The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 13, 1904, Page 33

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SU \DAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1904. MISCELLANEOUS. MARCONI WIRELESS ACROSS THE | ] One Can Send Com- mercial Messages. 3,500 les Across the Atlantice Wizard of Electric Waves Will Have Everything Ready for Public Service Before Christmas. January s most impor- sbt that Maf- rth from TWO more the present above fact: ir free twenty- et. containing the mation on _the the field of its rd of its achieve- its list of over over the and e. If you YOUR opportu- | 4 and non-asses- ptions in blocks $6 each for cash with our pamphilet »-OCEAN DAILY, a n board passenger other- welcome tc ne Marconi instruments in ope- call at our office Address all communications and make ks payable to F. P. WARD & CO., Bankers 408, 410 and 412 Crossley Bullding, San Prancisco, Cal. delphia. Chicago, Pittsburg, St. Louis You can write us in English. French, G .. Italian, Spanish or Scandina’ Phi AUTHORITIES OF AUBURN ARREST YOUNG WEBER ON THE CHARGE OF HAVING MURDERED HIS RELA TIVES N NS ADOLP/Y WEBERL.S furas joned as to acted after he = it was on owed any emo- District Attorney g on a recent companions 1ed to answer il Cor- elled hi do so the names of the y. Among those him the hunt , whose overcoat he to advanc on { { not meet again until The arrest of ccasion much surprise, as he you will - denied . When asked pistol in the replie deni havir or any 3 He admitted, hov looked at a pistol d also cartridges rtroom was crowded during Adolph was ADVERTISEMENTS. What SulphurWD;é; For the Human Body in Health and Lisease. | he mention of sulphur will recall to the early days when our grandmothers gave us our f sulphur and molasses and fall. universal spring and fall tonic and cure-all, , this old-fashioned rem- edy was not without merit. The idea was good, but the remedy was crude and unpalatable, and a large quantity had to taken to get any effect. Nowadays we get all the beneficial effects of sulphur in a palatable, con- centrated form, so that a single grain r more effective than a tablespoon- f the crude sulphu recent years, research and experi- ment have proven that the best sulphur, medicinal use is that obtained from lcium (Calcium Sulphide) and sold ug stores under the name of Calcium Wafers. They are hocolate coated pellets and con- he active medicinal principle of | in a highly concentrated, ef- ve form. people are aware of the value of this form of sulphur in restoring and | maintaining bodily vigor and health: sulphur acts directly on the liver, and excretory organs and purifies and en riches the blood by the prompt elimina- tion of waste material. Our grandmothers knew this wiien | they dosed us with sulphur and molas- | ses every spring and fall, but the cru- dity and impurity of ordinary flowers of sulphur were often worse than the disease, and cannot compare with the modern concentrated preparations of | sulphur, of which Stuart's Calcium Wafers is undoubtedly the best and most widely used. | They are the natural antidote for| liver and kidney troubles and cure eon- | stipation and purify the blood in a way | that often surprises patient and physi- | cian alike. Dr. R. M. Wilkins while experiment- ing with sulphur remedies soon found that the sulphur from Calcium was su- perior to any other form. He says: “For liver, kidney and blood troubies, especially when resulting from consti- | pation or malaria, I have been sur- prised at the results obtained from Stuart’s Calcium Wafers. In patients suffering from beils and pimples and even deep-seated carbuncles, I have re- peatedly seen them dry up and disap- pear in four or five days, leaving the skin clear and smooth. Although Stuart’s Caleilum Wafers is a proprie- tary article, and sold by druggists, and for that reason tabooed by many Dh!ll-i cians, yet | know of nothing so safe and reliable for constipation, liver and kidney troubles and especially in all forms of skin disease as this remedy.” At any rate people who are tired of pills, cathartics and so-called blood “purifiers,” will find in Stuart’s Cal- cilum Wafers a far safer, more palat- able and effective preparation. ! arms. | the great chamber. His made in a low voice, | distinct. He sat for of the time with his from his questione: t part averted face Toward the end of the ordeal he be- gan to look cross and peevish and his swers were more or 1l ss snappish. | COOLLY DISCUSSES MURDERS. Weber was dressed in black from head to foot, even to a high black stock about his neck. His hair was dishev- eled and hung down over his low fore- he; His eyes were bright and beady. The peculiar sharpness of his features was accentuated as the inquest come to a close and the hard questioning of the Di: t Attorney began to tell on him. He was composed to a marvelous de- gree and discussed the death and mur- der of his family without the slightest show of feeling. \ No verdict was brought in and at midnight the jury was excused and will Wednesday. voung Weber did not had inti- ing the afternoon that ken into custody. Du a conversation with correspondent Weber re- marked: “I know T am under suspicion. If I| | am arrested I Wwill talk, but I will not untii then. SHOWS GREAT INDIFFERENCE. erence and lack of emotion Weber have prejudiced his 5 of the residents i not e hibited | ed rela- their | nd calculating man- | He has cold a and aths in a ner. When he viewed the bodies of his parents, brother and sister he remained unmoved, and to outward appearances was not a bit more affected than if they had been total strangers to him. He has conducted himself in a non- chalant manner since the night of the terrible tragedy, and his lack of feeling has turned from him many who would have gone to his assistance under other circumstances. The murdered persons were all highly respected by their friends and neigh- bors, and when the funeral services were held in the little undertaking par- lors this afternoon these friends gath- ered around the flower-covered biers and gave way to their grief in heartfelt son who had been bereft of | those who should have been most near and dear to him stood as cold and grim as a piece of marble. To signs of grief did es kent continually room and appar- | wandering | May- hap it was that he had before him another picture—a prison cell and he thes occunant. | roving around ently his the thoughts were far from the scene of sorrow. The sc in the undertaking estab- ! lishment was a sad and impressive one. Three caskets, draped with | were arranged in One contained the with her | snow-white cloth, the back parlor. body of the murdered mother, her murdered boy clasped in On either side of this casket were those containing the bodies of her husband and daughter, who had met | death with her at the hands of the| same cruel, crafty murderer. IMPRESSIVE SERVICES. Services were first conducted by Mrs. William Watts, Mrs. J. Manning and Mrs. Ethel Seavey of Azalea | Lodge No. 117 of Rebekahs, of which | order Mrs. Weber was a loved mem- ber. The Rev. A. K. Glover of the Episcopal church and the Rev. J. P. McAuley of the Methodist church also officiated. The tension during the services was deep and intense and several of those present were so af- fected that they had to be led from the room. When the choir of the Congregational ! church rendered several beautiful | ‘hymns those gathered at the biers gave | vent to theix feelings in bursts of tears. Throughout the touching eremony young Weber, dry eyed, looked on. When the services were concluded he was one of the first to leave the under- taking parlors. The bodies will be shipped to Sul Francisco on an early train Sunday morning and interred in Cypress Lawn Cemetery. But it was not alone at the funeral services that young Weber aroused the {ll-will of those who heretofore had only regarded him as an eccentric character. At the Inquest being conducted by Coroner Shepard to determine who 1.‘ guilty of the quadruple murder Weber was, if possible, more defiant, cool and calculating. He did not show the smallest desire to assist the authorities | N 1 | sible, and the only in unraveling the mystery and nothing was elicited from him that might aid — o - ADVERTISEMENTS. THOUSANDS OF FAIR WOMEN HERALD PRAISES OF PE-RU-NA Catarrh and Catarrh- al Diseases Maks Invalids of More Women Than All Other Ailments Combined. NNETT ) A LINFORD <O~ cians Had G.ven Up the Case —Now Entirely Well. v 3. =2 | Miss Nalley’s Story—Short, but Interesting to Every Woman. 8 E Suffered Lonz With Catarrh. Miss Clara Case, 715 9th street, N. W., Washington, D. C.. writes: | “I can think of no event in my life| that fills me with more gratitude and at the same time a sense of future security as a cure after long suffering from ca- tarrh, brought about by using Peruna as directed. It has completely cured me."— | Clara Case. En‘ire System Tomed by Pe-m»na.g | Physi T D stre ce Presid teacher Buftalo, N. ss Gertrude Linford, cured me y given up m physicians case. I suffered w weakne or a long time rh of the kidneys. had a pain in th k. feet w. unde Miss Mary Bennett, 1619 Addison ave., ago, IIl., writes: A few months ago I contracted a cold by getting my feet wet and although I used the usual remedies I could not shake it off | 1 finally took Peruna. In a week 1] was better.’ After several weeks I suc- geeded in ridding myself of any trace of a cold, and besides the medicine had toned up my system so that I felt splen- | i entirely 4 too strongl If ycu suffer from catarrh in any form do not delay. Teke Feruna at once. D:lays are dancerous. I | | did"—Mary Bennett. 1al : M P — e g T = el = | YouNc RESIDENT OF FLACER | |to direct susnicion toward the dead, | TRANSVAAL GOLD OUTPUT | B | RED HIS FAMILY. | and thus shield the guilty. If such was | DAZZLES IMAGINATION | GOING TO MOVE? . . the purpose of the story, it signally | — s 3 - B | falled, for the autopsy heid on Weber's | Financlal Journal &Estimates That HOUSES mad COTTAGES ad: e DT body showed conclusively that the | Value in One Year Will Be | | vertised to-day. s When asked to view the bodies of his | wound which caused his death was not | Fully $76,000,000. | Read THE CALL'S TO LET dead relatives so that he might supply | self-inflicted. ' | | COLUMNS. It saves time. the identification required by the law,! he complied in a perfunctory manner. | To all questions asked him by the Cor- oner he gave the shortest answers po: time that he dis- played any feeling was when one of the | interrogatories implied that he knew | more than he had told to the jurors. i Then it was that he showed that he was becoming angered. His an-; swers from then on were snappy and | it w h a sigh of relief that he left the witness stand when the Coro- | ner abandoned all hobe of receiving | any from him. PLODE In some manner yet unexolained, a story was set in circulation last night | that the elder Weber had on several | occasions cuarreled with his wife. The story undoubtedly was intended | The statement published by our Go ernment that English enthusiasts are| looking for a future output of gold in the Transvaal $120,000,000 to $150,000,000 a year, is stimulating to the imagination, just as the realization of this prediction would be stimulating to the sveculation and busin of thej world. In the first six months of this year the output of gold in the Tran vaal amounted to about $38,000,000. | This is at the rate of $76,000,000 for the year. Last year's production amount- ed to over $61,000,000. The largest pro- duction was in 1898, being $79. The prospect is therefore that the pre The robbery theory was soon aban- 1 doned, for the pockets of the cloth- ” ing worn by Weber when he met death contained $100 and in the piano that was removed from the burning house by neighbors was found $40. From the outset young Weber inti-| mated that he thought the crimes had | been committed either by a madman or a robber. | No one could be found who had seen a madman or any stranger in| the vicinity of the house, or, in fact, in Auburn on the day of the murder, so the robbery theory, for a time, gained a few sunnorters. | The finding of the money on Weber's | body and in the piano exploded the remaining theory, and the officers com- o e Tenced their search closer at home, | duction of 1904 will nearly equal that of The sequel came to-night in the arrest| 1898—in other words, will return to the of young Weber. | normal yield of this region. Coolie la- bor has just been introduced into the Transvaal, and w labor r tinued inc yellow metal production s of from each the eno he effect on n hardly b vaal pro- $81,000,000, the ap- An increase roduction in the near 00,000 a year would lift duct of gold in the m of $400,- ous s Journal. ADVERTISEMENTS. Our Made-to-Order Suits Look and WearLike Much Higher Priced Garments Most every man wants out lookinz it. Our clothes look and more mopey. quality. We have reduced the still maintained the quality. Buying advantage- ously did it. Buying the cloth direct from the making the clothes in immense quanti parativelv small profits gives us an advantage over every other tailor in town. That’s why our $10 suits are the same in quality that sell for 15 elsewhere. That's why our $I5 suits are equal to the usual $22.50 garments. That's why our $20 suits are th2 same as the $30 garments of other establishments. All these reasons are " It’s worth your investigation. ~ Suils satisfactorly made customers through our self-m and samples. ‘Men’s Hats $1.95, $2.50 and $3.00. And that’s the very reison why he should have us mike his clothes. You see, we have reduced the cost of production and the clothes sell for a third less than must be asked by other tailors for the same See in our windows to-morrow the several priced hats in all styles which have made our hat department so popular—at $1.30, to be economical with- wear as if they cost cost of production and mills and 5 at com- found in the clothes. fo order for out-of-town irtng system—write for blank Night Shirts On special sale for Monday and Tuesday— sateen night shirts with or without collars; white, pink and blue; regular $1.50 values for $1.15. 740 Market and Cor. Powell and Eddy

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