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o THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1900 COLONEL MAZUMA’S MONTANA OPERATIONS Sack Used in the élark Senatorial Contest Appears to Have Been Bottomless. offer of $20000 had been accepted. The witn id that he was now the pro- prietor of the Florence Hotel at Bu and amination was is ow witne Mr. Hennessey, r or not Daly at his here were before the | the s hotel T was the patronage among the miners of da mine, and counsel brought 1 sefore the s had been the ss who was & ently He was that he had all to occupy ne her for . the Brown block, that he had re- of the room and s convers between A. J. Repre: ives Gillette and enatorial_election. he had not re- had heard no & tuly Tye" He sald he room and had agher occupled 1 or heard no one g the eclared that the closet and 1y o q gher take while ditor Poindexter testified that le had promised to give him vote of the three > from Beaver- Poindexter) to but that he Clark’s election e them for him only others acting in the capacity was one of the members who but also other circum- up to this episode. He = 1 first been approached as Senator by Dr. S. W. M. Bickford, and his lark requested. He had been men that if he would agree lark the latter would appoint tion with h tter from C. W. Y written from , 1888, This letter In it Clark stated ded to Dr. Minchall ainer for his services in the mine. had afterward asked ter before the joint t he had agreed to White- T accept $10,000 from )se of expos- rts at brib- eceived the r saying to go to see tter, he said, had m first to vote for the State until after over the Senatorial race lastly, to sign a state- 1g his connection with the ex- adicting his own testi- legisiative commi E had asked him if there inducement or d secure his hat there that Mark 000 to ve and he ssent, Hewitt had of- | E e for Clark, saying Clark had authorized him to oposition. The latter had told he could put up $10,000 ide. to be paid to him in case for Clark. ast witness of the red arley im v was Henry member of the Legislature . Montana. He is the Legislature in name money was turned over to 3 vestigating cammittee by only one of them who 1 voted for ( t ark for the S c with iteside had | f his and he had Whites: ad his him teside cation ntajning $5000 in $1000 bills brought to him a 8 ring the session of the last winter. He had no rea- 1 for doing this except his confidence Whiteside and the additional fact that himself was an ‘“egregious ass.” He | however, put his initials on the en- | e exhibited yest ' to the com- e as the one 5o marked. He declared Whiteside had never sald anything bout voting for Clark and that kept his promise to Conrad's rad as long as he ion. He pronounced | e report that he had told | F. Smith that he was to vote | Clark and receive $8000 for so doing. & felena du well. One of the men concerned In rwlvmlr\' was sentenced to {nurleen} = Imprisonment rly in 1863 Luigl's lavish expenditures wakened suspicion that hrwap v st life . and Signor Cri pl was made painfully aware that of his son's fu;wds was the sale of ers to the enemies of the tatesman. Some of these wera made use ;Arvn rvj;\»prvrl ;(‘IAnxd:slous charges against ispl. Young Lulgi was locke | house of correction PRI P »on source SENT TO PRISON Stole Jewelry From the oyhen the Countess Cellere accused Lulgl he retorted with a charge of black- Countess Cellere. malling. TUltimately s as fered as an excuse for him. 1 Va8 Of- PP CE— ROME, Jan. 1 uigi Crispl, son of Bignor Francisco Crispl, the distinguished and former AGED WOMM LEFT DESTITUTE Threatened With Evic- . tion From Her Shanty. med n —_—— Epeclal Dispatch to The Call. ed to four y the theft of Argentina of theft was bro s father used his ught st cwe ed th he } How Luigl Crispi d the induced the Cou whose intimate friend he was, to e ;r’\il.:frv’(:““(;»\{:mr?l SAUBALITO, Jan. 12—The alleged vic- e tim of schemers and deserted by husband m the prete: r wished o s 3 y were in ber suaded her to go to F and children, Mrs. Campbell, an aged woman of this town, is vainly seeking for 2id and counsel. The property which was hers she clalms t a woul e them. Whil partments he pe: cati, h com plices meanwhile secreting themselves in the apartment. This having been done, | Das vanished and now her divorced hus. Le took the Countess home and left her | band threatens her with eviction from at midnight, after an u ally tender | the miscrable shanty in which she Is lfy. That is Well Spoken ing. Although she has five children, their ‘ affections are, she claims, alienated and from them she can hope for nothing. About 158 John and Catherine Camp- :glpxmua:mndmérc‘e‘? lAv. the time of their 3 iy . Catherine ow That is Well Taken. homestead, but owing to a micial sl —_— making out the deed, John was named as co-owner. When the two parted Cap- Let every sufferer from catarrh fake | tain McKenzie was appointed | Buardian of this as a personzl recommendation from ihe children Mrs Campbell claims that e Doughérty of Helena proved to | € | Senator Myers was the next wit- ark for Senator. | the place of his | constderation | BRAVERY SHOWIN BY Some Qeie 00560666000 de@ @ | * : | | L o e an C o ] $ g : ® b @ + P * @ : * P + @ 1 g % Qo006 0pe0edebededed o EW YORK, Jan. 12.—Mail advices just received from London state that the British war correspond- are pouring in through the’! columns of descriptions of South Africa. Those recent- refer chiefly to the battles of 1d Modder River, for it is yet v for the publication of fuller ac- »f Buller's defeat at Colenso. The operations in § Iy printes s Pan correspondent at Modder River | has written a graphic account of the fierce battle that takes its name from that river. “For the whole of the * he writes, “the Guards brigade lay on the open veldt in a heat that was act- y 110 degrees in the shade at midday. le the left flank had not been idle and after the general had lly led them the summit of a slig e that com- manded the only possible means of cross- D i SRR S o o ] Incide There is no square rood within this ex- tinct paradise that does not bear wit- ness of the fec-iul effect of modern weapons." The conduct of the marine naval brigade at Gras Pan Is a source of un- ending praise from all correspondents. The Times' representative at that” battle writes: “The naval brigade advanced in extended order, but then converging upon ing the river—the dam that had been buflt te turn the Modder River into an orna- | mental water for the pic of Kimberley excursionists—they moved in echelon to- ward the edge of the river bank on the enemy's extreme left “That 1t jould even be attempted to cross the river sliding sideways through the rush of water over the paddles of a rickety iron bar, one by one clinging to the short supports in full view of the opposite | | shores, was an act of reckless heroism | against which even the wary Cronje ha® not provided. This, however, is what was actually done, and it would be difficult | to find a parallel of the stubborn pluck of the men who accompanied Colonel Barter across the 300 yards of dam and weir. One | by one some 400 of them crossed. Then a | detachment of the Royal Engineers, show- | ing how well they could take their part in the forefront of the fighting line, followed them; after that some more of the York- shire Infantry. Little by little the force was collected which cleared several of | the nearest houses on the right and ef- fected an occupation of an irrigation path from which they were never dislodged To fight for thirteen hourt Is an ordeal |} that in ordinary warfare would be a| terrible strain, but on the treeless, shade- | less veldt, with the thermometer at the degree above mentioned, the exhaustion | suffered by our men was so great that in hundreds of officers alike slept as they lay in the scrub, care-{ Jess of the shell and rifle fire that surged over them. To provide them food impossible; to bring a water-cart on the field, as the Coldstream Guards found by bitter experience, was only tempting men | to expose themselves to death, rushing for the water at ail hazards and leaving | the cover, such as it was, afforded by the nine or ten inch growth of mimos: scrub, “Early in the afternoon the general was shot through the thigh, and for some time | the two brigades, in the absence of orders, | were compelled to act Independently of | each other, the only communication being | a warning to the Ninth Brigade not to | fire upon the First, of which there was | some danger. “The magnificent manner in which the Boers had realized and augmented the | strength of the position, the success with which they had kept their works and dis- position secret until the cruclal moment, | the feint by which they drew off the entirs artillery strength of our force from their main position, and the astonishing accuracy of their pickad shots at the longest ranges should a!l be | remembered to the credit of their gener- | als. But it was In the material which | formed the commando that they falled. They could do no more than they actually did with the men under their command. Already jealousies had sprung up between the generals, the men accused each other of cowardice and the threat of physical force had, If rumors were true, to be held over them more than once. “The one-pounder Maxim gun was the most effective weapon used by the Boers. The five and six pound shots fired in one second while the gun was traversed had more moral effect than the steady dis- charge of shrapnel of the ordinary fiftecn- pounder at half-minute Intervals. One man not far from me had both thighs blown off as he sat by one of these little shells landing on the ground between them, but there is no question that the moral effect was, as a rule, greater than the practical results. No gun was more cordially disltked by our men than, this new weapon, that was usually christenel ‘Bong-bong-bong,’ the patent of which in 1802 was offered to and declined by our Government."” Of the lessons to be learped from Mod- der River this correspondent says: *It would be impossiblein any future war for the officers to retain their swords, and it will be worth while for the War Ofiice to construct some light carbine that may be carried by them, instead of the welghty rifle served out to the men.” The scene after the battle 18 thus de- scribed by the same writer: “Most people who have stayed at Kim- berley know of Modder River as a crea- tion, only thinking of it, in fact, much as London regards Maidenhead. Never has it been anything but a frivolous littie patch in the heart of the veldt. The pun. ishment for its giddiness has been sudden and extraordinary. The place is deserted, the walls and roofs are perforated like a colander;; the -water, churned and be- fouled by 10,50 animals, rolls over =and over the dead that were hurriedly thrown into its eddying hollows with a weight at- tached, that has in many cases proved in- sufficient. The bridge lies on its ruined piers a twisted length of scrapiron, and a | during his guardianship he, unknown to the ¢ ands who have beeri cured of | her, sold the property to Dorcas Camp- ; hous | bell, her divorced husband’s sister. The this disease by Hood's Sarsaparilla. It :)l‘d“:\i'rmm;“sny:h(hnl she knew nothing 2 | of s until a short ti eradicates the cause of the disease, and at | g0Ing o pay her taxes, she :n;n:fin'm{:: the same time socthes and rebuilds the iri- | Der few acres had vanished. When Lhe ime and rebuilds the i | ncara the truth she Bimost: wear out of tated and inflamed membranes. | Ber mind. Her enemies claim that since ” 5 | then she has not been right and t| Catarrh—*My throat was in such a | statements are 1rresponhsfi>re, s g 3 e Woman seems to t condition with catarrh that 1 could hardly | and the terrible state otfi);:e‘ri;a{o"v‘?}:‘ngck . she is reduced is proven by her ragg. swallows and had no appetite. 1 found | garments ana squatia surrowniiags S6°0 Hood's Sarsaparilla an excellent remedy, | _When scen ip:night Captain McKenzte lood % cd that Mrs. Campbell is not and now have a good appetite.” Ella J. He says that he sold the estate to satisty : se lawyers' claims and what remains h White, Ennis, Texas. has in trust until the youngest boy be- fi:me‘i;twng:, )sle adds ;ihll 'l;n'e will feel en his ardiansi is over. The children are all Tairly weil to do. " " T Dr. Parker's Cough Cure. One dose will stop & cough. Never falls. Try it. All druggists, the dead horses fill every nook in the riv- erside woods. “The chapel, with 1is little wooden cross, near the river, stood in the thick of the fight, and now lies a crumbling mass of adobe walls, with its shattered earthen a.ir and most of its nesta.] | open formation and the B o e e S S S S S A + as Colesberg, from which the Boers retired and he reported its capture. The © appearance of the enemy on the hill overlooking the town deterred him ¢ Tfrom entering it, however; and the two forces have since been maneuvering & In its vicinity, with frequent skirmishes, and the loss to the British a few J days ago of over a hundred officers and men of the Suffolk Regiment, includ- ing its commander, Lieutenant Colonel Watson, who was mortally wounded 9 in a surprise attack which he had planned. * Queenstown, General Gatacre's base, lles on the Eastern railroad line, 4 running from East London to the Orange River. To the northwest of the town les Stormberg Pass and near it Stormberg Junction, where the British made the disastrous attempt to surprise the Boers on December 10 last which resulted in the loss of nearly 700 men. B+ 400000+ 0+00043 404040400000 0000+0 the position to be taken they uncon- sciously found themselves closed in and f1 that formation attempted the ascent. ‘Phe fire directed upon them was terrible, d, distipguished by their swords, the offjcers were first to fall. Colonel Ethel- stan was mortally wounded fifty yards from the first slope, and one by one the rest fell as they advanced, many with two or three bullet wounds. The slaugh- ter was appalling to watch; the gal- lantry displayed was useless under the pitiless iron hail that was but slightly checked by the redoubled shelling of the reinforced battery. With a cheer the Yorkshire men—by a curious coincidence they had been convoyed from Mauritius by the very men to whose help they now came—advanced under a tremendous fusillade toward the crest of the Sangar. Of course sy lost heavily, but their impossibllity of distinguishing officers, saved them from the concentrated fire that had deprived the naval detachment of their leaders, and little by little the thin line of khaki crawled up to the top. “The storming line was now so near the crest that the guns could only be directed upon the Boers enfllading the position from the spurs of the kopje on the left. Lieutenant S. C. Taylor, closely followed by Lieutenant Jones of the Ma- rines, reached the outer works of the Sangar and made their way over. In the next half-minute fifty men tumbled over and immediately rushed over to clear the position In the rear. This was, however, held for a quarter of an hour more, perhaps as a screen more than anything else to cover the retreat of the Boers. Above, the hilltop was al- most dripping with blood; not a bowlder escaped its splash of crimson, and the innumerable splinters and chips of iron stone blocks indicated the terrific nature of our fire. Most of the dead or wound- ed Boers were carried off—the more se- verely injured were found in their hos- pital, a quarter of a mile away—but here and there a dead man proved that here the Transvaal had sent its men down for the first time to meet the oncoming col- umn.” LI £ DENOUNCES THE GREED AND RAPACITY OF BRITONS HARTFORD, Conn., Jan. 12.—Professor Arthur M. Wheeler of Yale University spoke in denunciation of the attitude of the British in South Africa toward the Boers in a lecture given to-night in the South School Hall. His subject was “England and the Transvaal.” He said that whatever be the result of the pres- ent contest, the British must lose in the end. Living on the islands and sur- | rounded by an almost {mpassable wali, the English go through the world as if there was nobody else in existence. The Dutch element was pre- dominant when the English took posses- slon of what Is now Cape Colony. The Boers were forced back lrito the interfor. The Boers cultivated the soil and estab- lished institutions, but the English came In and took the fruits of their labor. One of the grievances of the English against the Boers is that the latter will not live under British rule, which is an unpardon- able sin in England. He sharply criti- cized the manner in which the English ob- talned possession of the Kimberley dia- mond fields, and attributed all her Inter- ference in the Transvaal and Orange Free State affairs to greed and rapacity. Other clalms made by the English were only excuses. DISSATISFIED WITH ENGLAND’S LONG DELAY BERLIN, Jan. 12.—There is still great dissatisfaction in Germany at Great Brit- ain’s long delay in releasing the Bundes- rath and in sending a formal answer to Germany's &rolel'. A high officlal at the Foreign Office VIEWS IN NORTHERN CAPE COLONY. This is the sectlon in which Generals French and Gatacre are operating. ® The tormer on the Midland railroad line had ten days ago advanced as far THE BRITISH SOLDIERS Thrilling Battles of Gras Pan and Modder River. nts of the volced the foregoing sentiment when ques- tioned on the subject to-day, adding: “Ap- parently the Loudon Government tried to expedite matters, but the Durban authorities are unduly slow, seeming to be determined to open the last box of the Bundesrath’s cargo in order to avoid an admission of error.” The Fleet Soclety continues to agitate vigorously in favor of the naval bill. Its \ /;:ZOLESSURG €.C. LV HERE GEN. FRENCH BASE. LOOKING TOWARD STORMBERG PASS. latest pamphiet, issued to-day, deals with ““‘American Naval Regeneration,” praising the energy shown and admiring the man- ner in which “this joyous, vigorous and lvely nation plants the banner In every nook of the globe.' The war in South Africa continues to be a subject of elaborate comment in the German press. The Militair Wochenblatt, the military organ, declares its expecta- tion that Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchen- er, having arrived at the Cape, things will henceforth “‘mend for the British.” The German diamond industry is being seriously (n‘lured by the war. In Hanau four large diamond-cutting establishmen have been closed. ¥ e MANY LIVES LOST IN THE BLINDING STORM ‘DE!\'VER, Jan. 12.—A special to the News from Alamogordo, N. M., says: De- talls of the blizzard which swept over Soulhv,veslern New Mexico on Tuesday and Wednesday are just coming in, and they indicate that it was the severest storm ever experienced in the region. A stretch of territory fifty miles in width, with White Oaks and Nogales for the cen. ter, seemedl to suffer the most, although the severity of the storm was fully felt throughout the Sacramento Mountain re- glon. The velocity of the wind was terri- ble: all roads and trails were obliterated, gfln‘fl ;P;vglm-m:( snow made it impossibia ers to Lov. see thelr way In the When the storm abated wagor had been abandoned were mfin?:”s?fl‘fifl all over the section. Several fatalities are reported, including the driver of the White Oaks-Lincoln stage. It is fearcd that many sheepherders have lost their :hr']e.‘k T}:‘n:zs?mls of head of stock per- shed, and it is believed that th % ngAgrequée $500,000. 8 ety n old prospector found dead at th. Bead of Cox Canyon, in the Sacramento Mountalns, has been identified as John Voss. Between Carrizozo and Capitan, on the EI Paso and Northeastern Railway. the snow was elght feet deep, and the down train to Alamogordo was in the drifts a day and a half before being lib- erated. R Bishop of Fort Wayne Dead. FORT WAYNE, Ind, Jan. 12—Right Rev. Joseph Rademacher, Bishop of the Roman Catholic dlocese of Fort Wayne, dled to-day after an {llness of a year's duration. has | | Commerce ordered a favorable report | | on the Hepburn bill for the construction | | | | bal alterations. | control of star-spangled | s | stand committed to await the action of | death was certain, sald that the shooting FAVORABLE REPORT ON HEPBURN'S CANAL BILL House Committee Practically Unani- mous in Support of the Measure. esident Section 2. Provided that when the Presiden has secured full control over the territory in section 1 referred_to he shall divect the Secrer tary of War to excavate and construct & cana ;re of the and waterway from a point on the shore ~4 r Greytown, by way of Nica- WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign of the Nicaraguan Canal. The bIll Is| Caribbean Sea, nea: A X practically the same as that reported by | Taus. o a point near Breto, of Q8 *C. this committee in the last Congress.| ..y ang depth so that it may be used by vessels of the largest tonnage and greatest depth now in use, and shall be supplied with all necessary locks and other appliances to meet the necessities of vessels passing from Greytown to Breto, and the Secretary of War hall also construct such safe and commodious | harbors at the termini of said canal and such | fortifications for defense as will be required for should not be construed as opposition to | facety and protection of saild camal and ha:- the measure, but merely as a reservation | °% sident shall of his right to support or oppose it after | Section & Provided that the President Shell ‘There was some discussion about the ad- | visability of delaying action, on the bill| until the Isthmian Canal Commission had | reported, but this was finally regarded as unnecessary, and all the members excep Fletcher of Mississippl voted to report the bill favorabi: Fletcher sald his silence further consideration. ~The committee ‘ i Tl B B 5 5 made some changes in the original bill, | 53'd canal and harbors and in the inserting a new section 3 and making ver- | “siee NS o As finally agreed to the bill is as follows: To provide for the construction of a canal and constructfon ¢ River and Lake each as may be his negot o h tiantic and | _Section 5. . Section 1. That the President of the United [ Which the Pre ¢ may have the President 1s authorized to_guarantee to sald States the use of said canal and harbors, upon such terms as may be agreed upon, for all vessels owned by said States or by citizens thereof. Section 6. Provided that the sum of $140,000.- 000, or so much thereof as may be necessary. is hereby appropriated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated for the completion of the work herein authorized, sail y to be drawn from the treasury from same shall be needed, upon dent, based on estimates made and verified by the chief engineer in charge of the work and approved by the Sec- | retary of War. MRS. WER TELLS OF C 2 States be and is hereby authorized to ac- quire from the States of Costa Rica and Nic- aragua. for and in behalf of the United States, uch portion of the territory now belonging to Cista Rica and Nicaragua as may be desirable and necessaty on which to exca- vate, construct and defend a canal of such depth and capacity as will be sufficlent for the | | | movements of ships of the greatest tonnage and | dravght now In use from a point near Grey- town, on the Caribbean Sea. via Lake Nicara- gua, to Breto, on the Pacific Ocean; and such sums as may be necessary to secure such con- | trol are hereby appropriated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. NOT THE VICTIM OF A NIGHTMARE Alfred Morrison Charged With Murder. OMFORT yan brought her. Denves, Colo. Dear Doc- tors: Hudyan ecured me of Nervous Prostration, NEW YORK, Jan. 12.—Alfred Morrison, who shot and killed one of his wives, with wh wai whom he was living in Mount Vernon, is | complicated under arrest. Crowds waited around his with Indi- house all day in anticipation of the ar- m;r;l l'ni rest, and they followed Morrison, who | Wes > By was in charge of two detectives, to the b L g Bad Courthouse, where he was arraigned and taken but three doses held to the Grand Jury on the charge of murder In the first degree. Morrison_on the night of December 23 shot his wife Allda and she died the fol lowing day. He appeared to be grief- stricken over the afiair and told a pitiful tale of how the shooting was the result of fright occasioned by a dream of burg- lars. The woman herself, knowing that Hud- yan has re- tored me to erfect ealth. - My strength and appetite are restored and I am well in was accidental and attributed it to the sume cause as Morrison did. The Coro- ner’s jury exonerated him. i Some days later Morrison’s original wife, whom he married many years ago under the name of Gordon, gave out the information that the man was a bigamist and had practically abandoned her, and since then facts tending to place Morri- son in a bad light have been ue}-eloped, | :ve!ry Te- The police have been watching Morrison | g, Y ever since, and it was rumored that Mor- rison was acting like a crazy man. When he was placed under arrest to-day, how- Hudyan cures Nervousness, spepsia, Costiveness, Weakness, Pnlenne.y ng"l.v ation, Dizziness, Nausea, Weak Ba. ver, he was very quiet and perfectl 1 ::n'}moued. s » v 88 of Appetite, Palpitation of Heart, Judge Appell said thdt the depositions | mndencr, Cloud !omol?', Lack of and cther papers in the case did not show All-gone ' 'udyan re- ‘n.x;.:' all Jets i ! 'omen, udyan cures utertn: | ovartaz troubles, — Letcorrhoea, - patntul and irregular periods. The figures indicate the weak points when the nerves ars letting down. ~Hud- T Pudvan—a _a s—50c _a pack udyan ruggist: a age, $2 50. ‘gf your druggist do:s that any crime had been committed; or, if any crime had been committed, that the prisoner at the bar had committed one. He then moved that the case be dis- miss and the prisoner discharged. Judge Schatz denied this motion, and Judge Appell said he would walve ex- amination and that the prisoner would yan six g- not keep It, send direct to Hudyan Rem- the Grand Jury. Morrison was committed 89y Co. Cor. Stockton Eilis and Market Ban Francisco. Cal to jail without bail. The next Grand Jury will assemble in White Plains on the first Monday in February. bt iae Rrkicuarag g District Attorney Andrews to-day | | CONSULT | Consult Free ths claimed that he had sufficient evidence to | FREE. Hudyan Doctors. Cail prove that Morrison, in shooting his wife, or write to them. committed a deliberate and premeditated murder. \ DEPUTIES SEARCHIN! FOR MURDEROUS TRAMP No Talk of Lynching in the Neigh- borhood of Stevens Creek. SAN JOSE, Jan. 12.—Sheriff Langford life, vim and vig | Drugs give but te a stimulant, but parts of the body thereto and doing the r: In a permanent health and stre tricity. Use an | best method of applying good one while you are about it: in short, t Plerce’s.”” for it is guaranteed o be the fe Belt on earth. o ee at office or sent by mall for a 2c stamp, tells all about it. Ad PIERCE ELECTRIC CO., 620 Market street, SAN FRANCISCO, and some deputles are in the hills on Stevens Creek to-day investigating the shooting of little Louisa Cornu, which s | sald to have been done by a tramp Mon- | day, when he was attacked by the 14-| vear-old brother of the child, after the | tramp had attempted to assault h Whatever may be the facts of the shoot- ing there Is no excitement in the neigh- borhood nor threats of lynching. The officers all agree to this. The Sheriff | and his deputies have been busy in the chase, running down tramps ever since the matter was reported. None of these has been identified by the boy. While the officers are reticent, it 1s a fact that they are not entirely satisfied with the story that a tramp did the shooting. Late last night the police arrested a tramp who gives his name as Sullivan | and he is held pending an investigation. | The Cornu boy will be brought here to face Sullivan, A conveyance has been | sent to the hille for this purpose. Sulli- van has been rather conflicting in his statements. 1 u had better Dr. visir DR. JORDAN’S casar SEUM OF ANATOMY w8 MASERTOY. tet. G247, 07061, Speciaiie cm the Coust. Eat. Jovears @ MU The Largest Anatomical Museum in the OR. JORDAN—PRIVATE DISEASES ¢ Worid ~ Weaknesses of any contracted Tre ument personally or b, - per y y D] SADIR N George Brandt Dead. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. PACIFIC GROVE, Jan. 12—News has been recelved here of the death in San Francisco of George Brandt, a former prominent resident of this town. He had suffered for many years with a trouble of the blood and it is belleved this caused his death. While living in Pacific Grove he bullt the locally well-known Brandt House now owned by the English scient- ist, T. W. Cowan. About a year ago Mr. Brandt moved with his wife to San Fran- cisco, where he has since resided discase pesttively emred Ly the oldest Ese Consultation free and private. Teher ve Cure in every case ua A en. lots and odd sjzes ! * SEMI-ANNUAL . Ladies’ Low Front, High Back Square Toe Rubbers, sizes 5 to 645 . Sens s Misses’ Storm Rubbers, Square Toe, sizes 11 to 1%..... Ladies’ Red Felt Romeos, sizes 25¢ quilted, sizes 3to 7, C, D and E wide ... $1.20) Just a Sample We quote below a few prices on fashionable, seasonable SHOES, broken These are but a few of many good things in store for youatour CLEARANCE SALE. 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