The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 24, 1904, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANC YOUNG'S DEATH NOT SUICIDE Physicians Give Expert Testimony Against “Nan” Patterson —_— NEW YORK, Nov. Patt of C e ecross-examin CLAIMS OF THE DEFENSE. t £ ~N Pa BELIEVED IT WAS SUICIDE. examination ed Dr ¥ c Bes r Ques . sion f Dr. O'Hanlon's = . k o the rul ot Jus- point PAWNBROKER STERN ILL. The prosecution called Dr. S. Milton Lee to the stand to explain that Hey- P Stern, the pawnbroker who had identified the revolver with which ¥ S was too ill to appear Dr. Lee woulc to attend next week. nest A. Lederle, a chemist, who > pieces of skin taken e men are and using Gil- refuse to stropping or £5.00 as of is a conven- lent Razor. aise m.;l’ou—d;lf»d Ones, T ARD as Jow as K1 XET — At various ces. In great variety of high-grade nakes. styles and shapes. Some ex- 1lent ones as low as 81.00. ° RAZOR STROPS that you can de- on, THe up. bars Williams’ Shaving Soap, 15e 3 Razors ground and honed. Honing, kS : =Hc . Mail orders filled promptly. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Station 1008 MARKET STREET, Opp. Fifth, BSAN FRANCISCO. said | peritonitis, | THURSDAY OVEMBER THIEF CAUGHT BY A WOMAN <! Widow Clubs™a Prowler She 1ISCO CAL) 24, 1904, 3— I Finds in Her House and Marches Him Off to Jail [BURGLAR BADLY HURT {Surgeon Called In to Dress the Wounds Result of Severe Beating Epecial Dispatch to The STERLING, IIL, Nov. 23.—Harry Dyer is in jail nursing serious wounds as the result of attempting to rob the | home of Mrs. Anna Flannagan, a | widow, on Tuesday evening. | Mre. Flannagan was awakened by noise and the burglar in the itting-room. | | quilting frame, she entered the room | | and while the bur was ransacking the bookcase the woman pounded him saw on the head | him down. The ais- | | afmed the man, while he was daze | {ana ay woman then i the point of his own revolver | ;hn wis commanded ‘to walk to the police station, a distance of six bioc surgeon to take | A< soon as the burglar is able he will be taken into court and the | woman wiH appear inst him. | ————— | | WoMAN LOSES HFR LIFE AS THE RESULT OF DREAM Going to Investigate Iis Reality, She Drops Lamp and Whole Family Suffers. CHICAGO, N 3 1 result of Couet, {a dream Mrs. 1 41 years old, lost her life to-day and her hus- band and infant child were fatally burned in a fire that partly destroyed | | their home. | The woman dreamed that her sav- | n stolen from a hiding ings had be 1 test I would not Steamship Loaded With Ital-! trial and also to| jan Ste Passengers as an expert f the rage who extr grains| in Collision Off New York of W those pie said Levy R i B2 > | e Davis admonished the attor-| NEW YORK, Nov hcient ful in his remarks, | hundred Italian steerage passengers, jury to disregard the | r g what Italy on’ the steamship . ”gar'} > , were thrown into ex- r:-t"i:’{?v iy when the ship was ; rk in Ster ew York, New Haven | float - in the Island. The float mship about forty feet | nd two feet above the tearing a hole twenty feet | x feet high in her plates g it impossible for the vns-l late on the af iilroad berts » continue her voyage without E | nt of the collision | and a woman abou side of the ship toward the ap- | e morning of June 4, | Proaching fic When crash | i Bt Ehe oo 1 the Nord Amerika kuulerl‘ armingly many of the passen- | ghth avenue d One Hundr a full head of steam. tve woman to her t fifth street. The woman tly frightened, and thfi‘ dant in this case and one h difficulty in reassur- | ung. Young Ing em. | Patterson, the witness When the collision occurred the l was crying. Young ika was going down the | da i him to dr home and he did so. Cn the way down r pier at the foot of town he watched the occupants of the | West Thirty-fourth street at 1:15 cab through the trap in the top of the | a'clock. As she was passing the| hansom and she continued crying all | Statue of Liberty Captain Raffo saw | the way down to Sixty-first street, | on hi yoard bow the heavy steel where she left the cab. Crowley said | float a dozen freight cars aboard that Young and the man were intoxi- | coming directly toward him. Ac- | cated, but that Miss Patterson was not. | cO g to the captain’s statement he Albert Schieid another cabman, | thought the captain of the float in- witnessed the scene when Miss Patter- | tended to p it his stern and kept | put into Crowley's cab and he | on but the float came on | at full speed and struck the steam- ship. After the Nord Amerika regained an even keel and the passengers were son w his cours corroborated the testimony of the T vior witness. After Crowley drove away, he said, Young and his compan- ion called him and were driven to a house on West One Hundred and For- | quieted the returned to her th street. He noticed that both men | pier. The float, which had appar- rder the influence of liquor. ently suffered but little in the colli- MORGAN SMITH’S BRUTALITY. | ®l°™ continued its course. The scene between “Nan” Patterson | QUIETLY GATHERS EVIDENCE sf‘d her brother-in-law, J. Morgan RELATING TO BEEF TRUST Smith, which was referred to at length | : lzy Rand In his opening argument, was | Special Agent of Federal Bureau of described by Joseph Hewitt, @ mews- | = ¢ o ions Snends Week in boy. He said he was standing 4n front st o of a cafe at Fifty-nintnh street and Kansas City. Eighth avenue about 9 o'clock on the | KANS CITY, Nov. 23.—It was , night of June 3 when Smith and Miss | learned to-day that T. A. Carroll, a | Patterson came out and got into a cab. | special agent of the bureau of corpo- rations in the Department of Com- They were quarreling and as they got {into the cab Smith struck Miss Patter- | merce and Labor at Washington, had | son on the face. | been in Kansas City for a week qui- | “What did the man say?” asked Levy. | etly collecting evidence bearing on the | * “He said, ‘You'll have to do i an- | alleged packing-house trust. His pres- | swered the newsboy. | ence was not known until he departed : | late yesterday And what did she say?” I won't,’ and then he struck her | e and pushed her into the cab.” | WIFE OF MISSOURI FARMER Hewitt said he remembered the inci- | FOUND WITH THROAT CUT | dent distinctly and was positive in his | 4 | identification of Miss Patterson and the | Posse Takes Up the Case and Begins photograph of J. Morgan Smith. He; Search for the Murderer. | had noticed the couple particularly, he| ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Nov. 23.—Mrs. | said. | Géorge Gray, wife of a farmer near | “There is always a little quarreling | sgency, in this county, was found in | going around the circle, and 1 keep my | por home to-day with her throat cut .‘y»i ?pe; to see the fun,” the newsboy | 5ng her hands and feet pinioned. A explained. | pos search 7 ot G IO A L B posse is searching for the murderer, to identify a photograph of Smith and | HUNDRED NEW LOCOMOTIVES to testify that he had summoned Smith | FOR THE HARRIMAN LINES to appear before the Grand Jury and that Smith had failed to appear. He said he procured a process against yith a I. Philad. Smith on June §, but that he still hildi - ety elphia it, having be®h unable to serve it. A | warrant calling for Smith’s arrest for | FPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 23.—An or- contempt of court was then read and | der for the building of one hundrea markid for iinticsiie. locomotives ‘for the Harriman lines has been placed with a large firm in LONDON, Nov. 23.—The text of the arbitra- | tDIS city. Beyond confirming that the | gon ((r;:‘(ty ':awecn Sweden 7:: NT-.y and | order had been received, members of reat ain was issued to-night. It is iden- | the firm decline to say for which of tical with the treaty bet: “Britatn ¥ between Portugal and | pe Harriamn railroads they are to vessel were } S tom«nmedm-mem Great | {the pantry. Startled by the dream, | she took a lamp in one hand and her | | baby under other arm and want to g F e 4 | investigate. The lamp fell and ex- B P b ik ploded. Her husband, aroused from HER AGED PAR- sleep in an adjeoining room made a mpt to put out the flames i succeeded with the aid of a be built. The same firm recently but oniy after he, as welil booked an order for fifty locomgtives and child. had beer zht- for the San Pedro, Los Angeles and |fully burned. Mrs. Couet died while Salt Lake Railroa which E. H. | being taken to a hosnital. ! —————————— Harriman is interes ! —_————— LINCREASED EARNINGS Money Wired to the Coast. | OF SOUTHERN PACIFIC | NEW YORK, Nov. 23.—One million | P e g e M 3 six hundred thousand doilars was | Balance of N e Million Dol transferred by telegraph to San Fr: lars Applied to Improvements isco to-day by the sub-treasury for During Year. account of local banks. The money, it| NEW YORK —The report is understood, goes to move the fruit| of the Southern Pacific np; ; for crop on the Pacific Coast. | the fiscal year ended June 30 shows TE TR T e | that gros were $92,933,231, LIMA, Peru, N t—The American Fish i o increa 896, and that op- mmiasion batross arrived .to-day = il were $63,1 | erating expenses 594. Received as | Armed with a piece of | The third blow knocked | place in the bottom of a sugar jar in | ADVER' CATARRH OF THE LUNGS OFTEN FIRST STAGE OF CONSUMPTION ’ This Pretty | i = - Girl Saved ; L o , From | : 3 Catarrh of the : _ Lungs by REHIR. ' \ Pe=ru-na. Miss Florence E. Kenah, 434 Maria street, Or ““A few months ago | caught a severe cold, which settled on my lungs and remainzd thara so persistently that | became alarmed. | took medi- cine without ber.efit, until my digestive organs became upset and my head and back bzgan to ache severely and frequently. “l was adv:sed to try Peruna, and, although I had ittle faith, I felt so sick that | was rcady to try anything. It brought me blessed reiref at once, and |/ felt that | had the right medicine at last. Within three weeks | was completaly res’ored, and have enjoyed perfect health since. ““I now kave the greatest faith in Paruna.”’—Florsnce E. Kenah. cold Ottawa, Ont., writes wind WOMEN SHOULD slush BEWARE OF CONTRACTING CATARRH women | i Pe- ru-na Contains No Nareoties. symptoms of catching| . 0 O be taken. Colds lead | Per arrh in imp- . | tion. Delays are dangerous. | ru-na for Colds and Catarrh. | | Pe- | | e following interesting letter gives |#fe young woman's experience with Pe- | runa . i iss Rose Ger ad ipon the syste an of Crown eliminates catarrh b 1 ntly took . t where Pe: | caught lungs, mes t be drugs na. contained | Peruna for e and 1| nature D T sl mey Address Dr. Hartman, President of | S g B e e . Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, O took abor All esp After | remaine | which | ment of expenditures for reconstru betterments and additional The operating expenses .384. The net earn- 637, an increase of | the payment of charges there a balance of $8.874,483 toward the p OCEAN TRAVEL. was applied San Francisco tehikan | tion, equipment. increased $ 1gs were $2 lu.a;u 5 Port Townsend, S outh Bellingham. Dec. 1 N. Ry.: a at Vancouver ¥'s steam or Tacoma te P. Ry. t Bay)—Pomona, 6 Coroma, 1:30 Los Angeles and Santa Barbara— 18 reserved to change s t - | TICKET OFFICES—{ New M. :vz.m. ery st. (Palace Hotel),10 Market st_and Broad | way wharves 0 Market st TN ssenger Agent *Finland, Dec. 10 *Calling at T London and Paris ATEL. C TRANSPORT LINE .4 Yecrk—London Direct. Mesaba, Dec 3. 10 am| Manitou. Dec 10 am Minneha, Dec. 10, S am Menominee, Dec.24.10 3 DOMINTON LINE. | Montreal—Liverpcol—Short sea passage. | Canada December 10 | RED STAR LINE. Wew York—Antwerp—Lond. Calling at Dover for London | ® Dee. 10{ Kroonland Zeeland Dec. 17! Vadertand . WHITE STAR . H Wew York—Ousenstown—Liverpool. Cedric.Dec. 7. 5:30 am| Majestic. Dec.21.10 am E 7 Oceanfe, Dec.14.10 am'Baitic, Dee. 28, 10 am 24 . Roston—AQueenstown—! 1 3 Gymrie Dec. 2i. Jan. 2% f3 NEW YORK AND BOSTON DIRECT | Via Azores, Gibraltar. Navles. Genoa. | Alexandria. FROM NEW YORK. | RePUBLIC Dec. 1_Jan. 14 Feb. 25 ;cm:nc 3 Dec. 12. Feb. 4, March 18 FROM BOSTON ROMANIC . Dec. 10, Jan. 28, March 11 CANOPIC an. 7. Feb. 18 C. D. TAYLOR. Passenger Ag: | 21 Post st S ‘Oceanic$.s. t Pacific Coast WA, $ANOA, e ZEALANG ase sYONEY QIRECT UM 0 TaniT. §. §. SONOMA, for Honolulu, Samoa, Auc! and Sydney Thursday. Dec. 1. 2 p. m ! 8 S. ALAMEDA, for Honolilu. Dec.10, 11 a.m 8. S. MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, Nov. 25, 11 am. 1.D.SPRECKELS & BROS. 0., Agts., Ticket 0fice 543 Tar | ket Freight Ofica 337 Market SL. Pier 7, Pacils | COMPAGNIE GENERALE TRANSBATLANTQIL DIRECT LINE TO HAVRE-PARIS. | " Sailing every Thursday instead of fi | ®aturday. at 10 a. m.. from Pler 42, North River, foot of Morton st First class to Havre nd upward. See- ond class to Havre, and upward. GEN ERAL AGENCY FO! ITED STATES AND ANADA, 32 Broadway (Hudson building ew York. J. F. FUGAZI & CO.. Pacific Coast r 5 Montgomery avenue. San Francises Tickets sold by all Railroad Ticket Ag For U. S. Navy ¥Yard and Vallejo. Strs, General Frisbie, Monticello and A: Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensarys 629 KEARNY ST. zn';ou-m' i 834 for the treatment of Private g o rses e Boctor curewwhen Charges low. teed. Callorwrite. “al 16 Pages. $l per Year

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