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z2 NEWS FROM CAPITALS OF EUROPE|lRGE THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1900. A FAMOUS SEA CAPTAIN BY 'CABIE TO THE CALL PEARY RESENTS THE INTRUSION OF SYORDRUP R Emerican Lieutenant Inclined to Consider Frozen Ground His Own for Exploring Purposes. 10.—It now r. Leopoid A8 oe SPANISH-AMERICAN CONGRESS MAY FAIL | Very Few Delegates Have as Yet Put | p In an Appearance at Madrid. | Ma DRI ¢ the dele- cial Makes Good Time. L, Nov. 10.—Tord Strath- P » Canedian Pa. 100 minutes for | koo i) Three Fishermen Drowned. Three SOUTHAMPTON, Nov. 10.— v nk Pope some net: . storm, their boat upset undi drowned. all were | up the boat. a | keel under water is vet 10 be solved. PASSING OF A NOTED SPORT AND POTENTATE Death Claims an Indian Ruler Who Became a Great Favorite Among the British. At . 10.—The death of i of Patialia at products of Anglo-Indian the first reigning Prince to s of the English gentle- tentate. Educated at i to India and put kingdom the reforms Iy absorbed in Eng- h vitals for women, free T3 g orphana drilling troops, em to help a British expedition e ng them personally. It was one « b keenest disappointn ts not to be ywed to serve in South Africa. But he a and enlightened ruler. he best polo player in India, ss rider, a dead shot, w only ‘to Ranijitsinjhi at cricket and e of the finest amateur billiar y The deceased was a close Lord William Beresford, Lord nd other well-known people. He fond of horses and im- did stud and an Irish ex- Bryan to be master of With Bryan went his Prince fell desperately was not only , and Sikhs murmured and threatened re- and the imperial Government, dread- d to break oft the match. tain and his, own, subjects witted and eventually appeased, e embracing the Stkh faith. Her s short Accompanying her hus- campaign in the fcv > died of pneumonia. At silent army the Prince remains were cre- which this himself. n of the American invade these markets English of the greatest steel country, who said American trade in d will amount to v manufacturer gets a cer- is which, if he can find a mar- ar profit. We are get- rplus and believe per than in their such competition serious it will be necessary for the Amerizan manufacturers to devote more than their surplus to the market. When th€y do 1 believe they will find they cannot /beat us in prices or quality on our ) OWn £TO as cver and promises to remain so. 1 {carmot s have vet felt the pinch of American Mr. Thornye! the English torpedo- boat builder, has been expressing inter- esting opinion on submarine boats. He necessary for QGreat » to_bulid submarine boats, even if periments of other nations have site successful. He is certainly g the problem of devising a su destroyer, should it ever be neces. He regards the American sub- arine boat as the best type yet made But he doubts its efficacy, even for har- bor defense. ™ dropped 1 oft ny n the neighborhood of sajd Mr. Thornycroft, her level with or low flicient shock to crumple ession of a submarine 1l not help you tb find e at present of too limited range insufficient propelling Jwer to be really a serfous factor, and e unsatisfied problem of keeping a'level If 1 boat of our own enemy. They have to go under water with a s arine boat I will prefer to sit outside. In spite of the pessimism of Mr. Thorn; croft the Admiralty has at last decided to grant a submarine boat, designed by a Howard of Tasmania, an official trial. " f the most interesting house par- ties of the week was that of Lady Fermer- Hesketh (formerly Miss Florence Sharon of San Francisco), who entertained, among others, Lord and Lady Willlam Beresford Among those returning to the Unlited States is Mrs. Mackay. A novel feature of the Lord Mayor's banquet was the appearance of the Mayors of newly created boroughs of Lon- don. The titles sounded strange, but the jdea seems to meet with general approval. ‘Among the new Mayors of London are two Dukes, one Earl, four members of the House of Commons and two Knights. The Duke of Norfolk was elected first Mayor of W, minster, arl Cardigan Mayvor of Chelsea and the Duke of Bedford Mayor of Holborn. With such aristocratic heads the new City Hall may, it is belleved, bid fair to rival the Mansion House. “AT SLOANED. SPECIAL! During the coming week we offer our extensive line of LOUIS XIV CURTAINS at prices that should be of interest to the most conservative buyer. A few Examples— 11 pairs, regular price $5.00, reduced to $3.90 per pair. 52 pairs, 24 pairs, 17 pairs, 27 pairs, regular price 6.00, reduced to 4.60 per pair. regular price 7.50, reduced to 5.75 per pair, regular price '9.00, reduced to 6.95 per pair. regular price 9.50, reduced to 6.50 per pair. 3 pairs, regular price 27.50, reduced to 21.60 per pair.’ ODD PAIRS AT LESS THAN COST. HOLIDAY GIFTS. In our DRAPERY, CARPET, RUG AND FURNITURE Departments will be found a rich field in which to rummage for HOLIDAY GIFTS. LOTS OF DAINTY PIECES OF FURNITURE AT MOD- ERATE COST. Purchases made now will be livery. held, if desired, for future de- W.&J. SLOANE & CO,, CARPETS. FURNIT URE. UPHOLSTERY. 114-116-118-120-122-124 POST STREET, Sen Francisco, — il ) s | ous there h her, proposed and was ac- | 'k hundreds of miles | eel | Business here is as good | GERIANS ARE PLEASED WITH THE PREMER Lord Salisbury's Guildhall Speech Is Commented On Most Favorably by Berlin Press. ————— ERLIN, Nov. 10.—Lord Salis- bury’s Guildhall speech is comi- mented on favorably by the German press, especially the passage anent the Anglo-Ge man agreement, in which {inferentiaily Great Britain’s pro-German sentiments are divulged. The British Premler’s army reform references likewise meet with ap- proval and the hope is expressed that the reform will be thorough. The passage touching upon the United States was passed over silently by a majority of the papers. Interest in China This may be seen ever and in conversat Interest just now centers in the Reich- stag opening next week, which will particularly solemn. At noon, in the R: tersal of Berlin Castle, Wednesday, previ- there will be a divine ser- decidedly waning. re, in the press vice, both Catholic and Protestant. Tie press generally calls attention to the im- portance of the forthcoming session whose first part will d fcy, the Bm hitherto compreh ing the creation ¢ with the Chinese pol and the Government's nsive measures, inclu a rpecial China army which the Liberal press has been pointing to as unconstitutional. Furthermore, the ag will deal witn the Posadowsky matter, which will arouse heated ates. The budget and bills referring to insurance companies, publishers' rights, commerce and marine will also receive attention. The Center party will again in- troduce a bill providing for the recall of the Jesuits. The second part of the ses. sion of the Relchsta wf]l probably not before A The first work wiil revision e tariff and a renewal of the commercial treaties, on the prepar- 3 'k of which the Government nts are still zar behind. Never- gitation on the whole subject is carried on vigorously throughout Ger- including the entire press and in hamber of Commerce. = Central Bureau for the preparation of commersial gor treaties to-day submitted ‘Vu” ount von ]\llln\\} ](llr Imperial Chan- | cellor. 'a very powerful 1remorial, provi the inadvisability of P | mum and minimum tariffs. The correspondent asked Dr. von Holle- ben, the man Embassador to the United States, who will ‘.\1r\’93n\;(r some questions regarding | the German-American commercial treaty, \l)r._n\'em Holleben said: 5 “The work is still belng done in the Ministries here, but nothing can be sald on the subject because nothing tangible has been a 1 and nobody knows what the re be.” ' !r'lhe ;:url{ 1nu{]nm got a similar reply om the ted States Embassad i drew D. White Fria The press is space to the re: United States. still devoting considerable sults of the election in the Dr. Bath. in to-day's ation, and Professor von Halle, in tl Woche, publishes critical articles thereos, The Vossische Zeitung to-day expresse: pessimistic opinions regardin velopments in Cuba, F Fear g ents ha, orto ¢ Phillppines, PORED. 1 The Post expresses astonighment at th alleged fact that the United States intends to discontinue building torpedo by which the German naval anthorites eon: tinue to consider a valuable agency naval warfare. 3 The National Zeitung to-day thoroughly discusses the United States Congressional projects for a Central American canal and an increase of the United States navy classing both projects as being of - mense interest to Germarry. also condemns the United intention to discontinue the bullding of torpedo-boats. In spite of the North Ger man Gazette's semi-official statement that the German press, regardless of par celved most ably the news of dent McKinley's re-élection, the truth is that a large part of the press ix com- menting_hostilely and venomously on the result, It is significant, for instance, that the Cologne Volks Z the leading organ of the Center party, which dom- inates the Reichstag, continues the most bitter comments, deploring President Mc- Kinley’s re-election as likely to re-engen- der in Washington a policy unfriendly to Germany. 5 The Sternberg trial is still proceeding. The press, in commenting on the Beriiti criminal police corruption, calls attention to the extremely low salaries pald them, highloffivlals receiving barely $1000 to $2000 vearly. The latest reports show that the Offen- bach disaster was caused by tention of a switchman. The number of dead is now twenty-one and'’thirty per- sons were seriously injured. The correspondent learns on reliable au- thorit; t German: negotiations with the Turkish Government on the subject of a coaling station at Farsan are still pending, but are likely to result favorably. Count’ von Zuppelin in Beriin is trying to get the War Department to purchase his airship, but up to the present t'me he has failed, the department taking the view that the airship is not yet available for practical army purposes Emperor William's ' barber, - Francols Haby. the inventor of his Majesty’s style of mustache, recently ventured to remark, “What does your Majesty think o e Med’ the ¥ s so ruffle the mperor's that, taking Haby by the ear: he eseorted the barber from his chamber. The inci- States' alleged lin, It was announced May last that it was frequently remarked during the festivi- ties that his Majesty's mustache was no longer ‘“‘turned upward so fiercely as for- merly, but was worn at an angle of 45 de- grees only, with the ends no longer spreading out proudly.” It was added that it was a fact that the Emperor had abandoned his former fash- fon of wearing hig mustache, although all male Germgn_\‘ adhered to it, one reason being the dismissal of Haby, who had “become impudent and had trade upon his alleged frien with the-Emperor.” ly relations FALLS FROM A WINDWILL. . Helena Carpenter Receives Injur- ies Which Cause Death, ST. HELENA, Nov. 10.—S. N. Harrison, a carpenter of this place, dled last even- ing from injuries recefved by falling from a windmill yesterday afternoon. Mr. Har- rison with others was enfiued in placin, % new wheel on a windmill at the Deljet place. When the work was nearly com- Pleted and_ the timbers were being re- moved Mr, Harrison, who was at the edge of the platform pushing one of the heavy ¥Iece: out of the way, fell from the plat- orm to the ground, & feet, striking the top of an open door at the ground floor. He sustained internal uries. Mr. Harrison is survived by a [dow and four children. COMPLETE DEFEAT OF COLOMBIAN REBELS Government Forces Are in Hot Pur- suit of the Fleeing Remnant of the Army, COLON, Colombia, Nov. 10, via Galves- Tex.—Advices have been received here announcing the complete defeat of the rebel forces at Buenaventura. The Government forces, it is added, are in hl‘:ot gurflnlt of the rebels, who are said to urning villages while retreating. — Von Mittnacht Resigns. mmnmn% Nov. 10.—Baron von SHBE S d Sblrier o Foroign adtmics 1olio on Bu o i o «‘nrhenltff% coeed 1 von Sod the King's binet. He en, be | establishing maxi- | 1 for New York | in| The papar ! the inat- | dent has been laughed at throughout Ber- | presumed to | BIECUTION OF YU 1. Peace Commissioners Make Demands on Empress Dowager. —ia Court Replies That Owing to Pe- culiar Conditions This Is at Present Impos- sible. — Special Dispatch to The Call. PEKING, Nov. 9.—The Chinese Peace Commissioners, having urged the Dowager | Empress to execute immediately Yu Hsuen, Governor of Shensi Province, and General Tung Fuh Siang, as proof of the | 80od intentions of the Government to pun- | ish adequately those offictals who are most responsible for the anti-foreign atro- | cities, a reply has come from the court | that the utmost sentence for Yu Hsuen will be banishment and that as the cour. is now in the power of I'ung Fuh Siang's troops, it is impossible to punish Tung Fuh Slang at all. It will require firu pressure from the powers to secure’the i runishment of these two detestable crim inals, but rebellion now raging in the south, having for its declared purpose the expulsion of the Manchu d vy and the establishment of one purely Chinese, will soon compel the Dowager to yield to all | the demands of the powers and make peace with the “‘foreign devil” to escape the deep sea of revolution in the empire. Although the Minfsters atlirm that their meeting was perfectly harmonious, they practically agreeing upon all the questions considered, they have not yet proceeded | beyond the most elementary subjects. The | question of indemnity, for instance, was not even discussed. It is of such magni- | tude that théy seemingly are desirous oi | putting off its considerstion as long as possible and the negotiations are lixely | to be greatly protracted before anything will be ready to present plenipotentiaries. The present desires of | the Ministers is first to contract a prelim- | inary treaty acknowledging a few princi- | ples, such as indemnities and the securi- | ties for the future of the lives and prop |erty of foreigners, leaving the other questions to be negotiated separately by { each power. There is every probability that the negotiations will last for years. | The best informed persons do not believe the Chinesescourt will return to the capi- | tal while any forelgn troops remain Peking. HONGKONG, Nov | pers report the’exe inent leader of the Triads, and the arr of Young Houng Po, prominent re- | former. The officials are duing their ut- most to stamp out the reform movement. TIENTSIN, Friday, Nc s a result of the British representation Petersburg Government, Ru: cially handing oter the railwa to Count von Waldersee, who will give it up to the British owners Belgium also has annexe foreign settlement. PARIS, Nov. 10—General Bailloud, com- manding the Krench torces in China, an- nounces in a dispatch received here to- night that a serfous Boxer movement is reported south of Pao Ting-Fu.. He re- ports that the French troops attacked an | internched viliage on October 30 and drove | out the Boxers, despite the latter's artil- |lery. Three Frenchmen were killed and several wounded. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—In_order to expedite the conclusion of thé negotla- ! tions in progress at Peking, Secretary ! Hay has sent instructions to Mr. Cqnger, authorizing him to make concessiong not affecting lflc majntenance of the intggrity of China and the “open door.’” Delay. it is belleved by the admiinistra- tion, will give rise to developments Which may be seized upon by the foreign pow- ers as pretexts for the dismemberment of China. As stated in The Call this morn- ing the Secretary has made representa- tions to foreign governments urging them to instruct their representatives in Peking to make concessions which will enable an agreement to be promptly reached. The Secretary has put into practice what he has preached, and Mr. Conger, in a mem- orandum he will present to the diplomatic corps at a meeting to be held to-morrow, will show conclusively that the United States is willing to make concessions where they do not injurfously affect the principles of the integrity of China and the “open door,” for which this country has always contended. The meeting to be held to-morrow will be important in demonstrating whether any of the powers are purposely delaying a satisfactory solution. A suspicion has arisen that this is the case, but there is no proof, and it may either be confirmed or dissipated by the | results of to-morrow’s session. It is un- derstodd here that the diplomats in Peking are acting in accordance with instructions sent them by their governments, and the latter and not the Minlgters are responsi- ble for the delay. The character of the | instructions sent to Mr. Conger has not been made public, the State Department £oing on <he theory that it would be in- advisable to do so at this fime. 1t is ‘knn\\'n, however, that if the remainder of the diplomatic corps Insists tpon the de- + capitation of Prince Tuan Mr Conger will in 10.—The Canton »n of Chu, a p ia is ofli- 1 land for a agree to it in order to bring about 2n end | to a discussion of this feature of the ne- gotiation: Other concessiors of a like nature have been made, the hope being that this attitude will have a good effect upon the representatives of the other na- tions. e e e e s, ___ ADVERTISEMENTS. ENTHUSIASTIC CONVERTS. There Are Thousands of Them Who Belleve as This Woman Does. Mrs. Ira Knowlton of Butte, Montana, | 18 a most enthusiastic convert to the vir- | tues of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets as a | cure for obstinate stomach trouble. She says: “I had poor digestion nearly all my life. It now seems to me that for years I never knew what it was to be hungry, to have a gocd natural appetite. “I was troub'ed with gas in stomach. | causing pressure on the heart with palpi- tation and short breath. Nearly ever: thing 1 ate soured on my stomach; some- times I had cramps in the stomach whici almost resembled spasms. “‘Doctors told me I had catarrh of tho stomach, but their medicines would not reach it'and I would still be a sufferer had I not, in sheer desperation. decided to, try Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. 1 knew they were an advertised remedy and I didn't belleve anything I read about them as I had no confidence in ad- Y5riised remedies, but my sister living in Pittsburg_wrote me last spring teillag me how Stuart's Tablets had cured her and her little daughters of indigestion and loss of flesh and appetite, and I hes- itated no longer. +1 bought a fifty cent box at my drus store and took two of the large tablets ;fler each meal and found them delight- ul to take, wlr:ig nsxleun,nt to the tasie caramel cany Y henever during thLe or night 1 felt any pain or uneasiness in ‘the stomach or about the heart I took one of the small tablets and in three weeks It seemed to me as If 1 had never known what stomach {rouble was. keep Stuart's Dyspepsia lets tn the house and every member of our fam- ily uses them occasionally after a hearty meal of when any of us have a pain or ache in_the dlsu(lva organs. Mr. E. H. Davis_of H says: “1 doctored o R m ve years octors’ treatment.” Stuart's g:pe Tablets is the safest g well as ¢ implest and most conven- medy for any form of indigestion, catarrh of stomach, billousness, sour stomach, bloal after meals, sympa- thetic hux}t uble. 3 hsemart'- y?porl- Tablets s not a cheap cathartic, but an active dlf.e.ltlva "fi:{." containing the pepsin and diastase every weak stomach lacks, and BLht Gt e by , overworked ACLT A ehance to AT T Canada. and Bultadalrited Baies, to the St. | \ to Peking | to the Chinese | | | lers with whom it Tells How Peruna Restored His Health. The life of the sea captain especially ex- | poses him to catarrhal ailments. Day and | night he is exposed to the flercest gales and storms. | No class of men appreciate more me“ value of Peruna. It not only cures them when a cold has become thoroughly set- tled in head, throat or lungs, but a proper | use of Peruna prevents them from taking | these colds. Captain Tull has commanded some of | the largest vessels that cross the Atlantic | and is personally known to thousands of | people who have met him on board of vessels. He is now captain of the big Chesapeake Bay steamer Norfolk. Chronic catarrh often makes -its ap- proach in disguise. Before a person knows ! | 1L Captain R. . Tull, well kncwn in Chesapeake Bay and all along our Atlantie coast, is a man of splendid physique and now excellent health. He is also a friend of Peruna. Among the many things which he has sald about the world-famous ca- tarrh remedy, Peruna, may be citsd the following letter written from Nor- folk, Va., to The Peruna Medicine Company, of Columbus, Ohlo: “After suffering for years with catarrhal and bronchial trouble | was advised by a friend to use Peruna, and after the use of one bottle I was relieved of my trouble. | take pleasure and feel it is my duty to recommend this remady to all fellow sufferers. Besides being an abso- lute cure for catarrh, it is one of the best of tonics.” R. E. TULL. | is the first month I ”ovember of the winter ca- | tarrh season. Catarrh of the head and catarrh of the throat are preva- lent during this month. Atthe appear- | ance of the slightest symptoms of cold Peruna should be taken. This will prevent a long siege of head and throat catarrh, which may last all winter and perhaps a lifetime. it he may bscome a victim of chronic ca- tarrh. Its onset may be gradual, its develop- ment insidious, and at last the vietim finds himself in the clutches of a tena- clous disease. A slight cold, a tendency to sneeze, a puffiness in the nose, stringy mucus in the throat, slight cough or wheeziness any one of these symptoms should be re- garded as a warning. - What can be cured in the beginning in a week or two, by using Peruna, if al- lowed to become chronic, may require| .. stitch in time saves nine.” One bot- months of faithful treatment. tle of Per taken at the onset of ¢ Peruna is the remedy for such cases; al- | tarrh is worth it eight in gold to ar are no substitutes Hart B3 man or woma g Peruna has been Dr ydy knows that by hearsa; i for Peruna most ever, and thousands know it by blessed expe- | for Peruna. TErRRR S0S CCFrh for the rience 5 last_for ar ; You had better take Peruna now, for ‘Address The Peruna Medicine Co., Co- and by you may be obliged to take it jumbus, O., for a free copy of their new a long time in order to get well. catarrh book, Peruna has been endorsed by over 50,000 prominent citizens of the United States, including the following prominent persons : | Sénor Quesada of the Cuban Legation at Wash- ington, D. C. Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee, Alabama. Belva A. Lockwood, 619 F street, N. W., Wash- ington, D. C. Senator Stephen R. Mallory of Pensacola, Fiorida. | Ex-Chief Justice William C. Chambers of Wash- ington, D. C. | Congressman H. W. Ogden, from Benton, Loursiana. Governor Joseph J. Johnston of Montgomery, Ala. Major General Joseph Wheeler of Wheeler, Ala. Governor G. W. Atkinson of West Virginia. Ex-Governor P. B. S. Pinchback of Loursiana. Senator W. N. Roach of North Dakota. Judson W. Lyons, Register of the United States Treasury, of Washmgton, D. C. Hon H. 6. Worthington, ex-Mimister from Argentine Republic, of Washimgton, D. C. Congressman Amos J. Cummings, from New York. Governor W. M. Lord of Oregon. Hon. S. Smithmeyer, Architect of the Congressional Library, Washington, . C. Hal. P. Denton, Chief National Export Exposition, of Philadelphra, Pa, SECRETARY GAGE HAS NO INTENTION OF RESIGNING Only Cabinet Change ment of Attorney Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, WELLINGTON HO-| EL, WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—There is | | no foundation for the report printed ln; New York this afterncon that Secretary of the Treasury Gage is to resign his | seat in the Cabinet in the near future and | is to be succeeded by Cemptroller of the | ‘urrency Dawes. [t can be authorita- tively stated that Secretary Gage wijll re- main at the head of the Treasury Depart- Tent at least until the beginning of Me- | Kinley's second term and there 18 every | robabllity that he wiil stay longer. He Baa no prasent intention of resigning and would very much dislike to | e P ro. "Mr. Dawes will remain 13 his present place, probably for the first two vears of the new administration, though it Is probable (hat if the Repubil- cans carry the Illinols Legislature in 1502 e will be elected to the United States Senate to succeed Senalor Mason. President McKinley's attitude toward possible changes in his Cabinet was indi- cated by his statemenc to a close politi- cal friend that he would be very have every member of his Cabinet re- main in office. This being the case the question of whether there will be changes in the personnel of the President’s offi- clal family will depend on the personal : the rigl d wants to get the re- ward away from him. Other operatives of the Grannan agency have located Dunham at Round Brook, N. J., and at Elizabethtown, Tenn. Sheriff Langford takes little stock in their claims, but the Hawkshaws have been mailed pictures and descriptions of Dunham. TUp to this evening no word had been received from the authorities at Braail Ind., in regard to the arrest of the su pect there. Sheriff Langford is eagerly walting news on the subject. The officer: there had never communicated with the Sheriff In regard to making an arrest. Imminent Is Retire- General Griggs. prohad? - s Will Call on President. binet | WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — Admiral Tishes of the members of the o ome | Richard, of the French fleet in American waters, will arrive in Washington to-mor- row nifht or Monday, and with the offi- cers of his staff will make official calls on the President, the Cabinet officers and Admiral Dewey. B. KATSCHINSKI, PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 Third St., San Francisco. changes about -the time of the beginning of the new term or even sooner 18 very probable. Attorney General Griggs, it is understood, - will probably resign to re- | gume his piivate law practice and privace business and personal reasons may lead to the resignation of Secretary of the Navy Long, though there 1s no member of the Cabinet whose resignation the Presidert would accept with more regret han that | of his Secretary of the Navy. If the Presi- dent's wishes are followed Secretary of State Hay will remalin in the Cabinet until the end of the second term, and that he will remain for the. present is assured What he may o In the future may de- pend largely upon his health. If he should retire it is possible that Postmaster Gen- eral Smith might succeed him. As matters stand now the only change in the Cabinet that can be predicted with any degree of certainty is the retirement of Attorney General Griggs. No predie- tlon can yet be madeé as to his successor, though it s understocd that the Presi- dent would be_very glad fo have Secre- tary of War Root accept the Attorney General's portfolio. Mr. Root {s very much interested in his work as Secretary of War, however, and might not wish to change. FIRE YET BURNS IN IRON MOUNTAIN MINE Experts Predict That the Conflagra- tion Will Exhaust Itself ‘Within a Week. REDDING, Nov. 10.—The great body of sulphide ore in the Peck tunnel of the Iron Mountain mine is still smoldering. No one can determine the length of time | that will be occupled in consuming the inflammable portion. Miners who have witnessed the burning out of copper prop- erties in Montana say it will not be long. They contend that the ore itself, on which the fire depends, is of unusually compact formation. There are blocks of it out- lined in the Peck tunnel as large as ordl- nary city blocks, in which there is not one crack, and_on which the fire will be un- able to make any impression. They &u. dict the termination of the fire within a week. ‘While the ore is smoldering and smok- ing In the mountain above them, the min- ers are working in full force in the lower d rifts. Suit Against Flume Company. SAN DIEGO, Nov. 10.—Sult was com- menced to-day by E. A. Riall, as at- torney for a number of ranchers in Kl Cajon Vajley and about La Mesa and Lemon Grove, against the San Diego Flume Company to restrain it from dis- posing of water from the reservoir at Cuyamaca to mnénl other than them- selves after the water in the reservoir level. It is alleged Brego. city atter i to supply the ranch- a contrasta, falls below a hat the flume co of water to less than en CROP OF DUNHAM SUSPECTS GROWING Numerous Amateur Datectives Have the Sextuplé Murderer TLocated. SAN ‘JOSE, Nov. 10.—There is marked | activity In the location of the Dunham | suspects. Besides the man arrested at Brazil, Ind., last night. who gave the name Fred Greenland, amateur detectives have the murderer of the McGliney fam- ily located in several sections of the Union. Harry J. Fossow, an amateur Hawk- shaw of St. Louls, belleves he has James C. Dunham there and so certain is hc' that the suspect 1s the sextuple murderer | of Campbell that he is afraid his employ- ers want to rob him of the 311,000 reward offered. On October 3) Fossow wrote to Ladies’ Shoes at [nfant Prices Some reason for it. of course. Not having a full line of these goods, we will place on sale at 81,15 Pair Ladles’ fine Tampico Goat and Governor Gage, informing the executive French Cali Button Shoes. :'l‘:nl: dl:cyo‘;etyi nfid thl; cnflr;mumeauon Seamless Fox—double sole— o-day received by She: il ¢ F & wolteh thet ko b X;tnxg::; {;.; stitched and narrow square ham in St. Louls, has “shadowed” him | for some time ard can lay his hands on him at any time. Fossow on October 1| obtained a button photograph of the sus- | pect from a lady friend and forwarded | it to the Grannan Detective Agency of Cinelnnatl, Ohio, of which he is an opéra- | tive. Since then, Fossow declares, he, himself, has been continually shadowed. He made a demand on the Grannan | :.pncy to return to him the button, but e agency claims it sent the button to| California and had heard from it. | Fossow doubts this statement of the | aenc‘.lnfl wants to know if Governor ge has recelved it. He says he thinks the Grannan agency knows the suspect is When sizes were complete the goods sold for $2.50 and ‘$3.00. Following are sizes and width B-2%to T E to 9. to7. BE-2%, 4% and g to 9. . 3l and 6 to 8. Country~ orders selicited. illustrated catalogue. PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 THIRD ST. ~ San Franesco. Send for not