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'HE SAN FRANCISCU CALL, HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1901 S DOCTORS IN ERROR, SAY EDITORS OF A MEDICAL JOURNAL X - PRESIDENT AUTOPSY SHOWS A MISTAKE — Surgeons Credited With Displaying the Best Possible Skill. SEN. BOIES PENROSE. SENATOR. | FAIRBANK S \ - The forth- it of the New York al J w iscuss the c dent McKin- a article. It will consolation - of res in e omission all the may have the fearf: e duties of b el there was now s shock. ck was correctly hat no conside rrhage was going on. 'Well Done. elf was per- ble gyn on nditions rtance. 3 establis efore the fatal is 1 hardly hout giving rise to than aug- rises from t traum There is g degree of ion, but mnot serious renal v lamented 3 unique in s0 much, FIXES RESPONSIBILITY ON YELLOW JOURNALISM Lttorney Who amvicted Anarchist Most Speaks of Causes of the Assassination. NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—The Press say For the purpose of obtaining u- thoritative opinion on the responsibilit; moral, of the incendiary llow journalism of Wil _R. Hearst ihe Press submitted various copies of that publication to and requested an opinion from cey Nicoll, who, when District Attory of the County of New | York, prosecut convicted John Most, the an , who served two termé in the penitentiary. It is the opin- jon of Mr. Nicoll that William R. Hearst, editor of the v rk Journal, can be held legally as well as morally responsi- Dble for any crime resulting from his pub- leations which tend to excite and inflame the evilly disposed to acts of violence and e, and that if it can be shown that gosz was a reader of the Journal in- citements and acted in response to them limita- finished | distin- there fo |made up of representatives LR T ] = { N PN - i MEN WHO ARE TAKING A PROMINENT PART IN THE McKINLEY OBSEQUIES. | William R. Hearst could be indicted with Czolgosz. CHICAGO’S BUSINESS WILL BE SUSPENDED Mayor Harrison Requests That Work Be Stopped and Church Bells Tolled. Sept. 18. CHICAGO, Mayor Harrison all | to-day Tequested that all business be sus- pended to-morrow from 2:30 p. m. to 2:35 p. m. He asked that only such work as was absolutely necessary be dome. Min- | isters of the city are requested to see that during this cessation of the city’s pulse |in honor of the memory of the nation’ | dead, all church bells toll, alone break- ing the silence of the mourning city. The memorial parade to-morrow will be of practi- cally every civic and military organiza- tion in Chicago. The 800 regulars Sheridan, including the Twenty:- te of artillery, under Colonel Van Horn, will also be in line. Memorial services will be held in all the churches. Exten- sive preparations being made for mass meetings to be held in the Coliseum Sunday afternoon and evening in memory of the dead President. .| _This afternoon an article prepared by Superintendent of Schools Cooley, on the life and character of President McKinley and the enormity of the crime which Czolgosz committed In assassinating him, was read in all the public schools. L GOVERNOR RECEIVES | A THREATENING CARD New Jersey’s Exccutive Advised to Keep Quiet or Share McKin- ley’s Fate. | TRENTON, N. J., Sept. 18.—Governor Voorhees to-day received a postal card marked Hoboken, N. J., which read as | follows: “You want to keep quiet and keep your detectives away from here, or you will get what McKinley got. We are looking for | your kind.” The card bore nosignature. It is thought | it came from anarchists at Hoboken, as | State detectives and secret service men | have been keeping a close watch on them since the shooting of President McKinley. | MRS. McKINLEY BEARS HER BURDEN BRAVELY Widow of the Martyred President Secluded in Her Home in Canton. CANTON, O., Sept. 18.—Mrs. McKinley, | immediately* upon reaching the North | Market street home, retired to her room, | denying herself to all. Dr. Rixey said | she had borne the trip from Washington very well, although she frequently gave way to her grief. Dr. Rixey said at 1 In' lock that he thought Mrs. McKinley { would be able to go through her part in the funeral arrangements to-morrow. ] From those who accompanied her on the train it was learned she bore up as well as could be expected under the circum- stances, better than her friends had an- ticipated, in fact. She is breaking down, however, under the awful strain, and it is necessary that she secure all possible rest and quiet that she may endure the ordeal of the next twenty-four hours. Obsequies Impress Cleveland. PRINCETON, N. J., Sept. 18.—Ex-Presi- dent Grover Cleveland speaking of the McKinley obsequies at Washington to- day said: “I was very much impressed with the sqlemnity of the occasion and the deep feeling of all the people who were present and thelr manifestation of sincere grief.” Mr. Cleveland also said that he found it impossible to attend the public memo- rial service to be held in Philadelphia to- morrow night. B SR v May Be Tarred and Feathered. QUENEMO, Kans., Sept. 18.—William Graham, a section hand, who made re- marks against the late President McKin- ley, was ordered by the Mayor to-night to leave at once. If he is here to-morrow the people say he will be tarred and feath- ered. U Telegraph Wires to Be Silent. NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—The Commercial Cable Company and the Postal Telegraph Company will suspend business their wires between 3:30 and 3:35 p. m. (Eastern time) to-morrow as a mark of respect to the dead President. <o S b Mrs. Roosevelt on Journey Home. WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Mrs. Theo- dore Roosevelt left to-day for her home at Oyster Bay. She will return next week and take up her residence at the execu- tive mansion. NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—Mrs. Roosevelt arrived in this city at 3 o’clock this after- noon en route to Oyster Bay. She was ac- companied by her son, Theodore Jr., ana Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate on all | T William Jeffords. After a couple of | hours' shopping Mrs. Roosevelt and her | son left for Oyster Ba RIDES THROUGH WILDS TO ATTEND FUNERAL E‘Senntor Penrose Makes a Dash From Idaho Forests to Reach Canten. PHILADELFHIA, Sept. 18, —After a ride of three days or horseback through the wilds cf Idaho and four and a half days on railroad trains United States Senator Penrose arrived home at midnight and left this morning for-Canton to attend the funeral of President McKinley. Senator Penrose had been on a two months’ hunt- ing trip, and started for the East the mo- ment the news of the shooting of the President was conveyed to him. Three Months for Mr. Walsh. EVANSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 18.—Robert “LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT.” LEAD, ken (The President's Favorile Hymn.) Lead Thou me on. dly Light, amid the encircling gloom, The night 1s dark ahd | am far from homs. Lead Thou me on ; Keep Thou my feet, | do not ask to see The distant scene; one step enough for me. ! was not ever thus, nor prayed that Thou Shouldst lead me cn ; ! loved to choosé cnd see my path; but now Lead Thou me on. I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears, Pride ruled my wll. Remember not past years! So long Thy power has blest me, sure it still Wil lead me on O’er moor and fen, o'er crag and tarrent, till The night 1s gone, And w.th the morn those angel faces smile Which | have loved long since, and lost awhile ! * —(Cardinal) John Henry Newman. - SENATOR MARCcULS HANNA, — GUARDS MAY HEAR CRITICISM Shake-Up Is Impending in Secret Service Office. Walsh was to-day sentenced to the Coun- ty Jail for three months for saying he x‘illsdglad President McKinley had been ed. e VETERANS ORGANIZE TO STAMP OUT ANARCHY Loyal League of North America Comes Into Existence in Tacoma. TACOMA, Sept. 18.—The Loyal League of North America has been organized here by Grand Army men to oppose an- archy throughout this continent. It pro- poses to organize local branches ever: where and, through them, to inculcate | love of American institutions and insist upon their absolute protection. The pa- rent organization to-day adopted a dec- laration of principles which specifies its object as follows: ““To accomplish the utter annihilation of anarchy and anarchistic teachings | within the borders of North America and | to prevent disloyalty to existing forms of government.” Any citizen of the United States, Cai ada or Mexico more than 21 years old and | never convicted of an infamous crime is eligible to membership. All members pledge themselves to obey the rules of | the organization and give unquestioning obedience to its executive officers. George H. Boardman, one of the most prominent Grand Army men in the State, was elect- ed president. Pl O RUN OUT OF COUNTRY BY ENRAGED CITIZENS Foreigner of Anarchistic Tendencies | Escapes a Coat of Tar and Feathers. MARSHFIELD, Or, Peterson, a foreigner, Marshfield to-day on ances derogatory of the late President McKinley. A party led by business men visited Peterson's residence last night with the intention of administering a coat of tar and feathers, but he refused to come out and the atiempt was abandoned. This morning he came down town and was immediately taken into custody by a committee of citizens. Tar and feathers | were in readiness in a warehouse, but the committee finally gave him one minute to make his choice between tar and feath- ers and_leaving the country within five hours. He chose the latter. Two men living on Coos River are re- ported to have expressed satisfaction at President McKinley's assassination. A | party has been formed to visit them to. | morrow. | Mills Will Be Closed. PITTSBURG, Sept. 18.—By orders from President Schwab of the United States Steel Corporation all of the mills of the Carnegie Company, National Steel, Amer- ican Steel Hoop, American Sheet Steel, American Steel and Wire, American Tin Plate, American Bridge, Federal Sheet and Tube companies, employing 150,000 men, will be closed to-morrow_in_ honor of the memory of President McKiniey. Many independent mills, the Westing- house interests, glass factories and all the coal mines in this district will be closed, as well as _the exposition, theaters, city, county and State offices’ and business | houses. Sept. 18.—John was run out of account of utter- —_—— Suggestion to Elk Lodges. PHOENIX, Sept. 15.—Phoenix Lodge of | Elks to-night determined to request every | lodge in the United States to join with it | in including the name of the dead Presi- dent in the list of brothers for whom spe- clal memorial services are to be held on the annual memorial day, occurring in De- cember. g S BN T Insult Sends Him to Jail. | NEW 10RK, Sept. 18.—Alfred Danz- chall, a Dane, aged 52 years, was to-day cent to jail at Plainfield, N. J., for sixty days in default of a fine of $60 imposed upon him for abusive language directed against the late President McKinley. Pan-American Gates Will Close. BUFFALOQO, Sept. 18.—The board of di- rectors of the Pan-American Exposition has Gecided to close the gates to-morrow. Ends Life While Delirious. SANTA BARBARA, Sept. 18.—It is sup- gosed that the body of Albert Buelna is oating in .the channel to-night. This afternoon he escaped from a sick bed while in delirfum and his hat, coat and shoes were found at the end of the pleas- ure wharf late this evening. The boy was about 20 years of age and the son of Lius Buelna, a merchant of this city. Cracksmen Open a Safe. BLOOMING PRAIRIE, Minn., Sept. 18. —The safe in the bank of J. C. Brainerd & Co. was blown open by cracksmen last night. Between $4000 and Lrency was taken, in cur- A | vice men | disarmed. HICAGO, Sept. 18.—One of the first matters President Roosevelt will take up after his return from Can- ton will be in relation to the protee- tion afforded the late Presidert by the secret service. President Roose- velt has already given some consid- eration to this matter and from an ae- count of an eye-witness to MecKirley's assassination he has most serious doubts regarding the efficiency and value of the protection given his predecesser. It appears from reports made to the President that the secret service men who were with McKinley were not men with such experience as to be entrusted with such duties. They were not detectives acquainted with criminal methods, nor were they alert in their duty as guards to the President. They did not even accom- plish the arrest of the assassin, as ap- pears from the report of Captain Wisser of tke Seventy-third Coast Artilery, whose men wetc on duty and disarmed Czolgosz after the negro Parker had struck him down. In nome of the official reports sc far made does it appear that the secret ser- took any part in the arrest, though they demanded that the prisoner be turned over to them after he had been From photographs which have been placed in the President’s hands the secret service men appear more as mem- bers of the receiving party or as specta- tors than as officers on duty looking out for_dangers that threatened the life of McKinley. President Roodevelt will investigats the bureau to determine whether the men there employed are experienced detec- tives. If the men are merely placeholders the President will give the bureau a se- vere shaking up. Judge Sends Him to Jail. NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—As Magistrate Cornell was leaving the Essex Market court to-day he was accosted by a man who spoke sneeringly of a mourning band which the magistrate wore on his left sleeve in memory of President Mec- Kinley. The magistrate at once arrested the man and took him back_into the court, where he said he was Willlam A. Davis, a shoemaker, of Troy, N. Y. Mag- istrate ' Cornell sentenced him to Black- well’s Island for two months. ADVERTISEMENTS. Uncle Sam’s Mail Service requires physical and mental ability of a high degree to withstand its hard labors. The high tension to which the nervous system is constantly subjected, has a depressing ef- fect, and soon headache, back- ache, neuralgia, rheumatism, sciatica, etc., develop.in severe form. Such was the case of Mail Carrier S. F. Sweinhart, of Huntsville, Ala., he says: “An attack of pneumonia left me with muscular rheumatism, headache, and pains that seemed to be all over me. 1 was scarcely able to move for about a month when I decided to give v Pain Pills and Nerve Plasters a trial. In thiee days T was again on my route and in two weeks I was free from pain aad gaining in flesh and strength.’ Sold by all Druggists. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Eikhart, Ind.