The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 23, 1906, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1906. PHILIPPINE TARIFF BLL IS ABANDONED | FOR THIS SESSION Friends of the Measure Give Up Hope of Its Passagein Any Form. Secretary Taft Discour- aged by Result of Can- vass of Congress. DN TYPICAL SCENES ILLUSTRATING HOW THE BURNED-OUT MERCHANTS OF SAN FRANCISCO ARE PREPARING TO RESUME BUSINESS. DRIVEN TO MURDER BY STRANGE VOICE YOUNG WOMAN TEL LS OF HER ACT ADDITIONAL LIST OF DEAD. REPORTED DY CENERAL GREELY Includes Persons That Died of Injuries Re- ceived During Fire. Names of Fifteen Vic- tims of Disaster Sent to Washington.. WASHINGTON, May 22.—General Greely has sent to the War Depart- ment the following list of dead, in- cluding persons who have died from the effects of injuries received in the San Francisco disaster. These names were not previously reported to Wash- ington: Baumirter, Annie. Bush, Albert J. Buck, Pauline. Coleman, Hugh A. Corbus, Sarah C. Cook, Francis. Daniels, H. M. Lichtenstein, daughter, Esther. Lawless, Lawrence. ¢ McCarthy, Katherine and Mary. O'Toole, Cecil A. Richards, Elizabeth. Morris, wife and Bonaparte Resumes His Duties. WASHINGTON, May 22.—Secretary Bonaparte resumed his duties today at the Navy Department after an absence _;2) FURNITURE STORE NERRING COMFLE 7/QN. QN FYNE. AND 6V NESS,, K247 of about three weeks, due to illness. it She R L COMPANY EIGHT-HOUR DAY of Corporation. Says Proposed Law Would Manufacturers. WAS Ma H s bsapesetieiiog d to go. I did everything, « . se e e " ing, and some- day bef } bo o ¢ er one winter morning s Sor BIG TOURING AUTOMOBILE same DASHES INTO EXPRESS TRAIN | The eg et 3 Chauffeur and a Valet in the Employ of g its o P. F. Collier, Who Were Riding in | - w e Machine, Are Killed. ouit fac- | —While run- . ! n an hour a big tour- | B 5 . owned by P. F. Collier, SPECIAL APPROPRIATION an eastbound expr train FOR THE FEDERAL COURTS. ng here toni The | v e the machine, Geo: 4ouse Committee Reports Urgent De- and Fred W, ficiency Bill to Provide Funds | e Collier family, were | for Teibun machine wrecked. the way to the Meadow- BAND OF REBEL FIRE BULGARIAN VILLAGE | GRE] Turkish Troops Arrive on Scene Soon Afterwards and Kill Seventeen | of the Raiders. | SALONIKI, May 22.—A band of {one hundred Greeks began burning | d | the Bulgarian village of Startchina, near Monastir. When six houses had been burned Turkish troops arrived |on the scene and killed seventeen of |the Greeks. The remainder of the Greeks fled, with the Turks in hot | pursuit, That | - T Washington Authorities Believe TS Morales Intends Trying to Re- | O ) RN gain the Presidency. May ropri n of openi which, a opene —_— NEWS FROM SANTO DOMINGO OF A DISQUIETING NATURE.| ST. PETERSBURG, May 2 ed political amnesty wi —The long- 1 be pro- rpvolut Yy move- | claimed May 27, the anniversary of the Domingg, led to & con | coronation of Emperor Nicholas IL The e etails ot C thnd|exact scope of the measure has not as s are vague, and are difficult of | Vet been determined. It will, as expect- " is gathered in substance|ed, be limited, but the Constitutional indicate that ex-President | Democratic party is prepared, though who for some time had dis- | grudgingly, to accept the act of grace, 1 from the scene of activity, Thomas, and is mak~| ed effort expel Caceresl the presiden: of Santo Do-} from which the terrorists are excluded, recognizing, though not publicly, that the Government is not altogether unjustified in refusing to set at liberty men who will be as ready 'as they have been in the past to shoot down or to blow to pieces hated representatives of authority. Their demand for unlimited amnesty TEN YEARS IN JAIL AND FINE OF $1000 FOR A MURDERESS. : was based on the expectation that, with ~oman Who Shot Husband During Fam- | e institution of a full constitutional ily Quarrel Is runished by |era, the terrorists, as was promised in an open letter just before the assassina- tion of Alexander II, would abandon ac- Baruth of Medical Lake was sentenced|tive operations, but they have been ; Judge Huneke yesterday to ten years|forced to admit that the crimes of the the penitentiary and to pay a fine|last few days give the Government no of $1000 for the murder of her husband, |guarantee that the promise will be kept. whom ehot during a family quarrel. | The administration is daily cutting| ler plea was self-defense down the number of prisoners who may ! be affected by the amnesty, releasing | convicts by hundreds in' the provinces, while among those released in St. Paters- burg are some members of the councl of workmen's delegates who drew up the famous manifesto preaching a raid |on the Government's gold reserve. ! Spokane Court. SPOKANE, May 22—Mrs. Josephine RS Deuver’s Treasurer Is Dead. DENVER, May 2-C W Bagley, | 14 urer of the city and county of Den- ver, died &t his home here tonight of | apoplexy. He was 54 years of age and fa\;:g, a wife apd four children. when ere about eleven and a half 3 ! she was asked. The girl replied that she did; that her aunt had taken her to the uncle’s room that day. * “That is what I am on trial here about,” she added. As the girl told of her uncle's treatment a woman spectator fainted, and the court proceedings were interrupted by the re- sulting commotion. The girl hesitated in giving her testimony, saying that she was ashamed to speak it. She said that her aunt had forced her to obey her uncle, and had beaten her, PRESBYTERIAN UNIONISTS VICTORIOUS IN THE COURTS Legal Contest to Prevent Merger of Churches Will Be Carried to Supreme Tribunal. DECATUR, I, May 22.—The legal contest instituted to prevent the union of the Cumberland Presbyterian church with the Presbyterian church has been decided in favor of the unionjsts. Judge Johnson tonight made public a decision in which he refused to grant the injunction prayed for by the anti- unionists and dismissed the bill on de- murrer. A written opinion will be handed down on Thursday. The decision was not unexpected by the leaders of the anti-unionists. Their attorneys announced that they would ap- peal, probably to the Supreme Court of Illtnois. ® LS R Lo RICH CHINESE IS KEPT OUT OF COUNTRY BY EYE DISEASE. Merchant Returning From Orient Con- tracts Trachoma and Must Go Back Home. SEATTLE, May 22—Wo Gen, manager of the Wa Chong Company and one of the wealthiest Chinese merchants of the northwest, is to be deported. He made a trip to China recently to patch up trade relations and did a great deal toward alleviating conditons caused by the boycott. When he returned a few days ago he was found to have trachoma, the dread eye disease, and was placed in the quarantine detention station at Port Townsend. Powerful influences have been brought to bear to nullify the order, but without avail. —x Seeks Arrest of Cortelyou. CHICAGO, May 22.—Counsel for John H. Dalton, who was today placed on trial on indictments charging him with using the mails to promote a scheme similar to lottery, askec Judge Landis of the United States Court to issue attachments for Postmaster General Cortelyou and At- torney General Mcody. It was declared that both officials had been served with subpoenas, but had not appeared in court. Judge Landis refused to issue the attach- ments. —_——— Agricultural Bill Reported. WASHINGTON, May 22.—The agricultural apropriation bill was re- ported to the Senate today. It car- ries $7,715,000, an increase of $223,- 560 over the amount carried by the bill as it passed the House. Items of increase include $51,800 for the Bu- reau of Animal Industry, $51,630 for the Bureau of Plant Industry and | 832,400 for experiment stations, $15,- 000 additional for public roads and $10,000 added te exterminate the €ypsy moth. . elates a Tale of Great Cruelty on the Part of Her Aunt and Uncle. | breaking a stick during one of the whip- pings and making the witness so sick that | she went to bed. \ The girl said that she was never per- | mitted to play with other children, and | was forbidden to talk Enslish or associ- |ate with the boarders in the house. She | said she wanted to go to her mother, but was not permitted to. | The witness said her husband was led | to suspect what her relations with her “uncle had been because of a remark | which the latter made. She declared that (her uncle’s mistreatment covered a pe- riod of about six years, and that it con- | FEARLESS MATTEUCCI DRIVEN FROM VESUVIUS OBSERVATORY | Mud Resulting From Floods of Last Few Days Surrounds His Coign of Vantage. NAPLES, May 22.—That which the re- cent awful eruption of Mount Vesuvius could not accomplish the torrents of mud resulting from the floods of the last few days have brought about. The mud has so surrounded the royal observatory and obstructed ingress and egress that, Di- rector Matteucci, his assistants and the carbineers under him have been compelled to abandon their posts and come to Napl beer, and perfect beer is brewing ex (-nd a |tinuel up to her civil marriage to Ter- ranova. She told of the circumstances which led her to kill her uncle, Gaetano, and her aunt, Conetta. She said that her husband, after listening to her confes- |sion, told her that she was no longer his wife and thereupon left her. She re- mained alone during the following ten days, subject, she said, to the influence of hallucinations, in which her uncle appeared. Whenever he appeared a voice said, “Kill him.” Each night, the wit- ness continued, she would dreag or im- agine that she was in the presence of God, and there again she would hear the words, “Kill your uncle.” At the end of ten days, the girl said, she went to her mother's house and was turned away. Then the mysterious voice became more insistent and the directions more pronounced, telling her to buy a knife and a revolver and kill. When armed and on her way to their house for this purpose, she said, she had crossed herself three times and prayed to know whether she was doing right. She confronted her uncle, calling him “traitor,” and he replied, “You are an outcast.” She remembered little of her attack, but asserted that she began to stab when her aunt came between her and Gaetano. She did not remember which one she struck first. Under cross-examination by Assistant District Attorney Ely the witness said she had been unable to run away from her uncle's treatment as she desired to. Her aunt, she said, had told her that there was no harm in her relations with Gaetano. The trial was adjourned until tomorrow. Perfect Malt FUNERAL NEARLY Trouble in New York as the Result of Strige Among Drivers. ~ All Attempts to Settle the Controversy Have Been Futile. NEW YORK, May 22.—Though there appeared to be a tendency on the part of the coach owners to get together and try to settle in a body with the funeral coach drivers who are on strike, the officers of the lat- ter met yesterday and decided to have no collective settlement. A number of funerals have been held up, but most of the large con- cerns postponed funerals where pos- sible. The undertakers usually drove the hearses. It was next to impossi- ble to get drivers for pleasure parties. The officers of the union reported last evening that twenty out of the thirty- five employers had settled with the union individually. One of the funerals held up was sent out by Mr. Sicardi, an under- taker. The cortege consisted of a hearse and four coaches and had reached Fourth street when President O'Brien ordered the drivers to dis- mount, which they did. The rela- tives of the dead person began to plead with the strikers, but those in the other coaches were very angry and it looked at first as if a fight would follow. "A policeman came up and soon straightened matters out. The funeral was allowed to continue. A Hebrew charitable organization which conducts funerals free for poor Hebrew families had four to conduct yesterday, and Barnet Friedman, president of the organization, asked for police protection. The request was granted. The burial place for the society is Silver Lake Cematery, Staten Island, and a policeman sat beside the driver of the hearse or wagon in each case. bR M COURT PREVENTS THE SALE OF ZION CITY PROPERTY. Judge Declares Dowie Insolvent, but .Takes Healer's Estate From Hands of His Successors. CHICAGO, May 22.—Judge Landis to- day, in the United States District Court, issued an order restraining Wilbur G. Voliva and all of his attorneys, agents and employes from disposing of or in any manner dissipating the assets of the es- tate of Zion City. An injunction pre- viously issued enjoining the counsel of | Voliva from attempting to secure the dissolution of an injunction in the State Court which prevents Voliva from inter- fering with Dowie was dissolved by th2 court. Judge Landis said that he pre- ferred to preserve the estate under his own order. An order declaring Dowie individuaily to be insolvent was entered by the court, but it will not become effective until to- morrow because some of the creditors desire to contest the insolvency of Dowie. In making these orders Judge Landis said that the agents who had been ap- pointed by him for the purpose of exam- ining into the conditions of affairs at Zion City had reported to him that the Zion City industries can make :noney, | that there has been no misappropria- | tion of funds, and that under proper management the estate can be made to pay 100 cents on the dollar. | SHIP LIBELED BECAUSE OF ALLEGED CRUELTIES Seaman of the Hawaiian Isles Declares He Was Brutally Assaulted by the Mate. HONOLULU, May 22—A libel for $10,000 has been flled against the ship Hawailan Isles and another one is re- ported to be coming, while there is talk of criminal prosecutions in the Federal court against her first mate on account of alleged cruelty to sailors. The vessel was seized by United States Marshal Hendry. The libellant is Alfred Sodeman, who shipped in New York last August and went with the vessel to Australia, com- ing here from Sydney. He declares that on the 10th of this month, just before arriving at Honolulu, at 3 o'clock in the morning, the mate made an attack upon him, beating and kicking him and knock- ing out his teeth. Sodeman says $102 is due him for wages and he asks for damages of $10,000. —_——— May Send Embassador to Turkey. WASHINGTON, May 22.—Senator Knox today gave notice of an amend- ment to the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill to raise the diplo- matic post at Constantinople from a legation to an embassy. Under the regulations of the sublime Porte Em- bassadors are the only diplomatic rep- resentatives permitted to seek an audience with the Sultan, and there- fore the United States has been han- dicapped in its negotiations with Tur- key. It is to correct this that Senator Knox has proposed his amendment. Perfect Beer ible only with perfect malt, Though perfect malt is an absolute essential, no brewer, even with make pure, high quality, wholesome beer without pure water, choicest hops and ci machinery—all managed by experienced brew-masters along thoroughly scientific lines. Pabst for sixty years has been the pioneer in perfecting the most highly scientific pro- cesses of brewing, and to-day he leads in the manufacture of the purest and best beer. Pabst Beer is made only from eight-day malt. This means that Pabst Beer contains the highest amount of nutrition obtainable from malt. The exclusive Pabst eight-day method gets all the good out of the barley into the malt and insures more invigorating food extractives than are found in any other malt. This, coupled with sixty years of practical ence, makes Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer unequaled as a nourishing tonic Next in importance to eight-day malt is- cleanliness, and we might very well say just as important, for cleanliness is not only Malt is well said to bef";be ao>ul‘ of beer.”’ .it is the life, the vitality, the substance of fect malt, can e and clean dengxnble but necessary in brewing the best beer. And in this again Pabst excels. The mammoth Pabst brewery in every de- ent is as clean as the cleanest kitchen and the beer from mash-tub to keg or bottle is never touched by human hands. It through sterilized tubes and pipes into hermetically sealed sterilized tanks, and every known safeguard is established to t contamination. N The ingredients of Pabst Beer are the purest and best money can buy, and it is given to the public only when science and the test of time show it to be perfect in age, purity and strength ; the best beer brewed, When Ordering, Call for Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer For sale by .all grocers and liquor dealers. THOS. W. COLLINS & CO., 417 Eighth St., General Distributors Oakland, CalL, ~ *STIRTS | Ao NOTICE. +7, JOS. FREDERICKS & CO. ) ¥, HAVE OPENED . . TEMPORARY OFFICE AND WAREROOMS % { AT 2200 WEBSTER ST, 7 Northeast Corner of Clay, ‘ San Franclsco. fl& STOCK EXPECTED DAILY O".‘ Qfl CARPETS, FURNITURE, " DRAPERIES, SHADES, BEDDING AND WALL PAPERS WORKMEN ON DEMAND. ’ v} THE TEMPORARY OFFICE Newman & Levinson, me. Is Situated at s L) " 1707 OCTAVIA STREET NEAR BUSH. Port Costa Milling Co. . MERCHANT + MILLERS 3 MAIN OFFICE Clay - Street Bulkhead San Francisco S. B. McNEAR, President GENERAL ELECTRIC " COMPANY * Temporary Arrangementfi] Main Office Union Savings Bank Building & OAKLAND, & W } Branch Officer 4759 GEARY STREET, S8AN FRANCISCO. A Fiedwnomn i Temporary Office: 1] 1055 Washington St., Oakiand Rooms 2 and 8 All business transaoted here. ANl persong are cautioned apd warned against purchasing Furniture, Car- pets, Stoves and other merchandise leased by us, or belonging to us, now in the hands of other parties, unless such other parties have a clear bill of sale for the same. C.A. Malm & Co. Trunk Manufacturers o 2 220 and 222 BUSH ST. Have opened a temporary bDusiness of« fice at their factory, 18th AND FOLSOM J. EUGENE FREEMAN B. REMMEL ASSOCIATED ARCHITECTS l;hnOpenedOffieuut 1840 __Fillmore St, San Francisco. WALL PAPER BURLAPS UHL BROS., 717 Market St. Doing Business at the Old Stand HAWAIAN RELIEF BUREAU 424 SCOTT STREET. ajmut i = CLOSES MAY 25, CALL NOW.

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