The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 10, 1904, Page 1

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midnight, June 10: winds changing to erly. THEE WEATHEER. Forecast made at San Fran- cisco for thirty hours ending San Francisco and vicinity— Pair Friday; light southerly A. G. McADIE, District Forecaster. brisk west- 4 — Orphenm—Vaundeville. * Tivoli—“Sergeant Kitty.” VOLUME XCVI NO. 10. SAN FRANCISCO, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1904. PRICE FIVE CENTS. KUROPA KNOX DICTOR IN FIGHT FOR QUAY’S TOGA e + | { 4 i o BRNEY G N R KN Attorney General UWill Take UDacant Seat in Senate. Fi DELPHIA, June 9.—Philander Attorney Genera the T States Senate death M < a nd rve by r Pennypacker p of the expirva- I Cabinetl until General the et o C. Frick N h United S to this xpected that ] ° but e Pittsburg del- 9.—Just ore shing- probably General sign 2s Attorney until Con- gress convenes next December. 3 —teffe GAMBLERS REJOICE OVER KILLING OF McDONNELL Harlem Sports Toast Death of Man Who Killed Onc of Their Number. June 9 YORK n astonish- g exhibition of joy been noted 1aintar in Harlem r ™M & F MeDe 1 over the mur- gambler in Albany. reet, in the saloons | re the man was well | feared, his death was toast- a t is even reported that some of George Price, who ¥ McDonnell in 1900, got up ebration of the event. : never forgave McDon- Price, although he the ground of self- een mixed up in a in one instance is | ar from a man while em- | dling gambling room. The ear ed up on a wall of the room. | il sie g { BILLS FOR LIQUOR AROUSE | IRE OF AMERICAN WOMEN | usan B. Anthony Calls Berlin Hotel Proprietor to Account for Charg- ing Her for Beer. RLIN, June 9 S Susan I B.| | Mrs. May ht Sews Carrie Chapman Catt, M % | Mrs. Harper, Dr. Anna Shaw, | Ma Wood Swift and other rican ieaders of the International ress of Women have been n- zed by an attempt of the st el, the aristocratic headquarters of American delegation, to charge hem for beer, champagne and wine, | + the women neither drank nor ed. The affair came to a climax day when Miss Anthony’s bill, con- ning a charge for a couple of cases | f pilsener, alleged to have been deliv- | ed 1o her room, was presented to her. After a severe remonstrance the bill | as withdrawn NMENT FORCES MEET | AT IN SANTO DOMINGO | Advices From Southern Republic In- dicate a Grave Condition of Affairs. PORT AU PRINCE, Hayti, June 9.— | News received here to-day from Santo Domingo is to the effect that the sit- uation in that republic is grave. It | appears that the Government have sustained a severe defeat before Monte Cristi, on the north coast. E HEFU, June 9.—The léng contemplated attack by the Japanese on Port Arthur began early this morning. The Russian ‘ ] i forces around the beleaguered city were reinforced by the troops which had garrisoned Dalny and Kinchou. The | Russian vessels in the harbor, with their great guns, aided the land forces in repeliing the attack. The fighting still goes on. ST. PETERSBURG, June 9.—General- Kuropatkin telegraphed to the Emperor under date of June 8: brigade attacked a Russian detachment occupying Siamatsze on June 7. great superiority, toward Fenchulin Pass. OKU BEGINS ASSAULT ON PORT ARTHUR: TKIN REPORTS RUSSIAN REVERSE UPPOSED ~ OUTLAW IS SHOT DY Meets His Death in Fight With Dead Man May Have Been One of the Colorado Train Robbers. 72t Victim and Two Companions Sus- pected of Baving Dynamited Express Car. NEWCASTLE. June 9. —A posse of ranchmen and cowboys living neighborhood of Garfield, west of this place, came upon three men supposed to be the Denver and Rio Grande train robbers who dynamited the express car of a train near Para- chute, ¢ )., on Tuesday night, and in a battle hich followed one of the pursued was kilied. The other two es- caped into Garfield Canyon, and at last Colo., in_the acepunts were surrounded. It is be- lieved that escape is impossible Claer Chapman, a cowboy, received 1 ight flesh wound The dead man was brought to this place to-night and was identified as ve of three men who worked several | days last week on the Denver and Rio Grande section near Parachute. He went under the name of J. H. Ross. Pre- vious to working for the railroad he was employed in a restaurant in this town. Nothing is known cf his his- ¢ here. Identification was made by a Rio Grande pay check found on his person. The two other men who work- ed with Ro last week gave the nam of John Emimerling and Charl Scubbs. Th worked zlong the rail- road track from Thursday until Sat- urday unight and all quit together and left the neighborhood. Their several days’ employment on the road gave them an excellent opportunity to fa- miliarize thems with the lay of the land in the nity of Parachute. It is reported that at ieast 200 men, heavily armed, are watching the two men in Garfield Canyon to-night and will shoot them down if they attempt to escape A SO ISR e BOSTON GIRL BECOMES BRIDE OF CALIFORNIAN Miss Maunde Blanche Marshall Weds Charles L. Sanborn of San Francisco. BOSTON, June 8. — Miss Maude Blanche Marshall, daughter of Mrs. | Emma 8. Marshall, and Charles L. San- born of San Francisco, Cal.. were mar- ried this evening at the residence of the bride’s mother in East Boston by the Rev. George S. Spencer of the Sara- toga M. E. Church, East Boston. Paul Sanborn, brother of the groom, was | best man and the bridesmaid was Miss | Gertrude Gilmore of Somerville, Mass. —— BRAZIL AND PERU IN FAIR WAY TO SETTLE DISPUTE It Is Reported That a Joint Adminis- tration Will Terminate Row Over Territory. RIO DE JANEIRO, June ' 9.—The questions pending between Brazil and Peru now seem to be In a fair way to | a peaceful settiement. It is reported that a joint administration will be es- tablished in the disputed Acre terri- tory. . —_———————— | LOW-PRICED SHOW HOUSES UNDER COMPANY'S CONTROL Syndicate Formed at Denver to Estab- lish and Conduct Cheap Vaude- ville Circuit. DENVER, Colo.. June 9.—A theatri- cal syndicate was formed in Denver to- day under the name of the United Vaudeville Association. The deal was effected by D. J. Grauman of San Fran- cisco and A. J. Morganstein of Los An- geles, who control the ten and twenty cent vaudeville hoyses of the Pacific Coast, and George Ira Adams of Den- ver, who controls the Crystal circuit | between Salt Lake City and Milwaukee. The new combination proposes t take in all of the ten and twenty cpnct' vaudeville houses from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Coast. There are troops | already thirty houses in the trust and it is expects that eighteen mo be added to . e chain. g | | | il | FLEES WITH HER MONEY San Francisco Girl - Left Penniless in Special Dispatch to The Call. | CHICAGO, Jur millionaire, but the victim of a man | | who married her to get her money | then desert her—this is the disc | Mrs. Frank Pyle, formerly May D | who was married a week ago in San | i: Not the wife of a| | Francisco, made when she was de- | serted by her husband yesterday. When he left the Sherman House the | man took with him $750 which she had | placed in his keeping. He ’left her | with not enough money to pay her ho- | | tel bill and the mortified and stricken woman is now at the hotel waiting to | hear from her married sisters, who live | | in San Francisco and Sacramento. | After twenty-four hours of absence Mrs. Pyle has accepted the theory of | the police that the man married her for | the ready money she had and at lhc‘ first opportunity stole away from her, | never to return. | Last evening Mrs. Pyle notified the Detective Bureau that the man she married in San Francisco a week ago had left the hotel and failed to return. She at first thought that he had met with some .accident. She wanted the aid of the police in locating him. Her | husband, she said, represented himselt | as a member of the wealthy Pyle fam- | ily of New York, who made a fortune in leather. The day before they were married, she said, she gave her hus- band $750 to keep for her. After the marriage they came to Chicago. Yesterday morning her husband left | her, saying he intended to visit a| leather firm in Fifth avenue, the mem- | bers of which were friends of his fam- {1ly. She suspected nothing until he failed to return, Then, fearing that he | was injured, she asked the police to search for him. pra i e CROWD PURSUES THIEF CARRYING DYNAMITE “pon’t Drop It!” the Warning That Is Shouted at Fleeing Negro. ! LOUISVILLE, June 9.—“Hold on to it! Don't drop it!" This advice was given to Joe Evans, who was running away with property he had stolen. For three blocks Evans ran with a package of dynamite, enough to destroy a city block, and be- hind him followed a crowd of men cry- ing to him to stop, but not to drop the bundle. 7 s The negro, not knowing what was said tohim, ran the faster. Patrolman Smoot finally caught him, while \his partner seized the package. Evans had taken the package, thinking- it was 1 Jewelry w -FA_ i | i ARTHUR-DURING ONE OF ADMIRAL TOGO'S FUTILE 4 5 T HE CHANNEL. AND GENERAL WHO IS LEADING i THE ARMY NOW ATTACKING BY LAND. x Tokio Expects Port Arthur to Fall i Less Than a Week. Special Dispatch to The Call. TOKIO, June 9.—Port Arthur is ex- pected to fall in less than a week. The attack on the fortress is being pushed by the land forces, supported by the high-angle fire of Admiral Togo's war- ships. The Japanese vessels iu front of the fortress are merely maintaining a close blockade, except for occasional reconnalssances. Detachments of the fleet that are doing effective work in connection with the storming operations are stationed off both flanks of the besieging army. They are quite secure against the Rus- sian fire. Their shells, which cover a range of many miles, are said to ex- ercjse a terribly demoralizing effect on t! Russians. No inkling of the proceedings in the direction of Liaoyang is allowed to be made public by the authorities, who control the cable from Korea. Their exceptional reserve in this particular is construed as presaging a general forward movement against Kuropat- kin. The Russian general is apparent- ! ly determined not only to refrain from advancing to the relief of Port Arthur, but to persist i’ the shipment of su- perfluous stores northward in prepara- tion for a retreat. Some of the Mikado's soldiers belleve that the Russians have already de- layed their retrograde movement until there is slim chance of their getting off without severe loss. SLAV ADVANCE REPORTED. ST. PETERSBURG, June 9. —Among the rumors that fill the city to-night is one, on better-authority than the aver- age, that General Kuropatkin is him- gelf moving southward from Liaoyang. It is not possible to authoritatively confirm the report. St. Petersburg is displaying more concern over the fate of Port Arthur than over any event since the first naval reverse. In spite of the philo- sophic calm with which the authorities & month ago said that Port Arthur would probably fall'or be abandbned in the course of the campaign, the Rus- sians find it hard, now that the event has become an imminent possibility, to assume an indifferent attitude toward the garrison now fighting in isolation. n interest in the retention of the fortress entirely independent of its real stra- tegic value. Special dispatches from Liaoyang re- port Chinese as bringing news that the Japanese on June 2 attacked Port Ar- thur by land and sea, but were re- pulsed with a loss of 3500 men and four vessels, which, judging from the description of them, were torpedo- boats. This report is unconfirmed. RUMORED BATTLE OF FLEETS. Other dispatches give rumors of a naval ‘battle between two fleets in the gulf of Pechili and a definite re- -pert of a bombardment in Liaotung Gulf, near Kaiping, which may fore- shadow - a-landing there for the pur- pose of cutting the railroad back of the Russian troops operating around Wafangian. LIAOYANG, June 10. — The Russian force at Siamatsze was commanded by General Erhoff, who engaged the Jap- anese advance at 9 a. m. on June 7. The Russian infantry advanced steadi- 1y, pushing the Japanese from their position, but the Japanese attack grad- ually developed strength and the Rus- siaps, finding themselves in the pres- ence of an overwhelming force, retired in good order. Their losses were three officers and 100 men killed or wounded. Russian observers say the Japanese loss was greater. Artillerymen who took part In the fighting at Samsonoff on June 3 say that the Japanese artillery was decid- edly poor. Many shells did not burst and the shrapnel was badly timed. T S0 OFFICER AND SAILOR KILLED. Hit by Russian Shells While Making a Reconnaissance. TOKIO, June 9. — Admiral Togo re- ports that on the night of June 7 he sent eight small torpedo-boats from the battleships of his squadron to make a -reconnaissance of Port Arthur har- bor. The boats went far inside the heads .and were exposed to the Rus- sian fire. One sailor and one petty offi- cer were killed in the operation, but the hoats escaped undamaged. o cand oo The public is showing a sentimental | . War News Continued on Page 2. | tune in her own right, HCCREBRYS ARE PANTED BY DECRER Court Grants the Wite’s Plea for | Divorce. | ——— 7 Granddaughter of the Late| Bishop Kip Wins Suit for Separation. Given Custody of Her Child, r,o1 Whose Support the Father | Will Contribute. ‘ | e Special Dispateh to The Call. NEW YORK, June 9.—Rumors of do- mestic differentes hetween Mrs Edith McCreery, only daughter of the late Colonel Lawrence Kip, who has a for- and her hus- band, Richard S. MecCreery, are nc - | confirmed by the granting of an inter- locutory decree of divorce in her favor by Judge Gildersleeve of the Supreme Court. The decree was signed t does not become cffective for three months. AWM papers have been sealed by the direction of the court and can- | not be opened except upon application of one of the parties to the action. The custody of the eight-year-old chiid is the mother and to the day, bu: awarded to father is granted permission to visit it_twice during each year. He is to pay $3000 a year for the support, main- tenance and education of the child. No provision is made for alimony to the wife. Mrs. McCreery is a granddaughter of | S the late Bishop Kip of California. Her | mother was a sister of the late Pierre | Lorillard. McCreery is a man of wealth, a son | of Andrew McCreery, who made a for- tune in California. His mother was a noted beauty and one of her sisters | married Justice Feld. | —————————— TUCKER 1S INDICTED FOR MISS PAGE'S MURDER | Discovery of New Evidence Concern- ing Mpysterious Crime Results in Rearrest of Suspect. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 9.—Charles | Tucker of Auburndale was indicted by | the Middlesex County Grand Jury on the charge of murdering Miss Mabel Page at her home in Weston March 31. | Tucker was not arraigned, but will be brought into court some time during the criminal session of court. which | meets next week. The murder of Miss Page attracted wide attention because of the mystery | sutrounding the case. It was at first | thought she had commifted suicide, | but later developments indicated mur- der. Suspicion pointed to Tucker and he was arrested, but after an investi- | gation was relegsed. Later. on new evidence, he was' rearrested and held for the Grand Jury. —————————— JUSTICE CLARKE REMANDS MRS. ELIAS TO CUSTODY Reduces Bail of Colored Woman Held for Extortion, but Sends Her Back to Jail. NEW YORK, June 9.—Mrs. Hanna Elias, held on an extortion charge, was taken before Justice Clarke in the Su- preme Court to-day on haifeas corpus proceedings. After hearing arguments, Justice Clarke ordered that bail be de- | greased from $50,000 to $30,000. He also | dismissed the writ of habeas corpus! and remanded the prisoner- to the Tombs. A meeting of about 50 representa- tive negroes was held here to-night, at which it was decided to exert every effort to secure the immediate release of Mrs. H. Elias. ——————— VIOLATES STOCK EXCHANGE RULES AND IS SUSPENDED NEW YORK, June 9—JN\ S Bearnes, head of the Stock Exchange firm of J. S. Bearnes & Co., was to-day suspended from the privileges of the exchange for one year. The charge against Bearnes was that he had car- ried a speculative aceount for an em- ploye of another member of the Stock Exchange. ————————— ~ Snow Falls in Leadville. | LEADVILLE, Colo., June 9—A | heavy snowstorm began here at 5| o'clock this ‘morning and at 9 o'clock there was four inches of snow on the ground. ’ | himself for the | pup GREETING TO OLD FRIENDS va | | - e |SATOLLI GIDES | ba “A Japanese | | The Russians retired slowly, because of the enemy’s I i Our losses were two officers wounded=and one hundred soldiers killed or Younded. [ FRIENRES o A& ] JLLI, _ FAMOUS S iNITARY WHO IS VISITING AMERICA. 4 | - - | + - Cardinal Arrives in New York Direct From Genoa. steamship Pr weather spoiled the reception that it was proposed to give him dewn the bay. It was intended th large party of priests and lay should go down on the Sea Gull and take him off at Quarantine. The steamer, T slipped in in the fog of earl and was almost up to her dock in H | boken before the steamboat got under way from her pier the Cardinal came down the gang- plank Archbishop Farley greeted him. They clasped hands and gave each other the accolade in trué Latin style. With the Cardinal, as traveling com- panions, are two. young ecclesiasties, Father Ercole Satolli, b cousin, and | Father Giuseppe Marucchi and Gio- vanni Giontoni, a student from a Ro- y, who acts as the Car- dinal's private secretary. nal said he had long de- t his old friends here and s0 many impertant events in his career. He said he would travel about the country, see St. Louis and veral other of our large cities and would then return to Rome, probably in about three months. Cardinal Satolli brin_s as a gift from Catholic University a valuable gold chalice, which his old of Urban College of the propa- ganda in Rome gave him as a souvenir of his ‘sacerdotal silver jubilee on July scenes of | 17, 1887 | STRIKE CAUSES QUEER SIGHT IN CHICAGO RIVER Strangers to Sea, in Absence of Mas- ters and Pllots, Undertake Navi- gators’ Tasks. CHICAGO, June 9.—Into the almost deserted Chicago River yesterday sailed a forlorn appearing craft, the | Chili of Buffalo, with a cargo of coal. On the bridge stood a captain, M. E Drake, the owner, who has not sailed a vessel for thirty years. At the wheel and in the old cabin were officers, many of whom likewise were stran- gers to the sailors’ life. Twic the steamer had gone aground, once at the Bois Blanc Island and once in Lake Huron. The incident was eloquent of the condition of the lake commerce wrought by the strike of the Masters’ and Pilots’ Association. ————— FRIENDS FIND MISSING MAN IN SAN BERNARDINO Prominent Orange-Grower of Delrosa ‘Who Mpysteriously Disappeared a Week Ago Is Finally Located. SAN BERNARDINO, June 9. —Af- ter keeping out of sight of the po- lice and his distressed wife for a week H. H. Morean, a prominent orange- grower of Delrosa, was found by his friends in San Bernardino late to- night. He had left his home with a large sum of money on his person and it was thought that he had been murdered. _———————— SUES SHIPYARD TRUST TO RECOVER HER MONEY Mrs. Benjamin Wood Wants a Return of the $195,000 Cash She Invested. NEW YORK, June 9.—Mrs. Benjamin Wood to-day took preliminary steps in an action to recover $195,0000 cash she put into worthless bonds of the ship- yard trust, on advice of high financiers. This suit has been feared above all others by the trust promoters. —_—————————— Accused of Stealing Gold Brick. DETROIT, Mich.,, June %—Edward Delaney, a bartender, is under arrest and the police say that he is suspected of connection with the theft of a gold brick valued at $22,000 from the Pacific Express Company’s office in the Union Depot in this city a year age.

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