Show DEMAND fOR THE H EXCLUSION LAW LAI Text of Resolution to Be Intro Introduced Introduced Introduced in the Legislature of California I II I ANTI Ar TI ASIATIC J JAPANESE LEFT OUT OF RECK RECKONING RECKONING THIS TIME TIMEt j jV jr jA f t a Ime tu Cal r ID Ft b 2 Senator i iL L r t chairman of M th sen Rn n na at a 11 on federal relations relation has hap ha hap i ip p vr n i tin follow following ins resolution a all as a n aI I for the meat measure ure drawn by byA I IA A V A t o of or o Jackon and nd Mare Marc An n r rt r l Sail San Francisco to toroa toA A A i 1 I Ir roa rea r The happiness Ita I iu ril rity of Ut tin ti th people of o 0 a nation il upon ulon a li p pula ti YV FA The Te i from the over ocr p il 1 l ia tiON of Asia Ala of people wh ii i for American citizen sit I 0 r fur with the Cau Can Canian a tan ian rc r hat has resulted and an will re rh reMi I IlU Mi lU Ui i I lo J erin prill the American standard i if f h Wc c ini the dignity and lug ing t h of hf American labor 1 VUc ref The exclusion of Chinese lal r un 1 the tho existing exl exi Un exclusion id la s R i r the States has tended to pr cr ro rv th economic and anI social wel WEI WEIfa fai fa of the thc th people Il VI Ii I ria r s W V it with alarm any proposal J i repeal of such exclusion laws and the substituting of or gen general en eral laws aws Whereas Tte The Interests interest UI of tf California an best beat be safeguarded by the reten retention retention tion of said exclusion laws and by br ex ext t their terms and provisions to other Asiatic people 1 Have Wrong Impression The Th people l ople of the eastern Ma tat toe and the tile United States generally have hae an erroneous impression as a 1 to the ical 1001 sentiment of the people of the t e Pa coast relative to the Asiatic ques question question question tion Whereas We Ve think it right and proper that the people of this country countr should be advised as M a to our true post position tion ion on that question qu therefore be It Resolved By B 11 the senate and assem assembly m bly bl Jointly that we respectfully urge the congress of the United States to intact the present Chinese ex exclusion laV and instead of taking any n action looking to the repeal of said ox IX laws to extend the laws and provisions thereof f so o as to apply to and Include all aU Resolved That our senators be in instructed and amI representatives in congress to use all honorable means m ns to carry car out the foregoing recommendation dation and request Resolved Re oled That a certified copy cop of lh these e resolutions re be transmitted to the president pre and speaker respectively respective of ot the senate and house of ot representatives of 1 the United States and to each of our senators and representatives in con congress on gross gress by the secretary of the senate Xo No more patriotic gathering could have Siave been found yesterday perhaps than that of the Daughters of the American Revolution when the local chapter tho the Spirit of Liberty met for fur forthe tile the yearly feast to do honor to tho the Father of his Country Always an elaborate social and intellectual affair this year It seemed to surpass s all pre pro previous previous records and the fourth annual luncheon of or the chapter will be one long remembered by b the members and those fortunate enough to be counted their guests pes I Toasts roasts wise and witty witt enlivened the I after part of the on In the be beginning beginning beginning ginning an informal reception was held heldon heldon j jon on the tho top floor of the Bransford where wherein in the tho large card rard and billiard rooms am dm ample ampie pie space was found for the meeting and greeting of friends Here for a ahall half hall hour a warm welcome was extend extended ed d to all by the chairmen of entertain entertainment ment mont Mrs Irs C S Kinney and Mrs Irs C E B BAllen EAllen i Allen and by b the chapter chapt r regent Mrs Irs Henry La Motto Motte and the other mem members members bers holding or 01 having haing held office in inthe Inthe inthe the chapter Before 2 the entire company compan had repaired to the dining room below where the tables formed into Int a hollow square with a smaller table in the cen ecu center centOr ter tOr for the toastmistress and the guests of honor made a most attractive pic plc picture picture ture with of flowers Around the room were hung many flags gs gsand and the national colors were seen feen at each place as its s well But down the long tables ropes of green smilax were wen in interspersed interspersed with many crystal baskets filled with the exquisite freesia flowers in great groat quantities sent from Califor California nia by Mrs In Lee Charles Miller a director director tor of oC the chapter and A program of toasts done dom in ln the white and gold of the chapter chaster was also at each place combining the chapter col colors colors colors ors with the national Before begIns nine ning the luncheon Mrs Irs C G Plummer sang The Flag Without a Stain Mrs Irs R n G Gemmell accompanying After a delicious menu had been served the toastmistress Mrs I H C Wallace arose arm p and in a brief ch told of the idea of devoting the day da to toa toR toa a R special topic The Cavalier Instead of ot the too general resume of historical subjects ts Before giving the first toast Mrs Wallace read a telegram from Crom Mrs Irs Miller sent s nt in greeting to the Chapter ani Mrs George Hancock read reada a letter from Mrs Irs Mary Ian M 1 F Allen who is also on the coast Mrs I Wallace spoke in brief of oC the part the cavalier had played in the of the country and introduced Mrs Margaret Zane Witcher who spoke on The uThe Com Corn Coming ComIng ing of the Cavalier Mrs Witcher confined her talk almost entirely to modern times and told how hazy haz ou orn knowledge of the early earh cavalier was She said she had wished for a voice oice like own nightingale Heber J Grant that sha sh ah might sing the praises of the cavalier but lacking that she would extol the thc modern cavalier and hope the day clay would come when he lie too would be a memory through the advent of universal peace peare Mrs L E B Hall responded to the toast His Ills Work Vork as a Colonizer and spoke of the efforts of or the cavaliers to found new colonies and to plant the Christian faith in the new land She closed with witha a toast by b Ti to the cavalier Mrs 1 R n A herself a descendant d of cavaliers spoke of his influence in politics and she mentioned in her brief talk many names made famous Camous in the political history of the country C who were all either cither cavaliers or their de descendants descendants descendants Mrs Irs Robert Robart W Ues Fisher spoke to the toast His Hospitality H and she he said sald in part pan If we are arc to believe bellee the New Eng land historian the Revolution wa was fought by br the Puritans Puritan and if f that is true you 00 are to be congratulated to day upon the death of o your our ances ancestors ancestors tors tore for such frivolities as this sump luncheon lunch on with its and Its It elaborate toilettes would have hae con eon condemned condemned the participants to the stocks stock or the Looking down this table ft t Is easy to see either cither that the ladles ladies have obtained ther papers of eligibility under false pretenses or that the present generation has seen the evil of its ways and gone tone back to the good old days of Charles I when the cava cavalier cavalier lier her was in his ascendancy as and good clothes and good cheer had their charm chann Mark Marc Twain wishing to refer to some of his ancestors who were hung described them as having occupied the platform If It any of you lades would woul like to make it clear how the grand granddaughter granddaughter granddaughter daughter of or a New England Puritan had so far forgotten her puritanical precepts she fhe may do so by claiming a cavalier grandfather When hospitality is mentioned we wr think of the cavalier His first thought was for the comfort and entertainment of or his guest It is not far to seek the reason for the question that the governor of North Carolina put to the governor of South Were Ver these Instincts of hospitality inherent or were they the result of environment and of the sumptuous viands viand of which he partook Think of ot his diet terra terrapin pin reedbird and Madeira Contrast st the Puritans diet What would be the theCO 1 CO natural result of or a heavy heay boiled dinner I preceded by a breakfast of or pie on the th character and conscience of ot any an one Is it surprising that thoughts of the hereafter and of the futility of human endeavor should engross and become the leading adins h characteristic of a people whose soup was WitS allowed to get cold by bythe bythe bythe the length of the blessing bling bl One is re rl reminded reminded minded of the saying of the good wom worn woman woman an who ho frankly told her husband that she would woul be ashamed to t wrestle with I the Lord in prayer pryer for two hours when all he needed was Va a R pinch of s oda soda The center of the cavaliers cavalier religion was his love of man and his hla hospital hospitality I ity it was one of its evidences He would ha have said with the poet I 0 O hour of all hours houn the most blessed upon I earth Blessed hour of our dinners The land of or his Iw birth The face of his first love loe the bills that he lie owe owes The twaddle of friends and the venom of foes The s sermon rmon he heard when Ihen to church h he last went I The money he borrowed the money he tent spent I All of thee things a man J I believe may ma forget And not be bethe the w worse for forgetting but butet yet et Never Neer never neer oh never ner earths luckiest sinner pInner Hath unpunished forgotten the hour of his dinner Life in the south Io th and In iii the cava eava cavaliers liers nature reached its fullest tull st development In Virginia and they say sa The roses mm nowhere here bloom so white As 8 In Virginia The sunshine nowhere shines sill nos so bright An in Virginia Tho bird birdi sing nowhere quite so sweet And nowhere hearts so 10 lightly beat For Por heaven end earth both seem to lo meet Down in Virginia The days are r I never quite so long longAs longAs longAs As in Virginia Nor or quite so filled with happy song As in Virginia when my time has come to die Just Juet take me back and let me He lie Close where the James goes rolling roiling by b Down In Virginia There is nowhere a land so fair As in Virginia So full of song so free of or care As in Virginia And I believe bellee that Happy Land The Lords prepared for mortal man manIs manIs manIs Is built bout exactly on the plan Of old Virginia Miss liss Margaret Connell made a brief l and clever clover talk on Arc Aro the Cavalier and the Puritan Changing Places Miss Connell held that th virtues of the one are being acquired by b th other but that the characteristics of each cach would still remain characteristics A number r which was Va much enjoyed was Mrs Ir W V A s singing of The TheLand TheLand Land nd of Hope and Glory Glor by b Edward Elgar in which she fhe was accompanied T y Miss Mary lary Olive Gray The TV wives ives of the three officers highest In command at Fort Douglas Mrs Mm Scott Mrs Irs Williams lams and Mrs Irs Rowan Howan wore were honored guests guesta of the tho chapter Mrs Irs Harriet Sells the only real Teal daughter of the chapter and one of the very vel few surviving real daugh daughters daughters teis in the country count was not present however Among those tho e present were Mrs C E EAllen Allen Alien Mrs In C S Kinney Mrs H C Wallace Mrs Irs L E Hall Mrs Mar Margarot garet garot Zane Witcher Mrs Irs R H A Broad Broadhurst Broadhurst Broadhurst hurst Mrs Irs R fl W V Fisher Miss Mar Margaret Margaret garet Connell Mrs Seth W Morrison Mrs Irs J 3 M 31 Oglesby Mrs Irs William Igle Igleheart Igleheart heart Mrs Irs F D Hobbs Miss Hobbs Mrs Irs 0 O J Salisbury Mrs J W Hous Houston Houston Houston ton Mrs W IV V S McCornick Mrs Frank B Stephens Mrs L B McCornick Mrs Irs J M r Dart Mrs lr Fred A Hale Miss De Deker ker Mr J E L Carver Mrs Barber Miss 1158 Beatrice Boreman Mrs Irs IrsA W A Cavanaugh Mrs airs Walter alter Scott Mr Mrs JrP A A S Rowan Bowan Mrs rs Williams Mrs Irs George It R Hancock Miss Hancock Mrs M r E Lipman I Mrs Irs Robinson Mrs Morris L 1 Ritchie Mrs W F I Adams Miss lIss Mary IRI Olive OUO Gray Gra Mrs Don R n Corny Coray Cora Miss Merrill Mrs Irs George GeorgeA A Lwe Mrs Irs P S Kt gh Mrs Henry La Motte Iotte Mrs Iri C W IV Boyd irs Will Sibley Mrs ir E Bonnemort Mrs E B Critchlow Miss i Sprague Mrs Ir Sol Sot Sie Siege Siegel Siegel ge gel Mrs Irs C G Mrs W A 4 A Wetzell Wet ell Mrs Irs McCrel Mrs J C Han Hanch Hanchett ch chett tt Mrs J 1 K IC I Shaw Miss lIss Shaw Mrs Cook Miss Josephine Spencer Mn Mrs Ir Fairweather Miss Edith Madame Mrs tIN E L Jones Mrs Irs U t U Hiskey HIlkey Miss oils Alb Alberta Brown Miss Mine Scholes Mrs L H Stoin Dr Grace Stratton Miss Misa Duval Dual Mrs Irs F Bacom Mrs rs R H 1 G Gemmell Mrs Tre Tremayne Tremayne Tremayne mayne I S |