The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 2, 1903, Page 9

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AUSSIA AIMS atCRET BLOW AT ZIONISM Circulars Are 8ent: to Authorities to Re- strain Jews. i Efforte Wiil Be Made to Crush Out.the National Idea Muskovite Officials Insist :om the| Btrictest Vigilance, 80 That He- brews May Not Centinne in ‘Their Project. b s’ Rnfis\an Minister of the to the Governors nd other authvrities The cirular -explaiis I Russia to. the promotio event ‘the collection’ of man- lers 10 transfer Soelety Jewss a.and Ph tine. and to irculating lftrars where of Interioe Minister R O S r— NTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE- PACIFIC - COAST Changes, - ‘Army :Orders| test' Patents Issued to Inventors. OF I ) ffice estab- ‘Albert & JHoquiam, 8. - ne for steam b ———— PRESS EXCLUDED FROM HAGUE ABBTIB.ATION COURT At - First Claims Question Programme Is Mapped Out. THE HAGUE, Sept sch of Austria- has betn appointed one of “the. arbitrators. in- the - Veneguelan question. Dr. Zorn, a professor &t the University of Koenigsberg, represénts Germany in the -arbitration court The first session to-day.of-the court; which is to decide the Venezuelan clatms, was occupied by the discussiop of pro- cedure to be followed.. The members -of the Council. of Ministers, the Premier, Dr.. Kuyper, and thé Forefgn- Minister. Baron von lLynden, were present. yiress was excluded from thé court Se erai representatives of the interusted Fov. ernments have not yet arrived. Theé. Vene: n 'counsel has protested | the . secretary _of ~ the °: tribunal gainst the delay entaled by the failure the part-of “Great -Britain and Ger- to ask the Cza# to appoint three | rbitrators 40 time for the opening of tribunal it is believed that- the Venes: counsel .will* insist on thée nomination of arbitrators and the organ- of the tribunal as soon as pos- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. . e THE KAIB.BB‘J_BB Breeds Dandruff, Which ‘Causes Fall- ing Hair and Finally Baldness. Professor Unna, Hamburg, Germany, ;mq authority oh skin dlseueu,uya at dandruff js as contaglous as any sther malevolent disease, and -that ons mmon source of the spread of dan- druff is the use of the same hairbrush y' diffefent persons. 'The .way to avoid eliing dandruff or-any otheér diseasp irom another’s brush is to insist on the se Newbro's Herpieide. It mot only the Gandruff germ, but it is also ntiseptic that will preveht the catch- |. £ of any disease whatever through con- tagion. of another's brush. Bold by lead- druggiste. Send 10c in stamps for to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Biguature of |POLICE BELIEVE of.] I idea, and. orders:| take _stringent: me its consummation, action of “mahtds, make - speeches | meetings. public : meetings:, dplegates organi tq-. bind ; for Befp-{ Se!smn on’ Venezuelan | 1.—Professor Lam- | The |. | LERVEY WERKENS; Suspected ,Woman'é Paramour Expected to Confess. - “Hard. Fight in the" ; Courts. ————— i Lxme progiess wia made In the search [ for--ingriminatiing evidence ih the Bow- The detee- | {lives kept hard at. work, but details are difficult to gather now ‘that -the ‘maln cts.have been miade known. The class of people with ‘whem Mrs: Bowers asso- clated have no lking: for the courts and the efficlals beliéve ‘that they- tell-even if. they know anithing. Every- iore’ who wag In any - ‘way with Mrs. Bowers has been interrogated. | {All ‘@eny that ‘the wonian ever said any- | } thing ‘to thiem 1n: Yegatd to domestic d(m--. 3 culties Thére we sweatings” = yesterday. Hatry Bowe! rtedl’ that his brothér had possessed “a gold watch, ‘valued at about.$14. “Nothing has been’seen of it »ince -the a and_the rumor was ge-. 1ng the s that Lervey. had paiened 3. ‘Bowers were questioned E the watch had been’ given to hn aningham, the valter - who' ‘was. a ‘clgse friend .of ‘the ead bridge -butldér. Detective Ryan.saw { Cim ast. night and took the wat )f Justice fa -hopes that prove of “value as 1 evid, T Goeqii solit bot that it Lervey some -rest and man was not will be campelled t I trict” Attorney says est to g presum . emiory after-a he ‘officials do not- expect that Mrs. Suttén. or “Mrs.. Bawers will own ap to anjth but they are confl- - | dent that Lérvey will bréak down. - COMES. TO GIVE: AID, s, Matie Jones, g sister of: the im- d women,- has aoma from Pnr(lan give shch aid as she may-to ther very tempestuous mat 'rh» father left a cdn-] oney. 6ver which there | X Thé history-of containe an imposing - list Of dlvoreéd, -marriagés. and av-- thoysand Aol ars | been .m family anarrels s “is that Mrs.. Bowers | i@ ofit of the way in? iave Lervey. &he- commuinicated- The _sister ~18 have evginéered tiie -whole a uhp'rr- of s’ sip- e Known st mnmng ‘of wlat oing on. s a_great deal:of this belief, Pt ing. J tér was “recefved. by Mrs Qu(mn Mrs. Harry Walsh Vesterday, in- statemerits '{ mirder had been “re Detéctive Ryan went to Pgtahima; catly esterday’ morning to- iavéstigite r Minzie ¢n, said La Po she as she. is sometimes not know * O'Loary. m of them Jiked .to. be Poweta bet around town GIVES NO' INFORMATION. Eedip thought Uum ws Sowers: had that. ia Parte-Mc tarice during the c | and returned }o the Zedie La Port cCallum is at* present Portland, Or.,” and-the. police will. see her As Soon ‘as -pos: port: tq the local authorities woman was “Mrs. Bowers® closest frignd, it is expected that.she will have Some- thing interesting to say. g S0 An interested assemhiy in Judge Cook's court was disappointed.again Yesterday morning by tke failure of. the two mur- . of- his “Interview ; last night. Mrs. attorneys for Mrs. Bowars and Mr: | ton had a- confererice With the, police. o ficials Monday night and decided to that the pétitions for writs of habeas oor- | | pus be dismissed, as formal charges wers im course of preparation. This means that the women, wWho are now simply under detention in.the dotmitory, will be placed in cells. Accordingly when the case was cllled at noon Attorney Framk Druty made the | motion for dismissal of the writs, and ‘as . fhere ‘was no objectitn the Judge so or- Gered.. District. Attorney ° Byington said that he.would file & formal complaiit &f- | ter the Coroner's inquést, which will take pldce” Friday at 10 o'¢lock -in the morn- ing. 5 . . Attorney W. T. Vaighn-of Portland; | Or.,.bas been. sént by the, suspected wo- {'men’s mother, Mrs. Byers, t6 act as as- sociate counsel for the defens: He .ar- rived yesterday morning and set to work at once preparthg to make a hard flgm for the liberty. of his clients. 2 Lervey, or O'Leary, has-no counsel as ['vet,” His- ‘statement that ‘he has,no | friends seems to be partially bofne out | by the fact that ne one has called to-ses him* since his - incarceration. - Détectives | Taylor and Ci olemsn weat out in a buggy I night to carry on’ the search for the purchase of arsenic by Mrs, Bowers, Mrs, Sutton or Lervey. Harry Bowers said yesterday that he réalized that the ‘defensg purposed cast- |ing a doubt on the gullt of the impris- oned women by- showing that he or his | wife might have put the poigon into. the food eaten by his brother. - The detectives gave him a _close questioning late Mon- | day- night,. but_elicited no new informa- tion from "him. ——e——————— LINEMAN AT STOCKTON I8 AOCIDWTAI.I.Y KILLED . STOCKTON, 'Sept. 1—Chnrles 8. stith recelved 2000 volts of electricity from & | wire carrying an alternating current, “whl'le engaged in painting a pole this morning, and was killed. The flesh of both arms and one side was badly burned. Stith 1s from Kansas, where heleaves | 2 mother and a- sister. He came from | San’ Francisco a week ago and was in the employ of the Stockton Gas-and Electric | Company. He had worked for ‘years as -a linéman and was an experienced man. While paihting he. rested ‘each arm over separate wires, thus “shorting” the cur- rent. Stith was 26 years of age and unmar- ried. RS WIS Rt 2% GERMAN INVENTS A SPEAKING PHOTOGRAPH BERLIN, Sept. 1.—Oskar Messter, who bas Invented an apparatus combining the phonograph and moving photograph ma- chine, so as to produce a speaking pho- tograph, gave a private view of his in- vention.to-day, with satisfactory results. | Defense Is Prepared for- & will “not | acquainted | is he mle'\s? Ui the pros- | et st namhed' denied that she Bad, - réspect to “the. we hat -she “had not seer - Mr: ers. sin last M They had heen good-friends, she said, but she had’ pever heard Mrs. Bowers sneak. of any domesti¢ difficutties. Mrs. Walsh, She 1tiéed Mrs. | T der mijspects Yo put ih an appearance. The| Sut- |- 'SEPTEMBEB PLUCKY WIFE OF A UNIVERSITY - PROFESSOR CAPTURES A BURGLAR Dlscovers Thief Crouchlng in Corner of a Linen Closet and THE SAN . FBANOI‘SCb CALL, WEDNESDAY, 1903.', Before He Can Spring Out She Slams the Door in His| ‘Face, Locks It and Then Summons Marshal by Telephone ERKELEY, .Sept. 1L—Mrs, Leon. ] S ; J. Richardsen, wife of Professor " Richardson of the Wniversity of- Calffornia, is the heroine of a _burglar hunt that began .early this mornmx and ended by her shutting the robber up in a. clolel unlll the police arrtved to take him. She was asissted in 2 the Cfip(ure by her husband and her J - e ' -0y ——'/.’ 7 mmm = usuln|n|‘mmn,|m'mm u_n.wnmmc‘t.a.u.u.umu.ammuu mini | BT nisiii T l MARS.CLEON J~ RICHARDSON “*:.fi.::-., / ° /74 i > [ kA B ) - aia fathicr, Warring: ‘Wilkingon; supertritend- ent ot the ‘State Deaf and Blind Institute, Uln whose Tesidence ‘the capture was mads: Superirifendent - Wiikinsop *“heard . ..a e dbout 2 o'clock -and. suspect- aroused Mr. and Mrs. Rich- on-in-law: and ‘daughter re: \ose apartments’ adjoin. his. went: downstdirs. - - and l house. "The *.search. ‘was| | er;. for all, they found was | ‘ 1 nt v\lnduw 1 Just -after -they Had returned: to. bed Mre: Richarason. fhought: of - her. silver-|-1° | | { iggested to her “husband’ that ° FPROF LEOR J. - WARRING \JLLKIHSQH R[CHAaDson.- wnand bing- 1t upstairs. Act: ardson’ had’ Just: begun 'to -gathér up.the stiver when she noticed:a-linen: closet door lead@ng Off: thé- diningsroom ‘ajar: Without” any ‘thought that thers might’ be a-birg! hr-mnd 4£“Mrs. - Richardsan | opened - the g A flood: o/ 11ght poured ‘ into the toom’ us xhe door swung: ajnr aml reyealed a :man erouching’ in’ a > corner, irs. Richazdsori’s breath-was taken away. moment,;: but she reécoyered-her:self- posseésion Immediafely. and; slammed: the {"atior -in. the -man’s face and locked-it be- | tere he had tiré to; spring-out:’ —t [ i E HO ‘CAPTURED A BURGLAR -BY 5T, HER FATHER AND HUSBAND, WHO- .T)\ESSED THL PLL_ !\\" ALT ‘A ‘D THE, TRAPPED CRlMlVAL wnuw CHNGE szcnmnv' TR " ORGANE KT .arter May Follow: Dole -as- Next Ha.wa,na.q : in -the meantime .fhe” two -men . were | breathiess .spectators. of-‘the agene; -: But | they were equal to‘the emjergency.. - Pro- | fesar Richardson relieved -his ‘wife at the | dcor” while she “telephoned - to. ;Mirshal | Kerns and Mr. Wilkinson-looked :around for ‘weapans,.. Aftef & .lohg. search: the :{ father found.-a Filiping’ bolo that- served |-as a-nornament in the parlér:-and with this he reinforced his son-in:law,: ready:| . lo carve the burklat into bits should :he break .down’the doof. 1 The suspense ‘lasted until- thé arrjvnl of [ | Marshal Kerns and his ‘deputy, H. 8. s | Howard, whnh opened the .closet’ door| ' uickly and shoved two pistols under the . 0¢ thé-Lungtar. L dondlin no HONO"rL‘*V Atfangements attempt at resistance, bul pretended to | 3T¢ #lready being mhade in- Wishington | be intoxicated and asked the ofcers some | to influence President ' Roosevelt in the | foolish questions. When the officers- were |choice.of a:Governoy.to succéed, Mr. ‘Dole, | whose term expires next Mag The prime putting the hxndcufls an hls wrms he’ ‘movers in the- matter are those R'epub-' sald: licans - who were soured at the nah-ap- | “Well, I guess I'm up a,gainst fl now." A search of the prisoner's pockets failéd | noinomon s of Harold Sewall by President Goes to Inspect Progreas in Erectlo‘n of Fair - Bulldmgs., ————— N ST. LOUIS, Sept. l—Secrétary of the Treasury §haw- arrived in St. Louls this morring for.the purpose of {nspecting the progress made in the erection of build- atory to beginhing the ddsbursement of | the -$5,000,000 appropriation. He was es- 400rted by a committeé of the World's ings at the World's Fair grounds prepar. | C | PREPARATIONG FAINTS IN ARMS fOR ELEGTION! OF HER HUSBAND Three Straight Tickets . Will Be Presented - ‘to Voters. Indications of Republican Success. Obsetved by * 'Politicans. ————— The Democratic Municipal Convention will‘assemble Monday, September 14, and probably adjourn for one week. Gavin McNab and his lieutenants will adhere to their old-time tactids of postpoming nom- inations until- the Republican ticket has been “made up. Thomas W. Hickey is slated for chairman of the Democratic convention. ‘The Horse_and Cart dele- gates and others who aré not in harmony with the regular organization may make a vigorous effort to break the slate. For theé sake of harmony and ‘gcod feel- .Ing .Mr, McNab may_ concede a point or two in organisation, but, he’ has .the strength, nevertheless, to earry out his own progrimme. Franklin K. Lane can have the Democratic ~nomination for Mayor if .he wants it. The questiori now is whether he wants 4t. The certainty that there will be three straight tickets in the fleld renders the chance-of Democratic success somewhat remote. Michael Casey’s men may or- ganize some kind of 'a Igbor party on-the side In order to help Lane "and down Schmitz, bat sich an exhibition will not ‘attract Republican workingmen, who are now getting ready for. alisnment in the national campalgn of 1904. The present indicatiéus are that the Republicans of *San *Francisca will sup- port the nominees of-the Republican local convention, proyided.a fairly good ticKet is placed in the flelq by the represenia-. tives of their party. The registration office lt the City Hall is -now open for the convenience of voters who_are not registeretl. ' The registration for the municipal election closes’ Septems ber~23. All citizens registered since Jan- uary 1, 192, who have changed thelr res- fdence..are required to reregister. on or before the 234 day of Septémber. The Union Labor party convention ‘will meet- this evening at the Turk-street Temple: § : e SAY VANDALS HAVE cuT LABGE CABLES Telephone Compnxuel Complfln of Malicious Work in This City 3 and Oakland.. 3 The Pacific States’ and - Sunset Tele- phone and Telegraph companles lssued the following statement yesterday: - SAN FRANCISCO, Sept: 1, 1908 ‘In San Francisco and Oakland, during the s, about twenty of our most im- I3 varying from 100 to, 408 wires each, have been cut in manholes and on poles utterly destroying the service of a. large num- ber of our piincipal subscribers. The tele- phone company 18 repairing tnese as rapldly as_possibie. We. wish to say in”connection with this mat- ter_ that this work has been done at the in- stance of the strike managers and by. strange men who have been imported into the city of San Francisco for this purpose. “We do not belfeve that any <of this wock has been done by our ex-employes, 4 very:large percentage of whom are anxious Yo return to work. but are, terrorized by the emiesaries of the strike managers. The following is a partial list ‘of the ¢uts that occurred last night at midnight: Two underground cables cut off at Spear and Folsom. Aerisl cable cut at Main and Folso Aerial cable’ out at Beale and Folsom. Two crossarms of wires cut at Fultor Masonic avenu Two aerial cables cut at McAllister and De- visadero, Mderground cable cut at Hayes. and Brod- S hderground cable cut at First and Tehamd. Underground. cable Fage and Steiner. - Aerial cable McAllister and Plerce. Aerial cable Fifteenth and Guerrero. . The Nelephone company’s men-Have been as- near saulted’ day after day and.no expense will be | epared to bring the offenders against iife and roperty to justice. Pri¥iile the destruction of the company’s prop- it financial harm, ahd the subscribers | - such work cannot settle { B Fike "and It surely paves the way 1o the nlunllln for the offenders. 3 MICHIGAN MAN KILLS DAUG!TEE ACCIDENTALLY OTSEGO Mich:, Sept. 1-Duncén Swan accidentally shot'and killed his daughter Mary yesterday. Swan had been troubled with crows in his corm saw the stalks moving, -and thinking crows were in the patch again discharged his shotgun at the moving corn. To his hogror, his dauzhter gcreamed, and. he found that-he had shot her in the breast. She was gathering corn for dinner and her father did not kpow it Swan. is hearly crazed . _—e—————— ‘Marriage Licenses. 3 OAKLAND, Sept. ‘L—The following marriage licenses . were issued by the County_Clerk to-day: Frapk M. Davis, over 21, Oakland, and Eteinor J. Rivard,.over 1§, San Francis- co; Frank E. Siefert, 25, and Della Wood- ruft, 21, both’ of San Fran¢isco; E. Cook Clark, %, Searsmon, Me., and Theresa A. Barker, 3%, Oaklan Joseph Carero, 23. and Katle King, 20, both of Sdn Le- Yesterday he | Court Dismisses Arnold Case and Young ‘Wife Swoons. Judge Finds No Evidence to Connect Them With the Diamond Theft. —_— Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Sept. 1. With a hysterical outburst of weeping. Mrs. Eloise Arnold swooned in her hus- hand’s arms this afternoon in the Police Court when Judge George Samuels an- nounced his decision discharging her and Charles E. Arneld, her husbaid, who had been under examination on a charge of stealing $1000 worth of dlamonds from Mrs. Mary C. Robinson. Arnold and his wife were sitting on a bench listening Wwith strained ears for the court’s decision, and as {{ came the wom- an collapsed. She was taken in charge by her husband, her mother, Mrs. Under- wood; and sevéral women \friends, who restofed the young wife-te cnmclausness In’ his decision - Judge Samuels said the evidence had failed to show at most an§- thing more than a suspicion. There had heen nothing presented, the Judge held, to connect the Arnolds with thé possgs- sion of the gems that were said to have been stolen. Concetning the finding: of the watch and chain in the room the Ar- nolds had occupled, his -Honor dismissed that ‘malter entirely from the case, de- claring that it had no-bearing whateveér. In the defense Miss A. Bassanio of San Francisco testified that on May 11’ the day Mrs. Robinson clajmed her diamonds were stolen, Mrs. Arnold was at_ her home i San Francisco.during. the hours when, it was charged, the jewelry was taken. Attorney M. C. €hapm for the Ar- nolds, ‘declared they were victims of an infamous _conspiracy —— e CHIEF SULLIVAN GOES EAST FOR TWO MONTHS Will Attend Fire Pighters Conven- tion' and- Study Latest East- ern Methods. Chief D. T: Sullivan of the local Fire Department - started ' East_last evening. He was accompanied acroas the bay by a multitude of friéndsy who wished him- self and wife godspeed on thelr long jour- ney.. Mrs. Eva. G. Graney, wife of the politiclan, was also in the _party ~and scores of her friends went alopg to swell the numbers. Travelers were astonished at the fare- well reception to the popular people. Mrs. Sullivari and Mrs. Graney were showered with’ flowers and candy and‘ roundly cheered as. the trafi pufled out for the East. Their drawing-rooms were prettily decorated ard during-the short walt for the mail to be put on board the ever- land the Chief and his fair companions held a reception. Many tears were shed at. parting and handshakings were flrm and numerous. Among thase whp crossed the bay with the travelers were Captain Splllane of the Police Department, Colonel Herbert Choy- inski, George Duffield, Fire Marshal Towe, Battalion Chiet John Wills, John Murphy, Johu J. Gleason, E. M. Graney, Judg? Kerrigan, John F. Cunningham, Max Ro- senfeld, Mr. and Mrs. Harry James, Her- man Fortriede, Miss Georgie Dow, James E. Hritt Sr., George Maxwell, Fire Com- missioner Parry, George Lowenberg, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cashman, William Fin- igan, Mrs. James Coffroth, Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. James McNally, Mrs. Caverly, Mrs. Charles Caverly, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rice, Mrs. Peterson and others. Chiet Sullivan will journey to Atlantic City. to attend the convention of fire.chiefs of -the United States. He will make an effort- to. have the cdn ation” meet - in this city in 1%6. The Chief will be gone two- months and will "visit _the various citles of the East and study theé latest In fire fighting aparatus and- methods " in vogue there. s e BN S DEMENTED MINER IS LOST ON NEW mFOED DESERT Wanders Away During the ‘ Night and All Hope of Finding Him Is Abandoned. TONDPAH, Nev., Sept. 1.—The story of a miner’s awful privation and. probable déath. on the desert comes from Lunning, on the line of the Carson 'and Colorado Railroad. James O'Brien is the name of the unfortunate man. Being unable to secure_employment here, O’'Brien started to walk to Reno, where he claimed. to have friends. For four days he wandered about, and ‘when he reached Lunning he was completely exhausted. -Hig condition aroused sympathy, and after being fed he was given sheiter for the night. . He was' missing the.next. morning, but his shoes were found alongside of the bed he had occupled. He was tracked as far as the: Xew Bedford desert, ‘where his coat and vest were found. There all trace of him was lost. ‘Search for him has. been abandoned, as O'Brien is -witheut doubt andro; Francis A. Hoey, ’n Mokelumne | dead by this time. He is. thought to have Hill, nnd Edith ¥, Titus, 29, ljerkeley been demented from exposure. to discover any weapon. At the local pos | lice station ke gave ‘the name’ of Charles | 7. Gaylor and his occupation’ that of a hostler at the Dwight -way stables, - of | which White & Esmond are the nronneA tors, His rogm “in the Baily -block ‘at Dwight way was searched, but it -revealed nothing. - When arraigned hefore Justice of the, Peace Edgar this afternoon Gaylor gave some additional details about himself, but in regard to hig mqmlng episode he pre- tended that his.mind was a blank, claim- ing he was too mmxlcnea to_know. what he was doing. He sald also that he was an ex-soldier, having been honorably discharged from the Fourteenth Regiment, but afterward admitted that this was a He. The poHce ‘belfeve him to be.a man with a record.| Justice Edgar fixed his preliminary ex- amination for 10 o'clock Thursday morn-, ipg, after he had pléaded not’ guflty to. the charge of burglary. - Stablekeeper White sald Deputy Mar- shal HoWard had found a compromising note in Gaylor's room this morning but this both Howard and Marshal Kerns, his { superipr, derry. The’ note, White sald, | was addressed to Gaylor's pal.and the | substance of it was that he had tried |'three times to rob Miss Head's school, had fafled but intended to try again. Professor Richardson. gives all the credit to his wife for the capture of the burglar, as it was she who acted prompt- ly in a moment of danger. He sald: “My wife is entitled to all the applause for the capture, if there is any. If it had not been for her we would net have gone downstairs the second time and but for her the burglar might have got away. It McKinley. | Sfrice then they have Kept up'| .a running ‘attack upon Dole and.all his | deeds. 1t is. now believéd .that Dole will | be succeeded by George Carter, Sec- retary ‘of the Territory, who has proved himself an- excellent man in the position he now holds, and would doubtiess maké an equally. good Governor. ~ - The attack, however, through Congress by - a change in the organic act which will empower the Gov- ernment to appoint a Governor from the contents are supported Dy some of the natlve Hawalians who have been dissat- isfled with, everything -in the shape of government since the annexation of Ha- wall. They seem to forget that a change in the organic act such as they suggest will 'be a frank avowal of the unfitness of the Hawailan people for self-govern- ment, ter serfously and the Influence of other Territories will certainly be thrown against any such attempted diversion of Territorial rights. . s ——————— SUPREME COURT MUST DECIDE FILIPINO’S CASE Native Murderer, Who Escaped, Raises Question as to Civil Government’s Powers, WASHING1ON, Sept. 1.—The War De- partment has decided to refer to the Su- preme Court of the Philippines the case of the native Filipino Dunphy, who was convicted of mupder by the Military Gov- ernment and sentenced to death. He es- was gshe who slammed the door in his face. Forlunately for us the man had no weapon.” Mrs. Richardson laughed when asked about her part in the affair and said she bad simply acted on the impuilse of the wmoment. P caped and was apprchended after the Philippines passed into civil control. His attorneys make the claim that the Civil Government cannot carry out the sen- tence of the Military Government. It is expected that the case ultimately will be taken to the United States Supreme Court, is: to be ‘Tade’ Congress is not likely to také the. mat-, mainland. The few white Republican mal- | Falr - directors to. the “Administration | bullding ¢n the World's Fair site, where he was ‘ree;ed by President Francis. The company was driven’ over the great sité in carriages. From the top of the Art Palace the Secretary was afforded -a view of. the main pleture of the exhibitios howing the gréat exhibit buildIngs’' several of which are now completed and awaiting the installation of exhibits and the deco- rative features, in the course of construc- tion. Secretary Shaw . was _impressed with the sight, for he sald: “Gentlerhen, It is a gem. It is the finest thing I have ever seen. The view. from this point is’ surpassing.” B After finishing his inspection of the World’s Fair Secretary Shaw was escort- ed * to the Mercantile Club, where a luncheon was spread in his honor. —_————— Pioneer Dies Suddenly. _SALINAS, Sept. 1—Ezekiél G. Dodge, a’ pioneer resident of San Antonio Val- ley, was found dead Sunday.under pecu- Har circumstances. He went to Jolon Sat- urday evening for his mall, after which he started for his home. Sunday momn- ing his horse and cart were found near the Eplscopal church at Jolon, with Dodge dead in the cart holding the reins. The Coroner’'s jury found that death re- sulted from heart.disease. ——————— Train Cuts Off Both Her Feet. MONTEREY, Sept. 1.—Mrs. A. Brown, a resident of San Jose, who with het daughter Mrs. Allen, has been spending the summer at Pacific Grove, was run over by the incoming Del Monte express near Paclfic Grove depot this ev g an had ‘both Yeet cut off at the ankle. The unfortunate woman was going dlong the track to the depot, and becoming flurried at the approach of the train, stepped in front of it. Her injuries are expected to “'- IN" fatal. No Summer Bowel Troubles Not for me! I'm'sdfe from all of them and happy. The heat of summer causes orgfnic matter everywhere to decay. All dead vegetable or animal matter rots if not kept on ice. All undigested food in the human body will fer- ment a hundred times as quickly in summer as in winter. Consequence —stomach, liver, bowels poisoned, thrown out of order—sour stomach, gases, colic, diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera, a pcnd:cms and in some regxonsycfiow féver and the plague. Little children suffer terribly every-. where. - What does good sense tell you to do ? You can’t keep the hu- man body on ice, and the drinking of ice-cold drinks does more harm than good because it stops digestion and chills the internal organs. The proper thing is to keep all impure and unnecessary matter out of the body every day, not give it a chance to sour and decay in the stomach and bowels, and poison the blood and the whole body. In this way you will stop all. hot, feverish conditions, and keep your insides cool and healthy. To do it, use a medicine that is not offensive to the taste and not harsh and ,violentin its action. There is only one safe system-cleaner to take in the summer time, because it will not cause diarfhoea or griping, and that is 10¢, 35¢, S0c. Never sold in bulk. to cure or your money Best for the Bowels. All p’:-i--m.n- M Address l_nly Co., Chicago or New York.

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