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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1906. s 31 WELLMAN'S AR CONFIRNS TALE RAFT ORDERED OF NASSACRE Explorer T:]T: to Begin |Hermosillo Banker Tells of Jls Preliminary ‘Trials| Murder by Yaquis of Driv- in the Month of June| ersand Pay Wagon Escorts IT WILL COST $140,000 SAVAGES GET $13,000 Start for the North Pole to| Twenty Men Lose Lives in Be Made as Soon as the| Heart of Country Infested Machine Stands the Test| by Bloodthirsty Natives s Special Dispatch to The Call, NOGALE! . Feb. 3—Marshall P. n banker of Hermo- s just in receipt of ad- | t e 'W. Beebe, president e Cieneguita Copper Company, con- ning the reports of an attack made a wagon train sent out from Her- lo to the mines of the company on er Yaqui River. The wagon train, s carried $13,000 i mer- e and silver being sent out to pay was set upon near Cobanchi by ¢ over 100 Yaqui Indians, and scort of twelve which ac- ight, are believed As yet not a | has been found. it took place last Sat- | owing to the fact that every h the wagon train was probably of the affair could not be | untfl a party sent out from | o confirm the report returned The Indians made away best of the plunder, burning the r and the wagons before they »d. The horses and mules which he wagons were used by them as | n the heart of the section | is are thickest, and the | made way with the loot. —_— - | MAGISTRATE TRIES AND FINES HIMSELF | Also Mulefs the Man With Whom He Fought on a Street. | | | | | | st arrested | before his | to himselt, | 1 himself $10 | fine himself. | met an old foe on the had a few hot words, ting In a clash. Fists ents and each’ par- | ADVERTISEMENTS, THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. g the matter due considera- ce sent a constable to ar- ice and his Yoe, B. F. Lacey. and Pollard were brought into | face Judge Pollard. he evidence had been preuented’ e Pollard fined himself and Lacey costs or three days in jail. Both he fines and the Justice warned | imself and Lacey not to appear in his | again. 4 REFUSE TO TEACH IF BOY IS RETURNED Washington Educators Rebel Because Unruly Lad Is to Attend School. SBATTLE, Feb. 3.—The teachers of the | Is in side district of | unty are on the verge of a | They have all handed in their tion to the School Board and are | d to leave their positions unless | s are taken to change the situation. | ouble is caused the fact that chool Board has insisted on the re- Guy Lichty, the son of H. M. one of the most pyominent real state dealers of the county, to school fter he was expelled. Young Lichty was | led from school during the last| ool year and has not attepded since, | but a few days ago the School Board of | the district decided that he was to return. e | WAR DEPARTMENT FAVORS HEAVY CALIBER REVOLVER i | | | - | Few People Know How Useful It Is tn | Preserving Health and Beauty. | Nearly ¢ y ws 1 | | | a cure a Bullet with Greater Stopping Power. g | WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—The War r ‘in any | Department has decided to go back to the ordinary 1 ts | the heavy caliber for army revolvers to adopt a cartridge proposed by 3y Ordnance Bureau carrying a bul- let of .45-caliber to replace the .38-cali- “ nge is that it is desired to have & bullet with greater stopping power PERFECT then that now ia uss. OPDOFLURILY also sen for a decided innovation in the is & type of the revolver. The Ordnance Bureau has invited manufacturers of pistols to enter into & competition and | to submit types of revolvers either of Cleanses and eauntifies the | the automatic kind or along the lines th an | of those now used by the army. All tes d purifies the breath, |7 000 TIV %0 ewever. must be g?"d by people of refinement |™ade for the use of the .45-caliber cartfidge, which has been adopted. over a quarter of a century. | The competition will take place some Convenient for tourists. | months hence. PREPARED BY ————— After being sentenced to a short term of imprisonment for & =minor offense, | George Schmiedhuber, & Vienna ocab | ariver, notorious for his immense girth, | had to be released because the cells wers | too small for him. PREVENT COLDS, Grippe or Pneumonia By building up and fortifying the sys- | tem with Hestetter's Stomach Bitters. There’s nothing else to equal it, as our | 53 years’ record of cures proves conclu- sively. Therefore we urge you to keep I t ) | Changes to Be Made in Order to Se- | We make | a bottle of s 4 Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters handy all winter and you need not fear the inclement Pl weather. A dose before meals and bedtime will ——Repairing— . - AEA FRIrNr TRUNK MANUFACTURER 22 Turk Street Phone East 9224 Slightly Dsed $10, $I5, $20 Second Hand $3, 5, $8 “Q safeguard against attacks of SOMH '~F 18 HOvWOo.L You Know? Where Chills, Colds, * g: w”?fiécws."" m General Debility, L NEW HOME 1 Indigestion, SEWIEG MACHINE C0. | i Dyspepsia, 1051 Market St - 4= l'~ nlnnubu!&,“ 1 years old when he died; his eye was not | duced from: Burt, ® Packard’s famous shoes, most, favorably known throughout America as “one of the best,” never sold for less than $3.50 and $4, now placed on sale at a mere fraction of their cost. Patent. leather, colt, kid, enamel, calf, low shoes, high shoes, button shoes, lace shoes; all styles, but, not, all sizes; here and there a size is miss- ing; sale starts to-morrow at, both stores; values $3.50 and $4. Price- - - - -$2‘65 Wood’s “Special” Shoes $3-30 We searched long and carefully among the lines of the best shoe makers in America and we believe that we have selected a shoe to sell at $3.50 that we can con- scientiously recommend as the best of its kind for the money—the maker is responsible to us for every pair of shoes that are sold. We allow you to take no chances whatever in buying your shoes of us. They are sold to you under theliberal guarantee—ifa pair goes wrong a new pair free. Here’s the Story In taking on No. 26 Powell to our Powell and Ellis Streets store we bought the shoe stock of Mr. Harrison, formerly agent for Burt & Packard’s Shoes. Having already made arrangements for a line of $3.50 shoes, which we believe to be superior to any sold at that price, we close out the Burt & Packard’s shoes, and place a price upon them that will not only send them flying out of doors, but which emphasizes our policy of claiming less and giving more than any other store. The newest lines—the latest styles—the most complete assortments—among which you cannot fail to find your taste exemplified, and your ® pocketbook pleased. Sale of Ladies’ Shoes, $4 values for $2-65 {3S'Gins Three thousand pairs of ladies’ fine shoes—the entire stock of Mr. Harrison, formerly of No. 26 Powell Street. These include Oxfords in lace or button—street shoes in shiny or kid leathers, former $2 65 price $3.50 and $4.00. Your unrestricted choice while they last................. .. ... X Men’s Shoes .m | Ladies’ Shoes at / at the Both Stores Manufacturers Wholesalers Retailers Powell Street Store Only ' 740 Market Street Cor. Powell & Ellis 35 Geary Street TWO Larde Stores' Arcade Eatrance 972 Market The thing to be fought against and fight shy of burials. They convey l’ux- just after waking in the morning. If, ing on somebody's toes and the struge- eliminated is what Dr. Round calls the | gestions that are very bad for the solar | the solar plexus should carry out the| gls for existence would lead to univer “death instinot.” That, it appear: s | plexus. We should avoid also “reading | suggestion to its logical conclusion, it|sal cannibalism. something which has been transmitted |tales that end badly, or witnessing [ would follow that in the course of a I asked Dr. Round if Be had con- to us by our benighted ancestors, who, [ maudlin dramatic tragedies, or recapit- | few years adults would not only renew | sidered what awful future he was 1) because they observed that all lives | ulating them in our thoughts. In fact, | their youth, but go back to the bottle | preparing for the human race. He an- 1] ended in death, were illogical enough |such mental virus, which s the expres- | stage of infancy. However, it may be | swered, o hat loftily, that as & to assume that there was no way of (sion of morbid minds, should be, as [assumed that the cultivated solar | discoverer had n stopping it. noxious drugs are, marked with a |plexus may be depended on to exerci 1f ¢rith the ultimal In getting rid of‘ this death instinot | poison label in the interest of the un- [ some judgment in the matter, even if . and laying the foundations of perpetual e the individual ego doesn’t. life a great deal depends upon getting “We are also,” says the doctor, “very If . people got the living-for-ever | are no furrows on his brow. That may LO dO Doctor Cl&im.s Thflt the solar plexus to behave itself prop- | susceptible when eating and drinking, [ habit and continued to rear children | be due to the fact that he constantly naon erly. "Most peopls la America drst|as our attention is, or should b i |and tesch them the trick. it is obvious | impressen ble sclar plecas with the iSC-O l'ed heard of the solar plexus through Bob |these times fully occupied with nothing | that long before any reachied Methuse- | idea that he s and lool yor He H&S D ve. a Wa‘y Fitzsimmons, who knocked out Corbett | to spare for self-defense. At meals |1 age, this earth would become so |day by day. Or it may be mm f I’eo 19 tO Live Forever by landing on that portion of his anat- | there ought to be a cessation of all | densely populated that it would be im- | great discovery really involved no hard or P omy and thereby won the fistic heavy- | unpleasant discussion—in fact, the less | possible to move around without tread- | thinking. welight ohnn‘;»lonlhlp. But according | said the bnter.’ 2 to Dr. Round there is a deal more In “So when ass! ating food and drink e e e the solar plexus than Bob Fitzsimmons | we should, as far as in our power lies, LONDON, Feb. 8. — Dr. Cornwall | ever found out. have congenial surroundings and think Round, a medical practitioner in Lon- BRAIN OF THE ABDOMEN. our highest thoughts and in this way don, claims to have discovered how to bdominal brain.” It con- |Salt our bread with our own best live forever—barring accidents.. As he ideals.” is only 40 years old himself, it cannot This seems fairly easy. In fact, most be said that in his own person he offers of Dr. Round's tips for Immortality are even presumptive evidence of the truth | man who gets it to obey the behests | asy. Rich and poor alike can practice of his theories. But that is no reason, | of the brain, working harmoniously | them. We can even utilize our olfac- he thinks, why he should not start a | with it instead of kicking against it, [ tOTY organs to keep our solar plexi up lot of other people living forever, and | may, if Dr. Round’s discovery amounts | to the mark. 5 he has just confided to the writer how | to anythi live long enough Lo beat| “Smell,” among all our senses,” he the thing can be done. Methuselah’s record. say! ems to be the one that has the According to Dr. Round, dying is sim- | “The diseases of everyday life,” said [longest memory for associated ideas. ply ‘a “bad racial habit,” which we have | Dr. Round, “are the solar plexus’ at- | Thus we can also make the sonse of all got into and should strive our ut- [ tempts to throw Off effete poisonous (Smell an avenue for healthful impres- most to get out of. matter from the s; sions ' by mentally connecting some “As a matter of fact,”” he sald, “we |a wrong—a forme chosen ideal with a particular odor, each have the free will to create our ! selves that we have knowingly or un- | For instance, write on incense paper, The Switzerland of America ’ own ideal of longevity, and according | knowingly committed—and at the same | “Health is natural,” or some other a t J to our faith it will be done unto us.” |time by painful symptoms give us a |firmation which you wish to impress Those who cannot muster faith|friendly warning that we are miscon- |On yourself, ignite the paper and hold & 2 H five mi stadon. enough to persuade themselves that|dusting the internal affairs of the body, | Yourself in'a mentally relaxed passive The Ch"“‘-e“. spot in the u]]zy’ ] minutes to they cannot go on living indefinitely | and should, therefore, set our house of | condition, then the perfume will tend “ Nine lots nw in four dlyl- Large, nght!y lots, covered with - should endeavor to emulate Methuselah, | flesh in order.” to convey the usgclnlefl suggestion. to 3 who, Dr. Round reminds us, lived to be| So the important thing is to so train | vour solar plexus. oak and bay trees, commanding fine view of Mount Tamalpais s S o " and the bay. There are choice lots in all tracts to those who 969 years old. and treat the solar plexus that it won't come first. Prices reasonable. “Surely,” sald the doctor, “that is a [ give in when old age and disease tackl The best time, says Dr. Round, for pbetter ideal than the current three- |us. The solar plexus, the doctor tells’| conveying life-renewing impressions to score-years-and-ten and equally autho- | us, is remarkably amenable to sugges- | the solar plexus is on awakening or ritative.” tio falling asleep. As one of the means of And if people can’t convince them- “It will,” he says, “carry any sug- |attaining perpetual life, he advises selves that hey may equal Methuselah’s | gested idea to its logical conclusion | hanging on the wall near the bed a longevity record they might fix their | and by means of the sympathetic ner- | placard containing this inscription in ideal on Moses, who, according to | vous system it will tend to rebuild the | white letters on & black background: Scripture, “was an hundred and twenty | body according to the logical result de- | “I feel and look younger day by day. accepted suggestion.” This should be looked at very e dim nor his natural force abated” According - to