Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LONG MY GV 1V 10 ALEN Early Change in Chief of Navy Department Is ixpected. —e— Former Assistant Secretary | Slated for a Cabinet Position. 14% G STREET, N. N —Sec- Se , will to leave the Cabinet, 1 Charles H. Allen of Massachusetts ng the strong p bilities of succes- B Secretary of | Spanish war, being or of Mr. Roosevelt. the office during was said to be in . was regard- nd his record was nced to the im- of Porto Rico. wduced to take the F ent Mc- g that he f the Navy retire, an rable talk esign and re- He r. Al- tor who & dence of the ssible for any one Secretary Lor ¥ come from New HOPES TO SOON EFFECT RELEASE OF MISS STONE | Treasurer of the Missionary Society in Constantinople Is in Communi- cation With the Brigands. N hed com wh I e flect that C. M. = received a_complaint v, Bulgaria, £ va and TELLS STORY OF MURDER TO POLICE OF HELENA Mary Henson Accuses Her Paramour Drowning Her Husband of ney state wisband at Nordau’s Advice to the Jews. Switzerl Dec, 27.—Max Nor- hiysician, delivered before the Zior on the phy se emigrating sweating ork. He sal 1d organize bodies for eprecates the riages among this ADVERTISEMENTS. WHEN LIFE'S AT STAKE The most timid man will take any chance of escape. The slender ro dropped down the precipice, the slip- pery log over the abyss, anything that offers a chance of life, is eagerly snatch- ed at. The end the man seeks is safety, He cares nothing for the means to that end. There are thou- sands of men and women whose lives are at stake, who are hindered from accepting the one means of afety by foolish ejudice. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has peen the means of restoring health to many men and women whose hol- low cough, bleed- ing lungs, ema- Cibion and weak. ness seemed to warrant the state- ment of local phy- sicians—" Thetr; s no cure le. . N Why should prejudice against a put-up medicine hinder you from trying what has cured thousands of suffering men ? ‘?do;ltm{n:nbr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery 1 think I d be in my grave to-day” writes Mr. Moses , of Hilliard, Uinta Co, nxmm-»mxwm:ia o 2 ight and wes compel SR " Sected my lunge 8o that 1 Soghed il the time, both day and night. =My friends 21l thought I had consumption. wife hiad “geken Dr. Pieroe’s Favorite Prescription an 28 helped her so much she i my ty. ing his ' Golden Medical Discovery 4id. 1 have taken four bottles and am now a well man, vti(bilgi:? mr;"."h g Picree's Golden M4 e AN S The sole motive for eul tion pe'ln;} the dealer to make the little more profit *at,ym...xeofhsmuiwnmu ‘s & old | the | mplished | e Morning Leader morning from its General at | an attached to the | ion of the Jews, | THE SAN FRA CIS BELKTIESBURY WRONG GOAPSE Man Thought to Be Dead . Writes to His Father From This City. After His Disappearance Fam- ily Claimed a Drowned Body. NEW YORK, Dec. There was bur- | fed in Cypress Hills Cemetery last March | 2 body belleved to be that of Frank Hol- burn, who, four months before, had dis- | appeared from his home at 143 Ainslie treet, Williamsburg, where he lived with his wife and two sons. He had .been out of employment and on the day he was last seen by his family and his father, Henry Holburn, he vowed he would find work if he had to tramp all over the world. The body supposed to be that of Hol- burn ‘was found in the Hackensack River, and although the featurcs were unrecognizable, his family found marks which made them certaln it was his. To-day the missing man's father re- celved a letter purporting to be from his son, postmarked San Francisco. Holburn made no reference to his silence, but ex- plained that he had nearly circled the globe since leaving Brooklyn. —He in- | quired about his wife and children, and said he was going to settle in San Jose, California, when he would send after his i family. FIRE STILL BURNS IN THE SEINANO'S HOLD JSapanese Vessel Arrives at Seattle and Blaze May Soon Be Ex- tinguished. SEATTLE, Dec. 27.—The steamship Shi- nano of the Nippon Yusen Kaisha ar- | rived here this morning, the.fire which forced her to return from sea still smol- ering, perhaps blazing, in her hold. Late | last night the Shinano left Port Town- send, where she had arrived early in the morning, and came on up the Sound. She anchored off the Smith Cove docks at 4 a. m. The fire, which is cenfined to the for- ward part of the ship's hold, is being kept well under control. It is believed to have originated through spontaneous combus- tion of cotton, which composes the great- er part of the Shinano's cargo. It was discovered December 22, at 11:30 a. m., in latitude 51 degrees 15 minutes and longi- | tude 149 degrees 15 minutes west, 1025 miles | | off Cape Flattery. A strong westerly wind was blowing and the s were running high. The first intimation came in smoke emitted from the forecastle. Fourteen of the crew were overcome, though all re- rived when fresh air. The | passengers of the vessel acted with the utmost composure. There was no excite- ment, and, under the direction of Cap- tain Cope, the hatches were .battened down and steam turned into the hold to smother the fire. The vessel at once put back for the straits. She made the re- turn voyage under her own steam. At least that portion of the cargo in the im- mediate vicinity of the fire will have to be discharged, and until this is done the ex- tent of the damage cannot be.ascertained. AMERICAN FRIENDS PRAISE MESSAGE OF ROOSEVELT Approve President’s Expressions De- claring for a World-wide removed to Peace. | PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27.—The com- mittees appointed by rthe American | Friends Peace Conference to prepare a ! message for President Roosevelt to-day mailed a copy of the address to the White House. Following is an excerpt from the address: We have observed with encouragement and satisfaction the passage in the message to | Congress in which the declarations are made | that the “true end of y great and free **; that sincere and cordial friendship with all *"and ‘“‘that more and more the civilized peoples are realiz- ing the wicked folly of war, and are attaining that condition of just and intelligent regard : s which will'in the cnd ntiments, so may grow and prevail, and during thy administration the public behalf of rational methods for set- national differences may be fostered, possible steps be taken to make such and effective. AT SRR | MISSING BANK CASHIER HAS STOCK IN NEW YORK Supreme Court Issues an Attachment Against Property of Fugitive From Los Angeles. NEW YORK, Dec. 27.—Justice Leven- | tritt of the Supreme C rt to-day granted | an attachment for $90,000 against Henry J. Fleishmann in favor of the Farmers’ | ana Merchants’ Bank of Los Angeles, Cal. Fleishmann is alleged, while cashier of the bank, converted to his own | use funds of the bank, and is now a fugi- | tive from justice. Deputy Sheriff Roberts served a copy of the attachment on F. B. | Cochran, a downtown stock broker, at whose office Fleishmann is said to have an account TELEGRAPH NEWS | (HALIFAX, N, . 27.—Halifax is In the gripsof a bi to-night. Reports re- celved from points in Nova Scotla state that the storm is general along the coast , Dec. 2 Michigan, hore and ee d by the cold wave, ENVILLE, Pa.. Dec. 27. mployes of the Pittsburg, Besseme: Railroad havé been notified in- f 10 per cent in wages, commencing anvary 1. PIERRE, { missioner ! ceimg the ce ness in South e | soclation of Topeka, Kans. CHICAGO, Dec. —Frank H. Peavey, the Minneapolis grain man, who ds ill of pneumo. nia here, was reporied by his physician to-day as being in a serious condition. The doctor said the crisis would be reached on Sunday or Monday. TRENTON, N. J., Dec. 27.—Robert Henson, colored, was hanged to-day in the Mercer County’ Jail for the murder of Mrs. Ma. ., Van Lieu, colored, and her child. Hensen set fire | to ' house and Mrs. Van Lieu and the child were burned to death. NORFOLK, Va., Dec. 27.—A message was received from Beaufort, 8. C., to-day saying that the Edison party Is alive and well. Th yacht, the Ounaniche, which left here recently for Florida, via the Dismal Swamp, was re- ported wrecked last night near Beaufort. SHARPSVILLE, Pa., Dec. 27.—An explo- sion at the old Sharpsville furnace about 7 o'clock this morning wrecked the furnace plant and killed three men and probably fatally in- jured another. The dead: Martin Clary, How- ard Dickson, James Bartlett. CHRISTIANIA, Dec. 27.—The violence of the snow storms which have prevailed during the last week is almost unprecedented. A number of railway trains are stalled in the snow In the southeastern districts of Norway and most | of the telegraph wires are down. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 27.—The directors of the Pennsylvania Company, which includes the Pennsylvania railroad lines west of Pitts- burg, at & meeting here to-day elected E. B. Taylor, meneral superintendent of transporta- tion, to the office of fourth vice president. BUFFALO, N. Y., Dec. 27.—Three children of Jacques Mondry were burned to death early to-day In a tire that destroved a two-story frame buflding on Lombard street. They were aged 10, 7 and 3. The mother and a baby t days old were carried from the building on mattress. NEW YORK, Dec. 27.—Edwin Glennon, the former wardman of the West Thirtleth Street Police Station, was to-day sentenced to six months’ imprisonment in the penitentiary by Recorder Goff. Glennon was found gulilty of willful negligence in failing tofsuppress a dis- orderly house. GUTHRIE, O. T., Dec. 27.—Rollie Parks, an escaped convict from the Arkansas Peniten- tiary, was arrested to-day in South McAlester, 1L T., and will be returned to prison at Little Rock. He was convicted on & charge of as- sault and attempt six months of o kill and hal served only ntence when he escaped. 30 CALL, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1901. CIVIL MARRIAGE OF SENATOR DEPEW AND MISS PALMER OCCURS IN NICE Wedding Takes Place in the American Consulate and the Nuptial Knot Will Be Tightened To-Day by Religious Ceremonies at Notre Dame and in the Episcopal Church EW YORK, Dec. 21.—The World has the following from Nice: Sen- ator Chauncey M. Depew and Miss May Palmer were married at the United States Consulate here to-day, Consul Van Buren performing the ceremony. American consular and diplo- matic history has not on record an in- stance of a similar event in which a rep- resentative of the United States Govern- ment officlated as the celebrant of a mar- riage. Mr. Van Buren performed the service under speclal dispensation from the authorities in Washington. The principals and a rew relatives and friends assembled soon after noon at the villa of Count de Sers and were driven to the Consulate, where they arrived a little before 3 o'clock. The utmost pri- vacy was observed. The bride-elect had for her two wit- nesses, demanded by the laws of France, the Comte de Cantalouse and her brother- in-law, Baron Adolph Van Andre. The witnesses for the Senator were’ James Gordon Bennett and the Count de Sers. The bride was very quietly but\charm- ingly gowned in a walking cdstume. Senator Depew, who was in the gayest of spirits, wore a black cutaway morning coat and gray trousers. His tle was of blue and white. The ccremony consumed about twenty minutes, after which the wedding party i MRS, T RS/ SE S RPEPEW P S L. ... 3 b L ELOQUENT NEW YORK STATES- MAN AND THE LADY WHO BE- CAME HIS BRIDE. o 5 * returned to the villa of the Count de Sers in two carriages. Mrs. Palmer accom- panied her daughter, and others present besides the witnesses enumerated were the Countess de Sers and Baroness Van Andre, sister of the bride. American flags, flying from three well equipped carriages drawn up outside the American Consulate, alone indicated that something unusual was going on inside. The shutters of the Consulate were closed. Inside bright lamps. were burning and a silken American flag was spread over a table, around which stood the principals, the witnesses and the few other persons present. The bride is a Catholic, and to meet the & demands of her faith there will be a cere- mony in church to-morrow. It will take place at Notre Dame at 11 o'clock. Senator Depew Is a Protestant and wishes that his own church should par- ticipate in his marriage. Accordingly, there will be a third ceremony in the American church (Episcopal) at noon. Gut of compliment to Dr. Depew as a | United States Senator and an otherwise distinguished citizen; ten bluejackets from the cruiser Albany will attend at the church as a guard of- honor. TROUBLES BESET THE GROOM. State Department Appealed to Before the Ceremony. WASHINGTON, Dec. zi.—Senator De- pew has encountered great legal and in- ternabonal difficulties in getting married in France. Since his arrival in the Frencn capital he has become involved in the in- tricacles of the marriage laws of that country, and for a time it looked as if he would be so hampered that the transfer of the scene of the ceremony to sume place outside of France would be neces- L I 0 1 20 J 2 e e e Y MEXICD AGREES T0 ARBITRATE Claim of the California Jesuits Will Be Settled. WASHINGTON, Dec. 27.—The State De- partment has just added another to the long list of arbitrations which it has ar- ranged within the last few years for the settlement of American clalms. This ar- bitration will provide for the settlement of the Plous fund, which has been a sub- ject of diplomatic exchange between Lt United States and Mexico since the Mexi- can war. The claim arose through the failure of the Mexican Government to pay to the Archbishop of California interest on lau.ls belonging to the Jesuits, for which the Mexican Government acied as trustee. The claim was submitted to the Mexican Claims Commission in 1877 and judgment given in favor of the church for about $1,000,000. The Mexican Government al- leged that the payment extinguished thc claim, but the State Department held that the interest began again from the date of award and run until at present it amounts to another $1,000,000. Personal representation by the Arch- bishop of California, who recently was in California, and other dignitaries” of the Catholic Church, caused the department to press the matter, with the result stat- ed. The name of the arbitrator and other detalils remain to be announced. £ Novel Places for Dining Parties. At the Paris = Exhibidon 150 persons dined in a champagne tun large enough to hold $1,000,000 worth of the wine of the gods. The dinner was one of a dozen courses. This tun, in the shape of an enormous barrel, was large enough for an army of 3000 men to stand in_ its in- terfor. A year “'Bfld:’gent in building it, and its cost was $12,000. About two years ago an immense whale was driven ashore on the coast of Norway. It yielded hone and oil worth $12,500, and in honor of the find a banquet was given inside the body, which, after the removal of the blubber, afforded ample sitting room for thirty Buests. — % IN NEXT SUNDAY’S CALL the very latest color process. Eight pages in beautiful col- ors that are pleasing to the eye. — TURKISH TOBACCD NOT “CORNERED" German Dealers Do Not Fear the American Trust. BERLIN, Dec. 27.—Inquiry among the tobacco manufacturers of Berlin does not reveal the existence of any great diffi- culty in obtaining Turkish tobacco. The prices of this article, which are now higher than usual, are attributed to the demand being greater than the supply. The American Tobacco Company is a large user of Turkish tobacco in its American, British and recently acquired German factories. From information here the tobacco trust seems undoubtedly to be the largest buyer of tobacco_in the world, and a larger holder of tbbacco, several times over, than any of its com- petitors. This, it is said here, is a very different thing from cornering or attempt- ing to corner the Turkish tobacco crop. President Duke of the American Tobac- co Company has been here for ten days, engaged in personally examining the to- bacco manufacturing situation. The im- portant tobacco firms here say that they have not received any propositions from President Duke. It was reported from Berlin on Decem- ber 15 that President Duke had acquirel the Jasmetzil Cigarette Company of Dres- den and the business of Kyriazi of Berlin. The same advices said tnat two other Dresden tobacco concerns would be amal- gamated and then be absorbed by the American Tobacco Company. Country Journalism in Missouri. Last Saturday was a busy day for Squire Baxter. Clayt Honeysuckie and Uncle John Phillips both got drunk. The revival meetings at the Turtle Ford Church have closed. Rev. Verdigris says | it is a little late in the season for bapti2- ing, anyhow. Thncle Hod Arkwright had it played on him pretty rough on Hallow Eve night. The boys corraled him i a barn and put a pair of socks on his feet. They were the first he had had on for fifty-seven years. # Curt Henshaw's hogs got into Link Gii- linwater's cornfield last Sunday and pulled down a lot of the shocks and done other mischief. Curt says it wasn't the fault of the hogs. He lays the blame on the fence. Link threatens to law_him from : Jefferson City to breakfast. We advise sary. From the little that can be learned it is evident that the Senator was obliged to appeal to the State Department and the United States Embassy and United | States Consulate General in Paris to un- ravel the network of law in which he be- came entwined. t The trouble arose over the requirem that there must be a civil marriage c: mony. So much authenticated informa tion concerning the bridegroom and bride was required by the French code that it would have been impossible to produce proofs without great loss of time. Final- ly it was decided that might be met by having Consul General Gowdy perform the marriage ceremony in the Consulate General, which is nominal- ly American territory.’ The State Depart- ment forbids Consular officers performing marriages, but an exception was mads in this case. Gowdy and Embassador Porter had been instructed, however, to cor the French authorities as to the le of a marriage by a United States sular officer and Gowdy was especially . di- rected not to act in that capacity unless it were absolutely settled that his right to do %o was clear. The State Department is anxiously awaiting further advices from Paris, @ Iiiieileieiil il @ ARCHBISHOP CHAPELLE REPLIES TO AN ATTACK Says That His Course in- Philippines - Has the Pope’s ' Full Approval. NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 27.~The States this afternoon had an _interview with Archbishop Chapelle, in part as follows: Archbishop Chapelle declares as utterly | without foundation the . assertions made by the Rome correspondent of an Ameri- can paper to the effect that'he had been forced to withdraw from his. position as apostolic delegate to the Phiippines by the Pope on account of inefficiency and antagonizing the American civil-and mili- | tary authorities and the Catholic clergy and friars in the archipelago 'and says that, so far from this being the truth, Pope Leo has publicly and priyately ap- proved his work in the Philippines. He says that he resigned voluntarily, as he believed a permanent delegdte in the Philippines. was desirable, and Hé comes back to New Orleans retaining the office of papal delegate to Cuba and Porto Rico. Archbishop Chapelle assérts that he bas not quarreled with the Archbishop of Manila, but, on' the other hand, says they are as brothers and saw one another frequently while in Rome. He says that within the next month there will be sued a papal constitution in which tne policy of the Vatican will be fully set torth and in _which the approval of -his work in the Philippines by the. Pope will be reiterated. INCONVENIENT RULES OF LONDON POSTOFFICE Public Have Small Privileges as Ccmpared With What We En- Jjoy Here. Not long ago an American briefly tarry- ing in London had oceasion to send a postcard in a great hurry. As he was in the neighborhood of the general postoflice he purchased the card there, thinking to write and to post it all under one rocf, but as he took his pen in hand at one of the many well-equipped desks in the bullding’s spacious corridors a uniformed officer stepped up and said: ‘“You can't write that ‘ere, sir.” The American apologized, removed to another desk and had barely grabbed his pen a second time ‘when another officer appeared. “You can’'t write that 'ere, sir,” he said; “hit’s hagain horders.” The American betook himself to a third desk. A third official appeared and told him he couldn’t write | at that desk. “In heaven's name,” asked the American, “at/ what desk can write?” The officer looked puzzled. “HI'm sure Hi don’t know, sir,” he replied. might go houtside to some 'otel hor hother, but ye can’t write letters nor post- cards hin the posthoffice. desks his hall reserved for those ha wants to write telegrams.” “They ma, think they are running a postoffice over there,” concluded the American in telling the story. “If they did but know, it's just a branch of Westminster Abbey.’ ———— Recent Explorations in Hawaii. An_exploring pdrty recently made a’ number of important geographical discov- eries in the Hawaiian Islands. The source of Waipo River has been found to be sev- eral miles farther up the mountain than was supposed and in a waterfall that has one sheer fall of 600 feet and.in this ex. ceptionally dry season runs §,000,000 gal- lons a day. The party reached this water- fall only because of the low water, which permitted the explorers to ascend the bed of the stream. ‘The forest growth was nearly impenetrable and the trail had to be cut through the tropical jungles. They them to settle the matter without going to law. Fight it out, boys. It's cheaper. 1 . were probably the first white men to see this magnificent waterfall. the difficultles | | | i DEATH CLOSES |CAST AMERICAN LEARY"3 CAREER Noted Naval Officer Dies From Attack of Heart, Disease. Navy Department Mourns Loss of Brave and Effl- cient Seaman. ‘WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 27.—The Navy Department this morning recelved the following telegram from Admiral Mortimer L. Johnson, commanding the Boston navy yard, dated to-day: Captain Richard P. Leary, United States navy, died this morning at Marine Hospital, Chelsea. Captain Leary was the first Governor of Guam after that island came into the possession of the United States. He was relieved of the command of the receiving ship” Richmond last October on account of heart trouble and granted six months’ leave of absence. Captaln Leary was held in high regard by his fellow sallors because of the nerve he showed in the presence of two German warships in the harbor of Apia, Samoa, during the stirring times which wound up in the tremendous hurricane that wiped out the German and American fleets in those waters in May, 18%9. Leary was in command of the little Adams, a third-rate vessel of antique type, and finding that the Germans were about to interfere for- cibly in support of their own candidate for the Samoan chieftainship he cleared ship for action, first placing himself in a gosmon to command either approach and forbade any interference. He was not molested and remained at his post until the American squadron under Ad- miral Kimberly arrived, when he was sent north in the Adams, thus escaping the great hurricane. He was a unique figure as the first naval Governor of the island of Guam, which he ruled as he would a ship; breaking up immorality by obliging the natives to marry; calling upon the men for a certain amount of work every week and even prescribing the minimum number of poultry which should be maintained in each family. He was appointed from Maryland and en- tered the naval service in 1%60. He com- manded the San Francisco during the West Indian campaign of the Spanish war. Accepts Judgeship in Philippines. SALEM, Or., Dec. 27.—D. S. Ambler of this city has been tendered and to-day accepted a Federal Judgeship in the Phil- ippine Islands. He will leave the latter part of.March, going first to Cebu, but later will be stationed at Manila. 5/ S0 AL To Settle Boundary Dispute. RIO JANEIRO, Dec. 27 —The Brazilian Senate has approved an agreement to de- fine the boundary between British Guiana and Brazil. + THE DAY’S DEAD, *» 27.—Willlam F. NEW YORK, Dec. Cochran, a director in several Southern railroads, the Western Union Telegraph Company and other corporations, died in this city to-day. Mr. Cochran’'s wealth is estimated at $10,000,000. His gifts to various institutions ' and church endow- ments aggregated over $1,000, James G. Bennett. OSWEGO, N. Y., Dec. 2l.—James G. Bennett, a prominent hotel man, died here ty-day. He was born in Newark, N. J., in 1835 and had conducted hotels at New York, Oswego, Watertown and Los | Angeles, Cal. David Hayman. NEW YORK, Dec. 27.—David Hayman, brother of Al Hayman, and formerly a well known theatrical manager, died here to-day of pneumonia. IN'A DUNGEON Seattle Man Has Bitter Experience Among Austrians. i Says They Imprisoned Him Falsely and Stole His Money. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Dec. 27.—Three years ago Benjamin Greenburg, a harness maker, left Seattle with the intention of enjoy- ing a trip in Europe. After a serles of adventures such as fall to the lot of few men he is again in this city, with the statement that he is ‘“‘glad still to be in the flesh and once again om Puget Sound.” Greenburg arrived in Seattle to-day. For two months Greenburg lay in a damp dungeon in Austria and was given hardly enough food to keep body and soul to- gether. He was not allowed to communi- cate with his friends and daily was put through the ‘“‘sweating process” in the endeavor to make him confess that he was another person and guilty of violat- ing the Austrfan laws. Greenburg left Seattle in 1897. He is a Russion by birth, but had been natural- ized and felt that in making a tour of kurope he would be accorded the rights and privileges of an American citizen. In this ne reckoned without the Austrians. He was arrested at Tarnopol while on a visit to friends and thrown into prison, On the morning following his arrest, he says, he was visited by the police and in- formed that if he would pay $1000 he would be released without further trouble. He refused. This angered the authorities and they kept him in jail for two months. His iate was learned by a friend, however, ‘who carried the news to the American Consul at Vienna. Upon that official making a protest, Greenburg was granted freedom on giving a cash bond of $1000, after the charge had been formally preferred that he was Peter Carpovich, a Greek, who .had been ex- pelled from Austria for procuring women lor immoral purposes. Alded by the American Consul, Green- burg obtained evidence that he was the person he represented himself to be. The case was allowed to drag along for more than a year and was finally transferred o the highest court. When the trial was | held a number of hired thugs, Greenburg | asserts, were brought forward to show | that he was Peter Carpovich. Their per- jury was easily shown up In its true light and he was acquitted. Since that time Greenburg has traveled around Europe n search of health, as the treatment he endured in prison seriously impaired his physical condition. § The money he deposited as bail at Tarnopol has never been returned. He will present the facts in the case to the authorities at Washington and belleves that in the long run he will secure what is due him. Gain More Ground for Poles. REDWOOD CITY, Dec. 27.—Judge Buck to-day decided the case of the Standard | Blectric Light Company of California against MacMonagle et al., executors of the will of William Corbitt, deceased. The action was brought to condemn a right of way over the Corbitt ranch at Bur- lingame for the purpose of erecting poles and stringing wires to conduct into San Francisco from Amador County _electric light, heat and power. By the decision the plaintiff is granted the right of way upon the payment to the defendants of the sum of There now remains but one right of way to be secured by the company in order to complete its system to San Francisco, and that a very short one, re- quiring but twelve poles. —e Bulgarian Cabinet Resignms. SOFIA, Dec. 27.—The Bulgarian Cabinet has resigned. It is understood the new Cabinet will include two members of the | Stambouloff party. T —— Sore throat and lungs chest pains Pains in the throat and chest are liable to be serious pains. When inflammation gets into the throat or chest you want to get it out as quickly as you can. for they are the tender organs of the body and it does not take disease long to get a foothold that will cause you endless misery and . perhaps death, Bronchitis, pleurisy, asthma, trachitis are_all represented by pains in the throat and chest, and what is good for one is good for the others, and Dr. Halpruner's * Pain Remover is the right medi- cine to give you the relief and cure you ought to have. The way to use it is to rub the Pain Remover in from the outside and then take from 14 to 1 tea- spoonful in a wine glass of water internally. This starts up a vigorous circulation of the blood, which puts the inflammation out like water puts out fire. It isa wonderful medicine ; it softens, loosens, heals, allays andremoves inflammation and brings quick relief when others fail. You ought to have'a bottle of this wonderful medicine in the house, there is no telling how quickly you will need itduring this changeable weather. All druggists, 50c and $1 — but demand the genuine ) B Halpruner's Halprunet Medical Manufacturing Co., 28 California St., S.F., Cal. 27 San Francisco, Cal. i I am now having a friend of mine in Los Angeles use your Wonderful Pain Re- mover for the con- sumption. He has had the consumption bad for quite a while and you would be per- fectly surprised to see the improvement in his condition since he commenced to use this medicine. 1 have no | doubt whatever that | it will cure him per- manently and en- tirely, and he himself has already admitted this great improve- ment in his condition. Yours truly, Louis PURCELL, Chronicle Bldg, S. F. Forsale by all drug- gists—s50c and g1 a bottle. ‘Halpruner Medical Manufactur-| . ing Company, 28 Cali- fornia Street, San Fr:mciscp, California.