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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1902 3 PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND. Buds and Flowers of Home Life PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND MAEES AND KEEPS THE CEILDREN WELL AND: £TRONG. Mothers Make It the Home Medicine fur‘ the Little Ones. ildren of our homes. hearty laughter our uld be desolate. They - carefully tended in childhood and if we expect them women. e and at school the children times of fil-health and suffcr- °n note the pallid and blood- VY eyes, nervous move- of limbs and mus- ¥ complain of headache, drow- , wearin dyspepsia and indiges- All such symptoms and ailments that the seeds of disease will have & fast and firm hold, unless proper meas- ures are taken to restore & perfect condi- Without of wise and prudent parents eir children happy, heaithy giving them nature's e's Celery Compound. and complicated cases Compound has ones were given up ones are not as hearty gged as they should be in health-giving virtues of d. It makes and Compou well REDUCTION! GENUINE Delivered to consumersin San Francisco, Oakland and Alameda by all coal dealers. CHARLES R. ALLEN, AGENT. UNITED STATES BRANCH. STATEMENT —— OF THE — CONDITION AND AFFAIRS ~—— OF THE — Liverpool and London and Globe INSURANGE COMPANY RPOOL, ENGLAND, ON THE of December, A. D. 1901, and for ding on that day, s made to the issioner of the State of Cali- pursuant to the provisions of sections 611 of the P al Code, condensed as rnished by the Commissioner. ASEETS. Real Estate owned by Company. ns_on Bonds and Mortgages. v $1,865,833 3,009,050 ue of all Stocks Bonds owned by Company.. 8,323,345 in Company’s Office. 2,725 in Banks............ 227,278 st Gue and accrued on s gnd LOBDS. ...eereran.s 188 In ue and accrued on Bonds NP s Sk or bt 35,650 77 ®r n due Course of Collec- G0 ic+-Pedbsmis 1,141,385 12 Rents due and accru 10,000 00 Due for P. P. Premium: 925 00 Total Assets ............ 316,301 02 LIABILITIES. Losses sdjusted and unpaid. 6,578 39 Losses in process of Adjustment or i SUSDENSe +-eeovnn-nn. . 503,910 65 ses resisted, including expenses 72,025 00 on Fire Risks year or less, $4,- ance at 50 per " asossse - 2,036,878 96 on Fire Risks than one year, 501 79; reinsurance, pro rata biresoserensviot i TRINEIIE NS Amount reciaimable by the in- Fire Insur- INCOME, received for - $5,502,416 51 131,456 72 Stocks, Loans, er sources. ..... 1 other sources.. 90,546 92 96,447 53 Total Income . EXPENDITURES. for Fire Losses $400,901 38, losses of ae years) Brokerage - .- - for Salarles, .. “charges for officers, clerks, etc. 344,880 35 State, National and . 153,245 81 . 859,324 16 . $5.551,923 71 Premjums. [Fire Risks.| Premiums. ks | the | ... |§854,656,8041$S,190,861 84 Risks | g the | 783,986,087| 7,130,9.1 17 . 1901. | 911,528,314 8,097,259 61 EATON, Res. Manager. GEO. W. HOYT, Deputy Manage: Subscribed and sworn to before me this day of January, 1902 W. H. WILDEY, Notary Public. vea - Net smount December Pacific Department %992 California Street, SAN FRANCISCO. CHARLES D. HAVEN, Res dent Secrerary. C. MASON KINNE, Assistant Secretary. fileak Men ami Women SHOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE Great Mexican Remedy: gives health and strength to sexual organs. Depot, 323 Market. God bless them, are the | ould | o ripen into per- | In| restored | EST POINT, N. Y., June 11.— The celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the West Point Military Acade- my reached its climax to-day. President Roosevelt was the chief guest, and there was a brilliant crowd, includ- z army and navy officers, Cabinet offi- | ladies in bright costumes and hand- | somely uniformed diplomat | The day’s activity began with. the ar- | rival of the President, and then came a review of the cadels, a reception at the home of the superintendent of the acac- emy, Colenel Mills, the formal exercises and =peeches in Memorial Hall after luncheon and the dress parade at sun- {down. A banquet with more than 5% guests was held in the cvening. President Roosevelt's party included Secretary Root, Secretary Moody, Post- master General Payne, Secretary Cortel- you and Miss Carew, the President’s ter-in-law. The President was met at the station by Superintendent Mills and his staff and the staff of the academy. When the President reached the crest a salute of twenty-one guns was fired. The | cadets were drawn up in line on the pa- rade ground.. The President was driven to the home of Colonel Mills, and then he walked across the street to the pa- rade grounds and reviewed the cadets. Grouped about the President were Post- c master General Payne, Secretary Root, General liorace Porter, Secretary Cor- telyou and a large number of officers and | other officials. In,the course of the re- | yiew Cadet- Calvin P. Titus was called | from the ranks to face the President, who pinned a gold medal for bravery on his breast and spoke a few words to him after an order had been read announcing the award of the medal to Titus for llant and daring conduct at the battle of Peking, China, being the first to scale the walil of the Chinese city. While the reception which followed the review in progr: Governor Odell arrived and paid his respects to the Pres- ident and jomned the official circle of vis- itors. Immediately after luncheon the hun- dreds of visitors sought Memorial Hall, new stone structure, where the exer- cises were held. The President, escorted | by the cadets and leading a notable party of officers, came across the parade ground and soon after his entrance the speaking began. Colonel Mills made an address of | welcome, and then introduced President Roosevelt, who said, in part: ’ PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS. Colonel Mills, the graduates of West Point |and you men and women who are drawn to | them” by ties of citizenship or by the simple fact that you are Americans, and therefore of nec drawn to them: I am glad to have | the chance of saying a word to you to-day. There is little need for me to say how well your performance has compared with prophetic promise made on your behalf by the greatest of Americans—Washington. This institution | has” comoleted its first hundred years of life. { During that century no other educational in- | stitution in_the land has contributed as many | names as West Point has contributed to the | honor roil of the nation’s citizens. | Colonel Mills, I claim to be a historian, and 1 speak simply as a reciter of facts when I say what I have said, and more than that— not merely has West Point contributed a | greater number of the men who stand highest on the nation’s honor roll, but I think beyona | question that taken as a whole the average | graduate of West Point during this hundred | years has given a greater amount of service to | the country during his life than has the aver- | sge graduate of any other institution in this broad land. Now, gentlemen, that is not surprising. That ie what we have a right to expect from this military university founded by the nation. But | T am glad that the expectation has been made | good, and of all the institutions in this coun- try hone is more absolutely American, none more, in the proper sense of the word, abso- { lutely democratic than this. Here we care nothing for the boy’s birthglace, for -the boy's DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. | Family cares and duties do not weigh | down the well woman, and the children are mever in her way. But when the womanly health fails, and there is a con- stant struggle with weakness and pain, household duties are a burden almost t bearing, and children are a cease- ess annoyance and worry. Week women are made strong and | sick women are made well by the use of | Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It | ‘establishes regularity, dries dis?reenble | drains, heals inflammation and ulcera- tion and cures female weakness. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter free. All ndence strictly private and sacredly confidential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. 1 had been ailing some time, troubled with female weakness,” writes Mrs. Wm. H. Johnson, of Avondale, Chester Co.. Pa. “Every month I would have 'to lie on my back. I tried many different medicines and nothing gave me relief until T began Dr. Pierce's medicines, using two bottles of ‘Favorite Prescription’ and two of | ‘Golden Medical Discovery.” These medicines have cured me. When I began ur treatment | I was not able to do very much, but now I do | the work for my family of nine, and feel better | to-day than I have for a year. I thapk you, | doctor, from the bottom of my heart, for well | doT kuow that you are the one who cured me.” | “Favorite Prescription” has the testi- mony of thousands of women to its com- plete cure of womanly diseases. Do not a an unknown and unproved sub- stitute ig its place. | Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the best laxative for family use. Drunkards Quickly Cured at Home—Any Lady Can Do it—Costs Nothing to Try. iven in tea, A new tasteless discovery which can be eoffee or food. _Heartily endorsed by W.C. T. U.and all Semperance workers. It does its work so silently and surely that while the devoted wife, sister or daughter Tooks o, the drunkard is reclaimed sven against hifs will and withiout his knowledge. Send T cur name and address 10 Dr. J. W. Haines, 2 Glenn. Bdg., Cincinnati, 0., and e will mail a triaf package of Goiden 8 £ show bow easily it is to cure drunkards with this remedy. | Fuli-sized boxes of Golden Specific are for | sale in San Francisco by J. R. GATES & CO., | 417 Sansome st. D Lyon’s | | ! PERFECT Tooth Powder Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century. B ‘ths remedy that cures a cold in one day. to | PRESIDENT LAUDS WEST POINT’S FAMOUS SONS " A ) grade, for his social standing: here we care nothing save for his worth if he s able to show it. Here you represent with almost mathematical exactness the country geographi- cally. You are drawn from every walk of life by a method of chance meant to insure and which In a great majority of cases does in- sure nothing but active youth. Here you come together as representatives of America in a higher and more peculiar sense than can pos- sibly be true of any other institution in the land, save your sister college that makes sim- ilar preparations for the service of the country on_the seas. This morning Y have hands with men who many of stand as representatives of every great Strus- gle, every great move this great nation has made for the last fifty or sixty years. There are still some left among the older of you who took part in the Mexican War, a struggle which added to this country a territory vaster than has changed hands in Europe as the re- sult of all the wars of the last twé centuries. I always delight when I see any of the older , men who took part In the great when this nation was tried as in a furnace: when the men were ‘called upon to do the thing which had to be done under pen- alty of making the memory of Washington himself worthless, because if you failed then failure would have been written across the | record of his works. Finally, I see the younger men as well as the older ones, the men whom I bave seen myself take part in a little war, a war that was the merest skirmish compared to the struggle in which you fought from '60 to '65, and yet a war that has had almost as far reaching effects, not merely for the des- tiny of this nation, but therefore upon the des- tiny of the world—the war with Spain—and it was my good fortune to see in the campalgn In Cuba how the graduates of West Point han- died themselves and to endeavor to profit by their examples, and it has become my pleasure to come here to-day because I was at the time intimately assoclated with many of your grad- uates. COUNSEL FOR CADETS. There was never a moment by day or night that I was not an eye-witness of some per- formance of duty being done by a West Pointer, and I never saw a West Pointer fall- ing in his duty. I want to be frank, gentle- men. You cannot get a body of men of abso- lutely uniform conduct, but I am able to say shaken you and 41 have met t] — DISTINGUISHED VISITORS AT WEST POINT AND VIEW OF MILITARY ACADEMY. b -3 proud to be an American and a fellow-citizen of_such peonle. Your business here at West Point has been to teach men to do well in war, but it Is a noteworthy fact that you have’ also taught them to do well in peace. The highest political positions in the land have been held, not ex- ceptionally, but again and again, by West Pointers. 'Colonel Mills, I make the answer that any man who Is asked the question must make when I say that, while we would have the right to expect that West Point would do well, we could not have cxpected that she wouid have done so very well as she has done. And now in closing, 1 want to say one word to those. who are graduates and the younger graduates as well. 1 was greatly struck the other day by an article of one of your in- structors here, himself a graduate of West Point, in which he dwelt upon the changed it was my good fortune to see the role of | condition of warfare and of the absolute need duty performed in a way that made a man | that a man who was to be a good officer should OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE DROVE RECKLESSLY INTO OF THE PACIFIC COAST| CROWD ON MARKET STREET Changes in the Postal Service aud New Military and Naval Orders. ‘WASHINGTON, June 11.—The Postoffice Department to-day announced:. Postof- fices established—Oregon—Cold Spring, Crook County. Postmasters commissioned —Oregon—Joel Flannery, Butler; Marga- ret R. Gibson, Cold Spring. Appointed— California—Chestina Clark, Delrey, Fres- no County, vice J. C. Clark, deceased. Washington—F. A. Mooers, South Park, King County, vice O. O. McAllister, re- moved. These pensions were granted: California —Original—Frederick 1. Currier, San Francisco, $10. War with Spain—Ernest ¥. Jurgensen, Ocean View, $8. Increase— John H. Shaffer, Napa, $17; Herman B. Ensign, Fortuna, $12; Albert Matthews, Coronado, $8; George W. Fisher, Na- tional Soldiers’ Home, Los Angeles, $14; Joseph W. Taylor, Sawtelle, $10; John Ellickson, San Jose, $8. Oregon—Original—Robert Z. Williams, Ritter, $. Minors of Nathaniel Daron, Elgin, $18. ‘Washington — Increase — Clark Black, Coupeville, $10, Navy orders announce that Lieutenant H. G. Gates is detached from the Naval Academy and_will go to San Francisco, thence June 2§ to the Asiatic station; Lieutenant H. Signor, detached, Na- val Academy, to Mohican, sailing from San Francisco June 21. Army orders announce that Captain William B. Rochester Jr., paymaster, will report to Colonel Frank M. Coxe, presi- dent of the examining board, Presidio of Sgn Francisco, for examination for promotion. Colonel Frank M. Coxe, as- sistant paymaster general, is detailed as a member of the examining board, Pre- sidio of San Francisco, vice Major Charles ‘W. Hobbs, relieved during examination of Captain W._ B. Rochester Jr. Captain Donald P. McCord, assistant surgeon, now at San Franéisco, is assigned to ation to Make an Example of Charles Hoffman. Immediately after the close of th Shriners’ parade Wednesday night a num- ber of men, women and children had nar- row escapes from being run over by reck- lgss drivers of vehicles on Market street. One of the worst cases was that of Charles Hoffman, driver of a victoria for M. Michelsen & Son. He drove from the direction of the ferry at a rapid speed, and several people had barely time to get out of the way of the horses. At Powell and Market streets he drove recklessly through a crowd of men, women and chil- dren. One of the men grabbed hold of the reins and Hoffman tried to strike him with his whip, using at the same time abusive language. Hoffman was placed under arrest by Polilceman Naylor on charge of disturbing the peace. Just the Corporal Adams appeared and said he ha been trying to catch Hoffman for hi reckless driving along the street. Hoffman appeared before Judge Fri yesterday, and after hearing the test mony, of the two officers he characterized Hoffman's conduct as shameful. “1 was trying to get out of the way of a car,”” sald Hoffman, “What you wanted,” retorted the Judge, “was to kill some women and children I am determined to make an example of men who drive: recklessly on a crowded thoroughfare, but I will continue this case till to-morrow, so that the officers can sulbpenn the man who grabbed hold of the reins.” ——————— STOCKTON, June 11.—The body of Den O'Rourke, who had been a resident of Stackton for twenty vears, was found floating in Stock- ton Channel early this morning, He l& believed to have committed suicide. e e e NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. IN THE GOOD OLD-FASHIONED duty as transport surgeon on the War- DAYS ren. Major Thomas. Cruse, apartermas. 3 : ter, is relieved from duty in the Phili 3 pines and ordered to San Francisco (g; Powdered Wigs Formed an Important further orders. Major William -P. Ken- dall, surgeon, is relieved from duty at Fort Porter, N. Y., and will go to San Francisco to the command of the general hospital, Presidio, relieving Colonel Al- fred C. Girard, ordered to the surgeon general's office, Washington, D. C. Adjunct to-a Géntleman’s Apparel. It is safe to say that the majority .of bald men of to-day would gladly revive the old, dignified custom if they . could. But, they can do the next best thing to it; that is, to revive the growth of the hair nature gave them. 4 In cases where the hair root or hair General Marries an Author. AT CELEBRATION OF THE ACADEMY A Judge Fritz Expresses His Determin- FUNCHAL, Madeira, June 11.—Brigadier General Sir Frederick John Lugarn, the] British High Commissioner of Northern Nigera, and Miss Flora L. Shaw, the au- thor-journalist and head of the colonial department of the London Times, werc married to-day. F 4 bulb has not' been completely destroyed by parasites that infest it, Newbro's Her- picide will do wonders in the way of stim- ulating the growth of lifeless and falling hair. Destroy the cause, you remove the effect. That is the successful mission of Herpicide. & ‘say. ote meet these changed conditions. I'think it is, 0ing to be a great deal harder to be @& first- class officer in the future than it has been in the past. I think that In addition to the cour- age and steadfastness that bave always been the prime requisites in a soldier, you have got to show a far greater power of individuality than has been necessary before, if you are go- ing to get up to the highest level of officer-like performance of duty, As has been well said, the developments of war in the last few years have shown that the unit will not be the regiment or the company, but the unit will the individual man. If he does not know how to shoot. how to shift for himself, how both to obey orders.and to ac- ceptresponisibility Wheg an emergency comes, he won't have any orders to obey. If he is not able to do all of that you had better have him out of the army. In a battle hereafter cach man is golng to be to a considerable ex- tent alone. It will be so that the youngest officers will have to take much of the respon- sibility that in former wars fell on their seniors, and many of the enlisted memnr will have to do most of thelr work without the super- vision of any officer. The man will have to act largely alone, and If he shows a tendency to huddle up to some one else his usefulness is preity near at an end. If he is nervous, so that he wants to feel the touch of elbows, he had better be out of the battle: and you offi- cers, if you are going to do well, have got to learn how to perform the duty which is so essential: The task Is a_hard one and you want to face that task. You want to realize that, more than ever before, the honor or the shathe of the country depends upon the high average of character and capacity of the offi- cers and enlisted men, and that high average of character and capacity In the enlisted man can to a large degree only be obtained through you, the officers: and that you have got to de- vote your time in bringing up to the standard the fighting efficlency of the men under you, not merely in doing your duty so that you cannot be called to account for failure to per- form it, but doing it In a way that will make each man under you able to perform his, I want. you to weigh what I say, for if you take only half of it you will invert what I 1 found in my regiment that the best man was the man who had been in the reg- ular army in actual service out in Western campaigning on the plains, that if he had been a good man in the regular army, out on the plains, he was the best man that I could get and, on the other hand, If he had NNIVERSARY served in time of peace a couple of years in an Eastern garrison he practically had next to nothing outside the parade ground and bar- racks to do, or if he had been in an ordinary National Guard regiment, that one of tWo things was true—if he had understood that he had only learned 5 per cent of war he was that 5 per cent better than any one else, and that was a big advancement, and if he had thought that he had learned the other 95 per cent he was worse than any one else. Gentlemen, I do not intend to preach to on the performance of vour duties here, but it is your special business to learn them. I do not ask you to remember the difference in the military ‘profession from what it has been in the past and to remember continually that soldiership does not consist of excellence on the parade ground, but efficiency in actual | service on the fleld, and that the usefulness, and really great usefulness, of the parade grounds and barracks work comes In its being used, not as an end. but as one of the ele- menis to the end. I do not ask you to re- member what you can't forget, the lesson of loyalty, of courage, of steadfast adherence to the highest standards of honor which all men draw in when they breathe the atmosphere of | this great institution, The orator of the day was General Hor- you ace Porter, Embassador to France. FHe reviewed the interesting history of the academy and spoke eloquently of the great names associated with it. In con- cluding he counseled the graduates to maintain a steadfast devotion to the country. Secretary of War Root dellvered short address. = At the banquet in the evening the toast- master was Judge Advocate General G. B. Davis. The toasts were: “Our Guests,” responded to by the Italian Embassado Signor Des Planches ‘American Uni- versities and Colleges,” by Dr. Willlam R. Harper, president of the University of Chicago; “Congress and Its Relations to the Military Academy,” David B. Hen- derson, Speaker of the House of Repre- sentatives; ‘““The Army,” General Mil “The Navy,” Captain French E. Cha wick; “The Staff and the Army Schools Adjutant General Corbin; *“The Volun- teers,” Majdg General Danfel E. Sickle “The National Guard,” Major General | Dick of Ohio National Guard. @ cielirilinirieminieielnniei il @ TORNADO PASSES OVER TWO STATES | a Continued from Page One. | two sisters were found locked in each | other’s arms. Miss Kelly was being pulled through a window by Clement Spencer when_the structure collapsed. - Spencer was hurt internally and may die. Many | other persons were injured. At Merna in addition to the town hall the Kinzella implement house was le: eled and many other structures destroyed. The new Methodist church at Twin Grove was demolished, involving a loss of $10,~ 000. Wesleyan University lost its roof and cupola, aggregating a loss of $25,000. VICTIMS OF STORM. PEORIA, I, June 1L—The double storm that struck Peoria at 10 o’clock last night and again at 2 o’clock this morning was the worst that has been experienced since 1343. Rain fell in torrents and the damage caused by the high winds is ines- timable at this time. Probably the worst damage in proportion to the size of the toewn was at Kingston, a small mining town twenty miles below Peoria. There three persons were killed outright and ten were injured, three fatally. The dead: Mrs. Thomas Murray, infant child of Mrs. Murray, Mrs. Robert Mc Elwee. | George Reardon, an employe of the elec- tric company, was instantly killed to-day by a live wire while repairing the storm | damage-at Glen Oak Park. The Peoria and Peking roundhouse was blown down shortly after 10 o’clock. Sam- uel Spence, an Iowa Central engineer, was caught by the falling walls and se- riously injured. . Thirteen locomotives owned by the IIli- | nols Central, two owned by the Iowa | Central, four owned by the Toledo, Pe- | orfa and Western, and five owned by the Big Four, were wrecked. | .The storm struck Morton, a small vil- | lage fifteen miles below here, and Ed- ward Beeman was killed by a falling | timber. A farmer named Ellison was killed while attempting to save his horses. DAMAGE IN IOWA. | DES MOINES, JTowa, June 1L—Very | meager details of the storm that passed | over Central Iowa have been recefved. It | is known that the storm struck the town of Jordan, a few miles east of Boone. It is reported that no lives were lost, but that some of the buildings of the place | were destroyed. Oskaloosa reports con- siderable damage from the wind. Grinnell reports that the town of| Laurel, Marshall County, was destroyed by a tornado last night. Laurel is in Jef- ferson Township, Marshall County, and has a population not to exceed 100 people. CORWITH, Iowa, June 11.—A tornado struck an empty excursion train on the | Towa Central a few miles east of here last | night and blew three cars from the track while the train was running thirty miles an hour. The engine and two last coaches | remained on the track. No one was hurt. | Neeley Gains His Liberty. HAVANA, June 1.—C. F. W. Neeley, who, on March 24, was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment and to pay a fine of $56,701 for complicity in the Cuban postal frauds, was released to-day under the bill signed by President Palma June 9 grant- ing amnesty to all Americans convicted of crimes in Cuba during the term of the American occupation and those awaiting trial. | the main | they finally ceased | numbered two hundred and eigh | perate batt | entered DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. HOW TO FIND OUT. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four h £ H a sediment or settling indicates an un- healthy _condition of the kidneys; if it stains the linen it is evidence of kidney trcuble; too frequent desire to pass it, or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. WHAT TO DO. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Reot, the great kid and bladder rem- edy, fulfills every wish in curing rheuma- tism, pains in the back, kidneys, liver bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, ne or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the ex- traordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressi cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty- cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle of Swamp-Root and a book that tells more about it, both sent absolutely free, by mall. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- hamton, N. Y. When writing mention that you read this gemerous offer in the San Francisco Sunday Call. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. ——————— SOLDIERS REVEL IN CARNAGE, Continued from Page One. under the command of General Augustine Garcia Hernandez hemmed in the Yaquis in Ulvala Canyon, in the Mazatan Moun: tains. About one hundred Yaqui men were guarding the women and children, while body of the army was near Santa Rosa. The troops under Hernandez were guided to the scene of the subse- quent slaughter on Sunday night by loyal Yaqui scouts and completely surrounded ‘the Indians. t daylight they opened fire on men, women and children alike, killing indis- criminately. The troops kept firing as long as there was a Yaqui alive. When firing, eighty-seven Yaqui men had fallen and one hundred and thirty women and children, many of the latter infants, were lying dead in the narrow canyon. The women and children who escaped four, according to the official report of Generai Torres. A dispatch from Hermosillo says that they arrived there to-day,.escorted by a heavy guard. EXCUSE OF HERNANDEZ. General Hernandez excused the slaugh- ter by saying that it was impossible to separate the women and children; that he had orders to kill all Yaqul men and that the women and children had to be sacri- ficed. The report of the merciless massacre has caused great indignation in Southern Arizona, many of the Americans being in mpathy with the Yaquis. There are many people in Hermosillo who do not approve of the tactics of Torres and Her- nandez. The majority of the population, however, was anxious to avenge the des- e at Aguajito, where so many Mexican privates and two gallant officers lost their lives. General Torres was at Minas Prietas when the slaughter in Tvala Canyon took place. Colonel Christy said that, as a rule, the Yaquis do not molest Americans, al- though four Americans were killed by the Indians a few days ago nine miles nerth of Minas Prietas. Colonel Christy and his party, guided by an American who spoke the Yaqui language, rode on mules overland from his mines on the Yaqui River to Hermosillo, a distance of ninety miles. They met many Yaquis, but were not molested when they ex- plained their errand. DEATH TO ALL. YAQUIS. Colonel Christy says that rurales and regulars have orders to kill all male Ya- auis found out of employment. This was rated yesterday, when a friendly Yaqui miner went to Prietas for supplies and was killed by the rurales on the out- skirts of the town. The Yaqui forces are led by a former Mexican rancher, whom they rescued from the jail at Ures. He was a man of much prominence, but was arrested for smuggling and sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment. A party of Yaqui spies Ures, outwitted the jailer and rescued the imprisoned rancher, who goes by the name of Martinez. He bad always been kind to Yaqui laborers when a pro- prietor. They had great confidence in him, and it is reported that he has been directing their movements and has taken a place ilar to that occupied by Chief Maldonado, who was at the head of the Yaquis during the raid which ended six vears ago. Maldonado was afterward killed, and for a long time the Yaquis bave been without a leader. The people in Hermosillo think the Ya- qui_uprising was crushed by the recent Mexican victories. but Americans in So- ncra believe the slaughter will only cause the rebellion to spread among now peace- able Indians, and that it will break out with increased fury Twenty years ago the modern liner of the Atlantic or Pacific was not even a dream in the mind of the most fantastic idealist. ship which is a. veritable floating palace. To-day we sea the The advance of civilization, the im- provements in machinery and the general progress of the world are responsible for the changed conditions. Twenty years ago a tailor-made suit was a luxury—only the most pros- perous wore custom-made garments. The improvements in the clothing world make it possible. example one of our $10 made-to-measure suits. - suit. To-day anybody can afford a tailor-made Take for The price is within reach of almost everybody; the material is all wool; the style is just what is being worn in the more expensive suits; the workmanship is thoroughly good; the entire suit is guaranteed; the value is very exceptional. May we give you some samples of the materials used in these suits? plentiful supply for the asking. You can have a Suits made to order for $10 Suits satisfac=- torily made for out=of=town customers. If out of the city write for self- SNWooDs (0 718 MarKet and Cor. Powcll and Eddy. measuring blank and samples: