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@all, [t SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1900. GETZ IDENTIFIED BY ' AN ALLEGED VICTIM Albert Ziegenbein, a Sailor, Asserts That the Suspected Prisoner Is the Man Who Stood Him Up. The Unfortunate Young Man’s Relatives Claim He Is a Victim of Jealousy—Several More Hold-Ups Startle the Western Addition. Burke, Dunbar and Dwyer in favor of the motion and Fitzgerald, Dockweiler and, others in opposition. During the argu- ment Dockweiler of Los Angeles made a sharp ailusion to his fellow-townsman, Burke, and it looked threatening for a short time. . C. Wright offered an amendment which had for its object the holding of a smaller convention. The amendment was lost by 70 noes against 16 ayes and the original motion made by Burke prevailed unanimously. Then followed a wrangle over primaries which lasted for nearly two hours. It arose over a motion made by R. H. Nor- ton of Orange County that delegates to the county conventions should be elected at primaries. or if no county conventions were held délegates to the State conven- tions shouid be elected at primaries. Gov- ernor Budd made the point of order that the constitution and by-laws of the State Central Committee adopted at the last State convention defined the powers and duties of the State Central Committee in this respect. The provision was read by the chairman. 1t is as follows: “The State contention to nominate State officers or delegates to the national convention shall be called by the State Central Committee by notifi- cation to the chairman and tary of each county committee at least ten days | before the time fixed for said convention |and said call shall explicitly state the | time and place, the business to be per- | formed and the basis of representation. Said call shall be signed by the chairman | and secretary of the committee, Should DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION CALLED Delegates to Assemble at Sacramento on Thursday, June 14 -Bryan Vote of 1896 Basis of Representation. Power of the City Machine Perpetuated—Local Bosses May Appoint Themselves Delegates to County Assemblage—-Rank and File Ignored. Qe e 000000020000 0eO et sdeitdheieisde g | i sbep with the monarchy, therefore be it Resolved, That the Democratic party should | place {tself on record as being in sincars sym- | pathy with the brave citizens of the Boer re- publics of South Africa and as condemning, | | unqualifiedly, the “attitude of President Me. | | Kinley's administration in its un-American sympathy with Great Britain in the war now- is given as the cause of the officer's al- leged scheme. Despite the protestations of Getz's In- | nocence witnesses are cropping up who are certain that he was the man who way- land and robbed them. Albert Ziegenbein, a sailor, positively identified Getz yester- ® | there be anfi' Lnfg‘e” cnlthe part of the | county or district committee to call an Raaaas s S e a e g Ra e e oo o ol o o o o ot o ok TS S S S SRCRY S S SR S S S : 2,1 mvenlion ™ wiien i sl | 2 A 44 e -t ; ssued c h. E — ¢ State Central Committee may cail soch E HO gy A s e Bald-upe b ; P $ | onvention hall Do elected ekcept 3t Dok | 3 henes ending at 2 selock this § . Vi shal except at pri- I A b 4 | maries or county conventions.” 2 foteaiingat L osib cun : B 1 $ Chalrman Mann decided that this law | § morning: ? ) ¢ provided for the calling of a St gl 54 € Vention and defined the guties of the Stame LI, Taleht i 4 ) ¢ < ]f{.’?‘é’{;‘fé‘flnifin&'}?fip'ce&m“ %"5‘ therefore and Webster streets, yielded 3 h¢ e d not do anythin 4 except what was provided for by this sec | 3 3007 801d watch and badge. 4 |1 L ¢ . éim:, namol',\'. to call the convention to : —— LYNCH, same vicin- t . | designate the time and place and b4 | the ‘apportionment of delesates He A% | 4 ity, money and jewelry. 3 3 3 N |SERieR® O Somim PR 6 LA | 3 G denwieh and | Devisadero, 3 |3 3 o i : o : a esired 4 < Bor Be 105 e ¢ INTENSELY | to prescribe primaries and to provide for Greenwich snd ero, 41e ? . EXCHANGED A Pew sHos’ INTERESTINGS | the clection of elegates to the State con- $3 50 in cash and gold watch. + 4 ) Rt 1 £ ventions or to the county conventio; HALLEY, 3le ) * PACKAGES | appeal might be taken from his decision FRED ) Pine and T o 3 \ & |and the committee could then proceed to | + Laguna, $3150 and gold + ¢ « | act as it saw fit - Dwyer took the ap- | + wwatch. bak ] b ¢ 3 e:l {,nd!was Kac ; by .\iaka(xpper and | + 5 - * 5 * | Mr. Norton, _Vote was taken and the QHH++444444 44444 b chalr was sustained by 67 ayes to 8 naes. THERE o3 ? . 1 Senator awell offered the following HE relatives of Barry Getz, the sus- | 4 . rP;phlu!Inn, Which was adopted: pected footpad, are positive In their | o ) ¢ littls, repablics of Bearh a ik, Pooble of two assertion that the young man is the [ 5 g | agea 'in a desperate life and death coatest: o victim of spite work. They state | f ‘:::‘»':.‘f(“:h:hm ho v;w! and national existence [ they will prove beyond a shadow of a k.—WMO—&O*—«W. essio) ol ) i p | destrous of J‘,f’»’;mng"n?'x:w‘i",‘l‘.‘}'i‘.i'mfi&“,”m | doubt that he is innocent of the crime | . . 4.q by the imbecile Vetsera, set the | ¢ $ ovhereas, The Republican administration, | Charged to him. They even g0 o far as o | officers hard at work again. Even should PY abandoning all the traditions of the founders | charge that Policeman George Brown, | Getz prove to be a footpad it is evident b | Pros” serhiment o Hracrhnk (he almost unani- | whose beat Is on Ellis street, Is the per- | (0 the police that the Benus did not be- | ernoon who swore that on Monday night, April 23, Getz and another man held him | | up on Howard street, near the water front. This sallor, Albert Ziegenbein by | { name, positively identifled Getz, picking | him from among three other prisoners, | | and then swore to a complaint charging | being ruthlessly waged by that country him with assault with intent to commit | “ against freedom and republican institutions, | 42y as one of two men who robbed him | robbery. genbein’s narrative included : § and be it further .’ | on Howard street near Beale. The sailor | the tale of a meeting with Getz afterward | ? hetiaolved. That the Democratic party does not | picked Getz out of a crowd of prisoners. |at a ic hall and the sudden departure F;r'?;;‘mx::;;r: its earnest and heartfelt de- | There are some devalopments in the case | of the alleged robber from that place upon - BArBoUR) their struggles Lfilh;"? be as successtul in | of the accused which would appear to give | his spying his alleged victim. The sailor's - pe fighting for the same priscioins aner When | color to the contention of his relatives | identification of Getz and the minute de- | EAD HIS figttiog for_th principles and against | that the whole affair is a plot to rail- | tail of his story caused the detectives to | {RESOLWUTION 7 P g road him to prison. As usual, a woman is | place credence in what he said | poy s Clitus Barbour introduced the following | the central figure in the plot.’ The alleged | To make . matters worse for the £l ‘res_oluuon, vfnlch was also adopted: villain is sald to be Policeman George | trembling, terror-stricken Getz, a young 4 Whereas, We are threatened with a new | BIOWN. man called on Captain Seymour after the ERE HEWAS -SG50 P -0-0-4-40-0- 000 Funny Features of an Up-to-Date Democratic Wrangle. | inundation of Asiatic slavery, the first install- ments of which have already poured through Im-. Golden Gate and Puget Sound ports and with the reopening of the flerce agitation which | finally found its quietus in the Chinese exclu- | slon law, and whereas the effect of the expira- | tion of that law by its own limitations in the | near future and the probable decision of the Supreme Court op the constitutional rights of the islanders madé to open and keep open a broad road into 'and out of the Orlent. all of which will be especially disastrous to the labor fnd ctvilization of the Pacific coast, therefore Resolved, That we eamestly appeal to Con- | Eress to enact before its adjournment the nec. essary legislation to arrest the further importa- tion of Asiatic slaves and to extend the Chinese exclusion law, Including Japanese and | Astatic laborers of all sorts, whether disguised as merchants or otherwise. | Before adjourning Chairman # | called attention to an indebtedness of B R R S R R B S S 0-0_&-@-0‘0 DRI, Mann | asked for rellef. Mr. Tarpey aided him In his efforts, and their combined appeal was 4 | so touching that Mayor Phelan, who was & | present, subscribed §1000 toward reducing [ | the debt. ' Governor Budd added $100. M. F. Tarpey $50, R. M. Fitzgerald $50. W. H. Alford $0. J. C. Bonner $50. Ed McCabe $25. Charles H. Holcomb $20, J. N. | lagher $25, Oscar Hochs $10 . F. Cochran Gal- | of the city. ?‘onve thought they had landed | | $10 and E. V. Sargent $10. It is openly charged that Getz and Brown were suitors for the favor of Mrs. Margaret Moore, and that the former out. bid his policeman rival for the affections of the woman. It is alleged that Brown swore to be revenged. It is even asserted that he visited the saloon of Getz's broth- er and warned him to keep, his brother away fram the vieinity of Elii$ and Larkin streets, as he might be arrested. The priscner was either not warned, or If he was took no heed of it. Policeman Brown denies that he was in- timate with the Moore woman. He ad mits that his beat was on Ellis street, but he paid no more attention to her than he would to any one else on his route. He thinks that in Getz they have the right man. Mrs. Moore made a statement to Cap- tain Seymour last night, in which she ad- i smitted her relations with Brown. She said + | Which Sto0d against the committes o | the latter had on numerous occasions chased Getz away from her residence. While Barry Getz, suspected by the po- lice of having robbed and shot Frederick | J. Bortzmeyer and also of the robbery of Hedburg, was locked in a cell at the City Prison vesterday morning another excit- ing holdup took place in the western part ‘Bhis_robbery, occurring just when the w the man who was profiting from the scare | coruplaint had been sworn to by Ziegen- bein and said that a little while before he robbery of Bortzmeyer occurred he saw an individual answering Getz's de- scription hiding within the gateway of a hedge on Ellis street, near Larkin. He said he belleved Getz to be the man he saw. These two identifications of Getz and the evidence of the- hoid-up mere than five hours after his arrest caused the de- scratch its head and wonder what it was up against. Getz looked like a man on the verge of | delirium tremens when he was brought | from his cell early yesterday afternoon His gaze wandered everywhere save on the eyes of his questioner. He trembled, looked wild and gave every indication of | having passed a most uncomfortable night. e “I won't say anything more. I don't want to talk,” he exclaimed agitatedly when a question was asked him. “*Sit down and don’t be afrald,” said the | questioner. *‘No one's going to hurt you. | Getz =at down, but when another query was put to him he sprang to his feet, ex- claiming: B “I don’t want to talk. Sure, I don’t. I've aid all I'm going to,” and he asked to be taken back to his cell. Ziegenbein related the following story while the complaint he was waiting to | in response to a reguest for an interview. | P e S R I S A e B e S S THE SAILOR WHO IDENTIFiES GETZ AS A ROBBE * > @ePe e eieieieieg | dier, of his watch, badge and $3i at Haight | and” Webster streets, he encountered a | man named Lynch in the same neighbor- |'hood and made him surrender his per- | sonal property Fifty officers were specially detailed to scour the Western Addition, w ordery to capture any suspicious character dead or alfve. STILL THEY COME. William McDonald, a Clerk, En- } counters the Footpad on | Greenwich Street. | Willam McDonald, a clerk, reported to the North End on last night that he had been held up by a footpad at Green- | wich 2nd Devisadero stre The hold- | up occurred about 10:20 o'clock. The rob- | ber secured 5350 in coin and a gold watch. | McDonald says the highwayman was | short and thick set, wore dark clothes and a slouch hat and covered his face with a black mask. He was extremely cool in his work and acted like an old hand at - v s being prepared: ST’ had been to & Iheater with a friend | named John Ryan the night 1 was held up and was returning to the New l,nllror-} nia House on East street, opposite the Government dock, when the footpads | the business. The police made frantic efforts to kee the hold-up quiet. Lieutenant Birdsal was notified, but after ordering the offi- cers at the North End stat t to give out any information the lieutenant com- * B e e e e o e s ) Bryan wing of Cal e gallant Edeiman, went to the aid of | about twenty who had not paid the as- t bled at the pper. He proclaimed against the sys- | sessment, and each would demand a trial fore- of appointing delegates. and the committee at this time had no € sovernor Budd's opposition to any | opportunity to investigate the matter. SOUGHT DEATH WHEN HER PLEDGE FAILED stopped me. Ryan, who lived at the Reno | e o n_in favor of primaries had the | Mr. Popper brought the matter squarely Hogls‘e. reft e T WA ot S (R La‘;ebn:gl’ ;fl;\pr;o;ég; that no footpad work of consistency. He asked the | before the members by moving that those front alone. Between Third ‘and East | street the sidewalk is very bad, so I stepped out into the middle of the street. | Down by Beale street two men came out | from befxlind jome old machinery and one | of them leveled a pistol at me, resting 1 on his left arm, and ordered me to stop, | Laguna Streets and Relieves = ‘\Vha; do yoF :nm?' 1ld asked ron! xhi Him of $31 50 and a Watch. men, and one of them said something 1| e P 2 3 6id hot understand. I asked them again | Fred Halley, who works in a shirt fac what they wanted and the one who had | !OTY at 28 Kearny street, encountered spoken before said they wanted money. | the shert, stout footpad at Pine and La- puoss ST Jie FOOTPAD GROWS BOLDER. Attacks Fred Halley at Pine and who had failed to pay the amount be ex- pelled. Dwyer quickly moved to lay the matter on the table, but again he was! foiled by Popper, who asserted that a mo- | tion of ‘that kind could not prevail until | the original motion was put. The motion was then repeated by the chairman. Governor Budd said that he did not know who the delinquents were and moved that they be tried serfatim. Delegate Dwyer reiterated his motion to lay on_table and an to read the constitution of the | ral Committee, and Mr. Mann No delegates shall be elected ex at primaries or county conventions e alert ex-Governor then maintained the committee had no authority to any method of electirg delegates. | ed a Supreme Court decision to sus- | tain contention. By repeated inquiry Max Popper ascer- tained from Seth Mann that the latter in sending out official notices would recog- B e e e o S o Y o+ @Q it prevailed by a vote of 15 to 14. ; | e 0" be = s cinsy MEoCADE: boall o Fiiiiet ot 1 ran away and they got nothing from | suna streets about 1 o'clock this morn communications. The first was from the g ing and was relieved of $313 and his Then came the most interesting part of | Ziegenbein's story—that relating to his | alleged meeting with his assallants at a concert hall. | “Two nights afterwvard I was at the | Mr. Popper also succeeded in the all-important information rman Mann would not direct the Committee to hold primaries for on of Iroquoig Club and was in the form of a resolution. It read as follows: ‘“‘San | Francisco, April 20, 1900. Resolved, That it is the sense of the Iroquois Club that the State Central Committee adopt a plan for gold watch. The highwayman came up behind him, tapped him on the der and demanded his money. Halley handed over 33 50, but r speak f elegates the county | g T the robber was not satisfled and poking convention, s o ¥ | the formation of district elubs in this city Olympia concert - hall,” continued the | a. pistol in his vietim's face made him The technicalities were brushed aside | to select delegates to the State conven- sallor. “Two men sat at the same table | hold up his hands while he went through is admission was made Some one | tion that will select delegates to the Na- ;"h me and were talking = of Maska. | his pockets, securing 328 more and-a gold aimed: “The committee will appoint | tional Convention to be held in Kansas L TR I IR S S to the convention. It is all the | City Ju’.i')l. 1800. Max Popper, P. M. Wel- m a "g t he wouldn' e st ng here The footpad then advised Halley to now. He knows us, tco. With this I| looked at the men and saw they were the | same two who had held me up. It was " lin, tion: Another was from the committee on shut out the voters. Lemon, committeé on resolu- nians fancled that a great | gained by the revelation. make himself scarce under penal ing shot. of be- The thief wore no mask, but had a soft slouch hat, which he pulled the danger li 1 v « Getz who pointed the pistol at me. ‘n ov: < nts TN S8 & Burke ¢ , Nortons and Pop: | CoMenting . SRcunie SuvEing the %Y determined at first to grab Getz, but | 10F™ OVer his eves. | ' ! collar on_the w 1on Pl triumnh, DU | the Capltol. The 'communication was e vie no Kuife or. péato) decided not ee: | Claffey’s Big Gun. faction. T 1 mad knew that they had a | Signed by Mayor Clark, A. C. Hinkson While T was thinking the matter over ot in the collar that spec- sufficient to execute it.|2and Talbot H. Wells. the pair got up and went in behind the| W. E. Claffey, who was arrested early Il cell was complete it was | M. F. Tarpey moved that the committee stage. I ran out to the side entrance and | yesterday morning on Geary street by Po. lace for B S R R SO R S e was ready to spring a antagonist. It wil watched for them to come out, but they did not. I told a policeman all about it.” Before issuing the warrant for Getz's arrest Judge Mogan questioned Ziegen- bein, but the sailor stuck to his story. Bail was fixed at 3 Lorenzo Stenhouse Jr. of 726 Ellis street, that only nine members stood for iples of Thomas Jefferson. On de sixty-seven were arrayed. se who voted against giving the voters of the city the right the councils of the party Eroceed to name a time and olding the State convention. Before the motion was_placed before the body W. H. Devlin of Sacramento moved that the first convention for the election of dele- | gates to the National Convention be eld at the city of Sacramento at a date | lceman Collins on suspicion of being | footpad, appeared before Judge Fritz yes- terday to answer a charge of carrying a | coneealed weapon. The weapon was an old Colt's revolver about two feet long. Caps Irad to_be used to explode the McNab, James H. Budd N g cartridges. Claffey was carrying the re- et - ¢ of | to be fixed later. Mr. Tarpey retired for 249560500+ ede® | whothinks he saw Getz hiding in a hedge Curt Yy i o me of Wapar | the moment and the chalrman Jut the gateway, said: | yolver rolied up in a paper, and"said he second motion, which was unan! | adopted. Mr. Ta?ey moved that the convention convene Thursday, June 14, at 10 a. m. mously According to the husband of the woman, Mrs. Lestrange commenced to drink some time ago. er condition at times was helpless and music Rl o hor Baac o Seslen strees | town: i intention Was. to-sell 1t Fha o -40 | Judge continued the case till to-morrow, and started for my own home at 1140 Judse continued il Solise will taguice 85 ‘Nevada and W. R. Burke itiable and his home went |p. m. 1 _walked up Market and Eiliis | nt e ped, the committeemen up-| Sanator J. H. Seawell, who was given % | to pleces. .His children’s morals became | streets. The lights went out when I to Claffey’s anteccdents. er and the agent e genor Budd gained a | yojce in the deliberations by virtue of the corrupted by rapid strides. He threatened | reached Leavenworth street and it be- | by predicting that Ad- g In the light of lished fact that uddock of Ukiah, deliv- proxy of J. C. dlvorce, with the custody of the two | came very dark. As I passed a hedge | d in California it o tha gek norqmau;;l for | ared a long speech In which he said he children, a boy aged 10 years and a girl of | about seventy feet from rkin street I WOHEN A“RESTED WHILE hern Pacific, v BN T D | wanted to consult with the members of For a time this called a halt in the |saw a man leaning against the gate and the best of selec(lnf candidates. He sald the sole purpose of halding such a con- vention was for the purpose of electing or selecting eighteen men who are to nom- woman's disgraceful life. She took a gledge two months ago, but it was quickly roken. Three weeks ago she again be- evidently hidi of the hedge. I went by. got home."” between the square ends | looked at him closely as | It was 12:15 o'clock when I sed to preside over the de- | s of the United States Senate, as | ned there would fit him for | ion later on. | DRINKING IN SALOONS produced came intoxicated. the p yan accepted | MRuG 1ot g e inate W. J. e employed an_atto: Stenhouse looked at Getz and said he FPolice Gather in Fifteen South of e e the gitt of | AT members to the number of about | ""H 10 3 gk the First Congressional R e Y et e wwaat e s Do s Rithw o | - arkut Stveet Waman sid Charge transportation on the ground that Brvan | Cofirornia Hotel before Cap oortochl He | District is concerned.” he said, “I think ruption of the marital ties. This fright- | the hedge sateway. | Them With V: D . e S {ime et for mecting Cang cnciogk. the | o can agree among ourselves who will ened the wife and she promised to reform, | Ziegenbein says he told the story of his | agrancy. tocratic church and the friend of corpora- | hect: Soul Chatmantsen arcooied 2 fh‘;‘ga from that district. I am aware that Her husband agreed to give her one more | being held up to the proprietor of the | Numerous complaints having been the selection of delegates by committees who have not been directed under the law | to make such selection is a dangerous officers of the committee could get the | earing running smoothly. A half hour later the members were invited to walk chance and there was three weeks of sun- shine in the Lestrange household. Yes- terday morning the husband attended a New California House, to his friend, John | made to the Southern police station of a Ryan, who lives at the Reno House, and | : to an’ East street policeman, Officer Mec- | [OUSN crowd of women who frequent the at t California resolved that the nvention shouid meet at n e . many saloons on Howard street, be- Sacramento o 14 A big convention a hel e Ly arty precedent. We are willing that San funeral. When he came home he found | Grath, as it was subsequently learned. | S c E of A delegates was decided upon. Each | Ahout to be opened “h fow scire o pea® | Franefsco, Los Angeles and Sacramento his wife arunk and the children neglected. | All thse people substantiate Ziegenbein's | f¥een Third and Fourts. Captain ‘Spil- county is tc d also ad- | ocrats, with balf as many proxies, en- hold a convention, but so far as we are A portion of a can of beer remained on a | Statement. Ryan says the sailor told him | raid > concerned we would much prefer to make the selection of the First Congressional | Distriet and I believe the members of that district would like to make that selection.” ‘The chalrman lhenflnut Mr. Tarpey's on of one & Bryan § majority i all saloons” in that neighborhood ditional repr 'l;:‘re women were found at the bar last night. As a result the officers arrested fifteen women in saloons at 722, 715%, 7 and tered 'the room and awaited develop- | ments. Attorney M. C. Hassett. opened | proceedings by moving' that all those | olding proxies have the right to pjarti- | also of seeing the footpads at the Olym- pia and seemed very angry that they got table in the room. Seizing his wife h{ the throat Lestrange exclaimed, ‘‘Alice, T will kill you if you do no stop drinking away. Ziegenbein has not worked for nearly »emocratic national com- a month. He was last employed on the cipate in the business of the meeting. | B S R R S g S e S S S R S S e He quickly released her and left the { - inistrator of the polit- | The motion s,—e“um, When Secretary | motion and it was carried. m.,&.qxn a few moments his little son | coasting schooner Santa Cruz, and says | &?fl'ag"fi;egugnglcx’rflgw them at Jefferson, attended McCabe called the roll it showed that Mc- | W. R. Burke of Los Angeles suggested rushed to him and told him that his | he is going to Alaska soon for the Allsk.' o g Whitehurst, a ung,’.'-‘.o,, at the nd used his gifts Nab and Fay could easily control the | that the next question to be taken up was MRS. LESTRANGE'S LEAP TO mother had jumped from the window. He | Exploration Company. He is now living | ~N0SePR, TLAREREISt, 2 TAREcroon at the o eloquent. pereunsion 1o induce the Som- | Adfbirations of the Dody. | the one of apportionment. Chairman Mann ESCAPE FROM DEMON DRINK. found his wife on the pavement, three |at the Reno House. ] SR ST Sl A e mittee 10 give the common, every-day | Max Popper bobbed up at the conclu- | stated that one had been figured out on \ . storfes below. She had thrown up the tz was liberated last evening, “his oa e:"“ May Carthy throm h""- wt Democrats of San Francisco the right to | sion of the rolicall and asked the ohair. | the basis of one delegate large from @+ 9+ 0+ 08+ 0+ 0+0+@ window, clutched the sill and dropped. | brother and brother-in-law fu: lhlnfi St B ay McCa e o {v l‘d h“‘ express a cholce in the sclection of dele- man to read the provision of the const. | each county and one delegate from each Her body struck the roof of a small shed | bonds for his appearance. His case will | oW to the stret in order td avoid her gates to the convention. Max Popper. tutlon which provided for' dues and as. | three hundred votes cast for James G. RS. ALICE LESTRANGE, resid- | Which protrudes from the building at the | come up Monday morning at 10 o'clock be- | 3rrest, The young lady alighted on her With less eloquence, but with great sin- | sessments. He insinuated that some of | Maguire in 1888 and one delegate from ing at 537 Howard street, at.|fAIst story and splintered it. fore Judge Mogan. alsfaured.. She was ireated mt the Ne- cerity and commendable tenacity, fought | the gentlemen present had been lax in | each majority fraction of three hundred, X suleide yesterday aft The woman made the statement that Z!efinbeln says the reason he is so posi- | dis ey e By side by side with Mr. Dwyer. MF. Tar | their payments. Mr. Mann read the fol- | which gives a_total of four hundred in the tempted © yesterday after- | o hysband threatened to draw a knife | tive identifying Getz is that the al- ceiving Hospital also fought for the principles of | lowing excerpt: “Each member of the | ronvention. Burke moved that the noon by leaping from a third- | and that to escape him she took the dan- | leged footpad was smiling all the time he BN AT B A He had faith jn the | e Jefferson. Fiomas 3¢ The fight for | committee (except the chairman, secre- | basis of rank and file of the party. | of window of her home. Her spine was tary and treasurer), unless excused by the : for the - r. apportionment be the vote cast | story il severely injured by the fall and fatal re- . The children, both of who: hest_elector for William J. gerous leap. e - is stated to have aimed the rhtol at the were witnesses to the quarrel, say that agree with tail Grocers’ Pienie. sailor’'s head, and that he smiled the same - . Nab, B b to thy tre B! in 1 ne delegate at I " ‘was menti and at the Olympla. The Retail Grocers’ “Association will oy oy B gy i e R R e e P R B L T e Sutcifatad Derint hd Yomec s R TR e crimes rommitted by the daring | hold fts annual picnic next Wednesday at simply smiled at the futile efforts of the sum of £20. Failure on the of any hundred votes and one delegate for each | act I8 & patnetic story, of,a wife's intem- e was arrested by Officer Mor- | highwaymen are ually coming to | Schuetzen Park. More than 600 valuable L o A S R e i R M kR S e ot e “;e-u‘ Srday morning. " AMter he fostpad | Hon or SIStHIDUtOR A, Ane Drosamme or Fay ‘wol u meml] motion a scuss| inves ion. morning. 3 lon for ‘hezr?;n":?odlt‘ln‘! bearing the vgoxv of l ship.” Mr. Dwyer sald that there werc | Flery speeches were .:.um.X by 'rarp:',': the interest of their little children. - et -n." A af Talived Taines Riley, the veteran sol- | of games and races has arranged.