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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 190a. SAYS TARIFFS CAUSE DECLINE Joseph Chamberlain Gives Reasons for Falling Off in British Iron Industry TS A LS St SUGGE Secretary Recom- | a System of Three of Duties for Goods | i July 20.—The report of | Chamberlain’s tariff commis- sion on the iron and steel trades ar- rives at the usion that the de- ine of the British iron and steel industry is due to the fact that the | manufacturers of America and Ger- many have secured control of the| home markets by means of high tariffs | end an organized system regulating their export trade, that they are in a position to dump their surplus products on the British and other markets ir- respective of cost, and that the dump- ing could not be carried on except for | the British system of free imports. The committee expresses the opinion that | the situation can only be remedied by 2 system of tariffs arranged as fol- lows: (a) A general tariff consisting of a local scale of duties for foreign coun- | tries admitting British wares on fair terms. (b) A preferential tariff, lower than the general tariff, for the colonies, giv- | ing adequate preference to British | manufacturers and framed to secure | freer trade within the British Empire. | (¢) A maximum tariff consisting of comparatively higher duties but sub- | Ject to reduction by negotiation to the | Former mends Grades LONDON, h Josep REMEDY | level of the general tariff. The report, which is signed by fifty- eight commissioners, ie very bulky and gives the evidence of British manu- facturers, the evidence given before | the 4 States Industrial Commis- | . on and steel industries, the orgenization and working of German kartels and & vast amount of sta- | e i e | CURZON 1S TENDERED | FREEDOM OF LONDON Viceroy of India Is Honored by Eng- | lishmen With Customary High Ceremontes. i NDON, July 20.—The freedom of London was presented to urzon of Keddleston, Viceroy to-day with all In a speech Lord Curzon said the 7 : longer a for he xpedi- e political unrest in would cease and that ons between India adually be built up. —_——— AND GERMANY COMPLETE NEW TREATY RUSSIA Are Granted on Both Sides to Promote Commercial Intercourse. Concessions BEFT July 20.—According to latt the negotiations between M president of the Russian com- m isters, Chancellor von 1low on the subject of a new Rust serman commercial treaty have completed, Russia man minimum duties cilitate the importa- tle and meats. —_——— CANADA WILL HAVE AMMUNITION FACTORIES Sir Frederick Borden Closes Contract With English Firm for Three Large Plants. WINNIPEG, Manitoba, July 20.— Word has been received from Ottawa that Sir Frederick Borden has about completed a contract with the Arm-| etrong-Whiteworth firm in England to 4 a large ammunition factory near Winnipeg, one at Ottawa and a third probably at Vancouver. The one to be built at Ottawa will produce 40,000,000 rounds annually. ——— CAR INSPECTOR NARROWLY | ESCAPES BEING KILLED | Conductor Orders Engineer to Start | Up Train While Fellow Employe | Is Repairing Air Brakes. COLFAX, July 20.—Car Inspector Priskett narrowly escaped being killed to-day while repairing the air brakes | of a car attached to 2 passenger train. | The conductor gave the order for the | t 1 to proceed while Priskett was under the car. Priskett managed to get hold of a beam, however, and clung to it until the engineer, whose attention was called to the inspector’s hazardous position by a bystander, | inquiries to the Home Office. | the black-robed MRS. MAYBRICK FREE AFTER LONG TERM OF SERVITUDE Distinguished Prisoner Leaves Convent of the Sisters of the Epiphany in Truro, England, and Goes to France, Where She Will Remain Until She Is Requiredin America s ————+ 1 — NVICTED OF POISONING HER HUSBAND AND WHICH SHE SERVED FOUR- RELEASED BY A PARDON. —~ TRURO, Cornwall, England, July 20. | them to find her not guilty in the face | Mrs. Maybrick is left here at | of the medical evidence. The Judge 11:43 a. m. to-day on her way to time later in a madhouse. Fr the time of Mrs. Maybrick's ance. % SR MR e L S0 L tion her mother, the Baroness de S e i BT as unremitting in her efforts not terminated with the cla on' behalf of the pris She sua- doors at Aylesbury Prison, wh ceeded in getting her th sentence spent more than fourteen years commuted to penal servitude for life life. It closed before the doors of the : and finally has obtained the freedom of white convent of the Sisterhood of the Epiphany in this little town, with the black-robed sisters soft blessings gnd good wishes for her fu- ture. With two companions, Mrs. May- brick entered the carriage of Miss Dal- rymple, secretary of the sisterhood, and was driven rapidly to Stausstel, a small | station fourteen miles away, where, after exchanging gocd-bys with her companions, she boarded a train and started on her journey to France. She will not go to America until her pres- ence there is considered imperatively necessary. crecy was thrown about Mrs. May- brick’'s departure. Mother Superior Julian of the convent said to a repre- sentative of the Assoclated Press that under instructions she must refer all Others were equally uncom- municative. At the railroad station or- ders were issued forbidding the em- ployes to discuss Mrs. Maybrick. The little town has taken deep in- terest in this international figure. at the convent | Crowds daily stood at the gate of the grounds waiting for Mrs. Maybrick to appear. They were rarely rewarded, for she generally went out only when | the road. was reported clear. When Mrs. Maybrick first arrived here she was kept under strict surveil- lance. Subsequently she was allowed to walk in the quiet streets of the town and in the country lanes. The villagers soon got to recogni woman, with bonnet and flowing strings, and ga her kindly greetings, which frequently passed unnoticed, Mrs. Maybrick seek- ing so far as possible to avoid the at- tention of the curious. Her time at the convent was taken up by sewing, read- ing and chatting with the sisters, en- dearing herself to them by many acts showing that even the many years of | servitude at Aylesbury Prison had been | unable to stamp out her innate kindly disposition. 4 y uttering their | | her daughter, to whose release from prison she has devoted her life. The Baroness was aided by influential { friends on both sides of the Atlantlc. In 1900, after the death of Lord Rus of yKillowen, Chief Justice of letter whicl. he had writ- brick ia 1895 was dis- It showed he was convinced she ought never to have been con- | victed and it has been generally sup- | posea that all the recent American | Embassadors to the court of St. James have done all possible to aid in Mrs. covered DESERTS ARMY FOR OLD LOYE Nebraska Youth, When Jilt- ed, Shoots Himself and Is Arrested by the Military | PARENT MAKES TROUBLE Young Man Tries to Kill Himself After the Irate Father Orders Him Away Special Dispatch to The Call. HARTINGTON, Neb., July 20.—In re- | sponse to a telegram from the United States military authorities Edwin | Johnson was arrested yesterday at the home of his parents near here on the charge of desertion from the army. | | When making the arrest the Sherift discovered that the young man had been shot, and upon inquiry was in-| formed that young Johnson had shot| himself in the left shoulder late the | evening before. | Johnson had been courting Miss | Wingate, a Cedar County teacher, who; resides with her parents in the neigh- | borhood, until it was brought to a sud- ; den termination by the interference of | the young woman's father. The young i man in his desperation resolved to en- | list in the army. He did so and for! about eight weeks was quartered with | his regiment at San Francisco. How- ever, he learned to his sorrow that his | love for the young woman was strong- | er than his oath of allegiance as a sol- | dier and he deserted his regiment and | fled to his home to renew his suit. Miss | Wingate refused to listen to his en- treaties, having been forbidden by her father to have anything more to do with him, whereupon Johnson threat- ened to shoot himself. Johnson insisted on visiting .the ‘Wingate home on Monday evening and i Wingate ordered him away with a| threat that he would shoot him should | he come back. Then Johnson moved off to an adjoining fleld and deliberate- | ly shot himself. The prisoner is now | lodged in the county jall, waiting the | orders of the United States authorities. | The doctors probed for the bullet, but | they were unable to find it.” Another | effort will be made with the assistance of the X-ray. ———e e {MOB THREATENS TO | LYNCH A PRISONER | | A { Masked Men Make Demonstration Be- | fore Jail, but Disperse Before | | Armed Guards. DANVILLE, Va., July 20.—A mob | of seventy-five men, composed prin- | | cipally of railroad men, wearing hand- | | kerchiefs over their faces, made a| | demonstration before the city jail shortly after 2 o'clock this morning for the purpose of seizing the negro, | Roy Shiel accused of the murder last Friday of Flagman James Larmes | of the Southern Rajlway. | Finding that the police were pre- | pared the mob did not attempt to { force an entrance to the jail. After a| half hour it dispersed, the leaders say- ing they would return. The jail is be- ing carefully guarded. e MANY CALIFORNIANS i | ATTENDI THE FAIR 9 Persons From Every Section of the State See Sights at the | Exposition. ST. LOUIS, July 20.—The follow- ing Californians are registered at the California building: | San Francisco—J. F. Donovan, H | notds, H. Bradford, Miss H Y- t H. Rey- | . J. Wood, Miss M Robert: ; H Beitman, V. | A. C. Miller, G. W. Wilcox, Mrs. O. D. | R. Chamley, Mrs. J. Wood, M. Schofield, | SUIT FOLLOWS DIAMOND DEAL Millionaire Mine Owner of Arizona Says That He Was Swindled Out of $15,000 FRIEND DECEIVES HIM - Learns That Stones Given! Him as Security for a| Loan Are of Little Value e Special Dispatch to The Call. TUCSON, Ariz, July 20.—Albert Steinfeld, a well-known merchant of Arizona and a millionaire mine owner, has been swindled out of pearly $15,000, it is sald, by Ezra Bartlett, keeper of a gambling hall at Tucson, and J, F. Harcourt, an alleged confederate and New York diamond sharp. Harcourt has flown and Steinfeld brought suit at Tucson to-day to recover the $15,000 from Bartlett. 2 | Harcourt was brought to Tucson by Bartlett, who enjoyed Steinfeld’s confl- dence and often borrowed money from him, with the intention of defrauding his benefactor, so it is charged in the complaint. Bartlett introduced Har- court to Steinfeld, representing that the | latter wished to purchase a half in- terest in tue gambling hall, that he had no money with which to make the deal, but possessed $23,000 worth of diamonds and jewelry which he wished to put up as security with Steinfeld for a loan | of $15,000. He had pawn: . the jewelry at Los Angeles for $6000, he said, and it had been forwarded to hir. through the express office to be delivered on the payment of that amount. Steinfeld loaned the money to Harcourt on Bart- lett’s verbal guarantee that the diamonds were worth Bartlett explained that Harcourt had ®#0 much valuable jewelry in his pos- session because he pla:ed the races and invested his earnings that way to pre- vent losing all at one time. A few nights after the loan had been made, Harcourt lost $5000 at roulette in Bart- lett’s establishment and together they left for New York. Steinfeld soon learned that Harcourt had no inten- tion of going into business with Bart- lett. The jewelry was packed up and sent to a New York expert, who valued it at $550. When Bartlett returned he complained that he, too, had been taken in by Harcourt, but Steinfeld knew they had been life-long friends and, refusing to believe Bartlett, filed the suit for damages against him. It s | said that Harcourt stopped at Bisbee, while in the Territory, and sold W. H. Brophy, president of the Bank of Bis- bee, the same kind of a gold brick, bunkoing him out of $2000. ————————— | NO RACE SUICIDE IN Rhode Island Parents Congratulated by President Roosevelt on the Birth of Twelfth Child. PAWTUCKET, R. I, July 20.—Mr. and Mrs. 1. J. White of this city are in receipt of a letter from President Roosevelt on the birth of their twelfth child, a son. All the children are alive and in good health. President Roose- velt said, through Secretary Loeb: “Your letter of the 7th inst. has been received and I beg to thank vou in the President’'s behalf for writing. THIS FAMILY May I ask you to be good enough to; extend to Mr. and Mrs. White the President’s congratulations and best | wishes for themselves and the mem- bers of your family?” —_——— BOSTON MILLIONAIRE SUDDENLY DISAPPEARS the amount. | 0. | ? A Beautiful Young Soclety i - ] Woman's Letter. H 3 ' » St. Paul, Minn. 3 521 Wabasha St. 3 e Dr. Hartman, Columbus, i / 3 e Dear Sir: } £ " : 3 “Ztook Peruna last summer g : when I was all run down, and | had a headache and backache, 1 and no ambition for anything. { % 1 now feel as well as I ever did : .. 12 172 all my life, and all thanks ! 3 i ’ i (75 due to your excellent Pe- | X 8 iruna.”—PBess F. Healy. | o The symptoms of summer ca- | tarrh are quite uniike in differ- { 5 S8 ent cases, but the most common & i | ones are general lassitude, play- | ‘ i ed-out, tired-out, used-up, rum- | 3 A down feelings, combined with more or less heavy, ltupl%‘hlt- | 1 less, mental condition. lish | for 'food and the ability to di- | S gest f00d seems to be lost. ) | 3 Skin eruptions, sallow com- | g lexion, iliousness, coated | P ; ngue, fitful, irregular sleep, g i : 5 : help to complete the pieture which is so common at this | season. Peruna so exactly meets all these conditiofis that the de- mand is so great for this rem- edy at this season of the year that it is nearly impossible to supply it. Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics One reason why Peruna has found permanent use in so many homes is that it contains no nar- cotics of any kind. Peruna is perfectly harmless. It can be used any length of time without acquiring the drug habit. Thousands of women suffer from pelwic catarrh and catarrhal ner vousness and don’t know it. If you feel fagged out, begin at once taking Dr. Hariman’s Peruna. It will relieve your catarrhal affliction and all your organs will be restored to health. Buy a bottle to-day, as it will immediately alleviate your case. WOMAN'S BODY FOUND; MURDER IS SUSPECTED HUNDREDS WANT TO MARRY MISS McCANN New York Woman Dies Under | Heroine of the Slocum Disaster Is Strange Conditions and Police Unable to Handle Volume Are Investigating. of Mall. { NEW YORK, July 20.—The body of | NEW YORK, July 20.—Mary Me- | Mrs. Gertrude Kramer was found in |Cann, a 17-year-old girl, whe although |her home on East Eightieth street |only three days out of the hospital at | to-day under conditions which lead | North Brother Island, where she had the police to believe the woman was | beeny ill with scarlet fever, saved six murdered. The door of her apart-| persons from drowning after they had | ments was locked with a padlock on|jumped from the burning steamer the outside. Mrs. Kramer's body was | General Slocum, has appealed to the lround lying on a sofa. Marks on her | postal authorities on North Brother | throat indicate that she had been mur- | Island to help her with the enormous | derea. ; {mail which arrives for her each morn~ The police are looking for Willlam |ing. Since the testimony at the Cor- Murphy, a streetcar conductor, who |oner’s inquest established the fact that had lived in the Kramer apartments | Miss McCann was a heroime she has |since Mrs. Kramer and her husband |received more than 1000 letters c | separated several months ago. | taining offers of marriage. There are | TS S e Sl | offers from young men and old men, | THOUSANDS CLAMOR from bachelors and widowers. FOR GOVERNMENT LANDS % Pt SEEKING INFORMATION Excitement in South Dakota Uupre- ABOUT LOOMIS’ DEATH cedented and 46,000 Applicants g Have Registered. YANKTON, S. D, July 20.—Over | 5000 registered for Rosebud land here | to-day, bringing the total at this point {to 46,670. The crush of visitors in the town is unprecedented. | Victim’s Brother Arranges to Have the Movements of American Widow Watched. BERLIN, July 20. — Secretary | Loomis cabled instructions to this city | to-day arranging for the shadowing | of Mrs. Orme, an American widow, a iMuyhrui s pardon. | T. McGrath, J. Munroe, Mrs. M, Waters, F.| The transfer of t i J. Johneon and wife. ' Dr. N. T. Coulson,; T er he prisoner from a | Jo Joseph, C. Blanchard, H. C. Walker. | Police Are Searching for Henry | penal prison to a quie ‘ ccnsti ed country home | Angeles—F. H. C - > i an almost unprecedented B s, Tudor, Who Escaped From His | act on the part of the British authori- . £ htrmng Smmesting, {ties. It was due to the mediation of | Fin ¥ iresnd, B & Hook B Kany & J.| NEW YORK, July 20.—Henry Tu- the Duchess of Bedford, who as a| e i\“’&‘;h’,‘,"db‘:"“. M. JyMullen. | gor,'a Boston millionaire, is reported visitor to Aylesbury Prison for many | ana wife. F. Jewsl, 1. $. Glass, M. J. Le Sage. | to have disappeared from his hotel years had taken a keen personal in- | _ Miscellaneous - Mrs W. R. Treland. Los: here and no trace of his whereabouts terest in Mrs. Maybrick and finally | $o % . Goarva, L. Hermany Eaomed®: | has been found. Charles Blakely, succeeded in obtaining the mitigation | A. Jenson and wife, D. L. Beard | of her punishment to the extent of her being allowed to spend the last six | B: { months of her confinement outside the | R- | prison walls. | Young, Berk Ana —_——— . Napa; | his guardian, reported the disappear- ‘3 2',‘,’2;:} ance to the police. an Jose; E.| Tudor is 53 years old. Three years Simpron. P. | 420 his relatives, had Attorney Blake- . Wail, C. | ly appointed as his guardian. ‘When "liss | Tudor was asked by the Judge | 8. Knapp, Anaheim; B. Crockett, E |4 ‘Warner, Hollywood; Mrs. erafield; Mrs. J. M. Dennis, panler, Oakland; Mrs. C ). e M Hall, eley; W. 3w, nch, OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE | e o s %. Tws| fore whom the guardianship pro- OF THE PACIFIC | | Fresno; C. Johngon, + K. Willls, | vere a) what was the sl | W. F. Reager, Sacramento: J. L. Pendleton sectings. wain, Deard 2 w | T ! and wife, Saratoga; N. H. Leggett, Tulai matter with him he answered, “Finan- | Several Orders Affecting the Postal | A, L. McCray, Fresno; E. H. Rings, Riverside: | cia] effervescence.” Service of G | P “w. Kauftman, Pomona; M. Barry and | 0, I N Service of California | Aaughter, San_Jose: F. P. Plety. Hollywo Are Made. 3.'G. Taylor, San Dieso; W. Riverside; | CALIFORNIAN 1S HURT L. L. Caffrey, Santa Ba E. Willis, IN RAILROAD WRECK | Cars Are Derailed Near Omaha and an Oakland Man Is Seri- ously Injured. OMAHA, Nebr., July 20.—Joseph Biganego of Oakland, Cal, was in- WASHINGTON, July 20.—Lilla E. | Sacrameto, | Bell was to-day appointed postma | ! postmaster | FATR CONCESSIONS lat Bellvale, San Mateo County, vice | V1 1 James W. Bell, deceased. GO TO BANKRUPTCY The following postmasters oned: have | California—Nel- | {lie B. Bishop, Bostonia; Robert Hurl- | I'but, Merriliville. £ | Additional rural service route 2 will | | be established at Pomona, Los Ange- Jerusalem Exhibit Company and Ori- | ental Construction Concern | Seized by Creditors, ST. LOUIS, July 20.—An applica- | waukee and St. Paul Railroad just east | tion was made to-day for a receiver | of here last night. Two rear cars of les County, on August 15. The area | for the Jerusalem Exhibit Company |the California express, on which he covered is seven square miles; popula- and the Oriental Construction Com- | was traveling, were derailed on a S e | pany, World's Fair concerns, and the Charles H. Hanke has been appoint- | appointment of a new trustee in place ed rural carrier at Sander, Cal., and | of the Germania Trust Company of | tion | turned. | injured beyond slight bruises. He was be- | | jured in a wreck on the Chicago, Mil- | | sharp curve and one of them over- Biganego was the only pérson | BONESTEEL, S. D, July 20.—As | the time for closing the Fegistering | for the Rosebud land opening draws { near the excitement increases. Two |and three sections of each passenger | | train are arriving, bringing thousands | of belated homeseekers. A few street | brawls have occurred, but no serious | trouble has resulted. —_———— STOCK REDUCTION.—Certificates of re- | duction of capital stock were filed With the County Clerk yesterday by the San Franciseo | Joekey Club and the Pacific:Coast Jockey Club, | the former cutting the vale of its capitaliza- tlon to $1€01 25 and the latter to $1240 50. ‘The action was taken by the two racing cem- | | cerns on May 13 and March 1 respectively. | New York on fellow passenger of his dead brother on board the Kaiser Wilhelm II. Mrs. Orme was in Berlin early in July and {left July 12 for Dresden and Vienna, where efforts will be made to trace her. PLYMOUTH, July 20.—The body of | Frederick Kent Loomis is now here. It is expected that it will be sent to the American Line | steamship St. Paul on July 23. S e REDDING, July 20.—Four freight cars and two ofl tanks were piied up in wreckage at Edgewood this morning, having left the ratls as a result of a broken flange. No one was injured in the wreck. ADVERTISEMENTS. Worth $1000 to Him! Mr. W. F. Quite of Cedarville Sings the Praises of Dr. McLaughlin’s Relt. Cedarville, Cal., March 10, 1904. Dr. McLaughlin—Dear Sir: 1 Dave been wearing your Belt a month to-day It is all right, for, in addition to im- proving my general health, it cured a sore hand that has cost me $1000 in doc- tors’ bills and has troubled me com- tinuously for ten years. The pains in my back and leg have gone and alto- gether I think the Beit Is a great thing —— President Is Notified. OYSTER BAY, July 20.—President Roosevelt this afternoon received an official dispatch sent him to notify "him of the release of Mrs. Maybrick. | il brought the train to a standstill. Pri kett was considerably bruised on the | body by being dragged over the ties. The conductor who was responsible | for the acc was discharged. ADVERTISEMENTS. GUILT LONG DOUBTED. N THE | Mrs. Maybrick’s Husband a Confirmed i 1 User of Arsenic. Mrs. Maybrick, who was Miss Flor- During the summer months | ence Elizabeth Chandler, a member of some member of the family is sure | & well-known and prosperous Southern | family, was married July 27, 1881, in to suffer from Cramps, Bowel| i jaime: Church, Piocadilly, to James Complaint or Diarrhoea. Always | Maybrick, of Liverpool. She was then keep a bottle of Hostetter’s Stom- | 18 years old. Her husband was over | | 40 years of age. In the spring of 1839 | Mr. Maybrick became ill and in a few | days he died. His brother investigated | his death and charged Mrs. Maybrick with the murder of her husband. A | long trial followed, and a number of Beiching, Poor Appetite, Nausea, | . > > doct swore that the deceased di: Indigestion, Dyspepsia and ul-;.::e:ll:J poisoning. e;‘ehe dete:n:: laria. Try one bottle. The gen- | proved that for twenty years May- uine has our Private Stam, 1 brick had been a confirmed_user of the neck. P oper arsenic and that he daily took doses HOSTETTER'S | ooy e see” Savbet e STOMACH BITTERS ach Bitters in the house for such cases. A dose at the first symp- tom will afford ‘prompt relief. Then it also cures Headach eventual sentenced to death by the Judge, r Fitz-James Stephen, who spoke for two days in charging the jury. He sald it was impossible for W. F. Hanke substitute, The follow army orders have been issued cond Lieutenant Ro- {land B. Elli |report to Colonel Owen J. Sweet at the Presidio at such time as He be re- for promotion. issued: tached from the Wheeling and will Ition for promotion, thence home to await orders. —_——— NEW YORKER CHOSE: ATTORNEY FOR CANAL ZONE J. Marbourg Keedy, Who Served in Porto Rico, Will Be Located in Panama. WASHINGTON, July 20.—J. Mar. bourg Keedy, a New York attorney, to-day was appointed prosecuting at- torney for the Panama canal gzone, Keedy served as prosecuting attorney in Porto Rico during the Davis aq- ministration as military Governor, and prepared the code of laws after- ward adopted by the Legislature and now in force. ——, e e Just plain, ordinary stubbornness often masquerades as strength of char- acter? Thirteenth Cavalry, will | |quired for competitive examination ! The following army order has been ! Lieutenant S. J. Graham, de- | proceed to Mare Island for examina- | St. Louis. It is alleged that the Jeru- |salem and Oriental companies owe $40,000 to St. Louis merchants and several thousand dollars to employes. ———————— Christian Endeavorers Elect Officers, SANTA CRUZ, July 20.—The State Christian Endeavor convention now | in session at Garfield Park has elected | the following officers to serve during the ensuing term: President, ILee | Trimble, Watsonville; first vice pres- ident, John Littler, San Jose; second vice president, Miss Laura Hocken- smith, Santa Rosa; secretary, Miss A. C. Harvey, Fresno; treasurer, Miss Victorine Hartley, Berkeley. e ' Merchant Is Shot in the Groin. SALINAS, July 20.—A telephone mepsage was received from Tassajara Springs late this afternoon announc- ! !ing that Joseph Gada, a merchant of | San . Jose, had been shot in the groin, and asking that a surgeon be sent | there. Gada Wwas reported to be in a critical condition. Miner Is Killed by a Cave-in. OROVILLE, July 20.—Lewis Sibley, employed in the Libbey and Manwell mine at Enterprise, was killed yester- day afternoon by a bank of earth cav- ing in upon him. He leaves a wife and three children. - taken to a hospital, where his wounds were dressed, and to-day he was able to proceed on his journey westward. —_— e ONLY TEETOTALERS MAY SHARE IN HIS ESTATE Eccentric Millionaire Devises Unique Plan to Prevent Intemperance Among His Heirs, FRANKLIN, Pa., who died last week, devised a way to prevent intemperance among his heirs. His will, just filed, excludes as bene- ficiaries any child who indulges in the | use of liquor, tobacco or narcotic drugs. The entire estate goes into the hands of the executor, who shall man- age it and divide annually the pro- ! ceeds among only such children as do | liquor or narcotic | not use tobacco, dfugs in any form or in any quantity. —_——————— Cadets Give an Enjoyable Dance. SANTA CRUZ, July 20.—The ball given by the officers of the League of the Cross Cadets at the Casino audito- rium to-night was an enjoyable affair and was well attended. The members of the regimental band were the guests | of the Capitola Electric Railway at Capitola to-day and gave an open air concert on the beach. July 20.—S. P.| McCalmont, an eccentric millionaire, | and shall be glad to recommend it Thanking you for what you have done for me, 1 remain yours respectfully, W& F. QUITE. And It Will Curc You. No man should be weak: no man should suffer the loss of that vital element which renders life worth living. No man should allow him- self to become less a man than na- ture intended him; no man should suffer for the sins’ of his youth, ‘when there is here at hand a certain cure for his weakness, a check to his waste power. Most of the pains, most of the weakness of stomach, heart, brain and nerves, from which you men suffer, are due_th an early loss of nature's reserve power through mistakes of youth. You need not suffer for this. You can be restored. The very element which you have lost you can get back, and you may be as happy as any man that lives. My Electric Belt, with special Electric Suspensory (free) will restore your power. It will check all unnatural drains and give back the old vigor of youth. hat ails you? Write and tell me, and no matter where you are, I think I can give you the address of some one in your town that I have cured. I've cured thousands, and every man of them is a walking adver- tisement for my Belt. Every man who ever used it recommends it because it is honest. It does gweat work and those whom I have cured are the more grateful be- cause the cure cost so little. Every man who uses my Belt gets the advice and the counsel of a phy- sician free. I can give you all that any medical man can give you, and a lot that he can't. | Try my Belt. Call or write me to-day for my beautifully {llustrated book, with cuts showing how my Belt is applied and lots of good reading ] for men_ who want to be “The Noblest Work of God.” A MAN. Inclose this 1 ad. and I will send this book, sealed, free. Call for free consultation. {® DR. M. C. McCLAUGHLIN, 906 MARXET 57, abeve muis, Office Hours—8 a. m. to 8:30 p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1. NEVER SOLD BY DRUG STORES OR AGENTS. 2000500000000000000000000000000000