The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 31, 1902, Page 23

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RAIGER SALUTES THE AMER GANS German Emperor Raises His Baton to Our Generals, United States Officers to Travel at Wilhelm’s Expense. BEKLIN, Aug. 30.—The autumn parade of the gran was held to-day on the in the presence of the Empress, King Victor Em- ly and other important per- crowds enthusiastically Majesties, the demonstra- particularly warm when, after le, Emperor William and the King rode back to the castle at of the troops. The weather was or Generals Henry C. Corbin and suel B. M. Young, accompanied by de-camp, attended the parade. ,down the lines of troops and the review, Emperor William, ly on these occasions does not J singied out the . turned his head raised his baton to his | e in that part of the field, especially the embassadorial clus— ter, were much interested. After t v devoted himself ¥ he duties of the g to any of the foreign Italian, Wood, who arrived not in uniform, his ing with his delay- w _the review from a T LET his heimet _John B. Jackson, secre- | United States embassy at About 80,500 troops, one-third of . the g cav , took part in the customary brilliant von Vroom, Emperor mp, gave a luncheon eral Corbin and Mrs. \ el Johnston and jeneral Young and McKinley. er ‘s I pay their r transportation maneuvers and g at Frankfo x Assessor, Herr von Ja and Lieutenant Me- Murdered by Robbers. L la., Aug. 30.—The Mrs. Britton Lewis, re- of Bronson, were r of their home e had been pil- dered. There is Imitate Our Methods. 2l parlors are endeavor- e our methods and our Should, at ten years, or beccme unsatis- d be more than repair it free of charge. m Dental Parlors are 7s ready to back t made. we . £2sup Fullsetofteeth . o . . . . Van Vroom 1001 Market, Cor. 6th Open evenings 'til g—Sundays, all day Sen Framncisco, Cal, canners, ayers 2 foun es, paper: bangers painters, shoe factories, eteblemen, coters, tanners, tailors, etc. BU.HANAN BROS ., Brush Manufacturers, 509_Sflcramentosh NEW WESTERN HOTEL, NY AND WASHINGTON SIS.—RE- znd_renovated. KING, WARD & plan. Rooms, 50c to §1 50 day; ; 8 to §20 month. Free baths; fire grates in LEADING BUSINESS COLLEGE OF THE WEST.—% Post st., San Francisco, Established pearly 40 years. Open entire year. Write for 80-page catalogue (free). POLYTFCHVIC BUSINESS (ALLFBE! Ogkland, Cal, Largest, cheapest and best school of business, shorthund and engineering in Cal Perfect climate, homelike influences, 100-p. catslogue and specimens of writing free. CALIFORNIACOLLEGE of OSTEOPATHY 621 Butter st.—Osteopathy offers finest pro- feselona! life known lo ambitious young men women, Write for ann asd any particulars. HITCHGOCK MILITARY ACADEMY, SAN RAFAEL, CAL, EMAE TERM WILL BEGIN AUGUST 18 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1902. PRAGERS PRAGERS 1 PRAGERS ! PRAGERS PRESS ANNOYS THE PONTIFF Stories About a New American Cardinal Premature. Indications That Archbishop Ireland Will Be Selected. —is ROME, Aug 30.—The reports relative to the creation of another American Car- dinal are unfounded, or at least prema- ture. For fifteen years efforts have beea made to secure another American for the | Sacred College, but it was found that the | American episcopacy was not sufficiently | favorable. Di Cesnola came to Rome to advocate that Archibshop Ireland and the late &rchbishop Corrigan both be promoted, | 10 avoid their rivalry, but New York’s | geographical position was regarded at the | Vatican as being too near Baltimore to { permit of Archbishop Corrigaw’s appoint- | | ment, 1 |~ With the | at: ing away of Corrigan, the much altered and it is con- hat a satisfactory solution of the question might bring recom sald 3 Archbishop Ireland's chances, as the | Pope 1s always irritated at anything be- | ing imposed upon him by the press. Monsignor Guidi, the apostolic delegate to the Pnilippine Islands, will be nominat- | ed Archbishop of Stavropoli, the oniy tit- | ular archbishopric vacant. The Osserva- | tore Romano will to-night officially an- nounce both the appointment to nila anc the confirmation of the episcopacy. Monsignor Guidi, after receiving an of- ficial letter this morning saying the Pope | wished to give him a special mark of his benevolence and has appointed him apos- | 1olic delegate at Manila, asked for an au- cience, which the Pope immediately | | granted. Monsignor Guidi thanked the | Pontiff for'the honor conferred on him and the Pope said that from the moment | it was apparent thaf the negotiations re- gardirg the frairs’ lands would be contin- ued at Manila he thought that Monsignor Guidi was the most competent and most fitted to carry on the. delicate negotia- tions, The apostolic delegate in the Philip- pines was also received by Cardinal Got- tl, prefect of the propaganda, who said to him: *I love you as though you were my son After his consecration Monsignor Guidi Il be insttucted to proceed to his post atel i there about Novem- T H 1 take with him an English prelate a ecretary. w It CONVENTION PREPARATIONS FOR THE LETTER-CARRIERS Executive Board Meets in Denver and Arranges the Preliminary Matters., DENVER, Aug. 30.—The officers and ex- ard of the National Assocla- ter Carriers held a meeting afternoon to arrange the pre- es for the annual convention, will open in this city next Monday. officers and members of the board follows: President, J:Lm\flls C. Kel- t, M. Bloomington, Was board—D. L. White, chairman, Bos- M. A. Fitzgerald, New York; E. J. r, Muncie, In A. J. Michener, St. C. W. Miller, South Omaha, and e board examined the reports of the | secretary and treasurer and found them entirely satisfactory. The past year has been the most successful in the thirteen vears of the life of the association. The ecretary’s report shows there are 916 free delivery postoffices in the United States, and of these 888 have organized branches of the association. The twenty-eight free ery offices unorganized have been es- ablished only three months. During the vear eighty-two new branches have been established, with about 1100 members. There are now more members of the as- sociation than there are regular letter carriers in the service, many substitutes g members. The total membership is 16,400, and of these 15,000 are regular car- riers. | TR At o Smaller Pay for the Cavalry. LONDON, Aug. of the report of the committee on army education is a scheme of the War Office | to reduce the living expenses of cavalry officers so as to enable a man to live on §1000 per annum besides his pay, the pres- cnt minimum being about $3000. The War oses to furnish officers’ me: r bachelor officers at the pense and a full field kit to each offis Whether or not the ccmmittee’s other recommendations, to abolisk regimental coaches, hounds and polo tournaments, are carried out the | above concessions will greatly relieve the strain on the poorer officers and are ex- | ected to result in the entry of a more cfficient but not so fashionable element | into the cavalry branch of the service. and qu: Government'’s Doors of a Bank Closed. LINCOLN, Neb., Aug. berlain banking-house at Tecumseh closed its doors. The bank is the st in Johnson County, and its suspen- | caused the greatest surprise. The sits are placed at $102,000, but there was practically no cash on hand when the examiners arrived. Charles M. Cham- berlain, the cashier, left last Monday for the East, taking, it is alleged, a valise TO Market and Jones streets on Wednesday, the 3rd of weeks past an army of willing assistants have been cordially bend- ing their energies to hasten this opening. were in the Eastern markets with our Division Buyers, and after weeks of wise, careful and conscientious buying, we gathered to- "vv""‘,’:”‘l“wvmuu|v||mmlmva|IWI I TR nouncin ~ the Openind Wednesday, 3 September; 1902. W DEP. )l i i umummrwumuur“:»l:yl\w'~ S T 1238 t- 1250 MARKET é'TREET"gtJONES. san Francisco,Cal THE PUBLIC: We take pleasure in announcing the opening of the new store at gether an immense stock, the critical inspection of San Francisco shoppers. thread nor a piece in stock which is not new and fresh. worthiness and the latest dictates of fashion and style were observed in show our appreciation of your attention, every instance. Your presence which is earpestly requested on Wednesday, and to In June and July we we submit with great pleasure to 7 September. For There is not a Extreme we shall arrange an inaugural sale, which will long be remembered by the happy par- ticipants who join with us in starting the new store. We pledge the people of San Francisco and of the Coast the worthiest goods possible margin of honest mercantile profit. nexh year—but all the time—to-day. to obtain at the lowest prices which admit of a small We believe that commercial honesty pays not to-morrow—not This principle will be carried out strictly in our store policy and in all our advertising. will find us You reliable, and our newspaper advertisements will be backed up just as thoroughly as the individual word of any Director or representalive given to a customer in the store. full of securities with which to raise Very sincerely, money for the bank. It is asserted that he has not been heard from further than that he was at_the Union station, Chi cago, Tuesday. Former State Senator W. R Barton is president of the bank, but | | Chamberlain was its active manager. Its | capital stock was $50,000. iy British Soldier Confesses. KANSAS CITY, Aug. 3).—William Toll, an English soldier in the Second Bedford- | shire Regiment, stationed at Colchester, | England, has confessed to the murder in Kansas City in January last of George Landis, according to a cablegram recelved to-day by the local Chief of Police, and is being held by the Scotland Yard officials awaiting extradition papers. Landis, who d“for a Kansas City ice scompany, | illed in the rallroad yards and his | body robbed. Up io this time the case had remained 3 mystery. Toll i sald to have had a wife in St. Louis, whom ne deserted soon after the murder, going to | , CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—The hearing of tes- England. | timony in a legal tangle that comes as an echo of the absorption of the Carnegle Company by the United States Steel Cor- it oo poration was closed to-day before Mar- shall Sampson, clerk of the United States Court, acting as special commissioner. The suit involves the transfer of over $5,000,000 of stock of the Carnegie Com- pany held by prominent Pittsburg people ’ anG specifically is in the form of a peti- Dyspepsia, Flatulency, Constipation | ticn for an accounting of profits received or any other ailment arising from a | [U25, 191 and it is alleged that HI- lands, Carlside & Co. of this city for se- weak or disordered stomach can be | curing stocks for the United States Stec! quickly and permanently cured by Corporation. William H. Vantine of Pittsburg is the the use of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. It has a record of fifty complainant. According to Vantine he represented the Carnegie Company share- h bt af 4 £ holders in Pittsburg and acted as selling res ba of it, an agent. He alleges that the Chicago bro- kg of ARcly o H % ker was on the other side of the deals we therefore urge every sufferer to try it. It will cure you. The genuine has our Private Stamp over the neck of the bottle. and by agreement was supposed to divide the profits with Vantine equally. The altEL COMBINE ECHO 15 HEARD Testimony in a Legal Tangle Over Stock Transfer, ADVERTISEMENTS. prcfit from the brokerage duties on the wransfer is said to be in excess of $200,000, of which the Pittsburg man asks for half, instead of only $2000, which he says he received. The deals were carried through in Feb- ruary, 1901, and it is allelged that Hi- lands represented J. P. Morgan & Co. in the transactions. Hilands is sald to have made $75,000 profits out of the deals, but it is said he in turn had to pay President Delafield $24,771 for a three-minute inter- view with J. P. Morgan. Hilands to-day denied all the charges. : g IMPORTANT CASH REGISTER DECISION National Cash Register Company ‘Wins Infringement Suit in United States Court Against Hallwood Cash Register Company. [Special to The Call.] CINCINNATI,O., Aug. 30.—Judge Thomp- son of the United States Circuit Court here to-day handed down a decision in the two patent suits brought by the Na- ticnal Cash Register Company of Dayton, OHhio, on March 2, 1897, one suit against the Hallwood Cash Register Company and the other against the New Columbus Watch Company as manufacturers of the Hallwood machine. The court holds the Hallwcod machine infringes the claim of the Maxwell patent, owned by the Nation- al Company, and a decree has been en- tered accordingly. Their decision makes the Hallwood Company liable for all gains and profits received by them and all dam- ages suffered by the National Company by reason of such infringement, and the court has referred the matter to a master for an accounting to ascertain the amount of such profits and damages. Siied v i New Wireless Telegraph Scheme. LONDON, Aug. 30.—One of the latest wireless telegraph schemes is the pro- posed installation of a combined lightship and ocean telegraph station 100 miles west of the Lizard. It is suggested that a ves- sei provided with a_powerful searchlight projected against the clouds mark the point of the station at night. The wire- less telegraph plant is to be powerful enough to command the fairway of the channel and exchange news and orders with passing vessels. Should the experi- ment succeed it is proposed to establish a number of such ships along the coast. It is thought that they will be?aruculnly valuable in the transmission of meteorical reports and warnings. $30.00 From St. Louis, Or from Memphis, New Orleans or Mis- sissippi River points. Santa Fe colonist rates during September and Ogctober. Tickets may be paid for here and tele- aphed to your friends. Ask the Santa ‘e, 641 Market street, S Liken Taxes Are Abolished. PEKING, Aug. 30.—The Gazette to-day publishes an edict abolishing the liken taxes throughout the Chinese empire. It ‘388 actcompsan(ed by a declaration that in the negotiations for the new commercial treaties with foreign states an under- standing had been reached for an in- crease of the import and export duties, and that the Ministry of Finance is au- thorized to set apart a proportion of the surplus receipts resulting from the in- creased duties in plate of the liken, which shall be paid over to each provincial gov- ernment. PRESERVES On the Markst . LN TRY A JAR.. .. THEY’RE FINE All Grocers LONG BYRUP A NOBLE DANE, THl BARTHOLIN Man Accused of Murders Comes From Famous Family. CHICAGO, Aug. 30.—According to infor- mation unearthed here Willlam J. Bar- tholin, wanted by the police in connec- ticn with the murder of his mother and the disappearance of his sweetheart, Miss Minnie Mitchell, is a member of the noble house of Bartholin-Eichel, in Denmark. It has been also discovered that he has a half-brother, Frederick Bartholin, liv- ing in Chicago, prosperous and highly re- spected. ‘The house of Bartholin was founded in 1680, when Dr. Bartholin-Eichel was made a baronet for “distinguished services,” Since then the house has stood high in the counsels of the Danish court, its mem- bers occupying important positions. The line descends without a blot until half a century ago. Casper Bartholin is the reigning baron. His brother was William Peter Bartholin, the father of the Will Bartholin for whom tae police of the country are on the look- out. Being a younger son, Willlam Peter Bartholin had no estates, but by the influence of his family was made warden of the royal castle at Ribe, where he was made a Knight of the Dannebroge and given a castle of his own. He mar- ried Countess Gottholdine Grevencopp- Castenskjell of Great Frederickslunds ("astle. Two sons were born—George, now editor of the National Tidenblatt, the largest newspaper in Copenhagen, and Frederick, who now jives in Chicago. Later, Bartholin loped to America with the family’'s German servant girl, and, it is alleged, took with him a large sum of public money that had been em- trusted to his care. Chicago and, in 1872, WIill Bartholin, the present fugitive, was born, — Notice to Passengers. Round trip transfer tickets now sale at any of our offices. One trunk (round trip), 50 cents. Morton Delivery, 408 Taylor street, 650 m street and Oakland ferry depot. LIRS —_—— Mrs. Joseph Cook has just presented 1Ca.labu.st of sdmuflcunltomm.. ollege. Solid Oak Folding Table, suita- ble for card 'ghle: c':n be folded into small 2 $i. 50 e R Remnants of Tavestry Carpets in a variety of patterns, all lengths, per yard. ‘We furnish flats, hotels and reom- ing-houses, and liberal credit. Free delivery within 100 miles. T. BRILLIANT FURNITURE CO., 338-342 POST STREET. Opposite Union Square.

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