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| the recent arrivi the ESTIMATE OF THE FiLIPINOS. y the Fili- HE last appeal made to the nations t pinos, which recites the facts, already rmed by one of Dewey's officers, that they had con- | sted Luzon and Panay single-handed, and that under the laws of nations it was theirs by the title | of*conquest when Spain pretended to sell it to us by be | KELS, Proprietor. will again rouse what ma To what | ¢ of civilization have they advanced and to what educated are queries that bear for- of Paris, ons to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. PUELICATION OFF! EDITORIAL ROOM e people. 217 to 221 Stevenson Street 1874 are cibly upon the able relation we occupy toward them. There are two recent contributions to the stock of f bject that deserve respect and John standing 2nd upon the most deplor- | , 16 CENTS PER WEEK. rmation on this s pread confidence. Mr. [ : 1.50 1.00 r of St. Andr o has been in States troops W ¥ All pos 1ce we invaded Bample coy service ively to Mr. OAKLAND CFFICE.. C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Mr. Peyton g excursions into the coun- Memegor Forcign Advertising, Marquette Buitdlag, | (.. (v, e people and investigation of Chicago. hese peo- e of them nd educational status, says: A larger percentag n I found among the country people ‘ennessee and other of our States polite and courteous, genial and social NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. €. CARLTON. Herald Squere NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: of PERRY LUKENS JR 29 Tribune Bullding CHICAGO NEWS STANDS. Great Northern Hotel; NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. Waldort-Ast ria Hotel; A. Brentaso, 81 Uniom Square; | Murray Eiil Hotel. WASHINGTON M. C.) OFFICE Wellington Hetel d. L. ENGLISH. Corrcspondent. battle of Manila Bay was fought there stood with Dewey on the Olympia an_ex-naval of er, whose offer to volunteer for the day's service | Dewey. This volunteer was Joseph | unt of the battle written as fw L. Stickne y street, corner Clay, es street, open untlf | .. oot he C: vas e firs tail to react : L et ubtt 90 1 pondent of The “!_\\. the first de A o reach 615 Lar street, cpen until 9:30 o'clock. world. Mr. Stickney has remained in the lon street, open until i0 o'clock. 2991 Market | Philippines and in touch with every phase of the sub- | ner Sixteenth, cpen untll 9 o'clock. 9518 E 5 R otk o6 yomeh | icct ever since, and has just issued a book, “War in NW. rner Twenty- | the Phil whi begins with the first event SpepSUBLIOIDIClons nd pre th g ing particularity all obtain- NS able doc on every side of the suh- S ject. Its rrative comes down to June 14, 1899, so - nden that it is a able book of days to that date. ™ The author cquaintance of € H on, | and t s government. He says that s ek = eert. tor | Aguinaldo is only 20 vears old, but is a thoroughly ¢ AL o! > ght trained and intelligent leader, is well educated and a vyer of merit. Mr. Stickney continues: “He won a-house—"1 his leadership not by chance but by his own energies e l g { and abilities ng the insurrection against Sp: i Spa ¢ importation of ter part of 1806 n maintained a 11 When it was on its I tished. all the reb: the lead governmental $400,000 in gold to vaid th reupon he refor Aguinaldo yreak. first half of the money in Hong- to notify his followers, who o'clock, Turkish vas to be 1 were then to lay down W kong, w This was.carried —_— COMPLETE THE FUND THIS WEEK. signed in at the c 1878, Spain 1d with the Cubans in ) Y let the $30,000 fund for recen ot the rest of the agreement and the ') corapleted this week » hostilities as fast as they could obtain equipment, the $200,000 received by Aguinaldo given by the drz ed States de- When the U New vell the contributions red war against Spain the new rebellion was well ¢ e sur amount required. | under headway.” Here Mr. Stickney quotes General Francis V. | is one | Greene, U. S. A, to show how honorable was the po- ined by Aguinaldo. Though he was sued of the leaders, for a divi portion to population, U For hospitality and uatation that is world- :ntertainment of sitio by th on. Artacho, another of money, he kept the sum intact the trustee of ing redemption of countr for the purpose of for tl men conventions of cord of the past ent réform. This part 1dard in the reception we give of special import a mercen- to contempt by e 1mpy who sold out his country done reception festival on a-compr n for Spanish gold been of injury to the people of of him This view the ed to assist the volun who are furnishing the men and a United States. 1t him, Qgcau yon, who might be expected d in obtaining em 1s been tireless in = it represented him a to run at cordial co-op Of his of “The Secretary preparation is not long. | of Forcign / ctano S. Arellano, formeriy ila U iversity, a magistra fessor of Let the money be forth- [ T { and leader of the b his istant in diplomacy is al San Fr. 1 who | Dr. Pardo de , an author of repute and grad- hare in the welcome to the ¢ of the University of Paris. The General Director Ko lumbes ¢ those who help to m: it | of the War Department is Antonio Suna, a bacteriolo- brilli Ma: i ist, student of Pasteur at Paris and graduate of his o : b i institute. Jose Alexandrino is chief of the Bureau of ndo Cannon of Public Works, I 1€ not enough Agriculture and F s not be 1 « i many, but of all. E and the other of Leyden. , should contribute some T g nd nitation is in charge be popular, and the fund that | of Dr. Jose Albert, graduate of the University of Ber- lin. Ibarra, Secretary of Home Affairs; Fasa, head of 1d see the whole of the | the Department of Justice; Alos, Chief of the Police and ‘in the hands of the | Establishment, and Tangeo, Registrar of the Depart- all university graduates and law- ment of Justic » subscribe this week {ly the subscriptions | vers of distinction. Baldomero Aguinaldo is Secre- they will be. San |tary of War. Trios. Secretary of the Treasury, lifornia in this matter. | wealthy merchant, and sc Ledesma, Secretary of ia boys a California wel- | the Navy. and Romo. Chief of the Bureau of Com- a way that the whole | merce. Pedro Paterna is President of the Filipino the time for liberal | Congress and a graduate of the University of Madrid. ! Bureau, is a graduate es.” binet in the world has | ated men as that of the Segardo, Chief of the Treasury sk of collecting funds over | of one of the English universi 1 be directed to the prep- It is quite doubtiul if any C It is not too much to ask |as large a percentage of edu It is not too much | Philippine republic. while Mr. Peyton’s testi given before the weelk | to the universality of education among the people goes | to show that the university men are not exceptional | instances resting upan a foundation of ignorance. but ders and outrages | the natural outgrowth of the love of a people for learn- Come up with the arations for tl ony, as 850,600 for the view pt t once it be ports from the committed by American troopers are destroying so ‘Hng and the liberty to which it leads. of the romantic interest which attaches to Uncle Sam’s | — T — soldiers. It ‘hr“ d be a mater ..{tho deepest cnuccrn{THE IMMIGRATION QUESTION AGAIN- to the t majority of United States soldiers to see{ Ch | L ITH the return of prosperity under the Re- publican tariff there has been an increase in the number of immigrants hastening from Europe to profit by the work and the wages which are now abundant, and with that increase there has come a re- 1ould be pun- | tors among them ished. ler another terrible abject Jesson ‘ % i that the few male The doubi committed at Denver is| fon swelldom seems to have‘taken the wrong | int of view in the ma ge of the black impostor, | : o = ce Lobe ja.” and a.Jewess. Aristocratic Lon- | vival of the demand for a revision u‘| the immigration le a fool of jtself in patronizing the “black ‘ laws and the enactment of more stringent regulations t the admission to the country of undesirable 1d now in the mar- | ® onit. It would seem that the | PETSONS. | istics given out by the Bureau of Immigration | i " show that for the year ending June 30, 1809, the num- If the | ber of immigrants that entered our ports was 311,-| rrect the Indians had to consent to be robbed or | 878, as compared with 229,209 for the previous year. irdered. It appears now that in antagonism to a | More than that, the indications are that the coming’ superior force they will have to submit to the theit | year will show a very large increase over last year, for- of their fands and the sacrifice of their lives. Commissioner Powderly states in his report that he ! is recciving a large number of inquiries from abroad as to the best place to locate in this country. jspust ’ to the | ks the joke i is on the g itest reports of the Yaqui Indian war be - 5 | It appears ~ that death, in its devastating sweep | through- Posto Rico, failed to recognize the aristoc- | % 0 g A % racy of the ishnd; Considerable surprise has been| Attention has been directed to the fact that the in-| o ;;rc«et[ Telo iR s s Ul | erease of mnmgrnu:m is largely from despotic and | Jies were not spared by the reaper. | comparatively |_|t|01111p{111c11e(¥ countries ot Eastern and 5 Southeastern Europe! It is well known the people | of those sectioris have a hereditary antagonism to gov- j ernment because of the oppressions they ‘have suf- | fered. They are saturated with ideas of socialism, o~ nihilism, ot anarchy. or perhaps have no ideas at all about government and are simply animated by discon - 2ger Tom O'Rourke has engaged Middies to train Heavy-weight Tom le ‘with Jeffries. He doesn’t be- an beat this Tom Tom combina- weight Tommy R Sharkey for his b lieve the “champ” tion. year w | tent. They do not'understa;m our Government or our | MINGLING DIVERGENT MANKIND ! institutions, have but little sympathy with them, and come to our shores solely because they have great expectations ©f acquiring wealth. When those ex- pectations are disappointed such immigrants will in- evitably join the idle, discontented classes of our great cities. Their lawlessness will complicate strikes and 1 disturbances, and be a con- all other industrial or civil tinual menace to labor and to capital alike. It is not only desirable but imperative that some re- striction be placed upon immigration of that kind. The recent im-csxiganflons of the United States Indus- trial Commission show that the present laws are vague ! and lax, and it is almost impossible to enforce them. Thus it is made clear that something should be done at the coming session of Congress to revise the| statutes on the subject and guard the republic against | |a form of invasion which is almost as evil as any | military invasion could be. The issue has long been before the American peo- ple. Time and again stringent immigration laws have been reported to Congress, but in almost every case they have been pigeonholed in committee-rooms or beaten on the fleor of either the House or the Sen- Such laws as have been enacted are now shown to be comparatively valueless. The issue, therefore, remains unsettled. It is to be secen whéther the in- ate. | creasing rush of immigrants noted in thé fiscal year just closed and likely to be even greater in the present 11 so arouse the people as to compel Congress to take action of an adequate kind without further de- lay. THE PORTO RICO HURRICANE. DETAILS from Porto Rico show that the hurri- cane which recently swept over that island it one of the most appalling calamities of our times. Lack of communication throughout the island ren- | ders it impossible for the officials to gather full infor- mation of the number of deaths or the extent of the damage, but from what has been learned Governor General Davis estimates that upward of a thousand persons were killed, something like 100,000 rendered homeless, one-fifth of all the dwellings on the island | destroyed and all crops and most of the fruit trees ruined. . Had a disaster so widespread and so terrible occurred in any northern country it would have en- No new crops could be raised between now and tie coming of frosts, and the ruin wrought directly Ly the storm would be largely augmented by the in- Fortunately, it The tropics have cvitable distress that would follow. will not be so bad in Porto Rico. evi advantages. such houses as are nceded in that climate, fertile soil under the ever-glowing sun will soon sen up fcod for the people whose crops have been de- | stroyed. ma It will be comparatively easy to erect The one need of the island is immediate relief, and | it ir a good fortune for the people they are now a part | St of the United That prompt and liberal char: ity for which our country is noted will be extended to he Government ftseli has but fittle money avai'shle for help, but private contributions can be counted on to compensate for any lack of governmen- | tal assistance. Our officials will go to that island not | ates. K ck h arms in their hands but with food, clothing and | The effects of the terrible disaster will be w mone; as far as humanity can do it. ar any rate, “benevolent assimilation” will not niockery. To the stricken people there Uncle | am will be truly a helper and a friend in a time of alleviated Rice need. SOUTH AMERICAN COMMERGCE. G ONSIDERABLE information concerning the | commerce of the countries south of us is given in a recently issued bulletin of the treasury bureau of statistics. It has long been the aim of our| | niore enterprising merchants and of some of our greatest statesmen to obtain for the United States the | ; of that commerce, and it is therefore somewhat | that after all efforts so far we bulk discouraging to lear have but a small fraction of it. From a summary of the statistics given it appears that while our trade with Mexico and with the West Indies is comparatively good, we are far behind other nations in dealing with countries farther south. It is| ! of the total imports of all South America, 87 per cent is taken by the countries bordering upon the two oceans, and but 13 per cent by those bordering upon the Caribbean. Marching down the eastern coast of South America, we find Brazil importing, in 1897, goods to the value of over $105,000,000, vf which the United States supplied about 12 per cent; Uuruguay and Paraguay $22,000,000, of which our share was less than 7 per cent, and Argentina $95,000,000, of which Jess than 7 per cent was from the United States, while a tour of the Pacific Coast shows impoitations into Chile of $24.000.000; Peru, $8,500.000; Bolivia, $11,- 600,000, and Ecunador, $7,000,000, the proportion from the United States averaging about 10 per cent. Thus the northern coast of South America, fronting on the Caribbean Sea, imports goods to the value of $36,000,- 000, of which we supply an average of 25 per cent; the eastern coast, fronting on the Atlantic, $222- 000,000, and the Pacific Coast, $51,000,000, of which our proportion is in each case about 10 per cent. While we supply these small percentages of the goods imported into South American countrics we are by far the largest importers of their goods. Wz are the chief consumer of the coffee, rubber and other chief articles of export of Brazil, and of the wool and hides of Argentina. Of the South American countries fronting on the ific Coast it is noted the United | > States, in 1897, purchased goods valued at $88,408,119, | while her sales to them in that year were but $24,480,- 013, or less than one-third of her purchases from them; in 1898, despite the fact that to the whole world our sales were double the amount of our purchases, those to the South American countries beyond the Caribbean Sca were still but about one-third of the amount of our purchases from them. - The explanation of this unsatisfactory condition o trade is that Europe owns the ships that carry South American commerce, and as we export more to Europe than we import from that continent, an opportunity is afforded shipowners to make profitable triangular traffic. The heavy exports from South America are brought to our ports, ‘our exports are then carried to Europe, and European exports are taken to South America. Such a condition of affairs will prevail as long as. the commerce of the ocean is under control of the merchant marine of European nations. - Qur mer- chants and- shipowners, no matter how enterprising | they may be, cannot compete successfully with the subsidized ships of foreign nations. The trade of South America will be ours whenever our statesmen will work for it in the only way by which it can be accomplished. Commercial treaties are of little value unless there be ships to profit by them. We shall have the bulk of the trade of the countries south of us whenever we follow the example of European nations and build up a merchant marine équal to the -needs of the republic. P caused an amount of destruction which makes | led famine and starvation and a winter of desola-| , but they are not without compensating | and the | In Porto | is among them with the Bible in one hand and a| Palace. Krag-Jorgensen rifle in the other. preach- ing benevolent despotism. praising his| . yy . Sibley, Sheriff of San Joaquin, is God, whom he evidently assumes to wear i > £ § registered at the Lick from his home in Can the Contact of Two Races in the| g, o, oceoute', Sbiing | T Philippines Result Beneficially to {a few brief years as the white race has| <y, F. Summers, a big merchant and Either ? | accomplishe wenty centuries. There | Bt 4E'at the Dt T ines Yeriatiom whoiin- [ining st of Juness; % S0 t I sists that “the American flag must never | California. [ it o en though it be raised | H. H. Harlow, a wealthy mine owner over a dung-hill or a nest of rattlesnakes. | of Gold Gulch, is among the late arrivals and who concelves-t to be his duty to ex: | %% 8OIC. 20 0 J. B. Ryer, one of the leading men of terminate the ipinos first and then | | treat with them afterward. i New York, is at the Palace accompanied by his family. ¢ III. HUS, it will be seen, the American people have experienced tion and contact with the red race, associa- | -~ All these have arguments to make along | their varving lines of thought, but it is the black race and the yellow |impossible for any of them to deny the] 4 5 race. Their experience with these { danzers and evils that result from the Arthur B. Wood of Honolulu h::s‘ r’i Yorns : contact of two Givergent races. It mat- | turned to the city and is again registere orms of social contact has NOt|{ers not what course we take in dealing | a¢ the Occidental. ! with the fslandere: it matters not whether all that our people are really ashamed of | it is right or wrong to rule the islanders [In their history is comprised in the In-|With benevolent intentions instead of per | dian problem. the negro problem and the | T i) remains (hat we cannot in any Chinese problem. Yet with all these evil | way bring the white race and the brown and even disgraceful results recorded dis- | together, either here or there. without tinctly In our brief history, the people of | been satisfactory or encouraging. Nearly Frank Barret, a wealthy oil speculator of Pacific Grove, is at the Lick, where he | arrived yesterday. Henry Garnett of the United States Geo- shouls logical Survey is at the Occidental with developing the evils which are inseparable S the United States are now apparently | Allan Cameron and E. J. Coyle, two & geunder. let nof foolish man attempt to | AUSR e OO an Pacific officials, are intermingling with the only remaining | E ob- | registered at the Occidental. race with which they can experiment. | lem whg-h . mukho ;gfixfl““nfl(fi:; i i i v! pause. Xpansion to the pp! S o ad 2 i t 3ra p: Having tried living with the red, the |bause, Expapslon Inip the BRIUPERGUE | ey road at Pinole. is at the Grand on bus iness pertaining to his position. his wife and daughter. from that condition. What God has put considering with favor the proposition of | It is this feature cf the Philippine prob-| = C. W. Cadman, connected with the Val- black and the yellow, and mad® a wretch- | onqent of the people of those isiands, is | ed failure in every experiment, they must | not merely the procurement of more ter; e o leading -citizens of now try the brown men of the Philip- |ritory. It is not merely the enlargement | B Eeaty, ooe D'p";.' L theiar- of Uncle Sagq's national farm. It s the | Denver, is at the Palace rival of the Colorado volunteers. John D. Hart and Nelson B. Lansing both arrived last evening on the China rom Honolulu and registered at the Oc- cidental. B. F. Stern, ines. The idea of “expansion,” as it is now advanced in this country, does not merely mean the acquirement of new territory and the establishment of greater bound- aries. A mere extension of area might admission into our national organization | of several millions of people who can | never amalgamate with our own popuia- | tion, and who' must be either ruled a lifical serfs or else extermin. h ave exterminated the Indian: driven out the Chinese; we are now ruling managing owner of the | not be necessary, but it might not be in- | the negroes as political serfs in the South- | jurious. The real danger of the policy | ern States In a condition which is o curse | Humboldt County Commission Company. | of expansion is in the new population |to the whites as well as the blacks and | js a guest at the Grand, where he has a shame to republican institutions. What do we propose to do with the Malays o the Philippines when they become a par of our national organization by the poli | lately arrived from his home in Eureka. A. Waterhouse, Rev. J. M. Evera and Rev. T. S. Timoteo are three who arrived which is to be added to and form a part of our nation. The condition at present is quite dif- ferent'from that invelved in the acqulre- | Of expansion? | in th last night on the China from ment of the Louisiana purchase and the " GEQRGE A. RICHARDSON. [ e iieea at thos Ocel- Mexican territory. In each of these cases | Flacerville, August 7, I il —_—————————— IN NEXT SUNDAY'S CALL Here are some of the features that wili President J. G. Schurman of the Phil- ippine peace commission arrived from Ma- | nila last night on the China. He said: i r's C: z SVIRY c f the situation apear in next Sunday’s Call. A number of | “I can_tell you_nothing o e | other good stories are also on tap, and | in the Philippines and will decline to talk will be announced later. | on the subject until I have reported to we acquired contiguous territory, thinly | populated by a people whose location | would have given us as much trouble had we not acquired the territory as it ae- tually did after we.acquired it. The curse of race contact did not become greater by the expansion, although it continued as | "y, % ST L e famous Jonn | President )(x}cmmeg.,G =y E " i . | Brown of Harpers Ferry fame, is a Cali Att. v George D. Gear arrived on the he retention of the Philippines, how~| o' b " cher and In next Sunday’s Call | China last night en route for Washing- : re | ton, where he will endeavor to procure the different. ey ever mil Lo yastly he tells the pathetic story of his life. | not contiguous to our own country; their ase of the imprisoned Galicians and {abaar: i s : b g Who will be the next.Pope? The Call | Telease e impi G s an [ Slmate 15 such (hat they; do nofbecomie} ) o aecurea: airect from | Rouis poriaits | Obtain = dLCislon F the ‘Gepreme. Court e T . and | 0F he twenty-seven Cardinals, one of | Of the United States as to whether or not the constitution of the United States applies to Hawall as a result of absorp- tion. | their average population milé is alr y four tim United States now sustains. | whom will undoubtedly be the next Pope. This complete set of pictures has never before appeared in any newspaper. In acquiring the territory west of the Mississippi we = H 1. - e e : : Two Weeks as a Telephone Girl. A |, At the Palace is registered D. C. O'Reil- | obtained a fine land thinly populated, | (w0 WENE T8 5 ) SIS0 TP wg weeks | Iy, vice president of the Columbia South- lying In the temperate zone adjacent to | SURGAY catl Teporter B P o experi. | ern Railway of Oregon. Mr. O'Reilly is here on business connected with his road His our own country and fitted in every way In ences and observation ‘tell why the hello girls seek relief by suicide. and will remain for several days. visit will be made doubly pleasant owing for permanent occupancy. acquiring the Philippines we do not get a square i it P Count Huokichi Mutsu, the Japanese | | mile of territory that a white man will | JOURR oo 0O O "mu!’ e | to the fact that he is one of the most pop- | iltivate. We merely acquire the | fro 0™, 0 es advantages to America in | Ular men in the railroad business and has | responsibility and danger of associalng | oo o) and to San Francisco in particu- | many friends here who will be glad to with 7,000,000 of Malays and Cr with | 501 | welcome him. whom we cannot intermarr. 2 —_—————————— [ b i 55 | The only bumboat woman on the Paicflc | mheen ve il meceastely | waae InteE | oost s s WocationsEutsre uian (CATIECRNERNE TN/ NEW ST ORI from them or exterminate them. The re- | Francis Read the strange story of her |\ p v vORK, Aug, 14.—Charles L. Ack- | sults cannot fail to be similar to those | life. erman of San Francisco is at the Hol- grising out of lour ‘contact with ‘the Inc| How, the Japances Mishermen dive IOr | iardr Savtnue SURGHAMDIatE of Bavi Krau. ians, the negroes a e Chinese. It 1S | apajones. One of the most curfous indus- | ciceo i i s Grid. not a question of location but of race con. | fH8 OTPS, HE e e cisco is at the Hoffman. Mrs. G. E. Grid tact, for It matters not whether the | (T8 ON the "aCie 008 @ e Olym- of San Francisco is at the Gilsey. whifes and Malays come together in this | Pictures of Admixat DEWEy OF ti% BV | 3 M. R. Stores of San Francisco is at | pia, homeward bound. s will interest | oy Venaome, 2 Tesu.C ameful to " Philippine strous and country is sure | both. It we permanently retain the Philip- | pines we must either control the people | by despotic military government or else admit them to_participation in our na- { tional affairs, first tories, afterward a case we shall have a ing military rule, all our theories the rights of seif-government and desirability of republican institutions and demacratic ideals. We shall have as su stitutes for these the imperialistic for or you. The above are only a few of the human | interest storles that have been selected. There will be a lot of other featurs. None of these articles will be copyrighted, and therefore any paper can copy them; hut the original stories will be found in néxt Sunday’s Call. e ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. SEATTLE TO VANCOUVER—L. M. H., | Oakland, Cal. There. is a line of steamers from Seattle to Vancouver, daily. There is also one from Tacoma north via Van- couver, fare $11 75, GOLANDRINA—H: P. P. T., Washing- ton, D. C. The weed known in botany as golandrina and commonly called sn ke weed, on account of its reputed efficacy as_one or more Terrl- tates. In the first Sailors in the Philippines Are Grate- _ful to The Call. of ancient Rome and modern England. [ U. S. Flagship Baltimore, Manila, P. I., " D T hout any neces- | g, mhe’Call, San Francisco: Here's to | and in Arizona. Y < sity for such action, instead of a body of people maintaining and extending liberal and progressive institutions, demanding the great newspaper of thie Golden West from the crew of the Baltimore, who . A. C. and E. Plainfield, N. J., is an incor- freedom for ourselves and extending it 10| wish to, render thanks for the kindness Dok Jen to| the. dissohition: of -andlent | JnoyD ket and the mhola et Lo ho and has a mayor, who is the Rome un heonle. have for years dec| 1o the Enilipyines. :We ardigiad to know |ichief offieer.; Lha papers blished 1n Botmced the -military despotism which | that some good folks are thinking of us | that place are: The Courfer-Ne: daily: Breat Britain has exiended over weaker | aver here and letting us know what s | Central New Jersey Times, weekly; Press. Decote th all parts of the wofld, and I|8oing on in our own country and_else- | dgily; Consttutional, weekly: "Zabhath PNt forter S0 world, and 11 Where once in a while. The .papers are | Recorder, weekly; Jersey Law Journal, lieve that th n future greatly appreciated by the men forward, | monthly; Peculiar People, monthly. ; find we know the officers are also glad | v Saate S St s to receive them.” We all anxiously look for The Call, and once again permit us to thank you for so kindly remembering ipinos to_participation in_our cal. gi 1 er b at Townsend's. * mental affairs as a part of the republic Lt e Y R e we shall lower our average national | Kandard of inteliigence and efficiency by | us, _Very respectiully, Special information .supplied daily to admixture of 5000000 of Malays and| CREW OF THE FIGHTING-SHIP | business houses and public men by the | e ignorant and en- Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 Mone- most of th f. ar with the ideals our ation. Our national bound- | enlarged to include the | their [u-n‘lrh and the result not greatly different from admit- 0 es as immigrants, goniery street. Telephone Main —_ e Yesterday's Fire. A fire shortly after 4 o'clock vesterday afternoon damaged the two-story frame residence of Mrs. Mary Walsh, 57 Elliott Vil be AROUND THE CORRIDORS il ting 7,000,000 of these rac to become a part of our nation in that e 1 way. There is something curiously ab- F. L. Kincaid of Stockton is a guest at | Park, to the extent of about $500. The fire surd in_the present position of our peo-| {he Russ was caused by sparks from a chimney. ple. A fow vears ago they were so hostile | T ;7 sk s B o e — ee——— to the Chinese hecoming a part of this - J. L . . nation that they were almost prepared | is at the Grand. President McKinley and His Wite Will travel over the Northern Pacific Railway to raise armies and drive them into the sea. Now the same people are actually raising armies for the purpose of com- pelling Malays and Chinese to come into the nation and unite with us. It should be obvious to all that we cannot expect from contact with the brown race any better results than we have secured from assoclation with the others. All_sorts of ideas exist with Tegard to C. E. Stone, a fruitman of Fresno, is a guest at the Russ. V. Costa Andrede is registered at the Palace from London. State Senator B. F. Langford is at the Lick from San Joaquin. Judge N. K. Harris has come down from Fresno and is a guest at the Lick. when they visit the famous Yellowstone Park. They intend viewing the new geyser that spouts & tremendous stream of bolling water to the height of the Call building. It's a wonderful sight. Send 6c in stamps for book telling all about it' to T. K« STATELER, Gen, Agt., 638 Market st., S. F. e Very Low Rates East. our duty toward the Filipinos, There is 75 el s o the chivalrous American who considers r. and Mrs. Buller of Montreal are| on August 23 and 30, the popular Sante Aguinaldo a patriotic George Washing-| among the recent arrivals at the Palace. route will sell tickets to Phlmelphlu. and :: g for the liberties of his coun- is the money making expan- sees commercial turn at the very low rate of $§885. Occa~ sion, National Encampment, G. A. R. Call at 628 Market st. for full particulars. —_— e Mr. agd Mrs. J. Straus of Yokohama are among the late arrivals at the Palace. Dr. Powell, one of the leading physi- cians of Marysville, is a guest at the Palace. L. P. Goffin, a traveler from Brussels, e who thinks he sionis L advantage in the retention of the islands, and who cares not a nickel about the rights and wrongs of the question. There is the pious reformer who loves his fellow creatures o much that he advances upon It you don’t eat well or sleep well, have head- aches and dizzy spells, try a spoonful of Dr. Slegert’s Angostura Bitters. SR Prrival of the Califorpia Volunteers? |IF S0 YOU CAN WIN $50 AND ALSO HAVE THE HONOR OF DONATING ‘ $50 TO THE GENERAL FUND OF THE ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE. VERYBODY is on the tiptoe of expectancy as to the date of the arrival of the California vol- wnteers. Can you guess the exact time, if not how near? To the person who guesses the wear- est to the exact time (day, hour, minute and second) the Sunday Call will give $100, one-haif of which ($50) goes to the lucky guesser and the other half ($50) will be donated in the name of that person to the general funds of the entertainment committee. The Merchants' Exchange of this city will furnish the official recoyd of the sighting of the - transport, and from that record the decision will be made. ; The terms of the contest are: W All guesses.must be made on a coupon cut from the Daily or Sunday Call. Each person is allowed to fill out as many coupons as desired and they may be mailed each day or all together, at the pleasure of the guesser. No coupons zwill be received or entered into the contest that bear a postmark later Fill out this coupon and mail to Coupon Editor Sunday Call. @ AT A TR T AT AT AT A TR A TR TR TR TR T AT AT AT AT AT Ak A A Tk *‘Q*@ (-] | GUESS THAT THE TRANSPORT SHERMAN WITH THE 5 CALIFORNIA VOLUNTEERS WILL BE SIGHTED BY THE TIMEKEEPER OF THE MERCHANTS EXCHANGE AT : HWlonth...........Date.....Hour...... (:@g’)flz}m[e......Jecand...... R R Rt P e R L . : than August 20. T AR RR e e R R G SesSomtaptatsagtastaptensantams it msg s 0 S A A n 0t e S et e st Rie St Bt a o g e Do RN 4 ¢ ¢ i ; j . \