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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 14, 1899. 3 MR CHOATE'S | ARE CUBANS COMPARISONS | PLOTTING AN NOT POPCLAR, INSURRECTION? | —— e, Arouses English Ire by Gomez and His Military Staff| Likely to Make Trouble for Uncle Sam. —_— Classing Sampson With | the Great Nelson. 1» L atch to The Call. YORK, May 13—The Herald's rrespondent sends the official reports »m Major General dowing trouble with the reason to believe that re not altogether satis- uation in the island. with whom I talked to-day the danger lay in the nding Gomez. Gen- a staff of 150 officers, her support or provide was with a view to sp NEW t ei and it letter to the Pre,fldfln! (nnun d\e~ not p 1bans to maintain their the ( ¥ ization much longer. If the = nt desired does not occur 2 1t is made to regarded in s cation of preparation ubans for an insur ited States ment for the purpc s and ammuniti arent to offici thm the U: »n of Cuban who has jus nistrat! ADVERTISEMENTS. 000990 000000000 GAS§EN’S amous Anoliances forMen NO DRUGS. ~ NO TREATMENT. Expert Opinion of the World’s Leading Specialists. DR. BARON von KRAFT-EBING (Royal Imperial Counselo” of the Court and Royal Imperial Professor at the anersntv of Vlenna» stateS' *T POSSIBLE EXPEDIENT 00009700000 DR. P. FURBRINGER (Royal Imperial Professor at the University of Berlin) stateS' nded exp e can refrain from ac- P at t’h the sen, which stand to-day @ SDY for lack of power in = DR. JOS LEVY (Editor of the Berlin Medico) states? inventions are THE BEST KNOWN REMEDY that can the different stages of premature weakness.” Extract fronr the world-famed medical publication, ““VITASEXUALIS,”’ Leipsic: entions are THE BEST KNOWN R natural power and for IMPROVING WEAKNESSES.” The above statements are fully in- dorsed by all the leading physicians of San Francisco, who have tendered us their strong- est recommendations. PATRONS MAY BRING WITH THEM ANY REPUTABLE PHYSICIAN THEY DESIRE. THE SEMPER COMPANY, e Agents in America for PAUL GASSEN’S APPLIANCES. .532 GEARY STREET (Near Powell,) S. F ENTIRE BUILDING. Telephone Red 3206. 0Or at Main Office, No. 9 West 2Ist St., New York. » EDY to-day for INDIVIDUAL Office hours—9 to 12 a. m.; 1:30 to 6 p. m.; evenings, 7:30 to 9 oclock. 10a. m. tolp.m. Private appointments can be arranged by correspondence (strictly er provision that he re- | | and Powers. TEXT OF PAPAL ~ BULL ORDERING A | YEAR OF JUBILEE Revival of the Holy Year Insti- tuted Since Ancient Time. NEW YORK, May 13.—A cable to the| utm;e Iwho h“ ‘:‘e )lmur run thi_dsgg:r of losing the heavenly portion offeres o Journal from Rome says: This is a | %hom™ “Fpis s the aim of the Holy Year, | translation of the Pope’s bull, ordering | as the tender mother church will try dur- | | a year of jubilee to celebrate the aus- | ing this period to discipline souls, to teach picious closing of the nineteenth cen- | i ““'n"o“ e mnaace tury: With this principle she will multiply her | Leo to the Bishops and servants of ‘pm\ rs to the calm outraged majesty of | heaven to obtain abundance of heavenly, God; to all faithful Christians, salutation | a"d benedictio | gifts. In opening treasures of indulgences | Whereof it is the dispenser, the church in- | vites the whole of christendom to the hope of pardon. Why ought we not to hope for good re- | sults if- the people prepare themselves | spontaneously to honor Christ by cele- brating the end of the century? We cannot propose anything holier or more utary for men, or more of what men ought to desire, aspire to and hope for, than to dsk from Jesus throughout | this holy year for that salvation found | | in his resurrection, {n abandoning whlch‘ | men go to perdition. Many men refuse with Cfln(flmp( this saving mercy. We have seen in these | ¢ of the end of the cen- rough the grace of God, . has decided us to | toward the and per- of the h\‘l\ ause It ought to be ac- us holy ceremonies because it furnishe for correcting morals tn holiness. benefits arising | jatter times a renewal of the Arian| under the Pontifi-| heresy regarding the divinity of Jesus. cate.of Leéo XII. At that epoch r(llgious But have courage and let us to odr occurred in Kome, making | work! Let all Ch ns contribute to ground of God. these proposals by cxamples of piet In spirit let us recall the crowd of pil- grims, the multitude of the faithful visit- ing temples In_processions, the sacred orators who spoke to the public, tiff himself, surrounded by Cardinal ing examples of plety and charit ng to people what is form of impiety v of Jesus. Joxrinz in te a. and with the approbation of the car we order a universal jubilee, to commen of Rome with the fi ar we concede of sins to or that of at least e salvation of Chris- ness or_other t the Roman nd_communi- the_indulgence y nalized use the O ian religion God continued fruition “time, what blind errors How many people are 1 ruin! What grief see how many Christ- | license of thought, are h ift of faith! jury these cted upon the Rome as the cel Here is his empire Here under at of his of Dud tendeticiés | on carth guarded the ng part in & dan- From here spreads light to all the world. ruggle, without | Whoso remc himself from Rome re- the goods of this | moves himself from Je . Religious monume! the tombs of the af of the martyrs, Rome. os VIEW COMBINES WITH NEW ALARM i, he catacom! add to the sanctity Ivation to ali | ST. LOUIS’ ADVANCE " CHECKED BY THE RE ANDING. W. L. Pet. 13 NATIONAL LEAGUE S 1 458 429 s . 1 e Reds hit Touns | Strong Stand of Western | ning, when four singles Labor Un]on_ was ad three men | 1d not score. ey H | | Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SALT LAKE, Utah, May 13. ——The Western Labor Union has pracncally completed labors in the convention held | during the past week. To-day the offi- cers for the ensuing term were elected, and nearly all other business except the final adoption of the constitution ‘was disposed of. The president and vice president were elected by acclamation and without division. For the other offi- cers there was a spirited but friendly contest. The election of officers took place this | morning. The present president, Dan McDonald of Butte, was re-elected ann and Wood; Young, Con- ires—O'Day and Brennan. y of the game At- 22 Lajole and P Fiflel president for the ensuing term by ac- - S . | clamation and without the division. | Ha» h) | Vice President John Troxel of Cripple | 5 @ | Creek was elected in the same way. M. il of Butte was elected secre- ahiheld and | tary and treasurer. It was decided to hold the next con- T | vention in one year from now at Den- ver. The vote for the place of the next’ annual meeting stood: Wallace 16, Butte 14. The executive committee Is composed | men played ~n»n«{m- of pla: vatting hard Denver 33, | of Delegates Nash of Spokane: Ea H. E. | man of Wallace, Idaho; Lane of Crip- 5 1! ple Creek; Farrar of Alberta, Canada, 14 2| and McPhee of Cripple Creek. The president and vice president are ex- officio members of the same committee. On the subject of the Couer d’Alene mining troubles the following preamble nd resolution was adopted: Whereas, It has come to the knowledge es—McFarland, McGuire and Hoydon Fi Umptres—Emslie and | M of this convention that the Governor of Farrell. Umpires—McDonald and Emslie Idaho has so far forgotten his oath of BOSTON, May 13— three-bagger by Long | Office and honor as a man as to turn the executive branch of the government of the State over to the owner of the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mines, who, through his attorneys and a pliant general of the regular army, has established conditions { in the Coeur’ d'Alene mining region far worse than ever existed in Russian Si long fiy to left by Duffy in the last in- ning won the game for the Champlons to-day. Both pitchers were effective, Willls particu- | larly so, and hits were scattered. The feature of ihe game was the fine fielding of Holmes. | Attendance, 3560. Clubs— B H Eberia or on Cuban sofl during the Spanish | Boston ... 1 4 1 reign of terror; and Baitimore Whereas, It is a fact that Ameflcan Batteries—Willls and Bergen; Kitson and Robinson. Umplres—Gaffney ana Andrews. CHICAGO, May 13.—The Colonels gave the Orphans another hard rub to-day and were defeated at the end only when a four-handed liberty and the constitution of our coun- try have been supplanted by a military despotism In its worst form, wherein the | owners of silver mines in the Coeur| d’Alene district are denied the right of | employing any man unless he first makes double play closed the game. Demont was | miavit that he is a non-union miner; and sp! |k§g»h) Pzg:‘m the ninth inning. At- | “5oy oreos "Many other citizens, including X : prominent’ business men of the district R. H. E | who are guilty of no crime other than 5 1| that they have expressed their sympathy . with the miners in their righteous strug- th and Donohue; Cunningham | gle for the very existence of their organi- Umpires—Burns ¢ and Smith. | zation, have aiso been denied the right of counsel and the actual necessities of life; and Whereas, The Western Labor Union believes this state of affairs to be a men- ace, a strike at the very institution of American liberty, that priceless jewel gained by our forefathers after so much suffering, privation and the shedding of their blood on the field of battle that we might be free; therefore be it Resolved, By the Western Labor Union | in convention assembled that we con-| demn_every public official responsible for the abrogation of civil law in Idaho, from President McKinley through 'his Secre- tary of War down to Governor Steunen- h;:rg and Coroner France; and be it fur- ther Resolved, That this convention call! | upon organized labor of the American | continent to enter their mighty protest | | and condemnation at such unwarranted | tyranny, and the effort now being made | to reduce the standard of labor to the level of serfdom: and be it further Resolved, That this organization hereby | | pledges its assistance, both moral and‘ Batteries—Gi THORPE LANDQ DR. ‘ SHEPPARD WINNER‘ Burns & Waterhouse Entry Wins the Inaugurdl Handicap at . Louis. ST. LOUIS, May 13.—There were fully 15.000 people out. this afternoon to see the Inaugural run. Hard work .during the ! night and morning, assisted by the high | wind and the sun, put the course in ex- cellent shape, although it was slow. The | y was cool. When the Inaugural hand- icap was called, Leo Planter caused a delay at the post by swerving around. To a fair start, Dr. Sheppard got off in front and led the way, winnin~ easily by three lengths. What-er-Lou, the favorite, got away badly and was cut off twice in | trying to get to the front, beating Macy a short head for the place. Results: | financial, to the Western Federation of | Selling, seven furlongs—Maroni won, Pat | Miners in their fight for justice. Morrissey second, Our Clara third. Time, e 1:31%. A Clumsy Invention. Five and a half furlongs—Dave Waldo won, Richard J second, Be True third. Time, 1:11. For maiden three-year-olds, four and a halt turlongs—Greenock won, Hackmeister second, Mosswitt third. Time, | " Inaugural, value $2900, one mile—Dr. Shep- pard, 115 (Thorpe), 9 to 2, won; What-er Lou, 118 (H. Shields), 2 to 1 and even, second: Ma | cey, 119 (T. Burns), 4 to 1, third. Time, 1:45. | Les Planter. Fervor, Branch, Crocket and Bas- | quil also ran. Mile and twenty yards—Jackanapes Forget-Me-Not second, Helen H. Gardner third. Time, 1:47. Seliing, six furlongs—Stmon D won, Sorrow | second, Dom't Skip Me third. Time, 1:17%, l Special Cable to The Call and the New York | Herald. = Copyrighted, 18%, by James Gor- don Bennett. BERLIN, May 13.—The Government organ, the North German Gazette, pub- lishes the following: The news publlshgd in the English press and some German | papers that the Kaiser on Thursday, in| the neighborhood of Metz, received the | a New York paper named the World and made him a mes- senger of certain sentiments to the Ameri- can people is a clumsy invention. oo | correspondent of | market, | points below the previous day’s closing. Wall street has ever known. Within half an hour, in which all vrevious records for volume of trading were far outstripped, the worst was over, and the market quieted down as it gradu- ally sought higher level. An incident that chiefly contributed to the restora- tion of confidence was the report that a group of financiers had met before | the opening of business and decided to form ‘a big pool to take all of the big| stocks that were thrown over. in case such a thing were necessary. Among| these men are reported to have been | representatives of the Vanderbilts. the | Rockefellers, D. O. Mills and J. P. Morgan & Co. EXCITING TOMULT IN WALL STREET i Speculators Madly Rush to| S s 0110 DSCOVER STATTS A USH S Special Dispatch to The Call. e R NEW YORK, May 13.—Former Gov- ernor Flower’s sudden death at East- H i E er port, L. I, Friday night, created the Placer Str:lke l,n ow most exciting tumult that Wall street California. has seen for nearly twenty years when | E e | the stock market opened this morning. Speculators tumbled over one another in their haste to dispose of industrial stocks in which he was the dominant power. Heavy holders in what are known as Flower stocks felt that the most important factor in their market was gone. In the early hours it was a period of great interest and anxiety. There was a tendency to wildness in the general but nothing like to the same extent in t Flower interests. Tre shrinkage on Flower stocks js estunated to be more than $18,000,000, and the gen- eral less outside of these stocks a t Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, May 13.—Not since the days of the Almo excitement in Lower | California has there been such a stam- pede of men to a new placer camp that which is now under way to the Santa Clara diggings, 400 miles south of | this city, and fifteen miles back from the coast. Superintendent Swayne of barra Gold Mining Company a i, sent a runner 200 miles to the | telegraph office at San Quintin with a message to the agents of the company in this city, notifying them that the 200 or more men in the company’ $106,000,000. Some of the more conserva- | ploy had gone to the Santa Clara dig- | tive brokers advised their customers not | gings, leaving Calmalli®* deserted, and to be in a hurry to sell Flower stocks. | in consequence the Ibarra mines have | Many persons took this advice after a while. Rapid Transit, which had been Governor Flower's favorite stock for the last two years, was sold 2 n as the gavel fell to the extent of 25,000 shares. Trading was so wild that brokers act- ing for the same firm, one executing buying orders and another selling, made transactions seven points apart. Prob- ably never has there been such a white heat of excitement among customers as was witnessed during the first half hour for no landing at atite available, all the men having s: for the new di “Manhattan opening sales 1000 at 105,” shouted a man at the ticker in una of the b offi This was t t quotation to come out. It had clo: el the day before at 111%. s touche first reports of the placer up by the “Great Scott,” replied one of the by '[*r';l“a(;‘:r","f‘ e standers, “five and three-quarters off. ke 2 = What will Brooklyn be if Manhattan is dissiness nary shaying gone from Santa Rosalia, on the gulf c Several ast men at Los Angeles and Santa | ., have made arrangem: nta Clara, saili affected that way?” All waited with }(u—n expectancy for the first Flower K 1g from here for | ooklyn Rapid Transit, 2 et 3 <-pened at 110 to 100,” cried the Roque Bay. The diggings are on | e That'e oty miles inland from that land: | Federal Steel, 11 shares, 56 to 50. Perished in Bering Sea. from esterda People’s Gas sol to 104 on the at 119 the Brookly G S vorite. Just 10,000 shares of this stock were dumped on the market all at once Outside of the Flower issues other sharp brea occurred in American Steel and Wire, which lost 9 points at the opening: in Metropolitan Street | Railway, which lost 7 points; Atchison preferred, 33%: and in many of the highly speculative industrials. N Yo Air Brake, which is also one the Flower favorites and which had the most remarkable rise of any stock on the list, did not come out for a few | minutes, and traders could hsrd!y be- lieve their eyes when the fi made at 155, as against 1 hat's 113 points off and so they went. y from 11 or vears ten U Flores morrow. 2] YOUNG CHRISTIANS PLAN GOOD WORK b T Epworth Leaguers Meet at Stockton. e 0 The Call. May 13.—The fifth an- f the Epworth League ot down to busi- ndance was large and the i The first the morning pro- The Success- W. A. Ser- y s participat- -ar G. Heaton, the Epworth 1901. He told of to be hel h from od they ussion was_en- >. Dennett. Rev. Lunzue convention the convention a inted. raise n be appe pointed to CALIFORNIA PRAISED BY IAN MACLAREN Then it went day, a break of 30 points. tearing down 5, 10 and even between sales until it struck 125, points or 60 | T Amid the frenzy of the unfortunate | traders. whose holdings were thrown over because their margins had been “wiped out,” many investors jumped in and seized the opportunity to pick up bargains. This fact, and the sup- port of strong pools, saved the situa-|§ greatest possible values; for, tion from what otherwise might have E : 5 proved the most disastrous panic that with SatleflCthn, they come ADVERTISEMENTS. |} again, and it is their continual |} patronage that is making us THE PROBLEM SOLVEC. R syccessful |THE NEW MEDICAL DISCOVIRY TESTED. | Results of the Test in Various Forms of Vyspepsia. Chronic indigestion or dyspepsia, while a very common trouble, has for some time been looked upon by able physicians as a very serious thing, ard { that no time should be lost in treating it properly at the start, because recent researches have shown that the most serious, fatal and incurable diseases have their origin in simple dyspepsia or indigestion. Diabetes is simply one form of indi- gestion, the sugar and starchy food not being assimilated by the digestive or- gans. In Bright's disease the albumen is not properly assimilated. While consumption and dyspepsia | are twin diseases it is beyond question that dyspepsia makes a fertile soil for the seeds of consumption. But the trouble has been to find a remedy that could be depended upon to cure dyspepsia, as it is notoriously ob- | stinate and difficult to cure. This has been the question which | has puzzled physicians and dyspeptics alike, until the question was solved | three years ago by the appearance of the new dyspepsia cure in the medical world known as-. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, which it was claimed was a certain reliable cure for every form of stomach trouble. Physicians, however, would not ac- cept such statements without first giv ing the new remedy many tests and carefully observing results. For three years the remedy has been thoroughly tested in every section of the country and with surprising and | satisfactory results. | Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets can hon- estly be claimed to be a specific, a radi- cal, lasting cure for indigestion in the various forms of acid dyspepsia or sour | stomach, gas or wind on the stomach too much bile, undue fullness or depre: sion after eating and similar symptoms resulting from disordered digestion. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets were not placed before the public until this three years' trial left no doubt as to their value and they have recently been placed in the trade and can be found | at all druggists at the nominal price of 50 cents per package. | No false claims are made for the | remedy. It will not cure rheumatism, pneumonia, typhoid fever nor anything but just what it is claimed to cure and that is every form of stomach trouble. No dieting is necessary, good whole- some food and plenty of it and you may rest assured that Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will digest it. Drugeists claim for it that it is a pleasure to recommend it to dyspeptics, | because it gives such universal satis- faction. | Little book on stomach diseases !entt free by addressing F. A. Stuart Co., | Marshall, Mich. ‘ | | the way the clothes are stitch); weare familiar with from start to finish. we guarantee it, and only Money returned if return The 718 specluly = 877 Market St. ! CONSOLIDATED OPTICAL CO., We have ever studied in our business to give' customers the The fact that we make all our clothing is worth considering. We know what the cloth is (we are sure of its quality); we know (we are responsible for every We would run a great risk if we did not know our clothing, for clothes can bear such a guarantee: ADVERTISEMENTS. made them good you want it; or Suits kept in repair free for one year. We do this for your protection; we want to please you. If you want to get acquainted with us without spending much we recommend our men’s all- wool ready-made suits for 58 You can purchase one of these suits,examine it carefully at ho if you are dissatisfied we will your money. suit bears our repairing guarantee also. W00D & CO. Market Street. Out-of-town orders filled.