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2 1 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 189 A BRIDE AWAITS THE RETURN OF DICK STODDARD Irma Wilson Hopes the Mail Clerk Will Lead Her to the Altar To-Day. Promise of an Exciting Meeting When the Central Overland Reaches the Oakland Mole This Morning, in Which Pis- tols May Figure. Torn by conflicting emotions; at one buoyed by the hope that her | return and fulfll his hal- | r promise to right the great | 'ng he has done her, the next cast | into the abyss of despair by the tear} that he has gone, never to return, | poor, trustful, innocent Irma Wilson | seeks refuge in the one unfailing earth- ly haven—a mother’s sheltering arms. | On the Central Pacific overland | which will arrive in San Francisco this | morning is believed to be Richard C. Stoddard, a dashing young clerk in the railway mail service, whose coming Irma Wilson so anxibusly awalits. | At the Oakland mole Stoddard will be met mother and probably , and escorted across the bay. | > stands ready to keep his promise, | rip to the City Hall tg procure a | arriage license will be made, followed ¥ a simple ceremony which will wipe | out the stain under which Irma chafes, | and will install her into the realm of | honored wifehood. Should he seek to | his responsibility or delay the | of the wrong, there promises | dramatic scene, for | | | Wilson is intensely wrought up over the tarnishing of his daughter’s honor, and he has made violent threats against young Stoddard unless he re- the injury forthwith. Should he | owever, he will not be given | tunity to make use of the| revolver he has been carrying > learned of Stoddard’s perfidy; detectives will be close at hand to | such occurrence. y of Irma Wilson is mos in Modesto scarcely y go, family dissension | marred he and before she was | old e 2h to fully comprehend the shadow that had fallen upon her young 1 her parents separated, Wilson eventually going to Applegate, Placer inty, where he has amassed a con- | siderable fortune. In the course of a Mrs. Wilson became Mrs. | Overly to Reno, Nev taking It was there | et Handsome Dick | father, the leading of the most prominent | s of the place, gave his son a he best circles that the boy ly well qualified to fill. 5 moved in the same set | and in a short time Dick and Irma | we firm friends. Mrs. Overly is a cousin of a member of President Mc- Kinley's Cabinet and has many rela- who are prominent in this and | States, nother cousin being George McKen a prominent busi- ness man of Chicago. Young Stoddard completed his school ife and entered the Railway Malil Ser- being placed on the run between Francisco and Ogd The little of Reno became irksome to Irma the monot- by to San Francisco, mber of friends. It visits that | e friendship | was renewed | city after Dick we Stoddar: acquaint- ance of a t well known about town. and i Irma to some of his| newer She it was who figured | as the mysterious femn friend at the time of Jockey runaway mar- | riage last June, her assistance | to s carefully con- | it the time. Though | more than a child in years. Irma cautiful girl, a woman of connected with | y elopement, and that affair | ; be regarded as the great crisis in | their lives | Irma’s visits to the metropolis hp—’ came more frequent and of greater length, and Stoddard passed all his | time when here in her company. | d be but one result to these The child discovered, when too late, that in quaffing from the | s the dregs must a el ADVERTISEMENTS. | CUTICURA WORKS WONDERS. A Remarkable Cure of Sore Eyes And Sight Restored. 1am a graduate of Oberlin College, taught long enough after I graduated to have them give me the Honorary degree, and I have a great many acquaintamces inand around Boa- ton. About three years ago my son brought home a box of CUTICURA (ointment), and I picked up the circular that was around it,and Jearned about the CUTICURA SOAP, and told him to get me a cake. When I got it, the cir- cularadvised its use for the bath, teeth, scalp, etc. Ihad been a great sufferer all my life from sore eyelids, the wholelid outside and in ‘was red asa beet. Ihad to sitin a dark room, evenings, for eight and a half years, and wear black spectacles to keep the sun from my eyes in the daytime. When I got the CUTICURA 8oAP, I got a fine, soft cloth, dipped it in hot water and rubbed it on the soap and washed my eyes with it. I can’t tell you how much good it has done me, although it smarted very much at first. My eyes are as clear and bright as when I was a young lady. Ihad to go backwards in getting spectacles and wear No. 15, the same as I did twenty years ago, 1 can rea " medium sized print in daylight with- out any spectacles. As a matter of course Iam kind of a walking advertisement of CUTIOURA. People will call to me when I am going along the street and tell me how much good my CuTIOURA SOAP has done their eyes. Mrs. M. R. CONGDON, Jan. 18,°97. 26 No.Cedar Avenue, Oberlin, O. &5 We take pleasure in publishing this testi- monial as showing the interest taken in CoTI- CURA REMEDIES, and the various uses made of them not anticipated or suggested by us. We cannot, of course, anticipate how.CUTICURA Boar will work in cases similar to the above, but to those who desire to try it we would suggest beglnning with a very weak solution or ** sud of warm water and CuTicURA S0AP untll its | consulted attorneys pleaded with Stoddard to give her his name, but he refused, or at least de- layed. The time came when the un- happy girl must seek consolation from some source or else go mad, and then she turned to her mother. Mrs. Overly came and under her ministrations Irma found a ray of comfort. Stoddard was seen and promised the mother that he would make Irma his wife. That was one day last week. Mrs. Overly placed full faith in the young man’s promise, and she still believes he will hold to his word wh day. Meanwhile Mr. Wilson had learned of his daughter’s trouble, and came post haste to San Francisco. All last week he searched for Stoddard with a wicked looking revolver, swearing vengeance on the man who had wrecked his daughter’'s happiness, and | vowing he would make the young man | The Three Leading Characters in the Local Ibsen Drama. marry the =irl without a second’s de- | lay. The matter was reported to Chief | who promised to aid | of Police Le Wilson in every way possible to have Stoddard repair the wrong. Detective Anthony was set to work-on the case, but failed t> find Stoddard before the mall clerk left for Ogden last Friday. | Mrs. Wilson, however, had several interviews with the young man. had known him from' the time he was a mere boy, and she could not believe he would basely abandon her chiid. She promised to shield him possible harm and to have her relative in the Cabinet see that he w: in his position if he would give Irma | his name, and he upon his return. Should he fail to do so there is more | dard than even a father’s wrath. for Mrs. Overly has declared that not only will he lose his position, but she will seek justice from the courts. She has and has ascer- tained that Stoddard is liable to a long term in the penitentiarv, and that he shall receive full punishment she is determined upon. For that reason she will be at the Oakland mole when the overland arrives this morning. to shield Stoddard from the father’s vengeance or to wreak her own upon him, which- ever he may choose. DYNAMITE WILL BE USED. Supervisors Grant Permission to Baldwin to Raze His Ruins ‘With High Explosives. The Board of Supervisors passed yester- day a resolution granting ‘“Lucky” Bald- wrecking the walls of the Baldwin that remain standing. The Board of Health has finally brought the old gentleman to time and he has promised to go ahead with the work of cleaning up without delay. The permit granted him provides that he may make use of high explosives only between the hours of 2 and 4 in the after- noon, and then only under the direction and supervision of the Fire Department. —_———— Mrs. Hanlon Dead. Mrs. Emilie D. F. Hanlon, one of the best-known resldents of this city, died at 4 o’clock yesterday afternoon at the Pal- ace Hotel after a brief illness of a little over two weeks. The deceased was the widow of the Jate Captain Danlel Hanlon, who was one of the early pioneers of this State. On November 25, after eating a hearty dinner, Mrs. Hanlon broke a blood vessel in her brain and became uncon- scious. From then until the hour of her death she was in a comatose condition. Mrs. Hanlon is survived by six children, who are: Attorneys Charles F. Hanlon and John F. Hanlon of this city, Daniel M. Hanlon of Lassen County, Mrs. Mollie E. Crump of Boston, Mass.; Mrs. Emilie E. Banks of Lassen County and Miss Josephine G. Hanlon, who was living with her mother. Mrs. Hanlon was born at Ploen, Schieswig-Holstein, Germany and was 60 years of age. She marrie Captain Hanlon in London when a young woman and came to California. She was a lady of most lovable ' character and noted for her liberality to the poor. The funeral will take place from the Palace Hotel to-morrow, and after solemn high action is determined. For inflamed, granulated, or eozematous eyeltis., light applications of CuU- TICURA ointment will in most cases bo found 1o work wonders. tthe world. Porrer Drrg axp O Conrsoie Foopan Bosion. * How 1o Cure i mors,” roh mass at the Cathedral, the remains will be interred in Holy When she was taken ‘ill Mrs. Hanlon was about to go to visit her daughter, Mrs. Crump, in Boston. She was apparently in the best of health and had spent the summer at Del Monte. en he returns to- | .‘lh;\l induced her to | three ‘childre She | from all | | as retained | promised to do so | | serlous trouble in store for young Stod- | win permission to make use of dyamite in | Cross Cemetery. | IBSEN CAST A FATAL SPELL O'ER HER LIFE “Doll’s House” Deserted. Is NIELSEN DIVORCE ROMANCE TOLD HER HUSBAND SHE LOVED ANOTHER MAN. Wronged Spouse Claims His Pretty Erring Wife Was Hypnotized by Elias Ruud and the Norwegian Poet. Jorgen Nielsen has begun suit for ai- A HAND (Grant’s Salaried Agents Are Have Written Pledges Fr “Helped " With Eastern For the first time since the announce- | ment of the result of the election the | vorce from his wife, Camilla Nielsen. Jorgen is the proprietor of a little watch- | Democratic members of the Legislature | repairing shop on Polk street, and Ca- milla, as far as her unhappy husband knows, is somewhere In the Northwest with Elias Ruud, the man she told her husband she could not live without. It is an Ibsen tale with-a real flesh and blood Nora, a wrecked home, a broken- hearted husband and two children who will nevermore know the love of a mother. Nielsen traces all his troubles to his wife’s study of the great Norwegian dramatist, her unfortunate meeting with Ruud, the close intimacy of private nd concludes the whole with sm in which a Svengali power prove importaut > and mesmeri j factors. Jorgen Nielsen and Camilla Andersen were married ten years ago in Denmark, and for nine years have made their home | in this city. Their unfon, an unusually happy one, was blessed by two children— two girls, now aged 9 and 7 years respec- tively. TrSs. elsen tremely prett matic society that made a point of study- ing Ibsen and occasionally producing a drama from the same prolific source. Mrs. | Niel 's first appearance was in ‘“‘Peer Gynt,” and she had for her vis-a-vis in the production Elias Ruud, insurance agent, a_married man and the father of Immediate after the ‘Peer Gynt” pro- duction Nielsen noticed that his wife lost her usual high spirits, that her interest | | | in home and family was gradually de- creasing and her health rapidly failing. 2 went on in_this way until one day last May Mrs. Nielsen went to her husband and told him that she loved an- other, that the other was Elias Ruud, and that it was impossible for her to without him. In every way Nielsen tried to show his erring spouse the evil of her way, but without avail. When he told her of her duty toward her children she told him she had a higher duty, and that | was the duty toward herself.” Finally | husband and wife agreed to part, the wife receiving from her husband $800 and all | the household furniture. _Acting upon the advice of Ruud, Mrs. Nielsen invested $200 in a little stationery store at the Mission. She continued in | business but for two_weeks, and then | turned over to Mrs. Ruud the shop and the furniture she had received from Niel- | sen. After signing over this property to | her lover's wife Mrs. Nielsen and Ruud | | left for Tacoma. Nielsen is suing for divorce on the ground o1 desertion. In spite of the mis- erable conduct of his wife, he finds much to condone in her, and lays the entire blame upon Ruud, who, he claims, has hypnotized her and turned her brain with Ibsen logic. Ruud’s reputation in the Norwegian colony 1Is a_most unsavory one. Some time ago he figured in a romance in which his marriage to a young woman was called off at the altar. Ruud had repre- sented himself as a single man, and at the eleventh hour it was discovered that he had a wife and family in Norway. Mrs. Mary Ruud, wife of the elopin Tbsenite, filed a sult for divorce on the of December. ————— More Troops for Manila. Regarding the transportation of troops to Manila the following gratifying tele- gram was received by the Chamber of Commerce yesterday: “Meikeljohn authorizes the informa- tion that he is aware of the unpleas- antness of the Suez route. Mobile and Mohawk, specially fitted for troops to Manila, will be retained on the Paecific for transport service between the Phil- ippines and San Francisco.” ———— ““California Wild Flowers” and 48 other new calendars, “‘Chinese,” “Indian,” ete. Christmas cards as usual at Sanborn & o Vail's. —_——— Puerto el Oro Lecture. This afternoon at 4 o’clock Dr. T. W, Page of the University of California will deliver the last of the series of lectures presented by Puerto del Oro Chapterof the Daughters of the American Revolution on American_history, The lecture will be given in Golden' Gate Hall, and the sub- Ject is, “Influence of the Development | From 1816 to 1832 on Political Ideas and | Methods.” | e Have you seen the new collection of paint- | not rise up to shame the pc live | are beginning to take an active inter- | est In the selection of the successor of | United States Senator Stephen M. | White. This interest is due primarily | to the candidacy of Colonel Daniel | Burns, but more particulariy to the at- titude that has been assumed by the Examiner toward Burns' candidacy and the railroad interests that are sup- | porting it. | Some of the more prominent members of the Democratic minority who con- sented to discuss the matter yesterday were emphatic in their declaration that i’party lines should be wiped out if such a course becomes necessary to avert a public calamity. They contend that | the Examiner, which pretends to be the leading organ of the Democracy, | having joined hands with Herrin and | other political manipulators of the Southern Pacific Company for the pro- motion of Burns’ Senatorial candidacy, should not be allowed to place the | Democratic party in a false light by inference before the people of the State. These men claim that if Burns becomes a candidate before the Legis- lature it will then become the duty of the Democratic members of that body, knowing that the election of a Demo- cratic Senator is out of the range of | possibilities, to join hands with honest | Republicans in an effort to elect a man to the United States Senate who \\'ll]’\ enter the American Congress as a rep- | resentative of the interests of the peo- ple of California and not the will of the men who guide the destinies of the Southern Pacific Raiiroad Company. That the Examiner has been taken | into the railroad camp becomes more and more apparent every day—a fact that is causing considerable resent- ment to be manifested by the leaders of the Democratic party in the city and | State, for the reason, they assert, that | it places the party, in a measure, in the position of supporting the schemes of the Southern Pacific Company. The Examiner is avowedly the mouthpiece and defender of William F. Herrin, the railroad’s political agent, and it does not go to the trouble of attempting to disguise its support of Burns' Sena- torial aspirations. Its agents and em- ployes are working openly in behalf of Burns, a fact that will be corroborated | by a score or more of legislators who have been “held up” by the paper’s salaried strikers. This has had the ef- fect of reviving the stories recently circulated to the effect that a ‘“‘secret” contract has been entered into by the Examiner and the railroad company, sald contract to extend over two ses- sions of the Legislature and one gener- al election, during which time the com- | pany shall enjoy “immunity from at- | tack by the paper. | A fair illustration of what a majority | of the members of the Legisiature | think of Colonel Burns, his candidacy and his supporters, i sen in an inter- view s with a gentleman | who is rightly considered one of the leaders of the State Senate. He said: “There are those who must, after all, sympathize with the fix of the political agent of a corporation who is forced to look up a candidate for the United States Senate on the moral and social level of his employers. Tt might be that the agent, left to himself, would prefer a man who could play the cor- poration game with a background of respectability—one whose past would le who gave him place, and incidentally scare off the unwary. But in such a case your political worker must consider circumstances. The Senator he wants may be one thing; the Senator he must take must be of the ilk his cli- ents can und--~tand and feel at home with in the gentle arts of addition, di- vision and silence. Particularly the statesman ought to be one whom his employers have such a hold upon through their knowledge of his | darker past that he must necessarily stay bought and be unable, under any circumstances, to twit them upon his superior virtue. Such a task was set for Mr. Herrin and his selection as a man meeting all of the requirements of the complicated situation is Colonel Dan Burns. “It is no small matter to satisfy a group of millionaires who have made their fortunes in robbing stockholders, stuffing dummy corporations, rigging the market and breaking promises made to State, county and municipal governments, in selecting a candidate for United States Senator when so much is wanted in Congress in the way of speclal privileges. If the choice is respectable the dirty work may not be done; if vulgarly and criminally vicious it may be done for the benefit of the statesman himself or balked altogether. The thing is to strike the happy medi- um of rascality where the members of the corporations stand and where con- cert of action may always be depended on. In selecting Colonel Burns Mr. Herrin seems to have hit this happy medium. “For once the Senatorial choice is worthy of those who have made him and they in turn are worthy of it. The task seems to have been a difficult one for the agent. but who can say that he has not performed his duty well. Mr. Herrin having com- pleted his task to his own and his em- ployer’'s satisfaction, it only remains for the members of the Legislature to ratify his acts. I do not believe that there are sixty-one members of the Legislature who will so far renounce their sacred obligations to the peonle Who elected them as to ratify the choice logs at Wm. Morris' art rooms, 248 Sutter? ® ‘Mr. Herrin has made for his employers, They Resent the Friendship of the Examiner for Colonel Burns and the Railroad. | Grant and the Hubbard end of the’ DEMOCRATS MAY TAKE IN THE GAME Openly Boasting That They om Legislators Who Were Their Employer's Money. |If they did so it would be a public | calamity.” The Senatorial candidacy. of U. S. | Grant Jr. is becoming almost as great | a stench in the nostrils of decent peo- ple as that of Colonel Burns. His | agents openly boast that he has written | pledges. from certain members of the | Legislature and that these pledges | were secured by him prior to the elec- | tion in return for money given the members to promote their candidacy. It is something of a shock to decent people to hear that a man who aspires to represent the State in the upper house of Congress boasts that he owns certain legislators by reason of the money he has given them; that he car- ries in his pocket the written evidence of their servility, and that they dare not break their chaing for fear of the law. It is not likely that the men whose honor Mr. Grant boasts of hav- ing purchased will come forward and confess their infamy and their slavery before the public, but it may be that if | they have the hardihood to carry out their part of the illegal and disgraceful compact there will be others who will relieve them of the task and at the same time perform a public service. It is an old rule in politics that the man who will buy a vote can himself be bought. It may be that a candidate who has purchased votes expects to re- imburse himself, in the event of his election, for money he has paid to leg- islative candidates and members-elect by placing his own vote at auction up- on his arrival at the national capital. To all outward appearances such a | man seems to be a statesman who is | spending his mother's money, the frsel gift of a generous people, and trading | on an honored name for the purpose of | personal gain. For this purpose he wishes to represent in the national Congress the people of a State in which he has lived so short a time that he is not familiar with its geography, its needs or its people. Before and since the election Grant has had in his employ a small army of political heelers who have been in- trusted with the work of distributing | his money through the different coun- | ties of the State for the purpose of in- fluencing the votes of Legislators. Grant publicly declares that this money has been spent for the sole purpose of promoting his Senatorial candidacy, a fact that he sets forth as one of the| principal reasons why his claims should be recognized by the Legislature. He recently admitted in an interview that this money was furnished him by prominent friends in the East. It 15‘ also known beyond doubt that one| branch of the Southern Pacific Com- | pany’s stockholders is seeking to se- | cure his election. This interest is rep- resented by First Vice-President Hub- bard in New York and is sunniemented by the owners of the Santa Fe road. ‘With Burns and his record and the C. P. Huntington end of the Southern Pacific Company on one side and Southern Pacific on the other the.good people of California have small show of an honest representative in Con- gress to succeed Senator White. It is not conceivable that the Republican party in this State will permit either of these worthies to attain the object‘ for which they are aiming. | Mr. Grant’s services to the Republi- can party in this State consist of knif- ing the State ticket in San Diego County at the last election so success- fully that in the event of a close vote | he would have succeeeded in defeating almost the entire State ticket. It is possible that some one knows why Mr. Grant has a claim on the party ! sufficiently strong to entitle him to | consideration as a Senatorial candi- | date. If some one of his salaried | agents will come forward with one reason—save that his name is Grant— why he should be elected United States Senator The Call will gladly publish the same. It does not seem within the range of possibilities that the people of this State wish to be represented in the national Senate by a stranger who is trying to purchase his election with Eastern money and whose interests are the interests of Eastern men who have nothing in common with Califor- nia or Californians. SOUSAS ARD plays for the Gram-o-phore Company as the ““ March King”’ wants his music reproduced as near natural a< possible, that it will do his playing Justice, and he knows that the Gram-o-phone is the machine that does it. Come in and hear one of his marches as’Flayed by his famous band. he Gram-o-phone makes a good Christmas present. Price, $27.50 two records free Additional records 6oc each; $7 a dozen Constantly on exhibition at SHERMAN, CLAY & CO’S Piano and Music House Kearny and Sutter Sts. San Francisco | ful Crrors, or Excessivo Use of Tobacco, ADVERTISEMENTS. Open evenings until nine Overcoats for gentlemen. 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So acute, in fact, at times, ag to produce dreadful headaches that, notwithstanding all the outdoor work afforded me by my vocation, and the latitude it allowed me to test my pedestrian abilities—which is supposed to be a successful manner of displacing constipation—I was very often compelled to, forego my pursuit of ‘business.’ Constipation with me be hereditary rather than due to harder to relieve. ex., Ri seemed to' accidental causes, therefore much In my extremity I often resorted to most drastie measures, but found no cure to be nected with the Zimes of El Paso, T to my notice, and I used them with marked success. permanent. In 1892, while cone pans Tabules were brought' Nowadays I never suffer from such severe cases of constipation, and the violent' headaches I formerly experienced never WOrry me in the times, though, when I allow myself to lapse for a peri constipated, but by takin my bowels again perform their ular habits, I become slightly according to directions, g Righly pleasing manner,”. least. Some.! od into irrege g the Tabules functions in &