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FRANCISCO CALIL. TUESDAY EBRUARY 9. 1904 FAINE'S CELERY COXPOUND. Tired and Overstrained=—Now Strong and Well—These Thankfu! Women Send Their Praise for PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND. ’ ‘When Stra v Burned Out by of Toil and Care It Gave New Nerve Force. o FLORENCE WORDEXN, Niece of Rear-Admiral ‘Wordez. B R — Me.” EINCE WORDEN. e 306 N. 11th st health cures Hea lgia. Indige and Insomnia. e | % | | | | | ! $ s ! ; B T T T T R It purifles for bad 1 a word, Pa £l es new life to wo- and despondent. +essecsesrsscccecsseossss or + “Energy, Confidence and Health— ¢ $ gimply matters of zood vital force— ¢ . . E B M M . . i A [ARVES | DRCNKEN MAN . I ALUTH ~ “ < A 1.i'U\L[ ) ) i & mp Bemains in a Freighter | Chief of Police of Grants Pass, N s Without Food or; Oregon, Attempts an Arrest \ " Several Days and Reeceives Knife Thrusts | : < = ] x e ANTS PAS 2 SEMENTS. ¥ o i THOMAS SAYS HIS WIFE IS TLL WITH APPENDICITIS Others Claim. However, That Spouse g PODYCE, Is Suffering From Result of AND L AR ANTREA Recent Accident. e o X NEW YORK, Feb. 8.—Mrs. Edward oy e , who has been abroad, was iionaire Thomas toid the pier that Mrs. Thomas ing from appen follow- . the effects of which she had overcome. e e———— DEATH BY HANGING FATE OF THREE MURDERERS Judge Palmer of Denver Punishes Slayers of Mrs. Amanda Young- blood With Death Penalty. DE 2, Colo., Feb. 8.—Judge Palmer sentenced Frederick Arnold, Newt Andrews and Charles Peters, the ang men who killed Mrs. Youngblood last New Yea hanged in the week begin- An appeal will be taken Supreme Court to test the con- of the hanging law. —_———— Californians in New York. NEW YORK. Feb. 8.—The follow- ¥ Amand. M to the tionalit goes farthest, is most concentrated; b v rnians are here: From San Francisco—Mrs. Ardleight, at the Continental; J. W. Cutbert, at the | York; G. H. Hook and wife, at the | Park Avenue; H. S. Howard, at the York: J. Iny m, at the Grand Union; Mrs. M. B. McMahon, at the Park Avenue; S. Myerson, at the Raleigh: J. Wiffin, A. McAmara, D. A. Suther- . 4 3 . yland and J. Worth, at the Herald IeppeT is 5O common In gin | Square. = _ | From Los Angeles—W. G.'Emerson, ger, vou not know th | A. H. Helson, at the Holland; Miss A. M. Wessell. at the Imperial. SO S Life Imprisonment for Wife Murderer. ELDORA, Iowa, Feb. S.—Eben S. Blydenburgh, who recently” was con- vieted of having murdered his third wife by poisoning, was to-day sen- tenced to imprisonment for life. The trial lasted seventeen days and was sensational. Bilydenburg's two other wives also died viclent deaths. may taste of pure ginger. The sam even more true of pepper lling’s Best everything A% e eocer v @oneyback 1 rme 3 ~ alsl MAKES CHARGES I 4. 4 OF CONSPIRACY NOPIRACY | President Coleman of United Carriage Company Says Men Have Been Muleting Concern e a deep laid conspiracy combined around the Palace that have gainsd of the manths t veral estigating ct that a fum- other employes of o defraud eby the latter were fares and turn them ren, who, by means of were to divert a cer- = company’s revenue > pockets of damaging ev plo carriage com- or years reposed the greatest foremen and other em v are said to have The method de- of er' was engaged of four to the Ocean ved the proper fare, he t back a single load to within a close Jistance of tel and turn in a fare h the fixed rate for the ance. The balance of the fare collected would then be actual applied to the fund of the alleged con | spirat. ths divided among the men in the st how long 2 ring among the em- es existed and the approximate amount the company has lost through | the dishonesty of it men is a matter ¢ speculation and probably will never | be known. | evening, Barry Coleman, president and | manager of the carriage company, said: “Our investigation proceeded far | enough into the affairs of the company to thoroughly satisfy us that the com- pany has been badly muicted, but to what extent we may never learn. Be- fore we took any definite action against those toward whom suspicion was di- rected we had accumulated a pre- ponderance of evidence of their guilt and then promptly removed them from | the company. been with us for years, particularly the | who had enjoyed our confi- | | foremen, dence.” A number of the men dismissed yes- Itvrday loudly protested their innocence | of any crooked work, but Manager Discussing the matter last | Many of the men had! | | | | | 1 | DEATH CALLS A PROMINENT 'PREFERS DEATH [SALINAS GIRL 10 STARVATION' [N PRISON CELL Los Angeles Woman Goes to Young Woman Arrested in Port- San Pedro to Drown Herself| land Tells of Her Political and Her Four Little Ones| (areer in Monterey County CUPID OUTWITS IRATE PARENT| BUSINESS MAN = - Society Belle of Colton Stealsi{- Away to Los Angeles to Mar- | | ry the Man of Her Choiee% | —_—— LAN CLEVERLY EXECL‘TED% {1 fiaidisnt :LWADES OUT INTO THE BAY | NOW HELD AS A VAGRANT iCitizens Go to the Resene and | | After Providing Money andf Food Send the Family Homel P Bride’s Father Makes Hurried | Trip to the City, but is Tee| Late to Prevent the Union! Prisoner Was Employed as a Cépyist in Recorder’'s Office in This State During 1890 | — |1 | H ISR | | . _SAN BERNARDINO, Feb. 8—Cupid | ! | Special Di to The Call. Special Dispatch to The Call. : sl has been busy and one of the most | SAN PEDRO, Feb. $.—Mrs. Hannah 0 % % s - g PORTLAND, Feb. S$—“My word | charming of the society belles has | Martin, a middle-aged widow, sick and | [ oy ooy Setd. Sag P Bisie T l eloped and become a married woman. | | Colton has not been stirred for many! | moons as it is over this present elope- | | ment and the pretty romanee promises ‘1 to furnish a topic for the sweli set for | v a day to come. This afternoon, Stella Hebberd, the young lady in | the present affair, announced to her parsnts her intention of attending a| | demented, made a desperate attempt i to drown her four ehiidren this aft { noon. Mrs. Martin lived in Los S it ok Bhe. viasd T | Angeles, where her husband died two | o €7 <% TOS FECS O . yporiin e s, “anil dhdl Bl IVING" hard | B Policy Comt to ahy’ & stalemunt | to keep the little brood of four regarding a charge { gether. The children are Elmer, aged | asaimst her | 13 years: Lena. 3; Louis, 4, and E | aged 2. The strugglie was too hard an the authorities were planning to put ithe children. in an orphans’ home der of Monterey ¢ said Mrs oty. California,” Belle Perkins this merning when the b oman does o rge. sentence. he hardened ap- neither does she The was joined by a young lady friend, who £ accompanied her to this city and saw ! her safely on board the Santa Fe train { Rather than be separated from the nal, ailhuu-gh | for Los Ang The friend then | children, the unfortunate woman ing a watch | them that for there are numerous questions which | < £ A CROCKETT. priests must be satisfled upon before| A 1 G b Di 1R & SEw MmENEI UM SRRIE. W22 | state connel) of 8 | they will consent to umite two fond | AFTRUr GQruenpberg LIes sent to Los Angeles to-night in was held h rs and at certain periods in the | | brought them to San Pedro this { ing and selécted a secluded spot kn as “Crawfish George's Cove.” She d ! | | funetion in this city. On the car she! * i | | | posted a letter which the young lady f\h had written to her parents informing she had gone to Los An- geles to become the wife of Peter Fil-| | |robed them and herselt and, star anc, whom she had come to love with| | naked. with the baby in her arm: increasing devotion. This evening her | | | waded out in the water, trying to per- father, W. C. Hebberd of the firm of | | | suade the older children to follow. He T. Hebberd Company and one of the | | | peculiar action attracted the attention n 1890, Her was a Reputy Re- here and went s said was afterward oid fisher- d wealthiest men of this vicinity, was | | fairly stunned he opened the en- velope and read its contents. He followed his daughter to Los | Angeles on the next train, but arrived | of “Crawfish George,” an | man at the cove, who gan to town a | got several citizens to accompany | to the scene. They arrived in time to | | prevent the mother carrying ot she ba too late. Peter J. Filanc had not plan, although had the planned such a romance for nothing, | | Emma, under water when the rescuer ALLIANCE and before he left for Los Angeles | arrived. Tht family were taken to a NNUAL MEETING Sunday he had arranged with Miss| | POPULAR YOUNG BUSINESS | restaurant and given the first 2 i Hebberd that he would not send for | MAN OF THIS CITY WHO | they had tasted for twenty-four hou Orzanization Elects State Officers and her ‘unless all arrangements for the | The woman ate but little, but the Members Are Entertained ] FESTERDAY. S e children ate as though they were fam ished. A subscription of $30 was raised marriage could be made satisfactorily, at Crockett. and loving harts. The lucky groom is | | the charge of City Marshal Baker. the sole heir to an estate valued at| $150,000. His mother is a descendant of | the famous Salazar family, one of the most aristocrgtic and influential fami- lies of the old Spanish regime, while the late Mr. Filanc was a nobleman of the old school, whose family had for centuries been noted among the pastor- Suddenly at Home in This City. McKeon * % and Deane, was deputy sheriff during Lackmann's incumbency in pffice and a bailiff in Judge Troutt's court. The dead man was a native of Boston and lived the greater part of his life in this city. He leaves a wife and three chil- 1 to order a were presen ers for the pasty to be benefits) nated Refports of o wed the to irsements death benefits, other expense: Arthur Gruenberg, widely known in expired at his | home, 717 Fillmore street, early yester- commercial circles, The failure of M. L. Loekwood, or the largest operators in the Kansas ofl fields, assets and liabilities are $134.603. ure princes of the old world, always | day morning. Death was due to an ail- | dren to mourn his sudden demise. $12.420: me » rich, even as far back as genealogy | ment from which the wine man had i A . The following officgrs Were elected can trace them down to the present suffered but a comparatively short Pioneer Merchant Dead. State president, . o) time, and came as a shock to his| Ephraim Frank, a pioneer clothing family. dealer, dies U 1 p rank Chief Wi to hold his job, ap- = ol dIeN, N ,\T;hl,r:ht - parently, i of attempts to re- Gruenberg had a host of friends, and | {oF many years conducted the firm of ief still has a year his sterling integrity and stanch busi- | Frank Bros. at te treasurer, ires.” In [hess methods won him high esteem jn | SUreet- His sons. Trustees—T. e Poot® '€ | the world of trade. In addition to be- | 2nder: succeede ;- U ing manager of the large wine concern | 2 the sto - . A ?('13""- »a FAILURE OF KANSAS OIL he was engaged in other enterprises, fyfdh":”"}af:a"or . e of wr . OPERATOR I NOUNCED {204 was on the highway of success i ke — Fran D | ‘hen death visited him. He was bat | thFee =ons and six daughters.to mour B. O'Re M. L. Lockwood Foreed to the Wall by Debts Amounting to $250,000. Texas Bank Closed. INDEPENDENCE, Kans,, ‘Feb. §.— of is announced. His Habilities, s said, probably will reach $250,000. The assets are stated tq be close to $100.000. Lockwood is a heavy ope- rator in the Pennsylvania oil field. WASHINGTON, Feb. £.—The Comp- oller of the Currency has been ad- ed of the closing of th ational Bank of Maruder, Tex. Its It had a capital of $25.000. The aid to have been caused by the drop in cotton. —_————— ARTHUR SPENCER VISITS LAUNDRIES OF MILWAUKEE Trip Is Followed by Arrests of a Num- | ber of Chinese and Subsequent Production of Certificates. MILWAUKEE, Feb. 8.—Arthur Spencer, who was arr d in Pitts- burg on the charge of trying to sell Chinese false registration certificates, was in Milwaukee on January 20 and made the rounds of Mil%au laun- dries in company with Deputy States Marshal Durbin, and a num- ber of Chinese were sent to the county jail because they were unable to pho- | duce certificates showing they were entitled to reside in the United States. Some of the Chinese after a few days succeeded in producing the necessary papers and they were released. Some of the cases are still pending before a United States Commissioner. —_————— NEW TURN IN SAN JOSE WILL CASE | Judge Rhodes Reopens Litigation by Setting Aside Previous Order . in Piercy Suit. Citizens’ | fail- ¢ » United | his death. 32 years of age and had a broad future before him. T 0 Santa Cruz Pioneer Passes Away. The'deceased was the son of Mr. and | ] —P. J. Ryan, Frank P. ! Mrs. Max Gruenberg of %03 California| SANTA CRUZ, Feb. S.—William | 3 {street. He was a native of this city Henry Miller, for thirty-six years a cil adjourned at 9 p. m. " | resident of this city, died last night at | his residence on Garfleld street. For | Mrs, | Mmany years he was engaged in the | Loesh, Mrs. Kuhn and | drayage business and had ma me: brothers, | in his emplo; He was a very prom- | | Ralph and Carl Gruenberg. The funeral | inent Odd Fellow. will be held from the residence of his R G parents on California street to-morrow | Pittsburg Capitalist Dies. afternoon at 1 o’clock. | PITTSBURG, Feb. $.—Henry T < YT BT Oliver, the well known capi Patrick J. Walsh Is Dead. | master and politician of this Patrick J. Walsh, the well-known Re- | to-day after two months’ publican politician, died last night at|a complication of diseas his residence. 17 Joice street. Walsh had | years. been sick but two weeks with heart trouble. The deceased was a central| Passing of New York Banker. figure in the city’s politics for a num-| NEW YORK. Feb. $.—Louis Gans. ber of years. He had a host of friends | a2 well known banker and member and bore the esteem of all. He served | the firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., Is de; at his home in i bers were entertained by Crock and his wife, whom en years ago, s five SACRAMENTO, Feb. Pardee to-day issued a requis the Govern 8.—G ap- or of Oregon for the re- on -~ | as a Deputy under County Clerks Curry | ADVERTISEMENTS. (enuine Cravenettes Reduced to 38.85 1 SAN JOSE, Feb. §.—The contest for | the administration of the large e,m,;‘ of the late Mary Plercy has been re- | opened by an order made to-day by | Judge Rhodes setting aside the pre-| vious order submitting Andrew J.| Piercy as administrator of the estate of® Mary Piercy, deceased, as plaintiff | in the suit of Mary Piercy by her! guardian ad litem, Noble Hamilton, | against Edward M. Piercy. To-day’s! order is based on the order made a| few days ago by the Superior Court | of San Francisco rescining its prior order appointing Andrew J. Piercy ! administrator. —_————— Railroad Secures Bond Issue. | SAN DIEGO. Feb. 8.—The Los An- | “Owing to the fact that we manufac- ture our own raincoats from genuine Priestley Cravenette cloth, we have bsen doing an immense business in thess garments. In certain lines there are a number of broken sizes—hence this sale at the big reduction in price. The colors are olive, black, tan, gray and mixed goods. No color contains ail sizes, but the garments as a whole con- tain all sizes from 33 to 39 chest measure. geles Title Insurence and Trust Com- pany becemes trustee for the San Di- ego and Eastern Rallroad. The mort- gage or deed of trust’is to secure an | Coleman declined to hear them. Ex- | perts have been at work on the bopks !of the company for over a week hnd | they are still engaged on them, with a issue of bonds in the sum of $10,000,- | 000 and was executed February 2,/ 1904. The bonds are to be of the de- | nomination of $1000 each, to run un- | We have been selling these Craven- ettes for $10.00 and $12.50. The sale price now is $8.85. Mail orders filled—write us to-day. | view to determining within a possible | estimate the extent of the losses of the | concern and the date when the con- |sp[racy was formed. o —_—————— A Run on the Banks in This City. For the last few days there has beeg a run on the banks which puzzled the bankers. It looked like the uncalled-for ! run they had on the Oakland bank. By looking into the matter the bankers found out that the public has been draw- ing rather heavily to buy Furniture and Carpets at the big Retiring Sale of Pat- tosien Company. The depositors claim they can now make more money by buy- ing Carpets and Furniture at the Sale “than they can save on Interest in five wears. E ~ til March 1, 1949, or forty-five years, | dating March 1, 1904, and to draw in- terest at 5 per cent per annum semi- annually. ——————— Emperor Will Dine With Tower. BERLIN, Feb. 8.—Emperor Wil- liam has sent word to Embassador Tower that he will dine with him on Thursday evening. The Emperor dined with the Embassador at Kiel. but this is the firz: time the Emperor ever took dinmer at a United States embassy or legation and indicates the especially cordial relations existing between the Emperor and Mr. Tower, i SN'WOOD: 740 Market Street