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z THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1904. e e e DENT REPORT tiations With the Strikers Are Not at All Probable ~SATISFAC Assert That They Employer Are Filling All Contracts Have Plenty of Help —— “and « Aug hight by the packers the are in progress at negotiations bring about another conference be- een the packers and labor leaders is unded. The packers there is not the slightest of further conferences with to this gtatement the pro- at the plants is satisfac- ¢ packers; more men are all contracts and cur- led and there is a lants in the United are made at lower the strike began. ompanying the s »wn that the numb to-night at all points is With th mber at packers say, they shipped 831 of fresh meats from all points sale to enforce the order ery of ice to retail- en hauling meat from the since the d 1ttl elves e members y. Up to date the ice sup markets has been cut off. - PUT IMMIGRANTS AT WORK. Yackers Steal March on the Strikers in Novel Way. Aug. 4.—The pac a distinet novelty in a trainload of immi- direct from Ellis Isl- igrants were smuggled vards in groups of ten or the various departments and rk. This tyok place while ives ed w declaration made yester- scores of applicants for work turned away because only e STRIKE CAUSES SUICIDE. Rapids Meat Inspector Takes His Life While Insane. CEDAR RAPIDS, lIowa, Aug riv sane by the butchers’ strike, meat inspector for the se here, committed suicide Day’s hallucination was strike had extended to Cedar and that his life was endan- Cedar the e e—— YORMER SAN FRANCISC WEDS AN EASTERN GIRL | | | P | TORY PROGRESS | | 4—In a statement of the packers were re- | lled men are being offered employ- | MANY INJURED N RAIL WRECK AGAINST WOMAN R 2 ‘Fast Passenger Train on!Young Wife of an Indiana the St. Louis and San| Druggist Is Accused of | Francisco Road Is Ditched COACHES TURN FORESE oy ter Due to the Tender Accidentally Becoming Un- OVER | Disa coupled From Locomotive | | VINITA, I. T., Aug. 4—The Meteor, a fast passenger train of the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad (The Fris- co system), from Dallas for St- Louis, was derailed near here to-day. The en- gine, baggage car, mail car and two chair cars left the track. Several per- sons were injured, but no one was killed. The injured: Mrs., James M. Drake, Postmistress, Salina, Tex., arm broken, back wrenched, internal injuries, may recover; 7-year-old son of W. R. Myser, Fort Worth, Tex., cut and bruised, skull probably fractured; Ed Durham, Vinita, leg cut and three ribs broken; Mrs. J. W. Phillips, Knoxville, Tenn., back wrenched; 3-year-old son of Mrs. Phil- lips, seriously cut and bruised; A. G. | Leverite, Stephenville, Tex., head cut; Mrs. Leverite, Stephenville, Tex., inter- nal injuries; J. P. McCaskill, Abbott, Tex., shoulder dislocated and cut; P. R. Payne, McKinney, Tex., ribs broken and badly cut; Miss Annie Buford, Kerr- ville, Tex., teeth knocked out, face bad- ly cut; Mrs. Buford's baby, cut, not seriously; Meda Cundiff, Anna, Tex., teeth knocked out, face badly cut; Ella Cundiff, Anna, Tex., cut and bruised; Mrs. I. B. Dillon, Macon, Tex., fa cut, nose partially torm from face. Twenty others received slight cuts and | bruises. At the time of the accident the train, which was half an hour behind, was running at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour. For some unknown reason the tender became uncoupled from the en- | gine and turned half-way around, | crossing the track. The cars following, with the exception of the Pullman ceper, went into the ditch. The Pull- | man left the track, but remained up- right. The injured were cared for in the sleeper. | PR TWO TRAINS COLLIDE. Engineer Responsible for a Wrec Recetves Fatal Injuries. k LOUISVILLE, Ky., Aug. 4—South- bound passenger train No. 1, on the { Louisville and Nashville, which left | Cincinnati last night, collided early to- | day near Horse Cave, Ky., with north- bound passenger train No. 2 from | Nashville. Thirty-three passengers and four trainmen were injured, but none, | it is belleved, will dle. The condition of | Engineer Rehm of No. 1 is serious. | According to information received here Rehm either disregarded orders or was asleep, as his'train 'was going forty miles an hour when it struck the None of | northbound passenger train. the coaches left the track. — e LEAVES ADVICE TO HEIRS AS WELL AS HIS MONEY Alexander James Campbell and Eliza- | beth Rowe Fish Joined in Mat- rimony in Massachusetts. MANCHESTER, Mase, Aug. 4.— ss Elizabeth Rowe Fish, daughter of Professor Charles E. Fish, principal | dren to Whom He Devises Im- mense Estate. CHICAGO, Aug. 4.—The will of George H. Laflin, the Chicago pioneer, which has been flled for probate, not Will of Chicago Pioneer Warns Chil- | of Exeter Academy, and Alexander | & James Campbell of San Francisco, [OPL Provides for the distribution of now manager of the Norwich, Conn., | PFOP¢ o, e 3 3 % b £ T2 Electric Light and Gas Company, rried here this afternoon at Rev. Edward , rector rch, Exeter, assisted by Rev. E. J. Huginn of Beverly, performed the ceremony. Miss Sarah D. Fish, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Harry Campbell of San Francisco, brother of the groom, was best man. The bridal party immediately started on an extended tour of the West, the Pacific Coast and Mexico, and will also visit Canada and some of the Southern States. —_———— APPEAR WITHOUT UNIFORM AT DEPARTMENT Eecretary Taft Issues an Order That Greatly Pieases Army Officers at Washington. WASHINGTON, Aug. 4—In accord- - @nce with an order issued. to-day by Secretary Taft the army officers on duty here will appear at the War De- partment in civilian dress until fur- ther orders. This order to doff their uniforms caused some excitement among the one hundred and more of- ficers now stationed here. Various reasons for the order were advanced, but the general conclusion was that the move was to a large extent politi- cal. Army officers welcome the change. The administration has been con- siderably criticized by a large number ;v' army officers on duty in Washing- on. MAY ADVERTISEMENTS. @lye Fyh High-Grade Clothiers No Branch Stores. No Agents. THE BETTERMENT TO-DAY IN GOOD, SMART CLOTHES, TO BE APPRECIATED, REQUIRES EXAMINATION. OUR MODELS ARE READY. THEY CERTAINLY ARE TERRORS TO TAILORS. 132 Kearny Street Thurlow Block emeritus of Christ | contains the following advice to his | heirs: I would advise all my children to be prudent in their investments and not to purchase any- thing simply because it is cheap, but to remem ber that a long time security drawing a low rate of interest is often more desirable than an | investment which draws a high rate of interest. I would also advise them not to purchase any- thing which they cannot pay for in full at the time of the purchase, as more men are ruined by speculation than In any other way. I also advise them not to sign any note or bopd, and | 10 look well to all transfers of real estaté and | not to incumber any real estate except for the | purpose of improving the same, Laflin’s fortune was accumulated by his own exertions. e v POISONS THREE CHILDREN Only One Death Results From the Act of a Despondent Den- ver Woman. Smith, wife of Claude Smith, a Santa | Fe freight brakeman, gave poison to |her three small children and then drank some of the same mixture her- self with suicidal intent to-day. She was despondent over a separation from instituted divorce proceedings, and her inability to provide for her children. Lois, the 6-year-old daughter, died to-night from the effects of the poison and Mrs. Smith herself, it is feared, will not recover. The two other chil- dren were saved by the timely arrival of the police surgeon. IN HOUSE ON WHEELS FAMILY TRAVELS EAST Remarkable Journey Made From Coast to New York by Wash- ington People. MIDDLETON, N. Y., Aug. 4—An old, dilapidated house on wheels has reached this city from the State of Washington. The house is occupied by Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Lasley and five children, their son-in-law and his two children, two dogs and a cat. On March 22, 1894, the party!started from Fort Angeles, Wash., on the trip to benefit Lasley’s health. They proceed- ed as far as Maine, then back to Kan- sas City and afterward over various sections of the United States until they reached Oramge County. The total distance traveled has been 15,000 miles and many spans of horses have done service along the way. —_—————— EXPLOSION OF GABOIJN'A CAUSES COSTLY BLAZE Fire Destroys Eleven Buildings Val- ued at $40,000 in Town of Herrin. I""RRIN, I, Aug. 4—The explosion of a gasoline stove in Orr's restaurant to-day started a fire that cCestroyed that buiiding and ten adjoining frame structures. Help from outside towns was secured and the fire finally got un. dw.er;*d with an estimated loss of AND ATTEMPTS SUICIDE | DENVER, Colo., Aug. 4.—Mrs. May her husband, against whom she had | Poisoning Stepdaughter {VICTIM VERY POPULAR ST S Arrest Causes Sensation [ Because of the Prominence of the Families Concerned AR HARTFORD CITY, Ind., Aug. 4— iyoung wife of a leading druggist and | business man, on a charge of poisoning | her stepdaughter, one of the most pop- ular young women of the city, has caused -great excitement. The stomach of the dead girl will be given a chem- {ical analysis. Mrs. Krauss is still in | jail. She is 27 years old and the daugh- | ter of Dr. W. A. Anderman, president of the State Veterinary Association. The mother of Mrs. Krauss (nee An- derman) died in a Cincinnati hospital. | Mrs. Krauss was one of the beme- | ficlaries of her will. All property owned | by Krauss is in her name. At the time jof his marriage to Rae Anderman, | three months ago, he made a will be- | queathing practically all his property to his daughter, Crystal Krauss, the dead girl —_————————— SHOOTING OF PUGILIST 1 “Kid” Leonard Receives Bullet in the Back and Street Vender Is Ar- rested for Crime. YORK, Aug. 4. NEW — James | { (“Kid") Leonard, a pugilist, who is | employed as a waiter in a Bowery ho- tel, was shot in the back while walk. ing on the Bowery last night and may die. Diego Cacclo, aged 22, a vender, | was arrested after an exciting chase and is charged with the shooting. Mystery is added to the case by the finding of a bloody razor near where Caccio was caught and the fact that there was blood on the prisener’s hands. Leonard was not cut, and, as Caccio ran as soon as he fired the shot, the police think there may have been an- other tragedy. —_—————————— LINEMAN ESCAPES DEATH BUT IS BADLY INJURED Drops Upon JIron Hook, Which Pierces His Jaw, and then Falg to the Ground. WATERBURY, Conn., Aug. 4.— Lineman Trueman Judson of the Southern New England Telephone Company feil while at work on a pole forty feet high and was caught twen- ty-five feet from the ground by an iron hook through his jaw. After hanging thus for a short time the flesh tore and he fell to the ground. Although he has concussion of the brain, a broken jaw, a lacerated scalp and | fractured ribs, the physicians say he ivtill recover. —_—— CINCINNATI, Ohio, Aug. 4.—The Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters to-day re- elected Cornelius P. Shea of Boston president and E. L. Turley of Chicago grand secretary and treasurer for another term. NOTE THE CONTRIBUTORS Here Are the Attractions for Readers of Next, SUNDAY’S CALL Dr. Xavier, First installment of MAX PEM}BERTON‘E well - known novel. On the Dutles of a Vice-Pres- ident. By FINLEY PETER DUNNE. iters | Have Known, By JEROME K. JEROME. illy’s Tenderfoot, By STEWART WHITE. The Chorus Girl as She Is, By the Famous COLONEL KATE. Fables for the Foolish, By NICHOLAS NEMO. The Secrets of Home Candy Making, Illustrated by Photos at Mas- key's Factory. Talks on Physic Law, By MARIE CORELLL What Women Want to Know, By MADGE MOORE. Uncle Luther Dowell’s Wooden Leg, : By RAY STANNARD BAKER. a EDWARD N By FRANK H. SWEET. A New Climax, HUBERT McBEAN JOHN- STON. Her Last Call, By KEITH GORDON. Review of Some New Books, By ROBERT W. RITCHIE, The Call's Critic. i A Full Page Profile Photograph, Posed by Gladys Ure. A One of BRYSON'S Swellest Creations Given with This Issue of The Sunday Call. Is the Most Handsomely Ilustrat- u?unflly e in the Unitea es. Sold Everywhere on the Pacific Coast, 5¢ a Copy. Sunday i umbu::"&" 5 Copien. | The arrest of Mrs. W. R. Krauss, the ! MYSTIFIES THE POLICE | NO PROTECTION American Citizens in Port au Prince Forced to Flee Be- fore Stone-Throwing Mob SOLDIERS ARE RIOTOUS Government Decides to Pro- tect Populace Only When i PORT AU PRINCE, Hayti, Aug. 4— The city of Port Au Prince is in a state of great disorder. Bands of soldiers, | throwing stones, prevent the Syrians reopening their stores. American cit- !izens have hoisted the Stars and Stripes over their residences and a number of them have sought refuge in the American legation, driving thither in carriages flying the American flag and pursued by the populace, throwing stones. After the disorders of the morning Minister Powell went to the palace and demanded of President Nord that the Government should- take immediate action to protect all foreigners and their - property, demanding especially that American interests be protected. The President sent for the Minister of ‘the Interior and the Military Gov- | ernor- and ordered them to take imme- diate steps to stop the disorders and for this purpose to send troops and police to the disturbed districts. The energetic and prompt action of Minister Powell has no doubt saved | the property and lives of foreigners and prevented greater disturbances. WASHINGTON, Aug. 4—It is a cu- rious fact that while Minister Leish- man at Constantinople is seeking to secure from the Turkish Government | certain rights for American citizens | there, Powell, our Minister to Hayti, | should be engaged in protecting Turk- | ish subjects in Port Au Prince and in the rest of the Haytian island. It is | done at the request of the Turkish | Government. Many of the Syrians and Armenians now in the West Indies are American citizens by naturalization, but the ma- Jority have not remounced their Turk- ish nationality. Powell is caring for all alike. ———— CATTLE SHED COLLAPSES, INJURING FORTY-FIVE Spectators at Fight Between a Negro and a Bull Victims of the Accident. WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Aug. 4.— Forty-five persons have been injured by the collapse of a huge cattle shed at the exhibition grounds while watch- | ing a fight between a negro and a bull. The shed overlooks the bullring, where Nermeus, the black bullfighter, nightly | wrestles with the animals. | A crowd of 150 climbed on the shed {to watch the show without paying en- | trance fee. The roof broke through {and precipitated half the crowd to the | floor, a distance of about twenty-five feet. In its descent the roof turned over and fell on the people, causing | more serious injuries than would have Minister Powell Protests| BY CLOUDBURST Wall of Water Rushes Down Mountain Guleh and En- gulfs Party of Campers MANY NARROW ESCAPES i Woman and Young Girl Are Swept Into Torrent and| Carried to Their Deaths e S SRR BOULDER, Colo., Aug. 4.—Mrs. Lina Chambers of York, Neb., and Mary Renkes, the twelve-year-old daughter of Charles Renkes of this city, were drowned in Boulder Creek to-day. They were part of a party camping in Bum- mer Gulch, six miles from here. ‘Without any warning a wall of water, caused by a cloudburst, came rushing down the gulch, carrying the tent and the inmates into the creek. Some of the campers were thrown upon rocks or to the opposite shore of the creek. Mrs. Chambers and Mary Renkes were carried into the stream by the torrent of water and drowned. Their bodies, badly bruised, were found some distance down the stream to-night. The storm which caused the cloud- burst did considerable ¢-—age in the mining camps on Sugar Loaf Mountain and in the neighborhood of Ward. At the latter place the ground was covered with hail to a depth of six inches. —_—— FINDS THE DESCENDANTS OF THE CLIFF DWELLERS Archaeologist Discovers in Mexico a Mountain Race That Lives Underground. EL PASO, Tex., Aug. 4—Dr. Wush, a ‘well-known archaeologist, has returned | from a trip 700 milés into the interior of Northern Mexico, into the Sierra | Madre Mountains, and says he discov- | ered a race that prove to his satisfac- tion the perpetuation of the cliff-dwell- ers. The language of this people is dif- ferent from any other he ever heard, lsnd the hieroglyphics on stones corre- {spond to hieroglyphics found in the | ruins of cliff-dwellers’ homes, Dr. Wush also found mummies ex- actly like those unearthed in cliff set- tlements and living persons about the same size. Their huts are partially un- der ground on mountain sides, and everything indicates a connection with the cliff-dwellers. y —_—— UNSOPHISTICATED MEXICAN CUTS TELEGRAPH WIRES | Uses Material for Fences, Belleving It to Be of Service to No One. GALVESTON, Tex., Aug. 4—An unsophisticated Mexican was . the | cause of no little trouble by interfer- ling with the telegraphic communica- | tion in the southwestern portion of the State during the latter part of last! | week and his guileless explanations | savor of frontier days when the loco- motive was first introduced and tele- | graph wires were in their infancy. Last Friday the poles and tele- graph wires were cut for a consider- able distance in two places between otherwise resulted. About four- Laredo and San Antonio. Late yes- teen were taken to the hospital in | terday afternoon a Mexican who has ambulances, while several with minor | a small ranch at Devine was arrested injuries were able to walk away. |in connection with the matter. When James Speelman of Seattle, Wash., and | charged with the crime the Mexican ¢ readily admitted that he did the cut- |a boy mamed Sopher from Calgary| g of the wires and had removed the | were fatally hurt. Most of the in-|poles. In extenuation he pleaded that { Juries were fractures of the limbs. | g i FOG COMPEL EXPEDITION TO RETURN Zicgler Relief Party Puts in at Vards Because of Bad Weather. COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Aug. 4. | The Ziegler relief expedition arrived at | Vardo, Norway, on board the Frith- jof, July 3, on its return from the |north. Owing to ice and fog the | Frithjof did not succeed in reaching the America, having on board the Ziegler Arctic expedition. The Frith- ICE A | possible with coal for the America. The America sailed from Trondh- 1903. PSSR T (e CHAMBERLAIN EXPLAINS HIS FOOD TAXATION PLAN Reopens Fiscal Campaign at a Meet- ing Attended by Many Thou- sand People. | LONDON, Aug. 4.—Joseph Cham- | berlain reopened the fiscal campaign to-day, addressing a meeting of ten to twelve thousand persons from the surrounding agricultural counties in the riding school of Welbeck Abbey, the seat of the Duke of Portland, near ‘Worksop, Nottinghamshire, and ex- plaining in detail his food taxation plan, * —_——————— CLOSING OF CONVENTS LEAVES NUNS HOMELESS Thousands in France Apply at Various Bureaus for Positions as Domestics. PARIS, Aug. 4.—During the past few weeks, it is estimated, 12,000 nuns have ‘applied at bureaus in various parts of France for domestic work in any capacity. They explain that by the closing of the convents by order of the Government they are homeless and penniless. ———————— NO BREAK IN DROUGHT ON MONTANA RANGES EPERY Unless There Be a Rainfall Soon Stockmen Will Suffer Heavy Losses. BUTTE, Mont., Aug. 4—Advices re- ceived from throughout the State the past week depict a serious condition on the big ranges in Eastern and North- ern Montana, and unless heavy rain is soon forthcoming there will be consid- _‘I!untalu ranges in many localities re- semble a desert, former watering holes and springs being dry and parched. ‘Many of the ranges have had to be abandoned and the stock driven long _distances for water. State humane offi- ‘cers® have interfered and compelled ‘stockmen to drive herds into localities far removed, where some grass and water still remain, though even then the supply is scanty Rt | jof will sail north again as soon as| jen from Franz Josef Land June 23, [ ‘erable loss of stock. The Northern || for many months he had watched the wires and had never seen anything go over them and therefore concluded that they were of service to no one (and had probably been abandoned. As he needed wire and poles for fencing { he had cut down the latter and used | his hatchet on the former. The of- | ficers found considerable of the wire neatly strung afound the ranch. The | Mexican was jailed and will have his explanaiton to make to the court. CHARGE MURDER [STARRY BANNER |TW0 DROWNED [STOCKMEN HEAR BUREAU CHIEF Secretary of Department of Agriculture Talks to| the Cattlemen at Denver| il g S REPRESENTS PRESIDENT S, 5 RS Wilson Tells Livestoek Men | Roosevelt Wants Them to Receive Fair Treatment s DENVER, Aug. 4—Secretary James ‘Wilson of the Department -of Agricul- ture and Dr. D. E. Salmon, chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, arrived in | Denver to-day and met with the special land commission and the representa- tives of the Natlonal Livestock Asso- ciation for the discussion of the grazing | land and forest reserve question. In his address Secretary Wilson said he had come to Denver as the repre- sentative of the President to learn what was agitating the cattlemen, and de- clared it to be the purpose of both his department and the administration to bring about more cordial and pleasant relations between the official govern- ment and the stockgrowers of the coun- try. The afternoon session of the confer- ence was devoted to discussions on grazing on Government lands and the necessity for the enactment of laws regulating or governing the same. Ad- dresses were made by Senator F. E. ‘Warren of Wyoming, E. 8. Gosney and Professor Forbes of Arizona, Conrad Schaefer, president of the Cattle Grow- ers’ Association, and others. With a single exception all admitted the neces- sity of a law for Government control, by which the stockman can secure some sort of ownership rights to the range he uses. The following committee on resolu- tions was appointed: B. A. Packard, Arizona; T. M. Ammons, Colorado; H. A. Jastro, California; T. J. Hagenbarth, Idaho; Mortimer Levering, Indiana; C. E. Adams, Nebraska; A®* J. Harrell, Nevada; W. H. Jack, New Mexico; Murdo MacKenzie, Texas; John Mor- ton, Wyoming, and Jesse M. Smith, Utah. —_——— FEDERATION OF CATHOLIC SOCIETIES CHANGES LAWS Parishes and Institutions May Now Become Members of Organization. Minahan Is President. DETROIT, Mich.,, Aug. 4—T. B. Minahan of New York was elected president of the American Federation of Catholic Societies to-day. Several changes in the constitution were made. The most important of these is one permitting Catholic parishes and in- stitutions to become members of the federation, as well as Catholic socle- ties. A cablegram was sent to the Pope congratulating him upon his first anniversary as supreme pontiff. —_———————— SEVERELY INJURED BY LOOPING THE LOOP Defective Working of Apparatus Re- sults in an Accident at Tacoma. Aug. 4.—Last TACOMA, night Fravioli, the young woman who loops | the loop in a ball, was dangerously if not fatally injured. After making the loop the ball shot down the decline at terrific force and missed the net. The girl is paralyzed from the shoulders and suffers great pain. B —— Sage Works on Birthday. NEW YORK, Aug. 4—Russell Sage, the financier, was 88 years of age to- day and observed the anniversary by attending to business as usual. MAKES A PLES FOR ESKINOS Washington to Intereede on Behalf of the Natives —_— WILL VISIT PRESIDENT Effort Will Be Made to Se- eure Proper Appliances to Insure Their Livelihood @rlias Special Dispatch to The Cail TACOMA. Wash., Aug. 4—Rev. Mr. Ryberg, pastor of the First Congrega- tional Church at Nome, is here en route to Washington to urge upon President Roosevelt to do something toward sav- ing the Eskimo population of Alaska. He says: “Though they have saved lives of hundreds of gold seekers, this | kind and childlike race is rapldly pass- | ing away. Its members are meeting | a sad and undeserved fate. Shamefully neglected by our Government and its | boasted civilization, the last chapter of their history is being rapidly writ- ten in cruel charact of neglect, want, disease and crime. If the Eskimo, like | our Indians, had killed hundreds of white men, Uncle Sam would have at t expense on | cared for them comfortable reservations gre Ryberg declares that the reserva- tions are unsuit to Eskimos, but that four to si lonies be en Point Barrow and the mouth of the Yukon will solve the problem in two years. ‘With the help of h Nome miners Ryberg last winter purchased a road- P house at Quartz Creek, Nome, and helped the Eskimos build thirteen igloos from logs hauled eight and ten miles. The colony numbers a hundred and this winter will include two hundred. | A school established and Ryberg says the kimo will become self-sup- porting if the Government will furnish | each colony with a steam or gasoline schooner of seven: e tons with which | they can catch halibut, codfish, whales and walrus. ach schoonmer should clear $20,000 per year. enabling them to | repay the cost and supervision. The | reindeer furnished by the Government | benefit only fifty natives and Lapland- | ers imported to drive them. —_—————————— DIEGO COUNTY WILL START EL CAMINO REAL | SAN | Supervisors Purchase Equipment for the First Section of the New Highway. SAN DIEGO, Aug. 4—San Diego | County is to have the honor of mak- |ing the first section of EI Camino Real, the highway that is to traverse the State for hundreds of miles. The Board of Supervisors has entered into a contract with a San Francisco firm to purchase an Immense rock crusher, roller and spreader wagons, and as soon as the machinery arrives con- struction will begin on a strip of the roadway from Oceanside to this city. Efforts will be made to make this end of the line a model of macadamized roadway. | BANK FAILURE RESULTS | IN ARREST OF MAYOR Chief MAgistrate of Ovegon Town Is Involved in Transactions of In- solvent Institution. PORTLAND, Or., Aug. 4.—A spe- cial to the Oregonian from Baker City says that as a result of the failure of the Bank of Sumpter Mayor McCul- loch and A. P. Goss have been placed under arrest. It is alleged that several days before the failure, while knowing the bank to be insolvent, they allowed the bank to accept a deposit of $1000. McCulloch’'s connection with the bank is not stated. Goss is the cashier. All for 3 to 12 years. suits with the extra pants sold to any one customer. tively no suits at all will clothing dealers. / ing at 8 o’clock. ADVERTISEMENTS. Regular $3.50 Sailor Suit And Extra Pair $1 Pants $2.90 The sailor is a pure wool fast color suit which sells regularly at $3.50. silk and neatly trimmed on collar with eight rows of soutache braid; has a silk tie and elegantly embroidered shield; ages range from It is sewed with The extra pants are made of the same material as the suit. They sell regularly for $1.00. The suit and pants together represent a value of $4.50. They will be sold Friday and Saturday for $2.90. Owing to the extremely low ‘price, considering the splendid value of the goods, no more than two ill be WPosi— be sold to The sale commences this morn-