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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, AAILADAD MEN UNEARTH BIG FRAUDS Continued From Page 1, Column 1. y or its representatives grove valued at $12,000. 4 Gibbon assert that rises to him that this would settle the y are free to pro- d that Right of Way ssert was not implicated with tter, but Mr. Gibbon to- & b suspected that Diss . Y ng of it RESIGNATION IS EXPECTED. Hays is said to have agreed to re- with the Riverside Tuesday, and before dealings with the became knowr, the in Riverside but no rea- =it m made Gibbon of the t that the ve not de- »out the mat- 1as only begun, ough enough f land since If other ling are than suspects he init- th the com- s to wheth involved in 1 refused to com- ed that the deal- Hays were in the right of artment and as the head of ¢ nt Major Diss should what was being done. fore it was thought best for him employ of the company. stated that he } found 1 which the compan not through made its purch: uel to the sto amazing than the > company is able e than suspects. ROPERTY. say 2 wh S DEEDS P HAY: S nd Vice President J. Ross Clark ht fully confirmed the report as s land deals and as to his hav- d to the Salt Lake Railroad worth $12,000 in se e had collected fron acting as their agent. Ro ‘ hat the payme in considerati proceedings by and that pro discoveries at further Mr. Cilark fficers of the s will have institution and that 1ay be expected in a « v reason we have not made tter public and the only reason it could now be suppressed,” Clark to-night, “is on account ossible effect it will have upon e Growers’ National Bank of bank one of the this part of the State, 1 th reason why this mat- would affect its standing, but we t tell what will happen when it that the cashier of any finan- this ma is stable re is no on has engaged in such nable transactions. We simply protect the bank. s has secured us so far as we and he is going to get out. It would be better to permit him to resign y and get away rather than a any trouble to the bank. Con- gressman Daniels, the president of the bank, is in Washington and until he can be communicated with and told what has happened, I suppose Hays will remain in the bank, but after that we have been assured that he will As to Major Diss, he was in a posi- to protect us and it was his duty know what kind of a man he was ———e——————— SNOWDRIFTS STALL TRAINS IN MONTANA Storm May Cause Heavy Loss to Stock on the Mountain Ranges. TWISTOWN, Mont., Nov. 15,—More twelve inches of snow has fallen n the in Fergus county and un- y winds of the past three i bavoc with mountain , filling the canyons with snow. sreat Falls stage is stuck in the le Rock. Lewistown has had since Friday, and two engines now cab deep in drifts with a few fles of Lewistown. It is feared that vy loss to stock will result if a warm spell i not speedily forthcom- ing. The temperature to-night is 5 be- low zero and still falling. debts are like the poor—they with us. ter as they may deem | RIGHT OF WAY -~ FOR GUBAN BILL ;'Senate Will Give Other Subjects Little Con- sideration. iFinaI Vote on Mezsure to Be Taken in the House on ANAMA, Nov. 15.—President Marroquin’s statement as con- veyed in a cablegram to Gen- eral Plaza, President of He- | uador, that Generals Reyés, Cabal-| now | Thursday. leros, Ospina and Holguin are | marching on the isthmus to “suppress | X the isthmian traitors” has set the en- | WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—It is the | tire population of the isthmus laugh- intention of the enate leaders to con- fine as closely as possible the legislation of the present extra session to the bill to carry into effect the Cuban treaty, and with that end in view the daily sessions of the Senate during the rest of the week will be brief and another adjournment will be taken on Thurs- ¢ or Friday until'the following Mon- The work of introducing bills and of presenting petitions will go forward, but, with the exception of the Cuban bills, neither bills nor petitions will be taken up in committee nor for discus- sion in the Senate during the week. It is quite well understood that Sen- ator Morgan is prepared for a lengthy discussion of the situation on the isth- mus of Panama, but, while he does not m to have taken any one into his confidence, the general supposition is that he will defer his speeches until the new canal treaty shall have been sent to the Senate. There is an under- standing on the part of the Senator day that even though the negotiations for | > new convention be forthwith com- leted, it will not be transmitted to the Senate until the beginning of the regp- lar session of Congress in December. ACTION ON CUBAN BILL. It is expected that the Cuban bill will be received from the House on Friday and it is probable that a session will be held on that day in order that the bill_ may be referred to the Committee 1 Foreign Relations, which will begin its consideration at orce, The Committee on Military Affairs will meet during the week to consider the nomination of General Wood, and, as soon as practicable after the com- mittee reports upon it, the question of confirmation will be brought before the Senate In executive session. Senator Hale, who is chairman of the Republican committee on organization the Senate committees, expresses - opinion that the organization will Jleted by the close of the week. ¥ it will be impossible cte the work until the follow- Other Senators s to comp House the bill making effec- tive the Cuban reciprocity convention, eported by the Ways and Means Com- ing. Protected by the impenetrability of the land and the many leagues of coast line separating the isthmus from Colombia, and confident that the United States intends to prevent the landing of Colmobian soldiers from the sea,, the isthmians feel that their security is ab- | solute. The loss of the isthmian territory is, of course, a tragedy for Colombia. The Government at Bogota is probably ig- { norant of the attitude taken by the Government of the United States dur-| | ing the last two weeks. In a frenzy to | “save its face,” to appease an angry and disappointed populace and to sat- isfy the public demand for some ap- pearance of activity and an attempt to save the honor and the territorial in- tegrity of Colombia, the Government is no doubt promising and threatening tq send forces to the coast and to take other aggressive steps. The realization | | by the Colombian Government of the impossibility of sending troops to the isthmus would not necessarily deter it from taking those steps which, as al- | ready stated, are intended merely to | | satisfy the people. | TO FORESTALL REVOLUTION. Well-informed people on the isthmus | believe that the Colombian Government is going through all these forms of or- | ganizing expeditions not merely for the | foregoing reasons, hut owing to the | necessity of forestalling or weakening | ! the threatened revolutionary outbreak in Bogota. The growing feeling against Presi- | dent Marroquin is believed to be due | to the fact that he did not show suffi- | cient determination to effect the rati- | fication of the canal treaty, which | would have saved the isthmus to Co-i lombia, and because he appointed Gen- eral Obaldia Governor of the depart- | ment of Panama after Obaldia had de- clared that he would remain a Colom- bian if the treaty were ratified, but that otherwise he would only be a Pan- | the MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 1903. amaian. General Obaldia was born in the state of Panama. Miners and others familiar with the coast on both sides of the isthmus de- clare that any attempt to march an expeditionary army from any port of Colombia to the isthmus would be fu- tild Both coasts consist of impassable jungles, swamps and rivers, without towns or roads or any means for the provisioning of an army. The members | of the junta have not the slightest fear that any such expedition will be at- tempted, and 'they receive the reports of such expeditions with equanimity. ‘What is described here in Panama as “United States’ broad interpreta- tion of the clause of the treaty of 1846, regarding the protection across the isthmus,” is deemed ample for the preventing of the transporta- tion of troops by sea and consequent hostilities. The Pacific Steam Navigation Com- pany, a British concern, plylng between Panama and Buena Ventura, has a clause in its contract with the Colom- bian Government which says that it must ‘“‘under normal conditions” trans- port Government troops. It can, how- ever, be said authoritatively that the company will not transport Colombian | troops to the isthmus under present conditions, and that it has not been | asked by the Colombian Government to do so. CANNOT DISEMBARK TROOPS. Other vessels which bring troops from any Colombian port for any point in the republic of Panama will be frocibly prevented from disembarking them by the naval authorities in case they in- sist on doing so after warning. The revenues of the new republic, if economically administered, promise to meet all expenses. These revenues con- sist of the 10 per cent ad valorem duty upon fmports, slaughter-house taxes, liquor licenses and similar sources of income, as well as the fair yearly sums derived from those holding a monop- oly of the tobacco business, from the gambling privileges in Panama and Colon and from the lottery. These sources of revenue do not include $5000 in gold per week paid by the Panama Railway Company, a United States con- cern, to the Bogota Government, which retained $4500, giving to the state of Panama only $500. The Government of the new republic, realizing the necessity of keeping its army in a contented condition, is pay- of traffic! ISTHMIAN RESIDENTS LAUGH AT THREATS OF COLOMBIA Germans Irritated by Reported Seizure of a Ship by the American Squadron. ERLIN, Nov. 15.—Tha ever la- tent irritation against the United States in the matter of South America has been vividly awakened by a cablegram from Panama stating that the commander of the American gqundr(yn at Colon has forced a German ship’to weigh anchor and get out of the harbor because he of war aboard. Apropos of this, the Neueste Nachrichten says: America must not interpret the ab- stention from interference on the part of European powers in Panama as a sign of weakness. of the powers. | We must take the contents of the telegram received as a very ugly ac- knowledgment of that duty. Should the dispatch prove true, the holding up of a German ship is an act which even at the time of the South African war would have been taken as an unfriendly act. It is less justifiable in this case, as neither a blockade nor a waters. We hope the news is exaggerated, or, if it is not, that prompt redress will be demanded for the wrongful seizure. The steamer referred to is Marko- mannia. Tht same paper, after pub- lishing a telegram from Bogota telling of probable fighting, says: Even should a state of war exist, it would not justify the seizure of a German steamer. B e e e e e i s ] ] ing its officers and soldiers with the ut- msot promptness. General Obaldia appeared on the streets of Panama yesterday for the first time since November 3, when the independence of the isthmus was pro- claimed. He was greeted cordially by friends and acquaintances. It is generally asserted that the isth- mians will eventually insist upon the separation of church and state, as sep- aration was one of the measures de- manded by the Liberal party in the last revolution, and the population of the isthmus is largely Liberal. The question of the admission of Chi- nese is being seriously discussed by the press and in other quarters, the con- posed to such admission. The junta has Invited designs for a Panama coat-of-arms. " .+EH+%:%-HWWWWWM. \AMERICAN MARINES ARE LANDED AT COLON WHEN COLOMBIAN REPUBLIC’S ENDOYS ARRIVE \ Continued From Page 1, Columns 5, 6 and 7. o ittee, will be taken up to-morrow nd disposed of on Thursday. It prob- ably will be sent to the Senate on Fri- day. WILL VOTE ON THURSDAY. Payne of New York, chairman of | the Ways and Means Committee, in accordance with the notice he gave when he reported the bill on Friday, will ask the House, as soon as it con- venes to-morrow, to begin its-consid- ration. A rule will be reported by the intervening motion. On the adoption of the rule the House will go into commit- , tee of the whole and discussion of the Cuban bill will be begun. The programme of the minority is well defined by the resolution adopted at the Democratic caucus last night. A rule cutting off amendments will be opposed in order that an amendment may be offered striking out the differ- | ertial on refined sugar and eliminating | the five-year clause. The resolution made it the sense of the caucus that the Democratic members should vote fcr the bill either “upon the adoption or rejection of the amendment.” With the House' in committee of the whole, Speaker Cannon will be given an cpportunity to further cor\slder the meke-up of the House committees for the present Congress. —e————— LABOR MEN ENTERTAINED. | Delegates to American Federation Convention Enjoy Sightseeing. BOSTON, Nov. 15.—After a week crowded with busy sessions the dele- | gates to the convention of the Ameri- can Federation of ‘Labor to-day gav: up their time to enjoyment. In the aft- ernoon & trip was taken in a trolley car over the route traveled by Paul Revere on the night of April, 1775, when he warned the patriots that the British | soldiers were advancing. At Concord and Lexington the cars stopped long enough to give the excur- | sionists an opportunity to visit the | famous revolutionary battlefields in | these towns. Entertainments for the | delegates were given this evening by the various local unions. | Longshoremen’s Union 302 held a | mass-meeting to-night. Among those | | present were John Mitchell, president | of the United Mine Workers’ Union, | President Keefe and National Secretary Barker of the Imternational Longshore- { men's Union. Delegates from San Francisco have | announced their intention of making a strong contest to secure the 1904 con- | vention for their city. —_———————— Kaiser Growing Better. BERLIN, Nov. 15.—A bulletin was is- | sued to-day from the new palace at Potsdam regarding the condition of | Emperor William, saying the wound | was nearly healed and that the Emper- ! or had been permitted to whisper since | yesterday. Orizaba The King’ of Coffees 50 cents Pound We are sole agents KonA KOFFET KomMPANY 145 Stockign 3t Opp Criy of Por Phone Bush 510 near ceary €« bry Goods C»> mmittee on Rules providing for a | vote at 4 o'clock on Thursday without [ between them.” atory. The Colombian Government, according to Minister Beaupre, planation of the instructions, but the Minister informed it that he regarded ments of both Colombia and Panama “the peaceful and equitable settlement of all questions at issue was disposed to ask for an ex- them as self-explan- Beaupre still appears confused about the instructions sent to him regarding his leave of ab- sence, probably because of the delay.in the receipt by him of cablegrams regarding it. He has been | again informed that he is at liberty to leave Bogota whenever he desires, and it is expected that he i will take early advantage of the opportunity. Bunau-Varilla, the Minister from Panama, continued his efforts to-day to obtain recognition of the new Government by the European nations. dor, and to-night Bunau-Varilla expressed the opinion that France soon would accord the recognition desired. The French Government is anxious that the republic of Panama shall guarantee to the Pan- Twice he saw Jusserand, the French Embassa- ama Canal Company and the French citizens interested therein all of the rights, privileges, etc., now held by them. country. This guarantee is desired before any steps looking to recognition by France is given, and to-night Varilla cabled to his Government for authority to make such representations. To-day he received a long cablegram from Panama expressing thanks to the Government of the United States for its courtesy in offering the privileges of United States Reyes on his arrival at the isthmus of Panama should he desire to go aboard. The cablegram says | the greatest enthusiasm exists throughout the republic of Panama over the reception given to its | Minister here and to the recognition of the new republic. | Roosevelt when the former presented his credentials have been published in the various papers of the warships to General The addresses of Varilla and of President The same cablegram gave authority to Minister Varilla to make representations to the For- eign representatives here, necessary to effect a speedy recognition of the new republic. has suggested to his Government that it clothe the commission now on its way from Panana with | such powers, but the officials there preferred that the Minister should exercise these offices, as he already possesses diplomatic functions. The Minister was suspected of having contrabands | It is her duty to avoid | any action prejudicial to the interests state of war has been declared in those | sensus of opinion appearing to be op- | In official circles here the opinion is expressed that the commission consisting of Generals Reyes, Holguin and Ospina, which went from Bogotg on a peace mission to Panama, are embarked on a hopeless task. It is now too late, it is said, for anything to be.accomplished. - It is felt certain here that Panama will not treat with them, as it is not likely that the isthmians will care to become again a part of the Colombian Government. e o Y ) DIPLOMAT DIES ALONE N BATH Chevalier Luigi Petich Meets Sudden End in New York Home. NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—In the bath- room of his home on Ninth avenue was found to-day the body of Chevalier Luigi Petich, former Embassador of Italy to Mexico. He had been dead three days and apoplexy is said to have been the cause of death. Petich, who was 65 years old, was a man of many at- | tainments, a scientist, inventor and | scholar, but withal a recluse. Chevalier Petich came to the United States a few years ago with the inten- tion of recouping his fortune, so that he might go to Buenos Ayres, where his wife is living, but he failed in this. Luigi Petich was the man who found and owned the famous- “smiling Toltec heads.” These were among the first American archaeological finds which went to prove the relationship of the | earlier races of this continent. v L T T | WILL CLAIM TWENTY MILLIONS FROM PRUSSIA Descendants of Field Marshal Muen- lich Demand Estate Given to Their Ancestor. LONDON, Nov. 16.—The Daily Mail's ‘St. Petersburg correspondent says that { the two Counts Muenlich, descendants i of the famous Russian Field Marshal, | are about to claim $20,000,000 from the Prussian Government, the value of the estate, with interest, which Frederick the Great presented to the Field Mar- shal in 1741 for the latter’s assistance in arranging a favorable treaty with Russia. It is said that the proofs of the claim are indisputable and that the trial will cause a sensation. POISON CAUSES WONAN'S DEATH PR B Chico Professor’s Wife Passes From Life Suddenly. CHICO, Nov. 15.—Mrs. Bira Chase, wife of Professor Ray E. Chase, pro- fessor of biology in the State Normal School here, died to-day at noon, her death being due to poisoning. Mrs. Chase and her husband went to the biological laboratory about 10 o'clock this morning, he having some matters to attend to in connection with his department. An hour or so later he was startled by the sound of his wife’s body falling to the floor. When he reached her she was dead. She had announced her intention of taking some bromo-seltzer, having suffered s‘orne during the morning from indiges- tion. It is supposed that in preparing the bromo-seltzer she had used 4 glass pre- viously containing some very deadly poison or had made a mistake by plac- ing a poison instead of the bromo- seltzer in the glass. She was an as- sistant in the kindergarten department. ——————— Italian Cruiser at Honolulu. HONOLULU, Nov. 15.—The Italian cruiser Elba has arrived here en route from Acapulco to Yokohama. WATCH FOR THE BEAUTIFUL PICTURES IN THE BIG THANKSGIVING EDITION, - NEXT SUNDAY CALL. AOVAL PAATY LENES [TALY Tour of King Victor and Queen Helena to " London Begins. ROME, Nov. 15.—King Victor Em- manuel and Queen Helena left for Lon- don to-day. There was no demonstra- tion, as their departure was kept strictly private. Their Majesties were accompanied by Signor Tittoni, Minis- ter of Foreign Affairs, and the mem- bers of the civil and military house- holds. On reaching French territory, the King sent a telegram of greeting to President Loubet. The majority of the writers in the press and the general public look with satisfaction on the Vvisit of their Majesties to Great Brit- ain and consider that it presages a new alliance and a greater bond of friend- ship between the two countries. PARIS, Nov. 15.—The train bearing King Victor Emmanuel and Queen Helena passed through Nice at 2:20 this afternoon. 'The entire railway line is guarded by troops. A British squad- ron has arrived at Cherbourg in readi- ness to escort the royal visitors to England. LONDON, Nov. 16.—The Italian col- ony here is greatly disappointed at the abandonment by King Victor Emman- uel and Queen Helena of their project- ed visit to the Italian hospital in Lon- don on the advice of the police because in the narrow and tortuous streets of the Italian quarter it would be impos- sible to provide adequate police pro- tection to the royal couple. Moreover, there has been an influx recently of suspicious persons, who are being closely watched by Italian and English detectives. L e———— To Cure a Cold in One Day. NON-UNION MEN TAKE OUT CARS Chicago City Railway Operates Part of System. Large Force of Police Acts as Patrol Along the Route. e e CHICAGO, Nov. 15.—A victory, tem- | the managentent of the Chicago City Railway against its striking employes. From early in the morning until dark | to-night the compamny succeeded in maintaining a regular service on its Wentworth avenue line, which extends | from Seventy-ninth street to the down- | town district, a distance of eight miles. Twenty-five cars in all were put into the service, but the schedule was fre- quently interfered with by delays porary at least, was scored to-day by | STRANGE HINTS " OF PARIS JURDRS The Humberts May Have Had Aid in Their Frauds. Declaration Made Thai Au- thorities Were Forced to Their Duty. PARIS, Nov. 15.—H. Kieken, an arch- itect, and Luigi Loir, a well-known art- | 1st, who were prominent members of | the jury which returned a verdict of | guilty against the Humberts on the | trial of fraud, in interviews had with | them declare that the papers submitted during the trial fully justified an inves- | tigation into the possible complicity of | certain politicians in the case and also insist that the authorities were perfect- ly aware of the Humberts’ whereabouts | in Madrid during the latters’ stay there, caueed by obstructions belng placed on | but were unwilling to arrest them un- the tracks and by the inexperience of | til practically forced to do so. The re- men in charge of the cars. The most j moval of Madame Therese Humbert to serious troyble occurred during the | Rennes and of Freder Humbert to morning, when a number of arrests | to-day was attended by | were made, but clashes.between the po- ent of note. transfer of lice and the crowds that lined the | the prisoners ends th gimz of slight | Streets were frequent during the after- ' fayors which have been granted to noon and when darkness set in it was not considered safe to send more cars from the barn. The last car returned | to the barns at 4:30 o'clock and after |it had been safely housed the day’s | work came to an end. | More arrests were made during the {day than upon any previous day since the strike was declared. The most trouble was experienced between Twen- | ty-second and Forty-ninth streets. In the blocks bounded by these thorough- fares crowds of men, women and chil- dren hooted at the police and non-un- |ion employes. This was soon followed by more violent demonstrations. Huge barricades were piled upon the tracks, stones were thrown at the cars and hand-to-hand conflicts between the po- lice and the crowd occurred in several instances. Several patrol wagons which had previously been called were soon filled with prisoners. One of the men arrested, who gave his name as McQuade, is said to have placed a cartridge of large caliber on the track near Harrison and Clark streets. Thousands of spectators were on the street at the time and, believ- ing it was dynamite, became panic | stricken as they dashed for places of |safety. Assistant Chief of Police | Schuttler, who was near at the time, {removed the cartridge and arrested Mc- them at the Fresnes prisons and hence- forth they will both wear the convict dress. —_——— ‘[ MINERS GO TO NEW FIELD. | | Strikers in Northern Colorado Go to | Southern Part of State. DENVER, Nov. 15.—A special to the | Republican from Pueblo, Colo., says | Two thousand of the men thrownm out of employment by the closing of a por- tion of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company works will be shipped to the southern fields to work in the coal fields there. Three carloads were sent | to-night and others will follow as rapidly as possible. The officials of the company here state that they will not reopen the closed departments until the | strike is ended bt The woman who is cleverest in advice if often the stupidest in t of her own extremity. DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS. " ACT QUICKLY. | Quade. | It being Sunday, the absence of | teams in the streets lessened the | | trouble of the police In the matter of | Delay Has Beea Dangerous i Saa | blockades, but another source of seri- Prancisco. | ous annoyance were the crowds of idle | Do the right thing at the ri time. | sightseers and sympathizers who were | Act quickly in times of d r | attracted by thousands to the streets B s kidney dang | through which the cars had to pass. Joan's Kidney Pills act quickly Cure all distressing, dangerous kidney | During the latter part of the after- | noon, hewever, the interference with * | the progress of the cars had greatly | ! diminished and many of the cars were | half filled with passengers as they sped along unmolested. According to the officials of the company, an attempt will be made to- morrow to operate some of the other lines of the system if the police depart- | ment can supply protection. Enough | non-union men have been engaged, it is said, to extend the service in all di- rections if police aid be forthcoming. As far as known, no further attempt was made to-day by either the officials of the company, the striking employes or the State Board of Arbitration to bring about a conciliatory settlement of the trouble, and the indications to- night are for a protracted struggle. MINERS OPPOSE SETTLEMENT. Proposition to sume Work in Northern Colorado Is Defeated. | LOUISVIILE, Colo., Nov. 15.—The of - | ficial count of the votes cast by the miners of the Northern Coal District |last night reverses the decision and | deteats the proposition for a settlement of the strike. The sub-district board met here to-day and canvassed the vote. They announced that the propo- sition was defeated and there will be no work to-morrow, but refused to make public the vote. It has leaked out that there Is a majority of six votes The mistake occurred in counting the votes last night at the various unions and it took but a few votes to change the decision. Several thousand entered | |into the caucus that resulted in the | defeat of the ratification of the agree- ment between the committees and the {operators. The men were afraid to accept the conditional eight-hour day | on account of the effect it would have | on the south. Then, again, all other | miners except day men would work | only eight hours and receive only eight | hours’ pay, and these men are greatly in the majority. National Representa- tive Ream of Iowa and the special out to Erie last night and worked hard to carry the measure, but it was de- eated by a majority of over two to one. All of the members of the committee who met the operators worked hard to have the measure accepted by their various unions, but without success. e g DELEGATES MAKE PROTEST. Desire to Dissuade Cotton Manufac- turers From Cutting Wages. FALL RIVER, Mass.,, Nov. 15.—The request of the textile council for a con- =3 turers regarding the announced plan of the manufacturers to return on Novem- Dber 23 to the wage schedule in existence prior to March 17,1902, has been referred te the executive committee of the manufacturers’ delegation. Delegates ever, for a favorable answer from the | executive committee before Wednesday evening, at which time the various unions will meet to discuss the situa- tion. The council wishes to lay before the manufacturers a plan of retrench- ment less burdensome to the operatives than a return to the schedule of 1902, which means practically a 10 per cent cut in wages. It is believed there is Jittle likelihood that the manufacturers can be prevailed upon to reconsider their decision. That opposition to the new schedule will take the form of a strike is still more doubtful. SHOE FACTORIES SHUT DOWN. Manufacturers in Quebec Decline to Yield to Demands of Union. QUEBEC, Nov. 15.—Twenty boot and down. with the machinists, who refused to abide by an agreement made in 1901 creating a conciliation board. The spe- cific complaint on which the action was en was that of four machinists who left the Marsh factory because they were refused an increase of wages without submitting the demand to the arbitra- tion commission. The manufacturers will no longer recognize the Shoe Ma- ‘chinists Union, but will insist upon in- dividual contracts. Five thousand oper- atives are affected by the shutdown. in favor of rejecting the proposition. | representative of John Mitchell came | ference with the cotton mill manufac- | to the textie council still hope, how- | shoe factories in this city have shut | The shutdown is due to trouble | flls Plenty of evid to prove this. H. Smith of 165 Linden avenue daughter complained every ren for about a year of n through the nall of her back. Besides that, she had very marked symptoms of either weakened or excited kidneys. A overexertion brought on an attack, a if she contracted a cold aggravation wa sure to follow. I advised her to try Doan's Kidney Pills. and she commence: their use. They were prompt in their action, and a continuation of the treat- ment for a short time stopped the pain in her back and improved her health in every way. Doan's Ointment has also been tried In my family and beneficial re- sults undoubtedly followed its u: For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name, Doan’s, and take no substitute. q 1s | PER CENT DISCOUNT 4 Framed I’Tl:luras |W Priced at $4.00 and Over. We must make room for holi- day stock, and will allow above discount for a short time. A solen- did opportunity to secure some- thing good for the home or for presentation. 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