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SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1899 SCORES OF BODIES IN RUINS OF THE TORNADO’S TRACK Heartrending Scenes of Death| and Desolation in Storm- Swept: Towns. 5.—As a| The Cathollc swept ructure In the east- r Lt sw unroofed and otherwise this elly lling of Judge of the locality He MYSTERY OF STARR'S FATE IS NOT SOLVE OS ANGELES, April 28.—Four days have elapsed since Hillary 8. Starr, the young superinten- dent of the Oak Knoll ranch, | near Pasadena, suddenly disap- | peared, under circumstances strongly | pointing to murder. Up to a late hour | to-night no solution of the tragical | mystery has been found, although offi- | cers have continued the search and | have investigated every clew. Wilson Lake, the historic body of water at the base of the old Mission Mill, has been thoroughly dragged for the body of the m man, but noth- ing was found that conclu would lead to the on that his captors or abduct- had attempted to conceal the crime e B e o S o o o o SeCE SRUS Secn SRCas St o L R O o S - i R o O O O R R S "] Residence of the Missing Superintendent of Oak Knoll Ranch. 1 © ' : : [ MSOLUTE DL OLD GLORY FLI T BLUEFIELDS And His Ex-Wife Weds | Americans Hoist Stars Perry Belmont. and Stripes. SLOANE GRANTED | | ! i FREED WOMAN ACTS QUICKLY SEEK FLAG'S PROTECTION AT ONCE RE-ENTERS THE SEA OF GOVERNOR TORRES ATTEMFPTS MATRIMONY. TO COLLECT DUTIES. These Proce Those in Which Mrs. W. K. Van- edings a Duplicate of Checkmated by the Action of Amerie can Citizens, He Seizes Their © * 5t 3¢ s iour efore Mar- Goods in the Govern- by throwing Starr’s body Into the lake. ® derbilt/ Figuzed B ment House thec & A edy While the public belief in Pasadena $ rying 0. H. P. Belmont. | 3 Although | f and literally torn | Still leans to the theory of murder and 26 | st d. _{Tobbery, there are those, including + ople In that portion of | some officers, who incline to the opinion ) i e e | D The Call ‘as soon a: V- t Starr may have taken this sen- It £ : o e : hey immediately went to | sational method to voluntarily disap- $| NEW YORK, April —Henry T.| NEW YORK. April to Surrounding towns And | Pear from his home. 4 |Stoane, the well-known and wealthy so- | the Press from N¢ Lol i HElanas SLE sl icnl Ty e & | ciety man, was to-day granted an ab- | the following news fro ssessed a gloomy disposition, he may solute divorce from his wite, Jessie A. | der date of Ar : have wandered away while temporarily i Sipane. JiTma deered d down | For three days the American - el insane, but his friends contend that his By s os Btover in the me Court | chants as a measure of protection have e e sl family relations were of the best, and G SR e e port of a|been flying the United States flag over G g doctors co-operated | that Starr would hardly smash his own { | referee. The name of the co-respon- | their places of busin SRdor Anctt local physicians and the work of ern and have a buggy concealed in @ e . S The custody of | 19, all of the American firms the wounded' was expédited ntern and BE) 2 & [ dent was kept secret. The ct 3 ods of persons visited the stricken | the. woods and use it to spirit himself ¢ ¢ [the Sloane children and | business have been closed ot and a large number of | aw ® & | Eleanor—was given to Mr. S He| Th G EEy . oyetion : il e o ey e 3¢ { |was also accorded the right to marry, | through the Chief of Police 1[ : to go thro Seo 0o eie0® L |and the defendant in the s it was | at once all who were ““]‘ b s S S Q@O+0+600406904640646+® | 1ted, should not lawtully mar ates flag to explain they had gy . | until after the death of Mr raised the emblem of liberty. It seems hade them & | “But,” the de continuec that a former decree cr proclamation state of a ) | marriage of the said parties, to issued many years n it ] action is not hereby prohibited nt | offense to fly “0ld Glory” except on Mrs. Sloane is deprived of the right | offense " Sunds The merchants i’ [to any part in Mr. Sloane’s property. holidays and Sunday s i¢ | The separation of the couple was {nformed the Chief that as a threat ha 3 | nounced last December. been made to selze their goods they had s were horri- & U | _Perry Belmont and ~Mrs. Jessie A. | closed their places of )i!lamn?;‘m‘ d_ his wife] ¢ ! Sloane, the divorced wife of Henry T. | raised the flag, believing that under its eir evening | & 3¢ - Sloane, wer. married at 8:30 to-night they ¢ 3 A 2 |at Greenwich, Conn., by the Rev. Wal- ing been kmated by the it decd e . ter M. ows, pastor of the Second | mercha npt to make ey JiContest IHas | Narrowed |t o iioh ot os tiat dity. | fareed s £ of the duties demanded, No trace of | T { hd Mrs. Belmont will g0 to|General Torres yesterday had all the ) D Ir. and Mr e ! 1] yuse al of t S i own. { hington, where will be the nd merchandise in the Govern- ead were W wou . | guests of Mrs. G..H. { ment house at the biuff belonging to DBt ot Be 1S Splinters This| © + mont’s sister, for several those involved in the demand seized. : n ho | ¢ | Belmont will ‘then tak It b as yet been pdssible to ascer- Her ‘head- + Secial to The Kentucky to visit his stock farm tain the amount of value in dollars of s With its ¢ & e 1 | “Before leaving this city to-night and | th ire was di ot | 4 ® all Headquarters, Wellington Hotel, |a¢ Mr. Belmont's request, the new M The cruiser Detroit arrived and an- W Iniaie g Washington, April 28. | Belmont cc r home at 9 Bast | chored three miles off the bluff this t N The Speaker: s been narrowed the house that | afternoon at 1 o’cloc She muu,.lnL ¥ [a8em fo iram iy BhE g e e given to her by Mr. | from Greytown aquin Sansor (\:‘. ® | man of New York. There rumor | Sloane, and all its contents to the State | Nicar: n ?[m]\ml-‘ Foreign Af- e s : ; ¥ | Prust Company, with instructions to | faires; Mer - ¢ ‘[hd»t N~nu_ll-r ]Iam‘m may throw ”Pi"“““ it back again to Sloane. | jster to Nicaragua, and Con @ | weight of his advice and influencs t The property is valued 000. If The American officials remain 4 |a man who hails from somes re west | he shall refuse to acce trust | yard rship all night in con- @ | of the Wabash. These appear to be the | company is instructed to invest the| ference, discussing the questli # | salient features of the Speakership gos- | proceeds of the sale of the house for | jssues involved hey will come ? sip of (;‘.. ,y‘.‘ foc Speakeranin g lhr benefit of the Sloane children )-morrow to meet the Nicaraguan of Jie £ : E | It v learned that the refere ¢ | Some Representatives now in Wash- | givorce cage was Willlam L. x Torres temporari @ |ington declare their b f that neither | and that he had b appointed embargo on ninete 2 4 | Mr. Hopkins nor Mr. Cannon will with- | Justice Francis M. Scott on Mare der the ban last 3 @ |draw in favor of the other, nor submit | last. The refe held two hi . llowed to cut ¢ | to the dictation of a caucus of the dele- | Mrs. Sloane did sttnle o Hote o 1 v B mber & | gaticn. If that attitude persistently oors. s 2 Daen ¢ | maintained it will remove Tllinois SUES THE SAN JOSE Foid ; i 1 ¢ | factor in the case, although effor: C ersons w ® | . L ; N that 5 4 | be made, it is said, to keep the d BOARD OF EDUCATION INTERESTS THE COAST. Yank = ma 4 o | tion intact and cast its vote as a wh 2o ¢ ; ; n inju + T Some other candidate. Kindergarten Teacher Declares She Voluntesrs Who Have Been Ordered 3 5, 4 | Word is going around that ator 5 Discharged From the Service. ) 1 M 1 8 ? 3 & | Hanna, who may be expected to be con- Was Ousted to Make Way for S rCORC s 5 R pmson, ; Sehe ¢ Where Superintendent Starr Was Last Seen. o |stlted by his Republican fi in the a Trustee’s Wife. WASHINGTON, April 28—By . S sy s @ | House upon the contest from time to N Josiz, April Z8—The right of the | of the A a ecretary . il numbered | @ o 60 6005 654000 S I+ e e e edeededede® time is averse to ths electi of nn‘ ¢ Board of Bdueati to remove s v o 2 t zen cases : | Flastern man. It is favors | 6! - teacher without cause is to M W fatally. This list | The presence of blood near the lan- viewed, but she advances no theory or |, S TrO thE A S G R S R tetatin the bums s been ex- solution for her husband’s disappear- | choice has been mention, i Fltie aeainley 19.1he Didintff, And an : plained by the fact t o of the ce. A private detective has been em- If this proves to be the cas N in- | cyit brought agai the Board of Educa- o= bleodhounds used to track the foot- p ed by friends of the family to hunt wresum.'. battle may be expected be- ;\r»lx. Contnosen ot My Gritam SRR he follow- prints cut his foot on the g for the missing man, and it is stated (I:Iw“nl -*'emim:r Hanna and Senator Wemj X on, T. O'Neil and R. ']-n\lw m W en xgute. to broken lantern. Mrs. Starr, that he will confine his search to some | Flatt in influencing the sontesyler !g J. Langford, @ writ of mandate commands | Francisco, matize on the ranch, and who is being clews in the Immediate vicinity of |poUeBe TAZEE HWO Sl R e the defendants to rein at lu}r Im!‘“,m”‘_‘,,‘\””_, L > s . 4 2 b utcome, | ¢ 200 s or the two month he hag Samue ¢ by the Maccabees, has been Pasadena and the ranch. notwithstanding the ~general supposi- | ba¥, ¥4 SAARTY o8 (e 00 omns S e tion S not 3 tion that the House settle its own |is asked for. S0 _wan Rasn eeee——— S s = elections. Mr. Platt is generally sup- | Graham removed from office v | ; 1 of th | | posed to backing Mr. Sherman for | On August 20, 1888, Mi i of I | the Speakership. elected a teacher in mi er ted as follows from : hild was It is not believed that Ohlo will have | Partment ang e e Original—Jonathan A; Green, rs led for |a candidate. General Grosvenor and T eE e ; John Rile oldiers’ Hor ntified, | | Mr. Burton are willing, but they ara rd of Education on e | being held in leash, it is thought, to I to ciose the Kinder ssen igentned. | | be set loose if it is found that the can- | first of the year four of the P07 ‘of the' i§torm wag| | didacy of an Ohio man is necessary to | reopened. Among these four were yrpse of a 16-year-old | break a deadlock 2 Cooper Kin: S Taenibul Miss Original four scantling driven | | was not placed in her old posi- nerease- 1S ‘ KYTKA QUALIFIES AS | T3 compain rcten gt Truste 1 s neck. citizen was | g 5 el v iraham engineered the _seheme, and ifter the storm standing over the| Bench Claims Yield Big|Dr. Garrett Coming AN EXPERT ON INX | ifiat his oniy object in not eiving pliimtitt | is_dead wife, The head hae 8 prEe e, Mrs. Grahan > _accomplish hed and severed from the body. | Returns. From Portland. wife, Mr: raham. C I DESTRUCTION .ANDV DEATH IN STORM-SWEPT NEWTOWN CHILLICOTH of utter a orney, ran Mo., April 28.—Scenes ress and desolation were pic- tured to-day in the little tornado-swept burg of Newtown, forty miles north on t t. Paul Railway. A uay of ceaseless ch in the ruins for the injured and g followed a night of despair and Fifty families are homeless, there about fifteen dead and over thirty in- d, hom. scked £ M part of the e half of the place is in —— e in mplete list ¢ ties will g known for several days. The known des ADVERTISEMENTS. wife and three children, " 1 AN E AN and two daughters. What Head- WILLIAM HAYBS, wife and two chil- eches Mean.” | aren The injured: lliam Hayes childre; Ella Evans Mz suffer me nineteen time and out of twenty wife, Mose Guym: that there is ot e el storm struck Newtown at 6:15 in the than headache. | C¥eNIng, coming from the southwost. It . came wi rning and few were able 17“'“’“ is prob- | o ake advantage of their storm cellaps, ably some un riking t stern end of town, it cut a healthy condi tion of the del icate organism of womanhood | and often added to this the digestive func tions are out of order; these two conditions cause nearly all the headaches from which women suffer. | There are two great remedies specially | apted to these ailments invented by the th 500 to 600 feet wide through portion of the place ng before Over_thir torn to splinte one stre jury. 1 h that sounded above the roar of the storm, burying people in the ruins. Frame buildings were twisted and lifted from their foundations, others were fell wi a chief _consulting physician of the famous | batvied for o Cohnaes of them s Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute of | position, apparently unhurt; one was Buffalo, N. Y., Dr. R. V. Pierce. His | turned square Lol o P el world-renowned ‘' Favorite Prescription was turned upside down. is the most successful *medicine ever | Samuel Desper, at the appearance of the ack cloud, started with his family for neighboring « r, but his house was known for the cure of distinctly feminine | ailments and his ' Golden Medical Discov. 2 : blown over them as he reached the front ery” is the one supremely effective cure | door. His two daughters were caught for digestive difficulties. with h by the timbers and killed in- Taken in-conjunction they completely | stantly. HIS wife was seriously injured, though still alive. Mrs. Willlam Hayes was killed while running up the street i irch of shelter. The mutilated trunk, ng, was found in the rejuvenate the mervous system of weak and debilitated women; giving health strength and capacity to the nerve-centers; renewed power to the blood-m 1kiu;§1 gland and energetic force to the entire body. A lady living in Coshocton Co., Ohio, Mrs. W' Hayes' husband and two children death within a few feet of each other. T. Stanton, of Blisshield, writes: T Had female | The storm lasted five minutes, When weakness very bad for nearly three years. Had | it had ended the sun came out for a few dragging down pains in and above nly hips and | minutes and shone brightly over a scene such dreadful pains in the back and top of my | of ruin. Women and children ran Shriek. head (just as though someone was lifting me by | ing through the streets, while men busied the hair). Had no ambition, would try to work | themselves attempting to restore order. a few days then would have to lie in bed fora | A thunderstorm followed and darknoess long time. No tongue can express the suffes gathered quickly. The night proved a I endured. I had much pain at monthly pe. | most dismal one. Numbers of citizens rio 1 doctored most of the time with as good | plied the ruins incessantly, answering the a physician as there in the state, but had no | ease only when 1 was quiet and off my feet and then 1 had more or less pain in my head. When | 1 began taking Dr. Pierce's medicines I weighed cries of the injured from this place or that, carrying the dead to the depot and the wounded to places of safety. Houses | of the survivors were thrown open to the 102 pounds, and was very pale and weak. Ttook | unfortunates and all possibledone to allay tielve bottles of the *Favorite Preseription’ | the suffering. Chillicothe sent n squad of and seven of the ‘Golden Medical Discovery. sicians, “ who materially aided the Now 1 feel like a different person. Have no | Newtown rescuers. ain in my head, can o all ‘my work for selt usband and one child; am gaining in flesh, i Shdas e el It 18 through God's mery and your wonder: All Salaries Advanced. ful medicines that 1 am cured.” BIRMINGHAM. Ala., April 25.—Five Where constipated conditions exist Dr. Pierce’s mild and agreeable Pleasant Pel- | lets”” should be occasionally used in con- mection with the “ Rrescription.”” thousand employes of the Tennessee Iron and Railway Company were given notice to-dey that on May 1 thelr salaries would be advanced 10 per cent. dings | . d anuped | i WILLOWS, April 28.—The Murd i pectal Dispatcl The Call the attorneys have been arguing on the SpecislFDISA D eapil e ion | s | admissibility of testimony. The defense | | TACOMA, April 28—John Galbraith of | PORTLAND, Or., April 28.—Rev. David | put a witness on the sta:id Wednesday to | © Sturgis, 8. D., who returned to-day from | Clayborne Garrett, rector of Trinity Epis- | prove that Willlam Murdock had plenty | Dawson, was one of the most fortunate | copal Church of this city, has 11«-m-n\ml | of money when the $100,000 note was given. prospectors who went to the Klondike |the call from St. Luke's Episcopal | This question has been argued for the last year. He brought out $80,000 in | Church of San Francisco. At a meeting | past two days and submitted to the | drafts, over 81600 in cash and several |of the vestry of Trinity Church this after- | court yesterday at 5 o'ciock. This morn- | pounds of nuggets, which represent the [noon Dr. Garrett formally tendered his | ing Judge Pirkey sustained the objection | net proceeds of his single bench claim | resignation, to take effect on September | which shuts out all such evidence. during the past year. 1. About two months ago the call from | ’T'llllt dvf‘;\-*f‘nlm-l_}_fi‘11_‘;:1 .|\}|_ !_h(évh:m:]- ¢ J. C. Brown of Monta but he decided he could not leave the | fice of the Peace Firkpatriek ie 2 dock note case has been at a standstill as re- gards evidence for the past two days, as They reached Dawson in May. After rest- | work which he had entered upon here.|shown to Ames and hi ing for a few days they started to pros- After further deliberation and the adjust- | prove that the affidavit w 4 | spent the night | ment of church affairs here he decided to l.m‘xw“\!ffix:x 1;,:_ ml"xlx'rliw:"mvlhr [.‘, minz y | cabin. The next morning they com- | accept the call from San Francisco. G Aeument Lot e s B | menced panning gravel on the hiliside | Mr. Garrett was born in Burlington, | not written within the past month, bat above them. Coarse colors were found |Towa, on December 23, 1857. He was edu- | might have been written within ¢ lin 3 and they decided to sink | cated in the public schools of Burlington Expert Kytka was . | holes at a plice where 20 cents to the pan | Griswold College at Davenport and Har- | el e St | was realized. Each took up a c vard University, whete! He recélved ithe| SoW € S (IGin B iel. whon Dhoto ith getting a Discovery clalm of degree of A. B. in 1882, In 1883 he was or- | Javit under discussion and lained that 1000 feet. A stampede followed their re- | dained rector of Trinity Church, Daven- | ink which had yellowed by took on a cording and the hilisides were staked for | port, where he served for seven years |much darker hue. He said the photograph miles. Galbraith ran a tunnel, which is | until 19, during which time he aided In | Shawed the Ink was dued Black ink in 180 feet. building up the parish from a small con- | Wortd Yos MUHEUteC WOU Appear thirty | As they progressed inward the frozen | gregation to a large and flourlshing | aven line, while in the diluted ink jn spo | gravel became richer, indicating they | church, clearing off all indebtedness, | instrument there appeared ragged lines, | had struck the ancient bed of Klondike @ erecting a rectory and doubling the num- | caused by the coloring matter flowing | River. Galbraith’s tunnel has produced | ber of -communicants. In 18% he was |0Ut to the fg)fl"i‘j‘.“'l lodging s e over §100.000 in gold. He employs twelve | called to Seattle, where he duplicated | F48 508 & Singie instance In the 800 docu- men. This, together with the royalty, | IMs work in Davenport. While changes | ¢d Ink had been used’ except in e | cost of wood and other expenses, reduced | occurred in the pastorate of very church | of the afidavi | his net proceeds to $63,00. The unwashed | in Seattle, Mr. Garrett- remained through e o gravel now taken out will yleld $25,000 at | all the “hard” times, declining numerous HARRY GREGG CONFESSES. the June clean-up. Gaibraith estimates | calls to larger parishes. After three years | thie w61d-beariniz value of hin olais ui|he was called 16 g0 bhok {0 his ot pare| REDLANDE, April #8—Harry Greg | $1,500,000. ish in Davenport and also to Christ|the nine-year-old would-be train-robbe | Church Cathedr: In 1896 he wa New Orleans. 1, elected rector of Trinity Brown has remained to look after their | appeared before Justice Tisdale to- da | interests. His claim is producing almost | Church, Portland, but felt it his duty to | 399, Gonfesecd, to having placed a section | equaily well. Galbraith's claim has made | decline.” The nekt spring. through his | o6 Tl PO the track, He sald he did | the best record as a producer of any |cfforts, the handsome new St, Mark's | ain. Cench taam Church was built. Then Trinity Church declared that Clarence Goth, aged 8 years, iraenay and tiegans o WHAT THESE - NUMBERS SLEPT AT HIS POST. PRISON, April 28.— one of the peculiar characters at the prison, who had been employed for several years as a guard was forced to resign his position to-day by Warden Hale. Ve was forme the Tewn Marshal at Randsburg and was imported by the warden at a time when | SIGNIFY IS OF VAST IMPORTANCE. as Hale appeared to think ;mlnu!\\ suitable | o officiate as guard unless he were a : 4 gun-fighter.” Voges' feats of tongue Y OV, o MAY have long been the marvel of the prison. e toyox It was only short time ago that he Sacits alarmed the whole prison and turned things topsy_turvy by emptying his re- volver at a dog in the belief that it was an opium planter. Voges was discovered | Sleeping at his post last night and ad- | mitted his fault when brought before the warden to-day. Voges was permitted to resign instead of suffering the ignominy of a discharge. AR R New National Bank. HONOLULU, April F i and Cecil Brown are for incorporation under Hawalis the bank which is ultimately apers | n laws of | to become | rough nnels. the t National Bank of Haw By | Monday or Tuesday next the s lotted to Hawail of the $1,000,001 tock will b with the opened for subseriptic urance that the entire ment of $300,000 will be taken up in averchiaiged elght hours. Colonel George W. Macfar- | with e In the weakest lane completed arrangements for making | SPots fering must en- the start while on his recent visit to the | *% United States atism and heart- trouble—those two ——— ases that are 0 often assoclated. and Honolulu’s Sewer System. o in s entively free. It HONOLULU, April 22—By to-night's I the muscles and joints—tha mail advertisements are ordered for pub- heart structu that ~cause the lication in San Franciseo inviting tenders | ® and aches. for the construction of the s of Honolulu. Telegrams go New York apprising possib there of the opportunity. That great remedy for the blood —that great remedy that will purify the blood —will correct this evil. It will counteract and | remove all blox from the | helped him. Goth testified against Gregg | to be supplied to the contractors by Do you suffer with headaches, verti Aizzy | e + 3 = of thisg city nt a second call, having | | 31 . s - | spells’ (Fig. 1), coated tongue (F ' | ; The shooting of a Katha Indian named | gone a whole vear without a rector, and | 2t the trial. [Eaweiian (Covernmant, | pitation o pain aver resion of heart (Fig | John by his hunting companion, Alexan-| Mr. Garrett came to Portland. Princi- — ——— — - ] in shoulders (Fig. 3), pain in ar 4 | der, last month caused excitement among | pally through Mr. Garrett's efforts the T T ain in hips (Fig. 6), pain in legs (T | the Dawson Indians. Alexander was trail- | debt nflufl.f::fl on the ;;u}:lshdwas virtually ble »‘"m“.‘l‘\\)l\\ ““M \:“lh\' atic !lvum tre | ing moose when he noticed cement | Talsed by the issue of bonds. ohly elleve oy Tk relieve: you. TRt ];:)‘(hnllll\Ith"fi rn]fl ;ir:? &(hl(nkz;nm‘)'\:m”;t AT Ghrratt wras Tiasrion in 165 to. Misk only relieve you, but it will cure you. | E S i S & an ani-|yjan’s. Elmer of Boston, and has three It you have pimples or eruptions on th mal was coming toward him. The bullet | children, skin, if you have a muddy complexion, | | pterced both of John's lungs and he died | | Toen yaus pihat tred and worn-outfeeling immediately. Rev. Mr. Totty, a mission-| ~ SALE OF SUGAR STOCK. then your blood is out of order. ' HUDVAN 13 ary, saved Alexander from arrest. & s’ curative effects’ upon blood i ; Two Circle City miners recently fought| HONOLULU, April 22—What was a : will_correct vour bowels if they s | a duel over a pretty dressmaker. The | Well defined rumor on the arrival of NEW YORK, April 28.—The Princeton alumni and friends of the my:u }‘M\\im“.\\hnulmr and strengthen | principals were named Thompson and MESSTs. A\laqur]::nv. Hecht and Strassber- university who are conversant with its affairs have not waited for the P g ot i i S0 e : | Sullivan. One man had a revolver and | &°F kf”’m_s“l‘;‘ ‘”‘)"'-‘"c" the flf“‘h"f the trustees to meet and act upon the recent anonymous gift of $100,000 to | HUDYAN'S cures, = There is s cyagence of | the other a knife. Sulllvan loved Annie | Y€ o e 7 SHE el "_k‘ e Ha- endow a professorship of general politica in the institution, but have Bood as that of people who have been cu | Blank and was visiting at her cabin. | Wallan Sugar Company’s stock to-night s e cotapant of 6 by HUDYAN. 1 : 3 | assumes the appearance of actuality. | settled upon former President Grover Cleveland as the occupant o e | HUDYAN will cure any disorder e neioatidad ad-| Owing to_ differonces among brokers in chair. It is even said that the donor of the fund had Mr. Cleveland in pure or contaminated 5 San Francisco the o majority of the stoc York, fillon for placing the in London or New perhaps partly in each of those break down the door. Doors being expen- | sive at Circle City Sullivan decided it was cheaper to open the door and stab Thomp. | Sities, pfiobgbl)[‘hvfigmbe joxerclsed pext interest since he last left the White House. | son. He undid the fastenings and plunged | 1o close the detalls. A strong syndicate | his long dirk knife into Thompson's lung. }(s organized, including Colonel Macfarlane The latter drew his revolver and shot | and Alexander & Baldwin, representing | Macfarlane at a capitalization of $2,000,- | 000, and has proved a fine investment. For 1 ABOF | the five vears since its first crop was man- | STANFORD, April 8. The sophomores | yactured It has ylelded dividends yeariy to-day elected H. L. Langnecker of New | ranging from 12 to 2 per cent. The plarc Brighton, Pa., a8 editor in chief of thelr | tation now pays a regular monthly Qivi- wwd of 3 per cent, .. Sophomores Name an Editor. ciples of government. | -~ @UROROWUROR AR OROLORONOLTO mind, and that the place has been created in order that he may be formally attached to the university in which he has shown such a lively As the university already has a professorship of jurisprudence and politics, which is filled by Professor Woddrow Wilson, there was some speculation as to the purpose in creating a new chair for general poli- ternational law, political science, diplomacy and the fundamental prin- The field, to be covered will be supplementary to that covered by Professor Wilson. blood. Disease that live and multiply in the |>{w‘<l ‘nnr! T dinary conditions are destroyed and eliminat:d | from the system by HUDYAN. HUDYAN nature's own remedy for overcoming dise HUDYAN cures all Stomach, Liver, Kidney, | Heart, Nervous and Blood Diseases. Tts ctir | tive influence is thorough and reaches eve nerve and fiber in the human syste | EaRtE , . HUDYAN is for ¢ < Sullivan through the body. Both werel]Og?alkl;‘\(u\?;l(;“?fiemplca?gugxt1:1’:%[353"wfls tics until Mr. Cleveland’s name was mentioned in connection with the package or s-E :v;fm;m ;:)r 'é{‘?,hk expected to die. Jor,“,mm.‘ floated in London by Colonel place. It was explained that the new professorship would embrace. in- If your druggist does not keep HUDYA send direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY C( gorner Stockton, Ellis and Market streets, San Franciéco, Cal. SOSN8 DB IGORURINTIS You Have the Privilege of Consulti t!-e Hudyan Doctors About Your Case | Free of Charge, Call or Write, [ j=iAel