The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 3, 1901, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1901. 8 OFFICERS KIDNAP DUNHAM SUSPECT TheValue of Union=-Made| WHILE HE IS HELPLESS FROM LIQUOR Clothing Keep Charles F. Crill Imprisoned in Kansas for Days Before Bringing Him to California---Prisoner’s First Wife Denies That He Obtained a Divorce and Intimates That He Is a Bigamist Possibly very few people know the real vaiue of union-made clothing. Now, a man should not wear union-made clothing merely from sentiment, Sentiment is all right, but there is something else of more interest to the wearer of union-made clothes. : The clothing is made under most favorable conditions---the workshops are clean, light, airy Special Dispatch to The Call. F ORT SCOTT, Kans.,, May 2.—If C. | here and knows nothing of her husband’s | told to-day by a Call representative that | | F. Crill of this city, who is now in | arrest. f‘;{rsfi Crill at Fort Scott, Kans., had given PO 2 T the San Jose jail on the suspicion rth to a child he called the reporter that he is JJames Dunha.m‘? the CRILL EXPECTS RELEASE. aside and asked particulars and sald his proves that he is not the man wanted he he was a bigamist Crill became enraged. mey cause the officers who arrested him Saloon Drawing Card. He would neither deny the charge nor an- in Wichita a great deal of trouble. There | SAN JOSE, May 2.—Charles F. Crill will [ SWer any question, but threatened both se no doubt that he was forcibly kid- | be given his freedom in a few days. While | bodily injury and prosecution to those gz - . making such a charge. Later he asked naped and taken to California against his | the Sheriff's office is reluctant to admit [ F2FNE Soen, & charkes Lat s that the man is not Dunham, this fact has | “1¢ Crill was regularly divorced there arrest of Crill wds one of the most | been pretty conclusively proven. The | could be no reason for these actions, and jar pleces of detective work done in | public is satisfied he is not the murderer, | this has led to_the belief that he has led Stete. Crill, for the last thirty davs |but believe he is wanted somewhere else | a dual life. Crill has been tendered all 2, had been etopping at the | 0T an offense—probably bigamy. kinds.of positions as soon as he is allowed % < s but A stream of people poured into the jail | to go, for many real Hotel in Wichita, again to-day and only about a corporal’s | drawing card. One saloonkeeper has of- > neighboring cities 10 | guard of these hundreds were bold enough | fered him $150 to tend bar for a week. for to Apri DENIES SHE IS DIVORCED. 2 clubs. to assert that the suspect was Dunham. after Crill arrived 2 man | Then these few were not positive and | those who thought he resembled the registered as E. F. Grelner appeared st the same hotel. He claimed to be a 1 gent from Illinois. He seemed to t Mking for Crill, and, it is oney several times. Al- aimed to be a real estate the Wichita police | Campbell murderer would hesitate about | going ‘on the witness stand to swear it. The others declared he was not Dunham. Most of Crill's story as to his where- abouts is being substantiated. People who knew his uncle at Flagg Station, Iil. have questioned him and state he tells ¢ Mrs. Dora Crill Says That Her Hus- band Deserted Her About Seven Years Ago. DENVER, Colo.,, May 2—Mrs. Dora Crill, the wife of the Dunham suspect un- and cheerful; the workers are skillful, contented white people, paid good wages for doing good work. They are the best workmen in the world---no ques- been Chief of Po- | straight story. Former resldents c.|der arrest at San Jose, is most emphatic tion about it. They take pride in their work and keep it up to the standard of their union. The || union label in every garment stamps that garment as perfect in workmanshnip and faultless in fit and finish. It is a guarantee of excellence. Our Own Make The general satisfaction which our clothing is giving substan- ||| tiates all the foregoing facts. Ours is the only union-made cloth- {!| ing on this coast. In buying from us you buy direet from us, the makers, as we manufacture all our ready-to-wear clothing. We save you the middleman’s profits. This saving alone m.re than pays for the difference in wages between those of un‘oa men and poor, unskilled labor. In addition to the union label the clothing bears our personal || label. which guarantees the clothing for a year. If you are dissat- isfiad we return your money. Clothes are kept in repair free for a year after purchase. ° - Box Overcoats We have a large line of box overcoats that are worth $ro—we made them to sell for that. Right now, while the season is de- |, manding them, we will dispase of th2 coais at a special price—to reduce the stock and to bring more customers—we want more || people acquainted wi.h us. Surely a value like this ought to doit. The overcoats are union-made from a good quality of covert in tans, browns and olives. They are loqg enough to cover any three-button cutaway frock. The sale price is $7.50 Send in your nam- and address for our new iliwstrated catalodwe, ° ® 3 “Whatto Wear,” which is now being printed. & 1 He said he was | Rockford, IlL, and Pueblo are of the samie | jn her denial that she is divorced from oks and was al- | opinion. There {s no doubt Crill mar-| Crill. She says that they have been sep- e papers ‘n police | ried Dora Schreiber at Pueblo in 1887. | arated since 1894 and that for a long time he recognized any | Father Leggio has established this fact, | she lost trace of her husband. She claims men who were |and to C. H. Shumate, who conducted a|that Crill could not have very well se- grocery store there, Crill related incidents | cured a divorce from her without serving that happened there in 1894 that only one | her with a copy of the complaint and who was there could tell. . |summons. No summons or complaint Crill is still detained at the County Jail, | were ever served on her nor to her knowl- but this detention will be short. He said | edge was there any attempt made at cer- | to-day he had no doubt but they would | vice by publication. Mrs. Crill, whose | release him. Those who have critically | maiden name was Dora Schreiber, is liv- s | examined Crill, among whom are scores |ing at Cripple Creek. She is very uncom- | who knew Dunham by sight, are con- | municative and declines to state just what | vinced he is a victim of his own re- | steps she intends taking, now that she has semblance to the fugitive. While a pris- | Jearned the whereabouts of her husband. | oner in name, Crill is given freedom inside | the jail and no one interferes with him going from room to room. PUEBLO RECORD-éTRAIGBT‘ Crill’s Former Father-in-Law Tells | About the Suspect. ed by a 1€ on the Sheriff Langford is not yet satisfied with his wrists 2nd | the proof that Crill s not Dunham and man that he nad | will hold him a few days longer in the _‘vlzllp ‘é{?fl‘m?é | hopa that some one may turn up who can " = mind had been relieved of a great burden, murderer of the McGlincy family, Speculators Now Want Him for a |DPut When confronted with the report that 3 ne | SAN JOSE, May z—A special to the ||+ account_for Crill's whereabouts in May, 3 1866, This is done on advice of District | Mercury from the Pueblo (Colo.) Chieftaia | || | Attorney Campbell. E. F. Greiner, whe | says: capsed the arrest of Crill, still cherishes | “Crill was married here in October, 157. a hope that the suspect is Dunham. o | w, & i Bim it is o matter of dollars and cents. | M- Sehrieper: father-inlaw of Crlir Bk fore- on his neck | Greiner will be out about $250. When | ¢, B nck 250. rill v one of kis back | Crill is turned loose he will be given | (ities ma o s’;l:;lfiox:?gs‘g?tsgrfilo:‘:l\l;% for his expenses and trip back to | ria, He was a man of fine business y, but drank o excess. He was ar Do 4 pot: Jehm | . oThe gold for this is now in the | abi I don't 3 hands of Sherlff Langford and was placed | mixed up. In soveral shate geals wins Away in a Carriage. there In the shape of five twentles before | jnoxicated and he was kept ot of i taken downstairs | that official would bring Crill here for | by his father-in-law pUttng up money. was the last | identification. The couple separated about seven years | he officers and treir | There is little doubt Crill is wanted| after the marriage, but the father-in-law g the hotel, went to | Somewhere. else. His refusal to talk of | gays Crill was in Pueblo in 18% at the aged a e carriage | his marriages infers it is bigamy. His| time of the murde: s distant. | memory is bad, or else he does not want s alked but 1 Last night Crill declared the prison: iner returned | stayed only |in 1 . o have his | riel again. San'Jose. | grounds on which a_divorce was obtained | Or the exact date. He separated from his | first wife in 1583 or 1894 and at that time | divorce case of persons named Crill has | Mrs. Crill No. 1 resumed her malden name. | been In the divorce courts of Salt Lake - | to remember. r | he cbtained a divorce from his first wife | Dora Schreiber, whom he marrie i 2nd a few: months later he mar- | Salt Lake Inquiry Does Not Bear Qut He refuses to give the Crill’s Statements. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, May 2.—No S 2 NO RECORD OF DIVORCE. lea forw e arrest that n of it until Cril i i‘l"l-'(mamon | Of his second wife Crill is dumb. When | County for the last ten years. PG 1 SR GO SEEkeRs COPPER PLANT LOST IN ALASKA to San Jose. e STRICKEN DEAF AND DUMB Prospectors in Arc- tic Wilds. pany Begins a Big Project. Year-Old Girl at Redding. Out-of-town orders filled for anythingin men’s or boys’ clothing, furnish.- ings or hats—correspond with our Mail Order De- pariment. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Wash., May 2.—Fred Zoell- —While standing be- | TACOMA, May 2—The Tacoma Smelt- engeged in wiping | ing Company has purchased of the Sather ently as happy as most | Banking Company of an Francisco, late- i e ly disincorporated, the valuable twenty- “:;g"' f“" Diego was one of a party of | ve acres formerly known as the Pacific [P d'"” ors lost for twenty-three days | adjoining the and suffered terribly in the wilds of The adjacent | Alaska. According to a letter received in this elty by W. E. Hadley he was | generally are, little denly stricken this morning. e in an instant at the com- Miils Company’s propert; elter property, for $22 lands have been bought, giving a fine heen convers- before. There | Redding. 8 summoned. The girl to her bed and the rary. caused by | robably the it is 2 blow from a stone v when the girl was have been the cause tempo e ELOPES A SECOND TIME AND TAXKES HER CHILD Young Woman Whose First Marriage Was a Romantic One Repeats the Performance. evening with taking her | rears of age, t is her d venture vears ago, when a mers the husband she nces on the ocean, ut of Monterey Bay. | home Tuesday and left him, sold all the started for Oak- of the runaway couple. aged to a young lady of but the charms of Mrs. Fur- tardo proved more alluring. —————— Moody the Dead Man’s Name. REDWOOD CITY, May 2.—The mystery eurrounding the death of the old man |and will be preserved among the church who died at Tanforan on April 22 has been cleared up &nd the body identified and n charge of by relatives in San Fr.n- cise The man's name was William Moody end he was an old-time resident 4 once prominent bus e he dropped dead he was uite shabbily, but had on his per- as bes r peopie’s money to the track it for them. This accounts found on him at the time. ne time a wealthy wool mer- Railroad Victim Was a Soldier. - Democratic Ticket in Fresno. FRESNO, M he City Democratic mination this aft- on June 4 L. O. ctor) for Mayor, rcumbent) for City Johnston (Free Library S Tacoma Machinists on Strike. TACOMA, Wash., May 2—Machinists in | Tacoma went on strike to-day for a nine- hour day. One hundred and fifty men are ' | to turn out ore bars, carrying gold and 2.—Mrs. Joseph | vriy] Waintain Right of the Sovereign v were married un- | the Papal Legation to-day. The oath was s man of that | $330 in cash. Since the identity | leave Los Angeles for the north and will * termined it has | begin their annual conference at Del hat he was in the habit of | Monte Tuesday. { time nothing has been heard of boat or | early this morning. He was a native of additional water front of 1200 feet. ‘mis new property an extensive copper |plant and lead refinery will be built. | Plans for buildings are being drawn. | The new plant will enable the smelter | | { | i | Paralysis Attacks Ten-lTa.coma Smelting Com-|Terrible Experience . of| } silver ready for the assay office or mint, whereas the present product is copper matte carrying 50 to 60 per cent copper, | which has to be sent to San Francisco or Montana for refining. The capacity of the smelter will be increased from 400 to 700 tons of ore daily. It is now handling 300 tons a day and will smelt 400 a day as soon as a blower for the fourth blast furnace arrives. The present force of 300 | men will be doubled. The total cost of the new plant, includ- |ing the site and wharves, will be nearly | 500,000 The smelter is controlled by D. O. Milis and other large stockholders in the | Treadwell, Bunker Hill and Sulllvan | mines. | | CARDINAL MARTINELLI | TAKES OATH OF OFFICE Pontiff to Exercise Temporal Power. | WASHINGTON, May 2.—Cardinal Mar- | tinelli took the oath of his new office and | subscribed to the profession of faith at administered by Mgr. Conaty of the Cath- olic University and witnessed by Mgr. Marchetti, the papal delegate. The cere- mony was private and was extremely | simple. Among the provisions of the oath are pledges on the part of the Carainal that he will not resign office; that he will not canvass for any one in the election of 2 new Pope, and that he will maintain the right of the Sovereign Pontiff to ex- ercise temporal power. The' profession of faith embodies the Athanasian and Nicene creeds. Both documents were in Latin, archives. g e iy General Freight Agents Coming. LOS ANGELES, May 2.—The Western Classification Committee, comprising | about twenty-five general freight agents | of the leading Western roads, is due here | to-morrow evening and will visit San Di- ego Saturdey. Monday morning they will I Echooner Stella Is Missing. SAN JOSE, May 2—Two weeks ago the schooner Stella, Ed Selfridge commander, left Alviso with a deckload of clams bound for San Francisco, since which man. It is feared that the Stella went down during a ttorm on the bay. e Prominent Rio Vista Man Dies. RIQ VISTA, May 2—Martin Christen- sen, 2 prominent cltizen of this place, died Denmark and €2 years old. He came to California in 1571 ‘and to Rio Vista eight years later. He was the first president of the Board of Trustees. e i Sheriff Closes Their Store. CAYUCOS, May 2.—The general mer- chandise store of De Gottardl & Righett! was closed by Sheriff Ivins this morning | on an attachment issued by the Commer- | cial Bank of San Luis Obispo for $3500. : the firm from whose safe, it is claimed, over $8600 was stolen by burglars last Tuesday night. Pays a Fortune for a Seat. NEW YORK, May 2.—The sale of a seat | out in the institutions along the water front. The men in the Northern Pa- | cific’s shop are not affected. is recorded on the New York Stock Ex-| change for $70,000. The previeus highest authentic record was $66,000 for a seat. Upon frozen badly and may not recover, Hadley is a member of the Bear Min- | ing Company, which is a corporation of | Seattle and San Diego men. _The com- | pany had a number of representatives at 718 Market Street. Teller at the close of last season, and of these a party started in ‘December to| o e e e ———————————————— e ——— . ——— e ———— 2 cross the Arctic coast. They had retn. | deer and were well suppli vi 5 visions and camp equipamegs Wit Pro- I After they had been gone about six ||| Wweeks a reindeer driver who had started | with them returned to Teller, bringing the information that the party had been lost for twenty-three days and that ||| Zoellner was badly frozen and might not | survive. Upon the receipt of this news | Wyatt made a trip from Teller to Nome for the purpose of writing a letter to | Hadley relating the circumstances. This letter reached Hadley yesterday and bears the date of January 25, | S i EXCURSION TRAIN RAN - INTO PASSENGER TRAIN D. 0. Mills Considerably Bruised | About the Head in the Wreck at Emigrant Gap. H OGDEN, Utah, May 2.—The second sec- tion of No. 6 of the Southern Pacific, which was wrecked at Emigrant Gap, | Cal., reached Ogden to-day. D. O. Mills and Whitelaw Reid were on the t: dexunedd;o be interviewed. R R ccording to the passengers the train struck a rock and was pulling away from | the obstruction when the excursion train | crashed into it from the rear. Mills’ pri- vate car, which/was on the rear of the train, was demolished, as were also the | engine and one car of the excursion train. Mills was cut in the hand and bruised about the head. Reid escaped injury. The injured passengers were brought here and attended to by the company’'s physician. None of them are seriously hurt and ali proceeded on their way east. Superintend- | ent Noble says the li - | lished is carre{:t. o o By pub Baloons Will Remain Open. KANSAS CITY, May 2.—The Police Commissioners have refused the request of the speclal committee of the Law and Order Enforcement ague to close the saloons on Suncay. The league has called a mass-meeting for to-morrow ht to take the first steps toward tionin, Governor Dockery to remove those of- Steel Rail Mill Closes. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohlo, May 2—One hundred and fifty men were dlscharged at the steel rail department of the Na- tional Steel Company plant to-day. It is stated that the steel rail mill now in this city will be discontinued and removed to | Chicago, to be added to the steel rail de- partment of the Illinois Steel Company. The plant is now under the control of the United States Steel Corporation. i e Will Buy Carload Lots. ST. JOSEPH, Mo., May 2.—Every retall grocer in the city to-day entered a com- bination to discontinue the practice of buying in small lots and henceforth the organization will do all the buying from the jobbers in carload consignments or more. Large sums of money are expected to be netted to the retailers as a result of the new plan. | Ministers Abandon Their Fight. BUFFALO, May 2.—8o far as the Buf- falo churches that were represented by the committee appointed some time ago, ' with the Rev. O. P. Gifford of the Dela- ware-avenue Baptist Church at its head, are concerned, no further action will be See Note prices. our windows. They are interesting. qualitics and Another Sale of Sailor Suits We want every mother in San Francisco to know the facts about our children’s, boys’ and youths’ clothing department. It is a large depart- ment, occupying a floor by itseif. It is light, c'ean, airy, comfortable and convenient; and, what’s more to the thrifty, it abounds in bar- gains. We make most all the clothing ourszlves — except a few extreme novelties—and by buying direc* from us, the makers, you save money. These sailor sui's are for boys from 4 to 12 years of age; they are made in flanneis and cheviots in invisible plaids, chalk line stripes and nixtures, about seven patterns in all; lanyard and whistle, silk embroidsred design on coilar and <hield; the price is so low that it does not permit of the material being all wool; however, the suits will wear well; they are worth $2.50; special price from this Friday until next $1.65... Also a line of vestee suits, in plaid ‘weeds, with vests to match and separable shields, ages from 4 to g years, regular price- $2.25; special for the week $1.65 o Overalls in blue and Erown, ages 2 to 17, 28¢ a pair. ; White lawn blouses, azes 3 ‘0 7. 80C each. Linen blouses, age- 3 to 7 28¢C each. Boys’ straw hats in all col rs. 28¢ each. Boys’ fedoras in dark and I'ght grhv, $1.80 each. SNWOO0D 5(0- 718 Market Strect. Out-of-town orders filled — write us for anything in clothing, furnishings or hats. taken looking toward the closing of the Pan-American Exposition on Sundays. 1

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