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o 1 [1V0RS GEAMANS | COMES_FROM THE EAST | AND IS RECALLED TO CLAIM HIS BRIDE =t ’Fashionab'e Throng at the Wedding of Dr. france Relieves Tahitis| -, j.n F. Welty of Cleveland and Miss Governor From Offi- : § v g cial Duty. Eleanor Wood of This City in St. Luke s | — s Declare Partiality Was Appeal to the Home Il ry and Edouard Petit 1 Henceforth Rule. ATk Wi 1 MRS. CULLEN F. WELTY, THE BRIDE OF A PROMIN: PHYSICIA NT CLEVELAND Photo by Marceau. — were dressed allke in dainty gowns of 1z6 over white silk. They car- uets of pink carnation: prominent physican of and his fair young bride ter of Mr. and Mrs. W, Welty will spend several his coast before proceeding to home in Cleveland. Testimonial to Hammersmith. Despite the inclement weather last there was a large attendance at the farewell testimonial tendered George Hammersmith, the versatile young come- who leaves shortly for the East to the vaudeville world. An excellent mme was rendered and greatly en- by those who filled Native Sons' Mr. Hammersmith gave a number clever impersonations. ose who.assisted in the programme were , Mr. Cl rtwell of De- prog joye Hall of i gown of n a silver rain and the | Miss Millle Flynn, J. F. Veaco, Miss Rub: S £ 5 corsage trimmed with a bertha of point Dawson, Harry Wood Brown, W. t e. The bridal veil was held in place by | Hynes, Mrs. J. E. Birmingham and the ne orange blossoms. | Empire City Quartet now appearing at e the Orpheum. Mothers! Your Money Will buy the Swellest of Here are Values for Royal Blue Boys: H Th vellest of Serge SUIts' ne ws’ctaclm?gmg‘s in Spring Swits for boys, ages 8 to 15 years, in A suit that neither the sun nor the double-breasted elements af- style; trousers Y'ect A4 $20 all lined—val- wes up to §6.00. Special, $2.98 Little Boys’ Shirtees, Like papa wears, Fancy Percales.. valwe. Spe- cial with wus, Picture to Yourself - 3 4 The swelles and newest spring color- ings in suits, in allthe new weaves. The swellest of Over= coats in all the smart shades, some of ’em silk faced— values never shown before, and the price, L $11.00 Boys. Good, service- able ‘feotches, and Blue, Cheviots for the big lads, ‘ades 12to 19 years. Your o money does e double duty & ‘B here—special ® | $4.45+ Boys’ Heavy Bl#ck Ribbed Hoseg, . The 25¢ kind—special per pair.... llc greatest “=ple of * Amon# ®| will be short instruction, ros: THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, FATHER YORKE'S BURNING WORDS Bitterly Arraigns Opponents of Temporal Power of the Vatican. —_— Declares Britain’s Sorrows Are Retri- bution for Action in Shutting Door of Peace.Conference in Pope’s Face. L AR Rev. Peter C. Yorke dellvered an ad- dress last evening at Metropolitan Temple for the benefit of the parish of St. John, Evangelist, his subject being “The Prison of the Pope. A large audience was present to listen to the address and the speaker was fre- quently applauded. ‘A pleasing musical programme was also rendered, fn which Miss Marie Giorgiani, Miss Annie Roo- ney, Miss Etta Walsh and Signor Napo- leoni took part, Eugene Murphy introduced Rev. Father Yorke to the audience, and after a great ovation Father Yorke spoke in part as follows: S In the past year those of you who stu- died events through the press noticed the tide of pilgrimage which flowed toward the Eternal City. It was the year of jubi- lee, the year predicted In the Testament when men should put aside thoughts -of -.arth and remember they were the chosen sons of Zion., Last.year, when the jubilee was proclaimed, tens of thousands went to the city of Rome to venerate the tombs of the apostles and to pay homage to the Pope. In olden times the pilgrimage was a serious affair; the journey land and sea was beset by dangers. To-day | the pilgrims have little inconvenience to suffer to reach the Eternal City. On ar- riving there they are marshaled into com- panies and set forth to the great build- ing of St. Peter's. Picture for yourself, it you can, that multitude of men and.wo- | men marching to that holy spot. It 1s the citadel of our faith; we have read and dreamed of it. Now we behold that mass of humanity before St. Peter's. That great building and the shrine of the apos- | tles are secondary in the minds of the | pllgrims. Thev look out on & palace on | the hill. It is the Vatican. They point | to the two rooms which are the apart-| ments of the Pope. He is the magnet | which draws these thousands from many lands. A poor old man of 9 years is sit- | ting in those rooms, but he is proud be- cause he is the successor of him whom Christ made the head of the Catholic church. For twen ive years he has lived there. He has never passed outside this palace. The gardens of the Vatican, about which so much is said, are no larger than two of our city blocks. The Pope is no longer seen in state; he no longer comes out on the balcony on Easter morn- ing; he no longer rides in his carriage through the streets, because by vicissi- tudes of things he is a prisoner in th Vatican. . People ask themselves if he is a | prisoner of his own free will. Men ar- range themselves on two sides. One class says that the Itallan Government will not allow the Pope to leave the Vatican; tne others say that the Italian Government will welcome the Pope at any time if he | chcoses to come out on the streets. “The Duke of Norfolk, one of England's great peers, rece spoke of the restoration of the temporal power of th Holy See. 2 up all_ove the ~ world ociated Press, which represents all that which Is anti-| Christ, like the Bourbons, cast slurs on the Viear of Christ. This Associated | Press went to the gutter sheets of Eng-| {land and the Continent and racked out | {all the abuse they flung against the Duke | |of Norfolk and gave it to the press of | America and of this city as the represen- tative criticism of the great papers of England and Europe. The respectable papers did not fly in a passion over the utterances of the Duke of Norfolk. They realized that the Duke's act was like the handwriting on the wall; that the House | of Savoy had been weighed and found wanting.” Father Yorke then described the growxh of Rome and the power of the opes who lived there for many centurie and the struggles of the early Christians and_continuing, said: “The Church of Rome is a soclety of men. It is not a secret society. She is | wonderfully organized and she is Catholic | because she is universal. The Catholic | Chukch is under the direction of him who. is the successor of him appointed by Je- | sus Christ. The church is a reality of the world which must be reckoned with. She is spread everywhere, in all lands and among all tongues. There are divi- sion# and heresies in the church, but they B0 to prove the unity of the church. Like the branch which is swept from the mountain top by the hurricane and car- ried into.the valley to wither and die, it but proves that there is a mighty tree somewhere which is rooted firmly in the soil and can never be overthrown. The unity of the church must have a visible head. Christ is the Invisible head and his representative was left to take his place. The visible head of this vast organization cannot be the subject or under the con- trol of any particular king. “It is often asked why the Pope does not come out of the Vatican, and why he does not walk abroad in the streets of Rome. When Pius the Ninth died and his body w: directions left in his will his body w: taken at night from the Vatican and the | procession. marched across the city of | Rome to the place of burfal: The Italian | Government stirred up the people, who | pelted the hearse with stones and tried to secure the poor budy with theinten- tion of throwing it into the Tiber. Why does not the Pope come out into the streets of Rome? I will tell you why. 1f a dead Pope was not safe on Roman streets, do you think that a live Pope would be safe? “When The Hague Peace Conference | was called, all cauntries were willing that | the Pope should be represented there, but taly objected, and to the shame of | America, this country that boasts so often _about liberty and religious freedom i joined with Italy and England and shut the doors of the conference in the face of 1 the Pope. Since then the bloodies history has been waged against England, in high house and in low house she mourns the thousands who fell in battle or died of sickness; not only is she mourning the death of her sons. but she is scourged by just refribution of Him in the death of her who sat on England's throne when the door was shut at the peace conference in the face of the Pope. “When the Duke of Norfolk spoke of the restitution of the temporal power of the Pope, the Anglo-Saxons raised a | howl. They raised a similar howl when the Ttalian troops marched into Rome and the Pope became a. prisoner in the Vati- can. hey dared at that time to howl | with joy that the tyranny of the Pope | was ended, when within a_few miles of them thousands of men and women in Ireland were starving or forced to leave their homes for far away lands. The Anglo-Saxon is the Pharisee of the na- tions. Phey dare to talk of the tyranny of the Pope when they slay the Boers, starve women and children of the Trans- vaal, rape the women of their enemies, send their prisoners to the miasmatic swamps of Ceylon or_the burning rocks of St. Helena: they dare to talk of the tyranny of the Pope when they are try- ing to crush a republic_in South Africa under the heels of their British cavalry. “The Pope can afford to wait. The eternal years of God are the years of Papacy. " Popes have seen the birthplaces of all nations and they will stand by the tombs of the nations of to-day and those to come. The rock of St. Peter shall stand and the Pope shall rule when the memory of the nations which hold him ml:#!"'e shall be as a dark dream of the night.” war in 5 Mission at Holy Cross. A mission will be opened in Holy Cross Church next Sunday, to be conducted by the Paulist Fathers. On Sunday high mass will be celebrated at 11 a. m., when the opening sermon will be delivered. Mass will be celebrated daily at 5:30, 6:30 and 9:30 a. m. and in the évening there . mission sermon and _benediction of the blessed sacrament. TInstruction will be given at the 5:30 and 9 a. m. masses. The mission will be divided, the first week being for women and the second for men. g 2 oSt e S Passing of Dr. Wise. Dr. Wise, the specialist, passed away Sunday, February 3, at his resid of Market street. e was one of 1118 best known ladies’ speclalists mn the St:z - 1901. ROLLS DOWN NARROW STAIRWAY TO DEATH John Campbell, Charged With Murder of C Guy, Who Dies of Injuries Received in Fight With Prisoner in Lodging-House K JoHN CAMPBELL. + clared are not of a Zrious nature. ‘When seen &t police headquarters Campbell gave his version of the trouble. He is a man of mature years and was em- loyed in the carpenter shop of the Ris- son Iron Works. Guy was a stone- mason, about 60 years old, and had not recently been regularly employed. “I was robbed of my week's w: Saturday night,” said Campbell, did not accuse Guy of having taken the money. Mrs. Huser, my landlady, first directed suspicion against Guy, and I re- ported the matter to the police and was told nothing could be done for me. Sev. eral times in passing Guy's room I { | || i | | HOUSE. FATAL PLUNGE DOWN THE STAIRS OF A BUSH-STREET LODGING- | ONE OF THE COMBATANTS IS DEAD FROM HIS INJU- RIES, THE OTHER A PRISONER. — RIPPED in a struggle of death, fel- Guy at John Campbell and C. low lodgers in a house Bush street, rolied down a stair- | way leading to their rooms at 3 | o'clock vesterday morning and Guy sus- | tained fnjuries from which he-died a few minutes later while being removed to the City Receiving Hospital. Campbell was arrested by Detectives Edward Gibson and Riordan and locked up at police head- quarters, until on examination wounds necessitating prompt medical attention were discovered on his body and he was taken to the Recelving Hospital for treatment. Later In the day he was charged with murder. There was no witness to the encounter. Both men had lived in the house for a constderable time and the difficulty grew out of the loss of $25 last Saturday, which Campbell suspected Guy of having taken from his clothing during his absence from his_room. : Upon being taken to the hospital it was found, in addition to a fracture of his skull, that Guy had broken three ribs in his descent ATTOW Campbell was unco s when found by the police tained a number of bruises on his face, besides numerous other abrasions, which the physicians de- | HOLDS KOTAR PRICES OFWINE AGHIN ADVANCE Short Supply and Strong Demand Cause the Raise. The wine market was treated to an- other unexpected shake up yesterday. It | came in the shape of an arbitrary ad- vance of 2%’ cents per gallon In the price | of ordinary clarets, making the figures | 25% cents per gallon for naked common | wine f. o. b. San Francisco, or 30 cents | including cooperage. The increas i declared by the California Wine Associa- tion, representing the allied houses, which are now in absolute control of the market. | There would have been no surprise at the | advance had it not been for the fact that | prices were raised four cents per gallon a | few weeks ago. The announcement caused a great deal discussion in the trade, among whom it was common talk that hints had | heen thrown out by the salesmen of the | big corporation that another boost in | rices might be looked for at any time. Euch” news is particularly gratifying tc the wine producers, notwithstanding the | fact that there is, comparatively speak- | ing. little wine in first hands. The rapid upward movement of values is good proof of the fact that there Is & shortage of stocks of this class of products and that the demand warrants the action of the controllers of the market. Furthermore, it §s a guarantee that this demand will be sufficfent to insure excellent prices for the wines of the coming vintage and sev- eral more to come. 8o far as the inde- pendent houses are concerned, their man- agers are rubbing their hands in glee, as they are not responsible for putting the | prices up, but have only to follow the course marked out by the Wine Associa- tion and reap the benefit. | “The advance was a proper one and urely a business proposition.” saild Percy g', organ, president of the California Wine Association, last night. “There is a shortage in stocks of such wines and at the same time there is a strong demand for them which is steadily growing. The advance we announced was called for by the situation, and furthermore we are confident that we are fully competent to judge of conditions as to supply and d mand. One thing you can state for a cer- tainty and that is that there will be no drop. If anything there will be motheri raise.’ . | | A Desperate Struggle. Since the great challenge sale of the Pattosien Company other houses have | tied to meet our prices, but they all had to give ft up as a bad job, as the public knows no one dared take up our chal- lenge. This great and successful sale wili contijue until further notice. Everybody shoufd buy now furniture and carpets at our store while prices are low. Corner Sixteenth and Mission streets. . ————— Burglars Rob a Barber. A bold burglary was committed in the barber shop and the residence of Willlam Peters at 1043 McAllister street Sunday night. From the residence coin was taken and a large quantity of supplies were stolen from the shop, which is in the same bullding. The thieves entered the house while the family was mnfimg stairway. | sent back to the {a divorce from Nettie C. Van the evening with friends and the have no clew as to their identity. i knocked on hi; ing him to ret door with a view of ask- n a portion of the money if he had taken it. There was never any respor “Lat last night while going to my rcom Guy suddenly confronted me in the hallway and began an unprove as- ault. He was a large and well preserved man and I had little chance to proteet myself. We fell from the top landing of s to the bottom, a distance of six- teen fee At the bottom I was uncon- scious and didn't know Guy was Injured ormed by the officers that he was dying." Campbell did not express regret over the o e his desperate battle ned that he was maintai and stoutly tu in ha tacked by a m 3 cal strength. The pi not weigh over 100 pounds, e his vietim s a man of powerful stature. C: plained of pains in presented a generally battered ance from injuries he claimed were flicted by Guy. or- com horne a good repu- rhood. where he has s, and has worked nce moving there. ° reticent concern- 1d several people had lived in Oregon, separated from his f CRAIG LIABLE Negligencs in Acknowledg- ing a Deed May Cost Him , Dear. at the h where h 2 several Notary Public Lee D. Craig and the | sureti vet have to pay to BeMrend Joost, apitalist, the sum of $1000, which the last named is alleged to have lost through the negligence of Craig in acknowledging a deed. The Su- preme Court vesterday reversed the judg- | ment on nonsuit that was awarded i by the trial court and the case has been uperfor Court for an-,| other trial. The decision is an important one. as it holds that notaries public must exercise grea re in affixing their sea to_papers of a legal character. Joost brought suit, against Craig and his sureties for damages charged to have resulted from the negligence of the no- tary. The record of the case sho that | in April, 1891, a man named Fisher, who was a Teal estate broker in this city, of- fered to sell to Joost ten lots of land sit- uated in the county of San Mateo. The | lots were part of the Abbey Homestead Association, and Joost was familiar with these lands, having bought a portion of them. He contracted with Fisher for the | property, agreeing to pay $1000 for it. Joost had an abstract made and found | that the title to Anderson was good. He | notified Fisher that he would, pay for the | land whenever he received a deed from | Anderson properly executed. A deed was produced. apparently exe- | cuted by Charles A. Anderson of Redwood City and acknowledged before Notary Public Craig. The latter certified that Anderson appeared before him on the 27th day of April, 1891. It developed later tha: | the deed was a forgery and was not exe- cuted or acknowledged by Anderson or by any person known by that name, but ! was written by one Frank €. Koen. | Through this forgery Joost lost his $1000, and immediately brought suif to recover the amount. Craig, through his counsel, raised the point that in taking an ac- knowledgment a notary acts judicially and is therefore not liable in damages for mere negligence, but the Supreme Court | held that section $01 sets this contention | at rest. ! . In the Divorce Court. | Judge Sloss yesterday rendered jud ment against Della Blum, who was seek- ing a divorce from Joseph Blum, on the ground of cruelty. The testimony failed ;10 support the charge ‘of cruelty made by er. Veranus C. Van Etten has | been granted en on ground of desertion. - Agnes Peters was granfed a divoree | yesterday from Joseph E. Peters on the | DS Totio Wt e wilts for o) | ollowing new sults for divore filed vesterday: IFrank L. Brown ve. Laig Brown, on the ground of infidelity. The couple formerly lived in San Jose. Ed- ward Mason of Healdsburg is named as corespondent. William WIiggin vs. Luple ‘Wiggin, desertion: Mafg!e velyn' Millar vs. George Edward Millar, cruelty; Caro- line Hall vs. John H. Hall, failure to pro- vide; Yoska Solotoegora vs. Ida Solotoe- gora, -desertion: Willlam Wagner vs. Car- rie Wagner, cruelty. Pyrography outfits, camer: albums ::\g ?ogkl on pho:agrs-p)g in Artists’ Ma- lal Department. Sanborn. V. 741 Market street. frpise < | the merchant | the conclusion th: | and shipping | 'bowels to do right. SEEKING DIRECT LINE 0 MANILA Meeting: of Representatives of Commercial Bodies Is Calle Pacific Mail Fails to Respond and * Merchants Decide to Get To- gether and Discuss the Situation. —_— ng that may result in the sub- £ a steamship line, to give S frect connection with the P be held next Thursday af rooms of the San Fran Something like ship ' neéarly all the wholesale h the ¢fty, addressed a communi: the Pacific Mafl Steamship Com clals, asking that something mi {o give the connection ni t was desired. It wa t that there is a direct line from New York to Manila and that a line was a begin operation from Tacoma market was in a way to pass int hands if something could not dome t give San Francisco a -falr chance w its competitors. It was suggested at that tima that connection at Hongkonug mix - e avail. No answer has be this communication to the effect that Mr. take the matter up on his East. He has be from him co Pacific Mai a gel all the manufacturing and r terests of th visable. Yes of committ turers’ and Producer: Chamber of Commerce, the & Board of Trade, the Siip O ciation and the Merc exchanges, to discuss tr take some action if dee: 7 cover it. is expected. Fed upon show their courage and cut their teeth early. H-O is strength itself. —_—— The Money-Saving Furniture and Carpet HOUSE. FOR THE NEXT 15 DAYS. We will give 20 per cent dis- count for cash on Bedroom Suits and Chiffoniers until next Wednesday, February 13th, When we will discontinue this dis- count on Bedroom Suits and Chiffon- iers, and give you the extra discou on other pleces of Furniture for a few days only. Cal! on us and we will tell th - son WHY. aboy Don’t miss this opportunity to save money. All our goods are the latest designs. Every article marked in plain figures. Remember we give you 10 pgr cent for cash on every other article of furniture anyway. CASH OR CREDIT. KRAGEN FURNITURE O, 1015-1017 Market Strect, Cprosite Taylor, San Francisco. ——————————————————— ———————————————— | ¢ e Educate Your Bowels. Your bowels can be trained as well as your muscles or your brain. Cas- carets Candy' Cathartic train your Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, 1oc. FPAINLESS EXTRACTION SO cts. Our $5.00 Plates fitlike a glove. DR. . L. WALSH $15% GEARY STREET Between Hyde and Larkin. Telephone Polk 1135. DR. MCNULTY. Tm! WELL-ENOWN AND RELIABLE OLD Speciaiist cures Blood Polson, (Gonorrhasa, Stricture, Seminal W eakness. Ty {iheir allied Ditorders. Rook on ver: eary’ ex; mce. Tarma reasonabie. Hours, 9to3. :6:30t08. 0av’y - tation frec andancredly Sonadentlal Cal of sddress P. ROSCOE MeNULTY, M.D. Kearny St., San Francisco,