Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1900. REVOLT AGANST ,C, IBBLE DN I FORTY-FRST SUICIDES KEPT THE CREW | OF THE HANCOCK VERY BUSY 1Chinese Firemen, Coal Passers and Sailors on the Trans- | l port Eager to Carry Soldiers to China to Fight WEWS FROM THE OCEAN HAO THE WATER FRONT ¢ |-the wharf when the accident happene 3 - ny though rom ch ¢ and Mo time was 108t in getting hor back | APart in my thought from much of the tendency of our times, and are, 0|m the dock. passeng e sehety z‘flbunrd and were well cared ers all rem: for by the above it, like a great prophet and | which everybod ains, or the poet David and his | him, Mr. Whitt ith ourtly bo 1 would as soon act modern liter- | turned to a lady who happened to be that courtly bow pany. The steamer we again at 5 p. m., but . e+ WHITTIER: BY ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS. Sentiment Against Boodlers Their C ountrymen Germany Sending Steamers Copyright, 1800, by Seymour Eaton. aas Q : . : BOSae_a Spreading B bstsacse s s b s et e il L cs b e i g e S | e Hiure o Oarey Supplies | s S in Dlstrlcts- ; % to Chllla. LITERARY TALKS AND REMINISCEN . @ | PR S =R R : . bl ® | VIL heaven. On urging the reason for th ublicans Demand an Honest As- | ¢ ©|The Bosnia Is on Her Way From Thirty years ago a girl who had written | discouraging opinion I that h 1 semblyman Who Will Serve the : ! Baltimore and the Silesia From |in the Atlantic Monthly Magazine a story | Kinedam . buc. bad. stoutly Pecple Regardless of ‘ 2! Yokohama, to Load Horses called “The Tenth of January™ came from | friend that I should not stay Ratliond Didk ¢ * < the postoffice up Andover Hill with a wfh- | this time, it should be said, I happen oad Orders.- ® | and Mules. ter in her hand. This was penned | PG . . o in delicate, flowing script of the| - ) . " = | Quaker poet. and was ed | secomaw: “thes wit 3 +| Germany is rushing steamers to San|great name ot John G. Whitth b~ e flfi:‘ix’,fl“’df'a : 7| Francisco. Two of them are now on the | unknown writer the famous dary s out.” s way and more will follow. Horses, mules | fow words, such as only he could is so good that perhaps I may . @ | and fodder and black diamonds from the | written, ing in brief. T have read thy or 1ts, pessenal characte: { + | Puget Sound collieries are to be rushed to | story,” and spontaneously offering a kipd T catfs sl B s 3 & | China, and as the Kaiser cannot charter | of encouragem the voung auth “give the people of his )¢ o | vessels in America he has to send over|which a timid, girl mus h & | some of his own merchantmen i have felt to the full. I never heard him relate an aneed . 2 + | _The Bosnia is now on her way here from | That letter was the beginning of 2 Bl B R ey : & s 4 $ | Baltimare and the Silesia from Yokohama. | friendship lasting over twenty vears: and e vt e ® | Both of these are enormous carriers and depths of one of those ¢ which the public should . ¢ | will take away about 15,000 tons of freigh which Whittier pear - @ | between them. ‘Among the hordes of visitors who bese: 3 ¢ | The Pacific Mafl Company's Walla Wal- Iy theve caliel she ox) O s PS to have got awaj 11 a m. for el et e ke fo g d vesterday, but was delayed long wished r * immugn the blowing cut of a manhole play cold itic to the 1 b s . @ | gasket. She had only just got away from | jonn G. Whittier. It and he both stand . . . . . . . . Green street. The case was continued till ary anatomist to the twenty-third psalm | day his guest and who sat quietly at the | July 24, and another venire of forty was |as to “Snowbound.” 1 should find it as | window issued. easy to dissect the fifty-third chapter of | “Allo I | R R - IR Isaiah as “At Port Roval.” gravity | scHEPER‘S HOUSEHDLD There is, in fact positive a religious | that character to the p vy of Whittier as to | com.’ partake of the nature of sacredness and o | Soon after Mr. Whittier's CONDITIONS ARE AIRED call for the reverence due sacred | lished in the Century Magazin Headouarters of the Third |Pretty Mary Manley Locked e Do "o Guaiicy "end. & dpete 20t | ontainca s Suthe Memoried o0 spiration of a guality and a degree mot cont ‘ ‘: morning before .k‘h-}!!'m @0+ 6 060000000000 sdsdertetsisisirsieiete® A vesterday morning > L 3 ? | steamer Lagu latter part of | 0 N @ | April the La shore on the spit | & . + | at the entr: Later she & | was got off. 2 h rlozged it > | was decided ] o 8 Francisco | & * ¢ | for assistance, dalg ® | couple of men were in ¢ ge of the| | waterlogged craft, and on July 15 the Kru- b4 2 5 | ger took her in tolv and a < . PY | Two days later a northwester sprang up & . . 3 and the men on the Laguna were taken pe é |off. That night the hawser parted and ¢ L4 : | the Laguna was in the thick fog. This & . b en mi uthwest of Crescent City. | o )4 K ST - - cep, e - = = the Laguna is now floating around ¢ + UNITED STATES TRANSPORT HANCOCK SEARCHING FOR A MAN OVER- there a derelict and a menace to naviga- © . 2 ® @ BOARD. Manielaleo. a child 4 years old, was 3 & & - ymux;n mh'hT Harbor n.,}mm'. ¥ s 99 1 s K s br = rom Lombard-street wha He - & = B+ 5423009000002 0000000 000000000000 0003 08600560439 3+5e0e6-e@)|fishing Pv_flrh some other boys, but went ' g . 2 L E : E ; | out on East street to play. A wa he transporton deck. It was 6 o'clock in the evening| searchlight on the bridge followed the boat u\'e\'I him ;n(](rr:s:t\::xrg';‘his\le‘l'_‘g;:‘snam 4 L d cor is going on | and so thick n object 200 yards away | in all ite wanderings. Not a trace of Sul- | crushing his hand in a terrible manner. | & - . the (\-:,Ml not 1-;. om rh.nhhtrmn_ A b llix\fln could ;‘w found. and once more the 34 = Vi owered, Ithough it was in cor ancock had to stand on her course. { ® the | stant danger of being swamped the crew | On June 2 Private Gus Morse took it | START MADE IN TRYING |e . v ;xnr five made a diligent search for the | into his head to jump overboard, and then 3 he ng man, but no trace of him could be | was seen as rt a piece of sea i 1 =k |Eeniemce s Sulies ot atapannty) THE POOLROOM CASES . . Ly ee days after this episode Private |2:09 p. m. the signal was given to the = 3 . & Joseph Suliivan jumped overboard. This | bridge and a second later the engines were | : was at 10 o'clock on the night of the 224, | reversed. The Hancock was going through | LWO Jurors Out of a Venire of Forty & b4 when it was pitch dark. There was not a | the water at the rate of seventeen knots Passed in Conlan’s , @ star in the siy and the moon had mot|an hour, vet at 2:11 p. m. a boat was in | ® . « | Tisen. ont as the cry “A man Over- | the water, manned and on the way to the | Socsk ? 3 at 2 Hiiter wab rd! s raised a “flare” buoy was|rescue. At 2:18 p, m. Morse was picked up| A start was made in the trial of the ¢ ¢ ing Peking. ur“mflvd from a ships by order of Cap- | and secured in the bottom of the boat and | poolroom cases yesterday afternoon in @ o . s % tain Harry Struve. This kind of a buoy'| at 2:2%5 p. m. the cutter was back in the | Judge Conlan's court. A venire of forty ; ® ? - , men, coa S 1 that when it reaches the | davits and the Hancock was once more | had been Iseued Thursday In the case op| ¢ b + e Hancock a itself and the tmpact with | going full speed ahead. This is & per. | SHShE (BN Thursday . tie case-af | p . Power to expe- sites two flares that are fixed | formance that the officers and crew of the | 9% Feckerman of Zick Abrams' rooms & 4 l el, These throw a glare for a | Hancock have every reason to be proud |and at 2 o'clock the case was called. At- 1y ) nd not only enable the | of. torney Coffey appeared as | & - see where he can reach | On June 19 both wind and weather were CUtor and Attorney George . guide the boat that is | against a rescue. On June 22 the darkness | Sented the defendant. . search. | prevented the rescue of a man determined | Some of those summoned were under 8 Ty fie ites after the flare buoy was | to die, but on June 27 hoth officers and | OF OVer age and others were excused for | WAITER IS DECEIVED r | men could see what they were doing apd | VArious reasons. Out of the . ? k' u };;e v\n‘l(xld-hlfldnn{(nidé as rescued. %J}.e ‘\;nli.\'g ‘WOd.»hnd1 ll;wn cepted, nel e & s ancock will dock at Fols s 3 udge ordered them to s up to BY HIS SWEETHEART &%~ g | on Bunday and will safl for Manila this rSWorn, asking Collins if he had any chal- | 4 ? e r Manila this : g € ba up the hunt, while the |day we [lenge to make. Collins said he would é fis e iy i i) | serve his right to c nge till the twel ¢ Came From Baden to Get Married and | — e e ———— —— R T TR : . b h aADD Vi i e 5 ot 5 > She Disappeared With His r\ [ right then, but he still declin ¢ Money. jurors were sworn. Shortly after N * f M A b | | of the other veniremen said he believed _Fre ller, @ waiter from Paden, 18| H the ordinance against poolselling was a | & > ~ A & SW ood one, and Collins at once challenged | ¢ . b g . - im to the amuSement of the spectators & g A o * < 5 HoNon fir by | S in_court. VHITTIER AS A YOUNG MAN. ) ¢ wis ® e hes { Thej two jurors kncremeg Werg John | ¢ ° BBk i < S g | Whiting, stove packer, 14 Second street. | @ o040+ 040000603 +0+0+beb0dedsbsdeie R vk o 4 . 2 | and James Fortune. cery cierk. 733 B = i £ a me,” he sald, with impert o present thee to the autk autiful poem, ‘Miss Luecy END ALL RAIDS | Will Test Their Rights in pet W ed such memories hi 2 nd did uch money She denied tnat she intended LESS RESTRAINED » J. Boggs Gets Order g Her Husband From Visiting Her. Boggs filed applca- sought t r down with h the night »rmed him o ‘((: gi\‘.., Mre and the right to ime, McGaw- —_——————————— Weanted to Be Arrested. n English sailor, did not sea again on the same s wen o Mrs. PosTiUM CEREAL. CAN SLEEP NOW Since Leaving Off Coffee. “Up to five years ago I had used coi- all my life, but was finally forced to give it up on account of the way it acted me. Right after drinking it I would | headache and sour | ave to make a cup of | e taken with a dizzy | the | nevolent Association,” | dence together by whi |lect 32000 damages | P | Duke. i | Action Against ex- Chief Lees. e Slated for Fortress Monroe. Demand Judgment for Heavy Dam- Major Lockwood, Twenty-First In-| ages Against the Veteran Peace | fantry, in Line for the Position Officer and Sergeant | of Commandant—Few Duke. | Desertions. | While the natives of | provinces are whiling awa; | ing off the heads of “the !2 number of latest report In army circles Is to ect that the headquarters of the Third Artillery will be transferred from | idio to Fortress Monroe, Va. This | gnified title, Up in the Detention Ward of the Hospital. —_— S L an attractive, | dresse@ young woman, was arrested last | Attorney ‘s ! evening on a warrant sworn to by her | €T A A et well- | Scheper was called for hearing yesterd: Postmaster at Penryn, | p, N o e hat the garrison of the Presidio | charging her with i premble; Whb FeU ~ 2 was | answer charged Scheper w to be of infantry and di-| taken to the detention ward of thé& Re- | abuse of his wife. ‘“This man, policy of General from n of allowing a ery officer: ce Lees and Sergeant £ allowiag axfilecy corrl to have command of that post. h change be made the Presidio Some of Lees’ men under the lead eant Duke became convin of October 6, 1599, that th. tle of dominoes told the story Shew Hing Association had temporarily rested from its ber ged In seeking n little g2 of “pi_ & 3 Duke's ax distributed the splinters assoclation door in the midst of the i Cantonese and the duty of in- ~iy postponing the game was soon Twenty-first Infantry, dio in command of the | hmen and was " v and the convalescent companies all probability be retained at ths ma Tro v being ordered for foreign service. erest ops F and G of the Sixth Cavalry, | efi Incensed at the uninvited intrusion, the Shew Hing Benevolent Association filed ¢ yesterday to recover $20,600 damages from Lees and Duke. As cause of n he plaintiff corporation sets forth the acts stated and, following the allegation that Duke's visit rendered the tion rooms untenable for some tim plaintiff makes its demand for re tive and exemplary damages in t om their present stations and join the r China on the transport Grant. Their will probably be assigned to com- s of convalescents. i= hardly a troop of cav-lrgeln rvice whose ranks have not been depleted, and to bring them up to ser numerical strength is keeping iting officers busy. Headquar- | named. The case will be watched with interest, A e i s et < points of detachments of recrults law prohibiting the playing of fill these vacancies. and fan tan, the police will find Presidio Notes. ves up in thé air and one of San now 600 patlents in the hos- fruitful sources of revenue e “hin e r 4 teen were discharged yester- Chin gamblers for i,e B s against the law, will cease. Thers e 10~ wvole: forming duty. uém-mr:fm(lq 1(;1' té;?:a!!nv\#m:n'dw:?{?h;,'?,E The bodies of seventeen goldiers who police claim, are but gambling dens oper- | Si¢d in Manila were e ating under the law that i tupp T; | There are now about elg “orporations orga or lawtul | i - Dirsces. Bhat Tate loin store for thaca A detachment of thirty-five artillery. Ao, e victory or Jefeat, | rived from Fort Baker vesterday and unlimited speculation. Tn the mean time | XNt intg camp. awaiting” departure on T aw they may Tellove the saonsof | “Consldering the large number of men fever within them by bémm{ on the o‘ut%' involved, du-“nior;n :irem r;gt (\'et}uen‘\ v Hing" i h celpt of orde: r service In | e oo 10 eace o€ oo PASETR Y | e Z T Rare .%a.u;rzntj)“- d three from Battery A, eeting of Iroquois Braves. hir e Th eeting of (hq 1 | Private Raymond Briggs, one of the de. e meeling of the Iroquois Club at|i,chment sent East in charge of insane Pythian Hall last night was well attend- | soldiers, was assaulted by ome of hi pital. Ni day, eight of whom are capal a ceiving Hospital r looked with favor | padded cell. If the unfortunate woman be mentaliy o | wee talion of the Eighteenth!for the telephone com of her employment grew tired her position. for garrison duty, as they are | been living at the W inc troops avallable in view of 80| Third street, frequently g | order to pay her room re ¥ - . y dition appealed TR stationed fn Yosemite, will have to move | Jives in the house, and she did all in her | A Convenience That Business Men power to brightén th mainder of their comrades who sailed | erable woman e lifg of the mis- Yesterday morning the father of the girl | The rapid increase of the oil interests in | appeared in the Superior Court and after | and about Bakersfield has occasioned ly | such unusual traffic batween that city and nt against | stating that his daughter was 4 ible swore to & complaint Apsidy | Policemen Cl{\ghli{: and | it necess A A At “inchester | facilities ¢ e oWl rrangements | House to arrest her. but in deference %6 | have been made for that train, leaving ters at the Presidio is in daily receipt of her wishes they allowed Mrs. Durrell (o | this evening and in future, to carry a el announcing the departure from | e8cort h;nr i ",‘,23,!""“ while v After being placed in a cell Miss Man- | disturbed tiil a comforiable Tising hour in ley became hysterical and amid tears she | the morning. declared that her arrest was part of a| The convenience of this will be keenly engineered by her father to | appreciated by business men, as the arriv- To Matron AL | ing time at Bakersfield, either of the rews the woman said that her father | "OWl~ or Express. isin the dead of night, had driven her away from home after | When a fellow doesn't like to be hustied telling her that she would hav p"l‘::nmfseg' jed b: s is denied by v. He claims idniigh fhat: at times the sirl I8 ine « s | {ill two hours after midnight, passengers sponsible and that he Intends o have her | MaY eAter the car at pleasure and get a men under. command of Lieutenant Clark | sent ‘hfl some private asylum in e r——— that her health will be restored. who accompanied the | Board of Works Makes Appointees. woman to the hospital, character-| E. F. Hass has been appointed by the Gf Arrest as an outrage. | irrespo | Tracey et her out of the way. e to sup- the hope has been stopping at the Shameful Neglect of His Wife, Who Is Paralyzed. An interesting statement of the condi tions in the household of Charles Scheper, a shoemaker, living at 216 Clipper street, Her Friends Say That She Is Men- | was made yesterday before Judge Heb- tally Strong and Characterize Her Arrest as an | bard. Scheper filed suit for divorce against his wife a_short_time ago, alleging Intem- | perance. Mrs. Scheper filed a cross-com- | plaint, charging her husband with undue | intimacy with Mrs. Duen, who keeps a | grocery at Sanchez and Clipper streets. | An application for alimony made by Mrs. ¥ Prosek, why appeared for Schep- . $30 a_month, was too large. Warren nted Mrs. Scheper, in shameful id Tem- in a|ple, “is worth at least $10.000, ahd he is | Seeking to transfer his property to his | mother in order to defraud his helpless suffer, for he will not ald her. After hearing the statement Judge Heb- rori Ponry: 8iX | hard ordered that Scheper pay his wife $30 2g0 {rom Penryn and went to work | 3 month alimony and also to pay her §75 She soon | counsel fee ahe 2 p S ORI B Since then she has .o i ias| SPECIAL SLEEPER 0ing hungry mn Her sad con- Durrell, wno FOR BAKERSF!ELD Will Appreciate. San Francisco that the Espee has found y to_increase the sleeping car they | special Bakersfield sleeper, so that the oc- “hpants may be permitted ta remain un- ut. o'rhe plan js equally convenient from Bakersfield. While,the “Owl" doesn’t pass full night's rest. 1| ant bookkeeper in the main office at 55 Attorney Temple Charges Him With n vife. He spends his money gambling and ' deranged the doctors at the hospital have | viaiting resorts With the woman named as | change | failed to discover it. She converses in a | corespondent in the cross-complaint, while ably have as commandant Major | rational manner and does not exhibit the | his_wife, Who is paralyzed. ig forced to symptoms of a tottering mind. arrived here d of Public Works as assistant on | “If her mind were impaired,” indignant- Hour tion work at a salary of $150 remarked Mrs. Durrell when dluc[fl.!ln. Soonth. and John Johns as third class o as I have | g t on construction at $160 per month. frequently conversed with her since sho ,‘i'_‘?,”né’m goes into the bureau of build- Lo RS r“tf’lnc:nleater ing as an ins !n{ atla xznlur{"o; $100 per peal "al C. Ni - was the last person in the world that 1| o tuokhecper in the main office ‘at 35 would take to be mentally weak. be considered on a level with the ex- | presston of a less dedicated genius A young student of his writir bear in mind that for this ver certain class of critics will find it poss opt a tone toward the poet and his ‘hich they would never be tempted se in treating the poetry of a man equally genuine but less devout. > It used to be the fashion among critics not in sympathy with the religious nature d aims of the Quaker poet to recognize him reluctantly. His stately fame came to him slowly. But it came firmly. It be- Jongs now to those things which cannot be shaken, but remain. His position in the great pentarchy of American ets Is as secure as that of any of ihese elect, and secord to none. Partly because he was the poet of faith Whittier was pre-eminently the poet of the people: for the people as a whole pos- sess religious faith, and respect it evea Where they do not possess it. He was as deeply beloved as he was widely red. and the two are not always synonymous facts in the history of distinguished minds. It will be remembered that he was fore- ed to make a general acknowledgment of the loving solicitude with which unknown admirers and adorers followed his invalid fife. He could not command strength or time to answer his letters, untraced to lips unknown blown 1y mown, | e floating in some pond, Wood fringed, the wayside gaze beyond; 1 The traveler owns the grateful sepse | Of sweetness near. he knows ence, | And, pausing, takes with forehead bare The benediction of the air. 1 have always regarded these lines as in purely poetic character among the highest that he wrote. So pervasive was the af- fectionate expression of his readers that it was in truth like the air he breathed. His enormous mail came freighted daily | Wwith grace, mercy and peace. After an absence of a few days from his home in | Danvers he toid me und over 200 let- ters from unknown writers awalting him. He had no secretary or stenographer, and | he was often appalled by the drift of un- | answered and unanswerable missives S hich snowed him under. He might well | have called them “missiies.” as George | Eliot did, for they hit heavily on his weak | body and strong sympathy. Yet he took, | as all writers do who command the love of their readers, a definite amount of com- | fort out of these personal communications. | He needed it, for his was a lonely life, and | his sensitive modesty—his exquisite dif- | dence always stood ready to underrate his | value. | O'% friend found him one day in her li- | brary, listlessly sitting with his huge | morning mail scattered about him, partly | opened, half unread. |She said: ““Mr. ‘Whittier, it must make you very happy to know what you are to So many | thousands of soul: - Ah, but.” he answered, sadly, “they that Tennyson has written a perfect | say | PYt"was seldom that he ailowed himself a sigh like this, and, perhaps because of jts rarity. it has been poignantly remem- bered by the little group that knew of it. He was a sad man. But his personal at- ‘Whittier for the pages of th plest, truest word of the American people to the God of the fathers than any other ome man in our tion. ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS. as 1 cared to share with the public that joved him. The kind courtesy of the editors of that periodical has allowed me to s for the readers of these pages the W tier anecdotes herein rel 1 al quote from some of These were more fully gi publication: 1 feel every change in temperature with a sensitiveness that I am ashamed of,” he % kindness has hung Al amd the Holmes breakfast) sake. He and | are very literary friends. We love I have suffered much from t r lawn is now gzreen, the masmolia buds are sweiling and the hepaticas and violets begin appear, and when the golden dandelten com it will be really spring. I would rathe thess flowers in the world bBeyond than golden = are told of."* ““These 'mber days of Indiam summer make me hapoy that I have lived to see them I am glad to be permitt once more to ses le of spring.” ral Gordon—my hero—is dead: an sifieh enthusiast of humanit derful figure had for centurie: of our planet.” 1 have just been to see an old friend a littla in advance of me in age. We ta talk who listen the while for the summons. solemnly. and yet not unhopeful 4 sure I am any better for my long life— rer to God: but He seems nearer to me and that comforts me."" I see that T had summed my ossed the dis ughts of Century in ’t now im- words upon which I could prove if I tried, because they came warm and fresh from the heart of grief and loss immediately after he was called from his friends and was not, for God took him. Thus T wrote then, and otherwise I write after the lapse of al! these yvear It remains only to say the shortest. sim- 1l that can be said for his dear and honored name. We shall remember him longest because of the largest thing which he did for us. ard what that is it is not possible te doubt. He gave us the music of human freedom, of human brotherhood, of passionate hu- man purity, of an intimacy with nature more widely comprehensible than that « Wordsworth and scarcely surpassed b that inspired pantheist. But he gave us something beyond all this; he gave us faith in God. - € In an age when doubt darkens the brav- est heart. when science and art grope for their author and find him not; when ge- nius (what we have lelt of it) deviates tat, little sketches of little subjects and cuts crosspaths through mire and walks biind fold under the stars—this poet. being ded: cate, has done more to hold the faith of Newton Center, Mass. am mth. J. W. Farnham, E. A. Burke, was anything but sad. In con- thoroughly satisfied that she is perfectly ‘;’f,rgouvton, W. D. Evans, James C. a‘:!npa‘t‘le;: he was more than cheerful; he sane and intend to do all in my power | Gorborino and T. J. Ryan were appointed | was vivacious—even merry. His sense of @ 44444444444 4444444444044 + to have her reieased from the h % T da; very strong. A d sto: 2 be: f the club vol Recruiting Marines. 0spital | to positions paying $3 pe: ¥ umor was very Strong. oo ry Coffee and since finding how to | Members of the club volunteered to She Demands a Statement, thought. He brimmed with fun like a |+ Have you ever seen a pic- to-morrow.”” be United States = < 3 N he rooms until time fo .| Captain A. S. McLennon, “br . make it properly 1 1d o | PEUNERL 48 § . r_naf " has _received orders from .~ His hearty laugh pealed out easily. = 4 e it properly I would not exchange | Uralization had expired. Clitus Barbour Marine Corps, Sacrifice of Curios. itk g eaguin s b o AN |7 B N T I hie g el 1 1 ture of the frightful Chinese for the best coffee I ever saw. My ol | addressed the mecting on_the-issues of | the commandant O e e s Snidhy | Lovers of thie beautiful will have a rare | o Sarall BOSSRED: SO0, 1, (0 Jate | Hra i my remembrance of many ong | { tortures? Next Sunday’s Call ed. The club appropriated funds for the | charges. During the mix-up Brlggare v maintenance of rooms, where informa- | ceived a severe cut in the face is work flon as to the Proper course to pursue to | ROW at his home in Philadelphia. Two years ago I started on Postum | obtain naturalization papers could be had. | g sca before I could go about my | gave him more satisfaction than a somber ane vid H. Dexter read | W ashington to pusl ruiting as rapidly Jles have disappeared entirely, I |the campaign and Da 1 ; ere the first | chance to purchase Chinese and Japanese Albert M. R. * with him, an extraordinary mi will contain a copy rare ve gained considersble desh and, what | $he'srite of $3 oltered for the bect aray | 10 sufier Ty China Tt will require & thou- of art at the great fire saie, which | 25Sing FEent PATiner of the frm of | bf the Erave and the Say. Such as never {3 print from n. mhu:: i is still better, sleep perfectly at night, | on “‘Political Tssues of the Day from Y ! sand men for duty in China alone. Tuesd: ornini &‘I“YHZ:, at the | Rosenbaum Brothers, to file an account | failed at once to stimufate the thought | P Democratic Standpoint” was awarded to Jonn Aubrev Jonee. The winning eseay and the others submitted are o be used ay m ‘. —— of Wing Fat - Dupont | N the court. a statement of the firm's | and to lighten the spirits. We tdlked for | 4 who has vividly and accurate- to b =L . 1 see that 1 have recorded else- New City Hall Elevator. i e T gr 13 adjut. the Ae'a | ammaies. aud cobgition. spd 13 Show cause | RAICE f-w"'. Ralkea "untll our heads |4 1y portrayed them. Only four sen 1 first used Postum my hus- | by the club as campaign literature, The Board of Public Wg:flme?lved insurance. Bale limited to two weeks. * | ycp g statement ached and_our, hroate were sore. and |3 of these prints are in America. 34 complained of its being tasteless, R P PSS | bids yimpnddy on; SEOW SOOTES Ser- Sudden Death of John O’Hara. 1o mo more dellghtful trip on the | We ran from theology. Shiloraoty e |+ Remember next Sanday’s Call ‘ iried to use more of it, but as that | U- S. District Judge Beatty Presides. | (or In, the nex Ci¥ MAL [ 087 W% | Jjonn O'Hara, a well-known hackman, ot thak a ville i Mcin, Bersines . S o ik |3 will have a faithful reproduc- matters I tried more b United States District Judge James H. | pany, : Elevator Company, | died suddenly yesterday at his residence, | and Russian River Valley, and it becomes | choice reminiscence. The most auinentis] 4 tion in the Art Magazine Sec- g. which proved to be the right thing, | Beatty of Idaho is presiding over the ses- ,fm and $4950; W. L. Holman, 3500, and | 153 Tehama street. He had been suffering | a positive pleasure when it can be taken | ghost would be crowded in between the : tion. in " comfort. Take excursion to Ukiah, joke and the newest poem. I was N S bR S BINg. | e of the United States Circuit Court A. J. McNicholl, $430. The bids 'were | for a long time with an abscess or cance 2 and now it is delicious” Mrs. W. A | H008 of Hhe o] B seace of Sudne | taxen under aAvisement until the Z7ih | of the siomach, | He was & native of Ire. | Sunday, Juiy 22. Only $2 for round trip, la‘u'fie disturbed ome day at hearing that & vacation. linst land, each Mr. Whittles 1 should Eckels, Sisson, Cal | Aorrow on W ycais el ticket sold insSuZes & seat. never go wi@® ' - which was not the case while using Brtttttttttt ittt ire