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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1901 APOSTLE GEORGE CANNON HANFORD WILL BE GIVEN - ANEW AND HANDSOME DEPOT First Result of a Policy President Hays Will Apply to Many-of the Railroad Towns. THE NEW RAILWAY STATION SOON E OF THE EXAMPLES OF THE TO BE BUILT AT HANFORD IN PLACE OF THE OLD BUILDING. PROGRESSIVE POLICY OF THE NEW PRESIDENT OF THE SOUTHERN IT 18 torn down and replaced by pretty and at- tractive structures. The designs for these Mldings are now being drawn in neering department of the South- in this city under the super- of John D. Isa chief draughts- of the company. As soon as the the depot have been drawn in each case they mber | will be presented to Manager Kruttschnitt $o faet COWBOYS LASSO |INSURANCE MEN AN VICTOR CIRORK WOMEN ee Intoxicated Vaqueros Nevada's Valued Policy Law Take Possession of | Is Declared to Be the Town. Invalid. T hr ar | Epecial Dispatch to The Call CARSON, Nev., March 20.—The ernor and Secretary of State in examining brougt to. It sho ve been signed the President of the Sen 5 “the Fiouse and the : es, but instead it has only the signs { 2 of tures of members of the Le two vears ago - ecretary of tate Howell refused to re ize the bill as valld. He claims that after passing over the Governor's veto it should have been signed by the officers of the Legislature, as specified in the consti- tution, but no such officers’ names apy upon it. Attorney Gi al Woodburn up- Gov- | the Hard insurance bill (the valued policy law) found that the enrolled bill the necessary signatires to make it The bill was »d two years ago i vetoed 1t ernor. It was up at the fon and passed | | holds the Secretary of State in his opin- | fon. He has been asked for a wtllug vinjon, which pi bl ill be d ALY CALIFORNIA WILL :‘i‘_v’x_:‘i”;:_“v\ h probably will be rendere JOIN IN CELEBRATION Of Interest to the Coast. WASHINGTON, March 29.—Postoffice Department orders are as follo Pos office established: kiyou Ccunty, Abner Weed Postmasters issi Many Towns to Be Represented at Jose’s Coast-Railroad s the banquet on | Warren E. Cole, Ahtanum; 3 3 & ng of | Hunt, Granville. . Appointed: Oregon: . r nd the | Phebe Kindt, Kinton, Washington Coun- vice Jo Kindt, resigned. In army orders James, now in San Francisco. e significance, | ¥ of here wi Pa- heir Captain William F. assistant surgeon of volunteers, is sent to Manila mE v Califor- Original—Charles Knowlton, Sol- * Home, Los Angeles, $6. Increase— t Hall, Long Beach, $8: Jacob , Nordhoft, $10; Charles Hudson, Garden Grove, $12. War with Spain— Christopher Baumgartner, Oakland, $6. Oregon: Original—Henry Geibel, La- fayette, $6. Bids for the construction of a cabin pas- senger house at the San Francisco quar- antine station were opened here to-day, A. T. akland, $13.400 ard San Francisco, $16,94; rd r of toasts has been Mutual | e: “*Our Fruil | Rich “The Church,” | Richa D. [he Coast McCann. Sinnot, § —_—— Death by Suffocation. STOCKTON, March 29 —A man, evident- ; |1y a laborer, giving the name of Croffitt, as near as it could be spelled from his pronunciation, suffered death by suffoc: n last night in his room in the Gari- 31 House, a small hotel at the corner “enter and Lafayette streets in this When smoke was seen issuing from oom this morning the door was burst 1d the room founZ to be ablaze. The ras extinguished by a few buckets roffitt was found dead upon dressed. » ally Wakefulness. Badly nourished nerves are irritable and uneasy, so -n‘nervep that are overworked and worn-out. The quiet and harmony of the nerve-centers are gone; and every effort either of mind or body increases the jarring and discord They cannot rest because they are hungry; and the sleep that comes after a night of tossing, brings neither rest nor strength. Feed the nerves. " Nourish and tone them up, and wakeful nights will be lthing of the past. Dr. MiLes' NERVINE is the best remedy for wakefulness because it wmakes strong nerves. *“My wite was so worn-out and nervous from jong sufe fering that she was unable fo get to sleep without the use of opiates. Our leading physicians here and several from Indianapolis failed to give her any relief.. She was induced to give Dr. Miles’ Nervine a trial and in a very sbort time she was able to go to bed and slecp soundly at night.” ‘W. T. Loxewirs, Portland, Ind. D¢, Miles’ Nervine Is 2 brain and nerve-food and restorative medicine that helps nature reconstruct the wasted cells and tissues and restore bealth. Try a bottle—NOW. Sold by druggists on a guarantee. Dz. Mires MEDICAL Co., Elkbart, Ind California—Weed, Sis- | — | of the railroad stations on the line will be| and, meeting with his approval, they will be ordered built at once. When President Hays took the presi- dency of the Southern Pacific Company 1 his tour of Inspection he paid particular ttention to the railway stations. It is said iat he was s sed that cleaner, larger and handsomer buildings had not been erected. On the conclusion of his trip on rriving in this city he ordered that new hould be erected at a number of maller towns. oottt @ STANDARD OF ADMISSION Trustees of San Jose Nor mal School Make a Change. HlG Special Dispatch to The Call, SAN JOSE, March 29.—At the quarterly meeting of the trustees of the State Nor- mal School here to-day steps were taken which will place the school in the lead | of the Normal institutions of California. The principal changes are the placing of the standard of admission on a high school basis and the establishment of a summer hool for teachers. There were present Trustees Short, Plerce and Brow and State Supermtendent Kirk. F. C. Jacobs, the newly appointed trustee, touk | his seat. President Dailey rendered a lengthy re- | port, recommending the changes that were subsequently made. This showed a total enrollment in all departments of 923 It was decided that in the admission i far as po: requirements be change:! so tat students to be admitted in futu be high school graduates, or those who ‘have done equivalent work, or teachers with certificates to teach. Delegates 1o the next meeting of the Jjoint Normsl School boards were instructed to bring about, if possible, such standard of ad mission. The board decided in favor of estabMshing a summer school of six weeks, but action was deferred until tac June meeting. The school's year 5 r!!.x’ngc(l to two terms of eighteen weeks cach. President Dailey was instructed to re- port at the June meeting the probable cost of a physical training department for the school. A department of domestic science was recommended by the presi- dent and this probably will be established in_June. Messrs. Short, Jacobs, Brown, Kirk and President Dalley were selected a commit- tee to attend the joint board meeting at Chico next month. BARELY ESCAPES DEATH ON NORTHERN COAST San Francisco Gold-Seeker Almost Falls Victim to Cold and Starvation. VANCOUVER, B. C, March 29.—Oscar anton Brown, who came here two months ago from San Francisco, has re- turned to the city from an exceedingly adventurous trip to the north. His boat was capsized in the surf, and after losing his entire outfit he narrowly escaped death from exposure. For a week he mped on the shore in rainy weather catmeal daily to eat during that time. Brown is a large, strongly built man, but he is now worn and emaclated. He left here three weeks ago, taking an out- fit worth $500 with him. After leaving the steamer he went in his open boat to the of Knights Inlet. There he met ex- edingly rough weather, and while try- ing to make a landing his boat capsized in the surf. He swam ashore, and the only thing he saved of boat and outfit was a sealed tin of oatmeal. This he subsisted on for six days, and it was on the even- ing of the seventh that he wandered into an Indian settlement and got help. Two_snowstorms occurred immediately after Brown was wrecked, and this add to his misery. He could not make a fire, and several times he expected to go to sleep and die. He was badly frozen and is still in great pain from the privations of the trip. The Indians cared for him and he was sent by them to Vancouver to-day. DETERMINING POWERS OF CAPITOL COMMISSION Triendly Test Suit Brought on Behalf of the State of Wash- ington. OLYMPIA, March 20.—Attorney General Stratton has brought suit in behalf of the State to restrain the Capitol Commission from proceeding further with the pur- chase of the Thurston County Courthouse until after the expiration of ninety days from the close of the Legislature. The bill did not carry an.emergency clause, but it Is contended that it should go into effect immediately on the ground that it is an appropriation bill. The Superior Court sustained the de- murrer filed to the petition of the Attor- ney General and the matter was appealed to the Supreme Court and argued this morning. It was taken under advisement by the court. The suit is a friendly one and is brought Jargely for the purpose of determining through the medium of the highest authority in the State the powers of the Capitol Commission at this time. . — Alleged Kidnaper in Court. OMAHA, March 2).—James Callahan had his preliminary hearing in the Dis- trict Court to-day on the revised com- plaint in connection with the Cudahy kid- naping case. His trial is set for April 22. Callahan's lawyers, it is said, will offer as testimony a deposition of H. C. Hen- derson, the Dallas man, who is alleged to have confessed to a complicity in the ab- duction. without a fire, and he had only a little | ‘Bound and Gagged, Vivienne | the revorts of the six-shooters did not STEALS CHILD ON STREET 0F 105 ANGELES Kidnaper Carries Off a San Francisco il Gedge Makes a Sensa- tional Escape. —_— LOS ANGELES, March 2.—On a crowded street of Los angeles, in broad daylight, while many vehicles and pedes- trians and street cars were passing, a 13- year-old girl was seized, bound and gagged and carried away into the country by an abductor. - Then, when the villain thought escape impossible, he left her by the roadside for a moment and she, tak- ing advantage of his absence, made her escape. The vietim of the abduction was Vivi- enne Gedge, daughter of Dr. Donald Gedge of San Francisco, one of the best known physicians in that city. The child had started for school and while waiting for a street car at the corner of Main and Eleventh streets a man drove up in a bugey, alighted and threw a shawl over her head. He lifted her into the buggy, bound her hands and gagged her and drove rapidly toward the country road. He stopped at a point near Vermont ave- nue and entered a clump of trees. As soon as he was gone the child leaped from the buggy, and, after she had run half a mile, a young man on a bicycie released her hands and removed the gag. She finally reached the terminus of the University car line, and, boarding a car, reached home in a highly excited condi- tion at about noon. Chere is no clew to the the outrage and his object sun ey b conjectured. LATEST CASUALTY LIST. MacArthur Sends More Names of Un- lucky American Soldiers, WASHINGTON, March 29.—General MacArthur's latest casualty list from Ma- nila follows: Killed—March Company 1, I A. Peterson; Company A, Twe thew Migusik. Wounded—Martin E. Keavey, thighs, se- vere; March 22, San Antonio, Luzon, Com- pany B, Forty-ninth Infantry, Maddie Blackstock, wounded in hand, slight; March 19, near Olongapo, Luzon, Com- pany G, Forty-first Infantry, Hiram Yar- borough, face, slight: February 28, Tapaz, Panay, Company D, Thirtieth Infantry, Sergeant John Eplerio, wounded in leg above knee, slight. —_— MEXICAN JOLLIFICATION ENDS IN A KILLING Intoxicated Man Accidentally Slays a Companion and Is Threatened ‘With Lynching. TUCSON, Ariz., March 29.—At Las Gui- jas mining camp. in the Quijotoa Moun- | tains, the Mexican miners indulged in a “boracho” last night. which resulted in a fatal shooting. Alejandro Gomez was a member of the crowd of drunken miners, and when the crowd started out to “shoot up” the camp Gomez went to his home and obtaired a shotgun. He thought that 23, near Gadleria, Luzon, ty-first Infantry, r San Antonio, Laguna, nty-first Infantry, Mat- | properly mark the enthusiasm the crowd wished to express. Joining his compan- fons Gomez swung the <harging both he One of the charges struck Ventura Robledo in the stomach, resulting in almost instant death. The hilarity which had reigned with such fervor died out at once. The crowd turned upon Gomez, and the murderer's life was in danger for a time. Gomez's friends hustled him off to a jackal in the outskirts of the camp, where he was pro- tected until morning. The prisoner was brought to Tucson this afternoon and placed in the County Jail. Gomez claims the killing was purely ac- cidental, but as the murdered man had many friends in the camp Gomez is not likely to get off easily. NEW TOWN STARTS IN VALDES DISTRICT Swanport, the Miners Call It, and It Is Already in Thross of a Boom. SEATTLE, March 20.—The steamship Elihu_Thompson arrived this morning from Valdes. Like the Excelsior, she dis- appointed those who were looking for Nome mail. Captain Jones brings news of a new city that has sprung up recently, which is named Swanport. It is located five miles south of Valdes and has had quite & boom of late. The Alaska Com- merclal Company and the Pacific Steam Whaling Company have large warchouses there. The record for fast mail between Valdes and Circle City has been broken. The carriers on that route made the trip in just sixteen days and sixteen hours, and that in the dead of winter. The glacier trail out of Valdes is reported to be in fine condition. Much prospecting is re- ported to be golng on in the Copper River district. RS SPIDERS EXTERMINATE A PEST IN THE CROPS British Columbia Farmers Rejoice Over the Advent of the Cut- worm’s Energetic Foe. VANCOUVER, B. C., March 29.—A big black spider has appeared in the fields all over the lower part of the province as the enemy of the cutworm. ' The latter did hundreds of thousands of dollars of dam- nie to cereal crops and potatoes last year, The spilders are harmless to vegetation and are killing off the early cutworms in great numbers. Thev attack the cut- Worms apparently from a wanton desire to kill, and leave their bodies intact. Th.: gpider, full grown, is over half an inch across and easily does away with the largest cutworm. Deputy Minister of Agriculture J. R. Alderson has just made a complete in- vestigation and he considers that the cut- worm is a pest of the past. CLAIMS TO BE HEIR TO ENGLISH ESTATE Tacoma Ship Carpenter Wants Share of the Late Thomas Holden’s Fortune. TACOMA, March 20.—Samuel Philby, a Tacoma ship carpenter, claims to be one of the heirs to the English estate of Thomas Holden, mentioned in yesterday's TS, aispatches. Philby’s_mother, liza- beth Shelton Philby, 76 years old, now liv- LIES IL L IN MONTEREY Mormon Church Leader Is Suffering From Serious Nervous Prostration. —— e GEORGE Q. CANNON, ONE OF THE THREE HIGH COUNCILORS OF THE MORMON CHURCH, WHOSE ILLNESS, HIS PHYSICIANS AD- MIT, HAS ASSUMED A CRITICAL TURN. critically {ll in this c'ty and two of his sons and an attorney are now en route to Morterey from Salt vake Ci called hither by his condition. lur. Cannon has suffered with nervous prostration for sev of almost continual insemnia, and it feared it will eventuaily affect his mind. He came to Del Monte several weeks azo and his physicians. who are with him. finding his condition scmewhat improved here, recommended taking a house where he could be away from the noise and bustle of the hotel. Accordingly a c: tage was engaged in ‘his city and the in- Vatia instailed there. One of his physicians was seen to-night and said that Mr. Cannon's condition was o e e e e e e BIVL ELECTAIC COMPANIES Wi Striving for Possession of a Pole on Santa Rosa’s Main Street. ST ol Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA ROSA, March 29.—The two eiec- tric light companies of this place are at war with one unother, and the ownership of a pole and the right to attach wires to it is the cause of the rumpus. Alex Gutsch, manager of the Santa Rosa Lighting Company, this afternoon cut three wires belonging to the Merchants® Lighting Company. Manager Weber of the Merchants’ immediately had Mr. Gut arrested for destroying his company’s property. By mistake Gutsch: also cut two wires belonging to his company, and all the business houses on the north side of Fourth street, between A and B, were in darkness to-night ex- cept those on the arc light wire of the Santa Rcsa Lighting Company. The trouble arose over a pole which be- longs jointly to the Santa Rosa Lighting Company and the Sunset Telephone Com- pany. Mr. Gutsch savs he notified the other lighting company three days ago to detach its wires from the pole. It did not heed the warning, so this afternoon he performed the job himself. Mr. Weber Claims to have permission from the Sun- set Telephone Company to use the pole, and Mr. Gutsch says the telephone com- pany did not give him leave. ‘When arrested Mr. Gutsch immediately gave bail and returned to the pole to see that Mr. Weber did not reconnect the wires. After trying three times to con- nect them the Merchants' manager was served with an injunction. Then an in- junction against the other company was issued, which leaves both corporations without being able to reconnect their cir- uits. “Mfuch excltement prevailed on the streets here this afterncon and large crowds gathered at the pole in dispute. The case promises to be an interesting one. The stockholders of the Merchants® Lighting Company are composed mostly of merchants of Santa Rosa, while the Santa Rosa Lighting Company is a branch of the Pacific Lighting Company of San Francisco. FORBES HELD FOR TRIAL ON CHARGE OF BIGAMY Accused Big Oak Flat Resident Must Answer in the Superior Court. BIG OAK FLAT. March 20.—John W. Forbes, who was arrested a few days ago on the charge of bigamy, was given a reliminary hearing at Groveland to-day. e was held to appear before the Superior Court, his bond being fixed at $1000. For] ing at Brazil, Jowa, was the granddaugh- ter of Thomas Holden, through her moth- er. The claim of the Philby heirs combats that of the Broadbents oi Baltimore, Stambaughs of New York and others who claim inheritance through Holden's sister Elizabeth, while the Philby heirs claim direct descent. The Philby children in Towa are coal miners. e Monterey’s First Automobile. MONTEREY, March %.—The first autc- mobile belonging strictly to Monterey made its appearance here yesterday. It is a steam automobile of very fine construc- tion and is owned by Shelley Pickles of Oak Grove. married Miss Edith Bailey of Oakdale at San Jose in April, 1900. It is charged that he has a wife living in Ottawa, Canada, from whom he has never been divorced. Pour Indictments for Murder. PHOENIX. Ariz, March 20.—Four men were indicted at Yuma yesterday for murder—Willlam Hart, for the killlug of Deputy Sheriff Matt Devane; Joe Alex- ander, for the killing of Mrs. J. J. Burns, and James Miller and “Bill' Fain, as ac- complices in the latter case. Both mur- ders werc particularly atrocious, and for safe-keeping from probable mob venge- ance all four men have been placed in the penitentiary, awaiting their trials. eral months, his trouble taking the form | Herman | Special Dispatch to The Call. ONTEREY, March 2).—George,the result of overwork and had been Q. Cannon, one of the highest | Ereatly aggravated by the high altitude of s alt Lake City e hecvy atmosphere o dignitaries of the Mormon | yopicrey had enabled him to get mo Church and in many respects | gleep since he came here than he had ha: practically its head, is lying | for some time. When asked as to what | had caused the preseat alarm he wi make no statemen | that nis patient hut he did not dei as in a critical condi- tion. He said it is true that Mr. Cannon's ons and attorney are on their way to nnon is one of the three hizh the head of the Mormon | church, President Alonzo F. Snow and Jo- | seph F. Smith being the other two. death or_disability to verfcrm the duties | of his office would mean a great loss to his church. He is here with his wife, who is a daughter of the first Brigham Young, and two children, a private secretary and | two physicians. 'Some time 2go he toos ri T il in search of health and was greatly benefited and his present re- soon after his return home. i e @ MRS, DIERSSEN -~ WOULD BE FAEE | Divorce Suit Causes Sensa- tion in Sacramento | Society. Special Dispatch to The Call. | SACRAMENTO, March 20.—A sensation has been caused in local society circles by the filing of a suit for divorce by Frances B. Dierssen against Will L. Dierssen. on the ground of cruelty. The couple were married less than a year ago, and the wedding, which occurred at the Congre- gational’ church, was one of the most elaborate and fashionable ever witnessed in that caifice. Both Mrs. Dierssen and her husband have been prominent in local soclety circles, and number among the young people 'of Sacramento a host of | friends.” Mrs. Dierssen was formerly Miss | Frances Nourse, a graduate of a leading | Boston conservatory, and is a singer of fine ability. - NO DIVORCE FO. MRS. FRIANT Is Not Sustained. SAN JOSE, March 29.—Mrs. Elvira Friant was denied a divorce from Alfred E, Friant to-day by Judge Rhodes, who held that the charge of infidelity made by plaintiff had not been sustained. The case has attracted a good deal of atten- | tion because of the prominence of the par- ties, who were members of high society. Mrs. Friant had been living apart from her husband for about a year, and several months ago commenced suit for divorce in San Francisco. She charged her husband with infidelity, and mentioned the name of a young lady of spondent. Lat hither for trial, The Friants were married about a dozen years ago, and have a child 7 years of age. For the past few days the case has been heard behind closed doors. When the evidence was completed to-day Judge Rhodes denled the divorce. Friant was formerly secretary of the Great Western Can Company of this city, but is now engaged in the mercantile business. “ABALONE COCKTAIL” IS THE NEWEST DRINK Monterey Saloon Man Invents a Re- freshment That Is Proving Very Popular. MONTEREY, March 20.—J. J. Kelly, a saloon-keeper of this city, has invented a new sort of refreshmeat that has jumped into immediate popularity hercabouts. It is an abalone cocktall, similar to an oys- ter cocktail, but very different in flavor. The abalone used is not fresh out of the ‘water, but goes through a special proc-sa of cooking and therein, say those who have tested it, lles its chief excellence Many who have tried the new cocktali prefer it to its oyster predecessor. e Ak eerid Want Hickman Appointed™ MONTEREY, March 29.—A petition ask- ing the County Board of Supervisors to appoint J. B. Hickma1 of this city to the office_of Hortleultural Commissioner for the Northern district of Monterey County, vice W. T. Gilkey, resigned, is being cir- culated here and is signed by nearly all the influential residents of the town. Mr. Hickman is a botanist of some note and an_expert horticulturist. He was until recently principal of the Monterey schools. His | | lapse was caused by beginning work too | Court Holds That Infidelity Charge | this city as co-re- | the suit was transferred | FLINT REMAINS IN THE FIGHT Does Not Intend to Give Up District Attorneyship Voluntarily. —ie Denies Senator Bard’s Recent State- ment That He Has Quit the Contest in" Favor of L. H. Valentine. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, March 29.—The United States District Attorneyship of Southern California, which for weeks has been the capital prize in the lottery of local poli- tics, is again at stake. War has broken out afresh, with all its former flerceness The so-called treaty of peace which was said a few days ago on the authority of Senator Bard and former Assemblyman L. H. Valentine to have been signed has been abrogated. Frank P. Flint has decided not to voi- untarily give up his present billet after next winter, when the United States Sen- ate was to have confirmed the nomina- tion of L. H. Valentine. Flint will re- main in the running to the end of the game. If he is to be displaced, Senator Bard will have to come out into the open and oppose his reappointment. Flint says that he was never a party to any formal deal by which he was to step down and out next December or at any other time, and he declares that he has by the contrary statement been placed in a false light befdre the public. “In _reference to the appointment of United States Attorney to succeed me. said Flint to-day, “I wish to say that I | did signify to Senator Perkins and Sen- ator Bard my desire to be reappointed, as an indorsement of my administration of the office which I have heid for four years. Afterward I informed them both that it was my intention to retire at the | end of this year for the purpose of devot- ing my entire time to my private prac- tice. This intimation has been perverted S0 as to place me in the position of en- tering into an agreement to the effect that I should retain the office for a cer- tain time, and cas then to_retire to make way for my successor. This is not a fact. I have entered into mno such agreement, and I have written to botn Senator Perkins and Senator Bard that any suggestion that I may have made that I would retire at the end of this year is withdrawn, and that my applics tion to succeed myself should be acted upon regardless of any statement from me as to the length of time I should re- tain the position. “Senator Bard sald to me. and to a number of business men of this city who called on him in my behalf, that some time previous to March 6 of this year he had said to Senator Perkins and others that my conduct of the office of Unite States Attorney had given general sat | faction and that he had decided to in | dorse me for reappointment. On March | 6 he received a telegram from a number of State Senators who had voted for him for United States Senator requesting that he recommend the appointment of L. H. Valentine, and he then decided that he could not refuse this request, and deter- mined to recommend Mr. Valentine. “T have requested Senator Bard to file my indorsements with the Department of Justice, and I am willing to submit the matter of my reappointment upon the ree- ord I have made in the office and upon sald indorsements. “I want to say positively that it {s my desire that definite action be taken upen this matter before April 8, the time of the expiration of my term of office.” STORM IS DESTROYING PROPERTY IN TEXAS Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars the Loss in Dallas From the Snow and Rain. | DALLAS, Tex., March 20.—A heavy rain storm, accompanied by a high wind, pre- | vailed here this afternoon. The wind dam aged roofs and blew down shrubbery an! the precipitation was so heavy that it formed torrents in the streets, whicn swept everything before them. Streetcar trafic was delayed and a quarter of a mile of track in the southern portion of the city had to be abandoned for the re- mainder of the day The damage in Dallas is estimated at $25.000. OMAHA. Neb.. March 29.—Five inchcs of snow has fallen since noon. The storm covers the entire State and(garts of Towa, extending north of Sioux City and we<t to the Wyoming and Colorado lines. In- coming trains on the Union Pacific were three hours late and other railroads report considerable dalay. In Omaha the street- car service is badly hampered, especially on the Council Bluffs lines. where it was= nearly suspended. The snow {s heavy and is accompanied by wind. The temper- ature is above the freezing mark. procualage>gs B Canton for Petaluma. PETALUMA, March 29.—A canton of the military rank of Odd Fellowship will be instituted in this city. Last evening Brigadier General H. O. Brower and Col. onel C. H. Wever of Alameda addressed a large party of patriarchs of the local fraternity. To cold and stormy weather opens the way to an attack of bromchitis. The man on the wagon, be he farmer, milk- man or truckman, needs to special heed to the fgt b symptoms of Weaa- ness or disease of will cure bromchi- seated | h"bs, bleeding of | eeding of ooy = b other conditions which if neglected or unskillfully treated terminate fatally in con- sumption There is no alco- | bol in the * Discov- ery,” and it is en- tirely free from opium, cocaine and other - 1cs. “For seven years 1 i had been troubled with what the doctors cali- ed bronchitis,” writes Mr. Arthur Maule (general merchant), of Niles- town, Middlesex Co., Ontario. "A year ago. af- ter I had been taken sick with a severe attack, I taking your - Golden Medical L I rapidly recovered from the attack and felt no more of it that fall. This season I i " in August. and have se far been perfectly well. I can go out in all kinds ot Deatnes and ot fecl the trouble at all. Let me say to all who from such complaiuts to give Dr. len edical com- Medical Discovery a fair trial, vinced that good results will be obtained.” Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, paper-bound, is sent free on re- ceipt of 21 one-cent stamps, to pay ex- pense of mailing only ; or 31 stamps for the book in cloth binding. Address Dr, R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, £ DR. CROSSMAN’S SPECIFIC MIXTURE Price §1 a bottle. For sale by druggists