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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1 B. C. CUVELLIER ENDS LIFE WITH A PISTOL Prominent Business Man and, Politictan Seeks Rest. DIES AS FATHER WENT AT SAME AGE| — | | Cuvellier's body. with the pisml: | | near by, was found at noon to-day | | by a party of sightseers, who had | gone to the observation roof, a fa- | | vorite viewpoint of the city. They | alarm and | | | rushed back to give the notified John Bernhard, the elevator | n, who summoned the police. Dr. | | Carl’ E. Curdts also responded. He | | examined the corpse and found that | the bullet had passed through the - e | roof of the mouth into the brain. Deputy Coroner Van Vranken re- moved the body to the Morgue. An hour before the body was seen Cuvellier rode up in the elevator with | B. H. Griffins and A. P. Leach, attor- < KLAND, 8—Haunted by | neye, with whom he passed the time morbid fear that his 'reason | Of day. Cuvelller seemed cheerful. He = ng shattered, B. C. Cuvel- | inquired the way to the roof and re- | idemt. of the A |paired there, remarking on the splen- | did view of the city gain from that height. The first clew to the possible cause | of the suicide was obtained from a letter found among Cuvellier’s effects. The message was one of cheer from | | George R. Close, written at the St.| | Helena Sanitarium, where Cuvellier | had been a patient several weeks ago. | Close urged his friend to be hopeful, {and its tone indicated that Cuvellier had been despondent because of his ill health. DOCTOR’S STORY. Following the finding of the letter | came the story of Dr. J. F. Rinehart, at whose residence, Eighth and Ade- | line streets, Cuvellier had been stay- that one could | of San rs mpor Councilman of Oakland, to-day - by head with a de roof of the teenth street his brains death ressed ay nd the de- ide. own father stence in i been € e 2 ing for a week under treatment for nt er shot | extreme nervous lapse. e of a, He left the physician’s home this > n did | morning after breakfast, osten- to-day. | sibly to go to San Francisco to make thing he same ag re to arrangements for a trip to Chicago, where he had been invited by his cousin. Julius Kruttschnitt, the South- ern Pacific Company official, to spend DOAN’'S PILLS. A REPUTATION. How it Was Maie énrl Retéined in| San Francisco. | | some time in recuperation of his health. From Neil McCracken, a clerk at| J. P. Maxwell's hardware store, Four- teenth and Washington streets, Cuvel- lier bought cartridges for his pistol | this morning while ‘on his way to the | place of death. | It was a year ago that the former | Councilman showed signs of mental de- pression. His wife some months before that had sustained a severe injury by a fall. Her death followed and the be- = ion is not easily |reft husband was prostrated. But he . 1it was only by hard, con- | appeared to rally, and later he re- F among our citizens that | Sumed, outwardly, his accustomed vi- vacity and keen interest in his business and political affairs. He had served four terms in the City Council and was to be a candidate for re-election when unexpectedly he announced his with- | drawal from politics. ey Pills won their way distinction attained in The public indorsement | n Francisco residents red invaluable service to the Dios at this Several months ago he began to com- Read what this citizen | i0 ‘of I health, “Hs suffered. foom | 2 = > .- | sleeplessness and went to St. Helena | 5t Collins, silk hatter, of 10102 | for treatment. Among his intimates | I e street, says: “It is a difficult | he confided his physical troubles. Re- | T r to give greater praise to|cent treatment seemed ta have bene- | Joan's Kidney Pills than their re- | fited the sufferer. He so expressed him- | markable properties deserve. I-'ur;""' but the shadow of melancholia | was upon him. era vears [ was bothered more or kidney complaint, partic FROM OLD FAMILY. i if I contracted a cold, which| Cuyellier was born in New Orleans of ' | one of the old French families of the e to seat itself in the region | o] back just over the kidneys. I{ MISIsap imetropolis’ He sane 10 sheom A e i f e & California fooled around for 2 long time trying | early engered the employ of James de ines of various k|nd§. none of Fremery & Co., the pioneer importing 1 even helped, and finally Mrs. | house of San Francisco. After many llins, who had been reading con- | years of service there Cuvellier sev. siderable about Doan’s Kidney Pills, | °red his connections and (was associat- | sed me to take a course of the €4 With the A. Vignier Company. In St oheos B IF the frst b had __ | the business world he occupied a high reatment e frst box had not | pogition and was esteemed for his brought results I can positively guar- | probity and charming personality. His antee this, I never would have boughr | business assoclates were shocked by a second; and if the second had not {the news of his tragic death. They stopped the last attack—and, what is | .snld he had been ill for several months | better, there has not been a symptom | 'Qx"f, was a sufferer from nervous trou- of a recurrence for six months—I | e 4 | rell could mot be induced under any cir- fr‘e‘;‘d:‘ wgu}:sczl::;—k“;mn!::txdg:kteo ’l:‘l: n1stances to publicly recommend | threats serfously. Dr. Rinehart in this e preparation.” connection sald: For sale by all dealers. Price 50| “To orthreedaysago I took away cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Bufiair\.I;’;"";],,';";"";&“’ffl‘;g};” g{!slol with wh:ich N 4 - 55 . He was very de. N. Y., sole agents for the United| pondent and had threatened fo iill otates ; himself, but I got him into a better Remember the name, | frame of mind. He agreed to go to a take no substitute. | hospital for a few days until he should - ‘fefll in shape to go East. He required e < a long rest and 1 believe it would have TEETH OF CHILOREN | 0rd him to normal health. I drave Few mothers know how vitally important H part way up town this morning with 1s the care of a child’s first teeth. The | him and left supposing he was going to San Francisco.” ‘::;‘;‘.{y"",;::r manent eet depends Almost | *°y ot Friday Cuvellier met B, W, Bel- { lingall, an old friend, saying: s z D N | *Pete, if anything happens to me, TOOTH POWDER | lock out for my children.” | Great surprise was occasioned {among the former business associates }of Mr. Cuvellier in this city by the pews that he had committed suicide. | : Cuvellier had been connected/ with A. sed with SOZODONT Liquid, prevents - s umulation of tartar, yet being free from | being vice vresjdent of the company grit does not scratch the enamel. Do not | of which Mr. Vignier is the head. Mr. experiment on baby's teeth. Insist on | Vignier said yesterday that he knew SOZODONT. of no reason why Cuveilier should have committed suicide. He \had no 3 FORMS: LIQUID, POWDER, PASTR. financial troubles. Back of his con- | Doan’s, and Vignier in business on Battery street, DAKLAND CASHIER ABSCONDS J. D. Birdsall, Trusted Agent for L. C. Sheldon’s Grain and Hay Business, Short Seven Thousand Dollars RACES RESPONSIBLE FOR- HIS UNDOING | Track Season Over and Hope to Recoup His Fortunes Gone, He Quits All and Flees to Parts Unknown J. D. Birdsall, who has been cashier and manager for the Oakland branch of L. C. Sheldon’s hay and grain busi- ness, is missing, together with about | $7000 of his employer’s money. A warrant for Birdsall's arrest was issued last night by Police Judge Smith of Oakland. The alleged defaulter is believed to have been playing the races. When the season closed last Saturday, it is said, he found himself short in his accounts and desired to flee the State. L. C. Sheldon, whose office in this city is in room 304, Merchants' Exchange building, maintained a large branch at the corner of Second and Market | streets in Oakland and nearly three years ago Birdsall was placed in charge there. There was never any suspicion of his dishonesty until last Saturday, when he failed to appear at the office. An examination was at once made of his accounts, and while the exact amount of the shortage is not kngwn it will be about $7000. Birdsall’'s home is at 1720 San An- tonio avenue, Alameda. He has a wife but no children. PROMINENT ATTORMEY LOSES MIND Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, May 8—Raving mad, George D. Bilake, one of the brightest attorneys of the local bar, is a prisoner in his apartments at the Hotel Washington, on South Olive street, to-night, guarded by a male nurse to prevent him from doing him- self injury or endangering the life of others. To-morrow morning he will be | arrested on an insanity warrant and placed in confinement, pending his ex- amination by a lunacy commissioner. Blake went suddenly insane this af- ternoon and besieged the newspapers with tales of an impending suit for the recovery on & $64,000,000 English estate. He thinks that he and Henry E. Hunt- ington, with the spirit help of Stephen | M. White and Collis P. Huntington, are to meet in conference for the formation of a two million dollar bank. A few years ago Blake’s wife, a beau- tiful and talented woman, for some time a teacher of literature in an Oak- land seminary, died. A medium in- duced the bereaved man to attempt occult communion with her. This sug- gestion plunged him in a deep study of | psychic literature and led to the final unhinging of his mind. he is hopelessly insane. ————— CRAZY MAN KILLED AFTER CUTTING PASSENGER’S THROAT Unknown Man Runs Amuck on Train and Is Shot to Death by a Constable. BELLEVUE, Idaho, unknown man, herder, ran amuck on a Wood River branch train to-day and after slash- ing the throat of one passenger with a knife was shot and killed by Wil- liam Schaeffer, a constable who was on the train. The train was taken back to Bellevue and the dead man and his victim were taken off. The injured man is named Moore and is said to be connected with the Salt Lake headquarters of an Eastern publishing company. There is little chance of his recovery. The dead man has not been identified. —_—— YOUNG FLEISCHMAN MAY REMAIN IN THE NAVY Parents Give Consent When They Learn He Has Opportunity to Enter Naval Academy. NORFOLK, Va.,, May 8.—The par- ents of young Leo Fleischman, who, after a small fortune had been spent in an effort to locate him, was found enlisted as a naval apprentice here, May 8.—An have decided not to take him out of the navy. They say they have been informed that with application to his studies the lad will have an oppor- tunity to enter Annapolis Naval Acad- emy and, as he likes the navy, they will leave him to study with Annapo- lis in view. — nection with business Cuvellier was a newspaper reporter. He was an in- dustrious reader, and books made a great impression upon him. Cuvellier resided at 1228 Union street. He was a member of Oakland Lodge No. 171 of Elks and of the Nile Club. His aged mother and five children sur- vive. The latter are Rene Cuvellier, a | Southern Pacific engineer; Charles Cu- ellier, Harold Cuvellier, Miss Jean- ette and Miss Carmelita Cuvellier. The funeral arrangements have not been made. Coroner Mehrmann will hold an inquest. —_———— The Kneisel Quartet To-Night. The following programme will be played by the famous Kneisel Quartet at the first con- | cert at Lyric Hall to-night at quarter past 8, Beethoven—Quartet in F major, Op. 59, No. 1. Allegro. Allegretto vivace e sempre schers zando. Adaglo molto e mesto—Theme russe C. A. Debussy—From quartet in G minor, Op. 10. Andantino doucement expressir. Assez vif et blen rythme. Haydn—Quartet in D magor, Op. 76. No. 5. Allegretto. Allegro, Largo. Menuetto (aliegro). Finale (presto). The next concert will be Friday night on which occasion Messrs. Kneisel and = Theo- dorowicz will play the Double Concerto hy Bach with accompaniment by a selected string or- chestra. 'This will be the first time that this great work has been given in its original form in this city. The only matinee perform- ance will be Saturday when a particularly at- tractive programme has bee . Seats t. Francis _Art Society affais B0 obiained at Sherman. Clay & Coas " A A It is feared | said to be a sheep | Continued From Page 1, Column 6. admitted it. Only in regard to the parentage of Susan Collins as stated in the death certificate did he show any perturbation. “You say that in the record Char- lotte Newman is named as her moth- er,” he exclaimed, with the only show of excitement he had made, *That is false. She was the daughter of my wife, Agnes Collins. This is the first [ have ever known of her maternity be- ing attributed to Charlotte Newman. ‘What does this doctor mean by giving me two wives in three days? Why does he give a certificate naming one woman as my wife and three days af- terward a second one naming another as such? And why did he not mention to me the remarkable fact of my hav- ing two wives at that time? What sort of a position is he in in this mat- ter? Why did he file the conflicting certificates? This discrepancy in the records will cast a doubt over all the other records that exist in the case— that is that I am told exist, for I do not know of my own Kknowledge of any.” “Do you deny that you went to the marriage license office and obtained a license to marry some one?” was ask- ed of him. “I don’t deny it and I don’t admit it,” said Collins. “I might have sent some one for the license.” “But if handwriting experts say that your signature is attached to the | application for a license made by you to marry Charlotte E. Newman will you deny that you made such an ap- plication and that you thought Agnes’. name, instead of Charlotte’s was in the license?” “It might have been that if I did make application for a license myself I at the same time stated the names of my witnesses—Charlotte and Thomas E. Curran—it was sup- posed by many people that they must give the clerk the names of their wit- nesses when they procured licenses, and that the names of the women were nmixed by the clerk. I affirm that scarcely any man reads the license that the clerk makes out.” Asked what he would do in case the whole application was shown to have been filled out in his handwriting, Col- lins fell back on his oft-repeated state- ment that the records would count for nothing against the evidence he would produce in court to establish his mar- riage to Agnes. VISIT TO DEL MONTE. “I want to be arrested,” said the at- torney. “I sent my chief clerk, Mr. Fitzpatrick, to the Hall of Justice to- day to see about my being taken into custody, but I cannot get arrested un- til some one makes a charge. 1 can ex- plain everything in court and I.am anxious to do so. “I have no personal knowledge of any records of marriage concerning me that are said,to exist, as I have al- ready stated. “To carry on this case in the news- papers simply means crimination and recrimination. The court is the place for it. There I will be on a basis where I can show my side of the affair. I do not look on the Newmans as peopie in my class. I have helped support them. I became attached to Agnes be- cause she seemed struggling mnobly against adverse circumstances. I am | through withf them all now. I got Wil- { iam Newman the place he holds in the | Fire Department, because he needed | employment. Charlotte Newman was not leading the life I approved in my house. I went theré armed one night with two of my clerks and she and a man fled through a rear door when we came. We pursued them down to the tenderloin and they ran into a house known as the Clifford. The affair pro- duced excitement in that neighborhood, {but we escaped without newspaper ! notoriety. I closed my houvse against her then, but she came back to me in three days and made pleas that caused me to let her live there again. ‘“Charlotte always acknowledged Agnes as my wife. I have wit- nesses plenty who will swear to this !and have written evidence on that point. The children always called | Agnes mother. Agnes and Charlotte went to Del Monte once and there Agnes was recognized as Mrs. Collins by all, including Charlotte.” ALLEGES “CROOKED WORK.” Collins does not seem to be worried. He even laughs with heartiness when some phases of the case that are amusing strike him. He will not for a second divert himself from the stand | that it was Agnes he mairied. Keenly, parrying every question that is lead- ing, he denies everything that may in any way connect him matrimonially with Charlotte. Dr. Rogers refused absolutely to talk about the three death certificates. He said that any public record signed by him was correct. He would tell the whole truth if questioned in court, he said. Collins, when asked if Dr. Rogers had not been the atteniing physician at the birth of his children, said he had not been, but that Drs. Kahn and Ayers, now dead, had officiated at those events. He sald that anotner physician | assisted Dr. Rogers during the last illness of Agnes and that his testimony would be valuable. ‘When confronted with the certificates of the death of Agnes and the causes leading to it Charlotte at first denied knowledge of it and later admitted it. She could not explain why Agnes was buried under the name of Agnes M. Collins, but said that Collins was prob- ably the father of the infant. She said that her sister Agnes was usually of a morose disposition, but when in Col- lins’ presence seemed jolly. “My sister was not liked by any of | the family and frequently spoke of , ending her life, but she did not give | any reason for the statement,” said Charlotte, “and she was only contented to live here in the house with George and I SAYS HYNOPTISM WAS USED. “The reason that I did not expose George when the disbarment proceed- ings were instituted against him was because I did not “want to review Aggle’s past in the courts. If the full history of her connection with Collins had been known at that time he would be in the penitentiamy now. He had | a hypnotic influence over my sister and I and everything he wished was done, whether it suited us or not. I was content to run the house on $20 a week, when he repeatedly told me that he was making from $1000 to $2000 a ! month. Where he spent this sum I do a fast life.” % ‘When asked whose child Susan Col- . lins, that died two days before Agnes in the residence at 1236 Page street, . was, Charlotte became confused, and at first answered that it was hers, She claimed that it was adopted and finally that her sister Agnes gave birth to it. She refused td state who was the father of Susan. “This ring that I wear was given to Newman ! not know, but suppose it costs to live |/COUNTY RECORDS AGAINST COLLINS Marriage License and the Certificate Put on File Bear His and Char- lotte Newman’s Names. me by George Collins at the time of our marriage on May 15, 1889, and it has my name inscribed in it,” she said. ‘“There could be no possibility of my husband being married to my sister | Agnes and myself at the same time. | Their relations were such as would not be countenanced by soclety, but noth- ing in the way of a marriage was pos- | sible without my knowledge.” 1 INDICTMENTS PROBABLE. H - Willlam Newman is trying his hard- | est to induce the Grand Jury to indict | Collins on a charge of bigamy. Dis- trict Attorney Byington is looking up ! the law in the case and if he finds that ; the fact of Collins’ alleged bigamous | marriage having been contracted in Chicago does not make an indictment | here defective, one will be returned at ! once, the Grand Jury being willing goi act. ‘ The ‘disbarment proceedings brought} against Collins last July are still pend- | ing. The Bar Association, after hear- | ing the testimony, decided that dis- | barment proceedings should be brought | in the Supreme Court and they were. The charge against Collins in connec- tion with the estate of Agnes Collins, or Newman, was that in order to col- lect $1500 she had on deposit in the Hibernia Bank at the time of her death ' he had sworn he was her husband. | Collins demurred, one of the many grounds being that when he got the | money he was acting in a personal capacity and not as an attorney for any one. The demurrer is still under consideration by the Supreme Court. Should Collins . be convicted of ! bigamy he would be disbarred thereby. conviction of a felony being sufficient ! to deprive a lawyer of his license. The developments in the strange case of Collins and his wives make the following excerpt regarding Agnes | Newman, or Collins, from his brief in support of his'demurrer to the disbar- ment proceedings interesting, it giving something of an insight into the work- ings of the mind of this man, who has brought about one of the most peculiar | matrimonial tangles that courts have | ever been looked to to unravel: We might contemptuously ignore the law and “rush {n where angels- fear to tread”; we might for the delectation of the accusers and their co-conspirators invade or permit the in- vasion of sacred family tles now hallowed by endearing memorles and sanctified in death; we might permit the hand of the despoiler to | draw back the curtain and with diabolical de- rision invite the vulgar gaze of the curlou we might even allow our loved ones to be the targets for coarse jests and ribald criticisms— | but we stand guard at the portals of our home, | ever ready to make sacrifice, no matter how great it may be, in defense of hallowed memo- | ries of the past, and never shall the marauder trespass the threshold or desecrate by his im- | plous touch the cherished garlands of affection | that entwine its sanctity. We are ready to render the last full measure of devotion in | maintaining the privacy or our home and in ! repelling the iniquitous attempts that are ing made to defame the memory of one who: gentle presence was ever a benediction to Who came within the charmed circle of her gra- | clousness of manner, her splendid qualities of heart and intellect, and, above all, her trans- cendent nobility of character. It is at best a meager tribute, but we shall at all times and in | all places indignantly resent and bitterly repel any and all inquiry as to ner relation to re- | spondent—as to whether she was or was not | his wife—and this we woutd do even unto the | last syllable of recorded time. We have a | just sense of honor that forbids us descending into the debasement of an investigation that | carries with it a villainous tmputation against the fair fame of the dead; we have neither the instinct, the appetite nor the howling propen- sity of jackals. CLOUDBURST NEAR SALINS SALINAS, May 8.—A cloudburst s reported by J. A. Goodrick. a road- | master, as having occurred near Agenda, ten miles from here on the Santa Lucia hills at the head of Shaws | Canyon, yesterday morning. After what sounded like a heavy explosion | a huge volume of water poured down ! the canyon, snapping off trees and tearing away the side of the moun- tain. Bridges on the Arroyo Seco Creek were swept away and the ranches of James Smith, N. Laymon | and T. Reed were covered to a depth of nearly four inches with gravel and rock. The county road will be im- passable for many days. In a few hours over two and a half inches of _rain fell. RENO INVITES MARK TWAIN Al T S MHMM”!\A&IL RENO, May 8.—The people of Reno have extended an invitation to Samuel M. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, to deliver the oration at the Fourth of July celebration in this city this year, and as it has been a great many .years since the famous humorist has visited the scenes of his early life, it is thought that he will be Nevada’ guest during the first week in July. Mark Twain i{s one of the greatest men who have made Nevada their home and the scenes of many of his stories are laid in Nevada. He spent a number of years on the Comstock and in his writings are numerous storles of the pioneers of that great mining camp. Mackay, Fair and Sutro, who made millions on the Comstock, were his friends and all have figured in his stories. BIG MINING DEAL MADE IN anSS VALLEY REGION FErie Group Near Graniteville Bonded by Los Angeles and Eastern GRASS VALLEY, May 8.—The largest mining deal made here In vears has just been consummated in the bonding of the Erie group of mines near Graniteville. Five fine claims have been bonded by the owner, | George Mainhart of this city, to L. Douglas Sovereign of Los Angeles, representing Los Angeles and Eastern capitalists. The Erie has a complete equipment ready for starting up. Work is to be commenced within a month. The Erie formerly was a good pro- ducer. If purchased the price will run up into six figures. ——————— To, Hear Chadwick Appeal. CINCINNATI, Ohio, May 8.—The case of Mrs. Chadwick was to-day set for hearing by the United States Court of Appeals for October 3. WASHINGTON, May. 8. the apkinif;m L O-DAY a 50c¢ «: They Are Good Bleached Damask Not very large, ’tis true, but plenty large enough and plenty good enough for breakfast or lunch table. Raw edges, other- wise they would cost much more. Other good values in nap- kins mentioned in the column on the right. “Great Big TurKish Towels altlr. 57 3ZC 3 gi :l:;::nt That are easily worth 43c. 5 inches square ; cream T!my are - hieiched anc{ bleached, with red borders, fringed and double looped ; linen, dozen 6oc, and larger are very absorbent and give size restawrant napkins, good weai. Sale to-day. that usually sell at 1.00 1 dozen, we shall offer this TURKISH TOWELS—That morning at....... are hemstitched; snow white and very absorbent DAMASE NAPKINS— s T L Bleached union linen, with selvedge edges; dozens of TUI?KISH_ TOWELS — A patterns. Dozen.......1.00 fair quality; bleached and fringed ; same as sell regu- | PURITY LINEN NAP- larly at 12%c, to-day at.10c KINS—For the most par- ticular home use; large BLEACHED BATH TOW- : ] v size; satin fimish; 300 a ELS—Plain white or with dozen wouldn’t buy better. red borders; two sizes at - 2 As a special leader at..2.38 special prices to-day: i <42 i ’ PURE LINEN DAMAS™ _ Size 21x42 in. at...162-3¢ st enspe dl e PP 16 Size 18x37 in. at......15¢ o oo ¢ ing ; 72 inches wide ; 10 pat- COTTON HUCK® TOW- terns, including dots, spots ELS — Great big ones, and floral designs. Regular IOXI0; BECo0T et fa v aniQE 1.25 a yard. Now.....Lo0 Ruiiled Robbinet Curlains 3.00 quality at......1.78 pair 3.50 quality at......2.55 pair 4.00 quality at......2.88 pair Ruffled Swiss Curtlains Worth 1.50 and 1.75 L | R R R 1.18 White grounds with large floral designs and white A good selection of pat- grounds with colored borders | terns at each price. All have and small floral patterns. from 4 to 6 inch gathered ruf- fles and some of them are lace trimmed, some finished with Battenberg. White and Ara- bian. -——* MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. WRITE TO-DA WEINSTOCK, LUBIN & CO. THE SILK HOUSE. GRANT AVE, S. E. COR. GEARY ST. e w— Also hemstitched ruffie ef- fects. width. All full length "and EMPEROR’'S SAILORS SEARCH FOR HIDDEN EASTER GIFTS Crew of Imperial Yacht Receive Eggs and Search Vessel for Oranges. BERLIN, May 8.—The Neuesta Nachrichten to-day printed a letter from a member of the crew of the im- perial yacht Hohenzollern describing the Easter day romp of Emperor Wil- liam and the Empress. After the sail- ors had received their Easter eggs and other presents they were all sent be- low while their Majesties hid eranges in the cabins and in various places around the deck, for which the sailors hunted. “You have found all but two,” said the Emperor at length, and there was a fresh hunt. Finally one of the sail- | ors saw the Emperor’s pocket bulging and reached his hand into it and took out an orange. The last missing orange was found in the Empress” parasol. S JUDGE FINES HALE FOR NOT ANSWERING QUESTION Also ¥ssues an Order for Seecretary’s Commitment to Charge of the United States Marshal. NEW YORK, May 8.—Judge La- combe in the United States Circuit Court to-day announced that he will sign an order fining Edwin F. Hale, secretary of the McAndrews & Forbes | Company, $5 for having refused to an- swer certain questions asked him in the investigation being made by the Federal Grand Jury in the American Tobacco Company case. The Judge also issued an order committing Hale to the custody of the United States Marshal until he purges himself from the Grand Jury charge. —_——————— MILWAUKEE, May 8.—Henry G. Goll, the former assistant cashier of the First National Bank, charged with embezziement of more than $100,000 from the bank, was admitted to bail to-night in the sum of $10,000. REGAL SHOES. P it i i i H E j 1 E i i i o ~ g i f i; g ¥ | i b1 Sold direct from tannery to consumer. The largest retail shos business in the world. 93 stores in principal cities from London to San Francisca, + REGAL THE SHOE THAT PROVES