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FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1898 10 ] SIXEOLD DEATH HAS MURDERER ~ NOT ENDED INFRANCE THEIR FEUD | Why Two Women Lay Claim to Enos’ Body. Fearful Crimes of One Man at a Small Village. Senator’s Wife Had In- sulted Mrs. Snyder Years Ago. Kills a Family of Three Grown Persons and Three Children. In Revenge the Latter Resolved | to Wreck a Happy | Home. Upon Arrest the Fiend Coolly Confesses and Pleads Want as His Only Excuse. ATTEMPT TO LYNCH HIMA;STRIFE OVER THE DEAD. Maddened by the Deed of the Mon- | The Widow Is Given Poesession of the Remains, butthe Quarrel Goes On. ster a Mob Tries to Mete Out Swift Vengeance. Copyrighted, 1595, by James Gordon Bennett. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. PARIS, April'2.—All the crimes of the | BONOMA, APHI 2.—The body of John week sink into insignificance beside a | S. Enos has lain in its casket since lasz} crime which -in atrocity recalls to mind | Wednesday, and since that time two | the historic cause celebre of Tropmann. | women have been_ ba}!lmg to see which | In a. small village in Normandy, & one should put him in his grave. One| short distance from the fashionable is his widow; the other holds by his| : rt of Trouville, the fore- | will the sole right to bury him; and so | igar factory named Le |the tragedy that began years ago is| Bilond has been murdered, together |nearing an end. | with his mother. his wife and three By his will Enos directed that Ra- | children. This six-fold crime was com- | chael Snyder should take charge of his | mitted by a man named Caillard, aged | body and should bury it in her own | 33, who formerly worked in the district. | vault and with her own dead, but his Having stolen two, guns, a carbine, and | widow has come forward to claim his three revolvers, he got into Le Blond's | body and there is now pending in the man . of garden, armed with an arsenal of wea- | Sonoma courts a legal controversy over pons, and firing through the glass door | the corpse. ; at Le Blond and his wife, who were | Senator Enos died on Wednesday in Mrs. Snyder's house. On Friday fu- ed both instantly. Two small boys, 7| neral services were held over him, but and 9 years old, rmed by the report, | the interment was stopped by an in- | came down sta and the wretch shot | junction from the court at Santa Rosa. | both down. To-day an order served upon Mrs. Sny- | Then he entered the house and calmly | gor compelled her to surrender the body | sat down to :u'alnl‘dr\m;: \f\ hile ht: to the dead man's relatives, and to- sa‘( ked the house. When he reached the said and he will be placed in the city last bedroom he found Le Blond’'s | vault to await further legal action. mother-in-law in bed and he killed her | The dead man will then be in charge with a revolver ball in the head. Hav- of the court, and neither woman can ing collected everything of value he = . 5 e . vould find, he Stored his booty in a | touch him until the grewsome fight has portmanteau and started for the rail- | been decided 3 way station, where he booked for a Seventeen years have elapsed since neighboring town. He was arrested Enos met Mrs. Snyder, and the meet- the next rzmx'nlnll.h ;\ntd when lhj \\'ll"e:c); ing was not the first step in what was d made a full confession and related @ B e tatia. with revorting cyniolsm |50 tragic a relationship. D and had been taken to the scene of the Was taken before the woman knew him. murder, according to the French cus- | Mrs. Snyder was a Miss Sears, and in | tom, to be confronted with the bodies of | the early days of Sonoma County the | his victims, the fury of the crowd Was | gears owned all that was worth hold- such that the gendarmes had ;1,“ gl;e'dl- ing. They were rich at first, but they est diffioulty in preventing them from = z | lynéhing him n..‘n and there. Caillard | became poor, and then Miss Sears mar- | did not even make-any excuse for the |ried Major Snyder. Snyder was rich, zét beyond that of want. He suffers | and although the Sears were on the | from phthisis and is out of work. HIs verge of bankruptey at the time of the | S Ilig‘"":lélfl"“iglf:; | marriage their condition bettered at | jeen arrested. ard is V! S 4 De the perpetrator of several undiscov- | once and the marriage was said to have ered crimes. He has already been be- | been a most successful event. ssize Court on a charge of The bride was but 17 and her mar- | ried life ended before she was 20, bu(‘ in his will the major threw some light upon the marriage and more.light upon what followed. He left his entire property to his widow, but she was to have it only so long as she remained unmarried. Should she marry she was to lose it all. She did not marry, and as the years went by the people of Sonoma Valley began to talk of the rich and fascinai- ing young widow. While thi: LIk“ was at its highest Enos and his faiuily | came up the vailey to spend a summer. | There was a meeting between the two women and a parting, and people said | it was because Mrs. Enos had refused | reading a paper in the kitchen, he kill- with the mourning in is announced the grand aristocratic marriage of Count Jean de | “astella: vounger son of Marquis de Castellane, with the Princess de Furst- | enberg, widow' of Prince Charles de | Furstenberg.and daughter of the Duke of Talleyrand, who has just died. The succession of the father has not yet .been settled, but it is believed that | Comte Hele de Perigord, eldest son of | Prince de Sagan, will, with the assent of the German Emperor, assume the title' and succeed to the estate of the dukedom. of Sagan. Verdi, Wwho w engaged in Paris to conduct, ‘the Stabat Mater” at the ko 3 Ty = sacced concerts in holy week,. is stillf o fecoenize Mrs. Snyder and Mre: | very 1ll at Genoa and his place will be | oByder had vowed revenge in conse-| quence. The story is an old one, but as it is told Mrs. Snyder vowed she would break up the home that had cast | her out. She is a quiet woman, soft- | spoken, but determined, and one who looks as if she had an excellent mem- ory. It was nearly ten years after the epi- sode in which Mrs. Enos figured that Enos himself, the man over whose body the two women are now striving, was known as Mrs. Snyder’s closest friend and adviser. Before long there was talk of domestic trouble, and then there was an open separation. The names of Snyder and Enos were linked together as close as gossips could bring them, and Enos was known no more at his wife’s home. The Enos home was at a place near | Sonoma called Grand View, and when the separation between Enos and his wife became public she deeded the place to him. Within a short time he had sold it for $30,000. That was six years ago, and since that time the wife and daughter lived apart from the hus- = ——————— | band and Mrs. Snyder. Some months CHINESE READY TO ago there was talk of a reconciliation, | and Mrs. Enos was willing to receive s VSERE UNCLE SAM.|the husband again and, with the Hilaeye friends who urged a reconciliation, was Mercharits of Ogden Offer to.Raise a Mrs. Snyder. But Enos refused to have * Regiwent in the Event of War | anything further to do with his family, 72 - With Spain. | and in that mood he died. S He died in a back parlor of Mrs. Sny- FEW YORK, April 2.—A scheme is| der's home. When he had come in on foot ' an Ogden special to the | Wednesday morning the chimney in ) recruit a regiment of Chi- | that room was on fire, and in the ex- untéers, who will offer !he“_:clxement of quenching the sparks his to the United States in case | old enemy, heart disease, seized him, ¢ ' .. | and he died in Mrs. Snyder’s arms. with- Spain. The merchants at 7] umber about 500 and are of tha ‘When she heard of the dcath of her filled by his colleague, Boito. ident of the republic, like has paid a tribute to the v of the weather. He has just tack of influenza. for which his physician has ordered him a fort- | night’s rest in the south. Faure | is going to spend the time Cimiez, | here he will be a neighbor | have | of Queen toria. His apartments already Peéen taken and six : gent off yesterday for his Eas days, which our President, whose great activity is notorious, has well earned. | $1f the President had not wanted to take his own hors he might have had a| splendid bargain at e, where the sale | of the Princess Louise of Saxe-Coburg | of magrificent Hungarian horses has | Just taken place. "All the Princ ' ser- vants have baen discharged, and if the dispatch from Buda Pesth is to be be- lleved, King Leopold’s daughter is now in Croald at the castle of Lieutenant Keglovitz, where she is awaiting pre- | Jiminary steps in the divorce case to | which I have already referred. educated vlass and were the ones wto | husband, Mrs. Enos telegraphed to the comductéd the Chinese theater during | undertaker at Sonoma to take posses- the “World's. Fair. They are for the | $i0D Of the body. rossession was re- nost part anxious for citizenship in tha | fused by Mrs. Snyder. Then Mrs. Enos “United Stat and the leaders belisye | CAMe UD the valley and sent her daugh- that in’this kind of a move they may | tf, Mrs. Willls, and her daughter's in | husband to demand the body. They were met by Mrs. Snyder, who offered to let them view the remains but not be to ‘a- certain extent successful their demands.” The leaders here are | Heng Sking and Li Sing. Hong Sling is ‘one of- the best.known of Chinese | to take them away. metfchdants in the West, and he 1| _On Friday, in Mrs. Snyder’s house, equip a regiment if the United States | the first funeral services were held and will accept their ald. Li Sing is a re!- | the Rev. Mr. Wylle of Napa preached ative of Li Hung Chang a six-footer, | & most impressive sermon. Part of the and-a power among the See Yups. Three | ceremony included a reading of the will compdnies will be organized here cnd |Of the deceased, in which he directed others. at Rock Springs, Wyoming, | that Mrs. Snyder dispose of his mortal where tliere are a thousand Chinese in | remains. the -coal .mines. | There was to have been an interment e |In Mrs. Snyder’s family vault, but Mrs. ZOLA ‘GETS A NEW Enos had in the meantime invoked the AND..PERHAPS FAIR TRIAL. aid of the courts of Santa Rosa and an injunction on the dead secured it from Friday’s burial. Then Mrs. Sny- der was served with an order of court | PARIS, April 2—The Court of Cessa- |directing her to surrender the body to tlon has quashed the sentence of one|Mrs. Enos and this she recognized, year's imprisonment and 3000 francs fine | making possible a second funeral cere- imposed ‘on Emile Zola, the result of /mony to take place at the undertaker’s charges made "by him .in the Aurore | to-morrow. E againist the conduct of the Esterhazy | The undertaker has orders not to al- court-martial, but the court has ordered | Jow Mrs. Snyder to enter the house of # The.decision 15, Dised on-ihe fact that |SOTTOW. Once In the city vault the . the presidént of, the court-martial should | 3224 Will have passed out of the con- have lodged the complaint ainst M. Zola instead of the Minister of War, as it was the court-martial that was as- troversy except as a cause of strife. sailed by the famous author and editor. Enos will be burfed and who will have the bones is a matter for dry law and hours of legal argument. | Murder of Subjects of the Kaiser | the alleged wanton attack of a band of LED BY BLIND RAGE TO TAKE HUMAN LIFE Foreman of a Fresno County Ranch Shoots to Death an Aged Employe. FRESNO, April 2—W. L. Motley was killed this morning by Charles Worthington at J. R. Hite's ranch, near Wheatville, thirty miles southwest of Fresno. The murder occurred just at daybreak, and was the result of a trivial quarrel. Motley was shot as he was follow- ing Worthington into the ranchhouse. The contents of both barrels of a double-barreled shotgun entered the unarmed man’s body. Motley exclaimed, “My God, you have killed me,” and fell forward, expiring almost instantly. ‘Worthingtdn is foreman of the Hite ranch, and Motley and his son, Walter E. Motley, were working under himy Young Motley was harnessing his team when Worthington came into the barn and began complaining about the way the horses were cared for. Young Motley said his work was being done properly and the foreman replied that the team had not been curried on Friday. The father was in another part of the barn and heard Worthing- ton’s last remark about the horses. He saild Worthington was a liar, as the horses had received proper treatment. “Don’t you call me a liar,” sald Worthington, and he started for the old man. The two met in the bunk room of the barn and a rough and tumble fight ensued. The son ran to his father’s assistance, and hit Worthing- [OJOJOXOIOJOXOIOXOIOXOXOIOXOOLOLO} ® ton over the head several times. Worthington retreated toward the house. He was smarting from the blows he had received and ex- claimed: “I will go to the house and get a gun and shoot you,” applying a vicious epithet to the elder man. He procured a double-barreled shotgun. The elder Motley fol- lowed him. He was unarmed and perfectly defenseless. ‘Worthington was standing inside, waliting to slay his victim. As Motley stepped over the threshold Worthington fired. The men were only a few feet apart. Both loads of shot crashed into the body of Motley. He was hit in the side and his arm riddled with shot. The old man fell and expired almost instantly. With the fury of a demon Worthington sprang forward and struck the dying man over the head time and again with the butt of his shot- gun. The breech stock was broken off and then. the murderer left his victim. Motley’s life bood gushed out and covered the floor with the sickening evidence of the murder. During the shooting young Motley ran into the barn to keep out of range of Worthington’s gun. The murderer, however, did not at- tack him. 2 Jacob Yates and Walter Motley were the only witnesses of the shooting. ‘Worthington gave himself up this afternoon. He reruested Dave Francis to accompany him from Wheatville to Fresno. After arriving here his bruises about the head and body were dressed. He was then placed in the County Jail. He refuses to talk in regard to the murder. Coroner Long will hold an inquest to-morrow on the remains of the victim. He was accompanied to Wheatville by Deputy District At- torney G. C. Freeman, who will gather evidence for the prosecution. They will return to Fresno to-morrow afternoon. [OXOJOXOJOIOXOOROJOXOROXOLOJOX O JOXOROXOJOROXOXOOJOXOJOIOJOXOTOJOXOIOXOXOJOXO) ® OJOJOJOXOIOXOJOJOXOXO} @® OJOJOJOJOIOJOXOJOXOJOXOLOXOICXOYOI SO OJOXOXOJOX IO IR DX OJOXOJOXO) ® ® PEPEPOEOPOPEOPOPRPPREPPPEHINEOOEOECEO® GERMANY IS STARVING 0UT NOW FRIENDLY| THE OUTLAWS There Has Been a Change | Waiting Game Played by of Sentiment as to Pursuers of Cross Spain. Creek Robbers. Believe the Fugitives Must Soon Appear in Quest of Food. in Cuba Causes an Unex- pected Turn., William's Diplomats Praise the United States and Make Demand on the Madrid Government. Foothills Swarm With Armed Men Ready to Give Battle to Regan. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. Special Dispatch to The Call. SCHULTZ MOUNTAIN, via Merced, April 2.—The hunt for the Cross Creek train-robbers has now developed into & waiting game. For the last two days pursuing deputies have visited nearly all the isolated camps within a radius of thirty miles of this mountain, and from the spot where the bandits were | last seen, and notified the miners and sheepherders to be on the lookout for the fleeing men. The robbers had, When they were last seen, very little food, and the Sheriffs are obliged to Wait until hunger forces them from their hiding-place. The mountains in this neighborhood are honey-combed with caves and abandoned mining shafts, and they afford safe places of concealment for the hunted men. One Sheriff's posse, headed by S. W. Dickinson and G. W. Yoakum. is now centered near Grub Gulch, about twen- ty miles south of here, in the hope of heading the robbers off should they be trying to reach the Fresno Flats and Samson Flats, the country where Ev- ans and Sontag so long defied the offi- cers. ClUff Regan has many friends in Fresno Flats, and a woman who has been known as Regan’s wife resides there. Deputy Sheriff Mack and John Du- gan, at the head of another posse, are searching the hills in this vicinity and waiting to hear of the robbers applying at any of the cabins for food. They are making their headquarters in this vicinity. 3 Two men who are supposed to have been the bandits camped about a half- mile from the Francis mine in Cathay Valley on Tuesday night. The foot- prints about the campfire correspond Wwith those at the scene of the train robbery, and also with those found about the abandoned horse and buggy and the camps in Indian Gulch which the robbers are known to have visited. 1L is pretty definitely settled that the bandits are heading for the Fresno flats, and the country between where the robbers are supposed to .be and their goal is filled with armed men eager to meet them and give battle. The officers do not expect to get them without a fight, and every man hunting them carries his weapons on a hair- trigger and ready to shoot at the least sign of danger. Deputy Sheriff Mack to-day, with one or two of his men, started for the vicinity of the Three Buttes, a few miles north of here, to warn the ranchers and sheepherders of that vicinity to keep a close watch for Regan and his mysterious partner' in crime, and also to arrange some method of communicating with the posse now in Grub Guich, so that the two posses can close In on the pursited men shouid turther news of them be 1eceived. HEALDSBURG EDITOR CANED. Citizens Express Appreciation of His - Paper’s Policy. HEALDSBURG, April 2—Editor Cooke of the Tribune was waited on by a dele- gation of citizens this afternoon and presented with a gold-headed cane as a token of their appreciation of the course of his paper in the late fight for municipal ownership of the water and light plant of B i o Healdsburg to F. " ) b ERLIN, April 2—The sentiment in Germany in officlal and unoflicial eir- cles early to-day was that the Hispano- American crisis has veered cons’der- ably during the course of the week and is now decidedly more favorable to the United States. This, it is assert- ed, is partly-due to the moderation President McKinley and the conserva- tive manner in which the United States Minister, General Woodford, has dealt with the authorities at Madrid, and partly to the bitterness engendered by insurgents upon the German sugar re- fineries at Canamaba, in the province of Santa Clara, and the murder of four persons connected witn tne refinery, on March 18, which has taught Germany that Spain is unable to protect even the lives of foreigners in Cuba. As previously announced, the German Forelgn Office is demanding immedi- ate and full redress for this outrage, and a German warship will soon be sent to Havana if satisfaction is not forthcoming in short order. The Span- ish Embassador here, Senor Mendez de Vigo, has had lengthy conferences with Baron von Bulow, the German Min- ister for Foreign Affairs, who con- vinced the Embassador tl.at Germany intended to have complete satisfaction, including indemnity for the property destroyed and for the lives taken. The Embassador was also informed that unless the redress was forthcom- ing, Germany would ha f, secure damages and punish the offenders. As an incentive to quick reparation, Baron von Bulow added that provisional or- ders had been cabled to the command- er of the German warship Geier to sail in the direction of Cuba. The Spanish Embassador promised that he would exert himself to the utmost to comply with the German demands. The newspapers here are also chang- ing their line and now concede in the main the justice of the American de- mands, acknowledging that Washing- ton has acted with moderation which many another government would not have shown under similar circum- stances. The Cologne Gazette, the Vossische Zeitung, the Lokal Anzeiger and other leading newspapers highly eulogize President McKinley’s statesmanship and express confidence that whatever he ultimately decides will be dictated by some good reason. The United States Embassador, An- drew D. White, in an interview said that thus far, acting under instruc- tions from Washington, he had not for- mally inquired of the German Govern- ment what its attitude would be in the event of war. He had nevertheless been repeatedly assured informally by Baron Bulow that Germany will in no case assume an unfriendly attitude to- ward the United States, nor join in anv possible combination of the powers having that end in view. In regard to Emperor William'’s personal views, Mr. White said his Majesty has been gross- ly misrepresented by the foreign press. The Emperor has repeatedly given Mr. ‘White to understand that he felt most favorably disposed toward the United States and his sympathies are with the United States in this crisis. Advances made on furniture and planos, with or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission. ‘W. Cooke.’ RECEPTION T0 - CAPT. SIGSBEE The President Greets the ' Maine’s Able Com- mander. An Immense Throng of Dis- tinguished Persons Pays Homage. Plenty of Enthusiasm Created by Stirring Patriotic Airs by the Marine Band. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. Call Office, Riggs House, _ ‘Washington, April 2. President McKinley was one of an Iimmense throng of distinguished per- sons who to-night attended a brilliant reception in honor of Captain Sigsbee, commander of the wrecked battleship Maine. It was a formal reception given him by the National Geographical So- clety of this city and President Mc- Kinley laid aside work upon his mes- sage long enough to go over and join the guests. Considerably over a thou- sand peopl: were there. Professor Alexander Graham Bell, the scientist, received with Captain Sigsbee, as the president of the society. The line of guests occupied two hours in passing through the parlors of the Arlington Hotel. Secretary Long, de- tained at a dinner, arrived late and stopped a few moments. The President’s arrival was the sig- nal for an outburst of cheering. He refused to take advantage of the gen- eral movement to make way for him, preferring to remain in line and meet the Maine’s commander when his time came. As he reached him, the Presi- dent grasped his hand, with the re- mark, “Captain, it gives me great pleasure to have the honor of meeting you,” and with a few brief words cf congratulation, passed on to the ball- room amid cheering and the strains of “‘Hail to the Chief.” The hotel parlors were decorated for the affair with American flags and bunting and a profusion of flowers. The Marine band was present and played patriotic selections during the evening, and a detachment of marines was stationed about the parlors in honor of the guest. COLLIS P. HUNTINGTON ARRIVES IN CALIFORNIA. President and Other Officers of the Southern Pacific Visit Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES, April 2—Collis P. Huntington, with H. E. Huntington, Gen- eral Manager Kruttschnitt, Superintend- ent Muir and other railway men, arrived here in Huntington's vrivate car at 1 o'clock to-day. He does not disclose the object of his visit here. g High Wind Does Damage. HANFORD, April 2—A high wind this morning blew down the framework for the new cannery bemF erected here. Three carpenters were injured. Andrew Anderson’s head was crushed and he is not expected to live. PORT ARTHUR Russia Also Takes In Talien Wan in the Grab. Elaborate Details of the Inva- sion as Officially Described by the Czar’s Diplomats. Great Britaln Takes a Hand snd De- mands From China Important Compensatory Concessions. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. an important conference to-dav with the Tsung Li Yamen (Chinese Foreign Office). It is stated that Great Britain has demanded important compensatory concessions for the purpose of main- taining the balance of power in the far East. lowing official description of the occu- pation of Port Arthur and Talien- Wan by the Russians has been made public: By command of the Emperor and for the purpose of fulfilling the conditions set forth in the convention with the Chinese Government, General Grode- kow, commanding the Amur district, dispatched from Vladivostok on March 15 a detachment of troops with orders to join the landing parties of the Pa- cific squadron at Port Arthur, com- manded by Rear Admiral Dubassoff. The Chinese troops began their depart- ure on March 27, the last marching out at 1 o'clock the follow- ing morning. Five hours later the Rus- sians landed and began the occupation of the fort: By 8 o'clock the troops were in position. Russian flags were then run up on all the vessels of the fleet and Russian and Chinese flags on the fort. Salutes were fired by the ships and fort. A similar programme was carried out at Talien Wan. Measures will be begun immediately for the effective occupation of the terri- tory ceded to Russia in the Kwang Tung peninsula. The Czar has thanked Rear Admiral Dubassoff for the man- ner in which he has carried out his or- ders. YOKOHAMA, April 2—The Japanese newspapers think that the British na- val movement is not directed against Russia, but is intended to coerce China into making concessions to Great Brit- ain. is to be left in isolation, for which state of affairs Great Britain is blamed, and there is, consequently, a growing feel- ing of resentment against that country. The newspapers generally urge the re- tention of Japanese troops at Wei-Hai- Wei after the war indemnity has been pid by China. Naylor Found Not Guilty. INDEPENDENCE, April 2.—Marshall H. Naylor was acquitted on the second ballot by & jury in the Superior Court last night of the charge of robbing the Wells-Fargo stage of $2144 9 on Novem- ber 24 last. The verdict meets general approval NOW OCCUPIES |PREFER WAR 10 STSPENSE | The Costa Ricans Anxious. for a Brush With Nicaragua. Nearly All Laborers on Ba_nan'al and Coffee Plantations Are: Drafted Into Service. One Skirmish Has Already Occurred on the Frontier Between Forces of the Rival Nations. | Copyrighted, 1598, by James Gordon Bennett. PEKING, April 2—The British Min-| ister here, Sir Claude MacDonald, had | advices from tl.e Herald's correspond- ST. PETERSBURG, April 2.—The fol- | coiumn | The belief is expressed that Japan | PANAMA, April 2.—Saturday’s. mail ent in Port Limon regarding the Costa Rica-Nicaraguan dispute say: Since March 21, by executive decree, no pas- sengers arriving from any Nicaraguan port have been permittéd to land on Costa Rican soil. The people are clam- oring. They have no faith in peace, and prefer war to this suspense. Com- merce is almost paralyzed, causing as much ruin as if war were actually in rogress. & Niarly all the laborers from the ban- ana and coffee pi. ntations have been drafted into active military service. The | desire generally is for a prompt ad- justment of the difficulty. The present tension is ruinous. Many merchants who ceased importing goods have can- celed orders in the United States and Europe. Ne“\)‘s reached Port Limon on March 20 of a skirmish between a body of Costa Rica’s advance troops and Nica- raguan pickets near the town of La | Cruz, near the frontier line. The Costa | Ricans advanced to almost hailing dis- tance, when the Nicaraguans, fearing an attack, openéd fire, wounding the | commander of the force in the locality, | General Avila, and killing one private. | The Costa Ricans returned the fire with | more disastrous resuits, as seven Nica- | raguans were killed and several wound- ed. Both sides then retreated to their respective posts. General Avila has been reprimanded for imprudently going too near .the border. PREPARING THE VAULT FOR AN INSPECTION. John W. Mackay Will Visit His Cel- | ebrated Mausoleum in Grzen- wood Cemetery. NEW YORK, April 2—Orders were | given this morning that the magnificent $300,000 Mackay mausoleum in Greenwood Cemetery be cleared by to-morrow morn- ing for inspection by John W. Mackay. | The inspection will take place in theafter- | noon in anticipation of the frst mass to | be held in the mausoleum early in May, when Mrs. John W. Mackay will have re= turned from her home in Paris and when | the body of John W. Mackay Jr., who | was killed while hunting in France, will | be placed in one of the crypts in the north | wing of the structure. | e | King is the most ancient of titles. 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SANDEN. “Dear Sir: A short time ago I purchased one of your pleased to say that it has done wonders for S I mat fering with rheumatism, headaches and terrible pains in my Belt for about two months, and now I am happy all the pains have stoppc . and that I I had been troubled with my eyes, but t! and I can see as plain now as I ever could. out, has B.lsc; S(?‘l‘)ped. the means of selling a number of Belts to my friends, and knew I was wearing the Belt. 4 The B thought it would benefit, and will always to repay you,” writes Mr. N. R. Moon, Blaine, Ore., formerly of G The Belt has made Stop Drugging and Try It. If you are weak and failing, tru it to-dap. It costs U doctor bill,and is ten times urates the weak If you are a NOTE—Make no mistake in the number—632 HARKET STREET. Otfice hours—8 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays, Strength Can Depend on Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt to Cure When Everything When your neighbor saus it cured him, when pon- know that over 10,000 men have been restored by it vou MUST have confidence in this wonderful Belt, If vou have failed in other means that is ne argument agalnst it, for nine out of ten of its after all else had failed. neryes and muscles, must cure. READ WHAT THIS HAPPY MAN SAYS OF THE BEL It pours vitality into the restoring the wasted power, and it feel as well to-day as I ever have been In I have recommended the Belt do so, as I think I can akness of men, Portland, Or., %3 Washington st; Demranoren st o8 Angeles, Cal RURURRUIIWRK 888888898288883‘38958888983888’88289888889828288358:.&3882588238883823983? A Sure Cure For Weak Men. Broken Down and Lacking \ cures were made . April 2, 1888. F Belts, and I am or a long time I had been suf- back. I wore the to be in a position to say that me. he pains haveentirely stoppe My hair, which had started topi"’nfdl a great change in me, which has beeri . ced the change to all whom I ever do enough rayson, Cal. - parts with its standard. [t NErvousness, vari- Sent free, SAN FRANCISCO, Denver, Colo., 531 Sixteentn st.. Dajjad 583888858828288888238888?82888838888882828383888‘?8288'32883353282_8288{8282'8383?9‘33838_33332'33_88!2"" BERNURRRRRRANN UL NURURRRVRRRURRRRR