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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALi, TUESDAY, APRIL. CHILD'S USE OF WORDo SURPRISES TEACHER. Eleven-2 ear-Oid Honolulu Girl Shows : Fine Command of English Language. -+ Apri one of the array L, something SIMILAR te i Crane. He was not POP- e BRIGHT HONOLULU G v ionable young men o S DESTINED 10 BE & f the serious turn of | BE A ER “WRIT] engaged In writing a | ix. "5ie sino gave | ROCKEFELLER TO LIVE IN GOLDEN STATE He ailso gave nts on PHYSICS and | m a young lady {0il King Pays $250,000 for | » a Home in Pasa- dena. 0 disagree- > subjects | LOS ANGELES, April 2.—John D. Rockefeller, richest man in the world and head of the mighty Standard Of Company, expécts to make his homs in Southern California. He has bought the Carmelita property in Pasadena with the intention of passing his de- fore leaving Ben Francisco she visited | SI'NINE vears there. It is sald Mr. o fortunetelier and was warned swainat | Rockefeller pald $250,000 for the prop- Taking o een voyage, or she would howe s | ety and has already arranged to ex- narrow escape from a very serious accl- | Pend $200,000 more upon it. The fine -~ g | place, which formerly belonged to Mrs. | Jeanne Carr, was offered for sale ten : < N | years ago for $25,000. . Simeon Reed Scientists to 5‘:‘{‘5“:" . bought it for $26,000 and sold it ‘to L. Apri £ ‘.AGo»_e Tor |V, Harkness of the Standard Ofl Com- °d by the officials | pany for $160,000. Mr. Harkness, ‘t is t|said today, let Mr. Rockefeller have it persons belleve they can t with the same list of words let The writer of the foregoing, Buckland, was in San Francisco r and was one of the passengers e Alameda when the Oceanic Fort Point. On the evening azel » Washington th been sel i for $250,000. —_————— Banker Gets Five Years’ Sentence. SPOKANE, April 2.—Charles C. May, former president of the Big Bend Na- tional Bank, of Davenport, Wash., was sentenced today by Judge Edward in the Federal court, to serve This work will begin as soon :l;‘ weather permits. 1 e it A AP | Mutes Discover Rich Mine, PT"!,\'OPA};L Az'_l’ll 2-—Mary A. and|five vears in the United States Peni- \“'ae A. Page, 27 and 21 years old re- | tentiary at MeNefls Island. May was spectively, and both deaf and dumb | convicted.of making false reports. to birth, discovered a rich gold ¢ | the Comptrollér of the Currency and also 'of juggling the funds of .a de- for a gopd ; positor to forward a ‘mining specula- | tion. at Golden Arrow, thirty-five miles east They sold out here. Here’s What One ' ittle Fellow Writes One of the many epigrams that the school children are sending in for cash prizes: “We wander on in life’s weary foil day by day with ?athin( to call our own. ‘Give the Conzinzuly&lfld- ing and Loan Association your savings at 6 per cent and you’ll find ’!'hm your friend. A friend in need is a friend i JOS. T. BYRNE, 1114 Elm Ave. Y:dltc an epigram of noét nl;ote ‘t:l:an :orty words and in- cludin, t o i Bufldigg anadv‘l:‘oz:naAssocu' ‘trion."“t “““ Acmmmfl First Ten Prizes $5 Each Next Fifteen Prizes +$3 Each Next Twenty Prizes $2 Each Fifty-five Prizes - §1 Each Contest closes April 28—for ils of Hiigh Stoen © G?ammr and Continental Building and Loan 5 Association x 'Cor. Market, Sansome and Sutter Streets. Five Hundred Miles of New Railroad Is Already ‘in Process of Construction . |GREAT NORTHERN TWIN {Rails Are to Be Laid Across the Dominion From Winnipeg to Vancouver PATEEA SA ST. PAUL, April 2—The Pioneer Press tomorrow will say “James J. Hill is to have a twin trans- continental road, operations now being under way for the construction of an east and west line between Winnipeg and Van- couver. Five hundred miles of the new | line 1{ already in processs of construction and the plans call for a total of 1800 miles. ‘An exciting rail laying contest soon will be started between the Great North- | ern, the Canadian Northern and the Grand Trunk Pacific. “The biggest stretch of Hne on which construction is now under way s be- tween Vancouver and Princeton. The route follows the Frazer River, and, in- clining northerly, strikes just morth of the Tulamen Riyver. . The line proceeds along the Similkameen Valley in a north- erly direction to Midway, B. C., from which point a line already has been built to Nelson, Grand Forks and Bonners Fer- ry, where connection is made by Kuskoo- nok. From there a line is to be built to | Fernle, where there are extensive coal de- posits. From Fernie the line will strike across to Winnipeg. Surveyors already are in the field on this seetion of the pro- posed road and construetion presumably will commence in a month or more. “A number of feeders for the Canadlan transcontinental line are being bullt from points in the United States.” [GOOD SHOWING MADE | BY PANAMA RAILWAY Taft Says Time Has Come to [ Pass on Type of Canal. NEW YORK, April 2.—The annual meetings of the stockholders and di- réctors of the Panama Railroad Com- pany were held today in this city. Sec- retary Taft was present at both meet- At the stockholders’ meeting the ings. following directors were elected: T. P. Shonts, Charles E. Magoon, Mordecal T. Endicott, Peter Chains, J. D. Deo- baldta, John F. Stevens, Roger l. Sar- niam, S. A. Drake, Clafence R. Ed- wards, Williem Nelson Cromwell, Os- wald H. Ernst, B. M.:Harrod and W. Leon Pepperman. W. Leon Pepperman, the only new member, is an official at the canal. T. P. Shonts was re-elected president and Johin F. Stevens was elected vice president end general manager. Ths report for the ten months of the year 1905 up to October 31 was submitted, showing that the total earnings of the road for the transportation of all kinds of tzaffio,.exceed by, $302,304, or 18.77 per cent, thes¢ of ten. months of the previous year. Secretary Taft ‘after | the meeting sajd: Erait | The report of the Panama Railroad for the year past shows that it has made great prog- Tess. Ite_earnifngs have greatly inereased and in fact the road 18 quite unable to-cope with the business which is being rushed over. the line. The road is being double-tracked for a distance_of about thirty-five miles.’ This will greatly facilitate the operations of ‘the com- ny. We ‘have got to a point where it is very nec- essary that some plan-be adopted for the con- struction ot the canal, When eome definite plan of construction is adopted then the work can go ahead with new vigor. We all' hope that some plan will be passed upon very soon by the Government, JIU-JITSU PROVES DISMAL FAILURE Japanese Expert’s Contract Is Not Renewed at Annapolis. f Speclal Dispatch to The Call. ANNAPOLS, April 2.—Jiu-jitsu at the United States Naval Academy has proved a dismal failure. - One year ago the craze to acquire a thorough knowledge of the Japanese art of self-defense was para- mount. The results of matches In the last six months, in which Ameriéan wrestlers demonstrated that the native art was superior to the Japanese arm, leg and body twists, convinced the cadets that jiu-jitsu had been greatly overrated. Professor Yamashita, the jlu-jitsu ex- pert, who instructed President Rogse- velt in the art, gave the last of a serles of ten lessons, covering dast seafon and this sgdson, to midshipmien this after- noon. His contract has not been re- newed-and neither has he been succéssful in making profitable engagements for the future. In fact, interest in his art has died out end he will return forthwith to Japan,. - He has recelved $33.33 for. each lesson of one hour at the academy. —_— e C()NV[('I‘ED AND SENTENCED ON CHARGE OF POLYGAMY Utah Residént Found Guilty In Court of Having One Wife Too % Many. Y FARMINGTON, Utah,.April 2.—Cecll J. | Plant. was convicted of .polygamy and sentenced to three years {a .the peniten- tiary here today. In 1808 he marriéd An- nle J. Barrett at San Francisco. In De- ;| cémber, 1904, he married Miss Mary May at Farmington.” His first wife has begun sujt-for a divorce ahd Plant expressed a desire to remagrry the, second as soon as he Is frée to do so., There is a child born of the second marriage. ¢ - L e Loses Place. © NEW - YORK, April 2.—Edward H. Harriman is 1o longer chairman of the finance committee of the dHinois Cen- tral ‘Rallroad Company and that com- mittee has been abolished, according to 'a statement issued this afternoon by officers of the company. The chairman L of a new law.and finance committee is Walter Luttgen of. the firm of August Belmont' & Co. The official statement explained that the committees of the board of directors og‘ the road have never. been executive, but advisory or tecommendatory. na 3. ‘Steel for Mail. CHEYENNE, Wyo.; April 2.—H. B, Thrall, superintendent of mails on the Harriman railroads, states that mod- ern steel non-telescoping mail cars are to be substituted on those lines for the wooden cars now occupied by railway mail clerks. It hfl m been claimed that the position of cars in trains and the style of construction have en- dangered clerks unnecessarily. HILL BUILDING - |SON EMULATES CANADIAN LINE' THIEVING SIRE Accused of Stealing From a _ Bank Which His Father ‘Once Almost Wrecked S 5 5 N Loss of $100,000 Thirty Years Ago Made Good by Stock- hol(jers of the Concern SPARED Spedial Dis m.@md‘\x. NEW YORXK, Aprif*2—Inquiry into the alleged embezzlement of $84,000 by. Joseph A. Turney of the Natignal Bank of North Ameérica has disclosed that the accused man’'s father, Joseph M. Turney, once stole - $106,000 from the same ingtitution. The' story of this defalcation was told to- day by a well-known financier, who was at one time a director of the State Bank of New York, which was in 1891 abserbed by the Natlonal Bank of North America, and of which the elder Turney was:pay- ing teller. 5 It was a short time before the annual {(a(t cf the State Bank Examiner in 877, that the elder Turney sought ‘the president of the bank, Mr. Dowd, and confessed that he and another employe had, taken from the bank's funds: $106,- 000. He told Dowd that all the money haa been spent except ahgut $6000, which he and his accomplice could pay back. This .confessfon came as a great blow to the officials of the bank, for in 1877 a loss of such an amount meant ruin to almost any financial institution. Hurrledly calling a meeting of the di- rectors ‘Dowd made known to them the bank’s loss and explained that publicity probably would mean that the institution would have to close its doors. The news- papers were not notified and a conference was held by the stockholders, who agreed to subscribe $100,000 to make g0od the loss. Turney and his companion produced $6000 and were discharged. . At this time the paying teller's son, the present defaulter, was an errand boy in the bank and the subject of his discharge was discussed by the directors. It was decided that it would be unfair to the lad to visit his father's sins upon .him, and he was allowed to remain. The boy was never told of his parent’s disgrace, and the man who told the story today said he was not sure that Joseph even now knew that his father had ever com- mitted the same crime as that of which he has just been accused. Acting as his own lawyer, Turney walved examination this afternoon in the Tombs Cofirt on, a charge of forgery in the third degree. He wwas held in $10,000 bail. ANENDMENTS TOEXCLUSION ECULATIONS Fotr Changes That Hro| ‘Sanctioned by the President, —ln CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, April 2.—Secretary Met- calfe of the Department of Commerce and Labor has submittéd to the House com- mittee on forelgn affairs certain amend- ments to the Chinese exclusion laws, which he recommends be adopted. The amendments are understood “to represent what President Roosevelt wishes to do toward allaying hostile sentiment in China, and undoubtedly will be strongly urged by the administration. These amendments, four in number, are as fol- lows: . £ First—If under the treaty it. can be dore, to have immigration officers of the United States detailed to serve in China, tb examine Chinese desiring to come ¥ this country and to vise their. passports. Second—Conceding - to - Chinese refused admission by the Department of Com- merce and -Labor. the right to be #a- mitted to bail, pending an appeal. Third—AIl Chinese in the United States at present must re-register. ‘Fourth—All restrietions are removed from Chinese - re-entering the United States who possess certificates showing| that they had heretofore been -permitted to come into the country. The second and fourth amendments will be fought by the California Congressional Gelegation. In the case of thefourth; it is clalmed that such a change would re- sult in giving much room for fraud. The sentiment of members of the for- eign affairs committee is opposed to adopt- ing the amendments, but strong pressure from administration quarters may be ex- erted to Induce their. acceptance. MAYOR’S VETO SPOILS HUNTINGTON’S PLANS Ordinance Granting Valuable Permit to Los Angeles Magnate Repealed. LO8 ANGELES, April 2.—Mayor Mc- Aleer returned to the City Council this afternoon without his signature the or- dinance awarding the river bed fran- chise to E. W. Gilmore, whose assign- ment of the same to H. E. Huntington had so aroused the people of Los An- geles. The franchise, which is worth $1,000,000 to'the city, was given by the Council to Gilmgre . for apparently nothing. This afternoon the Council unanimously sustained the Mayor's veto of the franchise ordinance, thus com- pletely reversing its’ former position in the matter. ——————— New President of Costa Riea. WASHINGTON, April 2.—The lega- tlon: of Costa Rica has received official information that Senor Don Cleto Gon- zales Viquez, & distinguiShed lawyer, was yesterday elected President of that republic by a large majority and will be inaugurated May §. Spectal Train to Mexico ' Leaves su:sré.mhg April 2“3.‘- all points f interest. rand on rn! Better - . Ask Southern P-Muw agent, 3‘: w. £} SANTA ROSA, April 2—~Rev. F. K. Farnworth, ‘who has-heen the Congre- gational pastor at Sebastopol for the last two years, resigned yesterday. It is Mr. Farnworth's purpose to remain resident - of S topel and take up the practice of law. He was admitted to practice in this State last August. k 3 Market strest. Ty Laundry. 1004 o South 420, * g BHCHTER £ F0h BEPUBLE Governor Folk Sees Hopeful Sign in the Awakening of the Public Conscience TALKS TO DEMOCRATS Tells Towans There Is Room for but Two Great Par- ties in This Country DES MOINES, Towa, April 2.—Gover- nor Folk of Missour! was the chief speaker at the Jefferson banquet to- night under the auspices of the Iowa Democratic Club. Democrats of prom- inence from all parts of the State at- tended, and the gathering was one of “the most noted ever held in the State under the auspices of this party. Governor Folk, Ttesponding to the subject “Good Government,” spoke in part as follows: We are In the midst of one of the most dramatic periods of American history—the periodi in which the people’s rights are to be defined and ol 'ed as they never have been before. There are some who, see danger to our {nstitutions in the agitations resulting from the exposures In official and business life. I do not share this view. To my mind the hope for the perpetuity of thls Government by the people was never brighter than now. The fact that this awakening has come at a time of unusual prosperity shows that it does not Pproceed from a spirit of discontent, but springs from the moral sense of the people. It is simply a determination to stamp out the things that dishonor in public life and the things that oppress in private life—a Qrm resoive that the Government shall be representative of the good, not of the bad. The energies of this public conscience have been extended from the domain of the public wrongdoer to that of the private wrongdoer, and it is probing into the carryings-on of grafters of every kind. It is not insurance companies the people complain of, but abuses of trust on the part of some of ‘those running the insurance com- panles; the people understand these things. and know that while some insurance peopls and some bankers are crooked, just as some officlals are crooked, it does not follow that all insurance men or all bankers and officlals are without honor. The people are discrim- inating between the good and the bad. This movement against graft is not a cru- sade against wealth, but against the abuses whereby some obtaln great wealth. It is & demand for common honesty in public_life and private business. No man that ls doing an honest businesg need fear from the arousing of the conscience of the people against wrongs. The distinguishing characteristic of thi§ cru- sade for higher ideals fs the conservatism of the people. They do not oppose riches hon- estly acquired, but they do object to special privileges out of which . tainted .riches grow. The agitation against ill-gotten gains does not mean a rabid socialism or the destruction of the vested rights of any one. The cry is not for soclalism or anarchy, but that the corpora= tion magnate respect the law that governs the conduct of the corporation, as he asks others to respect the law that protects the property of the corporation. his Governmen® does .not rest elther upon the idle rich or the idle poor, but upon the energy and patriotism of thé middle 'class. This is the class that sufters under the relgn of the speefal privilege. The elimination of special privileges is the great queston before the people of this country—the railroad rebate speclal privilege, the tariff so arranged as to glve special privileges and create monopoly and tevery special privilege founded on graft. There ig.room in this country for only two great political parties. Our form of Govern- ment naturally makes one the party of special privileges and the other the party of equal rights. No grander misston can be in store for the Democratic party than to continue the fight for the rule of the people against graft. Clothed n the armor of & righteous cause the attack of Democracy upon the citadel of graft ‘and monopoly, ifi aggTessive enough, must triumph in the end, for the primciples of true Derocracy are '‘enduring Dbecause they are Just and invincible because they are right.” CAPTTOLK DONS CARB OF RE Cardinal of Stanford‘ Is Displayed Liberally at the Y. W. C A Conference SANTA' CRUZ, April 2.—The reception glven by the students in attendance from Stanford University was the fea- ture of the Pacific Coast Students’ Con- ference of the ¥. W/ C. A. at the Hotel Capitola today. Brilllant cardinal streamers decorated the hotel and the big 8 of Stanford was everywhere. Mis- slonary work in foreign fields was the subject which held the most prominent place -in the .morning session, Miss King, a returned missionary from China, leading the discussion. Denom- inational rallies were held in the after- noon. Miss Laura Richards of Sara- toga led the Copgregational rally, Dr. Emma Park the Baptist, Mrs. Dwight Potter of Oakland the Presbyterfan and Miss Ross of Los Angeles and Miss Chloe Anderson of San Jose the Episco- palian. Miss Simmons, one of the na- tional secretaries of the Y. W. C. A, was the speaker at the platform'meet- ing this evening. Rev. C. R. Brown of Oakland is expected tomorrow night. Tomorrow afternoon an excursien to the Big Trees north of this city will be made and on Wednesday a delegation of fifty from the University of Califor- nia will be here. | —_———— GOULD’S LINE OFFERS FINE ROAD TO BUTTE COUNTY Highway Which Cost $§500,000 to Bulld Is Tendered the Board of Sup ' MARYSVILLE, April 2.—Attorney W. H. Carlin, representing the Western Pacific, offered the Supervisors of Butte County free of cost today forty miles of new highway, which cost $500,000. The company asks that the road be laid out and accepted by the board as a public highway. The of- fer was made to protect the company from interference by = other concerns which have harassed the workmen heretofore. The road follows the pre- cipitous sides of the ther river can- yon on an even grade for forty miles and was built riginally to afford transportation for rallway machinery and materials. Still After Teacher Nolan. | SANTA ROSA, April 2.—Despite ‘the fact that the Trustees of the Sonoma Grammar School have Investigated the charges made against Principal Walter C. Nolan of their schools and that the Distriet Attorney has, as yet, refused to take any action regarding the com- plaint lodged with him against Prin- cipal Nolan, Dr. Alfred E. Byron of Sonoma has retained the services of | Attorney Clarence F. Lea of this city to draw up and submit to the Sonoma County Board of Bducation specific charges against Principal Nolan. —_—————— ., Santa Rosa Merchant Dead. SANTA ROSA, April 2.—A. J. ‘Wheel- er, a well-known business man of this city, died at his homé here today. He was a native of New York\where he borh seventy years ago. He w: Tretatan of the Civil War L T —_———— LONDON, Aprll-2.—In the House of Lords wa' m‘u m‘m replying for the s HOUSE PASSES THE WINE BILL Needham's Measure Receives a Large Majority When a Yote Is Finally Ordered IS OPPOSED BY CLARK Proposition to Hold Federal Court at Eureka Vetoed by President Roosevelt ————— CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, April 2—By a vote of 184 to 33, the House this afternoonm, under a suspension of the rules, passed the bill introduced by Representative Needham of California, permitting the’| fortification of California pure sweet wine, which had been favorably re- ported from the ways and means com- mittes by a vote of all the members except Champ Clark of Missouri. Fol- lowing a statement by Needham gon- cerntng what was hoped to be acc lished by the measure, Clark took the floor and read a ‘long list of amend- ments which he wished incorporated in the bill. Those amendments permitting the use for fortification purposes of rock candy, molasses and a host of other ingredients. Clark’s opposition was in behalf of some winemakers in his. own district. He denounced the Needham bill as obnoxious to the peo- ple on this side of the RockyyMountains, and sald that California would not be satisfied until she got a law passed that would shut up all the other wineries in the United States. John Sharp Williams of Mississippi, the minority leader, gave Needham fine support. Representative Payne, chair- man of the ways and means committee, also advocated the measure. Members of the California delegation worked to- gether in urging consideration of the bill and securing votes for its passage. ‘When Needham called up the bill, Clark of Missourl raised the point of no quorum, and the Speaker could not’ count a quorum. The doors were or- dered closed, and the sergeant-at-arms was ordered to bring in the absentees. A quorum was secured and the bill brought. before the House. Needham sald that the bill was to permit the dilution of grape julee used in the manufacture of brandy, to define the product commonly known as grape brandy and permit the use of small quantities of water, not in ex- cess of 10 per cent of the weight of the wine to be fortified. It also places a tax of 3 cents on every gallon of wine thus fortified. Clark said the bill had nothing to do with’ temperance, and that it would add to the consumption of wine. The vote was ordered and the bill passed. Representative Gillett’s bill providing for the holding of terms of the Federal court at Eureka, which recently passed both houses of Congress, was vetoed to- day by President Roosevelt. The De- partment of Justice, on whose recom- mendation the President has vetoed this and -other similar measures, opposes the holding of court at places where the business is not likely to be import- ant. In some cases there have been unwarranted demands for the erection of public bulldings at such places where Absolutely Pure - HAS NO SUBSTITUTE A Cream of Tartar Powder, free from alum or phos~ phatic acid ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. LANDSLIDE UNCOVERS PETRIFIED OYSTER Bivalve Twenty-Seven Inches in Circumference Found Near Ukiah. UKIAH, April 2—Track Superinten- dent Hart of the California Northwest= ern Railway 1s the proud possessor of a petrified oyster, which was unearthed by a landslide on the raliroad near Ridgewood. The bivalve is twenty- seven Inches in circumference. - It was found at an altitude of nineteen feet and about ninety feet below the surface of the mountain. The find tends to con- firm the belilef of scientists that Men- docino County was once a portion of the ocean bed and may lead to import- ant discoveries. The immense oyster is on exhibition at the rallway station at Willits and will be sent to the Academy of Sciences In San Francisco. ———————————— Vallejo Thieves Rob Stranger. VALLEJO, April 2.—G. H.-Camp. a stranger here, reported to the pelice yesterday that he had been robbed of $19 and some valuables in a saloon on Saturday night. He described the rob- bers and after a severe struggle the police arrested Willlam O'Neill and- James Coakley. Both are charged with robbery and Coakley with resisting an officer. ——————— Senator Selvage Resigns. SACRAMENTOQ, April 2 —Governor Pardee has received the resignation of T. H. Selvage as State Senator from Humboldt County. Selvage has been appointed postmaster at Eureka. cough if Shiloh’ i Tt Ta insta b = wlqfi';l:;m # i fis o cure_you, your you back what you paid for it. Hfi use Shiloh court sessions have been designated, and altogether the Department of Justice- disapproves-of the practice. The Senate in executive session today togfirmed ‘the following 'nominations: Alfred H. Taylor, receiver of public moneys at Susanville, Cal.; Thomas A. Roseberry, register of the land office of Susanville, Cal. The following California postmasters were appointed today: - Esparto, Yolo County, Augustin Appleby; Hoeglin, Trinity County, Elsie D. Holtorf; South Pasadena, R. B. Stephens; Corning, Myram R. Chittenden. ' For re-surveys of San Diego County, Californfa, an appropriation of $20,000 was made today by tite Senate. ————— MEETS A HORRIBLE FATE AFTER LIVING OVER A CENTURY Aged Indian Woman, a Pensioner of Shasta County, Is Burned to Death. REDDING, April 2.—An old Indian woman, Owackwinvaly, reputed to be more than 100 years of age, was burn- ed to death at her hut on the McCloud River Sunday night. Her charred re- mains were found this morning fifty yards from the cabin where.she had lived alone for the last twenty years. Charred fragments of her clothing, scattered between the cabin and where she lay. indicated that her clothing had caught fire during the—night and she had run from her hut in the vain at- tempt to put out the flames. She was friendly to the whites at the time of the Indian war and the county had pald her 2 pension for more than twenty years. — e———— JL,OSES HIS LIFE IN ATTEMPT TO BEAT HIS WAY ON TRAIN Member ,of the Eagles Tries to Board a Freight and Drops Under % the Wheels. REDDING, April 2.—George E. Car- penter of Reno was run over and killed "in the Redding yards shortly after mid- night last night by a freight train which he attempted te board to beat his way out of town. Both legs were cut off and his skuill crushed. Papers found on the body showed his identity and indicated that he was a member of Reno Aerie, No. 207, Fraternal Order of Eagles. Carpenter was a cook and had been in Redding only about a week. ——— Boy Is Run Oyer and Killed. SAN JOSE: April 2—William Tedeseo, the 7-year-oM Son of Matteo Tedesco, residing on Park avenue, was run over by a lumber wagon this afternoon In front of the house and instantly killed. He attempted to climb into the and fell under the wheels, one of which crushed his skull. MADRID, April 2.—Genersl Ramon Blanco, the last Spanish Governor General of Cuba, is seriously ill. FREE Mrs. Rorer’s overnment, would nat | g: Caso & beet sugar iy e R Sold by THE OWL DRUG Co., 1128 Market st. and 80 Geary st. Dr. Lyon’s - PERFECT Tooth Powder [o)! db’tx esn.a::da;; ea%flnt&‘. Used by peopl refinement fl:rovull,-ya.qwt.arogfaoonmryt. Convenient for tourists, PREPARED BY I Y Gy 285, visir DR. JORDAN’S aazar EGH 37 ANAToY l 2R szl