The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 1, 1898, Page 2

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THE SAN' FR OVER SEVEN HUNDRED THOUSAND VOLUNTEER TO AVENGE THE MAINE War Work o fore the f Pe the dations of the Secretary of War. fice this morning. ing either far the course, unable t down to second lieutenant. Rus the front Hamilton Fi first order. r officer. and s a volunte: h, gr rid lete of thi All letter should becc The v mobilization. NEW YORK. April 30.—A Washington special to the Herald says: ceived notification to-day of the mustering in of the first of the 125,000 yolunteers. the quota of several States will be mustered in. More sanguine officefs hope to place at the disposal of the President the entire 125,000 volunteers within two weeks. % f equipping this large body and forming it into brigades and divisions appointment of proper general officers, will then begin and will occupy the department two weeks longer be- will be made ready for field service. haps the hardest task the President has since the submission of the ultimatum to Spain has been Most of these appointments will be made on the recommen- Public men from all over the country besieged Secretary Alger’s private of- ° ators, Representatives, Governors and military men were there by the dozens, work- or themselves, for appointments in_.the volunteer army. atisfaction, but he filed several recommendations for commissions from the highest ppointing of officers for volunteer forces. Department Officials Believe That Within Two Weeks the Army Will Be Ready to Take the Field. The War Department officials re- son, son of form@ President Harrison, saw General Alger and asked for a chance to go to He will probably be appointed in the pay corps of the army. »h of former Secretary Fish, has enlisted as a ) is especially adapted for this kind of work, as he is not only a fine horseman but an ath- - Alger has returned more than seven hundred thousand applications for enlistment in the vol- These have not been Timited to any one part of the country, but have s every college and university in the country has offered men for the service, and many mili~ > volunteered as a unit. and telegrams offering service are kept on file by the adjutant general for ry to make a call for more men. %% 8 come. from all the & 3 % use in case it & © = will be divided into five corps, each of which will be sent to a different place for & 3 The War Department has decided to send five corps to Montauk Point, N. Y., Richmand, Va., Chickamauga Park, Tenn., and New London, Conn. The commanders of these corps have not By Monday, it is expected, and = corps, with the Secretary Alger was, -0f private in “Roosevelt’s rough ssesesesee sun THE NEW YORK FIRED UPON BY SPANISH TROOPS Alleged Bombardment of Cabanas Batteries Was a Bit of War’s Grim Pleasantry. es Gordon Bennett. (via the Herald-Call rs M. Smith to Key flagship New down the Cuban fell afoul of a , who sa at the big a cruiser harbor of Cabanas There being no reply from the man- ther gleeful volley was sent direction Captain Chadwick, hi nd marginal notes chart laid out before him, had no e of the performance on shore in he busy with ona knowléd until his firing. ittention was attracted to the ion indicated float ¢ smol U b : clot on the andsc lets came kicking from spots on the bit en, an cager gun a quict order was g crew rming to their quarters, and a moment later the bang, bang, bang of a four-inch rapid-fire gun was punctuating the stillness. The shells flew fair and true, glanced along the dry sward and b , and burst where went s demen had stood. The sun was g then, and at one stride came the ort southern twilight and then the k of evening. he order to cease given, and when it came the men of the flagship, peering through the gloom, could not teil what the result of their brief fusillade hadbeen, but there swung lazily past the little | rotugh the | beration | thing | | | | | | ing tow: | to the eastward of Morro. were no more replies from the beach. Having finished her investigation, the flagship swung around and went steam- ana again. Speaking of that saffron city, I passed it twice to-day. On the second run the Smith was not more than eight miles distant, and an excellent pair of glasses showed that new efforts in the way of defensive works are being made The land- scape is scarred by a fong, reddish mark of the newly upturned earth, and a bit further to the eastward of that and somewhat nearer shore marks of the pickax and shovel are again seen. As we drew abeam of orro we swerved a bit nearer, but no sign of life | could be seen anywhere in the city. Yellow. it lay in the burning sunshine, with a thin haze hanging over and be- yond the town. We drew near enough to distinguish the great arched gateway which marks the entrance to the ceme- . but the city of the dead not ss than was Cuba’s w: sital Steaming abeam of the Smith came the little gunboat Wilmington. The flagship was miles ahead and out of sig- naling distance. We orl the Smith wondered what the Wilmington might be up to, for her course carried her within easy range of the shore batteries. We peered through our glasses and waited for white dots of smoke from port and for the skipping and burst- ing of shells, but none came. Apparently thiese artillery men of Ha- vana have heard of that Matanzas inci- dent, and their dogs of war are not so very eager to bay at these ships of ours. THE OREGOY REACHES RIO Contiued From First Page. cussion in naval circles as to the ad- visability of sending one. of the men- of-war at Rio back to find and destroy £he ship. The probabilities are, how- ever, that just as soon as they are coaled they will continue on their way to Key West in accordance with the plan outlined by the Naval War | Board. Considerable satisfaction was ex- pressed by naval experts whom \I told of the arrival of the American wvessels at the execellent run they made around the Horn. The Oregon left Callao, Peru, on April 7, and upon arrival at Punta Arenas joined the gunboat Marietta, which had gone to ithat point from Valparaiso, where she had coaled. After taking on board a supply of fuel at Punta _Arenas, which they reached on April 17, the ships started on their way to Rio. The distance from Callao to Rio is 5005 miles, so that the average speed maintained was 10.8 knots per hour. In view of the fact, however, that the Oregon and Marietta were de- tained a couple of days at Punta Are- nas, taking on coal, naval experts , say it is evicent that a speed of more than eleven knots was made. In accordance with instructions sent him by the State Department, it is suppose . that Minister Bryan has made all arrangements for coaling the American men-cf-war at Rio, and that they will be ready to sail by Monday at the ‘latest. The cruiser Nictheroy may accompany the Ore- gon and Marietta to Key West, though this is not all certain, in view of the possibility that the cepartment has ather work cut out for the Oregon | to perform before that vessel arrives at Key West. Coming to the States from Rio Captain Clark will keep in cable communication with the de- partment, so that a junction between him and the other naval vessels can be effected without delay in case in- formation should be received that the Spanish fleet is coming to Porto Rico, and it should be deemed desirable to assemble all the armored men-of-war in order to crush the wpanish force. It is supposed by the department officials that just as soon as the Ore- gon.and Marietta dropp2d anchor in Rio harbor the fact of their presence was at once cabled to Madrid by the Spanish Minister to Brazil. In view of the departure of the Spanish fleet yesterday from St. Vincent, it is not believed that an attempt will be made to meet the Oregon and Marietta, though this cannot be stated definite- ly. Before reaching home waters the American ships still have 4500 miles to cover, so that they cannot possibly arrive at Key West under seventeen days. It will, of course, be possible for the two ships to be intercepted by Spanish armored cruisers and torpe- do-boat. destroyers. But Secretary Long and other officials of the de- partment are confident that if the Oregon and Marietta do fall in with the enemy, the latter will suffer just as much as this Government. QUEEN REGENT AS PARTIAL ARBITRATOR Chile and Peru Look to Spain for a Settlement of Their Dif- ferences. BERLIN, April 30.—A dispatch re- ceived here from Santiago de Chile an- nounces that Chile and Peru have chosen the Queen Regent of Spain as partial arbitrator of their differences. A protocol has been drawn up, arrang~ ing for a plebescite of the inhabitants of Tacna and Aricoa to decide to which courntry these provinces belong, the Queen Regent determining the condi- tions of voting. SPANISH SPY AT SANTA CRUZ City Clerk Wright Tells of a Questionable Visitor. Betrayed Extensive Knowledge of the Fortifications on the Coast. Went to the Powder Works and There Obtained Considerable Information. Specfal Dispatch to The Call. SANTA CRUZ, April 30.—City Clerk Wright says last summer he was intro- duced to a Spaniard on the beach whose ‘actions aroused his suspicions, leading him to believe he was a spy, and he so informed Lieutenant Gov 1 erncr Jeter. Before any action could | be taken the man had left. He was here for several days previously, pre- tending to go out fishing, but it was noticed he made notes of the entrances | be gleaned from the few personal opin- to the bay and surroundings, and his conversation betrayed a knowledge of | the fortifications of this coast. He is| supposed to have visited the powder | works. He was constantlv seeking in- | formation, his extreme politeness hid- | ing any evidence that would lead toward suspicion as to his motives. Three Italian laborers, who left San Francisco on April 17 in search of ployment, are missing, and it thought by their friends that they are | the persons who swelled the death list | at the explosion of the Santa Cruz powder works. The three men were in San Jose on Sunday last, and there they met a friend to whom they said they were to start the next morning for the powder works, expecting that they would be able to get a job there. They were to walk the distance be- tween San Jose and the powder mill and they expected to cover the ground by noon on Tuesday. ¥ach of them had his blankets with him, and it is thought the unidentified roll of blank- ets found near the scene of the explo- sion was the property of one of them. Two of the men were tall and the other| was under medium size and would pass | as a boy. The two tall men wore brown corduroy trousers. One of them had on a red sweater and the other wore a black sweater. The short man wore a dark suit and a brown sweater. All three had dark soft felt hats. Their friends believe they would have reached the powder works at about the time of the explosion, and they are of the opinion that these three missing men were blown up instead of the supposed Spanish spies. FAILS TO AGREE ON THE NAVAL BILL House Refuses to Accept the Amend- ments and Sends the Measure Back to Conference. WASHINGTON, April 30.—To-day’s session of the House was devoted chief- ly to consideration of the confereénce report upon the naval appropriation bill, presented yesterday by Chairman Boutelle. The report was rejected after three hours of debate, and further con- ference will follow. The only gréund upon which the fight against the 1eport was made was found |in the Senate amendment to cimpen- is'.ue naval officers for Government use of their inventions and authorizing them to have their claims. for such compensation adjudicated in the Court of Claima. Bouteile led the support. of the amendment and Cannon and Sayers the opposition. A resolution, introduced by Cannon, insisting upon eliminating the amendment, was adopt- ed. 118 to 42, and the naval bill was vgain sent to conference. GERMANY AND AUSTRIA ARE YET HOLDING OUT NEW YORK, April 30.—The kerald's ‘Washington correspondent te’egraphs: | All the great po -ers of Euripe, wi': | but two exceptions, Germany and Aus- | tria, have declared their neutrality in the war between the United Siotes and Spain. It has been understood toat the | Government of Austria, for dynastic reasons, leaned toward Spain, but the | failure of the Austrian Emperor to is- sue a proclamation of neutirality js not construed here as indicating that this Government will give aid directlv or indirectly to Spain. It has been semi- officially stated that Austria has ab- stained from declaring neutrality so as to be in a better position to take steps to brin~ about wuropean media- tion or intervention in -the interest- of peace at a later stage of the war. FRENCH PRESS - AND THE WAR Beneath the Surface They Are Not Hostile to the | United States. Journals That Justify the Inter- vention to Save Cuba From Spain. But the Monarchist Soleil Says It Is a Struggleof the Latin Race Against Anglo-Saxons. Copyrighted, 185, by James Gordon Bennett. "PARIS, April 30.—It is as well that AnNKricans should ‘have a more accu- rate knowledge of the feelings enter-| tained-among Latin nations, more es- pecially France, as to the war between the United States and Spain than can | ions published in the papers. These | feelings I have endeavored to evolve | by a diligent study of the most influ- | ential organs reflecting all shades of opinion in'the great ceuters of France. One of the first distinctions neces- sary is entirely political in character. Advanced journals, radical and oth- erwise, including nearly all who sup- ported Dreyfus and defended Zola in the recent great trial, like Clemen- ceau’s organ, L’Auroee; Goblet's rad- ical socialist organ, La Petite Repub-‘ lique; the woman’s rights journal, La Frende, in which Mme. Severine daily percrates—these, with all red Repub- Iican organs, consider it due to their principles to protest against what they style Spanish tyranny in Cuba, and, ‘without discussing the motives or con- sequences of American intervention, see in it only help given to the op- pressed against the oppressors. To this list should be added Roche- fort's journal, which, bv a - strange contradiction on this occasion, joins in the chorus with those he most furious- | ly opposed during the Zola trial. But it would be a great mistake to regard | as ‘serious Rochefort'’s statement in | the cablegram to Senator Morgan that all Republicans are one at heart with the Cubans and their liberators. The great conservative Republican | organ, Debats, thus concludes a long article on the attitude of the European powers: “In the action of the United States there is no justification in pre- cedents of the rights of nations. It is not even to be found in ‘the famous Monroe doctrine, which, already con- testable, becomes with this fresh ex- tension a direct menace to every power | possessing a square inch of terr!*ory | in the new world. The principle itself and its brutal application cannot fail to arouse on this side of the ocean a strong protest from public opinion in the name alike of the international rights and manifest interest of the na- tions of Europe. M. Judet, in the Petit Journal, de- votes a 1o article to the conditions of the conffict, and comments_ severely on the motives that provoked it. He says: . ] t has happened to; Spain proves it¥s best to have the right on one’s side, but you must not count on the impartiality.gr honesty of the other nations unless you mean to be taken by surprise or by disloyal dggression.” The Petit Paresian, one of the widest circulated popular organs, takes a broader view of the question. It says: “What constitutes a new and impor- tant fact is the intervention of the United States in the dispute between a colony and its mother country by vir- tue of a right which is very hard to dis- cover on this ground. as the question widens far beyond the actual one of the war with Spain. It is the right of Eu- rope'to hold territory in America that is called. in question.” The monarchist journal, the Soleil, develops an idea wider extending it to conflicts of race. It says the war now beginning is more than a violent con- flict between two nations; it is a struggle of the Latin race against An- glo-Saxon invasion, Catholicism against Protestantism, monarchy against re- publican democracy. All other conservative organs sound the same note. The Gaulois has ap- plied to the syndicate of the French press to organize in some representa- tive form a demonstvation of sympa- thy for Spain. . Called to a San Rafael Pulpit. SAN RAFAEL, April 20.—To-morrow the rite of confirmation will be administered to a large class in St. Paul's Church by Bishop Nichols, who will also preach the | sermon at 1l a. m. At a meeting held on Tuesday the vestry of St. Paul's Church extended a unanimous call to Rev. Wyllis Hall, D.D., to assume the rector- ship of the parish. ——e——————— In England there are 70,000 girls en- gaged in public houses and drinking bars. CAPTAIN CLASS | T0 COMMAND Cruisér Charleston Will Go Into Commission To-Morrow. . A Fleet Commerce Destroyer Added to the Pacific Squadron. Troops Stationed in Alaska Orderea to Rsturn at Once t> the States. Special Dispatch to The Call. VALLEJO, April .30.—The cruiser Charleston will go into commission on "Monday. Captain Glass will command. PORTLAND, Or., April 30.—It leaked out here' this -evening that Colonel Thomas M. Andersen and staff and two companies of the Fourteenth Infantry, sent to Alaska to preserve order, have been recalled. It fs understood that the order ¢ame from Washington to- day and will be sent north by the first steamer. The troops may be expected back within sixteen days. It is not known which two of the four compa- nies will bé returned. The men are anxious to get back, as the camp is in a very unhealthy location and: about 30 per cent of the men were on the sick list during March. General Merriam is reported to have expressed thé opinion that these troops will not be ordered to the front, but will be retained on the coast. General Merriam is also reported to have said that many more men than are at present available will be needed to man_the guns of the fortifications of San Francisco bay, at the mouth of the Columbia and on Puget Sound. SALINAS, April 30.—When the mus- ter roll of Troop C was opened for signatures this evening the armory was crowded with young men anxious to sign. Within a half hour the full complement of 103 had been secured. The signers .are all young men, most of them sons of the best families here. They average 25 vears in age, five feet eight inc in height and about 175 pounds in weight. - One, an Iowan, is six feet four inches, and is powerfully built. The men will be ready for mus- ter as soon as Captain Carrington calls for their attendance. STOCKTON, April 30.—Court Schil- ler, Foresters of America, passed the following resolutions at a regular meet- ing: Resolved, “aat members who volunteer to. enlist in the army or navy of the United States during this war shall re- main in good standing on the books of the court, and that during his absence the court will care for their families in case of sickness or distress or during .war times. PORTLAND, Or., April 30.—Governor Lord to-day appointed Owen Sum- mers to be colonel of the First Regi- ment of Oregon volunteers. Colonel Summers is a veteran of the Civil War. He holds the rosition of United States Appraiser for the port of Portland. PORT TOWNSEND, April 30.—Word was received here to-day that the Goy- ernment had cance¢led contracts for the transportation of ceoal to Bering Sea points. This would indicate that the Bering Sea patrol is to be abandomed this year. ACCIDENT AT LIME POINT FORTIFICATIONS Laborer Sustains Severe Injuries While Employed in Dumping Concrete. SAUSALITO, April 30.—Another seri- ous accident occurred yesterday morn- ing where the Government fortifica- | tions are being constructed at Lime | Point, by which a laborer named B.| Cupfer sustained a dislocated shoulder and may have been injured internally. Cupfer was emploved in dumping | concrete from a sort of mining car into | the excavations. This car is so made | that the body turns at right angles on | the truck and a door at the end opens | as it tips, but if the door does not open at once the car is likely to tip over. In this case the door did not open easily, and in trying to keep the car from tip- ping * Cupfer - was carried over and | hurled down into a nine-foot excava- | tion, recelving a dislocated shoulder, | several contusions of the body and head and perhaps internal injuries. The injured.man was sent to his home in San Francisco on the Guvernment | boat Yosemite. | About 175 men are now working in | three shifts, from 3 a. m. to 8. p. m. Sixteen carpenters under charge of | Foreman Milo Hoadley were obliged to | lay off work yestenday morning on ac- | count of the terrific gale, which nearly blew those in an exposed position off | their, feet. TELEPHONES [N WARFARE For the First Time They Will Be Used in Actual Service. Owing to General Greely’s De- vice Communication Is Made Easyin Battle. New Rules Issued by the War De- partment to Cover Selection of Summary Courts. Special Dispatch to The Call. Call Office, Riggs House, ‘Washington, April 30. For the first time in the experience of any army in actual service the com- manding officers of the United States troops will have complete outfits for maintaining telephonic communication with the various brigades, regiments, ete., that go to make up divisions or corps of any army. For this the officials are indebted to General Greely, thé chief signal officer. By this means of communication thus afforded commanders will be able to immediately send instructions to sub- ordinates in the field and to receive re- ports of movements. General Greely also has equipped and has ready for service his field telegraphic outfit. Several years ago Congress enacted a law providing for the creation of sum- mary courts, the presiding officer of which was to be the second officer in command at d post. These courts were to dispose of various small infractions of military rules by the soldiers. They were limited to “time of peace.” Ac- cording -to an order issued by General Miles to-day, this being “time of war,” the provisions of the summary court act are dispensed with and they are re- placed by the field officers’ court. This is in accordance with the eightieth article of war, which provides as follows: “In time of war a field officer may be detailed in every regiment to try soldiers thereof for effenses not capi- tal. and no soldier serving with his regiment shall be tried by a regimental garrison court-martial when a field officer of Lis regiment may be so de- tailed.” DR. BRUNNER GIVES Tells of the Sanitary Conditions in Cuba, and Thinks an Invading Army Should Not Be Sent. SAVANNAH, Ga., April 30.—Dr. G. W. Brunner, formerly United States sanitary inspector at Havana, has just returned from Washington, where he went to place valuable information in the hapds of the surgeon general and of General Miles and the War Depart- ment. Dr. Brunner, while in Havana, for the sum of $5:30 a month, had the .orig- inal reports from all the Spanish mili- tary posts’ hospitals.” These reports are noly in the possession of Surgeon Generald Wyman. They show, Dr. Brunner states, that there were in the Spanish hospitals daily, out of an army of 110,000 men, from 30,000 to 32,- 000. ~ The unsanitary conditions sur- rounding the men and the insufficient attention given them, tcgether with a lack of food, are responsible for these facts. Dr. Brunner also secured in the same way information ahout all of the coast fortifications around Havana and per- sonally saw planted eight of the sub- marine mines now in the harbor there. The plans have been placed in the possession of the War Department. Dr. Brunner does not think an army of invasion should be sent to Cuba, on aceount of the likelihood of great mor- tality from yellow fever. He says that with the volunteers and regulars the Spaniards will soon assemble an army of about 80,000 men in Havana. gt g DECLARES FOR 7FU’SION. OGDEN, May 1.—At midnight the | Washakie Club, the strongest political organization’in Utah, and of which ‘William J. Bryan is an honorary mem- ber, made the first break in the Demo- cratic ranks of the State in favor of fusion. Tt held a six-hour discussion in which all the bitternass of religious warfare has gone through. The resolution indorsing National Democratic Cominittee Chairman Jones’ propesition of co-operation of all the silver forces was passed. The Silver Republicans and Populists had already agreed to fuse, and the State Democratic committee is now eonsid- ering the question. ADVERTISEMENTS. Vigorous Veterans By the thousands testify that nothing hits their needs like Hood's Sarsa- parilla. It repairs the ravages of exposure, disease and age, and makes them feel young again. Es- pecially in the spring, when the health tone is low, it heals and builds up into perfect condition. Captain J. P. Thompson confirmsthese statements, He was captain of Co. @G, 33d Mass. Regt., was at Gettys- burg and with Sherman in his march to the sea, For 24 years he has' been Registrar of Deeds for Northern Middlesex Co. He writes: “Lowell Mass., March 29, 1898. “Messrs. C. I. Hood & Co.: “Gentlem .n: I cannot let another month pass without telling you the continued benefit I derive from Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I read of Hood's Sarsa- parilla as America’s Greatest Medicine, and I assure you I belleve this title has been well won. “Particularly for the benefit of vete- rans of the late war I would say I-take Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's Pillg as regularly as the spring comes around. I keep a supply on hand, and whenever I feel a little dull I turn to Hood's Sarsaparilla, and it seems to go right to the spot. T have used this medicine ever since it was first offered to the public, and the great success it Hood’s SarsaparillaZ has achieved is only what it justly | merits. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is my only | medicine. Early in the spring I start in' and take two or three bottles. It gives my system a thorough cleansing and acts very effectively upon the kid- neys. Only those who endured the hard .Ips of the soldiers in the late war can realize the sad condition of many of the comrades after the con- flict. Many did not break down im- mediately, but sooner or later, the ter- rible exposure endured in malarial dis- tricts, together with the privations and sufferings experienced in the service, have broken down those previously rugged. To all such I urge that Hood's Sarsaparilla be given a fair trial. It seems especially adapted to counteract and overcome poison and disease con- tracted in the South, and . comes as near as possible to making the veteran feel young again. : “My official duties keeping me quite closely confined, it is particularly es- sential with the approach of spring that I take a medicine to brace me up. Hood's Sarsaparilla has done this- ef- fectively for many years, not only at spring time, but whenever I felt run down. It purifies my blood, ‘tones up my system and gives me a good appe- tite.. In fact, it sends through me a thrill of new life, : “I am glad voluntarily and publiely to indorse Hood’'s Sarsaparilla and to recommend it to all who know me or who may read these words.”—Joseph P. Thompson, Middlesex County. Court House, Gorham street, Lowell, Mass. Is America’s Greatest Spring Medicine.. Sold by all drun'l-u. $1; six-for §5. Be surc to get HOOD'S." GRAND STOCK —oOoF— Spring and Summer Underwear, Hosiery, - Shirts, Ete., In All the Newest Ideas At Low Prices. AGLESONE.LD. 748 and 750 Market St. 242 Montgomery St. LOS ANGELES AND SACRAMENTO. THE GREAT SPECIALISTS FOR MEN. DR. MEYERS & CO., 731 Market Street. These are the doctors that restore partial or complete loss of Vital Power and Cure Dis- eases of Men quickly and permanently. NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNTIL CURE 1S EFFECTED. Established for 18 years; strictly reliable; best equipped; most scientific methods; rapid cures. These are- a few of the things that have made DR. MEYERS & CO. famous on FREE BOOK. 352" G805 “hend® o %Free Book and Symptom Blank and be cured at home. . : DR. MEYERS & CO., Specialists for Men of the ENGLISH AND GERMAN EXPERT SPECIALISTS PERFECT FIT, BEST OF WORKMANSHIP, at 5 per cent Less than Other Tailors Charge, Go to JOE POHEIM All Wool Suits to $12 ' $35 Order from 201 and 203 Montgomery St., 844 and 846 Market St., 3110 an: 1112 Market St, $an Francisco. CRAY or FADED HATR RESTORED to southful color and beauty by DR. HAYS HATR HEAUI Re: moves dindruff and sealy disease. Don’: stain gkin. Coyers BALD spytx. Absoiutely harmless. args hottle: , at druggt cetail agen O-PERC K *HARM A Mgrker st & MICH: holesale-MACE & CO.. TANGLE AELS: COFFIN. REDING'TON & Cu. BRUSHES brewers, -bookbinders, FOR BARBERS, BAK- ers, bootblacks, bata- houses, biliiard-tables, candy-makers, canners, dyers, flourmills, foundries, laundries, paper- hangers, printers, painters, =hoe factories stablemen, tar-roofers, tinners, tailors, ete. BUCHANAN BROS.. Brush Manufacturers,609 Sacramento S¢ " THE WEEKLY CALL It Publishes the Cream of the News of the Week and MANY ATTRACTIVE AND ORIGINAL FEATURES. IT IS THE BEST WEEKLY PAPER ON THE PACIFIC COAST The Best Mining Telegraphic News That Service on Is Accurate &up to date Not a Line of it Sensational or Faky, and Not a Line of it Dry or Uninteresting. A CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER ALL THE TIME, g e - si.58 INDUSTRIES l A YEAR.

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