The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 19, 1903, Page 18

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18 F HE RANCISCO CALL, _SUNDAY. APRIL 19, 1903. DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. Test for Yourself the Wonderful Curative Properties of Swamp-Root Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It. To Prove What Swamp-Root, the World-Famous K ney; Liver and Bladder Remedy, Will Do fo! Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. r YOU, Every Reader of The Call May Have a I wrote to Dr. Kilmer & Co., at| Binghamton, N. Y., for a free| le bottle of Swamp-Root, and pon me was so notice- I bought a supply, and r taking a few bottles of mp-Root I had entirely recov- and in six months I became the man you see me now. I had I am a wonderful remedy, Swamp-Root. _It's a great medi- cine when a man is not feeling firth believer in that cheetfully give my indorse- Dr. Kilmer’s|{ment to Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- ‘Ru.:, w~hich I sincerely believe, [from my own experience, stands e s loss -of | 3t the head of all known curatives well; alter exposure or 10Ss Ol | g, Lidney, liver and bladder trou- sleep and irregular meals. It is | ples. % also a great medicine to tone up\ My own cure and also my per- and regulate a man. There is|sona] observation during years of such a pleasant taste tp it and it|service in the Toledo Fire Depart- ey trouble, aggravated by Was obliged to n day and night, seems to go right to the spot. I use it and recommend it. There is Py 1 more Swamp-Root used by Kan- and was run down . of A few bottles of this|®®8 City firemen than any other more for me than a|medicine twice over. Yours truly, Assistant Chief, ) Fire Dep’t.!| Kansas City (Kansas) Fire Dep’t. adelphia (P: begin taking the famous | cause rheumatism, p-Root, because as soon as 1p all the other organs to ane. “feel badly,” Kilmer's Sw sick or trouble; you get a s: any as though you had | [ | ble irritates | 1 rritable. tice, and is taken | eady convinced that Sw. t Tug stores eve the addre F where. hamton Y bottle. on every is generous offer in the San Francisco Sunday Call when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & | ment have convinced me that Swamp-Root is a medicine of won- | derful merit. I have seen many | who had been pronounced incura- | ble speedily restored to health by | Swamp-Root. i Yours Respectfully, No 1 Engine House, | Toledo (Ohio) Fire Department. catarth of the bladder, pain or gravel, dull ache in the back, joints and muscles; makes your head ache and back ache, causes indigestion, stomach and allow, yellow complexion, makes you feel heart trouble; you may have plenty of am- ¥ eys are for many | bition, but no strength; get weak and waste away. 1 suffering Swamp-Root is ple to take and is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians in_their private prac- by doctors themselves, because they recog- u to | nize in it the greatest and most successful remedy that 2 vy Ikidneys | sclence has ever been able to compound. } IAL NOTICE.—Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Liver and Bladder remedy, 1s so remarkably successful gement has been made by which all of our readers who have not already tried it may have a sample Also a book telling all about kidney and bladder troubles and containing many of the imonial letters received from men and women cured by Swamp-Root. In writing be suge amp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-dol- Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root—Dr. Kil. - $20; ss Wetmore, Bowen & Co., $2 Bell Works, $20. Total cash 0. Jennings be B; subscripti IKING PLANS FOR REGEPTION Flags and Military Dis- play Proposed for President. ONE THOUSAND DOGS VICTIMS OF THE LAW | All Unmuzzled Canines Jersey City Are Put to Death. MORRISTOWN, N. J., Reed’s proclamation order of all in this ¢ pril 18.—Mayor ng the killing large and unmuzzied v has resulted in the practical fon of dogs here. The edict went into effect yesterday, and it s estimated | | | | ! | | | ion evelt in r U Y upon a bulldog, during which « er. pify his ming by | the animal bit 150 of the town's dogs. The ever f the National Government | Town Council and the Mayor decided that of which he is the chief executive. With | hothing but a wholesale slaughter would e = month off, thejr | 52Ve the situation, and the Mayor issucd ut 4 Pt | his proclamation. plans g e definite from. | iR ot long, will be Negro Deckhands Use Pistols. 8T. LOUIS and another wounded s the result of mer Chester, which ht deco- an affray on the st Market sireets, Va ved to-day from Cape Girardeau. Four and possthly Jeamy, 8 negro rou outs, after having been paid, RIgoMery stree began to quarrel and pistols were drawn. The two men who were getting the worst of it after wo ng one of their oppo- shed to the side of the nged overboard. One of men succeeded in swimming safely to shore, but his companion, Otis Price, on the at this po the executive commit- on the torpedo-boat de- | d oot e § 4307 moorings the wounded ne- nment. If this idea | ET0 Was removed to the City Hospital. g B oo companion, who was unhurt, was the Farra. | Placed under arrest and locked up. be stroyer Farragut plans for his entert is p 1o executl met at the Oakland mole by gut at 3:30 o'clock of the afternoon when he s to be received there and thence taken on & swift trip up the bay to Val-_ jejo and Mare Island at Dewey to Inspect the Squadron. WAEBHINGTON, April 18.—In order to prolong the perlod of target practice for Major General MacArthur expressed | the vessels of the North Atlantic squad- yes iy e _Semee_g e post at the |5, the Navy Department to-day & Presidio to participate in the reception. ¥ s M hed orders to Admiral Higginson at acola to delay the departure of the - . ; squadron until next week. The depar- ddy of the President’s stay, With a re- | yure will be fixed =0 as to allow the ves- view ‘of the troops on the following 4ay. | scis to artive off the Che The following subscriptions have been | fre 59 and’ gth of Mar ‘:‘;gf"n:’:;'::{; recently received to swell the reception | e jnspected by Admiral Dewey, and on fund: 2 Ko ; . Previously *acknowledged, $2020; Theatrical | U°¢ 5th Admiral Higginson will lower his The committee has consid ed the plan of having & military procession on the first MNenay Association, $250; Raphael Wei] & | € and turn over the command to Ad- Sperry Flour Mill, $50; Goodyear | Tairal Barker. Risbber Company, §$60: J. A. Folger, $60; Ris- i gop Izon Works, $50: Pacific Hardware TACOMA, Wash., April 15.—The steamship £50; B Achilies, which cleared at this port to-day, carried 13,000 barrels of flour for Hongkong, 1250 barrels for Kobe, 40,433 pounds of flax, vajued at $45000, for Hull, England, and 2] ases of salmon for Li: Schwartz Hooper & ADVERTISEMENTS. Is an ordeal which all women approach with indescribable fear, for nothing compares with BECOMING A MOTHER =7 of the suffering and danger in store for her, robs the expectant mother of all pleasant anticipations of the coming event, and casts over her a shadow of gloom which cannot be shaken off. Thousands of women have found that the use of Mother's Friend during pregnancy robs confinement of all pain and danger, and insures safety to life of mother and child. This scientific liniment is a god-send to all women at the time of their most critical trial. Not only does Mother’s Friend carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but its use gently prepares the system for the coming event, prevents ‘“morning =i d v MIOTHER’S FRIEND ¥ 5 i 13 of mhoflh- The Bradfieid Regulator Co., Atlasta, Ga. E | in a New | 1000 dogs have been killed since fts | | e order was the result of an attack April 18.—One man was kill- | When the Chester reached | MONTICELLO CLUB bIVES A BANQUET Jefferson Dinner Is At- tended by Many Members. By The members of the Monticello Club gave their annual Jefferson banquet last evening. Covers were laid for seventy- five, and a most enjoyable evening was spent. Supervisor d'Ancona acted as tcastmaster. During the repast the following speches were made: ‘“‘Address of Welcome,” W. W. McNalir; “Toastmaster,” Dr. A. A. G’ Ancon: National Democracy,” Alex “Jefferson’s Declaration,"” y; “What Democracy Has Judge Robert Ferral; “The Mon- Louis Hirsch. | | | | | | | Done, ticello Club,” A feature of the evening was the musl- cal selections of the Monticello quartet. The members of fhe quartet are Fletcher Tiiton, D. M. Ward, S. Homer Henley and Charles Goetling. Those present at the banquet were: W. W. McNair, A. A. d'Ancona, Alex Vogel- sang, Dr. T. B. W. Leland, J. A. Emery, i.‘nhn H. Grady, R. V. Whiting, Charles | Leller, Gavin McNab, Willlam Gett, | Louts "H. Mooser, Stephen Potter, W. M. Cannon, J. P. Booth, T. M. O'Connor, Thomas Collins, Henry Eickhoff, R. E, Allan, 8t. John McCormick, T. J. Walsh, Samuel J. Braunhart, Justus Wardell, J. B. Gartland, Judge George A. Caban- iss, Howard Park, J. P.’ Allen, J. J. Quinn, William Glynn, W. H. Langdon, William Ross, D. J. Oliver, L. 1. Sam- uels, Isador Jacobs, J. M. Cumming, J. E. Lorey, T. C. Hughes, Joseph Slye, E. J. Hill, J. R. Pringle, Fletcher Tilton, D. | M. Ward, Robert Ferral, D. I. Mahoney, Louis Hirsch, J. M. Hanley, H. C. Wilber, R. Porter Ashe, M. J. Kast, A. R. Ha: kell, Henry M. Hoyt, Purcell Rowe, C. W. Tour, Charles Goetling, C. L. Parent, 8. A. Savannah, Gailliard Stoney, Ed- mond Godchaux and T. Vivian. Track Is Cleared of Landslides. OGDEN, Utah, April 18.—After five days’ work the obstruction caused at the east end of the Aspen tunnel by four landslides jon April 13 and 14 has been cleared away and regular traffic resumed over the Union Pacific. Hitherto the through trains to and from the East have been going via Pocatello. The track was covered by the four slides to an average depth of thirty feet and extending over 800 feet in length. The first train through was No. 4, leaving Ogden last evening. Elevated Road Grants Increase. NEW YORK, April 18.—After a confer- ence between President Mahon of the Na- tlonal Federation of Street Rallway Em- ployes and the officials of the Manhattan elevated road te-day it was announced that they had reached an agreement sat- isfactory to both, and that it would be submitted to a mass meeting of the em- ployes on Monday. The agreement is for an _increase of wages, but does not con- cede the nine-hour day demanded by the men. e St Robbers Revisit Maxwell Store. COLUSA, April 18.—The general mer- chandise store of Benjamin Smith, at Maxwell, was entered by burglars Friday night and robbed of a quantity of knives, watches and tobacco. The same store was robbed in the same manner a fow months ago. Bheriff Sherer is investigat- ing the matter liver } SHOAT LINE NOW OWNED “BY CLARK Senator Makes Public Announcement of Purchase. San Pedro Company Obtains Salt Lake Terminal / Facilities. el Railroad Will Be Extended From Caliente. Through Nevada as Rapidly as Pos- BUTTE, Mont., April 18.—A Miner spe- cial from New York announces authori- tatively that Senator W. A. Clark says that he has purchased for the San Pedro, Los Angéles and Salt Lake Railroad Company all the lines and the equipment of the Oregon Short Line Company lying south of Salt Lake, in Utah and Nevada, including the Leamington cut-off. Senator Clark also sags that he has ob- talned a ninety-nine year lease on the terminal facilities in Salt Lake City, In conjunction with the Oregon Short Line. The property will be transferred as soon as necessary. The grading and track- laying will be commenced at Daggett, Cal., and the road will soon be extended |from Caliente through Nevada. From | Leamington to Callenté the roadbed will be improved and relaid with 75-pound rails. The Western terminus of the road is now being operated from San Pedro harbor to Ontario and will soon be com- pleted and in operation as far as River- side. Senator Clark hopes to have the road completed in about two years. SCOPE OF THE DEAL. Short Line and San Pedro Roads to Be Operated Separately. SALT LAKE, Utah, April 18.—The con- summation of the long pending negotia- tions between the Oregon Short Liné and Senator W. A. Clark and his associates, | owners of the San Pedro, Los Angeles | and Salt Lake road, gives into the hands | of the latter 444 miles of road south of | | Salt Lake, 344 miles of main line running | | from Salt Lake to Calientes, Nevada, and 144 miles* of branches and spurs. In this is Included the newly completed Leaming- | ton cut-off, 116 miles in length, which will | operate as part of the main line of the | San Pedro from Salt Lake to Los Angeles | and which will save seventy miles of dif- | ficult mountain railroading. | ““The Oregon Short Line will have abso- | lutely no partnership or interest in the management of the San Pedro road,” said | Benator Thomas Kearns, one of the larg- est stockholders, to-night. “The Short Line will be paid for its road in the bonds | of the San Pedro when issued, and this will be the only interest it will have in | the road. The San Pedro already has 120 | miles of road in operation in California | and comstruction of the gap between the | California terminus and Calientes will be | hurried. All accounts of the two roads | will be kept separate from this time on. The actual transfer of the Short Line | south of Salt Lake will take place as soon | as Senator Clark reaches here, which will be within two or three weeks.” The San Pedro road will open enormous flelds of iron and coal, both bituminous ' and anthracite, in Southern Utah and Ne- vada. It is announced that the new road will have no close traffic agreements with | roads east of Salt Lake, but will be an open gateway for all roads. e CLARK OUTLINES PLANS. NEW YORK, April 1.—Senator W. A. Clark of Montana to-night gave the fol- lowing detailed statement regarding the | differences between the Union Pacific in- | terests and the San Pedro, Los Angeles | and Salt Lake Railway Company and the | plans of the latter company: | A year ago the two companies had rival | construction gangs at Mountain Valley, | Wash, each eager to forestall the other | and ready to resort to physical violence to accomplish the end desired. Now Sen- | ator Clark and his adherents have leased | the Oregon Short Line south of Salt Lake | City and will construct about 400 miles | {of road from Caliente, Nev., westerly through Cajon Pass to San Bernardino, where connection will be made with about eighty-five miles of track already in op- eration between San Pedro, Los Angeles and Riverside. ! “There has been a great deal printed | about the plans of the new road, but no complete statement,” saild Senator Clark, “has been made. As president of the road I believe I ought to make everything clear. There is now perfect harmony be- tween the Union Pacific Company and the new interests. “The San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt | | | ADVERTISEMENTS. Spring Medicine There is no other season when good medicine is so much needed as in the Spring. The blood is impure, weak and impoverished—a condition indicated by pimples and other eruptions on the face and body, by deficient vitality, loss of appetite, lack of strength and want of animation. Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Pills Make the blood pure, vigorous and rich, create appetite, give vitality, strength and animation, and cure all eruptions. Have the whole family begin to take them to-day. Hood’s Sarsaparilla pronilol to cure and keeps the promise. ({1 79) If the use of Dr. Humphreys' Specific “Seventy-seven” does not ‘“break up” your Cold promptly, then alternate with Specific Number One—this will accelerate the action of “77."” At Druggists’. 25 cents each, or mailed, Humphreys' Medical Co., corner Willlam and John streets, N. Y. COLDS sible. rious secret society, which has its office in Brooklyn, and a “strike breaker” at Wigterbury, Conn., is the description of i other rolling stock and the whole system MURDERED MAN FOE OF UNIONG Victim of New York’s “Barrel Mystery"” Identified. Body Is Recognized as That of a Waterbury Strike- Breaker. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, April 18.—Almost positive identifications were made late to-day of the victim of the “barrel murder” mys- tery by two men, one of whom was for- merly the murdered man's employer and the other a fellow workman. He is sald to have been George Morrissetti, a ¥renchman or Italian, whose home was in Taftsville, Conn. Promoter and prime mover in a myste- thé man’s vocation. For nearly a month private detectives have been seeking the | man everywhere, for on March 19 he left | his home and dropped out of sight com- | pletely, as if the earth had swallowed | Eim. He was earnestly sought, as he was | an important witness in the case of union | men now under heavy bail at Waterbury lon the charge, of felonious wlts on non-unfon men who took their places dur- ing the strike. The identifications, made separately, were by James Farley, wh® had charge of the non-union men in Waterbury and was | the employer of Morrissetti, and William | Murner, who was conductor of the car of which Morrissetti was motorman for nearly three months. George Morrissett!, whose name ap- | peared frequently in the newspapers dur- { Ing the critical period of the Waterbury | strike, lived in Taftsville, Conn. The man | always asserted that he was French, but | many who knew him declared his speech was that of an Italian. He became a motorman in *“Boss” Far- ley's camp of ‘“strike breakers,” and in Waterbury was badly beaten by union strikers and lay in a hospital for some time. When the man disappeared in March and agents of the trolley company were | searching for him to return and give evi- dence against the accused union men ticey learned of his connection with a secret society, the nature of which he never 1e- vealed. This is supposed to be the Mafla soclety, which assassinated him. L e e e ] Lake road is authorized to lssue $30,000.- 060 bonds and has $25,000,000 capital stock. It has leased for ninety-nine years the Oregon Short Line system south from Salt Lake City to Caliente, a rallway sys- tem of 223 miles. Besides the main line there are two shorter lines taken over. Most important s the Leamington cut- off, extending from Salt Lake to Leaming- ton, Utah, where It joins the Oregon Short Line. It cuts off a great deal of track and is 117 miles long, besides having lower grades. ! “From Caliente west I have already had | forty miles of grading done. The road will go through Mountain Valley Wash, the only available pass. The wash is the dry channel of a mountain stream. At Cajon Pass we will find a grade of 106 feet to the mile and the next highest grade is only seventy-nine feet. The cost il average $30,000 a mile. “The Oregon Short Line system, under our control, will be rebuilt with heavier | rails and the best of equipment. The road from Ban Pedro to Los Angeles and Riverside now has the best Pullman and (ill be equipped accordingly. Last year ,000 carloads of fruit were raised in the Los Angeles section and there are or- chards which in less than five years will produce 50,000 carloads. This new line will take fruit trains from . that section fmmediately into a cooler altitude, a great | desideratumin such perishable shipping. “The distance from Salt Lake to Los Angeles ig 800 m! by the new route and we Intend to cover it in twenty-four hours. Now traffic from Salt Lake City north thereof reaches Los Angelés a San Francisco, not less than 1300 miles. At San Pedro there is building $2,000,000 breakwater and Wilmington Bay 1s being dredged into a fine harbor. This side of Riverside there is building an 800- foot concrete bridge, the longest and with the highest span of any similar structure. “Our terminal facilities at Salt Lake will be equal to the Oregon Short Line's | and we will connect with the Union Pa- cific and Gould systems. The mineral | wealth that our road will tap equals that of the Mesaba Range. “No bonds have been issued on the Lo: Angeles road so far completed and $15, 000,000 of the $30,000,000 bonded debt will be reserved for branch lines or kept in the company’s treasury. “With me there are interested, among others, Senators Kearns and W. S. Me- Cornick of Salt Lake; R. C. Kerens and the Bemis brothers of St. Louis and my brother, J. Ross Clark of Los Angeles. | DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. 7 sleep well enough at night, And the blamedest appetite Ever mortal man possessed.” Riley’s farmer is the very picture of a man advanced in years, yet in the enjoy- ment of perfect health, A good appe- tite, good digestion and sound sleep, are | the chief fultim in a vigorous ol 4 Life s sustaimed by foo(li. wl‘l;n it is y l%ufied a ng assimilated. When digestion fails, there is a loss of nutrition which soon_shows itself in physical weak- Pi Golden Medical cures discases of the stomach and other orfinna of digestion and nutrition. It stre ens the body in the only way possible,—by enabling the as- similation of the nutrition extracted from food. "I 'used ten bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and several viala of his ‘ Pleasant Pellets’ 3 down ht to was not able to work at all. rly 160 and can do a day's work. scveral, and shall ainaye hive a good Say for Dr. Pierce and his medicines.r The Common Sense Medical Adviser, in covers, is sent Bt of 2t one. = r stamps to o o, mailivg onb Al | vious to the transfer of Alaska to the | ed States Government and just lately the ADVERTISEMEN'S. How 1,000 Chicagoans Got Well at My Risk. On Jan. 11, 1903, I published in the Chicago pipers the names and addresses of one thousand peogle In that cty alone whom I had cured of chronic diseases in just the last six months. Since then several thousand other Chicagoans have written for my help. The offer I made to all of them is tie offer I make to you. Simply send me this coupon, or wrile me a postal stating which book you need. I will then mail you an order, good at any drug store, for six bottles Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. You may take it a month on trial. If it succesds, the cost is $5.50. If it fails, I will pay the druggist myself. And your mere word shall decide it. My Restorative is the remedy that cyred those thousand people in one city In one-half year. And Ihave in my office the records of nearly 550,000 sick ores whom it has cured in the past twelve years. And my Restorative is the only remedy so sure, even in dif- ficult cases, that any one dare offer it on tetms like mine. If you need help—whether the trouble is tufling or severs— you need the best help—this help. The usual way for treating weak vital organs is to doctor the organs themselves. My way is to strengthen tle inside nerves —to bring back the power that makes the organ do its duty. This nerve power alone operates the vital organs, and it is nerve weakness alone that makes the organ weak. I treat the weak organ like a weak engine—I give it the power to act. The result is always a cure, save wken a cause like cancer makes a cure impossible. Such causes are so rare that I willingly take the risk. CUT OUT THIS COUPON, For we all resolve to send for something, but for- get. Mark the book desired and mail this with your name and address to Dr. Shoop, Box 630, Ractne, Wia. Book 1 on Dyspepsia. Book 4 for Women. Book 2 on the Heart. Book 5 for Men (sealed). Bock 3 on the Kidneys. Book 6 on Rheumatism. M1ld cases, not chronie, are often cured by ons or two bottles. At all Druggists’. Cracksmen Wreck a Safe. EMPORIA, Kans., April 18.—Cracksmen wrecked the vault and sgfe of the Allen State Bank at Ellen, a small town ten | miles north of here, early to-day and | escaped with $2700. The buflding was | badly damaged by the explosion. At A mire, another small town a few miles eas STICKEEN RIVER CHART AN IMPORTANT RECORD American Embassy Secures Copy to Use in the Boundary Line Controversy. NEW YORK, April 18.—The attitude of | the American Embassy at St. Petersburg | of Eilen, the postoffice was broken into |and a shows clearly that the chart of the Stickeen River is considered an impor- | tant weapon in the settlement of the Alaskan boundary dispute, cables the Lon- don correspondent of the Tribune. This chart was made by an officer commis- gioned by the Russian Government pre- | all amount of money taken. B. KATSCHINSKI FHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 0 THIED STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, ADJOINING CALL BUILDING. United States and ceposited at the Rus- slan Admiralty, where it has remained ever since. At the time of the transfer a | copy of this chart was given to the Unit- American Embassy at St. Petersburg has been asking for another one. The Daily Chronicle's correspondent in the Russian capital says that a copy of the original chart, signed and certified to be a true copy, has been handed to.the United States Embassador, and is now on the way to Washington, SECRETARY SHAW GIVES WILLIAMS A HEARING | Assistant United States Treasurer in Chicago Replies to Ac- cusations. ' WASHINGTON, April 18.—William P. Wiliams, assistant United States Treas- urer at Chicago, was at the Treasury De- partment to-day in conference with Sec- retary Shaw. Some time ago it was in- timated to Williams that his resignation | would be acceptable to the department. This intimation was based upon_allega- | tions involving his efficiency. It was found that loose methods prevailed in his office and that there had been some ir-| regularities, which, however, had been straightened out. Willlams was informed that he could come to Washington and | present his answer to the charges. This answer was made this morning, but not made public. Several days will elapse be- fere final action will be taken. WOULD YOU CROSS MARKET ST. FOR $1.00 Well, that's just our argument. ‘We are on Third street, near Mar- ket, and every time you cross it to buy shoes from us you save at least $1 and sometimes more. It's a pure business proposition: our rents and expenses are small and we can afford to sell cheaper than Russia Gives Flimsy Excuse. LONDON, April 18.—The Times cor- our competitors on Market or respondent in Peking telegraphs that | Kearny streets. the latest official explanation by the Perhaps you don't require shoes just now: well, in that case just drop In and examine our stock and judge for yourseif. HERE 18 A BARGAIN, SURE— Ladies’ finest Viei Kid Lace Shoes, with cloth or kid tops, coin toes and tips, turned or welted soles and French heels. REDUCED TO $2.15 A PAIR. Worth from $3.50 Russian legation of the delay in restor- ing Niuchwang to China is that it is due to the presence in that port of British and American subjects and the consequent uncertainty as to the pos- sible action of these powers after the | restitution of the port. This, continues | the correspondent, is mere “bluff,” be- cause the gunboats have been stationed to $5. We have the following sizes: there more or less constantly the last TR T e g toas twenty years. | A ....2%t86 214 10 415 PRESCIESEP S B ...3 tof 2% 08 Horde of Immigrants Arriving. NEW YORK, April 18.—This month ls‘ expected to break all records for immi- | gration at this port. At the close of to- day's business 64,000 aliens had passed Mi- lis Island in eighteen days. Those sched- uled for the remainder of this month in- dicate that the total for April will ex- ceed 90,000. May of last year, with 82,000 | immigrants, was the record month at the | island. Reports from European ”lllngl ports indicated that more than 100,000 | aliens will arrive next month. —————— Window-Glass Factories Close. HARTFORD CITY, Ind., April 18.—| Every window glass factory in the United States to-day went out of blast, and 20,000 | skilled laborers leave the factories, with | no idea when they will return. The im- pression among the workers is that the wage scale adopted for the next blast will | be on a basis close to a 3 per cent reduc- tion in wages. * P Blizzdrds in Austris. | VIENNA, April 18—Snow, blizzards and | severe cold prevail in the southern prov- inces of Austria, wiich is quite unprece- dented at this time. In Vienna the subur- ban street-car lines have suspended oper- ations and the telephone and telegraph lires are interrupted. An immense amount of damage has been done in the frult growing district Unearths Stone Plow. PRINCETON, I, April 8—-Eli Wil lams, « farmer living four miles south of this city, while digging a well unearthed a stone plow, which is belleved to be a relic of the mound builders. The plow is of reddish stone, triangular in shape and thirteen inches wide each way. It wag found immediately above a stratum of coal. FnENGH HEEL OXFORDS FOR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR—Ladles' swell fitting Viei Kid Oxford Ties, circular vamps and full quarters, coin toes and patent leather tips, hand turned Soles and extra high French heels. REDUCED = FROM ‘2.2() TO !ld,%fl. Sizes, 3 to 7; widths, B. C nd D. OUR NEW SPRING ILLUS- TRATED CATALOGUE JUST OUT. SEND FOR ONE. B. KATSCHINSKI, Philadelphia Shoe Co. 10 Third St., San Francisco e —— Rev. Dr. Howard Smith, PHILADELPHIA, April 18.—Rev. Dr. Howard Smith, dean of the Reformed \Episcopal Seminary here, 1s dead, aged 83 vears.

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