The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 19, 1903, Page 3

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THBE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1903. CIRCUIT JUDGES HEARING ARGUMENTS [yinur Tjiyo ED M”mm EXPER IN CELEBRATED RAILWAY MERGER SUIT OF FAR Clgt , Counsel for Government and for Northern Securities Company of : New Jersey Open the Case in Which Former Seeks to Pre-|Attorney Says Settle-|SaVed from a Life of Suffering from Cafarrh of the vent the Destruction of Competition in Transportation Lines| et Will Stand in : Bronchial Tubes. 3 INSURBENTS THREATENING TEGUCIGALPA Any Court. Bonilla’s Forces Ad-|| vance on the Capital || of Honduras. ‘ President Sierra Causes Gen- | erals Who Fail Him to | Be Shot. Pacific Squadron Under the Com- and of Rear Admiral Glass Sails | From Acapulco for Mag- I dalena Bay. | According to ad- om Honduras, by | the forced cf Gen- | ct of Hon-| 1st General | who refused PANAMA, M receive: ¢ San Salvad esident tim State the history of the United and by the authorit ct of Congress S: ry, four United 8 sitting together the caus ernment ies Comp: merge Febru s are LOCATES HIS NECK, it BUT IS STILL LIVING ed Miner at Angels Is Attract- Attention of the Med- ical Fraternity ase. being ainst of New Un- go imm upreme Court in the ge it would necessarily Court of Appeals f two to three years g f ensue. The hearing of Sud s is merely for the e of the es con- four Judges before whom the mer- ing argued are United States n, Thayer iwell pre- se is b Judge: Devyanter are k el Government J attorneys for the Attorneys Gener: liam H. Da Watson of Pittshurg, General Schuyler Hamilton. Norther er Attorney Griggs, former Judge George ing of St. Paul, M. D. Grover, gen- torney for the t Northern Rail- and attorney s for t The attorne ties Company eral John W B Y eneral was taken up | “Most of arguments for LOUIS, March 18.—For the first | in o el e e Goes Over Ground in France and Finds No Cause for Alarm. Speclal Cable to The Call and New York Herald. _Copyright, 1903, by the New York Herald Publishing Company. PARIS, March 18.—George A. Knight of San Francisco, counsel for defendants in the suit brought by Mrs. Nelson, mother of Mrs. Charles L. Fair, against the ex- ecutors of the Fair estate, is confident that the outcome wiil be in favor of his clients. Knight has been in France for several weeks looking into the case. He | | has several times visited the scene of the | accident. In conversation last night at the Hotel Regina, where he is stopping, he told me he had the case well in hand. He said: The settlement made was just and eguitable, and will stand any place in America. There is absclutely no merit In the case made out by the piaintiff's attorneys. Maas, one of the witnesses, they have taken to America, was | not on the ground and does not know any- thing. As far as the question as 'to which of the two died first is concerned, injuries on the body of each indicate to any reputable physi- clan that both died instantiy. The physician who went to the scene did not arrive until they were dead nearly two hours. | As to the question of undue influence on | | Mrs. Nelson at the time of the settiement, ehe was represented by former Judge A. R. Cotton, one of our best lawyers, and for a_number of years attorney for the Union Pacific Ratlroad | | | on the Pacific coast, a man who stands as well | | |at the bar as any ‘man in the United States. | Nothing was done in the case without his ap- proval and consent. Mrs. Nelson was more than anxious to settle and get away from San Francisco. About Maas. Well, it was on the 14th of the month that Mr. and Mrs. Fair were killed On the 25th Maas wrote to Mr. Gowdy, United States Consul General, saying he was an eye witnees. His account” is, to say the least, | enadowy. ! Knight leaves Paris within a few days | | to take a holiday in England. Herman | Oelrichs, executor of the late Mr. Fair's | estate, has gone to Badnauheim. CONGRESS OF RELIGIONS DRAWS LARGE AUDIENCE Anagarita Dharmapala Delivers an Address on ‘“The Positive | Sylvester Yives] E Smith. While Still in the Bronchial Tubes Pe-ru-na Never Fails to Cure Catarrh. Truths of Buddhism.” SAN JOSE, March 13.-%A Congress of Religions held in th¢ Unitarian Church to- day attracted a large attendance. Be- cause of the antipathy of the Pastors’ advertising. The ministers refused to | have anything to do with the meeting, | | claiming that the Christian religion could gain nothing by such discussions. The | | Unitarian Church then arranged the | meeting, and finally a committee of pas- | tors nerved themselves and took charge | of the matter. | [Professor R. D. Hunt of the High | School presided as chairman of the after- | noon meeting. Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones of Chicago defined the purpose of the meeting. Rev. Melville Tenney of San Jose spoke on “Christianity and, the Ethnic Religion.” Dr. R. Heber Newton delivered an address on “The Harmonies | of Scholarship, or the Unities of Knowi- | | edge.” The address attracted greatatten- | tion. ““The Common Hopes of Humanity, | or the Harmonies of the Universal Faith | L TWO OF THE UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGES WHO ARE HEARING UIT OF *THE GOVERNMENT AGAINST RN SECURITIES COMPANY. S IN THE was handled by Dr. H. W. Thomas of | Chicago. Anagarita Dharmapala, rep- resenting Buddhism, and Swami Ram | also made short addresses. Judge J. R. Lewls presided at the even- ing session. Anagarita Dharmapala de- o end of the building, saying that the laws were such that employes of a railroad did not own ome cent of stock or one rail of the road could be enjoined from striking and thereby Interfering with the interstate commerce act by stop- unless this court { lvered an address on “The the building of the Great Northern Rail-| Truths of Buddhism,” and Jenkin Lloyd road and its extension to the Pacific|Jones spoke on “The Overlapping Terri Coast. He explained that at the begin-| tory, or the Common Duties of the Sect.’ { ning it was a!most impossible for the | road to sccure sufficient trade going east | and that a long time was spent in build- | ing up th lumber trade for traffic east SESSION CONCLUDES WITH | RECEPTION AND BANQUET | health.” Union the congress received considerable | | “Exposure and dampress ruined my This is a statement that oc- | curs | over and over again, in the im- | mense correspondence which Dr. man conducts with his patients, and West, orth and South. People catch a cold. They neglect to take Peruna, will get over it. The cold settles on their chest. They find themselves with a cough or chronic catarrh. They call the doctor, perhaps. He expresses the fear that they are going into consumption. He is right, too. They are actually on the road consumption. Consumption is simply catarrh of the lungs Catarrh is creeping slowly and surely toward the lungs. When it reaches the lungs it will be called consumption. While still runa never fails to cure these cases possibly thinking they toward | gpinstead of sending for a doctor they should have bought a bottle of Peruna. This matter. would have settled the whole |A Prominent Gentleman Testifiss, | n Cutts, a native of Vi 1 descenda ident’ James Madison, law of the late U. S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas, in a recent letter says: “As many of my friends have used your Peruna as a cure for catarrh with beneficial I have no hesitation in recommen g to all persons suffer- with that complaint it 1)\}7 in the bronchia: tubes, Pe- | Exposure and Dampness Set Up Catarrhal Disturbances. 0 Pe-ru-na ; Cured Him. 7 ) || Sylvester E. Smith, Mining Expert || and Superintendent ot Mines in Utah, in a letter from 311 Chestnut street, || St. Louis, Mo., says: 1 “Peruna is the best friend a sick man carr have. A few months ago I came | | here in a wretched condition. Exposure | | and dampness had ruined my once robust | | health. I had catarrbal affections of the | | bronchial tubes, and for a time there was a doubt as to my recovery. My good, honest old doctor advised me to take Feruna, which I did, and in a short time my health began to improve very rapidly. The bronchial trouble gradu- ally disappeared and in three months my health was fully restored. Accept a | | grateful man’s thanks for his restoration || to perfect heaith." with the ping traffic; but that | : ing wi "—Col. J. Mad- | the Government tant Attorney, oo ryjes the (Government would be pow- ! from the coast. He followed with a sum- | % =y ison Cutts. stronger than I had for years, and General Beck. After he had concluded s¢ to prevent the owners of the roads | mary of the building up and branching | State Council of Junior Order Unitedlnlil; m”ri(fh A. D'vuxlus.GInspectn'r of wn»newrf 5 have been exposed now a jenera e o Vhal . L % s-Pacifi s || " s ridge any ave., reen Island, | couple o oses of Peruna always re- Jate in the afternoon ument for the | o mcelves from merging, preventing | out of the trans-Pacific trade and the en: American Mechanics Conclu yo £ A - g ys re orthern Securities Company was begun | comit 0 o™ hereby interfering with | largement of the rafiroad interests. ancludes | N, Y., writes the following: | ftores me. Peruna Is an ideal protector "Mr. Young. | the points the interstate commerce act| After Young had spoken for more than | Its Labors. o o wisks comple me (o spend |in all sorts of weather.'—George A. “Assistant Attorney General Beck began | quent to protect. | half an hour court at 4:3 p. m. adjourned | SAN JOSE, March 13.—The State Coun- | Bave ofien been drewcied oy Sudden | It 70w 30 mot Seive prompt and sat- aking soon after court convened at 10| “\ypop Beck had finished Young began | until to-morrow morning at 10 o'clock, at | cil of the Junior Order of United Ameri. | raine, chilled by ‘oxiromed cold, and I |isfactory results from the use of Peruna o'clock, and with the exception of WO |,pgyment in rebuttal for the Northern | which time Mr.j Young will continue his | cay Mechanics completed its labors fo. | S00n found that | had a bad case of ca~ | write At oncs 1o Do Tt giving a spoke continuous- argument. tarrh of the bronchial tubes I tried | fgll statement of your case, and he wil. P L3 hours Of ce he Sec s Company. He briefly sketched | s The 3 i ‘,".“'”m;l’ Becems D B e ioustroom| FecuTities Compaxy | - day and TJ:‘IF':Ci-t Fth dt"f‘gflt‘fls “U“Iplaslfl}slgn’:l medicine, but nothing 1 did | be pleased to give you his valuable ad- Y, - e it TRl CAL- K ‘ PA3 s .. ) entertained to-night at a recention and |seemed to help me unti ook Peruna. |vice gratis. fme | e cpwdbd o brex ot Lo 0 R S e A S et ‘ noig ™8, splendld medicine took | right | Address Dr. Hartman, President of torney Be % : 3 he o . drove every of diseas artma Sa - 1s, * | Junction case which is being mf;lfli:';‘!n.r The council elected the following of- | bat of me bt S ORI B SO ;o e r— | Unite District Court at the ot | ficers to-d; State councilor, Eli Wright | ——— e s of San Jose; vice councilor, W. E. Bouton = > | of San Francisco; secretary, Herman 1 forcibly entered Hochheimer & Co.'s store Paine of San Francisco; treasurer, C. A. | here a week ago and stole money and Mantell of Alameda: past state coun- Clothing, was captured at Marysville Our Sale Closes This week completes the alterations—our sale loses Saturday night. We shall have for the occasion he best value we ever offered in underwear. Every C 1 garment in the underwear department is reduced. We mention below a few of the values. The goods aie guaranteed—any customer not satisfied can have his money back. Now’s your chance if you want anything in Underwear You must see these goods to really appreciate the value. Balbriggan, merino and fleeced underwear, form fitting, regular 50c goods for 40¢ a garment. Merino, camel’s hair and fancy striped underwear; 75c is the regular price; now 55¢ a garment, Ribbed wool and lamb’s wool underwear, form fitting, regular $1.00 goods, now 75c¢ a garment. ~ Worsted wool and mercerized silk underwear, form fitting, usual $1.50 quality, now $1.10 a garment. “xtra quality worsted wool, $2.00 goods, now : $1.65 a garment. S Cashmere wool and silk striped underwear, $2.50 usual price, now $2.00 a garment. Most of the above come in the following colors: Gray, blue, flesh and tan. All sizes—can fit anybody. ‘vaf-af-mm orders filled—write us. SNWoO0D: 718 Market Street IN A WOODSHED Former San Franciscan Swallows a Dose of Formaldehyde. Lt L Special Dispatch to The Call. | FRESNO, March 18.—“Carrie, in one | hour’s time 1 shall be a dead man. Good- by, good-by. Is there no hope?" | So read a note that Michael Whalen handed to Miss Carrie Darling last even- | ing. This morning his lifeless body was | found in the woodshed back of her home, at 1647 L street. | Miss Darling is a pretty little woman | | connected with the Peniel Mission here. | One year ago she met Whalen in San Francisco, he being a frequent visitor at | the meetings of the mission. That Whalen | loved her there 1s no question,: fot from | S8an Francisco he followed her to Pasa- dena, where she was visiting, two months lsago. He explained his presence there by | saying he was visiting relatives. She left | there and came to Fresno, and within a | few days Whalen, too, appeared. e | dogged her footsteps everywhere. He {was on the street corner every night when the mission people were going to services, and he was in the hall each night while the meetings were in pro- gress. He followed the woman he loved every night on her way home, and a week { ago he threatened to kill himself if she did not consent to marry him. | _ Miss Darling pald but little attention to ‘Whalen. She considered him a harmiess, lovesick crank, but his persistent atten- tions annoyed her, and a few days ago some of her friends of the mission warned him that unless his persecutions ceased they would call in the aid of the police. ‘Whalen hung about the mission all day Tuesday and seemed particularly de- spondent. In the early evening he sent a letter to Miss Darling declaring his un- dying love. An hour later he handed her the note quoted above. After the ser- vices he followed her home again, and that was the last seen of him until one of the ladies of the house came upon his | lifeless body this morning. A small vial of formaldehyde was found in his pocket, showing his means of seli- destruction. The dead man is almost a stranger here. He was well dressed and avparently abont 28 vears old. | cllor, J. T. Starr of Los Angeles; C. T.| Quirey of San Franclsco, representative | to national council. Los Angeles was chosen as the place for holding the next council meeting. The National Council meets in San| Francisco next August, and the councils in San Francisco are at work preparing for entertaining the national body. The competitive drill between the George A. Custer drill team of Oakland and Unity team of this city last night was won by the San Joseans. A handsome | loving cup was the prize. ! INBYE-ELECTION Conservatives Lose the Rye Division of Sussex. | LONDON, March 18.—The Conservatives | have suffered a crushing reverse in the | Rye dlvision of ‘Sussex, where a bye-elec- tion was held yesterday for a successor to | Brookfield, who has been appointed Brit- | ish Consul at Montevideo. The result was { the return of C. F. Hutchinson, Liberal, | by a majority of 53 over Edward Boyle, | Conservative. Hutchinson, who appealed to the electors as a critic of the Govern- ment’s policy, obtained more than 2000 more votes than he did in 1900 when he opposed Brookfield, while the Conserva- | tive vote fell off about 1000, The result of the election in |the Rye division has caused great | satisfaction to the members of the | cpposition in Parliament, this being |the first gain of an important seat ince the Liberals took up a definite atti- | tude in the army controversy. There was | much talk in the lobby of the House of Commons to-day about the “moral” ef- fect this and the Woolwich reverse would have on the Government. It is safe, how- ever, to say that the situation, so far as the Government programme is concerned, will not be changed. | 'The Conservative organs endeavor to | minimize the significance of the Conser- vative defeat In the Rye bye-election, fol- | lowing on the defeat at Woolwich, but they are compelled to recognize that the vesult shows a certain dissatisfaction in the country with the policy of the Gov- ernment. The Daily Mail will to-morrow boldly point to Colonial Secretary Chamberlain as the man to save the situation for the Torles and thinks a Chamberlain Cabinet may be nearer than is generally imagined, the country being tired of a Government of “muddle.” Restricts Foreign Corporations. PHOENIX, Ariz, March 18.—The Gov- ernor to-day signed the Cowan bill, which affects the process of incorporating for- eign corporations and provides for the transfer of the business from the office of the Secretary to the Territorial Audi- tor. COURT ORDERS PARTITION SALE OF TIMBER LANDS| | | Tt | Heirs of the Coburn Estate Will | Soon Receive Portion of Their Fortunes. TACOMA, March 18.—E. W. Marston of Oakland, Cal., one of the noted Coburn | heirs, is in Olympia closing up the liti- | gation in connection with, the $4,000,000 es~ tate of his late uncle, Abner Coburn, war | Governor of Maine and one of the four | original promoters of the Northern Pa- | cific Railroad. Marston is one of the seventeen heirs who renresent fwelve | original interests. His business to this State is to secure partition of a number of sections of timber land in Chehalis County, worth $50,000. Judgment has been secured inthe Superior Court ordering the partition of the timber lands in which others are joint owners with Coburn. | The lands will be sold in June at a special sale, and the proceeds will go to Marston and the other heirs. The lands involved | comprise but a small part*of the timber properties obtained by Coburn. His es-| tate stretching from Maine to the Pacific Coast and has been productive of much Mtigation. { Erled e L OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST New !n'tmntar; re Appointed and Number of Changes Made in Postal Service. WASHINGTON. March 18, —Postmasters commissioned: California—George F_ Hirsch, Long Beach. Oregon—Fred W. Stahlman, De- troit; Otto G. Weaver, Berlin. Washington— Helen Richardson, Pialschie. Fourth-class postmasters appointed: Oregcn—Michael Rod- dy, Winant, Lincoln County; vice Emma Lea- bo, resigned, Postoffices at Fowler. G bbs and Point Richmond, Cal., will become inter- national money order offices, and Atchison, Del Rey and De! Rosa, Cal., domestic money order offices April 1. Army order—Second ILieutenant Cyrus R. Street will join Elghteenth Infantry on it arrival at San Francisco, en route to Phil- inpines_ —_— KANSAS CITY, March 18.—Nelson Morris & Co., the packers, will soon begin the con- struction of a §1, o_:nuon plant near the Kan- sae Citv stonis e | | fair and broad-minded men. 3TRONG 3UPPORT Mine Owners Agree Not to Ship Ore to In- terdicted Mills. CRIPPLE CREEK, March 18.—The Western Federation of Miners has thus far won a signal victory in the battle | which it is waging in support of the strik- ing millmen at Colorado City. With very few exceptions the mines approached by the executive committee have agreed not to ship ore to the mills of the United States Reduction and Refining Company. A committee representing the miners met with Manager de la Vergne at the Elkton mine at 3 o'clock this afternoon nd after presentation of the case of the federation, De la Vergne agreed for the present not to ship to the interdicted mills. De la Vergne said: 1 have nothing to say as to a settlement beyond that the Eilkton will' continue work. if there had been such men as this commit- | tee In charge of things from the start there They are eminently I am now satis- fied that the trouble will be entirely settled within ten days. After a conference the miners announc- ed that the Elkton had agreed not to ship to the “unfair’” mills. Unless something unforeseen occurs the end of the strike is close at hand so far as thé Cripple Creek district is con- cerned. The mines which have shut down are the Independence, 450 men; Isabella, 100 men; Thompson, 5 men, and the Granite, 40 men, a total of 640 men. Added to this the men who have been laid off be- cause of the cessation of shipments the total number of men out of employment is about 1200 The big Portland mine and those of the Woods Company are not affected by the situation, as their ores are treated at their own mills. None of the mines have indicated any intention to fight the federation. would have been no strike. and pumpmen at work and the same is true of the Thompson and the Granite, The Isabella will completely cease opera- tions. Caught Wearing Stolen Clothing: WILLOWS, March I18.—John Gilroy, alias Charles Waller, one of the men who Sunday and brought here to-day by Sher- iff Bailey. Gilroy has admitted that he stole the clothes and a pair of shoes that he was wearing. His mother resides in Chico and he has grandparents in Wood- land. 2 P . Native Sons Organize at Angels. ANGELS, March 18—A parlor of the Native Sons of the Golden West was in- stituted to-night in this city by Grand President Lewis F. Byington and Grand Treasurer Henry Martin. Sixty members were initiated and the new parlor starts off under the most auspicious circum- s. As there are many native sona vicinity the order is expected to Increase at a fast rate. After the work had been completed a banquet was served. LS A TOLEDO, Ohto, March 18.—Through the ef- forts of Joseph Bishop, sectetary of the Ohio State Board of Arbitration, the strike of the local teamsters has been settled. ADVERTISEMENTS. . Try, Try Again to make home washing and iroming, it comes to shirts, collars and look all right and fall. Better men’s “duds” to us if you want ‘em to look right and be right. Youll get the thanks of the men. how to wash and iron for mem. No saw edges. - UNITED STATES LAUNDRY cffice 1004 Market Street, Near Powell

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