Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JUNE )1, 1904 AMUSEMENTS. GOLUMBIA (o umnmul RLES mem\\' PRE‘,SF\"I'\ ADAM& In J..M. Barrie's Comedy, THE LITTLE MINISTER. | WHAT T%E CRITICS SAY: £oing to see her in Lady y w |»err what a Alffer- | t k 1 think of all | most ronicle. plus Maude Adams | _bewitched Partington, Call present century has- its | 1 that some of it burns it Adame. Maude Adam Ashton Stevens, Exasm- Babbis in itselt helps | éss the very quiritéssence | o Bulletin he opportunity ot lams &nd Maude Adams fs happy in the firmmr«n of -Babbie. " —Thomas . Garrett, TIVOLI2 ONLY—TOY MAT. SAT. i B by X TDY Splendid Cest, Sownery and Costumes > ONDAT. NIGHT Fisst Production in This City eof The Mllttary Comis Opera Triumph, SERGEANT KITTY San Frav 00 - Deb: LILLIAN SEFTC Prime Donna | USUAL TIVOLI PRICES 3 . ‘ t of sence of Congressional enactment | granting such right. The court- held | that the constitution does not carry right without legislative: enactment. Unprecedented Attraction Ferrar, Cole and Company; Gaston and | Stone: Powers Brothers: Burke, La Roe and the Inky Boys; Colby Family: Al Lawrence; Belle Gordon; Orpheum Motion Pictures and Marcel's LIVING ART STUDIES. ar Matinee Every Wednesd Regn ANOTHER m' Sles—the & The 0l|ve' Mnrusca Company L _ LEICESTER medy of the Rev- JANICE MEREDITH SAIN. MATINEE TO-MORROW OPERA GRANDZ: is Week Only—MATINEE SATURDATY. MELBOURNE MacDOWELL In a Superb Production of Sardou’s | GISMONDA | Next Sunday Mat., A CAP]’AIN OF NAVARRE t burlesque art- rica HULL, GARRI- “ALL STAR” CHORUS i 50 actual, wonderful novelties Next Sunday Lawrence's ™8 | ay and Sunday. SAME _POPULAR PRIGE Selasco & Mayer, roprietors. E. D. Price, ALCAZAR 75 TO-NIGHT—MATS. THURS. & SATS. The Delightful Romantic Drama ToLL GATE INN “A strong production.” —Cail Evge.25c to T5c; Mats. Thurs. & Sat.25¢ to 50 XD ECENIC PRODUC- NEXT MONDAY, GRA? UNDER TWO FLAGS. Ouita’s Popular Drama of Romence. Preparation—'‘LOVERS' LANE.” Month—WHITE WHITTLESEY. GENTRAL=2: Market st., near Eighth. Phone =oum 533, IGHT—ALL THIS W S SATURDAY AND In Next The Powerful Romance of a Hero of F Magnificently Staged’ Bri‘liantly Gorgeously Costumed! PRICE! ; tenoy. | ast! Evenings. Matinees . .10 to 50c | . -10c, 15¢, 25c NEXT—“THE PEDDLER.” | THE GREAT ALFONS, Europe’s Foremost Equilibrist, And s Splendid Show Every Afternoon and Evening in the Theater. 7 TAKE A RIDE ON THE MINIATURE ELECTRIC RAILRO. Esmeraida and Her B.uar MONKEY in the AD INEPECT f‘ABAT{ET DE LA MORT. AMATEUR NIGHT TEURSDAY. Admissjon, 10c; Children, be. | tent in a few da | which be (el | Mnes, theaters, etc. DENIES APPEAL 10 GOVERNMENT| \'uprvme :Court Says State Cannot Carry Acqguittal to the = Higher Tribunal MANTLA CASES DECIDED WASHINGTON, May 3L—In the Unitéd States Supreme Court opinions were handed down to-day -n three cases, . involving questions pertaining to administration: of criminal- law in the Philippine Islands. The points rais- ed were as to the right of the Govern- {‘ment to" takeé appeal in ‘criminal cases and of an accused person to demand trial by jury. The. first case was that of Kepner vs. the United States. Kepner prac- iced law with embezzlement. The court of the first instance acquitted -him, but the ! Supreme Court of the islands convicted him. the Supreme Court of the United States by Kepner on the ground that by the | process of appeal he was put twice in jeopardy contrary to the constitution of the United States. The opirion by Justice Day sustained this view, versing the decision of the Philippine Supreme _Court. Justices Holmes, White and McKenna united in one dis- | seénting opinion, whilé Justice Brown vered a separate dissenting opin- fon. The case of Mendazona vs. the United States, involving -the same question, was similarly rendered in favor of Mendazona. Another Philippine case was that of Dorr and O'Brian, in which was raised the question of the right of a defend- ant in 4 criminal case to demand trial by jury in the Philippines in the Dorr and O'Brian are the editors of a | newspaper published in Manila and were prosecuted for criminal libel ey PRESIDENT PREPARE! FOR SUMMER OUTING | Mr. Roosevelt Will Receive Notice of Convention Work While at Oyiter Bay. WASHINGTON, May 31.—Whilé only ive arrangements have been made for the President’s sojourn dur- ing the summer at Oyster Bay, it has been decided that he will leave Wash- ington for his summer home on the morning of Saturday, July 2. - He has decided to receive his notification of the nomination at Oyster Bay.. The date will depend very largely on the desires of the members of the notifica- | n committee. early in July. It probably .will be It is expected that the President will return to Washington in the last week of. July, to remain here until about the middle of August, when he will return to Oyster Bay for perhaps a month. When he returns to Washingtom. in September he will re- main her> until election day, going then to Oyster Bay to cast his vote, —_———— Russian Pictures Coming to Fair. ST. PETERSBURG, May 8L—A pri- vate exhibit for the Russian art sec- tion at the St. Louis exposition consfl!t_ ing of 800 paintings and other works, which is now on board a !pe- clally chartered steamship, will sall | Anvmnsm Dr. Gl;arlesv Flesh Food The Great Beautifier and Skin Topic. Used by leading actresses, singers and women of the elite society of two conti- | nents for more than a quar- ter of a century. It is the only preparation having the unqualified indorsements of physi- clane and recommended by them to INCREASE FIRM. HEALTHY FLESH on thin, hol- lowed cheeks and neck without the use of liquid medicines and tonics. hands, no matter how deep the furrow. lost through sickness or nursing. On Sale Department Stores and Druggists. SPECIAL OFFER. cyoxr.s "y, prige of Or. $1.00 a box, but to introduce 1t Into thoueands of new homes we have decided to send two (2) boxes to all who answer this advertisement apd send us $1.00. All packages are sent in plaln wrapper, postage prepaid FREE, A sample box—just enough to convince you of the great merit of Dr. Charles Flesh Food—-will be sent free for 10 cents pays for cost of malling. We will also 4 _you our fllustrated book, “Art of Mar ** which contains all the proper movements for massaging the face, neck and arms, and full directions for developing the bust. Address DR. CHARLES CO., 108 Fulton St., New York CASTORIA Por Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Bignature of Outfits, Gu fion, "n.m...”‘ua"’o‘;.‘:.'f.t | sags Rent CATA FREE. 780 Market st. 521 Kearny st., 8. F. HOTELS AND RESORTS. (New)HOTEL BUTLER ; SEATTLE. REMODELED AND umm.-r at 000—New Management—EN !?nu ot tz'go P l/)CAT]ON—V -u-lphh to_street car 225 ROOMS with LUXURIOUS BATHS—. Beveral private rooms in antique decorations. Turkish Baths in Hotel. UNSURPASSED RESTAURANT, ger, Chef, (onmd‘v of Waldort-Astoria and Chef to Prince of Wales. HOTEL oncfl!s’rm tions in every room made with any part of the Coast. Wire for ressrvations, af dur expemte in Manfla and was charged | The case wes then appealed to | re--| ab- | MOVES WRINKLES from the face and | ELOPS THE IMMATURE BUST and | re @ breast to its natural beauty and | nts and Guns to | LOG REV. P. SCANLAN PASSES AWAY IN | | | Nl 1 1 Beloved Rector of St. Joseph’s Church Succumbs to Illness _ Which Overtakes Him in Eastern Metropolis—Arch- " bishop Riordan Constantly at Bedside of His Friend GRAVE HOLDS SENATOR QUAY Simple Bltes Over the Body of Political Leader Who Ruled the Keystone State BUSINESS IS SUSPENDED NEW YORK CITY. BEAVER, Pa, Mayv 31.—For two hours to-day during the funeral serv- ices over ‘the body of Senator Matthew Stanley Quay business was suspended throughout the entire Beaver Valley. Not a wheel revolved in any 0f the numerous mills and workshops in Bea- ver, Rochester, New Brighton, Beaver Falls or nearly a dozen other centers | for miles around. The leave-taking in the home was | | silent and sad. There were brief serv- |ices by the Rev. J. R. Ramsey, D. D., "pulor of the First | Church, consisting of a prayer and a few brief words of consolation to the jfamily. Only the family went up to ! the little bedroom above the Senator’s | their dead. Mrs. Quay broke down jagain and cried as she did by her hus- 'band’s bedside on Saturday afternoon, | when the physicians told her he was | dead. | A private service was held at the | house and under a guard of honor from {the Beaver €. A. R. post the remains were removed to the Fourth Presby- the public was given an opportuniay te view the face of the dead Senator. | Floral tributes from all parts of the ‘cr-unlry arrived. A large silk Amer- jican flag was draped across the cas- jket and no other decoration marked it. ‘At the public services a committee of the United- States Senate was .in | charge-as a guard of honor. The serv- lices were marked by simplicity. . The | body, at the close of the serv was Presbyterian | beloved library and took a last look at | terian Church, where for three hours; BOLD ROBBERY OF A CASHIER Two Negroes Stand Him Up in Broad Daylight in a Railway Depot at Portland EXHIBIT GREAT NERVE| PORTLAND, May 31L.—A bold rob- bery was committed shortly after noon to-day by two negroed, who entered the | office of the Pullman Company at the’ Union Depot “just as the cashier, W.| H. Aurelius, was making up his cash. Drawing revolvers upon the cashier, the negroes demanded what cash was in sight. Aurelius handed over about $2500. The negroes backed out of .the office door with thefr revolvers pointed at the cashier, and then hastily disap- peared. Aurelius’ description of the negroes is an imperfect one. The coolness exhibited by the robbers and the thoroughness with which they did their work, together with the nice- ty with which it had been planned, in- dicate that they were old hands at the game. The theory that they were white men disguised as negroes is not be- lieved, as the features, as nearly as Auretius could remember, exhibited al the characteristics of the negro. —_—————— Fire Destroys Engine-Room of a Mine. VANCOUVER, B. C, May 31.—The big coal washer and engipe-room of the Western Fuel Company of Nanaimo were destroyed by fire.. The loss is $80,000 and 800 men are thrown out of employment. b e conveyed to the family plat in Beaver Cemetery for interment. Among the floral tributes was a great wreath of American Beauty roses ahd white peonies with maidenhair fern interwoven from the President. TRAINS FREE 0F THE FLOOD Falling Waters in Kansas Permit Three Overlands to Continue Eastward P ~S— NO SUFFERING ABOARD KANSAS CITY, Mo, May 31.—The three through trains marooned near Quenemo, Kansas, for twelve hours yesterday by the flood which had washed out portions of the Santa Fe and Missouri ‘Pacific tracks, reached here to-day. A majority of the pas- sengers were eastbound, many of them coming from the Methodist General Conference at Los Angeles and others from El1 Paso. All trains-carried din- ing cars and there was no suffering. OTTAWA, Kan.,, May 31.—Flood con- ditions in this vicinity are fast im- proving, the water to-day receding rapidly. Communication with North | Ottawa, where several hundred per- sons were driven from their homes, was opened to-day with boats and pro- visions were taken to the unfortunates. Six men marooned in the Santa Fe depot, who were without food since Sunday, were brought away to-day. Many others were removed from the flood district, some of whom had been forced to upper stories or to their housetops. The needy are all being cared for by the city authorities with the aid of local churches and lodges. The country west of Ottawa for sev- eral miles hae been swept clean, crops having been wiped out and much stock drowned. All bridges here have remained intact, but train service is still at a standstill, the tracks for miles being under er. e e VANCOUVER, B. C. May 31—A dispatch from Ottawa says that work will com- Tonosd to-morrow en_ (he new Hudes Hey Railwhy. Track laying will be finished in October. The Rev. Father Patrick Seanlan, rector of St. Joseph's Church and Chancellor of the Archdiocese of San Francisco, passed away at St. Vin- | cent’s Hospital, New York, at an early hour yesterday morning ‘after an ill- ness of several weeks' duration. With the intention of visiting Rome and various parts of Europe and pay ing a visit to his sister, Mrs. B. Mur- phy, and his brother, James Scanlan of Lixnau, County Kerry, Ireland, the late Fflxher Scanlan left San an(‘lsu» on April 7. | He had been but a short time in New York when he developed pneumonia and though for a time he showed signs of an entire recovery about a week ago complications developed and it was seen on Saturday last that the end was approaching. Throughout all last week and up to the time of his death Father Scanlan had for his constant friend at his bedside his Grace Archbishop | Riordan, who chanced to be in the | Bast. Hls Grace visited the Chancellor | twice a day and besides was constant- ly kept informed .by telephone as to lthe patient’s condition. RECEIVES LOVING CARE.. ‘When it was first learned here of Father Scanlan’s {llness the Rev. { Father Eugene O'Sulllvan hastened | from the city to New York and remain- | ed constantly with the patlent until the end came. | A telegram was received by the Rev. Father Kane yesterday at St. Joseph's Church from the Rev. Father O'Sulli- van stating that the -remains would leave New York last night, escorted by Father O’Sullivan, who will telegraph | from Chicago the exact time of arrival | in San Francisco. It is probable that | the remains will arrive on Sunday af- | ternoon. | The faneral services, according to | present arrangements, will take place Tuesday morning from St. Joseph's | Church. | The late Father Scanlan was 68 years of age. He was ordained a priest June 24, 1864, at All Hallows College, Dub- lin, and shortly after came directly to San Francisco. | He was attached to Marysville for a while and then moved to Sacramento, where his pastorate of St. Rose's | Church continued for about 16 years. On the death of the Rev. Father Hugh Gallagher, Father Scanlan was appointed to the rectorship of St, Jo- | seph’s, San Francisco. A man sensitive to the suffering of the unfortunate, Father Scanlan became endeared for his benevolence. He was beloved by all who knew him, this regardless of creed or station. RESPECT TO DEPARTED. Besides a brother and a sister sur- viving him Father Scanlan leaves eral cousins in the State, the R Father M. D. Slattery, pastor of St. | Agnes Church, Page street’ and Ma- gonic avenue, this cityv, and grand | chaplain of the Y. M. L: Mrs. D. A. | 8haw, residing at the Marguerite, and Judge Lennon of San Rafael. The Rev. Father Daniel Slattery, who died in Marysville October 9, 1860, and the Rev. Father Willlam Slat- tery, who died February 18, 1882, in Petaluma, were first cousins of the late Father Scanlan. The successor to the vhnncellnrnmp made vacant by the death of Father Scanlan will not be known until thé return to San Francisco of Archbishop Riordan, in whose hands the appoint- ment rests. The graduating exercises in connec- tion with St. Joseph's Parochial School to-morrow, which were to have been of a public character, will, out of re- spect to the memory of Father Scanlan, beé privately observed. The school roll bears the names of 1200, those in. the higher grades tak- ing a business course in conjunction with the ordinary study. . The school received particular attention from the late rector. —_—————— . ‘Wants to Repave Streets. The Board of Public Works yaster- day petitioned the Board of Supervis- ors‘to transfer the sum of $2330 from the maintenance fund of the office- of Superintendent of Buildings to the general fund in order that the money may be utilized to repave streets. The money was saved out of a total of $3900 appropriated for the office hy doing away with the Superintendent of Bujldings, whose duties were ful- filled by one ef the Commissioners. —— Stage Service to Big Basin. Stages run daily between Boulder Creck and Big Basin Park, connecting with the Southern Pacific Coast Line. Leave Boulder Creek 1:15 | p. m., -mvm: at the park 3:15 p. m.; ieave the park © . 'm._ arriving @t Boulder Creek 11 tage fare, round trip, Fage allowed, 40 pounds. ; free Round ‘trip tickets from San Franciuco to the park sold for §5 in San Francisco, Oakland and Alameda. ——————— POLICEMAN “ACCIDENTALLY SHOT.— Policeman Fred A. Dauernheim, while cleaning a revolver at 18 Metcalf place on Monday aft- | ernoon, was shot in the right breast by the accidental discharge of the weapon. Ahhmuh the wound is not considered serious Dauern- helm will be Incapacitated from dutv for some time. -claims is wholly unimportant, ‘company or corporation may locats or ac: + REV. PATRICK SCANLAN, RECTOR | T. JOSEPH'S CHURCH, WHO | N NEW YORK. | [DAHO MINING CASE DECIDED HEL e iR Bunker Hill People Win After Long Continued Liti- gation Over the Property PR SR After a struggle in the courts lasting for several years, the Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining and Concentrating Company of Idaho has been declared the lawfal owner of mining property valued at nearly a million dollars. The defendants in the case were Last Chance Mining Company; Shoshone Mining Company, Empire State-Idaho Mining and Development Company and other and smaller concerns. The Bunker Hill people, misled by surface appearances, ran their longi- tudinal lines in their original location across the rich mineral bearing’ lode, | so that what they believed to be their end lines were in reality- their side lines. Under mining laws lodes and veins may be ‘worked underground |. through side lines no-matter how far they may go, but no work may be, prosecuted underground or on the sur- face beyond the.vertical plane of the end lines projected to the center of the earth. The decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals affirms | that of the District Cpburt of Idaho that in such a casé the intention of the locators may be 'considered, and the side lines established -as the end lines. There is no appeal from this_decision | save,by a writ of certicrari to the Su- preme Court of the United States and a writ of certiorari must present co- gent reasons before it will be consid- ered. The following are the prominent points of the decision: The fact that one indivifual or company ar corporation locates 6r acquires many such |- Congress has never yet seen proper to put a limit on the number of such clalms that one individual, '!lu from food. quire. * 'The fallurs -of the locator of the Bunker Hill claim to record his notice of location within tbe time’ prescribed by the Idaho stat- ute did not work a forfeiture of the claim, belng no such penaity fixed by the stat- The Hnel orrgmau; located as side lines of |. the Bunker Hill mine aré parallel and, it ap- pearing from the findings of the Commissfoner that the apex of the lode crosses these lines, they become in law the real end lines of the claim. The extralateral right of the vein out- cropping at the surface where it ‘exists fs fixed by the course of the lode on the surface " and not by its course on the level. While th# | ° statute requires parallelism of the end- Ii and the courts having held that they may not be Jaid so divergent as to include more lenzth upon the din’ of the vein than i ‘al- lowed in length upon the surface, neither the statute nor any decision that has been brougnt to our notice defines any particular angle at which the end lines shall cross the general | course of the vein in order that the extra eral right given by ‘the statute may exist. Where more than one. vein apexes within the surface lines jt would be a physical Impossi- bility for the end lines to be drawn at a right. angle to the courses of all such veins. The court also handed down the !ul. lowing decisions: 5 Portland Flouring Milis Company va. g,." Fire and Marine Insurance Company (Ltd District of Oregon. Decree affirmed with cost m Boise City Irrigation Land Company - W W A: Clark, James Larkins and George County Commissioners of ‘Ada Cwnly. um_ Judgment affirmed. Ship Erskine M. Phelps and Rubert J. Gra- ham, claimant, ve. Jullus A. Schinmacher— e Judgment reversed with instructions to dismiss s the 1ibel. Convicted of Assault to Rob. Frank West was convicted by a jury in Judge Lawlor's court yester- day on a charge of assault to mb nnd will be sentenced on Saturday. Leylor, on December 25, took Nclwn Larsen, a dealer in poultry, to her room _on Folsom street, near Fifth, and she and, West assaulted him and attempted to rob him. West tried to prove an alibi, but was not successful. The woman has already been tried nnd convicted. * organs. ) cm??u: TAKES HIS OWN LIFE.—Sera- | fino An:,elulu pacoieple. ‘oummlgr Iunl;!dc yes- terday by inhaling gas y and County Hospital, of which he had been an inmate for the Jast 'two years. person shows less, in one case only GRAPE-NUTS. —— 2Y4 per cent. This and Nerve food in existence, whlch can be provcd by trial HOW THOUGHTS ARE MADE - A battery must have vitriol to act upon the ‘other things and produce electricity. A Brain is made of Water, Fat, Albumen ard Phosphate of Potash. It mtist have Phosphate of Potash to act on the other things to make ihinking possible. A normal Brain shows 6 per cent of Phoéphatcs, while the brain of an insane proves Brain-power and Nerve-force depend upon the quantity of Phosphate of Potash the system assimilates ‘Certain parts of \\'l;eat and ‘Barley contain these elements in t-heir most ef- fective form, but many cannot digest enough to feed a.bfisy Brain upto its full work- ing capacity, nor can they digest the dead Phosphate of Potash taken from Th: drug store. (Note—White Flour does not contain these Phoéphaies, be'au.sc vthcy grow in the dark parts of wl heat which the miller leaves out because of 1ts color This ex- plains why white flour is uit]exs to restore Brain and Nerves.) Tn GRA PE-NUTS food these elements are presented in the most liberal .pro- * portion-and in such form any one can digest and assimilate them. Government analysis proves GRAPE-NUTS thirteen times teadier for assimi- . lation than oatmeal and three times more digestible than the average wheat food. This proves the valuable food elements of GRAPE-NUTS are ready to change into .Brzgin-power and Nerve-force with least delay and least tax on_Liver and other Also it explains why GR APE-NUTS is acknowlcdged the most scientific Brain of this great Government Food Test sent fres by Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle : Creek, Mich., largest makers of Pure Foods in the world. Grape=Nuts “The Food that Brains are made of.”