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CHAS, HEYER'S EAPLANATION EXPLAINS NOT Another Case of Tax~- Stamp Frauds. Iu SUPPORTED BY RECORDS| HIS STATEMENT EVADES THE|S VITAL POINT. The Man Who Attempted to Oppose “Honest John” Talcott Again Courts Unpleasant Notoriety. Ozkland Office San Franclsco Call, %8 Broadway, Nov. b. Charles W. Heyer, who is the Demo- opposed to Supervisor card in which he inted a few -days story pr g his con in Government, and | the use of reve- | in this case were | the {1l advised friends | so maligned Mr. 11 has de statemen ts State and n statut iade and provided. of th esaid Heyer, at and by and brewery premises ¥ removing {rom the said br y t ¥ said fifteen hun- | and | | Wherefore, he prays that of law may issue against hereinbefors force the fo tice to be g show o process, wh reed. _CHAS. A. GARTER, United States Attorney. This case, according to the recor: | file, was compr: mlsm;F by Mr. Iie)’e‘:sa:g. ng to the United States n snm of $1250. This | suit is altogether distinct from the one to | which Mr. Heyer refers in his card of explanation. { WARK ON LAKE J : MERRITT BEGUN; on such return forfeiture | DREDGER WILL BE BUILT WITH- | OUT DELAY. ‘Great Improvements Will Be Com- 5 pleted Before the Fiscal Year Closes. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, %8 Broadway, Nov. 5. | Work was commenced to-day on the im- | provements of Lake Merritt. Everything | ! now being settled and the legal aspect of | the improvements being in perfect shape, | s are now being run for the buikheads | the channel. The contract has been awarded by the Board of Public Works for dredging the | lake and filling in the marsh land deeded to the city. This land, consisting of twenty acres, will waen filled In be worth 5,000, and the city will own it for the of the dredging. Not only will the n in this way by having a large but it will | vn_at no 1 of surrounding prop- ; »een practically worth- bie gardens additional most if. not | s for maintain- 2 N raised from it ¢ provide the me: il begin er on the it is expected by the close | ear (Tune 3. 189 the con- | been completed. In the | ner of the lake a permanent | is now befng completed which ct with the boulevard built four | ing up to Peralta Helghts. his long been a noisome requently during the winter | cars down Fourth avenue | suspend operations. Tho | f the lake which contracted 1o Pro; erty ———— AEGIS' EDITOR RESIGNS. 3 F. W. Nightingill Objects to Oaklana High Scnool’s Principal Wield- | ing a Blue Pencil. i OAKLAND, Nov. has been Frank W. NI 1 Oakiand High School p is published and dents. In Xfa’g‘n this week’s Aegis, i Lio as his reason the fact thar thehena of | the faculty has demanded that all ma- | terial fntended for the editorial columns | of the paper must be submitted to him or one of the heads of departments before ! publication. ; Although Nightingill does not say so it | is stated by others that ihis request on Lne part of the sehool authority was made bec ¥ the resignation of | as editor of the | ver, Aegis, which supported by the stu- published in | cause the student editor presumed to pub- | Everybodv bis opinion about the controversy | ber is 78 lish | stock company and, { ceptance | would therefore be of little ton with certain | I connection | (N€ of the | N said | § | and Citizen |OPPOSED TO THE | Teachers’ Institute, held some time ago, | | report on the proposed sixth amendment | to the State constitution. | occupted by | ment is %o ambiguous that it seems impossible | Perenaded that the resulting uncertainty would | I'but the 271‘;5:‘:?%‘:&‘::’}:!& of study tnarted by Coun- vellier's recen: the Board of Education. et The students issue the Aegis under a though the stock- lders stand 34 against and 28 for the ac- . of _the editor's resignation, Nightingill still refuses to allow the au- thorities' thet be to wield a blue pencil over his opinions. St. Andrew’s. Officers. 5.—The following offi- ed by St. Andrew’s the ensuing year: N. W. tch, president; Charles & Kiad, vice president: D. Edward. Collins, treasurer; George Montrose Lackie, secretary; Wil- liam Stuart, fipancial secretary; board of trustees—N. W. Leitch, Peter Thom: son, Dr. Edward Collins, James P. Tz lor, James Smilie, Hugh Hamilton; relief committee—Hugh ' Hamilton, James P. aylor, James Smiife; literary commit- tee—Charles Kidd, Robert ~Howden, George M. Lackfe; Ifbrarian—George Howden. Streuber Goes Free. OAKLAND, Nov. 5—Ludwig A. Streu- ber, convicted a year ago for allowing| iis 16-year-old wife, Dora Streuber, to live a house of il repute, for which he was ntenced to Folsom prison, was this | morning discharged by:Judge Greene on | motion of the District Attorney. Streu-| Society Leitch, for ber was recently granted a new trial by | the Supreme Court; since his first trial, | | however, one of the principal witne | ha been timony More- v at for the State, John Logan_ Bell examined for insanity, and his t se. is over the woman In_question Whittier Reform School. Only Blew Out the Gas. OAKLAND, Nov. 5.—A stranger giving the name of John Smith and halling from d Chicago, unconscious in his Toom at th , Seventh and Chester streets, this morning, while the | gas jet in the room was on full| He “was ta to the Recelving | Hospital, and after several hours' hard | ith registered at the Kol , and when he retired was sadl s he had no of commit- | e and t ‘only blew out ! | Blaze at Elmhurst. | A blaze at Elm- this morning de- es on Orchard ave- was owned by Mr. e other was the cland I - OAKLAND hurst at abou He has been out a_ month, ces will be com- afternoon at the church, | e Imperial Yacht Club gave a clam- | ke this evening at Bay Farm, Bridge- | E. A. von Schmidt, wife of Pilot| Schmidt, is seriously ill at her home | this city. Brakeman Injured. | ALAMEDA, Nov. 5.—Robert Conway, a | " of “the South Pacific Coast | while attempting to jump on | ving train at Park street statio evening, missed his footing and wa: wn to the ground, striking the back | head on one of the streetcar tracks. | s not found until ten or fifteen | s after the train had passed. He | 1 a deep scalp wound and a slight | n of the brain. No one saw the The injured man was_taken to t. s home on Chestnut stret. His condi- | tion is serfous. | | —— BERKEL! Nov. 5—Dr. L. T. Hengs- tler of the, department of jurisprudence University Extension Lectures. [ | i In the University of California, will de- | nol liver six lectures on international law for the university extension course. The | lectures will be given weekly on Monday | afternoons, beginning next Monday, No- | yember 7. The class will meet in' the ar] a Member of the Fam Its Traditional Attitude" States as a Member of the | e t Indications of | ; ““The United | s a Member of thé Family of Na- | hat Should Be Its Future Atti The Principle of Intervention': | and posed Changes in the | Laws of War'; “International Domiclle ip. SIXTH AMENDMENT | ALAMEDA COUNTY TEACHERS/ WILL WORK AGAINST IT. | They Believe That While It Was Pro- | { posed in Good Faith, It Will { ‘Work Injury to the | Schools. ‘ At a meeting of the Alameda County a committee was appointed to prepare a | The report of { this committee was made the special or-| der of business at a subsequent meeting, | and, after being carefully considered by | the institute, it was unanimously adopted, The committee’s report as adopted is as follows: The Alameda County Teachers Institute, hiv- ing considered the Sixth amendment to the con- t] of the State of California proposed tcr this year, has reached the following jon with reference to the sald mmend- sed in the in- | of education, and specially for the gcod those who seek more adva schooling n that now offered in schools within their but we belleve also that, It adopted, it | 1 terly disappoint the expectattons which | it raises, and will at the same time work very ¢ to the schools which we now ese reasons we are earnestly op- doption. te constitution at present provides | he entire revenue derived from the State 00l fund and the State school tax shall be | to the support of primary chools.”” The effeet of K{l! pro- | s to throw the burden of support of sec- education (I e. education of the high | I grade) /entirely upon local taxation. The | sixth amendment seeks to get around this con- | itior to secure a portion of the State | for the support of secondary | mplish this end, y the constitu- vhich ilmits the application of State | moneys to primary and grammar schools, but | by providing that schools bearing the name of | Exiimmar schools may do the work of high | schools. Such an arrangement would, in our judg- i , disappoint the expectations of fts ad- or it would ‘In most cases lead £o | the giving of instruction in high school sub- | jects by teachers whose time 1§ already fully cinsses In grammar school subjects. The i ton of advanced classes under such untavorable conditions could not but be un- atisfacory to the teachers, to the patrons of he schools, and to the pupils. It would offer | oW Of secor ry education without its | substanc The amendment would, if adopted, work serfous injury to existing schools, in that. It would crowd the grammar schools with classes ment We believe it to have been pro) te: ¥s proposes to accol crly - belonging Ligh schools, thereby | rbing time and attention which are due | e regular grammar school classes, and t would moreover greatly injure into high by bringing them petition with schocls which liave the false appearance of doing high school work at less expense to | the communities concerned. | ¢ accord with the effort to education accessible to ail the in b s State, as is now the case in /| we belleve this end can be | more direct means. To | 2an high schools grammar echools will give G5 echools which are neither good hig Mo ood grammar schools; and will greatly | Tetard the movement toward good schools of | all_rrades. Finally, the wording of the proposed amend- I achools | to forecast its-effects in the matter of taxation | for educational purposes. We belleve it would Prove n source of much litigation and we are | Work-great harm to our educational system. JOHN GAMBLE; T. 0. CRAWFOED, - ARLES L. BIEDENBACH, WILLIAM M. GREENWELL, A. W. SCOTT, Committee. —_———— Thrown From His Buggy. William Larsen, residing at 1038 Filbert street, was thrown from his bug— at the corner of Howard and East streets yes- terday afternoon and wasseverely injured. At the Harbor Receiving Hospital, where he was taken, he was found 1o have Te- celved a wound on the head rtsumni in concussion of the brain. 'p to a late had- not regained consclousness, doctors believe he will recover. hour he Judge Wm. G. Burke, candldate for olice Judge, is making a winnii E ould vote for him. | canic activity. | trusive stranger. THE MOUATAN GROANS ALOUD 1 I NGUIS Tamalpais Rumbles Mysteriously. STRANGE NOISES ARE HEARD | THE RESIDENTS OF ROSS VAL- LEY MILDLY WONDER. Theories of the Phenomenon — A Patriotic Greek at the Summit and His Views. The residents of Ross Valley and there- | end no sign of eruption there. Anything more peaceful could hardly be imagined. Constantine’s dishwasher and ceneral factotum, Louis—there are no female ser- vants on the place—told exaectly the same story, and then I started out to explore the ravine. It was a weary scramble on a hot afternoon, down through chaparral thick undergrowth, startling the hares and quail at every step. Just below the Summit House there is an old mine, a tunnel running deep into the mountain. Some twenty years ago a sanguine indi. vidual imagined that he could get gold from the slender quartz reefs which crop up hereabouts. 'he heap of tailings on the hillside testifies to his energy; the abandoned mine, with its rotting bers, to his failure, The noise, however, dld not come out of this tunnel. There was noth there which could produce such a sound. Nor did the examination of the gully give ms better results. Whatever the undergrou; action may have been it showed no indi- cations on the surface. When I reached Bolinas Bay I questioned all the ranchers who live along the shore, but not one of them had heard the sounds. Evidently the nolse was confined to the hest points of the range and traveled over, in an easterly direction, toward Ross Val- ey. § %he theory that the rumblh had been caused by the stampers at Dog Town, some three miles from the bex:,‘y, looked at first sight to be far-fetched. But It exploded altogether when I learned that the mine had not been working for many months, and that it was practically in a state of. collapse. As to the sea, it is out of the question that anL ‘waves, no matter how high, could shake the solid ground in this manner. There remalns therefore no explanation but that of subterranean activity to ac- count for theerhummenon. An old resi- dent of the ni ghborhood, Captain Burns, states that he heard similar noises thirty years ago. And nearly forty years ago, abouts are having an experience similar to that of the good people of Exmoor, in Lorna Doone’s time. Every one has read in this famous novel how the moor used to quiver and shake, and give forth omin- ous nolses, fearful grindings and rattlings, during the middle of the night. And now the favored inhabitants of the beautiful | Ross Valley are asking themselves wheth- er some subterranean monster is not at work in the bowels of the earth beneath Tamalpais. Certain it is that this vast bulk of metamorphic sandstone has been | shaking and quivering in the most un-| seemly way. It is not at all easy to get at the facts in this case. Vague rumors of tremors and rumbling noises have been floating about for weeks, but it is almost impossible to crystallize them into tangi- ble shape. One obvious reason for this is that the property owners in the neigh- | borhood absolutely refuse to talk. In| | | fact, they have done their utmost to hush the thing up, fearing naturally that any doubt cast upon the stability of Tamalpals | will lessen the value of their holdings. | And land is very valuable in this pic-| turesque garden region, which is blessed | with the finest climate and the most fer- | tile soll, to say nothing of its scenic at- tractions. { They need not be so fearful. Good old | Tamalpais is long past the period of vol-| It has stood for who | knows how many thousand years, until | the metamorphic sandstone of which It | is composed has largely changed its form | and character through chemical agencies. Here and there, it is true, eruptive rock | is to be found, as at the Sugar Loaf Hill, near San Rafael, columnar basalt crops t now and again .hroughout the dis-| i tndications belong to | trict. But all these ! a past geclogical age. Tamalpais has | settled down to its bearings long ago, and | an earthquake biz enough to shift it would certainly wipe the State of Cali- | fornia off the map of the Unlon. | All this matter about tremors and ises and so on centers around San An- | selmo, and curlously enough the children seem to kmow more about the matter | than their grown-up parents. Perhaps their little senses are more keen, or, per- | haps, in their innocence they 'are not afraid to talk. When I visited the school- | house the sedate young lady who indi- es to the youthful mind ‘the path in | which it shouid walk held her littie flock | in awe by a mere wave of her ruler. The | boys wriggled uneasily on their seats and | looked as if they would like to giggle but dared not. The white-frocked girls, | perched high on their stools, simply open- | ed wide their eyes and stared at the in- It was a new kind of | examination, but at the same time it was | an agreeablé change from the monotony | of an arithmetic lesson. i “Now, then, children,” said the teacher, | impressively, *“have any of you heard about noises in the mountain, shakings of the earth or anything of the kind?” The children generally admitted some knowledge of the thing, but they invari- ably passed the responsibility for a defi- nite statement on to some other child. | Finally it_all narrowed itself down to a | mythical Tommy, who happened at the | moment to be absent from school. Later on in the playground, where the little people were more at their ease, I came across the aforesald Tommy and | found that he really existed. After protu- | ising faithfully not to reveal his surname | he told me that he lived with his mother | on the Petaluma road and that for some | time lately the ground had been con-| stantly shaking. They could feel it in| the house, and his mother was getting quite afraid. Then the other boys, not to be outdone, ceased their game of football and added that on the day before they had felt the ground shake as they were playing in the | Schoolyard. They thought it was a kind of an earthquake, but didn’t know for sure. A bright little lass of 10 evidently con- sidered the girls should have their share of the talk. “We've heard about it, too,” she volunteered, “but we don’t take any notice of these stofies. It's just the workmen up_there that say they feel tremblings. But, dear me, I don’t think much of what they suy; it's just talk. Still they do talk of a volcano breaking out up there or something awful like that. It's enough to scare you, if it's true.” So_muecn for the schoolchiidren’s end of the story. There was nothing very tangible in it, and I soon found out that 1 must go farther afield if I wished to get at the real source of the rumor. A chance conversation with the landlady of the hotel where I had lunch gave me the desired clew. It was at the summit that the noise had been heard in its greatest Intensity. She had been there the da{ before, and had heard all about it. Thither 1 must journey. Certainly the trip was well worth the trouble. 'he summit is the highest point on the Bolinas road, where the track takes a sharp dip into the valley beneath, and discloses to view, with startling sud- denness, the broad panorama of the Pa- cific Ocean; the Farallones shining white in the distance, Bay, under our feet, mirroring in its placid water the pine trees of ‘the mountain ranges. There, in the little inn, with its rickety wooden veranda, perched on the \-xery fop of the range, I found Constan- tine. Constantine is a character well-known throughout the. whole countryside. For years the regular travelers on the Sau- salito ferry boats swore by his cooking; his munageément of the steamers’ restau: rant was voted sublime. Even now, de- spite his age,. his hand has lost none of its cunning, and {f you api)roach him in a proper spirit, he will dish you up a salmi de cauilles or an omelette au fromage with all the skill of a Parisian chef. Constantine is a Greek and is proud of the fact. The first thing 1 noticed on en- tering his little dining room was a large portrait of the late E. Gladstone. I marveled to find such a picture in such a place, until Constantine explained. “"That man,” he sald, “did more for country than any other statesman. Greeks honor his memory.” In a simple spirit of patriotic reverence the old man talks. about Greece and her emancipation from Tul h rule, regret- ting all the more bitterly her recent, de- feats. Though he is 75 years of age and has seen nearly flfl{‘ years of rough and tumble lfe in California, Constantine bustles about his little place with the ac- tivity of a youth. e even finds time to make occasional hunting excursions among the ranges. For years he was Eume eeper for the Tamalpais Sporting lub, which preserves most of the coun- try hereabouts. Hence he knows every peak and gulch throughout the whole of this rocky ni borhood, and can guide you with unerring certainty to the fast- nesses where the mountain deer hide or my We | the quall run underfoot among the scrub. | ReL Score of “It was like this,”" said Constantine, when I finaily induced him to tell all he knew. “Ub a bub a boo, a dull lhrobbini noise, the und lhmn{ all the time. It went on for two days, Wednesd: Wy and Thurs- day-of last week. Mr. Waterhouse of Bolinas, who was here, says to me ‘Con- stantine, what's that? ™ “ I don’t know,’ 1 says. ‘Perhaps it's the stampers worl at the copper mfi perhaps it's the TR “‘But_where did the noise come from?”* say; but it was all round the hills, y-nd mostly from that gulch.” - We looked down Into a precipit clad ravine, which ran do& -3'&"3& into Bolinas . Certainly there was “T can’t exactl; Z | phur ! he hears the first rumbling he will mount | penses have oo, in 189, there was an eéven more marke disturbance at Mount St. Helena. A tre- mendous explosion was heard within the mountain, like the firing of heavy ean- non. All the inhabitants of the locality listened to the strange sound, and were scared out of their wits in anticipation of a volcanic outbreak. Fortunately noth- ing serious’ fonowed, and Mount St. He- lena towers as placidly to-day as it has done for centuries past. Neither has Mount Tamalpais anything to fear from these tiny rumblings. * It is true that certain evidences of volcanic activity are to be found in the neighbor- hood. _ On the sea coast, just a few miles from Willow Camp, some remarkable\sul- springs occur. _The springs rise through the sand into the ocean,and can only be located at low Mde, There, by simply scooping a hole in the sand, you can enjoy a hot stlphur bath, and affer- ward cool off by a plunge into the sea. At times the fumes arising from these spripgs are so strong that they can be smelt for a long distance. ut there is nothing very serious in this. Sulphur springs are by no means an uRCOmMmMON phenomenon, and do not necessarily indi- nic danger. Some scientists accounted for the Mount St. Helena explosion by the supposition ¢ a tremendous mass of rock had cn in an underground cavity. the same thing happened at Tamalpais, though it is w.fiicult to see how the nolse could have continued for two days, un- Jess great pieces of stone Kept on falling he time. Probably some of our spe- | s can give a better explanation. | unds may recur any day, or it may be years before they are heard again. Anyway, old Constantine has sworn, if he is still alive, to locate them. As soon as his horse and gallop over the ranges un- til he finds exactly where the sound comes from. We must wait until then luti of the mystery. for & solution of I°F. ROSE-SOLEY. —— THOUSANDS GATHER . IN CHARITY’S NAME SPANISH-AMERICAN CARNIVAL - WAS A SUCCESS. Mechanics’ Pavilion Presented a Gala | Appearance and Was Crowded With Maskers and Spectators. Although in the heat of political battle the people of San Francisco, heeding the call of charity, poured through the doors of Mechanics' Pavilion last night and con- tributed piles of gold that will be used to relieve the suffering of the boys in blue now stationed in far off lands. In other words the Spanish-American car- nival was a success. The big pavilion out on Larkin street presented a gala appearance. Early in the evening the maskers began to assem- ble and spectators by the hundred fol- Jowed them. When the first number on the programme Was announced it was es- timated that 3000 people had passed through the doors. La Petite Myrtle, a clever youngster, first received the ap- plause of the great crowd. Without delay the other numbers of the programme were ed as follows: P fehlana filng, Melntyre Sisters; French fanication dance, Bessie Glenwood; Pari- sian toe dance, Murfelita; fancy skating, Jeseph Waldstein; fancy bicycle riding, Thiny (H. C. Fowier); 1a danse Espanita, Q‘\'x‘él?n( ‘burlesque skating, (a) Kenna on skates, (b) Willlam Bernstein—Topsy on skate: selection, Professor Graeber’s school; American dance, Murlelita. Then came the grand march, Goddesses warriors in ancient armor, tcl?wx!:s“hyed!h:h score, ts and fools follow e wave Sk r's wand and then at the tune mingled in the mazes of the dance. At midnight the crowd had _greatly au l‘nern‘ed, flniléflflz\;{; seekers Jkept flocking in. S kT he when the band folded its music and followed the last weary cer from the hall. A large sum, affer all the:ex- been met, will doubtiess re- s that has done efenders on the of Olympus, %bstcrs, nymphs, of the leadel turn_of the main to go to the soclet: so much for the nation’s flelds of battle. GOLF CLUB COMPETITION. In Playing Off-a Tie Roberts Beat Pillsbury by One Stroke. The first competition for the Liverpool sflver medal, eighteen holes, with handl- cap, took place yesterday on the links of the San Francisco Golf Club. A speclal prize was offered, open to the players making the six best gross scores, com- petitors to make one round, or nine holes, extr: a. The scores made are given belo: cHeaZiac Geassed 5| & priltt | i No return| 13| H. D. Pillsbury and T. G. Roberts, with a net score of 9 each, tied. The players who made the six highest gross scores played one round, nine holes, for a special prize, and the tie for the medal was de- cided at the same time. The foliowing is the score for the nine holes extra. Dr. Hibbetts, Wll{!vlm ‘Thomas. TR stanto H. D. T. G. R berts accordingly won the s T. G. Rol cial prize and the medal wngoum score of 41 against H. D. Pillsbu u: In l.ed fm‘!heipe&l prize 2 h In order the - pficrve t‘am 'ln:wcnuu-:i&mdmeh- ot ponar, %, i, monte that yhen it must be taken off and put back. —— Opposition Water Company. - Articles of Incorporation of the Unton i i w“'tm g u‘t‘nm for the pur- o wal water rights PECC e i same, da: in lawful m b, : = = -able them to so: how easy It is to be | ILINPES MABIGED T MAKE A TIE N A Featureless Game With Stanford. SCORE STOOD SIX TO- SIX HOBBS AND HILL MADE THE ONLY POINTS. Cross Lectured His Men Between the Halves and They Did Better Toward the Game’s End. Olymples 8, Stanford 6. For the first time this season the Olym- pics scored. More than that, they Qid AANAHAAV AL 24 = s & = E = & = = 7 ADVFRTISEMENTS. and il TSROSO T SPORPIOT MR IO MOP SUTOOTMOP R T MOT T Y THOUSANDS OF CURES. Evidence power of Dr. Belis and Trusses continues from all parts of the country. IT GIVES HIM STRENGTH. Mr. L. D. Butt. Proprietor Colony Nursery of Penryn, Cal., writes to us on July 13, 5 have one of 'your No. 2 Chain Belts, now partly worn out. out it. amount of hard work and do not feel worn out. It is true that there are other trusses for sale in various parts of the countr: some very cheap and some very expensiv but, briefly stated. the faet remains n as it has during the i Sgiee if m_waat the BEST » E PIERCE'S." £ Send LUSTRATED PAMPH office. Open on Sunday from 2 to 4 p. m. PIERCE ELECTRIC COMPANY, 620 MARKET STREET, Opposit: Palace Hotel, S. F. AUMLERAIM LA EDIAALL LV IATR G B BRI I\ of _the wonderful curative Pierce’s famous Electric to arrive I cannot get along with- Have not felt so well In years; do any belts—so-called “Electric”—offered t twenty vears; you must have ps for our IL- T, or call at 2 _cents in st: SURAUMBBL MMM KRR LAA B AG BB =3 N Huseum of Anah-! 3031 ¥ABKET ST. et 62 3 72h, 6.1 The Largestof its kind 1o the Weekd. DR. JORDAN—Privaie Diseases. Concaliaston frea. Write for Heak Philasophy ef Marriage. BAILED FAEE. viste DR, JORDAN'S Groat | - Big & is & non-poson ramody for Gonorrhteay Gloet, Spermatorrhamy Whites, unnatural digs charges, or any inflammae ot to siriciare. - tion, irritation or ulcerae Preveats contagion. tion of Mucous meme HeEvANS OuENiny Cg, Pranes. Nou-astringent. Sold by Druggises, 'or sent in plain wrapper, by wxpross, prepuid {of ties, ©on requosty or uiar sent not lose the game. They did not win it, but they prevented the opposing eleven from adding another feather to thelr cap of victories and that is something. Hobbs, the giant guard, with his 220 pounds of muscle, won the touchdown from the car- dinal by a successful blocking of Mur- phy’s punt and following the ball on the rebound until it reached the goal line, when he dropped on it and rolled it over for a touchdown. This was the one bright feature of an otherwise featureless | game. Stanford did not play its best eleven on account of injuries to a few of the chosen | athletes, but those who did play did noth- ing to distinguish themselves in gridiron reputation. The clubmen, augmented in strength, put up a game that was falrly good, but which was lacking in judgment | | California, | ning on t | two-thirds of all the members elected tp of the two houses of said Legislature voting in favor thereof, proposed the following de- STATE OF CALIPORN’!#, EXECUTIVE DEPARTMEN MENTO, July 30th, 1538 SACRA. 3 N WIHFEREAS, The Legislature of the State of at its thirty-second session begin- he fourth day of January, A. D. ufli eacl bed amendments to the Constitution of the | meril | State of California, to-wit: AMENDMENT NUMBER ONE. (Being Senate Constll‘li!;om Amendment No. A_resolution to propose to the peaple of the from beginning to end. Code and Morse, | State of Clulltotl‘-nll: .}1 .mna'mea; "é lma.:on elght ‘of articl eleven of onstitu- Back- ot fuii“dtne, In & series - Dusu'i(ign. relation to revenue and taxation, by earned ground for the Olympics by clever passing on the run, and Sheehy, ever in the midst of scrimmages and down the field on Kicks, were the bright | particular stars of the Recreation Park | ogotball firmament yesterday. ‘What the game iacked was snap and ginger, but this was due in great meas- | ure to the midsummer weather, a six-inch coating of dust and the encroachments of the mob that crowded in on the side- lines, making it impossible for the teams to play. The police, with their usual atten- tion to unimportant details, neglected to | keep the crowd back, to the great dis- comfiture of the players, the people who must of necessity be on the sidelines and | the spectators in the stands. The guard- ians of the public peace were there in sufficlent numbers, but they preserved a | most beautiful inaction. The game began by Stanford kicking off to Sheehy on the twenty-yard line, and he ran the ball in about ten yards before being downed. Then the ball was ad- di ol 1 P vanced for twenty yards until a_fumble | gifey. on the part of the Olympics gave Stanford | less before, or at the time of incurtin indebtedness, provision shall be made collection of an annual tax sutficlent to pay the interest on such indel forty years same; County of San Francisco may at any time pay | For "any material | which it is proposed to amend sald section to who was | read as follows: | Section 18, N0 county, city, town, townsh! cur any indebtedness or liability in any man- Der or for any | the income an of education or school district shail in- urpose exceeding in any year & revenus provided for it for uch year, Without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors thereof, voting at an lection to be held for that purpose, nor un- such for the ‘btedness as it falls ue, and also provision to constitute a siuking fund for the payment of the principal thereol n or befors maturity, which shall not exceed the ‘time ‘of contracting the provided, however, that the City and he unpald claims with Interest thereon for materials furnished to and work done for sald | city and county during the forty-third and forty-fourth fiscal years, out of the incomd revenue of any succeeding vided, that any and all clal n and year or years; pro- ims for making, re- or for any work done upon oF furnished for any street, Court, place or sidewalk, or for the con- tructlon of any sewer or sewers In said city alring, alterin; the ball; but the compliment was returned | and county are hereby excepted from the pro- and the Olympics once more took pos- session of the pigskin on their own twenty yard line. Three times they tried to force their way through the Stanford line, which for the moment seemed imbued with a gum- my spirit, and three times were they re- pulsed, surrendering the pigskin to the cardinal. Then there was a fumble on the part of the college men, but it gained ground. The ball was forced to the five- yard line, when the next signal gave Hill an opportunity to score, which he did, collegians Lel i and the hooting and howlin on the benches sonorously celebrated the | first touchdown of the day. Stanford's five points were increased to six by Mur- phy kicking a goal. The rest of the first half was fought pretty much in the Stanford territory, the clubmen gaining ground with reguiar- ity of procedure that left Stanford life- less, untll some spot of danger was| reached, and then the -eollege men took a bracer and cut off the advance atiack. There was no further scoring in this half. During the rest between halves Cross tectured his men, and they returnéd to the field with more or less resolution to eliminate the Olympics as a positive quan- tity. They did not succeed very fully, for in this haif the Olympians scored and continued to earn more ground than they | were entitled to. It was Stanford’s ball on their own thirty-yard line when Mur- phy was given the spheroid to kick.. With a jump and a dash Hobbs of the Olym- ics shot zhroufh the Stanford center and glocked the ball just as it left Muhphy's foot. The rebound set the ball swirling over the field toward the goal posts, and Hobbs and Murphy raced for it. The big “un” won the palm and he nestled the ball-in his sweater, rolling over the ast lime-line to a touchdown, with Mur- hy holding him fast to the dusty “grid. glorse kicked a goal, and the score read 6—6, remaining such throughout the rest of the game. g umpire; visions of this section; and [ claim permitted to be paid Bta stitution of the State, | tion, to be known an | seven and one-half, article eleven thereof, pro- | viding for the framing countles of local govern: their own government. The sald proposed new | section to read may frame & county government act | own government, inafter spec! ject to the Constitution and laws ot fifteen have bees | electors _of | eral or special election, whose duf within ninety days after such elaction, to pre- tive body of such county, and 1o be sent to the Recorder county. Such sball then be eral circulation in pot_two such least twenty thirty days after such submitted to the coun | 8 maority of such quailfied electors voting thereon shall ratify the same, it shail after be submitted to the Legislature for its | rejection or approval, power of aiteration or n determining any by this section, no | statute of limitations shail nflply in any man- per; and provided further, that the City of Vallejo, 1n Solano County, may pay its exist- ing indebtedness incurred fn the construction of its water works, whenever two-thirds of the lectors thereof voting at an election held for hat purpose shall so decide. Any indebted- niess or liability incurred contrary to this pro- vision, with the exception hereinbefore recited, shall void. AMENDMENT NUMBER TWO. (Being Senate Conmt‘\auonu Amendment No. A resolution proposing to the peopls of the of California an amendment to the Con- bz adding & new sec- d designated as section by the inhabitants of ment acts for as follows: The inhabitants of any county for their relating to the matters here- ified, and consistent with and sub- of this State, freeholders, who for at least five years, quali! such county, to be elected by the at any gen- it shall Section Ti. y causing a ualified electors of such county, ropose a county government act for pare and T3k “ounty, which shall be signed in dupli- cate by the members of sucl jority of them, and returned, one copy thereof o the Board of Supervisors or other legisia- h board, or a ma- the other copy of Deeds of the county government act in two papers of gen- county, or If there ba pers, then in one only, for at ays, and within not less than xublitlflon 1t shall be ualified electors of such . at a general or special election, and if o Pefane such there- as a whole, without amendment, and If ap- The officials were: Cochran, . Proved by a majority of the members elected Cross, referee. The teams lined up as fol i 24 se. 1t shall be the county govern- lows: | Tent act .of such county, and shall in such Olymples. ?’x‘»;"gmi, i sf‘fl!c'éfi' | cane become the organic Inw t:.rznmr 2nd super. .R—End-L...Rice, adden any nty government act, Sl o - Rush :fi“-menag-nu ‘thereof, and all special laws Sheehy. Wells, Sexton. ... Blanchard 4! visors or and nulh!el::‘:clted by the Pament act to the ol fion by them, shall be made 'in duplicate = vgtnn. the other, after the other legi: one in the office of the ol being recorded in the the Recorder of Deeds in the county, L ‘the county, i hi of 0 ADVERTISEMENTS. | amenE e e ahall take judicial nottes thereot The ' State Medical Institute Discovers a | Remarkable Vigor. ARE SENDING FREE A TRIAL PACKAGE TO ALL WHO WRITE. Free umgln of a m remedy are being distribu l:eflezlqlnsflmm. Fort Wayne, cured so many men d baf vears against the mental and suffering of lost manhood that fute has decided to distribute free trial pa: es to ali who write. It is a home treatment and all men who suffer with any form of sexual ne-+ resuiting | e thful folly, premature loss of | 'h and memory, weak tack, varico- | cele, or emaciation of parts can now curs themselves at home. ost remarkable ted by the State | Ind. It The remedy has a pecullarly grateful | cests effect of warmth and seems to act direct to the desired location. giving stren; } and development just where it is ni It cures all the ills and troubles that come from years of use of the natural functions and has been an absolute suc- | cess in all cases. A request to the State Medical Institute. 193 First National Bank ‘Building, Fort Wayne, Ind., stating that you desire one of their free trial pack- Jges will be complied with. The institute §s desirous of reaching that great clas. | of men who are unable to leave home to treated and the free sample will en- ess en are employed. The in- restrictions. Any man x sent a free sample, y a plain package so that its recipient need have no fear of embarrassment or publicity. Readers are to write without delay. no es wi | ral !:::.eneg:a?wn intervals of not less than two Remedy for Lost = 4 m .ubl.'nmm any alterna ted for | B "Voted o others. ment act: | this N | vmr;fi?r'.:flumuv:: which, f.'h‘ the terms for a1 government ‘act o ed may be or, submitted by the he' county, to the ed electors thereof, at a general or s after the approval of the county the ehoice of the. separately without prejudice competent fn all county Bl D med nder the authority sfven T provide for the manner in It ts through ing for the el the officers. and e tion, PROCLAMATION. the gecond Mon The "Judges holaing recelve no extra shall recetve thelr The Legislature shall e i s nact all 1 {0 organize such court, (o provide the. pros cedure ther S thia thefeof and to darry out the provisions AMENDMENT NUMBER FOUR. (Being Assembly Cm:s;;umunnl Amendmene . 31.) : A resolution to propose to the pe: ople of t! .s:‘l“l,euaf Californta an amendmen!p mplhe C:shn: = Mgln of the State. amending article eleven, - ‘Bl & new section thereto, to be known mmnnd? number five and one-half, relating to =i ited city and county governments. The Sectin new gection to read as follows: & B 5%. The provislons of sections four > h" of this article shall not, nor shall any .e:u tion passed pursuant thereto, apply %o nn’. consolidated city and county government o existing or hereafter formed, which shi £ of D ey & charter under sectios AMENDMENT NUMBER FIVE. (Belng Assembly gom&t;nhm Amendment o. A resclution to propose to the people of t §tate of Californfa an amendment 2F section Gfteen and section sixteen of artjcle five of the Constitution of the State of "Callfornia. by posed to it B amend said sections to Section 15. A Lieutenant Governor shall elected at the same time and place and in ln same manner as the Governor, and his term of gffice and his qualifications shall be the same. fe shall be president of the Senate, but shall “f cn;ung vuurmerem. . In case of the impeachmen the Governor. or his removal trom agies: Geaths nability to discharge the powers and dutles of his office, resignation or absence ftrom the State, the powers and dutles of the office shall evolve upon the Licutenant Governor for the residue of thegterm, or until the disability sha.l gease. And #hould'the Licutenant Governor be peached, displaced, resign. die or become ine capable of performing the duties of his office, OF be absent from the State, the president pro tempore of the Senate shall act as Governor une til the vacancy in the office of Governor shall be filled at the next general election when members of the Legislature shall be chosen, of until such disabflity of the Lientenant Gove ernor shall cease. In case of a vacancy in the office of Governor for any of the reasons above named, and neither the Lieutenant Governor nor the president pro tempore of the Senate shall succeed to the powers and dutles of Gove ernor. then the powers and dutles of such of= of November of each euch term of court s necessary fice shall devolve upon the speaker of the gembly, until the office of Governor filled at such general election. TN AMENDMENT NUMBER SIX. (Being Assembly Gonstitutional - Amendment A resclution to propose to the people of State of Californfa an_amendment to mzfi’; six, article nine of the Constitution of the Stats ".‘u%"f{"fl’* :rehtluww grammar schools, by i rugnv;?m amend sald section to lon e public school system shall clude primary and gramgmar sehools ane su. high schools, evening Jchcols, normal schoolf and technical schools as may be estabiished by the Legislature or by munlcipal or district authority, but the entire revenue derived from the State sehool fund and the State school tax shall be applied exclusively to the support of primary and mmar “schools. Grammas schools shall include schools organized In & school district, or union of school districts, baving more than ome thousand Inhabitants, imy which a course of study shall be taught which Tiinin or sclenting depariment ot the Datas nf c department o 3 sity of California. P AMENDMENT NUMBER SEVEN. (Belng Assembly gansw;luonal Amendmeng 0. A resolution to propose to the le State of Callfornia an. Amendmment oo sacting two of article four of the Constitution, in relas. tion to sessions of the Legislature, by which It is proposed to amend said section to read as toglows: © ection The sessions of the Legis] shail commence at twelve o'clock meridian oa the first Monday after the first day of January next succeeding the eleetion of its membergy and shall be biennial unless the Governor sh: in the interim convene the Legislature by proce lamation. The Legisln main sinture shall” then re: in sesston for twenty-five days, after which it must adjourn to'some date not less than thirty, nor more than s from_the time of ade journment. If the two houses fail to agree upon a time at which they will resume theis session, the Governor shail.- by proclamation, [ fix a date for such reconvening. which shall be within the limits ‘above prescribed. U, assembling the lmnnmfe #hall eompl i 7; session. No pay shall be allowed toc members for a longer period than seventy-five davs, ond no bill shall be introduced 1z <her houss exm cept at the first twenty-ftve diys of the session, without the comsent of three-fourths of the O THERIFORE, Pu 3 ', Pursuant to the sions ot _the Conatitution, and an sct of the Legislature of the State of California, entitled *‘An act to provide for the submission of pro= posed amendments to the Comstitution of tha State of California, to the gualified electors foe their approvai’ approved March 7. A. D. 1883, the above-described proposed amendments are hereby published and aaverti to vol upon, by ballot, by the qualified electars of Stats. at the ‘election to be held mm;hm‘? e on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, A. D. 1858 The #aid proposed amendments are (0 be ssme ‘lll‘lm' voted upon im manner and form as f ows:. Each ballot used at such election must co: tain written or printed thereon the following Words, whereupon the yoter may express cholce as provided by faw: Amendment Number One, being_Senat ‘Constitut! (MNB‘ ‘: fonal Am 0 0. (exempting certain claims against the City and County of San aad isco, existing indebtedhess of the City Vallejo for the canstruction of its water works from the provisions of the Copstitution requiring such claims to be paid from the income and e~ nues of the year in which they were incurred), For the Amendment? Amendment Number Two, being Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 10 (providing for framing local cou; government acts by fimu;...u"f& t). § the of P Three, being Sen- Amendment No. he Tot'a A..‘:“". é'a‘.‘.;'u{‘u"""‘um.“xl Court succession thereto i Chlok Ast) Femcvias dRmOUNEy.