Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WEATHER FORECAST. i For San Francisco and vicin- ity: Fair Friday ; brisk north- news The Call prints more than any other “paper published in San Francisco. — " SAN FRANCISCO, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS. west wind. TRAVELS 1N CATTLE CONTINUE G N PANKS | s e Bu H [ Woma_n—Re[ugce Poses | as a Cowboy in Order to Get East. Thirty-Six “Dollar” Com- Unable to Get—a— Pass, She Is| Compelled to Qutwit panies Will Not Quit the Trainmen. T . SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. Inderw : nderwriters. OMAHA, Neb., June 21.—George H Miller, a San Francisco refugee, rode from Denver to Omaha on a pass in a 'mcssngev train while his wife, dressed h her hair cut short, . traveled in a cattle Decide to Hasten Adjust- ment and Settlement of Losses. car. 1 he gement was of the wom- an aking. It was a plece of char- acteristic Western pluck 1 ler and his wife got as far as Den- | ver on one of the free refugee trains. = Srhtes ;rh»!# they sought work in vain A «\T L ”» riend secured a pa for Miller, but it T\(‘\\ York P]an of Pay- had his description pun on it. The F pass obviou would not carry Mrs. er Another friend, a cattleman ment Agreed Upon Ernest, offered to let Miller go J 3 charge of a load of cattle. » there was no way open for Mrs. n Meetmg. r to get transportation, and they money. All thelr earthly ssions had been los OAKLAND, J Representatives les that Miller re of the milk herd in the old days. " she asked her remembered how of a lot ned of harmles: up so they can hard t my hair, T will on the pass, he cattle to Omak husband and Ernest and Mrs. Miller s which generously f her com and fair the cows all move? I our duds. and 1 will acdom- e finally blessed the marked her lexion ha been guise would not ting her teeth, her timldity In the she slept not a wink e. Once she thought men suspected her. If nothing. At South T, carrying a small hotel another !mma\n Then they came on where Miller se- cured-emplovment \\'Hh A transfer com- pany in Sioux They went for- |ward this evenin ke tresh have to secede nagers of the w York. The mpanies are not | of ly in the such i o ,,,m;‘«;:;,-JEIVES IP HUSHAND | MICHIGAN JOINS RANKS, by Lenders, rounced today T0 THE WOMAN WHO Aidns WONHIG AFFEGTIONS aadstion the st of | Seattle Wife Relinquishes Al rmed the dollar- | : Claims on Her Fickle follows: Spouse. | Seeks Divorce: Order That! Rival May Have Man She SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. SEATTLE, June 21.—“He loves j You may have him. Think of the years we all may yet live and how awful it |1e to go on, all four of us unhappy, when a sacrifice by one would mean | happiness for all. I do hope and pray that God will direct me in this matter, and that T may not make a mistake as | T aid when I married him. Now, again, I bid you hope and think that all will be 1 well.” | Such is the manner in which Mrs. | nthia Ducett brought to a close a long letter which she wrote to Mrs. Gertrude Mudgett, a woman with whom | Mrs. Ducet believed her husband, Charles Ducett, to be in lov Mrs. Mudgett lives in Los Angeles, from which place Ducett had returned a few | LO\’ €s. e of Boston ral of St Louis, Cent ompany of North America. PURE FOOD LESSON IN THE_HOUSE ‘Mann Delivers an Illus-| trated Lecture on Adulterants. Space Before Speaker’s Desk Resembles a Grocery. Ilinoisan S?lows Poisons Are Used to Deceive Public. WASHINGTON, June 21.—The space in front of the Speaker's desk of the House today resembled a small section of a delicatessen store and a corner grocery with cereals, jams, jellies, tins of peas, tomatpes, corn, bottles of whisky and wine, imported sausages, brandied cherries and other edibles and drinkables scattered over the tables. To complete the picture there was a standard scales with weights, a grad- uate and a funnel. These were used to demonstrate the contention of the majority of the committee on interstate and foreign commerce that a pure food bill is necessary for the protection of the people. The House went into com- mittee of the whole for the considera- tion of the bill, Mann beginning the discussion. Mann contrasted the features of the Senate and the House bills, remarking that it was not the aim of the House committee on interstate and foreign commerce to recommend legislation as to what the people should eat or drink, but to call attention to what they were eating or drinking. “Medicines now on the market adver- tised in the strongest terms to cure the | opium habit,” sald Mann, ‘“contain enough opium to develop the habit.” SOME FORMS OF ADULTERATION. Most of the goods are not. adulte: ated, according to Mann, and since the pure food agitation which was begun a number of years ago there has been a decided reduction in adulterations. “Yet," said Mann, “everywhere the honest manufacturer or dealer goes he is met by sharp and keen competition | from adulterations or short weigh Calling the attention of the House to the action of the Proprietary Associa- | tion in still insisting on the passage of he Heyburn bill, he said the associa- ion was afraid to come out in the open | and fight. He read a letter from the German- American Extract Works, which told how to make all kinds of ligquors. He sald that this firm claimed to make any kind of liquor out of ethyl alcohol. Black pepper, he said, was a fruitful source of adulteration, the “filler” being sold in five-ton weights, according to a letter which Mann read. Pepper ber- ries, he said, were made out of taploca colored with lamp black. “The coffee that we drink, mocha and Java,” said Mann, “is . generally adulterated with Brazil coffee and ground coffee with sawdust and even | bread crumbs.” COCKTAIL CHERRIES DYED. Taking his position between the tables, Mann began a rapid explana- tion of every article there, Stevens of Minnesota handing the several articles to him. “Is he a regular pharmacist?” asked | Gaines of Tennessee, speaking of Mann. Bo\klng gracefully, Mann replied that “the gentleman from Illinols has borne the title of doctor for many vears. He has demonstrated his right to lecture before the university of the House.” Taking up ‘a bottle with How| bright- | . re Insurance American of Newark Michigan Fire and Marine WILL NOT WITHDRAW. of the results of the meet- e thirty-six companies today on at this time ganized minority afflisted with th Adjusting Bureau raw from that organization. present purpose to follow the es now in operation and re- sting Bureau until -operation is utterly e. We do mean, however, every effort to hasten the s committees that have by the bureau, as the reports from these commit- not been rapid and of a satis- character. The reports have coming tardily in many in- and mean” to check such companies main with the ears that co of the 1 named work we delays if it lies within our power. stances Many of the companies ke settlements with their policy- s and the dilatory tactics of the nmittees of the adjusting bu- are irritating. Where less than six companies are interested in a loss the zation of thirty-six companies es to adjust In accordance with That means orga prope the New York agreement. risk will be adjusted on its that every merits, and where doubt exists as to the legality efforts will bé made to ef-| fair compromise—one that will eptable both to the Insured and rer. We are positively opposed horizontal cut. This Is one of for which we have which we will stub- fect a be ac the insu to any the principles fought and to bornly adhere.” The essence of the situation as de- veloped today is that the thirty-six| companies named reiterate their inten- tion of making no cut on adjusted claims. They will continue adjust- ments on the basis of the agreement| mentjoned, but interpreting it to mean not a hgrizontal cut of 25 per cent as advicated by sixty odd companies two weeks ago. The questions as to earth- quake damage, destruction by dyna- mite, loss of all evidence of value, and the like, are to be adjusted on a basis of reasonaBle compromise, but when Centinued on Page 2, Cohm v are ready | {days before the letter quoted from was | colored cherries, marked “Maraschino vitten, and er he had t e At i Genad 290® 112 | cherries,” he explained that the cher- PONE A ries had been picked green; that they This letter and many other details of | Were then bleached and colored with the unhéppy married life of the Du: | eniline dve, and, holding up a bright- - lored bit of cloth, he said: cetts were made public today in Judge | €0l 4 Griffin’'s department of the Superior | Thls cloth was dyed with the same Court during a hearing of the divorce|dve.” proceedings brought by both Mr. and Mrs. Ducett, | he i WIS TR TAKE OUT A MAN'S HEART AND GWE T THOROUGH CLEANING Surgeons of Los Angeles Per- form a Wonderful Operation. "hat are these cherries for?’ asked a member. “I understand they are used one at a time in,a well-known drink,” replied Mann, amid laughter, some of the mem- bers recognizing the cocktail which goes with the cherry. HONEY MADE OF GLUCOSE. Holding up a bottle containing a thl -colored liquid, Mann said it was “Yet it never saw a hive, much less a comb. It is fresh from the glucose factory.” Freezin, he said, was a powder sold to preserve meat. He admitted that it might keep meats from spoiling, but said that it was most injurious to health, being composed of sulphite of soda and red coal tar'dye. A fine grade of olive oil used by the Union League Club of Philadelphia turned out to be cotton seed oil, with an adulterant. Taking three cans of tomatoes, Mann said they were of different weight, but all were bought for three-pound cans. “The department stores of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and Washington and the mail order houses sell the short-weight cans,” said Mann. He in- sisted that standard cans ought to be full weight. The bill will be considered again to- morrow. LOS ANGELES, June 21.—To have one’s heart taken out and particles of sand washed from it as it beat and pulsed and still survive is not the or- dinary experience, but that is what happened to C. A. McCartney, a Pasa- | dena contractor, who met with a ter- rible injury, and after a most difficult operation glves promises of getting | well. McCartney, while riding a motor cycle at night, attempted to pass a hay wagon, and, not noticing a wooden rake | prong which stuck from the side of the wagon, ran into it with terrific( impact. The sharpened stick pene- |trated his breast several inches, sev- \ered a rib and terribly lacerated his |lung. He was hurled to the ground |ana rolled in the sand. Wlen the sur- geons examined him they found the cl\fl)gn his breast covered with sand —_-———— CONFEREES ON RAILROAD BILL REACH AGREEMENT Report Acceptable to Both Branches of Comgress Will Be Presented on Saturday. WASHINGTON, June 21.—An under- standing was reached by the conferees on the railroad rate bill tonight, which, it is predicted, will result in a com- plete agreement being reached tomor- row. The conferees will meet at 10 o'clock in the mroning to draw up the agreement. It is the present purpose to have it presented to the House to- morrow, that it may be printed in the Record, as_requl by .the rules, and called up for action on Saturday. |and séveral particles sprinkled over the héart. They took the organ out and held it while they washed and | cleaned it thoroughly and then put it back. The lung was sewed and drawn together, the rib set, and the injury to the breast closed over, and the indi- 'c;tlonl are that McCartney will sur- Norway was first created a nation. | ified and rendered less pompous. Trondhjem to Witness the Formal Coronation Ceremony. AMERICANS GIVEN A CORDIAL WELCOME AT THE PALACE OF THE YOUNG RULERS Rites Will Be Much Simpler Than When King Oscar ‘ Ascended the Throne of Sweden’s Sister State Forty Years Ago. OFFICIALS, BISHOPS AND CHAMBERLAINS PARTICIPATE IN A FINAL REHEARSAL TRONDHJEM, June ith a ceremonial modifled from the old Norse forms, King Haakon VII and Queen Maud at noon tomorrow, in the old Trondhjem Cathedral, will be anointed, blessed and given Norway's crowns. When, nearly forty years ago, King Oscar of Sweden received the crown, he bared his breast, and ecclesiastics crossed it with oils, ac- cording to the customs of older days. King Haakon will be anointed only on the forehead and wrists, and the entire rite will be simpler. The King and Queen will enter the cathedral at 11 o'clock. King Haakon will be crowned first and Queen Maud afterward with practically the same ceremony. There-will be 3000 persons present. The officials. Bishops and chamberlains who Wwill assist at the coro- nation rehearsed the service this afternoon. According to the programme for the coronation ceremoni the King and Queen will leave the Stiftsgard, the residence of the provincial Gov- ernor, for the cathedral at 11 o'clock. They will be accompanied by mem- bers of the court and the staff. All the church bells will begin ringing and continue until the sovereings have arrived at the cathedral At the pavillon before the cathedral their Majesties will be received by the Bishop of Trondhjem, accompanied by the Bishops of Christiania and Bergen and other clergymen. The Bishop of Trondhjem will greet them with the words: “God Dbless you, coming in and going gut, from now and until all eternity.” The procession will enterjthe cathedral in the following order: clergy; 2, Bishops; 3’ coronation committee of the state; who are to act durllg the coronation; tants of thé King: 6, King's private secrétary, the secretary of the royal household office; 7, the chiet of the royal household and high steward and thé King and Queen; 8, ithe banner of the kingdom, carried by ‘the Admiral and General in command; 9, the first lady of honor to the Queen; 10, ladies in attendance on the Queen. CONGREGATION WILL JOIN IN HYMN OF PRAISE. When all have taken their places the music will cease. Then the Bishop of Trondhjem will recite the first line of a hymn, after which the congregation and cholr, accompanied by organ and orchestra, will sing the first verse of this hymn. The Bishop of Christiania having read the confession, the Bishop of . Bergen will recite the first two lines of the Te Deum, the first six verses of which will be sung by the congregation and choir, accompanied by organ and orchestra. Following this the Bishop of Christiania will de- liver a sermon. The King will then proceed to the throne, standing on a dais before the altar. The chief of the royal household will precede the King and place himself at the left of the throme. After the King the General in command will carry the banner of the kingdom and hold it at the right behind the throne. The supreme adjutants of ms Majesty will remove the King's mantle and place it on the altar. \ The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court will take the royal mantle from the altar and jointly with the Bishop of Trondhjem place it over the shoulders of the King, who will then kneel on the devotional stool. The Bishop of Trondhjem will take the anointment horn and anoint the Ring on the forehead and wrists, saying: “May almighty God anoint you with His spirit and grace and give unto you to reign with wisdom, power and mercy, that the name of God may be hallowed and right and trih confirmed to the benefit and hap- piness of the people and land.” |HAAKON WELCOMES THE VISITING DEPUTATIONS. { /The Danish royal yacht Danneborg, with Prince Christian of Denmark, a brother of King Haakon, on board, and the steamship Tromp, carrying the special Dutch embassy te the coronation of the King of Norway, en- tered the harbor early this morning, whereupon another loud cannonade awoke the few who remained asleep in the city. The sky was overcast, and in view of the fact that a few drops of rain fell at intervals the scien- tifically inclined insisted that these endless artillery salutes were proving rainmakers and eventually would spoil the pretty decorations of Trondh- jem. The palace was astir early, as it had been planned to receive there the special French, American, Italian, Austrian and Dutch embassies in the order named, commencing at 9:30 o'clock, hefore the King pro- ceeded to the Danneborg to greet his brother. The special American Embasasdor, Charles N. Graves, the United States to Sweden, supported by Major William W. Gibson, military attache at St. Petersburg, and Lieutenant Commander John H. Gibbons, naval attache at London, and attended by the Norwe- .glan officers assigned to escort them, drove to the palace shortly after 9 o'clock. After a brief wait King Haakon received the embassy and gave the “Americans a cordial welcome, expressing his pleasure at their pres- ence and the most friendly feelings for the United States. The diplo- matic receptions continued for more than an hour. CRUISER BEARING PRINCE HENRY ARRIVES. King Haakon boarded the Danneborg at 11 o'clock and welcomed Prince Christian, his brother. When the King reached the ship the Ger- man cruiser Prince Adelbert, carrying Prince Henry of Prussia, the special representative of Emperor William, arrived, and there was another salvo - of salutes. Z King Haakon escorted Prince Christian uhore, where a guard of honor was drawn up, after which the King went out to the Prince Adelbert, which fired a salute in his honor. Prince Henry recelved the King, and they remained in conversation for some time, after which the King and Prince Henry returned to shore. The arrangements were similar to those of the Prince and Princess of Wales' reception. The German Prince took luncheon at the palace with King Haakon, who deferred his informal visit to the Victoria and Albert. ~ william J. Bryan has arrived here to attend the coronation. 21— 1. 4, the gentlemen 5, supreme adjutants and adju- the Minister of _Schoomer Simks With Crew. Los Angcles Gets the Convestion. DOVER, England, June 21.—The| PUT-IN-BAY, Ohio, June 21.—The Danish schooner Bertha was sunk near | National Electrical Medical Association the South Goodwin:lightship today as|adjourned ay. The next convention the result of a collision with the Dutch | will be in Los Angeles in June, 1907. tank utem;‘hlp ;milclnni from Ant- PRSI S 5 SR werp for New Yorl ght. of the Duke of Almodovar is Dying. schooner's crew were drowned. Peter o Norholm, the- flbm:; son, was the MADRID, June 21.—The Duke of Al- only survivor. The can proceed- | modovar, Minister of Forelgn Affairs, | ed, not having sustained any damage. |is dying. = Representatives of the World's Great Powers Assemble ati KING HAAKON AND QUEEN MAUD OF NORWAY 'WILL RECEIVE THEIR CROWNS TODAY. King Haakon VII and Queen Maud of Norway will- formally ascend the throne today. The coronation will occur at Trondh]em, the ancient capital of Haakon the Good, where In the ceremony the old Norse forms will be mod- RULERS OF NORWAY, WHO WILL MONY e BE CROWNED WITH SIMPLE IN TH% PRESE\CE OF THE REPRESENTATIVES OF m POWERS TODA WOMAN SUFFRAGISTS THREATEN A BRITISH Create Disturb;ce' Before the Residence of Chancellor of Exchequer. LONDON, June 21.—Miss Billington, Miss Kenny and ‘three others of the Militant Woman Suffragists were ar- rested in Cavendish Square today for creating a disturbance outside of Chan- cellor of the Exchequer Asquith's house™ In the present Ministry As- quith is the particular bugbear of the woman suffragists, and special police have been stationed in the neighbor- hood of his residence to prevent threat- ened attacks upon it. A score of women with banners fly- ing ‘assembled in Cavendish Square this forenoon and announced their de- termination to be heard by Asquith. They defled the police until their lead- ers were arrested and dragged off to the police station. The women derested were arraigned in_a Police Court later. Miss Billing- ton was fined $50, or two months’ im- prisonment, whereupon she expressed the iIntention of becoming & martyr and of going to jail. The hearing.of the other cases waz adjourned. The Countess of Carlisle, herseif an ardent suffragist, referred to the a fair of this morning at today’s meet- ing of the Women'’s Liberal Federation. She said she was shocked when pass- ing through Cavendish Suqare to see “so-called woman suffragists fighting the police and making a mockery of womanhood.” The Countess repudiated any con- nection with the “poor, misguided women” who attempted to mob the Chancellor . of the Exchequer in his own house. - SRR S AP e Albright Ouf of Law’'s Toilk. MACON, Mo., June 21.—Circult At- torney &[or of St. Louls today dis- missed the charge of bribery against T. E. Albright. former member of the St.-Louls House of Delegates. who 'ul acquitted early today on a charge of perjury. GABINET MINISTER: LIFE N NEW YORK PROVES T00 SPEEDY FOR FRED WILSON Los Angeles Embezzler Glad to Quit the- Career of a High Roller. NEW YORK, June 21.—Frederick Py ‘Wilson, escrow clerk for the Title Guar< antee and Trust Company of Los An- geles, Cal, who last December disape peared and was arrested here, was dis- charged today in the Tombs Police Court by Magistrate Cornell into the custody of W. N. Amble, Chiet of Police’ of Los Angeles. When Wilson was arrested he had only 30 cents in his pockets, although " when he disappeared from Los An.\fl it is alleged, he took with him $20,f of his company’s money. 3 ‘Wilson said today he was glad to go back to Los Angeles and “face the mu< sic,” and added: always had a hankering to see New York and experience the gay Mfe, I had read so much about. My act was' not an impulsive one. 1 planned it care- fully. I sent my wife and child to stay with relatives in Denver, and I made straight for ‘little old New York. I took my fling at the races and got badly bitten there, as well as in Wall street. “Now that it is all over, I don't mind saying that New York is too expensive for me. The best job I could get .u. me only $4 a day, and my expenses wers never less than $10 a day. Some can live on beef stew. I am not of that kind; at least, I never have been before, but I suppose I'll get a taste of ll now, I'm sorry for my wife, but it's a 'F time to say that.” e Pattison’s Body Rests in Grave. MILFORD, Ohlo, June 2I.—After & simple funeral service attended by high State officials, party assoclates and friends from all parts of the coun« try, the body of John M. Pattison, late Governor of Ohio, was this afternoom consigned to the grave.at m 3 Cemetery. his family alone being ent at the grave. Judge J-!l- .b nati, General