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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO JALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1901. JALER BATTLES WITH A MANIAC Exciting Affray Behind the|Prospsctive Bars of Jail at Los Angeles. Insane Prisoner Grapples With One of the Officials and Makes Des- perate Efforts to Kill Him. weAdl Measures to Which the Upper House Has Given Approval. MEN M 14.—The EACR ria State ¥ S000 for an air com PASSED Grist of ANXIDUS EVES ON HARBOR JOB Vaoaney in State Commission Causes Commotion. Speculation Over Causes of Gov- ernor’'s Delay to Suggest Major Harney’s Successor for an Enviable Position. HEADQUARTER March 14.—Shor after the re adjourns sine e Governor 1 probably appoint some one to ceed Major P. J. Harney as a member the State Board of Harbor Commis- T The appointment may be made legialative session ends, so rmatic , SACRA- b ¢ right of the appointee to hold for a term of four years, but ails that the Governor e present session ter- mmissioner, it selected after ad- be permitfed to of the next Leglislature the right man had not been he could send to the Senate the ther ate. There is talk e expec ¥ to wait a while to ascertain if pointee to succeed Major, Harney into a gocd Harbor Com- ndi or, whether will be at is_con- The question does not the * to the Senate Republican r the tull term of four rveyor General W nt, but his hopes talk along the y poli s that ex-Su- 1 Smith would get Major Har- . of Mr. Smith their man will who made a n Francisco v mentioned as gne recognition, But h Patton talk wch e convened. Senator 1 Aigeltinger s a » the Harbor Com- he is sup- nts. n, president of , 18 is presumed ppoint a citizen succeed Major Har- Collector of Internal mentioned.” -holder will e settied 1 and Perkins will not for second term his Governor Gage will Harbor Commissioner. ry is spoken of as one chosen 0ok after harbor istom, honored alike in the ervance, imposes upon a r Commissioner the duty fences of the administra- air. It is said that Secre- ng experlence in the fleld enables him to de- E any weak place on f tical fences. 1S who he surveyed the field he outside and sought by every clever e true inwardness of the Goverror has Y name has not been ned in the gossip. . Meanwhile Ma- ey is not pressing the Governor mediately. The major's term of 1 ‘not expire until next , and to accommodate the ex- = he would doubtless be willing to e a few months overtime. TYRRELL'S BILL LOST. | No Reconsideration Now for the Civil Service Destruction Measure. HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- March 14—The attempt T 1g in the Assémbl consideration of Tyrreil's Scnate bill 569, imed at the destruction of oigil servi ns in San Fruncisco, met with It was laid on tbe table by a viva voce vote, Speaker Pendleton announcing the result without giving opportunity for a demand for division or rollcall. Somewhat later Sutro made another at- P tempt to get the bill again before the 1 use by a motion to reconsider the vota = by which the former motion to reconsider 3 s and | was laid on the table. “Colonel” Martin of C. B. Light de relating right to _public t the Spanish g to the issuance of per- 1 teachers. ate highway be- 000 for the pur- for the State ntment of the Police Court of wing supervisors pay fencing along public roads. Supervisors to pro- ds with oll and author- rage tanks propriating 310,000 for the the Commissioner of Pul for h of Kern—Appropriating $351 to e0cy in expense account af Attor- office Enforcing the educational rights rd—Appropriating $500 for clearing Pit obstructions. Appropriating story crficers. ~Relating to rd—Approj ng 8371 45 for Btate Chice TAXATION OF FRANCHISES. Bill Ts Passed With an Important Amendment in It. HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- March 14.—Curtin’s franchise bill, over which there has est in the Assembly, w ed form by that bo f 43 to 17. There was As amended, a franchise m. where it exists - where the cor- s {ts principal place ided in the original ¥'s telephone resolution was beaten B, te this afternoon, Woife alone It was argued that the pre- age of Assembly constitutional ément No. 2 made the Brady ent to fix rates useless. It was attempted to pass it upon the flle, it objection was made. so the amend. ment wa up and beaten. — CHINA BASIN BILLS SAFE. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, March 14.—Jchnson’s motion to reconsider Senate bill 385, one of the China Basip lease bills, was promptly laid on the table by the Assembly this morning. The three companion bills sre Low in the bands of the Governor, Ex-Governor Budd, attorney for the Harbor Commissionera, and Al Lindley, who have been present much of the later weeks of the session to answer questions regarding the bilis and to see that they were not sidetracked in committees or Jost on the files, are receiving many con- fnxulumr.s on the success of their ef- orts. —_———— To Prevent Pneumonia and Grip. Laexative Bromo-Quinine removes the cause. * |ing it to be unconstitutional and there Brac v moved to lay that motion prevailed by a vote of 33 aves to 21 noes Many members voted for the bili, belie: fore fraught = e with no danger to existin.: regulations. In any event it rally held that it cannot ap- ¥ to San Francisco. The character of Lhe bill is seen in the foilowing provisions « or position of public ken the oath Bt office prescribed by section tiree of article twenty of the State constitution vpon entering upon such office, or shall, after hic election or appoint- ment, have offered to txke such oath, it shall be unlawful to remove such person from such office or posttion of public trust because such person has mot complied with some or any provision of any law, charter or regulation prescribing an additional test or quallfication for such office or positi>n of public trust, and any person who is removed or threatened wir removal from any office or position of public trust under any pretense or device whatever, if the real reason be because of non-compliance with provisions requiring such additional test or gualification, shall be entitled to restrain such unlawful removal or to enforce restora- tion by process of injunction both prohibitory and mandatory. Bec, 2. It shall be unlawful for eny person having the power of removal from office of any public official, State or local. to remove or threaten to remove such oMelal from his offce because such official in the appointment of any person to a position of public trust under such last named official, refuses to require any test | or_additional quaiification than the oath re- Terred 10 in section one of thim act as & con- dizjon of permitting - such - appointes to. enter upoh or remain in such position of public trust; and “such rerson making or ‘threatening such unlawful removal from office may be restrained by probibitcry and mandatory Injunction from eftecting such removal under any pretense or device If the real reason of such removal or threatened removal be r was such as herein declared unlawful. —_— TUMULT OVER .AMENDMENT. Lively Debate on the Quasi-Public! Corporation Control Measure. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, March 14.—The Senate this aft- ernoon considered Assembly constitu- tional amendment No. 28, which provides for a State Commission with power to fix rates and exercise control of all quasi- public corporations in the State. It was & line-up pure and simple and the amend- ment went through because it had votes enough to stand off ail the filibustering the opposition could indulge in. ere were as many parilamentary puzzles, points of order, questions of information, motions and counter-motions and amend- ments fired at the chair in the fight as would serve ordinarily for the session. But the support behind the bill was too strong and it would not even allow an adjournment until the motion to recon- | sider the vote by which the amendment passed had been laid on the tabl he motion to reconsider was tabled by the following vote: _Ayes—Bettman, Byrnes, Cutter, Devlin, Greenwell, Hoey, Laird, Leavitt, Mtgnrd‘ Nelson, Nutt, Qoeal. Selvage. Shortria Simpson, s Angeles, Tyrrell of N San' " Franciaco, Welch: and Noes—Belshaw, Caldwell, Currier, Cur- tin, Davis, Flint, Goad, dner, Luch- singer, Lukens, Muentér, Rowell, Sims Smith'of Kern and Taylor—15. 7 Absent—Ashe. Burnett, Corleit, Pace and Plunkett—35. —————————— If You Have Rheumatism Send no money, but writeDr.Shoop, Racine, Wis., bok 137,for six bottles of Dr. Shoop's Rheumati Cure,exg.paid. If cured pay$s.0. If not,it is tree® y the Senate wiil es- | Should the Governor on | eed himself, and | Brown had hopes of serving his | er fr v to secure a re- | rollcall his motion | T ary person within 'hlfl‘ GRANTING OF A NEW TRIAL TO MRS. CORDELIA BOTKIN Supreme Tribunal Finds Error in Charge to Jury but Sustains Lower Court’s Jurisdiction. | | | | | | | | |3 | | | | | il Appellate Court would reverse the judg- ment of the lower court upon the ground that the instructions given the jury in the case were similar to those in the cases of Hoft and Brandes, who were awarded new In the Hoff case the Supreme Court re- versed the judgment of the lower court upon the ground that Judge Cook had in his instructions to the jury gone beyond the limit by dealing too much with the facts and the importance of circumstan- tial evidence. The decision of the Supreme Court set- tles an fmportant point, however. Mrs. Botkin’s counsel contended that this State had no jurisdiction to try the prisoner, but Justice Garoutte in the opinion filed holds that as the crime was In part com- mitted in this State the Penal Code ex- gressly states that the perpetrator may e tried here. The opinion of the court is an interesting one. It is in part as fol- lows: 3 5 by the courts of this State and_this contention should now be passed upon. For it maintain- able a second trial becomes a useless expen- diture of money, time and labor and neces- sarily should not be had. For the purpose of tésting this claim of lack of jurisdiction in the courts of Californla | to try defendant the facts of this case may | be deemed as follows: Defendant, in the city | and county of San Francisco, State of Cali- | fornia, sent by the United States mail to| Elizabeth Dunning of Dover, Delaware, a box | of poisoned candy, with intent that said Eliza- beth Dunning should eat of the candy and her death be caused thereby. The candy was re- | celved by the party Lo whom addressed partook thereof and her death was the Upon these facts may the defendant be ch and tried for the crime of murder in the courts of the State of Callfornia? We do not find it necessary to declare what the true rule may be at common law upon this state of facts, for, in our opinion, the statute of this State APPORTIONMENT NOW SETTLED Legislators in Caucus De- cide to Accept Original Senate Bill. | Measure Will Be Passed To-Day and | San Benito Will Be an As- sembly District by Itself. gy L HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- 0, March 14.—TIn a joint caucus to- | ME | night the question of apportionment was settled for this session by a decision to stand by the original Senate bill which leaves San Eenito an Assembly district by itself. The Assembly amended the bill | =0 as to link San Benito with Monterey is broad enough to cover a case of the kind here disclosed. There can be no question | that the Legislature of this State had the power to declare that the acts here pictured | & 1 | TO LIFE IMPRISONMEN STATE. e MRS. CORDELIA BOTKIN, CONVICTED OF THE CRIME OF POISONING SEVERAL PERSONS AND SENTENCED ,» WHO HAS BEEN GRANTED A NEW TRIAL BY THE SUPREME COURT OF THE 3| | bly District of Amador, Calavera in one Assembly district and give the extra Assemblyman left without a dis- trict in consequence to Placer alone. tak- ing Placer away from EI Dorado. El Do- ‘| rado would then go with Alpine and Mono and Amador and Calaveras would be to- | | gether. Duryea of Placer offered a resolution directing that the Senate concur in the amendments made in the Assembly. T was lost after some debate by a vote 31 to 51. Then Shortridge offered a reso lution providing that it be the sense o the caucus that the Tenth Assembly Dis trict be composed of the counties of P! & and Mono; the Fifty-eighth A trict of San Benito, and the Assembly District of Monterey. sembl Fifty-n inth This was adopted bv a viva voce vote and left the bill as the Senate originally passed it, with the exception of a few words in th body of the bill put in by the Assembly and adopted by the Senate. [ RS, CORDELIA BOTKIN, con- { John P. Dunning and sentenced | to life imprisonment; granted a new trial ye erday by the Supreme Conurt. This will pot be| nd to osely. t the a surprise to the legal profession those who have followed the case 1t. was practically understood th /HARRISON'S LOSS I8 Continued From First Page. dertaking establishment, selected a cas- | ket and gave direciions concerning the funeral arrangements. What is known as a state cagket was decided on. It was made of red cedar and i8 provided with a copper ljning, which makes the compart- ment absolutely airtight. Over the cop- per is a silk lining, on which the body will rest. The casket is uecorated at the cor- ners with simple hand-carved moldlnng The top is absolutcly plain and the oniy ornament will be a plain oxidized plate, on which will be engraved the words: BENJAMIN HARRISON. 1833-1901. of black broadcloth. ornaments is handles and The casket complete will weigh nearly three hundred pounds. A heavy red cedar outside box will be The covering Heavy oxidized will be used. used with the casket. It will be deposited in an alr-tight vault and the casket will | then be placed inside. ! American Flag on Car. | The casket will be removed to the home to-morrow afternoon and the body will | then be dressed for burial and placed in it. The body will remain in_ the room where the death occurred and where it has eince rested until after it has been placed in the casket, when it will be taken 1o the double parlors on the south side of the house. Here it will remain until Sat- urday morning, when it will be taken to the Statehouse to ile in state gll thet day and until 10 o'clock that night. It will | again be deposited there on the return from the Capitol. | Four black horses will be used to draw | the hearse, which will be draped In black. A large American flag will be thrown over | the top of the funeral car, falling down about the sides. Black rosettes with long ficwing streamers will be attached to the horses’ bridles. Vault Being Constructed. The vault at Crown Hill, where the bod. is to be placed, is now being constructed. General Harrison will lie at the right side of Mrs. Harrison, who is buried in the family lot, located in one of the loyelfest spots in e cemeler¥. which is widely noted for its beauty. It is situated imme- diately at the foot of a grassy knoll that rises toward the west and is surrounded by shade trees which in summer add greatly to the beauty. Not far away are | The tombs of Oliver P. Morton, Thomas | A. Hendricks and William H. English and | the graves of thé unnamed heroer | gave treir lives for their country In the Civil War. A tombstone marks the lot. General Harrison himself selected the monument, & solid plece of granite, ten vhich wiil also stand above his head. 2 22 T e e e SLIGHT DELAY IN COMPLETING ATLAS. CHICAGO, March 7, 1901. John D. bpreckels, Proprie- tor of The Call, San Francisco: Owing to delay of Government in compiling and revising cen- sus it wili be impossible to ship first carload of atlases or- dered by you before March B80th. They will go forward promptly that day by fast freight. GEORGE F. CRAM. e R ST ) | victed of the poisoning af Mrs. | was | who | | feet high and six feet square, which | &‘“‘“ the grave of his departed wife and | Defendant has been convicted of the crime | constitute the crime of murder in this State, | of murder and prosecutes this appeal. The charge of the court given to the jury upon the law contained declaratio fch were held to be unsound and consti reversible error, in_ People vs. Vereneseueckockockhoff, 189 Cal., 7. few of the .l.(giluu in that case the 1 conc ggs that the judgment e Caiee remanded arther € £l 1§ n ceedings. rt for t ims the triable at all defendant cla ““Harrison’ is the simple inscription on the tomb. $ | State Troops Summoned. ' MOURNED UNIVERSALLY this | Orders were issued to-day -calling for the assembling in this city morning at 9 o'clock of the entire force of the State troops. The order was 8o distributed throughout the State by wire that the companies of the three regiments of infantry, the three batteries of artillery and the hospital and signal corps wiil have ample time to reach Indianapolis so provisions of the general order. Two hundred tyoops will be under arms in Indianapol turday morning-to par- ticlpate as a milltary escort and do ser- vice as guards of honor during the after- noon when the remains of the dead ex- President are lying in state at the State- house. MOURNING AT WASHINGTON. Supreme Court Adjourns Out of Re- spect to Harrison’s Memory. WASHINGTON, March 14.—President McKinley left Washington at 7:45 p. m. for Canton, O., via the Pennsylvania. He will proceed Saturday night to Indlanapo- 1is to attend the funeral of General Har- rison. With him were Mrs. McKinley, Secretary Cortelyou and Dr. P. M. Rixey. Mrs. McKinley will not go to Indianapo- 1 , but will await the President’s return at Canton. The return trip from Indian- apolis will be made Sunday night, and, aithough the matter has not been finally determined, the probability 1s that the President will make only a very brief stop at Canton and come back promptly to Washington. In pursuance of the President’s procla- mation, the flags on @very public bullding in the United States, at every post in the United States, Cuba, Porto Rico, Hawaii and the Philippines, and on every Amer- ican warship, in whatever quarter of the lobe, will fly at half-mast for thirty ays. The State Department has addressed the following circular letter to all United States diplomatic and consular officers b A abroad: “WASHINGTON, March 14.—Gentlemen: Your attention is Invited to the Presi- dent’s proclamation of this date announc- ing the death of ex-President Benjamin Harrlson and directing a proper_expres- sfon in_honor of his memory. You will cause the flag of your respective offices to be displayed at haif-staff on the reception of this circular and for a period of thirty days thereafter. “I am, your obedient servan “JOHN HAY.” The United States Supreme Court to- day, after disposing of the case under ar- gument yesterday, adjourned until to- morrow out of respect to the memory of | the late ex-President Harrison. The an- nouncement of Harrison’s death was made by Attorney General Griggs in a few culogistic words, and was responded to by Chief Justice Fuller. In announc- | ing the death of General Harrison, Attor- | ney General Griggs said: P1¢ G Tay sad- duty to convey to the court the intelligence of the death of Ben- jamin Harrison of Indiana, which oc- curred at his home in Indianapolis yes- terday. He was President of the United States from 188y to 1893, and most distin- guished as a citizen and a statesman—as & soldier and a practitioner the bar of this court. Out of respect to his memory, I move that the court now adjourn until to-morrow."” Chief Justice Fuller responded: “‘The court fully shares in the natienal sorrow and sympathizes with the sugges- | tion which has just been made. The great services to his country rendered by thi distinguished soldier, statesman and citi- zen; the exalted office so worthily filled by him; his conceded eminenece at this bar; his private virtues, make recognition of the loss sustained in his death involun- and universal. As a mark of respect to the memory of Benjamin Harrison the court will now adjourn until to-morrow at the usual time.” Cabinet Crisis Imminent. LISBON, March 14.—It is rumored that a crisis {s imminent in the Portuguese Cabinet. Meleto a Captain General. MADRID, March 14.—General Meleto nas been appointed a captain general. as to report in striet accordance with the | Bave the following account of the affa I Saturday | | Dyke, Henshaw and Tempvle, then quotes | and we now hold that the legislative body has made that declaration. The opinfon, which is written by Justice Garoutte and concurred In by Chief Jus- | tice: Beatty and Justices McFarland, Van | section 27 of the Penal Code and proceeds to refute arguments of gounsel for appel- lant in detail. There were twenty-nine Senators and | Fifty-three Assemblymen in the caucus. | The Senate acted on the bill at once, but the Assembly adjourned without acting upon It, in violation of the strict agree- | ment of the caucus. The caucus amendments to the bill were | | given to Johnson to introduce in the As- sembly, he being chairman of the Com- mittee on Conference, which had, the bill | in hand. There was a roll call on the question of adjournment and%Johnson's was the vote which carried the motion to adjourn. He said afterward that he had not had a chance to introduce the amend- | ments as agreed upon by the caucus. It must be done to-morrow or the Senate | will make trouble. | The apportionment bill was the measure which it was feared would hoid the sion over to next week. It will be passed by the Assembly, receding from its amendments to-morrow. s i GAME LAVW IS PASSED. | Frequent Efforts to Amend It but It Gets Through Safely. \ CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA-| MENTO, March 14.—Tke game bill, which was the subject of much debate and a | great deal of feeling when it came up for | second reading, was read the third time and passed this morning, despite vigorous | opposition and after several amendments | had been defeated. The bill as passed orohibits the selling of quail and deer, but does not stop hunt- ers from killing them. It was argued tha this was an unjust discrimination in vor of the sportsmen and against those who do_not hunt but wko enjoy a qua:l now and then just the same. An attempt was therefore made to amend the bill to cure this objection by making the bill operative upon ail. This was provided for in Leavitt’s amendment to prohibit the killing of quall by any one for three vea In offering the amendment Leavitt said he did so as a better measure of protection to the quail than the bill as submitted. He said if the bird needed protectfon at all it was better to give it absolute protection for a few years than partfal protection for | COUNT BONT SL4%S FACE OF AN EDITOR Continued From First Page. | quis | r: then retired to his study and the Mar Details of the Incident. “‘The paragraph in Figaro clearly desig- nated Boni as t"\e traitor of whom M. De- roulede nEoke, but Boni could not have acted such a role, nor be suspected of so doing. It was a most outrageous insult to designate him. Bonl determined to ask explanations of M. de Rodays and begged us to accompany him in order to serve as witnesses in case of need. We, therefore, went to M. de Rodays’ residence this morning, which is on the fifth floor of the house, where we &\resented our cards. M. de Rodays immediately recelved us. He had on a gray dressing robe. lite exchange of salutations the Count de | ‘You published against | Castellane said. me this morning an abominable para- lgg:’ph‘. I have come to ask for explana- s. “M. de Rodays replied: an article?" I interposed, saying: reud"vour paper? ‘ ‘Yes,’ said M. de Rodays, Per 8 e Rodays, ‘but I do not “‘Boni then exclaimed you retract? Yes or no! “M. de Rodays began: ‘I cannot——' ithout allowing him to conclude, ‘Can you say formally that it is not 1 you intended to refer to? ~Reply. quickly that it is not I, speak quickly or—' at the same moment Boni approached him and boxed his ears several times. M, de Rodays recoiled and Bonl struck him again. We then Intervened and stood in front of M. de Rodays. Then, after poiite salutations, the whole party withdrew, M. de Rodays, who was much agitated, companying us to the door.” —_— Arrangements for the Duel. PARIS, March 14.--M. de Rodays’ sec- onds, le. Prestat and_ Perivier, hav: called at the residence of M. de Castellane. The representatives of the Count are not publicly known, but it 13 understood that the four seconds will meet to-day to make arrangements for the duel, P aa—e——————1 Law Must Stand. SACRAMENTO, March 14.—Fisk’s bil! repealing the act of 1897, which requires the lapge of a year from the date of enter- ing a decree before divorced persons may marry, was beaten in the Senate to-night. Killed in a K::;-l Mine. GALENA, Kans, March 14—Ge Murray and Willlam_Chestnut, miness were ikilled at the Badger Company s mine, five miles north of here, to-day. A1 Immenge slab of dirt fell on the men, killing them instantly. ‘Do you mean ‘Have you not impatiently: ‘Wil a good many. The Senate was lined up, | however, and Leavitt's amendment was | voted down. | Taylor afterward got in ahead of the | amenders by moving the previous ques- tion. This w; carried and then the bill | was passed by a of 28 to 6. HASTE ENDS IN SORROW. Senators Find Themselves Losers | While Hurrying Their Bills Through. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA-| MENTO, March 14.—In a desperate effort to hurry the Senate this afternoon tripped itself up and lost one and a half of the| precious hours that still remain. Senawr,‘ Smith of Kern introduced an urgency res- | olution providing that the tax levy bill should be read three times on the same | day and put upon its passage. | Immediately Lukens tacked on another | bill, and before the resolution went | through it had three or four bills upon it. | Then another resolution was put in, and | immediately a dozen Senators were on their feet with bills to add to it. It finally | went to a vote with nineteen bills upon it, and it failed of the necessary twenty- | seven votes. his was somewhat of a | facer for the unduly industrious, but they went at another file and nearly had it | completed when the point of order was | rajsed that the Senate, having refused to declare certain bills matters of urgency, | those bills could therefore not be put | upon the second resolution. As these | were the bills every one wanted hurried, | they were all effectually shut out, and the Senate went back to the regular or- | der. WELCOME FOR McKINLEY. State Legislators Meet to Arrange for the President’s Re- ception. SACRAMENTO, March 14.—The jfoint| legislative committee recently appointed to receive President McKinley upon his visit to California in May held a meeting to-night, at which the preliminary work to be done was outlined. Lieutenant Gov- ernor, Neff presided at the meeting. A substitute committee, which shall have charge of the details of the matter of re- ception to the President, was appointed as follows; Lieutenant Governor Neff, Senatcrs Devlin and Seivage, Speaker | Pendleton and Assemblyman Johnson. eutenant Governor Neff was request- ed to telegraph Robert Coftelyou, secre- tary to President McKinley, apprising him of the preparations for his chief's reception which are in contemplation, and | asking for the executive's proposed itin- | erary. It is expected that Cortelyou's re- ply will be received to-morrow, In which event another meetin; further shape proceedings. Fifth Judge for Alameda. SACRAMENTO, March 14—Governor Gage to-day signed Kelley's bill creating | a fifth Judge for Alameda County and im- mediately appointed Henry A. Melvin of | Oakland to the position, to hold office until the next general election. ! Ladles’ tension so shoes, at in every detall doltars, ool ®® at Kaufman: FRIDAY ONLY Pfitent ;ea:har lace shoes, dull tops, e: es, mi 1 This is undoubtedly one of the most fashionable looking shoes ever produced. In the future Friday s, en gentlemen’ bé on the lookout for our Friday Money back if not as good as we say. itary heels, ng regular $4.00 $3.05 It closely resembles hoe which ordinarily sells for fives will be & very Special Day exceptional values in higl s and children’s shoes will FORMERLY LUCKE'S 832 MARKET ST. | concurrence § PRINARY BIL 5 ACCEPTED Assembly Gives Its Approval to the Amendments by the Senate. Jeint Elections Committee’s Test of Party Fealty Becomes an In- teresting Feature of the Revised Measure. ——— Special Dispatch to The Cal HEADQUARTERS, CALL SACRA- MENTO, March 14.—The primary election bill, Assembly bill 798, was accepted this afterngon by the Assewbly as amended in the Senate. The test of party fealty as framed by the Joint Elections Comm thus becomes a featura of the bill as will go to the Governor. That test is a declaration of a bona fide present {nten tion to support the nominees of the e vention for which delegates are being chos Johnson led with the faint oppositi there was to concurrence in the S amendments. It was amendment slaced in the Assembly bill the ¢ of a declaration of belief in the p; of the party as embra in the latest platform. His was a forlorn hope to-da but Johnson k. 2 10t 2 hopes for the last two wee sion and he is getting used to it. In the course of the deba serted that the polits Senate were Insisting placed in the bill in would be declared un dan sald one tect was pr as the other from a | wnd the appro advi ment would pre the responsibilit i,enp]» a primary law Republican majorit On h of motion of “ h L L . When a good phy- sician prescribes beer for a gatient it is Schlitz beer. A phy- sician knows the val- ue of purity, Askhimhowgerms affect beer and he will tell you that few stomachs can digest them. He will say at once that impure beer is unhealthful. You will know then why we brew under such rigid pre- cautions — why we even filter the air that touches it; why we filter the beer, then sterilize every bottle. If you knew what we know and what your physician knows about beer, you, too, would insist on Schlitz. THE BEER THAT MADOE MILWAUKEE FAMOUS wisir DR- JORDAN'S gnzar WUSEUM OF ANATONYS | ease and Weakness will be called to | of | lishea 1881. Consul- | tation and private book free, at office or by mail. vator San Francisco. DR MEVERS& LD, Specialists, Dis- men. Estab- Cures paranteed. 1 arket street (ele- entrance), ASHS BITTERS SAN A V N\ E NOT NTOXICATING A BRUSHE ers, (b dyers, flourmills, FOR BARBERS, BAK- ers, bootblacks, bath- houses, billiard tables, ers, candy-makers, canners, foundries, laundries, inters, painters, shoe hangers, pri blemen, tar-roofers, tanners tallors, ete. BUCHANAN BROS. Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St