The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 4, 1900, Page 6

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« THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1900 I—— him on his way through Kansas is that he was hailed Rabb fi N fi @ t@ [[ S Dfi Sflpp@fi nt@@l o not as the hero of San Juan Hill, but as the Repub- lican candidate for the Vice Presidency. The people admire him most not as a dashing Rough Rider, but L iste as a brave and sagacious statesman. The demand at S-S ERET SR 7 every stopping-place was for a political speech. The RN 5 -": Not So Vfigofous 1? as Zangwill’s Book, Declares the Eminent Hebrew. reople wished to hear him as the outspoken cham- pion of Republican principles and Republican policies, and in those places where he spoke of political issues the enthusiasm of his welcome was greatest. o e i st What he said was brief, but it was to the point. At EDITORIAL ROOMS....217 {0 221 Stevemsom St. Judged by these standards of statesmanship Colonel | Emporia he addressed the people on the issues of the i : ]hl Telephone Press 202. lfi}r_\-an is a failure of the rankest sort. In 1896 he | day, and in conclusion said: “We are &dding 16 pak| ‘Zte]r' Vflsfi‘tfing E e | found business depression and hard times in the coun- | down brigandage and outrage and murder in the Phil- Pfl | try. Manufactures and agriculture alike had been | ippines just as sure as s e ay. and some the more modern and rational view of religion. Miss Morrison worked hard and deserves great credit for the creation of her part. It was the picture of a modest, pure, affectionate and de- voted daughter, who, though overpowered by love, cannot at the crucial moment for- get her duty. Her early training. the Fecollections of her youth, everything in l’l is the business of statesmen to reason from the known facts of human nature, from physical and artificial conditions, and thereon base judgment as | to the future effect of a given policy. Statesmanshiv | is a mingling of the quality called genius with the | practical elements which make the successful man of | affairs. It is the application of logic, guided by ex- | perience, assisted by the rare quality of correct fore- | sight. @+ Closely Analyzes “TheChildrenof the Ghetto” Af- S P AN JOHN D. SPRECK Address All Communica MANAGER'S OFFICE.. PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, 8. F. Telephone Press 201. Telephone Pre: Delivered by Carriers. 15 Cents Per Week. Single Cople: 5 Cemts. Terms by Matil, Inciuding Postage: CALL (necluding Sunday), one year. Sunday), § monthe | prostrated side by side since 1893. The only dust | if the American people choose to go kitti-cornered G g | raised on the roads was shuffied into the air by the | next November we will have all the brigandage in the H'r was more than a fair audience that DAILY DALY EUNDAY CALL WEEKLY CALL One Year. All postmasters are authorized to recel subscriptions. Sampie copies will be forwarded when requested. | strial ies, made up of the tens of §iToioi p & P8 assembled Monday evening to witness | maching of industrial armics, made wp of the tens of | Philippines that s possible. But it will stop, because | || S8 oatt Eomoe® o bl L0 o Cne thousands of idle men who COHN_ be fed no longer iu | the election will go straight next November, and we Ghetto.” An anxious expectancy held one locality, and so went crusading toward the capi- | are going to introduce in the Philippines the kind of all in the bonds of its rapture before the tal, living on the country as they went. One city was | liberty that follows and can only follow orderly ad- curtain raised Upon the first act, but a dismal gloom settled down upon all when subscribers in ordering EW Al Mail particular to give both to insure & prompt and correct OAKLAND OFFICE.... C GEORGE KROGNESS, Wenager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chicago. (ong Distance Telephone “‘Central 2615.") KXEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON ... Heraid Square YORK REPRESENTATIVE: NEW e STEPHEN B. SMITH....... .. ..30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWE STANDS: House; P. O. News Co.; Grest Northern Hotel; ange of address should be OLD ADDRESS in order omplance with thelr request. v.2.1118 Broadwa) glad to get rid of them at the cost of their transpor- | ministration of justice—liberty for each man:to lead tation to the next, in cattle cars, and the city to which | his life as he sees best, prm‘i;]cd he does not wrong they were sent bristied against the one that sent them | his fellows. You remember last election you were told and always threatened some reprisal. So acute was | that prosperity would never come to you until you the situation that fears were felt for the safety of Washington City, upon which these armies of des- perate men converged, and measures were taken to protect the public property. The only law found available to deal with them judicially was one against work of your own hands. If this nation is allowed to | such prosperity in this country as the sun has not shone on in any nation of the earth before. I appeal going on the grass in the parks and public ' to you for the sake of material prosperity and in the grounds. | name of the honor and renown of America—the good Such were industrial conditions during Colonel | Bryan's first candidacy, and he took advantage of | The closing phrase will serve as a keynote to the them in ever His ways established had 16 to 1. Now prosperity has come to you by the ; g0 on as it has for the past three'years we shall see | | the curtain fall announced the completion of the first chapter of this tragedy—com- edy—farce(?) That is just the point—no one could divine the particular character of this performance. A strained attemptat pathos environed in solemnity was sud- denly reduced to worse than low comedy by the perhaps over anxiety of the gen- | tleman who tried to portray the Hebrew oet and pathos was the r 2 represented all the Jewes jeurls. This perhaps is no fault of the author, but still if militates against the realism he strove to depict—it was not | true to life, Shossy Smendrich and | Melchizedeck Pinchas again did their pathetic by persistently overdoing their parts. The high note that was such a favorite termination in all Melchizedeck's B S L T A RABBI JACOB NIETO. L e e = ] Lackaye delivered himself of a speech in which he committed the grievous error of | himself becoming his own critic and In- cidentally defending the author. This gratuitous defense was neither pleasing [ RS ber life, her struggles, her emotions, her tears, her paroxysms of grief are so trua to life that one is tempted to forget many of the absurdities of the play while sha is on the stage. And even her magnifi cent acllnfi could not stem the tide of laughter that greeted even her most im- passioned utterances. Zangwill could have made a better play of his work. For while the novel stirs our deepest emotions and awakens our sympathies the costumed figures that stalk the stnf as object lessons only awaken ridicule. As witness the red hair. Whiskers and antics of the poet. The strike parade is not true to life—in 1864, such things were unknown in Londoi Jewry. In fact at that time the class ok Jew that has been forced into the play was an unknown quantity. Little Esther did good service in trying to save the play, but who among the vast audlence umfmtood and appreciated the great cone | name of the nation.” | best to destroy whatever was dighified or | | | Ebermen Premont Hcuse: Auditorfum Hotel possible way. SNV WORE: SIS EEANDE. him as a politician, but forever forbade his classifica- vm-mm;;mnmm;‘i_‘ P tion as a statesma Murray Hill Hotel “Elect me Pre campaign--“the good name of the nation.” To pre- serve that at home and abroad is the charge that rests s % Sy and under his sonati f the fan- tpon the peopI-e in this contest, and there can be 10 | fastie th::“fnfp,f‘r,:‘['f'“ p‘}';(:ndere il | doubt as to which paity can be most safely intrusted | dreamer as unlike what the cheracter cern that stirred the great soul Inhabiting her tiny form? Personally I do not dislike the intention underlying the play. that of exhibiting to the world at large the f!he poor down-trodden Jew, speeches as given by Wallace Shaw sav- | ors more of the burlesque than the real, nor apropos_—the public are the judges. not the actors. Besides, I doubt very much whether Zangwill, who Is a per- <onal friend of mine, would appreciate the epithet snob so graciously bestowed upon | inner soul o he cried, “and there shall be WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE Wallington Hotgy | should be as it is 1 i y by Wi 5 eempasessonie 5 : poail 2 : E possible to render it. | adverse critics of the play by Wilton | who while despised aspires to lofty things MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. “ | no signs up to ‘keep off the grass. with the responsibility. The Republican party is for- | I once saw Wallace Shaw at the Alca- Lackave. Ho did all h::: éoul to save | and though Spurned as ignorant fs revel i A g & shdhstrial i - : 5 : r in a plece where he had been hyp- | the pla s rendition of the part of Reb | ing in the luxury of enlightenment an He declared that the industrial disturbance was due | tunate in having a ticket composed of the patriots of | notized info believin fze. hemu “hoth A learning. But though it costs me some Iit- that he was a prize- | Shemuel was both dignified and feeling. nfhtcr_ It is a pity that some one had not | He entered into the spirit of the charac- Monday right again performed this mes- | ter with all his heart and soul and gave meric kindness for him: he might then [a sterling and true revresentation of the | the work of my friend Zangwill, yet I feol have done as well as in the part I saw | good old man torn by love of his child | compelied to admit that his play will him act before. The third act has a gem | and loyalty to his faith he conceived | never be the success his book has be ruined by a foretaste of buffoonery and | it. The old battle that thousands of | The Jews know and feel the strained and idiotic portrayal by Meichizedeck and | Jsraelites have fought between sentiment, | unnatural situations and the Gentiles do Sho: t_left behind a flavor so bad | love, affection, passion and fancied plety | not know what it is all about. So even that even the strenuous, heroic and mar- | could not have been more faithfully de-| with the fear upon me of being called Velous efforts of Wilton Lackaye, Miss | pieted than It was by Wilton Lackaye. | a snob by Wilton Lackaye T stil m Morrison and Henry Roberts could not | But even that will not popularize the rla{. say that with the exception of the third entirely eradicate it. At the end of this, | All through the audience was divided: | and one portion of the last act I do not some applauded the old way of thinking BRANCH OFFICES 527 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open 20 o'clock. 500 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 32 ster, open until 9:30 o'clock. €15 Larkin, open until $:30 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Bixteenth, open until § o'clock. 103 Valencis, open until § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until § o'clock. NW cor- per Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until § o'clock. tle pain to say it, because I know the ear- i to the gold standard, and that if that standard were nestness and have learned to appreciata adhered to “things would go from bad to worse,” and he drew a vivid picture of what would happen if the gold standard were further protected by law. The gold standard is the law, entrenched there as | never before in our history, and instead of the terrible things coming to pass which figured in the lurid prophecies of Colonel Bryan there is general pros- | perity and industrial activity. Employers are hunting for laborers, workmen and artisans of all kinds. The | commerce and wealth of the country have greatly in-" creased. The dust of the highways is raised now by the clattering wheels of activity, and no longer by the shuffling feet of desperate paupers. e — In Bryan's own State the average increase in a farmer’s income, upon equal kind and quantity of 500 per annum. In 1896 the total value Nebraska was $43.658,000. Now it is Horses have gained in value 60 per cent. cows and cattle 200 per cent. Sheep are worth | malign d < much. Corn used to be consumed | for any party to have Sulzer talked of as its candi- :a, and wheat was fed to hogs. All | date for Vice President no human ken can see. That 1d on every side there is prosperity. | it is rough will be admitted by the whole country, and other countries would not deny it. Indeed, all the two wars, the statesmen of prosperity—McKinley and Roosevelt. rm———— e BRYAN'S RUNNING MATE. /[_\S we are now close to the Kansas City conven- tion Colonel Bryan's understudy becomes an object of interest. The only two booms that are at this moment audible, visible and tangible are the property of Towne and Sulzer. Towne has been | a nominee for Vice President ever since the Populist | convention at Sioux Falls. He is a Silver Republi- can-Populist-Democrat. The political child of such inbreeding, it is no wonder that he runs to polygamy of nominations. His honeymoon with the Populists | is hardly over before he desires to begin another with the Democracy. At this writing it seems probable | that he may win. His leading opponent is Congress- man Sulzer of New York. Just what stellar spite, like the play. * PERSONAL MENTION. Charles G. Bonner, a prominent ofl man of Fresno, is registered at the Grand. | L. W. Fauquier, one of the leading citi- | zens of Yreka, is a guest at the Grand. Chris Hirth, one of the ploneer mer- chants of San José, is at a down town hotel. ] R. C. Minor, a well-known attorney of | Stockton, is at the Lick, accompanted by —_—— | the only attempt at real pathos, Wilton ART AND ARTISTS. streets—Specialties. e every afternoon and N exhibition of mezzotints and etch- ings, by Frank Short, is the principal matter of interest in the San Fran- cisco art world this week. The ex- hibition is a rarely interesting one, and should on no account be neglect- ed by those who appreciate the possibili- ties of these fascinating mediums. “ To many doubtless the mezzotint etch- | | ings from a number of Turner's unpub- ny or hard fate should make it possible |lished drawings, originally intended for | the “Liber Studiorum,” will prove most interesting. These drawings, entrusted to Mr. Short for translation into meazotint, as were the lLiber Studiorum drawings placed in Charles Turner's hands, have been reproduced bé him with nicest sym- AUCTION SALES. | produce, i of livestock in $102,000,000. his wife. Adjutant General Seamans, N. G. C., is at the California Hotel, accompanied by his wife. D. 8. Rosenbaum, one of the leading merchants of Stockton, is at the Palace, accompanied by his wife. just three tim Dr. von der Lieth Charged With Negligence by a Mother. s fuel in Nebra this is changed The bank deposits have increased over nine millions. na. This lower, money is casier to get and debts are | Planets in our solar system, as they dance in their end- | pathy and exactest understanding. With | Walter A. Starr of Oakland, who was v . . it W ner Bt 540 Lasiine to nid less ring around the rosy sun, would admit that the @ fine intuition Le has caught the manner | reported lost on the steamer Alliance, has 3 to pay. . 4 2 v <, . and method of the great artist, and these | Sh 1 & arrived safely at Nome City. got out in safe In other words, everything has turned out just the | Party has got 'em bad that can have Sulzer talkeéd of | are indeed notable reproductions. e Declares Her Boy Died of Lock-| = =~ "= i manager of the jaw Becauss a Small Wound ‘Was Not Properly Treated. e He is one of the members se- | “Stonehenge,” a rich, deep, reddish- brown print, is a weird and powerful ef- fect, chiefly in mezzotint. The subject, | the Druidical circle of Stonehenge, seen in that relation to it. Sharon estate at Minturn, is at the Palac Paymaster Clyde Sullivan of the United States navy is at the Palace. 8. H. Comstock. a capitalist of Honolulu tered at the California. He is on The jury at the Coroner's inquest yes-| hlS Way home after an extended trip sending in four or opposite of Colonel Bryan's prediction. The gold ctandard is more positively in action than ever be- | lected by Croker to represent New York City, and is r fore, and concurrently Colonel Bryan's own State is | elected by Tammany under orders from the boss. : L buttered on both sides with an unusual condition of | S_Of"e good men ha\'f been sent to _the Ho}xse by g:;i-,l;ll]!‘h:;,rv{l.:;‘r:‘y: '(‘:r{\’;:td"h'?ydg::?\'gfirzs prosperity. Tammany, but Sulzer's name is not in the list. A |for second theme, lends itseif admirably to | h S the Rrstatsisit o . . . . " o v 3 v v rou e Eastern States, But Nebraska is not singular in this. The States | man who shows no cultivation in his speech or man- | the afMuent medium. “The Falls of the| terday morning on the body of Sidney |t g 2 | s i 3 3 5 | Rhine’’ and “Solway Fishers” are excel- | Smith, the 12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. | s o0 vt i S DAY around her have felt the good effects of the gold |ners, he has not a single qualification fitting him %0 | jent fllustrations of the felicitous use of | Henry Smith of 609 Davis street, rendered | CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. standard, and there is plenty where Colonel Bryan | represent the metropolis of a hemisphere. He is a = mezzotint_ with etching, which so distin- | a verdict that “deceased came to his death e ; 9 | “ B i > * | guishes the Turner drawings, and the | through lockjaw, the result of aceident| NEW YORK. July 3.—Carlisle Morton predicted famine, content where he foretold disorder, | sort of “growler” for the conveyance of the drips | former is filsfl a ’\;t;‘ryi" t‘hfll"fllgflzl‘fgi“":“,‘l: caused by the accidental discharge of a |of Oakland is at the Normandie. Bradley that he said would make it scarce and the interest | swipes by his admirers. pistol in his hands.” J. Wallace of San Francisco is at the Eiee ansiit The boy’s mother, Mrs. Letitia Smith, | Fifth Avenue. 3 Fapagly A p . | _To turn to Mr. Short’s own compositions. high. In Colorado there was probably a more pes- | He and Lentz, of Ohio, have made it their busi- tiferons Bryan sentiment than in any other State. | ness during all this Congress to lead in attacks on the ers to effect their for mis- nme 1t is responsi re their presence is unwel- a representative of their this country protect either side to that M or el rmon m intellectual where abroad, wn South, where the Perhaps that which appeals to the widest | Jess treatment given him at the Harbor | appreciation is “A Wintry Blast in the | Receiving Hospital by Dr. Harold O. von | Stourbridge Canal,” a complete eXposition | gar Tieth and she bitterly declares that gays her son’s death was due to the care- | LATE ST STORIES would s Gov ould ir The demagogues of Colorado were after Bryan’s own | administration No one objects to that. In all rep- | of the power of Pute e 0 o R e shavp | her oy would be ajive to-day if the phy- of the wot t the question. The Mormous | heart. But Colorado, instead of suffering, is making | resentative Governments a party in power is made | rain, the arrows of the wintry w d,l as slglgnn had given him proper attention. | 2 AR : : b 2 A " one looks at the “Stourbridge Canal''— he boy shot himself in the palm of | t to send onaries as any money. On the value of sheep and wool alone she | more cmllinonshand its admmxsu;,zuon is improved by | and hear the howl of “bm"kSSlT%le and | the jet ‘Sand Oundiy. Yawo M p:::‘h g A £ - s petie s S . % Satites g = 3 ici ce in i i - | obvious in composition, bleak and bare in | stol. Wi playmate | £ has cleared an-dncrease of values“in. ‘one “year gffattack But theicritichm must iave in it & desire for | Q0N IuS " cathors Hiztie. charm trom. its | DiUE enlidis PRt TIte s Rt TOOK A FEW BOARDERS. cir own respons S8 860,000, since Colonel Bryan warned her that | the public welfare and an element of fact. Neither | subject matter, It is the masterly free- e Harbor Recelving Hospl-| g anger—Is this Mrs. Slimdiet's board- tal and applied to Dr. von der Lieth to | dom, spontaneity, inty of its treat- cel ng-house? opposition to the Gov- | things would go from bad to worse. Iowa has an | has been present®in the attacks made by these two | pof SR LAY, O G ourbridge Canal” | have the wound dressed. The physician | Sire g ol e b Ak a B ir prosel 1 rage of $34 per capita in the savings banks. Thirty- | men. Mr. Sulzer has feigned virtues that are foreign |a small chef d'oeuv B 2 was busy with other matters and after a | ing-house, sir. b 4 s 3 3 x A ¥ ’ . Of quite different acter is the “En- | casual examination told the ron, Miss Hem! Must have the wrong number. g turning the people against | four dollars on interest for every man, woman and | to him, and has fully realized Shakespeare's descrip- | trance to the Mer and perhaps pmotg) :}:nv\;h to wm;nl the wound and dress it. | can you tell me where Mrs. Slmdie imatituts Lt £ < 3 A ey . .. Ve & characteristic of the peculiar charm of | She did so and Dr. von der Lieth warned 9 5 b tutions. This fea- | child in a State is almost an ideal condition. The | tion of a scurvy politician, pretending to see the | (IR Cter e O A B Gelicate im- | the boy to £0 to & physician for Innhtr.“‘--?nm Mrs. Slimdiet.” e boy was received at the o’clock in the evening and | o ssed at 7:40 o'clock. Sunday morning Mrs. Smith things he does not. | pression of sea and sky, enchanted archi- . . . e tecture and a shining stretch of wet sand. He took up the investigation of the Idaho mining | It is slightly reminiscent of Lalanne, and troubles and sought to make out of them a point situation seems but little under “Indeed in China it is the cause of And you do not take boar: TS ‘Certainly not. This Is a private house, sir—a home, not a boarding-house.” 'Then I have been misinformed. value of livestock in Towa has increased $45.000,000, and the movement of industry there has taken the place of the torpid inaction which Colonel Bryan said Last brought her son back to the Receiving one wonders why. Every line is eloquent n missionaries there ex- and it is full of funlight and atmosphere. he natives until they attacked | would go fr ¢ 2 i resident and the Republican party. | Again another manner, this time pure | Hospital. Dr. Frank R. Dray was on duty | « 4 . Mipes i (s ed | would go from bad to worse under the gold standard. | against the Pres 1 the Rep: _party. | Al Anter e e tIhe, PUNa | and he saw at o siance that sympsoms of | o fohould say so. Being lonely. hat attack served ths Now, a man who has around him, face to face, the | This Bowery statesman was in his element in that | extraordinary effect of immeasurabie dis- | tetanus were present. He operated on the ; hand and back beneath the tough palma fascia, imbedded in_ the flesh, he found a small mass of wadding from the blank cartridge. He gave the wound the most thorough attention possible and then with the consent of the mother he sent the boy to the City and County Hospital. The | tances and vastness on a handful of pa- per. All the soft charm and mystery of the medium arc taken fullest advantage of—the gradations of tone, the chiaroscuro, are little shert of marvelous. In sharp contrast with the “Swiss Pass,” and il- lustrating almest everything that a mez- Weekly. THE WAR CRITIC'S CHANCE. ““We have come,” they saild to the great war critic, “to offer you the command of the army.” ““Why, really,” he expostulated, “T have work. Being a man without dignity, seli-respect, gentleness or any quality that outfits a gentleman, he reveled in the opportunity to be as false and crooked as his nature is. During the hearing of testimony, | ochau a d | evidence of his utter failure as a statesman, must s0il. | hiave an abnormal gall to put on the market a new iot i promizes and prophecies and expect them to be credited. on Chinese t sort has gone on, and expect anything but that gners are not always instead of acting as the impartial judge he was the | zotint should not be, is the “Chelsea | muscles of the jaw and of the back had | not had the experience to e: e R e it s oD Ve B o el e St Bridge™ 'a ‘commonpiace, characteriess | already developed the rigiaity that comes | 1l for so great 4 responaibiies. T 1 o ig ves, nor | Vi v g composition, whic e ort would do L. 2 2 C P ths,” they e e. They appear without 3 { g jaw. v app n ing is the “Twilight in Campagna,” from | JaW- generals ought to do and pointing out the Dr. von der Lieth asserts that he did | | 1 One sample of the method pursued by him and i i i in oiten regardless of any real 4 iv velt 1 Lentz will suffice as an index to the whole. a painting by Glovanni Costa—a common- errors they have mad i3 Sl St “3IROM the reception given to Roosevelt in Okla- t i A Dlice transiation, except as regards the | all he could be expected to do, but ad-| “™Yy "vex, of course.” he admitted, “but re firm in the belief that it will homa 2nd at every stopping-place along the rail- When a witness was before the committee Lentz | sky. of a seemingly commonplace subject. r,:v;;e:kt‘naatfll_m‘glad [not _urge oursmv‘xm:he':ny that's different, you Encw." g be better for the morals and peace of the world when road through Kansas abundant evidences are | asked him, “Have you ever heard that the Bunker | JBe “Span of Old Battersea Brigec.’ & | Jhysician Vecause he thought from. the course they knew. but the astonish- ing feature was that he should admit it.— Chicago Post, SAVED HER EXTRA WORK. Mrs. Thumpp—Hardie—Did you ask Mrs. strong and quaint composition; “Tallant, | Cornwall,” with some adorable 1 “A Calm,” tn which Is too little said; Lynn,” a lovely study bridge and river, w 0y's appearance and dress that he would | not do so. Otherwise, he says, he would have tried to get the case himself, for his private practice. Hill and Sullivan mine is controlled by the Standard Ob- r Governments have it understood as a principle furnished of his extraordinary personal popularity in ! o {ing's OWn re- | the West. Not even in his own State could he find | Oil trust?” These men pretgnd to be lawyers. 3 ries who ‘go abroad on their of architecture, ced expect nothing from their Govern- | ST " L | sef m of ion—"“Havi ver i - v “ g a more cordial greeting or a more enthusiastic fol- | Serve the form of the question ave you ever | ;5,%% the black There Was no reason; Dr. von der|iqextdoor if mx laying disturbe Fhe hicdotw altilswni and Pk FE P . | & A 4 f . Lieth said last evening, “to suspect that | cxsaoor. P JARS PUFng dlverbed ry of' Hawaii and the Philippines has | Jowing. He is the popular hero-of the time in all A heard.” A member of the committee objected to the | make up this most interesting exhibition. | (e8d (0 (80 4T Baaded T The flesn, | her baby? g E 2 3 . There are also specimens of the work of parts of the country, and the academic mugwumps of | Question as it asked for hearsay testimony. Imme- | seymour Hayden. Appian, Whistler, Le- the universitics and the rough cowboys of the plains | diately Sulzer turned upon him, shouting ;'Aha! R e wond of (ha etonr alike delight to ,19 him honor. | thought so. Trying to protect the trusts! Afraid i ne&fl;io{: }'i?.fi:%:t;g s;;st;‘:m}ned e The cause of this personal popularity nas been | to let the truth go before the people! Trying to gag | New. York and is now painting in Mon- stated as clearly by ome of his political opponents as | U, are you?” and so on. This style of examination | ‘g | by any of his friends. In commenting upon his nomi- | Was varied by asking witnesses such questions as | Francisco from his European tour. nation for the Vice Presidency the Louisville Courjer- | this: “What do you think was in hismind when he | S PLANNED IN Journal said: ““He brings to the ticket just the things | heard those rumors?” 1 CHANGE | that McKinley cannot give it. He is in every way | After weeks of this sort of thing the Governor of | LIGHTING OF STREETS McKinley's complement—in age, in temperament, in | Idaho, a Bryan Democrat, was called as a witness and | | record, in influence. He will supply the magnetism | immediately assumed the entire responsibility of the | Incandescent Burners to Replace 0ld 1in such "'f“]“ @8 are now vis- | and inspire the ardor necessary to a hurrah campaign, | military occupation of Shoshone County and declared Lamps—Inquiry Into Cost of o the further fact that every coun- | fe yil] light the torches and wave the flags. But | that the time had not yet come when it was safe to WAvsE Bogxoes. Servant—Yes, mum: and she said the baby liked it, and she was much obliged to_you fer playin’ so much. Mrs. Thumpp-Hardie—Did she, really? Servant—Yes, mum. She said it saved her the trouble of poundin’ on a tin pan.— New York Weekly. A probe would not have shown it, and | there was no occasion to cut the hand open. “As a matter of fact, the wadding didn’t cause death anyway. It was the tetanus bacillus, which lurks in the dust of the street and elsewhere. Had the wadding been removed and had the ba- K i cf 2O nto the woun afterward V. 9 eI wOUIE Bave: e, e sama . X toed E% AR VDN PR, the boy to go to a physician, but did not | A friendly magazine editor was talking try to get the case for my private prac- [.in pleasant but critical mood to a cou- tice, because from his appearance I did | tributor. He said: *“It seems to me you not 'think he would go to any physician.” | use a faulty fisure of speech when you “I_belilve my boy would be ‘alive to-| say a ‘brave old hearthstone.” How can day,” Mrs. Smith said, “if the physician | 2 hearthstoné be brave?’ “Well, sir~ had given him proper treatment at firsr. | Said the contributor, “‘the one I am writ- He went to the hospital before I knew | ing about has been under fire for nearly of the accident at all. He came home, fOrty years without flinching.”—Chicago with his hand bandaged, and said noth-) Post. ing about its needing a doctor’s care. I SIMPLY HADN'T LEARNED YET. kept it bathed and bandaged. and as soon as he began to suffer I took him to the| Rev. Dr. Queen, observing the janitor hospital again. Dr. Dray gave him the | wabbling about uncertainly om his new greatest care, but it was too late. Dr. | wheel in the street in front of tNe church, von der Lieth not only turned the boy | called out, “George, do you ev take a over to the matron for the wound to be | header?” o, Doctah "Queen,” replied dressed but he gave me no warning of | George, with visible indignation. neveh any danger. There is no reason but his | take nothin' strongah 'n cawfee!"—Chi. carelessness why my boy is dead.” cago Tribune. Dr. von der Lieth is not now connected sor cast to the whole missionary business. 1 »n parties have issued ire owners of the land ives find themselves ex- . McComas has just returned to San v respect the civil institutions of a coun- to take the consequences. We iful that these views will be in- those who have ideas abour But our reason for e world s ies H far 3 . . The Supervisors’ Public Utilities Com- s ""zj"‘? “""d; ”’;"" far more | pe will do much more than that. He will | Withdraw the Federal troops. This knocked Sulzer | mjttee Sided Iaet alaht 1 Teconunend RESOEA ZOTOMS. JAn Every City | attrac T, 5 i ity | clear out. The “outrages’” on labor and liberty were | that the old street lamps at present in e ot e Lo attract a la ge cleme: 1t of the mdepen.dcnl vote, which | € s D i " | use be replaced by incandescent gas burn- B 4 peopie as pagan as | thinks for itself, which rebels against boss rule, | all calmly assumed by the sturdy Democratic Gov- | ers as fast as possible. The recommend- ore a joss in far Cathay. There | yhich recognizes and admires brains, courage and in- | €rnor. | ation was the result of the (‘mésldfli?tlnn 1 of medicine, letters, light an-i > o Still, to fool the country, Sulzer hopes to advance ‘\ glfsctgxecgl!d (?;xxelr;l;t“t;d by the San Fran- | tegrity. There is no man in the country who has a for the lighting of DILEMM. PP p i 1 . AR 4 i 5 3 S it f | with the Harbor Receiving Hospital, as A DILEMMA. .sn.v.,_‘:. that can be found in the Da‘n Conti- | jarger following among this class than Roosevelt, | his chances for the Vice Presidential nomination by | rx::;l;’l(l‘ceds{;:ell?he figp;:;‘rng%:vear({eegome vme"n the :t:_f&tog recel(vlng hmftbul Phy-| Mrs. Gallagher—An' phwat'll Of do at uent. When all of these thotgands are taught to tum | ang jt is a class which is daily growing stronger and | PUtting a plank in the platform denouncing the Re- | contract for gas lamps at o cents each | Utk i%o Dy drawing lots e was ons | aAioike. oTus machine only goes up heir faces to the s a § SR i % 4 2 i ; amps ks their faces to t and keep their faces clean, | nigre assertive in the affairs of government. But | Publican party for sending troops into Idahe to sup- | fre D o et o 38500 cemts in | Of the unlucky ones who drew a blank. | if Oi'm an ounce. e He was an_appointee of the Democratic H hen mercy y . P p . | . . . h tlyis tions. Gallagher—Get on twoice, Bridget, an" )\\ n dsings lxa}c'g?rfe among them to | Roosevelt's strength will be even greater among the | Press an insurrection upon call of the Democratic | ' OUUNIRE RGNS 1 1ca that his com- Board of Health and hoped to be rein-| add up th' totals.—Glasgow Q\(m'nn‘ soothe sorrows, nursc in sickness and comfort in | young men, among the full-blooded Americans of ac. | Governor of the State! pany would take a contract for 44000 1 T i —— Times. SRAEDA LR death. :in: have et = : ol (h;xr :a;kened lives the | {ion and progehs, who believe in fighting when fight- | Sulzer is very proper Tammany material, but g'},;ru_t;“{lh%fi-han Reed eaid that the in. SUPERVISORS OPPOSE EQUALLY HORSELESS. gl drpiiad 4 P A tion ; ‘ s candescent burner was an experiment an “Ha!" jeered . pirit of ; © 00N S0 # unto 'the | ing is necessary, and who, however proudly they may | American P""“fs has never yet fallen to the depths | {'jiy luperlnrugecould be established the CLERK’S APPOINTMENT | & x‘g::obif:ehu :gr.ne "1’0"‘::':;- g:n" Jeast of these hath done it unto me,” it will be time ! of such a nomination. Those who urge it should | system would adopted. T stay!” ‘“That’s all right,” rnpbndedett:: look back on their country’s past, look forward to its future even more proudly.” 3 A - . The fact that such a tribute is paid to his personal When Boss Croker of '].'ammany_ was “ke‘! on his | orth and influence by an opponent in politics is it- ad fared during the racing sea- | | self an evidence of Roosevelt’s ability to attract the % 2 3 - son in England h', answered: “T done good. T had | ,qmiration of sincere and true-hearted men of all NAmins Audea oo fng 5 Cl}xr}a Epbeact mde.mmty ' It \w_H be seen t_hat Tawmany grammar, | qa.cec Among the crowds that greeted him on his | for the death of the German Minister sounds ominous. any politics. is satisfied with any old thing way to the reunion of the Rough Riders were men and | B Sy veHent ol et A grneml Fesof the <0 long as it gets there. women representing all the parties known to the va- { powers, for territory, and what is now &.bad enough The committee decided to take a trip man on the seat, calmly lighti; Friday. July 20, to in- “But why should a ma hl! ng a cigar. Booth Says Mayor’s Selection for a | gisplaces the horse axé‘.“{né"fin' ':fl;’.‘,“; Place Is Not a Good asses?"—Chicago Tribune. One. The attempt of Mavor Phelan and his supernumerary, Charles Fay, to force the appointment of John Finn tionery clerk of the Board of Supervisors is meet- ing with violent opposition on the part of some of the members of the board. This oppnsltlonBol; esveda:ly manifested to go abroad with the Pentecost. have the thanks of Towne, for it serves to make his own candidacy seem respectable. to Lake Tahoe on spect. the waler supply of that 'region. )x:mbfira of the Board of Supervisors and Public Works will inspect the system and will be accompanied by M. Cuvellier, pres- ident of the Board of Trustees of Oak- land, John C. Ing, president of the Boarl of Trustees of Sacramento, Mayor Clark of Sacramento and Grove L. Johnson. The Board of Public Works was dirccted ‘to_make a chemical analysis of the five different sources of the present water supply of San Francisco with a view to arrival home how he | The report that Kaiser William is to send a fleet of Cal. glace fruit 50c per 1d at Townsend's.® —_—— Special information supplied dafly to business houses and public men th Press Clipping Bureau ( 3 2 - ipe "le u Alle: ;). 510 fon —— —.....__.""u.' Larry—O'Hooligan hos jist arroived from z ; ; problem for an international council to deal with In making your preparations might become a chaos worse confounded before thes | year is over. f ' —_— recognized as the fnremtts( representative of the Phelan should have taken his bubonic board with young Affltflfa" of our time. - : him to Kansas City and left it there as a plank in the A significant feature of the popular greetings given , Democratic platform. for the Fourth do not forget to take precautions against fire. You may need them before the jubilation is over. Now gghat the bubonic scare is over it would be a good thing if the Phbonic board would vanish with it. { ernor of New York, who is now by common consent ried politics of Kansas, and people who agree in noth- ing else agreed in cheering the brilliant young Gov- is wt hbe continued until after the winter months, The City Engineer and Board of Public ‘Works were authorized to ascertain the technical_cost of the construction of the ring Valley Water Company's works now actually in use. The Board of Works was also re&uuted to Investigate the cost of construction of other available sup- | plies submitted to the board. determining its purity. The investigation gy Supervisor 0] mmittee on Printing and Salaries. His opposition is an important factor against nn, as the recommendation to the full board must come from that committee, The committee will order all heads of departments to appear before it and make affidavits that the stationery asked for js really needed. The appropriation for the allowed to go beyond that aj ear is $24000 and the contracts will not figure, ' th’ wor. He siz ivi toime a shill lond- od, R th" Hoylonders it made him Denny—How phwas thot? Larry- miny _“hot - g aroun’—Chicago News. "corones” floyin Loss of hair, which often mars the face, prevented by Parker's Halr Bai Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 15 cta tiest

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