The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 1, 1897, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 1 our sunny clime will be of the mcst de. | ‘ —— | j % fortified citiel “The best fortified cities are | s e FERSONAL, e Bl e ey s ol TMENT. | s et e bt Ui Ser | e lightfal character. T am sure Teaptraen ~abd e DosTias wits | EBATERNAT DEPAR | Paci Kniwery and Bochrech, e atier (v The report from Atlanta published in Tke people are not worrying their minds Dr. W. 8. George of Antioch is in town. & twinkle in his eye, “unless you make your Sans Souci Parlor of Native Daughters | Mayance, Co.ogne, on the R.iie, hove elab - denomination void of offens: also Meiz, Verdun and Tue CALL of yesterday, to the effect thai | over problems of Federal politics to-day. | F- M. Mills, an atiorney of Fresno, is in the rate fortifications; of the Golden West G.ves Its oT PiRCES O e Franco rusn frontier. - tbe Populists of Georgia, led by Tom Wat- | They settled the question of their prefer. | CI'¥- Ricelott! Garibaldi, who, sccording to re- First Entertainment. ime Dihar clties have antiquo warks, but the | son, have joined in the movement of the | ence seven months ago, and the first three | Ex-Judge A. Albrechtof Fresnols on a visit | eent reports frem kome, has organized three Sens Souet Parlor No. 96 of fho Native | cities named represerit chie highest develor { middle-of-the-road Populists to overthrow | months of Prasident McKinley's adminis- | BeTe: , Tegimeats of volunteers for service in the | p5¢% Soucl Parlor Xo. 06 o1 fhe aihe | ment of land fortiiication of the present day. | Marion Butler and the National Commit- | tration have served to teach them that| “5‘39‘“" of Vallejo is at the Cosmopolitan | Greek army in the Crete. is the eidest son of | Les months old, gave its Initial entertainment | iy n moders sense.” _ | tee is one of more than ordinary signifi- the Italian patriot, Giusepp! Garibaldi a l 0 S handled hundreds of thousands of dollars | xo PapEms To CoNvVICTS—C. M. A, City.—The | i PR v having been the candidaie of a great party | the formation of a uniform international | The kmyress of Japan fs distinguished for | SYErS mouth- 1t §OL Rliodcallotbetatho- | 10 EERD T8 SRR, ST A Sty o] H Areptions for the chief magistracy of the Nation | lnonetary system. her musical taste and ability, aud in par. | O, MoRey in Colorado. Its head bulilitan | T4 : : i i While maintaining an unshaken confi-.| 3nd the fame ol being a magnetic and | » observatory—the fourth largestin this coun- | prisoners at San Quentin is because of an order CHARLES M. SHORTRIDUE, Editor and Proprietor. | cance, Itis an evidence thatthe move- | ment is increasing in strength as it pro- their confidence was rightly placed. Already do we feel the goo | influence of the promised new order of things. Every Joteph Sarnick of Stanford is at the Cosmo- politan. The Shah of Persia is a persistent carics- turist. On the white paper walls of his pri- in Devisadero Hall last Saturday night in the presence of a large number of its frieuds, who were delighted with the very entertainiog pro- ’ The follo and Best & and after the big PRICE OF STOCKS—M. G., City. ing was the prics of Mexican Belcher immediately befor E e e gresses, and that it is likely to baves | indication points to the gradually return- | porigaq m -ctt Of Stanlord is at the Cosmo Foe o haxc A quAtut plefures when | zeming fhatwas prewniad s this: comim e | e (ool SR Clfpfiion ‘ceourred Ogtober IBSCRIPTION RATE -egmel e L ing th . ity. i £ © spirit moves him. When he gets tired o ainment. | 26, 1875: The duy before the fire—Best & SUBSCRIPTION B _!mm seap | Strone mllnelvme in shaping the course of‘ ing prosperity. The passage of tne relief | * yy;y 5 Barre of Bureks is at the Cosmo- | the lot of them the room is repapered, The hall was most tastefully decorated with | 26 1873 e o o o y and Sunday Carz, eneweek, by oot T .00 | American politics for at least the nexttwo | measure now beinz debated in the Senate politan. oom it . e i e ‘;EELX‘;Q‘E’“ 0 $30; Mex'e {to $20% o Sa e (e s Sbiihe o malle gl | Yeata: { will confer upon the people a zreat boon | 3. R Garrett, a merchant of Marysville, is Among writers the ex-newspaper men are | lor displayed x fitge American fiag over the | OetobelB%; to $160 lest & #nd Sunday CaLz, three months by mail 1.50 | It is well known that many Populists | by lifting the Government out of the | tne Lick. able 10 do the most duily work as Robert Burr | piatiorm. The Naiive Daughters ars uothing | Giclngr et o i 16 to $17 unday CALL, one month, by mail. .65 | aid not like the coalition with Democracy | financial straits into whioh Democratic Edward Jackson of Leadyille, Colo., is at the :r;:lfi“:_ AF:‘a‘n,::h‘\)‘. (:n 4(;;0 \wvrddls a de)" s e nnzd e et | :n,:‘(‘“,;l:, ‘_(:44‘ ‘:\m" $unday CaLy, one year, mbm.m;.u. & 189 ' in support of Bryan. Thousands of them | incomypetence bad led it, and a greatef | Baldwin. b ease, while Sir Walter Besant does only | uriors. The members of the several commit- | i WRLKLY CaLL, one year, by mall. BUSINESS OFFICE: 710 Market Street, Fan Francisco, California. who supported the combination did so un- der protest, and with the undersianding that their support was to be for the cam- | paign only. These men consitute the boon by securing to our industries the measure of protection which will enable them to enlarge their scope; which wiil open mills that were closed through the | _ State Librarian E. D, McCabe of Sacramento is at the Grand. State Senator E. C. Hart of Sacramento ar- rived here yesterday. abot 1000. Conan Doyle does about 1500, Anthony Trollope used 10 do never iess than 1500 words, getting up at 5 o'clock in the morning for the purpose, and performing his tees did all in their power to creato a favora- ble impression, and so we!l did tbey succeed that it is safe tosssertthatatthe next function of this infant parlor there will be present all who were in atterdance on Saturday night | $41't0 $42; PREFER E LEiuAL AGENT, 8 TR Tegular work at the postoflice il day. e 8 Buffalo Commerct 5 i i Se ' more. The officers of this parlor 3 iote ot thos e Telephone .. oo MAIR=1883 | ) inking element of the Populist party | blighting influence of the Wilson bill, and nator E. C. Voorhees has gone on 8 VISt 10 | o gt ves. ua well as English, watoh | A1° determined 1o make 1t oné of thé most dig. | The Medical Societs of the State of T EDITORIAL ROOMS: and are aware that the differences be- | thus bring about the good times for all, | his mineson the mother lode. | ootives, as well as Eaglish, WAteh | pified as well as most progressive in the order. | vania, in session at Pittsburg this weck, hus 517 Ulay Streer. Telephone | BRANCH OFFICES: | gomery 8.reet, coraer Clay; open antll 27 Mor :80 0'clock 439 Hayes street; open until 9:50 o'clock. | tween Populism ana Democracy are funda- mental and can never be compromised. They have therefore noted with indigna- tion the efforts of the National Committee of their party to make a complste and permanent union with the Democrats. which are coming as surely as asy follows | night, and in which no man willng to work will have to beg for bread. Mr Bryan will share with all of us the bene- fits of the Republican era. Come right along, Mr. Bryan, and make vourself at W. M. Kelly of Washington, D. ., was among yesterday’s arrivais at the Lick. L. H. Frankenheim, a wealthy business man of Stockton, is here on & short stay. John A. Buck, vice-president and manager ©of the San Maleo Electric Railway, who has over the safety of Queen Victoria while she is on the Conttnent. The Empress Eugenie, who has recently been in Paris, is shadowed by a faithful Corsican, who dates from her own dynasty, and who is aseigned to this duty by President Faure. But the Empress of Austria has & more numerous bodyguard than any Atter an overture Mrs. Minnje Kallock, the president, delivered an eloquent address that demonstrated her ability as a speaker and won for her many plaudits. Then there was a piano and mandolin duet by Misses Otive and Anette Zinos; Mme. Ellen Coursen-Roeckel ndered Dannstrom'’s Svenska Foikvisa (A) Nur jag blef ar,” with n great deal of expres- taken a stand in favor of the infliction the death penaity in capital cases by asphyXia- tion, and will present the subject at the forth- coming meeting of the National Medical A The action taken is the outcome of going on through ciation. 615 L reet, open until §:50 o'clock. been i1l at his home, 619 H hire street for | other E after which Harrold Kayton :inter. | 0 the State to abolish banging as a means of in street, open until 9:30 o'c & J £ x = ome, 619 Hamps other European Queen. ch A 0 ¥ ton er- SR o dont © report of th EW. corner Sixieéuth aad Mission sizeeis open | The movement toward a revival of genu- | nome. ~ Caiifornia extends to you the glad | goul. it B home. 010 Ham 9an.Quioy preted on the violin “Tha Gipey Dance' and | Putting eriminals to death. Tho report i | il 8 o'cl | ine Populism was started some time ago | hand. Sz Rsinllatioe ol Chicents- ot tuthe' | VOIS Musiler UE Sosiuiy Sikvw (bhe . | 30 0 CRmas sute b Rergun by Kapios, | Suming a sommiins cenliegii e, SV B 518 Mission street, open until 9 o'clock. | in & call for a Nationa! econvention to meet | E amoug others Qucen Marguerite of | Senor Martinez being the accompanist. Each | ishme: he ordinary scaffold exeqution, and $67 itk gtiees. sren sl $ 0ok _ B c i ENALISM. highest-salaried commercial men in the conn- brother, the Duke of Genon: Arehduke | W35 8 most delightful evidence of the soul- | inaies to the ordinary scaffold e¥ecution, an 1505 Pote mtrcett e Al 50 Pilock: | at Nashville in July. The call was for a| A FIEND IN JOU . try. and revuted to draw a salary of §10,000 u | gi& b8 MOIMEh the Buke of Benon; Arehduke | yoothing tones that can be produced fro n | holds that e N L NW. corner Tweity-sccond and Kentucky | time regarded asof little moment. Snort- | oo e Gl Baes T4 s one of the latest arrl Rt b oF o Mcaperoe , Willisms: | me et s (A he B aetour | attion of he hesrt shonla be stilied auring streets; open till § o’clock. ly after it was issued Senator Butler was | Mother's Eyes” appeared as a four-column Francisco de Mirauga, who is Deavily inter- | princess Waldemar of Denmark, wife of tbe | Then fullowed *Hark to tne Mandolin,” a | nuturalsleep. s - 1 aoxida quoted as saying, “‘Any Populist who at- | ko= 3e oot gstedln the wells of the French Petroleum | gajlor son of King Christian, has a beautiful | VoCul quartet by Miss Grace Sherry, Mrs. | Thelethal Gt b b R S B st e OAKLAND OFFICB tends the convontion defies the regualar or_ | eadline in yesterday morning's Examiner. | Gompeny tn ‘Pern, who arrived here ssvoral | s oston o KIBg Christian, bat « bew nal. | 8thie. Coursen-Compbell, Miss May Mabie | of carbonic aeid gas. Tnis i to be admiticd Brosdway. | g lar or- | 1, g vhich § a S 4 < b BRIl | 000 Mrs. Gergie Stout. The ladies sang it | into the cell of the condemn 501 e ganization of tne party.” Thatof course | LI RWS report which it prefaced related | months ago and 'has since been iil, has re- | L pt Ul B IOV (G008 G0 Bor A, BAIL | and Mrs. Gergle Stou ¢ Rooms 81 4 Park Row, New York Cltys DAVID M. FOLTZ, Eastern Manager. | OFFICE: | was to some extent true, but | | | — | w that the | | candidate of the party for the Vice-Presi- | party convention in the full sense of the | | that Governor Budd had decided to spare the laws of the State the disadvaniage of his objection, and that in accordance lawfully punished for the crime of which he stands convicted before all the courts covered and will sail for home June 3 on the steamer San Juan. Fred Yates, the widely known California Honol u, where he went to do some sketch- which, of course, is conspicuous whenever she wears a low dress. said to be the youngest man who has ever held the post for which he has been nomi- erfect unison, and their effort, which cal encore, received well-deserved ap- There Wwere several other numbers on d or an plause. The first function is one of which Sans Souci Parlor can well fecl proud, and was under the through the influe the bo sult in f t pipe of the ventilator at om of the cell. 'Dzath will surely r m three to eignt minutes after outn and n 5 — the programme. After the last number there | g85 ascends to ihe level of the n 1 — dency has joined the movement it be- therewith Mr. Durrant would be duly and | 87tist, who was in England for some time till | Webster Davis of Kansas City, the newly ap- | was dancing, which was kept up untilafter | ;’fia‘,::fu'f{“" .\\Hn“\\l\’s ageat it 13 recon- THE CALL SPEAKS FOR ALL. comes a question whether it will not be a ke % ? a few months ago, has returned from a visit to | Pointed Assistant Secretary of the Interior, is | midnight el hat execunons o1 h following manner: After a prisoner is sen- te ced by the court he or she is informed he D OO —— word, leaving Senator Butler and those | & ing which be haslong had in view. He brought management ef the following named: Com- | Of she 1sto die within a period of three oF six JE SUNMLR Ao who oppose 1t in the attitule of defying | Of the State. g - back many different canveses of mountain, | nated. Heisinhis tnirty-0fth year. IHohas | miltee of artangements—Mis. L, . Drows | monihs Jue prisoner is confined {n 1he' con- Areyou going to the couniry ona_vacation? It That was the primary object of the re-| crater, wildwood and seashore scenes. served as Mayor of Kansas City, having been | (chairman),. Mrs. E. Clark, Mrs. C. L. Little- | demned cell, wi s so arranged thut the gas iz 1s no trcuble for us to forward THE CALL to | the organizatiom. | cki 7 Yow § % e & c lected by 8000 ty, and, after a success- | Jobm, Mrs. A. Mocker, Mrs. 'A. Munson, Mrs. | may be admi time, “Ata <ate to ba Your sddress. Do w0t let it miss you for you will | Tt is fairly certain the Nashville conven- | POTl: to Which there were a few incidental | 'Fred Stanton, formerly chief clerk of the Ry ey oy T oo | W ErBtan s e W Mng: reception com- | fixed by the Governor, or at the dijeretion of Toies 1t. Onders given 10 the carrier Of left & | tion will b'ey. sesrlimin ds both the | 4¢tails added. One of these incidents— | Palace Hotel and for vearly a year past man. | (i} adminisiration, was » okl ‘“; ‘;“ mittee—Mr. G. Gunzendorier, Mrs. Grundel, | the Sheriff. the lutter {0 be guided by the gool iness Office will receive prompi attetion. | - oo e sk o) {and one which should have been deli- | ager of the New Impenal at Stockion, is in the | ?‘BD“N;’;H:‘HUELHRJOH for Governor of (1o | Nrs. A Hendrickson, Mrs H_ Hackmolr, Miss | heaith nd sicep of tne prisoner, the date to NO EXTHA CHARGE. Fifty conis per mouwy | DUMDers represented and the resolutions | -, o"0 4 respectfully treated—was the | City, and thinks of leaving soon for his ola | State. He has taken part ia all cumpaigns for | 3. Kiine, Mrs. J. Mulcrevy, Mrs, 3. D. Ralph. | n ee ned, [t for summer months. The next thing to look forward to ie the orious Fourth Greece and Cuba are small countrie but they keep the big ones busy. Even in dull times there is always live business where there is a live advertise- ment. Having bad t wo holidays in succession almost everyboay would like to make it three. The question what we shall do with our ex-Presidents is largely answered by the announcement that Benjamin Harrison has begun taking lessons on the bicyele, The people of Munich, Mich., are trying to compel all trains passing through their wing of the party atany rate, if not for the organization throughout the Union. | Many who voted for Bryan wiil be pres- | ent, ‘and it will not be an assembly of ‘“‘soreheads.” It will be an earnest at-| tempt to revive genuine Populism and to | reorganize the party on its old platform afier the confusion into which it was | thrown during the last campaign. | Whether the National Committee will | continue to oppose it, now that the move- ment has become so strong, remains to be een, but it is fairly well assured that if the opposition remains the convention | { will set up a committee of its own and go | forward with the work it has undertaken. WINE-MAKING IN FRANOE. In a report made to the State Depart- ment some Lwo vears ago C. W. Chance lor, United States Consul at Havre, de- adopted. It will speak for the t'nuthernl’ | | circumstance that the mother of the con- demned man had expressed a desire to <hare with him the ignominy of his fate by witnessing the fulfillment of 1t tothe vitter end. This almost sacred detail among the mass of rough circumstances which go to make up the closing chapters of the doomed man’s life-story—this one little thing which should have, by its de- fenseless and innocent purity, won im- munity from the unclean hands of the | “new’’ journalistic monster—was the very thing which was pounced upon to sate his craze for sensational headlines. Tne act was so startliagly brutal, so cow- | ardly, so baldly indecent and sickening that, notwithstanding the striking appro- priateness of its connection with the Ezaminer, most people were compelled to pause once more in amazement at that paper’s persistent and versatile vuigarity. And yet it is a safe conclusion that the home in New York. He was, prior to coming 10 California, chief clerk of the Gilsey House, and was also prominently connected with other large hostelries there. Hl> GARDEN. He spaded it with diligence (Aud also with a spade). * And. ob. hie had the ba kache By the time he kot it made! He raked it off quite smooibly, And made sonie pretiy beds, And at night be dreamed of turnips And great prize cabbage-beads. Well, when he got it reaty, He'pianied seeds ealore Of every kind proviaed At (he agricuitural store. With fetticus. and celers, And radishes, and beans, And pepper grass, and onions. Aud vacious kinds f Kiecns. And cabbages. and melons, Aud cucumbers, and pew: And artichokis. and par; And a iew lettuce trees. At last the whole was ioaded, | & number of years in Missouri, and is consia- ered one of the most effective campaigners in the Republican ranks of the State. BICYCLIST> ANv :HE RAILROADS New York Times. One railroad atter another is making what are called coucessions to the bicyclists, but 1105t of them do it only on compulsion, and in & majority of the exceptional cases the couces- sions are granted voluutarily only in the sense toat the company does not wait for the compulsion which ft saw was fmminent and tnevitable. It is a curfously short-sighted policy that delays until the last possible moment action 80 obyiously dictated by self- interest, and equally mysterious is the appar- ent desire to do as little as possib to create and attract profitable patrons. Bicycles make 8 1ot of bother for station-masters and baggage men, but they also cause the sale of many a ticket which would otherwise remain for in- definite periods on pretty littie racks behind the windows through which so Iarge & part of every railway's income may enter. . Floor committee—Mrs. M. Kallock, floor man- egr; fiss J. Creighton, Miss M. Colvin, Miss E. Clark, Miss E. C iff, Miss D. E-sner, Miss 8. 8'amper, Miss Z. Stawper. Daughters of Liberty. California Council No. 1, Daughters of Lib- erty, held a meeting last Wednesaay. Fiv candidates were initiated ana considersble terest was manifested in the proceedings of the evening. To-morrow night tlere will be a | mock trial siter the reguiar business of the order shall have been disposed of. Itis ex pected that it will create much amusement. The council will soon give a picnic. Good Templars. The District Lodge of Gooa Templars for San Francisco, Alameda and Solano counties met on Saturday last in the Foresters’ bullding, O'Farrell street. F. A. Authony of Livermore, district chief templar, presided, and James G. Simouton was the secretary pro tem. Eight lodges, eight Bandsoi Hope and one temple were represenied, and there was s creditable attendance of delegates and visi- tors. Rev. James W. Webb of Fresno, the grand | | | ture. i | i [ will be administered, The success of the execution depends solely upon the condition of the prisoner’s sleep. 1t it be sound and healthy death will result within a few minntes will be paluless and unattended by any excitement or Larrowir scenes, Of course the week point in thissystem is that the “horrors of anticipation” are not re- moved from the prisoner's mind. When sen tence is passed he knows that he must d within aspecified pericd, but he does not kaow just when and the fear'is at once implanted thateach night may be his last. Some, per- haps, would not care, while others wouid hardiy be able to obtain “healthy sleep” un- der the circumstances and tie ‘‘extra punish- ment” wouid be in the nature of mental tor- “GREAT TRIUMPH FUR LIBER1Y.” Alameda Argus. The San Francisco News L:tter soberly in- quires 1f Judge Hebbsrd is goicg to resign He is not going to resign, but there are very many who think he should. One does not have to be a partisan oi Mr. Marriott to fee gratified that a vindictive effort to destroy o When the p. t " : Hoitns % s 'And, having dons his b st c templar, and W. P. Nethertoh of Santa | Sio hed Baat 8 tho 5 SomnfoRuyalfsows ok e hie 1o | clared that much of the sc-callea wine | Ezaminer, after evolving the gruesome | And belog somewhat tired, bicyclist s alse o commuter he has the co- L ao S L eerion o SinTe | hisy wholly falied. " When the people INAY Bea UL DEONE N 1818 | ade in France was “perfectly innocent | heaalines, fell into a trance of admiration | Heo sut him dowu to rest. et Of biing doubiy hated by, as well | i5ii'aq were appropriately received. Among | elected Hebbard by a preposterously large one case where business wants slow trains, | M2d€ i Trance was “perfectly tonsa i £l | s doubly valuable to, ‘the transportation | i c t Tt LR Y N North, Alre M. | majority ne took it that tney were just as £ i | of any acquaintance with tue proauct of | thereat, and deemed them triumphs of a Ajaat that fum error Sompany e suoporis, and_ ihereiore he is | jryine P '8 L. Robbins, Mrs. 5. Kerrigan, | desirous of destroying his enemies as of iavor . = % 3 v " % 000 | magniiule which Dame Chance had fortu- | de all bis1ibors va'n. cubly delighted when he discovers a scheme s, M. M. Carpentel s Niesan, Mrs. E |ing him. He secured action by the Grand The Yreka Jowrnal remarks that only | the vineyard.” It was alleged that 15,000 | magni! . ¢ Pribicag | The man who makes a saiden %k gL exma therepulations ofhisfon | oins, ta oo Cuiventer, Jans Niswen, Mre 8 8 o o e myaaicatanr (b8 isl pas one of the 14.000 people in its county was | casks of wine had recently been destroyed | itously rendered ICCI‘S;“”E to e editor’s a7 hould never rest, that's plain. Inall the suburban towns 1t would be more | {i¥myre, Moy Bastng, By, & W Friedrieh, |80 0 BT o 1a showed ii, and al- < ) : ot or P ngenuity, coincident with his rece tention evers moment 3 ~ i 3 Miss Echel M. our, . Adams, Johx | his particuiar o Redi IRt 1 in_jail last week, and ho was to:be liver- | by ths municipal Iaboratory of Parix the | Inzenuity, colncldentally with bis recep- A Vlanted garden needs, 1P hn sarenience to the bieyeling commuler | Gunningham, Mrs. W: A. Dalzivl, George Mot | toseiher he was jusiified in rubbing i hands ated that very evening. How, then, do | official inspection havine failed to reveal | 110n of particular momentary inspiration But he, ne stcpped 10 rest bim— morning, leave it there during the day and | %% O- G. Garduer, John Mackey, Mrs, 8. C. | in Rive. That fie signally failed shows (hat i 2 2 ad g 3 In the May { from bis watchful master, the devil. It is And bis ooly crop wus weeds. e d R the day and | poler. Miss Grace Estelle Baker, Mrs. J. M. | the people were mistaken in him and have they: puuiahy people fun Anihay Nappy;f » TPl exspeyguios lnR e e U i orp e —Somerville Joarnal, | €54, 1t AR0ID At R e s Privilege, byen- | yurbour, Mrs. A. Campbell, Mrs. J. K. Pelrce, | BOW tnken his mensure. The acquittal of Ma { ber of the“United States consular reports | to b at only . abling him arther away from the sta- 4 region? lawyers in San Francisco, and yet the Ezaminer repeats the fake, writes an ed torial on it and sends the lie circulating through the sl The story of the farmer who yoked him- self with a calf in order to train tne calf is Chancellor’s representations to be incor- | rect. From official inquiry it appeared | that there was no record at the municipal latoratory of Paris of such destruction as the Consul reported. Attention is directed 10 the exceptionaily abundant production of wine in France during the Is | a sore affliction anyhow to know that the such acoincidence will not in future occur with any regularity or frequency. For it | would be hard indeed for the rest of us to ! suffer the thought that an ordinary jour- | nalist under ordinary circomstances could | do what tbis Examiner fiend has done, and ‘ She—It must have taken a great deal of per- sistence on your part to learn to play the violin so well. He—Itdid. Ihad to go constantly armed for five years.—Life, ce Gentleman—How old are you, little boy? And how oid is your brother ? ~We're eraps. favor, however, but the wiser and craitier commuters have discovered that by taking toeir wheels into the ity with them every day, they can get free siorage for it at the urban terminus, and ride home from their own ste- tion every night, with no more trouble to themselves than if the thing were done in a simpler way. This prac:ice is rapidly spread- ing in commuier circles, and it causes a vast Miss Sudie Burke, Miss Mamie Wyckoff, Miss Skogsberg, Mrs. H. A. Williams, Mrs. P. W Friedrich, Miss May Fijedrich. Joseph Homan, Miss Anna Wailace, Mr. Meciuerney of Als’ meda, W. Krause of Livermore, F. M. Brown of Vailejo, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson of Modoe County., Mrs. F.'A. Plymire of Shasta County, N. Brennan and many others. The district lodge degree was conferred on eleven candidates. Reports of the district lodge officers were read, showing satisfactory riott was a great triumph for liberty of speect | e i F dence of cpportunity and fleeting brill- | | ton, “ouid mean decreased rent orinterest | Davis, Mes. Mary White, Mrs. Mary | 80d itought 10 beaiesson 10 good men the == | appears a statement from the French em- | P | WIT R COFFE chnarges, and incidentally it would incre Dolores Davis, Mrs. Mary nite, Mrs. Mary - 3 v gof r toail | e fan 1 s ki | A e Eas b v Maude Im.|would warn them of the evils of going off Jordan has emphaticaily denied | bassy at Washington to the effect that| iance could give birth to so striking a | H YOU FEE | the number of the road’s possible patrons. | EAIULE, Josenn ' Wyckof. Mre. Maude TIm-|Foyc Red E ng said there are only twelve good | investigations have shown some of Mr. | “feature” of “new” journalism; and that | | one of the railways grant this inexpensive ’ 3 l Will Trust in Prayer. No other support but tnatsent in answer to prayer and faithful service,” is the motio of 0. C. Miller’s new Evangelical Lu- tneran Church of the Pentecost, which will formally opened t Sunday. Mr. M opened his mission some weeks ago v ith : feodsto, b i amount of wholly unnecessary labor to the jo X o pedd which s already well atiende un old one and is probably fictitious, buta | 20 B B8 e ile O 1 183 conductor of the Eraminer were not dis- G.—Craps ? ; railosd employes. Sooner or later the com. | Progres among the lodges in the disiriet dut- | 4, progresses it is fntended to hav New Jersey farmer’s boy actually tieda |* : ARl | tinetively different from every other jour-| Swipses . Jim’s seven and I'm 'leven.— | Panies will see that it costs no more to grant | 108 the guarter, but '8 I | a crildren’s sewing school, mothers’ meetines calf to his bicycle and tried to lead bim home. The result was something which it wou!d take a diagram to explain. A convicted highwayman has been dis- charged from the New Jersey State prison gallons, valued at $286,830,00). ! “It is hardly credible,” the statement proceeds, ‘‘that when such enormous | quantities of natural wines are produced, | French wine merchants would resort 1o | the fabrication of artificial wines contain- nalist on the face of the earth, | 1 HOW NATIONS WASTE GOLD, | Oue gieat cause of the loss of precious metal from the stock of the world is shown Kausas City Star, “Iwoke up in the night, but couldn’t telt the time. My watch had stoppe “What kind of & watch is it 2" “One ot those silent midnight watches.”— t x.orage privileges in Lonclyville than in New York, aud then another step in the march of progress will be taker HE WAS A MONEY-MAKER ance upon the Bauds of Hope. Mrs. Alice Simonton resignea as district secretary and Miss Nellie Morton was elected s her sucees- sor. San Francisco and Vallejo were suggested &s the place for ho ding tne annual session in August, and balloting resuited 1n the selection of this City. The disirict lodge was ent tained at lunch-time by the young ladies, wto and other features conuetted with the work. Dr. Hayes C. French and Rev. Charies McKel- vey will pronounce the consecra iou prayers for the new mission and Rev. Edwin H, Jeuks will preach. - o CALIFORNTA glace fruits, 50c Ib. Townsend's." PR e z Texas Siftings. Chicago Times Herald. talne & S 2 boil = Lis o sbhi, by order of the court on the rround that | iDE DO grape juice,” as “such fabrication | ;e the practice which prevails at the T — Many years ago in'Contral New York an old | i “Aitermars thore were in erostins Socr: | ‘When the Queen of Italy eaters a store to do oneof the important dccuments in the | could be profitable only in countries pro- | ;in4o of each nation of melting foreien “":'r" 1250 Sdage ity S trug man traveled about the country In a one- | cises, inciuditg music, addresses and remarks | some shopping. the doors are closed ana the cas: was made out on a blank the form of | ducing no wine or but little.” coins and recoining the metal. Thus| «Dowst putoff i tomerraw @ Horse shay that Holmes must have seen. T | by ail the delegaies uphn tho tople, "Why Am | fuiic excluded until she has Lot which has been superseded. This is what | Notwithstanding tais, however, the | u: minis melt English sovereigns and What should be done to-day.” | orde FaSka-aE UnUAE (6 vant o e L8 COOTRE RN O RSN e e < A e some peaple eali a technicality, but to the | Statement shows that the French mer- | oipor foreign coins as soon s received, ot i i e e T umerous botiles of “Packard's | evening, which iled the hall, and was very dreupiniozadion diily t ARGt iAoy average cilizen it will seem like tom- | Chants will bear wafching: ‘“The occa- |\ cast the metal into ingots for coinage e s g bl poiiorog s e e, o o o hopsen d pupllo men by Ao foolery. Reports submitted to a recent S-nday- school conference :n Boston showed in every part of New England a falline off in the rate of attendance at the schools, and in a discussion on the subject it was cen- erally azreed that the cause of the trouble is the bicycle, It thusappears that the magic wheel is vorking its revolutions everywhere. It will be remembered that when Dues- trow was being tried in St. Louis Le was everywhere referred to as the “millionaire murderer,” and the St. Louis courts re- ceived much credit for being able to con- vict a rich man. It now turns out that he | sional seizure and destruction of small quantities of adulterated wind® are rather | to the honor of the French Government, which thus protects the health of its citi- | z>us.” | The statement adds the very interesting | fact that, according to medical inquiries | made by bighly competent authority, a moderate consumption of French wine is | beneficial to public health. The officiai statistics 1n this regard are wortby of | attention. They show that drunkenness | 15 less frequent in wine-consuming regions. | ! Out ol 100 cases of pubic arunkenness, | twenty-nine cases were recorded in the | northwest of France and thirty-four in | the north, where spirits were mostly con- | into American money, which is often shipped back to Europe, recoined into sov- | ereigns, and again, after another sea voy- age, transmuted into dollars. This goes on in endless process, and hundreds of millions of pounds of gold have been melted over and over again in | this way. Experiments made many years ago in the British Mint proved thatan appreciable loss of the precious metal takes place with every handling. Even the most careful transferring of coin or ingots from one room to another or from cne package to another causes s loss. Every time the metal is meltea a consid- erable loss occurs, and this is increased by the metallurgical operations necessary to 1n this manoer, strange to say: *Don’t be put off Lll the morrow By the oues you dun to-day.” Up-to-Date. “My wife says she saw the lights all burning in your house last night as she came in from the 3 o’clock train, and she thought it a little strange.’” “A little strange. It was a little strauger.”— Cincinnati Enquirer. “Iwss %o funny,” said the Sweet Young Thing, “that I just thought I would die.” “Well,” asked the Social Wet Blanket, “‘why did you chunge your mind?’—Indianapolis Journal Brawn (to dentist)—1 won't pay anything extra for gas. Just yank the tooth out, even if 1t does hurt a Jittle, Dentist—I must say you are very plucky. and body wore seamed by the disease, which he said had been cured by his medicine. He sold enough of it to pay his expeuses and lay by alittle. More thau once specuiators palay- ered with him, desiring to form a stock com- pany to manufacture the stuff in quantities, but such schemes always fell through. So old man Packard boiled itat home in an iron pot and went on the even temor of his way. By and by rumors went about the country neigh- bo rhoods that be nad hoarded much mones. He had ona child, a daughter, and she was unwarrentably plain. So homely wus she that, as Twain would say, she cou!d not smile after 10 o’clock on Saturday night without breaking the Sabbath. To her came a lanky, Bawky, cadaverous youth with love in his iooks. 'This was Chamberlin. He married ner, and Packard paid the license clerk and the preacher with a dozen bottles of his king's evilannihilator. At that time Chamberiin was an ideal “Rube” of tender years. He hnd ANSWERS TO «ORRESPONDENTS. MARRTAGE AFTER DIvorcE—P. C., Oak'and, Cal. Parties wno obtain a divorce in this State cannot remarry in the Staie until after the expiration of one ye: GLOVES—M. R, City. Itis considered proper for a groom at an_evening wedding in church 1o wea: light-colored gloves and for the ushers to wear ligat-colored gloves WOMEN NOTED IN JOURNALISM — M. L. H., Vallejo, Cal. There are but few women at this time who are prominent in journalism, that is women who are prominent ontside of the eity in which they work. The most prominent are Margharita Ariina Hamm and Elizabeth Bis- land. HALF OF 1853—Subscriber, City. If the half- Clipping Buresu (Allen’s), 510 Montgomery. * asn e SN ool Senator Deboe, the new Senator from Ken- tucky, visited the stationery room of the Sen- ate the other day and he made a selection of paper, pens, pencils, paper-cutters, blotting- penknife and other articles. *I think all [ want,” he said as be turned to go. “Haven't you forgotten a corkscrew?” asked the clerk. *'No,” said the Senator; “that's oue thing 1 do not want, even if I do come from Kentucky. 1donot drink and I do mot smoke.” The Great Santa Fe System Leaves dally ai 5 ». M. Through carsto Chicago, with Pullman palace, drawing-room and modern upholstered tourist sleepers now daily. Tickets also sold v.a Portland, Ogden, Los An- geles, Deming or E1 Paso toall points in the United | L 7 . States, Canada, Mexico, and sieamship tickeis to sumed, while only nine cuses were re- fi £ been a failure at evervthing—farming, | dollar of 18 which you have, is one that | States, = \ and s left an estate valued at little more than !cmdw in the center, five in the sonth. | C0Ye't sovereigns into dollars, or vice | Justlet me see the tooth. | tenching, clerking, fencc-building, book: | has arrow beads alongside of the date, and A“‘IW'“ in Musops, =6e time table {n adver- $8000, and thus another sensation goes to | . | verse. This loss is declared, by financial | Brawn—Oh, I haven’t got any toothache; 1Us | canvassing. He —had run. the gamut | has rays about the eagle. it Is worth just50 | tsing column. San Francisco ticket ofice, Gid wreck upon the rock of fact. west and only four in the south, where | experts, to be absolutely unnecessary. Mrs. Brawn. She'll be here in a minute.—Tit- | of employment cpen to a rural ~male | cents. If it is one without arrow heads at | Market street. Chronicle building, telephone Main It is reported that a petition is being | the use of wine among the laboring classes | | is general. Here is an example of the process as be- tween this country and England. The Bits. in those days. Learning that his father-in- law's treasure consisted of $75, stuffed into date or rays about the eagle, it is worth from $20 to £30. 1531; Oakland, 1118 Broadway. ————————— I 2 ¢ Mother—Why are vou not studying? an old sock, wnich in turn was stuffed into a x - Greatly Keduced Kates to Spokane, ] Prepared in Scotland requeating that in the | T'iere i8 no question but that our Cali-| United States standard of fineness is 900 | Tommy—'Cause paps whipped me, 'n sez | MIOUE DT and Jocked up. B went to iivg | INCORPORATIONS—J. ., Haywards, Ll nd Helena, Batto and St. Paut g official record of the Queen’s jubilee the | fornia wines are mnklng great inroads on i with the old man and contentedly botled the | E. 8., Signal, Cal. The fees for incorporating words Eagland and English shall not be the French article, in point of popularity parts of gold and 100 parts of copper alloy, “Let that be a lesson.”—New York Evening | Journal. medicine. Later on, having amassed £60, he a company in California are $1to be paid to Tlekets both first and second class sold to the % 4 being based on the French decimal sys- i opened a drugstore. He had no clerk, and the | the County Cierk and $10 to ihe Secretary of | Above-mentloned points at a great rednction. used, but the Nation shall be referred to | throughout this and other countries. The | yom " The English standard is based on | Henpeck—Is this the officeof Quigles’s Quick | PECPIe looked askance at his sign: *Prescrip- | Stute, then there is the fee of the O | e Ty Tt e s i e ! always as Britain and the people as Brit- | ©'d-time prejudice in favor of imported | pa o1d “carat,” the soversign being 22 | Cure? ons Caretuily Compounded.” No customers | is at the rate of 50 conts for each one of the | 1oL 50 i ihn T otanal e e | ish. ltis not altozether pleasing to the Scotch to have their country spoken of as if it were only an English kingdom. The Bulletin of yesterday made its ap- pearance fresh from a new press, in a new dress and adorned with other evidences of the prosperity which atteads enerey and enterprise in journalism. Our con- temporary deserves many compliments on the success it has achieved, and its readers are to be congratulated that they get so larze a share of the profits of that success in the form of an improved paper. Some attention is being given in the East to a Boston ordinance imposing a penalty of $3 on every person who attendas on Sunday a fake charity show or a fake sacred concert, bul uo explanation has been made as yet of the means by which the average Boston policeman distin- guishes in matters of charity and music between the fake.and the real thine. ordinance should be accompanied by a dencein the prospect for better times in the near future the Tulare Register never- theless ventures to assert tuat the wave of prosperity would have been staried earlier if rain nad fallen during the month The | | wine is rapidly dying, if not already dead. | In the bit of statistics about drinking just | quoted we have an excellent argument for | tbe moderate use ot California wines. | That they are beneficiai to health when | temperately used the best authorities con- cede. Ifthe laboring classes would more generally patronize the produect of our vineyards they would encoursge a desery- ing home industry with profit to them- seives. EXTENDING THE GLAD HAND, The approaching visit to this State of Hon. Wiiliam J. Bryan of Nebraska wiil be an event of some importance for sey- | eral reasons. It will not be the first :ime! that the distinguished gentieman has been | a sojourner in this favored part of the country, but upon, his last visit be was a comparatively unknown man and. his | presence here awakened only a passing interest among people of his own political | belief. To-day he enjovs the prestige of | brilliant orator. These things will assure him. & hearty welcome throughout the State, and we bespeak for him a most hos- pitable reception whersver he goes in our pleasant domain. The interest in his | carats or eleven-tweliths fine, which is| equivalent to 916.5 paris of gold in 1000 | parts, the balance being alloy. The | weight of the sovereign is 123.274 grains, | or 6726 grains less than our $5 goid | piece; and its value in our money is | $4 866 as determined by the Unit-d States | Mintassay. When alot of gold sovereigns are melted at a United States Mint for coinage into our gold money the requisite amount'of conper 1s added to bring the proportion of gold down from 916.5 to 900 parts in 1000. When this money is shipped to England and recoinel into sovereigns the rever-e process takes place, sufficient pure goid being aaded to bring the pro- portion back to the British standard of 916.5. To take steps to avoid in time to come the extravagant wastefulness which has thus ‘been -going on for. years and years an international monetary conference has been suggested; its ultimate object to be the codification of all monetary laws and PEIL ARMUUR ANU (HE PORTER Philip D. Armour is smong the earliest risers of any business man in Chicago, says & writer in the Times-Herald. He is in his office by 6:30 every morning. IHe leaves his car and Patent Medicine Man—Yes. “Gimme six bottles for my wife.” “‘Tried all other remedies without succes: o—she ain’t sick at all; but I saw in your advertisement where a woman wrot: after taking six bottles, ‘I am a a‘fferent woman,’ and I have hopes.”’—London Tit-Bits, Uncle—So you don’t believe the moon is made of green cheese? Ethel—No, I don’t. The Bible don’t say so. Uncle—What does the Bible have to say about it Etnel—Right in the beginning it says tha God made the moon before he made cows. Rochester Posi-Express. MEN :Ni WOMEN. Major Quincy has invited General P. A. Coliins to deliver the annual Fourth of July oration this yesr in Boston. Speaker Reed is sald to be one of those per- sons who are constitutionally unabie to spell correctly. He is liable to make mistakes in spelling that annoy him very much. ticular plays the koto—a Japanese instrument Tesembling the zither—with great success. Prince Nicholas of Montenegro has had the luck to dispose of all” his grown.-up preity daugnters, if the engagement of the King of Servia to the Princess Xenis turns out 10 ba a came near and pharmacy was his thirty-sixth failure. ‘He lost confidence in himself, and those who knew him never had any confidence in him to lose. At that time the local Y. M. C. A. deter- mined to branch out. It wanted to hire sec- retary st a salary, and Chamberiin got the job. ‘He was an instantancous success. He threw himsell into the work heart and soul. He boomed the organization as it had never been boomed. He metaphorically dragged in members by the conttalls. He advanced rap- idly in the Methodist church, He was a central figure in ail church sociables, church fairs and tnose meetings known as “gift par- tles,” where the Irenzied parson receives twelve pairs of flowered slippers, not any one of which fits, and twenty-three “tidies” to go over the back of his singie rocking-chair, The members of the Y. M.C. A. raised Chamber- 1in’s pay 10 $1000 year. He worked at this awhile and then went West, When his friends next heard from him he was worth $1,000,000. The man was & miniature Johu Law, whose genius for finance of the Tisky sort liad been cabined, cribbed, confined witiin the nariow limits of an agricultural neighborhood for many years. He saw that the iin.e for a real estate boom in Denver was st hand, and so he boomed. The Chamberliu | Investment Company was iormed, and corner lots 100k an upward shoot. The compax which was really Humphrey B. Chamberlin, try—and many cnurches. He gave $7. 000 in cash to Trinity Methodist Charch.. ite founded Chamberlin, & D., and other towns. He taught a class in Sunday-school and taught ell. Not content with being the biggest biped. in Colorado and contiguous Statew he Invaded directors sworn. The fees for incorporation in the State of New York are $6. Best ONE HUNDRED NOVELS—A. G., City. Tt is impossible to give & list of the best 100 novels for the reason that no two persons agree as to which are the best and what would be presented by one individual as the 100 best would be disputed by thousands who would say it was not. What works of fiction are the best is a matter of individual choice. A CrrsaMAN—W. K., City. The naturaliza- tion of Chinese is expressiy prohibited by sec- tion 14, chapter 126, of the laws of 1882, con- sequently a Chinaman cannot become a citizen of the United States. Boys born in the United States of Chinese parents are by birth citizens ot tne United States and entitled to vote when 21 years of age, and such would be entitled to hold public office. MARBIAGE LICENSE—S. G., Sen Jose, Cal. A marriage license is vaiid only in the county in which itis issued. Persons living iu: one county in the Siate of Califprnia mav o into another county and ootain a marriage license, but if that license is to be used .it must be used in the county in which it was obtained. It must be recorded in that county within thirty days after the marriage. sed by the Board of Prison Directors years ago. The board was of the opinton that no good results would follow if the prisoners were permitted to see the newspapers. Religious papers of any denomination will be de ivered 1o prisoners, as will also monthly magazines. . X, Texas. It took him eR-Book Cross—A. K., ity. of April. May the wave of prosperity | COMIng is not confined to any party nor | Walks down Adams street to the Home lnsur- | fact. He wiil then have ieft oRly the 10-year- | town of Forsaworts r.v’r:;é:ar;ydufi.y:e‘:lilz:?: prPl::Y-'hnol. or Drake, cross in g«:;zn JA[:: overtake this fellow and drown himl|to the members of any financial creed, | #0¢e building just as the sun’s first kiss of tne | 01d Princess Vera. In two weeks he had the stnid semi-Mexican What does he mean by measuring a rise in the metaphorical river of thrift by the supply of mere ordinary rain? Here is an instance where a Legislature did a good thing without knowing it, Atter killing & woman suffrage bill by an overwhelming vote, the Arizona Leegisla- ture, before breathing its last, hastily passed a measure. to regulate municipal affaits ia incorvorated cities, and now that the Governor has approved the act it has He will be as. warmiy greeted by the stanch advocates of ample protection and sound currency as he will be by those who | supported him in his demand for a species of silver monometallism as the National remedy for every ill. The people of California, as a rule, have a pardonable curiosity to seeand hear Mr. Bryan, but this curiosity, of course, shouid not be construed to signily that they sanc- tion bis potitical course or believe in his doctrines. Asa men of National promi- | just enjoyed a bearty meal. day lights upon the tall buildings. His gait is steady and elastic and he looks as if he had In passing the Lausing Hotel yesterday morning, s porier, who was washing the sidewalk, stepped politely out of his way and begged pardon for the water that lay in puddies through which he must walk. He did ol kuow whom he was addressing. The gentieman reached in his pocket in a hasty sort of way, and among a 1ot of loose siiver drew forth two hali doliars that he handed to the porter uud passed on. As he did so I asked the servant if he knew the donor's uame. He did not, When I told him that he was the richest man in Chicago he secmed astounded. “An’ you say he passes The Duke of Teck having asked the Cana. disn Government to allow him and his char tered compauy to_govern the Canadian.gold regions in the Yukon River territory, the British Columbian Press says: “This is the most paralyzing proposition ever presented to any modern Government—to -hand the gov- erument of Cauadians and Americans over to a chartered company, as if they were 50 mauy Hottentots.” 5 % The Toledo Blade tells this anecdote of the Rev. Dr. George T. Dowling, Episcopal, of that ci'y, who used to pe s Baptist minister. He town of 8an Antoujo waltzing ear. He bought an even'ng town and imported editors from Denver, mainly dis'inguished by the wealth of ad- jectives, and boomed and boom d. He bought round on 11 aper in this | largely on time payments and sold largely for money down. One German was so happy over seliing a $200 lot for $5000 that he made preparations 10 go back to the Fatherland and drink Bavarian beer for a cen. tury or two aud dropped dead from_heart dis. ense. San_Antonio flare and the Fort Worth flare collapsed, of course, aud the Chamberiin Investment Company retired Denverward to its mountain iastnesses. It continued business for some years and dis- solved with the advent of hard times in the Park is 57 feet high, standing upon a pedestal of solid stonework 17 feet 6 inches squere and 7 feet in height, The cross is composed of sixty-eleht pleces of stone, nggregating 600, 000 pourds in weight. The arms are formed of eight pieces, each weighing 24,000 pounds. There are ten stones in the cross that are larger than the largest in the famous pyramid of Cheops. CHANGE OF NAME—J. C. F, City. An individ- ual who desires 1o change bis mame must pre- nt a petition to the Superior Court of the county'in which he lives, setting forth the name of the petitioner, the proposed change and the reason for the desired change. The . € s legal fve Is §6 for iling the petition, $2 f 4§ been discovered that it really confersupon | nence, with a reputation for a high order | JoU% dis "ef way every day ’bout dis time? | was in Allanta, Ga., not 10 g after he joined | Went, When 1t wens st Fiamiedi) s th ot tesis sbarera D 3o win i ‘Wall, sah, » t R women the right to vote at all city elec- | of eloquence, he will be treated as cor | o ’.m‘."..y{-“:.,”\:.‘.'{f."."&“: Moy carieinie | he Episcopal church, and hapened 1o meet | 0 Europe, The company owed §15.000,000, | & mewspaper or publishing the petitian g tions. Butitis fortunate for the weman suffragists that the law-makers did not aiscover the joker in the bills dially as would any other American ci1i. zen correspondingly familiar to the public |atlarge. We trust that his experience in mawnings.” Mr. Armour gives more money to mendi- cants than ull of the otber pedestriaus whol Wwalk Adams street. & Baptist minister, who somewhat bewailea the loss of three good men. Hesaid: “‘Doctor, will you tell me how our denomination can keep such men as Dr. Behrends, Dr. Moxon and 1ts visible assets were sold for $317. It will strike most people that a man who starts with boiling scrotula medicine and dies in ten years owing $15,000,000 must have had an element of greatness in him. the best terms that can be made with a lawyer 10 present the matter in court. Best FORTIFIED CITY—A friend of this de. partment writes as follows on the subject of these Tow rates. Call on or address 1. K. Stateler, general agent Northern Pacific Nalway, Market street, San Francisco, before buylug your ticket any where else. Usk PARKER'S GINoER Toxto and gain good digestion, better health and relief from pain. PARKER'S HATR Barsax is it to toe hate ————————— A backing cough Is a weariness to tha flesh; but Ayer's Cberr; Pectoral isa cure that never fails. AR s e John P. Cuddy, a farmer of Baltimore County, Maryland, who died the other aay, made the first trip on Peter: Cooper's locomo- tive over the Baltimore and Ohio road on Au- gust28, 1830. Ile was also present when Pro- fessor Morse sent the first teiegraphic message over the Baltimore and Ohio wires belween Baltimore and Washington. ———————— NEW TO-DAY. Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. GROVE L. JOHNSON AS REMOVED HIS LAW OFFICES FROM Sacramento 0 ‘San Franciico and formed s Tartnership with Waiter H. Linfoth and Georgs E. Whitaker, with oflices at 810 Plue aa 1 ! ! |

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