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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1899. "PRESS CENSORSHIP MADE MORE RIGID Manila Papers Shall Publish Noth- ing Regarding the Movement of Troops. 24—General orders just|stringency of the money market was dis- Nothing will be tion, cussed. done at present as it is believed e of events the 1 the n public A R he arrival or de- | pidt ' Lae D8 arge surplus in the treasury he Cabinet decided to allow purchased by 4 ican citizens to engage in the Philipy i trade. the laws of reign ves- other movements the publication of | vements com- the order is to stop pating the move- f mc astwise _trade, £ or ammunition. ols in the were allowed to \ flagmuch g cable dis- | Many of these erican wspapers were into” American of War will S G [ rmitting them 5 flag and_enjoy all the ster. fore the Cab- 1 300 negroes em- rnment contractors at Ke 1 thrown out of their jot fever at that point and that were in destitute circum- to the suspension of worl vill be notified that they operations at least to the mploving these men /| COLONEL ALLEN TO GO o TO THE PHILIPPINES olonel James San Francisco fly the America = »atch from him the com- | rps in the Philip- | Santiago. 1 ed for rapid promotio: lonel Allen tive-born T e in 1869, when 3 Packard, then ongressman, a cadetship at West g RECALL OF CONSUL WILDMAN IMMINENT 24 int PORTLAD _The Ore- A gonian says: Th post of duty of R, Wildm s Con- eneral at He: d he is to be with the affa Filipino Dr. The n will be s Consul at 1ton called to ( Washington. - R -+ Troops Nearing San Francisco. e 24.—The last sec- I Regimen: from d of Ci here pt M fferson iight. th irty-eigh Mo arracks, these seven miles of 1 matte Bering Sea Claims to Be Adjusted. - of moderr ough whi 1 was p reed by but ri ected for that the case as the pape - Department ON TRIAL FOR MURDER. Hearing of the Charge Against Policeman Tony Rice. bmitted to him s can be prepared at the B & FRE! 0, Oct. 24.—The trial of Police- man Tony Rice for the murder of Dan 2 Donnelly in the tenderloin some months & ago, is in progress before a jury in Judge p Risley’s department the Superior each case Court. Rice is charged jointly with Jack t | Brooks. Brooks has been convicted of s murder In the second degree. Donnelly fired first at Rice, who attempted to ar- rest him for disturbing the peace. Both ¢ the | Rice and Brooks fired at him, and it is S n that | not known which killed him. Tt is claimed ¢ B els ed by that Rice exceeded his authority. There v c what is a great deal of feeling on both sides in da high case. ADVERTISEMENTS. VERY woman suffering from any female trouble can be helped by Mrs. Pinkham. This statement is based on sound reasoning and an unrivalled record. Multitudes erica’s women to-day bless Mrs. Pinkham for competent common-sense advice. Write to her if you are ill. Her el . address is Lynn, Mass. Absolutely no SAFE foves vesesaod modlils e Q@UNSEL but for your help,” writes Mrs. GEo. FOR SICK WOMEN BAINBRIDGE, Morea, Pa., to Mrs. Pinkham. Am i *+It is with pleasure I now write to inform you that lam now a healthy woman, thanks to your kind advice and wonderful medi- cine. I can never praiseitenough. Iwas a constant sufferer from womb trouble, and *a, had a continual pain in abdomen. Sometimes I t walk across the floor for three or four weeks at a Since using your medicine, I now have no more bear- vn pains, or tired and am well and Ishall recommend Pinkham's Vege- mpound to all my friends as the medy for all greatest female nes MRs. J. WEAVER, 1821 Callowhill St., Phila~ delphia, Pa., writes: **DEAR MRs. PINKHAM—I had inflammation of the womb and painful men- struation, and by your advice I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. Have taken four bottles and used one package of Sanative Wash and feel like a new woman. I thank you so much for what your medi- & cine has done for me.” Mrs. M. BAUMANN, 771 W. 218t St., Chicago, Ill, writes: ‘“After two months’ trial of Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound I can not say enough in praise for it. I was a very sick woman with womb trouble when I began its use, but now I am well.” E will reduce. the | vessels | Under | 1CTORIA, B. C., Oct. 24.—News was brought by the steamer Rio Jun Maru, which arrived this evening i { a terrific typhoon, sald to have | been the worst ever experienced at | Tokio and Yokohama, which visited those cities and the Japanese coast on Satur- day, October 7 and the day following. | One of the disastrous consequences was a | shocking railway * accident, which oc- | curred on the River Hokigawa, on the | Japan Railway Company’s line. Just as the storm was developing its greatest force a train happened to be crossing the iron bridge over the Hoki- gawa. This bridge, which s situated be- tween the stations of Yalta and Nozakl, has a length of 1044 feet. The riv though of small dimenslons under ordi nary circumstances, had been consider- ably swollen by the rains. The train, from its exposed position on the bridge, could not resist the pressure of the wind. The locomotive, owing to fits weight, crossed safely, but all the car- riages were tumbled into the bed of the stream, thelr coupling with the locomo- | tive being severed. The loss of life is estimated at between thirty and forty and twenty-three persons were severely wounded. Fourteen bodies have been taken out of the wreckage of the train in the river. On the Tokliado line there was a tidal wave flooding the whole district and in the go-No-Ura region a wall of water twenty-five feet high swept up over the | land, carrying death and destruction. It from the Orient, of the ravages of | greater | TRAIN BLOWN BY GALE FROM A HIGH BRIDGE Heavy Loss of Life Allends Disasters Caused by a Terrific Tuphoon in Japan. devastated the following Mayeda-Shinden, Tago, Sameshima. In the Moto-Yoshiwara regions the dis- tricts devastated were Tanaka-Shinden, Suzukawa and Kashiwa-Mura, and in the Imaido region Mayeda-Shinden (there stricts of this name) and Shinhama. y-three persons were killed, thirty-six severely Injured and 150 | slightly injured. The wave piled up such a quantity of sand at the mouth of the Numa River | that the river was dammed and over- flowed its banks, producing an inundation of large dimensions. Numbers of houses | were swept away and all that is to be seen of those remaining 1s the roofs. In Toklo and vicinity the damage was extensive and a number of lives were lost. Along the coast hundreds of houses were destroyed and many craft lost. At Oiso and .Kolso the storm was felt with ex- treme violence, the sea sweeping over the land. At Oiso the steamer Umezawara Maru foundered, and all on board, four- teen, were lost. | Here, too, the villas of Viscount Ok! | Moukata, Dr. Mitchell and a number of foretgn-owned residences were leveled to the ground. The steamers Shinagawa Maru and Fushikl Maru, both from Kobe to Yokohama, were damaged and the cap- tain of the latter, an American, was in- jured by being thrown from the bridge. Two hundred fishing junks were wrecked at Namazu. At Yokohama, although that port did not encounter the full force of the ty- districts: Nakamaru and phoon, it sustained considerable damage. While the storm lasted the force of the wind was terrific and the scene in the harbor, especially outside the defense works, was remarkable. Great seas rolled over the breakwater. The French mail steamer Tonkin collided with the Ham- | burg-American steamer Serbia, both be- ing damaged, and havoc was played with the vachts anchored in the harbor. The town was flooded, the water being in many places kneedeep. The storm had its origin where many storms have been born—in the Riukia Islands. The depression declared itself first on the 4th inst., but showed a dispo- sition to pass into the Pacific, and hopes | were entertained that Japan might thus | escape without any serious visitation. On | the 6th, however, the center began to move in a northeasterly direction dnd it was then evident that these islands would | be invaded. That night the center reached Oshima, and on the seventh the storm | swept into the southeast corner of Kiu- | shu. Thenceforth it coasted along the | east of Kiushu and Shikoku, the center | probably following a maritime course and only the skirt of the storm being felt | on shore. But the curve of the main island brought it nearer the path of the | depression’s center, and when the ty- phoon, after crossing from Shikoku, struck the shore again in the neighbor- hood of Hamada, the winds were exceed- ingly violent. All along the eastern coast the effects must have been felt very se- verely. 0 STRIKE ON CVALLEY Ao Slight Grievances That Will Be Settled. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. STOCKTON, Oct. 24—For some days | past rumors have been in circulation that rike on the Va Ralilroad was im- of employ minent. A large number were intervie to-day and without ception they declared that no such prop- osition was under consideration. The men could not account for the rumors. However, there is some dissatisfaction among the mu especially in the me-| | chanical department, over the fact Khal‘ the Santa I s failed to extend |ts lule to this recently acquired strike in r re is no ground for a which we could secure the aid of otl trainmen id engineer to-day. ‘S0 long as « road Is in course of construc- tion the general schedule cannot be de- manded. We have been working under what s kaown as the construction schedule. When the Point Richmond branch is opened and put in operation 1 joubt not that the general schedule of inta Fe will be extended here. 1 am king now of the trainmen or actual | atives of the rolling stock. Even If we had a grievance there would be no strike. The days of strikes on railroads | are over. 1f we treat the company fairly we will come out all right. The force in the machine shops has cut down one-half and it s rstood that the machinery is to be ved to Albuquerque and only enough here to do emergency repairs. As of the men had been working for vears in the hope of advancement, the decision of the company came to them as bad luck and left them in no very good humor. As a matter of fact there are only about twenty regular engineers, con- left many ductors and firemen at present in the em- | and should they ploy of the company, leave their places could be promptly filled. Many of the employes have every reason to be loyal to the company and not quibble over any decision the company may make. Several of them had been out of employ since the big strike and were taken on regardless of how they might have been marked on the old com- i pany ts. Undoubtedly there is dis- {atisfaction among some of the men, but the idea of a strike s laughed at. There have been some agitators and one or two men quit last pavday in a huff, but even thfl\lxi’\ the situation might become strained the men say they would send a committee to headquarters and do not doubt that any differences would be ad- | justed satisfactorily to all concerned. GENERAL PANDO CHOSEN PRESIDENT OF BOLIVIA Majority of Two in the Cham- ber of Deputies. LIMA, Peru, Oct. 24.—In the Peruvian Chamber of Deputies to-day a resolution was offered in favor of including in the budget a vote of £100 as a present to Senor _Nicholas Plerola, former Presi- dent of Peru. Advices from La Paz, caBital of Bolivia, announce the election by a vote of 5 to | 57 in_the Chamber of Deputies of General | Pando, the revolutionary or Federalist | candidate for the Presidency of Bolivia. WARSHIP AT SAMOA. | German Cruiser Cormoran Ordered to Remain at the Islands. BERLIN, Oct. 24.—The German pro- to remain at Samoa. | A dispateh to the Cologne Gazette from Apia sa; “The proposal to divide Samoa is considered here a most unhappy | solution. Owing to the manifold interests the islands to Germany it is hoped will not renounce her claims.” The Neueste Nachrichten, referring to | day to the partition scheme, says: “Iow- ever painful such an eventuailty would be, the Germans may have to face it. | The chief dir to find adequate compensation. culty is — - FATHER McKINNON’S MISSION. Will Return to Manila With Arch- bishop Chapelle. WASHINGTON, Oct. 2i.—Father Mec- Kinnon, chaplain of the First California Regiment, was accorded a long Interview | with President McKinley this morning. | He has been asked to return to Manila iw“h Archbighop Chapelle and will do so. It is expected he will be of great as- | sistance 1o the Archbishop. GIFT OF CLAUS 7SPRECKELS. Deeds of a Schoolhouse and Land to _the Citizens of Aptos. SANTA CRUZ, Oct. 24.—Claus Spreckels | to-day deeded to the trustees of the Ap- tos school district & schoolhouse and land valued at $3000. The building has just been completed and has all modern improve- ments. L Very Heavy Rainfall. years since the October rainfall was so heavy as it has been up to date this season. In Western Yolo, especially in Capay Valley, the heavy rain last Friday pight temporarily stopped the farmers from plowing. But once before in the his- tory of the county, so far as the records Lshow, has this occurred in October. Revolutionary Leader Elected by a | tected cruiser Cormoran has been ordered | WOODLAND, Oct. 24.—It has been ten SHAMROCK MAKES HEADY TO DEPART Lipton to Build Another Challenger. e | Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Oct. 24—Captains Ho- arth and Wringe and the crew of the ht Shamrock were at work to-day s and coiling up the gear , ready to be shipped with the | spars {0 Southampton about the time the Shamrock sails for the other side. The date now set is next Tuesday, when the Erin also will be ready to go. Captain ogarth expects to replace the racing | mast with the jurymast to-motrow. Men | were at work to-day putting in the braces which are to support the yacht below on | her Atlantic passage. At Prospect Hall, Brooklyn, to-night, | the captains and crew of the Columbia and Shamrock entertained b the | Yachts Mas 1 Engineers Associa- “)nlul. A dinner and a smoker were also | reld. An Informal luncheon, in honor of Sir Thomas Lipton, owner of the Shamrock, glven to-day in the rooms of the | Transportation Club, in . the Manhattan el. A number of raflway and steam- boat transportation officers were present. Scniator Depew, president of the club, re- | ceived the guest. The Senator in an’ ad- dress sald: No man has contributed so much to the speed of England and so much to exhilarate | this country as Sir Thomas. He wanted ‘that < ‘Hul | cup. We stopped twieting the lion's tail a vear ago and this year we had to stick pins the eagle. The result has been satisfac- | tory to the eagle. | 1t the sporting spirit in fts best gense | that carries England’s flag and the spirit of | England over the world, and it is the sport- | Ing spirit in its best sense that carries our | flag to the other side of the wotld. The same | teeling that stirred us when we received the news of the battle of San Juan stirred us | three or four days ago, when we recelved news of the fighting in the Transvaal. In reply Sir Thomas said he was deeply moved by the sincere greeting extended him. Sald he: I have been asked it 1 _would challenge | again. Unfortunately Mr. Fife, the designer of Shamrock, has been sick and we have not had the benefit of his advice during the whole | series of races. After the lust race he was | too i1l to be told, although I suppose he knows | now. Now, gentlemen, I am prepared to make an- | other ‘challenge when 1 Mr. Fife regains his | can discuss health and the matter with him. ALLEGES FRAUD AND SUES FOR PROPERTY | | | Cristanto Castro Charged With Hav- | ing Deceived His Sister to | Gain Her Land. SAN JOSE, Oct. 24—A sult Involving about $50,000 worth of property at Moun- | tain View, this county, was filed in the | Superior Court here to-day by Mrs. An- | gela Castro, an aged Spanish woman. The defendants are Cristanto Castro, the plaintiff’s brother, and A. V. Fatjo, who | | holds, in_escrow, deeds to the property made by Mrs. Castro to her brother. The property in question consists of 185 acres | | of farming land near Mountain View, | | valued af over $30,000 and nearly 100 lots | in_town, worth about $12,000. Mrs. Castro alleges In’ her complaint that on November 16, 1896, Cristanto Cas- | tro induced her to deed the property to | him as she was feeble and physically weak, being 81 years of age. She states the deeds were merely made in trust so that he could handle | but she alleges that her brother has placed the deeds on record, taken pos- | cession of the lands, usurped the rents’| its and threatens to sell the lands. | have the deeds canceled | and set | " Similar action has been begun by Maria | | Josefa Castro de Davidson, Vicente Soto, | ‘Angela Castro and Mariano Soto against the same defendant, Cristanto Castro. These plaintiffs are heirs of Mercedes 'astro, a sister of Mrs. Angela Castro, | and they allege that their uncle also de- prived them of about the same amount of property. | ae SO, SCENES OF DISORDER. Acrimonious Debate in the Austrian Reichsrath. VIENNA, Oct. 24—A scandalous scene was witnessed in the Austrian Relchs- rath to-day, growing out of the acrimoni- ous discussion of the language question. The Minister of Justice, Herr Kindinger, was literally bombarded with papers by his opponents, amid shouts of “Resign!” The uproar finally became indeseribable and the president of the chamber closed the sitting. ol e | Changes for Naval Officers. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24—Captain Sigs- bee is to be relieved of the command of the Texas about December 1 and assigred to duty in the Navy Department | as chief of the Bureau of Naval Intelli- relieving Commander ence, Richard “lover. The latter will go to London as naval attache of the United States Embassy there, relieving Lieutenant Commander J. C. Colwell, whose term of shore duty has expired. i Less Damage Than Expected. WOODLAND, Oct. 24.—The clear, cold weather and prevailing north wind are minimizing the damage to the raisin crop and the wheat in sacks plled along the river and rallroad tracks for shipment. Unless there should be another storm soon the damage Will not be so heavy as at first estimated, 1 | people on_the charge of intimidating la- A 5 HOT DEAD DURING A AOW T. D. Perry of Liberty, Or., Killed. e Special Dispatch to The Call. i SALEM, Or., Oct. 2¢.—Joseph A. Wil-| lard proved himself a good marksman to- day when he killed T. D. Perry at Perry’s | farm near Liberty, four miles south of | Salem. The killing was the result of a | row over a lease. An examination to-night by the physi- clans showed that four of the five bullets fired by Willard entered Perry's body, three of them in vital places. One en- tered Perry’s heart, another punctured both lungs, the third passed through sev- eral intestines and the fourth lodged in the left arm. ‘Willard r:n(ml Perry’s farm and a con- troversy hdd existed between them as to the time the I expired, Perry going | g0 far as to threaten to kill Willard. Both | men met at the farm to-day and after a few words Perry reached into his_hip | ocket as if about to draw a gun. Wi ard fired without hesitation, and as a | result Perry now lies on a slab at the morgue. After the shooting Willard gave him- self up to Sheriff Durbin and is now in ail. Both men were dents of Salem. Perry, who s about 55 years old, left a widow and two children. Coroner Clough will hold an inquest to- morrow. TROUBLES OF PARSON AND HIS PARSONAGE MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 24.—The Rev. Mr. Howell, pastor of the M. E. churches at St. Lawrence and at Miller, S. D., at- tempted last Friday to move the parson- age from St. Lawrence to Miller and wa arrested on the complaint of some people of St. Lawrence. To-day a number of Methodist women of Miller, accompanied by the Sheriff and a gang of workmen, ent to St. Lawrence to get the par- sonage building and take it to Miller. Senator King, Dr. Taylor and Mr. Loomis | of St. Lawrence were arrested by Miller | borers. The women are supposed to-night to be on their way to Miller with the pa sonage. The pastor s still under ar- rest. —_— Dixon-McGovern Date Changed. PROVIDENCE, R. L, Oct. 24—Tom O'Rourke, representing George Dixon, and Sam Harrls, representing Terry McGoy- ern, to-night agreed to change the da of the battle between the two champions for the feather-weight championship of the world from February 6 to January 9.1 The men will fight at 118 pounds at the Lenox Athletic Club, New York, for a purse of $10,000. McGovern's forfeit will be posted to-morrow, and the change of date will be made in'the articles as soon as McGovern returns to New York at the end of the week. Married Near Woodland. WOODLAND, Oct. 24.—J. W. Summers of Visalia and Miss Mattie Cramerof Yolo County were married near Woodland at 2 o'clock to-day, They left on the after- noon train for San Franci ADVERTISEMENTS. HEART DISEASE. Some Facts Regarding the Rapid In- crease of Heart Trouble. | Heart trouble, at least among the Amer- | fcans, is certainly increasing, and while | this may be largely due to the excite-| ment and worry of American business life, 1t is more often the result of weak stomachs, of poor digestion. Real organic disease is incurable; but not one case in a hundred of heart trou- ble is organic. The close relation between heart trouble and poor digestion is because both organs are controlled by the same great nerves— the Sympathetic and Pneumogastric. In another way also the heart is af- fected by the form of pwor digestion, which causes gas and fermentation from half digested food. There is a feeling of] oppression and heaviness in the chest caused by pressure of -the distended sto- mach on the heart and lungs, interfering | with their action; hence arises palpitation and short breath. Poor digestion also poisons the blood, making It thin and watery, which irri- tates and weakens the heart. The most sensible treatment for heart trouble is to improve the digestion and to insure the prompt assimilation of food. This can be done by the regular use after meals of some safe, pfeasant and effective digestive preparation, like Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, which may be found at most drug stores, and which contain valuable, harmless digestive ele- ments in a pleasant, convenient form. It is safe to say that the regular per- sistent use of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at mealtime will cure any form of sto- mach trouble except cancer of the sto- mach. B Full sized package of these tablets sold by dmgxiau at 50 cents. Little book on stomach troubles mailed free. A. Btuart Co., Marshall, Mich. HORSE THIEF SHOT . Address FJ, PURCHASED DEATH WITH THEIR FARES Two Passengers on the Schooner Hera From Cape Nome Perish of Starvation. SEATTLE, Oct. 24.—After a voyage of | Nome guaranteed them plenty of good twenty-eight days from Cape Nome, m,,,‘ provisions on the way down. ‘they were ing which time two men died of starva- | Charged %0 for their passage. When they tion and others were half crazed by want | WeT€ & f6W days out the meat, sugar and butter raa out. Their meals consisted of of food and water, the schooner Hera ar- | salt horse and a small supply of canned rived in port this morning with nearly r 9! n v mutton, There was a little dried fruit on passengers on board. News of the| board, but only enough to supply the wretched plight of the Hera's passengers | table three times with dried peaches a: was brought in on Sunday night by the| twice with dried prunes. steamer Lakme. From ihat time The revenue cutter | on, for nearly twenty-four days, their Grant and the tug Sea Lion Immediately sisted of flour and coffee. Thers started after the schooner. They suc-| was plenty of flour, but the water was ceeded in finding her yesterday | short. Four days ago the last of the un- about fifty miles off Cape Flattery. The two deaths reported were those of S. Ryan, who came on board a well man, but through bad food and lack of attentipn gradually grew worse until he dled on October 16 The other case is much the same. George Lamby, through want of nourishment and confinement in fll-ventilated quarters, was attacked by typhoid fever and died on October 21. palatable salt horse was consumed. Had it not been for rainstorms, which fell for a few days, they would have been with- out water also. When the Hera anchored out in the stream the majority of the men were so weak that they could not carry their gold dust ashore without assistance. Several passengers were crazed from their terrible experienc and had to be carried ashore \\'h!vlp he was sick he had absolutely no | and taken care of. Even taking thelr medical attention. Both men were buried | terrible voyage into consideration, the at sea. D ngers unite in declaring Nome to be From the statement of other passengers the greatest camp on earth, and many of it Is learned that the agent of the ship at | them will return in the spring. }'BREASTWORK ABOUT BY PURSUING OFFICER THE TOWN OF NACO As the Criminal Falls He Attempts | Mexican Authorities to Swallow Poison From a | Bottle He Carried. SPOKANE, Wash,, Oct. 21,*!\1&!'5}1&“‘} Preparing to Resist Threatened Attack by the Cowboys. BISBEE, Ariz., Oct. 24.—Intense excite- Dethridge of Oakesdale to-day shot in|ment has reigned among both American the back and probably fatally wounded | and Mexican residents at Naco all day to- a horsethief he was pursulng. As the|day. The Mexican garrison was rein- forced late last night infantry and cavalry f robber fell he grabbed a bottlé of poison by detachments of from an inner pocket and swallowed a La Marita and portion of the contents before he could | Magdalena. As soon as the additional be restrained. The officer hurried the s arrived the Mexicans began pre- man to the nearest physician. Emetics | Parng for an attack = They thtew up were given and other means taken to pre- Cesl e B S vent fatal effects ‘from the poldon, e | o Within 00 feet of the Leunasry Hie Several field pieces were also rolled into position and the works were manned by a cordon of soldlers with an advance line of mounted pickets thrown out to patrol the border and keep a lookout for the in- vaders. Babe Thompson, the recognized leader of the cowboy: has counseled them against making an assault on the Mexi- can works until every means has been exhausted to secure the release of the two prisoners without resort to violence. Judge Mendoza held court last night and sent word across the border that he had decided to release Joseph Rhodes on a bond of $5000. The bond was promptly made and Rhodes was surrendered to his friends. George Maarts is still being held and the indications now are that he will | also be released within a few hours. bullet wound, however, is expected to prove fatal, although the robber is still alive. The Marshal was acting under tele- phoned instructions from Colfax that a thief had stolen a team and buggy there. The man was discovered at the outskirts of town. He refused to surrender and attempted to pe when the Marshal fired. The bullet penetrated the back near the spine and low down. The wound- ed man ses to give his name. He de- stroyed identity, even eating the | lea s pocket that might dentify him. In the buggy there was found a couple of saddles and bridles, and two sets of harness evidently stolen. The Sheriff is expected here this evening and if able to be moved he will take the pris- oner to Colfax. all es of a book in I SUICIDE BY HANGING. Mrs. Susan Ritchley Ends Her Life at the Napa Asylum. NAP. Oct. 24.—Mrs. Susan Ritchley, a native of California, aged 39 ye: and an inmate of the Napa State Hospital, mmittad suicide by hanging in the bath- m of her ward at noon to-day. She committed to the institution June 11, f Humboldt County, where her Ge. Her husband resides in - J. H. FRIEDLANDER DEAD. Brother of the Theatrical Manager Passes Away. | SPOKANE, Oct. —S. H. Friedlander, manager of the California Theater, left for home to-night. He was called here by | the illness of his brother, J. H. Fried- lander, and reached the latter's bedside hortly before his death. J. Fried- | w nder was a_prominent fruit grower and | 18 farmer of Wilbur, Lincoln County, this | re State. J San tiv Franci; The overcoat for you Is a “Yeargood” overcoat if you intend to pay under $25.00, because there is value for every cent you pay—nothing fancy in the prices at all. One advantage in a “Yeargood” over- coat Is our year’s repairing guarantee. But besides this is the excellent values which make them desirable. By making all our clothing ourselves we save you money. We save you enough so that you can see the saving yoursalf —it doesn’t require a clothing expert to see what values the overcoats are. 'y ) % X ‘V /128, We have them in all cloths that overcoats are made of, and prices range from $12.50 to $25.00. Boys’ Reefer Suits. Here’s a clothing value that is an exceptional value, We have several Fine Reefer Suits, only in sizes to 6 years. They have been sold tor $3.25, :;. 50, 33.751 $4.00 and $4.50 a suit. Patterns are prown and gray mixtures neatly trimmed with soutache. Now, having only small slzes, we will sell the suits for 52. lO a suit. Remember, for boys from 3 to 6 only. 718 MARKET ST Out-of-town orders filled—write us.