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THE FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, METROPOLITAN TEMPLE CHOSEN St. Mary’s College Gradl | uation Exercises to | Be Held Here. ‘i EPNESTE ! Archbishop Riordan Will| Award Diplomas to the Students. | ND, May 28.—The uating xe of Bt. Mary's Colle will be d Wednesday evening at Metropolitan P Francisco. The college offi- s were compelled to go across the bs a hall suitable for the ex- the Macdonough Theater The ercises will be Archbishop Riordan, for will award th plomas and confer ees uy the students who have the college he; degree bachelor of arts will be pon John P. Plover. John P. D. Harloe, William_ J. A. Crimmins, Walter D. Bo- Thomas J. Kennedy The gree of bachelor of science will elved by J Flynn, Robert 8 hy and A T. Porter. Subjects of the Theses. ng are the subjects of grad- will be delivered at I ¥ v was the winner of the me for the best English e v pon “The New Century i rwWa s0 winy the meri. | during uperior won by warded for # " ANEULE win € rlos Wins Archbishop Medal. the £y Ha of the for the of Tte commercial de Brother 1lani e ol | w winner mednl smophy wil Henno, Rivera g cla er a won severe took trained in Chris- graduates h been 1 business pra religl ining 180 | rriculum. The commer- college 18 now re- . tr Cushing have 2y on nd. Miss Cushing some years with Mr. Duniway f English at Stan- the couple will away for one wedding be d will ah ha is- rederic F ing, June 12 Church the wedding of Cincinnati to Abe hich will take place ’ Mr. and M m take place at Less Prager, burgh an- ir daughter r of Bakers- a luncheon t his residence, s ,_on Sunday last. we Misses h Lu- Cohen, Dilion and es Maggie following _were Gibbs, Mrs a Mrs. ‘Gibbs, Mag- 1, Esther Buzzini, Wolfsgn, Gertie A M rtin, Ethel Clark, Esther ssie Baln, Stella Lyons, Mer- codes ¥ Dottie Martin, Irene Ryan, | per v Gibbs | returned from Am ux has returned from San iest of the University r alma mater, during {incaid left last week for ja, where she will spend iting Ontario and Los An- | nth annual picnic given by the Refooah will be held at | ne 2. STILL SEEKING RIO WRECK. | ‘ ‘ Another Attempt Made to Locate Re- mains of the Lost Liner. There are still a number of people in San Francisco who are confident they can lo- cate the remains of the lost steamship Rio ¢ ro. Over $10,00 has been spent by jes on the search, but so far result. Mrs. Young and her ht the spirit of the 1ate Cap- had told them the exact wreck lay. It cost them that the spirit was wron, Sorenson part $100 each heir money is all sp show for it is a diving outfit everal other parties venture, but all came | but no resuits. these failures another up the matter. A few named McLaren went to st Wrecking Company to wanted the best man in | i was willing to pay th John Roach went out with launch. When the vicinity of the | 2 of all taken ar e h = reached McLaren produced a Givining rod. It is formed of a long glas Xed into & whalebone handle ~The ull of gold nugkets worth over h saye. McLaren held the rod is and stretched it out cver The boat was then staited moving in an ever widening covered a lot of spare. When e wreck | nd Mc ity of Rio de Janeiro once got into his divi ed down half an h srmed McLaren and that el | The man with the divining | fied, however, and is going er try. e | President Returns Thanks. [ Young Ladies’ institute has received | ollowing letter from President Mc- "RANCISCO, Cal., May 20, 1801 a Institute: In behalf of the | 1 beg to acknowledge the receipt of " cation of recent date and to @s- you that the cordial message of welcome nization is warmly appreciated. ours, GEORGE B. CORTELYOU, Secretary 1o the President. STRANGE POINT ENTS IN SOCIETY & | sioner Heacock IN BOTKIN CASE. “Blow Was Struck in| Delaware” Declare | the Attorneys. Will Ask United States Su-| preme Court for Writ of Habeas Corpus. Ay B | California’s sovereign rights and pow- ers will be pitted against the sovereign | rights and powers of Delaware in a final | effort before the Supreme Court of the | | Unitea States to secure freedom for Mrs. | Ya Bork:n, now confined in the | h County Jail, charged with the | murder of Mrs, John P. Dunning. Attor-.| neys Knight and Heggerty are now pre- | paring a petition for a writ of hat corpus on behalf of Mrs, Botkin, which | Will e presented to Judge Carroll Cook | and argued before him next week. | “‘hough Mrs, Botkin’s case has been | d on the calendar of the court for | the action which Attorneys Knight ty purpose taking will act a stay, and if Mrs, Botkin is ever placad on trial again it will certainly not be | within the year. In j ing upon Mrs. Botkin eal the Bupreme Court of this State rev the udgment of conviction, but su the jur sdiction of the courts of this to try the accused. As the judgment wr reversed d a new trial ordered it w: and hence, under the rules of case could not be taken to | urt of the United States | v, Buch | ment in habcas cOrpus procee final & writ of habeas corpus will be ap plied for before Cook, and in event of his refusal to grant the writ, which is deemcd more than probable, & writ of | error will be applied for and the c | taken te the court of last’ resort In United Btates, | Guiteau Case to Be Cited, | Refore the Bupreme Court of the United | Bintes the jurisdiction of the courts of Culifornin to try Mrs, Botkin for tie mur der of Mrs, Dunning will be attncked, | The colebruted case ngaingt Guitenu, the | sluyer of President Garfield, will ho cfted 0f A auihority in support of the con tention that jurisdiction does not reat in the Calffornin courts, and an equally cele bratea North Carolina caso will also be | relied upon When Gulteau was placed on trial in the 1 of Columbln it was urged by | his ¢ that the jurisdiction to t him lay in_ the couris of New Jer | where Gurfield war taken nfte Wour and where he died, It w by Guiteau's counsel that the death pleted the murder, and that the crime murder had not n_committed in the District of Columbln. The Supreme Court held, however, that the erime of murder | had been completed where the fatal blow was struck, and Guiteau was tried in the District of Columbia and executed for his crime. In the other case mentioned a murder was committed across the boundary line between North olin man who fire ] orth C lina, the victim in Tennessec 3 r of North Carolina refused b 3 murderer was n Tennesse tice of for extradition mu derer was placed lina, however, der committed in ment was reversed by the . It was held that the jurisdiction to try the accused lay ol in T “where the fatal blow was ) al of the ( rnor of to permit the extradition of the ac- d was upheld by the Appellate Cour result the accused went free, and suffice to say religlously avoided Ten- nessee, wherein alone the jurlsdiction to try him for his crime lay, | Was Blow Struck in Delaware? | Now as to Mrs. Botkin's case. The ‘“‘fa- tal blow"” that ended the life of Mrs, John P. Dunning was “struck’ in Delaware, In the North C: bullet wa sped into Te Botkin case the box of pe was sped with e swiftness of th ails over the bou f and at Dover, | blow.” Under the authorities cited jurisdiction try Mrs, Botkin lies in the courts of Dela- ware; but ar she was not in the Ste aware “when the fatal blow was struck,” and has not since been there Del. aware inot demand the right to extr dite her for trial. This right of one State to withhold an | accused pergon from the jurisdiction of the courts of another, Mrs. Botkin's at- torneys point out, is the result of British | oppression prior to_ the sion of the 1thorit sion w, ates from British es for the seces United S of the cau Britain’s action in * across the seas to be offenses.” When the constitu United Sta s framed G action if t and hence prov constitution to prev accused person from one sov to another for trial, unless such ac person was actually—not con: fugitive from the state demanding the de- livery of the body of tt ACCU d for trial. In view of these precedents, Mr. Heg- | that there is but one place | Botkin can be legally tried. ace Delaware, “‘and,” he says, “as Delaware is a small and uninterest- ing State it is not likely that Mrs. Botkin | will ever be tempted to wander within its d nothing but her own will her there.” reign state Chinese Slave Cases Decided. United States District Judge de Haven yesterday overruled the appeal of Lyman I Mowry in the case of Fong Mey Yuk | and approved of the findings of Court Commissioner Heacock that she was un- | jawfully in this country and should be de- ported. | Mr. Mowry appealed on the ground that | the woman was a native born citizen of | the United States, and that therefor: | Judge Heacock had no jurisdiction to try | her. From the decision of Judge de Haven | Mr. Mowry took an appeal to the United | States Circult Court of Appeals. { Man Yin, another of the captures of the | Federal raid, was tried before Commis- | sterday and was dis- | she having proved that she was ted Stat I A SR R M | Real Estate Transfer. : Gustave C. Winterberg and Louise Gretsch have purchased from Louise Junker a lot on the north line of Turk street, 206:6 feet west from Pierce, 28x 37:6 feet in size. In an announcement of | the_ property reported to have | deeded to Louise Gretsch only. : charged born in MAY 29, 1901 UNPARALLELED TASK PLANNED FOR CALIFORNIA STUDENTS They Will Erect for the Wilmerding School a Structure Made of Brick and Terra Cotta Containing Both Classrooms and Shops, and Labor Will Continue During Several Busy Years TR g - that has been set by George A. Merrill, B, 8., for the Californiashoys who are under his care In the Wilmerding 8chool of In- dustrial Arts and the California School i st teenth street. It will furnish Instruction during the entire perfod of construction. In the building will be classrooms and shops. “The standard construction of this building,” says Mr. Merrill, “will us a standard of workmanship that will be both high and perman Both the schools named have been placed under the care of Mr. Merrill since the death of Mr. Schwartz of the Wilmerding School and he has been instructed to divide his time between them. With the next term the bullding trades will be transferred en- tirely to the Wilmerding School and du- plication of courses will thereby be | avolded. Additions to the Lick School will and molding. The new class at the Lick o THE~ WILMERDING e VIEW OF THE BUILDING TO BE ERECTED BY THE HANDS OF BOYS STUDYING TRADES IN THE WILMERD- | ING SCHOOL AT A COST OF MANY THOUSAND DOLLARS AND WHICT WILL STAND AS A MONUMENT TO THEIR SKILL. rF\HE construction of a brick and terra cotta building, to be 160 feet long, 70 feet wide and three storles high, the material of which alone will cost $40,000, is the ambitious and unparalleled task for student labor of Mechanical Arts, founded by James Lick. This work will begin at the open- ing of the next term, so Mr. Merrill an- nounces, and it will continue until the task 1s finished, which may involve some years. The structure will face on Six- and thirty-five {Imn and a competitive ex- amination will be held July 24 for admit- tance. The lrfldua(lnf exercises of the Lick School will be held Friday afternoon. Both schools will exhibit the work done during-the year by students Friday after- noon and evening. D e e e e o e e e e e e e B B R R R e R R iR Y UNION IRON WORKS PAYS OFF ITS MA./Y EMPLOYES The Men After Rebeiving Their Wages Dispersed and Went to Their Homes. rger detail of policemen was sent to the Potrero yesterday in order to pre- serve peac mong the striking machin- {sts who were being pald the wages due them from the first of the month, until A le they laid down their tools on Monday, Ma Their services were not required, for the men, as soon as they recelved their clearance cards and money, quietly departed. During the two hours in the morning and afternoon set apart for the payment, the crowd was considerable. Each man seemed to feel the gravity of the occasion and acted accordingly. The Iron Trades Council met during the afternoon with delegate J. D. Plerce of the International Assoclation of Labor, and Secretary Bd. Rosenberg of the San o0 Labor Council present. Details discussed but no statement of gains or los: was made. Arthur M. Selfridge, who is connected with an electrical engineering enterprise in Geneva, Switzerland, had an exciting time at the Fulton Iron Works at Harbor View on Monday afternoon. He is here on a visit with his parents and surfeiting of a continuous round of pleasure sought an opportunity to utilize his time. Being friendgly with the management of the Ful- ton lron Works, he went there. As he was leaving he was jostled and pushed by & number of strikers who were await- ing their_pay. Young Selfridge, whose grandfather and great-grandfather were Admirals in the TUnited States Navy, wanted to fight the whole crowd but was restrained. —_— Holy Cross Parishioners’ Picnic. The annual picnic of the Holy Cross parishioners will take place to-morrow at Mirabel Park, in Sonoma County, near Mark West Creek and the Russian River, The steamer Ukiah will start at 9 a. m. with the picnic party from Tiburon ferry, tickets for the excursion being on sale af the ferry depot. A band of eight pleces will accompany the picnickers and a pleasing_ programme of events has been | arranged by the committee in charge. The committee of arrangements is as James Den Charles Casassa, P. E. Eagen, J. | F. Svllivan, William O'Toole, C. Caulfield, Thomas Snéad, F, Kennedy, E. J. Beardsley, % Barry, Willlam Enright, J. Laydon, 1y Jr.,'J. Yones, M. Carroll, 1. Carroll, J. D. Regan, E. I. Regan, Thomas Curran, Willlam O'Connor and Fathers J. F. McGinty, R. Sampson and P. J. Ryan. Dyspepsia, Biliousness and all e Einisorloabla T T T UY YT TR R T T TITE YT mis Tells The Story One Opinion taken from over ome thousand testimonials received from the most prominent physicians all over the world. DAVID WALSH, M. D., C. M. Edin., Physician to the Western Skin Hospital, London, England, writest *“I have found Hunyadi-Janos to answer every purpose and I invariably presecribe it, partly because it can be obtained anywhere and everywhere, partly because of its uniform action, and last, not least. because itis preferred by my patients.” Hunyadi Jdnos CURES Constipation Fod | Stomach and Liver Troubles. No Medicine in the world has received such widespread endorsement ABEL ON BOTTLE is BLUE with Red Centre Panel v (chairman), Paul Spottiswood | E, JOWA HONOR THE PRESIDENT Great Crowds Gather to Greet the Nation’s Executive. CEDAR RAPIDS, Towa, Mav 28—T"e trip of the Presidential train from Omaha eastward to-day across Iowa was practi- cally without incident. It was made over the Chicago and Northwestern ard, to avold the crowds at the stations, engines and train crews were changed a few nilles from the end of each division. Few siops were made, but the train was slowed up at the principal cities and towns and the President appeared on the rear platform. This is Secretary Wilson's home State and he shared the honors with the Fresi- dent to-day. At Tama, where Mr. Wilson formerly resided, there was a big crowd to greet them both, but no stop was made. At Marshalltown the local G. A. R. post was lined up in the station. Mrs. McKinley's condition has continued to show steady but no rapid improvement since she left San Francisco. She is gain- ing some strength and the President is much encouraged. She has not .eft her couch, however. Dr. Rixey does not de- sire to have her tax her strength, but he permits her to sit up in bed most of the day. The President is at her side much of the time. At the place where the Chicago and Northwestern crosses the Des Moines River, over the new Boone viaduct, sald to be the longest and highest double- track structure in the world, the train was halted for ten minutes to permit the photographers with the party to take sev- eral group pictures of the President, Cabi- net and newspaper men. The train is due to reach Chicago about 3 o'clock to-mor- row morning. It will not run into the station, but will be switched to the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad in the out- skirts of the city and proceed directly to Washington. At Canton to-morrow a stop of twenty or thirty minutes will be made to permit some of the relatives and friends of the President and Mrs. McKinley to come aboard PLACES BAN ON SECRET ORDERS Sensational Action Taken by the United Presbyterian Church. 1 DES MOINES, Iowa, May 28.—By a vote of 9 to 63 this afternoon the general as- sembly of the United Presbyterian Church adopted the judiciary commlittee’s report with regard to an interpretation of article 15 of the creed. The action of the assem- bly is in effect to exclude members of se- eret orders from admission to the church. It is also interpreted by some delegates to mean_the expulsion of members of the church who now belong to- secret scei- eties. The final discussion on the question was long and heated. M. C. McKittrick of Los Angeles, Cal., said he would rather cut off Lis right hand than to vote for the exclusion of members of secret societies already in the chureh, “If we let this report go through as it is,” said Mr. McCreery of Pittsburg, heat- edly, “we are saying that men who have been good members of the United Presby- terian Church for vears must be turned out of doors. I want to tell you, fathers and brothers, that if we pass this report without amendment we are going to make more trouble than the United Presbyte- rian Church has ever seen.” R. G. Campbell, who moved to strike out the section of the report which sald the testimony does not include such orders, held that labor unions should not be ap- proved by the church. This idea was strongly opposed. ECLECTIC PHYSICIANS IN ANNUAL SESSION Twenty-Bighth Annual Meeting of State Soclety Convenes at Cali- fornia Medical College. The twenty-eighth annual session of the State Eclectle Medical Soclety convened yesterday morning at the California Medical College, 1422 Folsom street. The session will continue to-day and to-mor- row, and officers will be elected at the closing session. Dr. Donald Maclean, president of the Soclety, presided at the meeting yester- day morning. Reports of committees were presented. Papers were read by Dr. P. F. Bullington of Oroville, Dr. W. A. Har- vey of San Francisco and Dr. J. W. ilton of San Francisco. In addition to the election of officers to-morrow, two members of the State Board of Medical Examiners will be elect- ed, in accordance with the provisions of the new law giving two members of that board to each of the three State medical societies—Allopathic, Homeopathic and Electic. —_—————— Beadle Has No Title. United States Commissioner George E. Morse flled with United States District Judge de Haven yesterday his report in the case of A. W. Beadle vs. the schooner Reliance and others. Commissioner Morse finds that Beadle is not and at the time of the selzure and sale of the schooner Rellance was not the owner of any part thereof and not entitled to any part of the proceeds of the sale. He finds that the Western Trading Company is the own- er of seventeen twenty-fourths of the schooner and entitled to that proportion of the balance on hand after deducting costs. The ownership of the remaining seven twenty-fourths has not been suffi- clently proved. set for | be made at once, entirely new shops be- ing buflt for the departments of forging | Bchool will consist only of ninety boys | C MOST COLOSSAL OF CONVENTIONS | Three Halls Engaged for Epworth League Meetings. APPEAL MADE FOR THE NEGRO Address Sent to Ala- bama Constitutional Convention. | California Is Receiving Gen- erous Advertising in | the East. pre R A7 (NI Senator Morgan Prepares a Solution of Suffrage Problem. The international convention of tha Ep- | MONTGOMERY, Ala., May 28.—Booker worth League, to be held in S8an Francisco | T. Washington, in behalf of the negro from July 16 to 21, is assuming proporiioas | race, to-day presented to the Constitu- as the days go by that justify the predic- | ticnal Conventlon an appeal for conserva- tions that it will be the most colossal of | tive action. The address reminds the con~ such gatherings that the countrv hus | vention thdt the negroes came here seen, Already arrangements have been | Against their will, but have been benefit- made for three convention halls, fn esch | ¢d, trained and Christianized. They did | of which three meetings will be held daily, | thelr duty in the Civil War and in the Spanish war, They have ceased for twenty Mechanics' Pavilion will be the scene of | | years to be an offensive element in poli~ the great opening concert, and the various | e g " Us | {ice. Leading members of the race have headquarters, etc., will be there. In fact, | po ggtentiy urged the negro to learn to it will be the main convention hall, but | {;yst the white man. s men, he says, this is a crucial meetings of equal importance will be held | negro pays some direct taxes. | | simultaneously at Metropolitan Temple | }emrl the Alhambra Theater. | | He pays much more indirectly through Mechanics’ Pavilion will be very eiabo- | his labor. He is in the main a producer rately decorated for the convention, more | Of WEeAItH, and ger ll,\'”um!::;lll‘::aamt | ) vel au- aw-abiding. & eAc he than usual attention being given to beau- | law-ablding. = -Already SO CHUERCCS titying its barn-like interior. An exhibit of California produets, ar- | ranged by counties, will occupy the entire | east side of the gallery of the pavilion, and the negro fears that his citizenship and schools will both be taken away. The slations are now reasonably satisfactory b 1 B ot BT tween the races, Anything that wili un- | B rtistic Arrangement of theis prodticts. | Settle the negro naw. when he is settiin | "1t is estimated now that between 40,009 | 4own to thrift and common sense, Wou | and 0,000 excursioniats from bavond the | Injure both races, The address pleads | Rocky' Mountains will be brought to San | that all ineentive tor right and useful live | Franctaco on aceount of the convention | 1§ be wot withdrawn from the youns and its cheap rates, Many of thesa mre | DOKFO. T concludent =~ oo o e writing for ten days' accommodation and | <0 and form of fraud, or ean be inter- JlSi‘:L".t‘"J,'B’.Ak‘f“ of ‘them Will be here at 's meaning one thing when applied | The Epworth League of the State is ace and "&'fif".’.‘.lfx',‘15'77'\.:'2;{’“&:', making an effort to have 10,000 members | | nother, ; . ors | fprove present conditions, but unsettis from California in attendance at the con- | (WPTOVE FERCUL COTTGRRR S0E S gae ventlon, Of course, & much larger num- | = - bor may be expeeted to vislt dan Fruas | [I0 the wealth and prosperity of Ale- clsco from the interfor and northern ar o vy : I'he leading feature of the suffrage southern parts of the Btate, clause offered to-day by ex-Governor Jones 18 that which denles the right to vote to “any person who whall hereafter be guilty and convicted of selling his own buying or bartering the vote of Many Visitors From Canada, ¥, W, Trower, nm-rnmrr of the general | committes, recelved a letter yester: | vote from Dr, A. C. Crews of Toronto, sec 3 ! tary of the Bpworth League of Canada, Snother in uny lesul election or in oy waying that applications for accommoda- | MIImary, eaucus or conventien, of shall make or ald in making any false tions on thelr speclal.train were poullng Nt or returns us to the result of wuch in. Probably 600 persons will start from | ¢ ult o Toronto, while from pointw tarther. eant | oleclion. primuaty, caucus or Consentiofy in the Dominfon many muy be expected, | © bon "id’ be conv thereof.'" and British Columbia will send down large | delegntions. | for the Senator Morgan has prepared Y Con- of the Constitutional Californin hag nover had such generous | Sonsideration bE the Constl ndvertining without cost to the people, | peitlol 4 adrems o o oraan s Excursion managers (o the number of | [l L e Nobody but a white man 100 are at work In the Bast, scattering | Bt "N A" y urt of hall hold office. A court of three regis- trars is provided for each county, and these courts shall have absolute power to detetmine the qualification of every voter, #ave that an appeal from its decislon lles to the Clreuit courts. The real feature of the plan is_in the provision that only white men shall hold office. The registrar plan 18 similar to that in Mississippi, ex- cept that the courts of registrars have a much wider discretion. BROOKS THINKS lterature broadcast. The rallroads a doing their share. The pworth League papers all over the country are devoting imng to Callfornia and the convention, The Hpworth Herald, with a elrculation | of 126,000, gnve its whole lssue of April 2) to carefully prepared and profusely | illustrated articles on California. | The Fourth General Conference District | Epworth League, comprising Pennsyl- | vania and New Jersey, has lssued a §5- page pamphlet, ‘“Itinerary—California 1901 It s an attractive publication, de- veted almost entirely to California. | Stereopticon Views of California. i MARKE:'; IS SAFE A stereopticon expedition has been traveling over the Eastern States for the }n.n year, sent out by the Epworth | eague, to advertise California and the | copvention. The Brooklyn Eagle devoted four col- | umns in ifs issue of May 18 to the coming snvention. The General Committee has sent circu- lars with general information concerning the convention and California, to every minjster of the Methodist ~Episcopal Church in the United States and Canada, | and through them to the presidents of all the local Epworth Leagues. In this way 200,000 circulars have been placed in the hands of 20,000 men for distribution. The music of the convention will be most impressive. A chorus of 200 volces is being trained to render the sacred mas- terpleces. Of necessity all but the final rehearsals must be done *in smaller | choruses.” In San Francisco a chorus of 600 voices is being drilled and in Oakland one of 400. Los Angeles has a chorus of 200, San Jose one of 250, Stackton 200, and Sacramento 200. Robert Husband is chairman of the music committee. The grand chorus will be directed in different numbers by vari- ous well-known conductors. | The great organ, recently built for the new memorial chapel at Stanford Uni- | vergity and made avallable for the con- vention by the kindness of Mrs. Stan-| ford, will be put up in two sections, one | price is tobacco. Peace is practically on each side of the gallery. The organist | reigning, however, and the other products will be a hundred feet from the pipes. | will increase in a period of a few months. The best known organists of the city will | The hemp trade of the islands is in the have opportunity to test the new instru- | hands of four concerns, of which the pring ment during the convention. cipal ones are Warner, Barnes & Co. and Smith, Bell & Co. ““The natural conditions existing and the lack of tonnage on the Pacific are suf- cient to prevent any great influx of pro- ducts from the Philippine Islands into the United States at once. The regular Ori- | ental lines have about all the business they can attend to. For these reasons I think there will not be a chance to send forward great enough quantities of anr Philippine product to affect the American merket very much before Congress can meet to legislate and fix the duties.” ———————————— Natural Conditions and Scarcity of Tonnage Will Afford Protection Until Congress Can Sup- ply Legislation. “There are flve leading exports from the Phillppines,”” sald Franklin Brooks; ‘hemp, tobacco, sugar, coffee and copra. Rice is a great product, but there is not enough raised for local use and it 1s nec- essary to import rice for food. “Just before I left Manila Mr. McGov= crn, manager of the Insular Tobacco Fac- tory, sald that he could not fill any orders for shipment to the United States because the factory was taxed to its full extent by European orders. I also asked the man- ager of the Alhambra Cigar Factory and recelved substantially the same answer there. The tobacco trade in the Philip- pines is practically a monopoly. Behind this are British capitalists who have spe- stal_privileges. ‘Coffee was little produced at the time I left the islands. Sugar production wi #lso small, owing to the destruction of the lantations during the _ insurrection. here were large sugar warehouses at Manila, Malabon, Iloflo and Cebu. Those at Malabon had been destroyed. The only one of the products mentioned that ex- ists in sufficient quantity to affect the St. Paul’s Parish Outing. The annual outing of St. Paul's parish will take place on Wednesday, June 12, ! at Los Gatos, and the committees in charge promise an entertaining pro gramme and a most pleasant outing to | all who take part. Captain M. J. Wren is president of the d and John Mc- Gushin vice president, the secretaries be- | ing R. S. Shepston and Charles J. Willey. The following committees have been ap- pointed: Prizes—Thomas McGrath, William Hurley, John Farry, Cornelius O'Brien, William Haas, Willlam Mahar, Thomas Branson, M. Kelleher, T, Ahern, P. Fraher, J. Howe, J. McDermott, M. ‘Ashe, F. Wales, P.” H. Sullivan, Thomas Branson Joseph ~ Carroll, John Kelly, Thomas Grant, Thomas Christal Jr, Grounds—R. Shepston, W. Healy, Richard Coughlin. 1 Music—Rev. C. E. Kennedy, Daniel Meagher, T. Christal, W. Healy and T. Desmond. ‘Games—Rey. P. Hennessy, M. W. Farrell, John Murray, J. H. Spring, J. W. Maher and RIBS BROKEN BY A FALL.—Oscar Olson, a painter residing at 244A Shipley street, had two ribs broken yesterday by falling from = ladder while at Wwork on_a house on Stefner street, between Clay and Washington. bt SN A LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Tuesday, May 28. Schr Ida Schnauer, Sorensen, 11 days from Port Gamble. Schr Volant, 14 days trom Port Halversen, T. Hannon. A ARG Gamble. SR R Caward Bowers hePStom: C- | “Schr Louls, Genders. 8 days from Willapa Trains will leave Third and Townsend P streets at 9:10 a. m., June 12, and will stop a Valencia street, Ocean View and San | ateo. SAILED. Tuesday, May 25. Stmr Noyo, Johnson, Eureka. Stmr National City, Dettmers, —.