The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 2, 1904, Page 3

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)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2 = 1904. ~+ DEPEW MAKES REPLY T0 HILL . Says He Did Not Speak to| the President About the PRINCEN: LOURE IN STILL FREE Seen P |8 —_— iter _\ul King’s Imn DISCUSSES Sinee Nhe Left Apartments RS and Joined - Two Women ! Avers That - United States and a Man - in Gardens| Cannot Give Up Posses ESCAPED THROUGH NEW GUESTS' ROOMS BINGH Y., derarted Denew Sept. from his PR A - 2 s original intentionto d=liver anon-polit- Believed to Have Taken Au- il speech at ths Brook County fair J = F . » | at Whitney’s t to-day and devoted iomobile After Leaving the |3}, ‘addres a renly to ex-Senator Carriace in - Which ~She | B neech of yesterday, made at the = e £ ame Hlace = said in part: Was Driven From Grounds ek - AD ¥ ER, Saxony, sr;\; 1— o, w s, escaped alone from her r to President in- ¢ t until it ¢ r..k.— any attempt to pre- I bave ncver threatened not know how more than we supper d good night at 11:30 wer enot aware of o'elock riy had uldble value 1 value to any of the great Euroj f we let them go. ————— FATRBANKS IN KANSAS. - Senator Is Given Rousinz Reception | at Opening of Campaign. p MARION, 'Kans.,, Sept. L—The Re- > campaign in this State was S ecches by United Senator er 1. Long and w “Hoch, Republican candi- vernor. There was a large ce from this and surrounding & coming in on special skirts or Fairbanks® special ar- > wutes before s orted to the principal = town by a large delegation. bat . fus were gayly- decorated and 5 s dee was ied by a brass band. d cheers as the Senator A his train and they were a h left < many times throughout the " Hof,. forty The speeches occupied the W Princess part of the forenoon Munich or“Fairbanks spoke in part as not 1s un- exhibition taken Pierson were Inadequate ngress, to which the made no effort should not We had which Clev oon fcan party pledged itself that it 1 to a ain the gold standard and it has 3 L ard w. Under jt we hav a better monstary system S nan | ¢ o the repubiic began. Does Cegle- | any one re his vote for William McKinl Keg! 1896 or In 19007 Does he resret his vots allowed tive tariff or for the inflexible 5 Pierson replied nce of the gold standard? Events = o B B tified in the fullest possible degrss £hie t wisdom of what we have hitherto that . b nsist’ that she go K 5 e 2 S Pt e prosperity of Kansas is well illustrated The Princess ) "\ "pank de~osits. They have again to be | from $32.000,000 in 1595 to more than $80,000,- eutenant for | 000 in 1903 o o Sicutempnt for 1« on every hand evidence of business r became so. dis- | act f bullding and growth. What will turned to Mat- the effect upon all of this if there is a 4 7 the national administration? What requested him | be the result if we adopt new economic o = of honor that he |policie " persua the The principal meeting of the day was Pr t who were tak- | held in the public park, but the atlond- . £ The lieutenant prom- | ance was so large that it became neces- | - - € of hearing | sary for Mr. Fairbanks to address two 0 long sepdrated, talked | overflow meetings. If his speeches he Ze several minutes, made only general references to gen- e e < eral issues. Semator Fairbanks left at For Visitors and Tourists. | 10 o’clock to-night for Kansas City. » Islar , 0 cents TALKS TO POPULISTS. - by vt o Watson Delivers Address at Closing s Sept T y 4 Sescion of Convention. River. - Fa i i ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 1.—Thomas - - E. Watson, candidate for President on the People’s party ticket, a 4 Fail to Find tire Smolensk D o e wor 1 The eft immense audience in the hall of the . P forts of 'House of Révresentatives of the : s y Georgia Legislature to-night. He Hope squadron to es € x th = n part as foHows: with the npaign the Democratic . national | i fleet steamers Smolensk vrostituted the name of Democ- . . i) “are ‘demandin= that they be blindly ¥ this. far ~ fa A e of the fact that they have | A eceived late this after- rinciple of Democracy. Will | atch from "Rear Admiral follow the-name rather than o ng that none of his ath we are told we must submit | 5 Sl But of dreiia | ender to Wall street because of *‘the reless telegraphy from d demand to know the facts Russian cruisers. He arker. How do=s he stand upon 3 god 1o Golifiine tie SpnR il negro question? Is his _position nt from that of Roosevelt? 1 so, Im w respect ™ outh should demand ser was ordered to report to e G “xplicit resty to the follcwing questions beter | join in it votes for him Conclave Edltlon = Ff=—= ..The Call.. ut Next Sunday -.ORDER NOW.. MM . ‘chirnls - Senater Green Indictment | PHILIPPINES | sion of Lands in Far East 1.—| upon the assumption that he | 'DORA FUHRIG, NOTORIOUS MIDWIFE, DIES A SUICIDE ,Docr Guides Her Son to Where Body Is Lying Woman Takes Dose | of Carbolic Acid in Park. S Weary of a life that was spent in the shadow of the jails, Mrs. Dora Fuhrig, | |a midwife, who was arrested seven | times on charges of murder, committed suicide in Golden Gate Park Wednes- day by taking carbolic acid. The body was found yesterday by her son The- odore, who was led to the scene of the tragedy by a dog ownec by the dead | woman. i Mrs. Fuhrig left her home at 1445 El- lis street on Wednesday - orning. She | did not return and her husband. Charies Fuhrig, became alarmed. He sent his son Theodore to look for his| wife and suggested taking the dog, who had been the constant compumonj of the woman for years. Father and son both deny that Mrs. Fuhrig ieft any ‘word to indicate that she intended to end her life. DOG FINDS THE BODY. The son says he had a premonition ; that the park would be the best place| to look for his mother, and the dog seemed to want to go in that direction. The pair walked out through the pan- handle, the dog tugging at his chain and sniffing at the road. In an unfre- quented path near Stow Lake the ani- mal became strongly excited, whining | and trying to break from the leading | string. He forced young Fuhrig into a run and dragged the boy into a thicket. There lay the dog’s mistress, dead, on a couch of dried leaves. The ammal threw himself upon the body, whining pitifully. Young Theodore was horror- stricken at first, but quickly recovered his presence of mind. He left the body in charge of the dog and told two passers-by of the discovery, asking | them to notify the police. When one | of these asked him if he knew the wo- | man he refused to answaer. Young Fuhrig had a hard time in- ducing the dog to leave the spot. The animal crouched beside the dead wo: man and snarled "viciously when ap- < differs from n the negro question: e to eat at the same 1 soseveit u_refuse to rece! the White House Turner, Bocker Washington | tune ? the mixed schools | ted under Grover | which soclal equality s prac- | a matter of compulsion? | uch schools—wherein black chil- | te. children are educated to- ~d thing for your native State “wculd ther be a good thing for ork G and South Carolina? If mot, why not? Why did nativnal Democratic lcaders sur- | render to Belmont and Wall street? Party names to me ar> nothing. The doc- | trine is_cverything. 1 call upon all Jeffer- | sonian Democrats help make this fight | against the two Resublican parties, headed by | velt and Perker. What do we need with | s committed to Wall street? Let ¢ cne for the people The address was delivered at the | closing session of the State convention of the Georgia Populists, which met | this afternoon, selected electors and irdorsed the nomination of Watson for the Presidency e DENOUNCED AS A LIE. President Roosevelt Did Not Hold | Conference With Morgan. OYSTER BAY, N. Y. Sept. 1.—| After a conference with the President | to-day Secretary Loeb gave out a typewritten statement denying the story printed to-day to the effect that | J. Pierpont Morgan recently had a conference with Roosevelt concerning the campaign. The typewritten state- ment i remarkable for the extra- ordinarily emphatic language em- ployed. It denounces the.newspaper | story as a ‘flie.” The word “lie” does not often figure in the statements given out from the President, but this has been a very sultry day on Sagamore Hill. PEIRLY \ PECK IS NOMINATED. Democrats of 'Wisconsi . State Ticket. OSHKOSH, Wis., Sept. 1.—The Democratic State Convention to-night nominated the following ticket: Gov- ernor, George W. Peck; Lieutenant Governor, Dr. H. A. Lathrop; Secre- tary of State, James P. Nolan; Treas- urer, Andrew Jensen; Attorney Gen- eral, William F. Wolfe; Railroad Com- missioner, Edward L. Hanlon; Insur- ance Commissioner, Henry Fetzer. Former Governer Peck was nomi- nated by acclamation, amid much en- ! thusiasm. There were contests on | other offices. e o WOODRU! IS INDORSED. Select a Full { Brooklyn Dclrgn(cs Want Him to Head State Ticket. NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—Delegates and alternates to the Republican State Convention to be held in Saratoga on | Septemuber 14 were elected in the twenty-one Assembly districts of Kings County (Brooklyn) to-night. In each convention resolutions indorsing 1Tlmolhy L. Woodruff for the nomina- tion for Governor and in8tructing the | delegates to vote and work for hlm were passell. FEECE LRI Date of Convention Set. NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—The Demo- ' cratic, State Convention will meet at | Saratoga on Tuesday, September 20, | that date having been fixed at the | meeting of the State committee in this city to-day. e e FLOTILLA OF GUNBOATS. Small War Craft to Aid in the Attack Upon Kurovatkin. TOKIO, Sept. 1.—Japan is prepar- ing to form a river flotilla like Gener- al Kitchener's Nile expedition, which will be able to ascend the Liao River! and its tributaries as far as Liaoyang and Mukden and so harrass General Kuropatkin as to compel him to re- treat to Harbin, thus effectually pre- venting a march for the relief of Port Arthur. | proached. about acknowledging the mistress he |h | the | ber 10, December 14, 184 MAKES STEPSON I \\ Mrs. )Ic\'lckcrs Will Gives! 1 Three-Quarters of Income! of Estate to Chicago Man | AL e {NO POISON IN STOMACH| Ulemlst s Analysis Discloses No Trace of Anything That i Would Cause Her Death| = | i 1 [ Spectal Dispatch ¢o The Call. CHICAGO, Sept. 1.—Previous to the filing for probate and the official open- ing of the will of the late.Mrs. James MdcVicker, L. D. Condee, attorney for Horace McVicker, her stepson and principal heir, made public the con- tents of the document to-night. The | testatrix names the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank executor and trustee of an estate which, by Condee, is esti- | mated at somethirg more than $350,000, provided the large amount of money {and jewels said to be missing from the safety deposit box in the trust com- pany’'s vaults can be replaced. Three-fcurths of the net revenue of the estate is to be paid semi-annually | to Horace McVicker ‘and wupon his death the trust company is requestéd | to transfer and convey the original three-fourths to Horace McVicker's heirs. The net income of the other quarter of the estate is to be paid semi-annually to Mrs. Clara B. Game of San Francisco and upcn her death the original shall become the property of her children. Mrs. Game also gets all the wearing apparel of the late Mrs. McVicker. Miss Jennie Boydston is to receive $5000 and James R. Owen and Mrs. Owen will receive, jointly, $5000. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 1.—An analy- sis of the stomach and other portions cf the body of the late Mrs. J. H. Mc- Vicker, sent to Dr. R. V. Day, City Chemist of Los Angeles, has been com- pleted and no trace of poison was found. The examination by Dr. Day was made at the demand of Horace McVicker of Chicago, stepson: of the deceased. Relatives of Mrs. McVicker. met to- NOTORIOU AY | CommrrT SUICIDE BY DRI MIDWINE WHOSE BODY W — "OUND IN THE BRUSH IN GOLDEN 1 day in the cffice of Public Administra- OON BY HER YOUNG SON. SHE HAD | I tor McGarvin ard agreed to leave the !handling of the trunks and other ef- fects here in that official's hands. CARBOLIC ACID, Doglike, he had no scruples loved. LEFT UNIDENTIFIED. The bady of the woman was taken to Morgue, where it remained un- dentified until late in the afternoon. Then Charles Fuhrig appeared and admitted. that it was his wife, Dora Fuhrig, the woman who was | seven times arrested for murder caused by malpractice. On November 29, 1898, Mrs. Fuhrig was charged with the murder of Mrs. Anna W. Walmsley: “Whilé out on bail for this offense she was arrested for three other similar offenses on Decem- and January 5, 1899. The charges against her were dismissed by a ruling of the Supreme Court. On March 20, 1900, she was charged | with causing the death of Su Ella Ty- | son and on November 5, 1903, she was arrested for the murder of Mrs. Ann Callaghan. She escaped convictions on both of these charges. Mrs. Fuhrig was 50 years old. Nearly her entire life has been spent in un- lawful medical practice. For the past few years she was clcsely watched by the police. Her family, consisting of a husband and three sons, refuse to say anything that will give a clew to the cause of her suicide. It is thought that her mind became unbalanced from worry over the trouble she has been in. Like many | that smelt strengly The body was shipped to Chicago to- | night over the Santa Fe road and is accompanied by Mrs. Game and Mrs | Effle, nieces -of the deceased, and Dr. Zeigler. of the unfertunate women whom she d treated Mrs. Fuhrig chose carboli id to end her life. An emptied vial | of this poison was found beside the body. The dead woman's family lives at 1445 Ellis street in a comfortable home. The e is filled with flowers and notted nlants. The strange woman spent her spare time in gardening. The husband seemed overcome by i grief at sight of the body in the ! Morgue, but when seen last night he | was calm and refused to talk of the ! tragedy. The dog still whines and every now and then scratches at the door of the room where his dead mis- tress formerly slept. The body, is still at the Morgue. e ———— Card Systems and Cabinets. Index cards. filing cabinets, loose leaf | ledgers and all modern systems in our stationery department. - Printing “and bookbinding_at lowest prices. Sanborn, Vail & Co.. 741 Market street e e et~ b JAPAN'S TYRMS OF PEACE. What the Mikado Hopes to Gain by Victory in War. VLADIVOSTOK, Sept. I.—The 3 | bitious hopes of Japan are freely dis- cussed by Japanese orisoners Hhre. All of them are confldent that naval SINGLE ENGINE HAULS | supremacy will enable Jasan to dic- MONSTER FREIGHT ‘l'RAl.\'l‘a“’ terms of peace, which will in- nelS <X { clude, according to- them, the posses- sion of Port Arfhur, Dalny, Korea Outfit Is So Long That Conductor Has to Telegraph Messages to Engineer. Saghalien, Kamtcha mander Islands, leaving Manc Russian hands. huria in CHICAGO, Sept. 1.—A freight train | The Japanese prisoners claim a | of 137 cars and more than a mile in | first victory for their country in the length was hauled by a single loco- | preventing of the Russians making a | motive from Ashtabula to Youngstown, Ohio. The trip, news of which reached the Chicago Lake Shore offices to-day, was made in six hours. When the conductor desired to communicate with the engineer he left his message at one block station and it was tele- graphed ahead to the next. | base of Vladivostok, from which place | | the hostile fleets would effectually | | have imperiled communication in ! Korea, rendering a land camvpaign im- ‘. possible. The Jananese, thev say gained this victory by foreing a war in | the winter. when Viadivestok \\‘\e‘ ice-bound. PRINCIPAL IR | Efforts [ persons 2 and the Com- |~ | Romano, TRIES 1N VAIN T0 GET BONDS Jail. Though Judge Agreed to Release Her on. Bail CANNOT RAISE Are Made to. Have the Sum Cut in Half. but They Are Not Suecessful —_— $20.000 Spectal Dispatch to The Call NEW YORK, Sept. 1 son walked from the —"Nan" Patter- Fombs to the Su- | preme Court this morning, the first time she has been out of prison in ‘weeks. She walked back to the Tombs affer Judge Amend had decided: that she might be liberated should she futnish bonds for $20,000. Her lawyer tried to have this cut in half and and. with the girl's father -saw District "Attors ney Jerome later in the . day,-but- the amount stood, although 'the -girl sat after returning to prisen without doff- ing her hat in- expectation .that she would regain her freedomr in’ & short time. Her lawyer was unable ‘to find. a bondsman, and to-night she reoccu- pied her cell in the Tombs, a bittérly - ppointed woman. 3 ‘When she. appeared at the dnor of . the Tombs, accompanied by. Warden ° Fiynn and Philip ‘Waldhémier, her counsel, the crowd in.waiting. saw she was dressed in black.and that a heavy veil of the same hue hid her.facé. As the trio ‘went- down : Center .street an the way to the courthouse; after-she had declined to ride; the crowd fol-- lowed. ‘There wére several -hundred - waiting ‘in .- the “courthouse,’ among them her father: 3 Abraham . Levy; -her " attorney, ad- dressed Judge Amend on the writ:of habeas corpus. - Levy said_he had been assured by ‘the.District Attorney that he was not -prepared .to' bring. the case to trial for some weeks, although the girl had Dbeén 'in-prisan “for “months. Therefore; he asked- that she should be, liberated on ‘bail, saying. shat’ the’ Dis- K- trict Attormey . had - ho. objéctions: io sueh a step. “1.will fix her bail’ at-$20.000;" ‘said the Judge; “without prejudice ' to a later motion for vided such.-a a. feduction and pro+ e t opposed by the District - A At Levy's office to-night it was said that no further ‘attempts would-be madeé to obtain the girl's r se untid tQ-morrow —_————— Russian Warshins on the Atlantie. MADRID, . Sent. E-—A . ‘telegram roin Las P: Canary Islands..an- nounce Mititary’ Governor 3 ‘of thé-arrival Ag 1 (the most hortheast- Islands) “of " $everai ng the Russian flag. " The telegram says that the vessels coaled from steamships. which were waiting there. has recéiv Lanzarote Isl of the nar: K B War Correspondent -Shot. LIAOYANG, 1.--Kirdloff, one of the Associateéd Press. correspends ents,. who had -been foilowing. the operations of General Zaroubdisff's. army, shot through the. lung - while on the firing line south of Liao= yang yesterday. —————— Favors holic Federation. ROME, Seot. 1.-——The Osservatéire the Vatican orgamn, publishes an article to-day praising and recom- mending a Catholic federation in the Uriited . Stat - Sént was SALE 3 fale of the Supreme Cou. 00 to J as admi Joseph P. Hale, wa ned yesterday -by -Judge “Cof- fey. The o n to the saie filed by Ann Feeney 'Wright, one . was with- drawn ADVERTISEMENTS. Suits for the Conclave If you want a suit or overcoat for the occasion we have them ranging from $10 to In almost any one line we pletely stock many retail stores. $35 have enough to com- We study our cus- tomers’ desires, and as we manufacture the clothes ourselves we keep the store well stocked with what i most wanted by the public. Besides tha vast assortms nt, which is a distinct advantage, there is th2 maker-to-wearer price that means such a saving to you, a sa\'mq any man appre- ciates who likes to make his dollars count. For example: We have a suit which we sell for $l0 Garments made just like ours sell for $12.50 in other stores, as they do not make their own clothes. The suits are stylishly cut in the latest Fall fashion. The patterns are prmc:pallv gun metal gray and nut brown in a great variety of checks, stripes and plaids. Every garment is guaranteed—money back is vour privilege and protection. We carry ready-to-wear suits and overcoats ranging in prices Special . you want For to-dav and Eat- u-day only a‘'-wco sweat rs, rsgu ar $i. fcr 55¢. buy them. & pecial These swecaters, mentioredinthe p n 1 above, ar: r:aly on sale below cost to us. from $10 to $35. If some new clothes for the Conclave this is the place to SNW00D5 740 Market Street

Other pages from this issue: