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19 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1898. The sotan Addresses a Crowded House. tHe Learned to Revere Lincoln, but He Cannot Tolerate Hanna. o ! highwaymen last Friday night that cost WA | hitn Some money: a waten and.chain, dia- A/ J mond locket and a_silver matchbox. ‘ | | Mr. Marshal left the theater on Fri- ~ i idn_v night and started up Stockton street | | toward Plne. When he arrived at the ; FOR S]LVER stone wall surrounding the old Buckley place, between Sutter and Bush streets, two men suddenly stepped out from the | | shadows and ome, presenting a pistol at | his head, commanded him to throw up | his hands. Marshal obeyed, and the fellow's com- Mi | panion, who was armed with a black: — | Jack, went throu, im, takin se Eloquent INNEe: Mg & mnall aum. of money and | the other above-mentioned articles. | The matter was reported to the police. ! —_—————— BURGLARS ARE BUSY. The Police Are Able to Make Several Arrests. Thomas Stanton and Thomas Roach, | two boys, broke into the grocery of L. | W. Schneider, Twenty-sixth and Valencia | streets, about 2 o’clock on Friday morn- mg. Mrs. Schneider heard them and be- to scream. They rushed out of the place into the arms of Policemen King and Young, who arrested them on a c- | charge of burgl Knutt Frass wa hour yesterday Says Goldbugs Prevented Re ognition of Cuban discovered at an early morping by Policeman would -have made a name among the fraternity and gained the confidence of the people. I took the amount of- fered, as that was all there was in sight. I do not intend to take legal steps, as the law gives us no redress.” Smith denies that Ryuu will ever fight Walcott. as the welter-weight draws the color line. 't is admitted by all local sports, count out or not, that Green was a beaten man. —_——— FIREMEN SACRIFICE THEIR LIVES TC DUTY. An Explosion During a Conflagra- tion Causes the Death of Six Men. KALAMAZOO, Mich., Feb. 27.—Fire broke out in Hall Bros.’ laboratory at 10 o'clock to-night. While the firemen were trying to extinguish the flames in the second story, a. terrific explo- sion took place, blowing up the entire side of the building. The first explo- sion was followed by two others. Fire- men on the ladders were hurled in every direction by the fearful concus- sion. The flames shot high into the Patriots. Feld trying to force open the lock on the RAG TIME HOGAN WAS ROBBED Black Patti’s Leading Man Lost His Dia- mond. | | Prize Fighter Tom Lansing and His Friend Arrested on Suspicion. Rigid Search Failed to Reveal the Whereabouts of the Lost Gem. lhttag' Wwas in the room when you went out?” ‘Mr. Hogan rolled his eyes for awhile, and then replied: “He was searched.” Then he retired to another part of the station and sat down near an officer. “I've been here only a few months,” remarked Lansing to a Call reporter, “and I have put two men on my prize ring record. If I ever meet that coon in a dark alley he'll be the third man on my record of knockouts.” After this episode Hogan was visibly nervous. “I don’t charge nobody,” he sald. = “All I want is to get my pin back.” Hogan leaves the city to-day for the southern:part of the State, and he ex- pressed his regret that he could not stay to prosecute the case. When asked why he did not progure the arrest of Tom Trice, he replied that Trice was an old-time friend of his; that he had intrusted hundreds of dollars to Trice, and had never found him unfaithful. The men were released late last night, as the evidence did not seem sufficient to warrant their being held. e b BAYS FOR A door of W. Weldon's pet-beating air, and it looked for a moment as | ADVERTISEMENTS. BLACK DRESS - FABRICS. We take pleasure in an- nouncing the arrival of an elegant stock of Foreign Black Dress Goods for Spring and Summer wear. SPECIAL. e hment, with « | though there would be an awful con- | He was sent to the Ci Prison booked on a charge of attemptzd the flagration. The crowd was dazed by the explosion. Horses were thrown e down and windows in the vicinity shat- Ernest Hogan, author of “All Coons Look Alike to Me,” lost a $750 diamond | solitaire stud yesterday at the matinee BELOVED BARD FEELS SURE OF VICTORY. v. He acted so queerly that he was sent before the In- e by Judge Joachimi- d that he was per- s returned to the + Firmly Announces That Silver Forcss ' Orezzi Salvin John L. Are Certain to Win Their 17 red B Delreav Battles ted eman Yy were wn, and Ivini and B re booked for a public ro ssman Charles A. Towne Sunday night the ta spoke arge and en- the Soroma Pac ta spoke to a large and en- | (UL, s “warehouse ~at 1240 Battery jastic audience at -Metropolitan stole a lot of stuff and destrovecd Temple last night, his theme being the rable quantity more. They also > into a butcher-shop at Sans Salvini is the leader been twice arrested R \d its purpose: . His man- f well-trained at compass anc i are an- WERE AFTI ns and dignity. 4 asted for more ! \Y il vl AT CROON'S SCALP interrupted by fre- M I Jus plause. flver campaign has only just This begu he opened. T Ryan and Green Claim That el oy cibat efo National Clubmen Have e followed the asser- on that Br “Welched.” ¢ come out of the campaign and that the defeated — the at 000,000 in numb ver party, had the air Said Money to Have Been Brought me | | tered. | The work of rescue began at once | and the building was left to its doom. | Intense excitement prevailed until 1a m. The dead are: P. H. M'HUGH, fireman. JAMES QUIGLEY, fireman. of the Black Patti Company at the California Theater. He values the pin highly, because he says he paid the | price named to the widow of W. J. Scanlan, the Irish comedian, when he | bought from her $15,000 worth of the | jewelry of the dead actor. | Dr. Friedrich K. Castelhun Agreeably Surprised by His Friends. | De Friedrich Karl Castelhun, whose Hogan’s story is that, while he was | seventieth birthday was so enthustastic- waiting to go on the stage for the mat- | ally celebrated last night by a large num- inee at,the California Theater yester- | ber of German-American citizens in the - S hall of the Schlaraffia Club, 411 Bush V. E is dressing room % éfl ga'yshe; A ?""“ o ]f‘_* 1 of his anq | Street, was born February 27, 1525, in Y e o anbarn,ya LU s Nordheim, near the ancient -city of Tom Lansing, a prize fighter from Ken- | \vorms on the Rhine, Germany. At the tucky. There was present at the time a colored man named Thomas Trice, who sat on a trunk at the end of the room. Sanborn came with his friend ¢ for the purpose of hearing the Black St age of 18 he graduated from the Gym- nasium of Bensheim, where he received a thorough classical education, and in 1847 came with his parents to the United ates. Here young Castelhun took up rather than of men who had They were beginning fight for human free- that the great y is that he is a He appointed a goldbug for of the Treasury,” said hen recommended to plans of the Gold Demo- anapolis. Does this look In fact, there is nduct of the Re- mind one of its . I learned to revere Lin- they now give me a Mark Hanna as a model. This degeneration shows the extent of the degeneration h getting along all the b d defeated for Congress, for I ex- one of the great throng to escort to the White the greatest Democrat the has produced since Abraham Lir I can well call Lincoln a Democrat and Bryan a Republican, for both were, like Washington and Jef- ferson; men who had ple aith in the peo- and whose doctrines are consist- st no sleep because | ent with the ideas of a government of people.” A large part of the arguments of the g were the well-known assump- f the silver men that the appre- m_of gold is steadily making a f slaves of all who are not the s-of bonds. A s that wherein the speaker narrated his experiences as a member of Congress at the time the Cuban question was before the House. He held that there was a time two country could ha to settle the question consistently with peace and honor, but the gold power that owns the bonds interfered, as in the case of the Turks and Armenians, and prevented the recognition bell rents. I do not h orator, “that , -as Tepor v Mark Hanna newspapers, ble to the —owners It is said that the bonds are to dorsed by the United States Gov- ernment. It. wa then attempted to show that there"is every reason to believe that the steady depreciationof the products of human industry, by reason of the gold standard, will reach a point that the people will not endure. He said it was, according to great economists, not a question of gold or silver, but merely 2 question’ of how much the people would -suffer from the inequalities of the .old standard before they would re- volt At the conclusion of the address there was prolonged applause and much cheering. The Democratic Central Club -attended as a_body, dressed in white ducking. DESPOILED WITH A GUN AT IIS HEAD Irving Marshal Held Up and Robbed on Stockton Street. Two Men With Masks Go Through Him in Regulation Bandit Fashion. Irving Marshal, the janitor at the Bald- wxirp Th had an adventure with t PIMPLY FACES Pimples, blotches, blackbeads, red, rough, oily, mothy skin, itching, scaly scalp, dry, thin, and falling hair, and baby blemishes prevented by CUTICURA SoAr, the most effective skin purify- ing and beautifying soap in the world, as well as purestand sweetest for toilet, bath, and nursery. (Uticura Is «old throuchont the world. Porren D. & C. Conr., Sole Props., Bostou. (7" How to Beautlfy the free. BLOOD HUMORS oo sSeai UTICURA REMEDIES. ADVERTISEMENTS. - people, for the people and by the riking part of the address was ars ago when the | e done a great deal | of the | is negotiating | " peace in some way that will be | of Cuban | Back at the Point of a Revolver. Everybody Talking. If the words of an eyewitness are to be taken as true and there seems no legitimate reason to doubt them, “Fight Promoter Groom of the Na- tional Club had a very close call yester- day when he came to settle up finan- with Ryan and Green, the welter- weights who put up so game a battle at Woodward's Pavilion the night be- fore. In fact, it is claimed that as a re- sult of the wrangling and an attempt of Groom to evade payment he was made to come to terms at a revolver's muz- zle. It seems that the articles of agree- ment provided that the two men should have 60 per cent of the gross gate receipts, but should be guaran- teed the sum of $4000. The receipts were said to figure only $4800, and the two men demanded the $4000 instead of 60 per cent of this sum when they went into Groom’s hat store in com- pany with Al Smith, Ryan’s mana- er. A hot wrangle ensued, according to the tale told by George Harting, the club’s timekeeper at the fight, and one of the fighters grabbed up a sackful of silver, whereupon Groom laid hold of a sack of gold coin and started for the door, but was forced to return at the revolver's point. It is further stated that the men were finally forced to take the 60 per cent. Smith denies that revolvers were drawn, but admits that there was a good deal of trouble over the money question. He adds that Ryan is will- ing to fight Green again under the aus- pices of the Empire Club, but will never again let the National Club men have charge of a fight in which he engages. Groom admits also that there was a war of words, but asserts that the $4000 was only a paper agreement, and that it was understood by both men that 60 per cent of the gross gate receipts were to go in any case. “I heard there were some wild stories going round about Ryan and myself having trouble with Groom and Gibbs,” said Green last night, “‘but there is no truth in them. There was no attempt on Groom’s part to leave the store with a bag of money, nor were there any pistols drawn. “I simply went to the store to get what was due me as a participant in the fight and while there met Ryan. Groom stated to us that owing to the smallness of the house he could not live up to his original agreement with- out loss to himself and partner. He therefore offered us 60 per cent of $4800, the amount realized. We ob- jected to his going back on his con- tract and told him so. Arguments were of no avail, however, and seeing we could do no better, we took the per- centage, amounting to a little over $2800, each taking $1400. “1 am a friend of both Groom and Gibbs, and dislike to talk about the | matter, but as long as you are familiar | with the details I do so. I think that they should have stood by their agree- ment, even though they did not realize a large sum. Had they done so they Last Night. Ex-Congressman Charl:s A. Towne and Some of Those Who Heard Him Plead for Silver at Metropolitan Temple Patti and his friend Hogan sing and went to Hogan's room, in order to gert | seats for the performance. Hogan went out to do his turn, and in the interim had some one show his visitors some unoccupied seats in the dress circle. GEORGE HOLLIDAY, fireman. | CHARLES WHITING, fireman. | JOHN HASTINGS, drayman. | WILLIAM WAGER, fireman. | The injured are: L. L. Holloway, druggist, both legs broken and back broken, injured internal’y, will die; Al- bert Labon, concussior of the brain; John McAllister, legs broken; Eugene Dole, injured about the head. Several others, whose names cannot be obtained at this hcur, were injured. DR. SANARELLI CURES ‘ YELLOW FEVER PATIENTS.| Copyrighted, 1898, by James Gordon Benaett. BUENOS AYRES, Feb. 26— am ad-| vised by the Herald's correspondent in Rio Janeiro, Brazil, that Dr. Sanarelli has effected six cures out of ten yellow fever cases which were considered fatal by lo- cal physicians. Dr. Sanarelli has for some months past been experimenting with his new cure on yellow fever pa- tients in Sao Paulo, where there is an epidemic of the disease. —_— NAPLES—Arrived Feb from New York. QUEENSTOWN-—Arrived Feb 26—Stmr Etru- ria, from New York. ST MICHAELS—sailed Feb 26—Stmr Penin- su.ar, for New York. tmr California, | but $150 in silver coin and a few love | When Hogan came into the station he | ‘When he came back he found that the diamond stud which he had left in the bosom of his shirt hanging on a hook‘ was missing. He at once raised an outcry in rag time, and Police Officer Thomas R.| Flinn of the California Street Station respended. Hogan pointed out Lansing and Sanborn in the dress circle. Flinn called upon them to throw up their hands, and they complied. Then the | officer searched the seats and the vicin- | ity, after having first satisfied himself | that the diamond was not on the per- sons of the suspects. He then took the | men to the California Street Station, | where they were obliged to strip and | submit to a more rigorous search in the presence of Lieutenant Esola. Nothing letters were found on the men, and the i palice generously refrained from perus- ing the letters. The men's names were placed upon the small book, and they will be de- tained pending further investigation. was confronted by Lansing: “You're a nice fellow,” Lansing, with a sneer. “What's the matter?” inquired Ho- 8an, in evident trepidation. remarked | the "German character, dn’t you arrest the coon oo the study of medicine and completed af- terward his medical education at the Uni- versities of Wurzburg, Vienna, Prague and Berlin. After his return to America | he settled in St. Louis, Mo., and became | soon a prominent physician.” In 1875-76 he | lived in San Francisco, but returned to | St. Louis. ‘In 185 he came again to San | o and has ever since lived here. | astelhun is one of the foremost German-American poets of the United States, and his poems appeared last year | in their second edition. There is much of the grace, clearness and power of Schil- ler and Goethe in his verses, and to read | his splendid hexameters means to admire them. Professor M. D. Learned, at the | head of the department of Germauic lan- | guages In the University of Pennsylvania, | recently wrote of the distichs of Dr. Cas- telhun: “What s them particularl agreeable to my ear Is the admirable co- incidence of rhetoric and metrical pause at the caesura. I have been reading and | comparing some of Castelhun's distichs | with classical German examples and [ must bestow upon him the laurel.” Dr. Castelhun is essentially a political poet, or knight valiant in the service or religious, political and social liberties. His poems are full of the best features of the proverbial honesty, the sincerity and reliability of One case (30 pieces) 52-INCH GENUINE BLACK CHEVIOT SERGE, - 75c Yard. SPECIAL. One case (30 pieces) 52-INCH BLACK ENGLISH DIAGONAL, 75c Yard. SPECIAL. One case (I8 pieces) 52-INCH GENUINE BLACK TWINE CLOTH, 75c¢ Yard. SPECIAL. One case (24 pieces) 52-INCH . BLACK ENGLISH SERGE, 75c Yard. NOTE. Our patrons residing in the Interior are urged to write for samples of the above Four Special Lines of Black Dress Goods at once, as they are undoubtedly the best values we have ever offered. TELEPHONHE GRANT l2<4. ui, 113, 115, U7, 19, 121 POST STREET. . . character, the deep love for the family the home, the old and the new country. However, many of his choicest produc tions could never be published in the @+ 4+ +++++++++4+4+++ Fatherland, they being altogether democratic to suit those in power, and | for this reason the collection of poems, a | + handsome volume of 260 pages, had to be | 4 printed in Switzerland. 00 | 4 | The committee in charge of the ban- | ¥ quet consisted of Professor Ad. Herbst, | 4 president; Professor Julius Goebel of | 4 Palo Alto; M. Greenblatt, editor of the Daily German Demokrat; Dr. A. Wil- helm, E. C. Priber, Dr. Schulz and Pro fessor W. Zimmermann. During the evening a beautiful album, with his picture, was distributed as a souvenir among the guests, containing original contributions of Messrs. Goebel, Herbst, Greenblatt, Glauch, Priber, Bund- schu and others. Among the official toa werethe following: Address of wul- come, Professor A. Herbst: “Castelhun | and German Poetry,” Professor Goebel; “Dr. Castelhun, the Patriot of Two Worlds,” W. Zimmermann; “Dr. Castel. | hun and the German-American Pres: Greenblatt: ‘‘Castelhun, the Phys cian,” Drs. Wilhelm and Behr; “Dr. Cas- telhun and His Relations to the German- Americans,” Dr. May Magnus; r. Cas- telhun of St. Louis,”” E. C. Pribe C i;\(-lhun and His Family,” Chris A brother of the doctor, Fritz J., and his oldest son, F. K. Castelhun Jr., are well-known lawyers of this city; a sister, Miss Mary Castelhun, has been for over twenty-five years principal of the Hum- boldt = Primary School,. and the two daughters of the septuagenarian are both graduates of our State University. —_———— THE OLD FRIENDS. Last Wednesday night the recently elected officers of the Society of Old Friends were installed by ex-President Robert Ferral, after which Dr. F. F. Lord, the retiring president, was pre- sented with a gold ,badge on behalf of the society. uuring the evening there was Tead 4 letter from Presiqent Mo Kinley, acknowledging his election as an honorary member of the society. Judge Campbell, the new president, presided at a high jinks that furnished entertainment for the many who crowded the hall. —————— DAUGHTERS OF ST. GEORGE. Britannia Lodge of the Daughters of St. George, at its last held meeting adopted resolutions expressive of their ‘‘deep and heartfelt sympathy for the mothers, widows and relatives of the brave men who recently lost their lives on the Maine."” It has been decided to give the old Eng- lish tea party under the auspices of this Q‘}-d”hm St. George’s Hall on the 2ith of March. | | | e Dr. Bund- ADVER' TISEMENTS. D-AWSON CITY, Nov. 13, ’97. Mr. Ttomas Butler— Dsar Sir: c e e The Mackinaw Clothing and Woolen Blank- ¢ts made by Brown Bros. & Co. are the best on the Klon- dtke. Every one wants OGPt ++ 4+t 4+ Pttt 44 PP L4044+ 4444444444441 P41+ 4 4444444 E P4 P44 EE 44 000000000000 0000¢ J S. F. Our stores are rented and we wind up business in two weeks. We will not resume in any 4 0000000000 00000000C0000000O00000 4-PIECE MAHOGANY SILK UPHOLSTERED PARLOR SET. 4444144+ 44 44444440 000000000 NOOANABANOANRAN Cash or Little-at-the- other location, nor will our + Time Payments. firm be succeeded by any + other fim, ;3 J. NOONAN, 3 i + 1017 to 1023 MISSION STREET, + 518 to 532 MINNA STREET, = © + Above Sixth. o + © Phone South 14. Open Evenings. o =a + +|0000000CO0QCQQOOC000Q + + 54 : AT AUCTION 11 0’CLOCK,: And daily for Two Weeks ONLY—from I! to 5, FINAL RETAIL SPECIAL SALE, BY ORDER PROBATE COURT, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 18908, AT 12 O’CLOCK NOON, At Salesrooms, 626 Market St. Property of Estate of W. B. Dolan. A GRAND INVESTMENT. N. W. cor. Polk and Grove sts.—Stores and flats: rental value, $525 per month; within 2 blocks of Market st. and 1 block of City Hall; size of lot, 137% feet on Polk st. by 170 feet on Grove st. This property has a grand future. > o Q a2 S Z SALE. 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