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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1902. 19 SOUNCIL BRIBER SHYDER BOILTY Banker and Promoter Is Promptly Convicted by Jury. Penalty Is Assessed at Five Years’ Imprisonment in Penitentiary. MR Oct. 4—Robert McClure | convicted of bribery in Court to-night and was e years' imprisonment in | tentiary after the jury had | fifty-nine minutes its ver- | case, which had occupied an | presentation. were present when Snyder's was announced, the defense apparently been confident that its ny concerning Snyder's residence 1sas City would convince the jury e was entitled to the benefit of the of limitations. ncarceration of the convicted man to be imminent, when two of his | orneys signed his appeal bond for $25,- | securing his release until the term of court commencing Mondey. Early in this | term Snyder will be sentenced, and mo- | ons for appeal and a new trial will be | d. LOU1s, r was rolman Coulter to-day arrested John “Eid” Sheridan, the fugitive | of the House of Delegates, | rged with bribery and perjury, in a | n in the West End. When Sheridan | arrived at the Four Courts in charge of tne officer he was placed in the hold-over. onse to a question as to his where- ince the indictment Sheridan sail in & private hospital. Hartman, the fugitive boodler who pprehended at South McAlester, I 7 in the week, reached St. Louis day and is now an inmate of the City | He is held under bonds of $45,00 on two charges of pribery and one charge of perjurse in conmection with the Suburban ry case. Hartman is a former member of the House of Delegates and he is one of the eighteen men indictedas he result of the return of John K. Mur- 1 from his Mexican hiding place, where he was located by the Post-Dispatch and | induced to surrender himself. Hod-Carriers Go on Strike. CHICAGO, Oct. 4—Eight hundred hod- on the University of Chicago g and ‘n the mew postoffice went ke to-day. They declare the con- are mot paying the union scale s an hour. B. KATSCHINSKI PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANGISCD. Just a Few Left Clear Them Out. The last sale to clear up our stock, all our short lines bunched gether. Shoes that formerly sold from $3.00 to $5.00 sold at this sale for $1.25. Just to clear them out. Don’t be backward about in- quiring, but step in and examine the stock, as we may have your size, and we want your trade. Ladies’ Vici Kid Lace Shoes, turned or welted soles and coin toes and tips, SOLD AT $1.25 A PAIR. Sizes: HOOD RIBBED BACK RUBBE The best rubber on the market—keep it in mind, as the rainy season will soén be here. 4 For Ladies, 50 cents a pair. 45¢ LADIES’ BLACK BEAVER FELT SLIPPERS fer around the house. A mew shipment just received. REDUCED TO 45 CENTS A PAIR. Sizes3to g A full line of ALFRED DOLGE’S FELT GOODS con- stantly on hand. Country Orders Solicited. B. KATSCHINSKIL, PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 THIRD STREET. €an Francisco. Purely vegetable, mild and rellable. fect dligestion, complete absorption calthful regularity. For the cure of ail Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, regularities, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Con stipation, ‘Piles and all ts Of the Internal 'Viscera, 25c a box. At drw‘fi or & mal EADWAY & CO. New ¥ {but all efforts to induce him to return TIME REUNITES FATHER AND SON Missing Oakland Man Is Restored to His Family. W. H. Smith’s Hermit Life in Sierra County at an End NEVADA, Oct. 4—An interesting ro- mance came to a termination among the mountains of Sierra County yesterday when an aged man, who has been miss- ing from home for nearly twenty years, was restored to his family, which had ex- hausted every means to find him. Twenty years ago W. H. Smith, a well-to-do busi- ness man of Oakland, left his home with- out apparent cause. He was heard from/ at different times and for a few Yyears some trace was kept of his whereabouts, home were unavailing. After he was absent four years his family lost trace of him. Letters were sent to various postoffices and to many newspapers in the hope that thereby some clew to his where- abouts might be obtained. Nothing was learned and for sixteen years the man was as completely lost to his family as though he had been dead. Meanwhile his wife had died and his sons had gone into business. One of them, Charles H. Smith, became a pros- perous clothing dealer in Oakland. It was through his intimate acquaintance with W. H. Rouse, who is operating the Wide- awake mine on Alabama Hlll, near Dow- nieville, that the mystery suddenly has ben cleared and the missing man found. One day this week an aged man stopped NO MORE PASSES FOR CAMPAIGNERS Railroads Sadden the Hearts of Washington Politicians. Take Revenge for “Insertion of Objectionable Planks in Platforms, TACOMA, Oct. 4—The Great Northern and Northern Pacific railroads have de- cided not to assist in the election of State legislators who will enact Into law the planks adopted by the Republican and Democratic State conventions last month, declaring for the creation of an appoint- ive State Railway Commission which shall regulate rates and otherwise gov- ern the rallroads of this State. The dis- pleasure of the railroads was exhibited this week in’their refusal to issue trans- portation for campaign speakers to be | sent throughout the State by the central | committees. This State is nominally Republican and in the past years the policies ‘of the Re- publican party have been largely shaped by railroad managers residing in Taco- ma and Seattle. Despite energetic ef- forts, these men failed to prevent the insertion in both party platforms of planks favoring an appointive railroad commission. The railroad managers went so far as to get Presidents Hill and Mel- len to visit the Eastern Washington wheat districts in July and voluntarily give the farmers a ten per cent reduc- tion in grain rates. This created some sentiment in favor of the railroads, with the result that the rallroad commission planks were adopted by only small ma- Jorities. | at | remain with him and the following day | | dispatched ‘a"letter to Charles H. Smith Now that - transportation for their speakers must be paid for, both State committees must obtain at least double funds heretofore deemed necessary for conducting a campaign. X the Wideawake boarding-house and | informed Rouse that he was prospecting | on Canyon Creek,- but had become lost | in traveling about. He was invited to re- main over night and during their con- versation Rouse learned the man's name HUNDREDS DIE HAVANA BISHOP IN A TIPHOON| 10 BE GELEGTED Appalling Loss of Life on the Coast of Japan, Immense Fleet of Fishing Craft Fails to Reach Shore. VICTORTA, Oct. &—Japan was visited by a heavy typhoon early in September and the steamer Tartar brings advices of many disasters. From Kagoshima comes news of the loss of 600 fishing smacks and 1500 men. The steamer Karazawa Maru, which was dispatched to search for sur- vivors, brought in about sixteen. The Governor of Yamaguchi Ken re- ports that thirty-eight persons were drowned and nine others were killed by collapses of buildings during the storm at Iwakami, Yokohama, Fujikiwa, Atgo, Skino and Kawashita. The Governor of Hiroshima Ken reports that inquiries as to the damage done by the storm Sep- tember 12 showed that sixty-five lives were lost. Twenty-five casualties have been reported from Akigori alone. Ac- counts of further damage and casualtles were expected. The steamer Kairu Maru (250 tons) was wrecked on Ushifuki on September 10. HUNDREDS OF CHINESE SINK WITH STEAMER Sand Leong Probably Lost Off the Asiatic Coast During a Typhoon. VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 4—Advices by mail from China tell of the loss of the steamer Sand Leong off the China coast. The vessel, which was bound from Ran- goon to America and embarked 300 Chi- nese at Singapore, is believed to have been lost in a typhoon with all on board. Purpoie of Archbishop Chapelle at Rome Explained. Vatican Officials Deny That Philippines Are Con- cerned. ROME, Oct. 4—Vatican officials author ize the announcement that Archbishop L. A. Chapelie of New Orleans, Apostolic Delegate to Cuba and Porto Rico, has not been summoned to Rome by Cardinal Rampolla, and that his visit is in no way connected with Philippine affairs, the cus- toms of the Holy See being that a prelate recalled from a position shall have noth- ing to do with the business of the ap- pointment he vacated. These officials consider that Mgr. Cha- pelle’s request to the Rev. Santiago Paya, Provincial of the Order of Dominicans in the Philippines, to confer with him was made because the Rev. Santlago Paya is also Provincial of the Order of the Do- minicans in Cuba. Mgr. Chapelle comes to Rome to hasten a verbal understanding regarding the set- tlement of questions pending in Cuba, principally the’ appointment of a Bishop of Havana, the management of Mgr. Bar- nada, administrator of the diocese of Ha- vana; the choice of a new Archbishop of Santiago and the division of the fund paid by the United States to the clergy entitled thereto. Mgr. Chapelle has informed the Vatican that he will remain in Rome a fortnight. He will Jand at Genoa October 19, the day on which Archbishop Guidi, Apostolic Delegate in the Philippines, will sail from Marseilles for Manila. ANADARKO, I. T., Oct. 4.—Samuel Robinson to-day shot and instantly killed Smith Brown. Both were prominent business men, supposedly close frient and the shooting has caused a sensation. binson when arrested refused to reveal the cause of the shooting. Catarrh of the Stomach and other forms of indigestion are often eaused by eatarrh of the head and other complications; eight out of every ten people have dyspepsia in one form or another; the only absolute eure for dys- pepsia and indigestion is DUFFY’S PURE Catarrh and Dyspepsia symptoms are a sense of burning and dull weight in the stomach after eating, sometimes accom- panied by heartburn, flatulence, constipa- !"l or dlarrhea, languor, depression, Ir- ritability, dull headaches; all these symp- toms show that your digestive organs are out of order, and you should take Dufty’'s Pure Malt Whiskey. It will cure dyspep- sla and stimulate the blood to healthy action. STOMACH TROUBLE CURED. Gentlemen: I got six bottles of your Whiskey about a year ago, and I used half of it and it did me a great deal of good, and I gave the rest to my brother, who had stomach trouble, and I think he would be in his grave to-day it it hadn't been for your Whiskey, as he was going down fast and the.doctor could do him no good. ISAAC E. WALKER, Lebanon, Pa. CURED INDIGESTION. I have used Duffy’s Malt Whiskey for half a year, and it afforded e great sat- isfaction by curing me of that dreaded disease, indigestion, which troubled me for two years. DAVID GORDON, 170 W. 11th st., Chicago. TWO BOTTLES CURED HIM. Atlantic City, N. J., March 16, 1902 Dear Sirs; I have used two bottles of your Pure Malt Whiskey. I 'tried it for indigestion and dyspepsia and found great relief from it. M. H. RENO. CURED DYSPEPSIA. I have used Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey for dyspepsia, and from the benefit I de- MALT WHISKEY rived from iteI can safely recommend it le; any one suffering from stomach trou- e. R. M. JOHNSON, Eiko, Va.. Sept. 8, 1902. Do not fill your system with harmful drugs. Doctors prescribe and hospitals use Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey whenever an absofutely pure stimulant and tonic are required. It contains no fusel oli or other dangerous ingredient. The genuiné at all druggists’ and gro- cers’ or direct, $1.00 a bottle. It is the only whiskey recognized by the Govern- ment as a medicine. This is the guaran- tee. Valuable medical booklet contain- ing symptoms and treatment of diseases and convincing testimonials sent free to any reader of this paper who will write Dufty M;Jt Whiskey Company of Roches- er, N. Y. Traveling Man Injured. CALIENTE, Oct. 4—The Kernville and Callente four-horse stage overturned to- day while passing one of the Kern River Company’s ten-horse teams hauling ce- ment on the high mountain grade. A man named Dinnegan, traveling for Paul Fredman & Co. of San Francisco, was badly injured. e il SAN JOSE, Oct. 4—Thomas Higuera, com- victed of larceny in the stealing of & bicycle, was to-day sentenced to one year in San Quentin. and enough of Lis history to become con- vinced that he was the long missing W. | H. Smith.. He prevailed upon Smith to| in Oakland. The latter lost no time in going to Downieville, arriving yesterday. | He found his father, who, it is said, was | not anxious to return to the centers of | civilization, life in the mountain wilds | seeming to have more charms for him | than that of gay cities. He was prevailed | upon, however, to return with his son and | they departed for Oakland. Torpedo Boat to Be Destroyed. LONDON, Oct. 4—The Admiralty has | decided to break up the torpedo-boat de- | stroyer Wolf at Portsmouth, with the ob- | ject of discovering whereln lies the weak- | | ness which has led to so many mishaps and -disasters in the case of this craft | during the present year. The Wolf, which { | cost $1,250,000, has been placed in a spe- | cially fitted drydock whilevawaliting the | costly operation. { — ——— Hart F. Smith Is Dead. SACRAMENTO, Oct. 4—Hart F. Smith, one of the most prominent fruit growers | in this section of California, died at his | home in Isleton to-day. On Thursday he{§ fell from the top of a windmill, breaking several ribs and receiving other internal injuries. Smith was a Mason, high in the order. He leaves a wife . and family of grown children. ‘.-h'h'!'i-i—H-l'H—H-l—l—l—I-l-H-l'i-.’ | GIVES UP EFFORT T0 END STRIKE Continued From Page 17, Column 4. preme Court of the United States in Octo- ! ber, 1876. This was thie case in which the | State of Illinois, by an act of the Legis- lature; sought to regulate elevator and warehouse charges at Chicago. In pass- ing on this case the Supreme Court of the United States laid down the following | | principles of law: | “First—Under powers inherent in every | soverelgnty a Government may regulate the conduct of its citizens toward each other, and, when necessary for the pub- lic good, the manner in which each shall use his own property. “Second—It has in the exercise of these | powers been customary in England from time immemorial and in this country from its first colonization to regulate fer- | ries, common carriers, hackmen, bakers, | millers, wharfingers, innkeepers, etc., and in doing so_to fix the maximum charge | to be made Tor service regdered, accom- | modations furnished and articles: sold. “Third—When the owner of property de- | votes it to a use in which the public has | | an interest he in effect grants to the pub- lic an interest in such use, and must to | | the extent of that interest submit to be | | controlled by the public for common good | as long as he maintains the use. He may | withdraw his grant by discontinuing the | use. | ““Fourth—Rights of property, and to rea- sonable compensation for its use, created by common law, cannot be taken away without due process, but the law itself, as a rule of conduct, may, unless consti- tutional limitations forbid, be changed at | the will of legislatures. The great office | of statutes is to remedy defects in com- | | ;on law as they are developed and to |f|’ ! adapt it to changes of time and circum- | stances. “Fifth—Limitation by legislative enact- | ment of the rate of charge for services | | rendered in public employment or for use | f§ of property in which the public has an interest establisMes no new principle in the law, but only gives a new effect to an old one. RECEIVER IS SUGGESTED. “The well-established principles of law lald down by the Supreme Court of the United States ia the opinion I have cited make it clearly within the province of Governor Stone to take control of the situation in Pennsylvania. Necessities of the situation have made it his imperative duty to do so for weeks and months. There is no need for public sentiment to look to the President. It should be di- | rected toward Harrisburg, the capital of the great State, whose Governor has so far utterly failed to appreciate the re- sponsibilities resting upon him and the means for relieving the entire country, which are at his disposal.” Six thousand Illinois citizens during the jast twenty-four hours have signed a pe- titlon asking President Roosevelt to call an extra session of Congress to enact ] some measure for the prevention of a coal famine. One method suggested in the petition is a provision for the ap- pointment of a temporary receiver to operate the Pennsylvania mines which are closed on account of the strike. The petition i€ being circulated all over the | city of Chicago and throughout the State of Tllinois, under the direction of United - States Senator Willlam E. Mason. R AT “There are numerous instances where M .I o i 5’; o e temporary receivers have been appointed for the management of public utilities,” =aid Senator Mason, “and which afford ample precedent for such action in the present emergency. Rallroads have been thus treated by the courts on the petition of the people, as can be shown by The records. I have in- mind, too, a case where a dispute between a municipality and a water works company, which threatened to deprive the people of a water supply, resulted in the appointment of @ recelver until the trouble was set- hats or furnishings. Orders l Oul-of-town. orders filled for men’s or boys’ clothing, will look on you. sale price is - ; 9 3 Men’s Striped | Aot . TS e RO As a leader in our pants department we sell striped worsted They are in reality worth $2.50. have to pay that for them here if we did not put them in as a special. The pants were made by us—$2. 5o is the maker-to-wearer price; the trousers for $1.95. Boys’ Hats Style and e "1 AP Value for There is a pleasing combination of style and value in these suits at $7.75. latest styles of single and double-breasted garments. Take the suit here pictured—a three-button, double-breasted style.. The coat sets well across the shoulders and the trousers hang just right. The picture is sketched from life and shows just how the suit But as good as the illustration is it cannot do the clothes justice. They are cut in the You must see the cloth, the workmanship.and the patterns—then choose according to your judgment. The materials are tweeds, cheviots and worsteds in check mixtures; single or double-breasted styles; sizes 34 to 42; the value of the suits is $r2.5o—sale price until Saturday night, .95 | Boys’ Sailor | Suits As a rule, juvenile clothing passes through one or two middlemen’s hands before it reaches the wearer. This all adds to the cost, for each man must make his profit. You must pay for the profit unless you buy from the maker. That’s the proposition we offer you. Our juvenile clothing is made b; 1) i . own workshops, and is sold directly to o i Gy s ve pod fally & third. The proof of this j boy longer than _that bought elsewhere. n sailor suits we have an immense assortment in serges, cheviots, worsteds trimmed in a hundred different styles: the colors are navy blue, red, brown, Venetian blue and mixtures; ages 3 to 12; prices from $3 to $10. A suit like the one here pictured in the merchandise. *5.00 Boys’ hats, in all colors and shapes, 9oc, $1.30 and $1.50. Boys’ all-wool golf caps with snap visors, variety of pat- terns, 25¢ each. ' Boys’ unlaundered white shirts, made of N. Y. mill mus- lin, sizes 12 to 14; reduced from goc to 35¢ each. Boys’ nightshirts in, flannelette, twilled muslin and fancy embroidered muslin, Soc each. SN-WO0D 718 Market Street you at but one fair profit. You will find that our clothing wears your and Furnishings .75 You would - We save you fully a tweeds . and fancy ’ %7.75 sale ends next Saturday night Trousers | —é_atalogue : If you live out of San CO ‘ Francisco write for our illus- trated catalogue, “Attire for | I Man and Boy.” f - P