The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 3, 1905, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, .1905. ’ 3 NEN SHOT GOWN N STRIKE RIOTS N HEART OF CHICACD Frequent clashes occurred yesterday in the heart of the business section' of Chicago between union and n-union teamsters. - As a’ result, one man was killed and at least thirty were injured. Ins me cases in- nocent outsiders were mistaken for strike breakers and clubbed. Women in the shopping district were com- ed to flee by rioting crowds. Mayor Dunne will add 1000 policemen to the force to maintain order. G IFINDS SHE IS DIVORCED 4~ B : FROM SON/ON THAT DATE THE DISCO Brror Gives Womap PER CENT WILL BE WITI'MAWN. Custody of Her The Historians’ Hislory of the World. Husnand. THIS new magnum opus of world history—the most successful, inter= R esting and instructive book of many years, is now ctfmpleted, and Spectal Dispatch to The Call. this event, according to announcements already made, will be followed SMAHA-_ Mavdfl«;'ro iher“ unsncelsk- by an increase in prices. Readers of this newspaper should mail their surprise and chagrin Mrs. e 3 3 Rissonl] Alscovered 16o1a¥ fhat the do: orders before May 8th in order to make sure of getting the introductory el s matl prices. They should take into consideration their distance from New aeniha. hafo whe: okl R WOAA W York and the possibilities of postal delay. There is no time to be wasted. nry Jenkens ussell, instea ol % 2 Y P 3 £ £ from her husband, George Henry Rus- During publication The Historjans’ History of the World has been offered at a 11, he had d. A ding : s o 3 o ihe G he e iscount 0f A3 -per cent. from- the regular prices. This generous concession and the distribution of specimen volumss (substituting the book for the book agent, and saving the agent’s commission) have achieved . : A GREAT AND IMMEDIATE SUCCESS where that of the son should have appeared. plistanin i et i OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE follows: Henry Blumenberg Jr., Daggett, sul- the son and was given the custody of for the history, which is now universally recognized as the one complete, modern, and at. Mrs. Russell appeared to-day before OF THE PACIFIC COAST | phur burner; -Albert Buckingham, | ADVERTISEMENTS. i UNTIL MAY 15 ONLY & ' NO MORE SPECIMEN VOLUMES. Owing to The Outlook’s announcement of the withdrawal of the present discount, the demand for specimen volumes has broken all previous records. Ap- plications have been received for more than 60,000 specimen volumes, but the supply has not kept pace with the demand, and no more specimen volumes can be sent out. There are no more in stock. In filling out the decree the name of the son was written where that of the husband should have appeared and the name of the husband was written N pvas pnformed that there was | Japanese history down to the battle of Liao Yang and the United States history down error, and that, in order to get a di- | i Voree from her nusband, 1t weuid be | tO the election of Roosevelt. necessary for her to file a new suit. to Residents of the Golden i State, | WASHINGTON, May 2.—Patents | were issued to-day to Californians as the husband. Judge Sutton, \ho sranted the deees. | tNE SaMe time interesting narrative of all history and all times. For example, it brings Patents Granted for Various Devices | Oakland, pencil; Minnie P. Casterline, e Killed and Thirty] | . Known to Have | Been Hurt. San Francisco, cigarette paper hold- er; William J. Citron, San Franclsco, device for entertainment; Peter A. 2 Deasy, Oakland, water heating appar- atus; Charles Z. Ellis, Berkeley, point Y Y [ ° counter; George -H. Fairchild and R. g rl | R. Pierson, San Francisco, heater for | 0 a S an Ics repairing bituminous and asphalt ! . I L | 1 I Outsiders Taken for| Partisans and ! Clubbed. ‘I pavements; Richard Fincken, San| Francisco, beef cooler; Frederick W.; GOVERNOR OF ILLXNOIS,‘R‘:"ILOO ‘B\JAY BE DRAWN H§§10\58%§%15A32 French, San Francisco, boring ma- STRIKE, LABOR LEADER W YILL, APPEAL TO HIM AN] 7D ; = WHO ISSUED AN INJUNCTION IN THE CONTROVERSY. ghifis; 8, H. Cresnilosigngeles; gon e (Note.—Ex-President Cleveland’s letter has been already published.) Professor W. M. SLOANE, autiior of “The] EDWARD GAYLORD BOURNE, Profes- trolling means for automebtles; Frank D. Hopkins, San Francisco, gun sight; F—y | ers’ | similar stand to that of the Chicago 2.—The strike situ- ed a peculiar | wners' acts . with- the Association have also taken a| Tearn Owners’ Association. TO AUGMENT POLICE FORCE alone Federal Judge C. C. Kohlsaat at the stone, injuries severe; Albert Mcllvain, shot in the back, not expeeted to live; L. Dowell, shot in the left hip; William Bass, shot in the left leg below the knee; J. Erickson, shot in the right arm above the elbos Louis Eisman, colored. struck on the head with a brick in & leader of non-unfon men, struck in the head by a stone while conducting wagons along | ing table; Frank Walter, Los Angeles, | Hamilton Johnson and A. A. Noyes, Los Angeles, hydro carbon burner; | Alexander Levison, San Francisco, manifold book; George Mitchell, Los | Angeles, copper smelting and separat- | | sanitary drainage and vent fitting; Life of Napoleon,” etc: I have examined several volumes of your Historians’ His- tory of the World, and one of them, that on the Revolutionary that the work is well adapted for the use of intelligent men , Unless he had expert guidance. and women who want trustworthy historical knowledge with j to Which he has access are smaller, in that degree would he sor of History, Yale University : ( Taking the work by and large, I am convinced that the av- erage searcher for historical knowledge who is without expert i vV e idance from a trained scholar will, on the whole, fare mucH o et 2 3 = % | figh i o R, ;| ing; Herbert L. Noxon, Bakersfleld, | Epoch in France. with some care. I find much to praise in | 8Y e e phonRndL Seex i) b 000 o William Davie coired, nomunion driver nead | Stuffing box; George C. Richards, Oak- | the enterprise. The selections have been made with skill and | Detter in resorting to The MNisterians’ . 8o far as get- & hellbe bolice force to-morrow and will|cut in the same fight; Andrew Scott, colored, | land, stamp mill; James G. SImPson, | consclentiousness, and the running comments are clear and ! ting at the accepted results of historical scholarship in = be put on strike duty as rapidly as | nonunion griver, head cut in the same fight: | Los Angeles, dough raising apparatus: ' juce So far as possible under the plan adopted there is a| Feadable form is concerned, tham he would in the average s aly i3y Ylj:d:?:;te(:l\‘:: :l";':fr;glre(:f e i R B At ok Caver: | Curtis J. Stafford, Bakersfleld, cloth- | gontinuity of narrative and editorial attitude. It seems to me | American public library of forty to fifty thousand volumes, In proportion as the libraries . Franklin street; Policeman Guy Dittinger, | Robert M. Windney, Fernando, fruit | fare better by relying on The Historians’ Mistory. Nor do T r s t large puit t I ven | knocke: . " . L minimum of time and energy. . ! ¥ of the large Airms | request of attorneys representing seven | knocked down with a revolver and half of | grader and separator. a minimum expenditure see how it ‘can reasonably be questioned that the average r o -transfér their | express companies to-day issued & tem- teeth kicked out, knocked down by a S o y.it was sup- oyers’ Association | firmly bound to- for supremacy ers’ Association, Y but union team- refused this ‘afternoon to veries to guy "of the firms ow involved the strike. when or- d to do so by the Employers: As- the. employers re- tum they notified the | hat unless théy recogn- | in. deliveries an effert would all existing contracts m owners. and the | business houses and the railroads can- 2 o vision upon the arrival in that division chl ] in- | Of translating you have done and the impartial ase you have — : B o fives. 0 T ikate (e Svuation beforesends | OL Mador Payeon, and will then pro- | BiTL Gl.le" Vetwean a bare chronicle of facts and valumimous | Made Of historians o€ all nations. Thus you do not give M- The Taflroed men, contrary to_the | . AT R } ing troops. ceed to San Francisco and report by | . 3 c1aborate histories for each country. tory from the English or French or German point of view, but ASTO) J TEN. s of - the members of the Em- ployers’ Assoclation, did not exert the | influence on the teagm owners that was expected. They toak practically the | stand, declaring that the fight was something into which the rai)- roads not propose .to -enter; that they had contracts with the team | that these contracls were at | being ‘fulfilied to- their entire | gould see mno A e railroads should be iragged into the atruggle. The commission team Gwners and the Lake Transportation Team Own- | VACATION TRIP AT OUR EXPENSE | | OPPORTUNITY OFFERED BY POM-| | | | owners MER-EILERS PIANO UNLOAD- ING SALE. outing costs money; so does | wafit both, but | one in order to| ou want 2 piano good ohe, and you | | a billy, knocked down and trampled on. porary injunction restraining all per- sons from interfering with the wagons of the petitioners or the men employed | upon them. . The fighting to-day in the streets was even more fierce and savage than that of yesterday. The strikers and their sympathizers attacked the non- | union men at every opportunity, assail- ihg them with bricks, stones, clubs, knives and any other weapon upon | which they could lay their hands. The | fighting occurred in the heart of the | business section of the city, men being | shot down within 200 feet of the retail | store of Marshall Fleld & Co. and | clubbed nearly to death at the corner | of the Auditorium Hotel, in plain view | of hundreds of ladies, who were com- In many instances men walkingl along, the streets who had no active | connection whatever with the strike | were assaulted by hoodlums, who beat | them first and then later accused them | of being sirike breakers. A notable in- stance of this kind was that of Rev. W. K. Wheeler, pastor of the Ninth | Presbyterian Church, who while pass- | ing the corner of Desplaines and Ad- ams streets on his way to the Pennsyl- vania statlon was attacked by three‘ men, who knocked him down and beat | him unmercifully, until the timely ar- rival of the police saved him from crit- | ical injury. Wheeler managed to hold | one of his assailants until the police | could arrive. | William Miles, a colored waiter, while at work in a lunchroom at Adams and | Sangamon streets, half a mile from any | former scene of rioting during the | strike, was accused of being a strike | breaker, was pounded on the head with | Miles was removed to the hospital, where his injuries were pronounced se- vere. LIST OF THE VICTIMS. As far as known but one man was killed during the day. The number of injured is much_greater than the | ! court; HP striker with a club; Leonard Webber, struck on the head by a flying bullet, slightly injured: G on, colored, non-union man, badly a mob at State street and Peck Tony Renbenberg. union teamster, taken for non-union man, struck on the head with a stone and knocked Insensible, serious; Utley, floor manager for Montgomery Ward & Co., attacked by sluggers on Oaken- wald avenue. Although it was announced night that the teams of the express companies and of the Employers’ As- sociation would be handled bv men armed with rifles to-day, nothing of the kind was attempted, save in the case of the fifteen drivers employed by the Scott Transfer Company. Governor Dineen will be drawn into the controversy by a committee to be |sent to him by President Dold of the During a riot to-night at Halsted and Erie streets, which lasted for an hour and in which fully 1000 persons were engaged, three policemen and three non-union drivers were injured and twice as many rioters were clubbed. The riot commenced when four wagons of the Peabody Coal Company manned with non-union men left the Richter picture frame factory, 42 Huron street, after delivering coal. The wagons went south along Halsted street and their appearance on that thoroughfare was the signal for the formation of a mob, which pressed closely around them, threatening the drivers. The escort of police was compelled several times to charge into the crowd and use their clubs. Finally Sergeant Sullivan, in com- mand of the detail, ordered his men and the non-union men to fire over the heads of the crowd. This, when done several times in succession, compelled the crowd to give way, and the police finally dispersed it. —_————— GENERAL McCASKEY'S SON TO BE HIS AID DE CAMP Pleasant Surprise Awaits the Veteran on His Return From the last ARMY ORDERS. WASHINGTON, May 2,—Army or- ders: Major George F. Downey is re- i lieved from duty at Denver and will proceed to San Francisco and report in person on June 30 to the commanding general of the Department of Califor- nia for duty in the latter city. Major Francis L. Payzon Is relieved from duty at San Francisco and will proceed to Manila on the transport to sail from San Francisco on or about June 30, and upon his arrival in Manila will report | to the commanding general of the Phil- ippines division for assignment to duty. Captain Charles W. Fenton is to be re- lieved from duty in the Philippines di- telegraph to the military secretary for further orders. Private Charles W. Debeque, Com- pany B, Ninth Infantry, of the Ameri- can legation guard at Peking, China, upon arrival at the Presidio at San Francisco will be discharged without | honor from the army by the command- the service. Major Arthur C. Ducat, Seventh In- fantry, now on leave of absence in San Francisco, will report in person to the commanding general of the Depart- ment of California for = special duty pending the arrival of the Seventh In- fantry in the United States, when he will join' his regiment. Contract Sur- geon T. Ogier Hudson will proceed from Beauforty S. C., to Fort Ogle- thorpe, Georgia, and wegort to the com- manding officer f ird squadron, Beventh Cavalry,/ . and accom- pany that squadron to the Philippines, and upon his arrival in Manila will re- port to the commanding general of the Philippine division for assignment to duty. Chaplain Ernest H. Newsom, Ninth Infantry, now in San Francisco, will report to the commanding general of the Department of California for “ty until sailing on the transport about May 31 for the Philippine Isl- ence. meets. and clear. ing officer of that post for the good of | @ll thal that it stands usefulness. volumes the reac each epoch. The large, the illustrations modern and a valuable addition to the One cannot praise too highly the service you have done to literature in this serles. \ L text. WILLIAM R. HARPER, President of Chi- cago University: In these modern days, every man is constantly confrontel with questions of history covering a wide range of space and time, but very fow men have either the library room or the means to keep on hand a complete file of histories for refer- To such men, and their name is legion, something in the nature of a cyclopaedia which shall gather together in compact form the most serviceable information is almost a necessity. General cyclopaedias do not answer the purpose fbr two reasons among others: intermingled with data on other subjects, and second. that the limitations of space do not permit a sufficiently full treat- This want The Historians’ History of the World effectively Although I have not had time to examine all of the volumes, I am convinced from those in which I have read that In general the salient points in the events and periods .treated are brought out and a conception given which is tryue In short, the volumes seem to give the “gist of the mattery’ just what the average busy man wants to know, and } often he has time to read. | WINSTON CHURCHILL, author of “The Cris T have received The Historians’ deem it an invaluable addition to my library. ext to the dictionary and encyclopaedia in T6 be able to turn quickly to the history of any of the world's nations, ancient or modern, is an enormous ad- vantage to the busy man as well as the student. And in your r turns to the best minds and authorities in the print " “Richard Carvel,” ,etc. : ks are tastefully bound. First, that historical data are of the Worla. I 1t seems to me acquisition of The Xistorians’ Mistory. ple Life”: shows much to admire in every nation. from the universal point of view. versity of Michigan: Mistorians you sent me some months ago. er has the advantage often of posing views of high authoriti taining whose statement we ai it might be. well carried out. CHARLES WAGNER, axuthor of “The Si public or school library and many college libraries would find their range of historical material greatly expanded by the I think that The Outlook has done a fing thing in compiling | History of the World according to this plan. | It is just what we need at this period of the world's progress ' to help all nations to understand, appreciate and love one an- | other, and to clear away the jealousies and misunderstand- ings that have caused such terrible misery. Your history ‘What I like particularly in your work is the vast amount JAMES B. ANGELL, President of the Umi- It is only recently that I have been able to examiné The ’ Xistory of the World, several volumes of whieh The plan is so unique that!it was with some misgivings that I began my examinatfon of the work. But I must con- fess that the measure of success surprises me. And the read- . ing different and even op-, inconvenience is ascer- reading in any particular passage is by the system of notation made less than I feared The transkations from foreign writers, so far as I have tested them, are admirably done. The introductory essays to the different divisions give excellent preliminary surveys of the histories which are given in fuller detall in the chapters F. MARION CRAWFORD, autiior of “Hve Roma Iinmortalis,” etc.: rather miss your Philippines. DENVER, May 2.—Lieutenant Me- ey, who is stationed at the Pre- ands to join his regiment. ANDREW CARNEGIE: P known list shows. In many cases the than take it and 4 s together or c(,m;,i{"‘non-umon men swung their clubs p one. * 7" | with great effect, knocking men from | C T have gone over Vol. VI of The Ristorians’ History of the ‘World, which covers the period from the early Roman Empire ACCUSED MAN CLAIMS 1 am pleased to see that you I have yours of March Sth. e a8 . “ . 476. In my opinion this volume gives an admirable we have solved the |their wagons headlong intd the street; | cigio, S isco, h: TO BE MINT EMPLOYE say “historical books on various countries deal with such |to A. D. problem for § Having been tempora |in other instances when assalled by i S;]d‘;&:flf i ,eadh}f;" ‘:‘;d“:cd limited periods and are so overwhelming in quantity that it is | account of a most difficult period. Not content with the work forced out r ail store, aid & mobs they fired point blank into the by our stand. | crowds. piano mekefs, to sell | < > efore, we are obliged | The dead: .Arrested in. New York and Says He Is William Davenport of San F¥rancisco. * almost hopeless for the busy man to try to read them." Noth- ing can be truer than that. The great fault with historians. of the ablest modern scholars. the editors give us long ex: tracts from the original authorities. and we have the inest| company his father, Brigadier General William McCaskey, to Colorado as aid ‘.i““ follow. In short, the altogether original plan has beem it seems to me, is the time they devote to mere detail. Those | mable advantage of reading Suetonius’ account of Augnustus b | % o - LRI CHARLES BEARD, struck on the | de camp. The latter will arrive at San| . L in oharge of vour “Historians’ History" glve attention only to | or Zosimus' description of Constantine's victories for our- e d antages of oug | forehead in the fight near the Audl | Francisco about May 15, on his way i fifx YOR(ff{c:‘,:an'tn-::tera;: ::: important events such as change or develop previous condi- | selves. Ths story is well and clearly told, while the main 1 ity be your op- i ls‘);:lulmthfktsLMSZvd]l?l%sopiz:] ractured | e from the Philippines. He will | 1B ree p 4 S tions, grasping the psychological moments, thus giving read- | questions of the period, such as the theory of the Empire; its and charged with burglary a man who ers knowledge of causes and results of those uprisings which | relations with Christianity, and the barbarian invasions, are ve $500 to spend for your new | $ for your vacation | e will give you | 0 pianos ever sold on | Jf you are counting 0 at a cost of $350 or or $153, as the case | time, ‘and see the | can give you for the Remember, that the differ- | . le and retail M the | means less than ! ding sale you get ; f this difference. to us your paper is 1. 1 you do not want | give you the easiest | S8 never n this unlo re than all f termm We have a wilderness of good pianos, slightly -used, of all.standard makes, | which we hdve heen selling at very low rates. This week we will make special figures on these to clean them out ommer-Eilers Mausic Go. Temporary | lesrooms, 514 Market street i | liam Hill, The injured: Bruno Germain, New York City, head cut; Charies Moody, beaten on the head with cans by strikers; John Blum, non-unfon driver, struck in the side with a brick, one rib broken: | Willlam Miles, colored waiter, head cut with blily and trampled on; Police Sergeant Barron, thrown from patrol wagon while responding to riot call, legs badly wrenched; Martin Garray, non-union man, head badly cut by billies in the hands of strikers; W. N. Brown, non-union teamster, struck by a bucket of cement thrown from the twelfth story ‘of bullding at Adam and State streets, leg broken; Policeman Id ward Camplon, struck on the head with brick, severely cut: Rev. W. K. Wheeler, beaten by strikers, face and head cut; Henry Schultz, shot in the left side by a non-union teamster, not serivue: Daniel Cohen, non-union map, struck on the head with a club: Willlam Burke, right hand lacerated by a brick; Wil- | head and left shoulder cut by ; stones: A B. Smith, non-unicn man, face cut with a stone; Frank maj right hand smashed by a brick; James Smith, | mon-union man, struck in the back with & succeed Brigadier General Frank D. Baldwin as commander of the Depart- ment of Colorado, with headquarters at Fort Logan, seven miles from Den- ver. General Baldwin has been or- ! dered to Oklahoma City and will command the Southwestern Division, with headguarters there. J General McCaskey does not know yet that his son is to be his aid de camp. —_———— Frank Smith to Get $100,000, TOPEKA, Kans.,, May 2.—Frank R. Smith, the long lost relative of Mrs. Charles L. Fair, killed in an automo- bile accident in France, left to-day for Newmarket, N. J., in company with ¢ | his attorney to establish his identity. | postmaster at Craftonville, San Ber- o pon,on-union man. | fle i3 entitied to about $100,000 mtx{; nardino County, Cal, vice Nathan A. | his mother’'s estate. said he was Willlam D. Davenport, an employe of the United States Mint in San Francisco. Davenport, who wore fashionable clothes, was captured with another man in the hallway of a -manufacturing building in Sixth avenue, which, the police charge, they | were trying to break into. Both men drew revolvers and threatened to shoot, t were knocked down before they cot do so. 2 No man named Davenport is con- nected with the Min in San Francisco. e S . New California Postmaster. WASHINGTON, May 2.—James I. McClung is appointed fourth class Johnson. in the history of every nation seem to mark epochs. This es the work an encyclopaedia of the World's History, to ich one may refer as one does to encyclopaedias for con- trolling facts. toms of the day neglected. forming a most suitable frontispiece. discussed with especial care; nor are the manners and cus- The whole work is, moreover, pro- fusely but judicfously illustrated. a portrait of Mommsen Please bear in mind that a payment of $3400 AT ONCE will bring you delivery of the entire ’ Residents of the Pacific Coast shouid mail their orders betore May 8 1o be accent~d at the low introductory prices. Send orders, requests for information, etc.. to THE OUTLOOK. 225 FOURTH AVENUE. NEW YORK. ———-—-—-&\ : set, and that you cun pay the balance in small monthly sums at the low wmtroductory. prices; FUTURE CRDERS will be charged the higher price. but .

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