The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 21, 1906, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, .V DNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1906. REFORM PARTY VOTES DIVIDED MISS McKENNA WILL BECOME BRIDE TODAY]| § New York Man Disposes of | Depositors Withdraw Money |Court Upsets the Testament QUENCHLESS AIi(h{_r::mhglang;da(t}(;ice:“ :fi Daughter of Supreme Court Justice From Golder Siate to Be Rty Pts ot Wik the Philadelphia Election | Married to Jokn Pultz at National Capiial. in Twenty-Four Hours — | + WOMEN ON THE TICKETS Large Percentage of Themg“ Victorious in Race for|| Posts as School Directors| | Feb. ns s strong- 1 e TRUST INUIR SEEMS CERTAI | House Committee Will Fa- vorably Report the Tillman - ges Resolution as Amended - Tepeating | WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—By unani- mous vote the House committee on in- | terstate and foreign commerce decided to-day to make a favorable report on Tillman resoluti amended. In s amended form t resolution pro- for the in by the In- uses we 11 measure is a com- llespie and diser by raflroa easure is br der than the Gil- t 1t includes all lespi lut! | coal, while the G e resolution re- lated to bitumi coal, and it prac- the Campbell resolu- the investigation to ally includes n by extending t SARGENT WOULD FURTHER RESTRICT IMMIGRATION e e — SAN FRANCISCO GIRL Pavors Barring Imbeciles and Requiring Newcomers to Have Fixed Sum of Momey. 20 IIN Miss Alice Leslie Walker Among Those Recelving Speeial Mention for Scholarship, POUGHKEEPSIE, N {., Feb. 20.— The class of 1806 at Vassar College has {the wunusual distinction of having | twenty-four honor gifts and ten hon- orable mentions. The honor list was announced last evening at the college end gave rise to the usual scenes of congratulations. An honor list of thir- ty-four fairly entitles the class of '06 | to be considered unusually brilliant in | scholarship. The ciass of ‘05 had six- teen honors and thirteen honorable mentions, & total of twenty-nine. The class of ‘08 numbers 184 students: the class of ‘05 had 196 at the same time of Year. The honor list includes Alice Leslie Walker, S8an Francisco. Those who obtained honorable men- tion include Mabel Chilberg, Seattle; Inex Anna Riggway, Denver, and Eliza- | beth Beverance, Spokane, Wash. Farge migre tavor of & jon before tmmigration gent favored the country bectle immigrants a session of some fixed & should also be 2 tion was taken by t DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. ol of money READ AND YOU WILL LEARN | | | POSTAL OFFICIAL WILL mmumdm — % BE GIVEN A REHEARING &5 S S B LS e [ Sames 7. Moteslt, Whe Was Oustid ong e n*fim‘ From Service, Claims He + and ) l o | WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—Yielding to | representations that a careful investi- | gation will disclose the fact that he | was innocent of wrongdoing, Post- k, | master Generak Cortelyou has ordered e gm k;c . Or g.!;.?vnk mfi'fl pecimymous in pi per- gi“ m}}\ cogteins h«%m bieh afe root, root, m the reopening of the case of James T. . mfij‘ ueen's P :d'er;c?lr. th: chief of the money order - S | division, who was dismi, sii the sbove. qinpr-ned- ons by such | service, later lndlctedmbuy.d!ht:ngr:s; emipent medicel writers Jury of the District of Columbia and ‘P,,,f, .g;.% 03'1 mt,‘nl' - I"h;(:z":rnw"x ndc;ue dyron-d. oge; . 5 | calf was indicted on ch: }"thu:x:h:r w&nu’!’( ., of f:r.-l:t!l l'm;\routrlly oonnl:uod °"::f';°:f t : : 23 ing, ‘? ... iste of Oinciboati | by the Hulmb:cl:-“"xk"vyn;.oo.: té:::p:'.’:;' ohn' M. Soudder, D,.Bl:r n{ Q) [which bad in its employ his son, Not- ot Prof. %ld:imc g a‘ gy B § Loy Metcalf. From the beginning Met- m&??‘%fl! u.ol 'w;fl_‘hl‘o.“ calf has strongly asserted his innocenae, y —_— seyersl seboois of ce. e oagon M | i - & the | BUSAWAY HU: IA.ll?nluwln T i R e ruggiste for lke 3 Returns 1t such fessional fl-:ri—'fl“ self the Uncle fi’ I:'.‘i‘( more t"?n piy mhmsber - L SEpY S Chilaren. X monials. Open cil AREHAM, Mass o the bottie wrapper is ihe best kol el o L O I v ite. 4 glanceat this | town hes an’ Enoch Arden cade that r-b'rll;‘e,d'or'mflil will ‘that ™ out-Enochs the Enoch of Tennyson, o g e b 4 and the Wareham Enoch, moreover, is g e T s not suffering a particle. i ehemicall; Hicks Parker ran away from her o { K‘:"M forty-four years ago, deserting & wife nm? e . ,,3 and two children. From far-off New i‘ hm# cure J Zealand Parker now sends word that e ::r_kh‘t.o “got uuuo;: 2od is coming ‘arebam. & now 75 years e [ > old. Like Enoch Arden, he will find B Deoveryt s # | that his wife has married his brother. root | She is the mother of eight children, the grandmother of thirty-five and the great-grandmother of fourteen. Nor has Parker been idle. He has been married twice and his last wife is only 37 years old, o P B g - :oklet. T s A ErrES e | the | WINS HONORS AT VASSAR | ARFIELD MAKES Declares He Did Not Prom- ise Immunity to Packers During the Beef Inquiry CHICAGO, Feb. | day In the packers' case and denied many | of the statements made by the witnesses for the packers & the hearing of the Edward Morris, ft and Arthur Meeker, repre- | £ the packing | & Co., Swift & | . all testified t oner Garfield had told them that | his department had the power to compel | information if they refused to give it ly. Garfield today, on the stand, that he had never made such nent. > denied that he had ever prom- nunity to the packers, saying that | the only protection that had been prom- i was protection for the individual of their confidential figures. kers ‘his, he said, had been given them, and ugh the average of these confidential | | figures had been given in the report of the Commissioner on the beef inquiry, in- | dividuals had been respected and their | names had not been given. He also de- ! nled positively that he promised that all | | Information wouid be regarded as con- fidential. He also denied that he had at any time said anything regarding an oath in connection with the inquiry. Garfield was the first witness for the | Government, the packers having rested their case shortly before the noon recess of court today. Commissioner Garfield told coming to Chicago and meeting the packers, his account of the occurrences and conversations not differing in any essential from those given by the w nesses for the packers. He declured, however, that Mr. Krauthoff, the at- torney who had advised Armour & Co. | to allow the inspection of their books and plants, told him that he would con- sider an inspection by a Federal officer on the beef business rather an advan- tage than otherwire to the packers. He declared that Krauthoft asked what would be done with the informa- tion given by the packers and was in- formed by the witness that it would be given to the President. Krauthoff asked what the President would do with it and Commissioner Garfield de- clared that he could not answer that Question, but added: “I told him that, ot course, the Presi- dent would not make any improper use of it.” “Did you say that the packers would be protected if they gave the Informa- tion?” “1 did not.” “Did you say that all information would be strictly oonfidential?” “No, I aid not.” “What did you do with the oconfi- ‘dcnlinl information you secured?”’ “It was made into averages given to the President.” “Did you say anything to Mr. Kraut- hoff about an oath?” asked District At- | torney Morrison. “No. | “Did you say that you | them know about an oath?” “I did not.” “How Aid you happen to come to Chi- cago February 287" asked the District | Attorney. “I came hére so that the phckers | might see that I had used in my re- of his | ) and would let | port the figures from the books in line with our agreement. 1 wanted them i to mee that it Aid not use the individ- | ual figures on confidential material.” “Did you ever say to Edward Morris hat your bureau was entirely dlvorced rom any other department?” “I did not use those words. I said the buresu reported to the President and was not under the Department of Justice.” —_—— To Spend Twenty Years in Jail | SPOKANE, Feb. 20.—Judge Heneke | today sentenced James Hardick, gen- i erally known as “Shamrock,” to twen- |ty years In the penitentiary for hold- ing up and robbing a saloon at Hill- yard, in which escapade two men were muuouly ‘wounded by shots from a re- Ver, ¢ 1 5 1 STRONG DENIAL 20.—Commissioner of | | Corporations Garfield took the stand to- | The wedding of Miss Marie McKenna, | Easi | a sister of tomorrow's t has been set | lars at Information Bureau, 613 Market st. ® for Avril, when she will be married to | e e o et | Dvaciport Browe, or Bos FOUR THOUSAND DOLLARS Z 5 g THE COST OF HIS KISSING | albeit ' not FAILS TO PAY FOR IT Evidence of His-Capacity as a Human Tank Brought Out by Innkeeper’s Suit Special Diepatch to The Call, NEW YORK, Feb. 20.—This is what David Lamar consumed in one day: -$120.00 110.00 | 60 pintx of wine 52 cigars . . Food . . 610 | Seltzer . £5 | Total . .o £236.73 An attachment to be served on David Lamar of Monk Eastman fame was is- sued this evening by City Court Jus- | | tice O'Dwyer for Lamar’s fallure to present himself for examination in sup- | plementary proceedings. The attach- | ment is bailable in $50: “When he has been brought before | the -court,” said the Justice, “it will be | decided how he shall be further dealt with.” | JudgMent for $413.83 had been ob- | tained against him by John A. Sonn- | | tag, proprietor of the St. Nicholas Ho- | | tel, in 1904, The amount represented | | expenditures during several visits to | | the inn. The most notable visit was one day | in 1904, when, according to vouchers | submitted by Sonntag's lawyer, Lamar | | consunied $5.1¢ worth of food, with | | $133.65 worth of drinks and cigars on the side. |NEW SENATOR MAKES SLIPS OF THE TONGUE| Hemenway Has to Apologize for Calling His Colleagues “Gentlemen. WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—The BSenate; listened for three or four hours today to & discussion of the details of the pure food bills. A number of minor amendments | were sugzested, but under the agreement | to vote on all amendments tomorrow none of them could be acted upon today. | A long discussion of amendments offered | by various Senators was participated in by Lodge. Piles, Hemenway, Gallinger, Spooner, Heyburn, McCumber and others, Hemenway and Piles appearing for the first time in debate in the Senate. Hem- enway spoke at considerable length in support of an amendment offered by him- self for the regulation of the purity of drugs. He found it difficult to get away from the forms of the House of Repre- sentatives, and more than once referred to Heyburn as ‘“the gentleman from Idaho.” At last he apologized for ‘‘speak- ing of a Senator as a gentleman.” Hey- burn replied with a smile that the apology was worse than the offense. Rayner presented by request a reply from the Baltimore and Ohio Raiiroad Company to the charge of discrimination made against it by the Red Rock Fuel Company of West Virginia. The commu- nication was signed by Vice President | Bond, who declared that there had been | no discrimination, that the Red Rock | Company was treated as were all others and that to meet its requirements wgs | | | | Ll i| ¥ise Mamie MEKEsNa. > 4 x® » L -+ | z BRIDE OF TODAY, i VHO WILL MARRY — Sp 1 Dis h to The Call. I Rk e impossible because of lack of equipment. WASHINGTON, 20.—At noon to- | e —————— morrow Mi: Hild de McKenna, the daughter of Justice and Mrs. Joseph Mc- | Colonist Rates to Caltforniz. Daily to Kenna, will become the bride of John L. | 3 $50 from New York; $33 from Chicago. Stm- flar low rates from other points. Send for | | your Eastern friends. Deposit cost of ticket with any Southern Pacific agent and trans- i1l be furnished passenger in the reation wil Illustrated literature and full particu- Pultz of New York take place in the city, Father Buc Church 'otficiating. The ceremony will nna home in this of St. Matthew's BY SALL Washington has Assesses Chicagoan for Failure to Obtain the Lady's Comsent. ! CHICAGO, Feb. 20.—A jury in Judge al-mad. | VoY in soclety and even in the solemn of legislation, ousseaus, lingerie, wed ifts. nuptiai | e ete have sidetracked every | Wrlght's courtroom considering _evi- | other topic of interest, for the personality | dence in a sult brought by Mrs. Lillle | of Aliee Lee Longworth had percolated | Davis against Townsend Smith, a real | estate dealer, for showering kisses | upon her without her consent, today re- | turned a verdict for $4000 for the plain- | | tiff. She asked for $10,000. into the heads and hearts of every Wash- ingtonian and kept them mightily inter- ested. But just as the bon bride betook her chic little self off to ‘White House !that time saying that no | Iltnots Hardwood Lumber Company, | efit of foreign creditors was $1,000,000. A CHICACO BANK — From the Jackson Trust and Savings Institution MANY NOT YET PAID Advantage Is Taken of the! Legal Right to Require| a Notice of Sixty Days| CHICAGO, Feb. 20.—A run was started ! today at the Jackson Trust and Savings Bank, it being thought by many of the | depositors that the institution was in- volved by the failure of the Bank of America three days ago. At the hour set for the opening of the bank 200 de- positors were'in waliting and as soon as the doors were opened the depositors commenced to withdraw their funds. It is known that the institution is a loser through loans to F. C. Creelman, whose loans from the Bank of America were the immediate cause of the closing of that concern. The amcunt of money loaned to Creelman by the Jackson Trust and Savings Bank is said by its officers to be 325,000, but stories on the streets by which the depositors were alarmed put the amount at several times 325,000 Despite the statement by the bank offi- | cers that payments to savings d:pusitors‘ would be made until 5 o'clock in the af- ternoon, a notice was posted much before more with- drawals would be permitted until after | the notice of sixty da: which the bank | has a legal right to demand, had expired. | Cashier Lawton sald that the notice was posted not because the deposits could not be paild, but because depositors were stampeded and would only draw out| their money to put it in another bank. | Commercial accounts were pald out as| rapidly as requested. By afternoon it | was estimated by the officers of the bank . that $150,000 of commercial and savings | accounts had been withdrawn. The bank yesterday, in an effort to| cover possible losses through the Creel- man loans, took over the business of thé a| corporation in which Creelman is Inter- | ested, and attempted to sell some of the | assets at a sacrifice. It was enjoined | from proceeding in this work by the Federal Court. The Jackson Trust and Savings Bank, according to a recent report of its re-| sources and Mabilitles, held savings de- | posits to the amount of §160,00 and com- | mercial deposits amounting to $750,000. | Its capital stock is $250,000 and a surplus | fund of $50.00 was reported with undi- | vided profits of $32000. Among its re-| sources were $900,000 approximately In loans and discounts, and $284,000 in stocks and bonds. The officers are W. H. Egan, president; David Decker and B. F. De- muth, vice presidents, and Willlam L. Lawson, cashier. AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP FOR JAPANESE CHILDREN Certificates Issued for Two Orientals Born on the Island of I8 HONOLULU, Feb. —The first ap- plications for certificates of Hawallan birth on behalf of Japanese children have been made to the secretary’s office and the certificates have been is- sued. The applications were made by Frank J. Sakamaki of Hilo on behalf | of his two sons, Fukuo Sakamaki and | George Sakamakl, one six years old | and the other three, both of whom were born in the island of Hawail The | proper proof accompanied the applica- tion fof the certificates. The last Legislature passed a law providing for the issuance by the sec- retary of certificates of Hawalian birth to all persons who could establish the fact that they had been born in fhese islands, upon the payment of a fee of $7.50 for each such certificate issued There has been a great demand for these cartificates among Chinese. to whom they may become of the great- | est importance in avoiding the exclu- sion barrier. e e—— Dominican Customs Recelipts. WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—A cable- gram received at the War Department from Controller Cotton at San Deo- mingo City states that the customs col- lections for the ten months ending June | 24 exceeded £6,000,000, and the amount | of money credited to the trust fund | or depesited in New York for the ben- | fight of twenty steps | cate, hours with a party of friends. Her LAMAR'S THIRST HEAVY RUN UPON (MILLION DOLLAR WILL SET ASIE of Mrs. Jennie P. Chase That Favored Adopted Son FRAUD CHARGE UPHELD Woman’s Husband, to Whom Fortune Eventually Passed, Censured by the Court e SALEM, Mass., Feb. 2.—The will of Mrs. Jennie P. Chase of Swampscott was set aside by a decision of Judge Harmon of the Essex County Probate Court to- day and the decree of adoption whereby De Forest Woodruff Chase, son of the woman's husband, Dr. Horace Chase, was made Mrs. Chase’s heir was revoked. Mrs. Chase died under alleged suspicious circumstances at her home last Septem- ber, but it was finally announced officiauy that she had committed suicide. Rela- tives contested the will of Mrs. Chase, which gave property valued at $1.000,000 | or more to her adopted son. The adoption of De Forest Woodruf® Chase, the court said, was not only illegal, but In securing it Dr. Chase had perpe- trated a fraud upon the court. Dr. Chase was a widower and De Forest Woodruff Chase was his omnly son. The latter died a few months after he in- herited the property of his foster mother. As a result of his death the fortune re- verted to Dr. Chase, who because of legal restrictions had not shared in the estate upon the death of his wife. —_——— GREEK CONSUL EXPELLED BY ROUMANIAN GOVERNMENT Trouble Between the Tweo Countries Aggravated by the Latest Clash. s BUCHARFST, Roumania, Feb. 20.— The Graeco-Roumanian differences dus to the alleged ill treatment of Greeks in Roumania have been further com- plicated by a demand of the Rouman- lan Foreign Office that M. Kapsambelis, the Greek Consul at Constantsea, leave Roumania immediately. It appears that while accompanying a compatriot, who was embarking on a steamship un- der order of expulsion, M. Kapsambells publicly voiced his resentment in & | manner so objectionable to the Roue manian Government that the latter de manded his departure from the couns try. The trouble between Greece and Roue mania is due to the fact that the Sultan of Turkey in Mzy, 1905, issued an irade officially recognizing the Roumanian o® Kutzo-Viaeh eclement in Macedonia. This caused irritation ameng the Greeks, who boycotted those employ- ing the Roumanian language in church services. The oxcitement thus aroused in Macedonia led to reprisals against the Greeks in Koumania. —_———————— 0dd lots of pictures at job lot prices at San born & Vail's, 741 Market street. . —_——e———— ACTRESS DIES IN CAB AFTER NIGHT OF REVELRY NEW YORK, Feb. 2.—The police of New York were called upon today to investigate the death of Gussie Hart, an actress 50 years old, who died in & ceb while being taken to her home by several companions last night. The matter at first was reported as a possible murder, and several arrests were made. It developed, however, that the woman had fallen down a at an uptown where she had spent several skull was fractured and she was hur- ried home. Suspicion was aroused by the fact that those who were with the woman left her house after summoning a phy- sician. The Coroner tonight dise charged all who were arrested. —_———— MAJOR GENERAL GREELEY ASSIGNED TO CALIFORNIA Will Be In Charge of Pacific Division During Absence of Mae- Arthur. WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—Major Gene eral A. W. Greeley, recently promoted, has been assigned to temporary com- mand of the Pacific Division, with headquarters at San Francisco, pending the return to the United States of Major General Arthur MacArthur, the regular commmandant, now in India. Cuba along comes another bride, equally bonny, equally dominant in personality— a President's daughter—Miss Hildegarde McKenna More 'trousseaus, more lingerie, more wedding gifts, more nuptial dejeuners— for Miss McKenna is the daughter of a Justice of the United States, and incl- dentally a very important young person in her own right. % - Californian by birth, breeding and tra- dition, Miss Hildegarde and her sister, Miss Marie are Juno types of womanhood for which the big free West js famous. Both sisters are afflanced brides, today being Miss Hildegarde's nuptial day. At noon, John Leggett Pultz. of New York, bon vivant and well-known club- man, will meet her at the altar, where, by the solemn service of the Cathollc church, she will be wedded, in the pres- ence of the leading people of the capital. Justice McKenna will give his young daughter into the keeping of the groom, a function he will be called upon to re- peat next month waen Miss Marle be- comes tae bride of Davenport Brown. Friends in San Francisco are greatly interested in today’s wedding, as is pro- claimed by the number of anticipatory congratulations and wedding gifts from the city by the Golden Gate. Though a slip of & schoolgirl when the country summoned her father to Wash- ington, Miss Hildegarde is affectionately remembered In San Francisco as a gay favorite in the Academy of the Sacred Heart—the fashlonable ‘Mesdames, " academy, from which many of the smart- est girls In the West have been graduated. The wedding today will give many of the Longworth-Roosevelt guests a chance to air their rsnlendld gowns again, and those who dfdn’'t get a chance at that function to line up today in capitalian gorgeousness. SPIDER BITE KILLS - BOY TEN YEARS OLD Little Fellow Is . Bitten While Playing in a Barn. —_— Special Diepaich to The Call. EAN BERNARDINO, Feb. 20.—While playing about in his father's W on East Fourth street snmrdaymoon. Edmund Seccombe, the ten-year-old son of F. W. Beccomberecelved a death sting from some dangerous insect. The boy suffered untold agony the instant he was injured until death came to his re- liet last night. The Skill of physicians could not save him from the effects of the poison of the insect, which is sup- The Latest Magazine to grip the interest out the alphabet. Whoever We can’t tell you half, but herg are a few titles at random The Moment of Decision—Roosevelt and Labor Unions—Money Among the Ancients—Rhymes of the Bards of Graft—The Devil and Tom Walker—When Fate Casts the Dice—Preservation of the Human Body— The Coins of Casar—A Horoscope of the Mon! Theater—The Companions of Jehu—What the Prophets —Benjamin Franklin—The Progress of Women, and a the heart of all the magazines packed into one and have some idea of the pastness and Everybody is going to read THE The Price is Ten Cents a Copy and One Dollar by the Year On all news stands or from the publisher FRANK A. MUNSEY, 175 Fiith Ave., New Habe You Read THE CRAP BAQDK | No matter how many magazines you read, you must read THE SCRAP BOOK—the biggest monthly magazine ever published. THE SCRAP BOOK is big every way—big emough for so million readers—broad enot;gh, roomy enough, brainy every person in the United States who can spell you are, THE enough, human enough, The Greatest P 3 BOOK is for you. i of the say about 1906 hundred others. SCRAP B( sooner or later. York

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