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"Parsifal*' Is Corid'emnecL . BOSTON, Dec. 14.— A reduction in wages averaging 10 per; cent and in volving 6000 operatives was made to day in the cotton mills at Adams, North Adams, Mass. and Norwich, Conn. . . ) Big Cut In AVages. Machinist Becomes Millionaire. OTTUMWA. Iowa, Dec. 14. — Frank Bradbury, a local machinist has fall en , heir to a fortune estimated at $1,000,000 left by his uncle, Thomas Bradbury of New York, a piano man ufacturer. • ¦ Man. AVho. Murdered His Wife in Brooklyn Dies in ISleotrie Chair ". In Sing Siuff. . j. NEW YORK, Dec. .U.-r-Willjam H.' Ennis,, a jforfner^, Brooklyn policeman,; cdnvlcted of 'having 'murdered hiS wife, Was put to" death this morning' in the electric chair in Sing Sing pris on. .Two applications of the -current w'ere made. . , r - ' r . . The murder occurred on January 14, 1902/ at the home of Mrs. Ennis' mother in Canarsie. -The -policeman' first. attacked his mother-in-law", then ; net. shot^downs his wife, despite the" pleadings, of he,r sister. FORMER POLICEMAN PX: .f PAYS LIFE PENALTY Two .women from Oakland who gave assumed names In Judge Mogan's court' yesterday, appeared to prosecute a burly negro irooper named Lee Banks.! They coyly "admitted that they h&d been drinking, too much during the! everiingVand while * waiting at Kearnyi and Washington streets* for a c*ar, were accosted by,' the negro, who attempted: to; v take ho'.d of one of the women. She rpsented;thc familiarity fUidlhe,, knocked I hfer> i 'd6^ v^^^^^o-Mp^^6j^e5i:t^i'*'ilike j service"for'Ver companion.* Judge Mo- 1 gan found him guilty of battery and will "make the-' amount of tho fine a de-' ter'rent one for future liberties on the, part it tho negro soldier. HONOLULU, Dec. 14.—Ex-Agricul tural Commissioner" Wray Taylor, who was indicted last Mareh for the alleged embezzlement of $S00 of .Government money, has been heard from. Taylor went to California early In the year on official business, and after visiting a number of agricultural officials was not heard of again. An inquiry disclosed that he had disappeared and that he was short in his accounts as Agricul tural Commissioner. His indictment followed. A letter Just received here from Epis copal Bishop Restarick of Hawaii says that Taylor visited the" Bishop while the latter was in New York. Taylor said that he had been home to England, but could not recall making the trip. His njir.d was a" blank from the time he was in San Francisco until he was with relatives In England. Taylor's story finds many believers here. He could have been an embezzler for a large amount had he been so inclined, aa his career had been one . of trust. He was organist- for the- Anglican Fathers. His brother, who is said to have experienced a- similar lapse of memory, died here recently. Former Agricultural Commissioner Taylor of Honolulu Has a Strange Story to Tell. ALLEGED EMBEZZLER SAYS MIND WAS BLANK George H. MuMer and F. O. Bushnell are making a hard fight to escape con viction in Police Judge Fritz' court for their little escapade with Policemen Peters and Hayden two weeks ago at the corner of Eddy and Powell streets. Peters and Muller had a lively mix-up and tho officer was compelled to draw his revolver before he could subdue "nls antagonist. Policeman Hayden, L. R. Parker,, an, insurance man, and 'lln.ll Williams, a steward 'at the Pacific Union Club, testified that Muller was the aggressor, which' closed the cas-> of the prosecution. For the defuse Walter R. Kneiss and George A. Kuplo thought thnt Peters had. struck tho first blow, although they made no ma terial change in the nature of the con versation preceding the fight from that maintained by the prosecution. Thrj case will probably be concluded to-day) Pretty papeteries in beautiful boxes, envelopes and paper tied with silk rib bons. Kseful for Christmas. Sanborn, \ all & Co. • Jail to continue his pleasant mood Grant* Porto Ilk-b a Delegate. WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.— The Com mittee on Insular Affairs of the House to-day reported a bfll giving Porto Rico a Delegate in Congress. CHANUTE, Kans.,.Dec. 14.— During a drunken riot on the streets here a po liceman shot Ed McLaln through the chest. McL.iin and Eiisha Wells then made a stand and fired into a crowd of 200 persons which had pursued them. A . policeman returned the shots but no one was hurt. McLaln may di-?. Poliwinnn Shoots a . Hoodlum. WASHINGTON. Dec" 14.— The gross postal receipt? at the fifty largest post offices in the United States for thelast month, compared with November, 1902. were $5,402,^S0, an increase of more than 7 per *nt. Tho highest increase was Zk> p^r cent at Los Angeles. Postal Rcfeints Increase. Judge Cnbaniss yesterday let' go a large collection of derelicts, alwiya possible criminals, who haunt the •'wine Joints" on the Barbary Coast, much to the' disgust of the arresting oflicers. But down at the very last of the line he found one squat chap .vho didn't look good to him. The pollc:- man testified that he found him at 3 o'clock in the morning trying to dis pose of a watch and that he had- a blackjack in his pocket. His name is Thomas McGowan and the situation was so pleasing to him that he smiled gleefully throughout the hearing. H» was given five months in the County PUEBLO. Colo., Dec. 14.— The loco motive, baggage car ar.d first coach of. a Rock Island train coming west wore thrown off the track this morning -.on miles cast of Colorado Springs', and three trainmen were badly hurt. The v/reck was caused by school children, v.ho placed a bolt en the track. School Lads Cause a Wreck. SIOUX CITY, Iowa. Dec. 14.— Hnrry Maine, cashier of the Farmers' and Merchants' Bank of Linn Grove, Iowa, shot himself through the heart to-day. It is. understood Maine lost heavily on the board of trade. The bank is a pri vate institution with deposits of $100, 000. It is controlled by, the First Na tional Bank. of., Storm Lake, which or dered Its doors closed. Banker Commits Suicide. Veronique Pacquatte is a hard work ing little French laundress at 934 Mc- Allister street with a child to support. For the last three years she also has had to feed ar.d clothe a big. hulking Frenchman of a husband. He toiled not, neither did he spin, but Solomon in all his glory never acquired the jags that have been imbedded in the inner works of the husband during the three years last past, while the wife toiled fourteen hours a day for him and their ¦child. Lately he has been In the habit Of escorting his Jag to the French laun dry and mussing things up consider ably. His wife finally had him arrested for hatterv and he appeared before Judge Cabaniss yesterday with Maitre Cognet for his advocate. The maitre made the most eloquent plea of his life. During fifteen minutes of impassioned oratory at !east seven words of Eng lish f.oated out of the maelstrom of fiery French and the Judge was moved. He finally allowed the husband to go, with the warning that if he annoyed his wife any further he would be sent APPLETON, Wis., Dec. 14.— The body of L. e. Mitchell, the SaiHa, Colo., miner who died on Thursday last, is still in the Morgue unclaimed. A telegram containing a touching- p.p peal for assistance was received from Mitchell's wife to-day. . Mitchell, it was said, was about to negotiate a «J«»al which would make him wealthy when he was attacked with a hemorrhnge and died. • Miner's Body Unclaimed. J. Tysma, a well-groomed Hollander, who says he is making a tour of the world, has been doing a good deal of touring in San Francisco during his three weeks' stay in this interesting metropolis. A week after his arrival he landed before Judge Cabaniss on the charge of carrying concealed weapons and was fined $10. Appended to the charge was a tale of a golden career in the opulent haunts of pleasure, of which, the court refused to take cogniz ance. A few days later Judge Cabaniss wandered into Judge Conlan's court and found the touring Hollander again arraigned for packing around deadly weapons. There were sidelights to this story that did not get into the record. Once again yesterday Herr Tysma loomed up fresh and smiling before Judge Cabaniss. He had evidently got the Police Court habit, which is more seductive than morphine.' This time he had trouble with a hackman, which was adjusted on an equitable basis by the court. Judge Cabaniss told the tour ist who is touring so much in narrow circles that the best thing he could do was to go back to his native dykes and the tender care of his mother. The great world was no place' for h'.z exu berant temperament. Herr Tysma promised to think It over. Sobatoris Viassi, although a native of a commercially decadent nation, is personally a strong believer in aggres siveness in the extension of trade. He is a trader only in a small way, but he is aggressive enough to capture the entire markets of the world, if only he were let alone. He peddles limes to private houses and when he fails to make a sale he stands out on the front stoop and curses the entire fam-1 ily clear down to the dog in blood curdling mixtures of American and Italian profanity/ The only way to se cure his withdrawal is to purchase his wares. Several complaints were made of his methods and he was up before Judge Mogan yesterday. He was promptly found guilty of disturbing the peace, but the charge of peddling with out a license went over until to-day for further investigation. At any rate his commercial ideas will undergo re vision when the Judge finishes with him. | Fight for Presidency of Lady Manag ers Lies Between Mrs. Ilorton and Mrs. Manning. ST. LOUIS, Dec. 14.— Miss Helen Gould to-day notified her friends among .the Board of Lady Managers of the World's Fair that under no circum stances could she consider acceptance of the position of president to suc ceed Mrs. James L. Blair. This, ac cording to the members themselves, leaves the contest practically between Mrs. John Miller Horton of Buffalo and Mrs. Daniel Manning of Washington. Mrs. Mary Phelps 3Iontgomery of Portland, Ore., who has been mentioned as a candidate for president, said to day that she thought there was no question that the contest would ba be tween Mrs. Horton and Mrs. Manning. She believed Mrs. Manning would be chosen. The board will make an effort after convening to-morrow to secure permis sion to change the by-laws so that the present limitation of twenty-one mem-' bers shall be increased to twenty three. MISS HELEN* GOULD DECLINES THE HONOR Woman's devotion to man was illus trated forcibly in Judge Mogan's court yesterday. Some weeks ago Philip Kel ly, living at 1318 Hampshire street, at tacked his wife with a butcher knife, cut her severely in the hand and stabbed her in the left breast. Fright ened* at his deed, he sought medical as sistance unsuccessfully, and finally came to the police station and said that he had stabbed his wife and feared she was going to die. She was sent to the Receiving Hospital and the husband was locked up on the charge of at tempted murder. When the case came up for preliminary hearing the first time the Judge asked the wife if she was in earnest in her intention to pros ecute her husband. Smarting from her injuries, she proclaimed that she want ed him punished. She appeared yester day with a four-months-old baby in her arms and calmly told the court that she did not want to testify against Kelly. There was nothing to do except dismiss lhe defendant, and the reunited trio left the courtroom with the wom an's hand in the man's and her eyes smiling up to him. VANCOUVER, B. C.'-Dec. 14.— Drs. Morris and Williams of Vernon to-day engaged in a rough and tumble fight at a Coroner's inquest held in that town. It was the culmination of an inquiry into the cause of the death of a woman named Marion RusselL There was a large attendance of lawyers and phy sicians from neighboring towns. The two doctors pummeled each other and one' of the lawyers was knocked down during the fight and trampled upon by the combatants. Policemen were sent for and order was finally restored. Tlie Coroner's jury brought in a ver dict of death from natural causes, but accused Dr. Williams of unprofessional conduct and declared that the quarrel between the only two doctors of' the town was a menace to the community. Later the Jury declared that in its opinion a man named Ferguson should be run out of the town. Fpeeial lMipatch to Jhe Call. \V. H. Clifford, playwright, author, librettist and other things, testified he roomed at the Adams House' with Wil kerson and knew of his conduct. He n«»ver saw Miss Rosedale in Wilkerson's apartments. Ovita Leathe, who is r-'W Mrs. Hawes, sat with, Flossie Hope during the play and smiled and wept as the drama was unfolded. Sue is the young vnman who gave testimony ihf.t partly proved that Wilkerson had bsen guilty o r suspicious acts, and wh? f i witnosses were put on the stand in the afternoon to prove her good character Attorney Newbergh insinuated that hjw character was bad. Mrs. Hawes burst into tears and tried to break in on the p!ay. Mrs. .Barney Bernard led her from the play house in order .that the porformance -might not be interrupted. The muchly abused heroine said she • earned $150 a week at Fischer's. The .heavy villain afterward cut in and said he had given his wife thousand* of dol lars and it was not stage money. When the friends'of the muchly abused wife had the stage Wilkerson muttered un der his breath and bit his nails In real melodramatic style. The performance was not over at 4:30 p.' m.' so it was continued until this morning. The au 'dience crowded the stag* door and 'waited until the actors In the drama •came out. The "Johnnies" ogled the chorus girls and others stared at the leading man and women. • K ¦ - : ¦; .- ' • "No, I never did." "Did you ever play cards with W il- r kerson?" he was asked. "Yes, I played poker with him until the early hours of the morning." "For heavy stakes?" THEY PLAYED POKEH. Miss Rosedale was allowed to seok the seclusion of the wings au-l Harry Harris, a man with a heavy cold, al lowed the calcium to shine on nim for awhile. "Were you ever addressed as 'the llt tlp Indian squaw'?!' "Yes. Miss Gorman might ha\e called me that." * "Was Mr. Wilkerson ever in your room in Spokane?" "Yes, twite, but in th3 davt!m-.\" "How did Mr. Wilkerson's trunk come to be in your room?" "I 'paid him $5 for it in Spokane." The play might have been entitled "The Lost Pajamas." Spicy lines .en livened the production. Pretty chorus girls without their make-ups held the center of the stage and spoke their lines, prompted at times by the inquir ing relative and the Hebrew comedian. Harry James came out to lead the or chestra, and .a few master mechanics were on hand to help out if needed. Myrtle Rosedale held the stage for a long time. Her acting was superb. She never forgot her lines and played her part nicely. She is called the co-re spondent, but she declines the title. The audience held its breath as the witness told of locked doors that separated her from, the heavy villain on northern trips. She denied that Wilkerson ever played "Sanho" with her and' carried her from one room to another. She said she knew there was a key in the door, because she had examined the door. ¦ ' "But you wore pajamas?" asked Humphrey. "I did, and they were red," said Miss Rosedale. ' "Did you ever . call Wilkerson 'Daddy'?" '1 never did." , "THE LOST PAJAMAS." For the. last week a pair of pajamas have hovered over the Wilkerson di vorce case. One witness said "they were baby blue, another vowed they were pink, the defendant swore they were cream-colored and how the co-respond ent in the case comes forward and de clares they were red. Judge Murasky has taken 'judicial notice of the color, and unless the said pajamas are brought into court and marked "Ex hibit A" more testimony must be intro duced'to pVove who wore them. ¦¦¦¦¦ Myrtle Rosedale, a -chorus girl with soulful black eyes, a retrousse nose and a charming lisp, denied that Ira Puerl Wilkerson presented them to her. She claims she bought them and wore them at all times. Attorney William F. Hum phrey, who represents Maud Amber (Mrs. Wilkerson) in the divorce pro ceedings, tried hard yesterday to prove the original ownership of the pajamas, but Miss Rosedale was too wary. There was a select audience in Judge Murasky's courtroom yesterday to see the performance. The Wilkerson di vorce suit has the elements of a trag T edy and a farce. Puerl Wilkerson is the heavy villain, and Amber, 'the statuesque song queen at Fischer's, is the muchly abused heroine. When the curtain went up yesterday morning the critics occupied orchestra seats and en- Joyed the play hugely. Judge Murasky fulfilled the position of stage manager and allowed no waits. Attorney A. S. Newbergh played the Hebrew come dian, and Attorney Humphrey assumed the role of the inquiring relative. There was a dim light in the courtroom and the scenes were sometimes sometimes pathetic and at all times sensational. PORTLAND. Or., Dec. 14.— Copies have been received here of a scathing letter sent by Senator Fulton and Sen ator Mitchell to Attorney General Knox, protesting against the appoint ment of Francis J. Heney and C. A. S. Frost as special prosecutors in the Ore gon land fraud cases. The letter, which is quite lengthy, says in part: "We cannot but / regret that you should have felt compelled to go out of Oregon to secure competentlegal.as sistarits. Had you gone elsewhere than to California to secure assistants, we might have thought you were indis posed to select one from Oregon lest in so doing you might secure one whose business interests would be in some way affected by the prosecutions: but such could not have been the motive that guided you, or you would have gone elsewhere than to California, for it is generally believed that the head and front of ' whatever conspiracy *has existed to defraud the Government in the matter of timber lands has its home in' San Francisco. "To have ignored our recommenda tion in order to appoint for the work one who has just escaped from jail leaves us at a loss to understand what we have done to merit such treatment. And the matter becomes more and more inexplicable to us when we re member that this San Francisco at torney was sentenced to jail upon a judgment of conviction of a crime quite similar in character to the one for which the parties he has now. been appointed to prosecute have been in dicted." Social Dispatch to The Call. Physician Accused of Unprofes-r sional Conduct and Another 3Ian Required to Leave Town Mrs. Ovita Hawes Finds Solace in Tears When Aspersions * Are Cast on Her Character to a place where the bears couldn't bite him for many moons. George Beattie, white, and Arthur Cotton, colored, two youths with preco ciously developed criminal instincts, were bound over to the Superior Court by Judge Conlan yesterday in bonds of $2000 on the charge of burglary. They are accused of breaking into a gun stone on Sansc-me street, but were ap prehended before they secured any booty. Attorney General the Recipient of a Missive Denouncing Al leged Unfairness of Selection . Mrs. Alice. Peck, who lives with her husband and -her mother on Fulton street, has hot been 'taking any three jear course at a "German university in studying hour to rear children. She has a much simpler method than that. She believes in a long right hand swing to the butt of the- ear and then if the child is not; sufficiently, raised she follows with a left hook to the jaw. She explained' the method ' to Judge Mogan yesterday. Nine little chil dren all in a row,. four of whom were little girls, invaded the back yard at tached to the domicile of which Mrs. Peck and her family occupy the upper portion. The woman in the lower fiat suffered the little ones to play in the back yard without molestation, but Mrs. Peck resented the intrusion and descending in her wrath on the youngsters caught hold of a little girl and slapped her soundly. '"I gave her a good, hard slapping." she told Judge Mogan. The children also testified that Mrs. Peck had a revolver in her hand and pointed it at them. This, she explained to the Judge, who erro neous. She had been cleaning her re volver, she said, and rushed down stairs without giving any thought to the weapon she carried. She denied that she had pointed it at the chil dren. As a defense she said that the. children had .gibed at her when told to leave the premises and she thought she had a right to expel them forcibly.- Judge Mogan found her guilty and will tell her this morning the amount her mistaken idea of how to raise children will cost her. BITTER LETTER TO KNOX LACAYMAL SCENE IN COURT DISORDER ..AT AX INQUIRY; British Columbian Doctors .En liven the Proceedings by a Bough -and : Tumble - Fight Oregon Lawmakers at Wash ington Complain of Special Prosecutors in Land Fraud Wilkerson Divorce Suit Now Hinges on the Ownership of the Bizarre Articles Is Cleaning It When She Starts Downstairs to Evict Children From Back Yard and Forgets to Lay It Down— Lime Peddler's Profanity Abated BATTLE MARS THE INQUEST SENATORS FILE SHARP PROTEST RED PAJAMAS IN THE CASE MRS. PECK INFORMS COURT WHY SHE HAD A REVOLVER THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 15, 1903. WASHINGTON. Dec. 14.— The Co-operative Association .of America., with headquarters at Lewlston. Me., has Issued a call for a national convention to be held in Fanueil Hall, Boston, January 12 to 14 next to "promote ac economic and cooperative Belf-fovernment." CHICAGO." Dec."" 14:— Tfie Chicago Presbytery to-day.adopted a resolution condemning the production on the public stage /of . ''Parsifal'', and other so-called religious rilays j which depict Jesus Christ subjected to temptation by W 6mW • ~ 6 Comet to Everyone, Bat Its Visits May So Postponed. Old age is not a question of years. Some men are old at forty, others are young: at sixty. It's a mighty hard proposition to look young, no matter how young you feel. If your hair Is falling: out and your head becoming bald. Perhaps you are tired trying ineffec- tual remedies for this evil. "We don't blame you if you are. Why not try an effective one for a change. Newbro's Herpicide kills the Dandruff germ — which Is. the cause of the whole trouble., "Destroy the cause, you remove the ef- fect." ' ' • Bold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. OLD AGE NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ip^OR special articles on burn- j -a. ing questions, good stories, I 1 beautiful pictures, and novels by; I I famous writers, McCLURE'S is jl JH the^best of all magazines -^ and ; j Trie Christmas McClure's ? is now for sale On all news stands. I- . McClure's— 10 cents a copy-r-$1.00 a year I "At atiy price the best** \ O I XLL/I ALr Subscribe now for 1904^-11. 00-r*nd get the November and I ' /\ t^ TE*'TG*"-T1> December numbers of 1903 free — 14 months for $1.00. The H •. V/JP'JP I* + fry -'' S. S. McClure Co^! 147 East 25$i Street, New York City. .. .'.11 ADVEBTISEMENTS. 1 For JANUARY j i§MBam&Ba£H3m3TCiHHl MRS. OSBORN the renowned fashion authority, has become a reg- ular contributor to The Delineator. Three pages of the January number (and of future issues) will ¦ be devoted to her letter with accompanying illustra- tions. This is our latest achievement in the interest of those who subscribe to The Delineator primarily for its fashion information. Hereafter the magazine will contain not only the latest ideas covering an immense range of styles of our own corps or de- signers, artists and writers, with illustrations by the most skilful fashion artists, but it will also present the views of the present and the prophecies for the future of this justly famous modiste. THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH . A Remarkable Series on PERSONAL BEAUTY JK'pS^EB . By Dr. Grace Peckham Murray. Finely Illustrated. This series of twelve monthlj * articles will be a mott practical help to The Delineator reader*. J) AD CTI7 AT* How Opera was Written, by W. J. Henderson; 1 /^.IXOll r\Lj I Reminiscences of lhe First Performance, by Custav Kobbe'. Illustrated from the only photographs of the opera ever taken, and pow pub- lished for the first time. A unique treat for the music lover. Just as interesting and ia another vein is SCHUMANN-HEINK AT HOME. THE EVOLUTION OF A CLUB WOMAN— Serial THE GOLDEN POPPY— A story by Jack London A DEPARTMENT FOR CHILDREN HOME MAKING WAITING AND SERVING AT TABLE For practical fashion information of value ; for the care of your person, the beautifying of your home, lhe welfare of children ; for every kbd of needlework, and for good liter- ature attractively illustrated, "Just Get The Delineator." Of your newidealer. or any Bctterick agent, or the pobtaKen. at 1 5 Ceaif ¦ copy. SI for aa entire year. THE BUTTERICK PUPL1SH1NG CO.. 7-17 W. 13th Street. New Yock FREE — Anyone addressing the publishers will be mailed free Mrs. Osborn's letts* with illustrations. Subscriptions to The Delineator can be handed hi at any of the fol lowing Butterick Agencies In this City: The Butterick Publishing Co., (Ltd.), 201 Post street. The Emporium. 1 Weinstock, Lubin & Co., Grant avenue and Geary street, I. :.. Cohen, • 145 Sixth street. J. W. Eaton, 639 McAllister street. s! M. Cohn & Bro., 1305 Stockton street. 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