The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 6, 1902, Page 25

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUN AY, APRIL é, 1902 WL OF RHODES AETES WONDES nglishmen Contemplate he Big Educational Scheme. berley Mourns When- Re- mairs of the Statesman Arrive, —The war in South topic usually of ¥ in the ab- Rhodes™ will. | ry document, | ) ascertained. | %0,000, or slightly under | executors are Lord | rd Milner, Alfred | Micell and B. A he bequeathed the | They will divide or £150.000 among them. | the terms of this legacy, ivided during their | legatee dies his dn fund until the | s its sole owner. | e executors, the majority | eady enormously wealthy, | it what will then have | ated into nearly £2,000,- | bave unusually full | true and add to the | Hence, the omission of | Nova Scotia and other | s from the list of schol- | ely to be corrected and | Canada may be put on | e American States. | intimate associates | in the same spirit | 1 all great under- ortant tasks he and left us | is {rustees are| In the matter of to meet | tried to leave s to those with | me, he had fre-| n bequests, the and Germans in- Oxford, Rhodes had g the youth of h what he e nations they might more strenuous people t become missionaries | understanding.” | 1 meet and all the | settled, a request 1 prominent Ameri- u to act in con- sh body and as- | s v for which | th e r téd, both | b3 States and | April 5.— | T the body of Cecil I s ape Town on Thurs- | d rrive ere on its way to | Bu 2 The town was | ctically the entire 1 the procession past FUGITIVE MURDERER DEFENDANT IN SUIT | - Action Brought to Quiet Title to Property Mortgaged to James C. Dunham. 5.—A suit to quiet title erty in the Willows re- s the six murders committed by James | nham at Campbell in 15%, as the f the McGlincy family is made dants. Joseph Sears is defendants include amuel Boring, re- estate; Jacob and father and mother of am’s victims, and Percy Os- son of Dunham. question formerly be- nniman, and at the ter the Shesslers t for damages against e ath of their daughter to collect the mortgage, e Court decided against of limitation the mort- held against the Penni- outlawed. Penniman re- »f the property to Sears, now brought for the pur- g the title to the property. { s made a party to the of the fact that he is the heir of the murderer. To Restore Old Custom-House. MONTEREY, April 5.—The commission ar 1 by Governor Gage to supervise the restoration of the historic - Custom- rer; J. A. Trescony of San Myron Wolfe of San Fran- work of restoration will not 1 after the meeting of the Na- Grand Parlor, on April 2, in which time the lease to -house will be formally turned | te by the Native Sons and ppropriated by the last Legis- creby become available —- Engineers to Be Licensed. SAN JOSE, April 5.—The City Council nece creating the of- inspector and an examining ngineers. Hereafter all sta- T = must be licensed. The ted at the instance of gineers’ Assoclation. GRAPE-NUTS. SHORT AND POINTED. The Food Was Grape-Nuts. know the kind of food earn the experiences ty to let you know ats Food has donme for me. g from & epsia and daily ble. After taking many s without finding relief tion of Grape-Nuts Break- began using it regularly, 1 two weeks my indiges- rely gone. gan using the food I weighed 1 now weigh 160 pounds and onger n I have ever felt before, s and praise to the makers of Grape-Nuts.” Name and address given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, fortune is likely | ° FINAN BY. CABLE . TO THE CALL. PLANS VOYAGE RBOVE GHICAGD Santos-Dumont, the Aer- onaut, Sails for This Country. Airship Trip Under érooklyn Bridge Fraught With Danger. Special Dispatch to The Call. PARIS, April 5.—Among the passengers sdlling on the steamer Deutschland from Cherbourg to-day for New York was Santos-Dumont, the famous Brazilian t. He is enthust; c,over the trip. Before departing from Paris he said: “I set my face Americaward to-day with the happiest anticipations and with confidence that I will learn as much as I will demonstrate in connection with air- ships. Though it is my present intention to remain only a few weeks I may revise my plans according to circumstances. I have every rea my St. Louis trials will prove successful. as I have introduced important modifica- tions in the way of shape and motor weight in my airship since I won the Deutsch prize. ““The prospect of passing under Brook- Iyn bridge is fraught with greater danger than is commonly thought, but if real- ized it ought to go far toward demon- strating the manageableness of an airship constructed on my system. If conditions are favorable I hope to be ablé to pass over the heads of the citizens of Chicago, from which city, as well as from New York, I have received most cordial letters. “The significance of my present visit is not personal. It emphasizes the interest that most practical people in the world | take in the problem of a steerage airship | which will be the vehicle of future gene- rations.” IGNDR MAACON Morgan Group Takes an Interest ip Wireless Telegraphy. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, April 5.—The World says: Marconi wi now have the aid of the J. Pierpont Morgan group of financi was anno company b formed to finance the American rights for wireless telegraphy. “Yes, it true;” said Mareoni at W p. m. at the dinner of the British School and Universities at the New York Ath letic Club. “Willard R. Green has ar- ranged the transaction, but back of it i E. Rolli Morse, the banke! He is one of the J. Plerpont Morgan group of finan- ciers. He has purc rights for the entire system for the United States, Cuba, Porto Rico, the Dan- ish West Indies, Alaska, the Philippines, the Hawaiian Islands and all waters ad- jacent to them. He has organized a com- y with $6,000,000 capital. “The parent company is This has sold no stock. It is at the contract to use the Amer- ican rights has been made. The two com- panies will work in harmony. Cuba will be the first station built. Work on con- necting stations will be begun as soon as | possible.” Mr. Green when seen last night said that the system might be in operation by June. E. H. Moeran, Marconi’s attorney, confirmed th! “Stations are building,” said Green, “at Cape Cod, Cape Breton and Tampa, and soon work will be started on the Pacific Coast. These latter stations will eventu- ally open up communication with Rus- sia and the Orient.” How far J. Plerpont Morgan has gone into the financing of wireless telegraphy could mot be definitely ascertalned Jast night. - He is now on the ocean en route for Europe. E. Rollins Morse is one of the most prominent bankers in Boston, who has recently come to New York. He is closely allied with Morgan in many finandgal matters, Senate Confirmations. WASHINGTON, April 5.—The following | confirmations by the Senate were mafe to-day: Postmasters: California—N. B. Stanton, Avalon; R.. B. Stephens, South Pasadena; G. M. Francis, Napa; W. W. Montague, San Francisco; K. M. Summer- field, Santa Monica. The Senate also con- firmed a number of army and navy. pro- motions, including those which were -heid back while the chiefs of the staff bureaus were being considered. These include the following: Judge advocate general, with the rank of :brigadier general—Colonel Thomas F. Barr, Colonel J. W. Clous, Colonel G. B. Davis. Chief of engineers, with rank of brigadier general—Colonel H. M. Robert, Colonel J. W. Bartow, Colonel George L. Gillespie. Foreign Coin for the Monument. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, April’ 5—Wil- liam M. Thomas Jr., the United States Minister here, has just sent to the United States his check for over $500, represent- ing the contributions from the Minister and others in Sweden and Norway toward the erection at Canton, Ohio, of the na- tional memo: to the late President Mc- Kinley. There is no American colony at Stockholm and the United States Minis- ter has raised this sum chiefly among the diplomatjc and consular corps of Sweden and Norway and among friends of Amer- ica at Stockholm, AL A S Mangled by Train Wheel. BISBEE, Ariz., April 5.—George Ward, son of a commission merchant of Los An- geles, met a serious accident while at- tempting to board a freight train just out of Naco Junction. The train was running too fast for him and he failed to get aboard. He was dragged 300 feet, a wheel passing over his left leg between the knee and ankle. Amputation was necessary. Ward’'s relatives are sald to be wealthy. About four weeks ago Ward and his father quarreled and he came to Arizona. He is 22 years old. Action About Crozier Postponed. WASHINGTON, April 5.—The adverse report on the nomination of Captain Wil- liam B. Crozier to be chief of ordnance came up in the Senate in executive ses- slon to-day and Senator Lodge.asked that §t go over, suggesting that a vote would no doubt disciose the fact that there was no quorum present and that no action could be taken. It went over yn- til Monday. - John A. Hull, son of Representative Hull ot Iowa, was confirmed as a major in the judge advocate general's department. to feel confident that | sed the patents and | the London | \HUNDREDS FALL - - WITH A TERRAGE Five Persons Dead and Twenty Are Dying in Glasgow. Crush of Spectators at a Football Game Causes Disaster. GLASGOW, April 5.—The struggle of | the crowds which gathered at Ibrox Park ' to-day to witness the last international associztion football contest between teams from England and Scotland caused the | collapse of a pertion of one of the spec [ tators’ terraces. Five persons are already | dead, twenty will die in a few hours and more than a hundred are seriously in- Jured. ¢ When the game began 70,000. spectators | | were on the ground and an immense crowd had gathered outside. Being um- | able to obtain admittance, this crowd ; broke down some of the barriers and | swarmed upon the field, whereupon the police charged and drove the intruders back upon the terraces and seats, with the result that the railings dividing the crowds were broken and the people were thrown over cach other. In a frantic Struggle toward the exits the pressure toward the upper portion of the western terrace was so great that a hundred feet of the highest part of the structure collapsed under the weight of the crowd driven upon it, precipitating the mass of people to the ground, sixty feet below. The injured were piled fn heaps, wedged in with broken ‘wood. The onlookers hesitated to approach the dangling structure at first, but finally be- &an to utilize portions of the broken bar- vlers as stretchers. A hundred of the most seriously injured were carried to the pavilion and to spaces In the rear of the stands. A majority of the victims are suffering from -broken ribs and fraciured limbs, \\:hl]x’ some sustained internal injuries. Those mest severely hurt were later re- moved in ambulances to Infirmaries, and the lesser sufferers were sent in cabs to surgeries. Six of the injured are not like- 1y o recover. A few persons were thrown down and trampled upon in trying to es- cape r1mm the crush when the police charged, but most of the victims sus- tained their injuries i sy : n the fall of the 1 MRS. THOMAS HOPPER GRANTED A DIVORGE Wife of the Santa Rosa Capitalist Relinquishes Her Claim for Alimony. SANTA ROSA, April 5— ; by her attorney, J. S, Sims &cg‘;’:pl?rn;g} {¢isco. Mis. Lulu M. Hopper dropped quiet. ly into town this morning, and before | I had obtained a divorce from Hopper, the ploneer capitalist, on * ground of cruelty. By the terms of agreement filed the office of the Mrs. Hopper re- dn County Recorder later linquished all claim upon her husband's property and abandons the demand upon him for alimony. The decree granting her directs that Hopper pay $1000 s fees, and it is understood she gets a substantial sum in addition for abandoning her claim. - May Deliver Liquor in Kansas. TOPEKA, Kans., April 5.—According to | decision made by the Supreme Court to- agents may deliver liquor in 5 vackages without violating the prohibitory law. A District Court of the State had held that the act of the express agent in delivering the liquor, sometimes to a fictitious address, amounted' to a di- rect sale. The Supreme Court holds it is | only fulfilling ‘the ordinary functions of an express company. — e | ADVERTISEMENTS. urprising Results A Simpls Internal Remedy Makes Remarkable Curas of Catarrh. People who have used sprays, inhalers, salves and washes for catarrh and have found how uscless and “inconvenient they are, will be agreeably’ surprised at results following th use of a pleasant, ‘Niternal remedy in tablet form; druggists everywhere admit that Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, which they sell at 50 cénts for full sized treatment, s the safest, most ef- tective and popular of all catarrh remedies. Nearly all cheap cough mixtures and throat lozenges contain opiates; these cheap medicines giye a temporary relief, especially with Mttic children, by destroying nerve sensation; the irritation in throat, which causes coughing, is temporarily removed, not by removing the cause, but by deadening the nerves of feeling titere and will promptly return. Stuart's Catarrh Tablets is the best remedy to remove catarrhal secretion, whether In the nose, throat or stomach, because they are com- posed of wholesome dntiseptics, Blood Root, Red Gum frofi Eucalyptus tree, etc. When you use these tablets you know what you are put- ting into your system and are not taking chances with cocairie, oplates or similar poisons found in so many catarrh cures and cough medicines, Dr. Ramsdell, in commenting on catarrh cures, says: ‘I can heartily recommend Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, because they contaln no cocalne mor other dangerous Arug ¥ound. in 80 many advertised catarrh cures. I have known of many cases of long standing catarrh of the head and throat completely cured by the’ dajiy use of these tablets for several weeks. One case in particular, . which I not reach Wig‘n an inhaler or lgly and where the catarrh bauzed daily headaches and’ & noticeable loss'of hearing, was -entirely cured by thi§ harmless but effective remedy.” 1 Dr. Walnwright says: ‘I never hesitate to prescrihe Stuart’s Catarth Tdblets for catarrhal headachiés and catarrhal deafness because 1 know them to be pdrfectly safe for child or adult and have seen many remarkable cures resulting from their regular daily use; because they are advertised and, sold In drug stores 1s ng reason why any good physician should not use them because we should selze upon the means of cure wherever found.' Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets are especlally valu- able for catarrhal colds In children because they are pleasant to the taste and may be used freely to break up severe'colds and croup at the very bezinning. | season in London, beginning September, ing skeptical of seeing her. the irritation is not felt although it is sulil i JOE ROSENBERG’S. = JOE ROSENEERG'S. Hosiery That Will Wear. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS HANDLING HOSIERY H.g TS GREATEST WEAR- R COMFORT TO THE ER. ‘We have LADIES’ HOSE, made of the best Peruvian cotton, warranted fast black, fancy lace .boot, ribbed top, dcuble heels and toes. Best hoslery in the market at this price.. ..25¢ LADIES' HOSIERY, made of best quality Maco cotton, good fast black, white foot, sure preventive of burning feet, full length, extra elastic. Were 35c, now 25c For the Little Ones. CHILDREN'S VESTS, high neck and long sleeves, made of the best Peruvian cotton, Jersey ribbed, fleece lined, neck and front finished with washable silk tape, medium weight, colors.natural and ecru. Pants to match, same quality as above. Little store with the small- st Db L B --23e Extra. Extra. JUST RECEIVED A NEW L ASSORTMENT OF THESEH CELEBRATED GLOVES. “SOROSIS” is the name of the best wearing glove made. It is equal to any and better than most $1.% gloves. They are made of best quality picked lambskin, pique sewn, “Paris Point” stitched back, two-clasp, soft and durable, best fitting glove made at the DPriCe..c..suecessssress Tt $1.00 Pearl Butlons. Made of clear White, heavy pearl, 16 to 22 line. If we did not get these direct from the factory we would not be able to sell them for twice this price 5 a doze SAFETY PINS—Very best quality, nickel-plated needle point. Card of one dozen NOW........... BReitessaq Andneses s -3¢ Chief Attractions® Are Our ‘Low Prices. LADIES' /CORSETS, summer Empire shapes, * strong bones encased In very best extra heavy sateen, tape at the waist line to prevent ' Corset .from stretching. Colors pink. and blue. Where we have one good offer- ing we have many other equally as good. Our at- tractive price .......29¢ 39c Instead of 75c. We have a small assortme of GENTS FLANNELETTE GOWNS that we are anxious to clear out before the real warm weather sets in. They are made of best quality striped Flannel- ette cuff trimmed sleeves, pocket, full length, good width. -~ Gowns we have always sold for T5c. Our rapid-clearing price . 9e " Worth Reading. A STORY OF LOW-SELL-~ ING IN OUR UNDER- MUSLIN DEPARTMENT. ‘We haye a most complete line of Muslin Underwear, at prices that only a man- ufacturer such as we can afford to sell them for. Ladies’ Drawers, made of good quality muslin, tucked, deep flounce, trimmed with insertion of good serviceable tor- chon lace and finished with three-inch lace edge. Cost of materials would be at least 50c. Our price for Drawers complete . 50¢ Sale O'Farrel Morz Trimming. Embroidery made on best muslin or cambric founda- tions, open work, button hole edge, 6 inches wide. Worth 18¢; now Se § Veilings " For® the sum- mer trade, in every variety of color and mesh, at prices that will surprise the most economical. N This week we have NEW CHIFFON VEILS, plain or dotted, In ail the newest shades; best quality chiffon, in all the newest designs. One of the best Veiling offers ever made; only......25¢ JOE ROSENBERG Mail Orders Solieited. LADIES® WRAPPERS made of good quality percale, fitted back, full front, flounce on bottom, trimmed with neat wash braid, walst lined, full length, good width. Regular l $1 00 values; now.. e Exiraordinary Values Await You in Our - Shirt Waist Depart- b33 ment This Week. FOR EXAMPLE — LADIES’ SHIRT WAISTS., made of ‘ good quality lawn, back and front finely tucked, fly trim- '] med with embroidery, new sleeves, fancy soft collar, with tie attached; all sizes. Our ever ready selling price . Sc Corsets. Corszls. LADIES—Here is a chance to buy a $1 25 corset for 75e It i= the new French TAPE CORSET, made of best linen tape, boned throughout with best boning: 7 inches long in back and 10 inches long front; rust-proof front steel: low and medium bust; one of the nicest summer corsets made; colgr, Regular price $1 25; now .. pink and blue. of this cqrset, Se Beat This if You Can. ERECT FORM CORSET FOR 50c. It is made of good quality Fast Black Italian cloth, blas cut, hand-gored, lace- Tont steel: trimmed top, new straight nowhere in town can you ues as these. Only.. Wash Waists Stay Fresh Ywice as Long When Worn With A Pair of Shiclds. Here i3 something within everybody's reach. It's thenew ALVA SHIELD —nainsook covered, warrant- ed washable and odorless. No ‘woman that perspires freely should be without the shields in ‘her waist, whether cotton or silk. You will find your laundry bill reduced just half. Note this price... .....Pair, 10e Some Immense Ribbon Vatves We have a new lot of HANDSOME FANCY RIBBONS that we bought from an overstocked jobbing house at a lib- eral discount. They are made of very best quality eilk, with white ground and fancy colored checks or stripes, or satin polka dots; full five inches wide; all the newest colors; ribbon that is sold all over town for 40c and 50c. Our way of selling ......... Sk 19¢ Bonnet Pins at Half Price. BONNET PINS, made of best quality tempered steel; good, solid jet heads. Our prices are always lowest. Dozen 3¢ 816 MARKET STREET, Running through to 11 0'Farrell. * PHELAN BUILDING. in. OFFERINGS FOR THIS WEEK_ -~ In Our Wrapper Department. Special Salc of Embroidery fresh LACES, & We have just received a brand new, lot of -EMBROIDERIES AND suitable for summer dresses and undermuslins, all of which we have marked in our characteristic way—that of large and numerous sales and small profit. ity thread, all newest well now selling for;. plece of good quality VALENCIENNES LACE—Best qual- patterns, strong, finished edge. Plece of 12 yards, Se Handkerchict Special, And a Rousing Good One. Too. LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS — Made lawn, neatly hémstitched, néat inexpensiva. The Proper Comb. NEW FLORADORA COMBS are the 3-initialed, oply things that keep the short hairs from flying or falling on the neck: they give any woman a neat. well finished apgearance, and are made of best qual- ity Italian shell, highly polished. long, well rounded and smoothly finished teeth; that will not scratch the secalp or pull the hair, as an inferior comb would. A novelty at the most re: .ages assorted pins in box. COVERS—Made golored lawn, tight fitting, ) all felled ‘seams, not a raw edge to be seen; colors, pink, blue, white and lav- ender. price we ask for cover.. Lonsdale cambric, deep 15-inch flounce, trimmed with torchon lace, edged with lace, extra dust ruffle. money ... sonable pric: Sale O’Farrell-street Entrance. Another Comb Surprise. LADIES' SIDE COMBS, made of very best qual- ity highly polished Ital- fan shell; smooth, well finished teeth; good, heavy rims. Hairdress- ers ask 50c for this comb. Our price.. Mothers, Here Is Something for Your Little Cnzs. It's THE FERRIS WAIST, made of best quality jean, with double row of tape sewn buttons, also extra buttons attached to elastic to fasten the trov- sers on and which does away with sus- penders: hose, supporters attached and made of best quality elastic, with good streng lcop and button; waist with sup- porters attached. Only Oe Just Look. Four packages HATRPINS for 21e. They are made of “best Japanned wire, well finished. Four pack- -Box, 2ue Al 39 Cenls. Just the Thing for Sheer White Shirt Waists. LONG-SLEEVE COLORED CORSET of best quality fast tucked front, neck, neatly made, long sleeves, Couldn’t buy materfals for the --39¢ $2.45 Instead of $3.75. LADIES'’ WHITE SKIRTS—Made of five' insertions of fine Excellent value for the 82 45 Lot togeanas s ) GRITICS UNITE ~ INGONDEMNING “Ben Hur” on the London Stage Is Severely Scored. LONDON, April 5.—“Ben Hur,” which was produced at the Drury Lane Theater last Thursday evening, is not likely to achieve success here until it is remodeled. The lack of skill in dealing with religion is strongly condemned by the newspapers, and caused a great deal of “boding’’ and hissing on the opening night. The general opinion is that the play should end with the charlot race. This is well voiced in the London Times, which says: “Any capable hack playwright ecould have put together a better setting for the features of the story, and we should be spared the unedifying mixture of religious elements with that particular kind of melodrama which has its home at Drury Lane.” Charles Frohman has secured the American rights of “The Country Mouse,"” by Arthur Law, now running successful- 1y at the Prince of Wales Theater. Froh- man also secured from Captain Marshall, the author of “The.Second in Command,” his new piay, which will be produced at the Haymarket Theater next October. Frohman is also planning Maude Adams’ 1903, and commencing with the production of “L'Aiglon,” but as many preliminary announcements of Miss Adams’ approach- ing appearance have not -been followed by her debut nere, Londoners are becom- Mrs. Brown-Potter's much-heralded ap- pearance as Calypso in “Ulysses” at her Majesty's Theater scarcely justified the preliminary fuss. The critics are not very enthusiastic over her rendering of the part. They think her predecessor, Miss Nancy Price, was a better Calypso. A shipyard at Ominato, Japan, still in operation, was established 1900 years ago. Solid Oak Dresser, double top and beveled French plate mirror 24x30 inches, $11.00. If you are refitting your home with new furniture, car- * pets, curtains or draperjes . you ought to, see our stock and learn our prices. + T.Brilliant " FURNITURE CO. 338-342 POST STREET, " Opposite Union Square. ELECTION TIME THRILLS FRANGE Députies Are Very Busy With Speeches to Constituents. PARIS, April 5—France has entered into the throes of an election period, Im- mediately after the session closed on. Sunday the members of the Chamber of Deputies left Paris for their respective constituencies and are already engaged in canvassing and n‘*klns addresses to the electors. G Thursday was the first day for the dec- larations of candidacy at the various pre- fectures, and up to yesterday mo fewer than a thousand candidates had present- ed themselves. There are 179 candidates for the forty-six seats representing Paris and the Department of the Seine. Paris has become a paradise for bill- posters and every available wall space scems already to have been covered with multi-colored electoral posters. The com- mon trick of candldates of printing their declarations upon tri-colored paper has been stopped this year by a decision of | Parliament prohibiting the use of the national colors. Offenders are liable to a fine of 50 francs for each breach of this regulation. The custom which has hith- erto prevailed of smothering national monuments under a hideous coating of election bills has also been prohibited. Ar Initial note has been struck by the ‘Woman's Suffrage League, which has is- ‘sued a pink illustrated placard, repre- senting a man standing beside a ballot box, politely bowing to a woman and asking her to vote first. An appeal for female suffrage, signed by the writer, Habertine Auclert, and other advocates of women's rights, is being circulated. Auclert, in @ published interview, says that France ere long will have to follow the ,&xample of America, In several of whose States women have equal political rights with men, The Ministerialists express confidence that they will be victorious in the elec- tions. Baudin, Minister of Public Works; Leygues, Minister of Public Instru n and Worship, and De Lanassan, Minis of Marine, appear to be the only mem- bers of the Cabinet whose positions seem insecure. Waldeck-Rousseau, - the Pre- mier, will remain in Paris, from which point he can engineer the wHble Minis- terial campalgn. He can exert, through the prefects, telling influence in ald of the Governmental candidates. The Nationalists have begun a spirited campaign and are actively stumping the country. Their leading spirit, the writer, Jules Lemaitre, is very sanguine, predict- ing a majority for his party of eighty. He gives as the chief plank in the re- visionist programme a change in the" method of électing, the President. He ad- vocates the election of the Chief Magis- trate by a system similar to the United States. The Chief Executive, he says, would thus become the chief man of the nation, instead of now, as the prisoner of the parliamentarians. LOS ANGELES YOUTH 4 ONE OF THE VICTIMS Body of a Boy Killed on a Rail- road Track Is Iden- - § tifled. | EL PASO, Tex., April 5.—The body of one of the two boys who were killed on ; the tracks of the Galveston, Houston and San Antonio Ralilroad, March at! Ysleta, was exhumed to-day and identi- fied by C. 8. Graves of Los Angeles, Cal., as Bruce Hughes of that city.® The body was identified by the initlals “B. H,” tatooed in India . 'who has “Woods. Graves came here in search of his run- away son, who was with the boys a few days before their tragic end. The other boy killed was identified a few days ago #s Vernon Johnson of Abflene, Tex. Chief of Police White has received letters from the country, of the dead anxious mothers all over who wanted descriptions boys. il gl ~Louttitt Versus Woods. STOCKTON, April 5—The fight over the Stockton Postmastership goes for- ward merrily, with both of the candidates The Malil announces the latest coup to-day, with the report that the friends of Nelson to |Washington a week ago to labor in be- ‘half of the incumbent and against Phelps, the backing of Congressman apparently confident of winning. tent ex-Congressman Louttitt on S A Gage’s Friends to the Rescue. SAN JOSE, April 5—The Santa Clara County Fish and Game Association, which two weeks ago refused honorary member- ship to Governor Gage, last night placed the State executive on the merit Hst. ‘At the previous session Gage was - turned down on t ground that he had done nothing forfthe game interests, but last night fhere was an unusually large at- tendance of @age men and they rescued the Governor's name from the mire in which it had been buried. 3 Sl b VIS 5 G 14 Changes in Philippine Bill. ‘WASHINGTON,April. 5.~ The: Républl- can members of the House Insular Com- mittee practically completed the Philip- pine civil government bill to<day and a print of the revised measure will be sub- mitted to the Democratic members next week. As now changed the bill reduces the number of Philippine Commissioners to the United States from three to two. The civil government plan and the goid standard coinage are preserved as framed some time ago. A change is made in the friar lands section, by which the Philip- pine Commission will determine the meth- ods of opening these lands to homesteads ers. 195 fJongs ngs. \ 1G5 a jar. ommend. Phoae South 486. longs 0@3 fongs Are recognized by those who use them to be the best pre- serves put up anywhere. Get Noticz the rich natural color of the fruit. Fxamine close'y 1he delicious flavor and you will join in the opinion ex- pressed by thosz who appreciate a perfect preszrve. “LONG’S PRESERVES ARE THE BEST.” Long's Preserves are scld by all grocers who try to sell that which they can rec- : * Put up in all varieties, Long Syrup Refining Co. - 8th and Er:nnan Sts. San Fraacisco.

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