The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 25, 1902, Page 27

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r THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, ADVERTISEMENTS. Men’s Diseases AND Certain Treatmant. 0. C. JOSLEN, M.D. The Leading Speclalist. cure soundly and ¥ s0. 1f 1 have to treat it. By never suessing one that he full de- Sisor. B_I od Poison ific Blood eliminates virus from this is ac- the use of I afford erals DR. 0. C. JOSLEN, 1049 Market Street, Opporite Hibernla Bank, HICHESTER'S ENGLH NAYROYAL PiLLs SAFE. Aiways relisble or CHICHES' '8 -'ula, by re e Chiohestar Cher ioai Coy or Bauare PHL 4e PL LL’SREINV.GORATOR loss: 23 hours. Five case we - HA re. This Emissions, PROFESSOR PEASE IS DISMISSED | FROM f With Reopenin % THE FACULTY OF STANFORD The Deposed Head of the Latin Department of the Univer- sity at Palo Alto Charges President David Starr Jordan Ross-Howard Affair | l 1 | | TANFORD UNIVERSITY, May 24.—Professor E. M. Pease, head | of the department of Latin, has | been asked by President Jordan to resign his chair or consider himself dismissed from the univer- | sity. Professor Pease has held the chair ;hl Latin since the founding of the uni- | versity, but for the past four vears hls relations with the president have been | anything but friendly and his dismissal | was not unexpected. He is much es- | teemed by his students, who deeply regret that such a course as that adopted by | President Jordan has become necessary. | | _Professor Pease is a graduate of the { University of Colorado, where he took his | { master’s degree in 158. Before accepting his p ent position at Stanford he was | an _instructor in Latin at Smith College | and professor of Latin at Bowdoin Col- | | lege, and he ranks as one of the leading | classical scholars of the country. He was | an ardent sympathizer with Professors | Ross and Howard when their dismissal was found necessary last vear. The re-! of the oth members of the Latin de- partment been strained, and this ms to have influenced President Jor- in a measure to take his present ac- correspondence that has passed be- President Jordan _and Professor rd {0 the dismissal is here | given: FIRST EXCHANGE OF NOTES. Office o M reason which must be manife erviews and cor- the past four | y that I should | ation of the department | ask your resignation of > take effebt at the end vear. ry truly ORDAN, President. April 22, 19 Staniford Univ I wish to acknowledge | vour letter of March 20 asking | | urtesy. which ha f ) give furt action. other than to | vinced that the interests 1 be served by partment of Latin, JORDAN, DAVID S { dan, Stanford U | L Acknowledging of May 13 from the fac | %o university to whic ve given eleven of | the best years of my T have to say that | { mince I wn that you had decided u; duty due to could be done, a reasons for my dis- 1 right of & professor ad of an unportant depart- many years, esperially In view of statement in a circular letter to. faculty that appointments in nless _connection slgnation. ieeal 1% | a or the university at this however unfortunate for t that fact sh 1f, rary, as 1 know thet some believe, 1 is'due to your determination to ut of the faculty every man * aid ssed it to_one of my co stand by of last vear,”” then uld be made plain in order that others | who may be asked to come here may know to | what kind ace they are invited. In this matter 1 di1 mot act wholly on my own judgment. but upon that of many whose advice 1 asked, and whose opfnion, in sub- expressed in the following extract from a letter addressed to me by a distin- =d Latinist in one of the greatest Ameri- not in the interests of the ¢ that the president should be per- thus indulge his personal prejudice. not resign, but should ir hearing., and 1 be olce the sentiment of your feilow-teachers throughout the country Tho credit of Leland Stanford has already suf- verely throughout the country by the action of its president.’” this object In view, it is true that, intimate in your letter to which this T have sovght through some of the all other means in my power. ter 1o such a clearl stated jssue that all concerned may judge whether I | {1ations between Professor Pease and some | | g the Unfortunate — ' tlon that you had not understood what we were doing, es indeed your letters made manifest. It is true that.you once attributed some fric- tion which then existed in my department to me, but you subsequently explicitiy snd em- hatically acknowledged your error, confirming Phe same by your letter of May 25, 1000. It s true that upon vour representation that Mrs. Btanford felt injured at some alleged remarks of mine in connection with the Ross case I called upon her, only to discover that she had never thought of such a thing. As a matter of fact my criticiem was not of her but of you. As to other vague alluslons, I have no idea to What you refer. | If any defense were needed, I could cite the resolution of my colleagues in view of your criticisms passed in offering me the presidency of the Philological Association in testimony, as | our cordial fellow-feeling, our high esteem of | his character and our sincere respect for his Il gcholarship and scholarly ideals.”” ! "7 am persuaded that if I had meekly accepted | ' vour dictation as to details In the conduct of my department upon which 1 am competent to judge and you are not, and espectally if I had been one of those who “stood by’ you in the Ross'matter I should not have been disturbed, as I confess 1 should have preferred not to be having ccme here at your invitation and set- tled myself. as I supposed, ““for life. Possibly I err in this, but the gradual but effective weeding out of the “‘Ross eympathizers” from the university has produced such an impree- sion, not only fn my own mind, but in univer- sity’circles. - 1 have been made aware of this by receht correspondence with university men from svhom 1 asked advice. I find the feeling to be that there is not in the university such academic freedom in any direction as self-re- specting and competent professors expect in all universities. That this feeling Is general may be inferred from some extracts from recent let- ters to me from university men of the highest standing: QUOTES EASTERN EDUCATORS. T hesitate to intrust to ink and paper my estimate of the injury that such persistence in what is certainly an_evil policy must have on the institution. ~Nothing but an emphatic and very public reversal of the policy can save it.”” ““But what is Jordan thinking of? He is act- ing so that seif-respecting men will presently preter to dig dirt in the streets rather than go to Stanford University *‘1 had hoped that the odium which the action of President Jordan last year brought upon the university In the eves of all right-minded peo- ple would have prevented him. or, if not him, | at least the | n to again diegrace the institution." Acqulescence in the attitude of your unl- versity must lead in the long run (and not so | very long, either) to a distinct deterioration in | the grade’ of men who | 12 a career so precarious.” “‘Surely the annals of the universities in this country can show no case of such flagrant vio- lation of the principles of justice and probity a3 this.” “‘Every university man feels that you are PROFESSOR E. M. PEASE, WHO HAS BEEN DISMISSED FROM STANFORD. | 5| covered after so long a time, or because T |fighting his battle as well as your own." | did not support vour policy last year. As a | “If scholars are men of spirit and indepen- | result of all these instrumentalities you write | dence of mind, they will surely hesitate to in- me trust their careers to an institution in which a request for a resignation can come for reasons 80 {ll-defined as seem to be those alleged in your case.”’ llows: | “Office of the President, i VERSITY, ! Pease, Stanford U TANFORD Professor E. M. May 1 ver- | —Dear Sir: Referring to your request of | “It is a pity that Mrs. Stanford's great gift April 22 that I should assign explicit reasons | should be so mismanaged. Is there no way of | for my request for vour resignation, permit | showing her that such methods react immedi- me to add to my letter of the same date the following: “I have stated that in my judgment th Interests of the university demand a reorgani zation of the department of Latin. The strong- est reagon for this belief is that your person- ality is such that I, as executive officer of the university, cannot get along with you. I have fourd an intense selfishness _controlling all your relations and I have been constantly aware of efforts to accomplish results by in- direction and intrigue. Your department has | been repeatedly torn by dissensions for which | you have been largely to blame. I cannot re- tain a professor, however able, if I cannot respect his character: nor will I be responsible for any man whom T cannot personally trust. “No better illustration of the ground of these objections can be given than is shown by your recent attempts to appeal from the appointing power. with which rests also the power of removal, to others whose relation, if any, is advisory only, and who are in no position to be | ately upon the good name of the university?" | "It this sort of thing is to be done, we must ell them (the young men who are thinking of | making university teaching their profession) that men with brains and consciences had bet- ter go into anything else in preference, and leave university professorships to those who are born to be time servers, and who will oe- cupy themselves. not in manly work in the line the president wants. President Jordan has dealt a severe blow at university life in this country In general.”” “Jordan will probably demand your resigna- tion In writing: but he will assign false fea- sons—reasons which he concelves will put you to a disadvantage, if you make them public. He aid this in a case last year—one that I may not mention more specifically.”” ACCEPTS HIS DISMISSAL. The original of those letters can be seen {upon any occasion grave enough to warrant Jl;d\r&uni' :losmum of the facts in a case | the introduction of the writers into the out- nd. iticl 5 v i 16 T have not been favorably impressed | SOKED, criticleme o this university. 1 have withheld some for thelr Anglo-Saxon plain- ness of speech. The contest which I have been making {s largely at the instigation of Ameri- can scholars and for the dignity of American scholarship. 1 regret that I have falled to bring into plainer view the real {ssues in- volved. For myself T accept my dismlssal as an act of arbitrary power, and I do o protesting that the reasons offered were concefved to meet a certain emergency, and that they never even | In your mind had a concrete basls. Very truiy yours, B. M. PEASE. President Jordan when interviewed in regard to Professor Pease's dismissal and the reasons for it gave out the following signed statement: The removal of Professor Pease was under | consideration in 1808, or earller, and his resig- nation was first asked for on December 18, 1807, long before the culmination of the Ross | episode. robably not have brought this matter to final {ssue on this ground alone. “T have been thus explicit with great re- luctance, because 1 had hoped that the matter might be adjusted by vour withdrawal with- qut the necessity for the use of this unpleas- antly plain language. “It is now optional with you either to ten- der your resignation to take effect at the end of the current academic vear, or to accept this letter as a final dismissal from the uni- versity to take effect on July 31, 1802. Very truly yours, “DAVID 8. JORDAN, President.” STYLES IT VITUPERATION. Obviously one cannot reply to mere vitupera- | tion, and I now give up' the attempt to obu 1 a clear statement of the cause of my dismissal. 1 have simply to say that the tone and sub- stance of your letter do not in the least cor- respond with our previous sconversations, with various letters.to me of which vou doubtiess| As to the ylews of Fastern professors, it can have coples and which 1 therefore meed not [ only be said that these gentlemen have de- quote, or with statements reported to me by | rived their information through Professor colleagues and cthers as having been quite re. | Pease. DAVID STARR JORDAN, President. de by you to them. It is | o e ety erticiome ot the work ot'mat! This statement, with the reasons given dopartment in which vou would not be sup. |in his letters to Professor Pease, shows ported by any Latinist in America, and which clearly the stand taken by President Jor- am diemissed for personal deficiencles dis- | you subsequently withdrew with the explana- dan. PEEREPERERRREEERR) ittt e e el @ DENIS KEARNEY TALKS | TO A STREET GATHERING Former Sand Lot Orator Announces Himself as a Champion of the Cause of Labor. SAN JOSE, May 24—Denis Kearney. | 5 after an absence from the stump for | nearly fifteen years, addressed a large crowd of workingmen at the corner of Market and Santa Clara streets to-night. Kearney announced that he intended to take up the fight where he dropped it on the sand lot years ago, and would cham- pion the cause of organized labor. The ®cand lot speeches, he declared. had been the cause of the high condition which organized labor had reached. He con- demned bosses ‘and bossism. and sald labor had intelligence enough to direct itseif. The laboring people should not be led v politicians. but should retain their individ- uality in politics. Through bossism the sathe dangers might menace them as lay Constipa'téd 0ld Age'* or anybody else; yet it need n Isn't it too bad that so many people, when they get old, get cranky and rickety and mean, and don’t fecl right towards themselves ot be so. “Cagcarets make me feel 50 light-hearted and lively, shad though T have seen thres scofe and thres. S00mes 1 yet may ses.'—Jumes 5. Millar: Vilis Park, Oal he invasions by Chinese hordes in the , OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE Kearney denounced the ;n».thogsg;:f tlh':! OF THE PACIFIC COAST State officials as corrupt from beginning | i to «nd. He sald he had reluser}\&'saa,\m Changes Made in the Postal Service to defeat the new constitution. Kearney | said _if the people of the State had any | and. Moze New Pen’““f gratitude they would offer him any posi- | Granted. tion in_their gift, but he wanted no of-| WASIIINGTON, May 24.—The Postdffice ¢ adviscd laboring people to vote ' pepartment to-day announced: Postoffica up next fall, as it regulates p?;;.r: established: lic utilities. Kearney said he intended to | halis County, Robert Y. Wright Postmas- speak at intervals from now on and in- tended to go on the stage. ‘W. H. Colbert, Dragoon, Spokane County, vice W. T. Guyer, resigned: P. Kim- | ball, Bremerton, Kitsap County, vice Y. J._Acton, removed. Thesge pensions were granted: Stanford M-n Win Honors. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, May 24.— Rea Everett Sml.ih % and Jean Jacques | nia—Original-—Samuel O'Brien, Vi Van Kaathoven '9), two Stanford gradu- | R Cunningham, Sawtelle, $5. 1 ates of the physiology department, have | —Charles Leonbardt. San Francisco, §10 achieved signal honors in the University | George Rowe,* Los Angeles, $10; Nel. of Pennsylvania medical s-hool. In a|Son A. Larnard, Los Angeles, $10; Leon class of more than 200 Smith graduated | ard B. Pratt, Fisinore, $1; Wiiliam Sell, with gm honors and Van Kaathoven with [gma‘rig';flsx: %Chargllefu“h‘;afie' l\]llslil"ltas second. ; Marcus 8. Plant, Los Angeles, ? | Mexican wWar—Willlam H. Funtleroy, Soldiers’ Home, Los Angeles, $12. z Oregon—Increase—William ' H. Hamed, Portland. $i0; Willlam Snow, Park Place, i7: James Savage. Galice, Washington—Increase—Joseph W. Pome- Califor- lia, $6 ease = Burton, §3. Army orders announce that First Lieu- tenant Christopher C. Collins assistant €urgeon, is to go from the general hos- arrival at that hospital of First Lieuten- | ant Theodore C. Lyster, assistant. sur- geon. Colonel Peter D. Vroom, inspector general from Governors Island, New York, is ordered to proceed to San Fran- cisco as inspector general of the Depart- d thres, a few more [ ““For many years I have been troubled with constipation. s ! excesses i 1 nned one B and two S boses of Cascarsts, and thoy havs < ment of . California, relieving Lieutnant t1e:% botties, §5; guaranteed | sfocied s permunert cure incs wy'diciaree Gom i3 | Colencl John L. Chamberlatn, ordered to &l or & rders Ty 1o 13 T have Dever bafore found alu . & ; . e e aed: T, 0. MeGwern, 949 Chapline Street, Whoellng, W. Va. | GutY, @8 Inspector general of the Depart Also for sale at 107315 Send for free book. WONG WO0O, CHINESE TEA AND HER3 SANITARIUM, 76466 Clay ., . ., Cal. Hours, BARBERE, BAK- bootblacks, bath- %, billlard tabjes, rookbinder makers. canners, dyere, fiourmi t laundries. paper. angers shoe factories, etable taflors, ete. Lonadan s s bstd o, Brush Manufacturers. 603 Sacramento St NEW WEBSTERN HOTEL, JKEARNY, AND WASHINGTON STH_RE- enovated. KING, WARD & « Ew n. Rooms, H0c to §1 50 day; $ week month. Free baths: cle Weekly Call, $1 All old people’s muscles get weak and flabby, and it’s the same with the muscular walls of their intestines as with the muscles of their arms. When the bowels grow weak, the old folks bilious, sick, helpless, irritable, arid that's the chie death. Old folks should take Cascarets Candy Cathartic bowel tonic, keep their liver lively, their bowels a hundred. Best for the Bowal ck. *'T was troubled with something that baffled the skill of | physicians for 35 vears; I ¥ 20 in better bealth weeks gained ~A. B.gtory- The genuine tablst “tam, Sample ana bockiet free. Sterling Remedy Company, Chicagoe or New York. ment of the South Phillppines. Contract Surgeon George B. Jones I8 ordered from :lwi Department of California to the Phil- rpines. used five boxes of Cascarets an than ever before.” & ~ C. C. Redick, Chase City, Va. Sz mantie ags Lok Coseareas or cooslastion T . u Noudertal and 1 advize all old soldiers to try them, HENRY C. BROSIUS DEAD. 2 Jas" Putman. late Capt. 53rd 111, Haney, Wis. | ‘was feeling bad. losing desh, had Succumbs to the Effects of an Aecci- feet, and couldn't sleep well. I took Ci 15 pounds. Am feelin veteran Mexican and fine now.” dent of Two Years Ago. ivil Wars, Epworth, Ia. SAN JOSE, May 24.—-Henry C. Brosius, a pioneer bookbinder of this city, died this morning after a lingering iliness. For a year he has been awaiting death, which physicians stated was certain to result from an accident he had met with. Two “I have been using Cascarets for some time for | constipation, and their greatest benafit has been to | gare meof asiime. 14w o my 6ih yoar and had asthma for years. e . M White. Bob Lee. Goorgia 79th yvear, I had suffered for r.mn'l‘e. dllvn}ered stomach, *'Belng now in my i five years from kidne; B 3 leumat . ot o e e s king, Cuscnsetn all The oems | years ago he visited Germany, the land bodily sunoyances Ware driven {rom fay system. One day while riding on a now feel able to dance a break-do I |of his birth. “Frank 0. Mahoney. West Side, Hannlbal. Mo. | hay wagon he slipped and fell to the ground. One of his ribs was broken and physicians say the fractured bone injured the heart to the extent that aortic anuer- iem develored. The best of medical ser- vice was of no avail. Mr. Brosius was 65 years of age. He came to America when a young man. San ,Jose had been his home for more than ‘lwen|l.v {I:ar!AHA wife lbi:d hglx children regular and strong and live to be | flaman and had many frienda oo 8o Nt et gists, 1oc, 35¢, soc. Never sold in bulk. “ST. LOUIE, May 24.—The plant of the s itchell Clay Manufacturing Company and th C O G qauaspntesd to cure or JOur MOReY | feoq suove f H. W, Beck & Son ware desisoyed * by fire to-day. causing a lose of more than 95,000, partially insured. gct constipated, cause of their Al | they expresfed it. of “‘our loyal friendship, of | . from aliowing any such | ill submit themselves | of thelr ideals, but in trying to find out what | Washington—Norwalk, Che- | ter. Postmasters appointed: Washington— | roy, Redmond, $12; Adam 8. Christman, | pital, Presidio, to the Philippines on the | MAY 25, 1902. STOMACH COMPLAINTS CAN BE CURED, There are hundreds of people to-day who are sufiering from Stomach Complaints because they believe there is no cure for them. How= ever, there is one medicine that wiil positively =Q cure stomach ills and that is . HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters. It contains only such ingredients as will be WWWNO LS bH helpful to the stomach and no matter how long standing your complaint the Bitters will surely | help you. We urge you to try it. It has cured these people and will not fail you. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dear Sirs — I have been troubled & with Indigestion and other stomach complaints and your Bitters has been my only remedy of relief. I cheerfullyrecom- mend it.© THOS. W. CHRISTY. RO RO IS OO OUR PRIVATE STAMP IS OVER THE NECK OF TH: BOTILE. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dear Sirs—I have used your Bitters and found it an excellent remedy for Indigestion and other* stomach trou- bles. I heartily recommend it to every one. E. T. TROTTER. o Fo8 ORI OEONNONCE DI i | night. The order is very strong in thia city and was given the additional Buys Million Acres of Land . EUGENE, Or., May %4.—The control of | FIE HUNDRED | | strength of 500 new members, who were the fmmense tract of land of the 0"9’50‘_‘_; | initlated to-night. More than 2000 visit- Central Military Wagon Road Company | ing members came to the city to-day and | changed hands to-day, the property being | purcPased by the principal stockholders | of the Booth-Kelly Lumber Company. The | j grant embraces more than 1,000,000 acres. Much of it is covered by heavy timber of | fine quality. It is sald that this transac-| ! tion is a step in the progress of the pro- | posed rallroad from Salt Lake to this coast along the Oregon Central route. Oats for British War Horses. PORTLAND, Or., May 24.—The British steamship Oske Hall, a 6000-ton_carrier, sailed to-day from Coronel for Portland under charter to -load 300,000 bushes of cats for the British Government in South were met at the station b the commit- tee of entertainment and a brass band | "In the procession to-night. in which | were four bands, the Woodmen marchel | four abreast and the line was a muls and a h ongth. 70 | alf in length. While the W ]meu were marching the streets w > ablaze with rockets and red fire. Great Ga.pital Cxty Woodmen | ;x;;:g:_ lined the sidewalks to witness the Initiate a Big | Class. Belgian Steamer Wrecked. AXIM, Guinea Coast, Africa, May 24— | The Belgian steamer Stanleyville, from Antwerp about May $ for the Congo. . y the largest has run on the Hoeven Rock off the Gold :}afrr:t:zabf’t;glt; g\"‘e‘rh;\l'tw;n%‘;‘t}ath; Ig;glefln' Special Dispatch) to The Call. Coast, and is a total wreck. Her znxz-l- £ , but the first full cargo ever " passengers, mostly from Antwerp, anc e hrom an Amedsan Dort on the| SACRAMENTO, May 2—The Wood- | her crew were taken off by Pacific for South Africa. ! men of the World owned Sacramento to- ' Soba. Seesess 7O CALL SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. §™** 000000600000000000000000000000000000000000000 very person contracting tc take The Call for six (8) montbs can secure a $15.00 SET OF “OUR ISLANDS AND THEIR PEOPLE For $3.20. Books will be expressed to subscribers upon receipt of $3.20. Expressage at subscriber’'s expense. Cannot be bought elsewhcre for less than the regular subseription price of $15. AN INVALUABLE ADDITION TO EGVB;:“IXJ)MYZ ORNAMENT TO ANY DRAWIN :Nsovncn OF INSTRUCTION AND ENTERTAINMENT for old and young, ylelding the de- lights of travel without its inconveniences. THE CALL’S SPECIAL OFFER. “Our Islands and Their People” AS SEEN WITH CAMERA AND PENCIL. INTRODUCED BY MAJOR-GENERAL JOSEPH WHEELER, UNITED STATES ARMY. 7, With Special Descriptive Matter and Narratives by 25 JOSE DE OLIVARES, The Noted Author and War Correspondent. > % “efiu Curse of Lopez,” “The Last of The Anguilles,” and other West Indian Stories. | \ Author lcaf “The Trocha Telegraph, PHOTOGRAPHIC AND DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE PEOPIIS:EGAE’,I%R;IE%TISLANDS LATELY ACQUIRED FROM SPAIN, INCLUDING HAWAII 'AND THE PHILIPPINES; ALSO THEIR MATERIAL RESOURCES AND PRODUC- TIONS, HOMES OF THE PEOPLE, THEIR CUSTOMS AND GENERAL AP- PEARANCE, WITH MANY HUNDRED VIEWS OF LANDSCAPES, RIVERS, VALLEYS, HILLS AND MOUNTAINS, SO COM- PLETE AS TO PRACTICALLY TRANSFER THE ISL- ANDS AND THEIR PEOPLE TO THE PICTURED PAGE. With a special consideratton of the conditions that prevailed before the declaration of war, by Senators Proctor, Thurston, Money and num --ous prominent writers and correspondents, and a comparison with conditions as EMBRAC : they now exist. Edited and arranged by WM. S. BRYAN, Author of “Footprints of the World's History,” “Heroes and Heroines of America,” “America’s War for Hu- manity,” Etc., Etc. . . 2 PHOTOGRAPHS BY WALTER B.. TOWNSEND, FRED. W. FOUT, GEO. E. DOTTER AND OTHERS, COMPLETE IN TWO QUARTO VOLUMES. REGULAR PRICE $15.00 PER SET. SPECIAL TO CALL READERS $3.20 PER SET. Superbly illustrated with more than Twelve Hundred Special Photographs, Colortypes and new Colored Maps. ¥ N. B.—Only subscribers to Daily | are entitled to these books at premium rate. All mail orders mfi be accompanied by $3.20, and books will be shipped by express, the cost of transportation to be paid by E iber at destination. asee BOBIORROHIVINVAHIPHAND

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