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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1899. SKIRMISHES RESULT IN FILIPINO LOSSES Colonel Bell’s_Regiment Twice De- feats Insurgent Forces Near Labam. @+0404040404040404040404040404040404040404040+040+Q | o | M , Oct. 31, 8:5 a. m.—Major Ballance's jon of the Twenty~ ¢ C itry entered 8 with no resistance. O | med the The 3 | % o the mountains. 31 I be appointed Military Governor of the Mohammedan & + ars at Jolo, until Zambc is occupled. General § command General Bates' brigade 9 4040404040 40404040404040404040404040404040404040+§ Octover 23, Company I, | 1. (lvilian employe on tug Oce- Chico, Pampanga, October 22, aln, severe; Twenty-first it amba, Company B, Cor- Amezee Elliott, shoulder, moderate; | October 23, Company D, Ernest Knowles, | thigh, severe George Smith, knee, se- | vere Also the following deaths since last re- port Uraemla. October 1, Willlam E. An: side and six m one bl 'a 5 & , 6th gar teenth Infan ohn tr; J Company preumonta, 19th, James | Yorktown; gastro ente- Company B, Twen- monary tuberculos ez Smith, ~Company : Infantry; anaemia, s ompany B, 1 elly dwar ; Infantry ; ¢ H, Fourth Infantry: chronic Alexander M. Culrose, Com- | Fourth Infantry; 2ith, Robert 3 e, Company hirt enth | 3 Infantry; chronic dlarrhe th, Edward . Bruce, Company I, ‘twelfth Infantry. | FRIARS BANISHED FROM THE ISLAND OF GUAM' WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—The Navy De- partment has received a report from Cap- tain Leary, the naval Govemnor of the island of Guam, in the Ladrones, which has excited a good deal of interest among 1s to whom it has been exhib- ent_himself has read the being particularly at- | made on ¥y mounted were recelved be- member of Gen- and were brought T the disclosure of the fact that | whom are | the first American Governor of the isl- Gilmore | and has been obliged to adopt herofc Yorktown, | measures to insure a proper administra. urgents | tion of affairs there. Captain Leary on, last | learned that his authority as Gover! gone on | was being subverted and every one c sanish | the measures of reform which he pro- | 1 was being def by the hostile | ce of the friz decree, no mas from a spirit ue Ty They resisted of what ch; ave brought a let- a relative of the eral Luna, who overcome reports that he f dozen of th other means to Captain Leary bliged to notify a s that they might w’m to ¢ a high opi o e free transportatic way from t him so am and he should expect them to avall : themselves of the left but and he w d reputation were aptain Leary of his one friar on man whose ct such as to convince ( fitness to remain. | — - | QUANTITY OF STORES el familles TO BEflSENT TO GUAM the women | Now the Navy Department is not un-| ort_from indful of needs and necessities of m 1s evidenced by the noon bids were with ari able to get 1 provinc General m The supplies | v the United . which is now at preparing for sea Her destina- will drop In at thousand feet e, thousands of feet gether with all kinds 1, pipe quan- e artl- FILIPINO LADRONES ‘ AND CHINESE FIGHT Oct. 30.—Recent m la show the exi mong the Chinese 1 suburbs due to between the na- D ¥ awmill outfit, con- e. One of | sisting of boller, engine and carriage, and fon appears to be the | N0 doubt this will prove quite a novelty . laborers for Fil. | {2 the matives when in wo order, oL The Solace {8 scheduled to leave about considerable amount of Gov- | g1 of November. e The transportation q Last week the navy 1 discharged 200 Chi ered to A. 8. Carman a contra $28,000 for t] pply of nearly 5 : | of Tumber, including a guantit same to be delivered at 1 at Cavite to vari work was 3inondo a part native Ladrones and ued, one of the Chin al_others wounded. i here of the fur- | sion of civil_admin o t to Manila ig_and Patero: held under t officials in order tive officers menced already ¥ to ass which he has agreed to deliver in 140 days. assemble e CHRISTMAS BOXES FOR ‘ AMERICAN SOLDIERS NEW YORK, Oct. 30.—At the army | pler in Brooklyn a corps of men is busily 1gaged In receiving and recording the zon loads of boxes which come in from all parts of the country for the United States soldiers in the Philippines. The Government furnishes free transportation and many persons are taking adva of the fact to send Christmas box their relatives re a full n the civil from the Eighth Army ts the electlon of a n the one formerly chosen has xercise his functions of late and t to have gone over to the insur- e issued by the commissary and friends ers vier th departn to-ds ‘.rf,é'f.',w“«mra“"fi se Of | There were packages and bundles of al standard emergency rauons. Ths | jize each carefully labeled and in most s intended for the use of parties | caces stamped “Christmas box” in large ¢ };"ynn‘j\lhg;fl‘“ h“]"“p{f’: black letters. Not only were there pack- | on, : : from individuals, but many firms | the regular army ‘nt packages, and among these was & s_in_question witl large box of literature for sick soldiers. Ner r‘»rk u"(} Sifl‘]‘) 25i3hice | It Is expected that the transport | isco for use In the P 1"hon;1fx.=. which E;a“:l on Satur with | the Forty-seventh Regiment, will take £ ¢ report té» th; ”‘t"'(“‘;{!’; most of the 3000 packages now at the pler. | Colonel Smith at Manlla ‘After her departure other gifts will be | 5 s just finished an Inspe ’furwardod by the Meade, Logan and | houses at the American | (rook, when their respective sailing dates i that everything s in the troops receiving v one being satisfied. rrived to-day at Gibral- fla The Marietta, arrived at Ponta Commander E. H ched from the com- at Manila and or-| = g orders. His place the Monterey will be r (". C. Cornwall, now RS SO0 in God Gven vy, | . IT COSTS NOTHING TO TRY. | glven for the FOrty-| g, the readers of this paver, who oan write the| 1 colored organization, iy ogt effective advertisement of Duffy’s Pure Ma. are settled. e g Forty-Second Is Coming. BUFFALO Y. 30.—The Forty NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. | | son Barracks, mo., ON | 'Whiskey (the old family remedy) we will give—| X r San Francisco, $200.00—$100.00 to the Arst, $50.00 to the second, | ke ship for Manila. $25.00 to the third, $10.00 each to the fourth and £ifth, and $5.00 to the sixth, ANYONE CAN DO IT. There are thousands of young men and women who poss lit> for writing advertisements. If they kn and good. If they do not kmow 1t, they may discover that they possess a new source of income. Do not think because you have not had » college education that yon cannot writean effective, forcet advertisement. Btronz, true, and sim rds are all you need to convince the biie, P e mafority of the most successful advertising| OTIS REPORTS RECENT FIGHTS AND LOSSES WASHINGTON The War De: following dis- 1l Otis r rt Glenogle, 29 of- ountry to-day are self-cducated men| h Volunteers, ar- :nr;”;::a?eclt is : clear presentation of bright) 1ty: Pri- gdeas that make an advertising writer successful. | 'K, died " "One writer jumped from oblivion to fams by G writing a prize story for a New York paper. A few S P l"TI«‘ years ago hedwu unheard ;’.2,”"’" his writings wchment Bell's regi- |are i oun p1 teegs, reconnolteriog |® pen e e o that o first-class advertising| - gt liuagua, struck | writercommant large salary. ake from| Insurgents structed | $5,000 to $20,000 annually. Perbaps you have the It attack - | {atont ability stored up, unknown tc yourself. Hers | . 2 ortunity to mal test of it. Who . YnowsT—peshap your fortune depends on the writ-| vertisement. | nd you a book of information regardi o will se o s Pure Malt Whiskey, containing ssmpl s OTIS. lyd‘:‘:r’u:-menu. for = two cent stamp to cover 7ar Department has recelved the |Postage. 4 for, it owing casuality st from Genoral Oy | Every sdvertisoment recelved will be paid for, following casugilly st from General OUS, |gaeg: ot the wniform rate, of $2,00. beaide the prizes < ivilian on tug ¢ oferad above. Ofer gzood until Nov. 15th. Killed—Civ ug Oceania, River |®pendas sdvertisements as you like. Chico, Pampanga, October 22, John D. &Iut ‘Whiskey Comnany, Dean, blacksmith; Twenty-first Infantry “ROCHESTER, K. 3, | throw of the monarchy he became Min- that he would attend the reception. | Lieutenant Cartmell and Second Lieuten- | wells purchased are among the steady | with the Rex Ofl Company for HERNANDEZ WILL GIVE CASTRO MUCH TROUBLE Counter Revolution Likely to Involve Vene- zuela in Internecing Strife for Some Time to Come. ALL HEADQUARTERS, WELLINGTON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—The officlal announcement of the de- parture of Hernandez with 2000 men from Caracas, presumably for the purpose of inaugurating a counter revolution against the de facto Government of Venezuela, was received at the State Department to-da¥. Minister Loomis, dip- lomatic representative of the United States to Venezuela, telegraphed to the State Department this afternoon ‘that Hernandez left Caracas at midnight last night. He significantly added that next to De Castro General Hernandez was the strongest leader in Venezuela, so that it is probable that unless an agreement should be reached bloodshed will continue in the little republic. It is presumed by officials that the departure of Hernandez Is due to his failure to reach an arrangement with De Cas- tro whereby he should be elected as President. drade was declared President. It will be recalled that Hernandez was a candidate for election when An- He claimed that Andrade's election was the result of fraud. He was arrested in Caracas with some of his followers and thrown into prison, from which he was liberated by De Castro. The continuance of revolutionary conditions in Venezuela is very disappointing to the officlals, especially in view of the lack of ships for service in South and Central American waters. ceed to Cartagena or Colon to take care of American interests in Colombla, threatened by there, but this is now impossible. It has been intended to order the Detrolt to pro- the insurrection prevailing The Marblehead will proceed to Panama and the Scorpion early next month to Colon withmembers of the Isthmian Canal Commission. second Regiment started from Fort Ni- agara for San Francisco en route for Ma- nila to-day. In the absence of Colonel | Thompson, who is in the Philippines, Lieutenant Colonel J. H. Beacom was in command. PHILIPPNE COMMISSION BEGINS ITS SITTING WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—The Philippine | Commission held its first meeting at the quarters selected for it in the Arlington to-day. Professor Schurmann, for whose | arrival the other members have been waiting, reached Washington this morn- ing and pald an early call at the State Department, after which he went to the commission’s rooms, where Admiral Dew- ey and Colonel Denby were waiting. Professor Worcester was the last to ar- rive and the commission sat down to business soon after 10 o'clock. It was | announced before the meeting that all | the sessions would be secret and that none | of the deliberations would be made pub- lic until the commission had finished its labors. Colonel Denby said no programme | had been arranged and it was impossible to say even what general course would | be followed until after the commissioners | had discuss the matter. | The comm: on reorganized its clerical force and roughly blocked out the form | of its report. There is a mass of material | on hand and a good part of the report is | already written. It was sald after the meeting that it was too soon to say how long the work in hand would take, but the suggestion was made by one member | that it would be a matter of some weeks, | but not much longer. The commission will meet daily from 10 until 1 o'clock, leaving the afternoons and evenings for individual work. 1 SOLDIERS CHARGED 1 WITH MISCONDUCT | PORT TOWNSEND, Oct. 30.—Honolulu | advices report that the transport Zea- | landia sailed for Manila on October 14, the Valencia on October 17, the Sikh and | Rio de Janeiro on October 18. During the | stay of the Thirty-fifth Regiment at Honolulu many outrages were perpe- | trated by some of its members. Japanese and Chinese storekeepers were assaulted and robbed, the police interfered with and a refgn of terror seemed imminent. Major | Burgeon J. C. Shulte of the Thirty-fifth | was ordered to his quarters on the Rio de Janeiro for drunkenness, and, sald, resigned his commission than stand trfal by a court-martial on charges filed by Colonel Plummer. The Rio de Janelro and the Sikh sailed to- gether, carrying the Thirty-fifth, the former transport having orders to keep the Sikh in sight the entire way to the Philippines. e mgd e HAWAIIAN MINISTER KING DIES SUDDENLY PORT TOWNSEND, Oct. 30.—Honolulu advices report that James Anderson King, Minister of the Interior of the Ha- wailan Islands, dled of apoplexy on Oc- tober 16. He, with his family, were at a watering place at Mokapu Point. While bathing in about two feet of water he was stricken and fell face forward in the water. His small son attempted to raise him and at the same time called for as- sistance, but when it arrived life was extinct. Minister King was a native of Scotland and was 67 years of age. He 1s well known on the Pacific Coast, having been master of vessels coasting in early days s far north as Alaska. With the over- He leaves a widow ster of the Interior. He was a and several small children. prominent Mason. S MUSTER OUT OF IOWANS. Announced Date Balks Plans for the Council Bluffs Reception. COUNCIL BLUFFS, Towa, Oct. 30.—Ad- vices from San Francisco are to the ef- fect that the Fifty-first Iowa Regiment will not be mustered out until Thursday. This will interfere materially with the plans for the reception here of the regi- ment, as_under the new schedule it will scarcely be possible to get it here on the morning of November & as anticipated. In order to prevent the arrival of the troops here the following morning—name- 1v, on election day, which is undesirable— an effort will be made to have the trains lie over in Denver long enough to bring the men in here in the morning of No- vember 8. Senator Gear to-day wired = Rough Riders in the Fortieth. FORT RILEY, Kans., Oct. 30.—The Fortieth Regiment, United States volun- teers—38 officers and 1095 enlisted men— Colonel Edwin A. Godwin commanding, departed for San Francisco, bound for Manila, this afternoon. The regiment went in three sections over the Union Pa- cific to Ogden, Among the officers of the Fortieth are five who held commissions in Roosevelt's Rough Riders, namely, «Captain Green, First Lieutenant Say- ers, First Lieutenant Fletcher, Second ant Bugbee. The wives of Captains Mar- ple, Kelley and Miller and Lieutenants ughee Cravens will accompany their husbands as far as the Pacific Coast. SEEK TO CONTROL SOUTHERN OIL FIELDS Various Large Investments Recently Made by Capitalists From San Francisco. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 30.—San Francisco capital, if Investments that are now In contemplation are reallzed, will dominate the local ofl fleld as well as the streetcar system. During the past week northern capital has purchased the fourteen wells belonging to the Yukon Oil Company. The producers and have a registered capacity of 5000 barrels a month. It is reported that the same company is negotlating ts sixty wells. Producers are strongly inclined to believe that an effort is being made to corner the Los Angeles fleld. This would be no impossible task, and once accom- plished would make possible almost any price on local ofl and a profit almost fabulous. The Hearst estate has purchased the mmrolllng interest in the Canfleld and Chanslor Company of Coalinga. The price paid for thirty-five shares in the company s said to be $140,000. The Santa Fe Company has a flowing well at Fullerton steadily producing 180 barrels of oil dafly. The Loftus gusher in this fleld is flowing about 160 barrels. There is a bear tendency in the market now, oil being sold during the week as low as $1 05 a barrel. MANY WARDNER NEW YORK FERRY-BOAT SUNK IN COLLISION Disaster in Which Several Passen- gers Are Belicved to Have Lost Their Lives. NEW YORK, Oct. 31L.—The Pennsyl- vania ferry boat Chicago, plying between Jersey City and New York, was cut in two by the steamer City of Augusta cf the Savannah Steamship line at 12:35 this | (Tuesday) morning on the New York side of North River. She went down in seven or eight minutes. There were between thirty and forty persons aboard, four be- ing women. It is supposed several were drowned, though there 15 no positive proof of this assertion. In spite of the severity of the accident there was no panic. Most of the pas- sengers ‘were on the upper deck and only a half dozen persons were on the lower deck. Nearly all of them managed to obtain life preservers. Some who could not obtain them, about a halt dozen In | number, swam ashore. The five or six persons who started from the lower deck assisted each other in getting ashore. One or two were with- out life preservers, but they all aided one another and succeeded in getting to the pler safely. There was considerable shouting for help, those on the boat calling for small boats to come No small boats were d, however, probably owing to the brief time which elapsed between the collision and the sinking. The Old Dominion liner was evidently coming up the river at the time of the accident, while the ferry boat Chicago was headed straight across from the New Jersey shore for the New York slip. The City of Augusta stopped after the acci- dent, but “apparently no boats were launched, and in the brief space of time which elapsed nothing was done to assist those in the water. Estimates made by the persons who succeeded in escaping differ very widely, some thinking it possible that at least a score of persons were drawn into the Wwhirling vortex as the ferry boat sank. The steamboat Squad, a few minutes be- fore 2 o'clock, found a body which, it is supposed, is that of one of the passengers on the ferry boat, drowned as the result of}{thn collision. . W. Bible of this city jumped over- board with a life-preserver. Hepsaw four Wwomen Struggling in the water near him, but was unable to help them. He was picked u{? by a lifeboat and taken ashore. Searchlights are being used in the work of rescue. A number of tugs and small boats have been secured. Everything is being done under the circumstances to g)t'k up persons from the water. One oat brought in six men, two women and a child. Captain Dunham, who command- eod the ferry-boat. says that he is of the opinion that no lives were iost, unless erhaps that of one of his firemen, J. room. Seven wagons and teams were lost. One of these belonged to the American Ex- {u:;ss Ct;{hp&ny and had $8000 worth of sil- ver on it. SUSPELTS FREED Government Withdraws Charges. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. MOSCOW, Idaho, Oct. 30.—In the trial of the Coeur d’Alene miners, charged by the Government with delaying the United States mall, several witnesses on the part of the Government were put on the stand to-day. Among these were Frank Funke, the shift boss at Mullan; Emil and John Anderson, miners of Mullan; E. M. Sin- clair, who identified Mike Malvoy, one of the prisoners; Olmstead, the conductor; Thomas Chester, a Northern Pacific brakeman, and L. W. Hutton, the engin- eer who hauled the train from Wallace to Wardner April 29; A. W. Perley, an en- gineer of the O. R. & N.; Robert Jell, a conductor, and George K. Marshall, the ostal clerk between Wallace and Tekoa. Fhe witnesses were all put on by the Government to prove a conspiracy and the stopping of the mail train. Five miners who had been confined in the Moscow jail and whose names did not appear on the indictment were released from custody to-day and are now free men, Their names are John S, Earls, Or- Vin Edwards, Frank Turner, 8. J. Robin- Son and Ed Clemmers. The latter two were among the eleven who were brought from Wardner by the soldlers last week. Farls_and Edwards were brought here trom Montana several months ago. The Federal charge against twenty- now l‘.mr)tiliile;d in the “’3§dl:er or _out on bail) was removed to- 3;:;30%« United States District Judge Beatty, None of their names appear in the indictment. As far as the United States Is concerned these men are now free. What the State will do and wheth- er it will hold them ls a matter to be handled by those in power in the Coeur d’Alenes. LAND CASES DECIDED BY SUPREME COURT Three Opinions Adjudicating Con- flicts in New Mexico and Arizona. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—In the United States Supreme Court to-day an opinion was handed down by Justice Brown in the case of the appeal of the United States from the decision of the Court of Private Land Claims in the case of the Cuya- land grant, situated in Santa Fe By, New Mexico. The land court de- clded that the title to the grant was properly held by Maria de Ia Paz de Con- Nay and assoclates, and declined to ex- cept in the decree lands covered by pat- ents issued to Pueblo Indlans covering a large portion of the grant. The decision rendered to-day holds that these lands should have been excepted, and accord- ingly reversed the opinion of the lower ur cl)Th:a- court affirmed the opinion of the Private Land Court in the case of the claim of the town of Real de Dolores del Oro to land located in New Mexico, af- firming the declslon of the Court of Pri- vate Land Claims. In this case the Su- preme Court found that the land in con- Proversy was included in the Ortez mine grant and that the appellants were with- out legal redress. The court, in an opinion by Justice Gray, reversed the decision of the Su- reme Court of Arizona in a case involv- ng title to the Sonvito grant in Arizona. This title was at issue between Santiago Afnsa and the New Mexican and Arizona Railroad Companr ‘The reversal was based on the rull ng of the court below that the case could not be tried in the ordinary courts. Bio o Factory Girls Strike. EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio, Oct. 30.— Seven hundred girls employed in the bis- cuit warehouse dipping and stamping de- partments of nearly every pottery in the city struck this morning for higher ‘wages. eight men | the dismissal of General CUBAN FARMIERS WANT A THRIS Ask That a Duty Be Placed on Corn. Special Dispatch to The Call. HAVANA, Oct. 30.—Governor General Brooke has received a petition signed by a number of Cuban farmers urging pro- tection against American corn. The farmers say they have no money to buy machinery, but have to plant by hand, and to carry their produce on their backs to where they obtain little for it, owing to the fact that there {s scarcely any duty on foreign grain. The petition goes on to say that this condition greatly han. dicaps the Cubans in their attempts to recover a degree of their former pros- perity. Incidentally the farmers protest against the protective duties on nlf: alleging that these are in force solely to protect one American refinery, whereas a protective duty on corn “would mean the welfara of thousands of small farmers, whose only source of revenue i{s what they make by growing corn.” Senor Domingo Mendez Capote, Secre- tary of the Government in General Brookes' advisory Cabinet, when walted upon by a committee of Veterans of In- dependence, who asked him to explain Ruiz _Riviera from the Civil Governorship of Havana, implying that there had been some dis- tinction made between the two classes of revolutionists, replied that the dismissal THE EMPORIUM. I PEEPPRRR RIS RRR IR ERRRR RSP R IR R PP PRV IR PRGN All This Week accumulate here with remarkable fancy checks, mixed suitings and many s One-Qua In conjunction with the chorce It of P ain and Fan ““After~ Breakfast %% THE EMPORIUM e and Cafes Cafe Golden Rule Bazaar. 3105 p.m. dail; CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST--AMERICA'S GRANDEST STORE.Uper at § a m. Dress Goods Remnanis Off the Already Reduced Prices: We sell such large quantities of dress goods that remnants large an accumulation of Colored Dress Goods Remnants—plaids, ranging in length from 1’¢ to 6 yards—we make an additional reduction during the entire week from the already lowered prices of at One-Quarter Off Maried Prices. THE EMPORIUM. a? One-Quarter rapidity. To reduce a far too tylish weaves in plain materials, pieces rter Off. Remnant Sale we offer a cv Suit Patterns /50 Probably never so many lace made by one of the best manufacturers real values until sold: 2. $1.00 Scarfs...38¢ $1.25 Scarfs...45¢ Sk $8.50 Scarf Lace Scarf Sale. this city as we sold yesterday, but we had such a large lot of them (1821 in all) that assortment still remains good. $2.50 Scarfs. scarfs sold at retail in one day in Real Sitk Spanish Lace Scarfs, in Europe, a¢ about One-Third of their $8.75 Scarfs...$1.38 $4.00 Scarfs...$7.68 $5.00 Scarfs...$1.98 $1.25 e Tuesday Only. Heavy Linen 50c¢ Linen Scarfs, 19x50 inches, some Scarfs 37¢. iingei, cthers hemstitched, stamped and plain, regu- larly 50c each, on special sale this dav only 8t.eeeeseses. Tuesday Only. 50c Feather Dusters 37c. We offer to-day 80 dozen excellent 16-inch Feather Dusters, full center and full count long feathers, and a moth prool bag free with each duster, reg- ularly 50c each, for... 7c Bleached Huck Towels, Irish Tuesday Only. Huck " ) T ’ '2 make, nea?ly owels 12¢. icunei, o2 17x33 inchzs. closely woven and a_per- fect absorber, our $1.75 per dozen quality, special to-day, each... PEPCPFR VRV PP P PR ER B R R R RO R R IRV PR R PO R PP PR R PR REP PRI R PP RUP RSP P PSP RRRPR R RO RV PRRE R VR R R R R R RS Good Hair Brushes 19c-. Eboniz:d han- dle Hair Brush, with bevaled edge piate-giass mir- ror in back, mxed bristles, a splendil value at to-day's special price, each..18¢ 2 At a60e480866646658464 PETRRPIRPORB PRV ERIRI P 7c Tuesdav Only. | We of- fer to- | 'e' day our Derbys $1.78. . ‘32.45 Derby Hats for Men, latest Dun- |lap, Knox and Youmans blocks for fall '99, in black, golden and coffee brown, a fine qual- ity of relt. with silk trim- mings, guaran- teed to wear £8 well as the hats =4 usually sold for $3, at the very special price. each,...... Tuesday Only. Fail Sty - Portrait Frames Half Price To-Day. For this day only we offr at haif price about 10 dozen “Im- perial , single or double, card or cabinet siza open- ings. These frames are uzed to bind embroidery work and make very acceptable Christmas gifts. Regularly..45¢c T5c 85¢ 90c $1.15 $1.50 .22¢ 8Tc 42¢ 43¢ c Toe Special Tuesday Only. \Children’s Shoes |76c: Children's Lace Shoes, black Don- go'a Kid, patent |leather tips, new | English toes,turned sewed soles, spring hee's, sizes 5'« to 8, |a eplendid $1 va.ue, Ifor this day only, per pair.. L L L e e e e L L L L L L L e L L L L T T T T L T L L L L LT T T L T LTy L 11 ....76¢ SESSS LGS A GANESESROS P was in no sense a personal matter, but that affairs could not be allowed to go on in the way they had gone, Riviera having persistently refused to recognize that he was not at liberty to do as he pleased, This reply the committee pro- nounced satisfactory At Abreu, province of Santa Clara, a deputation of citizens called upon the Mayor and asked him to issue an order directing Ceballoss, a former guerrilla, to leave town Iimmediately, as he had spoken against the Cubans. The Mayor told Ceballos he had better go in order to avold trouble, and he complied with the suggestion. One Borjes, a Cuban, was accused in court at Abreu of having spoken against {he Cubans. He was ordered to leave town and did so. This man fought for the Spaniards during the war. Governor General Brooke has appointed a special criminal court for Havana, to exercise jurisdiction for a period of three months and to bring to trial a long list of criminals now in the Havana prison. WILL ATTEND LAUNCHING. President and Most of the Cabinet Will Go to Richmond. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—The President and most of the members of his Cabinet will leave here to-morrow morning for Richmond to participate in the exercises incident to the launching of the torpedo boat Shubrick. A ston of ten minutes will be made at Fredericksburg on the way down. The party will return to the city at 10:35 o’clock to-morrow night. The illness of Vice-President Hobart will not interfere with this programme, but shou!d an announcement of his death be reccived before the time for departure the trip will be abandoned. PROPERTY DAMAGED. Ravages of the Hurricane in the Vi- cinity of Havana. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—General Gree- ly received a cablegram from Havana this afternoon saying the hurricane thers had done great damage to property and the lines of communication between Ha- vana and Santiago had been all cut. Signal-service men are repairing the lines. No mention is made of any loss of life. Cleared of His Debts. CHICAGO, Oct. 30.—Charles Gardi- ner, the actor, received the benefits of the bankruptcy act to-day. when all his debts, amounting to $0.115, were - wiped out by order of Judge Kohlsaat in the United States Circuit Court. _fire of life. OVER 10,00 REGAINED VIGOR OF MANHOOD FR 90 L 8 Any man who wea nature intended th fearing to venture manhood. They need Elec tality. machine. of new life to all p. BOX 432, PETALUMA, Cal., Oct. 2, 18 DEAR SIR: I have been waaring your Belt over two months and it Las completely cured me of my not a symptom of which is left. 1 consider it a great cure for such aliments as mine and shall be pl any inquiries sent me about your Belt. Yours truly, DR. M. A. McLAUGHLIN S. F., and Burdick Block, AK MEN OM DR. McLAUGHLIN'S METHOD. Here is the snap, the vim and vigor of youth tal and physical development. 7 Thousands of men are mere pigmies of what short of breath, weak-nerved, lacking the grit, the “sand” which is the possession of vigorous It is the foundation of all vigor. the fuel to the engine which runs the human Electricity, as I apply it, is a source Vigor of Youth Fully Restored. Men, are you weak, have you pains in your back, varicocele, weak stomach, constipation, lumbago, rheumatism, enlarged prostate gland, or any of the results of early mistakes, excesses or overwork? My method of applying electricity while you sleep at night will cure you. It fills the nerves and organs with the You wear my Belt while you sleep. You feel its life-giving power, and can regulate it. Call and test it free, or send for free book. 702 Market, Cor. Kearny, Office J Cor. Bpring and Becond, Los Angeles. NEVER SOLD IN DRUG STORES rs it can be a giant in men em, backward, oversensitive, , delicate, easily discouraged, tricity, which is animal vi- It is arts of the body. OUIS STANLEY. Hours—S a.m. to8:30 p.m. Sundays, 10 tol.