The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 9, 1905, Page 27

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45 HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 9, 1905. " LYACHERS ACE WITH SHERIFE in an Attempt to Avenge the Brutal Murder [ a Former Treasurer Colorado County f of ol a S| EQUEL TO ARREST MADE IN OAKLAND TEEELY "IDAD, Colo., April 8.—The n of former County Treas- n H. Fox by Deputy Sheriff 1; an attempt at lynch- ted by Sheriff Richard d posse, and, later, a race be- he Sheriff and posse with the ner for a special train and a mob bent upon vengeance, e wild scenes enacted in Trini- s afternoon. ation of Fox was the oded murder ever com- Las Animas County. Fox g at-a desk in the lobby of 2000 men reading a mnewspaper, the door. Johnson nt in hand, and, g, sneaked up he bullet en- r and came out lobby, grazing ding in the ele- son coolly walked from the post- ) i toward the County he assassination spread soon of the postof- was carried by aced in an sight seemed to turn them nd a rush was made for the nid loud cries of “Liynch the y deputies, who , and when the mob half-block Sheriff 14 n sworn to protect my kill the first man come up those steps. on it will be over my e effect of checking the lacked a leader, and, after engeance for an hour, it ed in front of the post- plans for & lynching were d. Several prominent ed the gathering and Sheriff Davie secured 2 on the Colorado and Later Johnson, surrounded ed from the fail on waiting train three refo reached the mob, which after the posse, grow- TS en route, until fully The Sheriff prisoner on started the yards away. ccurred after , the exeited mob rocks, but fortu- jone. After the yards a coup- b saw the en- se it rushed for- of the posse to s again coupled sh. ed Fox because I was mad. He t me from ing after Shoblo aid him to es- rds this morn- d some wo nson was a deputy Sheriff en proposed to send him the requisition for & had been arrested of having embez- 3 ! funds when rer’s office., Fox sending the ground idate before the tion last fall n of State Treasurer. 1 as bodyguard for Sen- during the cam- d while the Legisla- Denver. Barela for ma years, but ate Senator last year ublican candidate DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES, BAD STOMACH MAKES BAD BLOOD. You can’t make éweet butter in a foul Every farmer's wife knows this. s'./zm‘{l churns and digests the you eat, and if foul, torpid or out of ur whole system suffers from poisoning. You will have foul costed tongue, bad taste, poor ite and a whole train of dis: - able symptoms. Dr. Medical Discovery, which is not a bever- ge composed of whisky or alcobol, beln! y free from intoxicants, is a jor and_invigorator of the Stom- Liver and Bowels. ut 8 yesr I was i1l with biood poi- o wiites Miss Eveline Louis, of & r Strest. Buffalo. N. ¥. “1 had what seemed to be & small cold sore on my lip. It Jecame very angry in appesrance and began o spread until it nearly covered my face. 1 was s frightful sight end de the house because of my &) ance. I d & blood medicine which did not give eny reliet. Then I began to take your r e*‘al Discovery.' I was grestly ofited with the first bottle and after tak- the second bottle was completely cured. o erysipeiatous eruption disep; and y biood was clesn: My complexion is r and fresh and I bave felt better this ar then I @id for some time before. Dr. ce's Golden Medical Discovery is cer- & most remarkable medicine.” on't accept a snbstitute for a medicine which performs such curesand which has formly successful record of nearly rs to its credit. It's an insult to lligence for a dealer to try by persuasion to palm off upon you in G some inferior article with no to back it up. You know what ant; it is his business to meet that s reco: want GIVEN AWAY, in coples of 550,000 The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book that sold to the ex- t of 500,000 coples a few s ago, at 81.50 per copy yoar we gave SWAY 00 worth of these invaiua- © hooks. This year we shall away #50,000 worth of Will you share in this e 17 If so, send only 21 stamps 10 COver Cost only for_book in per covers, or3] stam cloth-bound. ~Address Dr. ; Pierce, Buffalo. X. Y. -3 stipation although a little:fll, b? ig ones if neglec Dr. Plerce’s f'vl;eu cures constipation. | | | ( | | | | through a glass | kward, dead, and | d by another Dep- | placed in the County a mob of 1000 ynching. When | f=oeeeeessotecosses A. M. Lea, U. 8. Dist. Atty. for the Southern District of Mississippi, writes from Vicksburg, Miss.: “I am more than pleased with the benefits derived from Peruna, and have recommended it to all my friends, undertaker’s | In the meantime the| [ { | | and paying no at- | g placed on the train|elers d for a statement.|gfter this, if they refuse to take any could not go out- | |and that the house they accepted as | genuine cannot have belonged tg either Plerce’'s Golden | g | ishment. B Pe-ru-na Cures Catarrh Wherever Hon. both as a tonic and catarrh cure. “If T had been lucky enough to have saved me much inconvenience. ccecccecoee Doctored a Year Without Help. ru-na Enables Him to Continue Pe- His Work. Walter 8. Parker, 180 Dearborn St Chicago, Ill, President Board of Local|* Improvements, also member Board of Education of Grossdale, writes: “l was troubled with a cough and ca- tarrhal trouble for a number of years, and although | was under the doctor’s care for over a year, he was unable to help me at all. “Finally 1 decided to try Peruna, and | after using it a few days my cough was | relieved. “I continued the use of the medicine for three months and at the end of that time was cured of the catarrh and my physical condition much improved. I can never be too thankful ti e S S S S P O DDA seen it years ago, Peruna would have you." “I find that I have a better appetite now and weigh more, and am better fit- ted to take charge of my business.” Superintendent of Public Schools Recommeds Pe-ru-na. c Prof. W. B. Powell, of Washington, D. the Public Schools of Washington, in a letter from 1410 N St, Washington, D. C., says: “‘Persuaded by a' friend, | have -used Peruna as a tonic, and J take pleasure in recommending - your remedy. Peruna is indeed a good medicine and should be in every household. " The avocations of men differ greatly. Some require only mental activity, Oth- ers the use of the muscles. One person is worn out ' from brain fag. Another suffers -great fatigue from muscular over-exertion. : 3¢ for fifteen years Superintendent of |- ADVERTISEMENTS. SO SUBJECT TO CATARRH FIND THEIR SAFEGUARD D R R S 1 Leon J. Charles, Attorney-at-Law, Winslow, Arix., writes: For a man taken up with the daily routine and rushed and pushed constantly to do 30 hours’ work in 24, there will invariably come a time when nature demands her due. “I was on the edge of just such a breakdown when Peruna was recommend- ed to me and proved a helper and a friend. It seemed impossible at the time to take a vacation and yet the constant brain fag seemed to compel it. proper and ini tired and sick."" Sedentary Occupations. Those people whose avocations are of a sedentary character, requiring chiefly a use of the mental faculties, are more susceptible to climatic diseases than the people who lead active out-door lives. The lawyer, the preacher, the clerk, the teacher—these classés, as a rule, wear “out the nerve centers too rapidly by ‘con- stant mental effort. bt “Peruna built up the broken-down system, restored me to normal condition and through its use I was enabled to continue my work. “| have learned to appreciate Peruna very highly and advocate it as a safe, d necessary medicine to every business man who is worn out, Wm—.mmi cold. The dagleterl condition of the sys tem makes the cold hang to them with eater tenacity. In many instances it levelops into chronic catarrh. Mental Workers. This explains why it is that so great a number of mental workers suffer from catarrh in some degree or phase. By fortifying thé system, a slight cold The slightest exposure gives them alis not able to intren¢h itself. IN PE-RU-NA. ’ ‘“\\n\h SN R.LEON J. WINSLOw +essessssosses posgl‘-l Co. and Scribe for the I. O. Alexander McKenzie, Montreal, Ont., O. F., Jeanne of Arc Court 1850, writes s I have used Peruna with happy results, [ am glad to indorse it. system is at times an easy subject to catarrhal colds. in inclement weather, or become suddenly chilled. - bookkeeper for the Jewelry and Im- J uy § Especially if I am out M b4 “When | get a cold | take Peruna, and it is only a question of a day or two until : I am fully restored.” . D e e SIS Took Hold of Business With Renewed Energy. James J. Osborn, 308 E. Monument St., Colorado Springs, Col, has filled all the positions in Knights Temflnr Masonic Order, was a Mason since 1866, a Judge of County Court, Clinton, Mo., and Coun- ty Collector of Clinton. He writes: “A sluggish liver which | had been troubled with for two years made life miserable and | was unab.e to attend fo my business half the time. runa I certainly felt better and by the time I had taken one bottle there was a marked change. “l took it as directed for two months, when | was a well man, able to go down to business every day and tak= hold of my weork with renewed strength and wigor.” To undertake to wear out a cold is a hazardous experiment, especially with that class of people known as the brain workers. At the first appearance of a cold Peru- “I lacked energy, had headache most | na should be taken according to the di= of the time, and my food distressed me. | rections and persisted in until the symp~ “Before 1 had taken many doses of P toms of the cold disappe: EVEN THE DANTE HOUSE IS FRAUD Special Dispatch to The Call LONDON, April 8.——American trav- in Europe can’'t be blamed stock in houses with “literary associa- tions.” For, one by one, the supposed- ly historic mansions in which tourists have taken most delight are being | branded as frauds. By this time most persons know that the place in Lin- coln’s Inn Fields that poses as the original “Old Curiosity Shop” is noth- ing of the sort. It has been proved, too, that Juliet never inhabited the mansion in Verona which is exhibited to visitors as her “home,” and.that Kenilworth Castle was not the scene of Amy Robsart’s death, in spite of Sir Walter Scott. The : old Cheshjre Cheese Tavern, in Fleet street, is de- nied the honor:of having been Dr. Johnson's favorite haunt. And now comeg an Italian savant with the as- sertion that Dante never lived in the house in Florence which thousands of travelers visit every year under the impression thdt it was his. It is true that the authenticity of the dwelling near the Church of San Mar- tino was vouched for by a commission appointed by the Florentine authorities in 1865 and that their opinion was confirmed five years later by another officfal manifesto. Signor Glorgio Piranesi, who has:been investigating the subject for several months, main- tains, however, that the two sets of commissioners must have totally mis- understood the evidence before ‘them Dante or to any member of his family, He affirms that the poet's real house was dbstroyed at the time of his ban- Signor Piranesi says that there is some evidence in favor of be- lieving that the house which once stood in the Via de Cinatori, on the opposite side of San Martino from the traditional hopse, was once inhabited by some of the Alighier! family, but this dwelling has long since” disap- peared. FLAUBERT'S HOUSE., Flaubert's house in Rouen, where “Madame Bovary” was written, has been having attention of late, not be- cause there is any doubt,of its authen- ticity, but because something will have to be done to save it from destruction. As a matter of fact, the novelist’s act- ual dwelling was pulled down two or | three years ago and a factory stands on its site, but there remains a sort of summer house on the bank of the Seine in which the great writer and preceptor of De Maupassant used to work. He used to walk up and down on the path by the river, cudgeling his brain for his “inevitable” adjectives, and his great figure, almost invariably en- veloped in a huge ulster, never failed to excite the curlosity of passers-by. | Mothers, it is said, used to frighten their children by threatening that if they were not good they should be sent “to the house of M. Flau,” as the au- thor was known to his neighbors. For the purpose of saving Flaubert’s sum- mer house. a committee has been formed in Rouen and a fund has been opened to which his admirers are asked to contribute. That there’s a lot of money to be made out of diterary relics, whether genuine or not, is being proved right along. The latest instance comes from Paris, where an imaginative old clothes dealer has just succeeded in getting more money out of certain pairs 'of trousers that never belonged to Victor Hugo than, according to all accounts, the novelist' ever was able to find in those that did. This “ole clo” man in question appeared not long ago at a house in the Rue Levigne and present- ing a pair of faded though still pre- sentable “pants” assured the conclerge that they belonged to the author of “Les Miserables” and that he had just bought them for $10. The concierge be- lieved the tale and passed it on to sev- eral people in the house, with the re- sult that the old clothes man's premises were invaded next day by a rapacidus crowd of curio hunters. To these he sold single buttons,off the trousers at pretty good prices, and finding the de- mand still brisk parted with a whole leg for $20. The remainder of the supposed “relic” the venerable miscreant kept for another district, where he succeed- ed in getting even better prices, eventu- ally parting with the second leg for $30. Realizing that there was a little gold mine in the thing, the old manlost no time in producing other remnants of the poet’s trousers, which he palmed off at fancy prices in different neighbor- hoods. Finally, however, the police got wind of the matter, and finding that the supply of trouser remnants was out of all proportions to the dead writer's wardrobe arrested the enterprising salesman, who by that time had cleared about $76. “AD” CAUSES TROUBLE. All things considered, England has taken rather kindly to American ad- vertising methods, but evidently the Fatherla-y will take a lot of convert- ing in this direction. The two quali- ties which the German newspaper reader demands in an advertiser are modesty and brevity, and when these are not displayed he gets mad. To advertise to the extent of a quarter of a column is considered “bombastic” in Germany, as a certain Anglo-Amer- ican business man knows to his cost. Quite recently he took the above men- tioned amount of space In a Berlin newspaper togadvertise a well known patent medicine. A few days after the ad appeared the' editor of the nswpa- per wrote to him stating that he had been summoned and fined for giving it publicity, and that he expected the patent medicine man to reimburse him. It seemed that the advertise- ment was considered ‘‘bombastic.” No other advertisement occupied more than one or two inches of space and one of the subscribers to the newspa- per informed the local police that the quarter of a column was offensive and irritating to readers generally. The authorities did not in any way ques- tion the efficacy of the medicine, the editor was fined merely for offending Teuton susceptibilities. Probably American advertisers will be able to adapt themselves to Ger- man ideas, but they will have to walk warily at first. To begin with, the Teuton frowns upon street advertising and billboards are almost prohibited. And when it comes to advertising drugs a delightful vagueness must be maintained. A patent medicine ven- dor is not permittéd to say what dis- ease his wares are intended to cure. An asthma medicine, for instance, must not be represented as a remedy for that complaint. The advertiser SLEUTHS SEEK - [STRIKERS MOB AN ABSCONDER| WAGON DRIVERS Special Dispatch to The Call. BOS! April 8.—Detectives en- gaged in tracing the movements of Charles F. Berry, the absconding Bos- ton lawyer, who disappeared several weeks ago, leaving half a dozen trust estates valued at $500,000 of which he had charge badly involved, have picked up the trail in Nevada and say that he is now concealed in some min- ing camp there, where he has inter- ests. He is believed to be in Tonopah or Goldfield, Since ‘it was substantiated that the ‘recelvers could not find within $300,000 of the funds entrusted to Berry, com- plaint was made to the District Attor- ney and Chief Watts was authorized to engage Pinkertons to apprehend Berry for the authorities. Berry was known to have sunk money in various wildcat mining concerns and the trail was started in the direction of the coast, San. Francisco and Sacramento being searched first without result. —_—— LARGEST VESSEL ON GREAT LAKES GLIDES DOWN WAYS CHICAGO, April 8.—The largest craft on the Great Lakes, the steam- ship Elbert H. Gary, was launched to- ‘day at the yards of the Chicago Ship- bullding Company, The steamship, which is tq be used for carrying ore, is 569 feet long, has a beam of 56 feet, is 30 feet deep and will have a carrying capacity of 10,- 000 tons. —————— Extradition of the Smiths. COLUMBUS; April 8.—Governor Her- rick to-day issued a new warrant for the extradition of J. Morgan Smith and ‘wife, now under arrest in Cincinnati on an indictment returned in New York, charging them with conspiracy in the ““Nan”, Patterson case. The warrant was issued at the request of Assistant District Attorney Garvin of New York, who came here from Cincinnati. may set forth only what general ef- fect his nostrums will have upon the system and leave readers to figure out for themselves what ailment it is in- tended to cure. ADVERTISEMENTS. WOMAN'S BREAST | WILL GIVE $1000 If faifto Cure Any Cancer orTumor isons deep glwnds. - rv until cured. No Knife or Pain. A The Best Book on Cancers and Tumors, ing_testimonials, ever wri ten, ANY TUMPIN WOMAN'S BRERST is_nearly always CANCER if neglected b IS IADE aus in e aript DR. &I;MFI?S. cl;!'A.MLEY & CO. Office 25 Third SL., San Francisco SEND TO SOMEON! WITH CANCER' South Chicago. | CHICAGO, April 8.—Under heavy es- corts of police a number of wagonloads of freight were sent to various railway stations to-day by Montgomery, Ward & Co., despite sympathizers with the company'’s striking teamsters and gar- ment workers. The drivers were jeered in force kept wagons and spectators | moving: Many arrests were made. There Is a possibility that the entire express drivers' union will be called out, owing to the determined attitude of the express companies to handle Montgomery, Ward & Co.’s business. Union léaders are placing dependence on Mayor-elect Dunne. . They say he will strive for arbitration rather than | érush-the strike with the police. Violence was precipitated in Madi- son street. this afternoon shortly after a light wagon belonging to Wells, Fargo & Co.’s express left the Ward the wagon and a crowd surged after it.. Two coal teamsters blocked the street'and amid shouts of derision the driver was taken from his seat. rolled under the wagon and severely kicked. Stones, sticks and other missiles were thrown. For a time the police were the crowd was dispersed. Many per- sons in the crowd suffered cuts about the face and head. Officials of the Wells-Fargo Company were quickly at hand and with the ald way. Mear}whlle a heavy truck of the American ' Express Campany had the two vehicles, surrounded by po- lice. were escorted through the streets. The crowd increased as the proces- sion moved along and when the wagon reached Van Buren and Dearborn streets it was estimated that 7000 par- sons were in the crowd. In Van Buren another obstacle was met with, The elevated railroad plat- forms were jammed with a howling mob. Sticks and stones were thrown, striking the police, driver and many persons in the crowd. The wagons wers driven hurriedly to the express com- pany barns near by. It was declared by policemen that at Kinsey and Dearborn streets acid-filled eggshells were thrown into the crowd. None of them did any damage. Police- man Meyer picked up one of the mis- siles and his hand was burned by acid. Detectives searched buildings in the vi- cinity, but could get no clew as to who threw the eggs. Rt EIGHT MEN ARE KILLED BY PREMATURE EXPLOSION Tamping of Powder Cause of Dl.u.stfl' at Limestone Quarry in Virginia, ALLISONIA, Va.,, April 8—The tamping of powder this afterncon in a blast at the Ardway limestone quarry, about four miles west of Al- lisonia, caused the accidental dis- charge of the blast. This caused the explosion of two other blasts that had been set near by. Eight men were killed and two others so badly injured as to leave but little hope of their re- | covery. The killed: John Fortner, Walter Miller, John Harris, Tobe Sutton, O. T. Davis, A. Vaughn, all negroes. A. O. Walton, white, and an unknown man. ————— SALT LAKE CITY, April 8.—The Western Paris Rallroad has secured & lease for. twg 160 acres west of this city to be 32-'9.-“'. material vard. g and crowds congregated, but the police | building. No policeman accompanied | unable to clear the streets, but finally | of a boy the wagon continued on its | reached the small express wagon and | j'She Is Held in Prison ———e Continued From Page 25, Column 6. is the information given on every hand in the Latin quarter. While' Mrs. Torturiti talked to De- tective Tom Gibson the baby smiled and gurgled gleefully, reaching out his tiny fingers in a friendly manner to anybody who noticed him. The police are certain that the man who was seen by Olivia was Torturiti. The woman clings to the child as a drowning woman. ‘While the Sicillans-and their neigh- bors live in a modern American city, they are in heart and soul still Siei- lians. Their children talk the language of the Mediterranean isle Retter than they do English. They have their own customs and their section of the eity is like a bit of southern Europe. This Torturiti woman is one of that colony and knows how the women of the quarter would feel toward her if she told what she is believed to know. Her family would spurn her.. So she Is silent or “does not understand.”, Her expression reads, “I will not tell.” —_—— In Tilsit, Prussia, a man who had used a derogatory expression abnr' the Kaiser was denounced to the pe lice by his fellow workmen and has been sent to prison for two months. —_————————— The world is a dark place to the man whose eves are in his pocket. | lection of footwear ; significance. | ! A Patent Kid Oxford— with an iniald dull kid front stay. silk worked eyelets and silk laces, high French as ever any lady’ Price, s foot | i $5.00 calalogue ready soon. ADVERTISEMENTS. Shoes are one of the first essentials for an elegant Easter attirg. speaks at once refinement of taste and an appropriate consideration for the season’s Easter Sunday is two weeks from to- day—not too far off to think of Easter shoes and of Kaufmann's comprehensive display of fashions suitable for this gala season—their beauty, style, originality and their reasonable prices. We picture two styles of Oxford ties well timed for Easter wear. Novelties in Chil- dren’s shoes; head- Y quarters for white ) Canvas goods. Mail orders promptly filied. Write us about _vour needs in Easter Shoes—we can fill them. New v Ag;mm\m ¢ . God Shoes The proper se- for this occasion be- Imported Patent Calt Oxford—cut low in front, ties with ribbon, light extended _ soles, graceful heel—a shoe as . charm- Ing as-it I8 gpod; the same 3iso in a @ne Viel Kid. Price. $5.00

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