The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 26, 1904, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY. JULY 26, 1904 CASTRO SEIZES | ASPRALT LAND |Los VENTURA COUNTY’S WELL ARRANGED EXHIBIT ATTRACTS WIDE ATTENTION Angeles Display Will Be Moved From St. Louis at Close of Fair to the Lewis and Ciark Exposition at Portland---San Siikwoims Are Objects of Keen Interest to Many Venezuelan Dictator Takes Property of New York Company on Attachment | Diego - e — i.;. — - SNAP COURT DECISION | Judgment for Ten Million Dollars on Ground of Al- Aid to Insurgents Govern- re the federal ing unrepresented hment the all fork and Bermudese that the ement, ment, causing to spend Department has been by Minister Bowen that has ob- ferred that t the only fon for this VICTIM OF FILIPINOS NOT EXPECTED TO LIVE | Manager of World’s Fair Restaurant Said to Be Dying—More > Made. Arrests Will Be ) CAUSING MUCH D, FOR THE FAVORABLE PEOPLE coM- | WHO SO CARE- BY PAUL BUREAU EDWARDS. WORLD'S FAIR —Ventura County’s CALI ing is m shown in the selection of i the judic display us arrange- been visit- pride WEALTHY CKINESE IS al and visitors ORDERED DEPORTED lar Honorec . - tion its char- Influential Chicago Silk Dealer Will is so indi- Be Sent Back to His Na- tive Country. it would attract wher- ib had been lo- s , with its acc enterpr ha to send its be: Lewis C Clark Los is tak- iminary steps. toward se- curing space and transporting the en- tire display L ngeles of 1 and the first and The knows the advantages s before the world, and fair is opened through the - chief county below dy for inspection. The s promptness always prac- Angeles are all that the er display and all go away t the people are awake and v gates will up-to-da HAS LEARNED L N. Los Angel learned about all there is wor carning in regard to exposition lay. Two items are fund of knowledge: It pays to make a first-class exhibit and pays to have it ready on opening entatives of some of the other counties have written home ad- vising as to the removal of their dis- to Portland wh this exposi- closes. politics es is a force in the ction of expos sentatives than public weal and some of the men who have gained valuable knowledge here r have to give way to others who never saw an exposition, but have “drag.” The final shipment of material for the California exhibits, with the ex- MILX CONDE NSING C° This Cap Label is a guarantee .of the purity and richness of our Pet Brand Evaporated Gream We offer $5,000 reward to anyone zble to prove adulteration of our product. a arrive throughout the sea- In it were sev- tinue to | son, has reached here Alameda County’s display in the Hor- ticultural building, three cases of stuffed birds, fish and animals, which constitute the Sacramento exhibit in the Forestry, Fish and Game building, where Los Angeles has been the only California county represented up to this time; an additional silk exhibit for San Diego County and eight cases of minerals and photographs for the | mining display. Among the minerals was some fine gold ore for the Nevada | exhibit With the San Diego silk material was a magnified cocoon, showing the miller | ning, in the get of escaping from its | delicately constructed castle to mingie iv.nh others of its kind and produce more worms to go through the same Drl Lyon s | process and produce more cocoons. This PERFECT | monster cocoon is five feet long and more than a foot and a half thick, and the miller escaning from it is as big as AN ELEGANT TOILET LUXURY | an eagle. If the real cocoon were as Used by people of refinement | large as this the silk would have to be wrested from its inhabitant by a Sher- for over a quarter of a century PREPARED BY HOPE TO DEVELOP INDUSTRY. CURE SICK HEADACHE. Silk is not produced now in commer- cial quantities in San Diego, but the Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature residents there hope to make its pro- duction a prominent industry in time, In many yards in the city of San Diego | silkworms are kept as a matter of | amusement, and one woman has made | money for years by selling cocoons and silk ornaments as souvenirs, but the jn- dustry up to this time has made no great headway there. Now the Government has taken an interest in it and much is expected ! from this aid by San Diego. Uncle Sam, iTTLE IVER PILLS. sub- | into which the worm turns after spin-’ $1 for , and has eve taken an es Diego article. Diego worn in Americ oduce even a better silk than those of China and Japan because ’ tendent of Sch of the equability of the climate. worms gre affected by every unusually | warm or cold spell and aiso by feeding et leav so every radi change 1 the thermometer and too much rain in, es the quality of the silk produced. Eight-inch mulberry slips planted in| daughters of Theodore Bresla: March in San Diego will produce leaves | tired merchant. in June big enough for the worms to | feed on. Through the efforts of the United States Government a colony of Japa- | Visitors From All Over State Are u\ nese silk growers is to be established ! near the city of San Diego, and ! Il give the industry a good start the CONFEDERATE Colonel R important part in the meeting of jon and Confederate veterans held here to arrange for a great national re- | union of the blue and the gray at VETERANS. Washington next May. He was ap- | pointed a member of the committee that is to notify Generals Lee and Black, commanc respectively, of the Confederate and Union organizations, of the desire to hold the reunion. Among the prominent visitors to the exposition is Colonel A.’B. Butler of » and San Franciseo, who was s a leading raisin packer and s credited recently with making e of oil lands at a figure beyond a million. He now has 12,000 acres of oil |land in the Indian Territory and has come here from Europe, where he left his family, on his way to the Territory. | He spent five months there last year. Judge Wills and his associates in the | Sacramento Development Association | display entertained 100 young ladies the | | other day, who were sent to the fair by a Cincinnati newspaper. They came | from Ohio and surrounding States. Each was given a package of Califor- nia nuts and dried fruits and some of the literature of the Sacramento Val- Charles H. Spear, chairman of the State Harbor Commission, is here with | his wife and daughter. Spear saw the unpacking and placing in position at | the San Francisco building of the sec- tion of a modern wooden cylinder pier sent here by the Harbor Board. This ception of fresh fruits, which will con- | i an excellent municipal exhibit—one | of the best and most interesting in the | building. The outer sixty feet of a pier eral cases of processed fruit to add to | 100 feet in width is shown on a scale| of one-half inch to the foot. { TO BETTER FERRY BUILDING. | Spear will return home armed with facts through which he hopes to make Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Express erect a building of its own on the water froht and stop using the space now occupied by it in the ferry building. He has | made inquiry in several large Eastern cities and finds, he says, that no ex- | press company is given such a privilege | in any of them. | George A. Dennison is here In the | employ of the State Board of Trade and | the California commission. He talks to visitors on the floor of the building | afternoons and assumes the duties of | secretary in the forenoon. Commis- sioner Filcher is very anxious that Denmison be made secretary perma- nently, but it is likely that some good Republican who is capable and who i helped make Pardee Governor—and | there are plenty eligible—will be given | the billet. The statute creating the commission provides that a secretary | shall be appointed at a salary of $200 | a month and expenses. The Commis- sioners are anxious to get some one of | their own choosing into the place at | legislative act. It is rumored that their zeal to save the State money is ! so great that they are going to donate { half their'own salaries to the State at the close of the fair. Neither of them will confirm this, and it is probably i only a rumor. B. W. Worthington, Julius Kruttschnitt Pacific Company, is on his way home | with his family via New Orleans after visiting the exposition assistant to M. Green of Oroville took | | less than half the salary fixed by the . of the Southern! cial interest in the San | with t It is said that the Saniis another Ventura visitor. this | i 1 < O. P. Cook, a nurseryman, and W. G. Goode, a farmer of Ventura, are here ir wi Coroner Roy Beckley J. W. Anderson, ex-State Superin- ools of California, and The | wife and Willilam Sexton of the Fire- man’s Fund, San Francisco, and daugh- ter are here. Superior Judge Taggart of Santa Barbara is at the fair. Other visitors from there are the Misses Breslau, u, a re- e CALIFORNIANS AT THE FAIR. St. Louis. ST. LOUIS, July —The following California visitors are registered at the California building: n Francisco—Miss A. Brand, Fred Brand, S . D. R. Hare, L. L. O'Connor, A. Weldurvilt, R. E. Stark, 2. Calieus and wife, A. B. Butler, M. Car- B. Gross, Mrs. M. B. Horton, J. E. Hor- Mrs. A. R. Rickoff, J. Browning and wife. J. Che- Cheney. enny, Mrs. E. roil ton Oakland—Miss M. K. Dunton, Mrs B. M. Little, da—W Foster nta Barbara—J. Beckstead, N. Wall. Miscellaneous—E. ser., B P. Beckstead, A. Schmidt, Berkeley: Mrs. Pasadena; F. J Dodge and wife, Sacramento; W. L. Brooks and family, Peta. luma; M. J. Fulton, Eureka: A. W. Haines and wife, A. I Haines, San Diego: D. R, Kil- bourne, San Bernardino; W. E. Meek, Hay- wards; G. E. Webber Jr., Belmont; M. Hirsch, Ukiah A. Norton, Napa; A. L. Amondson, Bo M. Menasses rey and famil nd wife, Stockton; San Pedro; P. 3! son, Kracaw: T. Kelley, O. A. Mulle tional City; T. R. St. Michael and wi Monte; Mrs. M. Deaver, Whittier; S, P, ney and wife, Blodes and w wife Tuscan ding: A. 1. Patton, S. M. Patton R Patton, Gilro; G. Riddle, Riverside; A. J. Gilman and wife,” Bakersfield MAY RAISE ANGORA GOATS ON LARGE SCALE Finely Bred Animals Will Be Crossed ‘With Importations From New Mex- ico to Get Superior Species, MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., July 25.—If the experiment undertaken in propa- gating a new species of Angora goats | at Debruce, Sullivan County, proves a success it will mean a great industry for that section of the country. A large tract of land at Debruce has been purchased, upon which has been placed a herd of imported white Angora goats. The owner has now gone to New Mexico in quest of 2000 goats from that State and proposes | to cross the breeds, expecting to pro- duce a superior species. watching the experiment with interest and if it results successfully immense tracts probably will be devoted to the Boat-raising industry, as thé animals’ wool brings about 50 cents per pound in the market. — e TENT HOSPITALS ARE Now ESTABLISHED IN NEW YORK Under Canvas Roofs Physicians Will Render First Aid to Injured in Parks of Metropolis, NEW YORK, July 25.—To give im- mediate aid to the injured and over- come the long delays heretofore at- tending the arrival of medical aid from hospitals Park Commissioner Schmitt of the Bronx has installed tent hos- pitals in Pelham, Vancourtlandt, Cro- ton and Bronx parks. The supervising physician in charge has an efficient corps of assistants and nurses in charge of each of the tents. The in- novation, it is said, will be adopted in the parks of Manhattan and Brooklyn. ————— MRS. BLANCHE MADDEN ENDS LIFE WITH POISON | Suicide of Song Writer's Wife, Who Was Formerly Miss Fischer of Los Angeles. NEW YORK, July 25. — Mrs. Blanche Madden, 23 years of age, wife of Edward Madden, song writer, com- mitted suicide to-night by taking car- bolic acid. She had recently been an irmate of an insane asylum. She was formerly Miss Fischer of Los Angeles, icaL f | | 1oses $23,000,000 annually through tubers | Several large | landowners of Sullivan County are| (0STS A VAST UM ANNUALLY New York Physician Esti- mates Yearly Loss by Tu- berculosis to Be $23.000,000 'DEATH RATE AT LOWEST Declares Improvement Is Impossible Without Adop- tion of Radical Measures | | - Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, July 2.—New York culosis, according to a statement made by Dr. Darlington, Commissioner of | Health, before the summer school in philanthropic work to-day. | “Estimating the value of a single life | at $1500, and taking only those lives be- | tween 16 and 45 years,” said Dr. Dar- | lington, “the loss of life in this city| { alone from tuberculosis mounts up to | | the startling sum of $23,000,000 annu- | | ally. | “The death rate here is much lower| | than in large European cities, which | shows what has been accomplished by 1 the spread of clinics, and of preventive | measures, of better housing conditions, | of the warfare against dark interior | | rooms and unsanitary plumbing, which | has gone forward here during the last | few years. { “The death rate will not go much | {lower with us unless we take even| | more radical steps. It is'a question | simply of educating the people and of | general sanitary conditions.” —_———— | BOSTONIAN STOCK OPERA COMPANY MAY DISBAND | Yield Enough Coin to Overcome | Success at Atlantic City Does Not ', ADVERTISEMENTS. WHY HOT WEATHER MAKES WOMEN NERVOUS | | Suggestions by Dr. Hartman.—How | to Combat the Nervous Deprassion i Incident to Warm Weather. | Nervousness is very common among !wnmPnA This condition is due to anaemie | nerve centers. The n nters are the reservoir for nerve vita ¥ These centers become bloodless for the want of proper nutrition, This condition is especially noticeable during the warm seasor ery sum- mer an army of invali a direct result of are produced as This could easil the use of Peruna. F at the root of the tr by correcting the digestion. P digestion furnishes increased nutrition for the nerve centers. Perfectly digested food gives these re ervoirs of life a vitality which creates strong. steady nerves. and in this man- ner fortifies and nourishes | Miss Blanche Grey. a prominent young society woman of Memphis, Tenn., in a recent letter fro: 4 Alabama street. writes: “To a society woman whose nervous force is often taxed to the ut most from lack of rest and irregular meals. / know of nothing which is of s> much beneft as Peruna. 1 months ago when I feit my strer | glving way, and /f soon made itse/f ma fest in giving me new strength and health." —Miss Blanche Grey. Pe-ru-na Contains Ne Narcotics. One reason why Perur permanent use in so ma it contains no r runa is perfectly used any length of tir ing a drug hab duce te: | in its effect It ha and grad moving the a multitude of has A Well-Known Canadian Lady Sends Letter of Endorsement to Pe-ru na. Miss Mary Burns, 28 Spring Garden rad. Halifax, N. 8., writes “Having used Peruna for indigestion and stomach trouble and to build up a broken down | been used off an system with the very bes Such a t pleased to state my experi runa contained n tr nature nd poor dig: on is season although [ tried | cularly liable to stomach and bow wisdom to learr power many remedie ee months I had en health and streng Losses at Boston. | ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, July 25. i A conference has been held here be- tween the manager and members of | the Bostonian stock opera company in which it was seriously proposed that the company disband. The members | have conciuded a three weeks' engage- ment in this city and while the patron- | age here was not disappointing, the profits were not enough to meet the serious deficiency which had been created by a run of ill-luck which started in Boston. l The manager of the company is quot- | ed as saying that if the arrangements | for further financial assistance did not succeed it would be advisable to wind | up the affairs after a three years’ ex- | istence as a corporate company. There | are some forty people in the combina- tion. i —_——— | WATERSPOUT JEOPARDIZES LIVES OF HOLIDAY FOLKS | Whirling Mass of Liquid Shaped Like | an Hour Glass Disports on Sur- | face of Cayuga Lake, | ITHACA, N. Y., July 25.—The lives of many persons out sailing on Cayuga Lake were put in jeopardy yesterday | by the sudden development of an enor- mous waterspout. Without warning a whirling mass of water at least 150 feet in diameter and reaching up to thc clouds started from the shore of the lake just north of this city and with remarkable rapidity traveled more than a mile across the surface of the water toward the west. The mass was shaped like an hour glass and was partially enveloped in ray. The surface of the water over which it passed was churned into a foam. Fortunately no boats happened to be in the path of the spout. ’ ——————— COLORADO GUARDS FIGHT & A DUEL TO THE DPI.\TH' Empty Revolvers at Each Other and Then Use Knives Till They ]1 Both Drop Dead. | } TRINIDAD, Colo., July 25.—Word | | has been received here that two guards | employed by the Victor Fuel Company at Hastings, twenty miles north of! here, became involved in a quarrel and decided to fight a duel. Accordingly they armed themselves with revolvers ‘and began firing at each other. When the guns were emptied the two men drew knives and fought until both dropped dead. The names of the duel ists were not given to the Coroner bere, who was notified of the affair, and together with the Sheriff has gone to the scene of the duel. — e ——— INTEREST TO PEOPL OF THE PACIFIC OF COAST Army Surgeon Brillingslea, Now Pa- | tient at Presidio Hospital, Is Assigned Duty Here. WASHINGTON, July 25. — Alfred | May was to-day appointed rural car- rier at Troutdale, Or., and Frank D. Hubbard substitute. Army orders — First Lieutenant Charles Brillingslea, assistant surgeon, now under treatment at the Army Gen- eral Hospital, Presidio, is relieved from further duty in the Philippines divis- ion and will report, on August 1, to the commanding general of the Depart- ment of California for assignment to i duty at that hospital, relieving Captain | Benjamin J. Edger Jr., who will pro- t ceed to Fort Brown, Texas, for duty. H ——e— ' DEWEY AND HIS MEN WILL GET THEIR PRIZE MONEY | After Long Legal Battle Naval Fight- i ers Will Divide One-Half | of $1,657,355. \ WASHINGTON, July 25. —After a ! legal battle of several years, Admiral ! Dewey and his men who fought the battle of Manila are to recéive their | capture money on account of the Don | Juan de Austria and other Spanish property. Justice Gould to-day signed an order confirming the report of the auditor in the case. The amount of the property captured finally was placed at COWBOYS KILL | started by a half-breed named Brown. UNDER ARREST THREE INDIANS| AT HONOLULL Cattlemen Quarrel With Eugene McPhetridge, an Aborigines and General. Army Clerk, Charged With Shooting Mateh Ensues| Smuggling 3200 Cigars ——— | —_—— Special Dispatch to The Cal Sp al Correspond: e of The Call. HONOLULU, Jul)’r 19.—Eugene Mec- HARLEM, Mont., July —Ne reached here to-day of a shooting af- | Phetridge, a clerk in the office of the fray at Rocky Point, in the Bad Lands quartermaster of the United States of the Missouri River, last Friday in|army here, was arrested by United which three men, all Indians, were States Marshal Hendry on the charge killed. Several cowboys were wounded, | of having smuggled into the United one fatally. States 3250 cigars. It was agreed that The trouble is said to have been the prisoner should be allowed to go on bonds of $2500, and he appearance in the is booked for Brown and several Indians were on . b Commissioner’s their way to the Crow reservation and s stopped for a time at Rocky Point. |°0urt on July 22 There they began drinking and playing | Tne United States officials concerned poker with some cowboys. A disagree- | i1 the case are observing a remarkable ment ensued and this led to the use of | 3TecY about the whole afisie ané W 19 weapons. When the smoke cleared | TUTOred that the arrest of McPhetridge sius Chandler and an Arapahoe Indian . , nature. were dead, their bodies being literally | 1h¢ cigars that McPhetridge is said pededizet Sl to have smuggled are understood to An investigation of the affair will be | Ve come from the United States army transport Sherman and not from the made at once by the officers of the | rA7SPOTt Therman and mot Fort Logan Indian agency here. Rocky | = Uiite: Tie 14st transport here. Point is s south of here and TR ot e | WENE RIS N ighty m communication with that place is pos- | sible only by earrier. R RS LS FLETCHER FAMILY WILL ASSEMBLE IN BOSTON employ of the army department for some years, has always borne an ex- | cellent character. He is a married man | of middle age, living with his wife at lHSS Nuuanu avenue. Mrs. McPhet- ridge is at present visiting in Call- | fornia. He was appointed to the de- | partment from San Francisco. NEW YORK, July 25, The presi- dent of the Fletcher Family Union, | ——— G i Mrs. Austin D. Fletcher, of New York. | gJUNGARY WELCOMES has issued a call for a meeting of the iy, descendants of Robert Fletcher, who T CAN SQUADRON lived in Concord, Mass., in 1620. The annual family reunion will be held in Tremont Temple, Boston, on Wednes- August 31. A family dinner will be served, addresses will be made by prominent members of the union and a trip will be made to Salem to visit the witch house and other historic spots and to enjoy a clambake at Salem Willows. FIUME, Hungary, July 25.—Geov- ernor Rosener of Fiume has received a telegram from Count Stephen Tisza, the Hungarian Premier, welcoming the United States warship squadron here in the name of the Hungarian Government. Governor Rosener will give a garden party to-morrow in J honor of the officers and men. ADVERTISEMENTS. Some New Fall Shapes It dosen’t make any dif- ference what you want to pay for a hat we can show you just the style desired it the price youcare to pay. A mention of the styles is rot possible here, but our n=w fall stock contains every shape and color brought out this season, We picture two styles out of a dozen or more that sell at $1.93, $2.50 and $3.00, according to the quality of the material. The hats in each instance are lower in price than the exclusive stores ask for the very same quality. See our windows. Special for Wednesday and Thursday only — Pure worsted wool jerseys, regular $1.50 and $1,657,355. One-half of the amount will be paid to the captors, while the re- mainder, as provided by law, was placed to the credit of the navy pension fund. —_———— EL PASO, Tex., July 25._Francis Mallen, Mexican Consul, to-day recfived a telegram from F. Canado, Governor of Sinaloa, con- firming the repcrt that two Americans were killed at Aguas Caifentes by u« man named ‘Torres, and adding that “a rigid investiga- ton has been ordered.” 3 $2.00 values, for $1.10. Out-of-towwn orders fill:d; wrile us. ‘SNWO0D 5 740 Market Street

Other pages from this issue: