The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 17, 1906, Page 2

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1906 SENATORS TALK ON RAIL RATES)| FRANCISCO CALL, MERCHANT S MILLIONS - FAIL TO SAUVE HIM, BUT ONE VOTE [HOUSE PASSES . WANIS CHINESE | ACAINST DEPEW, BILL FOUCHT ND LONGER DAY e Marshall Field Dies in New York ; : s - S b . . ¥ . Chief Engineer Stevens Rec- n::;[;)us:\?s;e and T AR, Won ‘fi:fl’cfif Diseussion of the Dolliver New York’s Upper House De- HY BABE “[K - taining hi: ‘A Vi - . 1 ymmends Repeal of Ex- Succumbs o Pneumo- cngo. ‘mei’; '2“;3&',‘,3,1{:.';';'l‘&"’of‘:mm Measure Precipitated Un- feats Resolution Calling | . 3 Nod > 5 | N Y ’ L D?OP e,‘ rom the very first he ¥ 3 s —— clusion Act in Canal Zo0€\. iz After Week's, |3 st soomitame tgampen | SXDREti R Tpnes HOEE Upon Semator to Resign| coo clTl conmms CRRR A Y 1/ o1 Thp UribuvmAna GRONCIR GF 16 RN b | , 7| order. Clark appealed from the decision ACTION IS - NECESSARY néess. orthih Co. oné Gb i Piracer therokotia FULTON HOLDS FLOOR DEMOCRATS LOOK ON ot the chair and on a rising vite the de- R T, PSP houses of the place, Fleld displayed such . < cRialonlwn sustained, 20 to ‘w. nor; a +|a genius for business and rendered such -A;l;\llnbu;cennm\;zt'ng :h:h';?: e W Man in Charge of Construc- tion Work at Isthmus Be- Members of Family ! valuable service to his employers that he was in 1860 taken in as a junior partner, ; the fitm becoming Cooley, Farwell & Co., afd tater Farwell, Field & Co. Defends Prineiples Whieh 1t Is Sought to Establish Take No Part in the Aeri- monious Debate and Are| liams exclaimed: “naving sueceeded Republican party (long Repubficas ap- in reuniting the fore the Senate Committee| @7 Bedside When BUYS OUT PARTNERS. by the Passage of the Bill Excused Froin Holl Callpiawe:. which is aiways ihe it of =3 E Tn 1865 this parinership was dissolved : Democratic applause), I- will not offer S En- Chief He Passes. oln and Mrs. Preston Gibson and the firm of Fleld, Palmer & Leiter wus formed. In 1867 Potter Palmer retired and until 1881 the firm was Field, Leiter ments in Chicago, Mr. Field had branch WASHINGTON, Jan, 16.—Unexpected- ly, the Senate to-day found itself con- delesate its authofity to fix rates and ALBANY, N. Y., Jan. 16—The State Senate defeated to-day by a vote of Senator Grady said the Demoecrats feit | another amendmient.” The Democratic substitute of immedi- ate free' frade with the Philippines was McLachlan, MeMorran, Mondell, Minor, & X = . I was be-| NEW YORK, Jan. 16.—Marshall -g'w ‘»hlt- In that year Mar;s'hnll Field | yijering the railroad rate question, 34 to 1 Senator Brackett's resolution re- | offered affer the amendments to the bill tor Ser . inter- | Field, the millionaire Chicago mer- | Pty G (¥ ;;t:('i“:;l‘-ui‘:‘fuedsl}?:rl‘)?j{: which was precipitated by Fulton's questing the resignatfon of. United | had béen agreed to in committes of the o s the He lchant, @led at the Holland House at 4 J tiess, which had already érown to vast | taling the floor to ihake 2 brief speech States Sepator Depew. The Democrats whole. ‘On roll call the Democ[nlc Iuba o m ok this afternoon, after an eiBht | proportions, as Marshall Field & Co. | in explanation of an amendment offer- More sacimert. Trom vottng, .Hefiad | Sor- W deteated, 31 to 106—Clark and ot " 3 days iliness, of pneumonia. | Prior to the Chicago fire of 1871 the | ed by him to the Dolliver bill, giving to Bracholt B tugbirtedl the resali- l:zr'rll 1:'!or|d. betng the onty D making Death came peacefully while mem- | €alas of the great establishment of which | courts of justice authority to modify Bhn Tl aition: Taflowed & 1ok 80~ | Taur S Vil ARRAIG the. & . « xclus . bers of the family, who had been in al- | MP. \Field was the head amounted 10/ orders of the Interstate Commerce Com- bate, opened by Senator Brackett in a FINAL VOTE IS ONE-SIDEN. . most constant attendance for several | m?r;“‘m" $12,000,000 a year. By 1895 they | pioqion jmposing an unreasonable rate. spesch of an bour and & half. He! \a ron call on the passage bf the bill . e | e, were gathered around the death.il coihed the enormous fAghre of ST.WUM. |7, 504 not proccetied tar When hé vas scathingly attacked Senator DePeW.(gwas then demanded by Mondell. The ce v me. The | Jays. were g e and have grown gince year by vear, keep- e with an occasional denunciation of Sen- hi ited In 268 ayes and 71 > ng ard A, 1 ¢ was the dying merchant | ing pace with the increase of population | SWitched from a general explanation of Ttor Blact | BimGoPE MATBY, CxaaiRY: ;au a:“th :e::u‘t:";m‘ p:zsem 7 < < prepared for the end. |of the city, reaching nearly double that | the terms_ ot_u_‘e pr()-Ylslnn to a dden{e Rains, Coggeshall and other defended W'—TM Republicans voting agatnst the bl‘ was had been swayed be- | figure. of the principle which it seeks to és- Depew. e Adume of Wiconsin, Babosck, £ » tween \d fear, but when the| BY the fire Mr. Field and his associates | taplish and a general debate on the bill Brackeétt's resolution came up as 2 Y mgh‘;p_ . Bonynge, Brooks of Colorado, Be arming tumn came fo-day after’ the | iOR BIopErty yniaed st $L500.00, Shelt L Hulsati igld, ehe Higox throveRunt Rl special order early In the session. AfteT | Brown' Campbell of Ohio, Cassell, Dar- o e rally Of Yesterday.ib.whe| L-rIate.bf (it flaleiing oardledion I8 SHNPS IESRBESEIEY - Inter TAUERES LD it was read Grady, the minority leader. | ragh Davidson, Davis of Minnesota, " A 3 ¥ ¥ : |2 single building. Te new building | other Senators fully shared the time. explained the attitude of the Demo- | Dixon of Montana, Dovener, Dresser, . lized that the end had beéa only | promptly erected on the site of the old | ymong them being Foraker, Spooner, 4 | cratic Senators. He sald they were in | Driscoll, Dunwell, Ellis, Fassett, Ford- . deferred. Those who were ome was devoted entirely to the ratall | Bajley and Clay® The discussion was EDUCATOR APPOINTED _ACTING no wise responsible for sending DePeW | ney, French, Gardner of Michigan, Gil- resent the merchant’s deathbed | trade, the wholesale business being caf- | listened -to attentively by all the Sena- PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVER- to the United States Senate, and the re- | jatt' of California, Goebel, Gronna, X were Mrs. Marshall Field, Mrs. Marshali | F1d on In @ massive granite edifice cOver- | tors. showing the great interest that is SITY OF CHICAGO, <| | spousivility of recalling Depew must ! Hayes, Henry, of Conneeticut, Higgins, Field Jr., August N. Eddy. }lf';f WG Dodke oSt mcBl R 52’;‘,‘3‘,&; :’::e:‘tf( T’Lera“{fiédpé’,it'fii — l'l"”n 01“) the party lhl?it sent him lh’e‘re. | Hogg, Howell of Utah, Jenkins, Keifer, ~ . ddy - 1 1 'S OW3 e lemocrats w remain assive < Con~ ® By | Besides these two mammoth establish- | (o whether Congress had the right to and sten to the debate. 3 Bectieut, iy of 1;::::9#-{::0“ a | of hope which flashed to the ay afternoon when the nly rallfed and for a houses in England, France and Germany. ! In addition to his mercantile interests he had large investments in real estate, rail- | ways, stocks and bonds, the total being whether the courts may determine what is & reasonable rate. Fulton eonténded that the courts may legitimatély exercise this right. 1S APPOINTED like the man who, looking on while his wife fought with a bear, cried: “Go it, old ,woman; go it, bear.” severe the consequénces Mouser, Nevin, Norris, Rhodes, Smith of California, Samuel A. Smith, Willlam The more | Alden Smith, Smith of Pemmsylvania, to both “the | Sherry, Stafford, Townsend, Tyndall, appeared to gain strenglh rap-|a¢ 3 moderate estimate about $125,000,000 9 eems, gy : 3 | e 000,000, Spooner asked Fulton why, 1f the old woman and the bear” in this in- v iy wa first displayed _bs an an- vdls(rlhu(@d as follows: Real estate, $30,- | courts were to pass upon the question stance, the better the minority -aumlwéf,“nf,c",,‘:’,'ffl,‘;;x Bmu::.“'d" Burg- 5 cement after the morning consul- | 000,000; dry goods, $25,000,000; United Btates | of rates, they should not be asked Lo do like it. ers, Clark of Florida, Davey, Gillesple, of the physicians to-day. Mr. Steel stock, $17,000,000; Pullman stock, | $12.500,000; Rock Island stock. $4,000,000; St. €0 in the first instance. Why, he asked, should a commission intervene? TG HeA BRACKETT GRILLS DEPEW. in Lamar, Lindsay, Méyer, Moon of Ten- nessee, Robertson of Louisiana, Slaydem, v's rest had been disturbed during p : . Senator Brackett d d, in open- Y IV iC CoasT | the latter part of the night, and when 5o K v By Ulh*r,l""r;’]‘flfl Fulton said that he believed the find- 5 PP g2 leclared, In SPead | Buriiiam, Wiitis oN THE PACIFIC CoAsT | 0 TR UL [ was found that the | stock $0.00000; Bastern textlle mille | ings of the courts could not be made Ty Harry Pratt Judson IS| the resolution in obedience to what he —— e . g ;i v v R $5,000,000; bank stocks, $6,000,000; other | generaliy applicuble. He thought that . arry o S S e resolution in ol ence SHIN 16.—Postma improvement of yosterday had not been | o000 batie stocks, S0 s e o g S A believed to be the solemn demand of VICTIM OF PNEUMONIA. AG ; maintained. From that time until the | ROIINES, $3000; total, $BUNGN. | the commission would take much work | apiporary President : 0f | the right-thinking people of the state. — . approach of death was steady | PRt s % iy g B S b e courts. * He denied that he had the slightest | Thomas J. Emery, Ohlp Multi-Million- vy # irresistible. Before noon the last | ‘l"’ I;a'fi :‘"_" opsl b"$"l(;i’fi~ MflrShfilgl Clay suggested that a commission | ¢l (‘hicng() University | wisn to heumilla:e Lt et more akioy Ts THERE fe TRETRE. % atorh of hope again had fled. At 2 [ € Wad HO TS IO B L (‘Duldkdo the work at less expense, but Y | than was necessarfly implied in any| CINCINNATI, Ohio, Jan. 16.—Thomas : £arding o'elock word came from:theiblcrooni| E18v 4P GIlH the Promperlty o0t i BT EE B Ot R e o e RS bossilile resolution of the kind. He as- | J. Emery, multi-millfonaire of this city, . was very low and the end was | Son W, 0 R N lic-spirited | bility upom the Goyernment. » Special Dispatch to The Call, Sorted that fhere was a lack of con- |is dead in Egypt from pneumonia, the ' . g e Mz i | citizen Teaped full and well of the grand et e fidence in -tho Semator named. which | néws Raving been received by cable. r . Mr. Field'ssbody will be taken to Chi- | [0 0 pitios presented to him as well as | % % | CHICAGO, Jan. 16—Dr. Harry Pratt | 134 been caused by recent disclosures. | Emery, who was an _extensive to-morfow . .fuofniag ‘_’:‘l'l \5""‘"‘3‘)’ | others. Dunne, pastor of the Blessed Sacra- |Judson was appointed acting president of | kie denied the assertion that it was | traveler, went to North Afrfca during Ao - - No funieral services will be held | Honesty, fair dealing, cash purchases, | ment Chureh. the University of Chicago by the trus- | not within the province of the Senaté | the summer and the news of his death | came wi n a few irs of the time [ : o PR ot short credits, promptness, truthfulness, —— tees at their regular monthly meeting | to pass a resolution on a subject . B e and Adelitysiness were' the mxims ; 3 bt . ® | reterence. o which it had no authority | When his family heard of his setfous ifi- s s ilineas deviloped aout | 2h0 MOelts el el SO iant | TN ARRUBIRY SN s BN ATt A0 ;‘"“"g Dr. Judson || o force action, and cited resolutions | ness. He had ¢t some time at Alg ago e 2 . Fleld ey id that he regarded his appointinent as o gt ‘ . e " | Chlcago and h, Tni ates. e Wwas , N. & 4 - . g e coal strike several E £ - el el gt g e T8 e & speoIALIY oF A TEiRINt] . SUTES WAt e Ly ::,,‘,,',:"of the | would endeavor to continue the policy of | continued: £ and his death was reported by cable p nnsylvania ited and was taken | IOt & £ai : ! § . . - b i, L e iae jact befors |10 any sense ‘of the word, Despite his | firm of Main & Winchester of this city, | PF HOrDer. fter the trustees had ap- | ol ¥eht 10 ssy to sou aid to the peopie i T St T e i . e aln reached Pittsburg. Theree a | v \d¢ fame and marked Success a5 & Mer. | snd at dine tims At the head of the Cen: T, Judson, after the tr D- | of the State that untii a mare righteous con~ . : , ) T° @ | chant and man of affairs Marshall Field pointed him as. acting president, ad- | eeption of public duty shail prevail we are | Emery was one of the principal heirs tral Railroad Company and the Geary- to the Thomas W. Emery estate, the -bed: el HRisSonted St sician boarded the train and came ithout hope for the future; that unless the - i AME | oas little known as 4 man. He was not & dresed the board. President H. P.|without hope e % on'to' this city with Me. Fleld, When | o little known s & man, e won Moven | Sirect Raliway, dled i e aos ot | Meunee of Brown University: fo-day. de- | Efeat,jvisic mesnecd of, fhe Sjefe P!, ione | largest oWners of resl estate: in Cin- | at 10:30 o'clock Tues- | w0 knaw him best profess to know ‘véarn" Ho was -Bofn in . Rochester, nied i a speech to the students at Prov- "rmm'.".“,.e of his public duty must suffer | Clmnati and Seuthern Ohlo. Fe estab- day night Mr. Field was taken at once | ;1. ¢ his business affairs. N Y. & Wad dolt An orphn at Sm' jdence that he was to succeed Dr. Har- | the punishment for his offense we can expect | lished the Cincinnati Orphan Asylum as ¥ to the Holland House. A New York | ¢ o g """]‘3 . 5 =% P b“‘ © | er at the president of the University of | littie respect for law, little regard for publié | 3 memorial to his two sons who died physician was called and a consulta- | DU IO . TR s Writ by tha o1t S TBoston th| Cntedgo. BT A e A e crimes of whai. |ANd _Was & large contributor to the While he avoided ostentation and pub- | for himss n city of pHoston I wt s 11 24 colored orphan asylums. FHe algo con- tion was held. Mr. Field was at once placed in charge of trained nurses, and licity he was always liberal in the be- | stowal of charitles and benefactions, ex- 1845, but later came to California. The firm of Main & Winchester, of All of Dr. William R. Harper's estate, consisting chiefly of personal property, ever kind. Senator Brackett declared that, al- tributed generously to other cBarities and largely aided Booker T. Washing- s | later the family physician and Stanley uests, is given < " & : | Fiota, r. Field's mephew, $yere sum- | ercising a careful discretion in the selec- | which he was the senior partner, :.’,“’;f:";fm',,,flef,,":"%:’e:.ed t;,.i..,;’ by | though “,‘;“;“‘L‘“‘ed ox f":‘:",”‘;, De- | ton fn his educational work. He gave ... | moned from Chicago. [tion of the objects thereof. He gave a |opened busiuess in this oity in. 1852 | b "seriner Baton, soni-i-law of the | Dyags he e OPI;ON s zo- | iiberally to the collegs at Berea, Ky. | "on Wednesday it was dnnounced |tract of land then valued at $200,000, be- | and continuiéll under that namé untfl| ... s .iiqent of the Untversity of Chi- fh’t""h“l i Papd m"," ’th:““m‘ 50 ana | an Institution founded for the educa- Doug- | that while Field had a high tempera- | €ides other donations, to the University about six lilmn:s agn..when the senior cago: 1 the will the property is valued mmlz = m \ms tg:l un:vnolesomn tion of both white and black stadents, ture, he was improving. Later in the | of Chicago, and built a $200,000 library in | partner sold out and the firm was In- | "¢ o0 b o PPy e s s, | although ft has since yielded to the office—Eugene van | day, however, his = condition became |the town of Conway, Mass, where he|corporated under the name of the Main- e R S et o P e haone ot ihe repre- | Kentucky statutes which prohibited 5 S~ 7 Pl more serious and Dr. Walter B. James, | was born. | Winchester-Stone Company. Main was ought to plush for shame at the repte | o iCcq schoots. 3 a ned the fol- | Who had’been in attendance, calle When on the close of the World's n:arrled to Miss Mary A. Norton of spnfauon o6f his ane n‘ me n :( ) S in Drs. Edward G} Janeway and Austin | Columbian Exposition in 1893 a ‘movement | Providence, R L States Senate by either of e present | $————— ————————p Assoclate Justice | F- Riggs of this city, and ‘after a con- | Wag started for the preservation of many e Sendtors. He disclaimed the slightest | chief argument a year ago advaneced for the o 7 = g sultation the physicians announced that | of the exhibits in a suitable and perma- VICTIM OF PARALYSIS, - responsibility !:‘rh&:sl';; ::M;:l :fle‘ ;mfim ;{“‘{'r‘,:“';:’h:;";g; po R e letrict of | Mr. Fleld was found to be suffering | ment building Mr. Field gave to the pro- - 5 election, and said he wou P! ¥ | in raising large sume of money from these Ore om pueumonia. The congestion, it |ject $1.000,000 on condition that half as Brother of Former President Grover othér Serator's resolution requesting | very insurance companies for use in the elec- Pog »rs, Washington—John P, |Was said, was slight at that time much should be given by ulhe‘rs. That (-lfl"tlllldv Dies at Columbus, Ohio. . him to resign. Stia i ::.:u:flnyg:“:vle;_.“.:?"nw;::":m: :’r:. M nr nner There wat an improvement in Mr. | was done, and in 184 the Field Columblan | CULUMBUS, Jan, 16—Hev, W. N.|. Senator Brackett insisted that no ser- | Umated in more than ons conioreics oa Fie o8 W. P. Pelnbaker, Woodburn, | Field’s condition Thursday, according Museum was formally opened to the pub- | Cleveland, brother of former President 3 vice performeéd by Senator Depew for | St " (hat guch contributions were made to bulleting issued by the physicians, |lie, an enduring monumént to the prac-| Grover Cleveland, died last night from the Fqaitable Life Assurance Society |upon the express understanding that he was the man whose | the effects of paralysis, aged 73 years. —_——— Auting the twenty years of his $20,000 | to be returned to thq Semate, where he could A Little Sound Advice Will Help Many |and in the following two days thege | was no intimation that the patient was not progressing favorably. Dr. Frank Billings of Chicago, Mr. Field's family physician, had arrived from Chicago in tical philanthropy of name it carries. | Unlike many other Americans who | gained great wealth, Field never was | weaned from his home life. He had a Rev. Mr. Cleveland was a retired Pres- byterfan minister. Former President Cleveland has been notified of the death, and the funeral Epectal Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Jan. 16.—Henry M. Bow- érs several months ago married Miss “refainer” had been other than what he owed as a director of the society. The claim that this enormous sum was paid for legal services excited only laughter and contempt. continue to protect in their places these men who thus give awdy your money and mine. 1f there ig here on this floor any timid soul among the majority who thinks this recital will hurt his party, I want to say to him and to every one of my party assoclates—to | the meantime and his presence seemed grynntry. home near Leamington, England, | arrangements await word from him. | muixie §t. Clair Goldsmith, & chorus girl say it kindiy, but firmiy—that if we do not to cheer Mr. Field greatly. On Satur- | and usually spent his summers in Europe, Bur.]m probably will be in this city. and artist's model, unbeknown to the DEPEW’S CAMPAIGN FUND. :xpon nd. :dm::- and our party of | day night, however, there came a sud- | den change for the worse. That night the physicians remained almost con- and often he spent his winters in Califor- | nia, but, despite his travels, he never for- got Chicago. i Oldest Mail Clerk Is Déac ALBANY, N. Y, Jan. i6.—Captain P. young man's father, the wealthy Judge Bowers, but when the latter heard of it Referring to the so-called “yellow dog” fund of certain insurance com- panies, he said: there will presentiy in the pages of the histo of the body in which he has a seat to & single thing that he has dons worthy of i . . stantly at his bedside, but despite all | Mr. Field's first wife died some vears | i §kinner, the oldest mail clerk in the | in Novémber last he offered the girl R 1a thot 2 Sufferer in San Francisco. | s the pationt seemed to grow | ago, and some four months ago he was | scrvice, aied to-day, aged 86 years. Cap- | $10,000 to release his son. e T O rsalen (bvatd ae ex. | the State. His conception of pubic difty has x o i | weaker. During the night and Sunday (married in London to the widow of | tain Skinner served fifty-eight years ih | ‘“Her refusal enraged him,” sald the |penses of ome of the political parties, “to | BOR SORNCS, Bp U T Ry aieamanahin. N can be healthy and well | {1ore” was no appreciable change in |Afthur Caton of Chicago. the postal department, continuously, | glflI's mother to-night. “He pretended to |save the honot of the Ration, e et it - the P 7 tat | ; . ¢ 11 b g . ¢ | The honor of the nation! The homor of the enato y arraigned are sitk, Poisons that|the sick man's condition, except,that| The first Mrs. Field left two chil- | with the exception of the term of the be recoriciled to the marriage and sent | R NOUSE TG (O N age men were so | Senator Depew as having been know- pass ine when the kidneys | his strength seemed greatly to wane. dre?; Et:\el. nowEmslrrlsd ar:id h;esld}:nl!l Civil War, when he commanded a com- }ham on a trip around the ;v?lrld.d ’fhey solielt tm::{m 1 ‘unlr ov&.mgr: ingly a “promiment figure in and tol- B ed in the body when | 2 BANDONED. at Leamington, England, an arshal pany in the Eighth United States Col- | left in November. The last eard from |so_solicitous the nal honor t _they » the s gy (Ao | I e = g Field Jr., who accidentally shot himself | bred Infantry Volunteers, and for 4 |my dmughter was a letter dated San | wese ready and did e(7e SWey faofsasis of e ;Z::-:‘:lo:n‘:o:o.&a- boms - iy During Sunday night Mr. Field ap- |a¢ his home In this city November 22, | time served as a spy Wwith General | Francisco, November 23, just before they GglIatg ot Jout ne s, of cepbtia, but net ] ti, o amed and swollen, | peared to be sinking ru’pldly and Mon- | 1905, and Qied five days later. Rl g it were to safl for Honolulu. Since then of o P ot thlam”;ve', wh‘ilv;h l:n&.a :7 under- \ delicate female organs |day morning the physicians announced i AL, < g t. 1| Let have done with this sham and mine the very life of the nation.” e e 3 3 pre- » I'vé heard nothing, but fear the wors! i s Jaws e Wil Qe sbare ad roes sometmes displacing s the true cause of many | that all hope for his recovery had been abandoned. | Mr. Field himself apparently elieved WANTS SHARE OF ESTATE | Seattle Woman Claims She Is Related The Louisiana R. G. Compauy OF SAN nmxclsi‘o—onoANlZED MAY, believe absolutely that she has been un- willingly confined in a sanitarium. What has beeome of young Bowers I cannot or necessary purposes. It i3 no answer to the stafement that the money stolen was weil gpent. But there IS not even this excuse DIES FROM FRACTURED _ SKULL— el yebtanday mornisg and his Tody mes y Rnoved 1o the Morwue. o P l ng-down pains, lameness, back- S . s that the end was at hand and by his re- to Marshall Field. Following are It was spent in & » i etc. Uric poi | e the capitals, Saturday: No. . 1 belleve my daughter is being held | nere. way that as s et 40 B3 sid ache, etc Uric PpoisOning | quest all the members .of his family SEATTLE, Jan. 16.—Mrs. M. O. Rex | 04260, tm\f). sold mp Stnmmnelm;“l':u’. “a}:: l‘l:ySau ‘?l':anetsco,y Honolulu or Sydney. I th:u:%";z:ld‘my -nnndh.” cg:‘ m'l‘i pital ,.“..g '.:“,.:, and :"n‘m while work- 0 ciwscs headaches, diszy epell, | wete summoned te the ASeh, Every Lo 1ae showast tsser dociared sha sh | SO0k Rios sen rranglRLIG S50k SN | baevs semeiune b Bemg v daen | HE R B T Devews in 0. ivpee | Seathly sk BUSRRt o 1hy Head il 3 ervousness and rhewmatic e “ , #0ld in San Francisco; No, . 8500, sold i with me. of Congress of the United States f whar. he had s brot | death watch. For hours there wa: no | Will fight for a part of the fortune 1éft | say Francisco; L 0, ot o |t frums Sommgk iR T Teifeh parposes dtd. °f | Gitv: dut dla -‘:!‘dtm‘ Bis sadrese. Ho was appreciable change in the condition of by Marshall Field. The woman declares > 1 Franclsco; No. 60521, $250, sold in San Fran- “Just previous to my daughter's mar- tiage young Bowers pawned about $2000 and it Again I charge the truth to be that the | ering so, try Doan’s Kid- ; | . cisco. > 3 H 1- | the sick man. Suddenly, however, about | that she is a close relative of the Chi-|“"u g @ ¢ id to M. . the temitdy Nt o icke | | <, Comp ; ewelty to their wedding I the remedy that cures sick | Monduy afternoon there came a re- | cugo multi-millionaire, but refuscs to Fred Bograin, Sumel Cars Dee. 10, 1005, doa0r ::;3,‘,;’ A oes Tawars fieutd: ok NS i ys u will get better as the | markable change. The strength which | 4o explicit as to the relationship. She | GeNfgrnta Safe Devosit apd T%Cufl o B | e e back the jewelry thraugh P - ve get better, and heaith will re- | gradually had slipped away from the ;s engaged lawyers in Chicago to at- | Windnen, i iiss sve! i ene™Y. " | the Pinkertons and sent it to my daugh- when the kidneys are well. Let |patient séemed suddenly to he Fushed | (end to her interests. She deolares that |Dec 28, 1905 $12x0; Wells, Fargo & Co. Ex' | ter in San Francisco through Charles H. about Doan’s Kidney Pills. 0f & Srigk, P | before her marriage Field atded her | giis Boini, Chl. Dec, o8 1006 $1850. " S\ | the last letter I recetved from my daugh- Irs. E. H. Harfick of 312 Prospect h possibly helped me to de over a spell, but if 1 contracted 2c or was unfortunate enough to get my feet wet a recurrence was sure to set in. 1 have never been as free from backache as I have during the six months, and 1 owe it to the s Kidney Pills. During I have not required the use of any medicine for my kidneys.” use For saie by all dealers. Price, s0 b secr celits onter-M . 4 not abandoned. however, and they de- | born in Queens County, Ireland, -April 5 \(ru\ ff,-,fighé,’ffl"?mcffie Bl‘}“ik:i. I clared that while his :andl!lons was | 11, 1815. At the age of 10 he came :nh ¢ L s e N. Y, s nited | critical % was not regarded as hopeless. | his family to New Brunswick and from ~1 uccess ood’s - S ;{' es ok . | Hie condition :-:nnnued fo become more { there to Chicago, arriving here August t:}mryvoi;yhn;n:.‘b l\'l: d‘l’::! -‘m:n::‘h:;: tquakd ¥ X » emember th — 2 | v- {15, i . illa i ¢ name—Doan's—and | desperate with every ‘moment, how- |15, 1843, wmafi U‘fiwn Telegraph Company that Sarsapanlla in the treat- take no other., ful, restful sleep. He was better, the physiclans said, much better, and there the afternoon. In the eafly morning hburs to-day, { however, gloom once more began to set- |tlg over those around the sick room. | MY. Field did not rest well during the |1ast hours of the night. The disease lat 9 a. m. to-day was described by the iphysicsans as “worse than last even- ing.” { The renewed hope whish ecame to them with the rally of yesterday was | ever, and by noon the last ray of hope | was gone. At 2 o'clock it was an- nounced that the patient was sinking the sick room that Mr. Field had only a few minutes more to live. Death came at 4 o'clock, with the members of the family gathered at the bedside. —— i 2 HIS SUCCESSFUL CAREER. Marsball Fiel Millionx All Gained In Tegitimate Business Enterprises. Marshall Field, the head cf the largest dry goo@s house in the weorld and one of the leading financiers of United States, was born in Conwa from 3 country in 1650, but the stock Norman origin, going over to with Wililam the Conqueror. His father was a farmer and. had the thorough industrial fra a New England country boy wi school academy early | spread in the lung and his condition | stzadily and at 23:30 word came from . | mother considerably. She left Chicago | when eight years old and is now thirty- cific. Mrs. Rex intimates niece of Field. Ctciiglcaanlls DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS. Laust of the Ploneer Dunme Family of Chicago Passes Away. CHICAGO, Jan. 16—William Dunne, thé last member of the pioneer Dunne | family of Chicago, died to-night after a long illness. William Dunne ‘tha.t she is a | He entered business as a contractor j and bullder, erécting as his home the first house ever bullt on North Wells street. o % A He was the uncle of Finlay P. Dunne, he author of the “Dooley” stories, and 1s0 of Archbishop Riordan of San | Francizeo, Rev. D. J. Riordan of Chi- | cago, Rev. W. P. Dunne of Joilet and Rev. D. J. Dunne, D. D. of the Cathedral | Seminary. | He was the father of Rev. John M. e g The — Commander Buckingham Deud. Druggists refund money If it falls to cure my E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 23c.* o TEDDY G Helping the Portef. The Roosevelt Bears: Are traveling East ’& it aveling mz‘.fld e CALL next . Don’t miss this part of th ;:‘:; brimful .6‘ fun Your Grder woduy for ter she said she had sent me some of the Jewelry, but I never have received it.” young woman named Goldsmith. ave says: “I have the best of rea- | wag even hope that he micht success- | 2 . & sons for recommending Doan’s Kid-| fully pass the crisis in his fllness j¢ | nine. From Chicago she went to Den- | ~WASHINGTON. Jan. 16.—Lleutenant “YOB';';‘:"';{"E:’; R by excess of uric acid in g 4 g W s Kid- | : | ver a S een years | Commander Benjamin J. Buckf : ers, Bonnell, 3 ; & ez I e achke ok A riiies § Ll\l-:nl‘:‘ p:(r’\:;;n:;‘i; §:’;';3::’:m tlh"c- b::;? {ago. She says she corresponded sears | U. 8. N. (retired), died at Curlt\::'kh-l‘l‘»-' ers, His father Is a member of the law the blood, due to defective )r at least a quarter of a century, and | fetl f ed by his physielans carriel | ago withy Field, but that he never | let, N. C, to-day. firm of Bowers & Sands. Judge Bowers s when they .occurred 1 naturaily re- | \oin tnem the ra S hape There had | helped her. Her husband is an invalid AR R Would make no definite statement re- di S SRR sorted 1o medicifies of various kinds, | 1o e -3 gt | and her omly support is a 17-year-old Mo Cure garding his som’s marriage further than igestion and torpid liver, inds, | been no loss of the gains made during a Cold in One Day some of w | son who works for the Northern Pa- | Iake LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. |to affirm that Henry had married a HOUNTAN WIRES BELOW CROUND 1| the anflconwmputad the construec- ‘tion: of ‘an undérground system of wires né Sferra Nevada fimmn:é One of the Blood Discascs, is caused kidneys and skin. This ex- cess of uric acid affects the muscles and joints, causing inflammation, stiffness and pain. ment of Rhclili:atism is the fact that this great medi- cine is the most effective tonic ever devised. It neutralizes and removes from the blood the excess

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