The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 12, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1902. ADVERTISEMENTS. ~Catarrh of the Stomach And other forms of indigestion are often caused by catarri of ths head and other complications; cight out o! every ten pzople have dyspepsia in o:ec form or another; the only absohyc curz for dys= 'MRS. HOPE ELLIS BYRNE RENEWS FAITH IN CUPID Yuba County Belle Becomes the Wife of A.C. ‘1 Bingham of Marysville. - AGSIGNEE ENDS STAIFE AT LW OREGON'S RANGE ~ WAR CONTINUES GALE ALMOST WAECKS TWD Suit Involving Bell Farm Cattlemen Drive Sheep [ 5 - - A repsia and indigestion is bt . il | fato Gorral and K | DUFFY’S PURE MALT WHISKEY Court. ‘ | TR s i | rived t t 1 tel a it (] Catarrh and Dyspepsia symptoms are a | rived from it I can safely recommend i | y > suffering from stomach trou= | sense of -burning and dull weight in the| !0 any one f&wqo\v i Y o Attack Upon Deed Made by | Tacoma and Indrapura Wanton Slanghter of TWO |stomach after eating, sometimes accom- | fas; R+ M. JOHNSON, Elko, Va., Sept. 3, Dama 5(1 b Wmd = ¢ panied by heartburn, flatulence, constipa- Do not fill your system with harmful “Mammy” Pleasant Is | g ¥ Hundred Animals in tion or diarrhea, languor, depression, Irri- | drugs. ' Doctors prescribe and ' hospitala : tability, dull headaches; all these symp- | use Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey whenever Not Pressed and Wave, Lost Valley. toms show that your digestive organs are | an absolutely pure stimulant and tonic 3 i - cut of order. and you should take Dufty's | are reaaired. It contains no fusel oll o | ? 5 | Pure Malt Whisk ¥, It will cure dvspep- | GEfer Sperene s | sfa and stk late tl lood to healthy ac- { *! | Great Seas Pour Over the PEV;{E:E]‘:"”&'“‘ ‘: T’”:a”\-\m it ks i e | Former Vessel, Flooding | Cameron and his herders were bring-| STOMACH TROUBLE CURED. o o1 1 ing a large band of sheep off summer | Gentlemen: I got six bottles of your | lebsant, an ingolvent debtor, | | the Saloon. range, on Buckhorn Mountain, into win- | whiskey about a-year ago, and T used half L I IOCR L This I e | ter teeding quarters in the Lost Valley | of it, and it did me a great deal of good, | SIPESEIN. | Sheonge | | country, between Pendleton and Prin- | 8nd I gave the rest to Y et Yo ssignee of Mz |Officers and Crew Behave Nobly | ville, 200 head mysteriously disappearsd | 12d stomach trouble. an Tk _Be of court on June 29, H 2 h would be in his grave to-day if it hadn't | ared an insolvent on petition ‘When the Chaneces for Surviv- from the band and no trace of them | peen for your whiskey, as he was going | ot G5 Alarch %, 283 i ing the Storm Seem |gould be found. The missing animals| dowh fast, and the doctor could do him | creditors on March . 185. & g bave just been discovered. Butchered, | no good. ; ooy - gt g il Hopeless. thelr throats cut and their carcasses rid- | ISAAC E. WALKER, Lebanon, Pa. o iver Robe: s v 5 y o t0 succeed him | G dledk Wil stot, 106 of theen layfiise ofc- | CURED INDIGESTION. s Foreyp . Bell Dl e ral into which they had been driven for | ”T;,‘m‘(;';fd g eoibad it Spedisl, o GR e the slaughter. The balance lay on the | T have used Duffy's Malt Whiskey for K SHan Bsien, In Sonpma. LOuNLY, s o hillside around the corral. | half a year, and it afforded me great sat- g 93858 acres. It was alleged in ' | | VICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 11.—The steamer | ™, P 0° S007R0 (08 o0 the Msana'm stock- | Isfaction by curing me of that dreaded | aint that Mrs. Pieasant had at- Tacoma, of the Northern Pacific line, gy " . | disease, indigestion. which troubled me | - % ] | 9 men or ‘“rustlers.”” A herder named Lad- | g 2ease, ‘ndlzestion, Which Leoupled o | Bk eiendefl £bstoanater ¥l {5 | and the [ndrapurs, ef the Ogegon Nayk |iges, who was biluging 8, B. Barker's | i3 [ne.Yoore. DAVEE O et ’ FEN NS Spet) Sl Shirty Rave gatlon Company’s line had their upper |band home from Grant into Gilliam Coun- | £ . v ‘in‘:;““':‘é"l’\;n’ :‘rT;; works wrecked on their outbound voy-|ty, made the discovery, accidentally pass-% TWO BOTTLES CURED HIM. ¥ " ol '8 C “ 1 o 1 " . T i i " £ i It Sebionk Tor ages as the result of a terrific gale, ac- | ing the corrql where the slaughter had Atlantic City, N. J., March 16, 1902. | The gen\;;pp“atua'{'l‘ :l‘\:fig{]!:! [a'n,s[lr:; ¥ tion of o s and for th cording to news received by the Empress | taken place. Dear Sirs: I have used two bottles of | C8S OF EHect Frlm Q0 e Governe b Of CXPUIDER. ARG Tecian -} of China to-night. From the Indrapura a | J. M. Cameron has lost more than 30| your Pure Malt Whiskey. 1 tried it for | ONlY whiskey recognized by the Govern- of fraudulent 'dom'»rs Itwas | Edeckhousc was washed away and she suf- | Sheep this year in Oregon’s stern range | indigestion and dyspepsia and found great | {25“ \‘?‘;‘m;mh medical booklet containin; IR ’“’,’_‘1 e 21 | fered considerable damage.” The Tacoma | War. It is now so late in the season that | relief from it. M. H-RENO. | symptoms and treatment of diseases an TR camaI . | was almost wrecked and her crew |all of the sheep are out of the mountains | CURED DYSPEPSIA. convincing testimonials sent free to any of action that Mr; thought she would be lost. An officer of | and this Is probably the last sacrifice for reader of the San Francisco Call who will sant entered into a | the Tacoma, writing of the vessel's ex- | tlis year on the altar of the stockmen's | I have used Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey | write Duffy Malt Whiskey Company of wr agreement whereby the former Al | hate. for dyspepsia, and from the henefit I de- Rochester, M was support and care for the latter & \pe:e(nce' S:HI al d on October 14, thi B = . her old age v - $15 4 5 b remendous gale raged on October 14, the " r k‘ifiaru‘i-!xn?fr:‘l;: llrx:{‘:{i;:’ .f}‘ ARYSVILLE, Nov. 1lL.—Marys- ‘| | ninth day out trom Victoria, and at 2 o. the | ALASKA SOON TO OFFER CHURCH CELEBRATES SAN JOSE PRISONER e ey vesciiiorn. daguged s ville soclety was given a sur BOCLed i Deavaax; themarb A e HOMES FOR MULTITUDE SILVER ANNIVERSARY IS A FORMER CONVICT i neglected and refused to carry prise this afternoon when there wheelhouse being washed away. A few min- | —_— | _— | prad e uin rding to the compiaint 4 came over the wires from Port- | | utes ;g]zm:‘h: kxhlp:‘)e‘:hl; \pl'oe‘r:xeglt‘ljueu! sea nh:'\;t. Vast Agricultural Areas Now Idle | Santa Rosa Episcopalians Commemo- | Frank Kelly the Man Who Attempted ” - 3 H i e okestack, ol 3 . This - s 2, sought to gain possession of jand, Or., the wedding an- I | shipped and smciqshed! the two after-liteboats, | Because the Land Has Not rate the Dedication of Their to Rob Gardiol & Cappa’s perty for the benefit of the credit- ement of A. C. Bingham and Mrs. | | completely upending the large Iron lifeboat and " it is belleved & compromise Was | Fome Bl Boime. The | | { laving it upside down across the galley sky- Been Surveyed. X Edifice. Winery. . ope Ellis Byrne. The announcerient | light, the after-lifeboat being lifted from th: | 'TACOMA, Nov. 1l—Surveyor General | SANTA ROSA, Nov. I.—The Church of | SAN JOSE, Nov. I1L—Willlam Brown, < | was not wholly a surprise to all, as a few | e M hensed AgaInsl Ihe enElne-rooM | Diston of Alaska is returning to Sitka |the Incarnation (Episcopal) to-day cele- | who was captured a week ago while at= WILL BE THE WORLD'S | were aware of the coupie's;dbparture on ., hrown overboard, being dangerous to the other | from Washington, where he asked® the | brated its silver anniversary, twenty-five | tempting to rob the safe of Gardiol & g‘e :i,"‘!”"l"n"l_““ “,]'3;" Oregon Express on | deglc Bttings. imuing its career of destruction, | INterior Department for an appropria- | years having elapsed since Bishop Wing- | Cappa. wine merchants, at Third and GREATEST RESERVOIR e con (oday ot the ros goer | washed away the saloon skylight, fosding thé | tion of $113872 for the fiscal year ending | fleld dedicated the church edifice. Two | San Fernando streets, proves to be Frank . Serit of the oficlating clergyinan, Rev. Hiwl | saloon and all the statercoms, to the great|in June, 194. These funds are desired |former rectors took part in the jubilee | Kelly, an ex-convict. Kelly was sent to g e desas ey e e vt A T i Lo | alarm of the passengers. for the commencement of the surveying | celebration—Rev. Griffith Marshall Cu:- | Folsom prison on September 12, 139, from ing Its Calaveras Valle; shneco b alnrdiee. Snsdafale o 0 5 o | P IN GRAVE DANGER. of 400,000,000 acres of land within the | ting and Rev. J. T. Shurtliff. The former | Sacramento for burglary in the second g return’ immediately to their Mary i i = c0. |-Alaskan district |is now of Salinas and the latter of Au-|degree. He was discharged on April 12 o v W J [he s vas now t A - - = P gree. o~ 2. PN e o Hmme VG j PRINCIPALIN WEDDING THAT: |||, Tho s mae bon bitrat aaer e o ot it abitias ot lnck [t At b ARG ke . | o e Sl (s e i e 1n "-‘r,"\ .,p:n;: A} i”mr B r. m:'r:- ra;r;fixf :lr:«:o (!Ch‘ifllzagdir;‘i :’,35:- HAS SURPRISED MARYS- | r\'hel(;‘l ung h“mok l);e{rhu;flted e!:loru‘:u of surveys, not an acre of this vast area | Rev. A. T. Burleson, they conducted the | the liquor store at noon while only L'app:: i NhE i ss of this city, oc si- 5 Te= e wheelhouse also being continually shedbe : - |.se < v ' . Calaveras Valley, in the | tion of cashier of the Decker, Jewett & poae o The captain and third officer were og | 1S Vet available for entry under the gen- |services. wan in . charge. TWo of the Ten wel end of this county, into a mam reservce into which the wate Creek and the Santa Ysabel tributaries are to be diverted. Fift the preliminary work, id this force will soon be in- 00. One force is at work cut- ne of the big ba- being placed and fired re ing Valley Company has pro- nirol of every drop of water in Hamilton range, from Cala- Nearly all of this will 1l be the largest reservoir housands of acres of val- farming land is to be converted hy of the country will be changed.|ural ball in Sacramento in 189 Mr. wood. umored that a pipe line across the | Byrne met for the first time af. Mr. and Mrs. Bingham will reside in the bay from near Dumbarton Point to the |ter the breaking of their engage- beautiful home of Mr. Bingham on San Mateo peninsula is to be the means |ment his old sweetheart, Mrs. Hope Fourth street, in this city, and thelr many | of conveying this water to San Francisco. | Ellis Sherwood. As a result he es- friends are waliting with congratulations - R fcorted her to the ball. The next day it to receive them. Growth of Silk Industry. | @ il fotoiosntodofoepetefosfostnfostont-totecesinfntoonforionfofontnfofocon O SAN DIEGO, Nov. 1L—Silk cultre in | @ iisbidi it bbb ool e this city been given more attention in the last few weeks fhan at any other time since the idea of establishing a silk here first took hold. The in- ncreased so much, in fact, that | s of pers! a market by rry tree. Thousands of as many trees as can be ob- re being planted now and all will to feed the worms. Everything ward the establishing of the ess here on a permanent footing. —————— e ADVERTISEMENTS. e e e S AN UNPLEASANT EXPERIENCE yeician that you must go and submit to an opera- u remember with what king you awaited the day endure the knife. The rating, especial- orrhoids or piles, and the profession st resort” un. it necessar: while the greater not recommend t hey honest believe remains that much needless ope- is done d the patient put to xpense and suffering for what? To 2in a possible temporary relief; thes words are used advisedly, because in nine out of ten the affliction returns and tient is t where he started from. i be cured much more by the use of sucl the Pyramid Pile Cure; be recognized as the best remedy on the market for the painful dis- imes he cot and easiiy ease named and the druggists now sell | than all other pile remedies The writer personally knows eople who were affiicted with the worst orm of bleeding and protruding piles and s permanently cured by the use e mid Pile Cure. we In every one of these cases the attending physician had ired the sufferer that only by an op ration could he rid himself of the di ease; so much for the infallibility of the doctors. This remedy, which is sold by all druggists at the low price of 5 cents, is uppository form, is applied directly to parts affected and performs its work < and painlessly. The Pyramid 1 “o., Marshall, Mich.. will mail free any address a book telling all about les or hemorrhoids, their cause and A suggestion is offered that if the reader is aficted, or knows any one who is, this book be sent for, as it will be found in- valuable. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH SAYE. dvars for CHI is RED an ‘metailic FEi e o e o wad 4 s for Partieulars. Hamp e Pare Toimevials W. T. HESS, YOTARY PUBLIO AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels bldg. Telephone Main 983, Residence, 21 California st.. below Powell 1501. "geon appears to be pos- | AR Pus 0w, #n letzer. by re. the Calaveras reservoir. | | her hand, their marriage taking place on the site for the lake and the topog- | ns are beginning to pre- | planting trees and | your unhappy lot to be | | ty-eight million tons of iron ore, fifteen shareholder in the whol ness of the W. T. Ellis Company. Bank, and being also an exten sale grocery busi- =k was learned by thelr friends that they had decided to consider the past vears wiped out and their engagement was again announced. An elaborate wed ding followed at the Palace Hotel on February 14, 18%9. They took up their residence at the beautiful home of Mr. Byrne in Southern California. Marriage once more proved a failure for the beautiful daughter of W. T. Ellis. She returned to her father's home and again the divorce machine was set motion and a senaration was granted or April 5 of 1902, leaving to the care of Hope Ellis an infant girl a few months old bearing the name of Byrne, and an- other little girl with the name of Sher- The bride is the daughter of W. T. Ellis, a pioneer merchant of Marysville, and as Miss Hope Ellis was a noted belle in San Francisco and Monterey soclety. She was the divorced wife of Callaghan Byrne. The wedding of Mrs. Byrne to Mr. Bing- ham is her third matrimonial venture. In 1892 Hope Ellis was the announced fiance of Callaghan Byrne, but as a re- sult of a lovers’ quarrel over nothing the engagement was broken. Then she met Bert Sherwood of this city, who sued for September 25, 1894. It resulted unhappily, and divorce followed in May of 189’ On the day of Governor Gage's inaug- seven | in | eral land laws, although it has been in the Government’s possession for mere than a third of a century. He declares there are large areas il Alaska capable of producing crops. Surveyor General Diston says there is no doubt that homc- seekers would soon rapidly settle Alaska, providing they could benefit by the gen- eral homestead laws, which they could do if the lands were surveyed. | the bridge signaling the wheelhouse by whis- | tle, the after-telegraph being disabled. | The ecene below was pitiable. The whole skylight being washed away, left a dark, | wning chasm in the saloon ceiling, through which the wind shrieked and whistled Bnd‘ heavy sprays continually dashed. The saloon s flooded inches deep with dirty water, which | t each roll rushed from side to side through <aloon and staterooms like a mountain torrent, even the upper berths being wet through. The | chief officer and his men were hard at work | fixing a tarpaulin over the skylight, and a dan- | | gerous and arduous task it was, as they were liable at any moment to be swept overboard b some huge ‘The saloon boys were bus balling the water out of the saloon, but as she continually shipped fresh seas they made little | son, pastor of St. Joseph's Church of this cadw: i et : ¢ the lowest and the | City, returned last night from a four The barometer was now a o nd the : weather getting worse and worse. About § | Mmenths’ tour of E“”’psi‘ He attended she a. m. a tremendous sea struck the port quarter | triennial meeting of the Jesuit Fathers boat, carrying it away and driving it bodily | in Turin, Italy, on July 8. He visited the through the va]ml;\n fion 11_!;‘9 rln;rhslwexr" Vatican and then spent the time in trav- snapped off like pipe stems. e taffrail di appeared and the whole deckhouse =~ wax | €ling through Europe and England. On wrecked. A window in the wheelhouse was | the way back Father Gleeson visited his stove in, the house flooded and the officer and | Father Gleeson’s Home-Coming. SAN JOSE, Nov. 1L.—Rev. Father Glee- Two celebrations of the Holy Eucharist occurred, the second being a full choral | service of thanksgiving. The | chofr rendered appropriate music. Clergy men from near-by towns were present. afternoon.” This evening the jubilee ser- vice was held. * Reception to Stanford's Faculty. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Nov. 11— The annual reception to the faculty by the college women residing in Roble Hall will occur on November 22. custom iof previous years a play will be presented in which the cast will be com- posed of the women students and some of | vested | An informal reception by the ladies of | the Guild of the Incarnation was held this | Following the | to the rear to get a drink and while Cap- | pa was busy Kelly entered the office and attempted to rob the safe. The clicking of the door aroused Cappa’s attention and | he ran to the office. Kelly ran from the store, but after a chase of several blocks was captured. His confederates escaped and the police have been unable to find them. There was $2000 in the safe. Keily is charged with attempted robbery and a prior conviction will be placed against him. Qi Gold Seekers Seize Townsite. TACOMA, Nov. 1L.—News is brought | from Valdes by the steamer Bertha that placer gold has been discovered on the new Valdes townsite, all of which has territory have more this is true of all the separate divisions but the Pacific States, where they have only a little less than doubled. The cash on hand and due from banks has more than doubled in each division and in the Pacific States it is almost | three times as great. about 47 per .cent in the ten years, but about 7: per cent in the last five years. The figures for ten years are all the more significant because the increase has all been in the last five of the ten years. From 1892 to 1897 those items all practi cally showed a decrease. Reviewing the various banking methods in vogue the Comptroller said: “With united and armonious action, however, T believe it is possible to secure slation as will correct the evils ub-treasury system and add such elasticity to our national bank currency VAST PROSPERITY PLEASES BANKERS e Continued From Page 1, Column 3. “There has been a tremendous specula- tion in stocks of all kinds and values now are on a very high level. The schemes of | promotion and combination have been on such an enormous scale as to be startling and bewildering. This ig all so spectacu- lar and sensational that it attracts great attention in the newspapers and the pub- lic mind is filled with stories of great stock deals and enormous sums made by speculators. We should remember, how- ever, that all this is not the cause of our great prosperity nor its chief result, but merely an unavoidable, if not necessary feature of it. It is not speculation which has advanced prices so much as it is ad- vanced prices which have caused specula- tion. Railroad stocks have gone up be- cause we have four billion dollars’ worth of farm products and thirteen billion dol- lars’ worth of manufactured goods to move. In consequence, railroad earningh were more than 50 per cent higher in 1901 than in 189, and the traffic of the rail- roads to-day is only limited by the capa- city of the cars and motive power. A bil- lion dollar steel combination was only possible because we were producing twen- ness rather than the price of bonds. ,With this accomplished a long stride will have been taken to improve our financial and banking systems and proach, which has had too much justifica- tion, that they were not keeping pace with the improvements in organizations and methods which have taken place in our agricultural, manufacturing, mining, rail- road and commercial business in the clos- ing years of the last century. In all these lines the United States begins the new century ahead of all the world. Our banking and financial systems must bc so improved that they wiil do their full share in the work which is before us in the development of the resources of this grand country which has been given into our care. The nomination committee of the na- tional association, composed of delegaics million tons of pig iron; thirteen million tons of steel ingo and twelve million tons of finished steel a ye@r, and were finding a ready market for it all. “We saw after the 9th day of May panic that there might be a great speculative collapse without its so affecting our indus trial and commercial conditions as to pro- duce any lasting depression, but we can hardly expect to withstand repeated | from each of the States, to-night decided | shocks of this kind, and 1t is therefore | On the following officers: President, Cald- now especially important for us fo| Well Hardy ot Norfolk; first vice presi- strengthen our financial and banking sit- uation and act with great prudence and caution. - “There has been another change in banking conditions of very great impor- tance in the increase of wealth and bank deposits and also the cash in banks in the farming States; that is, the Middle West- ern, Southern, the Western and the Pacific States, as they are generally divided in the Treasury Department tables and re- ports. I have prepared a table from the reports pf the Comptroller of the Currency showing the chief items of the consoli- dated statement of all the banks in these States and also a table showing the in- crea in values of farm lands and farm products since 1890. “From these it will be seen what a great increase there has been in ten years in deposits.and cash on hand and due from banks. The deposits in the entire Avoid bers of the executive council, C. L. Far- rell of Indianapolis, A. H. Wiggins of New York, A. A. Crane of Minneapoiis, Luther Drake of Omaha, A. V. Lane of Dallas; members of executive council at large, James T. Hayden of New Orleans, John Skelton Williams of Richmond, Va., Arthur Reynolds of Des Moines, Ia., David Sloan of Lonaconing, Md., William T. Fenton of Chicago. To-night an informal reception was given to the visitors in the Palm Garden at the St. Charles Hotel. The two candidates for the next ‘con- vention, which are making a hard fight, are Seattle and San Francisco. The place of meeting is selected by the executive council, but the delegates of the two States on the Pacific are trying to create sentiment in their favor and have made it a live issue in the conventlon, Substitutes ! An honest dealer will sell an honest remedy when it is called for by a customer, will use honest drugs in filling prescriptions, and can be safely trusted as a family druggist. A dishonest dealer, who tries to sell a customer a cheap substitute of his own when a standard remedy is asked for, will not hesitate to use impure and in- Jjurious drugs. ‘We caution our patrons to guard against cheap, so- called cough medicine that is offered at a low price by dealers. Insist on getting the OLD RELIABLE which has been sands of cases of the standard for ru coughs, colds, It has cured thou- y p and influenza. Will Cure You if You Will Try It. Head” on the package. Bold byall reliable druggists at %c. a bottle. Dr. Bull" Co 8yrup has been used‘%er fifty years and has cured thousands of people. It is anbl:adn:'tg Dr. Bull's Goug over fifty years. grip, asthma Be sure Jou get the genuine, which has a ** Bull’s bumanity. SMALL DOSE. PLEASANT TO TAKE. than doubled, and | The loans increased | that it will respond to the wants of bus!- | remove the re- | dent, F. C. Bigelow of Milwaukee; mem- | sallors lifted from their feet and jammed | against the roof. The captain's room looked as | | though wrecked by dynamite. rything in it was smashed and washed away in wet, tan- | gled heap on the deck. The bulkhead between lis room and the social hall was partially car- | ried away, the port door of the sogial hall was | washed overboard and the whole port side | | stove in. | OFFICERS AND CREW HEROES. | a5 sk ow SBoi6® Bowadiat Sriets Soea. panion, again flooding the saloon and after ladies''cabin and also the storerooms and linen | lockers. ~ The mess was simply indescribable. But luckily the electric light remained burn- | ing and enabled one to see. Darkness would | have indeed capped the climax. All through this fearful time the Tacoma ! behaving beautifull riding the enormou | seas like a duck. Every wave rolling down | | upon her with its wavering crest of wind- | | driven _spume appeared certain to sweep her fore and aft. and one involuntarily held one's | breath and closed one’s ey | shock of the enormous pile o water heaped up above her to fall. A moment of suspense { and then another look to find the noble . old | boat had climbed the apparently impossible | | mountain and was riding like a cork, peady | for_the next. l For hours the captain remained on the bridge watching and anticipating everything, | the shrill whistie, loud above the shricking of | the wind, signalling the officer at the wheel and engine-room telegraph ringing its numer- ous orders to the engineer. The officers relieved each other on the bridge and at the wheel and the chief officer and his sailors were here, there and everywhere, work. ng like demons. There was no confusfon and no undue excitement. Everything that could begdone “i! done and was done quickly and | w and Nt was an inspiring thf to see | brave men doing their duty at this awful | times quietly and coolly as though it were an every-day affair. ANTHRAX RAVAGING SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY HERDS EAflects Horses as Well as Cattle, and the Percentage of Deaths Is Large. \ STOCKTON, Nov. 11. unty Veterina- rian Eddy makes the startling statement that there is anthrax in this county and | that both cattle and horses are affected. it is believed that the disease started somewhere on the West Side, between | | Copperopolis, in Calaveras County, -and | Oakdale, in Stanislaus County. Both of these places are just over the San Joa- quin County line. Recently a_band of | several hundred cattle were driven down to the West Side from Montana. All were healthy and none died there, but after | being driven to Copperopolis they died one by one, indicating that the disease was contracted somewhere on the way between those points. Within the past three weeks six head of cattle have died on Roberts Island, ten miles west of Stockton, and it is reported that others have died recently. Dr. Eddy sent some of the blood to Dr. Barbette, the bacteriologist of the San Francisco’ Board of Health, and he pro- nounced the disease to be anthrax beyond a doubt. Recently horses in this city have contracted the disease. State Veterina. rian C. H. Blemer was notified three days ago, but has done nothing as.yet. .- The cases near Copperopolis were diag- nosed by Dr. Eddy at the instance of the Stanislaus Board .of Superyisors, 4 SAN DIEGO TO BOAST BEAUTIFUL CITY PARK Samuel Parsons Jr., New York’s Fa- mous Landscape Architect, Will Lay the Plans. SAN DIEGO, Nov. 1L—The greatest step San Diego has ever taken In the direction of city improvement is contem- plated in the plan for converting the 1400 acres of unadorned city park into a place of beauty. The plan will be carrlv to aving | 1 | execution, thousands of dollars h: been subscribed already. Word has been received that Samuel Parsons Jr. of New York City, who has been engaged to take charge of the land- scape features and plams, will arrive here ig the early part of December to inspect the large tract and formulate the scheme of improvement. The cost will approx- imate $16. and this has been assumed by George W. Marston as a gift to the city. Parsons is perhaps the best-known landscape architect in the country. He is at present landscape architect of Greater New York. Rl Rt LONDON, Nov. 11.—Oxford University has decided to ' retain: Greek “as “a compulsory study, parents in Philadelphia. Next Sunday af- ternoon the Gentlemen's and Ladies’ So- dalities of St. Joseph's will tender Father Gleeson a reception and the students of Notre Dame and the parochlal schools will do him a similar honor the following week. | Dennis the members of the faculty. Paul Leices- | been staked by stampeders. The find ter Ford's two-act comedy, “The Best-! there was made in October by John Laid Plans,” will be produced with the | Olsen, a carpenter. There are three following cast of characters: Mrs. Wycherley.......Miss Grace Chaddock '04 Helen (Her Daughter)..Miss Elizabeth Yoch '04 Amy Miss Ruth Seadler '05 Rose ..Miss Sue Bird '03 | Lord Ferrol . Professor R. E. Allardice George. .Professor C. A. Duniway | Stephen-. ..L. E. Bassett Professor C. Searles townsites at Valdes, the one now claimed as auriferous being that laid out by F. | C. Helm, projector of the Valdes-Eagle | Rallroad. The entire townsite was staked, though as yet there appears to | be nothing in the find to warrant the bee Hef that it is a rich discovery. ) l For a limited time we are mak- ing suits to order for $13.50, and the customer can choose any style he desires from the six here mentioned. We will also make overcoats at the same price—$13.50. Here are the different styles of suits: Single-breasted round corner sack suits. Single-breasted square cut sack suits. Single-breasted derby sack suit. Two-button double-breasted sack suits. Three-button double-breasted sack suits. . Cutaway frock suits. To realize the value of the gar- ments you must see the mate- rials. They are all wool, fast col- ored suitings, in swell winter patterns. We are pleased to give anybody samples desiring them. Rémember, any style garment made to your measure from serges, cheviots, tweeds, cassi- meres or worsteds for - $13.50 Out-of-town customers can order by our se/f-meas- uring system. Satisfaction guaranteed. Write for blank and samples. SNWOOD. 718 Markect Street and Cor. Powell and Eddy Sts.

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