The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 23, 1905, Page 10

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10 THE SAN FR ‘-\(‘v\ICISCO AZTEC WILL GO ON PANAMA T0 BE LOADED " WITH FREIGHT| Trade to Southern| Ports Shows Increase. MRSt Bas ) | Necessitates Extra Boat to Meet Demands. Company | ip Astec on or P carrier | way ports. This ‘action | to meet the de-, rs here, who have | s for merchandise for south- will carry 600 tons of principally of corn, of this merchandise & destined for New York, but the most f it goes to ports along the southern as grown tremendotis- regular steamer of (h! loaded to cas past. The City g months of to on has more freight he can get with, and offer- zs were so large ahead that the com- ' decided the Aztec on the to put The begin re dock on aded to il go on the drydock and will be ready to freight at the little Mail 26 She will be! freighter w to-day g Friday, capacity —— Gas Holder Towed Up the Bay. a huge gas 36 feet high e ae r and being much 2 big. towed b s it siowly moved alone. ton. It loomed up over harbor as it passed along to the new gas works at the When this hands of the San ation de- tank and e used as oil tanks | Blume .g Cram, | ng the tanks, » its new home led. and the Equita- thing of the past | Company’s | to arrive in port to- She will bring 350 will have to re- the Peru sails for the fethmus Pl Peru Due Thursday. mship Company's ve here on Thu an peasants. tok to Panama. hern part of this ‘:eln‘ of big ! They will Overdues. Three overdues were added to the list yes- erday. They are. Lergo Bay, 76 days from Penarth to East London, 10 per cent; Thalassa 8 per | Carnmoney, 90 days from London to Fre- § per cent. Others on the list are: 210 ays trom San Francisco to Liv- | 80 per cent: Alcinous, 158 days from o Antwerp, 90 per cent: Agnes, 194 days | from Shields to Valparaiso, 80 per cent; Kin- | ross-shire, 81 daye from Newcastlp, Australla, | Valparaiso, 18 per cent | | 72 days from Hamburg to Delagoa Bay, ent i t—— | Loading at Oakl Whart. The Pacific Mail stesmship Algos fs mnow | ng at Osklan for the Ori next Mon Sl Rosecrans Arrives. The steamer Rosecrans arrived yesterda: days trom Honojulu 5 sugar. Ehe is consigned to the Matson Naviga- | tion Company wharf with machinery and t. She expects to be ready i Mongolia Due To-Morrow. The Pactfic Mail Steamship Company steamer Mongolla. from Hongkong, Yokohama and Honolulu, is due to arrive to-morrow. S AL Will Sail Friday. The Ocegnic Steamship Company’s steamer Maripose will sail for Tahiti on Friday, at Uam _— | Alameda to Arrive To-Day. The Oceanic Steamship Company's steamer Alamede is due to arrive this morning from Honolulu Moptia® A ER NEWS OF THE OCEAN. | The barkentine 8. G. Wilder returns to Honolulu with general cargo. | e e SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. Monday, May 22. Olsen, 68 hours from Stmr_Senta Monica, Gravs Harbor. Stmr Greenwood, Walvig, 9 hours from Del- mar Landing | Stmr Scotia, Johnson, 12 hours from San Vicents Landing. Stmr Grace Dollar, Olsen, 64 bours Aberdeen. Stmr Atlas, Badger, 32 hours from Port Har- ford, up river direct. Stmr Rosecrane, Johnson, ® days from Hon- | olulu. | Stmr State of California, trom San Diego. Stmr Gipey, Leland, 20 hours from Monte- rey, etc Stmr Pulton, Panzer, 26 hours from Eureka. Stmr George Loomis, Seddon, — hours from Redondo, up river direct Schr Mary C, Campbell, a trom | Thomas, 45 hours 10 hours from Bo- gz Schr Bella, Jacobson, Bchr Bolinae Schr James A. Garfeld, Norby, 4 days from Grays Harbor. Tug Deflance, James, 3 days from Siuslaw. Jennie Griffin, Gibson, 2 hours from 6 hours from Monte- | rey. Barge No. 88, Danlels, in tow stmr Atlas, up river direct. CLEARED. Monday, May 22. | Stmr Coos Bay, Nicolson, San Pedro; P C 8 Co | SAILED. g Monday, May 22. | icolson, San Pedro, | Andresen, San Pedro. | Ahistrom, Eureka. ' m, Port Kenyon { E Juggan, Coos Bay | b r Novo, Johnl(‘n Eureks . ] Helen P. Drew, Gunderson, Point | Columbia, Doran, Astoria and Por(~' Vidette, Darwin, Grdys Ha: . Amelia, Hubs, Grays Hartor 1da A, Cambbell, Point Reyes. Bessle K, Bash, San Vicente Landing. SPOKE May S8—In Jat 36 N, long 05 W, Genevieve Molinos, from Penarth, ‘;;rbg:: Francisco. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, Masy 22, 10 e bazy: wind NW, velocity 24 m?le.mp"v::.l,h" DOMESTIC PORTS. TATOOSH—Passed inward May 22— Stmr 8anta Barbara, hence May 18, Ior Seattle. Passed in May 22—Schr Fearless, = from Guaymas, for Bellingham: schr G. W. Watson, from San Pedro, for Bellingham. y UMPQUA—Arrived May 17—Stmr San Ga- briel, from San Pedro. Selted May 21-_Schr Laucy. for San_Pedro. —Sailed May 21—Schr for_Ean Pedro _— GRAYS ::nson Amrtved May 2 Bear Coronado, ce May 17; schr Deflance, fi €ap Pedro; stirs Cascade and G, C, lm | sotace, | braskan, for Kahul | lington, hence May 18, | ltan, for Quebec PALERMO—Safled May 21—Stmr Pannonia, | | trom Trieste, etc., k. v _Somers, hence May 10. — and for Sun Francisco. Arrived May 21, midnight— from Skagwi Stmr ¢ for ved May 22—Stmr Nome City, ved May 2 hr Maweema, - from Salled May 22—Stmr Costa Rica, 1—Stmr Phoenix, chr Bertie Minor, for San 21—Stmr Venguard, 22—Stmr Alliance, 22— Stmr Pasadena, for San IND—Arrived May 21—Schr R. W. from San Pedro. rrived May 22—Stmr 21; stmr Bonita, from Bartlett for San for San Francisco. ailed Mdy 22—Stmr- Alliance, 22—Stmr Roanoke, from As- toria POR' Salled May 22—Bktn | Retriever, for Franclsco | MONTEREY—Arrived May 22—Ship Marion | Chileott ce May 21, in tow tug Deflance. d 22, 4 p m- , for Hardy FORT WORDE? stmr Burnside, U s Ruby, Arrived off May from Seattle. May 22—Schr Arrived m} 22_Stmr Chico, REDONDO—A hence May 18. Hurb«( stme aqua, for Ban EDRO—Arrived May 22— from ‘Graye Harbor; bktn Portland, ria; stmr laqua from Redondo; schr W. rose, A F, Witzemann, from Grays Harbor. PORT TOWNSEND—Salled. May 22—Br ship Lydechorn for Coquimbo, SEATTLE—Arrived May —Stmr Santa Barbara, hence May ABERDEEN—Arr! nado, hence: May 17; bence May 18. Safled 'May 22—Stmr Watson A. West, for San Francisco. COOS BAY—Sailed May 22—Stmr Roanoke, for San Francisco, via Eurel EUREKA—Arrived May hence May 20. ISLAND PORTS. HONOLULU—Arrived May hence May 15. MANILA—Sailed May 20—U S stmr Thomas, for San Francisco, via Honolulu. ILOILO—Safled May 21—Br stmr Oakburn, for Boston. HONOLULU—Sailed May 18. d May 22—Stmr Coro- stmr G. C. Lindauer, Aberdeen and ‘schr Stmr Navarro, 22U S stmr 22—Stmr Ne- HILO-Sslled May 20—Bark Amy Turner, for San Francisco. FOREIGN PORTE. BARBADOS—Arrived May 12—Br stmr | Coya, from Junin. BREISBANE—Arrived May 20—Br stmr Mio- wera, from Vancouver. HAMBURG—Arrived May 21—Ger stmr Sax- onia, hence Jan 7 QUEENSTOWN—Arrived May 20—Br ship A May 20—Br nas, from Eureka. A—Arrived prior HE! bark Queen Margaret, from Cebu. KUCHINOTZU—Passed May 7—Br stmr In- dramayo, from New York, for Japan. PERIM—Passed May 20—Br Cape Breton, from Sabang, for Boston. GRANGEMOUTH—In port Apr 20—Br ship Dumfriesshire, for Leith and Honolulu. Ll\l‘RPOflb—ln port May 10—Br ship 2 HOBE - sarie y 19—Ship Astral, for —. FOKOHAMA- ed May 6—Br stmr Tele- machus, for Seattle. VICTORIA—Arrived May 22—Br stmr Wel- for Ladysmith. PERIM—Passed May from Philadelphia, for New York. GIBRALTAR—Passed May 21—Br Auchenblac, from New York, for Manila’ CON—Arrived May 20—Schr E. B. Jack- oot Trves Grayatmastor.. SHANGHAI—Sailed May 21—Schr El Do- rado, for Port Townsend. SYDNEY—Arrived May 22—Ship William H, Smith. from Port Townsend. VICTORIA—Sailed May 22—Br stmr Em- press of Indla, for Hongkong. OCEAN STEAMERS. NEW YORK—Arrived May 22—Stmr Kroon- land, from Antwerp; stmr Minnetonka, from London. NEW YORK—Arrived May 22—Stmr Repub- lic, from Naples, etc.; stmr Noordam, from Rotterdam and Boulogne. GLASGOW—Arrived May 22—Stmr Corean, trom Boston. 20—Stmr Carthaginian, for St. Sailed Ma: Johne, N. F., stmr for New Yor! LIVERPOOL—Arrived May 22—Stmr Cym- ric, from Boston. HAMBURG—Arrived May 21—Stmr Bluech- er. from New York, via Plymouth and Cher bourg. Note—Reported arrival at Hamburg of stmr Saxonia, May 21, was an erroi ROTTERDAM—Arrived May 22—Stmr Rynd- bam, from New York. LONDON—Arrived May 21—Stmr ‘Saxonia, from San Francisco, via Valparaiso, Punta Arenas und Teneriffe, for Hamburg. MARSEILLES—Arrived May 21—Stmr Pe- leus, for Liverpool. MOVILLE—Arrived May 22— Stmr Astoria, from New York, for Glasgow, and proceeded. OUTH—Arrived Stmr Kaiser Wilhelm New York, for Cherbourg and Bremen, oceeded. GENOA—Arrived May 22—Stmr Welmar, from New York. i YOKOHAMA—Salled May 19—Stmr Em- prees of Japan, from Hongkong, Shangha! and Kobe, for Vancouver, B. C. GIBRALTAR—Sailed lhy 22—Stmr Prin- ;u!k Irene, from Genoa and Naples, for New or Memorandn. Per stmr Rosecrans, from Honolulu—: 22, 8 m, passsd & four-masted forelgn bery, heading west, 45 miles SW of Farallon Isloads ——— Saomn, Moon and Tide. mited States Coast and G s ‘Time and Holght of High and Low Wavers at For; Ifi‘l’m‘efi !:lr-m:e to San Franciseo . Pu thclal Bey. Fublished by officlal authority of the NOTE—The high and low wat, the clty front (Mission-street whart) avomt 3¢ minutes later than at Fort Point; Ahe height of tide is the same at both places, TUESDAY, MAY 23. [Timel [Timel ~[Timel lHW L w s Wi 3 | 2:00] 24 | Bi0v] 25 | 4:08| 28 | b:28) LW 20 | 1:00 28 | 1:50 20 | 2:82 hence | San | from Coos | chr - Mel- | € trom | & 21—Br stmr Croydon, and Philadelphia; stmr Mongn- | | from- Tacoma, - via Yokbhame, Hioj | | Sbanghai, i Wenther Report. (120th Meridian—Pacific Time.) SAN FRANCISCO, May 22—5 p. m. The following maximum and minimum tem-— peratures are reported for previous day from Enastern clties Cincinnaty 54/ Philadelphia | Boston .64-46|New York . Jacksonville -90-72{ Washington St. Louis 6-84|Pittsburg . | Chzcago 2-48/Honolulu, H. T..78-68 o, i 3 | 4. New Orleans ....86-74 { > = SAN FRANCISCO 6448 | BIG TANK BEING TOWED BY TU The following are the onal rainfalls to | ILTON TO GAS WORKS AT PO- i date as compared with those of the same date | TRERO. last season, and the rainfall in the last twen- | A =3 ty-four hours: | Stati 2450, feabi | B the early morning tides are given in the lert | Stations— ours. Season. Season. | hand column and the siccessive tides of the | Eireka 0.00 32.43 64.58 day In the order of occurrence as to time; the | Red Blu: 0.00 33.52 31.52 fourth time column gives the last tide of the | Sacramerito 0.00 21.88 10.87 day. except when there are but three tides, as | San Francisco 23.45 20.59 eometimes occurs. The heights given are In | Fresno .. 0.00 12.08 8.04 eddition to the soundings of the United States | Independence . 0.00 3.89 2.57 Coast Survey Charts, except when a minus (—) | San Luis Obispo.. 0.00 23.50 18.96 sign precedes the height, and then the number | Los Angeles . 0.00 19.48 8.72 | given is subtracted from the:depth given by | San Diego . 0.00 14.26 4.30 | the charts. The plane of reference is the mean | of the lower low waters. THE COAST RECORD. 1 | Movements of Steamers. g ;;E -1? °§ GE | g sHen ™ 3 | TO ARRIVE. 5 E333 42 8 STATIONS. 2 flggs §§ &2 % _ Steamer. | From. 5 33 2% 2 H H Aurelia Portland & Astorl: S e 2 : 3 | Centenziai. [} Seattle & Tacoma. | i 3 3 5 H | Alameda..... | Honolulu 3 | Bonita. San Pedro & Way Pts. May 23 lf‘;;‘.{‘;fl N s & | Taqua. .| San Pedro .. |May Hureka" 20 54 & | F. Leggeii...| San Pedro 3 Fround: 58 78 0 | Chehalls. Grays Harbor . S. E. Faral 99 51 ‘0 | Del Norte. .| Crescent City | Flagstaft ...-29.70 64 00 | Mongolia.. .| China & Japan. May 2¢ | Tnaenondence 30168 s 5l | Corona. Humboldt . May 24 et 20 o | 24 Los Angeles..20.88 68 -00 | Costa Rica...| Portland & A ....[May 24 | Mft. Tum'pais.20.99 60 | Roangke....., Portland & Way Pis._.|May 24 | Noren Heed 30.03 48 - ty Panama. {\‘;:m}l;malf!: Ancon..|May 24 | Proenix .29.86 92 64 W Clear .00 C fiooase Point Reyes .20.92 51 45 ‘00 i 3 Pocatello ....80.03 52 24 02 ! Portland .....30.04, 50 48 82 Red Bluft ... 20,92 ‘T4 52 00 | Roseburg ... 80.20+52 42 Bt { Sacramento ..20.92 72 56 .00 | Salt Lalke ...20.88 50 88 X | ; | San Francisco.30.00 84 48 W C | 8. L. Obispo..20.94 72 40 W Clear .00 - eattle . loudy .63 Bty vy Fosta. (Nar 37 | Spokane 5 40 SW Cloudy .18 G. Lindauer.| Grays Harbor . May e a4 n Bt Curacao......| Mexican Ports. Wally Wl & 42 Breakwater.. | C Winnemucca. mw 62 24 Arctic........| u 88 64 Sea Foam. | | Sydney Portland & Astoria. Hamburg & Way Port: & Way Port: WEATHER CONDITIONS AND GENERAL FORECAST. The pressure has fallen slowly over the northern half of the.coast and risen slowly over California, south of San Francisco. . Hamburg Steamer. Coos Bay Point Arena . Pt. Arena & Al |N. Y. via Ancon. FROM SEATTLE. Destination. & Way. Puget_Sound Ports. A e R ok Ln;?:‘:::;a depression overlies the valley of Rain has fallen in Oregon, Washin, and | TO SAIL. Idaho. % The following high winds are reported: Stesmer. | Destinations. Point Reyes west; Farallones, 44 i west; Eureka, 26 north; Flagstaff, 28 south- Los Angsies Ports.| | i i 2 B.el‘ ‘;.r s.| 0 am Pier 2 Forecast made at San uheo for thirty ! [ Humbotdt i 10 | hours, ending midnight, May 5| San Francisco and \lclnlty—Fdr ’hmldly' | £ 9 mli'; west v;lndl e s Angeles and vicinity—Fair Tuesday: Bredhwaicr. | Cons By 5 8 {(w wie ouas Seattl 8| Sacramento Valley—Fair Tuesday; brisk At & P ;;: Pler 23 | north winds, . er 27 ralley—Fair Tue warmer; Los Angeles Ports.| 8 pmiPler 5 | rréaty noren winds o U 5 dES e R § imlPler 2| Coast, north of Conception—Fair Tuesday; | May 25, P“‘I €F 2 | brisk to high northwest win A I A ",;'i’g m{Pler 40 | ,, C5RL south of Conception—Cloudy Tuesday; | a ) 0 | City Fuebia. (Puget Sound Poris./11 am|bler 8 | o foothlls and mountains—Fair Tuesday, Centennial.. |Seattle & Tacoma..| 5 pmPler 20 | “Nreda Fair Tuesday, warmer. Redondo.... | Astorla & Portland| § pm|Pler 2| 1 s N € Monica.” | Grays Harbor ...| 4 pmiPler 2 A G. McADIE, District Forecaster. Chehalis. 2 i3 SH'Y Al pamatERES ¢ SEVERAL MILLIONS -|8an Pedro ay. Pler 11 W St. Michaels direct| 2 pm|Ple | BtMichis & ¥ rbks| 3 bm|bler 19 FOR ORK AT NOME Bitzaveth..| Coquitle River [Pl 8 zal ‘oquille River {Pler 20 May 27, 'y ])e - Norwood... | Los Angeles Ports.|12 m|Pler 20 }Iea\y Operators Plan Exten Eel River Ports...| 2 pm|Pier 2 sive Improvements in "~ Mining Country. China & Japan....| 1 pm(Pler 40 | Gosta Rica.| Astorla & Portl 31 am Pler 24 Alameda. .. b = ,n City Panama| N. Y. v A;‘c'onmm “albler 40 TACOI\:A, ; m;;-u; 2 £ ay 22.—Five million dollars | F. Ktiby Port = |5 Ko Bon “m"g‘o‘hwv:,:y. § bmiPler 27 | are to be spent this summer In develop- 'c 2 " May 30. ment work about Nome. Part of this umuul'fff. P::ep‘onm:m"??ym l: :zl;l‘:_lt sum will defray the cost of thirty miles I of railroad to be built between Marys go!u“n:‘\al:‘.‘;r (A}-rm- :qu;thna]u Du.:g" 24 Creek‘ and, wavis Landing. Heavy Nome 3. Lindeuer | Grays Harbor..... er "2 | o] une Nome & St.Mich'ls. men than are now in Nome. Nome & St.Mich'ls! Major French will complete his mam- moth ditch through Solomon Bay dis- trict. W. L: Leland of California, backed by Los Angeles men,- will take north thousands of tons of machinery,. includ- Ing an immense dredger, for use at Solo- Santa Clara. - Valdez chants’ Exchange, May 22, 1905, 1 at noon of the p. m. Greenwich time. kagway & Way Ports. +| Cooks Inlet & Way Pts. Sk & Wi ay | Skasway & Way Ports Nome & The Time Ball on the building was dropped exactly at noon & Seward...... St. Michae! ne. Michasls yame Time B‘ll. Branch Hydrmnphxc Office, U. B. N., Mer- Cal., tower of the Ferry San ' Francisco,” to-ds 120th meridian. or af U 8. = Hospital Corps, now at the depot of recruits and casuals at Fort McDowell, Cal., will report to the commanding of- ficer of the Second Squadron, Thir- teenth Cavalry, and accompany that command to Port Myer, Va. Corporal Richard Bittle, Signal Corps, at Benicia Barracks, will be sent to Fort Nio- brara, Nebr., reporting to the commund- ing officer for duty. —— Goes to Drydock. The City of Pa: t Hunters Botnt u-urw" i —— e DAUGHTERS OF ST. GEORGE._. ’ s or, R G E Empress 'fll «ive a ball in Golden mon Bay. J. E. Chilberg & Co. will spend $500,000 of New York money i completing a ditch through the Kougarok country. Chilberg says four other large ditches will be built in that district. GRAPEMEN EXPECT TOP-NOTCH PRICES Offer of $150 an Acre Is Made to Woodbridge Grower. . Lieutenant, in charge, RDERS. . Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTO! ay 22.—Army or- | STOCKTON, May 22.—Wright Covell. of Sergeant Edward D. Gavagan, ‘Woodbridge has been offered $150 an acre for the grapes on his ‘seventeen-acre vineyard. The price is quot with the understanding that the bu will har- | vest the grapes. Table grapes will command a large fig- ure this season. Northern San Joaquin is about the only section in the San Joa- quin Valley which will'have a large crop of this variety of fruit. The Fresno dis- trict will not send many cars of table grapes to the Eastern market, because of the failure of the crop of Malagas. Other districts also complain of short crops, and for this reason grape growers in Northern San Jmuln axmc top- notch prices. —_——————————— TH PARLOR'S SICK.—In order to re- e e e deors e KEITH plete its func Gol«n ‘West, dmm W an in Hall on nnmm g‘. Cumberland Body Is Voted Into General " Assembly Without Dissenting Voice LD PLANS FOR-THE MERGER Differences Which Arose in | Regard to Church Policy Healed After Long Years WINONA LAKE, Ind., May 22.—Amid a storm of applause, without debate or a dissenting voice, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church to-day voted to reunite with the Cumberland Presby- terlan Church, which ~ceded from the general body on February 1, 1810. This .will bring together the two largest branches: of the Presbyterian faith. By the afloption in its entirety of the Teport of the special canvassing commit. tee, the assembly ordered that the ques. tlon as it now stands be referred to the committee on co-operation, the member- ship of which was increased to twenty- one, with the provision that it has power to confer with ‘a committee from the Cumberland body to the’end that detalls of the consolidation may .be worked out in a report to the next General Assembly. The dissenters from the East and South, who apparently made no concerted effort, outside of secret committee meetings to defeat consolldation, to-night declare that the General Assenibly opened the avenue to-defeat by referring, to a committee the work of afranging the detalls of consoli- dation.” ‘It s intimated that the opposi- tion ‘take the question back to the presb; ~of the Cumberland Church and ask-#hat it be reconsidered before the committee on co-operation makes. its re- port in 1906. Several of the Bastern dis- senters declare that the action of the General. Assembly was perfectly in 'ac- cord with the wishes of the oppesition. The proposed”union with the Reformed church ‘was discussed, but no ‘actlon was taken pending’ action by the General Synod. of that body, which'is in session at ‘New York. The ‘resolution 'incorporated ln the re- port of the committee on marriage and divorce prohibits the ‘remarriage o. ah innocent party to a divorce until after one year has elapsed. The negro, his racial fl‘hu and alleged criminality were subjects of discussion by several speakers following: the report of the Board of Missiéns for Freedmen. Jus- tice John' M. Harlan conel a brief talk with the words: * find no- where in the reports fiinmnuom of ulythll!s of the the General Assembl; criminality of the negro.” The resolutions were ulopted without reference to the criminality of the colored race. —_——— FILE TWO REPORTS. California Presbyterians Warmly Dis- cuss the Union Question. FRESNO, May 22.—The Cumberland Presbyterian General Assembly is in the midst of a warm debate on the union question. Two reports were presented to it this afternoon. A ma- jority -report, signed -by Drs. Temple- ton and Wigginton and Judge Beard, gave a complete list of) the presby- teries that voted and declared that the. union had been constitutionally agreed to by the Cumberland Presby- terian church. Elders McClelland and Young sub- mitted a minority report. This agreed with the majority with reference to the facts of the vote, but clalmed that the church has no constitutional right to unite with another church and that, therefore, the union has not been con- stitutionally agreed to. It further af- firmed that the Presbyterian church has not complied with the terms of the agreement .with reference to separate presbyteries. On a motion to substitute the minor- ity for the majority report, Dr. Temple- ton of Texas opened the discussion. He was followed by other speakers, tue debate lasting until a late hour. It is expected to continue through most of the day to-morrow. . The unionists see no need of discussing the matter at all, but have acceded to the demand of the opposition that there be a full debate. el g S MORMONISM DENOUNCED. Baptists Call for Expulsion of Smoot From the Semate. ST. LOUIS, May 22.—Interest in to- night's meeting of the American* Bap- tist Publication Society, as a part of the national Baptist anniversary, cen- tered upon the report of the committee which submitted a strongly worded resolution denouncing Mormonism and asking for thé expulsion from the Sen- ate of Smoot of Utah. The report was unanimously adopted without discus- sion and coples were ordered sent to President Roosevelt, Vice President Fairbanks, Speaker Cannon and Sen- ator Burrows, chairman of the Com- mittee on Elections. The resolution was, worded as follows: \ he recent Contr_lflnd investi- Whereas, gations n.v shown that Mormon hier— rehy l- d’u‘f‘yim u:- lAIu. both State vod Congress th ty oe Tadlcal ‘nction <3°°n Temoval of the manifest evils of Mormonism, ‘Résolved, £ Ne oAl b the. bmm ted_States Senate to 'XD.‘ body as unworthy of wbenmp_ CONFERENCE ADJOURNS. United Brethren Olose Their Session TOPEKA, Kans, May 22.—The Unit- ed Brethren General Conference ad- Journed this afternoon ‘sine . dle., The elections to-day resulted as follows: g:l.-ld‘rylod-&— . Burtner,. 8. W. 8. Kendall, G. ‘Hubt’r Wlllll.n McKee A. Kb m;h n‘lmnfln Am:l'nvn, W, It ‘Wash- unday-school M—A. B. . Slflttfl. Il". Seminary_E. T Thompaon, 1. e !TOCKTO‘N. p Mexican, was sentencéd to ten years in San Quentin this afternoon for kill~ .ing J. C. Floyd in a saloon recently. In passing sentence Judge Nutter stated that he took into consideration the evidence showing that Floyd car- May - 22.—Juan’ Dh.:, a nua,nm:qdlhtmuhmw it, the fact'that the men had been fight- ing and that the deceased applied vile names to the defendant and lmd him n'a W_ g FRICTION OVER FAIR AWARDS \Ia.nv Exhlbxtors nt St. Louis | Appeal to the National Commission for Hearmg INJUSTICE IS ALLEGED | Feared That Federal Boarl Will Lapse Before Ruling Can Be Made on the Cases| NEW YORK, May 22.—Requests for | hearings from the St. Louls Fair exmb-; itors, who are at present in controversy | with the Loulsiana Purchase Exposition | Company over the coming award of | prizes, have been flled at the offices of | the Natfonal Commission in this city, but as the commission has less than six weeks to live, and proceedings of such a nature, if started, would last well into | next winter, it Is doubtful if the com- missioners will be able to do anything to give satisfaction to the complginants. The protesting exhibitors, among whom are some of the most prominent manu- facturers in the country, are opposed to the award of prizes on the ground that exhiblts were improperly classified and judged and that many of the resulting awards will be unfair. The act of Con- gress by which the National Commission was created provides that the awards of the exhibition company must officially be | indorsed by the commission. This, so‘ far, has not been done, and as the com- ‘ mission, by law, ceases to exist on July 1, there is much speculation as to| whether the opportunity to confirm the | decisions will ever be presented. The cer- | tificates of awards, it is said, are now completed and only awailt Issuance. RAILROADS END WAR | AFJIFR SEVEN YEARS| Great Northern and Cana- dian Pacific Settle Row. | Over Territory. Special m.p.u:h to The Call. ACOMA May "2 _Atter seven years fighting it is understood at the West- ern headquapters of tne ureat Northern | and Canad Pacific raiways that a truce has been declared. President Hill of the Great Northern began the trouble | sevén years ago, when he extended the | Great Northern into Canadian Pacific ter- ritory in the Kootenay mining district. | Partly in retaliation the Canadian Pa- | cific is now building into Spokane, and is | running surveys across Washington to | Tacoma and Portland. Under a new agreement the Canadian Pacific is not to oppose the Great North- ern’s line through British Columbia, | known as the Victoria, Vancouver and | -| Eastern road. The Canadian road is to be given running rights over this line, and further will not be molested in m\ desire to build across Washington, se- euring terminals at Tacoma, Seattle and Portland. , DECISION DEALS A BLOW TO FOREIGN com\ RATIONS Allen Concern Loses Sult in Indian Ter- ritory Through Faflure to Com- ply With the Law. MUSKOGEE, I T, May 22.—Judge Raymond, in the Court of the Western District, has rendered a decision which will affect nearly every foreign cor- poration doing business in the Indian Territory. The case is that of T. H. Rogers Lumber Company, which| brought suit pgainst A. S. McRae to coilect for material furnished by the company to build a house for the de- fendant. The attorney for the defendant raised thq point that the company is a foreign corporation and had no one at South McAlester to represent it as required by law. Judge Raymond sustained the peint and dismissed the suit. Under the Arkansas law, which gov- erns Indian Territory, a foreign cor- poration that wishes to do business in Indian Territory must keep a represen- tative in the town where the incorpo- ration papers were filed. upon whom services may be made. If the corpora- tion fails to do this, all its contracts are void in case suit is brought upon them. —_————— SANTA FE WILL ARRANGE RATES WITH THE OIL ema | Conference Will Be Held at Which the Situation in Kansas Will Be Fully Considered. TOPEKA, Kans, May 22.—The Santa Fe will meet the oil producers of Kan- sas and rearrange the freight rates on coil. General Freight Agent Koontz made the following announcement to- day of the company’s intentions: The rates will be brought out at a confer- ence, which will doubtless be held within a week or ten days. At the grellmlnr’ confe ence with the oil men the producers were asked to prepare a statement showing what market they wished to reach. The producers | have been busy recently preparing this state- | ment. We cannot intelligently promulgate a | tariff till we learn what points the producers will want to reach with crude ofl shipments. | In the meantime we have been going over | the situation and have prepared figures so that | at conference we should be able | to tell the producers what can be dome for | them as soon as they make known to us what | markets they want to reach. ——————— BLACKFOOT INDIANS CLAIM ; TWO MILLION MORE ACRES GREAT FALLS, Mont., May 22.—The | Blackfoot Indlans have determined to make claim at Washington for all the | land lying between the Sun River and | a Hne a short distance north of Hel- | ena. The amount involved s nearly | 2,000,000 acres. They claim that a strip | of land lying along the Sun River was | sold by them, but that they never sold the land beyond. This Is an old claim | and it'is now revived because of a sim- ilar case in California, in which after | a_thifteen-year struggle the Indians | won out and received $9,000,000 for the | contested land. SHOW CAUSE.—Next Frt- | will hear the petition of PAXTAN t Guring the pendency | .,'i Pibic action for permanent support. Pears’ cleanse, it bas no medical properties; for the color of health and health itself use Peafi: Give it time. | ter street, | the atterncon and a fearful cough. | are from 9 in the morning until soap does nothing but | {The Cure of Cmumpmn wm Be Accomplished by tlsctro-Chep- istry. Eleclro-Chemistry Is o Germicide That Destroys Dis- e2se Cerms Without Harm 19 the Patient. _Electro-Chemisiy Destroys the Eerm of Consump- tion and Cures ericus Casos as no Other Known Traa'mant Can Do. Safety of Course Lies in Beginning the Treatmeat as Early as Possible, but no Case Is s Bad but There Is Great Hope From the Application of This Wonderful New Treatment. Everybody, including the medical profession, agrees that It is absolutely useless to try to cure consumption by medicines. Fresh air and plenty of it is about all the medical fraternity bas to offer as a cure. Nome cases are cured by fresh z2ir. Why? Simply because of the oxygen that is placed into the system by it. Oxygen destroys the germ. Ome . Electro- Chemic treatment puts more oxygen into the blood than a month’s breathing of the purest mountain air. A wonderful illustration of the curative effects of Electro-Chemistry is the case of Mrs. A. G. Iverson, living at 2015 Cen- Berkeloy. Mrs. Iverson had the worst kind of consumption, commonly called ‘galloping consumption.” In a few months she had lost twenty pounds in weight. She had night sweats so bad that the bed clothing was saturated every night. She had high fever in Her homse physician said that she must go to Arizona as quickly as possible and live in the desert and breathe the pure hot air of that barren wilder- ness. Ske must do this, he sald, or dis In & few months. Mrs. Iverson has two beautiful children. She could not think of taking them to suck a place, and she could not think of leaving them behind; eo. instead of following her dector's advice, took: Chemic courss at 118 ciscu, and was perfectly cured. This was thres years ago, and time has proved that her cure i8 Permanent. Because of its germicide and constituttonal effects Electro-Chemistry 13 also the most suc- cessful treatment known for the cure of ca- tarrh, asthma, bronchitts, deafness, ringing ears, head noises, dizziness, cancers, tumors, ulcers, old sores, eczema, pimples, eruptions, headache, meuralgia. rheumatism, _locomotor | ataxia, paraivsis, eczema, bicod polson, diseases of the stomach, liver and bowels, constipation, indigestion. piles, fistula, female ‘seases, such as displacements, irregularities, painful ovaries, in diseases of the kidneys. Bright's disease, diabetes, inflammation of the bladder, diseases of men, such as prostati haustion, stricture and enlarged prostate. In all cases consultation and examination is The Electro-Chemic h treatment successtul. Patients living at a distan: loaned a full Electro-Chemic outfit for home treatment. It Is always best, however, for such a person to come for a personal exam- | ination when possible. The Chemic In stitute, the only one on tne Pacifle located at 118 Grant avenue, cormer of P | street, San Francisco. There are separate a: private apartments for the accommodation male and female patients, and the office how 5 in the atter- noon, and from 7 to 8 at night daily, and on Sundays from 10 in the morning until 1 in the afternoon. DEVELOPED Providing You Buy Them of Me My films are daylight loading and are the best on the market. Here are my prices for fllms: 2%x2%, 18c; 2Ux8%. 20c; 2%x4l, 2Ve; 3%x a»,,, 30c: 3%x4%, 35c; 4xB, Sx4 and 5%, 45¢. I carry the celebrated d. eloping paper—CYKO, which gives clear artistic detall. Send 1Se for sample dozen; any size up to 4x5. Sent prepaid. My printing is um-dl- rices Jow. Here are & few: 2% Out of town orders vrmpuy filled. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, the !mhl' 1008 MARKET ST.. thowsa e Il.fikll vtbrnory method, Lhu’n oth!g'l:: the knife. ‘o issue s bond nsa. et e A o e DR. TII.GO'IT u. 1140 m ST Hale’s GOI.DEN MEDICAL D' FOR lmavtn.'“wues. BAJA CALIFORNIA '‘Damiana Bitters |15 A grear m.m ' l 3 RATIVE, INVIGORA- The most wondersul aphrodisiac and Spectal | Tomic for the Sexual Orguns, for both sexes. xn-n-ulx-u-uu mm‘m ulvu-.. = BRUNE. Agents mr-a-umu-nuu

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