The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 18, 1900, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1900. HOAR APPEALS TO HIS PARTY Urges a Complete Abandonment of the Movement Toward Imperialism. Venerab'e Massachusetts Senator’s Plea for Adherence to the Cherished ldeals of the Republic. - {in the Declarati on of Independence for ex- pansion, Hc dec! : dec ugh in it, but it is the and not of despotism; of Never was such growth in | as that from the seed anted. It has covered the in South America. It It is the expansion om your tinsel, pinch- as the growth of a a strong man differs from »nda_when he swal- | is the expansion of | s is the expansion of 0 hort a life made we recognizea nt of the governed | S0 acquired forth to ns of them. I suppose by your success. There are thousand miles away, | hing. You go forth | as Louls Napoleon at Sedan at length the Fili- | e causes which, in his it. He made an earnest | ise of the Filipinos, es- ldo, who, he declared, and patriotic.” In the £y of Aguinaldo he sald: to be remembered with that have given life and everything to their country in a losing live with Kossuth, with Oom with Emmet, with Eg- | with Nathan Hale, with W the great martyrs of histor been the seed of the Church lay all subert ned his well-known posi- lipinos had achieved their that the United States had its ally and was bound to rec- ind and that they for such inde- self-government I of Mabini, are prod They are not unwors the vehicle th which of Solomon, the pr Our Duty Senator presented an to the Filipinos. | laborate de- the charge | the present in resisting vhat he would r said 1 not take these | n {llustrat the Philippin do | ¢ the Ph {lipp! he: v b a Gov- | if they desire Hoar spoke for three hours and ten min- s. As he concluded applause swept ver the galleries. Many of his coll esp 3 N on the Democratic im. ue: side, Auburn’s New Mayor. Special Disptach to The Call AUBURN, April 17.—The new Board of Trustees organized to-night and ected J. W. Morgan Mayor for the fourth time. The new board promises to be one of progression. Among the improvements 800n to be made is the building of a street | ay and the extending of the sewer | ystem. | - Eslabe in Death Chamber. | The Call | PRISON, April 17.—| who murdered an aged | labe, rder in Oakland, will hang for Ap 1 23 Eslabe mber to-day. crime on Monday ken to the dea Gef Health--Get Sirength. Get Nerve--HUDYAN, HUDYAN is the very best gz remedy on earth for rebuilding @ | broken down constitu- ‘ effect of HUDYAN @] e, nervous MEN and 8| N is to give color to the activity to the limbs and y those who take HUD- the step becomes more the mind grows more | AN brings back "health and vigor. Note the numbers: They de- scribe pc of weakness that ]141'1')\‘ reaches. HUDYAN relieves pains and aches HUDYAN cures nervousness, headaches, sleeplessness. HUD- YAN insures perfect digestion and creates a healthy appetite. HUDYAN touches the liver gently, thus giving the bowels nature’s laxative. HUDYAN strengthens the action of the heart. HUDYAN stimulates the kidneys to perfect activity, in 3 manner expelling all impurities from the blood. HUDYAN js for weak, pale, worn, haggard men and women, and cures per- menently. GET HUDYAN from your druggist. 50c a package, six packages for $2.50. If he does not keep it send direct to the Hudyan Remedy Co., cor. Stockton, Ellis and Market sts.,, San Francisco, Cal & # th~ Hudysn R B D CTORS C s o ateer by etber or in person. Write your symntoms. <end for circulars »nd testimonia's ofths Great Hudyan 000CO0CTDEROCDNRRAOBCOTATCROCONOREE320020 | Wheeler of Kentucky De | duty to their country. | erty to use it. | cean after he has exhausted every scheme | the law could devise that would | the mother from seeing her child, and | departed Sunday or Monday so that he | charged with a felony. Mrs. Marceau, who | SHIPPERS MUST | PAY THE WAR TAX Text of Supreme Court Decision, From Which Justices Harlan and McKenna Dissent. Special Dispatch to the Jall CALL HEADQUARTERS, WELLINGTON HOTEL, WASHINGTON, April 17.—The Supreme Court of the United States yesterday decided that express com- panies may add the price of the one-cent stamp required to be affixed to their receipts for shipment of goods to the rates charged for transportation. There were two cases before the court, the opinion being delivered in that of the Ameri- can Express Company vs. F. A. Maynard, Attorney Gerneral, on relation of 3 9 «“ Mudder ! der British Are Komin PAYS T00 MUCH ~ GOVERNMENT FOR THE ARMOR | OF PLACERVILLE FOR ITS SHIPS' ~ REORGANIZED |Election Held for the First Time in Twenty-Eight —New York World. MRS, BRASLAN FILES SUIT FOR MAINTENANCE Claims Her Husband Has Failed to Support Her R S S O B e B S S o S S S S =3 § ; | ; i : i i i ; | | % clares the Government Is Being Robbed. Years. and Their Child. g Says Manufacturers Realize Two Prentiss Carpenter Is Chosen Mayor | He Has Been Known as a “Jolly and the Settlement of the Bond Question Will Devolve Upon Him. SRS JRCRS Hundred Per Cent Profit on | Their Contracts With Uncle Sam. | e | WASHINGTON, upon the Good Fellow” and the Couple Have Valuable Commu- nity Property. PSS Special Dispatch to The Call. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, April 17.—A suit that will come as a surprise to San Jose society April 17.—The second | the naval appropria- House to-day was con- the subject matter of the B S P S P bill and was as a rule devoid of interest- WS bequt.bere. 15-day) by Mre: | Gearat- E et LR S e ana Braslan against her husband, Charles N o parmor P. Braslan, for maintenance. Braslan is a , attracted | The general debate was to-day and to-morrow the biil will | 1 under the five-minute rule. plate and the building of w: two years of his residence here has cut among the young bloods and busines: ayton of West Virginia opposed the men, while his wife is well known in building of ‘warships in Government | society. yards. seler of Ke: g & g {here was not a in];!’;\' ‘((,.nl;.\ff(y"z e oo | BT 0 Weaw iroen IS B I C0E s not & Johbs prop cago and have a child 6 years old. Ac- ships In Government cording_to the compiaint nled by Ati ney J. E. Richards this afternoon, B I never heard of such a lobby,” replied Dayton. “The only lobby I have s, v lan deserted his wife last October, the dobby Of o e while he has been a jolly good fellow with could be called ayobby—arguing in favor his friends on the street, he has refused of the proposition 1 oppose.’” to furnish support for his wife and child. Dayton also opposed the establishment Everybody supposed the couple lived of a \;r'\w}nnln- plu]!f- factory. The Gov- i‘l_?x:wllgé a::thh;e;ux:nflsmzhfnlflt w-r‘prli‘.:» ernment hac cll go into produc o s onths s other “production which 1t sauat been in the East and & few weeks ago he returned to San Francisco. Mrs. Braslan wants $150 per month for her maintenance. It is said there is com- buy. Whe da eler concluded the debate for the | He criticized severely the rule of | § PRENTISS CARPENTER, day. the PR S P S SN >eoQ B e e 2 House which prohibite e s munity property valued at $20,000. o ke b e SuEmhece MAYOR OF PLACERVILLE, ‘Brasian is one of the best-known seeds- done and sald behind committee doors, | men in the United States. For a number d declared himself in favor of compell- | @4-0-®4-9-—+- ¢ -0+ 0+ oo @ | Of years he was at the head of A'Iqrzv z committees to open their doors to the | seed firm in Chicago and had many con- ot Sibhe. NGt e LACERVILLE, April 17.—The first oehind closed doors. He had no municipal election held in this city | for furnshing Government seeds. A few make again Nav: : 1ty | v ago T ed and he e to Wbt wanis T since the resignation of the Mayor | California, locating here. When the | and common Council twenty-eight | yvears ago took place to-day. Much interest was taken in it, as the purpose of the city's reorganization is to settle the railroad bonds which have long over- hung the city, and the attempted collec- tion of which caused the resignation of the city officers. Each voter was required to write the names of the persons for whom he voted, as the vacancies in the city offices, with whom certificates of nomination are required to be filed, pre- vented the names of. candidates being printed on a ticket. Prentiss Carpenter, a native of this city and a talented attorney, who has been twice District Attorney of the county, was elected Mayor without opposition, Mr. Carpenter is able and progressive and it is believed he will make an ideal Mayor, A spirited contest for most of the other offices resulted as follows: Clerk and As- Union Bank failed, the Union Trust Company, he tried to se cure a place on the Board of Directors but fafled. He afterward appealed to th. courts, but lost. He is deeply interested in seed growing in this State and last year, with Charles Parker of S8anta Clara, obtained the Government contract for supplying seeds to the Agricultural De- partment. General Gilmore Il WASHINGTON, April 17.—General John . Gilmore, adjutant general of the army, serjously’ {l! e thought the practice a bad He also opposed, he said, the appoint- ment of men with speciai interests to erve on committees. Their desire to :rve their constituents outweighed their heeler said he was opposed on con- vietlon to a Government armor plate fac- tory and the building of ships in Govern- ment yards, but when it came to surren- dering some of his convictions or submit- ting to highway robbery he would let some of the former go. He was convinced rom what he had been able to learn that the profit on armor plate was from 150 to 200 per cent Do Wheeler said he had in his session a letter to prove that Krupp or could be produced cheaper than Harveyized armor, but he was not at lib- ADVERTISEMENTS. THE IDOL OF THE TURF. Wheeler created something of a_sensa- tion by expressing the opinion that an officer in the uniform of the United States “was responsible for the armor plate | sessor, W. M. Muffley; Marshal, Oswald n America trust,” He id mot name the officer ang | Hardie; Aldermen-day E: Fox. 4. F Lu.| The Most Popular Jockey 1 ; was not questioned as to whom he meant. | cas, W. H. Sumner, John de Barnardi,| and England Recommends Stuart’s George H. Ingham, Matthew Blair, L. M. Stricker, William Barney, Frank Crocker and Harrison McBeth; City Superintend- ent of Schools, C. C. Pierce; School Direc- tors—Charles A. Swisler, Max Mierson, P. B. Hogan and P. Cote. Dyspepsia Tablets. No jockey has ever appealed so strongly to public favor as Tod Sloan. He has achieved more than his most noted predecessors ever attempted and stands in a class by himself. Not satisfled with his successes in his native country, he went to England and now his fame as a successful horseman is on the tip of every tongue not only in this country and England, but in every section of the globe where racing has found favor. When Tod first went to England his temerity was openly laughed at, but the little American played skittles with his English rivals and his victories made all England gasp. x Having the stamp of royal approval, so- clety both at home and abroad “lionize” him and he is feted and petted to an ex- tent that would turn an ordinary mortal’s head. The great jockey was In such demand soclally and dined and wined to such an extent that it was feared his health would give way. Too much society and the nervous strain of racing told on him. A two weeks' trip to America made him acquainted with Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets and their remarkably restorative effects on a depleted digestive apparatus and he recommended them in unstinted terms to a friend, saying, “Stuart’s Dys- pepsia Tablets are the best thing I know of for keeping the stomach in condition and appetite in good repair.” Thousands of former dyspeptics can youch for the truth of Tod Sloan’s words, as “Stuart’'s Dyspepsia Tablets”” have be- come a household word in America and few familles are without them. One or two taken after meals keep the stomach sweet by causing prompt and healthy di- gestion of the food. Pertectly healthy people use them after heavy dinners to keep their good health and to make sure that no Il effects will MRS. FENNELL FREED OF KIDNAPING CHARGE Her ex-Husband Failed to Appear and Justice James Dismissed the Case. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, April 17.—Mrs. Amanda J. Fiske-Marceau-Fennell can now return to San Francisco minus the felony charge of kidnaping her boy, Theodore Marceau Jr., that has hung over her since April 1, when she was removed from the north- bound train at Bakersfield through a war- rant sworn to by her former husband. As has been foreshadowed in these dis- patches, the attorneys for Mrs. Marceau, Senator White and C Pendleton, pre- pared for a desperate fight to have this charge removed, so that the hearing, that is set for April 23 before Judge Troutt, would not be colored by any other feature. At 2 o'clock this afternoon Justice James, at the request of the District At- torney, dismissed the charge. Mrs. Mar- ceau and her witnesses were present. Colonel Marceau was absent, so were the witnesses and attorneys for the prosecu- tion. The non-appearance of Colonel Mar- SETTLING YAQUI TROUBLES. General Torres Adopts the Policy of General Miles. TUCSON, Ariz., April 18.—Advices to the Star from Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, say Governor Luis Torres has settled the Yaqui trouble of his State. The Yaqui force has been broken up, the Indians returning to their homes. Gov- ernor Torres has adopted the policy of General Miles in the removal of = the Apaches to the Atlantic seaboard from Arizona, which settled the Apache strug- 710‘ The Governor is sending the Yaquis ar into the interior of the republic of Mexico as fast as he can gather them, Fifteen hundred have been sent and others will follow as fast as they are taken. The taking of the families of the renegades in the fleld is giving good re. sults, as the renegades follow their fam- flles.” The removal policy is accepted by Governor Torres as the solution of the Yaqui problem of Sonora. - Miss Pros® Lost. Specfal Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, April 17.—Judge Hyland this morning rendered a decision uphold- ing the action of County Superintendent Chipman in refusing to sign the salary warrant of Miss Blanche Frost. There are two Boarus of Education in this dis- trict, one of which sugporled Miss Frost and the other Miss Beaulleu, who had charge of the school before Miss Frost wae _appointed. There are but fifteen puplls in the disputed school and nine Voters in the district, four of whom are contesting their right to be school trus- tees. to oppress and humiliate his former wife is the subject of much comment. Colonel Marceau demanded every exaction that revent through his attorneys last Thursday inti- mmedx that he feared, unless he be per- mitted to retain possession of the child, further safeguards for its protection should be created. It is rumored to-night that Colonel Mar- ceau is in San Francisco—that he secretly would not be again compelled to go on the witness stand to face the woman he had TR ‘Woman’s Parliament. RIVERSIDE, April 17.—The woman's parliament of Southern California is in session at the Methodlst church, will leave Los Angeles to-morrow or Thursday for San Francisco, is determined to wage a battle for her child that will cause Colonel Marceau to know that he is on earth. S, There Killed. attendance, several delegates | follow an unusually hearty meal. Jinor led. gm:l Ly om sections s far north ne.u San | Your drus‘xln will tell you or your doc- JAMESTOWN, April 17.—While at work | Francisco. The principal addresses at the | tor either that Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are composed only of digestive fermen AleoptlcpPoplln. Hydrastls, frult acld: etc., and for the strong stomach as well as the most delicate constitute a safe- agalnst indigestion and stomach in a stope in the Rawhide mine this after- o Jhade, Ars. noon Frank Aggase was struck on the . Hart o clsco, back by a falling rock and died about an | Robert J. Burdette of Pludenfl B3 hour later, He was a native ce, | N. Bterry .of Los- Angeles, Miss Kate 8 years of age, and leaves a widow l.ndl Bassett of Pomona and Mrs, G. T. Green- three childrens 3 leaf of Redlands. Parllament to-day were made by Mrs. Mary 1 ¥ San L well-known seedsman and during the past | a wide swath because of his generosity tracts with the Agricultiral Department | George F. Moore and five other citizens of Michigan. The latter brought suit for a writ of mandamus against the express company to prohibit it from adding the price of the stamp to the rates in existence, ring that they were just and reasonable, but would be rendered unjust reasonable if the price of the stamp were added to them. It was also claime that the war revenue act imposed the duty of affixing the stamp upen t press company and that it could not be shifted to another. The expre: pany answered that no duty was imposed on it to furnish and affix the s act of Congress, but if it were the matter was left optional or open to cc between the company and its customers. The Supreme Court of Michigan decided that it was the duty of the comp to furnish the stamps; that it was not optional nor open to contract; t rates put in force by the company were a subterfuge to evade the law and tr the company was forbidden to increase its rates. It declared the increased ra illegal and made the mandamus permanent, and the express company ¢ Justice White announced the decision of the United States Supre discussing at some length the terms and effect of the war revenue cluded that there was no intimation in the act that the ultimate burd, must rest on the company. If that were the case, he said, the act would not be a tax law, but would regulate every transaction possible in human under it. Every tax act, he continued, would destroy the power of cont freedom of human transaction and regulate the cost of production and t of labor. The court could not agree that rates just and reasonable could rendered unjust and unreasonable by the addition of the tax. The judgment the Michigan Supreme Court was reversed and the case remanded. In the case of Willlam Crawford v the treasurer of e Adams Company on a certificate from the Second Cireuit Court of Appeals, answered In the negative the question, “Is an express company preciuded t war revenue act from relleving itself of the expense of affixing and car stamps required to be attached to receipts?” Justices Harlan and McKenna dissented, holding that the act duty of affixing stamps upon receipts and that the question of shift den was one to be decided by the State courts. They approved the ju the Michigan court. pan impose the bur- ndg tof of serges ends next Saturday N o’clock, when we close the store, we will close the sale of the blue serge suits—those popular suits that we have been talking about for the past ten weeks. lF you want to do as many others have done, buy one of those fashionable suits. You have the satis- faction of knowing that you are get- ting a good, serviceable, well made, popular suit at a saving price—it will cost you but LTHOUGH there are at present plenty of suits and sizes, you will find it much to your advantage to come before Saturday. When a sale clo<es of such suits as these for only $10, people naturally take advantage of it, and we know Saturday will see the store crowded all day. | Boys’ Washable Suits This sale is for a limited time. Washable suits made of covert cloth, with suitable trimming, sailor pants; ages 3.to 10 years; they come in six different shades. Make good outing suits for the boys. Also sailor suits of brown che- viot, with short pants; ages 3 to 10 years. These two values will be sold for a short time for 706 a suit All out-of-town orders filled, but write us imme- diately, then we can assure you of sending you a suit. NWood&Co. 718 Market Street. »

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