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THE SAN JOVHNiD.i S};RECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKI PUBLICATION OFFICE......Market and Third Sts., S. F. Telephone Main 1868. EDITORIAL ROOMS..........2I7 to 22| Stevenson Street Telephone Main 1874 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL (DAILY AND SUNDAY) Is served by carrlers In this city and surrounding towns for 15 cents a week. By mall $6 per year; per month 65 cents. THE WEEKLY CALL OAKLAND OFFICE. NEW YORK OFFICE. .One yzar, by mall, $.50 ....908 Broadway Room 188, World Building DAVID ALLEN, Advert & Representative. WASHINGTON (D. €. OFFICE Riggs Houes C. C. CARLTON, Correspondent. CHICAGO OFFICE... C.GEORGE KROG -Marquette Building ng Representative. 88, Adverti BRANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery street, corner Clay, cpen untll 9:30 o'clock. 387 Hayes street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 621 McAllister street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin street, open untll 9:30 o’clock. 1941 Mission street, open until 10 o'clock. 2291 Market street, corner Sixteenth, open untll 9 o'clock. 2518 Misslon street, open untll 9 o'Clock. 106 Eleventh street, open untis 9 o'clock. 1505 Polk street, open until 9:30 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second ana Kentucky streets, open until 9 o'clock. AMUSEMENTS. Columbia—*Fort Frayne " Baldwin - The Passion Play™ California—*Uncle Tom's Cabin. Alcazar— Frederick the t Morosco's—*The Gossoon Tivoli— Boecacelo.” Orpheum - Vaudeville. The Chutes—Zoo, acon and Eddy streets, Specialiles. 1 ting, fishing, every Sunday. AUCTION SALES. July 2. Furniture, at . Butterfield—This day, Frai 145 Baay e et, at 1E 0 eloek. DISCLAIMING A PARTNERSHIP. D R. PARDEE, candidate for Governor, denies rather vaguely that the railroad is behind him, aminer is. dc and somewhat more specifically, that the Ex- all it ‘can to’advance his politi Yet both assertions have the merit of be- ing true. That the good doctor should be aggrieved at the ‘publicity ‘is not surprising. That he should have used his influence to have the Oakland make denial’ for him is perfectly natural. owns the Enquirer makes his influence considerable. Yet the-doctor should not have permitted his agita- tion to-carry him to extremes. To the dispassionate of facts printed in The Call yesterday he makes the: résponse that the writer lied. Such a statement Jacks dignity, and fails to carry conviction. The Enguirer man was doubtless doing the best he kniew how, but-he got himself into a sad jumble. He ¢ article to which he was trying to interests. 1quirer That he asserted” that tt object. has been. inspired by a desire to defeat both Oakland aspirants, Pardee and Davis. A little fur- ther on he‘averred with equal directness that the can- didate who is not.Pardee is the railroad man, and thatthe: purpose was to “fall into his arms” in due seasom. he -doctor, ne¢dless to say, is wrong. The article which stirred. his ‘bile merely set forth the aspect of politics in“Alameda County. = The writer who pre- pared. it; - in- collecting * material, found that Pardee and the“Examiner and the railroad “push” were all engaged-in-inflating a Pardee boom. They had be- come’ campaign: partners. - Acknowledgment is made freely that it is a queer combination, but even con- sideration for the doctor’s feelings would not permit a conscientious:scribe to overlook it. Now the quick swoop made by :the doctor’s paper to the rescue of the Examiner confirms all that had been printed. Or, per- | haps, he:disavows the: association, not for the sake of the yellow sheet, but because he is ashamed of it him- self. If the doctor ‘expects to -impress the community with his-sincerity “he must ‘do more than deny that which is:known to ‘be true. . -Instead of disclaiming the ‘partnership -he.ought to repent, move for a dis- solution; demand'the-appointment of a receiver -and a_speedy accounting. AS TO THE ZOO. ' \ imitation- of ‘thinking; Call‘favors a’ liberal provement “of - Golden ‘Gate N:evening -paper, which ‘occasionally gives an wants to know why The expenditure for the im- ‘Park and not a cent for the establishmeént of a monkey.ranch:in the Mission. | Were “the. paper .in question: guided” by intelligence it would never have formulated such an inquiry. Yet an answer is-easy to give, and may -fall under the eye of ‘persons-so equipped: that they :can. appreci- ate it. The Call favors a-liberal -appropriation for Golden Gate Park, because this ‘park:is alréady one of the finest .in the. ‘world, a source of comfort and pride, | capable of being-made more and niore attractive. Gol- den Gate Park-is-not only -a beautiful bredthing spot, but it is the one feature of San: Francisco notable above all others. - People from every part of this country. and from abread have viewed it with amazement.and admiration.. . To in any :measure check its. develop- ment would be a distinct loss. It belongs, more- over, to the whole city. : It is-accessible to all.-. It is not for the especial benefit of the Mission nor of North Beach.: These facts constitute a sufficient ex- cuse for advocating a liberal appropriation: As to the proposed monkey ranch; it would be for the Mission alone. - The amount applied to it would have to be taken fromi the fund now devoted to a park for the ‘entire. city.- . There is no need of it; be~ cause there is still'much unoccupied: space in Golden Gate Park. There is rio justice in it, because the majority of San Franciscanis would not care to cease the habit of going to the established resort, and whatever attractions. might be put in the Mission would be at public expense: for the benefit of a few. The city has no money-available for the purchase of a site. - These are a few of the features of the situa- tion which constrain The Call to oppose the Mission zoo, and the consequent crippling of Golden Gate Paik. £ It is worth remembering, als; that the. proposed 700 is a real estate scheme: that a’ syndicate desires- to unload on the city for far more than legitimate value a lot of land of which it .might otherwise be unable:to dispose, certainly not at ghé absurd figure mentioned. in connection with the proposed sale. These are a few of the reasons for'the position we have taken, and propose to- maintain. The whole 200 scheme is a piece of shameless robbery, and none knows it better than the editor of the evening paper to whose work 2 passing reference has been necessary. Tt further proof of the character of the scheme is needed attention is called again to the circumstanceAthat ‘it “has his support. 2 E, Maiggev. | sudeville and Cannon, the 613-pound Man. | THE VICTORIOUS MARCH. | ROM the day the American troops landed on l:Cuban soil the advance has been steady and { success constant. It has been a victorious march on Santiago, hardly interrupted for an hour by the ambuscades and entrenchments. of the enemy. | The army, like the navy, has added new glory to our annals, and the triumph achieved by the one on the sunlit bay at Manila has been equaled by that ac- complished by the other amid the chaparral of the mountains around Santiago. The skirmish by which the advance guard cleared the thickets and made way for the main crmy to ascend the hills has been swiftly followed by an at- tack in force upon the Spanish entrenchments in the suburbs of Santiago itself. The reports of the battle which we publish this morning speak for themselves. | They attest the energy and valor with which the | army under command of General Shaiter is following | up the successes won last week. They also give as- surance of a speedy ending of the war in Eastern Cuba, leaving the army and navy free to direct their whole force upon Havana, there to end the conflict in the island with a blow. When Cervera, after dodging about the Caribbean Sea for as long a time as he could, steamed with his fleet into Santiago Bay for the purpose of avoiding a conflict with our warships in those waters, he doubt- less indulged the fond hope that he would remain in safety under the protection of the forts along the | narrow entrance to the bay, all summer; and, per- haps, keep his flag flying indefinitely. Such hopes were based upon the belief among the Spaniards that a land campaign in that part of Cuba was impossible. For years the best Spanish troops, under their best generals, strove in vain to dislodge a few insurgents from the mountains, and it was thelr conviction that Americans would have no better success in an ag- | gressive movement than themselves. They have learned | better now. Cervera's fleet would have been safer | in midocean than where it is. | With this brilliant feat accomplished in so short | | | | | a time the captious critics of our general will have to relapse into silence or speak only to excuse them- | selves. They can no longer charge the generals in the field with delay or the commander-in-chief with indecision. There can be no longer any sneering at the Board of Strategy, nor any mocking reference to it as a “board of lethargy.” The fleet and the army hLave moved together in perfect accord and have combined to encompass Santiago and Cervera and rival in this hemisphere the triumph of Dewey at Manila. With the winning of the battle of yesterday the war enters upon a new phase. The period of prepara- tion has given way to the time of action. Unless Spairn speedily sues for peace other battles will swiftly follow. News of additional triumphs for our arms in Cuba will alternate with dispatches of victories in the Philipp: Neither ambuscades nor the fevers of the summer season in the tropics will stay the vic- torious march of the younger grand army of the re- publi We have in the reports of its progress news to thrill us with keen ardor at the coming celebra- This is a new war for the Liberation of some of the oppressed peoples of the world. It carries wider yet the glory of the starry baznner, and confirms anew the cause for which that banner was first unfurled. tion of the glorious Fourth. | CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS. ation of the Examiner that a dependency” like Hawaii may be governed by ongress without regard to the constitution would be harmless, the mere vagary of a yellow freak, | if it were not expressive of the purpose of the annexa- HE frank declarz tion crowd everywhere. They throw to the winds every principle of this vernment. They propose to annex and govern without consent of the governed. They propose to tax without representation. They propose to erect different rules and enforce different statutes, “‘accord- ing to conditions.” At home will stand the eight Lour law, the prohibition of contract labor, the re- striction upon coolie immigration. In Hawaii there E wiil be the longest day that human endurance can | siand, There will be contract labor, there will be free | inimigration of coolies under contract. The fruits of this labor system will flow into our market to com- | pete with the fruits of labor at eight hours a day-not | bound by contract and paid on a white scale. While inequality of law will permit this advantage of cheap tropical labar, there will be no complementary in- ecuality of law for the benefit of white labor at home. | No tariff will shut out the products of coolie labor. Its sugar, raised on-a wage of $6 to $9 a month, will | mect in the home market beet sugar produced by | labor paid ‘three times as much, and the beet sugar | will be driven out and the promising industry will be | ruined. There is no end to the calamities that will fol- | low government unlimited by the - constitution and | therefore irresponsible to-the peoplé. - Yet the organ | of annexation treats such-government as proper! | The statesmen of this country saw in slavery an in- equality. To keep-light-and leading away from'the | 'slaves there had to beé a: Federal:law regulating- the | mails by prohibiting the carrying of “incendiary pub- |"lications.” Greeley’s Tribune and Garrison's: Liber- ator were “incendiary.” The law permitted their cir- |‘culation by mail in the free States and prohibited it | in the slave States. - In apportioning representatives lin Congress according to the population the law counted every five negro slaves as-three ‘white men, though the law deniéd to any black man.the right to vote. - These and othér -inequalities of law were re- quired by the necessities of the slaveholders, yet our { Government was founded on the principle of political | equality! : One day the yoice of Lincoln" rang out from Cooper Union in New York with the declaration that the Government could not live under such conditions of inequality, that between freedom and slavery there was an irrcpiessible conflict, and if the republic were to endure the Union must be all free or all slave. The cry of “one land and one law” smote the fountain of | patriotism and it was instantly affluent. The land was jfilled with widows and orphans; industry took bur- ! dens of taxation on its back; the people gave: up | luxuries first and necessaries at last, as willingly, that there might be one law for all. The veteran heroes of that struggle are yet with us. The verdure hardly hides the battle-fields where fell a million of men in that struggle for equality. Yet we are told now that “dependencies” can be acquired and governed by un- | equal laws; that in such inequality there is no ir- i‘;epressiblc conflict; that Lincoln was mistaken; that |'the laurels of Gettysburg and Appomattox were ill- | bestowed;. that the constitution does not limit the powers-of government, and that the ancient cry of “one land and one law” was a delusion. e Up to date the German admiral at Manila has re- fused to actually interfere, and :if he knows what is good for him he will keep on refusing. General Blanco's rule of not recognizing white flags ‘will'get him into trouble soonet or later if it is one of the rules working both ways. G | THE OPENING ' GUNS. FRANCISCO CALL, SATU N Pennsylvania and in the neighboring State of thia the campaign which is to end with the fall elections has virtually begun. The contending par- ties are lined up for battle and the issues on which:the i result is to depend are being rapidly formulated. In both States the silver question has subsided, and it appears the main fighting will be done over matters | rising out of the war. The “Philadelphia Record, a gold standard, free trade paper, has taken advantige of the situation to | try to make its way back to the Democratic camp, and in order to effect this has begun a vigorous attack upon certain policies advocated by the Republicans. One of the measures favored by Republicans to which the Record objects and- in opposition to which it wishes to array the Democracy is the construction of the Nicaragua canal. On that subject it says: “For years this project has been urged upon Con- gress by a powerful lobby, but it has been beaten off because of the grave doubts as to the physical feasi- bility of maintaining the canal in a region of vol- cagoes, carthquakes and tornadoes, and because also of its dubious financial success, as well as of the poli- tical complications in which it would inevitably in- volve this Government in Central America. But since the Nicaragua canal has also become an official meas- ure of Republican administration it can be defeated only by the refusal of the people to send a Republican majority to the next Congress.” While it is by no means desirable that a great com- mercial enterprise like that of the construction of the Nicaragua canal should be made a party issue, the Republicans will not be averse to accepting a chal- lenge from Democracy on the issue if it should be made. The need of a waterway across Nicaragua has long been apparent to persons interested in American commerce, and the events of the war have now made it known to all classes. If, as the Record says, “the canal can be defeated only by the refusal of the people to send a Republican majority to the next Congress,” there will be an additional reason why a Republican should be elected from every Congressional district in the Union. On another point, however, the Record makes a more effective shot against the Republican platforms of the two States. Commenting upon the declarations in favor of American shipping it says: “If the Republican party had been friendly to this policy of steamship bounties and discriminating duties on imports it would have been adopted when the Dingley tariff became a law. The notorious twenty- second paragraph, making discriminations in duties, has been ruled out of the Dingley act by an Attor- ney General's opinion, and, notwithstanding the ex- istence of a protectionist majority in both houses of Congress, the paragraph is as dead as if it had never been enacted.” There is no evading that statement, and no retort to it save the foolish one that Democrats have done no more for our merchant marine than Republicans have done, and that the Wilson bill was as barren as that now in force of discriniinating duties. Such a retort, however, is not worth the making. The Re- publican party and the administration have a pledge to the people which has not been fulfilled. So long as nothing is done for our merchant marine, so long will the party be justly subject to the taunts of its opponents. For Republican State conventions to adopt resolutions declering in favor of promoting American shipping is good, but it would be better to have the Republican majority in Congress pass a bill on the subject. In that, as in all things else, actions talk louder than word STRENGTH IN CONGRESS. OMMENTING upon a recent display of the ex- C ceptional influence of Vermont in Congress the Philadelphia Times s “One reason why Vermont secures the services of statesmen of high rank to represent her in Congress is that her people give their representatives a chance to become familiar with their duties. The Republicans of the State have just renominated the two present representatives in the lower branch, Mr. Powers, who is now serving his fourth, and Mr. Grout, who is serving his eighth term.” This view of the origin of State influence in Con- gress is unquestionably sotund. The great States of New York and Illinois, despite their preponderance of votes in the House, have less influence there than smaller ‘States whose Representatives ‘make up for their Jack of numbers by familiarity with the methods of conducting business in Congress and their alliances formed with other Congressmen during -their long term of service. In this connection it may be noted that the people of Towa have ‘learned the advantage of giving their representatives time to acquire influente at the capital. It has been recently stated that when the present members of Congress from that State finish the terms they are now serving they will have had a total of 142 years' experience in national legislation, which makes for the thirteen members an average of fiearly eleven years. . The total for the two Senators alome is fifty years; one member of the House has had eight terms, anothier six, two five each, three fur each, two three each, and. two others two each. California will never hold her rightful place at the national - capital nor have due -weight in Con- gress until' the people. haye learned the - les- son . 'so profitably applied - by. the States: we have named. We have been vacillating and shiiting at home, and have changed our. Congres- sicnal delegation as often as elections occur. recult we have now at Washington more free traders and free silver men to misrepresent our industries and our financial interests than protectionists and sovnd money men to represent them. We are weak where we should be strong, and are less potent in the great councils of the nation than Vermont or Maine. An effort should be made at this election to send to Vashington a delegation thoroughly representative of California, and thereafter maintain it comparatively unchanged from term to term. When we can point to a Congressional delegation with a service record like that of Towa we shall not see our interests so ofteu sacrificed as is now the case. The reciprocity clause of the Dingley tariff, for example, would have had in it something else than ~California products. We would not now be purchasing a market in France for Towa meat by paying for it at the expense of Cali- fornia wine. B S When Blanco ordered Cervera to get out of Santi- ago harbor the Captain General was either in an ab- stracted frame of mind, or he has no mind. Two ways are open by which the order might be obeyed. Cer- vera can put dynamite under himself and go up, or scuttle himself and g{: down. But he can’t get out. East for having knocked out a bruiser. There really suffian’s being a little huskier than another. General Wheeler has had a view of the Caban situ- ation as it looks to a man up a tree. : ——— It seems that Sharkey is getting little credit at the | should not be much glory attached to the fact of one | RDAY, JULY. 2, I As a [} 1898, COLLECTED IN. “THE ' CORRIDORS E. MeGettigan of Vallejo is staying at | the Russ. ; Peter Must of Stockton' s registered at the Grand. -3 : Dr. George. H: the Grand. . Ben U. Stein: the Palage, sy : J./G. Thoma has returned from a visit: to Moss Landing. SRR Francis J. Simmes, U..8. N., Is stopping at the Occidental. T. H. Buckingham and wife of Vaca- ville are at the Grand. < mian’of Sacramento s at James Colquhoun -of Clitton; “Ariz., 1s | registered -at the Palace. ‘W. P. Thomas, a lawyer from Ukiah, is stopping at the Grand. ‘W. C. Nations, a cattle man of El Paso, Texas, is at the Baldwin.- Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Webb of London are staying at the California. Easton Mill, a mining man from Paso Robles, i{s stopping at the Occldental. C. B. Shaver, superintendent of the Fresno Flume Company, is staying at the Grand. E. D. de Golyer, the well-known mining man, accompanied by his family, is stay- ing at the Palace. Forasetof men OO with farrowed ¥ . 'Twas ONLY X foreheads and X ¥ beetling brows % % when the weight 14 SOCIABLE CALL. gy of thought hangs upon their minds 08308 50 308 0F 30 106 0f 33 K¢ the plloters of the destinies of the Southern Pacific know no equal. When relaxed from the cares of transportation and traffic they might all have their measures taken for a model suit of affability. If you must see them on anything outside of the pale of busi- ness the best time is immediately after lunch, when the inner man is satisfied and the taste of the cigar still lingers. The person who supplies both the tragic and the comedy element of the following | story did not know this and now he is not on visiting terms with the “yellow building,” He was only a small boy and should have been pardoned, but the in- exorable custom of the company knows no pardon in these cases. The boy came to the Scuthern Pacific with every recom- mendation for good conduct and great mental potentialities. He was according- ly assigned to Mr, Richardson, master of transportation. In two days the boy had so completely, absorhed the peculiar busi- ness of Mr. Richardson’s office that the head of the latter feared displacement, so he displaced the boy. The boy was then assigned to duty at the freight building | at Fourth and Townsend and there began to mount the ladder which in his drea ended in the office of the master of tr: portation. Some. time after this the em- ployes of the various departments had a meeting in the “vellow building”? which the young man was given leave to attend. It was for the organization of some in- surance soclety among the lessér = em- ployes, and the boy, primed for the occa- sion, dressed himself in his very best clothes, with & glowing necktie to praduce a climax. Once again in the s duty to call on Mr. Richardson. The thought was father to the act, and the next instant found him in the office. Mr: Richardson arrived soon after and ing him. There were stacks of business to attend to that morning, and Mr. Rich- ardson was very anxious to get at it. The | boy inquired about his health and told of his progress and his expectations. The magnate listened: Then came an inquiry from him what the nature of the business was on which the young man had come. The young man replied: “Oh, I didn’t come on business. I just came to pay a soclable call. 1 knew you would be glad to see me. Now let us talk of something besides business. That's so common- place.” Mr. Richardson became epigram- matic and the boy departed. W. W. Douglas, Deputy State Controll- er, arrived from Sacramento yesterday and Ig staying at the Grand. Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis, wife of the brigadier general, arrived in this city from Los Angeles yesterday and will stay at the Occidental. Mrs. Duncan A. McDonald, principal of the De Lamar (Nevada) School, arrived in Oakland yesterday to attend her moth- er, who is critically ill J. B. Schroeder has been appointed local ticket and excursion agent of the San Francisco and North Pacific Rail- road, to succeed D. H. Smith, resigned. General C. C. Allen, T. R. Newberry, E. F. C. Klokke and Charles Wier, of Los Angeles, are in this city and are &topping at the Palace. They are all prominent citizens of the Southern city and will pre- sent Brigadier General Otis with a gold- mounted sword, a remembrance of his friends fn Los. Angeles. L. Feigenbaum of Rohnerville is in town for his health.. He reports that the crops in his neighborhood are excellent. The chief - need of his section is. the promised rtailroad connection with Ukiah and Eureka, which he regards as sure. ‘to be made eventually. He brought down a large con- tribution from Rohnerville to the Red Craess Soclety—the proceeds of an enter- tainment held in the Town Hall of his burg. —_——e———— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, July 1.—Robert Mackenzie of San Francisco is at the Buckingham; F. Schultze of San [Francisco is -at the Belvedere; Edward Brayton of San Fran- clsco has gone to Paris; Mrs. Hermean Oelrichs and Miss Virginia Fair- have re- turned from Europe. —_—_—— For Decorating. ‘We received last night 600 Cuban &nd American paper flags, also50 tén-footrolls: ‘American flag paver. . These make . the- rheasest and brightest decorations to be found. -Sanborn, Vail & €o. . L2 ———————— Flags, crepe paper, bunting and war plc‘(’m;fs for decorating, cheap at Sanbo:n Vail's. 3 ——————— Celebrate -the Fourth- with California fireworks. Buy direct from makers. Cal- ifornia Fireworks Co., 219 Front st. »or — 5 Special information suppiled daily to business houses and public men hKi the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 * —_——— e : ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. A BACK DATE—A. 8., City. 1847, fell on a Wednesday. POSTMISTRESS—B. C., Vallejo, Cal. Those persons who are named for the po- sition of postmistress are not required to undergo civil service examination. RUSSIAN JEWS—J. L., City. A lim- ited number of Russian Jews, who are duly qualified, are admitted to the Uni- versity of Moscow. : BT. PAUL DIRECTORY — Stranger, City. A directory of St. Paul, Minn., is to be found In the office of the San Fran- cisco Directory. June' 23, FIVE DOLLAR PIECE—A Subscriber, |- | City. A five dollar piece of 1836'is not one gt :ihosle for ¥t‘1m:hhn premi‘v.lxm is offered ealers. ey_have such on salé and ofter them for § 50 e PURE GOLD—W. T. McC., ‘Auburn, Cal. Pure gold, which is gold one thou- sand fine, or, according to the old method, is 24 Karats, is, according to the United | States mint valuation, worth"$2.671791 per ounce. 3 THE BIG GUNS—E. O. T. C., Wood- : land, Cal. The blg gun Big Betsy- was brought to San Francisco June 22; . It is now in the forward turret of the Mon- terey, on the port side, while- the sister Jsckson is Tegistered at.|: : “yellow | building” he thought it was no more than | he | found the yvoung man breathlessly await-| gun, named Alice, is in the same turret, | o ihe starboard side.. In the answer in | relation to these guns a few days since | it anpeared that they were on the Oregon, In that there was a confusion of names o vessels, PRINTED DOCUMENTS—“Documents | for Reference,”. Virginia, Nev, -If you | will communicate with the Public Printer | | at. Washington, D, C,, he will furnish you with -the act of Congress declaring | war with Spain, the first call for troops and a report of the Maine Examining | Board. | GAS METER—G. City. The -law does not recognize a private inspector of gas meters, but it does recognize the in- | spector appointed under the authority of | the Legislature... A gas company would | not recognize the certificate of a private | inspector. TWO ISSUES—F.. R. P. and others, Veterans' Home, Napa, Cal. In the mak- | ing up Of news for a dafly paper it often happens: that all the news- matter is ot | Teceived in time for - the first edition, | which must'be got out at. 4. fixed time in order to Teach the subscribers in the | country,-consequently matter which sp- | pears.in what s known as the. city. edi- | not get into the eountr: i of ‘that date; ~ THAt 18- wh Vo Lon-f gomething .in_one’paper; but - failed: to | 1find it in another paper of the same date | from the same.pre: LADIBS . 'ON. HORSEBACK—N. R.. City. e great: point in: riding is to straight in the:middle . of ' 'the sadil knew the témper of the horse and be able to echjoy a - good - gallop- in! moderatio: Ladies. should not ‘lean’ for-. | ward as t de. . They :should- rise little. as possible in the saddle while the animal *is- trotting. - Théy should -above all know how to hold the: reins, thc dif- erenty ‘uses of . each .and the gommon:] ruI‘éslflf tlhebrf)ax], Che “fifrst two quired only by p: “the iz a day’s riding, b LAY T in dder,’| U fmmedia | prevoke __ROYAL BAKING:POWDER 00., NEW YORK. ur-friends. 16 Townsends - Call= vé F 50e. Ih, ini: fire £tched Market st Pulacé’Hotel bldg.* Treat. ¥ fornia Glac box 62 In & civil ice . ‘examination . in’ England -t re. 1866 -fallures. in. & class of 1972 B S DG I N | Excursion. to: the Yellowstone Park, A" personally”conducted excursion wiil Teave this ity July 12°£0r: the: Yellowstorie. Park, via |'the’ "'Shasta .Réute" and Northiern Pacifie Ralls way." Tolrists Wil be- accommndated in" fst- ¢lass. Puilmian “edrs;: tickets: wili : De - e cluding - berths, “meals: and_.tfii: ‘throuet. the Park: : Send. for circular. giVing- rate and. ititier- ary. to- T K. STATELER:: General. . Agent Norihern: Pacific Kailwiy.: 635, Market: s 3 Velunteers: déasing: for: ‘the with a Bottle ot D. ¥ tu a Bitt FHE tiine comés Wher evéryh KRS GINGER Tox: 15 needs PAR- saveslife, cough: centage seen-in’the play: were wuite.suffici hostilitie: i _’Most healthful - leavener in ‘the world. Goes farther. -