The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 19, 1904, Page 3

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FORTIFICATION BILL PASSES Democratic Members of House Objeet to Using Part of Ap- Philippines propriation in '0 AMEND MEASURE - 1 1 MOVE Spirited Discussion Follows and the Minority 1s Defeated by a Striet arty Vote sum neces- he islands llowed, nority the vote e of lowa e House amendment atus of AMENDMENT. ppi t FIGHT FOR rtificat opposition was did not want duty of this 108 are un- The States il aval sta- of 80 to 32, the the minority Robenson lotments of with vithout amend- wit House adjourned —e SPOONER GIVES HIS VIEWS. senator From Wisconsin Discusses the Panama Question. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18.—The Pan- question a was the St the Senate and omcicungy 22 spoke on that ter portion sof scussed many sustaining the Hut 4!r>!~a(el THE SAN FRANCI SCO CALL, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1904. WIDOW FINDS * THE MURDERER Kate Duffy of Brooklyn Captures a Man Who Is Said to Have Killed Her Husband LONG SEARCH IS ENDED | AP | Successfully Continues Her Work After the Police and | Detectives Abandon the Case | —_——— } VEW YORK, Feb. 18.—After an un- | mitting search of nearly seven| wecks, during which she has walked | day and night on the Bowery, spent hc s i avory resorts and exhaust- in uns ed every resource of a skilled detective, < Duffy of Brooklyn to-day >d the arrest of a man who is ac- ed of being her hdsband's murderer. ard Duffy, her husband, was fatal- tabbed on the night of January 1 in front of a Bowery resort, and before | his death said that the wounds had been inflicted by Charles Devuno. The police used every effort to capture De- vuno, but in spite of a full description | given by Duffy were unable to do so. His wife, however, undiscouraged, kept | up the search without remission. She | patrolled the Bowery, visited haunts | Devuno was wont to frequent, shad- owed his friends and even watched railroad stations and steamship plers in her attempt to find him. Last night | she saw the man enter a hotel on the Bowery and notified the police, who ar- | rested Devuno after a struggle. He| had been in Pittsburg since the mur- | der, it is said. Devuno, who, with Duffy, is said to have been prominent | In the “gang” life on the lower East Side, was arraigned to-day. —_—— UNIVERSITY DELEGAT! MEET IN CONFERENCE Fourteen Seats of Learning Repre- sented at Gathering Held at New Haven, Conn. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb. 18— Representatives of fourteen \mi\'ers!-1 to-day for the sixth | erence under the auspices | ation of American Univer- | formal opening of the conference was preceded by a comp! .\ mentary luncheon given by Yale in | honor of the delegates in the corpora- | tion m of Woodbridge Hall ites listened to a Columbia University on the | of university statistics as | lime d expenditures. | es include Leland Stanford | Jr. University, F ent Jordan and | Instructor A. H. Suzzalo; University | President Wheeler, Pro- E of Califc "kwell f and Irving | — OVERDUE FOUR-MASTE Is X TOWED INTO PORT Ship Juteopolis From Philippines Reaches New York After Bauling With Elements for Ten Months. NEW Y b. 18.—Five months over from lloilo, P. I, and for a en up for lost, the four- Juteopolis was towed into | With her crew com- by the ten months’ rupted storms on tow here from when in d to anchor | wintry gales five the from Iloilo on ago, with a “hing Honolulu 1. A seaman was | lock when the ship r bl President throughout | resulting the es- | the republic of Pan- terrupted frequently ma. Tillman moved to | of course the dings of | day i vote of last Monday | > bill to grant $150,000 to ormer Queen Liliuo; ani was de- feated, but further consideration of the matter was not pressed at the ime. TAKES FAVORABLE ACTION. Senate Committee on Commerce Pass- | es on Nomination of Cram. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18.—The Sen- | ate Committee Commerce to-day | authorized a favorable report on the | nomination of William D. Crum to be | on collector of customs at the port of Charleston, S. C. Some members of | the committee were not present, but there was a sufficient number of af- firmative votes to insure favorable ac- | tion should all of the absentees have | their votes recorded | ination. against the nom- i | people passed the flower-covered cas- | ing for more than five squares, waiting | for | than had been generally expected. For | the train THOLSANDS VIEW BoDY IF HANA Remains of Dead Senator Now Lie in State Upon Catafalque | in Auditorium of the Cleve- land Chamber of Commerce e BANKS OF FLOWERS SURROUND THE CASKET Price and Quality The Quality Is Better Than the Price Would Indicate As a rule the price of an article denotes its quality. This is a law of commerce. But occasionally an article is really under- i T Crowds Gather in the Streets| in the Face of a Blinding | Snowstorm to Await the Ar-} rival of the Funeral Party e CLEVELAND, Feb. 18.—The mortal | remains of Senator Marcus A. Hanna now lie in state upon a shrouded cata- | falque in the auditorium of the Cham- ber of Commerce. where they were taken immediately upon their arrival here to-day from Washington. The catafalque is surrounded hy a veri- table garden of fi s and guarded by a detail of soldivrs from the State militia. From 1:30 o’clock this after- noon until 9:30 to-night fully 30,000 ket and took a last look upon the fea- | tures of the dead statesman. With snow blowing into their faces and a cold wind chilling them through, thousands upon thousands of people stood for hours in a double line stretch- an opportunity to pass into the building where lay the remains. Al- though the crowd was passing into the 'auditorium at the rate of more than sixty a minute, the line grew | rapidly and when at 9:30 o’clock the doors were closed for the night, there were still several thousand persons who had walted patiently, but were com- pelled to return home disappointed. The funeral train bearing the body of the dead Senator and the members | of his family arrived in Cleveland dur- | ing a driving storm. A large crowd | had assembled about the Pennsyl- | vania’s Euclid-avenue station, not-| withstanding the fact that the train | arrived more than a half hour earlier | a square in all directions from the cor- ner of Euclid and Wilson avenues, | where the station is located, there was a mass of humanity. The people stood | patiently, not complaining of the cold, and gave the police little trouble. The station grounds were surrounded by a iple cordon of police and none save those entitled to be there was allowed to enter either the grounds or the sta- tion. priced. This sale is one of these exceptions. The suits and overcoats which we are sell- ing for $8.65 have actuaily been reduced from $12.50. Previous to the sale the garments sold for $12.50 and were good values at the price. Our reason for the reduction is this. Feb- ruary is apt to be a dull month. To keep up the aggregate of sales we have made this reduction. If in need of a suit or overcoat why not take a look at the goods anyway. The quality is better than the price would indicate. | The suits are single and double breasted garments in blue serges, black cheviots and fancy worsteds in olive and brown effects. The picture shows the single breasted style. Some of the overcoats are black and blue cheviots forty-five inches long; some are rough mixed cheviot garments fifty inches long with belts in back:; and others are top coats in tan coverts and mixed cheviots. Any of these garments is $8.65. —_— Mail orders for these garments will be filled—state preference of pattern and size desired. Please address Department L. SNWO0D 5D 740 Market Strect < SAETCHED= FROM LI CONDOLENCES_OF ALL OHIO. At Salem members of Governor Her- | rick's staff joined the funeral party, | of which the Governor had been a mem- | ber from Washington. When the mer rs of his staff had joined him at S em, near the State line, Governor Her- rick, in the name of the commonwealth, | extended to the bereaved family the | condolence of all Ohio. | When the train came to a stop (hel first person to leave it was Governor | Herrick, who was followed by his staff. The Chamber of Commerce committee P alighted, followed by the mem- | bers of the funeral party. The family | and immediate friends, who occupied | the private car, were the last to lt‘a\'e“ completely covered with | taken from the car| station and deposited in Troop A, which will act as escort to-morrow, was at the station when the train arrived. | When . the casket had been placed | in the funeral car and the | members of the committee and friends | had been assigned carriages the cor- | tege, headed by a platoon of police | and followed by Troop A on black | horses, moved to the Chamber of Com- | merce building, where the body is to | lie in state until Friday noon. All along the line of march the reverence, respect and love felt for the dead Sen- | ator were shown. Men stood with bared | heads in an almost blinding snowstorm | while the cortege passed, and many | eyes were filled with tears. A bugle announced the arrival of the cortege at the entrance of the Chamber of Com- The ca: flowers, was through the the funeral car. t, ! merce, and the battalion of engineers, | which lined the entrances and exits to the chamber, was drawn up at “at- tention.” The casket was borne through the ranks of soldiers and | placed upon the bier. In the entrance | to the hall the pallbearers, with their burden, were followed by the mem- bers of Governor Herrick’s staff, and, | taking up the rear, the citizens’' com mittee of the Chamber of Commerce and the exchanges. The top of the| cagket was removed and the face of | the dead Senator exposed to the gaze | diameter, presented by the office em- | of carnations, of those friends who knew him best. ELABORATE FLORAL TRIBUTES. The chamber where the body now lies in state appropriately set for the occcasion. From the four large chandeliers there is a huge canopy of black. From a black and white rosette in the center four white strtamers ex- tend to the éorners of the canopy and round the entire hall. Near the ceil- ing is hung a wide black border. From this, at frequent intervals, are hung black and white streamers, reaching | LOSES FOUTING - AND IS KILLED | Colonel Bruback, a Prominent Railroad Man, Falls Into the Winze of a Park City Mine p—— Special Dispatch to The Call. SALT LAKE, Feb. 18.—Colonel Theo- dore Bruback, a prominent railroad | promoter and mining magnate, met death this afternoon in the Anchor tun- nel of the Daly-Judge mine at Park i City, in which he was heavily interest- | ed as a stockholder. 3 Colonel Bruback weent to Park City this morning to inspect the various workings of the Daly-Judge and was accompanied through the tunnel! by Superintendent McSorley. Bruback wanted to follow an uprise in the tun- nel, but was warned that there was danger of falling into a winze below if he attempted it. He persisted, how- ever, and fell a distance of twenty feet. He struck on his head on the rocks and his neck was broken. The body was brought to this city on a special train to-night. Colonel Bruback was one of the best known men in Utah. He was president of the San Pete Valley Railroad and was heavily interested in other enter- prises, notably copper coal, gold and silver mining properties. He also | owned large stone quarries and was reputed to be worth several millions. He was 45 years old. He leaves a wife and three children. o L o The train is composed of two compart- ment cars, three sleepers, one diner and a library smoking baggage car. to the floor. Beneath the canopy stands the catafalque upon which rested the remains of President McKinley at Can- As lifeleng friends and compan- that the ton. ions, it was thought fitting same bier should be use Hanna that did servic McKinley. The floral tributes wer most elaborate since the funeral of the late President McKinley. A whole car- oad of offerings from Washington offi- cials and friends accompanied the fu- neral train. They include a beautiful wreath from President Roosevelt. Here already were tributes in rich profusion from societies and friends in Senator Hanna's own city. A great wreath, fully five feet in ployes of the M. A. Hanna Company, is an imposing piece, while a large let- ter, likewise constructed of flowers, ad- dressed to “M. A. Hanna,” and bearing the postmark “Washington, D. 140 p. m., February 15, 1904 occupies a prominent place on the platform back of the bier. This last offering was from the postal clerks of Cleveland. A gi- gantic G. A. R. badge, built principally was sent by Memorial Post, No. 141,.G. A. R. DEATH PALLOR IS UNUSUAL. Of the entirg collection one of the most strikingly beautiful was a broken floral column, a tribute from the Union National Bank of this city, of which Senator Hanna was president. This piece stands six feet high and is built entirely of pink carnations with a base of ferns and vines. It is placed im- Hundreds of smaller pieces have been mediately at the head of the casket. | The committee making the journey is as follows: + President, C. H. Taylor Jr. of the | Boston Globe; vice president, 8. S. Rogers, Chicago News; secretary, W | €. Bryant, Brooklyn Times: treasurer, 21 vy Edward P. Call. New Yo Mail and l 0 FlGHT TR T l i g i £ SIS B | | BROTHER OF M¢KINLEY ey | REPORTED SERIOUSLY TLL { Famine Exists in White Paper, Late President’s Relative Suffers From Nervous Exbaustion and There Due to Monoply Held by! Is oo of Boith. g ¥ i i | JOHNSTOWN. Pa., Feb. 1S.—Abner Manufacturers Lombluatlon‘ s o the Nt Tres i | dent, who kas been suffering from ner- - .| vous exhaustion, is reported worse at NEW YORK, Feb. 18.—At a meeting | ;i symmer home in Somerset, and is of the American Newspaper Publishers’ ' .onfined to his room. Dr. Hermanus Association held to-day the famine in | Baer, his son-in-law, arrived to-day white paper was discussed and the fol- | in response to a message, and his sis- lowing resolution, introduced by Con- e McKinley of Cleveland, dee Hamlin of the St. Paul Pioneer| — Press was unanimously adopted: “That the American Newspaper Pui lishers’ Association requests the Pres dent of the United States and the At- torney General to proceed against any | of the three paper combinations to test | the legality of their existence and whether they do not stifle competition.” | A committee was then appointed to | carry out the suggestion that an agita- | tion be inaugurated to reduce the du- | ties on pulp and paper. | During the discussion, prior to the | adoption of the resolution, Don Seitz and John Norris, business managers of the New York World and Times, re- spectively, addressed the association, advocating the adoption of the resolu- | tion and attacked the methods of the International Paper Company. On behalf of the World Mr. Seitz of- fered $10,000 toward a fund to carry on a national agitation for the removai of the duty on wood pulp for papermak- ing, claiming that this step was neces- sary for the welfare of the newspapers in_this country. Mr. Seitz said that the paper situa- tion in the United States is steadily growing worse, the drouth of the last three or four months emphasizing the predicament of the news paper through the operation of the International Pa Great Auction Sale of RUGS Continues to-day. It is a great event for those who appreciate Art in Rugs. The Sale 1s being conducted in the Maple and Marble Rooms of the PALACE HOTEL There will be only One Sale To-Day received from clubs and Individuals,| Senators Feraker, Perkins, Warren. Fair-| DeF Company. The company, he said, at 1:30 m 5 =~ b both in Cleveland and from abroad. bane TR e et Beveridge. | Kittriage, | CCRtrolling every factor of the. paper | - . . The Senatof¥lanna seen by the thou- | Cockrsll, Bacon, Martin, McEnery and Wet- g‘v_::m‘s! i‘r'lgulsltcrlauru:l:i.nén;tead "»r,“m- | And only one_sale to-morrow : o more. L ccumulating b : H sands who filed past the bier was far | ™Representatives Grosvenor, Van Voorhis, | 5 reserve stock for emergencies, delibe (Saturday), in the | different from the Senator Hanna fa- miliar to Clevelanders in life. The face was thin and drawn, bearing plain tes- Southard, Morgan, Beidler, Cassingham, Hilde- brand, Kyle, Sncok, Nevin, Warnock, Garber, Jo-bel, Jackson, Kennedy, Longworth, Weem: at 7:30. EASTON, ELDRIDGE & CO., erately set out to restrict the output of printing paper in order to secure B Lucking, Wiley, Dalzell. ' Watson, timony to the sufferings that he had };.a.w:“ ni,"n:: ‘sn.rmm_ Rodenberg, Mc- co;;f:f,:; ff:'ég:t;oe';rzfofiis";:{;’:;,ce Auctioneers. undergone. The hands crossed upon | Cleary, Hemenway and Calderhead. he said, it had not put in a single new | the chest and visible through the cas-| Secretary of War Taft, Secretary of | nachine, had reduced its output of | { ket front were thin to emaciation. The | Agriculture Wilson, Secretary of Com- | newg paper at least 300 tons per day ¢ death pallor was unusual. merce and Labor Cortelyou and Com- | onq had perfected arrangements with At 9:30 o'clock to-night Memorial | missioner . of Corporations Garfield NO ICE ut our STETSON hats are here at last, all the same. . Were ice-bound on the way---that’s why they’re a little late—-but here in time for you to get one of the new shapes. block is waiting for you. It’s he L Remember it’s a STETSON ROOS BROS. KEARNY AT . POST Your re at $4.00 Post, G. A. R., of which Senator Hanna avas a member, marched to the Cham- | ber of Commerce in a body and in the presence of their dead comrade con- ducted the ritualistic funeral service of their organization. After the serv- ice the hall was closed, members of Troop A remaining to guard the body during the night. Upon the request of many friends of the Hanna family Bishop Leonard will deliver a short eulogistic address at the conclusion of the regular funeral services to-morrow upon the life of ! the dead statesman. Bishop Leonard will be assisted in the ‘services by Rev. William M. Pierce, president of Ken- yon College at Gambier; Rev. Dr. Mc- Grew of St. Paul's and Rev."A. H. Jones of St. John's Church, this city, of which Mr. Hanna was a vestryman. At the close of the services at the church the body will be conveyed to Lakeview Cemetery and after a brief | burial service in Wade mortuary chapel will be placed temporarily in the Wade vault, it not having yet been decided where the body shall finally be interred. PSS WILL ATTEND FUNERAL. Senators and Congressmen Leave ‘Washington on Special Train. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18.—The spe- cial train bearing the.- Congressional committee to Clevéland, where they will attend the funeral of Senator Hanna to-morrow, left the Pennsyl- vania station at 6 o'clock to-night. It will arrive at Cleveland about 9 a. m. to-morrow. Returning it will leave at 7 o'clock Friday evening and reach ‘Washington at 9 Saturday morning. were of the party. MAY COMPEL RAILROADS “TO PUBLISH THEIR TARIFFS Interstate Commerce Commission Will Take Action in Matter Unless the Present Laws Are Amended. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18.—The In- terstate Commerce Commission to-day announced that as a result of its in- vestigations of the feasibility of re- quiring railroads to publish the tariffs for the movement of export and im- port traffic, the same as domestic traf- fic, it has been decided to leave the matter in abeyance for a-time. If the interstate commerce act is not amend- ed within a reasonable time, so as to relieve the commission of the neces- sity of requiring such publication, the commission holds that it will be its duty to enforce the publication of ex- port and import-rates in the manner now provided by law, but so far not complied with. —_——— Train Wrecking Case Goes Over. CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo., Feb. 18.—A jury was secured to-day ,in the cases against Sherman Parker, Thomas Fos- ter and W. F. Davis, Miners’ Union leaders, charged with attempting to wreck a Florence and Cripple Creek passenger train in November last, and by mutual agreement adjournment was taken until to-morrow, when the tak- ing of testimony will begin. —_———————— “Do you think he would accept a brige?” “Certainly not—if any one was looking.”"—Chicago Evening Post. independent mills to maintain prices. | Over-capitalized to begin with, he said, | it was impoverishing itself in purchas- ing wood lands at high prices to ghut out competition and to enrich insiders, the whole to the ultimate burden of the newspapers, which could not well increase ‘the price of their product or advertising. “We should establish a bureau to give this matter its unceasing atten- tion,” he sgid. ‘““We should assail Con- gress in the interests of free pulp and free paper. Fully 50 per cent of the pulp wood is now drawn from Canada and the paper business has passed be- yond the protective period. Let us raise a fund large enough to be effect- ive in maintaining our interests, one which we can keep the country new: papers busy on their Congressmen. Mr. Norris of the Times declared that newspapers are to-day threatened with a paper famine, many of the pa- pers being on a “hand-to-mouth” ba sis, and that the manufacturers hs deliberately shut down on productio “Is it not time,” he asked, “that | customers of these paper manufac- turers took effective steps to protect themselves against men who show their short sightedness, lack of enlight- enment and incapacity for the respon- ibilities they, have voluntarily as- sumed ?” At the afternoon session the com- mittee to which the subject had been referred reported in favor of the ac- cumulation of a fund of $100,000 to promote agitation “for release from the oppression of the paper combination,” and this report was unanimously ado by the association. e annual meeting was concluded to-day. These officers were elected: PROVIDENCE WASHINGTON INSURANCE COMPANY (Established 1799.) The above Company having reinsured the business of the FIREMEN'S of Baltimore, policy holders of that Com- pany should apply at once to the un- dersigned. ls GEO. E. BUTLER, General Agent. Pacific Coast Department. 413 California St. CUILERY . EVERY BLADE WARRANTED - Flavoring extracts are gen- erally fictitious or weak ; Schil- ling’s Best are true dad full- strength. Your grocer’s; moneyback.

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