The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 11, 1899, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1899, veals the cause for the coming of Eugone V. Debs to this coast. These resolutions are highly eulogistic of Debs and . Gay- lord Wilshire of Los Angeles Debs conceded to be the next nominee for Pre: | TREASURY WILL | i v [ ident on the Soctal Democratic ticket. | ! | Wilshire is being pushed for Vice Presi- | dent by the San Francisco and Los / i geles Sociallsts, and it s to-night nounced that t ‘alifornia del 1 | demand this recc t. ‘ —_— | e o is dead, Wilst c the fore- | Speculators Must Look| mmostscontrh Liten i | hire's Out for Themselves. of Toledo re- | 1mp Ohio during owing to pressure | | on of one mil- | Bpecial D! | patch to The Call. but lined LIEUTENANT BAMFORD | MARRIES MRS. OBRIEN Wedding That Recalls the s::andu{ Ending in the Court-Martial of ‘ | ast campa. of business he CHI( TAGO, cag0 iy, Captain Romeyn. , Ga., Nov. 10.—Word was re- ed {n Atlanta to-n t of the marriage | ton on Saturday last of Lieu- | Bamford, Fifth Infantry, U. | and Mrs. Mae Kendall O'Brien. a highly Interesting sequel to the | at McPherson in | Bamford at that time | marry Mary Romeyn, yn's daughter, at the same fime paying marked attention to Mr: ('Brien. Captain Romeyn expressed him the matter and Lieutena of it, accosted the cap- His superior responded down, the court-martial | dled some time ago Lieutenant Bamford is at present stationed in Omaha. YELLOW FEVER AT TAMPA. Board of Health Reports Two Cases and One Death. JACKSONVILLE, ate Board H es and one death t Tampa City. oro he place and of the dock: X and dispatel Fla., alth s quara. s was at this ev om0 Y Wwere no new MEANS LITTLE CHANGE | IN CUBAN GOVERNMENT | Aime = SUIT TO FORECLOSE. | Action Begun by Holders of Mort- | Plan Doss Not In- Greek Mine. Nov. 10. - gag e on the ANDR wns 69,994 of th ‘Will Erect 2 Cyanide Plant. > SAN DIEGO, Nov. 10.—Judge T to-day authorized Re T ' \ the Golden Cross mines at Hedges to § erect a cyanide pla )nnection with > 3 e works, with a of 300 tons = - C testimony it I Y = s made, E B The cost of tre s r & cents per ton. P stat : 2 be S x PASADENA Ball, of Chi, DOING POLITICS. His Visit to the Coast Explained. [ et of reso- | Council re- | DEBS Reason for Workma: d. ~ st n Badly Mangle ANGET STINGY GIRL | Saves Her New Shoes by Only Wear- ing Omne at a Time. day b fore Hyde t of con- woman ved irough a b t of a ECHA PILLS BE M'S bably gure Wingd Pain & Stomach S Torpid Liver G wome \she hrought Sallow Skin i e e Indigesticn, ete. 10 cents and 25 cents—Druggists. SUOURUOUOETOUSTIIE PSRRI SP PR | COKE! COKE! P. A. McDONALD, svement in petty 11d have bee A ARA LIS A LA 44 440 10 sald when her pon her, “I have 4 Do yot 1 know, girls,” Wholesale ipper of Coke. ona of them thought immediately OFFI OM & lan of avoiding gravel walks, and 1 to hear an old story. But it 3 * she went on, “I r worn shoes that were mates | dancing partles. You see, there's really no reason why one should e on two good shoss at once any- OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. et S et buy & pair the other with Catalogues and Price Lists Malled re. down 1 am al- v careful not te old one show, on Application. Dt put the new one out where it can be one gets old 1| r pair and put seen. discard the o = When the first new BOOKS AND STATIONERY. t on the other new one, then keep that foot | in front. Of course, then 1 am wearing | both of the same palr, but they're | not m any more. Now, isn't that a | great scheme?” el A | SRR There was a wild and concerted strug- “"])M"\'(O“’!‘ AND Pd. JRON. 2RI alf dozen girls m; ‘ ) xi 9 i e at the J-C ILSON & CO ) Telephone Main 1864, her they | LT = S| scheme.” ( COPE | SMITH. | 175 T cuet taini cen called | C. W. SMITH, 37¥en! sol and 18 Washington st - | mer, to look so f ‘And now ti “What next FRESH AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & C0. ’ m about ' has new -~ “putting yo f FURS. meaning for g = e iR e e J. N LOESTAD, [4, /ooy . wewars _ Lot Foreign Parcels Post. ! bR i ck In spite of the frequent publication in | IRON FOUNDE | the newspapers ‘r'{ Diosanrdhatoa parcels | : { FOINIRY Morton & Hedley, | post convention has been L WESTERN FOUNDRY, 572" o ficmon: | Ewveen the Usited s | st. Cadtings of Brery. Des n Made to as gone into effect | s Bla iited States remain in ignorance of it i | At Jeast so says Superintendent Brooks of | PAPER DEALERS, | the Foreig ail Service. Twenty-eight METTE PULE AKD FAPER cO., | parcels were gent from the United st WILLA Montgomery . |to Germany October 1, the day AT - P e 5 " | Vention went into cffv"r'. i{p«l £ ]-(~r!| frul.( 5 Ty to this country. Captain Brooks PRINTING, Germany 10 e Americans Wil saker o he thi St | fheir new pri B e vilege before long and that | DT Be general use of the mails for | there Wil of parcels.—Washington Special | New York Times. S. F. STATIONER AND PRINTER. Telegrar we PARTRIDGE c;;!lxrr::‘n'u | . SN = 7 o - ‘ A Mixed Blessing. WHITE ASH STEAM COAL, 75 BX| <Telephones. are great time-savers, DIAMOND COAL MI RIVER COLLL market, JOffice and NG CO., at its GRE is the Best Coal in ti &rfls—40 Maln streety “:‘:{}:,1‘1‘ Thn.t depends on who calls you her other- | w | and the otk | were WIFE-MURDERER FOREIGN CRUISERS BECKER HANGED MAY INTERFERE | Asked to Take a Hand in Venezuela. Awful Crime Avenged by the Law. e Special Dispatch to The Call LA GUAYRA, Venezuela, Nov. 10— Francts B. Loomis, United States Min- | ister to Venezuela, has asked the com- | manders of the forelgn cruisers off Puerto Spectal Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, Nov. 10.—Albert August Becker, who on January 27 last murdered Rachel, and afterward chopped and boiled the remains in order to dis- is wife, ¢ of them, was hanged in the County | Cabello to act together In order to prevent 1 at 12:05 this afternoon. Becker's neck Antonio Parades, formerly a was not broken by the fall, and it was | commander in ex-President Andrade’s army, who refuses to recognize the au- thority of General Clpriano Castro, bom- sixteen minutes before he was pronounced dead. | On the scaffold Becker protested his in- | nocence, and declared that George Sut- terlin, the father of his second wife, was the real murderer. The case of August Becker in many ways bore a remarkable similarity to that | of “Adolph Luetgert. Both of the con- | demned men were butchers, and the mo- | tive for the crime was the same in both cases—the desire to get rid of the wife pressure to bear upon him. The British, French, German, and American commanders will confer at Puerto Cabello and will take all proper measures to prevent Parades sacrificin the lives of innocent persons. legation will s of Charity by SRTO CABEI The Unite ecial request. Venezuela, Nov. b4 3 in order to marry a younger woman. The | 10._General Parades absolutely refuses manner of committing the crimes was | to agree to any ))(4;()”, al to surrender. A much the same, both men, according to | conference was held this afternoon be- | tween German, Dutch and re, and as a result : the United s sent to discuss the the testimony, being extrem an ly brutal in | g the same boiling the the killin 1d both us! : means to dispose of the body—by and burning. It was proved at Becker's trial that af- | matter with General Parades and to try ter killing his wife he had chopped | to effect an arrangement. He proved to her body to pleces, then boiled the re- | be defiant, and intimated to Mr. Russell mains on his kitchen stove, afterward | that he was v to fight any force that burning the remains in various places. As | General Ca ould send a, in the case of Luetgert, the rings of the murdered wife played no small part in the | testimony leadin conviction. ldke Luetgert, also, B eavored to ex- plain wife! nce by saying st him. WAR-TIME STORY. Recalled by a Visit of Admiral Wat- ippear:; she had eloped with another man. | son to Chicago. B et LalaMishigms | Chicago recently through the presence in Later he endeavored to implicate fn the | the city at the same time of Admiral Wat- 'rime the father of the woman whom he | son, who wa sing through on his way arried after murdering his first wife, ! y, and Mrs. Ed- d to the last he adhered to s version. | win A. ( f Quinc; Ill, who was here visiti r son, Edwin B. Clarke, LEGAT SLAVERY IN THE SOUTH. | the Chicago - 1t was a story i of the lon and not of the Services of Negroes Fined for Small | 5J il THHCe 0fiy fons he meantime does not dim Crimes Are Sold to Farmers. “onditions much like slavery have been | yught about among the negroes in this | ¢ with 1t the fine-aiternative system of | & midshipman A arragut’'s Shing minor crimes, and the grand | fleet before New Orleans, and when she of this (Anderson) county, in its| Was a Mis sancon, a Southern bells, entment just made, directs attention | and the stro: d of a sympathizer to them. | with the sece: A negro is arrested for some offense— | Miss Besancon was on her father's plan- gambling, fighting, resistance of officers, | tation uburb of the city. A part of h of contract, violation of the lien | the 1 army of occupation camped selling liquor, or any one of a dozen | hear lace. The soldlers needed fire- wood, and set out to get it. On the Besan- econ plantation were some magnificent oaks, centuries old, the pride of the place He is e of w six 10 alternat ys, or_even fined $25 or rking sixty | months, on ain Then a white farmer | and of the family. The wood-cutting nd s him over. If he appears | party saw the oaks, and with axes in n _able-bodied farm hand, the | hand started for them farmer offers to pay his fine, to be| On the plantation with Miss Besancon worked out,” and the negro usually con- or, two cousins and two vis- sents. As farm wages are from $§ to $8 E 1l young women. From a a month and board, and in such cases ars | window they saw the ax party approach the s lowest rate, the ng himself out of ser the group of great oaks. Then there was a race. When the soldiers arrived at the two are slim. He does | first tree they found six pretty girls in his contract. If he | white with hands joined encircling and family, he cannot get aw: and | clasping the old gray »ven if he 13 a single man he can o| It was a case of spare this far before he is captured, and breach of | tree,” but the men wanted wood. They means another long term on ‘“‘tne | made for another oak, but again were outstripp: the race, and that. tree, in {ts turn, was clasped in the arms of six plucky ithern girls. A third tree was circled in the same manner, and then the Northern Invaders shamefacedly with- drew and secured thelr fuel supply else- v in its report say! to-day a n under a terror of ranging from the these unfort the i tree-saving eplsode reached ears of the officers of the army of oc more, having in some instances pation and of those of the fleet. They four years' serv for the advan called In scores to offer their congratula- f $50 or less. Worse than | tionss to the p plantation girls the callers was Midshipman Wat- £ w a rear admiral with a fleet of his own goes s admirat whit ¢ who have T without saying, perhaps, that of the Federal officers was fshed when they learned m Juently that just before the oak epi- have been | gode the same six Southern girls had metimes during the | wheeled, “by hand,” a battery of light ity, In order to pay | artillery, which the retreating Confeder- . the price of their T instances these d in order to avoid ates had left behind, down and had dumped the ing waters of the Mississippi, in order that they might be of no service to the invading host.—Chicago Tribue. O e ODDLY MATCHED RACERS. names one lawyer of ntment bar, who, Pigeons Outfly Honey Bees in a Mile Course Trial. Two men who lived in Wigtown, in Scot land, became engaged in | to whether homing pigeo could fly tt ster. Jach was so sure of he correctness of his own opinion that they resolved to make a test of the mat- ter or ac ly bad them : P! But how shall we know that your fast dous prices, | bees are the right bees when they come Mo iines: © | in2" sald the man who owned the plgeons. ily enough—flour’ em,” sald the | other. So a number of bees w arefully taken from a hive, near evening, so that it might be altogether unlikely t would lofter by at, they rinkled The floured is later: es and thirty secon me in thirty seco: six minutes. Colored Ealsominers Have Caught | the Craze for Combines. | The resuit did not prove a great deal, Baltimore whitewashers are about to | so slight was the distance, and the bee combination for the regulation of | man taninks he might win on a second ness, and for the purpose of pre- | trial. Certainly neither pigeon nor bees venting price cutting. Colored men who | were vei wifi. Perhaps they were slow been engaged in the business for | {n getting under way.—Youth’s Compan- ve been alarmed over novices, | fon. er into competition with them and B jobs by using inferior materials | Earthquake in Africa. and cheap workmen. This they say re- flects in the eral, and thefr object is to uphold their on by throwing around it safe- | which they m will be as mucn the bLenefit of their customers as for themselves. end-upen the trade re- | A afstinet shock of earthquake was ex- D e, A neen | perienced in Cape Town and suburbs at barding Puerto Cabello by bringing moral | Dutch | 3| protect the French | friendship for Mrs. | to the levee uns into the rush- | with fine, white stuck to might | them. Then the bees and one homing derson | pigeon we en to a point a mile away 1t New York Tribune, | from the pigeonhole and also a mile away from the beehive, :}nd‘ .'\111 were liberated. - 3 | “The pigeon reached its journey’s enc WHITEWASHERS' TRUST. | R p Golithen s taneas nl e | in ex- | o sfendasretrstasrstasiasrsfetssrstestestalesesisshesdosts rsfesdr s she e efa o e sfa oo atrele i o 72 | \ \ \ PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND | RELIEVES PAIN. Mrs. Margaret Bethel, of Brainerd, Minn., writes: | “For thirty years | have been a great sufferer from neuralgia in the head and also with rheumatism in the whole body. [ began taking Paine’s Celery Compound, and soon found that I was much better. Before taking the Compound, my life was such a burden that | almost prayed tolay it down. | was bedfast every two weeks with horrible pain in the head, back and neck until | was almost crazy. | am able to do harder work and more of it to-day than for twenty-five years. | am really enjoying life again,thanks to Paine’s Celery Compound. | am satisfied that my life has been prolonged many years by its use.” Paine’s Celery Compound is a great reconstruct= lant. The weakened, inflamed nerves are built up and the nervous force increased. The stomach, liver ‘and kidneys are kept in healthy action. The body is kept free of acid blood and morbid waste material; is made healthy and free from pain. 12:23 nicipal pawnshop. A report just issued well as felt, and in the s | ehows that among the borrowers last more distinetly than in tc are taken by means of | year were 8500 working. pe 84 W } probably be due to the vi high, which the natives | ploves, 6364 merchants, of the trafflc. It was < fastened to poles, in the | manufacturer: d 2019 Tepr enough to tantial bu fashion of curtains gliding on their rods. | the liberal prc ns. Rer ings, but itfon. Many | In reality the net is double. The first | on their dividends, frec would not believe that it was an | near the side of the sea i of meshe help of the friendly Mont, and arthquake, but attributed both noise and | large and loose, but at the back is an- | class are among the borrowers. | vibration to passing of some heavy |other net where the bird will really come | stitution Is looked upon mor vehicle or ing operations at a dis- | and perch itself in the folds formed by | nature of a bank t 1s t tance, and there were vast numbers of net of small meshes | It advances money 4 people who knew nothing of it at all. In| There is another method of capture |est on any form of security, the gardens, at several houses where the | which is more picturesque. Rows of dried | niture and railway shares, table was laid for dinner, the shock was | branches are placed on the shore, At the | the tradesman short. of capit | suciently strong to break the crockery, | foot of each branch is disposed a tuft |as by laborers out of wark.—London —Cape Town News. | of fresh herbs, in the middle of which is | Chronicle. ‘With nothing on earth to en Unable to make oth. | £ = | arranged _an opening which ends in a | — e—— | s The quall, tired by its journey it NETTING QUAIL. | efhgabiattie peanch b crer He Is to Be Pitied. | = ._._ | bunch of herbs, naturally, without figur- | HOw sad is the man who wanders through | gyptians Catch the Birds ! 1t that it is going to put itself ife ;How the E i where a native will surprise With these means of destruc- by Thousands. | d lately of the | ap d kil it. There has been mu tion, 1t is not astonishing that each -year | While everything seems to annoy. 1ail in Bgypt n regard to | more than a_million of these birds are | HIs life is a cocoanut, minus the milk, made by Frenchmen about | taken.—New York Sun A dry, empty shell ng more; carrsing the Dirds across French terri- | So pity rather than blame thé poor man tory for English use. ‘ Who has heard the story before, The passage of | band of quail over the coast of the d of the Nile, from Port Sald to Al dria, beging In September and lasts a | Paris Pawnshops. All sorts and conditions of people pa- tronize the Parls Mont de Plete, or mu- | Even a tramp may he invariably draws th dmire pictures, but ine at wood cuts. % When it is remembered that there are about §7,000 bufldings in Baltimore it will n what a formidable affair a white- trust would become, and how gs would be broughit home to family in the city. Scarcely of these buildings but needs some part of it v every gle one a sin & coat of whitewash for or its surroundings at least once or per- haps twice a year. There i3 some talk | of having the State regulate the business, | probably by having a State Board of Ex- | an , who would Inquire into the qual- tfications of whitewashers by competltive examinations. It has been suggested that the examinations might be arranged to take place at some State institution, where a sectlon of fence or building might be alloted to each applicant for a practical evidence of his ability. Another | plan suggested is to license whitewashers, | Then, it is sald, the men would be regis- | tered and could be kept under surveil- | lance.—Baltimore Sun. —_———— FAITEFUL DOG. Saved the Lives of a Family, but He Perished. Fad it not been for the warning ba f a faithful dog the family of Therk y, of Kipp street and Indiana avenue, uld in all Hkelihood have been smothe Mr. (¢ v of to ered to death recently Keeohra nd in some out in the s penned up in the rear of d the bright glare of the s caused him to bark and The noise awakened Clay r members of his family, who all asleep. They soon found out the matter was, and hurriedly d themselves, 'he dog's warning came none too soon, for by the time they reached the firet floor the house was filled with smoke. Tn the meantime an alarm was turned in by a Thirtieth District policeman. The fire- men succeeded in extinguishing the flames, with a damage of $1000, equally divided between the building and con- tents. When the firemen had forced thelr way through the fire and smoke into the cei- lar they found the dog dead. In their hurry to get out of the house the family had forgot the faithful animal that gave them timely warning.—Philadelphia Times. Is perfected after twen what not blister. closely sealed, upon application. Dear Sir:—1 purcl Another Version. “All the world’s a stage,” quoted the man from St. Louls. “That's right,”” remarked the Chicago man, “and when it comes to amateur the- atricals the rest of the universe isn't in it with your village.” 3 o e ® b 3 b k3 k3 + k4 rd $ + ki k4 fepr 1 IT GLADDENS THE HEART OF A spring to the tongue parched with thirst. It is glorious, joyous and satisfying. receive the exhilarating current of Galvanic Electricity, which is food and drink hope it infuses into his despondent mind—what strength to his frame. Electricity is the acknowledged remedy in applying it. Dr. McLau it does its work gently, ! . health bubbles forth in all its pent-up force, the patient is cured as he rests after his daily labers. —The perfzction of physical manhood is a most beautiful subject, and it is treated in READ MY BOOK a simple, inferesting manner in @y new 88-page illustrated book. which I send free, DR. M. A. McLAUGHLIN, hased one O since that time I have noi tion and I found your Belt h suffer from the above complal | DR. M. A, McLAUGHLIN, e O O8O o OO LT O Y g e NERVE-WRECKED MAN The soothing, gentle flow of animal vitality which is infused into the nerves men wrecked by over-taxation of the vital forces is like the touch of the cool The nerves are starved—drained of their life and encrgy. How gladly they them. What joy it brings to the weak and nervous man, what courage and oo s o s o s S SR o o o s o s s S e o e s DR. McLAUGHLIN’S ELECTRIC BELT years of close application to one hobby—the upbuilding of physical force. for exhausted vitality, and this method is the most effective ghlin’s Electric Belt is worn during sieep. The electrodes are covered and do and, while hardly realizing the change until the ioy of renewed ty You wish to be streng and to realizz the pl:asures of life fully—send for it, PIEDMONT AVE., OAKLAND, CAL., Oct. 25, 1899. f your Belts for general rheumatism, wore it three weeks and t had a pain or ache. I also suffered from indigestion and constipa- as cured me of those ailments. T recommend the Belt to all who ints, feeling sure that benefit will be derived. FRANK KELLY. 702 Market, Cor. Kearny, Officc Hours—S a.m. t08:30 p.m. S. F., and Burdick Block, Sundays, 10 to 1. Cor. Bpring and Second, Los Angsles. NEVER SOLD IN DRUG STORES

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