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09 THE SAN FRA NCISCO CALL, S U AY, AUGUST 16, 1903. -z DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. [IBNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLES PROMPTLY CURED Sempie Botile Sent FREE by Mail. the wish great eve in it, or bad »r, wine or asant ne- go often mild and the ex- Swamp-Root is soon and th highest for its most_distressing | recoinmended for CANAL TREATY ~ NOT IN FAVOR Colombian Legislators Approve Proposed Amendments. PANAMA, Aug. I5.—Letters received from Bogota say that up to August 15 the Panama Canal Commission had held only on account of the disgust members with the action of Senator Soto, who insisted upon recalling the treaty at the first meeting. Senator Obaldia, a warm supporter of the treaty, has had several conferences with Presi- dent Marroquin and United States Min- ist Beaupre, and notwithstanding their ne- meeting, of * | Amendments | seem efforts the commission could not be in- to report in favor of ratification. have to meet the appru\'nLof twenty Senators out of twenty-four. Both the House of Representatives and the Senate are deeply impressed with the duced | been offered which | persistent rumors which reach Bogota of | possibility of a movement for the ssion of the isthmus in case the treaty e fear that such an might follow fallure to ratify appears to constitute the only action on the treaty. the sec is not even the POSSE RESCUES (MOB: HOUERING - | KIDNAPED WIFE! Brutal Husband Ma.y Be Lynched by Illinois Citizens. BLOOMINGTON; I, Aug. 15.—A posse of citizens which formed last night to rescue the wife of Homer Manspile, a farmer near Sydney,”ffom her husband, who at the point of a revolver forced her to teave her father's home barefooted and attired in’ only her night robe, captured Manspile to-night near Mayview. Sherift Clark tpok. him to Urbana. Mrs. Manspile was found lying among some bushes, partially covered with a blanket. Her. feet and .body.were. badly torn by briars. Manspile stood over her: with a drawn revolver and swore to kill | her and himselt if the pursuers ap- | proached nearer. A deputy sheriff slipped | up behind him, . threw his arms| around him to prevent his shooting and the crowd soon made him a prisoner. Mrs. Manspile was taken to the home of a nelghboring farmer and is being. cared | for. She is in a serious condition. Man- ! spile is in danger of beng lynched. His | wife had left his home because of his| brutalty. YK O Lalnfalnl 10K =t <3 4 B =3 2 & < g 3 o z b4 b o % b3 2 £ 3 Y. A g o 2 < < b 4 o 3 g o g g BACRAMENTO-—-Hevener, Mier & 615 J street; C. N. Davis, book e, 817 K street. 3 PETALUMA~H. Wyckoff SAN JOSE—George Denne, M. Len- gen & Son STOCKTON-—-Morris Bros." book store, 20 North EI Dorado street: Btockton Racket store, 711 East Main 8. Gutermute, J. M AR &0 5 O Price 5 Cents. 1 LADY IN BLACK. street; Gage's art store, 509 East Main street; Weber's art store, 425 East Main street. MARYSVILLE~G. W. Hall, OAKLAND-E. J. Saake, 13 Tele- graph avenue; A. A. Barlow, 369 Twelfth street. ALAMEDA—C. P. Magagnos, 1368 Park street. CHICO~—Fetters & Willams. CBCEO-ORCRC: LHORORY C“D!‘-zOC;OOOG RO ORCRCORORC JORORORCHOROROAOROECEOOR0HOROR0ROR0N ! KCHOHOSCROND! SEORCHOHORO QRO A GREAT “BRYSON.” ADY IN BLA Or Queen of the Party. EE With Next Sund ay’s Call, Aug. It would be advisable to place orders for THE SUNDAY CALL at once with your local agent or newsdealer, as they are selling like hot cakes and the supply is limited. o o & & & & TRAIN NEWS AGENTS AND ALL NEWSDEALERS SELL THE CALL ° Price 5 Cents. Price 5 Cents. THEY ARE FRAMING THE CALL ART SUPPLEMENTS The Following Art Dealers Are Making a Specialty of Framing Call Art Supplements: F_street. Furniture Company”; Houston Furniture Company. Bros., F. R. Hew, George Hoban, | : | | § QBRI SAN DIEGO—W. P. Fuller & Co., 71 FRESNO—S8ronce & Dick. REDDING—W. -H. Bergh, “Bergh T. J. Houston, REDWOOD CITY—W. L. Kline. SANTA CRUZ—H. E. Irish, Cooke % § s JACKSON—E. G. Freeman Co. NEAR VIGTIMG Wyoming Murderers Are in Danger of Lynching. James Dollard’s Brothers Gather Force to Protect Him. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Aug. 15.—The peo- ple of Lander, Wyo., are still greatly ex- cited and there is grave danger of a double lynching, of which James Keffer and James Dollard, the murderers, will be the victims. To-day two brothers and two half-brothers of James Dollard, ac- companied by several friends, numbering in all about a dozen, arrived at Lander, well armed. It is rumored the Dollards have sworn to save Jim Dollard from the mob and also that they pian to attack the Jail and rescue the alleged murderer. The mob in front of the jail dispersed about 10 o'clock to-night, but the situation is still very grave. A large crowd of excited men gathered about the Lander jail at 11:30 last night and for a time it looked as though the bastile would be stormed at once. The mob was armed with rifles and re- volvers and two or three men carried ropes. After a brief consultation among the leaders, however, the crowd appar- ently dispersed. Since that hour men have been seen lurking in the shadows of buildings of the county jail and an attack is expected at any moment, the | dispersing of the mob being a ruse, it | Is belleved, to throw the officers off their guard. Dollard murdered Frank Bryant in a saloon on Wednesday night after having brained Ross Stringer with a board in the street. Dollard, who is an ex-Rough Rider, was drunk and shooting up the téwn ‘at the time. James Keffer was convicted of murder- |ing Willlam Warren, a stage tender on the Lander-Rawlins line, two years ago and was sentenced to be hanged, but was granted a stay of execution pending an appeal to the Supreme Court. ~Apparently there is no extra effort be- ing made to protect the prisoners. The regular guard is at the jail, but that is all. Sentiment in Lander appears to be all one way, and unless the' murderers are spirited away, which is doubtful, it seems certain that both men will be hanged. —————— KANSAS RIVER'S FLOOD THREATENS DESTRUCTION ‘Water Stands in Streets of Abilene to Depth of More Than Two Feet. TOPEKA, Kans., Aug, 15.—The level of the Kansas River here has taken another | upward turn and it seems probable that the present rise, which has made it as high to-day as it has been at any time since June, will continue. Reports by telegraph and telephone show that the Blue River at Manhattan is again feet above its low water. At Abilene the heaviest rain of the sea- son fell this morning, The water came down from the hills and is standing on two of the streets of the city to a depth | | of more than two feet. River there rose seven feet last -night and 18 still going up. | i ten | The Smoky Hill | ing the track for quick travel. Pasadena Villa Tract. | residence section in the world. center. 1nto a solld ecity. unquestionably a good investment. UTES. the tract. Wi or be sick, he will not forfeit the land. map, ete., address FLEET ANCHORED IN THE SOUND President Will Review Barker’s Vessels Monday. OYSTER BAY, L. I, Aug. 15.—Arrange- ments practically have ‘been completed for the review and inspection in Long Island Sound by President Roosevelt of the North Atlantic fleet next Monday. President Roosevelt will review the fleet from the bridge of the auxillary cruiser Mayflower. The fleet came to anchor in the sound off Lloyds Neck Point at sundown to- e TR BB et fore UE: I5—Detalls | ;ight and lies in four long lines reaching along the Nebraska-Kansas line for "“’"’“‘i east and wegt for 2000 vards. The fleet eight miles. Two clouds apparently met | left Bar Harbor at moon Wednesday in and for an hour the water fell in sheets. Estimates of the downpour are all the | way from a foot to three feet. The water | swept down Dry Branch and Silver Creek, | that are usually dry at this season of the year, taking everything before it. More than 1000 trees were taken out by the roots, and barns, corn cribs, grain and | hay stacks, several droves of hogs and | many horses and cattle were swept away | by the flood. Not a bridge remains on Silver Creek and but one at Dry Branch. The residences were all built on ground, which accounts for the fact that no lives were lost, although there were several narrow escapes. Dead stock and farm implements were found “lodged in trees twenty feet from the ground. —_—————— | It is natural that a man who hasn't a toat to his back can’t put up a good front. - DR. PIERCE’'S. REMEDIES. “WILFUL a fog, which lasted about ten hours. Or- | ders had been issued by, Rear Admiral | Barker, the commander in chief, that the fleet, in case of separation, should rendez- | vous in Gardiners Bay. The battleships | and the cruisers d1d become separated, but $ The above desdendants of the athletic Greeks of old have just completed the P The Greeks are not alone in the good work of develo) are ably seconded by the Japanese and Mexican contingents. Pasadena. H,_ E. Huntington is entitled to the bearty co-operation of every public spirited citizen in his great enterprise of building network of electrio ratiways to all points in Southern Calfornfa. Now is the time to buy lots in the coming residence suburb It is as bound to occur as the sun will rise to-morrow. Only $70 per Lot--$4 Down ‘We are selling quarter-acre Pasadena Villa Tract lots for $4 down and $4 We are now selling at $70, but the Monrovia and Alhambra electric railways now run from our tract to the B CE Such rapid transit is bound to make our quarter-acre villa lots soog sell for over ¥ GUARANTEE 25 PER CENT INCREASE. PASADENA VILLA TRACT LOT, full size, 30x150 feet, facing on 80-foot avenue, subject to the following guarantee from piration of one year from purchase this $70 lot is not worth $87 50—or 25 per cent increase—based on the price at which our will then be seliing similar lots, we will refund all of the money pald us, with 8 per cent interest additional. any time before payments have been completed we vvlll}lgll{« to his heirs a deed of the lot without further cost ANDNS THE FOLLOWING #. . Huntington, vice president of the Southern Pacific B R. Co.: W. . Cirison. ok U, 8. Special Commissioner of Railroads of Cuba: Baird Bros. Wi Meare e California; ¥, H, Dixon, ex-Btate Harbor Commissioner: Dr- williems Do e, o™ M. P, Snyder. Mayor of Los Angeles; State Bank and Trust Co, of Los 1000 Men at ork on Huntington Short Line to Pasadena. dena Short Line, and are now making dirt fiy ballast- ent which Mr. Huntington is pushing through, for they By the timekeeper's reports over 1 25 years ago Pasadena was a sheep pasture. What a grand transformation has been wrought! A similar change will take place at the Pasadena Villa Tract, which is 3 miles nearer Los Angeles’ businese The entire region between Pasadena and Los Angeles is bound to bulld up price will $300 A PURCHASERS ARE L. and per month until paid for; ro interest. no on be raised to $100. . ENTER OF For $4 down and $4 per month until T. Garnsey, president of Dr. William Dodge, Dr. J. E. 100 men completed the broad-gauging intd of Los Angeles—The It is to-day the finest all-year-round $4 per Month taxes. Our lots are new Pasadena Short Line. the ES CITY IN ONLY 15 MIN- lines will soon run through paid- for we sell a regular L Two 1f the purchaser sh If he should lose employment LEADING CITIZENS: »s Amgeles and Redondo Railway Co.; »n merchants; J. G. Estudilio, ex-State Cowles and others. Referenc Hon. A.. Angeles, and our many satisfled customers. For further informatiom, CARLSON INVESTMENT CO., 114 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. in dispersing the warring factions and the streets were deserted. S —— WAGES ARE INCREASED. Union Pacific Consents to a New Schedule. OMAHA, Aug. 15—The joint committee representing the engineers and firemen of the Union Pacific Rallway to-day con- cluded a conference with Superintendent of Transportation Buckingham and Mas- ter of Motive Power McKeen, the result of which Is an average imcrease of wages for the engineers of about 3% and the fire. men 43 per cent. The increase runs from 10 to 20 cents a hundred imiles for the en- gineers, with proportionate increase for the firemen. The negotiations have been pending since July 6, and the new scale affects the entire system. a5 T, Strike Assessments. DENVER, Aug. 15—At the session of the National Building Trades convention to-day an important change was made in the' constitution affecting per capita as- sessment for strike and lockout benefits. Heretofore such assessment was levied upon the total membership of all national and international locals affiliated with the council. Under the change this as- sessment will be limited to unions which are affillated with the local councils that are members of the National Building Trades Council. SEVEN ARE NOW DEAD AND THREE MORE DYING “Crazy” Twigg’s Victims Include at Least Four Others Who May Not Recover. WINFIELD, Kans.,, Aug. 15.—The death list from the Twigg shooting, which oc- curred Thursday night, now numbers sev- en, and the list of wounded, some fatally, remains at about twenty-eight. Elder Farnsworth, a prominent cigar merchant, is dead, while the deaths of Everett Ridgeway, a plasterer, living at. Wichita; | Wil Moore, a farmer's son, living near | Arkansas City, and Otis Carter of Win- fleld, a bill poster, are hourly expected. Four othe Race and Milan, Kans.; Dawson Billit Port S funerais at at his and the h, two miles south of town, derer, Gilbert Twigs. ey e | Steamship Encounters Hurricane. NEW ORLEANS, Aug The British steamer Rosini, from Ceiba, Honduias, which _arrived here _to-day. passsd through a terrific hufricane. Ome /nifn was lost overboard, the ventilators offthe vessel were carried away, the davits twisted and the entire cargo of oranges cn deck was swept away by the tremen- dous seas. ADVERTISEMENTS. joined again at Nantucket. While anchored in Smithtown Bay the high | { Dolphin, with Secretary of the Navy Moody on board, passed and was saluted. The Dolphin arrived here about the mid- { dle of the afternoon and the Mayflower | and the Sylph fired the salute of the | Secretary of the Navy. Secretary Moody is the guest of the President at Saga- more Hill to-night. The disposition of the fleet 13 that the first squadron, consisting of the flagship of Rear Admiral Barker, the Kearsarge and the battleships Illinois and Alabama, making the first division, and the flag- ship of Rear Admiral Sands, the Texas, and the crulser Baltimore, making the second division, lie In one column with 500 yards between each. Eight hundred yards to the north is the squadron, the first division under Rear Admiral Cogh- Jan, consisting of the crulsers Olympla, flagship, and the Topeka, and the second division, under Rear Admiral Wise, con- sisting of the Yankee, Prairie and Pan- ther. Six torpedo-boat destroyers, Lieu. tenant L. H. Chandler commanding the division, lle between the. first squadron and the Long Island shore and six under Lieutenant H. K. Benham lie between WOEFUL WANT.”” That old copybook maxim finds ity most forceful application in the waste of vitality, which 1s called “burning the the second squadron and the Connecticut shore. The destroyer Chauncey will go to New York and convey the foreign at- taches to the Kearsarge Monday morn- ing. President Roosevelt and his family and his guests will atiend religlous services to-morrow morning on board lhe battle- ship Kearsarge. The trip from Sagamore Hill to the battleship will be made on the Sylph. Admiral Dewey is expected to arrive to-morrow. He will go aboard the May- flower and subsequently will call upon ROOS BROS. Offer for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday A Sale of Men's Furnishings AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ¥ To make room for our large stock of Fall goods which we are now receiving, we have organized a special sale in our Men’s Furnishings Department at greatly reduced prices. % The goods are all high-grade in quality, and are such as have sold all season at regular quoted prices. ¥ Many excellent bargains are to be found, the first comers having the choice of the offerings. :.fine‘xinhte::pt:mbe;m"he:n:;?x b‘; the President to pay his respects. Riding Sto_cks and Cx;oats for Men and Womgn. domestic or social demands. Some da{ s BT B A RO Former price $1.00, $1.50- At 5S¢ she awakens from this waste of stren, § ¥ to the wokeful want of;t. ; Shcblhas THlK[HS FlBHT Strawina Bath Slippers for Men and Women. come weak, miserable. 1 5 myor wnk‘“:‘w‘fi:flmn fmm il Former price $1.25, $1.50. At [=1_1<] ere is no better toni ervine than : ’ r s 3 Dr. Pierce's F.iofiz“ ;’;‘.:,i fon. 1t A large variety of Men’s fine Silk Four-in-hands. restores the appetite, quiets the nerves e Former price $1.00, $1.50. At 65c and gives refreshing sleep. - It cures ml ueas:’: peculi:‘rll{ v;tl)‘lzunll{;?{ch Men’s Leather. Belts, sizes 30 to 44. ermine e e € . es 1 weak women lt.gzng, sick women well. y Fired Former price 75c, $1.00. At 4Sc 5 Many Shots Are Fire : S No doubt you have forgotten me, but after Fancy Figured Cheviot Pa TS M Romic 5. Soving, of s n hvenst, | on the Streets of Yar price $3.00 i s W, ‘f;:;,%}:i;f “"of. ing, y;?xvstg ':E:“; ) Regular price $3.00. At $1.90 a Charge. When T rote toyou 1 was wreck: T Wheeling. Fancy Figured Sateen Pajamas could not walk straight for pains in my abdo- A o men; could not sit down, lie down, or get any Regular price $2.00. At $B1.3S5 easeatall. T had what was called the best doc- WHEELING, W. Va., Aug. 15.—From 9 '”J?n'f’“céfiz?*“‘,;m:' ?":glzl;:fi o'clock last night until 1 o'clock this Men’s Golf Shirts, pleated and plain bosoms, cuffs attached bottles each of - PBavorite Prescription’ and | (Sunday) morning streets of Renwood d hed » P ’ or eolden Medical Di .’ and ten bottles of | were the scene of a wild riot. The etached. thie Ficgsant Pellets.' 1 fell you tha Bedicine | gy riking m:;hlnl!tl and n;::-um:; e Regular price $1.00, $1.50. At 6Sc 5 g who replaced them at the Riverside p! Weak and sick women are invited to | o¢ the National Tube Company clashed ) : g . consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All [ ana many shots were exchanged. Men’s Fancy Drop Stitch Mercerized Silk Underwear, correspondence is held as strictly private. | = For four hours an inaiscriminate bat- heavy silk faced. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. | tle raged between the two forces. Al- Regular price $2.50 per suit. At $1.70 ellefs cure biliousness. adway’s R*Biie Purely vegetable, mild o. pertect digestion, complete absorption and ealtbtul regularity, 4 the cure of ail disorders of the Stomacn. Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, e Ir- regujari Headache, Billousness, Con- stipation, Piles Internal Viscera. we and all derangements of the 25c a box. At or +RADWAY & CO.. New York. though 1000 shots were fired, . only two men are known to have been wounded by the flying bullets. Clay Hoover, a passerby, was struck in the left knee and another man was wounded in the leg. The latter was quickly carried off by the strikers and his name could not be learned. Hostilities began when an aged man was set upon and badly beaten by a crowd of strikers. He is in a serlous con- dition. This was followed by two other assaults upon non-union men, who were terribly bea on their way home from work. Thesnon-union men armed them- selves and battle lines were drawn. At 3 o'clock this morning the police succeeded Men’s Fancv, Blue Ground, Striped Balbriggan Underwear. _Regular price »2.00 per suit. ROOS At $1L4S BROS. KEARNY AT POST.