The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 16, 1904, Page 6

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CISCO CALL RDAY JUL & N DESERTS NAVY 10°A1D SISTER Girl, Friendless and Alone, EWS' OF DREAD DISEASE CAUSES ALARN I | | | | | [ Glanders Widespread THE COUNTY OF ALAMEDA 'COURAGEOQUS Risks Her Life in the WOMAN SAVES THREE PERSONS | Braves Fury of Flames and Death From Falling Timbers to Keep Two Babies From Incineration, and Again Rescue of Imprisoned Female Entreats Her Brother to‘: Among the Horses at| . Come to Her Assistance| Niles and Centerville|} —_—— . ———— LEAVES TO EARN MONEY | AUTHORITIES NOTIFIED Warren C. Stowe Is Caught| District Attorney’ Sends| | While Working on Train and Taken Into Custody i amee py Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | 1016 Brosdway, July 15. Because his sister was in dire dis- tress and aione in the world and neede Veterinary G. J. Donnelly Into the Field to Report e | Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1016 Broadway, July 15. Glanders has broken out among the horses at Centerville and Niles, and the his assistance, Warren C. Stowe de-l1504) ang State authorities have a dif- serted from the United States ""‘“5;" ficult problem before them. State Be at Mare Island, three week®| ., . ... .0 Blemmer has not yet ago and this evening was captured and must go back and answer for his of- fense before the naval authorities. mmunicated with. In the mean- feared that the dread disease been ¢ it time My sister is only 17 years old,” he | has become wide spread. Seven horses said, “and wrote to me from Kan have been quarantined and there are City and told me 1 had to help her. I|many others that are showing the same would have d to wait three weeks to | s ptoms. District. Attorney Allen get a leave of ab e, 5o left without | sent Veterinary Surgeon G. J. Donnelly getting it to make a special examination. Don- Young Stowe is just 21 himself, and | nelly has reported that the disease is as soon as he left the cruiser he|undoubtedly the glande: boarded a tra nd in three days was| It is not known j what steps n Kensas City. His parenis are both | should be taken, and dispatches are dead and his sister had had a home | being sent all over the State for the with her ndfather, but h a | purpose of locating the State veterin- week before Stowe reached |ary. He is at present absent from C The rv way found his | S8acramento and cannot be found. Veterinary Donnelly says he has no au- He was afraid to stay there for fear thority in the matter and refuses to do that he would be caught, so as s0on as | anything further than give his opinion. he had a taik with her he told her that | One Lewis, as soon as it was pointed he would go to work and earn enough|out to him that his horse had the to support her and the mnext nders, killed the animal for fear ing took a train back that hie family might become infected. sk | Other he owners refuse to destroy e arrived here on the 3d of July and | their animals. Seven of the worst cases, an application for work at the | however, have been held for inspection rn Pacific es and the next|for the State veterinary when he ar- day was given a position as gateman on { rives. Both Niles and Centerville have the Seventh-street local train in Oak- | cases and it is not known how far the land. Each week, as he drew his|malady has spread. Owners named money, he sent some of it back to hie | Oliveira and Dazzell have horses which sister, but his remittances must now fected and bglieve they can trace £top | k to an old sorrel horse given A detective saw Stowe this | ra by “White Hat” McCarthy. evening talking with a young fellow animal is now in an advanced v jeserted from the navy and | ge of the disease and two horses } > concluded that Stowe was | with which it has been working have 2 & and took h custody | both become infected. As soon as and m in t Ce | Blemmer arrives the infected district attired in his n h begt he ished 1 lightly bore e the vang will undergo a therough examination. —————— FIND NO TRACE OF BOLD HIGHWAYMAN POLICE Robbers Who Held Up Saloon Captured Policeman Still at Large. and > QAKLAND, July 15.—Chief of Po- lice Hodgkine and his men are still | looking - for the bold highwaymen PROFESSOR VIOLATES A TOWN LAW mes of Department of (= Acquainted | who held up the saloon of Henry Wie- king at Eighth Washington | streets Thurs: and ay made a prisoner of State Policeman Cochran and obliged him to accom- s es to Shell the point of revolv- par | Mound station at | ers. The men are not known in the city uly 1 *":- and the police are positive that they IR D o made their escape on a freight train 1 . of Cali soon after the crime and are now far | & not hold a speaking acquair ° | away. laws of the 1 1 Inquiry along the line of the rail- the professor are strang- | ;59 has failed in results and the fol- lemo; 4 this morning. | 1554y gescriptions of the ‘men were s for -viciating ed in a circular by Chief Hodg- e o | KiNS to-day name of the gentleman of | vosi 6 feet: welpnt, troms 190 e e LoEht nd eross-comnlaints, was appre- dark complexion, smooth shavea, X . minton of the Jaw RaIs h; d'»lti:rz'hI;A ;4)'( hat, round v m P t, a mere deputy mar- 22 to 24 years; helght, 5 professor i€ E t biack shirt; dark brown —_———— Vilsd an - ina MAN WHO CHOKED HIS there is a penalty attached to its vio- DAUGHTER ON TRIAL of ail of which Professor Jones | — 5. « rant | Girl Says Father Hurt Her Until She lling to be enlightened, however Could Not Swallow Without or Jones submitted to Pain. without ‘resisting, the, officer 2 OAKLAND, July 15.—The examin- " Z"”l""i ):fnn- fixunf‘ of the ation of A. R. Eme; who is charged | Samu To the Justice the pr with having made an insane attack sor plead his ig; e as his ex-{yupon his daughter, Miss O. Smery « ahd on this showing the Justice | 3ng nearly choked her to death, was kindly accepted his plea of guilty and | pegup this afternoon before Judge F. then suspended sentence | B. Ogden and will be continued to- BT > BT | morrow. The girl testified that her Teamster ield for Trial. neck was so badly hurt after she had « KLAND, July 15.—Christopher | made hen escape from him that she | Murphy, a San Francisco teamster, | was unable to swallow without great was held to answer before the Su-|pain. perior Court by Justice James G imery has engaged two attorneys, Quinn to-day on a charge of assault|who are making a fight to keep him deadly ’ Bonds were | out of the asylum. The charges made 00. 3 Murphy is sccused of having attacked State Railroad Poli by the wife are to the effect that at times he is insane and is dangerous to man J. R. Lewis at Ogkiand pier on |be at large. the night of July 4. Murphy was in| The courtroom was full of wit- a crowd of forty men, who were re- | nesses who have seen Emery differ- turning to n Francisco from a pic- |ent times when he was believed to be nic. It is claimed that Lewis was as- | insane. saulted because he had been a guard luring the teamsters’ strike in San ancisco. F. W. Neave, James A Butler and Frank Ryan, Southern Pa cific Company employes, corroborat ed Lewis’ story of the attack. They said Murphy had used a club. —_—— Inguest in Burrows Case. ———— Prince Tires of Jail Life. OAKLAND, July 15. — When brought into court this morning Ran- !late Maharajah of Lahore, who is said to have presented the Kohinoor diamond to Queen Victoria, wanted to night and who later | ma Sengh, the self-styled son of the ' (plead guilty to a charge of petty lar-| ALAMEDA, July 15.—Fred §. Cone, | ceny, pay a fine and escape from jail. Justice of the Peace, acting for Cor- | The case Was continued for one week. oner H. B. Mehrmann, will hold an in- ; The Prince is tired of confinement and quest next Wednesday morning at 10 | fears that the law’s delays will keep o'clock in the case of William J. Bur- i him in duress for an indefinite period. rows, who ended his life with a pis- | He received a telephone message to- tol yesterday on the spot where his|day from a woman, ‘'wWho refused to wife dropped dead from apoplexy four | €1Ve her name, but said she knew his months ago. Burrows’ funeral will be | mother in Cairo, Egypt, and that she held to-morrow afternoon at 1 o'clock | Would call on him. from a local undertaking parlor. The body will be laid to rest beside the remains of Mrs. Burrows in Ever- green Cemetery. et 4TS SR C Sl Sent to State H tal. i OAKLAND, July 15. rtha Trim- ble, daughter of Major N. G. Trimble of Berkeley, was adjudged insane this Marriage Licenses, afternoon and was committed to the OAKLAND, July 15.—The follow- | State hospital at Stockton. She is 32 ing marriage licenses were issued by | vears of age. Her condition is due to the County Clerk to-day: Joseph Can- | epilepsy. ciamilla, 22, and Selma Lo+Hanson, 19, T o e both of Berkeley; Lloyd C. Hawley, Will Fix Election Date. 22, Sacramento, and Daisy Agar, 19 OAKLAND, July 15.—The special Berkeley; Manuel Fernandez, 24, and | bond committee of the City Council Marie Pereira, 18, both of Oakland; | will meet on Monday night to fix the Antonio ONviera Jr., 27, and Mary [date for the general improvements Rezendes, 19, both of Centerville, bond election. 11 — b SKELETONS ARE { | Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1016 Broadway, July 15 The mystery surrounding the discov- ery of two #human skeletons beneath Henry Crocker’s saloon at Mount Eden was cleared up this when Dr. Alfred Kroeb: instructor department of anthropology at University of California, who had sub. jected the bones to a searching exam- ination, testified that the skeletons were undoubtedly those of California Digger Indians. Dr. Kroeber was called as an expert at the Coroner's inquest held at Hay- wards by Justice of the Peace Charles Prowse, who acted for Coroner Mehr- mann. He said that ffom the condition of the bones and the character of the soil in which they were found he judged the skeletons had been buried at least 150 years. The principal witness besides Dr. Kroeber and hi sistant, Professor Joseph Peterson, was William Gall, the assistant postmaster at Mount Eden, who was the discoverer of the skele- tons. all testified that he had un- carthed the bones while digging a cel- lar under the saloon. After the dis- covery of the bones he had notified Dr. Kroeber, who sent Professor Peterson to Mount Eden to investigate the find. After hearing the testimony the Coroner's jury returned the following verdict: We, the jury in_ question in ea afternoon, were unearthed at Mount Eden, coufity of Alameda, during the months of May and June, 1904, between five and scven feel underground, and that the persons of whom sald bones are the remains were ! Indians, who must have died at a time beyond he memory of man, as sald bones have been | burled at least one hundred and fifty years. APPENDICITIS “HEX HEITMULLER | SRR, Athlege of the University of California Stricken With Discase and May Not Play. BERKELEY, July 16. — “Heine" Heitmuller, captain of the varsity | baseball’ team at the University of California and right tackle on the varsity eleven, is threatened with ap- pendicitis and there is a possibility that he may not figure in athletics at all this year, though the doctors say that he will come through all right. With Heitmuller out of the run- ning California would be materially weakened and the students are hoping that his illness is not serious. Heitmuller was attacked by the dis- ease while on his vacation in Jack- sonville, Or. Physicians advised his being taken to Medford and there he lay abed in a hospital for three weeks taken back to his home in San Fran- cisco. Heitmuller is still weak, but out of danger. It is probable that ation will be performed. ——— Boys Charged With Burglary. OAKLAND, July 15.—Willie Jacobs, Willie Davis and George Mait, three lads who were arrested here several nights ago with a quantity of stolen whisky, an alarm clock and a box of handkerchiefs in their possession, were to-day sent to Martinez on charges of burglary. The lads, it is alleged, stole the property from a boxcar at that place. | Remains Found at Mount | { Eden Arve Those of Cali-| | fornia Digger Indians| S in the | the | do find that the human bones | until he recovered sufficiently to be | when he recovers his strength an oper- ' WOMAN WHO PLAYED F F 1 { | | | 1 | | i P BERKELEY, Jlly 15.—A fire that broke out and destroyed a couple of uses on Ashby avenue at an early hour this morning developed three | heroines, all equally brave and self- | sacrificing. To the Misses Louise and finnie Chambers and Miss Mary Judge, the trio that played the role of fearless young women, do the families residing in the burned homes owe their lives. Just at the critical moment they arrived on the scene and with a cour- age born of desperation saved the in- mates from awful death. The fire was discovered in the resi- dence of Mrs. Katherine Gilligan at Ashby avenue at 4 o'clock this morning by the Misses Chambers, who live in the neighborhood. They rushed to the scene and warned Mrs. Gilligan and Miss Judge, her sister, and then hurried next door tc the home of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Mason, which was in danger of destruction on account of its proximity to the burning house. By the time all this was performed the Gilligan house was a mass of flames, with absolutely no chance of saving any of the furnishings. It was &ll that Mrs. Gilligan and Miss Judge could do to save the five Gilligan chil- dren, in the rescue of whom Miss Judge exhibited so much heroism. The three eldest children were taken to safety easily enough, but in the hurry the two babes were almost forgotten. When it was almost toc late Miss Judge hur- ried back into the burning bullding and grabbing the children from their cribs, rushed into the street, just in time to escape a crash of falling tim- bers. In the meantime, the Masons, who hall responded to the warning of the Chambers sisters, had hurriedly dressed and prepared to remove some of their things from the house. With | | | | | | | | | and their neighbors the Masons saved most of their furniture, but in so doing Mrs. Mason nearly lost her life, for in some unaccountable way she got caught in a closet from which she could not escape without assistance. It seems | that a catch on the cutside was sprung s0 that the door was locked, thus defy- ing the frantic efforts of the imprison- ed woman to open it. It was while Mrs. Mason was in this dilemma that Miss Louise Chambers again proved herself a heroine. Above the roar of the flames that were fast deveuring the house Miss Chambers heard the despairing screams of Mrs. Mason, and without a thought of the danger to herself hurried to the rescue. She leaped fearlessly through a bank of flames toward the closet and a mo- ment later sprung the latch back and freed Mrs. Mason, who was now so weak that she had to be half dragged and half carried to the street, where she was revived. Mrs. Mason said aft- erward that it was only Miss Cham- bers’ heroism that saved her life. The fire left both families homeless and it was necessary for neighbors to supply them with food and clothing. The loss is about $5000, with little in- surance. The Mascns had only occu- pied their house three weeks. BAN JOSE, Ju)y/{5.~llmel Kelly, a negro, was shot through the arm by Ludivico Baro- rera this afternoon during a drunken quarrel The wound Is not serfous. the assistance f the Misses Chlmberl' AUDITOR GIVE NEW ESTIMATES Increase of $£120,000 Over s Expenses Is Departments Last Yesr Asked by NEW OFFICERS WANTED Various Branches of City Government Demand More Money to Conduct Affairs ke Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1016 Broadway, July 15. The City Auditor to-day received all estimates of exnenses with which to conduct the various branches of the 'city government during the present fiscal vear. The increased appropria- tions asked for over those of last year amount to nearly $120,000. Just how much of this additional amount will be allowed not known, but it is expected that over one-half of the amount will be awarded, the money asked for being for necessary purposes. Superintendent for $250,020, which is an about $77.000. Much new is contemplated, and the cost of sprink- ling new highwavs will be Money is also asked for grading, pav- ing and sewer work, and the City is increase of street work work done. The Police Department wants $113,684 and fifteen additional patroimen. The increase asked is $30,- 563. The rapid strides taken in the growth of the city and the necessity for more vrotection to life and property is responsible for the request. The improvements in the Fire De- partment will call for more money and $148,368 80 is asked for. Education asks for $9000 more than it did last year. Its total amount 5 of Health asks $1590 more than year, the City Council a total of ,000, and the City Wharfinger §9023 & There is but littie increaze asked in the estimates of the Auditor, Treasurer, City Clerk and P lice Courts, ATt SRS PN MANY SPORTS FOR ADMISSION DAY The Board last 0, PLAN Native Sons Progra Preparing Interesting ne of Contesis on Land and Water, OAKLAND, July 15.—The A County committee of the Native Sons of the Golden West for the celebration of Admission day adopted a report to- night from the sub-committee on ath- letics. It calle for a regaita on Lake Merritt on September 9 and bicycle races on the lake boulevard. The aquatic programme will con- sist of three barge races, outri will be under direction of the Pacific Amateur Athletic Asso The Alameda Boat Club will arrange the aquatic sports. All boating clubs in California will be invited to take part. The commitiee has extended a gen- eral invitation to every parlor of Na- tive Sons and tive Daughters in the State to participate in the celebration. The following have been added to the | Bigeley, George Parker and W. Tur- ner. ————— HUNTERS ARE AFTER A MARAUDING BEAST Schmidtville Ranchers Want to Slay Mountain Lion Which Kills Their Stock BERKELEY, July 15. lion is roaming the A mountain hills back of Berkeley on the San Pablo road. and a posse of farmers, loaded with rifles and other things just as deadly, are on his trail. To those who have seen enormous, though seasoned lion-hunt- ers say that the largest of them never measures more than eight feet from tip to tip. The farmers of Schmidtville after the lion because the lion has been after their calves and sheep. They thought at first that the. coyotes were getting bold and committing the deeds, but the peculiar methods of the destroyer have forced them to chahge their minds. It seems that the beast does not eat the flesh of his victims at all, merely their blood, which he sucks out of a wound in the throat. —_——— Japancse Enters a House. OAKLAND, July 15.—T. Takitu, a |Japnncse who was captured while forcing an entrance to the residence of | Thomas Prather, 1264 Harrison street, will plead to-morrow to a charge of disturbing the peace. It was shown that Takitu did not enter the place for the purpose of robbery, but was seek- ing a woman of his own country who is employed on the premises. are of Streets Ott asks| increased. | Council is favorable to having all the | The Board of | ¢ ameda | skiff races and four shell races. There will be six bicyc!" races. The prizes | will be handsome .rophies. The r Alameda County committee: x-T Welch, George Stutt, V. Wehe, A. D. | Wilson, F. D. Fagan, Dr. W. J. Smythe, Frank McAllister, Frank Schmidtville, a hamlet just north of | the brute his dimensions seem to be | BOARD ISSLES STERY EDICT No Merey Will Be Shown to Policemen and Firemen Who Become Intoxicated DISMISSAL THE PENALTY Commissioners Take a Firm Stand and Will Accept No Excuses From Guilty AP Oakland Ofiice San Francisco Call, 1016 Broadway, July 15. An edict has gone forth that means much to those who tamper with the flowing bowl while performing service in OaRland as firemen or policemen. The Board of Police and Fire Commis- sioners issued a stern warning at a meeting this afternoon, and from this date every member cf either depart- ment found intoxicated will be sum- marily dismissed and no excuses for their conduct will be accepted. The positive stand taken by the board is the resait of the recent case of Thomas Merrick, a policeman. Merrick | lost his star on the ground that he was unfit to perform duty owing to his in- | toxicated condition, but later came for- | ward with a defense that paregoric and | not whisky was responsible for his trouble. Two the members of the police hoard were in favor of reinstat- | ing him, and this was done at a re- | cent meeting. The case created a great | deal of @ sicn. The board resolved | | to emphasize its position on matters of intoxicaticn. ‘The resolution that will bring ill to offenders in this regard is as follows: b 1 departments are promptly all cases of intoxication their departme N hereby giv in e ¥ mplcye becomes intoxicated while on duty he will be sum- marily kind and no excuse of any Oakland; $10. Harriet N same map, i REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS. Alameda County. FRIDAY, JULY 15. James Elliott to Sarah M. E arvided 1 toll l:-! Tenth en ¥ ster, being i nd; also ’ and Brush streets | 2 and deed and ag Land Company (Heron-He Marfe J. and Lilla Toucha Seventh street, 62:6 W of 5 by N 100, Oakland; $10. re Mabel Hambieton t P. Flint. lot line of West street, | Thirty-first, by E 100, | block” 2304." Rowland Tract Louis Feldman (sicgle) to ther), all interest in lot o ih and Kirkham streets, Oakland; gift Kuhn (s.ngle) t pe A lot on SE ¢ East Eighth street k 3, Clinton, . and Fanny V meda Building and Loan line of Court street, 37 N 37:6 by W 100, & on _or Arthur D. Harrison_ (sister) nnd Dreed, feet of ot wood Tract, William H. Waterh W 2215 feet of lot amended map subdivi Oakland; $10. die M. n (single) to Anne E. Can | nan (single). undivided % interest in lot | N line of Seventh street, 100 W of Grc W 25 by N 100, portion block Kellersb ger's map, Oakland; $10. Edward P. Flint (single) to Bernadena L. Khegel (wife of J. F.), lot cn S line of Thirt} first street, 132:6 E of West, E 32:6 by § 140, porticn lot 16, block 2034, Rowland Tract Oakland; $10. Eli and Laura A. bury, Henderson to C. J. Wood lot on W line of Chestnut street Thirty-second, N 64 w utees under estate of Harvey Caroline Quinters (wife of Jerome) in lot on N line of Cameron street, 180 E of Winter, E 10 by N 80, portion lot 11, eron Tract, Brooklyn, to description ‘in 396 D. F. Taylor (widow) to Rob: block A, amended map the Tract, Berkeley: $10. — e — Cement Workers Elect Officers. OAKLAND, July 15.—The local Cement Workers' Union elected the following officers last night: President, E. L. George; vice president, Bennett; recording seeretar: E. W. Lewis; financial secretary, L. Madsen delegates to Building Trades Council— Messrs. Smith, Bartell and Branch- port. —_—————— Barnett Pleads Not Guilty. OAKLAND, July 1 E. Barnett, a capitalist, charged with having chop- ped down a tree planted by the city in front of his residence at 407 Tele- graph avenue without a permit from | " | barrow, which he is wheeling around » | ranged |in China and sent home =1y |1y block | Bullock) to | all interest | Peter | Big Lumber Mills Burned. the Board of Public Works, pleaded TRONWOOD, Mich., July 15.—The |not guilty to-day and his case was set Kimball & Clark mill, a large stock of ! for trial on Julv 28. Jumber and nearly every building in —— e | Kimberly were destroyed by fire to- | PENNSYLVANIA PASTOR day. Loss, $250,000. b WILL GO TO PASADENA 5 o . i = Rev. John E. Wishart Accepts a Call | THE CALL'S to the United Presbyteria i WANT AD PREMIUMS, - Church. PITTSBURG, July 15.—Rev. John E. Wishart, pastor of the Ingram United Presbyterian Church for ten years, ac- cepted a®call to-day to the United Presbyterian Church at Pasadena, Cai., and he will leave for his new pastorate: in September or the 1st of October. Like Its Circulation, ARE HIGH CLASS. A WALKER'S SELF-PULLING CORKSCREW FREE TO-DAY To Every Person Bringing a The Pasadena church is the one which ‘Want Ad for Rev. E. S. MeKitrick, former pastor of Tnited Presbyterian Church, SUNDAY TIDITION. Aha hird. Ui ¥ g Allegheny, served from 1895 to 1902 e P R See announcement, classified DIES ON OPERATING TABLE.—P. Swan- page. son. 1ving In a lodging-house at 520 Sacra- | mento street, died yesterday on the operating table at the' Emergency Hospital. He leaves i “* $300 in the bank and had $S0 in his pocket, - | eaengancrags BRANCH OFFICES OF THE CALL IN ALAMEDA COUNTY OAKLAND. 1016 Broadway. Telephone Main 1083. BERKELEY. 2148 Center Street. Telephone North 77. ALAMEDA. 1435 Park Street. Telephone Alameda 539. FIRE DESTROYS - FREIGHT CARS Flames Break Out Among Southern Pacific Roll- ing Stock in Berkeley e EMPLOYES WORK HARD | | | | | | | | | 1 I They Summon the Engines and Fight With Bucket Brigade for Many Hours Berkeley Office San Francisgo Call, 2148 Center Street, July Fire broke out among 200 freight cars on a siding in West Berkeley last night ten of them the , and destroyed before flames had their fill, causing a loss to | the Southern Pacific Company of $1000, | at least. That the whole lot was not | destroyed and the plant of the West | Berkeley Furniture Factory, with its '3 000 worth of buildings and steck is due larg to the aetiv of the employes of railroad, fought against great odds and with little help them. The fire is supposed to have | d by tramps. | The fire was discovered at 2 o' Robert Jones, the operator at ¢ who organized a fi | summoned help by w from all ‘tions. Jones and Albert | Coons, a watchman the railroad tried to quench the flames with buckets of water, but could do nothing on ac ount of the high wind blowing. It !was a half hour before engines re- sponded to the alarm from West Oak- land and by that time ten of the cars were burning cely and threatemims to communicate their flames to the oth- er cars and the furniture factory. All that saved the factory was that th | wind was biowing the flames away from it When the wrecking train erew a rived the burning cars were uncoupled { from the oth which prevented a spread of the mes. It was too lat | then to save the burning ones and this morning they timbers ve £ ¢ a mass harred SRR SIS WHEELING A BARROW AROUND THE WORLD Millionaire’s Som Makes » Complete the Tour in Years. July lionaire a Wager Nine OMAHA, Neb., son of a js in Omaha 15. B. V. Evar « land, with his wh mi « to-da the world. The novel trip was to settle a wager and Evan | was allowed nine years to complete th | trip. He finished a tour of the | countries and last fall was taken when he given a new ar- sn covered he was to complete his journey his way Salt Lak | cisco, New Orleans, Savar | York City. from which itinerary and is now ¢ San Fran- mah and Ne v piace he return to Cleveland. He now has nea three years to complete the hike | His barrow weighs twenty-five poun | and eontains nothing but a few person- al belongings, weighing forty-five pounds —— DULUTH'S HARBOR FRONT SUFFERS BY A BIG FIRE Freight Sheds, Cars and and One Man Loses His | Boardman's ‘map, Oakiand: $10. | L. W. Macomber to R. Damon (widow) | re-record @6 D. 373, lot begm. of E line of Winter street at interse th N line of Camerun, on subdivision 11 Tract, thence along N line of Cameron, £ | Life 40, right angle 80, thence parallel with Cam - eron 40, S to beginning, portion of subdivision LU FET S e of block 11, Cameron Tract, East Oakland. $10, | DULUTH, Minn., July A Tory Margaret M. and Ella L. Bullock (distrib- | freight shed and its contents Y freight cars and three tugs were bur ed in the harbor to-day, causing a | | of George Smith, a one the tugs, was drowned tempting to escape the flames. eral workmen were scorched wh caping from-the depot, which be to the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapol's and Omaha Railway ——————— SANTA ROSA. July 15.—A light rain | nere last night. The precipitation was something less than half an inch. No dam: was done. ADVERTISEMENTS. Are You interested in the Condition of Your TEETH? Do you want them to look well and To be free from pain? To if they have work well? be out of your mouth passed beyond usefulness? To be filled | ¥ith a permanent composition if de- | cayed? Do you want to have the neces- | sarz DENTAL WORK Done =2t moderate cost? If you do, come to Post-Graduate Dental College, 3 TAYLOR ST. SAN FRANCISCO. 973 Washington St.. Oakland. San Jose. - - - Sacramento.

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