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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THUR DAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1899. CHARGES AGAINST RUSSIA’S MINISTER OF FINANCE B e e e e o S o o o DE WITTE, Russian Minister of Finance. werful a d influential man in the ster, Count Muraviefr. king him for his ser- tion acted in the only tted to him w iski, who succe ner certain to be Wrong. ! h him post to another, ance. o until B R R 0.404040».044\0-@0900. oD ebebevebereieie@ e Z eltung to-day publishes the following dis- er of Justice Muravieff to Investigate esumably the Minister of Finance) has pers advantage. M ed an a financiers and offici de Witte has e statements made In the Deutsche f Finance, who i an Intimate friend M nister of Finance, said to a correspondent of the Associated Press that he knew nothing it the matter except that the antagon- ween M. Muravieff and M. de Witte was of lon 8 Minist DN MAY D 00T OF POLITICS R N Will Decline to Accepta Dem Renomination. | ands TheirSuppres- sion by Law. l Special Dispatch to The Call. AUSTIN, Nov Ohlo, Nov. 20—The terey, Mexi , which has been in ses- 8 he past week, will W, ortant the report of whic was s their approval master, Aaron mand the enact- will protect of men and in- cost_of pro- d to the tnations destroying product com: tions or trusts supply, and, like the reach’ out thelr arms on. Bpecial favors »ads, thus enabling to the w: he r Company, them by ra sell and forc industry n of our t be con- impossible for so- mulate millions by selling thout adding to the wealth of © recommend: tion of all corporations, corpora- s cannot e for Presi- he way RECEPTION TENDERED ARCHBISHOP IRELAND v Principal Speech Delivered by the | Bishop of a Protestant Episcopal all rebates or discrim- carriers. capital stock. ock should be paid up Ities for violation of the y impeachment, fine and im- of all public officlals 'whose duty it e to enforce the law and who fall to per- form that duty. elections and corrupt officials. | o 1 Suggestions—We would advise many peti- Church. ’n 58 to Congress to pass remedial legislation ST. PAUL, Nov. 22—A remarkable re- ‘Bl;r‘r}l the lines above euggested. - - sibtion . g 2 ¢ ask the members of our © ception in honor of Archbishop John Ire- | aease legislation not fn oonfict with erioeny land city was given to-night at the | laws, but suited to the pecullar requiremen Comm I Ciub. It was intended as a | of their respective States. One of the greate: tribute of respect and love from feliow | e¥idences’ of trusts is thelr power to controt | citizens of St and Minnesota and This can_ be veral hundred pe tes Senator Davis, Caj he Hamline (Metho- ; others of na- The prin- hbishop | P t remedied by educating the people. Meanwhile we must control by the strong arm of autharity. pe principle worthy of consideration bas been thus stated, | Whenever monopolies are based upon the ac quisition of nearly the entire supply of natural treasures of any #ort, or upon exclusive owner- ship of raw material of any kind, Government | ownership of the source of supply s called for. | The National Grange and Patrons of Husbandry pledges its best efforts for the suppression of langerous assoclations, and we invite the . ration of = every liberty-loving, z citizen of the republic. ge also adopted the following Suc FLAMES BREAK OUT ‘ IN A VESSEL'S HOLD Fire Starts on the Cromwell Liner Hudson, but Is Extinguished by the Crew. The Gran resolution: | That we most yeartily desire the upholding of our ‘merchant mirine, but we are emphatically opposed to the principle of subsidy. and believe desired sults’ can and plished without resorting theret DEATH OF THE CREWS OF TWO LOCOMOTIVES will be accom- YORK, Nov. 2.—The Cromwell n, which arrived at : 5 River w-)! was on | Baltimore and Ohio Double-Header re at sea on Monday night, but the b ssen, was extinguished 3 mu;nu.ll:ulnl:;" | = ger Train Crashes Into was dc ”.‘ ’\ hi ouid be learned of a Freight, the extent of the rom the officers of Nov, o B e ?;nr:1:.§ GARRETT, Ind., Nov. 22.—The heavy e 1t the cargo In the after hold of the had been ablaze. Smoke could be seen is. sulng from the vessel, and the hatches were battened down, the officers being afraid to open them The steamer arrived from New. Orleans with thirty or forty steerage passengers and carried a cargo of cotton and mo- Baltimore and Ohio’s limited passenger train, drawn by two locomotives, ran into the rear end of a freight train near Mc- 4 small station fifty miles out of £0, this afternoon. Both the passen- | ger engines were ditched and their crews weré ‘killed. The freight train was al- most a total wreck. Its conductor, Mr, T Butts, and Rear Brakeman Hami asses b - | missiig, and It 15 supposed they’ ot Tinh Bkt Hithvas. | buried Jnder the debris of their se. _Fred p B, S special trajp reached here about noon SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 22—Fred Schu-|having seve inju : mann, whose name has always been |dead: Jured and the Follewing linked with that of Schuetzen Park, has | retired from business and will be suc- ed at the neted pleasure resort by Lieberg of San Franciseéo. 11l health is given as the cause of the change, but Schumann will have to stand a little more before he gets a chance to recuperate, as President Philo Jacoby of the California Schuetzen Club Is Krrpnrln, for a ban- quet to be held in honor of Schum: long lease of the park from that clul reman, JOHN STINE, fireman, | Each of the dead men leaves a family, | Miles at Galveston. GALVESTON, Texas, Nov. 22.—General s Nelagn .xf )illlr,l“ :wnt lhde day here in- specting fortifications, and I - b, for New Orleans. LR R R I SR S SR R S SN D AP AP AD AP SUD A SAD S AP SO SN U0 S SO SOUD MDY 1 of charter, fine and im- | TELEGRAMS POUR IN UPON DEWEY BRI Friends Send Reassur- ing Messages. gt | DENOUNCE HIS CRITICS L SR PUBLIC PULSE UNDERGOES AN- OTHER CHANGE. el SR | Popular Indignation Gives Way to Sympathy for the Admiral Be- cause of the Attacks Upon Him. e Spectal Dispatch to The Call CALL HEADQUARTERS, WELLING- TON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 Admiral Dewey has no regrets to express or apologies to offer for the disposition he | has ‘made of the home presented to him | by the American people, When 1 saw him to-night he was pleasantly chatting with a caller and seemed in the best of spiri He had received a large number of tele .grams from all parts of the country ex- pressing satisfaction with the course he | had pursued and condemnation of the cr: fcisms to which he had been subjecte ! He regards these expressions as coming | from his true friends and is deriving much comfort from them. The admiral does not wish to make any further explanation, | | but desires it understood that he stands by the Interview which he gave last night after he bad learned of the full extent of the criticlsm which his action had | caused. “You may say,” the admiral said to me, “that the interview which 1 gave last | | | ar has absolu! night Is correct in every lpumtul.u. and Witte's rise from trely satistied with the posi- k hlx.. one. He has ¢ taken, Further than ths, I mis i k for publication. I have ad- B RS EOEML Lt IRILY verai others to-night that this he raflroad line from was correct, and it is possible ¥ may take advantage of this to te further extended Interviews with but they will not be justified in doing 1 have i all that 1 am going to for publication.” 1 conversation with other friends tne ! treely admitted to-day that in | Ting house to Mrs. Dewey he r alone in mind; that he had 1t he could make her no more | 1 ent than admiral transfe emplate a further tran to his son George. Tne reach Mrs. miral heartily approved. doubt that Admiral Dew cont, n which has 1 from those that he had political ambi- intimation was thrown out er-in-la r. McLean, last nd it was repeated again to-day of Admiral Dewey’'s close One of them even went so far y that if it were hept up the ad- L, after all, find it desirable to Presidential race. But it ma authoritatively, regardiess of the suspicions the admiral may have as to the Presidential motives behind the at him, that nothing whateyer could tempt hi to enter politics. The admiral's sole desire, as he expressed it to friends as quietly as possible. very weary of the social attentions which are being heaped vpon him, and it is probable that he and Mrs. Dewey will take a trip in a few days to some quiet place for an indefinite stay. jeorge Goodwin Dewey, Admiral Dew- | ey's son, to-day became the legal owner of the much-talked-about house. The deed by which Mrs, Dewey made this lat- | iral mig est transfer was filed for record this morning. It sets forth that the prop- erty Is transferred by Mildred McLean | wey and George Dewey, her hu the city of Washingto yrge G. Dewey of the cit | The consideration named deed $10. transfer is made subject to this condition, which 18 inserted in the deed: | ““‘Subject, however, to this expressed | reservation: That the parties of the first part do hereby expressly reserve to them- Selves and to each of them during and perfod of their natural lives Iy, & life interest in_and t es” therein described. Such 1i 0! | G re- the parties of the first part to revert to the other.” X it ts Admiral Dewey &0 for iIn- nue stamps every time th house is tr: ferred the Government has profited to the extent of §150 by the fre- nsfers. The admiral might have of this amount if he had simply :d the property directly to hi; e first place without passing it he hands of Mr. Crawford and | Mrs. Dewey. The ¢ cisms of Admiral Dewey fo transferring the title of his residence to his wife and son continue, but it is ap- parent that a change in public opinion is setting in and there is a tendency to- sympathy for the admiral, w h made to feel that a single mis- udgment may completely over- In his desire to be. through t as bee take In § turn & popular hero. stow a iding gift upon his bride Ad- miral Dy v lost sight of the fact that he could not with perfect propriety treat the house which had been given to him as a testimonial of e | been any ordinary plece of property ac- | quired In an ordinary way. The hasty sfer to the son after the first evi- dence of popular disapproval is taken as evidence of his desire to condone his of- | fense against good taste. 'RECORD BROKEN ON 1 | THE GREAT NORTHERN Rapid Trip Between St. Paul and Spo- | kane to Make Up for Seven 'm as If it had | Hours’ Delay. ST. PAUL, Nov. 22.—The Great North- ern claims the record for the fastest run | on a Northwestern railroad. An east- | bound Great Northern train was delayed | near Leavenworth, Wash, by a land- slide. In the delayed traln was some im- | portant mall, A speclal train was made | up of an engine, mallcar and caboose, the mail was transferred and the traln start- ed east. Leavenworth is several hundred miles west of Spokane. In the meantime, finding that the east- bound train would not reach Spokane, another train had started on toward St. {’nul in order to fill the vacancy, So it | became a stern chase. The special east | from Spokane had a start of 210 miles. | The trip of the rursuer to Spokane, 205 miles, was made {n folir hours and thirty | | minutes. The best time was made be- tween Wilson and Spokane, 106 miles, in one hour and thirty minutes. The. pur- | | suer came up with the pursued at Black- | foot, Mont., having made up seven hours of delay. | It was de by Peing & NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. the fastest long-distance run a Western road, the distance miles. tle where the dzide of vic! nds upon lhew:’«ldd:?hu]ld un; play o g R . time the charge of cavalry, the sudden unmasking of a pew battery or the rush of fresh infantry into the turmoil and disorder of the broken firing line revives the strength axd brings new courage to the wavering ranke. Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey t medicine stamp marks the . Dragrise wsually seil it. If yours does not, we will express & lw;‘l',ul-hu. ‘Write for interesting book. | Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. ¥. Tttt rrrettart b HUNTERS SLAY MEN AS WELL AS DEER PLATTSBURG, N. Y., Nov. 22.— During the deer hunting season just ended In the Adirondacks twenty- three persons were accidentally killed by hunters. The number of deer killed was also larger than usual. R R R g PRIATE SERVICE OVER HOBART Funeral Will Be Held Saturday. + + + + + > + a6 + + - + ++ R e PUBLIC MAY VIEW REMAINS TROOPS ORDERED OUT TO DO POLICE DUTY. el B English Flag Hung at Half-Mast at the British Embassy as a Mark of Re- spect. AL Spectal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—The funeral of | the late Garret A. Hobart, Vice President of the United States, will take place on Saturday. The morning services at the redidence will be attended by only the members of Mr. family, Presi- dent McKinley . and Mr. Hobart's most Intimate friends. At the Church of the Redeemer in Paterson the public service will be held at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon. The body will not lie fn State in the City Hall, as was desired by the city authori- tles, but on Friday a will be open in the library of his home and for three hours the public may view the face of the late Vice President. The body lies in a handsome casket of ak, the plate bearing this inscription: Hobart' 1844, GARRET A. HOBART. Secretary er the body of the la reld at the son, on ) p. m. accommoda- t the family provide for the lals, re atives and friends n accommodated. Previous to the public exercises on Sat- ay afternoon a brief service will be held at the Hobart resid y for the family, the President and hts Cabinet, and intimate personal fr s. riday afternoon the body of the Vice President will be placed in the li- b of his home, where the public may an oppor ¥ to view it. The in- ent will be at the convenience of the at Cedar Lawn Cemete mpanies of ors Island will funeral ceremonies aj gular s take 1 wiil an escort from the late res e President to the church. The mili- ¢ wil as an e is party at President MeKinley Supreme Court Jus. als will arrive before A special train bear- nd Representatives and € ates officials will rt York and committees will be on nd at Paterson to take charge of those part in the robably act other 1 1 t many messages of condolence ved to-day, Including messages from Chief Justice Full of the United States Supreme Court, United States Sen- ator Carter of Montana, Minister Harris at Vienna, the Oregc te Bar Associa- tion, Mrs. Julia Dent Grant and a number | of foreign Ministers at Washington. All of the public buildings in Paterson have been draped, as well as many of the pri {dences throughout New Jerse Dr. . the = President’s phy cian, y filed certificate of death, giving the caus h as “dilation of the heart, due tc myocarditis.” Mr. Hobart v member of the Order of Free and Accepted Masons of high rank, a thirty-third degree Scottish Rite . and a Knight Templar, ries of repre bodies it has been explained to them that the family deem it best not to have a Masonic funeral, Up to the pres- | ent time the names of the pall-bearers have not been announced. Mr. Hobart two months ago, when he feared some- thing might happen, most intimate friends in New Jersey, it is belleved that these will act as his pall-bearers, Mrs. Hobart is bearing up well under her great trouble, and to-day was able of her most inti- mate friends. Including Attorney Gencral Griggs. and Mrs. Griggs and Rev. Dr. Magie, who will deliver the funeral ora- tion WASHINGTON, to a large numt the Treasury D that the offices toms and Col stamp deputie cloged on next Saturday, the day of the funeral of Vice President Hobart. At the request of Attorney General Griggs the War Department has directed that 200 regular troops be sent to Pater- son on the day of the funeral of the Vice o —In responae graphic inquiries t desires it state all Collectors of Cu President. These troops will be on pol‘ce | duty in the vicinity of and around the res- idence. The British jack over the British em- bassy was at half-mast to-day as a mark of respect for the late Vice President. Lord Pauncefote and the members of his staff left their cards at the White House as a further evideyce of respect. The half- masting of the eMbassy flag attracted considerable attention and was regarded as an unusual mark of consideration to an American offictal. INCREASED POPULARITY OF THE STOCKTON FAIR Proceeds Will Be Devoted to the Founding of a Home for 0Old Men. STOCKTON, Nov. 22.—The Catholic ladies’ fair now In progress at the Pa- vilion is proving a great success. The attendance is larger each evening. The | proceeds are for the benefit of St. Joseph's | home. The pretty booths are being cared for by the following ladles: Italian booth, decorated in red, white and green—Mesdameés Gianelll and Ghiglier!, assist- ©d by Misses Allegrettis, Rossi and De Martial. Dolly and handkerchief booth. pink and white— Mesdames Loagier and Minahen. Catholic La- dies’ Aid Soclety booth, green and white—Mrs, John Collins, assisted by Mesdames Morrissey, uxen, Hopkins and Trivett. Weber Institute, - L. L, blue and white, with California pop" ples—Miss Sarah Sharon, assiste dames Heffernan, Garvis Fisher, Archambault and Misses Garvin, Glun, nini, Prendergast and Harnett. Young Ladle odality, white and gold—Miss Annl sey, assisted by Misses Eckstrom, Walsh, Fitz- Fishpond—Mrs, "Meroy gerald and Heffernan. tein, assisted by Miss Minnie Power. Refresh- ted by % ment’ fables—The Misses Nunan, Misses Kathryne Martin and Mayme Heffernan. Ehooting gallery—James Bull. The Brothers of 8t. Mary’s School have charge of the cineograph display, and the Father Yorke Literary Society has charge of the menagerie. i i &4 Drowned in Shallow Water. STOCKTON, Nov. 22.—Frank Schell, an aged County Hospital patient, who wan- dered awa esterday, was found drowned to-day In hi f the outakirty 3! lo;l:. lnc' es O nter on rnoon the casket | ldfers from | rdence of the | cort to President | named six of his | and | BEDSKINS MAY 61 O THE WARRATH Sacs and Foxes Resent 2 a Wrong. i B {INDIAN AGENT’S INJUSTICE IMPRISONS A YOUNG SQUAW WITHOUT CAUSE. —— Determined to Make Her Attend a Training School in Common With Maidens of the Tribe. LR Spectal Dispatch to The Call. OMAHA, Nov. 22.—A special from Des | Moines, Iowa, to the Bee says: Four | hundred and fifty redskins at the Sac and Fox Indian reservation in Tama County are ready to start on the war- | path with rifle and tomahawk. N. T. Wilcox of Montour was in con- sultation with Judge Oliver P. Shiras of the Federal court here to-day and said that it was only because of his persomat | intercession that the Indlans had been prevented making an assault on the peo- | ple of Tama city and Toledo to avenge | themselves for alleged wrongs inflicted by | the Indian agent. | Wilcox finally arranged with Judge Shi- ras to go to Cedar Rapids and there file | a petition for habeas corpus for the re- | lease of an Indlan girl, aged 18, confined | in the Government Indlan training school at Toledo for a month. Wilcox returned 1o his home to-night assuring the’officials that he would be able to con- trol the Indians as long as the courts had | the controversy in hand. | | .. The woman in the case i{s Lelah-Puch- | | Ka-Chee and she is married. Her nus- | | band i{s Ta-Ta-Pi-Cha. They were m ir- | ried when she was 17 according to Indian | rites, the Sac and Fox Indians being per- | mitted to marry on the reservation ac- | cording to tribal customs. When the | training school was established by the Government at Toledo Indian Agent W. | G. Malin sent out an order for all In-| | dian children under 18 to enroll in the | school. The Indlans refused and hid| | thelr children. The girl in question was | taken into another county and was cn- | rolled in a school near Belle Plain. | An Indian interpreter was charged with | helping <hildren to escape from the res- | ervation and on the trial the State sum- moned the woman in this case as a wh- s ness. Wilcox induced her parcnts and E company her into court at Tama City. The interpreter was ais- | . but the Indian agent and Super- | intendent G. N. Nellis of the school | took her aw from her | force and, conveying her to 1, confined her there. a room there sin It is for her re- seeks a writ of | | seized the girl, husband by The husband is nominally the plaintiff and the claim is made that the Govern- ment has 1o right to force the Indians to go to school an ase has no right to detain a_married wom 0000006000000 000000 * WILL PUBLISH THE s CHARTER TO-MORROW To meet the increasing demands of our subscrib- ers and of those cily offi- ctals particularly inter- ested in the provisions of the New Charter, The Call will publish that instrument IN FULL as a supplement of to-mor- row’s issue of the paper. In addition there will be a synopsis containing the number of office holders, lerims, salaries, elc. I EEEEEEE SRS X X 2 RAILROAD SHOPS WILL NOT BE MOVED Story Emanating From Oakland Is| | Flatly Denied by Southern Pacific Officials. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 22.—The story emanating from Oakland and published in an Francisco that the Southern Paclfic | PPV 2920000990000 000s000000 e CPPPOVIPPO PPPP990009 000 PPPPPISIOPIOQP shops here would eventually be removed to the former eity is discredited by rail- road officials and every one else conver- sant with the tremendous volume of work done here, and with the present and fu- ture 1 1 plans of the Southern Pacific at this t :r before in the history of the shops were 50 many men employed as now. The bulldings destroyed some months ago by fire have been replaced by vast brick | structures, and fitted out with the most modern and costly appliances. The rail- | road has entered into negotiations with the State Board of Prison Directors for the purchase of cut and crushed granite | from the Folsom quarries with which to widen its yards and afford more track room in the vicinity of the shops, and cars are being turned out in great num- | bers. The fact that the company is re- claiming the tide land south of the Oak- land pler is declared to have no bearin; whatever upon the site of the uflronfi shops. H. J. Small, superintendent of motive power and machinery, and the highest au. thority at the shops, in discussing the rumor, =ald tfl-dfls’: “The story s with- out foundation. There is no intention of moving any of the shops from Sacramen- to. This is simply a repetition of storfes which T have been hearing for the past ten yvears or ever since I came here. “The ‘work now being done in Oakland for the railroad company was Inaugu- rated at my suggestion. Better swifch- ing facllities and more yard room were needed, and 1 recommended that the low land be filled In. The recommendation :\-nsu:'lf'led upon, and that Is all there is o it in thelr efforts to 0 apiece vincing ~ to Y X}% everybody > Y | of America, | ber | Mc ©99CCOCO0000006000000060 06 “ELECTRIC FAIRY TALES” 'r!m newspaper advertisement storles told by certaln self-styled “‘doctors™ to dispose of inferior old-style Electric Belts at from $0 are Indecd very affecting, NEW ADVERTISEMENT! Dr. C. F. B. Burchmore, House Physician of the Suffolk Dispensary, Boston, writes: “Thereis no question regard- ing the remarkable curative value of WARNER’S SAFE CURE. I have watched very carefully the results of this great remedy upon patients afflicted with any of the many diseases of the kid- neys and urinary organs. From ‘the benefit derived, I feel it is most assuredly a specific of great value.” WILL BUY THE MARCONI PATEN | Brown, 2672 Taylor's pluralit The motion to thr t Louisville the: | Hargls was permit | from Mayor Weave was | relative to the pre this city on th aMidavits state Y militia was uncalled al authorities we the situation muniel | cope with Oebipany CERanineg. o |t e New Jersey. | | ADVERTISEMENTS. | SRR 4 - | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. DOCTOR MEYERS & (0. GIVE MEN LASTING VIGOR TRENTON, N. J., Nov. 22.—Articles of Incorporation were filed with the Secre- | tary of State to-day of the Marconi Wir less Telegraph Company of America, with an aushorized capital of $10,000 000, one- | half of which is preferred stock with § per_cent non-cumulative dividend. i The company is incorporated to purs chase and acquire varfous inventions and discoverfes of letters patent connected | with the business of n by means of wireless telegra And Cure the Following Ailments: cially to use the Marconl pi company Is also empowered to contruct Kidnsy Dissases [Physical De:ay and operate lines for using this invention - ? {and and sea e e incorporators are Guglielmo Mar coni of London, Isaac L. Rice and August | | Liver Dissases Belmont of New York, Clement A. Gris. com of Philadelphia and Robert Goodbody of Paterson, N. J. This company, it {s understood, has no_connection with the | Telephone, Telegraph and Cable Company incorporated a short time Heart Diseases ago. PAY WHEN CURED. ATIENTS POSIT THE price of a San Fran- clsco bank, to be y after the are well, or may pay hly instali- . quest ndence RS & Ct ME || Francisco. || evenings, 9 to 11 Bundays ’ | ELEVATOR ENTRAN | | | Houts, 8 60 § datiret Odd Marital Relations of a San Jose Couple. s SAN JOSE, Nov. 22.—A story of a wo- | | man's duplicity and the casting of her love on an ingrate was told in Justice Rosenthal's court this morning by Mrs. | Charles Wilson when she swore to & war- rant charging & man whom she believed + to be her rightful husband with grand | larceny. While the warrant charging theft is in the name of Charles Wilson, | the man wanted Is Nick Infantino, a bar- | — who has been leading a dual life. | t likely a charge of bigamy will also be dged against him. Infantino has been employed for the past year by an uncle of the same name in a barber shop at 52 Eldorado street About six months ago he met the woman | who Is now known as Mrs. Charles Wil son in Oakland. She was employed as a domestic there and had saved up a little over $1000 from her earnings. When In- Special Dispatch to The Call. | | Velvet-Grip Eye-Glasses. HEY TAKE HOLD SO FIRM, TRUE AND silp, tilt steady that there's never a waver, yet o easy that ther or sore spot fantino heard of this bank account he| All Eastman Kodaks cut 331-3 per cent made desperate love to her. Having a _Oculists’ prescriptions e e wife here he went under the name of | Factory on premises sl Charles Wilson. It now develops that the wife was In on the play and encouraged | her husband for the sole purpose of se- | curing the mond. In July Infantino| married the woman under the name of L APPARATLS Viison. They came here to reside. From | RAPH that moment Infantino tricd to get hota| OPTICIANS PHOTO6R™ screnmipic of the woman's money. She refused to | . 642 MARKET ST. IWsTRUMENTS RBER CHOMICIE B Do rurl with it and Insisted on their bufld- ng a little home. Infantino’'s first wife was Introduced into the family as Miss Lizzie Stevens, a cousin. She was a frequent visitor | ered terribl Mrs. Wilson furnished the money to buy | , X #uffersd terriy alot at § Luther avenue and built a cot. {rom roaring 4 head during an attack of catarrh, and became very deaf, used Ely’'s Cream Balm and in three weeks could hear as well as ever—A. BE. Newman, Graling, .\Hcr"h‘m balm is placed into nostrils, epre tage there. Mrs. Wilson had $600 left with which to make the final payment on the home. Yesterday morning Infantino, through threat of leaving her, made her give hfm the $6%. He then went up town. While Mrs. Wilson was absent during the after- noon Infantino and Miss Stevens, as his wife No. 1 was known, went to the house and carted away several trunks and boxes of effects. over the membrane and fs absorbed. Rellef The couple then left town on the money immediate and a cure follows. It is not drying secured. There is no doubt that Infantino | —does not produce sn committed bigamy in marrying the sec- | At drugglsts or by mall ond time, as “Miss Stevens” was known | ELY BROTHERS, & W about town as Mrs. Infantino. His sec- | ond wife he never took out and she knew him simply as Charles Wilson. | Miss Stevens has also been charged with being an accessory to the erime of grand | larceny in alding and abetting Infantino | in securing the $600. Mrs. Wilsan refused to give her maiden name. Furniture Buyefg Call and examine my prices on furniture, ——— carpets, stoves, etc., before purchasing else- | where. You can save fully 20 per cent by buy- TO THROW OUT THE VOTE. | tn here. Liveral credit extended to all; $0 e worth of furniture for §1 per week. Louisville Election Board Hears the Estumates given on complete house furnish- Argument of Goebelites. | tng from cellar to garret. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 22—The Coun- | T ty Election Board convened this afternoon Y jig BR'LL'ANT, 338-340 POST ST., and took up the motion to throw out the whole vote of the city of Louisville. The Bet. Stockton and Powell) Opp. Unloa Square county vote for Governor was announced as follows: Taylor, 15,445; Goebel, 1,0 Free delivery Oakland, Alameda and Berke- ley. Open evenings. D Trom all over the United States ia | ERTEEE S PALACE s GRAND but fafl to prove con- in this wide world, BECAUSE It is actually a fact that the Latest Im- proved, Most Powerful ana in al respects the BEBT Electric Belt Is “DR. PIERCE'S,” and it sells at half e g N K the price asked for the other kind. JOHN C. KIRKPATRICK. Manager. ‘We keep right on manufacturing our e Patent Electric Belts and [russes | and curing people therewith by scores and hundreds in all pm:..e: (RS DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR the world. If you want tke you MUST have “Dr. Plerce’ A word to the wise .ufficlent. EF¥Come and see us at the office or send 2 cents in stamps for “BOOK- Strictures, Lost LET NO. 2. PIERCE ELECTRIC :'" ;ll"ll ll.o:.t: e ) CO., 620 Market streeot (opp. Palace -.‘ i Hotel), San Francisco. . MEDICS 0000000000000300000000