The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 16, 1902, Page 25

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THE SAN ¢CHARLES McCLATCHY PAYS HIS RESPECTS TO REV. P. C. YORKE Sensational Controversy Which Is Exciting Political and Clerical Circles. / yrice in & while one can serve a friend | .;._, Sacramento, th inst., un- s of Rev- Likewise Some of chy wrote as fol- | icles now being con- r two men whose prom- ence California makes the battl wh ach has chosen the other his of deep interest, not © al circles, but to t Tk Peter C Clatchy, the > by Rev. Peter C. the offense shall not olumns. The object sblication was to on who still s only argu- to criticize of supreme magisterial, fatherly of of s a shower a torrent hough extended, re- doubts his good sak of Christ T, Gage 18 a » that might be urbary Coaster, but cer- g the h of shame @ man who professes to and ga for Henry langua be riest of ( Peter C, ¥ has grown so used to rke forging the euthority of the Pope and the « ch to deeds that give the lle to the gentle mdvice of the one and are a dis- Erace 1o the other that he cannot restrain his passions w any ono has the temer- ity 10 stan he path of this black guard Bedo { the priesthood, this wandering Arab in holy orders, who dis- torts and garbles encyclical letters to sult his own political purposes, und who pro- fessos 10 Ik ox-cathedra for Leo XIII after Archbishop Riordan has stripped him of the authority even of chancellor of the dlocese. He has grown wo used to baving people humbly submit as he rides rough-shod over their liberties, not only of mpeech but of thought as well, that he splashes mud like a crazy bull whenever e GRA PE;NUTB. TOOK THE HINT. Friend Told Him to Change His Food and win a life-long obligation by a littie food advice thankful I was to a friend for his advice when he told me about Grape-Nuts | Breakfast Food at the time I was suffer- fng. My stomach trouble originally came from neglect of colds which caused cotarrh of the stomach, then followed mwisery from dyspepsia, headache, loss of vitality and flesh. Lest August a friend in discussihg my health sald if I would change my food end take Grape-Nuts instead of any other food or medicine for one week he would guarantee that I would be greatly improved and feel like a new man. *“He was so0 positive that I concluded to try it and, as I sald, I am exceedingly thankful to him. In a week's time I lost the heavy, dead feeling in my head, naus sea had ceased and the action of my gen- eral system had greatly improved. “I have stuck fast to Grape-Nuts. Now I weigh nine pounds more and am stead- ily improving. Grape-Nuts has a most exhilarating effect on the system' and makes one feel bright and alive, as though they were well nourished as a healthy man should be. “The price of Grape-Nuts is within reach of all, but I consider it worth its weight in gold.” John Haywood, 3931 Aspen street, Philadelphia, Pa. | controversy in enriched by a | This is worth while. “Very | Ny -3 SACRAMENTO EDITOR CRITICISM OF REV. P. C HAS CREATED A SENSATION. WHOSE | he is opposed in the slightest. It is high | time he should learn that a blackguard |in the pulpit, a Simon Legree of the | cloth, is entitled to even less respect than a blackguard of the slums. A few salu- | 1tary lessons in this line delivered by men who have nothing but contempt for min- isters who respect neither themselves nor their calling might have a reducing ef- |fect on a head that imagines itself a Savonarola of the West. “As to the muck.Ossa-on-Pelion piled by Yorke on the devoted head of the writer, it is not worth noticing. In the { eves of all decent and self-respecting men such a weapon is a boomerang that in- jures the thrower far more than the tar- | get. The undersigned will not lower him- | self to the level of Peter C. Yorke. He { could not if he would, and he would not if he could. “Upon pnly one personal point of attack | in the vulgar onslaught has he a word to | say: He has never at any time nor under {any circumstances insulted any religion or any minister thereof. He has treated | every religion with courtesy and respect. And that is far more than Peter C. Yorke can say for himse The latter has never publicly uttered one decent word of any religion save his own or of any minister not a professor of the Catholic creed. On the contrary, his language concerning any other faith or any minister denying alle- glance to the Pope has been such as would not be tolerated in any decent home. When he was editor of the Monitor the phrases that paper applied to the ¢ gymen of all religions save the Catholic were vulgarly offensive, They were g0 en- tirely uncalled for, so obnoxious, in fact, that scores of the best Catholics in this and In other cities refused to subscribe to the Monitor because of Yorke's scurrilous blackguardism. “Note the difference! Then he conducted the Monitor in his usual nasty style. Now | kis name 1s never permitted to be men- tioned In its columns. | *““The trouble with Yorke is that he con | founds himself as a priest with the creed | he disgraces. He cannot understand that his religion is insulted by his acts ax its | minister, and not by the criticlsm of those | mets by & man who respects that religl | none the less because he despises Peter C. | Yorke all the more,"” “Although the writer will not say aught further for himself, he will not stand |1dly by and lsten to insults thrown by this priest upon James H. Barry, “Barry is editor of the Ban Franclsco Btar, as brave and knightly a gentleman as ever kept himself poor while doing deeds of mercy and generoxity to others. He is an Episcopajian. But long o Feter C. Yorke uttered one syllable in Ban Franclsco aguinst the Infamous A P. A, organization Jim Barry denour it In his usual fearless style—the ‘only journalist In Ban Francisco who dared beard that un-American soclety in fte lalr. And to-day the Catholics of San Francisco owe Barry a debt of gratitude a dozen times over that which they owe or ever will owe Peter C. Yorke—a man who has used them and Is trying again to use them as political puppets in his hands to serve his own ends. “How has the Catholic debt to Barry | been pald? | “When Barry was a candidate to Con- gress—a position he neither sought nor particularly cared for—Peter C. Yorke ls- | sued circulars which were distributed |trom Catholic house to Catholic house, the object being to prevall upon the members | of that creed in Barry's district to vote against him. Not only that, but he or- #anized Catholic women whom he could control into proselyting bands against Barry and in the interest of Julius Kahn, a man who was never known to utter one word against the A. P. A, or any other organization—no matter how infamous— *hat carried a vote. “And why? “Because James H. Barry would not at the ‘behest of this politician-priest knife James G. Maguire, a life-long personal friend to Barry and head of the ticket. ““And what was Yorke's enmity to Ma- guire? “Because Maguire would not throw Dr. Clinton from his advisory board when ke demanded it. “And what was the matter with Dr. Clinton—by the way a better Catholic than Yorke, even if he has not taken boly orders? ‘ “His offense was that when Rev. Peter C. Yorke virtually ordered him—as a wember of the Board of Supervisors of San Francisco—to vote against an appro- priation for the Seamen’s Home that had - been allowed for a score of years, Dr. Clirton absolutely refused. “And Rev. Yorke's objection was that Protestantism was in charge of the Sea- men's Home! “It was at this time particularly that Rev. Yorke demonstrated his ‘respect for religion’ by articles against the Protestant clergy as vulgarly blackguardly as any- thing that#as ever appeared in print in this State. nd how did Peter C. Yorke vent his | <pleen upon James G. Maguire? } “He waited until a few days before elec- tion and used the occasion of a charity cntertainment for Father King's churci in Oakland to deliver a political speec’ appealing to Catholics throughout Cali fornia to support Henry knife James G. Maguire. No more con- temptible act was ever committed by any man in this State. It was an insult to the good priest who had asked Father Yorke to speak in the name of charity—a good I henorable man, “any gentleman, would tuke advantage of such an occasion to deliver a blackguardly political harangue against a man whom Peter C. Yorke couid rot dominate. It was an insult to every parishioner in that parish. “And the insult was premeditated and carefully planned on the part of Rev. Pe- ter C. Yorke and those in whose interest he was working. before that attack on Maguire | was delivered 250,000 coples of it had been | printed and stacked up, ready to be ; 8 before father Yorke [ a for Henry T. Gage, when he | sked to speak in Christ's name for ‘s poor, 1ts and employes |'of the Republ! Central Commit- tec had address: ared, so that that pre abusive talk could be scattered broadcast among the Catholics of California imme- ately after its delivery. A contempt for Peter C. almost argues a respect for religion, Yorke : “As with religion, so with the cause o abor. _““Who will not knuckle down to Peter C. Yorke is fn his eyes all that is vilely fr- religious. And headed or unscrupulou triend of labor is th that refuses to tell labor it is right when it is eminently wrong; when it is com-~ mitting an Injustice “The labhoring cl had a stancher f leaders. The reai man or the journal es of this State never end than the Bee has been through father and through sous. It has fought their battles for forty-five vears unceasing 2 was the ploneer of many laws In their interests, to any of which the workingmen owe far more than they do to Rev. Peter C. Yorke. lessly un-American and as anarchistic as any promulgated during the Reign of Terror. “‘Peter C. Yorke has done so much for labor! ““What has he ever done? “Let any man point to a single deed from this priest that in any way has en- hanced the cause of labor or has benefited the workingman, *“In San Francisco, he egged the strikers most to the point of riot.and murder; he kept fanning the strike when he knew it was lost; he twisted and distorted docu- on & acts of cowar all employer Iy cruel in this St he blackguarded te in the language ————————————————————— ADVERTISEMENTS. "ABOUT CATARRH GURES. The Reason Why Intalers and Local Applications Are Useless. For many be w local di local remedies, sprays and vears catarrh was considered to e and was treated entively by salves, m inhalers, and nearly gave & temporary relfef, but a gen nent cure was very ra It s true the most annoying symptoms, like stoppage of the nose and throut trouble, mre purely local, but they are simply symptoms and the real weat of disease I8 far remoyed, Catarrh fs a constitutional disease, & blood disorder, complicated usually with diseass of tho liver, and to suppose that, local applicatic of spray powders, Inhalers, could ever reach the real cause of the trouble {s ridiculous, The sensible und successful treatment Is to remove the caterrhal potson from the system by regulating the liver and purifying the blood and this can only be done by an internal rem- edy, which should consist of antiseptics and remedies to, act vigorously on the blood and ver. The best preparation of this kind which fills all the requirements of a safe constitutional treatment is Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, com- posed of Blood Root, Red Gum and similar Wwholesome antiseptics, which are absolutely safe to take into the stomach and which aot upon the liver, stomach and mucous mems brane, . Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are large, pleasant tasting lozenges, to be slowly dissolved in the mouth, thus reaching the mucous membrane and wind-pipe and finally reaching the stom- ach. Dr. Edmondson, in speaking_ of = the treatment for catarrh, fays: T have acome plished the most satistactory results in all forms of catarrh of the head, throat, bronchial tubes, as well as catarrh of the stomach and liver,' by using nothing else but Stuart's Ca- tarri Tablets, 1 long since threw aside sprays and inhalers as being inconvenient and at the best, mero temporary make-shifée. “Stuart's Catarrh Tablets act immediatel; “upon_the liver and blood and clear the whols system of catarrhal poison, They are pleasant and very convenient to use, and they are not only the latest, but I belicye them to be the best and certaihly the safest treatment for any form of catarrh.” All druggists sell Stuart's Catarrh Tablets at 50 cts. for full sized package, A little book on cause and cure of Catarrh mailed free by addressing the F. A. Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich. . T. Gage and | priest who had never anticipated that any | Yy one who refuses to see In this man either a Peter the Hermit | to the work ses or even a bene- factor to the cause of union labor is an emeny to the toilers, a hireling af capital. | The true friend to labor is not the man nor the journal that is continually pat- ting it on the back, no matter into what errns and wrongs it may be led by hot- “But this paper has never hesitated and never will hesita in the face of any and all opposition and threats, to battle | with all its vigor against the infamous doctrines put forth by such ‘labor lead- ers' as Peter C, Yorke—doctrines shame- ments of the gentle Leo into approval of | of the slum he crowned as heroes men who 11 gangs were breaking the wrists of | helpless men with fron bars: he spat vile language at the Police Commissioners because they dared interfere to protect life and property; he incited strikers to oppose the offic of the law and to break the peace, all the time the labor JOE BOSENBERG'S. | FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 1902 [&] < JOE ROSENBERG’S. Will Placz on Sale Monday A sample line of vests. Every one knows what it means when Joe Rosenberg places a drummer’s sam- ple line on sale. They are made some of best quality all silk, others best American silk, and some silk and wool. All are samples, no two alike, and each marked as samples should be at less than manufactus- ers’ cost. Some are slightly soiled, others perfect. If you are in need of any be the early bird. Among them are | LADIES' VESTS, low neck, no sleeves, made of American_silk, lace effect; neck and arm trimmed with ‘a crocheted edge run through with a silk tapé. Sample price ......... ~19¢ ALSO LADIES' VESTS, good quality silk, hand- crocheted yvoke of _best quality crochet silk. Regu- 00 value, now selling as samples ] Sc Another and Many More. LADIES VESTS, best quality Amer- ican silk, low neck, no sleeves, crocheted edge of 'silk drawn through with silk tape. Best value money can buy. Only ............ G Vo o S L T e We Will Also Add to This Sale A case of VESTS and PANTS ordered by us for our fall trade, but only just recelved, so rather than have us return them the manufacturer allowed us a lib- eral discount, so we will place them on | sale Monday at prices that speak for themselves. LADIES' VESTS, made of good Peru- vian yarn, fleece lined, high neck, long leeves, Pants ankle length with French ands, well made, neatly finished. Bought to sell criginally for 65e. 35¢ gpecial Windows. Closing Out Umbrella Stock. UMBRELLAS ALL RE- DUCED MORE THAN ONE-HALF. AN EXAM- No UPHIS 18 LAS PLE OF LOW SELLING. UMBRELLAS, made of good quality Italian cloth, steel rod, steel frame, lar §2. arrell-st. UMBRBL G LR profit price Ribbons al a Sacrifice. ALL-SILK TAFFETA RIBBON, war- ranted all silk, 4% inches wide, colors cerise, green, lavender, navy, brown and Sold formerly for 25c; now 12%e On exhibition in O'Farrell-street show windows. Special Sale of Velvel Ribbon. Best quality velvet satin back, width No. 1, 10 yardsto 4 piece:...15¢ plece good fast black, natural wood handles, Our little -35¢ purple. JOE ROSENBERG’S. We Manviacture Our Own Flannelelte Goods, And consequently can afford to sell more reasonable than others who must pay a middleman’s profit. Here is a sample of manufacturer’s selling: LADIES' SKIRTS, made of best qual- I?r flannelette, solid colors, yoke band of best quality heavy muslin, deep eight-inch flounce. Colors pink, blue @nd cream. You couldn’t buy materials for what we ask for skirt... --45¢ Ladies’ Underwear. Very good values, serviceable kind, fullest assortments, at low- est prices, can always be found here. This week we have quite a few excellent values awaiting you. FIRST—-LADIES’ WHITE SKIRTS, made of good quality soft bleached muslin, with deep 10-inch flounce tucked and hemstitched, flounce of fine quality lawn, extra _dust ruffle, full length, gcod width. Money not wasted in val- ues like these 98¢ SECOND—-LADIES' CORSET COVERS, made of good quality gmuslie, four insertions of good washable lace, arm size and neck finished with lace. Well made and neatly finished. Can’t be equaled anywhere _ in i town. Only. 50¢ THIRD-L A- DRAW- made of best quality soft bleached musiin, deep flounce with two insertions of lace, edged with jacel Lace and insertion best wide and full. Time and money wasted if you g0 ¢ s ' Special Values in Hosiery. ;. LADIES' HOSE, made of best quality Maco heel and toe, double ole, warranted the best fast black, new ribbed effect, full length, at 85¢. Our way of selling. 3¢ ANOTHER—LADI HOSE, made of very best quality XX English thread. full length, extra elastic. No other 2 hose can equal this and it excels most 50c hose. Our small profit price....25¢ LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS made of best quality lawn, neatly hem- stitched, with fancy colored herring- GENTS' HANDKERCHIEFS made of best quality all linen, hemstitched, with hand-made _initials. Former price of b 23 S 75¢ Mail Orders Solicited. linen finish. Cut elsewhere.” Note our price... 39¢ cotton, high spliced very elastic. Sold elsewhere as bargains double heels and toes, good fast black, Our HandKerchief Depariment * bone trimming: worth 12)4c. now. these was $1.00. Now box of six sells Sale of Corsets. Here’s a sale that will immediate- ly interest throngs of women. The fame of our corset department has traveled far and near and this sale will add materially to its fine repu- tation, for we have every style and shape for stout or slim figures at prices much lower than elsewhere. Fal Deople Made Thin. For stout women we have the cele- brated MAJESTY CORSETS, the only guaranteed corset made. If a steel breaks in* this corset within three months we replace it with a new corset. They are made of best quality Italian cloth, bone: throughout with best quality tempered steel. Short, medium or long length. This is the best corset made for stout women, as it is almost impos- sible for it to bend or break, and it is so well boned that it gives the wearer a figure that none of the lighter-boned cor- sets can give. A waste of time and money for a stout woman to wear any other corset. Our price...... 8275 Ovr Challenge Corsel for Fit and Wear. It is made of best quality French cloth, bias cut, hand-gored, rust-proof, straight-front steel, low sloping bust, top bound with satin ribbon, which looks neater and is more durable than lace trimming. Regular $1.50 values, now -$1.00 Thin People Made Fat. Bust Improver—Latest and Best— b THE MELBA, Is made of best mercer- ized sateen and is boned with feather-bone, which is light in weight and health: ful. ‘It fs made in one piece, extends under the arms and is fastened by means of a strap which comes ‘over the shoulders. This is su- perior to any two-plece per= fector made, as it rounds out all hollows without showing where it begins or Go0d form for very little money. --B0e ends. Only R-st Dollar Glove in Town. THE SOROSIS—It is made of best picked lambskin, plque sewn, ‘“Paris Point" stitched back, two clasp, in all shades, and black. Equal to any $1,50 glove made. Our price .. 1.00 \.';Y WASTE TIME AND MONEY when we clean gloves to look like new for Se, with our new Dry Process? Hair Ornamenls. LADIES' SIDE COMBS, best quality Italian shell, highly polished, curved so as to set well into the shape of the head, well finished teeth; worth 20c, now -10e 816 MARKET STREET, Running through to 11 0"Farrell. PHELAN BUILDING. NOT GOING TO WASTE. Money spent here is well invested. More than even exchange for your money this week. : Money back if goods are not satisfactory. And having sold all goods, we have cut $1.50 to $1.00. FETA RIBBON, 5 inches wide, the bes ribbon made; instead of 35 cents, our holiday bargain, E b~ bon bows, tied by experts. Special Iicm From Our Leather JOE ROSENBERG'S. Overstocked. Being Heavily Stocked in $150 Skirts, our regular $1.00 the price of the They are made of best fast-black Italian cloth, highly mercerized, with a ten -inch accordion- plaited flounce, edged with small ruffle and faced with best quality crinoline. Money weil spent in a skirt of this kind . St. Patrick’s Day Bargains. 500 yards of ALL SILK GREEN TAF- 12%e. Goods Department. LADIES’ WRIST BAGS, made of good gray Suede, block bottom, riveted steel frame, strong steel wrist chain. est and swellest things in purses. pensive, too. New- Tnex- Only. 50¢ Not Going to Wasle 1 You Buy a Pursc This Week to Save Money. is a COMBINATION POCKET- It BOOK and PURSE combined. It is made of the best morocco leather, lined throughout, well sewed. They come in all colors. of the best; The clasp on the pocket-book Is steel frame; the kind that you cannot lose money out _of. Your ‘money-saving opportunity; pocket-book now.. and sheer, foundations of muslin, with openwork pattern in floral or scroll designs, with good, strong buttonhole edge. or figure designs; all one price. Embroiderics at Less Than $1.50 95e < LADIES' SHIRT WAISTS made of very best quality grass linen, with white openwork stripe, full long- waist front, plain French back, new sieeves, soft cuff, fancy white pique stock with butterfly tle of linen. A new, up-to-date, tallor- made walst for. 1.50 Sale O'Farrell-street Entrance. g Wholesale Cost WE BOUGHT THEM FROM AN OVER- STOCKED MANUFAC- TURER, who, on finding himself overstocked, was willing to sell while his goods were still in sea- son, and get the ready money he was in need of. We bought his entire line at a liberal discount. They are not fine, dainty but are on good, strong Usual 8 inches wide 5 inches wide . 2% inches wide Newest Effect in BucKles. Made of very best French metal, in new oxidized effects, that will keep their color, fashioned so as to give requisite long-waist or dip ef- fect. Floral, scroll 5S¢ leaders were cautionirg prudence and moderation. “Where is that strike to-day? “Where are the strikers? “Curses and not blessings are the mes- | sages that come, flocking from the homes of the poor of San Francisco to Peter C. Yorke, and those curses will grow and multiply as the months roll on. “No man who made cthers cripples for life in that strike in San Francisco—and many were so made—no man who com- mitted murders—and some murders were | committed—are any more guilty of those crimes in the eyes of God than is Rev. | Peter C. Yorke himself. For, if he aid | not at times almost' counsel the com- mission of such crimes, he never at any | time nor under any circumstances, either as priest or as citizen, reproved those deeds, or used of and concerning them any language that was not that of at least palliation 1f not commendation. “And if any man were condemned to death for the erime of murder committed during that strike, he could consclentious- ly say In the very shadow of the gallows: “The priest tempted me and I did strike.' ™ “And now to the original offense. “What caused Rev. Peter C. Yorke to become himself again as a natural black- vard was this In the Bee of February 9 He uwsed the occaslon of a charitable lecture In the interest of a little church in Bacra- mento to proselyte for Henry T, Gage. Under pretense of delivering an address on ‘‘The Itights of Labor,” he worked up & plon for the laboring classes to stand b, [ ihe man in @ interest he Iv traveling throughout the Jocnl priesthood, by # clever trick Daniel < ognized overywhere aw the Gov- Widentinl political worker, Kot the rtage manugement Into his own hands, He wrote out the list of viee preoidents who wsat on the stage—the ucolytes to Father Yorke, an thoy might bo called—and he tled the claqueurs n the rear, Athough the price of admision was §1, tlokets were distributed among union men at 25 contw each In order to Insuro thofr mitend- B ) ADVERTISEMENTS, CURES WEAK MEN FREE. Insures Love and a Happy Homie for All How any man may Quickly cure himself atter yours of wuffering from sexual weak; L Vitality, night losses, varicocels, otc., lurge sinall, weak organs to fuil uize 3 Eimply wend your name and address to Dr. Knapp Megical Co., 1378 Hull building, Detrolt, Mich, and they wil gladly send the free re: ceipt 'with full directions %o uny man may easily cure himselt at home. This {s centainly @ most enerous affer, and the following ex. tracts taken from their dally mail, show what men_think of thelr generosity, “Dear Sirs: Please accept my sincere thanks for yours of recent date. I have given. yous qreatment o thorough test and the benefit’ nuy b It has completely braced n extraordinary. when a buy ! d vl me up. 1 am just as vVigorous as and_you cannot realize how happy T “Dear Sirs: Your method worked beduti- tully. Results were exactly what I needed, Strength and vigor have completely returned and_enlargement is entirely satisfactory. " “Dear Sirs: Yours was received and I haq no trouble in making use of the recelpt as di- vected, and can truthtully say it fs a boori ty weak ‘men, 1 am greatly improved in sizé strength and vigor.'! . Al correspondence s strictly confidentlal, mailed in plain, sealed envelope. The receipt 18 fres for the asking and they want every man to adway’s Pills Purely etable, mild and relfable. Causes perfect fll':"tluola..' complete absorption and O DT i o Stomach, ‘or the cure of A Liver, Bowels, Kidueys, Bl.ldaucr.‘hl"mll- Ir- regularities, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Con- stipation, Piles and all derangements of the ar. Gl Ve B B Neh S anca and even beyond that ome party circu- iated 200 tlckets, fecring the lecture would not be a success In numbers. And it would not have been, save for those strenuous and discriminating methods. “Of this statement Rev. Peter C. Yorke £ T It may be said that every statement which | The Bee makes about the lecture itself, and about the events which preceded, accompanied and followed It, is a plain and malicious fals hood. “Not so, Peter; not so. “Every statement therein contained was and s true in each and every particular. And even then the half has not been told. “There is positive evidence at hand to substantiate every assertion made, and the writer herewith takes particular pleasure in repeating them all. “Danfel Kevane did make out the list of vice presidents, He was acting for Henry T. Gage when he did so, and he persanally asked partles to let him write in their nomes, “Tickets were distributed among union men for 25 cents each. Not only that, but many tickets were passed around free by a person known to the writer and evi- dently acting In the interest of the State administration. '‘As to the batch of 200 tickets, Rev. Pe- ter C. Yorke probably knows the truth of that himself by this time, That will not likely change his subsequent denials, how- ever. His public conduct in the past year amply demonstrates that he can separa himself from facts with an absolute disr gard of the Catholic canon against di- vorce, ‘“The truth remains that Peter C, Yorke came to Buoramento in the Interest of Henry T, Gage; that he delivered here a lecture which was a literary shell gumo played upon Catholies und unfon men; that wald shell game was none too adrolt- ly managed by one Danfel Kevane, ropre- wenting Governor Henry T. Gugoe; that unfon men were begulled there at ono- quarter rates or on freo tickets; and that when the crowd was there—Dunlel Ke- vane doing the capping and clapping Peter €, Yorke exhibited thoe shell game, showing Henry T, Gage under the shell where the audlonce had pald—or womo ot them had—to see ‘The Rights of Labor.' ‘‘Vale, Reverend Peter C. Yorke! ‘“*An ounce of civet, good apothecary!' —————— CONTRACTOR O’BRIEN HAD TO PAY LICENSE Deputies Confiscate His Wagons and He Begs Them Not to Let Neighbors Know. Deputy License Collectors Warren and Elfendel swooped down on the sand ‘wagons belonging to Contractor James H. O'Brien early yesterday morning and placed twelve drivers under arrest pend- ing the collection of licenses on the wagons, which had not been pald for this year. It is customary to notify license payers of thelr delinquency, and with that object in view Colonel O'Brien was routed out of bed about 5 a. m. “For goodness sake,” said O'Brien, put- ting his head out of a window, “what's the matter? Is the house on fire?”" “‘No,” replied Deputy Warren, '‘we sim- ply woke you up to tell you that twelve of your sand teams are in custody for ‘| non-payment of llicenses and your drivers will be locked up unless you pay up.”” ‘Hush, not so loud,” whispered the lonel, “‘or the neighbors will hear you. low much is it?"" “Twenty-elght dollars,” replied the dep- uty. O'Brien left the window for a moment and returned again after making a touch on his trousers’ pocket. ‘““There’s your money, and for pity’s sake don't let the neighbors get on,” said O'Brien, as he went back to bed to re- m’O his sleep. | son-in-law, on a charge of perjury. SUED FOR DIVORCE AND WANTED FOR PERJURY Troubles of Robert Shenson for Swearing He Was Twenty- One Years of Age. A. Miller, 341 Clementina street, secured a warrant from Judge Cabaniss yester- day for the arrest of Robert Shenson, his It is alleged in the complaint that on Septem- ber 2 last Shenson applied for a license to marry Miller's daughter Ida, giving his age as over 21 years, whereas he lacked #ix months of being 2l. He also swore there were no objections to the issuance cf the license, whereas Miller alleges there were serious objections. Mrs, Shenson has already applied for a divorce on the ground of cruelty. After the marriage the young couple lived at 22 Folsom street. A few weeks ago Shen- son had Miller and his son arrested for Lattery, but the cases were dismissed by Judge Cabaniss. Shenson's father is a liquor dealer at 1021 Folsom street, and he was also opposed to the marriage. The young man is a clerk In his father’'s store and receives a salary of $750 per week. The divorce suit is pending before Judge Hebbard. —_——— Moran’s Case Continued. The case of Thomas Maran, convicted of the murder of George W. Rice, the non- union machinist, at Twentieth and How- ard streets on October 11, was called in Judge Lawlor's court yesterday. It was expected that the Judge would render his decision on the motion for a mew trial, but it was reserved till Mareh 21, when judgment will be rendered on this and similar motions In the cases of William Buckley and Charles Donnelly, also con- victed of Rice's murder. Preeirdingtend iR Never before has there been such a de- votion to Mohammedanism as in Indla at this time under British rule. Friedman’s Furniture a couch, by night, By reason of our having many duplicate styles, a chance for you to economize in an article a bed. needed in home and lodging. No suspicion of a bed in the looks of a bed couch. This one is cov- ered with bright velour, has solid oak frame, and easily opens and adjusts for a double bed—$§90 00 22.50 Bed Couch 25.00 Bed Conch Anel Oriental velour, tufted, spring ed; gondola shape,' full spring mflgs nt couch, a comfortable bed. Tufted top, a variety of velour covers 16.50 18.50 A 15.00 Spring Edge, Velour Covered Couch for 9,75 And many other reductions for you in both plain and bed couches. “The Credit House.' Six Stories High. 233°235-257 Post Street. . Phone'Private £x 37

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