The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 12, 1901, Page 6

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1901. THURSDAY .....4SI§PTEMBER 12, 1901 JOHN D, SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. BMANAGER'S OFFICE. .... Tele?‘holt Press 204 PUBLICATION OFFICE. .. Market and Third, §. F. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS. . Telepho: Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies. 5 Cents. Terms by Mail. Including Postage: CALL (including Sunday), one year. CALL (including Sunday), € months. DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 8 x.onths. DAILY CALL—By Single Month. SUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. DALY DAILY All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Eample coples will be forwarded when requested. i Mail subscribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order 1o insure a prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE ++.1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Masager Foreign Advertising, Marquetse Building, Chic go. (Long Distance Telephone ‘“‘Central 2619.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON. ....... <+ee..Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Building EWS STANDS: Great Northern Hotel; CHICAGO Sherman House; P. ©. News Co.; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE. ...1406 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until $:30 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until 8 o'clock. 109 Valencia, open until # o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until § o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until 9 o’cleck. 2200 Filimore, open until $ p. m. B L Tivoli—*‘Carmen."” California—""A Royal Box.” Orpheum—Vaudeville. Alcazar—*"The Taming of the Shrew.” Grand Opera-house—"'Quo Vadis.”” Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and Fischer' s—Vaudeville. Recreation Park—Baseball Sutro Baths—Open nights. AUCTION SALES. By William G. Layng—Friday, September 13, at 10 o'clock, Pelo Alto Brood Mares, at Agricultural Park, Sacramento. By G. H. Umbsen & Co.—Monday, September ©'clock, Crooks’ Estate Properties, at 14 Montgome: = ABETTING ANARCHY. HILE we are denouncing the wretched fol- lowers of the leaders of anarchy and calling for the arrest and punishment of every ong who was in any way associated with Czolgosz in his attempt to assassinate the President, let us not fors get that the miserable and obscure anarchists who lurk in the slums of our cities are not the only un- holders and supporters of the There are learned men like Krapotkin of Russia and Reclus of 12 creed France, calling themselves “philosophical anarch- ists,” whose influence is more potent and perhaps more pernicious than that of the slum leaders. There are also persons known as respectable citizens who by reason of some vagary of mind or heart asso- ciate themselves with anarchists and to some extent abet them in their crimes even while ostensibly de- ploring the commission of assassination as a “jolly.” We have had in our own city an evidence of the ex- tent to which that kind of support has been given to anarchists by men from whom society has a right to expect better things. At the meeting of the. seli- styled “Independent Debating Club” on the Sunday following the attempted murder of the President there was amid the crowd of obscure fools or worse who applauded the centiments of the orators in at- tacking Christianity and vilifying the President at least one man whose presence there is not to be passed over unnoted. That man is Mr. George Cum- mings, a trustee of the Mechanics’ Institute Library. It will not do to exhaust ourselves in denouncing the anarchists of the slums and leave the anarchists of social positioh uncondemned. As a trustee of one of the most important institutions of the city Mr. Cummings is something more than a private indi- vidual. He is charged with a public duty, and has a voice in the control of a semi-public institution. The public has thereiore a right to expect him to be an upholder of law, of religion and of the whole so- cial organism. What, then, shall be said of him now that at the very time when the whole nation is out- raged by the anarchist attempt to murder the Presi- dent he shows himself at an anarchist meeting as a believer in the creed and 2 supporter of its propa- ganda? . Mr. Cummings is too widely and too well known in this city for any one to suspect him of conspiring to assassinate any one. He could not have attained 2 trusteeship in the Mechanics’ Library unless he had won the esteem of a considerable number at least of the best people in the city. The very readiness, how- ever, with which those who know him will acquit him of any suspicion of criminal impulse renders it 2ll the more strange that he should have any sym- pathy or association with the miserable outcasts of the earth who look upon assassins as heroes, and who are restrained from murder only by the coward- ice of their natures, Among the letters of Emma Goldman found by the police is one in which she complains that Prince Krapotkin received $750 for a series of lectures in New York while she has to lecture on the streets and content herseli with such petty contributions as the crowds give her. Her complaint is not without justification. Why should society applaud in 2 Prince that which it condemns in a poverty-stricken woman? Why shouid the law tolerate Krapotkin any more than Goldman? If we are going to enter upon the task of suppress- ing anarchy we must deal with the powerful as well as with the weak votaries of the creed. One thing is certai Society cannot tolerate among the directors of its institutions men who promate anarchy either by precept or practice. If Mr. Cummings is to re- main 2 trustee of the Mechanics’ Institute Library he should at once sever his connection with anarch- ists; or if he choose to remain with the brotherhood B should retire from the institute. ANARCHIST LITERATURE. ESIDES its literature in the Hearst papers B anarchy supports an expression of its creed in a special journal, which has hard work to hold its own as an exponent of murder and disorder against the competition of the American, Journal and Examiner. This organ is called “Free Society: For- merly The Firebrand; Exponent of Anarchist- Communism.” The issue of Sunday, September 1, is No. 31 of Volume VII. The paper and typography are excellent. It contains no advertisements except of the books of Krapotkin, Lissagaray; “the famous speeches of the ‘eight anarchists in court, and Alt- geld’s reasons for pardoning Fielden, Neebe and Schwab”; the works of Jean Grave; “God and the State,” by Nikolas Bakunin; “The Economics of Anarchy,” by Lum, and various writings by Mala- |testa. A poem by Gordak adorns the first page, in which are these lines: | For when T see the earth unpopulate, The barren fields, the joyless lives of men, I am filled with that eternal hate That shall revivify the world again. i The first article is entitled “The Monster Slayer,” which gives the story of Hercules and the Dragon, | Theseus, Jason, extracts from the Arabian Nights, jand concludes: “Oh, Gradgrind, wilt thou call it | unreality and fiction, that which has fed ‘the souls | of so many generatidns, who could not be persuaded that they had none; when in this very millennial age of pig-philosophy a Bresci, Luccheni and Angiolillo appear like the Arabian Princess, each ready to burn up some Devil’s grandson of a genie, at cost of being burnt with him?” Con Lynch of Los Angeles, Cal, contributes an appeal to workingmen to join the anarchists, remark- ing that the interests of labor require “that every tie that at present holds human society together be broken.” Then a Mr. Blum makes himself interesting on the subject of “Voting Cattle,” and is followed by Mr. Kinghorn-Jones of 36 Geary street, San Francisco, who desires that the Government issue fifty billions of greenbacks and pay labor ten dollars a day, and in- sists that “Government damns itself” by not doing this at once. On the editorial page the Chicago Anarchist Club announces that “the Chicago comrades are preparing | for the fall and winter campaign of education. Meetings will be held to which comrades are invited that they may learn how to make bombs and witness the process of selecting the removers of obnoxious rulers.”” On the same page the police are denounced in almost exactly the terms employed in the same business by the Examiner. Among the editorial mat- ter appears this statement: “The efficacy of punish- ment is disputed in modern sociology, but an occa- sional execution committed on tyrants seems to have a healthiul effect on these monsters in human form. Since the execution of King Humbert the Italian anarchist weekly, L’Agitazione, has not been mo- lested, while before it was constantly persecuted, both by the censor and the police.” % The signed articles nearly all bear foreign names. | The editor is Abraham Isaak. The address of agen- cies for the paper in many cities is given, with the names of agents. Among the names of the seven- een agents we find Bauer, Kisluck, Morwitz, Kahn, Lang. Havel, Schilling, Maisel, Notkin and Rieger, | who is the representative of this delectable publica- tion in thisicity, Fhe tone of the publication is intensely pessimis- tic. It atfacks, berates and belittles the qualities of generosity, humanity and kindness and is gavage in cxpression against all existing institutions. Wher- { ever there is disorder and lawlessness it sides with It excuses and extenuates all kinds of crime, evidently regarding the criminal in- | stinct as merely a proper protest against existing conditions. Much of its matter would be perfectly at home in the Examiner. | those who cause it. Hardly any imagination could conceive a more striking illustration of misery in the midst of joy and starvation in sight of a feast than this story of real life told by the Porto Rico Herald: “Yesterday while {a part of the town was celebrating the anniversary of the American occupation of the island a2 man was | dying of starvation in the public plaza, lying amid the flowers. This, notwithstanding the fact that as if to prevent such spectacles the committee of celebra- tion distributed on the morning of that same day a thousand rations of meat.” to furnish a {A MASSACHUSETTS CANDIDATE interesting to MASSACHUSETTS promises Her Democracy is to State campaign that will be the country at large. set aside George Fred Williams and his following of Bryanites and nominate a ticket that will reunite the party, bring back the gold men and set an example for other States to follow. It is not expected the ticket will be elected. Indeed, it is to be made up for export rather thaa for home consumption. Prob- ably were there any prospect of its election the Bry- | anites of the party would bolt it, but as there is none they are expected to vote for it solidly, so that Mas- sachusetts Democracy can say to the Democracy of other States: “See what I have done—follow my example and we will sweep the country in 1904.” Such is the promise from Baston. The scheme is to be carried out by the nomination of Josiah Quincy for Governor. He has announced a willingness to make the race, and all of his competitors save one, the Hon. Gamaliel Bradford, have retired in his i favor. Those who know Mr. Quincy well assert that his consent to run means that everything has been fixed not only for this year but for the future. Thus the Boston Transcript says: “It would be but an empty honor were Mr. Quincy to be put forward for this year only. It is not to be supposed that he or any of the leaders in his party have the slightest idea that Governor Crane can be defeated by Mr. Quincy or by anybody else, and Mr. Quincy is not the kind of man who acts without a motive. It is evident | enough, therefore, that this year's campaign is simply scoring for the race in which there may, be a chance to win in 1902.” So Mr. Quincy is to lead a forlorn hope this year, with the promise of something better next year, and with a chance of making a reputation that will give him prestige at the rational Democratic convention in 1904. Under the circumstances it will be seen that the politics of the year being dull in other quarters the Massachusetts campaign will be worth watching by those who are intzrested in the drifting of Democ- racy. Up to this time we have heard_ nothing of the plat- form on which it'is proposed to nominate Mr. Quincy, but that is a matter of no importance. Democratic platforms in ‘these days signify very lit- tle. The chief want of the party is a leader. Any kind of a convention can build a platform. Mr 1 Quincy, then, is likely to be a2 man of whom we shall i the posterior wall of the stomach. hear much for the next few years. It is true that Gamaliel Bradford objects to him because he stands in with the Boston machine, but that seems to be merely a rural prejudice. In fact, Mr. Quincy is a typical Massachusetts great man, and we are going to see what kind of figure he will cut when he tries to fill the place of a national great man. s In reading the reports that come from New York about what a wonderful boat is Shamrock II it will be well to remember that we heard the same kind of reports about every challenger that ever came for the cup. We have acquired a habit of beating wonderful boats. S to a communication from G. F. Wikstrom in relation to an editorial in The Call of Wednes- day under the title, “A Wrong to Americans.” The editorial is based upon a statement of Andrew Furuseth that the Sailors’ Union is not worrying about the strike because most of its members are not citizens of the United States and would not oRject to a trip to Europe while the strike issgoing on, and, moreover, that only about 5 per cent of them are married men. Mr. Wikstrom writes to correct what he regards an injustice donme to the Scandinavian sailors, and we gladly give his letter publication. The Call has no attack to make upon Scandinavian sailors nor upon any other sailors. The statements of fact contained in the editorial were made by Furu- seth, and The Call did no more than direct attention to them and point out their significance. It neither affirmed ror denied the accuracy of the estimates as to the number of foreigners and of unmarried men in the Sailors’ Union, but said: “Accepting Furuseth’s statement as true, it will be seen that a union composed mainly of foreigners and almost wholly of unmarried men is now endeavoring to tie up the trade of the port, preveui the shipment of the products of our farms and enforce idleness and the danger of destitution upon the homes of Ameri- cans;, and, moreover, are doing it with a feeling of impunity, for, as Furuseth says, they can profit by the stagnation of business here to make a trip to Europe, visit their friends and have a good time while, American homes are bearing the affliction of the strike.” - There is one point in our correspondent’s letter to which especial attention should be paid. He says: “Let me, on behalf of our Scandinavian sailors and officers on this coast, change the impression the read- ing of the article mentioned may have given the read- ers. It would not be honest and fair to give these hardworking sailors the miscredit which to the un- acquainted with- the facts the statement has naturally given; “and may we not judge too severely those who walked out at the order of their leaders? Who knows how many among them this day would gladly rectify the wrong which has been done if it lay in their power?” With that sentiment The Call cordially agrees. In fact, The Call has many times reminded the public that many of the strikers entered upon it unwillingly and would gladly return to their work. It is an un- fortunate fact that men with families to support have been forced out of employment by the dictation of persons who have mno responsibility resting upon them. That many members of the Sailors” Union are included in the number of the unwilling we do not doubt. That fact only emphasizes the statement made in The Call editorial that American homes are being injured by the action of irresponsible parties who have no interest in them THE STRIKING SAILORS. PACE in another column is given this morning Roosevelt says that since January 1 he has received fully 2000 invitations to deliver addresses. When Bryan hears of that it will give him pain to think how much he has missed. ADVANCED SURGERY. HE President’s case calls general attention to Tthe practice of advanced surgery. “Out of the evil comes good, for a vast number of people die by accidents whose lives could be saved by anti- septic surgery, while others suffer abridgment of life by disorders which such surgery could cure. These will learn from the President’s case the possibilities of their own. Because, prior to the knowledge of bacteriology, certain surgieal operations were im- possible, and in certain other capital operations, es- pecially upon the abdomen, the percentage of re- coveries was small, it has come down as a popular tradition that surgery is limited in its scope. The fact has long been that knowledge of anatomy and knowing where to place the knife were not lacking. The trouble followed“the operation. Inflammation, blood-poisoning and death followed many a success- fully executed operation. Now surgeons keep their work clear of the germs which cause inflammation and blood-poisoning, and the area of capital operations is wonderfully ex- tended. The President’s case is remarkable. Within thirty minutes after the shooting he was on the operating table in a hospital. The highest surgical skill was present. The abdomen ivas opened. - It was found that the bullet had pierced the stomach. The point of entry was in the anterior and of exit in That organ had to be lifted from its position and turned over to close the exit. All this was done before the first newspaper extra announcing the crime had left the press. It is a triumph of American surgery of which the pro- fession may be proud. Not a single unfavorable symptom has followed the operation, and surgery stands vindicated as a benign art. It is not a figment of the irnggination tLat hun- dreds of sufferers may in the future be relieved and hundreds of lives may be saved by this great revela- tion of what the surgeon can do. As a patient, the victim of a crime and the object of an ordeal on the operating table, the President has rendered to humanity a service no less distin- guished than many is his official career. From the first he has said, “I will get well.” When his hand was withdrawn from his clothing red with blood from the breast wound there was no relaxation of cour- age, no moment of fear or weakness. Optimism, hope and the determination to live are great elements in the cure of the stricken. They are all there is of suggestive therapeutics, and he has inspired them in many a weak and suffering brother man. i P — § A New York Julge has decided that belief in Christian Science is not an evidence of insanity. He might have added to the value of his decision by ven- turing an opinion on just what the cult is; most of u1s think we know what it is not. Senator Aldrich doubtless hoped to be remembered hereafter as a statesman, but it -is now likely he will be known to fame chiefly as the father-in-law of a Rockefelles. . - - o Lot PILOT LOUIS MEYER TRAINS .. E3 < APTAIN LOUIS MEYER, the Adonis of the pilot service, is a firm believer in physical culture. A few months ago he deemed a cruise oufside the Heads all that Wwas necessary to keep 2 man healthy and strong, but since he tralned with Cham- plon Jim Jeffries a® Harbin Springs he has come to the conclusion that long walks in the morning, punching the bag and sparring, coupled with a light diet, Is calculated to add vears to a sailor man’s life. Captain Meyer was on the sick list and the doctors ordered him to take a change of air. He hied himself to Harbin Springs and there met the champion pugilist of the world. Captain Meyer thinks he knows a thing or two about boxing him- self, and as he stands 6 reet 2 inches in his stockings he was filled with the idea that with a little training he could hold his 'WITH JEFFRIES AT LoulE T TRIED Te R THE'BAG" ouT " THE SPRINGS « ‘Now Hsten to me, Cap. . Understand theéroughly, your stomach is not thirsty It is the back of your throat and the palate. Now the way to drink is this.’ and he took a gnouthful of his whisky and soda and after gargling his throat with it spat it out. After three mouthfuls t} whisky and water was all gone—not down Jeff’'s throat, but into the cuspidor. ‘My thirst is gone,” said he. ‘now you try it." I hated like the dickens to spoil good liguor, but I did and found that the cham- o LIKE A PIECE OF BAD Mon (=0 saidD ALL THE oews.) fi 1 TMADE JEFF Look 4 “Looie. AL3o DID A Fe~v sTOU MNMoT o THE SILL WWHILE CHASING OUVER THE "KNoBs“~w7ITH N JEFF « v i | | i | £l - own with Jim for a few minutes. The re- mainder of the story is Captain Meyer's. “When I reached Harbin Springs,” said he, “T was all out of condition. My girth as more than it should be and my wind was not what it was (wenty years ago. | When I met Jeff we had a chat and he advised me to train with him. I said it was a go, but many a time I wished I | hadn’t.~ We weke out at 6 a. m. and off over the hills for a six-mile walk. I ran. Couldn’t keep up, you know. Then we got back and had a rub down. After a rest we sat down to a measly breakfast of hard boiled eggs and dry toast—cold tea to drink and no etceteras. I kicked, but Jeff laughed and said it was good for me. “After breakfast we took a stroll and after that we went in for punching the bag. ‘Work hard, Cap,’ he kept dinging into me. ‘Mind, you've got to reduce,” and T'l be hanged if I don't think I lost five pounds the first day. After punching the bag I thought I was entitled to a drink and told Jim so. ‘Why, of course,’ said @i .. N PLEADS IN' BE DITOR OF THE CALL: HALF OF TH WHO ARE ENGAGED IN THE SEAFARING LIFE I read with L3 * « THE FETTALE "BUNCH AT THE SPRINGS "LAMPED'] AT 1OUIE MEYERS GENEROUS FoRMT - -~ = AN OLD SALT TEACHES THE CHAMPION A FEW FANCY’ STEPS. * * he, ‘take one—take anything you like,’ and I ordered a nice, long Scotch highball. I was ready for it and could have got rid of it at one swallow, but Jim after me again and this is what he sa % I 2 e 2 e OSE SCAND indignation the INAVIAN * pion was right. ‘Take your drinks in that way,” saild he in conclusion, ‘and your walst measurement will come down four inches in a month.’ ‘“Well, after our midday rest and not a sign of anvthing to eat, we tackled the punching bag and the skipping rope and Jjust when I was nearly starved to death dinner was announced. Roast beef, dry toast, cold tea and a mite of cheese was all we had. There was not a sign of a vegetable and I feit sore. ‘Got to get down to weight, you know,” was ali Jim said. He was fifteen pounds heavier than what he considers just right and I—well, I don’t know where I came off. Anyhow, before I left Harbin Springs I was twenty pounds lighter and my waist was as dainty as that of a miss. “‘One day toward the end of my visit the champion and I put on the gloves. I wag feeling good and gave him some pretty hot ones. All of a sudden I got one in the solar plexus and another on the jaw that made me see more stars than I ever saw during all the years I have been [)' sea. When I came to Jim w over me and said severely, r never do, Captain Meyer. You must keep on training for another six months. W two gentle little taps like that wouldn't make Ruhlin wink the other eye.’ “I never said a word, but packed up my trunk and ecame home. [I've still got two beautiful blue eyes as mementoes of that occasion and all I'v got to y is, help Ruhlin if he ever rums into anything harder than one of those ‘gentle little taps.’ Goc S down here, have their own homes and contribute to the welfare E suits | ment have They b libel third N E is at D is at tered Scandinavians, are indifferent to the prosperity of the port of San Francisco. the reading of the utterances which the editorial contained, but the facts are not so. vears I have learned to know our people here and their pur- that very few will take ships for Europe, but would rather stay on the coast, where, consequently, their earnings in most cases will be distributed, especially during winter, in payment for | lodgings, clothes, ete® which is for the good of our coast cities. The fact is that we find among the names of officers and masters of ships belonging to this port, as well as to others on this coast, a great many of our Scandinavian sailors who have toiled henorably on merchant ships as well as in the Govern- ensation and give :::ég ihe California exhibit at Hamburg, Atlanta and Paris, | @i ¥ PERSONAL MENTION. Jackson Hatcn of San Jose i3 registered at the Palace. V. S. McClatehy of Sacramento Is at the California. 0. F. Atwood, a Garrison Turner of Modesto is regis- Colonel P. B. Fairbanks of Petaluma Is Occidental on their honeymoon. Epes Randolph, the Los Angeles rail- road man, is a guest at the Palace. statement made in the editorial columns of the San Francisco Call of to-day, under the heading, “A Wrong t Americans,” to the effect that our San Francisco sailors, the majority of whom are, as is well known, Such an opinion may have naturally followed As a citizen of San Francisco for fifteen in life. By fair inquiry among the sailors we will find service. They have gained confidence and ability and sought higher knowledge through navigation schools. have won the confidence of ship owners and to-day pos- sess honorable places in the latter’s service. Many have settled of our weil-liked city of San Franeisco. Only last year the re- port of one of our navigation schocls in San Francisco showed that about 75 per cent of those officers who passed the school with honorable examinations were Scandinavians, who will fill the vacant places on ships here when the time comes. Every one who knows about the shipping of this port kdows this to be the fact. Then let me, in_behalf of our Seandinavian sailors and ships’ officers on this coast, correct the Impres sion that the reading of the article 'mentioned may have givem your readers. It would not be homest and fair to put discredit upon these hard-working sailors, swith as might be done the by those umacquainted 't upon reading the editorial mentioned. And may we not judge too severely those who walked out Who knows how many among them thi gladly rectify lay at the order of their leaders? day would the wrong which hds been dome if it in their power? Hoping these few lines will find a place in your honorabie paper, yours for the good of our sailors, San” Francisco, Sept. 11, 1901 G. ¥! wikstrom. WORST ENEMY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA AND ESPECIALLY OF THE CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO DITOR OF THE CALL: The Examiner is certainly the I worst enemy of the State of California and especially of San Francisco. This discarded mistress of the rail- road for years has sought to avenge itself on all our interests, including alike capital and workmen. It pub- ; lished a mass of lies about the bubonic plague to deter money, | skill and muscle from enlarging our population and developing | our resources. It is now engaged in the congenial effort tnl our merchants and to precipitate riots. It required little | intelligence to discern, and it has since been proved, that its | pretended report of remarks to police officers by the Chief of Police was a naked distortion and fabrication. In 1856 the San Francisco Herald was reduced-to less than a of its original size in one day for an attack upon busi- ness men, merchants and laborers who comprised the Vigilance Committee of that year. I am not considering the right or the REPLY TO THREATS wrong of the proceeding, but recall the fact. In 1865 the Ex- aminer itself, then under the name of the Demoecratic Press. was temporarily destroyed by a mob, and afterward, for the violent and illegal acts of municipality $10,000 in damages. the rioters, recovered from the As its existing proprietor— charged to the brim with malignity because he has been long since ostracized socially, and by his anarchistic appeals has alienated our largest and soundest interests—has some rich mines behind him, it is not probable that the lesson of 1856 will be successfully repeated, but it has frequently happened tha: the originator of a petard.” At all events it is tumult has been “hoist with his own gratifying to know that the Examiner is understood and repudiated by respectable citizens of all elasses and by the decent press of the State. ity, but it has no influence upon public It may produce brutal- opinion. San Francisco, Sept. 10, 1901. CIVIS. s, ;. ool oo et S OF ATTACK BY THE YELLOW PRESS UPON THE CHARACTERS OF MEN IN OPPOSITION DITOR THE CALL: The State Board of Trade has for | many years promoted the commerce and production O(i California and is supported by contributions from the | business men of this city, boards of supervisors and the | transportation companies. Its directors serve without | much of their time to its work. It/ at the Occidental; bride. Palace. contractor of Stockton, | © ¢ the Grand. i geles, is among the reccrt arrivals at the J. M. Blodgett, a physician of Lodi, Palace. the Erand. J. D. Schuyler, a prominent attorney | at the Grand. Palace. days at the Russ. and i sou now making the exhibit of the State’s products and ré - ces at Buffalo. As it is trying to benefit the State and the people, what is more natural than it should be lied about b Hearst’s paper? upon the character of others, if fed to a dog would kill it. His practice is to make or threaten attacks while his own private character JOHN P. IRISH. San Francisco, Sept. 11, 191, L. A. Spitzer, Assessor of San Jose, is among the recent arrivals at the Grand. A. Y. Comstock, a capitalist York, is among the recent arrivals at the W. C. Stimson, a capitalist of LosAn- man of Benicla, Is registered for a few | business houses and John A. Mclntire, a wealthy mine-own- | S0MEry street. Telephone 3 R A 5 2 o accompanied by his | rived in this eity yesterday morning in a private car. The Soefal Club is an organ- ization composed of wealthy residents of Harrisburg, who every year make a trip to some part of the United States. This time nineteen members of the assoctation have joined the excursion and they pro- Pose having a good time and visiting a the points-of interest in the State before returning. of New ————— The Board of Public Works yesterday and politician of Los Angales, is at the | 2PPointed John Hannan to be timekeeper in the | In Bureau of Streets, at a salary of | 375 per month. Hannan was selected from Charles G. Lamberson, an attorney of | the civil serviece let. a guest at the Lick. Visalla, is registered for a short stay at —_—— J. T. Cameron, a mining man of New- | the Lick. | Cholce candtes, Townsend's, Palace Hotei® man, is a guest at the Lick. T. J. Field, the Monterey banker and ENEOS o J. B. Marsden, a Chicago business man, | capitalist, is at the Palace, accompanied | cg1, glace fruit 50¢ per Ib at Townsend's.* is a guest at the Occidental. by his wife. | Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Meagher are at the| Dr. A. C. Hansen, a prominent medical | Special information supplied dally to public men by the | Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's). 510 Mont- ain 1042 ® United States Marshal M. H. MecCord of Phoenix, ATz, is a guest at the Lick. Dr. F. E. Raynes, a prominent medical man of Angels Camp, is a guest at the Grand. 1 Dr. M. V. Stone, United States Navy, Is er of Sacramento, is a guest at the Lick, where he arrived yesterday. 8. T. Clover, general manager of the! Los Angeles Express, is one of the ar- rivals of yesterday at the Falace. ‘The Social Club of Harrisburg, Pa., ar- ———— It was a Boston damsel who referred to, a bowlegged man as a parenthetical destrian. w\ —_——— Stops Diarrhoes and Stomach Crampa. Dr. Siegert’s Genuire Imported Angostura Bitters.s

Other pages from this issue: