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2 WON'T RING fOR YOUTHFUL PAIR Stern Father Takes Son to Nome to Separate Him From. Sweetheart Romance of Pretty Alice Quin lan and Carroll Webster is Rudely Shattered ;. - • • . • : V*Uw — \»i;clo — you might -have heard nic spesjt." : "Perhaps we might." said the father. His eyestwinkled at the look of gentle reproof in his wife's eyes. The father met Miss Quinlan with 'the .utmost good nature 'and jollity, and cracked a joke about his son's sentimental feeiings. • Carroll- pleaded with his eyes .to be allowed to remain behind, but the rather commented on the likelihood of a calm passage. The son went straight to the point. "I hate to ieave San Francisco," said he with a burst of spirit. "I see we have "Fog I^orn' Riley with us this tri-p," was the answer of the relentless dad. Thereupon the blanket of blank looks crept Into the eyes of the youth, »nd taking the girl's arm, he wandered with her around the corner, away from the prying eyes of the mul titude. "He'll get over it," said the father, "and if he doesn't — well, it will be all right as far as I can see. .Every cub Is foolish about his age. Sonfe get it worse than the others, and the bad cases need abrupt handling. Digging ditches," the millionaire grinned,'- "will do him a heap of good." STOnY OF TllKlit LOVE ' . • Young 'Webster atid 'Miss Quinlan liave been engaged =for S9«ie time past, t^he wears his diamond ring, and r.o sx-crct h»s been made of their marriage, to be. 'She recently = graduated from' Notre. Dame and is a sorority girl, be longing to the Phi Gama Si. In fact, she wasto have attended a meeting of the organization yesterday afternoon, tout the farewells were so lengthy~that she had -to give up the idea of doing so.- Young Carroll started out to be come. a .civil engineer, but hesitated after he had got' fairly started. . A few months ago he .determined to earn a living for himself in order to furnish the cofy flat where" a dear little girl would flit about him, ever and anon Xvhisperhs^; soft stuff into his ear. He a positipn with the Valencia tb'^atef .as assistant treasurer. But — "\u25a0\u25a0 His\ faliier, .who was in the east at the tirae. : hearing of the plan, wrote him commending liis step, telling him to stick to his job and inclosing a icfreck of liberal dimensions. Next week there was a similar check. Also the next. Iv a short time the boy saw that earning his own living was an un necessary nuisance and went back to his allowance and engineering. . Webster senior, has several' valuable claims in Alaska. While in San Fran <isca he lives at Twenty-fourth and Castro streets. He expects to return here with T -hjs eon within five months. The peculiar part of the entire pro t-f^ding yesterday was. that no sooner had Miss Quinlan" met Mrs. Webster than between them there sprang up an instant friendship, and they comforted each other as the steamer bore away the husband and sweetheart. INCENDIARIES ATTEMPT TO DESTROY STEAMERS Four Lives Are Lost as the Re sult of Fires VANCOUVER, B. 0.. June 1. — Efforts ar« being made to burn steamers be longing to the Union steamship com pany. Fire broke, out yesterday on the steamer Cassiar when that vessel" was on her way into port from the north. A rcopth ago a. fire was found aboard the steamer Comax, but it was discov ered in time to prevent serious conse quences. Laat week the Coquitlam took fire in an unexplained way and was badly damaged. Three deaths have occurred since the morning of the fire as a result of the Coquitlam blaze, and the lives of a score of peo ple were placed in dartger. A large package of ftav an 3 cotton batting .saturated in coal pil .and only half burned was found in the hold of the Cassiar.' A halfbreed logger became so excitcl at the time of the fir« that he jumped overboard and . was drowned. When the steamer arrived this morn- Ing the deckhands and the firemen deserted the vessel in panic, and thf company has been unable to .find new men to take their places. -• c RECALL OF AMBASSADORS NOT DUE TO SCANDAL French * Foreign Office Denies Payments by Abdul Hamid PARIS. June I.— The foreign office has authorized a categorical denial of the story first published in the Berlin Lokal Anzeiger that the sudden recall ofyM. Constant, the French ambassa dor to Turkey, and M. Zinovieff, the Russian ambassador, was due 'to the discovery in the Yildiz palace of docu ments showing that Abdul Hamid, the deposed sultan, had paid Constans $10,000 and Zinovieff $5,000 a month for a term of months. It pronounces this allegation as a calumny absolutely without foundation: CAR STRIKE SITUATION PRACTICALLY UNCHANGED Seven c Hundred Run Until Nightfall, Then Stop PHILADELPHIA, June I.— The first ordinary business day since the-begin- Ing of the streetcar strike Saturday morning- closed with conditions prac tically unchanged. . IBy the aid of recruits hired in this and other cities the company was able to run 700 of its 3.300 cars until night fall, when no further attempt was made to continue the traffic. Ther<» was little disorder, and those arrested were held on. trivial charsres Tonijrht JLhe mayor extended the time which' saloons are. allowed to remain open to 8 o'clock p. m. ROOSEVELT WILL VISIT AFRICA INLAND MISSION Trip to Kijabe to Be Taken by Former President NAIROBI. British East Africa, June 1- — Theodore v ßoosevelt. Is agoing to visit the station at KUabc of the Afri can inland mission, an American or palzation^ He probably will make the" journey next Friday. 7 The; African, in land mission is, independent and seif-i controlling, though represented by" home councils In Philadelphia and Lon don. \u25a0 - ' The Boyeon Apartments, Tweniy-firet end Dolores streets, are plastered. Mc- Cullough would be pleased to have yon call and look them over. ' .. . *• SEATTLE FAIR EXPLOITS RESOURCES OF ALASKA, PACIFIC COAST AND THE ORIENT Scenes at the Alaska- Pacific- Yukon exposition, and ; portrait of developer i of the 'northwest,-: who .received Van '..',] . _ ovation at the opening; yesterday. ' -jC..^'Vf^- ' ,Z- ' A: Y. P. EXPOSITION OPENED TO PUBLIC Taft Touches Key Studded With Gold Nuggets Taken \u0084 From Klondike Mine Contloued from l'ngc 1 Manila rd of economy in its affairs must ,be re stored. The curtailment of federal expenses lir.one fouvth 'woulil assist' not only \u25a0 efficiency in .tbe" departments l»ut reforms now postponed by the task of raisin? anil the race of-spendin£ Rreat sum« that should, lie', lett in the pockets Of the people : : 'V- ' Banquet to Noted Quests ..• : The closing event of the day was a banquet to distinguished .guests to night, given in the New York building. Th c " toas ts -\ve r e : 'To visiting ?nvernonj. address of welcome — Governor >1. E. Hay. Washington: resiK»nne,- Sft-" rotary of State «.". N. McArthur of Oregon, rep- 1 rpseatin? GoFcruor Benson. ' 1 To visitlujr mayors, '.uddre^s ,of welcome — Mayor Jolin !•". Miller. 1 Seattle;, response, Mayor David S. Itose. MilTrauUee. To the press— Colonel Alden J. 1 Blethen: re- \u25a0 sponse. J. K. Norcro*s. Vaueourer. B. C, ' World. T<» tbe nayy — Addre<B of welcome. Admlrnl : I'riel Sebree, I'nited State* Davy; response, Ad nilrsl IJiihi. Imperial Japanese navy. To the a rm.v- Rei>pon»e by- Colonel T. 'C. W'oodbury. I'nited States arnjy^ . ." ; To our, Canadian neighbors — Rmponse by At torney General < '. W. Crosß of Alberta. To railroads — Itefspon^e hyH. C Xutt. jren «>ral manaser western division of the. - Northern Pa.-lflc railway, \u25a0 To Alaska— Response by" Governor W. B. Hag- | patt. ..^;- .'\u25a0•'„\u25a0\u25a0 : President Opens Fair \u25a0 c . WASHINGTOX, June 1.4-The cere mony of pressingr. the ; gold .'key in the east room of the White House by which President Taft today formally opened the Alaaka-Yukon-Pacifie expo sition was simple. Two wires were working through from the exposition grounds at Seattle to the White House. Practically the entire diplomatic corps . was present and after the ceremony the president held an impromptu reception. After- the president had touched the key there was a wait of a ,few minutes amid complete silence. Then came the ticking of the instrument to tell, that the starting flash had done its work. ° The president also I made a brief speech, in which he said: We ore here to go through a ceremony that syinlKillzp? the l elo«e relationship in;th!« country between, the eastern \u25a0\u25a0. seaboard and the westtrn seaboard, and to express in this way the 'in terest it the Trhole country In an exposition that affects Alaska., the northwest and the Philippine islands, all parts of this country In the.develop ment of .which we are eepAcially interested' and toward tbe fntnr* " of which tre look forward with every hope that there shall be a success ful development. ;-;.-- . . I haven't the', slightest doubt that, with -the holdiDK of the exposition In Seattle and o with the spirit of that city as I know it to be. the exposition Is certain to be a success and Is cer tain to show « df-vejopment Af all that country that we may well be prond of. Senator Piles spoke next, and ' the ceremony wa,s over. " Unlike Other Expositions, SEATTLE, June I.— The Alaska -.YU kon-Pacific -exposition cost . slo,ooo,ooo and was built,. In -.two -/year's; '• .The grouping of the buildings is much: dlf . We eat and drink many Go co a \u25a0" . . • \u25a0 /^ : €s^'CJ^^ • - t , .*: - .. is one thing we like and Nq, 21 is tas npimsHing aiid g The cocoa tree is a very ]&& \t is fragfailt B:nd fastidious plant. It will • , * j-|» ••";'.'."*,'.„ -.',-*..* .growonly in Jdcep alluyiil '-'deIICIOUiSV V \ ; : i/ '• •oil. "The land must be - -*- ... . - ... . - • g^SIS Don't, ask merely [fir cocoa ' ': Ghirardellils. \u25a0\u25a0' ' - ' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 - ' - - . '"\u25a0 : ' -"'\u25a0 "• $HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, .JUNE 2;. 1909: ferent'than at other^ exposition's.': TJie structures are compactly- placed;, there is no long, tiresome "walk from one to another. After entering the main gates two buildings standing in a clustery of trejss to the .left 'first -meet' the eye. One is • where, 'the administration ;of the exposition is centered, and the other is the. Auditorium,: a brick and: steel building of imposing architecture. -•' , To the'right and across Puget'piaza is the' Fine Arts palace. This building contains a valuable art display loaned from famous.^collections all 'over the world. A few steps fead to the inter section of Olympic place and. Alaska avenue. To the right is a view .down the "Pay Streajfec,".-./ the. exposition amusement way, and to the left a front view of the Auditorium nnd the University of Washington in the "dis tance. . : The "Pay Streak. Is also , reached by following- a to the right just inside the~"main entrance* gates, and on past the! rest -headquar ters- of .the ; Women's league a-nd the Masonic, Swedish/_and other buildings... Crossing' over.' Olympic place - and wajking to apointof vantage in front of the- main'- government structure,- the beautiful picture of /the .fair .is un folded. To the riglu the Alaska' build ing, to, the left the Hawaiian building,, and on either ; sjde : of ; the ; Cascades \u25a0 the Oriental, Foreign. Manufactures '."and Agriculture palaces.; -In .the 'distance, are the music ; pavilion,' -the^buildings of ' Canada and \u25a0Japan^a.nd,! completing* this_ picture, .Mount: Rainier, 4 , the hfgh-i, est'mquntain peak in 1 the United States. Various avenues and streets branch off in every direction. ! * On every, thp/ough-.' fare Is something of .interest. Build •lngr* • stand out everywhere in "..\u25a0\u25a0. 'jtii Is • forest .-of flrs. ' Natural beauties are'on every hand." : • ; = 'California's; home is in Spanish mis sion" architecture: This? building con-" tains exhibits : from , every county {arid is the 'mo.stl complete display of the wonderful .resources of -/-.the Golden State 'ever* assembled ; away from/ home. In the-.rear.of ' the. California building: and facing on Sewafd-averiue r .: is •\u25a0the New York > state Btructurr, a ".replica of; Se'ward's '< old lrome near Auburn; N. Y. - • . _• ''\u25a0::. SUICIDE OF KICH MAN— Alpena. Jllrli!. June J.— Jfcsse- Fletcher.' a- wealthy.r etired \u25a0 businefis man of Indianapolis.v-Ind..:SO years of ajfe, j com mitted <«ulcld*-. last "nljrht nt the Turtle. I^iko clnb., 30. miles, sonthwest of: Alpena. . He had beeniin:poor,l)eftlth.' .•;:,\u25a0,:". .; ' .. .; . "• «J /,,'•••: SHOWS POETRY IN INDIAN BASKETRY George Wjiarton James Speaks on a Cruelly Misjudged People : -\ ';';'.' "The Poetry and. Symbolism of = In dian Baskptry" was: the subject of .an interesting lecture bboy o George Wharton James : ycjsterday afternoon .before the members of Tp Kaion, tlie 'address be. ing illustrated by an exhibit of Indian baskets from the speaker's collection. ' i He begAn, by saying that it was :al-': al-' ways a pleasure to li^m to "speak- of a people who were very ' dear .and .in teresting to him and \u25a0 who : were so , -pruellyi misjudged. The : baskets^; he said, were xevelations .of Vthe libman , soul— -revelations of i\ wonderful, peo ple\;who have never; b.een underst.o9d, alwa-ys been belittled, I; lied H about, always ; demoralized and fhave , never been 'appreciated.'. '1 ". = . I, ': ..\u25a0 , -\He then : went on: to , tell of the ab sb'lu'te injustice of the general' opinion . of ; the Indian^. Reople,"; and said [-.that in Speaking , of the attitude. ; of. the • •United States government: toward the j Indians his' .Indignation was .so* greftt'j \u25a0.that^ne- migljt- use. unfit language if he tried; tq describe it. V- -•' \u0084 : ; '.Before the', lecture Mrs. Charles dyerr sang ..'very delightfully ."Dream, o': Day Jill" and "In -Blossoni Time."; . : ," ' Navy Orders WASHINGTON. Jurte.l.—-Ensigh*;C. W.: Mauldiri 'iff/detached from duty on the West yirginia and" ; ordered \\.o duty as . aid on the "staff of .'the commander of > the second division; of .the'-' Pacific j!er>fv. ,--, . \u25a0 .'\u25a0-.'-\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0• .\u25a0\u25a0'• ." ... -:• -\u25a0 ;-. -; -Paymaster's clerks, 'k.-M. -Thompson and.F. D. Fc-ey,' have*. be-in- ordered to the navy yard, at ' Mare* island. . POLICE ON TRAIL OF VILE WRETCHES Insuiters of Girls and < Young Women Taken Into , Custody by -Vigilant Patrolman . Department ;-: Is - Determined to Suppress Form oi< Crime; • Frequent of Late " About, 3 o'clock" Saturday-afternoon Acting Battalion Chief Henry Mitchell, stationed at truck -4, saw '.a man talk ing: to iwo little girls irv- front : of .a vacant lot in Pacific \u25a0 avenue- between Polk street and" Van Xess avenue,"" and after watching.his .^ctfons for a min ute -or. so he, ran 'toWardj: the. group. The -man ran' and Mitchell sounded an alarm., J'oliceman 'Bakulich- responded, and jumping, into ;a' ; buggy .'driven by Michael:;' Casey," 'he " started ..-in '.pursuit and.^overtook the , man \ af.ter a chase of several blocks.- ; ' '' The man, who gave the name of George Flynn. a, sailor, was. taken back to the two girls', Nellie Locher of 1305 Greenwich \atreetr andClrene Coffey of 1310 Pacific; avenue, and they 'identified him.. They said he had endeavored to induce them to enter jthe lot with him ahd^' made.-, an, improper proposal to them. : , Flynn' appeared .'before '\u25a0• Police Judge. Deasy. yesterday .-. and " his _ case was Continued until today. He was Jater. booked - oh \u25a0 another charge ' on complaint of Helen Lackmann of 1703 Leavertn-orth' street,' a. niece of the former sheriff, who c says {that about 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon he" had also insulted her. V \ • — .Stephen 'Cuned was arrested Sunday afternoon by Detective S. A. Earle and his name ; registered .on "thQ detinue book at the city, prison. He had been making -insulting,; proposals- to little girls in the neighborhood 'of Polk and "Union- streets. -Cuneo closely, resem bles the description' of the youth -who killed 'Anna' Paltera- in "Griffith park, Los Angeles, • and'- he ' admitted -.. that : he had been in •Los-'-A.ngeles, but' not. at the time of the... murder. He wjll be detained pending ; a .thorough .investi gation as to his record. ' \u25a0 \u25a0 .'' • • Kmile," Bennett,- an, > 4 x-convict. was booked at; the" city prison yesterday by Detecjlve 'Balletto ; for a violation of= section \u25a0 286 of the j pejial code.- Ballet- , to was complimented by Captain. An derson for. capturing Bennett, who was sentenced to " serve 1 0 years for a sim ilar offense, but was paroled after serv-. ing^To'ur. years.- 'V . "••'"- ' GOOD SAMARITAN HAS . RUDEST OF SURPRISES Befriends Girl". Who • Proves to Be Clever Thief. . CHICAGO.' June I.— "Dear Mr. Pat terson:' I .hate to' do tills," but 1.-'gue.s& I-.rriust. You were good arid kind to me.. I hope .you will nof miss, the money - much. ..."SWEET COUNTRY GIRL." j This, is the note John Patterson found last night' when he returned to his .room in. Eri.fi Street, which he had gfveri tip to a- "friendless,: hungry 5 and penniless" ! young .woman. -lie al?o found:', that $63 was gone . from this dresser and that his- -landlady, who was robbed of $*00 "and vprious arti cles, wanted to tlirpw him into the slrest; -\u25a0/.,. .•\u25a0\u25a0: .\u25a0\u25a0.-;•\u25a0•. .-\u25a0"-.. ' . \u0084. ', .--,..•..-. ;±.- . \u25a0>. Patterson found the. yourig woman weeping on a-do.ors,tep. near his home Sunday afternoon. '• She told him she had been.in Chicago only a few days and- that, she w^s -homeless/ He pur chased a dinner' for! her, and -then al loiwed her -to use- his " room while- he .went 16- a hotel.' .'."She had freckles and had . the appearance of.' a country grrl,*'. said Patterson. -J "I never was so surprised in air'my. life/" . ~^- -'*'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 •\u25a0" '--•.\u25a0 \/k \ y&L j§* j&L. ' afT^-A-^// _vv j^f £ '*&i' *^r r %^v-.»- r": rf .':... 'V. '\u25a0'*.- '\u25a0 *-\u25a0 "' - : ' .- \u25a0- ' - '- * ''-.". : ' r - ' - ';'-.: - * . "•\u25a0 . ' .. -*' -.- - P 4sM^AflSttvifanflii^KMMunh^M... THE AMERICAN YACHTSMAN •No better type of man exists on theface of the earth than- the American yachtsman. • I Since IJIBSI; the; supremacyof American sailors and. yacht designers has never been , seriously ;eh^ .' ; .; .\u25a0 : .--. . . ' • ; ; •\u25a0; When devotees of yachting gather to. toast 'eacKother— -no .beer* is half -so popular, as V . The KiiigoiF r All Bottled Beers. : ; .1 • ' :': '- It has a bunk ; aliarsevet^^y^ tingles like an oceaji^breezer It ;is;pure;afid'clean"as}the:foam on a:\vhite-cap.-.lt is cool and refreshing "'\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0)\u25a0 Should Yjour Dealers Not \u25a0jCairry-'BJUDWE^SER'in':Stock^FU^»e-''PhoneUa, • "• Bottled Only at the : " iztf^" * HP* 11 O T!fc 1 1 Anheuser-Busch Brewery " C^^^^_ lllmann fci Kendel CORKED OR wITH FrailCiSCO ' CaL CRIME A DISEASE SAYS STOMACH MAN Bad Digestion Warps 7 Mental Attitude and Lowers :''•\u25a0;•": / .Moral Tone Eating Too Much More Apt to Nourish Body Poorly Than ° ' a Eating Too Little Is crime.'a 'disease? Does morality, hinge on the mentality, a rrd is a man good or wicked according as his health is 'normal or " his .stomach is out of. order? ' Cooper,* the "stomach man," as he. is' called in the east, claims that this is: true. He -was meeting caHers yesterday at the Owl" drug. store in th» Phelan building. lie said:-; .^l, believe that 30 per cent of all ill health is caused "by s-tomach trouble. And .1. believe the stomach "affects the mentality and that the: condition of & man's thinking apparatus controls his" conduct as a .citizen. Experts on criminology . prove- by. 'statistics that practically all crimes are committee: by Individuals of weak mentality and poorly nourished, bodies. Medical rec ords* show that a disordered mental attitude results " from a disordered nervous system. .. \u25a0 . "A man . doesn't have to eat too little to have a poorly nourished body. A poorly nourished- body. is. far. more apt to result from eating. to<> much. A man stuffs himself with rich. -food, fails to ta.ke exercise as' nature in tended, and then 'gets dopey, droopy, tired and. half sick. . lie wonders why. It's as simple as A. B, C. With such a .mass of food, in his stomach, it" be comes overloaded*, -won't work .a,nd he is poorly, nourished. He has [bad dreams, gets a- warped Aiew. of "every thing. The whole .world seems to bo against him. If this, has been- going oh from his earliest babyhood he be comes a criminal. 1 -^j • "I-, have] a medicine thiC I know .will put a stomach In.-a normal, healthy I condition in fou^to six v/ecks"'tlme. I have, "talked with thousands- of people since I have been in Fan Francisco and many -thousands more .in the east be fore I, came here. .Xot one 'person out of '2o knew what was the matter with themselves. I know that all this chronic .ill health is- caused primarily by stomach trouble, and nothing else. 1 also know that the preparation I came here :tq introduce will, tone tip the digestive organs,', and " I- know that miglity few persons' can be .sick with a digestive apparatus in perfect shape." .Oiie]of those who had thanked Cooper for. what His medicine had ' done for them was M. Henry Meyers of 94S Mis s-i.bri street. . He said:- .. : ."iFor two years. l." have suffered .tor tures -.beyond description.- I thought my trouble was catarrh of the" stomach and 1 .-I .have been treated by various j .physicians at different \u25a0 times : for stomach .trouble. I have been told many times tha.t.nothing could be done for;me. I have tried everjthing. I had almost- given up l;bpe when I heaifd of Cobp.er. He gave . me some, of, his stom'aph medicine,- and, now. l am a well man.. 1 am willing to. give all . the credit to this man's remedies. They are wonderful/.' • • • • "• • ; MADE FATAL- MlSTAKE— Portland.- June 1. Throwing on all power instead of cutting- if off as she /was driving an automobile around, a cot ner.' yes.tfrrday at ,' Walla Walla. - Wash. ; \u25a0_ Mr». Henry Helsler'eanse«r the car to oTerturn^'seri ously lnjuribp herself and husband. Neither !s etp«-cte<l--to live. -The car tnrnert a complete \u25a0.somersault, pinioning the couple beneath it. •. fSave money on fuel by getting X 1 1 STONE CANON <§ |||, the easiest kin- |^ IP died, the o best '§ t burning and dM most economi- ™ fcaF coal you can |$| buy. Doesn^t liSr tneed to be brok- $jh en, as it comes fin exact stove or ||| .v- range size. *r IM O V/ . H . per Ton m t At all Dealers flfX Large Lumps $11 jSMY per Ton fiS^'- § STONE CANON® CONSOLIDATED jfe* COAL COMPANY Ig ' Phone Market 3225 ip Yards: 11th and Bryant Sts. {£§& Mm L-B. Fuller, G=r. Sales Agt. Wf W3jj 503 Wells Farjro B!J^. *tS& . Phone Douglas 476 fj|s» ««L«__— IM—iIMBULJ .IIL-H^-M—^ ,_ IS NOW PERMANENTLY LOCATED AT 34KEARNYST. BET. MARKET AND POST . FR.WKP. MEDLXA Patent Attorney. Many years' experience with patent office examiners. Patents, Tradrmartss, Copyrights v *rf 812-Sl4 Call Building