The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 12, 1906, Page 4

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EASY MARK NOBLE MARRIED AT LAST Marquis of Townshend, Once Uictim of Aduventuress, Finds Bride. 3 ar he the wiles i antecedents. is for breach ot 1sel discovered was prepared tp w up the said, subse- for other side susceptible m! The- ¥ 0 has taken incidentaily ction of becom was before her marriage Sutherst. She comes | but has never figured ty le the Marquis hadn't ng herself a Marchioness, Miss Gladys Ethel of & good fam! much to share with her. Nominally he owns some twenty thousand acres, but | vhen he entered into possession of the | s, & lttle over five years ago, he found them so heavily mortgaged that he had to sell & lot of family heirlooms in order to raise money enough to just keep him going without having to work for a living. Though he has inherited littie of their ability, he comes of a famous line of | sncestors—Townshends, who ~fought in the Armsda and at Cediz, at Dettingen, Fontenoy and Culloden; Townshends who were Embassadors, who fought with Woife et Quebec, and who at all times took thelr share of the burden of great work They came &t one time, however, ve: near losing thelr peerage. The third Mar- quis separated from his wife, and the | lady, after unsuccessfully seeking & di- { vorce, entered into a gquasi-matrimonial elliance with a Cornish squire and bore | him several children who, curlously enough, were called by the names and titles that would have been theirs had | they been the offspring of the Marquis One of these sons was actually elected | to Parliament as the Earl of Lelcester, | and & long trial in the House -of Lords was necessary to prove the succession of | the rightful heir. But all came right in the end, and the young man who had been taught -to belicve. that he would one éay be & Marquis was handsomely pro- vided for, though not to the extent of a title, The Norfolk seat of the family, Rayn-| ham Hall, is of the finest in the country and re in an extremely well-authenticated ghost. This is the ap- parition of La Dorothy Walpole, second wife of the Viscount, who flourished late in the eighteenth century. Her life was | an unhappy one and ended. in such an ex- treme of mental gement thst she hed to be Kept in duress in the upper | story at Raynham. Her appeara-ce is | supposed to herald a dcath in the Town- | shend or Walpole family. —ie— i SEVERAL PASSENGERS HURT ON THE ILLINOIS I'E.\'TRAL‘ | | | Traim Strikes an Obstruction Near Nashville and the Cars Are | Tursed Over. NASHVILLE, Tenn., Feb.' 11.—The lllinois Central Railroad’s Chicago and Florida limited, leaving here to-night at 7 o'clock for Chicago, is reported to have been wrecked at Chapmansboro, fifty-four miles west of here. Conductor A. Cherry, Charles McGee and two whose names have not tained, were injured. Six other pas- sengers were slightly hurt. The train | & said to have struck an obstruction on the track. The engine, baggage car, emoker and first chair car were derailed and turned over. The sieepers did not ! leave the track, ! Engineer passengers, yet been ob- | Paeific inals and shipping warehouses upon it | Offictals of the Bt. | Company refuse to state the exact | tenacity. Union Pacific | Japanese. understood‘ to be | store and their loss was undoubtedly | County. | cago. NON PACIFC CETS TIDE LAND Harriman Pays $1,000,000 for Ideal Site for Terminus in the City of Tacoma Feb. 1 TACOM. be- Negotiations [ tween the Union Pacific Railway and the St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Company have been closed, whereby the Harriman interests have acquired seventy_acres of tide lands fopming an ideal site fom, rail- | road termipaks and having a frontage pf 1600 feet on the bay and about 1400 feet on the Puyallup waterway., The prop- erty is the highest priced land on the tide flats and cost approximately $1,000,- of which the Union Pacific has paid ge amount in cash. conditions of the sale is that the Union improve it and locate its term- within a certain time. limit by which the pound, but it is about twenty months as they. say that | the Union Pacific will be hers sooner | than any other transcontinental line | could build to Tacoma were it to com- | mence construction work at once. —_———— LIFE TIMER TO ASK PARDEE FOR LIBERTY Farmer Who Has Spent 19 Years in Prison Wants to Get Out. Special Dispatchto “The Call. SAN DIEGO, Feb. 11.—J. J. Bush, for the last nineteen years a prisoner at San Quentin, has sent notice that he will apply to Governor Pardee for a pardon on his record. In fhe early eighties Bush was a rancher near Julian. In a dispute over a road he killed a neighbor, John Ivy. Bush was tried three times in this county and once in San Bernardino The first jury recommended life imprisonment. He got a new trial and the second jury disagreed, standing ten for acquittal. The third jury brought in a verdict of murder in the first degree and the scaffold was ready for Bush when the second appeal was successful, The fourth jury in San Bernardino found a second degree verdict and the Judge sentenced him for life. o TR GIVES UP HIS LIFE TO SAVE TWO BOYS Woodsman Crushed by Tree After Shoving Lads Out of Danger. Special Dispatch to The Cail. SPOKANE, Feb. 11.—In a successful effort to prevent two small boys being crushed to death by a tree he was fell- ing, Willlam Smith himself was caught and so badly crushed that he died in the hospital at Harrison, [daho.- Smith |, was working near Lane, Idaho, and thie little Jads” were watching him. As the tree began to waver the boys danced about directly In its path. He rushed to push them into safety, was caught by the falling tree and his chest crushed. He was a bachelor, 40 years old, and owned a farm near Lane, —_—— “Bargains” are ground out by the “mills of competition.” The French say: “A good bargain is a pick-purse.” Tt is nearer the truth to say that the bargain-hunter (the ad. reader) 1is purse-cautious. —_— Train Hits Crowded Street Car. CHICAGO, Feb. 11.—Two persons were killed and twelve Injured to-night when a Pennsylvania passenger train struck a crowded street car at One Hundred and Sixth street, South Chi- The street car was wrecked and the engine and first coach of the pas- senger train left the tracks. The train: was a theater train bound for East Chi- cago, Indiuna, leaving Chicago at.11:34 o'clock. It was traveling-at the rate of. twenty miles an hour when the colli- sion occurred. ——————— Try the United: States Laundry. 1004 Market street. Telephone South 420. ¢ purchasing the property, one of the | | pants of Lodging-House to Jump From Windows ONE FIREMAN INJURED Blazing Structure on Lit- ter May Die From Shock S | LOS ANGELES, Feb. 11.—Fire broke out in a storeroom beneath the Louise lodging- house at 520 South Brogdway at 10:30 to- | night and & number of guests in the lodg- ing-house bad narrow escapes from suf- focation. Nearly a dozen were taken from | the windows of the house by firemen, al- though none were injured. One woman wasg rendered unconscious. Sam L. Wood, an aged man who was ill in, the house, was carried out on a stretcher and taken | to the hospital. rie was nearly suffocat- ed, and it is feared ghat the exoitement | of his experience may prove fatal in his case. Harry Griffitu, a fireman at work in the rear of the bullding, was struck by the nozzle of a hose which flew off while under full pressure and was seriously in- jured. He was removed to the Receiving | Hospital. The fire which was in the basement | burned with great stubbornness and re- quired herculean efforts to extinguish. It was of the smoldering variety and im- mense volumes of smoke issued forth, filling all the several stories above with dense smoke. More than a dozen lines of hose were played on the structure and the basement was rapidly filled with water. The lower floors of .ne bullding were oc- | cupied by the Los Angeles Novelty Com- | pany and the Chicago Wall Paper Com- pany and‘Art Novelty Works. Several adjoining business houses were flooded with water and considerably damageu. The fire was directly in the rear of the new $2,000,000 Alexandria Hotel,' just com- | pleted, and which will. be formally opened to the public to-morrow. Much alarm was felt' for a spread of the flames, in which case the heart of the business dis- trict of the city woula have been: en- dangered. The firemen responded to the alarm quickly and performed splendid ser- vice In getting out the guests of the house. ~ Following are the names of | guests who were taken from the win- dows by the firemen and either assisted or carried down the ladders: Miss M. C. Hood, daughter of the landlady; Miss Hart, Miss Grace Pillar, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Harri§, Mr. and Mrs. ‘W. D. McNeil, Mrs. C. 8. Heald, Miss Anna Heald, A. C. Anderson. Samuel Hood, husband of the proprietress of | the ‘place, who Bright's disease, was vTescued with great difficulty. Fireman Thomas O'Brien succeeded In penetrating through halls and rooms filled with the densest smoke and carrying the aged man to where further assistance could be rendered and he could be got from the building in safety. The old man is 90 years of age and had been bedridden for seven months. At midnight the fire in the basement was burning with renewed fireceness and threatening to burst forth into the lower floor. It is belleved that all per- sons were removed safely from the Louise and that there was no.loss of life. The Lonise had fifty-three rooms |and there wédre about”that number of guests in the house. Probably not more than thirty were in the building when the blaze broke out. The building is a three-story brick, extending from 516 to 524 South Broadway. The blaze started in the storeroom of the Y. M. Company, one of the stores on the ground floor. The firm deals in turniture, paints and oils and it was in this that the fire burned with such T. Yamasaki and Y. Kurodi, are the proprietors of this total. Several other firms suffered large losses, but no estimate was obtainable during the fire. The Cummings confec- tionery occupied the principal ground floor space and suffered large damage. The fire was finally .extinguished at 112:20 a. m., after the basement of the bullding had ‘been almost completely filled with water. The losses of the fol- lowing firms will probably be total: Y. M. Company, Company, R. H. Dunston, proprietor; the Art Novelty Company, J. W. Leonard, Wakeman & Tilly, proprietors. The fire is believed to have been caused by poor insulation of electric wires in the basement. Another blaze was discov- ered in the same place about a month ago, but extinguished. G. M. Chenowith of the Pacific Coast Biscult Company was among the guests of the hotel, and made such strenuous efforts to save his baggage by ladders from the third floor that he narrowly escaped suffocation. {FEAR AGED RANCHER HAS BEEN MURDERED Farmer Is Missing and Blood Stains Are Found in His Cabin. FRESNO, Feb. 11.—Henry A.:Jack- son, ‘an aged rancher who racently bought a five-acre ranch near this city, has disappeared. To-day his cabin was entered by neighbors, who had dis- covered_blood spots on boards at his door. The room was in disorder and on the floor were splotches of blood and in one corner a congealed mass of it. There is a strong suspicion that Jack- son was murdered and his body taken away in a wagon. To substantiate this theory tracks of a wagon were discov- ered. The end of the wagon had been backed up to the door of the cabin. Rain had fallen on the tracks and it is im- recently they were made. Jackson was last seen Friday even- ing. He came here from Maine three months ago and purchased the ranch. He 1s believed to have had $1000 in the cabin with him. When entered to-day the windows of the cabln were hung with qujlts and it is known that there were two less quilts in the room than there ought to be. SAVES MAN AND BOY FROM DEATH IN BAY James Hooper Goes to Rescue of Drowning Father and Son. ) VALLEJO, Feb. 11.—George Kane; a 7-year-old boy, while walking along a wharf to-day slipped and fell into the bay. His father immediately went, to his rescue and with the boy was nearly drowned, for a strong ebb tide began to carry ‘hoth away.' James-'Hooper saw ‘the danger and bravély went to the succor of father and son and after a hard struggle succeeded.in bringing them to the shore. Both the boy and his father were exhausted when res. cued by Hooper. Aged Man Carried From the: was ill in bed with | possible to measure them or to tell how Fierce Flames Compel Occu- | Musicians in a Seattle Thea- the Van and Storage | | proprietor; Chicago Wall Paper Company, | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1906. LEAP TO ESCAPE (SICHT OF COIN DEATH BY FIRE . ENDS A STRIKE —_— ter Quit Playing Because Their Pay Is Long Overdue TREASURER SETTLES UP Opera Official Finds That < All Work and No Pay Is Not Conducive to Peace Special Dispatch to The Call, "SEATTLE, Feb. 11.—While one of the most fashionable audiences that éver as- sembled in the Grand Opera-house was enjoying ‘the .masterpiece, “‘Faust,” last night a serfous labor union disturbance Wwas going on in their midst. The orches- tra which accompanies the Savage Grand Opéra Company struck, as the big bass viol player said, “I get my salary or L quit work.” He. was the leader of the strike, * o It seems that the orchestra payday was overdue, and the musiclans proposed to strike unless.their pay was forthcoming. To make matters worse, it was grumbled from one end of the orchestra to the oth- er that the treasurer was due to leave last night for Portland, and that precipi- tated matters. Word was carried to the box office, and the treasurer made g00d, ending the strike. WISHES FOR DEATH AS.DOCTOR WORKS Man Shot by Officer Sorry Bullets Did Not End _ His Life. Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Feb. 11.—Charles Lawrence, who -was shot yesterday afternoon when he attempted to escape from Special Offi- cer Clark, who had him under arrest on the charge of insulting little girls near the corner of Sixth avenue and Seneca street, was taken to the hospital ward in the county jail late in the afternoon. Lawrence recelved two bullets. One pass- ed entirely through his left hand and the other went through the fleshy part of his left arm. “I .wish I had been killed,” moaned Lawrence at police headquarters while the surgeon was giving him atten- tion. “I had no business to run. I guess I got what was coming to me.” WEALTHY EASTERNERS ON VISIT TO COAST Pennsylvania Special Carries Tourists Through Land of Sunshine and Flowers. SAN JOSE, Feb. 11.—A Pennsylvania special train bearing a tourist party com- | posed of twenty-nine wealthy Easterners, who spent the day in visiting Mount Hamilton and the big trees, arrived in San Jose this morning. The train {s the most luxuriously equipped that local rail- road men have ever seen. The observa- tion edr is the one which bore the body of President Mchkinley from Buffalo to Washington and therice to Canton.” The train leaves for San Francisco to-morrow. —_— e Valentine greetings, with best wishes. We have a host of good things from one cent up. Sanborn, Vall & Co. . New Departure by Quakers. RICHMOND, Ind., Feb- 11.—Employ- ment of a regular pastor by the East Main-street Friends’ Church of this city to-day marks an epoch in the history of the conservative orthodox quakers. He is the first regularly employed pas- tor'in the history of the church, which has always been opposed to a hired minister, and marks the taking on of modern religious methods, as the local . |WOMAN CAUSES A EATAL FICHT Negro and White Man Quar- rel Over Female and Both Men Are Now in Hospital REVOLVER IS —_— African, Though Shot in the Stomach, Secures Weapon and Shoots Enemy in Back i LOS ANGELES, Feb. 11.—Harry Al- ton, white, employed as a stationary en- gineer, and Henry Simpson, colored, a waiter in the employ of the Southern Pacific, were both shot with the same ‘Wweapon, and the former probably fatal- ly wounded in a fight between the two men at the negro’'s home, at 843 East Third street, early to-day. Alton went +to the home of Simpson at an early hour and knocked at the door. Simp- son got out of bed and answered the summons. Alton inquired as to the whereabouts of & woman whom he said he believed to be in Simpson’s house. Simpson denied this and Alton grew wrothy. A quarrel ensued and Alton finally drew a big revolver and shot Simpson in the stomach. The negro grappled with Alton and the two fell struggling in the street. In the melee Alton dropped the pis- tol and Simpson secured possession of it. . Alton then gained his feet and started to run away, and the negro leveled the pistol and shot him in the back. Both were taken to the Receiv- ing Hospital, where the surgeon to-day stated that Alton's chances of recovery are slight. * Simpson will survive. WILL TRY TO GET PACIFIC SQUADRON Seattle Chamber of Com- merce Starts Move to Ob- tain Ships for Coast. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Feb. 11.—James B. Meikle, secretary of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, left to-day for California, where he goes to work for the estab- lishment of a Pacific squadron of bat- tleships. While in the Southern State he will appear before the Chamber of Commerce in both San Francisco and Los Angeles and endeavor through them to stir up a sentiment in favor of such a squadron. ' Mr. Meikle contends that the presence of such a fleet is not only necessary to the west coast, but that the presence of the boats here will mean millions®of dollars annually to the Paciflc Coast merchants in the way of supplies. IDAHO WOMAN DOES CARRIE NATION STUNT Smashes Mirrors in Saloon in Which Her Spouse Was Tippling. Bpecial Dlm'l'he Call. SPOKANE, Feb. 11.—Mrs. Ed Crane at Harrison, Idaho, gave a saloonkeeper a sample of Cirrie Nation methods that stirred up the town. About 10 o'clock last night she came to Tom McHenry's saloon in search of her husband, a well- known citizen. The husband failing to respond to her calls, she attacked two plate glass windows in the saloon with the point of her umbrella, demol- ishing them. Then it was Crane ap- peared. He 'settled the damages, amounting to 325, and meekly walked away with his Irate helpmate. ————— NEW YORK, Feb. 11.—Fire starting in the Bremuller Plano Factory at Tenth avenue and Fifty-first street to-night caused damage esti- mated at $100,000. The blaze spread so rapid- ly that for a time several big tenements which USED $mine. BLOW ON NOSE " CAUSES DEATH Oregonian Struck During a Row in a Saloon Dies From Hemorrhage Hours Later SLAYER UNDER ARREST| Patient Too Weak to Rallyl When His. Physicians Fi- nally Stop Flow of Blood BAKER CITY, Or., Feb. 11.—During | a quarrel in a saloon early to-day be- | tween Fred Neuhaus, a well known | contractor, and Henry Swartz, a miner, Neuhaus was struck on the nose by Swartz. A hemorrhage followed, which | resulted in death. Physicians worked | on Neuhaus all day and when they | finally stopped the flow of blood Neu- haus was so exhausted that he died. Swartz has been arrested. TWO THOUSAND TONS OF HAY.DESTROYED Fire of Incendiary Origin Burns Big Warehouse at Hollister. HOLLISTER, Feb. 11.—Early Sunday morning iron warehouse No. 4 of the Lathrop Hay Compeny was totally de- stroyed by fire with 2000 tons of hay. The warehouse valued at $10,000 was insured for $8600. The hay was Insured at about $7 a ton. Manager H. P, Lathrop feels sure the fire was of incendlary origin, this being the third warehouse owned by the company destroyed within the last four years. The entire community is highly incensed and the perpetrator of the crime would be summarily dealt with if cap- tured. WASHINGTON BANKER | GUILTY, SAYS JURY Charles C. May Responsible for Wrecking of North D'S EXTRA OLO FAMILY DOcTon A FIRST AID BOOK THE containing s ions for First Aid to the Injuréd in Accidents and Emer- gencies, with valuable information as to how to care for the sick and prevent spread of disease, will be sent you FREE upon reques?to POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY Seventy-six Fifth Avenue New York T™E ouo pamiy D078 DNG's EXTRAC NOW IS YOUR CHANCE To Bring Your Friends or Relatives From. ... EUROPE Throuzh Rates to California From QUEENSTOWN. ...$71.50 LIVERPOOL ...... 7150 LONDON. ..... 74.50 GLASGOW ..... 74.50 DUBLIN ....... 74.50 COPENHAGEN. 75.25 GOTHENBURG. 75.25 Bend Coneern. { SPOKANE, Feb.:11.—Charles C. May, president of the defunct Big Bend Na- tional Bank of Davenport, Wash., who has been on trial for wrecking that in- | stitution, was to-day found guilty by a jury in the Federal Court. The jury was out twenty-four hours. The conviction came after one of the most stubborn legal battles in Spokane. May's downfall is said to have been caused by efforts to develop with funds of depositors on | hand in his bank the Palmer Mountain Conviction was found on the fourth, fifth, sixth ang seventh counts of | the indictment returned by the January Federal Grand Jury. The minimum pen- alty is five years in the penitentiary, the maximum ten years. May's attorney will argue for a new trial. Failing in this they will take the case to the Su- preme Court. May is probably the best- known citizen of Big Bend and until this conviction confildence in his integrity was absolute. —_— e e——— Will Inspect Steel Plants. PITTSBURG. Feb. 11—C. A. Fleck, Second Secretary of State of Prussia, accompanied by F. V. Guthrid. attache | of the German embassy at Washington and a brother of R. Fleck, arrived in this eity to-day. Herr Fleck will visit | the Homestead Steel Plant, the Pressed | Steel Car and Westinghouse Works in search of statistics for the German Government Department of Raflways. | The party will visit other large steel plants before returning East. | ——————— Wet Weather at Auburn. | “TAUBURN, Feb. 11.—Drizzling rain fell all day yesterday and part of the night. It was clear this morning. The | wind to-day is from the north. The | rainfall for the storm was .21 inches; | congregation is one of the most influ- ential in Amer adjoin the piano factory on Tenth avenue and on Fifty-first street were threatened. for the season, 18.31 inches as against 27.98 inches to date last year. Do you know that it is actually cheaper to cook with gas than with coal, wood or oil? Do you know that a Gas Range is cheaper than any other range you can pur- chase — cheaper in first cost, cheaper in last cost? Do you know that no woman who 'has ever used a Gas Range could be per- suaded to go back to the cumbersome coal range? Do you know that a mod- ern Gas Range costing $20.00 will do all the work of a $40.00 coal range and do it with half the labor and half the cost? Do you know that a rea- ular family dinner can be cooked on a Gas Range for about 7 cents, a breakfast for 2 cents? Do ‘you know as Range Special $20.00 BAKING OVEN BROILING OVEN 4 TOP BURNERS 1 SIMMERING BURNER BEST CONSTRUCTION FULLY GUARANTEED FREE CONNECTIONS J | Do you know that you can heat water in your bathroom by sim- ply lighting a gas jet downstairs? Do you know that you can have a hot bath at any hour of the day or night by simply striking a match? Do you know that the au- tomatic, instantaneous gas water heater will furnish an abundance of hot water at a cost of one-tenth of a cent per gallon? Do you know that a Gas heater costing $2.00, and 2 cents an hour to operate, will comfortably heat an ordinary living room? Do you know that we sell gas appliances at cost, giving free, delivery and connections? That the Gas Company maintains a corps of skilled inspectors to see that your gas service is perfect and the supply good; that they will give frequent inspections to maintain the highest efficiency of all appliances; that they will carefully investigite any unusual usage or overcharge. This service is absolutely .free and offered of the company’s own volition for the betterment of the service. The public is responsible if it does not always promptly take advant:gé of this opportunity to obtain perfect service. PHONE EX. 8. e 415 POST ST HAMBURG. ... 78.25 LIBAU............ 8125 Proportionate low rates from all .other points by the Old Reliable Cunard Line. SAFETY, SPEED and COMFORT crossing the Atlantic These rates good only for limited time. Purchase tickets at once. If you can’t call, send the money and we will furnish you with the tickets. S, F. BOOTH, Gen. Agt. U. P Cunard § R. R. Co., 8. Co., 1 Montgomery St., San Francisce, California NOTIGE OF PUBLIC AUCTION | Of Parcel of Bonds Issued Pursuant to the “San Francisco Seawall Act,” Approved March 20, 1903. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the un- dersigned, Truman Reeves, as the State Treas- urer of will, THURSDAY. th 1908, the hour of 2 o of that day, at the office of the State Treasurer, in the State Capitol building at Sacramento, California, sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, and in one parcel, two hundred and fifty (250) bonds, being numbers one to two hundred and ffty, both inclusive, executed under and pursuant to that certain Act of the Legisiaturs of the State of California, entitied: “An to provide for the issuance and sale of Staie bonds to create a fund for the construction by the Board of State Harbor Commissioners of a seawall and appurtenances in the city and county of San Francisco; to create a sinking at | fund for the payment of sald bonds, and pro viding’ for the submission of this Act to & vois approved March 20, 1903, and d designated as the “San Frau each of sald bonds bearing A. D. 1905, and made payabia ¢ january, 1924 A. D., and each date January 2. oB the 20d day of of said bonde being for the sum of ome thou- sand dollars and bearing interest at the rate of four per cent per annum. The undersigned js required by said act to re- ject any and all bids for said parcel of bonds which shall be below the par value of said bonds so offered for sale; and, likewiss, has the right, by public announcement at the place an. time fixed for the said sale as aforesald, to con tinue such sale to such time and place as he may eelect. Dated January 29, 1906, TRUMAN REEVES, As State Treasurer of the Stats of California. WAHA IRRIGATION SYSTEM. & LEWISTON, Idaho, Feb. 1, 1906 Sealed proposals wiil be received at the office of the Waha-Lewiston Land and Water Com- pany, at Lewiston, ldaho, until 3 p. m., Feb- 28, 1906, for the construction of 18 mitles ood water, Catchment Ditch, 4 miles of Main Supply Ditch and 2 Storage otrs, situated on Cralg Mountain, Nes Perce County, 0. This work involves the handling of some of eart cubio 310,000 cuble yards yards of rock and construction of about 18,000 cublc yards of concrete and other masonry, and about 4000 lineal feet of tunnels. A certified check, or a Trust Company's Bond, for a sum 10 § per cent of the amouat of the bid must accompany each bid, and the successful bidder will be required to emter into a contract at once and furnish satisCactory bond in the sum equal to 40 per cent of the amount of the contract as a guar- antee of the proper execution of the contract within the time meclfled.. - company reserves the to reject ‘Bida will be received (1) % q,.......;” ls wil v C for the of the ditches, () the reservolrs and (3 is tunnels, or for the entire work. Plans and specifications are on file at the otfice of the company at Lewiston, Idaho. Additional Information furnished upom ap- plication. WALTER H. GRAVES, Engineer. BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters $ A GREAT RESTORATIVE BY o 6 R INVIGORA- PILES! MAC'S INFALLIBLE PILE CUR® BLEBDING. ITCHING ARD PRO PROTRUD- PILES; cases of many years' stana- ing cured by a single box; mnmmxu.m.mvm 504 Washington St. San Francisco. BUNS = & BARBER co., 739 Market EST W

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