The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 12, 1899, Page 6

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6 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1899. THE ULTIMATUM OF THE TRANSVAAL. business by minding_th‘:ir own, has inspired Swin- T s v burne to crawl out of his retirement and put his pen to a libel in the form of a sonnet, in which he calls * and “dogs,” who when they pray | at “blacken God's dishonored it one reaches the conclusion | ish appetite must be rather rank to be | ch intellectual swill. It is written for | and as they seek a virtuous excuse vice to which Government can turn it while it revo! nd and the world. It is putting poetry to a hen it lilts against the weak and righteous the strong and unrighteous. y can long afford to go forward in a f oppression and injustice against the con- its people. Our Government and that of n seem bent on doing this now, but soon nburnes and the Kiplings trilling together vill not hide «the clamor for national morality and ice that will be heard on both sides of the At- | et and Third Sts., S. F PUBLICATION UFFIC EDITORIAL ROOMS Telephone 24 OAKLAND OFFICE.. ....908 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, _— e i e @ PACIFIC COAST COMMISSIONER. | Chicago. NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON Herald Square RESENTATIVE: NEW YORK RE PERRY LUKENS dR... 29 Tribune Bailding d ociation hopes to accomp! that of bringing about the appointment of a 2 | member of the Interstate Commerce Commission to represent the Pacific Coast. In some respects that object is the most important it has yet announced. 2 The contest against the scheme of the St. Louis | = ociation over freight rates is but a temporary | The victory will be of but passing value to | ter side, for the loser will be almost sure to re- | ng time 10 pew the struggle at the first opportunity, and all will | s been pro- fl.\XOXG the objects which the newly fo CHICAGO NEWS ETA P. O Co.; NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. Waldort-Astoria Hotel; A. Breatano, 81 Union Bquare) Murray Hill Hou WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFIC Wellington Hotel &, L. ENGLISH, Correspondent. ontgomery street, corner Clay, Hayes street, open unti! 9:39 ock. 615 % 930 o'clock. $41 Mission s 20" Market 1 9 o'clock. 1096 ock. 106 Eleventy NW. corner Twemty* have to be done over again. If, however, we could | E 7 b | J procure a representative of this coast upon the In- | INSATIABLE. terstate Commission that would be a lasting gain of | | great e in more ways than one. | It is well }'10'.\'-.'1 that the Pacific Coast has not ! SHBOONS Q anoo ;AQ a0 been altogether fairly d in governmental mat- e, and what's mine is my own. —From Life. reatec P 19 o'cloc =3 o e :nd the Dutch | e The unfairness has not been due to any an- | g > 5 tagor to us or to our interests, but to the ign o e THOS, J. KIRK, ance of Eastern people concerning the conditions of | & =3 he Union and the inab: B=1 o ial at Washington to und Tl o . i el 5 H O ME = Superintendent of Schools, o < < =3 to the lences of the wrong done us in that way | & bl SAYS _-"‘7"'1"’1 occur in all departments of governmental work. 3 STUDT fi 1-many | The Co rce Commission is not alone to blame. | = = Iillment | In the present tariff, for example, the clause wh ; g It Is Another Valuable Means — of his boast permits the President to arrange reciprocity treaties | & vos ziter the lapse of i sent of the Senate puts in the 3 IE RIGH ' 3 o THE RIGHT SPIRIT. e 2s on which he can grant concessions many | 4 (IR(LE = FOR PUBLIC EDUCATION, \RES T I introducing - sed a br 4 icles which are Californi and not | 2 o [) tert s il e g S Sothe |G u o oo EOUORCOO0OT Sta i sai 2 2n to the | been the bills almost inva y show a | " o & n the East S == ’\'l‘—’ > =5 : It hall be under It is so all | =y \‘T"““\;Q_! P‘""L\]\-?' . z r s Bri to come. The issue | ;] N\ - = \?‘. n as at Pretoria. It statesmen of both coun- | capse w rselves much to blame in the matter be- | e never made strenuous and wel i vulgar fight for gold | rected efforts to protect ours for an empire cf | representativ ave strong We have not STATE or CAI;R es at the natio ects. re-elected our Congres on the side tness that we delegation has con steadf: ey : '/////'///////y//, oL 7L hington and conse- A luence there. The effort now made to gain a representative on the Interstate Com- g, and it is to be hoped Association ‘will find sufficient backing ake that part of its fight earnest, persistent and | until it Editor Call, San Francisco, Cal.: Dear Sir: I recognize in the Home Study Circle which you have established through The Call another valuable means for public ed- isb Duteho i | |ucation, that education which is required beyond and outside of g « 1000 1000 OUR FRUIT PRODUCTS. |public schools and even of colleges. The adults, the masses, as the efiect that the total revenues derived from | PTENENsive courses of study which you are thus offering should, and the orchards and vineyards of the State this I believe will, attract many students. Very truly yours, be in the neighborhood of $15,000,000, of last year of upward | mate is based uporha calcu- lation that the total output will be 1200 carloads of o compel the peaches at $1200 per car; 4000 carloads of prunes at ce not only of $;00 per car; 330 carloads of apricots, for which e State. The own- | $2000 would be a low average; 2500 carloads of rai- | course urge the | sins, averaging $1200 at least; pears, plums and nec- to the utmost, and the | tarines and that sort of fruit, 150 carloads, averaging | vill not require much | $1500 per car; apples, perhaps 150 carloads, at $1500 | wue the 5 the old days | per car. AROUND THE the United Colonies eight years be- A statement of that kind is grati 1g their independence, and thing of h (well as the children, continually need educating. The broad, com- ESTI?\I;\TES made by competent experts are to ope of Kruger to drive the i the country at the first rush, been active service, if not mounted, is first | leges, academies and universities in the five years $1400 a year; after ,r;\-e vears' | different States where military instruc- 1 vs | service, 31540; tion is given, under the direction of some ) : : atifying. It shows CORRIDORS | fiteen v officer of the United States army, detailed has not | the increase going on in the fruit industry and the | ;i?‘é | 81650, for that purpose. It is likely to | vast magnitude which the output has already reached. | ‘a p. Morgans, a mine owner of Anguis, nt time there is no | Still it is not wholly satisfactory. The great bulk |is at the Grand. peo- If mo $1800, $19 old pers be a long war, and at t 5 P ST v = : & : ot hs -lle, | Redding Cal. The asylums for the in- | T A R R T what developments may come of it before | of our fruit, the finest in the world, is sent to market | A. H. Bryan, 4 mining man of Oroville, | el s | _Special information supplied daily to " ° is at the Occidental. gane in California are: Stockton, Asa | puginess houses and public men by the Clark, medical directo Napa, A. M. ieithcr fresh, or dried, or packed in tins. Now, in 5 | N. A. McKay, a wealthy mine owner | Gardener; Agnews, J. H. Crane; South | J’ress Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 Mont- il T even the best of these forms the fruit amounts 1o | of Angels, is registered at the Lick. California, &t Patton, San Bernarding | SOMery street. Telephone Main 1042 * | SWINBURNE'S SONNET. hardly more than raw material. In the meantime | Charles E. Hale, a leading merchant of | [P Ii¥: M. R. Campbell; Mendicino, E. : Charged With Manslaughter. | there is a wide demand for the finer grades of jel- | oS Angeles, Is a guest at the Palace. | . e R g Lieutenant C. O. Huntington, U. 8. N I‘“; mgrmalades, preserves _and‘ all the hundred kinds | is at the California accompanted by his | N 3 c Y ] of fruit conserves and confections. Moreover, our | wife. United States is eligible to an examina- tion under the civil service rules of the MUST BE A CITIZEN—T. O. §., City. | Coroner Hill yesterday held an inquest No person who fs not a citizén of the |On the body of Mrs. Ellen Richardson, | who was shot and killed by her husband {last Tuesday night in their saloon at §45 1 i | 5 > . street. jury returne - 2 Consuls tell us there is a large demand throughout | Dr. G. F. Falkner, one of the best-|{inited States for any position. A declara- ggrg;gr;l;?cl By it that ele n British 50- | the Orient for fruits in glass, since neither dried nor | ¥2O¥ND Ph"”“éa“’ ,°t Bcrauiento,sias & Ho “m‘""""“‘;" o b“"“‘]‘f a citizen 15 | slaughter. . § . i . e st at the Grand. | not sufficient for any applicant to take | 5 er all, has g Victorian era | ¢; ot 1 7 o Eu . b L R Pl tinned fruits stand the climate. . W hy should we | James McCudden, the well-known |27 €Xamintion for any position. It you don't eat well or sleep well, have head- ory than a= iis soiditrs and afs “sallors. | ship uearly. all onr fuit as. rdw matexial wheh by | valieio contraator, 1o amors €he arotvals TOMPKINSVILLE—Subscriber, City. In | aches and dizzy spells, try a spoonful of Dr. there in the sam 1 and political at- manufacturing it to its highest form at home we |of Yesterday at the Grand. the State of New York there is a Tomp- | Siegert’s Angostura Bitters. to stomach aggression on the Transvaal. Her- bert Spencer and John Moriey have voiced the [T is evident that British opinion needs some tonic | disapproval o mo, e e 5 B = : | kinsville in Ri S y | e e { American anti-imperialists and are | could not only diversify our industry and give em- | T- C. Johnson, one of the most promi- | XRSVIE ;r)‘mre ‘cs)";“‘;‘l‘i‘?es(—gg:[‘a»bo_" ‘:‘f‘ Gt Ohnioh Fublice i i sty | taunted as “little Englishmen” But still they stand . ol nent ranchers in the vicinity of Pleasan- | ROTthel ity o . g & X | taunted 2 ttie Eng S ey stan | ployment to more labor but largely increase our | Eoni iz aipueal st e Crond. | from New York City. Richmond County | mhe vestry of Grace Church has issued | for morality and principle and’ justice, as against | revenues? [ |18, Dot on the Hudson, but is opposite |, orc attractive ‘booklet.”” profusely Lester Wallack, a prominent merchant | Kings County, on the Narrows. Any ma i | o oY ADY MaD | i octrated and containing a brict sketch The Governor of Texas has called the capitalists | of Fresno, is registered at the Lick on a | 5Ny York and surroundings wil snow | Musteated 257 TR 208 0, DriC Sretel t | and the investors of the country to meet some two | short business trip to the city. ‘ghgret lssalsnhn"ljumpk{?svfll‘? ll;l( Broome | Grace parish u!e.!This ‘!‘lbooklet" will be identified with patriotism and the lib- & i : g | James McNell, a capitalist of Santa|County, South Middle New York. | ot Interest niot cnly, 1n;the present mem- i wh e B i ae ol e A e ol e il b T WHITE HOUSE—Subscriber, Oak. | Pership of the church, but also to many 5 n, which ar ¢ | discuss the industrial development of that State. It |ghort vistt of pleasure to this city, land, Cal. The only morfey that is paid | wn° Wore formerly connected therewith. is the purpose of the Texans to show enterprisin Timothy Lee, an able and influential | by the United States to the President is ~L0e_collection of photo-engravings that % % prising | shown will be valued Ly citizens gen- ago, when state policy required mur- | business men of the North that raw material for | 8ttorney of Ione, is at the Lick, where | the amount of his salary, $30,000 a year. e . s A P RE s : : ¢ 3 main during h | Al the expenses of y s 3 subject is not appropriate for | der _‘»"d outrage ‘'to F"O‘fc“ the If’d‘a" frontier, and manufacturing can be had more cheaply in that State {’,fe‘,f,’{'y,” S e pa(d‘ ueuf gt ae:piclgletl‘x‘ngne:ngf“i;e :,r: s the affair turned out all | the independent tribes of the Chitral had to be the | ¢han in any other part of the Union, and that the | 5 penses that are in the way of a public | S i i o Y , Mr. and Mrs. James R. Holt Jr. are| | THE | , British opinion was soothed by calling the o 5 x i 3o | nature. Among th e ford to smile at the joke. It is not | Vi facilities for shipping to all parts of the world are ! staving at the Occidental. Mr. Holt is | r?:dai‘:zrlgnangnotgth;els:m%{ggtggdc;;;uggg ey tribesmen rebels and traitors, though they had never | pxenll g sgais slGint |largely interested in Hawaiian sugar |the greenhouse, the conservatory, the | ,hL gkong. a5 e t& Br’yh S c‘xcchcnt. Why _s}_:fqld not. C'ahforma direct atten- | Planttoe. | furnishing of the White Proveoryy ol 3 .| been under any sort ol subjection to British jurisdic- | tion to the possibilities that lie before the men of | | pay ‘of all persons employed about that | is of opinion there is room in|tion. When they had been killed, their poor hut o M eiler, 8 leading business man | house, except the ~President's private | anner in which the , blood and greed. To overcome their influence | ar was overcrowded with | it has been found necessary to discover and in also a clever bit of rical de- med the “United States trans- | © 14 the nigh ers who | British heart. y in : < 5 3 | ey i capital and energy who will work up all our fruit | of Butte, Montana, is a guest at the |servants cmocratic national poli- | burned and their hill country laid waste, the English | into the forms in which it will command the!best |ibialace. . Mra Muellprn:, gondmmantes-afisnf o5 =y G Ve Lt : St O K c; | into th : i 3 z 5 Al-E., : . onn i enough for Republican national poli- | conscience was quieted by the announcement that | prices in the best markets of the world? Bushagd with vessels, Is a symbol to designate a | tics. He would have the Democrats vote a straight | R b : b 3 3 _ J. C. Steele of the Kansas City Star is | first class v E | N TRl e !hfrc !";m"ms ’J!f the C}}flfa:!;}ad been punished. According to the estimates there will be $15,000,000 | at ‘the Occidental. He has come to this s ::st)\i:szg’a5;cé?23sih3:illle;l:rlA:: sy EEo A ut now the case is different. The Transvaal | worth of fruit sent out of the State this year, and it | city to write up the story of Funston's | s and 1o assigned to a new ship for | cs who do not believe he thinks himself a very | affair cannot be dumped into the hopper as part of | is safe to say that a considerable percentage of it | 52!1ant bovs for the people of their home a number of vears, varying from four to | ute young man. i(he “white man’s burden,” and murder and criminal | Htate: AR b oty mue matertal gk | will be worked over again in the East or in Europe | E. P. Gifford, an influential attorney of | ALter the original term has expired the 5 agar ann ma 2 . E A AL § 3 A may be further continued for an ad- Offers 5000 shares of its stock at nburne are doing the: war- | B8 oion cannot be made to appearas a duty to | and sold for three times what we get for it. It is | Stockton, is registered at the California. | ditlonal specified term on condition_of hilagaingt %he. Bote ) Pao the blick or brown man. The Boers are civilized, | not improbable that some of it may actually come Dr. J. G. Pierce has come down from | certain specified repairs being made. The g o e his home in Sebastopol and Is staying at | figure 1 refers to the state of anchors, | $1 h ) reate Austin Hlest Bl o Brde s of an older race and better blood than the British. | back to us and be sold in our own groceries as | the Occidental ¥ | cables and other fittings. Vessels of in- eP S aPe. 2 ) o ; 4 ferl for Kruger and consoling himself with the thonghe | L Ay v Gops f:r fiberty at the bat- | Scotch marmalade, London preserves or confections {Hetiers AE R 2nd 7. % he teri A1 hag| Capital stock that while “the shallows murmur the deeps are | S of the Golden Spur when the British Isles were | from Paris. It is almost certain that much of it will | CALIFOBNIANS IN NEW YORK.| come into use {o deriote anything that js| Par Value . b o 2 3 e | of undoubtedly good quality. not out of the troglodyte stages of progress. | be packed in glass in England and sent around to | NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—C. H. Bentley of Esnee e Kipling and S ging for the Bri do 100,000 shares. -$10 00 per share. e | They carried civilization into Africa in advance of | China and there sold under our very eyes for a big- | San Francisco is at the Tmpertal. L. T. e e e e ke T e London dispatches agree that the London press | G_"fi{ Britain and had planted civil and religious in- | ger profit than we make in selling it in sacks or in fl“‘{;fi xg:%ohyd‘lssthga? ‘{tvm‘sn‘;{;fgehfllzfi United States maintains a school of ar- | very. centex.of the famoua is defiant in its attitude on the South African mud. | stitutions there while England was so intent on rob- | tins. It is time for California to follow the example | Wintingham and Master Wintingham of | Hll€Ty at Fort Monroe, Va., and a school dle. Tt is safe to say, even in the absence of d's- . . . 3 L i A % , s of infantry and cavalry at Fort Leaven- | K R DI t bing the treasure vaults of Hindoo Princes and de- | of the Southern States. Let us make known to in- | S%1 Frauclsco are at the Herald Square. | worth, Kansas, Thesé schools are " for | eri 1Ver N | i patches from the Transvaal, that the London press | SPoiling the Greg! Mogul that she hardly knew there | vestors the wealth of our raw material and the ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS, g;(?l'-jem;tde\?a;tce‘;elsn‘ Fxgé";a;vu}fulms%rl&?fii Biawsy Retwesn ‘““"“-L‘\Zm‘l‘ & ot iow the ving AR | was such 2 continent as Africa.. Therefore these ter- greater wealth that awaits those who will manu- e ‘%t ‘"’f SEr¥ice they: have pusmued st Vedut | (bfi{:‘L ‘;ggu(c:‘ieTll‘\?zE ns(‘s\ F,‘,rL D | rible Boers : T S s LEAVE SENCE— oint. | St e sur- i S ; : | xible Boers must be lied about in verse and prose, | facture it into its most finished form. City. Tn the United States. s sor ey | There is the Virsinia Military Institate | ~ Igunded by wella'ia' various staes Now that the rains have put out the forest fires in | misrepresented and abused. Kipling has done his 2 cer in the regular or volunteer service 1 | ot &‘;"\‘{-"‘"{“po‘ufi‘A‘é'q"c'x?;‘m""éfif Hidael A SE INVESTIGATION 18 ant i ins r T 5 b & 4 : g o es 3 o t s | 2 3 N m{ Cruz Mountains the grape men are com- | share, to his discredit, and his war song, which fits| It has been noted that the Democrats have about | fm"r:ed““h]”;" “’1 ';bse“ce' not a fur- | not ':"g”ef( mm'i'y “dfigr"s', There 0(;;] ull\vgfgict for sinking is ahout it inj some hei es. | volf n i il : . . ; ough. When he is absent. f; i - | also the Kentucky Military Institute' 8 abou g because i .1r)uyed some of. their grapes. | the “'mf'l.mrdcrmg the lamb for roiling his water | abandoned the campaign against trusts in the State m:gd on business connseecl:ed :Elhht‘:ecg;g- Farmaale, Ky, There "e)s‘“‘"""u“e‘-‘“‘al e :’: 'ei‘! .and 00t a0 Tk may There is no such thing as satisiying a man who lives | by drinking downstream exactly as it fits England e PRE AT W0 Tebenik elections this year and are now stumping on gen- | vice he is allowed mileage, but not like ztx‘xl(:xl;i B‘hgefid‘vfi{gfiixfisfig"fg{;:)lrsxha‘x'xe:fl & e . . - a private or non-com., commutation of ra- as to requirements you should writ eral principles and fighting nothing but prosperity. | tions The bay of & second Heutenant im | 25 s cF homer{svou should write to any in the mountains. for making war on the Boers because they injure her OFFICE—Room 47, Eighth Floor, Mills Bullding,

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