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4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1896 A —————— e e ————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— MARCHERS TREAD UKIAH'S STREETS Greatest Demonstration in Mendocino County’s History. Republicans Form a Proces- sion Nearly a Mile in Length. NEAR-BY TOWNS REPRESENTED Two Large Meetings Addressed by Major Kyle and Thomas H. Selvaze. UKIAH, Car., Oct. 25.—The grandest political demonstration ever held in this county was that of last night under the auspices of the Ukiah McKintey and Hobart Club and the Republican County Central Committee. Early in the day a large number of people began coming to town from all points in this vicinity and before evening the streets were crowded as they never had been before. The Ukiah McKinley Club, numbering 130 men, formed in Iine at 7 o’clock and marched to the railroad depot, the proces- sion being headed by the Ukiah Silver Cornet Band. Immediately upon tne ar- rival of the train the Republican clubs from Petaluma, Santa Rosa, Healdsburg and Cloverdale, headed by their respective bands and the Hopland, Geyserville and Bebastopol clubs,escorted by the Sotoyome Band, were formed into line by Grand Marshal W, H. Chessail and the march was pegun. The procession was headed by aids Sheriff J. R. Johnson and Colonel ‘W. H. Miller who cleared the way for the parade. It is estimated that there were 1200 voters in line. Orders had been given that 10 cheering or other demonstrations pro- ceed from those in line and this order was obeyed to the letter. Taken altogether this was the most orderly and well be- haved body of men ever congregated at this place for any purpose. The procession marched along the prin- cipal streets of the town to the ball. It was almost a mile in length, two men marching abreast. Company A, High Bci ool Cadets, headed by Captain Jennie McMilian and Sergeant Marie Hatch, acted as escort to the speakers’ carriage. Colored lights were set off along the line of march and fireworks were exploded by those in the procession. Numerous bon- fires had been lighted along the route. The hall in which the speakers held forth was crowded, and hundreds were turned away. It had been tastily deco- rated by the ladies of Ukiah. On the stage was a magnificent life-size litho- graph of Maior William McKinley deco- rated with flowers. The chairman iutroduced Hon. Thomas H. Selvage, who made a short speech on the issues of the day. Then Major C. W. Kyle was introduced, and for rully two hours held the strict attention of the audience. Fe explained that there never had been an exact parity between Ameri- can gold and silver coins. Congress first established the ratio of 15 to 1, and found that it had undervalued the gold dollar, and when it was changed to 16 to 1 it un- dervalued the silver dollar. The speaker ‘was opposed to fiat money, and said that the laws of Congress could notoverride or control the law of supply ana demand in fixing the value of money. He dweltupon the fact that Congress, to keep the silyer money in this country, had caused the halves, quarters and dimes to be coined at a depreciated rate. Kyle explained that silver had in reality not been demonetized in 1873; that for eighty-one years.prior to that time 8,000,000 standard dollars had been coined, while in twenty-one years since 1873 over 400,- 000,000 standard silver dollars had been coined. He asked the free silver men in the audience why it was that the standard dollars which now remain in the treasury were not put into circulation. One vault in Washington twenty feet high, fifty-four feet wide and eighty feet deep was filled with standard silver dollars. It was not more silver we wanted, he declared, but employment for the workingmen’ to give them an opportunity to earn the money now in circulation. In closing he quoted Major McKinley’s words: it is better that we open our mills to American workmen than to open our mints tothesilver of the world.” An overflow meeting was held at the Courthouse park. It was presided over by Hon. G. A. Sturtevant and addressed by Hon. Thomas H. Selvace. -— ORANGE SILVER RALLX. United States Supreme Court Attacked by @ Democratic Orator. ORANGE, CaL., Oct. 25.—0. L Clark of Vila Park and W. P. Northcross of Orange addressed a silver meeting at this place last evening. During his remarks the latter gentleman said: “Let us see whether there is room for criticism of the United States Supreme Court. This tribunal is not infallible, nor can it be considered august as the term is now applied to it. In deciding political matters the Justices have almost always shown partisan bias. In the trial of the election of Samuel J. Tilden the five Justices who sat upon the Electoral Com- mission divided upon party lines and voted for a decision just as they had voted at the polls. After the Dred Scott decision was rendered fourteen Northern States passed laws practically nullifying the action of the Supreme Court, and during Lincoln’s administration, without reversal by the court, the decision was utterly disregarded.” —— WALNUT CREEK DEMONSTRATION, Judge Hunt of Alameda Talks to Farm- ers and Orchardists. WALNUT GROVE, Carn., Oct. 25.—A grand Republican meeting was addressed at Walnut Grove Hall Friday night by Judge A. B. Hunt of Alameda. For an bour and a half hediscussed in an able and eloquent manner the subject of the coinage of silver and the doctrine of pro- tection. His audience was composed largely of fruit-growers and farmers and was enthusiastic in the extreme, frequent- ly interrupting the speaker with hearty applause. At the close of the meeting three rousing cheers were given for Mc- Kinley, Hobart and protection. After the meeting persons who hadintended to vote for silver announced their intention of voting for McKinley. WASHINGTON WANTS REED, Northern Republicans Urge the Speaker fo Fisit the State. TACOMA, Wasn., Oct. 25.—Republi- enns of this State are making energetic offoris to get Speaker Keed to visit Wash- ington, Beveral weeks ago in Boston he told Joshua Pierce of this city he had #gresd 1o deliver six speeches in Califor- #in, but would come to Washington if the Californians would release him from two addresses. Since this was made public, last week, manv prominent Republicans as well as the State Committee have been wiring to the California Republicans and Mr. Reed, urging that that plan be carried out. They urge that two speeches by Reed might change Washington from a doubtful to a sure McKinley State, and that his presence in Tacoma next Satur- day night, when the Republicans have a monster parade, would more than offset the influence ot Senator Tiliman, who is to address the Bryanites here the same nignt. - SRR e Schoonmaker’'s ¥reka Speech. YREKA, CaL., Oct. 25.—F. X. Schoon- maker of New Jersey spoke 1n the Opera- house last evening to the largest audience which has yet assembled during this cam- paign. Schoonmaker is the most interest~ ing and logical speaker whom the people of this county have listened to this year. His illustrations were excellent. Both parties will hold meetings in this county every night until election. gy Ross® Frost at Redwood. REDWOOD CITY, Car., Oct. 25.—The lecture here last night on silver by Pro- fessor Ross was not a success from a party standpoint. He had few hearers, created no enthusiasm and made no converts. AbAsE G Two to Une jor McKinley. DUNSMUIR, Car., Oct. 25,—Passengers on the Portland overland train to-day took a straw vote on McKinley ana Bryan. Fifty-three were for McKinley and twenty- six for Bryan. et Silver Talk at Cloverdale. CLOVERDALE, Car., Oct. 25.—R. A. Long of Willows, Democratic elector four vears ago, delivered a free silver speech here last night at Library Hall. The audi- ence was small but enthusiastic. HIGHT NEEDS OF L0S ANGELES Citizens' Lend a Hand for _the Improvement of the City. Successes of the Past Will Be Outdone Through Their Efforts. NEW VENTURES IN PROSPECT. Include a Deep-Sea Harbor, Salt Lake Railway and Tourist Hotel. LOS ANGELES, CAL., Oct, 24.—Los An- geles is rich, not only in successes already achieved, but in future possibilities within easy reach. She is now a city of 100,000 innabitants and is the metropolis of a region, abun- benefited by the establishment of the pro- posed steamship line. Third—A steamship line to the southern coast. When we import our coffees, dye- woods, mahogany, fertilizers and numer- ous articles which come from the west coast of South America, it is to be pre- sumed that the cargoes are landed at one of our Southern California ports, and when we send our fruits, nuts, sugar, beans, flour and various other products and manufactures to the Pacific coast of the countries named, they should naturally be shipped from the same ports. The presumption wonld certainly be based on common-sense, but unfor- tunately it is not the fact. Under present conditions an invoice of coffee illed by a merchant of Costa Rica toa Los Angeles importer will proceed past us up the California coast to a city 400 miles by water morth of this latitude and then be brought 500 miles by rail south to this city, making an absurd detour of 900 mules, and adding needless expense and consuming valuable time. On the other hand, our goods destined for those southern countries must likewise be shipped over the northern loop via San Francisco. 1t requires no prophetic skill to predict that this preposterous state of things can- not and will not continue long to exist unless the city of Los Angeles has lost the spirit and eaterprise. which has charac- terized its history in the past. Fourth—A tourist hotel. Central Cali- fornia has a magnificent tourist hotel, with ideal surroundings, at Del Monte, and Soutkern California has one equally unique on Coronado Beach. Both serve well the purposes for which they were planned. But Los Angeles needs within its city limits or closely adjacent thereto a tourist home different from either of those mentioned. Itshould tnaveasightly location, be surrounded with beautiful grounds, and its Moorish arches, support- i E@; Il Southern California, and consequently its | which to smelt the ores or to sample them metropolis, Los Angeles, will be greatly | on any large scale. ‘Those of surpassing richness are shipped hurndreds and thou- sands of miles to Denver or Omaha or San Francisco. A smelting furnace here would he sup- lied daily with trainloads of ore of a lower grade than can be profitably shipped to the distant points named, and would give employment to many idle hands, and _at the same time encourage a more thor- ough development of our hidden stores of mineral weaith, Eighth—A railway to Salt Lake City. Donbtiess the thoughtful reader has been anticipating mention of this eighth need ifrom the beginning of this article. indeed, the most important project now engaging the attention of Los Angeles, and would undoubtedly hasten the a complishment of all the other enter- prises contemplated. The proposed road would give us a third competing trans- continental railway. The advent of the Southern Pacific doubled our population, the Santa Fe a decade later doubled it again, and it is safe to predict that the Salt Lake road would double it a third time. In the first place it would reduce the distance to Chicago and the Northwest from 200 to 300 miles, shorten the time from 12 to 18 hours and thus lessen the cost of passenger and freight traffic, all of which must stimulate travel and business. In the next place it would open up a new territory of 150,000 prosperous people to our merchants and manufacturers and to the fruit growers of all Southera Cali- fornia. Finallv 1t would traverse a region of untold minerai wealth and enormously stimulate our mining industries. Gold, silver, copper, lead, borax, gypsum, salt and nitrates abound. - Besides the precious and useful minerals named, there are great bodies of iron and coal of the best quality in Southwestern Utah, less than 300 miles from our present railway systems. These would insure a permanent supply of cheap fuel, steel rails The Southern Pacific Company’s Principal Depot at Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES DECISION. Rights of Dealers in Oleomargarine De- fined in a Ruling by Justice Owens. LOS ANGELES, CaL, cision of interest to provi California was rendered by Justice Owens of this city yesterday after long and care- ful deliberation. The action was against John Moriarity, a Main - street grecer. This gentleman was complained against upon two charges, the first of which al- leged that he sold a certain product made partly out of fat, oil and oleaginous sub- stance and compounds thereof not pro- daced from unadulterated milk or cream— the product being, in plain Engiish, oleo- margarine. The action was brought under the provisions of section 2 of chapter XXXVIII of the laws of 1895, entitled *‘An act to Sre\'eul deception in the man- ufzcture and sale of butter and of cheese.” The court said: The defendant insists that-the statute is void upon the ground that it is in conflict with the act of Congress adopted August 2, 1886, providing for the manufacture of oleomargarine, and is an attempt to interfere with interstete commerce. . I think that this statute is valid, not being prohibitory and not in conflict with said act of Congress; but I have also arrived at the conclusion that the defendant in this case has not violated the provisions of said statute and consequently is not guilty. The second complaint was based on sec- tion 3 of the act, which provides that the manufacturer ‘‘shall prepare a statement printed in plain Roman type stating in the English language its name and the name and address of the manufacturer, the name of the place where manufactured or put up, and also the names and actual percentages of the various ingredients used NEW TOURIST HOTEke aADAMS ST. in the manufacture of such imitation but- ter.” It was conceded that the information specified was delivered to the purchsaer pasted upon the tub containing imitation butter. The defendant did not furnish a loose copy of the statement to the pur- chaser, and for this reason the people de- manded his conviction, and claimed that he was guiity of violating the provision of the act. The court holds that pasted no- tices upon tubs, firkins, boxes or other packages are sufficient, and concludes: Therefore a verdict of not guilty will be en- tered in each of these cases, and the defend- ant discharged. R R Fails to Break the Record. SAN JOSE, CaL., Oct. 25.—The attempt of Walter Foster of the Olympic Club Wheelmen to establish a new five-mile road record over the Milpitas road this afterncon was unsuccessful. His time was 11:53. He attempted to lower the record of 10:20 made by “Bunt’’ 8mith last Sunday. The pacing was slow. Fos- ter was paced the two first miies by Arthur Boyden, Russell Cushing and J. E. Ed- wards on a tripler, and a quad, manned by Roma Dow, Allan Jones, Ed Chapman and Frank Byrne, carried him the last three miles. LTS SRR, San Jose High School Races. SAN JOSE, CaL., Oct. 25.—The five-mila handicap road race of the High School Wheclmen yesterday afternoon was won by Charles O'Brien in 15:08. W. D. Wells (0:30) was second, O. Giibert (1:10) third. The time prize was captured by I L. Ryder (scrateh) in 14:19 3-5. — . TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drug- gists refund the money if it fails to cure, 25¢. dant in but partially developed resources, containing an area of 200,000 square miles and a population approaching 300,000, Los Angeles has sprung into this envi- able prominence within the last score of years by reason of her natural advantages —climate, topography, productive lands and rich resources—and also, what was equally essential, by the energy and en- terprise of her citizens who have intelli. gently turned these natural advantages to the best account. They vpublish our climatic attractions to the worid and bring 30,000 tourists here every winter. Many of these find South- ern California a good enough Paradise for them, and they remain perman- ent citizens, and invest their capital and engage in business enterprises. They have the courage of . their convictions and erect costly buildings on our business streets, or adorn the residence sections with sumptuous dwellings and homelike cottages, ard the advent of the succeeding tourist season finds all these structures permanently occupied. If perchance a lull occurs in business activities or building industries, the rest- less energy of her citizens sets the surplus labor to work paving miles of streetsand sidewalks as in 1889; or constructing long lines of electric railway as in 1891; or bor- ing hundreds of oil wells asin 1894; or building needed sshoolhouses and beau- tifying parks asin the present year. Iet us enumerate some of the many things Los Angeles needs, must have, and surely will bave in the near future. They are not mentioned in the order of their prominence, nor of their anticipated effect upon the growth and development of this city. First—A deep-sea harbor. Los Angeles has three ports, namely: Santa Monica, 18 miles. west; Redondo, 20 miles south- west, and San Pedro, 22 miles south, each connected with the city by two lines of competing rallway and traversing a level, fertile, beautiful farming country. A less expenditure than the Government has lavished on the Oakland water front or in the shallow waters of Humboldt Bay, or along the river approaches to Portland, will give a serviceable harvor at one of these Los Angeles ports, which will accom- modate the vast commerce of Asia, the Eust Indies and the South American coast. At the last session of Congress the sum of $2,800,000 was appropriated for the im- provement of one of these harbors, the selection to be determined by a board of engineers. When the selection is made there will be an expenditure of abont half a miillion a year, and the improvement will help keep the money circulating in this vicinity. ~ But the construction of the harbor will' lead to a far more important result. It will greatly stimulate our ocean commerce, and by finding new markets for our Southern California products increase their value. Second—A Japan steamship line. The shortest railway haul from the Pacific Ocean to the heart of the Mississippi Valley is by lines beginning on our .omE- ern coast, and passing over the easy grades and low dividesof the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific railroad systems. Los Angeles and her sister city of San Diego are equaliy anxious to have the new trans-Pacific steamship line from Japan terminate for the present at that port. Tea, rice, spices, cement, sul- phur, curios, ete., will be shipped east- ward, and flour, cotton, beans, fruits, iron’ ore, etc., will constitute return freight. As the commercial intercourse between these two great populous countries be- comes more intimate their exchange of products will necessarily increase, and ing broad verandas, would admit the genial sunsbine in the mild winters or afford welcome shade in cool and breezy summers, This Los Angeles tourist hotel will be luxurious in its furnishings, appoint- ments and service, A Vanderbilt, a Rockefeller, an English lord, a German baron or a Russian noble should find here an appropriate and delightful resting- place for a few days, a month, or an entire season. The financial advantages of such vatronage would not be limited to the payment of the hotel bill by the wealthy guest and his traveling party; their pres- ence would attract others and make the resort a fad. But the convequences would be still more lasting. When Mr. Flagler of the Standard Oil Syndicate visited a Florida winter resort some yearsago he took a fancy to the town and he and his friends subsequently invested millions of capital in that locality. Fifth—A system of boulevards. Los An- geles lacks first-class out-of-town drive- ways. A boulevard to the seashore at Santa Monica, eighteen miles distant, will soon be under way, if the strong committee of the Merchants’ and Manu- facturers’ Association, who are identified with fhe inception of the enterprise, can materialize their plans. The proposed avenue will be 120 feet wide, shaded with two rows of tr-es on each border, have a cycle path, besprinkled in summer and be kept smooth and in perfect order at all seasons. It will be a charming drive for the win- ter tourist as he speeds from the City of Angels to the occidental sea—the Cahu- enga Mountains on his right, the genial sun low in the sonthern heavens, the ver- dant fields on either hand, and the blue rim of the Pacific in front. Who can doubt that this noble ayenue will ulti- mately be lined with elegant suburban villas? How many tourists will silently resolve, “I will have & winter home in this beaatiful land.” Sixth—A popalar educational institute. This wili be an_imposing structure, strik- ing in its architectural features, and will become the home of art, science, music, Iterature and education. Our Public Library and Board of Education are occu- pying cramped quarters in the City Hall, which are needed by other departments of the City government. They should be provided with enlarged accommodations for present and future needs in the new buiiding. There is a pronounced artistic element in this community. A school of desien and a series of art galleries for drawings, paintings and statuary would ‘meet a popular demand. The Historical Society would here find a congenial home. A scientific museum, embracing the various departments of mineralogy, bot- any, zcology, ethnology, archology, ete., would soon be enriched by private collec- tions now stored away from the public gaze in boxes and closets. This institute would not only be an edu- cational factor of great value to our own people, but its halls would be thronged by visitors from a distance, and the variea attractions presented would prove unfail- ing sources of interest to temporarily resi- dent tourists, whose abundant leisure would thus be pleasantly and usefuily oc- eug’i:d. = enth—Smelting works for precious metals. We are in the midst of one of the richest mineral regions on the globe. Gold, silver, copper and lead are found in inexhaustible ~quintities. ~ Magnificent lodes of gold-bearing quartz stand out like reefs on our mountain sides and penetrate to unkuown depths. Other valuable minerals exist in ever: range from the flanks of the Sierrasin | Kern County to the extremity of Lower fornia, and from the aurilerous sands of the seashore to the picturesque buttes ©of New Mexico. But we bave no works in at low cost, and low-priced iron for build- ings, machinery and various manufac- turing purposes. Wy H. KNIGHT, Secretary Merchants’ and Manaufa: turers’ Association. COLUNMBIA RIVER PLACERS. Mining Prosecuted on an Extensive Scale Along the Streams in Wash- ington. TACOMA, Wasm, Oct. 25.—Placer micing is being prosecuted on a large scale on the banks of the Columbia River in Eastern Wasbington. Last week earth running 25 cents per pan was found on the Last Chance claim in the Big Bend district. The owners have driven a tun- uel through solid rock for 262 feet to strike an old channel which was partially worked during the Big Bend excitement several years ago. A 750-foot tunnel has been run on the North Star claim. a half mile away, revealing dirt which pays four men $50 daily. Nearly as good results have been ob- tained on many other claims and work will be continued all winter. Most of these claims are owned by Eastern Wash- ington men. In several instances farmers have secured good claims above Wenat- chee, and up toward the British line sev- eral Chinese have been extracting gold from river sands for years ana are now wealthy. Companies are being formed to pur- chase dredgers and engage in placer mining on 8 mammoth scale. The dredg- ers can pump sand from beneath deep water where gold is supposed to be most plentiful. HE IS NOT INSANE. Max Pauly, an Inventor and Instru- ment Maker, Locked Up in the Receiving. bospital. Max Pauly, an inventor and instrument maker, living at 651 Stevenson street, was arrested Saturday night and taken to the Receiving Hospital to await his examina- tion before tte Insanity Commissioners this morning. Pauly declared yesterday that his ar- rest was an outrage, as he was perfectly sane and the doctors at the hospital agreed with him., The complaining witness against Pauly is Martin Calsing, a machinist, who lives in the same house as Pauly, and the lacter could not understand why Calsing, who was an old friend, should swear to such a complaint against him, “Iused to be in business for myself,” said Pauly yesterday, “‘but have receutly been employed by A. J. McNicoll & Co., the elevator men. I had made up my mind to start for myself again and asked Cals- ing to help me with my instruments and I would pay him for it. He put it off till finally I told him I did not want him. Then commenced a series of petty an- noyances. My eyeglasses were broken; my alarm clock was tampered with and my wrunk damaged. I spoke to Mrs, Dayl, the landiady, about it, but she said she knew nothing and I believed her. *Last Friday night when I found that my trunk had been tampered with I opened my door and spoke so that I could be hearc. Iwas angry and said that if any of my things were tampered with again I would have somebody arrested. intended leaving the house to save myself further annoyance, butto my surprise I was arrested last night for being insane.” ————— Beaten Into Insensibility. Michael Lynch, a teamster living at 901 Battery street, was carried to the Receiving Hospital last night suffering from several 1p wounds and other bruises on the head and shoulders. He elaims that, at the corner of Vallejo and Sansome streets, a_gang of un- known men accosted him, and then, without any provocation whatever, beat him into in- sensibility. He was found by Officer Walsh and taken to tne hospital, when his injuries were dre: ——————— Spiritual and Bodily Health. Rev. Dr. R. B. Spalding delivered an inter. esting sermon in St. John the Evangelist Church on Fifteenth street last evening. He took for his text the words of St. Paul to the Ephesian Christians, in which he bids them “Be stroug in the Lord and the power of his might.” In his discourse Dwflin spoke of the blessing of bodily stre , but he said that spiritual th is of far more importance, for it reaches into eternity. People are apt to nore this fact and :.Arlhly. : strive ior things merel: o« Governor Budd to Speak. There will be a silver mass-meeting in Union ;hu :n Howard street, between Third and ourth, this evening. Governor Budd wi! make aspecial address to workingmen. H-mlyl Mevyer, Eut president of the District Trades Couneil, will preside. The University of Cali- fornia quartet will sing the latest campaign Itis, ! LOOTING MAILS [N NEW MEKICO Lincoln County’s Series of Recent Stage-Coach Robberies. Four Hold-Ups in a Single Spot on the Road Near San Antonio. BULLION SAVED BY A DRIVER. Deceives the Bandits and Preserves the Treasure—Posses on the Trail. ALBUQUERQUE, N. Mex., Oct. 25.— Full details of the two stage robberies in Lincoln County Wednesday night were bronght to Albuguerque to-day by the searching party sent out to hunt for the coaches when they did not arrive at their destinations on time. Both stages, one bound for San Antonio from White Oaks and the other to Wuite Oaks from San Antonio, were stopped at a point twenty- six miles west of White Oaks. Thedrivers recognized the robbers as members of the gang that robbed the stages on the same route two weeks ago. The amount of the loot they got Wednesday night is not known. The bandits, numbering three, halted the westbound stage first and then waited for the eastbound coach, robbing it at the same spot. They cut open the mail sacks, taking the letters of value, and took two horses from each stage. A box contain- ing $2100 in silver bullion on one of the coaches was not taken, as the driver, when asked by one of the robbers what was in the box, gave it a kick and said 1t co® tained a clock. 2 » A posse of seven men started from San Antonio after the robbers, following the trail on tho west side of the Oscura Mountains, going southward. Deputy United States Marshal Fowler left S8an Antonio yesterday morn.ng with a posse. Postoffice Inspector Fredericks, who has been in Lincoln County ever since the hold-u‘f two weeks ago, is also on the ground. The robbers told the drivers that they secured about $800 from the hold-ups two weeks ago. Atter taking the horses from both stages they had one more than they needed, and they shot it so that the stage- men would have no means of getting to the station except on foot, thus consum- ing more time and giving the robbers a better start. This baud is the one t_at at- tempted to rob a Santa Fe overland train several weeks ago, when its leader was killed. It includes upward of a score of boider desperadoes. Stockton Wins at Baseball. STOCKTON, Cawn., Oct. 25.— Stockton won the baseball game from the San Fran- ciscos to-day by a score of 7 to 1. The visitors did not seem to be able to connect with Balz and were able to knock out only five base hits, getting one run, not earned, on these. For Stockton Lockhead played a great game at short, taking a hard drive with one hand. Sweeney, at first, also played a star game, and won his share of applause. George Harper of the Brooklyn team acted as umpire, and his decisions were uniformly satisfactory. Josh Reilly of the Chicagos played third base for Stockton to-day, and knocked out the only tbree-bagger made during the game the first time up. ” The runs by innings were: Stockton.... 02000200387 San Fraucisco. 000100000-1 e Cloverdale’s Citrus Fair Pavilion, CLOVERDALE, CaL., Oct. 25.—Work on the Citrus Fair Pavilion is being pushed forward rapidly in anticipation of a prob- ably long siege of rainy weather, which will necessarily impede the progress of building. The lumber is arriving daily and a force of men is fast fitting the tim- bers for framing. Possibly by the end of this week the skeleton work. for the first story will be in position. The foundation has already been laid and consists of cement pillars ten feet apart, which in- sures a solid foundation. plcl s DPARAIS A Cloverdale’s Chrysanthemum show. CLOVERDALE, CaL., Oct. 23.—The fifth annual chrysanthemum fair under the auspices of the Congregational Church, will be heid on November 5 and 6. These fairs are always great successes. Although a private enterprise, much local pride is taken in them, so every garden has its chrysanthemum-bed and all vie for prizes. ———————— PLACER CRICKETERS. They Pldy and Are Easily Defeated by the Pacific Eleven. The last cricket match to be played on local grounds this season took place yes- terday at Alameda, the contestants being the Pacifics and the Placer County eleven. While the visitors showed excellent form, both with the bat and in the field, their want of practice muade them comparatively easy game for the home team, who came out winners by 48 runs. Captain Theobald, winning the toss, put bis men in. Myers, who headed the order, was not dismissed till be had compiled a stocky 42. Later on Wiseman put uo three dozen in his usual free style, the rest of the team doing little scoring. The visitors, too, led off well. A. H. Jackson playing ao inning of 20in ex- cellent form. Lannow also did good work for the team, but the combined efforts failea to bring up the score to much over half that of the home eleven. The Pacifics started a second inning and made 50 for six wickets. This, of course, had no effect on the result. The fielding of the Pacifics was exceptionally good. The score: % PACIFIC C. C-—FIRT G. B. Wise b Simmonds.. J Myers ¢ Marsh-Browne F. Sewell b Simmonds. A. Dickinson ¢ sub b Turner. NG, @ CETISIS (ST ) b Paui. . Theobold not ou H.'C. Casidy c Marsh-Browne b Paul J. F. Harbour b Paul. ... . T!J. A. Lirdemann b Paal. C. B. Hill' b Paul Extras. Total Bowling analysis A alls, Runs. Maidens Wickets. 98 46 1 2 90 85 3 3 29 T o 5 28 9 [ [ PLACER COUN C. Simmonds b Uickinson. A. H. Jackson b Hill A, 9 DY =TOTETaIe: -1 ©.'K. "l urner b Dickinson....... R. Marsh-Browne ¢ Wise, b Dickinso W.S. Paul b Hill..... P.'E. Colman run out. M. Lannow b Casidy H. Alder c Wiseman Parkeuham 1 b w b HIil B. Bird (sub) not out Extras Total..... Bowling analysis Balls. Runs. Maidens. wn:;eu- - gl 2lene 107 28 % 84 16 3 24 6 1 0 @2 5 3 3 C. C.—SECOND T C. B. Hill ¢ Jackson b Pau!. T. J. A. Lirdemann b Turne; J. H. Harbour b Piul.. H. C. Casidy ¢ Jackson b Turne; - EReoKawS Total for six Wickets. Bowling analysis: Balls. Runs. Maidens. Wicketa 2 16 5 3 72 33 2 3 To-dav and to-morrow the Placer County team will play the San Jose Club. On Wednesday they will be at Haywards to compete with an eleven of local talent,and on Thursday they start for home. Republican Clubs Unite. There will be a grand mass-meeting of Re- publican Clubs 1 and 2 of the Forty-second Assembly District at B'nai B’rith Hall, 119 Eddy street, this evening. Prominent speak- ers will address the meeting. A band will be in attendance. The meeting will be held under the auspices of the regular Republican County Committeeman of the district. ZL IR SR i Fire in a Cemetery. Some boys set fire yesterday aiternoon to the grass in the old Mission Dclores Cemetery, off Dolores street, between Fifteenth and Six- teenth. A “‘still” alarm was sent to the enm- gine-house on Sixteenth street, and the fire- men soon extinguished the blaze. Two fences around the graveyard were destroyed. gty rons Novel Pass-Checks. The .theaters in Japan have a novel method of pass-checks which are positively non-transferable. When a person wishes to leave the theater before the close of the erformance, with the intention of return- ng, he goes to the doorkeeper and holds out his right hand. The doorkeeper then, with a rubber stamp, imprints on the valm the mark of the establishment. ———— Laplanders are great skaters, and often skate 150 miles a day. 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