Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1903 : PRESIDENT PAYS GLOWING TRIBUTE - TO FAMOUS PIONEERS OF OREGON Nation's Executive Is Welcomed by Governor Chamberlain at Salem and in the Metropolis of the State He Lays the Cornerstone of a Monument to Commemorate Deeds of Lewis and Clark During Their Expedition o f—— 4 SHO0TS WO BEFORE SUICOE - % Mining Town in Shastaz | aronrviie e Eaies- : | RATE THE DEEDS OF LEWIS Startled by Keswick | v cuah Quarryman. L 21 . ORTLAND, May 21.—President| Epectal Dispatch to The Call Roosevelt traveled through the | fertile Willamette Valley from | KESWICK George R early this morning until late this s P snsoion dions afternoon when he arrived in this = ooz dmiicgpa: city. At Salem, the capital of the State, | e houss § a stop of three hours was made. The | President was welcomed by Governor ars old and lain and delivered an address on the quarry B at Hadiics hip at the Capitol. The only other | SR - Where made during the day was at Oregon igh drill. Rose Car- City, a manufacturing town fifteen miles south of this city. All along the route crowds gathered at the stations and gave the President an enthusiastic reception. | In this city he made two speeches, one | at the laying of the cornerstone of the 1ewis and Clark monument and another | at the banquet given in his honor at the Hotel Portiand to-night by the citizens | of Portland. The President is spending | the night here and at 9 o'clock to-mor- row morning will resume his journey, two hours later crossing the Columbia River and entering the State of Washington. When the President reached the city park here at 4:3) o’'clock 25,000 people had lived with him, came here two e shooting attracted little at- the woman's screams and ap- , together with continued . soon e woman e y saloon She One bullet struck penetrating the body coming out above the left other bullet struck over the ranging around to the point aped to a roo believing he had killed the| gqcembled to witness the laying of the | probably fearing to g0 into | oornerstone of the Lewis and Clark monu- descended the rear steps | ment, The spot where the monument is | t beneath the house, where from | 44 e erected is an elevation 200 feet above window Mrs. Soula saw him | yn. city, from which a fine view of the he empty shells from his re-| Golumbia and Willamette rivers, Mount yolver, reload it and turn it upon himself. | 5504, Mount St. Helena, Mount Adams | ing his head at the first shot he ana other snow-capped peaks of the Cas- | the point of the weapon in his| ..ge range can be had. Mayor Willlams | h and fired A card game last night is said to have result a bitter quarrel between the i may have cz he ehooting. | delivered the address of welcome, to which the President responded as follow: ADDRESS OF ROOSEVELT. tere to-day to lay a cornerstone to mind the greatest single | thig continent, the voyage st by Lewis and Clark, whi statesmanship of Jeffe y giving to the United main between the Mississ- P Following their advent came the relgn of the fur trader, @nd then some sixty years ago those entered in whose Changes in the Postal Service. WASHINGTON, May 2L—Fourth-class postmasters appointed: Oregon—Garrett W. Horner, Airle, Polk County, vice Ed- gar A. Taylor, resigned;: Mary E. Bower, Harvey, Harney Coun vice Fred < . ¥ children and children’s children wera.to possess | Haines, resigned: Charles S. Brockway, Across the continent In the early | Kamela, Union County, vice Henry W. e ihe ox-drawn white-topped wagons | Swart, resigned; Emma Weyer, Long the pioneers, the stalwart. study, urnt men, with their wives and little ones entered into this country to possess it, You have built up here this wonderful com- monwealth. a commonwealth great in its past, and infinitely greater in its future. (Ap- plause) It was & pleasure to me to-day to | have as part off my escort the men of the econd Oregon, frho carried on expansion of our people bevond the Pacific as your fathers had carried it on to the Pacific. I speak to the men of the Pacific Slope, to the men whose predecessors gave us this region because they were not afraid, because they did not seek | the life of ease and safety, because their life training was not to shrink from obstacles but 1o meet and overcome them: and now I ask that thig nation go forward as it has gone | forward in the past; I ask that it shape its life in accordance With the highest ideals; I k that we govern the Philippines primarily the interest of the people of the isiands (cpplause), and just so long as men like Taft and Luke Wright are there they will be so governed: 1 ask that our name be & synonym for truthful and fair dealing with all the na- tions of the world; and I ask two things in connection with our foreign policy—that we never wrong the weak and that we never flinch from the strong. To-day the Secretary of the Navy spoke of the great pride we take In the feats of the mighty battleship which bears the name of this State—the Oregon. (Cheers and applause.) It is & good thing to cheer her, but it is & better thing to see that we keep on building ships like her and even better. That is the right way to cheer our Oregon, to see our Senators and Representatives in Congress go on with the building of the United States navy. Whether we wish it or not, we have to be a great power: We have to play a great part. All we can decide is whether we will play that part well or fil, and if T know my countrymen there is scant doubt as to how the decision will come out. DUTIES OF THE HOUR. I ask that you show your appreciation of what the navy did in '98. that you show your appreciation of what was done in by the ploneers who won this land, by ing ready for the future. If we do'mot, then our children Wwhen they look back for cause of | pride in our history will have to slap our generation. 1 ask that we. the inheritors of the glory of the men who founded the repub- Jic of Washington, of the men who saved it under Lincoln, in our turn play our parts and do t the lesser tasks of to-day et to commemorate a mighty pio Tom, Lane County, vice Madison Cana- day, resigned; Carrie L McAllister, Shaw, Marion County, vice G. O. McGilvray, re- signed. LONDON, May 21.—A sensational price, $78,600. was paid by a dealer in & London suc. | tion room to-day for Racburn’s portrait of Bir | John Sinclair, | { | e Tyuh Chas. Keilus & Co. B x cligwdwve High-Grade Clothiers NO BRANCH STORES. NO AGENTS. Warm Weather Clothes And Outing Garments Cut of the Ordinary Correct New Fabrics And Stylish Comforts Stock Still Complete Prices Always Safe Here o> Ed > Stre et m:: h-{'. feat of the old days, when me; Kearn y 1o call upon every ounce of courag needed Thurlow Bloc k| aimiiaur e me in 1 < 2z AND CLAZH N LAME L AT FarrLAND. oXES o JTUDENTS GAIN THEIR DIPLOMAS Graduation Exercises at University of the Pacific. — Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, May 21.—The fifty-second graduation exercises of the College of Liberal Arts and the Conservatory of Music of the University of the Pacific were held this morning in Conservatory Hall, at College Park. Relatives of the graduates and friends of the schoo] filled the hall. The stage was Langlsomely dec- orated with potted plants and flowers. As it is the oldest and the leading Methodist educational institution on the coast, prominent church members were present from various parts of the State. The past year has been an especially bright one for the schooi. Last year a big mortgage was paid off, and the rais- ing of a $100,000 endowment fund has been assured. There has been an increase in the attendance of the scholars. Dur- ing the past week uity-two students have been graduated from the university, divided among the various departments as follows: Academy 12, commercial de- partment 17, elocution department 3, con- servatory of music 12, and college of lib- eral arts 8. On the stage beside President McClish were the trustees of the school, mem- | bers of the faculty and prominent clergy- men of the State. The programme of exercises was as follows: Piano solo, Dean Pierre Douillet; invocation, the Rey. E. R. Willis, 8. T. B.; vocal solo, Miss Nella Rogers; address, the Rev. W. C. Evans, D.D.; sduo for piano and violin, Pro- fessors Wilbur McColl and Henry Bettman. Professor McClish, in a few happy re- marks, conferred degrees upon the grad- uates as follows: College of Liberal James Falconer, A. B., '00. Master of science—William Arnold Angwin, Ph.B., '01; Clarke Loring McClish, B. S., '99. Bachelor of philosophy—Juua Merryi Kinsey. Bachelor of sclence—Willlam McConnell Shearer, Frederick Horace Tibbetts. Bachélor of letters—Bradford Samuel Crit- tenden, Abble May Richardson. Conservatory of Music: Bachelor of music (planoforte)—Claire Marguerite Balley, Agnes Rachel Caughy, Gertrude Amelia Filimore, Jeannette Gillis, Grace Holliway, -Josephine May Morton, Emma Helen Reichman, Olga Reichman, Adaline Amelia Ricks, Josephine Loulse Sinclair. Arts—Master of arts, Bachelor of music (vocal culture)—Carol Maude Hufe. Bachelor of musle (violin)—Nel Frances ‘Willlson. President McClish announced that the following honorary degrees had been con- ferred: Doctor of Divinity—Rev. W. R. ‘Willis, pastor of the Napa Methodist church, a graduate of the University of Ohio and the Boston Theological school; Edward P. Dennett, alumuus of Universi- ty of the Pacific and graduate of the Boston Theologieal school. Doctor of Sciences—Robert G. Aitken, inrecognition of distinguished services at Lick Obser- vatory. At noon the ladies of the College Park served dinner in the maple grove on the university grounds, after which a reunion was held. @ sieiieiebdeielelelleininieiefelede el @ tinent. Let us In our turn with equal courage, equal hardihood and manliness carry on the task that our forefathers have entrusted to our hands; and let us resolve that we shall leave to our children and our children's children an even mightier heritage than we received in our turn. I ask it and I am sure that it will be granted. The President then laid the cornerstone of the monument. The exercises at the park were somewhat curtalled on account of a slight shower of rain. After the exercises the President was driven to the Hotel Portland, where he rested until 8 p. m.,, at which time he attended a banquet given in his honor by the citizens of Portland. The grillroom of the hotel where the banquet was held presented a handsome appearance, having been decorated with a profusion of roses, lilles of the valley, potted plants and hun- dreds of electric lights of various colors. Mayor Willilams presided and introduced the President. —————— Boycotters cartooned in the Wasp this we Business men should see it. O | | | | | S DERTH MARKS THE PATH OF ) WINCSTORM Cyclone Passes Through Kansas Destroying Many Homes. Three Lives Are Lost and Valuable Property Is Destroyed. Trees and Windmills Are Blown Down in the Farming Sections and Large Number of Cat- tle Are Killed. i SALINA, Kans., May 21.—The third cy- clone in Salina County within the past| twenty-four hours struck Assiria to-night. | Two men were killed and a dozen or more injured. The dead: WILLIAM A. OLSON | PETER OLSON. | Of the injured none are fatally hurt. | The house In which the Olsons lived was demolished and the body of the boy | was found thirty rods from where the house had stood. A terrific rain follpwed the cyclone. At Bridgeport in this county hail fell con- | tinuously for twenty minutes, doing im-| mense damage to wheat. ASHLAND, Kans., May 21.—This place and a large portion of the county was laid waste this evening at 5 o’clock by a cyclone. The damage will be immense and 1t is considered miraciilous that no lives were lost. So far as known to-night nobody was killed and none in Ashland | are injured severely. It is reported from the country districts that some were fat- ally injured. The indications are that the storm was worse i the country than in town. This county is very sparsely settled, however, and no particulars are obtainable to-night of the extent of the damage done. The business section of Ashland was not | damaged to any great extent. The res- | | 13 years of age. | dence portion suffered most. The homes of J. P. Campbell, M Stevenson, C, B. Nunemacher, J. A. Van Orsdell and F. | R. Kerne were wrecked. As many as fifty houses are partly demolished. Campbell, | | Stevenson and Ainsworth were injured | when their houses went down. The fine fruit farm of F. R. Kerne was swept clean of trees and buildings. The Theis ranchhouse was destroyed and trees and windmills are down in all directions. A large number of cattle are killed. 1t is reported here to-night that the oth- er villages in this vicinity suffered, but | nothing definite can be learned. QOKLAHOMA, O. T., May 21.—A special from Amarillo, Tex., states that the Pan- | CUNARD DOCK INFERNAL MACHINE IS TRACED BY POLICE TO BUTTE Clerk.Employed by the Montana Electric Company Says He Sold the Dry Batteries to a Stranger Who Answers Description of Suspect Rossio > 2 DENVER STAIR 5 COMPAOMSEL Both Sides Make Con- cessions and Sign in Agreement. | G. ROSSIO, ALLEGED INV TOR | OF INFERNAL MACHINE SENT | TO THE UMBRIA'S PIER. | a stranger. and a cigar lighter, similar to g e - * He fully answers the descrip- tion of Rossio, who I8 known to have | se used | in the construction of the machine found Strikers Are to Be Reinstited | and Injunction Suits | Withdrawn. ————— DENVER, May 21.—The strike “wh for several days has practically paralyzay the business of the city, involving nearly 110,000 men and women and threatening to | | toree into idleness twice that number of unfon members, was settled at 7 o’clock | this evening through the efforts of committee from the Chamber of Com | merce and one from the local Typograph cal Union. Though both sides made c cessions, the victory seems to be with laboring men. The agreement entered into between the general executive com | | mittee of organized labor and the execu- | | tive committee of the Citizens” Alllance whose membership embraces nearly a the employers of labor in the city, cor | cedes the right of employes as well a | employers to organize; permits employ | ers to choose their employes regardless thelr membership in unions; forbids the discharge of employes on account of thel | | aMiiations with unions; provides for the | | arbitration of the present differences by a | board to consist of five each of employ ers and employes directly involved In the present trouble, with, If necessary, an eleventh man who has not been so volved; the findings of this board to be binding upon all members of the Citi- zens’ Alllance and upon all unions repre sented by the general executive comm tee; all strikes, lockouts and boycotts are declared off; the men now out are to be reinsated as rapidly as their services car be utilized, and all suits for injunctions | | are to be withdrawn. - | Omaha Strike Is Being Settled. | | OMAHA., Neb., May 21L.—Two large de- partment stores took back their old driv- | ers to-day at the old schedule and a num , ber of smaller places also settled with their teamsters One hundred deputies were discharged by the Chief of Police to- day, but a large number are retained for night du The Chief says that the | stofke is being settled plecemeal and that he does not expect further serious trouble. o i e HUSBAND AND WIFE FOUND WITH THEIR THROATS CUT ) | Imlvn m]}\ tte Ts late as a month ago. | Woman Had Threatened Suicide and tist pinion of the local poiice ar the New York detective who is here {E‘fl Fulien. Julieve. Sl o 3 Rosslo had confederates in this city cided to Die Together. i 1R and their work is being pursued along| KANSAS CITY, Mo.,, May 21.—Fred | that line. The salesman of ths Montana | Lotty, a laborer, and his wife were found Electric Company informed the police | n their home at Independence, near here, that the stranger bought two batteries | eariy to-day with their throats cut. The woman was dead and Lotty was in a dy- ing condition and so weak from loss of handle country was visited by a severe o — on the Cunard docks in New York. It storm last night. The home of M. R. is sald that prier to coming to Butte | blocd that he could not talk. A bloody Wilson, near Hereford, was blown to UTTE, Mont., May 21.—The Butte | Rossio lived in Seattle, where he had |razor lay on the floor. Mrs. Lotty had pleces, killing Mrs. Wilson and a child | police department has secured | a bomb made during the winter of 1309- | threatened suicide, and it is belleved that and fatally injuring Wilson. Considerable | damage was done to property in the vicin- ity of Amarillo. BLAINE, Kans, May 21.—A ecyclone passed through here at 6 o'clock to-night. The Commercial Hotel was demolished | In and many houses were damaged. Nobody | suspect for whom the ) ities are looking, was in tective from Inspector McCloskey's office | in New York learned that the Montana | ctric Company of this city had manu- | factured the dry batteries used In the | | machine. was injured. The storm was more severe in the farming district than in town. WRIGHT, Kans., May 21.—A cyclone | visited this place to-night about 6 o'clock, | demolishing a number of houses and un- | roofing some others. As far as can be ascertained at this time nobody was fatal. | ly Injured. Crops were damaged greatly [ Butte police and Chief Reynclds ascer-| ;o oty this evening. The wedding and stock was killed. tained from the officers of the electric| .reated great surprise even among most m};::‘mfi\;; I\l;_n‘s, May(?l.—A tornado | company that the batterfes were pur-|intimate friends. Warner Is past 60 years . ver Ridgeman County, fifteen i ¥ The “haser w 5 5 miles: noythwest of Kinsley, this -arter- | C'a400 here April & The purchaser was of sse evidence that shows that the plot | 1900 to blow up the steamship Umbria with an infernal machine at the PIONEER OF TULARE Cunard docks in New York was hatched | Butte and that Rossio, the TItalian | BECOMES A BENEDICT &uthor- | A ew York Butte. de- | Mrs. Hornsnyder dn Visalia Surprises Friends. The fact was reported to the | oo e o e Y ) Marriage of Erastus Warner and VISALIA, May 21.—Erastus F. Warner, | 17, cne of the ploneers of Tulare County, and J. H. Hornsnyder were married in | atter she had killed herself Lotty tried to end his life. The couple were found by one of their children, three of whom had slept throughout the tragedy in an ad- joining room. ————————————— NEW VISIBLE TYPEWRITER. SYRACUSE. N. Y, May 20—L C Smith & Bros. the most experfenced | typewriter men in the world, will short- introduce an improved typewriter, which will be superior to any writing machine ever offered to the public. It is called the L. C. Smith Typewriter, will be a perfected visible machine. O 1000 men will be employed at the fac tory, and it will have a capacity of 300 typewriters a day. L. & M. Alexander & Co. will have the Pacific Coast agency. — | | noon, destroying Daniel Gleason’s hnusc“ and killing Mabel Tuttle. l \ e e e R T ) CHRISTIANS AND JEWS KILLED. —_—— Continued From Page 1, Column 7. Majesty commanded me to impress on | the commanders in the province and towns that they are obligated and are held personally responsible to take ail the necessary measures to prevent vio- | lence and calm the populace in order to remove the occasion of fears for life and property in any portion. “In informing your Excellency of the monarch’s will T feel obliged to state for your guidance that no sort of assoctations for self-defense can be tolerated.” | The Jews are not inclined to depend | solely on the police and have armed themselves in spite of the clrcular throughout the Jewish belt. Answering a private letter asking for his opinion of the Kishenev massacre, | Count Tolstol writes My relations to the Jews and the ter- rible Kishenev affair must be clear to everybody interested in my beliefs. My relations to the Jews can only be as that | to brothers whom ‘I love, not because they are Jews, but because they and everybody are the sons of one father— | God. That love does me no violence, be- | cause T have met and know Jews who are very good people. My relation to the| Kishenev crime is also defined in my re- | liglous beliefs. | ‘“‘Before knowing all the frightful de- | talls T understood the horror and felt in- tense pity for the innocent victims of mob savagery, mingled with perplexity at the bestlality’ of the so-called Christians and aversion and disgust for the so-called ed- ucated people who instigated the mob and sympathized with its deeds. Above ail I was horrified at the real culprit, name- ly, the Government, with its foolish, fa- natical priesthood and gang of robber of- ficials. The Kishenev crime was a con- | sequence of preaching lies and violence, | which the Government carries on with such stubborn energy. The Government’s relation to the affair is new proof of its rude egotism, hesitating at no atrocity | when it Is a question of crushing move- | ments regarded as dangerous, and is proof. of ity complete equanimity, which is like | that of the Turkish Government toward | the Armenian massacres, at the most hor- | rible atrocities, if only its interests re- | main untouched. T B POISON FOR JEW BABES. ‘Writer Alleges That Deadly Candy Is Given to Children. | NEW YORK, May 2..—In a letter to| Mr. Lispen of 637 East Ninth street, which | the Jewish Herald has received for pub- | lication, Lispen's nephew, writing from Kishenev, says that Russian children give to starving Hebrew children poisoned candy, which has caused many deaths. | He says also that poisoned cigarettes are placed where destitute Hebrews, craving for tobacco, which they cannot buy, will pick them up. —_————— Fire Threatens Sugar Manufactories. ST. PAUL, Minn., May 22, 2:15 a. m.— The Watrous Engine Company, on the west side levee, Is burning and the fire threatens to spread to the sugar manu- facturing establishments and the Robert street bridge. The loss will be heavy, fprice is Special Sale of Wash uits This morning we start a special sale of boys’ wash suits and the sale will last until the suits are all gone. Knowing our reputation for good merchandise at very low prices you may count on securing unusual values. The suits come in crash, mad- ras and pique in blue, pink and white; th2 garments are made up in sailor style, some plain, others trimmed; some with all white collars and others with half white; the ages range from 3 to 10years; the picture here shown will give you an idea of the suits; special 4OC ‘a suit Boys' knee pants in all-wool cheviots of mixed patterns; ages 3 to 16 years; 75¢ and $1.00 values for 50¢ a pair. “Mother’s Friend” percale shirt waists, latindered bosoms, separate cuffs, ages 8 to 14 years; $1.00 value for BOe. | Boys' pajamas, made of madras in neat stripes, at $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50. Boys’ night shirts, made of plain muslin, with fancy embroidered fronts, and also made of heavy twill muslin, at 50e. Children’s crash hats and $1.00. Boys’ felt hats in all 90e¢, $1.30 and $1.50. Boys’ straw hats and caps, 45¢. and caps at 45¢ colors and shapes, We fill mail orders. e TCusp SNWOOD (0 740 Market Street Wrrite for new catdogue..