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12 THE SAN FRANUISUCO CALL, TUESDAY, JANUARY lo, iv.i. WILLIAM TREWELLA IS SHOT DOWN BY ROBERT E. GLAZE, HIS PARTNER, SUHELLER AVERS THAT GRANT 15 ONSAFE VESSEL If a Good Sea Should Ever Strike Her She Would Go Down. | Behind a Door and Shot the proprietors of the Wind- sor Hotel at Fifth and Mar- ket streets, was shot and al- most instantly killed a few s before 2 o'clock yesterday after- by his partner, Robert E. Glaze. shooting occurred in the Kitchen of hotel ‘and Trewella’s body riddled with bullets. Glaze, imme- Grant seaworthy? diately after the shooting, gave himseir er—I most -assuredly do not. » to the police, claiming he had killed attletrap. The only .thing his partner in self-defense, but accord- | good about this ship is the | € u:,n’u: statement made last night by is below the SUPeT- | ayewitness of the e. Captain Buford said “Am-|was a cold-blooded nd she will fall apart.” |tion. O'Connor sa ky all over the decks and | _ _ weakly constructed above | ¥ aain deck. If a good sea should strike the ship, such as we might id go to pieces. We y bad weather yet. Baker—If this ship is un- y I want to know it. ain Scheller—Well, she T now. Supervising Inspector Bermingham | Malkes Investigation and Deciares Her Safe Enough, Ngtwith- standing a Few Leaks. e T ILLIAM TREWELLA, one of 1 i | was liter- boy, and the only the killing assassina- lay in wait for deltberate a preme e crime | remarks | | fanciea is IN KITCHEN OF THE WINDSOR HOTEL Bellboy Who Witnessed the Tragedy Says the Slayer Hid His Vietim Down Without a Word of ‘Warning, Riddling His Body With Bullets afternoon,” said swered a ¢ » room .t some drinks from | | ted up a flight | n court of the CORDELIA BOTKIN IS CHINATONN 1S THE SOURCE OF MUCH EVIL Rabk: Voorsanger Advecate 118 Removal From the Limits of City. Municipal League Appoints Commit- tee to Ask Police Commissioners to Concentrate Celestials in One District. The subject of the “social evil” was taken up again last night for discussion | by the Municipal League. The Rev. Dr. | Voorsanger, who has made a careful | study of the matter, gave it as his opin |ton that Chinatown is the great moral | cancer of tne city. “If it was possible to remove China- | town,” sald he, “San Francisco would be | the most moral city on carth. With this | plague spot removed we would have | [ttle to of mora ue, there would other | eviis to cor with, but they could regulated. luxury of our modern rongly operated on ue | times has tc | inaticns of our poor. Hunger is ti |8 anaichist in the world. When | r stallis abroad those who do aot themselves for brea il with great pity the al conditicns Treat it as we may, I at which A PPUS imen wish to die | We must treat for the vi | we have created ver agiee to licensing t 1 am opposed, bitter! to liceasing any evil, for no gove has the right tc make money ¢ which morality forbids. I am oppose | licenzing objectionable houses the sam. sell thi; | T am opposed to high Jicense as a rem- for the liquor traffic. It wrong the Government has no | right to license the business at all. To | licence any of our social evils, is just as | bad as if we were to take hush money. is | 1f a thing is wrong, let us condemn it, | but never make it & Source of revenue for | T . 1 am neot in favor wsuies, however. | will nev making object icssons of women in our midst, unt'l| the gambling houses on Kearny street, | the pawnshops on Markel sticet anG tac | | gilded pulaces and underground dives are | The great troubic is that our | business men like theories, and become frig ned almost to de when you pre: t them with facts. s the first st | toward removing the soc the condemning of Chinatow moval to a site selected near Lake | ced. 1 am more afraid of Chinatown thag | P | of our fa n women, drunkards and gam- | | blers. We can deal with the latter es, but it seems from present out- 10 be impossible to deal with Chin town. Let us first remove Chinatown and | | then we can e: deal with the rest | “Irving Davis, who foll spoke at length on the evils that existed, both be- | fore and after the Parkhurst crusade in | Ne: York City. % Isidor Jacobs favored the concentration of the evil in one section of the city. Rev. Dr. Scott agreed with Dr. Voor- | sanger in many of his views, but did not | think that the removal of Chinatown | | would noticeably purify the moral air of | the city. { *I do not | China think it practical to remove tow id Colonel C. Currier, “for so many influential people are de- | riving revenue from it that any such h strong opposition sses complained o | I | & . the bar- | | should be pu y section of the city | v ” keeper tol lime: d | | and quarantined 1 e Ay B Tre | A “The evil can be minimized,” sald| & for some. The me | | Supervisor Braunhart, “but to what ex- | Mr. Trewella ne downstairs tent depends upon the honesty of the of- | e b with Mr. C went the kitchen, ficials. In the past the unfortunite crea- . Whish 18 right under the barroom, and 3 C : | tures have been s\“b{f” o bhm(.;]mlaxl, - aw Mr. Trewella inside They have been blackmailed by officlals " B ey ma e e Glage around: /L told upreme Court Justices Hear | Zuey, roe heer, MG I do not | r. Trewella what I wante : think it right to license the evils of the | ing B Arguments in Her Sty—and that is what it practically e would give me = - =3 amounts to If arrests are to be perfodical- from the which THE SLAYER, HIS WIFE el WAS ENAC I went ahead g ki . Behalf. ST AND THE VICTIM IN THE TRAGEDY WHICH TED YESTERDAY AFTERNOON IN THE KITCHEN OF | THE WINDSOR HOTEL. { own from the he Interior court posite the kitchen door The Supreme Court opened its January ly made, with the understanding that the offenders are to pay light fines. If our of- ficials do not accept bribes and levy black- malil, but Instead carry out the laws now | egacted, we will soon remedy the social s As Mr, Trewella had just started down | | o 4 a S : evil” s of the en the first thing I | % - i calendar yesterday and listened all day to | “'A¢ the conclusion of the discu - \ze was near the | arguments in many now celebrated cases. | appointed Messrs. Jacobs., € r. Trewelia. 1 2m locked up, everything taken from my [and this fact saved him from the wrath | The appeal of Cordella Botkin, the nger, Greensfelder and Henderson remember ckets and charged with murder.” | of Kendall. | woman who,was convicted of poisoning | r before the Police Commission- ze_then asked if it was really true | Trewella was 5 years old and had been | Mrs. John P. Dunning and her sister, was | °rs and endeavor to bring about arrange- that Trewella was dead, and when in- | engaged in the hotel and restaurant busi- | argudd and submitted. Attorney General | MENLs to concentrate the evil In a section : formed that his partner was no more, | ness in this city and the State for many | qy ey T e e T b Py for that purpose. 2t Washington, the ery and | Glaze sald | vears, Mrs. Trewella will return te the | Yy srd; appeaced In Lebai((d the | Schnee, Selfridge, Weil, Salfield, ot Semtoriar Kitchen and came Well, I am sorry for him, but it could | city this morning. | people and replied to the address de-| Davis, Greensfelder and Rea were ap- a personal investiga- | U5, Dehi through an- | not be hell | @Robert E. Glaze was again interviewed | livered by Charles Heggerty, counsel for | pointed a committee to appear before the . t b to me, ‘If Oscar 1T clerk in Superior Judge | late last evening. At first he was reticent | appellant. The argument of Mr. Heg- | Supervicors to-morrow —aftérnoon and ’ shot, you Carroll Cook’s court, who is an old friend | about the affair. He claimed that he was | gerty was devoted solely to the point | lend their moral support to the proposed he shot himself.” Glaze then walk of Glaze, hastened 'to the prison when ladvised by his attorney not to make any | tha:*there was an insufficienicy of evid ordinance fixing the railroad fare for and 1t to help Mr. Trewel he learned that Glaze was charged with | statement. He later claimed that he was | " A enicy of evidence | .p .01 children at two and a half cents. ys, as- J. Bruglere, , chief engineer; Then I went into afterward murder. Glaze informed Tolle that he had | forced to the act in self-defense. The to warrant a conviction. shot Trewella in self-defense, and wheni “Trewella was coming for me Y the police iike a Attorney | (ieneral confessed error in this case, as he | Refore adjournment the league on motion of Isidor Jacobs adopted the fol- ain of from the standpoint | ADVERTISEMENTS. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS ON ACCOUNT OF ILL-HEALTH. The old pioneer shoe mer- chant, Richard Pahl, 324 Kearny, | will offer his entire shoe stock to i the public for less than wholesale | Give us a call and costs. | great bargains you can secure. | lalways kept high-grade | Do not miss your chance t your shoes for half price. A £ {W. L. Douglas’ shoes | duced 15 per cent. Call earl; |avoid the rush. . R. PAHL, 324 KEARNY ST. i;'reparamry fo Vacating §ture: BY ORDER OF M. B. MIHRAN, I Wi Sell a -RUGS Art Goods and Antigus Furniture, NOW IN HIS STORE, SW. Cor. Geary and Stoekton. SALE COMMENCES THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, At 11 a. m. and 2 p. m., and daily until Jan ORIENTAL The stock is superfine and not brought from the East for an A ut coliected b Mr. has been he business Rather than wa them in my Cured While You Sleep In Fifieen Days ~Gran-Solyent™ dissolves Stricture like snow be- n, reduces Enlarged Prostate and strengthegs the Seminal Ducts, stoppiag Drains and Emissions In Fifteen Days No drugs to ruin the stomaeh. but » direct local aBd positive application tothe entire uretnrai tra Gran-Solvent is not 8 liquid. It s prepared the form of Crayons or Peneils. smooth and fexib! 83d 30 Darrow as to pass the closest Stricture. Every Man Should Know Himself. The St. James Assn.. Box 8. Cincinaatl. O has mm u'.reu expense an exhaust- FREE ’ 1 ' lustrated Treatise upon the male hich thay will send 0 any 250 ELM ST., Cincinnati, Ohio. aitplicans: ‘l St. JAnES ASSN,, d Dl LON D'ON FRONT 22n. BACK 248 ENGLISH WELT, Made *038IdUBILY uBg ‘1§ 1dEY PBY ‘Yourag 18209 2141 | asked by Tolle what caused the shooting “he sald, ad 2 ¢ look | did in the Brandes case, which alsc came | low es ) artarinaster T8 A d besn In pirt. |atatel that' ‘Trowella 1aif hands m Y | Hobis Srs pod L ai pive he ;;:a‘,i‘i‘{“m,.‘f‘ug for hearing. P o oils Soaee e T CANDY CATHARTIC second o ;h:'(h‘Afler . both men be- | wife last night.” Nelther the accused | {ion to draw a gun on me. I shot him,| When the Brandes case was called Y | 1ature bills. to provide the necessary revenue survey of the ship and | ing 1 ¢ stepchildren. The | man nor his wife would make any state- | and I did it clearly in self-defense. I hear | Chief Justice Beatty, the Attorney Gen-| for the proper maintenance of our State Uni parties the Bupervising | two families re in the hotel. As far | ment vesterday as to what offense Tre- | that they found no gun on him, but that | eral admitted that error had been com- | versity in accordance with its rapidly growing | is office and pre- | as is known, Trewella and Glaze hava | wella had been guilty. {5 not improbatie. as the Morgie officials | mitted- by the lower court. Attorney F. | roquirements: be it b on mosi friendly terms, and the | The Chinese cook of the Windsor Hotel, | did not take his body a until twenty | W. Sawver of Oakland, attorney for the | Resolved by the Municipal League of San e Superintend. | Shooting came as rise to'all the at- | Ah Jim, was a few feet away from the | minutes after he was shot. Trewella | man; who was convicted of choking and | Francisco, That we heartily indorse the sald taches of the hote g o :rhmr«”(‘rafmliy & the time it oc- | handled my wife roughly lasi night: he beating his 14-year-old daughter to death, | measures and ask thelr passage by the State 25e. 50c. Drogziets. . y Z p. m. yes v, | curred, but the Celestial claimed that he | 4 ers s ormed the cour ¥ " | Legislature, so that the University of Califor- | Genuine stamy 3 f'*gj Socal Trewella and Gl weore in in the lobby | heard no words pass between his empl { &fi'.:‘.‘,h'?;f' hy" ht::"; :2")‘::;} r;lxn?“f?r ’1!‘:“3.,’;?5 miugflnem to .-.m{-:f-ltmr:n;h:xn:;:fie?gf Said | ia may not be retarded or hindersd in carry. e pd CC.C N"". seld tn btk - ?r the ?:;;k‘;.,:‘(m. tly engaged in friend- ;‘;g_h':ru‘ .:T] k"fi“} .,g u;;. affair was that | have Kiiled me." e h,):ped 2o Bacune & AlSniissnl OF this chae | ;(.!TX ;:m]r:.«‘:r;v'vukr sr\u‘y;:ressary to the cause of | Beware of the dealer who tries to sell ¥ _conversation. | d the shots fired. < " a ower c o L | ing “jt 00d. it paL & B e roceedsl 10, hs Pear 01| - Beores Uedl Si8 bl Porbar enipiokent (oL L m T sosiisy, stepdaughter of | by the lower court and thereby save the something “just as g €. V here the unseaworthiness y transport Grant, that board for my county of Alameda five or six thousand | dollars for prosecuting another trial. The case was ordered placed at the foot of to-da: calendar. Glaze, said last night that Mrs. Glaze re- fused to be interviewed. When asked If Trewella had ever annoyed her mother she answered in the affirmative. All other questions she refused to answer. Glaze is well known in this city. He| was employed at the Baldwin Hotel for some years as night clerk and also as day clerk. Aiter the baldwin Hotel was destroyed by fire Glaze went to the Ha- wallan Islands ana ran a hotel there for gome time, He was born near Dallas, Polk County, Oregon, where his mother and sisters still reside. Twenty years ago | the Glaze family became involved in a the lobby and passed cut into the interior open court of the building and ascended | over the baKery, where the shooting ha o the ealoon, which 1 situated over the | pened. They said that they heard four | kitchen and bakery of the hotel | thots fired, but heard no quarrel between After taking a drink in the saloon, Tre- | Trewella and Glaze. Miss Amanda Lar- wella and Glaze went downstairs and en- | gen who was in -the jaundry which ad: 4 tered the bakery, whicii adjoins the Kitcn- | joins the kitchen, claims that she heard en. only the sound of shots. In a few minutes the sounds of pistol| A" number of the employes of the hotel | shots startled the guests and attaches of | jnformed the police after the murder that the hotel, and several of them saw Glaze | they had heard the sound of firing, but as he was walking away from the body e o it e Eohoaren Eort wid s 1| Coul - threw hut e AEHE-On-Ehs fone | 1y ejected the exploded shells from his re- | Velver and started to reload the weapon. | of the hotel, were in the saloon direct Trunks and Valises. { For quality, variety and price see our | trunks, valises, traveling bags, dress-suit | cases, belts, pocketbooks, purses, bill- books and letter cases. Your name in 0ld letters free of charge. Sanborn, Vail £ Co 141 Market straet. . visrr DR. JORDAN’S gsazar WUSEUM OF ANATONY regard to the allega- | Scheller in his tes MILLINERS DISAGREE AND SPLIT FOLLOWS i P e Aol 1 Many Walk Out of Meeting at Which | pAREN TO A MISSION It Is Decided to Form a AGAINST HER WILL Union. = A union or not a unlon was the per-| Young Chinese Woman, Dragged MAIKET O Gt GA2TR, S0 Gl The Largest Anatomical Museum in the - Vo, Weaknecsen of ay contracten 4 diseass pesitively cared by the videss 3 Specmlist co the Coase. Hae. the 12th and of that vessel had been ever her hull, botlers Coomitation freg and wricty privase dy. Yesterday morning Mrs. Trewella went “Tre vment personally er b, of the vessel, er. A n r ~a | to Auburn, and some of her friends as- | feud with a_family named Whitney and | plexing problem which was troubling the From Her Home, Declares Police Pos.tive Ourein every case undertaken. o Teak e e i | B e T e e e whs 6 | Sert that fer journey, was for the pur- |two of the Whitnevs were killed, it was | brains of the fair milliners of this clty, ‘Acted Withowt Warrant e ook PAILONOFEY or o doubt. duty, wrenched the revolver from his |DoSe of raising money, as her husband alleged, by Till Giaze, an elder brothcr | and it proved a rock upon which they split % [ desired to buy Glaze's fnterest in_the ho- tel. They aiso say that Mrs. Trewella | frequently told them that her husband | had never drawn a cent out of the re- of the man who shot his partner yester- day. Till Glaze afterward met a violent death in Oklahoma. Quite a little excitement was ' causcd among the Mongolian residents of Sulli- van alley shortly after 5 o’clock yesterday afternoon by the forcible carrying off of hand and cursed him. He then told him | | to give himself up to the police. Glaze vy | 4id as he was told, and surrendered to it | Police Officers N. J. Barry and D. J. Dris- last night. They are unanimous in their desire to have the miiliner stores close’at 6 o'clock, but some of them hesitate and RDAN & €O, 1061 Market St. 8. §. o he T 3 ceipts of the hotel, and that each month become extremely timid when they see by = ltle viglance on | COll at the corner of ¥y and MAarket {pe was oblixeg to -draw. upan this:cw Ladies Do Have Patience. the possibility of a dreadful strike loom- | Low YOm: @ handsome ¥oung CHiness said leaks can pass dows| I have shot my partner, Trewella,” | Lunds for his expenses, It 1s known that| One must go to the Pattoslen Company | ing up before them. At the meeting last D - . . ° and Policeman Ben Kaskell, who is balll in Judge Conlan's court, entered the woman’s room and told her she must go with them to the Wasnington-street mis- sion. When she objected the officers took he vessel, but ra during the last week Trewella, with the ald of Night Clerk Heaney, had made an investigation of the hooks, and that Glaze only & few days ago learned of Trewella's acticn. Frank L. Seavier, an employe of the Gas Consumers’ Association, who boards at the Windsor Hotel, stated last night that he was the first'to reach Trewella after the shooting. He tried to lift the Cying man, who exclaimed, “My God, he has killed me.” H8hortly afterward the doctors arrived and Trewella died without uttering another word. The statement of the bellboy O’Connor is fully borne out by the location of the bullet wounds on Trewella’s body. The door of the bakery is to the left of the stairs leading from the kitchen, and it is evident that the first bullet fired by Glaze struck his victim in the left arm; the sec- ond bullet entered the left shoulder blade as Trewella reeled with his back toward his murderer, who then fired a third bullet er passes | said Glaze to the officers, to whom he was | | known, “and I want to give myself up. | We have often had trouble about domestic | and business affairs ané he threatened mo | many times. A little while ago he came nced that the sweeping | toWard me in a threatening manner and Scheller @s to the | made a motion as if to pull a weapon. I ie-trap” and ‘‘unsea- | thought he had a gun, o1 pulled my pis- t speech, without | tol and shot him.” . practically Glaze was taken to the Southern station, from which place he was conveyed to the | he safety of | Hall of Justice. should she | Ag soon as the shooting was known to ®ay | the employes of the Windsor Hotel, u-- ! gent calls were sent for physicians, as | Trewella_was still alive. Dr. F. A, Mc- amage to| Mahon, 230 Turk strect, and Dr. G. W. of the houses on | O'Donnell responded. They hastily exam- | ined Trewella and found that he was be- covered with canvas | yond human aid, as two of the bullets had | deck of the Grant, | entered the stomach. While the doctors | were examining Trewella hi: | mAn gave a gasp and aied. that| “The news of the shooting spread rapidly | to learn that ladies have patience. Ever since the great challenge sale commenced, rain er sunshine, some ladies walited as long as two hours to be waited on. They had good reason when real Brussels car- ts sell at 4jc yard, fine parlor suits 17, oak bedroom suits $15. The entire stock at same low figures. Corner Six- teenth and Mission streets. . ———————— CITY AND COUNTY WINS AN IMPORTANT ACTION Supreme Court Holds Certain Stocks and Bonds Are Not Exempt From Taxation. The Supreme Court yesterday handed down a decision in the Important case of the Savings and Loan Society against the night the matter was discussed in a very stormy manner. Two factions arose—the unionists and the. mon-unioniet The former agitated the immediate formation of a union an nd tried to force h. fiiation with the federation of unions, | hold of her and trief to Torce her alons. while the latter thought the storekeepers | strong resistance, crying to the men to would accede to their demands without ghow her a warrant for her arrest and the necessity of taking any such drastic | nromising to go peaceably if they pro- measures. The unionists, who were well [ RUOTH 8, (0 T organized under the leadership of Mrs.| Yee was finally taken from the house, Reynolds, finally carried their point, and | byt when she reached the street she fought their opponents withdrew from the meet- | vigorously, kicking and biting the officers ing. A union was formed and Mrs. Bessie | in her vain effort to release herseif. To Coliins was elected president. J. D. Plerce | her friends he declared that the officers and wife of the American Federation or | were kidnaping her and were acting with- Labor were grexent and addressed the| oyt warrant. She sald that she was 2 meeting on the aims and advantages of | vears of age and was being taken from | the labor union. Fer home against her will.~ All the way to the mission she fought and struggled, yelling at the top of her voice and de- nouncing the action of the mission peo- ple and the unlawful methods of the ce. 'l'flls WELL-ENOWN AND RELIABLE OLD Specialist cures Blood Poison, G Gleet, Strichore, Seminal W eaknosm. Hapotencs sad thels aliled Disorders. Book on Diseases of Me Ovtrwfrnn'pxn!r‘Gnfl.T!rmtrowynlb‘e 9to3daily ;6:0t03. Wev'gs. Sund: tation free and sacredly confiden P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M. D. 263; Kearny St.. San Francisce, Ol DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Mallal on Applieation. leading fr:m the main rm from the deck officers of ner w ————— DR. HOLMES ARRESTED FOR SMUGGLING SILK , which could rpenters in a single 4 ed a simple duty the comforts of the wounded | COAL, COKE AND PIG IRON. Po- - " his pas- | L - s San Francisco. Th o woman was taken to the mis- | J-C WILSON & CQ., 200 Bastery Streee nd large crowd congregated in front | into the spine of Trewella. As the in- | City and County of ra; e - Telephone Main 1564, ihings inte consideration I con. | of the hotel, requiring the presence of a |jured man sank to the floor two more |judgment of the lower court was af- Bolt of the us Material Found :wrt!. ‘}"here -;l-ak thnv an ::t'e-usn( o e e k (o %o il intents and pur- | number of policemen Lo Keep the sidewalk | shots were fired, Which entered the chest | firmed and the municipality scores a big on the Person of His g R s o ey G vt G oy COPPERS MITH. pose worthy condition. Respectfully, | clear. The Coroner's ceputies soon ar- | just below the breastbone and perforated | yictory > at the City Prison. 4 JOHN BERMINGHAM. | rived and searched Trewella's body, but the stomach. The s wger burns on | "5 it "was brdught by the bank to recover Aulmt.‘ e ———— C V. SHITH, Sl Prumbing. Steambon ang rector t t v t, a few papers, ewella’s s! ront show a e e es, surgeon thy Ji Don't drink the first this the bartender | 18 W = ‘rele s B O T rnd some Keys being all that | murderer must. have Gaitiatn inaies SpallY: wndor. “Profest o and | l-: HIOMDER,. EHIECOR . O e United nk the ng nder ashington st. Tel held his weapon o FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES &Q, Shipping Buteh offers. Call for Jesse Moore and insist on getting it. e DR. KINYOUN DOWN WITH “AA" whiskey States transport Grant, was arrested yes- terday by the United States Marshal on a | chargé of smuggiing a bolt of silk from | levied upon certain loans made by the bank and secured by pledge of stocks and bends exempt from taxation. The con- by Captain J. K. Bul- pectors of Steam Ves.- Deering, Assistant In- | inspected on | B OP | Was in the pockets of the dead man. | at close range. | The policemen and Detective Cody ex-| Detectives Cody and McCann, who were amined the pistol with which the shooting | detailed by Captain Seymour to work on 104 , Assis Clay. ‘Tel. Main 1294 ey T d pstant Tn- | 14 been dome and. found one new car- | the case. learned last night that a serious | tention of the bank was that the stocks | the transport on January 2. He was e - [They found her in good | A1 DG 0 VK carerul search of the bak- | auarrel had taken place on Sunday even- | anu bonds so pledged are collateral to se- | taken before United States Court Com-| A SERIOUS SICKNESS oILS. P c for one E ery tevealed the prescnce of five empty | ing between Mrs. Glaze and Mrs. | cure such loans and are exempt from | mjssioner Heacock and was released on "3 LUBRICATING OTLS. LEONARD & ELLIS, 3 | shells, -,!.lndhn )1« lc-\'ld(-{nl (h;;'t‘ G\l;ze. ter | s 1 | firing all the bullets from his pistol, had | s is drilling for ofl; Dr. J. 8. |ejected the empty cartijdges and put in | buy the stock; 40 eents. | a single shell. Just why Glaze did this b declines to state. Soon after being conveyed to the Hall of Justice, Glaze sent for his attorney, Trewella. *Mrs, Glaze, it is said, went to the rooms of Mrs. Trewella and roundiy abused her. Seeing that Mrs. Glaze was under the influence of liquor, Mrs. Trewella ordered her from the room, and when she refused to go, Mrs. Glaze was pushed outside the door, which was shut taxation, upon the theory .that such loans were to be deemed and treat- ed as an interest in the property by which they are secured; and the property secur- ing them being exempt, such Interest was also exempt. ‘The Supreme Court in afirming the his own recognizance pending examina- 418 Front st., S. PRINTING, E. €. HUGHES, i 511 Sansome st.. 8. PRINTERS. BOOK BINDERS. Hearing of the Petition for the Writ of Mandatory Injunction Is P ed. The hearing of the writ of mandatory injunction against Federal Quarantine Of- Phone Main 1719, tion. ‘When the bolt of silk was found in Dr. Holmes' baggage as he was landing from the Grant the customs Inspector notified him that it would be sent to the Apprais- er's store for valuation and that he could . Daingerfield Gains. s : | 1. I Brown, and for Mrs, Glaze. He sat |in her face. This incident is supposed | judgment of the lower court said it could it on the duty. Dr. Dr. J. J. Kinyoun TRE HICKS-JUDD CO.. mas F. Graham is slowly fall- | in ihe of the prison and talked ' to have been the basis of Glaze's atate. | not see any reason for holding that Do l'aaid that he L preter to send g.g"flffl ':-cx;rye-iegdmi morning be';::,'.?..;';;’}f.’,* 3. Whet ot e Wiemtonn. is opp t, Judge William | €a e ';:x‘x his wife and his attorney. ment that Trewella had laid hands on | cause the security happens to be of some | back to his room on the transport, which | row, but was postponed’ until next Mon- 'N eld, in the contest now on be- ad :9\ fl"! thfi‘ man,” s; Mre. Glaze. kind of property exempt by law, the|he did by A. Mlmmrf his assistant. A | day. Judge Morrow sitting in the Unnea PENTIONGR AND SREVIAR, ky. At the end of the » a reporter for The Cal Robert Kendall, a son-in-law of Trew- | debt secured thereRy should also be ex- | few minutes later Milthorp was stopped | States Circuit Court of Appeals in th Telegraphic RIDGE ** Cautorna ¥ Tudge Datngernets e | 1can say. 1know that is a serious state- | ella, sought to wreak vengeance on Glaze, | enfpt : as he was going ashore with the sgk con- | Kengie contempt matter: e M- | Tele PART! - dge Daingerfield was | ment to ‘make, but cither 1 had to kill | when he learned of the murder. Kendall Tanklin K. Lane, the City and County | cealed under his coat. Milthorp was ar- | Dr.Kinyoun was reported very sick with - -+ E2in of three votes, | him or he would have killed me.’ T cannot | came fnto_the hotel, and when told that | Attorney, and Willlam I Brobeck ap- | rested and pleaded that he was obeying | catarrh of the appendix, and was unabie | WHITE ASH STEAM COAL. ¥5EP8r. 5% P TSR T By s ot as iy Wigrnay ad | Trevell was dead aed ot Tnto ihe | puargi‘hc ihe city and couny ang ai | fhe orotr, of B Holmey Sud that i the | 12 oave Mg s5em I the Sussesting hind” | cuateonp oous, Mciko o o e SRERY " - h . . wn o or had comman m to b serious pozition £or me to be In. Wara I|was on his way to police headquarters, ed’(he bank hiiokia n:ited MW\I!':’II have had to ob-;? g %‘fi‘,fi&".;.:,' %12: serious. m—.‘ cmo %M" L hmcun-: o