The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 10, 1901, Page 5

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ADVERTISEMENTS. M HEADAGHE vely cured by these Little Piils. They also relieve distress from Dys- sia, Indigestion and Too Hearty ng. A perfect remedy for Dizzi- ness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in | the Side, TORPID LI‘;E“R. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. AUCTION! Referee’s Kfictiun Sale BY ORDER OF COURT. FINAL OFFERING OF Crooks’ Estate Properties, | Posi Monday, September 23, 1901, | 12 O'CLOCK NOON. At Salesrooms of | G. H. UMBSEN & CO,,| Nc. 14 Montgomery Straet Prominent Third-Strset Corner, 200 feet of Market Street. Large frontiges on Th'rd, Stevenson and Jessie Streets. The largest available corner left in this see- tion of the e ty. Cffered in three 4 and Jessie sts., 69 ft. Jessie st. Stores and | per annum. i basement brick building | ) 1t s on Stevenson st., 57: and fronting 27:6 fL. on basement brick building Stevenson st., 117:6 fronting 47 ft. on from these last two | ve separated and increased 1t Jessie st 2 Pleces 34000 Wit sma Ct x of Business Property oice Piece Brick Building, Nos. 915-917-919 Dupont Street. Washington and Jackson; 6 feet: best 1o $155 D Betwee: preser lot 47:8 Chinatow ren Nos. 882-834 Washington Street. 4 corner brick buil west corner of W: 1 ween Dupont by 137:6 feet; rents Three Large Pieces of Propgrty in '; Potrero Distriet. { of the cit; k bounded by rkansas streets frontage of 200 feet, streets. W. corner of Wisconsin, by Sseet on Wisconsin st. further particulars, or the 18th and trom | J. T. HARMES, 626 Viarket St. G. H. UMBSEN, 14 Montgomery St. P. J. SULLIVAN, Parrott Building. CANDY CATHARTIC Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold In bulk. | Beware of the dealer who tries to seli ing “fust as good. ell=Laundered Sirt is one of the signs of a well-dressed man— without it all other signs fail. You can always carry this sign if you patronize the United States Laundry. We launder shirts perfectly, and all other linen as well. You will find that your linen will wear longer, also, if you send it to us. Just try it No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY | Office 1004 Marke: Stres: Telephone—South 420, ©Oakland Office—54 San Pablo Ave. EALD LEADI%G BUSINESS COLLEGE OF THE WEST . 24 Post st., San Francisco, Cal. Established Nearly 40 years. Open Entire Year. Write for S0-page catalogue (free). | uncivilized world. | swered. | who preserved | press, THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1901 GRAND ARMY VETERANS SAY THE LORD HAS HEARD UPLIFTED PRAYER OF WORLD General Sickles Declares He Will Back McKinley's Luck Every - Time, and That the God of Battle and Good Fortune Will Not Desert Him--- LEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 8.— The city to-night was bril- liantly illuminated in honor of the visiting Civil War, who have been pouring into Cleveland all day to participate in the annual exercises of the G. A. R. The center of the scene to-night was Soldiers’ and Sailors’ monument, whil stands in the middle of the public squar in the heart of the city. General Daniel E. Sickles to-night gave the h an expression to a sentiment which is re- | flected in the hearts of every patriot present. Tall and sturdy, as if the snows of over seventy winters had noc sifted their powder into his scanty lock standing erect on his crutches, he strod into National G. A. R. headquarters lifting his cap Lee Rassieur and the other dignitar'es bowed and exclaimed: “Comrades, let us thank God for the news from Buffalo. The Lord has heard the uplifted prayers of the civilized und dan, Chinese and all people have unit: with us in praver that McKinley mizht be spared to us. That prayer is an- Blessed be the name of the Lord that great person: to_us. Then, dropping his the general said T'il back McKinley's luck every time. The god ofsbatties stood by him during the war. The god of good fortune has remained with him ever since. not die at t time and under such cir- cumstance: Ex-Senator impressive man- n Manderson of Nebraska also sounded the keynote of the encamp- | ment at the reunjon to-day of the First Ohio Volunteer Light Artillery. ““Tempering every breath of happiness at this reunion is the fearful tragedy of li“ Friday,” said General Manderson. “'I o not e: you for forty years been one of patriotism. = You have trained your sons to be sons of America, to know what it is to uphold the flag of | our free institutions. “There remain; foor an elemen! tenanced and sustained by an unbridlei an unprincipled rostrum, preacn- ing the gospel of discontent. I do not say too much when I assert that this element Gelights in condemnation—aye, con- tempt, for the powers that be. o, Danger Point Not Past. MILBURN HOUSE, BUFFALO, Sept. 9.—Dr. M. B. Mann, who has Dr. McBur- ney as a guest, was seen after the last consultation to-right. He said: to be trampled under I am gratified at the excellent showing made | by the President and the remarkable manner in which the case is progressing. 1 feel that. | although the danger point is by no means passed yet, ev day that goes by without and decided any unfavorable sign is a distinci sain toward recovery. 1 prefer to wait a time before.making any positive declaratifis on the subject, although I e President will here are no indications of such iymptoms, but on the contrary an entire ab- sence of them. The President certainly has had a comfort- able day, and there has ben a steady improve- ment all along the iine. There has not been any unfavorable symptom. No, I cannot say that all danger bas passed, but every hour that passes diminishes the chances of trouble. He is very cheerful in manner, a very good patient and is easily managed. Everything is going smoothly, favorably and nicely. While Dr. Mann was speaking Dr. Mc- Burney pointed out that violent peritoniti might have developed, but his opinion now | was that danger from that form of dis- ease had pa All Are McKinley Men. LOUISVILLE, K Sept. 9.—Speaking to-night at a mass-meeting called to de- | mand vigorous laws against anarchism and to-express sympathy with President McKinley Henry Watterson said: ‘We must meet the bloodstained hands of an- archism not ‘merely with cleaner hands, but With a purer public spirit, If not & deep philosophy. We must disséminate the lesson that government exists not for the private gain of any, nor for the cure of any private but for justice, the citadel and the bell the public beace and order. us this night are McKinley 2 3 | We pray this night that God spare his life. men. Veteran in Disgrace. LEAVENWORTH, Kans. Sept. 9.— George Braunraider, a member of the Soldiers’ Home, was dishonorably dis- charged to-night and drummed out of the mp for expressing satisfaction at the shooting of President McKinley. ADVERTISEMENTS. IT KEEPS 1T/ STRENGTH § and FLAVO%\EGE!EENLAMD Pleasant Hours Swiftly Flying— Those spent on the California Limited as it rushes and races across the country from San Francisco to Chicago in 75 hours. Leaves San Frantisco at ® a. m. every Monday and Thursday on the SAN FRANCISCO BUSINESS COLLEGE, 1236 Market Street. Actual business bookkeeping; only expert ac- countents and reporters as teachers; Gregg shorthand, the easiest, fastest and most read- able. Day and evening. FULL COURSE, $0. Corner Fourth and CAFE ROYA Overcoats and valises checked free. veterans of the | to Commander in Chief | Christian, Mohamme- | He can- | gerate when 1 say that the | | example set by f our population coun- | unfavorable symptoms develop. | Steam and Lager,! FAVOR Dr covery.” | | rapid recovery.’ | 1 General Manderson | PRESIDENT'S CONDITION S RAPID RECOVERY AR ILBURN HOUSE, BUFFALO, N. Y., Sept. 9.—Dr. P. M. Rixey, one of the President’s attending physicians, and also the private physician of President and Mrs. McKin- ley, said to-night regarding the patient: “I am not a specialist in abdominal surgery, but from a gen- | eral knowledge of gunshot wounds, I can say that the only possi- | bility of complications would be by blood-pcisoning or peritonitis, and that I consider both now a very remote probability. Peritonitis might set in as a result of the two apertures in the stomach, but up to this time, a time beyond the usval standard record, not the slightest symptom is manifested. There is not the slightest evi- dence of blood-poisoning. As the bhullet is not yet extracted, I do not think we need worry about that. The presumption is that it is | lodged somewhere in the muscles of the back. courses, it would now be cut off from possible harm. There should be no attempt to extract the buliet at present. Neither will there be any operation for its removal at this time. I see no reason why the President will not recover rapidly.” Hermann Mynter, one of the consulting physicians of President McKinley, said to-night: “I have always made it a point not to prognosticate in serious cases, for you know man propozes and God disposes. I consider the President’s case a serious one, and so I do not predict, but I may say that at this stage the condition of the patient is remarkably favorable, and personally I cannot expect anything except re- Scores the Pursuing natural | Dr. Eugene Wasdin, who was with Dr. Mynter, said: “I, too, am averse to making predictions, but I agree that the President’s condition is one that strongly favors complete and |REFUSES TO ABANDON 5 SPEECHES IN CAMPAIGN Chairman Dick of the Ohio Republi- | can Committee Will Not Grant Democratic Request. COLUMBUS, Ohio, | M. A. Daugherty of the Democratic State | Executive Committee to-day addressed a | letter to Chairman Charles Dick of the Committee, suggesting | that as an evidence of respect to the Pres | dent all political ncs for the cal paign in Ohio be canceled, adding that a similar a nt had been made at the time Garfield was assassinated. ; To-night Chairman Dick replfed to Chair- man Daugherty, refusing to acquiesce in his suggestion and cailing attention to the | fact that, while a similar arrangement had_been proposed at the time of Ga | field’s “assassination, it had not been a cepted by the Democratic State Commit- | tee. Chairman Dick sa | 1t dces-not seem to us appropriate to ac- | quiesce in your suggestion that we abandon our | public maintenance of the principles that Pres- | ident McKinley represents and which he has | sa often and so ably presented to the people. In the present campaign the Democratic party of Ohio has brought forward as its most promi- hent fssue the Sreat mnational question with | which President McKinley has been most con- | spicuously identified and has demanded ‘‘the abolition of the so-called protective system,” | of which he has been the most distinguished dvocate, sceking to substitute for It as a ma- | tional policy “‘the traditional Democratic policy of a tariff for revenue.' If it were not becoming for fidelity to Gar- field and his principles to leave the fight for & time because the leader was stricken down, Etill less is it honorable for McKinles's friends in his own State to abandon the contest at the time when his most cherished principles are brought into question as the foremost is- sue of this and succeec g campaigns. It seems to this committee, therefore, that we can best Sept. 9.—Chairman Repubiican State attest our loyalty to our leader by continuinz | our advocacy of the principles which he has | always supported. It it seems be to your committee to with- draw from antagonizing those principles and to cease from further advocacy of politwal doc- trines which the President has always believed | to be perilous to the prosperity of the entire country we shall be very glad indeed to be ad- vised to that effect and to have your hearty co-operation hereafter in the maintenance of more wholesome public polic In any event, and in accordance long conduct of President McKinley of courtesy in all political campaigns, our committee and the entire Republican party will be especially | glad to unite with you in whatever will soften the asperities of the controversies, eliminate unwarranted personalities and make the con- test one devoted exclusively to the consideration of the great principles that separate the two opposing_schools of political opinion. —Presi- dent McKinley may not survive, but the prin- ciples for which he stood will live and triumph it we in the discharge of our duty as citizens meet every requirement with the same pa- triotism and devotion to principles that have characterized the life of Willlam McKinley. Predicter Maggio Jailed. SILVER CITY, N. M., Sept. 9.—Antonio Maggio, the musiclan and alleged anarchist, who is said to have predicted the assassination of President McKinley before October, 1901, was arrested at Santa Rita, N. M., a mining camp, near Silver City, at 5:3) this_afternoon by United States Marshal Foraker on instructions from Washington. Maggio has been play- ing a piano in a saloon at Santa Rita for some time. He is said to have frequent- ly made the prediction that the President wculd be killed before October 1 since coming to this section in February last. He is quoted as saying that Emperor Wii- liam of Germany will be the next ruler assassinated. IThe Pope and Anarchists. LONDON, Sept. 10.—The Pope has been so impressed by the attack upon Presi- dent McKinley, says the Rome corre- spondent of the Daily Mail, that he in- — WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY TELLS THE SAD NEWS Passengers Learn of the Attempted Assassination Thirty-Eight Hours Before Reaching Port. PHILADELPHIA, Scpt. 9.—Passengers and officers of the American line steam- ship Belgenland, which arrived early this morning from Liverpool and Queenstown, speak in terms of the highest praise of the enterprise of the New York Herald, which enabled those aboard the vessel to learn of Colzgosz's dastardly crime thirty- eight hours before reaching port. ‘When the pilot went aboard the steam- ship at the Delaware Capes late yester- day afterncon with newspapers. telling of the attempted assassination of President McKinley at Buffalo he found that the news had already béen carried to the pas- sengers by wirzless telegraphy. The passengers, of whom there were 128 in the first cabin, learned of the attempt to take the President’s life when the ves- sel was about forty miles off Nantucket. As the Belgenland was passing the Nan- tucket lightship, about 4 o'clock, two short flags were seen on the vessel dis- playing the letters “B. J.,”” which means [Lome” nearer; have important informa- tion.” C ptain Hill brought his vessel in, and through the megaphone came the words: ‘“‘President McKinley was shot at Buf- falo yesterday afternoon; is still living.” ‘When the passengers received the start- ling intelligence there was the utmost consternation on board, and a great many were incredulous, believing that they had not heard the message correctly, and it had to be repeated. Nothing was talked of but the awful erime. The entertainment that evening was abandoned, and instead the passengers held religious services, offering prayers for the recovery of the President and the welfare of the country. The prayers were interspersed with singing of = patriotic hymns. e Result of a Plot. CHICAGO, Sept. 9.—United States se- cret service officers in Chicago, having come to the conclusion that the attempt- ed assassination of President McKinley was the result of a plot arranged in this city, have telegraphed to Chief Wilkie of the secret service, who is now in Buffalo, asking him to send Czolgosz's coat to Chi- cago immediately. The officers believe the mark on the assassin’s coat will prove that it was made by a tallor who_ livel very near the house of Abraham Isaak, one of the anarchists now being held on a charge of conspiracy. This fact once determined, the officers say, it will be a matter of only a few hours to ascertain exactly where Czolgosz lived in Chicago, the names of those with whom he asso- clated while here and the length of time he remained in the city. —_— | An Appeal to Gage. | MILBURN HOUSE, BUFFALO, Sept. .—Secretary Gage has been appealed to y some of the New York financlal inter- ests to relleve the money market by in- creasing the deposits in natlonal banks. Representations are being made that, hile the interior is demanding money to ove the crops, public funds are piling p in the Treasury to the detriment of e commercial interests of the country. ecretary Gage declined to state what, if anything, would be done to relieve the situation. He will be In Washington in the morning and can there consider the atter at close range. He will not an- ounce his decision until he is on ‘the ground. _— tends to take the initiative in jdint action -l+ o by .the Christian powers against anarch- ists. He is writing an important en- | | cyclical on the subject, which will be pub- | | ANARCHISTS ARE lished next month. | . ASKED TO VACATE 3 BES | Special Sale of Fine | When the directors of the Pyth- i | ian Hall Association read in yes- > | terday's issue of The Call an ac- B || count of a meeting of the San E Francisco Independent Debating Society, an organization that H B | || gloried in the attempted killing of the President, they promptly de- For Five D_ays Only. m ’ cided not to permit further ses- = stons of this kind. With this end Genuine Mink Capes. - $16 and.up | In view the secretary was instruct- B Genuine Fitch Copestiii 15&3 andup B| || ed 'to send the following letter to | B Genuine Persian Lamb H The Call: Jacket: 5 d Genuine Krimmer Jackets and up B e R e e L Genuine Astrachan Jacke! 2% and up :; Sept. 9. 1501 e e S8 R Proprietor Call—Dear Sir: The atten- { B Extra fine near Seal J: s §38 tion of the Board of Directors of this J association has been called to the arti- cle in your paper of to-day's issue in ! raference to the San Francisco Inde- a s pendent Debating Socety, at present ; 9 tenants in our halls. This association has by unanimous vote ordered their 121 PO—St St. secretary to notify them that their 7 ROOMS 7 TO 11. tenancy must imme'ately cease. Re- = (Don’t mistake the number). = , spectfully, L W, BEATTIE, Sec. | ENEYEEENERDEERES TSR TS | & — . . Yellow Journals = —r UFFALO, Sept. 9.—Czolgosz, the assailant of President Mc- Kinley, went through another long examination to-day at the hands of the police officials, but emerged from it without having added anything material to their knowledge of the case. The chief effort of the detectives was to draw from the prisoner some admission as to his accomplices, but he persistently stuck to his denial that he was assisted in any way in the commission of the crime. Every possible device was resorted to in the effort to obtain the information, but the prisoner maintained his position and could not be shaken. In answer to ques- tions he again went over the events of Friday, and -told substantially the same story as in the originai coniession made Lo Superintendent Bull and Listrict Attorney Penny. Czo1gosz carefully weighed his answers, and wnen conclusions that he did not ap- prove were taken from his statements in- sisted upon making expianations of his exact meaning. Third Degree in Store. The police have about concluded that more effective work on the plot theory can be done on the outside, although Uzoigosz probabiy wiil have another experience at the third degree of police craft to-mor- row. The general investigation of the case progresses slowly, because the men on it must cover a large amount of pre- liminary ground before they can do effect- ive work. According to the local authori- ties the police of the country know very little about the anarchists. They say that the secret service men do not show any special familiarity with them, and that tnere does not seem to be a single city Police Department in the country that has more than a general knowledge of them. Members of the Buffalo force admit that they have never given American anar- chists serious consideration and that they did not know there were any here. Since the President was shot they have found that there are mt least twenty avowed anarchists in the city. Here, as elsewhere, it has been necessary for the detectives to first satisfy themselves as to the identity of a lot of men whom they never had oc- casion to watch before. No other arrests have been made in connection with the case, and the local police say that they do not anticipate any at present. After Goldman and Schwab. It is belieyved that both Emma Goldman and Julius Schwab will be detained by the police whenever they are found. Superin- tendent Bull has made a general request to the police of the country that any one suspected of complicity be detained and examined. The police of Chicago, Cleve- land, Detroit and other Midde States cities are co-operating with the local officers in tracing out the movements of the prisener before the crime, and Superintendent Bull said to-day that he had practically ac- counted for him for the six weeks that preceded his arrival here. Czolgosz is still kept secluded and the detectives are the only ones who have access to him. He is still strong and healthy and eats with a will. Knowledge of the condition of the President is kept from him. He knew on Friday night that the President was still alive, but has been given no information since then. Not once since his confinement, either in talking with his guards or when up for examination. has_he asked as to the fate of his victim. No plan for the ar- raignment of the prisoner has been con- sidered by District Attorney Penney. Was With the Assassin. PITTSBURG, Sept. 9.—Carl Nold and Harry Gordon, well-known Pittsburg an- archists and intimate friends of Emma Goldman, were arrested here this after- noon. Nold was a friend of Berkman, who shot H. C. Frick. A thorough search of the lodgings of Gordon and Nold failed to reveal anything criminating further than a lot of anarch- istic literature. A number of letters were seized, none having any bearing on the crime of Czolgosz. No further arrests were made. It is learned on what is con- sidered good authority that the arrest of the two men was made upon a telegraphic request from the Police Department of Buffalo, and that the Buffalo officiais have ordered them held pending further instructions. It i§ also said that Emma Goléman has been located at some point cion that she may have been directly con- nected with the attempted assassination of the President. Emma Goldman was in this city Sunday, September 1, and par- ticipated in a meeting of several ana ists at the house of Gordon, on Wylie avenue. She has visited here frequently and nothing of unusual interest attached to her last appearance. At the time she was supposed to be here in connection with the steel strike, but she said she was only on a short vacation and was go- ing to Cleveland the next day. There i8 a strong suspicion that the as- sailant of the President came to Pitts- burg with Miss Goldman on her last visit. She came here from Rochester and on her way stopped at Buffalo, the detectives who have been tracing her movements say. There was in her company a young man who answered in every way the gen- eral description of Czolgosz, except that the suspect wore a very slight brownish moustache. This mysterious young man accompanied the woman from the station to the house of Gordon. MARBLE CUTTERS . SHOW THEIR LOYALTY Adopt Resolutions Condemning Act of the Assassin and Praying for President’s Recovery. At a meeting of the Marble Cutters’ and Finishers’ Union last night resolutions were passed condemning the act of the assassin and praying for the speedy and ultimate recovery of the President. The resolutions are as follows: Whereas, We, the members of the Marble Cutters’ and Finishers’ Union, in regular meet- ing assembled, having heard with sincere regret of the attempted assassination of our beloved President, Willlam McKinley, would at this instant place on record our abhorrence of such a dastardly and diabolical act, which, by its inception and by the helnous nature of its of- fense, 18 a blow to our civic institutions and our world-wide reputation of freedom. If it is possible that a jealous regard for human lib- erty has let unbridled the vaporings of foreign flends, who have come here to incite hatred against our laws and against our constitution, the principles of which are the wisest, the purest and the grandest ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man In_any age; be it E Resolved, That this association of Americans belonging respectively. to the two great poilti- cal partics, would insist in the interests of hu- manity and all that is.dear to individual hu- man effort, that such persons be excluded from our shores and such: literature be suppressed; and be it further TResolved, That in this hour of national sor- row we refiew our pledge of loyalty and dutiful attachment to our grand Institutions, and while in this connection we would say that Mr. P, H, McCarthy, the worthy vresident of the Build- ing Trades Council of San Francisco, to which body we are affectionately affiliated, has al- ways tried by example and precept to exclude from the ranks of thes> in our vast brother- hood everything that is oposed to our cherished laws and the moral uplifting of man on_this North American continent; and be it further Resolved, That in our prayers we supplicate the great fountain head of all beneficence and goodness for the speedy and ultimate recovery of our sincerely loved and noble President of these United States. WILLIAM MAYS. Secretary. Lack of Patriotism Punished. SACRAMENTO, Sept. 9.—John Peter- son of car shop No. 5 of the Southern Pacific plant in this city is looking for a McKinley had reached the shops, Peter- son remarked, in the presence of several fallow workmen. that it served the Prasi. in Ontario, which gives rise to the suspi- | job. On Friday afternoon, after the news of the attempt to assassinate President ADVERTISEMENTS. Miss Maggie Becker, 653 Lake street, Appleton, Wis., writes: “It is with pleasure | recommend Peruna as a splendid tonic to any over- taxed persons. When the mind is wearied the body wiil soon be worn out also, but Peruna invigorates the body and refreshes the mind. I have alsofound it a relief in cases of sevars backache. We are never without it at home, and consider it a household blessing.””—MISS MAGGIE BECKER. Has Better Health Than for Six Years Mrs. W. E. Llewellyn, Florence, Ala., writes: p “After using six bottles of Peruna my health is better than it has been for six years. I always recommend your medi- cines to my friends and will do all I can | for you. I had been in bad health for two years before I took Peruna.”—Mrs. ‘W. E. Llewellyn. ffered Five Years. Mrs. Christopher Fliehmann, dam, N. Y., writes: “In speaking of your remedy, I have { been sick with catarrh of the stomach | and peivic organs for about five years {and had many a doctor, but none could | help me. Some said I would never get jover it. One day when I read your al- i manac I saw those who had been cured by Peruna, then I thought I would try it. I did, and found relief with the first | bottle I took, and after two more bottles | T was as well and strong as I was before. 'Now I.can eat most anything, and it don’t bother me.”—Mrs. Christopher | Flichmann. | Pe-ru-na The Best Medicine in the World. | Mrs. Fredericka Hoepfinger writes from Tilden, Madison County, Nebr., the fol- lowing; { . “I was in the Change of Life, and was despairing; did not know what to do. I Amster- PE-RU-NA INVIGORATES. PE-RU-NA REFRESHES. A was troybled with hot flashes; it seemed as if there was heat all around me. think Peruna’is ‘the best medicine in the world.”—Mrs. Fredericka Hoepfinger. Free Home Advice. In view of the great multitude of women suffering from some form of female dis- ease and vet unable to find any cure. Dr. Hartman, the renowned specialist on female catarrhal diseases, has announced his willingness to direct the treatment of as many cases as make application to him during the summer months without charga. Those wishing to become patients should address The Peruna Medicine Co., Co- lumbus, Ohio. dent right. This morning Assistant i Superintendent W. E. Gilbert, who had learnéd of the circumstance, ordered the acting foreman to discharge Peterson, and this was done forthwith. 'SAYS ANARCHISTS ARE PUBLIC OUTLAWS William J. Bryan Declares Govern- ments Cannot Be Reformed by Cowardly Assassins. BUFFALO, Sept. 9.—Willlam J. Bryan to-day telegraphed’the Times as follows: | “Free governments may be overthrown, | but they cannot be reformed by those | who violate the commandment ‘Thou | | Shalt Not Kill” Under a Government | | like ours, every wrong can be remedied | by laws, and the laws are in the hands of the people themselves. Anarchy can be neither excused nor tolerated here. The | man who proposes to right a public | wrong by taking the life of a human Dbeing makes himself an outlaw and can- not consistently appeal to the protection | of who will act in case of disability; of the Government which he repudiates. He irvites a return to a state of bar- barism, in which one must at his own risk defend his own rights and avenge his own wrongs. The punishment admin- istered to the would-be assassin and to his co-conspirators, if he have them, should be such as to warn all inclined to anarchy that while this is an asylum for those who love liberty, it is an inhos- pitable place for those who raise their hands against all forms of government. Ve J. BRYAN." —_——— Long Is Confident. BOSTON, Sept. 9.—On his arrival hers to-night from Buckfield Secretary Long said that he had not decided when he would go to Buifalo. He went to his home in Hingham to-night. Secretary Long in an interview said: From the first advices I have felt confident that the President would recover. There seems to be no occasion for considering the question there evidently is to be no disability. I am not prepared to say what kind of legis- lation should be had in dealing with this class of crime. That whole guestion is most intricate. In each individual case the course of the law is plain. Cobbler Seat Rocker $1.90 Mahogany or golden oak finish on elm—well made and ought to please at twice the price. All the hot water you want with 2 Richmond | | | $6.¢9 sawed and polished, six feet five in- ches high mirror ten by fourteen ches. Eight double hooks Costumer $1. Made of polished golden oak. Handy for bed rooms—sometimes used in halls. Globes $I. Have ‘you an old style lamp? It’s an easy matter to make it a new style lamp. Nine inch, either Ruby or Green, Decorated. Carlsbad China Dinner Sets $20. Three patterns at this excep- tionally low price. Count ng up Davenports this week. We show seventeen pat- terns. Beauties for $36.c0 and good Sterling upholstery at that price. You know you can’t get trash fur- niture here at any price—Sterling furniture, Sterling prices. Quarter

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