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2] [&] FRANCISCO CALL AY DR. KTLMER’S SWAMP-ROOT: HOW.TO FIND OUT. Fill 'a-bottle ‘or'common glass With your water and let it-stand twenty-four hou a sedirient or. settling indicates an { altly condition of the kidneys; if It ne’ the dipen it is evidence of-kidney bl€; tog frequant deiire fo pass it, or in.the back.ls also -convineing proct the kidneys and pladder are out of | order. . WHAT TO DO. There-is comfort inthe’ knowledge =0 expréssed. (hiat Dr, Kilmer's Swamp- the great kidney apd bladdér rem n curing rheums k. kidneys, liver, t of the urinary If corrects inabllity. to hold wa- in passing it, or bad ¢ liquor, wine .or | mes that unpleasant me- | cémpelied to go often dur- y times | blafider and every pessage is the highest -for its| the most - distressing a medicine you should | i by dreggists in Ofty- r .sizes sample’ bottle - of | e any mistake put wanip-Roet, Dr. and the address, | Santa F e Places B! ADVERTISEMENTS. WOMAN'S BREAST A LUMP IS CANCER A lump or sore on the lip, ‘face Or any- where six months is Deayly always - | cancer. it mever pains until plmost past cure. I WILL GIVE $1,000 . || If I Fail to CURE-any CANCER or Tumor. NO.KNIFE QR PAIN. ot ‘a ‘Dollar Need Be Pald Until Gured, ss . and - infallible Best free bdok on sent with- tes- cured whom- you in the breast the armpit 1t . o cured Ipare doctor. iy t olute guarantee. 130-page book sent. free. unti] or € past Investigate my-abs The Dr. Chamley Cancér Cure Co., “Strictly Reliable.” 25 Third St, SAN FRANGISCO. Piease send to some one with Cancer | g. 7 inches deep wheels 1%-1x & Allison, Neff & €o. 222 MlS}?I(}\ sTRfET. fiQ Patented “\, -Spherocid Eye- Glasses Will imaprove. the sight. Prices moderate. : 6§42 mRKLfr_s; | rders HALL'S MEDICAL Eroadway, Oakland, Cal ket st., 8. F. "Send VTV VDO visit DR. JORDAN’S crear MUSEEM OF ANATOMY 1061 KARTITOT. bat. GrhaTd, 8.0.0a), he The Largest Anatomical Muses Worid, Weak: OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN pSonsuitaton tree and_ siicty private reatment personally or er Pottivs Ourt 12 every case unfervaken. for Book. PHILGSOPRY of IAGE, MAICED FREE. (A book for mes) & ©O.. 1051 Market§t. S, F. CUTLERY EVERY BLADE WARRANTED TRUNKS AND VALISES AT MANUFACTURER’S PRICES J. MARTY, 22 TUEK ST. Factory 526 Howard St. Weekly Call, §1 per Year 3 | Jones and Ruth:-| . erford Must Be | HAvenged. LACERVILLE, Aug. 1—No one in Placerville or the adjacent towns will go to-bed to-hight. At mid-| night the streets are thronged with | | men, women and children. Sheriff Bosquit | has sent word to all surrounding points, and armed men will flock to the scene of battle that will be fought out at daylight, and the killing of Rutherford and Jones | by the murderous convicts will be avenged. The deepest regret is felt here at the untimely end of the two brave men who met death to-night on the mesquite-cov- | ered hill near the Grand Victory mine at | the hands of the outlaws from Folsom | prison. The members of the militia com.- | pany volunteered for duty, and the whole | Btate will deplore their death. But one thought pulsates through the mind of every resident in El Dorado County and adjacent points to-night—the slaughter of Rutherford and Jones must be avenged. e e———— Oregon Land Withdrawn. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1—The Com- missioners of the General Land Office to- day ordered withdrawn from land entry 2,500,000 acres of land in Oregon for the creation of the gWarner Mountaln forest reserve. The larger part of the land | withdrawn is in the Lakeview land dis- trict and the remainder in The Dalles dis- ) triet. Bodies Lie Under Guns of the Convicts. LACERVILLE, Aug. 1.—At 9:30 to- night Fred . Vanderhayden, who drove a wagonload of soldiers from Placerville to the scene of battle, has just returned here. He says: “We arrived at the Grand Victory mine at 8 o’clock. Lieutenant Smith, who is in charge of the militia and who went-out from Placerville this afternoon to trail the convicts, reported that {wo of his men had been killed, Rutherford and Jones. Jones is a married man with three chil- dren and Rutherford is a single man. Pri- vate Gill was shot through the shoulder, Gill is at the house at the mine and Dr. Mountaini has extracted the bullet. Lieu- tenant Smith says that it was impossible to recover the bodies of the men who were shot, as they were right under the guns of the convicts, who were on the top of the hill. “Armed men are flocking to the vicinity from all directions. There are about 250 men around the hill where the battle took place. Lieutenant Smith says-he is con- fident that the convicts are in the brush in the hill and that it is impossible for them to get away. He says they will never escape. The hill will be guarded to-night and the plan is to send volleys of bullets into the brush as soon as daybreak. It would be very dangerous to do this at night, as some of the men hunters might be shot by thelr friends. o AT PLACERUILLE CITIZENS THRONG STREETS -~ AND NO ONE SLEEPS DURING THE NIGHT “h Wl////{[ / V) AUGUST 2, 1903. .| near Bisbee in a pool of his own blood, G.H MUMM&Co's Extra Importations for six m - TL170 onths ending June 36, ' CASES. Being greater, by far, than the importations for any previous six months. The Extra Dry of the superb (898 Vintage now arriving is conceded to be the choicest Champagne produced this decads. NOTED “CUNMAN" 15 FOULLY SLAN Body of “Andy” Griffin Found by Arizona " Roadside. Special Dispatch to The Call . TUCSON, Ariz., Aug. 1.—“Andy” Griffin, a notorious “gun man” of the border, has met the fate that comes to all of his kind. | He was found yestérday by Willlam E. Storrs, a freighter, lying by the roadside with his throat ‘cut from ear to ear and | two bulletholes in his head. All indlca- | tions point to the fact that he was mur- ) dered. Storrs' attention was attracted to the lifeless form by the roadside by vul- tures, which flew away at his approach. Grifin was found on the ground beside his wagon and harness, hig horses having | been turned loose. Many tracks circling | about his body showed that he made a | terrific struggle against his murderers. | Hie remains bere the marks of having | been hacked and mutilated. Griffin’s gun | was found by his side with an empty shell in the chamber. B O\ \\// i | | e Two Guards Qiu't Service at Folsom. PR S— ACRAMENTO, Aug. 1.-A special to ‘ the Bee from Folsom this morning states that Guards O. C. Edwards of Placerville and G. M. Wyatt of Sac- ramento are no longer connected with the prison. Edwards resigned this morning, representing that his wife was opposed to his staying there longer. She Is very ner- vious and it is said that as a result of the stirring times at the prison last Mon- day, consideration for her prompted E wards to tender his resignation. Wyatt, it is said, was relleved of further duty. Both he and Edwards were new men, having come here shortly before the break. Captain Murphy will send for two former guards to take their places. Work was commenced this morning on a new guard post to be erected on top of the present kitclien, from whi¢h point it will command the prison proper and the office of the captain of the guard. In this post a sharpshooter will be stationed and he- will command these two important points at short range. A dead line will be established in front of the prison en- trance and the captain’s office and any | person who steps over that line will be shot by the guard in the post. - Conviéts are no longer to be permitted to step from the line as they march out. They will be required to maintain the line un- broken from the inner prison gate to thelr places of employment. Should a convict break this. line he will be killed. i S MINERS' UNION SECRETARY PLACED UNDER ARREST BAKERSFIELD, Aug. 1.—A sensation was sprung at- Mojave to-day by the ar- rest.of B. I. Davis, secretary of the Min- ers' Union, a branch of the Western Fed- eration of Miners, and one of the leading members of the organization, on a charge of embezzlement, made by President A. A. Moross. As secretary he had charge of considerable money belonging to the union and had been thoroughly trusted by the members until recently they be- came suspicious, and on the 28th a de- mand for an accounting was made upon him. He failed to turn over $200 of the amount In his possession and when asked for an explanation declared he had been robbed of the amount and did not have it. The miners did not accept the story, and at a meeting last night it was dis- oussed with great warmth, members roundly scoring Davis, and on a vote be- ing taken it was decided to prosecute him 1 eriminally, [ — e MEMBER OF POSSE, WHERE CONVICT WAS ENCO' TERED, AND MAP OF REGIO: Y RANCH - MUST SECURES WALUABLE ROADS Two Hundred Miles of Street Railway Are Transferred. NEW YORK, Aug. 1L—More than two hundred miles of electric railway, worth millions of ‘dollars, extending throughout Queens and Nassau counties, Long Isiand, has passed into the control of a trust company in this city. This is probably one of the largest street railroad deals ever made in Greater New York. For some time the Pennsylvania Rail- road Company and the interests repre- sented in the subway Rapid Transit are sald to have desired possession of these railways. Eleven years ago the Steinway interests, which then owned the horse car system in ..ong Island City, began to build a tunnel under the East River, The work came to a disastrous end when a dynamite explosion killed several men and aid $500,000 damage. By means of this tunmel the trolley system of Long Island could be made a part of the subway sys- tem of Manhattan and several times it has been reported that the electric system of Queens has passed into the control of the Belmont interests. Whether the trust company represents the Belmont or the Pennsylvania Rallroad Interests could not be learned. Among the roads sald to have passed into the hands of the trust company is the New York and Queens County Electric Raflway, which was owned by a Philadel- phia syndicate. This road operates branches extending all through Athens, to College Point, Flushing and Jamalica and all through Long Island City. It also controls the New York and North Shore Road, which extends through Jamaica and Far Rockaway and connects at Queens with the Nassau County Electric Rallway, another branch which connects villages in Nassau County, and expects to send connecting lines into Suffolk County. The line also skirts the new $2.000,000 race track now building on the line between Nassau and Queens counties, to be known as Belmont Park. In addition to lines already in operation many unused franchises go with the roads purchased, so the cumpany acquiring the property can practicaily gridiron the bor- ough of Queens. Moors Attack French Force. ALGIERS, Algeria, Aug. 1.—A body of about 500 Moors of the Berabor tribe re- cently attacked a French force of fifty native sharpshooters, who were guard- ing 150 camels, at Sidi el Jady. A brisk fight followed. The Berabors lost neavily, but they killed ten of the sharpshooters and two French corporals and carried off their camels | drasamha cleared from this Griffin was last seen alive Thursday leaving his mining camp in = Huachucas | bound for Bisbee. He had a Mexican f his company, and this man is believed to | be the murderer, as a hat found near the | body has been identified as belonging to him. He has disappeared, and it s | thought that he fled.on one of Griffin's horses, losing his hat in his haste to get away from the scene. Grifiin was € years old, an old soldier and a noted gun fighter. He killed a man named Powell at his'own camp two years | ago, and it was at first thought that Pawell's brother had avenged the murder by killing Griffin, but this brother, who lives in Bisbee, had no trouble in proving an alibl. The officers have reasen to he- leve that the murderer was a hired as- | sassin, that his‘plans were well Jaid and | that_he. is already. far on his road into Mexico. —_— PORTLAND, Or., Aug. 1.—~The steamer In- | ort to-day for | Hongkong and the Orient with 50,787 barrels of flour and 14,933 bushels of whea ADVERTISEMENTS. SPEGIAL DISPLAY OF CHOIGE PIANOS Kimball, Decker, and Hazelton| | MILLS coL (FOR | tunities offered in musie, SACRAMENTO, ‘Aug. 1.~~Governor Pagdes has fssued a warrant of arrest upon ¢ quest of the Governor of Texas for the r ¢ P. E o that State Walker, charged having commt srgery. Walker 18 now u der arrest in Los Angeles. |HEALD COLLEGE OF THE San Prancisce, Cal . Opén entire year. ustrated catalogue (free). LEADING BUSINESS WEST, 24 Post st.; Established 40 v Write, for ill VON MEYERINCK Sghosiof $41 Fulton st San g:}%’:w:f Cal Under the Dt MME. ANNA YON MEYERINCK; The largest ‘apd best equipped school op the Pacific Coast, offering all the advanh- tages of Eastern and Eurcpean Conserva tories for & thorough musical education under d: of a carefuily selected staf £ proi teachers. acpl Prospectus. sent on POLYTECHNIC Business College School of - Eng ing, Oakland, Cal Largest and best LEGE AND SEMINARY YOUNG LADIES). Cenfers Degrees and Grants Dipiomas. Seminary ‘¢ e accredited t6 the univers ties -and leading -Eastern oileges; rare opp: art and elosut Thirty-elghth year. Fail term opens A 12 1 Write for catalogue to MRBS. M PO, BELMONT SCHOOL, FOR BOYS, ‘BELMONT, CAL.. e for new pupils August i0: for former August 12. Catalogue and book of view 1LLS, Pres., Mills College applicats W. T. REID, A, M. (Harvard), Head Master SACRED HEART EVENING COM- MERCIAL SCHOOL, £ACRED EEART COLLEGE, Eddy.snd LarkinSts. GLASSES OPEN MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1903, ot 7:18 p. m. SAINT MARGARET’S SCHOOL SAN MATEO, Accredited to Stanford, reopens August 26 in new buildings on Monte Diablo ave, Modern improvements. For further information or cir- culars address (MISS) I. L. TEBBETTS. sitions in past year. 60-page catalogue. 308 REIN ST. San Francisco. Pianos at Pommer-Eilers’. | Sale of Used Pianos Received in Part| i Payment for Fancy New Cnes fo Con-| tinge. See the Instruments and | * Compare Prices. Almost Every Fa- mous Maker Now Represented. To-morrow morning we place on sale a beautiful assortment of the finest Kimball Planos that have ever been shown in this city. Fourteen vears ago to-day th ball Piane was made. Since that time more Kimball Pianos have been made and sold than of any other American make; ves, we may say, than of any other two makes. There is no better piano than the Kim-. | ball. No piano will outwear it. The Kimball Plano to-day “is used and indorsed by the highest musical authori- ties of this country and Europe. Every style contained in the Kimball catalogue, together with numerous special or art styles, may be seen on our retail floors to-morrow. Prices will range from 3235 for the plain little so-calied Kimball School Piano, to $635 for the most beautiful dappled Eng- lish mottled walnut, handsomely ecarved Orchestral Upright Kimball, for which grade or quality as much as 3800 would be asked elsewhere. HOUSE-CLEANING CONTINUES. In addition to the above fine Kimball Planos and the choicest styles of twenty- seven other more or less world-renowned makes, we offer to-morrow, to close out quickly, a large number of used pianos that have been received in part payment for new pianos of late, among them: Klegant rosewood Fischer Upright, used, first Kim- $155. Another plainer case, $13. Excellent Decker Upright, ebony case, used, $200. Miss West’s School for Girls, 2014 VAN NESS AVENUE, Opens August 19. Home and_day school. Ae- credited by leading colleges. For catalogue ad- dress MARY B. WEST, Principal SANTA CLARA GOLLEGE- The next season beging August 4, 1003 ROBERT G. KE! w 8. J., President. Hitchcock Military Academy, SAN RATAEL, CAL. Separate building for little boys. - Xmas term will begin on August 17. St. Mary's College, OAKLAND, CAL. Studies will be resumed MONDAY, A 1903, BRO. Z: NTAN, - Prestd 3 ST. JOSEPH'S ACADEMY,* PERALTA PARK, BERKELEY. D r prospectus to Bro. Genebran. COLLECE OF NOTRE DAME, SAN JOSE; CAL. Fifty-second year. Confers degrees, grant diplomas. College preparatory accredited. Con- servatory course. Intermediate and primary departments for younger ren. Studies re- sumed August 4, 1906 . _ HOITT’S SCHOOL FOR BUYS, Meénlo Park, Callfornia. Prepares for any -university or for business. :Send for {llustrated cataldgue. IRA G. HOITT, Ph.D., Prineipal. Fall term opens August 11. MIss AND MISS EUGHES' S CHOO% FOR GIRLS ; A ALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA Forme: th THOBURN SCEOOL. & © " Prépares for -the Universities and Colfeges. West apd East. University lec - - students. Semester begins Augus ANDERSON ACADEMY, A NighgredINOTON, CAL ; . igh-grade Military School 'tor number of boys of §00d character.” Next term Fancy Itallan walnut cased Bush & Gerts' Upright, $190, 0Odds and ends of European makaes, more or less used, but all in playable condi- tion, from %6 to $5 (uprights, not squares). Kingsbury Upright, fair condition, $%. Good little Hall Upright, $128. Upright planos of quite a number of high-priced makes, among them: Kimball, Decker, Steinway, A. B. Chase, “Crown,” etc, etc., some of which could hardly be distinguished from new, at corresponding- 1y low prices. Every Instrument we well goes out un- der the positive warrant of money back if not satistactory or-as represented. Every piano is accompanied by regular written factory guarantee. Easy terms for those not prepared o pay all cash. Remember the place. POMMER- EILERS MUSIC COMPANY, 658 Market st., ‘“‘where the arch is going to be." ‘ Other stores at Portland, Spokane and Sacramenta,. - - ins August 12. LLX{H WALKER ANDERSON, Principat. HAMLIN SCHOOL AND VAN NESS SEMINARY, - 1840 Jackson st., S. F. Roarding and school for Eirls. Acecredited by the colle‘fl' -: 'unlwfii;:fi Special ven to_music. pens EARA s D HAMLIY, e s THE LyCeEUMm 2 An accredited preparatory school for the uni- versity, law and medical colleges, is well known for its careful and thorough work. Come Thcea. Preskiant’ Josdbn o e Bieind oo an fessor. t’hel-a building. T H. GRAU, Ph. D., Principal. THE JENNE MORROW LONG COL~ LEGE OF VOICE AND ACTION. Stage and platform positions ;’ml.@d languages; diplomas. Catalogue. 152 Sutter st. Phone West 1169. Reopens September 2 SCHOOL OF ILLUSTRATION, PA&mflm& 424 ml'l’. In Al New Term Begins MONDAY, At DAY AND EVENING - " day l¢ading: attkntion 10, 195,