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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, POPE SIGNS APPOINTNENT __ [nf |T IIFC OF T1ONSIGNOR SBARETTI New Apostolic Delegate Is Pleased With His Mission to FHE["UM Tu BRADBURYS Canada, Much Preferring the Northern Country to the Orient—Notable Career of the Distinguished Prelate Wife’s Suit for a Di- vorce Goes Through WEDNESDAY, 1902. NOVEMBER 19, ADVERTISEMENTS. DEATH REVEALS h LIFE AOMANCE Polish Nobleman’s Re- mains Interred' in a Texas City. Associate of a Son of Grant| Dies and Leaveés Riches. ; Quickly. [ { : Special Dispatch to The Call Colonel Mzkes No Contest EL PASO, Texas., Nov. 18—A romantic | and Remains Out of the City. story just come to light concerning | nel Adolf Rock, of Mexico | was buried here last week. He | Mexico, but his body was | 4 buried under the direction | come from San sent here ar Triumphant Plaintiff Will Resume Her Maiden Name and Con- tinue to Reside in Los Angeles. of his wife, who had Fran sco. Rock was a Polish nobleman. from Poland a quarter of | | 3 o to save his life. He left wife and a family and the Colonel had been executed by Government. He also left a e in Mexico. > Rock was the colonel of a ziment which fought with Rus- v, His men were surrounded, Governor ordered the Rock conferred with his men determined to fight They made a dash for lib- aping with their Constantinople, from at the first oppor- for America. He without a penny. He engineer -and se- building of the tunnel in New v was discovered anfi a month for his services. e of a School of Mines and with Jesse Grant, | invested in a silver Mexico. The mine made | Speclal Dispatch Lo The Call. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 18.—Mrs. Lucy T. Bradbury was secretly granted a di- vorece yesterday from Colonel John: Brad- bury, millionaire mine owner, form newspaper publisher and erstwhile mem- ber of the staff of Governor Budd. Ev- ery possible precaution was taken to pre- | vent the news of the filing of the divorce suit and the granting of the decree be- coming public. Judge Shaw assisted the former society leader in her efforts at secrecy and records which are always congidered open to public inspection were | lef®blank long enough so that twenty- | four hours elapsed after the decree was | granted before it became known that the suit had been filed. It had been reported for several days that Mrs. Bradbury intended to bring the suit, but when asked about It her attor- neys simply said that the question was being considered, but that no definite de- cision had been reached. That there was collusion between husband and wife in thelr effort to obtain legal separation s | indicated by the celerity with which the case was disposed of. From the filing of the complaint to the granting of the de- cree censtituted practically one proced- sent word by a Jewish | is family, but never | | was afraid to write | r on passing the | would investigate the | his letter., Men Leave a Sinking Vessel. = = “*|ure. There was no contest—in fact, it TWO HARBORS, Minn., Nov. 8—The| | p(STINGUISHED PRELATE WHOSE APPOINTMENT AS APOSTOLIC | |a$ Understood beftore the action was SHEDEEE WYSMGON: SURBeR Pk fore DELEGATE TO CANADA WAS SIGNED BY POPE LEO XIII AT ROME BRADBURY NOT PRESENT. Wein., Bor: GOt shk | | YESTERDAY. HIS SELECTION IS SATISFACTORY TO ALL. g rteen miles off this port last | | B ; g . : The complaint alleged stmply fallure on f breaking her stern | g x s, | the part of Colonel Bradbury to provide on and crew escaped | Ashland, which his boat | 2. 7 amer sank in 300 feet | ¢ water and will be a total loss. the necessaries of life, and upon that | ground the decree was granted. The only witnesses were Mrs. Bradbury and her OME, Nov. 18.—The Pope to-day signed the brief appointing Mer. the church he was professor of moral! philosophy in the College of the Propa- - 5 5 . .~ Mary Banning. Colonel i ostolic delegate in £anda. Except for about two years,|mother, Mrs. Mary (_sab:(;';fl P - when he was employed in handling mat- | Bradbury was Jopoxen in the city. He Anchor line i AR s ters concerning the missions of | is said to be in Oakland. WASHINGTON, Nov. 18—MEr. the Propaganda in China and Japan,| Colonel Bradbury was represented by Sbaretti has received no officlal an- ho has had much to do with the | Attorneys Dunn and Crutcher, while John nouncement of his appointment as affalrs of the American church. His ex- Chapman and Bicknell, Gibson & | apostolic delegate to Canada, but he ex- pressed confidence in the accuracy of the statement. That such ' an appointment would be made had previously been in- timated to him, but afterward there was a change of plan with the view of send- ing him to India. He is much pleased with the new designation, as he prefers Canada to the Orient. Dr. Sbaretti said that he would start for his new post as scon as afficially notified. He will be lo- cated in Ottawa. perfence during the period he spent In the employ of the Propaganda in hand- ling American matters. led to his selec- tion es auditor of the papal delegation when it was determined to establish it, and In 1893 he accompanied Cardinal Satolli to this country. Monsignor Sbaretti and Archbishop Ire- land, it was said, did not agree about the policy of the Catholic church in this country, but with Archbishop Corrigan the auditor was on cordial terms, and he counted among his supporters here Arch- bishop Chapelle, who indorsed him for the post of Bishop of Havana, to. which place Monsignor Sbaretti was appointed in December, 1899, in succession to the aged Bishop Emmanuele Santander y Frutos. His consecration for this post | took place in St. Aloysius Church in Washington on February 4, 190, the con- secrator being Archbishop Martinelll, the papal delegate. oo ofoforforferfeniert KAl Trask looked after the Interests of the| plaintift, The divorce ends marital relations | which have been fraught with many sen- sational features and which have sup- plied food for gossip extending over a pe- | riod of several years. For nearly a year | Colonel and Mrs. Bradbury have not been | living together, she making her residence with her mother, while he lived where | he pleased. Much of his time was &pent | with jovial companions about town and he frequently made trips to other cities. Several years ago there was a scandal in the Bradbury family which attracted attention throughout the country. In July, 1897, Mrs. Bradbury left the city with an Englishman named Ward. They | went to San Francisco, but the fact of the elopement, if such it was, became known before they had boarded the train and soon after they arrived in San Fran- clsco they were arrested. The case was not prosecuted, and after her release from custody she returned to her mother. RESUMES HER MAIDEN NAME. There was a question as to whether Mrs. Bradbury would be received again | in soclety. Bradbury surprised his friends | by taking his wife back, and together they went to his estate in Mexico, where they remained several years. When they ADVERTISEMENTS. A SOURCE OF SURPRISE | To Physician and Patient Alike. | nond, a specialist in the study | ent of plles and rectal diseases, stated that the Pyramid Pile| he new discovery for the cure of | was the most remarkable remedy | 4@ ‘ever seen or tried in one respect, | t was the instant relief experienced es, no matter how severe, from | e moment the remedy was applied; this as the more suprising to him because analyzed the preparation | f opium, cocaine or similar d be detected. s look with great favor upon | Pile Cure, because it is| g the place of surgical ope- | because it is so simple, so | ed and contains no mineral or so commonly used in pile \ \ Monsignor Donato Sbarettl was born in Montefranco, near Rome, in 185. He studled both law and theologyM his law studies embracing cafion and Roman law. He recelved the doctorate in law and the- ology. Later he gave a public disputa- tion at the Vatican before the Pope, his subject being “Philosophy.” For this he received a handsome gold medal. Be- fore entering the diplomatic service of Moot IN MORE HOSTILITY | | SHETCHED mROM L\Fe_ efoferfofefeofrfeeetotodel @ PP PREPARES brook reports that the Pyra- not only cures the various but never fails to give ef on the first application, w severe the pain or discom- ho have suffered from piles for often astonished at the instant erienced from the first applica- ther important advantage is the one can use the remedy n from business or inter- laily occupation. Rollins of Sweet Springs, I cons! the Pyramid Plle . ; it cured me in less s. 1 waited fifteen days to be sure I was fully cured be- I can now say I am 1 recommend the Pyramid T possible opportunity, eq uggists now sell it at 50 cents e and its sales exceed those of r remedies combined. Pyramid Drug Co., Marshall, for their book on cause and cure of Famous the ' World Over—Fully Matured. Sol Everywhere. Specialists for Men. Established 16 rgest practice t. No pay required e is effected. Col- ored chart of the male * anatomy free at office or 2} by mail. Home cures. DR. TALCOTT & CO. Entire upper floor. ’ 1140 MARKET ST.. S. F. years. in the Dr.Pierce’s Electyic Truss is 3 Marvel. Nothing like it. Best Retainer on earth > and s eyemuine Cure for Rupture. * World renowned. 27improvem'ts. \ 1f ruptured investigate at onoe. Cal MAGKETIC E, (RUSS CO., 33 West 24th Street, New | Yoxg, N. Y. or 206 Post Street, San Francisco, BRUSHE bo: FOR BARBERS, BA. kers, bootblacks, bath houses, billiard tables, binders, candy-makers, canners; fiis, foundrie laundries, paper- «, painters, shoe factories, cofers, tanners, tailors, etc, BUCHANAN BROS.. Erush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St W. T. HESS, FOTARY PUBLIO AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Tenth Ficor, Room 1015, Cllu;sgpmklll bidg. | brewers. dyers, fi Largers [ etableman, Il or write for *“Booruer No. 1.” |' The Ministerial Alliance Fights Against His Eiection, SALT LAKE, Utah, Nov. 18.—The Min- | isterial Alliance of Salt Lake is prepar- | ing to make a vigorous fight against the election of Apostle Reed Smoot to the United States Senate this winter, and fail- ing this to carry the fight against him to Congress. A plan for organized effort on this line, it is stated, has already been outlined and will be taken up at the next meet- ing. The general idea, it is said, is to make a fight similar to that made agalinst the seating in the House of Representa- tives of Brigham H. Roberts. Not only will the matter be brought be- fore the non-Mormons of-the, State, but if the fight is unsuccessful in the Legis- | lature, then an attempt will be made to make Smoot's election an issueand a peti- tion will be drafted to Congress, asking that Smoot, as a high official of the Mor- | mon church, be refused a seat in the Sen- ate. Cruiser’s Silver Bell Cast. DENVER, Col., Nov. 18.—The silver bell to be presented to the United States | cruiser Denver by the city of Denver was | cast to-day at the Denver Brass Works | in the presence of Mayor R. R. Wright, other city officials ahd prominent citi- zens. The bell is twenty inches high and measures twenty-six inches across the mouth and the crown is sixteen inches in diameter. et <k Ty Damages Against Southern Pagific. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 18.—A jury this evening rendered a verdict in favor of the widow and children of Robert Douglas for 38500 damages- against the Southern Paci- fic Company. Douglas was killed by a flying piece of lumber in the sawmill of the railroad shops here. FOR LEGAL FIGHT Famed Gunmaker Will returned to California Mrs. Bradbury made ‘no attempt to re-enter soclety, in which she was once an acknowledged lead- er, but has since been living quietly with her mother. Ward started for England, but a few days after his departure his body ! Stir Up Things for an Editor, b BERLIN, Nov. 18.—The seizure by the police of the Monday issue of the Vor- waerts, the Socialist organ, for publish- ing an article strongly reflecting upon Herr Krupp, the richest man in Germany, n hy hi was followed by a search of t - waerts’ office for the manu:crlp:‘eu!vtol:-e article in question, which was a column in length and contained wliat purported to be the details of the Italian police in- vestigatioh into the charges made. The Berlin police during the domiciliary visit forced the desk of several members of the Reichstag. This, the Vorwaerts avers, is contrary to the constitution and c B was found lying alongside a track in Towa. fallen from a rapidly moving train and | family of this section and Is wealthy in will be made between Colonel Bradbury is likely to be followed by an extraor. | 2ng, NS former G ey dinarily sensational trial, as 1t s saia |P00C mm———— to-day that Herr Krupp intends to bring | APPEALS FROM ORDER criminal proceedings against the paper. 3 A CI 1 S'J;hedpubllcanon referred to.was made o R The aturday and s i this afternoon'says that John C. Osgood. chairman of thie board of directors of the morrow make application before Justice rafiroad | He had either jumped or een killed. Mrs. Bradbury will assume her maiden ame and will continue to make her | ome here. She is a member of a pioneer | er own right. What financial settlement File Application in an Impor- tant Case. DENVER, Colo.,. Nov. 18.—The Times ‘olorado Fuel and Iron Company, will to- rewer of the United States Supreme | will be a matter to be taken up later. * An acquaintance of Herr the latter had been aware since July tha Krupp says a malicious story was in circulation and Court at Washington to have the order of | Judge Caldwell, appointing a master in chancery to conduct thé annual meeting of the company to be held. on “December 1, with power to decide all questions as t added that it was the result of & con- spiracy of hotel-keepers at the island of Capri, where the great gunmaker has a residence, antl who, supposing him to be about to build a modern hotel on the icland, where he has expended several million marks on his villa and grounds dGetermined to drive him from the place. Herr Krupp has a taste for beautiful Fotels and has built model inns at Kiel, C O to the stockholders’ other questions which may arise at the meeting, dissolved: Judge Sanborn.of the United States Cir- cuit Court at St. Paul sustaining Judge fect of dissolving the order appointing a rights to vote and 1t is an appeal from .the decision of aldwell's order. -If ‘the court sustains ' cgood's contention it will have the ef- Essen and other places in Germany. What began as a project to make Capr distasteful to Herr Krupp developed of blackmail ignored. The Vorwaerts was misled, but Herr Krupp designs immediate steps toward legal vindi cation, Dece Telephone Main Residence, 821 California st., below Poweil L Residence Telephone James 150! mber Namber of Krupp's acquaintance says. into a scheme which he has thus far perhaps taking master in chancery and will permit of | the election being conducted without any supervisor from the courts. It is, under- stcod, however, that it will not be the cause of postponing the election, .as all legal formalities have been complied with and there is now no further need of de- laying action. el Lo GOVERNMENT RECEIVES MONEY FOR SEALSKINS Fifty-Seven Thousand Dollars Goes Into the Treasury as the Result of Contract. WASHINGTON, Nov. 18.—The Treasury Department has recovered ~from the North American Commercial Company, about $57,00 due to the Government un-' der its contract, as bonus, tax and inter- est on about 4000 sealskins taken by thc natives on St. Paul Island, about twelve years ago. The skins were taken by the natives from seals used as food and the question of ownership as between the Alaska Commercial Company and its successor, } the North American Commercial Com- pany, has been pending since that time. 1t finally having been settled that the kins belong to the latter company, appli- cation was made for the payment of the sum dye, with the result that the money was deposited in the sub-treasury in New York yesterday. Hasburg’s Gold, %5c. Further reduction in quantities. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market-street. o, L 5 derwear s The rainy season has commenced—winter with its chilly nights and cool morn- ings will be with us for some months. Now’s the time to change the weight of your underwear—put on warm, medium or heavy weight garments and avoid colds and other discomforts. ’ We are prepared to supply your needs. The largest stock of underwear on the Coast awaits your inspection. We buy in large quantities direct from the mills. This means a saving to you of fully twenty-five per cent. We give you a better article for the same money or the same article for less money than you can buy else- where. We mention but a few of the many kinds from the assortment; At 50c a garment, cotton ribbed underwear, in flesh color, blue and garne't: also* cotton fleeced underwear (warm, comfortable garments); in golden brownand light blue_ At 75¢c a garment, natural wool and camels’ hair underwear; also wool fleeced underwear in fancy stripes. ' ; At $1.00 a garment, lambs’ wool underwear, in gray, tan and blue; also form fitting underwear in gray, flesh and brown. At $1.25 a garment, natural wool underwear with double front and back to shirts At $1.50 a garment, form fitting cashmere wool underwear, splendidly-finished garments; also mercerized silk underwear, heavy weight for winter wear, colors, sky 'blue, flesh, nut brown; also natural }V'ool underwear, fine selected stock, single or double breasted shirts. ’ At $2.00 a garment, form fimn.g medium weight cashmere wool underwear, in jight blue and flesh color; aisp silk-striped cashmere wool underwear,” in white with pink or blue stripes: also heavy weight non-shrinkable seamless Scotch wool under- wear in white and gray. s . At $250 a garment, extra heavy weight, pure worsted wool underwear, form fitting, excellent quality; in iight blue and light tan. SN-WO0D 5 (0 718 Market Street E g ot MAIL ORDERS CATALOGUE Write for illustra- ted catalogue, ““Attire for man and boy’'— contains prices on clothes, hats and fur- nishings. We fi!l mail orders for any of the above. We have a thorough, efficient department —writs us.