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SEPTEMBER 23, 1899, O CALL, SATURDAY FRANCI THIL A STRUCTURAL DIFFICULTY. cels Hill, as greatly as does that fish, the red snapper, excel a sucker, At a recent conventicle of the Governors Gene_ral of the New Democracy, so new as to be “fresh,” in- deed, he was warned that his snap in Massachusetts might fire a gun heard around the Union—a sort of an alarm gun that would start a reaction against the present owners of the party, He was requested to give a reason for his snap, and he frankly declared that it was in order to get a Bryan delegation, which might be doubtful in a State convention next year. This admission is of great importance. It does not imply that the 60,000 incomunicado Democrats of Massachusetts are going to become comunicado ORIENTAL TRADE. experience Mr. John Barrett earned the title of “an expert in oriental trade.” He appears before Chambers of Commerce to declaim on that subject, but he leaves one in doubt as to the real ob- ject of his mission. In his address to the merchants of this city on Thursday he advertised the fact that he subscribed to the Dewey monument fund and the fund to receive the First California, and then seemed to assert that our oriental trade depends on imme- | diately electing a Senator from California. Mr.. B.ar- | rett is a gentleman who enjoys large and muitiplied PPTE\TBER 23, 1809 »\11 RDAY W E don’t know by what extent of commercial 'JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprister SUSSESUY SOl SOUPEERUTEN Address < Al Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. e PUBLICATION OFFICE ......Market and Third Sts, S. F Teiephone Main 1868. EDITORIAL ROOMS ..2I7 to 28I Steveneon Street Telephone Main 1574 DELIVERED BY CARRIERS, 16 CENTS PER WEEK. Eingle Coples, 5 cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: PAILY CALL (including Sunday Call), one year. .c.x contacts with public men; we do not accuse him of ;'«'l!'h the party. But it means that there ar; signs 31 AILY CALL (includis day Call), € ths. 3.4 atigue am vi vho consti- QAILY CALL :n:m::\:: :::a:\.; (L;n;_ 3 .:;::h. 1.80 | this, for he admits it, and he said that throughout the g ong the starving concentrados W tute Mr. Williams’ forces. What he can compel them to do now he fears he could not make them do next year. This Massachusetts symptom is not local; | East the Senators and Representatives whom he had the honor and privilege of knowing had unanimously | deplored the fact that California has only one Sena- ':tor, and, inferentially, had r sted him to include DAILY CALL—By Single Month .... CALL One Year. All postmasters ars authorized fo recelv. mubsoriptions. Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. it is ©OAKLAND OFFICE.... <sveeesesss--908 Broadway | our Senatorship in his great mission of setting things {;eneral_ There is a growing panic among the Bryan C. GEORGE KROGNESS, ll'lghl He fears that only ther Senator from herc ‘?f"fzs-b Th]fy are not in fear of l.nvaslon.lbut arefiter- Manager Forelgn Advertising, Marquetto Building, | can dig the Nicaragua ca and is sure that we will | rified by the ‘prospect of defection. Being anxious that Mr. Bryan shall continue to add to the gayety | unless that canal is completed. of nations by again playing an engagement as “The For the present we take this part of his address,on imitation of a man running for President,” we have He pointed out as “an | t0 propose that snap conventions be held in all the States, in order to secure delegations that will pull open the vocal throttle of the boy orator, aged 44, and Chicago. | mourn for oriental commerce as those without hope NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON.. 5 -.Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: commerce for a brief PERRY LUKENS JR.......co0onoeene 20 Tribune Bullding | ;nomaly in transportation the fact that a great part of the American trade with the Orient is done from Nnommn Bl T.,um-m’,:‘ review. H CHICAGO NEWS STANDS. s Tt : 2 Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hoteli | New York, and not from Pacific ports, which are so | let his mind rest again while he talks. i e Bremont House; Atuitortuin Hotel. 2 dien o . ] | I 2o Weres much nearer,” and at the same time mixed another Fed ! NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. Senator and the canal together as a remedy. In the eagerness to get food supplies to the people 2 '3 o 81 Uni Bquare; > A 7 B Peub gy el e e o " |~ The west coast of South America lies east of New | of Porto Rico rendered destitute by the recent hurri- e i WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE......... Wellington Hotel York. When the ¢ is built that coast will be |cane the Government officials of the War Department :f‘ f d. L. ENGLISH, Correspondent. Bearet i New v than to San Francisco. There- | c]mnexl'cd a'forcxgn \"e<se] as a transport, but w.hcn i 1,'1 b BRANCH OFFICES—_S2T Montgomery street, comer Clay, | fore, if nearness is an element in the problem, New | the ship arrived the civil officers would not permit it %; open until 9:30 o'clock. 30C Hayes street, open un;l:; York will do the trs ie of that coast which we do now. | to unload because, being a foreign craft, it had no . a 930 o'clock. 630 McAlllster street, open untll 9: : b L : & o'clock. 51'(5 Larkin street, open unthl 930 o'clock. | Again, New York's trade with the Orient now has 1flght to carry goods fm_r.u one American port to ) f,:‘. * 1941 Mission street, open untll 10 o'clock. 22C" Market to go around Cape Ilorn or the Cape of Good Hope, | another. It was a beautiful snarl for a while, but it st — street, corner Sixteenth, open untll 9 o'clack. | is all right now. Valencla street, open untll 9 o'clock. 106 Eleventh street, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twemty- second and Kentucky streets, open until 9 o'clock, g of either continent, it Hercules and travels by the d the Suez ca When the Nicar- rancisco will be no nearer the Orient t now, but the distance from New York to the Orient will be cut one halfl It would Columbiu—"Marle Antoinetts” Monday evening, Septem- { SCCIn t Mr. Barrett cnrrfies his original system of { logic in international politics into his statement of commercial problem Perhaps the labor of travel in many countries and | the interesting and often thrilling personal expe- | riences involved, none of which he attempts to con- | have so occupied his time that he can only appear | or, avoiding this doubl passes the T Mediterranean agua canal is built San The Democratic donkey in Massachusetts made a wild attempt to upset the apple-cart at the State con- vention on Thursday, but failed, and George Fred Williams will drive in all right at the National Con- vention with the State delegation in his pocket. Vir- tually he has “got there” already. ars of AMUSEMENTS. Orpheum—Vaudeville. Tivoll hello.” THE ST. LOUIS RESOLUTIONS \.mm Opera-ho hutes, Zoo an Drum Major's Daughter.” Vaudeville every afterncon and Theates orner Mason and Ellis streets—Spectalties. Swimming Races, etc. ROM the anti-trust conference at St. Louis the public gets about what it expected—a set of difas had noleicnte resolutions denouncing trusts in good set terms subject that is of the | and demanding “the enactment and enforcement by = | the several States and the nation of legislation that sportation begins at the point ism“ adequately and fully define as crimes any at- anged roduced. The Orient | témpted monopolization or restraint of trade in any want Indian corn, raised in the Mississippi Val- {iine of industrial activity, with provisions for adequate | hmian canal is built it will go | punishment, both of the individual or the corporation | ippi River, through the canal and that shall be found guilty thereof, punishment to the rancisco will never see it. This ig COrporation to the extent of dissolution.” SALARY FUND. SELF-DEFENSE. fact that if New York control now the 1 Among the acts of remedial legislation proposed are T e \e Orient it is because within the | & Provision for publicity in corporate business, along There is apparently some little trouble | Cornelius J. Sullivan has at last been 2 g i e BT b heCok ahead of the Finance Committee of the | acquitted of murder. On August 27, 1898, zone of production that pours its surplus into that 22 A ccommended by Bourke LOCK- | Board of Education in the segregation | he ghot his stepfather, J. L. Pratt, in a city for export there are produced the articles of com- | 1an at Chicago, the subjection in every Stateof foreign of its funds for the current fiscal year. little house on Minna street, near Eighth. corporations to the same laws as are imposed upon At its meeting on Thursday the commit- | : : z s At its meeting v the our times he has stood trial for merce which oriental trade demands. San Francisco e outlined its funds as follows: e. The first, second and third | ceal, IT MAY NOT BE EASY TO CORRECT HIM, EVEN WHEN YOU KNOW HOW. —Chicago News. - in the upper air of commerce, e O parformanos o orron: to devote to that part of the Oakland Rac: >-day. at 30 or 31 it reaches its height,356 pounds. At the end of the thirty-first year it be- gins to decrease, slow at first, but surely; by the fortieth ar it has fallen to 348, 'and at the age of 50 it has fallen to 330 pounds. After that stre! £glh fails rap- idly until the weakness ol age Is reached. FLYING THE FLAG—A. 8., City. If an American orders a ship built on any foreign territory he must sail her under the flag of the territory on which she was built, and cannot sail her to the United States under American colors. She can carry the American flag by special act of Congress or by being rebuilt on American AUDITOR WELLS TO ABIDE BY THE LAW CORNELIUS SULLIVAN HAS BEEN ACQUITTED WILL ESTABLISH A TEACHERS iJUEY FINDS THAT HE ACTED IN SAN FRANCISCO DEWEY DAY. |icy and when an [fi\']fl{y proper effort was made to induce Ad- | down Missi al Dewey to touch his country first at San | 2W and ‘\?" to illustrate t isco and cross overland, giving his ad- ymen in the non-maritime States an op- ng to his due. These at they were made at all was more Am trade o onor him accordi e expectation that the grim old has a zone of production whose surplus comes here | those mcorpnrn!efl within the State; the DIEYEDton of M“:L‘,‘J’p“‘:nim = g sagreed, but a majority of each | territory to the extent of more than one- et Vil ould exchange his ship | fOF export. That zone is nearer the Orient than the | On¢ corporation from having another corporation as favored an acquittal. Judge Lawlor re- | Balf- it of the kings woulc xchan s shif 5 L, = e 2 Shlaben . A et i fused to discharge the prisoner and he ; e 3 . o |OTE C nstituent parts, orof owning g 3 for a pa s way to report at ial head. | one which outlets through New York, but if it does ”i "f ”I‘ L‘; 't“)‘ t part Ol otowiing ?lr cofin}:rollm | Samllen petinant was placed on trial a fourth time, before | Cal. glace fruit 50c per I at Townsend's. * oduce what the Orient wants nor consume what | the stock of another corporation engaged in the same uditor Wells, however, adheres to his | the following jury: Martin Joost, Charles | S e quarters. a- | HOf proguce whas Sativants ho SMtabiGs s b S ; bive to follow the law passed by the | Cate T st rnee Teao s Gharles | gpecial information supplied aatly to the Orient has to exchange, it might be next door to | OF @ competing business; the prevention of a corpora- | last Legislature with regard to teach ! e s LoEh “~ | business houses and public men the baum, William S. Redington, William T. Adams, Charles J. Wentworth, Wiiliam J. Conard, Roland H. Powell, Alfred J. Kennedy, Benjamin J. Upham and An- tonio Devoto. ng the treasures of those who rec , and are held to be sufficient com- pensation for the pains taken to let him know how ! we felt toward him. But has zll been done that San Francisco owes to 'hen poor old demented George I1I of Eng- mental helplessness, guarded y the great guns boomed mong their echoes mingled The stricken King, v the salutes were fired, Hong ave Fress Clipping Bureau (Allen's), sm gomery street. Telephone Mal; SR i Yesterday’s Insolvent. The jury retired at 11:45 o'clock yester- G. W. Dearborn, insurance agent, East salaries. That law provides that the Lz pervisors shall create a fund to be des- ignated teachers' salary fund, and shall ‘dmwrtlon to it an amount equal to the the oriental market and yet have no oriental trade. | tion from doing business in any State when it is a | Seaports, canals and oceans don’t trade with each | member of a pool or a trust in another State, and the other; as physical objects they have no exchanges. rcqmrcnmm that all capital stock of private corpora- previous year. The fund can be drawn They are the facilities for. use of peoples who trade | tions must be fully paid up. _ | pon for no other use, and if the Su- | day morning and fifteen minutes later re- | Onkland, $5338 2, assets, Inburance policy LN Ene i None of these suggestions are new and several of | pervisors fail in their duty the Auditor|turned with a verdict of not guilty. The“ for $3000. 3 A X 2 is authorized and directed to comply with | now free man was complimented by A Therefore, to swell our nrmnhl trade we dvvnt ncml ']-"m_ have been long under discussion. In particular | the law in their stead. sistant District Attorney Salomon on his B J . 2 : . | 5 he complimenter during four different to prodme more of what (1 e ()m xt consumes ‘,".1 some means of remedying the evil which has resulted “mber and Dervmhu salaries which | trials, Sullivan then left the court. consume more of what the Orient produces, and in | from permitting a corporation to obtain a charter in proportion as we do this our trade will swell. one State for the purpose of evading the laws of the ived sum expended for the purpose during the e Northern Pacific Railway. Upholstered tourist sleeper through to Bt. Paul every Tuesday night. No change. This car is nicely upholstered in leather and is ex- tremely comfortable In every respect. Pullman sleeping cars of the latest pattern on every were held up, amounting to $179,346, and ————— the fund which should be made this year ANSWERS ’I’O CORRESPONDENTS under the latest law is_$1,029, 99, which is §28.813 more than the Finance Committee | ————— Cheap Rates. September 28 to October 5 inclusive, the San- ta Fe Route will sell tickets to Chicago at very crisis of the nation’s the King cried: “It was The battle of Manila Bay & ; : Seahiohs i i s using £0 e ain. Tickets sold at lowest rates to all points 's in honor of the anniversary Nicaragua canal is not a factor in the oriental | State in which it purposes to do most of its business. | Rigeca MInE D¢ [hep purgose, | DUELS—G. In France the law | [as;. 7. K. Stateler, Gen. Adt. 638 Market st es won in the trade of this city. We want it built in order to profit- | The Southern Pacific Company of Kentucky has | contend that the law of the lnst Legis- 40€S not prohibit duels, but if one of the | san Francisco. {:\uuu is unconstitutional, and ‘Auditor | duelists is killed the survivor may be but | prosecuted for homicide and the relatives of the deceased may sue the survivor for damages. ny dueling is punish- able by fmprisonment. made the people of Ca rnia fairly familiar with the which can be made of that privilege of and of the importance of providing some ably export lumber, base ores and other of our do- mestic products which do not bear long rail transi But as far as our oriental contracts and South Ameri- | 1ls is also inclined to that opinion says that until the courts have p: upon the question there {s nothing for him to do but obey the law as it stands gross abu our law, In Germa r America. The day on which the = ; | The Finance Committee will meet with — low rates. Occasion, corner-stone laying s A "~ can trade are concerned the canal will take commerce | means of preventing them. [ Ehe Adtion oo hoise Ml et withl. A MANISISTRENGTHEM O, R ICIy. | (Grucoament tullaiig aal fall’ festivitica:’ Got e is honored on his return is great | . : g : i 5 dith el away from us. Mr. Barrett does not digest all his On that issue the conference adopted two declara- ;Jn%o(-k.t‘a?d !lhcre is little m,.}l},(bum :l;)\f- muscl fu; n:)m;, in u«lmm)uu with all | gan particulars at 628 Market street. rwhere, an he coldest heart must o Y ¥ s el i i SR i some satisfactory arrangement will be ar- | the org; of the body, have their stages —_————————— facts together and pre the resulting nutriment, | tions. One calls for the enactment by each State of | rived at between them. of development and decline. Physical | Nothing contributes more to digestion than faster in time to its meaning. Only the cities that ew York harbor are in physical touch 1eir people will see the pageant, fire its enthusiasm and live to cherish the the use of Dr. gert's Angostura Bitters. Don’t accept an imitation. s es up to a certain age and then decreases. A great many tests have been made, with the following aver- figures Tesulting for the white Tace: hower of a youth of 17 is 230 t 20 It increases to 320 pounds: laws that will prevent the entrance of any foreign- created corporation into its limits for any other pur- pose than interstate commerce, except on terms that will put the foreign-created corporation on a basis rejecting the waste. After kindly advising us in do- mestic politics, and upon the canal, he said: “You know, as practi that it is cheaper to carry anything in the bottom of a ship than it is AROUND THE CORRIDORS —_—e—————— The charm of beauty is beautiful hair. Se- cure it with Parker's Hair Balsam. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns, 15c. al merchants, mong the things that gild the past 1t that nothing else can kindle at is not enough tern waters in defense of San Francisco. No what we know now. Then we knew that an ttered and unresisted squadron of Spanish war- ships was a paralyzing threat to this port and city. The Government was so hard pushed by that risk that it acquired and prepared to arm merchant craft to stand between us and destruction. Our merchants, with argosies at sea, went to nightly slumber uncer- The great Admiral went | find room in the hold. tain whether at dawn they would still have their own | which was afloat or whether it was gathered into the greedy maw of our enemy. Then came the fight in | that far bay, and the fleet of Montijo was besomed o the seas. More than any other people on the conti- nent we owe to Dewey some expression of our grati- tude for the fear he turned into courage, for the de- spair thundered by his guns into joy. It is an honor to propose that on the day of his re- ception in New York there be an expression of San Francisco’s feeling for the hero and his deeds. committee which managed the marvelous reception to our own volunteers has on hand a surplus of many thousand dollars. There has been much discussion as to the manner of its disposition. A portion of it should be used in observance here of Dewey day. We have in camp nearly 15,000 soldiers. less in their pent quarters and camp, Let the com- mittee provide music, all the bands in the ecity if need be, and call out such organizations as can add ¢ | Delief that he was working for their interest he stuffed | | yers, it is fair to assume that the The | for heaven's sake give us the old. They are rest- | to the spectacle, and let us have a grand military pa- | yade in honor of the hero of Manila Bay. At the close of the Civil War two hundred thousand veteran troops marched down Pennsylvania avenue in review before Grant, Sherman and Sheridan. The country and the world will never forget it. The in- spiration of that day survived as the fire of patriot- ism in tens of thousands of hearts. The Spanish war is over. Let the troops that are with us pass in review in celebration of the greatest achievement of that war on the water. And as the marching and the music pass let the sentiment of all hearts be: May the service united ne’er sever, Lt eer to thelr colors prove trueg The army and navy forever, Three cheers for the red, white and blue. The committee should at once institute the meas- | ures needed, secure the consent of the War Depart- | ment to the parade of the troops, the presence of the bluejackets from the warships, and of civic organ- izations which may add to the scene, and give to Dewey day an expression that will show forth our thanks for what the Admiral did for San Francisco. To such use of some of the funds of reception day there will be enthusiastic and patriotic assent and ap- proval, and part of the problem before the commit- tee will be happily solved. across a great stretch of country in a railroad train.” ‘ Commerce from the Orient comes here now for rail transit East, and figures in the forty millions of for- | eign trade of this city in the past months, rather than double e Horn or Good Hope; but open the isthmian canal and that trade goes from us | never to return, becz it can go all the way by a | short route in the “bottom” of a ship, and we may suggest to Mr. Barrett that some of it will doubtless | seven Assessor Dodge seems to be an expensive sort of | luxury. In his anxiety to fool the public into the | the assessment roll of San Francisco with any old | thing until it reached this year a figure more than | four hundred millions. In consequence the tax- | payers of the city have had to contribute to the State | treasury $700,000 more than they did last year. If that is the teaching of the new school of assessment, A MASSACHUSETTS SNAP. chusetts, ruling under the sovereignty of Wil- liam the First, is Mr. George Frederick Wil- liams. The organization in which Gaston, William E. Russell, Josiah Quincy, Charles S. Hamlin and | Sherman Hoar were the lights and leaders has now | shriveled down to the size of Mr. George Fred. Wil- liams’ pocket and is carried there like a “luck penny.” Mr. Williams is charged with the duty of keeping the party small and manageable and harmonious, and has accomplished it by the expulsion of about 60,000 of its former members, and building a trocha barbed with the aphorisms of Bryan around it. He guards well his trust and proposes that his suzerain from Nebraska shall receive the tribute de- manded, in, the form of a unanimous delegation to the next National Convention. In the fear that this may be in jeopardy he has se- cured the delegation in advance. Mr. David B. Hill of New York was once unwise in his day and genera- tion and called in that State a “snap convention” to get a national delegation opposed to Mr. Cleveland. He got the delegation, but compared to its effect on him the shirt of Nessus was a silk undergarment. The shadow of the snap followed him like his doppel- ganger, until he retired into a political hole, and it is now believed pulled the hole in after him, for there is no sign of him nor of the place where he disap- peared. Unmindful of his fate, George Frederick, Governor General of the Massachusetts Democracy, has pro- ceeded to elect in September, 1890, a delegation to the National Convention of 1900. As a snapper he ex- T}{E Democratic Governor General of Massa- | The second calls for the enactment of legislation pro- | ated shall be prohibited from admission into any State. | is one of the corporations created by the State of | An act preventing corporations from being organ- | ized on fictitious capital, for example, might go far | with reference to the of equality with the domestic-created corporation of the State entered, and subject to the same laws, rules and regulations of the State that it enters which are applicable to the domestic corporations of that State. viding that a corporation created in one State to do ly in other States than when cre- business exclus The second class of legislation demanded would be a body blow at the Southern Pacific, for that company Kentucky with the provision that it shall not do busi- ness in Kentucky. | As the men who attended thc conference are law- | legislation they | recommend would be constitutional if properly drawn up. It would therefore be worth while for the States to put some of the less radical among them to the test. toward checking the tendency toward fraud and undue | speculation which is now so notable in the East. Such laws of course would not prevent trusts, but they might correct some of the abuses which have grown out of the corporation system of doing business. Bourke Cockran's suggestion that the business of trusts be made public is a most excellent one, but who will audit the books, make up the statement, specify for what purposes all sums were expended and make oath that the figures don’t lie? Goldwin Smith, writing in a Canadian newspaper approaching celebration in honor of Admiral Dewey, says Canada cannot pos- sibly take part. Well, hardly. Americans do not want. any Canuck$ at the feast. The warmth with which the Eastern press is com- mending Cornelius Vanderbilt as a philanthropist now that he is dead has never been surpassed except by that with which it denounced him as a plutocrat while he was alive. The French general staff gives evidence of improve- ment since the termination of the Dreyfus court- martial. A dispatch from Paris announces the death of another of its members in the person of General Brault. LR The American Society of Dancing Masters, accord- ing to a Chicago paper, has taken up the question, “How to hold your lady in the dance.” The answer seems obvious—don’t introduce her to a handsomer man. —_— After having borne the brunt of the rhetoric of two conferences, the trust problem stands just where it did before and has the same aspect. | attorneys of Visalia, S. Moderow, a traveler from Berlin, is registered at the Palace. | Sig Wormser, a heavy oll speculator of Fresno, is registered at the Lick. A. W. Fox, a wealthy mining man o! Carson, Nev., is at the Grand. ‘Walter von Cleff, a big manufacturer 0! New York, is staying at the California. Cnp(ain Willlam G. Cutter, U, 8. N, is one of the recent arrivals at the Palace. G. A. Bottsford, one of the prominent | is a guest at thel Lick. Judge W. H. McGee, a prominent jurist of Pasadena, Is among the late arrivals at the Grand. | Dr. G. H. Fleet, one of the leading phy-| sicians of McCloud, is among the recent | arrivals at the Grand. i W. H. Hulbert, a prominent raflroad | man of Portland, Or., is in the city. He is staying at the California. | J. W. Churchill, a wealthy lumberman of Yreka, is at the Occidental, panied by his wife and son. E. D. Goodridge, a prominent Maiden- | lane jeweler, i{s registered at the Lick | from his home in New York. Arthur Page, the well-known ship, in. surance and grain broker, has gone to New York for a six weeks’' vacation. Rev. Allen W. Cooke, a missionary to | Japan, is staying at the Occidental, where he arrived yesterday and registered from | Tokio. ‘William Selever, a well-known flour man of Portland, Or., is one of those who ar- rived in the city yesterday and went to the Lick. George B. Dall, assistant postmaster at Dunedin, New Zealand, is at the California, where he went yesterday after landing from the Mariposa. Judge E. M. Ross has come up to the | city from his home in Los Angeles and is staying at the Palace, where he can b found for the next few days. C. C. Kennedy, a big business man and | planter of Hilo, H. L., is at the Occidental, accompanied by his wife and family. They arrived yesterday from the islands on the Mariposa. Dr. G. B. Somers left last night for an extended tour of Europe. Mrs. W. J.| Somers accompanies him to New York, where she will spend some time and then conclude her trip by visiting in New Eng- land and Washington, D. C. General Manager W. G. Nevin, his sec- retary and Chief Engineer R. B. Burns of the Santa Fe Pacific arrived in the city yesterday. They come on business connected with their road and are regis- tered at the Palace from Los Angeles. A number of the members of an English football team that has been winning laur- els in the Antipodes arrived yesterday on the Mariposa from Australia. They are scattered through the different hotels in the city and will shortly leave for their homes in the old country. e CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Sept. 22.—William A. Hemphill and wife of San Francisco are at the St. James. A. G. Musgrave of Los accom- | Angeles is at the Willard. THE SECRET SOCIETY That incited the'insurrection in the Philippines—Its inside history and secrets revealed. THE WOMEN OF THE DREVFUS CASE. Who they are and the parts they played. FOUR DAYS ON A PILOT-BOAT, The exciting life of the hardy men who guide ships into our harbor. FATHER McKINNON, The soldier-priest. THE INDIAN » Who claims Lake Tahoe as his heritage. STORY OF THE OLDEST TUGBOAT On the Pacific Coast. THRILLING EXPERIENCES Of an lIrish regiment in a thunder- storm—One of the most remark- able incidents recorded in the English War Department. THE WAR TELEGRAPHERS Meet and swap stories. STEPHEN CRANE'S THRILLING STORY > “Active Service.” HOUSEKEEPERS' DEPARTMENT And a host of interesting Features N KEXT SUNDAY'S CALL 09006200090000000002000800000062000000000009