAN JOSE, Nov. 2—The police and Sheriff’s office are trying to locate Hora- tio 8. Richards a I5-year-old boy, who disappeared from his home near Los Ga- tos on September 1. On that day he came to San Jose to witness the Labor day pa- rade, and since then 1o trace of him has been found. His father, E. Richards, is a rancher. PN 208 e Fall Ends Surveyor’s Life. MARYSVILLE, Nov. 2.—Word reached here this afternoon of the sudden death of J. P. Hall of Greenville, a prominent citizen of Plumas County. Hall was out in a rough country on a surveying t and fell over an obstruction, breaking hfll: about fi neck. eleven to score almost at will | against the, Rellance players raised the |’ | from what I obsetved in ' and bishop, the Christian church has been | place. Bishop Rowe Preaches at the Cathédral Mission. Describes the Difficulties Which Missionaries ! Encounter. Right Rev. Bishop P. T. Rowe of Alaska preached an interesting sermon. last night at Cathedral Mission on the condition of mission work in the Territory: ‘Bishop Rowe. told of the, zealous. efforis being made by missionaries under his "charge and of the many difficulties which they are forced to encounter in their endeavors to spread the gospel-.-amoing the Indian tribes in the wilds of Alaska. “Even as Bishop Kip was sent to Cali- fornia in the early days to teac¢h Chris- tianity, when this golden State was 3| dreary waste,” said Bishop Rowe, ‘“‘so, notwithstanding the criticism of clergy | organized in Alaska. e are meeting| similar conditions which confronted Bishop Kip and are experiencing the same | difficulties. “Alaska is not supposed to be a perma- nent home for any man. People do not come to stay there and leave as quickly as possible, for they have no permanent in- terests in the place. Yet it is singular | that no men need the comforts of religion more than men in Alaska. By reason of the long nights in winter nature deterio- rates and the following year the man is not so good mentally or pnysically. | “It 18 necessary for human life that there should be something to call out the finer qualities of mankind and that some- thing is being supplied by nople men who have given up everything in ordér to min- ister to the spiritual wants of those that need it most, “There is a strange atmosphere in the Take Rampart, for instance, near ‘which there is an Indian village. A young man named Knapp has been sent there and is taking great intérest in the work. The greatest difficulty he has to contend with is to protect the morality of the In- dians from the whites. A bad condition of affairs exists there, and it is difficult for righteousness to prevail, “In Nome last year St. Mary's Mission raised $2000 to clothe destitute men, of which there are many. The Indians have been ennobled, and the signs and indica- tions of Christianity would do credit to| civilized people. Much good work is done | in rescuing men who have succumbed to the séverity of snowstorms. ‘“The work -i8 not yet what it ought to be, but that'is becduse it is not recelving | the assistance it merits. There is no man under.heaven who does so much for soci- ety and. manhood as the ministry of God. | The voice of the missionary is heard everywhere-in propagating spiritual help- fulness.” PROSPEROUS CONDITIONS IN THE EASTERN CITIES ‘William P, Buckingham Gives Ob-! servations of His Trip Across Continent. William P. Buckingham, president of Kast & ‘Co., who has been in the Bast | for the last six weeks, returned Satur- | day apd gave an {nteresting account of -conditions. in the section of the country he visited.. n" evsatd g - Times = are” DYD!])PYO\II in the East, and this {8 due to the present administra- tion. Workingmen are actively engaged at | their trades snd business is ncreasing dally. Present conditions are very ~much different ‘93. In the latter year men were idle and factories were closed down. Now everything is booming. The boot | and shoe factories are so rushed that they | are behind time in thelr output. The upward tendency in prices of materiul indicates that the consumer must be content to pay more ! money for his goods. There is a disposition to buy a better grade of article. High class material is being utilized on account of in- | creased earning capacity. I saw the voting machine in operation at Rochester and find it far superlor to our Aus- trallan ballot. It gives perfect satisfaction. Voting is secret and the machine does away with many faults that are apparent in the system of voting In our city. My visit to the East was for the purpose of buying goods for our new store, which we will soon occupy at 104-106-108-110 Geary | street, and to obtain advanced ideas regard- ing retailing to be made use of to the ad- vantage of oursel ——————— SMITH CLAIMS HUSBAND AND WIFE ASSAULTED HIM | Alleged Forgetfulness of Mission | Coal Dealer Causes Him Con- siderable Trouble. J. B. Gallagher, who keeps a wood and coal yard at Noe and Ford streets, and his wife were both placed behind the bars at the Seventeenth-street station yesterday. Gallagher started out yester- : market, | last day in a buggy, taking with him his two- year-old daughter for a drive out the San Bruno road. It is charged that while on the road he became under the influence of liquor and left his child in the buggy without protection. Police Officer Frank Smith heard of the incident and went to Gallagher's resi- dence to inquire about his action, when, Smith says, he was threatened with death by the head of the house, who armed him- self with a pistol. The weapon was taken from Gallagher and thrown away by the officer and the coal man handcuffed after a struggle. While the officer was strug- gling with Gallagher, his wife, Smith claims, picked up the pistol and dealt the officer a blow on the back of the head, cutting him severely. Smith succeeded in taking husband and wife to the station, where they were charged with an assault with a deadly weapon. ——t e Synagogue’s Prosperous Year, The Ohabal Shalome Congregation held ite semi-annual meeting yesterday in the social hall of the Bush-street Synagoue, the president, Maurice Kahn,in the chair. In his report the presidént con- gratulated the members on the prosper- ous condition of the congregation, and a vote of thanks was tendered the retiring | members of the board and also the Rev. Isidore Myers for his great service in largely increasing the membership. The Rev. Mr. Myers was also the recipient of thanks for his successful efforts in rals- ing funds, which had enabled the congre- gation to purchase land for a cemetery. The officers elected for the ensuing year | were: President, Maurice - Kahn; vice president, P. Stern; treasurer, B. Relss; secretary, M. L. Stern; board of trustees —A. Altmayer, E. D. Bloch, M, Friedman, H. Mayer, H. Stern, J. W. Stern and Dr. Zussman. —_—— Fired Two Shots at Landlord. F. J. McCann, who rents a_house from James M. Daley at 9 Manchester stroet, fired two shots at Daley yesterday. Mc- Cann, it is saild, accused his landlord of shutting off the water supply and some ugly words passed betwen them, culmi- nating in the shooting. Officer Nyhan heard the shots and placed McCann un- der arrest, charging him with an assaujt with intent to commit murder. Guard Finds Floating Body. SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 2—The body of an unknown man was found floating off An- gel Island this morning by a guard doing duty at the discharge’ camp. The body is evidently that of a sailor and had been in the water about two wecks. He was feot seven inches tall and had black h: 8 Brokers Are Compelled to Borrow at Four Per Cent. Dealings of Stock Exchange Are Mostly Confined to Professionals. LONDON, Nov. 2—The plentifulness of money which characterized the October market has been succeeded by conditions cempelling heavy borrowing from the bank at 4 per cent in order to meet Stock Exchange settlements and month-end ob- ligations. An increase in Government dis- bursements is anticipated this week. This will enable borrowers to liquidate some of their indebtedness. The bank mean- while has regained control of the money and the hardening of London discount rates has not affected conti- nental exchange. That there will be any censiderable shipments of gold from New York in connection with the purchases of the shipping combine, or for any other reasons, is regarded as improbable, inas- much as the mercantile balances favor the United States, and it is considered likely that these will provide sufficient exchange for requirements. The sluggishness of the Stock Exchange was .relieved for a couple of days by spurts of activity, especially in American and British railway shares. The dealings were. mostly professional. The more cheerful tone prevailing did not induce. the public to buy to any extent. ey BERLIN BOERSE IS WEAK. Iron Shares Suffer Depression Be- cause of Gloomy News. ‘BERLIN, Nov. 2—The Boérse began the week under the influence of the gloomy remarks of Herr Baare, director of the Bochum Gosstahl Company, who at the annual meeting of the company, held October 25, sald the German iren in- dustry was approaching a serious period of its existence and that there existed danger of the dissolution of the steel rail syndicate, in which eventsthere would begin a price war between everybody in the business. These utterances of Herr Baare depressed all industrial shares this week, and particularly iron. This decline, however, was partly checked Wednesday by the remarks of a Silesian magnate, who was more cheerful regarding iron prospects. The annual meeting of the great Dort- { mund Iron Company brought out diseour- aging facts, and representatives of other iron companies also expressed dismal views of the situation. Yesterday, how- ever, brought strong recovery upon good | prospects of the renewal of the pig iron and steel rafls syndicate in the Rhine country. Shares of electrical companies did not show a uniform tendency during the week. Those of the Schuckert Electrical Company of Nuremberg dropped to 70.50 on Friday, ‘but recovered to 78 yesterday upon the announcement that the company had secured a contract to build a suspen- sion electrical railway in England. The week’s drop in Schuckerts, however, was four points, but shares of other electrical companies, .were _slightly higher. Quota- tions upon Aligemeine Electrical Com- pany of Berlin shdres rose upon the dec- laration of an 8 per cent dividend. This company paid a dividend of 12 per cent year. The newspapers, however, point oat that this year’s dividend would have been below 6 per cent except for the fact that the company's tax has been re- funded. TIndications are that the elec- trical industry is in a bad way, with no prospect of improvement. All negotia- tions for an électrical trust have appar- ently failed. A number of American elec- triclang are resigning their positions in German companies and are returning to | the United States. The money market showed a greater demand for the monthly settlement than was expected. Considerable demand still existed yesterday, call money reaching 4% per cent, but later relapsed to 4 per cent. German 3's and Prussian consols were slightly lower during the week, and there was little doing in foreign rentes. 'Shares of the North German Lloyd and the Hamburg-American steamship ,com- panies continued to be weak. They are hovering just above par. S i PRICE FIXED FOR BREAD.—At a meet- | ine o the Master Bakers' Association, held yesterday, it was decided to fix a standard price for loaves of bread. On and after next | Monday, November 12, all loaves to regular customers will be 4 cents and all others 5 cents. C T E3 10 KILL ENTIRE FAMILY Discardéd Lover Blows Up a Home With Dynamite. Il Two Persons Are Killed and Several Others Are Badly Ipjured. V2 e e ans e CHICAGO, Nov. 2.—A dynamite bomb, the weapon of a deranged assassin, blew up the home of Joseph Kordeck in Chi- cago Heights to-day, killing two members of the family outright and injuring sev- eral others. The house was set on fire and burned, and that of a neighbor caught fire and was also destroyed. The dead: Joseph Kordeck, arms and legs blown off. Lucy Kordeck, aged 2 to picces. ‘Fne injured: Mrs. Lucy Kordeck, flesh blown off right side, injured internally; may die. Seven children were injured, but none seriously. The explosion occurred while the family was asleep. The father and mother, with the daughter, Lucy, occupied a rvem In the front of the cottage. On the other side were rooms occupied by the rest of the family. The cottage stood two feet from the ground, on wooden posts. The bomb was placed under the room occupled by the parents and the impact of the ex- ptosion tore a hole in the floor, blew the bed to pieces, dismembered Kordeck and scattered into fragments the body of the child, Lucy, who was sleeping with her parents. The force of the explosion tore a piece of flesh from Mrs. Kordeck's side and blew her through a window. The noise aroused the rest of the family, and they had barely time to escape from the flames, which seon destroyed the cottage. Kordeck's body, torm to shre was found in the debris after the fire. Charles Smith, a former boarder at the Kordeck house, who was paying atten- tion to one of Kordeck's daughters, has been arrested, cnarged with the crime. The Kordeck girl was to have been mar- ried to another man next week. Smith declares he is innocent, but neighbors de- clare that he made threats that if the girl refused to be his wife he would blow up the entire family with dynamite. Smith was absent from his room at the time of the explosion. His roommate, Thomas Kobilinski, claimed that Smith returned to his room greatly excited shortly after the explosion. years, body blown Actor Has Manager Arrested. SACRAMENTO, Nov. — Willis H. Goodhue, manager of the “Hello Bill” Company, was arrested to-night on a complaint sworn to in 8an Francisco by Harry Corson Clarke, who alleged his be- lief that Goodhue was about to leave the State while owing him a debt in the.sum of $1150. The “Hello Bill” Company play- ed at the Clunie Theater to-night, and a writ of attachment was served on the theater management for the amount. The receipts will be retained by the manage- ment pending the determination of the question as to which party is entitled to the amount. Goodhue was taken to the county jail, where he gave. bonds. He de- clared that Clarke is in his debt to some $150 on account of printed matter rendered usvless by his leaving the company. He sald Clarke had made the present move out of spite, ard not because any money is due bim. Sealers Have Poor Luck. VICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 2.—The Bering Sea catch of the Victoria sealing fleet will be smaller this vear than ever. It will be less than 6000 skins, compared with 10,500 taken last year. The average per schooner, based on the catches of the eleven schooners of the fourteen that have reported their catches, will be 428 skins, compared with an average of 437 for each of the twenty-four schooners which hunted the year previous and 467 for the year prior to that, when thirty- elght schooners took 17,577 skins in the Bering Sea. i Tramps Attack a Teamster. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2—Three tramps attacked William D. McFarlane, a team- ster in the employ of the Cudahy Packing Company, at the corner of Turner and Amelia streets at 10:20 o’clock to-night for the purpose of robbing him. They were unsuccessful in their effort to get McFar- lane’s watch and money, out one of them made a murderous assault upon him with a pocket-knife. He is not fatally hurt. DUEL 13 FOUGHT ON RUBBIGH HEAP "Forty-Niner Is Shot to Death as Result of a Feud. Fatal Quarrel Between Her- mit and Chinese in Los Aungeles. PRAREL o ARLE Y Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Nov The body of George Newberry, aged T8 years, a quaint character known as the “Hermit of the Dump,” was found this afterncon in a pile of rubbish at the city dumpiog grounds at the southeastern edge of the city, where the refuse material for a large seetion is piled over many acres. There were two bullet holes through his body and another through the neck. Im his hand was a large revolver, from whieh one shqt had been fired. It was at first supposed that he had been murdered for his money and had died de- fending himself, but later it was learned that he was killed in a duel with a Chi- nese, whose only known name is Jim, af- ter a vioient quarrel over (he right of the Chinese to pick refuse material from the dump, which Newberry claimed as his property. About the time that the body was found the Chinese appeared before a party of men half a mile away and stated that he had shot Newberry. He carrfed a small rifle, which he surrendered to ome of the men and then left, saying he was going to the police station to give nimself up. No effort was made to take him in custody. the necessity for that never occurring to the men until he had disappeared. According to his story, he went to the dump to pick whatever he could flnd of value. He and Newberry had had fre- quent quarrels and Newberry had driven him away more than once with a revel- ver. The Chinese bad ‘‘squatted” om a small section of the dump and from this Newherry attempted to drive him. The Chinese had provided himself with a rifle and when Newberry appeared he retreat- ed. Seeing the gun, Newberry drew hLis revolver and fired one shot. The Chinese then opened fire and Newberry fell dead with, three bullets through him. After leaving the men to whom he surremdercd his gun the Chinese disappeared and has not been seen since. Newberry was a2 49er and had lived on the dumps for years. It is believed he had considerable money secreted somewhere near his shack, which is made of old pieces of tin. SOLEMN PILGRIMAGES TO THE CEMETERIES People of Vienna Religiously Cele- brate All Saints Day and All Souls Day. VIENNA, Noy. 2.—One-third of the pop- ulation of Vienna made pilgrimages yes- terday and to-day, All Saints Day and All Souls Day respectively, to the Cen- tral Cemetery of Vienna. The pilgrims started in the early morning and returned late at night. Some went on foot while others used vehicles of all descriptions. It is estimated that 600,000 persons vis- ited the graves in the cemetery on these twe days. The pilgrims . all carried wreathes or flowers, and before the tombs and in the long grass burned ecountless candles. The sparsely occupied parts of the cemetery presented a weird and pic- turesque spectacle. ‘The monuments to Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, as well as the plot where are buried the 600 victims of the Ring Theater fire of 1881, attracted thousands of visitors. This cemetery is the largest in Europe and contanis 622,000 graves. Emperor Francis Joseph and other members of the royal family placed wreaths upon the coffins of the Empress and of Crown Prince Rudolph, in the vaults of the Capuchin church. ———— Three Men Die in a Tunnel. WHATCOM, Wash, Nov. 2—News reached here to-night that three mea were killed this afternoon while engaged in clearing out a tunnel where a cave-in had occurred on the Chuckanut Creek cuttoff division of the Great Northern Railroad. No names could be given by the messenger who came here for the Coroner. —— Cholera’s Work in Jerusalem. JERUSALEM, Nov. 2—There have been 494 deaths from cholera here and 76 at Ghuzzeh during the past week. Great distress prevails at Lydda because of the total inadequacy of medical aid here to cope with the disease. T AT A T AT T To attain and sustain Perfect Health R T Qg O v G ST 11 Perfect Health is Sustained by Perfect Food. ‘Illaltafl?ita* ““The Perfect Food” for Brain and Muscle, Malta-Vita meets every requirement of science and hygiene, both in substance and in the process of its manufacture. Malta-Vita contains the Phosphates or Brain makers, the Nitrates or Muscle makers, the Carbonates or Hecat makers—all the essential elements necessary to build up and sustain the humaa system and in their propes proportions. Malta=Vita, :‘the perfect food,” eaten for breakfast and supper wnsures perfect digestion and removes all causes of insomma and dyspepsia. Beware of imitations. Insist on getting Maltas Vita, ‘‘the perfect food.” Malta-Vita is a concentrated, malted food. PERFECTLY COOKED—Always Ready to Eat. ‘Malta=Vita is so prepared as to be easily digested and assimilated by old and young, sick or well. Large package 15¢ at your grocer. MALTA-VITA PURE FOOD CO., Battle Creek, Mich., and Teronto, Canada.

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