The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 9, 1902, Page 2

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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1902. TRAGEDY END A PIaTOL DUEL Ranch Employes Engage in Battle and One Is Killed. PRISONERS DVERPOWER THE JAILER Three Inmates of Cells in San Diego Ob- tain Liberty. Friend Places Horse Between Combatants During Shooting. —_— Special Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, July 8.—Word has just been received in Redding of a duel that was' fought between Robert Toney and Jerry | v at the Buena Vista ranch of the French Glenn Livestock Company, -fifty miles south of Burns, Or. As a result of | the duel Robert Toney has been sent to an | untimely grave by a pistol shot. The man | behind the gun was Jerry Daley, Toney | was from Modoc County, near Lake City, where his family reside. Toney had heen left temporarily in the e of the ranch_foreman -during- the ¢ absence. had al- Guardian of the Convicts Is Beaten, Bound and Gagged. | Notorious Diamond Thieves, One of | Them a Woman, and a Man Under Sentence for Cattle Stealing, Missing. The Call §.—H. R. and Bessie |} They finally met at the back of e house and both. pulled pistols and be- | gan a duel. Eleven shots ‘were fired, and during the progress of the affray the men made their way up an incline to a pasture gate, a distance of 100 feet. At the end:of distance Toney’s-gun was ‘empty-and threw the weapon at Daley, remar! “‘Shake hands, you have got mme.’ | Toney afterward walked to. what "is known as-the west ghed, where he died after the two had shaken hands. | " Daley .returned o the. housé with both | revolvers, which he placed in a cupboard, and immediately Started for Burns in | company with Prim Ortego. Daley was | uninjured. Jesse Cox, also an employe: of the French Glenn Company, is sald to have been the only eye-witness of the shooting. | He did_not reside at the Buena Vista ranch, but was there to remain over night. Cox had just dismounted from a horse near the gate, and when the shoot- ing began Daley took the animal by the bi they ntenced have been Neard in t of the bold- hern California rtly planned with | as carried out but the fates victs, for after | ) was on watch | thing to thwart | their Geparture | an hour after ding. It was any hunting party before | during much’of the fight. The sgaddle in | cells in the steel | which Cox had ridden was scarred in/ o'clock, when |several places by bullets. One bullet ) t jatler,” went to | creased the horse just over the left hip. he found that| During the shooting one bullet passed through a window at the south side of | the house, narrowly missing the little | child of Mrs. Zurker, whose husband was | the ranch foreman. Toney was struck.by | three bullets, the fatal wound being in | the right breast, the bullet plercing the | lung. Daley gave himself into the cus- | tody of the Sheriff of Harney County at | Burns. Toney had only been at the ranch a week. The remains were interred at| Burns. getting out of the |OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST succeeded 1n | Fatents Are Issued to Local Inven- | . 3 tors and Pensions Granted to | and the jail er and he was Kept between the men | aton's foundry, San Jose, gas James M. Dunahoo, Hood | § to R. J. w is mouth, secur- € cket and ciit him- Disabled Soldiers. { = ceeded In attract. | WASHINGTON, July 8.—These patents | near ar word was sent to | were issued to-d. Wayland B. Augir, the d the Sheriff’s house. | Deer Harbor, Wash., bell; Wilmer S. It and the prison- | Case, assignor one-half to J. H. Hunt, = Oskland, can body forming machine; an Fred E. Caton and F. G. Waring, as-| e i w iver, assignor one half Ginn, Morro, Or., endless chain reel; Wii- | liam D. Farren Danville, Cal, railway semaphore; Arthur W. Foote, Grass Vai- HORSE REACHES LAND | bullding dams; Sylvester T Hall, , tree limb support; L. J. Hen- Spokane, ' Wash., hand stamp; ow, assignor to Washboard Pali , Spokane, Wash., pail; James T. Ludlow, San Francisco, ammonia com- pressor: John Manes, San Francisco; Weighing apparatus; Oscar Newhouse, AND RIDER IS DROWNED | { Young Man Loses Life in Salmon‘ 3 Lake After Separating From 2 Companion. NEVADA CITY y 8.—V infred Reed Sifoimed i n La \t miles | San Francisco, gar axle box; H. F. Ong, - ke et mits | Wendiing, Or., switch hand attachment; - 8. | Charles K. Rosenberg, San Francisco, ac- John Bassett, but | P. Sheedy, -Los Angeles, liquid delivery apparatus; same, 'locomo- e cylinders. These pensions were granted: nia—Original—Eben H. Smith, town, $10; Julius H. FoX, Lemoore, $ Elias“A. Read, San Francisco, $8; Wash. | ington L. Bresler, Fresno, $8; Peter Coon, With a broken | San Bérnardino, $12; Balthazar Scplenker, San Francisco, $; Edward Ovenden, Napa, $§; James Connor, Tinemaha, $12. Increase—FPeter J. Mangles, Soldiers’ Home, Los Angeles, $10; Christian Santer, | San Francisco, $24; John Schmitz, Sol- | diers’- Home, Los Angeles, $8; Lorenzo Califor- Reed attempted to | he lake on | ter unexpect- | He was ed the where a number }ns} Red Bluff, $8; Augustin M. Adams, A party >asadena, $30, u‘k g | _Oregon—Increase—Willlam H. Patrlck,‘ body > | Central Point, $12. Widows (Mexican | be clearly seen | war)—Hannah E. Caikins, Sherwood, §5. Another party | Washington—Original—Charles W. Per- ith grappling | Que, Vancouver, 3. Increase—William | Reed was 2 | Phelps, Port Madison, $8; Richard H. ¥ son of Mrs. Rob- | M East Sound, $i3; Henry M. Sher- ! sett | man, ’ Coupeville, "§10; John Arnold, | gy | P raT ortecs. o der Blockli : 2 | "Naval orders—Commande; ocklinger, _Assessments in Kern County. |, nc'Teieved from Mare, Island, is grant: | BAKERSFIELD, July or J.|ed three months’ leave” Surgéon N, H. Jameson I M over the assess- | Drake goes from the Philadelphia to Mare | Y year to the Board of | Island. Surgeon P. C. Lovering goes from wow tha$ notwith- | Mare Island August 9 to Cavite. in the ol business | = | has: increased | CORPSE OF A WOMAN ate assessed rslmaé ool | FOUND BY FISHERMAY | E 18,975,000 in 1891, | v er S\-wn;]w &aklexrs:m\d | Body Discovered Floating at Santa the figures b ng Cruz May Be That of Wreck | Victim. SANTA CRUZ, July 8—The body of a | woman, which had floated for several | down the coast, was recoverd by fishermen to-day. It was towed to the| wharf here and turned over to the Cor-| oner. The corpse had evidently been in | | the ‘water for some time. There were | ly exag- | Shoss on the feet and the upper portion of | delmyed | the body was covered by a black waist. | the | Nothing is known of the woman’s iden- | age was done. | tity. It is supposed that she was the vic- | in the vicin- | tim of a wreck at sea or may have no loss was | jumped overboard from a coast vessel. growers July 8.—The report of the melon crop in Indio sert, caused by | rm is sald by Superin- n Pacific Favor Woods for Surveyor General. SAN LUIS OBISPO, July 8.—To-day the Republican County Central Committee de- cided to hold primaries August 12 and the county convention will select delegates to California Growers Will Benefit. SAN JOSE July 8.—President Woods of | Cured Fruit Association | the failure of the prune make a difference of | the State convention. The committee | fornia growers, | stroagly indorsed the candidacy of Victor days the basic | H. Woods of this city for the ‘publican from 2% to 2% or | nomination for State Surveyor General. gliesarere e soz-dey 4 NS R 0Old Soldier Found Dead. Dgposeu Teachers Will Protest. NAPA, July 8—W. J. McDermott, a| AN JO £—D. M. Deimas is| native of Ohio, aged 60 years, was found | with the eighteen | dead on the river bank this morning. He served in the Fif:f'-flrn Regiment of Illi- nois Volunteers in the Civil War and was an inmate of the Veterans' Home. It is supposed he fell from the bridge into | tidewater Monday evening. naving been dis- or investigation. COVERS EVERY PIO WE SELL OUT OF OUR REGULAR LINES. We sell six lines of the highest grade Pianos the world We carry the greatest number of different makes of Pianos of any house west of (hicago—21 dif- ferent lines altogether—and we sell on the most lib- eral terms. Call and get our terms. THEWILFYB.AILENG . LEADING PIANO DEALERS, 931 MARKET STREET, San Francisco. All Market-street cars stop in front of our door. adway, Oakland. in { was the event .of the week | zens. SANTA CRUZ ELKS THE MERRY HOSTS OF LEAGUE OF THE CROSS CADETS Brilliant Reception of the Young ANTA CRUZ, July 8—The cadets have been given a royal wélcome ever since their arrival, but to- night was reserved as the time for a formal greeting, which was given at the reception tendered the regiment by the citizens of Santa Cruz. This reception and was planned and carried out by the Elks, who kept up their well-earned reputation for hespitality. The reception was held at the armory, which was . elaborately decorated for the occasion. At 9 o'clock the regiment marched into the pavilion in a Body and formed in line.. Mayor Clark of Santa Cruz then expressed his pleasure at the visit of the cadets and accorded them a. hearty welcome. The response on behalf of the regiment was made by Colonel Power. The chief feature of the evening was an exhibition drill by Company N of Oak- land. It was the fancy drill for which the company has won so much praise. The | men had been drilled by Major Kennedy. They won much applause from the citi- The band gave several concert se- lections, and Cadet Arnold Grazier sang and gave a fancy dance. Then Arnold and his sister, Miss Ethel, gave a cornet and French horn duet and a duet on the mandolin and piano. The dance which followed was a social event of the season. Those in charge were among the most prominent people of the city. The recep- Ton committee was™ Mayo: D. C. Clark, @ il DESP:RADO TRACY, SURROUAD [ OVSAEEPEES SR S N S Continued From Page One. -+ hearty meal that he seemed easier in his demeanor. Anderson arrived at Seattle at 10 o’clock last night and was taken at once to the Sheriff’s office in the Courthouse, where he is being closely guarded. The most important information gained from, him is the fact thgt Tracy has had the help of four men since he arrived in the vicinity of Renton. Anderson s unable to say whether or not the four men are friends of Tracy, but the inference is that they are, trom tue fact that when Tracy me: them he greeted one of them with the remark, “Hello, Fred.” ) Anderson was not allowed to converse with the new-comers. Tracy's gun was always pointed in his direction and he was told to keep moving on in frent. For this reason he did not hear any of the talk between Tracy and .the four men. He says Tracy seldom spoke to him except to give orders about the work he wanted, such as rowing the boat, packing tile bedding and preparing the meals. An- derson tells this story: “We.left Madison Saturday night at 9 o'clecck. We went to West Seattle, arriv- ing at’ daylight. I pulled the boat.” He held a gun over me all the way. We land- ed south of the West Seattle elevator, un- der a trestle and went directly into the woods. We spent Sunday in the woods at Is Held in the Seaside Town in Honor Soldiers, and Beauty and Chivalry - Have Enlivening Parts in an Affair of the Season e SCENES AT THE PRETTY MILITARY ENCAMPMENT OF THE LEAGUE OF THE CROSS CAPETS WHICH IS BEING HELD NEAR THE SEA- SHORE AT SANTA CRUZ. A S chairman; C. E. Lindsay, Frank Matti- son, Milton Besse, M. C. Hopkins, C. M. Cassin, Dr. F. E. Morgan, M. H. Murray, J. J. C. Leonard, F. R. Walti, J. J. Doran, Thomas W. Kelly; floor conductor, F. W. Swanton; assistant floor conductor, John G. Tanner; floor committee, George Staf- fler, H. F. Kron, H. E. Irish, W. H. Wil- liamson, Benjamin K. Knight, C. E. Ldil- 1y, A. A. Morey, R. S. Miller, Joseph D. Enright and George C. Chittenden., The drill to-day was the best sifice the camp was established. It was a batfalion drill, and Captain Filgate, a former army officer, commanded. Captain Filgate was aiso in command at dress parade, which was a marked improvement upon pre- vious efforts. The regiment presented a fine appearance. 7 Among the clergymen who visited the camp to-day were Father H. McNamee, Father G. G. Frund and Father P. J. Hennessy of Holy Cross parish; Father Foley of Alameda; Father W. Butler, Father Kennedy and Father W. Lyons of San Francisco and Father O'Neil of Bal- timore. A concert was given at camp this after- - 3 noon at the platform erected at the head of Company N street, ‘“Oakland boule- vard.” Father O'Neil of Baltimore, an accomplished violinist, gave several selec- tions. here was a speech by Assistant Hospital Steward Catania, violin solog by Quartermaster Drossell and Hospital Steward James O'Day, drum selections by 8. Manaton and I. Kelly and a_banjo !ulllu by Quartermaster Sergeant O'Far- rell. A party left early for a bus ride and picnic to Ben Lomond. The ride was up San Lorenzo Canyon. In the party were Colonel and Mrs. James Power, Lieuten- ant Colonel and Mrs, P. J. Haggerty, Mr. and Mrs. James Whalen; €aptain Jjoseph Kendrick, Miss Nellie ndrick, Mrs. J. C. Flood, Lieutenant Garrett Sears, Lieu- tenant Thomas Delury, Captain George Welch, Miss Agnes Fitzgerald, Miss A. Egfll]«;n, Miss M. Powef and Miss A. Company D also went on a picnic to- day. Lieutenant McCormick, Co‘t’nmissary Lieutenant Congdon and Battalion Adju- tant General Welch were in the party. The journey was to the Big Trees. g e e o e e B SRR RS RN ) ED BY MEN, SLIPS AWAY BEFORE POSSE BEGINS AN ATTACK, R e — toward Black River. We turned off the track to the left shortly before we reached Black River, We crossed a large hay field and went into the woods. This was Monday morning., “When we .got into the timber, we cooked breakfast. We thenrested until the afternoon. At 3 o'clock - we started through the timber toward Renton. Just before. we reached the rallroad bridge over Black River, we met four men and Tracy saild ‘Hello, Fred, and jumped down the bank to where the men were standing. % Y g | “Tracy talked to the men for a few three hours when Tracy tcok me out into the brush. *'At the river bank he said: ‘Lie down.’ After looking up und down the river Tracy tied me up and cautioned me to keep still. I lay in this position until called to by Mrs. Jorrel when I hobbled out of the brush into her back. yard, where a man untied the leather straps which held my wrist: . e QUEEN OF THE BELGIANS ... IS NEARING HER DEATH ‘| Marie Henriette's Iliness Has Taken '~ aSudden Tusn for the -| agreement. | fornia market on better terms than were _{‘mopolis, Wash. ; Northwestern West Seattle. When it got dark we came acrcss the bay lnyour boat and landed at the sawmill at’South Seattle. 3 “We then started on the railroad track minutes. After the talk was finished Tracy left one of the men to watch me. He and the three others, after blindfold- ing me, went off and stayed about an hour. When they returned they brought ‘a bottle of whisky. “Then we started out. Tracy forced me to walk in front and he followed behind, accompanied by the four men we met on the bridge. We arrived at Renton about 11 o'clock and walked up the rafiroad track ‘through the town and a half-mile east of the brick yard. Here Tracy tied me up and he, accompanied by the four strange men, left me. ' “They returned at daylight this (Tues- day) morning and we went further back into the brush and cooked breakfast, Af- ter breakfast Tracy told me he would go away for a while, but would come back in an hour. ‘When he Yeturned he brought a little boy from Jorrel's. house and we walked down to the Jorrel place togethér. We were in the house about ° Worse. _BRUSSELS, July 8—La Chronique shys that Marile Henriette,-Queen of the Bel- glans, who has been i1l for 5ome time past ‘at Spa, Belgium, has suddenly grown worse and is in an alarming condition. ESczema How. it reddens ‘the skin, itches, oozés, dries and scales! Some peo;fe call it tetter; milk crust or m. f 3 t rheus B .‘i'he suffering from.it is sometimes in-, tense; local applications are resorted to- they mitigate, but cannot cure. It roceeda from humors - inherited or acqui and ' persists until these have ‘been removed. ¢ Hood’s Sarsaparilla Positively réemoves them, has radically and anently cured the worst cases n and is without an equal for all cutaneous eruptions. % ot i S SRR SIS AR SO R SR Hood's Pills are the best cathartic. Price 2bc. MAKERS OF BOXES FORM A GOMBINE Oregon Manufacturers Working Under New Agreement. Reduces the-Cost of Market- ing and Increases the Profits. PORTLAND, Or., July 8.—The box manufacturers of Oregon and ‘Washing- ton are now working under an agreement that reduces the cost of matketing their product and contributes to the profit of the business. Outsiders call it a trust, but the insiders say it is not a trust and Las pone of the attributes of a trust. They say it is merely a joint agency for the sale of products of the parties to the The main purpose of the combination is sald to have been to get into the Call- previously acorded. 4 The Northern Box Manufacturers Agency, manufacturers of spruce and Flne boxes and all kinds of cut up mater- al, has its headquarters in Portland. The concerns bound together in this joint agency are the following: Grays Harbor Commeréial Company, mber : iam; .; Standard Box fory, Portland, Or.; Star Box Compary, {and, Or:; -Multriomah’ “Trunk and Box { pany, Portland, Or.; Clatsop Mill Company, | | Astoria, Or.; Astoria Box Compahy, Astoria, | Or.; Nécanium Spruce Lumber Company, Sea- 1 Davidson Fruit Company, Hoy River, W. ‘Morse Box Company, Puyallup, .; Queen City Manufacturing Compan: | Seattle, Wash.; N. L. Bennett, Seattle; Wasl | ington 'Mill Company, Spokane, Wash.; Grand Ronde 'Lumber Company, Perry, Or.; Puget Sound Sawmill and Shingle Company, Fair | Haven, Wash.; Fidalgo Mill Company, Ana- cortes,, Wash.; W. K. Rogers, Anacortes, Wash. MONUMENT IS RAISED OVER INDIAN’S GRAVE United States' Government Remem- | bers Services of a Famous Chief in California. REDDING, July 8.—Over the grave of | | old Calchooloo, a once. famous chief of | | the MeCloud River Indians, the Govern- | | ment of the-United States has placed a| | fitting monument. It was erected in mem- | ory of the old chief as a reward for the gallant service he performed in preventing | | a massacre of the whites. Calchooloo was | over a hundred years of age when he died. | | When Livingston Stone first established a | | hatchery on the McCloud the aged chief | | warned him that a massacre had been | | planned and would be carried out. His | “ warning enabled the whites to save them- | selves. Colonel Stone compelled his suc- | cessor to keep a promise to have a monu- | ment_erected. St | INHABITANTS OF TULSA FEAR VOLCANIC ERUPTION | | | i Surveyors Discover Fissures in Moun- | tain Side From Which Natural i Gas Is Escaping. i | | | GUTHRIE, Okla., July 8.—Great excite- ment has been caused at Tulsa, I T., | owing to the discovery by surveyors | working north of that place of cracks in | the sides of mounds, as though from | | great pressure underneath. Gds 1s escap- | |ing from the fissures and a continual | hissing and roaring can be heard. On the | | extreme top of the highest hill there has | | been a_small volcano at work, raising up | large bowiders and tossing them aside. Experts state that it is a sgreat oil and | gas field, and that the pressure from a | great depth has causéd the commotion. | The inhabitants of Tulsa are becoming nervous over the state of affairs. | MISSING SCHOOL TEACHER { IS LOCATED IN JAPAN | Instructor Supposed to Have Been Murdered in the Philippines Writes to a Friend. PLAINFIELD, N. J.; July 8.~Lewis S Thomas of this city, one of the teachers who was supposed to have been slain by nattves in the Philippines, is alive. Robert { Craig_of Dunellen has received a letter | from him, postmarked Nagasaki, June 6, | in which_ he. says that he left the Philip- | pines for Jagz'n to see the sights. He will T resume teaching in the fall. As this letter | fs dated at the time he was supposed to | | have disappeared, his absence is thought | | to be fully explained. @ittt et @ | TRYING TO FIND HOW HE DIED Italians Anxious About DPominico Mangini's Death. Captain of Detectives Martin says that Dominico Mangini was not murdered, but presumably died of ptomaine poisonihg. He does not think it a case worth while | investigating, but nearly every Itallan in | the colony believes that the miner from | San Bruno met with foul play. There can be no question but that Man- gini was robbed either before his death or afterward. Admittedly he hpd $30 in gold and a deposit check of $700 on his person cne hour and a half before he died, The Coroner’'s report shows that when he was brought to the Morgue he | had nothing of value on his person. He died in a dingy Italian lodging-house at 18 Ohio street, the proprietor and inmates of which bear none too good a reputation. All the_circumstances surrounding the death of Mangini were mysterious enough to warrant a police Investigation. ~Some of the most prominent Italians in the city visited Captain Martin yesterday and besought him to maKe a sweeping inves- tigation of the affair. They assured him that Mangini had certainly been robbed and that he might have been murdered. Dominico Lecapo, president La Meridion- ale Society, of which the victim was a member, prevailed on Captain Martin to =end out Detective Coleman, who visited the lodging-house where Mangini died. The | aeteetive could get no information, but the proprietor valled Locapo aside and hand- ed him. $20 and some clothing which had been taken from the dead man. Locapo that he would do anything to prevent being arrested. Detective Cole- man stood around idly while this transuc- tion took place and made no effort to as- certain what became of the man’s money. Locapo said last night: “If the police had arrested the keeper of this lodging- | house at the time I visited him in com- pany-with a detective he would have told the entire truth of Mangini’s death and what became of his belongings. Captain Martin told me that jme Public Admin- | istrator had all his foney, but I have visited that official three times and he told me that Mangini had absolutely no property. 1 know of my own knowledge that he had fully $700 when he died. “He may not have been murdered, but he certainly was robbed, We- Italians would like to have the police investigate this case, but so far we have been unable to_get them to work.” . In view of the fact that all the indica- tions point to a murder and robbery, with Mangini as the victim) the apathy of the police in this matter is, creating considerable adverse criticism among the 1tajian colony. He told DENVER, July 8.—The Post announced thi, afternoon that Edward T. Jeffery, president of the Denver and Rio Grande system, has re- moved his headquarters to New York City. | Good enough for anybody! ALt Havana Flu.zv\ * FLORODORA "™ BANDS are of same value as tags from “ STAR," * HORSE SHOE,” ~SPEARHEAD,"**STANDARD NAVY." « OLD PEACH & HONEY,” « SAW LOG.” ** OLE VARGINY™ so' MASTER WORKMAN"™" Tobacco. PACIFIC COAST STEAMSHIP (0. —— FOR — NOME DIRECT. LEAVE SEATTLE: SENATOR -9 p. m., July 18 (about) VALENCIA. 9 p. m., July 16 (about) And fortnightly during the season. The new and elegant steamships Senator and Valencla made regular trips to Nome last year, landing all passengers and freight with- out loss, mishap or delay. For passenger rates and Nome folder apply TIC OFFICE—4 New Montgomery streat (Palace HoteD. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO., Gen. Agents, C. D. DUNANN, Gen. Pass Agt., 10 Market st., San Francisco. VACUUM DEVELOPER EVERY SUFFERER from Strict Varicogele, Prostatitis, - Lost ‘Weakness is o fllustrated book No. 6, showing the parts of the male_system involved and describing our Vacuum Treatment. Sent sealed free. Investigate. Cures guaranteed. HEALTH APPLIANCE CO., 6 O'Far- rell st., S. F.; office hours, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.; Sundays, 10 to 1. PATENTED, IDENTITY OF A SUI PUZZLES A ORITIES Believed to Have Hailed From Los Angeles, but Nothing Is Known of Him There. HELENA, Ark., July 8.—The body of & white man about 6) years of age, sup- pesed to be S. R. Gaylord of Los Angeles, Cal., was found last night under a tree below this city, with a bullet-hole through the head. On the tree was a mir- ror which had been used by Gaylord in aiming the shot that ended his life and near his body was a revolver. Gaylord came to Helena yesterday and registered at a hotel as being from lowa, but all his clothing bears marks of Los Angeles merchants: His general appearance and a. paper of a dramatic school at Los Angeles found in his valise led fo the belfef that he was an actor. LOS ANGELES, July 8—If S. R. Gay- lord, whose body was found near Hdle Ark., ever lived in Los Angeles, it was so long ago that. recemt city directories do not contain his name. The police ré- celved a request for information concern- ing him and two officers spent most of the day trying to learn who he was. No per- son was found who had ever heard of him. Theonly Gaylord whose name ap- pears in the city directory was a tourist whose home is 72 Niles street, Hartford, Conn., who_spent the winter here and 1eft for the East a month ago. No person named Gaylord has ever been reported missing here. BUTTE, Mont., July 8.—Practically all of the old employes of the American Smeiting and Refining Compahy’s plant at East. Helena signed an agreement with the company to-day The smelter will reopen in about ten days. JOHN J. FULTON CO. HE TOLD THAEE AL RECOVERED, Bright’s Disease and Diabetes Are Positively Curable. Last week we recorded the recovery in & case of Bright's Disease that was - brought about through the suggestion of Lewis Miles, who urged the adoption of the Fulten Com- pounds. Mr. Miles' place of business is 431 Montgomery street, and he has now given us his expertence. It Is as follows: “Mr. Applewhite of the S. P. Co.-told me of people who had Bright's Disease and had been cured when-there was thought to be xio hope, and that was what put me on it. My kidney: had Been' troubling me so long I feared Bright's Disease. There were continued pains, later in- continence, and finally the dropsy, realizing my worst fears. I was therefore ready for Ap- plewhite’s suggestion, and went on the Fulton Compound without delay. It gradually relieved me, and there s now only an cocasional symp- tom of the old trouble, and I feel confident of & complete”elimination. As I got better I went over and told my old friend, Newton Fay, of 1276 High street, Fruitvale, who also had Bright's Disease. I found him k Been & sufferer for years, and had been g nounced incurable by Sacramento physicfans. by my experience and went on the o Compound and was completely restored. in turft told Txhu anln: of 3 wbn"i: son was very low with Bright's 3 Hasking was aiready - Sn. tha Compount through the suggestion of a city merchant. He, 100, recovered, did also a Mr. neighbor of Fay's, who also lives at station. AllL these people can be af] seen, am at the-store, 431 Montgomery street evenings and - K, ol e Medical works agres that ‘Diseass and Diabetes are Mcurablor but 'pe cent are positively recovering under the Fulton Compounds. (Dropsy, Bladder Trouble, Rheu- matism from uric acld and the minor kidney diseases are soon relieved.) Price $1 foe Bright's Disease and $1 50 for Diabetic Com. - pound. Free tests made for patients. De- scriptive pamphlets mailed free. Call or ad- dress John J. Fulten Co., office 6, ninth floor, Mills building, Montg: streef, San Fraa-

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