Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 1 . THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1906.° REVOLUTIONISTS | FICHT SOLDIERS - Rally After Being Expelled From Kwirila and Give Battle to Troops of Czar SEVERAL TOWNS BURNED Fire of Revolt Is Blazing in Northern Caucasia and Grave Trouble Is Expected MUTINY AT VLADIVOSTOK. elegrams Are Censored and Extent of | the Trouble Is Not nd private tele- at General Selivan- f the army corps the reserve thoroughly moring for home, though them preced- Rallroad in the avallable | a renewal of the | | med by irsday are well ualties in a fight on 1 of saflors in ad- | e commandant’s house was e guns, is not stated | and there is no mention operty hangha! corre- g Post says it is vostok mutiny resulted RG, Jan 26.-Colonel the gendarmerie at | has been informed | ry organization n of Colonel Lis- ing the Seventy-eighth by members of the or- | a blunder. He had been Colonel Prosorovski, and on has notified the latter r will shortly be rectified. Bl 5 # WD Seize a Bomb Factory. Police MOSCOW, Jen. 26—The police to-day reized aboratory in which explosives were ; prepared and bombs loaded A great of powder was captured. FRENCH AND GERMAN DELEGATES CONFER Discuss in Detail Features of the Moroccan Question. ALGECIRAS, Jan. 26.—Count von Tat- tenbach and M. Regnault, respectively the German and French specialists on Moroc- co, to-day began the first of a series of detalled private discussions with the ob- ject of reaching an agreement outside the Mereccan conference. M. Revoll, head of the French mission, and Herr von Rado- | witz, head of the German mission, at their yesterday, while most pleasant | ard each other, avoided touching upon | thing except the general ground. Herr ywitz remarked on one point: you know we could not let you licing of Moroceo.” | ou that we will not agk you | ed M. Revoll. as near as the two diplomats main question, but they ar- M. Regnault and Count von discuss the disputed points | Their subject to-day was a Moroccan state bank, a question which | probably will be the next to come before | conference after the problem of the | xes is disposed of. The conference now has four sorts of | activity—the Regnault-Tattenbach dis- | cussions, upon which most'of the atten- | tion s fixed: the sub-committee dealing | with financial reforms; the committee of | the whole, from which the secretaries are | excluded, and, finally, the conference ftself. | The envoys are tiring of this quiet| coast town and already.want to get away, | put it looks as though a month more will e required to finish the work in hand. | ——t——— Californians in Paris. | PARIS, Jan. 26.—The following Califor- | ans have arrived in Paris: Mrs, Abra- | ham Lincoln Brown and Master Albert L. Brown of Los Angeles. ————— | | Dr. McKanna's treatment destroys all | tastedesire,craving for drink. 14Geary.* | was drunk and that he attempted to lay | to give her 3300 more. | mobtie trip to San Jose with a party of | amputate it. | coal, as he wauld not take the responsi- URY FINDS ELLIS DIED - FROM NATURAL CAUS “ | The Coroner's jury decided at ; the inquest held yesterday | afternoon over the body of William H. Ellis that the aged sea captain died from natural causes. This decision tends to clear J. T. Crawford and Mrs. | Young, charged with man- slaughter. H. Spaulding was also booked for the same crime. All are out on bail. ERRLE A e laces No Blame on Mrs. Young and Crawford. Woman Tells Lively| Story How $200 Was Spent. i SRS P of the Coroner’s jury Mrs. Young and Thomas J. Craw- pair who were arrested on Thursday and charged with manslaughter s a result of the death and dying state- | ment of Willlam H. Ellis, in no way con- uted to the causes from which the old captain dfed. Yesterday afternoon jury listened to all -the evidence 1p in the case and then on that Ellis did not esult of any blows inflicted by | but died entirely from natural sea the cayses Before the law, however, Mrs. Young and Crawford are still held on the charge | of manslaughter. They are out on bonds, y must appear before Judge Ca- baniss next Thursday for their hearing The verdict of the jury will be evidence in their favor, however, and taken with the fact that nothing of importance was developed against them yesterday, seems | to assure their final release on that day. Harry Spaulding, the young man who was with Mrs. Young and Crawford at the time of the fi on the corner of Bddy and Mason streets, was taken by the police yesterday and also booked for manslaughter as the resuit of the death of Ellis. He was promptly released on bail. There seems to be no evidence to show that he participated in the fight. The decision of the Coroner's jury was brought about in the main by the' testi- mony of Autopsy Surgeon Kucich, who swore that Ellis died from natural causes alone. He showed that the organs of El- lis’ body were in such bad condition that an enforced lying in bed, as followed after the fight on the street, would cause them to cease the performance of their work. | The prosecution tried to show the jury that the blows caused Ellis to take to bed and that they were a cause of death, but the jury could not see it in that light and brought in the ‘“natural cause” ver- dict. Mrs. Clara Fouts Young was the center of interest whem she took the witness stand to tell her story. It was the same in every particular as that which she had told to a representative of The Call the v before. She testified that she did not see Crawford hit Bilis, that the latter hands upon her. But her story of the loan of the $200, the money which Ellls was evidently try- ing to collect when the trouble with Crawford began, was intensely interest- ing. e said that Ellis admired her and knew her quite well. She swore that he gave her the 3200 to spend, and wanted She gave him the note for the $200 only after he had used insulting language to her, and she did this, she claims, so that she would not be longer under obligations to him. The $200, according to her testimony, was spent in one glorious time. An auto- triends quickly ate up the $20, and much more. There were two women and two men on this trip, the men being Crawford and Spaulding, and San Jose was visited in great style. Spaulding and Crawford retold their stories of the affair. Dr. McLean de- scribed the circumstances of the death of Ellis and Detectives Bell and Bafley told of the arrest. WINTERS FARMERS TO BUILD CREAMERY Will Run an Ice Plant in Connection With the Project. VALLEJO, Jan. 26.—One of the fruits of the great irrigation movement in the vicinity of Winters is the plan of sixty- five of the farmers In that section to es- tablish a co-operative creamery in that town. The capital stock of the company will be $25,000 and of this sum already $10,000 has been promised by the farmers and business men. | The bullding will be of cement blocks and on the lines of the model creamery of Henry Bird at Buisun, which has at- tracted so much attention from dairymen all over the State. An ice plant will be run in connection with the dairy and will supply ice for local consumption and also for the fruit men of that section. Already 500 cows have been promised by the pro- moters. D — MONTEREY CONSTABLE WHO SHOT HIMSELF LOSES LEG Doctors Amputate Limb Accidentally Perforated by Bullet From Ofi- cer’s Own Revolver. MONTEREY, Jan. 2.—Constable John Hinkle, who accidentally shot himself in the leg on December 19, lost the limb to- day, the doctors finding it necessary to The bullet entered above the knee. S ——— Government Coal Goes for Song. HONOLULU, Jan. 20.—Captain Hum- phrey, the local depot quartermaster, has sold for the sum of $2 2000 tons of Naga- saki coal, which was part of the army supply at this station. The reason for selling it was the fact that there are pockets in the plle where there has been fire or else very highly heated coal. Cap- tain Lynam of the transport Thomas re- fused last week to accept some of this bility of putting it, when heated, into the bunkers of a ‘steamer where spon- taneous combustion was iikely to ensue. The sale was made at public auction. —————— Lands Withdrawn. WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—The Secretary of the Interfor has withdrawn from all forms of disposal 89,600 acres of lands in Oregon as an addition to the Mount Rainier forest reserve near Olympia; also 700,000 actes for the proposed Multnomah forest reserve in the same State. These latter lands are thirty miles east of Port- land and include the Multnomah Falls. [ R — No Shaking—No Coaxing. - Buy a Conklin Self-filling Pen of us; it fills every want and fills itself. Or Ideal” that is always ready, or a that does the work and costs only $1. horn. Vail & Co., 741 Market streat. ES _— . MRS. CLARA FOUTS YOUNG TESTIFYING BEFORE THE JURY YESTERDAY AFTERNOON ABOUT THE AUTOMOBILE TRIP ON WHICH SHE SPENT THE $200 WHICH ELLIS GAVE HER. CORONER WALSH AND BUNKERS AILS FRANK_ FRENCH Gives Evidence Favorable to Senator Accused of Being Partner in Boodle Special Dispatch to The Call. SACRAMENTO, Jan. 26.—The unexpect- ed happened late this afternoon in the trial of ex-Senator Frank French for bribery, when ex-Senator Harry Bunkers, brought from the penitentiary to give tes- timony for the prosecution, made state- ments on cross-examination distinctly fa- vorable to the accused. As a matter of fact, the effect of Bunkers' testimony was to disconnect French from complicity in many of the criminal acts in which Bunk- ers admitted he had himself participated in company with ex-Senators Ell Wright and E. J. Emmons. After rehearsing the general story of the compact to blackmail the building and loan associations, Bunkers was taken in hand for cross-examination by Frank D. Ryan of counsel for defense. He was asked: “Did Bdward Short call on you in your cell in the Sacramento County Jail and ask you if you belleved French got any money, and did you reply, “No, I do not belleve French got a cent’? Is that true?” “Yes, that's true,” replied Bunkers, to the evident surprise of the entire court®{ room. Cross-examined further, Bunkers testi- fled that on the occasion referred to he told Short that he had spoken to French immediately after the expose and that French denled having had anything to do with Jordan in the boodle transaction. He denied that French had sald anything about all four Senators standing together and dividing the spolls, share and share alike. Bunkers said he knew French did not like Joseph Jordan and did not vote for him for secretary of the San Francis- co delegation. It was observed that before Bunkers entered the courtroom he met French in the corridor and shook hands with him. Although in the Emmons case Bunkers gave his damaging testimony with flash- ing eyes and admitted his desire to re- venge himself on ex-Senators Wright and BEmmons for not treating his wife and child right, it was noticed to-day that he told his story for the prosecution with much hesitation, although ready enough in his answers on cross-examination, when he had a chance to put in a word for French. The trial will be resumed to- morrow. —_———— ARMY AND NAVY ORDERS. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2.—, orders: Lieutenant Colonel Crittenden, Twenty- first Infantry, will report to the com- manding general of the Department of California for duty. J. Daniel A. Frederick is assign the Twenty-second Infantry. He mel_f r: port to the commanding general of the Department of California, Captain Van Deman, Twenty-first In- fantry, is detalled as a memtl{er of tlll:e general staff and will proceed to Manila for duty. A board to consist of Major Charles M. O’Connor, Captain Frank A. Grant and Veterinarian Henry W. Peter, Fourteenth Cavalry, is appointed to meet at Seattle to inspect animals belng purchased for the army. Navy orders: Assistant Surgeon E. L. Jones goes to the Naval Hospital at Mare Island. —_—— Forgets Where Wife Lives. PORTLAND, Jan. 2%6—M. J. Corbett, who was committed to the State Asylum for the Insane from Dallas yesterday, {s the victim of one of the most unusual cases of loss of mental faculties on record here. | He can remember nothing, not even what house he ig working for as a commercial traveler, nor where his wife and childrer live. He says, however, that he is mar- ried and has two children. Corbett rep- resents a women's dress suit house apd bad done a #ood business in the valley. FLODD CARMIES AWAY HOUSES Eel River “Waters Overflow Banks and Shift Site of Caml_) Grant School EUREKA, Jan. 2.—Eel River just ex- perienced one of the highest tides it has had for twenty years. The Camp Grant school house, with all its furnishings, was carried down the river by the flood. The river did considerable damage, washing over the Smith ranch at the mouth of Larribee Creek. Bryan ranch, about one mile below Larribee, suffered little dam- age. The river left quite an amount of drift on the place and took away six fruit trees. The cook house and barn at Camp Eight, belonging to the Pacific Lumber Company, were carried away. A large slide on Shiveley’'s Bluff has blocked the wagon road since the heavy storm and has made it very inconvenient for malil carriers. A large crew of men is now working on it and expects to have it out in a few days. Feed in the mountains is still very short. There is still snow on the moun- tains. The high water having gone down an estimate of the amount of damage done {s being made. State Highway Com- missioner Nat Ellery says the greater part of the jetty riprap work remains. The cook house, barn and several cab- ins at Camp Eight, Scotla, were washed away. They came down thé river in a string and landed on the bar in front of the Willsle place on -Sandy Prairie. In the barn were some hay and saddles and other articles, MAY LOCATE STATE FARM IN SOLANO Professor Wickson Makes In- spection of Sites in the County. VALLEJO. Jan. 2.—Professor H. J. Wickson of the College of Agriculture of the University of California, has just completed an investigation of the jsuit- able sites offered in'Solano County for the proposed State farm. He de- parted and no word of his opinion has been given out. At Suisun Professor Wickson was enter- tained by the Board of Trade, and, ac- companied by Editor E. Dinkelspfel, was shown a number of the best farms in Suisun Valley. Among the places visited were J. C. Wolfskill's and Lewis Plerce’s. At Vacaville, Professor Wickson was also well recelved and shown over the choicest gltes in the rich Vaca Valley. Here were visited the farms of W. D. Davls, J. and I. Blum, George Davis, Edward Fisher Hawkins. At Dixon the tracts Robbins and B. D. Dudley were t'he great irrigated alfalfa tracts visited. of these two ranches attracted much at- tention from Professor Wickson. GIRLS BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN SOLD Mere Children Become Brides of Orientals in Hawaii. HONOLULU, Jan. 20.—A 40-year-old Chinese and a 14-year-old Hawalian girl have been married here. Ah Young is the Oriental and little Anna Kahau- lelio is the bride, She looks to be about 11 years of age, but she says she is 14. v Not long ago the father and mother of a Portuguese girl called at a license office and asked for a license for the marriage of their child to a Japanese. Everybody was willing and the license was granted. The Japanese gave his age as something e girl was 14, althoug ¥ o One notary public believes that mmmn‘ girls are sold to the Orientals FILIBUSTERING IN THE HOUSE Democrats Seek to Defeat Section of Bill Affecting Eight-Hour Law on Canal FOR TO-DAY R VOTE SET Minority Leader Williams Malkes Use of Every Oppor- tunity to Bloek Matters WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—The first at- tempt at filibustering during this session occurred in the House to-day in a Demo- cratic endeavor to defeat the provision of the urgent deficlency bill walving the elght hour law for foreign laborers on the Panama canal. The amendment was placed in the bill in committee of the whole after the House had divided many times on every pretext which Minority Leader Williams could make the cause for a vote. When the bill, to which the amendment was proposed, was finally fin- ished late In the day a demand for a separate vote and roll call on that amend- ment was made and ordered, at which time the 'House adjourned. The vote will occur to-morrow. The amendment was ruled out of the bill on a point of order on Tuesday, and its inser- tion to-day was effected under the provi- slons of a special rule brought in from the Rules Committee for the purpose. The only other controversy of the day resulted from an attempt to Increase by $115,000 the amount for meat inspection by the Department of Agriculture. This increase was refused after an animated debate. R S STATEROOD BEFORE SENATE. Favorable Report Authorized by Com~ mitiee on Terrifories. \ WASHINGTON, Jan. 2. —The Senate Committee on Territories to-day author- ized a favorable report en the joint state- hood bill passed by the House yesterday, and Senator Beveridge, chairman of the committee, said later he would present the report in the Benate next Monday. None of the Democratic members of the committee was present when the agree- ment to take a vote was reached. Sena- tors Patterson and Frazler were in at- tendance earlier in the day, but they con- cluded not to make any attempt to delay the report or to force a dlvision on any of the disputed points. They reserved the right to present a minority report. The bill was amended in several places, but the amendments related largely to the governmental machinery provided by the measure, such as the judiciary and the methods of voting. It is the purpose to press the bill upon the attention of the Senate as soon as possible. —_——————— RULING OF THE COLLECTOR AT SAN FRANCISCO UPHELD Decision on Duty on an Importation of Rum From France Sustained. NEW .ORK, Jan. 26.—General Ap- praiser Hay yesterday rendered a decision on the French reclprocity treaty. It was based on the assessment of duty by the Collector at San Francisco. The mer- chandise was rum and was assessed for duty under paragraph 292, tariff of 1897, at $2 2 per gallon. The importers claimed the merchandise was entitied to the bene- fits of the reciprocity treaty with France, and therefore dutiable at $1756 a gallon under the provisions of section 8. The protests stated that the rum was made in France from unmanufactured sugar- cane from Martinique, & French posses- sion. In a previous decision the board had held that brandy or other spirits import- ed from Martinique, a colony of Frence, was not entitled to the reduced rates of duty accorded to such merchandise pro- duced in and exported from France by the terms of the reciprocity treaty. In line with that deision the board overruled the protest. On the protest of J. Cusimano et al. against duties assessed by the Collector at New Orleans on certain shooks, orange and lemon boxes, American goods re- turned, Judge Somerville decided while on the imports in question foreign goods were indiscriminately mixed with Ameri- can, a fair proportion of the American shooks coming under the provisions of paragraph 205 would be represented by 50 per cent of each of the importations. To this extent accordingly the board sus- tained each of the protests,” but half of the duty of 15 per cent should be pald. —_—————————— OMAHA, Jan. 26.—Edward Rosewater, who was appointed with Captain D. M. Brooks, sy perintendent of foreign mails, to represent the Dnitea States in the World's Postal Congress that will convene in Rome the first week of April, has accepted the appointment. | ter of Foreign Affairs. DEATH COMES KILLS HERSELF 10 A VICTOR| T0 BE A AOSE Irish Nationalist Who Won |“Wild Flower Girl” of Colo- Election to Parliament Succumbs to Weak Heart EXPIRES IN HIS ROOM Unionists Carry the Middle Division of Buckingham- shire After a Hard Fight LONDON, Jan. 2. —Thomas Higgins, Irish Nationalist, who yesterday success- fully contested North Galway against Colonel John Philip Nolan, Irish Nation- alist, was found dead in bed at his hotel | at Tuam to-day. The tragic occurrence | is attributed to the excitement of yester- | day’s polling acting on a weak heart. Mr. Higgins was one of the most militant Nationalists in the west of Ireland- and had many conflicts with the police. He was imprisoned under the Crimes Act during Arthur J. Balfour's tenure of the Chiet Secretaryship of Ireland. Twenty-elght divisions polled to-day. | This practically marks the end of the! elections, as less than a dozen scattered | constituencies remain to poll. | Lionel Walter Rothschyjid, Unionist, has | been re-elected for the Middle division of | Buckinghamshire, though the Rev. Silas | Kitto Hocking, the novelist, gave him a | good race, reducing the Unionist majority at the last contested election by one-half. Totals now are: Liberals, 351; Unionists, 149; Irish Nationalists, §1; Laborites, 49. LONDON, Jan. 26.—The Morning Post, which leads the campalgn in favor of the Unionist party on a Chamberlainite basis, interprets the acceptance by formew Pre- mier Balfour of the seat for the City of London, resigned in his favor by Allan G. Gibbs, who is a pronounced tariff refor- mer, as an indication of his willingness to lead the party henceforth on a tariff | reform basis. Other Chamberlainite organs give un- mistakable hints that Mr. Chamberlain i8 now in a position to dictate the policy of the Unionist party. TWENTY-FIVE NEW STARS DISCOVERED BY A WOMAN Found by Examination of Plates Taken | With Twenty-Four-Inch | Telescope. | CAMBRIDGE, Jan. %.—The discovery of twenty-five new variable stars by Miss Henrfetta S. Leaviett by a recent exam- | ination of plates taken with a twenty- four-inch telescope has been announced | by the Harvard Observatory. Six of these stars are in the constellation of Orion, three in the constellation of Virgo and sixteen in the constellation of Cys- nus. All the plates are of extremely fine quality, the images of at least 200,000 stars having been caught with a clearness that will permit of comparisons. The new | variables in the Cygnus are in the region | of the Great Spiral nebula. 1 —_————————— MRS. BROWN-POTTER GIVEN DISCHARGE IN BANKRUPTCY Actress’ Reverses Are Sald to Be Due to a Disastrous Engagement in London. LONDON, Jan. 26.—Mrs. James Brown- Potter, actress, obtained relief from her financial troubles to-day when thé court granted her a discharge In bankruptecy. The actress’ reverses were due to a | disastrous season in “Du Barry” at the Imperial Theater. The receiving order In bankruptcy was granted on her own peti- tion last July. —_———————— GENERAL ALFARO IS NOwW SUPREME CHIEF OF ECUADOR Selects Manuel Montalve as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the New Cabin GUAYAQUIL, Jan. 28.- neral Alfaro, former President of Ecuador and leader | of the recent revolution, which overthrew | President Garcia, is now supreme chief | of the republic. A Cabinet was appointed to-day, with Manuel Montalvo as Minis- PR S — Henry Irving’s WIIl Is Probated. LONDON, Jan. 26.—The probate of the late Sir Henry Irving’s will was granted to-day. It divides his property equally between his two sons and Mrs. David B. Aria, a woman journalist, who has made dress a speclalty, and who has written on this topic in American as well as Eng- lish papers. ———— WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—A bulletin issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission to-day shows that during the months of July, August jand September last 1003 were killed and 16,386 injured among passengers and employes of | steam raflroads in the United States. | dent of the Citizens’ National rado Takes Her Life Under a Strange Hallucination JOINS LOVER IN DEATH Her Mind Deranged by the Study of TheosopHy, She Puts End to Her Existence Special Dispatch to The Call. DENVER, Jan. 26.—Miss Jessle R. Hess, daughter of Abraham Hess, a Colorada pioneer, and widely known as the “Wiid Flower Girl" killed herself yesterday, cutting her throat. The study of theoso~ phy deranged her mind. She grew up among the wild flowers near Golden, Colo., and became independently Wwealthy by pressing them in books she embel~ lished with sketches. One day Albert Willcoxen, a tourist, saw her name in a book and wrote to her. She answered and they became lovers. He Interested her in theosoohy. Six months ago he dled in St. Paul and the day he died she received a message asking her to follow him to the other world. Her parents, en route to California to locate there, were recalled by news of the tragedy. Miss Hess was convinced she would become a wild rose after kill- ing herself and would be with her lover always. She was about 29 years of age. SUISUN GAS PLANT SOON TO BE SOLD Will Be Purchased by Coms pany of San Franeisco. Capitalists. VALLEJO, Jan. 3.—The negotiations are now being brought to a successful conclusion for the sale of the Rochester Ofl Company’s natural gas plant at Sui- sun to a company of San Francisco capl= talists headed by Douglas Watson, presi~ Bank of San Francisco. The price to be pald is forty-seven cents a share, or about $45,000 for the wells, pipe line and other im- provements. The history of this project is intereste ing. At the time of the oil excitement, five years ago. a company of Sulsun capitalists was formed to bore for oil near that town. Like many other ofl boring ventures, the company was beset with many troubles, but finally struck natural gas In immense quantities, but no ofl. The wells were abandoned until last fall, when an assessment was levied on the stock and the,natural gas piped to Sulsun and Fairfield, where it found a ready sale. It is said that Watson and his associates plan to increase the output of the wells to supply gas to the big cement works near Suisun and to Elmira and Vaca~ ville. ——— EXTRADITED TO MEXICO AFTER YEAR AND A HALF Man Whoe Kidunaped Prisoner Across the Line From Lower Califor- nin Surrendered. SAN DIEGO, Jan. 26.—After resisting extradition for a year and a half, An- tonio Feliz will be turned over to the Mexican authorities to answer to a charge of kidnaping. Feliz arrived from Los Angeles in custody of United States Dep- uty Marshal Christian on this evening's train and will be shipped to Ensenada by the steamer leaving to-morrow. Feliz s accused of having kidnaped Juan Puebla across the line ffom Lower California into this country, and with turning him over to Los Angeles officers, who wanted him for murder, of which | crime he has since been convicted. The Mexican Government apparently cared nothing about Puebla himself, but was resolved to punish Feliz, and has made a determined fight for him. —_—e——————— DEFEATED AFTER LONG RACE AGAINST DEATH Brings Wife Over Alaskan Tral) With Dog Team, but She Succumbs. TACOMA, Jan. 26.—Mrs. George Potter, with whom her husband made a herola race of 250 miles with a dog team from Duncan Creek to Dawson, in the hope of saving her life, dled at a hgspital there the day after her arrival he faithful husband, althoughy deprived of his life partner, has the satisfaction of having made a long and heroic struggle to save her lite. For twelve days he was on the long trip and eight days of that time was stfuggling with a sleigh and dog teamy that bore his wife toward Dawson. TEDEPr B e STE . Ifyou had togo to different stores and pay cash for your kitchenry and dishes and table linens and bedding it would cost you more than the deposit we ask on the complete furnishing of your entire honte. No small advantage to find everything in one store—to have everything in one account. Richmond Ranges ol e = e SRR $1.00 a Week $1.00 2 week is all you pay. And you pay nothing at all if a Rich- mond is not as good or better than we rep- resent it. We return - have paid on it. all the money you We represent a Richmond Range to be a fuel saver and a perfect baker. Think of heating an 18-inch oven with a six-inch firebox! That’s what a Rich- mond will do. You can’t waste fuel. OPPOSITE TV RS R RRRN 2 COMPAN MEALLISTER