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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MAY, 4, 1901 OURRELENDS | PARTNERSHIP | Both Men Are Badly| Beaten Before They | [ | | Are Separated. They Had Been Business Associates for Twenty Years. P Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | 1118 Broadway, May 3 A bloody quarrel ended a partnership of standing and almost cul- e planing mill b and who are now together at the corner on- g a busine: ourth and Clay streets. Like most of that kind, there two of how it originated, but there is s to the amount of damage to the partners. They went er with hammers, clubs, iron tion » had to be taken to the for treatment. ct was the y McManus. had their sons | d last week Mc s declareq thaf young Gartner w: rking his work and mot obeying him. ¥ he ought to At any rate his morning de- McManus in " for member- ckers’ club” by nus' head with nine_wounds iving Hospital. E little the worst of it| mer-beating time on the top L es McManus, the son, Gartner was knocked | £ kicked him in | h0se. been patched up a Jospital McManus had rrested for assault with a dead- | nd Gartner announces his in- | ing both McManuses, father | ed upon similar charges. 1 of the partnership will fol- | SOCIAL EVENTS. | e B L. Seidner celebrated wedding anniversary at! A Golden Gate avenue, The parlors were hand. Mr. and Mrs, k, Miss F. Crown, | G. Poliack, Mr. Mever, Mrs. Dr. Label, Mrs. Kahn, , Mrs Schmidt, Bauman, 3 Levy. Mrs. Seidner were the recipients handsome and valuable presents. and ard Mrs. F.| eir tin wedding Twenty-sec- ng of their two Schrader took | The company | ic, games and | Many appro- nts were among festal board Thomas e guests in merry mood | né short stories. John Mc- | n exhibition of artistic jig nd Rudy Peck gave selections | Among those present were: | F. Koldenstrodt, Mr. and Mrs. | rs. E der, Mr. and | Mrs. L. Bar- m Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. H. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. | d Mrs. F. Wolfsen, Mr. 11, Mr. Joseph Nagle, Miss Mr. Conrad Schell, Miss H. Poupfogel, Mr. and Mrs. Hil- le, Mr_ and Mrs. Hagan, Mr. | ng, Miss F. Nagle, the Misses Pearson, Bruns. B | vening, April 20, the Aca- ed jts first anniversary at and Mrs. Thomas. Music, Mr. games, etc., were in- midnight, when all sat ous dinner., Those pres- Thomas, Misses Emma Thom Dorothy Rojas, Frieda von Hansen, Margory Rojas, nnie Sturken, Mamie Grace, ne Unger and Carrie Mack- Thomas, John von Staden, Ay Chisholm, Richard yon Herman Hansen, An- ton and Colin Chisholm. | & . | le farewell party was | i Mrs. Alexander Pratt, | t, Wednesday evening, | were continued | an elaborate repast Songs midnig Mr Sam and Mrs H 3 MeCullough, Mr. ith Pratt, Robert | iigginbium * | and Mrs. Sol Rosendorn have re- | from their trip to Howell Mnun-l Mr. Rosendorn entirely recov- ered fror his ‘ong illness and is now able resume business. Mrs. Max L. Friedenthal ang daughter Dorothy of Chicago are visiting the former's_ parents at 181§ Washington - They will receive next Wednes- | reet George E. Stadtegger of 2711 Sutter nas left for ¥orba, Orange County, | gone several months visiting her | —_——— OCKOUT DROPS. —George arrested after a struggle by | rporal Egan and Policemen Freel and | Brien last Tuesday on Sacramento street, | s comvicted by Judge Conlan yesterday on | Charge of having knockout drops in his cssession and was sentenced to six months in the County Jail ED A who was Pears’ Pretty boxes and odors are used to sell such soaps as no one would touch if he saw them un- disguised. Beware of a soap that depends on something outside of it. Pears’, the finest soap in the world is scented or not, as you wish; and the money is in the merchan- dise, not in the box. All sorts of stores sell it, especially % AMESTOW... N. Y., May 3.—Mrs. Fen- druggists; all sorts of people are |, SANIE of former Governor and United pec. ; B e T oo 1 e | ably be appointive. | Manila yesterday. | Government Lets Extensive Contract | undertakes to supply 750,000 pounds of beef { and Dawson. | frigerator ship | 1ow, escaping with a slightly injured back. | WANILA GANS A CIVIL RULE New Government, Is For- mally Put Into Operation. City Census Shows Two Hu- dred and Forty-Five | Thousand. { | MANILA, May 3.—Civil government was established to-day as a preliminary to the | inauguration of a general civil govern- | ment. The United States and the Philip- | pine Comission are unwilling at present | to permit the experiment of elections here, | although they have been authorized In i all other municipalities. Judge Taft says | 2 municipal government for Manila will | shortly be created. The officers will prob- | | The Board of Health has completed the | census of Manila. The population num- | bers 244,732, The trial of Lieutenant Boyer, charged with commissary irregularities, has been completed. The verdict has not been an- nounced. The trial of Captain Barrows, who Is charged with commissary irregu- | larities, will begin Monday. WASHINGTON, May 3.—The War De- partment has received the foilowing list (\?a‘ a ;x.ames from General MacArthur at | Wounded—April 5, Fourth Artillery, George . B. Giover, slizht: Corporal Warren | lin H. Gross, shoulder, slight; Louis Gregory, leg above the knee, slight; April oo First In- B. Ely, William Schlager,’ arm, slight; Clyde B. Ely, arm, elight: April 27, Third Cavairy, Corporal Alfred Baliin, abdomen, slight; Cap- | tain John B. McDonaid. lungs, severe: Apml Zx: First Infantry, Quartermaster Sergeant \\l]llnm RBake, abdomen, moderate. Killed—April 10, Forty-seventh Harry A. Varner. General McArthur also reports that the transports Buford and Wright arrived at Infantry, The transports Indiana, Pakling and Lenox saifled from Manila on the 29th ult. for Taku, and the transport Sumner will sail for the same port in a few day: These vessels will carry General Chaffe army from China to the Philippines. FRESH MEAT FOR ARMY POSTS IN THE NORTH to a Tacoma Cold Storage Company. TACOMA, May 3.—The largest contract for supplying the Government with prov | sions ever signed in the Northwest was concluded this wgek. Under it the Pa- cific Cold Storage Company of Tacoma and mutton during the year commencing July 1 to the military posts at St. Mi- chael, Nome, Fort Gibbon, mpart, Fort Egbert and Valdes. The company is now for 2,000,000 pounds of | dressed beef. Besides supplying the Gov- | crnment posts, the company will fill its | cold storage piants at St. Michael, Nome placing contract These supplies will be carried from Ta- | coma to St. Michael by the company’s re- | Elihu Thomson. At Michael the meats will be transferred to | the refrigerator steamers Robert Kerr nd Lottie Talbot, operated by the com- pany on the Yukon River. President Charles Richardson of the Pa- cific Cold Storage Company is concluding negotiations with the Union Iron Works of San Francisco for a new refrigerator steamer of 3000 tons capacity and costing | about $200.000. to be delivered by next De- cember. This steamer will ply between Tacoma and Alaskan points during the summer. During the winter she will car- ry cold storage products to Honolulu and Manila. AGED MEDICINE MAN SLAIN BY TRIBESMEN | Chief Tenawashie Pays the Penalty for the Impotence of His Weird Incantations. TACOMA, May 3.—Chlef Tenawashie, one of the oldest Yakima medicine men, | was murdered at his home on the Yakima | reservation on Tuesday night. Two bul- | let wounds, indicating that he had been | shot in the back, and one showing that | his assassins fired upon him after he fell, give evidence of foul play. The body wa taken to Fort Simcoe and interred to-day | after the ceremonies and customs of the | tribe. An jnvestigation will be made and the perpetrators brought to trial. ¢ is co dered certain that the murder was perpetrated by some Indians who were angered because of his failure to cure their relat who died of smallpox last winter. Tenawashie was 80 to 100 years old. Dur- ing the hard winter of 1881-82 he was a prominent personage to all the residents of Yakima Valley. He engaged in a Chi. nook dance with such barbarous enthusi- | asm that he tore great pieces of flesh from his arms by biting and clawing Lo appease the wrath of the evil spirit and cause the winter to break. Cattle were dying by the hundreds, and some of the | more superstitious cattlemen offered the | Indians great sums of money if they | would cause the winter to break. | Tenawashie went from his hut on Tues- day night to look after his ponies and was shot from the rear by enemies in am- | push. His aged squaw did not discover his body until the day following the trag- edy. —_———— RUN DOWN BY TRAIN ON RAILWAY BRIDGE Chinese Resident of Santa Cruz Loses | ‘His Life in a Tragic Manner. SANTA CRUZ, May 3—Lem Sam, a Christianized Chinese, who has been a | resident of Santa Cruz many years and held menial positions in the homes of some of the city’s most aristocratic fam- | ilies, met a tragic death on the railroad | bridge across the mouth of San Lorenzo | River. While Lem Sam and Ah Fong | were crossing the bridge a freight train | came into sight. 1ne Chinese started to | Tun, and as_the train drew nearer Ah Fong jumped thirty feet to the sand be- Tem Sam apparently became paralyzed from fright and stood shaking in the cen- ter of the track. A brakeman from the cowcatcher of the locomotive made a heroic but ineffectual attempt to pick up.| the Chinese as the engine came upon him. | The cowcatcher struck the Celestial and" ran over his left leg above the ankle. Lem | Sam then fell to the ground below, strik- ing on his head. His skull was fractured, and he dled soon afterward. @ il @ THE DAY’S DEAD. el @ David Porter Rosenmiller. LANCASTER, Pa., May 3.—David Por- ter Rosenmiller, formerly Mayor of this city, died to-day of tetanus, the result of | a cancer. Rosenmiller entered the United | States navy in 1861, and was executive offi- cer of the sloop of war Essex, which blew up the Confederate ram Arkansas. Ros- enmiller was a relative of Aamiral Porter. Consular Agent Gadd. WASHINGTON, May 3.—Richard H. Gadd, United States Consular Agent at Port Limon, is dead from malarial fever. He was a native of New York, but had spent a large part of his life in ihe tropics. W. J. Footner. ST. PAUL, Minn., May 4—W. J. Foot- ner, vice president and general manager of the Great Northern Express Company, died suddenly of apoplexy at 2 o’clock this morning. Mrs. Fenton. here to-day, aged st | PERFORMANCE OF “THE MARSH KING” A GREAT AND UNQUALIFIED SUCCESS |Ladies of the Civic Section of the Adelphian Club Are Delighted, as the Entertainment in the Macdonough Theater Will Put More Than One Thousand Dollars in the ‘‘Free Bed’’ Fund e S — AR 5 =5 A SCENE FROM “THE MARSH KING,” WHICH WAS PRODUCEb AT THE MACDONOUGH THEATER LAST NIGHT UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE LADIES OF THE CIVIC SECTION OF THE ADELPHIANS. % 5 L AKLAND; May 3.— The *“Marsh King"” performance drew a great crowd to the Macdonough Thea- ter this evening. The house had been sold out beforehand, but the | knowledge of that fact did not discourage hundreds who were willing to take stand- ing room in the gallery 6r anywhere they could get. It was a great satisfaction to the civic section of the Adelphian Club and others who had to do with the ex- travaganza to see the wholesale second- ing of their efforts. ““More than we expected,” said delighted Mrs. Philip 8. Teller, “ president of the Adelphians., “We are going to have a thousand dollars for our ‘free bed' fund. Of course, with a big show like this it costs a great deal of money, but the pack- ed house is going to put us way, way above expenses. We have worked hard worked hard. Tt is most gratifying to know that success has come and that the people of Alameda and Oakland and other places made it possible. - We want to thil!nl(' them for their interest and gener- osity.” Artistically the operetta was as great a success as it was financially. It could hardly be otherwise after the weeks of rehearsing by the big and little people who made up the cast. There were nine- ty-six people all told in the cast, includ- ing the chorus, yet not a mistake was made. Everything went along as smooth ly as it does .when big professional com- panies are performing. Opens in Fairyland. The curtain went up on a scene in fairy- land, the haunt of the enchantress Zeno- phar. She is engaged in mixing in her cauldron a concoction with which she hopes to put the Marsh King out of busi- ness, he being her hereditary enemy. is assisted by her goblin subjects, who <help her stir the ingredients round and round and round, at the same time sing- ing their songs and dancing their dances. In the midst of the merriment Hildegarde, the mortal maiden who has lost her broth- er Roland, appears, searching for him. The end of the scene shows where Zeno- phar and Hildegarde are agreed upon a scheme to undo the King. Act II exhibits the cave of the Marsh King. In the center of it is his golden throne and all around in the walls pre- cious stones gleam and dragon eyes blink. It is a_weird scene. It is in this chamber that Hildegarde meets the king, who has been forcing her brother to slave in his mines. It is here that the king is foolish enough to bow to the mortal maliden, which means for him the loss of his king- dom. The third act is the first scene over again, showing the reconciliation of the king and the enchantress and the grand times the fairies and gnomes and goblins have in honor of the event. Some Striking Costumes. Of the costumes that of Miss Louise Clark as the enchantress was the most She * tion and just the kind a real witch would be most likely to wear. Miss Edythe Par- iser as the Marsh King was arrayed in all the gilt and glitter of an absolute mon- arch. As Hildegarde Miss Maude Jackson was the picture of innocence in a Gre- cian robe. Miss Mary Jackson as Roland was dapper in the habit popularly sup- posed to have been worn by Rosalind. The conspiring prime minister, who wae acted by Miss Eileen McCurrie, was the counterpart of the ancient Beau Brum- mel. As Puck little Anna Countiss frisked about and played tricks in a becoming dress. Miss Alice Teller as Queen of the Moonbeams was all betinseled and arrived in the moon, which came right down to the earth. All Gilt and Spangles. All the children of the chorus were bright with gilt and spangles. They were: Leona Young, Gladys Emmons, Marion Mitchell, Hope Courtelyou, Anna Dodge, Char- lotte d'Evelyn, Kdna James, Harriet Perks, Marguerite Durney, Louise Countiss, Em Lou Frisbee, Emmy Lemche, Bessle Searle, Doris James, Elise Curtls, Hazel Royer, Merily Krusi, Laura Smith, Mollie Nicholls, Bernice d'Evelyn, Pmma Young, Frankle Read. Mil- dred Foster, Clare O'Cormer Dorothy Tisdale, Faith_Speddy, Edith Cramer, Beatrice Han- #on, Ethel Conner, Helen Bickford, Marguer- ite Parr, Edna Simpson, Louise Guislain, Florence' Plummer, Anita Junkins, Eisie Scheerin, Gladys Amann, Mignon Read, Mirlam Jackson, Sadie Older, Charles Thomas, Roy Watson, Alice James, Edith Older, Gertrude Postel, May Bissell, Norma Whitney, Sylvia McCurrie, Edwin Higgins, Leland Scott, Car- lotta Hanson, Emily Lancel, Laura Wisner, Marjorie Arnold. Ruth Tisdale, Victorla Faro sich, Harrold Miller, Victor Newbell, Ethel Watkins, Eunice Currier, Lena Willlamson, Mildred Dodge, Ruth Carson, Stella William- son, Philip Taylor, Carlos Solomon, Warner Sherwood, Victor Newbell, Francis Bowen, Al- fred Sundell, Carl Bruntsch, Joseph Cowing, Willie Fostef, Alan Van Fleet, Jack Medcraft, Earl Leland, Guy Medcraft. The managers of the operetta were Mrs. Phillp_S. Teller and Mrs. Charles L. Til- den. Miss Isabelle McCurrie directed the stage and elocution. Miss Rosine d’En- nery taught the dances and Miss Fisher to make it a success. Kverybody has striking. It was a welrd looking crea- the singing. NATIONALIST O’CONNOR CHARGES JURY PACKING Accuses Officials of Corruption and Wants Salary of Ireland’s At- torney General Reduced. LONDON, May 3—In the House of Commons to-day T. P. O'Connor (Irish Nationalist), member for the Scotland division of Liverpool, opened a fierce de- bate on the Irish question by moving to reduce the salary of the Attorney General of Ireland, asserting that not only was Jury-packing one of the most flagrant evils of legal administration in Ireland, but that the whole system was *calcu- lated to produce abrogation of law, and to suppress individual and national lib- erty.” Among many citations, he brought up the case of Patrick A. McHugh, member for the north division of Leitrim, who was imprisoned because of editorial comments he had made in the Sligo Champion. John Atkinson, Attorney General for Ire- land, replied that it would be a farce to try members of the United Irish League by a jury composed of members of the Jeague, men who, he asserted, regarded the law of the league as higher than the law of the land. He pointed out that juries were selected by the crown in order to secure impartiality and declared that Catholics were not rejected as jurors because of their being Catholics. It was his own duty, he insisted, to take advan- tage of all means to remove from the jury box men who had been tutored to belleve that serious crime was not crime. Sir Bdward James Reed (Liberal) said | the Attorney General for Ireland ‘had ad- mifted the practice of jury-packing on a large scale. Many members took part in the debate, among them T. W. Russell, who said he had been packed on a jury, a remark which provoked Patrick O'Brien to exclaim: “I was packed in jail for saying you were packed.” Mr. Russell—No one need tell me that juries are not packed in Ireland, for I have gone through the operation myself. Mr. O’Connor’s motion was rejected by a vote of 153 to 105. THOUSANDS OF PERSONS GIVE TRIBUTE TO CONGER DES MOINES, Towa, May 3.—A public reception was tendered to Minister Con- .ger in the Auditorium of this city this afternoon under the auspices of the G. A. R. of Des Moines. Fully 300 people crowd- ed into the building to listen to the ad- dresses and the response of.the guest cf honor, who for an hour detailed his expe- riences during the siege of Peking. Conger will leave on Monday for Wash- ington to consult with the State Depart- ment with regard to his duties. This morning he made the statement that he would give out before leaving a written statement with regard to the talk that he is a candidate for the Republican nomi- nation for Governor. i F TWO SLIGHT WRECKS ON THE SANTA FE Passengers of the First and Second Sections of the Overland Get a Shaking. BAKERSFIELD, May 3.—Passengers narrowly escaped serious injury to-day in two wrecks on the Santa Fe. West-bound overland No. 7 was in two sections, both of which were considerably delayed by ac- cidents. The first section, which was about ten hours late, ran into an open switch as it was moving toward the depot in this city at a high rate of speed. The road engine crashed into the yard engine and both were considerably wrecked. The woodwork and steps of three of the coaches were hadly splintered. Many of the passengers, who were looking out of the car windows when the collision oc- curred, were thrown from their seats by the jar. In two or three instances faces were lacerated, and one passenger had one of his legs badly wrenched. He was attended by a physician on the train. The train was delayed here about two hours by the accident. At about the same hour section No. 2 got into .difficulty at Mojave. Engineer Moran was trying to make that station with a broken flange and was running un- der a light head of steam. As he was pulling into the yards at Mojave the broken flange dropped and caused the en- gine to leave the track. The mail and baggage cars followed. They were re- placed on the track, and after procuring another engine the train resumed its jour- ney to the coast, passing through this city an hour and a half behind section one. As in the first accident, the passen- gers were badly shaken, but no one was seriously injured. o ige U8 Cars Leave the Track. NEWCASTLE, May 3.—Two cars of a westbound freight train left the track here yesterday and rolled down the em- bankment. Conductor Cantrill, Brakeman Connelly and Engh:eer ‘Wilkinson, who were riding in the caboose, were badly bruised. The wreck was caused by a spreading of the rails. s Pardon for a Murderer. o SACRAMENTO, May 3.—Governor Gage has issued a pardon to Donati C. Probas- co, who is serving a term of twenty-one years in San Quentin prison for murder of the second degree, committed in Sis- kiyou County in 1893 The prisoner has shown exemplary conduct during his im- prisonment, and saved the life of Guard McDonald when he was attacked by Con- MR T e A B ano 2 “to kill McDonald. The EXCUSABLE HOMICIDE PLEA FOR EASTMAN Defense Now Begins Its Case on Be- half of the Accused Harvard Instructor. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 3.—An ad- verse decision on the prosecution’s at- tempt to introduce the defendant’s testi- mony before the Grand Jury which . in- dicted him brought the Govérnment's case agalnst Eastman, the Harvard instructor, charged with the murder of his brother- in-lgw, to a sudden close uus morning, but before the defense could outline the whole of its case the illness of one of the jury made postponement necessary until to-morrow. The case for the defense was outlined only in part in Mr. Bartlett’s opening ad- drees. He said that the case was one of excusable homicide, that occurred by rea- son of the accidental discharge of the old rim-fire revolver. —_ Dedicate New Schoolhouse. SAN RAFAEL, May 3.—The residents of Mill Valley assembled in large numbers to-night and dedicated their new school- hecuse. The principal speaker,was County Superintendent of Schools Robert Fur- long. Music and literary exercises by the school children completed the programme. The bullding just completed cost about $10,000 and is thoroughly modern. (o] 11 HUMAN WRAITH SHOCKS TOILERS John English Reappears Among Men Who Buried Him. Succeeds in Proving That the ‘Wrong Man Was Laid to Rest. Sy gl Special Dispatch to The Call. BAKERSFIELD, May 3.—John English, a mechanic in the employ of the Webster Iron Works, who was supposed by hi fellow workmen to be dead and buried, appeared before them yesterday and gave | them a fright which they will not soon forget. English, who was popular at the works, was taken i1l with pneumonia last winter. He was reported dead a few days | later. The fact was chronicled by the| local papers. Friends of English viewed | a body at the morgue and reported the mechanic’s death at the iron works. Those who had seen the body at the morgue were positive that it was all that was mortal of John English. Weeks | passed and English was forgotten in the hurry and bustle of the big foundry until the supposedly dead man walked into the | works to greet his former companions. He | was emaciated and deathly pale, and | wlten he stepped through the door startled workmen let their hammers fall and | gazed In speechless amazement. After | their astonishment had subsided explana- tions were in order. English all these weeks had been in the | hospital. He was very near death’s door, | but never in the morgue. How'his friends came to mistake another body for his he | cannot imagine, but he is certain that he | is English in the flesh. He. Is still very weak, but will be able to again resume his duties in a short time. HOTEL ARRIVALS. GRAND HOTEL. M H Murray, Bkrsfld|F Bachelor, N Y M: Christensen, Cal |Miss L Mclntosh, Va W G Peters, S RosA |Miss A McIntosh. Va | W F Price, S Rosa ~ |J L Depauli, Cal | C E Jordan, Livrmore|H Gould, Denver C F Whittler, Bkrsfld|S T Peet, Los Ang L Kemper, Butte |W Alexander, Cal H E Walker. Ft Bragg | |T Wilken, Chicago | H Kaler, Milwaukee | | | + L W Billings, Chicago M Brooks, Cal O Perkins, U S8 V. F McPhail, Reno rs A T Collier, Wash| |L W Krolin, Milwauke |C A Hall, Florida |F J Herthel Jr, Bostn D Graham, Chgo M Fisher, Chicago | J Randali, Martines | W_Bush, rs J P M rs W Forrester, | Los "Angeles | {W Pike, Fresno | |E_Gilbert, Indianaplis | |W_Reed, ‘Menlo |{J B Keating, Redding IL, "M Hancock, Cal C Moltzen & w, Cal E Derby, Berkeley M F Robinsgn, L Ang C B Wilber, Chicago | - v H Worswick, Cal | Smith, Fresno s W T Boyle, Chgo | S Finn & w, Cal E Aubury, L Ang W P Magrane, Oakind F Walker, Los Ang G A Whiteford, L Ang. § W Traylor, Denver J Hukman, Hanford F Hukman, Hanford Dr T A-Keables, Cal G Brigham & w, Bost S J.Dougall, Boston E C Howe & w, Cal (D Eidench, E Berwick, Monterey |T J Lancaster, Cal F D Wetherby, Boston|F Booth, Danville 8 Williams & w, Il |J M Pike, Modesto Miss B Willlams, 1l (E L Hicks & w, Chgo J Gardiner, Cal |T E Thebreatn, cal J McCudden, Vallejo |S S Holl, Sacto Miss McCudden, Valjo|Mrs A S Hopkins, Sac J K Mcintosh & W,|Mrs R D Stevens, Sac Richmond, Va Miss E Stevens, acto PALACE HOTEL. O Stevens, Sacto (O Wellborn, Cal E V Kaminski. N Y |T L Lillls, 'St Joseph | § G Britten. Menlo | W _J Murphy, Chicaso RR Davis & w, N Y |J W Sanborn, Mo 1 A B E F M; M; apa | rthy, Cal | ISb T ekt bl dw,.d - = 5 3 H a Miss Davis, N Y B F Brooks, Cal W S Carr, England (W A du Bois, N Y Lt Schron, D C F Whiteside. N Y { Loetcher, Dubu J E Levi, New York | R O Marcom. U § N |T Flint & w. Sn Juan | E L Howe, Chicago |E R Pelz, Chicago Mrs W Laurence, Colo|L J Rose Jr. Oxnard J O Simonton, C H_Hill, Wis L W. Morrison, N Y |Mrs W F Boyle, Iil W L Cunningham. Mo|R H Dreyfuss, Utah Mrs A B Steinbach, Or|C L Rossiter, N Y Miss Steinbach, Or ~ |Miss Rossiter, N Y N L Orme. New York |Miss L Rossiter. N Y Mrs H E Blood. N Y H S Fletcher, Cal Miss M Gray, N Y_ |Mrs J P Graham, N Y J H Gray & w, N Y |A Graham, New York E F Carbray, N Y NEW WESTERN HOTEL. J Mulron, Ingleside |C Baker, Cincinnati | J A Parry, Vallejo |W Goodrich, Denver T 'Hill, Toronto P A Beard, San Jose | J Johnson, Arcata E A Stone, Portiand Miss E P Dennis.Napa|G Agen & w, S Rafael L Lindermuth, La (J Haller. Petaluma E A Lecon, Boston [B T Weale, Taranaki P_Boukoy, 'Boston H_Partington. Taranakl | W _Chinn, Cal W Robinson & w, L A | C W Abernethy, N Y { A B S S NOVEL EXCUSE FOR NOT | PAYING A JUDGMENT | FerY o | W. H. Lavigne, former proprietor of the Horseshoe restaurant at 12 Grant avenue, | was up before Justice of the Peace Groez- inger yesterday on an order of examina- | tion on a judgment obtained last Satur- day by John Powers for $137. The stay of execution expired on Tuesday last. La- | vigne testified that he sold his place for $500 on the evening of that day. When asked what had become of the money, Lavigne replied that he had bet it with | a stranger on Oscar Gardiner, who was beaten by Terry McGovern at the pavil- fon on Tuesday night. He could not tell | the name of the man who won the money. | Further testimony developed the fact that Lavigne had sold his restaurant to | an employe named John McRae. Judge Groezinger remarked that the sale had all the earmarks of a fraudulent trans- | action, and he thereupon gave .eorge H. Perry. attorney for Powers, permission to sue McRae as the holder- of Lavigne's property. 3 Steamship Managers’ Association. The organization of the Steamship Man- agers’ Association of San Francisco was completed at a meeting of ike directors esterday afternoon by the election of R. ;, Schwerin as president; John D. Spreck- els, vice president; E. R. Dimond, treas- urer, and F. F. Connor, agent of the Pan- ama Railroad Company, secretary. The directors were elected on Thursday, when the by-laws were adopted. They are John D. Spreckels, R. P. Schwerin, C. M. Good- ali, . F. Connor and E. R. Dimond. Drinks Carbolic Acid. LOS ANGELES, May 3.—R. C. Caulson of Dallas, Texas, attempted suicide last night b{ drinking carbolic acid and turn- ing on the gas in his room at the Unitad States Hotel. ‘was unconscious when discovered and was taken to the Recelv- ing Hospital this morning, but probably will Tecover. ROME, May 3.—Forty thousand emi- ants, according to the Fanfulla, are Fooked to leave for the United States this month. Pt % oI N = e, SOSFOFSOT == OO ASK ror THE FULL NAME Hunyadi Jinos To Obtain the best and safest Natural Laxative Water Known to the medical pro- fesslon, a never-failing remedy for all disorders of the stomach and liver, of fnval- uable service to people of sedentary habits and an absolute cure for chronie Constipation. For Dyspepsta, Biliousness, and for Heedache arising from overloading the stom- ach, no remedy in the world has been so thoroughly indorsed by the medical profes- slon generally as this well-known Aperient Water. LABEL ON BOTTLE %2%n centre raner. ROk LABOR ARMY 15 T0 MARCH Twenty - Five Thousand Coal Miners Now Preparing. They Will Demand Favorable Legislation in Penn- sylvania. FE A A Special Dispatch to The Call SHAMOKIN, Pa., May 3.—President John Fahy, Secretary George Hartlein and other prominent labor leaders of the Ninth Anthracite District, United Mine- workers of America, arrived here to-day and are actively engaged in making ar- rangements for the marching of at least 000 miners from the entire anthra coal field to Harrisburg to have certain bills passed favorable to the laboring classes. President Fahy warned the legislators yesterday that the march would occur. It is proposed to assemble the miners ncxt week, when the marching host will start from 'three points. The men between Ash- land and Shamokin will move through Treverton and Herndon to Millersburg, where they will be joined by the march. ers from the Schuylkill and Luzerne dis- trict. The column will then move fo Harrisburg and by their earnestness im- press upon the Legislature the necessity of having the new mining bills adopted as laws. Each man will carry a full dinner pail and coffee bottle, and as it is expected i the march will not consume more than three days the men will not go hungry, as provisions will be donated along the line by labor sympathizers. No riotous demonstrations are anticipated. MINERS MAY NOT STRIKE. Men in English Collieries Lack Unan- imity in Their Protest. LONDON, May 3.—There were scores of attempts at settlement to-day in the coal districts and there was evidence of the intense interest in the tax question felt by both miners and owners. But the re- sults of the conferences show that the miners are by no means so unanimous as expected in supporting a general strike. Chairman Briggs of the joint conciliation board of the Yorkshire miners has issued a marifesto to the men to the effect that, although he is strongly opposed to the impost, he considers it most unwise to take such a grave step as stopping the collieries. Several miners' councils have issued similar advice to the men. i ia s ot Aam TWO THOUSAND MEN AFFECTED. East Helena Smelter Closes Doors for an Indefinite Period. HELENA, May 3—The East Helena smelter has been closed for an indefinite period. All hope of compromise has been abandoned. Directly and indirectly 2000 men are affected. The coal mines of the Northern Pacific at Red Lodge, employing 500 men, and those of Senator Clark at Bridger with a force of 500 men, closed down last night because of the strike agitation by out- siders. S S Immense Factory Force Idle. DAYTON, Ohio, May 3—Two thousand | and three hundred employes of the Na- tional Cash Register Company here are idle as a result of a strike of molders in the foundry department. The molders struck for reinstatement of four men who had been discharged. LANDLADY BITTEN BY A FEMALE ROOMER Warrant Out for the Arrest of Miss Kenrose, a Singer, for Battery. Mrs. Eleanor Hulse, who keeps a board- ing and rooming house at 305 Taylor street, secured a warrant from Judge | Mogan yesterday for the arrest of “Jane Doe” Kenrose on the charge of battery. | She says that Miss Kenrose is a singer and has appeared at several places of entertainment. Late Thursday night Miss Kenrose, who had a room in her house, came home ac- companied by a gentlefhan. Soon they were joined by two or three other gentle- men and they kept all the other roomers in the house awake by singing and shout- ing. Mrs. Hulse went to Miss Kenrosc's room and expostulated with her, where- upon Miss Kenrose attacked her viclously and bit a plece out of her right arm. She screamed for help and some of the roora. ers came upon the scene, but none offered to assist her. She had to plead with Miss Kenrose before she ceased her attack. ——————e Coleman Is Discharged. J. M. Coleman, the oil promoter from | Kern County, who was arrested Thurs- day for carrying a concealed weapon, had the charge dismissed by Judge Mogan vesterday. The only witness for the pros- ecution was Policeman Hooper, who made the arrest. He said that he did not see any revolver till Mrs. E. M. Smith, Cole- man’s divorced wife, told him to search Coleman, as he was always armed. Hoop- er searched him and found the revolver in his pocket. The defendant, he said, went peaceably with him. Coleman testified that in the decree of divorce which he got from his wife she was given the custody of the child till she remarried. When she married Smith and he found that she had taken the lit- tle girl from friends in San Jose, where she had been cared for, he went to 928 Hyde street and demanded the child. He is a traveler and always carried a revol- ver. He sald that habeas corpus proceed- ings had already been instituted to re- cover possession of the child. SR e U In the Divorce Courts. Decrees of divorce were granted yester< day to Mabel F. Langtry from Frank M. Langtry for cruelty, Willlam D. Miller from Marguerite Milier for desertion and Clare Blaisdell from De Wight M. Blais- dell for failure to provide. Bertha E. Rankin filled suit for divorce yesterday against Charles E. Rankin, leging cruelty as cause of action. 'udge Hunt has ordered Dr. B. H. Bau- meister to pay his wife, Wilhelmina Bau- meister, $75 a month alimony pending the disposition of his action for divorce. Dr. Kreutzman testified that Mrs. Baumeister was ill and should be removed to a hos- pital. ‘The court then made the order for the payment of the alimony. —_———— Native Daughters’ Memorial Service. All arrangements have been completed for the memorial service to be held to- morrow in Native Sons’ Hall by the local parlors of the Native Daughters of the Golden West in remembrance of‘the mem- bers who within the past year were sum- moned to eternal rest. In the past it had been the practice of the parlors to observe memorial day each in its own mx place, but this year it was decided to have a joint service on a grand and most im- pressive scale. There will be music propriate to the occasion, eulogies of :g; dead and an oration. The hall will be tastpfully and appropriately decorated. —_————— Major Lewis Is Not Insane. “Major” Edwin Lewis was examined by the Commissioners of Insanity vesterday and declared sane, notwithstanding the verdict of a trial jury acquitting him of a charge of forgery on the ground of his insanity. Lewis was originally ch: with the crime af forging the name of Meyer Lewis to a deed for property on Jackson street. His sanity having been declared by the Commissioners he will once more ba com- pelled to face Judge Lawlor and a jury. Presidio Saloons Given Grace. At a meeting of the Police Commissfon- ers last night the question of closing the