The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 27, 1904, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

2" SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1904. 27, r IRATE HUSBAND AND OPERA SINGER v ATTEMPT DUEL AT A MARIN RESORT Southern Pacific Employe Discovers His Wife at Breakfast With a Stranger, and After a Stormy Scene and Trip on a Train Gains Possession of Child and Says That He Will Sue for a Divorce the Three-Year-0ld e 1 An angry 1in possession of | jo ly hour this morn- & & excitement at Pas- leclares that Sig- opera singer well known ¥ s sa ted the af- his wife. He asserts that | with her partments. 1 Mrs. Ed- nd the AY He de-| | Mmanded an exy d displayved evolver Mrs ards hurried | e room an € Russo’s of their ch who . his owr ms g the weay Edw uen ¥ s my ¢ w et Mrs. E rls ed & ¥ wards t e 1 shots © fired TAKES CHILD FROM MOTHER Edw e the prem cam S 2 ) 1 Mrs s A o ed b x - s San A When th esentati had } She has bees ine g music lessons fron £ | FRIENDS AID HUSBAND. e s = ald g k friend T ng at s I stay- | s x r ent in to | ss0 were | ' e st. I we 1 mer | >wed her, and a | fight 1 ssess the child fol- | Jowed ¥ &0 reay red with a shot- | gun. 1 other le interfered and | BUSHRELL e Te e g WERE PARTICIPANTS IN AN EXCITING AFFAIR | HE CHILD THE FATHER NATCHED FROM My K\}’-“l"‘w'n childhood, but their parents se- | of my | riously objected to their being married da she ing. They ran away and were mar- drew s I now find | ried in Harleyville, S. C., on October ir $100, besides | 16, 1809, She was 15 years old, he 29. of my salary. She | They moved to San Francisco in 1900. | 1y have her, but T want IK Edw | Pacifi | partment. | - ELOPES IN THE SOUTH. rds is employed by the Southern c Company in the auditing de- | Romantic Incidents in the Marital Life of Mrs. Edwards. Mrs. Laurie M. Edwards, the young | woman, has had a romantic career, | mother's statement. t seems, s. ¥ s wt seen this after- | wh Sav no was not | ACCUSES HER HUSBAND. I have hing much sa) but to that nduced me ave hom In fact, I never 1 him 1 was married until last 1 When my husband speaks of my taking all his savings it is not true n the bank was mine, not hi him $100 anyv d that is more t deserved. I should have done so. and had this 1 out and wi I do not love that woman. I do not love any man. I know what love but my heart was broken five months age I did ’t know this wo- man was ma ed She came to me as Miss Edwards, and was just the same to me as any other of my scholars. I tried to help the woman with her oice. She could not pay me, so I told | her that she could when she could go upon the stage Edwards and his wife are connected | with prominent Southern families. She was Miss Mary Thomas Smith of Sa- vannah, Ga., and ‘he 1s also a native of Savannah. They were sweethearts e A month DR. SHOOFP’S REMEDIES. on trial. ~ Dr. Shoop’s "Rheumatic (Wi for | Address Dr. Shoop Box 4630 [ ° o ‘ Frescriptions 34,406 and 7. | GUARANTEED CURE FOR XEN. | HARMLESE INJECTION. Cures ordinary | cases In & Tew days. Warranted to cure | N0 OTHER TEEATMENT | Prevents and Cures Stric- VENTS INTAGION. Harm- $2.00 for both bottles. For sale only ¥F. 5. XKELLY'S PRARMACY, 102 Eddy. wW. T. HESS, . Notary Public and Attorney-at-Law. genth Fioor, Room 1013, iaus spreckeis LIds. Telephone M - Residence, 1502 Mc - Residence Telephone Page 5641 S7EEKLY CALL. $1.00 PER YEAR | What Schilling’s Best doe< for a family: saves all care about et 8 xing-powder #pices coffee fAzvoring extracts soda and setti>s those questions once for a'l. At your groc r's; meneyback, | according to her | Five years ago she ar-old was a ! school gir! & avannah, aurie M. Edwards, who was a clerk at that time, paid her considerable attention. ‘\\ hen Mr. and Mrs. J. R. the wards, of 3 forbade | their daughter. they eloped. The result was that There were some domestic differ- ences subsequently. Mrs. Smith took :h"l daughter’s part. Last Saturday | morning, the mother says, she advised Mrs. Edwards to go to Fairfax. Neighbors who were intimate with | the family say that Edwards was de- | voted to his wife and child. Mrs. Ed- i wards returned to her home last even- | ing, but the husband and child did not put in an appearance at the Haight-street home. Mre. Edwards stated last night that she would ieave nothing undone to recover the child and with that end in view employed | Attorney W. H. R. McMartin to enter proceedings for divorce and custody of the child. Edwards has placed his case in the hands of Attorney E. J. | Hill and will also enter suit for di- | vorce. | T 0 155 | FARMER LOSES LIFE WHEN WAGON OVERTURNS Accident Near Napa Causes the Death of Man Whose Wife Committed | I Suicide. ' NAPA, April 26.—F. Beraldo, | while returning from Napa to his | home in the Redwoods last night, was |thrown from his wagon and Killed. | The accident occurred at 6 o’clock ;ahoul twelve miles west of here. In [the wagon with Beraldo were John | Caminada and John Reander. On |one of the steep grades in the road { Beraldo's hat blew off and he called | to Reander, who was driving, to stop. | The driver did not hear and Beraldo ;rea('hbd for the lines himself, but suc- | ceeded in grasping only one of them. | The team swerved sharply | side and the wagon struck a bowlder, { throwing the occupants out as it over. | turned. { Beraldo's neck was broken in the | fall and his companions were badly i bruised. Beraldo was a farmer and had resided in the Napa redwoods for several years. He leaves four chil- |dren. His wife committed suicide three years ago. He was a native of Italy and 40 years of age. —_———— Victim of Drunken Man Dies. CORVALLIS, Ore., April 26.—Ex- Chief of Police James Dunn, one of the victims of Chester Keady, died to- day in intense agony from his wounds. Young Keady, while under the influence of liquor, shortly after | midnight Sunday morning, resisted arrest, and in the fight that followed fatally wounded Dunn and danger- ously wounded Night- -Watchman Os- born. 2 - N dwards calling on | to one | l SAVAGES CAPTURE THE TOWN i Three Hundred Yaqui In- | dians Reported to Have ‘ Made an Attack on the Res- idents in Northern Mexico DEFENDERS KILLED | IN A BRISK BATTLE Are Burned by the Hehel{ Band and Another General i | i {Hotel and Other Buildings | | Uprising Is Now Expected | Special Dispatch to The Call. HERMOSILLO, Mex., April 26.—Nu-. merous dispatches from Ures, Carbo | and La Colorado to General Torres and | | Governor Ysabel add a new phase to i the Yaqui situation in Sonora. The| | War Department of Mexico recently de- cided to deport to Yucatan all of the Yaqui Indians remaining in Sonora, | whether or not they had taken part in | the troublesome revolts of the past few | months. | According to advices from Ures 300 Yaqui Indians who have been shearing wool, tilling the flelds and doing the | hard work upon the ranches in the Ures district rebelled when they learned | that they and their families would | eventually be included in the deporta- | | tion order. | The Indians assembled in the moun- | tains and a town called Batobabi was | first attacked. Manuel Cubillas and | Luis Estrada, who led the force which | | defended the town, were both killed and | { the Indians captured the place. Of the| fight at Tocolete and Los Paredones | ranch little is known, except that the | Indians were victorious and took pos- | session of both places. From Toco-| lete they poceeded to Rayon, an im- | portant mining camp, which had been | | ®arned of their coming and prepared | to meet them, but with little avail, as| the 300 Yaquis overcame the hurriedly | organized company sent out against | them, and some of the Indians who suc- ceeded in entering the town put the | torch to the Killen Hotel, which with several other buildings was burned. A runner carried the first news | the fight, while a party of five Indians | brought to that town resolution drawn up by the leader of the Yaqui| band, offering desist from hostil ties and go back upon the ranches if | the Mexican authorities are ready to | agree not to deport any more friendly | members of their tribe. If these terms | of peace are not accepted the Indians threaten to spread terror through all| the country round and defy General Torres. to e — SELECTS LABOR MEN { AS CABINET OFFICERS | Victoria Government Will Be Directed | Watson’s | i by Men of Choosing. MELBOURNE, Victoria, April 26.— | Watson, the lahor leader, has formed 1a cabinet, with himself as Premier | |and Treasurer; Hughes, Minister for | | External Affairs; Higgins, Attorney | General; Batchelor, Minister for Home | Affairs; Fisher, President of the | Board of Trade; Dawson, Minister of | Defense; Mahon, Postmaster General, ‘N'd McGregor, Vice President of the | | Executive Council. | Excepting Higgins, all the members iof the new Cabinet belong to the La- | bor party. | broken out in Major von Glazenapp’s CAGE COLLAPSES REPUBLICAN LEADERS WANT CANNON TO TAKE SECOND PLAGE ON TICKET Nomination May Be Forced Upon the Unwilling Speaker of the House of Representatives——-Indiana Convention Meets for the Naming of State Ticket---Democratic District Delegates Elected in Massachusetts PREMIER'S LIFE 15 ENDANGERED Assassins Attempt to Kill Spanish Prime Minister on His Way to Madrid| SHOOT THROUGH COACH Incident Causes Much Alarm, but No One Is Injured and No Arrests Are Made L el MADRID, April 26. — Premier Maura, who arrived here this morning, was shot at, but not wounded, while on his way here from the Balearic Islands. When between Alicante and San Vicente a bullet whizzed through the roof of his car. The accident created great alarm, but no one was injured. The official report of the incident given out by the Minister of the /In- terior says: *‘As the train was running between Alicante and San Vicente some persons fired and others threw stones. The gendarmes accompanying the train re- turned the fire. Neither the Premier nor the other passengers were hurt. Two arrests were made.” Later details show that the attempt on Senor Maura was an organized plot, between thirty and forty men armed with revolvers being concerned. A regular fusillade was exchanged be- tween the gendarmes accompanying the train and the miscreants. Many marks of bullets were found in the train afterward. ——————————— I DECIMATING THE GERMAN SOLDIERS DISE Typhus Breaks Out Among the Troops if South Africa and Many Deaths Result. BERLIN, April 26.—Colonel Leut- wein, Governor of German Southwest Africa, cables to-day that typhus he column. Seven deaths from the dis ease were recorded up to April 22. The column has marched to the mis- sion station at Otjihaena, which has been converted into a hospital. ———e——————— ND LI, TO DEATH MINERS F. Forty-Three Natives Drop a Thousand Fect and All are Kilied. JOHANNESBURG, collapse of a cage April 26.—The a in the Robinson | mine precipitated forty-three natives down a thousand feet to the bottom. All were killed. The bottom of the shaft is a quagmire of human re- Bt L S RS Ss A, Ont., April 26.—Minister of Cu erson has announced that the Go ernment Mitends strengthening its staff of tors in the United States, who will in- m Canadian customs officers of the home orted to Canada. At prese is said, there are many United States fir involcing thel ods at a speclal price and in this way escaping payment of the proper vty Continued From Page 1, Column 1. ‘W. Tillinghast of Johnston and: Al- phonse Gaulin Jr. of Woonsocket. The platform commends the admlinistra- tion of President Roosevelt and pledges him the united support of the | Republicans of this State in the com- 1 ing campaign. | b TRIUMPH FOR OLNEY. Bl Hearst Forces Routed in Massachu- setts District Convention. BOSTON, Mass., April 26.—Demo- cratle district conventions to elect dele- | gates to the national convention at St. | Louis were held in the fourteen Con- gressional districts of the State to-day, and in all but four the district dele- to the nomination of Richard Olney for the Presidency. Of these delegates, twenty-one are claimed for Olney, six are conceded to | Hearst, while one is unpledged and | non-committal. To the Olney forces must be added the four delegates at large elected and pledged to him at | the State convention. Of the eleven conventlons held out- | side of this city, fifteen delegates either pledged to or known to favor Olney were elected, six delegates were pledged | }and the twenty-one elected to-day the { Olney faction has a majority and | will, it is understood, enforce the unit ; rule of the national convention. { Against the unit rule the Hearst delegates will make a strong protest to the Democratic National Commit- tee. The greatest surprise of the day was occasioned by the result of the ballot in the Twelfth District convention, which was held in this city. Dedham, the home of George Fred Williams, chusetts, is in this district and Wil- liams was a candidate on the Hearst ticket. He and other Hearst delegates | | to Richard Olney elected. Delegates favorable to Hearst's can- didacy were elected in the Third Dis- | trict, which is represented in Congress by John R. Thayer, one of the fore- most opponents of Hearst's candidacy. t MILITARY ACADEMY APPROPRIATIONS PASS Many Amendments to Bill Made by the Committee Are Thrown Out on Points of Order. WASHINGTON, April 26 ate to-day passed the Military Acad- emy appropriation bill, the last of the supply measures. The amendments suggested by the Committee on Mili- tary Affairs for a reorganization of the medical and ordnance departments of the army and for the establishment of a number of campsites were thrown out on points of ordeF. Bacon con- cluded his tariff speech. —_————— Naval Militia Bill Favored. WASHINGTON, April 26. House Committee on Naval Affairs to- day authorized a favorable report on the Meyer bill to establish a naval militia and define its relations to the General Government. The bill extends to the naval militia all the privileges extended to the regular militia by the Dick militia law. ADVERTISEMENTS. gates were either pledged or favorable | iun(‘onditionn]l)’ to Hearst, while one delegate is unpledged. With the four delegates at large | leader of the Hearst faction in Massa- | were defeated and delegates pledged | The Sen- | — The! POPE DISLIKES LOUBET' YISIT a Letter of Protest to | All the Catholic Powers ! —_— |SOLDIERS ON REVIEW French President Witnesses Military Display and Com- | pliments King's Troops ROME, April %.—1It is reported that the protest of the Pope against the presence of President Loubet at the | Quirinal will take the form of a note | to 211 the Catholic powers. ‘! President Loubet to-day drove to the | Piazza d’Armi with Queen Helena, and reviewed 20,000 troops. M. Loubet and he Queen were accompanied by King Victor Emmanuel and the royal Princes and followed by several hun- dred staff officers and the foreign mili- tary attaches. The Pincio Heights, the Janiculum and Monte Mario, surround- ing the Piazza d'Armi, were occupied by several hundred thousand people, while military The King Vietor cheering and shouting, bands played the “Marseillaise.” to President expressed Emmanuel the high satisfaction with the efficiency and martial bearing of the troops, especially admiring the Bersaglieri, who with their quick step {and waving cock feathers in their hats marched past in their most char- acteristic manner. Returning to the Quirinal, through the city, the President and the royal par- ty passed .through the Piazzi di Spagna, where the historic steps of the Church of the Trinita di Mont} were entirely covered with flowers, producing a gorgeous effect. This evening the French President received in private audience each of the Embassadors separately. The | whole of Rome was illuminated to- night. ———— LABOR CONDITION HUNGARY IN IMPROVED | The General Strike Has Collapsed and | the Situation Is Reported as | Quiet. | VIENNA, April 26.—The |in Hungary has improved. eral strike declared yesterday at Gross-Wardein has collapsed. No | further disorders have been reported and the Government's victory is re- garded as ¢ le % B s YD IBRITISH BOMBARD A COAST VILLAGE situation The gen- | Town of IlNig in Somaliland Is At~ and the Sultan Captured. -—The town of Il- and, has The | tacked ADEN, April 2 |lig, on the coast of Somali been bombarded by the British. Sultan of Iliig was captured. A I AR SANTO DOMINGO, April planters have lodged a protest ican legation against the decree port dutles on sugar. imposing ex~ We can please you with a Spring Suit for *10 The jobber makes the mills. | clothes. Spring Suit for $10. the judge and jury. write for blank and sample. 740 Market St. and Cor. his profit. And you are . Surts satisfactorsly made to order for oui-of-town customers— NWOO0D§(® Powell and Eddy Sts. 3 If you are not having us make your clothes Il you are paying more than you need to. Other tailors buy their cloth from jobbers. We buy our cloth direct from the mills and are the only tailors in San Francisco that do not buy from jobbers and that can buy from We save you from $5 to $10 on a suit. If the evidence is not in the gar- ments you don’'t need to keep the We will make you a good fitting light weight It will be cut up-to-date from a pattern recently received from the mills. | We will agree to refund your money if the suit is not as good as any $15 suit you ever purchased from any other tailor.

Other pages from this issue: