The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 19, 1900, Page 12

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20 CALL, TH HORDE OF ASIATICS COMES TO MENACE WHITE LABOR —_— They sbebebebebeberereieiebeioie® ied e et eded P o> v e JarANEsE. IN FUMIGATING PEN ON ANGEL ISLAND v . oS e ied ULD EXCLUDE THE JAPANESE HORDES -— e~ WO st Congressmen Agree That Steps Be Taken to Shut Out Undesir- able Immigrants. wcific ports, mem. e to express t Senator Perkins’ Views. tes Govern- this country contract labor law. Un- ve come here have “U'nder existing conditions the United Sta it : from entering Japane ment ca except 10t prev T the under provisio mber who oubtedly a very large 1 paid to come by p » United States have brought Japanes of ex whose agents in here with the vate compa ying them 1ship companies whose ships bring in this class of immigrants would be obliged under the law to carry them The Federal officers should be ations of the immigration laws i » their own count: in detecting vi Representative Barham’s Idea. to restrict “The Government has the power ab ople of the country wish to it is within their power as s author- 1 Japanes ss to do so 1 or unskilled 1 nd Congress should exercise this conditions seem to demand.” Congress hz borer »m en- Representative Waters’ Remedy. the best policy would be, perhaps, on our part ates to approach Japan with a proposi- 1 of the existing treaty, if any modi- Jooking to the restriction of immi- not only on friendly terms with Japan, f the two countries have been and are 1 believe Japan would meet us half in any effort to prevent undesirable classes of that intry from coming in:o the United States.” J. A. BARHAM. wa Representative Needham’s Stand. “The immigration of Japanese laborers ought to be pped. I favor any executive or legislative action that bring about this result.” Representative Kahn’s Remarks. “This matter of immigration of Japanese laborers should receive the immediate attention of the authorities. I believe the best way to meet the question is for Congress to pass an exclusion act, similar to that governing Chinese immigration.” Representative Loud Reticent. Loud was disinclined to express any t now should be done in the matter until studied the question and famil- g conditions relating to it. roughly th € Representative De Vries for Exclusion. has the power to restrict, regulate and immigration into the United States. v stipulations, expressed or implied, that te against such legislation by Congress Japanese laborers. On the contrary, it is ex- ated in the treaty of commerce and naviga- n l')x\ country and Japan of 1894-95 that this It is there provided: ‘Citizens or subjects of each of the two high contracting parties hall have full liberty to enter, travel or reside in any part of the territories of the contracting parties, and shall enjoy full and perfect property.’ It is further provided: ‘It is, however, under- stood that the stipulations contained in this and the pre. ceding article do not in any way affect the laws, ordi nances and regulations with regard to trade, immigration of laborers, police and public security which are in force or which may hereafter be enacted in either of the two countries. It will thus be seen from the terms of the treaty that the power to pass laws against immigration of Japanese laborers has been expressly reserved United States, In my judgment. the only possible way to prevent the incoming of the threatened hordes of Japanese laborers is for Congreu to prolnbu their future immigra- tion to this country.” In respect tc gislate JULIUS KAHN. MARION DE VRIES. SABIPEERET Under these conditions the | protection for their persons and | in the | e Y P AP SIPUD S SR S SO DA SD S S S5 S SO A e N <. PN D e O 3 JAPANESE ON BOARD THE CAROLINE. G +040449404000004 09 D4 04000900 D 0400000400400 4060 60-00-00-0000-00-000-0000 D040+ 00000004040+ 0+0400404040-0-0-0 JAPANESE IMMIGRANTS | EXPERT KYTKA AND HIS ARRIVE IN THE NORTH | NEGATIVES IN EVIDENCE Hundreds of Them, Bound for This | Photographs of Fair's Signatures Be- Country, Are Landed in Victoria i ing Made Part of Record in by Steamer Miles. ! Sensational Trial. VICTORIA, B. ( There was nothing but negatives—soft, | Miles arrived tc lwl otherwise, prints hard and April 1. —The steam- | from Kobe with e 1200 Japanese immig a majority of ain, and a string | whom are destined for the United States in the Fair case e«lerfl to work on the railw day afternoon. There were photographs | | TACOMA, Wash 1 15.—The present | of the signatures to the marriage con- | importation of Japar to Puget Sound | trict, to the deeds, to the letters and has reached unprecedented figures, greements 1 to numerous checks. and thousands more 8 Mikado are now During the month ¢ have been landed in and_British Columbia | landed in the latter po m’y‘]’ their w: e border. e reasons for the present ru ) s th the Japanese are leaving . their waties land in consequence ted im- minence of war be Rus- nd tk \I l)n of > had be in subjects of n photographed singly and group: 1l kinds of lights and under | all circumstances, -and it took all the afternoon to get them properly before the | court | Kytka, the writing expert, was called | to the stand, and the first question Croth- put to him was objected to by Charles | Pence did not want the enlarged to go in and when the court | hem he objected to any question the characteristics they brought out. e clalmed "that the negatives and ould speak for themselves. Mc- declared an expert had the right Y two-thirds W clost, allowed t n he rush will end within the nerfes and the railroads is s: to call” attention to what the prints | = ‘showed, and Budd took the u}.)pnrtunlly‘ to address the court on behalf of Crothers’ earch for information. The question was lowed and with a §vnernl exception noted the negatives and prints were filed | as evidence as fast as Crothers could pass | them in. The photographs of the signatures on | the deeds and ‘republication” letter were | submitted for identification only, as it is | the intention of counsel to argue the de ‘TEN OF THE TYROLESE : UNDER FRIENDLY CARE ‘ Will Be Given Employment Here Un- | l less the Government Takes Up | | | Their Case. The ¢ % | matter next Tuesday. It will be ttempt- | re ten Tyrolese who escaped from the | ed on the part of the Falr peopie to in- | Doric have found asylums iff this city, and | clude the deeds in the general litigation, an intention that will not prevail without strenuous objection from counsel for Mrs. “raven-Fair. The case will go on again this morning. — e Troubles of the Cobbs. Josephine L. Cobb yesterday filed an amended complaint in her suit for divorce against Harry D. M. Cobb, her husband. Their marital infelicities were aired in the | papers a few weeks ago. Mrs. Cobb now charges z-ruel[;‘ and specifies that on Feb- ruary 25 last her husband seized a shot- gun and threatened to kill her. He struck her on several other occasions and called her vile names. She alleges. that he is in possessfon of $500 worth of realty and asks that he be restrained from selling "any part thereof. She also asks for $40 per month alimony and $50 counsel fees. il Al maeC s b aba s | there possibility of a legal fight be- fore it is declded whether they are to | remain or are to be sent back to their own | country. Seven of the fmmigrants are quartered | | on the southeast corner of Broadway and | ets over the saloon kept by | who was instrumental in The other three are living n_a lodging-house at 270 Brannan street. Just what the legal status of the immi- a question. They cannot be for they have committed no crime either in this country or their own. They cannot be sent on to Honolulu, for this” country does not recognize the con- tract that requires their presence there, | The only solution of their case from the standpoint of the Government seems to be | to send them back to Austria on the | ground that they are not entitled to re- main in this country under the imnilgra- % u'_;_r;] lav\ds e o R e e ‘Will of Hippolite Dutard. ey desire to remain here and. their " friends promise that if they be allowed to | The Wil of Hippollte Dutard was fled stay they will be given work sufficient to | | keep them from becoming public charges, | queaths all the property of the deceased to his widow, Eliza Dutard, who, with ‘Walter D. Sheldon, Willlam C. Barnard and Charles B. Stone, is named as ex- ecutor. Barnard was the confidential clerk of the deceased and provision s made in the will that he be employed in a similar capacity by the estate, to be paid for his services in addition to his com- missions as executor. The estate is val- ued at $800,000. —_e—————— Our name on your printing raises the stand- ard of your goods. Mysell-Rollins, 22 Clay. —_— e Cannot Deduct Inheritance Tax. The City Attorney yesterday informed the Assessor that he is not warranted un- der the law to allow an estate having money in bank to deduct from the same the amount due as collateral inheritance tax; therefore the estate is not entitled to deduct from any of its solvent creditors \Sho amount of any tax it may owe to the tate. i | | grants is -xtradited, I want some whiskey, and I want it bad"; | they dian’t give him Jesse Moore. —_—————— OPPOSES THE GRANTING OF SPECIAL PERMITS Reed Lays the Law Down to His Associates in the Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Reed yesterday addressed a communication to his associates in the board in which he submits several reasons for opposing the granting of any privi- leges for permanent encroachment on the sidewalks of the city, which he holds to be in violation of t! charter prn\'lslons. “1 think it is evident,” says Reed, “that of ipal- | ity by recelving special privileges Zfrom | the board. These taings are of the Hature | of, spolitical pulls,’ mar the general admin- | ation of the law and make the citizens ’fnl that if they have sufficient influence =mm- n avold the general enforcement of e | "I therefore submit that the policy of | granting’ special permits to maintain cither permanent or temporary encroach- | ments upon the sidewalks or the streets | is unwise in practice, contravenes one of the main principles of the charter and is calculated to destroy the equal adminis. tration of the law.” —_— e Will Not Obey the Law. R. Domingo, a scavenger, was con- victed by Judge Mogan yesterday on a charge of dumping garbage in a vacant Jot &t Fourteenth ang Castro streets. He was caught in the act by Policeman Mec- Hugh. Domingo has been arrested be- fore for a similar offense and the Judge intimated that when he anears for sen- tence this morning he will make an ex- ample of him. ————e—————— Dr. Parker's Cough Cure. One dose will stop cough. Never falls. Try it. All druggista. * | |Scheme to Appoint Delegates Devised to Enable | mittee derived its power to manage the | Hale's. Hale’s. lain talk he ladies of SanFrancisco one of our greatest authors has said (sp-akmg of a friend), *‘He was a merc%::xnt yet honest.” we would like you to say, ‘‘He is a merchant—therefore honest. ” every progressive merchant nowadays advertises, every wise housekeeper reads the adver- tisements, but we regret to say every merchant does not advertise truthfuliy ; for instance, mercerized cotfon moreen skirts have been advertised as silk morzen, whereas as a matter of fact they bear no relation whatever to silk, not even as remote are lati 01- ship as forty-second cousins. honest advertisinz pays; truthful advertising of good goods builds up big businesses. thereisno use nor necessity for lying advertisements, ginghams. 1200 yards Everett classic ging- door are showinz d-fic_ltelv sweet . hams, 27 inches wide, pretty pinks and panels. door panels in I-ish peint and tam- blues, plaids and stripss... 3 boured effects, in white and Aratian.. $1.25 to $2. 25 arden 5o feet of 5-ply nch garden hOSf_. fiolc with coupling complete... .$4.25 25-foot length of the same hose, Jl;o with coupling.... 2.25 hzandk’f we have now on sale nearlv 250 sale. dozen ladies’ Swiss embroidered handkerchiefs, 11 diffsrent makes of hand- kerchisefs to pick from................5¢ each infants’ caps ten stylss of organdie and dress three gross of sizes 3 and 4 stock- and bonnets. lawn, colors pink, blus sn! ghields. inet dress shields (some slightly white..... o 0Oc to $2.01 imperfect, so we reduce them), regular infants’ white orzm.ile caps, witn hem- price 10c ; to close out, pair 5¢ stitched strings, fancy tucked crown and back, lace and ribbon trimmings, very sailor 3 dozen wide ’bnm tam crown, rough 4 § ts. straw with silk scarf trimming, a good s % $L00, ha hat for :ezud- wear, ..81.33 taficta when the ribbon-buyer speaks of “The Dio,” arough-and-ready straw sailor ribbon. Celicate shades in ribbons he says hat, jumbdo braly Knox block... . .38¢c “'the new pas‘el shades.” we show eignt 20 dozen Milan salior hats in black, white, 25¢ imported mod- .$7.50 cach) navy and brown.. (47 hats—dress hats—after els—now on sale at. of these to-cay in a taffeta ribbon, no. 40, 314 inches wide (specially designed for r eck- wear), per yard... . Hudnut’s alk mond meal cures tan and sun- burn, kesps the pores open, and is far preferable to s0ap......25¢ see our window display of baby buggies and go- carts, then visit ourbig and busy basement. al, adopted tr CLUMSY HAND OF JOHN C. LYNCH| Source From Wthh Opposition = to Primaries in the Fifth District Emanates. enounce the attem Herrin to Capture the Next Republican State Central Committee. .3_Day Specia}s | THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ! | HE Fifth Congressional District Re-| Lynch has been acting for and is now publican Committee will meet to- | representing Herrin and Burn night in the office of W. H. Cobb.| The selection of delegates to the na- NG BUT THE & Parrott building. The meeting 1s | tional convention cuts no figure in the AND THE MOST FOR YOUR M ilroad agents. They are candidate for con- are worki et possession culation of the not for or aga vention honors, however, to next Republi Lynch has b ection of the t to the called by the chairman, Max Goldbers, | to consider the advisability of holding primaries for the election of delegates to the district convention. In the Fourth District a resolution dn- claring in favor of primaries has been adopted and the Fifth has been requested to adopt a resolution of similar character and to fix a day on which the election in both districts may take place. Sl There is a peculiar state of affairs in | trict. the Fifth District. Last June J. Alva! Collector Lynch is not a dangerous pol Watt, who was chairman of the conven- | tician, but he will do desperate work w tion in 1898 which nominated E. F. Loud | his masters require it. When the whole for Congress, appointed the following to | inside history of the late Senatorial cam- compose the district committee: E. I |palgn Is revealed to the public of Califor- Robinson, W. H. Cobb, Frank French, G. | nia it will be truthfully told that Lynch H. Fairchild, Max Goldberg, Jesse Marks, e e e e 4 East 163 ;EGGQ. chmcest ranch, 2 doz. .35¢ TABLE SYHUP gallnn......S]c Fancy YELLUWSTUNE WHISKEY— Full quart bottle S, galion $4 A high-grade Bourbon whisky at rn breakfast be surprising that he wa Fifth from the Congr a moder- rly $125 and % Shredded Wheat Biscuits, pkg 12¢ handed to a member of the Legislature at F. R. Danforth, Alvinza Hayward, R.|Sacramento a sheet of paper, representing » Donovan, Louls O'Neal and J. D. Mac- | that the words written on the paper were | § health food for weak stomachs. kenzie. | contained in a dispatch wired from Wash- i The committtee organized last month | Ington by Senator Perkins to a well- ENBUSH WAI.NUTS 2 Ibs. . .25¢ by the election of Max Goldberg as chair- | known res Ayt Sonoma County. The hn.[ message so conveyed to the member rep- Jatest crop. ’1' resented that Senator Perkins had re- ~ quested his friends to vote for Burns. Sub- sequent investig: ed the fact SWEET mes bm' Pl 253 that no such me: 5 ever, 8ot BY | pori: Sncery -Anaed Gallon $1 00 snator Perkins and no such message was Sherry. Angelica, 74uscat. Cholee old er received by the Sonoma resident to whom it was said to have been addressed man and Louls O'Neal secretary. Whether J. Alva Watt had authority to appoint the committee is still an open question. He claims that a resolution was adopted by the convention of September, 1898, which conferred upon him the power to appoint the committeee; but when the committee t for organization he did not produce | c and $1 50, me! | the records of the convention. When the | It was a stupid, clumsy forgery, designed lMPOHTED MAGARU"' pkg -125¢ Fourth District committee was called to | to gain a vote for Burns by fraud. Spashetts. Vermicelll and Paste. order the records of the convention of 1898 | Several members of the Le Regularly 15c know of the efforts made by Lynch lo persuade or coerce Assemblyman Bliss of Alameda into voting for Burns. The Col- lector resorted to influences which if not indecent yere grossly impertinent and offensive to men who keep politics out of the family circle. It might be well for Republicans in the | various countles of the State to give par- | ticular attention to the duty of recom- mending State Central Committeemen to the convention. COUNTRY 0RDER§ SOLICITED. CATALOGUE FREE, ——— 39 STOCKTON ST., near Market. (Old_number 21 Stockt TELEPHONE MAD N WANT A CURE? FOR Catarrh, Deafness, IN EARS, THROA' G DISEASE? It -;t use my NEW ANTISEPTIC reatm in that district were produced and read, to show the source from which the com- initial affairs of the present campaign. There seems to be a desire on the part | of Republican voters in the Fifth Dis- | trict to have a voice In the selection of delegates to represent them in the district | and State conventions which will meet next month to choose delegates to the National Republican Convention. At the recent meeting of the State Central Com- mittee J. Alva Watt announced that primary elections would be ordered in the Assembly districts of 8an Francisco Within the boundaries of the Fifth Con- gressional District. Since that announce- ment was openly made in the presence of | a hundred Republicans Watt seems to have changed his intentions. Others have changed front, hence considerable opposition to the holding of primaries has been developed. Varlous reasons for the change of base Veterans of the Guard. The annual banquet of the veterans of the National Guard of California will be held at the Occidental Hotel on May 24 It will be a subscription affair. Com- mander George R. Sanderson has appoint- ed John Middleton, J. €. Glesting and E. H. Prentice as a committee to take charge of the banquet. dreds of letters of endorse- ments. | FREE An honest trtai of one week given to are given, One member of the commit- e (ke e Y gives tee says that he fears that the A. P. A.'s Declines to Investigate. this new treatment. Do nor An- President McKinley has notified the fall to try it, free, and be will get in and capture the works. convinced of a cure. Call other member apprehends that Martin Kelly’s rounders from the Fourth District will swing about and seize the primaries in the Fifth. The reasons are not good and sufficlent. They are not the real rea- sons for the change of front. The Call, having made careful inquiry and close investigation to ascertain the actual cause for opposition to primaries, reaches the conclusion that the opposi- tion is secretly directed by Collector of Revenue John C. Lynch and that the said Anti-Civil Service League of this city that he declines to order an Investigation as to the alleged discrimination made against veterans of the Civil War at Mare Island Navy Yard as there are no avaflable funds for such an investigation. The league at its meeting last night commended Recorder Godchaux for his effort to nulify the civil service clause of the new charter and after pledging all delegates to the various conventions to appose the civil service enactments, both Painless Methods. - Evenings until 9. Sundays all day. Written guarantee 10 yrs. ¢ Full Set of Teeth, pain- less extractions free..$4.00 up Gold Crowns, 22-k. .50 up Fillings .. 25¢ up Teeth Without Our Specialty. We give gas. esececccs e cocosssos @ DENTAL WORK OF THE HIGHEST GRADE AT ASK YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT US. “YVAN VROOM” THE USUAL PRICE. Prompt Attention. (OUR NEW HOME), 1001 Market Strect, S. W. Corner Sixth. SEE ELECTRIC DISPLAY. The Largest Office West of Chicago. at once or wriie. DR. COTTINGHAM 204 Sutter St., NW. Cor. Kearny. HOURS—9-12 a. m., VERY LATEST Straight Front, Hand-Made SAPPHIRE CORSETS $3.00 $15.00 PER PAIR. 10 Geary St., CORNER KEARNY. CHESTER F. WRIGHT, Royal Worcester Cor- set-Fitting Parlors. 13and 78 p m. Conducted under the | American and Euro- § pean plans, and in a , manner that will s isfy the most exactinz and particular tast=. 1400 ro0mMs—goo With baths. Hotels I

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