The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 9, 1903, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1903. SOOLDGETS THE USE OF GOVERNOR OFFERS LEIB SANTA CLARA JUDGESHIP Prominent San Jose Attorney Who Is the President of the Board of Trustees of Stanford University Asked to Accept a Superior Bench Position Left Vacant by Lorigan | | E3 THE TRAGKS — | Secures an Outlet From | Salt Lake City to Pacific Coast. Closes Big Deal With Sena- tor Clark and the Harri- n Syndicate. - ? | i | | P ses Portion of the Oregon | Short Line and Will Immediately Complete the San Pedro Road. AKF 8.—George k, Se Kearns and a nce with Gould - New Yor w v San ¥ ne ht . i = fFleet,, Under Admiral Barker | | PROMINENT SACRAMENTAN ES, WHO HAS B UNIVERSITY ’ NT SUPERIOR | | z TRUS :N OFFERED THE VA SUMMONED EY DEATH JUDGESHIP IN SANTA CLARA COUNTY BY GOVERNOR PARDEE. i gh Sr a . Shafis e, Lk I SER —pe | < ;”‘r,”‘“' Dhes & AN s cib is president of the Board of the Capital = 5 of Stanford Unlversity. He has 1a i AW Saiaiat practice and would sacrifi & . » A 8 s accepting the Judgeship H rior Court Judgeship in this he is known throughout i Governor Pardee. He lie is a graduate of Ann Arbor | message from the Governor in veteran. He has practiced | . c and asking him to Jose for the last twenty-five | ot dle ! s 3l s Evemitg me he part of Governor Par- | z W P evidently made to head off the | S m F 1 of the a Clara County Bar | K art ir P swer in a ion, which was called for Tues- | - .- rom the select iitable- man to recom- | - w R S S it @ IKERS WIN PREPARING PRISON REPORT Committes Findings Will itted To-Day or Tuesday. Canadian Pacific Is Re- - ported to Have Made . R Concessions. e e o VANCOUV March 8.—The United | . been | Brotherhood of Raflway Employes claim | - . have w the Can- ko therhood s n sta - will be de- f nd that strikers will re- - 2 t work with recognition f the 2 brotherhood by the company « . - - Ma of the , vision forwarded to general | » Severa nager at Montreal to-day for his ap- Senat - oy val the demands of the brotherhood. > - . legram of President Estes last | a - eve alling out members of the brotherhood at Calgary 1 Winnipeg is 1id to have been subsequently counter- probability of a e are sellifg agents fc all” the “Water- writing nd low & Co. - made. 741 Market street. o ———e—— ——— en I8, March ».—F 000 akers will st to-m and for a recognition of their |teration. Prices while our store front is b Alteration g changed. s are considerably lower than regular prices—they af- 1 you a big saving—there’s a feast of values in every de- now. Here is one in | ! Underwear s hea cotton-ribbed and comes in flesh, light blue, a garnet—the colors are guaranteed to wash without ading : the material has a soft finish and the garments are ting: the former price was $1.00 a suit; now reduced to 40 a garment, Out-of-town Orders Filled—MWrite Us. - sNWooDs ([ 718 Market Strect. S50 HARD FIGHT MEs BY CUPID'3 -DART Grace Snell-Walker-Cof- fin Once More a Bride. to Special Dispatch he Call. CHICAGO, March 8.—Mrs Walker-Coffin, t Grace Snell- e much married daug: ter of Amo ell, whom missing Willie | Tascott is sald to have killed, has mads | Ler fifth appearance before the matrimo- s Mrs. Pel nial altar, and is now known a kins A. Layman. Mrs. Coffin’s latest ‘hy- real venture was entered upon Thurs. at Riverside, Cal. Los Angeles w'll be the home of the couple, who expect to devote much of their time to travel. Mrs. Layman was thrice married to and | divorced from Frank Nixon Coffin, and | nd divorced from JamesT ikesha. Her firse mar- ed in 1884 and the re- | to Coffin oce! n_continued ten years. During th time the pair had three children, and it | was a great surprise when Mrs. Coffin applied for and obtained a divorce on tne | und of incompatibility. In 1898, at the deathbed of her eldest son, Mrs. Coffin | became reconciled to her former husband snd was remarried to him. This rela- ship endured but a few months, and | intoxication supplied a cause for which | Mrs. Coffin again separated from hes twice-married husband. mes . Walker, then a clerk in the rginia Hotel, was the next man to| whom the daughter of the murdered mil- licnaire was united. This ceremony oc- | curred in 189, and it was not until two' years later Coflfin made her re- | appearance in the divorce court. | As soon as her prayer for separation fiom Walker had been granted, on the ground of crueity, she remarried Frank | Coffin. This period of married life lasted | but’ four hours, and then the divorce court was again called upon to separate | the couple, who had been three times | married to each other. | This divorce was granted in 1801, and | | since that time Mrs. Coffin has been trav- eling and devoting herself to lterary work, She Is said to have inherited mucn valuable property, from a recent division of the estates of her father and mother. | country { mand the fleet, wili entertain the nobility | sufficlent coal along to asgime offensi | protected by battleships. | offices. PORTUGUESE PORT 10 BE BLOCKADED Yankee Ships Will Give| Europe an Object f Lesson. to Engage in Mmmic Warfare. of the American from Washington:. The plans for Ing a powerfui battleship squadron | M opean waters next M contem- | 8 plate a more impressive cbject lesson on the growing strerigth of the United States | § than has been suvbposed. Behind | the shield of a practice cruise with the | most friendly Intentions it is proposed to | demonstrate the ability of this Covern- | a war to the doors of any To prove this, the | 8 Portugal, to be r : end of the long trip | ment to ca in rope port of Li “blockaded” at t across the ocean Pcrtugal was selected for test because of the tmprobabtlity United States e son is e this unique | of the r becoming involved in a w ith that country Representations will be made will prevent any Po tuguese suspiclon of an ulterior motiv Rear Admiral Barker, who will com- and naval officers of Portugal in lavish style on his flagship and visitors will be velcomed on all the ships. | i AS IN TIME OF WAR. | The fleet will be grouped off Lisbon lcng enough to prove that United States the D3 can €ross ocean and tal ! operations on an extensive scale. Europ hus considered this impossible. | 8 The fleet will consist of the Kearsflrgc,i 4 Admiral Barker's Maine, Towa and agship; Iilinois, in- Massachusetts, | the second class battleship | the cruisers San Francisco and Albany, and colliers and supply ships. | In the lee of the Azores the fighting | ships will be coaled and provisioned, s ana, possibly as, they will reach Portugal In readiness for | RESENTS THE COMMENT action. The flcet will proceed as though war were actually on. Cruisers will scout | in advance and the supply ships will be OBJECT LESSON TO KAISER. While the operations are intended as an Government Intends to Show Old ! I World the Increased Power | | { - Navy. 2 l & i g e i Special Disratch to The Call i b EW YORK, Marca 8.—~The World has | {4 | Deputy Sheriff Who Was Kidnaped ADVERTISEMENTS. ZComd! /\. fo the Finish! During the last two weeks The Owl Drug Co. has shown up the Drug Tru turned a searchlight on their miserly, stingy and robbing methods; their combination to raise prices, to cinch the sickroom, and, incidentally, to force The Owl out of business. No matter what they it they do (and they will do anything now to with- draw public attention from their anxiety to pr I'he Owl Drug Co them a run for their money, and will put the prices so low that they will hate us worse than ever—if that is possible. wil aise es ). give in the combination, and as The Owl is the only drug store in San Francisco not long as we are out there can be no raise in prices, and you can depend upon it we are out for ‘good. Peruna ...$1.00 size.........40¢ | Pink Pi Laxative Bromo Quinine... .23 sizc 1Ce | Pears Winelof Cardui- .t .. 0 1 i Pac Swamp Re : Coke Dands 1 Syrup of I i Wa r's PR S i Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. . Beecham's Pills Pierce’s l‘l'h\ size 15e 1128 Market St., San Francisco. §10600 ball pending his examinatior st MONTANA WOMAN DEFENDS | HERSELF WITH REVOLVER Assaults a Newspaper Man and Is Arrested. ond-Story Window. Willey by charging Stayton with | SIX LIVES ARE LOST BY THRPATENTNG O EILL|LOLilc with Mieat i comm e e IN FIRE IN A HOTEL | Other Guests Escape With Slight In- juries by Jumping From Sec- object iesson to all of Europe, it is known | SAN JC March S.—Deputy Sherift CUMBERLAND, Md., March S$.—8ix that ‘the Navy Department is espectally | W. H. Stayton, who was-recently kid-| BUTTE, Mont, March 8—Michael | persons were burned to death and one anxious to let the Kaiser see just what | naped by Frank Herman, a highwayman | Keating, a miner, was snot and it is be- | was fatally injured as a result of a fire our ships can do. When Prince Henry | ect, to-day went gunning for Joseph | lfeved fatally wounded by Mrs. Edward | in a small hotel at Leiter, a mining town as In Washington last vear he asked | Nunan, a newspaper man at Gilroy, and | Paver, who was tending bar in her hus- | near Elkins, W. Va. The dead: Chief Constructor Bowles as to the rela- | " i ' b | X v il 1s a result Stayton was himself arrested. | band's saloon during the Iatter's ab- | . OU SIELED e Or. the Gemian and Kiderd: des writing up the kidnaping episode, | sence. Mrs. Paver had refused to drink | ANNIE BURKE “We bufid our ships to carry coal as ant had parodied that officer’s es-| with a number of intoxicated miners| HENRY BURK well as to fight,” replied Bowles. “They | C3P2de. Stayton objected to the reports | who.were in the place and when she at-| GEORGE C. ANDERSON car cross the ocean and some of them can | ¥ Dich reflected on his braversy. When be| tempted to leave the saloon they pur-| MRS. GEORGE C. ANDERSON. return without recoaling. Your ships can- | et Nunan at the Central Hotel to-day sued and brought her back. She Was| A child of the Andersons not do this." i"" Unrr»;v,lon:‘drmn:lr‘.;\w '::nrfl‘\(l;ll\'!’\r_“:nr‘:]krljll | rvlvl\l:',h'l\' I:mdl(;lr .h\k the lr.:»u“;‘dqaln%n; ;: | Fatally tnjurea: Robert Long The Kalser has regarded this as rel. RE : ReWsDape: I g Sy | alleged B SAFREK N SR et e | v TS edens v or o ST e S TmprOed Khls u) is mory | would kill him and struck him in the | cuspidor by Keating. Mrs. Paver then| Several persons MENIH. WIS than that % 5 e. | grabbed a revolver and shot Keating. She jumping from a second story Naval attaches of European countries| A Warrant was sworn to before Justice | is under arrest. are displaying great interest In the trans- Atlantic maneuvers and many have asked to be allowed to accompany the fleet. The requests probably will be granted, as the avy Department wants to make its case complete. GREATER COAL CAPACITY. The department is constantly working to increase the coal capacity of the war- | ships and extend their steaming radius. | The Texas can steam only 2 out recoaling. The Kea more than 8000 miles without recoaling, which is half as far again is the Iowa, Illinois and Massachusetts, while the lat- est addition, the Maine, carries 2000 tons of coal, as compared with the 1645 tons of phe Kearsarge. ARMOURS ARRANGE TEST OF WIRELESS TELEGRAPH Big Packing Concern Will Install a Plant if Experiments Prove Successful. CHICAGO. Mar. 8—It is said here that Armour & Co. have arranged for a test of the wireless telegraph as applied to communication between the cities where they have packing houses and important They now maintain telegraph wires west to Kansas City, St. Louis, Omaha and Sioux City and east to Alle- gheny, Philadelphia, New York and Bos- ton. After preliminary experiments between the Chicago stockyards and the company’s offices downtown, plants will be installed, if the first experiments shall prove suc- cessful, to test the svstem betwen Chi- cago and one of the four Western cities. Officials of the company estimate that if the wireless system could be successfuliy worked between important cities in which the company maintains its large offices, an annual saving of at least $190,000 would be effected. SRS IS HELENA, Mont., March 8.—Fire this morn- ing destroyed the Northern Pacific treight house and eight cars, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. RAIN FALLS LIGHTLY | ON SOUTHERN IIELDSE | San Bernardino and Santa Ana Re- | | zle all day. | much snow that has not melted. | regarded as necessary to the success of {er ops. ceive Benefit From a Thin | Drizzle. H SAN BERNARDINO, March 8—Rain | began falling this morning shortly after 4 | o'clock and has continued in a lght driz- | The amount of precipitation has not been measured and is not great, but an immense amount of good has been done, as every drop of moisture has scaked into the ground. It has been storming in the mountains all day and considerable snow has fallen. Last re- | ports from Bear Valley are to the effect | that the lake contains more water than it has held for years, and there is still Indica- | tions are that the lake will be full be- fore it is time to begin Iirrigating or- chards, | SANTA ANA, March 8.—A drizzling rain | has fallen at intervals during the day. | Prospects for a heavier rain to-night are excellent, the sky being overcast and threatening. The rain at this time is not 1LOS ANGELES, March 8—Eight-hun- dredths of an inch of rain fell in Los An- gcles to-day, making the total for the season 9.97 inches. The precipitation was in the form of a fine drizzle and contin- ued throughout the day. SAN DIEGO, March 8.—Light rains fell at intervals to-day, the total precipitation up to 5 p. m. being .06 of an Inch. It is | cloudy to-night. Parasites Cause All Hair Troubles. Nine-tenths of the diseases of the scalp and hair are caused by parasite germs. The importance of this discovery by Pro- fessor Unna of the Charity Hospital, Hamburg, Germany, cannot be overesti- mated. It explains why ordinary hair preparations even of the most expensive character fail to cure dandruff; because they do not, and they cannot kill the dandruff germ. The only hair preparation in the world that positively destroys the dandruff parasites that burrow tp the scalp into scales called scurf or dandruff is Newbro's Herpicide. In addition to its destroying the dandruff germ Herpiclde is also a delightful hair dressing, mak. ing the hair glossy and soft as silk. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10 cents in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of 2t A E o 202 Sunday Call Art Supplement “Retrieving” (in Colors) Next Sunday’s Art Supplement by Alexander Pope, the famocus painter qnd _sportsman. This beautiful work of art free with =1 lidiidihdi THE SUNDAY CA March 15th

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