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WINNING VOTES FOR THE CANA vernment Positions for .Recalcitrant Colombians. How Republic's Lawmakers Are Induced to Change Their Views. et ~The date of the mbian Congress has by the Government, ¢ desiring by all means the ap- o €l of the caval treaty, wanted to » the nion of all the representa- s therefore sent spe- | ¢ through the country. | tiv Government posi- offered 10 some of the | decidedly un- | project, which they eting of Con- | ntation wil! who were = anal tre: Upen infor- through | at- | has bee in a sub T Bogota and that | me from Wash- | - | three or nited States >mbia Feb- well as ardent "king % RN OO DI 'NW??)&)«)‘N)‘D OHAHD QR SHRHHIHID é | EICH TOURIST FALLS UNDER RUNAWAY HORSE | Cart Passes Over Him and He Re- ceives Injuries Which Cause Death. S ANGELES. April ¢ —Whi Mzin street between the V' nd W e 5 m Prancis. a w time s way to pu e. He an $100,000, Tanana Telegraph Line. ril 4.—Genera | ount | nprecedented at ser of the board- Friday ich entally n's neck, severing the | ed a few hours later -- Taken to Paris. T of « penetrat Count’s Body ” bo »unt | nesday in ar- the the s placed 1 o rem rton-Mowbray, ____ GRAPE-NUTS. MAKING AN ATHLETE. Proper Food the Most Important | Requisite. ! besith comes from | epending upon how It is Jete 4= very dependent upon An athlete of Muncie, From a frail, sickly col- nt of scarcely six score pounds | Grape-Nuts has brought gh persistent conscientious use, | g athlete tipping the hea 2 pounds. For two years the | food has bee stomach what pure air is ' —a source of vigor, healtk 1 : | Having always been a great reader, 1| . while at school missed my | devote the time to a T hurried through rity, omission and ber with the close appli- finally told on my health | 1 was forced to leave school. I must | been in a truly pitiable condition m what my friends have since told me, ough at the time I am sure I did not 281f realize the seriousness of my case. M)y pearents decided to send me on a trip Southern California On the train 1 made the acquaintance a Mr. Weissenger, a wholesale grocer | of Chicage, who was interested in my | ase. He heard my story and advised | me to try Grape-Nuts, a food greatly rel- | shed by his own family. From what he | told me of the food T longed to try it, but did not expect to find it beyond the Rocky Mounteins, To my surprise, on arriving at Los Angeles I noticed a box of Grape-Nuts on my aunt's sideboard, That marked the beginging of my health and comfort. Since then I have come to Jook upon the food Grape-Nuts as a syno- nym for good health and happiness.” Name furnished by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. 4 - | resentative of the Yaqui Copper Company THE SA ADVERTISEMENTS. Lingecrie Depariment (SECOND Waisls Paris Models of Silk ered Linens, Pongee, 'Tea Gowns, Matinces, and Wrappers Attractive Display of Exclusive Paris Models in Silk, Crepe, Veilin French Hand Embroidered Underwear Spring importation received. The While Housc Corsel A la souveraine. R o | Jhe White House FLOOR) , Crepe, Hand Embroid- Direct Importation. g and Batiste. | | | fers. | for 25 cents, with general transfers. aphael Weill & Co. Inc. and Kearny_ STts ‘ This Week's Special hile they last $1.85 EASTER 1320-1328 Stockton St. We furnish houses complete. All cars lead to our store Country orders solicited. ‘We Trust th'é' This Beautiful Parlor Chair. Quar | fered, Sawed and Polished; upholstered { the very best of Velours and in all ! trimmed with Brass Gimop | OUTFITTING CO. pl i % % Caiad Peo e % & 2 2 2 2 & CONSUL TO AT State Department May Attend to McCurdy Case. ! -— NOGALES, Ariz., April 4—Judge M. arsteller, counsel for Attorney W. J. N. of this eity, who is incarcerated in the jall at Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, made a plea to A. R. Morawetz, | TUnited States Consul in Nogales, Mexic and the McCurdy forgery case promi 40 become of international importance on account of the high standing in finapcial les of the parties involved. | cCurdy 4] The American Consul has taken up the | matter with the Washington authorities | and United States Minister Clayton at the | of Mexico. Interesting developments - be expected in a few days. In the meantime the young attorney, Is lying in a Mexican jail, where it Is sald he wii! be forced to remain ten years if the United ates does not intervene in his behalf. The plea as presented alleges that an American. citizen is unjustly imprisoned .nd denied the rights that should be ac- | corded an American citizen. It s allesed that counsel and witnesses have been re- fused in his defense. McCurdy states in the plea that he was arrested on several charges, the principal one being that he rged telegrams in W. P. Harlow’s nume dering that the New York office of the v should deliver to the National ank of Commerce in New York 300 ghares of Yaqui Copper Company siock for a like number of shares held by them as a collection. The stock which Mec- Curdy claimed to have had been pre- viously refused, no reason having been given except a statement made by a rep- compan nk that it was not good. The alleged forged telegrams bore date of March 10, and at that time McCurdy claims he was in No- gales, Aris. DEMANDS ARE MADE ON MINE SUPERINTENDENTS ! Union at Jackson Insists on Fewer Hours and Reinstatement of | Employes. JACKSON, April 4.—A committee of five | members of the Jackson Miners' Union | waited on the superintendents of the| Zella, Kennedy, Oneida and other mines | yesterday. They left a written statement | of demands. These include recognition of the union, reduction of the working day to eight hours and the reinstatement of men alleged to have been aischarged be- cause affillated with the unton. The com- panies are given ten days to consider these demands. The committee consists of Hugo Gobish, president of the local union; W. Ouid, C. J. Peters, John Rado- vich and George Thomas. Not one at present works in the mines. Work Eight Hours and Quit. MAHONOY CITY, Pa, April 4.—The first serfous hitch in this region over the | finding of the anthracite strike commis- | sion occurred to-day when the employes at 2ll the colleries in thig region quit work at 2:20 o'clock, after working eight hours, causing the collieries to close down. The coal companies will not pay them a full day and the mine workers’ organization threatens to declare Satur- days holidays. NDIANS GNE AEIN T0 WRATH 1 Warner Ranch Redskins| Object to the Pala | Lands. ‘ AGUA CALIENTE Temecula) April 4—Sentiment among the Warner ranch Indlans, who will soon be cjected from their ancestral lands, has crystal- | lized against submitting to the will of the Government in so far as going to the| lands purchased for them at Pala is con- | cerne. Obedience, however, will be given | by the young and the old to the demands of the Government to remove thir fami- (via | lies and household effects from the lands are Pala | decreed to belong to others. They almost a unit in condemning the lands recommended by the special lnulani] v Commission, and deciare they will sca ter to the hills surrounding home rather than to go to Pala to starve. | Bitter denunciations of thc new home | are frequent in the Ague Caliente village, | where the greater portion of the Cupa | tribe resides, but the rebellious spirit is also in evidence at the smaller settlement on the Warner grant : E Very erly few their faces. people’s noses are set pProp- Ninety-nine out of | on every hundred turn to the right ADVERTISEMENTS. THE VALUE OF CHARCO AL. Few Peopie Know How Useful ItIsin Preserving Health and Beauty. 5 Nearly everybody knows that charcoal is the safest and most efficient disinfec- tant and purifier in nature, but few real- ize its value whem taken into the human system for the same cleansing purpose. “Charcoal is a8 remedy that the more you take of it the better: it is not a drug at all, but simply absorbs the gases and im- Durities always present in the stomach and intestines and carries them out of the aystem. harcoal swoetens the breath after smoking. drinking or after eating onions and other odorous vegetables. Charcoal effectually clears and improves the complexion. it whitens the teeth and, further. acts as a natural and eminently safe cathartic. It absorbs the injurious gases which collect in the stomach and bowels) it dis- infects the mouth and throat from the json of catarrh. °A)] druggiste sell charcoal in one form or anoiher, but probably the best char- coal, and the most for the money, is in Stuart's Absorbent Lozenges. They are composed of the finest Fowdered Willow charcoal and other harmless antiseptics in tablet form, or, rather, in the form of large, pleasant gmnx lozenges, the char- cofl being mixed with honey. The daily use of these Iozengen will soon tell in a much improved condition of the general health, better complexion, sweeter breath and purer blood, and the beauty of it is that no possible harm can resuit from their continued use; but, on the con- trary, great benefit. A Buffalo physician, in upgaking of the benefits of charcoal, says: “I"advise Stu- art's Absorbent Lozenges to all patients suffering from gas in the stomach and bowels and to clear the complexion and purify the breath, mouth and throat; I also belleve the liver is greatly benefited by the dally use of them. They cost but 25 cents a box at drug stores, and, al- though in some sense a patent prepara- tion, yet T belleve T get more and better ‘coal in Stuart's Absorbent Lozenges in any of the ordinary charcoal tab- | FRANCGISCO CALL, SU by the present administration. Mayor i Hinkle has stood on his record on the | | matter of obtaining better street car| | Chairman Revell Predicts a Republi- CHICAGO, April 4.-With .the most hotly contested mayoralty campaign In Chicago's history practically ended, the { cutcome is uncertain in the opinion of al observers. | C‘hairman Revell of the Republican | Jign committee, who at the begin- | | ning of the fight prophesied that the Re "al observation and reports from all part |a co | mer winning easily. | its strongest teams. CAMPAIGN ENDS N GLEVELAND Vote in Monday's Elec- tion Will Be Very Heavy. Cheaper Streetcar Fares the Issue in the Mayoralty Contest. CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 4—To-nicht marked the close of one of the most ex- citing Mayoralty campaigns,in the his- tory of this city. The vote to be cast on Monday will be by far the largest ever | recorded in a local municipal election. The total registration is about 83,600. Mayor Johnson, remominated by the Democrats, has during his brief cam- palgn made no less than sixty speeches, many of them in his tent, which was moved to a new locality nearly every day ot his canvass. Harvey D. Goulder, the Republfcan nominee, became so hoarsg from speaking early in the campaign lh:t he was tem- | porarily compelled to retire. Later, how- | ever, he resumed his speechmaking and | addressed meetings In all parts of the city. The paramount Issue of the campaign | has been along the line of cheap strect- | car fare, Mavor Johnson standing for a | straight 3-cent fare, with general trans- | Goulder, on the other hand, favnril an immediate compromise with the street- car companies on a basis of seven tickets CINCINNATI, April 4—One of the most citing mayoralty campaigns n the his- tory of this city closed to-night with a nionster open-alr meeting by the Repub- The fusionists closed their cam- | paizn last night with a meeting in Music | Hall, which was largély attended. There | are four tickets In the field, but the fight | | | hcans is hetween the Republicans, hecaded by Major Fleischmann, and the citizens' | municipal ticket, with M. E 1Ingalls as the candidate. Both candidates are con-| fident of being eclected. COLUMBUS, Ohio. April 4.—The mayor- alty campaign in Columbus, which closed | to-night, has been very spirited. There | are five candidates in the field, but the | ntest lles between John N. Hinkle, the | present Democratic or, and Robert | H. Jeffrey, the Republican candidate. The Republicans have waged thelr cam- | paign on the lax enforcement of the law fares and reducing the rate of taxation. - BOTH SIDES CLAIM CHICAGO. can ndslide. . ticket would by a margin adheres to that figure. Gr: | the Republican nominee, him the opinfon, based upon person- | of the city, that there will be practica a Repubiican landslide. i wafrman Carey of the Democratic | Central Committee declares that Maver Harrison will have more votes te than two years ago. In an estimate | ards he places Harrison's plurality | w0, as against 28,343 in 1901 Mayor Harrison adheres to his prediction of a | week ago that he will win by from 2i- o0 to 30,000, AMERICAN CAPITAL CAUSE OF FRENCH CONTROVERSY | - } Assertion Is Made That Rockefeller | Interests Control Paris Gas Company Franchise. ! PARIS, April 4.—1t is reported that the | of American capitalists to pur- the Parls gas franchise is playing derable part in the present bitter political controversy before the municipal ouncil aroused by the question of ex- tending the franchise. Several newspa- pers have asserted that one of the lvad- ing companies seeking the franchise is American and the Matin said Rockefeller interests controlled four-fifths of its cap- tal. This has brought out a sharp lettar of denial, which the Matin publishes, from several leading French capltalists inter- csted in the company. After referring to the report that the Rockefellers control the concern, the letter says: “Our project is not Amerlcan, but is French. Its organization will be French and its administration will be exclusive- | French.” | The letter further denies the report that some of the religious orders own part of the company’s stock. AR S , New Custom-House at Dalny. WASHINGTON, April 4. —Commercial Agent Greener reports to the State De- partment from Viadivostok that in an- swer to Chinese complaints that a great quantity of smuggled goods were being carried into Manchuria over the new Chinese BEastern Railroad, the Russian | Government has opened a new custom- | house at Dalny. Hereafter goods going to | Manchuria over the railroad system must be entered at Dalny, though Port Arthur and Dalny remain free ports, and dutics are collected only on goods passing through them into Manchuri —————— County project chas: BELMONT SCHOOL DEFEATS LICK ON' TENNIS COURTS Neither Institution of Learning Sends Its Strongest Players \Into the Field. The pérfect tennis weather yesterday at- tracted many players to the California Club courts. *In the merning Belmont and Lick schools tried conclusions, the for- Neither school sent Lick was represent- ed by two substitutes. In singles Arthur Green, Belmont, beat Haloran, Lick, 6-3 6-4. In the second mateh Douglass Grant, Belmont, beat Wolfson, Lick, 6-4, 6-1. Tn doubles Green and Grant beat Wolfson and Haloran, 6-3, 6-1. . Nearly all of the cracks were out in the afternoon and many good practice matches were played. The best match was a doubles in which R. N. Whitney and Wil Allen beat Frank Mitchell and Sidney Salisbury, 6-4, 1-6, 1-6 6-1, 6-4. Norman Hodgkinson was in fine form and beat both Allen and Dr. McChesney. The score against Allen was 26, 6-1, 6-3. He beat McChesney 6-4, 1-6, 6-4. The singles tryout of the University of California for the intercollegite tennis was finished down to the final yesterday. As was expected, Drummond MacGavin and George Baker were the” successful players. MacGavin beat Harper 6-2, 6-2, -3, and Walter Ratcliffe 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 6-1. Robert Variel beat Howard Wayne 6-3, 6-3, 6-3. George Baker beat Varfel 6-4, 6-0, 6-2. MacGavin and Baker will play the singles matches for Berkeley, MaeGavin and Variel will play the doubles. ————— COLUMBUS, O., April 4.—Reports from o 0% e 2, at the early fruit crop was y the frost and snow of last M‘h: , APRIL 5, 1903. Ask Britannica 01 11 91 Massive Volumes. 23 ANYTHING! *Fis a real comfort—this of having a good encyclopaedia in the house; one that can be relied upon to answer any ques- tion which may arise. And how nmany questions do ari when you stop to think about it : Questions about canal treaties, or coal fields, or former Vice Presidents, or the diameter of the earth, or the chemical action of yeast in bread. EVERY question, great and small. can be answered def- initely and finally if you have at hand the one great reference work the ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA. 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