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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY. MAY 5. 1903. N0S GAIP SWORDS T NEWCHUANG Japanese and Bussians Are Very Npar a - Collisioy Clash May Eagly Occur X recipitste Hos- tilitief SEEP B in tle Mikado's Em- icate the Beneral Eager- ness of the Pegple for Re- al Universi Yokohama meet when he de blem i 0,000 Mauser RUSSIAN DEMANDS. Mukden and trea pe ployment of foreigners rticle inter- t be all the Russian 1 shall re- tion. Russia ke most decisive nsfers any portion to any other that direction Veterans tainment e participants Adele 1 cally received. mpanist, LDVERTISEMENTS. Good fo OG at fair prices is within the reach of everyone. Schilling’s Best. Ligon | { 'DR.AINSWORTH | ' SECURES THE . APPOINTMENT 1.0OS ANGELES PHYSICIAN AP- POINTED CHIEF SURGEON OF SOUTHERN PACIFIC. Takes Place Made Va cant by Death of Dr.Gardner. GOURT An Enlivening Incident Closes Sacramento Proceedings. S Dispat SACR NTO, M scene was enacted shortly befor: A sensational 5 o'clock this aftern: in Judge Hughes' depart- ment of the Superior Court. ast Saturday night Albert Hilbert, a ng grocer, kidnaped his 16-month-old- child from his wife, whom he met in a downtown store. Hilbert and his wife had been separated for some time. This ternoon, upon the application the Hilbert was brought into court with paby. Judge Hughes ordered the siven into the custody of the moth- pending an investigation to be made next Friday afternoon. < Deputy Sheriff Lowell was in the act of handing the child from the father to the mother, Miss Alice Hilbert jumped up and grabbed the baby from the officer’s Judge Hughes immediately ordered w child arms her under arrest for contempt of ourt, and, after giving her a severe lécture, ordered her taken to the county jail, to be locked up for twenty-four hours. MARYSVILLE WILL HOLD HER FIRST CARNIVAL People of the Y\{!;County City Pre- pare for a Week of Mer- riment. MARYSVILLE, May 4.—Marysville is to have her first street falr and carnival this month. The streets are well adapted | for a show of this kind, being laid in as- | phalium and always kept clean and in| fine condition. Arrangements have been made for ten shows and booths will be | strung along several blocks of the princi- | pal thoroughfare. The carnival will open May 25 and con- | | tinue for six days and nights. Excur-| | sions will be run from different points | and a large crowd is expected throughout | | the week. RN | | OFFICERS ARE FEARFUL | OF ATTACK BY STRIKERS | Labor Trouble at Cumberland, in | British Columbia, May Re- | | sult in Bloodshed. CUMBERLAND, B. C., May 4-—Two hundred and forty miners are on strike to-day for union recognition and the rein- statement of union officers who Mve been dismissed. There is great excitement here to-day and notices are posted warning trespassers off. Special constables are patrolling the Chinese and Japanese quarters, fearing attacks by the whites on Mongolians who are employed-in the strikers’ places. Napa Elects a Mayor. NAPA, May 4.—At the municipal elec- tion held to-day J. A. Fuller defeated Dr. C. H. Farman for Mayor. Farman ran as an_anti-saloon candidate. The follow- | ing officials were re-elected: City Clerk, { H. H. Thompson; City Attorney, J. T.| | York; City Marshal, N. 8. Thomas; City | Engineer. O. H. Buckman; City Council- | men, C. B. Sceley and J. F. Even. i OMAHA, Neb., May 4.—One hundred bakers went on sirike io-day, demanding recognition of their union and an advance in wages. i WHITES FEAR ) MSSHCRE BY SAVAGES Alarming Outbreak of| Indians in the Far North. Couriers Tell of the Peril of Prcspectors at Shunguak. Authorities at Candle, Two Hundred Miles From the Scene, Asked to Send Assistance to Pre- vent Murder. »> Special Dispatch to The Call. , May 4—The Indians of Ko- buk are on the warpath. This news reached Nome March 10, having been bréught by Mail Carrier J. W. McKay om Candle, according to Nome dis- patches of that date received to-day by wire from Daw B Just before McKay left Candle Paddy O'Donnell and his partner had arrived from the scene of the outbreak, having' been sent by white men in that region for Donneil n was critic district, abc athered to resist natives the prospective trouble is . 200 miles from Candle. Des- titution ng the natives and inflam- ory advice of the medicine men are listurbing elements a scarcity of fish this season, and ne men have been stirring up have been the ig- gines that every time white 1 stake it kills many salmon destruct the salmon ck a plentiful supply of food more they been urging the ex- nation of the paleface intruder: that the All the white men it eighty in number, an attack of 3 repor the at Shung There has been the ding greater safety nell and his in numbers, hed to Cane office additior 1 entertain the great. > friends who were being well armed well supplied with an RECEIVES A WHIPPING Mrs. Edward Gibbons Soundly Lashes James A. Cowan for a Fancied Insult. HELENA, Mont.,, May 4.—There was a $1n4 ¢ ay's affec- tried in the E awyers intro- several Incriminating the attorneys for djournment of court a compromise was sed e ng the Cowar and du rece effecte It wa n of these lette t the name of Mrs. Gibbons was us in such a manr T she took offense and was prepari > Cowan for dam- , bu eting t to take main street, al revenge, persor SERVICE HELD OVER LATE DR. DOYLE Medical Men of Santa Cruz Act as Pallbearers at Author’s SIMPLE Funeral. A CRUZ, May 4. funeral over the late Dr. Charles W. Doyle, the author, were held this morn- ing from his late home on Beach Hill Praver was offered by the Rev. C. O. Tillotson of Calvary F al Church All the physicians of the city were pre ent with the immediate friends of the R There were many beautiful floral pieces. The pall-bearers were Dr. W. A Phillips, Dr. J. F. Chri Dr. H Ke Dr. W. R. Congdon, Dr. E. P. 1x and Dr. H. C. Whiting. The remains were sent on the 8:15 train to Cypress Lawn for cremation in a big and, to- in will be run from v morrow DR. PIERCE’'S REMEDIES. A Quert Babg. Now and again there is an item in the mewspapers concerning the birth of a “‘Z baby so small that a quart cu olds it comfortably. If the article tol all the facts it would probably tell also of a mother who in weakness and misery had looked forward to the baby's advent with shrinking and fear. To have fine, healthy children the mother must be healthy, and it is the | common testimény of mothers that the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- tion not omly pro- motes the mother’s health but also gives her strength to give her child. “Favorite Pre- scription” accom- lishes these results y tranquilizing the nerves, promoting a healthy appetite, 4 and giving refresh- It increases physical vigor sleep. gives great muscular elasticity, so that the baby's advent is practially painless. It is the best of tonics for nursing mothers. =1 gladly recommend Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.” writes Mrs. J. W. G. Stephens, of Mila, Northumberland County, Va. “Before my third little boy was born 1 took six botties. He is the finest child and has been from birth and 1 suffered very much less than I ever did before. 1 unhesitatingly advise expectant mothers to use the ' Faverite Prescription.’ " The flealer who offers a substitute for " Favorite Prescription” does so to gain the little more profit paid on the sale of less meritorious medicines. Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, containing 1008 pages, is sent Jree-on receipt of stamps to pay expense natives in a st 1g condition | are desperate from h r. The sit- tion is so serfous that all whites in the ave assembled in one band, rely- DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. ! ER | kidney trouble? ache? | | | | matter? Kilmer's Swamp-Root! it will cure you.” | | i I | { If he did this, would you be- lieve him? Woudn't you, if you were a suf- ferer, follow his advice, knowing ! that he bore living, sentient, vital testimony to the wonderful vir- s great natural remedy ? tues of th Philadelphia Fire n. | hill Stree I know ELL, that is just what Hugo Hutt, strongest man in the Department, hero of a hundred battles with the flames, is doing now through the maglium of this newspaper. Hugo Hutt has been connected ith the Philadelphia Fire De- partment for the past four years. He is stationed at the engine | house at Nineteenth and Callow- Mr. Hutt is known as the strongest man in the Fire Department and has taken many prizes at athletic tournaments for his prowess in the field of sports. He is also an ex-sergeant of the having for several years been stationed at Hutt also served with the Sixth Pennsylvania Regiment dur-| the Spanish-American war. Fire-Fighter’s Story the story of a man who was near death’s door and was H saved by using Swamp-Root : If he came to you and said: “My friend, do you suffer with| wa, Does your back Po you feel bad all over and can't tell exactly what's the Have you tried medi- cines or doctors without benefit? Are you about M Then do as I did, and get well—use Dr. United States Fort Infantry, | kidney troubles Niobrara, Neb. | fifty per cent. For these testimonials all prove beyond a doubt that the great- HUGO HUTT, PHILADELPHIA FIREMAN. ' How the Strongest Man in the Philadelphia Fire Department-=Once i the Weakest--Gained His Strength and Health, by Using Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney and Bladder Remedy. ERE is the story as he gave it to a special representative of Philadels phia's Great Newspaper, “The Nortl. American”: “You will hardly believe it when I tell you there was a time when my body in such a deased condition that my relatives and friends would have, at no time, been surprised to learn of my death. It was all due to kidney trouble, for which I could secure no relief. I was under the care of my fam- ily physician for a number of years, but he was unable to do me any good 4 also consuited two noted specialists on kidney diseases, but they were unable to give me more than temporary lief. I had already made application to join the army, but was turned down on account of m; al condition “I was advised to try that greatest of all remedies—SWAMP-ROOT “l wrote to Dr. Kilmer & Co., a8 Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bot- tle, and its effect upon me was so no- ticeable that I went immediately and bought a supply from my druggist, with the result that in a comparatively ghort time I had entirely recovered and be- came the man you see me now “I served a number of years in the army,. for the past four years [ have been connected with the Philadelphia Fire Department. My work. both in the army and fighting fires in Philadel- phia, has been of the most arduous, and work that I conld not do did I not have a strong physiq “I do not know what the words ‘Kidney Trouble’ m. now, and do not expect to. I cannot speak too thly of Swamp-Root. A few bottles this of great remedy did more for me than a dozen physicians could.” HUGO HUTT Philadelphia, Pa (Signed). 2223 Vine S is ND this story — if only one man's the average reader of a newspaper could be persuaded to read the thousands of | such testimonials which come to Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, the h now afflict humani would be cut down | est cure for kidney, liver and bladder troubles is Dr. Rilmer’s Swamp-Root NATURE’S GREATEST AID TO THE SUFFERING. EDITORIAL NOTICE—Swamp-Root is so remarkably suc already tried it may have a sample bottle sent absolutely free by mai /. In writing be sure to mention th Binghamton, N doll Binghamton, on every bottle. ar size bottles are sold by all druggists. you read t mista generc Don’t mal LEPER COLONY 15 CONDEMNED Medical Expert Arraigns Hawaii’'s System of Segregation. HONOLULU, April 28.—The | committee which visited the tlement has made its report, with its own findings a lengthy and sen- sational statement made by Dr. L. F. Alvarez, a physician who went to Molo- kal with Yhe committee expert. The doctor very severely criticizes Hawail's tem of segregation and makes the atement that there is a large proportion legislative ubmitting * | of those kept at the settlement and listed as lepers who ought to be at liberty. He says that out of twenty-ome supposed lepers examined by him some time ago sixteen were entirely free from the dis- Dr. Alvarez quotes Dr. Sauton, the | Paris specialist, who visited the settle- ment a couple of years ago, as saying that he met many persons {(here who | were formerly supposed to have the dis- leper set- | | ease, but have not shown any signs of it | | for years. The segregation system is an utter fai | ure, says the expert employed by the | Legislature, because of its severity. It leads those who have leprosy, and their | relatives, to conceal the fact, in order that they may escape being sent t6 Mo- lokai, and Dr. Alvarez s that while Norway, with a mild system of segrega- tion that does not utterly banish patients frem their own people, has reduced her number of lepers from 3090 to 400, Ha- waifa’s number remains the same and shows a great increase in proportion to the number of native Hawaiians. ‘The suspect system is severely arraigned | by the doctor. He calls attention to the case of a Hawallan woman 80 years of age, who was taken from her home on | the island of Hawaii and placed aboard a | steamer at a most difficult landing placc, | and brought to Honolulu. She was kept | at the detention station, with other ac- | knowledged lepers, and was finally found | to be free from the disease and released. | The doctor says there ought to be a suit- | able hospital for the examination of sus- | pects. Another case referred to is that | of a young girl who was taken to the set- | tlement in 1886, when she was 4 years of | age, and was supposed to be a leper. It | was afterward found that she was not a leper, but she had married and was al- lowed to remain with her husband, who is listed as a leper, but who Is very likely not one, says the medical expert. The legislative committee recommends the establishment of a large hospital on the island of Oahu and the employment of Dr. Alvarez as physician in charge. It is also recommended that a medical commis- sion be secured to go to the settlement and examine all thd doubtful cases, re- leasing those who have not the disease, Sacramento Gathering Funds. SACRAMENTO, May 4.—Preparations are rapidly being completed for the recep- tion to President Roosevelt on the even< ing of May 19. The Board of Supervisors to-day voted $750. It is estimated that be- tween $1700 and $1800 will be required, to carry out the programme of entertain- ment proposed. At a meeting of the cit- izens’ reception committee to-night $150 of the amount required was subseribed, and committees were appointed to canvasg of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume, or only 2r stamps for the book in paper covers. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buf- falo, N. Y, the city for funds. E R HANOVER, Mass., May 4.—The Rev. David B. Ford, M. A., D.D.. a well known Baptist clergyman and writer, is dead at his home here, aged 82, | The CHINESE ESCAPE UNDER THE GUNS \ | Daring Smugglers Oper-| Young Stanford Student | Succumbs -ate Near Revenue | . Cutters. | Special Dispatch to The Call May PORT TOWNSEND, Wash, 4— temerity of smugglers t Sound was demonstrated Saturday night { when a sloop painted water-color and provided with a swift gasoline launch ran | the gauntlet of three revenue vessels j trolling the straits in w for her quietly landed seven cont c in Discovery Bay within a stone’s throw | of the United States quarantine station. The landing was seen by hunters, who reported it, was at once sent into the wood: cept the c nds and arrest them, with their a tall Swede, who was taking them the peninsula to of the Chir amps at Sawmill. there they might easily work t to the interior a The force captured th on nd e forcs of inspectors to inier- | m e Chinamen t} | night, but only one was found to be con- | | traband, the others having regular pa- pers. The hunt is still in progres: inspectors on shore and launche oat. The sloop which brought the cooiies | slipped back Into the fog and disappeared as she as quietly -ame. GIRL BREAKS WINDOW) TO ESCAPE THE FIRE | Yolo Farmer’s House Almost De- stroyed Before His Daughter Makes Her Exit. WOODLAND, May 4—About 10 o'clock this merning the residence of J. R. Jones a wealthy and prominent farmer of West- ern Yolo, destroyed by fire. All the contents, a sewing machine and a small quantity of bedclothes, were also burned. The only member of the family | at home at the time was Mr. Joncs' daughter, Miss Jessie. One son, who had been to Napa, arrived on the morning | train, but not until the house was re- duced ‘to smoldering ruins. Mr. Jones | and the other members of the family were at the Orleans vineyard. The fire started from a defective flue. Miss Jessie did not discover it until neariy the entire building was enveloped in fames. Her exit by way of the door was cut off, and she escaped by breaking out a window. s PN A Highbinders Forced to Depart. TULARE, May 4.—The controversy over the possession of Yet Kee, the Chinese slave girl who escaped from Fresno, was brought. to a peaceable settlement to-day. The local constabulary, after placing the girl safely in an uptown lodging-house, overhauled the highbinders in the cellar of an opium joint and compelled them to leave town. R S Renewal of Strife in Venezuela. WASHINGTON, May 4.—Dr. Russell, United States Charge at Caracas, reports that there is increased activity among the revolutionists in Venezuela, and that Ma- tos has joined the land forces and is pro- ceeding toward Caracas. This report agrees with mail advices the Department of State has received predicting a renewal of the revolution. S BAY CITY, Mich., May 4.—Louis Reep of ‘West Bay City is dead, aged 105 years. He was, it is said, In the battle of Waterloo under | Blucher. ; 1 that a spec also a book that tells but rememb: | istered sh ous o TP 1 arrangen HOID TAKES been made by which all of W L and its wonderful cures. Address Dr.Kilmer & Co., Swamp-Root—Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and INITHER LFE Dread Fever. al Dispatch to The Call. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, May 4— The si th among those afflicted | with typhoid fever occurred in Palo Alto this morniv Mi orence May Bald- "0 aughter ¢ e Rev Bald- wia, pastor of the Palo Alto Congrega- tional Church, died at the home of her pare ill on had not been f g well for several days | prior to that. | Miss Baldwin was a graduate of Po- mona College with class of '01, entered Stanford a year ago, regi the s at 11 o’clock. rt work th to the She became seri- er Sunday, although she ish department. devoted t her li W hile se > work. ) reg- most of her time to with the expecta- Miss eaders who have not Call. ent and one ¢ address, The regular fifty Baldwin was 22 years old, and was borm in Ripon, Wis. The funeral will take Fiace in Palo Alto on Wednesday Another student is reported on the | of those serio m fever. Harold P. Kuhn, '03, " hurdle and yell leader, became y night and 1s now at Lane Hospital in San Francisco. It Is not known how Kuhn be came ill with the fever, as he is not sup- posed to have takem any of the infected milk. He may, however, have had some of Jit, unknown to him, as the milk was quite generally used both in Palo Alto and on the cam X The majority of the feve® patients are rapidly improving, although a few of them still remain dangerously fll. R. D. Barrett, '04, whose life was despaired of, | row has a chance of recove: Burglars Cut Through a Ceiling. BIGGS, May 4.—Burglars entered the general merchandise store of C. Cohen last night and broke open two tills and a safe containing about $40 in cash and | several checks. An iron box containing papers was taken away. Entrance was made by the burglars climbing a locust tree to thesfront porch, thence through a windovwg to the upper floor, where they wed through the ceiling of the store Gunnysacks cut into strips provided = rope by which they descended. —e BUTTE. Mont., May 4.—A Miner special from Fort Keogh says that the court-martial has imposed a sentence of three years at Fort | Leavenworth prison upon Private Charles R. Oliver for the murder of Quartermaster Ser- geant George Rist last February. el Ificyzné Togs Befdre you buy anything in bicycle togs look at our stock—we are quoting a few prices to-day to arouse your interest: . Bicycle or golf trousers in all-wool tweeds and cassimeres, in tan and gray checks and plaids, latest style cut with but- ton knee.cuffs; special at $2.00 a pair All-wool sweaters, in combi- nation stripes and solid col- ors of cardinal, black, navy, royal blue, green and white; exceedingly good value, $2.00 each All-wool footless bicycle hose, in navy blue. brown, gray and black, with fancy col- ored tops, $1.00 a pair Leather belts, in tan. russet, English red and black patent leather; different widths and lengths, 50c each Out-of-town orders filled--write for new catalogue. SNWO00D 5 (0 718 Market Street