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FRANCISCO LAWYER'S WORDS AROUSE HUSBAND Lookout Lynching Case May Result in a Tragedy. Citizen Resents Mention of His Wife as a “She Detec- tive.” — e Special Dispatch to The Call AETURAS, Nov. 20.—For a time to-day the prospect for a “gun play,” growing | out of the Lookout lynching case, ap-| peared very rosy. During his examina-| tion of a venireman this afternoon At-| torney Raker, for the defense, asked if the prospective juror were acquainted with the “she detective.” He referred to | Mrs, Summers, who is wunderstood to have given testimony against the lynch-| ers before the Grand Jury. Raker was | promptly called to order by the court. After the adjournment for the day Mrs. Svmmers and her husband called upon the lawyer fer a retraction. For a few minutes the situation looked decidedly in- | terésting, but friends interfered and pre- | vented a clash between the two men. However, the feeling between them fis| very bitter and there may yet be trouble. Only one talesman was mined dur- ing the entire morning on of the court. Henry Lorentz, replying to a ques- tion by the prosecution, said that he did not regard with favor an indictment by | the Grand Jury. He was.challenged by 4 the prosecution, and the challenge was | denied by the court. Lorenz later said that he would not consider the indict- ment at all. Lorenz's brother some time ago married a daughter of Calyin Hall, | one of the men hanged at Lookout, and Lorenz after that time entertained no frienély feeling toward the Halls. He/| said that he was a personal friend of all the defendants, but declared this would haye no effect upon his verdict. Under further statements by Lorenz that he would not under any circumstances con- vict on circumstantial evidence, he was excused. During the afternoon session three talesmen were examined. Scott H. Clas- pill 'was passed. A. L. Page of Cedar- ville was next examined. He was asked by the prosecution if he would be influ- enced in any way by the fact that at- taches of the Attorney General's office were ting the District Attorney of | this o v in prosecuting the case. He replied that he believed that he would and, further, that he was opposed to_the | presecution of the case at all. Mr. Post, for the prosecution, then asked him if it was not a fact that he believed that when | that mob hanged those five men at Look- out it did a good job. Page replied that he thought they “did not do a bad one.” | Page was'excused. i The examination of H. G. Holm was | not completed when court adjourned un- | til morning. Four talesmen have now | been passer | INCENDIARIES SET FIRE | TO TIENTSIN BARRACKS e N Two Soldiers of the Welsh Fusileers | Perish in Their Burning | Quarters. | VICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 20.—The| steamer Glenogle arrived to-day from the | Orient. She brings news that the Japan- ese Cabinet has adjusted its financial af- not be necessary I year. The main f new pregramme is that larg: ecopomies will be effected in the ordinary expenditures and the departments wiil pay into the treasury sums heid by them on account of uncompieted WOrks. Big fires are reported from Tientsin. The Welsh Fusileers' barracks were among the bulldings destroyed and iwo soldiers were burned to_death. A fire alsc ocourr: the British barracks at Sinho. The godowns of a Russian firm were de- stroyed and had there been much- wind ress in t! e floods. Thous: been drowped and_thou- ng. persons ha sands are star Lo | STRIKE AT ALEXANDRA COLLIERIES AT AN END Deputy Minister of Labor King Ef- fects Settlement and Men Re- turn to Work. NAIMO, B. C., Nov. 29.—Mackenzie fan Deputy Minister of La- alled to British Columbia strike at Rossland, ble at the Alexandra s of the Wellington Coal Company s ‘morning just in time to prevent a sympathetic strike at the other collierie of the company, of which James Duns- muir, Premier of British Columbia, president. This afternoon the hoisting engines, which have been idle all week, were rushing coal to the surface in the endeavor to fill the holds of the waiting ships at Oyster Harbor. The principal points asked for by the men—recognition of the union and the ad- justment of the price of stringems—had been conceded, but a hitch had occurred in the negotiations over the tonnage for certain places. A suggestion from Mr. King was accepted by both sides and the men returned to work. No further trouble is feared. Kill Another Man’s Steer. RED BLUFF, Nov. 20.—Sheriff Bogard | has arrested J. V. O'Brien, James Rosell | and a man named Bradley for the kill- | ing of & steer that did not belong to them. | Bradley, who was arrested first, was con- fronted ‘with such conclusive evidence of his guilt that he made a confession im- plicating O'Brien and Rosell. DUBOIS, TiL, Nov. 20.—Charles Evilsiser, the | City Marshal, ‘and Henry Cameron of Ashley | inquire into the terminated the tr is fought & pistol duel at & ball here last night. | Both will die. ——— e ADVERTISEMENTS, The Most Common Cause Only Re- cently Discovered. It has been stated on good medical au- thority that nine-tenths of cases of deaf- | ness are caused from catarrh or from sore | throat trouble. The little tube which leads to the ear | from the throat is lined with a sort of vel- | vety structure called mucous membrane. This membrane is simply a continuation | of the mucous membrane lining of the throat. When disease of any sort attacks | the mucous membraani of the throat it is very liable to extend into the Eus ! tube and up into the ear. e The history of nearly all cases of deaf- mess Is like this; a cold is contracted and neglected, other colds are taken, the throat becomes sore and inflamed, which,| is aggravated by particles of dust and | gerw:ls from the air. d’l'hlls condition causes, | the disease to spread into the tul | leads to the ear. b It seems a little far fetched to say that most cases of deafness are caused from catarrh, bug it is certainly true, and any | one who hes had a severe catarrhal cold | must have noticed how the hearing was affected while the cold lasted. With catarrh sufferers this impairment | of hearing_becomes chronic and grows worse the longer the catarrh is neglected | You -can _cure catarrh and deafness by | the regular use of an excellent new prepa. ration called Stuart'’s Catarrh Tablets, composed of antiseptie remedies, which act both on the mucous membranes but prin- cipally and most effectually on the blood, elelnnung the catarrhal poison from the system. People whose hearing is defective may think it a little Temarkable that a_simple and harmless tablet would very often re. move all traces of deafness, but when it | is remembered that catarrh causes the deafness and that the catarrh is easily curedl by the regular use of Stuart’s Ca- tarrh Tablets there is no mystery about it. If you are subject to nasal catarrh or catarrh of throat, bronchial tubes or ca- tarrh of stomach and liver, the safest and most effective treatment is the new ca- tarrh specific, Stuart's Catarrh' Tablets, sold by all druggists at 50 cents for full- sizzd package. u L, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1901 SIETY BELLES DISPLAY GORGEOUS GOWNS AT ENTRE NOU i e DEBUTANTES WHO PARTICIPATED IN COTILLON AND TWO BELLES WHO WILL AID CHURCH BAZAAR. \ W 508 HE new ballroom of the Palace Hotel presented a brilliant scene last evening, the occasion being the second assembly and german given by the members of the Entre Nous €etillon Club. There was a large attgndance. Six pretty and intricate figures of the cotillon were danced under the leadership of Sanford G. Lewald and Miss Pearl C. Haas. Among the figures presented was the ag of all nations.” The various sets were furnished with vari-colored flags and at the proper moment they were waved to the accompanying strains of the orchestra. In the ‘“arbor” figure the ladies were presented with colored lan- terns. The lights in the ballroom were lowered and the intricate figure was ! danced with the aid of the lights furn- ished by the dancers. Japanese umbreilas were used in another pretty figure and added to the general effect. Miss Haas is a daughter of the late George W. Haas. She is a petite blonde. She was attired In a handsome gown pink brocaded silk, trimmed with cream jace and parrow white velvet ribbon. Miss Lillian Lubben was attired in a beautiful gown of white silk with an over- dress of black jetted lace with garlands of white roses over the shoulders and in the hair. s Ella von Kapff was gowned in ite chiffon trimmed with lace. In the leading set were the following members: Misses Ida Pariser, Josephine D. Jones, Ethel s.el!rene Meussdorfier, Aimee Auger, Lil- ltan Breiling, Lillian Curley, Mabel Hamilton, Helen Bruning, Ethel Boyd, Mabel Kergan, Daisy Huggins, Virginia Potter, Ida Purlensky, Cuneo, Elizabeth Baker, Edith Stadtfeld, Nelle Blakey, Edna Sullivan, Evelyn Sresovich, Gface Cashin, Eva Dolan, Camille Nelson, Lillian Dunbar, Messrs. Dr. W. A. Ellis, Ernest Brand Jr., Harry T. Bailey, Otto F. Schiller, Willlam J. Haas, Martin Hurenberg, E.. W. Gordan, William F. Hooke, Harry A. Saxe, E. J. Breiling, H. H. Sagehorn, Fred Cellarius, David B. Torres, J. B. Adams, Wesley Claw- son, Harry C. Johnson, Dr. A. W. Baker, John Breuner, Willlam Stadtfeld, Dr. Calvin W. Knowles, Percy C. Windham, Victor La Motte, William Westerfeld, Alton ' Payvton, M. E. 1. Bateman, Louis Haven, J. L. Ful- . V. Politeo and H. L. Cunningham. At midnight supper was served in the banquet hall adjoining the ballroom. The guests sat at six long tables. During the banquet the scene was animated and pic- turesque. On New Year's eve the Entre Nous in- tend giving another cotillon. & s w The cotillon given by La Jeunesse in Native Sons’ Hall last evening was an event that will live long in the memory of the social set. It was in a measure a military ball. Officers of the army and navy presented a martial appearance in their resplendent uniforms. Military trap- plngs were used in the various figures with grand effect. Debutantes handled sabers, flags and guns with the familiar- ity of veterans. e hall was magnifi- cently decorated for the occasion. From the center of the hall hung a can- opy of flags and streamers of red, white and blue were caught at the sides of the gallery by clusters of small flags. The or- chestra ;{)layed patriotic marches and melodies behind potted plants. Lieutenant Conrad - Babcock of the United States army and Ensign E. R. Miller of the navy led the cotillon. The patronesses of the cotillon were: els, Mrs. Eleanor Martin, Mrs, A. W. Foster of San Rafael, Mrs. McClung, Mrs. H. E. Huntington and Mrs. Timothy Hopkins, Mrs. Benjamin Cohen and her daughter, Miss Jane Cohen, assisted by Mrs. Han: nah Pinto, will receive their friends at their new 'residence, 3019 Laguna street, next Tuesday afternoon. . s . J. E. M. Taylor of Chico and Miss Mar- guerite Boyce San Francisco were married in Oroville on Wednesday last. The ceremony was performed at the home of Mrs, W. A. Palmer, a sister of the groom.” The couple will'reside {n Chico. Everything is in readiness for the ba- zaar to be %;Ven this evening for the bene- fit of the English Evadgelical Lutheran Church. The affair is to be held in Mis- sion Opera Hall.' An excellent musical programme will be rendered. The bazaar will continue Monday, Tuesday and Wed- nesday evenings. The various booths will be presided over by the following com- mittees: > Executive—Mrs. E. M. Stensrud, Mrs. A. Sonderup, Mrs. H. Schroeder, Miss Sophie Hansen and Miss Lulu Lucky. Finance—H. Olsen and A. Sonderup. Decoration—Mrs. L. Larsen and Mrs. J. Car- penter. Programme—Rev. E. M. Stensrud, Mrs. E. M. Stensrud and Mrs. P. Paulsen. Booths: Ladies’ Aid No. 1-Mrs. P. Paulsen and Mrs. Brunn. Ladies' Ajd No. 2—Mrs, J. Engell and Mrs. M. Mikkelsen. Ladies'_Aid No. 3—Mrs. M. S. Smith and Mrs A. B. Gudmundsen. Young Ladies' Aid No. 1—Miss Marie Son- derup, Miss Annie Bensen and Mrs. N. Lucky. Young Ladies' Ald No. 2—Miss Alfrida Pet- tersen, Miss Emily Olsen and Miss Ida Gibson. Japanese tea—Miss Olga Olsen, Miss Helen Hansen and Miss -Ingebors Nilsen. Ice cream—Miss Dora Knudsen, Miss Lulu Lucky, Miss Sophie Hansen. Miss Lulu Krull, Miss Selma Olsen, Miss Clara Olsen and Mies Bekke Bensen. Lemonade, candy, etc.—Miss Agnes Andersen, Miss lda Broneer, Miss Henrikka Hansen and Miss_Sophie F 7. Mrs. A, "aber. Refreshments—Mrs. Olsen, Son- cerup, Mrs. H. Schroeder, Miss Alma Reimers Olsen, J. Tellefsen and A. Reimers. Hat Toom—A. W. Hogrebe, O. Thompsen, | John Smith and E. Sonderup. Door—-C. Claussen, A. Pettersen, H. Schroeder and T. Tonnesen. »i5# The entertainment and ball given in Na- tive Sons’ Hall last Thursday night by the Webster Dramatic Company was a great success. The hall was crowded with friends of the amateurs and those who took part in the rendition of therural com- edy drama entitled “Hick'ry F: P2 applauded for their clever work. Miss Cella Celler scored a hit. She has a sweet voice and displays much taient in her work. Harry Stenge, John C. Morris and Miss H. Lyons also did good work. The cast was made up as follows: Ezekiel Fortune, W. A. Lyons; Urich Skin« ner, Jack Morris; Gilbert Darkwood, H. Stenge; Detective Lawrence McKeegan, A. J.- Lyol Rankin, B. Michels; Jessie Fortune, Miss C. Celler; Mrs. Prescilla Dodge, Miss H. Lyons. At the close of the performance the floor was cleared and dancing was enjoyed until a late hour. Mrs. William_Cluff will give a tea in honor of her daughter this afternoon. A tea will be given at the California Ho- telldthls afterfoon by Mrs. General War- field. The international doll exhibit will be shown for the first time on this coast at the annual reception of the Protestaut Episcopal Old Ladies’ Home in the Maple room of the Palace Hotel on December 3, Pauline Ryder, G. Moss Coleman, Kathryn | Mrs, Willam H. Mills, Mrs. A. H. Voorhies, [ and Miss Blanche Reimers. 4,5, 6 and 7. This collection of dolls num- Mever, Alma Schroeder, May . Curley, Rose| Mrs. Willlam McKittrick, Mrs. John D. Spreck- | Ushers—Oscar Olsen, J. J. Olsen Jr., John | bers 400. Among them are many old and D o e e e B B e e ST OF 0'BRIEN'S VIGTIMS GROWS Fourth Murder Is Added ' to Dawson Outlaw’s Record. —_—— Epecial Dispatch to The Call. VANCOUVER, B. C., Nov. 20.—J. H. Seely of the Northwest mounted police secret service, who was instrumental in | working up the evidence against O'Brien, the murderer who was hanged in Dawson severeal months ago, Js authority for the story of a crime committed by O'Brien previously to the three murders for which he wegt to the gallows. Seely says that the details were learned only a few days ago. The man who was Kkilled was named Hannaford. “Kid” West, the con- vict recently pardoned, says that in the spring of 1898 he and O'Brien went cut one mnight on the trail pear Dawson to hold up some one. A man was met and robbed in the usual manner. O'Brien, with his insatiable lust for murder, was not content with getting money, and struck the victim upon the head with a Jead pipe about two feet long. The man dropped in his tracks. West then. dis- covered that instead of the victim bel merely knocked senseless he was dea He so remarked to O’Brien, who simply sa‘"‘%Ve'u have to throw him in the river.” The body was then thrown into the river and drifted down to where it was afterward found. In August of 1839 Lwo constables were sent from Forty Mile to the boundary line for duty. Whilé on their way down it was reported to them that the body of a man was lying on the beach. A search was made and the body found. The police buried the corpse and marked the grave with a board bearing the following inscription: *“‘An unknown man found and buried by Northwest mounted police, August 3, 1899.”” Since coming from the north Seeiy has learued the victim's name. e = . LONDON, Nov. 20.—The mer St. Paul, which will sail from Southampton to-morrow for New York, will have among ber passengers Lady Pauncefote, wife of the British Embas- sador to the United States, and John R. Car- ter, second secretary of the United States em- bassy in London, and Mrs. Carter. BEGOMES MANIAG | ENTIGES A GIRL - INPRISON GELL) ~ FROM HER HOME ‘Woman Accused of Rob- bery Gives Way Un- der Disgrace. ¥ Special Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, Nov. 29.—Raving for her freedom and tearing her unkempt hair and clothing, Mrs. Mary Clarke paces the insane cell of the County Jail, apparent- ly a hopeless maniac. Her mind has be- come deranged from brooding over a charge of robbery against her and the possibility of being sent to the peniten- tiary. Mrs. Clarke's case is a peculiar one. Three weeks ago she came from Sacra- mento with her infant child to become housekeeper for John Horan, a railroad attache living i Copley. Ten days ago Horan went to call his housekeeper and found only her babe. The woman had disappeared. A trunk in the room, con- tnlnrng the jewels of Mrs. Hdran, who died recently, had been broken open and diamonds, a watch, necklace and trinkets valued at nearly $1000 had been taken. Thirty-six hours later Mrs. Clarke was arrested in a suburb of Redding. She d she was going to Anderson, ten iles below here. She had walked ‘through the rugged, brush-covered hills from Copley. ler shoes were worn and torn from her feet and her skirt was in ribbons. She denied having taken the Jewels and had none upon her, She hint- ed that she had been insulted by Horan. She cried for her babe. A short sickness in tx'laon was followed by violent in- sanity. Mu’f Clarke is a handsome woman of 30 years. } e NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—Carl H. Hoffman, the stenographer who was in the employ of the Isthmian Canal Commission, and who was ar- rested in this city Tuesday night on a warrant issued in the District of Columbia, charging him with selling reports of the commission, was n to Washington to-day by a United States | Marshal. o Stops the Cough And works off the cold. Laxative BEromo. &33.‘“ Tablets cure a cold in one day. No No Pay. Price 25 cents, . —te Mrs. Ella Pinard Faces Serious Charge in San Jose. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Nov. 29.—Ella Pinard, who has gained much notoriety from being the firet wife of Fred H. Pinard, now held in the County Jail on a charge of bigamy, occupied a cell adjoining that of her hus- band last night. The woman, who is also known &s Ella Alvord, was accused of vagrancy, but the more serious charge of enticing Beulah Martin, a 17-year-old girl, from her home in East San Jose to enter upon an immoral life in_San Francisco is to be preferred. Mrs. Pinard was ar- rested in San Francisco by Detective Anthony on a vagrancy charge swore to by John Martin, who claims the woman induced his daughter to leave home. Mrs. Pinard was cooking in a restau- rant in San Francisco when arrested. De- tective Anthony says that Beulah Martin has been staying at 17 Turk street, but as soon as the assoclates of Mrs. Pinard learned of her arrest they spirited the girl away and hid her. Mrs, Pinard pleaded guilty before Jus- tice Wallace to-day on a charge of vag- rancy, but sentence was suspended on her promise to reveal the whereabouts of Miss Martin. CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—Stockholders of the Bur- lington met "again to-day, but adjourned until December 6. No reason is given for the re- peated postponements, ' Piles Cured Without the Enife. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. No _Cure, No Pay. ts are_author- ized by the manufacturers of Pazo Ointment to_refund money where it fails to cure any case of piles, no matter of how long standing. Cures ordinary cases in six days; the worst cases in fourteen days. One application gives case and rest. Relieves itching instantly. This is a new discovery, and is the only pile rem- edy £old on a positive guarantee, No cure no pay. A free sample will be sent by mall to any one sending their name and address. . 1f your druggist don't keep it in 50c in stamps and we Will forwi &% S o by " dimutactured by ‘mail. | PARIS mlcmg CO., 8t. Louls, % “Mo., who also manufacture the 'celebrated ' cold cure, Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets, CREDITORS HAL MECHAM'S LUCK Texas Oil Fields Yield Riches to Bankrupt Speculator. Special Dispatch to The Call. TACOMA, Nov. 20.—George B. Mecham, formerly one of the largest mining oper- ators and townsite speculators in this State, has pleased a large number of cred- itors and friends by sending money to Spokane and Molson for the payment of debts contracted by him during the “boom” times some years ago. News comes from New York that in the past few monthg Mecham has cleared more than $250,000 in oil speculations. He hur- ried to Beaumont when oll was struck in Texas and has since been making money rapidly. Going to New York and Mon- treal he promoted several oil concerns a{xd seems destined to become a million- aire, Mecham has the reputation of being a money maker and plays for big stakes, having already made and lost three for- tunes. Six years ago, while operating on the Colorado Springs stock exchange, his profits for several months exceeded $100,- 000. One of his luxuries was a private wire between Chicago and Colorado Springs for which he paid $22,000 yearly. rec days after President Cleveland’s famous Venezuelan message he was prac- tically “broke.” | ‘When the southern half of the Colville Indian reservation was opened Mecham became_ interested in mines in that lo- cality. He bonded the best claims obtaina- ble, organized a syndicate in Montreal and platfed the town of Molson, in the heart of a rich agricultural and mining section. At a critical juncture his Mon- treal backers withérew. Mecham. was left in the air, owing his creditors large sums. Soon afterward he went East and little was heard of him until news came of the fortune he made in oil speculation. Present indications are that every whom he owed will be paid in full with interest. e 29.—Private to-da; Fort Leavenworth y by h k of the young soldier’s head The bacl ed in. S AND LA JEUNESSE PARTIES New Figures Are Danced by the Guests. Debutantes Enjoy Their First - Ball. Ban(juets Are Pre- pared by ‘ Hosts. Rieh Decorations ‘in the Palace e rare dolls. The collection comprises dolis of the whole world and has been exhibit- ed throughout this country. The recep- tion will be given under the auspices of the board of managers. They are as fol- lows: Mrs. R, B. Sanchez, Mrs. C. E. Gibbs, Mrs. G. W. Klire, Mrs, James Newlands, Mrs. S L. Foster, Mrs. P. I Asbury, Mrs. B, E. Bab- cotk, Mrs. George L. Balker, Mrs. Phillip Ca- duc, Mrs. "Aifred Clarke, Mrs. J. F. D. Curtis, Mrs. John Landers, Mrs. E. J. Lion, Mrs. J. V. D. Middleton, Mrs. A. M. Prindle, Mrs. M. . Ramus, Mrs. George Reed, Mrs. John I Sabin, Mrs. Louis C. Sanford, Miss Selby, Mrs. George Sneath, Mrs. F. L. Southack, Mrs. E. M. Spalding and Mrs. George Wellington. B i B s o ] SEAMEN ARE NEEDED IN THE GROWING NAVY International Union Considers the Present Personnel of the Mer- chant Marine. BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 29.—The com- mittee on resolutions of the convention of the dnternational Seamen’s Union of America redported to-day. The report was adooted. The bill introduced in the last Congress to amend the laws relating to American seamen and to improve the ersonuel of the merchant marine was ndorsed and its reintroduction urged. The report of the committee calls atfen- tion to the undermanning of all classes of vessels. The employment of Asiatics as_sallors is condemned. Attention is called to the loss of the Rio Janeird and the conduct of the Chinese crew on that vessel when she was wrecked near San e Would tsist,” th t ‘“We wor nsist,” the report continued, “that if our country is to % able to use its growing navy seamen must be pro- vided and preferably native seamen. Un- less the American boy can be induced to seek the sea for a livelthood there will be no field from which the navy can be recruited in time of need. It is idle and dangerous to depend upon foreigners to defend at all times the honor of the flag under which they serve as mercenaries.” Congress is feutioned for an increased lrproprintlon 'or the marine hospital ser- vice. One Failure Causes Three Others. VICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 20.—As a result of the failure of Thomas Earle, M. P., three minor fallures were announced to- day. THey are: R. H. Jameson, grocer; Alfred Magnesen, Mr. Earle’s confidential clerk and his partner in various enter- prises, and the Clayquot Canning Com- ny, the chief shareholders of which are essrs. Earle and Magnesen. N What are Humors? They are vitiated or torbid fluids cours« ing the veins and fecting the tissues, They are commonly due to defective diges- tion but are sometimes inherited. How do they manifest themselves ? In many forms of cataneous eruption, salt rheum or eczema, pimples and boils, and in weakness, languor, general debility. How are they expelled? By - Hood’s Sarsaparilla which also builds up the system that has suffered from them. T Ia the best medicine for all humors. | i cember 6. HEAVY RAINFALL AUSES A SLIOE Wall of Earth Crashes Down Upon Sierra Ra.ilway. Construction Force Has Nar- row Escape From Burial Alive. —— ANGELS, Nov. 29.—The heavy rainfall of the past few days caused an immense landslide on the new exzensio; of the railway, fiear Robinson Ferry, on g;eefil:esday mysm. There is a big cut at that point and a wall of earth eighty feet high and 100 feet in length was Joosened by the moisture and slid down upon the track. The wagon road also was covered to a great depth. The con- struction gang had a_ narrow escape, as the camp was moved just the evening wious to the accident. It would have g::n completely covered by earth had it remained where it was. A large force of men is engaged in clearing the track and ‘wagon road, but it will take some time to move all of the loose dirt. The rainfall at this place for the storm was 1.61 inches, making a total of 838 inckes for the season. against 11.60 a year ago. Many mines will now be started, as there is sufficlent water to keep them N BING, Nov. 20.—For the twenty- four hours ending at 7 o’clock this morn- ing, 2.45 inches of rain fell here, making 1% ‘inches for the season. It was the “wettest’”” Thanksgiving on record. ADVERTISEMENTS. $10 810 $I0 $I0 Our great specialty is the manufacture of children’s vehi- cles—we take pride in the qual- ity of our work, and always study to produce the best article at the lowest price. ., We particularly direct atten- tion to our Hood Carriage, as illustrated. It is nicely uphol- stered, has the very best springs and the latest improved rubber- tire wheels. COULTER’S RATTAN WORKS, 227 SUTTER ST. A man’s lnen should be immaculate Your linen will be immaculate if you send it to this laundry. We do only first class work, and when it comes to linen we're far in tbe lead. Lots of people know this. A trial"of our work will convince youe ‘We call for and deliver, No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street lephone—South 420, | NOME | Persons desiring to send packages not ex- B ceeding five pounds to 3 St. ichael, Nome @ and vicinity cando so through the BTRANS-ALASKA COMPANY Room 128, Crocker @ Building, before De- ® For Stomach Disorders. Cout and Dyspep sa DRINK VICHY CELESTINS Best NATURAL Alkalinej Water 220 BROADWAY, N, Y. BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters S A GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine. The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special ‘Tonic for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes, Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kid- deys and Bladder. Sells on its own merits, NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Agents, AB! 3 323 Magket st., S. ¥.—(Send for Circulars.) CH! b £ el o Dragpie ¢ Tesitmoniaia. Seiddy Mention is japer. Madioon Susace; SHILLY S5