The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 5, 1902, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1902. PILGRIMS FROM DISTANT POINTS OF UNION BEGIN JOURNEY BRYAN OBTAINS ND INDORSEMENT Indiana Democrats De- ‘Injunction cline to Consider His Name. b e 4.—The Demo- ate Convention was called to or- k by W. H. O'Brien, he State Central Com- Indianapolis an. The fol- Stillwell, tor, James R. Riggs, , Jerome Her- reme Court, New Alba Instructic perior Court Howard, So pellate Court for R. Yeast, Portla Fowler; H. G. E on was remarkable for its didates for all but chosen by ac- ere was no fight- oper there was a meeting of resolutions. A of William District were vor of the in- s City platform. committee was ment, saying d it out of place at the Bryan's name into agreed restoration and arine and to oduction of reign mines as e truth and condemns ne policy of istration ADVERTISEMENTS. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS ecific remedy for aiilments he stomach, liver and bowels, ed by hundreds of testimonials. We would therefore urge every suf- ferer from Indigestion, Dyspep- sia, Flatulency, Constipation, Headache or Liver and Kidney Trouble to try it. It will cure v For sale by druggists, with our Private Stamp over the neck Avoid substitutes. hts signature is on every box of the genuing Laxative Bromo-Quinine Taviets %5 remiody wbat cures & cold in one day. LAW REAGHES | Court Justice Chester to-day granted an merman, of the quan- | | Bay, a: | was served on the representatives of con- | Schoonover, FOR PACKERS Restraining Trust Is Granted in New York. ALBANY, N. Y., June 4.—Supreme injunction restraining certain beef pack- ing companies of the West from carrying | on business in this State in violation of | the Donnelly anti-trust law. The order | cerns in this city and Troy to-day, and | will be served on others throughout the | State as quickly as they can be reached. It ‘was obtained on the affidavit of D. W. Meredith, a former manager of Swift & Co. The injunction is directed against Ar- | mour & Co., Swift & Co., the Cudahy | Packing Company, the Hammond Com- | pany, Schwarzschild & Sulzberger Com- pany, domestic and foreign corporations, and against Nelson Morris, Edward Mor- irs and Ira N. Morris, copartners, car- on business as Nelson Morrls & Their managers and all persons act- 1g for them are restrained and enjoined from fixing and determining by combining together the prices to be charged for meat and from agreeing among them- | selves as to the supply of meat to be brought into this State by them, and from acting upon anhy understanding tending to diminish such supply, and from | fixing or maintaining prices of their and each other’s products by agreement. Attorney General Davies asked that the injunction be made permanent, and Jus- tice Chester directed that it “continue un- til other or further orders of the court.” JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., June 4.—At- torneys Hagerman and New addressed the Supreme Court this afternoon and asked the court to allow the Schwarz- child & Sulzberger Packing Company to accept the count in the Attorney Gen- al's information to the effect that the cempany is operating in this State with- ou a charter from the Secretary of State. Hagerman and New stated that if tho ccurt would accept that the company would pay the $1000 fine imposed by law and at once take out a charter, and then this company would be on an equal fool- ing with the packing companles in the proceedings against them for violating the anti-trust law. Attorney General Crow stated that he was willing to accept the fine if it would not bar him from proceeding against this company the same as the other compa- nies. At this time the court announced that it had overruled the motion of all the packing companies to quash the in- formation filed against them by the At- torney General. The Supreme Court this afternoon di- rected a writ of ouster to issue against the Schwarzchild & Sulzberger Com- pany and suspended the same on condi- rying Co. tion that the company comply with the | | Btate laws relating to corporations within | five days. The question of fine was re- served until further orders of the court. | . The other packers against whom similar information was filed were given until June 18 to respond and file return to rule. | Attorney New sald that he wished to en- ter exceptions to the overruling of the motion to quash the information. This was regarded by the court and the Attor- ney General as the first indication that the beef trust would carry the case to the Federal court. YOUNG BRIDE ARRESTED; HUSBAND A FUGITIVE Aberdeen Couple Accused of Drown- ing Their Two Weeks Old Daughter., SEATTLE, June 4—King County offi- cers are looking for Paul Underwood, a shingle weaver, who is charged jointly with his wife, Nellie Weatherwax Under- wood, aged 17, with the murder of their two weeks old daughter. The coupie came here last winter from Aberdeen, | where they were married in December. Three weeks ago a baby was born. They left Ballard on Saturday night for Aber- deen. On Sunday morning the baby’s body was found in an estuary of Salmon tied in a flour sack and weighted down with a stone. An autopsy showed that it had dled of drowning. The Underwoods were seen in Aberdeen on Monday and Tuesday. On receipt of | the telegraphic instructions from Seattle to arrest them, the authorities at Aber- | deen refused to act until a copy of the warrant_charging murder was wired to them. By this time, Tuesday evening, Underwood had escaped. His bride is un- der arrest. A reward of $100 is offered for Under- wood’s arrest. HiRAM v EECOR 0, Tty LEMBL 0001"‘. i SOME OF WELL-KNOWN REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ANCIENT.ARABIC ORDER OF THE MYSTIC SHRINE WHO WILL BE PROMINENT IN EVENTS THAT ARE SCHEDULED FOR ENTERTANMENT OF VISITING | MEMBERS OF THE ORGANIZATION TO WESTERN MECCA. LIKE b PALAGE 15 HIS PRISON Buencamino Tells of Ag- uinaldo’s Delightful Captivity. WASHINGTON, June 4—Senor Buen- camino to-day continued his statement before the Committee on Insular Affairs, explaining the address to the American Congress made by him advocating Philip- pine independence. He said the originai document showed that he wrote it as Aguinaldo’s secretary. He sald he might be obliged to divulge secrets of Agoncillo and Lopez. He stated that there were four Filipino agents abroad working at odds and making independence impossible. Some sharp talk occurred between Chairman Cooper and Representative Jones over questions put to witness espe- clally regarding religious matters in the Philippines. Chairman Cooper asserted that the questions put by Representative | Jones to the witness were a plain and palpable attempt to arouse religious prej- udice. Jones commented on the fact that the witness, who had changed his views, “enjoyed a' fat office” while Aguinaldo was a prisoner. Senor Buencamino stated that he as well as Aguinaldo had been captured, and that he was allve to-day was due to the humanity of the Amer- ican army. ‘Witness sald Aguinaldo had a palace for a prison. It was formerly occupled by Commissioner Worcester and the govern- ment pald $500 Mexican per month as rental for it. It is as large as the White House at Washington. The witness said ‘Aguinaldo lived in this house with his family, with a physician at his disposal, a retinue of servants, a carriage and an allowance to provide food for the estab- lishment, Senor Buencamino resented the sugges- tion that a government official had in- fluenced his testimony favorable to the United States and declared that his law practice was worth $1000 per month, so that the $290 paid him as salary could not have been an inducement to him to sacrifice his bellefs. He strongly opposed a colonial system, declaring that that system made Spanish rule a fallure, saying that failure should be a warning to the United States, For the present, he said, the Filipinos were obliged to have American guidance, as they had just emerged from Spanish darkness into American civilization. Sen- or Buencamino's hearing closed to-day. e o B King Edward’s First Derby Dinner. According to a cable received by the Paclfic Coast agents, Messrs. Wm. Wolff & Co., Moet & Chandon champagne had the _distinction of being served exclusively at i{mg Edward’s first Derby dinner last night. ——— Priest Drowned in a River. DENVER, June 4—A special to the News from Silverton, Colo., says Father O'Rourke, a well-known Catholic clergy- man of that place, was drowned in a river near there to-da: —_——— The office of the San Francisco .News Letter and the Overland Monthly have been moved to the Halleck Building, 320 Sansome street. . MORGAN UPSETS A PERIL THEORY Senator Says Nicaragua Canal Is Quite Safe. WASHINGTON, June 4.—Discussion of the project of constructing an isthmian canal was begun by the Senate to-day. Morgan of Alabama, chairman of the Committee on Interoceanic Canals, opened the debate, speaking nearly three hours. A considerable portion of his speech was devoted to an examination of the recently suggested danger to the Nlcara;ua canal route of seismic disturbances. this dan- ger, he concluded, after a careful review ot many authorities, existed only in the imagination of those who desired to de- feat any canal project. His study of the situation had convinced him that really there was no greater danger from voi- canic and earthquake disturbances to the Panama route than to the Nicaragua route, but he was satisfied that little danger to elther was anticipated. Morgan reviewed at length the political conditions in Colombia, finding in them a grave menace to the United States ia the construction of a canal by the Pan- ama route. He presented also the pres- ent phases of the diplomatic negotiations looking to the building of a canal by both the Nicaragua and Panama routes. He closed with a strong appeal for the pass- age of the Nicaragua bill. The debate on the Bntl-flnarchi’ bill continued all day in the House. It was without sensational features, being con- fined almost entirely to the legal and con- stitutional phases of the question. Jen- kins of Wisconsin and Parker of New Jersey contended that the bill did not go far enough; that the killing of the Pres- ident should be made punishable by death, without any limitation whatever. Powers of Massachusetts and Nevin of Ohio, the other two speakers, supported the measure as it came from the commit- tee. The Manufacturers’ Sale of Clothing. To make room for the clothing that will be shipped from St. Louis on June 9, the Hirschman men’s sults will be sold for 35 8, worth $15, at the Lyceum, 915 Mar- ket street, opposite Mason. y — D HOTLY DENIES ALLEGED THEFT San Francisco Woman Appears in a New York Court. NEW YORK, June 4—Indignant and al- most starving, Mrs. Katherine Hartridge, a comely, refined Englishwoman, was ar- raigned in court this morning, charged with stealing $270 from Otto C. Kersgood, a San Francisco confectioner, who had been a fellow-passenger on the steamer Advance from Aspinwall, and with whom she had been playing bridge whist. The accuser told how he had missed his purse, which he had pinned in his coat pocket, while the garment lay upon his berth and he was washing his hands. He reasoned by deduction that the woman had stolen his money because she might have slipped into his stateroom and taken it without being seen. He declared that a safety pin similar to that he had employed to secure the pocket-book had been found by the stewardess in a pin cushion in Mrs. Hartridge’s cabin. The prisoner indig- nantly denied the charge. *‘I met this man on board the steamer in which we sailed from San Francisco,” she said. “Several ladies and half a dozen of men played bridge whist, and this man was one cf the players. We played for luncheons, the beaten party having to pay for sandwiches and beer or wine. He had been in the saloon with fifteen others. I was arrested at the gang plank in this city. My effects were examined by the customs officials and no money was found. I had in my pocket-book.” She was remanded until to-morrow. “What am I to do?” faltered the prison- er, as a policeman took her into the pris- on. “I have not had a mouthful to eat since yesterday. I am starving.” Million Dollars Lost in Fire. PHOENIX, A. T., June 4—The forest fires in Huachuca Mountains are dying out. A small army of men from Tomb- stone, aided by soldiers from Fort Hua- chuca, diverted the path of the fire from the Tombstone watershed and it is burn- ing itself out on the barren higher range. The damage to the timber and mining camps is estimated at $1,000,000. Established 1823. ; WILSON WHISKEY That’s Alll JAKE JOSEPH, Representative, 300 Battery Street, San Francisco GRrRAaves = or TOWARD THEIR MECCA AT THE RIM OF THE SUNDOWN SEA BEMNEDIcy Py i =™ ) Haonmran® e NATIONG SEND NEW DIPLOMATS Herbert Is Successor to the Late Lord Pauncefote. WASHINGTON, June4.—Two important changes in the diplomatic representation in this city were announced to-day. The Hon. Michael Herbert succeeds the late Lord Pauncefote as British Embassador and Senor de Ojeda succeeds the Duke d'Arcos, the Spanish Minister. Notice of Herbert's appointment came to the State Department to-day through the British embassy here:. At present Her- bert occupies a place without a counter- part in the American diplomatic service. | He is first secretary of the embassy. at Paris, but with the rank of Minister Plenipotentiary. In very few instances does the British Government employ an official of high rank in the office of secre- tary of embassy. Herbert's marriage to the daughter of Richard Wilson, as a result of which he | became closely related to the Vanderbil the Ogden-Goelets and the Astors, wiil not in any way interfere, according to opinion in London, with his usefulness as Great Britain’s Embassador at Washing: ton. His record at Washington as Charge d'Affaires from 1888 to 1889 and secretary of the British legation from 1532 to 1893, and his work as British agent on the Venezuelan Commission eminently it him, so official belief inclines, for his proposed new and important duties. A recent dispatch from London stated that before the new Embassador at Washington should take up his duties the salary attached to the position would probably be put upon a par with the highest paid in Great Britain's diplomatic service, namely, that which is paid the Embassador at Paris, £95000 a year. The change in the Spanish legation hera came as a distinct surprise to all but the intimate friends of the Duke d'Arcos. He came to the United States as the first Spanish Minister after the war, and nat- urally his position was a very_ delicate one, requiring the exhibition of infinite tact to avoid unpleasant incidents. He was very successful in his mission, while socially his relations have been extremely pleasant. It is thought the change is at- tributable entirely to the retiring Minls- ter's desire to secure the best possible treatment for his impaired vision, which has caused him much and growing con- cern. Therefore he has secured a transfer to the Spanish legatioh at Brussels. There he will be as near as practicable to an eye speclalist, who already has under- taken his treatment at intervals. Senor de Ojeda, who succeeds the Duke d’Arcos, comes to Washington with ex- cellent credentials. He was secret: of the Spanish Peace Commission at Paris and is at present Minister to Tangler. OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Changes Made in the Postal Service and More New Pensions Granted. WASHINGTON, June 4—The Postoffice Department to-day announced: Postmas- ters commissioned—California—Alice W. Reed, El Rio; Leonard J. Harless, Lewis. Oregon—Hiram F. Murdoch, Klamath Falls. Appointed—Oregon—N. P. Hansen, Monkland, Sherman County, vice J. R. Hunter, resigned. These pensions were granted: . Califor- nia—Original—Stephen L. Cleaver, Veter- ans’ Home, Napa, $6; John Comer, Mill- ville, $6. Increase—Lyman E. Cobb, Napa, George W. Strunk, San Bernar- dino, $8; Lee N. Laughton, Stockton, 38; Thomas _J. Coggshall, Stockton, $I Charles D. Douglas, San Francisco, $10; John M. Phillips, Soldiers’ Home, Los An- geles, $10; Isaac Thayer, Veterans' Home, Napa, $10; Henry Payne, Los Angeles, $50. Widows—Anna Tully, Decoto, $3; Susan ‘Woolley, Santa Rosa, $8. War with Spain —E’d.nny E. McGuyre, mother, Windsor, £ McNeal, Oregon—Widows—Ann ville, $8. ‘Washington—Original—Henry H. Tidd. Everett, $6. Increase—James H. Rumséy, Taled:z.s $10; Philllp B. Gwinnup, What- com, May- —_— PRESIDENT REVIEWS COURT-MARTIAL FINDINGS WASHINGTON, June 4—The reports and findings of the court-martial which tried General Jacob H. Smith for cruelty in the Philippines have been received by the President and he is now going over them. A dispatch from Manila some time ago stated that it was the impression that the verdict was acquittal. ENTATE o N> GOIN MAY END GROKER"S POWER Enormous Sum to Be Used in New York Primaries, Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, June 4—A story of a record-breaker in raising funds for po- litical purposes is In circulation here. It originated with the district leader of the Tammany organization and has been cor- roborated as to the amounts by several of his colleagues. “The story is that a fund of more than $500,000 is now being raised by the op- ponents of the Croker-Sullivan commis- sion, to be expended in the primary fights in September. - Carroll and Van Wyck, the leaders, alded by powerful financial interests, are said to be getting that vast sum together for the purpose of exterm- i;mltlin‘ Croker’s influence in Tammany a . Information of this project has reached Croker in England and he is said to have advised his followers to raise a larger | amount if it is necessary to defeat the plans of his enémies. One hundred' thousand dollars of anti- | Croker momey. will be required, it is de- | clared, to defend the leadership of John | F. Carroll, John B. Sexton, August Moe- | bus, Percival E. Nagle and Thomas F. Foley in their respective districts. It is shid $20,000 or more will be distributed in each of these districts. Tammany leaders say it will cost more than that amount for Carroll, Sexton and Nagle to win against the opposition of the Croker-Sul- livan men. | Western Federation Declares for In- dependent Political Action and Educational Work. DENVER, June 4—The convention of the Western Federation of Miners in- dorsed soclalism by a vote of 230 to 73, by the adoption of the following: Resolved, That we recommend the adoption of the principles of the socialist party plat- form as outlined in the president’s report; and be it further Resolved, That the tenth annual convention of the Western Federation of Miners does de- clare for a policy of independent political ac- tion and does advise and recommend the adop~ tion of the platform of the socialist party of America by the local unions of the federation in conjunction with a vigorous policy of educa= tion along the lines of political edicine for Old People. Rev. Geo. Gay, Greenwich, Kas., is past 83 years of age, yet he says: ‘1 am enjoying excellent health for a man of my age, due entirely to the rejuven- “mi influences o! Dr. Miles’ Nervine. It brings sleep and rest when nothi else wxfi and gives strength and vit ity even to one of my old age.” ‘Watson, of Newton, la., “ard I have been a great sufferer from prrvousness, vertigo and spinal trouble. Have spent considerable money for medicine and doctors, but with little beaefit. I was sobad my mind showec signs of weak- ness. Ibegantaking D7. Miles’ Nervine, and I know it saved rtv life.” >, Nervine Miles Saved me from the insane asy- Jum,” Mre. A. M. Heifner, of Jerico Springs, “lo., writes. “I was so nerv. ous that I could scarcely control my- self, could not sleep nor rest, would even forget the names of my own children ag times. I ~ommenced using Dr. Miles’ Nervine and it helped me from the first, and now Iam perfectly well.” Sold by all Druggists on Guarantes. Dr. Miies Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.

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