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NEW YORK PRESS FLAGELLATES HEARST FOR INCITING MEN T0 MURDER ¥ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1901 JOURNALISTIC NEW YORK HOLDS THE YELLOW PRESS RESPONSIBLE FOR ANARCHY Hearst Excoriated by Editors, Who Denounce in No Sparing Terms t he Evil He and His Papers Have Wrought in United States. Sentiment of the Entire C ountry Applauds the Stand That Has Been Taken by the Men Who Are Condemning Anarchistic Writers. EW YORK, Sept. 17.—Since the la- mentable occurrence in Buffalo, which resulted in depriving the American nation of & beloved and respected chief, the news- papers, from one end of the country to the other, have been filled with editorials condemnatory of the cowardly deed and censuring with- out mercy the sensational and treason- able journalism which, working on the minds of murderous fanatics, bas at last accomplished something so horrible and infamous that the minds of men are stag- gered at its contemplation. All of these cditorials are doing their part toward arousing a pubiic sentiment which will eventually resuit in a long-de- sired and much-deeded reform. The in- dignation which they have aroused- will not rest until Hearst, Most, Emma Gold- | man and the lesser viliains of their sect &re rendered harmless. All classes are now uniting in a common cause and the sentiment of the entire United States is crystallized in the following utterances of the New York Press which were written while the President was hovering between life and death William R. Hearst, the editor of the New York Journal, attempts to repudiate Czolgosz, his partner in the assassination of the President of the United States, by abandoning him and calling for ven- geance on him. As tokens unmistakable and proof absolute of that partnership we submit the subjoined articles of previous confession by William R. Hearst in his Evening Journal of April 30, 1901: We learn that at Buenos Ayres, far away, and at Paterson, near homé, and elsewhere on the earth’s surface solemn-faced anarchists are at work plotting death to Kings and Em- erors. These anarchists are very much in earnest. It seems sad that cven anarchists should waste their time so patheti- cally. We shall tell them that King-kill- ing is entirely out of date. A King samounts to mothing any more. He is small fish compared to many oth- | ers. The real King to-day is the industrial King. If a man in search of big zame walked into a zoological garden it would be foolish of him to spend his time trying to kill a mouse, elephants, tigers and lions around. It is equally foolish for an an- archist to aim his blood and thunder at the old-fashioned little Kings and Emperors and Presidents— when the really big men—the real kings—are so plentiful and so near 2t home. In thi nation ali action of anarchy and assassi- American civilization and the jury before whom jam R. Hearst and his hal is the people of the Gentlemen of the jury, we . William R. Hearst on, Czolgosz; pur- people and arraign- n American law he indicted, turn informer; cted he judgment co y the ot A gentlemen of the jury, McKinley's wise pro- »f the President iould_be, without Buffalo was an = mational speech, the Declaration of s that every propertics sions, great FTER the assassina- Look at the writhing wretch who is the breeder of anarchism! A coward as well assassin! After he has directed the yw see him squirm under the evenging arm! Watch him grovel: hear him whine; behold the man: Faugh! To the thousands of letters which are coming to us from our readers and to the | hundreds of editorials which are arriving from our contemporaries throughout the country, we repeat again that the crimes of anarchy and yellow journalism are not to be suppressed by Congress. Banish- ment, deportation and exile of the Czol- goszes, the Goldmans and the Hearsts will not blunt their assassins’ tools one-hun- dredth part so surely and quickly as the trip hammer of American sentiment. Statutes and police regulations will not shackle their wrists against crime and murder so securely as will the bonds of American intolerance of un-American epirit We need pass no laws to send the apos- with I tried and | e for mercy from | erican citizenship. | tles and the disciples of anarchism to penal colonies. We need not march the abettors and the partakers of assassina- tlon down the gangplank of prison ships between the files of military guards. There is no need of that. Let the American peo- ple extinguish by their own determination the notoriety of the anarchists and yellow iournals, and the deed of suppression is one. The Hearsts and th& Goldmans, no less than the Czolgoszes, will sink into an im- potent obscurity if the American people refuse to nourish them with the devil's milk on which they sustain themselves— notoriety. Not the written laws of Con- gress, but the unwritten' laws of the American spirit will suppress them. Not | the detective work of a secret service, but the manhood work of the American peo- ple. Not the police cell, but the pit of scorn. Give them all negligence and ob- (lx\o'i:n. and we shall give them all extinc- A few days will find the President fully con- valescent, and in a month from now, unless complications unforeseen should arise, Mr. Mc- Kinley will have resumed the administration of the affairs of the Government.—The New ? Will you haye resumed your vilification of the President? Will you | have resumed your likening of him to the despots of history who have deserved and | suffered regicide? Will you have resumed your harangues that “McKinley and his Wall-street Cabinet are ready to surren- der every particle of national dignity and | honor”’; that “‘the President of the United States is commander in chief of the army | and navy of the United States; the trusts control the present commander in chief of the army and navy of the United States”; that “in a not remote winter the Ameri- | can peasant will walk by a window of the White House begging for bread,” and “a white, fat hand will toss its answer out of the window, ‘A trust can do no wrong’ ”’? Will you have resumed your predictions that “there will be an awtul, bloody quarrel between the commander in | chief and the peasant?” Will you have | resumed your description of him as— | “McKinley—bar one girthy Prince- ton person (Cleveland), who came to te no more, no less, than a living, | breathing crime in breeches — is, | therefore, the most despised and hated creature in the hemisphere; his | name is hooted; his figure burned in | efigy”’? | Will you have resumed your flaming pictures of what you call the President’s crimes? Will you have resumed your narrations of murders and your examples of assassinations, which, you assure your pupils, have wrought “benefits” to hu- manity and liberty? Will you have re- | sumed your lashing to homicidal fury of | the weak-minded, the envicus, the discon- tented and the blood-lusting? Will you have resumed your preaching of the gos- pel of anarchism, crime and assassina- tion? President McKinley (God grant the prayer of the American nation!) will re- sume the administration of the affairs of this Government. But YOU? What will YOU resume? TROPS AT THE PRESIDI Continued From Page Two. {in the various military posts and naval | depots. At noon twenty-one minute guns will be fired at the posts. | CITY WILL ADD TRIBUTE OF SORROW AND GRIEF | Plans Are Perfectedv{—or Public Gera’ | monijes to Be Held at the Mechanics’ Pavilion. Crape lined and somber with its black bunting and half-masted flags, San Fran- cisco 1% preparing for a solemn memorial service in honor of President Willlam Mc- | Kinley. Slow to begin the draping of | their buildings, the people of this city are | now using nail and hammer, and on every | side the sable decorations spring up in | spectral profusion. So far the grief for the nation’s loss { has been of a private nature. To-morroy ! San Francisco will mourn publicly. Be- | sides the special services to be held in church, lodge room and clubs, the city, represented by ministers and eulogists, will pay tender tribute to the memory of No Wrong”: wine. of ages. It must be so. > for me. I am going to cat. Trust. by a window of the White Flouse. | HINTS AT REVOLUTION WHILE PRESIDENT DIES THE following editorial was run in the New York Journal on September 53, while the suffer- ing President was breathing his last. It appeared under the heading of “The Trust Can Do “Fat city men, reading this m thewr big armchairs, will grimace and say ‘Pooh I’ throwing this paper on the floor. It was done by fat city men in France only five years before the head of stolid Louss fell leaden to the ground amidst the demomiac shouts of the French peasantry. “‘But there he is eating,’ said the peasant, ‘and here I am starving. No more philosophy “In a few years all the peasants in France were eating—but the King was dead. “«So when we hint that this republic is in danger now just remember what a short time in- tervenea between the King alve and drinking and the King dead and the peasants all eating. “It may be near, it may be far, but in a not remote winter, the Americanspeasant will walk It will have been some hard winter—a winter with the Coal Trust, a winter with the Gas Trust, a winter with the Beef Trust, a winter with the Clothing “A white, fat hand will toss 1ts answer out the wmndow: « A trus¢ can do no wrong.’ f “Then the commander-in-chief of the army and navy will 1ssue p-oclamations as to the pro- tection of property, and other proclamations; he w:ll call out his army and navy, and there will be an awful, bloody quarrel between the commander-i-chief and the peasant.” = “They had been telling the workers in the field and factories, year in and year out, that opportunity was to the man with mind and will to seize it; that men, by birth and fortune, always would be unequal; that some must be poor and some must be rich, just as nature had built the moun- tain peak and the lowly hillock. i “The peasant believed it until he walked, his stomach linings grinding against each other like millstones, by the window of the King and saw him wash down the rich, slow bolus with golden ‘Bread!’ cried the man at the window. “The King’s man lifted the sash and tossed out a bright riband, saying: “‘A present from the King! “The peasant snatched the thing up. A legend was embossed in gold, saying: ““The King can do no wrong.’ “So priest and philosopher had written it always. It had been wrought out of the wisdom \ - 1= | the man who has won a lasting place in the hearts of all. That_the Pavilion will be crowded is assured. Sacred music with voice and band and a eulogy pronounced by General | Barnes will be the general programme. Much is expected from the effort of Gen- eral Barnes, whose eloquence is of such 2 moving quality as to be thoroughly at- tuned to eulogistic work. More than that, General Barnes and McKinley struck up a deep friendship during the President’s visit to this city. It is well known that the President held General Barnes in great esteem, and there was a warm re- Turn of affection on the latter’s part. The eulogy pronounced _to-morrow afternoon in the Mechanics’ Pavilion will have the ring of truth. A meeting of the executive committee of the citizens’ committee appointed by the memorial services in honor of Presi- dent McKinley was held yesterday morn- ing in the Mayor’s office. Rev. S. D. Hu sinpiller was selected to deliver the in- vocation and the following partial pro- gramme of exercises was adopted: Overture, “Melpomene” (Chadwick); open- James D. Phelan; funeral march, (Beethoven), Chestra; _hymn. Nearer, My God, to Thee,” chorus and or- chestra; prayer, Rev. S. D. Hutsinpiller; chanting Lord's prayer, chorus; eulogium, Gen- eral W, H, L. Barnes; funeral march from ““Gotterdammerung’’ _ (Wagner), orchestra; tar Span- orchestra and benediction (minister not chosen) gled Banner' assemblage. The decoration committee made a report contemplating the transformation of Me- chanics’ Pavilion into a cathedral with a The last (Keyes), chorus, profusion of flowers and palms. words of the President, “Good is God's way. His will be done, worked out in flowers over the platform in the Pavilion. The rank and file of the army and navy will be represented on the stage, each carrying a furled flag. Thursday afternoon there will be auxil- iary services in Golden Gate Park, con- sisting of solemn musiec. The Park Com- missioners have been to au- requested thorize the same. ~ The chorus of one thousand voices to sing at the Pavilion will be under the direction of J. W. McKenzie and the or- chestra will comprise seventy-five pieces, one-third of which will be brass. =~ Paul Steindorff, assisted by A. Rodeman, will lead the orchestra. Invitations will be limited to 2500 per- sons, including the Governor, judiciary, foreign representatives and consuls, who will appear in full uniform. The Uniform Veteran Guard of California, numbering fifty persons, have volunteered to act as ushers. W. Greer Harrison, chairman of the decoration committee, reported that the decorations for the Pavilion will cost $1500. A. A. Watkins, chairman of the committee on printing, was authorized to have 20,000 programmes printed. Any person desiring to send flowers to be used In decorating the Pavilion may do so up to 1 o’clock Thursday afternoon. Director McKenzle has issued the fol- lowing notice: Church singers, singing socletles and all available singers are earnestly requested to at- tend the rehearsal this. Wednesday, September 18, at 8 p. m., at Metropolitan Temple, Fifth and Market streets, which T. J. Kavanagh has kindly donated for the rehearsal, or communi- cate with the musical director ‘at 305 Larkin street. A memorial service as a tribute of rev- erence to the memory of President Me- Kinley will be held at the Bush-street synagogue to-morrow, at 7:30 p. m. The cervice will be conducted by Rabbi Isi- dore Myers, who will deliver an address, and by Cantor Salomon, assisted by an efficient choir. All are invited. Mayor Phelan to make arrangements for | MASONIC LODGES HOLD UNION MEMORIAL SERVICE Speeches Made by John P. Irish, Ser- ator Perkins and Superior Judge Melvin. OAKLAND, Sept. 17.—The Masonic lodges of Oakland held a union memorial service in honor of the' deceased Presi- dent to-night at Masonic Temple, George W. Dornin, Master of Live Oak Lodge No. 61, officiating, and being supported by John "A. Britton, Master of Oakland Lodge No. 188; John C. Foster, Master of Brooklyn Lodge No. 225, and Charles 1. Snook, Master, of Alcatraz Lodge No. 4. The singing was by a double juar- composed of Alfred Wilke, Ed Crandall, Harry Baker, Algernon Asp- land, Clement Rowlands, A. C. Read, George H. Carlton and Judge Henry A. Melvin. " The organ was presided over by H. O. Hunt. "After an invoeation by the RKev, William Kelly, pastor of the First English _ Lutheran' Church, Senator George C. Perkins was introduced and delivered a stirring speech. Colonel John P. Irish said: It is a wise and truthful saying that discon- tent is the cause of human progrees, but there is a noble discontent that leads a man who is not successtul to examine himself by intro- spection to see where he Is weak, and if he have the strength to make repairs he will go forward and there is no limit to the heights which he will reach. Then there is the igno- Dle discontent that looks outside, but is blind to its President of the United S vietim to the cultivation among the American people of that ignoble discontent. It i time that we insist upon the truth that this land to-day, as it always was, is the best land on earth for humaniiy that was ever known; where man has the best opportunity for life, happiness tet and prosperity. It is time that the pessimists, who from per- sonal malignity or from bad partisan zeal preach that this is a bad country, shall re- Ceive less attention and less toleration than they have been receiving. Those men shall be driven out who attack our Government. Let us insist that when our chief magistrate shall be shot down by an assassin whose aim fis nerved by American ingrates and malignant men they shall be driven out. And when foreign people come to our shores if they have no desire to make this nation their nation, let them be driven back where they were spawned to affiict their own land, but to let us alone. We welcome all men who come with good resolve and character. In that way the death of this great man may be a lesson, but let us never forget as we mourn his untimely death to execrate eternally the causes which led to the deep damnation of his taking off. Superior Judge Henry A. Melvin was introduced and said: The lesson of this dark tragedy is plain. Let us not only stamp our heels upon the vile monster of anarchy, but look higher and decry the actlon of those in high places who are as much_responsible for this cruel crime as the wretch is that fired the shot. Let us say to the depraved, vicious and vio- lent who would tarnish our good government, “No thoroughfare. None may enter here ex- cept those who are duly qualified.”” The meeting was closed with a benedic- tion by the Rev. J. T. Wills after the zudience had sung ‘“‘America.” ———— ARRANGE FOR MEMORIAL SERVICES AT UNIVERSITY BERKELEY, Sept. 17.—The people of this city will unite with the university in holding memorial services in honor of the late chief executive, Thursday morning, in Harmon Gymnasium. At these cere- A Woman’s Graiitude. 2o to inform of the d(:'mumcm 2316 R. with , Richmond Va., Oct. 17, $900, done me and is still wrote this letter because she felt it was her duty to write it. She wrote this letter she wanted suffering women o take WINECARDUI and find the same relief she found. The reputation of this pure Wine resis upon what 1,000,000 cured women like Mrs. Stutz say of it—1,000,000 American women who know the distress, agony, and anguish, humiliation and despair that female troubles bring to a modest woman. that this Cardui simple, bitter, vegetable wine, Thedford's Black-Draught, the pains, the For advios Departmen curse—this misfortune—may be banished forever by the use-of Wine of Cardui. Wi will regulate menstrual derangements just as surely as the terror e tell Itisa harmless under all circumstances, and ‘used in connection perfectly K to assimilate and digest its virtues, it will re; of «;uncy pleasanter, mufimnu:op easier and ick. Procure period of pre; 3 recovery qui a your druggist and take it in the privacy of your home. You cannot doubt this. A eI Ry — monies a common expression of sorrow will join all classes and they will pay to the dead in a manner as fitting as possible a tribute of their respect and honor and love. It was President Wheeler's wish that the townsfolk be with the university at the gathering and he has selected from the city’s clergy a number to speak and assist in the services. There will be no procession, but a general gathering in the gymnasfum. The services will commence at 10:30 o’clock. The speakers of the day will be Presi- dent Wheeler, who will also preside, and Rev. George B. Hatch, minister of the First Congregational Church. Rev. Father Michael O'Riordan, pastor of St. Joseph's Catholic Church; Rev. C. K. Jenness, pas- tor of the Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church, and Rev. George E. Swan, rector of St. Mark’s Episcopal Chureh, will par- ticipate in the services. In the afternoon public memorial services will be held at 2:30 o'clock in Shattuck Hall. The call for the servijes was issued to-night by the Town Trustees and the offer of Durant Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, to con- duct the memorial exercises was accepted. Definite arrangements for the services have not been made. The Town Trustees passed the following resolutions to-night: Whereas, Our nation has suffered an_irre- parable loss in the death of its beloved Presi- dent, Willilam McKinley; and Whereas, Every loyal 'citizen of this loved land has been horrified by the dastardly and cowardly erime that has sacrificed the life of our executive to the hatred of the opponents of law and government, and has brought grief and sorrow to the hearts of all true lovers of our republic; therefore, be it Resolved, By the Board of Trustees of the town of Berkeley that we deeply devlore tha great loss our country has sustained in the death gf him who has endeared himself to a loving fpeople, not alone by his wisdom and statesmanship, but also by the kindliness of his_disposition and his integrity and sterling worth as a man: and be it further Resolved, That in accordance with proclama- tions issued by the President of our natlon and Governor of our State, the citizens of the town of Berkeley be requested to suspend all business on Thursday, Sevtember 19, 1901, and that the day be devoted to general prayer and mourning: and be it further Resolved, That the entrance to the Town Hall be draped in mourning and the flag be placed at half-mast for a period of thirty days. The Berkeley School Directors met to- r\lli,'hl and passed the following resolu- tion: ‘Whereas, We are to-day a nation in mourn- ing for the death of our honored and well beloved President Willlam McKinley at the hands of a cowardly assassin. Resolved, That we, the members of the Board of Education, representing the people of the town of Berkeley and its public schools, and knowing the deep interest he had in the public schools and the love he held for the school children, feel in his death a personal loss and a personal grief. We extend to his wife and relatives cur heartfelt sympathy in this thelr hour of trou- ble and sorrow. We direct that on Thursday, September 19. the public schools of the town of Berkeley be closed in honor of the memory of the late President. —— ARRANGE FOR SPECIAL MEMORIAL SERVICES Prayers, Addresses and Sacred Music in Memory of the Nation’s De- parted Ruler. California Commmandery No. 1, K. T,, in obedience to orders issued by the Grand Commander of Knights Templar of Cali- fornia will hold memorial services at 0dd Fellows’ Hall on Thursday at 8 p. m. in commemoration of its distinguished brother, the late President, Sir William McKinley. A committee of arrangements was appointed last night. It is composed of the following: It is composed of the following: R. H. Lloyd, P. P. Flint, Charles W. Slack, R. P. Hurlbut, L. M. Hoeffler, John Ton- ningsen, W. H. L. Barnes, Charles E. Green, John D. Spreckels, J. S. Young, B. N. Rowley, Hon. James M. Troutt. J. P. Fraser, Thomas P. Riordan, Martin Jones, James 8. Lichfleld, William Mec- Donald, Asa R. Wells, E. F. Preston, G. M. Perine, 8. M. Shortridge, George W. Whitman, T. H. Browne, George W. Brown, Geprge F. Neal, W. H. 8. Titus, H. T. Graves, Thomas Morton, O. F. Westphal, G. H. Umbsen. All commanderies of Knights Templar of California are called upon to hold me- morial services on this occasion. On_Thursday morning at 10 o'clock at the Temple Emanu-El Dr. Voorsanger will direct a special service out of respect to the memory of President McKinley. At 11 o'clock to-morrow Dr. Rader, as- sisted by Dr. Jones of the Park Congre- gational Church and Dr. Day of the Oli- vet Congregational Church, will direct special McKinley services for his flock. To-morrow evening at 8 o'clock a joint memorial service will be held at the Simpson Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church by the Golden Gate Union of Christian Endeavorers and the San Fran- cisco Epworth League Alliance. Rev. Dr. Hutsinpiller and Rev. Dr. Adams will speak. clal sacred music will be a feature of the services. P ey TEAR DOWN A PICTURE OF PRESIDENT McKINLEY Judge Conlan Sentences Two Vandals to Six Months’ Imprisonment in the County Jail. Six drunken Mission hoodlums disgraced themselves and the community by an act CONTINUED ON PAGE NINE. YELLOW PRESS IS BANISHED BY DIRECTORS —_——— Three Leading Clubs Dis- pense With the Examiner. ——— Round Robin in Pacific Union for Hearst's Resignation. Yesterday three well known clubs of the city—the Cosmos, San Francisco and Mer- chants—resolved to cease subscribing for the Examiner. In each club action was officially taken by the board of directors. At the Union League the directors dis- cussed the proposition to exclude the pa- per, and decided to ascertain fully the sentiment of the ciub membership before adopting a resolution to banish the paper from the premises. In other clubs of the city the feeing against the yellow journal is intense. Members insist that the direc- tors shall express the club sentiment by dropping the paper. In advocating this line of action members assert that they have excluded the offensive publication from their homes and places of business and therefore have a right to demand that the paper shall not be brought into clubs to which they belong. It is acknowledged that this demand is un- usual and extreme, but they hold that they cannot tolerate the presence of the paper without sacrificing a sense of self- respect. In the Pacific Union Club a petition to the board of directors demanding that | Hearst shall resign or be expelled is ex- tensively signed. The members also de- mand that the Examiner shall be dropped from the club’s newspaper list. At the next meeting of the board ‘the petition will be considered. 3 The feeling against the anarchistic Ex- aminer is not confined to the social clubs. In restaurants, hotels, on steamboats, in railway trains and in barber shops the patrons insist that the paper shall not be seen. Former subscribers who have given | orders that the paper shall no longer be | served to them complain that their orders | to “stop” have received no attention. Carriers, doubtless acting under instruc- tions from the management, serve the paper as usual. By common impulse, American citizens seem to have reached a determination to | teach a lasting lesson to the promoters | of debased journalism. In the East the New York Journal is the object of popu- lar resentment. In the Middle est Hearst's Chicago_American is utterly de- spised. In San Francisco the Examiner, the oldest and worst of the Hearst publi- cations, is held :n universal contempt. The notion that business rivalry has anything to do with the popular crusade against the anarchistic yellow press is the rank- est nonsense. Lf every club in the United States tabooed the Hearst publications the circufation of other papers would not be advanced by reason of the exclusion. In _California the people have simply made up their minds that Hearst journal- ism is a blight on the State. — e Stanford Parlor Adjourns. Stanford Parlor No. 76, Native Sons of the Golden West, at its meeting last night | DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once eve’rlyhthree minutes. e kidneys are your el blood purifiers, they fil- ). ter out the waste or "‘t impurities in the blood. L LA If they aresick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, achesandrheu- matism come from ex- cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unst: heart beats, and makes one feel as thoug] they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney- poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be conslgcred that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin- ning in kidney trouble. 1f you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized. It stands the highest for its ‘wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty- & cent and one-dollar siz- es. You may have a sample bottle by mail Home of SwampRoot. free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. ol 5 ) i unanimously and by a rising vote passed the followins resolutions: ‘Whereas, Willlam McKinley, President of the TUnited States, has fallen beneath the hand of a contemptible assassin, and in the prime of his exemplary life and proud achievements has been summoned by death beyond the cares and responsibilities of our earth and life; and Whereas, he has In all things in his private and public life pre-eminently endeared himself to all of the American people, and notably to the people of the loyal State of California, and obtained in their hearts a position of profound honor, respect and love. Now, therefore, be Resolved, That out of respect to the mems of our late beloved President Stanford Parlor No, 76, N. S. G. W., adjourn this its regular meeting of Tuesday, September 17, 1901 RUCE CORNWALL, President. FRED H. J G. Recording Secretary. Butchers Take Action. At the meeting of the Butchers’ Beard of Trade yesterday the following resolu- tions were adopted: ‘Whereas, Our beloved President, having suc- cumbed to the wound inflicted by a cowardly assassin, therefore be it Resolved. By the members of the Butchers’ Board of Trade of San Francisco and Alameda counties assembled, that we express our heart- felt and unqualified grief at the untimely and sudden death of our President, who, through his able statesmanship and moral ' domestic , “endeared himself to all law-ablding citi- Resolved, That we, feeling the great calam- ity which has befallen the people of our great republic, and sorrowing with our fellow citi- zens, tender our heartfelt condolence to the mnoble and devoted wife of our beloved and lamented President, Willlam McKinley: be it further Resolved, That all members of the Butchers' Board of Trade close their shops and markets during the entire day of the funeral out of re- and f-spect to the memory. of our beloved President. — ree— Be Hypercritical In looking over our stock of framed pic- tures, for among all the pretty things we have in Old Dutch, Flemish and Gold Frames there is nothing we are afraid to submit to your good taste. If you love the arts it will please you to see them. If you need the pictures it will not incon- Venience you o get them, for our prices are unusually reasonable. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. ® Take our cloth samples home, show them, examine them, test them, compare them, do anything to test their quality. Such a demon- stration will prove that t and of good texture. hs goods are all wool We buy the cloth only from first-class mills and buy it directly at close figures. It is because we care in buying our cloth such a strong guarantee. exercise such extreme that we are able to give Furthermore, we give you gcod, . generous samples so that you can see what the-pat- tern is. We are always pleased to supply any in- terested person with all the samples he wants. You must feel free to ask even though you have not made up your mind to purchase. The prices range from the lowest at which it is cafe to buy up to as much as most men care to pay. Miy we show you some samples of made-to-order suits at $10.00 We sell on the money=back plan. Suits for out-of-town customers satisfactorily made through our self-measuring system. Write for samples. SNWOODs (D 718 Market Cor. Powell Street and & Eddy Sts.