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THE S FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1904. TO MINE TRINITY RIVER e LARGE PROJECT IN VIEW | Tunnel Uncover Wgzalth Mountains to Provide a Way to| Golden Gravel. —_— George Kryder. Napoleon., Best for The Dowels Chicago or N.Y. ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Every Woman s intereated and should know wondertal MARVEL whiru-. Spray ention is to work the property hydraulic process. smelter that Shasta County the & the new r of W0 tons daily ted by the Mammo to reduce ¢ n the Backbone between Backbone and a mile vad. It will be connect by a branch raiiroad Little Backbone west of the d e the managing director of the of which the 'EL DORADO COUNTY. Georgetown Gazette reports he working plant of the El Dor- » Copper Mining Company has been and the mines that it owns be worked on a larger scale than In the earlier days ey were paving propert The Placer- that there is much e mines in El Dor- The ed at Daw- 1 gold out- the current returns covered was In th Forty-mile paid to $5385. The ex- aid in royal- been inter- s Angeles Herald eral belt that runs rra Madres in Western and Eastern Sonora. He OIL ME UNEASY. the statements of the Mining Review, it may be inferred that the operations of Associated Ofl Company are oc- 1 some uneasiness among the 1 producers in the fields that lie south £ Tehachapi. In part the Mining Re- According te Angele ¢ the piant an peo: in Los Angeles at is seliing for to-day. is directed by the Los An- to an interesting and prising disclosure made of the of the nited States for 1903. A Herald's presentation of deductions is as part facts lows: and al production of the United the metals and $617,3%0,831 by A neral product If these cepted as a mercial importance of the é appear that the metals per cent and the non- of the totai. The mar- American Portland hows that the. Eod pro- Creek is paraliel to and ightly above that for Portiand cement, production of Alaska sinks into eom- insignificance. The most surprising of this increase in the cement industry has been within the past eight years. A Port- land ent production valued at about $2.- 500,000 506 has risen to over $22,000,000 in | 1902 PORCUPINE DISTRICT. Charles W. Wright of the United States Geological Survey has made a } | by the returns of the mineral produc- | fol- | Just_valuation | report relative to the Porcupine placer | mining district in Alaska. trict is the discovery of the placers on Porcu- pine Creek, in 1898, tion of the region has amounted to| about $460,000, according to the best ' available sources of information. In lpan Mr. Wright reports as follows: The goid-bearing gravels in this are confined to the few creeks and Iying within an area five miles wide and tem miles long that extends from Nugget Creek ou the Saimon to the mouth of Pe Creek on the Kiehini. Beits of mineralized | slates inciuded in this area are crosscut by | the streams, and from these the gold has been derived. The workable deposits vary vielnity benches ! from twenty-five feet to several hundred feet in width and are from a few feet to forty in depth. The The dis- | B in Southeastern Alaska, near | hom "l D¢ <& i | the international boundary line. Since | the gold produc- | | ing Company of South | AMERICA AND T0 JOIN IN PEACE PACT 'Negotla,tlons Begun for Arbitration Treaty. WASRHINGTON, Nov Negotia- tions have been begun for a treaty of arbitration betweén Germany and the) United States dent Roosevelt suggested to Baron von Sternberg, the E that a treaty In his judgment be very desirable. Em- bassador von Sternberg coincided with this view and told he would what steps the matter. Late this afternoon Embassador von Sternberg called upon President Roose- velt and informed him that the Ger- man Government had expressed itself as entir agreeable to the President’s proposition and that he had been di- rected to oven formal negotiations for such a treaty. These negotiations will be conducted by Embassador Sternberg on the part of Germany and Secretary Hay for the United States. STUDENT RIOT GROWS SERIOUS Troops Are Called Out at Innsbruck and With Fixed the President that if any it desired to take in Bayonets Charge the Mob e ; 2 ~ ng of v,b udents at the univer- RETARY HAT. which began yesterday, be-| % 2 ) serious dur:ng the night that| ~ 2l Al of the German demun- At 2 o'clock this morning the tter were besiegirig and wrecking the pied by the Italian students. rust through the heart. The ; the Italian faculty was wrecked. restored at 5 o'clock this morning. The troops only charged with after the students had as-| 'm with volleys of stones. Altogether there were eight Germans and ten Italians wounded. Erler, the representative k in the removal of the Italian faculty and hold- ing the Goverment responsible for the consequences in event of its refusal to do so. There have been many arrests. The rioting continued intermittently throughout the day. The students, re- forced town mob, wrecked the Club and Italian Inn, smashed in the Hofburg and made a atlon at the Italian al Council held a stormy oon ns demanding that the Ital- department of the university be a public funeral for t. who was killed by hen the soldiers e German students. —_————— BURGLARS' PLANS FOILED BY A VY PHYSICIAN and charged Noise of Explosion That Wrecks Safe | Arouses Doctor and He Shoots at Thieves, SPOKANE, Wash, Nov. 4.—Safe- blowers visited the Bank of Endicott, at Endicott, fifty miles south of Spo- kane, early to-day. They wrecked the safe, but the explosion awakened Dr. Asa Henry, who began shooting from the window of another building. The robbers fled, firing as they ran at Dr. Henry. The $4600 in the safe was un- touched. A’posse of citizens has gone in pursuit — e ———— The Mission-Street Branch Y. M. C. A. Will conduct a star course of entertain- ments, co ng of five numbers, as fol- lows: Edmund Vance Cook: poet and tmpersqpator; Knickerbocker Concert Company; Ralph rlette, humorist; Blanchard and Venter Concert Company and Wallace Bruce Amsbary —_————————— Rhodes’ Decision Duplicated. SAN JOSE, Nov. 4—In four suits against the Bay Cities Water Company to restrain that corporation from di- verting the waters of Coyote Creek, in this valley, Judge Tuttle this afternoon , overruled the plaintiff’s demurrers on the same grounds as those recently set forth by Judge Rhodes in a parallel case. —_——e—————— Picture Frames. Our Eastern selection of frames and moldings for fall trade now in. and more beautiful than ever Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. —_— From information available they average sev- eral dollars to the cubic yard, though in local bonanzas much higher Values are obtained. In the bench dm- s lower values may be expected. The extensive river beds are known £ contais same “Fold, but are of %0 low vane dredging would probably be the only pnmuble method of working them. While some of the deposits on the Jower claims of the Porcupine have been considerably developed the greater number remain um- touched, and to obtain the greatest yield from before. tions and work the various claims under one management by more economical methods than are at present employed. The Mining World reports the great fluctuations in the Homestake Mining | Company's stock as foilows: The highest quotation on Homestake Min- Dakota in the history of the company was in 1901, when the stock sold at $104 per share. The lowest price at Thich #t bas sold in the pust tem years was in skare at present. The price the stock has touched since 1888 wag in March of this year, when it fell to $40 50 a re. ‘com- Several days ago Presi- | German Embassador, | of arbitration between, the United States and Germany would | inquire of his Government ' von ! named 'Pezzy was killed by a| | of Reichsrath, has tele- | to the Premier demanding the | adopted | Better | GERMANY | 1 ! 1 ) 1 t i | BY MASKED MEN | Four Hundred Helpless Ani- | mals Shot as Result of a| Fight Between Cattlemen’| | | Epecial Dispatch to The Call. PRINEVILLE, Ore, Nov. L—Fourx hundred sheep owned by U. S. Cowles | | are the latest victims of the great | sheep war which has raged through- out South and Central Oregon for more than a year. The sheep were slaugh- | tered by ten masked men, who held up the herder, disarmed him and ordered him from the scene before the butchery began. The killing followed closely upon the cattlemen's assertion, made at the annual meeting of their associa- tion, that their cattle shall and will be | provided with grassing in the Blue Mountain ranging district. The slaugh- | ter occurred on Cowles’ ranch at the | head of Mill Creek, twenty-eight miles | | northeast of Prineville. It took place | October 18, but news of it reached here | only to-day. Cowles left his ranch a short time before the raid was made and knew | nothing of the slaughter until his re- | | turn. The shooting of the sheep is generally laid at the door of the cattle- men, who have made threats against the sheep interests and who have| themselves suffered by unseen hands. Following is the herder’s story: Late in the afternoon of October 18 | ten masked men, armed with Win- | chester rifles, rode out of the timber | near his flock and demanded that he throw up his hands until he could be searched. Refusing to comply imme- diately, the rifles were leveled at him and he was threatened with death if he offered any resistance. After search- ing his pockets and taking away his revolver the herder was ordered to run as rapidly as possible and neither stop nor look back until he had covered a distance of three miles. When only a few hundred yards away he heard the shooting commence, but he continued on his way. The searching party which returned the next day found 400 of the band lying dead along a ravine where they had been shot down while running from the noise accompanying the shots. The remainder of the band was scattered over a distance of several miles and the entire day was consumed in getting the sheep together. The party then followed as far as possible the prints of the horses’ hoofs, but in the timber, where the pine needles lay as thick as matting, these were soon lost from sight. ——e—— GETS FUN OUT OF CRIME, CONFESSES BOY BURGLAR Mexican Youth of Salinas Makes Re- markable Admission in His Plea of Guilty. SALINAS, Nov. 4—Celestino Juarez, ! who was arrested last week for burg- lary, pleaded guilty in the Superior Court this morning after confessing to another robbery. He claims to be only 16 years of age and that he robs “for| the fun of it.” R AR e P T WILL SPEND LAST DAYS BEHIND BARS OF PRISON Aged Boulder Creek Murderer Is Sent to Folsom for Twenty Years. SANTA CRUZ, Nov. 4—Thomas J. Laws, 61 years of age, who murdered Elizur Wright upon the night of July 30 six miles above Boulder Creek, was sentenced to-day by Judge Smith to twenty years at Folsom. TO SUE FOR DAMAGES—L. = Bleakmare petitioned the Superior Court | lumber, which tipped over from a flat- | his face was lacerated and he had suf- | | fered internal injuries. SALOON OWNERS WANT THE CASH —* Dislike General ManArt-hur’s! Efforts to Crush Evil Exist- r ing at Presidio Gates l PAY DAY IS DEFERRED; Twenty - Eighth Infantrvi Will Not Get Money Until | It Reaches Eastern Posts{ — A great protest is going up just oul- side the gates of the Presidio. The pro- : test is made by the owners of the saloons and groceries in that immediate locality because the | Twenty-eighth Infantry, which is on the eve of its departure for Eastern posts, has not been pald off and will not be paid off here, so that the $5000 or thereabouts that is coming to the regi- ment will not be spent around the Pre- sidio gates. General MacArthur has for a long time been trying to have the joints near the | Presidio abolished, but his efforts have met with jll success. In the present in- stance, with the co-operation of Colone! W. L. Pitcher, commander of the Twenty-eighth Infantry, he has | made a big coup. All the saloons about the entrance to the post have been run- ning without licenses, and the city au- thoritles are said to have made no ef- fort to stop the selling of liquors at these places. The saloons have had a! Government revenue license, but that is all. They have been kept open in di- rect violation and defiance of the law. ‘When General MacArthur found he could not get the saloons suppressed he | decided to take the matter into his own/ hands. He certainly grabbed the bull by the horns this time. It is reported that the saloons in that neighborhood have allowed about 80 per cent of the | soldiers to run up bills to the full| amount of their month’s pay. Now they | will be compelled to whistle for their| money and wait till the soldiers choose | to send them funds from Fort Snelling, to which post most of them are bound. The Twenty-first Infantry is due to arrive edrly this morning. It will be | met at Oakland mole by the Slocum | | and transported to the Presidio. The! regiment came in three trains. The Twenty-eighth Infantry went| into the model camp yesterday prepara- | tory to its departure. Companies L and M, in command of Captains James A.| Lynch and James Ronayne, will dexwart‘ to-morrow morning for Fort Lincoln, | North Dakota, and Colonel Pitcher with the other companies and the band | will leave early on Monday morning for | Fort Snelling, at St. Paul. [ —_———— Building to Be Torn Down. i A stock of $15,000 worth of men’s and ladies’ shoes to be disposed of at once. I will have to do quick work. To-day I '“l sell ladies and men’'s $3.50 shoes for $175 a pair. ‘all of the very latest styles in patent leather, vici kid and box calf. $1.75 will buy you a pair at 7 st., near Third. J. Morris, Dis, —_——————— Injured by Falling Lumber. Benjamin Astles, a workman in a lumber yard at Fifth and Channel streets, was seriously injured yester- day by being caught under a load of car. He was treated at the Emer-; gency Hospital, where it was found | that the right arm bones were broken, —_———————— Free Flour. Send your name and address on a pos- tal and we will deliver you a sample sack of * Summxt Snow Flour” at home, free of cost. C. A. Hutton & Co., room ( 8 133 Spear street, San Francisco. —_———— MONNIER CASE SET.—Judge Graham yes- | | terday set November 21 as the date for the be- | ginning of the trial by jury of the comtest| Sxainst the will of George Monnier. Attorney Matt Sullivan, for George Monnier Jr., made an effort for further delay, but Geerge D. Celiins, attorney for the widow, Anna Monnier, | successtully opposed the plea for more time. | — ey ADVERTISEMENTS. ‘ W/ SN | ‘“Madam,’’ sald the i grocer, ‘“let me intro- | duce Golden Gate—the highest grade coffee on the market.”” Nothind does with GOLDEN GATE COFFEE but satisfactie No prizes—mo coupoms —mo crockery. 1 and 2 1b. aroma t tims. Never sold ia bulk. i J. A. Folger @ Co., Established half a Contury | San Francisco visir DR. JORDAN'S anar IUSEIE‘&F ANATOMY 2. bt RRATR, E.1.Gal. ICOLUMBI i ISADORE RUSH 7 | THE WORST WOMAN | To-Day There will be *“‘Something Doing”* on all purchases made in our Grocery and Liquor Departments (Fourth Floor) Also Crockery and Household Departments (Third Floor) Grocery Department Specials (Fourth Floor) Saturday evening from 7:30 to 10 o'clock only These goods will not be on sale earlier. Sliced Boiled Eastern Ham— | Maryland Llub Pure Rye Whis- Regularly sold at 35: a 23c key—Regularly $1.00 a 63c Ib.; special, Ib bottle; special, bottle. . Bargains in rayvrfi e ALWAYS RELIABLE AMUSEMENTS. ' INGLESIDE Efulgent Vauderl! | CUUROING PARK. Watson, Hutchings, Bdwards and Com- | pany; the Misses Delmore; Halley and | Showing “The Widow and the ouy‘ Man.” Last Times of the Pmn-l Brothers; Three Dumonds; !unhu| and Pasquelena; Harvey Comedy Com- | pany and Owley and Randall. Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- | day, Saturday and y. Prices—itc, 2S¢ | and Every SATURDAY and SUNDAY. Coursing will begin at 11 o'clock sharp and | continue until the last winning fag goes up |ToTAL PRIZES $2000 Guerrero soe. Commencing Sunday Matinee. JOHN T. KELLY & COMPANY And the 12 NAVAJO GIRLS. CALIFORNIA=— BRING THE CHILDREN TO-DAY LAST TIME TO-NIGH All Misston-st. cars tranafer cars, whick go direct to the park. JOHN GRACE. Judge. EDWARD SHORTSTAG, Slipper. GRAN o HAVERLY'’S MINSTRELS the Funniest of | 1 | OPERA | HOUSE With Al Minstrel MATINEES TO-DAY and TO-MORROW. , To-Night and All Next Week “The Assassin of And_a Host of Other MATINEE TO-MORROW Pastoral Comedy Success B SWEET CLOVER - OTIS B. THAYER S P First Here After F¥ cnRGnHAN PREm Supported by ANDREW ROSSON PEGGY And an Excellent POPULAR PRICES. Compaay. MATINEE TO-DAY. | Sunday—Last Times. To-night and . o= H W. BISHOP. Lessce and Manager. LAST PERFORMANCES. ——MATINEE TO-DAY.— HOWARD GOULD. J. H GILMOUR. s e HAMLET Bianche Partington, Peter Robertson, Ashton Stevens and Eleanor Croudace Conceda It to Be the Greatest Stock Production Ever Given In This Oty Starting Monday, November 7, Offers And a Superb Company in the Farcical Comedy | | Ghttenng Glona ; Beginni T MO: e it Gl Chmiat Thwm ‘The COUNTY CHAIRMAN SEAT SALE NOW ON. ¥ Ofiver Morosco CITIZEN. medy and Romance. Premiere in San Francieco of the great London and New York music- al triumph In two acts. entitled: First Time Anywhers THE [7F.05 s MESSENGER B O Y First Time Auy'nenl at_Popular Prices. BY THE AUTHORS OF THE TOREADOR, WITH AN UNRIVALED CAST. Seats Now _Selling—Usual Tivoll Prices, 28c—30c—75c—Only Matinee Saturday. A Splendid Show Every Afiermoon and Evening In the Theater. TAKE A RIDE ON T TURE ELECTRIC SEVEN BABY LIONS IN THE ZOO. INSPECT CABARET DE LA MORT. PRISMATIC ELECTRIC PFOUNTAIN DISPLAY TO-NIGHET. LOOK OUT FOR THE JOHNSTOWN an ALC AZ m:.r.‘.,'" ADMISSION 10 | CHILDR Price, When Phoning Ask l Manazer. MISCELLANEOUS AMUSEMENTS. BASE_Z_@ALL. San Francisco vs. Portland. AT RECREATION PARK, Eighth and Harrison sts. TO-DAY and all week days, 3 o m SUNDAY, 2:30 P. M. LADIES FREE THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. Advaace sale of seats at 5 Stockton st MATINEES TO-DAY and TO-MORROW. Last Two Nights of Franklin Fyles’ | Realistic Drama, | DRUSA WAYNE | A Story of Absorbing Interest. ! Lillian Lawrence, Johh Cralg, Elizabeth Wood- zon and all the Alcazar Favorites. Evenings. 25 to Tic; Matinees. 25c to S0c. Next !qndl!—!‘ln! Time in Stock, A. C. er's Merry Comedy, PRINCE KARL The Play That Made Mansfleld Famous. CENTRAL=:: | Market St., Near fl(h(h Phone South 533, MATINEE TO-DAY and TO-MORROW. LAST TWO NIGHTS. First time Bere of the sensational melodrama, LONDON Thrilling Situations, the Murder. the Mansion of Crime, Revenge at Last, the Bloody Fight. APE FROM BURXING BAJA CALIFORNIA Al Damiana Bitters Haigs a GREAT RESTORATIVE. INVIGORA- m gt yas ml aphrodisiac and Spectal