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THE SAN FRAN CISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 6, .1908. TAFT SLATED FOR FULLER'S HIGH PLACE President Favors Philippines’ Civil Governor. ppoint Willlam H vil Governor of the he post of ( WOMAN MAY A HAVE BEEN OF NOBILITY SCION Was Found Dies - FARES TO BE REDUCED OM EASTERN POINTS Offici s Announce a New With Stop-Over Privileges. ADVERTISEMENTS. he Disease of Civilization is CONSTIPATION The Safest and Quickest Cure for this evil is Raturc’s Laxative Water, Not an Artificial Preparation. Relief Comes With the First Glass. Always Ask for HUNYADI JANOS Full Nem If you simply ask for Hun- yadi Water you may be im- posed upon. ViM, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN. MORMON EBISHOP'S PILLS e been In use over ffty years by the leaders of the mon Church and wers. Positively cure the cases in old and youps effects of self o Unfithess to Mar. Varicocele or Con Twitching of mediate. Im. every func- iieadache, : BOc & box; 6 for 1 guarantee to cure or 1 6 boxes. Circulars free. REMEDY CO., 40 ‘Eilis st., GRANT DRUG CO., 3% Address Ban Franc Ca and 40 Third st the! their | VATICAN'S REPRESENTATIVE PROCEEDS TO FRANCE ON RELIGIOUS ORDER MISSION |Provincial at Notre‘Dame, Indiana, Will Seek | Adjustment of Difficulties That Beset Cath- | ~ olic Communities and Also Make Transfers L | i | i i } | | | — >y, e 5.—The Very Rev Johy Provinelal of the | - of the Holy Cross | me, Indfand, left the | Pa an hm has been ns be- the - subject of the to a mod imposed on t eligious orders with a view f the restrictions now The eration ¢ 1 th members results of his the F th nferences fir were R AR S e R ICAN CLERGYMAN ALING WITH RELIGIOUS ORDER DIFFICULTY. most ment of adva the « lication of the!new laws the eventual ex- members of tion of about religious © | Zahm's first work w jon for those who beleng to Of these there are 400 broth- ers. He proposes to trans- rem to varlous colleges and parishe States and Canada. Many have moved to use in w York and American mother su- perior at the request of the Mother Su- perior here. Father Zahm has also ar- ranged for the transportation of "nearly 100 other French sisters to the Western and Southern States. The Rev. Dennis O’Connell, rector of the Catholic University at Washington, started for the United States to-day by way of Paris. his alread ited an BURDICK MURDER MOTIVE KNOWN ;sAS'HEs' VETIMS ~WITH A HATCHET Husband and Wife At- tagked by a Vicious Burglar. Police Say Jealous a,ndg Desperate Woman Did | the Deed. ] | BUFFALO, March 5—The of-| BIRMINGHAM, Ala., March 5.—Mr. and ill claim to be absolutely certain | Mrs. J. C. Dicke n, the Burdick murder was committed | of Jasper County, were fatally wounded that they know the woman, [ by a bury early this morning near an arrest the | Cordova a ir home was robbed of all dence is suf- val The weapon used was a the burglgr inflicted deep | Bashes on the faces of his vietims, ficers v & woman nd that they can m their chain of its and jent to secure a conviction. batchet A number of persons were examgined by 1 District Attorney Coatsworth to-day, | . Dickerson's i-year-old daughter notified Beth T. Pa)‘}’! of 492 Elmwood ave | the neighbors and when they arrived at Mrs, in Bur. | (he house the man and,woman were lying nue, whose picture was found i - p r Cewtodny | linconscious on a bed shlashed with blood. dick’s Gen, declared in an interview to-day |/ COVRCTUE OF 8 Ded #ba that she knew nothing about the tragedy | g e~y e g W i gy R i | There is no clew as to the identity of of the murder. This fact, she said, she | ¢ TObber, though posses have been or- could prove by her servants. |Bavized and are making every possible The District Attorney has frequently 1(‘f§n"{ to capture the guiity man. Henry spoken of evidence in his possession that |V 2/KeT, & Negro, is being held on suspi- would suggest & motive for the crime | “/°% . other than the fear of disclosures that —_— Pallas Sails Away. were llkely to be made in divorce pro- ceedings. What the evidence is the au- | CARACAS, March 5.—The British crulser | Pallas, the last representative of the al- | thorities will not It is said on good authority, however, that the evidence re- | 1\ 4 ¢ cog 1n Venesuelan waters, fett thts morning. lates to a woman who was In severe straits for money. This womandJs not a | member of the Burdick household, but | her name has been mentioned frequently mortgage was due about the time Bur- dick was murdered. A lawyer who car- ries on the legal business for the money in connection with the tragedy. Her ne- cessity was such that when she wished | to do house furnishing she bought her | goods on the installment plan. She also | Jender received the money for the pay- borrowed money from a money lender. | ment due. This is known beyond the It was quite a large sum and she gave | shadow of a doubt. It may be that the payment left her penniless and that she applied to Burdick for more funds. In any event the police believe the straitened security for it. The poll \When questioned regarding condition 1s established and they are giv- ing the greatest importance in their in- | this mortga@ly and the woman's embar- rassment to find means of maintaining a quiry into the motive for the murder. The woman’'s circumstances and the pretentious house acknowledged that they knew of the fact and had investi- gated it. They knew that she had been intimately acquainted with Burdick. It | {injunction,is not g 11 FOLLOWS RAIN IN SHASTA prominent citizens | Y OF MEN MAY ENGAGE I 4 STRIE Wabash Trouble Likely to Develop a Giant Struggle. the secret of restoring sight to the blind. Fear Exists That About Fifty Thousand Employes Will Go Out. | not only able to restore lost sight, but { known it. | Professor Steins took Dr. Caze Into a President Ramsey of the Railroad Company Declares the Matter Is ! Entirely in the Hands of Federal Judges. L o :!essf,\r walk to and fro, strike a match and light a lamp. Then he felt the ap- | paratus fixed around his temples, where- | vpon he instantly saw a dim iight, which jenabled him to distinguish surrounding abjects. Presently the light became | stronger and Dr. Caze w ST. LOUIS, March 5.—There Was N0 | @ ufufufufuiuffuirfriniint | change in the Wabash situation to-day, but the seriousness of its aspect increases | PRESIDENT AGAIN SENDS hourly. President Ramsey stated that he | CRUM'S NAME TO SENATE ! had nothing mew to report, saying that sy Colored Man Is Nominated as Be- | his force was at work as usual and that | | the matter of a strike is now up to the | fore for Collectorship of Cus- toms at Charleston. | Federal courts. There is a grave probability that the| WASHINGTON, March 5.—The ¢Presi- firemen and trainmen of the Wabash may | dent to-day sent the following nomina- | strike as individuals. It is reliably re- | tions to the Senate: | ported that the mt:g\ arelyelad.v llg Sl?dflx:] Willlam D. Crum, Collector of Customs, 's notice. nless reside S o ;:M:,-::Pfl?l'fls 11%s farther deciarcd, the | letrict of Charleston, S. C.; Page Mor- e X telegraph opera- | 115 United States District Judge, district tors, brakemen and trackmen to the num- | Of Minnesota; Willlam Byrne, United ber of 50,000 may become involved in the | States Attorney, district of Delaware; | William A. Day, district of Columbia, and struggle. Rumors of a secret compact be- ) | e the men and-the leaders to go out | Milton D. Purdy, Minnesota, Assistant Attorney General. | even if the dissolvation of Judge Adams anted are abundant. | ss was made to-day by \h(‘; BISBEE, A. T., March 4.—Dan O'Neil, a who have secured an as- | miner, took A large dose of morphine while F. J. Judson, a prominent | standing at the bar of a saloon to-day, and { attorney of this ci to aid their law-|died a few minutes afterward. o cause is | vers, Pinney & Ir in the prepara-|known for the euicide. _His sister, Mrs. Mag- | tion of the motion and affidavit to be filed | &ie Welch, lives in Denver, Col. Special Dispatch to The Call. Some prog union leaders, | soctate counsel, The announcement fs | PARISIAN SCIENTIST CLAIMS INVENTION TO GIVE VISION TO ALL WHO ARE SIGHTLESS Physician Explains Working of Apparatus in Revue des Revues and Declares That Most Astounding Results Are to Be Obtained by It ARIS, March 5.—Professor Peterthe professor’s fingers when they were Steins clalms to have discovered | keld up before him and to enumerate other things in the room. 3 Just as he was feeling his vision was clearing further and he was convinced he published in Revue Des Revues|guid see normally, Professor Steins sud- by Dr. Caze, who explains how Professor | denty removed the apparatus | Steing tested on him the wonderful ap- | Caze was in total darkness. | paratus of his invention, by which he is | and Dr. Professor Steins’ claim rests on the the- jory that man does not see with the eye, | to give vision to those' who have never | dark room and bandaged his eves-so that | | he could see nothing. He heard the pro- | s able to count | but with the brain, the eye serving only to receive the image, which the optic rerve transmits to the seat of perception It, then, the image can be fransmitted to the brain without eyes, a blind person can see as well as anybody else. The apparatus has the same scientific asis as the telephone, with the substi- tution of light for sound. Dr. Caze says several other physiclans have experiment- ed with the apparatus, but none of them are able to explain how its astounding re- sults are obtained. MILLION DOLLAR GIFT .FOR BARNARD COLLEGE Trustees Announce a Benefaction, to Be Applied to the Purchase of Land. NEW YORK, March 5—It was an- nounced to-day by the trustees of Bar- nard College that a gift of $1,000000 had been made to that institution by a per- son known only to President Butler and Treasurer Plimpton. The money is to be used for the purchase of land adjoining the present college. It is rumored that John D. Rockefeller is the donor. 2 s May Mnake Pasadena Winter Home. PASADENA, March 5.—Admiral Schi made inquiries to-day as to the price of property and rentals here and said that he hopes to make his winter home in this | city later on. He leaves on Saturday for Redlands, thence to Santa Barbara and Monterey and home by the northern route. | | | i | | almost mad HUGH BRYSON RUN DOWN BY MISS HOWELL Mother Love Gives Wo- man Courage in the Pursuit. Specia! Dispatch to The Call. HOUSTON, Tex., March 5.—Hugh Bry- son, son of a wealthy Memphis merchant, was arrested in this city last night by two Pinkerton detectives after a flight half way across the continent and back. For several months Miss P. C. Howell of Memphis has been comstantly in search of Bryson, whom she a es of abduct- ing her 4-year-old child, of which he 18 the father ollowed him to Los Angeles, where he lived several months. | He eluded by again fleeing. Bryson ar in Houston a‘week ago. Miss Howell « and mediately wired thg dete been assisting her in the o came last night and the arrest fo The whereabouts of the child is still a mystery that is drivir he young mother Bryson states he will = tell where the child is. Detecti thinks it is concealed in Los An quisition papers were secured t the detectives, with their prisoner, left for Memphis to-night. QUARREL OF DEPUTIES RESULTS IN CHALLENGE Member of French Chamber Slaps Colleague’s Face and Seconds Will Arrange Duel. PARIS, March 5.—The Chamber of Dep- uties sat until a late hour to-night In or- der to finish with the budget, which was adopted by 312 votes to §2. Shortly befors the adjournment Deputies Loque and Bagnot got into a heated discussion, enc ing by the latter slapping his colleagt face. M. Loque subsequently sent his seconds to arrange a duel. B 1A The world’s population s increasing about 500,000,000 a century. lin Judge Adams’ court for the purpose | ___ of ring the'dissolution of his sweep- | ing injunction. These formal papers, | { which will be carefully prepared, will not | i be ready for presentation for several days. | HEAVY FALL OF SNOW | Reports From Interior Show That ! -Recent Downpour Will Prove | of Great Benefit. i NG, March 6.—The peach and | almond trees in the vicinity of Redding, { which were lured into bloom by the warm | weather of the past ten days, were cov-| ered with snow this morning. If the | weather turns to freezing cold great dam- | age will be done. This late fall of snow | is another strarge incident in a most ex- | traordinary season. Although replete with | freak storms, this season’s rainfall is but | { 34.83 {nches, more than five inches less | than last year at the same date. | SAN DIEGO, March 5.—The rainfalf in | this city last night was fitful, but by | morning the _total precipitation had amounted to .57 of an inch. In the coun- | try there was heavier rain, which will be | of great benefit to orops, as much as an | inch falling at several places. The storm |is not over, though but little rain fell | to-day. | LOS ANGELES, March 5.—Substantial benefit to all the agricultural interests of | Southern California is being seécured by | the steady downpour which began falling | Tuesday afternoon. The rain continued | intermittently through the night and the | storm is evidently not yet over. STOCKAON, March 5.—Stockton was visited by a heavy haflstorm this morn- | ing. It began falling at about 2:20 o'clock | and for five minutes it came down freely, | | covering the ground and gathering in | | drifts along the sidewalks and corners. | SAN JOSE, March 5.—It rained heavily | here last night and for awhile this fore- | noon, the precipitation emounting to .8 of an inch, making a total of 12.62 inches for the season, against 12.74 inches for the, | corresponding period last year. The moun- tain tops on either side of the valley are | covered with snow and more rain is prom- | ised. SAN MIGUEL, March 5.—A fine rain fell yesterday and last night, amounting | {tc .71 of an inch. making a total for the season of 4.54 inches. Green feed is com- ing up well and the grain looks fine. A big harvest is antlcipated. BALLARD, March 5.—After two weeks of anxious suspense for the farmers, dur- ing which perlod the coldest snap exper- fenced since 1887 visited this section, rain began falling Tuesday night and has been coming down almost incessantly. The | heavy frosts have greatly retarded all crops and pasture is very short, but if the present warm rain be followed by growing weather the greatest cre ever produced in the Santa Ynez Valley will be the record. LA S Unique Damage Suit Is Ended. LOS ANGELES, March 5.—Lyman New- ton, formerly a watchman of Long Beach, has been awarded 35000 damages in his suit against the United Electric Company of Long Beach. The case is a unique one in court records. Newton threw a bucket of water on a fire on the pler at Long Beach and was serlously injured by an glectric shock. He set up the claim that an electric wire was improperly in- sulated and that the water from the bucket formed a connecting link in the eircuit by which he received a shock that crippled him for life. s o Bold Robber Holds Up Bartender. LOS ANGELES, March 5.—A well dress- ed, middle-aged man held up the bartend- er in Armour & Rice’s saloon about mid- night and forced him, at the point of a revolver, to open the cash drawer. With | his right hand grasping the revolver which he kept pointed at the bartender's head the robber emptied the till with his left hand, remarking that he needed the money. He secured $30 in gold and sil- ver, backed out of the door and disap- peared. ~ suits don’t wear well. —_— Rich Gold Quartz Found in Kern. | BAKERSFIELD, March 5.—A specimen Alteration ®ale tions. from. Sailor Suit Like This for These little sailor suits are made of standard, fast colored blue serge; there are eight different styles.to choose from—some plain, others trimmed with braid, soutache or embroidery, prettily combined in different ways; stayed seams throughout, full cut blouse, patent ‘elastic waistband in pants; ages 3 to 12 years; they were made by us to sell for $5.00 and $6.00; they arrived a few days ago, and as our alteration sale was in progress we decided to sell the suits for .. As a reduction on brand new goods is so unusual we want to make our 'gwran!ee emphatic. Any purchaser can have money back even months after purchase if the Could we offer more to establish faith in our clothing? We want to keep busy during altera- tions of the store front. customers of course call just the same. New customersare hard to attract when the store front is torn up and no goods are on display. But low prices are a big inducement. Through our reputation for reliable goods and straightforward advertising we are doing a good business, even if we are handicapped by noisy carpenters and no windows. Such values as these are bound to keep us busy: Our regular Men’s sack suits in single-breasted garments, as pictured, or in double- breasted style; good range of patterns in a full assortment of sizes from 34 to 42; we have sold these suits for $12.50, and customers were well satisfied with them at that price; during alterations the price is reduced to $8.885. All our regular “Wood” hats for men will be sold for 82.85 during altera- All shapes and colors to choose was also stated that for a short time be- fore the murder a coolness had sprung up between the woman and Burdick. It is known that one of the payments on the fact that it had been rumored that Bur- dick was at the time paying more atten- tion to another woman, the police say, would tend to make the woman both des. perate and insanely jealous. Established 1823, WILSON WHISKEY. That's Al of quartz rich in gold was found in the Drury additjon, one-half mile from Kern and five miles from this city, to-day. The specimen is wonderfully rich and has created no little excitement here. It has becn known that the bluffs of Kern Riv- er contained 4 little %om, but the find to- day leads to the con®lusion that there is a rich ledge somewhere in the viclnity, ——— Ohio River Falling. CINCINNATI, March 5.—At 10 o'clock to-night the river still remains stationary at 53.2 feet, having been on a stand since 7 o’clock this morning. Reports from the upper Ohio Valley show that the river is falling and the indications are that it will recede here before morning. ALy Great Cargo of Oats. PORTLAND, Me., March 5.—The Elder- Dempster steamer Montauk, which sailed | to-night for Hango, Finland, carried the | largest cargo of oats ever taken out of this port, about 300,000 bushels. This car- go goes to Hango-Udde for the relief of the starving Finlanders. > for any of the above goods. Young men’s suits, comprising odds and ends in sizes 17 years (33 chest measure), 18 years (34 chest measure) and 19 years\(35 chest measure); in addition to youths we can fit men of small stature; all-wool tweeds—only two or three suits in a pattern; former prices $7.50 to $12.50, now reduced 0 ......ciiiriiiniiineiiiiiieen... . $4.95 Boys’ corduroy knee pants, ages 4 to 13, regular 50c goods reduced to......85e a pair Boys’ flannel blouses and shirt waists, 75¢ quality, for....ccecivvvieinnncnnne.... 40€ Boys' neckwear, all 25¢ ties for..............- Boys’ 4-ply, 2100 fine, linen collars, sizes 12 t0 I4....ccceieecsrsssnssssoaes.. D€ each Boys’ hats in soft shapes, colors only, reduced from $1.30 t0...ceevsireneses....$1.00 .10e Mail Orders We fill mail orders SNWO0D § 718 Market Street Srarcaen FROM wrs Mail Orders Mail orders filled for anything in men’s or boys” outfitlings.