The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 24, 1899, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1899. REAT RISH 10 THE NEW 'LACER MINES e San Diego Much Excited OS ANGELES, May 23.—Governor Gage has written a letter to Dr. Over the Lower Cali- Stephen Bowers, editor of the M e California Voice, explaining why he fornia Dlgglngs. vetoed Assembly bill No. 438, which conferred the ballot upon women at school elections. First, the Governor declares the act | 1s clearly in violation of article 2, sec- | tion 1, of the constitution of California, The continued | which reads as follows: ‘erroPinta placer | Every native el Dispat h to The Call May m t male en of the United es south of this cit States, every male person who shall have ver Ca have started a rush | acquired the of citizenship under the State. The or by virtue of the treaty of Queretaro, s s sailed at and every male naturalized citizen hereof, who shall have become such ninety d it ; . to any election, of the age of Sl aulost who shall have been a resident of >ct to Ascension tate one year next preceding the ing on Friday. The |election, and of the county in which he he | digging is twelve to is vote ninety days, and in the om Ascensic precinct thirty days, shall be en- >a > st carry all o vote at all elections which are st ol may hereafter be authorized by Skt mules and b \w; provided, no nat of China, no = g senada for t 1sane person, No person con- hts =4 o wv infamous o . no_person zi . mbezzlement g owne of the two mey. and ¥ passengers sai ) not 10 reac X : stitution In the E uage : St. Denis t ht and "his name, shall ever evercise the pro ndment and othe 1t st points on the peninsula s nse- of an elector in this State; provisions of this to an educational tting to the diggings by | qualification shall not apply to any per- cean route, and are son prevented by a physical disability he overland | {rom complying with its requisitions, nor verle to any person who now has the right to is, yus and try- | vote, nor to any person who shall be 60 th yd and the | vears of age and upward at the time this ndment shall take effect. (Amenc ntains being nt ratified at election of November 6 1t best w ) Amer or Gov Gage says: me of the' The mere fact that the small bays in the | tempts to limit the officer women may vote does no hardships itutional, by ge is denied n_just referred to generally o rov men who sailed the Cerro Pinta by five Mexicans by crude methods. btainable ls to an at the y 1 dollars a day. there s to-night to Ascension, | an act of the Le ture would be void e Ascension, | 0 would attempt to permit the exer- a_ this em to take abc cise of that right i vecial case. The 2 , which, of course reme_Court of this in the i their dry washer, | Of Van Volkenberg vs. Brown, ! > s fornia Reports, page 43, decide T 8 kets. Some of the | woman was not entitled to the king tents and extensive | suffrage s, Che provi of the old_constitutio ) far ¢ words “male ¢ I vhose putation s as similar to ity 1 been questioned, the present con- 1 s perhaps the best known v successful miners ical rights to one of the most | _ 2 3 € »f the new camp. | = e - ounces which Monday on the E OR THE SENATE by in- I ¥ Ore . . 4 1 said to have ler: | His Declination Will Be ) 00 in dust and | Ignored. ings is report- an area of ——— Wat is anding on ch t { May ire about 400 ey “erro Pinta, S the pre this t ahead of any | office. Senator White's frien X t those who were al- | &re € d in laying the w P terest before the Democratic A ) n to be held next vear. party . : DEBoers A0 this end of the State are a S e who is to be indorsed by 5 F. V Pinkhar w. t ention, no matter how o g E. N. Su AN he may protest. Slack, E. L. Don- nator insists that he Is ave an, W. B. Clark, & another contest and declares d J. Green. > does not desire the honor, even s e S e the place come to him without The party managers, however, next Mon o and t cept the position ey S it 1to his fight, no matter what — may be his own inclinations ADVERTISEMENTS. All factions of the D \tic party in e s claim to be for White, who is to be first indorsed by the county con- | i the earlier primaries next | A solid delegation for the ena- go from here to the State con- - State convention the issue is to FAOM RHEUMATISH be a plank in the State platform pledging > | the party to Senator White's_ election | without ‘a contest in the event of the She 2 | election of a Democratic Legislature, next Positive Relief Is Within the | ycir"The senator had such a_contest | Reach of Every Man and vears ago, when he won handily. He red the United States Senatorship at Woman. HUDYAN COUNTERACTS THE ACIDS AND EXPELS THEM. time The party, however, lost the Legislature that year and the Senator's temporarily delayed. red at one time that former mes Budd had an eye out for and intended next year to sontest the leadership of the party with | Senator White, Should Budd still be of that frame of mind when the State co vention meets next year he is to be given the fight of his lif stitutional diseasa, 1 elements (acids) in the E=gappceR ey iy Del Valle s an ardent acute or chronic. Be- fast, and he is to head the at rheu County delegation next year inte Senator Del est. n arise Heart fight for a White reso- % often In. | lution in the State platform, and he :: claims to have no fear of the result, no ter what combination may be made. tor White also will_probably head stem elegation from this State n il do National Convention. His DYA ot L the | clates as delegates at large may b overcoming their destructive | Governor Budd, Mayor James D. UDYAN will expel them by Michael ¥ pey Oakland and pos- | ne amd stimulating the kid. | sibly James G. Maguire. Instructlons for atlon. in order that, Willlam Jennings Bryan are more than pass off through | probable. LIFE IMPRISONMENT j FOR JUSTIN BROWN Slayer of Cain Found Guilty of Mur- | der in the First Degree at rheumatism perma- prevent rheuma- organs of the ubjected to much ex predisposed to rheu- should use HUD- disg | rheumatism Vourself to blame. Bakersfipld. elilng of perma BAKERSFIELD, Ma ~“We, the t the great HUD- | jury, find the defendant guilty of murder re the heart disease|in the first degree and recommend his o Deart disease | punishment at life imprisonment. [ s bomplications =s | This was the verdict of the jury in | HUDYAN is a most | the Brown murder case. It was returned | AN contalns | q¢ 6:15 this evening, after the jury had | al poisons an hour and a quarte or re- | stment of | DeeD Ot A own romacked: ] “That's a long time Lo spend in prison. T | sle by drugg 50C | guess the jury did what they thought was I g8 for 3200, b | TNt T've got it and can't do anything. ! keep HUD- | “jstin Brown is 27 years of age. He | N REM-| a4 the friendship of Mrs. Cain, the and Mar- | widow of his victim, throughout the trial, | She is 37 vears old and is the mother of five children, the eldest 17 years of age. 5 I I OF C RGE. CALL OR WR S | s s amn = Crops in Yolo County. | SRR " x| WOODLAND, May 28.—A cool south % | breeze is the prevailing wind, and its ef- | , 2! fect on growing crops is very benefic! 2| BEvery day it continues will materialls B )ve the prospects of a good grain | t. The crop of early barley will be fine as ever was harvested in the county. The wheat crop will hardly come up to the expectations raised by the March rains, but under the influence of favorable weather prospects are growing better. PILLS Cure CONSTIPATION STOMACH PAINS BILIOUSNESS - | May Defer Bond Payments. | WOODLAND, May 24.—The last Lr‘g(g.‘ lature enacted a law authorizing cities of | the fifth class to extend the time for the | payment of building bonds from twenty g H H ) : ! 2g to forty years. The City Trustees ar 2 ‘)ICK HEADACHE’ Etc' «'}?ns‘l‘:ge)rr{ng m;; Em osmonogo 80 exlemg‘ £_10 cents and 25 cents—Druggists. | xtenaion must ba with the consent of the s T | bondholders, | from the records was partly argued | enable D GAGE DEFENDS HIS POCKET VETO OF SUFFRAGE BILL [ e R S i S o ) ® - v e @ indfvidual and yet he may be a citizen. The rjghts of office and suffrage are po- litical purely, mnd are denied by some or all the lation, who +oe b ebed e same report of to, the court says: mere power of the' State to deter: mine the class of inhabitants who m: vote within her limits not curtailed in the fourteenth amendment. The fif teenth amendment took away her au- thority to discriminate against citizens of the United States on account of either race, color or previous condition of servi- tude: but the power of exclusion upon all other grounds, including that of sex, re- mains pot.” In the case of Spier vs. Baker, 120 Cali- fornia Reports, page thé " Supreme Court, speaking of the right of the Legis- lature to regulate the political rights of its citizens, say “That is, the Legisla- ture b attempted to extend the right of suffrage to certain classes of citizens outside of those classes mentioned in the onstitution. If the Legislature has such wer it ¢ extend the right to aliens minc to women. It has no such power. » Legislature can no more ex- of suffrage to persons not astitutional provision prive persons there included 10 BE SEN 10 MERRIAM SRy nd the | i Organized Labor in the Coeur d'Alenes Crowded Too Far. Special Dispatch to The Call —The Silver Association BUTTE, Mont., Mz Bow Trades and Labor adopted the following to-da Whereas, A reign of terror prevails the town and vicinity of Wardner, 1d brought about by the un-American, tyrz nical and outrageous mandates promul- ed by General Merriam, that have re sulted in_the wholesale and indiscrimi arrest of hundreds of American citi who f < re at present confined under condi- | tions so brutal and unsanitary that it has | resulted in the death of four of the im- prisoned mes he and had these men been of creation instead of being hu- we would, nevertheless, be remonstrance against the in- rpetrated in the name fore be it the Silver Bow Trad and La Association, in regular s sion convened, recognizing the abov statements to be a conservative presenta tion of the conditions as they exist at Wardne: nd the result t must neces sarily follow if such acts go unheeded, extends to its fellow workers and the citizens of Wardner its sincere sympath for the outrages perpetrated upon them; and Resol labor ¢ brute beings d in an_out s d, That we call upon organized 1d all lovers of patriotism and ju tice everywhere to hold mass demonst tions_to denounce General Merriam the War Department behind him, subservient Governor of Idaho and the sympathetic Governor of Montana, for the tyrannical treatment of the working- men of Idaho and Mon ; that we fur- thermore call on all workingmen here to use their ballots to secure a Government ip the wings of the military Wd truculent officials. at If the martial law ades _union succeeds in this ins workingmen will find cause to formulate certain limits to pre- sent to the Government, beyond which friends of organized labor will not allow any of their friends to go, and, standin on’ their constitutional rights, ‘they wil prepare to defend these rights at any cost. WRECK OF THE BARK MARECHAL LANNES FOUND LONDON, May 23.—Advices from Saint Brides Bay, Wales, tell of the discovery there of the wreck of the ‘French bark Marechal Lannes, Captain Lee Petit, which sailed on March 2§ from Swansea for San Francisco on her maiden voyage. A body supposed to be that of the stew- ard of the vessel has been recovered. The Marechal Lannes was a new vessel of 1711 tons. A few days after leaving Swansea she was reported lost, quantities of wreckage, including boxes of guncot- ton and a board with the name‘Marechal Lannes” on it_being washed ashore at Broad Haven, Wales. Tt was thought at that time from the appearance of the wreckage that she had blown up. - - Terrill’s Case Argued. SAN JOSE, May 23.—Attorney 8. B. Terrill, who has been indicted for em- bezzlement and forgery In connectfon with giving a bogus deed to Mrs. Clara Fread, was before Judge Lorigan to- day on a motion to have the indictments sef aside on the ground that they were irregular. This was denied by the court. Another motion to strike the indictments and until _to-morrow afternoon to rict Attorney Campbell to look continued up authori -t Chicago Gets the B'nai B'rith. CHICAGO, May of the Order B'nai B'rith to-day the mile- age provision in the by-laws was changed so that all delegates, instead of from each lodge, will hereafter have their transportation expenses paid out of the funds in the treasury of the order. It was decided to hold the next conven- tion at Chicago. S ‘Buys Hawaiian Stock. HONOLULU, May 16. — Albert Raas, late of San Francisco, is one of three new members of the Honolulu Stock Ex- change, coming in under the revised fee of $2500 admission, Instead of $1000. Mr. Hecht has bought heavily in_Pioneer Mill Company and Oahu Bugar Company. ame | At the final session | COAST LINE 10 BE COMPLETED S All Obstacles Are Now Removed. f the right. Th licatis f th - e bieisio iminer et GXclualoy alters == g ius’ bears with full force upon this pro- vision of the constitution, declaring who are competent to vote at elections au- thorized by the laws of this State.” In the case of Spencer vs. the Board of ion, 1st McArthur, page 169, aris- | ing in the District of Columbia, it wa held by the court that the right of suf- frage 1s not gzuaranteed by the United Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA BARBARA, May 23.—It now seems that all obstructions to the com- pletion of the Coast road have been dis- posed of. Some time ago L. G. Dreyfu announced that a satisfactory agreement » States constitution to women, and the | had been made with him b the Southern court s “While the conditions of | Pacific Company. To-day the last of the right have varied in several States and | psiructionists, the Hollister estate, we from time to time been modified in the same State, the right has uniformly rest- ed upon the express authority of the polit- ical power and been made to revolve with- in the limitations of express law. gain, in Mino vs. idappersett, 21 Wal- lace, page 163, the Supreme Court of the Unifed States, passing upon the question of woman's right to suffrage, under the provisions of the constitution of Missouri, denying that right, held that there was no placated. The arch that the Hollisters demanded from the railroad company in front of their ranchhouse (there is a long [ fill of forty-two feet directly in front of the ranch buildings, vbstructing the view and necessitating a grade in order to get out of the ranch), and which Superinten- dent Hood estimated would cost $4400, is to be put in. Hood in his figures evidently inherent right ‘1‘; \‘n';e! h\m‘ “::-‘n n‘\]f made a mistake and upon investigation woman's mere citizenship a e R TR el stitution of the State of Missourl, con- | It 15 ascertatned that the cost will not fining the right of suffrage to men, was |} iq this a and the Hollisters will grant the right of way for a distance of twenty- seven miles through their ranch. These facts were made Known at to- day’s railroad mass-meeting, called by n. Ellwood Cooper. The opera-house crowded by property-owners along coast line and delegates from the se counties. Hon. Marion Cannon, ex- not in volation of the United States con- stitution, and that the fourteenth amend- ment to the United States constitution | had no application to the subject of suf- | frage. The court, in » review of the ques- tion, In conclusion EH “*A's has been seen, all the citizens of the | States were not vested with the right of Suffrage. In all save perhaps New Jer- : e : men, and not upon all of them. Under | AleBETes - (rOW o Er Tande aiahor men, and Bot DO Al T O inly meg | Chalrman Ellwood Cooper made a short address, ot the meeting. in which he outlined the purpose He said: too late to contend that a Government is not republican within the meaning of the guaranty In the constitution because | This call has not for its object the incres Bhan are mnot made voters. * * #|of the income of the Southern Pacific Com- Wamen were excluded from suffrage in | bany, but it Is to help ourselv If we want nearly all the States by the e o pro- | the rallroad, we want It quickly; and as intel- Lk ligent business men we should dg everything in g It vision of the constitution and In conclusion the Governor comments as follows: our power to insure rapid work. to consider the circumstances or motives that have induced the rallroad company to build we stop TAKES LIFE IN JEALOUS RAGE e SEEK EQUITABLE REIGHT TARI e Crime of a Mexican atiFight Waged by Coast Bakersfield. Jobbers. e — e Spectal Dispatch to The Call. BAKERSFIELD, May —DMaria | Barrera, a Mexican woman, was mur- dered in this city early this morning by | her rejected lover, Francisco Ochoa. Ochoa shot and seriously wounded an unoffending man named Smith, who chanced to cross his path just before Spectal Dispatch to The Call. ST. PAUL, Minn.,, May —Repre- sentatives of the jobbing interests of the Pacific Coast and the important | commercial centers of the Middle West met in a conference in the Ryan Hotel to-day, the result of which will greatly affect transcontinental shipping busi- 2 he broke in the door of the woman’s | ne The subject of discussion was home to murder her. Ochoa escaped. | the transcontinental freight tariff put The affair occurred in the tenderloin, | into effect by the two northern roads near the corner of L and Twent on May 1, which the Western men streets, at 1 o'clock this morning. Ochoa | claim will ultimately cause them se- and the woman had lived together for | Vere loss. Jobbers of the (\’tifime ;‘niflo‘t some time. - A month ago she cast him | g 4" (P R m‘_m‘(_mmé“d. and off and his anger prompted the crime. | {he onposing factions are arguing the Ochoa entered the woman's house DY ' matter before representative officials of the back door and found Maria Barrera | and another woman in bed. They had heard the shot fired at Smith and e the Western roads. held to-day decision ha Two sions were . an adjournment without a 1g been taken at 5 o’clock. tinguished the light in their room. A third session will convene to-morrow Ochoa crashed in the door with his | mornin . pistol and attacked Miss Barrera. She| The coast jobbers represent that if begged piteously, but he fired a bullet | the present tariffs are continued it will into her breast, death resulting almost | ultimately result in curtailing their immediately. Ochoa wore a mask, but | trade. They desire a greater difference between carload and less than carload | Was recognized by the other woman. | i Ochoa fled and has since eluded pur- | rates and the prohibition of “mixed | suit. He about five feet six inches | carload” shipments. They maintain | tall and weighs 130 pounds. that unless a greater difference is made d ain less than carload rates to lose trade in their in carload 4 they are ce Shortly before the killing Ochoa and a tamale peddler known as Tomas were | seen lurking in the back yard of the murdered woman’s house. Tomas has | disappeared. It is said Tomas urged Ochoa to slay the girl. Smith was shot in the neck. The bul- | immediate territory, to which they hold are justly entitled though entirely friendly presentatives of the two cl they The cont between the r interests, is nevertheless being waged in earnest. > and is e f ¢ the Tiost ohiecti im»"“ml"‘fi L fr"“;“r}‘;“;f;”:x;“l EUSYERCS, | let lodged near the spinal column and o I Strong dele- ese are a few of the most objection- | whether they be real o v, Wi e 4 | ged. ! s A e ticas e Fre foin Somi D T able reasons which presented et 9as | Rerlous. mistaks, | These questlons’ are beyond | he may dle. He was passing B i A S SR '“‘:‘,Tm“lsc:[ A T the time of the submission of | our power to know. ~We do know, however, | Fera place when a man thrust a pistol | Tacoma, Seattle —an other coa the il for wotion. I therefore felt it my | What our duty is, and that is to do every (hing | Into his face and fired.’ It was Smith’s | Points to urge a change of tariff, while 7 Ao L e e aikn % | in our power to insure the completion at the | hallooing that attracted the attention | St. Louis, Chicago, St. Paul and Duluth Quty undeckthel 3 arllest possible moment. Our Interests do not = g > 5 5 = bill which was clearly invalid, and which, | S35t BOSPR POTSlGion of ‘the gap. We | Of the officers. The woman's death was | Were equally well represented by dele- Thoreover. would not have ‘reachedisthe | Sapicven At the campleH o e ,‘,]nul Siscovered until several minutes | gations intent upon securing the main- end desired. % | port our products, passenger accommodations, | after Smith w found. | tenance of the present freight rates. In \‘ww of »;']T:n hfi been tl;]flr:’mlwfflrle; ihe good will of the company, harmony in ali | | About eighty jobbers in all were rep- stated, you will readily see that permit- | our dealings with them. The company is on | S S E & S & | | resented. Th; were met in St. Paul ting the exercise of suffrage by females | the ground with all the paraphernalia for rapid | s _ ety to school matters could result | work: It Is ready to place camps on .M,‘[ROBERT L. CUTTING by J. M. Hannaford, vice president of financial harm to the various | ranch where there is much work to be donc, SUES FOR DIVORCE the Northern Pacific; rancis B. s, touching the validity of |and to push it to every extent with a reason- | Clarke, trafiic manager of the Great reason of th doubt as, to | able degree of economy. e must bestic our-i s | Northern; Freight Agent Somers of the their constitutio right to act. As be- | selves to e a0 - < N . . | Great Northern and other prominent fore indicated,: T Dave ‘not here 2% | “Ex<Congressman Cannon, hearing that|His Wife Brings a Counter Action, | Sreaf ’ z tempted to go into all the details which | the people of Santa Barbara County had | als. {nfluenced my judgment in the premises, | agreed to give the Southern Pacific Com- | CRGL VL BE KRG 5 but from the foregoing I am satisfied | pany a free right of way through the Co-Respondents. KRUGER’S FRANCHISE that vou will coinclde thoroughly with tire county nl’lnw:\x!llmg free depot | NEW YORK, May 23.—Robert el e adchimoy of my pesition " Yours very | sltes andother such peiviggts was UCh | ing s besun suil for_absolute divorce | PROPOSAL DISCUSSED ¥ | U e ivine Ftoo emiioh inst Mrs. Minnie Seligman Cutting. S — — e — | fr citizens. He spoke at some wife positively denies his allegation . | M eommiitten of “five property | of infidelity, and she intends to make | TTansvaal Volksraad Decides to Post~ ; U'g‘;(f,”’}";:l’l'"f,'l,,‘,‘)'j:.‘“, slven POWEE | counter charges, insisting that the courts pone Action Until Next ‘ [ 5 oo the part of property hoid: | MUSL grant a decree in mner favor. Mr. Year. | ers the line. After a greal deal | pucf i8S @ o, who has semreqtate! JOHANNESBURG, Transvaal, May 23. | | 6f discussion the following resolution was | Rastus S. Ransom, who has served the| ;"o e T ALe oS Lschs & summons in the divorce suit without the —The Volksraad to-day departed from the |8 : Pl s S s complaint, s n;m Mrs. Cutting does not | order of the day to discuss President | Resolved, That we, the citizens of the city | vot know exactly’ what charges aer n Kruge franchise and Bewaarplaatzen ! jiand edtnt Of ,,;:;"(;:_l{‘?"" e onyn band malke He is not bound to serve | proposals. A resolution was adopted 'n- | I unfeigned satisfaction t the complaint on her lawyers, Howe & |structing the Government to publish the | | mina £ the Southern Pacific Company to | Hummell, within twenty da nd con- | franchise proposal and submit it to the | imm e e the &ap in the const yoad | Sequently Mrs. Cutting may” have no ic- | Volksraad next year. President Kruger | Sy | between Surf and Elwood. | formation within that time as to the al- | denied that he w. elding to the seats | Resolved, That we earnestly request | 1€ ions again = ke nd said he would never agree to the | . that the par from whom the right of way | _ Not only doe; Cutting deny zeneral extension of franch s demanded | Assemblyman Miller De- | cimmittet have secured either ‘contracts’ or | her husbind has grounds for sui By the Uitlanders | | feeds give to the raflroad company, without | but she declares that during her The other proposal was postponed pend- | hindrance, their cord support in furtherance | frcm the city he, has b : At o > the receptio! fals. finishing the road, which means so much to She intends enter a ecs ‘ LT s et hi e | Burglaries at Bakersfield. | e _ Resolved, further, That in view of the fact | i, enter a countersuit for divorce. One| BAKERSFIELD, May 2.—Three bur- that the railroad company has nmenced in | e 5 e i hat the AR O e oo e 2ol | of the co-respondents she wishes to name | & were committed in different parts LOS May 23.—GOVernor | our people 1o ¢ dms of the company's | 1S 4 Woman prominent in New York so- | of this city last night. The residences of Henry 7] his law office early Y‘H'"“ry\ l‘lnfl ide r:(Hl \mkv{.x‘\yr. ’lu “‘(“, ]\\'\h: '”n:\n 4[1!\r\x:‘_'e ,{(l furmrl\l a|J. J. Mack, W. H. Sanborn and E. W. s e spe Hiblarmornineto oin hands in e effort to finish the | ten days sensation Among those | Wrigl are 100 Che = 3 : i"»‘- HeHoent (s I‘E:‘ ‘,,T ”\“‘{’Ll“"-:‘ work so auspiciously begun. Whom Mr. Cutting has been attentive to | 1\(3’5:\’: e Bt inne stenographer over his mall. Mactin J. { ¥y ere decided feeling of content- | it i alleged, are two of the prettiest girls | other valuables. ' At Mack's house a bur- guirre called upon the Governor nenteliera. o AR one belleves | of the Casino chorus. Their names will | glar was detected, and Mack fired shots | in the day and was one of the few O e yoad will now be rushed to com. | appear in Mrs. Cutting’s answer aud | out of a window and called for help. The | ors admitted. The two passed sdme time pletion. Contractors Ramish and Marsh 1it. | burglar fled. | discussing 2d means for the gov- | are expected daily from Los Angeles witi 200 men and as many teams. Contractor ernment of the penitentiary at San Quen- McCormick returned from Los Angeles tin. Between 11 a. m. and noon the Gov-| {o-night, where he engaged many more ernor and George J. Denis consulted upen | teams to add to his camp at Elwood. law and mining business in which they | —_— are interested. | COOLIES TO BE ADMITTED. The Governor and Mrs. Gage expect to leave here about June 1. They will pass i . : il dainh eio, and will bein | Hawalian Cf'abmet Reconsiders Appli- San Francisco by June 4, where they will | cations of Planters. Ili“ "““"1’}-‘" ?‘r'fl:;"l {\13: \'Iw".x»'rx; xf.‘."dl,‘l":' HONOLULU, May 16.—The Cabinet held tor Seennen . M. White ‘has: about | 2,mceting this moming with thefBurean iven up all idea of the jaunt, as he ex- | Of Immigration. It was decided first of pects the Alford murder trial, which be- | all to reconsider the application of Bee- Pins on May 81, to keep him in Los An-| croft, Waialua, Onomea and Pioneer T mills’ for laborers. It was against these geles through the first w ‘< The Governor terday visited the | estates that the Inspector of Tmmigrants State school at Whittier. " He that | had filed objections either for sanitary Bt iitant Eeneral has been selected, | Teasons or for {ll treatment of laborers by although his identity will not be made | lunas ’{‘hy decision that upgn a public until after the Governor shall have | Shewing by those plantations that the Paft Tos Angeles. Colonel J. C. Currier | evils complained of had been remedied B S paneisco 18 supposed to be the | the number of laborers required would be | permitted. A regulation was made that in future where feports of the Immigrant Inspector lucky man. | The talk of an extra session of the Leg- | islature for the purpose of electing a|ore”unfavorable fo i slture | 2 purpose of electing 5 o or sanitary or other T nlt"mlmflr?]}:n S \.,‘"'“‘r“";m".,;‘;"?d | reasons coples of such reports should be el man M er o meid, and, | furnished to the agents of the plantation, with the Information that no other labor- érs would be permitted until the evils were corrected. The lists of laborers were looked over and 5311 were permitted for the next period. g0 far as he is concerned, he would favor | the dropping of all of the candidates of Jast winter, or would go Into a Republi- can caucus and settle the sues “in the good old Republican wi MADE MAN AND WIFE A HALF CENTURY AGO | Judge and Mrs. Joseph H. Budd of | Stockton to Celebrate Their Golden Wedding. STOCKTON, May 23.—A soclal event which will awaken widespread interest will occur on the evening of June § at the Budd mansion on North Sutter street. It will be the celebration of the golden wed- - Arms for Marysville Guards. MARYSVILLE, May 23.—Marysville’s new military company to-day received from the adjutant general sixty Spring- field rifles, three arm chests and all other ccouterments included under the head of ordnance stores. No date for the mus- | tering in of the command has been fixed. 1f _the citizens decide on a Fourth of July celebration the induction of the company into the National Guard will be a feature of the day’s programme. ‘Williams Recaptured. SAN LUIS OBISPO, May Joe Wil- ! liams, who on Sunday tunneled out of the ding of Judge and Mrs. Joseph H. Budd. | county Jail, was recaptured at an early The invitations are already out and are | re al | hour last night near Pozo by Ed Bean models of the printer's art. The mono- [ and John W. Yeary, two young men_of gram “B” in old English is at the center | Santa Margarita. Williams and top, while on either side are the dnll-s; the jail again at 5 o’clock this morning. 1849-1899, all the work pelng in a bright golden hue. Surrounded by their children, one of them a former Governor of the State, the | couple will repeat the vows made fift | vears ago in Wisconsin, when as youth | and maiden they joined their fortunes. | In the throng which will assemble will be persons from all parts of the State. BLACK, TAN, BROWN, RED, SLATE, GREEN, MODE, | Mre. Budd has for years been famed for BEAVER and OPERA are | ity Mk WO e | B s we are offerin | fn @l social and charitable movements g o B g T e o ivea ap. Taany this week in our very suc- e e e cessful sale of $1.25 and been honored by his fellow citizens wit: | high judiclal offic At present he is $1.50 Gloves for serving his tenth year on the Superior | bench.” The v s have been full of hon- ors and rewards to the couple, and in their passing have left so little impression upon them that the Judge and his wife will be among the gayest and most youth- ful in spirit of those who gather on the auspicious occasion. g Reception to Runyon. | RED BLUFF, May 2.—The people ot | Red Bluff are elated over the appointment, of E. W. Runyon as one of California’s Commissioners to the Paris Exposition, and to show their appreciation they to- night tendered Mr. Runyon a reception in the pavillon. Leading citizens of the town made short addresses and Mr. Run- von replied, thanking the people for the reception and promising to use his utmost endeavor to further the interests of Cali- fornia at Paris. 89¢. We are also selling a Men's $1.50 Glove for 50c. Just the thing for driving or biking. Our show window will tell you why, The Glove House 800 MARKET ST., Corner Grant Ave. - | To Dedicate Their Hall. STOCK1UN, May 23.—The Woman's Christian Temperance Union will dedicate | its new building on California street, near | Weber avenue, next Friday. The build- ing, while not pretentlous. is the union’s “own.” The hall was erected through the | bequests of the late Willlam B. Milier and wife. The deceased couple left te the union about §10,000 and the site for the structure. G T Bubonic Plague Spreading. | HONGKONG, May 2.—The bubonie | plague is Increasing. The official reports |thua far for the month of May show 413 cages and 254 deaths. ! lodged in | | | | | When it comes to a discussion of clothing we've a number / of points to talk about. We want to state first that we make all our:cloth=~ ing ourselves—and that stamps it safe, as we know what the suits are and you can rest assured that we are going to make only satisfactory clothing. | We give you value for your money. Wesstandby«: everything we sell, with this guarantee : Money returned if you want it; or Suit kept in repair iree for one year. { We are now selling men’s all-wool ready-made j suits for $8 j They are a collection of pleasing patterns in all |} thesizes. There are a lot of light patterns among |§ them for summer wear. Buy one of the suits——get acquainted with us—you appreciate values. Remember we guarantee these $8 suits. BOYS’ MIDDY SUITS, all wool material, neat soutache trimmings, 8$2.25 Each, S. N. WOOD & CO. 718 Market Street. Out-of-town orders filled—write us. 3

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