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Bodies of Dead Crowd the Valparaiso Morgues quake catastrophe Ligua, Curice, Rengo, Pelequen, Tingui- ririca, Estrella, Polpaico, Linares, San ler, Panguilemo, San Rafael and Ca- are all utterly ruined and their fe has been great. Raflw aphs are working very badly tion of Jupiter and the was accompanied by oril- ric phenomena, several wit- at they saw jets light pg in all dire on above the city eceiving all countries ave been re- | t ed more than 1y t io: er House ng away the debris with great activi nd wood the affected zone. were f 3 It Chile, was that day Ministry of o ad been ised that it w e necessary to lish more houses as the result of dam- sustained in the recent earth- asures have been taken overcharging for t necessaries of life by merchants here. The is now selling fresh been suspended owing to lack of coal power houses. GERMAN MARINES LANDED. IN, Aug. 23.—The German Gov- oday gave out the following at the advices from Valparaiso un- the almost total The German Melipilla, Petroica, | the Government of Chile by which the German cruiser Falek will land a de- tachment of sailors and, marines to protect the lives and property of Ger- man subjects at Valparaiso.” TON, Aug. 23.—Robert S. the American Vice Consul at Valparaiso, sent a dispatch to the State Department announcing that every- 7g in the American consulate in that city was destroyed and no supplies were available. CITY IN STATE OF SIBGE. Authority Conferred on Cap- tain in the Navy. VALPARAISO, Aug. 23.—Fernandez Blanco, Governor of the Province of Valparaiso, has proclaimed the city of Supreme Valparaiso in a state of siege, and has| conferred supreme authority on Navy Captain Gomez Carreno. The Prefect of Police is charged with the duty of collecting and distributing food. One of the first acts of the milltary gover- nor was to issue an order that any persons breaking water mains would be shot. The water supply is fairly adequate, and repairs are actively pro- gressing at Baron Hill, Vina del Mar and Ramaditas, where a large number of mains were broken during the earth- quake. MONEY FROM LOS ANGELES, | Part of the San Francisco Fund to Go to Chile. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 23.—The citi- zens relief committee formed at the| time of the San Francisco disaster to- | day passed resolutions setting aside $10,000 to be forwarded to the suffer- ers from the earthquake at Valparaiso. This sum was taken from the $80,000 still remaining of the $240,000 donated at the time of the San Francisco earth- quake. | London Raises Funds. LONDON, Aug. subscriptions to the London Chilean | earthquake relief fund approximates | $116,310. TRAFFIG BLOGKE BY WASHOUTS. enger trains, W forty-eight b 'yesterday morning ated much it took five panting en- them into the Richmond the trip from The time. occurred at the night. Eastbound T Pacific t led. The di- of both ra force of men 1 Society Planyed. those has m., ing of na neet interested in seis- been called for in the headquar- henefit as the effects of concerned. 4mong _active part in b is mining ears at the Bicycle Highwayman in Oakland. DAKLAND. 24.—A masked rob- r on a bicyele held up John l!ortan.' o'elock th street t mor Tele- 1 and the point of a pistol and and watch mo r secured a go d $6 his whe amond stud an 24 on Sireet. living at dead last n front Dror gger. he Fyub Exclusive| High-Grade Clothiers No Agents No Branch Store JUST A FEW REMARKS ABOUT OUR FALL EXHIBIT.) |cluded an FASHIONS AND FABRICS THAT ARE FOREIGNERS TO MOST CLOTHES SHOPS, PRODUCTIONS FROM THE TOP-MOST DESIGNERS OF THE CLOTHING WORLD, SUCH CLOTHES YOU GET HERE. “‘Shoemaker, stick to your lagt.” We are the recognized Exclosivesnddistinet High-grade Men's Clothiers that have achicved suceess, Years of ardent study of men’s clothes only placed us in this position “We're nbt Jack of all trades.” King Solomon’s Hall ‘Fillmore St., near Sutter B8an Francisco, - | fects. POLIGEMAN 5RO0TS AT MRS. ARMOUA. SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. CHICAGO, .\ug 23 Shot at five times by a policeman, her chauffeur | arrested twice and fined $20 the second | time, Mrs. J. Ogden Armour, wife of | the wealthy beef packer, today planned drastic action against the Rogers Park | policeman who riddled her auto with bullets. As a result of the shocks, Mrs. her little daughter, keforest. e adventures of the party with a Lolita, is ill .at policeman were told today by C. H. Huck, the chauffeur, who was digging bullets from the auto at the Armour age. When we entered Rogers Park we ere driving slowly,” Huck said. “Mrs. account of Miss Lolita. We had just {turned into the Ridge road when the pnlumnn appeared. Mrs. Armour sat on the first seat with me, and in the rear were Miss Lolita, Miss Biller, her nurse, and a woman whom I @id not know. The policeman ordered us to stop, calling out that we were violat- e speed law. I denied it, for we going so slowly that we could > up a running conversation with hen he drew a revolver and began to wave it. I stopped the car, and as| he came up he began to shoot. He fired five shots. Here are the bullets now,” uck pointed to the riddled ton- Armour is thoroughly ed over the oulrage and said to- he would push the day 1imit PSS LI T S PHILIPPINE CERTIFICATES GO TO FISK AND ROBINSON | VASHINGTON, Aug. Blds were opened at the Bureau of Insular Affairs, War Department, today for $1,000,000 of Philippine certificates. Numerous bids were submitted, but it is expected that whole amount will be awarded | to Fisk & Robinson of Boston, whose bid is for all or none of the amount. One of the bids was as high s $1.03 lars’ worth These certificates are 4 per cents and are to be redeemed in one year.” Two bids for the whole amount, one at 104 1d another at 105.11 were submitted, but could not be considered because they were not accompanied by a certi- d check, as required in the proposal. ————— Canada May Bar Hindoos. VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 23.—Owing to the restriction of Chinese immigra- tion into Canada during the past few vears, been coming into this port and secur- ing work as laborers in mills and mines. immigration has hitherto been unavail- ing, as the Hindoos are British sub- Now, however, the Dominion Government has taken the matter up with R. G. MacPherson, M. P, who announced today on behalf of the Gov- ernment that this immigration will be checked on the score that such immi- grants are undesirable. —_— Refuzee Woman Tries, Suicide. Mrs. Mary Tonzy, a refugee living in Hamilton Square, took a quantity of ide of hydrogin last night in an attempt to end her life. She was but ightly injur She was treated at | the Central ergency Hospital by Dr. Pinkham. A A e g e Very Long Ra Rails 331 feet long were exhibited at the international exhibition held at ege, Belgium, In 1905. These elghty-five-pound grooved girder rafl for street railway track, 331.28 feet long, and a seventy-pound tee rall of the same length; also a light | tee rail 25 fcet long, ‘of only saven pounds per yard, for portable railway track. The two large rails were each {made from a 5%-ton ingot, heated a3 hour and a half in the soaking pit t* insure a uniform temperature througt out the mass. This was rolled in a rolling miil having blooming and fin- ishing mills driven by an engine of 10,000-horsepower; the rall was rolled | in five minutes, and was exactly 354.24 feet long, the ends being cropped to make a first-class rail of 331.28 feet. Owing to the restricted space, theé rail, as it passed through the rolls, traveled up a steep inclined plane and over the top of a two-story building. When the | rolling was finished, and while the rail was still at a bright red heat, it was attached to a locomotive which hauled it along the ground about 850 feet to a place where it could be left to coo! slowly. These ralis, as well as two tires 16.4 feet in diameter, were ex- hibited by the Ougree-Marihaye Com- | pany of Belgiu Engineering News. AMERICAN CONG] FNDE WORK. —Rio | D2 laneiro, Aug. 23 Tue International dmerl- gan, Cans conclnded m actual work foalls dleposing of o sanite i e B pa ks the Pan-Aerican rallway and th 35’ 1of international laws —The first list of | | * ! Armour is almost prostrated and | rmour had asked that I be careful, on| case to thef for one hundred thousand dol-| large numbers of Hindoos have| Agitation against the Hindoo | in- | MHS.EHUMHMIXED BY PROSEGUTION. Sister of Dora Chipp, In- dian Girl Accused of Murder, Is on Stand RETRACTS STORY SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE ‘eaLL. YREKA, Aug. 23.—At the continu- | ation here today of the trial of Dora Chipp, the Indian girl accused of the murder of a child of Mrs. Beale, the | prosecution scored a decisive point on | the cross-examination of Mrs. Cinda Crumb, a half-sister of the aceused girl. Mrs. Crumb, after testifying that she had not told Dora Chipp of the intended whereabouts of Mrs. Beale on the Sunday of the murder, upon being read her testimony at the inquest ad- mitted that she had told the accused girl of the intentions of Mrs. Beale on that day. The defense objected to this testimony on the ground that the prosecution was endeavoring to im- peach its own witness, but the objec- tion was not sustained. Mrs. Seavers, in whose house Mrs. Beale took refuge from the enraged Indian girl, was next called. She tes- tified that on the day of the murder Mrs. Beale came to ‘her house in an almost exhausted condition, with her clothes torn and dusty and her face | covered with blood. Soon after Mrs. Beale arrived, the witness testified, she .saw Dora Chipp riding rapidly toward the house. She and Mrs. Beale enteréd the house and | secured. the windows and doors. The Chipp girl rode up to the house and fired at it four or five times. It is rumored that the prosecution will call a man by the name of Bare- field, who was in the county pail the night the girl was there, to prove that | while there she made a confession. HOTEL PROMOTERS REINGORPORATE. The Palace Hotel Company, which | will have as a primary object the re- :buildlng and management of the fa- | mous 01d hostelry in this city, has filed articles of incorporation in the State | of Nevada. The Incorporators are | Frederick W. Sharon, Francis G. New- | lands, Willlam ¥. Crocker, John C.| Kirkpatrick, Willam F. Herrin and | Wellington Gregg Jr. The company is| capitalized for $5,000,000; which will beé divided between the Sahron Estate Company, consisting of Frederick W. Sharon, Lady Hesketh and Senator| Newlands and his daughters and oth-| ers identified with the Sharon Estate | Company, and Willlam H. Crocker. The largest ipterest in the capital stock will be taken by the latter company, | which controlléa the old Palace Hotel. | | 1t was stated yesterday that it has| |not yet been decided by the original | incorporators of the new hotel com- | pany whether they will hold all the | stock among themselves, but it is prob- |able that with a view to fixing local |interest In the new establishment the company may place a portion of the | stock with a few persons whose co-op- eration would be desirable. Messrs. | Sharon, Newlands, Kirkpatrick and *| Herrin are directors of the Sharon Es- | tate Company. The Crocker interest in the newly incorporated hotel company will be represented on the board of the latter concern by W. H. Crocker and | Wellington Gregg Jr., who is connected | with the Crocker-Woolworth National Bank. i Plans for the new Palace Hotel are | already in the hands of architects and | will be submitted shortly to the pro-i moters of the big enterprise, who are| at present in consultation with engi- | neers in this city regarding the remov- | ing of the vast amount of debris from | the site of the old hotel and preparing | the ground for the modern structure. John C. Kirkpatrick, who 5o success- | | fully managed the old Palace for so many years, will retain his responsible position in the new hotel. The fact that the Crockers have| | joined in the project to rebuild the | Palace Hotel emphasizes their con- fidence in the future of San Francisco, for they are one of the largest stock- holders in the St. Francis Hotel, which is already in the hangs of the re- builders of the city. —— Californians in Paris. PARIS, Aug. 23.—Mrs. A. Naftzger and Roy E. Naftzger of Los Angeles registered at Herald Bureau today. SRR S A I | FINDS GENUINE DIAMONDS IN PROVINCE OF MANITOBA | Professor Andren, Well Known 1n Winnipeg, Displays Handful of White Stones in That City. WINNIPEG, Aug. 23. — Professor Reuben Andrea, well known in Winni- peg and Portage la Pralirie, has re- turned to this city with a handful of diamonds in the rough, which he clairs te have discovered somewhere within the confines of the province. Andrea took them to several local jew- elers, who pronounced them to be stones of the first water. g e L SONS OF VETERANS ELECT SAN FRANCISCAN TO OFFICE Organizntion Closes Seasion at Peoria and Elects J. R, Wolfram Jurntor | Vice Comicander. | PEORIA, Iil, Aug. 28.—The national | convention of Sons of Veterans closed | its session today, with the election of officers and the selection of Daytoen, Ohio, as the next meeting place. Edward M. Aunes of Altoona, Pa., was elected commander in chief. J. R. | Wolfram of San Francisco was elected | Jjunior vice commander. Exeursion E-n—l.mr Rates, Tuion Pacige, Panl eatironds, Eqn ’ a ko #a"w'?:cfi |t(x:l§u 'MO t;‘u:: w nlfl’ Kansas mali cqn | SiaTen, Trerey bailoing, or 3 Bast Trveeto T P John Teit’s Not Sued. It was not the Tait Catering Com- |pany at Van Ness avenue and lllldy street that was sued by Adol for the récovery of money for mlhu loaned, but the old Tait cancern that subsequently called its phee the Cafe Summer cal&. Laxative Bromo Quinine, | that values increase at a rate of $2 FIJRTHEH FIEIIHES ONU. P, REPORT. Full Staten;:nt of Com- pany Will Be Differ- ent From Thursday s GROSS EARN INGS NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—The full re- port of the Union Paclflc for 1906 will be radically different from the report published last Thursday. The method followed in making up the Unlon Pacific “other income” ac- count is to include dividends received prior to the publication of the report. There will, therefore, be an additional $2,250,000 at least from the dividends on Southern Paeific common stock. The dividends charged against this income account for 1206 will be about $15,578,500. On the day of the dividend declara- tion a statement was issued to the ef- fect that the combined surplus, after dividends on Unlon Pacific and South- ern Pacific, will be over $19,000,000, without allewing for the $4,100,000 of betterments. The call would show the total combined surplus on Union Pacific and Southern Pacific to be §25,762,146. This is quite a way from being “over $29,000,000." Tf the statement issued from the Unien Pacific s correct, the preliminary statements conceal a total of over $6,250,000 of net revenue. In| the above tables $2,250,000 of this is ac- } counted for in Southern Pacific com- mon dividend, but the remaining $4,000,000 is still unexplained. It is safe to assume, however, that this item is really the $4,100,000 indi- | cated in the reports as appropriated | “for betterments and protection.” The full report will also show gross| earnings for transportation at the rate | over $12,500 per mile, the average mile- age being a trifle under the average for 1905. WIN WEALTH FROM ANGIEAT LAKE. SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. GOLDFIELD, Nev., Aug. 23.—The ancient sink which has lately been given the name of Miller's Lake is proving a bonanza for women whose thoughts dwell more on their pocket- books than on their bonnets—and their bonnets are not so bad for this desert frontier either. It was discovered as a source of min- eral supply by Mrs. Bessie Miller, who is something of a prospector herself, having graduated from keeping a min- ers’ boardinhg-house. She staked out the first claim on the dry bed of the lake May 23, and did not stop the good work until she had some thousand| acres under location. Of course, though | an energetic woman, she had a team,| and a wagon load of stakes, and she’ stopped for meals and fo} sleep. Then came Mrs. Jennle Enright and Mrs. George Lewls, and each, by perse- verance and hard writing, prepared lo- cation notices until they had something like 10,000 acres to their credit. Others came, but they were men, and their efforts don't count for as much. They did the prospecting, however, and it was found that all over the lake bed, | from the surface down, the ground as- sayed from 84 cents to $84 a ton, which, in that particular dirt, means from $2.52 to $252 a cubic yard. Mrs. Miller and her associates sold some thousand acres for $30,000. Mrs. Enright and Mre. Lewis, not to be outdone, disposed o f 8000 acres for the same figure, because it is an easy amount to carry in the head. Then, to get clear of business annoyances, they closed a deal Tuesday morning with L. R. Keough of San Franciseco/| for 3000 scres for $25,000. So far as is known it is over 200 feet In the center of the lake to bed- rock, but the shallow development that | ‘has been done already shows that there is a series of false bedrock from two and a half to three feet apart. and| for each of these hardpans passed through. There is not the water. the fall nor the dump for sluleing, and it has been agreed by engineers that the: method of working the ground is by power shovels and cyanide tanks. It is claimed that, in this way, it can be handled for 50 cents a ton. The plants for some of the property have already béen ordered. PR RS B0 2 Success in Dentistry. Dr. ——, dentist, i{s not yet 30, but has built up an enormous practice. There are twelve chairs in his office and thirty assistants. “How did you e 1t?" I asked. “Other dentists struggle for twenty, thirty, forty years, and never get further than one chair and a female assistant in a 10x12 office.” “Juet by a trick,” he replied. “I, too, had a hard struggle at first. One day the fool notion entered my head that I ought to make something out of the fillings in the teeth o. patients, so I made this proposal to each customer over 50 years of age: ‘I will fill your teeth for the cost of the gold with the understanding that when you are dead all the gold in your mouth belongs to me.’ To my surprise the plan took like wildfire. Ot course, I have never taken 2 bit of gold oyt of the teeth of a dead person, but the proposition proved to be*a splendid advertisement, and my business grew apace. The customers under 30 were my fortune.'—New York rress. PSR T Srie T Sweet Pea Festival in Montana. Bozeman, noted for the profusion of sweet peas, which clamber over its lattices and he in the summer, has decided to hold a sweet pea car- Inival or festival, and Angust 11 has been chosen for the opening day. Merchants will iestoon . their wsg- dows, porches of homes il be draped with them, and wheYever in the city there is room for a blossom it will greet the eye of the visitor or native. Plans for the carnival were tormn— Jated by the sugar beet committee and will be carried out by the Civic League. The affair will be as dainty and ecxquisite as possible, and the umuit usually a feature of street rs will be eliminated. There will be music and a floral mflde, with a carnival queen to ify the spirit of the ocnsion. and in the evning the maskers will hold high jink: -:‘illnnupolh Journal. —— o ————— Fiesta. Cold Cure, 3:"!1‘-%* @ name; loet ! x:{ air lt omhwvm %: m a 'eom\, no cm |ters treated by Hess apply. 11905, so writes Hess, additional discov- HEFHBEES RETURN RAILROAD FARE. Santa Fe Re;ives $10,000 FromPeopleSentAway Free During the Fire MAY COME BACK The passenger office of the Santa Fe has received more than $10,000 in cash from refugees It carried East for noth- ing at the time of the fire. Remit- tences and notes of thanks have come from every part of the United States and Canada.- Not the least important among the senders is Joe Gans, the colored pugilist, who sent $77.50 to J. J. Duffy of the Santa Fe to pay for his passage to Baltimore, Md., his home city. At the time of the fire the Santa Fe sent people East without charge, but took the name of each favored passenger. From some they took per- scnal notes and from others merely I O. U's. Last month the passen- ger department wrote to all of these free passengers advising them that ths Santa Fe would accept their passage money as soon as they felt able to pay. Many responded with checks for the money due the rallroad. Assistant General Passenger Agent | H. K. Gregory said yesterday that| thousands of persons had returned| from temporary places of refuge in| other States and again taken up resi-| dence in San Francisco. Men who sent their families away are depositing mcney for tickets with the railroad companies and sending for them to re- turn. Bight families arrived over the Santa Fe yesterday, one from Georgia, twe from Maryland, four from Colorado | and the rest from Southern California. | LA DS | CUTS THROAT ON STREET WITH RAZOR AND EXPIRES Chris Hansen, Longshoreman, Commits | Sufcide in Spectacular Manner After Inviting a Fight. After provoking a fight and having his nose punched, Chris Hansen, a longshoreman about 28 years of age, went from the reading-room of the Fhoenix Lodging-house, 828 Howard street, at 8:10 last evening and cut his throat on the sidewalk near by. The man used a razor, and with two gashes nearly severed his head from his body. The deed was committed in ti% pres- ence of witnesses, who were not quick enough to stop the suicide. Insanity from drink is though to have been the cause. Mike Cummingham, Ed Higgins, Charles Clark and H. Reilly, fellow lodgers of the deceased at the rooming- house, were on the sidewalk and saw Hansen stagger from the place, pull off his coat and throw it and his hat to the pavement and then cut his throat. Joseph Davis, night clerk at the lodg- ing-house, says that the man had been acting queerly for a week, and early last evening begun to charge about the reading-room, inviting men to fight with him. One man accepted the chal- |lenge and struck Hansen on the nose, |and the suicide followed quickly. L S g Tin Ores of Alaska. Frank L. Hess of the United States Geological Survey has issued an ac- count of whit was done by the survey in 1905 in regard to the tin deposits of Alaska. He finds that there are lode déposits at’ Lost River, on the Crim, Randt and O'Brien claims and on the Dolcoath lode. The first three men- tioned localities are the places where deposits of cassiterite were found orig- inally. Several tin-bearing dikes and veins have since been discovered in the York district, to which all the mat- During eries of tin ore were made in the vicinity of Cape Mountain. Small tin- bearing veins have been found in the Buck Creek region, but no producing tin lodes are situated there. In 1905 prospecting for tin gressed on Ears Mountain. Cassiterite has been found on the mountain, but not to large extent. At Buck Creek is the only placer deposit of tin that has made any output, so reports Hess. The product has been something less than 100 tons of ore that averaged some- thing like 65 per cent of metallic tin. There are other placer deposits at| Grouse Creek, Red Fox Creek and the | creeks that run Into Dick, Old Glory and Gold Bottom creeks Gulch. The lode deposits have advan- pro- tages that the placer deposits lack. The | |lodes cam be operated continuously throughout the year. The placer de- posits can be worked only in the short open seasons, and are subjected to in- terruptions due to storms, other climatic causes. _—— MAN-LIKE. Hard luck! I found a dollar bill In my last summer's suit, For joy I went and blew it in, With several more to boot. —The Catholic Standard and Times. | streets. | matter. and Fred | floods and | FIXES LOGATIONS FOR CITEANS. Water ComrmtteeOrdcrs City Engineer to Esti-| mate Cost of Planl REPORT IS FILED Chief Engineer Shaughnessy filed | with the Board of Supervisors yester- day a statement showing the proposed | locations of 207 underground street cisterns in addition to the twenty-four now in good condition, as a measure | for better fire protection. The locations are as follows: In the district north of Market street and east of Stockton cisterns to be placed two blocks apart on east and west streets and four blocks apart on north and south streets. On Market Street a cistern at the intersection of Drumm street and one opposite eac numbered street from First to Se enth, and one at Ninth, Eleventh, Va- lencia, Guerrero, Church and Castro | streets. I South of Market street cisterns to be placed four blocks apart east of First| street and two blocks apart between First and Eighth streets on streets | from Mission to Brannan. In the| Western Addition cisterns to be placed four blocks apart, in the Richmond and Sunset- districts five blocks apart on | east and west streets and three blocks | apart on north and south streets; and in the Mission district two blocks apart | on east and west streets and three| blocsks apart on north and south The report was adopted and referred by the water committee “to the City Engineer to estimate the cost of con- structing the cisterns, which are to be | of 100,000 gallons each where circum- stances permit, and to be of reinforced RICHMOND RANGES The finest stove in the whole wide world. They're made of the best new gray iron. Neat, plain design, rich nickel trimmmugs, smooth, satin finish. To reduce your coal b buy a Richmend We receive a carload every week. BRUSSELS CARPET AT 65c. 9x12 RUGS AT $8.00. Carpets can be laid the day after purchase—your choice from 3joo patterns. STERLING FURNITURE COMPANY Sixth St., From King to Berry. Free Buses From 6th and Mission and 3rd and Townsend. concrete. A. H. Payson, president of the Spring Valley Water Company, said he was| willing to comnect the mains with the | cisterns and the company's engineer will confer with Shaughnessy on the| Representatives of several corporations disclaimed having filled in some of the old cisterns. Complaints from several improve- ment clubs against the lack of water facilities in Holly Park, Bernal and other districts will be taken up next Wednesday mornln[‘ when the Spring Valley Company's efficlals will be clted to appear. The petitign of the Market-street ana | Eureka Valley Improvement Club that the City Attorney be directed to estab- lish a legal title to all property where the records have been destroyed was referred to the finance committee. The board finally passed the amended | ordinance granting the Qcean Shore Railway Company a franchise for an electric branch road on certain streets| so that ornamental poles shall be placed in the center of the roadway on | Potrero avenue. } The amended ordinance requiring the written consent of owners of property 100 feet on either side of a proposed | stable before a permit for the stable can be granted by the Board of Works was finally passed. The board ordered the width of side- walks on Howard street from East street to its southerly termination re- duced from fifteen to twelve feet. | Action on the proposed ordinance to | do away with any further inspection of chimneys was postponéd one week | on recommendation ol the fire com-‘ mittee. | —_ ! NOCHIO EXONERATED i FROM BLAME BY GUI A JURY | Verdict Is Returned That Vietor Temple Met His Death While Attempting Attack om Coal Dealer. A Coroner's jury in the case of Victor | Temple, who died after an altercation with J. Guinnochio, a coal dealer, at | the Dewey Restaurant, 1324 Point | Lobosavenue, returned a verdict yes- | | terday that Temple's death was caused | | by shock from a fall to the ground | while attempting to attack Guinnoehlo'| with a chair. The jury exonerated | Guinnochio from all blame. | The jury also returned verdicts that‘ | 3. A. Reid, a contractor, who was killed | {by a freight engine in the Southern | Pacific yards, met his death by accident and that John Doe McCarthy was ac- cidentally killed by walking off a train | at Twenty-third and Folsom reets | while on the way to San Diego to st | work. verdict of accidental death | | was rendered in the case of Joseph McCarthy, a hod-carrier, who fell from a building at Twenty-sixth and Va- | | leneta streets a distance of eighty feet | | to the ground. | | In the case of Fauchon La%rcode, a | boy, who was killed by a Geary-street | | ear near Fillmore street, the jury found | that he came to his death through the | caralessness of the gripman in charge | of the car. The evidence disclosed that | C. J. Dowen, a student. was handling the grip at the time Laforcode was run | down and Michael Norton, the regular | | gripman, was at Dowen's side. | SAN FRANCISCO. THE PACIFIC MOTOR CAR COMPANY, now doing busin 1416 Broadway, Oakland, beg to an- nounce that on twenty-fifth it wil 378-380 Golden Gate avenue, near Larkin street. The ml;.-!gx is_prepared to make immediate deliveries of t! Durvea 4-cylinder cars. : The George A. Has opened in San Francisco an nization. It offers its servi '! n its corps train uctmn. and unexcelled sorts in unlimited quantiti Ihe George A. erected in different lars Sther bullding concern tn & tracts thoroughly and In the sl to meny sliled IR very umuh for supp! cities more vorlll. It 1is hortest possible ess at its branch, and after August 1 be located at 376- Fuller Company office wit h a e. D h ylnt:'g’ull e uudlng or- :’ bul’dlnr{“em. ing materials of Fuller Company buildi :d to n-'x'oeut- eon- ‘mo-m-m«u-—:.u-vnm SAN. mm nmee—mm BUILDING S GRAND SUNDAY KCURSION PO Halfmoon Bay Crowds are flocking to the future Atlantic city in great numbers on .the Sunday excur- sions mauguratcd by the sev- eral companies operating in that locality. Like all other locali- ties, prices of realty will advance enormously upon the comple- tion of rallway communication. Thousands of men are now en- gaged in pushing to completion the Ocean,_ Shore Railroad, which - is expected to reach Halimoon Bay not later than February 1. TAKE THE TRIP WITH US SUNDAY AND LET US SHOW YOU OUR BEAUTI- FUL FRANCIS BEACH TRACT,BY ALL ODDS THE MOST DESIRABLE BEACH LOTS AT HALFMOON BAY. LARGE LOTS, DOUBLE FRONTAGE, $aco AND UP- | WARD. TERMS TO SUIT. Call at our office and arrange for transportation. Cars leave Fifth and Market streets at 8:30 2. m. Sunday. W. J. Morgan & Co. INVESTMENT BANKERS 925 Golden Gate Ave. San Francisco, Cal. The Ocularium OPTICIANS Photo Supplies Scientific Instruments 1309 VAN NESS AVENUE Eetween Bush and Sulter Streets HENRY KAHN & CO. C.A.MALM & CO. Fermerty 220-222 Bush Street TRUNK MANUFACTURERS 'mm at Their Factory, 18th and Folsom WNINGS, TENTS and COVERS Ross McMahon Co. 35 MARKET ST.