THE MORNING ORElxONIAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1907. 6 ADAMS TURNS MARBLE WHITE then marrying her and refers bitterly to his wife who caused the prosecution of the guilty couple. Wife Quits Court in Tears When She Hears Letter Read to the Jury. STATE SPRINGS SURPRISE Prisoner Write Damaging State ment, to Relatives While Con fined In Idaho Penitentiary. Darrow Begins All Over. SPOKANE. Wash.. Nov. 21.-A special to the Spokesman-Review from Rath drum. Idaho, says: The most dramatic incident connected with the trial of Steve Adams, on trial here fpr the murder of Fred Tyler,, was the introduction of two letters by James H. Hawley, counsel for the State, this afternoon. The defense objected to their being read to the jury, but Judge W oods declared them properly identified. Durlpg the reading of the first letter. Mrs. Adams arose from beside her hus band and left the room in tears. She did not return for an hour. Adams turned marble white and waB motionless. His attorneys were jionpulsed. The letters were not Introduced in evidence at the Wallace trial from the fact that it was t.ot known that a copy of them had been kept. Warden Whitney, of the Boise pen itentiary, found them soon afterward. They were written between the time Adams confessed and signed the confes sions. Clarence Dnrrow. Adams' counsel, when the letters appeared, set his jaw and went to work again as if it were the first dav of the trial instead of what was supposed to be the last for taking tes timony. betters Admit His Guilt. The letters were written by Adams while In the Idaho penitentiary to Mr. and Mrs. Oliver, an aunt and uncle, and to his brother, W. T Adams. Their gen eral tenor is disclosed in the following extract: I wwm glad to har nf your belipf in my Inrorenre I wish to Ood that I was. but I fell in with had company and was led to commit a number of most vile alas, breaking tht- law of both man and God. Had I stayed with my church and with the raining of my poor parents, who are. I believe. In heaven. ( would be a tree man today. But I allowed tnyeelr to be led into sin most damnable. I fcm going U try to undo what I have done, fcnd sin no more. Each side has introduced its instruc tions, the state asking, as before, for 'murder In either first or second degree Dr manslaughter. The defense has changed a few of Us suggestions. Anxious to End the Trial. Judge Woods wants to finish the ar guments by Saturday and will convene court at n o'clock tomorrow when R. E. McFarland and Henry P. Knight, for the state, have agreed to consume two hours, each. McBeo and Heitman take the same time for the defense. Mr. Darrow and Mr. Hawley say they may not con sume more time than three hours apiece. But Judge Wood said he would not limit them. There will be a night session tomorrow night. The state closed Its rebuttal today, but the defense may have a little sur-rebuttal In the morning. After that the ' arguments will take up the time. PATERNITY OF CHILDREN tOontinued F"-"m First Page.) astonished." she said with some show of regret. In another letter written in May, 1903. Mrs. Bradley wrote: I mm wondering if you are trus to me. are you? 1 so want to feel your arms .round me and hear your loving words. Are you asking for divorce? if not. when will you begin? I am sewing every day and pray ing with every breath that our troubles may soon end She closed by declaring that she and the Senator were "'linked closer than the church could link tliem." Her Feelings When Found Out. Judge Powers asked her how she felt when she became aware that her rela tions with Brown had got to the ears of Mrs. Brown. "I wanted to go away immediately," the witness said. "I was begging him to send me away." "Had he said anything to you on the ubject of what you should do or say in the event of his wife talking with you?" "He immediately sent a messenger to me. I threatened to go. and he sent word to me instantly not to say anything and to deny everything." A letter of 1902 written from the Idaho farm was quoted at length. Mrs. Bradley closed It by asserting that the disgrace ghe and Brown had brought on them selves would leave a scar on her life, and said she would give half, the pleasure she expected to obtain through a proper life with Brown to efface the humilla Ing past. Little tokens of friendship were exchanged between her and Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Bradley said, and added with a touch of sadness: "When Arthur was a baby, Mrs. Brown gave him three little dresses. To Martha she gave two pairs of silk stockings and Some ribbon and lace and other little things." She then spiritedly replied in answer to Judge Powers, that she "never In any manner, shape or form" received any support from Mrs. Brown for herself or children. Once the Senator deeded a piece of real estate to her, but she deeded It back voluntarily. After brief cross-examination Mrs. Bradley was excused. Dot-tor Corroborates Her. This afternoon Mrs. Bradley's Salt Lake physician. Dr. E. W. Whitney, was Introduced to corroborate Mrs. Bradley's statements concerning criminal opera tions performed on her and to testify about her health during her Intlmacqy with Brown. The doctor said Mrs. Brad ley first visited t . office in 1902 and that Brown accompanied her. When Mr. Powers sought to bring out the conver sation between himself and Senator Brown. Mr. Baker objected. The objec tion was sustained, and the witness was excused for the time being. Brown's 1ote Letters. Brown's love letters to Mrs. Bradley, made public today, show the strength of his infatuation. Mingled with extrav agant protestations of love and expres sions of desire to make her his wife, are reproaches for receiving attentions from Ather men. including uncles and cousins at Los Angeles and one whom he calls a "damned traveling man." He says their quarrels only make them love the more. He made a will, containing provision for her and the boys, and sent it to her to take care of. She destroyed it, and he reproached her for so doing. He ex pressed I. ope of getting a divorce and FAVORS MORE SILVER COINS .Solomon R. Guggenheim Suggests Remedy for Stringency. SALT LAKE CITY. Nov. 21. A larger use of silver i oinp is advocated by Solo mon R. Guggenheim, chairman of the ex ecutive committee of the American Smelt ing & Refining Gempany, as a measure of financial relief. In an interview with local papers today. Mr. Guggenheim said: "Since coming West I have found a strong sentiment in favor of the Govern ment helping out the real money strin gency by the purchase of liberal quanti ties of the white metal and coining into dollars. It is believed that $50,000,000 worth of it might be bought and so used to the best Interests of the entire coun try. Around present prices that would pfovlde nearly tl00.000.000 of new real money and the Government would hardly miss the amount of gold It would need to pay out for the metal. "The population of this country has grown so fast and the requirements of trade have expanded to such r degree that more metallic money has come to be a necessity. Conditions are different today from what the were when there was so much prejudice against the white metal. When silver advocates were demanding the coinage of silver with gold and on a basis of 16 to 1, silver was being produced at about the ratio of 23 ounces to one of gold. Since then the production of gold has increased at such a rate that the ratio Is now only elgnt ounces of silver to one of go.-. "I believe the country is ready for an enlarged use of silver as money, but it Is hardly likely that it would take kindly to a free coinage proposition. It would be more likely to agreu to use more of the metal in the same way France is doing." ROMANCE ENDS IN JAIL Seattle Man Accused of Stealing Wife and Money. SEATTLE. Wash., Nov. 21. (Spe cial.) Amid sordid surroundings an elopement that a few months ago astonished an exclusive Berkeley, Cal., set, culminated at the police station. Mrs. Anita Morton, wife of Dr. Harry R. Morton, a wealthy and respected dentist of Oakland, and P. F. Roller, a Seattle city sanitary Inspector, are the principal actors In the case. Roller Is now wanted. It is said, by the police for grand larceny committed In San Francisco. The woman's ar rest resulted from a direct charge made by him. Last March the two left Oak land, where Dr. Morton had his office, after Roller is alleged to have stolen $20.) from the man whose wife he in duced to leave her home and friends. The family home was at Berkeley. Tearful and repentant, the woman Is now held by the police. Her husband is willing to take care of her and there may yet be a reconciliation. He no longer wishes to call her wife. The couple came here last March and have lived here much of the time since as man and wife. STREETCARSJCAUSE RIOTS Small Disturbances in Louisville Result From Strike. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 21. Several disturbances, two of them developing Into riots, broke out tonight in widely separated quarters of Louisville as a re sult of the first attempt of the Louisville Railway Company to operate all its lines after nightfall. Today is the seventh day of the strike and the tension seems to Increase. A number of persons, some of them passengers, were painfully in jured, but none seriously. At Twenty-fifth and Portland avenues a man fired a shot into a car, slightly wounding a woman. Fifteen arrests were made. DRYDOCKS FOR THE NAVY Recommended in Report of Rear Admiral Holladay. WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.-Addltlonal drydocks for the Navy are most urgently needed, according to the annual report of Rear-Admiral R. C. Holllday, Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks of the Navy. It is again urged that steps be taken for the establishment of a first-class dry dock at Pearl Harbor. Hawaiian Islands, where the necessary land has been ac quired. This harbor is the nearest porf to Honolulu, but Is vastly superior for naval purposes. The proposed dock will cost $2,000,000. The estimates for the various yards In clude the following: Naval station at Cavite. $59,700-, Naval Appetite None. The Woeful Reflections of a Withered Dyspeptic. No substitute for good nature has yet been found. Smiles take root In the stomach. Without good digestion there never can be very much sunshine, for the very simple reason that the stomach and the brain are twins, and what affects one Invariably affects the other. The adage that the best road to a person's heart la via the stomach, still holds good. Gorged grub and pappy pie always breed gloom and sleepless nights. They also breed dyspepsia, quick dys pepsia, and dyspepsia shows itself in a Is This You? variety of ways belching, burning sensa tion, an empty feeling In the stomach, bloating after eating, brash, aversion to food, fermentation, or downright Indiges tion. There are few diseases which create such misery long drawn out misery as dyspepsia. It pursues you before meals, after meals, and between meals; you take it to bed with you; It is with you at the theater and at your desk. What is the only way to get rid of It? You don't have to stop eating, you don't have to diet. Just take something that will do the work of the stomach and let the stomach take a rest. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are the most wonderful little tablets on earth for this very thing. In plain arithmetic, one of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets equals one good strong stomach for one time for one good hearty meal. One Ingredient of Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets will digest perfectly 3000 grains of food In Just the same way that a strong, robust, healthy stomach would do it. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets enrich and fnchease the gastric Juice in your stom ach, and that is mostly what you need more and better gastric juice. And It gives the stomach a rest, a good long rest. In the meantime it cures the dys pepsia, and all other stomach troubles. Just a few of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets will prove to you what these little cherubs of health and hnppiness can do. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are for sale at all druggists at 50c a box. Send us your name and address today and we will at ooce send you by mail a sample package free. Address F. A. Stuart Ca., 150 Stuart bldg., Marshall, Mich. statlon at Guantanamo, $425,000. of which $400,000 is to commence a drydock; Mare Island, Cal., $786,800; Puget Sound. Wash.. $1,491,500, $100,000 of which is to begin the construction of a drydock. BOAT CAPTAIN NOT GUILTY Fowler's Officers Exonerated From Charge of Reckless Navigation. CAIRO. 111.. Nov. 21. United States Inspectors Waltz and Hodge, of Mem phis, who yesterday began the trial of the captain and officers and crew of the steamer Dick Fowler, charged with reckless navigation on the occasion of President Roosevelt's trip down the Mississippi River on- October 3, have returned a verdict of not guilty. Will Hear Motion to Quash. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 21 The mo tions to quash the 12 indictments against the Southern Pacific and Pa cific Mail Companies for illegal rebat ing came up before Judge De Haven in the United States District Court today and were set for a week from Saturday for argument. MRS. BRADLEY AS SHE AI'PSARS IN COURT. SKETCHED BY STAFF ARTIST FOR THE WORLD. Mail Orders Promptly Attended to Satisfaction Guaranteed SILVERFIELD'S The Fashion Center Entire Corner Fourth and Morrison Streets GREATEST FRIDAY BARGAIN DAY Offering unmatchable values today in everything necessary or desirable in Women's and Children's up-to-date, ready-to-wear Apparel. Charming Fall Suits Radically Reduced $37.50 Garments at $21.75 We offer today many pretty Suit Modes along the "Prince Chap" styles, made up in handsome and novel color conceits from smartest Fall fabric. The coats have long sleeves, with deep cuff, some are finished with velvet collars, while the skirts are cut full with bias folds. Sizes up to 44. Values to $37.50; for today $21.75 Girls' and Misses' Winter Coats At Greatly Reduced Prices for Today and Saturday Misses' and Children's fine quality Cravenette Raincoats, ages 10 to 16 years, in tan and oxford; $10.00 values $4.98 Children's Melton Cloth Jackets in plain, navy, red and leather, with velvet collars; lined with heavy satin; very suitable for cold, wintry weather. Values $12.50 for. .$6.75 REPAIRING AND REMODEL ING AT THE LOWEST PRICES SEND FOR NEW FUR STYLE BOOK FREE ON REQUEST SILVERFIELD FURS "Merit Made Them Famous" Our Furs are known for their SU PERIOR QUALITY, DISTINC TIVE STYLE and PERFECT FIT. Our stock is not excelled anywhere, either in variety of de sirable furs or in modesty of price. All furs manufactured in our fac tory on third floor. Save the mid dleman's profit by buying your furs here. A Remarkable Fur Coat Sale $55 Nearseal Coats $2950 We place on sale today only 24 N e a r s e al Coats, plain or trimmed with Brook Mink or Beaver, collar re vers and cuffs, fancy buttons, lined' with Skinner's satin or bro caded silk. These Coats just from our factory, and are MADE IN THE VERY LAT EST STYLES. We offer them far below value, so don't fail to take advantage. Sizes from 34 to 42. Regular value $55.00 $29.50 Exclusive Millinery Reduced One-Third The opportunity which this great sale affords those who wish some thing particularly exclusive for the social functions of the Winter has never before been equalled. We have taken all the imported Autumn Hats, the handiwork of the cleverest French milliners, and MARKED THEM A THIRD LESS THAN THE ORIGINAL PRICES. We includie in this great offer all our own models and the copies of French Hats which have been so popular ALL CLEAN, FRESH AND SPARKLING WITH NEW NESS; made of satin, felt, velvet and plush, trimmed with plumes, tufts, aigrettes and wings. ALL ONE THIRD OFF FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW. Extra Glove Special for Today We offer a complete line of Misses' Kid Gloves; sizes 4 to 6; excel lent quality. Regularly sold $1.25. Special for today 98 Misses' and Children's Golf Gloves and Mittens, 35c and 50c values; while they last 23 Kayser, Lined Suede, in black and navy; for ladies and children. Extra special 25 RETURNS TO ATTACK the carpenters and Amalgamated Wood- case of failure to arrive at an amicable workers' Association on the other, the agreement, to determine the matter. Federation In the first dispute provided The convention this afternoon took up for a committee of three from each side the brewery workers' controversy, Involv wlth Mr. Oompers as chairman, to ad- ing; the revocation of their charter be just the dispute, the executive council, in cause of refusal to relinquish Jurisdiction over the brewery engineers, firemen an-1 teamsters. Kenora. Ontario. In an explosion W.dns day on the Eastern construction works of the Grand Trunk Pacifle. at Dryden. seven men were killed and four injured. Gompers Repeats Charge Against Brandenburg. ATTEMPT TO BRIBE MADE President of Federation Cites Evi dence That Brandenburg Repre sented Manufacturers and Van Cleave Waited to Meet Him. NORFOLK. Va., Nov. 21. At today's session of the Federation of Labor, Pres ident Gompers, with Vice-President O'Connell In the chair, replied to the de nials sent from New York last night by Broughton Brandenburg, who declared that he was the man referred to by Mr. Gompers in the latter' s charges of an at tempt to bribe Mr. Gompers, and denied that he had made such an attempt to bribe, also that he. had any connection with the National Association of Manu facturers. Mr. Gompers said: I want to call your attention to the fact that, if Brandenburg destred only to con sult me about a publication, why was it necessary for him so persistently to urge me to see him In private? Why was it neces sarv for him to assume a false name? Why so much secrecy? Why did he. In bis letter to ursre that I come at once to New York, use tthe language he did, saying it was necessary for me to come' at once "as mat ters were coming to a crisis"? Why could there have been such a crisis between two men who had only a passing acquaintance, if only a publication were involved? If there was ao attempt to bribe, upon what other basis did he hope that I was going to aban don my life's work ? Had Warrants Ready to Pay. All the circumstances link by link show that it was Brandenburg who came to me as a representative of the National Manufac turers' Association, even disregarding the statement that he himself told me directly that he represented this association, whose purpose was to attack and destroy and bribe the men of labor in order to strike at the organisations themselves. Why was it necessary for him to reas sure me that he represented the Manufac turers Association, coming to me with war rants Issued by the Century Syndicate, an auxiliary of the National Manufacturers' As sociation, the marks of the latter appearing in no lest than two instances on the war rants presented, the Initials in one Instance and the full name of the Manufacturers' Association spelled out in the other. These warrants were eight inches long and four or five inches wide, such as are used in ordi nary business houses to safeguard money transactions. Van Cleave Was Waiting. Immediately after my speech yesterday I was informed by Delegate Jerome Jones that about the time I told of having re ceived letters from Brandenburg urging that I go to Edgefield. 8. C, for a conference. Delegate Jones saw Mr. Van Cleave, the president of the Manufacturers Association, and another man in close proximity to Edge field. I am willing to stand before the dele gates, the rank and file of labor and the general public for them to judge the mean ing of this man's great secretlveness, the mystery which he threw around the whole affair and the documents proaucea by me. I The key to It all 1 thaT I declined to act as 1 he wanted me to act. Disputes Between Unions. After prolonged debate today involving important jurisdictional questions between steamfltters and plumbers on one hand, I SPECIAL SALE MEN'S SUITS OF THE largest and TAKING ADVANTAGE NECESSITIES of one of the most reliable New York manufacturers, we bought their ENTIRE STOCK OF FALL WEIGHT SUITS at a most wonderful BARGAIN 1011 of these suits neither more nor less were placed upon our tables yesterday 17 cases in all and are now placed ON SALE at the EXTREMELY LOW PRICE OF $15 These suits are ABSOLUTELY HAND TAILORED -NOT ONE of them worth less than $20 ; most of them worth $25. We consider this the greatest BARGAIN we have ever offered. WHEN YOU SEE IT IN OUR AD IT'S SO MOYER 2 STORES Third and Oak