THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTX.AXD, JUNE 25, 1905. 3 VIEW TIE Bill Thousands of Visitors Board Great Vessel at Bay City. MANY WOMEN IN THRONG Quests Are Permitted to Roam Over the Steamer at Will, and Re freshments Are Provided In Great Abundance. BAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. June 24. (Spe cial.) A reception was given 5'esterday to ihe public aboard the great steamer Da kota., on the iv-ay to Seattle, for which port the vessel sailed this afternoon. Within 20 minutes after the gangway was lowered yesterday to admit visitors hold ing Invitations, all attempts to keep any thing like- an approximate tab on the cumber was abandoned. Nearly 5000 Invitations had been issued, ach invitation reading, "and ladies." This latter phrase was followed literally, each card bringing aboard from one to a dozen ladies and from 1:30 to nearly 5 o'clock a living tide rolled up the gang way and overflowed the decks and down to the engine-room. At last there came b time when .the steamer, big as she la, could hold no more, and the gangway was raised until those on board could pass out by the after companion ladder. The reception was given San Francisco citizens in recognition of the fact that this city was the first American port touched in the Pacific a C. Lacey. marine superintendent of the Great Northern Steamship Company, and Ed ward S. Blair, general agent in San Francisco of the Great Northern Railroad represented the owners and acted as hosts. In which they received the efficient aid of Captain Francke. Surgeon "William H, Topp. Purser A. I- Watson, Chief En gineer R. S. Paul, Chief Officer J. S. Rob erts, First Officer James Barneson, Chief Steward George W. Medley and the entire complement of the ship's officers and crew. Refreshments were served in the grand dining saloon and wines and other liquids and sandwiches and boxes of fine cigars stood on the tables, from which smokers Vtnind tViomsolvfls. The crowd was so great that anything like personally con ducted groups was out or me question, and the visitors were allowed to roam about the big vessel at will, asking ques tions of officers and men alike, who drove to satisfy their curiosity. At one time It was estimated that there j(vut npnntft nn the wharf, and the pressure was so great'that Mr. Blair ordered that the crowd oe pressea ones from the edge and the gangway raised until some of those on the steamer should make room by passing out the arter com .,ni.nv rrnntaln John Martin." of the )aim""".- - harbor police station, was on the wharf u, eminH nf his men handling the enormous crowd without accident amid the hundreds of teams and trucKs ana keeping It clear of the thousands of tons of cargo being discharged from the ateamer. ti,. nnVntn rlwired at the Custom house today for Seattle. A big gang of stevedores was hard at worn tnis mora lng getting out the freight she brought for this port. MAN KILLS BEARDLESS YOUTH James Howlett Found Guilty of Man slaughter in California. WOODLAND. Cal., June 24. (Special.) The Jury in" the case of. James Howlett, v. mnrAcr of William Gamble. returned a verdict of manslaughter this morning. Howlett will receive sentence Monday. unn-itt elm and mortally wounded William Gamble, a lad IS years oW. In the cabin of Frank Welch in the mountains several miles from Capay. on the night of April 21. Gamble died at the home of his parents. In San Francisco, where he was taken from a hospital In Woodland several -r ..- oftni- IVlA KhnOtlniT. According to the dying statement of the victim and the testimony of Welch, the only eyewitness, Howlett shot Gamble while the latter was ending over annus 1 ImA fnr J-Tnvvlptt UIMI1 the flOOr. flP parently without provocation. Howlett v.oh wn rtHnldnrr and was aroueed from a drunken sleep to be put to bed when the tragedy occurred. unot( Ti'Hn Ik 0 vears old. testified hie HnVnnco that Welch and Gamble were trying to rob him. and that he shot Gamble to protect, hlmseir. CONFERENCE ON FISHERIES. Governor Mead Appoints Delegates to Represent Washington. OLTMPIA, Wash.. June 24. (Spe cial.) Governor Mead today appointed a commission which will sit with. like commissions from Northern states, and with a commission from the Dominion of Canada, for the purpose of dtscussT lng uniform fishing regulations and laws In the Northern states and the p.ninn nmvlnces. Practically all the Northern states interested will send delegates to the conference. The asn- lngton members appointed are; t t a TTnrr. Seattle: E. B. Doming. Belllngham: T. J. Gorman. Seattle; A. E. Woolard. Anacortes; E. E. Ainsworth. Seattle, and Fish Commissioner T. R. Vnrchnv. It is planned to hold the conference In July and it Is llKeiy that the com missioners will visit the fishing cen- i.., r U'orfilni-tftn anrt TlHtlKh Cnlum- Dla. The commissioners named by Gov ernor Mead must bear their own ex penses. Sheep- King Sells His Flocks. BOISE, Idaho. June' 24. Robert Noble, of Reynolds, the "sheep king" of Idaho. has disposed of his flock of 140.000 head to Haley & Saunders, of Salt Lake The price has not been made public, but Is raid to be in the neighborhood of $2.40 a head. Noble came here 30 years ago poor boy and herded sheep, afterward securing a btfnd on shares. Besides the flock disposed of, he owns a 3000-acre ranch and large real estate holdings in Boise. Celebration at Hood River. HOOD RIVER, Or.. June 24. (Special.) The. subscription fund for the Fourth of July celebration here will exceed J600. The business men have been liberal in their contributions, and a successful eel ebration is assured. Twenty floats have been promised for a street parade. Com pany D. of the O. N. G., will be here from The Dalles. Dies of Consumption on Train. HELENA. Mont. June 24. Lewi Strlngfellow. of Whltehouse, Ky., died on the Great Northern passenger train last night near LArimore. N. D.. while on the way to Havre, Mont., of consumption The body was taken to Havre, where twe brothers live. Richards Charged With Murder. EUGENE. Or.. June 34. Speclal.)-Thls afternoon the grand Jury returned a true hill again at John. Rlcnard charging him with the murder of his Bister, Mrs. Skin ner and her husband. Sanford Skinner. The trial wHl begin the first ef next week. fw . 2 Divorced to Marry Wife's Gnest. LOS ANGELES. June 24. (Special.) The secret of the divorce of W. N. Stowell, l millionaire of this cltvls out. His mar riage Tuesday to a girl 22 years old, ex plains his desire to be free from the wife with whom he had lived 20 years in appar ent happiness. His latest bride Is Miss E-elyn Wilkinson, of Chicago. Even Mrs. Stowell had no idea her husband contem plated another marriage when he brought his singular suit for dlvprce. A telegram received today announced the wedding. Mrs. Stowell entertained the girl in her own "house; In fact. It was while the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Stowell. In this city, that the millionaire became smitten with his new wife. The Stowells have lived here many years. The Stowell block figured in the divorce settlement. Stowell apparently tried to keep the dl orce secret. He went to El Paso. Tex.. to get it Mrs. Stowell bringing a counter suit here. Nearly $100,000 was settled upon Mrs. Stowell. Worked Two Days in Ten Years. LOS ANGELES. June 24. (Special.) Ten years ago Samuel Montgomery took a solemn vow never to do another stroke of work, and he "kept It, with the excep tion of two days. He admitted this In court today when his wife was suing him for a divorce, which was granted. "And if the Lord will forgive me for that two days, 111 never do it again, sir," said Samuel to the Judge. It developed in the trial that Montgom ery never gave his wife a cent during the five years of their married life, and no clothlag. except one hat. although he claims he will be worth $500,000 within a few years. He is a Socialist speaker. SCANDAL AMONG VETERANS Director of Home Often Seen Drank by Inmates. SAN FRANCISCO. June 34. There is a scandal in the Veterans' Home Associa tion, which has charge of 3000 old soldiers of the Mexican and Civil wars, at Yount- viile. in the Napa valley. Misconduct Is charged against Director George W. Strohl and the papers in the case have been In the hands of Governor Pardee for several days. Dr. W. F. McAllister, medical director of the Tountvillc home, preferred the charges and sent them to the Governor, Instead of submitting them to the Board of Directors first. Dr. McAllister. In bis signed charges to Govornor Pardee, states that Director Stohl has repeatedly come to the home in an Intoxicated condition and been seen by the old veterans on the grounds and in the various buildings In that condition. So patent was his drunken state. It Is alleged, that the soldier In mates repeatedly commented on Stohl and his drinking habit. The soldiers are not allowed to drink on the grounds since the abolition of the canteen. McAlHeter sworn state ment to the Governor comments on that fact and goes on to say that as a conse quence, Strohl's conduct- nas tended to demoralize some of the men and In that respect In particular has been highly Improper. j. he canteen question has for some time been a burning issue at the Institution. That adds importance to the charges against Strohl. Since the canteen was abolished the soldiers have patronized saloons at Yountvllle. a town a mile away from the home. The directors have repeatedly charged that these saloons have been selling bad liquor to the sol diers, and that seven or eight deaths can be traced to this fact- At the last ses sion of the Legislature, the director" got law passed prohibiting the sale of llauor within a mile and a half of -the home. This law was aimed at the-Yount vllle saloons, and has caused much bit terness on the part of the saloonmen and their friends, and also on sojte of the soldiers who favored the saloons. HEINZE COPPER CASE. New Complaint Filed In Famous Montana Mining Suit. NEW YORK, June 24. Further llti gallon in the famous Holnze copper mining case was Instituted today be fore the united States Circuit Court, when the Johnstone Mining Company filed an amended complaint in the suit of the Boston & Montana Silver & Cop per Mining Company, in which suit It Is alleged the defendant company took valuable ores to the amount of J3,0ee. 000. These charges are repeated in the new complaint and it is further alleged that the Montana Ore Purchasing Com pany, prior to the commencement of the action, was the owner of certain ores of great value that had become separated, loosened and freed from the Rarus mine in Montana: that the de fondant, well knowing that the ores were the property of the Johnstone Company and the Montana Ore Purchas ing Company wrongfully took these ores. The Johnstono Company, the complaint alleges, deeded its title to the ores by transfer to the Montana Purchasing Company. The real quostion involved is whether the mining patent granted by the United States to Eugene Fatrview and four others in June. 18S4, for the prop erty in question and conveyed to F. A. Holnze. who in 1697 transferred his rights to the Montana Ore Purchasing Company, Is legally valid. Since No vember S, 1S9S. the Montana Ore Pur chasing Company and the plaintiff were the Joint owners of the veins in the Rarus mine. The decision In this case will call for a new construction of the United States mining laws by the Fed eral courts. SLITS OPEN MA1LP0UCH Robber Gets $2000 From Bag Hang ing on Crane. SANTA FE, N. M.. June 24. At Belen. Valencia County, today, a robber cut the bottom of a mall pouch hanging on a crane for the passing east-bound train, and abstracted a package con tainlng $2060 mailed to the First Na tlonal Bank at. Albuquerque from the bank at Beleo. The robber escaped. Delegate on Conference. ST. LOUIS. June 34. (Special.) Mayor Wells today announced the appointment of James L. Dawson. W. H. McClaln. Rev. C. C. Stahmann. Andrew Scully. Dr. H. J. Scherck. Adolph Row. D. Samuel. M. Green. Rev. Frederick H. Jens. Mrs. O. C. Shedd. Herman Horchert and Harvey L. Christie as delegates to the National Conference of Charities and Corrections, to be held at Portland beginning JUy is. i . Sailors Fail to Return. Uncle Sam's sailors absent from their ships after 12 o'clock last night were locked up in the police station. Shore leave expired at that time, "as the cruis ers Chicago and Boston sail today. Sail ors found on the streets after 12 o'clock were: T. J. Keilher. A. LI pp. J. Strong. H. Newton. J. Blake. P. Ross and Tama moto. Disaster on Spanish River. VIGO. Spain. June 24. Advices received here today from the Mlnho River (which empties into the Atlantic near CanUnha) say that SO persons were drowned recent ly through the oapstsiag of a bark which bad arrived la the river Iron Portugal, LODZ IS SHAMBLES (Contlased Frees Flnt rttO losses to themselves andLfearf ul slaugh ter to the rioters. The soldiers exhibit ed the utmost carelessness as to whether they killed peaceful persons or rioters and as a consequence many women and children were among the dead. Streets Like BattJe-Field. The streets on Friday resembled & battlefield. The houses were barricaded with boards and mattresses and many volleys and individual shots were heard in every quarter of the city. Until late at night the Cossacks were busy collect- in? bodies of the dead and picking up persons -seriously wounded. The bodies were carried off In carts to neighbor ing churchyards. Hence the Impossi bility of giving an accurate estimate of the dead until order Is completely re stored. If Indeed the full story is' ever told. Terrorists are energetically foment ing agitation among the soldiers by distributing' revolutionary proclama tions and pamphlets, but their efforts are without effect. Shooting was renewed this evening. Cossacks are robbing the dead, of Jew els and mony. A factory-owner named Newmann has been shot by strikers. ANARCHY REIGNS IN WARSAW Bombthrowing Is Signal for Battle Between Mob and Troops. WARSAW, June 23. Anarchy's red flag was again unfurled In Warsaw's streets today, and in the evening the scenes of rioting and-bloodshed that brought death to hundreds and Injury to thousands at Lodz In the past four days of rioting promise t5 be repcavod here, unless the troops and police are able to cow the spirit of the Socialist element Up to midnight It was known that one soldier had been shot dead. In reprisal the troops to which the murdered soldier be longed fired Into the throng, injuring sev eral men and women. Soldiers of an in fantry detachment shot down a mother and her daughter, who taunted them with revolutionary cries. Two soldiers were fatally injured by the bursting of a bomb thrown Into a detachment of mounted Cossacks. At 7 o'clock last night, hundreds of Socialists and laboring, men cheered the fight their comrades had made agalnrt the authorities at Lodz, counting not the cost In life and property after being ha rangued by several Socialist leaders. whose language whipped them lato a frenzy, and air shouting taunts to the police, who hurried away to give the alarm. At the corner of Wronte. street, the au thorities made a determined, effort to bring the procession to a halt in order to interrupt lis march. A party of mounted gendarmes with drawn sabres blocked the entire width of( the street. As the pro! cession came near, the officer In com mand called to the marchers to dlrperse. Bomb Thrown at Cossacks. In reply a young man went up with the leaders, ran forward a few paces, hurled a bomb at the mounted soldlors, and then. turning, fied and made his escape. The bomb exploded under the horse of a Cos sack. The animal was blown to pieces and Its rider and another soldier were frightfully Injured, but were taken to hospital. It Is not expected they can re cover. The damage resulting from the bursting bomb added to the excitement, and for a time had a quieting effect upon the march ers. The noise of the explosion drew t still greator crowd, however, which packed the adjoining streets of Leszno and Chlona. The troopers, reinforced by a detachment of Infantry, made a deter mined assault. Two volleys were fired by the foot soldiers Into the marchers, the officers giving the order without calling on the people to fall back and disperse. It is not known how many were killed or in jured. The marchers withdrew sullenly with their maimed comrades, and orde; was partially restored. Later on the remnants of the mob cap tured a secret police officer and upon him took revonge for the killing of their mem bers. An agent of the police who was recognized by one of the Socialists was shot six times and stabbed twice and left for dead. He was later found by the po lice, and, despite bis frightful wounds, the surgeons say he has a chance for his life. Deadly Revenge for Comrade. Later on In the evening, while a Cossack patrol was passing down Konstantln street, one of a 'number of police and mili tary squads that were sent to every sec tion of the city to restore order and to prevent the formation of mobs, a man leaped from the window of a house and shot dead one of the soldiers. The re venge of bis comrades was Instantaneous. They surrounded the house, and, without cabling on the man to surrender, poured volley after volley through the windows, doors and walls. When they had ceased firing, two men In the house were dead, two women so badly shot that they can not live, and the remaining inmates, who numbered a score, were all more or les3 seriously wounded. Early in the evening a patrol passing near the gax works was taunted with rev olutionary cries by two women, a mother and her daughter. Without a word of command from the officers the patrol shot the two dead. Death Roll at Lodz. Official reports of rioting at Lodz and vicinity, official in that they are what is admitted by the authorities, who have been in communication with Lodz con stantly during the troubles, state that the number of dead Is 223. Funerals of the dead were held today. The burials were wholesale. In the vil lage of Doly 59. and in the village of Darczw 125 were buried. It Is believed that the authorities will admit that the number of dead is in -excess of that ad mitted today. CLIP POWER OF ASSEMBLY Russian National Parliament Will Be Closely Hedged About. ST. PETERSBURG. June 26. (12:40 A. M.) Russia's coming National Assembly, if forecasts that are appearing in the newspapers are correct, will be controlled by parliamentary machinery and pro cedure profoundly Intricate and unwork able from the standpoint of Western countries. Everywhere checks will be In troduced upon the power of the Gosud arstvennla Douma. or popular elected lower bouse ot tSte Legislative Assembly, and arbitrary methods will be evolved for overriding, or rather, sweeping aside Its objections when they become troublesome or too Insistent. For instance. It measures fall to reach the Council of the Empire or the upper house within a certain time, consent of the lower house will be assumed to have been given. Bills introduced must be sup ported ay thirty members and then go to the Minister wherto department is af fected, who exercises a sort of prelim inary veto power which can only be broken down by a vote of two-thirds of both houses and with the approval of the Emperor. Even then It will only have the effect to compel the Minister to intro duce a project of law to meet the views of the Assembly within a year. Ihe lower house has not the power to initiate revenue legislation. The budset Is to be introduced by the Minister of Finance annually on November 11, and must go through committee In ten days and be passed by December 5. All items provided for la existing laws or relating to the established budget of the army and navy cannot be stricken out and the machinery practically Insures acceptance of the budget by providing for a motion for striking out an Item to follow the same procedures in new legislation. Throughout, the Council of the Empire nominated by the Emperor exercises a preponderating Influence or control over tne eioctea lower nouse. una president of the house is clothed with powers not only to keep debate within bounds, but to suspend sittings. Ministers are to be interpreted in Camera, and only such por tions of proceedings In executive sessions may be published as the president ap proves. Representatives are to be ad mitted to open sessions, but their ac counts are considerable. Besides, there will be an official publication like the Congressional Record at Washington. The mode of elections Is yet unsettled. Apparently there are two possibilities. one for class representation and the other along the general suffrage line. This question is yet under consideration. RUSSIAN TRADE IS CRIPPLED War and Strikes Reduce Nation to Verge of Bankruptcy. SPECIAL CABLE. LONDON. June 24. A private dispatch from St. Petersburg states that a confi dential report regarding the actual condi tion of Russia at the present moment is now In the hands of the Minister of the Interior .and that Its contents, if per mitted to become officially known, would perhaps make it impossible for Russia to borrow a single kopeck in any foreign market. Embodying statistics gathered within the past month or so. the report shows beyond the shadow of a doubt that Russia is ministerially bankrupt, with little hope at the moment of early re demption. Russian Poland has suffered worse than any other section of the country, but even the famous oil belt has become un. productive of prosperity, and the large factory enterprises of St. Petersburg, Moscow and Kleff. which at the begin ning of the war prospered under the in fluence of - Innumerable government or ders, have been all but crippled by the strike movements of the past month. The depression had Its beginning when Japan struck the first blow against Port Arthur and suddenly Interrupted In very serious fashion Russia's considerable sea board trade between her Baltic ports and the Far East. The ships of the Russian volunteer fleet. Russian Steam Navigation Company. East Asiatic. Northern and other Russian shipping lines were com pelled for the most part to lie up in Idle ness In Russia's European ports. Then came the crippling for commercial purposes of nearly every railway line emptying Into the Siberian road by inter minable shipments of soldiers and sup plies, and It Is said that, had the Interrup tions of trade not compelled the Polish and Russian manufacturers to reduce their employes by mere than one-half, the great strike movement with its attending cry for liberty would never have been In augurated. LUCE TAKING BESIEGED CITY Desperate Resistance of Workmen to Attacks of Soldiers. ST. UETERSBURG, June 25. (2:3) A. M.) St. Petersburg is without defi nite news of the happenings on Frl day and last night at Lodz and there Is the keenest apprehension that Satur day may have been marked by a re newal of the battle of FrIJay, the dead of which are apparently to be num bered by the hundreds. The troops were desperately opposed by an army of 60. O0S. many armed with revolvers, de fending substantial barricades with bullets and showers of paving stones and other missiles, and even bombs. The industrial quarters were aooar- 1 ently largely in the hands of the mani- was akin to that of the Russian sol diers In the war In Turkestan, wnen towns had to be stormed, street by street, almost house to house. The demolition of the barricades at Lodz required regular sappers work unJer the fire of revolvers and showers of missiles from windows of houses, by which the troops suffered heavily.-The Military Governor had it 'pis disposal four regiments of Jnfantry and two of cavalry. The last barricades were taken at 4 o'clock Saturday morning. NEARLY 200 ARE KILLED. Lodz Fall of Dead and Hospitals Arc Crowded. LODZ. Russian Poland. June 24. So far as ascertaineu. ISO persons were killed outright during the fighting of Friday. and 41 more died In the hospitals during the night. Of the wounded. 320 sustained only slight Injuries, which were attended to on the spot by the ambulance surgeons. The casualties up to noon today added IS killed or wounded to yesterday's appalling total. All the hospital: of the city are filled to overflowing, and. owing t the insufficient number of beds, many of the wounded are lying oh the floors All the shops, stores and factories are closed, and business Is at a deadlock. The rioters this morning attempted to set fire to the government offices, but were scat tered by a strong force of troops. BOMBTHROWER IS SENTENCED Warsaw Workmen Threaten to Strike in Revenge. WARSAW. Russian Poland, June 24. Stephen Okrjela, the locksmith who threw the bomb into the Praa. "police statlo'n March 26, .Injuring six police nenv has been sentenced to death. The workmen threaten a general strike as a consequence, and further serious dis order is anticipated. The streets -are heavily, patrolled by Cossacks and in fantry. A workman was murdered In the streets during the night for refusing-to strike. FIGHTING LASTED ALL NIGHT Continuous Fusillade Shows Stub born Resistance to Troops. ST. PETERSBURG. June 24 (7 P. M.). Dispatches received here from Lodx report that street fighting continued there nearly all night, but the corre spondents either are not permitted or were unable to give the number of deaa or even an estimate ot tne cas ualties. One fusillade at midnight is reported to have lasted 15 minutes, in di eating & atout resistance. The. troops WHAT DOCTORS SAY OF Found Pe-ru-na a Dr. A. Morgan. 314 West Gater street. Indianapolis. Ind., writes: "Regular physicians uo not. as a rule, indorse patent meiicines. WI have, horvervcr found In my practice that l'cnjnn Is a notable exception and not nt all like any other medicine Kenernlly nold as "patent medicine." "In examining it I find that it Is a scientifically prepared medicine, com posed of herbal remedies of high medicinal value. "It In a apectflc for catarrh of the head, lungn or stomach, a fine remedy for female trouble and' Invaluable to mothers and children. "After fevem and other protracted Illness, It Is one of the best tonics I know of to restore the system to normal condition and I recommend it to convalescents. -It Is a high-class remedy, good for young and old." professor of Howard "University Rec ommends Peruna to the Public. Dr. A. P. Bogue. formerly profes sor of anatomy at Howard Univer sity, writes from the Bureau of Ed ucation. Washington. D. C, as fol lows: "I have used Peruna In several coses of catarrh nnd have found It nn excellent remedy. Ml con honestly recommend It to the public as an excellent remedy for catarrh nnd colds." at Lodz were strongly reinforced dur ing the night. CAN'T GIVE JEWS EQUALITY Czar Approves Referring; Cas.e to National Assembly. ST. PETERSBURG, June 24. Em peror Nicholas last 'Wednesday ap proved the recommendations of the Committee of Ministers on the revision of laws deollnir with Jews. The com mittee was of the opinion that It would be detrimental to the Interests of the remainder of the population to give Jews equality and might lead to out bursts of popular lilwlll. and It there fore was decided to leave the revision of the laws to the forthcoming- repre sentative assembly, but recommended toe appointment of a special extra of ficial conference, to consist of mem bers to be nominated by the Emperor and representatives of the authorities, to arrange the preliminaries. CONVICTS " 3IUTINY IN PRISON Demolish Cells and Are Subdued by Soldiers With Swords. LIBAU. June 24. The convicts In the prison here mutinied today and. with the assistance of a mob of roughs. demolished eight cells. The police and ' military restored order, using their swords. Twelve persons were wounded. Sheepmen Killed With Hatchet. j ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. June 24. , mettabecn'murd small village IS miles west of this city. while bringing their wool clip to market. Their bodies, hacked with a hatchet, were found In an abandoned well. Amelio Mc Clure. a negro, who was in the employ of the dead men, has been arrested on sus picion. . General Strike Is Ordered. WARSAW, June 24. The Social Dem ocratic party of Poland and Lithuania has Issued a proclamation calling- out the workmen ns a protest against the Lodz massacre, and the men in the workshops of the Warsaw and Vienna and the Vistula railroad have struck. Thomas H. Mastln, Banker. KANSAS CITY, Mo.. June -24. Thomas H. Mastln. a pioneer banker and real estate man, died at his home here today, as the result of a stroke of paralysis, aged 67 years. In the Civil War he was made a Colonel, and was attached to Jefferson Davis escort Just before the Southern leader was captured. Automobiles to Nevada Mine. LOS ANGELES. June 24. The Las Ve gas route to the Nevada mines will have opposition shortly from the Santa. Fe in a line of automobiles that Is to be estab- Hood's SarsapraHa is unquestiona bly the greatest Hood and liver medldne known. It positively and permanently cores every humor, from Pimples to Scrofula. It is the Best. Blood Medkine. Notable Exception. As a rule Physicians are opposed to proprietary medicines. Man; are opposed to Peruna Just be cause It Is a proprietary medicine. In spite of the natural prejudice against It. however. Peruna has won the favor of a great many nhvaleJan Some very prominent physicians use 1 ana prescrme .Peruna. Many times Peruna finds its way into the physician's family first. His wire or children make use of It and its value is demonstrated ln the physicians, own home. Tnen he timidly prescribes It for his patients. Ushed at once between 'the terminus of the Santa Fe's branch at .Ivanpah and Bullfrog, going via Manse, Pahrump and Johnnie. According to the plans agreed upon. 12. powerful passenger auto cars have been ordered and will be put on the run. Row in Royal Arcanum. NEW YORK. Juno 24. Seventy-two councils of the Royal Arcanum, repre sented by 300 dlgats tonight at a meeting- held in Brooklyn protested against the action of the Supreme Council in Issuing-, the new table of rates made at Atlantic City recently and asked that the operation of the new table be sus pended until such time as the supreme councils of the various states have voiced an opinion on the subject. Hlg Burst of Oil. FRESNO. Cal.. June 24. Pieces of brick, iron tubing and tools were shot 110 feet Into the air by a tremendous burst of oil from a well being bored ten miles north west of Coalinga. The gusher's Immense stream of oil was easily seen this morn ing from Coalinga. and practically every been onediscovered that is the equal ol S. a. b. it is especially aaaptea lor a systemic remedy, because it contains no strong minerals to derange the stomach and digestion, and affect the liver and bowels. It is made entirely and possesses just the properties strong robust health. When the blood becomes impure and clogged -with, waste matters and poisons , r the body does not receive suf- I have used your S. S. S. and found tt to be an ficient nourishment and suf- excellent tomcto build ury the general health and e c j t. t.HMO give tone and strength to the system. Iiave used fers from debility, -weakness, Hghlrecommended, but S. S. S. did Sleeplessness, nervousness, me more od than-cverythmg else combined. As loss of appetite, bad diges- to tonfc properties it gives a splendid appetite, tion and many .other disa- refreshing sleep, and the system undergoes a gen greeable symptoms of a dis- eral buUding up under its invigorating influence, ordered blood circulation, 548 Woodland Ave. , Warren, O. Mrs. Kate Bscs, and if it is not corrected some ' form of malignant fever or other dangerous disorder will follow. S. S. S. builds up the broken down constitution, clears the blood of all poisons and impurities and makes it strong and healthy. The nerves are restored to a calm restful state, refreshing sleep is had again, the appetite returns and the whole system is toned up by this great remedy, S. S. S. is a blood puri fier and tonic and acts promptly in this run-down depleted condition of the system. Book on the blood and medical advice f urnishedby our physicians, without charge. jH SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. A "HAIR-SAVER" that crows la popularity. SOIN3! COOING!! GONE !!! EilRClHTTiLlSlTEIT HHfMIK HE NEEDS A GUARDIAN The bualrjeas man -who Is too busy to look after bis health and persona! comfort netds a rnardlan. To notlc dindroft asd fjJllnp hair 1 beneath his idem, of builseu. Later when Inearablo baldseM cornea ha -will vista money trxlnr to Bras St km, SLM. Ini IB:., stupe, tt HEIPICIK Gl., left H. De, HkL, Ur 1 imjk: NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE The ORIGINAL remedy tfeat "kills the Dandruff Gcria." AppIIcatloas at Proatlaeat Barber Shays. PE-RU-NA. Afterwards he boldly proclaims its virtues and gives public indorsement of Peruna. i All the way from California to the District cf Columbia are to be found physicians who believe In Peruna, and prescribe It for, catarrhal diseases. Considers Pe-ru-na the Peer of All Patent Medicines. Dr. W. Green. 330 S. Spring St.. Los Angeles, Cal.. writes: "If people would take less medi cine and pay more attention to the general laws governing health, they would be better off. "I am also satisfied that the ma jority of patent medicines are at best almost worthless and unfit to takes or cure anything. "I Iiave found, however, one ex ception to this rule, and that Is ln Peruna. 'I have often prescribed 11 In cases of catarrh of the respiratory or digestive organs, nnd have also fonnd It very valuable for female weakness and ovnrian troubles and fccores of women are happy and healthy mothers today on account of reruna." resident of the town went to the scene of the strike. The men working at the well had to flee for their lives at the out burst, but were saturated with oil beforal they got away. The oil flowed rampantly until late this afternoon, when control of the stream was secured. Season at Washington Closes. WASHINGTON. June 24. Mrs. Roose-, velt will leave for Oyster Bay next. Monday morning. Her departure will' be the signal for the practical closing of the White House for the Summer, as tWe. President will leave on Monday for Boston to attend the commence ment exercises of Harvard College, and. will go thence to Oyster Bay. ThaJ Roosevelt children, except Miss Allce and Theodore, Jr.," already are at Saga more Hill. Dakota Sails for Seattle. SAN FRANCISCO, June 24. The steam-v er Dakota, which arrived last Tuesday! from New York, sailed today to complete her voyage to Seattle. While appearing to be almost empty, the Dakota carried 7000 tons of steel rail?. BEST TONIC When the system gets debilitated and in a run-down condition it needs a tonic and there has never that are needed to restore to the body WIL Uf IT liiu LITE FBlKWeiK overcome the result of his own neglect. Soma one at home should look after him. At first sight of dandruff which is a contagious disease Neirbro's Herpleide should be used. It cures dandruff and stops falling hair by destroying the daa druft germ. A. delightful hair dressing. STOPS ITCHING INSTANTLY.