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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1905. PARDEE WILL ~ CZAR RECENES PROBE SCANDAL ZENSTVD PLEA Governor to Take a Hand Gives TUnexpectedly Gracious in Matters That Have Dis- Greeting to Bearers of| rupted State Dental Board | Attack Upon Antoeracy | DOCTORS WAX ELOQUENT | AGAIN PROMISES RELIEF | Cool and Dunn Freely Make Unshaken in His Determi- Unkind Remarks About| nation to Convene an| Their Fellow Tooth-Pullers| Elective National Assembly | Special Dispatch to The Cail ST. PETERSBURG, June 18.—Emperor | holas rece;ved the Zemstvo deputation noon to-day in the Alexander Palace | at Peterhof. Prince Troubetskoy. presi- | June 19 dent of the Zemstvo Congress of the Moscow Guvernment,” in behalf of the Moscow delegation, addressed the Em- peror in a long speech. in which he de- | ired the serfous internal difficulties h had caused the Zemstvolsts to ap- Majesty directly. The Em- | peror was evidently much impressed. M. | F. off, representing the St. Petersburg | egation, aiso spoke. His Majesty re- | ed, expressing deep regret at the great | g, at the disaster to the | He said: | m happy to have heard you. I have | ubt you are gulded by an ardent | ve for the fatherland in | directly grieved in my w peo at t e war has brough 1 those which may as at our internal issipate your doubts. , and it ian navy. no do rhole soul, | the calamities | t upon Russia | till be feared, sturbances. My will is sov- rable that e ) the state shall be regularly hed. daily and devote myself to You may announce that to all | town. | Russia | »m the trials | t there will at n | on and commun- | s for the orig- | desire to help | individual delegation, shaking hands 1 ing a few cordial t that the Emperor not only re- | the boid, ~plain-spoken address | | 0 much as an indication of his| | ion, but expressed full sym- the efforts to ameliorate the | T ety state of affairs depicted there- S o 1 o Di direct and explicit his promise to summon . people, made | on on the delegation. he board “an overwhelming ma Dr. M all-Russia assem- Peters- by Hayden burg for pr a dey p M and Shipoff lent of the Moscow Zemstvo, but it does not appear | from the cable dispat that the docu- | ment was handed to his Mafesty, al- though doubless Prince Troubetskoy and | M. Fedoroff in_their speeches communi- cated the substance of the address to the Emperor. The document in its origiral | form bids falr to become historic. The customary phrases of respect at the open- | irg and closing were omitted and It was | otherwise unceremonious, employing the.| direct personal pronoun. | The eddress arraigned the bureaucracy | and reminded the Emperor that his | pledge to convoke a national assembly | was slow of fulfillment. It said the coun- try was on the verge of civil war and even ventured to criticize a royal meas- | ure, contrasting the increase of the police | power by the ukase issued on June 4 with | the weakening of the administrative pro- | ment at being 1 Pears’ " i | cess which the country had been led to | No soap in all the |expect { . | The address urged the summoning of a | world is so chcap, | national assembly, that the war might | | become national or cease, and conciuded 3 : with & sclemn reminder of the sovereign's No - soap in all (the | o O e | prayer for action before it was too late. | josatviodes Lk OBJECT TO POLICE DUTY. world is so good—none so lasting. Soid all over the world. | Russian Army Officers Hold Meeting to Formulate a Protest. LONDON, June 19.—A dispatch from 'Delegates to St. Petersburg to the Reuter Telegram Company says that several hundred of- | Bl SR SOCIALISTS A_ND COSSACKS FIGHT. An established practice and clientele over twenty years in fitting the eyes with glasses s our guar- | ficers held 4 meeting on June 15 at tan to | Krasnoye Selo, sixteen miles from St. Petersburg, to discuss the situation YOI created by recent events and to pro- test against their constant employment ok .2 . in the role of police. General Rehbin- Artificial Eyes and Hearing Apparatus | ger, commanding the ~guard, ordered | the meeting to disperse, on the ground | that it was illegal. . A group of officers stepped forward . and declared that they were all faith- ful subjects of the Emperor, but could OPTICIAN | not remain in the position of military 105 MONTGOMERY ST. | E2ir-min., 't is i positon. they . sald, which completely isolated them "NEAR SUTTER" OPP OCCIDENTAL HOTEL | from society, toward which they prac- kODAK AGENCY‘D“OTO SUPPUES | tically sustained .the role of butchers. General Rehbinger still insisted that the meeting disperse, but promised - them a speedy opportunity to meet le- Uricsol e Rh ti e“m C Two Persons Are Killed and Thirty-Six ifi c Wounded at Lods. -~ WARSAW, Russian-Poland, June 19. =y ¢ : 3 Two persons were killed and thirty-six Kidney and Liver Stimulant.|youiged in:a confilet between troops The most successful remedy |and Sodal!!;szato Lodz yestefday. A : ;| procession of 2000 Socialists, carrying ‘_‘Rfore the pubhc. Does not in | red flags, was stopped by Cossacks. The jure the stomach. Drop postal | Socialists thereupdn fired and the for Free Booklet to URICSOQL | Cossacks replied and then charged with CHEMICAL COMPANY drawn swords into the thick)'of the ® Al » | progession.. The disturbances were re- Los Angeles, Cal. newed this morning at a factory in the For sale by all druggists. suburb of Balutz, which the troops have cut off from communication with Lodz. | |ATTA CKS HIS MOTHER WITH A BIG KNIFE Insane Man Slashes Own Throat After Trying to Kill Parent. Epecial Dispatch to The Call * SAN LUIS OBISPO, June 19.—James B. Parkinson made a desperate attempt to take his mother's life with a butcher knife at Arroyo Grande yesterday., | She escaped to the nelghbors and the | frenzied man then slashed his own | threat. e will recover. To-day he was adjudged insane and committed to | Agnews., The- famjly is prominent and’ | highly respected. An injury sustained’ | elght years ago is supposed to be the tseeaw visir DR. JORDAN'S gnear MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1061 MARKET ST. bet.6th& 7th, S.F.0al. Writs for ook, PHILOSOPNY of MARRIAGE, KAILED FEEE. (4 valaable book for Wea. ) ’n: EDAN & CO.. 105 Market 5t 8. F, i T S Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature P IVER STOCKTON MECCA OF THE DRUIDS Grand in Pretty San Grove Assembling Joaquin City. s 4+ oF e E ELECTED NOBLE GRAND ARCH CAPABLE AND POPULAR OFFICER OF 'THE DRUIDS, WHO PROBABLY WILL B] ATTENDING THE GRAND GROVE IN STOCKTON. OF THE ORDER BY THE DELEGATES * [ Special Dispatch to The Call- STOCKTON, June 19.—Stockton is fill- ing up -with delegates fo the ~Grand | Grove of the Druids. The lodge meets in Masonic Hall to-morrow morning and will | hold daily sessions until Friday. The | Grand Circle of the same order will con- vene at Druids’ Hall. There are more | than 300 delegates to' the Grand Lodge | and 150 delegates to the Grand Circle. Be- sides the delegates there will be many other visiting Druids in this city for the Grand Grove. In all 700 visitors are ex- pected. The subordinate groves, of which there are 157 in this State, are allowed to work in whatever language each grove selects. In this State there are groves working in Enpglish, Itallan, German, French, Span- ish, Slavonian and Portuguese. More than 100 of the groves are conducted in English. The present grand officers are: Junior past noble grand arch, George Beck of | Livermore; noble grand arch, Charles de | Legh of Stockton; deputy grand arch, William G. Antonovich of San Francisco; grand secretary, James F. Martinonl of San Francisco; grand treasurer, R. J. Moliter of San Francisco; grand marshal, M. Pozzi of Oakland; inside guardian, George H. Burtram of Modesto; outside guardian, Elmer Welsh of Haywards. The session to-morrow morning will be consumed in organization. At 1:30 in the | afternoon a parade will start from Ma- sonic Hall. To-morrow evening a grand ball will be given at Masonic Temple. On Wednesday evening there will be a public reception at the Stockton Hot Mineral Baths.: On Thursday evening a banquet will be given the delegates, to which the Mayor and other city and county officials have been invited. More than 750 covers will be lald. This evening-a special train brought the delegates from Ban Francisco and the bay counties. They were given a rousing reception at the depot and escorted to their hotels. Among the distinguished delegates who will be here are Mayor Schmitz of San Francisco, Judge Buck of Redwood City, Grove L. Johnson of Sacramento, ex: Judge Bahrs of San Francisco and Judge Lennon of Marin County. gl BUSY SESSION OF WOODMEN. et T 1 New Officer Installed at the Meeting in | Milwaukee. MILWAUKEE, June 19.—Having in- stalled a new board of Officers, refused to indorse the law committee recom- mendation that the head office of the Modern Woodmen of America employ traveling auditors, ordered the sum- mary dismissal of incompetent clerks, tabled aresolution abolishing head State physicians, rejected a proposed change in the method of collecting assess- ments from newly elected members, demanded a higher salary for the head clerk of the society as well as for the | secretary of its own organization, the | local Camp Clerks' Association Con- vention held its final' session to-day and adjourned until the next Head Camp in 1907. . 3 The closing session, while one of much activity in the disposition of af- fairs of a business nature, was marked by warm expressions of cordiality to- ward the retiring president, H. Y. Hoyt of Seattle; to whom the associa- tion - presented & magnificent gold watch. - _ John Sullivan, a member of the law committee, urged upon the association the necessity of revising the existing rates of fraternal insurance, declaring that unless a revision was made within a few years, the Modern Woodmen of beneficfal Insurance organizatfons— | hopeless bankruptey.. ° Among the Foresters’.prize drills to- cause of Parkinson's insanity. CITIZEN'S ALLIANCE SUED.—Jobn A.!' MAUYAIS MUSIC CO. o £33 WARKET S7.. GPP. WASON. o, 587 Natoma. commenced suf yesterday against the Citisen's Alliance (o' Te. Buy “Piney Ridge” Waltz. b ol Fover be d Crowley. -rm'-fu..:a to Ilehl:(.or.fnurt’n day the following averages were made: Camp No. §36, eka, x.u’n; Captain O. B. Hatch comman 3 i No. 28, Topeka, m:f‘& tain Archie Baughman: commanding, 96.463. - Several citles are striving hard for the honor of entertaining ‘the next bi- L America would suffef ‘the fate of other | ennial convention of the Head Camp, Modern Wopdmen of America. Buffalo, Cincinnati and.Peoria appear to be in the lead, while Los Angeles. Detroit and Louisville are active opponents. SHERIFF FINDS AWFUL POVERTY Two pitiful stories gf women with families of little children to take care of, who were left destitute by cowardly husbands, came to light in the Sheriff's office yesterday when notices of evic- tion for rent were placed in execu- tion. The first was a writ obtained June 1 on the premises in the rear of 53 Chenery street. When the officers arrived there they found evidences of the most terrible poverty. The woman, Mrs. Dean, had parted with her husband about nine months ago, thinking that he was going to work and that he would return in the evening. She has not heard from him since that day, nor has she had any money for the supoprt of her five little children except what she could earn from time to time. She has a son, Wil- liam Dean, aged 22, who i8 & painter for the United Railroads, but he does not contribute one cent to the support of his helpless mother. Through the mercy of Under Sheriff Haynes the execution of the writ was delayed until to-day. Menptime the city charities have been notified of the condition of the woman. Mrs. Stevenson, a member of the Ep- worth League, has paid for a few! months’ rent in a new dwelling at 3710 | Army street for this family. No less pitiful is the condition of; the family of Mrs. Street at 2036 Fol- om street. When the deputy sher- called yesterday to execute a of eviction he found a wo-| man with six small children, one of them a baby in arms, suffering from the want of the barest necessities of life. Her husband had also deserted her sud- | denly. The execution was delayed and the Associated Charities notified of tha‘ woman’s condition. | | run.’” | | president of the Lake Shore, and George THE SCHEDULE On Initial Run It Goes From Chicago to New York in Less Than Eighteen Hours GREAT SPEED ATTAINED On One Stretch of the Road Train Skims Over Rails at Rate of Eighty Miles! NEW YORK, June 19.—With three min- utes to spare, the New York Central's | new Twentieth Century Limited train | rolled into the Grand Central depot at 9:27 o’clock this morning, at the- enu of her first run on the Chicago-New York eighteén-hour schedule. When the train reached Buffalo twenty-five minutes ahead of her schedule there remained no necessity for record-breaking time and the flier came through the remainder of the distance practically on the schedule whnich has been in use for several years. George H. Danlels, general passenger agent of the New York Central, said of | the run: ““While no record, as far as I know, was kept of the time between stations from Chicago to Buffalo, I understand that a speed of eighty miles an hour was | maintained between Chicago and Elkhart, Ind., and almost as great a speed at sev- | eral other points, notably between Cleve- |land and Erie. As a matter of fact the two hours’ difference between the new Twentieth Century Limited and the old, which had a schedule of twenty hours | between New York and Chicago, was | made up on the Lake Shore end of the | From Albany to Hudson, a distance of | | thirty-one miles, the train ran at the ! rate of nearly seventy miles an hour, thirty-one miles being made In twenty- | nine minutes. On another stretch, be- | tween Castleton and Hudson, twenty les were made in eighteen minutes. The new train brought to this city | seventy-two passengers, many of them | | prominent railroad men. They declared | | that, despite the great speed, the ride | was easy and pleasant. James N. Hill, | son of J. J. Hill; Captain Grammar, vice | H. Daniels, passenger agent of the New | York Central, were passengers. The av- | | erage running time, including stops, was | fifty-three and a third miles an hour, | CHICAGO, June 19.—The first west-~ | bound trip on an eighteen-hour basis | made by the Twentieth Century Limited | over the Lake Shore Railroad was fin- | ished five minutes ahead of time. The | train was due here from New York at 8:30 a. m. and glided into the La Salle- street staticn at 8:25. The train averaged one to five minutes ahead of the schedule all the way. The average running time for the entire dis- tance was fifty-three and a third miles an hour. Outside of stops, the train oc- cupied seventeen hours and nine minutes in making the journey between New York and Chicago. MAY ENTANGLE MEN IN SAN FRANCISCO Utah Authorities After Lead- ers of Fraudulent Bounty Claim Gang. Emery of Salt Lake County, coming to San Francisco to as- local police In recovering the treasury funds of that State that were obtained by a gang of men by means of fraudulentg bounty claims. He also ex- pects to furnish the local detectives with evidence that may lead to the extradition of several leaders of the gang who are supposed to have furnished the money for the successful carrying out of the scheme and directed operations from this city, As was announced in yesterday's Call, the local police, assisted by Under Sheriff Sharp, who has returned to Salt Lake City, succeeded in locating in this city $15,000 of the money secured from the county treasuries of Utah, and the issuance of garnishments against the banks in which the money was deposited followed. It was learned yesterday that prior to Under Sheriff Sharp’s arrival here Sheriff Emery had been in San Francisco for two weeks and gave the police valuable in- formation that led them to the place where the wives of Mitchell and Meyers, two of the men now under arrest in Den- ver, were staying. The women were | placed under surveillance and it was their movements that finally enabled the police to discover the place of deposit of the stolen money. Ten days ago Sheriff Emery returned to Salt Lake, leaving his deputy and an attorney here to continue an investiga- tion of the connection of certain promi- nent men with the bounty claim frauds. A private message received yesterday stated that Sheriff Sharp has secured from one of the men now in jail in Utah a statement that may soon result in in- dictments of others, whose names have not yet been publicly connected with the fraud, and possibly their arrest here may be asked for by the authorities of Utah. + It had been arranged that suits for the recovery of the money should be filed yesterday, but-telegrams from the Utah authorities caused Attorney Charles Pence to defer these proceedings for rea- sons that he refuses to make public. The Mitchell and Meyers women are still be- ing kept under the watchful eye of the police, but it was stated yesterday that there is no evidence that they were 'n any way implicated in the matter beyond the bare suspicion that they assisted their husbands in getting a part of the stolen Sherift Utah, is sist the ——— YOUTH WHO STOLE HORSES IS SENT TO REFORM SCHOOL Court Orders Lad Confined in Institu- tion Until He Is Twenty-One Years Old. SALINAS, June 19.—Albert Bonnell, the 15-year-old horsethlef, who was arrested at Jolon a few days ago, was committed to the Whittier Reform School until he is 21 years of age by Judge Sargent this afternoon. money out of Utah. —_—ee————— TRAIN CRASHES INTO AUTO STUCK ON RAILROAD CROSSING MODESTO, June 19.—An automobile owned by the Grange Company of Mo- desto got stuck while crossing the Santa Fe railroad track near Hugheson this afternoon. An oncoming train, despite the signals of the auto’s driver, George Grenfell, smashed into it, de- ‘molishing the machine. | kerth to-day heard the case of the People | forced to close when Louis Kahn OF A RECENER Man to Take Charge of De-| funet Finaneial Institution ! 0 OPPOSITION IS EXPECTED: Rumor Has It That but a Few Cents on the Dollar Will Be Paid Depositors P S Special Dispatch to The Call MODESTO, June 19.—In the Superior Court of Stanislaus County Judge Ful-| | against the Bank of Oakdale and ap- pointed a receiver for the defunct con- | cern in the person of A. L. Gilbert of Oakdale. Deputy Attorney General | George A. Sturtevant conducted the case | for the people and Attorney F. L. Nieol of Stockton represented the stockholders of the bank. - Although there were rumors to the ef- fect that the directorate of the bank would fight the appointment of Gilbert, who was at one time a bookkeeper in the concern, there was no opposition. The people of this county are looking forward Wwith great interest to developments when | the work of the receiver will show the true condition of the bank, which was shot himself. It is stated upon good authority that the bank will be able to pay oniy & few cents on the dollar. Some of the stockholders are unable to pay much toward making up the de- ficlency and the papers in the estate of Louis Kahn, the principal stockhoider, filed to-day show that his private fortune is given a legal value of only $15,000. ——————— It's very little trouble to move from | one furnished room to another. The “other one’—the one that will enable you to get to work easier—is probably advertised to-day. e LOS ANGELES BONDS | NOT VERY TEMPTING | LOS ANGELES, June 19.—Dillon & | Hubbard, the New York bond experts. | have declined to certify to the recent! issue of Los Angeles school bonds, amounting to $730,000, and without that | | certification no attempt will be made to sell the issue. The firm raises the point that Los Angeles is now taxed for certain schools outside the municipal- ity; that the election was held under | the provisions of the State law, when ! it should have been under the city| charter, It is pointed out that if the ' courts should decide the State law de- | fective, that would becloud the entire bond issue. | The city will now have to secure a| decision of the Supreme Court upon | certain statutes which have never been | tested, and pending such decision the | elaborate plans for school Improvement | in Los Angeles will have to be post-k poned. FLIER BEATS |BANK IN HANDS (MAY HAVE FOUND SECAET OF LI Experiments of Professor Burk of England Said to Have Given Rich Results LS VITALITY IN CULTURES Believed to Have Demon- strated the Possibility of Spontaneous Generation —_— Aceording to the nents conducted LONDON. June Daily Chroniele, exper for six years in the Cavendish laboratory at Cambridge University by J. Butter Burk, a young professor, who for a long time worked with Pgofessor Thomson, have almost certainly demonstrated the possibility of spontaneous generation. By means of radium and sterilized bouillon, piaced together in a test tube, Professor Burk abtained cultures present- ing many appearances of vitality, such as growth and subdivision. {JOBBERS ARE AFTER SOUTHERN - PACIFIC - Railroad Accused of Illegally Collecting State Wharf- age Tolls. WASHINGTON, June 19.—Complaint has been filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission against the Southern Pacific Company by the Pa- cific Coast Jobbers' and Manufacturers’ Association, alleging a violation 6f sec- tion 1 of the interstate commerce act. It is recited that the State wharfage toll |of 5 cents a ton on freight entering San Francisco over the wharves of that city is charged by the railway com- pany to shippers, although the comple- tion of its coast line gives the company | a rail entrance to the city over which it hauls its freight. It is further al- | leged that the charge collected by the railway from shippers is not turned over to the State. —_—e—————— STANDARD AGAIN ENTERS THE KANSAS OIL FIELD Plans to Relay Pipe Lime and Wil Beecome a Purchaser as Before. INDEPENDENCE, Kans., June 19.— General Manager O'Neil of the Prairie Oil and Gas Company to-day made the announcement that the Standard Oil Company would resume work in the Kansas oil fleld and would relay the pipe line to the heavy oil district and pay 25 cents a barrel for all ofl grad- ing between 22 and 29 degrees In qual- ity. This is the meost important an- nouncement made in the ofl fleld since the Standard practically stopped buy- ing in Kansas, following the stringent laws passed by the last Legisiature. THE BEST g The highest type of FAMILY SEWING M A C HIN E—the embodiment of SIMPLICITY and UTILITY—the ACME of CONVENIENCE. NEEDLES For all makes of sewing-machines are made and sold at Singer Stores in every city Price, 5 Cents SEWING MACHINES 1217 Stoekt: Per PacKage CHANGED AT THE SINGER STORE. 1380 Market St., 1818 Devisadero on St., 3210 Stocktom St., 576 Valenela St., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. e b e gt OCEAN TRAVEL. OORAN TRAVE. Steamers leave Plers 9 and 11, San clsco: For Ketchikan, Wrangel, Juneau, Treadwell, Haines, 11 a. ay, etc., m., June 19, 24, soma Tacorice, South Bellingham: . Everett, Anacortes, Sou ingham, Belllnxh;\m—lli a. m., June 19, 24, 29, July 5. Change at Seattle to this company's steamers ‘or Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at Seattle or Ta- soma to N. P. Ry.; at Vancouver to C. P. Ry. For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona, 1:30 p. m., June 16, 22, 28, July 5 Corona 1:30 p._m., June 19, 25, July 1. For Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondo), San Diego and Santa Barbara— Santa Rosa, Sundays, 9 a. m. State of California, Thursdays, 0 a. m. For Los Angeles (via San Pedro and East San Pedro), Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Mon- terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, Port Harford (San Luie Obispo), Ventura and Hueneme— Coos Bay, 9 a. m., June 23, July 1. Bonita, # a. m., June 19, 27, July 5. For Ensenada, Magdalena Bay, San Jose del Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosa- la, (Mex.), 10 a. m., Tth of each palndar steamunip, SPORANE. will leave Ta: ti ve Ta- coma, Seattle and Victorla June 22, July 6, 20, August 3, 17, For 1s reserved to cf CKET batldias), R | GOCamIes. .00, S MRsor St. Paul ......July ;L‘s,m Louls ... July New York .....July ‘hiladeiphta .. July A LINE. Mesai July 13 Minneapolis ... July 8 Minnetonka ..July 23 H LINE. NEW YORK—ROTTERDAM via BOULOGNE. Sailing Wednesdays at 10 a m. Potsdam June 28{Statendam 3 Noordam _July 5! Ryndam ... .. . July 8 Kroontund .. WHITE STAR LINE. -June 30/ Cedrie ..July 3 Baltie oy & Au o Set 13, Aug. 17. Sept 14 7 3 20. Aug. 24, Sept 21 To the Mediterramean. FROM NEW YORK. e July 8 l 27, Sept. . Nov 4 CANOPIC. , 16, Oct 28 ROMANIC. t. 7. Nov. 18 €. D. TAYLOR, Passenger 21 Post st. San Hamburg-American. Plymouth—Cher~ou» -—Hambury 5 July HFERZOG & CO., 401 Califomnia St ™ AT $. VENTURA. for Honol A land and Sydney, . June 29, 2 P. 1.D.SPSECKELS & BROS. CO., Agts., Tickat 0fice 643 Mar- Ket. - Froight OMce 387 Market St Pier 7, Pacul St