The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 20, 1907, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, ‘FEBRUARY 20, 1907. SCAMITZS CAPITULATION CAISES DISSATISFAETON COOLIE. IMMIGRATION T0 BE INVESTIGATED President Is to Learn All About the Influx of Japanese READY FOR ACTION New Exclusion Law to Be Enforced When He Is Fully Advised Japanese School Question and Extlusion Deemed Far From Settled BURKE GIVES VIEWS| Says Asiatic Pupils Gain“ Position They Held | Before Order ! | atl of Mayor, Schmits In HONOLULU, Feb. 19—Governgr Car- szt oy th the Japanese school| ter has recelved a request from Seere- segregat estion in r n for the President’s promises o ng exclu. | tary of State Reot to motify agents of lon measures of & more or less Aefinite | steamship companies that Japanese In - has alre one very de- | borers in Hawalli with passports for result. It has raised a storm of Hawali only will not be admitted to on that is not eonfined to | Mon t ng an interest in one particy- | the mamland. The steamship % s of the matter, but that ex- | golia, which sailed for San Franeiseo te every eclass conneeted with | today, earried over 500 Japanese from of the controversy relative | here. hool measures or general ures, Officers of the Korean League ate mnot to aceept any measures short By Ira ;Bennett * WY 15 CLEARED FOR PRIMAYY AMENDMENT Assembly Committee Re- cedes From Untenable Position By George A. Van Smith | CALL HEADQUARTERS, | 1007 EIGHTH STREET. | SACRAMENTO, Feb. 19.—By | agreeing to the adoption of the joint | rules proposed by the Senate the As- sembly committee cleared the way to- + People’s Nominating Measure Seeing Liglfl ERAFTERS WIN VIGTORY IN THE LOWER HOUSE Bill Mazking It Easy to Secure a Change of Judges Passed CALL'S HEADQUARTERS, 1007 EIGHTH STREET. SACRAMENTO, Feb. 18.—Grove John- son's bill making an afidayit of preju- dice all that is neeessary to obtain & change of judges in either a civil or criminal case received the approval of the Assembly today by a vete of b1 te 22. day for the submission of the Held-| FIRST BLOW LANDS ON RAGE TRAGK GAMBLING Assembly Passes Bill For- bidding Betting on Horse Races CALY, HEADJUARTERS, 1007 EIGHTH STREET. SACRAMENTO, Feb. 19.—Contrary to expectations the Eshleman bill for- bldding betting on herse races passed the Assembly today, getting two votes more than the necessary number. The test of strength showed 43 ayes and Vetera_n of th e Civil War Mr. C. H. Cady, 64 years old, of Worcester, Mass., a veteran of the Civil War, has bees made vigorous and strong by Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, the World’s greatest tonic stimulant Thousands of men and women— like this veteran—have been cured by this great medicine, and cannot say too much in praise of it Mr. Cady says: “I am a veteran of the Civil War, served three years, and am 64 years of age “I take DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY before each meal and find it the best of appetizers. I think that there is nothing better for a man get- ting on in years. I am a temperate man and only use your product as a medicine and only at such times as I need it.” C. H. Cady, 381 Park Ave- lute exclusion; affillated organ- decry any esettlament that powers of discrimination in the the President; those inter- jestion from the school unwilling to accept an school attendance which leaves bar e q t for leave & legal of clder Japanese; and the Jap- are dissatisfled because the Board is given the right to met 1 standards of sdmis- BURKE SEES LOOPHOLE Attorney Burke's , &s pointed out by agreement would t of returning Japanese in th nls exactly the status y occupled before the ation order of the School Board Burke sald yes- It seems on fts face d 16-year age limit will keep of the lower grades with dren. but in actual such thing. As a mat- sult In Do change at all for it puts the burden the shouiders of the es under such an that sort et tn almost every case d time and funds to spend IT BAD BARGAIN O. A. Tveitmoe of re- yesterday in s to e leag: promised of San bardly city few points under loophole for the ad- | sion to ome of the schools d if be says that he is Tbe only way in which dmission is for the School e and prove that he of evidence accept easures on the | WASHINGTON, Feb. 19, —Ofclals of | the Immigration Bureau belleve that | the first movement to be made toward | the enforcement of the new Japanese | exclusion act will be an investigation pose of ascertaining what allens are entering the United States under pass- | ports to other countries, whether they are a detriment to labor conditions | here, and how the immigration sho be stopped. Under the existing law many Japanese entering the country from Mexico in violation of the law | bave been deported without protest from Japan. This fs goilng on con- stantly. Officials now say that they believe that the President will order an investi- gation before directing the excluston of Japanese coming from Hawall in order to determine whether they are actually a detriment to labor conditions in this country. A A A A A A A AN AN NN whelming majority of the people on the Pacific Coast. It is hot what they have asked for, and, according to press dispatches, this was frankly sdmisted by Gongressmean Hayes on the foor of the House. The race question is the big thing. The school question is only &n incident. If we bad received s real exclusion law in return for the concessions in the matter of the schools, the bargain would not have been 5o bad, but the rrangement made is in my opinion about as our a lemon as the president could have hand- ed to the Pscific Coast. Of course we are given to understand that something more is 'promised us, If we are very, very good. Whether that something more 18 another large-sized lemon, “the soft word,” a gold brick or a big stick, remains to be seen. HAVE EVADED QUESTION In line with Tveitmoe’s views is that Walter Macarthur, editor of the Coast Seamen’s Journal and a labor organizer prominently connected with the exclusion movement, who addressed a meeting of the Commercial Travel- ers’ Association last night at Franklin Hall on Fillmore street. He said in part: Some people may have gathered from what they have heard that the question is settled. But of it is far from being settled. and I the opimion that we are further from a peaceful solution of the international problem than ever. In fact, the recent adjustment of the question is sn insult to the people of Cali- fornia. Presidents may write messages aud they may wield big sticks; they may bulldoze local delegations into making all sorts of propositions, but_the people of California will be heard from. The question has literally been dumped for the time betng. In an editorial to be published in this morning’s issue of the Japanese Dalily am by agents of the bureau for the pur- | Wright direct Jzflmty constitutional amendment, and incidentally smoothed |a path for the Assembly out of the pit |1t dug for itself by refiulni to concur |in the Senate proviso tacked to the |amendment in the upper house. In the joint meeting of the rule com- mittees at 12:30 o'clock this afternoon Assemblyman Leeds voted with the Senate contingent for the acceptance of {the Benate proposition, and Grove L. | Johnson, who had been the keystone on which the Asserably based Its | resistance and also because of whom |1t was unwilling to accept the joint | rules of two years ago, gracefully ac- |cepted defeat. It remains but for the uld | Assembly to ratify the work of lui | committee and conference committees |can go to work at once on the direct primary amendment and other disputed measures. When the Assembly asked for & spe- |clal conference on the Held-Wright amendment it named Held, Johnson and Stetson as members of its committee. It is altogether probable that this com- mittee will be renamed under the rules. The Senate declined to consider the matter of a committee until rules were |adopted, but it may be assumed that | Senator Wright, sponsor in the upper | house for the direct primary measure, and Senator Leavitt, chairman of the caucus which made the Held-Wright amendment a party measure, will be two of the three members from the upper house. A possible third is Sen- |ator Walker, chairman of the Senate | committee on_ elections and election {1aws, before which the merits of the | measure were so thoroughly threshed {out. | It should not be difficult for a con- | ference committee constituted as thus | sugested to reach an agreement. In fact, it may be assumed that four of | the five men named are virtually of the same mind about the form of the amendment that should be submitted. This being true it should be easy for| the amendment to pass both houses and be ready for the signature of the | Governor on Saturday evening, or Mon- | day at the latest. Governor Gillett, | while inclined to view the Senate pro- viso as a bit of unnecessary and hu- | morous safeguarding, favors the sub- | mission of a constitutional amendment |and will be ready to sign it when it | gets to him. | By the barest kind- of a margin, margin that could be overcome by the | change or acquisition of two votes, the Sanford bill providing for a popular advisory nominating vote on candidates for United States Senators was de- | feated in the Senate today. The final .l A spirited debate preceded the roll call. Johnson denied that either Ruef or Schmitz or Fairall or anyone con- nected with the indicted San Francis- | cans had had anything to do with the | framing of the bill. Johnson dug deep into history. He declared Adolph Weber of Auburn Wwas convicted not by a jury, but by an unfair judge. “T have defended seventeen murder cases | in my time,” said Johnson. “I was successful in sixteen and would have | won the other one wWith a fair judge.” Cutten of Hureka opposed the bill warmly. Pyle of Santa Barbara supported the measure because he sympathized with persons convicted before they were tried. In citing examples, he spoke of Ruef and Schmitz and then recalled cases of Mrs. Surratt, Durrant and Gui- | teau. He did not think Durrant should | have been tried in San Francisco, and | altogether showed a hazy idea of the bill, which doesn’t provide for a change of venue, but a change of judges. Coghlap of San Francisco grasped| a handful of withered flowers of ora- tory, set up a target that he called judicial despotism and kept firing away | for balf an hour. Otis of Alameda offered an amend- ment providing that the affidavit of prejudice must be flled either before| or at the time of the answer or plea, but Johnson objected and the amend- ment was lost. Costar of Chico, atithe request of op- | ponents of the bill, gave notice of a| motion to reconsidef. A A A A A, { {to the Legislature mext assembled, which Legislature is to be only morally bound to bow to the expressed popular | will. Anderson, Belshaw, Broughton, | Keane, Lukens and Rush did not vote, either being absent with excuse or beyond the reach of the sergeant at| |arms when the call of the Senate was | | orderea. | Sanford had the speechmaking for | the bill all to himself, his Democratic | | colleagues fearing to chip in lest the| bill be jumped on as a party measure. Wolfe, Willis, Carter, Price and An- | thony voiced opposition to the meas- |ure, but Anthony voted for it on the | final roll call, which resulted: | _Ayes—Anthony, Bell, Black, Boynton, | Caminett!, Cartwright, Curtin, Ken- nedy, Markey, Mattos, Miller, Muenter, elson, Sanford, Walker, Welch—16. Noes—Bates, Carter, Greenwell, Hart- | man, Irish, Leavitt, Lynch, MeCartney, McKey, Price, Rambo, Reily, Rolley, Savage, Wood, Willis, Wolfe, Wright | —18. | | 81 noes. Of the eighteen members from San Francisco only John McKeon voted for the 'bill. Pete Kelly of the Twenty- eighth bubbled over with zealous op- position. He made rambling speeches and asked pointless questions until squelched by the Speaker, and acocord- ing to half & dozen of his colleagues MR. C. H. CADY. nue, Worcester, Mass., Sept. 21, 1906. Duffy’s Pure Mait Whiskey It is recognized everywhere as the unfailing specific for the cure of consump- tion, nervousness, typhold, malaria, every form of stomach trouble; all diseases of the throat and lungs, and &il run- down and weakened conditlons of the brain and body. It restores vouthful vigor to the old by nourishing and feeding the vital forces of life, and maintains the health and strength of from the bay it was Kelly's nolsy dis- sent that carried the bill. . Bshleman opened the debate by read- ing letters from banks and guaranty companies telling of the demoralizing <t | the young. It {s a food already dl- ;1"“““‘“ :’ 1“’{?%““ betlt‘lns- Next | £08, YPUH 1 prescribea by doctors of e told of small boys stealing money | gi] schools, is used in all the leading to play. Then in an impassioned way | hospitals of the world. and is recos- he declared that many students of the | nized as a family medicine everywhere. University of California were gambling | It s absolutely pure. Medical advice away the money sent them by their nd a valuable illustrated booklet on parents. In regard to this charge he Adiseases sent free. ur guarantee is on every bottle. said that members of the Assembly had | : 3 threatened to fight all appropriations| Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey is sold for the university if he used the facts| by all first-class druggists, grocers concerning the demoralization of stu-|and dealers, or direct, in sealed bottles dents as an argument in favor of his|only. Price $1.00. See that the “Old bill. | Chemist” trade-mark is on the label. thfe::.celf::cyk:pun‘ to, the" resods. of | Look for it carefully, and refuse sub- “This s one principal reason why 1| Stitutes. It will cure you aftec “31; came to the Assembly,” he began. Af-| i ter some irrelevant remarks he went| Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y. on to recall the days of the great fire. “People were roving about, irrespective | of party or religion” said Pete. He | nhey, Hammon, Held himself and members of his family | Jonson of Sderamento, | MeConnell, were in dire straits. “We were 100K- | Peciont Py vis, Devlin, Drew, Eshfeman, Estudillo, Fin- | Jotn, Hewitt, Higzins, cket . Sith, Spauld- robridge. Thompson of Transue, heads,” crled Pete. The Assembly |~ Whitmore and Speaker laughed, and Pete said n:*?rovlngly, Noes—Darty: Baxier. ‘Heben, Beckats. Bervy, | “Gentlemen, this 18 no josh. | Bishop, Boyle. Coghlan, Cuilen. Fisber tessa, | Pete at last got down to the kernel | Hartmano. Johnson of San Diego, J Kelly, ! of his argument. “Who came to our Kohlmag, Ludington. O'Brien, Root, B, son of San Wessling, Wilson Becket: changed his vote from no Lyach, . § McClellan, T | to aye and gave notice of reconsidera- tion, but Eshleman and his lleutenants are confildent that they can hold thelr advantage. rescue?’ he asked. “The Ca"lorrfla.l Jockey Club opened up Emeryville and sald ntlemen, come in and lay your | heads. 1 Devlin of Vallejo, in closing an able | speech against the evils of professional gambling, asked the fathers of fam- | ilfes: “Would you want your daughter to marry a racetrack habitue?’ Kelly | sprang to his feet. “I'll answer you,” he said. “Yes, I would.” Thompson of Los Angeles and Otis of | Alameda argued that the question was | one of morality and that racetrack bet- | ting was a curse to the State. Grove| Johnson closed the debate. He called | the Emeryville racing enterprise “a plain, unadulterated, gigantic steal” Then came the roll call. The nine members from Los Angeles, all pledged | to vote for measures aimed at race- track gambling, were on hand, and every man kept his word. The record on the bill reads as follows: Ayes—Bell, Birdsall, Butler, Campbell, Case, Chandler, Cogswell, Collister, Costar, Cutten, The Wine of the CONNOISSEUR {vote was 16 in the afirmative and 18 {in the negative. The friends of the measure believe | | that had several Senators realized how icloso the measure was to passage they | have voted in the afirmative,| would and they hope to slip over a majority | e Jerome and Delmas Struggl vote on a reconsideration, notice ‘for E3 < | which has been given. i ” P = oI withdraw my objection,” he sald,| The Sanford bill is simply an adapta- e after returning to his place. | tion of the Oregon idea, which contem- g TRt The lawyer was apparently acting |plates placing the names of candidates sou say. was spent in Peon- | under advice from the witness. 5 5 2 Jerome repeated the question. “I first read of it in the newspapers,” | lived tn much | o043 Mrs. Thaw in a voice that was de- cidedly <cheerful. ther's death Tou s . e life at that “When?” asked the prosecutor. - 1904 16 years old = - J it was pot 19037 . e trisls pum_nSiusensed ure it was in 1904 et e e ot ol you in Boulogne at that time? - put it o | 1 gon't remember. You heard of it after Mr. Thaw bad proposed went op | f0_vour band? ner you had Did you consult a lawyer? nothing to do with either the witness' story to Thaw or her credibility. will tend to fix dates,” suggested Jerome in a tone which suggested that it was a matter of no concern. It has been reported that the District Attor- would attempt to show that Mrs. Thaw consulted with Abe Hummell ebout the case. “The objection is Justice Fitzgerald. When you were in Boulogne and after you hud hesrd you had been named as a corespondent, aid_you write to sny one in America? Yes, 1 think I wrote to Stanferd White. And this was after Thaw bad proposed? re and simple surroundings were | sreful of you when you were in to be the rej der the date of ar signature—Bvelyn sustained,” ruled t that refresb ¥ mind? Does that s that you arrived Saturday, October from . espectally te she made photographer. | of your ruin s Did you cable to Stanford White from Bon- logne? 1 _don't remember. ‘I understand your honor wishes to adjourn at this hour,” said Jerome, w'e direct testimo: Yerence to the ford White to fixed the date Yo reference to this visit to the pho- by looking at the clock, which pointed at| tographer, did you not?” 4:25. Delmas objected. He said the ques-| Justice Fitzgerald ordered an ad- journment until tomorrow at 10:30 tion o'clock, at which time District Attorney related to an event and had noth- to do h the story Mrs. Thaw her husband told He said the cross- | Jerome will continue the cross-exami- examination must be confined to the|nation of Mrs. Thaw story as she had told it to Thaw— ¢ as to historic events. Jerome took another tack PHOTOGRAPHED ON A BEAR photographed on @ polar bear, 7 pose in 2 kimono with your ebin | e hesd of the polar besr? | e many poses were there? don't remember vey were 1l modest poses which Do one “take exception to? es. You stated constantly of the things you marrated here were what you bad told Thaw—eall, all terrible occurrence? Yes. thing you told Mr. Thaw at tbat ‘::’nd"lag:e"n‘h vecurred at the bands of Sten- ford White were true? Delmas sprang to his feet with an| objection. { “¥our honor,” he said, “whether these statemen were true or false is en- y immaterial. We have not been wed to show the truth of them. The le question is whether or not she made the statements to Mr. Thaw as ghe says she did” | “The truth or falsity of her state-| ments go to ber credibility as a wit-| pess” sald Justice Fitzgerald. “She may enswer.” Were those statements true?’ peated Jerome. They were,” was the firm reply. When @id you first learn that you ed as corespondent in the rce suft. 1w ujckly objected. | N0 EVIDENCE OF DIVORCE | There is mo evidence here” he de-i Xv‘d with feeling, “that there ever| a divorce case.” | Send for the record,” sald Jerome.| “It is in my safe,” he explained to the court, “and it is like playing & game of solitaire to solve the combination hat old lock. Maybe we had better arn. i Meantime Mrs. Thaw called Delmas | over and whispered vo him. on the stand that all | Just | another. Select the by him. in time when you opinion of Ayer's Che REVISED re- for coughs and col not, just as he says. Delmas objected, declaring this had | “It | Have One Doctor No sense in running from one doctor to Do not delay, but consult him T he new kind contains no alcohol We have no secrets to hide! = We pub- lish the formulas of all our medicines. - Y 4 J. C. AYER CO., Manufacturing Chemists, Lowell, Mass. . for the United States Senate on the general vote and a return of that vote o e e e e of It the 'school | World the gettlement is termed question is criticised. 1 don’t remember just when—some time in|.yuite unsatisfactory by the editor, who | | | points out that it is possible for the Board of Education to make arbitrary rules concerning the examination of | pupils to be admitted to schools with | American children. The editorfal is as \{nlln\\-s. According to the school matter agr tween the President apd the San Fra mittee, “‘all children of allen races years of age. who speak the English la ¢ be admitted to the white schools. pecial children of are to be established for irth who are deficient in the ents of language.” We have beard that hool Board will make detailed rules to determine the | Board of Education will probably make a steict rule for English-speaking Japanese cbildren. The majority of the Japanese children cannot peak English fluently. According to nent, the Jspanese children who can- | ot speak English fluentiy cannot attend the | public schools. Therefore, if the Board of Edu- | cation will maliciously make strict rules for the examination of Japanese children, agreement is weak from the Japanese side. Thus, according to our opinion, the school questicn should not be settled in that way, and then the we are not satisfied with our side of the agree- | { ment. Hence we wish the Board of Education | would give admission to all echildren without restriction as before the fire. ————— REYBURN ELECTED MAYOR | PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 19.—Congress- man John E. Reyburn, Republican, was | elected Mayor’of Philadeiphia today, defeating William Potter, Democratic and City party candidate, by about 35,- | 000 plurality, best one, then stand are sick. Ask his rry Pectoral FoRMULA Then use it or ds. 'Nine American Piano-Makers Combine to Further Ad- vertise Their High-Class Makes in Practical ‘ and Economical Way e | Buyers to Choose Whichever Teacher They Prefer—Piano Manufacturers | | Through Eilers Music Company Ray the Bill—Music Books Also Supplied | Free—A Thirty-Day Piano Sale Started Yesterday—Enormously Reduced i Prices and Easy Payments the Guarantee. standard of admittsnee, and the | | | | . Yesterday the sale of the very choicest and highest. grades of brand new pianos on a basis never hereto- fore attempted was commenced by Bilers Music Co. | Not only are pianos offered greatly under price and . for considerably less than the same grades and qualities are obtainable elsewhere, but in ad- {dition to this 3 four months’ course of piano instruction will be given to every buyer, positively without cost. Any competent instructor or school | may be employed. and Eilers Musie Co., through an arrangement with manu- facturers, pays the bill. This offer is extended to every buyer in the State. There will be 518 pilanos |in this sale, which will be conducted simultaneously at, all of the, K Eilers stores-—1130 Van Ness avenue and 1220 Fillmore street in San Francisco: 11076-1077 Clay street, Oakland; Mail | Building, Stockton, and 77 Fast Santa Clara avenue, San Jose. | PRACTICAL ADVERTISING | A few years ago such an undertaking | would have been simply impossible. To- day it can be easily accomplished by means of the vast distributing facilities lof the Eilers organization. The makers of the Hazelton, | Decker, the Kimball, the Hobart M. | Cable, the Story & Clark, the Schu- mann, the Smith & Barnes, the Schu- !bert and ‘the Bailey pianos have joined to make this :undertaking possible. They realize the necessity of effective yet practical publicity, which is next in importance only to making a first~ class article. Unlike the firms who spend thou- sands of dollars annually in magazine advertising and _ subsidizing concert artists, our manufacturers believe as we do that after all the hest adver- tisement is the pleased and enthusiastic buyer. An army of a thousand satisfled cus- tomers will do more to assist in the sale of large numbers of pianos than all concert piano recitals and maga- zine advertising possibly can. They will pay for advertising only when a plano has been actually sold. 4nd not otherwise. Their generosity will long be remembered by the bene- ficiaries of this advertising allowance, and future sales will result in abun- dance. / any other than the v pianos. Every m’:'i,iufeue»m this sale - LESSONS | general election ballot, a canvass of the | the |, Eilers Music Co. aldo realizes that|strument we sell. No other house has an advertising campaign of this mag- | ever made such an offer. nitude would not be attempted with |strument sold by us must give satis- ery finest of new | faction or no sale. i of the very highest order; and it was with this clearly In view that the above-named makers were approached | in this undertaking. There are no finer | pianos than the Hazelton, the Decker and the Kimball. No' choicer workman- no greater durability, no more pleasing and satisfactory tone quality | is to be found in any American up- right. And these makes have also the jadvantage of old-established reputa- tion and time-tried service of many years' standing. All the other makes of pianos se- lected for this purpose have given the greatest satisfaction to their users for many years. Every time one of these planos has béen sold it has been the means of selling others, and with this liberal arrangement upon the part of the manufacturers these pianos will have the most valuable and consistent advertising possible. Please bear in mind that there are all told 518 fine new pianos included in this great sale, and that though this number I8 large, thers are five stores that will jointly dispose of them. It is safe to say that all will'be taken during the next thirty days. First come take first choice. write first thing today. PRICES THAT SELL Pianos which have heretofore regu- larly sold at $560 and $600 will, dur- ing this sale, go for virtually $200 less. All ~$450 and $500 styles are now redufed to $322, $286 and $269. | We offer in this sale a choice, medium- sized, full seven and one-third octave, | highest grade, artistic piano, one which’ | never heretofore has been sold for less than $375 by the house which pre- | viously held the agency, for $248 and $238; and a plainer, yet very desirable | style, now goes for $218. PAY BY THE MONTH IF YOU LIKE These prices-are all for cash, but liberal time in which to pay for them, by making a small. deposit and bal- ance in monthly payments for the ad- ditional simple interest, may be ar- ranged for. Six dollars a month se- cures a fine piano. Tae most elaborate || styles are $8 and $10. and several very costly ones go for $12 and $15 monthly. A DEFINITE BINDING GUARANTEE A Remember that the Eilers money- back guarantee goes with every in- Call or BEAUTIFUL FACE " Send for Particulars and of SRR _Eflers Music! Co., Bigger, Busier and | beneficial results are guaranteed or money re; Better. thén ever. 1130 Van Ness, 1220 x> Fillmora.. -Also at Stockton, San Jose Every in- i AMI VIGNIER, Inc. Pacific Coast Agents

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