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s THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1902. MA JOR GENERAL CARNAHAN OF THE UNIFORM RANK OF GIVES HIS APPROVAL TO THE ARRANGEMENTS FOR S R GAGE RELIES | O RAILADAD R < = PYTHIANS CONCLAVE WEEK ThesISTRATIN 1 L0 To-Dny o ‘;"’: Last Chance for Voters 5 ¢ F‘SS'STANE[ % ) to Enroll for the - " - 5 3 Primary. i 5 | ¥ ) < Herrin Orders His Co- 4 ALl Signs Indicate Utter ; b H R t b out of Boss Gang horts Into Fray at : t : Sacramento. ¢ 1 in the City. Sa . v i 3 Bvery unregistered citizen who shall 11 Make a Despairing Sontie fail to register before 12 o'cbock to-nig = : A | | will be denied the privilege of voting at Effort in the Face of 2 1 | the primary election on August 12 . d + 3 4 This is positively the last day of registra- Certain Defeat. = | | tion for the primary election and special — i | | effort should be put forth to cause the en G itact : | | roliment of the unregistered. T.e offic Governor Is Bitterly Denounced at > s | | at the City Hall will open to-day at 8:3 2 Meeting of the Capital " Bl @% . m. and remain open continuously unii s : il Loaowooen o'clock to-night. R?Pubhcan » t-:o-i'*.‘,"":f;" A The response of citizens yesterday to Club, MM PR the call for registration was highly grati- : = : fying. The number of voters enrolled -7 making the total The 1L—A bitter fight | anti-Gage forces | the Governor, who | | ee him returned to | t the men who are | | are greatly in | by even Gage' Hiram John on of Gage at the last night was | versation in political railroad organ here | the utterances of rney and bold y of the city’s e stopped Johnson in his | nt of Gage. | openily said that the railroad ed to take a hand in the win for Gag: the pri- amber of the men who gy Ve A e b EIRY ¥ s « * . 3. » 4 Vet asin E HOPELESS. pat the canse | will | T » that the rail-| that the op- ove and are conii- | the capital of | be delivered f the horde of | rat | | | ,-.uué.un nufl' s deqw . ae P o e oot X 13 ~ mit aes ages SO - during the day was 1 | registration up to last night 48423. The Gage politiclans show signs of weakness in many quarters where they | formerly boasted of strength. If Gage is depending on San Franeisco for his re- | nomination he will be disappointed. T i | forces opposed to machine rule are well organized and enthusiastic. The Go ernor’s henchmen are despondent. They are not displaying the activity or mani- festing the confidence which they ex- hibited some weeks ago. Knowledge that defeat has overtaken the push in many of the interior counties and that disaster to the bosses in Sacramento and Napa | counties is impending causes the slump | | in Gage stock. LEGALIZED PRIMARIES. The Iroquois Club met last night at Pythian Castle Hall when a lively dis- cussion arose out of a resolution sub- | mitted bty Max Popper, chairman of the | committee on resolutions, which recom- | mended a sum to be appropriated from the funds to publish wigely a list of the | names of “so called Democrits whb vote | the Republican_ticket at the coming pri- | mary election.” The resolution also s forth that the club devote its energies solely to see that the Democrats vote | Democratic ticket and to prevent, so fa | as possible, “paid_hirelings from voti | one year_as Republicans and the nex | year as Democrats, thereby destroy | the prineiple involved in legalized pr | maries.” | ~ Judge Lemon, while declaring his strong adherence to Democracy, which, he de- ey ¥ Z g .’ clared, could not be disputed, opposed t a1 " ik o “ resolution so far as the widespread pul et b LY as N lication of names, which he contended Spmad - ! - 3 was nothing but a proposed “blacklist,” a ’ iled | ¥ e s ~ method which to him was most distaste- heavoring 10| | & I¥ » 4 ful under any circumstances. tain to engull the - S - Max Popper defended the resolution, e it 3 2300 e -~ saying that those who professed to I i E"_? "'“h 7 33 - e one thing and voted another way should e delegation will ‘;, . ke b be known broadcast. He submitted that - L3 [ the adoption of the resolution would | “frighten” those who have one foot on the Democratic side and the other foot on the Republican threshold. The resolu- tion was adopted. CHIEN WAS UNFORTUNATE. At San Quentin yesterday the sent of death passed on Chien Keong, a Chin- ese murderer, was executed. This Chi man was surely unfortunate. In the S | perior Court he entered a plea of gt | und the Judge imposed the death p y. that the ral | Unfortunately for the Mongolian he was e T’J;‘;" i not a cook. Had he been the possessor ever, € a )¢ of culinary accomplishment he might | have been paroled and given employment | as chief cook of the State administratior | The Democratic Club of - the Fortieth Assembly District met Jast night - and | nominated "delegates to the State and ‘m\l:\h‘irrfll conventions. The Democrats of the Thirty-first 4 s { i | sembly District met t night and or | ganized a eclub. A committee was ap- t X | pointed to propose delegates to the Stat . e | snd x«,(%l cons onz. e - defeat o he Twenty-ninth. Assembly trict 1 complete rout Democratic ub - met ‘last nig and in this city, but SCORED BY REPUBLICANE. ble lan- | was not fit to nominated the following delegates to th | State convention:: Thomas F. O Conno: | George E. Madison, F. Shannon, J. J | Sweeney, Charles Gildea, James F. Lally | W. H. Zander, Charles Charmack |liam M. Pratt'and R. F. Gough. to the municipal convention of ere also proposed. Registrar of Voters Walsh yeste: notified the committ of the v Said be | political parties that the lists of A Shcrasnuis Satesstion 1.1 dates for delegates to the conventions 3 e e e w1 | must be filed in his office before Tuesday | August 6, at 10 p. m. or the names w opposed to ministration. Gage defeat I to affairs GRAND COURT OF HONOR, WHICH WILL BE A FEATURE OF THE ELECTRICAL DISPLAY IN HONOR OF VISITING PYTHIANS 4 | last night at The Temple, 11 not be printed on the tally-sheets | UNION LABOR CENTRAL CLUB. { The Union Labor Central Club resumed Turk street { its work of choosing delegates from to be voted for at districts matter of rrangements for the have an escort of which will be held in this city oa | Knights at the ferry sued to Uniformed landing to welcome | parage lican County | PArade which X ntrol of the | (e afternoon of Tues August 12, and ' them. that 1 was going to fight Gage ‘ sequently not fitted for the high office to which that we long as vour candidate i The railroad IS to effect 2 compromise, onest and reputable. | Joaquin Valley and Sacramento Valley | Considerable work has already been | done on the grand court, at the junction C e e e DESERTED WIFE e e S B R end the p of this great State have elected 2 ) e o L5 | Bepdopierof this tate have 8, was the sensation of the day. From KEVANE'S VAIN CAJOLERY. B N T o e T ' this wiaoe he geas Gmesti to Marystille The following additional have been acknowledged: Previously reported, §: Kingsbury (Lick House), 33; George W. 100; Builders’ Asso- erious disappearance on January 18, thence to San Franclsco, where he passed | | 4. | of delegates and it w: ty-ninth Assembly I to turn in its name t Forty-fifth, ~ Thirty-th NERAL J. R. C the parade to be held in Oakland the foi-, The California Promotion Committe A | ciation of $30; Spruance, Stanley & | Forty-fourth and Forty \ of the Uniform Rank | lowing day | recently announced a serie excursion ber of ped: 1 § it C. /. $25; Califor- | districts. The Fortieth and y \ Knights of Pythia | Major Carnahan is more enthusiastic|to be given during the national gat placed in position and the districts, which_have not yet filled, were it | by his wife and|in Tesard to Pythian week than he was|of the Knights. Parties in the interior | ging the festoons of lights turned over to the executive committee to is gang that they arrived vesterday | 07 (¢ occasion of his previous visit here | have been notified of these excursions and | next commenced. Above the crown | be acted on. 2 | arrive yes V1a few months ago. He estimated that|are enthused with the idea of having an | light at the apex will be a circle of T | The executive committee will meet to- were received During the afternoon | ncariy 5,000 Knights will be here during | opportunity to show’the resources of their | lights seventy-five feet in diameter within night at 405 Gough street and delegates consultation with C. Patton, S A large number of visit- | several sections to the itors and the | which will be the emblem of the order i: are invited to attend if they have any < ¥ ng young attor- | of the general committee, E tors >company the Pythians. excursionists are already ured of a |colored lights. The emblem will be 115 | Y ma | auestions to ask or business to transact ) introduced an@ wildly ap- | acler General Arndt and Adjutant’W. C.| Ogden H. Fethers, the supreme chancel- | hearty welcome all through the State, | feet above the level of the street, and |$25: California Wire Cloth Company | 41t was decided that the Thirty-fourth g age without gloves | Graves. The arrangements made for the | lor of the order, will be in this city on | The itinerary is for daily excursions to | When all of the many festoons of lights | & Co., $20; Naber, Alfs & Brun: | Assembly District be given until the next age declared at | Teception of the coming host were ex- |} 7. _Powell, adjutant general | Alameda County and San Jos and | are ablaze the most magnificent electrical | K. S. Hart, $10; Henry Harri " | meeting to complete its ticket. The club he people of this | piained to him and he approved of them. | jor General Carnahan, | steamer excursions around the bay. also | effect that has ever been presented to the | ber Company, $10: H. Harmon & | Will hold a mass meeting a week from to- { He also ha ltation with the same | zrrived yesterday. | to Del Monte, Big Trees, Santa Clara, | citizens of San Francisco will be pro- d F. Niehaus Co., Oscar | day at _a place to be hereafter decided official A. Nerney of the | The first trainload of visitors is due | Mount Hamilton, Lick Observatory and | duced. . $5; Domestic | upon. The club adjourned at 11:4 p. m. Naval in the day on the | here on the 9th and orders have been is- | Mount Tamalpais as well as to the San contribution: Livingston & | to meet at The Temple at 8 o'clock on | Monday evening. Safe tron Summer Complaints All mammas, and papas too for that matter, dread the heat of summer effect & COmproms e Governor and In language that | Gage is n ntative of the people and jout of view. His wife received a letter Su ey ? h is @ base lie. ‘The only talk of | bouid . ot het | never « been elected Governor. Let from him on February 11, 1888, bidding her | With it’s danger for the little i i $5 o3 was when Dan Kex Gas<’s - that o I ther and on ‘August 12 Tectity and his five little children Hood-by et it h fOI:(;' csl{’:“a“y the l:jabxcs. It is simply trusted Heutena fice and su eve be made etire e when we elected him chief announcing his intention to commit sui- eart- o gested that we bury the haichet and stand | Gage o brivate life. " That is the whole sub- e | cide. i b tt;ea ne dto ;fa year after yzar together in the interest of the Governor. 1T | ce of this so-called compromise. | Mr. Johnson's scathing repudiation of | Mrs. Long has eked out a miserable ex- abou e great death rate am ild- very 1r 4 him that we wanted no com- | I abhor Gage because he s not true and con- |4the Governor mumnefmepwndp.«t ap- | 1stence all these years for herself and the € — child-en caused by the summer’s heat. Yet it is easy to protect the infants against all stm- mer complaints, because we know that all plause | deserted childres jiPhe meeting was presided over by Loulg atfel . all the time trusting her truant husband and praying for his safe return. The fortitude with which she has fought for the means of sustenance for one of the leading attorneys cf During the interim between Missing Williams Man quartet rendered several cholce ns. ; The other speakers were Frank Griffin { and George Reynolds. They paid a glow. ing tribute to Mayor Clark and predicted that ke would be triumphant in his bat- tle against Gage and Gage's gang in the coming primaries. WhCW' 83° in the shade. “KEEP KOOL.” STHE. . Jaska Relrigerators: will KEEP PROVISION LONGER and USE LESS ICE Than Any Other Refrigerator on the Market. W. W. MONTAGUE & CO. SAN FRANCISCO. st AR RO R AR DR SRR R RORCAD DR ARCECEREI | Sou” 201 ni 15 s Somarals €uard to THREE SETS OF DELEGATES. Pretty Congressional Race On in San Diego County.. SAN DIEGO, Aug. 1L.—As pretty a three- cornered fight for a delegation as was ever seen is on in San Diego County be- tween the local candidates for the Con- gressional nomination. . They are Judge M. A. Luce, Senator A. E. Nutt and D. C. Collier. Each goes before the people | with his own special delegates and as all are in carnest they have selected the best | men they could find. The resuit will be that thirty of the leading men of the city and twenty-five of the most prominent in the county outside of the city will bé voted for at the polls. U. §. Grant is heading the Nutt ticket and Merchant George W. Marston is at the head of the Luce ticket. Collier has not made his dele- gates public. Every man of the fifty- TRORCRCRORC mmomumpmbm CHCROROAC RO 16 LRORRCRORORC LRORCROHCRINC ARG KRORCYCRY RCRIROBAOAC LR — Now Toiling in Pow- der Mill. Special Dispatch to The Call. WILLIAMS, Aug. 1.—Charles M. Long, lodgeman, boniface and foremost citizen, who disappeared from this city more than four years ago, has been found. He is toiling as a day laborer in the Santa Cruz Ppowder mill. The man who has been re- garded as dead, for the reason that when he deserted his wife and bairns he left a note in' which he declared his intention to make away with himself, has no expla- nation to offer for his strange disappear- ance. Apparently at the time of his de- parture he was in splendid circumstances, e was popular, as 1s attested by the fact that a local fraternal order élevated him to the highest position within its gift. He left bright prospects behind to become a toiler in a powder mill. On Sunday morning Mrs. Jean Long left Willlams for San Francisco. Her most intimate friends did not know her mission. Last night she returned with the news that she had found her missing husband. Charles M. Long was assoclated with his father as lessee of the Willlams Hotel, which hostelry they conducted for fifteen years. Charles Long bad a wide acquaint- ance among the traveling public and his | her children has been the .admiration of all her friends, and the patience with which she has watched and waited for $ome mnews from her husband was pa- etic. ‘When her long quest ended in the dis- covery that her husband was working in a powder mill near Santa Cruz she quiet- ly slipped away and went to that city. At noon on Monday the landlady of the boarding-house at which Long lived called him into the sitting-room, when his wife confronted him. The meeting was sensa- tional, and regarding it the wife is sflent. Suffice it to say that she returned to Wil- liams alone. Long was living under the name of C. M. Jones. BOY WITH A SHOTGUN KILLS A BIG BEAR MARYSVILLE, Aug. 1—With an old “‘blunderbuss” loaded with No. 2 shot, and aided by a couple of dogs, George Brown, | a 16-year-old boy of Mountain Meadows, | killed a 250-pound bear on Wednesday. The dogs treed bruin and kept him there while young Brown hastened to the house | for the only weapon at hand. The first| discharge - of shot merely angered the bear and he came down from the tree to | get revenge. But the dogs were ‘“‘game’” and gripped him with a hold he could not | shake off. Then young Brown got close | enough to almost touch the bear, and, firing at close range, blew off half of the animal’s head. these fearful perils have their beginning in stomach and bowel troubles, and we have a perfect family medicine that will keep the del- icate machinery in a child’s body clean,regula. andinhealthywork- ing order in the hottest weather — CASCARETS Candy Cathar- tic. The plump, bouncing, crow- ing baby shown here is a CAS- CARET baby. He feels that way winter and summer. Nursing mammas take a CASCARET at bed-time, and'it makes their mother’s milk mildly purgative and keeps the baby just right. Older children like to take the fr'agrant, sweet little candy tablet, and are safe from colic, gripes, diarrhoea, summer rash, prickly heat and all the mean troubles that summer brings with it. Best for the Bowels. The genuine tablet stamped C Sample and booklet free. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. back. pok R Never sold in bull. i cure or your money 563 All "““E"é" Ioc, 35¢, soc.