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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30 Tall ‘Y:GL'ST 30, 189(,;‘ JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. PUBLICATION OFFICE......Market and Third Sts.. S. F Telephone Main 1868, EDITORIAL ROOMS.. 217 to 221 Stevenson Street Telephone Matn 1874. PATILY CALL (incl PAILY CALL (inc DAILY CALL (Including DAILY CALL—By Si NDAY CALL Oge CALL One Year. unday Call), Call), 3 months OAKLAND OFFICE... ROGNESS, ing, Marquette Building, C. GEORGE Mansger Forcign Adver: NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: . €. €, CARLTON........ o ...Herald Square | NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE : | PERRY LUKENS JR.. ...29 Tribune Building i CHICAGO NEWS STANDS., ‘ Sberman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel | NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. i Waldorf-Astoria ‘Hotel; A. Erentano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel. | | | WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE ..Wellington Hotel o\ L. ENGLISH, Correspondent. ! spect and much BRANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery street, corner Clay open untll 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes strect, open until 9:30 o'clock. 639 McAllister street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission street, open untll 10 o'clock. 2291 Market street, corner Sixteenth, open until 9 o'clock. 2518 Mission street, open until Q o'clock. 106 Eleventh street, open untli 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twemty- second and Kentucky streets, open untlil 9 o'clock. AMUSEMENTS. Paul Jones.” i ater—Vaudeville every afternoon 4 Fllis streets—Spectalties. ces, et trict No. 1—Races to-day. to John W. Slade, Saturday | nto—September 4 to 16. Fair and Philippine Ex- | S ———S———— AUCTION SALES. THE CANAL AND THE SHIPPING BILL. m has been niore It is recog- lefeated by dil- t h ) setting forth | lost to the ships of other na foreign carryving Ivance statem s to sinion.” ts for the Argumen it doubt! garded nsy cobweb, Re 1 to sweep it a There is n isthmus to in i e Guli the Atlantic ¢ it says, and yet we do not of those ports. It draws 1c that our Eastern through the an open waterway . they would le there. ¢ re unquestionably true. An open is of no use to merce unless there be | rse it. We lose the trade of South | se our ship-owners cannot compet= | ubsidize wropean nations. The ping bill is therefore as mecessary as the canal but the Record will not tolerate that seli-evident comng n irom its own statements. It says: “Since | our foreign carrying t so cheaply by fc ! shippers cannot eigners erican undertake it without loss (necessitatir we are benefited, not ired. Our pers get full | e in the dered for the money it | costs. Why, then, should subsidies be granted in | order to make good losses to be unnecessarily in- answer to that ion is that foreigners do not carry our comm it could carry f T O nd, moreover, the for- more intent in de- eign and me er nt are veloping the trade of their own country than in pro- moting ours. The swiit upbuilding of German com- | merce and of German industries by the operation of sidized ocean vessels is a striking proof of what can be effected for the welfare of a ation by that policy. Before the grant of liberal aid to German tively small foi- s a rival | vessels the empire had but a comy eign commerce and was never dr to the Bri Now Germany is not only a r Great Britain in the trade of South America, but is actually competing in the British colonies and in the | red of ival of | Orient, where Great Britain had once almost | monop: of the foreign trade. According to Senator Frye the United States are | now paving to fore gners $100,000 a day for carrying | our commerce. It would surely be better to keep that money at home. If the Record will study the situa- tion it will perceive that the canal bill and the ship- ping bill are something more than administration measures. They are popular measures. The needs of the country require them, and the people demand them | e e e The official call for the great pow-wow on trusts, | | rett, | all the ¢ | against that city they were not delayed an | by a country campaign | 1808. | confiscating private property on land. | est esteem |Qice. which wears out patience and replaces it LET US HAVE FACTS. HE Portland advocate of imperialist and militarism. It is a paper of such ability that it can afford to argue Jregonian is the ablest Western i its case from the substantial and everlasting {basis of truth and facts. It is therefore more noticeable than in a weaker paper when it avoids facts and substitutes imagination oF invention. The American people are willing to make war and continue it at the order of their Government. They will so continue the war in the Philippines un- til they as the masters of their own Government choose to command it to cease the pushing of an ad- venture after they choose to see in it neither honor nor profit. The Oregonian'’s latest st on this imaginary foundation: ement of its case is base “We did not go ‘o | the Philippines for the purpose of dealing with the Pr pury insurgents or of helping them to gain their freedom. We went there to strike at Spain, with whom we were at war. The insurgents rendered us no real assistance in the capture Manila and the expulsion of Spain, for they were then, as now, too weak and cowardly to stand and fight. No people that possesses so little ghting quality can establish or maintain national in- dependence.” The North China Herald, published in Shanghai, in its issue of January 16, 1809, prints a lecture given in that city on January 12z by Hon. John Bar- who one of the most active coad- jutors of the Oregonian advocating im- perialism and the conquest of the Philippines. In that lecture Mr. Barrett said: For Aguinaldo and his supporters I am free to say 1 cympathy. Having known him and well, 2nd watched him during a is in have some most of his officer 1 that has elapsed since I saw him put leng period i aboard of a dispatch boat in Hongkong last M permission of Admiral Dewey and Consul General Wildman, for the.direct purpose of going to Cavite to organize an army and temporary government, and make war on the Spaniards in co-operation with the him American forces, it is impossible to condemn He organized without reserve, as so many have done. an army out of nothing, which developed into a force of 30,000 men, armed with modern rifles. He captured anish garrisons on Luzon outside Manila, to proceed troubled organized so that when the Americans were ready Moreover, he ha government which has practically administered the island since the American occupation fairs of th of Manila, which was certainly better than the former administration by Spain. He has organized a Cabi- { net and Congress, 2nd has among his advisers men of acknowledged ability as international lawyers, | while his supporters include most of the prominent hy natives, all of which proves pos- lities of self-government that we must consider.” An officer in Dewey's fleet writes on January 31 of year: “Agu o landed at Cavite on May 20, He created a native army in a short time and These were ly commenced to win victories immediate ed detach-t took fort at the time to us astonishing. for he defe; fter detachment of the Spanish army \fter fort, captured regiments with arms and ammu- a little time he had captured every nd of Luzon, or had driven Iz I have witnessed whole battalions of Spanish soldiers Roque. nition, and i Spanish soldier on the is Time and again those not captured into Mar marched into San Beiorz as prisoners gust 13 these insurgents had actually captured the whole of Luzon, except Manila, from the Spaniards. After taking all of Luzon, with the exception named, they conquered the Spanish in the island of Negros and also in Cebu, and before we reached Iloilo they had that city and the whole island of P: ay, on which These places are, after Luzon, the most important in the archipelago. More remarkable to t Aguinaldo’s military actions, which every- it is situated. me where have been uniformly and tremendously success- has been the organ > island ful. jon which he has perfected governs and rules them, except in Manila and I h visited his government at Malolos, and when meeting t ed, courteous people, ich now roughout th Cavite. fe h these well-dre intelligent faces, the idea that they were assed from my mind forever, and I have e looked upon them as a people who should be ted when their fate and interests are at stak consu Now either this officer, who wrote from Iloilo only four days before hostilities began, tells the truth or he That he tells the lies ruth is known by the Ore- gonian and by everybody else. Why, then, base a position on the untrue statement made by that paper? Why not admit the historical fact of the conquest of the three islands by the Filipinos, with the unimpor- tant ¢ ila and Cavite? 1e American people are not traitors for wanting facts and not fiction as the basis of their action, and in the end it will go harder with policies and their tion of N | advocates who urge a certain course upon statements that are not true. When the Russians sought at the Peace Conference | to protect private property at sea they probably did not anticipate that Russians would soon be caught The guns of a British gunboat on Chinese waters proved eloquent pleaders the other day for the of private rights. sanctity THE LAW’'S DELAYS. HE National Bar Association is in session in Juffalo. Tts president, Mr. Joseph Choate, is absent at his duty as Embassador to the Court . James. He sent to the meeting an address, in which he said: “The law's delays, which seem constantly on the in- crease, may well engage the earnest attention of the lost to t the inevitable tendency to elaborate pro- association, and no opportunity should be counte: cedure and unnecessarily multiplied appeals, which cause a large proportion of these delays.” Mr. Choate struck at the root of disorders which | are not only causing a less respect for the body of the law but are rousing a feeling of discontent the courts. In the older States, especially in New ngland, the law and the courts are held in the high- because the delays in administering civil and criminal justice are less there than in the newer or less organized conditions of junior States. The appalling increase in mob vengeance and in horrible lynchings originates in popular impatience with the slow progress of judicial justice. Tt is wrong | to attack the courts except as a part of the bar. Courts must hear appeals. They must entertain an applica- tion for a dilatory -writ, and, though they promptly deny it. an appeal lies from their judgment in denial, and the purpose of delay is accomplished. In cases of homicide the enlargement of the list of pleas in defense is responsible for the modern slowness of jus- with popular and awful passion, leading to mob violence. | Beginning with the first plea made in an American | court, of temporary or emotional insanity, to escape Tt would | punishment for homicide, which occurred in the case seem that the people of the United States were al- | of the killing of Key by Daniel E. Sickles, there has ready “overeducated” on the subject. grown up an elaborate system for the protection of which will soon be held in Chicago, declares the pur- pose of the convention to be “educational.” murderers, which has crowded our jails with that class of law-breakers, who, by the mistaken mercy of the law, survive their victims for years, and in a high per- }centage of cases escape punishment altogether. It is | possible now to get a judicial inquiry running back to the remote ancestry of a murderer to find an | heredil'ary tendency to sporadic insanity. In cases, by no means few, this search for purely imaginary taint | involves the long delay necessary to climb the family | tree in other countries, to find some gibbering and | tongue-chewing relative who is supposed to have | transmitted, from epilepsy or cretinism or atrophy of | the thyroid gland, a homicidal tendency to a third or | fourth generation. Other means of delay are fur- | nished by the modern practices of the bar. Under our duality of government, the radix of certain rights being in the Federal constitution, the habit of going means of evading justice to the slayers of men. It may be said for the great body of the bar that these devices are most generally resorted to by minor prac- | titioners, who are apt to use a celebrated murder i case, that stays long in the newspapers, as a means of | self-advertising. To deal with such parasites of the | profession is the duty of bar associations, and the 1 inspiration may well come from the National Asso- | | | | ciation. Mob violence is the odium of the United States. § In Europe its frequency and its horrible details have | given rise to a popular belief that we do not live | under a government of law. Our large and old cities have not been exempt from it. A few years ago the jail and courthouse in Cincinnati were nearly wrecked by a mob which desired to clean out “mur- derers’ row,” filled with slayers who were mocking at the gallows. The lynching of the Italians in New Orleans, and of a negro in Washington City, add to the impression that there is no law. The Federal Government has paid a half million of dollars in the |last ten vears to other Governments as indemnity for the murder of their subjects by American mobs. Lynching has its origin in disrespect for the law. Wherein those who administer the law are responsible for this disrespect there must be reform. The next step must be the prompt punishment of the mobs which break the law by substituting their acts for the action of the courts. These are subjects that should enlist the immediate | attention of the bar in its national, State and local organizations. the position i the reform which will permit a prompt judicial final- ity, Beyond which there is no appeal nor oppor- tunity for delay in the enforcement of judgment. Of | course the law intends that a man on trial {for his life must have ample opportunity for defense. Anything less than this would be inhuman. He is arraigned with the legal presumption of innocence, and his guilt must be proved. But this need not require years to do. His opportunity is ample between com- mitment and preliminary examination and the deci- sion of the trial jury. When the case has been re- viewed on one appeal to the court of last resort his opportunity has been ample, and the rights of so- | ciety are entitled to enforcem — Washington authorities are disposed to allow trade ! concessions in the Philippines to remain as they were during Spain’s dominion. There several other things in connection with the islands that Uncle Sam they were before the battle of are would like to see Manila Bay. Several ambitious Peruvi tion the other day. are in jail. They say the insurrection was only a farce, anyway. They may entertain a different opinion of the affair after the Government officials play their parts. L take n spirits started a revolu- , and now they A QUESTION OF EVIDENCE. L, Chief quoted ile judgment ORD RUSSE Britain, cently to pronounce of Great said under- Dreyius Justice having would not on the is as re- that he w c so far as he had read it there had been no testimony against Dreyfus sufficient, when judged by rules of evidence prey t Britain, :nglish magistrate in holding him for trial. words, the great mass of testimony taken by the French courts would be ruled out in British courts as utterly inadmissible, and that which remained would be dismissed as inadequate to sustain the iling in Gres In other charge. It is probable a similar declaration would be made by almost any eminent lawyer in America as well as in Great Britain who should be asked for his opinion on the subject. The witnesses who have been heard during the trial at Rennes have'in almost every case stated opinions rather than facts. Hardly a single one of them has testified to any material point in the case as a matter of his own knowledge. Many of ! them have declared they believe Dreyfus to be guilty, but when cross-questioned it has turned out the be- lief is a so-called “moral conviction” rather than a conclusion drawn from facts of assured knowledge. Nearly all the positive evidence in the case sub- mitted by the prosecution has turned out to be either perjury or forgery. Up to this time no less than eleven documents involved in the case have been de- | nounced as forgeries, and instances the | forgers, like Esterhazy and Colonel Henry, have ad- mitted the forgery. In the face of such disclosures as these it is still permitted under French jaw for a man to go upon the witness-stand and swear to his conviction that Dreyfus is guilty, and to add that the in some conviction is based upon-a belief in the authenticity of these discredited documents. About the one and on!y argument of the prosecu- tion is that semeboay sold the secrets,of the French army and that Dreyfus is the only man who could have done it. “If Dreyfus be not guilty, then who is?” That is the question the prosecution asks and | which its witnesses repeat. idence such as would be admissible under American or British law has not been forthcoming at any stage of the proceedings. e st e e The local murderer, who shot a man and a woman to death because he was firmly convinced that they were worthless, might sympathize with the opinion that the hangman could, advantageously to the rest ! of us, finish the job. S An Ttalian anarchist has reached New York and says he intends to remain three months organizing clubs of anarchists. He will probably find a head- quarters in the Tomt William Jennings Bryan intends to dignify the solitudes of the Yosemite with his presence. And we were congratulating ourselves that we were not in the windy belt. China seems to be an outcast of the family of na- tions. Her brow-beating relatives, so the latest dis- patches indicate, will not even permit her to mind her own business. 3 e After the feast comes the nightmare and after the reception week comes the municipal campaign. to the Supreme Court of the United States upon some ! constitutional question has more recently become the | e or criticize the courts of another nation, yet | | Members of the judiciary feel keenly | SC€NE. which they are placed, and will hail | | 1 | i | | 4 HOBBY UPON HOBBY. Democracy’s Grand Entry on the Campaign of 1900. —New York Tribune. of the State will welcome the returning California boys. He gives numerous lamo | excuses, but none of, them will be accept- | ed by the citizens of this great common- | $ealth, If he gave more attention to his | official business and less to landing Dan Burns in the United States Senate and 3 E presantagives, to, fat, po- ;llt)l‘«g;sgflvgggsfi!a *1Egal ¢ holiday <would have been declared. His term of offica to date has been full of disappointments to | the people, and they have learned to ex- pect just such things from Gage. e Success of the Naval Parade. Oakland Tribune. San Francisco Bay has never presented | 2 more charming spectacle than when the | Sherman and the escort fleet entered the | harbor yesterday afternoon. The yachts | and excursion boats were a mass of glow- | ing color, and the success of the arrange- ments is a big feather in the cap of ('om- | modore John D. Spreckels, who managed | the water pageant. AROUND THE CORRIDORS W. R. Forman of Antioch is staying at the Grand. H. A. Jastro, a leading banker of Bak- ersfleld, is at the Grand. W. C. Good, a prominent attorney of Santa Rosa, is at the Lick. J. Finlayson, a prominent business man of Ross Valley, is at the Grand. L. D. Jacks, a well-known merchant of Santa Rosa, is a guest at the Grand. W. H. Clary, a well-known mining man of Stockton, i3 registered at the Lick. E. Gest, a well-known railroad official of Nevada, is a guest at the California. John M. Streining, proprietor of a big cannery in Santa Rosa, is a guest at the Grand. Frank W. Griffin, a mining superinten- dent of Oroville, is staying at the Call- | fornia. William Palmtag, & prominent mer- COMPLIMENTS FOR THE MILLS COLLEGE, ALAMEDA CO. CAL _ PRESIDENT'S OFFICE, Editor The Call—Dear Sir: ‘<Souvenir Edition of The Call'' CALL'S SOUVENIR EDITION. AUGUST 28, 1899. Kindly send me two copies of the of last Thursday. It seems to me remarkable that you should be able to so picture the whole wonderful I remain, yours truly, %i;. EXTRA EDITION e OF... “CALL” OUVENI e Owing to the great demand for the Souvenir Edition, it be- came necessary to run off another issue of this great paper. Agents, newsdealers and the public. in general can now procure any number of these papers by placing their orders at Call Business _| T ok ok ok ok ok ek e sk ok sk ke ok ok ok ok ok ok ok sk ke k ok ki ke ok ok ok ok ok ok ek kok ok ok R THE CALL’S SOUVENIR EDITION PRAISED BY THE PRESS \ © Woodland Democrat. For the first time on the Pacific Coast the San Francisco-Call utilized the wireless telegraphy to announce the arival of the transport Sherman, having on board the First California Volunteers. /The Call's test was probably the most successful application of wireless telegraphy ever made in the United States. Lightship No. 70 is anchored outside of the Golden Gate. Sensitive instruments were put aboard of this ship, in charge of a competent electrician. Like instruments were put in the basement of the Cliff House. In the sending station at the lightship was a Ruhmkorff cofl, which transmitted the waves from the electric dynamos on the lightship. The Morse characters were made by the opening and closing of an ordinary telegraph key. This charged an aerial wire which was suspended eighty-two feet in a vertical direction from the top- mast of the lightship. Electric waves were pulsated through the air and were recelved through a coherer from a similar wire suspended from the top of the Cliff House at the recelving station. This coherer actuated the Morse relay, which in turn worked the ink-writing register, making the characters on the tape. The Call's achlevement was a remarkable one. No doubt it cost a big sum of money, but Mr. Spreckels seems determined to spare nefther labor nor expense in his efforts to put The Call in the front rank of journalism. San Diego Union. The arrival of the First California volunteers afforded the San Francisco Call an opportunity to score two remarkabie journalistic triumphs. The first of these was a souvenir edition which for elegance in design and illustration and general excellence has never been surpassed. The second was a novelty of en terprise, which will go on record as one of the great “scoops” of progressive American journalism. To obtain the first tidings of the expected troopship The Call had recourse to that latest marvel of nineteenth century invention, the wireless telegraph. The task of employing this new appliance of telegraphy, yet in its infancy, involved no little labor and painstaking. The result was a bril- liant success, and The Call was first to announce the coming of the vessel and the incidents of the vovage. The feat is the more remarkable because this is the first time that wireless telegrabiny has been employed by a journal to ob. tain news several hours sooner than it could have been secured by any other means. Wasp. The Call completely wiped out the Examiner by the excellence of its illus- trations of the parade in celebration of the return of California’s heroes. The Examiner attributed its failure to the breakdown of its press. This is not so. It was the breakdown of its talent. The Call is absorbing the best artists in the city, and is rapidly becoming famed for the beauty and merit of its fllustra- tions, Willfe is beaten at his own game. Redding Free Press. The San Francisco Call's souvenir edition in honor of the returning volun- teers was one of the handsomest, most appropriate and entertaining newspape: ever published by that or any other newspaper house of the Pacific Coasa el Sacramento Bee. The Call certainly eclipsed all its cotemporaries in its issu gotten out in honor of the returning California Volunteers. of Thursday, Jack-in-the-Box Gage. Windsor Herald. 8o Governor Gage has at last announced that he will be on hand in San Francisco and will participate in the reception of the returning California volunteers. Gage has been a sort of Jack-in-the-box f Burns ever since his inception nggroflt‘):: and he is not building up a very brilliant and satxslacwryrrekcorrfl as a consequence. - ; m?éeasunton_’rlmea. ur mis overnor refuses to declare legal holiday the day on which the p:oplz chant of Hollister, is Tegistered at the California. H. Wrightson, one of the biggest vin- | yardists in Napa County, is staying at the California. | E. L. Heller, a well-known merchant of New York, accompanied by his wife and | children, are registered at the Palace. A. J. Brander, a heavy dealer in guano, arrived from Clipperton Islands a few days ago and is now registered at the Occidental. Mrs. M. A. Wilcox and her daughter, Mrs. M. W. Longstreet, and Alfred H. ‘Wilcox, prominent society people of Los Angeles, are staying at the Palace. —_— e CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Aug. 20.—D. E. Hopkins of San Francisco is at the Holland. Sam N. Rucker of San Jose is at the Hoffman. A. R. Patrick of San Francisco is at the Imperial. Mrs. A. A. Waterhouse of San | Francisco is at the Westminster. The following San Franciscans sailed to-day on the North German Lloyd line steam- ship Saale for BEurope: Mrs. Gretchen Meyer, Misses Adele and Dora Meyer and Master Herman Meyer. | e — | CALIFORNTANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—W. E. Pleck- er of San Francisco is at the Metropoli- tan. J. A. Whitacre and wife of San Francisco are at the Raleigh. | e ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. | LANGUAGE OF STAMPS—C. R., City. For the language of stamps see Answers to Correspondents, July 9, 1899, the last in the published list of answers. PRISON DIRECTORS—N. C. C., City. The Board of State Prison Directors meet at San Quentin on the second Saturday of each month. The Governor is not a | director of the board. | THE SHERIDAN—Subscriber, City. It having been reported that the transport Sheridan left Manila on the 1lth of Au- gust, she ought to reach this port about the 9th or 10th of September. NOTATION—Subscriber, City. The dec- | imal system for computing superseded the | old style numerals, and was adopted be- | cause of being much more simple and comprehensive than the numerals. | THEATERS—Reader, City. If you will g0 to the reference room of the Free Pub- lic Library and call for the World Al- manac for 1899, you will, in that book, on page 481, find a list of all the theaters and | opera_Houses in Manhattan and _Bronx boroughs, which include New York Clty, | together ‘with the name of the manager of each. | “CERITAS"—H. W. City. There is neither in Latin nor Spanish any such as “ceritas.” The nearest is “cer- which is Spanish for “a war stone’ | cellow agate.” There is also the word “cerastes” from the Greek, which is used to designate the horned snake. It y Milton in Paradise Lost, X, | EUCHRE-W. H., Soquel, Cal. In a | four-handed game of euchre A and B | partners play against C and D. C deals | and turns trumps. All pass, C turns down | trump and B names it. In such a case A | cannot play alone against C and D. If A | should take up or name the trump and | play alone against C or D, and the one | playing against A should take three tricks it wouid_count one point for C and D, If A should take but three tricks it would count but one for his side. — e Kelth's new pattern hats, 808 Market. i e e | Caglace fruit S0c per 1b at Townsend's.® e s s i | ) 5 . to the ont- C Special information supplied daily business houses and public men by Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's): 510 M | gomery street. Telephone Main 1042, | o T Chinatown Squad’s Record. The splendid record of Sergeant Dono- van and his squad in Chindtown was shown from a report handed to Chief Lees yesterday. From April 20, when the squad commenced operations, until Monday when‘ theydwe(r: re‘liio\‘ed. they made 831 arrests, an e fines o mounted to soas0, > 200 forteitures —_————— “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup” Has been used for fifty years by milllons of mothers for their children while Teething with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays Pain, cures Wind Colle, regu- lates the Bowels and is the best remedy for Diarrhoeas, Whether arising from teething or other causes. For sale by druggists in every part of the world. Be sure and ask for Mra. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, Zc a bottle, —_———— Very Low Rates East. On August 29 and 30, the popular Sants Fe route will sell tickets to Philadelphla and re- turn at the very low rate of $38 8. Occa- sion, National Encampment, G. A. R. Call at 628 Market st. for full particulars. — e HOTEL DEL CORONADO-Take advantage of the round trop tickets. Now only $60 by steamship, including fifteen days' board at hotel; longer stay, §2 50 per day. Apply at 4 New Montgomery street, San Francisco,