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[ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY CORRESPONDENCE OF REYES AND HAY s IS MADE PUBLIC BY ;. Conmtinued From Page 1, Column 6.|ent. The former voted against TREATY yet had ti had been able to attend. ation of citi The United S tes, by ulations. he harbor d States control the p , Racon, SLIGHTLY AMENDED. relating to sanitation, direct power in all sani- The amendment con- mitation of cities more defines the limits of Pan- d Colon in reiation té the canal T! amendment gives|an amendment was still the| during the greater part of the present | treaty and Money said that he had not| session, the Panama canal treaty was me to consider it, as it was ting of the committee he The three amendments relate to san- and control | the is | port of the har- urposes of improvement. | time to present an amendment looking v at the meeting of the !to the stri id be disposed of and orting the treaty to Members of the he absentees | Clark and McCreary. were subject wo had to in POLICE- CHIEF IS NAMED IN A STORMY SESSION THE PRESIDENT e e S not reported until to-day. It had no sooner been reported favorably to the Senate in executive session than it be- ame the subject of heated contro- rsy. Senator Cullom made the re- n favor of the treaty, whereupon Senator Morgan, as a member of the committee, at once entered a formal protest against the acceptance of the report, on the ground that when the committee decided to report the treaty under com- hag not had sideration, and that he ing out of article 22 of the ment with a brief speech and was im- followed by Daniel with a ng against e policy il until | offered any | to present. declared that the f had been both ir and urged that be recommitted for Senator Daniel course of the shot d onsideration. ere made by Senators Cu Speaking tee on For- 'y had been in comm nth before i d that during the greater i Congress was not he had cziled the mittee to meet on t 2d of precipitancy being ommittee had given deration to all sug- mendments and had opted some of them. Votes of Board at Sacramento. - Senate ad notice that he would ask the Senat to take up the treaty tormorrow or disposed of, to = =3 éMartin Coffzy Wins the TWO MAIN QUESTIONS YET AT ISSUE IN THE RUSSO-JAPANESE IMBROGLIC Czar's Expressed Desire to Avert War in the Orient Places the Peace Party in the Ascendant in St. Petersburg and the Extensive Powers of Admiral Alexieff, the Far Eastern Viceroy, Have Been Curtailed ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 18.—The|po, reflecting on the conduct of the|nothking has been kept so closely Associated Press correspondent on high | American marine guard at the Korean | v 5 t ve the followi: capital, the officials here feel quite ::l?;:;y"‘;;?l:m:u:‘ of the nmd:‘- sure that the reports of boisterous be- | pli havi - | tions between Russia and Japan: d::x:r; on their part are without foun- | Russia recognizes Japan's predomi- in W as the possibiiity, which was to be ided at all hazards, of serious com- fons with the United States. The ratification of the China-American treaty may be sald to have cut the | sround from under Russia's feet, and ST rs Committee Senator|treaty, in which Panams renounces nance in Korea and Japan recognizes| THREE TRAINLOADS OF BEEF. | in the circumstances Russia had nota- motion, which was | her right to participation in the earn- | Russia’s special position in Manchuria. e ing to do but to acquiesce™ ng that at the next | ings of the canal when built. | | There are twc main questions still at| Cudahy Ships First Consignment of | The Czar in receiving the Ministers »mittee the pending| Morgan supported his written state- | issue—the Russian demand for a meu- in state at Tsarkoeselo on Sunday de- the Raussian “Rush™ Order. | clared. says the Daily Mail's St. Peters- OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 13.—Three trains | burg correspondent, that all danger of cars of extra |8 conflict was now ended. All of the speciai cablegrams from St. this morning’s that the tem- sion has been greatly relaxed: but, ac- cording to the correspondent of the Paris edition of the New York Herald, | there {s a strong feeling in official quar- ters in St. Petersburg against the gep- | resentativ both Great Britain and | the United States. arrived in South | Omaha last week. The work of pack- | ing the meat was hurried with all pos- Sible speed. T fifty-one cars of meat will roll into San Franc January and will'be loaded on a steamship, which will leava for the Orient on February The meat will | | tral zone upon the Korean side of the | | Yalu River, which Japan met with a| proposal for a similar strip on the Man- | numbering fifty-one churian side. Japan also asks for cer- tain guarantees coveriag Manchuria, | which Russia thus far has declined to! grant. It is pointed out. however, that| | the assurances given a few days ago by, | Russia regarding open ports in Man-; | churia and respeet for treaty rights Is| a2 concession on this peint i That the two countries not so far apart may be fairly from the | tollowing statement made by Kurine, | the Japanese Minister: “War would now only be disastrous to both countries. Owing to the geo- graphical situation armed confl would resuit in a great drain on the men and treasure of both Japan and Russia without being decisive. Besides | | beef are on their way to the Pacific | Coast from the Cudahy Packing plants | Petersburg published in in Omaha, Sioux City and Kansas City. | PADers confirm the bel Twenty-five of these cars started this afternoon from South Omaha, twenty- four from Kansas Cit £ and two from the Russian | assurances. The Standard’s Tokio eor- respondent says that anoth confer- | ence of the Elder Statesmen is about to be_summoned ¢ | I believe it would mot be worth whil®| pe taken to Porf Arthur instead of to | TBhe Daily Mail's Peking correspond- SACRAMENTAN WHO Was war on the questions still in| yiadivostok, as ¢ bor at the lat- | SNt reports the arrival in Manchuria ons most of the time | ELECTED POLICE CHIEF | 3 ter port is now nd. From Port | O¥ railway of four more Russian regi- that very careful| | = is a strong indication thal." Arthur the m be z-aupur:ei'm'““ and thinks that Russia intends toall the | | AFTER BITTER CONTEST. through the Czar's personal acts, the| s in Manchu- | {0 Wait until she has 300,000 men avail- peace party is completely in the as- able. dant. Bezobrazoff, the head of the war party, has gone abread: Foreign linister Lamsdorff, who from the-be- | ginning has favored peace, is now com- pletely rehabilitated, and Vieeroy Alex- ieff has been made subservient to the | Foreign Office in the Russo-Japanese | negotiations. His extensive powers ar curtailed and he ean make no move without the Czar’s personal approval.| In fact the fresh assurance conveved ria and Siberia. e CREDITS PEACE TO AMERICA. it CALLS FOR MORE MARINES. S 13 Correspondent Explains Russia’s Sud- | \Merican Minister to Korea Sends Re- quest for Reinforcements. den Chanze of Attitude. LONDON, Jan. 19.—A Russian cor-| WASHINGTON. Jan. 18.—Minister at Seoul. Korea, has made a re- respondent of the es comments on | the extfeme significance of the fact of the State Department that the ion guard be increased. The Min- that\the Czar’s New Year's peace mes- lega Senate Foreign Relations Commi 7 to the ex- through Embassador Cassini to the|sage became known in St. Petersburg | ISter's request has been ed to the s s g authorities in Washington of the recog- hrough the retransmission from | N2Vy Department. which is consider- - . Alterations. nition of the rights acquired by the|D k of the Associated Press dis- | [N® means of sending more marines Bennington Reaches Panama. Trustees Ing, Farley, Tibbets and from Cavite to « e aboGt a ulpo. It will re- to reinforce the Chinese treaty is largely attributed go! Count Lamsdorff’s influene Diplo- | patch from St. Petersburg. which con- tained the Czar’s exact words, not only 13 o ¢ =% . | Fi o i . o K 0. a ne: i t | present guard. M = and Danlel Atteupt %o WASHINGTON, Jan. 18.—The United a stormy session of the | matic circies regard Count ansd?rt'_ls to Kurin: the ‘Jasa. 'se SIzn:ster. but | P Ly orza; . . Pre. t at Panama has been aug- Board of Trustees to-might w by | conduct of the negotiations under the, to the other diplomats assembled at the T o vent Consideration of Treaty. the zunboat Bennington and ~r;- i 'Tm's':efis Popert, Black, | C327'S direction as & very hopefui sign. | w paiace. The correspondent says Fears a Rising of Koreans. 0 pedo-boat destroyers Preble and | ooy, Meboen - and. Carragher, | Another strong influerice on the side| “Such a message could be published | SEOUL, Jan. 15.—The Government ones, which have arrived there | Callahan, McEwe % "eT: | of peace has been the attitude of in Russia only with the special per- | geclares the reports of disturbances on s Martin Coffey was declared chief. | Witte, president of the Council ozl mission of the Government, and it In- | 1% northern frontiers to be unfound. State, whe bas been bending his ener- | dicates an aspect of the sittion which 5 ——¥ | Elkus voted to confirmation and | gles toward avoiding a conflict. has a great deal more to do with Rus- i ,,: [:‘eum;"m;:,é‘;g: e \\' l L ~ 1 retain the incumbent, John E. Sulli-| R — { "Ad!e Dg'-‘f\{ attitude than is generally | > — 5 | Criticism of Marines Unfounded. by h A | van. 3 2 i mE = { The cor ndent, goes on to say: [ Czarina Has Recoveved. “ HEREROS | OFF[([:\L (:‘,\LL | Trustee Ing gave notice of a motion WASHINGTON. Jan. 18.—As no| “Nothing surprised the Russians so| ST. PETERSBURG. Jan. 13.—The same time declar- to reconsider, at mention is made in official dispatches | much 4 g the past year as the great | Czar and Czarina w return to St. Pe- cr r ing that the inauguration of Cof- |received by either the State or Navy | alteration in _the sentiments of the|tersburg this week. The Czarina has 3\ [« | | fev meant turning over the town |departments from Seoul and Chemul-| American people toward Russia, and |recovered from her indisposition. ) | ! to the gamblers. He asserted that Cof- | HERS % i 4 4 fey was the of Bart Cava-| 2 ! R Rt @® | naugh, a & n and former gl Rushing Marines to pooiroom cwner Chairman Jones Summons the! to the defense of Coffey. saying he had equal protection of the laws in viola of the fourteenth amendment of t constitution of the United Stat NEGROES MAY Sopt Afri > p— e . “ 2 s s to Pat Down N and good citizen. | I f Nati Notional Couvetttion te Mect} Magy have regarded the contest for | 3 v TN prpy | 2cUen of the Lagistature. troagh the a esurrection of Natives i St. Lonis hief | invoiving the proposition ! | courts _ b Che enseuites - in 0 losls, e duly G “hether Sacramento should remain & lS DISC L SS D | DO [ R\ D[ Tl T e . “closed” town eor .whether it would J AR S e i o permit prohibited games to run. Cof- | arrive at fey, however,Mdsclarcs he shall strictly | HAS BECOME EFFECTIVE :.\'E" FREIGHT TARIFF aforce the State and sity laws. but| Army Offi ivilians € of the Democratic Na- | that he shall be giided By ins!mcflons‘ ¥ cers and € | Lional Convention in St. Louis on July | from the Mayor lng‘%a::lrld of Tm:?ees? Join in Debate at Unitarian | next hether he s ow gambling | . : i i = bl T = Club’s Annual Ladies’ Night | t Supreme Court Deelares That | Colored Men Must Not Be| Barred on Aeceount of Raee| Moreoyer, 2300 would reach Schedule Increases the Westbound Rates on More Than One Hun- dred Different Commodities. The new westbound freight tariff. to go during the State Fair season. Coffey was appointed a week ago by | Mayor Hassett to succeed Chief Sulli- | | The thirteenth annual ladies’ night| van, who received his appointment WASHINGTON, Jan. 18.—The United | 2d0Dted several months ago by the < from former Mayor Ciark. of the Unitarian Club of California was | States Supreme Court again to-day re- | W oStern rafiroads and which changes e i 2 B | celebrated last evening at the Palace!affirmed the ruling made in the case of | th® raie on about 120 different com- WILL GIVE McKINNON MEMORIAL ENTERTAINMENT Hotei by a banquet and debate. The long tables in the Maple room were Carter vs. the State:of Texa: to the | modities, went inte effect yesterday. ffect that the exclusion of | <| The inauguration of the new rates zer e profusely decked with pink carnations. | from Grand Juries in cases | Is expected to be followed shortly by ot - ONE FATALLY INJURED | League of the Cross Cadets and Com- | while the decorations of those in the|criminal charges against m the adoption of an increased tariff on # v » e S g o pany From the st Infantry | arble room were of white narcissus. | their race, in violation o eastbound freight, although no det- rs - e The McKinnon memorial entertain- the pros and | - ~ - < Esception of a Cripple—Work- ment will be Beid at the MesneoiD-|cons of which were ably handled and | Holmes in the cas: Se; of the = man is Missing. e . listened to by the au- | Alabama named origina Lt Pavilion Thursday night. An excellent B b e St e e Eizght Hundred Pupils Escape With LEST YOU FORGET Will Participate. programme has been arranged. It will on and has called a meeting that comm Osborne, Wyoming, s A their military skill. Red Bluft, is at Grand. | Simon Wile, a manufacturer of Cin- cinnati. s at the California. Attorney Frank Freeman and wife of Willows are staying at the Lick. A. J. Uphus, a prominent busfness | man of Everett. is at the Grand. —_—————————— W HAVEN, ., Cepn.. Jan ight completely wrecied owned by Miss Hannah Banner DE. PIERCE'S REMED be divided into three parts. One hour! vice at Manila, will give exhibitions Gfi inite date has yet been set for a con- | sideration of the advances. The subject chosen for discussion was | “The Future of War,” stitution and therefore not p The decision was dei | composed en liam Hudson began the | from which it g ,_,‘\(‘]"‘"" e for February 2 next | will be given to music, another to a | debate and expressed his views on the | negroes were excluded because of & m. in the So military exhibition and the rest of the | subject in a clear and concise manner, | color. The Supreme Court of the State evening to dancing. and paved the way for the other|upheid the regularity of the proceed- | g e S The band concert will be at 7:33 speechmakers of the evening. _Hon.|iigs. but Rogers brought it to the Fed- | = " Viee chairman eeoumesam J. |p. m. The League of the Cross and Warren Qiney, Mayor of Uakland. was | eral court on a writ of err Ade. Dut 16 what extent. i Guffey. Pemnsylv o Jcm.- J. M. | the First Infantry bands will partici- | very much at home with the subject in | result that the deck of 2 matter for speculation. v hx}an- i Campau, | pate. The different companies of the | question. He said in part: | rersed and the A S ——— G. ;‘Jl:rsf;n- Ka ack, New York; J.|cadets will go through a series of miii- | “I know what war Is because I have | State courts for further | (in her iatest dress from Paris) > sy - !_onns, John R. McLean, | tary maneuvers. and Company A of the -seen it. War is said to be heil. During | proceedings, not inconsistent with to- —Harry, what's the difference between Oh . Head, Tennessee; Johr E. | First Infantry, which saw active ser- |the last twenty-five years from our | day’s opinion. a “gcwn” and a “creation”? Harry—I religious standpoint we have abolished ! ! The opinion was based on the Carter hell. and in the next twenty-five years | t give the exact fgures, but it's a case, in which it was heid that Ii fortune.—Punch. | PERSONAL. A £00d time is assured by the com. | we hope to abolish war. War is crueity | exclusion of all persons of the African ! mittee in charge of the affair and all | and a weight on humanity. | race from a Grand Jury which finds an | - { _C. E. Turkham, a lumberman of who attend will b= well pleased. | “If we keep on progressing as weiindlctmem against a negro in a State| Y2IOUth. England, exported over court. when they are excluded solely 000 barrels of cured h are progressing now war will b—comeK because of race or color, denies him ' Continent during the last obsolete within the next twenty-five { Years. Improvements haye been made | | in spite of war, but war has been an incubus on improvements. The time is not far off when all the nations of the | earth will be joined together. - “Dueling is a relic of barbarism, and | ADVERTISEMENTS. | | 4 - r r Mark L. McDonald, a ‘ez i { We Remind You of Our Santa Rosa, is at ':hadO:cif:l‘e_a‘.l.xs‘ ofi e i:'g;::!bwarbflflzx:g‘s:l& Wli!!ltsr!;st ::[1(‘52[ 2 e e DOUEietae: ok Eoyce | SN 59 : BPP | h reason that we are actacked, but | Overcoat Sa el > O /0 R cide i ? | intrs : = e J. D. Wood, president of the Stock | % - SbEchaeembade s n Special Lines now going on. You can’t fford to miss it - - E - E 0id Price New Price Growers’ Association of Utah, is at the | Palace. J” S. Nobie, former superintendent of | the Southern Pacific Company at Og- | den, { The above will: cheerfully be paid in lawful money of the United States, by tie undersigaed, proprietors of Dr. Piatce’s Golden Med- s at ape Gran urckhaiter and C. A. Ocker. | ia, arrived at the | erday. ' Tniz ¥ | ple.” H | General Charles A. Woodruff fol- lowed. In his opening remarks he paid | a noble tribute to the womanhooed of | \-this country, and =aid in part: : | “Whenever we had been engaged in | | strife the women have suffered equaliy | with the men, and have Dbeen ready to make any and every sacrifice for | in Hats ior $1.00 T. B Gl-bbrm. auditor of the Clark | ical Discovery, they can- | the national honor. We ha 4 < 7 - ived from Los Angeles yester- notshow the original signa- | “Out of the 2,600,000 men engaged in y' v rrange s $10.00 OVERCOATS. -$ 8.50 day and Is staying at the Palace. tare o the sulifeaiient wetautccrion the ics- | the Civil War the Jots in Jilled, and ~ o st - $12.50 OVERCOATS..$ 9.75 $15.00 OVERCOATS..$12.00 $20.00 OVERCOATS..$16.00 J. A. Spoar, president of the Chi- cago Stock Yards Company, and the members of his family are at the Pal- timonial below, and al=o of everyr testimgo- nial among tae thousands which they are comstaatly publishing attesting the superior curative proj of their scveral medi- cizes, aad g’;’afln the genuineness C. White and P. J. Spencer, stock- with a large hat factory whereby we can sell 2 $1.75 hat for $1.00. We have agreed to take the hats in an immense those that died from wounds amcunted to but 110.600. Future wars will be ex- | pensive in money only. “The last Consr appropriated | more morey for the use of West Point | Military Academy than any twenty - of Denver, who ha = - | and nliamflfi:e maultitude of testi- s € ] " e e e o ot Portian, eriend. | mosiate By gzatefal people, in | preceding Congresses had done. Amonz | quantity direct from the fac £25.00 OVERCOATS.) at the Grand yesterday. ’ their beBalf - : | the list of names of those that are | tory, so we purchase at 2 good p-Yo 2 £ -4 James IE. MePprians of Denves Wozrp's DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSO- | most highly reversd throushout the | rice. This, together with a <7 —0 O\ERCO f\TS ’52' -00 ! manager of the Western office of the | CTATION, Propietors, Buffalo, N. Y. | world are the names of Grant and Me- | P! - 1S, Py o 22/) t ) Pinkerion agency, arrived In this city | -;Ln_o!.’:hm'u;& m | R 'w‘Tg?A Ay, aive both profes- | :s osteo n:llix:g e:e P “hau o= < / yesterday on a tour eof inspection. | equal to Pierce’ = g} - ;P $30.00 OVERCOATS..$25.00 it i ! s e el D | S Remember the” words of Washing- : i good DIV ‘ .- . Colonel Camillo Lauterback of | covery, for punfying carries cithi . ’ | Dreden, who ‘has been. traveling in ol ghe In times of peace prepare for [ 2 price within every one’s ! South America, arrived here yester- fuid. reach. ( Sizes o0 fit everybody. ROOS BROS. | day and is registered at the Occiden- tal > —_———————— Californians in New York. ! NEW YORK, Jan. 18.—The fol- | $o give found that this same quality | lowing Callioraiass re_hers: - From '-_Fm e e e s oo | hat - was ‘selling in onc - store San Francisco—Dr. Bradstreet, at the About a 1 3 —-— St. Denis; O. M. Brenner, at the Im- | toac B e e e e e T here in San Francisco for $1.75. th R perial; E. A. Gilbert, at the Manhat- | Woresster. speeches were enthusias_ || i1 2nother at $1.85 and in still tan; B. J. éo.;md "itle,';:L;e Mari- | gghiog tically applauded. another at $2.00. borough; G. Kugan, a ork; J.! were 5 5 W. Leavitt, at the Manhattan: F. Les, | mes » speed of electricity unobstructed The_hats are in our win- at the Holland: C. M. Lee. at the Park | ical Discovery. is that of light, on conduct: it is, 8 dows—see the quality for your- Py S R T e S ers, at t : ", Al < 'S - m;ost:era!::; i\‘i Oihnclnd:ug, -a“_-. blu.fl-nseee«;'hw;.'et'h : t the 5 rs. A. C. Cool at _complete. falls to 62,300 iron. trans- m | he Herald Square; G. W. Phelps, at | couy oceanie cables it is much less orders filled—writs us %4 at England alone the volume | = e T S e o el SN'WOOD §(0- ! From Los Angeles—R. R. Foster, at | Common um:—nm‘;—amfl-[ ork l 2 the Criterion; T. McCarthy, at the | of 1008 pages umum-l-—fl-:. 7 Weekly Call, $t ear | Your grocer’s; moneyback. mmw—mmnmm maru‘actures and 13 times s fast as pgr St. Denis. I Maix Street, population. They come in soit and stiff shapes, in black and colors. By actual comparison we