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. : ! RY. tain this year promises well. is ishi It was not made a penitentiary of- The AL Ol -1 oo vt v oo s i e e e | AUTOMOBILE STREET-SWEEPER T'o rv hear: ith some surprise the ¢ i : country heard with ¢ P ous. The directors have appealed in the right way valley, Cal. Any lass book seller SR Gl S i = proposition to pay to the Sultan of the Sults | {5 turn the attention of the producers and the manu- INE can procure for you the works of any or an annual subsidy for submitting to our Juris |.gcirers to the advantages of the fair to exhibitors, of all the great writers. TUBESDAN < hvisinunvaspis AUGUST 22, 1809 3 E " | diction and the transfer of sovereignty to his part of TRANSFER OF ENGRAVINGS-A. O. and the result can hardly fall short of something like S.. City. Itis JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. the Philippines from Spain to us. If Spain had a valid 1d that if a cheet of glass | title to sell and we bought it the goods purc ased be- a genuine trigmph. T r—ca— that is covered with copal varnish and an en- graving or print is pressed evenly on the varnish, face downward, and allowed to to W. S. LEARE, Manager. [ longed to us, without hiring anybody to say so. e inply Ly R ) g any ) The London Saturday Review sneeringly say remain until thoroughly dry, the paper Address All Com PUBLICATION OFFICE Market and Third Sta. 5. F | There was no more reason for subsidizing the Ma- | 4 few music hall ditties and after-dinner speeches rep- may then hcflsllgmly ‘n:;xlstlg?it;fl. “r“{n.r,«q shone S68 etans of the Sulus than for treating i ke man- _ KA 5 v nger and the vill re- SR clephone .“.‘v:lvn‘L ,\”l i Sk hmmunt of the Sulus than for treating in like man- | recent the substantial benefits to England from the Omfiln‘:f;‘ l“;“‘e s and look as if it had AR R 217 to 221 Stevenson Street | .. (he Chrisgians of the rest of the group. nglo-American alliance.” England probably never been printed on it. : Telephone Matn 1874, P e 3 3 3 This first surprise is increased by the report that | (il forget the ditty to which her troops marched in DELIVERED IY CARRIERS, 18 CENTS PER WREK. | Generdl Bates is visiting the Sulus and making a ] defeat forever from the American soil. But “Yankee Iy lng Postage: treaty with them! If Spain passed to us a valid title | Doodle” is not the end of Uncle Sam’s musical ideas. thday Calb, one vear....... 8900 | hy do we recognize these Mahometans as a nation . 1y Call), $ months | capable of entering into the treaty relation? What THE SIEGE OF GUER[N~ ‘Ilghl have they to such recognition that does not S g SRl 1.00 | cqually belong to the Christian Filipinos? These arz ) Y all odds the cleverest display of strategy the 04t recalya SULRCHIgHORA: are answered. The ) Parisian police have shown the world for many AROUND THE CORRIDORS Assemblyman A. Crowder is registered at the Palace. Paris Commissioner E. W. Runyon is registered at the Palace. Dr. E. G. Parker, U. S. is one of the questions that will run until they forwarded when raquested. 2 ; o solicitude of this country reinforces its curiosity as vear is that by which they have turned late arrivals at the California. OFFICE st st i foaniat -:908 Broadway | (1,0 features of the treaty are exploited cording to | Guerin's attempted revolution into a jest and a joke w ; the "“AI‘\“l ;: 1(".“‘1;";’" ke fi f i sta e, Is @ uest. a e Grand. €. GEORGE KROGNESS. its terms we are to leave polygamy and chattel | for the railery of the boulevards and the merriment stage lin 8] 5 . A. M. Duncan. one of thé leading mer sh Rock, is at the Lic E. Bush, an oil man of Hanford, is registered for a short stay at the Lick. Lieutenant L. R. Sargent, U. §. N among the late arrivals at the Occidental chants of Manager Forcign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chicago. dlavery among the Sulus undisturbed, but our juris- | of the world. The siege of Guerin is in fact about flag is to fly | the brightest opera bouffe ever enacted on a munici- diction is to be acknowledged and ¢ over the islands and we¥are to pay the Sultan a | pal stage of the first class. to any officer of the The bellicose Guerin has long been able by the 3 NLW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. € CARLTON...... - Herald Squaro | salary larger than any paid PERRY l‘",'l“;:'::‘;h '”'""“""’;;"‘l‘”" el ! United States except the President. General H:m-:i ashing tongue of him to talk valiantly as a leader R. A. Boggess has come down from Sul TR S 2 ribune Bullding | . cianed to make it known that this treaty pro- | in the movement to save France and the rest of the phur cek and is a guest at the Occiden tal. olithe Tewg: Rev. D. G. Mackinnon has come do from Stockton and is a guest at the Do buy their | nations from the cosmopolitan plutecracy ghty of jaw in the Dreyfus fight, and vides that chattel slaves in the Sulus ma CHICAGO NIWS STANDS. | freedom. He says that the Sultan objected to this, man Wouse;, P O News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; | He has been m Fremont Houso, Audit Hotel - b S anheasedlby inserting oviso tha o | ha e been a Samson he wi 7 2t iavahay dental. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. ‘ but was appeased by inserting the proviso that the | had he been a Samson he 'wmh] with that ja \Aln\c ‘l_ ey e T StueYaMert st Jlotel; A, Drentaso, 3L Unlon Square; slave must buy his frcedom at the market price. As | slaughtered thousands. When the Court of Cassa- of e toedny's military. arrivals at th urray 1 Hote | . i ‘. esteraay. < TRk 3 4 . | the slave-owner makes the market and puts his price | tion ordered a new trial for Dreyfus the vehement A Occidental. \,\Mum.l;nL.h_ IS 12:-5». Welllagton Hotel | ;00 a slave whom he wishes to sell, the benefit of | Guerin resolved to act. He organized'a band, which St. Louis First in the Field With the New Device. Judge J. A. -Sanborn of Yuba City and ST ENGURT, Yarstnondants this clause to the chattel is of a questionable nature. | was something like a brass band, something like a e slot oHorséieas [ JuGEe JAW SDa¥ls bf Tulasesre both reg. - 5 «y- 1s¢ to ll e chattel l‘ fa que _--l_ ”‘ e b & s g R _flll“~ sor ; LS b HE‘ iulxlrvmnhile street sweeper is the latest device in the way o S S e ey ANCH OFFICES527 Montgomery street, corner Clay | [ ie slaves in this cox . before emancipation, were | wind band, something like a jewsharp and something vehicle uses. ' C. D. Daly, a Eureka capitalist, is stay- To St. Louis belongs the credit of introducing the new contrivance. The | = = T30 Bop o0 copllatlit & star open U 30 o' 9:30 o'cloc 200 Hayes streat, open until S o he 10 oh The aster ould a ¢ 3 e 3 0 vas dyv i = i o m‘;m-ur street, open untll 9:30 always given the same right H“‘ ,m" “: el ‘,I;Ll 4 ?"‘";I "“‘“"'I .h s ; r;’s“hf‘c bodygt ‘“?“ automobile is of ordinary construction save that the big broom wh;el xr; P e and the instances were | determined on revolution, and when it saw approach- ar is operated by elec ‘hi g 0 be more effective than 1 3 - J PP the rear is operated by electricity, which is found to hiiaat Clinie and Kaphael Welll have c'clock. 615 Larkin street. open untll 9:30 o'clock, | Ways let a slave buy himself, | Mission streat, open untll 10 o'clock. £891 Market | numerous in which a slave would buy himself and his | ing a body of police it took not the field, but Guerin's | the brus epended upon the wagon solely for propulsive power. eturned to the city after- a deli It was thought at first that the automobile swéepers would not be altogether | FEIMIBET "0, € P s, L 0 © i street, corner Sixteenth, open until ® o'clock. 518 | o gl b g SheoH e hare RO oI 2 o ; B Mission strest, open until 9 o'lock. 108 Eteventh | Wil and children, but this did not soft ? the hard | house, fortified itself A\‘n\l \'\\llcd from the window Dracticabls, andithe' firat one was sent out as a sart?of experfment. o ; street, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty- | features of jon to the minds of the anti- | upon the people to strike for their altars and their "o the surprise of many the new device proved to be so efficacious that thelr | Professor C. A. Copf general use in large cities is thought to be only a question of time. | from Stanford for a she second and Kentucky streets, open until ® o'clock. | Jon ST 3 h : slavery Republ . Guerin and hiberty. i es - — e ¥ 2 i e 5 B e 2 Following them will undoubtedly come automobile watering carts and per- and is a guest at the MUSEMENTS. platiorm declare that polygamy and slavery were the | The police declined to treat Guerin serously. In-| 4 000% Ctomebile i P elan ety BEE RS twin relics of barbarism | stead of battering down his door and dragging him In fact, the ho from the East, where he went d has come visit to the cits insti ans, who bravely made their first | hom h carts. loss sweeper is but one factor in a long line of mercantile | ago to attend to private busine P, ) | The Civil War was the costly means employed to | squealing through the streets to prison. they 'simply | uses to which automobiles will be put 2 5 ! 5 | \ G e . o 53 P et B3 The new sweeper is entirely s S 2d performs its duties more thor- [own. ¢ Atk B [put an end to slavery and all of its incidents, and | put a guard around his house, shut off his gas and | gughly than the heavy, cumbersome carts which are hauled up and down our Wallace Dinsmore ‘and J. C. Campbell, Cay B 2 million of men had fallen in battle and four | water, refused admittance to his baker, his butcher | thoroughfares at night with the accompanying rattle of horses’ hoofs on cobble- wo prominent ng men of Marysvill A . billions of treasure had been spent in:the struggle, it] and his grocerymap, ;and: leit himto harangue his{/sistoues and ths hoarse shonts of men enigiog Ciom, Sl 5 . ¢ was by am nt written into the Federal constitu- | band on the virtues of holding the fort upon an = —————— = = = Judge J s " nd " that slavery and involuntary servitude are for- | empty stomach | ¥ Grand. w Oty ¢ Ma {s streots bidd United States “and all places subject to | From the start Guerin has been dissatisfied with DOES ADJUTANT SEAMANS SV s i AR s g e their such treatment. He issued on the first day of the | W on the day following the police, aided by the army, | Sk SENE | The NCE on a Time there rei Phrygia a King named Midas. He was {man, what Artemus Ward would havecal ommodating Ct He kept Open House for all the Gods of High Ol nd made it a Point to ympus, and give feed them Nk every occasion to Tic their Vanity and siege a manifesto to Paris in which he declared that | BARBER NEED A HOLE Sea | 1 | Teg tre. lippines and to extend t Tt ne Islands. The wot d storm his fortress home and the Parisians 1 nd | and promised if they did would sce how a hero can die. He invited one 1 to attend the sacrifice, save him he would die for them avowed purpose of asserting our pu of the Pt out the cost of cone Good Thing Out o us, Dionysius, who is th th a show wort e price of admissio | ren | i The great day ¢ i he ce thing fOb8 (B AT BInaL Uay G DSy DOES NOthing. | Racchus, endowed I Transmuting Everything He touched of th ore sympathetic of the crowd flunz | into 1 and put in most of His Time for the the Waste ces of Hi: e was compelled to drink Nitric s Tofich had turned to Gold The God did 1 it not been that Hi M next By re: ough the open ed and was well loaves of bredd and canned luxuries ty Davs mi Fact Dous 1 Midas might never have dows and Guerin feasted and t ot the w1 at B \ccord- | grown sad Of course, like he has satisfied with hi Day by day, however, t it is borrowed er as well as thinner. On Saturday son X a variant | of his friends undertook to throw a i until He was Ward McAllister Th on English | a five-pound loaf of bread through the window. but hings w the one X h 1 ) - s 1 noted for the M Brand of Ca Ve s canon law sed, and the police confiscated the leg and the | (igars had bee after Him—got i p Warm Member on the F hen Bishop | loaf as contraband of war Dewey receive into ty heart of the revolutionist nearly broke merous wives e witnessed the confiscation. He had recourse | that Mic had no In the nincteenth century you trx to starve peo- | ooas and € e Roea SRl X 1048 Hesitation e to his never-failing tongue. was pro pro Midas, and Swore Revenge. That Night whi ngry God replaced the Roval Ears with and looked into His F al Nightcap. He concealed Mida con- ple. It is disgraceful. You.” he added, addressing Apollo was rent. | the policemen, “you ought to have more heart than :h":““‘\‘f‘\" & the and ought to give us back our provi o M any case, I w the first time my o hun AT ¢ hungry police passes out of was to t the or @ Poor Barber to keep. He was bendin pair He w oes, and hol¢ | way between the two: b CALIFORNIANS PETITION THE GOVERNMENT | Ask That the Expert Begin in This State His Investigation of cum—*"—‘ the Irrigation Problem. of our waters are on tributio ore thoroug e Dreyius ed world and the verg od business houses a | Press Clipping Bureau . gomery strest. Telephone Main L2 S e Pacific Bank Case. 3 w matenal one ton of 7000 feet J. J. Valentine’s Position. Modesto 3 . nto abont.230 toas VA newspaper stock ht of paper, sued a p Philippis there. the fore d Tt k t & o gradl ) d in replnting WAETE | . iine in their ranks. Of all WHAT WiLL THE VERDICT 822 a reasonable care be jrom wasteful destruction FARALLONE EGGS—W. 5 ey = S trees '1‘-».&.'-1 been removed. It is not so much the cut N-u.flfl\‘mleéa:;:z shor «5} Bave What are e made by the directors to achieve 3| ting of trees ecessary purposes that threatens | St and as he obuis of b I 3§ ce in the work of the wear will | the country a complete s of its forests, as ¥ Titie sok M“" et = ho what 2 notable exposition the neglect to d st fires and the abandon- A QUOTAT! ™ rur:i’g:! .:\::e :T,‘ I‘l’:,‘:vfi:: te fe when its advantages are thor | ment of lands B the best trees bave been Dan Bumms Wasnt in It 2 asked for. mamely— | | Secemulate) sreat wealth. W vaus e b and fully :'.u{!ej:se of by the pro- removed to the recurring fires that sweep away the | st from | finasctal “:“‘;H;J*';a?x.g“ i i e b3 1 D heaogs g factarers of the Sate. There is no younger growth. R e e SPECJULATE: ; 3 el e g o annual faic should not attract thou- ve civilization which brings sbout a destruction | San Francisco. It is slso stated that the Bl“" SPEWU‘E W@BUY» re “diviee” healer, sectred the mucleas of -‘i"-\-‘ of isitors irom aif parts of the coast. [t orests must provide for their reproduction or it E""u‘;”“’;‘:&? u;:eficnmrc:fif Sonesis | several places Inm Sam Francisco where | C2rnese. Rocketalir anil il xwll!’p' e his photographs. He mighe | S100d be an exposition of all the latest attainments perish of the consequences of its folly. The de. | 320 commen decency. which s, perhage. | parents who are forved to go omt “ta ek | Sikee suefe fovtmen fn ol Chllte) ake e people how fo sup-| . Y form of industry, so that 2 man who desires | vastation of spruce forests is but an item in the gen- ::;fi:a‘;i";;":fifim Burns had Doth. | to be cared for at @ small &’?:‘-_‘" g .’;flf%rz B ,’;;,?f;.])"’,“:,:,m:n":‘.“.(. e to keep posted om the developments of his calli 1 = is rommi & i P op: s of his calling | eral account that is runming against ©s im 2 treat- BADGES—M.. Cus. sLasce fflvfll‘afl""* A ES-M.. ity. The Legiskuture | chased NO WA GRS S 9 2 | would attemd it 2 « o bl x » ks bave been mixed up in the :;3:«:1 rjc:h»;n; i..f;b: N“: Bysienss 1 Lo the is. Either we must enter on the |/ VEBS TO CORRESPONDENTS. 3t its fnst held session passed 2 law do. fure. Semd fum aus S [Fsiss been m he | study of the exhibits woul seful as well as in- | work of preserving forests withomt delay. or the next| STEAMBOAT RACE-T. P. City. The CSFPE it & mistemeanmcr for any per- | Bedr @7 sTory ‘ Chitef of Police Lees scems | teresting to him. 3 = N | | som. " mot - | generation of Americans will have to pay dearly |T2c® between the R E. Lee and the o m; mm,md ANY society, 10| Lo on CONSUIBNTD Ul WD 6 i are decoys. { Whatever may be the future of the fir, it is cer- for e T e e e e % = | It was paseed o prevent frands & Jctetr- | TRANS FQRIATAIN <o, = —— frowe New | gosing cm memibers of orders or socie- | 2383 Parma mumws. Sk BFANES,.