The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 12, 1898, Page 1

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The SAN FRANCISCO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1898 SEMINOLE [NDIANS ON THE WARPATH Are Leaving Behind Them a Trail of Blood. PRICE FIVE CENTS. JOBBERY IN THE PRODUCTS OF STATE PRISON LXXXIIL—NO. 43. T VOLUME A FIELD DAY FOR OPPONENTS OF ANNEXATION esecscsssescsssssecsssss s e ANNEXATION MEANS essesscssccce =3=FcR-2-3-F-2-3-2-2-3-3:3-2-3-3- 3 f=d o OPPOSITION The Board of State Prison Di- Manipulating Grain Sack d suffer. After.some parliamentary skirmishing the reso- sacks were needed for the crops. . b o * o : ! E: b4 & rectors have been grossly violat- & | i B TINT + ‘A' . . . 3 . - Fi ¢ ing the law supposed to govern © A t s ll 1§ GAINING : A NEW SLAVE STATE. |lavesy twesy.fivels s Soomyes g | Pices ains ma = enle ! !| Whites Are Reported |¢ Prices have been manipulated O | Y v . © by them, to the great disadvan- © - % [ i ! FRANKFORT, KY., Jan. 11.—In the General Assembly § to Have Been Slain. o (;go el s o e ’Ig,d\\\h':u’v‘n o Wheqt qusers_ 1 4; ! to-day Representative ‘Alb rt Charlton introduced the following § | & the Ostrom act wa gned to & S = 2 befriend. =g ¢ 2 resolution : ’ : = * : 5 : : : < They have played into the & 7 ! “Whereas, There is at present pending in the United ; Special Trains With Armed|& nhands of the importers, and fa- © e P - 5 ¢ States Senate a treaty providing for the annexation of the | Men Hurried to Protect & vored throughout the State the & . . . : Th e 2y Lacis : H.i\\k‘\lam Islands; and, : Eariboro. g f:;";]l"'i‘( ,'h'\‘_a:';, 'r'vr”';“,“".?“n g n Arbltrqry POIICy Wthh e‘ Five or Six Votes ‘ “Whe That annexati rould b ! gt sl g s s s = . hereas, 1at annexation would be tantamount tothe ¢ 2 bl | © ar they depleted their & fet ¢ admission of a slave State, the representatives of which would § ‘g bt e “‘“.""]'"”‘ "r'"'"d.'"r g SUIted n Boomlng prlces 2 i1 Tl e o erap . J KL < uture delivery, in lots exceeding $ necessarily work and vote for the enslavement of labor in }|TERROR IN OELA HOMA et il A for the Importers GDd o ¢ general; therefore, be it 3 - | © raised the prices while the mil- & ) «Resolved, Th e urg Ini 4 — . © lions of unpaid for were O . There Is No Prospect . Resolved, That we u."e the United States Senate # ¢ Horrible Burning of Two Redskins @ still in the State warehouse. o Mlddlel’l')en. That Tt Will B ¢ reject the treaty of annexation and to take such other steps ¢ Has. Caugod Thele Biethien to & They favored largefpurchasers, & D2 n2ss = . be necessary to maintain amicable reiations with ¢ ik Ve O the wealthier farmers and un- © Gained. ! ! | @ scrupulous middlemen. & . % 3 ot . o They ran up the price of sacks © | el . There was some little opposition and Charlton made a } © from $4 75 to $5 40 per hundred in & | ! peech in which he took the ground that organized labor § On last Saturday Lincoln Mc-|Q 2 few weeks, and before the O Too Many Foreign Comy =% 3 o > . : o 4 . o . ¢ o ‘e pY [ o SR P S Geisy and Palmer Simpson, two|© One middleman handled 150.- tions Will Come I t n was passed by a viva voce vote. : r © 000 sacks under these conditlons e Tl i Seminole Indians, were burned at| & ana mulcted the small farmers e eeeseseteet ettt ot e et e e eeeceetecreesoesnens (ho stake by a mob of white men 3 to the limit. fig controlli hat trade for| When Senator Davis “lude s . 23 ant figure in controlling that trade ovhen Senator Davis concluded this | jn Okjahoma, for the murder and | G OO A GOUG OB B UH B Y DAVIS MAKES HIS TALK |the future portion of his speech, it was the gen- e S s T 3 ‘As for their military importance,” understanding that he would con- ascault of Mrs. James Simmons : 4 be- | tinte | b moirw] bat e he hat e ' | While the year is still young and not that the t abun e material it is doubtful the wife of a respectable farmer |greatly sinned against it may be well C an the € whether he will be able to conclude | ,. . L for the State Board of Prison Directors ; e iAu with one more effort. When he ceased | 1iving near the town of Maud. The | ¢, 1ay the foundati orm in the f o was generally applauded atrocious crimes of the Indians matter of manag sale of the by his fellow tors upon his com- jute products of San Quentin. P pr pre tion of the subj were committed in the presence Although the board seem to be bliss- that time was not - 3 i % 3 2 fully indifferent to the awkward pc e The can distant when the great natlons w JOINT RESOLUTION of the unfortunate woman’s small | tion in which they have placed them- if they were not checked, hi selves—and this is the mildest form 1 ¥ children. rildes rm in ! ‘ g House, S As s vcan SECURING ANNEXATION | which their transgressions can be gen- W D. C., Jan. 11. Taking up the question of the rela- CANNOT BE PASSED.| SOUTH MCALFSTER, L T., Jan. 11. | eralized--they have been violating the s ) for the anti- | tionship between Hawaii and the Unit- A telegr cived here at 5:40 |law supposed to govern the subject in | annex sts. They are in an exul- | ¢d States, Senator Davis prosenied @ | Weak Points of the Scheme Become More £ by the train dis- | @ manner intended to convey the Im- tant -night, and those who are :"h‘-‘ h‘ ““‘M hm_"-'_";"d“‘ = Apparent as the Debate in Secret taw, Oklahoma and | Pres : n lh\a! '!hvg\"h.:n'n decided unant 0 tle bit “sporty” of- 3 £ s P 1tes that a band of 150 | MOUSIY to be a law unto themselves. | P : ; 5 ession Proceeds. re on the warpath Not only have the board annulled the the treaty SHINGTON, Jan. 11.—The first e essential provisions of the Ostrom act battle in the Senate over the And are I hind them a trall of | gng trampled its mandatory restric- flan annexation left both com- | blood. The t m was sent by the tions under foot, their laxness of super- Rt s aiesnn nent hoth in h compl w of all the aspects which the s, the United feeling confident of ultimate seriously ¢ sitions of the nged by the recent great | cqui- wers in China, is likely to win votes one which is quite a South ringer, e In the cit Iroad st McAlester. Thomas a Federal 1d Town angic we decline to take?” Instead of having merely two inferior | & Weather forecast at San Fran- He said that up to the present time powers to deal with, we are|® cisco: Rain on Wednesday: south- g rt of Hawalii- we have assumed to se a sort of > to have these and three or four | ¢ €rly winds, s T s 1 in t of Hawali- | we have as . 2 h & » z ir | & Maximum temperature for the past NE Do chairman | supervision over the islands, under the | of vers of Europe thrown | hitira: - S Committee on Foreign | guise of erting the application of | in ger of ion and | e s 1sco Sidcyros nd i e ar the Monroe doctrine, but und increased by that o ¥ 1 1 sem cial utte cireur nces it would be is thought that some e Los Angeles « ¥ of the committ indeed who would consid Coast tor willing to | @ San Diego vhen the | trine a icable in the f ise on an agreement to fur- | . FIRST PA finished. | of our failure to take adv f and improve the leading | s Annexationists Losing Grour h was the first merits | this opportunity to make the nds | seaports their coast, so as to put | @ Massacre Whit ¢ \d on this account and4 our own. our who! fic front into the t| @ f the known fact that Sen-| “In case” asked Senator ( . also | possible condition for either war or Prtson DL HRES Ao ad made a very careful in- | a member of the Committee on For- | peace. One of thelr great objects now, Married for Many Y nds should be to have them eign Relations, “the i annexed, is it the policy tion of the ct, he received 1 attention of the members subj aside from standing in with the admin- | istration, is to cause a larger naval | < rs. THIRD PA Hanna Gets a Majority. 5 J State of e U i orce to ap! 2 5 i Bank President Murdered regardless of individual [ admitted as a State of the Union, with | force to be kfrl' I S Pf“",m‘ 25 woula Sloat Fassett Talks of China. As the speech was delivered be- | their present mixed population? be necessary in case of annexing the el Tar S1aa Tedlers e verbatim report| “Such I do not believe to be the pur- | Hawaiian Islands. If a stmilar end can | Fight for Creede’s Money. be secured. The portion of | pose of any one,” replied Senator Da- be gained by simpler means, it is|« Anchor Line in Hard Luck. deliv to-day consisted , myself, freely admit that the | thought some of them may be won | ® - JEOURIEL BAGH e A 5 over. It'is moted by the anti-annexa-|® The Work 3t Congress ew of the relations between | population of Hawali is not such at Sheyetis ita s raet thal ihe el Union Pacific Securities Held Up. nd He i during the | the present time as would be desirable tionists-as a peculiar fa hat the most | ;. Gjjroy's New Postmaster. ands, and v in- | in an American State, and for my strenuous opposition to the motion yves- | & Murderer Wi t v the United States | 1 say that T consider the character of | ferday to throw open :\lx‘lr:li(:‘j“:x 1 Qs ) a fostering and profect- | the population to be one of the objec- | SUSS the troaty In punlic came o le s ir over them from the beginning, | tions to annexation. Put the advan- | =° "“““”’! o e ion b rediiet] s Vanished ny evidences of the intention | tages so far outweigh this one element | MAN4INE 41 G = s iecere=ie Cleared. tel king th integral | as to render it of comparative insig- | tAry Bavards fisheries treaty with| e SIXTH PAGE. I s et o S e ¢ Great Britain was before the Senate in Fditortal. of the rican domain. -ance. ks : & o Wlins fow Corveney Malicin. 888, opportunit; w a. ol jproach this question,” the Sen-| He added that while he did not be- | 1% The . opp! . which would | & e il ‘with, T hope, a due sense | ponsibility imposed upon me | ate, the result of of momentous conse- - future dwellers of both and the Hawaiian Isl- lieve it t6 be the purpose of any one that the islands should constitute a State of the Union, he would not attempt to say anything that would bind future administrations in this matter. One point which Mr. Davis dwelt on at some length was thedesira- n,” he continued, “is one | bility of the islands, not only to this | of importance so vast that one must of | country, but to all the leading powers | it with a certain | of the world. | because it was, he| “We,” he said, “should take the isl- of timidity have been given the jingoes to roar out insults to England in debate on the fisheries treaty would, they thought, be | < popular with the ignorant mob outside, whereas the Hawailan treaty will af- | ® ford no such chance for inafimmatory | @ speech-making. | WAS NOT DEAD, BUT REMAINEG IN A TRANCE. |+ ST. LQUIS, Jar:)’lw Mrs. Alice Parke, An Incomplete Bill. Words to the Wise. Seasonable Rains. The Iron and Steel Industry. “Rain Up the Mountain™ (Poem). Graveyard Gossip. Stories From the Corridors. SEVENTH PAGE. A Bold Break for Liberty. San Francisco Club's Home. Jubllee Funds Lacking. EIGHTH PAGE. San Franclzeo, Gateway to Alaska. - Real Estate Market Review. said, very difficult to present all the|ands while we have the OPPOTtunity.| 29 years of age, residing at 422 ec. Reat Eeaie Marke points involved as they should proper- | and if we do not want them, it will be | onq street, East St. Louls, went into a Ricing at Cekland, . 1y be presented, however much care |a very easy matter for us to get rid of el d attention one might have given to them on our own terms.” the s He showed that they would be a very important territorial acquisition to either Japan, England or Russia, and expressed the opinion that either of | these powers would take the islands off our hands at any time we might make | known our desire to be rid of them. It will be easy enough, he said, to turn them over to some other country if we find them to be an undesirable acquisi- tion, but who will say that it will be so easy for us to take them at some future time in case we voluntarily deprive half an eye to the importance of the | ourselves of the present opportunity. trade of the Orient could discern the | He therefore urged that the experiment fact that they must cut a very import- | should be made at this time. ator, without further apélo- inched into the presentation subject before the Senate. He consumed considerable time in a gen- eral presentation of the resolutions for annexation, saying that these were both commercial and strategic. Referring to the commercial reasons for controlling the islands in the in- terest of this country, he called atten- tion to the location, midway in the Pa- cific Ocean, and said that anyone with 4 | not move, but she is all right now, with trance Monday morning at 10 o’clock, | and it was thought she was dead. Her | heart seemed to stop beating, and she turned cold. She remained in this con- dition until this afternoon, when some | neighbors came in to assist in prepar- ing her body for burial. She then shivered slightly, opened her eyes and looked around. The sight of the crowd so shocked her that she fainted. A doctor was hurriedly summoned, and | in a few minutes she was brought around all right. It is now thought she will recover in a short time. She said that she remembers nothing from Mon- day until arcused this afternoon. She says she simply feit queer and could 000006006000600000000 0 the exception of weakness and a queer | feeling about her head and stomach. l Cews Along the Water Front. Shea Calléd on to Report. Durrant's Body Goes to Pasadena. TENTH PAGE. The Commercial World. ELEVENTH PAGE. Trouble Brewing for Chinese. News From Across the Bay. Dan T. Cole the New Cofner. TWELFTH PAGE. Welcome Rain Over the State. THIRTEENTH PAG Births, Marriages and Death FOURTEENTH PAGE. Cosmos Club and the Ladies. Lawvers Almost Come to Blows. Meeting of the Regents. Sensations Among the Medicos. Counterfeiters in the Tanks. 0009000000090 00 000000 sly awaiting (O R R A $00069006600000000000900¢ nt at Earlboro. The vision and want of vigilance are blam- violated the law that the resu been evi time and time a, and injurious, practically morally ain; ts of these violations have >s have eluded their per- as to the | victo The Senators who opposed mveyed was that | able for much hardship and injustice Marey treaty. showing why it h ad nlwt annexation are sure that the sentiment noles were avenging the work Worked against the smaller farmers by | "t," 'pnrf;];l x;« . n: he ’1“-":1‘- > to 11’1:‘ “,‘ it r.t\:'r is at {?u'nd;hie BOW, AN | o g ok o aiee RSt S ha_mi:vr dealers in sacks and country | treaty which was e during Mr. | will slowly but surely. ebb. They fur-| e e e paaes =0 B e on Middlemen. i Harrison's administratio He 186 believe that if the treaty fails of | __ 2 . | Scarcely can it be possible that the in- quoted many of the utterances of Sec- | ratification in executive session, no 'riday last, and that the infuriated |jquities of a system which has devel. | developments show that | retary Marey and also of Daniel We amount of argument over a joint reso- | Seminoles had already massacred |oped rapidly during the vear past under | ir Senators who were count- | ster, and in ending, nexation can secure its en- twenty-five men, women and children. | their very e: into law. This is not so much The station agent gave the addition- | ception, since the complaints against it - > the Hou will be affected al information t the band started made by the sufferers have o ioned Honto ; the failure as because the clc S e the inquiries conducted by The Call. Hr‘z e ; “: ' ;‘ H: :h‘v\ 1-.-?*':;-; ”.‘m\rm ret ;-*- Eos vi cowed intention of set-| It 1S with no desire to bring the board 1t purpose sion Il result in a de atior o ute, . efr rations i pact of, the antl-annexationists ‘ flce 10 Wecumnen and Kiliug all “”I Al e o ) a 7 - S Pl whom they met, but that the Indians U2l IntegTity or to produce sensational ~day that e le sch And this 3 NS | offects t The Call takes them to task. te against the Un > rules, is possible if any con- | were reported to have changed their | N, inferential charges will be laid at | ters =ain _He conten ¢‘d that their h nun enat are | course and were at the time of the | their door. It will suffice in the public | tory, 8o far as they have a u ! sending of the message heading toward | interest, and more particularly in the | history, is the result of ],\!‘ : he which is said to have | Barlboro interest of those farmers who stand ],,:V,rt,;‘\l ar l\,, L :‘ ,r‘,‘ "‘, er ’(’\ o ”(r. t ,;..;1".mmy” : !'1«\— The receipt of this startling Informa- Most in need of encouragement and P sentiment and ge hical f. ¢ things on the Pacific had been | {17 has created intense excitement in | Protection. that the board have grossly the treaty sentiment 3 hical | face « s o e Pacifl d be 1ot afford, efther in it§ own inte ainst annexation as for it. Scores of people here| The motive of the establishment of a | or the interests’ of the Hawaiian pe Th: ANNex: ts regard it as T e — | jute plant at the San Quentin prison | ple, to allow this opportunity to gain| a g nt in their favor. for it add Continued on Second Page. was to maintain an industry with con- b ~com- | control of them to pass. Buppose We | materially to the complications Which | weee——————— | vict labor which would fn no manner should not ratify the present treaty we invite when we go into the bus X compete with the free white labor of | could we consistently continue to ex- | of extending our naval and c ® ercise the right to prevent other na- cial picket line into the middle of the | 3 TEWS OF . w tions from assuming the control which largest of the oce 6 NEWS OR TR DAY SAN QUENTIN JUTEMILL. the State, and at the same time prove ; such grain sacks as they needed each of especial benefit to the struggling | year at a price exclusive of the pro- farmers and other small consumers of jute products. To them was to be af- forded the opportunity to purchase fits usually accruing to importers and middlemen. istrative privileges allowed the board this result was not attained. Accordingly, the law of February 27, 1893, the full text of which is printed herewith, provided for the sale to farm- ers alone of sacks and jute goods in the Under the former admin-

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