The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 30, 1895, Page 10

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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER .30, 1895 AN e e e s e vt e o e e N D PR P B S THE MAGUIRE-DAGGETT WAR GROWS BIGGER Some More Heavy Guns That Maguire Has Loaded. IGNORING WILL NOT GO. If Necessary He Will Get a Con- gressional Investigation of Daggett. WAR ON THE PATRONAGE, T00. Maguire Will Try to Get the Mints Put| in the Classified Civil Service Lists. The new campaign against Superintend- ent of the Mint Daggett, begun by Con- gressman Maguire, as _exclusively an- nounced in yesterday’s CALL, promises to be still inore warm and notable as the Jlans and conditions more fully appear. Nearly the entire local Democracy ap- pears to be either actively or quietly ho: tile to John M. Daggett, and the condi- | tions of the local t, in which Daggett xed nself with Rainey and rs who aspire to bossism, make it certain that the roar which will go up from California in support of Maguire shortly after he reaches Washington will be a long and loud one. The party is full | of Democrats who are opposed to Dag- gett’s, running the party, local or State and now is their opportunity to getin um{ give him a bla Maguire, it was learned vesterday, not only proposes to forcibly call the attention | of President Cleveland and Secretary Car- | Jisle to his charges of varied official mis- | conduct on the t of Daggett, but he is ready to determinedly and vigorously push the fight further. If his charges are still ignored by the administration, she will take the matter into the House of Repre- sentavives. If the administration daes not seriously heed the charges and the evi- | dence which Maguire will present within a | few days at the White House and at the | e Department and order an official in- | igation of Daggett’s conduct, he pro- | poses to take the matter into Congress and | see if ‘the proper committee of the House wiil not investigate the administration of irs in the Mint out here. zett was asked yesterday by a Jorter to express his opinion of w campaign against him, but declined to say anything in t reopening this matter; re is,and let him open it. If he 1sh any more than he did do much. The local tight? I am sim- here in the anything out I have nothing fur- Joseph M. Leggett, the law partner of Congressman M e, said ;‘l’;(cl’dfi\': | The st morning’s CALL was sub- | ntially erstand Mr. Ma- | he intends now to see the ad- eland and i o see Presid y Carlisle personally hem and tell them responsi- He n. Mr. Ma ot himself approve the official who had b s Dagge nd sduty to call the t tion the ration to that sort of sk them ii that isin keepin ands in regard o It is not so much & personal fi Maguire is making, but he | if in the course he if necessary he will endeavor to | f before the e mittee of the ich may have discretion to investi- | t branch of the service. 1do not think make any personal onslaught on t, butwill simply discharge his duty vay. 1think that Mr. M has taken. Anattempt has been made by Mr. Daggett aturibute Maguire’s action to personal | t0 pique and disappointment in his distribution | of patronage, but 1 know, as a positive fact, | that for months aiter Daggett’s appointment | Maguire refused to ask tavors of him or to give | any letters of recommendation to him, such as he'was giving to other Federal officials. He | could not, consistently, ask anything from Mr. | Daggett, and dic¢ not expect anything. When | Mir. Daggett later suggested that Maguire could name somebody for appointment 1 think that he showed Jittle appreciation of the character of such & man as Mr. Maguire, or any other | seli-respecting men. It looks like & trick to | prevent Maguire from joining'in the criticism 10 which Daggett knew he wes open. What influences have worked at Wash- ington since Maguire fiied his first cnarges during Cleveland’s absence a few weeks | ago to secure the suppression of the mat- ter by the administration are not apparent. | Maguire when he left was very confident that the administration did not propose to do anything more about the matter for some reason or other, and that is why he has more strongly fortified himself and repared himself for a red-hot assault. | Maguire's friends say that as Daggett’s | appointment was due to Senator Stanford | and allied corporate influences, such as Cleveland is friendly with, these influences have probably been worked in his fayor. | Then it is thought that Cleveland is loth to have discredit heaped upon any feature | of his administration so close to the end of | his term. | One of the clubs that Maguire has armed | himself with is a notable letter, which President Cleveland wrote in 1886, during his first term, in which he expressed his | views of how administrative officers ought | | to carry themselves politically. | This circular roundly condemns ihe political “pernicious activity” of the kind | that Mr. Daggett is charged with, and Maguire thinks that if it had been framed | especiaily for Mr. Daggett’s benefit couldn’t have been m Superintendent of the Mint just now. In this letter President Cleveland said: | 1 deem this a proper time to especially warn all_subordineiés in the several depariment and ail office-holders under the General Gov ernment against the use of their official posi tions in an attempt to control political moye- ments in their localities. | Office-holders are the agents of the people, | not their masters. Not only is their time and labor due to the Government, but 1111:_\'.~huu|4lf‘ | | especially avoid in their political actions, as well as in he discharge of their official duty, | offending, by display of obtrusive partisanship, | their neighbors who have relatious with them as public officials. They should constantly remember that their party friends from whom they have received | preferment have not invested them with the | power of arbitrarily managing their political | | | affairs. They have no-right as office-hoiders 10 dictate the political action of their party as- sociates or to throttle freedom of action witnin perty lines by methods and practices which pervert every useful and justifiable purpose of party organization. The influence of Federal office-holders should mot be felt in the manipulation of political primary meetings and nomibating conven- tions. The use by these officials of their posi- tions to compass their selection as delegates to political conventions is indecent and unfair, and proper regard for proprieties and reaunire- ments of official place will also prevent their assuming the active conduct of political campaigns. Individual interests and activity in political affairs are by no means condemned. Office- holders are meither disfranchised noi for- bidden the exercise of poljtical privileges. but their privileges are not enlarged nor is their duty 10 party increased to pernicious activity by office-holaing. This Mr. Maguire regards as pretty | | at Washington, and that of Congressman | The Machinery for Opening Them Next Thurs- headguarters and organized it | e_applicable to the | | strong ammunition for bimself just now. He proposes to call President Cleveland’s attention to this and various other similar expressions of administration policy, and then ask the administration if it can swal- low Mr. Daggett and his ways. If it can, he proposes, as stated, to see what he can do in Congress. It is quietly told that when Maguire saw Secretary Carlisle a jew weeks ago the story about Daggett taking the Mint washingaway from Senator Biggy because he had not given his complimentary vote for him for Senator was the thing that surprised Carlisle most, although he took | a serious interest in the rest of Maguire's story, incinding the sacrifice_of the rela- tives of other Senators, the Rosalie mine | stock scheme. and so on. Now, in addition to his former charges Maguire will lay before the President an account of Daggett’s recent ‘‘pernicious activity” in local politics and set it beside | the President’s letter of 1886. | Maguire has still another gun to fire. He proposes now to actively take up the | recently developed idea of putting the | mints of the country in the civil service classified list. When the employes of the Mint here are placed under the protection of the civil service law Mr. Daggets’s pa- tronage power will suddenly drop, and this another way that Maguire sees of g Daggett a blow, as Daggett’s four years’ term will not be up for considerably over two years. i matter Maguire will simply be- specially active in a measure that would probably be taken up by Congress Initslast annual report the Civil ice Commission recommended that various branches of the Treasury Depart- ment be placed on the classified service list, the first named being the Internal Revenue Department, the second the mints and the third theassay offices. Since then the Internal Reve Department has | been put on the ¢ ied list, and now many employes and officials of the mints of the country, as well as others, are strongly favoring the same step with the | mints. In urging this measure Maguire | expects to make effective use of the recent | scandal at the Carsou Mint and the use which Mr. Daggett has made of the San Francisco Mint. guire expects the co-operation of most, if not all, the California delegation Bowers especially. _ Bowers, though a Republican, has stood on the same ground witn Maguire on_various matters, includ- ing the railroad funding bill, and is friendly to him. Then, as a Republican, he 15 not expected to stop long at criticiz- ing the administration. Senator White is an old political enemy of Daggett’s and what patronage he bas received from Daggett is not supposed to have closed the breach to any great extent. White was chairman of the Stockton convention | which read Daggett out of the party and further hostility was engendered at the San Francisco convention of 1886. They belong to opposite wings of the party, and when Daggett's appointment was being considered by Cleveland White joined with | all the rest of the California delegation, | except Geary, in vigorously protesting against his appointment. | Just_now some of the people who are | after Daggett are telling how Eugene Townsend, superintendent of the Phila- delphia Mint, had his official head cut off buta few months ago. The law says that | the superintendent of the mint may at | his discretion exact bonds of his employes. One of the charges against Townsend was that he organi a guaranty company, or- | dered a lot of his employes to file bon and sent them to his own company, where | they were charged a liberal rate. Now | they are drawing o parallel between that aranty company and Daggett’s Rosalie | mining scheme. | So John M. Daggett of S ou has | succeeded in stirring up another big and interesting Democratic mess. The war | will rage from the Twenty-eighth District | in San Francisco to the White House and | | % the halls of Congress. RAINEY-DAGGETT ROLLS, day Is Set in Motion. The one thing of immediate importance | with both of the Democratic factions just | now is enroliment, in anticipation of the | rival primaries which are soon to be held, | and both sides are busily perfecting ar- | rangements therefor through the respec- | tive committees of twenty-five appointed to take charge of primary matters. | Last evening the Rainey-Daggett pri- | mary committee met at the Flood building by electing hands the matter of filling vacancies in the general committee, and it will at the next meeting present resolutions directing the district delegations to fill all vacancies at an early day. Until that time the fold will remain’ open for the return of re- creant members who have accepted seats in the ‘side” committee. Buckleyites claim that since the recent meeting of the other general committee fully thirty of its members have returned their allegiance to the regular committee, and that the enemy will keep on sustaining steady losses that way. GOOD-BY TO CAMP. The Stanford Football Coach Leaves for the East With His . Family. The Stanford foofball men said good-by to Mr. and Mrs, Walter Camp at the Pal- ace Hotel yesterday afternoon, and “the father of American football” and his wife and Walter Camp Jr. left for New Haven on last night’s overland train. From half-past 3 until 5 o’clock one of the parlors was crowded with enthusiastic students and professors from Palo Alto | who had come to grasp the hand of the great coach who had done so much for the game on this coast, and particularly for the play of his pupils, whom, like his pro- teges at Yale, he seems to have made proof against defeat. The Varsity eleven gave Walter Camp as a parting souvenirof his third annual visit to California a heavy gold ring with an in- laid setting of gold quartz, a significant little reminder of the Golden State and of the Western cdllegians who have learned to love the quiet man who knows more about the gridiron game than any of the other experts. Mrs. Camp was the recipi- THE PRIZES THAT WILL BE AWARDED AT THE CLOSE OF THE HORSE EQUINE FOUR HUNDRED The Governor Will Be at the Horse Show Opening. SOME NEW ATTRACTIONS The New York Whips Who Are to Judge Are on Their Way Out. PRICE OF ADMISSION REDUCED. The General Public May See the Show in the Afternoon for Half a Dollar. Nearly everything is in readiness for the opening of the horse show on Tuesday, and it promises to be in many ways an improvement on its predecessor. A change T ——— 5 & « \ N L~ = K ¢ " Fm im '(:L_P‘;)P_E-! }Jo; D ("ra”tl !Skmwc. ! ____Cluo. Rads e A [Sketched by a “ Call " artist.] those of H. 8. Crocker,W.S. Hobart, Alex- ander Herrman, J. D. Grant, the Burling- ton Club and Talbot Cliiton. The same people have entered tandems. There will be a special exhibit of post entries from the two racetracks in the jumping classes. George Po‘pe lately brought back from New York four horses—two cobs and two hackneys—which are entered. These are said to be crack animals. In the coaching stallion class there are two entries, each with three of his get, and in the trotting stallion class five, each with four of his get. Fif'een feet of length has now been added to the arena, making it now 218 feet in all, and the director says it is one of the finest in the world. There will be attractive performances end parades in the arena both day and evening. These will include four-in-band and tandem driving, high jumping and hard riding. The driving of }our-in-handa and tandems will be a new feature. The mounted troops of the Presidio will give their musical-riding and rough-ridin shows again. Among the riders who wil mount their own horses are ‘l'albot Clifton, Hobart, Dick Tobin, Simpkins, and the ofticers from the Presidio. A new feature will be an exhibit of lasso- throwing and stopping of runaways by a member of the park mounted police. Cap- tain Thompson and a select squad have 'been entered for this event, for which W. S. Hobart nas given a valuable cash prize. Joe Grant has again offered 2 cup to be competed for by the Fire Department, and Onklg\nd will send over anengine and crew to compete. The directors lately added a.new class, thatof “‘unicorn” teams, with three horses, two abreast and one in lead. The Kern County Land Company claims among its entry of thirty-five horses the largest and smallest of the show, They 08 Mac- [mnough A b ' SHOW. ent of many bunches of California violets, for the Stanford men knew that after all her first sympathies were with the wearers of the blue at Yal CHOO FO00'S BATTERY. His Charge Against Inspector Richard Williams Dismissed by Police Judge Low. The battery case against Inspector Rich- ard Williams was dismissed by Police Judge Low yesterday. What evidence there was went to show that the complain- ing witness, Choo Foo, was the aggressor, and that Williams had acted in seif-de- fense. Choo Foo has the reputation round the | Custom-house and in Chinatown of being His family, the | an unworthy Chinese. Chew family, will not have anything to do with him, it is said. Some years ago Choo Foo was mixed up in straw bonds busi- ness and fled to British Columbia. Inter- preter Jerome Miller, to save himself, had to gbé after him and practically kidnap him back into the United States. Twice charges of crookedness, besides that, have been made against him. He was the custodian of the ch’ien (monev) of the Hop Sing Tong, a powerful highbinder | has been made by the directors that will tend to induce the general public to take more interest in it than they did last year, and that is the reduction of the price of admission for the daytime from $1 to 50 cents, with access to any seats except those in the boxes. On the first evening Governor Budd and his staff, in all their regimentals, will be on hand, three boxes having been reserved | for them. All the boxes except three had been sold last evening, and the demand for seats, the directors say, is far ahead of what it was last year. President Crocker last evening said | abont the stalls for horses: “The accom- modations for horses are far and away ahead of those at the horse show in | New York, and I want to say to the people who go to the show not to fail to see the stables. That is the principal part of it really and many did not seem to know | last year that they were entitled to go | through them. There will3y a lot of boys | in uniform in the arena to give informa- tion to the visitors and to show them : = will be paraded before the Governor on the opening nigat. Three well-known New York whips left | there last Tuesday to act as judges here. | One of these is R. F. Carman, who was the principal judge at the New York Horse Show, and is known as the best all-round whip in New York and owns a big stock farm at Carmandale, in Long Island. He was here last year with Reeves. H. K. Bloodgood and "F. T. Underhill, also well- known whips and good judges of horses, are the other two. COUNT O’BRIEN HERE. He Has Been Hunting Big and Small Game in Many Parts of the ‘World. Count E. 0’Brien of Paris, a noted hun- ter of big game in Africa and other parts of the world, is at the Palace accompanied by many guns and other equipments for taking wild animals. The Count has been for some time in Mexico, where he has been engaged in the comparatively peace- ful avocation of killing ducks. His field of operation was in the hacienda of M. Cas- through the stables. The building will be much more brilliantly lighted than it was | tellrane, in La Barca. The Count is the grandson of Guilliame THEIR AMENDMENT CLUB, Prohibitionists Organize a Society Supplementary to the Party. THEY ARE NOT DISCOURAGED. Congress Will Adopt a Prohibition Amendment Within the Next Decade. Prohibitionists know no frosts and are undismayed by any obstacles. The title of “The Unterrified” should be transferred to their party, where it belongs. The State leaders in the movement claim that the election returns this year were numerically equal to any that pre- ceded them, and if honest election methods were adopted in all quarters those returns would nearly double all previous ones. They cite districts where there were scores of Prohibitionist electors and only one vote was counted. Mrs. Henrietta E. Brown, State secre- tary of the Woman’s Christian Temper- ance Union, which organization 1s the strongest coadjutor of the Prohibition party, voiced the sentiments of many of ber coworkers by expressing the convic- tion yesterday that prohibition would be- come a National measure in the next decade. She said: Work in the interest of prohibition is chiefly educational, but I have observed that, though such work seems to progress slowly, there comes a point in the advancement from which there is a leap to popular fayor and success. It wasso with the siavery question. Indeed, history shows that was true of all re- form movements, and I fully expect that his- tory will repeas itself in the accomplishment of National prohipition. While it is generally agreed that effort in the direction of a National amendment will be more effective, we by no means despair of the aid of popular sentiment in California. It 18 growing. There is no question about-that. Then there is the phylioxera to help us, you know. Thne havoc it has wrought in the wine irade is one of our indirect aids. Oh, no! We have not the slightest intention of sinking; we shall keep on swimming. Like John Adams of old we have given our hand and our heart to this vote. Asan evidence of our being very much alive I might say that J. M. Glass, chairman of the Pronibition State Central Committee, completes a successtul lecturing tour this week. Arrangements have been made for a tour of the State by the great temperance advocate John G. Woolley. We are expecting_personal aid and counsel from Miss Frances Willard within a few months. In reply to a question as to why the sanitary district law enacted by the last Legislature had not been taken advantage of by the cold-water party, Mrs. Brown sai1 that while it was, in the main, ap- proved in so far as it applied to controlling che sale of liquor, a fear of increased tax- ation on the part of many had made the taw inoperative. The secretary of the county branch of the party, Thomas Harrison, has just issued an outline of a plan for strength- ening the cause, which plan, according to Mrs, Mary K. Harrison, superintendent of one cdepartment of State W. b work, contemplates the organization of a committee, which shall be to the proh tion party what the California constitu- tional amendment campaign committee is to the suffragists. The outline is as follows: To form an organization throughont the country to be known as the Nationaul Amend- ment Club, for the purpose of creating an amendment sentiment among the people, and to circulate a petition to Congress asking to have an amendment biil passed abolishin, liquor traflic, and submit it to the vote of people, say it 1900. And 1i said amendment be ratified by the re- the quired number of States, to then become a part | of the National Constitution. Said petition to be signed by voters and young men \\'Eo will be voters by that time, also one for mothers. This plan, you see, knows no gnr(y, and no one is asked to leave his party efore he can aid us in this work. All good citizens can now join forces and strike a de- cisive blow. The pulpit can accept this pla and have a Sunday, to be known as the N tional Amendment day, and_preach one hun- dred thousand sermons on the benefits of the amendment, asking all voters present and all young men who will be in said year, to sign the petition, which should be on hand. And could we not get three million on that dry? The W. C.T. U.and 1. 0. G. T. could have the & day and secure one_million more. ‘who oppose the traffic cun unite and work cn this plan. I8ROl 7 4 Sow HICRUKR(R Tim Kosein's RIN {om 00 [hpes £ tiier LV °2 ra \irs L L BaniR | 26~ WOS Mucooneen) 28 WM Lenr [crsony. s Cave v |Gl Gurcne 5 Mt bosait 7‘ WHcrocecR 2 ] Lox PROMENADE. 3 iy Mar HootR) 99 TH Wit /A 93 4 Donsnvt g ¥ 3 $ N \Oresies Pene (100 L/ DovAKYE (D56 BPiRRIN FLOOR PLAN OF THE PAVILION, SHOWING THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE BOXES FOR THE HORSE SHOW. W. P. Sullivan chairman and Jokn F. Me- Govern secretary, the same offices held by the two gentlemen in the general com- mittee. About twenty of the committee were present, and the proper enrollment methods were discussed for an hour. It was decided to place the conduct of the enrollment for district clubs next Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday in the hands of a special executive committee of seven, and the following were named: W. P. Sullivan, Jonn F. McGovern, M. C. Has- sett, J. B. Rheinstein, James Butler, Frank L flughes and A. A. Watkins. It was also ordered that the district dele- gates of twenty-five in the general com- mittee meet on Tuesday evening nextin their respective districts and organize. These delegates will constitute district committees to have immediate charge of the enrollment. On Wednesday evening next the primary committee will meet again, give final orders regarding the en- rollment and prescribe the test. Ihe Buckley primary committee, of which M. J. Donovan is chairman, is very quietly perfecting the enroliment also, and at_the meeting of the regular general com- mittee to be held some time next week it will present recommendations to the gen- eral body. This committee has also in its assoclation, and the accusation was made that he skipped out with the funds, and a charge of embezzlement resulted. Collector Wise does not put the slightest confidence in the tales he has carried to him about Inspector Williams. The Land of the Pharaohs. Colonel John O'Byrne will deliver a lecture ‘next Tuesday night at Golden Gate Hall, under the auspices of the Geographical Society of California. The lecture will be on *‘Egypt Un- veiled—the Land of the Pharoahs,” and be il- lustreted with stereopticon views, the slides for which are from original negatives that were colored by Levi of Paris. They are said 10 be the finest views on the subject ever shown in this country. This will be the sec- ond lecture of the course of 1895-96 of the Geographical Society, which are constantly growing in popularit; B o False Witnesses. . There are knaves now and then mst with who Tepesent certaln local bitters and polsonous stim- ull as identical with cr possessing properties akin to those of Hostett-r's Stomach Bitters. Thes2 scamps only succeed in fals'ing their trashy compounds upon peosle unacquainted with the genuine arti- cle, which is as much their opposite as day Is to night. Ask and take no subsutate for the grand remedy for malaria, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumat'sm and kidney trouble. last year. Everything indicates that the show is going to be & great success in every way. Society is more interested in it than ‘ever and I am told that the modistesand milliners never had such a busy time in this City.” There will be exhibited 380 horses, for which 437 entries have been made. There are more entries in each classthis year, ex- cept draft horses. The largest number of entries made by any was by W. 8. Hobart, who entered 45 horses in 79 classes. The Kern County Land Company enters 37 horses, John Parrott 13, John F. Boyd 12, and Clifton Talbot 11. Thoroughbreds are entered by A. B. Spreckels, Ned Cor- rigan, the Palo Alto stables, Agnews stock farm,” William Corbett, William Murry and others. In this class will be shown some great animals including Diablo, W. Wood, Ethel Downs and Tombro. Or- monde will not be there, but his daughter, !Ai]o:a Ormonde, will come up from Palo 0. Herrman, the magician, has entered the horses he brought out in_his private car, among them being an old favorite of the ublic here, Cock Robin, who was the leader in Theodore Kearney’s tandem at last year's show. Among the four-in-hand teams will be O’Brien, a_native of the City of Mexico, who has for many years been engaged in ‘ banking in Paris. “The Count himself was born in Spain. He is a very pleasani man of about 27 years. “I have been hunting for lions, tigers, zebras and other kindsof big game in Africa and other countries,” he said, “and came to Mexico some time since for ans other kind of sport. I have been very suc- cessful. My visit in this City will be for about a week. I am not certsin yet whether I shall do any hunting on this wa“”t O’Bri i dered ‘oun rien is considered a ve wealthy man. He isaccompanied by n?; servant. ————— Caravaggio was originally a hodea: and was afterward employed byr?:: painters in the Vatican to grind their colors. He was fond of depicting scenes in low life, and it was said of him that he pnifl:;ted like a ruffian because he was a rutfian, ———— The mottoes *‘Dieu et mon droit” and “Honi soit qui mal y pense” are French. The first signifies “God and my right,” the second “Evil be to him ‘that evil thinks."” Should Congress refuse our first request, keep right on working and add another million to the petition, and present it the next year. When the widespread antagonism against the traffic is concentrated upon this plan Congress will see its duty, and the dawn of the twentieth century the grandest victory recorded in history—the Waterloo of the liquor traffic. A Sagacious Dog. A Lewiston (Me.) man has a dog which can not only take care of himself, but the property of his owner and other people as well.” He pays no fare on the railro: It he happens to be up in New Hampshire Wwith his master and wants to gp home he boards a train and curls up under a seat, and stays there until it is time to change cars; and in a few hours he is found eu- tering the Lewiston restaurant as if it was nothing strangethat he traveled without a protector or guide. In a day or two he | will disappear and show up in Lancaster, N. H. He is the same dog that stopped'a runaway in Lewiston one time by seizing the rein near the bridle in his teeth and dragging down the horse's head. ————————— The World’s Commerce. The Venetians largely absorbed com- merce for five or six centuries, from the . T, | the | In fact, ai. | ear 1080 until 1600; they ha the Han- zenfic League as rivals. The Dutch re‘pl_!b- Tic, with its civic liberty, for two c_em.me[s transferred the trade of the world to Hol- land; but about the middie of the eigh- teenth century the energy and persever- ance of the English supplanted the Dutch. e ———————— Her Bond Fixed at $2000. Emma Cleverly, charged by Samuel Jackson, an Oregon rancher, with robbing him of $40, was held in $2000 bail by Judge Campbell yes- terday. Jackson came here several days ago and advertised for a wife. Mrs. visited his apartments and in a short while the wife-hunter found himself $40 to the bad. He followed the woman, " captured her and then placed her in charge of the first police- man that came along. He was offered the money back, but refused to accept it. A e CAUSED BY VACCINATION, From the Journal, Detrolt, Mich. Every one in the vicinity of Meldrum avenue and Cliampion street, Detroif, knows Mrs. Me- Donald, and many & neighbor has reason to feel grateful to her for tre kind and friendly interest she has manifested in cases of illness. She is a kind-hearted friend, a natural nurse and an intelligent and refined lady. To a reporter she recently talied at some length about Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, giving some very interesting instances in her own immediate knowledge of mervelous cures, and the universal beneficence of the remedy to those who hed used it. X “I have reason to know,” said Mrs. Mc- Donald, “something of the worth of this medicine, for it has been demonstrated in my own immediate family. My daughter Kittie is attending high school, and Las never been very strong since she began. I suppose she studies hard, and she has quite a distance to go every day.’ When the smallpox broke out all of the sctiool children had to be vaccinated. I took her over to Dr. Jameson and he vaceinated her. I never saw such an arm in my life, and the doctor said he never did. 3he ias broken out on her shoulders and back, and was just assick as she could be. To add to it all neuralgia set in and the poor child was in misery. She is naturaily of & nervous temperament and she suffered most awfully. Even after she recov- ered the neuraigia did not leave her. Stormy days or days that were damp or Freceded S storm she could not go out at all. pale and thin, and had no appetite. “I have forgotten just who told me about the Pink Pills, but I got_some for her and they cured her Tight up. She has a nice colorin her face, eats and sleeps well, goes to school every day, and is well and strong in every particular. I hdve never heard of anything to build up th blood to compare with Pink Pills. I shall al- ways keep them in the house and recommend theém to my neighbors.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are considered an unfailing specific in such dis- eases as locomotor ataxin, partial paralysis, S Vitus’ dance, sciatica. neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of 1agrippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow com- plexions, that tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration; all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as serofula. chronie erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities, and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a radical curein all ceses arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are soid by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a Dox or six boxes for $2 50—they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Wil- liams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. 10 CENTS “The Chtistmas McClure's 100 Pictures—ii2 Pages . First Edition 200,000 copiks, containing | | i 1 | THE YOUTH AND EARLY MANHOOD OF Lincol ‘With much new material; Four por- traits of Lincoln and Twenty-one other portraits and pictures. 70,000 NEW SUBSCRIBERS Have been added since the publication of the first article on Lincoln in the November number. Hon, Joseph Medill, editor of the “ Chicago Tribune,” and an intimate friend of Lincoln, sayss ** This biography is not only full of new things, but is so distinct and clear in local color that an intergst attaches toit which is not found in other biographies.” 10 Cents a Copy ¢ $1.00 a Year S.S.McClure,Ltd.®® Kaesyans e | : : | ; % Bazaar Prices-= Art Store Qualities. ) Some folks think that we carry only the highest priced Art Goods. This is a mistake. We have thousands of articles for use and ornament, suitable for Holiday Gifts, that are within reach of all, as far as price is con- cerned. The difference between our goods and those in the bazaars is not in the prices, but in the qualitiesand the taste displayed in selection. Ours are selected by people trained for the art business alone. Here for the prettiest, newest, most artistic, at Bazaar Prices. S. &G.GUMP, 113 GEARY ST. 000000: - 000000 Q She was #f -

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