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Peat : haB about . half o? the .heating power of coal and double that of wood.' i EUREKA. Aug. 10.— The British bark Graemere, carrying the fourth cargo of redwood lumber shipped to the United Kingdom, was cleared for London : Satur day and sailed to-day. ' She carried SCO .049 feet of rough clear redwood lumber, val ued sat more • than $25,000. This cargo makes a total of 3,311,343 ' feet, valued at 186,073 49. ¦ ¦ ;. . . Redwood for the United Kingdom. Jacob Samuels, at present great senior sagamore, will be advanced to great sa chem..and C. S. Davis of Angels Camp will become great senior sagamore.' There is to be a contest for the position of great Junior sagamore, which ig the starting position for the' highest station in this reservation. Upon retirement from the great sachemship J. , R. Tyrrell will become creat prophet. SACRAMENTO, Aug. lO.-The thirty eighth Great Council of the Improved Or der of Red Mpti will open in the State Capitol to-morrow. More than 250 dele gates, representing eighty-six of the eighty-eight tribes in California, will -be in attendance. Delegates arrived on all trains to-day and to-night a delightful open air concert was given at the Plaza in their honor. To-morrow night there will be a reception at the Crocker Art Gallery. On Wednesday night a team of Cosumnes Tribe of this city will give an open air adoption in amplified form at Sutters Fort. There will be a vaudeville show and open air ball at Oak Park on Thursday evening and a moonlight ex cursion on the Sacramento River Friday evening. In conjunction with the council of the Red Men, the women's branch of the order, the Degree of Pocahontas will hold councils in the Capitol building and will assist In entertaining the visiting members of the order and its auxiliary Great Sacjiern^ J. B. Tyrrell of Grass Valley will open the Great Council, and the report of the committee on creden tials will show a healthful Increase in the membershla of the order since the holding of the last Great Council eleven new tribes and 3000 members having been added. Several important amendments to tho constitution of the order are to be submitted, and Great 8achem Tyrrell will have some recommendations to make for the advancement of Its interests ', in the State. . . Special Dispatch to The Call. \ Will Open Convention at Capital City RED MEN WILL HOLD COUNCIL SALT LAKE. Utah, Augr. ; 10.— Frank Hoffman and Burton Downing, two of the best-known riders on the local bicycle track, are suffering from diphtheria and will not be able to ride for some time. Both are from California. Cyclists 111 With Diphtheria. Excursions With Reserved Seats. Beginning Sunday. August 23, a serie3 of popular $1.50 excursions to Cazadero and the Russian River redwoods will be Inaugurated by the North Shore Railroad. The reserved-seat feature, which- mot with such general public approval in pa*t yeara,- will .be continued under the per sonal direction of Excursion Agent LocH**. Sale of tickets begins next Monday at «* Market street, opposite Palace Hotel. Only a limited number of tickets wil! bo sold for each event. Parties of twenty eight or more may secure a private car. • TUCSON, Ariz., Aug. 10.— The Society of Arizona to-day \ adopted and . forwarded- to General; Nelson A. Miles resolutions In recognition of his forty- two years'- pub lic-service,, referring his conquests., of the Indian tribes of the Rockies from British Columbia to Mexico; the perpetual ;pcaee. to Arizona and New Mexico by the capture and removal, of Gcrohimo "and his Apache Tigers to the Atlantic Coast. , ' Arizonans Honor General Miles.. Accept Plans for Library Building. PALO ALTO. Aug. 10.— The plans of Dodge & Dolliver of San Francisco were to-day unanimously accepted by the board of trustees of the Palo Alto library for the new Carnegie library, to be built at a cost of 510,000. The style is an adapt ation of the Florentine renaissance ' arid combines beauty and economy of space. Search for Bodies of Drowned Men. VALLEJO, Aug. 10.— The ctew of the United States torpedo boat Davis dragged the; bottom, of Carqulnex Straits . to-day in the hope of finding the bodies of Her man Salomon, William Hanson, K. ChU cne and David Wilson. 1 who were drowned yesterday by the sinking of the yacht Heine. Eight attempts were made with out success and to-day two torpedo boats will resume the search. :"": RIVERSIDE, Augr. 10— The room in which Murderer Fischer committed the awful crime last April, for which he was recently hanged, was the scene this after noon of another tragedy. To-day Pro prietor Stewart set carpenters to work making repairs in the apartments. Harry Slmms' neck came in contact with a live electric wire oft which the insulation had been burned by the Fischer flre and was instantly killed. Slmms came her© a few weeks ago from Muskogee. I. T. Ha leaves a wife and five children. Electric Wire Kills Carpenter. VIENNA. Aug. 10.— In consequence of the assassniation of King Alexander and Queen Draga and the subsequent attitude of the Servian military officials, both Russia and Austria have decided to send home all the Servian officers studying in their military schools. Russia has for bidden her officers to have official or so cial intercourse with Servian officers ! BELGRADE, Aug. lO.-King Peter's children. Crown Prince George. Princess Helena and Prince Alexander, arrived here to-day from St. Petersburg. The King awaited their coming at the station. The Premier welcomed the Crown Prince, who expressed his delight at arriving on the soil of his forefathers. The royal party, subsequently attended a Te Deum at the Cathedral.. ¦ Would Punish Assassination of Alex ander and Draga by Military and Social Boycott. RUSSIA AND AUSTRIA SEND SERVIAN OFFICERS HOME AUBURN, Aug. 10.— Two of the con victs arc believed to have got off at Lin coln, on the Oregon road, last Saturday night, and the officers are investigating. The Sheriff's office here received word this morning to the effect that Fahey and Miller had been seen in the vicinity of Rocklln. The information came from William Taylor, who claims ta know Fa hey personally. Under Sheriff. May and Jailer Fulton were out Sunday in the vi cinity of Loomis,- where Seavis said he had hid his rifle in the brusu. The offi cers believe Seavis was honest In his as sertions that he hid his rifle In the brush, but think he was mistaken in the plape of hiding. UNABLE TO FIND RIFLE. Infernal Machine Explodes. CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 10.— An In fernal machine in the form of a box filled with dynamite was sent from PhlHlpop polis to Uskub, timed to explode at the latter place the. moment that two passen ger trains coming from and going to Sa lonica were due to pass . through. Fortu nately the train upon which the machine was sent w%s detained at the frontier de pot at Zlbiviche, where it exploded to night, damaging the station but injuring no one. Macedonians Are Concentrating. LONDON, Aug. 10.— A news agency dis patch from Constantinople says the Mace donian insurgents are concentrating be tween Prillp andDlbra for the purpose of intercepting the Turkish reinforcements from old Servia. Soldiers Are Kept Busy. SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 10.— Soldiers at Camp Dickinson and Camp Stone to-day began real work. There was battalion drill this morning and this afternoon dress parade guards paced their beats in regulation military fashion. Every visitor is required to take off his hat to the 'flag that floats in front of the headquarters. WALLA WALLA, Wash.. Aug. 10.— Brutally rawhlded by men who took turns at raising great welts on his naked flesh with horsewhips, then rolled In beds of tar weed .which filled his body full of countless prickles and finally sent on the run out of camp to the tune of rifle balls, a harvest nand named Ray appeared here this mornlns. weak and angry. He tells a cruel story. Hla fellow hands, he says, accused him of attacking the threshing outfit cook, pulled , him from bed, "trussed" him to a header box wagon for the whipping and otherwise misused him. He did not adhere to his original Intention of having the gang arrested. but has sought work elsewhere. THRESHING OUTFIT CREW MISUSE A HARVEST HAND According to previous reports, the trop ical worm disease has attacked 20,000 Westphalian miners. The Government commission investigating the disease re ported that only those miners who rarely see the sunlight are afflicted. The dis ease is fatal. . BERLIN, Aug. 10.— The Government's efforts to check the tropical worm disease among the mine operatives In the Essen district has proved unsuccessful. The lat est reports indicate that the disease is spreading. Its presence has Just been dis covered in the colonies of Pranziska and Bergmann, in the middle of the Ruhr region, which hitherto has been exempt from the disease. Effort to Eradicate Tropical Ailment in Essen District Declared ."V Failure. FATA^, WORM DISEASE CANNOT BE CHECKED That such means employed by . the , respond ent have done and arts doing great and 1 Irre parable Injury to complainant, and a perpet ual injunction Is asked for, , enjoining the re spondent or his agents from telling cigars under the name of "Sanchez" or any other name similar. In sound or appearance. . Affidavits are made by many leading whole sale as well as retail dealers, all engaged in the cigar and tobacco trado here, each of whom states that < he -has carefully examined the brands and trademarks of the "Sanchez y Haya" cigars and compared them with thoa» of ."Li. Banchez y Ca." and considers that the latter are well calculated to deceive the or dinary purchaser of the genuine "Sanchez y Haya" "cigar. That the respondent, II. Rinaldo. with Intent to deceive, and to deprive the complainant of its just rights, has knowingly and willfully of fered and sold since the beginning of April last, and continues to sell spurious cigars In imitation of those of the complainant, and bearing counterfeit brands and labels In imita tion of theirs. That in the year 18b7 the original firm adopt ed and their successors, the complainants, have continued to use designs, labels, trademarks and trade names so that their cigars might be readily distinguished from all others. That said brands ani labels -were duly regis tered by Sanchez y Haya In the year 1S7S In the United States Patent Office and registered :n the year 1696 in compliance with the laws. Thar by reason of their long experience In the manufacture of cigars, of the good quality of their product and the extensive advertise ment thereof the Sanchez & Haya cigars have become widely known and have acquired a high reputation throughout the United States and elsewhere, and are commonly designated as the "Sanchez" cigars. . The Sanchez y Haya Co., a Florid* corpora tion, have taken action by causing to be filed In the United States Circuit Court here a bill of complaint against H. Rinaldo of this city. wholesale distributer of La Flor de Sanchez cigars, requiring him to appear and show cause .why he and his agents should not b« perpetually enjoined from offering these goods In the manner they are presently doing, and asking for a temporary injunction pending the decision of the suit. The complaint, covering some 25 typewritten folios, sets forth the Incorporation of Sanchez & Haya Co. in the year 1S95 under the laws of the State of Florida. The confusion and dissatisfaction that have been created in this market by the Introduc tion, under a similar brand, of a substitute for the famous and popular clear 'Havana clgara of Sanches & Haya have at last culminated in the submission of the matter to the courts. TEMPORARY INJUNCTION SOUGHT. Sanchez & Haya Bring Suit Against H. Rinaldo & Co. for Substitution 1/ of "L. Sanchez" Cigars. MORE SUBSTITUTION IN CIGABS. Undertaker's Assistant Commits Suicide at San Diego. SAN DIEGO, Aug. 10.— Garfield Mayden, who was better known here as Billy Woods, committed suicide early this morning by swallowing carbolic acid. Mayden had been employed by Whltson & Co. for about a year, having come here from Northern California. He disappear ed from his place of employment nearly a week ago and was not seen until short ly after midnight last night.' when he approached the watchman at the flre de partment engrlne-house on the plaza and handed him a letter. Mayden then cross ed the street. The fireman, after he had 'glanced at the letter, followed Mayden and found him lust arter he had swal lowed carbouc acid. Four physicians were called, but they were unable to save May den's life. ' • Mayden, or Wood*, is believed to have a brother J. T. Mayden, in Sacramento. One of Butte Escapes Caught. BUTTE, Mont., Aug. 10.— James Martin, one of the six prisoners who broke from the County Jail last night, was captured thirteen miles back in the mountains to day. Martin is under sentence of death. Macedonian Delegates State Their Grievances Against Turkey. SOFIA, Aug. 10.— The delegates here of the Macedonian committee have . ad dressed the following appeal to ea£h of the representatives of the Powers: Your Excellency— The delegates of the Mace donian committee have the honor to bring to your notice the following resolutions, with the request that you communicate them to your Government: The Mussulmans', systematic persecution has compelled the Christians In Macedonia and the vilayet of Adrianople to institute a gen eral rising. They have had recourse to thla extreme measure . after exhausting, all pacific means to secure the Intervention of Europe to enforce the provisions of the Berlin treaty. At the present moment intervention is the only means of remedying the evil and stop ping bloodshed. The sporadic efforts of the powers to secure reforms have failed; they have resulted merely in a recrudescence of Turkish fanaticism and greater oppression. It is evident that reform measures, to be ef ficacious, must Include .the appointment of a Christian Governor General of Macedonia — some one who has never held office under the Porte, and who must be' Independent of the Turkish Government in the exercise of- his functions— and the further appointment by the powers ef a Joint permanent administrative board, with full power to deal with *ny dis turbance. Having published the foregoing facts to the civilized world and made known the causes which have driven the Macedonians to despair, the committee for the Macedonians now In arms proposes to continue the fight until the object of their uprising has been attained. > For the committee; TATARTCHEFF, - CHRISTO, MATOFF. APPEAL TO THE POWERS. CARBOLIC ACID ENDS HIS LIFE Dear Mr. President: Acting In accordance with the suggestion made by the Secretary to the President. I yesterday telegraphed you my approval of the communication you have seen fit to address to me under date of August 6. In doing this I proceeded on the well warranted belief that the commendation you have so gen erously accorded to my official acts was only incidental - to the broader purpoce of your ad mirable letter. ' which Is a moving appeal to INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. lO.-Gov ernor Durbin to-day sent a formal reply to the letter ' from President Roosevelt concerning the recent mob at Evansville: Governor Durbin says: Governor Durbin Sends Formal An swer to President's Letter. replies to roosevelt! 1« — _« — ., . — ... .... — «- v the conscience and the patriotism, destined. In my opinion, to profoundly affect public senti ment on a vitally Important national problem. The effect of such an appeal from suuh a source is certain to be salutary In its wide spread Influences. 'In this Instance, as In other emergencies, you have spoken with the cour age of conviction, with the eloquence of earn estness and under the inspiration of the clear understanding of and devotion to the duties and responsibilities of American citizenship. _J' feel that you have struck the keynote of a national neceenlty when you say that all pub lic men, all writers of th£ press, all clergymen, all , teachers, all who have a right 'to address the people should with energy Unite to sup press such crimes and support those engaged in putting them down and declare the corelated dectrine that we must show that ths law is ade quate to deal with crime by freeing it from evpry vestige of technicality and delay. Your stirring words will serve to press home upon the people a responsibility which, reaching beyond all those In authority Is, after all, es sentially their own. To arouee the realiza tion of that responsibility and all that it im .plles will be to entirely eradicate oonditions which otherwise may become soon, as you point out so cleverly, tin ¦ Imminent menace to the vry life of tl>« republic. . , GKORGIA'S GOVERNOR. WHO INDORSES PRESIDENT'S AN TI-LYNCH1NG SENTIMENTS. The elopers were traced to the town ot Gares, where they were endeavoring to stow away the seventeen youngsters and themselves in a three-room cottage. They were brought to this city and lodged, in jail. Kingsley never -suspected anything wrong until an elopement occurred last night. The loss of his wife 1 was bad, but the quietness that reigned throughout his once noisy 'homo when it was occupied by seventeen little Klngsleys was more than he could stand. ¦ ROCHESTER. N. \\. Aug. 10,-Joseph Bauer is fond if children, and. although a widower with three boys of his own, he felt lonesome. Mrs. Louise Klngsley, wire of George T. Kingsley. a piano fin isher, possesses a family, of seventeen hale and hearty youngsters. Bauer fell violently in love with Mrs. Kingsley, who is short, fat and 50i'and her flock at first sight. '4" t' " ?* Special Dispatch to The CalL Seventeen Children Go With a Runaway Couple.. On the Nogales branch a hundred foot bridge at Patagonia was -washed away Sunday night and k long bridge at Hua chuca Siding on the same line was burned so that tranic has been blocked for forty eight -hours and passengers are being carried to Nogales from Tucson by stage. On the El Paso Southwestern road traf fic has been blocked by the washout of an important bridge at Lewis Springs. On the Southern Pacific a cloudburst washed out a long stretch of track west of Red Rock and through trains were delayed for hours. Passengers on the Crescent City express were without food until the arrival of the Sunset Limited, carrying a dining-car. The Southern Pacific expects to have the bridges rebuilt and trains running on the Nogales branch by Wednesday. The main line opened' this afternoon and the delayed trains, which had been annulled, were continued as extras. The rains which have continued during the past few days have been the heaviest and most general of the season. The Sonora Railroad and the Nogale3 branch of the Southern Pacific are the greatest sufferers and traffic has not yet been resumed on these lines. Half a mile of track at Morena, near Ortiz Station, on the Sonora Railroad, was swept away by the storm and special work trains had to be sent out from both Hermosillo and Guaymas carrying men and material •with which to rebuild that stretcn of the line. TUCSON, Ariz., Aug. 10.— A severe storm swept over Southern Arizona and Sonora yesterday and last night. Rain fell in torrents and in some places the skies fairly opened and poured torrents of water over the mountains and plains. Railroad traffic on all lines was paralyzed by the storm and cloudbursts washed away long sections of track and bridges. All through trains over the Southern Pa cific were deldyed from twelve to twenty four hours and' on other lines trains were delayed at small stations, where some of them yet remain waiting for the track to be repaired or bridges to be rebuilt. Special Dispatch to The CalL To the correspondent of The Call Keck showed letters to prove that Llttauer had sent him at least one check as a reward for "fixing" his bid for a lot of gloves at a figure that would not interfere with the bid made by William Top, whose fac tory here was practically owned by Llt tauer. - Previous to 1836, when Llttauer was first sent to Washington as Representative in Congress, Xeck had been a contractor, dealing with the Government with more than fair success. In ten years he had had twenty-five contracts for supplying gloves and caps for the army, every ona of the contracts having been obtained after an open competition and an award ing to the lowest bidder. Since 1S96 he ha3 had only three minor contracts, though on several occasions he has sub mitted bids lower than those of his com petitors. He charges that favoritism has been shown, and though It is Impossible to prove that it was done at the suggestion of Littauer, the contracts have been awarded to men who are little more than Littauer's dummies, at figures above those sbumitted by other bidders. Ha gives dates to proye what he says and he gives figures. Keck charged .Llttauer with having con spired with himself and others to keep the price of gloves for the army at an unnecessarily high figure. So far as it was possible. Keck supplied proof of his allegations and said that he would make affidavits. He hopes that the investiga tion which has been ordered by President Roosevelt into contracts in which Lit tauer is believed to have had an Interest will be thorough and he bas given the names of various manufacturers ot gloves and others, who, be says, can give in formation that will be of value if the in vestigation is not for "whitewashing" purposes. JOHNSTOWN, N. T., Aug. 10.— In the most direct manner possible, Timothy Keck, a prominent citizen and well known manufacturer of this place, to day charged L. N. Llttauer, Representa tive in Congress from this district, with having had an interest in various con tracts obtained from the Government. Soeclal Dispatch to The Call. The fish hatchery has been doing an immense business this year and only recently 300,000 young trout were planted in Mendoclno County Btreams. Of these 73.000 were placed In Reeves Mill Creek this week. There are countless thousands of young trout ready for transplanting and they are being sent out as fast as possible. water in the streams of Mendocino~ County Is unusually low for this season of the year, which is a dis advantage in the placing of young fish. - UKIAH, Aug. 10.— For- some time past there has been a strange species of fish noticed ; In a pool near the fish hatchery here. One of the same was gigged recently with a common hay fork and thrown from the spring which is the source of the pool. The specimen was taken to Colonel LaMotte, at the hatchery, who Is regarded as an authority on things pertaining to species of fish. He at once pronounced it an Austrian mirror carp. This is one of the most toothsome fish known, but tho man ner in which they came to be planted in this spring is not known. Old settlers have known of this fish being in the spring for many years, but did not give 'it '"sufficient thought' to ascertain its species. In color it is golden, has a decidedly pretty contour and is almost without scales. The few scales possessed by the fish are a dark golden color, mak ing a decided contrast with tho lighter hue of its body. Colonel LaMotte in tends to make an investigation and de termine if possible the manner in which the species came to be transulanted in that vicinity. It is interesting in this connection to -note that the numerous lynchlnKs In the North ami Northwest of late have brought forth such an expression from the President, while the num ber of them In the South has been so few within the same -period as to attract little or no attention. « TLANTA, Ga.. Aug. 10. —Governor y\ Terrell to-day indorsed the con- J—i \ tents . , of President Roosevelt's " letter to Governor Durbin of In diana in regard to the recent ac tion of Governor Durbin to prevent lynch ing* in that State. Governor Terrell gave the following signed statement to the As sociated Press: I think President Roos*v»lt is on the rijrht line, and I am in h<»arty accord with the views h» pxprespei. The majesty of the law should be and fhall be upheld, but at the same time there should be a prompt and epeedy trial of the offenders in that crime which frequently excites the ancer of mob? and leads to lynch ing*, and the r>uni*hment should not be de layed by technicalities. No law however *trfctly enforced will ab solutely stop lynchings for rape, but Fpee«ly trials tend to lessen the number and' practi cally perve as a preventive of lynchings for ether offenses. -- . Toothsome Variety of Pish Discovered Near the Hatchery. Direct Accusation of Fraud Against the Congressman. Railroad TraflSc on All the Lines Is Badly Crippled. AUSTIN CARP IN MENDOCINO LITTAUER PAYS FOR FIXING BIDS SEVERE STORM SWEEPS ARIZONA ELOPERS TAKES ENTIRE FAMILY HONOLULU. Aug. 10.— The Supreme Court to-day rendered its decision in tRc disbarment proceedings instituted against prominent attorneys by Attorney General Andrews. The court disbars ex-Circuit Judge A. S. Humphreys and Georgo A. Davis. Frank Thompson is suspended from practicing for one year. Attorney J. A. .Magoon is exonerated. Justice Gal braith rendered a dissenting opinion in all of the cases. The court holds that Humphreys is guilty of attempting to in duce Magoon to betray. his client,; Sum ner, and also of opposing his ex-clterit, Sumner. Thompson is found puilty of op posing his ex-client. Davis i3 found guilty of , abusing a legal process. It was alleged that he forced the aged Sum .ner to pay him an exorbitant fee through intimidation.* Justice Galbraith says, that, Davis and Thompson aie deservitij; of lighter punishment and that Magoon,, on the charge of collecting an exorbitant fee. is deserving of some punishment.! - The disbarment proceedings grew but of the case of John Sumner, an aged cap italist, who was obliged to defend himself against the attacks -of relatives who/al leged that he was ; mentally Incompetent and unable to handle his property. Mfiny attorneys w^re engaged In the, case and some of the lawyers, after defending gum n*r in one proceeding, opposed him at subsequent stages of legal action. *ffhe fees collected from th,e weak old' man became a public scandal and Humphreys and Davis were denounced from the Cir cuit Court bench. For a few months of litigation Sumner paid out $50,000 in law yers' feos< . , ¦ ' ,:.-¦ - : Ex-Circuit Judge Humphreys Loses His Right to Practice Law. Decision Bezidered'From " Supreme Bench at Honolulu. COURT DISBARS TWO ATTORNEYS . ROM£, Aug. 10.— The names of the men who attempted to assassinate M. Combes A he French "Premier, at Marseilles yester day, seeming- to be Italian, the author ities here -looked up their list of Italian .anarchists anfl verified them. Many mes eagea of congratulation were thereupon *ent tp-M. Combos, including one of- an warm character from the Foreigjl Minister,' Vice Admiral Morin ¦Berne Authorities Look Up the Kec ',: ord> of the Would-Be -i . -.„•> Murderers. ASSAILANTS OF COMBES •'•ABE ITALIAN ANARCHISTS BERLIN. Aug. 10.— An agitation in fa vor of o-'Ceneral strike is making head way amors the coal miners in the Essen district . At, a large meeting of. miners held.arStockura. near W'itten, Herr Nue the recently elected Socialistic member of the Reichstag, said the strike must begin within, a few weeks unless the chief de mands ef the miners are satisfied. 5 Essen Miners May Strike. MANILA. Aug. 10.— David P. Barrows, chief of the.JBure^u of non-Christian tribes, has "been appointed successor to General Superintendent Bryan of the Bureau of Public Instruction, who has resigned the position on account of illness. The new superintendent is a native of the State of Illinois. He was appointed to the bureau which he has Just vacated In September. Succeeds Bryan at Manila. MANILA. Aug. 10. -The Filipino, Span ish and International Chambers of Com merce are strongly opposed to the pro posed bill regulating" the classification and pressing of hemp. They now urge the re moval of the majority, of the restrictions which would be placed upon the export trade by the bill under . consideration, while opposing the proposed reduction of the fine of $1000. the present penalty for the fraudulent packing of hemp, to 11 per bale., • - . To Foster Hemp Industry. Thp Constandinidis* divorce suit raised the question tit the legality of Dakota di vorces tri England. The husband charged his wife with bigamously marrying Dr. liinco, t"he famous physician. Mr. Con tfandihkil secured a. divorce from his first .wife in 1S37. John Lawson Walton, coun- for. the petitioner, explained the sub sequent proceedings as follows: .' "This deiicately nurtured lady of Bel- STa\ia went to a wild district of the earth, emigrated to the half-settled State of Dakota, became an American citizen, stayed £ix months there, fraudulently ob tained a so-called divorce, and married the co-respondent there, thus using the iax Dakota laws for her own purpose." The jury. July 25, found against the re spondent and co-respondent and awarded 5125.000 damages against Dr. Lanco. It also found the petitioner guilty on a counter charge. LONDON. Aug. in.— Sir Francis Jeune, president of the Divorce Court, to-day granted D. S. Constandinidi a divorce from his wife, a daughter of Stephen Ralli, a member of the firm of Ralll Bros., on the ground that Mrs. Constan •rtinidi's conduct led to the misconduct of her h'usband. British Jurist Does Not Recognize Dakota . Divorce. FAULTS OF WIFE EXCUSE HUSBAND His eld Venetian frteods agree that the Pope' looks ten years older than he did before his e'.ectioa. -but that his affable and Eiirule manner ha? not changed. The Pontiff allowed all of the mem bers of the delegation to kiss his hand snd called by name those whom he knew, ju^J as he baa when he met them for merly In Venice. He said to them: I. am. a poor mortal, too weak for tfc» heavy c-css which GcvJ fca? givpn ot But his will !>• 6m*. 1 will carry it a* best I can and you nurt all rnv to car Ix>r>i to give me th* IX3NDON. Aug. 11.— The ¦ Chronicle* 6 Home correspondent says this morning fhat «n authority which is frequently -well Informed asserts that Cardinal Sebastlno M4rtlneUJ Trill be appointed papal secre tary ct stat*>- BOME, Aug. 19.— To-day being St. Law rence day, the name day of Abbe I» reiizo Perrosso. the director of the Sistine Choir and * close friend and protece of EiUS X the Pope sent him his personal gr^etirgs. accompanied by an autograph nore congratulating him on the music Sivrn by the Sistine Choir durinc yes terday's coronation ceremony, most of which vras composed by the abbe. Pius X had another fatiguing day, a? he received all of the delegations which Kad coin* to Rome to attend the coro nation ceremonies. He accorded a lengthy to about thirty persons from Venice, receiving them In the Clementine Hall. ' .. Pius X Fasses a Fatiguing Day in Reception of Delegations. Cardinal May Be Given Post as Secretary of State. PAPAL PORTFOLIO FOR MARTINELLI THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, ITJE SD AY, AUGUST 11, 1903. Governor Terrell of Georgia Indorses Contents of Roose velt's Letter to Indiana's Chief Executive, but Thinks No Law Can Stop Summary Punishment of Infamous Crimes SAYS LYNGHINGS IN NORTH PROMPTED THE PRESIDENT 2 , ., Instructions for. framing , "THE OLD ARMX QHEST," NEXT SUNDAY'S * .ART .SUPPLEMENT: Frame in three-inch plain- scooped gilt or three-inch Flem- ish* brown* arid burnished, gold^ ECZEMA, NO CURE, NO PAY. Your druggist' will refund your money if PAZO OINTMENT falls to cure Ringworm. Tetter Old Ulcers and Sores, Pimples and Blackheads on the face, and all skin diseases. 60 cents. • ' f> {._':^_l _* ';';[._ ADVERTISEMENTS. \ .-£,7'. -' ' ' ':. Pl new/ ¦0: For Next to Nothing. _..T WO carloads of pianos in' a railroad wreck; damage to case only. Kailroad claim of 50 per cent allowed on the entire «amount. This makes KZ**** ?30o piano cost only $150, and first callers will get first and best choicetof these instruments, which, are scarcely damaged in any way. This iS9ti opportunity ypu- cannot afford to put off, as the best bargains will go'^jrst.^ There are some pianos badly damaged, but these will not be put on .sale, until they arc thoroughly repaired. Pianos' "rented from $2.00 up with privilege of allowing the rent to ap- ply-on purcba&c- price. ; Installments $4.00 up. Cash discount on all pur-' jchfltts if paid. lor in two years. ' Great bargains in piano players. » -•Jlcinc-Piano Cov Heine Hall, 2JS-237 Geary street, phone Main 5744. Largest wholesale and retail exclusive piano establishment on the coast. ¦ • \ . ADVERTTSETlirKNTa. CHOICEST imported hops, carefully selected 1 r i f--"r • •/• 11 barley, scietitmcially perfect malting, that's Always pure — pleas* ing —palatable. * Orders filled by I 1 am,, 1 Thftm9e W. Collins & Co., Telephone Grant 149-