The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 9, 1900, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1900 ADVERTISEMENTS. ONCE MORE A Completely Cured of]| Catarrh by Peruna. 2537 rites from Minn., as follo nter of late nd cold which phy able to cure. T Both ed o £ri A. R., writes the f W 1 Edgewater Polk | years I ice of a friend I Peruna with FIRE ROBBED HIM OF HOME HAPPY - WOMAN. Ida Murra, ¢ A~~~ icous membrane atarrh 1s more s of the nose and are mor: r portion: But one is lia- 1ses of female is heart- especially and Beauty The Peruna Med- . Ohio. for . 1 DEATH ROBBED HIM OF WIFE Dual Affliction of G. E. Booker in His Wedding Anniversary Week. 1 | ADA M. BOOKER, CAT ) BY ON A SICK BED. WHO TH ATH WAS HASTENED ING OF HER HOME, y de: y e loss and her ¥ se s0 weakened t day afternoon ‘ The Bookers had been ma: seven years. They had always lived se at 2215 Stelner street, and 1 ter part of the past year Mrs. n confined to her room and n bed when the house took as carried out through hall with smoke and bright with lea . he was taken first to a use and then later to a new h. Pierce street. The shock B to her BSeldom is it that a man meets within SULLIVAN REPORTED IN A CRITICAL CONDITION Nash Ferrer, the Stableman, May Have to Answer to a Charge of Murder. hostler who on Sun- ; e, stablemen, for he worke have to face a f murder. His victim, thought to be serfously in- is in a bad way. Ferrer ap- peared before Police Judge Cabaniss yes- terd on a charge of assault to murder, ich he was originally chamged, but his case was continued until to-day. to the office of the stable, h and Clara streets, in a on and demanded his Sullivan, who happened to be time. The stableman advised he got sober, and Ferrer There was a scuffle, and way threatening to kill Sul- | to ed get a revolver, to the office with a ¢ at his employer with !il h Jodged in Sullivan's to pull it out. s 1 to St as reported yesterday that critical condition, as blood s feared —_————— First rally of first voters at Metropoll- tan Temple to-night, 3 J. Sullivan of the | who at | but | e that it required lhe‘ Mary's Hos- | week of time h two_such misfor- s have afflicted Mr. Booker. Yes- friends went to Plerce . where the faithful wife and mother ad, to s sympathy. There wh lled the day when the 3 g uple first entered their er street home, and there were many 1om the virtues of Mrs. Booker and ailing gentleness and courtesy had 4 her in the lapse of years since Ay oker is the chief accountant of Valley Water Company, and was expressed in business cir- r him in his trouble, Booker and four children, Edith, Howard and Allan, were at home when' the mot assed away. John ¥ ker, who is clerk on the steamer is up the coast. He does not | Booker will St. take of Mrs. E Stephen’s at ! MRs. ErrEw momrToW | DIES AT HER HOME | | Prominent Worker in the | alvary | Presbyterian Church P!.S!el Away Quite Suddenly. Mrs. F Morton, wife of ex-Super- \]iR r Th Morton, died at her resi: dence, 6% Geary street, early yesterday | morning. Dec 3 ed had been a resident | n Francisco for thirty-two yvears and | was ¥ prominent in church circles, be- | ing a member of Calvary Presbyterian Church. She had been almost continu- ously ailing for the past three months but it was not thought that she was se. riously ill. In fact, Mr, and Mrs. Morton had arranged to accompany the Shriners to Honolulu. Besides her husba esides nd she | leaves one son, Thomas J. Morton . o | funeral will take place from Calvary Presbyterian Church to-morrow o'clock. The interment will be in lhe.:Odl{ Fellows' Cemetery. —_————— Taylor Will Plead Guilty. J. E. Taylor, arrested In S8acramento by Postoffice Inspector Bricker for using the mails for the purpose of defrauding his pondents, walved examination yes. | terday morning before United States Court Commissioner Heacock and was held for trial. The prisoner intended to plead gullty L of the lungs or kid- r or bowels, and and other pelvic | ¥ | ena of each four | pote. double trouble that has come | | 18 it good in the middle of the stream to jump from the bandwagon of prosper- ck of a homeless . more tiger? Wil the Americ voter do it in November? Thinkers and travelers say he will not if e when to leave well enough alone he is in better financial | condit now than he ever was, with continued promise of good times in the shadow of the G. O. P. bandwagon. Every interest, especially here on the Pacific Coast, cries out to the careful man not to hesitate, but to keep on—as he has been doing—prospering. W H 1=, who s recently returned from the Par position, gives some of s why residents in ould swell McKin- . as they did these reasons on the general distrust of Bryan, but upon his knowledge of com- mercial and industrial conditions on this part of the map. In an interview with a reporter for The Call Mr. Mills stated these reasons. He said: e present ad nistration found the coun- ate of progtration. At the end of four Rdition of the greatest p That this is a fact is un- hout the world. The United E most prosperous nation : alty with any fiscal pollcy adopted | by the Congress of the United States has been that it is never m tficlent longth | of time to 4 wis- { @>m. As I passed thro tate | 1ast February, on ork, T saw | evide the rising prosperity of those We produced he year 1599 11.000,- of cotton. tue of this the basis price is 1s worked in- 0,000,000. Tha be cre- intained a ere, or in some Shall we pay freight on this 1 haye It returned in the form o that the consumer will find the frieght both ways? Democracy. v is silent, practically, who is a free- in his following the free-trade elem: s of the count: did not dare to challenge the marked effects of the Dingley bill; but the election of Mr. Bryan will be the practical repeal the Dingley bill are to get control of the Government the pro- ons of the Dingley bill are menaced. In- vestors of capital in manufactures will find h investments extra hazardous under those rust occasioned by will be in all re- valent of a reversal cf the pol- ying the Dingley bill. It 1s the lla- of a change of administration at the tiade man b elf a menace to the stability of governmental | pelicies, which makes the investment of capi- | yntend t tal in enterprises very risky indeed. Tt s use- less for the Democrats to contend that no re- form or modification of the present tariff laws Intanaed. — The SNeE. ot -t siie ooy which secured the Dingley bill is defeated at the ng the law, so that the provisions of the Dingley bill are in Issue. In very truth, the deliberate ‘conclusions of the Congress of the nited States, from the standpoint of exist- ought to be maintained long enough to furnish the only scientific basis of determination—that of experiment. If the pres- ent tariff law Is urging the country toward a condition of inflation, which will eventually e a condition of great depression, we have a precedent by which we may be gulded in the future. But tariff laws should be modified, not radically changed, and If the P resent policy of the country should be con- tinued for twenty years it would not be too long to furnish standards of judgment as to the effect of a high protective systeme— Pacific States’ Interest. “The Pacific States have a pecullar interest In the present Presidential campaign. The Pa- cific Coast is practically the most remote por- tion of the world. You acquire a realization of this when you are on the other side of the ocean. The very appearance of the map shows you that the two American continents stretch almost from the north to the south California, Nevada, Utah, Oregon and Washington are a group of Pacific States | whese commerce by the ocean is served only | by the longest lines of transportation made for ccmmerclal purposes on the face of the giobe. The true, real and substantial development of this country will begin when the Pacific ports are the front and open door to an independ- | ent commerelal system. Our provincialism will pass an soon as the ocean becomes prime and leading factor in our devel *If we retain the Philippines and by | of education, by respect for the rights of. the | people, by conferring upon them stabllity ot | government and all the modern institutions of religious and civil liberty we will make | them fit for self-government and they have the right to this service at our hands. Mr. Bryan appears to think that they are already qualified to enter upon the conduct of a gov- ernment of thelr own. Well, if they are fit to be & nation they are fit to be members of this great republic. If Mr. Bryan's benevolent intentions concerning them are practicable he can proceed to the accomplishment of his pur- poses only on the theory that these people are fit to govern themselves and if they are fit to govern themselves they are fit to ex ercise state sovereignty as a family in the American Unfon. You have not eliminated them nor their influence upon the commercial, industrial, political and social life of America by making a nation of them. There is a greater Intimacy between the nations of the world to-day than there was between the States of this Union fifty years ago. They would exert an influence upon our people as a mem- ber of the family of nations fully equal to that they would exert as a member of the family of States. In the former instance wc would have mo control over them and in the latter instance we would exert an influence with them. “The possession of the Hawallan and the Philippine Islands gives us a standing in the Pacific Ocean absolutely indispensable to our supremacy in the great commerce which Is sing on that ocean. When that commerce rises the States lying west of the Rocky Moun- tains will be its chief beneficiarfes. “‘After fifty years we are confronted with the opportunity of having arise on the Pacific Ocean a great mariigite commerce with numer- ous lines of steamsMs runming in and out of our ports. “Great citles are simply the focal centers of converging and diverging lines of commerce by land and sea. Wherever ocean transporta- tion focalizes at a port land transportation meets it with like converging and diverging " vhe First Consideration. “The States west of the Rocky Mountains bave sustained a relation to the rest of the country resembling that of conquered prov- inces. We have sustained a relation 8o sub- ordinate and have attempted to expand’ our commerce under such disadvantageous circum- stances that the populations of the coast have grown but slowly. We have vast natural re- sources. The country lying west of the Rocky Mountains is the richest metalliferous country on the earth. We produce in California over seventy minerals for co But Go and listen to first voters’ Mefropolitan Temple this eventng. ™" *mmusm purposes, E‘_ competitive because if the people who favor free trade | ears which constitutes in it- | INTEREST OF PACIFIC STATES IN THE PRESENT CAMPAIGN W. H. Mills Points Out Their Opportunity of Laying Foundation of Commerce With the Rest of the World. The foreign policy of Mc- Kinley has given the Ameri- can nation a standing in the % earth which it has never be- i fore achieved. It possesses an .. influence in the councils of the i‘ nations to-day more potent, more dignified and more ex- alted from every standpoint of view than it has ever occupied before. Every citizen of Amer- ica who has traveled abroad for the last twenty years real- izes this in a signal way. We have achieved a national power which carries with it the responsibility of exerting an influence upon the destinies of mankind. This nation can- not by any possibility avoid the recognition of the respon- sibility which rests upen it as on: of the great nations of the world. We are living in a time which will exert an influence upon all future time. The great dead sea of human life in the Orient is to be awaken- ed. New commercial relations between the western nations of Europe and the nations whose countries border on the Pacific Ocean are about to be oo el o efoneeeofoferteeforfoolonte oo : bl feffferfefoefomfonfe doffefeefefofefefeete | established. The commerce which will result from this °f | new relation is wvaster than %‘ | % that of which the world has ‘__i‘ had any former experience. i 4 The Pacific Ocean will be the = ": theater of a commerce which B will dwarf that of the Atlantic | & Ocean, and this will be accom- i plished in a very few years.— % W. H MILLS. | race in reaching the markets of the world and | in_economic conditions relating to production. 1 . The opportunity is now presented of laying the foundation ofVa commerce which will be- | long to us; which will eventuate in the estab- | lishment of a commercial relation between our- selves and nearly one-half of the population | of the world. And yet there are persons who o turn their backs upon this great opportunity; to undo the history of the past two years; to extinguish the dawning hope of commercial development under the stimulating influence of an independent commercial rela- tion with the rest of the world. ““To me this seems very weakminded and foolish. Mr. Bryan says that If he is elected President he will give the Philippines an inde- pendent government. If the islands do not be- long to this country, what right of interfer- ence will he possess, and what can he do as President? If they do belong to the United States, that settles the whole question, and no President and no Congress will have the right to destroy the territorial Integrity of the country. “‘There are two leading conslderations which may be indulged in without the charge of partisan blas and without exaggeration. The first is that when we compare the condition of the country at the present time with the con- dition in which it was left by Mr. Cleveland when his term of office closed, our common sense prudence is appealed to. Wise men do not want to hazard the change of existing conditions when they are entirely satisfactory. Changes should be consented to omly in the Interest of reforming existing evils, If at the close of Mr. McKinley's administration, as was the case at the close of Mr. Cleveland's admin- istration, we had found every Industry of the country depressed, every institution on the G2 e 2 0 O ST e T T T e e | the Pacific States to place their industrial and | Present Administration Has Shown a Capacity for Dealing With Great Questions Affecting the Country’s Prosperity. | ’ verge of bankruptcy, a radical change in the | administration of the Government would be | the suggestion of wisdom. We could take no risk in the way of making things worse when i we changed from the Democratic administra- | tion of Cleveland to the Republican adminis- | tration of MecKinley. We incurred no risk of | making the condition of the country worse. It | was just as bad as it could be. But at the | summit of the broadest and most beneficent | prosperity which has ever attended the his- { tory of the nation, it would be unwise to look | backward, and I do not believe for a moment that the Americaa people will Incur the hazard of change. | The Second Consideration. ‘ ““The second consideration Is that the foretgn policy of McKinley has given the American | nation a standing in the earth which It has | never before achieved.. It possesses an influ- | ence 1n the councils of the nations to-day more iwunt‘ more dignified and more exalted from every standpoint of view than it has ever oc- cupled before. Every citizen of America who | bas traveled abroad for the last twenty years | realizes this in ignal way. We have reached |a time in the history of the world when our | course must be chosen with reference to the | policles ot other nations. We have achlieved a | national power which carrles with it the re- | sponsibility of exerting an influence upon the destinies of mankind. This nation cannot by any possibllity avold the recognition of the responsibility which rests upon it as one of the great nations of the We are living in a time which will exert an influence upon | all future time. The great dead sea of hu- man life in the Orient is to be awakened. New | commercial relations between the Western | pations of Europe and the nations whose coun- | tries border on the Pacific Ocean are about to | be established. The commerce which will re- | sult from this new relation is vaster than that | of which the world has had any former experi- | ence. The Pacific Ocean will be the theater |of a commerce which will dwarf that of the | Atlantic Ocean, and this will be accomplished |1n a very few years. “‘For a brief time the American nation has | arisen to the full stature of the other nations | of the world. For a brief time it has recog- nized its responsibilities as a nation. Only | within the past two or three vears have we received at the hands of the nations of the world that recognition which has in all time been our due, and this Improved condition of things 13 influencing favorably our Internal de- | velopment. It is having a direct influence up- | on our industries and commerce. The com- | mercial relations of the world are being ad- justed and we must not be adjusted out of | them. Commerce exists only where great sur- | plus products are produced. It is the surplus | that {s the object of commerce. The natural | resources of America are greater than those of any other nation. Under favoring laws our | productive capacity has been vastly augmented. | Let the present condition of prosperity continue another four years and America will be the most productive country in the world, and it will produce the largest surplus of any coun- try. This surplus will be worth something or nothing only if our relations with the rest | of the world are properly cared for by a wise foreign policy. The present administration | has shown a capacity for dealing with these great questions, and there is no portion of the United States that is so directly, so signally and so vitally interested In this new foreign policy as the country lying west of the Rocky | Mountains.” ;INCIDENTS IN POLICE COURT. John Grant, With a Penchant for Eggs, Is Sentenced to Six Months in Jail. John Grant, allas George Graham, has a penchant for egss, and he will steal them at every opportunity. April 13 last Judge Fritz gave him twenty days for stealing eggs from a grocery. He went to Los Angeles after serving his sentence and was convicted there of stealing eggs and got thirty days. Yesterday he again appeared before Judge Fritz for stealing a basketful of eggs from Goldberg, Bowen & Co. and was sentenced to six months in the County Jail. The case of J. Snowgrass, charged with assault with a deadly weapon upon Po- liceman Frank C. Howard in Mrs. Skel- ton’s saloon, Sutter street and Central avenue, was called in Judge Fritz's court yesterday. Howard was In court with his face covered with bandages. By consent the case was continued until Thursday. Charles Conwell and Thomas Hogan, two young teamsters, appeared in Judge Conlan’s court yesterday on a charge of burglary. Theg were accused by Police- man Jordan of having broken into Jar- l l = A Drive in Men’s = Fedoras. 3 Numerous short lots of our $1.85 quality Mews ¥ Fedora Hats, in black, brown, contrast’ and pearls, i in all widths of brims, are mar’k;d to ¢'ose out to- : SLET T eT9L 39 § 3 k1 35c Poker Chips, 23c. 5 A big special purchase of 5000 boxes of Compo- sition Poker Chips, 1§ inches in diametar, 50 white and 25 each of blue and red to the box, — 230 on special sale to-day on'y, per box Specizl Sale of Fine |$1 Kid Doll, 79¢. Golf Skirting. Hare are some nice Dolls tg Buy the material for your ‘“rainy-day| dress for Chrisrmas; k X skirt” to-day, for the chances are that| jointed. 18 inches long another opportunity like this will not| meta! riveted at shoulder present itself this season. We offe 52-inch c'o'h, plaid back, the righ weight, in three shides of gray, tw. browns, a pretty blue and a handsome| blue mixture, which is wogth regn hip and koes, bisque heads- woven mohair wigs in rirg lets, s'eeping ey howi g teeth, shoes and stockings; regu arly $1 each; lary $1.75 a yard, for to-day only 00 79¢ Tu:sday on'y... 2 3'137 355 Powdsr Puffs, 17c., Sale of Half Pairs Boaght 200 extra lar o ¢ Swansdown lace Curtains. Powder Puffs, with fancy h-ndles, at ha'f price; they are the kini that w |Another accumulation of 250 half pairs sell reguiarly for 35c each; of Lice Curtains, inc'uding some very vours on Ta sday for. % '7c hezvy linen lace effects, Arabian and i Brussels imitations, a very choice lot, Fino English Ghina | =i ton 5 o i & Cups and Saucers. o i Bk B r | 10 $5.00 per pair; oa special sale to- A small lot, 12 dozen| e day Tuesday ony. ony, of veryfine Ea-| gich Chna TeaCus| 40c fo $71.00 Each. and Saucers, a pretty| flated shape. vary thin| and daintily decorated, rezular price| $4 20 a dezon; spec.al price to-day— setol 6 i i 31.23. purchase © of lad es” | Meta! Photo Frames, | .5 One-Quartgr Off. | Combs and Empirs Bacx A promigent manufacturer’s entire sam-| Combs, in the very latest ple tine of beautiful Metal Frames, in| shapes and fizely finished, a big ss- Sale of Combs, large special A four sizes, for miniatures, card, vic-| fortment of patterns, worth at least toria anl cabinet pictures; some are| 25¢; on special sale to-day 8¢ j:weled; some are plain; G:rman gray,| only. - si ver and go!d finishes; regular prices from 75c to $6.5(; special to-dayon y, ane-quarter off. Whriting Tablets, e. Note sizz Writing T ibleta, ruled or plain, linen or satin finish, worth regularly 15¢ each. 650 only on special sale to-day at - 90 |25¢ Handkerchiefs, 12¢ We bought from a manufacturer 86 | dozen, all that be had, of slightly imrerfect all-'inen Hemstitched Hand- kerchiefs, such si'ght imperfactions as a thread too heavy here or a fine thread miseing there; their appear- anes is injured but little, their use- ’ funess mo: at all; the 25¢ Misses’ $2 Shoes $1.38 quaity go-day (Tuesday), each 12c Misses” flae Viei Kid p A 2R A Button Saoes, 65c Piliow Shams, 48c 250 pairs of ful-size Cambric Pillow new coin toes, kid tips, shoes that are worth regu-| Shims, 32x32 inches, having two rows larly $2, will be| of hemstitehiog and stamped in alarge 7 \ on sale to-day| variety of lra and conventional de- Tuesday) only, all sizes signs, a r ar 65c quality; asd widths. $1.38 ..o today oniy. par...... 48C Agents for “Po We are sole Famous t Rlu agents for Yasiianti Golden .“'.“k o s Monarch U dOrwear. SALFORNIA'S LARGEST--AMERICA'S GRANDEST stons GIOVOSe s L1 = = s B H = E 3 k] 3 b3 = 3 x - = 5 i = 5 x = = K b4 5 E x k] 3 = K. = 3 x £ = 3 > K1 = B g k3 s x x Bl k] = s B4 3 5 = s 3 s 3 = 3 K = = = 3 x k] 3 = s 3 = = = 5 5 acaa dine's machine shops, 650 Mission -street. They were able to prove a complete alibi and the cases were dismissed. The Judge continued the case and made an order sending Troy before the Insanity Commissioners to be examined Mrs. Abble J. Woodman, charged with | Lottie Williams, 133 Ellis street, swors grand larceny for stealing a tin box con- | to a complaint in Judge Mogan's courc taining jeweiry and valuable papers be- | yesterday for the arrest of Rona Gra- longing to Mrs. Dr. J. C. Stone. 1934 Page street, appeared before Judge Mogan yes- terday. She was instructed and arraigned and the case was continued until Whurs- day. Scott Anderson, the colored man who stabbed Moses Jones at the- Ingleside racetrack Sunday, September 30. pleaded | am on the charge of felony embezzle- A search warrant was procured over possession of Miss Wil- ams’ trunk, contalning personal property | of the value of $00, from Miss Graham. The trunk could not be found, hence the warrant for embezzlemnt. Miss Graham ‘was later arrested. guilty to battery before Judge Fritz yes- | Rodman Blain, “dope flend” and ple~ terday and was sentenced to ninety days | maker, who stole $45 from the il in W. in_the County Jail. | E. Bartsch's store, 230 Taylor street, Martin Barellas, David Bays, R. W. | where he was empioyed, pleaded guil Randolph, Joseph Mera, Joseph' Robles and S. Barilla, all cooks, appeared before Judge Fritz yesterday on charges of dis- | turbing the peace. They were arrested | early Sunday morning on Vallejo street. | They were drinking wine out of a milk |. can, singing Mexican songs and having an all-around good time after their fash- | fon. They all told contradictory stories | to the Judge about what they had been doing, but as they promised to behave before Judge Mogan yesterday a | charge of petty larceny and will be sen- to tenced to-day. E. Hintermann, manager of a grocery on Cortland avenue, appeared in Judge Mogan’s court yesterday on a charge of assaut with a deadly weapon, and the case was continued until to-morrow. Sun- day night the wife of Bert D. Hurd, & news agent, went to the grocery with a lady friend, and Hurd appeared on t! themselves in future the cases were dis- | scene just as Hintermann was utting o missed. the lights. Hintermann and Hurd had a M. Troy, who was charged with bur- | fight and Hurd was stabbed three or four glary for breaking into the office of Dr. Alfred Hiller, on Sutter street, and steal- ing an overcoat, appeared before Judge Cabanise yesterday. Dr. Hiller asked that I times, Mrs, Hurd was arrested for dis- turbing the peace. In court yesterday she claimed that her husband was cut by broken glass as he attempted to jump through a window. Her case was also continued. the case be dismissed, as he believed that Troy was not responsible for his actions. a womans life is lengthened by using it st

Other pages from this issue: