The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 23, 1904, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1904. (\R\E(,lt WILL |CAPTURE Tow - FOOT THE BILL OF VILLA REYES National Parliamentary Con-| Parammy:m Revolutionists vess Now in St. Lonis May | Take Many Prisoners and Vi California if Asked Seize Rifles and Cannon ¢OME FROM MANY LANDS ON SHORT ALLOWANCE —_— —_— \mong the Delegates Are Rations of Federal Troops ~ome of the World's Limited to x Bisecnits Most Distinguished Men Daily—Discontent Prevails By Paul Edwards. one cannon, in to a quantity of ammunition bl Savelinetion for rifies and cammon. - The ation her climate tionist Gemeral Ferreira is encamped by prcpeA effort near Villeta, where he is being jc"\-*d by many deserters from the Go ment troops, as well as r the inhabitants of Asuncion. The Paraguayan capital is suffering 1700 rifles an revoiu- gives. may secure @ visit from the delegates to the ngress, Exposi- be about amo: from the scarcity of ‘provisions. The s rations of the Gcn-rr'"or( troops are Vice President gned. Formc that As- but the ru- d. The revo- have seized another steam- aded non, s an ns of er fighting in of Uruguay. In a hand- ween Uruguayan rev he Government forc by tk five men were wounded. v surrendered and ops retired by wa- were of them were killed or wned during the retreat and others t refuge on an island belonging -+ n, Newcastle, Placer Coun- peaches; L. B. Hull, Tudor, apples; Paul H. Steude, Kelsey Japan plums; Mrs. atzenstein, Newcastle, Bartlett ; Frank Rogers, Newcastle, Hun- HU .\G.\RL&.\' PRUNES. . short branches, heavy with s prunes, are exhibited 4 New Hope, San CONTRA COSTA GRAPE! Sha g St = 2 amid the leaves. San Joaquin Coun, J. B. Cory of the ol Fr»d E&- s the No the the ro- 'Governor of Oregon and Mayor of City of Roses Greet Men Who Have Assembled to Discuss and Solve to th Problems of Vital oot S \ 'PORTLAND GIVES A HEARTY WELCOME TO MEMBERS OF MINING CONGRESS Interest s PORTLAND, Or., two sessions of the Congress, which assembled at the arm- ory in this cit 5 o’clock this afternoon until to-morrow | morning at 9:30 o'clock after a day de Aug. American Mining come and their responses and the intro- | duct of resolutions. So many of [b" a wer to-day, adjourned about| | 11 It ey g |the main building, where workmen cal A, o assistance the | .09 to the floor above. Mother Government had r»ndsr»d in the distri- | " 3 }Agalha the superior, gave orders to bution of the public domain through 3 i | remove the contents of the building the Department of the Interfor; to the =4 S el Thvoadlh A catuhite, el |and then turned in an alarm. By the g! tablishment of | ;. the arrived ‘the nuns and pu =d most of FIFTEEN SHOTS | FIRED AT BODY: ONE FUNERAL - PYRE FOR BOTH Expected Death of Son De- lays Funeral Services Over Posse Ts Out After Slayers of | Idaho Timber Locator. W ho‘ e Entire Country| Was Killed From Amhnshl Remains of His Mether 1| COMPANION IS WOUNDED|BOY IS SLOWLY DYING i1 i | | Tragedy Said to Be the R.a. News That Young Man's I11- ! it of Trouble That Has| mness Would Result Fa- {| Been Brewing for Months! ftally Kills Fond Parent ST. MARIES I-l::'r‘ ‘.A | tails have been lea | lof Ed Bentley | was shot and w e time ago The remains of | | and who, the other day, was murdered embalmed | lon the trafl mear Mica Creek. Frank = undertaker Lindsey, a compar' n of Bentley, was that the funeral may ! | shot through the arm. I e and mother and som be cremated together. Harry Har a telegraph tal Telegraph cancer of t they were at the creek, drin a shot from ambush str | who fell. Lindsey says as he ran | | cover a second shot struck hi | |arm. He got behind a tree and heard , was formerly e for the Pos- any. He contracted cat and went to San here Dr. Rixford of Lane e £ the assassins fire fifteen shots at the = - S med two tions. prostrate body. Sheriff Manning and £ 2 . | |the Coroner arrived here day on a erous growth was particularly out a week ago the ed that her boy ce then she has ignant and ab | | tug and went up the swift water of the | | St. Joe in a canoce to the scene of the | | tragedy. Deputy Sheriff Eiliott has gone with a posse and eight ses to head off any one coming over Santa trail. The trouble that culmin: tragedy has b It is said that Harry had but The blow was Saturday even- the a nd undertaking par- ved orders in the em- | ploy of big lumber companies have em . d | | Dloyed men to jump settlers’ claims, on. to hold it His death | | the ground that their jands w re | is expected Then | | valuable for timber than for agri- the two bodies wil | | culture. Two months ago Bentley, who by side. It w | | was charged with claim-jumping, was | it wiil be car | | warned to leave the country and, fail-| et % L S e Ing, was shot and wounded from am- | EXPLAIN RIVER PROBLEM | bush. TO PEOPLL OF STOCKTON —_———————— | FIRE VISI URSULINE Engineers Say Imle Can Be Done While Mine Tailings Flow Into Channels. STOCKTON, Aug —Major T. J. Da . Major H. B. Richardson and Chittenden CONVENT AT SANTA ROSA Prompt Action of Nuns, Pupils and Citizens Saves Institution From Destruction. SANTA ROSA, Aug. 22.—Fire broke | out this afternon in the Ursuline Con- vent, and, though the flames were brought under control before much | gamage was done, great excitement v\av created among the sisters and pup!ls and a largs number of citizens who soon gathered at the s The fire started in the basement of Major H. M State arrived in Stock- from Antioch. they appeared before Commerce. Major Dab- ings that as | delegates who arrived to-night, it is thought, will also enter the struggle for the alternative honor as well as | for the permanent headquarters, President Richards, in his annual ad- dress to-day, emphasized the neceulty, of securing Government co-operation in | the mining industry in the form of a | the remarkable work already accom- |y the Department of Agriculture, and to t portable lawn ay of Sat- s and San nt lemons of a fine qual- 1 its way from the 14 size the exhibitors are DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. THE ATTRACTIVE GIRL. Much bas been written sbout “"the Amer ican girl” and her reasons for bei eminently the most 'aridflfl in bn up girls TS can’t be u)o‘ carefil to let their daughters de- veiop all their nat- ural charms to the otmost. The cructal of & woman’s life is the chenge from maideghood to womanhood. It invoives the whole body and manifests itself in the nerv- position at this time rvous or sick women are afforded the of , for the makers e’s Favorite Preseri on now 0 cannot ed up by over a third of a remarka! and uniform cures, as no other remedy for the now feel fully war- pay $500 in legal money tates for any case of Leu- ea Female Weakness Prolapsus, or g of the Womb, which they cannot is a fair and reasomable medicine highty e Hippenhamer, of began takiog Dr. Tescription and took it stead- T was ot once sick at stom- Took the * + w cleven months old. Am Fn’ constipation, t.- me scmmficcue is Dr. Pierce’s Pieasant Pellets. Mild, barmiess, yet sure compare with them. No otber pill cam ast August she was | 3 an own pippins, dlings and Bell- hat will do t thing more th luxurt C. \LIFOR\I\'E PURE WINE. R Fath Patri O’Brien of the Good Shepherd Church, Toledo, Ohio, and Rev. Father R. Radka of Ashka Neb., have t fled to their belief in the p ¥ of California wine by giving orders for some to be used in the altar service at their churches. The State and the County Comm: sioners from California attended performance of the “Darling of the Gods” at the Imperial Theater Tues- day night as a testimonial to Blanche Bates. the California actress. Miss Bates is making a hit here, but the piece is not tremendously successful, a vacant seats being at nearly every performance. £ Barney Dougherty, chief jailer at the Broadway County Jail, and Wil- liam Burke of the City Prison, both of San Francisco, stopped over in St. Louis on their way from the East to see the fair and have a chat with De- tective Harry Reynolds, who is here for the term of the exposition to look after San Francisco crooks. Detective Reynolds says there are few San Franciscan evil doers operating at the Many petty offenders who say they are from San Francisco are gath- ered in, but nearly all of them con- fess that they are not residents of Cal- fornia, but were only foliowing the races when there. LA CALIFORNIANS AT THE FAIR. San Francisco and Los Angeles Well Represented at St. Louis. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 22.—The following California visitors have registered at | the California building: o D, Abraham. B. Bolle. L B w lestock. A. Ootesmock. fair. and wite, Clark W. Jac k«v' Samuel, Mrs. H Lukes. F. H. In . L Luby, S. Samuel, B. C. Sam S, , Miss V. | Bergee, L. K. Flet E Smith, W. P. Simpson, J. Monahan znd wie. Los Angeles—Mrs. A. Parish, Mrs. M. | hardy. T. H. Duzenbury and wife, Miss | ¥ ight. Dr. L. Lahonde, S. L. Hurst, M w hardy, J. R. Moise, J. 1. Moise, M. | S.'S. Chappelear, §. §. Chappelear, G. . Pfen. inger and wife, Knox. M Mre. ML J.C . Bri -, nton, G. H. E. W. F. Whittaker, H. Seymore, Mrs. M. G, Collins, Mrs. J. W €. Beringer and family, « Melton, J. H. Woods, Teed, L. Soltine, . Romaicks. | Matthewson, Mrs. E. Vance, Ed T W. B. Fleming, Mrs. F. H Omtkl'!fl.l ¥ 3 A. Stetson, M. L. Dailzeil, E. Greer, A Sha.nnln Mrs. O. G. Burpett, Miss F. H. Appiegate, E. 5. Stephens, | picious L D ed that the re plished by the new Department of | yos iy - trer ¢ » flooded and w Commerce and Labor. He asserted that ‘ “:Atzh"l ;Wen[}"nfin e ; al::r ,f": & u 'vah'n to make its first report unn' to- i | if the mining industry would give him | ;;a.r n}on( alrrA -1-},, a .am: s morrow afternoon at th | TS | | assistance it would be productive of | 4o arone $1000. o ET Ame The report it Is expeet Dl’?; { | sood not alone to individual pursuits, | e e e S cipitate the first real display o % | but would affect every line of industry | X = == trength between the delegates from 7 ENT IN THE DELIB- in the country. In pursuance with this | 1O OF L“TO'\‘,{LLE ities striving to secure the loca- | OF THE MINING idea he proposed the following resolu- | IS DESTROYED BY FIRE tion of permanent headquarters of the| | AT PORTLAND. | tion: } S ngress. This became apparent when | - - #| “Be it resolved, That the American |Fla2mes Start in Hotel and Rapidly | a resolution wag Introduced by Dr. J.| a0 con movae. H C. Hamlin, Col- | Mining Congress, in annual session| SPread, Despite Efforts Made M. Buckley of Missouri proposing an| .., g . White, Ohio: F. V. Drake, | assembled, believing that the time has to Check Them. mendment to the charter taking out of | o o Tpl el Hawarth, Kan- |arrived when a Department of Mines| WILLITS, Aug. 22.—Fire started In lived hands of the body as a whole the | S50 MR 00l B L TYTE Call- |and Mining would be the means of |one of the hotels at Laytonville last was sccl- e the convention AC% | breath Jr., Colorado; M. D. Leehey, | placing the mining industry on a plane | night and quickly spread to the livery d this afte and making it one of t Washington; Colonel James H. Lynch, | commensurate with its independence to | stable across the street. In a very iown a z,A wire ves of the board of dlrector: ... | Montana; C. W. Dersey, Nebraska; T. | all industrial progress, urges the Con- |short time the town was a mass of | artached to a telegraph pole. The The conv ion was opene: byea A. Rickard, New York: E. B. Braden, | 8ress of the United States to at once | flames. Both hotels, the livery barn, | wire had e become 'harg-d prayer, and on behalf of th S C. F. Emmons, Wash- | create a Department of Mines and | Which contained sixty tons of hay, and | witn eleetricity from the wires over of Orggon Governor ( h“ln“ii‘Ylll-f\ b ington, D. C. Mining as one of the great executtve | almost every house in the town was £ R Z 3 med the delegates S The | = cdentials—Philip S. Bates, Oregon, | branches of our Government.” destroyed. —_————————— COINE. WAS. & DEAILY OBE, | habrriun- M. P © California, | To-morrow’s programme includes the e AR e To Rebuild at Martinez. T O the i f his| . 1a R O Patterson aska. addresses of Senator John H. Mitchell | Dies at Hotel Del Mar. MARTINEZ. Aus. —Plans for s i 3 Eo longed | © ¢ the afternoon session W. D. Fen- | of Oregon and Chancellor E. Benjamin| SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 22.—Mrs. Rose | build ose destroyed was followed by Mayor | 10N representing the director general Andrews of the University of Nebraska. | Anna Edmunds of San Franciseo, a| g drawn and Gearge B Wiillaras ol ins "Roa of the Lewis and ( k Fair, made a | Owing to the fact that to-morrow night | guest of the Hotel Del Mar, died of |it ig only a a short time She e e e warm manner ex. | MOst interesting addres iewing the | will be the only time when Chancellor | pneumonia to-day. Funeral services | when Martinez will be a much hand- tended to the delegates the hospitalities | DIStOry of the plans for celebrating the | Andrews can be present and fill his|over the remains were held at Holy |somer town before. The Bank st “ | anniversary of the exploration of the | other engagements, an evening session | Cross Church. The body was shipped | of Marti t a new brick Responses to the addresses of wel-| Oregon cuu_mr,\' The delegates ui‘.l_all of the congress will be held. to San Francisco for interment. ‘bundm‘. Small of Maine, P sor J. T. Tal-| * | " | ADVERTISEMENTS. gt of Ut . . OOl o exas, J. -2 e e it e —————— ";a%;“h._:: E{: (‘0[“::;0 fa:;ajoh';v Colorado delegates arrived this even- T ing and the Denver representatives lost | no time in opening headquarters to be- | gin the campaign of that city for per- | manent headquarters. It is understood that they bring authority to offer financial support that will make the claims of the city appear very attrac- tive to the delegates. | SALT LAKE OFFERS SITE. Salt Lake City has tendered a build Daggett of California. SCOTT DELIVERS ADDRESS. Harvey W. Scott, editor of the Port- land Oregonian and a pioneer of Ore- gon, was introduced and delivered an| interesting address on the mining in-4 dustry and its relation to the develop- ment of the country. Secretary Mahon then announced the appointment of the following commit- | tees, selected by the board of direc- | ing site, a full lot located in the cen- tors: tral portion of the city and said to be Resolutions—Dr. - J. M. Buckley, | valued at $30,000. issouri, chairman; Professor J.| Upon the arrival of the El Paso and Talmage, Utah: E. G. Rein-| Sait Lake delegations it developed that Colonel Thomas | these cities are candidates for both | Ewing, ornia > B Waz-‘i permanent headquarters and for the son, Oregon; C. L. Digino Penn- | next convention in case no permanent sylvania; J. T. Small, Maine; J. W.| headquarters are chosen. The Denver | e - C. G. Gischel, Mys. W. W. Whitman, H. Bra- WILL PIPE STEAM FROM | nér, Mrs. M. T. Gordon, S. C. Stephens, A. B. | B CHOOLHOUSE | Mrs. M. A. Morse, | Millionaire Beermaker Comes to the | Aid of Northern Educational hol, A. B. Aus- | 3 1 Mrs. E. Austin Fresno—H. D. Rominger, C. | | L. Crow, J. B. & i Stevens W. H. Jackson. C. H. Cobb. Institution. | M Clark, r;,"_,n‘f o A 2 PORTLAND, Aug. 22 — Exhaust | | steam from the largest brewery on the | Pacific Coast will heat the Atkinson | School this winter. Henry Weinhard, the millionaire brewer, has made the offer to the Portland School Board and it has been accepted. A force of men D Hmywwa 13 R Nieaide W Riverside; A WS S ot IN FURNITURE we have always represented the very best ideas. When style is considered you will find our Display is always ahead of any other in town, and our prices are equally commendable. contain many novelties which we cor- Our Fall importations | will commence to-morrow laying pipes | kY Tlobs Twgl, Sleect, ez vl dially invite you to inspect : : : : : : i_ H. Hughes and |about 260 feet to the school basement. . Sacramento; S. W. MecKim, Sacra- “This act of Weinhard's will save ento E. Clowe and wife, Grafton: M - a 'ngin N i, Maa Bt rarton: o | the school district between $300 and n' uudunmn Downe: u Cooke. Dow- | $§00 a year,” Director Willlams said. to- Dougherty, day, “and we will be able to heat both { the old and the new part of the Atkin- " | son School for the next five years with- W.&J. Santa Paula: A. J. Rendleman, Whittier; J. i |out the usual annual bill for cordwood 7 woth, Haywards; L, S. Emming:r. Liver fin;e ener. Bckion: WA Ri% B and_the usual trouble of securing and Joss C. Wansiey. Glendora: H Wood, | Storing it away in the basement.” rass Valley; Mrs H._ W. Kennedy. Arbuckle! | r L. Brown, Rialto; B. F. Brown, An- : Mrs. G. E. Hyde, Cupertino: A. R. melter Sta; eswicl Powell, Azusa: F. Jonmes, Porterville: C. M o - st Sy = Johnson, Fowler; ' G. U. Moyse, Glendora; | REDDING, Aug. 22.—The report H. N. Vanderwoort, Palo Alto: W. Beck- anford: T. E. Palmer, Stanford; H. D. Hellywoed —_—— Points to Remember. Good pen points. We'sell “Waterman's Tdeal” and “The Marshall” the best $1 pen in the world. Sanborn, Vail & (.o 741 Market street. Mrs. that the Keswick smelter was to be moved to the vicinity of Martinez was a mistake. The company is now urg- ing all the small mine owners in this vieinity to bring in all of the fluxing ore they can get out and the company is employing all the men it can get. There are only two of the five furnaces ———— It is always safe to suspect the sus- SLOANE & CO. FURNITURE-CARPETS - RUGS - DRAPERIES- 114 -122 POST ST.,S.F.

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