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11 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 1901. EMPLOYES AT JUDSON WORK | MARVELOUSLY ESCAPER DSEATH UNBH%[E[S%[I‘B“{A%N Two Explosions Occur, Causing Only One Fatality, S EAED . i % opes Congress 0 Even Man Leaning on ‘Mixer” Escaping. | Into Navy Depart- : ment Affairs, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, PEDIGREED DOGS AND FOWLS POSE PROUDLY AT EXPOSITION Oakland Show Opens Successfully and Promises to Be Popular to the End. C Y 3 1S Dey Rear Admiral Crowninshield :’“Y SHow & Is Also Anxious to Disprove n:;:;.: (5 Charges Against Him, IN, MISTER? HE 15 pe b Special Dispatch to The Call. DL??IEEE;VOT \ 2 CALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, N. CASEY'S W., WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—Investiga- BULL Pup, tion by Congress of the Navy Department | ! will be.welcomed by Secretary Long and | other naval officials. The resolution in- troduced yesterday bv. . Representative Williams. of Mississippi contemplating a full investigation of the war with Spain | will meet-with no opposition from naval | officers. Secretary Long said to-day that ! | it Congress desires to investigate his de- partment he will be glad to facilitate the work of the committee appointed. Rear Admiral Crowninshield is also will- | ing that Congress shall make inquiry into his céhduct of the Bureau of Navigation. | He feels he has done nothing which will | not bear the ciosest inspection and his | friends are confident that if a fair and im- partial inquiry were made it would be | " shown that he is entirely guiltless of the | | charges of conspiracy against Rear Ad-| { miral Sehley and of alteration of depart- | mental records, which have been made by | | irresponsible persons. The investigation | | made by the Dewey court established con- | clusively, according to officials of the de- partment, the falsity: of these charges. The Williams resolution calls specially for an inquiry into the report that Rear ! Admiral Crowninshield approved the | proof sheets of the Maclay book. It is stated authoritatively that no such ap- proval was ever given, in fact Rear Ad- miral Crowninshield did.not see Maclay's w?rk unéll x!tt'.v(viz\s tlnmbm}:( form. t is admitted a e Navy De that Maclay is still employed as gall:l:?;g: at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Action has not been taken in his case because the des partment is awaiting the receipt of the | findings of the Dewey court. The find- ings are expected to be submitted within the next week. To win, SOMETHING. MIkE DONOVAN Ei/JOYED VICIOUS NIPPON .. THE Showsi.. SINGLE TON OF ORE PAYS FOR THE MINE | CLharles D. Lane’s Purchase of the | Eureka Property Proves a Prof- | itable Investment. TACOMA, Dec. 4—Charles D, Lane's luck has once more stood him in good stead. According to news brought here | by James Cady, a mining man of Siate Creek, one single ton of ore taken from | Lane’s Eureka mine in the Slate Creek | district contained enough gold to more | than pay him for the cost of the property. | He bonded the mine for $60,000 in 1897, car. B —The gelatin d guncotton Judson Dynamite Co s works - IMPRESSIONS OF A CALL CARTOONIST GAINED DURING AN AFTERNOON SPENT AT OAKFA'ND'S DoG SHOW, LISTENING TO EXPLANATIONS OF THE POINTS OF AN ASSORTED LOT OF CANINES-PRIZE WINNERS AND OTHERS—BY THEIR ADMIRING MASTERS. m_of and Powder e destroved this aft- | two explosions, | ¥ nds apart. One | led and two othere in- | George E. Mmer, | s severely cut and | —— Alameda. vhich occ Chinaman F. E. Mason, 1710 Everctt street, James S. Naismith, 471 Twelfth street, Oak- land; George B. Nugent, 709 Prevost street, San Jose; J. M. Nelson, St. Charles street and AKLAND, Dec. 4—The Oakland poultry, dog and pigeon show in the Exposition building opened The poultry exhibitors are: W. H. Arps, Santa Cruz; C, H. Adair, Fres- no; 'Mrs. A. L. Adams, 1331 Ninth avenue, San was at the boller, not far works, at that time located 400 yards from 1 % : Francisco. L A | rying forward development work . wirich | -day and fully justified ail the | *§ San Bernardino; Arthur Bailey, | Zagle avenue. Alameda; O. T. Nobman, 1727 s Roth, a work- . showed that it would become an immense | mo(;:\yse:; that };‘u;‘ve been made | 200i itk sireet Berkeley: E. M. Buckley, | Broadway, Alameda. ¥ cut 2nd bruised. As is producer. The development has pro. | il » i to | 3002 Dowen” strest, San Prancisco; Benjamin | Osgood & Son, 22 Telegraph avenue, Oak- h explosions, ne is abl D rogted winter and summer, only snciidh | for it. The poultry section, according. to | 2002 Powell strest. San Franciscol Beneil | jong. 1 explosions, no one is able | Ore being taken out to keep a ten-stary | Henry Berrar of San Jose, one of the | p™piu, M iy i . LM J. Plaw, East Twehty-seventh street, 56 5056 the Shute " - | mill in operatfon. The maln shaft is uo\{'\judges holds the best exhibition ever| g A" Condee, 134 Penrose street, Riverside; | Trultvale; J. . Pfaff, 1:21 Railroad avenue. v s in the ground with splintered | | | down more ‘than 300 feet and numerous | seen on this coast and one equal to any- | C. B. Carrington, Hayward; H. R. Campbell. | plameds; . K. Pearson 1014 Tyler streat, twisted irons about show | | | levels and cross-cuts are being run. Nest held fn America Petaluma: Mrs. C. Clausen, 46 Tenth | Lorin; 8 H. Pettits, location of the houses A | | | summer adaitional hoisting machinery | L2DE ever he h grade domestic fowi | Sthect, Onkland. LR T Willis S, Rose, Antioch; M. Ross, 725 Linden bulkhead between the two buildings | will be/pnt in.and arrangemernts made 10, | EVSTy class of Mgk grade SomEREC O L W e e e Femset street. Oakland: J. I Rogers, 1019 Central ave- leveled,. The Gebris caught fire and | | keep sixty or eighty stamps in operation, | IS Well and strongiy represented, < pu“ Lcrx“?méol;k_\ledigl‘(‘e:"l R akTa e, Alameda; Mrs. J. It Rogers, 1019 Central oy e s . e to-extin- | { “The main ledge contains several very | cially in the case of the Barred Piymouth | L, ¥, Cobbledick wl Twelfth steest. ONECIU: | avende, "Alameda; D. A. Robertson, 26 Pa- es an hour to ! | rich pay streaks, from one of which was | Rock family. The incubator department | oo Teo"A' Connitt, 6208 Colby street, Oakland; | cific avenue, Alamed 27 | taken the ton of ore mentioned by Cady. | attracts considerable attention, especially arm, Walnut Creek; A ; 2 is remarkable for the | The Eureka was discovered in 1595 and | among the school children, who attended East Oak street, Stock- | 21 5 2 X 3 e it caused. Sixteen men, | Brst bm:d’ed to Marcus Daly, who let his | the exhibition after school hours in ni 3. B b A O R ese, were in or about th | contract lapse. BoveR: = L. Duns w; am G. | Cen e, Rimadec O A 3 when the structures were ! R P v While it is essentially a poultry show, g??u;é “s aun;\'.z:;n:es:&e;:h;;@g:;r.s:oi Mfi,"{%m:n sleinh:a“:: Watsssvilie: Fya fragments, and how all but one HOBHOUSE INCIDENT there i§ a fine collection of dogs. From | Dick, s Avonty-fifth street, Oakland, | H. Seely, 1 West Eddy street, San Francise ed the others are unable to tell. | | * a noise standpoint the dogs constitute the | A, Dimptel, 42 fwenty ffih, stfel, O80T | 5 p. ‘Sarmento, San Leandro: C. M. Selfridge: 1 aid not lose their lives is due | STIRS UP TROUBLE | feature of the exhibition. All the ‘birds | Falr Oaks Duck Farm. 30 COISES SISV | 316 Fast Sixteenth street, Oakiand: T. B. €. of explosions. Wonderful - and most of the dogs were judged dur- | Qukland: Chavies B oot I hn Fahrenkrog, | Sielcken. box 61, Calistoga; A. J. Schmittgen. re were, and the accident, | LONDON, Dec. 4.—An interesting sequel | ing_the day, but the awards wiil not be | Fraitvate; Terguson & Lamos, 310 Third street, | 530 Tweifth street, Sacramento; George Sher- nature of the de- | 1= promised to the Government’s deporta- | mide public until to-morrow. Qakland; Mra 8. I Fayle Riverside: . | BN I O o acivare G, o inted a “lucky’ one | s 4 P! | Probably the handsomest animal in the | Forbes, Napa; Charles Fitch, Oakland. Teresa Poultry Farm, lenvale; G. J. Sleg- ged in the dangerous | {Rentrom, B iy ot 551“ Hob- | chow s the St. Bernard, Lester C, owned | A. H. Gregory, Fruitvale; George Giblin Jr., | fried. Alameda; George M. Seaton, EI Retiro, ng the high ‘explosives | | house, who was the first person to agi-|py Charles Newman of San Francisco. | High street, Melrose. a Trecte Tt Cnn . T AT e enufactured at the works. | tate regarding the condition of the Brit- | Le King, a St. Bernard entered by Phil | Master Eugene Hinds, Alfin::ea’l:a_c.“(i; 1‘1:1!! ] . Torae Woshes st et he scene of the explosion is on the | ish concentration camps. Meyer and the winner of many prizes mn | &€ Al W A._O. Tait, 1711 Fourth avenue, Oukiand. ' - Side of Cerritos, or McKeever's | [ The lady’s uncle, Lord Hobhouse, has | the East, was Lester C's only formidable | 1l, Elsinore; L. H. Herling. 0. Van Every & Co., 3519 Pearl street. Oak- to the swamis edge. Thres | begun suit in this country against Lord | SRSSUSL s o erything before him. ond strect, East Oskiand; Nomman | land: T ¥, ¥an Nostfand St Tayier avemse. were built into the hill with | | Kitchener, Lord Milner and others on the | L¢3 Newinan's: # | Bt B el M T e Ty ; . o s of dirt eight feet thick between | P however, and- Newman's whoops of de-{jand’ EI Oro Poultry’ Farm, Fresno; F. S. | Francisco. hey were used in the manufacture | | i | charge of false imprisonment and assauit, | jight outclassed the howling of the | Humilton, Stege: S. J. Hunter, Lonestar; J. F. | J. W. Wakefleld, Acampo; Williams Brothers, amite. On the east was | thereby raising the constitutional ques-| Gicfest dog by several octaves. Heartweli, Highgrove. Fruitvale; Winters Collle Kennels, Winters s on The tweatreie w1 | | tion of how far a British subject can ve | "phe show was largely attended during | A. E. Keith, 1012 Sheridan street, Vallejo: | E. Wood, 2901 Fifth street, West Berkeley: £ house, on the West the Sas- | ERI deprived of liberty by martial law. This | tne day and evening and promises to be | H. D. Knight, 761 Main street, Riverside; Key | A. Willins, 1104 Santa Clara avenue, Alamedsa house and between these - 3 - | aquestion not been raised since the | ., 1 1’- for the next three day: | & Kline, 510 Ninth street, Oakland, and 1336 | A. S. J. Woo 206 Woolsey street, Herkele: xing house. The west and center es | B Ak | case of the Jate Governor Eyer, in connec- | © e ni fdepart t i uliarly in- | St. Charles street, Alameda: Master Georgie | Ellas Willlams, Arbor street and Eagle ave totally wrecked, while the third was | ‘Lneg I Co}’l(‘!uded 1d "l:"", rrm; :!r e % | | tion with the rebellion in Jamaica The nigeon fllrmlr aflen b(de i cens ‘] l(‘: | Key, 510 Ninth street, Oakland; Mrs. Blanc nue, Alameda: Percy Ward, Bursom, ractically uninjured. L. N. Hoffman, the o ke the mizer, ‘on which I wae | $ jereating A e o et of trs | Knok.. (23 Twenty-seventh _street, Oskiand: | - Clarles H.. Younz. Santa’ Clara. er of the company ces the S Ky - s p |8 : s < gt T Kutz, 1232 Madison street, Oak- | In the do; 2 n - -3 ~y o does ot | Saskue s s fum b sxblote D Hie et | i) | ARKET STREET RATLROAD pigeon exhibit is the runt class, which s i Bree e raae,| 1615 and collies have Tatke ebresentanion damage to other bu s . ] iy | | s y 3 - H. A. Loud, Vacaville; Mrs. A. H. Ladd, so a pri P ~ ace, which will probably add | m;::‘d:;?::;elyz:h::h;:ehc\;lal:;‘h?sm;t o i | TO BUILD MACHINE SHOP | Pr%migeru arqgn)%'vthé ’é‘,‘ffi?"; i:;.‘g"étogs 0. Box 52, Modesto: George D. Lubben. 3125:9 li_':%:lo XX h?lzyflgg"l:: ;e",.d - 4 | i1dir | — 18 . B. Woods. W. S. Ch a . B. | 162 obs street, Alameda; W. P. Lyon, b - - B SINS-SS SHa St works 1is considerable. Windows were A 1Carpomticn Will Construct and| Jonnings of Pledmont and Mortimer [‘Baenvate o S | Deneiers are mudh sesased wAtH, Che e Mixer Explodes First. smashed and boards wrenched off. The | | Equip Tts Rolling Stock in Tt | Smith, Mrs. Blanche Knox, A. Bormann, | M. J. Madison, Haywards: William Marshall, | 7€ 2 According to Foreman Miner the |acid house was twisted out of shape and | quip Its Rolling Stock in Its | C. J.'Sicgfried and G. T. Marsh of San | San Rafael; Mrs. Emma F. Michel, sum,..u‘——-—-————fi “mixer” exploded Miner was sitting | may ha\‘;e to be rebmll.th llll%!_!enm‘[ :Et- | New Building. Foandtot avenue, Oakland; James Mitchell, St. Helena: | ADVERTISEMENTS. A e huge bronze bowl with his | acid maker, ran out of the building at the | s 2 - R S S e A s Zd s | e % A3on"its edge when the shock came. | first explosion, and when he stopped a { | The Eastern owners of the Market-| @ fufuimfufoinlriivilodriniuieiuiirivnimiininimteiniivterino ittt b R O ape he deems nothing short of a | piece of iron weighing five pounds | | street Railroad Company have in conter- | [ le. The dead Chinaman was in the | whizzed past his head and struck at his | | plation the building of 2 machine shop in in | house with Miner, but he seems to | feet. The shocks were plainly feit in this | the near future, The site seiected for the | | run in front of the guncotton !;uuse city an'd a yellov(hfluud of smoke hung for | 4, —i- | building is the corner of Utah and Twen- | cot the full effects of the second ex- | some time over the scene. | | iy Ranrth tatrester Dusing: the past wedk t T : was Swdel thisty Sosk | _Manenst - Hofnen, in spsaking of ‘the VICTIM OF EXPLOSION AND | | the lot has been used as & kind of crema he Best Stlmlflant into a diteh. was | explosion. said: : =kl i MIxX- | |tory for the destruction of old horse cars 3 At the time of the accident T should judse | s - | that were in use before the company se- | | that there were 1000 pounds of explosives in the ING HOUSE. | cured the franchise for an electric service. | two bulldings. In spite of every care we take | The antiquated cars were useless and | ! | the explosions occur. We are working all the | 4. 4 | were stored in the carhouses, to the great | When worn out of fun dewn | time o find the cause. | | inconvenience of the men handling and . is found in ur white men and twelve Chinamen | Dr. Gladding of West Berkeley attended | the present spot, exploded, and Superin- | SWitching the more modern rolling stock. the danger aistrict. Miner, as | the injured men. tendent Kennedy was killed. The wet | AS No one could be found to purchase e S 3 3 .4, was at the “mixer;” W. R. Edris. | Three years ago to-morrow the same | weather seems to bring on explosions and | them, they were taken to the Utah-street Oakland Citizens Are|Grief Causes Miss Nellie e engineer, nk Coster were in front of the h The amen were at @ifferent points, most of them inside of the bufld- ‘Roth was driving a car and the tood on the track in front of the uffing” house, fifteen feet from the and Julius Roth, a teamster, | REVISIONISTS winter is dreaded by the workmen. FAMDUS ARTIST lot and burned for the iron they con- tained. ‘When the new machine shop is erected all of the company's cars will be con- structed and all of work. will be done there. At present the repair- ing work ig done in the various carhouses, while the heavier work of equipping the the repair ‘Warned to Carefully Guard Children. McLerie to End Her Life. wreck, and received no injury. The cars with motors is done on Kentucky akland Office San Francisco Call Oakland Office San Franeisco Call, fled in all directions after the firat | street, The cars havo heretorore boch 5 ¢t Wt g gl 1118 Brialay, Déc. & Do (g hesvier shock. | Dhns “mow comtempiatan ents The com-| Residents of the Lakeside district have | Long brooding over the death of her oreman Miner’s injuries consist of deep ‘ rolling stock in one central building. “Tm‘; been warned by Chief of Police Hodgkins | mother so preyed upon the mind of Miss gashes in face and hands, cau?ed b); s will gifve employment to hundreds of me-. | to keep a careful eye on their children, | Nellie McLerie, residing at 312 Church fiving glass, and body brulses. A plece of | chanics. as the police have reason to fear tho |street, San Francisco, as to cause her to glass an inch long cut the left cheek o | —e— existence of a plot to do some wholesale | end her life last night at the home of the bome Just Bel N ras zui aboui the | HAZEL MONTGOMERY WILL kidnaping. Mrs. Robert Daiziel, 522 Fifteenth street, other injured man, Chief Hodgkins reports that a few days that she had overheard two men dis- found dead this morning by members of e LI S 5L Presbyterian Clergymen|Constantine Makovaky| REGEIva mam romsums | pil Hapdrimeades s o o | ity (At st S0l fl;‘ oacape.. Her::;‘if‘h' Car R | Discover a D flicult to Paint President’s Young Lady Reaches Her Majority | ised not to reveal. 'The woman told him | gas in_her bedroom, where she was was_sitting , and Trustceship of A. W. Foster - o its edge, when suddenly 1 felt it | : cussing a plan involving the abduction | the family, who discovered the stroms Sire. “In n instant an_explosion occurred and | Task. Portrait. Is Ended. and holding for ransom of the children of | odor of escaping gas and made the in- everything was totally dark. Hazel Montgomery, daughter of the | hvo S?:,‘g“gflh‘:’,’,‘;fiefim},’éfil[m‘,’;?“dc‘;?:fl vestigation which disciosed the suicide. Chinaman Thrown Thirty Feet. I sterted for the door and &t that time I Pears’ People have noidea how WASHINGTON, Dec. 4—The wide di- | creed was demonstrated when the com- mittee of twenty appointed by the Gen- eral Assembly to effect this work and submit it to the next assembly hegan its labors to-day. It was found that none of the members of any sub-committee nad united upon any report or statement. The committee held several meetings during the day, all the proceedings being in executive session. The full committee | Special Dispatch to The Call. Makovsky, Russia’s most celebrated por- trait painter, is to paint President Roose- velt's portrait. He is an artist whose works have already gained for him rec- ognition from connoisseurs of art in this country. During the World's Fair Ma- kovsky had several paintings on exhibi- tion there. The great artist has been in this coun- try not quite three months. He came on the same steamer as Count Cassini and late Aléxander Montgomery, attained her majority Tuesday. yA. W. Foster, surviy- Court yesterday to release him from his duties and decree ‘that he turn over to her $500,000, her share of the estate. W. F. Goad, lately deceased, served as trus- tee with Foster for.a number of years and since his death the care of the estate has_devolved upon Foster. Originally the sum held in trust was $1,000,000, but Anna Montgomery, another daughter, received her share when she became of age a few In order to secure the disso- iution of the trusteeship Foster has en. that the Chief immediately detailed De- tectives Shorey and Holland to investi- guard Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Thomson, who Teside at 117 Thirteenth street, and whose child was one of the proposed victims of the alleged kidnapers. The parents of the other subject of conspiracy, whose iden- tity the Chief declines to divulge, were also warned. 7 Every police officer in the city has been instructed to be on the lookout for sus- piclous characters and to watch particu- larly for strangers loafing in the vicinity of the homes of wealthy citizens. Chiet Hodgkins believes in the sincerity The young woman had been subject to fits of extreme depression and melan- Francisco, had tried many remedies to meet bis daughter’s peculiar mental con- dition, but nothing had been of more than temporary avail. Two weeks ago, in the hope that a change might be beneficial, Miss McLerie accepted the_invitation of Mrs. Dalzial, an intimate family friend, to go to their home in this city. There was not a suggestion of the im- ending deed when Miss McLerie retired ast night. ooettee oot oeeoeoee recommended to women because of it the blood running down my cheek It | yversity of leaders of the Presbyterian | 3 = ing trustee of the fund bequeathed h ate. cholia for several years. Her father, its age and ex- B o touch the lever and st: e CALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, er | gate. g - came It e S eitaied i ihe dootwag. | Church on the subject of revision of the | wr G GUREATL 198 G STREET, N | by her father, petitioned the Superior| He also notified and placed on their | Henry J. McLerie, & contractor of San cellence. wisit DR. JORDAN'S creat began the work of framing the brief his party, and since his arrival in Wash- | tered friendly suit against Miss Elizabeth hose information Mrs. Dalziel said: statement of a doctrine this afternoon. | ington has been entertained frequently at | Rodgers, formerly ~ Mrs. Montgomery, | Of the _Womin upon ~whose iy Feliod g crude and cruel soap can be. the embassy. A brilliant reception and | mother of the two £iris, and her husband, | 1o g o0y foet o sl provent a successbul | macohs iad ben, PIayIng, red. " The Hoceains .“SE“. oF lllro'v It takes off dirt. +So far, so good; but what else does it do. It cuts the skin and frets the under-skin; makes red- ness and roughness and leads to worse. Not soap, but the alkali in it. 4 ‘Washington The present long creed of the church will be considered article by article. The nsw statement will now comprise about 1000 words. The committee’s views are that this staté™ent should be composed of about twenty paragraphs, and when t session had concluded for the day onl one of these paragraphs had been agreed upon. It was said to-night that after the con- clusion of the work of the committee at statements agreed upon would be printed, and would be again corseidered by the committee at a meat- ing to be held some time in the spring, before the gathering of the General As- sembly, thus giving the members of the revision committee opportunity to aguin pass upon their work before it shall ne | | the first large function to be held here this season was given last Friday by Count Cassini to introduce him and Madame Makovsky to Washingion so- ciety. In Marienbad last summer Makovsky began a portrait of Countess Cassini. As it was not completed then he brought it with him to this country, but though he has been here some time, the red tape connected with the passage of goods through the New York Custom-house has Prevemed him from getting this unfin- shed picture. His patience becoming ex- hausted he, a few days ago, began an- other portrait of the young Countess. Makovsky is the court painter at St. Petersburg. He has painted a portrait of Arthur Rodgers. —_———— POLICEMAN HAS HARD TUSSLE WITH BURGLARS Officer Hutchings Surprises Them In Their Work and They Show Fight. Policeman Hutchings had a hard tussle in the dark with three burglars whom he surprised while they were attempting to loot the rooms over 1 Eddy street shor:ly before 2 o'clock this morning. One of the men succeeded in making his escape, b Hutchings landed the other two snl;.'ely ‘llyf undone to first of all prevent a successful carrying out of this or similar plots, and if possible to arrest the would-be kid- napers. The Chief has detailed a number of of- ficers for this particular duty and the atrol of the Lakeside district, where are ocated the homes of the alleged kidnap- Bimereased FREDERICK K. TRUETT DEAD. Tormer San Franciscan a Victim of Quick Consumption. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 4—Frederick K. Truett, a well-known newspaper man and recently manager of the Associated Press ers’ prospective prey, has been material-- ing shortly before she retired. The horror of her taking off was all the more terrible be- cause Wwe had not the slightest:idea that this was in her mind. She had realized her condi- tion, but had always struggled to fight off her melancholy moods. Her mind had not been right since her mother's death. Miss McLerie had made deliberate prep- aration for death, having stopped all the openings and crevices in her room as tightly as possible. ‘he” Coroner has charge of the case. The deceased was 35 years of age, a_na- tive of San Francisco. A sister, Miss Jean T. McLerie, is a teacher in the Slhen'nan Primary School in San Fran- cisco. Lynching. Case Progresses Slowly. r the Czar and his father before -him, as il. They gave their names submitted to the governing body of ihe| well as il th - i L AR i gy ‘in Los Angeles, died to-night in U =3 i kali in it. It neither reddens nor roughens the skin. It re- sponds to water instantly; wash- esand rinses off in a twinkling; is as gentle as strong; and the will call on President Roosevelt to-mor- row. Lineman Loses His Life. RED BLUFF, Dec. 4—Barney Jacobson, lineman of the Postal Telegraph Com- pany, while riding a railroad velocipede, was run down by a light engine a mile give Makovsky his first sitting to-mor- TOow. Says President Misquoted Him. GUTHRIE, O. T., Dec. 4,—Ex-Governor William Jenkins, who was removed from “office by President Rooseveit, made a public statement to-day denying the in- I known to the police. Oniel was treated at the Central Emer- gency Hospital for lacerated wounds of the face, which he received in the early morning struggle with the policeman. —_———— Licensed to Marry. OAKLAND, Dec. 4.—Licenses to ma: swere. issued to_James Dowiing, - Ve R o d St. Agnes’ Hospital of quick consumption. Truett came to Los Angeles from San Francisco, where he was chief bookkeeper for the Western Union Telegraph Com- pany seven or eight years ago. He was a man popular among his associates. Truett was always in the best of health until three months ago, when a sudden ulmonary_attack rendered him unfit for guflnen. He went to Arizona, hop! to h; steadily made to-day th‘fxe selection of jurors to try Jame: . Brown, the alleged ¢! of the LooRout lynchiers: A samber of veniremen were examined, but none were ?honn. Seven men have been sworn thus ar. . S Santa Cruz Offers a Site. SANTA CRUZ, Dec. 4—At a meeting of Cure in cvery case Write for Book, PRI Treamment personally or by Posttive case undertaken. LesormY MARRIAGE. MAILED FRES. (A valuable book for men) DR JORDAN & CO., 1051 Market St..S. F. 1051 MARZET OT. bet. :2 2723, 5.7.Cal, The Largest Anatomical Museum in the World? ~Weaknesses o any contracted Weak Men and Women after-effect is every wa: od. th of Cottonwood this afternoon and | sane uarl\un charges filed against himand n,sd :z.;m-i Kate Keily. 20, both | improve his , but grew itizens and the Ci ‘ounecil to-day e ol Sheeiy ajucat,_ S tred an e atter| Ssclarel toat Racsavel sliausiat ot | 8 ok framcloto: Boaok il 61, Ap :.go“'“;r. e it S Gt o st "‘,‘.,."’:d',‘?, Saopica Gty SAET S FOULD, USE DAMIANA BITTERS. THE = re. Jacobson was c nt to | wa g * 5 . ea € E 5 3 . Established over 100 years, formerly a linemin in Scn Francisco. l ress. : 7 s, 2, Oakland.' - hve sg‘;,w,.,, ,,{.,':‘,{‘m e no| Laveaps Helshts to the United States for Great Mexican Remedy; p-=.m