The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 15, 1903, Page 3

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FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1903 GRITICIZES NEDDING OF —————— “Vulgarity and Wealth” the Theme of London Daily Mail. Newport Ceremony Astounding Effort at stentation. giving the of the cere- have been too - BRILLIANT SCENE AT ARLEIGH. Reception and he Ceremony. 1 14.—The w t New late Cor- s Cathleen G. ANCIENT, RARE IRAN RUGS AUCTION TO-DAY=DRILY At 2:30 p. m. & direct new at bona auction e for a grand advertisement. VITHRAN’S, 205 Post Street. Cluett-Peabody shirts,they fit; new styles and new patterns for spring wear. See them where you do your buying. Cluert Shirts, g1.50 up. Monarch Shirts, $1.00. Cluett, Pcabody & Co. DIRECTORY CF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. (atalogues and Price Lists Maileq on Application. FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & 0, Sisrog oo, 1o Clay. Tel OFFICE, BANK FURNITURE, ETC, GEO. H. FULLER DESK CO. 152, OILS. LUBRICATING OILE. LEONARD & ELLIS, 415 Front st.. 6. ¥. Phone Main 1718, PRINTING. PRINTER, &1 Bansome st, 8. F. E. C. HUGHES, IHOERBILT Wedding Breakfast AT EXRIBITION ~ ATGRAND PALAIS gPaintings of Americans Adorn the Walls of the Salon. e et ‘Younger Element of Artists Is Well Represented by Canvases. SR S PARIS, April 14—The art events of the vear will be »-morrow with the opening of g f atfonal Soclety of Fine Arts at the Grand Palais whish will be folfowed a fortnight er by ihe salon held under the auspices of L er it exhibition to-ghor- ,w will represent the younger and inde- e among the artists, in- | cluding table figy s Carolus Duran, J rgent, Whistler and St g the 7 notable pictures in the are Weert's “Fifteenth Century Fetes,” painted for the Sorbonne portraits by Carolus Duran, J raits of the thr rd's “Jesus at ‘Fune 1 of yriraits exhibited by Henrl e of James Gordon Bennett ing represer nett in a ristic a e, standing on a ter- the an ex- Riveria overlooking a, with dis favorite steam The landscapes and inte ¥ of Bgston rec om the critics Watertown arrison of Philadelphia has six ich n color and showing pecur Dheric t ts sunshine Among the other Amerf E re Frederick Baker, Charles I o eeste, Herbert Fal Eugene Higgins, 3it- R e O clal season of 1303 at Newport. As he ge took place In a private villa W la much of the splendor which usu ally a church function About nearly all from New York, was a white wedding. The decora- white on a background of bridesmaids were gowned in h white picture hats; the bride- best man and the ushers wore ff cravats and white boutonnieres er bride, of course, was -attired in t te. Th eather sulked a rkling spring v it with a misty north- was gray and cold, eaet wind blowing in from the sea. For an hour preceding the ceremony an t at noon the ohengrin march b ;. ved and j strains of the I d the approach of th Meenan, r boys, previously had taken his place at a floral altar, and j e pro jon started down t stair d by his elder nderbilt, took Vanderbilt, Miss Neiflson advanced on the arm of | her uncle, Frederick Gebhardt. Her four | bridesmalds were Miss Isabelle May of Washington, Miss Florence Twombley, a cousin of Mr. Vanderbllt; Miss Evelyn lkarsvns and Miss Nathalie Schenck. The ushers who led the procession were les B. Neilson, a brother of the bride; Adams of Orange, N. J.; Arthur S. rden of New York, 8. H. Stone of Syr- acuse, P Goelet Gerry and Albert Gray of New York. The bride was gowned in heavy white | stlk with a costly vell of rare lace flowing from the crown of her head to the end the train. Around her throat was tightly clasped a serpent necklace of rar- | est pearls, the gift of the bridegroom. | The ceremony was brief. Its comple- | tion was indicated by the Mendelssohn | march. A reception followed and an in- spection was made of the bridal gifts, which were declared to be probably as | costly an array as was ever bestowed on | two young persons at the advent of their narried life. Then came the wedding reakfast. Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt left for thelr | | pew villa at Sandy Point, a few miles | up the island, during the afternoon, where | they will spend a few days, previous to a three months' trip to Europe. Among thcse who were present were the following: | Mrs. Corneltus Vanderbilt, Mrs. F. W. Van- | gerbiit, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Sloane, M | Mrs. McK. Twombley, Mr. and Mre. I . den, George R. Fearden, Chauncey M. Depew and Mrs. Depew, Dr. Seward Webb, Mrs. Elliott Sheperd, Harry Payne Whitney, | Arthur Kemp, P. F. Collier, Potter er, Admiral and Mrs. S. B. Lice, Mr and Mrs. Reginald Norman, Mr. and Mrs. W s-Wells, Mrs. Oelrichs, Mr. and Peter Martin, Mrs. Gouevernor Courtright, Burke-Roche, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam E. r and Mr, and Mrs. Edward Berwind. | SEA SERPENT VISITS | THE INDIANS UP NORTH VICTORIA, April 14.—Officlals of the cable station at Bamfleld Creek are spon- | Bors for the story that a sea serpent from forty to sixty feet long and with a head I'ke & horse has been seen off the station. The cable operators say, in letters to the local newsPapers, that Indians had been telling of the existence of a sea serpent, but the stories were not credited. David Osborne, one of the officials, says that a week ago the animal was seen from the cable station to raise its big horse-like head and swim out of the mouth of the Bamfield Creek into Barclay Sound. Mr. Godson of the cable staff says that when he first saw the animal 1t looked like a massive sea weed, but presently he saw the head elevated and the big serpent moved off toward the sea. Mr. Godson says it moved off with the speed of a torpedo-boat. On April 10 an In- éian saw the thing and was so frightened that he ran his canoe into the breakers, left it and fled along the beach to the czble station. The Indlan sald the thing had a head { shaped like a horse and its body, ten feet of which was lifted, was the size of a | tarrel. The Indians in the neighborhood | are terrified. £y EW ORLEANS, April 14.—Tke | Y first day’s gession of the annual | \J vention of the National As-| sociation of Manufacturers ended without any definite indication as to whether the organization will adopt as its own policy an aggressive hostllity to union labor methods, as outlined by President D. M. Parry in his annual re- port. Parry’s attitude on the labor ques- tion was the chief point of interest for | the delegates and, it is declared, was the cause for the largest delegate representa- | tion in the history of the association. | When Parry was Introduced at the morn- | ing session he received a remarkable ova- tion, 600 delegates rising and cheering him vigorously and repeatedly. His report was immediately referred to the commit- tee. At numerous times during the day, in | resolutions and speeches, the matter of | trades unionism came to the surface, but | at no time was there a test vote on which the attitude of the convention was shown. The frequent outbursts of en- | thusiasm, however, showed int feel- | ing on the part of the members of the association, and there is every indication {hat the session to-morrow aftetnoon, when the report of the resolutions com- | mittee will be submitted, will be a iively one. ARRAIGNS ORGANIZED LABOR. Parry’'s speech was an arraignment of organized labor as it now exlists, and charged that labor's law was the law of physical force; that it had not stopped at viclence and the destruction of property to compel acceptance of its demands, and had not regarded itself as bound to ob- serve the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, which declares that no State shall attempt to abridge the privileges or right of life, lib- | erty property of any citizen. He | that organized labor was with | ardor striving to force the nation at must eventually mean indust-ial ster, if not anarchy and despotism. Speaking of the eight-hour and anti-in- junction bills introduced at the last ses- slon of Congress and defeated by the ef- forts of the National Association of Man- ufacturers, Parry sald in part: | The introduction in Congress of such meas- ures as thess and the support they recelved there and from the press and public can only be regarded as ominous manifestations of the deep-seated power of an organization which in late years has had such an insidious growth that we find it dominating to a dangerous degree the whole soclal, political and govern- mental systems of the nation. Who can take note of the hundreds of strikes of the last year, of the many acts of aggression and ruthiess violation of principles heretofore held dear by the American people, of the sub- servient and apologetic tone of ma; news- papers and public men toward thode things, and also of the all too prevalent antagonism toward capital without being impressed with the gravity of the situation? If organized labor had succeeded In getting its two biils enacted into law more measures of a similer character would have followed close upon the heels, and we should have found soclalism stealing upon us at a rapld rate. It i well that those who would revolutionize the social order should at the very Inception of their national programme meet with or- ganized resistance, and it was fortunate that there was an aseoclation strong enough to checkmate the influence of organized labor {his last winter and that at a time when in the full plentitude of Its power it seemed certain of success. This conflict—and it wi a con- ., and a very momentous one—deserves to go down in history as the first decisive defeat of the socialistic forces which have of late years had such surprising growth. RECOMMENDS ORGANIZATION. President Parry then devoted much and | | | Established 1823, - WILSOR . WHISKEY. CHARGES THAT LABOR'S LAW IS ONE OF PHYSICAL FORCE| President of National Association of Manufacturers Arraigns Trades Unionism for Striving to Force the American Nation Wi+ / il | b . Into Industrial TORTURE VTN WITH § DAGGER | Wounds on Murdered Man Tell Story of Disaster " Slow Death. Body Is Found in a Barrel on the Harbor Front of New York City. ——s { Spectal Dispatch to The Call. : NEW YORK, April 14—The detective | force of this city has another murder mystery to unravel. A young woman on her way to work this morning discovered | | the body of a man in a barrel on East | | Eleventh street, near the docks. She im- | | mediately notified the police and a hur- | rled examination of the body revealed the | fact that the man had been murdered. | There were twenty wounds in the vie- | SECORTIE - COMPINYS NEW O |Will Ask for Modifica- tion of the Court’s Decree. Wants Permission to Con- tinue the Payment of Dividends. CALL 1406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, April 14—Pending the probable appeal of its case to the Su- preme Court of the United States, the Northern Securities Company, through its severed in two places, The majority of the wounds, which were slight, were on the right side of the neck, and all of them | had been inflicted with a dagger. | The theory of the pclice is that the | murderer or murderers intended to throw | the body into the river, but found the | pler at East Eleventh street closed and | dropped the barrel in the street, fearing | aiscovery. The letters “W. T.”" were painted on the | bottom of the barrel, and written in pen- | i i tim’s back, and the jugular vein had been | i i | oll was the address, 364 Third avenue. | Three hundred and sixty-four Third lavenue is a rooming house. Al- | | bert Voecke, the proprietor, was taken to | the police station, where he said he had never seen the barrel nor the body before. | The police thus far have been unable to | establish the nationality of the deceased. | Bome of the detectives are satisfled that | he was of Italian birth, while others claim | | he was elther an Armenian or a Greek. In the pocket of the coat worn by the | | murdered man was a plece of paper on | which was written in_Italian: “Come, come in a hurry.” A woman’s handker- chief was found in the barrel. The po- lice belfeve the writing was part of a de- coy letter. Coroner’s Physician A. T. Weston, who performed an autopsy on the body,says hat it revealed no evidence that there bad been a struggle at the time the man | was killed. He advanced the theory that the man had been held so that he could not move, while his assailants forced him | to tell something they wanted to know, { torturing him by making the wounds in | his neck. | Detective Sergeant Petrosini, who was | positive that the man was an Italian, ac- | companied eight Italtans to the morgue { to-night in an effort to have the deceased {dentified, but to his surprise the men declared that the victim was not an Ital- tian, but was either an Armenian or Greek, Orf the other hand Detective Ser- geant Feretti said that several Armen- | fans had declared that the man was not an Armenian and claimed that he was either an Itallan or a Greek. Rich Sacramentan Near Death. | SACRAMENTO, April 14—Louis Nico- | 1aus, one of Sacramento’s oldest citizens, | and a wealthy retired brewer. is believed | | to be on his death bed. | | down a flight of stairs at | J street, tast Friday evening and suf- | | tered a broken leg, the injury being at | the right thigh. Owing to the ad- vanced age of Nicolaus it is not thought | the case was recently decided. counsel, John W. Griggs, to-day notified the Government that It would ask fer a modification of the decree of the United States Clrcuit Court of Appeals, by whi€a In addi- tion to this the law department of the Government has been practically: asked | by Griggs what its attitude would be in case such modification of the court's de- cree was requested. Although no member of the Department of Justice will either deny or afiirm, it can be said that the Government will up- pose any such modification. It can be further sald that instructions have al- ready been drawn in the office of the At- torney General, ready to be issued to the District Attorney at St. Paul, outiining his course in case any such request for & modification be made whén the notice of appeal is flled in court. The Northern Securities Company prac- tically asks that the operations of the corporation known as the “holding com pany” of competing railway lines al- lowed to continue to a certain extent pending the appeal and the decision of the Supreme Court. This request, it is understood, Includes permission to pay dividends to the stockholders of the Northern Securities Company and per- raission to vote such stock at future me ings of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern railroads until the final decisien of the court of last resort Is made All of these things were positively and distinctly enjoined in the decree of the court at St. Paul, and the only coursa open to the Government is to oppose any such mitigation of the decision. Notice of this decis on the part of the Attorney General, it is understood, was Informally given to-day at a confer- ence between Knox and Griggs. Origss came to Washington early this morning very quletly and his presence at the de- partment and brief Interview with the Attorney General were known to but few in Washington. Griggs immediately aft- erward left for New York. A report was current to-day that the Northern Securities Company had decid- ed not to appeal its case to the Supreme Court of the United States. So far as known here, such is not the case, and the Department of Justice, expecting notice of an appeal within a few days, is making every arrangement accordingly. Whether, in view of the attitude of the department, the Northern Securities {om- pany will press its request for a madifi- cation has not been finally decided. Griggs gave no indication of his course of action in this respect. The Government, how- ever, expects this request to be made and | that he can recover. is already prepared to oppose it. PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL ] ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTUR- ERS, WHO SEVERELY ARRAIGNED ORGANIZED LABOR AND | CHARGED IT WITH TRYING TO FORCE INDUSTRIAL DISASTER. time to a recital of what he considered the unjust acts of organized labor. The American Federation of Labor was de- nounced as an organization which “breeds boycotters, picketers and so- clalists and the source whence proceeds such noxious emanations as the eight- hour and anti-conspiracy bills.” The speaker denounced conciliation as a myth and arbitration as a failure, holding that there can be no concillation or arbitra- tlon when a gun s pointed at the head of employers and they are forced to ar- bitrate, whether they will or not. As a cure for the many “evils confronting em- ployers” Parry recommended organization among manufacturers and employers which shall embrace the last employer in the United States, the varlous minor organizations to be combined in one grand rational federation. Marshell Chshing, natlonal secretary, read his annual report, showing an In- crease in membership of 100 per cent dur- ing the last year and a satisfactory flnan- FORMER BICYCLE RIDER IS SUED FOR DIVORCE Wife of Otto Ziegler Declares That She Has Been Treated Cruelly. BAN JOSE, April 14.—Otto Ziegler, the former champlon bicycle rider, has been sued for divorce by his wife on the ground of extreme cruelty. Mrs. Ziegler was formerly Miss Margaret Tennant/a popular young lady of this city and daughter of Fred Tennant, one of thg best known men in Santa Clara County The couple wer® married in 1899. It is alleged that the cruelty has extended over a pe- riod of two yvears. There are no children. A lis pendens has been flled restraining Zlegler from disposing of some $10,000 worth of property. Mrs. Ziegler wants $75 per month alimony. This is the second sult brought agalnst Ziegler by his wife for divorce. Less than a year ago she began suit for a sep- aration on the same grounds, but later had it dismissed. A few years ago Zleg- Jer was one of the best known bicycle rid- ers in the country. At Loulsville and Denver eight years ago he captured a number of national championships and established world records. After his mar- riage he retired from the track and for a couple of years has been conducting a sa- loon. ——— ROOSEVELT SENDS GIFT TO THE HOLY FATHER Present Consists of Handsomely Bound Volumes of All the Official Documents of Presidents. BALTIMORE, Md., April 14.—President Roosevelt has sent to Cardinal Gibbons and his Eminence has forwarded by spe- clal messenger to Pope Leo XIII a gift to be presented to the holy father on the celebration of his jubllee. The gift consists of ten handsomely bound volumes That's All! containing all the messages and official documents of the Presidents of the United States, from Washington to Roosevelt. The gift was Intrusted by Cardinal Gid- bone to a clergyman who sailed from New York for Naples to-day on the steamship Liguria. Autograph letters from the Pres- jdent and Cardinal Gibbons to his Holl- ness clal conditlon. i C. W..Post of Battle Creek, Mich., de- | livered an address on “The Tyranny of Trades Union: He sald in part: TYRANNY OF UNIONISM. | T am here to plead the cause of the white | slave of to-day. Practically every employe is | as free as air to go and come at his pleasure | and sell his labor where he likes, but the | slave of a tyrannous labor union is fn truth | and in fact more abject than the negro slave of the past, There may have been some brutal and tyrannous slave owners in the South, but I ask you If ever in the history of negro slav- | ery did there exist such a condition of oppres- | slon, of cruelty to the men, women and chil | dren, terror, anarchistic beatings and murder | &S now exist under the acts of desperate mem- | bers of labor unions. This body should proceed at once to the work of organization. Paid delegates should be sent broadcast to the labor ceaters, there to organ- | ize local unions, under the employers and employers' unfon. These local unions would draw to themselves the best workmen in the | land who are now forced too often from fear and by violence, to give over their liberty to the manipulation and direction of nolsy, tur- bulent men. man’s means | repre- | B sented in |} the above range of prices. The man who wants to pay, $10 will get a good fitting, all-wool suit that will wear satisfactorily—he is at least sure of ten dollars’ worth. . 18 COURT SAYS OFFICES BELONG TO DEMOCRATS Superior Judge Rhodes Passes Upon the Contests for County Positions. BAN JOSB, April 14—The contests over the offices of County Auditor, Superin- tendent of Schools and County Recorder were to-day declded !n favor of the con- testants by Judge Rhodes of the Superior Court. In all three cases Republicans lose and Democrats are declared elected. C. R. Willlams is deciared elected Auditor by three votes over Thomas Treanor, W. F. Parker beats Martin Murphy for Re- corder by 263 and L. J. Chipman leads D. 7T. Bateman for Superintendent of Schools by 220. Each of the three losers had ma- jorities of a couple of hundred, but these were overcome by ‘‘no nomination” bal- lots. The decision of the court merely de- clares the contestants were elected to the offices and gives them a judgment for costs, but does not seat them in the of- fices. The contestants will now have to bring an action to gain possession of the offices. The logers wiil appeal the matter and the cases will be taken to the Su- preme Court. The man who wants a suit at $15 or $20 will find an im- mense assortment from which to choose; the materials are fashionable, the patterns de- sirable. The man who prefers to spend $30 or $35 will get a swell suit in the finest of fab- rics. Such a suit at exclusive tailors’ would cost him $40 to $30. Whatever you wish to spend for a spring suit, you will find here just what you want, in pattern and price, made to your measure. Rhodes’ Oxford Scholarships. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, April 14.— President Jordan of Stanford, President Wteeler of the University of California, and Dean Norton of Pomona College, con- stituting a committee on the award of the Rhodes scholarships from the State of California, have decided that the first gcholarship shall be granted to the Uni- versity of California. The award will be made next winter, and the following year a scholarship will be given a Stanford graduate. Prize Donated for Debaters. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, April 4.— President Jordan is in receipt of a letter from George C. Ross, a well-known attor- ney of Redwood City, enclosing $100 to be given to the winning team in the annual Stanford-California Intercollegiate debate, which will be held in S8an Francisco next Saturday evening. Heretofore James K. Moffit, a graduate of California, presented an annual prize of $200, but discontinued If out of town write for sam- ples—good fit assured through our self-measuring system. 718 Market SNWO BrcyBD FROM LIF£L 0D} Strect and Corner Powell and Eddy Strects

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