The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 19, 1900, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1900. [TIAL STEPS {0R FORMING A FARMERS' TRUST New Organization Will Be Known as the Knights of the Soil. - of Devoting Its Time to a ssion of Political Issues It Will Be a Business Union. EIRES SRS ATAX REMEDY C0., 72 Bumormer. Fo- sale In B. F. by l&l»":‘ & centage Drug Co., Owl Drug PITKIN ELECTED ~ PRESIDENT OF - THE CONGRESS Trans-Mississippi Delegates Name Permanent Officers. | =i Committee on Resolutions Preparing | to Submit Its Report at the Session to Be Held To-Day. —_— | HOUSTON, Tex., April 18.—The com- g mittee on resolutions, the most important —The prelim- | » Trans-Mi pl Congress, 1s at > ganization of | to report to- embrace all r a hundred resolu- 2 es of the Mis- more than Special in- # ¥ of the resolu- s e has no easy task ! : which will affect 1y was the intro- s follows: By T. £oug lorado, indorsing the g to appropriate world's fair s hed the | teleg : Officers of the Congress. g con ¥ IS left 10 t £ which sion Mr. Whitemore -pared by 1 ARE YOU WEAK, PA PsLE ORNERVOUS? HIS BONDS BACK P B s hard up and 4 v arrival | n Francisco to ob- [ this power of attorney. Upon my ar- in New York I found the foliowing CISCO, April 10.—Power \ ney and assignment absolute. Im- P portant letter mal ed you to-day & “1J B, SHAIN.” yesterday morning in New York City age purchased a telegraphic draft for , to his wife. Mrs. Lilian explained that this was urned over to Kershaw by of the Hudyan Remedy Co. may be consulted by letter or in person Write your s.mptoms. ARS AND TESTIMC ¥ ' HUDYAN 3 PRI | {3 THE Mother’s Love THE REASON WH i, » 5 Is boundless. Vet it is utterly helpless e s in the uniform excel- | to give strength to the child born with a Spic and | low vitality. " The time to give strength a place to the child is before birth and to impart gi e right. There | this gift the mother herself must be n wearing things that strong. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- v'd had a brush with | tion gives strength to mothers. It pre- the comfort and ele- | serves them in robust health in the undry work only can! months before baby comes. It practical- ly does away with the pains of United State hood, a'nd enables the mother to endow 1008 Marsaandry. OS> | her child with a healthy body and a Telophone South $20. | happy disposition. “Favorite Prescrip- Oskiand Office, 514 Eleventh s | tion? contains no sloohol and is abso- — b ~" | lutely free from opium and cocaine. | I consider Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription | the best medicine made,” writes Mrs. Mary AT TABLET | Hurdock‘,,;):zm‘!‘lyllor?L.T ka, Klnsnsf. 1 eaanis A | know it has no equal. I am the mother of ten AL oroe Discascs—Failing Mem | cniidren and only one living—the tenth one. work sud ludiscretions. ! She is one year oid and is as well and hearty as G owroly Tesiors Loost WSty i o | can be. She is & beauty. OF my other babies, or Joung.sad Gt & man -Sy.ln‘- | some were born at right time, but dead, others S toars, Provent ani | were premature births; one iived to be one year s i mmediate S | old but she was always feeble. I tried dificrent | URE | .octors but noue of them could tell what my | trouble was. I was examined by surgeons but i they found nothisy J 4id wot know packuge, or iz packages Sishe 1 wou! B0 cls, Teuiicrs 86 . ] took it > DOCIS. mentiier$5 80 by mall 7L the entire nine months and now have a fine 8 | tempted T0 TBE CAL Remodeled and Home for Special Dispatch to The Call STANFORD MANSION GIVEN HOLIC CHURCH ‘Handsome Building in Sacramento to Be Used as a Day Children. ® ® . ! 1 © g 1e ¢ s d 5 ¢ ' b * > STANFORD MANSION, IR TO THE CATHO ACRAMENTO, April 18—The Bee to-night announces the gift by Mrs. Leland Stanford the beautiful ord mansion at Eighth and-N s to Right Rev. Bishop Grace ic diocese of Sacramento and ors forever, toggther with an fund of $75,000. This money | stre of the Cath his succ endowment SACRAMENTO, C HER WITH AN ENDOWMENT FUND OF. $§75,000. 6 M AR A e A e b e as o e E e e e e e S e e ae o e o s o Y ) WHICH FOR A HAS BEEN "HILDREN'S * $ * DIOCESE did during the days when General Sher- man, General Grant, President Hayes and other distinguished men were entertained there. The same massive furniture remains; the same pictu look down from the silent walls; the s TTOW seems to brood o erythin, it has from the day when the Senator and his wife, filled bonds and the monthly income will be ap- imagination. But '&n‘.ml to the maintenance of the “Lathrop- memories were all tender ones, and Stanf « Day Home,” by | Mrs. Stanford would have preferred that h € known. The home | the old mansion should have crumbled to > will b be conducted by the Sisters scay rather than that its history should | be_profaned. ¥ M years this mansion, one of r Stauford has planned some {im- h pd has been un- ments which Bishop Grace will ry caretaker | carry out prior to the opening of the in- apacity since on. e home and grounds, how- ford and wife remo are in perfect condition and the on _California ses are most attractive. Mrs. Stan- 0ld_home ford a few years ago gave evidence of 1 as | her interest In the Catholic church here It nd Stanford | ¥ the ple (DIFESSESTO - THE MURDER O CHIEF WA Imprisoned Chinaman Im-| plicates Himself and Two Others. Jail at Steveston Surrounded by Jap- | anese Who Wished to Lynch the | Men Held as Accessories by pre pictur nting to_the Bishop a magnificent of the Madonna, copied by per- of the Emperor of Austria from n as when the e original one of the old masters, in 1in whom the Senator | the | Gallery. The painting to-day centered their best | occupies the most prominent wall space ars as it in the cathedral. IMERICA NOT T0 MAKE WAR UPON TURKEY NextStep in the Controversy With the Sultan Will Be Peaceful. i BRI This Government Will Convey Its Indignation at the Sublime Porte’s Betrayal of to the Crime. | Promises. —_— AR necl spatcl 0 The Call - Special Dispatch to The | WASHINGTON, April 18.—The news of , B. C., April 18.—Eight | the firm attitude assumed by the State w in the provineial jail at | Department toward the Turkish Govern- charged with the mur- r Main, the Chief of Police with sbeing a ory to in had been missing three ys and yesterda mutilated and dis- red remains were found in a fresh- made grave near a group of shatks oc- d by Chinese market gardeners. So r W the feeling in the town of Steveston against the prisoners that dur- | the night several hundred Japanese | erime ing | surrounded the Steveston police statlon, | intent upon lynching the Chinese prison- | ers, but the officers managed to take the in safety to Westminster, eight stant. One of the risoners, Chan Yee Chung, to-day confessed to the murder, stating Yip Lick, a highbinder, had ordered ault upon Main, but that the mur- 1 first been struck on the who has fled and who has not vet & aptured. The club, with its iron hook, was found to-day near the | cabin, covered with blood, and - a long | | knife was also found with traces of blood | | upon its blade. i Tfrom Chung's confessions, aided by evi- | dence developed by the detectives, it is now belleved that when Chief Main at- | to arrest the Chinese “for the of the stolen goods found In their k he was killec with the club and | knife, being repeatedly stabbed and chopped with the hooked tool. The re- ins were temporarily hidden, fires were | Started where there were blood stains and | even Main's dog was killed in a valn at- | tempt to avert suspicion. At night -the body was taken from its | temporary hiding place to be permanently | buried in a little round hole dug in the beach. The body was chopped into small | pleces, but the hole had not been Heep €nough and 4t could hardly hold t parcel of butchered flesh. VICE PRESIDENCY WILL COME TO THE WEST “And the Farther West, the Better,” Says National Committeeman Manley. NEW YORK, April 18.—Joseph H. Man- ley of Maine, who is one of the members | of the Republican National Committee deputized to look after arrangements for the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia, was at the Fifth Avenue Hotel last night. He said the Philadel- phians were making fair progress in thc alterations to the convention hall and had raised the money pledged by the citizens’ committee. Mr. Manley was asked who, in his opinion, would be nominated for | Vice President. | “My impression,” replied Mr. Manley, ug he | ); l mother- | “was that it would be a New York man. | nja State League of Rej But that has now been changed. The action of your State convention yesterday | would indicate that the New York Repub- | licans do not want the Vice Presidency. 1f that be the case I think the nomina- tion will go_to some Western man—and the farther West he is the better it will | be. There has been some talk of Secre- tary Long, and Mr. Long probably would accept; but there is no doubt about New England, and I think the disposition is to take a candidate from some section that | is fighting ground.” | — Winslow Congratulates Hoar. BOSTON, April 18.—The following tele- gram from Ervin Winslow, secretary of the Anti-Imperialistic League, was sent to Senator Hoar to-day: | Conratsiintions” 3¥ Bapuitioas pacts sataes | this tremendous appeal it is doomed. We shali follow your inexorable logle, ment in the prosecution of its claim for damages to American missionary prop- erty caused something of a sensation in diplomatic circles to-day. Thre B sive American Ministers have peosessced these claims; each received a promise of prompt _settlement and yet not a dollar as been paid. With European diplomats that is an old experience, and they have consequently been somewhat surprised at the announcement that the United States Government js actually going to Insist upon performance instead of promise. Minister Angell, after trying his hand at collection for two years, recommended that a United States warship be sent to seize Smyrna and collect revenues at the custom house there sufficient to meet our claims. This suggestion was not seriously entertained, nor is it now. In the first place, according to the State Department officials, the most important business in- terests in Smyrna are in the hands of for- eigners, not Turks, and a bombardment by a United States fleet might result in a pretty bill for damdges against us. Then, as there is still a remnant of a Turkish navy, the United States would have to | send ‘a squadron instead of a single Ship, Such a movement would without doubht be resented by the remainder of Europe, which could not contemplate with equa- nimity any action by the United States that weuld perhaps destroy the fruits of many vears’ work of the great European statesmen by precipitating a final crisis in Turkey. Therefore the next step to be taken by our Government will not _be warlike, but will suggest in a most dignified manner the indignation felt by the United States at the betrayal of Turkish promises. How this attitude will bear upon the Turkish Minister in Washington cannot be fore- told at this moment. He has so far ab- solutely been unentangled in the negotia- tions, but that fact might not save him from being made the immediate victim of his country's laches. The Minister, how- ever, is very popular in Washington. “LET HIM REMEMBER SPAIN.” British Correspondent’s Warning to Abdul Hamid. LONDON, April 19.—The Vienna corre- spondent of the Times says: “By further resistance to the claims of the United States the Sultan will expose himself to grave consequences which ne grobably had not forescen. The United tates Government is not accustomed to indulge in empty threats. If the Sultan for a moment supposed that he would find El‘Dle(‘tlnn from any European power let {m remember Spain.” Large Gathering Promised. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, April 18.—From present indications the convention of the Califor- blican Clubs th: 27 and 25 will be & rfieeu in lhluhcity A‘nrrl the most enthusiastic and largest gather- ing in the history of the league. it trs | close of business to-night at the head- auarters of the executive committee over 200 clubs had reported as fully organized. These clubs have elected nearly §0 daje: gates, while their returns show 11,000 ac- tive members on the rolls. The arrange- ments for the convention are completed. A reception committee of 100 has been se. lected to act as hosts and receive the in- coming delegations. A monster mass meeting and parade is announced, e speakers will be George Barnes, F. Schoon- m;ker. George Knight, Frank Davis and others, Death of Mrs. Pope. Special Dispatch to The Call. MENLO PARK, April 18.—Mrs. Emily Pope, wife of Francis Pope and daughter supporting no | party or candidate not standing with you on | this rr:‘manm question. Everything else in- ca; of John T. Doyle, the well-known attor- , died ul: here this afternoon. Fiér fusband is In | the one hundred and fifty-seventh anni- MR, CLEVELAND GIVES WARNING T0 DEMOCRACY Appeals Against Abandoning the Traditions of the Party. St Declares That Victory Is Impossible ‘While Jeffersonian Principles Are Put Into the Back- ground. RO NEW YORK, April 18—The Brooklyn Democratic Club gave a dinner to-night at the Germania Club to commemorate f versary of the birth of Thomas Jefferson. About 150 persons were present. At the | Buests’ table were ex-Governor James E. Campbell of Ohio, Joseph J. Willett of Alabama and other prominent public men. Former President Grover Cleveland sent a letter regretting his inability to be pres- | ent and. expressing his opinions on the present Democracy. The letter was as | follows: PRINCETON, April 12. Louis F. Buchard—Dear Sir: I regret that 1 am unable to accept your invitation to attend | the dinner to be given by the Brooklyn Demo- cratic Club on the 15th Inst. to commemorate the birth of Thomas Jefferson. When those who profess the Democratic faith meet to celebrate the birth of the man who firet gave them faith in a distinct formulation, | their pride in the achievements and triumphs of the party which he founded should not e tirely displace all thought of present situatic and the conditions which, In the light of ex- perience, appear to be essential to its success Though the faults of the party in power a many, and though its offenses against the po- litical health and safety of the country are flagrant, these things should not encourage us to base an expectation of success and a hope | tion for the restoration of wholesome adminis upon the shortcomings of our adversaries. We should too well understand their ability to attach to their fortunes the powerful con- tingent of selfish interests, to place confident reliance upon the weakness which ought to be the penalty of their misdeeds. Besides, none of us can close our eyes to the fact that the Democratic party is only for- midable in its own strength. Its power to win | has always been found to depend upon a sturdy and consistent adherence to its t honored principles, ver y_of opportunity, every transient breeze of popul excitement, experiment has abundantly dem- you that the track of health is not clear. DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. e e S D 0 YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BAC ; Do You Realize the Danger You Are In? Pair or dull ache in the back is un- mistakable evidence of kidney t~c It is nature’s timely warning to you afford If these danger signals are unheeded i are sure to follow; onstrated that Democracy constituted | Bright's T which Is the wors at it is only strong when courageous in the | por ouble, may steal upe TiEht 'and only victocious when to. forces are | form of kidney. trouble, may steal upon aled under its old and we a d | you. covery o tllhl::‘h;.:‘:fidple & e The mild and the extraordinary effect ney and r p s are so simple, and »t the world-famous ney remedy, | use narked success in botk cord so well with the honest Ame of the world-famous kidney medy, | use it o : ‘ position, which loves freedom the public welfare, that they are e slight and se Swamp-Root, is E mend it to their pa the highest for on realized. It stands its wonderful cures stood by the Democratic masses. As the most dis ing cases t their own families, b of this, there has never been a time when convinee an: ffind you ,;}q .r'h,ln.‘; . nize in Swa - p-Root leadership of our party and a departure fr ey 2. . e - simple Democratic faith have not been quickly | Sample bottle for the asking. 1l remedy Giscovered and ruthless Lame back is only one symvtom of e the slightest Scpport. proucunced kidney trouble—one of many. Other ¥ or bladder trouble, or feat. These conseq symptoms showi : 3 - y so inevitable that th symptoms showing that you need a trace of it in 3 fam not be disregarded withc Swamp-Root are, obliged to pass wat send at once to Dr. Imer & C The healthfulness of « often during the day and to get up | hamton, N. Y., who will g questioned when it amination of its as will avold disaster, by keeping in a course c under the guidance e Demc Therefore, those who clal of Thomas Jefferson will solemn duty if in this ti temptation they neglect such and if this discloses a t power, without a brave and early I have addressed these w crats in the full consclousness that I am now far removed from any influen party man- agement, but I love the old Democratic and I have written under the E o Sulainste e of flesh or sallow complexion. | Swamp-Root is what you need : “conditions should mnot If v ter when allowed to remain | purchase the regular fifty-cent a nocrat s to fellow Demo- protest “freedom of speech” which Th ' | fortunes of war and as the fruits of the glori- | placed among the cardinal factors of our | OUs achievements of the American sailors and | Democratic creed. You idiers in the isla GROVER CLEVELAND. urs by the te A letter from ex-Governor Boies of | theos 1o Iowa was read, in which he advocated the | aga freedom of Cuba and the giving up of Philippines. General Joseph W heeler also sent a letter of regret. -ph J. Willett res “A Century of Democrac In responding to the toa d to the toast, The R to- the z tion of our gre many times at night, smarting or irr tation in passing, brickdust or sedime in the urine, catarrh of the bladder. nt headache, dizziness, sleeple rvousness, irregular heart beat- ing, rheumatism, bloating, irritability, worn-out feeling, lack of ambition, loss y free by mail immediate st to you, a sample bott oot and a book of 1 Root testimonials u read this ger Francisco Daily L already 1 If you are conv in a glass or bottl dollar size bottles at drug sto but rem for y-four hours forms a sedi £ or has a cloud ake, Root make any mis name, Swam tranquill The resolutions conclude “wise, able and patrio at President. — | peace and very trul by indorsing | - > > administra- | COX, Esq ¥ - ration of .1-»rr.-r-sr;ul\lmnI h.»mn‘(» x- THANK Call for District Convention. Governor Camgpbell declared that the ED EWE e B e orAE party of Jefferson c l:! not survive hal BY D Y. ‘.f‘\‘ RAME \T; “w The £ ,,,' ) ocratic and h >opulistis {e re- 3 X 'ONZr IStric e m.:(x‘y‘;fl;«:;nm“.w e opaiatie. hlr””;m | Admiral Pleased With Plans for His | (e m is city to-day and issued into this party by the Populists. Speak- | St. Louis Reception. a call for th n to meet ing of the Chicago platform of 1566, he | ST. LOUIS, April 18.—The following let- | in f May at declared shat it enu ed many great|ier was rece g L inar i Josing two and enduring truths, coupled them to | (o "0 " i i gy al Republican cor at least one fatal error—the un-Jefferson- | COX, secretary of the committee h: ention fan and (under existing mining and com- the arrangements for the en June. Th mercial coaditions) the impossible propo- | talnment of Admiral Dewey during his sion of “16 to 1" The speaker said that | forthcoming visit to St. Louis a majority of the electors of the country ey . were _ bimetallists, but they had been | pear S 1 heos forced to choose between the two forms | the receipt of your of monometallism, and they had chesen | lining the nlane for gold. In doing so they had been led | city =n May with a financial bill which created the ' change whate most powerful and dangerous of all trust —a money trust. It sufficient, he said, to know that 16 to 1" was dead, and that just so long as the Democrats proclaimed | their Intention to resurrect it, just that long would their own resurréction be | postponed. Mr. Campbell declared that the army of voters had plenty of work at good wages. Continuing, he sald: “It will be hard to enlist their co-opera- tion to destroy oppression in Porto Rico, or stay Imperialism in the Philippines, un- less we first abandon the menace to their own prosperity. DELEGATES NAMED BY , VERMONT REPUBLICANS State Convention Resolutions Praise | the Administration of McKinley. BURLINGTON, Vt., April 15.—The Re- | publican State Convention for the selee- | tionof four delegatesand four alternates to the National Republican Convention was | held here to-day and resulted in the choice | of General J. G. McCullough of Benning- ton, Lieutenant Governor Henry C.| Bafes of St. Johnsbury, Edwin Welis of | Burlington and Lamont W. Read of Bel- | jows Falls as delegates. The delegation | was not instructed. | The resolutions reaffirmed alleglance to “all the great historic principles for which | our party has stood from its foundation | as the consistent advceate and cham- | plon,” expressed belief in the policy of | rotection which such reciprocal trade re- | Pations with - friendly nations as seemed | wise; favored the ‘upbuilding and pro- | tection of the American merchant ma- rine; an adequate and constantly improv- ing system of coast and harbor defenses a frm, vigorous, dignified foreign policy, the reasonable regulation and restriction of immigration, a just and liberal admin- istration of the pension laws, the contin- ual improvement and enlargement of the navy, an isthmian canal under American control and a cable across the Pacific.” The financial plank pronounces “‘strong- ly and heartily in favor of the mainten- ance of the single gold standard.’” Concerning the recently acquired islands the platform says: We believe that this country should manfuily accept and shoulder the increased duties and | responsibilities that have come to it durinz the present administration, through the wish ana free choice of the people concerned in the accession of the Hawailan Islands, through the The Secrets of Planets Revealed. The immense telescope which s now in process of construction is expected to bring | the moon within a mile's evesight of this world, and to reveal the secrets of all planets. It may cause as great a change in the world’'s thought as Hostetter's Stomach Bitters does | in the physical condition of sufferers from | dyspepsia, _ constipation, liver or kidney troubles. The Bitters strengthen the entire | system. and also prevents malaria, fever and ague Try it. Sick 10 cents and 25 cents, at all drug stores. My party will 1 self. my aid and se. Caldwell ana J. W, were Alp Calaveras Nevada, Placer, _Sacramento quin, Sutter and Yuba. . Lieuten Crawford, HAT we are doing in making clothes to order proves conclu- sively that the dav is pastwhsnitis necessary to pay exorbitant prices to custom tailors. s % P X , “““{v‘,ml i ’ ‘H }";‘! 'r ||’ Among our spz=cials is this it i i sack suit It ‘.11'5?:,“ made to order byl for i %13.50 T is one of eight styles of suits and overcoats that we ar= making to order for $13.50. This suit is adouble-breasted sack, silk faced (if you prefer), well lined, thor- oughly and honestly tailored. Fit and wear are guaranteed. Get our samples. il Il i | il Out-of-town orders filled ac- curately and carefully —write for sameles and self-measur- ing blank. State you want our catalogue No. 2. 15.NWoodaCo, R L W B T e

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