The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 6, 1905, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1905. . SECRETARY HAY LAID TO RES CLEVELAND CEREMONY IN ———— e Hay, the late Secretary of State, was buried with simple services in Lake View Ceme- leveland. The cortege was devoid of all it moved through the streets ot the city. Roosevelt, Vice President Fairbanks and | | | t and former members of the Cabinet at- I eral. President and Vice President With th Cabinet Members Attend Funeral. \LL OSTENTATION AVOIDED Fitting Services Held in Small Chapel at the Lake View Graveyard. MANY FLORAL OFFERI read extracts with “I life, th portions of the pistie to the fourteenth chapter the rers, at the conclusion of the | while the quartet de the hearse, sang Tenny- to g the chapel itiful and wind the cemetery until e-fourth of a mile Mr. and and Mrs, grave. Presi- s a few Hay, Mr. dsworth and ther sto: of the o From then, while lowered, hymn “F eir I inch b Dr. Ha ice Rest” ar h the casket n recited the committal serv- Presbyterian church. When ed, t rtet sang the final 2 the n and the benedic- by Mr. Mec um brought the serv- ices to a close. after Dr. and the vas made y from brief pau d ceas the plac he turned ve and as she passed President Roosevelt reached her hand to him. He took in both of his own, bowing deeply as he did so. e a Samuel Mather, while the President and his party, the carriage of the executive surrounded by the members of the cav- alry troop, went at a rapid pace direct- ly to his train, which he reached at about 1 o'clock. After a short wait in the vards of the Pennsylvania Railroad the train started on, the entire party returning with him, except Secretary Metealf, who will remain in the West. grave and th ance of the ; lot were falrly . covered rs. A few of the tributes President and Mrs. , a wreath of orchids, maiden- ed by th outhful | mbers of the Cabinet r , the cavalry | ward VII, Gove Vice President Fair- £ the Chamber | anese ment, a wreat re ¢ wait | flowers t’s Cabinet, wreath e ¢ and of | Of sweet . cluster of orchids and Sormed of lilies and American Vice v roses; the Diplomatic Corps, a ° | standing wreath of green smilax, with prays of lilles of the valley and of ack and of sentries s, entered 1 a base of Easter t Charles retary of the Navy ary Metcalt of the| Labor; tison; Eki ¢ Japanese lega- Secretary to the me Court Justice ", Hayes. uped abeut the minutes and band of was | ed ar arm of each man. CAVALRY WITH FUNERAL. t just 10 o'clock the funeral Jeft the of the Equitable management have be- come so dependent upon Root's great knowledge of law that they feel they cannot get along without him. The question has often been raised as to the legality of the action of Ryan in purchasing the control of the stock of { James Hazen Hyde and of the appoint- ment of a board of trustees to manage it. It is insisted that all these things were done on the advice of Root, and should legal complications ensue he is expected to defend his clients. That he | pledged himself to guide the affairs of the insurance company to a successful g - . building this _ CABIE K e | atternoon at which Governor Herrick . | and a number of others spoke. Sro gy o ganey ROOT TIED TO EQUITABLE. 2 more. | y ent on | Reported That He Will Be Unable to S Sxp ained | Succeed Hay. s the arrange-| NEW YORK, July 5.—It was declared v and Goy- | during the day in Wall street that it r s 1 to the head | Will be impossible for former Secretary mi-circle around | © War Root to succeed John Hay in of the present | the Cabinet because of his engagements r -0 TP with Thomas F. Ryan dnd the Equitable | Society. les the mem-| ™ here have been expectations that s President Roosevelt would ask him to | become Secretary of State, but it is now s | said that he has accepted retainers to | Seneral ) s the amount of $200,000, the larger por- = J r . | tion of which is payment for his ser- nterior ¥ Thes General| vices in connection with the Insurance X, ex ster. Eiair “ia| company’s troubles. Ryan and the men time 1 the left :d(:{nizl Ing. The|jssue is asserted on the best authority, ,“, issioned | and it was stated by one of his friends L e cavalry vas borne | that this would keep him from return- e hearse between two lines formed | ing to the Cabinet even if he were urged to do so. A prominent Jawyer, who i8 convers- - | ant with Equitable affairs, sald that the entered the first carriage| story that the policy holders mgy di- ary pallbearers and mem- | vide the surplus of the soclety oWing to a “slip” in the legislative bill of 1868 and former Cab d as honorary committee occupled the | There were twenty- | was misleading. The . s g. e policy holders, he the column as, headed | declared. can do nothing to recover on v moving at a quick trot, | any policy. The policy holder will find Park place and turned | that he must live up to his conbract. avenue. | — e ibers of the Hay family| PRESIDENT v »er of Commerce build T 2D Os PORER with & few friends val of the funeral pel inside the ceme- No Amnouncement Made as to the Suc- cessor of Hay. PITTSBURG, July 6.—The Presi- | dent’s train arrive8, here as a special from Cleveland at 8:50 p. m., exactly on schedule time, and at 9 p. m. left the minute of 11 o'clock ted opposite the chapel door. ity M2y, Mr. and Mre | for the East. At the station a crowd Jr.. wondpisw’ -and had gathered to greet the President, - vitn | DUt o formal reception was given him. rriu'c:,ndvv?x?'::leih;‘:: After repeated calls for a speech the & President came to the rear platform of his car and said: “My friends, I should not be expected to make a speech on this occasion, as I am returning from the funeral of Mr. Hay, who was a friend of all the people and for whom I had a deep af- fection.” President Roosevelt passed the aft- ernoon and evening after leaving Cleveland in informal conferences with his Cabinet officers and friends on board his special train. At luncheon the President had as his personal which sang | guests Elihu Root, Paul Morton, Thee,” and | Charles Emory Smith. Secretary Shaw. casket, covered with the mational s and the beautiful wreaths sent by E Roosevelt and by e diplomatic corps, was President, Vice President bearers following with The thapel is not large not seats for all, fully being grouped around the were SERVICES AT CEMETERY. The services were opened by a quar- of male voices, Still With reading, carried the cas- | MANY FLORAL TRIBUTES. Mrs. H: with the members of her | family, returned to the residence of T WITH SIMPLE CEMETERY. 20 \i‘.fl A i AR I =l kS - YESTERDAY WITH LAKE VIEW CEMETE: JOHN HAY, THE LATE SECRETARY OF STATE, WHO WAS LAID TO REST SIMPLE CEREMONY IN THE FAMILY PLAT OF THE IN CLEVELAND. ' & — o+ Attorney General Moody, Postmaster | General Cortelyou and Dr. Rixey. Dur- |ing the afternoon the President took up some important matters with the members of his Cabinet individually. The President talked long and ear- nestly with former Secretary Root, who has been almost constantly with him since he joined him in Jersey City yes- terday afternoon. It is yet too early to ‘make any announcement regarding the successor of Secretary Hay, but it is expected that the subject was dis- cussed informally by the President to- day. It is not unlikely the President may authorize a statement in the near future regarding the appointment, but he has not indicated yet, at least not for publication, who his choice may be for Secretary of State. The\trip from Cleveland to this city | was without notable incident. At Alli- ance, Ohio, where the train stopped for five minutes to enable the engine to re- plenish its water supply, the President appeared on the rear platform of his car and acknowledged the greeting of | the people. He said he could not make an address under the circumstances. The members of the Cabinet who are | with the President will leave the spe- cial train at Philadelphia at 7 o’clock in the morning and return directly to Washington. President Roosevelt will reach Oyster Bay at 11 a. m. J il iy i ENGLAND PAYS TRIBUTE. Memorial Services Held in St. Paul's in London. LONDON, July 5.—England to-day paid to the memory of Secretary Hay a tri- bute seldom accorded to a foreigner, when solemn memorial seryices were held in St. Paul's Cathedral. ‘The immense edifice was crowded, the seating capacity being taxed to the fullest extent. The service was fully choral, the hymns be- ing rendered by a surpliced choir of 100 voices. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Davidson, wearing the black gown and, hood presented to him during his visit to America; and Dean Gregory and Archdeacon Sinclair took part in the ser- vice. The Bishop of Peterborough was also present, as was the Bishop of Washing- ton, Pa. King Edward was represented by the Earl of Denbigh, Lord in Waiting, and Premier Balfour, who was unable to attend, ‘as the House of Commons was in session, was represented by Malcolm G. Ramsey. Among the others present were the Marquis and Marchioness Lansdowne, the Lord High Chancellor, Lord Hals- bury; Lord Linlithgow, Lord Ashbourne and the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs in their robes of office: Earl Spencer, the Mar- quis of Bath, Lord Tweedmouth, the Duke of Marlborough, the Duke of Port- land, Earl Waldengrave, the Earl of Aberdeen; Lord Strathcona, the Cana- dian High Commissioner; the Mexican and Cuban Ministers and representatives of the embassies and legations. The American colony was fully repre- sented, including Embassacor and Mrs. Reid, and the staff of the embassy; Consul General Wynne and the staff of the consulate. Among the visiting Americans present were J. Plerpont Mor- gan, Rear Admiral Watson and a hun- dred others. Mr. and Mrs. Payne Whitney (Helen Hay), in’deep mourning, accompanied by Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Paget, entered the cathedral just before the service com- menced. The ceremonies were opened with Chopin's funeral march, which was fol- lowed by the processional “Now the La- borer's Task Is O'er,” and the impres- sive funeral gervice of the Church of England, the lesson being the First Epis- tle to the Corinthians, chapter\xv, twentieth verse. The anthem was “Blessed Are the Departed.” Archdeacon Sinclair read the prayers and the Archbishop of Canterbury pro- nounced the benediction, the services b ing closed wit hthe march from *Saul,” played on the organ. i SRR SERVICES IN WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, July 5.—A memorial service tor the late Secretary of State, John Hay, was held at the Church of ,the Covenant to-day at the same hour as the funeral services were being con- ducted in Cleveland. Practically all of official Washington was present and members of the .diplomatic corps who were in the city attended in a body. The chancel of the church and the pews occupied by the Secretary and his fam- ily were draped in mourning and a large bank of flowers surrounded the pulpit. o N e e / Hetch Hetchy Fishing. ‘The best fishing in California is to in_the Hetch Hetchy Valley. sSante tell you about it in connection with a Yosemite, Ask at 653 Market, st. Sasa i o B0 Guaranteed those who favor us with their or~ ders for engraving and tails are of great Vail & Co., 741 Market RENDERED FRANTIC BY INTENSE HEAT Passengers on Italian Rail- road Attempt to Leap From Train. Special Dispatch to The Call. ROME, July 5.—Entire pages of the newspapers are devoted to the subject of the phenomenal heat in Italy. The temperature in the shade in the square before St. Peter's was 109 degrees Fahrenheit to-day. There has been an enormous number of sunstrokes. Sev- eral passengers on the railway between Rome and Milan, rendered frantic by the intense heat yesterday, attempted to jump off the train. ————— SEPARATION OF HUNGARY FROM AUSTRIA OPPOSED Lower House in Vienna Rejects Pro- posals Advanced by the Pan- German Party. VIENNA, July 5.—The lower house has rejected the urgency motion pro- posed by the Pan-German party for the preparation of measures looking to the separation of Austria and Hungary. Baron Gautch von Frankenthurn, the Premier, emphatically repudiated the attacks of the Pan-German party and his remarks were greeted with great cheering. ———— SACRAMENTO, July 5.—Governor Pardes a to-day appointed M. J. Boggs of Col member of the auditing board to the Commin: FOUND DEA HOTEL A TISBURG Robert D. McGon- igle Probably a Suicide. ° Life of Well Known Philanthropist Ends in Sadness. Gives Fortune to Charity and Is Deserted by Friends ‘When Left Penniless. | Special Dispatch to The Call. | PITTSBURG, July 5—Robert Gonigle, famous threughout the United | ates as author, philanthrophist, elub- | 1 lecturer, was found dead at 11| o'clock this morning in the fashionable | Hotel Lincoln. Every effort was made to keep his death a secret. The Coroner's office refuses to say whether or not he D. Me-| MISS GENEVIVE MAY. CATARRH OF STOMACH CURED BY PE-RU-NA Miss Genevieve May, 1317 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind., Member Second High Schoel Alumni Ass'n, writes: ““Peruna is the finast reguiator of a disordered stomach | have ever found. It certamnly deservas high praise, for i1t 1s ski.lfully prepared. “I was in a terrible condition from a neglected case of catarrh of the stom= committed suicide. Everything points to | ach. My food had long ceased to be of the conclusion that he killed himself. An|any good and only distressed me after Inquest will be held to-morrow. | eating. I was nauseated, had heartburn Several years ago McGonigle went to|and headaches, and felt run down com- California, in company with R. J. Tindall, | son-in-law of United States Senator P. C. | Knox. He spent many months in San | Francisco, Los Angeles and Pasadena. | While there he wrote a book, “When I | Went West,” which he dedicated to Tin- | Qall. Afterward he delivered many lee- | tures in California, illustrating them with | vicws of the country. i McGonigle was last seen alive when he | went to his room last evening. When he | failed to leave his room this morning the door was forced open and he was found dead, an empty vial that had contained a solution of chlorate being found Coroner Joseph G. Armstrong said to- | night that the case was a mysterious one. | He would commit himseif no further. | McGonigle was 53 years of age. A few | years ago his fortune was estimated at | several million dollars. He was the| founder of the Alleghany Light Company, | afterward absorbed by the Philadelphia | Company. Sl McGonigle devoted almost his entire life | to charity. He founded the Kingsley House, the Pittsburg Golf Club. the Pitts- burg Country Club and the Duquesno Riding Club. He gave away the greater part of his money and recently he lost $300,000 in an unwise speculation. Then his friends deserted him and he became morose. He frequently threatened to end his life. LIVES WITH BULLET HOLE IN HIS HEART Wounded New York Youth Seems in Fair Way to Recovery. NEW YORK, July 5.—With a bullet hole through his heart and through the tissues of his left lung, Harry Nowak, a youth of this city, is alive and appar- ently out of danger of death, in St. Vin- cent’s Hospital, Staten Island. Harry started out for a day of pleasure yesterday, but, while crossing the bay on the ferryboat Castfeton, he was hit in the left breast by a bullet from a re- volver which Max Dascher, a friend, was displaying to a party of acquaint- ances. — e IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES MADE BY PROFESSOR KOCH BERLIN, July 5.—The Cologne Ga- zette prints extracts from private let- ters written by Professor Robert Koch, who went to German East Africa at the end of 1904 for a further investiga- tion of certain tropical diseases. show- ing that he has already made important discoveries in connection with the tsetse fly. The professor found the | breeding ground of the fly and says the | insect can be rendered harmless | through simple means. He made the still more important discovery that| microbes, which,are present in sleep- ing dropsy, exist in the tsetse fly. He | further discovered in April last that the relapsing fever is transferred to men | through a small sand tick. These dis- coverles are regarded here as of great scientific importance. The professor visited the Uhehe tableland, which he found to be tem- perate and salubrious and highly sioner of Public Works to succeed J. J. Cam, bell of Galt, resigned. S 5 luuked for European settlement. ‘ Are Ca Its purity, will do the sam try a case for grocer insist Cascade. BOTTLING ” SUMMER DAYS always enjoyed by those who drink plenty of good beer. It flushes the system—promotes digestion, increases the flow of the gastric juices— gives sound sleep and steady nerves. The best beer to drink is SCade wholesomeness and great tonic properties have given health, strength and vigor to thousands. ~._ Don’t take our word for it— when ordering from your UNION BREWING AND MALTING €0, DEPARTMENT Phone It e for you: yourself, but upon getting | on Treatment and Diet for o weeks after I took pletely. But in t Peruna I was a ch: bottles of the medici change and in three months my stom- ach was cleared of catarrh and my en- tire system in a better condition."— Genevieve May Write Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohi for, free medical -advice. All corr spondence held strictly confidential I Jelly Glasses, per doz Chewing Tobacco, per Ib. 40 1bs Mixed Beans .... 1 1b Chocolate Cheese, per Ib 5 bottles Olives 3 3 large jars Mustard Honey, per comb . Table Fruit_ per can . Macaroni_per Ib......... 1-1b can Pepper or Mustard... 3 cans Tomatoes, Peas or Corn Shredded Cocoanut, 15c Ib; 7 Ibs. Corn Starch. per Ib... 3 bottles Worcestetshire Sauce. 33 Ibs Rolled Wheat or Oats Cracker Meal, per Ib Butter, per square Eggg, per doz 40c Sottre Port, Sherry or Clare T3¢ bottle WhISKY ........... S §1 00 bottle Brandy, Gin or Whisky. 50 Ibs. SUGAR for $1.00 WITH OUR COMBINATION ORDERS ONLY. Complete Line of Campers’ Outfits. Free Delivery Within 100 Miles. 6._T. JONES & GO, 2 California St., Sam EECE R E R PR H BEAUTIFUL MILL VALLEY FORTY-FIVE MINUTES FROM MARKETSTREET Schools, churches, plenty of fresh air, magnificent scenery, Lots in Schlingman’s Addition, 10 per cent down, balance on time to_ suit. Write for particulars to agent, Schlingman’s Addition, Mill Val- ley, Cal Uricsol Rheumatic Specific Kidney and Liver Stimulant. The most successful remedy before the public. Does not injure the stom- : ach. Drop postal for Free Booklet Rheu- matism to URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., 23d and Grand Ave., Los An- geles, Cal. For Sale by All Druggists. .THE Los Angeles Times is located im ROOM 10, CHRONICLE BUILDING ARTHUR L. FISH, Representative. If you would do effective in the Southwest, drop a line to the above address or Main 1473 and our representative will be pleased to call on you with full information as

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