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o THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1903. SMO0T MUt BATTLE FOR SENATE SEAT Mormon Apostle Will Go to Washington This Week. h Leaders Count Upon Democratic Aid in the 3 8 oy e Foes of the Utahan Will Charge That He Has Connived at the Practice of Polygamy. PUSLE LS B s e 1 Washing o - s As s s * g v Y O ey Wi 8 e« sto v e ge Mor- ADVERTISEMENTS. Eczema i mici h i mless, cures by killing disease germs. Used and the medical where. Sold endorsed by profession eve! - Add Quy clattagtat e reEE () itreatineni TIME TRIED 254 YALUE PROYED ‘Bottle | | ’al visir DR. JORDAN'S cnear HUSEUH OF ANATOHY 1001 KARZET OT. bet. 0:2 2702, 5.7.0a, 7B Largest Anstomical Mo orid in the Weaknosses o any contracted Gucase pesitively cmred by the aldest Specaliston the Cosst. Eat. 36 yeats. OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN _ Consultasion Treatment e 2 % 2 el valuabic book for men) RDAN & CO., 1051 Market St &, F. DTV T DO DV | ADD ™ ©f mucous mem! . " . FPrevests Contagion. Painloss, and not astrin. THE EVANSCHENICALGD. gent or poisonous. Sold or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid. $1.00, or 3 bottles 82.75. Circulsr sent on request. uative Brome ons Y COVERNOR AIDS - AFFLICTED MAN An Old Miner Finds a‘1 YOUNG MEN’S INSTITUTE PLANS BIG CELEBRATION San Francisco Councils Combine for Annual Washington’s Birthday Exercises. Friend in California’s Executive. | Pardee Renders Kindly. Ser-i | | vice to a Decrepit [ Visitor. i [ P [ { Special Dispatch to The Call. | | e | | CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- : | MENTO, Féb. 15.—Governor Pardee for-| | got f yesterday that he is| | tornfa and became | | Pardee. In that | | which | | n just £ time he made glad'a heart had been long devold of its full measure of cheer an& gave &n old man, decrepit| | suffering from a terrible affiiction, | | experience: which =0 long as he lives | | 1 be remembered with pl The beneficiary of the € vernor's kind- | {s an aged miner named Patrick , who lives up Truckee way. Hig 1as been spen the 4 some time ago by the premature expio- f a bl t now he L his hand befor his fac : ame to Sacramento sevéral davs = it has been necessary for the endants at hotel which he is im to and from his room his mes Despite his lany t s b t he 1a Somebody that Gove Par person who called upon | ted to be able to say t ead fi m is cheerful lerk the » speak to the Go to him ¥ ead nor willing tol and into the presence | to mention his ‘ he hotel, and t m that service lighted and in- When was < of the Gov- 1 t cordial wel ! » all who call seated and for ten conversed with he Governor laid aside the e he kindly d [ 1 lection. He in- ondition of Kennedy's s apply y the rem- HE joint councils of the Young a ) mitting the old man Men’s Institute of this city have ¢ out his le dismissed him e ual cele d-Dle n's birthday, - oli Opera- K insisted Keeping the orig- | 'ouse next noon at 2 e Hon. stter it b Washington’s birthday falls on ¢ he declares tha o the exercises will be mone f this city OFFICIALS AND FURNITURE. as alw s birth- - 5 g day with much dor, and Assembly Passes a Bill to Prevent m’» ”\_m“' S ,:.r.,v“ Renewal of Scandal. AEMRAEA AN 1 the history ler wiil celebrate twentieth an- of its founding in this city next the celebration will there double s rated for the oc- of flags and bunt i birth of the father decorati the oce: present a nd banne » committee ion has be mance hee n spared to ma ful one of Visitor: present ihe most 1d in the city he State will be FORCERY CLOUDS * ONCREDBEE Count de Bosdari Held| in High Repute | EI]M ABROAD in Europe. |General Completes His Journey Around the Globe. having d the name of J. Pler; Morgan SR T ums aggre $150,000, as told in| NEW YORK, Feb. 15.—General Miles, | The Call's cable dispatch yesterc is as his wife and party arrived here to-d: on well known in Constantinople as he is in | the steamship ILucania. The general, London. Tt Q has friends in New | who has been abroad five months, has in g T extreme surprize at|pat time been around the world. One feature of the trip across the At- that they never | lantic for the general was the sending of before heard of his having been accused | @ marconigram to King Edward VII on a criminal or even dish able act Februar When the Lucania was He is the second son of Count Bosdari hty miles from the Marconi station at of Ancona, Italy. In IS5 to bad | Crook Ha General Miles sent the fol- agement of the Bosd estates, | loWing message: y the fault of amother son, the fam AN.—Greetings, with st wishes and health of his Maje y and the me much reduced Iy forced to 1e following reply was received ing to : e iy by cable on the arrival of the Lucania in | is an old i o port to-duy > submitted message to the King. " 3 38 WRY ex- mmanded by his Majesiy to thank you cited much gossip at the time among his | ko mou wma wishes b then pay for him that |5 ch gratification to receive it ded him F KNOLLeY were Colonel then Italian Mi . gave to Count Maur gene Maus, He There were no serious hostilities The 20,000 troops there were in troops ther at that time. | va | which were fairly successful. His pol- ished manners and good family est lished him in an excellent social posit and he counted among his friends Mr. Vi er for the Turkish debt, and Mr. Smyth, & leading English banker of Constanti- nople. While in the Turkish, capital he married the daughter of a wealthy Ar-| { rked later in other ventures, some of | { { ppines we went to Hongkong, Nagasaki and Yokohama, lemy at Toklo and equipped and When 1 was uestion of of the they have the most modern panese are efficient in their em of inspection and routine e | menian, whose name is familiar to all | b ereh the > as ours. They pay a great American and European tourists in Tur- | deal of attention to the drills, physical condi- key. tion and gymnastic exercises. The troops at After his marriage Count Maurice, | T0Ki0 Academy number as many cadets as we have at West Point, and it is a well construct- ed and- efficient corps. Continuing, the g went from Japan to 12 Peking. I remained there a ahort time. We have there a small detachment_of troops—the lega- tion guard at the capital.” Everything there is quiet. We were accorded dn audience by the Emperor and the Dowager Empress. They re- ceived us with a great deal of courtesy and at- tention. We saw the troops Of the Chinese army and the troops of the allled forces which are still there, through ‘the good offices of Baron Blanc | {and his other influential friends, includ- | eral sald the party ort Arthur, thence | cesslon in Bucharest, Roumanta, whither | he went to live. This venture proved to be unsucceseful. The Count lost consid- erable money in his effort to make the Conceesion profitable and finally gave It up apd ‘went to London, again taking with him strong letters of recommenda- tion, which opened to him the doors of | General Miles' party went through the British aristocracy. In London he' Northern China to Siberia, passing scon utllized his knowledge of art. Me|through Manchuria en route, and soon to cultivated relations with dealers and with | Moscow.. Said he: s wealthy purchasers and became well known as a connofsseur. It was while acting as commissioner for the purchase of art treasures that he came into con- tact with Mr, Morgan. We were eighteen days going from Peking to Moscow. The roads are very good, and the irain service excellent. The weather was very cold at times, but, in my opinion, it was no colder than I have experienced in our North- west. The railroads have as good roadbeds as B v el b 2 ary Clark Rous »_ther an. B o Miles and Sherman H Colonel Whit- &nd -thé-youns--Count. satted | ney was with the party when it left this | ntinople. Baron Blanc at first Corntey, buk pebiikng weeks ago. £ as interpreter ¢ fo his interviewers General Miles said: sy in the Turl I have been abroad for five months. Our but knowledge of the v nth in the Philippines. I ex- guage was not sufficiently thorough to | amined y situation and visited the enable him to hold that position. He em. | Principal stations and forts and inspected the | L] | Y. M. I. WHO | SR ORATION ON | | 'S BIRTHDAY. i L the grand officers of the institute will oc¢upy chairs on the stage, The programme tohe rendered will con- verciges, songs and reci- est known amateur tal- ent in the city has been secured for the Thomas W. Kelly of Santa Cruz, the 1 dent of the order, will pre w Kell§ of Cathedral Coun eil No the day torney, 2 city will be the orator o Kelly is a well-known at- graduate of St. Mary College an orator of great force, Tickets for oxercises are complimentary and can from any member of the Young Men’s Institute in this eity. TRUST MERSURES Says Bills Enacted Are Satisfactory to the President. ——,——— WASHI eral Knos TON, Feb. who is know pared the important feature of the anti- trust bills now enacted into law, on being asked as to how they were regarded by the administration, sald: ing thé trusts pa: prompt is_highly is now dividuals, 2nd the courls of the United States ith jurisdiction to restrain and ating the Department of cloihed Com- e a organization and ods of corporations engaged in d foreign commerce, and to that end to compel the testimony of persons hay- & the desired knowl The legislation is ncise in ita tern rehensive In its cope. ns @ fair opportunity will be the effect upon the strial _monopoly off its for the great prodcer Discretion i ged in the President as to the publication of facts useful to be publicly known, and a wise administration of the law ses all that is helpful and nothing that is_harmful The law to eXpedite the hearing of cases and ivIng an appeal directly to the Supreme Court fromt the court of first instance assures within a reaonable time authoritative decisions upon important pending questions, In the knowledge of which future legislation, If necessary, can be confidently framed. Upon the whole, the situation is eminent satisfactory, and js the result of concession: modifications of views and forms of expres- sions upon the part of many earnest and thoughtful men, who have endeavored within a brief session to, meet a rational public de- mand in a rational and effective way. @ il el @ the Union Pacific or the Canadian Pacific. From St. Petersburg we went to Paris, where we spent five days, thence to London, where we remained elght days, and so on to New York. Did you have an audience with the Czar? ‘We received an invitation to meet the Czar, but we were delayed a day and so did not ar- rive in time, have been given us, but we could not remain. I paid a very pleasant visit to King Edward when we reached England and was most gra- ciously received. Regarding the story that Mrs. Miles was overlooked in the invitation which the general received from King Edward, General Miles said: Mrs. Miles was not Invited to Windsor through an oversight. It was not known that she was with me, or the Invitation would have been extended to her also. The master of ceremonies wrote me a very nice letter of ex- planation and regret, in which he said the King did not know Mrs. Miles was present or she would have been included in the invitation. In Paris the general was the guest of honor at a dinner given at the residence of General Brugere, commander in chief of the French army. o | naval schooners An audience with the Czar would | SACRED END OF MARRIAGE lo VIOLATED Archbishop Farley Says| Large Family Is a Blessing. Noted Prelate Declares Ques- tion Is One of Morals i and Religion. [} et tm— i Condition in France, the Result of | Voltaire’s Teachings, Is the | Country's Curse*and the | People’s Shame. | —— e Speclal Dispatch to The Call | W YORK, Feb. Such importance | has attached to the present-day disin- | | clination of American husbands and wives | { to have large families of children that a'l classes of soclety are discussing fhe question in all its many phases. When | President Roosevelt voiced his convi «l ltlon that this condtion threatened the | future of the American race, he brought | | to the surface a topic of universal in-| terest. Archbighop Farley, head of the Catholie { ¢hurch In this diocese, deciares it a ques- | ! tion of “morals and religion, the most fm- portant cuestion before the country | As presenting the attitude of his church, the following statement by the Arch-| bishop will be read with interest: “It is a great question—the most im- | portant before the country. It is a ques- | | tion of morals and religion. ‘Our faith | | holds that a large family is a blessing, | and as a ruie Catholics Lave large fam- | illes, because they are taught that mar- i ge is a holy ate and they must| | bring up their children in the fear of God. | “Any violation of that end is criminal—| mortally criminal. No Catholic can be a | practical Catholic who does not take this | | view of the obligations contracted in the { sacrameni of matrimony. o Catholic habit violating the | | secred ends of marriage would be allowed | | to approach the gacraments of the | church. This is the law of the chur - the moral law governing the whole ques- | tion of marriage. Any one persistentiy violating this law would be living in habitual state of mortal sin. “8Such is the position of the church on the question, as it has ever been held and held, no matter what theo- others may be ad- “As far as the question of economics goces, the theory opposed to large families is founded on falsehood, for. even the Deor find thelr greatest happiness in their numerous proger I have spent many | years among the poor and those who work, and In my experience it has been | the rarest thing to see a dark look greet- ing a new birth. The man of faith feels that another soul has been born, to In- | herit heaven, and he feel himseif | guilty of a heinous crime for it to be otherwise. | “Look at France. Its population has | fallen below what it was ten years ago | | and it §s traced by its own ru to this | very cause—a violation of tHillaws of | marriage. Such condition exi®& in infi del portions of France. This widespread | {evil is the result of Voltaire's teaching. | | It i the country’s curse and thé peop! | shame. \ “A remedy this lies in a practica? for | recognition of the sacred | age by men and women. te of marri- When they care ‘mm'c fo, s and dogs than children it is | not surprising that divorce is frequent | 2d popular among people of that class. | I said before, we find the source of | | this evil in the failure of men and wome; to leok upon marriage as a holy sacra-| | ment. Divorce aturally follows and is ore of the evidences of the evil. A man | ov woman who feels that | soon follow marriage sparation may rannot be expected | to have much regard for the other sacred end of wedlock—which iz children. This question. Tt is old as always taught re and there {can be no other answer fo the problem than the faithful observance of God's | commands. | e | ICE-BOUND SCHOONERS | ARE STILL IN DANGER | Revenue Cutter Seminole Is Unable tq Enter the Gulf of St. Lawrence. ST. JOHNS, N. F. States revenue cutter on her w out a number of ice-bound America ng schooners, is still unable to ent If of St. Lawr most unpr “mii%e The United which i Yy to the Bay of Islands to cut n fish | ce, and the cc The Canad nd Minto already frozen up there, which is | dication of the probable fate of the inole shouid be caught in the Captain DeMney, the master of the foundland steamer Bruce and experienced ice navigator in this region, believes that the Seminole will be ur to venture toward the Bay of Islands un- | til the prolonged easterly winds drive the floes well off the shore. are TRANS-SIBERIAN ROAD IS WELL CONSTRUCTED | American Railway Official Says the Line Will Be of Great Com- i mercial Value, | NEW YORK. Feb. 15.—Henry Clark R, | of this city. president of the Mi Kansas and uri, exas Railway, whowas with General Miles' party on its tour of the world, returned to-day. While abroad he Investigated the construction and equip- ment of the Trans-Siberian Railroad, | making the trip from Peking to Moscow in the record time of venteen days. nineteen hours over the East Chinese and Trans-Siberlan Railroad. Rouse believes that the road will be of great commercial Jyalue. He finds it well constructed and well conducted and believes it w | 1 soon | be possible to make the trip by rail from { Berlin to the Pacific Coast In less than |'a fortnight. i d DETECTIVES SHADOW A&/ RELEASED CONVICT Believe That by Watching Him They May Locate Considerable Sum of Stolen Money. AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. —Charles Bee- ler, who robbed Wells, Fargo and Com- pany of express packages containing $52,000 at San Antonio a little fnore~than | two years ago, was to-day released from the penitentiary, his sentence for the crime having expired. None of the stolen money was recovered and it is claimed that Béeler hid it in order that he might obtain possession of it when he had gain- | ed his liberty. He was a wagon driver | for the express company when he com- | mitted the robbery. He is being shadoweq | by Wells-Fargo detectives, who met him | at the prison door when he was released to-day. | i DAPHNE R IR A e i A lifelike reproduction, one of nature’s fairest creations, by the eminent artist Sar- ony, a work of art, a clagsical study, rich in detail and charming in every respect. Daphne, whom the famous Sarony has pictured in this beautiful portrait, was one of the most bewitching nymphs of Greek mythol- ogy. She was the daughter of a river god, usually Arcadian Ladau, sometimes the Thessalian Peneus; her mother being Goea, the god- dess of the earth. Like all spring or river nymphs, Daphne had many lovers. The first, Lencippus, a son of Oenom , disguised as a girl so that he might the better pursue the appie of his eye. He was discovered, luckless suitor, and killed by the nymphs that pro- tected Daphne. Apollo, the finest specimen of manhood the Gree! ever conceived, fell a victim tg the witchery of fair Daphne and f lowed her whithersoever she journeyed, followed her until the gods, wearied of his persistent courting, metam%rphosed Daphne into a laurel. And when you see Sarony’s picture of Daphne you will not wonder that even @pollo found her so beautiful he could not resist her charms. This subject is the second of the cele- brated Sarony series of art supplements, the exclusive sale of which is controlled by The Sunday Call. By many of the best judges ‘“Daphne” is considered one of the strongest of this set, Do not fail to inspect the samples dis- played all over the city and c8ast and then, uniess you are a regular subscriber, the only way to insure getting 05 becu‘:i:ul picture is to give your newsdealer an ad- vance order for Next Sunday’s | _a_j ADVERTISEMENTS. ADVERTISEMENTS. Tt esbarium PATENTED ?’\7 > SPHEROID < 7 EYE-GLASSES L‘ Have a Scien Va b&z ’NARKE.TSI{ ! W T HESs, {Weak Men and Womenwy KOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Claus Spreckels bl S ™ Tele [y » HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, TH&% 'Great Mexican Remedy; gives hea) ad A ‘Telephone Main 953. Reside: strength to sexual organs. Depot, 333 Markes Cluett-Peabody shirts are the real thing. If you want the ! best to be had ask your dealer for them. | Cluett Shirts $1.50 up Monarch Shirts g1.00 Cluett, Peabody & Co. nce, 821 California st., below Powell Restdence Telephone James 1501