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THE SAN FRAN CISCO CALL, {FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1905. MANY NEW FEVER 'FACH SIDE SURE CASES REPORTED £ 175 SUCCESS Spread of the Disease in New Orleans ;... oads Say Strike Is Al-| ready Broken: Operators | and Surrounding District Continues: ‘ g | Deelare It Has Only Begun EE AR S AT LR Apprehension of a Collision Between the Authorities of Two States Allayed. e 'ARE HAN SR RS DLIN G FREIGHT Important Trains Run Near- | 1y on Time and Shipments | Will Be Accepted To-Day | | AR N NEW ORLE low fever o thix evening date 432. aths to ks of Total sub- ST. PAUL the telegrapk the Great N wilways ended with the railway asserting that the strike has al broken the officials of the phe deciaring that it has oniy begun. Eoth sides profess great s tion to- and each maintai 4 will be ended within a fort- 3.—The second day of strike on the lines of | sern and Northern Pacifie offi Aug. t iaws to revolu only in the other parts h, night. In struggie ed > of the difficulties presented by hers, the rail- to the s 1 the coast ar- . Paul to-d time with the the Coast limited ern Pacifi¢, which was not | The time freights are | handled. The abandon- the ~ negre way sjana and Mis- S that ble breaks in the ranks of there ilway officials *claim been n strike of of have the all sthe on - Great aving gone mqre to do so. operators one | Northern in th back to work and f having signified Many substi- slaced during the dav, and 1t parts of the country examined and put to work as| as they arrive < disprove the representations of that the freight traffic has aralyzed. There h - ‘at many points in the 1 freight. but th s Dak thirty their immigrant gateway immi- IXANDRA, when m D AT ALF Gremilion ance his class : \ taken extraordi- | of traflic is gradually being taken care Selegiater 3 24 5 out the infection, The railroad officials say that there “Sou t nome of the accumulation of freight at ter- 5 A ; be able to pass and that no shipments will be re- mpathetic strike of the cen in circulation, and s have been held with in view it is declared to-night a move is not impending. Pres- nt Perham of the Telegraphers’ Broth- od *said to-night! are-hound to win and we can fight | alone. 1 would not think of con- to a sympathetic strike.” telegraph companies are sending to where they.have independent of- ut communication with the smaller | s uncertain. esident Perham of the Telegraphers’ n said to-di § full effect of the strike will not be felt mpanies until four or five days have this plan that s k expedtic n W CONFERENCE 1S CALLED. w 1 gurati a more nany New ) have made more Or I am well satisfied with present condi- I am constantly recelving reports from tems to the effect that d and that freight the men going back to untrue, There has been r ranks. 5 : a charge being made against us general | no’ b There - ain to S o~ list VARDAMAN’S SIDE. that 1 would like to contradict, It was said aited 22 that by my orders the men that went out ol | Gavernor of Mississippi Had Ne Inten- turned their boards red’ : that is displayed o signals fo all approaching trains. and of Violatinz Lou NNATI ana’s Rights. The wi to embarras the It was done, but that this was done merely company and_del it was done tc i property. agants or. operators that were called ou sure to have train orders not yet defivered the | Times- ac M. Aug. d the f Va ses from Goy iamran’ of sissippi_concer ¢ clash between e of those orders could not be de- his ‘State dnd I twelve hours. Now, if the men g on, Miss The shad to leave their posts and fail to deliver SN, X -The much- | g ers serfous accidents might happen. I talked of conflict between the States | 5t tell what operators had train orders of Mississippi and Lo 13, So far | io deliver, so I instructed all operators to as T know, i without justification in | turn their boards’red on quitting. —This would e et : I dpstines T force the trainmen on every train to stop at fa he qu itine guards of Mis tion and make sure there were no orders sippi--have b ity of indis- | before_ proceeding. ort that,our men have been 'n it has not yet for the re ed to A cuttin t Sises : 2 : _ g the Wir re's no truth in it. All . heé officers in charge of the § cted to 4o nothing unlawful & =, and I cannot belicve that they TT Aug. 3.—Raiph E. Spur- a wrong. T have in- | rier, a telegrapher and formerly a mem- s Is to remain on Mis- | per of the Mill and Smelter Men's Union careful the in refused to join the striking | jperators on the Northern Pacific road and to-night several hundred smeltermen held a meeting and marched in a body to the depot, surrounded the structure and | of Butte, t of the T regv omuigated by t Mississippi ith: not to do any- he intimation of an bétween the States of | compelled Spurrier. to quit work under and: . * Lou whose | pain of “being escorted out of town,” an has Been so ¢ al and of | expression which is significant in Butte ridic- Other operators were looked for, but none were found. . | A dispatch from Clancy to-night, a di- vision point on the Great Northern, about fifty miles north of Butte, says that the miners there threw the operaor out of the only boarding-housé in the town be- | | cause he refuséd to stay with his com- rades on strike. The man had to be fed | by the division superintendent in the lat- | ter's car. i Marine Hospital Service Issues Cireular | At Basin, forty miles north of Butte, on Prevention of Yellow Fever. | on the Great Northern, miners and mill- | present misfortune | WASHIN IN, Au —The public | men Trequested a- ‘‘scabbing” operator to | vast extension of | health and Marine Hospital service has | cease work. The telegrapher armed him- | ged in the Board of | issued a cizcular on the prevention of | Seif Witha rifie and defied the miners un- { til about sixty gathered with a long rope me, 1 shall rantine guards 1 stream in the expected the G Te. not work he: s to be. t will put out will be i t and maintenance of deten- | in any disinfection of steamboats that may be required. { GOOD RESULT TO FOLLOW. the be the results that is ex-| city we @he Tyub Chas Beilus & Co Excinsiny One tec w will now | yellow fever. The directions given | 1ook to the suppression of the mosquito | With & noose in the end, when the man the only means of preventing its Weakened and several hours later left the a camp. mosquito, no vellow fever,” is | 4 —=p | the motto in big black letters at the top of the circular. The document continues as follows: “The infection of yellow fever is car- ried by mosquitoes and by no other means. “Persons take the disease by being bitten by mosquitoes that have prob- ably bitten a vellow fever patient. The of Louisiana that if any unauthorized | acts and abuses of discretion have been committed by the revenue cutter Wi- nona, now assisting the public health | and Marine Hospltal Service in the cam- paign against yellow fever, they will be | corrected as far as possible. This dec | laration of the Secretary followed the | ! for the crowd. ‘Bhe-astonished. onlookers | o clock this morning, i gasped for breath, and as he gulped his |away. | “The Mummy and the Humming Bird.” SPEDS 5100 ley Cowboy Miner, Makes Albuquerque Take Notice INHALES 04 " IND EAPIRES “It Is All for the Best,” Is ON HIS WAY HOMEEB}’{E.»\KS INTO HE.R()U) Scatters Money Lavi hl_ijusband Alarmed - by the’ and Declares That He| Poisonous Odor, but the Still - Has g Comes Too Late AT R 0,000 Left - Warnin, Special Dispatch to The Call, ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., Aug. 3.—Wal- ter Scott, the Death Valley miner and of coyote special fame, arrived Apparently surrounded with the hap- plest conditions of home life, Mrs. Gil- bertJ: .Sweet, living.with ‘her husband fin an apartmeni-house at 1423 Octavia 0 o’clock this afternoon on the Cal- | stréet, committed suicide last night by ifornia limited, @nd- for ..ty minutes | inhaling gas. “Scotty owned Albuquerque. Jumping | . Shortly after 9 o'clock Mr. Sweet, who | from the rear end. af an observation Pull- { had -gone to ‘another room but a short man, he ran up Rajlroad avenue to the | time -before, detected the smell of gas store of the Stern Clothing Zompany and |.and going to his wife’s bedroom found throwing down a $i00 bill called for a red’| the door focked. x necktie, having lost his tie in making the | an entrance the husband trip from Las Vegas here.. He did not|covered his wife Iying unconscious up: ait for the clerk to tie up the purchase, | the bed. In her mouth was inserted the Lut grabbing the tie that suited him he end of a rubber tube, which had been rushed out of ‘the door, leaving the |used for shower purposes in their bath- change on the counter. toom. The other end was attached to.the Across the street thé miner ran to the gas jet, the cock of which was wide Sturgis clubrooms.. Stepping up to the 'open. Doctors J. J. Pearce and & crap table he threw down a $1000 bill and | Defiau were immediately summoned and called for the-dice. -He made three passes | later Dr. Charles Leithead of 1398 O'Far- in succession, and taking ‘his. winnings rell street was called in. The three, epped up’to the.bar. /Throwing down aided by two nurses, worked over the ther $1000: bill he ordered champagne | unfortunate woman from 9:30 until 1:10 when she passed r it was noised around that “‘Scotty” { Her distracted husband was unable to in town, and by the time he started | give any reason for his wife's suicide | and insisted that their -relations had | He reached been of the happiest nature. Upon a | table in the room where the body of | Mrs. Sweet was lying there was found a | liqu we to cateh his train a mob of several hun- dred the people followed him. tation just in time and as the lim- pulled out swung aboard and stand- ing on the platform showered a pocketful | note address-d to her aunt, Mrs. Emer- | of silver dollars among the astonished | son of 751 Sutter street. It briefly dis- people in the crowd, who waved their | posed of the dead woman's jewelry to hats and cheered. . | her relative and concluded with the With Scotty is his wife and little vel- | words: low dog, “Gold Nugget.” The dog is rid-| “It is all for the best. I die happy.” ing 'in the Pullman with him, and Scotty Mrs. Sweet, who was Miss Minnie d before she was married, was % years of age, and to ner neigh- says he will take the canine to Los An-| Wi geles with him in the Pullman if he has on ) buy the car to do it. in the apartment-house she had “Had a great time in New York, Chi- appeared a happy and contented wife. cago and Cinc but did not Spend | Sweet is an agent for the Hilbert Mer- all my money,” said Scotty, “as I am | cantile Company. returning home with a quarter of a mil- lion (Inlfidrs. What's more, I'm going to ‘\]‘;(;R() BII:RDERER IS KILLED BY PURSUERS make another record-breaking trip to Chicago, and they'll have to do_it in forty houts if they want my money.” FAMED DANCER LOSING SICHT SR e Mrs. John E. Drew Will Grope in Darkness in the . < . - | Dims (losing Years of Her Life| Kinney wilea a negro at stamps on 0 | Wednesday, fled and while being pursued S Y by a posse shot and killed E. R. Fergu- son. At 8 o'clock this morning, three miles from Lewisville, the negro met Mr. Black Desperado Puts l'p§ Hot Fight Before Bullet Finishes Him. | | 1 | LEWISVILLE, Ark., . Aug. 3.—After killing two persons, seriously’ and prob- ‘flbl,\ fatally shooting two others and | slightly wounding two more, Ike hunney, a negro, was killed in a river bottom at Doella, six miles south of Lewisville, at noon to-day, after a hot fight with a | posse of citizens that had surrounded Special Dispatch to The Call. DENVER, Aug. s.—Her professional | 5 Mrs Stewart of Greensburg and im- career ended by failing eyesight, Mrs. | poqp,¢, 1y began firing. John E. Drew, the originator of< the! "jttor chooting and seriously wounding Serpentine dance and whose<fame: as'| both the negro told them that he thought a dancer is world wide, 1S becoming | they were members of a posse, and as- blind, 'She was obliged to abandon the | syred them he was very sorry that he |. stage year ago, coming to Denver| haq fired on them. Later this morning, from New York in search of health |apout twenty-five men with dogs started Gradually her sight is becoming dim- |,y Kinney's trail. A few members of mer and in a short time, it is feared, | the searching party finally located Kin- she will be blind. By marriage, Mrs. Drew is'a cousin w, the actor, and an aunt Her husband is a brother of Frank Nelson Drew, man- ‘ager of the Star Theater, Cleveland. Their father was Frank brew, brother of the elder John Drew. Frank Drew created and for fifteen years played the part of Mr. Stitch in “The White Slave.” He ‘died nine months ago in a hospital in Philadelphia. Mrs. Drew was born in England and | began her stage career when 7 years of | [ jeutenant Robert J. Binford, Fifteenth age. Ten years ago she introduced the | Iufantry, to report to Colonel Henry C. serpentine dance in Ame Her 1ast | Ward, Mifteenth Infantry, president of engagement was with John Drew in|examining board, at the Presidio of Mon- 3 | terey, California, for examination to de- . She is a talented planist and painter. termine fitness for promotion. Private | She hopes to see her hoy, 14 years 0ld, | Lovell C. Thickstun, Hospital Corps, Fort .come a great singer. He has a rare | Assiniboine, to be sent to Fort Walla to volce, _ | accompany the troops of the Fourth Fifteen years ago Queen Victoria and | Cavalry, stationed at that ppst, to the the then Prince of Wales gave her a| philippine islands; upon arrival at Manila silver girdle, studded with gems. Her 'ne will report to the commanding general, | ney in a bottom near Doella, a planta- tion postoffice. As soon as the posse had arrived and begun to close in on the ne- | gro he opened fire. C. F. Nash lost a finger. Alvin Barham was shot (hl’oughl | the neck and serfously. wounded. ‘then W. C. Nash sent a bullet into the negro and he tumbled over dead. Fifteen hun- dred dollars had been offered for the cap- ture of Kinney, dead or alive. ARMY ORDERS. WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—Army orders— father is a London furniture manufac- | Philippings division, for assignment to turer. . duty Private J. Thomas, P Gy | Eteverth Infantry, Fort D. 11, | Wyoming, is transterred to Thirteenth In- | fantry to be sent to Fort McDowell, re- porting to- the commanding officer for as- | signment to a company. Major John Milis will proceed to Seattle, | thenee to Manila to report to the com- | manding general in the Philippines for duty, will relieve Major Hary Taylor of | charge of all fortification construction in the Philippine Islands tagether with the money, proporty and records pertaining to these positins. Major Taylor will pro-, ceed to San Francisco and report by tele- graph- to the military secretary of the army for further orders. Second Lieutenant Sebring C. Megell, Eighth Cavalry, will report to the com- | manding officer second squadron Fourth TWO GIRLS FATALLY HURT IN RAIL WRECK Baltimore and Ohio Passen- ger Train Jumps Track Through Broken Rail. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Aug. 3.—The morn- | ing train from Rockwood to Johnstown over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was wrecked to-day between Border and Foustwell, eight miles from this city. Miss Mabel Beech, of Somerset, Pa., was Parting Message Left h)" Wife of Gilbert J. Sweet | i | \ | cupies positions in the vicinity of Ta- Cavalry. Presidio of San Francisco, for'! | SIDENT. 0 ASK FOR MODERATICN -— Continued From Page 1, Column 3. PRE Mr. de Witte to Oyster Bay. They will be guests of the President and Mrs. Roosevelt at luncheon. It is not ex- pected that any other visitors will be received by the President during the | e SATO SAYS PEACE WILL COME. m Is Conspicuous Around the Japanese Headquarters. NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—With the reti- cence that he has displayed every time he was interviewed, M. Sato, mouth- piece of the Japanese envoys, sat before newspaper inquisitors this afternoon. ¥ id little; yet spoke volumes. The optimism so conspicuous about the Jap- anese quarters exuded through Mr. Safo. d on figures given by Mr: Sato, the. war has cost $500,000.000. If the Japanese envoys insist upon being re- imbursed an additional 50 per cent above their actual losses it means that Russia asked .to pay an indemnlty of | 0.000,000. “Do you think result in peace?” Mr: Sato thought-for a mement and then replied deliberately: “Yes, I think that peace. will with the negotiation ¥ g POSITION OF RUSSIAN ARMIES. | : Optimis | | the negotiations will come | Present Disposition of Gemeral Line- | viteh’s Large Force. TOKI0, Aug. 3.—An unofficial report has been received to the effect that General Linevitch's first army is dis- posed near Chungmumen, that the see- ond army holds the Fenghwa-Pamian- chin line and that the third army oc- oma. Bodies of cavalry protect the ex- tremities of either wing. It is reported that the Russians are gradually strengthening their forces south of the Tumen River, in Northern Korea. The total number of men is estimated at 22,000. The force north of the Tumen along the lines of com- munication is said to be small o S ¢ 3R JAPANESE STEAMSHIP ATTACKED. Fired Upon by Torpedo-Boat Destroyers From Viadivostok. | TOKIO, Aug. 3.—It is officfally re- ported that two Russlan torpedo-boat destroyers appeared off Chungching, on the northern coast of Korea, at 4:43 o'clock this morning and attacked the Keisho, a small merchant steamship. The destroyers fired sixty shots, seven of which hit the port side of the engine- room and bridge, killing the captain and one boy and wounding two of the crew. The destroyers then ceased to fire and at 5 o'clock steamed toward Vladivostok. The Keisho was able to continue on her voyage and escaped. e e Russia Orders Turbine War Craft. ST. PETERSBURG, -.ug. 3.—The ad- miraity has given orders for twelve turbine torpedo-boat destroyers, rang- ing from 220 to 230 tons displacem: for coast service. WORKING CLASS WILL | FEEL HEAVIEST LOSS | Bank - Confiected iv Savings With Paris Department Store Closes Doors. PARIS, Aug. 3.—A notice was posted | to-day announcing the temporary sus- pension of payments by the savings bank connected with the Printemps, one of the largest department stores in Paris. The announcement caused great excitement. The suspension follows the | recent failures in the sugar trade, one | of the embarrassed sugar operators be- | ing the principal stockholder in the| Printemps. | The depositors consist mainly of the | working classes. Minister of Finance Merlou will seek to avert the losses af- fecting the poor by requesting leading | banks to assist the embarrassed institu- tion. SULTAN OF MOROCCO TAKES NEW ATTITUDE Now Opposes the Holding of | an International Con- ference. PARIS, Aug. 3.—Information from Fez reaching official quarters shows that the Sultan of Morocco, who first proposed an international conference, | now fears that the conference among | the powers will result in the dismem- | berment of his country. He has, there- | fore, called together a number of | chiefs, who have decided that outside | interference in Moroccan affairs was not necessary. The Sultan has since. shown oposition to the holding of a conference. ——————————— COUNTY MAY BE FORCED INTO HANDS OF RECEIVER | Santa Fe, New Mexico, I Having | Trouble With the Holders of Pain in the Head Is a danger signal, warr you that the brain nerves are exhausted—irritated, and undergoing an unnatural st Frequent and prolonged at- tacks of pain weaken the g erative power of the nerve cells of the brain, and lead to loss of memory, melancholy, spasms, epilepsy, and frequent- ly insanity. When the brain nerves are weakened they are unable to supply sufficient nerve force to the nerves that control the lungs, heart, stomach and other organs, and these organs are thus robbed of energy, and unable to meet the demands upon them,and they get sick. Stop the head pains with Dr. Miles’ Ant#Pain Pills, and the influence uwpon your general health will be greater than you can realize. “T want to tell you how thankful I m for Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. From a child I have been subject to sick headache, and never found any sting relief until I received a sample of Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills while in Geneva six years ago. By taking om it usually throws off my pain, so can go about my home duties.” MRS. ALMA GATES, R. F. D, No. 4, Geneva, Ohlo. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills are sold by your druggist, who will quarantee thak ng the first Packlga will benefit. falls he will return your money. \ 25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold in bulk. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind V| Santa Fe| Back East Excursions Round Trip Tickets to Chicago St. Louis Memphis New Orleans Kansas City Ontaha St.. Paul Minneapolis Duluth Fort Worth New York Baltimore Washington. D. C. 107 September Goed for 90 days. DENVER AND RETURN §$55.00 ON BALE August 10-11-12-30-31. Good for 40 days. These. tickets are all honoved on THE CALIFORNIA LIMITED ASK THE SANTA FE. 853 Markst Strest FREE MUSEUM CF ANATOMY Moved o Larger Quarters at 1023 MARKET ST. Near Sixth PayMussum Doctors Oniy If Cured. Hear Free Museum Lectures to Men in Central Hall Museum Building. 810 Kearny street, nightly. See new elec- tric museum, anatomy of man and wo- man. Learn secrets of life, mystery of eath. Know who should marry, who not, why. Museum, educational, free entertainments nightly. Teach why thousands cannot get cured of Varico- cele, Stricture, Loss of Vigor and Con- tracted Contagious Disorders of Men. Varicocele and Strictures cured without painful, dangerous surgery. No ancient methods, no dilating, irrigating or knife. To prove merits of new methoa, two weeks' treatment given, or mailed free. Call or address NITED MU- SEUM SPECIALISTS FOR MEN. The Dr. Liebig Staff 1023 Market St.. near 6th, San Franciseco. P L Los Angeles Times San Franecisco Office is loeated in ROOM 10, CHRONICLE BUILDING - ARTHUR L. FISH, Representative. If you would do effective advertising in the Southwest, drop a line to the above address or receipt of several dispatches from Gov- | fatally injured; Miss Emma Vickroy, of ernor Blanchard complalning of the | Windber, Pa., received internal injuries action of the cutter in interfering with | that may cause her death, and several fishing vessels belonging to the people | others were so badly hurt that they had of Louisiana and specifically referring to be taken to hospitals, the injurles con- to a case where, it is asserted, a boat | sisting of bruises and’ broken bones. 1472 | and our representative will be pleased to call on you with full information as to rates, etc. ¥ THE SUNDAY TIMES, with 36-page magazine, $2.50 a y mall mosquito to become infected must bite a yellow fever patient during the first three days of the attack. The first three days, therefore, are the most im- portant in preventing the spread of in- duty pending his promotion to first lieu- tenant. Sergeant first class, Henry Hartung, Hospital Corps, Fort Davis, Alaska, to | be sent to Fort Egbert, Alaska, report- 2 $1,000,000 of Its Bonds. NEW YORK, Aug. 3—Santa Fe County, New Mexico, whose Indebted- ness amounts to $1,000,000, may be Figh-Grade Clothiers No Branc¢h Stores and No Agents. fection. “It is diffienlt to decide during the first three days whether a patient has OUR FALL AND WIN TER'sennw fever, hence the necessity in | threatened communities of placing a | mosquito bar immediately around every CREATIONS WE NOW SHOW | [oiesieqpe immediaiely ssound svery BEAR THE CRESTVNY!MQQ"M at least. OF ORIGINALITY. IMPPROVEMENT 0! THE WEARER PRESERVES! THAT HERCULEAN EFFECT| | Magoon’s report for July on the yellow ISTHMUS. Governor Magoon’s Report for July Shows More Hopeful Health Conditions. WASHINGTON, Aug. WITHOUT THE AID OF! fever situation on the isthmus shows | : an improvement as compared with the A MATTRESS OF PADDING. | precedine month. were twenty-nine cases of fever. Since ‘,() e present outbreak of fever on the } isthmus, which occurred during the lat- | ter part of April, there have been twen- fi ty-six deaths, and three of this number | were employes. The average force dur- of the have ‘The master minds clothes makérs ‘roduced for us that some- ihing -which separates with lstinction the emart dresser the other fellow. | 10,600 employes. NEW YOREK, Aug. 3.—Ten persons with fever symptoms, two af them pas- sengers and the remainder members of | the crew, were réceived from ‘the steamship Advance at quarantine to- | day and taken to Hoffman Island. The ! steamer came from Colon, having on rd several employes connected with e ..rng".fi't.tcet Thurlow HBlock Seeretary of Treasury Wants Report of Revenue Cutter's Operations. WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—Secretary Shaw has notified Governor Blanchard £ ®e b 3.—Governor | During July there | | ing this quarter has been in excess of | was captured and towed away. Secretary Shaw also ha$ asked for a | detailed report of all the operations of | the Public Health and Marine Hospital | Service and the revenue cutter Winona | in the work along the gulf coast, with a view to ascertaining the exact condi- tion of affairs which has given rise to | the complaints of Governor Blanchard. —— Only Fonr Cases In Mexico. CITY OF MEXICO, Aug. 3.—The Su- | perior Board of Health reports that there are only four cases of yellow | fever in the entire republic. These cases are in the city of Vera Cruz, where they are thoroughly isolated. —————— You would like to and could own one | of the Homes advertised in Sunday’s | CALL. é City or Suburban—as you pléase—sold | on installments. Read the ads. | T v Kentucky Banker Kills Lumberman. PADUCAH, Ky., Aug. 3.—H. H. Lov- ing, a former banker, to-day shot and killed H. A. Rose, a prominent lumber- man. It is supposed that the shooting resulted from a quarrel over -business affairs. Loving is.under arres: e Approved as Agents. o WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.—The Chase | National Bank, New York, and'the First | National Bank, Francisco, ha cen approved as agents Vational Bank, Turtock, ————— A Surrey. Runabout afid Top Buggy oF Séan- hope, if bought of us, always lives up to the price. | We carry the best thats ) - hnld Harnase Comnany. 211 Larkin 0 street. | | | Owing to a broken rail the cars left the track, the engine and tender remain- ing on the rails. The baggage car rolled down the long, steep embankment, turn- | ing over and over, and landed in the creek standing, on the wheels. The smoker went only part way down the bank, turning over: but once, and the following %oach did not go far from the track, being held by a telegraph pole. A special train carrying physicians.and nurses brought the injured to the city.. PLEASANT,. HILL, Mo., Aug. 3.—Local passenger train No. 27, due here at 10:13 a. m., was wrecked near the coal chutes at this, place thils smorning, mortally in- juring Engineer Frauk C. Berry of Se- dalla,- and- painfully ' injuring Engineer Raymond ‘same place. BURNED BY THE EXPLOSION OF GAS IN ENGINE TENDER Lon Davis, Son of Chief of Police of | | | ¥ ~ ful Injuries. ¢ BAKERSFIELD, Aug. 3.—Lon Davis; the 17-year-oid son of Chief of Police Davis of this city, was painfully in- Jjured as a result of an explosion which occutred in the Santa Fe yards short- 1y before midnight last night. Davis was preparing " to fili “the tank of one of the engines with oil He Sremoved. :the. cover : from : the tank in the -tender, and, as ‘he did so, his lantern_ignited some confined. gas. -An explosion followed, which was heard all over tdwn. The young man’ “thrown to the ground, with hisi| clothing in_flampes, Yard hands came to his rescue. His face and head wers terribly hureds sog ing to the commanding officer for duty. Sergeant Harry Fisher, Hospital Corps, now at the depot for recruits and casuals, Fort McDowell, to be sent to Fort Leav- | enworth, reporting to the commanding officer for duty. First Lieutenant Robert H. Sillman, Fifteenth Infantry, is de- tailed a recorder to the examining board at the Rresidio of Monterey, California, vice First Lieutenant George E. Stewart, Fifteenth Infantry, relieved. forced into the hands of a receiver if | negotiations now pending fail to satis- | fy the holders of its bonds who are | taking steps to enforce the payment of principal and interest due, on which \the county Is alleged to have defaulted. Two banking houses in this city are the principal holders of the securities, which are known as railway aid bonds, having been issued to encourage the construction of railroads through the country. Consultacion free and 20! EXTRA GROGERY SPECIALS Butter, fresh Creamery, the usual good quall Olive Oil, imported Ifalian, full quart Coffee, M. & J. Regular 35c per Ib. Naphtha Soa Regular 5¢ per bar; glxdlnei. French imported, large %4-lb. tin: tar Cheese, Edam best quality, ca ported. Tipo Chianti, pint bottles. Regular 35c per Wine, extra quality. Regular 33c_per t extra quality. Regular 25c per bot.. Scotch Whisky, ten-year-old. Regular $1.25 El Bart'Gin, large Spectal CENTURY MARKET 1560-62 MARKET - ST PHONE SOUTH 105 ity, 135 b ns. Kegul Lobsters, best quality. Regular 25c per im) Regula; WINES AND LIQUORS Nature Juice, best after dinner drink. Regular 65c ver bottle . bottles. Regular $1.10 per bot .. FRESH MEAT DEPARTMENT Best Quality of Meats at the Lowest Possibie Prices. - | on Prime Roast and Spring Lamb for Friday snd Saturdaw. » aad serictly private Ay or by leter. & ‘ander-ak P S e et e e o ) visit DR. JORDAN’S cazar very case o DAN & CO.. 1051 Market St S, ¥ L et AY 35¢ B3¢ FOR FRIDAY AND SATURD squares . lar 65¢ per Regular 20c per can can .. r $1 per DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogue and Price Lists Malled om Application. cheese . - bot bot .. per bot . LUBRICATING OILS: LEONARD 418 Front st.. §. F.. Phone !al-.l?gfu =y PRINTL E. C. fUGHES.