Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1898 INOUIRY WILL BE BRIEF AND SUPERFICIAL Agnews Asylum Not to Be Given the Cleansing It Needs. State Lunacy Commission Dis- posed to Pass Lightly Over the Scandali. | owing to his be- A law passed N JOSE, July —It was learned the State Lunacy Com- have to be removed, | ing legally disqualif et oY on of the is to convene at the that abione shall Hospital to-morrow tion of medical superintend- to confine its investiga- who has not had State hospital 8" ce in the This experience | r. Sponogle has ad | : Budd )t be present at | of the State Commission, | ight, as he is suffering to the case of Dr. medical superintendent itution. Its work also will examination of airs in ge 1, but one of the , the STARTING ON HER LAST VOYAGE. treat- | M looks for the searching and thorough investigation that is neci ry to re- state the administration in the con- c. The general pre- that there will be as artistic t tewash applied aseverwas by an investigating bod > charges against Dr. Sponogle -d in th. sensationalstate- Detective ssion of the g reports that accused of hav- vife and ruined 0. Frost is un- been taken into e Gould-Sponogle fac- & of a damaging char- from a severe cold. When the State board has concluded its investigation the local directors will | take up the formal charges filed aga t T. T. Tourtillott and Mrs. K. Madigan by Charles L. Willlams. In this se, also, the groundwork |is being laid for a liberal coat of kalso- mine. Willlams will be represented by | an attorney at the investigation. He | sclares that his only object in taking | ion in this unpleasant affair is to | iicate his wife's reputation in oon-i Th nection with the charge made by Di- rector Gould that she was suffering | from mental hallucinations. He says | that he proposes to establish the fact | that his wife's mental condition is nor- | mal, and that what she said she had | Out of New York It from his ex- | seen at the asylum had actually taken | place. In conformity with this plan, anxious the friends of Dr. he states, he will further prove that | -tain him in his | his wife's removal was due to the fact BIC CHIEE REA \FTER SCALES Seeking to Undo Two Political Foes. $115; for car fare, attending meetings of board, $570; for expressage of pa- pers, $2 70. At the opening the meeting prom- | ised to be a warm one. Supervisor Austin took exception to the published interview of Superintendent Chipman, in which that official attributed the at- tack upon him to the animus of “Boss” Rea in an attempt to kill him politi- | cally. Austin denied he was acting | for any political clique, and said his | motives were of the purest character. | He denounced the statement in ques- | tion as a lie and the author as a liar. Superintendent Chipman responded that If he was responsible for the statement Austin knew how to obtaln redress and where to find him. Austin then qualified his statement. { Pettit gave a lucid explanation of the | charges in his bill, which covered the time from May 7 to June 30. He had | done most of his work at home, put- ting in from eight to ten hours a day. The fact that some of it had been done at San Miguel was made much of by | the Supervisors and caused acrimon- | jous remarks. An attempt was made to prove that he had not performed | some of the services charged. | Proved Against | Miss Cornelia Farley, H. M. Bland Them, {and Elmer Brownell, members of the | | County Board of Education, gave tes- | | timony contradictory to Pettit, but as | | their statements showed animus they | were lightly received by the spectators | present. Bland and Brownell, both | Rea men, are out for the nomination for County Superintendent of Schools. Chipman’s testimony supported that of Pettit. At the conclusion of the examination of witnesses the allowing of bills was postponed until next month's meeting. | It appears now as though the investi- | | gation has proved a political boom- | |erang and Rea is anxious to drop it. | 'YOUNG AMERICAN SLAIN BY THREE MEXICANS | | Cold-Blooded Murder of a Sixteen- Year-0ld Lad in Lower Cali- fornia. | SAN DIEGO, July 25.—Christobal Cros- thwaite, an American, the 16-year-old son of Phillp Crosthwalte, one of the ploneers of this section, was shot through the heart on Friday morning about sixty miles from Ensenada. The murderers were three escaped Mexican soldlers. Crosthwaite and another young man, named MacAleer, son of Chris MacAleer, an old settler in Lower California, left Ensenada several days ago to herd cat- tle in the Barbon Valley. On Friday SAN JOSE GANG HOLDS COURT CHIPMAN AND PETTIT ON THE RACK. Refusal to Bow to the Dictates of the “Boss” the Greatest Offense Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, July 25.—The Rea gang held court in the Board of Supervisors’ rooms to-day. George H. Rea, chair- man of the board and brother of “Boss” Rea, acted as prosecutor, Judge and In the latter capacity he was assisted by Supervisors Austin, Stern and Ayer. Supervisor Roll was pres- ent, but took no part in the proceed- ings. The persons on trial were Coun- ty Superintendent of Schools L. J. Chipman and W. W. Pettit, until re- | cently a member of the County Board of Education. Refusal to bow to the dictates of ““Boss” Rea was the great- est offense made out against the ac- cused. The proceedings were the continued hearing of the investigation begun last Monday into some alleged irregulari- tles in the bills of members of the Board of Education. Chipman and Pettit were accused of having charged for services which they had never ren- dered. Pettit was called before the Supervisors and questioned In regard to his bill filed on July 1 for $123 40. The items charged were twenty-three | o ning “just befors the young men had days at $5 a day, for preparing and | preakfasted, the three Mexicans rode into checking over examination papers, | camp. Although the young men recog- Jury. STARVING CUBANS SEND A PITIFUL APPEAL FOR AID Cienfuegos Residents Beg That Sampson Hasten the At- tack on the City. Copyrighted, 1898, by the Assoclated Press. GUAN.ANAMO BAY, July 2.—The following pitiful been addres Sampson: Honorable Sir: The Cubans—old men, women and children—resident in the town of Clenfuegos and this neighborhood are all dying of hunger. The young men are all in the field with the Cuban troops and have no shoes or food. All the provisions In this town are in the hands of the Spaniards. Cubans cannot obtain a plece of bread, as it is necessary to send every- :hlnfillo the fleld. The Weyler system is in high sway. The situation is errible. 1f you, honorable sir, do not come quick with your squadron to our help and take pos: on of this town we shall be lost. We beg you to precipi- tate your operations, or about 5000 old men, women and children will die of hunger in this town. Some of these old men have four or five sons fighting for freedom. . This is our situation—a horrible situation! It the great people of the United States do not come quick to our help we are lost. For God's sake, come quick. ) SOME CUBANS. Nothing can be done for the people of Cienfuegos until that place is captured. This will not be for some time. appeal has e. by the starving people of Cienfuegos to Rear Admiral ® ® ® ° JONC RO OJONOROJOROKO] ® ® R olofelofolelofofofofofof oYY oYoYoYoYofoXofoYofofoloYoYoofo¥eXol ® (O] ® ® ‘® ® ® @ O] ® ® ® (0] ® ® ® ® ® ® | Sailing came back. Frank Miller PRIVATE dispatch received by the Merchants' Exchange yesterday stated that the American ship Ken- flworth was on fire and that Captain J. G. Baker, Mate H. Piper and a boy named Hobson were dead. The telegram was dated at Valparaiso, and the general impression among shipping men is that the vessel had caught fire and the crew, being unable to subdue the flames, had abandoned her. In the struggle to save the ship the captain, mate and boy had lost thelr lives The Kenilworth came here in the early general cargo. e Above Picture'of the Kenilworth Is Reproduced From a Photograph of the Ship Taken From the Deck of the Tug That Towed Her Harbor Last December. loaded sugar for New York. and on May She sailed 2 s from here March started on her 1 The fire must, therefore, have broken out when she wa mewhere in the vicinity of the Cape of Storms, and the crew was probably picke passing ve and landed at Vi 0. This is not the first time that both mas- ter and vessel have been in trouble. In 1859 the Kenilworth was in the big Port Costa fire. On that occasion she was burned to the water's edge, but her hull was purchased from the British owners 1, i The Scene Is Off Sandy Hook and the Ship’s Boat Has Just Returned From Putting the Pilot Aboard the Tug. Baker was master of the clipper ship Wil- lie Rosenfeld when she was lost a few vears ago. After that disaster he was made master of the Kenilworth. The Kenilworth was built in 1853 at Port gow by J. Reld & Co. She was 2178 net burden, 300 feet 2 Inches long, 43 feet 1 inch broad and 24 feet 2 inches decp. She was owned by A. Sewall & Co., Bath, Me. Her cargo was insured in this city for $250,000 and the hull in the East for $65,000. The freight money was in- sured in San Francisco offices for $17,500. The insurance on cargo and freight money | here 4 seaTly e 2 arom the Dritish OWhers was piaced by Balfour. Guthrie & Co., | part of the year from New Xurk, “nhhu by some San rmnlc;;s > people, who. at 203 afmost every insurance company in After discharging she great expense, fitted her up again and put » city is more or less interested in the went from here to Hilo, H. 1., where she her under the American flag. Captain news. of yellow fever developed. She was nized them as dangerous characters th were treated with the utmost courtes and joined in the meal prepared. When the breakfast was cleared away Cros- thwaite left the party to get his horse and prepare for the work. Hardly had his back been turned when one of the Mexican sent @ bullet through his heart. Young MacAleer dashed into the. brush close by, thereby saving his life. Before the soldiers left they stripped thelr vietim of all his clothes and robbed the tent of everything that might be of service to them. “Half-crazed by fear and almost dead from exhaustion young MacAleer reached | Ensenada that night and told the story. A posse of several bands of rurales and about fifty citizens started in pursuit of the murderers. DRUNKEN ROW ENDS IN THE TAKING OF A LIFE One Nevada Man Shoots Another Who Was on a Still Hunt for a Third. RENO, July 2.—Will Chapman, a “bronco buster,” had a fist fight yesterday with Charles Safling in the barroom of Brubeck’'s Hotel at Amadee. It was a drunken row and after they had ham- mered each other for a time Sailing cried quits. The two men went in to dinner and there got at it again. Salling agaln told Chapman that he had enough. He im- mediately left the hotel, went to another saloon, procured a pistol and came back. Chapman was in_the washroom when appeared n the scene, armed with a double-bar- PHed Shotgun, and sald that he allowed no man to impose upon a friend of his. He put the gun to his shoulder and shot Salling with both bari®ls, one charge <~ | tering his right breast and the other shooting off the lower part of the face, killing Sailing instantly. Milfer was arrested by Sherlff Church of Lassen County and taken to Susanville this morning. ANNUAL CONVENTION OF CHRISTIAN CHURCHES Delegates Arrive at Santa Cruz on Every Train for the Summer Meeting. SANTA CRUZ July 2.—The annualcon- vention of the Christian churches of Cali- fornia opened this evening at Garfleld Park. All the cottages and tents have been taken and delegates are arriving on every train. The tabernacle where the services are held has been decorated with the national colors. The sermon this evening was by Rev. Frank S. Ford of the First Christian Church of San Francisco. The Ministerial Asociation will com- mence its annual meeting to-morrow morning, and ministers from every sec- tion of the northern part of the State will be present. In the evening Rev Benjamin L. Smith of Cincinnat! will deliver his lec- ture on the “Life and Times of Alexander Campbell.” SRS CHANGES IN THE DIRECTORY. Reorganization of the Pacific Express Company Completed. OMAHA, July 25.—The reorganization of the Pacific Express ‘Company is now complete. President Burt of the Union Pacific, who was elected provisionally to succeed President Morseman when the latter resigned some weeks ago, handed in his resignation to the board of di- rectors and it was accepted. James Eggleston of the office of the Adams Express of New York was elected to be president of the Pacific. Ollver W. Mink resigned as vice-president and director of the company. No one was elected to succeed him as vice president, but Erastus Young, general auditor of the Union Pacific, was chosen to flll the va- cancy on the directory. President Eg- leston will also be Eeneml manager and Eeorgs Stebbins, who has been acting general manager, will return to his posi- tion of division superintendent. —— More Time for Pacific Coast Builders WASHINGTON, July 2.—The Navy Department has been obliged again to postpone the date for the receipt of bids for the construction of torpedo boats. It has now been set for August 23, upon the representations of ship-builders on the Pacific Coast that otherwise they would not have sufficient time to get their bid: through by mail. 3 ——————————— Stmr. Grace Dollar will sail for St. Michael. Guaranteed connections Yuk River points; low rates. Particulars 46 Mkt. or 632 Mkt., r. §. ALL KINDS OF FEVER RAGING | Five Hundred New Cases in One Day. i [ NEARLY ALL OF A MILD TYPE| ONE DEATH ONLY FROM THE YELLOW SCOURGE. | Notwithstanding the Alarming Fig- ures Shafter Says the Condi- | tion of His Men Seems tc Be Improving. Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, July 25.—In a dis- | patch to the War Department to-night | General Shafter reports that about 500 new cases of fever developed in his | corps at Santiago yesterday. This | number includes, of course, all classcs | of fevers, probably some cases of gen- uine yellow fever. Only one death is reported, that one being from yellow fever. The cheering intelligence Is conveyed that the situation is improv- ing, and that about 450 men who have been ill have returned to.duty. The| dispatch, as posted by the War De- partment, is as follows: SANTIAGO, July 2.—Adjutant General U. 8. A., Washington: Number of new fever cases on the 24th inst., was 500. At | least 450 have returned to dut. Actual | figures will be given hereafter. Notwith- | tanding figures, the situation seems somewhat im ved. One death, Sergeant | J. Larnnen oop C, Third Cavalry. vel- low fever; Siboney. SHAKFTER, Major General. | As heretofore indicated by General Shafter and the medical officers of his corps, the cases of fever are of a not-| ably mild type. The patients are ill| from three days to a week and then jreturn to duty quite as well as ever. | The medical officers concur in the | opinion that this fever renders the men | immune, for the time, at least, to yel- low fever. GOMEZ GAINS A VICTORY OVER THE SPANIARDS Kills the Nntorim;s_Guerruln Chief, Rosedo Gercia, and Twenty- Three of His Men. NEW YORK, July 25—A special from Key West says that the Cuban | Junta there has advices from Santa Clara that Gomez destroyed two bridges of the raillway connecting Sancti Spiritus with Port Turas de Zaza, and seized a Spanish munition train, taking sixty prisoners. The at- tack was made on July 14, a few days after Gomez received the supplies sent | him by General Miles 'on the steamers Florida and Faulta. Rosedo Garcia, the bandit whom Weyler brought from Spain and left as brigadier, command- ing Spain’s guerrilla corps in Sancti Spiritus, attacked the patriot forces, but was defeated and killed with twenty-three of his men. The Cuban losses are given as éleven killed and twenty-seven wounded. Gomez is now reported to be planning the seizure of a seaport. Government Dispatches Quarantined. TAMPA, Fla., July 25.—The transport Aransas arrived at quarantine to-day and will be held. The Aransas has on board sixty-four persons, and on her trip down from Santiago several cases | Infernal ulachine Containing Dyma held at the quarantine station at Mul- let Key, and Dr. Glennan of the Marine Hospital service, who is in charge here, went down at once and ordered that the boat be held indefinitely. Colonel Astor is on board the Aransas and has dispatches for the Secretary of War, which he has orders to deliver in per- son, but he will be held until all danger is over. NARROW ESCAPE OF AN AMERICAN SUPPLY SHIP/ mite and Guncotton Found on the Port Victor. NEW YORK, July written to a prominent official to-day Captain Willlam Brackley of the re- frigerating and supply ship Port Vic- tor says that an attempt was made to blow up the ship when she was three days out. He said a box containing thirty pounds of dynamite and gun cot- ton was found on the main deck of the steamer. A clocklike mechanism had been arranged by which the explosives were to be set off. The box and explo- sives were thrown into the sea. The | Port Victor left New York July 14. T A ATTEMPTED WIFE-MURDER. Lassen County Woman the Victim of a Husband’s Attack. SUSANVILLE, July 2.—J. W. Jr. of Hayden Hill, Arnett after gashing iu.s turned its edge upon his own throat. Failing, either through lack of nerve or becauge of his wife's resistance, to kill himself, he procured a rifie and shot at Mrs. Arnett three times. The first bullet, deflected by a corset steel, entered iue hip; the second shot took effect in the shoulder and the third just grazed her head. Arnett then mounted a horse and made his escape. The people of the camp are hunting for the would-be murderer. It Is more than likely he has carried out his intention to kill himself. It Is not.thought the wom- an’s wounds are fatal. = geiet) Crushed Under Falling Rock. SAN ANDREAS, July 2%.—The Union League gravel mine, one mile east of town, was the scene of an accldent to- day shortly before the noon hour in which Albert Loeffler, an employe, lost Lis life. Loeffler and his son, Ernest Loeffler, were timbering one of the drifts. | They had put in a cap supported by two uprights to hold the roof and were put- ting in another support in the center of the timber when it suddenly snapped in two, letting down several tons of gravel and rock which buried the elder Loeffler. The son luckily escaped. R Fire at Healdsburg. HEALDSBURG, July 25.—A cottage be- longing to Mrs. J. H. Curtiss was de- stroyed by fire last night. The house was occupied by Herry Willlams and family. One of the children had placed a lighted candle near a window for a moment and it is supposed that the wind blew the cur- tain into the flame. -— False Rumor of the Pope’s Illness. ROME, July 25.—The rumors circulated to-day that the Pope had been attacked with a sudden fllness Dr. Lapponi, his physician, declares quite false. His Holl- ness reccived at noon to-day General Campos Salles, the President of Brazil, who was delighted at the vigor displayed by the Pontiff. et Held for Incendiarism. HEALDSBURG, July 2%.—Sam Sinclair, arrested a week ago on the charge of having set fire to Mr. Wheeler's house, which was destroyed, has been held to answer before the Superior Court and was taken to the County Jaill. The evi- dence against him was conclusive. —_— Catholic Boys’ School Opens. SANTA CRUZ, July %.—Tne Cathollc | Boys' School was opened to-day. Seventy boys were present. They are under the instruction of three members of the or- der of the Sisters of Charity, who lately arrived from the East. Fire Destroys a Barn. SUSANVILLE, July 25.—Fire destroyed a barn on the Knudson ranch in Willow Creek Valley yesterday. Wagons, har- ness and forty or fifty tons of hay were also burned. BRINGS BACK YUKONERS AND THEIR WEALTH Steamship Charles Nelson Reaches Seattie From St. Michael. ‘Carries Nearly Two Hundred | Miners and at Least a Million in Treasure. | SEATTLE, July 2.—The steamer|I located in the Manook country, and 1 : | Charles Nelson arrived to-day from St.|it was ther Governor Me- | Michael with 173 passengers from Daw- | Graw. We worked as partners, and son and gold dust valued at from When fllnv clean-up u{-\k Nzl(leh! was ]at | $1,000,001 5 L s |One end of a sluice box and he at the | $,000,000 to $1,500,000. Purser M. A. | S NG oW has good property, Tucker said: “I believe that $1,500,000 is a fair esti- mate. Of that amount I can vouch fer $600,000 which was turned over to me | and placed In the steamer’s safe.” One man, Mr. Tucker said, had $17 so have many other Seattle peo- wvho are loca 1 in the Manook v. I have a one-half interest in six claims on the Manook and a one- half Interest in three claims on Birch Creek. I know that there is property 25.—In a lelter‘ 000 and another $125,000. He would not disclose their names. Professor T. S. Lippy, his father and | two brothers carried from the steamer | nine canvas sacks which weighed about 100 pounds each. This was the clean-up from Lippy’s claim, No. 16 El Doragdo. { Charles Randall, an old-timer, had $84,000. Other indlvidual amounts ran from $1000 to $10,000, $5000 being an average. At 5 o'clock this afternoon sixty- assay office about $300,000. Four thou- sand ounces was the largest individual amcunt. This did not include the Lippy and Randall gold. About one- third of the passengers brought no gold. Some of them had gone in last spring. Not liking the prospects they | sold their outfits and returned. People are arriving at St. Michael every day from up the Yukon, and the next steamers from there will be crowd- ed to their full capacity. Owing to the high rates on river steamers many of the Klondikers are floating down in small boats. | When the Nelson left St. Michael there were twenty-six vessels there. Nine river steamers, laden to the guards, had started up the river. Some were drawing four feet of water, and doubts were expressed as to the heavier draughts ever getting to Daw- son. There is a large amount of mer- chandise at St. Michael which will in- sure plenty cf food next winter if it i;ln be got up before ice closes naviga- on. Moran’s fleet of ten river steamers was passed by the Nelson just after it | had entered Bering Sea, ahout 600 miles from St. Michael. The arrival of the | fleet was anxiously awaited at St. Mi- | chael, as it would enable many of the steamers to send their passengers up the river. The passengers were get- |ting very uneasy and discontented. | Several steamers were unable to sail, portation was provided for Among the steamers thus delayed were | the Progreso, South Portland and | Brixham. The noted Cuban filibuster Laurada, with three tows, was passed by the Nelson in Bering Sea. The Jonemaugh was discharging her steel river steamers and they were being riveted together. arrived with her tow river Minneapolis in good condition. Professor Lippy, who is recognized as an authority on Yukon affairs, said to- | night: | “El Dorado should not be counted when an estimate is to be made as to the value of the mines on the Yukon. |1t is vastly richer than any of the | others that have been worked up to date. But the country is good, as an average, for $10 diggings to the man, even under the present crude condi- tions. There is no question that the diggings of the Northwest Territory are very rich, but T question whether as steamer | the prohibitive charges by the Cana- | dian officials. From the time a man arrives at the summit of the passes he begins to be taxed, and he never es- ‘capes after that. He pays for every- thing. “That system does not compare at all | with the American side. In the first | place, on the American side the Gov- ernment takes no claims for itself and the miners make their own laws. No royalties are demanded and there are no_ licenses or fees.” One of the successful old-timers who left the Charles Nelson staggering un- der a weight of gold dust was C. Bevans of JTowa. This evening he gave expression to his experiences and opin- jons as follows: “I left Seattle fourteen years and have been in Alaska ever From Juneau I went north, and have prospected in almost every part of the country. I was at Circle City when the Klondike was discovered and when I heard of the news it was too late for me to go there, as I had prop- erty which I believed to be valuable. seven passengers had deposited in the ! owing to the fact that their passengers | would not disembark until river trans- | them. | The Navarra had | much work will be done next winter | Wite's throat with a razor this morning, | ce. alabiavy ohets o ae Lo | on the Manook as valuable as any to be found on the El Dorado, and all that is necessary is to have some work done. It useless to go to any coun- try and open up a broker's office or stake out cla..1s without doing any actual mining, and that is all that is the matter with Manook and other parts of Alaska. The people who are condemning Alaska never went any farther than the banks of the Yukon, while In order to find paying property it is neces ry to go from nine to ninety mi The country is better off without such people and the same peo- ple are better off out of it. “Boats going up the river are now loaded down with whisky and hard- ware, but not much provisions, and I was obliged to come out after another supply in order to keep my men at work. You can say with strict regard for the truth that AL miners are greatly handicapped by a shortage of food, and it will be impossible to mine to an advantage until the transporta- tion compani establish posts at dif- ferent points along the river and sell supplies at r able prices.” EXODUS OF CARLISTS FROM NORTHERN SPAIN The Government Claims to Have Ef- | fectually Checked Their Con- templated Uprising. MADRID, July 2, midnight.—The Government professes to have full infor- mation as to all the Carlist doings, and is acting accordingly. The Carlist lead- 1 , left Madrid because rather than with an The author- n y feared : 2 of preparir | ities insist that tion has been effectively checked. . the Carlist | chief at Bilba has been arrested. The | exodus of from the northern | Provinces of into France is ex- tremely active. T SUICIDE BY THE ROPE. Despondent Man Hangs Himself to a Telegraph Pole. REDWOOD CITY, July 2.—An un- known man was found hanging to a tele- graph pole on Saturday last near Holy Cross Cemetery, in the northern part of this county. ihe dead. man was about | 50 years of age. A star was tattooed on | the back of his right wrist and the num- ber was sewed to the bosom of his light blue woolen shirt. Evidently tne | man had committed suicide. E e Woodland Guards May Reorganize. WOODLAND, July %.—C. W. Bush re- cently wrote a letter to Governor Budd representing that an armory had been constructed in Woodland with the ex- press view of accommodating a company of the National Guard. He urged that it would be an injustice to the men who advanced the money and to the citzens in general for Woodiand to be denied any | further revresentation in the National | Guard. Governor Budd replied that a new company properly organized would be accepted and mustered into the State militia. Northern Volunteers Welcomed. WOODLAND, July 2%.—A large delega- tion of people went to the depot at noon to-day to welegme the Third Battalion of the First Regiment of Washington Vol- untee There were 450 men and 12 offi- | c Colonel D. Wolley was in com- mand. oS Yolo County Democrats. WOODLAND, July 2%.—The Democrats will nominate a county ticket by the awford plan on the Sth of August. Never in the history of Yolo County was there such a formidable array of candi- dates as at pre LR Suisun Mourns Her Dead. SUISUN, July 2.—The funeral of Dor- { man Perkins, the Suisun merchant who | was killed in a bicycle accident, took | place this morning under auspices of Sui- | sun Lodge No. 55, F. & A. M. Every busi- all ‘public | ness house and | closed. offices were - | Death Invades Soquel. | SANTA CRUZ, July 25.—Joshua Parrish, | a pioneer, died to-day at his home in So- VOh‘i“. He was aged 82 and a native of | Onio. yan," the great remedio-treatment liver, perhaps, but no matter what), other foolish men. what you can easily get so freely ? This never can happen when organs are stunted or overworked. That is the way big men feel—men who are full of power and vim. When the lifes blood is circulating in every part of the system grandly there is full joy; there is full manly feeling; there is pleasure in life. “Hud- of the Hudsonian Institute, makes weak men feel like kings. The tired muscles, the taxed bladder or the tired heart vanish where this great treatment is used. abused one single organ of your system by misuse or over-use (your If you have ask what “Hudyan” has done for It will cost you nothing, and the information you will get you would not sell for thousands of dollars. So is medical advice, no matter what you suffer from. Why not get It is free, we say. HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE, Stockton, Market and Ellis Sts., San Franciscol