The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 10, 1905, Page 29

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’ ,The Call Prints More News Than Any Other {"Pafper Published in San Francisco day, with clondin fresh east winds. ess increa e 2 fs S THE WBATHER | I THE THEATERS. ] ALCA[ZAR—'—“'H:C Sword of the King.™ — Matinee. ALHAMBRA—""After Midnight.” Mat- Forecast for Desember 10, 1905 l inee. CALIFORNIA—"London Gaiety Girls.” San Francisco and nity—Fair | tinee. UTES —Vaudeville. Matinee. Matinee. A G. McADIE, e ORPHEUM—Vaudeville. Matines. District Forecaster. ORFHETHE vaudevil CH! COLUMBIA—""The Collegs GRAND—“At the MAJESTIC— ‘The Privats Secretary.’ Widow." Old Crossroads LOYAL TROOP PETERSBURG, the loyal troops there were obliged 1o fire on mutineers. the troops returning from Manchuria. At Sizran rioters are reported 'to have sacked the railway station. OVERHEAD * TROLLEY 1S JNDER BAN Sutter Strest Must Have a Modern ystem e o N eople’s Wish for the Conduit. i One More Meeting Is Flanned N FIFTY-SIX PAGES—SAN FRANCISCO, SU :L';AY,,——DECEMBER 10, 1905 PAGES 29 TO 42, - o 3- I A I ) = - —_— Friday, Dec. 8.---Fresh disorders are reported from Kronstadt. MAHV[I-[]U S Riots are also reported to have taken place among Ty i 2 AR S FIRE UPON MUTINEE] It is said + ALY (v a: S Il ) 1l “\m S 2l Z 1 ESCAPE OF AUTOISTS F. A Allardt's Mo- | | | | ! l ! ' tor Car Struck by Gravel Train. Five Occupants Hurled Out in Various Directions. | Owner Pinioned Under the = oo T ) Recei ® in Hope That Agreement :\;/// S ] | Wreck, but None ve Scin b % ) | : : Will Be Reached. N =1 | Sericus Injury. : = e, N S * N ?:-'_\1 | OAKLAND. Dec. 8.—With his sutome- SOrs treet Tk A | {bile, in which were his wife and little ; g \‘/1 b | daughter, his sister and a friend, square- i « S ‘\5‘4 s | Iy across the track in the path of an ap- woitd: e =8 | Iproaching gravel traim'on the Leona : = Heights Ralflroad this aftermoon, F. A mously to reject the apph— =N } | Allardt, assistant cashier of the Oukland 5 — 3 | | Bank of Savings, wh egid 27 Lin of the United Rail- | — ! | den slree!d ‘s:i: ;oo 1;:: 'e::t,.yl.lunlun.z | ——— 1 e N oneo ¢ i | & 3 | | danger and was unable t v eol- >r permission to = {1 B A\, o ) =] | |lision. The trai crashed into the motor change the motive power m 3 Lo ge the pow =Y | | The automobile was huried fifty feet the Sutter-street line N | | from the crossing by the shaex of the co o\ | |listoh and a moment later all the mem from the cable to an over- | DA | | bers of'the party were lying stimned and s . | Sl bleeding amid the splintered fragments head electric zrollc_v SVs- o3 ll‘h;» machine. That all were not instantl = % —A4 : k. | killed i= hard to explain, for the entire te I'’he Supervisors rec- 'felj - ‘“ w',.:{,‘\:, | - ,“ ( e 7 | ubber part of the auto was torn trom the » ; | Ty | ) \ running gear and scattered In bits of ogize the T A S, : oguize the wishes of a | xg,;.lll’m.. M A}A).,n'.'.!vlnl...m..“ U IS, ( Wl \’w:fi:flf e S e 0 RE : : basiblt il rites 3 vas driving the machine, majonity of the people | AR FEA) ; vy | was thrown from his seat when the auto 2 2 — - | trame overturned in the dltch and was that an Jnderg.ound elec- | y m';m"%n W > y . Is | pinned beneath the wreck. Almost uncon- B ‘ TS TRN km Alh | sclous, he lay for a few moments, and tric conduit system be in- HEAHST S FU[ ronveN 01 en s ance | the membefs of the train crew beileved % ] . £ i 4 | him dead and turned their attention to talled. - ’ \( ST Al 1 the Rulmg' Power | the other members of the party. and | il | A8 ’// Wwas not until the banker revived sufi- ‘ 5 - . . clently to speak and call for help that the k : | \£\ // n RUSSla,. heavy wreckage was lifted away and he { k ‘ /// | was Telleved from its crushing weight. 2 | \\ \ 14 —_—— Ft;rlunnlely the machine had fallen in hr such a position that a greater part of its | | ZA | welght was supported by a broken wheel s | -» C R IS HELPLESS! and the axle, otherwise Allardt would { ; u have been crushed to death before assisi- . H | ance reached him. All the members of B\ 3 the party were bruised and cut, but they A1 111N Empire Takes Its Or-|isma wreres o o v o s $ : : when they think of their narrow escapo | . from a .« ~=ible de th. = wvan electe or ers rom evo- Hol = 3 The accident happened at the crossing - 3 f the Old County Road and the Leona Important House ‘ lutionists. o g T LY C . ‘F‘—RL'ESIA\' e ——INsmUCTING % . with his wire, his daughter Elizabeun; —_— BSIAN BNT | 3 Aulardt, 8 ady ommittee. PROLETARIAT ON THE IDEALS | s M Taite A, sl N . Gi Relief When I PROLETARIAT ON * t A POLICE IN REVOLT irind ws. naa sust asrived oo a visic ive Relief When In-|+~—————"""___ ; Another Serious Charge PSS e dug B & vy 2ot a Speclal Dispatch to The Call. 2 % y : = :;:;! F:;:(ler:e s::.:rtr’::mlx’.:l';:l',-pe:-‘lu.;f; CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, ected Into S lna,] A a]nst Fa,ds a,nd Special Cable to The Call and New York Her- | more than ten m..es an hour when he ap- ald. Copyright, 19¢3, by the New York hed the 1 d @ ™ e s 3 WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.—Additional 5 Herald Publishing Company. ] i e et e e » t has b s be- 3 o 5 ! . - - e s : nt has been given to the coolness be- Canal. Fancies. ST. PETERSBURG, Dec. 9._The pot 1s | ¥avel cars. was backing up. the track in y o n Representative John Sharp Wil- bolll;: The sitti 'r (h- > Lt | the direction of Leona Heights. As all Sutter-street &y be re- | llams, the minority leader in the House, —_— . SRS mny"'s .l,:o; e::u;w“: r‘e)vnr: ;,of::ly, | the cars in the train were flat cars they eled. d R s N : | could not be seen above the fence at the re is & slight hope on the part|yoo TePresentative Hearst of New Sosclsl DHvASs I e ol g e Moy, leaders sald to-day: | side of the right of way, and hearing, as Supervisors th e roed may — Jah :- ec! smr o b s NEW YORK, Dec. 9.—Dr. Samuel ' J. | . NEW YORK, Dec.10.—The World says: ““We are getting too powerful. A while | he declares, neither oall nor whistle, the 3 Sl o e e o Sullivan made ‘:’“’“‘ ®F | Meltzer, who, with several other physi- : “Fads afld Fancles,” as it is now distrib- | 8g0 the Government, with ‘all’ its re- |Danker did not see the approaching dan- oRbor codhes g ek bl s i e clans, has been engaged in extensive ex- . uted to subscribers, has an Index, niot al- | Sources, Was too strong for us. ‘To-day | 8°7 until his attention was cs s ’ -} mr e ullivan is the Democratic member experimenting in the Rockefeller .Insti- phabetical, giving the name of each it 1s the opposite. The weight of power 'utfl-l: The nathen - tr om his & from Roston who vigorously resented ’ 3 and resources is on our side.”” . ' was then fajrfy dcross The date of the meet- 5 tute in the past eight months with mag- son whose fads and fancies are the sub- | & | the tracks and the train was not ten g Sragie Pt i e on the floor of the house during the 1ast | nestum sulphats, or Epsom salts,- read & '| doat of an article and opposite his uame |,'SUCR confidence as that which mem- | foe; gistant. Befors he could make o : : one the various members of | Bession attacks made upon him by the | paper before the Academy of Medicine —_— ‘Is.& tac-simile of his’signature. bers ‘of ‘the :l"dl: °“?u”"g 3“’" l’:{movo to avert the collision the crash e ttee outlined their views on ' Hearst papers. This caused Hearst to | t0-day dealing with the substance in re- astounding al rerpaEe iy Or® 2 | came. The end of the first flat car struck ction ard to Its thetic whe: ’ The_obvious purpose is to make it ap- | power. In a particularly quiet and as- the acceptance or.rejection of the rall- | reply, declaring that Sullivan had once | 8 0 uses as an anesthetic when } ¢ n t = s Just above the running gear of the auto road's proposition. Several of 4he com- | killed @ man. Sullivan made & dra. |injected into the spinal canal. -He re- (] p @ | pear that the signatures stand for the |sured way its committea. issues orders, |aa cur tne fromt seat and tonneau from ittee appeared to be personally in | ma(io response, setting forth the cir. | POFted & case of tetanus that had actual- subscriber's satisfaction . with the ;,"Il';"m":am’;g""“’“ one end of the | ine machine as If It were & knife, and the of the overhead troliey, carry- ith it the promise of the company t along the thorough- h the franchise extends. ed this preference owing need of business advahoe- lack of transportation facili- tavor L furnish y of a rapid tran- Thelr reaso:, ho ver, m. Their reason, bowever, against the proposition was per cent of the people wige jerground system. MARKET STREET A PROBLEM. her reason why the board d its decision to deny the appli- wes the interjection by the oads of the Market-street n problem. The raflroad maintained that the overhead wire sys- m weas best, as it facilitated uniform sportetion throughout the city. It went on to propose es for Market street and on this the down flat-footed. advanced against the r 'orm system of nsportation t such a system fble in San Francisco. On s the cable will always re- use of the grades to be over- It is not necessary that the roads be operated entirely by trolleys or entirely under- , as cars can be equipped ments so that they may be either of the systems and with attac erated on ars readily switched from one sys- | te, the other without loss of time | £ was held at 762A Har- n account of the iliness of . ‘Be e. Braunhart, while siowly re- gaining his health, was unable to leave bis residence and the other Supervisors Continued on Page 32, Column 6. overhead | el Braunhart of the Street Com=- cumstances and the fact that he had been exonerated from all blame. Representative Willlams disposes the minority committes assignment and hias | selection of Sullivan for the most Im- | portant committee in the house is looked upon as & reward for Sullivan’s antagonism to Hearst. Sullivan is in| every way capable and fitted for the committeeship. ORANGE TREES HURT BY A FIERCE WIND, Gale Does Considerable Dam- age in Vicifity of Santa Ana. i SANTA ANA, Dec. 9.—The worst wind | storm of the season prevailed throughout | the Santa Ana Valley to-day, the wind ! coming down the Santa Ana Canyon from | the desert in gusts that frequently | reached a veloeity of forty miles an hour. The storm was general from Ocean Side | in San Diego County to Whittier in | Los Angeles County and extended to the interior as far as Riverside, Redlands and San Bernardino. Wherever it was felt damage was done to the orange crops * by the fruit being battered against the trees. In exposed orchards some of the green fruit was blown off the trees. The wind will have a drying effect upon pas- tures and crops generally, but with the exception of the injury to the oranges will cause no permanent loss. A few trees were blown down in this city and some awnings were torn from their supports. { Below here the San Diego wires are Anwew & 1y been cured as‘a result of the injection.’ The paper created a sensation and. it will Dbe published soon in a leading medical Journal. SENATE WILL NOT* HONOR DEAD MEMBER No Resolutions of Respect for Late Senator Mitchell of Oregon. Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—Vice President Fairbanks announced to-day that it was his understanding that friends of the late Senator Mitchell of Oregon would not request that a committee of Senators be appointed to attend the funeral services and therefore he would not name one. It has not been determined what course will be taken by the Senate when it con- venes on Monday, but it Is assumed that an announcement of Senator Mitchell's | death will be made by Senator ' Fulton | &nd that he will not ask for the adoption of resolutions of respect. This will be the first instance In the history of the Senate where the custom- ary ceremony in honor of the memory of a deceased member has not been held, PORTLAND, Dec, 9.—It has been: defi- nitely decided that the funeral services for the late Senator Mitchell will be held at the City Hall of Portland on Tuesday afterncon next and interment will be in the family plat at Riverview Cemetery. While the plans are not yet complete, it is belleved that the Benevolent and Pro- tectve Order of Eiks and the Odd Fel- lows, with which organization Senator Mitchell was affiliated, will participate in the ceremony. - Ship“~the Slogan at Mass-Meeting. Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. BOSTON, Dec. 8.—“Don’t give up the ship” wag the sentiment nailed on the front of the platform of Faneuil Hall, & public meeting held /in the historio building to-night to protest against the recommendation of Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte that the old frigate Constitu- tion, now at Charlestown navy yard, be destroyeG. A number of letters of protest against Secretary Bonaparte’s proposal wers | read. Ex-Secretary of the Navy John D. | Long wrote: | ‘“The suggestion shocks every instinct of national pride and glory."” ‘The speaker of the evening was former Congressman Willlam Everett of Quincy. Dr. Everett sald in closing: “If the Secretary is at a loss what to do with the Constitution, we will take ¢ her. Boston and Massachusetts will buy { her. Send her back to her own people, who will keep her as long as the United States exists.” | PARAGUAYAN CHIEF EXECUTIVE DEPOSED BUENOS AYRES, Dec. 9.—Tt is reported that Juan B. Gauna, president of the Re- public of Paraguay, has/been deposed by Congress and that the Foreign Minister, Dr. Cecilo Baez, who formerly was Paraguayan Minister to the United States, has been appointed President. Telegraph communication with Asun- clon is interrupted, to prevall there. which gave the text to every speaker at ! etches, and for a testimony that teach igner is a bona-fide, pald-up subscriber. In this table of contents,appear fac- similes of the signatures of President Roosevelt, Mr. Cleveland and Bishop Potter. Each of these gentlemen has publicly or privately repudiated all connection with or approval of the use of his name. Colonel Mann, publisher, to-day de- ! clined to state how these signatures were obtained, and the World does not hesitate to say that they are mere fac-similes of signatures—in other words, they are for- geries. ARRESTED FOR TRYING TO KILL AGED MAN Marin County Young Men Accused’ of Assaulting “Mayor of Greenbrae.” Speclal Dispateh to The Call. SANTA ROSA, Dec. 9.—Tom Fitts and Jack Woods, two young men well known | to the peace officers of this city, were | arrested late last night at the request of | the authorltles of Marin County and locked up to await the arrival of officers to take them to San Rafael.’ The men are charged with assault with intent to kill' i and the officers believe that they have a strong casé against the accused. The : men are accused of having viclously as- | saulted Felix Sands, the aged tender of { the drawbridgsé at Greenbrae station in . his little shack at the drawbridge early . Wednesday, morning. The shack was thoroughly’ ransacked at the time, but the robbers secured nothing for their pains. The old man has attended the drawbridge for many years and is famil- but: thnpnneaffig]yrmwn as the “Mayor of Green- “Don’t take Government messages, says the Workmen's Alllance to the few remaining operators who had done so up to yesterday and the operators “don” But they take those from the Workmen's Alliance. One asks, aghast: “Who is rul- ing the country to-day?” Money is coming in very fast, say the revolutionary leaders. According to the German workmen'’s paper, the Vorwaerts, the Teutonic Soclalistic party, which has a reserve fund of 3,000,000 marks ($750,000) sent to its colleagues here 162,609 marks ($40,652) and, as I told you a few days ago, the party representing law and order and advocating a constitution is unable to collect enough In its gathering of sev- eral thousands to pay for the cost of issuing circulars and ca..ng a future meeting. Even the police are half with the revo- lutionaries to-day. They themselves have issyed a document calling for redress of their grievances. It is printed in several papers this morning. They sided two days ago with the Workmen's Alilance meeting versus the Cossacks, held forci- bly back the horses of the latter and took without flinching nagaika blows for their pains. The political strike was averted to-day. : The signal for it was anxiously awaited throughout the country and would have been eagerly obeyed, but the Government gave way in the tace of the ultimatum of the Workmen's Alllance. According to the latest news received by the special wires of the revolution- arles, the only ones open, the whole army of the south is in a condition of revolt. In four different towns military mutinies have taken twenty-four served machine was pushed ahead of the train, bm;lpl::“ over '.h:d ties of the roadbed un overturned In the ditch side of the track. T ¥. J. Spencer, who lives near the scens of the accident, was the first to reach the spot, and he alded the train crew in car- ing for the members of the party. After their finjurfes had been temporarily dressed at the Spencer home, Allardt and his family secured a carriage and re- | turned to their home in this eity, leaving the wrecked automobile where it lay be- side the track. In telling the story of the aceident at his home to-night, Mr. Allardt sald: “The whole thing happened so suddenly that I hardly know anything about it. I was running not over ten miles an hour, as I approached the . and as the flat cars were hidden by the femce at the side of the right of way I did not see the train until a scream from my wife caused me to look around. Thers was no head- I light on the flat car at the end of tfie - train, which was backing up, and I heard neither bell nor whistle. When I first saw the train it was not more than five i feet from the car, and before I could do anything it was all over. “I was pinned beneath theé car, and I must bave been stunmed by the shock, ltor when I came to the train crew had | reached the place where the auto lay. [ | think they believed that I was dead, for they were taking care of the ladles and ask

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