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THE N FRANCISCO CALL. MO VDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1906. DR. DOUGLAS HYDE ADDRESSES LARGE ASSEMBLAGE AT RECEPTION AT TIVOLI Great Leader in the Movement for the Preservation of the Irish Language Delivers a Stirring Argument. Coutinued From Page 4, Column 7. \'l \I 8P Ii\]\ ]HI\H T0 GET MUNICIPAL JOBS e how we manage e do we get the money as not been out of the t great or of the rich, I as- Who was it that gave us our more than five years ago the vision of Irishman as it were, n? Wasn't any calth out of the many wealth in this the Irishmen or ave also been the indifference. It Ireland get and hever t as much money ieties and individuals, assist us in the hour we make an appeal ev countrymen dur h falls St. Patrick’s day ¥ year s, sixpences and shill- v 0 and £4000, d we make ourselves a sum of be- £3000 and £4000 from the sale of , pamphlets and newspapers, t money we are reviving eland. our work is necessarily b ; We are a poor country; we are verished people; the pennies lings of the poor do not go We are accomplishing our work, as it were, from hand to g and one thing alone sh nation, and it has {-sacrifice and devo- who are engaged in after circum- cum- with a file of soldiers. at devotion a million have worked no ellectual It we but for diocese in d upon dlord nor a ! er a ionist nor a in taking it for our plat- e achieved what is to my her a la t first saw floating before | orking gunsmith, Pat- |1 ew York. He left us t i dollars, and for | on behalf of every nk you, vne and | g the | mind the supreme and crowning glory lor the Gaelic League, because for the | { first time in Ireland within my recol- ection Catholic and Protestant. Union- st and Natlonalist, landlord and tenant, riest and parson, came together, all working hand in hand in the interest of | Ireland’s life and Intellectuality 2nd we | are realizing for the first time the glori- | How every race and every trade Shoulé be by love combined. NO ROYAL ROAD TO | ; ous dream of Thomas Davis: | REBUILDING NATION | “We are working together in a com- mon cause, in a spirit of good fellow- Mr. Chairman, that word is not enough; in a spirit of loving hood which has, of recent years, ampled in Ireland, and we are not engaged in doing anything that is impo: le. 1t is perfectly possible, and we know it, and we see it. “But I tell you that there is no royai road to the recovery of our nationality. It is a difficult, it is an, arduous task, and it demands stlf-sacrifice. If we are n earnest and have behind us the moral upport and the good wishes of America we must succeed. If we are only play- ing at being in earnest—and that is a game we shall fall and the whole world will | deride us and the historian will take his tablet and write the words ‘Finls Hiber- niae’—the end of Ireland. “The Gaelic League is In earnest. It knows what it is asking and it knows why it is asking for it. It will abate no jet and no tittle of its demand. The | oftener it is knocked down the more vig- orously it will rise up again. It will ac- cept no defeat.. We have upon our side right, justice, reason, the memory of the dead, and though it may seem a strange thing to utter it, in this city of roaring commerce, et I believe in my heart that the dead living. We have the sympathy scholars 'of Europe. We have the good- will of all well-wishers of Ireland, and against us we have only race hatred, anti- h bigotry, and Trinity College, Dub- and the time hds gone by when that combination, from which nothing con- structive ever yet emanated—the time has gone by when they shall win any more battles in Ireland. “Pardon me for having kept you so long. I shall end. But I earnestly im- plore ever ‘ou, whether he is a | Nationalist or a Unionist—whatever his politics v be—for this is surely no po- litical matter, to do his best to help the Irish race to develop upon Irish lines, be- c on Irish lines alone can the Ir | race once more become what it was of vore—one of the most original, artistic, literary and charming peoples ia Europe. i A silken Irish flag was presented to Dr. Hyde at the completion of his ad- dress by Alphonsus Twoney in the name of the Daughters of Erin in Cali- | fornia. READY TO DEFY FRANCIS JOSEPH 1"~'~~mv Clash May Occur Attempt to Dissolve | Parliament of Hungary| YOUNG ROCKEFELLER GIVES MORE ADVICE Man Starting in Business Should Put His Trust in God. <-x1r1(—:kld by Johr um'nw to God te is going ot give much who began with a picture of his mi B! the mistakes 2king is that we seek the help that will do more fdr us than thing else. We may start ¢ with & preyer, and when we begin to the hardships of life we are in- » go oftene nto prayer. Ther ngs begin to come our way, w to forget God ana strike out Show me & man who has not been suc- » bueiness and 1 will show you a who has not lived the way he should. BEach one of us has a purpose in There is a certain work for us to do. 1f we embrace the opportunities that come to us we will get ahead. These op- ties are made for us by our cre- He expects us to lead honest lives. ¢ we G0 mot we cannot expect to win ————————— Try the United States Laundry. 1004 Market street. Telephone South 420.° (ORATOR T0 WED ~ FANED WOMAN | Betrothal of Bourke Cock- ran of New York and Mrs. “Jack” Gardner of Boston| is true of great g the marriage of y came guests Hunt s:(fl&l’. ostesses of one the begun earlier., She gave a Gardner at 5 o'clock noon in her handsome home in et, at which Cockran was The result was t! ere soclal dined, e brilliant Boston woman ongued ora 8o swiftly silver. was out of Its engagement of Gardner and entative Long- daughter of the rtwined so closely tion remained 2 impression wedding pre- or its ac- proposal SULIETY WOHEN N PRISON CELL Specis] Dispatch to The Call LOS ANGELES, Feb. 18.—With all the esse and elegance of hostesses at a pink tea. 1wo beautifully drcssed women dia- mond thieves held a little informal recep- tion e County Jail to-day. Their guests were three society women whom they had “touched” for thelr gems—Mrs. ¥. O. Engstrum, her daughter, Miss Eng- strum, and Mrs. Fred Engstrum, her daughter-in-law. From descriptions of the two pretty dla- mond thieves, Margaret Sobel and Ger- trude Darborn, Mrs. Engstrum recognized them as former “model servants” who had disappeared between days with her tapestry and Mre. Fred Engstrum’s jew- eis. The two women were arrested sev- eral days ago in Pasadena and charged with haviug robbed the residences of sev- eral of their former employers there, but until Mrs. Engstrum visited the jail and identified them the authorities had little | direct evidence of ther guiit. { The women, however, readily admitted to the Mesdames Engstrum that they had ’stolen diamonds and other valuables val- | ved at several hundred dollars, and even t0ld where they had sold their loot. The | women admit that they are wanted in th Bast, but will not say where. It is be- lleved they are professional thieves. . | the the story of the be-} one without | MIZNER COMING Friends Blame “Knockers” for Quarrel Between Young | H Epecisl Dispatch to The Call. ! CHICA Yerkes mansion in New York last Wednesday. He is said to have departed with two suit cases and the hatbox that he carried when he moved from his hotel to the house. He was reported to be in Chicago to-day, but kept himself questere Along with the news of a separation comes the announcement that Mrs. Miz- ner has made a will in which she provides r a large sum of money for the found- g of a Yerkes Hospital in this city. Clarence A. Knight, attorney for the | Yerkes estate, declined to talk about the quarrcl between Mrs. Mizner and her hus- bux he confirmed the story of the Chicago hu‘mlla! He would of Mrs. er says she blamed Mizner for the publicity that fol- | lowed their wedding. Mizner talked about it to reporters whiie Mrs. vigorously denying it. Knight said to- da; “As to Mrs. Mizner's domestic affairs I am not at liberty to speak. I believe | that the story that Mr. Mizner left New York la is correct, Whether he is in Chicago or has passed through on his way West I don’t know."” Mizner was in Chicago night. Mrs. Mizner later left for Chicago, according to report, and is now domiciled { at the Auditorium Annex. on Thursday ner out of his good thing,” said a friend of the young man to-night. ““Why, some of his supposed friends have been circu- lating the report that he formerly was the ome on’ for a gang of wire tappers.” A vaudeville performer has been singing a verse in topical song dedicated to Mrs. | Mizner ana her young husband. Mrs. Mizner is sald t be greatly put out by | the continued notorlety her marriage has given her; and, then, Mizner's old Broad- way friends have been ringing the Yerkes door bell and demanding to be taken through the Yerkes art gallery. DIES OF STARVATION, THOUGH MILLIONAIRE Large Estate Left by Aged Recluse in Greater New York. NEW YORK, Feb, 13.—The charge has | been made to the District Attorney that { Miss Marla Corsa, an aged recluse of the | Bronx, who_died last Monday, supposedly | from exposure and starvation, though | possessed of great wealth, was polsoned. | This accusation came in the form of an | anonymous letter and led to an immediate investigation by an assistant District At- torney. He interviewed the physielan who attended Miss Corsa for the day preceding her death. No indication to support the charge of poisoning was found. Bonds and mortgages representing more than $100,000, and more than $40,000 {n cash have been found hidden in the house late- 1y occupied by Miss Corsa. Her estate is | valued at mearly $1,000,000. The money | was hidden in furniture, under carpets | and in almost every nook and corner of the house. e — ‘When the Ameriean People Will become educated to the use of | wine at their tables the viticulture in- dustry of California will give to this State §300,000,000, The Itallan-Swiss Colony wines gre helping this move- ment. . Irishmen: are very good at—then | often more potent than the | of the | 10" CALIFORNIA San Franciscan and Bride | AGO, Feb. 18.—Wilson Mizner left | Mizner was | t Wednesday night for California | “A lot of knockers are trying to do Miz- | YOLCAND NEAR (OL0RADO TOWN Flames and Smoke Issue From a Mountain Close to Hot Sulphur Springs SEael l ALARM OF RESIDENTS | —ten |Investigating ~ Expedition Makes a Cursory Examina- tion of the New Crater —_— Epectal Dispatch to The Call. HOT SULPHUR SPRINGS, Colo., Feb. |'18.—There is much alarm in Hot Sul- phur Springs over what is believed to be a genuine volcano that is belching flames and smoke from the side of Mount Sutton, a lofty, creviced, granite promontory, three miles south of\this | place. The mountain is burning, and not through any human agency, nor is the fire being fed by material that might have been placed there by in- tent. There is no timber or coal in that section. The flames appear to be consuming the very granite of the mountain and the fire is spreading. One investigation was made to-day by a party of reputable citizens of Hot Sulphur Springs, headed by City Mar- shal Stillwell McQuery, Sheriff Solomon Jones and Editor Jobn Brown of the Middlepark Times. This party ap- proached as near to the burning crater as it deemed safe and made a cursory examination. Every member of the ex- pedition is positive that the fire is vol- canic in character and says that the flames appear to be consuming the very rocks from which they spring. The dense volumes of smoke that roll sky- ward are thickly Inpregnated with sul- phur fumes, and occasionally there is a faint indication of ashes. A second and larger exploring party will leave here early to-morrow morn- ing to continue the investigation begun to-day. The reflection from the flames of the eruption was first discovered yester- a just at dark. From Hot Sulphur | Springs it looked as though some one | had built a large camp fire on the 300- | foot cliff, midway from top to bottom. It was generally supposed that the fire was built by a camping party, or that some person or persons had fallen from the cliff or become lost, and were trying to attract attention. Investiga- tion revealed the phenomenon. |COMPLETING GREAT NORTHERN MERGER New (ompany Formed With a Capitalization of $120,000,000. €pecial Dispatch to The Call, [ | | | NEW YORK, Feb. 18.—An official an- nouncement of the Great Northern merger is expecte almost any day. Teh plan as outlihed a fortnight ago was the formation of a company with $120,000,000 capital to take the Great Northern igpn llnd? the stock to be di- vided up among the Great Northern holders. The lands are leased to the United States Steel Corporation sub- stantially as long as the ore body lasts. The new corporation will get 80 cents a ton royalty, and the Great Northern Railway 80 cents a ton for hauling. The initial production is to be 3,000,000 tons minimum, this probably for five vears; then five years at 7,000,000 tons mini- mum; then, indefinitely, 10,000,000 tons minimum. From the beginning the Great North- ern Railway will get an assured annual haul of 3,000,000 tons and |a gross revenue from it of -$2,400, | 000. In ten years this gross revenue will be raised to $8.000,000. The Great Northern road handles fts whole business at an operating ratio of 50 per cent. The fixed traffic of this |iron can be handled at 40 per cent. | The net revenue from the start is | $1,440,000. After a period of years the gross revenue from this source is $8,- | 000,000, and the net, say $4,800,000, or 6 per cent on Great Northern Railway preferred stock. The new Great Northern Develop- ment Company gets nothing but the net earnings, which at the start amount to $2,400,000 on a capital of $120,000,000, equal to 2 per cent. After ten years it gets a net of $8,000,000, equal to 7 per | cent indefinitely. To hold the new | stock is worth par. b —_———— | ARRESTED FOR STEALING HALTERS.— | Patroiman T. Cronin yesterday arrested George >Gil|lxhnn who was carrylng away five halters from Cluie & Co.'s stable at Eighttenth street | and Potrero avenue. He was booked for bur- | Blary at the Seventeenth-street station. NS EXTRAC | Women should write to Pond’s Extract ! Company, 76 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y., for book- let, “For Ladies’ Use.” Witch Hazel it not the same thing as Pond’s Extract. On analysis of seventy samples of Witch Hazel— offered as ‘‘ the same thing’’ — fifty- tawo were shown o contain wood alco- hol or formaldehyde or both. To awoid danger of poisoning use \Ch: THE oLo pamiLy DOETOR ONDS r.xm E g | Cures aCold inOneDay, 2 Dql PROPOSALS. D! Acnrhmb T l%t“ lho‘ Xm;rhr W D. 9, 1006.—Sealed proposals wi 3 ‘st the office of e United Stl:lnz: Unian Trust building, ngeles. Cal.. until 10 o'clock a, o Havch 16, 1806, tor furnishing from - 300 16,000 barraia ot Portland cement, Partlone l may be obtained by lnnlle-uon u the Reclamation Service, thln Gol. o Klamath Fels Orews, o It’s In The Scrap Book All the world’s mirrored in TEE ScraP Boox—the new magazine that contains something of interest for every man, woman and child in America—the greatest and most remarkable magazine ever published. Do you enlry the tug-of-war for dollars? Read, “Qur Trade Triumphs for 1905.” It’s In The Scrap Book Would you like to read “The ComYI.mons of Jehu,” Alexander Dumas’ great tale of love and adventure? I’s In The Scrap Book Would you like to know what would happen if you were born in March? Read, “A Horoscope of the Months.” I’s In The Scrap Book Do you thrill with the weird and mystcnous? Read, “The Descent into the Maelstrom.” it’s In The Scrap Book Do you want solid fact? Read, «“Little Glimpses of the 19th Century.” ) Are you fond of dogs? Read, Senator Vest’s great ““ Eulogy on the Dog. It’s In The Scrap Book iIt’s in The Scrap Book Would you like a copy of Lincoln’s favorite poem, I’s In The Scrap Book These are but seven of the thousand good things that pack the or Roosevelt’s? pages of THE ScraP Book. The Four Corners of the Earth and thousands of scrap books and libraries besides, have been searched and ransacked to gather such a collection of good reading for you as was never before bound between the covers of a magazine. Whatevet else you read, you must read THE Scrap Boox. The Price is Ten Cents a Copy and One Dollar by the Year On all news stands or from the publisher FRANK A.T1IUNSEY, 175 Fifth Ave., New York orers T TVOL Ligue COLUMBIA oo BEGINNING SECOND AND LAST WEEK. MATINEE SATURDAY ONLY. HENRY W. SAVAGE'S Production of THE COUNTY CHAIRMAN LAST TIME SUNDAY NIGHT. Beginning NEXT MONDAY, FLORENCE ROBERTS With Max Figman and a Notable Cast in THE STRENGTH OF THE WEAK. SEAT SALE OPENS THURSDAY. TO-NIGHT MATINEE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. FIRST TIME IN THIS CITY The Piquant Musical Mixture, ISLE oF SPICE One Continuous Laugh, Set to Music. Book and Lyrics by Allen Stowe and George Stoddard, Music by Paul Schindler and Ben Jerome. Staged by Gus Sohike. GEORGE ADE’S Comedy Masterpiece. 175 NIGHTS IN BOSTON. 200 NIGHTS IN CHICAGO. VAUDEVILLE LUMINARIES! Herrmann the Great; The Three Sel- doms; Rosaire and Doreto; Roomey Sistersy Lew Sully: Mignonette Koking Bradley and Barnes; Les Auberts; Galett’s Pantomime Monkeys, and Orpheum Motlon Pletures. Regular Matinees Every Wednesday, Thurs- day, Saturday and Sunday. Prices 10c, 25c First Appearance GILBERT GREGORY and BERT YOUNG RBEGULAR MATINEB SATURDAY. USUAL TIVOLI PRICES........ e . Hall, Prop. and Mgr. Phone Main 121. BUSH STR EET NIGHT—All This Week. and 50c. 3 and Sun. Birthday Matinee Thurs- e T s oy [CENTRAL THEATER 8. W. BIFE'S “YANKEE DLO LE BIALy" | prresm—ommnng | rocnd souon oy Direction H. W. Bishop. In Two New Burlettas, Entitled “THE MIS- m B. Howeli, FITABLE INSURANCE (X)!‘P\\ and * Manager. iy g il Plierag An Uni ele o of tar and Head- Jine Acts, with the Added Attraction—The eergie o"" Five Baker 1;:-:»?. 'rhgl uo-et Marvelous Act As on Earth, aping _the lap.”” Gorgeous Scenery. rvelous Blectrical Edfects. = 20— Cad ths Tomboy ROLLICKING GIRLS—20. ™ Popular Prices—Evenings, 15¢, 25c, 83c, 75c; All reserved, Matinees, 25c; Reserved. LOST EN NEW YORK Belasco & Mayer, ALCAZAR'F5 B A E. D» lece body’'s Favorite, also Manager. LANDERS STEVENS and EDNA ARCHER CRAWFORD in the beautiful play of NEW YORK LIFE. ICBEA!INGLY FUNNY! TO-NIGHT—MATS. SAT. AND SUX Extra Matinee Waushington’s Birthd; New York and London's Laughing Hit, THERE AND BACK The Uproarious Farce of Confuston, First San Francisco Production. Bves., 25¢ to 75c; Mats. Sat., Sun., 23c to 5o NEXT MONDAY—First Time In Stock, “THE GIRL WIiTH iH: GREEN EY:$" Clyds Fitch's Greatest Comedy, | Matinees Saturday and Sunday. SOON—A Real Fensation, :urzcsxg.mbu;\ INEB DA;VAmsmNunmxrl N OB A . B,T,""f ;-,l:;:.':m g.,'.";.'.;‘;‘";;fif;fl The Most Gorgeous Production of the Century. AGADEMY OF SCiENces naLL | L ne Black Crook A w-l.“h of MiflC'nl Scenery. Market st., between Fourth and Fifth. arvelons hani: and Electrical Effects. The Californin Promotion Committee e Gy ™ LECTURES O CRLIFDRRIR | e oot e Costumes and Catchy Muste. 10c to 50c: Mats., 10e, 15c. 25e. Datly from 2 to 4 D. m. (except Sunday). Illustrated by Magnificent Stereopticon Flown and Moving Pictures, For week beginnlug Fobruary 19, FORNIA mm:snum. E. Edwords, from 2 to SANTA CLAM COLNT! Presented Jordan, from 2: SAN JOAQ"ELN COYJP‘TY AND !Oa- i Y, i Presented by D. L Fol(}'. from 8 to 3:80. ¥ TPETALUMA, | Presented by Rev. J. N. Lynch, from 3:80 to 4. | Fom Lec Five Minutes After ture for Audience to Ar o Ve PHONE - EAST 1877 Corner of Eddy and Jones sts. i Belasco & Maver, Propristors. ! By Popular Demand—One More Week. SECOND AND LAST WEEK. Prices—Eves., Always something new —at the— PALACE HOTEL SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES UNDER CROCKER, WOOLWORTH BANK FREE TO TRANSIENT GUESTS. Opposite Market-Street Entrance. AMUSEMENTS. CRCAORORCFCROROACRCRCRCAOROACICACRCRE MAJESTIC TO-NIGHT Wed. & Sat. Mats. Gadski THE GREAT PRIMA DONNA Prices, $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, Seats now on sale at Sherman, Clay & Co.’s where complet. programmes may be obtained. Commencing To-morrow (Tues.) Eve. “Pop’* Matinees Thurs. and Sunday. OFF THE ROAD A Rollicking, Jolly Farce by Emil Kruschke, U. C., Berkeley. Seats T3¢, 5éc and 25e. ?o'p" Matt- mees, All Seats 25c. mcamm GRAN DHOUSB THIS WEEK ONLY. MAT. WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY. The Famous Originals, MURRAY and MACK AND THEIR BIG FUN CROWD In Their Greatest Musical Comedy Hit, AROUND THE TOWN REGULAR MATINEE SATURDATY. Wm Next Sunday Matinee— {POLLARD'S LILLIFUTIAN OPERA CO. MRS. GENERAL TOM THUMB Assisted by Count and Barom MAGRIy Bothwell Browne’s Gaiety Girls Presenting “DILLY-DALLY” And a Splendid Continuouns in the Theater, .\fler:'o:- at 3 and Evenings A HOST OF ATTRACTIONS ON THR GROUNDS. THREE BABY LIONS IN THE Z0oo! FIREWORKS "‘IURSDAY NIGHT ADMISSION. PR OAKLAND RACE TRACK SIx or more races each week day, raln or shine. Weekly Gall, §1 Per Your