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TUESDAY, M o ARCH 1004 ==, FRANCISCO - CALL. UEST 5 M 4 TESTIMONIAL 10 DR. \\ [LLIY, Suceessor nf Late Reverend James N. Beard Tendered l-'w'rminu by His Friends -— Adam Grant, Distinguished as One Most Successful Business Men, FORMER MAYOR GRACE DIES OF PNEUMONIA IN NEW YORK| of San Francisco's Passes Away-—D. D. Shattuck, Commlssmn Man, Dies of La anpe and T MAXY \1\|\1 ADDRESSES NEW YORK, March 21.—Former e e e 3 Mayor William R. Grace dled of ppeu- | Deaconess Home of Metho- | monia to-d s v ity. Hew , nd year. dist Episcopal Church Is s | The E a Grace in| ~cene of Enjoyable Affair New o ning arks t of Ameri n N GRANT PASSES AWAY. ADAM Merchant Death. ventful Career of Pioneer and Banker Ended by SECOMES t the n Club’s New Officers. was tk Buffalo, > have now j The hot 1 June, th stility This was due tc between ADVERTISEMENTS. THE DISEASE OF CIVILIZATION (FULL NAME. IF YOU SIMPLY ASK FOR HUNYAD! WATER YOU MAY BE IMPOSED UPON. asked in reply. No, but I can speak Gaelic,” was the Highlander’s answer. Jansen hard- | thought that tongue would do as a | substitute for the language of the then | majority of Californians. but he agreed | to give the youth a trial. Grant went to work on a salary of $50 a month. The second month his pay was in- creased to $250. At the end of the third month he was offered by Jansen a partnership in the firm. but refused it, apparently seeing something better ahead in another business connection. During his employment with Jansen & Co. the assault on Mr. Jansen was committed that led to the organization of the Vigilantes. On leaving the store attack of aggravated grip. ite his advanced age Mr. Shat- ok an active part in the man- agement of his business until within a few days of his death, stricken by the iliness fatal. In the year 1852 Mr. Shattuck es- tablished the first commission house in San Francisco. The establishment } was on Front street and carried on 2 very profitable business. Several times during the ensuing few years the management of the firm was changed, Des; that proved Every Woman interested nod shonld know 2 aboat tbe wosderful present time. sour areggw S, §7 ot amppiy the In the early days of the California MARVEL. sccepino giber. but send sta: ADVERTISEMENTS. Do You Receive These Wireless Messages? They Are About Your Health ‘When your hezlth goes the least bit wrong, a wireless message is sent to your brain. It says something like this: “You are not quite well-take a dose of Times Buliding. New York DIRECTOR OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. | \atalogue and Price Lists Mallei | 3 Appuudt?l. FRESH AND SALT MEATS. Shipping Buichers. 108 | Clay. Tel Main 1204. | BEECHAM’S PILLS at once and it will put you right.” Do you attend to these messages when you receive them? You should do so. BEECHAM'S PILLS often prevent a serious illness, and so prove themselves ~ “WORTH A CUINEA A BOX.” - Sold Everywhere in Boxes, 10c. and 25¢. S. BOYES & C0. when he was | with the exception of Shattuck, who | remained in the partnership up to the | MEN WHOS : MOURNED ISCANS one-of the stock- a well known figure Franciscans. tueck was a member of the Cal- Commandery of the K hts Oriental Lodge. and a direc- urel Hill Cemetery Associa- of the board of trustees of = funeral wil ace to-mor- r afternoon s k from the Richmond Congregationa In- ment will be at Laurel B er Edaaite, o Death of Napa Pioneer. NAPA h 2 respe and narre & at his home N N escaped with their was due to : o Dt BUSINESS CALLS HIM. “‘-xfi age. “ 75 vears ¢ it ar d |of age ar i THE SAFEST AND QUICKEST ching San Francisco, he a ed Tanil: Hies iy ot ; married Miss | tied g in this CURE FOR Prive EV!I'JS Emma Gummer, with their son = ‘\‘Cf‘rs_ ) Hunyadi J anos | o b es will be hel amily The following children survive e <o the sidevalk - home, 1112 Bush street, William Miller, Miller, NATURE'S LAXATIVE WATER, wholesale house. The h: morning at 9:45 o'clec s "Augusta Miller, Mre. Marie Me. . ‘\1\ v= )Hx;s in this l;:m:aes were “,MHE will be at Mountain Coffrey of Napa, Miss L Miller of NOT AN ARTIFICIAL e T s h”:; ':;'é Oakland. Merced County and Mrs. Ella Craw- PREPARATION, Sor 5 Sl T A Semr o [ ford of Santa Cruz. AJ.I a D(J(lh.. in the dry goods | AGED MERCHANT DIES. | B t was the e blishm: of 1 RELIEF COMES WITH Co. § . e gl i e | Marin Pioneer Is Dead. THE FIRST GLASS. - long prominent in the | p p. Shattuck Passes Away After a| pprapum 5 annals of the city. but espe- s e S e MA, March 1.—J. B. cially famous in the history of the Vig- | % = | Sweetzer, a ploneer res and cap- ALTIE. RO FO flantes. # | D. D. Shattuck, one of California’s | italist of Marin Coun 4 sadder = tlan | m “Have you a job for me?” the young | 0!dest pioneers and head of one of the | !¥ here to- at the home of his man asked Mr. Jansen | oldest commission houses in this city, | 3uBhter, Mrs. J. B. Burdell. The de- “Can you speak Spanish?” Jansen|died Sunday afternoon after a short | C°3sed resided at Nos where he had large land holdings. He has been prominently interested in Marin Coun- |ty politics. He leaves two children, Mrs. Burdell and J. B. Sweetzer Jr. of | Novato. Sweetzer was a native of Maine and was 64 vears of age. nes DO Well-Known Traffic Man Dead. Death yesterday morning claimed a widely known and popular railroad man in the person of William J. Mc- Mullin, assistant general passenger and freight agent of the California North- western Railway. Death was due to heart failure and came after a week's fllness. Deceased was 43 years of age and leaves a widow and two young children. He had been connected with the San Francisco and North Pacific nia Northwestern, for many years in | various capacities and was a man greatly admired by his employers and associates in the railroad office. 2 5 O E. R. Campbell Dies. Edwin R. Campbell, aged about 70 veats, died suddenly yesterday in a lodging-house at 641 Washington street. ilton, Ohio. —_— Death of Old Resident. HAYWARDS. March 21.—S§. D.| Warren, an old resident of Alameda County, dled to-day at his home in | Haywards after a long illness. The de- sed was formerly engaged in fruit raising. Warren was a widower and leaves one son, Edward Warren. —_——— Tired of the Insane Ward. Carrie L. O'Brien, who is confined in the hospital for the alleged insane ! | at the City Hall. claims that she is be- | | ing illegally restrained of her liberty. | She yesterday applied for her release |on a writ of habeas corpus. | \ Railway and its successor, the Califor- | He has nieces living in Ham- | STORM RAGES - NEAR REDDING Rain and Wind Severest Known in Shasta County ravel Is Impeded | T HAIL AN INCH THICK | | Animals Are Unable to’; .\ Withstand Downpour andx Roads Are Washed Out‘! Spectal Dispatch to The Call. } ] REDDING, March 21.—Hallstones on | an average of three-quarters of an inch | in diameter and some as large an an fnch fell at Bully HIil, where the De! La Mar smelter Is located, east of Redding, Saturday and Saturday night. | To-day another big storm raged in | that section and Redding received the benefit of it. The storm of Saturday evening was the severest ever felt in the county. The storm came from the south and seemed to break In two about Cottonwood. The heaviest part of it traveled northeastward, taking in the Afterthought, Bella Vista, De La Mar, Bully Hill, the Cow Creek and Stillwater districts and passing north over the Grey Rocks and Baird. At Bully Hill the fury of the storm was intense. The downpour of rain was accompanied by a severe bom- bardment of thunder, vivid lightning and hail. No particular damage was done to the smelter or to any bufld- ings_in the path of the storm, but roads were badly washed out and trave! suspended for a day. The storm was severe that horses could not face it. The rainfall in Redding for | the season is fifty-four inches and still | raining. | BALLARD. March 21.—One-sixteenth | of an inch of rain fell here last night, tollowed by a heavy north wind. Al | though rain is not absolutely necessary, | yet it would be come to farmers and stockmen. i NAPA, March 21.—The rainfall for twenty-four hours preceding 7 o'clock Monday morning amounted to sixty hundredths of an inch. The total for the season to date is twent even inches and fifty-two-hundredths. Mt St Helena and the range thereabouts are covered with a heavy fall of s There was a heavy frost in Napa thi morning and the weather continues | cold { SAN JOSE, March Hamilton range was covered with snow | this morning. There some snow ! on the summit of the Santa Cruz| range, and there was an early frost, too light, however, to be of damage to fruit buds. The rainfall during the past three days has been sixty-one- hundredths of an inch here, and in the foothills about three times as much. S S IRA Rainfall Record. OAKLAND. March 21.—Showers in- creased the seasonal rainfall .41 of an inch up to 1 o'clock this afternoon. a a total of 26.01 inches for the winter, as compared with 20.77 inches to cor- | responding date last year, —_———— SOLDIERS BEAT CHINESE AND WRECK HIS HOUSE Privates of Fifteenth Infantry, Monterey, Wreak Vengeance on a Mongolian. March 21.—From Mon- report that on Friday night some eighteen or twenty pri- vates and non-gommissioned” officers of the Fiftee United States Infan- try, while on leave, visited a house occupied by a Chinese, against whom several of the soldiers had a grudge. oldiers at once drove the inmates and t assaulted the proprie- whom they beat about the head body so badly that serious results are feared. District Attorney Treat and Sheriff Nesbitt went to the scene and after an investigation made ye: terday had some of the assailants ar- rested. —The Mount | at SALINAS, terey comes a en —_——— HUNTER FOUND DEAD AND MURDER IS SUSPECTED Vancouver Man Meets Death by a Bullet Wound and Circumstances Point to Crime. VANCOUVER, B. C, March 21—/ John Spittal, a hunter and trapper. was found dead last night in his cabin on Lulu Island, ten miles from Van-| couver. He had a bullet hole in the back of his head. The door of the| shack was found secured on the out- side with a locked padlock. Spltml’!_ two guns were missing and there was | a strange coat in the room where the ' body was found. No gun was found | inside the house. There is no clew to | the murderer. eSO Mexican Killed by a Train. i BAKERSFIELD, March 21.—The| remains of a Mexican whose name has | not been learned were found on the| Southern Pacific track at Girard in | the Tehachapi Mountains. The man is believed to have been run over some time last night. He was a rider in the | employ of the Kern County Land | Company at the Bear Mountain ranch | near that point. —— e Clearing Sidewalks. | By order of the Board of Public Works a° number of butter boxes, which have been obstructing the side- | walks in the_wholesale district, were | . loaded on drays and carted off to the | corporation yard yesterday. They were | taken from the premises at 325 Front street, 320 Front street, California and Front streets, 305 Front street and 115 California street. A redemption fee of 10 cents each will be charged on the boxes, and as they are worth much | more than this amount the wholesalers are only too willing toredeem them and ’promlse not te offend in the future. —_—ee————— Policemen Catch Burglar, Policemen Lycett and Dave Murphy arrested a young man named John G. Moran in a lodging-house at 459 Geary street last night and placed his name on the detinue book at the Central po- lice station. Moran had entered two rooms with the aid of skeleton keys and from one had stolen a guitar. A number of pawn tickets were found in the prisoner’s possession, and it is be- leved he is responsible for other thefts. { | { which practically prescribe the regu- PRAGERS This Will Be Your Lucky Day at Pragers. There Will Be Something Doing. Don’t. Miss It. firagvrfi ALWAYS RELIABLE )0\0'5} It Costs You Nothing to Find Out That You Can Save Money, time, trouble when planning vour trip to St. Louis or Chicago by using the Union Pacific. We have through trains, fine tourist cars, splen- did scenery. See S. F. BOOTH, General Agent, 1 Montgomery Street, Or any Southern Pacific Agent. INION FORCES REMAIN FIRM CHINESE TREATY T0 BE REVISED I | | | | { Covenant Now Existing Be-|Labor Situation in the tween the Nations Will| Capital of the State Expire Next Da-cemher‘ Is Not Yet Improved | @ WASHINGTON, March 2L—A new | Special' Dispatch to The Ca treaty regulating the admission of ( i RAMENTO, March 21L—Whie | nese into the United States is in preP- | the open shop pri aration. The existing treaty, which | mect by the Citizens' Alliance to-day was made by Secretary Gresham ‘“dfi: made 50 change' il the labor 2 Minister Wu in 1899, will expire DeXt| . . mne. Alliance had annow December by limitation. | work would be resumed to-day and that Because the administration of the; union men SSt cxpest te luber aleas- Chinese exclusion act is now confinedto ? side nom-whion men the Department of Commerce and La- 2 bor, it has been necessary for re- | tary Hay te call upon Secr-mry Cor- telyou to assist in the formation of the new treaty. Secretary Cortelyou will deal with those sections of the treaty iple was put inw The men report- | ed for work this morning. but formed that the open shop prevail they declined to enter their employment. a dozen non-union men were put to work throughout the city. P. H. Scullln has arrived here from San Francisco for the purpose of pr moting-‘a movement for the arbitratioa of the present difficuity between the employers and the unions in the build- ing trades. He will address a pubiiz meeting Wednesday night at which Mayor Hassett will preside. He sa » he has called on Governor Pardee and the latter has told him he would be pleased to act as a mediator in the present difficulty. The situation is practically un- changed and both sides appear de- termined—the Citizens’ Alliance that this shall be an open-shop town and the union men that they shall not under any circumstances work alongside non- union men. —_——————————— upo Not more than hn. lations that shall govern the admission | of Chinese of the higher class and the | exclusion - of coolies. Secretary Hay will take care of the diplomatic sec- tions of the treaty. While much reti- cence is observed at present as to the lines upon which the new comvention is being formed, there is reason to believe that it will be more liberal in treatment of Chinese who desire to en- ter the United States. when they are not actually of the coolie class, than the existing treaty. There also may be made provisions for the entry of Chinese laborers into the Panama canal strip, though this is not certain. An attempt also has been made to avail of this opportunity to make more extensive use of Chinese labor in the Philippines. ———— UKIAH, March 21.—James Scranton died from morphine poisoning this morning. The | struck by & train ar Berestord and fmatantis deceased was troubled with and, it is | killed. The wagon was smashed into kindling sup; took an . He was an East- | wood and the body of Olson was mangled ern man and leaves a family. Nothing is known of his family or antecedents. ORDER FOR THE GREAT TWENTIETH GENTURY GOOK BOOK. Mall This Order to The San Prancisco Call With TSa The San Franacisco Call, San Francisco, Inclosed herewith please fin copy of The Call's Great Cents is d-; paper, aand ers to dze daily and Sun to prepay shipping charg SIGNET a.ccveeesersssmmcssscscsssssnen sassasssvasnssssannn STREET ..... sessssemmasacas - e csem sessssssesenssnanan.