The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 10, 1897, Page 9

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| | | - THE . SAN FRANCISCO ‘CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 10 1897. ball-player, known as David Foss. The detectives worked on this clew for a long time, and at last managed to locate Foss. Ulfl HE MUHUEH He was located in_the far E.st, and was able to prove conclusively that he was not | in the vicinity of San Francisco at the | time of the murder. v | At this point the sleuths were for a time | stalled. | A short time ago Police Officer L. C. | Clark was notified by a friend that the murderer of Manning was not Foss, but a Officer Clark Thinks He!:;g Jngwn among the kuights of the Has Spotted the [ Thursday a man seeking a dime ap- i Man | ter was conversing with the officer, who | proached Clark’s informant. while the la was in citizen's dress, Clark was ino formed that that was the man wanted {aad the mendica | for beTgmg. l\‘.szerdny Sophie Smith, a < 33 . | character well xnown on the ‘coast,” Arrests on Suspicion a Profes- | {aiiies Mickey s & man she had left to sional Tramp Kuown as | consort with Manning previous to the ur M ckey. Mickey, who gave his name as Lana when arrested bat afterward itted he was known as P. A. Mickey, denies any | knowledge save that which is common | property among the *hoboes.” He says The Hobo Says He Can Prove H: Was | he can easily prove that he was “‘doing ten > s % | days” for vagrancy, under the name of Dotng Time When tho Murder fiqqSy “Tintaroies i e of iy Occurred. murder, Mickey is a professions! tramp. He Al P | savs he "has been on the road ever since | the war. The police believe they have lan s Joe Manning. nj;;:::p(,hz UNHAPPY CINDERELLA. Barbary coast rounder, was shot down in | She Sues for a Divorce fr m Her Un- cold blood in Kayser's saloon, 104 South atisfactory *Prince Arthur.’’ Third strect, on the evening of December | Cinderella Coover has sued for a divorce 24 The murder was a particularly das- | from Arthur Coover on the ground of tardly one, and the escape of the perpe- | failure to provide the common necessaries trator was extremely annoying to the | of life. P. A. MICKEY, Hobo by Profession, Who Is Held on Suspicion of Being the Murderer of Joe Manning. volice, as the crime was committed in the | presence of several people, yet no reliable | t} The papers in the case do not disclose cause of Arthur's neglect to furnish clew could be secured as to the id read and butter for his little wife. It the murd The latter ci may be developed in the course of the was o g to the cha litigation that he expecied Cinderella to resort, who have no f ethod i part] haps, idennes of onslaught, the crime having been committea and the bring to his hearth a troupe of fairies who would be able to supply the commonplace articles of domestic consumption in ad- dition to the glass slipy i murderer having escaped before the spec- | maintain the romantic surroundings tators realized woat had happened. ssentizl to the lady's musical and Manning, sccording to the confused | fegendary name. ich was wleaned from the wit-| At sny rate Mrs. Coover's “Prince vas sitting in the saloon, when | Arihur” has not proved a satisfactory nt rushed inand witn an oath | mate and the disenchantment having nt blank at him, and without | taken pivce she s-eks a separation. to ascertain the extent of his| Jobn V. Kimball as sued jor a divoree action h way and was lostin | from Mabel Kimball on the ground that the crowd on she 1s addicted to intemprrin mong those who suw the shooting a | Heinrich Barth complains that his wife number were found who asdone by & man, once claimed Louisa hasdeserted h t n, and conse: proiessional | he demands a divorce uently NEW TO-DAY. A mother who is in good physical condi to her children the blessings of a good constitution. The child fairly drinks in health from its mother’s Do you know the meaning of what popularly called long- * or cravings, which beset so many women during pregnancy There is something lacking in the mothe Nature cries out and will be satisfied at all hazards. One woman wants sour things, another wants sweets, another wants salt things, and so on. The real need all the time is to enrich the blood so as to supply nourishment for another life, and to build up the entire generative system, so that the birth may be possible and successful. If expectant mothers would fort- ify themselves with Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, which for twenty years has sustained thousands of women in this condition, there would be fewer disappointments at birth, and they would not experience those annoying *“longing In the following letter to Mrs. Pinkham, Mrs. Whitney demonstrates the power of the Compound in such cases. She say ‘From the time I was sixteen years old till I was twenty-threé, I was troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my monthly periods came on. I made up my mind to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and was soon relieved. After I was married, the doctor said I would never be able to go my full time and have a living child, as I was constitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven months and a half. The néxt time I commenced at once and continued to take your Compound through the period of pregnancy, and Isaid then, if I went my full time and the baby lived to be three months old, I should send a letter to you. My baby is now scven months old and is as healthy and hearty as one could wish. ‘I am so thankful that I used your medicine, for it gave me the robust health to transmit to my child. I cannot express my gratitude to you; I never expected such a blessing. Praise God for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and may others who are suffering do as I did and find relief, and may many homes be brightened as mine has been.”—Mzs. L. Z. WHITNEY, § George St., E. Somerville, Mass, % by 4 those s blood. t was put under arrest | MSS LN 0Y TURNED LOOSE Condemned by a Court to Stay Here Unwill- ingly, Although She Says That She Was Landed by Rank Perjury. Manner in Which the Chinese Ex-. clusion Act Is M de the Sub. ject of a Lurlesque. Mongolian perjury vesterday wiped out the victory achieved by jusiice on the day before by United States Commissioner Heacock, when giggling Miss Ying was remanded inio custody for deportation to China, by the discharge of two of her chums who came over on the same steamer with her. One of those maidens, Wong Lin Oy, was taken before Judge Heacock vester- day for examination as to her right to land here, it being ciaimed by the Govern- ment that the testimony given before Coliector of the Port Wise on which she had been permitted to land was false, ana that instead of being a native of San Fran- cisco she was a native of China, and there- fore excluded by the act of Congress. It appears that after Miss Wong Ling Oy was landed, she and fifty-nine others were fcund to be leading immoral lives in Cuinatown. They were taken to the Chi- nese Presbyterian Missi where Miss Oy | said that she was a native of China, had never been in the United States before, and that the testimony on which she had | been admitted to this Couutry was per- jured. She flatly contradicted everything o which she bkad sworn before Collector Wise. Waen_this fact came to the knowledge of the United States authorities Special Inspector De Witt C. Jackson swore to a complaint against the three score maidens and they werearrested. 1t hasnow passed | into history that they were aliowed to land, with ihree exceptions, including the : Ying. Alter these arrests were aspector Jackson and other officers scoured the Chinese quarter in vain for the wiinesses who swore that some of the women were natives of San Francisco and that the remainder were entitied to land | on other grounds. But they failed to find | a solitary one of the Chinese shopkespers and merchants who bad appeared chiid- made missioner Heacock’s decision in the case of Miss Ying. The manner in which immoral Chinese women effect a landing here is somewhat of a farce. All that is required under the existing law is to have haf adozen al- leged shopkeepers swear that the women are American-born and then have the women coached on board the steamer or in China before they leave. Should there be an arrest after they are landed by the Collector the first batch of perjurers may remain in hiding and & second batch may be secured for $5 & head. And in the midst of all this burlesque Justice preserves the gravity of an owl stupefied with steam beer, while prosecu- tions of Chinese for perjury are so rare as to be invisid'e. TO HONOR ROBBIE BUENS. The Entire Proceeds of the Caledonian Games to Go Toward a Monument. An enthusiastic meeting of the Burns’ monument committee was held in Scot- tish Hall last evening. The sub-commit- tees reporied having about filled the membership of the general committee by adding the following: Jobn D. McGilyray, Captain R. Sudden, James Spiers, Captain Thomas Mein, Kev, Dr. Minton, Rey. Di ackenzie. A. B. McCreery, Robert Di s Dunn, Colonet William Nutt, Judge Belcher, i Kerr, Joan Center, ster; Peter Thompson, Onkland ; Monterey; William Rennie, William Barr, San Rafael; Hon, , Stockton. The committee on membership re- vorted thal the names yet lacking would be added in afew days and thata gen- | meeting of the entire commities { would be called at an early date, after which active operations would be com- { menced. A committee, consisting of James Mec- Nab, John McLaren and William Nicol, was appointed to act in conjunction with the zames committee of the Caledonian | Crub 1o arrange some special features for the Caledonian games, which take place on the last Saturday in May, tho entire proceeds of which will go to the Burns monument fund. An immense gathering is already assured. e A Union Mass-Meeting. To-morrow afterncon &t 3 o'clock Arch- deacon Percy C. Webber of Boston, evangelist of the Episcopal Church, will address a union mass-meeting of I the City churches at the Young Men's Christian Association Auditor. ium, Mason and Ellis streets. Special musie. Mr. Webber will speak on a seiected theme, He is an exccedingly interesiing and able speaker, and has been denominated ‘‘the ody of the Episcopal Church.” The service 8t the Association Hull to-morrow wiil be freo 10 the public. McDouald, Dr. W General J. SHE LIKES CALIFORNIA Georgia Cayvan Once Comes to San Fran- cisco. More On This Occasion She Is at the | like and biand before Collector Wise end | Who had sworn to the things that werenol. | 8o when the giggling Ying last Thurs- day and the oleuginous Oy yesterday were | tried before the United States Commis- sioner a brand new lot of Chinese swear- were i attendance. They swore that Miss Oy was a native of San Francisco; that they knew her father, and so forth, notwith=tanding the fact of her denials in the Presbyterian Mission. She was not called as a witness herself, because she was the defendant, and she’ could *not be | compelled to testify against herse Her statements made in the mission were not roborated, while thera were half a Who swore otherwise, | The Gommi-sioner accordingly decided | hat be would recommend Miss Oy's dis- | rge. His action was approvéd by the nited States Attorney, who moved, also, | that the same action be taken regarding | the other defendant. The motian was | | granted, and Judge Morrow made an order in the afternoon releasing the women. | ““Aiter she was arrest:d she denied everyihing that she had sworn to before the “Coliector.” said Commissioner Hea- cock 10 a CALL reporter yesterday. ‘‘Tney brought in the aflidavits made before the | | Collector, and then the question was, ‘when did she tell the lie?’ There was no | testimony whatever to corroborate her | contradiction, and there was no alterna- tive bui to discharge her.” It will be interesting to watch the prog- | ress of the case against the two Chinese women detained af the Presbyterian mis- | sion a8 wiinesses against Miss Ying. One of them swore that she and the Ying| woman were born in China, and had led | Heed of Her Own Com- Georgia Cayvan, who occupied such ample space in the hearts of the local theater-goers when last she played in this City, is again here. She is a star now. She says she is not. She says she is merely the head of her company, but she is a siar now ell the same, ana she is as well pleased that her| orbit leads her and her satellites to San Francisco as when she was just leading lady and in that capacity captured the an savs she is glad to get | *You know,” she said, *my , training was re- ceived here. I had only a year's ex-| perience when I was made leading lady of | the old California Stock Company, and | the critics and everybody were =0 good to | me that it ix little wonder I am glad to back here. first, or almost my fir: ke to travel at the head of my own ompany, and 1 am anxious to do well. he work bas becowne so interesting, but in another way than it used to. To feel | the part mysell is not enough, each mem- ber ot the company must feel his or her part 100, then the whole effect is as it should be. “Which play do I iike the best? I like ttiem all; it is too hard to choose, so I'll let the public do that. I wiil do my best in all of them.” Miss Cayvan has had phenomenal suc- //"/i,,,%« GEORGIA CAYVAN, Who Ha: Once Ui~ gy W s Come to Charm Theater-Goers More. immoral lives the: The other testified that sbe and Misses Ying and Oy had been coached by a Chinaman 1o swear that they were natives of San Francisco. Will thev also be allowed to land ? 1f the rule shouid be followed out the Commissioner must decide that what they | said in the mission is not to be believed and that the half dozen sleex highbinders posinz as merchants and storekeepers must be believed, and the women will be turned loose upon the community. Collector Wise admitted that Chinese women who have no right to be here are landed, but that is the fault of the evi- dence, not_the Collector. It apparently reputabie Chinese swear that they know those ziris and theic fathers and that they are natives of the United States, there is no other course left but to allow them to land. "He cannot refuse them that privi- lege on generai principles, as he has been often advised to do, for the court will see that the rights of the defendants shall be maintained. 'When Chinese women go to those Christian missions,” asked Mr. Wise, “why don’t the missionaries turn the women over to the Government for de- vortation? The reason is that the mis- sions want to keep these women in the country to reform them. It is their duty to bring the-e women before the court cess since she returned to the stage since ner long illness. She will open at the Columbia on Monday evening in “‘Squire Kate.” B aho LU Retreat at 8t. Mary’s Church, The Paulist Fatners will conduct a rotreat of onc week at St M Churen, Califoruia streer, beginning at the 11 o'clock mass to- morrow (Palm Sunday). Masses will be taid 16:30, 7 and 8 a. . Spectal holy week ser ices at9 A . on Holy Thursday and Good Fri- day,and at 8 A ¥ on Hoiy Saturday. Deve- tion'nl services with mission sermon every evening except Saturday at 7:45. This re- treat will offord an opportuniiy'for fuifilling church precepts. Al are invited. Men are especially asked to come. - The Smalley Coneert. On Monday evening mext the Smalley Con- cert Company of Chicago will give an enter- | tainment at the Young Men's Christian Asso ciation Auditorium, Mason and Ellis streets, 1or ihe benefit of the young men’s improve- ment fund in connection with the assoctation building. It will be the first appearauce of this noted company in San Francisco, and their entertainment promises 10 be‘one of special enjoymen e e e - osenthal Honored. Moritz Rosenthal, the noted pianist, passed through town on Weduesday en route for and have them deported.” “Lawyer Mowry will appeal from Com- Europe and wns plelllllll{ entertained at dunner at the University Club by L. S, Sher- man and Louis Lesser., 5 GREATEST OF ALL PHYSICIANS, Discoverer of Paine’s Celery Compound, fo Whom Thou- sands Owe Their Life and Happiness. xcepling its handful of magnificent | s'atesmen and its military heroes,” says | the mcst recent writer upon America, | “the people owe more to Dartmouth’s | physician-teacher than to any one man. “In evers walk of life, among the high- est office-nolders at Washington, in the homes of the best people in the larze | cities, among tne every-dav folks of the | country, families in comiortable circum- stances, families that ‘live from band to | mouth’ and could not, if they.wished, af- ford the services of any but an ordinary physician—everywiere I have met peop to whotn Paine’s celery compound has been a blessing.” The story of the life-work of this giant | among men has been often told and is familiar to most realers. The likeness | above is probably the best portrait of him | yet printed. It was the world-famed discovery by Prot. Phelps of an infallible cure for those fearful ills that resuit from an impaired nervous system and impure blood which | bas endeared the great doctor to the | world and made his iife an era in the | practice of medicine. Prof. Phelps was harn in Connecticut and graduated in medicine at Yale. unusval talent soon brought him putation and prominence among professional brethren. First he elected to the professorship of anatomy and surgery in the Vermont Univessity Next he was appointed lecturer on materia medica and medical botany in Dartmouth College. The next year he was chosen vroiessor of ti:e chair then vacated by Prof. Robby, and occupied the chair, the | most important one in the country, at the time when he first formulated his most remarkable prescription. In view of the overwhelmi to the value of Pame's celery compound that has recently abpeared from men and women of national reputation, the plcture of Prof. Phe ps s culariv'interesiing. g testimony The fact i+, Pit lery compound is not a patent me ; it iS not a sarsapa- rilla; 1L is not a mere tonic; it is not an ordinary nervin is as far beyond them il as the d.amor glass. It makes people we:l specitic recognizad or to cheap his | was i by eminent practitioners for diseases aris ing from a debilitated nervous system- Prof. Phelps gave to his profession a_posi- ve cure lor sieeple: wasting strencth, dyspepsia. bilicusness, liver com laint. ralgia, rheumatism, all nervous diseases an! kidney troubles. all such complaints Paine’s celery compound has succeeded again and again | where everything els - has fuiled. No remedy was ever so highly recom- mended, because none ever accomplished s0 much To-day Paine’s celery compound stards without com petition for feeding ex+ austed nerves and building up the strength of the bodv. Itcuresradically and permanently. The nervous prostration and general de- | bilily from which thousands of women suffer =0 long that it tinally gets to be a | secand nature with them—-all this suffer- | ing and despondency can be very soon re- moved by properly feeding the nerves, and r2placing the unhealthy blood by a fresher, more hi:hl, aiized fluid. A healthy | increase in appetite and a corresponding gain in weizht and good spirits follow the | use of Paine’s celery compound. | Paine’s ceiery compound is the most re- | markab'e medical achievement of this last 1i of the nineteenth ceniur b CHOA OF LAUSEL A'bers Dodges the Wreath of a Too Ardent Ad- mirer. “Himlet” Attrocts a Smail but C'amorous Auiience—The Bary- tone’s Splendid Work. It was the benefit of Henri Albers, the popular barytone, at the California Thea- ter last night, and the bill was Ambroise Thomas' “Hamlet,” performed for the first time in San Francisco. 2 Either of these two events ought to have sufticed to draw a good louse, but owing to the heat or the familiarity of “Hamlet” as a drama the house was one of the smallest of the season. What was wanting in numbers, how- | ever, was made up in enthusiasm. At the end of the second act, which ends with a drinking song—a gem of melody splen- didly rendered by Albers—the hou e be- | cume noisily demcnstrative. Not content | with flowers and bravos one enthusiast | rose up in his box and hurled a big wreath | of laurel on the stage, which Hamlet | dodged with neatness and dexterity just | when i1 was about to strike his manly | brow. There was no doubt about the favorable impression made both by the apera of “Hamlel” and the splendid work of the principals. Practically it is a tenorless opera, for the part of Laeries, although well performed by Deo, was too small to have much effect on the general perform- ance. ‘The choruses in “*Hamlet” are not very numerous or important, and the burden of the opera is sustained by the orchestra and Hamlet, Ophelia, the king, the queen and the ghos: Henri Albers in the title-role was spien- didly effective, both vocally and histrioni- cally, and Mme. Berthe: sang the fiorid vocal embroideries of Ophelia with de- lightful ease. It was not till the scene on the ram- parts with the ghost that Albers had a chance to astonish his hearers with a dra- matic interpretation’ of a tragic scene which would have won bim appiause in a Pprose theater. As in his Rigoletto one was almost tempted to forget his fine voice and beau- tiful phrasing in the dramatic power of his acting. Tghe invocation to the ghost, 0 mon pere, O mon roi,”’ and the whole succeeding scene of horror, where Hamlet learns of his mother’s infamy, were acted and sung with intense expression and feel- ine. i peare by Berthet not on nin-ly, but acted with sreat expression, particularly at the point whers Ophelis expresses despair at Hamlet's negicct. In the suc- ceed Beuati, the contrs The ‘opera of i and evel 1 urprise lovers of Shak its variations from the play; b considered only as an op fective. The score is much heavier and the themes less melodious than in the pratty opera comique “Mignon”; but t is to be expected_in grand music, and even on a first hearing tne score revealed ma beauties which were appreciated by the audience. The alarm sounded from box 139 at 7:10 o'clock last evening was fora fire caused by the explosion of & coal-oil lamp in a frame dwelling occupied by M. Shawl, S04 street. The loss will not exceed alarm from box 1 7 from a biezing ash barr dwelling occupied by George Garice: Austin street. The damage was slight. Fi caused Ly sparks, broke out in the cupo:o of the Ind Works, Beale street, nesr Folsom, at 10 o'clock lus laze ng duet with Ophelia Mme. Fremeau- | a it is very ef- | was s00n extinguished, Lhe loss only amount- | ing to about §50 Evening Papers in Litigation. The suit of the Evening Post Publishing Company against the Associated Press and John P. Dunning has been assizned to Judge Hebberd of the Superior Court for trisl Pending argument Judge Hobberd has issued & writ of injunction to p: t the defendants | from furnishing mny newspaper reporis or | telegraphic dispatcies to the Daily San Fran- cisco Report. McGowan & Squires are attor vs for the Post Publishing Company. Sl Father forke at Petaiuma. PETALUMA, Cav., April 9.—The local theater was crowded iast evening by an | andjence gathered to listen to an eloquent | discourse from Rev. Father Pater C. | Yorke on *‘The Pope und the People.” Preceding the lecture vocal music was rendered and the St. Cecile Mandolin and Guitar Club gave selections. Father | Yorke was introduced by F. A. Meyer. | | Duriug his stay here he. is being enter- tained by Eathers Cieary and Leaby. il i The Datch people consume more to- bacco per head than the people of any | other country. NEW TO-DAY. CURED THREE YEARS AGO. M . J. H. Cordes of Alameda Was Perma-= nently Cured of Rheumatism. There may be Cheaper Belts, but there a: none as good. Wheo you buy an appliance to you don’t want atoy. AL R. A. T. BANDEN got oue of your 2g0 I was troubled w arm and shoulder I got so bad that I could not lifi my arm. I bad tried sl kinds of linie ments without results and doctors failed to cure me. Your B-It, tuough, relieved the pain atonce, and in 1wo montns I was a well man. 1hsve not been treutlad witn it since, and fee. a great deal better aud sironger in every A, Cal., April 8, 1897. —DEAR SIR: WHEN I lts cbout three years th rheumatism in my respect. Mine is A _permanent cure. [ am recommend ng your Belt to all sufferers, Yours tri; J. H. CORDES, 512 Santa Clara avenue, Alameda, Cal. Whatever the cause, or wherever it lies, Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt will follow the course of rheumatic pains end find the seat of the trouble. Then it will drive it out of the body for good. Electricity . iu its subtle way strengthens the circulation, adds to the vitsl force and removes the cause of all pains and aches from the body. Dr.Sanden’s Belt is the most perfect means of applying it. Such letters menn a great deal to s sufferer undecided as to where to look for aid. They mean that others have been,cured. has huudreds of them and full information. Why notyou? Get the book “Three Classes of Men.” It SANDEN ELECTRIC CO., 8., i fmosite, Office hours—S A. M. to 8 P.M.; sundays, 10 tol. Los AngelssOlfico 204 souin Sroade way; Portiand, Or.. 253 Washington street: Denver, Colo., 835 Sixteenth sireet. D01k —Make 0 mistake 1u ihe humber—E3 343 Markes street Make note of it In the succeeding garden scene Mme. i DE. SANDEN’S ELECTRIC TRUSS CUKES RUPTUKE.

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