The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 21, 1905, Page 4

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. FRIDAY, JULY 2 L T AGREE CADETS ENJOYING LIFE AT CAMP CULLENI(IHTS HEHT ON A VERDICT /22> 42zPrE ~ IN THER CELL TIME FOR PLEASURE BETWEEN THE DRILLS Desperate Felons Who Took | Part in the Folsom Brea.k; Quarrel -in Capital Jail Jury in Williamson Land Fraud Case Deliberates 46 Hours Without Any Result [NOVEL WEAPONS TUSED | : PREE- g5 = LEADING BUSINES® COLLEGE oF THa ! WEST. Knives Fashioned Out of‘;m.’é';‘:n"d,:."..'(’{';";‘;.';”af?’. atgne. Steak Bone and a Tin Cup | Handle Wielded by Thug POLYTECHNIC ‘:'-h— College and kc:;;l."LE.‘I- Gpecial Dispatéh to The Call | _ Great Business University of the West | bullding in U. S. for business college — [ NTO, . —Charles Cor- | gudents: o - : msnA:‘r&A:;l-::ggfl ’;u'{hdo‘ Two convicts | Typibe Machibes PRisan or Gregs Shorthes on trial for thelr lives in connection with | Finest Banking Otfices :1.1 m,_:_::._xm,., the last big break at Folsom prison, en- | M"’“"’"‘_ i gaged in a savage fight at the County | Civil. Electrical, Mining Jail at a late hour last night. Quijado | TEN WANT CONVICTION - Offer of Compromise Fails to Change Two Jurors, Who Voted Always for Acquittal e s 2. P hope of &n onded hat prowE s FaNey s ] ted grea INDICTMENT FAULTY. X Admity Fiaw in Land Fraud Case. Prosecution - & F 12 » te d e b . z e MEMBER OF THE APPELLATE COURT A VERY SICK MAN Justice C. E. MeLaughlin May Have to Undergo Operation for Removal of Abscess in Ear. . . " Ar s s abs may be ne S B pe € next WOODLAND MAN IS SEVERAL TIMES STABBED IN A BRAWL Quarrel Between Two Drunkem Men Ends in a Serious Cutting Affray. Ds- was pocket & Over-the en- ¢ of the aeroplane ac- an@ Camp Culen pre- y. Th at are ) free from vis- will be “the 7. will be ldiers and a be provided large 4ccesSsion to the cadets to-day, t n Fra o to remain More McCullough of- to-day. cadets are put is .hardening them. alion drills are fol- ount in the morning, is given over to for dress parade. € a favorite haunt y8 and baseball teams from rent companies play games Fathers O'Ryan a Colonel Power and guests of Father Cu ’iew. at luncheon to ather Cullen that the camp is ‘iam(-d. The League of the Cross Cadets’ Band visited Agnews Insane Asylum to-day and entertained-the inmates of and Kennedy staff were the of Mountain It is after < and excursions made to: erest about the valley, San} UNIONS OF SANTA ROSA | oo > ) WIN A LEGAL BATTLLt I 1 granted the. defendant’s 'motion for a n uit, because the plaintiffs had not | shown by testimony that the defendant! organization was or would in the future | njyure ‘the business of the draying firm. Lee Brothers refused to sign the union | | zeamsters’) schedule .and, were declared “unfair.”” = Notides. to,Jlhis effect were sent by the Labor Council to a number of local merchants, and the latter with- drew their patronage from the draymen. The Lees obtained a temporary restrain- ing order against the council. The ‘counsel for plaintiffs acknowl- edged that he could not make the show- | ing requested by the court and the non- suit was the T POLICE CHIEF FINED - | FOR VIOLATING LAW| Spokane Official Pays $2 50 for Using Hose Without | a Sprinkler. Court Refuses to Issue an In- iunction Against Labor Couneil. SANTA ROSA, July 20.—Lee Brothers, bers of a local draying firm, were nent injunction restrain- Labor Council from the firm's business to- day by Judge Burnett. The court Special Dispatch to The Call. —Chief of e of the Police v thirteen | caught on Wednesday | g without a nozzle by corps of water detectives. ller paid the $2 50 fine before cr officials would again | Instructions were not to let the news on the wate by the Chie is the gulity person in this said the Chief, and he laughed a reporter suggested it was rat¥ bad to hlame the dificulty on | Mrs. Wall “Well, she gets no more hats this summer for this,” and again ke Chief smiled, determined to fasten SANTA FE TO BEGIN WORK ON NEW ROAD Will Rush to Completion Line Into Recently Pur- chased Oil Lands. Epecial Dispatch to The Cail. BAKERSFIELD, July 20.—The actual work of construction by the Banta Fe Railroad Company on the sunset to Mid- way will begin in from ten to twenty-days and the grading and laying of the tracks will be rushed to completion as fast as possible. The ralls are ready to be ship- ped from Arizona and other materfal is on hand for the work- The Santa Fe, now that it is directly concerned in development work at Mid- way and has contractsd for_the oil' of the Chanslor Canfield Midway Company, a half interest in whose holdings the Santa Fe purchased for $$10,00 a short time ago, is interested in seeing the ex- tension completed as soon-as possible, | and it may be said authoritatively that| there wili be no delay in the work. ——————————— FISH WORTH TEN MILLIONS WILL BE CAUGHT THIS YEAR Oficial Predicts Great Catch on Puget Sound Because of Size of Sock- eye Salmon Rum. TACOMA, July 20.—There is. a great run of sockeye salmon now pouring into Puget Sound. State Fish Commis- sioner Kershaw predicts a catch val- | ued at $10,000,000, or nearly equaling that of four years ago. He belleves the sockeye catch will be smaller than that of four years ago because during that year a dam ‘maintained in Quesnelle River in|British Columbia shut off the fish from their spawning grounds. The dam has since been destroyed. Pack- |ing on the Columbia River is under way with splendid prospects. Fish are unusually large and of fine quality. ————————— SACRAMENTO RIVER SAND CONTAINS MUCH PURE GOLD Contractor Engaged in Dredging the Stream Observes Metal Passing Through Big Pumps. SACRAMENTO, July 20.—Contractor William Muir,. ‘'who is filling China Slough with sand pumped from the BAKERSFIELD MEDICOS NOT LIVING IN PEACE | Dr. Crease Subject of Quarrel That May Break Up Association. Spectal Dispatcy to The Call.” _BAKERSFIELD, July 20.—The Kern with disruption as a result of a quarrel which has arisen over the rights in the assoclation of Dr. Frederick J. Crease. Dr. Crease and his adherents claim that | he is a full member in the association, is its president and” is 1o full authority to | perform all the functions of the office, while the opposition stoutly maintain that ! he is not a member of the organization, that he applied for membership and was | refused and that he has no grounds for i claiming the presidency. —_————————— ] A beautiful picture of JOHN PAUL JONES, AMERICA’S BELOVED NAVAL HERO, whose remains are new on the way from France for final interment in | thix country, will be Issued as a supple- ment to NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL. { ——————— MINER WHO DEFRAUDED HIS ;Sl.x Weens' Wanderings Along the | Yukon River Tell on Dis- | honest Klondiker. | { TACOMA, July 20.—Henry Currier, | who left Dominion Creek with $10,000 |in gold dust, leaving debts exceeding | ¢4v,000, was arrested by Deputy Mar- | shal Robinson while floating down the .ukon. He offered $1000 for his free- idom. Currier was taken to Bagle, where a charge of evading customs was | preferred against him. As gold dust is not dutiable, the Eagle authorities | quickly released him and he resumed !'his trip down the river. Commissioner Myers decided further that the Dawson charge was not extraditable. In his six weeks' wanderings, while haunted County Medical Association is threatened | shot off by & guard. Corson Is his cell mate. Th ter was armed with two deadly weapons, which he freely used. Quijado was bleeding from wounds in- |son himself was almost completely knocked out. The weapons wers of re- markable character, one being a sharp dagger, fashioned from the T-bone of & steak served Corson at the prison table | and carefully sharpened In his cell. The | {other was a knife made from the handle |of a tin cup. [NUGGETS AND FINE GOLD IN CREEK BED {0ld Klondiker Makes Rich | Discovery on Upper Hoota- linqua, in Alaska. Special Dispatch to The Call TACOMA, July 20—While in White | Horse last week Sheriff Eilbeck of Daw- | sen was able to secure details of the new gcld strike on Upper Hootalinqua. Three | gold-bearing creeks already prospected | are Willow, Sydney and Marble. They | flow into the Nesultin River sixty miles {from Teslin Lake in British territory. | Eighty-three claims have been staked and recoided. James Thompson, an old Klon- | dike miner, made the discovery a year |ago, but would not excite a stampede | until he had an opportunity to prove the existence of gold. His partners are | Brewer Anderson and R. H. Greenfleld, a | former Dawson jeweler. The gold runs | from very fine to nuggets with §7. unt of remt paid as Figure the | money lost— Buy your home on installments—save the money— | Ask the Real Estate man how. SURVEYORS PICKING A ROLTE OVER THOME; oN’ PASS SUMMIT Havemeyer Bel to Be Back of Road to Be Built Into Alaska Copper Territory. VALDEZ, July 20.—Surveyors are al- | ready in the field and thirty-five miles | of railroad will be built this season | from Valdez over the Thompson Pass | summit. The railroad is being built by G. Hazlett, manager of the Alaska Copper Company. It is intended to | reach the mines of the company oan Copper River., It will be extended to Eagle in time. The extension made this summer over Thomspon Pass will prove a great boon to Fairbanks peo- ple for making outside communication during the winter months. The larg- est copper mines im the interior are owned by the Havemevers of New York, who are believed to be back of Hazlett in his enterprise. | SLAVONIAN MINER DROWNED | IN WATERS OF SQUAW CREEK CREDITORS A PHYSICAL WRECK | ypfortunate Man Meets Death in Pres- | ence of Companions With Whem [ He Went Bathing. REDDING, July 20.—While two com- rades looked on from the bank, power- !less to aid him, Izan Grbatz, a Slavon- ian, was drowned in Squaw Creck, just below the Delamar smelter. Thursday Grbatz and two countrymen, also em- ployes of the smelter, went to Squaw Creek to bathe. Grbatz was not an ex< | perienced swimmer and handied himseilf awkwardly in the water. He stepped into a deep hole and with a piercing shriek sank from sight. His compan- jons gave the alarm and a party of men began to search for the body, which | was recovered an hour later. —_—————— | CACHE OF €OPPER WIRE has but one arm, the other having been | «wo men quarreled and Quijado with his one arm success- | tully fought off Corson, aithough the lat- | When the jallers reached the scens | ficted by Corson’s weapons, while Cor-| Established 1593 841 Fulton St., San Francisco Offers all the advantages of European and Eastern conservatories for a thorough sical education. Pupils prepared for chu and comcert work and the operatic stag Special Summer Course for Teachers. Prosectus upon applieation. Mills College and Seminary CONFERS DEGREES AND GRANTS DIPLO- MAS Seminary course accredited to the univ ties and leading Eastern colleges: rare oppor | mities offered in music, art and slocution | ty-ninth_year. di HAMLIN SsCHOO { AND V:N NE35 SEMIN:RY, | 1849 Jagkson st. S. F n School for Giris. colieges and wniv . given to music. Reopens Tuesday. 1905. SARAH D. HAMLIN, Pr THE LYCEUM An accredited preparatory school for the uni- versity, law and medical colleges: is we known for its careful and thorough work. Come and be with ences, Presiden BUSINESS COLLEGE. Ehorthand Insitute 723 Market St V. The high-grade school of S. F. Business Tram- ing. Shortband. Type- writing Positions for graduates. Free catalogue Boones Cnlversity School for Boys BERKELEY, CALIF. Commences its tw. ffth year Mon- day. st Tth. Term Opens Ausust 9. 1905 Western Business College. 1281 Market: terms $8 per month ces. IRVING INSTITUTE. | Boarding an4 day school for young ladies and | metle giris. 2 lifornia street. Wil reopen August 7, Acer 4 by the unt A MRS. EDWARD B. CHURCH. . E.L. ac ANDERSUN ACADEMY IRV L‘GTO‘;.( CALIEORNIA. L D. SCHOOL OF ILLUSTRATION PARTINGTON'S, 424 PINE ST School in America. MO! } Oldest | July 3L | Miss West's Scheel for Girls 2014 Van Ness avenue, opens August 18, 1905 Home and Day Schooi: Kindergartem: accred- ited by leading colleges. MARY B. WEST, Principal Hiichcock Military Academy SAN RAFAEL. Christmag term will commence August 18 WOUNT TAMALPAIS MILITARY ACADEMY, i SAN RAFAEL, CAL. | Junior School Separaze. stitution with a band concert. | .\ . Sacramento River in front of the city, : ] This amusement was furnished by | '0¢ Dlame on Lis wife. has discovered pleces of pure gold in | "‘,m f""‘: Currier has become a physi- IS FOUND NEAN EEDDING | —AXTECE CROSFE. D D Head Mo Father Raggio, who has charge of the| _ . __ S the sand. Muir says he is satisfied c&l wreck. = | y S Catholic services at the asylum. | SAVES HIS FATHER therey is much native gold in the Sac- | I R F S REDDING, July 20. — Wednesday | HARKER-HiUGHES SCHOOL Great preparations have been made AT RISK OF HONOR | ramento River, but he has no time to| _ Bennington to Tow Wyoming. morning F. A. Griggsby, a rancher, and | e Mo B | for the offic ball to-morrow night, | _ extract it from the sand passing” VALLEJO. July 20.—Orders for the | genjamin Hart. gperintendent of the | ypusie sducation under a pupll of Catvin B which promises to be a brilliant affair, | YOun§ Lawyer Accused of Perjuring | through his pumps. tug Fortune to go to Port Harford to | 1exas Consolidate®, mine, while walk- | Cady, Accredited to Vassar and Wellealey. e ———— Himself at Trial of tow the Wyoming to San Franecisco ing over the hills.to the White House | Opens August 21, 1905. 1121 Bryant Street. —_—————— Hope to Escape New Tariff. have been ceuntermanded. To-day Ad- TACOMA. July 20.—The German | miral McCalla ‘wired Commander de steamship Theben returned to Tacoma | Young of the Bennington, at San Diego, to-day ‘with rush orders to load lmi to tow the Wyoming to Mare Island. Parent. RENO, July 20.—Patrick A. McCarran, a young lawyer of this city and for- merly a representative of Washoe OFFICER WHO ALLOWED BEER IN CAMP COURT-MARTIALED found 500 pounds of heavy copper wire | |and copper fixtures stolenm from the | SL IATTIIEW'S’IILITAIY SBI“L stamp mill- of the Texas mine. bout Trin 1l Degin Au two months ago Hart caught two |3 N L shiie T . | Captaiw’s Lesiency During Maneuvers When dressing you will find & ot Coat Shirt @ delight to put on. If the garment is whi mmum.nr—fl-v. 1f oclored, the !A!x"l.‘t i COLOE-FAST. $1.50 and more CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., MAKERS OF CLUETT AND ARROW COLLARS “THE OLD SCRATCH.” How the Evil One Came to Be Popularly Knows as “The Old Scratch.” | familiar names of esty i “The Old| undoubtedly due to the ching is o disagreeable that people thought it no worse than the evil one. A scalp full of dandruff | ps one scratching all the time; not only agreeable, but considered very inelegant in polite soclety—as it should be—because one ought to keep the scalp | so clean that it would not itch. To cure the scalp of dandruff effectively, use| Newbro's Herpicide It kills the germ that creates the dandruff, which is pri liminary to falling halr, and, finally, | baldness. No other halr preparation kills the dandruff germ. Herpicide also §s a very delightful and effective hair dressing. Sold by leading druggists. Send We in stemps for sample to The Herpi- cide Co., Detroit, Mieh. At lealiing drug stores, sent prepaid from “Detroit, Mich., updn receipt of $1.00. at Atascadero Gets Mim Into Peck of Trouble. VANCOUVER BARRACKS, Wash., .—Captain Carl F. Hartman, Sig- nal Corps, United States army, is. be- fore 1 court-martial on. a nduct unbecoming an offi- nd a gentleman. Really he is on trial for an alleged breach of the can- teen law during the encampment at Atascadero, Cal., last year. Lieutenant W. H. Kent, Signal Corps, was the first witness examined to-day. cer a | He declared he heard Lieutenant Good- ale report to Captain Hartman that there was beer in the canteen, and that the captain replied: “I do not care how much beer they have got as long .as they do not get whisky.” The gefense ¢ndeavored to show that Captain Hartraan had used every en- deavor to prevent the men from get- ting whisky, at one time confiscating and destroying 2. quantity the soldiers had collected from saloons. = ————— LIFE OF AN AGED INDIAN IS ENDED BY A BULLET After Living More Than a Cenmtury Dr. Jim Falls Vietim of Cowardly Murderer. - EVERETT, Wash, July 20.—The body of Dr. Jim, an Indian, aged 106 yeaPs, was found to-d4y under the bridge on the Darrington branch of the Northern Pacific road, three mjles | from Arlington, Wash. A" bullet that entered the back.of the aged Indian's head had caused his death. Officers are searching for the murderer. SEVEN CARLOADS OF STEEL RAILS FOR OCEAN SHORE ROAD SANTA CRUZ, July 20.—Seven . car- loads of steel rails arrived to-day for the Ocean Shore Railway. Thé rails are part of thirty-five carloads and will be used for that portion of the road between -this eity and Waddell Creek, which has been graded. | County in the Nevada Legislature, is to | be arrested and tried in the United | Btates court on a charge of stealing | telegraph poles belonging to the Gov- ernment and aléo on a charge of per- jury. During the trial of McCarran's father, 2 well-known sheep man, in the United States court early this week, the young attorney ably defended his father, and by his eloquent plea gained his liberty for him. Attorney Sum- merfleld now_claims that it is the be- lief of the United States officers that | young McCarran perjured himself while testifying in the case in order to ac- quit his father. He testified that it was pot his father who took the poles, but | that he took them and that he did not | know that they were Government prop- | erty. The young man will now be! tried on two felony charges, but friends claim that the evidence is not strong | enough to convict him. —_—————————— MAN WANTED BY POLICE IS CAPTURED IN LOUISVILLE Alleged Forger Will Be Held In Blue Grass State Pending Arrival { of Extradition Papers. { SACRAMENTO, July 20. — W. H. | Buchawan, charged with having forged & check for $550 on the First National Bank of Redlands, is under arrest at Louisville, Ky. - The District Attorney of San Bernardino County has advised that he will forward the necessary pa- pers for Buchanan’s extradition. —_—————————— GETTING READY TO BEGIN ' "'\WORK ON WESTERN PACIFIC Ce— RENO;- July 20.—Representatives of the Utah: Construction Company have been at "Wells, Nev., for several days Jooking aver the line of the Western Pacific surveys and providing for ac- commodations. They gave out the in- formation that they were sure of get- ting -the contraet to built the Western Pacific from Eiko, Ney., to Silver “Zone, | Utah, a distance of ‘fifteen miles, . ¥ tons of wheat in order to gail for Mexi- can ports before the new tariff adopted by Mexico goes into effect. —_— e—————— NEW YORK, July 20.—Cable and land tele- graph lines in Japan which were interrupted by 8 typhoon have been repaired. | thieves stealing the copper power wire from the poles of his line and fired | nifieteen shots at them without result. Strictly a F: amily Beverage Consumed in 1904 More than three-fifths of this amount used in the homes. This fact marks the decline of strong alcoholic drinks, and is the greatest step in the direction of true temperance. Z Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louis, U. §. A. Orders Promptly Filled by Tillmann & Bendel, Distributors, San Francisco, Cal. ad A Brewer, A B.. Rector and Headmaster. 'BEAULIEU A boarding and day school for girls: numbes fmited; 1ith year. 2601 College ave., Berkeley. | ! COLLEGE OF NOTRE DAME, SAN JOSE, CAL. Bxciusively for boarding students. Fifty-fourth year. Courses: Class- fcal, Literary, Scientific, Conservatory, College preparatory aceredited. Intermediate and Pri- mary Classes. Studies resumed Thursday, Au- sust 17, 1905 THE PAUL GERSON SCHOOL oF ACTING—The largest institution devot

Other pages from this issue: