The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 5, 1904, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THRONE ROOM RESPLENDENT, Sesiae” Violet and Gold Drapings Give Gorgeous Effect Where the Gay Prince Carnival Will Sit MARDI GRAS IS NEAR ——— Electrical and Color Magicians \re Making Amazing Ch Temple on the Hill in the arnival a drape ely lor scheme which is greenery, demand which rigid tors—and and Searles gal- been by the censorship as for Egyptians, bear- Egyptian god- president of the Mic en Massachu New York ace to in the nois makes an extremely poor ! list, De d Cleveland are the surpass all others in ters of the produc- the self-mat It seems odd New York and Chicago should lag d them so far. rs. ADVERTISEMENTS. Open Sores / can be cleaned out; the suppura- »n stopped, and a afre effected by the use of Hydrozone Only morbid matter is destroyed by this marvelous germicide, which ows Nature to build up healthy ue. Absolutely harmless. Used and endorsed by leading cians everywhere, Sold by leading druggists, or trial bottle sent, prepaid, on receipt of 25 cents. The genuine bears my signature on every bo Address PEEEVaissbic Bockict on Tow te Treat Dlsesses. | : Pleurisy Pneumonia | Consumption Positis cured with Dr. Hal- pruner’s Wonderful Medicine, or your money returned, Price, 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. For sale by all dealer$ and at office of Halpruner Medical Mfg. Co., 28 California St., S. F., sent by mail or express. People cured | free of charge from 1to 4 p. m. | daughter. | mains of Professor Alexander Fellner, ATTORNEY BANNING IS DEAD | | 3 iy e {end of the town to their cellars. The! | | SENATOR i1 H | damage done in this city was com-| : j_'}']MEE 5 ASSISTANT U. S. DIS- paratively small, however. | JQ/DIJVEE : i " ATTORNEY, WHO | ‘ | DIED SUDDENLY. | Y e Demise of Federal Officer e i | | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. ]7RiD_\\'. FEBRUARY 35, 190& CYCLONIC I LIFTS THE HOUSES Damaging Gale Strikes a Por-! tion of a Nevada City and Some of the People Run to' Their Cellars for Safety FEABCRILD |HOTEL 1S SWITCHED FROM THE FOUNDATION AN One Barn Is Turned Upside Down and Many Fences Are [DEMOCRAT . IS GIVEN | THE TOGA Commons LONDON, Feb. 4—John Morley an- nounced to-day in the Housé of Com- | intention to | February 8, his the address in repl; the throne, even if Premier Balfour | mons his were absent. Several questions were put with the | object of eliciting information regard- | Far Eastern situation, ing the BITTER ATTACK [PON BALFOLR | Liberal Member of House of Assails the Pre- mier and Joseph Chamberlain iBOER WAR HIS SUBJECT! — | | Charges Gross Mismanagement | | and Asks If Ministry Is; | Fit to Continue in Office; S ADVERTISEMENTS. | | | Champagne we 1215 i | s of Com- any other brand. al amendment to | to the speech from | | produced this decade. The Importations for the Year 1903 of G. H. MUMM & Co’s | GREATER by nearly 20,000 cases I than the imperiations of The Extra Dry of the superb new vintage now arriving is conceded to be the choicest Champagne CASES —_— the | | Wrecked, but the Total | Loss Is Not Very Large | f SR I | ! Special Dispatch to The Call. i } RENO, Nev., Feb. 4—This city was | visited by a small cyclone early this| | | morning. It aroused the populace from | | | slumber and drove many in the west The gale spent its fury at East Reno, the new railroad town two miles east of here, where the loss runs well into the hundreds. The Stone building, a | made, but insisted these were due io | hardiness of the Scotch race to an early an inadequate army system. Acting 7 and persistent diet of scones. “Only the with the machinery of those days, he | S{Tong survive,” says Mr. Ford; said, the Government did not stand | °ak choke to death in infanty. . 2 - | York Commercial Advertiser. condemned. It. must stand or fall by | SR ) B the report of the commission, which | ¥ s Austrian Gambling Scandal. discredited some of the evidence be-| ther gambling scandal is causing cause it was conflicting. | considerable sensation in Budapest so- Joseph Chamberlain, in defending | In two days’ play the son of a himself against Robson’s attack. Which | cqjthy landowner in_Southern Hun- he asserted was intended to hold him | gary recently lost 300,000 kronen ($62,- up to derision, traversed his usual|500) to a member of the Hungarian yargument. He declined to accept the | Diet, $37,500 being lost the first day individual responsibility for the South |and $25,000 on the second. The loser's steps taken to avert war and whether | { the Goveérnment alone, or in conjunc- | tion with the United States Govern- | ment, had pressed Russia to evacuate | Manchuria, etc., but the questions | | practically were without result. Earl Percy, Under Secretary of the Foreign Office, declared that, in view of the present state of the negotiations | between Russia and Japan, it would be manifestly improper to make any | observations on the situation. The British Government, he added, had made frequent representations in re- A ty ;. structure 70 by 30 feet and two stories : E —_— 2 | gard to the delay in the evacuation African war or its conduct, and said i ft:nmlé}“ |:$g:::rx,”x;r\;::i"‘mmxzzyl;h: : high, was torn from its foundation and | PR | of Manchuria. that peace was made impossible be- | 2MU~ o 3 Dneto Eating ' In- @ |or I PrEsR e together. The| | PROMINENT DEMOCRAT OF || Earl Percy confirmed the reports chtine B losdrtos tedn anatdh_ | SO T T T fected Meat | occupants had a narrow escape, barely | MARYLAND WHO .SUC- | |that the Russians had removed sev-|ance and was misled by the atitude of | court of honor, his debtor being @ lieu ¥ getting out before the walls collapsed. | CEEDS SENATOR McCOMAS. {eral of the employes of Sir Robert|the Britlsh parliamentary opposition|tenant in the reserves. The famiiy The proprietor was the last to leave ' s 35 i | | Hart, the Inspector General of Cus- | into believing that Great Britain was | thereupon offered to pay, provided a q the building and was slightly injured | * | toms and Posts in'China, from the na- | not in earnest. Regarding attacks on | court of arbitration decided against Edward I Banning, > : s s y S 1 e cautitne aifice. Al Navche 9y S a7 L A BT them. Such a tribunal was duly formed, United States Distr ¥ the fiying timbers. egislature of Maryland | ke g and|the “mew diplomacy.” Chamberlaifl |y ¢ on a medical witness testifying that b ek = : s The Wah Hoo Hotel was lifted from St T | had replaced them with Russian nomi- | held that it should be made perfectly | At T % WEF S 00 BCOR o (o onsible ey & at his residence, 663 Castro | g foundation and carried several feet Elects Isidore Rayner |nees. Representations, the Earl added, | clear in diplomacy what Great Britain | go” 1id'a tions at the time of playing street an illness of about one| eastward. There it collapsed and is a | S | had been made on the subject fo St.| wanted. the members of the court nomjnated by month cause of death being trich- | total loss. The U and I saloon w“i enator. il’e(ersburg. i bods SRS B R his family withdrew and the ceed - it is thought, to eating in- | moved nearly a foot from its former | | Robson (Liberal) moved an amend- | Two Meals Daily for Students. | ings thus f»‘!l through.—New Yori bear meat. | position, but can be repaired with little | x4 pOLIS, Md., Feb, i “;if;: to the i\“‘:rgss setting forth that| cgllege students have so long been o i s s S B y aning, with two friends, | 1088 Many structures in adlition '°| Marylana Legislat i a0t Do et T nre Tl ey | TeEmesiSad 48 e buns apbigaranted Nothing Flso Theke. partook of the bear meat at dinner one | (0S¢ named Were more or less dam- | Jar¥iand L "‘“‘”e to-day Isidore | £lon disclosed grave mismanagement |order of Oliver Twists that the action | ne smart frontier town was mak- bl his e JERISE Sl o aged. “ tayner of Baltimore, who was nomi- | and negligence on the part of the Gov- | of the University of Missouri students | ing an effort to secure a political con- rpadered in sequence. Bamnine | At this time the loss has not been|nated last night by the Democratic [ Tment during the South African war. | in demanding less to eat is worthy of | vention A i 1 ¢ n quence. anning, definitely stated, but is probably in the | Caucus, received the unanimous vote | IN & lengthy review of the prepara- | notice. The students say that by ox-i The editor of the local paper called however, did not respond to treatment | | iohhorhood of $2000. Upson's barn|of the Democratic majority and twas | tions for the earlier conduct of the | periment it has been learned they are | on one of the solid citizens and laid a and two days er eating the meat n the eastern part of the city was | eiected United States Senator to suc- | War, Robson severely criticized Premier | “in better health and spirits and better | gubscription paper before him. he was forced to remain in bed. He 2 e £ | ceed Louis E. MecCo 3 Balfour and Former Colonial Secretary | Prepared for hard mental work™ when| “How much do you feel like giving i Rl s James W. Wara | turned completely upside down. Joe|ceed Louis E. mas. The R : Se Y | eating only two meals a day. The col- | toward defraying the expenses of hold- but ended his Edward weaker until death B anning was but 31 years ieath. He was ty and was educated a Ignatius stitution he grad- J the time of his Attorney Marshall B. Woodwo: 5 Banning was very popular both in his professic and -in pri te life and ant eath will be learned of with deep regret by a host of friends. The deceased is survived by his mother and one gister, Mrs. Banning being principal of the Everett Grammar School and of the veteran teachers of San Francisco. The funeral of Attorney Banning will take place next Sunday from the Church of the H Redeemer and the interment will take place at Holy Cross Cemetery. his nely PROMINENT GINEER GONE. Captain Stevenson of Pacific Mail Company Dies at Livermore. LIVERMORE, Feb. 4 —Captain John nson, who was for thirty years chief engineer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, died this morning at his residence two miles south of| here from cancer of the throat. He was 68 years of age and up to three months ago was the head of the me- | chanical department of the big steam- ship company, a position of great trust. Captain Stevenson was a native of Liverpool. England, and came to this country early in life. In the early day of the white occupation of this coast | he was seized with a desire to make his fortune on this side of the continent and he entered the employ of the Pa-| cific Mail Steamship Company, then the greatest carrier of freight and pas- sengers on the Pacific Ocean. He made himself so valuable to the company that, St | he was soon made chief engineer, with headquarters in San Francisco, and wag given general supervision over all | of the vessels of the company plying[ on the Pacific Ocean. { Captain Stevenson became afflicted | with cancer of the throat, the same dis- | ease that attacked President Grant, | and just before the new year he was compelled to retire to his ranch near| this city. Death came quietly this| morning. | The deceased leaves & wife, Mrs. | Sarah Stevenson, three sons and one| The funeral will take place | Saturday in San Francisco under the| auspices of California Lodge No. 1,| of Masons, of which he was a member. He was also a member of the Knights | of Honor and the Marine Engineers’ | Association of the United States. B il el Passing of Professor Fellner. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 4.—The re-| who died at Santa Monica and who un- til ten years ago was one of the most famous teachers of music in the Mid- dle West, were brought to this eity to-day and after a brief service wore | cremated at Rosedale Cemetery, Professor Fellner dropped dead of apoplexy while he was entertaining a friend at his home in Santa Monica.| He had gone to the kitchen for some | refreshments. While returninz he | stumbled and fell and when assistance | reached him he wes dead. He ‘s the third of his immediate family to die in that manner. 2 Born in Budapest, Hungary, Alex- ander Fellner early began his musical studies and soon attracted attention to himself by his proficiency. He became a pupil of Marchesi and pursued the study of music, science and languages throughout Burope. He spoke seven janguages fluently and was a deep stu- dent in Latin, Greek and Hebrew. His greatest bid to fame was as the com- poser of oratorios and in his presenta- tion of “Pinafore” he made himseif a! sFences throughout ! PARTNERSHIP I { roll alleges | rad. who shot and killed A | was but recently finished. Nine yes ago he came to Los Angeles with Lis| | wife and two years ago they moved to Williame suffered considerable loss at his ranch w; of town. A large hay- stack containing 200 tons of choice al falfa hay was blown over and scattered over an area of a quarter of a mile. town suffered and of trees were strewn about branche: nd at this point attained a ve- ity of seventy miles an hour and at East Reno it was reported at ninety miles an ur. A welcome rain and snow sto followed the blizzard. PUTE DS IN A SHOOTING PORTLAND, Or., Feb. 3.—A dispute about the division of profits led to a shooting affray this morning in Car- roll’s candy store, the largest establish- ment of the kind in the city. Thomas Carroll, Jacob Dreyfus and E. E. Sutro, son of ex-Mayor Sutro of San Francis- co, are partners in the enterprise. Car- that Dreyfus and Sutro have not paid up all their stock, but nevertheless have been in the habit of entering the office every day and ab- stracting checks sent to the firm in the mail. Carroll went to the store early to-day and assumed charge of the office. When Dreyfus arrived he found Carroll in possession, and reproached Miss Marie O'Connor, the bookkeeper, for allowing Carroll to get hold of the mail. Caxroll ordered Dreyfus out of the office, where- upon Dreyfus drew a revolver and fired at him. Carroll dashed out of the front door and Dreyfus took a second shot at him without effect. Dreyfus was ar- rested. EN —_—e—————— Garrad Must Stand Trial for Murder. SANTA ROSA, Feb. 3.—Anderson Gar- J. McKin- non at Guerneville a few months ago and was afterward captured at Red Biuff, was taken to the Ukiah Asylum by Sheriff Grace Tuesday, but the au- thorities there refused to receive him nd gave him an official discharge. Sheriff Grace McKinnon and brought him baek to the jail here. Garrad was an escape from the asylum at the time the kill- ing occurred. e r——— Seeking Pasturage in Sonoma. SANTA ROSA, Feb. 3.—The prob- abilities are that a large number of cattle will be brought to Sonoma County from the southern part of the State, where the dry weather has made feed scarce. Many inquiries have been received during the past few days from southern stockmen asking for accom- modations. The feed here is in fine condition, as there has been plenty of rain. e e Beautify Your Home. “A room hung with pictures is a room hung with thoughts,” says Sir Joshua Reynolds. So in making a gift "tis well to remember this and present to your friends a lasting thought. Beautiful, new framed pictures are now being shown by Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Mar- ket st. 2 o name which long will live in the musi- cal world. For a number of years he lectured on musical and scientific 5111- jects and spent several years in the preparation of an elaborate work on “Astronomy and Mpythology,” which Santa Monica, where they had since resided. EDITOR OF PUCK IS DEAD. Adolph Schwarzmann Passes Away at His Home in New York. NEW YORK, Feb. 4.—Adolph Schwarzmann, one of the founders and editor in chief of Puck, died to- day of pneumonia. He was born m Germany in 1838, and came to this country after learning the printer's trade. With Joseph Keppler he found- ed Puck in 1876 and had since been at the head of the publication. —_—— School Teacher’s Sudden Death. OAKLAND, Feb. 4.—Miss L. J. ‘Winchester, 66 years of age, died sud- denly this afternoon at her residence, 3994 Telegraph avenue. Miss Win- chester was a teacher .ln the public schools. Coroner Merhmann has charge of the case. 5] immediately rearrested | publican minority voted unanimously for McComas. —_———— STANFORD STUDENTS HOLD FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY President Jordan and Dr. Harry B. | Reynolds, President of the Alumni, | Deliver Interesting Addresses. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Feb 3. | The first general assembly of the semester was held in Assembly Hall this morning. Dr. Harry B. Re; | nolds of San Francisco, president of | the Stanford Alumni Association, and | President Jordan addressed the stu-! dents. | President Jorden introduced Dr. | {Reynolds, who is a former Stanford | football plaver, as'a man who was | | while at Stanford “in the front in | | scholarship and in the back part of | | the field in football.” - Dr, Reynolds spoke of the improvements and | changes at the university since his | | @ay, and in speaking of the Stanford | | spirit, which, he stated, was the same ! |now as in the days of the pioneer | | class, he said: “If there is any one | message from the San Francisco | Alumni it is one of sincere, absolute, | unqualified approval. I advise you to keep in the same course you are go- ing. Continué your work after you { have begun until Stanford will be known as much by its undergraduate body as by its buildings, its architec- | | ture. | | President Jordan gave an interest- | | ing account of his recent trip East, | | touching on his visit to St. Louis, | |\\'hcre he addressed the meetings of | | the American Association for the Ad-: | | | vancement of Science and the Sigma Xi scientific fraternity, and his sojourn at Washington, D. C., where he ~con- | ferred with President Roosevelt with; | reference to seal and salmon ques- | { tions and other top: Speaking of President Roosevelt Dr. | | Jordan said: “He is a man of the| same sort all the way through—you | always know where he stands. The | prinicipal objections to him come from {the people who know where he| stands. (Laughter.) T was asked if | the West did not wish a ‘safer’ man as a candidate for President and my reply was ‘no.’ I habpened to share my section in_the car' coming from | New York to Nebraska with William | Jennings Bryan. and- had politics talked to me all the way out. I will not tell you what I learned.” (Laugh- T. 1 “te P)resldent Jordan also mentioned | the meeting called by John W. Foster to discuss a treaty of arbitration to be arranged between England and the United States. His idea was that there should be a high court of arbitration comprised of lawyers, who should deal with international disputes in the same manner that civil causes are, { dealt with under any good legal sys- | tem and decide the question after a careful investigation of facts and evi- dence. e ————— POSTAL AUTHORITIES | MAKE IMPORTANT ARREST Expose an Alleged S_wlmlle in Which [ United States Mails Were Being Used to Defraud. PORTLAND, Feb. 3.—C. Guy Wake- field and Ross Nicholls were to-day placed under arrest at the instance of the postal authorities on a charge of using the United States .mails in an attempt to defraud. Wakefield and Nicholls, it is charged, have until lateiy been the moving.spirits in a comcern known as the Order of Fraternal Home Buyers, which, it is charged, accepts installments of $15 monthly from per- sons desiring to erect a home on con- tracts which it is alleged are cleverly contrived so as never to mature. There are said to be about 1600 subscribers, mostly persons. of moderate means. —_———————— Mother Joins ‘Runaway Children. REDDING, Feb. 3.—The case of the children who ran away from Iron Mountain Monday morning has taken a peculiay turn. The runaway tric ere captured late last night at An- derson and brought to Redding. They told the officers that their father’s in- human treatment caused them to leave home. The mother arrived this morning from Iron Mountain with an- other child, saying she would join the runaways and -~ with them te Chico. | Her act, she says, is the result of the treatment given her by her husband While she was worrled. over the ab- | sence of their children. Shiz Chamberlain, and at the conclusion of ! his remarks asked if Ministers capable | of such conduct were fit to conduct|be carried to New Haven, where the the affairs of the nation. ,MacNamara (Radical) seconded the|tangular meals a day amendment. | lege authorities are therefore requested to cut out one meal.. The news should ing the conve | “I don’t tee | Yale students not only want three rec- but have re- | | cently set up a vulgar howl for “more | | pie!” Instead of pie the Yale steward | g “Why not?" will only benefit tion her 1 like giving anything.” replied the solid ‘What good will it do t he asked. itizen. he town? Tt the saloons and the Wyndham, Chief Secretary for/Ire-| Lo a try Seotch seones on the b | great Scott!” rejoined the land, in reply, defended the Govern- g, eminent an authority on dietetics as | “What else have we got ment. He admitted mistakes had been | Simeon Ford of this eity attributes the | Have You Started Your lvory City Portfolio? The Dainty and Instructive Repro- ductions in Color of Jhe JSt. Louis World’'s fair Portfolio Series Can be obtained ounly through The Sunday Call. Lnterprising, Aggres- sive and Substantial 'Greater San Francisco’s Greatest Daily offers its readers a feature that can be bound in portfolios, framed and in other ways preserved and handed down to future generations, commemorating one of the great events in the world’s history and the greatest of the new born twentieth century. the Back of Picture. The Palace of Education occupies enc of the most prominent places in the Exposition, and justly so, as this distinction is only consistent with the theory upon which the entire organization is based, viz.: that educa- tion is the source of all progress. From its inception the aim has been to select an educational exhibit that would be national in its scope, to present comprehensively and systematically the educational methods in vogue in this country and to assemble for comparison and sclentific study contributions from all for- structures. The Palace of Education is a rarely graceful structure of modern classic architecture, is surrounded by a majestic Corinthian colonnade. mvmmwuummmnnnmmnotmemm The brilliancy of the coloring, enlivened by a lagoon bordered by a balustrade ornamented with statuary, r pic}-ruwmwk-besoldlnporfldlotommgmw These future at prohibitive by P figures. You can obtain the full set for absolutely nothing THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL Cut Out This Descriptive Matter and Paste on’

Other pages from this issue: