The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 17, 1906, Page 3

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FIERY SPEECHES IN THE DOUMA Peasant Members Regard, .Reply to the Throne as Too Weak. Predict Revolution If Ile-, mands of the Masses | Be Ignored. | BURG, May 16.-—-When eassembk at 11 o'clock ression prevailed witness stirring frame of mind of Parliament was list of speakers s te President Mo- | O a the house to or- der much due to Russ the fact that e i to feel himself is con- ze from THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1906 BAILEY MAKES ANGRY |WILL ADVANGE | SPEECHIN THESENATE, NEEDED FUNDS| Texan Charges That Some One in High{New Office Is a M \DUBS CERTAIN JOURNALISTS WHITE HOUSE CUCKOOS WASHINGTON, May 16.—The calm of the Senate’s discussion of the rail- road rate bill was disturbed today by a personal interruption by Senator Bailey, who arose to a question of per- sonal. privilege to make reply to a FIRST-TILLMAN—RUSH.. . charge made in the Chicago Tribun yesterday by a Washington corre- spondent to the effect that Bailey had been responsible for the- failure of the agreament between the President and Senator Tillman. Former Senator Chandler was givéen as authority for the statement that Tillman had been suspicious of Bai- ley, who, it was also stated, was really opposed to rate legislation and was also _in oonstant .conferences with Senator AMrich with the purpose of| defezting the rate bill. After this statement had béen read| Bailey took the floor and said delib- | erately: I bave taken no part in the question of city between the President and . Mr. dler, and 1 had fét eveén given any public expression on the question of faith, because 1 knew nothing about | either question. 1 had never conferred| with the Prestdent directly. nor with Mr. | It therefore, & matter | me when a Senator calitéd my attention to-the extract which | I have bad read. That correspondence, was understood. was sent by a corre- | ondent who is very close to the White | sc and is presumed to speak with, e degrée of authority concerning | sactions there. 1 do not know as to) of that ‘and T do not‘chu:e‘ Chaudle: r was, of great 1 denounce_that correspondent qualified, deifberate and mall- | 1 denounce the man who in-| e statement as =fi unqualified, | te and malicious "liar, whoever | = he statement was made in a dtllb-! erate monotone, but It was: none the| less. impressive on that account.' Tt| was recelved with absolute silence| and the stience continued for a few oments until, indeed, -Senator —Till- | man had taken the q n of personal privilege, be-: cause e article quoted had stated| that he had been euspicious of Bailey. | He caused to be read the parts of the; correspondent’s letter which Bailey| had omitted, and then proceeded with | his statement, saying: This - eorrespondent muck rake. Into whose house the handie | or what hapd bo.us it I will not at- | t fo say is -undoubtedly a | He said he ‘ecunted eight distinct | f@lsehoods -in the article, but he de- | address himsglf first to a de- | he had ever<been suspicious or Bafley. He .declared hisy great esteam’ and admiration for thz Texas Senator, and sald that their! cordial relations had always existed When Senator Tillman . conciudéd | again - took thé: floor | d said that his attention had been | d to amother article, printed in the New York Tribune of today. He! said it was of the samé character as t printed by the Chicago Tribune | and that evidently they had been| timed t6 bring tHem both to Washing- | ton -at the same ilme. Pointing to the} | press gallery he said: | 1 iritend to pnt in the Record, upon fre | statement of ‘moars than one reputabie wespaper correspondent in that gallery @ as & rule they are as honorable as Senators.on.ihis fldor—on their au- thority 1 state that the {wo chief cuckoos | of this administration are . the oorre-: spondents of the New York Tribuné and | the Chicago Tribune, d And, thercfore, it séems to.me con- | ¥clusive that this. slandeér proceeded from | White House. I hope, for the honor of my country, that it does mot proceed | from the President himself. { But -if he be 2 ‘man of high sense of , honor he will sée to it that Senators are ! not slandered by his. subordinates, and | the miserablé wrétch who communicated hese -newspapers ‘- and who sought them 1o eommunicate to the mtry a_ slander on_me which peopls | night discuss, rather than the issues that | been raised. is unfit for his high ! ice, and the man who perpetrated that infamy will pay for it with his position, it the man continues to hold his| s to be assumed that whet he has been with the approval of GUARD iE TROOPS H TO PREVENT JAIL A LYNCHING Nebraskans Want Shot Life of Negro Soldier Murphy ssing the STATE HIGHWAY BUREAU TO HAVE A BUSY YEAR w Werk immediately on Roads n Northern Part Segin srd Bridges of State Stone bridges ‘are | his chief ora and Mono and s 3 is =nd the jetty and| CONTRADICTS THE PRESIDENT. | Eel river is to be com- mated that the! itare of $150,000 Former Senator Chandler Describes His | White House Conferences. | WASHINGTON, - May -'16.—Senator: {Tillman today received from Former| ‘ Senator Wiitam “E. Chandler a state-| | ment of hi& course 4s an intermediary in the negotiations bétween President Roosevelt and Senators Tillman and |Bailey on the railroad rate BHL. The; | tommunicatien bears wupon Senator’ Lodge's denial! for the President of| handler’s statement quoting the Pres- | {dent as saying he had lost confidence | in Senators. Foraker, Spoonmer and) | Knox. It was offered:in the -Senate by Senator Tillman and will dbe printed in the Congressional Record. The text| ot the statement follows Dear Mr. Tillman: _As ‘the tele- denial by President Roosevelt, h to the Eenate through Senator Lodge, remains in the Congressional Rec- | ord of May 12, it-seems to me that I should take sdme natice of it, which I 4o now by resfirming the essential truth of the statement DR PVERéE'S RE‘VMAE.DIE_S. Ave You Tired, Nervous and Sleepless ? Nwrvousness and sleeplessness are ts- dne 10 the fact that th.lmmrr- Are properly nouri blood. .= £ DL“P!.«'I Joiden ) ical scovery ‘makes pure, wich blood, mdb:xer:dhy ‘:hehn-rv- l: properiy nourt and all the organs the body are run as smoothly as machin- éry which rens in ofl. In this'way you {es] ciean, strong and strenuous—yon ars | My mot ther are starved nerves. taned up and invigorated, and you ars good lor & whole lot of physical or mental work. Beet of all, the strength and. in- ergase in vitality and health are | The trouble with most tonics an feipes which have a large, booming sal com of alcoh ng the drugs in | as T regrét that the hasty on of = fution. This alcohol ah President nks u uscies; and in the ng TR pub c&.mm stem. One fee] | self, the extreme e he maki S Tbiiorated and batter 1o the time betse. | uch igsu .n:g?fi:. and 1 cannot v#1in the end weakened and with vitality | sirink from or t, although I S decréased. Dr. Plerce’s Golden by g, el s L ery contsins mo -aicobol i b on X:S‘ufi = l.mm-‘" hoa beitle of 1t bears upon controversy with confidente to the judg- W TIap] i Badge o Homeaty, 1n & 101l et of all 148 ment Gf those whe know me. severs! (ngredients. For the 10 | For those who 40 mot know me there offer you something he claims is “just as | is. fortunately, T evidence 004 * is 10 insult your intelligence. | of a2 high order which shows that the Every in, jent epteri: into the ; President could not -have —omitted to worid-famed * Golden u,«“unfm- | make in substance thé statements which Lt the unanimous spproval and endorse- !he denies. Nor coyld have then made meat of the leading medical s 2k ROw. ub- of 31l the seversal schools of practice. other medjcine sold t druggists like purposes has any & The "Goiden Medical o H0F | portance in itpelf. only as ng his attack uj mé. 1 give to you a fur- iscovery” not mmumg‘t’u follows: z only produces all the good effects to Prior to March 21 1 had not seen the I oo Lhe et "ot ok, enl | Precat 2o s e Bt A, 8 foot: in ail stomach, lver snd bowel | to a White: House as ‘3 representative tronbies, as in drspepéia, bilionsness, con- | &f e ot e, - bt -solely - because bokele and kindred aiiments, but the | b ™ "3 e his object. It was. unr Golden Beal root used in its .0 - | mistakably stated to be a communication ing is grestly enhanced in its 80 | with Mr. Tillman, who. had the rate bill lkx_:;!glqu-l uic:m-du” in e ,m:mc_rmudme] rodi eck Cherrybark, Bloodroot, ~ | Senate, urpose of securing the @ hd.—oine;;d chemically pure adoption in the _raflropd ra of refized glycerine. “The Common Sense Medieal Adviser,” i¢ sent free in paper covers on £l oue-cent stamps to pay the costof ing only. Por 31 stamps the o B 4 d volcme will be sent. Address Dr. B V. e Ta e Nhaw Shat it s Trnpre- 3 sible for him to open. conferences with Pierce. Boffalo. N, Y. Tilimas was 1 = Di: Pieree's Pleasant Pellets cure con- a that &.m " had tely stipatian, bilicusuess ‘headache. &iven up sil intentlon of coming to an on April 16 by Mr. Moodv and later per- | taxati - 1 - and ion upon owrners of ‘g;tfil by Mes: Mooay, fillman and San Francisco, | that the be, and Rowever high the office |} fioor also on a|l | plete disagreement with them.” {that has come to the whole business was 5¢ | flume in the southern part of town. The Rebuildin to Tnvest Millons in Real Estate in- San Francisco. NEW YORK, May 161t was de- termined yesterday that = $100,000,000 thall be the capitalization. of the new alicious Liar. agreement with “he Senators who had{. been making the contest for an unlim- ited court review, and in stating his ob- ject he sald that he had parted from them finally, iaming Senators Knox, Foraker and Spooner as the Senators #ho had made the arguments in the Sen- ate to-sustain that view, and he used 2s nearly as I can recollect the hnt\xge given in my sttaement repeated by Mr. Tillman. The conversation included the under- standing which he had that day reached with Senators Long and allissa, the fact that not over one-third of the Republi- can Senators could be relied on to vote for the limited court review, and that it Wwas vital that the support of nearly all the Democrats should be obtained. When, an hour later, I visited Mr. Tiil- Tan and told him my mission from the President I found him distrustful and suspicious. He questioned me closely as to what the President had said, and I related to him as accurately as I couwld the statement made by the President to me and 1 convinced him that the Presi- dent had ceased to hope for compromise With the Senators named and the other advocates of an unlimited court review. When satisfied that this was the case he readily consented to co-operate with the President and sald that he would see Senator Bailey and report to me fhe result, which he did, saying there would be perfect accord upon the limitation of the right of review, if carried forward In gonnection with a iimittaion of the right to_issue ex parte injunctions. The conferences thus begun ‘were on the 15th. at my suggestion, transf to Attorney General Moody and at once resuited in an understanding that the ef- fort could be made to limit the right of court reviews, as stated in the amendment and in the paper drawn up be organized here to advance money for the rebuilding of San Francisco. The promoters. of the —enterprise at first argued that $10,000,000 capitali- zation would provide an ample vehiclé for handling hundreds of millions investments, but it was found thal San Francisco ‘t,nyou 2 xhneh' h.rg:f capitalization, ving opportunity T investment by the fic Coast. Hence it s now considered best to capitalize for $100,000,000, with paid- in subscriptions reaching. $10,000,000 cash, E. H. Harriman, president of the Southern Pacific; Frank A. Vanderlip, vice president of the National City Bank; Senator Newlands of Neévada, and H. S. Blank, presidedt -of the United States Realty and Devélop- ment Company, will confer - .with Franklin K. Lane and Thomas Mages, |to be employed to remove ‘from minds_of investors in the Bast fear that the complicated . mor laws of California will inflict doubd! ‘the Was it mot natural and essential President should have satisfied me that he had finauv separated upon the question of the court review from the Senators who were the principal oppo- nents of any umitation of that review, which they believed would be unconsti- tutional, and that T should have repeated is statements to Mr. Tillman? Is it possible that I went directly that night to Senator Tillman at the Colonial Hotel and poured into his ears a deliberate and uné]uallnged falsehood ? onsider next the statement which the President says he thinks he made, in- stead of the one narrated by me. Sena- tor Foraker, he says, was not mentioned. am_quite sure he is mistaken. Sena- tors Knox and Spooner, he says, were mentioned, but that_all that was said about them, as to Senator Knox, was that the .iesident did not agree with a portion of his proposed amendment, but that he thought he made a stry argu- ment for asserting affirmatively th r’“ risdiction or authority of the cofrt, . as to Senator Spooner, that his name was mentioned by him only to express his cordial approval of Senator Spooners amendment. . This Spooner amendment was not of- fered in the Senate until May 10, but I learn that it had been in existence and shown to the President, whether as early as March 31 does not appear. But this is certain. that if the President had on that night told me that he cordially ap- proved of it and I had so reported to Mr. Tillman. there would have ensued no.con- Plans for the perfectig of huge $100,000,000 and -more for the recon- struction of the destroyed city will be- gin within thirty days. A VORERNS SENTENGED 10 B HNGED M GRANTED REPHEE HONOLULU, May 16.—Acting Gov- ernor Atkinson has reprieved for one week five Koreans who were sentenced to be hanged today. b - The five Koreans were convicted of {erences locking to co-operation: there- | first banged: him by the wrists ore. the esident, as to the amend-| beat his suspended ment, had in mind a conversation at t some’ other time or with some other per- son. It ehould also be borne in mind that the renort I made to Mr. Tillman of the. President’s conversation is comparative- ly harmiess and inoffensive. Here it is: | “"He said-that he had been much troubled | by the advocacy of an unlimited court review by some of the lawyers of the Senate. naming Senators Knox, Srooner and Foraker as trying to injure or defeat | the bill by ingenious constitutional argu- ments, but that he had come to a com- beatings, they lighted a fire' on the victim's sbdemef and he died. The victim was. ect of having stolen passports small sums of money from the murderers and this was the reason for the ‘crime. |asked for of Acting Governor Atkin- son by & number 6 prominent citizens, What is there in the above words that is untrue or should give grave offense to the Senators named? They were the great constitutional lawyers of the Sen- charge of Japanese and Korean reli- glous work here, taking the lead. The ate, Ku?!n ingenious arguments against any limitation of court review, and they were troublesome and likely to be|argument most used. The murderersiis were all tried at once and conviéted by one verdict. When written to on the subject their own attorpey, C. 8. troublesome in an attempt to carry the Long-Moody limitation through the Sen- ate by the votes of twenty-five or more Deemocrats and twenty or less Repub- lican Senators. What harm was &m in the President saying that he had come to a final disagreement with them on the day when he had held a White House conference with a view to uniting Demo- cratic and Republican forces in carryis lh limitation of court !:I'fie' I;.hen ln’ there agreed upon. e could say it in or out of their presence evithout giv- ing offense to them. Nor was it a very strong expression to say that they were trying to injure or defeat the bill by ingenious constitutional arguments. It pressing’ the opinion that the men ought to be hanged. SECRETARY SHAW HITs AT THE ARMY AND NAVY Suggests Waest - Paint as -the Proper Place. for ‘the .Development of gm{ no!mm::ixlxl :{h.lz zhe{d v‘::re n-yg:i to! Preachers. efeat e t coul ament to -. meet their views. Mr. Knox had de-| BALTIMORE, May . 16.—Leslie ‘M. clared it to be unconstitutional unless | Shaw, Secretary of - the amended and that was the general po- sition of the opponents of limited court review which led the President on that day to conclude it would be best to ex- pressly grant the jurisdiction to reviéw, but to rigidly limit it to the two objects named: The only harm that I can ‘see talked in a rather disc school of instruction “of the cuttér seryice . here. things he sald: . : In one branch of the Govi vice—I won't say which—if a the abandonment of any attempt to carry that limitation of the review, without any previous notice to Senators Tillman and Balley. s the whole perhaps I ought to con- sider myself fortunate. If the old im- perialist days had been fully revived at the White House one whom I considered yu‘uh no more ideas tg_ah?a!y- and navy have lots of meén whose ideas have been X 3 s If you serve the Government fér Rhire, the best of friends, Senator Lodge, upon . But 3 s demand would have cut off my head and | et :,:? it .flk' Tr?m‘:g“b taken it to President Roosevelt on & {know they are doing it. - ThHe midn charger, and I should have spoken. no | works 'y for the pay hé geéts ¢an only more. Now at least I have left to me | work eight hours & da¥y, but the one the power of speech. But I shall never is use it again as a missionary from Presi- | siois things is good : dent Roosevelt to the Democratic party. | mcer” NOUTs: and, at 4 pirch, much |, p Sincerely yours, There i one thing, - he 3 WILLIAM E. CHANDLER. |yant to F e e GRASS VALLEY MAN DROWNS pacity out IN FEW INCHES OF WATER out of a man Jury Says Death Was Due to Heart West Point, it Fallure and Coroner Glves ‘Its Iel-flh Members a Lecture. GRASS VALLEY, May 16.—The body of Richard Ford, a prominent young man of this city was found yesterday in a WILL AT ONCE COMMENCE =~ - - CONSTRUCTION OF NEW. LINES body was lying face downward in a few inches of water. Death was evidently due to suffocation, but the Coroner’s Eun’ returned a verdict of heart failure. - oner Hocking refused to agree with the jury on the verdict and plainly told that body that its verdict was not in keeping with the testimony. Ford, who had drinking hard, evidently fell into the flume and perished miserably in a few inches of water. He was probal stunned by the fall. He was a native England, aged 34. e e Take the Paso Robles Cure. com; Wonderful bath_- tonic tment . for | nel shattered nerves. Same treatthent as that given to overworked Wall-street in New York. A week will shape to rebuild the Greater San cisco. SRR VTR e Death Calls a Refugee. PETALUMA, May 16.—Mrs. Mary Gullfofle of Sar Francisco died to-day in Napa, where she was taken from St. Joseph's Hospital after the earthguake. Mrs. Guilfolle was the mother of Mrs. Mary Mitchell of Petaluma and two sons who reside in San Francisco.. ———— Superd _paTior. Sar obactrasion Hmitsd uperb parlor car observa between San Francisco and Los (via Oakland %l:r, San Jose and Santa Barbara) will resumed M .. May 21, from 8an Francisco, 8 2. m. T n and one-half hours to Los Angeles. mortgage. loan corporation: which is to| ANNOUNCEMENT We beg to announce that our Family Sewing Machine Business Has been established at 783 Haight St., and 1156 Valencia, San Francisco The business relating to SINGER and WHEELER & WILSON Special Sewing Machines for Manufacturers ' Is at 1056 Washington Street, Oakland Needles for all makes of machines; parts and supplies for all Singer and Wheeler & Wilson machines, L — SOLD ONLY BY SINGER SEWING MACHINE COMPANY the| to - Miss Russo-Japanese Commutations of the sentences wers ! sdycation at. the Rev. J.. W. Wadman, who has|time he ernment .ser- | conia. man had a|lightning and g00d idea they cou L . After | were | he has suppreesed IM’&éyomM‘ the you are no_use. Most work is naturally | cont!: ot | bws HASTENS WEST AND WINS GIRL OF HIS CHOICE both of San Francisco, and members|. When word of the local disaster of the relief committee, upon means|redched the Bast Colonel Edwin Em- ersan Jr. wired a proposal of marriage Mary Edith Griswold of this ¢tity. . Then without awalting an an- swer he boarded a train and hastened ‘mortgages in|to the city of_ruln, anxiety for the safety- of the girl he loved forbidding even the delay of an hour. Had the mortgage loan corporations ‘will soon | suitor tarried until Miss Griswold's an- be perfected and it is expected now!swer reached him things might have that all preliminaries wil be completed | been different, for she declined his of- this week and the work of advancing)fer in.a letter that did not reach him until yesterday, just a few moments before they were married at the home of Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson on Lombard and Hyde streets. ‘When Emerson reached San Fran- cisco, ignorant of the young lady’s decision, he repeated the message that wires and ‘was a pretty The home in which took place is on the brow of Rus- slan Hill in the heart of a district of debris. . A number of friends of both the yonng people came through streets of ashes to witness the ceremony and telegrams of congratulation came from many who could not be present, in- cluding President Roosevelt and Gen- éral Shafter. Rev. Dr. John Bakewell of Trinity Church, Oakland, performed the cere- mony. . Miss Griswold was attended by her sister, Miss Ora Griswold. and the groom was attended by Bdward Salis- bury 1d. Dr. David Starr Jordan gave the bride away. The couple will in. in this.city for a short time will then make a tour of the East. {8 - the intention of Mr. Emerson and. has won adistinction as soldier, War corr ndent and lecturer. He whs Roosevelt In Cuba and did extsusive work as a correspondent Quring the Spanish-American and wars. He received his Harvard and recently has been very successful throughout the as a lecturer. ‘At the present is representing the California and Century clubs of New York City in~the distribution of funds raised by . brutalizing eTect of Fanging five men | the at once for the killlog of one was thé| Miss Griswold is a Californian and well known for her literary ability. !h‘a was mu{u.nt editor gz the Sun- set Magazine for a number of years and has written much of worth. Her Smith, after the trial, declined to join|father is interested in gold mines in the movement for commutation, -ex-| Ameca, M " GERMAN VIIRES AND GROPS DAMAGED BY A HALSTORM ‘BERIAN, May 16.—Terrific thunder- strain | storms were reported today from sev- yesterday to the graduates of the|eral parts of Western and Southern A hallstorm did a great revenue | Germany. Among . other ghmotm to the vineyards and ¢ _crops in the flelds in Lower Fran- Several persons were killed by numerous formhouses burned and the animals killed in neighborhood of Treves, which also ered severely from a hatlstorm. parts of the Moselle wine district the crops have been destroyed. In the lower Rhine district protracted drouth nues. most parts of Germany the mead- are drying through lack of rain the cattle are suffering. —————— %o Be Montana Murderer. ; _ BRIDGES, Mont., May 16.— Sheriif Kadell of Madison County has In and- however, which: 1 you young- men of: “There | started for Helena to procure a re- make 2 fine - T would send i 5| lents, Nev., reliably belleved to be the is the -b-t'mj” man who killed Deputy Sheriff Allen Of this county while being pursued eight ago. Shrader was arrested by a te detective, who forward- ed his photograph to the Montana to' be| Sheriff, completing the identification. L : ¥ SON APPEAL BOOMING e MERITS OF ITS DAUGHTERS ‘on_Bacheiors to Coms to Nevad: g o ang Seiect Their CARSON, May 16.—The Carson Aj 1 matrimonial nml:fin e U1 stares that e ity i fonl ‘handsome ble girls and calls o the new populal of thern Nevada who are making fortunes e ng S e L mhflqflfit the sexes. " “Brimiut of New Ideas” KBOOK | | i | Corrugated Iron ON HAND AND FOR SALE. Buswell Paint Co. Eighth and Broadway, Oakland. UNION OIL COMPANY Of California - Oakland Office Removed to San Francisco, 16th and Illinois Streets Claremont Oil Co. Permanent Address 18th and lllinois Street, San Francisco. SHREVE V- & CO. &J.SLOANE & CO. Are Temporarily Located at Request all firms| 1760 PACIFIC AVENUE having accounts against the com- pany to render statements im- mediately. The Largest and Most Complete Stock of Up-to-Date HATS In Greater San Franecisco. We Are Always Leaders. $5.00 Panamas Just Received. Lundstrom’s —ALSO— KING SOLOMON'S HALL, Filimore St., Near Sutter. FOWNES on the clasps means quality In the ES FOR SALE 603 SQUARES OF Co.s New | CORRUGATED IRON Inquire of AD. WEGNER, Fairment Hotel SAN FRANCISCO, —AND— 510 TWELFTH STREET OAKLAND. * CASH L] hufi‘mcfllu": to us. BURR-PADDQ.P!_(}Q; 1909 Fillmore St. Over 17,000 Square Feet Large Cornmer on Golden Gats Ave. Thomas Magee & Sons 2550 PACIFIC AVE. Telephone West 1301. LE. BICKFORD OFFICE 2606 AIORNA ST - Bacigalupi’s NEW FRISCO MARKET, GOLDEN GATE, Near Buchanan. STALLS TO LET. Apply BACIGALUP! & STEVENS, 1113-1115 Fillmore St. R. N. NASON & CO. (ilass, Paints and Oils in Stock WORKS AND OFFICES: Utah & Fifteenth Sts. and Potrero Ave. 16TH and FIILMORE ST. CAR LINE. ! Formerly 117-119 Market Street. i

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