The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 14, 1903, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1903 SPOTS ON SUN |LAW OPPOSES L£55 NUMEROUS | THE FATH CURE Observers Szay They Are Interesting Decision by Condensing Into New York Court of Two Groups. Appeals. l | | -netic Conditions of the|Jail Opens for Man Whose Earth Are Noticeably | Wife Died Unattended Affected by Doctors. RIS The United | ALBAM day made ob- | terest N. Y., Oct. 13—Especial in- attaches to the decision handed £ the srdinary group of o-day by the Court of Appeals in now visible on the sun, the case of the people against Plerson, de- s a vered in the last de- | clarin dependence on faith healing in under the the case of sickness to be criminal neg- who made Plerson lives at White Plains, was sentenced to pay $00 W day imprisonment neglect in having falled to licensed physician to attend his sixteen- months-old adopted daughter in a case of bronchial pneumonia, wnich afterward proved fatal. The conviction was ob- tained under the Penal Code, which holds that “‘a person who omits, without lawful excuse, to perform a duty by law im- posed upon him, to furnish food, clothing, zence s aggregate lengt 23,000 miles is gullty,” etc. Justice Bartlett, in the prevailing opin- fon in the appellate division, held that “medical attendance” referred to in the statute did not mean exclusively the at- ce of a medical practitioner In the ral sense of the term. The appellate ;5 . reversed the conviction. In fits | opinion, written by Judge Haight, the CHINESE COUNTERFEITERS | Court of Appeals says: ARE CAUGHT AT HONOLULU Police Find Them Engaged in the Manufacture of Bogus Five- : Cent Pieces. b aware that there are people who e sick and faith is all that is re are others who belleve that the supplied the earth, Nature's store- everything that man may want for ort and maintenance, and preservation of his health, and e is left to work out his own salvation natural laws. There are still o believe Christianity and science go both proceeding from the Ci science is but the agent of the Al- shes de impleme: iv e invoked together to restore diseased uffering humanity. sitting as a of law for the pur- ining the mean- g to do with and have correct. given us by e ——— Officers Find Wandering Girl. BAN JOSE, Oct. 13.—Miss Celeste Kruse, ung woman who is said to be fr Francisco, was taken into k h road, northeast of this city. woman is about twenty years old and well dressed. Her m is deranged and she will give no account of herself. She s a stranger here. The ROOS BROS. Concerning Roos-Made Ready-to-Wear Clothes (. Are you one of the good dressers of San Francisco who has been paying large sums to ex- pensive tailors? If so, you have been needlessly extravagant in not trying ¢Roos-Made” ready- to-wear clothes. (. «“Roos-Made” ready-to-wear Suits, Overcoats and Cravenettes are made under our personal su- pervision. That is why they have all those characteristic marks of the most expensive tailor-made garments. (. They are modish and ex- tremely fashionable in cut and style-—equaling the best produc- tions of the most expensive tailors. Why not give them a trial? Men’s Suits - - - $10.00 to $37.50 Men’s Overcoats - $10.00 to $55.00 Men’s Cravenettes - $10.00 to $40.00 for criminal | engage a | shelter or medical attendance to a minor, | the divine power may be invoked | including the | re- rning while wandering about on | E3 | | .z LY7TTLETON 8} ) COLONIAL SECRETARY LYTTLETON SUPPORTS TARIFF PROGRAMME Issues an Election Address in Which He Declares Himself in Accord With the Policy Advocated by Premier Balfour and Joseph Chamberlain AL SLERTARY o | filled | County, | After graduating from the preparatory | seminary NOTED PRELKTE PISSES 10 REST Archbishop Kain Dies at St. Louis After Long Iilness. Roman Catholic Church Loses One of Its Most Bril- liant Members. Gy BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 13.—Most Rev. | John Joseph Kain, Archbishop of St.| Louis, died to-night at St. Agnes’ Sani-| tarium, where he had been a patient since May 12. Death, which came peace- fully, had been hourly expected by his attending physicians for several days. Dr. J. M. Stone and a number of priests and relatives, including his sister, a sister of charity known in the religious world as Sister Mary Joseph, were at his bedside when the end came. | Heart disease was the allment for which the Archbishop was first treated when he arrived at the institution, but a gen- eral breakdown from overwork caused | him much trouble. Recently appendicitis developed and the prelate rapidly sank. an operation, which was deemed neces- sary, being impracticable, owing to the| enfeebled condition of the patient. | No arrangements have been made for | the funeral. ' In the death of Archbishop Kain! the Roman Catholic hierarchy in the Uni- ted States loses one of its strongest and most brilllant members. Though not an old man the thirty-seven years of active conscientious devotion to the dutles of the several offices that he successively | told on his health, and finally | brought him to a comparatively early end. | John Joseph Kain was born ,of Irish parentage at Martinsburg, Berkeley West Virginia, May 31, 184l | of St. Charles at Ellicott's Mills, Maryland, he completed the courses in theology and philosophy at St. Mary’s College, Baltimore, then rated as one of the leading institutions, of the country, | ! and was ordained priest July 2, 1866. His first pastoral charge was at Harpers Ferry, where he remained for several doing duty at the same time In other parts of the West Virginia country | bordering on the Potomac. ! May 23, 1875, he was consecrated Bishop | of the diocese of Wheeling, which covered mainly the mountain Virginia. in 1893, as coadjutor Archbishop Kendrick of St. Louls. On the death of that eminent prelate, in 1896, Bishop Kain succeeded to the charge and duties of one of the most important archdioceses of the count Some months ago his health began to! portion of West From Wheeling he was sent, to the Most Rev. be seriously impaired, and he was re- lieved of the active work of the arch diocese by Bishop Glennen of Kansas City, who was appointed as his coadjutor. O = — e ? | | i H | | JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN'S SUCCESSOR IN WHO IS IN ACCORD WITH HIS THE FISCAL POLICY. /fl'// THE BRITISH CABINET, PREDECESSOR’'S VIEWS ON THE | i QUESTION OF [ ONDON, Oct. 13.—Colonial Secre- | tary Lyttelton issued an election { address to his constituents at Warwick and Leamington to-day, in which he says he is in entire agreement with the fiscal changes which | Mr. Balfour and Mr. Chamberlain to- | gether advocate. Littelton holds that igate the inequality of foreign competi- tion and to negotlate effectively for a reduction of foreign tariffs on British goods, by having the power to impose taxation on forelgn manufacturers. The Colonial Secretary 1Is convinced that the empi ted together by strengthening the com- mercial ties of its varfous parts by prefer- ential tariffs and to secure closer ties with the colonies involved a readjustment of the taxes on food, pecullarly affecting the poorer classes, who should therefore have {a full opportunity to minutely and delib- | erately consider the matter. It should, therefore, be distinctly understood that there is no proposal to impose preferen- tial tariffs for the colonies without fur- ther reference to the electorate. Joseph Chamberlain is confined to his DISASTER ENDG WHALING CRUISE The Joseph Manta Lost With Her Crew of Fifteen Men. FAYAL, Azores, Oct. 13.—The American whaler Joseph Manta has been wrecked on the island of Pico, one of the Azores group, and all on board were lost. She haziled from Provincetown, Mass.,, and carried a crew of fifteen men. PROVINCETOWN, Mass., Oct. 13.—The Manta was called the best whaler that ever fitted from this port, and was named for her owner of this place. She was commanded by Captain J. C. Frates, whose home was in' Fayal, where he leaves a wife. The crew were all Cape Verde and Azore Islanders, The Manta left Provincetown in Decem- ber of 1900 for a three years’ cruise In the North Atlantic. Since salling she has landed about 1900 barrels of sperm oil at the Western Islands for shipment to this country. ; —_— Loses in a Race Against Death. CHICAGO, Oct. 13. — A ‘race against death, which Walter H. Fleld of Port- land, Me., was making, came to an end as a Santa Fe train entered Chicago to- day. Field had been in Carlsbad, N. M taking treatment for tuberculosis. Find- ing the end near, he began a hurried trip East in the hope of dying at his old ROOS BROS. KEARNY AT POST Tell your grocer you wa- vour money, if Schilling’s Be are not good-enough for you IERCES RESCRIPTig home. He could hardly speak as he boarded the train at Kansas City last night and when the porter sought to arouse him to-day he was found dead. —_————————— Disabled Cottage City Arrives. VICTORIA, B. C., Oct, 13.—The steamer Cottage City, reported disabled in the north, arrived here this evening under her own steam, her engineers having made temporary repairs. The low-pres- sure cylinder had broke, filling the en- gine-room with steam, and the rods, pis- tons, etc., loosened as a result, causing quite a break-up before the engineers were able to shut off steam. SAN DIEGO, Oct. 13.—A. V. Lomiell, the Mexican Consul at this place, received notice from his Government to-day that he has been transferred to the consulate at Laredo, Tex. He will leave for bis new post in a few days. the Government should be enabled to mit- ould be further knit- | =\ | bed at Highbury, his residence at Bir- | mingham, by a sharp attack of his old enemy, gout. He hopes to have suffi- clently recovered to keep his Newcastle engagement on October 20. Lord Rosebery spoke to-night at Shef- field, whither he went in order to defirite- ly record his opposition to Chamberlain’s fiscal policy. He was greeted with the ut- most enthusiasm by an immense audi- ence, which he held in rapt attention for | an hour and a half. Lord Rosebery delivered a charactertis- | tic speech of brilllant rhetorical denuncia- tion of protection, jnterspersed with clever and caustic allusions to Chamberlain and the predicament in which te had placed the Government. Lord Rosebery delivered a characteris- fute Chamberlain’s contentions by argu- atistics or a detailed examination proposals. He confined himself to generalizations. He evoked applause by describing Chamberlain as the real head or the present Government, In reference to Balfour's attemnts to gag parllamentary discussion of the fiscal problems, he said: ““You cannot prevent a storm by sitting on the barometer."” L e e e | Angeles, adjustable window shade fixture; Le- GOMPERS ADVISES NEWYORK UNIONS Urges Building Trades ~to Call Off Their Strike. NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—Tn a letter to the bullding trades unions of this city and vicinity, made public to-night, Sam- uel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, and James Duncan, secretary, have recommended that the | unions agree to the plan of arbitration of | the Employers’ Association. This action, which comes after Gompers' investiga- tion of the labor situation in this city. is considered a defeat for the building trades unions which have refused to sign the plan of arbitration. It is recommended that the unions which have signed -the agreement Insist upon the disbandment of £uch organizations as have been instituted recently as rivals to the previously ex- isting unions of the trade. Gompers also recommends that the unions be lenient with the members of the rival organiza- tions and afford them an opportunity to join the union ranks. Although seeing flaws in the plan of arbitration as submitted by the employ- ers, Gompers approves of it on the whole, particularly in the elimmation of the purely sympathetic strike, which is a weapon, he says, that has been brought into play to such extremes for entirely in- sufficient reasons that even its advocates now deprecate its use. “It fs, therefore, not unnatural that a reaction has set in,” he coatinues, *and that the notion prevalls that all ‘differ- ences in disputes between employers and workmen can or must be adjusted by arbitration.” UNIONS ARE ENJOINED. Ohio Court Issues Sweeping Injunc- gtionina Boycotting Case. HAMILTON, O., Oct. 13—Judge J. G. Belden to-day granted one of the most sweeping injunctions ever issued by an Ohio court. It was directed against the Hamilton Typographical Union, the Ham- jlton Co-operative Trades and Labor Council and the Nonpareil Printing Com- pany, publishers of the County Trade organ. The defendants are enjoined from continuing a boycott on the Repub- lican News, or firms which advertise in it, and order that Interference of every . EOes . OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST| Several Small Postoffices in Oregon | and California Are to Be | Discontinued. WASHINGTON. Oct. 13.—Postotfices to ba discontinued October 31: California—Alexan- der Valley, Sonoma County, mail goes to Geyserville| Oregon—Lake,_ Coos County, mall to Templeton; Verboort, Washington | Courty, mail goes to Forest Grove; Logan, Redland and Viola. Clackamas County, mail | goes to Oregon City. Postmasters _ commissioned: Frederick J. Wheeler, Mono. Washington— Robert Murray, Silverton Fourth class pos master _ appointed—California, % San Diego County, vice How- | resigned. Callfornia— | Bruner, Hedges, ell N Baker, vy orders—Surgeon W. F. Arnold, de- for treatment at the Naval Hospital e Island, is to go home on three sick leave, Army order- to San Francisco, thence to the Philippt Edle goes from Columbus Ba | nes. ~ | The following patents were issued to-day: | California—John H. Adams, Alameda, hydraulic | | elevator; W. J. Bell, assignor one-haif to F. Moss. Los_Angeles, street railway switch Frederick E. Brooks ignor to Brooks. San Franeisco, roller assignor to Standard Roller Bearing Comp bearing; E. C. Chapm: Bottle Ciosure Company, Los Angeles, closure Robert F. Covert, Sallda, snap hook; William H. Fletcher, Capitola, a burglar alarm: Jam H. Gray, gold-saving apparatus for dredgi: machines (reissue): B. H. Green, Los Angel steam boller; Howard Harris, assignor on half to W. J. Gorham, San Fran wheel rim; Frederick W. Jones, | hydraulic indlcator; Theodore W. Lowe, Stock- | | | ton, windmill; Walter J. Mathews, Oakland, columbarium cell: John MecDermott, West Berkeley, alr draft heater; Milo E. Rice, Los gnor two-thirds to J. Yule roy Robertson. a and L. W. For: Oakland, combination | cane; Edwin Wadey, Los Angeles, window | zash: Willlam A. Williams, San Francisco, | flushing tank; Charles R. Wilson, San Fran- | clsco, fruit pulp machine. Oregon—Joseph G. Evans, Baker City, draft equalizing clevis; Stanton Ray. assignor one- half to T. Taylor, Portland, joint support (re- issue). Washington__Henry O. Fry, Cosmopolls. as- | signor one-half to E. A. Stover, Portiand, gauging and counting attachment for wood- Working machines; Sabin A. Gibbs, Tacoma, motor; George D. Potter, Spokane, breech and loading break-down gu —_—e—————————— WILKINSON TESTIFIES ABOUT PRISON BREAK Warden of Folsom Declares That He Had No Intimation of Conspiracy. SACRAMENTO, Oct. 13.—Thomas Wil- kinson, Warden of the State prison at Folsom, was the principal witness to-day at the preliminary examination of John Wood and James Murphy, convicts charged with the murder of Guard Wil- liam Cotter in the break of July last. The Warden gave a graphic description of the assault upon the office of Cap- tain Murphy. He told how the armory was robbed of guns and ammunition, and how the officers were taken from the prison grounds under threat of being killed by convicts armed with knives. He | testified that his relations with the subordinate officers had been very friend- ly. He did not know there had been a conspiracy, but realized that one had been formed when he saw the armed convicts rush into the captain’s office. L ol sort with the company’'s business must stop. The boycott was to force the plaintiff to unionize and abandon its open shop poliey. POISON FOUND IN WATER. Sudden Illness of Militiamen at Camp * El Paso Is Now Explained. CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo., Oct. 3.—City Chemist F. H. Martin of Colorado Springs has analyzed the drinking water which caused the illness of sixty-eight militiamen/at Camp El Paso last Thurs- day, finding that cobalt was present in the proportion of one and one-half grains | to each gallon of water. “We are convinced from the result of the examination,” said Dr. P. O. Hanford, surgeon-gene! of the National Guard, “that the poison was placed in the water by persons unknown.” DENVER, Oct. 13. — Governor Peabody to-day instructed Colonel Edwara Ver- deckberg, the officer in command of the troops at Cripple Creek, to reduce the force there to 500 men. Nearly 50 men will be relieved from duty at once. } | SIS HUSHAND THIED T0 KL Wife of Colonel Griffith Files New Com- plaint. Sensational Features Intro- duced in a Los An- geles Case. i s Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 13.—Mrs. Griffith J.Griflith to-day-made the most sensa- tional charges yet brought against her husband, Colonel Griffith, who is soon to be tried for the alleged attempt to mur- der his wife in Santa Monica. In his answer to his wife's recent peti- tion for divorce Colonel Griffith made the | assertion that he had always been a kind | and loving husband. Mrs. Griffith now files an amended complaint in which she| swears that he manifested his loving con- sideration by trying to murder her three months before the Santa Monica tragedy, by trying to murder her with a loaded revolver, by making a brutal assault upon her, and by cheating her out of her prop- erty. Mrs. Griffith sets forth that last May in their apartments at the Hotel Fre- mont, this city, Grifith armed himself with a revolver and threateningly com- manded her to accompany him to another room. She declares she reasonably sup- posed that he intended great bodily harm and possibly murder and refused to go Snecial Judson, of the bride locking her sleeping husband a companion whose WIFE LENES WHEN SPOUSE 1S PRISONER Sensational Aftermath ofa Marriage in Port- land. = D Says She Locked Her Hus- band in His Room and Fled. Seven Years’ Engagement Ends in a Wadding, but the Police Are Called to Have Part in Marie tal Differences Special Dispatch to The Call. PORTLAND, Or., Oct. 13.—After being engaged for seven years to Miss Lucy nfece of Colonel R. C. Judsonm, industrial agent of the Oregon Rallroad and Navigation Company, Leo M. Cutts married her here on September 15 last. To-day dispatches from Walla Walla tell a hotel and departing h unknown. enant in the Phil- who was a lie with him. She declares she was forced " met Miss Judson in St. Paul in into a violent struggle for escape and |37 anq became engaged to her. His managed to get away through the sudden | mother lives in Washington, D. C. The arrival of their son Adell. family is said to be well connected. On About 1900, she further avers, Griffith from Manila Cutts was ill for violently assaulted her in their apart-| gome time in San Francisco and came ments at the Hotel Nadeau, seizing her | to Portlan months ago. Im- by the arm and throwing her forcibly | mediately after the wedding people who upon a chair. These acts, she complains, | gecupied apartments in the same build- caused her grievous bodily pain and men- | jo a5 the Cutts began to tell tales of tal suffering. midnight w - Mrs. Griffith alleges that prior to their | A climax was reached when Cutts found marriage she owned property worth |, note wr by his wife to a male $250000 in her own right, the es-| griend detal the se she suffered at tate of Andreas Briswalter beIng | tne hands of her spouse and asking ad- then in litigation. Five days before their | yice. A parting was followed by a re- marriage, she says, Griffith told her she | conciliation and the couple left for a trip would be better protected if she would | ¢prough Eastern Oregon. The following execute deeds to him; that he would ful- teh received to-da ly protect her interests and hold all the | .ywALLA WALLA, Wash., Oct. 13.—A property so deeded in trust for her and ' 2 woman, as rigidly account for it all after the Bris- s B walter estate was settled. Accordingly, she says, she deed to her half brother, L. 11 o'clock to-night, on her way to Chi- January 22, 1 At the requ | cago, if her plans ‘do not miscarry. The fith the property was then conveyed to| woman is fleeing from her husband, to him. She alleges that after thi whom she says was married in Port- ecuted divers mortgages and deed to him for consideration. | land Se o she says has tember and w property . N. | already whipped her twice. gives She 3 sed a full set- | of Mrs. .. M. Cutts, and Is tlement as soon as he could realize money | v a handsome young man. from a sale. Instead of th police think the couple are eloping. he mortgaged it and proce frs. Cutts sent for a policeman im- & h s mediate on her arrival here. She told termingled his .+ - | him that she ha. locked her husband in She avers that he now has fully disposed e room in Milton, Or., and had of all property she deeded and that he|goq to the train under police protection converted at least $200,000 of her money t0 | (pere “ ghe declined y to see any his own Now he refuses to account | gne put the policeman : for it, s. 1 o s SRS = —_——— Acid Causes Woman’s Death. Insane Man Cuts Off Wife’s Nose. - 12 _ | HONOLULU, Oct. 7.—John McCabe, a SANTA CRUZ, Oct. 13—Mrs. J. W. | inool teacher at Heela, vesterday as- Haesters, wife of the proprietor of Villa | saulted e with a razor and oft Fontenoy, in the Santa Cruz Mountains, | died this morning from carbolic acid poi- ning. She had been ill for some time | and ended her life. | “abe has been a teacher in for many years. He is Ballaved 65 been temporarily insane when he made the a: % ADVERTISEMENTS. it makes no difference clothes inside or out, you w there. The workmanship, lini antee. and it makes no differénce the garments. der here, for we are satisfy as a natural consequence. Suits to measure from 740 Market ways consistent with the material used. The best proof you have of this is our guar- If the lining in your suit wears out before you think it should we will re-line it free of charge, We know we can please you if you place an or- It’s your first order we solicit—the second will come Suits for out-of-town customers satisfactorily made to order through our self-measuring system-- SNW00D s(0- Cor. Powell and Eddy Streets A A AN AN whether you look at our ill always find the quality ngs and trimmings are al- how long you have had ing thousands of others. $10 up to $33. write for blank and samples. Street and

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