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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1905. PRINTERS WILL PICNIC - IN NILES CANYON. Arrangements Are Complete for Annual -~ ST W KZZLF > - o | sYie i ZBoswyEiL : or - - - THE COMMITTEE EENTH 3. HAVING CHARGE OF ARRANGEMENTS FOR THPE EIGHT- TH ANNUAL PICNIC OF THE U v’ TY, WHICH WILL BE HELD NEXT SUNDAY. NION PRINTERS MUTUAL AID SO- The committee of arrangements hav-, e The affair is in charge of the follow- charge the eighteenth annual | ing well-known typos: g and picnic of the Union Print- | Arrangéments—John W. Kelly, chairman; ers’ Mutual Aid Society of this city, to | b0 Riffel treasurer; W. Cowperthwaite, J. held xt Sunday, a: at Fernbrook Park, Niles Can- unce that every- readiness and the indica- at the affair will be a great 4 those who journey J. Nevbarth end W. A." Rossett! Gamcs—George E. Mitchell, ¢hairman; Charles J. Cullen, A. D. Davidson, J. J. Ge v, Sam T. Sa chairman; F. 8. Bading, E4’ Beicher, Floor—W. A. Rossetti, Carmona, assistant: O. F. vat J. J. Chaudet, Charles Collins, T. F. Foley, private parties are being - - ¥ & Do priatis Aol nak . J.P. Olwell, Rod Payne and C. J. to enjoy a ride through a | Jobn Collins; first vice president, Cyren beautiful section of country to one of | Fisk: second ¥ice l';e'ldefllt.SOYrie J-fl ek . recording secretary, J. Spencer; financial the most picturesque canyons of the S trys Ir. Braber: rrecabver. Togh Etate ; marshal, James D. Laing; guardian, A band will be in attendance and helson; board of directors—John there will be dancing in the pavilion all afternoon Fifteen races are to take place, which forty-five prizes will be given. Over 100 remembrances are to be given at the gate. The boat will leave foot of Market street at 9:40 and returning the train | will leave the park about 6 o'clock. Kelly, chairman; J. A. Enell, secretary; Robe: Sieeth, Richard H. Hamshar, John Collins | physician, Dr. A. B. McGill; druggist, H. F. for gan. | ————— | DEMANDS MAINTENANCE—Mrs B Stearns flled suit yesterday against her hus- band, V. J. Stearns, for maintenance. Mrs. Stearns alleges that her husband has unlaw- fully deserted her and refuses to contribute toward her support. WHAT A LITTLE PAIN IN tality, and this thing will soon you can enjoy its sweetnes: Keep your again, and vitality. Now, don’t drug. does. It makes machinery go, Belt two months. near you whom I have cured. strong as you used to. ought to do something right now, because life is sweet only when and you are too young to feel this way. outh while you can, as you will never see yesterday 1 don't want to spend your future in regrets. You have not used yourself right. you have forgotten the laws of nature, and these signs which you feel now are reminders that nature always plays even. have to give her back the strength which you wasted, or she will Jeave you like a tree without sap. the power which nature calls for. I have it. It is Electricity. Pro- ressor Loeb, the scientist, says that Electricity is the base of human That's the best argument I have, except my cures. Mr. John Soares, Point Re duty to let you know that after wearing your Belt only a few weeks 1 am entirely cured of weakness dnd lame back.” It pours the electricity into your body while you sleep, and sends it right te the weak spot. gans and you get back that wasted power. When you can get cured so easily are you going to let yourself go down hill any longer? Don’t do it. those who love you to make yourself 2 man in every respect. Drugs stimulate, just like whisky, but you want real strength, and you know drugs don’t give it an Mr. E. L. Morrell, Prescott, Arizona, wrote: My ‘Rheumatism is entirely cured and my general health very much improved. The effect was immediate.” Tell me where you live and I will give you the names of people Don't put it off. Make yourself feel young and energetic and Come and.see me or else write for my book about the treatment, mailed, sealed, free if you send this ad. Dr. M. €. McLaughlin, Office Hours—8 a. m. to THE BACK DID : A man came to me some time ago and complained of a pain in his back; nothing much, only it bothered him at times. He would do nothing for it then, but if it got worse would come in. The next day he fell down in the street, paralyzed from his hips down. Look out for that pain in your back. It comes and goes, and you don’t mind it, but with each return you know it is worse, and you feel other symptoms with it. You hayve a weak feeling about the kidneys, you are tired in the morning and don’t feel like going to work. In the after- noon you feel stupid and lack the en- ergy to hustle; you go to bed tired out and don’t sleep well. You have not the courage and “go ahead” dis- position that you used to have, and sometimes feel as if you were getting old in vigor. You are, my friend. You are losing your youth and vi- make you old before your time. You There have been times when You will Now, there’s a way to replenish , Cal.,, wrote me: “I feel it my That puts steam into all your or- You owe it to yourself and 1 Electricity and it will make you go. “I have worn the 1 have a cure in every town. 906 Market S&Afl. Above Ellis, 8. F., 8 p m. Sundays—10 to 1. rs of the society are: President, | FRAWLEY S HE 15 LONELY Actor Regrets Unfortunate Conditions That Give Him Only a Summer Audience BUT HE PLEASES CROWD | |“Ranson’s Folly” Amuses| ., Those Who See the Clever Company Presenting It| You never can tell, as G. B. Shaw says. “Ranson’s Folly” looked all right to me | last night untl T. Danlel Frawley sug- gested that it wasn’t. Nor did there seem | to be anything the matter with the audi- | | ence. True, there might have been more | of us, but the hay lies golden in the sun, | and Mr. Frawley is but—Mr. Frawley. However, I for one never felt worse about not being twins than last night. Mr. | Frawley was too pathetic ror anything] about the large assemblage that did not greet him. Mr, Frawley was pathetic and grieved all round. He ‘“felt blue” about coming again to the Columbia stage, that | ten years and one pathetic month ago he baptized, with not one old face in his present company. He spoke of the clever folk that then surrounded him, that had | made the “Frawley name mean sbme- thing in the West"”—and those of us who | had brought a mere mouchoir instead of a hanky began to feel alarmed. Most of us felt ashamed, too. We had been | heartlessly enjoying ourselves. We had | thought Mr. Frawley was, too. We hfld' glven him a handsome hand when he ap- | peared. We had given him another and another for good work in a role that suits | him. We had had all kinds of fun and thrills out of the play. We had seen one good actor after another tumble into his part, and when we called out Timothy Daniel after the third act we thought he | would tell is that though he had just been around the world, “there was no | | place like,” etc.; that “he was glad to | sce us again™; that *“he thanked us for | our kyind reception of himself and his | company,” etc., and a happy, etc. | But no! Mr. Frawley -informed his | “friends and countrymen that he didn’t want to come back here under these .conditions. Theatrical condi- | tions here,” he said, “were now at their worst. The relations between the press | and the theaters were strained; every- | thing was at its unfavorablest. Even | the summer had butted in.” and then he told us again that we were not the | | biggest audience he had seen. Still he | | knew that we “wanted him under the right conditions. He hoped to come back under more prosperous condi- tions,” and then the curtain covered | Mr. Frawley and his sorrows. But even if Mr. Frawley is not now a2 managerial. Napoleon and other things are” equally unfortunate, the | heartless audience cannot escape a| good time with “Ranson’s Folly.” It | is a dramatization of Richard Harding Davis’ good story of the name, and three times better as a play than as a story. It tells in swift, gripping fash- fon the tale of Ranson’'s “folly,” the practical joke of a young army officer who, for a wager, holds up a stage with a pair of scissors, and the sensational consequence. The: scene {s .an, army post in Arizona, and everything lends illusion. One might go far to find a more skillfully acted and written din- ner scene than the mess dinner at which the wild young officer, bored to death by the inactivity of his life, makes the wager. The lovemaking is a pretty and convincing element, and | you get a genuine catch of the breath | at the hero’s predicaments. Mr. Fraw- ley is well cast as Ranson. Though not exactly a Hotspur, he achieves a good deal of fire and an unusual geni- ality. The close-mouthed, resourceful, nonchalant character is grateful to him, and he will be enjoyed therein. There is an excellent company in sup- | port. Mary Cahill is very prettily and sincerely acted by Eleanor Montell. The work lacks a shade of simplicity, but Miss Montell has tenderness and delight- ful girlishness. The lieutenant owning the brogue, whether it be Eghert Peters or Walter Crosby, is an honor to the accent. There js a very good “bad man” in Charles Sturgis as Abe Case and another in James McKean. W. H. Bur- ton and Frazer Coulter as Colonel Bol- land ang Captain Chase would be given command on sight anywhere. ' And the realistic note is capitally struck through- out, save by Mark Price as Jeff Cahill Mr. Price cannot wholly forget that he is acting. Grace de Witt contributes a |'delightful bit of comedy as Mrs. Post, | the old lady who tells of-the hold-up, and the rest fill in with all needful art. | The piece is put on excellently and can be handsomely recommended. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. Alcazar. “Audrey” was given in fine style at the Alcazar Theater last evening. The performance of Lillian Lawrence. as Audrey easily ranks as her best role to date. Throughout it was intense, never overdone, and effective from any point of view. John Craig was the | hero, the part being well done. Scott ade a strong presentation of Hugon. ‘m:he!' and Adele Belgarde shone as the Dardens. There are six scenes and each is effective and telling. The book story followed quite closely, with the | exception that Audrey escapes dcath, | and the love feature is rounded out happily. - Central. “Down Mobile,” a Southern idyl by Lincoln J. Carter, was presented at the Central Theater last night to an over- flowing house and was well enjoyed. The plot is different from anything seen at this theater and belng well strung along a line of fine scenic effects and surprising situations was pro- nounced one of the best productions of the season. Mr. Shumer and' Mr. Gamble come in for main honors in the play. Millar Bacon, Myrtle Vane and George Webster are also seen to ad- vantage. Tivoll. The second week of “The Black Hus- sar” began last night at the Tivoli be- fore an appreciative audience. S ‘ Chutes. Chiquita, the smallest woman on earth, and known universally by the | title of the “living .doll,” made great hits at both performances at thc Chutes yesterday afternoon: and evening.. Francesca Redding and her company in “The Cattle Queen,” the Southern Com- edy Four, the McConnell Sisters, La Toska and Annie Redline, who weighs nearly six hundred pounds, completed the bill. . —————— ARMED FARMER GUARDS HIS WERICANS CHISE M AL U Party of Yankees Under the Leadership of Joseph De- witt Dispose of a Big Band of Murderous Indians HANG FIVE OF THEM TO NEAR-BY TREES Ten of the Savages Are Slain in First Attack of the Plucky Sons of Uncle Sam and Rest Flee to Mountains - Special Dispatch to The Call. [ NOGALES, Ariz, June 26.—A party of ,American mining men " from the Ures district of Sonora saved a large number of ranchers in the San Miguel Valley from a terrible fate and drove a band of Yaqui rebels back into the mountains, ‘according ' to. passengers who arrived to-night from Hermosillo. Fully 100 Indians had been pillaging the country north of Ures, and Fran- cisco Orotondo, Luis Carranza, Jesus Orotondo, Jose Cunillo, Angell Acuna and fully a dozen _other. prosperous ranchers had been murdered when the news of the killings reached Poso, where Joseph Dewitt organized = his party of Americans and went to the rescue.. The redskins fled'at the ap- proach of Dewitt's party, but were hotly pursued. The fleeing savages left ten dead men along the trail and carried with them many wounded. The ' American party feared to pursue them further into the rough mountains in.which they took refuge. Five stragglers, captured by the party, were hanged to near-by trees. Some. of the Mexican ranchers met death in' a terrible manner. Cunillo’s heart. was cut out. Francisco and Jesus Orotondo . and Luis Carranza, with several members of their families, died after a hot fight, which took place at Buenos Ayres Ranch. According to the best advices the raid began Thurs- day and on Sunday the American party was still protecting the district, await- ing the arrival of regular troops from Ures, SUORE G D0 “WITHTHE 0T COPENHAGEN, Denmark, June 26.—A serigus disaster occurred last night near here, when the Danish cadet training schooner Georg-Stag - crammed and sunk by -the British :t”%‘l:gunonl. The Georg-Stag sank-in ene“and a half minutes. Twenty-two ' cadets: were drowned and fifty-seven rescued. The boys were all in' their bunks at the time of the disaster. The night was over- cast, but it was not so dark that objects could not be seen.at some dstance. The Ancona was considerably damaged along her-water line. The port authorities have placed an embargo on the Ancona. The vessel will remain here until the in- quiry into the collision is completed. Thus far only a single body has been recovered by the divers who have gone to the wreck. First Officer Myhre of the Georg-Stag attributes the accident to the Ancona changing her course. He sald the An- cona's bow crashed seven feet into the training schooner’s side, bringing down the latter's masts and rigging and pre- venting any of tue cadets from gaining the deek. Those who were not e‘ntangled in the wreckage sprang on board"the An- cona and assisted in launching the life- boats. Myhre himself jumped, into the water and-rescued many boys who were entangled in the rigging. The Georg-Stag was a schooner of 206 tons register and was 103 feet long. She was a training vessel for the mercantile marine and was owned by a private firm of Copemhagen. ARMOUR EMPLOYE NOW IN SECRET SERVICE Speclal Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, June 26.—At one time a trusted stenographer of Armour & Co., in which position he obtained informa- tion later furnished to the Government in its investigation of the packing in- dustry and the refrigerator car business, Hector Strecykmans is now said to be a member of the United States secret ser- vice staff. For some time, it is said, Strecykmans has been working in Chi- cago as a secret service operative with- out his friends or former business asso- ciates knowing of his duties. A few days ago the young man suddenly left Chi- cago, and is now said to be in the West investigating Armour & €o.’s fruit trans- portation business for the Government. —_——e————— Californians in New York. NEW YORK, June 26.—The following Californians have arrived in New York: From San Francisco—R. W. Neal, Mrs. R. W. Neal, at the Empire; G. W. Whittaker, at the Imperial; J. P. At- kin, at the Hoffman; E. E. Baker, Mrs. J. E. Baker, at the Broadway Central; P. R. Bradley, at the Westminster; H. . Cashman and wife, at the Wolcott; . D. Creighton, at the Astor; E. L Hirnburg, at the Imperial; J.. M. Eva, G. F. Elmer, at the Hotel Astor; Miss C. M. Finnle, at the Broadway .Central; Mrs, Fleter, C. G. Frisbie, at the Hotel Astor; B. 8. Harris, at the Hotel Nor- ‘mandit . T. Kibbler, at the Hotel As- tor; Miss E. Leroy, at the Grand Union; Miss K. McGowan, at the Bartholdl; L. Otzen, at the Astor House; C. L. Parke and wife, at the Hotel Astor; H. Perrin, at the Herald Square; W. Preston, at the Hotel York;.E. Samuels, at the Her- ald Square; A. M. Stone, at the Hotel Imperial; T. Tarbell, 8 V. Van Nor- den, at the Hotel Astor; J. D. Wheeler and wife, at the Belvedere; C. H. Wood- side, at the Hotel Astor. From San Jose—Dr. G. D. Marvin, CROPS AGAINST INTRUDERS Rancher Troubled With Lease Keeps Long Watch, Even Eating Meals in Field. SAN BERNARDINO,. June 26.—A quarrel over leases caused Omar Jones to take a position in his hay field with a shotgun and keep out.all intruders, his meals being brought .him -by his wife. A baseball club obtained a sec- ond lease, and tried to remove the hay crop. ~ at the Astor. From Los Angelées—F. Baker, at the Ashland, R. 8. Cromble, at the Murray Hill; 8. Smith, at the Grand Hotel; J. F. Clapp, at the Gilsey. The new “Thrift-Creed” says: “I be- lieve in finding leisure, every day, to read and understand the want ads.” 3 e Bacramtnts; Bied & DUtttion 1o T y in ‘the United States District Tl YHieawes #4532 and has no N -GALE. DESTROYS ‘BIG BUILDING One Man Killed and Two Hurt in New York by Col- lap_se of Apartment-House STORM ALMOST CYCLONE ‘Wind and Rain Sweep Over Section of City Doing Vast Damage in Fifteen Minutes NEW YORK, June 26.—A storm of cyclonic proportions, accompanied by a terrific deluge of rain, passed over Harlem and.the Bronx this afternoon, causing widespread havoc. A six-story building in course of erection in One Hundred and Thirty-sixth: street, near Riverside Drive, was demolished. John Lawler, foreman of the bricklayers’, was crushed to death, and’ two Italian laborers were ‘severely injured. The wrecked building was one of a row.of new apartment houses. Lawler and the two laborers, seeing the storm ap- proaching from the Jersey shore, start- ed for the street and had reached the first floor when the building collapsed. Abraham, Pearlman of the firm of Pearlman & Brown, the builders of the house, and Abraham Borderek, the su- perintendent of construction, were later arrested. A -The lower. section of the city expe- rienced only a somewhat heavy gale, with'no rain. The wind reached a ve- locity of forty-three miles an hour. Plateglass windows were shattered and trees,and chimneys blown -down. The storm passed-in’ fifteen’ minutes. NORTON A1 " BELINS U NEW YORK, June 26.—As chairman of the Equitable Life Assurance So- ciety’s board- of directors, Paul Morton has begun legal proceedings.to recover money alleged to have been wrongfully taken from the society, and he also has cut off certain perquisites in. the so- ciety. Morton to-night made the fol- lowing statement: I have retained Austin G. Fox and Wallace McFarlane as epecial counsel for the Equitable Soclety in connection with ths investigation of the past financlal transactions of the soclety by Price, Waterhouse & Co., and. Haskins and Sells, chartered accountants, which is mow in progress, and to institute such legal proceed- ings as they may consider to ‘be appropriate for the recovery of any money and property to which the Equitable is found to be entitled as the result of their examination. Messrs, Fox and McFarlane have been instructed to put themselves in communication with the Attorney General and the insurance Depart- ment and to act in harmony with them. It has been the rule heretofore to allow di- rectors $25_for attending executive committee meetings of the Equitable Society, and- these allowances were made whether the directors were presgnt or absent. This has been changed. No direetor will in future get fees unless he is present at the. meetings and no officer 8r em- ploye who happens to be a director will here- after recelve any fee for attending board meet- ings of any kind. % STEAMSHIP REPORT MADE BY KEMPFF Epecial Dispatch to The Call CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, June 26.—Rear Admiral Kempft, retired, has reported to Secre- tary Metcalf of the Department of Com- merce and Labor regarding the Investiga- tion of steamships and ferryhoats of the district comprising San Francisco har- bor and its Pacific Coast auxiliaries. Rear Admiral Kempft is one of a number of special inspectors appointe. shortly after the Slocum disaster to make a report re- garding the life-saving equipment of ocean, bay and river steamships in vari- ous parts of the United States. The inspection of Pacific Coast vessels shows nothing in detail regarding the ferryboat system as applied to San Fran- cisco Bay or elsewhere. The United States statutes do not make it a crime to overload ferryboats, and all that was necessary for the investigators to do was to go into details regarding the sort of life preservers required and the manner of handling lifeboats by ferry crews. The admiral reports that 142 steamships were inspected at ‘San Francisco, San Diego, Eureka and Sacramento. He says that the defects of the steamship George W. Elder were charged to the Portland divi- sion of inspection. The Elder is said to have been delinquent in boat drills and fire apparatus. The admiral intimates that after the first inspection there was a vast improve- ment in equipment and on reinspection many vessels were in comparatively good trim. e ——— BIG OIL PIPE LINE PUT INTO OPERATION INDEPENDENCE, Kans., June 26.— The Whiting pipe line has begun tak- ing oil from the southern field. The line is not yet completed, but as it will require.ten days to fill the pipe, it is believed that it will be completed be- fore the end of that time. It will take 150,000 barrels of oil to fill the pipe. In addition to this there is completed tankage along the route for 70,000 bar- rels more. The working capacity of this line is 18,000 barrels a day, but | it will be some time before the line | will take this amount, as several pumping stations have yet to be built. The ,Whiting line, constructed and owned by the Standard Oil Company, runs from the Southern Kansas oil flelds through Kansas City, at which latter point big storage tanks are lo- cated, to Whiting, Ind. PACKERS OF BEEF ours. It is thoroughly sani designs. FIBER CARPET—No floor covering made more thor- try homes; yard border. Per ya pure linseed oil. SICK OF AL STILL MISSIG BAKERSFIELD, June 26.—The disap- pearance of the United States mail pouch containing $2000 from a Santa Fe train has been reported. It may lead to the discovery-of one of the boldest and most clever holdups on the road. Somewhere between Albuquerque and Winslow the sack was missed, and the matter was re- ported to the authorities this morning. ‘There is positively no clew to the guilty person, but everything possible is being done to find the criminal. The pouch con- tained national bank notes issued by an Albuquerque bank and were in denomina- tions of fives, tens and twentles. All banks along the line have been notified to keep a lookout for the bills and find the robber if possible. Superintendent Denair of tne Santa Fe, to whom the loss was reported, has warned all officers and detectives along the line, a& Wwell @s those tn other parts of the country. As yet no clews have been found by the authorities, and the disappearance of the mall sack is a mysa téry which Is puzzling the authorities. CHICAGO TEAMSTERS REJECT PEACE OFFER CHICAGO, June 26.—By a practically unanimous vote to-night the teamsters refused to accept the terms recently of- fered by the employers, and the latest peace prospects in the strike have van- ished. The terms offered by the em- ployers were those which have been published from time to time, with.the addition that the question of wearing the unfon button should be left for de- ciston by the employers individually. Only two unions, the department store drivers and the express drivers, voted on the question, the other unions agreeing in advance to accept the decision of theses two unlons. e BLOW DEALT TO PRINTERS. PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—A nine- hour workday and “an open shop” were instituted to-day in forty-five of the leading establishments in this city, employing, it is said, two-thirds of the local compositors. This action was decided upon at a recent meeting here of the United Ty- pothetae, at which master printers from all sections of the country were represented. It was taken in anticipa- tion of a demand to be made by the printers for an eight-hour workday beginning next January. No immediate opposition to the new order is expect- ed._ The national convention of print- ers will be held in Toronto in August, and a course of action will be decided upon then. ———— GRANDMERE, Que., June 26.—Fifteen em- ployes of an American circus were ed here to-day by militia from Quebec. charged with having kidnaped a young French Cana- dian girl at Roberval and with having shot an- other irl at Chambord. Furnishing where the terms are as liberal as a home of your own Your Credit Is an easy matter high time you-owned .. Is Good. Carpets AGATE INGRAIN—A good, reversible floor covering; tary and moth proof; Per: Yard i ivsconsdecis oughly artistic for bedrooms, living rooms or coun- comes in choice patterns. Per Asc TAPESTRY BRUSSELS—An excellent grade in Orien- tal and floral designs; or without borders. VELVET CARPET—Soft and harmonious in coloring, closely woven; floral and Persian designs; with or without border. AXMINSTER CARPET—Soft and luxurious to the tread. A carpet that will give years of satisfactory wear. Oriental and Persian designs; with or without choice colorings; Per yard.. . Per yard 95¢ rd INLAID LINOLEUM—The kind that goes clear through to the back; made of the best Per square ground cork and i $1.00 PREFER DEATH 10 SEPARATION PATERSON, N. J., June 2%.—Unable to endure a long separation in the foreign |mervice to which he was assigned, Henry Eichenrodt, bandmaster of the United States battleship Alabama, with his | young wife, to whom he had been united {less than a year, committed suicide to- day. Eichenrodt married Clara Tetzold of | this city last spring and their life was very happy although the bandmaster's duties only permitted him to visit his bride at long intervals. After the last cruise of the North Atlantic fleet he came home and was to have rejoined his ship to-night, with the understanding that he would not again have shore leave before departing for the Asiatic station. The young couple were deeply depressed at their approaching separation. To-day friends gathered at his home to bid fare- | well to the bandmaster. In the midst of the festivities Eichenrodt and his wife left the party and soon after were found dead in their bedroom and clasped in each other's arms. Examination showed that after turning on the gas both had swallowed carbolic acid. Mrs. Eichen- rodt was 2 years old and Ler husband 28 ————ins COURT GRANTS DIVORCE TO LADY GREY-EGERTON Former Miss May Cuyler Given a Divorce on the Ground of Desertion. LONDON, Jhne 26.—The divorce court to-day granted Lady Grey-Egerton (formerly Miss May Cuyler, daughter of Major Wayne Cuyler. U. 8. A) a di- vorce oh the ground of desertion from, her husband, Sir Philip Grey-Egerton.” The suit is the sequel of a previous case, when the wife sued for a restitu- tion of her conjugal rights and obtainet a divorce, which, however, Sir Philip refused to obey. —_——————— DIES IN MEXICO. Well-Known San Jose Peace Officer Vietim of Puneumonia. SAN JOSE. June 26.—Juan Edson of this city, one of the best known peace officers In the State, died of pneumonia at Tepic In the State of Tepic, Mexico, yvesterday. Edson was born in Mexico fifty-four years ago. He served as a Deputy Sheriff in this county for many years. Edson for five years followed Juan Wasielski, who killed a former sweetheart of the officer at Los Gatos, and brought him to the gallows. He also captured “Dick™ Fellows, the stage robber. ———————— Temperance Advocate Better. LOS ANGELES, June 26.—Francis Murphy, temperance advocate, has so far recovered his health that he will start for his home in the Fast on Wednesday next, accompanied by his sons and daughters. That is WILL BE INDICTED Epecial Dispatch to The Call CHICAGO, June 26.—That the Federal Grand Jury investigating the beef indus- try wilk vote indictments against the packers next Saturday was admitted to- night by a Government official, who de- Is the clared that before the close of the week several of the men:against whom evi- dence of violations of the anti-trust laws has been obtained would depart suddenly, for- Europe and other points outside the Jurisdiction of the United States courts, on their “annual vacations.” It is now considered a foregone conclu- sion in the offices of the United States District Attorney us-t true bills be voted and that be returned in court next Saturday morning. et Itis Teachers Are Gathering. SAN JOSE, June 26.—Many teachers and students are arriving from all por- tions of the State for the State Normal Summer School, which will open to- morrow. President Dailey is of the opinfon that fully 400 will attend.the session, which will continue six weeks. & ’ - UNION Francisco. Bottling Dept. - 3 Doctors Prescribe It Nurses Endorse It Everybody LiKes It why Ca "most popular beer in San sCadl Beer a typical California product— pure, wholesome and tonic—Health, / Strength and Vigor are enjoyed all who drink it Ask your grocer and under no cir- cumstances accept any other beer.