The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 15, 1903, Page 1

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136, GROUER CLEDELAND UNCLOAKS HIS THIRD-TERM ASPIRATIONS IN SPEECH, MAKING A PALPABLE BID FOR SO GROVER CLEVE yrtcomi T F orme}' Piresiderrzz‘ inS ympathy With the At- t e enact- them izenship no a eir recial and ST WD RGO G | our citizenship there emendous of ness fellow countrymen 1 late slave-hold SHIELD OFFENDERS R Defies Remarkable In- structions From | Washington. d to omr ut- The grand FORMER PRESIDENT WHO 1‘ siderati nd sympatheti e smuggliag cases | SEEMS TO ASPIRE TO RE- | n the United States Gl I e ‘ i > oo \er prominent men gre in- | o s s % twithstanding the instructions aild, District Pet- 1 from the Department Attorney MISSING HEIRESS 15 FOUND LIVING WITH THE CREES. Washington not to present this the grand the jui nati inves last term a Armen rdo s = w \ement in Yo ¢ $100 for g * g visercese Sy mme | FOrtune Awaits Woman | -3 e court and asked for information. The | — o o | A0 SN | Whose Parents Were gToer a = e “It has come to our knowledge that | .ot cethenagd in cases of smuggling have occurred Massacred. | o "“"\V’T" bave asked the District Attorney T e 4 b |'1‘||~‘4-’)’— about the rT‘JHc»rha'ndh hehr;furedlmlhnnrx KALISELL, Mont., April 14.—Mathilda | - WIVET- | 3 up. dlleging that he had received cer- ; ¢ . » ’ ain instructions. V »w ask the judge M- Jngnt. 16, bE -Send, | & if we have a right ormation in spite large estate -in Stockholm, g el < R R bein found living among H Judge Holt had prepared .a written | Cree Indians, a member of the tribe. A = 3 harge, the reading of which caused a |gold ring given to her by her father and | - - ; sation. He sald in part mother, who were killed In a raid by the | 1 1 When you were empanelled at the be- | ( many years ago, has established . > Ta of the term you swore that you | her identity | ke a diligent inquiry into such When John Anderson, a relative, ap-| given to you or which might | peared in this part of Montana a year | 2 e therwise come to your knowledge touch- | ago and made inquiries for a ramily} e = : : ing violat the statutes of the|named Youngqulst no one could aid him. | 4 'f» <t 2 I'nited States, and that you would make | Finally he met an old resident who re- | e g s N | no presentment through hatred, favor,| membered that, many years ago, Frank | 5 iy o s oy vy, affecion or reward, or through hope | Youngquist had tried to operate a ranch | A e o the boXes wome Gosen | thereof. You could not, it you desired, | in the extreme northern part of the State, | D P s o HaieTS€ | escape from the obligations of your oathnear what is now the Blackfoot reserva- | ‘ 3 untin; by heeding the Instructions of any one. "fon One day the ranch was ralded by | . gro quartet from Hampton | The honored President of the United | Cree Indlans, who killed Mr. and Mrs. | s -~ e . States ¢ d pardon, but he could not in- | Youngquist and carried away their ttle | < by e Jhontgs .m; gu, " | tertere baby girl; Mathilda, then ¥ years of age. | plhcs gy’ i ot If you belleve that any one has given | Anderson to-day met the girl with a | e singe “J',:,f) structions tending to prevent the fullest | band of Crees.. She told him she had been | Black investigation into the commission of a|carried away by the Indlans after her £ C = « .":‘g”f ®| crime in the United States and the re- | father and mother had been killed and : .v:x;ed AYOT- | ¢ urning of an indictment, if the evidence | that since then she had been with the In- drow: a o warrants, then you should be inspired | dians, and was the widow of & member | additional determination to do | of the band, who was killed in a !nOWv{ The court has knowledge of | siide several weeks ago. She remembered | > { sctions to which the District At- | nothing of her parents, she sald, except singers re-| ey alludes. It is proper to say that it | that they were white, like Anderson. | is my opinion that there has been no in- | All she had left to remember them by tention of encroaching upon your sworn | Was a little gold ring. There was an in- duty of the judicial domain.’ scription on the inside of this ring, but The testimony submitted last December | as she could not read she did not know regarding the smuggling cases pointed to | what it was, a dozen prominent officials of the navy,| Anderson read the inscription which es- army and insular government and citizens | tablished the identity of the owner of the béing implicated in the charges. “To Mathilda, from tefs and g bowing his appre- nsung MINER LOSES HIS LIFE IN A SHAFTHOUSE FIRE Early Morning Blaze Causes Death of One Man and Another Is Mi | ornament. It reads: SEn. Mov. APt e B | Papa and Mama Youngquist, 1885.”” An- he shaft howss at the Laye | BONILLA'S FORCES NOW derson and the girl will go to Sweden. P property OCCUPY TEGUC!GALPAi e Pyramid last night - OLD AVES OF oss fe 4 | Arias, Who Was Appointed President | INDIANS ARE FOUND NEAR BIGGS Relics of Aborigines Crowd an An- cient Cemetery in a River Bottom. BIGGS, April 14.—The burlal place of at of Honduras by Sierra, Surrenders. SAN SALVADOR, Salvador, April 14— | Juan Angel Arlas, who was appointed | | President of Honduras by the retiring | superin » the mine shift, | Johnsor, | P \t, Sterra, has surrendered to the | lcast 1600 aborigines has been discovered § o'l | forces of General Bonilla, the President- | in the bottom lands of the Feather River, working on the pumps | ©/°ct of Honduras, whose forces yesterday | four miles south of the old Oroville In- occupled Tegucigalpa, the capital of that | dian cemetery. The remains were found er out of the mine prepar- i w machinery Pepubli ‘I"Y workmen who were prospecting for o’clock this morning Su- | dredging purposes. They exhumed prbngr e e 2 sl ‘bf"a\ Return of Dr. Lorenz. great number of skeletons, which cruin. his room, and upon gong | NEW YORK, April 14.—Dr. Adoiph | bled to dust when exposed to the alr. saw that the shaft house | “0TenZ, Who during his last visit to the | Various stone utensils in the shape of The alarm was at once | United States performed a number of | mortars used for grinding food and wam- ciything St et o Babe | bloodless surgical operations, arrived here pum and beads of all shapes and sizes | to-day on the steamer Lahn from Genoa, He goes to Chicago to remove the cast After of were found in the graves. One man has collected a bushel of beads. This ceme- the fire had gone of the men was charred bevond recognition, The | from the hip of Lolita Armour, daughter | tery cov: v » ry covers several acres and will soon other man had been rescued when |of J. Ogéen Armour, whom he operated an_ 5 5 3 ed ov vi Cutts left for Reno this morning. upen when be made his visit to America. o gl ai et ,drom the soil by dredgers. dark there. | you have.” | scarcely | being prevented by Immo; refused to talk of the crime, SERERNS LAND last night settled all doubts as to his third-term aspirations when, in a speech in New York, at a meeting in the interest of Booker Washington’s Tuskegee Institute in Alabama outhern support by declaring for white supremacy over the negro. Mr. Cleveland said that neither the emancipation proclamation nor the decree conferring citizenship upon the ‘colored man had re- 1gs. The Southern whites, he added, in regarding their peace and prosperity and even the safety of their ¢ DESPERNTE MOBBER LSES ) REVOLIER Midnight Hold-Up Ends in Blood- shed. d. Gilleece, a Saloon Man, Is Shot by Footpad. An old-time footpad, advanced in years added a this and desperate morning, was captured and taken to prison. hoary in crime deed to his career early In an | effort to rob a saloon man whom he had | followed from his place of business he | used a pistol with telling effect, shooting | | his victim and later attempting to murder a police officer who assisted in his-tak- ing. It was only after a desperate battle that he was disarmed and manacled and bis name, Henry E. Milton, placed on the prison register. After the business of the evening had ceased James Gilleece, a saloonkeeper, | 60 years of age, whose place of business | is at 31 Ninth street, closed his doors and started for his home at 16 Eleventh street Before his doors were atching the place, but were not of and the liquor man o more of the matter and went was accustomed to do red Gilleece ob- a sort thought on his way THOUGHT IT A JOKE. as he When Gilleece he turned toward Mission. It was quite A heavy-set man, weariug a slduch hat, stepped out of ap alley. & displayed a rev and lost no time in giving his iver command: “Hands up and glve me what money Gilleece was startled He looked at the highwayman and h It did not dawn on him that the order was imperative and he did not rea ize what part the loaded revolver might play in the affair. At length hie conclud- ed it was all a joke perpetrated by some friends and resolved to treat it as such. Then Gilleece, confronted by a desper- ate man, to whom human life was worth more than a song, laughed the muzzle of the revolver that was held to his face. With a jocose remark he attempted to pass his way outwit the supposed tricksters, but highwayman meant business and the laugh to him was the signal for an at- tack. Blow after blow he rained on the old man's head with the barrel of the weapon. The saloonman grappled with the crim- For a moment tated. close and the on inal and the two locked in a struggle for | life or death. Gilleece had been brought to a sudden realization of his plight ard fought with all the strength he had. The footpad fought back with beastlike feroe ity. Se times did the thug try to kill, but each time Gilleece turned the revolver aslde or held it above his head. Then the victim shouted for “help, out few heard him, and he battled for mo- ments that scemed hours with no hope of assistance. SHOOTS HIS VICTIM. Finally the highwayman shook off the other’s hold on the pistol and fired. The bullet struck Gilleece In the right leg, above the knee, and shattered the bone. The injured man struggled on, never los- ing his grasp oh his assailant and keep- ing up his shrieks for help. While the fight continued and after the shot had been fired the robber, display- ing Temarkable nerve, slipped his hand into his victim's pocket and took out three silver dollars, which he held on to until Orrin G. Immons, employed in an auto- | mobile establishment on Larkin street and residing at 219 Hyde street, hastened to the spot and gave his assistance to the wounded man. Immons was trying to wrench the pistol from the robber's grasp when Officers Keohane and Slattery, attracted by the report of the pistol, ran to the scene. Keohane arrived first and abgut the time Gilleece, overcome with weakness and pain, sank to the sidewalk, but stfll clinging to the man who had shot him. As the policeman approached Milton sought to escape. He tried to ghake oft the clutch of the saloonman, and found no opportunity to again use his pistoi, Keohane and thé robber came together, Gilleece, now lying gasping on the side- walk, begged them to arrest his assail- ant and excitedly accused him of the crime. Milton placed the pistol agalnst the officer’s breast and puiled the trigger, but the cartridge falled to explode, and the desperate man fought with renewed efforts to gain his freedom. After several moments of struggling the highwayman lay alongside his victim, manacled, and the ambulance and the pa- trol wagon were called. Gilleece was found, at the Central Emergency. Hospl- tal, to be seriously wounded and may not survive the shock, owing to his age. At the prison skeleton Kkeys, counterfeit money and a “jimmie”’ were found in the possession of the robber. The jimmy had the appearance of hay- ing been recently used and the police think that Milton had committed a bur- glary but a short time before he held Gilleece up. He s an_oplum fiend and well known at police headquarters. At the prison he feigned drunkenness and reached Eleventh street | UTHERN SUPPORT | | | lization as interwoven with the negro problem, were entitled to consideration and sympathy. | WAR HERD'S /AUGUSTUS B. COSTIGAN CAUSES SENSATION BY HIS SUDDEN MARRIAG}::‘;' 'I'AI-K S'I'"_'Is - A TEMPEST il ‘Baldwin Must Ex- ' plain Denver In- j terview. i l | | | ' 'Remarks About Negro || Soldiers Invite an | Inquiry. General Likens the Colored Trooper to a Cur Dog. | | | ride Is Great Favorite l Pr | Here and in Wash- ; etty Maid of Daggett| Elopes With Doctor : ington. ; and Weds. i — UGUSTUS B. COSTIGAN. II“?‘ Special Dispatch to The Call ‘* wealthy clubman, golfer and gen- | 2 & et . 2> | eral ail round good fellow. has won | 25 e ST vl e . e o Velle i The Deckon. of 3 Eltde | reached this city to-day of a sensa- Nash. The young woman, -who :1s] tional elopement, in which the chief | | only just out of her teens, made her de-| “"k‘““‘_ were Dr. Nolar arland, | but in Washington last winter at one of | * nown phys at | o - |candidate for County Coroner : | the brilliant functions given at the Ex-| y C ! . 2 M‘-cull\‘c Mansion by President Roosevelt, | 1’émocratic ticket November, and| | MR _A-\l“::'lft‘;‘P \IH\P{;{EI)?‘{; | and during the season there was a great) 7 Maude Lefu 0 WHOWS . MARKL G society favorite. In the spring, nu‘om»;“"'.‘1"""v"l JoJ A SURPRISE panied by her mother, Mrs. Calvin Nutt, | citizer of Daggett 5 b McFarland, to the report her sister, Miss Minnie, and Miss Annie | | Preeman of St, Louls. she came out to| Who is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Me- | W., WASHINGTON, April 14—Cold chilis { 22 5 } Farland of San Be rdino, has been ! and hot spasms rnated in the spine of | Ccalifornia to visit her cousin, Robert l’.’ at his beautiful home, ‘The ** on the sunny slopes of Sausalito. | the administration to-day Denver interview with Brigadier Genmera wanting to marry pretty Miss Maude Le- because of the furge for some time, but the girl's parents s Nash was at once recefved mso the \ubjmm »n account of her tender | Frank D. Baldwin, the new commande very exclusive set of San Franclsco's four | years. But love found a way, and it|of the Department of Colorado. General % via the Santa Fe route, for | Baldwin has just returned from the hundred and has been greatly admired for | proved to be | | when the east-bound overland pulled into | Philippines and it was in discussing the her charming grace of manner,.her beauty and accomplishments. At the Ned Green- | night Dr. McFarland and | Philippine quest that he gave utterance Maude Lefur climbed upon the dark |to a sentiment for which he undoubted!s way fancy dress ball, where she was ac- | knowledged to be one of the belles of | of the tra'n and were soon borne | Will be called upon for an explanatior away to the eastward. the evening, she met Mr. Costigan, who | ;\;flwral Baldwin is quoted as having said fell in love with her at first sight. Barly | Lefurge missed his aaugiter soon after- | “Ome of my reasons for liking the Fil in April & tour of the southern part of | ward, and inquiry put him on the right | pino as a soldier s the same that gives the State was decided upon and together | scent. He telegraphed to Needles, arnd | me preference for the negro in the same with her family, Mr. Greer, Mr. Costigan | the! peace officer at that place took the | capacity. In a fight I am not worrled doctor into custody as soon as the train | about his safety, as it does not make an pulled in. They were on their way .,,“dmerence whether he gets killed or not Kingman, Ariz., where they expected to| In “explanation” of this General Bald be married, and. to say that they were | Win sald: “There is nothing more to it disappointed is putting it mildly. Thew|If a person owned a thoroughbred or full both began to bombard the father with | blooded dog and also a cur, is it not nat telegrams so persistently that he finally | ural that he would prefer to have the cur relented upon the condition that they re- | killed before the other?” turn to Daggett immediately after they| The general added that the future of were married. the islands depended on the introduction The ceremony was performed in Needles | of Chinese labor, as the whites were in- this afternoon, and Dr. and Mrs. McFar- | capable of doing anything by themselves land will leave for Daggett to-night.|and the natives were too lazy. After a short stay at that place they will | Becretary Root to-day directed that a g0 to Needles for future residence. tormal inquiry be addressed: to General —_— Baldwin, asking whether or not he had ELOPERS IN TROUBLE. been correctly quoted. Pending a reply, — no action will be taken by the depart- County Clerks Advised Not to Grant | ment. Of course, if General Baldwin can Marriage License. repudiate the interview and sentfments, nothing further will be said about it, but SAN JOSE, April 14.—B. L. Tallman and Rebecca %arsen, a love-sick young cou- Daggett last sioe and his ever faithful automobile the party started forth. With Santa Barbara as a nucleus, rides were taken here and rides were taken there, and presently Cu- pid put in an appearance, only seen, how- ever, by the two occupants of the ma- chine as they gayly dashed along througi orange groves and flowered lande. Early this month the travelers returned to town, and arrangements were already completed to leave for Washington on Friday, when on Monday the bride as- tonished her mother by the announce- ment that she had decided to remain n San Francisco and wed Mr. Costigan. While Mrs. Nutt was in no way averse to the gentleman in question she strenu- ously objected to the wedding taking place here, as she desired it to be in her own home In Frederick, Md. Tears and entreaties were of no avail, the pair were obdurate and would brook no delay. | That same evening, as a farewell honor it he should avow the interview, he wiil get & much more severe rebuke than tha to his ;\:_:m, ;V“c‘”h ’Gn‘;‘?:‘;eg"""im“he‘"!; ple who eloped from Paso Robles, will | which was administered to Gen: ‘:“x:nernpl(s:‘,”: afl of bis visiting guests | OVIAently have: a hard time getting mar- | Funston, Wi B8 TRUUnel Grom he s ow v, 5 Philippines of red hot views about & lady s u and Miss Ada Howell, Miss Leontire | ried. The young y nder age and ol her father has/invoked the law to pre- vent Tallman becoming his son-in-law. Tallman has been charged with abduc- tion. A notice was to-day received by County Clerk Pfister asking him to refuse the couple a license. This notice has been sent to every county In the State. Con- stable Gans of Paso Robles asks that the would-be groom be arrested on a charge of abduction the moment he applles for a license. It Is said that Tallman and his sweetheart are headed this way. Fair Hearing Is Resumed. NEW YORK, April 4.—When the hear- ing on the will of the late Charles L. Fair was resumed to-day the testimony of Lucten Mas, the Frenchman, was read to him so that he could sign it before returning to France. The reading had not been finished when the hearing ad- Journed. Blakeman, Miss Emily Wilson, Miss Free. man, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Brokaw of New York, Claude Terry Hamilton, Allen St. John Bowle and Herbert Mee, and still not a word of the approaching wed- ding was whispered. Yesterday morning hurried arrange- ments were made, the private parlors of the St. Dunstan secured and decorated with smilax and lilies cf the valley, and at 2 o'clock the wedding took place in the presence of the bride’s family, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Greer, Mr. Thayer and Mr. R. P. Greer, who acted as best man. Rev- erend Father Ramm of St. Mary's Cath- edral officiated. The bride wore a tailor made dress of dark blue, with walst of white crepe de chine, and straw hat of white and blue, and the groom was in his every day busi- ness suit. Immediately after the ceremony bump- ers of champagne were drunk, and the happy pair took their auto, which was in waiting at the door, and started for San Rafael, and will tour the northern Lpari of the State before returning. It was pointed out to-day that no state ment could possibly have been made by an officer of the army or an officlal of the Government which could have caused more embarrassment to the administra- tion, either in the insular possessions of the United States or in Cuba, where are seeking to make friends with the na- tives and devoting much time and labor to bringing about amicable relations. The interview also will cause troubis to the President at home. He has taken decided grounds on the color question ia insisting on the appointment of Dr. Crum as collector of the port at Charleston. He is sticking by Crum purely because Crum is capable of filling the position, but mainly because of his color. If Gen- eral Baldwin's interview should be allow- ed to pass unrebuked, the incident would be used by the President's political enemies, greatly to the disadvantage uf abe administration, we

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