The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 7, 1901, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7. 1901. 3 REAR ADMIRAL HOWISON, RETIRED, lHUU.ETS 5]‘[") BATTLE BETWEEN * GOES ON SCHLEY COURT OF INQUIRY THE PURSLERS A DRUST AND s Officer Wit.h a Fine Record for Gallantry and Faithful Service EMPLOYES BEGINS Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable, Is Acceptable to All Persons Interested in the Naval Contro-|Placer County Highway-| President Shaffer Orders General Strike | mee & 51 T of th oo versy Concerning the Santiago Campaign and Sea Battle| man Disables Deputy of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers in All| jj Gures mads by Dr. Kilmer's Swamo-Root, : : Sheriff. : Sl 3 the Billion-Dollar Corporation’s Mills 3 the great kidney, liver € <y 7 ASHINGTON, Ang. 6—The N\ / the Schley court WA c y caused by the In- \ . DR. EILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. — Mysterious Bandit Leaps|.. From a Ditch and Opens Fire. P Special Dispatch to The Call. AUBURN, Aug. 6—The highwayman ‘who has been holding up and robbing the passengers on stages In these parts for the last few months has eyidently become desperate in the dearth of more stages to rob and is abroad on the roads seek- ing pedestrians whom he may dispossess of valuables. He seems not averse to at- and bladder remedy. Itis the great medi- caltriumph of the nine teenth centu dis- Rear Admiral Kim- covered after years of Rear Admiral Kim. scientific research by ed by the selection 1. Howison, whose ced by Assistant At the same NEXT SATURDAY IS THE DAY SET FOR f B Dr. Kilmer, the emi. INAUGURATION OF A GENERAL STRIKE ~AkeSe.-. ent kidney and blad- that this appoint- ble to Admiral ° der specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou- bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst tment before taking ac- foum of kiiney trouble. ist of names to Ad- Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec- “f:;’m,):,aat oécfi:fii ommended for everything but if you have kid- 4 Admiral Schley ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found list. The depart- e selection to g it public. RETHREN! The officials of the United States Steel Trust have refused to recognize as union men those who are now striking for the right to organize. The exccutive board has authorized me to issue n call upon =ail Amalgamated and other union men in name and heart to join in the movement to fight for labors’ rights. 3 ‘We must fight or give up forever our personal liberties. You will be told that you have signed contracts, but you never teanting. (i SR for 13 aleth e agreed to surrender those contracts to the United States Steel Cor- Cmpiiod hiw revstvok St CoADls 4F DD poration. Its officers think you were sold to them just as the mills uty Sheriffs and severely wounded one of| > ere, contracts and all. them in the leg. That he did not kill both Remember, before you agreed to any contract you took an was due to chance or his ineficlency in obligation to the Amalgamated Association. It mow calls you to pistol marksmanship. help in the hour of need ng});‘"&:?-r:ebot; g;ed tg;: 1‘;‘1& !l?ésciflte}:‘; Unless the trouble is scttled on or before Saturday, August 10, o8l at OBhir mad Tobbed of e torr dollars: 1901, the mills will close when the last turn is made on that day. | Deputy Sheriffs Coan and Lozano_imme- Brethren, this is the call to preserve our organization. We trust you and need you. Come and help us, and may right come to diately started out in a buggy for the purpose of/ obtaining details of the crime S ped e e Al ieting s e Pittsburg, Aug. 6, 1901. just the remedy youneed. Ithas been tested in so many ways, in hospital work, in private practics, among the helpless too poor to pur- chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. ‘When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,Bing- 5 hamton, N. Y. The —¥ | regular fifty cent and ITTSBURG, Aug. 6.—After weeks | must triumph, however. It will triumph in | dollar sizes are sold by all zood druggists. ‘of preliminary skirmishing at last | gg:}:uffe ;'P: ;;uz&ell:ygm that the union men the great battle between the | ““In"inia call’ for the men to come out we gigantic steel trust and the thou- | tried to avold all meaningless words, all bom- sands of men marshaled under | bastic utterances and sensational sentences. at Ophir and then starting on the trail of the highwayman. As the men were driving cautiously along the road and watching for some sign Qf the robber’s whereabouts they were startled by the sudden appearance of a man who leape. from cpver in a ditch and turned loose on thefm a large pistol. Bullets whizzed alongside the heads of the astonished officers and one struck Lozano In the leg. Before the dep- o uties had recgvered from their consterna- tion and whipped out revolvers to return the fire their murderous assailant had disappeared in the brush. Lozano suffered severely from the wound and Coan decided to drive back to town. As soon as the news was received here a posse was formed and is now hunt- ing the outlaw. He is believed to be the man who held up two stages within a few weeks and who robbed T. J. Durn- ing, a prominent mining man, near For- est HIll last Saturday. To-night a report was recelved from Lincoln that another man had been held up and robbed. ATTORNEY GENERAL TELLS OF SCHOOLBOOE REVISION' The strike call includes practically all the banner of the Amalgamated Assocla- tion of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers is fairly on. The long talked of general strike order was issued by President Shaffer this evening, to take effect after the last turn of the mills on August 10. What the result will be no man can fore- tell, but judging by the expressed deter- mination of both parties to the contro- versy the battle will be waged to the very last ditch. Much money will be. lost, thousands upon thousands of men will be idle, great suffering is looked for and even bloodshed and death are possible and feared. Amalgamated men in the United States It is too serious a matter for stage play. The Amalgamated men_ fully realize the task that is before them, and have been prepared for It. They are, I belleve, ready to suffer long for what they firmly belleve to be thelr rights. They will suffer hunger, poverty and priva- tion of all kinds before giving in. The trust can never crush such men as our people. Theyv may start some of our mills, but they cannot start many of them. rsm SR A DEEPLY INCENSES THE POTTERS PITTSBURG, Aug. 6.—Reports were re- ceived from nearby towns to-night as fol- lows: WELLSVILLE, Ohlo.—The same number of mills are working and the temper of the men toward the company and the officers has been in no wise altered. The arrest of H. B. Hen- | derson, president of the Wellsville local lodge WILL REMOVE ~ THE ATTORNEY Redlands Wantsthe Pro- hibition Ordinance Observed. Special Dispatch to The Call. Superintendent Kirk Receives an |Steel Corporation’s employ not now on | Of potters. on the charge of riot has deeply in- 1 censed all the tt Valle: Opinion Relative to the Disposi- |strike. It was issued from the Amalga- | “RS% Al the potters in the Onio Velley | tion of Funds. mated Assoclation headquarters and | lished in the mill yard and the non-union men REDLANDS, Aug. 6.—The City Couneil of Redlands is incensed over the outcome bhad given of opinion re- e Sampson-Schley ced that Admiral | ot detail. Admiral | f Admiral Howison's | ment sent to the together with ative to the | t and the de- with cor- Youngest Ret Rear Howison voungest Y har- r Admiral as se- d whom he He was YOUNGEST RETIRED REAR ADMIRAL IN THE NAVY, WHO HAS BEEN SELECTED TO SUCCEED KIMBERLY ON THE SCHLEY 5 SACRAMENTO, Aug. 6.—Superinten- dent of Public Instruction Thomas J. Kirk has received an opinion from the Attorney General relative to the question whether there s sufficient authority of law to war- rant paying for plates secured of Eastern book concerns and whether books thus compiled need be copyrighted in this State. Attorney General Ford states that as the law now stands, providing for the revising of certain books, the limit of the amount to be spent out of the State school book fund by the State Board of Educa- tion is fixed at $25,000. In addition to the opinion Attorney General Ford makes the suggestion: I am informed by the Superintendent of Pub- lic Instruction that there has already been complled a school history of the United States of which more than 50,000 coples have been printed and distributed. In printing new edi- tions of the history referred to, 50,000 coples of the book having already been printed, it s suggested that the State Printer might, with the consent of the se?&'al State officers who would be called upon % act officlally in the premises, draw upon the State school book fund for the cost of manufacturing the re- vised edition of the-history in question, includ- ing the rent of plates used in printing the same. This will require the consent of the parties to the agreement between the State Board of Education and the American Book Company and the further consent of the Su- perintendent of State Printing, the Superin- tendent of Public Instruction, the members of the State Board of Examiners, the State Con- troller and the State Treasurer in order that the provisions of section § of the act of 1887 (statutes of 1587, page 139) might be complied mailed to all amalgamated lodge officials, who are expected to call their men into the strike. Prestdent Shaffer added this statement: The call goes to the vice presidents of the districts in which there are mills owned and operated by the Natlonal Steel, National Tube | and Federal Steel companies, as well as to the officials of the lodges in the mills. i No notice has been or is being sent to the | managers of the mills. We think their notice | | has come from the other side and they have | been warned of this ever since the inauguration | | of the strike. That ought to be sufficient. Swells Tdle Men to 100,000. | The order of President Shaffer is ex-| pected to swell the number of idle men to over 100,000 at the end of the week. President Shaffer was asked if the order was intended to go to the union men in the Carnegie Steel Company. He said that he answered no questions on that score. The Amalgamated Association has lodges in the upper and lower union mills of the Carnegle Steel Company and a foothold in the Homestead, Duquesne and Braddon, mines of the great bulwark of non-union- ism. In conformity to statements that have been made by Presldent Shaffer be- fore, these men will be expected to join the strike, as will all Amalgamated men and sympathizers in all plants of the United States Steel Corporation. The other companies of the steel corporation not mentioned by the Amalgamated presi- | dent and whose operations the association will seek to hamper are the American Steel and Wire Company and the Ameri»‘ | th Wwill be furnisked their meals within the mill | of the many trials of cases involving vio- yard_instead of having them passed through the fence as heretofore. Manager Brookman absolutely refused to admit a reporter to his office and will not even tell the number of mills now working. BELLAIRE, Ohio.—From present indications at the Bellaire works of the Natlonal Steel Company_the men will not come out on the call of President Shaffer. An organizer has been here, but could not get enough men to start a lodge, as there are not many men in s mill that the Amalgamated Association would allow to become members, but it Is thought here that it all the other trades come out this mill will close down. MONESSEN, Pa.—The tin mill is running and the strikers bave so far failed In their efforts to get the non-union men out. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio.—The general strike order will have no effect fn Youngstown or the Mahoning Valley. On July 1. when the old scale expired, all the mills of the United States Steel Corporation were closed down and not | a wheel has turned since. In Youngstown the | Steel Hoop Company owns two mills, which | employ 2500 men. In Ruthers the steel com- pany operates a five-mill plant of 500 men | and in Niles it has a plant employing the same number of men. In Niles, also, the Tin Plate Company operates a_plant of 600 men, and in ‘Warren the Steel Hoop Company's mills are idle and 500 men are out. They are all or- ganized and have nearly all secured jobs in indcpendent mills and outside works. The only move expected in the valley at an early date is the strike of the blast furnace men. lation of the Redlands prohibition ordi- nance. Time and again these cases have been brought to trial and each time the defendants have been acquitted. although condemnatory evidence in the shape of captured liquor was not lacking. Most of the blame for the outcome has been laid on the shoulders of City Attor- ney T. R. Archer by the prohibition peo- ple, and when- his last case went against him last Tuesday, despite the fact that the liquor stood on the trial judge’s desk and was admitted by the defendant and sworn to by the prosecution’s witnesses, | a concerted move was made. To-day three of the Councilmen ad- mitted that after to-morrow’s meeting of their board they would appoint a suc- cessor to City Attorney Archer and abide the consequences. Major C. F. Prescott, an artillery officer, recently returned from the Philippines, is mentioned for the place. Before taking up the practice of law a short time ago Attorney Archer was a school teacher. Rain Now Falling in Nebraska. LINCOLN, Nebr., Aug. 6.—Heavy rains fell to-night in_the southwestern part of Nebraska, breaking a drought which has been almost continuous since the 4th of July. can Bridge Company. In the wire com- | pany the Amalgamated Assoclation has with, St | KIPPER EW. ED only lodges in the Cleveland Rolling Mill | | 8 P IS R ARD:! plant and the Joliet Rod Mill plant of the' FOR HEROIC CONDUCT |company. The former is now idle. In the plants of the American Rridge | = g | COURT OF INQUIRY, WHICH CONVENES NEXT.MONTH. juring the | mmander of s ing from Alaska, en route home. When tigrew, “it came to my notice that Samp- asked r(~gflr(’;lng !he!dsimp‘fcln-schh’,\'“ip- son nad ;llr\psl'eSsed records which made it e v Quiry he said it would doubtless result in appear that Schley was disobeying ord, Company thera is no organization of the Completely exonerating Admiral Schiey if When, in fact, he was obeving obders jo. | CoPLAIR Alexander of the Steamer) TOMPARY REIS 0 Mok handling and | the decision were based solely on navy sued by Sampson, but these facts aftes Santa Rosa Receives a Medal erecting the woik of the American Bridge | records in the case and free from outside ward, in some mysterious manner, were From Washington. Company are organized as the Bridge | nences In any event the people have | gax DIEGO, Aug, 6For herofe con-fand Structural Tron Workers. They are | duct in saving life at sea, Captain E. | ntlon of Labor. member of the Senate,” sal not affillated with the Amerigan Feder-‘ [] iesiesiebeeofeieolesifofodei= @ | Alexander, the commander of the steamer Atiitide of the Federation | MAYA INDIANS ROUTED | HUNTERS ARE MISSING S R e eder e et e EM | The attitude of the federation remains medals awarded under the act of Con-| T! : s BY THE MEXICAN TROOPS, IN FLOODED CANYONS |sress on June 20, 1874. incertain, and the yresident of the Amal- | s S | 3 = ‘The medal is in recognition of heroic | iyss it, although support has been prof- Many of the Rebellious Redskins | Searching Parties Fail to Find the |oonduct on the morning’ of April 3, 18%, | fered by officlals of the federation. This i it i 4 when at Port Harford, in command of the | hg v Have Taken Refuge in Brit Men Caught in a Cloud- steamer Mexico, Captain Alexander P{,‘: ,,‘,’,‘;‘{",,f“(‘,fif,‘°,:!flJZ{‘&,‘},’L";LJ?.?.‘{%“I,;’;’,".{T ish Honduras. burst. rescued from drowning an insane man | Many affiliated bodies of the federation f order to it jus secretal Diaz, who sa: lunts were swept away and small 2 S AUSTIN, Tex ch from | REDLANDS, Aug. 6.—There wa who had jumped from one of the ports|have annual or long term contracts with ted a list of (axaca, Mexico, says the campaign of the | cloud in the sky yesterday at 10 oo e e eros pat ne|g gamer and | ther employers, and bevond financial and \ s forelgn o troops againbt the Maya Indians | over the B Wi o'clock | the wharf, where a boat could not go and | moral support it is hard to tell how the /) be ordered g f -Y~ - 4 a In of By bt—‘l‘ _Sant na Canyon watersied, | where he was in great danger of not only | federation may go. " in the State of Yucatan is at [ but be 2,4nd 2:30 there were {wo|being drowned but crushed also. Captain| It has been the purpose of President 3 , Ad- omc soipel e Sondbursts and until 4 p. m. an unprece- | Alexander was about 300 feet from his | Shaffer to give the operating officials of min W. just b iss ionted fall.of rain occurred. Many power | vessel at the time, but he was in the | the remaining constituent companies of | water inside of a minute and had the man | the steel corporation time to anticipate us take your measure he . There are completely subjugated the rebeilious ‘;M:_’!gii]ilar';{f’dbcv_‘l_;]om of the big canyon | at the surface, where he held him against | the calling out of their men. If it was ficers iral Schley’s gians and that the troop bt Gneterated. The waters rose rapidly, | his will until a rope was lowered and he | intended to glve these managers an James Parker, Admiral Schley’s Die. Many of the hostile Indians walle. * Tove, Dartien of doer Muniors g | W2s Dauled on boara ; J O e D e | con f 1t the Navy taken refuge in British Hondur: missing. 1 Okine to-day, although they will still have till | T the closing of operations on Saturday to prevent the striking of their men, The call to the men of the three com- bart, | of the strike is the same as on Saturday | panies in the mills of which the Amalga- when the men walked out. The smelter fs | mated Assoclation 18 strongest Is expected | for them to-day, but up to 8 o’clock no Jerome Strikers Hope to Win. trace of them had been discovered. A | JEROME, Ariz, Aug. 6—The situation ta Fe passenger agent, C. H. Ho among those reported missing. tary garrisons will be establ ined in the Indian country until a danger of another outbreak Mexican teachers are also being the Indian towns and villages and Govern- Searching parties are looking | | | | | | Nt S s esta shes e he 8- e S V] V] E en g ally a 1y - d ment schools established under the aus-| Hoodlums Attack Streetcar Men, |Clo%¢d down., With some men at cleaning | 1o be Beneraliy and premptly, responded pices of the Government for the educa : $ work and repairing. A report is abroad 4 f tion of the Mava children. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6.—Three rowdies | that the miners are out in this stril ey g A R 9% ket docsmins | boarded an East Side street car on upper | nga 1a not so. There In na sronarey i | eral Steel Company and cut off half of the PEOPLE HIS VINDICATORS. New Owner of Paraiso Springs. ;‘,‘f;‘{!nf,g"‘:‘ft‘ur'a;fio’l‘éfl;“ag‘;"n;‘;"“;flg beat | bening the strike. So far as can be leapned o ibe apahtcs and thice mors 5 ¢ SALINAS, Aug. 6—A deed was filed | When the ear resehes” tha ;fia'z;f"fii the strikers have no friej other than | than 40,000 men idle. 1 d [ T Ex-Senator PettigrewSpeaksin Praise jumped off and escaped into’ Chinatency | what they may have individually. W. A.| In the most extensive plant of the onc oi.our made-io-measvre Suits e Al Tae e dallore ot the poA 1. | Clark left yesterday for New York and | Natlonal Tube Company, at McKeesport, of Rear miral Schley. o Nt 3 | pearance during the progress of the tran. | Pefore going announced that his orders | the organization is new and the efrect of Ak, 6 Tx-Senator Pettl- dad The considération is stated to have | bie % attracting much unfavorable com- | Nor, that the management should stand | ine strike order e uncertain. ‘The works ! . € eturned jast even- 195,000, Ent. ssions. he gen- | employ more than men. i - akota returned last even- been ment Ery eSS Skt e R e e S SRS We would like to do it for many reasons : W e settled within seven days. i g - el bl ‘The attitude of the men of the United Ycu would get acquiinted with us, acquainted Marriage of Capitalist’s Daughter. | Si21e Steel Corporation so far not affect- with our methods. acquainted with the fact that o ‘G‘,rfhé(s‘s“ Mats;l Quml)y.' ;‘asséd since the futlle effort to arrive at we- save customers mcre money on a suit of aughter of C. W. Quilty, the well- | terms of peace in New Yorlk last Satur- % % % g 7 e e 00y o O imre atricts! Nave ‘Beanssimone clothes than any other establishmenton this coast. jora, Springs Hotel, near Salings e | thelf men, and thelr reports have reached This will lead to our mutual benefit. We would Qs;;?e;r(e}l:agxrlxnrt)erfarmlln‘g the ceremony S R L have your trade and you would get good-wearing, . i v, a sister, was - : 5 . . s : A b mald, and Fred Gllchrist ofMciated as host | ACers. An ageressive move upon the Car- stylish suits at a low price and be satisfied with ] man. An elaborate wedding and reception | NGEle mils 13, e lid to-night: ‘Wi it i ing i ; i DS e e it CHIRE, 3, (15 S5 | want“no:bme-th.Gome bt With-us il the suits and pleased with the saving. To get If you have pains you should look after them quickly. Pain shows some- e foreone. Mr. and Mrs. - Jofran2d 10 | ingly. 1t our people are not in full sym- your measura we say : Come in,geta number of thing is wrong. The sharper the pain the more danger there is in delay. There spend their honeymoon in San Franclsco: | Pathy with ourfight we would rather they ; A ick leasi are thousands of women today who are bearing awful pain almost continually, Cloudburst in the Si «r;":aaflmae‘ }v;vun'my‘ml%g‘{e}yl&‘no;:\?ea:fi;} our Samples, examine them, pick out a p ea_sm_g rather than tell a physician about the shooting pains in their lower abdomen, SACRAMENTO, Aug. 6._There was a | ooer Whor thesr Snsily s dseidn” el pattern. leave your order. If, after the suit is about the agony of falling of the womb and the distress of leucorrheea. They heavy thunderstorm in the Slerra Nevada | Will come out prepared for the battlé. made up, you think that it is rot worth the let the months pass and their trouble becomes harder to cure and more distress- Mopuiaile st aight . A slondimrse SRR T T monev, o- that it is not satisfactory you can have ing. But modest women can secure exemption from the embarrassment of a fce pona ‘dam at leeland, east of Truekee | Pose and a, determination to stand for ; ; back and ill ly b t private examination. When pain tells you of danger you can cure yourself ENCIE DAL of el erss cobtld anded) R Fier Gasuing the omclal call for next MOUBIDONEY, i et il S A by the use of cnvert ofiie Central Paclde. . Tvalns | gsturday ignt President Shafter sald: time. But w2 will be pretty careful that you A cloudburst at Golconda, Nev., < | At noon to-day I called out all the m u i = . 3 ol morning washed out ;"‘.’D;} e ts gi‘ekl".J;mm yg.w_;;:;.,w.mu:':%; n‘,v:nr'.svi"‘;:f.:’.“.l will have no grounds for discatisfaction. Frap'k Farther delay of irains. ~The weathes Js | o clock {onight. My purpese 'in dotng’ nis ly, now, did you ever know of any other tailo- cloudy in the valley and foothills. o mEds Dare I s s, heen ivi S ivileg s these ? : Phacterss oot . = e iling "“"‘;:’"n"z{"rz::{f':fi"r;‘ 2“".: ol "}:?::‘Efi: giving customers such privileges a ‘ou can be cured without distressin, —in the privacy of ouncil Fears to 'orce Law. purpose of supply non-union mills when . e privacy of your home. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6.—The Councll | {oeilbnt it did ot work. The trast will oreh With these facts before you there is no reason for the delay which is increasin, oo Bt e e % 5 & A g has decided not to attempt to enforce the | all the bars they have stored now bad enough Suits sa{,sfaflw-,/, made for cut-of-town customers your misery and wasting the days of your lif. Why not stop the pain today? law against more thar: one street car com- }:;gfi;"’,{,,:"fi;,’;;"r‘fl‘ Vb vtk ke geas, S':;Egu:tn7es§,x'3§k‘{"°-rfle'3§£‘3§e than | Seleds rente Which read an Tollows: sl through our self-measuring system—write for samples. e is that the law is being so generally vio- Thi il brin; bout 1500 t ) h L8 2 i Belen, Miss,, March 9, 1900, Iated that any attemnt to enforce it Woutd Nntl;nn‘r fteé xfin:til:r: ‘fmi Efu:mf’ '; You ses 1 have used one_pottie of Wine of Cardui 20d one tedford’s Biack-Draught. Before T cause serioys complications in #he street | we have to be on the watch for fst euch began o t-ke your medicines | had paics in my back, higs, lowes bosrels and my aems. Sometimes | thooght CBme G i eftors Lo secure transiits bex | WM BOUTE o S 3n N1 UL hey ‘10 3y 1 wouid go blind. Fy head ached and I was so weak I could hardly walk across the floor. Now 1 can only tween - the companies using “the same | are fully prepared to meet every move they # = » fee! 2 little of the pain in my side and Iam to use Yo:;:,dm until I get cured, for I believe {:‘i“‘l;: for a distance of more than five ‘Will Be Felt by All Classes ill certainly cure me. 1 have been twelye years and am the mother of seven children, I SR - = et fo 7 g ey TATICEA sty Barber Shoots the Milkman i e taat g g > er! R R B e A e N CHICO, Aug. 6.—Last night J. F. Barnes, | of the country President Shafter saja: 718 Market Street and or ce and 11 re y g sym] “The ' a barber of this city, shot Bert Cof The closing of all these mills will be felt b; Department,” The Chattanooga Soarta Company, Chattanooga, Tenn. ik wagen driver. in the back of the |l classes. It will stop production and. this Cor. Powell and Eddy. ! neck. Cofer is in a precarious condition | Vill Stov commerce. The effect will be bad \ and Barnes s in jail, with bail fixed at | yealized it all the time and tried to avold by $2000. Both men bad been drinking and | every means In my power the carrying out st auarreled. - this programme, but it was of no use. Right

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