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THE SAN FR The Sl Call. THE GEARY STREET ROAD. ' THURSDAY...............SEPTEMBER 10, 1903 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprictor. Adéress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE. Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE. . .Market and Third, . EDITORIAL ROOMS. . 217 to 221 Steven: st. Delivered by Oarriers, 20 Ots. Per Week, 75 Ots. Per Month. Single Copies 5 Cents. Terms by Masl, Including Postage (Cash With Order): DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), one yeer. ... 88.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sundey), 6 months. 4.00 DAILY CALL—By Single Month. EUNDAY CALL. Ope Year.. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. { Dany. . - .. 1.00 $8.50 Per Year Extra FOREIGN POETAGE.......{ Sunday. 4.15 Per Year Extra | Weekly.. 1.00 Per Year Extra All Postmnsters are authorised to receivq subscriptions. 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NE. corner Cburch and Duncan streets, open until ® o'clc NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, 1 lock. 2200 Fillmore, open until 9 o'clock = —— SECRETARY HAY. k. of the signing by the ates and China of the commercial the ports of _ondon Spectator mph for Mr. Hay, opens to our tra a0 the de- o be a great t eed a crowning proof that he and most successful of living e ion, the Spect akes use but carefully prepared review believed he would the United States it was eve just such success as might be expected of a n of letters sent to serve in a capital where letters are honored by all classes and where literary distinc- s a passport to social and political preferment. surprise, therefore, that the n broke out and the Embassador was on to deal with difficult problems of diplo- British observers saw Mr. Hay develop a ca- y and a courage of the highest order. reviewing that phase of the career of Mr. Hay the Spectator says that in the face of threats of Eu- ropean intervention from some quarters, and of a thinly weiled hostility elsewhere, he showed himself endowed with a wise and comprehensive outlook on affairs, a diplomatist who could cross swords with the ablest foreign diplomats and easily hold his own. It goes on to say: “Instead, as was prophesied, of the man of letters being puzzled and perturbed by the task of meeting the finesse and lostility of a dexterous professional diplomacy, Mr. Hay showed himself at once perfectly seli-possessed and able to parry and thrust in the great game with the utmost assurance. He showed that should occasion rise he would know how to meet the bully with firmness, how to take fulsome declarations of friendship at their true value, and how to run great apparent risks without showing a trace of uneasiness.” The British critic attributes much of Mr. Hay's success’ to the training he had during his service as private secretary to Lincoln during the Civil War, saying: “It was in such a place and such an at- mosphere of fierce war and fiercer intrigue that the voung Hay watched and shared the serenity with which Mr. Lincoln faced and came victorious out of crisis after crisis. * * * After such a training under such a master Mr. Hay had little to learn. A shallower man might possibly have unlearned this great lesson iqa generation of leisured ease, but fine spirits are finely touched to fine issues, and the true steel of Mr. Hay's character was brought by those terrible years to a temper which it has never lost.” The great masses of the American people have not needed this commendatioff of a British critic to bring to their minds a recognition of the genuine greatness of the Secretary of State, still it is gratify- ing to have this evidence that his worth is appre- ciated abroad as well as at home. As his duties are almost exclusively those of a Foreign Minister, his influence is widely felt, and from the first it has been a power making for the good of the world and the maintenance of a peace secured by honesty and fair dealing among nations as among good men. In that respect his influence is likely to endure after he retires from office, so that he will be remembered among the great Foreign Ministers of all lands and of all times who have contributed to the development of an ideal diplomacy based upon justice and con- ducted with truth and plain speaking. when d up mak pac The Governor of Nevada has announced that he wil] surrender the convicts Miller and Woods, who re captured in Reno, until California pays the re- 7d offered for the apprehension of the desperadoes. e Governor of Nevada thinks that this brace of jail birds will make any distinct contribution to the | citizenship of his State he should keep the worthies and Jet the reward go by default. An insolvent woman has applied for relief from her debts in one of the United States courts. Her ap-' peal, so unusual as to excite general comment, speaks well for the fair sex and its keen understanding of financial obligations. As a rule in insolvency pro- ceedings, woman is generally the cause of man’s predicament, but is kept discreetly in the back- ground. 2 i HE Examiner attempts further discussion of Ttbc proposition to make the Geary-street Rail- road bonds a lien upon the whole city, and en- titles its latest effort “A Matter 6f Cold Business Policy.” Now that is just what we want to make it, a cold business proposition, by making the bonds a lien on the road only. Unless the road will carry the bonds it is not a cold business proposition at all, but a plan to compel the taxpayers of the whole city to furnish capital to invest in a business which will not carry its own credit and pay its cost, principal and interest. The Examiner fights against the only cold busi- ness policy that is proposed in the matter and de- | mands that the taxpayers furnish the capital and pay the interest, for a business which it also declares |is to be amply able to sustain itself. Arguing to that end it says, after introducing an imaginary .uxpa.ycr who objects to making the bonds a lien on the city: [ “You won’t have to pay it. The road is already pay- |ing $33,000 a year on the bonded debt the present | owners have placed on it, and gives them from $25,- |000 to $35.000 a year in addition, aiter paying all operating expenses, repairs and the like. You will have from $30,000 to $40,000 a year to put into pay- }ing off the debt, giving better service, paying better | wages and setting aside a good income for yourself.” | The imaginary taxpayer might well answer the Examiner: “If that i§ the case, what is the need of king the bonds a lien on the whole city, or taking |the taxpayers’ money at all? If the business is going | to pay such a fine profit, why not place the bonds and :thcir interest on the road itself, and leave the gen- |eral fund of the city free for the purposes of gov- | |ernment? The city will own the road and run it as | |a business, and if it pay its own interest, sinking {hmd and running expenses and make a profit, that |will go into the general fund, anyway, or public | ownership may be vindicated by giving those who {use the road a lower fare. If the road would not }m_\-, and yet were a public necessity, that would be {an argument for making all the taxpayers furnish the capital. But if it is to pay that is an unanswerable {reason why the bonds should be on the road alone | | and not a lien on the city.” | | If the Examiner’s imaginary taxpayer were a man | of good sense he would make that answer and vote against bonding the city for a business declared by its proponents to be capable of supporting itself and paying a profit besides. g It may be noticed that in the bond proposition there is no guaranty of separation of accounts. If the | road earn profits there is no provision for keeping |them separate for payment of interest and sinking fund, nor is there any provision for such accounting as will let the people know whether there is profit or | loss in operating the road. | ma Examiner, so far, directly supports our demand that I the b t will be observed that everything ofiered by the | A 1ds rest on the road and not on the taxpay- | If the road is to pay the large profit that is predicted, it needs no support from the taxpayers. As | for marketing the bonds and getting the money to ers ry, together with an esti- lenter upon the experiment of public ownership, no a statesman. It is pointed out |doubt Mr. William Randolph Hearst will buy the Britain received as Embassador | ponds. He is a multi-millionaire and $710,000 is a | mere trifle to him. His paper is sure that the road | is to be a great success, and will earn a large profit, !and he is an advocate of public ownership of all pub- t to the expropriation of coal mines, and he should put up this money gladly and | take the bonds, based on the road alone. The tax- payers would be glad to get®something from him substantial than wind. If they have to put up $710,000 and its interest un- | til maturity, they will have paid $1,420,000 for the ;Gear_\'—slrecr road. As it is a business investment its | operation should pay interest on that sum, which is not profit, but interest on capital. That interest wil: |amount to $49,700 per annum. So the road must per- | petually earn its operating expenses, its repairs and | maintenance and $49,700 a year interest on its cos, and anything over that may be called profit. It will be seen that from this cold business view of it the | Examiner’s “fine income” becomes a dissolving view, | and perhaps that is the reason why the Hon. William | Randolph Hearst has -not offered to take the bonds. He is entirely willing to try experiments that cost a million and a half at the expense of the taxpayers, | but wants to change the subject when it is proposed | that he risk something himself. | We affirm now that unless the bonds are based on | the road alone, andMts accounts are kept as separate as they would be by a private corporation, the peo- ple will never know whether the road pays expenses |or not. If kept separate, as a business matter, with- |out connection or merger with the general or other | funds of the city, the road’s success may be known |and judged or its failure exposed and corrected. The | Examiner sees imaginary parties, holding their im- | aginary money in their imaginary fists, ready to lease | the road, if the city fail in running it. That may be | so, but they will be just as ready if the bonds are a |lien on the road and not on the city. But it is not {well to mix prophecy and business. The road, run ias a public utility by the city, may be a success. | Basing the bonds on the plant only will not hinder | but rather help success by compelling the application | of business principles in its administration. If it be |a failure, making it carry its own bonds will in no | Hence the unintelli- lic utilities, even more | way contribute to that failure. gent outgivings of the Examiner so far disclose noth- ing in favor of making the bonds a lien on the city, but demonstrate the capacity of the property to carry its own bonds. If the taxpayers are wise they will have it so. | the very eve. | number of Republicans and of ANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, EPTEMBER 10. 1903. of elasticity, and a bill designed to provide that can be so drawn as to effect no other change whatsoever. In fact, elasticity might be provided not by enacting 2 new law, but by repealing an old one. Thus the Secretary says: “There is now no statutory prohi- bition against the well-nigh inherent tight of banks to issue circulating notes. This right exists through- out the United States, but subject to 2 tax of 10 per cent per annum. This tax is prohibitory. If I were given authority to formulate a meas- ure that would provide the requisite elasticity to our present currency system, I think I should add an amendment permitting - national banks, with the consent of the Comptroller of the Currency, to issue a volume of circulating notes equal to 50 per cent of their bond-secured circulation, at a tax of 5 per cent, the same to be retired at will or by direction of the Comptroller, by the deposit of an equal amount of lawful money with any sub-treasury.” Such, then, would be about all the legislation re- quired. To term it revolutionary is not to argue, but to denounce. If the method suggested by the Secre- tary be objected to, some other method equally simple and effective could doubtless be devised. The advocates of elasticity are pledged to no particular measure. They insist upon nothing but a good bill and prompt action: Of the effects of the passage of such a measure as vhat suggested by him Secretary Shaw says: “Three taings I know. First, this additional circulation would spring into existence almost instantly when- ever and wherever interest rates advanced to the puint of profit. Second, it would as promptly re- tire whenever interest rates became normal. Third, it would be absolutely safe—as good as the present national bank issue and with a slight and immaterial change identical in form and appearance—for the Government, amply protected by the 5 per cent tax, would underwrite it.” Where the issue at stake is so important, where the risk of evil resulting from delay is so great, where the remedy is so simple, it would seem that Congress might act even on the eve of a Presidential election. Besides, there is no necessity to wait for A good bill might be passed at the | extra session before Christmas, put into effect during the winter and be so beneficially in operation by the time the campaign opens next fall that no one would think of making a political issue out of it. Rear Admiral Cotton has reported to the Govern- ment that the presence of American warships at and Christians. It is very evident that these seli- same foreigners and Christians have never been on board of some of Uncle Sam’s fighting ships. If they had “confidence” would not be the proper word. ——— WHERE REPUBLICANS FAIL RECENT inspection of the registration of voters in several districts of New York dis- closed the fact that every voter known to be a Tammany man was duly registered, while a large independents were not registered. A similar investigation in any American city would disclose similar conditions. The bosses, whether of Tammany or not, are sure to get their henchmen registered in time for every election that comes. They are as ready to act at the primaries and at the smallest city election as at a Presidential contest. Too often, however, the class of voters upon whom a municipality must rely for the tenance of good government are so indifferent to their civic duties that they ignore the primaries alto- gether and not infrequently forfeit a right to vote by failing to register. The United Republican League has undertaken to rouse the attention of all voters to the importance of seeing that they are properly registered, so that they can take part in the elections to be held in this city. It is to be hoped the efforts of the league will be completely successful and that we shall .have a full registration and a thoroughly representative vote in the bond elections, in the Geary-street Rail- way election and in the municipal election which is to follow. 2 For the information of voters the league circular calls attention to the fact that the last day on which they can register for the coming elections is Septem- ber 23, and says: “If you were not registered for the gubernatorial election in November, 1902, or for the primary election in. August, 1003, or if you have changed your residence since your last registration, you must register now in order to vote at the coming elections. Citizens who will have resided in this city one year on November 3 are entitled to register now. Twenty-onesters who will become of age on or be- fore November 3 are entitled to register now. If you are registered in any other county in this State send for a transfer of registration to the County ! Clerk of the county in which you formerly resided, and when received take it to the registration office in this city. The registration office at the City Hall (McAllister-street entrance) is open from 8:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. and from 7:30 p. m. to 9:30 p. m. Go now. Don’t wait until the last few days. It only takes a few minutes.” While the advice given in the circular runs to members of all parties, and to voters generally, it has a special appeal for Republicans, since it is well known that a neglect of municipal elections is one of the political offenses to which Republicans are much more prone than the members of opposition par- ties. In repeated instances the failure of Republican candidates has been due solely to the neglect of Re- publicans to register or to vote. This time the is- sues are of exceptional importance, and every citi- zen should see to it that he assures himself the right to vote and to vote right on every question that is to be submitted to the people of San Francisco this fall. The man who wants the State to pay him for his team and horses, stolen from him by the Folsom es- capes, is either the greatest optimist in California or a practical joker who should be suppressed. Does he think that California intends to pay for the enter- tainment of her malefactors on vacation? We are paying enough in humiliation over the criticism of our sister States, 4 A Japanese gunboat prevented, at the point of her Beirut has given great confidence to all foreigners | almost | election of honest men to office and for the main- | _ LIt is not even drastic. At a recent Kentucky camp meeting just as the services had reached an ecstacy of devotional feeling three men were murdered. For Kentucky, we regret deeply to say, this is a lamentably poor showing. —— THE CURRENCY PROBLEM. O much opposition has been made to the adop- S tion of a currency bill at the coming session of Congress that unless the advocates of the meas- ure be earnest, vigilant and energetic it is more than |likely the plan of reform will have to go over for another year and then have to be argued all over again. The plea of the opposition is that the enact- 4 ment of a bill “revolutionizing our currency system | 8“"S: the other day, the entrance of an American on the eve of a Presidential election” would be folly. merchantman to a Korean port. ; Japa‘n may find to The answer is that no revolutionary legislation is her cost some day that small nations like small boys asked for or desired, and that it will certainly be bet- | |3 the use of deadly weapons only aiter the most ter for Congressmen to go before their constituents insistent practice and with almost inevitable damage with a record of useful work performed than with foviaee 'the stigma of neglecting one of the most important It has been asserted with all the gravity of inspired issues of the time. truth that high Turkish officials don't\ want war. As Sccretary Shaw stated at the Chicago ban- | Who ever was idiotic enough to suggest that they quet a few days ago, the legislation asked for by the |ever wanted war? What they want and what they advocates of reform is anything but revolutionary. |seek is the very diabolism of fiendish butchery It relates only to the question | worked out relentlessly upon defenseless beings. | Fe, IMPROVEMENT OF WATERWAYS IN OLD WORLD BERLIN, Sept. 9.—The Prussian Cab- inet has decided to propose again to the Landtag the gonstruction 6f a great cross- country canal to connect the Rhine, Weser and Elbe, thus completing- the Emperor’s proposed system of Internal! waterways. Congressman Burton, chairman of the Rivers and Harbors Committee of the House, who has returned hers from his Inquiry into the river and harbor Im-| provements in eastern and southern Bu- rope, says this is the only canal project seriously considered in Europe that com- pares in expense to the proposed Erie canal improvement. The Rhine-Elbe ca- nal was estimated to cost $60,000,000, though it is now thought it will cost con- siderably more. Burton, who is accompanied by Major F. Mahan, United States engineer corps, retired, and his secretary, Mr. Floyd, was recelved most courteously In the coun- tries through which they passed. Russia presented Burton a steamer for his trans- portation and Professor Timonoff and other engineers went with Burton and his party on the Volga from Tyre to Tsarit- zin, 1660 miles. Burton spent eleven days on the Volga and then visited Black Sea harbors, the Danube and the Upper Elbe. Speaking of | his investigations, which were begun in | June, Burton sald; We found f{llustrations throwing light upon almost every proposition in the river and har- bor works of the United States. Everywhere | in Europe there is a disposition to make in- | creased use of the inland waterways, whether Tivers or canals. The value of these means of transportation is coming to be realized more and more. In France and Germany and por- tions of Russia the quantity of freight carried by water Is increasing more than that carried by rall. There is a strong movement for the | improvement of the inland waterways and there is a growing opinion also, though not as potent or universal, in favor of tolls on the water- ways which are improved. It would seem that Europe affords better opportunities than Amer- ica to study the relations between railroads and waterway transportation because fre- | quently a state which is improving its rivers | and _ building canals also owns the rallroads. | But for various reasons the fleld is not much better. In some countries the policies adopted | !fiard the two methods of transportations are widely different. In others the railways and waterways are managed by different Govern- ment departments, each trying to make a good showing, and the competition which arises is almost as keen as in the United States Burton will visit the Lower Elbe near Hamburg and the canals of Northern France before going home. —— e Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Seot. 9.—From San Fran- clsco—J. Autmark, at the Hoffman; C F. Gardner and wife, at the Gregorian; R. H. Hammond, at the KE Holm, at the Grand Union; F. and wife, at the Ashland; Mrs. J. tle and J. C. Kittle, at the B. Tevy, at the Herald Square Lillienthal, at the Marlborous Lyman, at the Normandie: Mr: and D. Michan, at the Unlon S Kit- Manhatta A. re; H. Pi B. Mihran, at the Continental; F. H. . at the Morton House; Mrs. G. Van Worst, at the Marlborough: J. D. Wel's, at the | Manhattan; G. A. Wyman, ai thé Cos-{ mopolitan; N. E. Baker, at the Grand; | A. 1. Kittle, at the Manhattan. i From Los Angeles—A. Miller, at thej Grand Union. - i Santa Fe to Retrench. | TOPEKA, Kans., Sept. 9.—J. W. Ken- | drick, third vice president of the Santa| while passing through here to-day | sald the boilermakers who struck at La | Junta would not be taken back. Ken- arick also. announced that the contem-| plated extensive improvements on the | Santa Fe would not be carried out this | year. This is on account of the policy of | retrenchment in expenses which has been | adopted by the management. MAJOR GENERAL SHAFTER MAY BE A CANDIDATE Many ‘citizens of San Francisco, among them Republicans, Democrats and non- partisans, predict that General Shafter would be elected Mayor if he were nomi- nated for that office by the Republican convention. General Shafter was recently placed on the United States army retired list with the rank of major general. The grade is high and the emoluments for life are considerable. The question is fre- quently asked whether he could afford to terminate his army career in order to serve the city for a brief perlod. Stoneman resigned from the army to ac- cept the office of Governor of California, but after service for four years as chief executive of the State Congress restored to him the rank and pay which he sur- rendered in order to render himself eligi- ble, beyond all doubt, to the office of Governor. It is still an open question whether an army officer on the retired list can be classed as a salaried officer of the Fed- eral Government. Men familiar with the decisions bearing directly on that point assert -that the pay of an oflicer on the retired list s a gratulty in the nature of a pension and is not a salary. Argument is advanced that General Shafter would | not be required to forfeit this pay which | the Government bestows in order to ac- cept service under the mumiwcipality. s contended that the leading decisions are tu this effect. WHAT CHARTER SAYS. The charter of San Francisco, article XVI, section 4, provides: Any person holding a salaried office under the city and county, whether by election or by appointment, who shall, during his term of office, hold or retain any other salarfed office under the Government of the United States, or this State, or who shall hold any other sala- | ried office connected with the government of the city and county, or who shall become a member of the Legislature, shall be deemed to have thereby vacated the office held by him under the city and county. It is clear enough that General Shafter would not be compelled to resign from the army in order to accept a nomination for Mayor. When the late Colonel Men- dell, a retired officer of the United States army, was appointed a Commissioner of the Board of Public Works efforts were made by the political foes of Mayor Phe- lan to find decisions against the validity of the appointment, but such decisions were not found. The Republican local convention will as- semble at the Alhambra Theater, corner of Eddy and Jones streets, next Tuesday evening. The selection of J. S. Partridge for chairman would not be surprising COUNTY CLERKSHIP. John Farnham is a candidate for re- nomination to the office of Public Admin- istrator. His friends point to his official record and assert that he deserves an- other term as a reward for good service. Former te Senator Thomas C. Maher and A. V der Naillen Jr., formerly sioner of the Beard of Public publican nomination. There seems to be universal desire for a new deal in the County Clerk's office— for the nomination of some aspirant who has never been connected with the of- fice. George Boyne is a candidate for the Republican nomination and is said to have the support of many delegates. George C. Adams, another capable Re- publican, is in the field for the faver of the convention. —— i ——— Captain Martin Returns. Captain of Detectives John Martin re- turned from his vacation on Tuesday night and was at -his desk yesterday morning. He visited New York, Chicago and Washington, and says he spent a very pleasant time in each city. He thinks, however, there is no place like | the queen city of the golden West. General | » are active candidates for the Re- | HAPPY COUPLES ARE JOINED BY HYMEN’S BONDS — Grace Church was the scens of & very | pretty wedding yesterday at 1 o'clock. | when Miss Virginia Russell Ledyard ofy | this city and Earle Beeney of Oakland | were united In marriage by the Rev. Dr. | Ernest Bradley. Two hundred and ffty | invited guests thronged the church, which | was handsomely decorated with white roses and foliage. “O Promise Me” was rendered by Malcolm Fraser at the be- | ginning of the service. The bride was | charming in a gown of white etamine | over silk, with bridal veil and bouquet of Bride roses. Miss Dorothy Ledyard, maid of honor, wore a dainty gown #f pink net over pink silk and carried pink roses. George Beeney, brother of the groom, was best man. I. L. Bevans, uncle of the bride, gave her into the keeping of the groom. The ceremony was followed by a breakfast for relatives at Kenil worth by the bride’s aunt, M Dorothy Bevans. Mr. and Mrs. Beeney are visit- | ing the southland on their wedding trip, | and upon their return will re: land, where the groom has terests. ) ke, A small coterie of San Francisco peo- | ple attended a wedding at the Vendome | Hotel, New York, yesterday, when Miss May Anderson, daughter of Captain and | Mrs. J. F. Anderson of this city, became | the bride of George Isles Jr. of Scotland Mrs. Catherthe Collins of New York was matron of honor, and the groom was at- tended by one of a party of friends who came over from England for the nupt Captain Anderson was unable to be [ York. Mr. and Mrs. Isles will spend t i next year and a half traveling in Euror where the groom has extensive business ent, but the bride’s mother went with her to meet. the groom in interests. They will later reside in New York. RS There was a quiet wedding last ev g at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Charles D. Evers, on Shotwell street, when their daughter, Miss Clara Evers, became the bride of H. C. Siem in the presence of a small number of Invited guests. Tha bride is a talented young woman who has | spent considerable time in the study of | music. The groom is well known in bus | ness and political affairs and Is also con | nected with several fraternal organiza | tions of this eity. The happy couple wi spend their honeymoon in the south. . A pretty home wedding took place las night at 622 Broderick street, when Mis | Lulu A. Hund and Edward Gaylord Stew | art were united in matrimony by the Re Father Lagan. The bride, a winsome br | nette, was given into the keeping of t! | groom by her father, J. S. Hund. Tt bride was gowned in a dainty ereation | point d’esprit and wore the traditiona vell of tulle. She was attended by Len Swift as maid of honor and Miss Ma Parker as bridesmaid, the former becom ingly gowned in blue and the latter i | white. The groom was attended by Rob ert Stewart, The scheme of decoration was white and green and was tastefully | carried out in both the parlors and din- | ing-room. The young couple will leave n the morning for a short trip to Monterey | after which they will start for Denv where they will make their home. ——————— King Edward is also a clergyman of the Church of England, with a salary ,‘ | Pembrokeshire, Wales, St. David's cathe- { dral claims King Edward as a preben- dary, and for this office he Is entitled to a salary of £1 per annum. | o e — Townsend's California glace fruits and candies, 3c a in artistic E: 715 Market st., above Call bl —_——— | Special information supplied daily to | business houses and public men by ths Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 230 Call fornia street. Telephome Main 1042 * | friends. ADVERTISEMENTS. the home. 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