The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 10, 1904, Page 23

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1 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1904. SILVERITES DENDUNGE NOMINEE AS UNMANLY BRYAN ARISES FROM SICKBED TO TAKE UP FIGHT i AGAINST SENDING A REPLY TO JUDGE PARKER INDORSING HIS GOLD STANDARD DECLARATION nued From Page 21, Column 6. 1 o'clock and there were he trouble would pass. ch and that of Senator 1 been listened to attentive- ew words w and at it le the r Dar el cor h was rec he pit, ve hearty where the dele- twelve FIERCE CLAMOR H)n A VOT! CLEANING House is one of the duties that a weak look d to with dread. As azt she must pa th days or wcck‘ og- Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong and sick women well. REWARD:: $5° FOR WOMEN WHO CANNOT BE CURED. Backed up by over a third of a cen- tury of remarkable and uniform cures, a record such as mo other remedy for the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained, the Pierce’s Favorite Pres: 1 money of the Lni!cg Si f Leucorrhea, Femaie Weak- psus, or Falling of Womb cannot cure. All they ask ir and reasonable trial of their means of C._'e uterine trouble. aiso pain in the side and beadache. After taking your medicine [ was You may publish this or use it in Common Sense Med. rec_om receipt of e of mailing only. s for the book in stamps to pay em Bend 21 one-c aper, covers, stamps for the cloth- und volume. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. Y To the Public George Mayerle, the German expert optician, can be consulted regarding the condition of the eyes at 1071 Market street. Don’t be misled, but look for the name George Mayerle on ¢oor and window before entering. e TN STV H. S. BRIDGE & CO.. MERCHANT TAILORS. | €22 Market Street. Up Stairs. Opp. Palace Hots'. 5§, SAN_FRANCISCO. ! Novelties in impor imported Wear, pplause was given there | recognized, but < | gret on the part of the delegates when er entrenched himself in his room at his . | hotel, where he gave orders that he was t to be disturbed under any circum- stances. In addition to the loss of sleep had followed his first address. Great| applause followed his assertion that | lack of harmony in the party could not | be laid at his door. Senator Carmack undertook to cor- rect a statement made by Bryan as to the proceedings In the committee on tions and a short debate fol- d between the gentlemen, with the it that neither satisfied the other who possessed the better memory. | ONLY TWO WAYS OUT. The epeaker woke the galleries to| jenthusiasm when he declared that he | | had expressed a willingness to support | a gold standard man to build up har- | mony in the party and again when | he declared that he believed the adop- | tion of the gold standard would defeat | the party In the impending campaign. | iT} iere were only two ways out of the | difficulty into which the action of iJuige Parker had plunged the party. One was to amend the message In the | manner he had suggested and the other | was to amend the platform by the in- \sn‘!!on of a gold plank. Leaning far over the rail in front of the platform, he shook his hand at New York delegation and said: “I will agree to adopt Senator Car- 's plank. Will that satisfy the wds of Judge Parker?” It was five minutes after midnight en Bryan concluded and Repre- rtative John Sharp Williams arose. e plunged without preface into a cathing arraignment of Bryan. Turn- | ng from time to time he faced Bryan, | who t with immobile countenance |and fanned himself. His voice trem- ng, Williams declared that Bryan | d presented the spectacle of a man | eading for harmony, when in all this | reat convention his had been the only of discord. The amendments to ker telegram, he characterized “lot of foolish questions.” He | satirically, with biting humor | reat earnestness. N laining that the telegram from Judge Parker was simply an expres- sion of the Judge's own Individual | Williams suddenly wheeled, those on the platform, | »pose we had nominated on this platform?” | port the candidate “God forbid,” ejaculated Richmond Hobson in a loud voice just behind the speaker. In explanation of his own attitude on the absence of a financial plank in the platform, he remarked of the money question: “If it is in a trance it will awake, but if it is dead I do not want the corpse in my parlor.” Taking up the question of the reply to Parker Willlams read the first sen- tel "The platform adopted by this con- vention is silent on the money ques- tion? Does any one deny that—even Bryan?” asked Willlams. “Then take the next sentence,” he said. * ‘Because it is not regarded by us as a political issue.’ Does any one in this hall deny that? If there is any one on the floor of this convention who belleves that the money question is any issue in this campaign let him arise in his place.” Not a delegate arose. “Now let any one on the platform who believes the money question an issue arise.” # As he said this Willlams turned to Bryan. But Bryan kept his seat. Cries of “Question, question,” came so fast that confusion reigned for some minutes. In the confusion an effort was made to make an adjournment motion. This was ruled out of order. Bryan sprang to his feet and declared that his delegation was going to sup- that New York wanted for Vice President and if it would conduce to harmony he would withdraw his amendment to the reply. “I am going to withdraw this amend- ment,” said Bryan. will vote for the candidate for Vice President that New York wants. We are not going to do one thing to mar the harmony of the convention.” A roar of applause followed the an- nouncement. After some debate a roll call was or- dered on the question of the adoption of the Willlams reply to Judge Par- ker's message to Sheehan. As the roll call proceeded it was evi- dent that the motion to send the mes- | sage to Judge Parker would be carried by an overwhelming majority. The re- sult was announced to be 744 ayes, 191 noes, and the message was ordered sent BRYAN A SICK MAN. Others of the Leaders Show the Ef- | fects of the Long Strain. ST. LOUIS, July 9.—There was no re- they completed their work to-day and | for their homes to get sleep.| n of the past three days has erest in the history of po-! entions, and it was begin- | upon many of the delegates, the leaders, on whose should- illiam J Bryan has already suffered mporary collapse. He left the hall 0 o'clock this morning, as soon as the nomtination of Parker was assured, without waiting for the completion of the call, and accompanied by his broth- he had undergone, amounting now to nearly enty-two consecutive hours, | he is tre d with a bad cold, and his | brother and his close friends are doing | all they can to force him to take some | rest. He was not at the afternoon ses- n of the convention. Senator Pettigrew of South Dakota was among the few persons permitted to see Bryan, and he made a brief call upon him at 4 o'clock this afternoon. After leaving Bryan's room the Senator said that Bryan's bronchial tubes had been badly affected and that two phy- sicians had been called in. They found one of the lungs slightly affected, but a change for the better had taken place and the physicians expressed the opinion that ell danger had passed. They ordered complete rest, however, | | and Bryan will go to a place in thei country near here. He will not again appear in the convention. Senator Pet-| tigrew expressed the opinion that Bry- an would later define his attitude to- ward the Democratic ticket, but said that he would not do so until he could have time to give careful consideration | to what he might say. David B. Hill was late in arriving at the hotel this afternoon, and even his joy at the success of his candidate did not hide the fatigue and nervousness which the long sessions of the resolu- tions committee and of the conven- tion and of the numerous caucuses in which he was the leader have brought upon him. “I am feeling better. I have had four hours’ sleep,” said Senator Till- man as he arrived at the Coliseum this afternoon, but he found few of his con- freres who shared that™ feeling with him. John Sharp Williams was used up fafter his first session as temporary | chairman and for the last two days | has been suffering from hoarseness. Champ Clark, the permanent chalr- man, at this afternoon’s session was unable to make himself heard beyond the first four rows of seats, although he keeps a cough drop in his mouth all the time. He had his secretarv make the announcements for him through the megaphone. “There are only a few of the leaders who show the strain of the last few days, and it is the consensus of opinion that this convention has established a record for hard work and long hours. FREEAE = B Esopus. Now on Railroad Map. NEW YORK, July 9.—A sidetrack to the home of Judge Alton B. Parker at Esopus, N. Y., was ordered con- structed_to-day by the West Shore Railroad for the increased business at that point on acount of Judge Par- ker's nomination. —e News Continued 26.- Convention on —_—— A cheerful countenance betokens a good heart. inew spring wagon. TELLS STRANGE TALE TO COUNTY CONSTABLE Stranger Arrested at Suisun Accounts for Possession of Span of Mules ‘With Peculiar Yarn. SUISUN, July 9.—A stranger giving his name as Thomas McFarren and claiming Rutherford, Napa County, as his home, drove into town yesterday with a fine span of mules hitched to a He drove to & livery stable and ordered the team cared for. Constable Dawning learned that McFarren had offered the team and wagon for sale for $300 and at once placed the man under arrest pending investigation. When ques- tioned the stranger sald while walking along the road a few days ago near Winters a stranger driving the team overtook him and asked him to ride with him. When they reached Vaca- ville the driver turned the team over to McFarren and told him to drive it one day south and put the rig in a livery stable. The driver, claims Me- Farren, said his name was Wilbur and | that he hailed from Portland, Or. The constable is of the opinion that the team is stolen property. ST “Our delegation | by the convention. The roll call ordered on Willlams' telegram to Parker resulted as follows: Alabama, 22 ayes. Arkansas, 18 ayes. California, 16 ayes, 4 noes. Colorado, 4 ayes, 6 noes. Connecticut, 14 ayes. Delaware, 6 ayes. Florida, 6 ayes, 4 noes. Georgia, 16 ayes. Idaho, € noes. Illinois, 54 ayes. Indiana, 30 ayes. Iowa, 26 noes. Kansas, 20 noes. Kentucky, 26 ayes. Louisiana, 18 ayes. Maine, 7 ayes, 2 noes. Maryland, 16 ayes. Massachusetts, 32 ayes. Michigan, 28 ayes. Minnesota, 9 ayes, 13 noes. Mississippi, 20 ayes. Missouri, 36 noes. Montana, € noes. Nebraska, 16 noes. Nevada, 2 ayes, 4 noes. New Hampshire, 8 ayes. New Jersey, 24 ayes. New York, 78 ayes. North Carolina, 24 ayes. North Dakota, 8 noes. Ohio, 31 ayes, 6 noes. Oregon, 4 ayes, 4 noes. Pennsylvania, 68 ayes. Rhode Island, 2 ayes, § noes. South Carolina, 18 ayes. South Dakota, 8 noes. Tennessee, 24 ayes. Texas, 36 aves. Utah, 6 ayes. Vermont, 8 ayes. Virginia, 24 ayes. Washington, 10 ayes. ‘West Virginia, 14 ayes. Wisconsin, 26 ayes. Wyoming, 3 ayes, 3 noes. Alaska, 6 ayes. Arizona, 6 noes. District of Columbia, 6 ayes. Indian Territory, 5 ayes, 1 no. Hawali, 2 ayes, 2 noes. New Mexico, 6 ayes. Oklahoma, 2 ayes, 4 noes. Porto Rico, 6 ayes. Total (official), 774 ayes, 191 noes. R — ONE BALLOT ENDS, ——— Continued From Page 21, Column 7. that it became public with Sheehan’s consent. The effect was not what Sheehan may have expected. It has given Parker carte blanche to state the financial views of the Democratic party, but it has demoralized the dele- gates, who were yesterday so full of hope and fight, and there are few of them who are going home with any expectation of a Democratic victory in November. —_——— The Rosy Cross in Tibet. Any of the British officers now on the road to Lhasa who may happen to be Freemasons have, perhaps, just an out- side chance of solving an interesting question. For there are those who be- lieve that the high Rosicrucian adepts, having emigrated to the east about the beginning o” the seventeenth century, still inhabit the Tibetan plateaus to- day, and some of the mysteries of Freemasonry have been supposed to have been acquired from the Rosicru- T Y. 5 . riCatarth of Stemach From | sla and stomach. I have been using your | | medicine for a short period and I feel | very much relleved. It is indeed a won- | chial tubes, Peruna cures it. When ca- | | tarrh becomes settled in the stomach, A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Endorses Pe-ru-na, the National Catarrh Remedy. EROROR0R0RC SROR0S ORORORCROBCL IORORORCBOSCRCRCRORCRCY: An Ex-Senator, Hon. M. C. Butler, Also Is a Convert to the Good of Pe-ru-na. Coughs and Colds, and Other ilis Cured by Pe-ru-na When Other Medicines Failed. Hon. M. C. Butler of South Carolina was United States Senator from that | ! State for two terms. In a recent letter to The Peruna Medicine Co., from Wash- ington, D. C., he says: “I can recommend Peruna for dyspep- | derful medicine besides a good tonlc."— M. C. Butler. The only rational way to cure dyspep- sia is to remove the catarrh. Peruna has ‘won its way into thousands of homes and millions of hearts by its marvelous cures of catarrhal affections. Peruna does not | produce artificial digestion. It cures ca- tarrh and leaves the stomach to perform | digestion in a natural way. This is vast- | 1y better and safer than resorting to ar- tificial methods. i Peruna has cured more cases of dys- pepsia than all other remedies combined, | simply because it located. If catarfh is located in the head, Peruna cures it. If catarrh has | fastened itself in the throat or bron- L Peruna cures it, as well in this location as any other. | Peruna is_not simply a dyspepsia. Peruna is a catarrh remedy. Peruna cures dyspepsia because it is remedy for | generally dependent upon catarrh. |4 A Most Wonder ful Cure of Dyspepsia Made by Pe-ru-na. A. C. Lockhart, corner Cottage Street m?t Thurston Road, Rochester, N. Y, writes: ““About fifteen years ago | com- menced fo be ailing with a species of | dyspepsia and called on a physician, | who gave me only temporary relief. “I consulted another physician with no better results. ““I am now taking the fifth bottle of Peruna and have not anache or a pain | anywhere. My bowels move regularly every day and | have taken on eighteen pounds of flash, my usual weight be- ing 145 pounds. | was down at one time as low as one hundred and twenty-six pounds.””—A. C. Lockhart, The only way to cure a disease is to strike at and get to the source of the| indisposition. A cold left to run on and | on induces catarrh and catarrh produces consumption. What is catarrh but a consumption of the vital life forces of | one’s body? Many people die from con- sumption, when, if the case were more closely diagnosed it would be called ca- rrh. ‘The specific cure for catarrh is Peruna. ures catarrh wherever | & TR0 CRCROSCE! HON "JOHN Hon. John B. Weaver of Colfax, Ia., Pcpulist ticket in 1892, writes from the Natioal Hotel, Washington, follows: “ ; | can unhesitatingly recommend your remedy, J am satisfied that it will do all you claim coughs, colds and catarrh. for it."”"—dJohn B. Weaver. A German Baron Gives Pe-ru-na His Heartlest Endorsement. Baron J. M. Vendenheim, 1325 G St., N. W., Washington, D. C., writes: “For a long time, until I came into this climate, I had congratulated myself | upon having a perfectly sound palr of lungs. But I began to have little coughs and annoying colds that shook my faith | in my breathing apparatus. This con- | tinued two winters untl I had lost health and strength to an alarming de- gree. Peruna cured me and restored my strength. You are at liberty to use my heartiest endorsement of 'eruna as a medicine and tonic for colds, coughs and | "—Baron Vendenheim. 108080 0R0R0R00A0H LRCRCRORCACHCHOROORORORORONONCE ) cegel) B. WEAVER. §QWQ a candidate for the Presidenc on the C. as Peruna, for A Pr nce’s Endorsement. Prince Jonah Kalanianaole, 1522 K | St., N. W.. Washington, D. C., Delegate in Congress from Hawail, writes: “I can cheerfully recommend your Peruna as a very effective remedy for coughs, colds and catarrhal trouble.”” | —Prince Jonah Kalanianaole. If you do not receive prompt and sat- | 1sfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. | Address Dr. Hartman. President of The | Hartman Sanitarium, Ohio. — e clans. If they ever existed, the Rosi- ecruclans were a secret society possess- ing the art of turning baser metals into gold, and vowed themselves to gratui- tous healing of the sick. Skeptics, how- ever, maintain that there never was such a soclety, but that it was invented as a ponderous joke Ly a learned sev- enteenth century treatise writer.—Lon- don Chronicle. —_———— Our Note Papers. It is not a pleasant thought that the | brilliant white note paper which your | hand rests upon may have in it the fibers from the filthy garment of some Egyptian fellah after it has passed through all the stages of decay until it is saved by a ragpicker from the gut- ter of an Egyptian town, and vet it is a fact that hundreds of tons of Egyp- tian rags are exported every year into America to supply our paper mills. At Mannheim on the Rhine the Amer- ican importers have thelr ragpicking houses, where the rags are collected | from all over Europe, the disease-in- fected Levant not excepted, and where | women and children, too poor to earn a better living, work day after day, with wet sponges tied over their mouths, sorting these flithy scraps for shipment to New York. Our best pa- pers are made of these rags and our common ones of wood pulp, which is obtained by grinding and macerating huge blocks from some of our soft- wooded forest trees. — Geographic Magazine. ———— Lost Hostoric Treasures. Every year sees wiped out the re-| mains which have lasted for thousands of years past. Now, in our own day, the antiquities of South Africa and of | Central and South America have been ' | destroyed as rapidly as they can be | found. Elsewhere engineers of every nation use up buildings as quarries or | wreck them for the sake of temporary | profit. Speculators, native and Euro- pean, tear to pleces every tomb they can find in the east and sell the few showy proceeds that have thus lost | their meaning and history. And the casual discoveries that are made perish in a ghastly manner. The Saxon re- galla of Harold, the treasures of Thomas a Becket's shrine, the burial of Alfred, the burial of Theodorie and the summer palace of Peking have | within modern memory all gone the | same way as the wonders that perished |in the French sack of Rome or the Greek sack of Persia.—Flinders-Petrie’s | Archaeology. —_————————— No estate can make him rich that has a poor heart. Peril in Such Importations. The ants discovered by the Agricult- ural Department in Guatemala that are said to feed on cotton boll weevils, and which it is proposed to import into this country may turn out to be as destruct- ive in a way as are the weevils. Rab- bits were thought to be just the ani- mals wanted in Australia, and they were carried there from England. In a few years the Australian Government was offering premiums to those who wculd help abate the rabbit pest. The English sparrow, that has driven the song birds out of citles and towns in this country, is another {llustration of an imported pest and nuisance. Gypsy moths were imported into Massachu- setts for sclentific purposes. A few of them escaped and in a year or two the State government had to inaugurate a costly war of extermination against them.—Savannah (Ga.) News. —_————————— Government Engravings $1.00. A canceled postage stamp bearing the head of Washington is all that a | number of citizens in a Kentucky town have to show for dollars which have gone in answer to a cleverly written advertisement in which this offer was made: *“To close out a slightly dam- aged lot of engravings originally issued | by the United States Government, we will send you a beautiful popular like- ness of Washington for $1.” Perhaps fifty persons thoughtlessly enclosed $1 and were caught. After considerable delay each victim received a small en- velope containing a regularly issued canceled two-cent stamp, neatly wrapped Iin wax paper. The stamp may be the same one purchased at the local postoffice and used in forwarding the dollar to the schemer.—New York Commercial. - New Sea Serpent. A Texas steer fell overboard from a coastwise steamer the other day and swam for miles before succumbing to old Neptune. He was observed through the glass of Jersey hotel proprietor, who straightway notified the ;::ss of sighting “a mysterious horned sea serpent of a dun hue and with the tail of a lion, which wallow- ed frantically amid the waves, spout- ing like a whale.” The season is said to have opened auspiciously for that ingenious boniface.—Atlanta Consti- tution. ——— “Did Noah take two of each kind into the ark, pop?” “Yes, my son.” “Did he take two kinds of wives?” —Yonkers Statesman. ADVERTISEMENTS. Suits o Order $10 to $35 Cl tory; agree to repair, sponge and press your garments free of In our store performance follows promise just as day follows night Every week in the year we present to you through the daily papers certain facts why you should order your lothes from us. In every advertissment we make you a promise. We agree to m: ke you another suit if the first is not satisfac- we agree to refund your charge. Every transaction in our store is characferized by the meney if you want it; we performance of what we promise. Th:t is one reason why largest tailors in the West. Another reason for our growth is because every cus- tcm;r gets his money’s worth. s sood clothes as he is used to wearing for a great deal 1ess money. If you have been paying under $30 for your suits we will give you as cood clothes for about one-third less. If you can zfford to pay over $50 you can afford to go to these high priced -xclusive tailors. 1f you pay under $50 the here. Your burse should decide we have grown to be the In other words: He gets bast thing to do is to buy your place of purchase. Suits satisfactorily made to order for out-of-lown customers. Write for self-measuring blank and samples. SNWO00D 5(0 740 Market, and C or. Powell and Eddy Streets

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