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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY. JULY 28, 1899 THE TRAIL OF A SACK | AGITATES THE PUSH Buckley Lambs Line Up Against Rainey-Examiner League. | | of a Fierce Battle for Control of the Demo- cratic Convention— Rounders and Heelers of ‘ the Factions May Clash at the Polls. (7] o a= n 77 RS of Rriney- m nsed at the co of the wers of Buck T Aming eve: Democrat apost )t Jasper s to accept Rainey as a boss, officers of the ve Jasper McDonald exe commit fon of the | s Ref Democracy m yesterday n r that atic party di 11 responsi- ) for the mass meeting which w night. At Buckley stat t is made that tes did 1l the meeting. etin asserts that t Demo- 1 the Central Club, which ¥ s S e week the miner s meeting a half-col- ! s in th tising, but now the The cers of the p atic Central Club ¢ Holcomb € < TAXIDERMIST SHOP. BOXES 'STUFFED ON SHORKRT NOTICE. .“ J —_— = ———— = —— = X harles De 0 ar a1 From The Examiner, October 29, 1894. g G s ent was o Burt seniesinger,. How @ Skilled Artist May Be Useful to the Rainey-Examiner Combine. ) *. Grave s - — — — e e RN Holcomb s & v T % = T % A E 3 = = r S Char of eloquer lican Club, presided over by President ent of the club, occupied the chair, D. F. x N \iil(.)“\mn' ‘\‘x”'r”fv\v H. McCarthy, was held at Saratoga Hall. | Sullivan being the secretary of the even- ot D et at Forty new members signed the roll. The | ing 1 Bucl With the exception of the 13 meeting was addressed by C. J. King, W. everal local Democratic orators were B 1 their remarks J. Herrin, Fred Fry, Frank D. Worth, M. | on hand to deliver addr tephen s as 1 Republicans L. Milzner and others. The execut Costello s some ‘length about the s 0 < and praise for the | committee presented the names of the ‘‘cryir ¢ Democracy”’ and John J - created quite a sen- ates to be voted for at the primary | Barrett pictured the success which he | : : the news- on of August 8, which were unani- | thought would come from united efforts. T what he 1. The meeting then A committee to can’ ct was ] y s of Chris o meet on Friday evening, appoir lind —— » and indulg —_—— DEMOCRATS CONFER < ined sc the truth of. his < 2 & = 0 he truth of his| - PHELAN CLUB MEETS. & = : = - inst public ey The Thirty-First Democratic Fixar wy. Buckley’s| Demaocrats of the 28th As- 1 s vigorously ap- Club Discusses the e D. M their leade semble and Talk Over ss 1 the proceed he o Campaign. o adjournment hesSanipaign, 2 Hall was well filled last night 2 The James D. Phelan Democratic mocra Thirty-first Dis- > ){ the Twenty-eighth District me: < sident of th 7 e i f th at Saratoga Hall. Armory Hall on Folsom street Thirty-first Dis- nded meeting of tn nd. The attendance was large th He opened the 2 embly District Repu 1d enthustastic. M. Rodgers, the p 4 « party and giving o , FEST BY A SPLENDID PAGEANT s s b £ Str I Sl 1 iz B 1 « REPL REPUBLICAN CLUB Periected 5 rt ng Organizatio K the Forty-First As- C >mbly District. 7 JortN SiMmMEN SECRETARY. CHAIR MAN REPUBLICAN MEETING Assembly District hdaclias erings To-Night for the Election of Advisory Organization. distriot district Club Gath- an Democrats rict Republi- Committee of Arrangements for the Two HE seventeenth biennial festival —gomery street, right resting on Mar- of the Paclfic Turn Bezirk pre > § jses to be a great de. gorgeous in color and la two s of th month will consist ¢ the followi 3 be glven over to a colossal celebration 3 i o leo -t on the part of the local turn v San Francieeo Polic al nor F - withimany of theicoast soclaties e Ulrich Remensperger to be « A represented Park will be the A. Rem. erger. Ir ! mteal i Adviieayal ne of the fe but the proce grand m : Land Scpi J5S Ie ed with dele. | & sion on the first-day will be a featu Liefke, S H. Veror p | Bate he nominating convention. In |4« of the The ormttlesran. - Sunls 2 O Nlgke: .- Ban’ Pranclaen | due time nominations for’ delegates to the e L rotomlsted itsiiannis Captain’ _Jon | convention will be made in each district, | 5 3rransements his comp et s wrdia Vv And Bhe Shafonpechidistel as far as all preliminary matters are Herm Cotet ¢ | DEFENDS CHRIS ! -oncerned : man-Americi 0. ¥ < | CHRIS ! concerned. Land Warrants| 2 DlasLE g e e on the nth Wil start at 1 Citisa. “mars i Frome: | ; 4:30 a2, ‘and fake the following life = ISR - ECREE: (2t 00 iy 0f All Kinds Henry Hogan Roasts News- | of march: Marker street to Montgom- 6™y Diion SQSe o nnke For the Location of papers That Attack the ery, to Bush. to Kearny. to Van Ne: chroeder. 'E. Barweek and Julius Bolitioali Do avenue. to Fulton, countermar Wrede; Hencke's band: grand _officers : . = b, to Mission street, where ©Of the Order of Hermann's Sons of Government e muder Demperalc C e o cor eaeporia, {AMornia: Teibers of the: Order of tioth IARaSmBIY IDistoict) Lol o sons O e an Hermann's Sons of Callfornia, | hot meetin oSt : E: < i ; E 3 Third Division—J. Kollster, marshai; And ‘qn"l: 3% 7.,3,' ranklin Hall on Fillmore The points of formation will be: Al Mezolf, W Rter marshy deht Chianas T e absence of Presi- | First Division—Battery street. right von der Mehden's band: Germ State Lands dent Charles Haggerty the meeting was resting on Market. Second Div Club; float: Schleswig-Holsteincr presided over by J. B. McIntyre, who de Bush street, right, resting on Market. verein: J. Nagel. mar: G 7 livered a brief dress and announced | Third Division—First street, right. <ens. Ik Westp alen : No Both Surveyed that the purpose of the gathering was to | &, resting on Market. Fourth Div L3 P e ey And Unsurveyed. appoint & committee to eleot candidates | L, Sansome street, right resting on Mar- Abraham. al B e % to be voted for at the coming primary ket Fifth Division—Sutter street, Fourth Division—George Braun e election. The committee was pmmpu\-‘[. Hgng i ] os 8 -‘r‘;;‘"m Sixth Divi- shal; Richard Schoutenhaus, ! 3 sion—8 stree n lieb von der Mehden's band: F. A. HYDE, clected and instructed to report the resuit | @ Market. Seventh Division—New Mont- en Company; San Francisco Kieger of its delfberations at the next meeting of | @ A15 Montgomery St., San Francleco, | the club and then the crowd settled uselfl. 1 JosEpPrt STRAUD. TREASUREF WILLENSRINK &) Days’ Celebration. Verein, C nck commanding; members incisco -Krieger ¢ erans: Brewery San Francisco; Rumetsch mbr enge) « inus San Schwaben : Sueddeut Jadishe: in; Bayern Hessen Verein. Sixth Divisi B shal: aids Rehm. J. Daub dore Maier. J 0 Freder A. Kiein: E band tzen Section Verein Captain . F. Kuhls command- members of Verein -Eintracht nth shal; aids—F hoff. D. Jurge wer Vereir Division. J. M Eggerling ns, P. Stelling: Han- Louis von der Mehden's and: drum s San Francisco Turn srein; Schu, Section San Fran- cisco Turn Verein, Captain F. Attinger commanding; executive committee of the Pacific Turn Bezirk; prize judges of the festival: active members par- ticipating in the prize turning in gra uniforms: float; all members belonging to the Bezirk: California Schuetzen Club members in carriages: Philo Jacoby. marshal: Adam Brehm. prac- tical leader of the Pacific Turn Bezirk. OO0 - Il £ ~ Oregon Volun of the Philip HAT has become of the “wagon- load’” of overcc borrowed by the Examiner from General War- | field of the Second Brigade to be loaned to the Oregon voluntee now encamped at the Presidio waiting tc | be mustered out of the service of Uncle Sam? The effusive self-praise with which the yellow journal called the attention of yndering public to unparalleled nerosity” when it announced that i had made ngements to clothe the re ned veterans, whom it pictured S ivering with cold in the of its W an rancisco and in danger of being obliter- an epidemic of or un- really ed from the earth by pneumonta, caused the unthinking formed reader to believe that it contemplated doing something Those who had been informed and who had been made familiar by long acquaint- e with the Examiner’s hypocritical | protestations of benevolent charity knew the whe burst of pretended pity and | compassion for the alleged sufferings of the Oregon volunteers was simply another | disgusting effort on ‘the part of the dis-| | credited sheet to obtain a little free ad- vertising at the expense of the veteran soldiers, whom it persisted in favoring with its condescending patronage and commiseration. The majority of the read- ers of San Francisco, accustomed to the agaries of the Examiner and its habit of grasping every opportunity to adver: tise itself at the expense of anybody and everybody when it could do so without cost to itself, did not trouble themselves EXAMINER'S CHARITY EXCITES: DERISION Iis Wagonload of Overcoats for teers a Myth. ‘Only Eight of the Fifty-Five Loamed the Paper by General Warfield Materialize at the Camp pine VYeterans. then announced that 1d be sent to the Ore- day, but they have nut and are not likely to feeling among_the Orego he action of the Exam disgust, whie] is ied as the true md and gon camp the E | xaminer WO nex is one ming me | tive of i forcing itself befc e public medium of the al- [ leged distitution o webfoot veteran: | becomes mo rent. Lieutenant Knapp exp d ments of nearl ail the officers a when he d clared that wish xaminer had kept its ercoats and the dingy | blankets e had ctically been | is no n ol this fuss about ¢ Sl ant Knapp yester ; uty of them in store and the men could have | them for the askir they would have to pay il | come out of their ciptt 1t | they prefer to do wit ' der that they may have more money_coming to them th busi- In he plea that y it afford to buy Government over cause they were to be mustered ou fow weeks and would thereaf o use for them is all bosh. | " “The fact is, General Shaf permission for the soldiers | | civilian overcoats,and therefore tt 10 excuse for suffering from coid | they cannot claim that they are pr | ited by the regulations from pro | comfortable clothing. As for the nk | ets sent out here by the Examiner, ti are not fit for use, and if I had m about it I would have them throw | heap and condemned by a board o | vey yon't talk to me about the Examiner.” with worrying over the problem of ; ; - e e e ether the paper W aee o | said another officer a ed cf the whether the paper would carry out its | TG, ANCHE 0™ That paper must lava | self-imposed duty and clothe the soldiers | feen pretty hard up for advertising, it had taken under its protecting wing | That's all I can say.” | with so much blowing of horns. They | one ‘at the camp will undertake to realized that, having expended several | speculate as to what hos become of tho S S asnaiaavallc s orty-seven overcoats borrowed by the qaysiand considerablestuiiand Wen in| B aminer for their use, but which ard heaping praises on itself for what it an- | peing held back by the self-appointed di | nounced it intended to do for the poor | tributor of other people’s charity. It soldiers, the Examiner would quietly let | possible thaf they are being held In r the matter drop before unlooked-for ex-| S¢tve for anc ther KF""‘-*:“:\““[:‘{"'“ c PR Seiaiiia e | philanthropic- interest ir comfort of might possibly be incurred. | {he yolunteers when the next bunch « \gonload” of coats for the Ore- | colgiers arrives from the Philippine gon volunteers has never materialized at | at the same time be made the means the camp of the Oregonians, and the en- viding more glory and free advertising tire expense the Examiner has been pu caminer. : iline) by s on volunteers are not suffering to up to date in connection with this mat- | o Ythat might be considered is the hiring of a d to haul a few | necessary to their comfort as sold: dingy, wornout blankets and eight bor- rowed overcoats, four of which were with- to_the Presidio, miner cured fifty-five ove | coats, the property of the National Guard, from ( | Warfield, but only the frag- | ments ht of them W e received by Oregon regiment. General Warfield recelpt showing that the fifty-five miner, and Lieu of the Ore- sht were re- Regimental rspacher, | the | hole were delivered to the Ex tenant Knapp, quartermaster | gon regiment, declares but e | ceived. The record kept by | Quartermaster Sergeant C. Ri and they are altogether too manly of men to relish the idea of being pu lished to the world as an aggregation c | mendicants, clamoring to be allowed wear the tempora disused clothing | the california If the Examine beer ed by a desire t \ffering its officiou e in the affairs of regimen . but it has overweening advertise itself, and b Oregonians as th has earned the con- from the north as o) i might be done noth vul desire to using the _haples: means to the end it tempt of the soldiers Who receipted for the coats at the camp. | well as the almost universal condemna- | tonfirms the statement of Lieutenant| tion of Californians and San Franciscans Knapp. This all happened a week ago, | in particular. | a recital of the good during the c Phelan w talked live mpaign the theme on Colonel 1 Barbour evoked much mainly eulog 87.h District Democrats. There w gaod attendance of Demo- | crats representing the Thirty-seventh As- sembly District ¢ egated at Phelp's et last night. The club were elec in its selec- | Hall on Devisadero str [ following mgmbers of he o district | ed to represent t tion of representative men who will be %4 intrusted with the selection of nomi 5 the municipal gement of \eople's affairs: D. J livan. M ieffer P. J. Lawlor. Phil M Jhn - Connor, B. G. Maguire Nunan. W White. Johr M. Rearden d D. O'Dea, John W. MeCarthy. Joseph el | moth ‘Fhomas Cleary. J. F. H. 1 M. Campy. Thomas O'Neil Wililams, brandt, P. Fitzsimmons, Charles Swiegert, J. H. Bloom. Hugh F MeAvoy. John Moore, P. I. Fitzgerald an | d. Tyle TRAGE |A BRUTAL OU ; ‘ BY A JAPANESE KNOCKS OUT A BOY'S EYE WITH | THE POINT OF HIS CANE. The Boy Is the Son of Charles P.Troy, Deputy Sheriff and Bailiff in Judge Murasky's Court. was nerpetrated vears of age. outrage a boy A da dly upon Leonard Troy and son of Charies P. Troy. a deputy Sheriff, living at 3¢ Octavia street, terda Z The the sight of one eve and may Ic sight of the other. The hoy was riding on his bieycle along Octavia st and as he was crossing Gough he brushed past a Japanese. The Japanese was apparently ed and up- lfted a cane he carried as If to strike the hoy. Young Troy dismounted and grabbed hold of a rock defend himself. when | the Japanese made a thrust with the cane at his face, and the point struck the hoy full in the right eye. The pain was in- tense, and the boy was for the moment Dlinded and was unable to see where hi but three voung ladies | told the that e Japanese mis- eet, near Oc ssailant had gone who aw the he had disappea ion on tavia. The sn boy Haight 1y home and med a physician sht of the eve nd he had grave might lose the sight who was comp! fears that t ¢ other eye e boy's fatl isky's court evening and v d the matter station. and Pol who is bailiff in Judge soon as he got home rned of the outrag the Central pc man Dugan wa to arrest the japanese. He went but was curtly informed apanese was known_there ut in his face. Dugan without ob- Mur last repe lice the Toe station aininz any satisfaction. About 10 o'clock last night father telephoned Captain W he felt sure the Ja school .and if he wou the three voung ladies wou to the school and point the Japan: Policeman Dugwn was detailed to go 31 Octavia s voung ladies to the school and if they pointe¢ out the Japanese to arrest him | the boy that icer in an with him se out 10 reet and accompany the three ana charge him with mayhem. | A search of the school was made. but the voung ladies were unable to locate the man. TO RECEIVE RETURNING VETS. ames A. Campbell at the Palace as the Advance Guard of Penn- ‘ sylvania’s Delegation. James A. Campbell, political editor of | the Philadelphia Times, Is a guest at the ' work contemplated | Palace where he arrived on Wednesday e comes to represent his paper and extend a welcome home to the retu ing volunteers whom his State sent out to support its honor and carry its patriotism evening. through the swamps and forests of Luzon Mr. Campbell has been covering the Demaocratic convention in Chicago for h paper. and from there was ordered to this city. He comes as the pioneer of a_large »ody of Pennsylvanians who will shortly arrive to look er the welfare of their returning her The party will contain a number of Pennsylvania’'s most promi- t legislators. and with them in all yability will come the Governor him- thi Railway wish to es it for define. hem; s a gem Y, AU LOCK NOON, At Our Salesroom, 638 Market Street, ELEG South side (1711) of Van Ness ave.; and bath at a sacri TO €1« TUESDA TUESDAY. : AT ST 1, 1599 12 0°C 78:3 feet west of 1l rooms ESTATE. st.. 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