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BELIEVE. WOMAN WA MURDERED Loos Angeles Authorities Working Up a Mys- terious Case. Physicians Disagree as to the Cause of Death of a Waitress. The Cal Mrs. Jessie ay after- 1 after her for that her potson- case of motive exist- sy made to- which indl- may have been e che: suicide, Ea As & Gey eviden cates that s of the de- 1 not be known The discovery at an undertaking dertaker en rib. ol showed that were broken d from paraly- nign of the au- & heavy blow that there was se over the broken ribs t es to hesitate k y, for it RED MEN ELECT OFFICERS FOR THE COMING TERM Francisco Is . G e Pears’ What is wanted of soap for the skin is to wash it and not hurt it This is why we want pure soap; clean Pure soap does that. and when we say pure, we mean without alkali Pears’ is pure; no free alkali. You can trust a soap that has no biting in it, that's Pears’, Established over 100 years. Such best—Schilling’s Best —as the poor would be richer| lor US»ng. Your grocer’s; moneyback. nical analysis | fincing | | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, ATTORNEY CAUSES CAPTURE OF SUAVE YOUNG IMPOSTOR Man Giving Name as P. J. Kelly and Who Has Obtained Money From Many Yale Men Upon Pretense of Being Brother of One of Its Graduates, Trapped by J. E.-Eells | | SUAVE YOUNG EASTER FROM YALE MEN UPO) WELL-KNOWN GRADUATE OF OBTAINING MONEY l SE THAT HE IS A BROTHER OF THAT COLLEGE. those ribut e offt e of A Mon broth onsidered greeting. fortu ASKS FOR A LOAN. His resemblance to Roland Spaulding, whose brother he claimed to be, is strik- and for a while left Eells in some t about the case. Soon, however, oubt that was arising in his mind avor of the s ung man was rmed the attorney by making a re quest for a trifli t $70 or $100. That anxious desire, accompanied with | the reason that it was made through the n val of his uncle, which delin- the part of his relative had in a temporary but acutely ssing position, determined Attor- e a grand swoop on the MACARTHUR OVERRIDES VERDICT OF THE COURT Department Commander Directs That Artillery Sergeant Jones Be Given His Freedom. Major General MacArthur has ordered that released from the Presidio guardhouse, where he was confined on a charge of securing money from other enlisted men | as pay for not enforcing the regulations. Jo is a member of the Seventieth { Company, Coast Artlllery, and has a | reputation for being very strict with his | subordinates. Some time ago several of the company | men complained that the first sergeant | was getting a rake-off from all gambling | games and was selling excases from { duty. Major Hobbs investigated the mat- | ter and a court-martial was ordered. Cap- | tain Burgess and Lieutenant Lewis, both | of the Artillery Corps, were chosen re- spectively president and judge advocate of the court. The witnesses called by both sides numbered more than a score and the testimony of the defense and the prosecution was largely contradictory. Jones was conwicted by the court, but General MacArthur deems the evidence fnsufficient and directs that the prisoner be allowed to go free. —_——— Rodrigue Sues for Writ. Michael T. Rodrigue sued for a writ of review of the proceedings of the Board of Civil Service ~Commissioners. - He claims they erred in falling to declare his appointment as ordinary clerk permanent. | | | ng | hes omething pattern of a brake- train, hair jet dispelled when | First Sergeant Marlin C. Jones be | man, St who Lou! hicago and other parts one who had preyed~upon the generosity .. | tion and the officials ope A B reported to him_ from as MURDER OF THE INKOCENT AKD THE RAZING OF TOWNS OCCUPY TURKS AND REBELS it Continued From Page 1, Column 8. The insurgents continue to devastate the district of Koritza and have captured important Turkish supplies of provisions. More or less severe fighting is reported {in the districts of Kastoria and Florina. Three hundred insurgents are assembled on the heights between Gievgvell and Yenije. Twenty-six Mussulman peasants have been massacred in the village of Zivernini, near Perlepe, by the insur- gents. Stringent military = precautions have been taken in the town of Uskub to prevent threatened dynamite outrages. The Mutesarif of Mush, Armenia, where Kurdish excesses were recently alleged to have occurred, has been dismissed. HOPES FOR INTERVENTION. Sofia Government Says Powers Alone Can Prevent Disaster. | SBOFIA, Bulgaria, Aug. 12—The Bul- garlan Foreign Office has received very | disquieting news from Iits agent at | Uskub. The Mussulmans there are dafly | gathering in the mosques and it is feared that a massacre of the Christjans is im- pending. Officials here express the be- lef that the intervention of the powers alone can prevent a disaster. The most astonishing feature of the sit- | | THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1903. ESCAPES DROP - UT OF SIGHT Outlaws Thought to Be Safe in the Devils Basin Country. No Reports Received From the Pursuers Who Left Placerville. PLACERVILLE, Aug. 12.—No reports have been received to-day from either of the posses which have been on the trail of the five convicts who killed the two militiamen and wounded another in the fight near the Grand Victojy mine ten | days ago. It is believed the outlaws have reached | the very heart of the Devils Basin coun- | try, a region which will give them shel- | ter and where, if cornered, they can put up a fight strong enough from their en- | trenched position to hold an entire army in check. The faflure of the posses to report is | accounted for by the fact that the pur- suers are now. far away from any point of communication by telephone or tele- | uation here is the remarkable quietude | with which the people have received the | news of the fresh rioting in Macedonia. | | The whole outbreak came as a greai sur- | | prise, even to the local revolutionary' | committees, which were not prepared for S0 early a rising. In spite of the stir- ring appeals of the committees, little or no popular enthusiasm is apparent, not | even among the 20,000 Macedonian resi- | dents of Sofia. | How long this condition wifl last de- | pends largely upon the developments in | Macedonfa. At pre the center of the | disturbance is Monastir, a long way' off. | Bhould the rising spread to the vilayet of Uskub and come near to the Bulgarian of .Bulgaria will become aroused. The Government also charges Turkey with doing less to pr | crossing _ the trontier than Bulgaria. though Turkey maintains four times as ! many troops border. The | Turkish soldie retire to bar- | racks at s in there until ! sunrise, egress to the Mace- donlan insurgents the night. The Turks fight ave! & daylight, but the dark. declared that the pres- 1g its utmost to check novement, but the sit- dislike skirmishing | vation i3 r stances may strong for the €ab- inet. The growing economic depression in | the country constitutes a dangerous fac- tor in the situati FEAR GENERAL MASSACRE. | | Bulgarian. Officials Expect Fanatieal Christians. | Rising Agai pied Krushevo, after by the Turkish gents who have o repuising two ass troops, offered a conditional surrender. Instructions were ked for from Con- stantinople and in reply the Turkish com- mander received orders to give no quar- ter. The bridge at Giev on the Uskub- | | frentier of Eastern M lonia. H The whole Buigarian vernment takes ! a decidedly pessimistic view of the situa- express their fears that a general massacre of the | Christians in Macedonia is inevitable, pos- | sibly within four days, and almost cer- | tainly within a fortnight. Meanwhile the Government continues to maintain its | peaceful attitude, but it believes that a sudden development of affairs . border may at any momer authorities powérless to preven The reports from Bulgar of numerous and divers graduates of the | agents in Macedonla show that the sit- distinguished university. uation is rapidly growing wor The | “Bev or one hundred dollars,” mur- | fact that the Mussulmans are becoming decidedly; anything @ excited and congregating in the mosques classmate of mine. s regarded as an additional feature in- moment, Spauld- | dicating the possibility that a massacre t the amount, | may occur within a short time. It Is left his vis- | feared that such a massacre would cover office, telephoned & wide area and include both the large word that Detective towns and the villages, and that the <pond in person to Turkish soldiers would prove incapable ttle delay returned to of restraining the Mussulma even if the ntil the arrival of the detective. A SMOOTH TALKER. smooth 1Hn‘i"l’ onali. until GI n wal er into custody tel A Polic s, where “Spaulding” Is made himself ved in reply. the man th much named man in conversa- proved to be a fluent and and entertained ed in and took the sent to the Chief of perfectly nse of numerous Yale up to vesterday no word rtin sald he would liberate morning should he receive they desired to do so, which is by no means certain. Monastir now|contains only four battal- ions of Turkish' troops, two consisting of raw recruits, who will be quite unreli- able in-the event of serious trouble. It is thought quite possible that the troops might even ald the Mussulmans in slaughtering the Christians. The officials here blame Tur for the present sudden outbreak, attributing it largely to the action of the Porte in in stituting a search for arms in the vil- | 1ages. Dr. Mandelstam, the acting Russlan ;_fi xildmg. from official quarters at St.| ¢, guoceed M. Rostkovowski, the mur- iavien o = | dered Consul at Monastir, reached that . The .,'”'",""‘-v Soige Y!‘Tt Kelly, or jown to-day. Some anxiety had been felt Spaulding, or Carver, or Gilford, had ad- | s,/ his safety. nothing had been heard | mitted to him that he had been beating I way from place to place and getting under fz representations as charged When arrested he gave his name as P. at Kelly is his right name. denied that his name is Carter or that he | comes from Lynn. He gives it out that | he is of good family and consequently | will have nothing to say as regards his life or his birthplace His answers are ready and he is evi- a man of varied experience. CLAIMS SHE WAS DESERTED THREE DAYS AFTER WEDDING Marie Peltier Sues Her Husband for $100 a Month Main- tenance. In a suit for maintenance iled yester- day by Marie Peltier against her hus- | band John, who is in the asphaltum roof- ing business provided for her since the 8th inst., when she says he deserted and abandoned her. when the alleged abandonment occurred, they having been .narried at Redwood City on the 5th inst. Mrs. Peltier says her husband ean his business yields an income of $250 a month. She asks to be awarded that amount and $250 for counsel fees, ————— He Was Not a Burglar. James Reilly, 320 Tehama street, found J. P. Hyland, a drunken sailor, prowling around his kitchen early yesterday morn- ing. He called Policeman Moriarty, who placed Hyland under arrest and booked. him on a charge of burglary. The case was called before Police Judge Mogan yesterday, and as Rellly refused to prose. cute it was dismissed. Hyland said he was so drunk that he did not know what he was doing and the policeman corrobo- rated him as to his condition. A turbine engine for trans-Atlantic busi- ness will be fully tested by Sir Christo- pher Furness. nd when seen yesterday main- He she alleges that “he has not { She had been his wife but three days easily afford to pay her $100 a month, for of him since he left his post at Uskub a couple of days ago. The Mutesarif of the | Uskub district refused to give Dr. Man- | delstam an escort. The Consul inststed cn proceeding to his new post and, hav- ing obtained an escort from Hilmi Pasha, | he started on his own rsponsibility across | country for Monastir. e Greeks Join the Macedonians. SOFIA, Aug. 12.—Representatives of the | Macedonian committee gay that the Rou- | manian and Greek inhabitants of a num- | ber of villages have joined the insurgents | and that the Mohammedans are taking | refuge in the cities and towns. At Kru- | shevo the revolutionists have seized the | repeating rifles and ammunition stored in | the magazine. It is stated that Prince Ferdinand will spend next Saturday, the anniversary of his accession to the throne, with his fami'y in Hungary. g Fear Vengeance of Albanians. CETINJE, Montenegro, Aug. 12.—The Servians throughout Old Servia are in a state of panic because of the departure of the Turkish troops' from Monastir, which removes all protection from the Servians against the vengeance of the Al- banians. RS AT Revolutionists Well Armed. VIENNA, Aug. 12.—Statements from Bulgarian sources assert that the revo- lutionists possess 35,000 rifles, 15,000,000 cartridges and four tdns of dynamite; that the insurgents number 25000, of whom 10,000 are in the vilayet of Monastir. R —_—— Albanians Wound a Pasha. CETINJE, Montenegro, Aug. 12Tt is rumored that Feric Pasha, while leaving Epek with Turkish troops, was attacked by Albanians and severely wounded. —_——————— Ten-Year-0ld Boy Kills Himself. HAV Mont., Aug. 12—While the members of John Chester's family were greeting him on his return home from a journey Willlam, his ten-year-old son, lay down on the ground, placed the muz- zie of a rifie in his mouth, pulled the trigger with his toe and blew <ff the top of his head. What prompted the lad to the deed is not stated. The Chesters live on a ranch just across the Canadian Iln.l frontier it is probable that the popuiation | ent the insurgents | | SALONICA, Aug. 12.—It is reported that the Turkish troo Monday bombarded and des ed the vi of Eshiu, twen- | ty miles south of Monastir. | According to another rumor the Insur- | Salonica Railw which was blown up | by the Insurgents, has been repaired. Several strong bands recently Crossed the | O TR AR CHCACROMOIORY Consul at Uskub, who has been appointed | i graph. It is not thought the man hunt- | ers will be htard from until they capture the outlaws or abandon the pursuit. MARYSVILLE, Aug. 12.—George Hill, a resident of Sutter County, was stopped on the road about three miles from Yuba City last night by a stranger armed with a heavy revolver. The man made some inquiries in regard to the roads leadin | north. Hill hastened to Marysville an notified the officers here of the occur- rence. He gave a description of the stranger and it talies with that of How- ard, the Folsom fugitive, who Is known to have been a companion of James Rob/ | erts, who was captured near Davisville a few days ago. ——————— OWNERS Ty BUILD A ROAD INTO WESTLEY Supervisors of Stanislaus County Give Them a Bonus to Com- vlete the Work. MODESTO, Aug. 12.—The Supervisors of this county, ufged by the Board of Trade. this afterncon appropriated $12,000/ as a bonus to a combination of mining comparties of the Coast Range Moun- build a road from the mines to this countv, and to erect re- tion works and fire brick and tiling factories at Westley. The combination is composed of the Martel Mining Company, owner of the Red Mountain District Mag- | nesite Quarries: the James Manganese | Mining Company and the Phoenix Quick- r Mining Company, of which E. P. Newhall and Alvinza Hayward are the promoters. The companies agree to build the road and erect works and ‘factories at a cost of $100,000. Work is to be pushed aheud immediately. This will also mean a road over the | MINE > O OR KORORO ¢ RO QOO O 3 LECDOOC OO RO CROGO TR O OX Mier & SACRAMENTO—Hevener, book Co., 615 J street; C. N. Davis, store, 817 K street. PETALUMA—H. M. Wyckoff. SAN JOSE—George Denne, M. Len- 8. Gutermute, J. zen & Son. STOCKTON—Morris North El Dorado street; Racket store, 711 East Main store, Stockt ADVERTISEMENTS. NINEDOCTORSFAILED Systemic C;t;-rh Was the Trouble—Pe-ru-na Cured. R. CHAS. SCHMIDT, 42 15th Ave., Newark, N. J. writes: “I feel better than | ever did before. 1 was sick for a year and a half. Had nine doctors, but none of them could help me. Your Peruna has brought me back to health. I can eat and sleep well and am no longer weak cs | was. | had trouble with my throat, had pain in the lungs, heart and liver, then in the sides, chest, kidneys and | stomach. | had headache so much that /| could hardly do my work. No doctor could | help Me, and | spent all my money for | nothing until | began to take Peruna. || have now taken half of the seventh bottle, | and | shall not have to take any more, for || am now well. | express to you my sincerest | thanks. | feel good ond am getting fat. | My wife takes Peruna also.”"—Mr. Chas. Schmidt. Systemic catarrh is often called By | Few doctors realize | many other names. the cause of this condition. They call it stomach trouble or kidney trouble | and doctor for these diseases without once realizing the cause of the trouble. Catarrh is the cause. That is, ca- tarrhal inflammation of the mucous membranes lining all of the internal or- gans. The catarrh may have begua in the head or throat, and being neglected has pervaded the whole system. Bomething to soothe and cleanse the in- flamed mucoys membranes is what is needed and all that is needed to correct the many disagreeable symptoms of sys- temic catarrh. Catarrh May Permeate the Whole System. Mrs. Mary E. Sampson, West Derry, Rockingham County, N. H., writes: “I had_terrible headaches, both cars run and I was nervous all the time, also had trouble each month; was deafl In one ear for thirty years. I took six bot- tles of Peruna and one of Manalin and am happy to say that it 1s the best medi- cine that 1 ever used. I am not so nervous, my appetite is good, everything 1 eat agrees with me, and [ am feeling better in every way. I think Peruna is a Godsend to women and a blessing to suf- fering humanity.”—Mary E. Sampson. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a 1 statement of your case, and he will d to give you his valuable ad- vige gratis ddress Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarfum, Columbus, Ohio. mountains, giving San Jose and other | ccast cities a direct road to the Yosemite Valley via Mode: e Yacht Heine Is Located. | VALLEJO, Aug. 12—The yacht Heine that went down Sunday afternoon with four prominent residents of Vallejo, all of whom were drowned, was located last evening opposite Eppingers’ warehouse The depth of the water where the yacht sunk is eighty-five feet. None of the bod- ies have been recovered. Nine-Year-Old Boy Shoots Brother. EUREKA, Aug. 12—Willle Carr, the 9-year-old son of Charles Carr of Rhoner- ville, this coynty, shot his 3-year-old brother Tommy through the chest with a revolver last night. The wounded child is in a Very critical condition. —_————— \ Austrian-Lloyd Steamer Founders. TRIESTE, Austria./Aug. 12.—The Aus- trian-Lioyd steamer Poseiden to-day foundered on the Syrian coast. Her pas- sengers and crew were saved. . THE RELICS OF AN OLD VETERAN The Fiag, Musket and Saber, From His “OLD ARMY CHE By GEO. E. SENSENEY. “THE OLD ARMY CHEST. This Beautiful Picture, Tender Sentiment, in Marvelous Tones, will be issued Free with the G. A. R. Edition of The Sunday Call, August I6th, 1903. All Newsdealers Sell The Sunday Call And it would be well to place your ordér early, as the supply is limited. THEY ARE FRAMING THE CALL ART SUPPLEMENTS The Following Ar Dealers Are Making a Specialty of Framing Call Art Supplements: street; G rt store, 509 East Main &lr«t; eber’s art store, 425 East Main street. MARYSVILLE—-G. W. Hall. OAKLAND—E. J. Saake, 13 Tele- graph avenue; A. A. Barlow, 369 Twelfth street. * ALAMEDA—C. P. Magagnos, 1358 Park street. CHICO—Fetters & Williams. F street. Furniture Company”; T. J. Houston, Houston Furniture Company. Bros., F. R. Hew, George Hoban. SAN DIEGO—W. P. Fuller & Co., 71 FRESNO—Sronce & Dick. REDDING—W. H. Bergh, “Bergh REDWOOD CITY—W. L. Kline. SANTA CRUZ-—H. E. Irish, Cocke JACKSON—E. G. Freeman Co.