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CUBHHS AOTOIS NEW YEAR'S GREETING TO MR. AND MRS. McKINLEY oo el ime"" Brilliant Gathering of Foreign Embassadors and o o | American Officials at the Home of the et T o AT CIENFUEGLS Jew: year was ¥t procession princtpal B une played was L + P . s . B3 . Ps R4 .o B T S e S I R U SRR SRS SRS A Y =3 OVERLAND’S WILD RUN WITHOUT AN ENGINEER Train Goee Fifty Miles Before the Fireman Discovers That His AT THE PRESIDENT'S RE- C=PTION. @+ e e ASHINGTON, Jan. ‘1.—Beneath & =ky as bright as that above Cuba and in a wind 2s cold as pay _their respects to the President of the States after the brilliant -official on which ushered in the New Year the opening . of the social shington. ave béen larger crowds in the the White House New Year gath gs, but few functions of the sort h: nt erowds been better handled, with less confusion or less of femi and resentment for dain apged _ in- the DARING CRUISE IN TINY CRAFT ENDED loop Xora, Oaptain MecCord, With Two Men and a Boy for Crew, er feeble h Reaches San Diego. ue parior only throt S 1 tion_of the program Beginning at which time 33+ assed down the line. h e officlal sec- ring then, as flush of excitement on her usually pale the crystal chandeliers overhead, the twinkle of tiny electric globes through the | heavy of palms and foliage plants that w. the red-carpeted corridor made an excel- se perilous ad h f pre r ald, fu s m their bearings. Butte Dam Case Di ; | receiving ‘party was about to take its| B e masetrasty gl ’mssfd’ | stand. Mrs. MeKinley bowed and smiled T 3 Parkes o dogd ateial D | to the little crowd of favored spectators | filled the end of the corridor to wit- he opening act of the day’'s cere- As she turned into the Blue room ed the tips of ‘her white-gloved their hands to-her from a point of vantage near the door. the Su.| . The troublesome question of precedence | between the army and navy wis settled in biendti asisese - | ing the military contingent, with Adjutant Very Fast Torpedo Boat. | General Corbin at his left side. . After the RTLAND, passed ‘In- review, .- Admiral n. 1 —The tarpedo boat | army had ff & Zwicker - Iron | Villé on his arm, led the naval line. Mrs. worked perfectly | Dewey was with the receiving party and -two miles | of the Navy Long. current listof guests, was a ays the show feat- ure of the reception. Lord Pauncefote, ADVERTISEMENTS. corps, Jed the way. The display of uni- forms was brilllant, the Turkish-fez, the gilded orders of Continental powers, the fur-trimmed tunics and high polished boots of the Russians, the queer, sage- - he Jap- cen, gold encrusted uniforms of t ¥ ¥ s ; of the Korean and Chinese all com- E:"tm;?*:w s '-‘“da"y', On his % form & picvx:xx;e of unusual bril- depends thousands of ‘Tiyes, and millions of doliars iz property, cach day. In his baste he ruzs ot in the rain or the snow hatless and unprotected. Then eofres the scuel — broms- chitia, ‘or some | apreme Co tion to the general pub- inction. could hardly have found a day now that has grown a trifie grimy ng the past week was covered over with a fresh fall, scarcely an inch thick. The broad sweep of the White House drive had been quickly cleared of this, but the lawns were covered with the fresh, white mantle, and the bare black HeE dust. The sun was bright, but the air was crisp and frosty. At an early hour the streets beyond the White House grounds began to fil Surged back and forth, eager for a place in the public line that was to follow the reception of the various sections of the | day’s pageant w holly and other greens everywhere throughout the state dining-room, the blue, red and green parlors and the east room. The mantels were banked high and plants. The green of 1 relieved by scarlet poinsettia and other fowering plants. The light of the bril- liant winter day was excluded, and the rooms were flooded with electric lights from thousands of tiny bulbs in the cefl- ings and the sparkling chandeliers add- ing to the brilliancy of the decorations. The glittering gold_ and silver trappings of the members of the dipiomatic corps and the full-dress uniforms of the arm: |'and navy contrasted strongly with the | modest black of the jurists, statesmen | and civilfan officials of the Government as they moved through the mazy throng. | e President and Mrs. McKinley re- | ceived in the Blue parlor, assisted by the me to try a me rs of the Cabinet and their wives, -, hflnmmzfi friend advy and “behind the line”’ were about fifty of try Dr. Pierce! jor me. & medicines. your - Goide. the wives and daughters of Senators, Representatives, prominent army and navy officers and others high in the social and official circles. | The members of the Marine band, in {heir red uniforms, were stationed a the " . ead of corridor o) ite the state Dr. Piesce’s Pieasant Pellets regulate | dining-room, and thmu:r out the recep- tion pllfi'ed patriotic airs. The New Year's reception approaches et et et es et eiesea® the 'Arctic, more than 2000-citi- | zens stood in line at the White | House gates to-day, waiting to | and in none have the | DR R R R Y , the ceremony was | - was present in spite of | She rematned in the | bad been previously arranged. With the | face sh as she, | with the President. led the Cabinet pro- cession down the corridor to Blue room. The brilliant lights reflected from | draperies of smilax and the jungle al lent stage setting for the offictal proces- | sion as it moved down the stalrs and | — through to the Blue parior, where the | fingers to some -of the children who waved | favor of the former, General Miles lead- | ven a second bufld- | Dewey, with the venerable Admiral Mel- | run .hgi‘ escorted in on the arm of Secretary | The diplomatic corps, which headed the | the British Embassador and dean of the | and the ermine-trimmed silken | wing the American officials, Judges t, Senators and Rep- | tment chiefs and the | r if less striking pro- | of the whole winter calendar | ed for the New Year functions. | limbs of the trees were outlined in silver ! with the crowd that | The decorations of the Executive Man- | sion were not so elaborate as they have | been on some former occasions, still there | a profusion of palms, ferns, smilax, | 4 with foliage plants and the window re- | cesses were filled with tall, graceful palms | e foliage was | S Nation’s President. D+ e04000 604090000000 +009040+0+0+048-+@ Trust Conference, to be held in Central | nearer dresses were gal Promptl the assembly band struck up the Chiet.” ¢ procession, headed ley and Mrs broad stairway Blue Secretary. wife | Griges, Nirs. the 'Interior; Wilson, dau riculture, al tives Mrs, an, G the M1 Davis, rik: Millan, Miss -McMiilan, H. Platt; Mrs. T. D. Pl Miss Proctor, Mrs..0. field Proctor, el J. B Rixe: Jemes Sheridan, Lane Johnston, Manning, B. Dawes, Misses Sartoris, Buckingham, Mrs. Fabyan, Sargent, Mra: A. As: soon as all had taken their he doors of the Red parlor were thrown open and the Embassadors and Ministers of the foreign resplendent Lord - Pauncefote, the British Embassador, the dean of the dip- lomatic corps, moved into the Blue lor to pay thelr respects to thé President McKinley and their recelving suites, dre: and Mrs. party. The scene in the Blue parlor to-day has seldom been surpassed in the diplomats passed throu; gorgeous uniforms, | eldes. with and wife. dial. tary of t! ed especial attention, as hi: ?d in the terred G. The White House Entrance. South Front, to & court function than any other e socfal affairs of the President, and al programme, with its order of is rigidiy_edhered to, The Chinese in thelr green and purple, the apanese in gold and black and the diminutive Koreans, with their strange |M. L. Lockwood of Pennsylvania, chair- - offic headgear, attracted much attention. man of the committee, afterward issued | inet in the west cor- | foreign Embassadors and Ministers were e rited bekh Every day the antl-trust sentiment through- gecond ngnrh:ho:}tum:eéonun\m1 behind the line. ~Among those to | ,E¥4Y 487 the aBtitrum entor fea wad | in the state din- Red parlor. k the bugles sounded ne red-coated Marine strains of “‘Hail to | s accompaniment. the | President - McKin- 2y, moved down the 3 ook - places in’ the.| arlor, adjoining the..Red - parlor. | Mrs. McKinley. wore an. elaborate gown | of brocaded white satin. feeble health she received seated. to_her stood Mre. Hay, wife of the Sec- retary of State; Mrs. Gage, wife of the of the ' Treasury; the ' Becretary. the Attorney Bith, wife of the Postmaster. Gen- eral; Mrs. Long, wife of the Secretary-of hMrsfH;}lrhrot‘,k and ter of the Secreta: of - briliiantly: gown?d.ry » Behind the line gathered ladies of ‘the Cabinet, daughters. -of Senators and_ Representa- and other . distingulshed officials who had been invited to assist. Th. cluded the following: The Misses Hay, Griggs, thé Misses Long, the Misses Hitchoock, | Miss Grace McKinley, John Addison Porter, ‘Mrs. L. A. Bing- Mrs. David J. Hill, | Justices. of the Supreme Court and other | of special pri Owing -to. her | the District judiciary appeared in the | as they meet the energetic competitive capacity | The latter, however, gave way. as they | approached the recetving line, ana General | Mi . 'Mrs. White, Miss Brewer, sses Wood, Mrs. Shiras, M; Mrs, McKenna, the Misses McKen: bery, Mrs, Plerce. M.A. Hanna. Mrs. J M. Cullom, . M Fisher, | the venerable Rear Admiral | famous Arctic explorer. They were fol- | the whites and took command after |lowed by Rear Admirals Hichborn and | Leschi, his. colleague, was captured and i B AL . | Bradford and some of the fighting heroes, | hanged. He was a large powerful man Ridgley, Miss Ridgley, Mrs. James M- | I latt, Mrs, Red: Miss Campbell, Foraker, Mrs. ‘Wil B. Henderson, ‘Foraker, the Mids ifam B, Bate, Mrs. D. | serves. Professor Alexander Graham Bell | ing machine fame led the Regen © | Smithsonian Institution, who were fol- the Misses 'Sheridan, Mies Kennedy, Mrs. Daniel Mrs, Charles G, Dawes, Mrs. Harriet | Kinley withdrew, the ordeal being a try- the streams of Marin so that many of | ing one for her. | in which the country has engaged. - NEW ADVE MENTS tss Phelps, Miss i o s foihisim H. Matthews. Governments ! v about 200 fn number. . with their gold and sflver eourt swords dangling from their Especially gorgeous were the Rus- slan Embassador and his sulte, old brald; the Germ: s ataches in their w] and the Austrian sable-trimmed cape of purple. al interest centered in the ap- rance of the Duke d’Arcos, the Spanish inister, ! It was the first White House recep- | tion at which Spain has been represented since the close of hostilities and the great- ings accorded them were especially cor- C. N. BE. Eliott, second secre- tish Embassy, also recefv- s name appear- Sul of honors con- a as K. tals, in their brigh te and silver. Embassador in his ‘during the day, being assisted by the mavy and Mre'Dewey received a largs need a pure and sure stimulant. Take n T officers. Eincre s St it Bl | S SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1900 LIFE LOST IN NEW YORK' FIRE He oic Rescue Work Done by Bellboy. NEW YORK, Jan. 2.—Thres alarms were sent in for a fire in a five-story-flat house, 754 First avenue, early this (Tues- day) morning. The flames, which sud- denly beiched from the building, were S99 0-0-0+ 00 0+2@ discovered by men working in the| { United Dressed Beef Company's plant. | They carried out half a dozen women, | while many persons got to the street by means of fire escapes. The suddenness of the fire cut off the escape of some of the tenants. On the top floor six-months-old Loretta Lennert | | was found in bed dead. She had been smothered by the smoke.. The child's | | father, Edward Lennert, a butcher, was taken to the Flower Hospital burned about the hands and face. The chiids| mother, Margaret, was carried down a | ladder and taken to Bellevue Hospital | suffering from the shock. | Joseph Lennert, brother of the dead| child, jumped from a window to ome of | the lower floors. He was seriously in-| $ ‘jli\re]d and was taken to Bellevus Hos- pital. @/ Jnsth Kelleher, 13 years old, a bell boy, | . rushed into the bullding before the arrival ? | of the firemen. He rescued Lillle Powers, | | e e S SR SRS 4 | a child, carrying her through the fire and 4 |'smoke.’ He was burned about the hands & | and face and was taken to Bellevue. Hos- pital. 4 | _Robert Lowe, aged 1S, a companion of Pauline Tichman, 63 years of age, who 4 | boarded with a family on the first floor, ¢ | jumped from her window. Her back was lrlnjulred. She was taken to Flower Hos- pital. +| Wild rumors got around from minuts to | minute of missing persons, but each in | turn turned up. At 2:35 the fire was out ¢ | and everybody had been accounted for, & | The house was gutted, entalling a loss of o $30,000. Ten familles were made home- | Tess. tnstance of a refusal on the part of a| steamship company to deport jmmigrants | found by the United:States Immigration | Bureau to be contract laborers, occurred | | here to-day. About two weeks ago Im- | %' migration Inspector Levy brought fifteen | | Slavonians here from Mississippl, charged | 4 | with having been brought gere on + | German Lioyd ship in violation of {mmi- rants were issued for S. G. Spencer, a, ¢ | on the captain, but Spencer was arrested. Spencer claimed the men had not been ¢ | tendered to jim, and if they wers tend- @ ered to the ship without tickets from hi + | office, tne purser was obliged to decline | to receive them. | Inspector Levy says the men were tend + | ered to the company on December 13 by the @ | cepted them and assumed responsibility 4 | for their board. It is understood that the immigration & | bureau has information of some 1500 al- o |leged contract laborers, which it purposes to deport and that the steamship com- # | panies intend to resist the orders. Most 4 | of these tmmigrants came through Balti- ¢ | more and many through New York. Un- der the act of 1861 the penalty for not re- 4 | turning contract laborers is a fine of not & | less than $300 in each case, and the clear- | ance of vessels may be withheld pending 4 | payment of the fins. L4 $ WILL STRIKE A BLOW + AT THE TRUST EVIL 4| ¢ | Chairman Lockwood Outlines the 4 | Aims of the Conference to Be :» Held in Chicago. * CHICAGO, Jan. 1L.—Members of the ex- | ecutive committes of the National Antl-i | Music Hall on February 12, held a short | | conferenca to-day at the Sherman House. | Several of the wives and daughters of | a statement in which he said: whom this honor was accorded wers Lady | ou is going up: ‘W) and the Misses Pauncefote, Madamolselle | po Bono iy save The Covntrs from the mepes | Cassini and - Madame HenfeI-Muller. sion of the trustsT' The mission of the con- | After leaving the receiving parlor the | ference is to answer this cry. To the political | diplomats passed on into the east room, | economists and statesmen of the conference, | where they lingered until jolned by the | rather than to the politicians, will the people | other -distinguished callers. | look for utterance which lead to their deltver- Following the diplomatic cor came | ance. Chiet Justice Fuller. and the Associnte | The ax shou Dbe lald to the root of the tree causes - rather than the effect, to strike at| members of.the Judiclary, former mem- | (S00h Tiliages hardest and ‘first. In gov- | bers of the Cabinet, including: ex-Secre- Gary. . ; porate ownership has proved a fallure. In or At 11:25 the S'enqtor!, Representatives | for o destroy the trusts we must take from and: delegates of Congress, members of | them the special advantages which have created the. District government and members of | them and they will wither of their own weight | order named. The number. of Senators | of the. American people. and . Representatives who attended - was | It ls the plan to organize all who are op- unusually smail. | posed to trusts. with the view of uniting the Following “this flight of statesmen and | friends of freedom in every State, county and eivil oficials came the officers of the nrmv‘ school dls(fl.(‘l. unti]l that concentrated action and:-navy in . their - full-dress- uniforms, | ' reached which alone can prove effective. massive golden epaulets and - gold-em- Dt dn smoe,vite | FAMOUS INDIA CHIEF PASSES AWAY General Miles, who headed the line, was TACOMA, Jan. 1.—The most famous In- accompanied by Adjutant General Corbin. | es first greeted the President and Mrs. | MeKinley. | dian chief of Washington passed away | The line of naval officers which fol- | Saturday night when “0ld" Sigo died at lowsd, headed by Admiral Dewey, was | Por: Washington. He was 166 years of mu an at of e army. e admiral's small, well-knit figure was in | G5c;havios béen & contemporkry of Chiet striking contrast to the largs frama of | Seattle. During the Indlan wars in the imvms, the | '50's he led a large body of Indians against among whom were “Fighting Bob” Ev- | and ruled. with an iron hand until the ans, Captain Sigsbee, Lieutenant Com- | authority of the Indlan agents superseded | his. For several years he has been blind | mander Wainwright and Lieutenant Haes. er. and unable to stand, finally dying of The line of naval officers was followed | senflity. To his sagacity is largely due by Brigadler General Heywood, command- | the fact that the Western Washington | | er of the Marine Corps, and all of the | Indian reservations comprise the chojcest | officers of the corps now in and around | land in the State. Sigo was buried to- Washington. Then came the officers of | day. the District militla and the Naval Re- Ay e Narrowly Escaped Drowning. SAN RAFAEL, Jan. 1.—Virgilio Garcla, and Protessor Samuel P. Langley of fly- s of the ments, assistant secretaries, chiefs of bu- | two-horse team to-day and lost one horse reaus, heads of bureaus, etc. | by drowning, narrowly escaping with his When this point was reached Mrs. Me- | life. The late heavy rains have swollen them are dangerous to ford. Following came the veterans of the wars cedence was given to the few remaining véterans of the Mexican war. Those of lhe‘ cl\":lu Will‘l‘lnflude(d ‘the ‘?l;&nd Ar}-ny A N .I posts, al Legion, Union Veterans' Le- D oncand Chton Votsrans, Then came s erve builder veterans of the Spanish-American war, It is said that a ure stimulant is rd to find. Not at all. All the world knows that The ‘““Oldest Inhabitant Association” of the District of Columbia was the last or- ganization In line. The general public was then admitted, and for an hour and a half a constant stream of humanity flowed through the ‘White House Fnfll s. Meantime practi- cally all the distingushed callers had de- }:mrted and many of the ladies in recefv- ng had left. At 1:15 the last of the publie passed through the parlors. In all 585 persons attended the reception. 9, Duify’s Pare The Secretary of State and Mrs. Hay Mait Whiskey entertained the members of the diplow IO matic corps at breakfast at noon at their | is absolutely pure. Made expressly for handsome residence on Lafayetts edicinal oo ! Mont OF the wives and nsar. !relit'l?/::r:i use. - No fusel oil. Over 7,000 m the several Cabinet officers were recaiving | |2ading physicians prescribe it. wives of those officials of high rank in When the nerves are unstrung, the bod the various departments. Mrs. Gage had | weakened, the energies relaxed, when th with her Mrs. Cassini, niece of th . <bgrens Sion Bbassador. . Tha " admizal of s | 02d.cold has a strong hold upon you, yo | Kelleher, who also went into the burning | | building, was burned about the hands. | i NMNg DRY GOODS COMPANY. LINGERIE (SECOND FLOOR REDUCTION CLEARANCE SALE. Ladies’ Underwear IN 0DD SIZES AND BROXEN LINES. COMMENCING TUESDAY. LADIES’ DRAWERS—Odd sizes, formerly sold at $1, $r.25 and $r.50. During the sale will be. ....30¢, T5c and $1 Each LADIES’ CHEMISE—Broken lines, always sold at 31._31 25 and $1.50. Are now selling at. vireeeB0c, TS5c and 81 Each LADIES’ GOWNS—Various styles, sold generally at $1, $1.25 and $1.75. Wiil be changed to.. % 50c, T5¢ and $1 Each LADIES’ CORSET COVERS—Different shapes, regularly $1, $1.25 and g1.50. Will be cleared out at.... ...50¢, T3¢ and 81 Each LADIES’ SKIRTS—In varlous shapes and plain and fancy styles. Will b closed out at.. .T5c, $1, $1.25 and $1.50 Each COUNTRY ORDERS STRICTLY ATTENDED TO. CITY OF PARIS DRY GOODS COMPANY, ” SE. Corner Geary and Stockton Streets, San Francisco. NEWPORT NEWS, Va., Jan storfes sent out from Washington inti- mating that negotiations were on foot looking to the sale of the shipyard hers . to the Government wers wholly without Budapest to the Berliner Tageblatt foundation. G. E. Miles, the magnate’s | gration laws. To-day he tendered them to | private secretary, speaking for Mr. Hunt- ® | the captaln of the steamship Roland of | ington, to-day denied the report, branding ¢ | that line and they were refused. War- | gg ridiculous, This rumor, which has en ~ © | of the company. and for the captain. The | beoh, started before, was doud: ¢ . ship salled without gervice of the warrant | niombers of which are on the Naval Com- Tittees of the Senate and House. Some| SANTA ROSA, Jan. {ime-ago when it was reported that Mr. | Ulrich Hungerb on contemplated disposin B S aiTal Tny ha sl Abut 1€ he | unsher:of - XAgw ver saw fit to sell his yard the United States Government ought to be the pur-| chaser. o ! | collector of customs and the company ac- | w{:u‘:irbl; "fi:‘:‘?m‘ohr'!_l !n;‘;":u%' e come news to the local public, as every | fered and cau | one realizes that should the shipyard pass | engagement into the hands of the Government only | upon his mind Warships would be built here, and the | cide by some m main support of the city would not be the . | fmportant_plant that it is to-day, owned by ol g olined to talk on| SIOUX CITY, lowa, Jan. L—James J. trusts when the subject was broached to- | Hill to-day acquired the Sioux Clty and duy. This afternoon Be addressed the sti- | Northern and the Sioux City and West- dents at ampton ormi ' | ern raflr . The proparties h where many colored young men and wom oads. The properties ORIy St LB Ty My arty wil e sday or Thursday, Mrs. Hunting- | has been designa ton and B, B. Miles, are with the magnate. Mr. S | B o’ Gastetsog Thiaven Sioms UNIVERSITY FARMERS’ | 10 Yankton as & branch. and that About One Hundred and Fifty Dele- | PASADENA, Jan, L—This afternoon the | University Farmers’ Club convention opened {n the Auditorfum Hall with about | 150 delegates present trom all sections of Southern California. The convention is being conducted by of Pomona College. the Sentative in Southern convention will close January & President C. A. R e Tmome. Conductor C | Felcome i o general way the benefits | i8 thought they threw a. 1 to be derived from organization and meet- e 1 es. ing once a year. Eos. ane plan 1s to treat the | 1€ O ve marketing and co-operative in- surance and transportation as the best b esults to H o > | ernment ownershi; only can railway favoritism | means of securing the best resul { tary “Foster- and:: ex-Postmaster -General| Srmelt SWRersys ol Con i nY rader aae | B it. The follgwing committees were appoint- | ed: X topics; Professor 5.’ M. Woodberge, on | Sprague, on resolutions. BLOWN TO DEATH Horrible Accident Occurring to Ben- OROVILLE, Jan. L.—Benjamin F. Cran- dall, a miner, aged 27 years and a native of Enterprise, Butte County, was blown to death by glant powder yesterday after- noon at 4 o’clock. He was working in the Bloomer Hill mine, sixteen miles above * Oroville, when he attemgt»d to thaw out some glant powder in a He was alone in the shop, but his felluow- Workmen heard an explosion and running | to the spot found the forge blown to pieces and Crandall in a dying condition alongsids of it. He was unabie to speak and died In thirty minutes after the ac- cident. He left a widow and five young children. AUDITOR OF IOWA a rancher living near Cazadero, tried to | lowed by the heads of the various depart- | ford Austin Creek, near Cazadero, with a | Frank F. Merriam, Visiting the _‘'ludyan cures Coast on a Business Trip, Said Sy s. Miles, wi chances. Use Duffy's Pure Malt Whiske: the commanding general of the ;n: {gw:.: - ; assisted by the wives of a numgflr of Government stamp marks the Druggists usuall 1l ie, I 3 T T T B IR other mem iatior T, ’ :: the fix‘mmeuiuurl. received at their | DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO., Rochester, N. Y. number of callers. Buchanan, who was in Denver a of her husband's death, arrived yester- day. Although the deceased was a lead- ‘ Wl'lfllfs IIlfllflll Vfififllai)le Plns Get the Newport News Plant Are Denied. The Marie Christine. Special Cable to The Cail and Herald. Copyright, 1500, b UNION SQUARE. ;_REFUSE TO DEPORT Wvasossonnssomsoss By rreroere | . CONTRACT LABORERS T R b HUNTINGTON NOT TO ; ;.‘Am'é;:n:l: m;;mgzésfi:ed by[ SELL HIS SHIPYARD ;“;: Frankfort, Ky.. years of age bl GAL\'ESTOS.OTT:Zfsisn. 1.—The flrs(g Rumors That the Government Is to mm'fir’xTN WED. ! L 4 . nounces the engagen e s colored v, four HUNGERBUHLER ENDED LIFE. buhler was to have been married t but in a let*er written befors his de asserted that certal d the Dreaki believed Hill Buys Two Railroads. turned over to the Wi Indians are being remain here until dent James N. Huntington, besides Mr. | quired lines. Fres name of the eorporation will be changed CLliB_ CONVENTION to correspond with the expansion of the pmmmfllmdflu for burning. State in Attendance. ment, Sanborn, Vail on the lower floor by J. fom as ‘s saloon, was 1 1o%8ay of the Pasadens | The fire is sald to have been b Sb “elivered the address of | the carelessness of two y ook, in dealing with | 9ecupled a room on the ‘alif cau papers and He urged taking up co- .{mg."cnmm of the Azusa Club sald there should be & club organ among the | papers which should thoroughly represent HUN RED the farmers in genera.l and farmers' clubs all of Southern C: ‘A strong paper was read by Mrs. M. D OF Withington of the Escondido Club on ifornia in particular. It should be an authority for the utterances of the clubs. ature Studies in Our Schools for In- struction in Horticulture.” ~She sald pu- pils should be shown plants, insects and Scale in order that they might tell how they grow, etc. They should be given a hall-hour to see & given thing and to study it and then a half-hour to describe to say re! Sessions, chalrman, on eclub oy s stions; D. C. Smith on club organ; A. | BY GIANT POWDER jamin F. Crandall, a Native of Enterprise. nul“"l(!-fl Hud: lacksmith forge. Rollow eyes (7), pale, wan sations (5), oppressed rt (3), path in back women wh Hudyan aff VERY ILL IN THIS CITY mucuous or irregular p es permanent health. Hudyan to Have Typhoid. DES MOINES, Iowa, Jan. 2—Frank . GET HUDYAN From your arussist o a Merriam, State Auditor of Towa, is dan- E gerously fll at San Francisco, and fears B entertained for his recovery. He ton. Waskee stn left Towa ten days A?O on a business trip (ADVISORY DEPARTM to the coast and be 3 Francisco was taken {ll. He. is said to CO;‘S('LT HUDYAN DOCTORS. CALL OR be suffering from typhoid fever. WRITE. REMED' ore arriving in San FREE.) NOTED PSYCHOLOGIST DEAD. saiien | DR. CROSSMA&’S Said to Have Been Originator of the | Science. | SPECIFIC MIXTURE, SAN JOSE, Jan. 1—The body of Dr. P 2 Joseph Rhodes Buchanan, B CURE OF GONORRHOEA, psychologlst, who dfed in t ago, was cremated at Cypress Lawn | Price 31 a bottle. For sale by druggists Cemetery, San Franelsco, to-day. e the noted | Gleets, Strictures and analogous city a week | 3'-":t8 of the Organs of C-:neration. Mrs. | — SR NG S G G GGG OGS GG LSS Alexander Betrothed to Archduchess New York ames Gor- Jan. L—A aispatch from found dead yesterday near his home, oc- curred here this afternoon. Mr. Hunger- ey, n persons had inter- off of the i is preyed 14 that he committed sul- e Deen mar and Bioux and Vice Presi- Hill of the latter company Pyrography outfits, skins and a great number of new gs in wood and leather rtigts’ material depart & Co., 741 Market st. ————— Building Totally Destroyed by Fire. The alarm from box 34, shortly befors midnight last evening, was for a fire at the northeast corner of Hermann and Va- J. Cook | lencia streets. A two-story frame bufld- e eiveraity repre ing. owned by E. L. Rees¢ and occupled Ci ornia. e W Wi y destroyed es- could not be ascer- Have written thae Hudyan gas them strength and perfect from W &k nesses natural to theirsex Stace Hudyan tell about it ations or inflam. ge _ (leuccrrhoe ckage, stz packages for Soes mot Resp 1. vend o the time ht among Spiritualists, no services in, - g e Were held over the remains and no dele RE ACKNOWLEDGED BY .HOUSANDS {auon escorted the remains to the crema- ory. O TIFATION 1. - Dr. Buchanan was the author of over 100 | gch, Pimpies and’ "“L“"r Weak Stome of persons who bave used HEADACHE, amh'm pus