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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JTULY 22, 1004. PORTLAND MINE ENORNOUS CO GAIN CLOSED| OF TRE STRIKE Miners Refuse to Surrender Working Cards and the Operations Are Suspended MEN ARE TO BE TRIED If They Refuse to Yield to Demand of the Military They Will Be Deported July 21.—The Port- closed in conse- of the military au- e was giving em- 500 men fers Soldt about 40 of these, ingJud- chanical force at the This comprised aster mechan- other depart- afts firemen, ed men removed used of no accusation being that sacrifice their member- Federation of < t Mine Owners’ As- king cards. ed by the military tri- to take out probably be DEMURRER OVERRULED. Victor Fuel Company Scores a Point Against Mine Workers. 21.—Judge LOCKOUT AREA INCREASED. New York Builders Strive to Keep Strikers From Getting Work. THIRTY THOUSAND TO STRIKE. Fall River Cotton Mill Employes Seem Determined to Walk Out. HIBERNIANS ENJOY IRISH DAY AT FAIR g G ange es and Exercises Are the Sons of Arr o Erin. lelegates f the An- OUND ON LITTLE WESTERN CHINA" HEMISPHERE iscan ¥ Receives a tablishi in Mexico. Conces- a Colony ADVERTISEMENTS, Speakins of Quality! Just Op=n a Bottle of Blatz Malt -Vivine (Non-Intox.) Tonic. TAL. BLATZ BREW. (0. MILWAUKEE tion, Fishing and Outing Goods. Tents and guns to Rent. CATALOG FREE. EHREVE & BARBER CO., ot st CAMP 736 Market st., 521 Xearny st, 8. ¥. W. T. HESS, Motary Public and Attorney-at-Law. Tenih Ficer, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels bldg. Restdenos 802 McAllister - Residence Telephine Page n:; | Outfits Guns, Ammuni- | Figures Reveal the Losses Due to the Walkout of Packing-House Employes REACH INTO MILLIONS | | Chicago Union Men Alone| Are Out $400,000 in Wagesi as Result of Their Idleness | e S { Spectal Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, July 21.—Now that the| great strike of the packing-house em- | ployes has been settled, figures showing | the cost of the walkout to Chicago and the eight other cities involved are of interest. The following table gives a resume of the effects of the strike order: N CHICAGO. T [CRUISER SOUTH DAKOTA WEDS THE SEA TAQUT REBELS LOSE LEADER | Mexican Bandit, Who Plan- ned Many of Their Crimes, Is Finally Run to Earth CAUGHT BY A RANGER PAYS FORTUNE FOR TERMINAL Illinois Tunnel Company Secures Property in Chi- cago at Cost of $2,500,000 WITH EVERY OMEN OF FUTURE SUCCESS Sister Fighting Machine to the California Glides Down the Ways in Majesty and Strength and Is Christened by the Daughter of Governor of State From Which She Takes Her Name | | |BIG PLANS PROJECTED S - A e T N T T . A O T f o™ A KW AN R S ST B oS o o B o 4 LA Lo o L B WLETIE SIS T - VLIPS Outlaw Shows Fight When |Significance of the New Cornered, but Is Quickly; Scheme is the Ending of Disarmed by His Captor| the Traffic Congestion { | Spectal Dispatch to The Call DOUGLAS, Ariz, July 21.—Thomas Hilborn, sergeant of the Rangers, ar-| rived to-day at Tigre, on the Nacozari | Railroad, with Ramon Casteo, a Mex-| ican bandit and instigator of the Yaqul | rebellions. The renegade. badly w-.m-i ed by the rurales, gave them the slip CHICAGO, July 21.—A site for a gen- eral terminal of the Illinois Tunnel Company’s system of underground elec- tric rallroads has been secured by the company at a cost of $2,500,000 through the purchase of the property om the west bank of the Chicago River norta of Taylor street, now occupled by the Albert Dickinson Company’s seed ware- e e el b e e 4 B T — in the Box Canyon country of Northern | Sonora, where they rounded up a dozen other outlaws. Hilborn, who, with Brooks, has on many recent occasions assisted the rurales, heard that Casteo had visited a ranch of Southern Tigre | and set out to capture him. He came upon the outlaw in the Box Canyon. from which there was no escape ex- cept by a steep trail at the head. | Casteo showed fight and opened fire |upon the ranger. Hilborn finally e 50,000 | | got the drop on Casteo, whom he dis- srike had armed, placed on a horse and drove A . in front of him to Tigre station. Casteo |is thought to be a confederate of the ! | Maxwell murderers. He will be turned iover to Colonel Kosterlinzky of the | rurales. | —_—————————— 345,000 | WANT REPAIRS E IN 4 CAN SHOPS TROUBLE AT ST. JOSEPH. Strikers Fretting Because Non-Union Men Are Being Discharged Slowly. J SEPH, Mo., July 21.—A riot turned in from the stockyards o’clock to-night and every avail- able policeman is on duty, endeavor- ing to control frenzied members of the labor unions which went on strike sev- ago. The packers are not ng the non-union men fast to suit the strikers. To-night days o the packers are en- o hold all non-union men, of the union men cannot work if the packers are to carry out their plans. wherever a non-union plants is fo he is The union men, by to get rid of all expect help. . MEN GO BACK TO WORK. Kansas City Plants Will Be Operated to Their Full Capacity. Unions Say St. Louis Is Unsafe and Crew Will Be Imperiled by Go- ing to Ireland. NEW YORK, July 21.—A commit- | tee, representing the Central Feder- | ated Union of New York City and vi- cinity, the International Association of Machinists and the Marine Trades | Council, to-day filed with the Federal | Commission on Steamship Inspection a protest against the stéamship St. Louis of the American Line being taken over to Ireland for repairs. The protest states that the St. Louis is in an un- | seaworthy and unsafe condition; that | she has only one engine in working | order and that in case that engine be- came disabled the lives of her crew would be endangered. The protest adds that the only reason apparent for not having the repairs made in the port of New York is that it may be done at smaller expense in Great Brit- ain. —— WILL EXCLUDE POACHERS FROM KOMMANDER ISLANDS Accepts America's JProposal and Revenue Cutter Will Be De- Russia COND AFTER | | A SE tailed for Duty. s e i 2 - CK TBE i 4 CITY, July 2.—Many of| | e { WASHINGTON, July 21.—The Rus- packinz-house employes | !sian Government has accepted the uplayed v, and others! | | | proposal of the United States to ex- =) u-b: za;\:;!m‘vaa' k \‘dn'h‘;mm‘:‘; ;ta:‘.;;l; % £ —— | clude American poachers from the whre- 2 o-morbow with | PHOTOGRAPH OF NEWEST FIGHTING CRAFT OF THE UNITED STATES. TAKEN AS WORKMEN WERE UNBLOCKING walers artund > the” KANaieNor $ eme e | HER FOR HER DIP INTO THE DEEP AND ONE SECURED AS SHE RODE THE SWELL CAUSED BY HER OWN IM- Islands. A United States revenue cut- ement of men, when great | PETUS IN STRIKING THE WATER. ter will be detailed for patrol duty. be made to catch up with B +! B | TO YOSEMITE VALLEY. O P - Once again the Pacific Ocean has re- | tered words, “T christen thee South Da- | turned over to the Navy Department 1 INJUNCTION _\\N()\!.\(- ‘ ceived in its embrace a modern ship of | kota.” pending the manning of the cruiser|geang Personally Conducted Excur- TO RAILWAY MAGNATES war. The South Dakota, sister cr Cheer after cheer followed the fight- | some two years hence. sion 2 to the California, m ally treaded ing craft to the water, and these were | Henry T. Scott, head of the Union . ific Cz v 5 5 : | > Leaves Saturday. July 23; $28 50 round- Northern Pacific Cannot Now Hold an | the- ways vesterday and floating well | continued long after she had found her | Jron Works, said that the launching | ¢rip. In one way and out another, around Annual Meeting of Its away across the plagh of spume which moorings. This ended the ceremony.| was as successful in every way as any | the famous “double loop.” Passes direct- Stock:holders. her adv t I occasioned There were no speeches and no audible ' that has ever taken place from the|ly through two groves of giant sequolas. EW YORK, Ju —The annual ckholders of the 1ed a statement in and children. et the best of everything on A rare chance to visit the Special_care for women You_will the Santa Fe. vards. He entertained Governor Her-| ried and party at an elaborate luncheon prayers, but the prayers of the nation will follow her futur hank, with her y as to make- her landed keel buried s« c urse. Pacific Railway, which has re fro dorn wollt inck: 2 NS ir(\;'il_fif!. S"_‘_"fl,i“dh“‘“[”l"r‘(l ‘{‘f‘f'?‘.ffipl&e‘,nfi;mfia"m Hotel previous t0| ¢ 0us valley. Inquire at 641 Market mel Toows hiee o~ wrdas i s .q cum and were landed at the Mission R street, Santa Fe office. - urn L P as the armorers have equipped gireet wharf. Here tomobiles met| Among the invited guests present| ————— T 903, was to-day ad- o open the purple testament of | the visiting gubernatorial party and | were Captain Long, who will command ese Bea definitely In explanation eding war % whisked its members to their hotel. The | the Oh who represented the navy; - B‘d.l’ ez h: R vice president of nosing mass of steel, grace- | visitors will leave for Portland this | United States District Attorney Wood-| SACRAMENTO, July 21.—At an uilt as a early hour this morning two burglars Lieutenant | houses and owned by the Chicago Dock Company. The tunnel company will proceed immediately to remodel the property, and promises to have its lines in use by November for general trans- portation under the streets of much traffic now carried on the surface. On all sides of the purchased tract, which measures 404 feet north and south and 700 feet east and west, are the ter minals of trunk lines. The property has connection with all the railroads and is adjacent to the tunnel company’s large condult under Taylor street, which con- nects the tunnels under the business district of the South Side with the West Side tunnels. “On the terminal site,” sgid Albert G. ‘Wheeler, president of the Ilitnois Tu | nel Company, “we shall have a general distributing system for the transporta- tion of freight between stores and war houses and the steam railroads. W also will have our own power plant. W\ - - shall spend $1,500,000 immediately and improve the property gradually. A fea- ture of the terminal will be a storage warehouse, whers goods can be kept until they are wanted. There are now thirty-two miles of tunnels under the streets of Chicago.” The most important significance this practical completion of the tu: nel company’s equipment will be the probable ending of street congestion in the downtown district by heavy team- ing. The tunnel extends under nearly all the important streets of the loop district, and connections will be made with all the large wholesale and retail houses and business blocks. It is the intention of the company to haul all kinds of freight and material to and from these big establishments, to carry goods from the stores to ou lying distributing centers and to trans- port all kinds of refuse which collec in the lar | TWENTY-EIGHTH INFANTRY GOES TO FORT SNELLING Two Companies of the Twenty- First Ordered From Fort Keogh to the Presidio. MILES CITY, Mont., July 21.—The two comvanies of the Twenty-first In- fantry at Fort Keogh have been or- dered to the Presidio at San Francisco and will start on September 3. The Twenty-eighth Infantry. which they will relieve, will go to Fort Sneiling. There is a report current at Keogh that as soon as the two new cavairy | stables are completed two additional it.roope will be stationed there. ! pudimies et | CREW OF CREEDMORE ARRIVES IN SAFETY | Captain Kennedy and His Men of the [} Burned Oil Ship Have Narrow | Escape. | WOODSHOLL. Mass., July 21— Captain Kennedy of the British ship | Creedmore and crew were landed here | to-day, having escaped from their ves- { sel, which was burned off Fire Island yesterday. The Creedmore was oil | laden and bound for Liverpool. She . pleasure yacht but cor’- ' morning, thence proceed directly home. | worth and wife, Captain of Detectiyes was owned at Yarmouth, N. S. he continuation of the her light A terrible ' Governor Herrie that when the Martin and many foreign Consuls and | troke into a Japanese lodging-house| The crew of the Creedmore num- ted on the application ed of a W by Congress | prominent business and professional|at Seventh and H streets and when | bered eighteen men besides the cap- and Pierce, trustees, 0 of a bear, ling of the South Dakota | men of this and surrounding cities. [ they were discovered severely beat|tain. The men lost everything. They the distribution ‘of vard the water the Legisiature of his State, at his sug- | Captain Spillane had charge of the po-|two of the roomers, J. Kubo and Y.|left the ship in her own boats and Northern Securi- d in exquisite tast gestion, voted $5000 for a silver service, |lice arrangements and conducted affairs | Unoda. The latter had bis skull frac- | were picked up soon afterward by a it impossible to champagne. which has been manufactured and,in his usual faultless manner. tured. The burglars escaped. ! passing schooner. s of the charter .d, daughter of » Pacific Company, the ern. y Dakota, who = he transaction of any had bheen he with the duty of| ADVERTISEMENTS. ckholders” meetings un- christening the r i e y of the outstanding| The visit rnatorial party ar- 1d voting. | rived earl Iron Works T on the T vort tug Slo- TWO STANFORD STUDENTS cum. e Governor Herried, his wif ghter; Frank REVEAL SECRET MARRIAGE Surprise for the Parents of Miss Florence Ross and Wheeler North. 21.—There was on in local so- announcement circles w made that Miss Florence Ross, ughter of Mr. and Mrs. James P. 0ss, who for two vears has been a pil in the Leland ford Jr. Uni- was secretl; ried on April to Wheel ‘orth, son of a capitalist of Los North, Angeles. Neither Miss Ross’ parents nor the parents of the bridegroom learned of the wedding until to-day. The young uple met while attending the uni- together and resolved after their marriage to keep it secret until both graduated. The ceremony took place at the university. PR A R METCALF IS WORKING HARD IN TI ABINET New Secretary Will Visit California at the Conclusion of the Slo- cum Inquiry. WASHINGTON, July 21.—Secretary Metcalf said to-day he would return to California early in August and ar- range some private matters which had been neglected on account of his hasty call 10 the Cabinet. He is now aw & the result of the Government ial’ investigation into the Gen- eral Slocum disaster, as he does not wish to leave Washington before their report is in. Metcalf is at present the hardest working member of the Cabinet. He remains at his desk almost nightly until after 10 o'clock and keeps three confidential clerks busy. 4 —— SHOOTS HIS WIFE AND THEN DEFIES OFFICERS Murderer Keeps Police at Bay Until Thrown Off His Guard by an Undertaker. PEORIA, July 21.—Frank Pierce to-day shot and killed his wife at their home in Canton and then barri- caded himself in the upper portion of his house and through the closed shutters announced he would kill tie — |first officer to set foot on his: prem- ises. Thrown off his guard by an under- taker entering to prepare the body for | burial, officers rushed in and captureq Pierce after a desperate fight. They were forced to chloroform him. Crane, clerk of the Suy chairman of the State tral Court and ublican Cen- { Committee, and his wife; Code oner J. M. Brown and wife; E. W. h, State Superin- tendent of Public Instruction, and his wife, and Miss Alda Johnson. The launching was set for 6:40 p. m., and on account of the lateness of the hour not more than 5000 persons at- tended, and there were few craft in the bay carrying sightseers. One minute and a half before the appointed time the instruments measured high tide and the key was pressed by Governor Her- ried. As the great ship started to slide Miss Herried raised high her berib- boned bottle of wine and crashed it against the prow. It was broken into Her lips moved, but only est to her could hear the ut- CRAVE PERIL. OF A HONTER Need a You know your needs and likewise spend on your clothes. If you require a new suit and are $12.50 or $15.00 garments we can interest | i 1 [ Snake Strikes at Him ‘While | He Is Hanging From Snag | Overlooking a Deep Pool ! RS i now quite popular. and buttonholes. | REDDING, July 21.—Hanging from a | dead snag that stuck out from a bank | overlooking a deep pool in Whisky Creek and in Imminent danger of fall- | | ing and being drowned in the waters | below, Wade Hampton, a well-known miner and orchardist, helplessly : | watched a monster rattlesnake as it! | made two efforts to sink its fangs in: his legs as they dangled in the air. I { Hampton, in company with Bruce! ! Ross and two other friends, went out | hunting Friday morning. They walked up Whisky Creek above the Mad Mule mine, owned by Hampton. As Hamp- ton was walking along the bank he slipped, and would have fallen into the water had he not caught a snag. As he held on to the snag a large rattlesnake ! colled on a ledge struck at him twice, and only by dodging did Hampton es- | | cape being bitten. He was finally res- | | cued and he and his companions killed | the snake and now have eleven rattles as trophies. them $7.35. | ! An inspiration is greater than an ex- ample. We are selling good, well- cut, sack suits, worth $15, for $7.35 We are selling some single-breasted sack suits at $7.35 which were formerly priced at $15.00 and $12.50. The materials are fancy cheviots in gun metal gray and nut brown—colors which are Each garment is hand tailored, even to collar These suits comprise principally certain garments which at stock-taking were found advisable to close out. sizes-and have sufficient patterns we added some new fall suits to the assortment, put them all on a salés counter and marked This sale is also to force July business. business by giving you just what we advertise. Our guarantee of money back and free repairing ought to con- vince you that the suits have been reduced just as we claim. Butif you want further proof see the suits—they speak for themselves. SNWooD § 740 Market Street Suit what you can afford to accustomed to wearing you in our sale. To complete the We can only expect