The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 12, 1899, Page 4

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THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, FRID G AY 12, 1899 e PAID HIGH FOR LUBRICANT TO ; : OFFSET FREIGHT How the Railr'oad.Gave Standard 0Oil a Rebate Despite the Law. ; He would also suggest that the WASHINGTON, May 11.—The Indus- | dence. trial Commisslon to-day heard the first | capital of all corporations except tho witness to be called in connection with | ©f & public or quasi-public nature its Inquiry into the operation of trusts. | SP0Uld be limited to $1,000,000. fg st The witness was Hon. James W. Lee of Pittsburs, attorney for a1 pipe [ABSORBED THIRTY-SIX ines and oil companies, and formerly IRON AND STEEL M|LLs a State Senator of Pennsylvania. Mr. | Lee's testimony was directed malnly | ok M oo e e Standard Ol Company. | of the Republic Iron and Steel Company | DPEARIIE) te effect of trusts upon | (., "\ errected to-day, when final detalls | the customer Mr. Lee said the tendency | were completed and directors and officers electe was to increase prices until they > came extortionate. Trusts were organ-| The board of directors is composed of August Belmont; Myron C. Wicke, presi- ized to secure a monopoly, and when this was secured by closing up rival es- | dent of the Union Iron and Steel Com- tablishments they were in a position to | Pany of Youngstown, Ohlo; Grant B fix prices, which were, according to his y of the banking firm of Moore & . v; Randolph S. Warner, ervation, generally increased in King-Filbert Compan: George F. Sheldon, seve be- | chley of this cit formerly of the O a to permit dividends on watered | Columbis, Ohlo; ; stock. ThHis L A rue | banker of this city. who v active in tock. This had been eminently true | IR gt Sek o e dompany of the Standard Oil Company. aldwell of the Birmingham Rolling illustration, he said that whe Birmingham, G Watson S OB e : French of the Syivan Steel Comj 4 By oot Mo IiL; Alex ; mpson o inter went into t Tron and 1 Comp York, in 189, 1t found Taylor of the Brown- se at as almost and re bein cents & ing « price w Andrews Ot the object The first but the latt hile the i pending with several Southwe second 1 third that d the George M. within the past tw wellyn; trea yed about Al counsel, Ruben 3 Wi Ta. Te sommittee hompson, enburg Dick, Harry nd Randolph S. panies, wh cent we vance " STOVE MEN PLANNIN A BIG COMBINATION May 11.- to fc ign mar ay, and the f nkage at given fon of the pro- t lower prices posed trust. It is thought that this com- the United would incly 200 plants, and small lependent companies i would thus be compelled to compete abroad la ! t Britain and in Germany and or arrangements some other countr mpetition w e sto e have been made, preserved to a gr xtent than s R gt e Ay United s rma ) € o ek I * INTERESTS THE PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Major Holloway Detailed to Carry Funds to Manila to Pay the American Troops. in this country it WASH —Dr. Oleott, tandard Oil d Stat n ordered to ned the price pa orth Atlantic ars prio averaged only hereas th orders: direction of the cond T4 John B are As- and ch had that | r3 about 10,000,000 | racks, Ohio, to the or ut. | cisco and report n to com- s which were | manding officer of ment, who will remunerative high degree |assign them of productiven As atter of fact, | Priva Twelfth United howeve many ells produced | St attached to the very little. Of th s in opera- | Presidio of Sar 25.000 1 1 half rred to the general P » gent to the recruiting 2] a day each, th ht if there 3 had been fifty refineries instead of the n I SaAD Hrancisknaio Jaron goang Stand ‘ompany the market would e W st have been just as extensive, the con- George T. Hollow: additional sumer would have secured his oil as . United States Volunteers, will cheaply and the producer would have from the chief paymaster, De- been much better off. | nt l;f "nHv‘m]. i : flxl’nllh for l!]v{- There has the e gone?” g it of troops In the Department o o basdheibrlanceleOnadt aaked acific, and will proceed with the I hink Ditta R : o same from San Francisco to Manila. On sl athink cstheymitness replied, “the | 1l at Manila Major Hollow will Standard Oil C« ny could explain |turn over the funds to the chief ms- that. The understanding that it has | ter, Department of the Pacifi d fe- realized about $500,000,000. port in person to the commanding general Mr. Lee was quite confident that the | Of that department for assignment to 1 effect of Sts was Injurious | QULY. The commanding general, Depart- fodlabors. /Thejeffect! was o deprive | ment jof (Cailfornia, twill, on application 4 as to deprive | of Major Holloway, furnish suitable es- rs of competition, of chances for | cort for the funds. employment when thrown cut of work Major James Canby, assistant paymas- and to make them subs nd | ter, United States Volunteers, will report poorer citizens. Speaking ‘cifically | to Major Holloway for duty, to accom- of ‘the Standard Oil Comy treat. | pany him from San Francisco to Manila. ment of its employes, he said they were [ On arrival there he will report in person }‘e"c'ln‘",‘?""ie??dh? gertaln class of them | of the Pacific, for assignment to duty. Y gh salaries. Still, the | "The following California postmasters ultimate effect of any monopoly must | were appointed to-da; Alvarado, Ala-| be injurious to labor. meda County, L. V. Ralph, vice Edwin A. As a means of prevention of trusts | Richmond, removed; Fisk, Sonoma Coun. | Mr. Lee suggested a law making de. |1y, Alexander Templeman, vice Robert | structive competition criminal of- | Templeman, resigned; Indrla, San Benito fense. He thought the fear of imprison- | $ounty, James G. Finch, vice Bdgard G ment would Intimidate some of them. | hoimas: Fesigne O DA Bk o] ¢ t unty, Henry P. Clark, vice Robert L. The law could be passed by the States | Younger, resigned; Toluca, 1.os Angeles and in case of prosecution, prices | County, Wilson C. Weddington, vice P. B. | charged for years could be used as evi- 9 Pears The Intérior Department has :\ppnmtodl | Pretty boxes and odors A. J. Comstock pension examining sur- geon at Ventura, Cal. The_postal service between Jamestown and Sonora, Cal., will be discontinued | after May 14, | Pensions: California: Original—Special | May 1 (special act)—James J. Marcher, | Rialto, $20. Restoration and Increase— Hiram E. Fraley, Sacramento, $6 to $8 Increase—James M. Kelley, Soldiers’ Home, Los Angelés, $8 to $10. Reissue Anton’ Mallacowitz, ‘Soldiers’ Home, Lo. Angeles, $6. | Pl 1 5 Ofegon: Tnerense.David G. Trost, Or- se < egon City, 38 to $12. Original widows, e RS0 S such eteFrances 0. Lawfon, Lafavotte, $5 ‘ashington: Additlonal—John Cars soaps as no one would |centralia, $2 to $s; Christopher Grove, Centralia, $6 to $5. Institute of Butte Farmers. BIGGS, May 11.—The Farmers' Insti- tute, which was held In the Raptist church of Biggs yesterday, was largely touch if he saw them un- disguised. Beware of a soap that . depends. on . [attenden by farmers; truit’ srowers ‘ana . . . business men from 1 parts of Butte something outside of it. County, Professors Fowler and Lough- ridge of the Univer \{ of California gave | five lectures. They dealt with horticul- Pears’, the finest soap in the world is scented or ture, agriculture, dairying and all phases of practical and sclentific farming. An organization will soon be formed to dis- cuss sclentific farming and help advance the many industries of Butte County. Drinks Carbolic Acid. FRESNO, May 11.—Mrs. Lottie Thomp- son attempted to commit sulcide at 11 o'clock to-night. She drank a half-ounce of carbolic acid. Medical assistance was | %ulckly summoned and everything possi- le was done to save her life. She is still Itving, but is in a very precarious condi- tion. She is the wife of Henry Thomp- €on, a well-known resident of this city, ‘What prompted the act is unknown. not, as you wish; and the money is in the merchan- dise, not in the box. All sorts of stores sell it, especially &ruggists; all sorts of people are g it | point within the proper radius at w STILL A CHANCE - FOR KEY AND WIRE — Space Telegraphy Not Yet Perfect. GEN. GREELY’S EXPERIMENTS BELIEVES IT CANNOT SUPPLANT THE OLD SYSTEM. Improvements Suggested in Trans- mitters and Receivers—Ex- baustive Tests by Army % | Signal Men. People. | Valenclenne ...107| 1085 Judge Napton..10d | Judges Also Gave Corrigan’s Adolph | Tobey 11 0sA Jeriiderio f 2o S0 i 3 e | Spreckels the Verdict in a Nose | ‘;r]h'vd Race—Five furlongs; three-year-clds; ; sellin G Special Dispatch to The Call. e owgCie Races | e Sacumn 00l 1008 Samile o +| = ‘Were Won. 096 C.H.Harrls o Racebud + NEW YORK, May 11—Satis- + | STANFORD UNIVERSITY. May 11—/ 1005 Gentta 1 —ororci07| 1108 Eart Taitngion 112 + factory progress has been made *jnr, C. C. Closson, who is measuring the iR 1110 Watossa rrsixm Royal Fan......107 3 E | heads of the Stanford students in the + by the Signal Corps in its ex- 4 gemnasium here n an endeavor to obtain i Fourth Race—Futurity course; four-year-olds + periments with wireless teleg- + | Gata to substantlate the theory that the| While dozens of California horsemen | 410 upwarts seling. =00 00 + raphy, the system which The <+ |shape of the human skull has much to do | #T¢ BOIng hungry, their poor, weather-| (; 1112, 1114 Oahu 10 + Call and Herald propose to use <+ |with race movements and habits, will re- | Deaten-charges neighing for a good feed | 1065 Defender 12 4 in transmitting news of the +|main at his post until the end of the of oats, Ed Corrigan, the curse of all that | :1‘\ 1105 Ricardo ... BE 3 e e e ahe ¥ | Cemester, when he will go to San Fran- | ! £00d and pure in racing, has race after | U2 pherialla s 1y + British yachts in the coming 4 | €1SC0_to pursue his investigations among | TH¢€ placed on the programme for the | pifth Race—Six furlongs; three-year-olds and BEL i 8 4| ihe Swisk, German and French inhabit- | Winners and non-winners of his string. | upward; selling. race for the America cup. It is + | "Next fall he will take meas- | Thus does the man who ruined racing in | 1108 Amasa Cabrillo .. + apparent, therefore, that by The +|urements at Berkeley similar to those hicago and sounded its deathknell in | 110 s + Call and Herald enterprise the +|now be ; | | Ban Francisco now seek to 2 | 109 | chruary o-...11 4 people. of this country will 4| Dr. Closson has examined abbut 130 ;hls mjr:'lle' port )m ]lhe city acro 1084 Rosemaid ......107 |(111)Novia .. 109 4+ promptly obtain news of the <+ |studenis. Allhough he has not com-|Pay. He heads the list of winning own- S e > 3+ Thovements of the cup defender 4 |Plied the intormation obtained, he Is able | ¢rS for the entire season, but still his lust | S5 T (o e e s + and the British yacht when the 4| 10 52Y that the large majority of the | for gold 18 ’l' S CeoeiuG et Rlack 1106 Highland Ball.. % DE T R U men the university are of the long- |2 trail of blood, misery and woe, ne uma. 1051 Har. Thoburn.. 87 races take place. ~ *|neaded, urban type, the chicf character- | SOUght this far Western country to re- | alist 0| 1103 Pompino . 4+ Signal officers express gratifi- istics of which are migratory activity, | oub his fallen fortune. Seated on a tot- | Ulf Tony Licalzi.. 0 1114 Alaria .. + cation at the practical enterprise + | encrey, late marriages and small families. | tering throne, surrounded by a corrupt | S e o T 4 of The Call and Herald and say +|He is under the impresSion that there i | court, how long will a long-suffering pub- s i a { | | elections for To-Day. s experime: i Tt | @ much larger number of blondes at | lic bow subservient to ansplante e SRS : nfor | then, {1 the. Bastern ieotieges. | riiler? o 10 this transplanted | pirst Race—Kitty Kelly, Bamboulls, Tar uccess. | though in the shape of the head there iS | The above wo s % | Hin. b i o atotal 0\ Marenes betweeni them. | Tt |10 above words sere Mot yritten; withe | & 2 - 2 & | : i out something to be said in support of [ Second Race—Valenclenne, El Estro, Judge | PEICTC I e o erted that Bastern college students s £ : Pr | are more narrow headed than those in | them. Caldwell art in the opening | Stouffer. oAl X | Englapa. ace was nothing short of | Third Race—Carter H. Harrison Jr, Ach, WASHINGTO! May 1L—General | “Tnis'fact has an important bearing on | s disgraceful. Corrigan | Genua. to-day made the first authori- | the statement t long-headed type | and his clique played St. Casimir, and | pourth Race—Peixotto, Sflver State, Elidad. tative statement as to the progress | People is I or the settle-| Caldwell sent the youngster away flying. i : < ment of this country. It is known that | He won handily from Hindoo Princess, | Fifth Race—Cabrillo, Jingle Jingle, Feb- made in wireless telegraphy undet the |in the north of Europe the long-headed | San ‘Tomas had worked well enough Y & auspices of the United States Signal |type predominates, but thal It ErowS | twin a block, and was lefi at the post. . | | st o o Corps. The important conclusion is | ¢2Ker toward the south. Henc: Sthe R i e e ahe b (a rh ol v e W St Race Slaria g My S Biack, i Highland 1 ) S | fact that the students of the ited borrowed from the California | Ball reached by General Greely that the |States are narrower headed . than the | R T e e - = wireles is not likely to sup- ;}ll‘“‘emfi '\]i Hllglm'lti]fiwwfi tga‘ l('\'fifl‘ This Is not to be taken as a criterfon of Railroad Appointments. plant the method Of tele= | [y o the mont extrone Sasen of whis tor. | hgnesty, for all five winners were heavily s T. . Bullock, general manager of the graphic communication. The results | mation that are the ones to migrate. ‘,M:{ng on the six-furlong sprint, sec- | Sierra’ Rallway ‘Company of Callfornia, S0 far obtained have been uncertain. | The influence of their traits is one of the | ond on the card, was nervous and fluctu- | has appointed S. H. Smith general freight Gene! Greely's statement is as fol- | 'easons why new count develop rapid- | ating, Sly opened favorite, receded to 13 | and passenger agent of the company with low: e e S 10 5, then later had her price cut to % 1o | headquarters at Jamestown, Cal. Mr. Since’ the announcement of. the te Hondt ',,.},,,H .”':,l'm e Al B A \ms:f r{md‘ on High Hoe at one Smith will succeed B. T. Booze, who has . nor Marconi ty high nctivity of the | oieee ot Fonerin the betuins. . 1o Ihe | resigned to accept service with the South- years ago. has been under Towth is slower., The | Biace Of BoOr e fhe stestoh: first. with | €rn_ Pacific Company in this city. The consideration orps of th certain extent truc in the ! §lv an easy fourth. Ruiz on the latter | health of Mr. Booze's wife necessitated and - recently ments have Wil ot towns and cities SN Forsed {5 the front, beating | his removal from Jamestown to thoroughly test the value He iiveatieatlondt DeE mads by D | oo Y T S s b Sty 2 st 2% ! y Dr. | Alarfa a head on the wire, with' Horatio | Mr. Smith has been joint agent of the means of ¢ tion for mili n and his edlle in anthro- | 3 neck further aw; Santa Fe and Southern Pacific compan ind other governmental purposes. | pological study have revealed some ¢ e o oo, tha tille and mignar | Mol e niore TeceHtv naB bren ’.“4;}‘(“”1 e (‘:4‘!;"(uv:{;“A‘!\ll‘;)\fi:y:i)\};‘xl\"t" s facts X'\‘lu!x\'}n;‘h\ the popul tion ',”. {he | ter event with his Hvl’l l'\'m, FEG ulv ten | rate cierk in the local Southern Pacific eady shown sufliclent promise to war- | lfeved (hat there T R By o e i s R S nt further systematic trials. : smplexion and tall s as: ea'the weakly ridden Castake out for the | knowledge of railroad affairs. In view of the great public interest and | with the narrow, type of bead. s | place. General Agent Willlam D. Sanborn of in order to facilitate experiments by other | found {rom army measurement statistics | With nothing to beat it was no more | the Burlington route has appointed . scientists in the United States,” it is| that the people of the United States are | than natural that Carrigan’s good horse | W. Elliott agent for Southern California med proper to put forth this statement | taller than those of Continental Europe; | Adolph Spreckels should win the mile and | of the roads leased by the Chicago, Bur- operations to the present tim | that the people of the different nationali- | o sixteenth sel He closed a 1 to 2| lington and Quincy Railroad Company ransmitter—In the experiments thus|ties who have migrated here are taller | favorite, and in a fierce dr earned the | Mr, Eiliott will be in charge of the freight far several forms of transmitter for the | th their countrymen at home; that even | verdict over Malay by a nose. The finish | and passenger traffic, with headquarters generation of Hertzian waves have been | the population of the Western United | was such a close and desperate one that |at Los Angeles, and 'will succeed F. C. used, and much promise has been realized | States averages taller than that of the | many picked Malay as the winner. | Matthews. who has been transferred. Ed- froni the use of a large alternating cur- | East, while the people who come West | A sprint for maidens follawed, in which | ward L. Lewis, who has been in charge rent coil in oll as a generator, instead of | from’ Massachusetts are taller than those | MelRarth, backed from 12 to 6, led Santa | of the Los Angeles office, will take the the orc Ruhmkorff coil employed by {lefi in Massachusetts Tucia out three lengths. The favorite, | place of Elliott, who was chief clerk in Marc his coil is energized by a| These strange coincidences of physical | Marcelles, was unplaced. the Tocal office of the Burlington route for transformer, fur- ating potential, se-horsepower nishing 125 volts a this arrangement akes a very powe and efficient source of Hertzian rotation. Receiver—The former receiver as been substantially the Brankey he: * discovered in 1891, and the signals 1smitted are recorded upon a receiv- TaDe mitter has been mounted upon west elevation ¢ tate, War and 4 bullding ant C en flagpole a for e transmitter. first aced at the old tory about_three a_mile and later ved to the Signal eyer, Va. ts ant com- flag 1g and rec: been Kept up by the trained men of the regular Signal Corps, and this the work of ex- inig. letters and words >, been transmitted and received be- n those stations, but the great deli- i constant adjustment required in :nt_receiver have made the transmissic f regular vet unreliable and i ence of large buildings and of iron and metal necessarily in cities make such places undesir for rrying on experiments of this charac- ter. The distance over which signals ma be transmitted by a given anparatus a function of the height of the vertical wire used in elther end, and this ha naturally suggested the use of small gas s have already been used her purposes by the Sig- upply of these balloons been ordered and will already v used for this purpose in the near future. has 1d of usefulness for but that a f That there is s undoubted, space telegraphy will_supplant to a mate! f wire for ordinary e Jegraphy is not believed. " Its value for connection between lighthouses and light- ordinary flag mmercial ships at sea and to replace methods in use between naval vessels, should prove invaluable, since darkness or_storm have no effect upon its use. The use of metal reflectors to augment and direct the radiation to particular points has already met with partial suc- and should be thoroughly investi- cel ated. At present the radiation proceeds rom the transmitter in all directions and age can be received at any hic a receiver is placed. A satisfactory di- recting reflector and a recelver of the proper electrical capacity, or, in other Words, tuned to the vibrations of the par- ticular transmitter, would make a great advance in space telegraphy and do much toward the extension of it fleld of prac- tical usefulne: While secrecy of transmission s among the probabilities, the present stage of ex- periment does not justify its positive pre- dictfon. MEETING OF THE GRAND CONSISTORY AT ROME The Papal Delegation Has Not Yet Been Advised of the Session. WASHINGTON, May 1L—The papal delegation here has not yet been advised of the assembling of the consistory at Rome the latter part of June, as an- nounced in previous dispatches, for the purpose of creating ten new cardinals, but this meeting_has been antleipated” for some time. The new cardinals will be named to fill the vacancies now existing, the latest being those at Florence and Cologne. the same mess i e DREYFUS MAY. SOON RETURN TO FRANCE A Guard Said to Have Been Sent to Escort Him Home—Will Arrive in June. PARIS, May 11.—The Petit Bleu says that ten members of the Republican Guard and four gendarmes left St. Na- zaire, France, on the steamer Lafayette Jast Tuesday to form an escort to bring Dreyfus to France, and that his return may be expected by the end of June. e e giini i Banker Johnson’s Funeral. REDDING, May 11.—The funeral of the late Henry Fisk Johnson was held here this afternoon. Johnson was president of the Shasta County Bank. He came from Massachusetts in 1849, en ed in freight- ing and grew wealthy. e leaves two sons and a daughter, f | great import: be | al extent the | STANFORD'S MEN ARE LONG-HEADED g Resuit of Dr. Closson’sl | Investigations. | MANY STUDENTS EXAMINED pas g | NERVOUS MIGRATORY TYPE PREDOMINATES. i | 1 i | Blondes Are in the Majority and the | Average Stature is Taller Than | That of the Eastern characteristics with race movements have led anthropologists to arrive at the con- clusion that there were originally two | | types of men—one short of stature, dark | | complexioned, broad-headed in nature; the other, 31 blonde, unsettled in habits quiring mind. The intermarriage of | these two types has brought about the | various kinds of men we have to-day, and s0 it in no wise refutes the theory to find a broad-hcaded man with the mental and domestic characteristics attributed to | the other type, and vice versa. Neve theless, this seems to be the exception, not the rule, and the general contour of | the head still stands as the clearest e ponent of permanent hereditary differ- ences in the human species. Not that these eminent scientists believe in *“bump- ology” and support fake phrenologists in thell assertions that they can tell by | fingering a man’s cranium whether he fs| | sentimental or sour, a thief or a parson, a poet or a scientist, but the color of the eyes and the size of the human statur are liable to modifications by local cir- cumstances, while the shape of people's | heads is little influenced by climate, food | or habits. | This wide view of mankind is not of as 1ce to the particular group | of anthropologists to Vhlijn-h Br. Classon | fongs, as is the question of socl ion and ment. Society often been likened to a pyramid, whose | | base is the bone and sinew of the land | and the apex the upper cl . but this | | likeness can be carried still farther—the | | base being largely of the broad-headed | type of men, graduating toward the top into a predominance of the narrow-head- ed. The pyramid is constantly changing. | People are dropping off at the top and being recruited from the ablest represent- ablest representatives of the lowerclasses. It is known a 't ‘that several gener- | atlons ago the ge family of genteel | arents was eight children, where now it | s only two. | From the large common class of society | grow two distinct cla —one, the intelli- | gent middle class in city and country, | | whose members have medium-sized fami- lies, but fail to materially bet- ter their ; and the other, the up- | per clas °TYOuS, energetic charac- | | teristics small families. Both of | and | these latter two classes, the majority of | whom are narrow-headed, tend to die out but the number of generations nec 7 to accomplish this has not been deter- mined. This is one of the tnings which Dr. Closson, Dr. Sargent of Harvard, and Dr. Ripley of Columbia are now attempt ing to find out, and at the same time dis- cover the exact effect of education and refinement on the size of the family. The study in California will afford data, though necessarily incomplete, as to the size of families among Californians. What the ultimate result of the investigation in amhrnFolngy in Europe and the United | States will reveal is only a surmise, but it s liable to cause a reconstruction of ideas | as to the history of the human race, and | will undoubtedly throw considerable light on our obscure past. Already e inves- | tigations have led to a well-defined belief, supported by solid reasoning, that the home of the Aryan race was T the center | | of Europe, rather than in India, and that the blonde, narrow-headed type of man originated fn Scandinavia, when that land was larger and its climate more sui for human habitation. tels TWO SPANISH GUNS. Sent by Admiral Dewey to the Na- tional Musuem. | _ WASHINGTON, May 11.—The National Museum In this city has received from Admiral Dewey two cannon captured from the Spaniards when Cavite fell. In one of them two shells and a grape shot were found. A gunner summoned from the navy yard extracted the shells, which contained moldy powder. They would have exploded 1f ignited. _The_transport Buffalo, which reached New York several davs ago, has six can- non from naval officers at' Manila con- signed to the museum. . g =g R 2 R - R R -R-FER-F-F-F-5 1 k=3 s READ 5 & Brig. Gen. King's g o Stirring Story of Owr Sol- 5 diers o ood-Stained » Trenches of Manila 2 & InNewt Sunday’s Call. 4 30308 308 306 306 306 308 108 300300 308 30 % 30¢ 308 3 3% o o In the Bl o i a stanch favorite and won easily from Ringmaster, a 30 to 1 shot. Storm King, sore and lame, ran third. G Track Notes. When the odds against Sly reached 13 to § the owners of the mare went to the Judges’ stand and requested the retiring gentleman reposing therein to kindly resurrect her. Ruiz was read a lesson and went out and won. If the judges would keep a closer eye on the fluctuating prices they might save the under- takers a heap of work. The Hanlon Brothers have concluded to ship Sly to St. Louls along with the string of ORRIGAN STILL DRAGGING FOR MORE PURSES e Hughey Jones. It is said that Johnny Relff has had about enc ot a . Only te in t! saddle, He Hates to Leave Qur | g e game, onlyamits i 15 2000 Caldwell when not at fault, and Enoch Wish- Rich Sucker Soil. - o deciacd {0 kiep his miget rioer To-D;\y's Entries. e rst Race—Five furlongs; two-year-old yert e 09 BACKED HIS ST. CASIMIR Crtrude. 1 | (1083)Tar Hill... ey | Honor Bright. Second Race—Six. furlongs; three-year-olds CALDWELL GAVE THE RACE TO | d upward; selling THE YOUNGSTER. i“fif‘g";'“?"m‘ S 1066 Oraibe g Judge Stouffer. vivan Lass. 1065 Madrone . 1039 Homestake - 111 109 Solstice only a gallop | a number of years. The closing mile run w THE CALL’S RACING CHART. OAKLAND RACE TRACK, Thursday, May 11, 1899.—Eightieth day of the Winter Meeting of the Pacific Coast Jockey Club. Weather fine. Track fast. JAMES F. CALDWELL, Starts EDWIN F. 8MITH, Presiéing Judge. FIRST, RACE ear-olds; purse, §$400. | Betting. Oop. ClL Horse, .12, 110! 13 12 110/ 8 110 10| t. Casimir. Prine Bassinger |Jenkins . |Glover Tom Sharke Juletto 10f 5 110| & 9 110110 10 13| ¢ & SHisi= Time—th, :13%: %. :374; %, 1 Winner, E. Corrigan’s b. g. by St. Andrew-Ottyana. Had start. Won handily. Second and third driving. The *“Corrigan outfit” played him. San \awell presented the race to St. Casimir. s could have won Tatched—Surfeit 110, Pythta 110, Atelog 110, Bogus Bill 113, Kickimbob 113, Aborfgine 110. selling; three-year-oldsjgnd upward; purse, $100. 3 SECOND RACE—Six furlong | Betting. ¥m. %m. Str. Fin. Jockeys. 4 4h AT T 31 2% 2h 2 21 1% 33 |Glover 3 11 33 4h |Jenkins . 5 74 56 510 |Hahn . ] 64 63 §3 [|Kellas Oahu, 4 5 b 1% 75 75 Outright s 8 8 3 3%, 115. Winner, D. M. Hanlon's b. m. by Racine-Rosebud. v ariving. vas resurrected by the judges after receding to 13 to 5. High Hoe lame. Licalzi away off. ratched—Roval Fan 98, Highland Ball, 110, Toribio 107, 1115. Alaria should have won. Rey Hooker 95, Oralbee 95 THIRD RAC purse, $400 | | Betting. Tndex. Horse. Age. Welght.|St. r. Fin Jockeys, - Josng: (1056) Ulm, 3.. 96! 3 2 12 (). Ward, s ws 1102 Tempo, 4. 10 § 1 2% |Dingley SfEie cas 1103 Castake, 4. 107 2 5 38 |Jenkins . 2 32 (1079) Personne, § 11l § 43 [Glover qo0 1 1068 Twinkle Twink, 4..109/ 7 6 & h-|Robinson. Sl 109 Rondrunner, a.......114| § h 610 Macklin i e 1085 Alvin E, 6. [ 3 74 |Falleny A4 30 10 1076 Eureka, a. 1 9 (Habn . 100 2:10. Winner, Mrs. C. P. 1 Won first three driving. i FOURTH RACE—One and a sixteenth miles; selling; three-year-olds and up- ward; purse, $100. ndex. Horse. Age. \\'e!ghl.x t. %m. %m. Str. Fin. Jockeys. (E‘fi“"{fii 1087 Ad. Spreckels, § | 4 ‘ 2% 1h |Jenkins 10 12 1081 Malay, 3. f16 3n a8 1D (e 5 e 1105 Rey del Tierra, 5. 247 11 '33 36 [Macklin § 5 1106 Tos Medanos, 3. B 4 |Bassinger (a0 Time—1-16, :06%; 6-16, :31%: 9-16, :66%; 13-16, 1:22; mile, 1:41%; 1 1-16 v E. Corrigan’s br. & by Longfellow-Jennié Treacy. Good start. ‘%\'fln S i Spreckels won the last jump. Rey del Tlerra” was a live one to-day. Los Medanos blew up for San Venado, The Baldwin entry ruled | ANTI-CEMETERY LEAGUE WILL ENTER POLITICS ey Question to Be a Campaign Issue. e * CANDIDATES TO BE PLEDGED R STRIVING FOR A NEW SCHOOL IN WESTERN ADDITION. e Lowell High School Said to Be In= adequate for the Demands Now Being Made Upon It. AL The crusade against the cemeteries in Western Addition which has been waged for years was given fresh impetus last night by the organization of the Ant- League. Dr. Charles Cross elected temporary chairman and E. E. Troy temporary secretary. The ng of the cemeteries will be made an sue in the forthcoming campaign. It is pledges from candi- aries that they favor her burial of the dead of the city. s have been wary of the cemetery question. The men who represent the cemetery associations have made the assertion that the owners of bu- rial plats constituted the bulk of the vc ing population and would defeat any man or measure tending to the cem teries. The claim is made that the oppo- site is the case; that the general public aware of the fact that the cemeteries are z ace to the health of the city of the city is pointed as an example to hs o i mile beyond the Cemetery wa = proposed to ex dates at the pri prohibiting the fu | within the limit For years politiciar close his. It built up a | cemeteries toward the southwest, while | the growth has been retarded in the Western Addition and Richmond. The officers of the new league & pect to derive their*chief support from the mem- bers of Western Addition Improvement Club, Richmond District Improvement Association and from the Bush street and the Polk street clubs. In addition every | improvement club in the city will be delegate to the meet- | ing, at which the league will be perma- | nently organized. The present agitation | is not for the immediate removal of the cemeteries, but for their closing. It is expected the next twenty years will bring bout the actual removal of all the dead. he agitation which has been mal ntained recently is slowly effecting what it has been found impossible to bring Imm’_by legislation up to the present time. The majority of burials now being made are | in family plats sold by the Ceme “jation years ago. Few people & ing pla in the eterie: ring to go into San M | their dead can rest The meeting at which the Anti-Cemetery | quested to send one | > buy- prefer- where gue was form led chiefly toad- vocate the of the Western Addition to a new high school building. The Lo- ba | well High Scho S entirely inadequ the demands | made upon it. The following plan of cam- | paign was determined upon First to se- | cure the approval of the Board of Educ tion in_the prem econd, to appear before the Supervisors and petition them to allow for the expenditur the pro- in | posed bond issue, and third, to procure | the co-operation of all the improvement clubs President Charles H. Hubbs announced at once the following committee to repre- sent Richmond District Improvement As- sociation;. E. P. E. Troy, Charles Sutro Charles F. Muclier and 'C. H. Hubt President Cross of Western Addition Club named Andrea Sbarboro as one member of the committee, the remaining members to be selected at the next meeting. The meeting last night was attended by Dr. Charles V. Cross, J. Henderson, Charles H. Hubbs, W. H. Hazell and B. B Troy O LIVER Countless Numbers Who Suf=- fer From Disease of These Organs. HOW TO OBTAIN EFFECTUAL AND PERMANENT RELIEF. s seldom that stomach trouble, or trouble, oceurs as independent aff Disease of either organ usually in- | s functional derangement of the other. People who suffer with indiges- | tion usually suffer with constipation as tion of well, due to a_decrease in the secr bile. In enjoy good t are concerned t be in good omach; the order that one ms There is the s, the bowels. all contribute to digestion. They ibject to deleterious influepce | as stated above, derangement of ¢ | fects the other. | "The Great Hudyan reaches them all in its curative influence. It strengthens and | stimulates all these glands. Hudyan s | sists in the assimilation of food—the con verting of it into flesh and blood. People who suffer from liver and stomach di | order are nearly always thin and sallow | Hudyan makes flesh and blood, restores | the glow. of health to all pale ‘men and | women. Hudyan will promptly relleve ths i | | headaches that attend such disorders. People with liver and usually feel tired and languid. Hudyan will give activity and energy to all such sufferers. Hudyan will restore brain quietude; it will produce natural slee;- because it insures a perfect discharge ot the digestive functions. Hudyan corrects | all those nervous conditions that are us- | ually assoclated with digestive disturb- ances. 3 Hudyan is for sale by druggists—i0c & package or six packages for $2.50. Tf your druggist does not keep Hudvam, | send direct to the HUDYAN REMED | COMPANY, corner Stockton, Ellis an | Market streets, San Francisco, Cal. | You may consult the Hudyan Doctors about your case free of charge. Call or FIFTH RACE-Six furlongs; sellin maidens; four-year-olds and upward; purse, HIT, " Index. Horse. Age. Weight. %m. m. %m. Str. - Fin. | Jockeys. lop & 111t Melkarth, 4.. SRy e 3 Sl 5 106 Santa Lucia, 5 s feaet 1 ] 11 Henry C. 4. 1% 41 314 B 2 1068 Marcelles, 4. €473 By s 4 165 1109 Flacon, 4 8 . . 52 30 20 1098 Catastrophe, 5. 4 153N 62 52 92 963 Zem Zem, 4 BT 76 [Coburn . 20 6 1088 Nuncomar, 9 & . 81 |Macklin 1530 1083 Rio Glenn, 4. 10 9 2 91 |Jenkins 52 185 1088 Paul Kruger, 4. 5%. 10 «ee 10 [Falleh 8 2 Time—%, :2: %, :50; %, 1:16%. Winner, M. Quinn's b, g. | ™ S Good Mart™" Wwen firet inrée driving. Wil I o T Winner was the good thing. Bassinger, on the favorite, was well taken care of. Seratched—Lomo 102, Cyaro 102 2 1118, SUXTH RACE—One mile; four-vear-olds and upward; purse, $40. . < | B Betting. Index. Horse. Age. WelghtSt. %m. %m. %m. Str. Fin. [ Jockeys & 1104 San Venado, 4.....15(1 - 4h 3h 31 1 13 |Tenkina 1094 Ringmaster, 164 &% 5h 6 1533 maen o Storm King, BUUUNS 2 23 Bpg dpw 2w an 1071 Inverary IL d......112(5 - 31% (42" ‘5h° 3% 44 (1080) Gibbertifiibbet. '5.. 114/ 6 6 8 i% 6 53 1104 Imp, Mistral iL, 5..118/3 _1h _1n _in__ 8n__ 6 Tim :25%: 3%, :50; %, 1:16%; mile, 1:43%. Winner, 1. J. Baldwin's br. h. Duncombe Lizzie B, Good Start. Won easily. Second and {hird driving. o> o San Venado pounds the best. Inverary badly ridden. u Baja Californla 'DAMIANA BITTERS | write. | Is a powerful aphrodisine and specific tonic | for the sexuai and urinary organs of both gexes, and a great remedy for diseases of the kidneys and bladder. A great Restorative, Invigorator and Nervine. Sells on its own Merits; no long-winded testimonials necessary. NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Agents, 322 Market streei, S. F.—(Send for Circular.) VITALIS THE NEW FmoTosRAPIED 15t Day. L 10th Day. AR ABOYE 30th Day. RESULTS. Itquickly . | Nightly Emisoons, self-abuse or excess and indi 5 i Powe: ana Failing Memory. - Wards o Livenity s o 81070 tion. Cures when all others fail. Insist on havi vrnl.? Bo ckher. Can be carried in the vest pocket. By yasil § 1. age or six for 85.00 with a gusrantes to Cure. <fund, the Money. Clralar Frea’ Kidrems ~ oo °F ‘UMET CURE CO0., 884 Dearborn £t., Chicage x . Bold by Owl Diug Co., 6. ¥. and Oaklaod, effects tomach troubla N

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