The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 21, 1903, Page 1

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" ams’ VOLUME XCHI-NO. CISCO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY JUBILEE RECEPTION DAY THE HAPPIEST IN AGED PONTIFF'S LIFE Splendid Spectacle in Hall of Beati- fication. Love Offerings Glad- den the Heart of Leo. WHO YEA SCENE IN NNIVERSARY YI T. DOMINI( TERDAY HAS OCCUPIED THE PAPAL THRONE AND PRIE THE Rev. Father Newell of St. Dominiz’s Preaches Sermon on Life of : 3 . His Holiness. g HE Iver & ary of the| of the of Russia. d in that way ¥ ate « Holiness | has he been to warn the powers of 1 XIin s rated w the sc and itical evils that envel 5 high mas at St. D oped th He warned Emperor Alexan- i yesterday morn- | der of the danger that threatened him & 4 z T crowded w had the echo of his volce brant of the deacon The ser- 15kt was er O'Nell es sub-d Rev MANY NATIONS ar acon and work 1 said in part levated to the head olle Church February ced age of 68 vears. His to doubt the wis- sclection, owing to the many jes required of the r New ¢ sed some rduous d being able at his age great questions which were agitating and engaging of the church. In fact, who went so far as to election as a farce and an adding the prediction that his usefulness would be limited to H =. However, twenty-five years tor sed since then and rdinary age of 9 years this| 1 the owed left as he passe with a steady fabilt hand tact and power he his younger man and actually | thanksgiving. | Pre | a feeling of doubt | Emperor fell us fanati the vietim He also beso rnot of France to protect his person the day before he was stabbed in the streets Paris. No wonder, the the world looked on and marveled at t found knowledge of this wonderful was well ainted w conditions of act of anarchy w foretold.” v life of the Pope, his fru sweetness of his disposition wer. entertainingly pietured er Newell d-the olled the Rev. Among other impressive features of the | ceremon “Gloria ging of the “Kyrie,” netus,” ‘“‘Benedic- tus” and ¢ from Bruno; Os- r Klein's mass in G and Himmell's Veni Creator.” H. J. at the organ. At 7:30 in the evening a solemn bene- diction was given. Among the priests who were present at the mass were the Very Rev. Father Pi- | ous Murphy, the Rev. Father Harrington, ¢ the great | the Rev. Father Warren, the Rev. Father O'Brien of Portland, Or.; the Rev. Father man of God still guldes the|Kline, the Rev. Father Jones, the Rev. Father Rouski, the Rev. Father O'Nell i the Rev. Father Proctor of London, srgland. ag course, whose ed the high esteem of all the crowned | qhere was no special service at St . heads of Europe and stiil more, he has | Mary's Cathedral, but at the mass & won the personal asting friendship | prayer .was offered fo his Holiness. &0 1 Dpresence feofosfoforfosforfotent seemed re necessary for @ il 0 il @ tect attained by a peculiar arrangomen\ot all who had contributed to the offering, ESCORTED red draperies before the windows. ! BY CARDINALS. PRESENTATION OF GIFTS. Cardinal Respighi, Vicar of Rome, read an affectionate Latin address, expressing loyalty and devotion and offered the gold tiara, the jubilee present of the Catholic world, which cost $25,000, and $40,00 in money. Cardinal Ferrfiri, Archbishop of Milan, in bebalf of a pligrimage from Lombardy, presented an address of felicl- tation to the Pope and gold, silver and bronze commemorative 'medals, on the sbverse side of which was the head of Leo XIII and on the reverse the figure of | the Redeemer, surrounded by the Apos- | tles in the act of conferring on St. Peter the supreme pontifical power. The Pope such stocracy € appears at form nd escort- ir red by the noble g which state , &s it seph Drex E were from 3 thanked the Lombardy pilgrims and gave taken the old ones h‘m.' and giv | them his benediction. to the museum of the University of F | Cardinal Boschi read a third address Ivan: On the righ and presented to his Holiness the sym- bolic keys, one of gold and the other of silver, accompanied by an offering of $40,- stood Count Almodovar the | 000 in gold coins. The Roman committee ff ascended the scemed | for the jubilee fetes presented a rich w be in a kind of glorified i‘-lmvshhen;,iyarchment volume with the signatures of le Pont When throne he with another $40,000 to be devoted to the restoration of the Basilica of St. John Lateran, which is under the care of Car- dinal Satolll. Other committees followed with addresses and offerings. PONTIFF'S SPEECH IS READ. The Pope expressed his gratification and admiration at the artistic designs and workmanship of the various offerings and then charged Mgr. Bislet, his master of the chamber, to read a Latin speech ad- dressed “to my venerable brothers ana beloved children.” In this address his Holiness expressed satisfaction at the manifestation of which he was the ob- ject on the part of the whole Catholic world. For the second time in a century, | the matter of furnishing funds or other continued the Pope, Christ had wished to glorify his vicar on earth by allowing him to reach the years of St. Peter. The address ended by the Pope saying that he was happy to celebrate his jubilee amid the homage and veneration of the Continued on Page 3, Column 4. | i | TURKS LOSE NINETY MEN | | . Small Macedonian Band Repels | ‘ Attack. : LA Makes Stand Against! Odds in a Narrow Defile. Preparations for War Con-! " tinue on Bulgarian | Frontier. al Dispatch to The Call, LONDON Feb. ‘_A dispatch to the Mornir from 8 ia serious engage renorted to have taken place near K Cap Tschake- larvof, with T fonr revo had been hid 1e village of Dubeny. nea Kastorfa. A spy revealed his presence and 800 rkish tro supported by | | Bashi-Bazouks, were hurriedly dispatch- Meanwhile Captain Tschakelarof was warned 1 withdrew toward a bridge guarding a defil near ¥ k. Here he disposed his men into two king bodies awaited attack. This soon came. | 1e fighting was of a most desperate | ope that every | | Stewart presided | which the candidate has been clected. | Best of Feeling Exists Between Of- racter. I Turkish firing line was deelmated nd many were lost in the river. Al ninety were killed and | a large num ded. The latter were | ved to € villages. { th rebels were rein- rced by seventy men, and this enabled | them to withdraw safely to the moun- tains. The news caused a sensation among the ' | Macedonians velers from the fronytier say that the | roads on the Bulgarian side are being rapld repaired by large gangs of work- | men. , This is most significant of coming | events, 'y i ok | PRINCE IS DENOUNCED ! BY REICHSRATH LEADER| Criminal. by \NA, Feb. 20.—Sensational charges | Prince Philip of Saxe-Coburg « . who is an Austrian.ficld marshal | s husband of the Princess Louise of Belgium, werc made to-day in the Reichs- rath d § debate on the army bill by Herr Daszyn the Poligh leade The latter denounced the Prince as a criminal. Referring to the imprisonment of the former lieutenant of hussars, Mattasich, who eloped with the Princess Loulse of | Coburg several years ago and who was sentenced to four ars’ imprisonment | last December for 8 erted that while in prison h drew up | a formal acc charging Prince | Philip with having ed the Prince Louise, who was co n asylum for the insane near Dresden some time after her elopement, to on Hirsch for mone the late - CANDIDATES MUST REFUSE TO BUY DRINKS FOR VOTERS ‘Woman Legislator of Utah Proposes | to Limit Expensss of Vote- | Seeking Politicians. } SALT LAKE, Feb. 20.—Mrs. Coulter, the | only woman member of the Utah Legisla- ture, to-day introduced a bill in the House | limiting election expenses of candidates and requiring the filing of the same. The | bill makes it unlawful for any candidate to give away or treal to any cigars, drinks or other refreshments, or to fur- nish voters carriage or other transporta- tion to the polls. Violation is made punishable by fine, | imprisonment and loss of the office to | | i | | | | | The bill also makes it a misdemeanor for any voter to solicit cigars, drinks or | anything of value from candidates, S R SANTA FE IS WILLING, TO MAKE A COMPROMISE cials and Trainmen, and a Set- tlement Is Expected. TOPEKA, Feb. 20.—It appears that the Santa Fe will be able to make a com- promise with the conductors and train- men demanding an increase of wages. The men demand an advance of 20 per cent. It is understood that the company s will. ing to give 12 per cent and the probabil- ity is that a compromise will be effected and the men given an increase of 15 per cent. There is the best fecling between the two factions and the negotiations thus far have not been characterized by the least unpleasantne: — e DELAWARE MAY GIVE AID IN BOTKIN PROSECUTION Legislature Appoints Committee to Confer With Attorney General on the Question. DOVER, Del., Feb. 20.—The State Legis- lature to-day appointed a joint committee to confer with the Attorney General in aid in the prosecution of Mrs. Cordelia Botkin in San Franciseo on the charge of murdering Mrs. John P. Dunning of Dover by sending her poisoned candy. It is understood here that Mrs. Botkin is about to be released, as California does not want to pay the enormous expense |there that El Menebhi, the Minister of |of Vallambrosa is on fire. which the new trial will entail. 21, 1903 CHARLES W. FULTON IS CHOSEN SENATOR R s 3 AFTER LONG FIGHT ) I Oregon Deadlock Is Broken at the Last Minute. dzavzfifi/o THEODORE T i ¥ + i " } SUCCESSFUL CONTESTANT IN THE GREAT SENATORIAL FIGHT IN Polish Statesman Declares Philip of | | d Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Be a i | | OREGON, WHICH ENDED LAST NIGHT, AND FORMER CHIEF EX- ECUTIVE OF STATE, WHO WAS HIS PRINCIPAL OPPONENT - L5 - ALEM, Or., Feb. 2L—Charles W. | Geer 3, Herman 1, absent 1, Fulton not Fulton of Astoria, a well known | voting. lawyer and State Senator, was| Hén Charles W. Fulton has occupied a elected United States Senator | prominent positio: the Republie: shortly after midnight on the forty- | party for the last twenty years third ballot of the session and the eight- eenth ballot of the night. Tt has been an all-session contest. the first ballot having been taken on Ja ary 1. F led from the start, receiving 28 votes on the ballot, He galned gradualiy until strength reached 34, where it remained for nearly three weeks. To- at ncon one ballot was taken and the jo assem- bly adjourned until 8 p. m. Seventeen ballots were taken to-night and still ¥ul- ton’s forces stood b him. On the eighteenth ballot members commenced to announce changes to Iton and when the result was anno one more than a ma stood: Fulton 46, Scott 21, Wood (Democrat) 17, ced he had 46 vote: v. The last ballot JORY CONYICTS DARING BURGLAR Robs Many Los Angeles Homes Before Police Arrest Him. JRES. ~ LOS ANGELES, Feb. 20.—R. D. Jack- son, known to the police as the ‘““Wagon- load” burglar, was found guilty by a jury in Judge Smith's court to-day. Jackson's wife, who was arrested at the same time he was taken into custody, and who has since been in jail, will go free, owing to the resurrection of an old English com- mon law provision, which holds that in the event both husband and wife are im- plicated In the commission of a crime the wife is held blameless. Judge Smith in- structed the jury to acquit Mrs. Jackson. The case has attracted considerable at- tention, owing to the methods of the de- fendants in acquiring other people's furni- ture, Jackson stripped numerous houses of valuable bric-a-brac, plate and furniture during-the temporary absence of the own- ers. He worked in daylight without any precautions against detection. When his home was finally located the police found a cholce collection of goods, including costly rugs, portieres, curtains, ete. Mrs. Jackson made a scene in court when the jury returned a verdict of guilty. Sentence will be passed Monday. MOROCCAN PRETENDER IS REPORTED KILLED MADRID, Feb. 20.—The correspondent of the Heraldo at Melilla telegraphs the report that the pretender to the Moorish throne was defeated by the imperial forces on February 14 and mentions the rumor that Buhamara himself was killed. A dispatch received .from = Tangier. Morocco, says it is persistently reported War, was killed in battle February 12. been a member of county State conventions almost county ¢ 1 commit Central Republica league c« was Phairman o ) the Sta: and of the 1 Second District « 1 in 1866, In 1883 epublican Na- a Presid tector. i to the e has taken a campalg ecte | State Senate, president of the prominent pert in politic speaker. He received strong support for the nomination of Governor in 1894 and ! United States Senator in 18%. In 1001 he was an ardent supporter of United States | Senator Mitehell 4 to his election. and contributed largely LAKES 70 GULF B TROLLEY LIKE Electric Road Planned Which Will Pierce Country. i | ST. PAUL, Feb. 20.—An electric railway, chiefly for freight business but which will eventually carry pa ssengers, is to be built from Duluth to the Gulf of Mexico. John W. Gates and leading capitalists of the Twin Citles and the East are identi- | fied with the enterprise. Mr. Gates sald to be the real head. The estimated cost will be $70,000,000. There will be a double track, and the route will be through the Twin Citles to Des Moines, thence to St. Louis and on 10 the Gulf. The company will be known as the Texas, lowa and Minnesota Elec- _tric Railway Company. Thomas Lowrey of Minneapolls, presi- dent of the Soo Rallway and of the Twin City Rapid Transit Company, ang ex-Sen- ator W. B. Washburn are among connected with the enterprise. There will be a separate company in each State through which the line passes. Later these will be consolidated into one com- pany. The road will furnish a new gateway to is and Northwest, and the great railroad combines now existing will be at least partly broken so far as control of the transportation situation is concerned, VALE OF VALLABROSA IS WRAPPED IN FLAMES Famous Forest and Villa; Once the Home of Somber Dante, Re- ported on Fire. LONDON, Feb. 20.—According to a news agency dispatch from Florence, the forest The Villa Medici has been destroyed. those | Europe for the vast exports of the West | PRICE FIVE CENTS, KAISER GIVES PROOF OF HI3 DRTHODOXY §Declares Faith in God and the Old | Testament. Rejoicing Among The- ologians of the Fatherland. Emperor's Interest in the Delitzsch Lecture Is | Explained. —Emperor Willlam's ity his Society, s s of the vidence been the cause glans and pastol The dout Emperor litzsch's lec bylonian orle n of the Bi cased later whea mperor isted the As= logist in show eopticon pictures to sixty members urt. The pic= S igned ve the Babylo- The Em- m b partic accomplished Dryander, who besought the Empero: make some defini ement of ¢ tors, the order to restore the confidence of the cler- &Y and laity. The Emperor’s letter to Ad- miral Hallman is the it of Dr. Dry- the letter to the a the nclusions press yesterday, are as fol miral, net contained in en to e low: During the eveniug efitertaimment wt | us, Professor Delitasch had the opport nity to fully confer and debate with he and Dr. remained passive doned the stand- torian and Assy d theolog nfortunately ints of the going nclusions wr nebulous When he ¢ to speak of the New Testament it be clear onc v ws regarding the j that I had pposite vie ventilate hi irele laymen »ooks and is ntal carry on exeava Socie ienc results in behalf of s m or attack re with Prof or De who has run away theoiogian, with historian STRIKES AT THE The gret at th did not FAITH. Emperor then goes o exy wct that Professor Delitzse original pury terpreting insc ad translating and excavated ’ the relatio Jetween toms, morals, historical events and tr: tions, etc the Israelites, “‘which would have been in the h teresting for laymen,” and adds: | *“He approached the question of tion in a very polemical tone, mor denying it or reducing it to pure. | matters. That was a grave error, thereby he touched on the innermost, liest possession of many of his hearers, which shook and even shattered the foun- dations of their faith. It is a deed that only the greatest genius should venture to attempt and for which the mere study of Assyriplogy did not justify him.” The Emperor then gives his personal views regarding revelation, saying: “I distinguish between two different kinds of revelation—one progressive and, las it were, historical; the other purely | religlous, as preparing the way for the | future Messtah. | “Regarding the former, it m@t be said | ter me, it does not admit of a doubt, net | even the slightest, that God reveals him- | selt continually in the race of men creat- ed by him. He breathed into man the breath of life and follows with fatherly | leve and interest the development of the | human race. In order to lead it forward | ané develop it he reveals himself in t} lor that great age, whether priest |or king, whether among the hea- ien, the Jews the Christians. | Hammurabl was one; so was Me- . Abraham, Homer, Charlemagne, | Luther, Shakespeare, Goethe, Kant and | Emperor William the Great. These he | sought out and endowed with his grace | to accomplish splendid, imperishable re- | sults for their people In their intellec- tual and physical provinces, according to t= will. How often my grandfather | pointed out that he was only an instru- | ment in the Lord’s hands. | “The second form of revelation, revela- or or the Continued on Page 3, Column 6.

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