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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1899. PUGILISTS READY FOR R o MO UM e 0 RECOGNITION FOR NAVAL HEROES 3 o Admiral Crowninshield Severely Ar- raigns Congress in His Annual Report. e born. recefving-ships points out the g i uch ships at after ail £ C hing more than floating he say For the sanitary ould give wa, racks on shore. for o for drills and for ot administra- 1 the sug oper ation ns e stem of d for reduced cost of maln- % T / el air and care-taking, per- : i 2 for the men should be § the large naval stations A to d that should the c..angebe v rernment would save $14§, s The reports show, as Crown. , that ance, Germ d _Japan not T hi Therefo: ave at Boston. of training of reisco around (% ttention to the faflure amended to pro- re native the army service ‘ B0LD ATTEMPT Fail Each Time. R Special Dispatch to The Call. rley were NI DE veehl ol ANCOUVER, B. C., N 2.—The mer Miowera from Sy to-day and hoped that a re- 1 soon arrive. brings a sensational story of the attempt- robbery from the Bank of New South >s in Melbourne of £10 wshier P from his d bank If a crown are the chang head and 0 was f a rden ba s had the effronte cessful. Two men Harris have been ar- attempted theft. FILLING STRIKERS’ f‘LACE& Italian Laborers Are Brought British Columbia. 2.—A spectal The strike in ountry hed a crisis, lver and I Mine Owners' has commenced the importing n laborers from Pa C The first consignment to work in the Payne mine. The striking miners are excited over the arri- rkers, but no vio- was offered to the latter when they 1 here to-day. uble between the mine owners e workers is of six months’ stand. - yon the adoption of the new t-hour law, the mine owners reducing to Egerton big ant with the - AT THE BETHULEE BRIDGE. CAPE TOWN an RMARITZBURG, Natal, Nov. wages from $350 to $3 per day, the 1 1t t ers are occupy rs refusing to accept the reduction. & hAtither e - have been many conferences, but 3 S b er side would yield, and the mines : miles from Grey- n entirely closed down during the rey. :00000000 R R e e e R e e e e e e e AT SLOANB’S Removal Sale. Our removal sale offers us an opportunity of displaying the unequaled facilities we possess for obtaining choice' and unique pieces of furniture and exclusive designs in rugs, carpsts and draperies. PORTIERES. RUGS, | Direct ; from are prepared to show an ex-| TURKEY, Sl o 3 PERSIA and ) fine line of silk and Dearby INfiUM- Mag- b tapestries, ranging fro 52, [P nE LK ) r. anging: from S8 R0D | includina choic- o per pair and upwards. During | est antiqus and < 3 y ¥ modern carpets. REMOVAL SALE PRICES are | During RE- AL MOVAL SALE Wolow extremely low. every rug reduced in price. LACE CURTAINS. CHOICEST AND LATEST STYLES. R AISSANCE reduced during sale to..,..$3.90 and upward per pair IRISH POINT reduced during sale to ,:2.00 and upward per pair POINT ARABE reduced POINT DE PARIS redu Immense varlety higher grades at greatly rec iring sale to .86.75 and upward per pair during sale to..$4.00 and upward per pair t from. BExceedingly fine values in the ced prices. FURNITURE. . A grand display of parlor, bedroom, dining-room, library and hall furniture In the latest and most correct designs. We quote for example: gant Colonial parlor set; regular price $175.... ..NOW $1p25 gljsh fireside settle mahogany; very unigue; regular " price #15... et e et NOW 8$37.50 One mahogany bedroom set, highly finished, -latest style; regular B cane, meads e T NOW $62.50 Ladies’' fine inlald Chippendale writing desk; regular price smo.’?i = 50 bedroom sets (3 pieces), solid oak, hand-rubbed finish, French bevel plate glass; regular price $30. el A RS NOW 822 Any goods selected for holilay pr:sents will ristm is delively. 6%1-647 MARKET STREET. B e sacassss 2SS SOV UUUTTUURE be carefuily stored for ( B S R R R S R S PSSR TS e S S S R S - | enter the ring at 9:45 o'clock. ® | small. ! *|is in the habit of holding a great many - | bet 'n was temporarily | WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP, Continued From First Page. easy as far as these points are concerned. Jeffries is the bigger man of the palr; | | he weighs at least twenty-seven pounds more than the sailor, has a longer reach | and is taller by at least four inches. Both | men are familiar with the rules under | which they are to fight. The straixht | Marquis of Queensberry code will govern the battle. This gives either man the | right to hit with one hand free, and on the breakaway. George Siler, who will referee the bout, says that as both men have fought and won victories under these rules, he does | not expect to experience any difficuity with them. The sale of seats for the contest has| been enormous, and indications point.to largest assemblage ever seen af the | | ringside in this country. Every box and} half the reserved seats had been sold up | to midnight to-night. As the managment | of the Coney Island Club is charging $10 | more for box seats than was ever asked | | for a championship battle in this vicinity, | all concerned will reap a rich harvest. The winner of the contest will recelve | three-quarters of the 66 2-3 per cent of | the gross receipts. | .1t 1s estimated . to-night that the winner's share would be about $30,000 quite a snug sum for an evening’s work. Special trains for the ringside will be run on the elevated road. | Jeffries and Sharkey are scheduled to f | \ | | .The amount of money belng placed on the fight. is, comparatively speaking, very A prominent man uptown, who | 1d to-night: “There seems to be a lack of sporting blood, so far as bets go, on to-morrow’s ight. Interest seems to be at fever heat nd yet men will not wager their mone Queer reports in the respective training as to their inabil- quarters ity to put argument seem to have ha effect in the bet- mind both men are my The most e condition. ting m B in the best po conse the a hard battle for eight and if it lasts longer it will be \ of the man with the stamina AT THE LOS ANGELES | HOME OF JEFFRIES 2—While In this is manifested in the fight on account of its home of the champion, little bet- so far been done. Jeffries is fa- )s Angeles people want longer ruling in New York. For key has a strong follow- Nov. city mt odd some ¢ ing, but they are not putting up any gre sums of mone What money bet wil change hands on the night of The ruling odds are 10 to T. \ll bets have been placed at 5 to rgest bet so far reported is that | Robert Kern, who placed an | even thousand on Je inst_eight hundred on Sharkey scond time | this year the h of the Jeffries fam- ily on Arroyo Seco is the center of at- tention on the part of the curious and idle. As in former times Mrs. Jeffries [ n of the family. She was in answer to a question | aid: ““Whoever says 1 want my boy Lo | be a prizefighter does not know what he | talg about. I did not want him to | enter this business. But since he has chosen this vocation I cannot help it, and | e 1 do not want him to lose. | . Jim never made any profession | glon, no one can say that my big | hot honorable. I have known mer stood high in the church to do worse | things than Jim has ever done. I want e sp n n to-night and | him_to succeed. Any mother ~would, would ghe not?” - * list's_sisters, Mrs. Southwick, Ada Jeffries, with hers, echoed the mothe: s, the entire family, includ: Rev. Jefries, desires that Jim shall ‘morrow night knock Sharkey out. The en folk do not have ey clear idea a as preliminary evidently are not columns of the know that it is Jim who they want him to win. In fact, aithough they are shy about saying it, they know in )n (woman's reason) that he must | win. - | i HEAVY BETTING HERE. \ | Money Flowed Steadily Into the Pool Boxes All Day at 10 to 7. i Sharkey fight ater in volume | than on any cer held in this coun- From ali tions over $10 vill | have been wagered on the outcome of the battle before the gong signals the begin- ning of hostilities.” At Harry Corbett’s a s stream of mor poured into the strong box throughout the day. The odds were 10 to 7, with Jeffries favorite. _The majority of the small bets were on Shar. Key, while the big money went in on th champion. | | The biggest bet of the day and the largest ticket ever written at Corbett's | called_for $5000 to $3000. ‘Jerry” Driscoll | took Sharkey, while Henry Harris, the | basebatl magnate, secured the ticket on Jeftries. In the mutuels a total of 3099 $1 tickets | have been sold up to the present time. | Jeffries is most in demand on every line, | but is pressed closely by the sailor. The | 1d calling for the men to win in ting on the Jeffrie has bee fight nd The be in this ¢ | | | | | ds are as follow: | T JEFFRIES. || _ SHARKEY. | | Tickets| | Tickets | Rounds, | Sold. || Rounds. Sold. | 1to 7 4 | Ttor | e | 8 to 13 508 | 8 to 13 400 141018 | 4 | 14 t018 a0 | 19 to 23 208 | 19 to 23 181 | 24orover | 312 | Borover | 157 Total, 5099, WILL TRY SUISSER. Twelve Jurymen Satisfactory to All Parties Chosen. SALINAS, Nov. 2.—After several days | of challenges and counter challenges a éury has finally been accepted to try| uisser, the slayer of Sheriff Farley. The | jurors are: Hendrickson, W. 'i‘ Har- | vey, T. C. Herbert, David P. Crawtord, L. Landrum, R. G. Willlamson, Davi Upton, R. H. McGowan, H. V. Westcott, | J. P. Snyder, C. R. Macomber and Wil- am Patton. The case will be begun at 10 o’elock to-morrow morning. Although there are but five direct witnesses to be cxal":'flned the trial will probably last a week. DESERTED DROWNING MEN. Arrest of the Captain of the Italian Bark Bersagliere. FOLKSTONE, England, Nov. 2—The Italian bark Bersagliere, Captain Costa, bound from Hamburg for Pensacola, was captured off here to-day, after an exeit- ing chase by a tug, on board of which were customs office:s and a magistrate. | The captain of tne Bersagliere was | charged with having sunk a Lowestoft trawler in a collision and with having left the crew of the latter vessel to their fate. el Pdass Hobart’s Condition Unchanged. PATERSON, Nov. 3, 2 a. m.—No appar- ent change is reported In the condition of Vice President Hobart. He retired early and shortly after 1 o'clock this morning Hobart Tuttle said that he was sleeping quietly, g Y | Injured by His Horse. WOODLAND, Nov. 2—Asa Morris, a prominent Cacheville farmer, met with a painful accident Wednesday. His h fell on him and Mr. Murfl‘u sus!alne%rs: fracture of the leg. | EEmi e Do To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money If it falls to cure. E. W. Grove's signature 18 on each box. 2c. | pendence, and requests the pri ive and well-informed patrons of | thur's with me that the contest- #men in front of Angeles, discovered a Fili- {of the HAS HOPE IN OUR CONGRES Proclamation Issued by Aguinaldo. e HOPES FOR INDEPENDENCE TWO FILIPINO LEADERS RESIGN THEIR OFFICES. | Brilliant Work of Lieutenant Sla- vens and Scouts, Who Rout a Much Larger Force of the Enemy. st o Spectal Dispatch to The Call. MANILA, Nov. 2-—Aguinaldo has issued a proclamation announcing that the American Congress will meet in December to decide whether the “impe- et rialistic policy” and ‘“this bloody work’ are to be continued. He exhorts his sol- dlers to conduct themselves so that Con- gress will consider them worthy of inde- s to ab- tain from politics and to redeem the hurch from the bad name the misdeeds of the friars have given it. A crisis in the Filipino Cabinet is pre- dicted as a result of the resignations of Paterno and Buencamino, two Filipino leaders who have lost the confidence of the rabid revolutionists. Some Filipinos who attempted to come | to Manila with the Spanish Commission recelved a message from Major General Otis saying the women and children would be given American protection, but the men who had cast théir lot with the insurrection must remain with it. The party included a brother of General Luna, who ‘was assassinated by the guard before ldo’s headquarters, with his fam- the Filipino Secretary of the The famil a lac. Lieutenant Slavens of General MacAr- staff, reconnoitering with eighteen pino outpost in a trench. The Filipinos numbered about forty men. As the Fili- pinos had sighted the Americans, Lieu- tenant Slavens’ only course was to charge, and his party rushed to the trench, shooting and yelling. They killed nd wounded sev. in hree of the insurgen eral, who, however, s ing. Not one of the eri wi The lieutenant secured valuable informa- tion about the enemy’s position. The feeling of disquiet aroused at Tioilo the arrest of Santiago, the wealthy Filipino who is charged with forming a r rlutiona Junta, I subsided. The natives in thelr quarter of the town were | d were heard chant- , with the re- frain, “The » A provost marshal's force surrounded the quarter and drove the suspicious-looking native Jutside the line The America Tioilo and the djoining towr nd Molo with 1000 men, consisting of the Eighteenth and Twenty-sixth regiments, two battalions ineteenth regiment, a detach- ment of the Sixth regiment and a battery of the Sixth artillery. The Insurgent forcé is now supposed to be between 2000 and 5000 armed men and many more unarmed. Their lines are about %0 yards from Jaro, which the Twenty-sixth regime are reported to have five nnon. For a_long timi past they have been building trenches be tween Jaro and their stronghold, Santa Barbara, eight miles north. TWO TRANSPORTS FOR THE PHILIPPINES PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 2.—The United States transports Pennsylvania and Olym- pla sailed for the Philippines to-night with the Thirty-ninth Infantry and two companies of the Forty-fifth Infantry on sullen and restless s ing the de: occupy f Jaro 3 smooth-bo; board. Coloncl Bullard and his staff safled on the Pennsylvania. In addition to the troops the transports carried a large quantity of supplies for the arm the Philippine COMMANDER ADAMS GOES TO PHILIPPINES y in VALLEJO, Nov —Lieutenant Com- mander C. A. Adams, United States navy. for some time past the executive officer of the United States amship Independ- s returned'to Tar- | cargo of stores for the Solace aboard. The paymaster of the Solace has been making some heavy purchases in the way of provisions on direct orders from Wash- | ington. One hundred thousand pounds | of flour will be shipped up from San Francisco to-morrow. The Philadelphia, which has been un- dergoing repairs here at the navy yard for months past, is now fast nearing com- pletion, and before many days will be ready for the seas again, although at| present she has no orders. | |INSURGENT CAVALRY ENTIRELY DESTROYED } MANILA, Nov. 3.—The Insurgents at- | tempted to am‘ush Captain Batson's | scouts between Santiago and Saragossa, | but Captain Batson charged them and | drove them out from their position, kill- ing and wounding several of them. One | | American officer was killed and a private | wounded, | General Young's troops are beginning ! | to live on the country, trying buffalo meat | and rice partly in ileu of army rations. | The captures a? the Talouera arsenal in- | | clude thirteen small brass howlitzers and | 800 one-pound projectiles. | Major Bell's regiment yesterday adv- | | annced from Guagua on Fiorida Blanca, which was found to be deserted. Bishop’s battalion is stationed there. Major Bell also made another descent upon Porfic, | pursuing the Filipinos thence into the mountains and capturing their horses | and baggage. The American loss was on “kmod and two wounded. Major Bell re ports that he entirely destroved the in- surgent cavalry that was operating in | | that section. |SHOT THE WOMAN ' WHO REJECTED HIM | George M. Hubbard Attempts to Commit Murder and Then Blows Out His Brains. L.OS ANGELES, Nov. 2.—George M. Hubbard, a prominent real estate dealer | of Colton, this evening shot and seriously | wounded Edna Howard and then fired a | bullet into his own brain. He died in-| | stantly. The shooting took place in a | 1odging-house kept by a Mrs. Cunning- ham, in an alley off Fifth street,’and of Hubbard’ infatuation for s under the influ- | ence of liquor and lack of encouragement the result the woman while he wa on her part. Hubbard has a wife and four children in | Colton, but he frequently visited this city and consorted with the Howard womar. He came here about a week ago and has been drinking heavily ever since. Barly | this evening he visited Edna Howard and she tried to prevall upon him to return to | his wife and family. He started to leave the house, but turned suddenly and shot her in the right shoulder blade, inflicting a serious wound. He then ended his own | life with a bullet in the brain. FERRY-BOAT CRASHES [ o 1 INTO THE PATTERSON | Revenue Cutter Was Badly Damaged. | | but Fortunately No One Was | Seriously Injured. \ SEATTLE, Nov. 2.—The local ferry City | of Seattle ran down the cutter Patterson | at her anchorage this morning. The long overhang of the ferryboat crashed into | the side of the ship, knocking the officers out of their bunks and clear across the wardroom. A hole was made inside the | cutter fifteen feet wide and eight feet | st above the water line. The ferry- vas not damaged. Nobody was seri- ously injured. ENGLAND WILL GET THE SAMOAN ISLANDS | | 5 | Germany Accepts the Gilbert sndi Solomon Islands in Exchange | | for Her Interests in Samoa. | | LONDON, Nov. 3—A dispatch to the | | Telegraph from Berlin it is now cer- | tain the Samoan Islands wil: become Brit- | ish ferritory, Germany having consented to acképt the Gilbert and Solomon islands | in exchange for her interests in Samoa. | She will thus henceforth own all the groups comprised in Micronesia except Guam. w - | | CAPTAIN GREEN DEAD. i Was One of the Earliest Pioneers of | the State. SONOMA, Nov. Captain Willtam | Green, Sonoma s oldest resident, |1s dead. He pa y at his Embare: | dero home, where he had lived for forty- seven years, at 1 o'clock this afternoon, srrounded by his aged wi daughters, Captain Green cam. fornia with the celebrated lonel Ste- ence, will take passage on the United | venson regiment in 1847. In 1852 he located States steamship Solace for Manila, he | wderq, f“";rlm”"»‘ from Sonoma, having been relicved from duty a few | resided continuously days ago. Lieutenant C ; me | & e oW O Will be suceseded iy Commander Adams | and two daughters, the latter being Mrs. J nt Com- | C.H. Wise and Mrs, Carrie Lund. L. H: mander Thoma navy, one of the 8. Phelps, United States st popular officers in the Ameri navy and a son rme: Rear Admiral Phelps. fhon e Captain Goodall came up from San Green and William Green Jr. are the sons, the former being a prominent young bu: ness man of this place. Captaln Green born in New York City, and was Men's what values we gi our gloves are sold exclusive dealers. - colors: English red sizes 6} to 9; price We have often told you about our ties, shirts and underwear——you Kknow These men’s gloves have emboi- | dered backs and pique se:ms, are well | sewed and fit like expensive glov.s; .00 - | S.N.WGoDe&Co 718 MARKET ST Out-of-town orders filled—write us. | i aged T8 years. | | \ | i | | | | | | (iloves. ve in these. Now, | at just such prices | as our other furnishings—lower than and brown; a'so tan; | Booth, James P- FOR [ REGULAR REPUBLICAN NOMINEE. CITIZENS’ NON- PARTISAN PARTY. FOR GOOD GOVERNMENT. To the Voters of San Francisco: The Non- Partisan party was organized seven years ago to wrest from professional politicians the con- trol of municipal affairs and to separate en- tively from national politics the selection of city and county officials, It has at all times opposed machine politics, and sought to elect worthy men to office by in- dependent nomination or indorsement. “Fhe last Legislature passed a law expressly almed at the ‘unwelcome interference” in public affairs of non-partisan organizations. The Rickard act forbids any Information on the ballot concerging the indorsements that a can- didate may receive and makes it impossible for « man to be nominated by two parties. Such a creditable occurrence as the nomination last vear by the two great parties of John Lack- mann for Supervisor could not be repeated. We regard this law as pernicious In principie | and against public policy, and we intend to | vigorously contest It. The adoption of a non-partisan charter, the result of the last primary election, and the in- dependent character of the recent Republican and Democratic conventions, clearly indicate, however, that the friends of good government pave awakened to their duties. With these changed conditions we feel that there is no occasion for an entire Non-Partisan ticket at_this election, It is, however, a fundamental principle of this party to support those nominees who have faithfully and fearlessly filled their offices and are renominated for the same office. We would fall in our obligations were we to leave this work undone. We therefore unqualifiedly recommend for your guffrage at the coming election: For Mayor. . . .. JAMES D, PHELAN For Assessor. WASHINGTON DODGE For Auditor.......ASA R, WELLS For City and County Attorney. . - weo-.....FRANKLIN K. LANE To each of these faithful servants of the people there is certainly due a generous meas- ure of credit and encouragement. for the able and honest manner in which they have ful- filled their public trust. This committee, furthermore, realizing the difficulty for each individual voter to inform himself as to the qualifications of the many | candidates for the Board of Supervisors, has | given careful and impartial study to the rela- tive merits of the nominees on the several tickets. As the result of continuous work by this committee, extending over a month’s time, re- garding this important department of the city vernment, we feel justified in recommending | upport and vote, irrespective of T the following eighteen citizens, se- from the Republican and Democratic , to constitute the first Board of Super- visors under the new charte: Tobin, Joseph . Foster, Samuel Goodsell, D. C. I. Jeffers, Milo §. { King, Charles J. | Morris, T. H ! sanderson, George B. Pumm, Oszool | Watu, Willam Reed, Charles Wesley | Wright, Cyrus §. CITIZENS' NON-PARTISAN COUNTY COMMITTEE. GEORGE K. FITCH, Chairman. JOSEPE BRITTON, Vice-Chairman. C. C. BURR, Secretary. San Francieco, Oct. 30, 7899. comte, A. Ir. D'Ancong, A. A. Hotalng, R. M. Jennings, Thomas Pohli, Einil Brandenster, B U. | | \ MAYOR HORACE DAVES, REGULAR REPUBLICAN NOMINEE. For Sheriff, JEREMIAH DEASY (Present Supenvisor of Teath Ward,) DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE. FOR COUNTY GLERK, WN. A, DEANE (Present Incumbent,) | POLITICAL. A s N _— = RALLY! HON. F. X SCHOONMAKER Will discuss the relative con- nection between the issues of the present municipal campaign and the policy of the National Republican Administration AT PIONEER HALL, Fourth St., Near Market, SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. 4th, At 8 O’Clock. HON. IRVING M. SCOTT WILL PRESIDE. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Public Rights and Home Rule Against Bossism and Corporate Control. Mayor ........ James D. Phelan Auditor . .. .. Joseph M. Cumming Assessor Dr. Washington Dodge City Attorney ... Franklin K. Lane Sheriff . . . ... .. Jeremiah Deasy Tax Collector . . . . Richard P. Doolan Treasurer . . . . Samuel H. Brooks Recorder . .. ... Edmund Godchaux County Clerk . . Major Dennis Geary District Attorney .Lewis F. Byington Coroner . . . . .. Dr. R. Beverly Cole Public Administrator . Patrick Boland FOR SUPERVISORS. James P. Booth, John E. A. Helms, H.U.Brandenstein, Thomas Jennings, P. J. Curtis, ‘W. N. McCarthy, A. Comte Jr., M. C. McGrath, John Connor, A. B. Maguire. L. J. Dwyer, Emil Pohli, Dr.A.A.d’Ancona, Osgood Putnam, M. J. Fontana, C. W. Reed, R. M. Hotaling, - Joseph 8. Tobia, POLICE JUDGES. Geo. H. Cabaniss, Alfred J. Fritz. Charles T. Conlan, Ed P. Mogan. FOR MAYOR, JAMES D. PHELAN, INCUMBENT, DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE. For CITY ATTORNEY, arles H. Jackson. Regular Republican Nnm!nee. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, LEWIS F. BYINGTON, DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE. IF YOU WANT THE DEAD RE- SPECTED VOTE FOR C. O'DONNELL FOR CORONER. VITALIS THE NEW FRENGH.. s o, REMEDY.. RESULTS. Itquickly & surely removes Nervousness, Losses. Dreams, Wasting Dixcases & ol cFoors of sl e o1 indiscretions. Restores Lost Vitality, Power & Fa Watds off Insanity and Consumption. Cures when Insist on having VXTALIS, no other. Cap be carr or v six for $5.00 00 per package ot six for #3.00 « E ¢ the Noaey. Clrcala: Frez. & 8old in Sen Frauciseo and Osklsnd by the 0% C. rmotosnAPHED. Frox LvE. 158 Day. FC 10th Day. YITAMS,, fon” ABOVE FOR SUPERVISOR, CHARLES BLISS, _Regular Republican Nominee. _DRPIERCES GOLDEN FOR SUPERVISOR, MILO S. JEFFERS, REPUBLICAN NOMINEE. FOR SUPERVISOR, M. J. FONTANA. REGULAR DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE. FOR THE BLOOD,LIVER,LUNGS: REYNOLD'S 5 Gou sP°°|fi° I _Opeuitiv Goutor Rheumatism, ifon the firstapproach of the paroxysm they have recourse to tok Tem: edy; then, a single dose is often sufficient. E. FOUGERA & C0,, 26.30 N, Willlam 56,.¥.X,