The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 11, 1903, Page 4

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LANE JSPIRES | 10 HIgH HONOR Wants to Be Democratic | Nominee for Vice ! President. Confers With Texas Leaders as a Beginning of Tour of the South HUNDRE TO REPAIR BROKEN t W of Flood Is Over New Crevasses Are LEVEE N IS NOMINATED REPUBLICANS General HERRMANN BY OREGON of Try ngress. OUTLAW ELUDES PURSUING PO3SE McKinney Secures Pro-| visions and Horse Near Randsburg. Officers Believe That He Is Trying to Make His Way to Porterville. ch to The Call April 10.—James Me 1 at Chinne, or Blac s from Ran and it ago, that po miles fa t he can easily ind Porterv w two posses known to of Randsburg. One of a night to be mear w les from the des- E e one of Mc 3 ed. The other is at s north of Randsburg x works e loca i. A s reported to be at Garden tween one me: to-night to that a por the field has the 3 to make any state- tentions of the pa bably a mat- any news what- his doings. At far from tele- hat news of probably will be e pr Inyo neriff County is In the cKinney e northeast. A the move- thers, who wever m them the report that s & constable a ofcial positl be quiet know but they brother an would t eceived & not reward of $5i n Brodle for McKin- e devoted no CO CALL, SATURDA STORY OF RUBY GRILLS BETRAYS DARK PLOTTING OF NOLAN GANG With Eyes Averted From the Cruel Faces of Her Former Associates, She Tells a|Chief of Free Delivery Tale Fraught With Underworld Shadows| | MISS RUBY GRILLS, WHO GAVE DAMAGING AGED MRS, MATHEV IMONY ~ FHE IN POLICE Al BERDAY. AGAID Cor tw . xaving - e 8T BURG, April 10.—The re- | f port ted in Paris that the Czarina 1 suffering from peritonitis s untrue ¢ She is in perfe leaves here | for Moscow with REGAL SHOES. e A A A SHAPE -RETAINING EASTER o SHOES. r ASHION says Patent leather shoes for Easter dress! Wrinkles are the bane of ¢ Patent leathers’ and fatal to t Wrinkles are due t heir dressy appearance. o slack leather across \forepnrt of foot — a result of imperfect lasting. Patent leather breaks where it wrinkles, and the best of it is unc risks are reduced. in enough when all the The shoe shown above is shaped so as to keep the Patent leather ¢¢ upper *’ constantly taut, and unwrinkled as possible. This is a feature you won’t find in the ordinary Dress Shoe, though vitally important, Regals are made from the finest Patent leatherin the world—Heyls, of Worms, Germany, and that they have genuine Qak leather soles is proved before purchase Better dress shoes than the 36 new Regal styles for Easter, on view in 51 Regal stores at $3.50, cannot be bought for $10.00. The shape shown above, in multiview, is an ** Barl ’’ Oxtord, which is made in Valvic Ventilati well as imported Patent and Ename! request. , and King Calf, Cil‘f“l%:mmk on Post card REGAL OAK SOLED SHOES Hoid only in 1 Regal Shoe Stores frém N, Also b, CORNER GEARY AND ew York to San Francisco and London. y mail. STOCKTON STREETS. JUDGE CABANISS' COURT YE BR AL, ASSAILANTS O ITH b averted from the thr faces of the n she betraying and her volce subdued to a whis- fear of thelr | per | vengeance gulded t 1 of th Nolan gang, fore Police Judge Cabaniss v | ternoon the story of the p three desperate men ar | woman, thelr mento { which nearly cost M: |on March 4. All of e atmosphere of the w | erime athed through the f | words of the erable woman, ti | of Whitelaw. | shoddy coffee | the crim the tears of the Nolan woman over the chances oi | exposure for her consort, punctuated by | directions for the commission of added | crimes—these w the shadows of the urderworld revealed by Ruby Grills. In glaring contrast to the witnesses | who followed was the dainty little Lita | meeting ‘In the hasty after the deed, a flight of als Tutile, who first took the stand. With a | composure worthy of a much older wit- | ness the littla, girl told of her friendship Madeline Pearson, the niece of Docia Nolan, and of how she had found her mother's money in the toe of her sllpper when her little companion was present and had told Madeline of the jewels. She identified the dainty slippers, now labeled “People’s exhibit No. 8.” Henry H. Johnston, a real estate agent of 1716 Halght street, at whose office Mrs. Tuttie had often called relative to pur- chasing a house, denied the authenticity of the signature on the false telegram sent to Mrs. Tuttle on the afternoon of the assault. Cross-examination drew no added facts from him. NOLAN IS IDENTIFIED. Henry Weber, the saloon-keeper on the corner of Haight and Fillmore streets, | followed with an elaborate account of the routine work of his establishment, ident!- fylng Nolan as the man who bad taken a drink at his bar shortly before the per- petration of the assault. He was not certain of the identities of Davis and ‘Whitelaw. He stated that Nolan's nery- ousness had attracted his attentlon when he was in the saloon. That he had seen Nolan standing in | front of the saloon in question shortly before the attack on Mre. Mathews was the testimony of Thomas H. Douglass of (20 Washington street. Chen Ruby Grills took the stand. She | LABOR TROUBLE ENDS | IN THE ETERNAL CITY Amsterdam Unions Object to Defense Committee’s Action Toward { Strike Settlement. ROME, April 10.—All the strikers, with the exception of the compositors, have resumed work and Rome has regained its normal aspect. Many foreigners, who left the city temporarily, are returning. AMSTBRDAM, April 10.—The work- men'’s defense committee decided to-day to proclaim a cessation of the general strike at midday. The strike was never really effective. At a monster mass-meet- ing, held later in the day, the Federated workmen's defense committee and 'de- cided to continue the strike without the consent of the committee. The tumult prevented the members of the defense committee from securing & hearing. With the exception of the diamond cutters, all the men will remain out. Pt oy Low Not to Be Embassador. WASBHINGTON, April 10.—On the best authority it 1s positively denfed here that the name of Mayor Seth Low of New York has ever been considered in connec- mn-rn1 with the American Embassy at Paris. Trades Union repudiated the action of the } kept her eyves per faces of the accu icok tly away from the G when ed to Attorney led giance and shrank. umder t from his eyes, - TALE' OF CRIME. 41 street,”” < and Whitelaw my sister and myseit. inday evening precedins 1t to a Mexican restauran ween Kearny and Du- B TELLS live at O'Farreil »a | | | | ¢ {tion of the investigation for months te ington, | t the square | thre APRIL 11, 1vvus MACHEN SLATED ~ FOR DISMISSAL Division Deeply ‘ Involved. ! iParty Leaders .Urge That‘i i Scandal Be Probed to | the Bottom. Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, April 10.—Abandoned, { apparently, by many of his Senatorial ! friends and having lost a large part of his political pull, A. W. Machen, chief of | the free delivery division of the Post- | office Department, is the next man slated | for dismissal or resignation as a result | of the postoffice shake-up. | “This,” sald a well-known department official to-day, “is the next important move to be looked for.” It was further said at the department that enough was already known in the investigation to warrant the prediction that Machen's entire division would be thoroughly cleaned out before the inquiry had reached its end. When Postmaster General Payne re- turns to his office next week he will find | letters from “United States Senators of great influence and importance and other men high up in the party councils, urging him not to abandon In any degree the present investigation, but to go to the | bottom of it and free the entire depart- | ment and the administration from all taint of scandal | The action of First Assistant Postmaster | General Wynne, who is acting as head of | | the - department in‘ Payne's absence, is | ! now supported by all the prominent part | leaders who know anything about the ci | comstances of the investigation. Each day brings to the department letters, some signed and others anonymous, mak- ing charges against various divisions of { the postal service. Little attention is paid to anonymous | communications, except ag they contain ! hints that may lead the inspectors to fol- low lines of investigation already begun. Whenever charges are signed and filed | they are immediately turned over to Bri tow. There are enough charges suf- | ficiently vouched for to warrant continua- come. The lines of investigation at present be- ing followed by the inspectors relate first | of all to what is known Beavers ring, for “the Machen- | been formed | office patron- said to h the distribution of po: this are 1 and wr aries and in importance to many | ng- al- supplies, Machen's th a mail- box comp: ailing meth- | ods and ng in the de- Hvery de Washington postoffice wrongdoing, | charges state that these hines were sold to the Government at $150 each, whife thie regnlar price to the public was $1 Fourth A tant Postmas n al | Brissow, who is at the head of the fnves- tigation now going on, is under instruc- ident himself to main- ice as to the re he Pre tions from tain absolut | his inqu | SNOW MANTLES CAMP WHERE ROOSEVELT RESTS | President Rides Into the Mountains and Studies /Animal and Plant Life, CINNABAR, Mont., April 10.—Secretary | Loeb received no word from President | { Roosevelt to-day. The President is in the mountains at a camp forty miles from his | 'd Whitelam, ‘here 1| béadquarters, When he started for that . Nolan. We had din- Piace ve day morning it was his inten- standing on the| Uon to rem e for a number of da outside of Testaurant Mre. | and possibly a week. Snow fell to-day in | a: | the victnity in which the President has | " *I know aady out there who hae $200 | 8O€: but the fall was not heavy. or $30) and I want Mike to go out and | John Burroughs, t tratist, d(d oot | it 1t would be easy got when the | dccompany the President, as he was suf- | Chitdren were at achaol, | loarned it | TETINE from & slight cold, This has al- <. Tuttie'’s | st °d it | most aisappeared £ 5 Sy ;",’.;_‘]T“',:,‘]!,';‘f"s,'Il:‘:"x[,ms’el"‘[' | roughs’ intention to join the President to- Lut he fs 100 well.Known out (here: v | morrow. While Burroughs will be with Ruby Grills then told of her mesiings | he President off and on during his stay with Docia Nolan ‘and Mike Najn 5; |in the park, he will not accompany him on their rooms, 622 Post street, oné or two nights after the assault. cia Nolan in tears becanse shé, was afraid her consort was to be exposed. Of the lan woman's warning to her the wit- s sald: She told me to say I didn't know, If any- 1g was asked of me. She sald they wculd take me to jail and question me, hut that they would get tired If I said 1 didn’t know. She said they bad to hit Mrs. Mathews to keep her still, but it 't worth $60—all that trouble, The second time I called she was in tears because Mike was to be exposed and while she was crying she was telling Mike where he could rob a man of $200.” ‘I'he witness then told of how Davis and Whitelaw had left for Sacramento a day or so0 after the assault and how Nolan had called the day after his examination by the police and said “Everything n"l‘ off, Tell the boys all is O K.” Before the cross-examination of the witness was begun a legal tilt was in- dulged in between District Attorney By- ington and former Governor Budd, coun- sel for Docia Nolan, in which Byington came off with honors. Budd claimed that Byington had a written statement of the Grills woman and demanded that it be yreduced. Byington quoted the law in favor of his being allowed to retaln it and Budd had to yield the point. The case will be resumed on Monday sfternoon at 2 o'clock. @ ieimivimteieelulioefeefe el el el oottt bl @ MUST BE INVESTIGATION BY GOVERNMENT SURVEY Secretary Hitchcock Not Ready to Grant City’s Request Concerning Yosemite Water Supply. WASHINGTON, April 10.—Secretary Hitcheock of the Interior Department has decided that before he acts upon the peti- tion of the city of San Francisco to be allowed to take water out of Yosemite Park for the supply of that cify he will lave made a thorough investigation by the Government survey. After its inquiry the survey will report to the Secretary, whereupon he will take up and decide the question. ———— To-Day’s News Letter. An Easter picture, well worth framing, ac- companies to-day's issue of the San Francisco News_ Letter, which is one of the best got- ten out for weeks. The story is by Ethel Dol- #on, and is a beautiful piece of romanticism. There is a very interesting article by David E. Gordon on ploncer country journalism. In the Looker On department the resignation of Rev. Heber Newton of Stanford is fully gone into, and some more hard truths are toid about the Ban Francisco Art Association. There s a wide assortment of miscellany, and politics, finance, insurance, automobile topics, literature and the drama are inteiligently dealt with. The society department is complete. The News Letter is the brightest, snapplest weekly in the West, and alwaye speaks plainly and to the point. ¢ ' |all his trips She found Do- | The President is studying mal and plant life in the park »ying himself there. and is | en | PROMOTIONS OF BISHOPS RATIFIED BY PONTIFF Right Rev. John G. Glennon and Right Rev. Henry Moeller Honored by Pope. ROME. April 10.—The Pope to-day re- | celved Mgr. Vericla. secretary of the Con- | gregation &f the Propaganda, who sub- | mitted the names of Right Rev. John G. Glennon, Coadjutor Bishop of Kansas City, as Coadjutor Archbishop of St. Louls, and Right Rev. Henry Moeller, Bishop of Columbus, Ohlo, ns Coadjutor Archbishop of Cincinnatl, which the Pon- {iff ratified. | ADVERTISEMENTS. Taste Tells The palate must be gratified and satisfied, and the fine, rich flavor of {Hunter Baltimore Rye Charms the taste and it becomes at once a fixed choice against change. Itls HILBERT MERCANTILE CO., 213-215 Market st.,San Francisco, Cal. Telephone Exchange 513. 0L00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 | (é A Danger” Period Through Which Every Woman Must Pass. Owing to modern methods of living, not one woman in a thman_d approaches this perfectly natural change without experiencing a train 0? very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. At this period a woman indicates a tendency towards obesity or tumorous growths. Those dreadful hot flashes, sending the blood surging to the heart until it seems ready to burst, and the faint feeling that follows, some- times with chills, as if the heart were going to stop forever, are only few of the symptoms of a dangerous nervous trouble. The nerves are crying out for assistance. The ery should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was prepared to meet the needs of woman’s system at this trying period of her life, and all women whe use it pass through this trying period with comfort and safety. TWO COLUTINS OF PROOF. “DeARr Mes PivgHAM : — I was sick and nothing seemed to do me any good until I began taking Mrs. kham's medicine. It was Change of Life with me and falling of the womb. Ihadsevere pains all through my body. I hada a ter 1 had consumption. 1 took six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Yegetable Compound and two of Blood Purifier, and two boxes Liver Pills, and [ am now stouter than I have been for a long time. I can do all my work now, thanks to Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. **If any one wishes to write me, to verify thess statements, I will gladly answer their letters.” Mrs. CiaRA CHEZEM, Jewett, IIL ““ DEAR M&s. PINKEAM : — For seven years I had been suffering, was pass- ing through the Change of Life, and my womb had fallen: mehses were so profuse that at times I was obliged to lie on my back for sjx weeksat a time, could not raise my head from pillow. had been treated by deveral phy- ns; but got no relief. I was advised by friends to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which I did, and after rible cough and people thought taking it six weeks I was able to be around a!l the time and do my house- $5000 SERIOUS DAMAGE DONE T0 10WA above testimonials, which wil Lydi | il and snow s ragl Battleship Must Go Out|<ome paince reached. of Commission for |.ii ieer Repairs. ot o 2 PENSACOLA. Fla., April 10.—The dam- | age battleship lowa, caused by the premature explosion of a shell in th forward port i2-inch gun, is more serious than was thought when the first was made and as a consequence the big ! ship has been ordered to the New York | vy-yard to go out of commission. She med down to the Pensacola navy-yard to-day, where she is fitting out with sup plies and preparatory to sailing as soon as ible for the north. It is ed that the steel supports un- | der the 12-inch port turrets are sprung’| to such' an extent that they will have 10 be removed, though this cannot yet be stated positively. The gun itself is a total wreck. Although the gun burst into numberless pleces, the end of the gun is as smooth as if it had been turned out of a shop. According to the record, the exploded gun was good for at least an- other year of service, and reports that the gun had been condemned are without foundation. An investigation shows that the acci- dent was caused entirely by a defective shell fuse, which, it is stated, burned faster than was calculated. It is under- stood that the shell exploded fully sixty | to the seconds before it was timed to go off. | The funerals of the three men who were | killed in the accident took place to-day. The dead were buried In the National Cemetery here with military honors, com- panies of bluejackets from all the ships of the squadron participating in the ex- ercises. It is understood that all of the injured men are almost entirely out of danger, except First-class Seaman Paul Gough, who lost an eye and is in a criti- cal condition. OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE | SEVERE STORM RAGING report | t OF THE PACIFIC COAST established—Washington—Dalkena, Stey- WASHINGTON, April 10. — Postoffice ens County, Ralph K. Kennedy post- master. Postmasters commissioned—California— Wililam E. Hawkins, Ager. Oregon—An. nie A. Jones, Inavale. Washington—John Strand, Birch Bay. Fourth-class postmasters inted— California—Lulu Dwyer, Boralma st::gz. County, vice Willam D. Watson, re- signed; William T. Richardson, Moorpark, Ventura County, vice James E. William. son, resigned. Oregon—Emma O, Pope, Elsie, Clatsop County, vice Joseph R, W, Adams, resigned. ” The gross receipts of the San Francisco Postoffice for March were $120,500, against $106,530 for March, 1902, work. I know your medicine saved my life and I cannot praise it enough.™ Mgzs. Lizzie RoEcAy, 519 Smith St., Millville, N.J. “ DEAR Mgs. PrvemAM : — I have worked hard all my life, and when the Change of Life came I flowed very badly for weeks at a time. I would stop for a day or two, them start again. I went to see a doctor and went through an examination, and spent two hundred dollars for me cine and doctor’s bills, but I did not get the relief I expected. “ At that time I saw Lydia F. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Comrpound advertised and began its use. I have found it to be just what I needed. “I wish every woman suffering from female trouble would try #t. I recommend it to all . Mgs, Wi, Darm bank, S.D. “DEAR Mgs. Prxggaw:—I feel it a duty I owe you and every suffering in the land to tell of the results I have found in ‘‘ Passing through the Change of Life, some of the physicians consulted said nothing but an operation would save me. But your medicine alone cured me."—MRs. MMexoLIA DEAN, 1441 First Avenue, Evansville, Ind. FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of 1 prove their al ydia E. Pi bsolute genuineness. inkham Medicine Co., Lyaa, Mass. WEST OF THE ROCKIES Rain, Hail and Snow Fall in Vari- ous Parts of Utah and Montana. CITY, Ut SALT LA KE istor re win ¥ In Salt Lak to hall and fin predicted Weather Burea ADVERTISEMENTS. ON EASTER MORNING You want to look your prettiest—ean as far as your shirts, collars, Waistcoats, ete., ére concerned, if they are laundered by us. Get your Easter orders In early and we'll promise prompt delivery. We call for and deliver goods. 'Pho connec- tions. No saw edges, UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Cffice 1004 Market Street, Near Powell. For Stomach Disorders Cout and Lvspepsia, DRINK VICHY Best NATURAL Alkaline Water, A. VIGN. CO., San Francisco.

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