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2 THE SAN FIRST GREAT CHRISTIAN|PAUL GILMORE COLLEGE IN ORIENT. Yale to Lstab[zsh a anc h 1 the Orient” the follow- pition of the and other noted the first great Chris llege in the Far East: Yale is soon to exert a powerful in- fluen he Far East. An undertak- ing stimable value and historic mpor is being carried on that fair t he greatest achieve- | ed by this universit equ he college now being es- in Chan province of | ever nu.mm China. The character and pur.x 2 not ¢t be a mis- siopary organization or a thec m)gldl sem It is to be a college re; sense—a branch of Yale, la\mR especial emphasis on science and medi- : e ot ot i aaaney - Viclim < of X Itah Crime as far as possible the college will be| -Carries Letter Addressed | self-supporting. i 3 | “It is not to be begun on a large; 10 a Resident of Folsoni | scale. A limited amount of land is now ° being procured, and the teaching staff RORE : will at first be small, but in establish-, OGDEN, Utah, Feb. 6.—Buried be- ing ducational institution with only five instructors Yale is laying the foupdations for the only Christian coi- lege in the whole Chinese empire. A definite system of education will be in- stituted that will have for its field of work rovince with a population more one-fourth as great as that of the ted States. The proportions to which this college will grow and the national prominence it will attain are tion. The lit- vbrook more pu tle ¥ matters of specu college founded at n 200 vears ago had mo brighter prospects e MITCHELL TO INVESTIGATE THE STRIKE IN ALABAMA INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. Mitchell, national president of the United Mine Weorkers of America, left to-day for Birmingham, Ala., where he will investigate the grievances of the bituminous miners of the twentieth district, who have been out for some time on a disputed wage scale. ‘There I { PRESIDENT oF 1 | | Hl TERS HM) X neath a pile of rocks in a secluded spot | fourteen miles | near Little Mountain, west of here, with the back of his head crushed and otherwise mutilated, the body of a man supposed to be Encch D, Jenkins has been found by a hunting | party. The pockets of the dead man's trousers were turned inside out, indi- cating that murder and robbery had been committed. In a coat pocket was found citizen- ship papers issued at Clear Colc., in the name of Enoch D. Jenkins. A Southern Pacific envelope addressed to Mr. E. Jenkins, Folsom, Cal., also | was found. 5. — John +- are 8000 miners in the district and the | difficulty is considered to be one of | signal importance, been out since July. “No, I am not going to settle the difficulty,” said President Mitcheil just | before he left as the men have “In fact, I know of nm dena. The man was apparently between 35 and 40 years of age and well dressed. < MANY GUESTS AT THE HOTEL DEL CORONADO 2 gh i HOTEL DEL CORONADO, Feb. 5. Among the guests at the hotel are | Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Andrews of Pasa- Mrs. Andrews was until a few developments. that are due to come days ago Miss Nell Flournoy, daugh- about soon I have been very busy for | ter of Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Flournoy of some time and this is really, my. ffst | Albuquerque, N. M. As Miss Flour- opportunity to make a personal study | noy the bride has spent some portion of ¢he Alabama troubles. I will prob-|of each year at Coronado ever since ably be gone for some time.” it wafiatay DYER WILL DIE.—Max Peaters, & dyer, living at 218 Shotwell street, was.found uns sonscious in his room. yestenday sfterhoon with ¢ cscaping from an open Jet: He was re- ed to the City and County Hospital, docto say he has a chance for. hs life Poaters is believed to have blown out ceidentally. - DVERTISEMENTS, You’ll Know When you get the grip, but you won't know how it happened—no one does. You won't care. You will be too mis- epabie. But you will be intensely inter- ested in how to get rid of it How to stop those eold chills from chasing up and down the :plna. the in- cessant pains in the limbs back, nausea, coughing fits, sneezin; dudnr'e from the eyes and mose, mf' museular pcl:.n-‘ and ,that brain-wracking head- ache. ; The best treatment known for this dreadful affiiction is Dr. Miles’ Nervine Dr. Mjles” Nervine cures by buils outmd up the nervous ly-v.un and. the germs which . poison. the blood.. taken when first symptoms appear is al- | the most a sure preventive. suffered several weeks and nothing I took seemed to mm?flt commenced against Judge E. S. Tor-|a box of ‘matches lflem almost dent.h until I tried Miles” Restorative ] first day I felt better. misery and ?La tully T St Jackson. Tenn. ? e first bottie. druggist will return your money, The | ghe was a little tot. The groom also of his choice. Mrs, C. H. McKinstry, engineer in charge of Government work on the southern coast has taken apartments at the hotel for an in- definite stay. Miss Maud Matthewson has gone on a visit of six weeks with friends at|The holdovers received generous ap-| ment to the town and a source of pride |to the railroad. Palo Alto. Among the recent arrivals at the hotel are: J. H. Wusson, Milwaukee; C, E.. W. Mur- phy, wife and son, J, B. Fiske, Licutenant G. Whittemore, Los 1 Maurice, John Staford. b 5. rs. G. W. Dr. -nd s 3 ‘arlck. Mahthester, N "Hi; C ; ‘arner,” Ne } J. “Eliot Bowles, Néw York: F. X"’infilfii San Francisco; 1. D. Kohe, Shicago; 8. "o Andrews. and_wife, . Anderson 2nd Russ Avery, Los Abgeles 4 1S BEAUTIFUL New Star at Cahfornia Is Ideal of the Chocolate Row, but Short on Acting IR S MAN TOO BURY TO LOVE Such Is the Theme Worked Out in “The Mummnly ard the Humming Bird” More beautiful than Herschel l&‘ynul and cuter than anything is Mr. Paul Gilmore, who. came as a star_to the California last night in “The Mummy ! and the Humming Bird.” Mr. Gilmore is new here. One would rather imag- ine him generally new if one had not heard otherwise. But one has heard | frequent reports of Mr. Gilmore’s fatal beauty. They were not exaggerated. It is all there. Moreover, as an ex- ponent of the art of playing the injured | | husband without crinkling one’s collar the actor is unapproached. His sang- froid is entirely magnificent, Mr. Gilmore had the happiness to be mecuded by John Drew as Lord Lum- | ley in “The Mummy and the Humming | | Bird” during the play’s run in. New | York, Sir Charles Wyndham began lt; in London. If I remember aright—and | | the latest evidence is to. the effect—the | piece met with a tempered approval | {in New York. Which shows what good | | acting will do. As played last evening ! at the California ‘“The Mummy and the | Hummmg Bird” was engagingly un-* | convincing. The story is all about a‘ scientist who is too busy with his| | chemiicals to make love to his wife, and | as one of the characters says, objects ! when one of his understudies does. { | The particular understudy is a sort of | D'Annunzio, who wooes the lady with | | autographed novels and broken Eng- lish, and has done it before, In fact, ' D'Orelli, such is his name, has wooed | and won a young Italian peasant wo- 1 man whose husband also objected. The | Italian girl dies and Giuseppe is on‘ D’Orelli’s trail with a bread knife. 1 The first act shows Lord Lumley ! | mixing things in his study. His wife and cousin and her sweetheart are go- ing out to dine and he is to go with ! them. But Lumiley is just on the hflnk| of discovering argomn or some such, and | goes on mixing. They plead with hlm; to come, but to no purpose, and you | are made to understand that the| neglected wife is in danger from the at- | | tentions of D'Orelli.. They go then, and shortly afterward the butler appears with a satchel dropped by Lady Lum- ley. A poor Italian has picked it up. Lumley then, in the fashion of scien- | tists when they happen to be Lords, in- vites the Italian, Giuseppe, to take pat- luck with him, and discovers D'Orelli's FRANCISC 'JAPAN LOSES A H | the battle of Hoikoutai. OF PORT ARTHUR SIEGE GENERAL MATSUMARA DIES AT FRONT | Oyama Will Attack as Soon as Weather! Conditions Permit an Advance. 1 LONDON, Feb. 6.—General Mat- sumara, according- to the Tokio cor-'as to whether the question of peace | respondent of the Daily Telegraph, has died at the front of congestion of the brain. He commanded the opera- tions at 203 Meter Hill and was dec- orated and promoted for heroism. According to the Daily Mail's Tokio correspondent, Lieutenant “General Tachimi, in command of the _Eighth Japanese division, bore the brunt of He was con- stantly. oppaesed. by superior forces, but | continued fighting to the last, with a total loss of 162 officers and 5500 men killed or wounded. ST. PETERSBURG. Feb. ... -Ac- cording to. General Kuropatkin’s last | reports, which._ indicate the wounding] of a third Russian general, Demobow- ski, the operations at Sandiapu and the fighting at Shakhe have been mo- mentarily suspended. The . Russians successfully repulsed the latest attack of the Japanese eastward with heuvy loss. 4 The_cold is still intense, there being 24 degrees of frost. There are indications that the Jap- anese are preparing to break thz ‘nac- tivity on their account as soon as the weather moderates. The War Office is closed, and no further facts regarding. the 1zports that General Kuropatkin is about to | give up his command. can be obta‘ned. General Kuropatkin, in a report to Emperor. Nicholas, says: “No fighting was reported-on Fab- ruary 4. At present activity is coa- fined to operations by our voluat~rs, who harass_the enemy. There is ar- i tillery hring on. both_sides, and a hnutv strengthening of positions by { both. the .Russians and Japanese.” General Kuropatkin on Friday re- ported the repulse of the Japanese ad- vance gudrd on the left flank toward Sunosyr and Chansan with slight losses, the Japanese leaving fifty dead on the field. e DURAND VISITS PRESIDENT. Embassador's Sunday Call Gives Rise to Peace Rumor. WASHINGTON, Feb. 5.—Sir Morti- mer Durand, the British Embassador, was at the White House to- might and was in conference with President Roosevelt for almost an hour. With him also was 1 | 1 { January 28 and retired northward. I about. When pressed for an answer between the warring powers had been discussed, he replied laconically: “No peace proposals; nothing.” The German Embassy to-night, upon receipt of a cablegram from the home government, authorized the statement. that there had not even been as much as an exchange of ideas | between the Berlin and London gov- ! war in the Far East. e e A T TR & ATTACK UPON CHITAITSE. Japanese Garrison Assailed by Rus- l sian Infantry, and Artillery. TOKIO, Feb. 5.—<There were a num- : ber of serious skirmishes along the | Shakhe and Hun rivers on Friday ' night and Saturday. The Russians | shelled portions of the Japanese lihes on Friday night, and small bodies of | Russians attacked Waitao and Titi | mountains and places in these vicini- | ties. Reports received from Japanese Manchurian headquarters say that all the attacks were repulsed. On Friday afternoon Russian bat- teries stationed at Liuchientun and ‘Wanpao Mountain, north of the Shakhe River, and at other places shelled the Japhnese positions. On Saturday morning 600 . cavalry com- | prising one foree, and two companies of infantry and one battery compris- ing another, simultaneously attacked Chitaitse, on the right bank of the Hun River. The Russians appeared | to have reserves. The Japanese gar-| rison at Chitaitse was defending the | place when the report of the attack was forwarded. Three hundred Russian cavalry with two guns occupied Songchin on Plak- sin Bay, northeastern Korea, on Jan- uary 24, but abandoned the town on Sl S OYAMA WILL ADVANCE. Terrific Artillery Fire the Prelude to a Forward Movement. MUKDEN, Saturday, Feb. 4.—Dur- ing the night of February 1 the Jap- anese artillery facing the Russian/ right opened a terrific fire on the Rus- sian positions southeast of Sandiapu, in preparation for an attack. The Russian artillery replied and the can- nonading lasted until after noon. i | ment, POLAND UNDER WEBER'S TRIAL MARTIAL LAW| BEGINS T0-DAY Strike Movement Spreads and Cossacks Are in Fre- quent Clashes With Mobs MINERS COAL Employers Order, the Men to Return to Work To- Day or Accept Discharge LODZ, Russia, Feb. 5.—The situation here has reached a critical stage and it will be decided to-morrow whether the conflict shall end or the strike be gernmems regarding the ending of the | continued, The employers met on Sat- | urday and decided to reopen all their | factories on Monday, when men report- ing for work will be re-engaged and the remainder discharged. A large | number of workmen are disposed to resume, but fear that the malcontents will employ coercion. The newly appointed Governor Gen- eral, Archimovitch, is giving the closest attention to the situation. In the course of an interview this aftermoon the Governor General said that to-mor- row would bring the critical test. the strikers once resumed, he said, the strike would be broken. whether he considered the strike a po- litical movement, the Governor General said: “Yes and no. It is a labor move- but the strikers’ specific .de- mands are suggested by political agi- tators, many of whom are foreigners.” ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. 6—The strike movement in Poland has spread to the Governments of Warsaw, Kallsz, Lublin and Suvalki. Martial law has been declared in Kalisz, Radom and Seiclec. The workmen to the number of 4000 in the car shops here have drawn up a manifesto repudiating the delegates who were put forward as representing them in the deputation wHich visited Emperor Nicholas at Tsarskoe Selo on Wednesday. They assert that these men were selected by the employers and were not representatives of the workmen. The employes of one or two other factories may follow suit, the workmen in gemeral are inclined to stand by the deputation. There were a few slight collisions be- GO oUT ‘ If | Being asked | but | tween Lessner’'s workmen and the po- | | lice guarding the factory yesterday. Poland, however, continues to be the storm center of the - disturbances. Though the strike has ceased in somie establishments,. it has assumed a more important phase by its extension to the great coal mines and sugar fac- tories, and three more Gouernments Judge Prewett and Jurymen Ready to Hear Grewsome Details of Awful Tragedy BIG CROWDS EXPECTED Hundreds of Persons From All Parts of Placer County Flock to Town of Auburn o Special Dispatch to The Call. AUBURN, .Feb. 5—The trial of Adolph. Weber for the murder of his mother will begin to-morrow at 9 a. m. Distriet Attorney Kelly Robinson will make the opening presentation of the case to the jury. This will occupy fully one hour. The first witness called will be L. F. Warner, County Surveyor. At the request of Judge Prewett, War- ner has prepared four maps of the Weber premises. Copies of these maps will be placed in the hands of the Jurymen. Plan No. 1 shows the ground floor of the Weber home; plan No. 2 shows the barn where the pistol and can contain- ing $5500 in gold was found; plan No. 3 shows the entire Weber premises, and plan No. 4 gives an outline of the Weber premises in conjunction with that portion of the lower part of Au: burn through which Adolph . Weber says he passed on the night of Novem- ber 10, the night on which his father, mother, sister and brother were mur: dered. The town to-night is in a state of suppressed excitement. On all sides the | only topic is the Weber tragedy. Nearly all the jurers are here and the mid- night train will bring thé others who are to serve. Attorney General Webb returned from Sacramento this afternoon and, with his wife and son, is at the Free- man Hotel. Grove L. Johnson, princi- pal attorney for the - defense, arrived here to-night. Hundreds of persons from the sur- rounding country arrived in Auburn to- day to witness the trial. Judge Prewett has announced that the court will be in dally session from 9 to 12 in the morn- ing and from 1:30 to 5 in the afternoon, and If it is required there will be even- ing sessions. . . When a famous person lectures, take your children to hear him. This works ‘wonders.. Spring-Rice, formerly attached to the | British Embassy at Washington, but; During the night of February 2 the row First Secretary of the British iJapanése attacked the village of Embassy at St. Petersburg. Spring- { Schantan and adjoining Russian posi- Rice is a personal friend of the |tions, but by daylight of February 3 gufit. It is all very naive, very trust-! preocident, whom he has known for! they had been defeated along the en- ful, very unconvincing, What of illu-| gome time. | tire front. The Russians even ad- sion Mr. Henderson—who made the The presence .of Embassador Dur-|vanced slightly. The Russian losses | play—has not contrived to_lose, MI.|ang at the White House on a Sunday | Were about 300 and those of the Jap- \Gllmnrp does his most to get rid of.| night—quite_an unusual _thing for | And so throughout the play. | him—in company with. Spring-Rice, Creek, | Mr. Gilmore ds mot a success as.a | scientist. Nor does he rabidly suggest | an English nobleman. .As he mixes his drugs at his study table one is in fact | | irresistibly- if impertinently reminded of a smart young. drug clerk. Nor is | his attitude as the injured husband | more plausible. Mr. Henderson makes | is different’ from other men.” He is | indeed. The lady has just flung off | after declaring she has a right to hap- | | piness, etc., and Mr. Gilmore’s Lum- ley takes the matter about as pas- ionately as he imight the untying of | his shoe lace. It is not ‘wholly Mr. Gilmore’s fault. The playwright makes | the absorbed, scientific dreamer of the | first act in the third a shrewd, re-| sourceful, practical man of the world, | and the like, and as I have sald, it has taken good acting to make the part denvineing. Mr. Gilmere may be a | very good man, but he is short on act- ing. | The rest fill in as pleases them. John | Martin is really clever as Giuseppe, and Signor D’Orelli is done quite effectively | by Theodore Terry. Bessie Brown | Howard would not matter only for her | wonderful Western burr, and the rest | do not matter. Still Mr. Gilmore is as lovely a thing as ever chocolate rnw set eyes on. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. [ .. i The Quigley brothers had the blase, first-nighters at the Orpheum laughing till the seams strained.last night. One of them had some brogue gags that would make even King Monologist Kel- | 1y's best seem like a funeral march! with the soft pedal on. “But politicians do something,” insists one Qulgley | “Yes,” replies the other, “but it is hard | Lumley own that he “supposes that he | g who is in the United States on a ‘va- cation and fresh from $t. Petersburg, gave rise to the surmise that the ces- sation of the war between Russia and Japan might be under consideration. The Embessador declared when leay- ing that nothing of interest was talked | nine wounded. | anese were heavy. The Japanese prisoners declare that gnother movement is impending. | —— 4 Russian Loss Is Slight. | TSINKHETCHEN, Saturday, Feb. | 4.—The Russian loss in the successful reconnaissance of Vantzo Pass was WILLOWS WILL HAVE A PARK Southern Pacific Agrees to Expend Large Sum Beauti- fying Glenn (‘ount\' Town S Special Dlspfltch to The Call. WILLOWS, Feb. S—The Southern Pacific is to lay out a spacious railroad park at 4 the company rorth of its depot. Last spring the building of a Sown park was agitated by the citizens and a commit- tee from the Board of Trade wa,lted on the Southern Pacific officials asking for a long lease on the above mentioned tract, assuring the corporation that . more than $2500 would be expended in a model park. The railroad informed this commmee that in view of the tide of immigration now flowing toward the Sacramento Valley they were desirous ot doing everything possible to improve Willows on the land owned by | to catch them at it.” “Did you do lny- the appearance of the town property thing to help the country when you ' through which the line runs and that were in Congress?” ““Oh, yes; 1 moved ' they would béar the entire expense of | to adjourn once.” Some of the gags would lose their| Quigley brogue ‘“they are to lau; Happy Jack Gardner, monologllv and | singing comedian, proved his right to Blithers, bachelor. Cole, and Johngon, colored musicians, gave a varied pmsmmme that had in it numbers to please any sort of audi- ence. “Good-by’ was nmrkn—bly effective. plause. o ls | building a park at Willows. | snap in black and white, but in the partment sent a surveying party to lay i out, the pleasure grounds. Cole’s rendering of Toistoi's would reconsider its plans and would Seveml days ago the construction de- The land mapped out was so much smaller than what was expected that the Board of the sobriquet from the start. Robert H.| Trade called a meeting and sent at once was a frequent visitor in times past, Hodge and a good company started a a committee to wait on the Southorn knnd it was here that he met the lady | gigglefest with the troubles of Bill Pacific, with the view ‘of having the Neweil and Niblo company eplarge its plans. Superinten- wife of the |made saxophones and xylophones. talk. dent McBride visited Willows and w.s so much impressed with the great in- terest manifested by the citizens:that he assured the.people that the railroad lay out a park that would. be an adorn- s R R A n the| MRS. CAROLINE RYER DEAD. fnidst of the gallant advent of “The Gay Lord Quex”, the hu on* sm-vlvedbyus»nWhpmvuins-n ngcles: | pe north side of O'Farrell street, in- | Francisco. cluding the theater. circuit, went out | and the play was finished by candle ld. Ryer, a xrnnddnuhtér of the rev- light. At the first lntlmluon of dukne- aid the audience showed am inclination: to g; Just at present the hotel is enter. |go out also, but.a few becalming 7, taining B. Weyland, . R. Devlin and |words from , Stage Director Butler 'of s ST. LOUIS, Feb. olutionary general, Dariel Den e camp to Geneul Wuhl day at her home here. She w” _age. She was the mother arshall B. Ryer of San Fran- . J. O'Brien, members of the com- |ceused them to stay. ‘the meantime ! heo. E. mittee appointed to Investigate and report on the application of some of members of the Los Angeles bar to bave impeachment proceedings rance.. The three are here to learn Peiok ,.,"““’"m, the | from San Diego and Coronado people what truth there is in the charges. —_—— At Christmas. send some uplifting the entire .compg.n /. 5 ber Firieon and. & 32.:“’% scouring for a Each of the. wmu was mp o p'!!,' th 0+ M&fl.wn&wt#w» ton, ., the aute-handi Vi i novel spectacle. The rest of the play by Her- | +__—.__._—_+ " 5 fi&“; 2l o e S o will benefit, if not,. book to some child in a home of lxnm-. out the intemhlorenjéyl u:ge 4 ance and poverty. was continued by the subdued Laxative Bromo Quinine; worl8: wide Cold and for the full Grip remedy, mfi Call name and look for signature E. W. Grove, 25c. —Mrs. Caroline | ate_has laid out an ext SPEECH STIRS * GERMAN WRATH x Words Credited to British' Official Cause a Storm in the Empire of the I\«ll%&‘l‘! —————— LONDON, Feb. 5.—The speech of Arthur Hamilton Lee, Civil Lord of the Admiralty, on February 2 has created such a storm in Germany that the Government organs here this nwrnlng are busily endeavoring by means of editorials to alter its effect. Lee himself, in-a communlcation to the Standard, makes a similar effort by de- claring that he was incorrectly re- ported and giving what he calls a cor- rect version, which in its essentials differs from the original report.” Ac- | cording to the Standara’s Berlin dis- patches, un}ess Futefizn Mlnister Lans- downe promptly repudiates responsi- | bility for Lee's utterances, the Gov- | ernment will make a formal complaint. | have been placed under martial law. | Police and Cossacks have had to break | up a number of demonstrations and | quell disorders, but as-yet there has | been no repetition of fighting on the scale of the first collisions. An imperial ukase has been issued | appointing M. Saburoff a member of} the Council of the Empire, president of | the special conference to debate the Sore Throat | committee of Ministers’ proposals for reform of the Senate and for the ftam- ing of-laws for the local administrative courts. The Emperor expressed a de- sire for the speedy conclusion of the| labor conference. Foreign Minister Lamsdorff in an of- | ficial note to the British Embassador | has formally disavowed the action of , Deputy Chief. of Pélice Roudneff of Moscow in exhibiting a placard show- mg the strikers were assisted with 'y from Japan and other sources for the purpose of crippling the Gov- ernment works. SOWOVICE. Feb. 5.—Strikers to the | mber of 15,000 to-day marched from Domnro\o to this place and attempted to reach the Warsaw statioif. but Cos- | sacks drove them back without using | their weapons. EVANGELISTS HOLD BIG MEETING IN LONDON Americans Meet With Great Success in Their Undertaki in British ' Metropolis. LONDON, Feb. 5.—The American evangelists to-night had one of the most successful meetings ever held in London. Lerd Kinnacaid expressed himself as delighted with the results. Thousands of people collected outside Albert Hall houts before the opening of the meeting. An enormous num- ber were turned away. At the close of the meeting 300 persons made pub- lic confessions. The audience includ- ed Dr. T. J. Barnard, the philan- thropist, and many well-known cler- gymen. LONDON, Feb. 6.—The Torrey-Alex- ander mission in London is reported | elaborately in the niorning newspapers A Harmless Antiseptic. Endorsed by the medical professbn Send ten cents to pay postage on free lrl-l bottle. pgold b‘:iead nge Druggists. Notgenuine unless label bears my signature : Q“‘f% Write for free booklet on Rational Treat- ment of Disease. New Models AUTOMOBILE GOGGLES From PARIS abn¥6o) 642 "MARKETST “JUST LIKE A PLEASANT NM!‘ NEW Russ HmISE FRA\'C!SLO CHAS. NEWMAN CO., Conventent to all car lines, pisces o amuse- ment and prominent bulldings, A Botel of un- exc:dlledmu;vlee. - ropt::y $1 per day up- wa erican, $2 per upward. ial Tates to families. "The famous Russ & e cares dinners, 5c. The table is Iupn.ll.d with prod- ucts direct from Mr. Newman's ranch. Mer cantile Lunch $7 per month. Lee is quoted as having said in a speech on February 2 that in the dis- | to-day and .is the subject of sympa- | thetic editorials. It was also referred @visitr DR, RDAN’S tribution “of Great Britain’s naval! to in the sermons in many prominent forces. Englapd has had not so much | | churches yesterday. Archdeacon Wil- to keep her eye on France and the berforce, at Westminster Abbey, Mediterranean, but to look with Preached on the parable of the wheat anxlety toward.the North Sea; that the ' and tares, and said that “beneath those | fleets had been so distributed 4s to! words was the implied injunction to enable them to deal with any,dnn‘er: keep, our fingers off our brethren's re- | in that direction, should it occur. ligious methods, whether Welsh revi- Under existing conditions, he said, the:vals, Albert Hall missions or high British Navy would get jts blow in|church missions. Bulls of excommuni- first, and he maintained that “by the cation issued by Protestant alllances recent naval reforms Great Britain's ' have gome out of date.” } strength as a naval fighting power has Bishop Steyney, at St. Paul's Cathe- been m'm:tlcauy doubled during me'd al, in_a similar sympathetic refer- last few weeks. ence, said there was need of a like soul —————— stirring «within the Church of England SENATE, WILL TAKE VOTE ON itself. 'ATEHOOD ’l‘o-:uomow — be voted on before adjournment on | Tuesday. The contest over some of | the amendments to the bill will be | sharp. The Sen-| R iroad rate legislation ll to_have ended pro- | the right of way in the House énmx mgma for itself for this week. Ac-|Monday, y and Wednesday. to this pl onday and ru!'m_akln;flleflll(lflntthelnhr— g.d-y will be given over almost en- mte Commerce Commission power to to the tehood Dbill. On| fix rates a apecial order Rallroad Rate Leglslation to Occupy the Attention of the WASHIN °E ills wm' ] m = | th eq&‘:; n:_s fil' ’flm» it, { ing the wee publica time | ing committee has aeclded that . though | pur ,,.‘%*;.zwr m.ww-v !ood _bill bqegme the un+ nce r-_,me two should unite to .memant reached, the statehood bill ' rule, those who have counted and all amendments offered to it will 'say this could be accomplished. L] Ell IF F ANATONY 3-—-‘-5- “m“ -‘ ‘Speciaiist an the Coast. Bt nmid Pnstfllllmfl.“flfl'l ek i yad B w.m“:?fm