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THE SAN” FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1905. SCPREME COURT ACTS OUICKLY —— e Confirms Decision of Appeal |Mrs. Cassie Chadwick Col- Tribunal in Harriman vs. Northern Securities Co. NO DISSENTING OPINION RSBEIFES EE, 2 New Jersey { Judge Who |Session Ends Abruptly When HER IRON NERVE GOES T0 PIECES lapses Completely and Has to Leave the Courtroom| FIRST DAY OF TRIAL ST g i | | | IssuedInjunction Affecting| Second Witness Takes the | 1INGTC March €.—The Su- e decision of the Circuit for the Third Dis- case of Harriman vs. the ties Company, involv- stribution of the shares in n Securities Company. The de- vorable to the company. of the court was Chief Justice Fuller. als ision by He CARLISLE AT MAY REMAIN MANILA FOR REPAIRS United States Government Gives Protection to Disabled British. Blockade Runner. Its ————— COLORADO MURD! PAY DEATH PE THRE] MUST ALTY Court Denies New Trials and Declares Capital Punishment Law Constitutional. Supreme > Go hanged next et Army Orders, ommand of the De- 1 March 31 o, Te- Francis ¥, from the ment of Cali- temporary com- vision on April 6. ADVERTISEMENTS. Notice (o Pile Sufierers We Don't Ask You to Take Anyone's Word for What Pyramid Pile Cure Will Bo. TOU CAN EAVE A TRIAL PAOKAGE FREE BY MAIL We receive hundreds of letters like 1 “I have been feeling so 0@ I could hardly believe it, after suffering with plles for a year, to nind that I am once more feeling like my- eelf. I wish you could have seen me before I started using Pyramid Pile Cure and Jook at me now, and you 1d say I am not the same man. I have gained twenty poundsfand all on eccount of Pyramid Pile Cure.” Wal- ter Sharkly, 56 Park street, Springfield, Mass. I bought a 60-cent box of Pyramid Pile Cure and used as directed with the most unexpected results, a com- plete cure. I have been troubld with piles for thirty years and was in much distress and passed much blood, but at present am free from any kind of I F. McKay, Weaverville, Cal. Pyramijd Pile Cure has been worth ousands of dollars to me; it cured ter using numbers of other reme- and taking medicines from doc- it “also cured my son, although suld hardly walk, eat or sleep; he w all righ B. Stringfellow, wster, Elkeo, 8. C. #vold an unnecessary, trying and expensive examination by a physician and will rid yourself of your trouble in the privacy of your own home at tri- fling expense. Afrer using the free treatment, which we mall jn a perfectly plain wrapper, you can secure regular full-size pack- ages from druggists at 50 cents each, or we will mail direct in plain pack- ege upon receipt of price. Pyramid Drug Company, 368 Main street, Mar- shall, Mich. the use of Pyramid Pile Cure you | | the United States to- | 17,300 Shares Is Reversed | Stand and Prisoner I-‘aiuts'PI'flm and GIEVEP, - CLEVELAND, O., March 6.—A | complete nervous collapse by Mrs. | je L. Chadwick brought the fi | of her trial to an abrupt close this | oon. | Haller of Oberlin, the second witness called by the State. was on the stand and had answered but two q tions when Mrs. Chadwick, who very pale, whispered to her attor- gey that she would be compelled to feave the room. She passed out quickly and on reaching the anteroom sank into a chair in a fainc. Two trained nur: who were in the courtroom Were hastily summoned and in a few moments Mrs. Chadwick was revived. She was in no ceadition to return to the courtroom, however, and Judge Tayler adjourned tne trial until to-mo! morning. It was an excit- ing day for Mrs. Chadwick and she took the keenest interest in all the pro- ceed. Seated close oeside her at- she scanned the face of every ummoned and frequently ex- her opinion of them to her ers In the afternoon, when Dis- Attorney Sullivan outlined the he expected to prove against her, Chadwick’s eyes did not leave his for a second. When her counsel, J. P. Dawley, ri to state her side of the case, her face brightened and she followed him a agerly as she had listened to Mr llivan, and apparently with more pleasure. T al made rapid progress to-day. was accepted within two s and this afternoon the opposing outlined their cases and the [ testimony was commenced. Twenty-eight wit ses have been sub- poenaed by the Government and as far can be as tained none has been oned by the defen e attorneys for Mrs “hadwick are nfident that the Government will be prove its cas its legal eology the = upon whi Chadwick is ned > against the of th con- > Government and the officials « 2 Citizens’ tional Bank of Oberlin, Ohio, to issue and negotiate certified checks when she had no money in the bank. e DEMENTED BOY SLAYS MOTHER Wounds -+ Mortally Father | at the Home of Parents in a New Jersey Town Dispatch to The Call March 6.—Richard an, twenty-one years old, the demented son of John and Augusta 1 of Bloomfield avenue, Glen- J., attacked his parents this fternoon. His mother died in Moun- nside Hospital. where his father ly mortally. hurt. man fi attacked his r with a hatchet, cutting her and then into the base- where he drew at his father. father's a revolver and One bullet lodged head above the left close to the heart and rd imbedded itself in the back *ad. The boy was in the act fourth bullet, when the is a cripple, raised his d struck his son on the wrist mpt_to knock the revolver hand, but in so doing broke a Prior young m attacking his father the who had been in the rear ent d the house and asked his her where his mother was. She is up stairs,” said the father. he not feeling very well and is Richard then went up the stairs leading from the basement to the second floor and walking into the room seized a hatchet which he had hidden behind a door and struck his mother two violent blows on the head. Her cries attracted her husband, but before he could get up the stairs the maniac had met him and fired the | shots. i Mr. Wakeman called for help and | his cries were responded to by Percy | Jacobus, a neighbor. When Jacobus | entered the house Wakeman stood at‘ the foot of the stairs. In the mean- time the son had left the house and | in a few minutes Wakeman, despite | his Injurles, had crawled up the stairs | and was beside his dying wife. At the approach of -Jacobus the | maniac fired a shot from his revolver | at him, the bullet just missing his head. Jacobus, fearing death, ran down the street in search of a police- man. Wakeman and his wife, who was Augusta Wakeman before her marri- age, were cousins. The son was born | with brain trouble. ———— DEFENDANTS FILE ANSWER IN SUIT BRO! HT BY MOODY | Trust Denies Being in Conspiracy to Control Paper Trade of United States. ST. PAUL, March 6.—The General Paper Company and the other defend- ants in a suit brought by Attorney General Moody in the United States Circuit Court against the so-called pa- per trust, to-day filed their answer to the bill, in which they enter a general denial that they have conspired to con- trol the paper trade of the States. United | ——————— DOWIE WOULD ESTABLISH ZION NEAR CITY OF MEXICO Unkissed Son of Chicago's Elijah | Makes Announcement of Father’s | Plan for Expansion. i CHICAGO, March 6.—The mission of | A. Gladstone Dowle, who visited Zion | City as the embassador of his father, | Dr. John Alexander Dowle, has been disclosed at a secret meeting of elders and members in high standing of the Christian Catholic Chureh. made public was the definite announce- ment that a new Zion is soon to be es- tablished near the City of Mexico, ! where Dowie now 1s. » mother, and she can handle a tiller or, BIERCE'S WIFE | by their contributions, will help to | ROYAL DEBUTANTE IS SEVENTEEN. Princess Ena Soon Will Make Her Bow in Society LS Ly IS KING'S NIECE it She Is Famons Yachtswoman RECUINE N LONDON, March 6. — Among inter- esting debutantes of the season who will make their formal entry into society at the first court held at Buckingham Pal- ace is Princess Victoria Eugenie | Julia Ena of Bat- | tenberg, usually | styled Princess Ena. Born on Oc- | tober 24, 1887, she 1 is now seventeen | years old, and as [ her photograph shows is quite a pretty girl, having inherited her full share of the good looks. that are tra- ditional in the Bat- tenberg family. The Battenbergs have not much ‘morey, and most of her girlhood has been passed with her mother, Prin- cess Henry of Bat- tenberg, at Os- borne Cottage, Isle of Wight. Hereto- — CE OF KING EDWARD, WHO WILL MAKE { | FIRST | | PRETTY NIE HER FORMAL ENTRY INTO SOCIETY AT URT HELD AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE fore she has taken o * no part in state or 1 scciety functions, and surrounded | popular here. by good influences, free from the arti- | Princess Ena's mother is the young- ficialities of court life and spending | est daughter of the late Queen Vic- | torfa, which makes King Edward her uncle. It was in 1885 that Princess ! Beatrice married Prince Henry of Bat- tenberg, who died in 1896. Ena is the only girl in the family and has three brothers—Prince Alexander, who is barely a year older than herself, and Prince Leopold and Prince Maurice, who are much younger. Queen Vic- toria, as is well known, was extremely partial to the Battenbergs and brought abcut a match between her favorite | granddaughter and a younger brother | of Prince Henry, Prince Louis, who is | soon to visit America in command of |a flying squadron. much of her time out of doors, she has developed into a wholescme type of | budding womanhood, high-spirited, full of fun and entirely free from affec- tations. Her favorite pastime is yacht- ing, a taste which she shares with her trim sheets in a thorough sailor-like fashion. it is a pity that because of her royal blood she will be subjected to such severe restrictions in the choice of a husband. The chances are that some petty German duchy will event- ually provide her with a mate, though an alliance with one of the native houses of nobility would be much more — ANCIENT CENTENNIAL | TO GO TO HONOLULU | Coaster With Long and Varied Past to Bring Japanese From Hawailan Islands. HONOLULU, March 6.—The Japan- ese newspapers here contain advertise- ; ments announcing that the stéamer Centennial, belonging to Charles Nel: ' son & Co. of San Francisco, will leaye | here March 25, and the steamer Olym- pia, belonging to the Oriental Trading Company, on April 18, to take Japanese laborers from the Hawaiian Islands to ths Pacific Coast States. The Centen- | nial, the advertisements say, will make | monthly trips between the coast and Honolulu. Sesen il MANY IMMIGRANTS ARE SCHEDULED TO ARRIVE SOON | NEW YORK, March 6.—Nearly 20,000 immigrants, forerunners of the spring rush, are scheduled to arrive this week. Last week 14,585 were brought in by thirteen ships. Of the eighteen ships scheduled to arrive, seven will bring 7578 Italians. Of the large number now coming from Ttaly the majority will go West. GETS DIVORCE Spouse of the Well-Known Writer Granted Decree by | ‘the Court in Los Angeles Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, March 6.—Mrs.! Ambrose Bierce, the wife of the well- known newspaper and magazine wriger, was granted a divorce in the Superior Court late this afternoon on the grounds of desertion and failure to provide. There was no contest. Service of the summons was admitted | and the defendant was represented by ccunsel, but no evidence other than that presented by the complainant was | adduced. The Bierces were married in 1870 and separated in 1891. For nearly fcurteen years they have not lived to- | that he was being severely criticised ASSUMES CHARGE |3 OF THE REMAINS Lieutenant Chandler Will Take Body of Wife, Who Killed Herself, toBaltimore KIRKMAN WOULD RESIGN Army Captain Said to Be Re- sponsible for the Tragedy Wants to Leave the Service OMAHA, March 6. — Lieutenant Chandler, who arrived in Omaha this evening to look after his wife's re- mains, positively declined to make any statement concerning the causes which led to her tragic suicide. When told for not having come to Omaha imme- diately upon being notified of the sad affair, Chandler explained that he had been ill and was not able to come earlier. * Chandler appeared to be very deeply affected by the circumstances leading ! to the suicide and feels very bitter toward Captain Kirkman, who is charged with. being the cause of it. Chandler will take the body of his wife to Baltimore, the home of her parents, for burial. Captain Kirkman is reported from Fort Niobrara to-night to have ten- dered his resignation from the army and to have requested that it be ac- cepnted at once. —_——————— MONEY FOR MERCHANTS IF THEY KILL ROBBERS St. Louis Chief of Police Will Pay OPHS CHOOSE THEIR EDITOR FOR THE QUA MORMON CHURCH p| DISMISSES HIM Former United States Sen- ator Cannon Is Disfellow- shipped by Brother Elders {HAS TRIAL AT OGDEN Accused Denounces Presi- dent Smith as Worshiper of the Idols of Mammon i SALT LAKE, March 6—Former United States Senator Frank J. Cannon has been disfellowshipped from the Mormon church for “unchristianlike conduct and apestac Cannon has been an eldefof the church. This ac- tion of the church authorities, which was announced to-day, followed a hearing in the city of Ogden before the local bishopric, with whom charges had been preferred against Elder Cannen, who is editor of the Salt Lake Tribune. The charges were based on editorial utterances of the Tribune, including “An address to the earthly king of the kingdom of God.” Cannon ad- mitted the authorship when called be- fore the court and reaffirmed his edi- torial utterances. The official report of the proceedings states that Elder Can- non, in answer to the question “Do you sustain Joseph F. Smith as head of the church?” replied: “No, as President Joseph F. Smith is leaving the worship of God for the wor- ship of the idols of mammon, and is leading the people astray.” TELLS STRANGE STORY OF AUTOMOBILE JOURNEY $100 te Man Who Slays % Safe-Craéke ST LOUIS, March 6.—“I will give $100 to any business man who kills a | 4 STANFORD STUD! EDITOR IN CHIEF OF COLLEGE ANNUAL FOR NEXT YEAR. | Woman Who Claims to Live Here | | “Cnarged With Vagrancy in Brook- safe-blower in the act of blowing open a safe in his place of business.” Chief of Police George O. Purdy of East St. Louis made this definite an- nouncement to-day to the members of the East St. Louls Police Department, | and instructed them to notify busi- | ness men that such reward was ready for any one who could kill a safe-| blower in action on his premises. Mayor Cook said Monday that he had discussed the situation with Chief Purdy and approved of the announce- | ment he had made. “We want safe- breakers .alive,” he said, “if we can get them that way, but dead or alive, we want them. ——————— WILL DO THE RIGHT AS GOD GIVES HIM GRACE TO SEE IT ed St m: col President Roosevelt Sends Message in | 1Y Reply to Baptist Ministers As- sembled at Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, March 6.—At the weekly meeting of the Baptist| ministers to-day, the following mes- sage from President Roosevelt was read: “God giving me grace and strength, I will do the right as He gives me grace to see it.” The message, which was an answer to one forwarded to the President, was_ received with great enthusiasm by the clergymen. —_—— BOUNDARY LINE DISPUTE IS FINALLY ADJUSTED te: fr iny m STANFORD UNIVERSITY, March 6—K. A. Bickel chosen business manager of the Quad, which the present sophomore class will publish next year. by the junior class. was spirited. and Bickel and Brennan won by a good and is a student in the English de- | partment. on the Sequoia and a member of the | English Club. He is the author of the | produced won the second prize in the story con- | ber of the Press Club and of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. NEW Thieves Loot Apartments of Dudley | 1yn Police Court. NEW YORK, March 6.—Calling her- self Mrs. Mildred Wilson of 46 Cali- fornia stréet, San Francisce, a woman | whé tells a marvelous story of making a trip across the continent in an auto- mobile and stopping incidentally at ‘Washington for a quiet visit to Roose- velt, was held to-day on a charge of | vagrancy in the Myrtle-avenue police court, Brooklyn. | The complainant is James F. Larby, | who says Mrs. Wilson engaged a room from him on Sunday and left to-day without offering payment or leaving word that she intended to return. Mrs. Wilson told Larby all about her au- tomobile trip and of a visit she and her husband made at the White House. She spoke familiarily of “Miss Alice” and of “That mischievous little rascal Kermit.” A next door neighbor of hers in San Francisco, she said, had been Mrs. Leland Stanford, and she ex- pressed much sorrow at her death. Mrs. Wilson explained her husband's absence as being due to the automo- bile breaking down. He had taken it off to be repaired, she said, after send- ing her in quest of a boarding place. | Special Dispatch to The Call. | was to-day elected itor-in-chief and J. F. Brennan was The Quad, the anford annual, is issued every spring To-day’s election Over 200 votes were cast ajority. Bickel registers from Geneseo, IIL, | He is very popular in the | llege world, being an associate editor | rics in the junior opera which will be | in the spring. Bickel also; st in this year’'s Quad. He is a mem- | Brennan is a law major, registering om Santa Barbara, and is very prom- | ent in Stanford athletics, being a ember of the cardinal football squad. | —_————————— YORK CLUBMAN LOSES JEWELRY WORTH $3000 ) No such woman is known here and no woman has ever left this city to make the transcontinental trip In an Olcott While He and His Wife | automobjie. Attend Theater. ———e——— ——— NEW YORK, March 6.—Jewelry | NO BAIL FOR GAYNOR worth $5000 has been stolen from the | AND GREEN IN MONTREAL Minister Barrett Says Ancient Quarrel | apartments in Sherman square of Between Costa Rica and Panama Q Dudley Olcott, a well-known clubman. H‘ugllltes From Ameri Law Ap- ? to m at Has Been Settled. WASHINGTON, March 6.—A cable- gram was received at the State De- partment to-day from Minister Bar- rett at Panama, stating that a con- vention had been signed adjusting finally the boundary line between Costa Rica and Panama. This boun- | dary was for a long time a source of friction between Colombia and Costa Rica, having been very loosely defined in the old Spanish grants and the new state of Panama naturally inherited the Colombian claims and contentions. —_—e———— Miss Constance Barbara Clarke, a nurse at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, is to be married to Admiral Sir J. K. Erskine Band, K. C. B. fo 1 0. M te So far the police have obtained no clew | Wi Funeral in Parls of Former United Magistrate uary chapel of Pere la Chaise Ceme- Porter, Henry Wolcott and seme inti- mate friends. The body was cremaled.i bail for the prisoners. pear Before Canadian tradi- tion Commissioners. MONTREAL, March 6.—Messrs. Gay- | nor and Green, who are wanted by the United States Government on charges of fraud in connection with the Savan- nah River improvement, were before LaFontaine, the extra- | dition co;m;nlsalt;ner. to-day. Counsel for the accused men filed Embassador Porter. | an objection to the jurisdiction of the PARIS, Mareh 6.—The funeral of | magistrate. The latter thereupon rmer United States Senator Edward : agreed to a postponement of the case Wolcott. who died at Monte Carlo | until March 14 to give an opportunity arch 1, took place to-day at the mort- | to get witnesses here. Commissioner LaFontaine announced | | the thief who entered the apart- | ents while Mr. and Mrs. Olcott were | tending a theater. OLCOTT'S BODY CREMATED i AT THE FRENCH CAPITAL States Senator Attended by presence of Embassador | that in his opinion the Dominion stat- utes did not grant him power to aceept ry, in_the gether and for several years there has been no communication between them. Mrs, Bierce has been living in Los An- geles with relatives and Bierce has been following his newspaper work in various citles. i The cause of the estrangement was | not brought out in the evidence, but | it is understood that after a son of | the couple killed a woman and him- | self several years ago in Chico no ef- fort to secure a reconciliation was| made. No property interests were con- | sidered in the divorce proceedings. = HOMES PLANNED FOR BACHELORS Dr. Eastabrook of Massachu- setts Would Make Them Comfortable in Old Age good values. Special Dispatch to The Call. EVERETT, Mass., March 6—Dr. Charles E. Estabrook of this city has evolved a plan for the establishment of a chain of homes for old bachelors stretching across the country and has formed the “Hope Brotherhood” to carry out his project. He will estab- lish in Everett, a quiet little suburb of Boston, the initial bachelor’s home in the ‘chain and will call it the “Center of Rest,” which title will be given to each home as established. i Dr. Estabrook’s plan looks to the | uniting of middle-aged and elderly bachelors of intelligence and refine- ment into a great brotherhood, who, each suit. provide comforts and even luxuries: for bachelors as they become aged and more or less helpless, instead of | their having to lead the lonely lives they do now. “The plan is wholly humanitarian | in its aim,” said Dr. Estabrook to-day, | “social in its acts, but providing havens of rest for men who have be- come nervous wrecks through the use of tobacco, morphine or liquor, or through the hard work and loneliness they have been compelled to endure.” As the “brotherhood” increases other “Centers of Rest” will be estab- lished as fast as the growth warrants it. Able bachelors will be sent to establizh colonies in various places. i e s You are as welcome A London pawnbroker testified that one of his tests of the honesty of a per- gon who offered him an article for pawn was whether he was in a hurry or not. Hurry was prima facie evi- dence of dishonesty. blank. | A New Spring Suit, To Your Measure for Y If you live out of town send for samples and self-measuring ADVERTISEMENTS. The following facts are what make it possible for us to give you a good fitting, good wearing suit for only $12.50: We buy the cloth direct-from the mills at manufacturers’ prices——we purchase in immense quantities for three work- shops in New York and three in San Francisco. big volume of business and make a small margin of profit on Other tailors have small businesses and buy cloth from jobbers and not from the mills direct. Their cloth costs them from 25 to 30 per cent more than the same quality costs us. You save this profit in ordering your suits here. We can show you several bright spring patterns for $12.50 in all the checks, stripes, mixtures and overplaids of the season. to inspect the stock in the st We guarantee a satisfactory fit: Money back to those who want it without a question on our part. 00D 5 740 Market, St. and Cor. Powell & Eddy $ l 2.50 The phice is no indication of the value, because the suits are really underpriced. o They could easily bring more money right here in our own store, and surely our customers always look to us for We have a ore as you would be to look in our show windows. Our self-measuring system as- sures out-of-town customers of a satisfactory fit.