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o FINDS LEO’'S SPIRIT TRANQUIL Denerable Patient Appears Greatly Relieved After the Administration of the Diaticum, WDhich Signals the Rapidly Nearing Close of His Long Pilgrimage R ally bright and in good spirits, and dis- plays great force of character. This morning, again, at his own wish, he left his bed and seated himself in his arm chair, as he finds a sitting posture comfortable than being recumbent. What surprises all who approach him is that there has been no change in the lucidity of his intellect, which disease has not affected. For instance, not a single detail of the ceremony of the last com- munion escaped the Pope’s observation. He spoke of it with great interest. re- calling each personage who participated. “The worst symptom, apart from the feebleness of the Pontiff’s pulse, is his v temperature, which is stationary at 31 centigrade. He continues to take nour- hment at short intervals, but not in suck Continued From Page 1, Column 7., tion seemed so hopeless that only | a short time apparently remained before he would glide into his last | sleep. At Dr. Lapponi’s initiative | a hasty consultation of the I“npc'a: relatives, Cardinal Rampolla and | ther ecclesiastics was held and it | o was decided that extreme unction | should be given. The Pontiff re- wouncement with his ceived the ar wsal calmness, and, though | usnhtities && s weakness reguires. or his L doctors wish, scarcely able to spez hing medical said he knew his time audibly, he had come as ready to appear _hefld lime tribunal with full 1e divine mercy. science ean suggest stand has been left oxygen, cutaneous digitalis and caffeine, which have been Injected to produce more apid effect as announced in the first in, is se le pneumonia in a torpid Pope Leo's which is now its maximum in- extreme un sity but which may have begun un- remony was over h observed before the Pope complained of Ra « the low with nt any feeling of great re t 1| was done and tha SR e e e was ¢ nto rest after his long H pilgris Noted American {elegrams hoping for Prelate Pays ! ¥ the Pope, and he appeared t 3 e R S Tribute to Leo he interest the Pope inquiring about his health ALTIMORE having heard that a French lady by Md., July 6.—Cardinal ned to this city to-d: ret B he had received 1 audience a few L o e i from Westminster, near which N Gt 5 o B | place he had made all preparations to Monsignor Pifferi brou, for Rome immediately in the event of n “1):'”""'& to look at the s death. dinal Gibbons said: | e o R S AN death of Pope Leo XJL I shall @ desr friend and a father. I ha ¥n him for twenty years and with tion of his char- ished by a singu- ich made his in- an see figures flitting to and lighted windows of the pal al number of which onsidered certair ¢ e of the King and Que ik Pope's death. If he should pas: 2 g at such time will enable me to X Spv—" ca e sle: r with day 1 should > » > N be to make the within the Invalid’s Energy e it albety 2 - - interfered 1 should be able to FallS fo Ralse ach Rome in nine days, and that would L e be & e must begin tc s even if I did not apponi’s Hopes el 1 o - — there would be . Thus catching the thing ¥ work il ; Hopes Conclave j Will Remember o 1o Church Rights 4 | | | | | ) speaking with Cardinal Oreglia yesterday, his Holiness expressed the hope that the conclave would not forget the wrong done the Holy See in 1870 ana would elect a man who would defend the rights of the church, its liberty and independence. He also strongly recommended the Cardinal to insure the seclusion of the conclave frem all outside influence. Rome’s Populace Grows Apathetic ness assumed its serious character As Death Nears anm has been no marked change in OME, July 6.—Since the Pope’s ill- the symptoms and alternation from DEATH'S LIST A5 NAMES OF A SCORE Twenty Victims Ac- counted For in Jean- nette Disaster. Sixteen Persons Are Missing and May Have Been Drowned | Damage to Property in Brush Creek Valley, in Pennsylvania, Caused by Breaking of Dam Will Reach $1,500,000. - — 1 JEANNETTE, Pa., July 6.—As a result | | of the breaking of the Oakford Park dam hope to fear in the minds of the physi-| clans has given place 1o a certain feeling of apathy on the part of the populace. For centuries the Romans had been ac- customed to the rise and fall of systems >vernment to changes of rulers. This doubtless affected the present gener- ation, causing them to regard without iety or. even keen interest events of his nature. The Pope's During the urday, 1 shine, the Plaza questioning doors gress and illness is a case in point. whole of Friday and of Sat- > of the blazing July sun- onged the of St. Peter's, the guards the occupants on duty at of the Vatican, watching the and egress of ecclesiastical and and obtaining from them it rmation regarding the health of the illustrious patient Then came Sundz The Pope seemed to be sinking fast and hope died away on the announcement that the viaticum would be administered in the colonnades of | the | in- | evening. | But as night wore on and the solemn rite | | was accomplished, and, contrary to ex pectation, light improvement in the Pontiff's condition was observed, the anx- ety diminished and the crowds dwindled away. Some persons belleved that the | amelioration was only temporary, the last | effort of failing vitality and that it would be followed immediat by corresponding Fra Q felt within the church and with- now arranged for July 18, will poned, as in the event of a fatal te ach Rome in time t the Pope’s il e n the election of a Pope | nuel will not b te . he saidg ) jom u ‘| e - ¢ hing will depend upon the time { | keep prostration, but this surmise proved in- orr All day ¥y day the improve- ment wa's maintained. The Pope himself seemed persuaded that this illness was his last and he ac- cord settled his affai Though awaiting the end calmly, his mind was clear and he still gave attention to mu dane matters, despite the fact that he h been warned by who feared that wear away his doctors, n intellect might the frail sheath in which it was encased. rd evening the Pope grew worse and the news spreading, together with the tone of the last siderable alarm. A 1, who repeated in substance what pponi had said in the afternoon, adding that to-night it was necessary to up the strength through artificial respiration. Dr. Mazzoni at 10 o'clock expressed the opinion that Pope Leo might live perhaps two days, with- out excluding the hypothesis of a poss ble ultimate recover RS e Disposition of Pope'’s Savings. BERLIN, July 6.—The Tageblatt’s Rome | spondent telegraphs t ded to leave his s: Pope Leo ings, amount- | ably lost. ling=. vesterday twenty persons are known to | be dead and sixteen are missing. The | property loss in the valley will reach $1.500,000, and the distress is so great that outside relief must be asked for. Following is a list of the identified dead and missing reported up to.10 o'clock to- night. The dead MISS LUCY CRUM, 24 years of age, of Jeannette. | MISS GERTRUDE KEEFER, 24, Jean- nette. MISS CATHERINE DONNELLY, Grapeville. JOSEPH BROWN, 22, single, West Jean- nette. MISS SISSY BIRD, 19, Jeannette. MIS8 EVELYN WIGGS, 20, Pittsburg. JOSEPH OBERLE, #, Indianapolis, Ind. JOHN McCANN, 18, Jeannette. MARY GILLEPIE, 12, Grapeville. ANNIE GILLESPIE, 10, sister of Mary. ALBERT BROWN, 2, Pittsburg. JOHN FLEMING, 18, Greensburg. JAMES WESTWOOD, 25, Penn Station. JOSEPH WEIGHTMAN, 10, Penn Sta- tion. MRS. WILLIAM NEGAR, 5, Penn Sta- tion. THREE CHILDREN of Mrs. William | Negar. 1 HENRY FINK, 35; Jeannette. MRS. CYRUS SHRADER, 7, Jeannette. | The missing are: Miss Mary Griffith, 20, | Miss Kate Cona Ware, 22, | Jeannete; Jacob Anderson, 38, Greensburg; two small sons of Jacob Anderson, Greensburg; Miss Mary Beaver, 18, Pitts- burg: Daniel Bradt, 23, Wilmerding; Mrs. Catherine Fink, 30, wife of Henry Fink; Martin Pressler, 16, Arona: John McGurl 40, West Jeannette; George Williams, 35, Jeannette; Alexander Victor, Curtis Moore, Samuel Vogel and Alfred Sipe, ali of Jeannette. VALLEY OF DESOLATION. Dawn broke to-day on a scene of devas- tation and ruin atong the Brush Creek Valiey. From the sight of the break of | the dam, taking in the towns of Jean- nette, Penn, Larimer, Greensburg, Irwin, Burrell and Manor, the awful power of the rushing waters following the break- ! ing of the dam is apparent on all sides. Stories of thrilling rescues are heard on all sides and many acts of bravery are report the heroes being persons who | risked their lives to save others. One man whose namg could wot-be learned was seen by several persons to/makbe a hard effort to rescue'a woman, presum- ably his wife, shortly after the flood hit the waiting-room. The man was in an apparently safe position among some sap- In his struggles to get to the lost his hold and both were ¥ with the current and prob- | 2, woman swept continues IENNA, July A Rome dispatch | ing to several million lire, as a private | A Tescuing party was organized imme- . . B U 10’ thé Neus Frele Prosie auotes s | 100 fof blxwaorsapes’ | diately after the wall of water had passed. | is stationary, w h m that S very private letter written to a friend | ———o— | Dr. Freshwater states this morning that B ioey. » it tse o cirlipdii | ECZEMA, NO CURE, No PAy. |!hey had rescued fuily 10 persons who | L ki 4 ey o el R r drugglst will refund your mégey it pazo | 120 been thrown into the water by their | AvE, i ‘ sses as g ital- | G Tty 1o 0. your mdaey. houses being overturned. Many houses | [ ing ar 18 1 nk His mind is as tranquil and still as | Old Ficers #d Sores, Pimples and Bla were seen by them floating down the may rec un on a calm night. He speaks about | on the face, and all skin diseases. 50 cen * | stream, upside down, sideways and in crisis occurs nd death with the same beautiful ——————— ev ible manner. | s Ay ity. To-day he said to Cardinal | RAILROAD OFFICIALS | chrader one of the vietims, was | term eu: ‘Great France. She has caused | asleep in her home at the time the flood gt o uch pain. but has also given me WILL HUBRY NEW DEPOT | arted. When Mre. Schrader awake o | durin nsolation and joy.’ "’ . H | tried to get out o S & & : Conflagration at Santa Rosa Not Al-|!Mied [0 el out of her home. As she ame correspondent re BamimoreRYE Wi BariMore RYe WMLananan & SON BALTIMORE NAHAN A SON ALTIMORE Way Ahead When perfection is reached that ends it. It is thus that Hunter Itimore Rye on its quality and purity has passed the goal in the sace. HILBERT MERCANTILE CO., 213-215 Market st., San Francisco, Cal. Telephone Exchange 313. | Northwestern | temporary freight depot. lowed to Interfere With Business. SANTA ROSA, July 6 and President I uperintendent Zook of the California Raflway arrived at the scene of the fire here carly ster and began immediately to have debris cleared away was erected north of Devereaux warehouse the depot A temporary depot the old site. The will be used as At 1 Agent Soridgeon is using a b for his telegraph and ticket offic The railroad officials couid not estimate precisely the extent of the company’s loss, sent tion | but all agreed that it was over $50,000. | ceed $1500 in The Santa Rosa Tanning Company's los= i $12.000, with insurance of $6625. The | Sa Rosa Bank owr & d the Cnopius De Gens warehonse and it was $8000, with insurance of $5500, D¢ Gen warehouse and they carried $2000 insu ance. Lee Brothers & Co.’s dama the burning of a small barn w , with no insurance. W. T. Spridgeon’s will ex- addition to the small insur- | ance carried by him, —_—————— POLICE FIND NO TRACE OF MISSING HUSBAND Mrs. Dorothy Manning Leaves Port- land Believing That He Met With Foul Play. PORTLAND, Or., July 6.—No trace has yet been found of Frank Manning, the Southern Pacific clerk who mysteriously disappeared Saturday, leaving behind his young bride of a week. The wife, Dor- othy Manning (nee Bloom) of San Fran- cisco, left to-night for her home, Mrs. Bloom came to Portland this af- ternoon and in the evening started back with her daughter. Neither Mrs. Man- ning nor her mother will belleve that Manning is a deserter. They are confident that he has met with foul play. The po- lice have followed up every clew and are convinced that it is a.clear case of de- sertion. —_——— PERSONAL BELONGINGS RUINED BY VANDAL Clothing and Photographs Destroyed During Absence of Owner. RICHMOND, July 6.—While Mrs, Anna Parker was out on the bay with her brother, Joseph Brown, and a sister, on July 4, some one entered her house and cut and tore her dresses and smail be- longings. A photograph of Mrs. Parker, which was on the bureau in her room, was slashed into bits. Mrs. Parker suspects that the outrage was committed by a man in San Fran- cisco, whose suit for her hand she re- pulsed some weeks ago. : HUTCHINSON, Kai Jul; 6.—Robert Grose of West Plains was acquitted to-day of the charge of having murdered John Newberry on June 19. Vz%:n arrested told the Sherift that Newberry was killed by two ne- groes. t statement, the trial bore out this / this morning | | woman | strea opened the front door in view of a score of people who were watching. the water rushed in and the imprisoned woman, old as she was, saw her peril and rushed to the second floor of her house. Then her house was swept from its foundations and taken down with the swirling current. WOMAN'S AWFUL DEATH. { When the hovse was floating in mid- stream, nearly opposite the Pennsylvania Railroad _station, persons who were | watching the floating residence saw the | =hingl of the roof suddenly fly off. With a piece of board the frenzied woman was trying to get out on the roof in the hope of saving herself. Her strength failed her, however, and with uplifted hands Mrs. Shrader went to her grave. Shortly after the house was hroken up by others hitting it the body of the drowned was seen fo float out into the m, but despite all efforts to rescue | her, she went down with the debris. Almost together with the dam in Oak- | ford Park the Fort Pitt dam north of | thiz place gave way, carrying wide de- struction along the lley of Bull Creek, which empties into the larger stream of Brush Creek in the lower part of Jean- nette. The Fort Pitt dam served to sup- ply the Fort Pitt glass works at that point. Tt was rebuilt about eight years ago, when it was torn down in the same manner as yesterday. To add to the alarm caused by the disaster in Oakford Park it was reported this morning that the big reservoir of the Westmoreland ‘Water Company, at Radabaugh, about a mile from this town, was likely to give way and that the people in the vicinity had taken flight and fled to the uplands. The suddenness of the disaster, together with the attendant features, was indeed pathetic. Yesterday afternoon most of the people were attracted to the park by the children’s orchestra, a juvenile mu- sical organization which held its open air concert. The band was playing when the storm came up. Many of the young musicians, who were girl¢, hurried and grabbed their instruments and ran into the building used as a roller-coaster, to the laughing gallery and the terit cover- ing the merry-go-round. All these build- ings with the excention of the roller- coaster building and a portion of the mer- ry-go-round were Swept away. —_————————— Kills Himself Week After Marriage. DENVER, July 6—Ferdinand V. Voor- hees, a stenographer employed at the Denver National Bank, committed suicide this afternoon near Sloan’s Lake, in the suburbs of this city. Voorhees was 20 years of age and was married a week ago to Miss Bessie Ayer, who recently came here from Pennsylvania. He was a son of W. D. Voorhees, postmaster at Fair-|| view, 1lL., and has a brother, Condit Voor- | | hees, living in Chicago. The cause of the suicide is not known. £ —_————— DENVER, July 6.—Mabel Brown, aged 20 years, was found dead in her house on Market street this morning. Her” hands were bound and there was evidence that she had been strangled. There is no clew to the murderer. The case in many of its details strongly suggested the serfes ‘of murders by strangulation which took place in this neighborhood some years ago. APPROACH OF HIS FINAL REST RE. TRAIN STRIKES A COW AND AN ENGINEER LOSES HIS LIFE Firemen Receive Severe Injuries When a Dead Animal on the .ka Near Millerton, in Marin County, Sends the Foremost Locomotive Off the " Rails and Shakes Up More Than One Hundred Laborers in the Coaches _____________—————-—'fl NORTH SHO Yt vy IRED. LAMIZTON. _ +* — 4 ‘; ENGINEER WHO WAS KILLED IN i | AN ACCIDENT ON THE NORTH 1 SHORE LINE. A NN + - — i /| IVOMAN PERISHES | IN THE FLAMES Zz Incendiary Causes Death | | >y . 5 ’ In Southern Cali- o | fornia. AL >3 2 = =Y Special Dispatch to The Call. near Monte Rio, & summer resort near AR Y AP % 7 $ I('asad#rn. and Manager Rank deemed it | pecial Dispa AN RAFABL, July 6—Like the|essential that a big gang of men be| gAN PEDRO, July 6.—A blaze attended poet's solitary woes, that tread | taken to the scene to fight the fla"‘,':‘ with a fatality and undoubtedly of in- °"‘;’ “”“"’" FLiEck. halter Shatn | “HACER Bo-0 e o ave veen 10 the | cendiary origin occurred early this morn- to follow closa uvpon dis: er on | €0 es excep he train crew, 3 - T s 1 in the small town of Wilmington, five the North Shore Railway. Within | The train left Sausalito at 10 p. m. and | In& Ir E 2 y 43 2 3 i was ordered to leave Cazadero on the | miles north of this city. ur\a weeks there has been much wrecking | g0l ‘trio at 3.5 this morning. It reached| 7. B. Goodnight end Ms wife, esch of trains and loss of life. It was hoped | pgjlarton about 13:30. The -moon had gome | about rs of age, congucted a small that the end of the series of accidents| down and the t ran through thick | frujt store in a building on Canal street had been reached, but to-day there was | foliage. About one-half mile from Pisto- | , 1ortion of which was used by them for another. | lesi the forward engine struck something |\ 1000 Lo Tio o am resided a som, This time Engineer F Hamilton, | Which proved to be a dead cow. The loco- | " 1 e e . i o p v i E. Goodnight, aged 3 ye Or. last Sat- one of the most efficient locomotive | MOtive gave a lurch, toppled over on its | ht the rear of the buildi nd became uncoupled from engine | urday night the rear uilding was drivers of the company, was killed. Fire 7. Engineer Hamilton Temained at | discovered to be in flames, but the blaze man G. A. Stebbins and George A. Beal post and went over with his engine. | was extinguished by several young men were serfously injured. Once again No. 4. eman. Beal attempted to jump. but |jiving in the village one of the oldest, but considered one of caught and pinioned down. Engineer | This morning about 2 o'clock the Good the bést engines of the company, was Dixon threw on the air brakes of the sec- | night family was awakened by another instrumental in causing death, and a dead | nd engine and then he and his fireman, | hiaze in the rear of their home. They | cow Iying across the track was the direct | “”" B, dRmPW; 7 all managed (o escape with much difi- huts Bt Ihe aectidbuit amilton’s body was extricated from |culty. Mrs. Goodnight ran around th ShTe lenar Tas ain with | the debris and upon examination it was | front of the building and entered for the lito to Cazadero was deralled between | SKull was fractured In several places. | she had in a purse in one of the fromt Camp Pistolesi and Millerton, in Marin | Fireman Beal was cut about the head and | yooms. She had only taken a few steps County. The accident occurred about 1| face. Enginéer Dixon had his back badly | {nto the burning building when she fell, o'clock this morning, at a time when the | Wrenched, while Fireman Stebbins was | overcome by the smoke and flames. Her train wos running on level ground and badiy bruised. hushand and son éashed after fer, but could not su ceed In saving her, and we iHamilton was a native son and 38 years . compelied to leave her to perish. not going at a high rate of speed. ain was co d of engines 4| old. He was married and leaves a wife ar:lt-ih;_ :.J,"su :xasw:y:‘;-r coaches. Fl'.n:lnn- | and two children in Sausalito. He worked | In making ;‘_h' Iu'h_mr-_v 3 seeine his No. 4 was in the lead, with Engineer Ham- | for railroads for many yvears. having come [ Wife the h‘l:‘am received such deverc flton at the throttle, and Fireman Beal|to the North Shore Company from the 3;_'}'1”‘-“ that - M:_ngl' r;'nssi |lv. recover. in the cab. Locomotive No. 7 had Engi- | Southern Pacific. He was engaged for e F-': W:"*.:lsv"“rer ‘: r'|llrn?-fl' . e fire neer T. E. Dixon and Fireman Stebbins | several vears also on the Great Northern :”"‘ “'r'; ;“'}m e ;\‘( '“:. An :r) 'rz n, aml aboard. Conductor P. de Sella had charge | and Guatemala Central. § h"r”m L e S 15 i of the train, while Y. M. Rank, general| No. 4 is certainly a hoodoo engine. Tts |80 effort fo & T manager of the company, and the lahorers | bad luck commenced over fifteen year St erepe— Dewey Resigns the Presidency. WASHINGTON, July 6.—Admiral De has resigned as president of the Thomas Jefterson Memorial Association, and Gen- eral Nelson A. Miles has been elected to | succeed him. g0, when Enginéer Charles Lucas was The train was scheduied to run from | killed in a wreck between this city and Sausalito to Cazadero empty, in order to | S8ausalito. On June 19 engine No. 4 pulled bring the Fourth of July excursionists | the ill-fated funeral train to Tomales. back to-day from the up-country resorts. [ This trin cost the lives of two persons A large forest and grase fire was raging | and the serious injury of thirty more. oceupied the conches KITCHEN REQUISITES. Jim Dumps said, “Wife, your bread and cake Are not like mother used to make.” But when he ate, with cream, of course,} Baked apples in a nest of “ Force,” Which his good wife had fixed for him, “This beats Ma’s food I”cried “Sunny Jim.” * For | | Cares Little for Other Food. bl“fi{:cl ’:lmnm“wmp.;’w g t owe express m: ntumforstood.wmohbymghamnewd mut.-omn,z'xmappduthu care very little for AT N 000, pana e o0 AR