The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 6, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1902 URES BFTS | GOVETED POST President Roosevelt Se-| lects Him to Be Min- ister to Cuba. General E. 8. Bragg Is Named | as Consul General to Havana. G. Squires, ion at Peking, has | e President to be and General E. 8. as been selected as e very first re-| President, to Cuba of diplomatic experi. f Canada, but was York. In 1894 tary of t he etir- ap- States ere con- when he 1 leave by Y 1S A sy i Chosen to Preside Over the Street Fair Nearly Two Hundred Thousand Ballots Are Cast for Her g o e - ¢ ‘going g from g - the agency is 7 ¢ & for army, na Special Dispatch to The Call ) officers go- | — 3 | ACRAMENTO, May 5.—The final k Wadsw New York has canvass of the ballots for May n Cor- | Queen was combleted to-night & "Btate e Ens. and Miss Fay Jackson was de- to the throne. She received 187,716 while her opponen Miss Gertrude Plumb, received 68,609 votes. The May Queen will at once select her robes to be worn at the corona- | tion ball in the chamber of the votes, SURVIVES THE SHOCK OF ELECTRIC CURRENT T nds of Volts Pass Through | srate Capitol next Monday night. ~A num- Lineman’s Body, but He Still ber of young society women will dance Lives. | the minuet at this ball and it pr to EAN JOSE Several thousand | be a bril t opening of the festival week. wvolts of electr passed through the| ©On the following d Tuesday, the o a lineman in the | fioral pageant will take place and on this = . | occaston e een and her maids of e e 3 on: Walegraph | Occasion the Qi 2 4 - < affernoon, and he 16 et | honor, who will come from neighboring . r ten seconds he lay on | Citles. Will appear in fluffy white gar- ¢ und, | ments, affording quite a contrast to the g ety robes of state which will be worn i esh cooking e evening events. It is believed the & 4 were pres- | fioral parade will be the finest yet at- 3 d rescued Doug- | tempted in Sacramento and there will be P > equipages in line. worked for the tele- "air Club has under consid- E many years, ascend- lding of a mardi e corner nter and Cin- r one of the wires. the telegraph com- ot crosSed with tne i Blectric Com- 0 of the falr week believed that it will be a splendid drawing card and the plan doubtless will be car- ried into execution The Sacramento Drjving Club announces towar e Lakes to San | its intention to hold a race meeting at carried by the | Agricultural Park during Street Fair believed that | week. Many of the horses from the Oak- land racetrack are expected to appear The Street Fair Dog Show will be an- other attraction. It is to be held under the auspices of the California Kennel ge part of this cur- ctricity passed into his | sald to have been at least sev- | than is re-| Club. Four well YWn experts have been man. | chosen to judge > dogs. They are J. J. the shock he | Lynn of Port H Mich.; E. C. Plume network of | of San Francisc e. The man : back from his 3 his face and cooked. He was dition when resoued eiving Hospital. | consclousness. were treated he was re- | ke’s Hospital. frightfully burned, nce that he will re- | ost of Sacra- 3 Chi- ple, but by his ecclesiastical superi He took a deep intere T and institutional work and establishments of the greatest importance to the welfare of the people about him soon be; rise, as it were, magic. fifty new churches and and co ecrated a cat )run(inlmd to be pre | over which he kept a w 1576; founded a number of religious com- munities, established a reformato a refuge for misguided women and atchful eve until —Eastern and s have acquired the bo i se of the Santa Cruz|a general asylum for the orphans of his b € 1 Power Company, owned | diocese. He introduced into New Jerse N d The | the Jesuits and Dominicans and founded - s d_the | the convent for the Dominican Nuns of - - ¥: Palo | the Perpetual Adoration, besides other < Propose to | works too numerous to list here. . " extending On October 1, 1880, Bishop ',hcrrif an was ey t of succes made coadjutor, with the ri c sion, to Cardinal McCloskey, Archbishop of New York, under the title of Ar: bishop of Petra, and thereafter nearly zll Result of Gilroy’s Election. £ ¥ the city election | the practical work of the archdiocese fell - e elected: Mayor, | into his hands. By this time the Catholic x r Hoover; Mar- | schools of New Jersev had increased to . % reasurer, Henry | 150, having nearly 30000 pupils, with 150 churches and 172 priests. | “Archbishop Corrigan was then the | youngest archbishop, as he had been the | youngest bishop, of the Catholic church @ | in America. From the beglmming of his rn LUBHGM PASSES AWAY ecclesizstical career honors had fallen to | him 1 most unusual way, but never did —_—— homas Hines, A i E JP they change his manner or course of con- : duct from the unassuming habit that be | had adopted from the first. | In 1884 Archbishop Corrigan was sum- moned to Rome, and represented New York in the Plenary Council, called to ad- vise the Holy Father. | On October 10, 1885, the death of Car- | dinal McCloskey made Archbishop Cor gan_Metropolitan of the dioc Ne rued From Page One. s after he was mz de vice pre é 86 pon the appointme yrk, and by special act of c ¥ C newly was permitted to perform the fu c s C ough | of his office immediately upon his acce: 1 ears | ppointed ead of waiting, as is the custom, . ¥ dent of the coi- fum, which in his case did not ” . of the foremost | actually arrive until early in 1886 itions in the| Archbishop Corrigan was a profound | scholar, a ithough not a great orator, sence of Archbishop Bay- | a most agreeable preacher, impressing h an Council § Father | hearers without resorting to any of the , or and vicar | usual rhetorical means of gaining and and when in 1 nsferred to t holdin their attention. His office was conducted in a masterful manner, though often under conditions and circumstances the reverse of peaceful, being not infre- disturbed by the most bitter and & internal dissensions, through all | of which with remarkable tact and judg- | ment he managed to steer his course so v 4, 1873, in t by the late IcCloskey. as to gain tne respect even of his oppo- ' = new office soon | nents and those who disliked his public p t made him ad-|attitude as a member of the Catholic r only by his peo- | hierarchy of America Ladies, Be on Your Guard!J DENOUNCE THE RASCALS Lablache Face Powder benefit to the skin. It freshens, clears, beautifies. Restores and preserves the natural softness of the skin, while the counterfelt powder will injure the com- plexion. We ask that every lady using Lablache Face Powder will examine the label of the box carefully, and if in doubt as to the genuineness of the powder, send Shanghal, | us the circular or the cover of the box, to- fact, every-|gether with the name of the dealer from ave been sounded by | whom the powder was purchased, and if me. Emma Eames, | it is the counterfeit, she will be advised Mme. Suzanne | by return malil, so that she can demand - de Lussan, Miss | that her money be refunded, and whoever by. forcing upon rfeit powder when uine Lablache rade to honest and sell you the gen- | Face Powder, the stand- | is a positive ms aude Adams, Miss Marguerita Sylva and | sold it will be prosecuted to the full ex- by scores of other famous women of the | tent of the law. Fifty cents per box of i in private life. The genuine! all rellable druggists or by malil. FRENCH PERFUMERS 125 Kingston St. MASS. BEN LEVY & CO. BOSTON, dent of Seton Hall, | | fight in AVALANCHE OF VOTES BEARS A CROWN | TO THE BROW OF A SACRAMENTO BELLE R o it Coronation Ball Will Occur in the Assembly Chamber of the State Capitol Next Monday Night, and on Tuesday the Beautiful || Sovereign and Her Court Will Review the Floral Pageant < The tennis tournament will be another interesting feature of the week. The en- tries for the tournament will close Satur- rext. The following teams have thus entered for the championship and Noack trophy for doubles: Pope and Lum bard and Patterson er of the local club; Atkins solaus and Ea CAPSIZE WITH BRAWLERS Four Deaths the Result of a Combat Near Juneau. Special Dispatch to The Call. VICTORIA, B. C., May 5.—News was brought by the steamer Princess May, from Juneau and Skagway, of a tragedy near the former port, resulting in at least four deaths. One of the victims was Thomas Johnson, a white prospector, who, after working for some time at the Treadwell mines, was beachcombing and selling whisky 10 Indians along the northern c t. The others were George Hansen, his wife and daughter, all Sitka Indlans, who had been living at a small camp at Petersburg, on the Douglas Isl- and ccast. Johngon became enamored of the daugh- ter of Indian George Hansen when he visited the camp and offered $100 for the girl. This Hansen at first refused to ac- cept, but whén Johnson later threw in a case of whisky the Indian parted with the girl, who was 16 years of age. Johnson took up his residence with the Indian family. Several days ago a number of Indians visited the camp and taunted Hansen with having ,gold his daughter to the white man. Then Hansen and Johnson, both intoxicated, commenced to fight, the young woman taking the part of John- son. During the conflict . a lamp_ was knocked down and a fire started. While the camp was burning the Indians fled in a canoe. Johnson followed in another, and paddling after his fellow brawlers he grasped their craft and the fight was re- sumed. While the struggle was in prog- ress the canoes were upset and none of the contestants reached the shore. Two Indians who had taken part in the the camp, but who did not go out in the canoes, witnessed the tragedy. STRAPPED TO STAGE SEAT HE RACES TO HIS DEATH Driver of a Mountain Coach™ Loses His Life in a Runaway Disaster. REDDING, May 5—Because he was strapped firmly to the seat of the coach, George Rogers, driver of one of the Sis- son and Fall River Mills stages, was un- able to leap when the stage overturned during a runaway, and his life was crushed out beneath the cumbrous vehi- cle. The accident occurred in the vicinity of Bartle’s summer resort and had no Wwitnesses, " George Rogers was driving toward Sis- son. His brother John, who drives the other stage, passed him on the road and they exchanged a few words. The next morning George's overturned coach’ was found, with the driver dead beneath it. One of the horses lay dead near by and the other was badly crippled. Apparently the harness had broken In descending a grade. The horses had run away and the pole struck a pine tree at the foot of the grade. The shock broke the horses Joose and upset the stage. Rogers was strapped to his seat, as is customary with drivers through the mountains, and could make no effort to save himsel Gallows Loses a Victim. SACRAMENTO, May 5—The sentence of Frank R. Donlan of Tulare, condemned to be hanged on May 9, has been com- muted to life imprisonment by Governor Gage. Physicians declared the prisoner is mentally unbalanced. e e e e + Hinsdale and Hawley of the East Side Club; Budgett and Whitney of the Citrus Colony Club; the Elliott brothers of Lin- coln; Toler and Birdsall of Auburn and the Porter and Allen brothers from Wood- Hinsdale, Albert A. Allen, Ben S. Allen, 2 land. F. A. Porter, H. D. Porter, F. S. Cralg. The following have entered for the > umpires for the tournament will be QUEEN FAY AND SOME OF champlonship singles: S. E. Pope, Charles as follows on the varlous days: Joseph THE FAIR MAIDS OF HONOR i MR R E SRR R R R RN OF HER COURT. rate; the great timber wealth in the P: &= — FILES ANSWER - TO MERGER SUIT Securities Company En- ters General ‘Denial | to the Charges. ST. PAUL, May An enterprise in aid of a great competitive interstate and international commerce” is the descrip- tion of the Northern Securities Company in the answer filed by the attorneys for that corporation in the suit brought by Attorney General P. C. Knox on behalf of the United States to enjoin the so- called merger of the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern railways. This an- | swer was filed late this afternoon in the United States Circuit Court in this city, and at the same time individual answers were filed by James J. Hill, Willlam P. Clough, D. Willis James, John 8. Ken- nedy, George F. Baker and the Great Northern Rallway and by J. Pierpont Morgan, Robert Bacon, Daniel 8. Lamont and the Northern Pacific Railway. The varjous papers follow the same lines. The answer of the Northern Securities Company is divided into two parts, The first is largely a denial of the petition as respecting "any charge of conspiracy and ization of the Securities Company. In- stead of owning a majority of the shares of the Great Northern or Northern Pa- cific companles, it is stated that those who are interested In the organization of the Securities Company did not own within 326,000,000 of a majority of the Great Northern shares and little more than one- quarter of the Northern Pacific shares. This part of the answer states that the Securities Company has acquired by transfer on the Great Northern books about five-twelfths of that company's stock, has negotiated for about four- twelfths of the total of such stock which has not been transferred and as to which it has at present no voting power, and has paid on account of Great Northern and Northern Pacific shares purchased over $0,000,000 in cash; that many stock- holders have not and may not sell shares, and that neither company by any act or suggestion has solicited shareholders to gell to the Securities Company. In the second part of the answer the purchase of the Chicago, Burlifigton and Quincy Railway Company is taken up, the reasons for such purchase having been, it is allgged, “‘erroneously stated in the petition.””/ Attention is called to the sparsely settled or unsettled nature of the country through which the Great North- ern lines pass; the abundance of raw ma- terials to be hauled at a low mileage + + TWERTIETH CENTURY COOK BOOKS A A car-load of Cook Books has just arrived from Chicago and they are ready for distri- bution at the business office of this paper. AIll Call sub- scribers are entitled to a copy of this great Cook Book at the premium price of ffty cents. An additional charge of 20 cents to pay expressage will be required from out of town subscribers ordering by mail. as respecting the purposes of the organ- | g ) 3 k| THERESA e F AR Lumbard, A.’D. Patterson, B. Drescher, | A5tv@hk. # F. Budgett, H. F. Elliott, H. R. Elliott, J. H. Toler, E. S. Birdsall, Frank Atkin- son, L. Nicolaus, Dr. Hawley, Lester | | + cific Northwest, and the necessity of a return load for the cars taking this tim- ber to the prairie States; the development of trade with Eastern Asia as a means of securing such return loads, and the establishment of a connecting steamship line for that purpose. It is stated that “in the interstate and national commerce which the Great Northern Company hs thus built up it competes both in th country and on the ocean with the other tl;ia‘nsc(gtlr‘\gmal lines lh;]cluglr‘\g the Can- of Honor. adlan Pacific), and at the Oriental ports & ey it competes for the commerce of the| SANTA ROSA, May 5.—Miss Elaine world. Its rates are and must be made | Davis has been selected to represent the in competition witli the rates of ocean | City of Roses at the coming street fair carrlers and by way of the Suez canal. | and floral festival in Sacramento. Miss Tha policy thus follm;;et}m?l’y the Gr?a' Davis decided to accept at a late hour to- commerce has_been followed by the | bY the people of this city some time ago. e P aSiG eompany since 1ts re- | o ppointed by the Sonoma County Board rganization in . of Trade. Miss Davis is a striking brunette, above the average height and is one of the | handsomest girls in Sonoma County. She ; is ‘& native daughter, having been born in this city. She is a daughter of Mr. and ’Da.lley and Robert Whitney of the Cali- fornia Tennis Club of San Francisco; Dr. . J. Powell of the Stockton club and Bert Adams and C. M. Goethe of tife local | | club. SR CHOICE OF CITY OF ROSES. | Miss Elaine Davis Will Be a Mald SAN JOSE, May 5.—Two Chinese on the Santa Maria ranch on the Uvas, seven mlles from Gilroy, quarreled this evening and one stabbed the other to death. The murderer | certainly have proved fatal | condition was Mrs. John B. Davis. escaped. HOPE TO aAVE LIFE OF QUEEN : Wilheimina’'s Physicians Report Her Condition Satisfactory. Master of the Household Says There Is No Cause for Disquietude. THE HAGUE, May 5.—“It is a disap- pointment, but the Queen is saved.” Such is the general feeling regarding the sad event of yesterday evenin The extreme seriousness of her Majesty’s illness was closely connected with the acute infec- tious malady from which she was cov valescing, and this complication involved imminent danger of her death. The op- eration necessitated under such conditions was performed without difficulty and without the serious complications which often arise in such ca: Consequently the intense anxiety felt throughout the castle has been repl 1 to some degree by confidence, since the Queen’s symp- toms continue to indicate that the dan- ger is no longer im A bulletin issu this | morning 1s as been feared, the illness of which Queen Wil- helmina is suffering put an end yesterday evening to the hopes for a happy evemi. the realization whereof was expected in September next. All things considered, her Majesty's condition is satisfactory at e present moment.” A bulletin posted at 2 p. m. announced that the condition Queen Wilhelmina continued to be satisfactory. The evening passed quietly at Loo Pal- ace, but Drs. Roessingh and Pot have re- mained at the Queen's bedside. Baron Clifford, master of the Queen’s household, said to-night: “Her Majesty's fever has not increased, and we are quietly and hopefully awaiting the result of a good night's rest for the Queen. There is no cause for immediate disquietude.” At 10 o'clock her Majesty was reported to be sleeping quietly, and at that hour her condition was practially unchanged. The Dutch newspapers strangely publisi nothing concerning Queen Wilhelmina's fliness beyond the offictal bulletins and brief expressions of thankfulness that her Majesty’'s life has been saved. It is no longer concealed that the operation which was performed last night was most dan- gerous, and that for an hour the patient life hung by a thread. causing the m terrible suspense. Even now, although the Queen’s physicians are exceedingly reticent, it is known that her condition remains precarious and that everything depends upon the strength of the pa- tient's constitution. There is reasomable hope for her Majesty’s recovery, how- ever, provided that hemorrhage ed. Tt is now said her Majesty’s docto being no longer embarr: tlons in their patient's able to adopt more treating the typhoid efficient means in It is also held to be exceedingly fortunate that the mishap of last night occurred when it did. instead of a fortnight ago. It would then almost Great_hopes are built on the fact that the Dutch, Pre- mier, Dr. Kuyper, was not summoned to the palace to-night. The Dutch public is strongly resentful at learning that the truth of this case has been long withheld and that reassuring bulletins were issued while her Majesty" known to be dangero This fact engenders some suspicion, and anxiety as to the reliability of the bulle- tins issued to-day. Queen Wilhelmina, although of robust appearance, has always been somewhat delicate, and her health has required very careful attention. MARINE FIREMAN’'S BODY FLOATING IN THE BAY Edward Euston of San Francisco Meets Accideptal Death at Seattle. SEATTLE, May 5.—The body of Ed- ward Euston, 2 marine fireman of San Francisco, was found floating In_the bay near the Grant-street bridge this morn ing. There were no marks of violene The only article found on the body was a skeleton key, which was in an overall pocket. Euston came to this city about a month ago from San Francisco on the steamship Humboldt. He made a trip to Alaska re- cently. He was seen at 11 o'clock last night walking on the wharves not far from where the body was found. It is supposed he fell into the bay while Intoxi- cated. He had a brother living in San Francisco. — ey —ies Bakersfield Excursion. Parties desiring to visit the Bakersfleld Street Fair and Carnival can secure tickets at one fare for the round trip. These tickets will be on sale at the Santa Fe office, 641 Market st., for all trains May 7, good to return untll May 1. — California Fruit for Mexico. SANTA CLARA, May 5.—Mrs. E. Abad, wife of Henrique Abad, a fruit dealer of the City of Mexico, was here yesterday on business connected with the firm of which her husband is the head. She says that California fruit is in great favor with the Mexican people and the firm will handle it extensively this year. Light summer suits to order for *10 Our line.of $10 made-tc-order suits contains many pattern cloths that are just the thing for summer wear. sty.ishly cut and well made. of the materia's. } SN-WOO0D Suits satisfactor- ily made for out-of- town customers. As a summer suit is only worn for three or four months, ours at 10 are suitable and inexpensive—yet they serve their purpose well, for they are Every suit guiranteed—ycur money’s worth or your money back. Come in and get our samples—no trouble to give you several pieces 718 Market and Cor. Powell & Eddy samples. light weight and light If out of the cit” write for self-meas- uring blaak and

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