The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 20, 1900, Page 3

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THE FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, IR, BROVN WEDS APYER A DIVORCE Wife Number Two Is a Wealthy Woman. — Former San Francisco Clergyman in a New Role. ABANDONS MINISTRY.| Proceedings :;:HCcurts for a Separation Are Instituted by His First Wife in Chicago. 12.—The Rev. C. reh trial fon, nanged that Charles O. was changed BY THE The Well-Enown Pastor Forcibly States They Are a Refuge for C inels AR WATER FOWL ENTERTAIN CROWDS AT THE BEACH e be: nday visitors at th i A w e of water fowl migrating of the temperate zone, and e the frigid blasts of the a new home in which to of another spring. ed on thelr long o dwell near the 71l be many days vet rd has passed below tn vesterday at the the crowds were Thousands lis- park and ma d et _the beach, Chutes tke a varjed and I swimming con- at Sutro Baths. e—G. Agler, first; J. ater 2ing—H second. . Diving for D. O'Brien. se prize. High div- : . Ryan, second dash, amateur—H econd. _Springhoard < prize; S. Crawford, ——————— )r. C. C. 0'Donnell in Congress From the Fourth. > the right man in the right be supported by all party. He is_a rator e u—— Grand Larceny Charged. 1 Sweeney, bedmaker in a lodging 27 Minna street, was arrested on on a charge of grand f the roomers, of stealing $15 from # Picture Framing a Fine Art. Te can please the most fastidious with the many new styles of moldings, in their varie pictures. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market.' how- | ccused by Joseph Skelly, | of widths, shapes and finishes to t:n,rrge harmonize with all styles and tones of | number of Washington o 6»‘-_6—0@4—94—0—04% i3 TS SR o o L e e e S o g siebede .0 L s e S R SO S HE funeral of Colonel Victor D. Du- boce yesterday was a tribute to his memory from the entire city. Sel- dom, if ever, has San Francisco witnessed so grand and ‘so impressive a demonstration. The flags of the whole city were at half- | mast. Soldlery and eivic and fraternal societies and thousands of the fellow- townsmen of the deceased united in the last sad rites. The memory of the soldier ero, the trusted -citizen, the beloved brother, was honored by & funeral service and a pageant such as are seldom ac- corded even to brave men and beloved citizens. p The funeral was both Masonic and mil- | diere of Colonel Duboce’s old d followed the body, borne on a sson, to the sunny-sloped ceme- the Presidio, where the interment took place. ree volleys were fired over the e and the sweet, sad notes of taps brought tears to the eves of the thousands who stood silently around with uncovered heads. | Services at the Pavilion. H the funeral was much more | vi n Mechanics’ e were in charge T commanderies in_resplendent un The highest officers | | S S g ] o 3 -1 2 ] & fon and the cemetery to the Free Masonry and the rrantry of noble manhood. rted from the First Page and Gough s” Pavilion by the First C.. with side arms only, ed by the relativ Gate Commande: ommandery B 3o already taken | sections to the left re the casket was fantry, ) W casket was from_ the calsson and delivered to California Lodge No. 1, {F. and A. M. Troop A of the Natignal d in check in the Pavilion. t of the platform that had in the west end of the Pa a Lo followed it, and ns t soldiers entered the on. ter hail en the doors were thrown open to In an incredibly short time |, d t Pavilion until all the seated to the them. ( 1 the section J and back of them sat dery b of the Board of Supervisors. X Many Distinguished Mourners. t Lodge t 3 rear of California . General B jer General nd the officers of the were _and militia Govern Seamans and avilion was oc- iment and 1 Herbert CI ho: G. C.—Colonel {: divi- | o Willlam D. | ol ed to seating the various bodies in the ponel & o3 | Pavilion. g After the opening address of the Ma- B ¥ "‘.“w‘_h Aeuten- | gonie ritual, read by Worthy Master Umb- janson: Veter rd sen, a M quartet, composed of Bi derson. Major Clark., Alfred Wilkie, C. Hughes and _represent the faml nel | john R. Jones, sang “Nearer, My God, to Burdick, C. S. Benedict; Super-|Thee.” After further reading the quarte fajor Boxton and Richard To-|gang “Consolation.” The worthy master. bin nator George C. Perkins, Con- | with the assistance of the lodge. conferred gressm 1 Kahn, J. ampbell. | the grand honors upon the deceased, after The active pallbearers sergeants | which the quartet sang “‘Go to Thy Rest from the First Regiment, fol- | jn Peace.” The officers of the lodge lows: W. F. K. Company A; Charles | gathered around the casket and the lamb- Lindecker y_ B: B. J. O skin apron and sprigs of acacia were de- Comy A. T. Roche, Company H: |posited upon it. The officers conferred the any 1; Bernard Clanc: m Maher and J. e s . Pro et ebecebebeiede B4 e to the pavilion | ® + L 4 d been detafled to aid in holding | ¢ sket was borne to the catafalque | ¢ been | ¢ |4 Q@ +o s ebedobedeoe@ red d many were com- | fowers, with the a Supervisors, a ribbon suspended from the :Commandery to the | staff and caught up with a cluster of _each other and with the | orchids, bore the words, “A city’s tribute rary pallbearers and relatives [ of sorrow.” The First California Infan- and | War Veteran fornia Lodge, conducted the se the D, I snted | ¢ alifornia | Owens and John R. Aftken, acting senior . F. and A. M. Frank Dal- | and junior wardens, and General W. H. E. Dow; California Chapter,] I, Harnes. e Golden Gate | “Colonel Charles H. Murphy of General SR e oGS Dickinson’s staff and of Golden Gate y Sqyemors stafi— | Commandery had direct charge of the | funeral arrangements. | grand honors and the quartet sang “Fare- weil.” )4 & + L 4 | TAE SERVICES IN = The floral pleces were grouped in front of the stage. A large American flag in and white carnations and blue corn- stars of tube-roses, and ff of violets, was the offering the a shield; General Dickinson and a vas act Mayor Tobin, a th; the Red Cross Society, an em- lem in red carnations; Golden Gate ommandery, a Knights Templar em- jlem; Phoenix Club, an emblem; General ienry W. Lawton Camp No. 1, Spanish , & gate ajar. Many other wreaths and bouquets were t as the offerings of individuals. eated on the platform were H. P. 'mbsen, who, as Worthy Master of Cali- vices: H. land, generalissimo of Golden mmandery, of swhich commandery Duboce was a member; H. M. “olonel Raymond H. Wil- cox, marshal of California Lodge, attend- 1. Throughout the service four yellow- stood at attention around the casket. contest whose end no man can foretell and Kmd around whose bier more friends have HE PAYLLION plumed troopers of the National Guard General Barnes’ Oration. General Barnes delivered the funeral oration. He spoke as follows: “] address these surylvors of four wars, and already we hear echoes from across the Pacific of the beginning of a the results of which may have most im- portant and enduring effect upon the estiny of the nation. “Who shall say that this is not a fight- ing natlon? From Concord and Lexingion | and Cambridge to the final great contest at Yorktown, from Perry’s victory to New Orleans, from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, n the Civil War, in Cuba and in the Philippines, there have lald down thelr lives for pure love of country, not actuated by personal ambitions or driven by imperial edicts, more men than there are to-day Inhabitants of any proud city of our land. This is indeed a fighting nation. “We are here to bid a last farewell to one brave American who gave his life, for he gave it as surely as if he had iaid it down under the heat of the torrid equatorial sun. Duboce rode with Smith at the head of the regiment. You remem- ber when they embarked and they bore the flag that was given them that sunny afternoon on the slopes of the Presidi It came home without a stain on it sav that of battle. Do you remember how we | greeted them on their home-coming, with Jove and hope on every face as they | fought their way through the crowd? No human being who saw those two events will_ever forget them. “Out friend went out with his command and came back with it. The germs of disease had weakened his frame, and his eye was already growing dimmer, v brighter. let us hope, as he neared the eternal life. “Death is not an enemy. We pray to be delivered from him: we stand over our dead with sears and sobs; we turn away, and life seems black and hopeless. But death is not an enemy. Death is a friend on whose breast we deposit our cares. We | Stretch out our arms, and when we are enfolded in his there is no more storm or tempest, no more pitiless sun, but every- | hy hope and lessing. Let us not rwrmsfil hlrl|?| so much as to thank God for this brave California boy who fought through the Philippine campaign and who came back to receive high civic honors, thered than millions and the wealth of 'zhe 2;enunflnt could have purchased. Of him it can be sald that he lived llke a man, fought like a soldier and died like a saint.” March to the Cemete: H. D. Loveland, generalissimo of Golden Gate Commandery, spoke for his order. He =aid in closing: T‘::zlng on that casket draped in the flag he loved and for which he died may we not hope that his awakening may be in the presence of him whose soldiers , Company CUBAN TEACHERS LEAVE WASHINGTON Spend a Quiet Day in the Capital City and Depart Cheering {or McKinley. 1 19—With cheers | & tates, President McKinley i, the people of the District of Columbia, the fourt hundred Cuban schooi teachers left the city at 1 o'clock this afternoon for New York. After spending the greater por- tion of the week there and in Philadelphia the entire party will embark on transports for Havana. | The visitors were tired out thoroughly by their experiences of Saturday and « ASHINGTON, Aug. It joyed a good rest last night. To-day thelr programme was @ short ome. Af 5 eart breakfa most of them attendec a solemn requiem mass at St. Patrick’s « rch. After church they returned to the hotels, where they were grouped in squads and taken to the Capitol, arriving there about 10 o’clock. The building was thrown open to the visitors and a detachment of _Funrda was on hand to escort them. They were | shown through the Senate and House chambers, the Statuary Hall, the rotunda and the Supreme Court chamber, and then ushered to the west front and afford- ed a view of the city the Wi ngton monument. Com!n; back to their hotels they re- mained for a short while.and then, board- ing the electric cars, went to the rallway station, where spect s al to New York. the party t ™A Ta e 0 e le were u‘z« B! it ts |t depot to see the visitors o! 'BIG SUM STOLE Twenty-Five Thousand Dol- express pac {000, is alleged to have gone astray. | e agent of the Chicago, Quiney orders concerning given from the Burlington headquarters | press Company. expressed from the Chicago bank it was wrapped in the usual way in which money Burlington Agent of the railroad received | a similar package, but it contained noth- | terested in the matter spent a busy day | to-day investigating | missing arrest of stolen between Chicago and Burlington. tire plant of the Kelly ‘ompany. ed fire. in '{{. world, employing 900 running full force. FRON 4 TRAIN lars Mysteriously Taken by Unknown Robber. . CHICAGO. Aug. 19.—Somewhere be- | ween Chicago and Burlington, Iowa, an | kage. supposed to contain $25,- | The Commercial National Bank of this | sent the package to the Bur"n:t:mi Burlington anl | days ago and disposition were few its Rafiroad a n this city. The money was sent by the Adams Ex- When the money was | s transmitted. In due course of time the ng but brown paper. The wrapper con- aining the worthless paper was returned 0 Chicago and the bank officials are cer- ain it is not the one sent out by them. Representatives of the corporations in- the mystery of the ackage and laying plans for the the robber—if the money was Largest Ax Factory Burns. ALEXANDRIA, Ind., Aug. 19.—The en- Ax Manufacturing , valued at $300,000, It was the largest ax factory men BODIES OF TWO - MINERS FOUND Efforts to Extinguish the Fire at the Primrose Have Failed. MAHONY CITY, Pa., Aug. 19.—After many hours of desperate battling with deadly ‘white damp one of the successive rescuing partles succeeded to-day in re- covering the bodies of George and William AUGUST 20, 1900 WHOLE CITY PAYS ITS MEED OF TRIBUTE TO MEMORY OF BRAVE COLONEL DUBOCE Fraternal, Iilitary and Civic Bodies Unite in Funeral Rites. Thousands of Citizens Gather at Pavilion and Cemetery Knights Templar are?" | In the funeral pageant the various bodies marched in the following order: Colonel Hays of the Fifth Regiment; First legiment band; Fifth Regiment, N. G. C., | under arms; California Lod; tleship Towa; Golden Gate Commandery, escorting the caisson bearing the body Colonel Duboce’s horse, with boots re- California Comman son; relatives in carriage: First California Volunteer: erans of the National Guard; Lieutenant Governor Neff and staff; General Dickin- Platoon | son and staff; General Warfield and staff, of police; Colonel Whitton and Lieutenant | and the Supervisors in carriages. line of private conveyances followed. dery: | procession left Ee No. 1; band of the bat- | streets were lined with people, in some ered to witness the interment. versed in the stirrups, led behind the cais- | sonic_burial rites were observed, a firing officers of the | squad from the Fifth Regiment fired three men_of the | volleys over the grave, a bugler sounded First California Volunteers and First | taps and the body of Colonel Duboce was Regiment, N. G. C., with side arms; vet- | consigned to the grave. | SIGNA| FORTAE LAST MARCA D R R R ] A long From thePavilion to the point where the Van Ness avenue the | laces gathered in throngs. At the Presidio an immense crowd gath- The Ma- POVERS DISES AS HARTTR Issues a Statement to the Pub- lic. PSSR Denounces His Trial af Georgetown as a Farce. ATTACKSTHE EVIDENCE Pl L Declares That Kentucky Judiciary Has Been Disgraced and That He Was Not Proved Guilty. g GEORGETOWN, Ky., Aug. 19.—-Caleb Powers issued a statement to the publle to-night in which he says: ““That one of the greatest judicial farces * known to history has been enacted here in my trial, under the forms of law, no well fnformed man can doubt. Innocence is no shidid with $100,000 and the methods of Campbellism aganst you. The rectitude of one’s past life counts for naught. They say Taylor is guilty because he was at his office, and that I am guilty becauss I was away from mine. This has been a political trial throughout for pelitical purposes, and no greater mistake has been made by the Democratic party since they robbed us of the offices to which we wers fairly elected by the people. From the beginning of the campaign until now I have stood with what little of merit I have had for the rights and liberties of the people. That is my crime. This is the only offense 1 have committed. That is the only thing they have proven against me. I swore to that myself in testimony. I have never had, and I now bave, no apology to make for being true to the trust imposed upon me by a_major- ity of the voters of this State. History will draw its dark lines around those who have outraged me and disgraced the ju- diciary and blackened the history of the State.” The case of Henry called to-morrow has not fully whether the muchk if not in securing a jur Youtsey as will be the defendant alified Powers trial Cantrell will summon adjoining counties, evidence in the le that Judge a venire from the BEATEN TO DEATH. NEW YORK., Aug. 19.—Catherine Scharef, aged 2 was beaten to with a hammer in her rooms c ond floor of 674 Second av ! between 7 p. m. and midnight the body not being found until e morning. Her brot m h ey waen he came home 'he woman's body lay IWar Near by_on the floor W / ham- mer, and the rooms had been ransacked of everything of value. It is the opinion of the police that a thief entered house and was surprised in his work b the woman and that he killed her to prevent identification. ow prices. going at half last Previous to this sale Thompkiss and Charles Iritis, who were entombed yesterday in the burning Prim- rose colliery. The bodies were found near the middle of the tunnel. They were lying in a heap. The sixty mules which were in the mine when it was found to be on fire are also dead and were raised to the surface to- day. The fire is still burning fiercely and the mine officials are bending every effort to extinguish the flames. HELMSMAN DID NOT UNDERSTAND ORDER PARIS, Aug. 13.—The board of inquiry which investigated the cause of the loss of the torpedo-boat destroyer Framee, which was sunk in a collislon with the battleship Brennus on the night of Au- gust 11 during the maneuvers of the French squadron, commanded by Vice Admiral Fourier, off Cape St. Vin- cent, officially reports that the disaster ‘was due to a misunderstanding of an or- lmsman, the destroyer In the direction opposi instructios com- ma.ml::. é‘:p'u'rn Manduit n‘u“?lr::h. now reduced to $5.85 a suit SN some $13.50 and $15.00 suits, which were taking well at these prices. you can get the very same suits for $10.00 Youths’ Suits OJdds and ends in sizes and patterns, all sizes repre ented, but notin anv cne pattern; worth $7.5>, $8.00 and $9.00, Remodeling loses soon When our Remodeling Sale ends we will be in- terested in selling you new fall goods at regular Until then our spring and summer suits are The sale will don’t put off buying too long. save half on your clothing bill? At our prices you can afford two suits, instead of one. Ready-Made Suits Good all-wool cheviots, desirable pat- terns, sold once for $12.50; price now $6.85 Fancy cheviots, good material, pleas- ing patterns, worth $15.00; while they -$8 45 Fade=to=Order Suits prices. Isn ever had. stripes ; down. we were selling Now | Garner’s perca latest designs, 00D 718 Market Street. just arrived; $1.00 and $1.25; sale price 60C ~ach Hats Soft and stiff hats in the prevailing colors and popular shapes—hats that some stores sell for $1.50; our price 90c end soon--- ’t it policy to Fancy Hose Here’s the biggest hose bargain we Seamless balbriggan, fast- coiored, fancy hose; all colors in new some around, some up and They run from quiet colors to what is termed ‘‘very loud.”” They look like 50< hose, but we will sell them for 10c a pair Notice the display of these hose in cur Geary-street windows. Shirts le shirts, in the very worth

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