The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 30, 1900, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1900 TH i ANKSGIVING AT WHITE HOUSE Passe d in Homelike Manne With No Invited Guests, MRS GRS, In Grester New York Miss Helen Gould Entertains the Little Cripples at Their Home, ‘Woodcrest. e N ON, Nov. 20.—Thanksgiving erved epartments deserted, of the VEN FOR JOSEPH'S CHURCH e ADVERTISEMENTS. THE ARMY OF HEALTH. Army in the Philippines Insigni- Compared With This O the United States who _make psta Tablets r would mber our d by at least are broken down e thousands n; the are in fair the way to s gularly e good diges- of food better than working art’s Dyspepsia re field, Cal ed P I wish everyone ful T am for Stuart's I su for a long | 2 ow d me. 1 los ng. v day I three tabl all They cathartic or e in_the eat Britain. T CURES IN ER 300 PERM . 5. ‘souns after @ ) cuffer LESE. THE TREAT RESULTS AR NO E . DILATATION, CARBOLIC ACID, SALVES, DRANCE FROM BUEI- FAT il Office, 5. F. Cal. Cut MCNULTY, " DR . t curcs §10ond Poison, Gonorrheea,Gleel, inul Weakness, Impotence and their raes. Fook on Diseases of Meu, free. cars’experic ce. Terms reasonabie. Houra, %3108, 9 ev'gs, Sundays, 10to 12. Consul- recandsacredly confidential. Call or address P. ROSCOE MceNULTY, M. D, 26, Hearny %t San Francisee, CslL CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE cure of GONORRHOEA, GLEETS, “% and anslogous complaints of tbe t dizziness who sald verheated o weeks re for yarious around » who take Stuart’s T fairly good taking them contain no in- the natural peptones h every weak stomach | Dyspepsia Tablets are sold by United SAN years of suffering; inent business men on who_may be inter- r particulars address PHY- APPRENTICES SPENT DAY tuart’s | thing lke them | tion follows mmer street, | | torlous second section will have a grand | | Congregational | Do OWX AND RELIABLE OLD | o IN FRIENDLY RIVALRY Pensacola Boys Contest for Priz-s and Revel in Turkey and Pie. How the Holiday Was Passed by the General Public. T THE BARRACKS. the naval Goat Island ance of the days. There was an on the part of the co1r y department he cocks, b 2s by no means the best p: A programme of games which prizes were as an additional i winning the most ent was pron Saturday and m matinee. ' t divi range: and ng station has now s as could be gathered under hey were ready for any t for the = first division st of the same dlvision: from the fourth, and the fifth sixth; the ond sec ivision won fro won on wo! fifth o second. t beat was pul the potato race eac! tato on each of fifteen chalk marks floor of the barracks, and then, one, to return them to their t e race was won by Pearson e fourth section of the first division, | addick of the second of the first being 0od second. gwag signaling Wagner and Schmucker of the second section of the first division won, Doughty and Conle of third of the first being second, and ssi and Heiner of the fourth of the - ng and splicing the second of the first division 1 score, but J. F. Lel- Mayfield won the indi- on the monkey of the first d section vard won, st di- war was the most event of day, the and snappy and the exciting pulls being short ause of the greatest the enthusiasm. The pulls were The second section of beat the first 2 second sectic the f section ¢ fourth of first beat nals the second first beat nd of the second, and the sixth of the first beat the third of the first. In final the sixth of the first beat second o e first amid great cheering. In the boxing matches, which wer: individual prizes, Bradley beat P« B. | McCann beat Fox, and A. L. Jones beat Oleson. the The table of points scored by each sec- <] 21312 | B < g g 2 = = | : B |5 1 2 s : i : l i 1 [= - > | 118 10 3 | 8|1 w| - - 4 1 - - 5 5 1 15 - — s 1| 0 = 1(3]s - = 8 l2]- - - The winning crew of apprentices was made up of G. W. Dorcey, W. T. Nelson, A. W. Fox, J. D. Plerroni, T. McKim- | mons, H. H. Hearne, T. F. McCoy, W. Morgan, E. McCann, E. V. Walker, W, | B. Clark, C. ms, and Chief Boa sekswain. inning section are: Nichols, H. H. Gripp, Almstead, W. W, C.| Evans, C. F. Out- Hooper, E. Lom- o Noite, O. Schmucker, E. Ruddi Hansen, B.| sShaw and J. F. Leldecker. There was | no doubt of thelr victory after the first | three events. The judges of the games ant Commander A. W, Dodd, Paymaster | W. L. Wilson and Lieutenant J. B. Upham. They took as much interest as | the boys in the various contests. | A block of seats will be secured in the | middle of the Orpheum auditorium, and | Baturday afternoon the boys of the vic- er, L. T m C. W, Gripp, A Chapmar “E. were Lieuten- rur ashore. In addition to this every win. ner got a prize of his own. UNIOVN SERVICES. First Congregational Church Crowd- ed With Devout Worshipers. The union services at the First Congre- gational Church, in which the Baptist, Presbyterian and Congregational churches participated, attracted a large number of the members of the different congrega- tions. The services were held at the First Church, corner of Post and Mason streets. E. A. Woods, D. D., stor of the First Baptist Church, deliv- ered the Thanksgiving sermon. Beautiful music was furnished by the choir under the direction of Samuel D. Mayer, organ- ist of the church where the services were P Dr. Woods chose as his text First Corinthians iv:l. “Let a man so ac- count of us as of the ministers of Christ and newudlnof the mysteries of God.” art: B e power of Christianity is shown in the redemption of men from sin and the transformation of their character. How faith in Jesus Christ can do this is a mys- tery, but it is a reality. This mysterious infiuence i3 shown fn the history and | ON THE BoAaT'S CREW OF THE EIETH . K a /) THE RECONSTRUCTION OF EUROPE. Copyright, 1800, by Seymour Eaton. WAR GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE. —_— VIL (Pose { The empire of the French at the height | b of Napoleon's power (1812) reached from ), the northern f Saxony the Elbe to the Pyrenees, and on the; south from the Pyrenees to a point | midway between Rome and Naples. The | recently established kingdom of Holland and a long stretch of North Germany, the malniand territories of the King of Sur- dinia, parts of the st the church | ana other Italian ities had been swallowed up. Switzerland, | e Confederation of the Rhine, compris- !ing a large part of Germany, the Kking- doms cf Italy and Naples, comprising the | "‘;{“»"y,k ! parts of the peninsula not annexed to| fpio SFUAT | France, and the newly created grand | duchy of Warsaw, a resurrection of Poland, wers all dependent on Napoleon. nly | In alllance with him were Austria, Prus- d_Germany sia and e collapse > na of this Immense sy upon the The rest d powers In 18U t tion of Europe and the restoration of the equilil rium of politicai world. The w | that was accomplished was remarkable | on the whole for its durability, con whirlwind_of changes that er going on for twenty years The primary purpose of the allies in the struggle against Napoleon was to restore | France to its former boundaries under | adequate restraints to prevent any fur- d from thi; onfeder | ther alsturbance of the peace of Europe | This invelved the determination of thel | p—— SRR I | R 11 | | 1 | | | | 1 | | | ! ConERESS | o Guy WVIENNA status of the territorfes annexed by | Diet, like the Congress France—the Low Countries, the territory | federation of 1781, was a natic, not a of the old German states on the left bank | legisiative body, recommending rather | of the Rhine, and of large sections of | than e & laws, and was composed of | Italy. Next came in importance the set- | delega t t tlement of the German Qquestion, wh ess was should be done with the state: In neither body Rhenish confederation, and finally sentation of t disposition of Saxony and Polanc >mposition, To settle these questions a European | bund far su | concert was called to meet at Vienna. | States of 1781- Thither flocked in the fall of 1514 the sov- | which comp | ereigns and diplomatists of all Europe. | The states created, as well as those an- Aust nihilated, in the last twenty years, equal- ly dispatched envoys to push claims for the preservation or recovery of their ex- | placed untarily and involuntarily. now is to part miss our cro To draw back AT RICHMOND CHURCH. Special Sermon Preached by the Pas- tor, Rev. Philip Coombe. A Thanksgiving service was held in the Richmond Congregational Church at 11 o'clock yesterday. The pastor, Rev. Phillp Coombe, preached the sermon from the one hundredth Psalm. He said: We should be thankful that we live Christian land that we have been brought with thankful he into God's presence by a Christian proclamation. Our form of gov- ernment is patterned after that which Christ gave to his disciples for their government in his king« It provides the liberty which he proclaimed and for which he died. The honorable who 1aid the foundations of this government and all who have bullt upon them were Christian men. The nation as such has always been found on the side of liberty. It has never as & nation raised an arm against humanity. As a nation It has never favored slavery. In the attitude of the administration toward China America Is extending a_Chris- tian {nfluence to the natlons of the world, We should be thankful that our State has just itself consplcuously on in a a national Teputation for a new morality in its defeat of the proposed ordinances to license poolroom gambiling. We should be thankful for our prosperity as a on, and that we are lending, not borrowing: that wage-earn- | ers have opportunities to work and are able that we have had | to save for the future; abundant harvests and good prices everywhere, We should aseribe it all to God's goodness, who is the giver and source of all that is good. METHODIST SERVICES. Sermon by Rev. J. A. B. Wilson in the First Church. The congregations of the thirteen Meth- odist Episcopal churches of the city as- sembled at 10:30 yesterday morning in the old Powell-streét Church. The sermon was preached by Rev. Dr. John A. B. Wil- son, pastor of Howard-street Church, on “The Primal Theme of Thanksgiving.” The text was from Joshua, xiii:3: “There remaineth yet much land to be possessed,’” and Numbers, xili:3: “Let us go up and possess it, for we are well able to over- come.” The sermon was out of the usual line, In that the theme of thanksgiving was found not in the things we have already, but in the opportunity presented for the achievement of greater things. The speaker referred also to the serfous divergence between Wl(al and labor. He eaid in 1850 $8,000,000, with our birthright and | tle us; and we are going to do it. Let us thank God for the opportunities before us, In the use of which we shall attain to the | { | | hood. By the power of the gospel shall every | one of these evils be ultimately settled, and | settled right. | ———— Patriotic Entertainment. | Twelve Lundred people were in OAd Fel- lows’ ‘Hall Wednesday night to enjoy the | patriotic Thanksgiving entertainment and dance given by the local councils of the | Junior Order of United Americgn Me- chanics and of the Daughters of Liberty. The hall was decorated with patriotle | colors and emblems of the order. The the sideé of | Christianity, and that our own city has gained | was the measure | mates were given a dinner good as any programme had for its features vocal | selections by R. C. Ayers, Natie de An- gells and Miss Concelia_von Gelsterlich; recitations by Lida Ten Eyck and E. Ten | Eyck, and an address, illustrative of the | patriotic principle of the order, by H. A. | Slaughter of St. Louis. Dancing followed. he floor manager was H. C. Puckhaber, who was assisted | by the following named members of the | floor committee: Dr. A. St. Clair Sullivan, | Mrs. Carrie Ewing, Joseph E. Odgers, Mrs. Jennie Adams, H. A. Bowman, Miss | W. Thomas, E. Harwood. Miss J. Wright, C.'T. Quirey, Miss Mabel Latherow, H. | A. R. Hanse: Miss Minna Ketel, C. M. Prater and E. R. Fletcher. | The reception committea consisted of Cal Ewing, Mrs. W. E. La Diey, W. D. Caldwell, 'Miss Gertye Deemer, Hugo Schmidt,” Miss Evely Moore, J. P. Sparr, | Miss E. Lewis, W. D. Grant, Miss Laura | Cantus, D. A. Hemphill, Miss Nettle Mec- | Cullough, J. 8. Shilaber, G. T. Fletcher and W. C. Norton. Young Women'’s Charity. The ladies of the Young Women's Christian Association, 1259 O'Farrell street, were busy for weeks before Thanksgiving preparing to give dinners to the deserving poor that had been visit- ed and reported as especially worthy. Through the kindness of numerous | friends and leading merchants, the ladies were enabled to make bappy over one hundred families. To each was carried a | turkey or chicken, ham, beef, flour, tea, coffee, sugar, crackers, fresh, canned and dried fruits and vegetables, beans, rice, fish, cheese and mince ple. The ladles who took an_active part in this work were: Mrs. W. O. Gould, Mrs. G. W Prescott, Mrs. J. L. Martel, Mrs. H. J. Sadler, Mrs. 8. P. Tuggle, Mrs. A R | Baldwin, Mrs. G. P. Thurston, Mrs. Un- ger, Miss Reid and Miss Van Winkle. | AT At the Almshouse: At the "Almshouse yesterday the th- tian Assoclation building yesterday. Al members of the institution who guests of the association at dinner at § o'clock. Tables were spread for over two hundred and ladies representing the vari- ous churches, comprising the Women's Auxiliarv of the association, served the dinner, Mrs. B. C. Wright, chairman of the auxillary, acting as chief lady of the | occaslon. — Bhort after-dinner speeches weze made by a large number of the guests. A unanimous vote of thanks was extended the Women's Auxiliary for their hospitality. - Mass at the Cathedral. A requiem high mass was celebrated in the Cathedral yesterday morning for the repose of the souls of the dead of the Young Men's Catholic Union. The cele- | brant was Rev. Father Joseph F. Byrne, the chaplain of the union. Rev. Father Phillp O'Ryan delivered the sermon. His discourse was upon the origin and signifi- cance of the holiday. He closed with an appeal to his hearers to remain loyal to thefr faith and to be untiring in their ef- forts in behalf of their organization. sl In the City Prison. The inmates of the City Prison were treated to a Thanksgiving dinner yester- day that made them thankful for the time-being at least. Each prisoner had soup and as much turkey as he could ear, followed by plum pudding and mince pie. Chief Sullivan dropped in_ while the “trusties” were at dinner and they gave him three rousing cheers. Turkey for All Emeryville. In accordance with his annual custom, Thomas H. Wililams Jr., president of the California Jockey Club, ordered that yes- terday every employe of the club should have a turkey, and every poor family in Emeryville should have one as well. Tn {all four hundred of the best turkeys that could be found in Livermore Valley were distributed. It made two and one-half tons of bird. Fine Stationery. Everything in the line of office and cor- respondence stationery — fountain pens, Koh-i-noor pencils, lej blanks and typewriters’ materials. laries and dally {('ml'n-!u for 1901 now on sale. Sanborn, ail & Co., 741 Market street. . Every man is bound to hear the truth fé:culonnny. even if he doesn't recognize were | | most exalted standards of manhood and woman-d| rocrout homes In the city were (nvited as presented little difficulty. Of the old united provinces a consolidated kingdom was formed and assigned to the Prince of Orange. _To strengthen this kingdom against France the southern Netherland (Belgium) was annexed to it. This union of Holland and Belgium, one as intensely Protestant as the other was Catholic, 18- nored the wishes of the people, and the artificial tie lasted only fifteen years, when the Belgians revolted and were rec- ognized by the powers as an Independent kingdom. The disposition of the territory between the Rhine and the restored boundary of | France was perplexing. The guiding prin- | ciple was to use it to give the stronger | neighboring states a solid footing in that | region as & defensive measure against | France, and it was finally settled that the strong fortress of Luxemburg and the ter- | ritory of that name should be given to | the Prince of Orange as a possession sep- | arate from the kingdom of the Nether- ria the southern portion. In Italy the work of Napoleon was more completely undone. The Bourbons were restored in Naples, the temporal rule of the Pope re-established in Central Italy, Genoa was annexed to the kingdom of Sardinia, the sway of Austria extended over Lflmbud{ and Venetia and the prin- Iclpalltles north of the papal states were brought to life egain. To Austria also fell the Illyrian provinces east of the Adriatic. The task of the next half-century in Italy was to undo all this laborious patchwork. The most difficult task of the congress was to settle the fate of Saxony and of the grand duchy of Warsaw. In 187 Na- poleon had stripped Prussia of her share in the second and third partitions of Po- land and erected this territory into the grand duchy of Warsaw and placed over it the Elector of Saxony. whom he had a few months before authorized to take the title of King. In 1813 the Czar enlisted the aid of the King of Prussia in the gen- eral attack on Napoleon by promising him euch an increase of territory as would restore his dominions to their extent in 1805. In the course of the campalgn the tive the Saxon King, while the Czar took possession of the grand duchy of Warsaw, planning o restoration of Poland under imself as King. The Czar agreed. there- fore, with the King of Prussia that Prus- sia should retain Saxony and himself the grand duchy of Warsa but this en- largemvnt of Prussia by the complete ab- sorption of Saxony was effectually block- Prussians occupled Saxony and took cap- | istence. The cOngress as a CONETess | For the transaction of ordinary business — | never met; all the work was done by com- | seventeen vates conld be cast. one each by AFTER THE BOAT RACES THE BOYS FORMED ON THE WHARF AND THEN, HEADED BY THE PENSACOLA'S ’ s (‘;;2";3:1\-({1;;‘1{;8:‘(1p:gfiglsfi‘;nt‘:::,\‘s;j e gl o B A R D, THEY MARCHED UP TO THE BARRACKS, WHERE FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE DAY THEY in the provisions of these treaties, and ail | twenty-seven were constituted for voting co D IN FRIENDLY RIVALRY. | | these provisions were at the end in- | purpos But for which we | | corporated into a single treaty called the | should call ame s to the constitu- + e i ! | final act of the congress of Vienna, which | tion, and regulati »f Importance affect- 4 g ~¥ | was signed June 9, 1815, by Engiand. Rus- ing the general interest, six of the larger yower of (¢ lan natlons. The keys of | of our natloral wealth, but 62l per cent | that was cooked in the city, and there Sia. Austria Prussia, France, Spain, Por- tes ca tes each, then came he futu 1ds | was in the hands of the producer and 3% | was surely not one better appreciated or | tugal and Swed ; several cas ree t three Chri itself In a true per oe with the investor. To-day we | more kly disposed of. An effort had | It was the original intention of the four | with two h, g th bids our nation | have 000,000,000 with but 10 per ¢ been made to have the tables decorated | allled powers—England, Russla, Austria rest with o case of av- world's prob- | in the hands of the wage earner and 9 | to suit the occasion and the menu, and in A and Prussia—to dictate the terms of set- | ¢inary b grand duchies and % y of nations, and | per cent retained by the wage payer. Con- | the women's department a graphophone | tlement, but they could agree heartily on | Smaller st down Austria, in this f A)\.n‘&vrun,:vr members have | tinuing Mr. Wilson | whiled away the minutes of the meal and One measure only—the restoration of the A Prussia and the loms; on the other gpeclal duties and responsibilities. Self-| = and we are the | DelDed to drown the clatter of busy | old boundaries of France. Their rivalry | hand. inasmuch v the passage of 1 may be national as well as indi- Th meeting the | Knives and forks. In the men's depart- | offered the adroit Talleyrand the opportu- amendments or changes in the general Yidual Our nation has a n}l}_htvv-nrn»!wr suttilig 1 TIghe. all develop that | Mment there was not table space for all | hity to secure for France a share in the regulations either a two-thirds vote or un- s gy e e "fllf(‘_“nrflfl ’1?«’“ which is of far greater Value than all—royal, | 8t Once, and so nearly half stood around | deliberations. Urging that the main sig- | animous cons “““)"""’”"(‘Y’ the great Tolation. Our elvilzation, owes: o fept | Fe6nant manhood. There is & remedy, and we, [ and feasted thelr eyes before they filled | nificance of the congress was to sanction’ states could always head off obnoxious e e Al e T & cen the servants of God and humanity, must | thelr stomachs. They knew there was | the principle of legitimacy as against rev- | legisiation 3 b B Bl ol s e R ";m_t‘ilflgl it. And we are going to find it, and these | plenty to go around, and they enjoyed | olution and conquest, and that the powers e U;nrfilnmn”n was empowered to of duty, oglc of im ve necessity. t captains of industry shall vet become the | the preliminary sight with a_patience | had been allied against Napoleon and not Provide for the common defense. against rp e ik Peo our bresent posi- | patriots of peace, whose talent shall be ex- | born of confidence in the size of the lar- | France, that King Louis XVIII was the WAaT between the states and against any tion. !Tn'-"\m ish free ( y‘u.-na Institu- | erted for pubilc good rather than for colossal | der. It was one of the most pleasant | legitimate King of France and must be |States making a treaty Inconsistent with tions in_ ds and to banish the te gain Thanksgiving ever celebrated at the | recognized as such, and that as France the federal obligations. = Under such a forces of ig ce and cruelty is a duty ther issue to settle, and the settlement of | Almehonse. e hing her recognition involved | constitution the union of Germanmy was we owe em, to the world and to the will develop the highest type of man- 5 - Yanted nothing hef recognition involved | equally innocuous to outside powers and God of Providence has pushed us | bood, 1s the destruction of the licensed liquor Y. M. C. A D 0 loas or sacrifice for. S vl | to the privileges of the German princes. | forward in the van of national influence | traffic. One in every sixty of our population is . M. C. Dinner. Bis poInt A e e Ao ot the wcaiy | They each pursued their own good pieas- and to retreat would be worse than cow- (8 ruined drunkard, - Every ffth tamily must| Thanksglving day was observed tn | OB ihe Tesultas the detender of the small: | yre,” showing caim Indifference’ to the ardice. ‘e are a misslo v na % € victim to s ul erime. o v, ’, . s 8! a8 <h OC n o he stonary nation vol- | F:€°¢ £ot 1o throttie this evil or it will throt. | SPecial manner at the Young Men's Chris sluggish proceedings of the Diet. A real union of Germany was not to come from deliberations and the petty balancing of interests In their equilibrium restoration of f Europe the powers reso- lutely closed their eyes to a factor which as 4t increased in weight inevitably would upset their balance—the spirit of nation- ality as evinced in Italy and Germany Regarding this spirit as born of the revo- lution, they ignored it in the formation of states in 1315, and trusted to the en- ginery of despotism to crush it, but in vatn. Their hostility to it was instinctive and natural, for at bottom it was an e: pression of the will of the people—of the political | people who, scious of unity of lan- guage, of ideas and aspirations, wanted unity of government that they mig! count for their real worth in the pelities of the world The work of the congress of Vienna was a serfes of intrenchments thrown up by | the conservative and despotic powers lands. Of the rest of the tertitory on the | from which to resist the attack of Iliberal left bank of the Rhine, Prussia received |ideas. So successful at first that the Ger the northern and larger portion and Bava- | man liberals characterized the rule of Prince Metternich (the dominant spirit continental politics) as that of Prince | Midnight (Mitternacht), the spirit of thae age constantly countermined these de- fenses until they crumbled a half century later. | EDWARD G. BOURN Yale Universit | | The most concentrated form of beef | science knows COMPANY'S EXTRACT of Beef Signed ed by the other powers under the leader- Corner Fourth ana ship of Talleyrand, and the final settle- w 8. r..'x;,', ment arranged that Prussia should obtain ...m'm Lager, the proniised reetoration to her area in Sc. Overcoats snd 11805 by recetving a province of Poland valises checiced (ree

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