The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 15, 1901, Page 1

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’ I VOLUME LXXXIX—NO. 105. SAN FRANCISCO, mDAY, MARCH 15, 1901. PRICE F1VE CENTS. HARRISONS | L0SS MOURNED UNIVERSALLY i | AL X Words of Condolence. From All Parts MEN OF TMILLIONS FROI' CHICAGO | ON PLEASURE AND BUSINESS BENT WILL ARRIVE IN THIS CITY TO-NIGHT of World. L 2 EN representing more than and : $1,000,000,000 1i alth will President McKinley and et s s 100 X this evening on a Santa Fe X : Members of Cabinet to i o g, Attend Funeral. b Tt R e Pacific Coast will tender ome to them, representing eyed interests of the PROCLAMATION BY PRESIDENT aires and of te, and, while it is sald he visit is pleasure, it t the men of millions are the Pacific Coast with a pros- w of investment. Among the gentlemen who are to arrive | 14—The ar- pL Gonpral [ L nt of the ed. The arch ‘uneral - is rated to be less than a m!lih)nAl e city of San Francisco and the State 7 ifornia w der the gues royal welcome. clal train will ” s eve egatl da Palace Hotel reserved for he visitors Guests to Be Banqueted. will be s Institute of Art, the Board ad 1 bodies. The tables will be arranged in the and no expense will be s. During the he decorat the Fun-ra e of the members of the T gem MK ago Commercial Club all the princi- pal points of interest in and around the will be v ed. The gentlemen from » e t will have every opportunity of seeir San Francisco is the truly , with boundless | ties of extension in the near fu- netropolis of the P Are Men of Vast Wealth. il @ POET RILBY PAYS TRIBUTE Chicaro, sald to be S [ 22 e heck at any time for | as writ- Adolphus C. Bartlett of the firm of Hib- : on the bard, Epencer, Bartlett & Co., one of the largest wholesale grocery houses in N'S ¥ America. | B et o J. Harley Bradley, president of the David Bradley Manufacturing Company firm doing a business of more than $20,007, 000 a year. Edward B. Butler of Butler Bros., the | largest department store supply concern | in the world, with branches in Chicago, St. Louls and New Yerk. William J. Chalmers of Fraser & Chal- the largest mining machinery com- pany In the world, supplying machinery to | all parts of America and other conmti- | nent . tears benesth the old flag at rouses us, and n sorrowing, a et dfrpefoeelmfonfoott dofote el renched e sh pride—es though the grest man passed high reward for our poor to be held in the Senate chamber at the | Statehouse to-morrow afternoon. oved of all men—we muse—yet ours he was Cholce of the m ='s mighty brother- e Superintendent of Public Schools | has issued an order 1ecommending that a part of Friday be devoted to the life and services of General Harrison and that the teachers speak of Lis life In connec- tion with the history of the United States, of his services as a soldler, as a | Senator and as President of the United States. County offices will be closed Saturday at 1 o’clock in honor of General Harrison. statesman, ruler—aye, but & neighbor, kind and friend and ow citizen. dianapolis held a meeting this afternoon | and édrafted a memorial on the death o General Harrison. Arrangements hlvei Mayor Taggart has called a spectal boen made for a jolnt meeting of the | Council meeting for to-morrow morning to State end Marion County bar associations | take action. The State Bar Associgtion | In America. | ments have been completed and the body D) AC BARTLETT Commercial Club From Second City in Country, Representing a Billion in Wealth, Includes Merchant Princes, Financiers, Railroad Presidents and Others of Equal Renown. rector Simmons Hardware Company, and H. N. Davis, president Smith & Davis Manufacturing Company. Chicago—E. C. Dudley, M. D. Prominent Men to Speak. Irving M. Scott will preside at the ban- quet to-morrow evening at the Mark Hop- kins Art Institute and the toasts will be as follows: Orening remarks “Welcome to C “City of Chicago’... Responded to by 4 G, “Pacific Commercial Mu Professor Ben B “Santa Fe Railwa ...Pres MARSHALL FIELD RO®BERT T LINCOLN FRANCISCO'S REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS. John M. Clark, president of the Chicago Telephone Company, which does the greatest business of its kind In the world. James H. Eckels, nresident of the Chl- cago National Bank and ex-Comprroller of Currency of the United States, who is one of the financial pillars of America. J. V. Farwell Jr. of J. V. Farwell & Co., rated as the third largest dry goods house Rollin A. Keyes of Franklin MacVeagh & Co.. the second largest grocery house in America. Eldridge E. Keith, president Metropoli- tan National Bank, cne of the richest banks in Chicago. has issued an order requiring that the Circuit Courts throughout the State be closed Saturday. Remains to Lie in State. The body will Hle In state at the Capi- tol Saturday from 11 o’clock in the morn- ing until 10 a’clock at night. Arrange- will be taken from the home Saturday morning, accompanied by a military . es- cort composed of the National Guard and Grand Army posts. Orders have been is- sued for the mobilization of the entire Nadtional Guard. On Baturday there ‘will be & military display, but the exercises |’ Sunday will be unostentatious. Charles F. Kimball, president €. P. Kimball Company, which ranks next to the Studebaker Company as a manufac- turer of carriages and farming ments. Robert T. Lincoln, president of the Pull- man Palace Sleeping Car Company and son of the lamented Abraham Lincoln. The president of the sleeping car company is rated as a millionaire many times over Edward P. Ripley, president of the Santa Fe Rallroad, which ncw runs from San Francisco to Chicazo. Included In the party are W. A. Fuller of Palmer, Fuller & Co, Franklin Head, Christopher Hotz, J. J Janes, Henry J. imple- All the members of General Harrison's Cabinet have been heard from with the exception of Redfleiq Proctor, who is now in Cuba. Telegrams have been received from B. F. Tracey, Secretary of the Navy; Charles Foster, Secretary of the Treas- ury; John W. Noble, Secretary of the Interfor; 8. B. Elkins, Secretary of War; John W. Foster, Secretary of State, and John Wanamaker. Postmaster General. This morning Mrs. Harrison received a telegram from President McKinley which read: “In-the death of General Harrison the country has lost a distinguished states- man, a devoted patriot and an exemplary g SOME OF THE PRINCIPAL MEMBERS OF THE CHICAGO COMMERCIAL CLUB, REPRESENTING OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS IN WEALTH, WHO WILL ARRIVE THIS EVENING AND BE ENTERTAIN! ED BY SAN McFarland, Murray Nelson, Byron L. Smith, A. A. Sprague, G. C. Walker and General Wesley A. Merritt, U. 8. A., ra- tired, the dashing soldier who commandsa in the campalgn against the Sioux and Cheyennes. As guests of the Chicago Commerciai Commercial Club of Boston—Robert M. Burnett, president Joseph Burnett Com- | pany, and Frederick B. Carpenter, George ©O. Carpenter & Son. Commerefai Club of Cincinnati—Edwin G. Goshorn, manager National Lead Company, and Willlam ‘Worthing, attorney at law. Commercial Club of St. Louls—Isaac W. Morton, di- citizen. The people of the nation mourn with you. You have the heartfelt sym- pathy of Mrs. McKinley and myself In this the hour of your overwhelming sor- row In your home.” Ex-President Clevcland has telegraphed that it will be impossible for him to at- tend. Governor Beckham ot Kentucky. Gover- nor Nash of Ohlo, Governor Dietrich of Nebraska and others. Among the tele- grams received from foreign representa- tives are those from Wu Ting Fang, Mex- ican Embassador Azpiroz, T. Daggettau, Commissioner from Porto Rico; Sir Rich- ard Webster of London, who was chief Club are the following named gentlemen- | Telegrams have been received from | 'way Company” ..President C. M. Ha: Speeches will also be made by Robert M. Burnett of the Beston Commercial Club, Edwin G. Goshorn of the Cincinnati Commercial Club and Isaac W. Morton of the St. Louis Commercial Club. PLEASURES AT SAN DIEGO. Commercial Club Has a Gala Time at the Szashore. SAN DIEGO, March 14.—The Chicago Commercial Club has come and gone and another chapter has been added to the story of the Western trip of the distin- guished gentlemen from the city at the other end of the rallroad line, whose guests they are. When In fancy the San Diego and Coronado stay is “Southgrn Pacific Rall within halling distance of the great Pa- cific, with the thermometer clinging around the 75-degree mark and nothing | in the wide world to do but rest. There| will be thoughts of surf bathing or of an | hour in the immense plunge baths. Thers will. be recollections for some of an after- noon on board the hig battleship Iowa with Rear Admiral Casey. The goif links were not forgotten by | Robert T. Lincoin, General Merritt, Mar- shall Field and many others, nor the shooting traps, where, as the guests of the Coronado Gun Club, the clay birds were broken to bits by James H. Eckles and Willlam J. Chalmers. At 9 o'clock to-night the special train started north. In the early morning it will pass over the famous Tehachap! into the San Joaquin Valley. San Francisco will be reached to-morrow night. I i e e B e e e e ] counsel for Great Britain In the Vene- zuelan case, and Vou Holleben, imperial German Embassador. Flags are at half-mast and buildings are draped in mourning. While the body lies in state to-morrow morning all the mer- chants in the city wii' drape their places in mourning and business practically will be suspended. The ourfal will be private. Late this afternoon W. H. Miller, Rus- sell Harrison, Secretary Tibbetts and Col- onel Ransdell, who is In constant attend- | ance at the Harrison home, visited an un- Continued on Second Pags- | COUNT BOMI SLAPS FACE OF EDITOR Anna Goulds Hus- band Must Fight { trayed the Derou reviewed | there will certainly come pleasant mem- | orles of summerlike days in March spent | M. de Rodays. Pistols for Two Will Be Re- sult of Charge ol ‘ Treachery. TORY TOLD BY THE PRINCIPALS Reading We Figaro T was filled with us insinua- e el @ foofoefonforte] the Figaro. agraph was io mo > him, and that, ew the was worded in the most terms, and that his name was not mentioned. The Count then n me and punched me e time to defend was a prearranged by M. de Rodays. bbbt delebeledmtedelieteied A el il @ PARIS, March 4.—Count Bon! de Cas- { tellane asgafled M. Fernand de Rodays, editor of the Figaro, to-day for insinuat- ing that ¢ (M. de Castellane) had be- de plot on the ocea late Prasident A duel is ex- Psion of the iunersi Faure, Febguars pected Count de Castellane interpreted a para- graph in the Figaro as alluding to him. He was accompanied by his father, the Marquls de Cast and a newspaper friend, M. Morel. They proceeded to the residence of M. de Rodays, in the Rue de 1a Chausse d'Antin ated In the center of Paris. The Cou asked to see M. de and was ushered into the writer's M. de Rodays later recelved the in his rg room. Count de Castellane “You publ ing an abom me.” dressir party the Figaro this morn- le paragraph against de Rodavs replied what that he did mot meant, to the you retract or not?" Count Boni as a Slapper. g repliad by ex- paragraph wa 1 that no mention was “Wil s courta- Sl ft name of Count de Castellane. without further ado, Count de Cas- boxed M. de Rodays’ ears severely and repeatedly. M. de Rodays, who was seated, recofled, and M. de Castellane followed him up and siapped hi severely The Marqu then interposed and protected M. de Ro- The De Cas- s de Castellane and M. Morel ays from further violence. tellane party then withdrew. de Rodavrs the day said he had decided seconds to Count Boni de Castellane The affair Is of Paris. Since the speech of M. Deroulede at San Sebastian last month, in which he nti- | mated that the Royalists of Paris had notified the police of his attempted coup d'etat, after his refusal to allow the Duks of Orleans to appear In the ranke of the | agitators, very great interest has been aroused respecting the identity of the Royaiist emissary who approached M. De- roulede and M. Marcel-Hebert on that | occasion, the names suggested including Jules Guerin, the hero of Fort Chabrol, while the Royalists denled that the cmis- sary acted in behalf of them. Arrange for a Duel. The duel arranged to take place possibly to-day or to-morrow near Lausanne, Switzerland, between M. Deroulede and M. Buffet, the agent of the Duke of Or- feans, is a direct outcome of the sion on the subject of the coup ¢ which failed. The paragraph in the Figaro, which was the immediats cause of the assault upon M. de Rodays, was as follows: | “People have been asking who is the person M. Deroulede wished to designats. It appears that he is a member of Par- liament, and it is affirmed that he is the yvoung Deputy whose name is best known and who, on the eve of starting for Amer- ica with his youns wife last week. very loyally delayed his departure In order to reply, if necessary, to the polemics which may develop.” Count de Castellane was Interviewed to-day at his residence on the Avenue du Bois de Boulogne, on his return from the residence of M. de Rodays. He said: | “Yes, T boxed M. de Rodays’ ears sev- eral times in the presence of my father | and M. Morel, who is editor of the Jour- | nal de Castellane. They are here now, and can give you particulars of the inel- | dent. | The Count, who was calm and smiling. the sansation at Continued on Second Page.

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