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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER ¢28 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Keeping Everlastingly At It. and it? Has the ars told? Those vou, but which ) others, do they tell coming low ? that the human fect machine, will by the use of that | J | PURE MALT WHISKEY. | n all the vital forces, | perfect. It enables | bod you eat the | Can you not see up the system and | r system y or sixty y s which fr kne you will not ¢ nfess t is bei ge! DUFFY’S ger, Ala., September a6th, | and have for the | strength with vour iy, { CarvLowrTZ, k. hester, N. Y, [ D hiskey Co., Roc! | uffy Malt W' ] R PETIE = I WiLk &iveE 81000 S If 1 fail to cureany =55 CANCER oreumor I treat ore 1t scats ters or affects the | nbs or other bones. No Knife No Paia! No Pay '/ Until Cured. 28 years’ experi- 1000 cancers now in my offices in alcohol. fedysttend. ant.” Any hard Iump anywhera 18 cancer, L - @ ¥Any lump ina Woman’s Breast is Cancer 5 Third ., . R, | WITH CANCER. | 5‘1 | EECHAR’ LLS Cure Pain in the ;Stomach and Distress After Eating. £ 10 cents and 25 cents~bmg’gistsi Easexasecasesasesmcesase: rsasesesesay ALL AILMENTS OF MEN CURED, ERS & CO. bave tne Ia: best equipped medical inatitution Pacific Coast. Established 17 years. & | BOOK and advice free at office All letters confidential. Market St., San Franeciseo. Speciaiist cn the Coast. Est. 36 OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES & ation free and MAKE PER]I;EQ Do No Jogs an be restored to you. You. The very icasesot Nervoag Debl red by y years. and potency to every func- Give bioom to the young or old. 3 P I3 1aled in plain wrapper on recefpt of PERFECTO (0., Caxton Bidg., Chicago, Ill, 14 by Owl Drug Co., §. F. and Oakland. £ Chickester's Engligh Dlamond HRYROYAL PILLS Originel and Oniy Genutne. sare 78 reliabis Fcme Paper. | AT | | diseases of the Pig & 11 & non-porsonony remody for Gonorthae | Gleet. Spormatorrhoea, uanatural dis es, or sny inflamma- tion " irritation or uicers. | tion of mucous mem- | HEWION g, branes. Nom-ustringent. So1d by Draggista, or n plain wrapper. ‘xpr‘:lboprrpud. 1&” $ 1 3 bott) Girowisr sens o rowad, Provests coutagion. oot rHeEvANs C: GINGINNATL,O 2 4 14 C 8URG, WILL OPEN for th MONDAY OLLEGE OF DENTAL ERY of students For further 8 W. I GILBERT M. BARR retar; stter st 320 MAR w—eali Men an HOULD USE DAM s, THE | great Mexican remedy; gives heaith and | strength to sexual orgaus.’ Depot, 223 Market. | = donm‘en i A Weekly Call, §1 per Year| | agreement shall | compact_entered VANDERBILTS WL 15 FLED No Reference to Trouble With Cornelius. B giet Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Oct. 27.—The will of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt was filed for probate {n the Surrogate’s office this af- ternoon. The provisions of the will are substantfally the same as mentioned in the syno given out Thursday by C. M. Depew. The clause relating to Cor- nelfus Vanderbilt Jr. contains no direct reference to the alleged troubles said to ave occurred between the young man his father, The facts as given out reviously by Senator Depew relating to this olause of the will are substantiated in the will. Nothing mentioned con- cerning his name further than is neces- sary to make the bequest of the one and one-half millions. In the thirteenth clause of the will a bequest 1s made to the mother of the de- ceased, which reads: fo my mother, as & mark of affection, ieath oue undred thousand dol- also one h red thous dollars 0 my brother, William K. Vanderbilt. In the twelfth clause, wherein the trus- tees of the several funds are directed to & ities, the will designates what s ties are to be so managed. They con- sist of United States and State of New . bonds, mortgage bonds of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, Lake Shore and Michigan Southern oad, the New York and Harlem 2 oad Company and the Chicago and Northwestern Raillway Company. The will gives the added Mmformation that the ex ecutors are directed to pay annually to e Society of St. John the sum of 2000 long as the officlals of that soclety p an agreement made in 1892 with the deceased and Mrs. Vanderbilt. When the be broken the annuity There were no further differ- t0 be seen between the will and the ynopsis given out on Thursday evening. The Tribune to-morrow will say ase: ltus Van- . exs costly Vand o1 W ment and not a Fift.” The World_to-mo following: Cornelius Vanderbilt, at home, 608 Fifth at 10:45 o'cl last (Friday) night m his important aporter: h I receive $6,- tion of pear as a mere the result of a It my father's gift death. By this cor T was to receive no less than $10,000,000. The truth of t matter is that an eement of adjus: ment was made from the beginn Yes, I may say from the beginning to the end. There was an understanding between that my share should be no less than $10,000,000."" “When was the agreement made “I can only v that {t was some time prior to my fi death. T since then has been in t lawyers, Carter & Ledyard absolute charge of my interest Mr. Vanderbilt was asked if he matter nds of my They have on the basis indicated by the transfer of $5,000,000 to him from Alfred’s port! this he replied: “You must excuse me. I will not dis- cuss the matter further. I just wish to b set right before the public. All my inter- ets are in my lawyer's hands.” DELLA FOX IS HOPELESSLY ILL Was Recovering From Peritonitis ‘When She Disobeyed Her Phy- sician’s Orders. NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—Della Fox, the famous burlesque and comic opera actress, 18 hopelessly ill with peritonitis at her residence. She submitted to an operation for appendicitis ut a week ago and was in a falr way to recover, when she disobeyed the physicia ess affairs. COLORED MURDERER | LYNCHED BY A MOB Victim Had Provoked a Quarrel With and Cut the Throat of His Employer. MACON, Ga., Oct. 27.—John Gooset negro, was lynched at R about six miles from here, | by a mob from Twiggs County. a few days ago, S.ru\-:.k»d a 1 with his employer, John Robinson, which resulted in the negro cutting Robinson’s Robinson's _neighbors _pursued Gooseby and was captured at his, father's house near here. Robinson prob- ably will recover. ADVERTISEMENTS. HEART-SICK. There are a great many people who have heart sickness, who have mno chronic derangement of the heart. When the stomach is diseased it may affect many other organs, and produce all the evidences of diseased heart, dis- eased liver or kidneys, or disease in some other organ. The inexperienced practitioner treats | the wrong disease, and hence the con- stant statement of Dr. Pierce’s corres- pondents: " Doc- tors could not help me.” Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures stomach and or- gans of digestion and nutrition. It increases the as- similative powers, and purifies and enriches the blood. & When diseases of organs remote from the stomach are caused by the stomach, the cure of the stomach re- § sults in the cure of the other dis- eases, in heart, lungs, liver, kid- neys, etc. #Bix years ago my stomach and heart troubled me so much I had to do something, as the doctors could not xelp me,” writes Mrs. S. A, Knapp, of San Jose, California, Box 352, "I went to S8an Francisco and had treatment for catarrh_of the stomach, and was better for gome time, then it came back. I then used Dr, Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery aud *Pleasant Pellets.’ These medicines cured my stomach. Ido not have the pain and indiges- tion as I did. It is very hard for me to tell you what 1 suffered before 1 commenced faking our valuable medicine. I fecommend it to al e sufferers whom I meet.” To cure constipation use Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. t the proceeds arising from certatn | the | AGNEWS NEW Crane’s Opposition to BAN JOSE, Oct, 27.—The Agnews Insane | Asylum has been rescued from the frying- pan of scandal only to be cast into the fire of politics. The new medical superinten- | dent, Dr. J, C. Crane, it {s stated, I8 to be | punished for his disapproval of ‘“pull” Emethods in the management of the insti- | concerning the political policy of Governor | Gage. If he does not lose his position he will be confronted with a Board of Trus- tees that will not uphold him in his ad- ministration and will make things so un- comfortable for him that his retirement to | private life will be preferable to continu- ing in office. The last meeting of the board, the sen- | sational features of which were published exclusively in yesterday’s Call, upset ail the plans of the reformers, while those | who have been fattening by means of their political “‘pull” suffered from paraly- sis. Dr. J. R. Curnow almost lost his senses when he read in Dr. Crane'’s report & brief but pointed reference to a “pull.’” Trustee Adolph Greeninger was also much hocked in the region of his political solar | plexis. These members of the board, with Tustee O. A. Hale, compose the commit- | tee on management, and it has been cus- | tomary for the statements of the medical | examiner to be embodied In the commit- tee's report. Without letting Mr. Hale into the secret, Curnow and Greeninger etracked Dr. Crane's report and made a futile effort to bury it out of sight. Its | absence at the meeting was noted, and | when it was read, in compliance with a | demand for its contents, the storm broke forth. > All the applications for positions in the asyvlum had previo: been referred to this committes and the opportunity for | the members to exercise a ‘‘pull” in re- warding their political parasites was cor- lingly great. Trustee Isaac Upham fon, and to Improve the d that in future these be referred to the medical application superintendent. Curnow and Greeninger were horror- cken with the fdea that a h > had boldly disapproved of “‘pull’ thoc is in making appointments should v voice whatever in the selection They raised such a howl offered, but those who were partial to “pull” ‘politics would not stand for any- thing but the good old way of doing of Curnow was complete ane announced that he had mind to discharge one of the who was then enjoying n va- on as he returned. He stated | catton, that th, tution and for expressing himself 8o freely | t it that a compromise measure was | CHIEF MAY BE TURNED DOWN| TRANSFER STOCK Appointment by Po- litical Pull Makes Him Unpopular Among the Trustees. things but a fool in the bargain. Pressed for an explanation, the doctor sald that the man had been in the habit of playing the Peeping Tom and had no better sense | than to tell about it. Dr, Curnow turned blue when Dr. Crane revealed the name of the man. It was | H. N. Turner, a chum of Curnow's, who | had been ‘“‘pulled” into office by the trus- tee. This {8 one of the reasons that Curs | now and his colleague, Greeninger, voted agalnst allowing the medical superinten- | dent’s report to become any part of the | Trustees’ records. | Now comes the part that Governor Gage | plays tn the affair, When he recommend. ed the appointment of Crane he recom- mended better than he knew. Gage and | the “pull” have stood In pretty well to- | gether. Crane was the Governor’s friend. | He admits this himself. Naturally, Gage | supposed that the physictan would not op- forethought to ask him. The Trustees did not dream that the Governor would force | a man upon them who could not be han- dled without difficulty, and when the truth was revealed in that *pull” para- graph of Crane's report the atmosphere around Agnews was blue from the audible expressions of chagrin from the Trustees and the Governor. The Trustees have ac- cused the Governor of passing a gold brick off on them, and Gage has been wondering if he himself has not been bun- ho were congrat. | ulating themselves that the Agnews As lum was about to become a creditable In- fear that the Executive will carr. threats. The terms of three of the five members expire shortly. Greeninger of San Jose and Edward White of Watsonville go out of office next month. Curnow will cease to be a Trustee in January. White in- dorses Dr. Cranc's independence and method of management and does not ex- pect to be reappointed. Curnow and Greeninger, It Is stated, have assured thelr friends that they are all right. They are against Crane. The plan of the Governor, it is announced, is to appoint some one in White's p who will _oppose Crane, With a majority of the Trustees against | ntm it will be imposible for the Medical | Superintendent to carry out the reforms | he contemplates. But what does that make so long as for differing from the G y out his difference he Is punished “The Agnews Asylum will lead any stm- flar State institution within s luuath sald Trustee Upham, “if Dr. Crane is per~ mitted to carry out his poli of reform | In its management. My only fear is tnat on account of the political misunderstand- ing between him and the Governor, Gage will not appoint a board that will uphold him. an was not only several bad DIES PROTESTING ~ HiS INOCENC iRev. G. E. Morrison Exe- cuted for Murder. | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. DALLAS, Tex., Oct. 2.—Rev. G. E. Mor- | rison was hanged at 12 o'clock noon to- day at Vernon, Tex., for wife murder. He met death resignedly. On the scaffold he said to the select party of twenty wit- nesses permitted at the execution: | “I am innocent. Circumstances over | which I have no control have placed me in | | this position. I have taken my trouble in | private to my God. I admit that I have | | acted Indiscreetly. I have done no worse, however, than hundreds of men who stand high in the religious, social, busi- | | ness and offictal circles of your State. I have done nothing to conf: I am in the hands of my Maker. He knows I am | innocen | Morrison’s neck was broken by the fall and his death appeared to be painless. VERNON, Tex., Oct. 2..—The crime for which Rev. G. R. Morrison pald the death | penalty was the poisoning of his wife in | October, 1897. The facts show that for | deliberate fiendishness they are almost without a parallel in the annals of crim- tnal jurisprudence. The crime was com- mitted in order to rid himself of a pretty, amiable, loving wife, In order to marry a woman possessed of large means, $100,000 of which was in cash. Morrison married his deceased wife about seventeen years ago. At one time they lived in Californta, then {n Oklahoma | Territory, from which place they moved | to Panhandle, Tex., where the crime was | committed. He was born and raised in | | Tiltnots, and went to school at Carbondale. There he became acquainted with Miss Anna Whittelsey, who _subsequently | moved with her parents to Topeka, Kans. | In August, previous to the polsoning of his wife In October, 1897, Morrison met | | Miss Whittelsey, his schoolday sweet- heart, ascertained her financial condition and made an offer of marriage. He pre- | tended that his wife had been dead eleven | years, that he had quit preaching, had been ‘successfully engaged in the cattle business for eight years and owned a ranch near Higgins, Tex. On his return to Texas he began a correspondence with Miss Whittelsey, urging his proposition of marriage, stating that he had for a | number of years intended to come to her when he could do so honorably, and he Dbelieved he could now see the time. This statement was made one month before the death of his wife, Hie procured strychnine for the osten- sible_purpose of polsoning ‘‘varmints,” which_he sald were catching his chick- ens. On the day previous he had procured a box of quinine with empty capsules. On the Friday night before her death Mrs. Morrison went to hear the Swiss bellring- ers, leaving Morrison at home. He said he 'had to prepare his Sunday sermon. The next morning he took the strychnine | back to the druggist, telling him he was afraid to use it for fear he would poison his neighbors’ chickens. The package had been opened. On Sunday night he preached and allud- ed In a pathetic manner to the parting with loved ones at death. About 10 o'clock that night he called upon his neighbors for assistance, announcing the serious {ll- ness of his wife. She was found in | spasms. He delayed sending for a doctor, | who arrived after his wife's death. In the meantime he kept up his corre- | spondence with Miss Whittelsey, writin, | her a letter two days before the death o | his wife and one the day after her burial. | In the latter letter he announced the death of his brother's wife and notified her of his early visit to Topeka. On his return from Topeka he was ar- rested, held a few days, was released on bonds ‘and fled. About three months there- after he was rearrested in San Francisco, returned to Texas, tried, with Miss Whit- telsey as the main prosecuting witness, | and given the death penalty. | e | TWO HANGINGS IN TEXAS. }Wnlter Ford and Samuel Watrous | { | | | | Pay the Penalty for Murder. DALLAS, Tex., Oct. 21.—Walter Ford, 1 who cruelly murdered his sweetheart, Lu- | cinda Moore, at Waco in June, 185, was hanged In that city to-day. He dled with- out ~ faltering, saying he was going straight to heaven. | AUSTIN, Tex., Oct. 27.—Samuel Wat- | rous, one of the murderers of G. W. Eng- berg and his wife, was hanged in the jail yard here to-day. Watrous sald h going to heaven. James Davidson, con- victed of the same crime, will be hanged on November 24 Sl e Briscoe’s Slayer Hanged. IRWINTON, Ga., Oct. 27.—Mack Can- non, a negro, was hanged here to-day fo the murder of Willlam Briscoe I Station in April last, Sreal il i | many reports, BELIEVES ANDREE HAS 0T PERISHED | | beria, ur, Franz Joset arry 1Is ess made b} View of a Brother of the e Special Dispatch to The Call. Baldwin, the Arctic explorer and ob- server In the United States Weather Bu- this station, has arrived here from Wash- ington. He has just received a letter brother of the polar aeronaut, and has | Biven to the press the following extract, rother's safety and his conjectures as to is whereabouts: anywhere between 86 and ¥8 degrees north lati- tude and 70 or 80 degrees west and 150 degrees heard from him. But, not having heard di- rectly from him as to his having landed, I 180 degrees and between 83 and §7 degrees north, From 85 degrees north and 150 degrees land, New Tay: Land, the 4 ould take him two ach the coast of the Parry Islands, and an- | civilization. My brother several times ex- | pressed his wish to examine the ocean north of The last one of my brother’s buoys was found | on the narth coast of Icela: Lately, iow- | coast of King Charles Land, east of Spitzber- &en. He had with bhim twelve bu eleven Explorer. MOBILE, Ala, Oct. Z.—Evelyn B. reau, who has been assigned to duty at from Captaln Ernest Andree of Sweden, precisive of Andrec’s confidence in his b My opinion is that if my brother had landed west (Greenwich meridian) we would have | think he must have come down to the west of | west it is about 750 miles to the nearest known Progrs | other year before he could communicate wi the Parry lelands. | ever, another has been found on the nort smaller ones and a large one, the ter one ! being thrown out when the bailoon es far north as the expedition expected to h. th expedition reached 50 or § degrees north and 90 or 100 degrees east, and then got | northerly winds, it is most likely they would have thrown the buoy not exepcting to go any more to the north. But the wind might have changed in a few hours azain to the south or southwest and thus have carried the balloon to 84 or 56 degrees north and 9 degrees west of 180 degrees. Here they may have landed in an unexplored reglon, previous to reaching which they may have salled backward and forward several times. Remember that the balloon sailed fif- teen or sixteen miles an hour during the first three hours. 1 do not put the least faith In any of the ith the exception, of course, of the pigeon mcasage and the two buoys. I dc not expect to hear anything more this year, but expect to kear all the more next sunumer. DEWEY TO ENTERTAIN ON EXTENSIVE SCALE Admiral Will Take a Prominent Part in the Social Affairs of ‘Washington. WASHINGTON, Oct. 27. — Admiral Dewey Is expected to take a prominent part in the soclal festivities of Washing- ton. The avowed purpose of the admiral in securing such a large house as that selected by him was that he might have ample room to accommodate the guests whom he proposed to invite to dinners and other functions during the winter. Offi- cial and social residents here are makin; arrangements for the entertalnment o Admiral Dewey, and it is expected Presi- dent McKinley will request his attend- ance at varicus state functions in the White House. There has been some misapprehension as to Admiral Dewey’s position when at- tending a function participated in by the President and Cabinet, the diplomatic corps and the army and navy, as will be the case at the New Year's reception in the White House. The Vice President will follow the President and after him the six Embassadors. Following the Em- bassadors, Cabinet Ministers —will take rank and then the remaining members of the diplomatic corps. Had the army an officer with the rank of general he would come next, as the War Department was established before the Navy Department. but as Admiral Dewey has greater rela- tive rank than General Miles, who ranics with a senior rear admiral, he will pre- ced; that officer and follow the diplomatic corps. Admiral Dewey has been obliged to can- cel his proposed trip to Chicago. He had accepted an invitation to be the guest of the city between November 15 and 30, but on account of the coming meeting of the Philipplne Commission he has written g letter explaining that it will b, - ble for him to keep his enmeel:nlenmgo.'l S e Decides Against Colombia. LAUSANNA, Switzerland, Oct. 2f.—at- ter two and a half years of consideration the Anglo-Colombian Interarbitration Court to-day gave its award in the dis- gute between the Government of Colom- ia_and Punchard, McTaggart, Lowther & Co., enzineers and contractors for pub- lic works, respecting the Medellin-Mag- dalena Railway. Colombia’s claim of $00,- 000 francs was dismissed and the firm, a London concern, was awarded upward of & million fiancs, z . | pose_his methods, but did not have ine | stitution, free from scandal and politics, | THE EMPOLIUM. | THE EMPORIUM. PEPPERERIIR I RS ERRRERR PSRRI SR PRSI RPPBEP e % 21 lbs. Western Refinery Granulated Suga for $1.00. SHAREHOLDERS & r Concert tg Po “ \BTwo Prospects Bad for Union To-Night mo [M.M RI .;:i?vlls;z‘nt Bank Depositors. at 7:30 idenRule Bazaar. Qo000 CALIFORNIAS LARGEST—AMERICA'S. GRANDEST STORE. %fl TONIGHT. Saturday Sales for Men. Men’s $15.00 Fast Blue Serge Suits, $10.00. Until closing time to-night we offer another lot of those fine Fast Blue $15.00 Serge Suits for men for $10.00. They are pure worsteds, guaranteed fast color, well made and lined and come in two styles, round cornered sacks or doub e-breasted, silk faced sack coats. Ramember that they are regular $15.00 suits ani 2re on sale for Saturday on'y at. $17.00 Men’s $1.75 Underwear Special To-dzy at $1.25. We offer for this day only, 30 dozen fine Derby Ribbed Wool Undergar- % ments for men; they area pretty fawn color, the shirts made with French silk trimmed neck bands and silk trimmed fronts edged with silk at the bottom and cuffs; the drawers are sateen taced, gnssst- ted nd siik edge! at an:les; these garments are :eautifaly woven, fit the form perfectly and are first-class $1.75 undar- ——— Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Oct. —The directors of the insolvent Union Savings Bank levied an assessment of $60 per share on the bank stock this morning. It is made pay- able on Saturday, December 2, 18%9, and becomes delinquent on December 23. On the capital stock of the bank this should bring in $600,000, but not over one-half of the stockholders are solvent, so the as- sessment cannot be collected from them. The full directorate was present at this morning’s meeting. President Rea and Directors Dunlop, Stmpson and Caldwell favored the assessment. Opposing them were Diractors Callisch, Jones and Eaton, who claimed the assessment was exces- sive and more than was needed to pay depositors after assets had been real{zed RACBAARALELAGLILLAET AL SR RERR e upon. lg‘)resldent Rea opened the meeting by reading a long statement of what he termed was rottenness on the part of Di- rectors Callisch, Jones and Eaton in the management of the bank. It was a char- acteristic Rea document, in which “me and pa” figured prominently, and he stat- ed his reason for making it was “‘My faultiess father would never be satisfled to have nis son dishonor the name of Rea by placing money before duty in the per- | formance of a trust imposed by law.” The statement declared Directors Cal- lisch, Eaton and Jones had tried to block every movement he had made for the benefit of the depositors; that they had tried to evade the assessment already levied and had disposed of their property and stock Iin order to escape the $60 as- sessment about to be levied. According to him they had also conspired to obtain control of bank property by having the bank buy in delinquent stock sold for as- sessment, but the depositors had frus- Wi ee teieetat | B Qinectors mildiy ob wear in every dstai’; all regular sizes for men; on special sala | Jected to the report being received, but it for Saturday only... $1.26 cord. Jones stated s had not pleased | became a matter of | some of Rea's own a | the community and he did not belleve in Saturday Only. An as- |Sarurday Onlr. Our reg- Zpp ke bim sethos Hinciit v w3\ & 65,50 Dress e Si k Striped =1 | A resolution levying the $6) assessment ; 3 Silk | then cartien” Some: Eoutine Dusncerwns | & Skirts, $3.95. oo |Moreens, 68c. .. | considered, atter which the session ad- Dress Skt | Moreens, 27 in hes wide, a v:riety B e R e R A T light and dark of color.d grounds with very hand- |is an organized attempt on the part of grays, browns ’ some silk stripss, on special sale th's | | the stockholders to evade all future lia- 1 ay on'y, per yard | bility and (hus defraud depositors out of ;&‘if;fii’gi dayony; neryan -680 thousands of dollars they are rightly en- K I s | ttled to. It all came about through the cheviots, also A Saturda_y T"‘." "’}i‘.’“d‘d | carelessness of the stockholders’ attor- black and fiz- special offers ney, whose clerk in a thoughtless moment o Dihe Book Sale. :: iy ony: this morning left a letter behind him on el |i8)%ities of the floor of the bank. cloth, some | In the past few days nearly a ecore of habit ta-k, | the best the heaviest stockholders have been as- fheie i | seliingand | signing their stock to parties who have Lk s | but little property and are not considered plait back, 203 YY P | reliable. The $I0 assessment per share percaline lin var clas- | levied some time ago was paid in each in- 3 e s'cs, artis- stance and the cashier requested to trans- S0 Qe Fa s E ot fer stock on the books. This was refused veteen, others rubber boun —:;g:lagrlsvl i | in each case. In the last three days be- 5.5 ch, for this day only.. A | ma e | fveen $11,000 and $12000 has been paid in 30°B0 etk S e books, this manner on the $10 assessment. 1 7 : i Shortly after the bank opened this Saturday On]. 7 Two big| bound in : : morning a clerk from S. G. Tompkins’ of- Surtain nep §, bargans | cloth, type and paper equa tormn_v 'p,llouln@ell for m; slr;gk?;'}:sers. eg(er:el(‘i) s i ' for this | higher priced editions, publisner's the’ fnstitution and_ paid $3000 on_the | sheima f i Ssscaiment (ciarged amatust C: It Hops PeCcIaiS. day oa price 85c, on special sale Saturday 260 yaras of table oiicloth, i1 two lots, 70 134 and 134 yards wide, slightly dam- kins of San Francisco. A demand was also , each.. made that stock be transferred to D. W. on! Sherman, After transacting the busi- : i5c Standard Library Books— st = i % aged, the regular price if perfect i5c A e S e 2nd 800 per_ yardoosslo prics Satur.| 2000l the best works of such stand- San Jose, Oct. 25, 18%9. day. 8¢| ard authors as Dickens, Scott, Dumas, siri T wish o Titorm vou of th latest move | & 1000 yards of Figurad Serim, with color. Huzo, Thackeras, Henty, Olver Oatic, Kipling, etc., large type, good paper, extra cloth, publishars’ price 75¢ ea ch, of ‘some of the heaviest stockholders in the el patterns running through, for sash | Unton Savings Bank, and would advise you to P g g curtains and all kizds of draperies,| do likewlse, " = The proposition on, foot now te for them to regu'ar price 10c a yard—sale pric-| on special saie Saturday, 3 foraglé pay the $10 per share assessment that has .or, eac . been just levied and have the sult against Saturday 8¢ them on this assesement dismis their stock over to some irrespo course the president (neither tary) will Dot enter the tra: books of the bank; so we have drawn up and send you herewith some forms for the seller and one for the buyer to sign, and these must be served upon the president and the secretary. On the 27th of this month, next Friday, there d, then assign le party. Of 1 the secre- T _upon the Saturday Onlr. 2T-1ne h! Liquor Suecials. $1.25 Colored P“fi: _;‘fl'f These prices for Saturday only ore aI- G)od C aret af a popular prics, regularl. Taffetas, 88c.:...: "y, g.nm..‘:peciaf... 5 280 a choice assortment ot fall colorings, g B, Hayden Bourbon or Cyrus Noble b'uets, rads, greens, rurp e, light bue, Rye, bottle. 85¢ brown, turquoise, etc., a quality that|fjebig’s or Patst Malt Extract, dozen.. will give excellent wear, ani baing so will be an assessment of $60 per share upon the stock of said bank, and It s to try and avold euit on this that the transfers are being g ¢, 1t 1l avail 1¢ d to good advant 1¥/Sa o 0 now you must, if you will avall yourse wide cuts to good advantage, regu'arly| r — of this, find some one who will take your $1.25 yard o Rab ot eosd [osuttne Burgundy; Hook ori Gn sl s stock. Then indorse the same over to him and LeALG P 8y ON'V| bottles. »nd‘ lrét;lnsl:d ey after fi{_s“t carefully filling at.. | in all blanks in the same. N return papers 4 and stock to ue, with 2 cents revenue for every : | To-Dar On'y share of stock sold. This must be done and Sale Closse To-Day. The bal- | Fodora papers returned to-morrow, as meeting takes e | place Friday. We will find some one to serve 32-45 and $3 anceof the ais, 77¢ papers on the bank. nurs: truly, S‘uils s' 85 0" of 150| Dy . G. TOMPKINS. 'y - & suits for|Men's all tur Fedora | | There seems to be no trouble in getting v v s advartised in yester-i ats in bla-k, persons to assume the llability of the Loysjihe e oL i 1 ,I? Etrowi gold stockholde: even with a $60 assessment | day morning’s papers are on sale until| dark brown, go'd- | hanging over it, for the following persons closing time to-night. There are 3| en brown, cedar, jare among those who have recently made | transfers:” Cyrus Jones, A. Eaton, F. K. Ledyard, L. Callisch, Mrs. S. L. Knox- cifferent styles of pretty cheviots, all| new, this season’s effcts, for boys 3| maple and otter, so'd by us 1e7u- PEPTREREDRP PP RSB I P PR ORPRLF VPV VORIV RR P LT DCOT IRV RIRSPR PP PRSP RO T CC PP PRSP RO L PSPPI PSP R P PP PPV P VPP R LR PRI PP R RS OIFR PP PRIV PRVPRRED L L L L e L I L L L e T T T L L L e L A L e e L e L e e e L L L L L L L L L L L L L L T e T e L T LY Goodrich, Hnnri‘ §:n I. Kalfus, L. to 8 years of age. See illustrations| larly at 95¢ each, | F. Sai son, I G. Knowles, Emily C. and comp ete dascriptions in yester-| hats that compare Woc Roy. Sally A e e : A\_o;{19“»,,,:;“‘1;‘;%_“},0%‘3(15 T day’s papars, ani if your little boy| favorably withthe : H?fnk:] In fl;\(o list are three directors. needs a suit do not miss this special| ordinary $1.50 Fedoras, on special sale these stockholdets can escape payin lolat v ot | Saturday, ezch.............. & | the assessment 1t Wil bo & Severe Jock 15 saoac 100 ' 770 | the depositors and it is doubtful if they will ever get 25 cents on the dollar. Attorney S. G. Tompkins returned this evening from a two weeks' hunting trip in Lassen County. He pronounced the H0¥k1n5 letter a forgery. He said: “I never sent out any such circular, never authorized any one to send it out for me and know nothing about it what- ever. How it came to be on one of my letterheads is a mystery. You will ob- serve that it is dated October 2. On that day I was in Lassen County. I shall make it my business to find out who has been taking such a criminal liberty with my name.” & %Q‘Qcid‘i‘ltt“cni“-sad.“t“““..li.!i!t‘z BOUND FOR MANILA | Ciaines Rate i e Lol IN MALE ATTIRE |™Prese S | FUNERAL OF GENERAL HENRY. NEW YORK, Oct. General Henry's | remains will be taken from his home on | Sunday and will be placed on a special car and the car attached to the V express, which leaves at 12:5 p. m. riving in_Washington, the body will ba taken to St. John's Church, where it will lie In state, with a special military guard, until 11:30 o'clock Monday morning, at :‘!’ll‘ii('h hour the funeral services will be eld. The body will be escorted from the Novel Method Taken by a Femals | Correspondent to Get to the Front. | ASHEVILLE, N. C., Oct. 21.—A letter | recefved here by the wife of Bandmaster | Goe of the Twenty-ninth Volunteer In- fantry says that when the transport car- | rying the regiment to Manila arrived at Honolulu one of the employes of the ship became very ill. but refused to take medi- cine or have the attendance of a doctor. | Colonel Hardin ordered a surgeon to at- | house to t he ferry in this city by tha tend the case, and It was discovered that | national and State troops. Of the latter the patient was a woman in male attire, | there will be the Seventh, Sixty-ninth and going to the Philippines to represent an | Seventy-first regiments | Fresno Man Missing. FRESNO, Oct. 2l.—Antone Houke went | to San Francisco October 16 to claim his | share in his mother's estate, promising to return on the 20th. He s(i\)'er‘j at Fahey's hotel and left the hotel with the money on the evening of the 19th for home. He has never reached Fresno. UMATISM! Electricity Offers You a Cure. Sufferers from pains in the back, in the shoulders, in the knees and in other parts, joints and muscles of the body; whether your troubleis caused by impure circulation, weakness or lurking disease, I have a cure for you. Electricity. when applied with intelligence is the mas- ter of rheumatic complaints, and I have cured over 5000 rheumatics in the last three years. Cases which had resisted the efforts of the most expert physicians have succumbed to my late improved meth- ods. I use Electricity as a means of renewing the vital energy. In my hands it produces a stimulus to the circulation, dissolves all im- purities and drives them from the body, gives new strength to the muscles and restores the healthy activity to every part of the body. THE McLAUGHLIN METHOD, My appliance is in the form of an electric body belt, which is worn while the patient sleeps. “It cures while you sleep.” In a man- ner which I have learned during my twenty years' experience in 5 treating the ills of humanity, I am able to bring health to the lame and feeble. I have a special meth od, which renders the use of electricity a pleasure, and a positive, certain cure for Rheumatism, Lumbago, Lame Back, Kidfiey Trouble and all manner of pain and weakness. It re- Juvenates, invigorates and restores activity. It is the life, the force of physical action. The secret of my success is in my special method of application, in which the power of Electricity is combined with scientific common sense. SELMA, Cal., Sept, 16, 199. and cheerfully acknowledge that I have received great bene- has been largely benefited. Very truly_yours, G. W. TERRILL. Let me explain it to you free. Let me show you how If you can’t call, let me send you, free, my book telling all about Dear Doctor: I have been wearing your Electric Belt for two months, it therefrom. My lumbago and sciatica have disappeared, and my digestion Are you suffering? If so, come and see me. simple yet powerful my method is. it. Call or direct DR. M, A, McLAUGHLI 702 Market, Cor. Kearny, Office Hoars—S a.m. to8:30 p.m S. F., and Burdick Block, Sundays, 10 to 1. 1 Cor. Bpring and Becond, Los Angsles. NEVER SOLD IN DRUG STORES