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THE SAN FRAN "ISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1. 1899. @ xll SUNDAY.. Lt OCTOBER 1 xflon)“ 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. .27 to 221 Stevenson Street ‘Telephone Main 1874 DELIVERED BY CARRIERS, 15 CENTS PER WEEK. e Coples, B cents. by Mail, Including Postage: uding Sunday Call), one year. ing Sunday Call), § months. ng Sunday Call), 3 months Te. DAILY CALL ( DAILY CALL ( DAILY CALL ¢ DAILY CALL—By Single Month . 6fc EUNDAY CAL e Year . 150 | WEFELY CAL! Yeur. 1.00 | All postmasters ave auth subscriptions. Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. OAKLAND OFFICE... .808 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, { Manager Forelga Advertising, Marquette Bullding, Chica NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON.. a s iaian ..Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: PERRY LUKENS JR. 29 Tribune Bullding CHICAGO NEWS 6TANDS. Sherman Mouse; P. O. News Co; Great Northera Motel} Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. storla Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Uniom otel Waldor?. ey Murrey Hill WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE Woellington Hotel d. L. ENGLISH, Corrcapondent. BRANCH OFFICES--527 Montgomary street, corner Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. 30C Hayes street. open until 930 o'clock. 639 McAllister. street, open untll 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission street, open unt!l 10 o'clock. 22C" Market street, corner Sixteenth, open until 9 o'clock. 1096 Valesncla street, open untll 9 o'clock. 106 Eleventh street, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twemty- second and KentucKy streets, open untll 9 o'clock, AMUSEMENTS, ville, ine Yentleman.' Ado About Nothing,” to-morrow night. Major's Daughter.” o every afterncon and Un Me. reatio n Coursing Park-— hanics' Favili o-day. ’ Fair and Philippine Ex- B —————— e AUCTION SALES. Co.—Tuesday, treet day, October 3, at 11 o'clock, 517 Mission street October 3, at 1% CONSUMPTION QUARANTINE. State Board of 1 regard to a quarantine of consump ve action of our Health 1 has had the very desirable effect ot pro ston of the subject. yduced the comments of four- representing large centers of popu- . from Salt Lake to Boston. Of these eight ¢ six iavor the quarantine idea in some We have no doubt that if in the cities where oppo- isolate r some form oposed to rigidly em und e oversight to see that the isolation is per- s would make no objec- xm would be for the protec- newsy preca ies in which they circulate. laind States had a system designed to st the support of indigents, ter what the condition of his to secure in some form a hie went as a stranger against In es there possible indigence. ned Western Sta which denied access to ss they could give security, in some ) their moral conduct as well as against indigence in effect, a es for the In their day Lations were, financial there r them or they would not have ex- recognized as a legitimate use of police pow xim of civil government that the publi ¢ is the supreme law, and under our h State must judge for itseli m Thereis noth- te blish it is v that max tion which forbids a Si enied power to e! pox, cholera and yellow fever. being undenied, if the necessity of its 1 our 15t be discussed on the line of its power use is establishe Board of tent ve proposition of Health m: cessity and As to the necessity, that depends upon the recog- nition by science of consumption as a disease so certainly and dangerously infectious as' to be pre- ventable by quarantine precautions. We are not pre- has gone far enough in this e e I'we are not aware of any difference world on that subject. [t tion of sputum, clothing, uronndings, just as in the case of the wlera, plague and typhoid. To the s far 1o establish the theory of in- pared to say that science recognit justify ¢ advises 1sola- st dic n some drastic criti- ot to be expected that a age for potable purposes have very nice ideas on who enters that city day an official no- Board of Health that the water in certain or that day dangerous, in others passable, rs under suspicion. But he -does not know arging feculence not stranger s morning papers e et oxidized <on, or what one is dripping de nced e of decay. Under the cir-| ble condition to 1d keep them away from phoid fever. flux and other fatal diseases which ate in her water pipes cago is 1 adm ¥ peop authorities are reported to be buying Amer- v the war in the Transvaal. This is per- haps the first time that the Government mule has es- | caped being a joke and is raiced to the dignity of in- ternational interest. : ican mules f There seems to be a question in the minds of cer- | in State officials concerning the terms of notaries public. The people at large are satisfied, however, | that they are strictly cash. | the sure foundation of the gold s tion fixes the par redemption of all forms of currency denly, under which payment in silver would smite the | lican party to stand by the sound money colors under | ! which it won in 1806. | ver movement +out the militia and convened two special i the more injured by any false impression produced ! among the people of the North concerning its social | showing made by the News. | special terms of court and put the State to thousands | of dollars of expense for the purpose of securing to | most law-abiding community in the world, and is |and the West, where better conditions prevail. Never- FINANCIAL LEGISLATION. HERE is a growing feeling that Congress will T be willing to go even farther in financial legis- lation than the conclusions reached last spring by the caucus committee. Those conclusions related to the basic conditions of a financial system, and proposed putting under it andard. Such ac- in goid, and plants the public credit immovably upon that basis. While the law now fixes gold as the unit of value, the declaratory resolutions of Gongress per- | mit the redemption of the public debt in coin, either gold or silver. This admits that such circumstances v arise, and they would come unforeseen and sud- credit of the United States in a fatally vital With such a gap between the nomi and actual | value of the standard silver dollar as has existed since the silver tinkering began with the Bland bill, there is left under credit a mine to be exploded by any ncial accident. Therefore the proposed legislation, definitive of a financial foundation, is highly meritorious. But everywhere this year there is an obvious strengthening of the purpose of the Repub- | spot. The persistence of the free sil- among the Bryan Democracy is 1ally indicative of the determination of the oppo- sition to persist in its policy. The Republican party may read an instructive I In 180 and 1892 it went down in dusty wreck with its tariff policy in splinters. But it persisted, even in the face of defec- tion and loss. It saw the strength of the opposition grow and gain in the Senate seat after seat from what eq son from its own experience. | considerable portion of the Northern people. | satisfaction, had appeared to be impregnably Republican States. | Rut the party persisted, and in 1806 it rose, repaired, | clubs and associations. The Chautauquan movement, | handed down from the dark ages of the rom its wreck and refreshed by its rest from power, | and has marched forward until there is not left a | straight Democratic Senator from a Northern State, and there are six the South, There is but little danger now. which favors the party may change. ist will deny the fact in the history of financial | penics that they come under all revenue systems, | under tariffs for protection and tariffs for revenue, and to the business of all countries, regardless of their The current flush times are not | Our masterly gain in foreign | trade is not caused by prosperity at home alone, but Republican® Senators from But the prosperity Only z dog- form of government. an American specialty. by prosperity abroad which stimulates commerc exchange and enables the world to buy England and the Continental nations are | flourkshing. The portentous advance in the metal | trades is not pe It is general in all the | Confidence high and general, and speculation has caught its inspiration There are all the conditions which imply a reaction. | hat we have to sell liar to us iron and steel countries. is It may be long deferred, but some time it will come. | Confidence is like a man in a balloon, who looks ap | But when high in the | air he looks down and trembles. So the trading and financial world looks ahead and not back for a long | time, until it faces to the rear, trembles, stops, and | as he rises and feels no fear. there is a panic | When this time comes, unless we have strength- | ened our financial system, the scenes of 1893 will be repeated, and the Federal treasury, which is yet sui- | fering an annual deficit. will be in the same condition to which it was plunged by the last panic. Then, with | the silver movement as persistent as was protection ‘ among the Republicans, who can say that it will not stem with a septic influence which will make it permanently infirm? | It is the duty of the Republican party to make (h:xt‘ succeed and inoculate our fiscal immune to bubonic politics. The goes far to that end, and if Congress sha arther. and by simplifying our whol body of currency and adapting a banking system to | the needs of the country, making it strong enough to weather any storm, it is easy to see that the conse- | legislation chaose to go quences of 1 limited a panic may be a slight storm instead of a cy- | »ss of confidence will be greatl clone like 1893. { ———— | The present season seems to be pretty tough on | dentists. At this writing the Grand Jury is investi- gating Tooth-puller Gedge, the State Board of Dental | Examiners is on the trail of Dr. Tebbets, and the | powers at Union Park have told Dr. G. W. Leek to his teeth that he has been engaged in the business of | preparing dope for greyhounds. The profession wiil | do its best to bridge over the dark S siderable show of justice that while every lynch | law outrage in a Southern State is displayed 1s | a sensation in the news of the day and made use of | by a considerable number of Northern papers as an days. ‘ JUSTICE TO THE SOUTH OUTHERN newspapers complain with a con- asion for denouncing the Southern people, little or | no attention is given in either the news or the edi- | torial columns to the efforts made in the South to | eradicate race antagonisms, enforce law and put a stop to lynching. | The Savannah News cites the recent Delegal inci- | dent in Georgia as a case in point. When the dis- turbances at Darien took place over the attempt to arrest Delegal and threats of lynching were made by certain classes of the whites the affair was heralded far and wide as a race war, but as soon as the law was enforced the issue was dropped and no credit given to the State authorities by the outside critic who had been so busy in condemning what they called | the lawlessness of the South. “We have so far failed to see” it says, “any comments in the Northern papers upon the fact that the State of Georgia put: herself to thousands of dollars of expense, ordered ' i | | | | terms of | court in order to secure safety and justice to a negro charged with assault upon a white woman, and that in the end a jury of white men found the negro not guilty of the crime alieged and restored to him his liberty.” : The justness of a complaint of the kind is not to be | questioned. Lurid reports of lynchings tend to pro- duce the impression that many Southern communi- | ties are relapsing into something like barbarism and | that life and property are not secure. Reports of | that nature are harmful to a community in more ways than one, for they seriously impede its industrial and commercial advancement, and the South, being in | need of an increase of population and of capital, is | | | | conditions. The relations between the whites and the blacks of | Southern Georgia are bad enough ecven upon the A community in which the Governor has to call out the militia, convene two i a citizen his right of trial by jury, is certainly not the justly subject to a good deal of criticism in the North | bell, Margaret E. theless, it is only fair to direct attention to the fact that the law was enforced and the r.egro did receive a fair trial and an acquittal. The Southern_papers, however, are in error when they assume that the loud denunciation of lynching taken. in connection with the comparative silence in the Northern press when the law is enforced is a ! proof of prejudice against the people of the South. There is no such prejudice of sectionalism left in any It is well understood by all intelligent Northern men that Southern people have a difficult problem to deal with in the antagonism of races, and there is a wide sym- pathy with them. Every effort made by Southern offi- cials to enforce law and keep in order the unruly ele- ments of both races is noted with more than ordinary It is desirable that every portion of the Union be prosperous and peaceful, and much has been done in the North to direct attention to the progress of Southern industries and the improvement of Southern conditions. Such injustice as may have been done in the discussion of lynching carries its atonement with it, for it has had no other motive than an ardent desire to have such outrages stopped | and to rouse the Southern people themselves to a perception of the wrong done to their section by the occurrence of such crimes. FOR STUDENTS @ND EDUCATORS. DOPL’LAR education in the United States has developed a demand for a species of instruction supplementing that given in schools and col- leges, which will enable the great mass of intelligent men and women to pursue with success various studies during the leisure moments« of their busy lives. In response to that demand there have arisen among our people all forms of literary and scientific which is an outgrowth of that desire, has spread all over the Union and become a national institution, and now the enterprises of university extension are giving their aid in the same direction. All of these things attest the need of a daily help to students and educators in the work of advancing the general culture of the community. To supply that help The Call has undertaken to publish a series of courses of study every day except Sunday. and the attention of all persons interested in general culture is directed to the fact that the courses are not to be “studies” in name only. Each course, as we have an- nounced, is to be under the direction of able masters and recognized authorities on the subjects dealt with, | while the whole series will be arranged and supei- | | vised by Seymour Eaton, formerly of the Drexel In- stitute of Philadelphia. The papers will be of course interesting to casual reader, but their main purpose is to serve the genuine and earnest student. public or private schools and colleges, the members of literary or scientific clubs and of the Chautauquan and university extension societies, and all who prose- cute home studies, will be well repaid by a careful study of the papers. It is, in fact, to that class of the community the articles will most potently appeal. It will not require a university education to be able to follow them with understanding, but none the less even the best rcad students will find in them much that is instructive as well as entertaining. Students of Shakespeare, for example, will have an opportunity of reading in The Call on each Monday and Thursday articles written by such men as Pro- fessors Dowden of Dublin University, Albert S. Cook of Yale. Hiram Corson of Cornell, Isaac Demmon of the University of Michigan, Hamilton W. Mabie of the Outlook, and William J. Rolfe, whose edition of Shakespeare is well known to all students. In the department of American history there are to be papers every Friday by such authorities as John Bach McMaster of the University of Pennsylvania, | Albert Bushnell Hart of Harvard, Charles H. Smith of Yale, Bernard C. Steiner of the Pratt Library of Baltimore, and Andrew C. McLaughlin of the Univer- sity of Michigan. The articles on the world’s great artists, which are to be published every Tuesday. will be contributed by John C. Van. Dyke, lecturer on art at Columbia and Harva . L. Frothingham Jr., professor of art at Princcton; Russell eminent art critics of New York, and Frank Fowler, one of the leading artists of that city. The papers on home science and houschold economy are to be furniched by such noted women as Mrs. Helen Camp- Sangster and Kate Gannett Wells, Lucy Wheelock and Anna and Misses while on each Wednesday there are to be two papers, one dealing with desk studies for girls and the other with shop and trade studies for boys. The usefulness to educators and students of the daily publication of studies on such subjects by emi- nent writers and thinkers can hardiy be overrated. They will materially advance the movement for the general culture of the community, and to most of our readers will be one of the most valued features of The Call. The destructive tendencies of certain members nf the Board of Education have reached such a stage as to make them matters of public concern. While they were busily engaged in shattering their own reputa- tions there was no particular reason for unrest, but now, according to the testimony of their associates, they are demolishing public school property should be hauled up with a round turn. e A San Jose litigant has developed a most peculiar notion of the commercial value of wifely affection. His wife deserted him after announcing, with some emphasis, that the only thing more she wanted to and see of him, in remembrance, was his death notice. | After that he sued the other fellow for $10,000 for robbing him of his wife’s comfort and society. Recent actions of Secretary Root knock the props from under rumors to the effect that General Corbin and not he is the man in the War Department. Di. patches are to the effect that the Secretary has just purchased a high-priced Kentucky thoroughbred and will soon be—if he is not now—in the saddle. Author Constantine Demetrak’ of Oakland claims to be a Spartan, but his recent actions do not bear him out. Because a firm of publishers have failed to*meet his ideas in the printing of a book he is making vigorous complaint. No true Spartan ever known to do any such thing. The infuriated Spanish gentieman of Lemoore who tried to sever the matrimonial bond between himself and his wife by carving his spouse will probably have plenty of time now in which to reflect that the divorce court cuts almost as quickly and with not nearly as much disturbance. was Lo v Two directors of the Melrose school district engaged the other night in a quarrel, during the course of which they called each other liars. Fortunately no weapons were drawn, the directors entirely overlook- ing the chance they had to teach the young idea how to shoot. the | The teachers of our | Sturgis and Arthur Hoeber, the | EDITORIAL VARIATIONS BY JOHN McNAUGHT. A young woman of an intense emo- | tional nature, with an ardent, ambi- tious intellect, possessing, it appears, | many fine faculties but lacking the sa | ing one of common sense, in a stress of excitement lost her reason and her strength and was committed last week | to Agnews asylum as an insane patient, where she died. For some time before her insanity manifested itself she had been a student of Christian Science and a votary of its doctrines. On that show- ing a considerable number of the people | of the neighborhood have come to ‘the conclusion she was rendered insane by | | the philosophy she was studying, and | { they have found means to make some- | thing startlingly sensational of the case Ynnd to raise a clamor against Christian | Science and all its teachers. In that same asylum at Agnews there | was for many vears—and may be yet, for all I know——a young woman of ar- | dent mind who, while a student at the State Normal School at San Jose, be- came insane from a strain upon the brain brought about by overstudy and {lack of proper recreation and nourish- | ment. Now let us have another sensa- | tion and raise a cry against the Normal | School, demanding the suppression of the teaching of those who believe in the education of girls. . Call a doctrine ‘“‘Christianity,” and { the common world will listen to it with | toleration at least, though it be hardly | more than a traditional superstition {human intellect. Call a doctrine | ence,” and the same world will listen to | {it with an equal toleration, though it | teach by precept there is no soul, and | | that every ill of humanity can be cured | | by pills. That much the world will do solely because Christianity and science | are old, familiar names. We do not | know what they mean, but we know the words, and anything called by | their names sounds friendly. It has| been the custom to regard them } as good old antagonistic forces, | opposing one another in the domain | | of philosophy in much the same | | way as Democracy and Republicanism | oppose each other in politics. We have grown used to their rivalries and their | fights, and it appears to most of us a natural condition of the world that they . should go on fighting. The thinkers who are trying to fuse the two into a rational system of Christian Science are therefore regarded as enemies of soci- ety, hardly more respectable than the i men who try to organize fusion parties in politics, and the average man who | has never given a serious thought to | Christianit “ience or Christian Sci- | ence is cocksure that just as a fusion party would endanger the chances of both the old parties, so the new philoso- | phy, if it be not suppressed, will entail | the destruction of both science and Christianity. | . The war for the cause of the good old ;faces forms, creeds and names against | anything and everything unfamiliar be- | gan with the appearance of the first | stranger on the outskirts of a village of human beings. No sooner had that ear- | | liest of wanderers been sighted by the natives of the village than one said to another: “Do you know that thing?"” The other replied: ‘“No, I don't. | “Then,” said the first, “‘get your club | and let’s kill it.” i . g When a name has once become famil- | iar and approved any kind of doctrince | can be put forth under it with good | success, no matter how different it be from what the name itself means and implies. Examples of that truth are to | Editor of The Call, Dear Sir:— are the public. mend friends. T be found preached and practiced in the names of religion and of science. During the cur- rent discussion of the strife in the Phil- | | ippines what pranksome preaching has | there been! Here is a case fresh from ! | the Republican convention in Nebraska. | | To that body there came the Rev. Mr. | Mailey, who made a speech, prefacing it with the statement: “I am no politician | —simply a preacher.” His speech was | | an insistent demand for the prosecution | of the war against the “enemy we are | trying to save and civilize,” and in the | course of it the usual declaration in | | favor of fighting for the flag, “right or | wrong.” When that doctrine is shouted | from the mouths of irresponsible lay- men it hardly means more than that such people are careless alike of the principles of justice and the honor of | the nation; but when a man speaking professedly as a Christian preacher proclaims the creed it is time for the church to get after him. If a declara- tion in favor of war, ‘right or wrong,” be not heresy in the church of Christ, then there is no heresy in that church and very little of Christ. . PR in the thousand vagaries | I make the suggestion of heresy charges against the war spouters of the pulpit with no intention of taking part in any controversy that might arise from the trial of such a charge. I can well imagine what a splutter there would be if a church should assert that obedience to Christ is more imperative | 49040604040+ 0 ¢ 0+060+0e0e0e0 © at the following great bargain prices: out without thought of original cost ’ $ E or making—Monday : ¢ 24x3yds. 3xByds. 3xSiyds 3x4yds. 6x9 1t SI{x103¢ ft. Ox12 fr. 10MXI12% ft $ $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $7.00 SIL.50 $12.50 $15.00 . Patrons should remember that we have the finest Curtain Dept. of any store in % San Francisco, and tnat our prices are so low that connoisseurs can satisfy o their most artistic taste, and at the same time save a considerable amount of $ money. . PATTOSIEN'S, & i . 9 and Mission Street. ’ | consequence there would be a ruction |come the best hc [ e e e S e o e el e e MES MILLS INDOBSES ' THE FPEARN, Says The Call Educational Scheme Is a Good One and Deserves San Francisco, it to our faculty and students, MISCELLANEOUS. o ©0+00000-6060 + 0606040+0+0+0+0+04050+0e0+0e0e0ede0els YOU SAVE MONEY AT PATTOSIEN’S. Very Beautiful Brass and Steel Bed, in =ny color imported enamel, all sizss, only one to a customer; regular price $10.98; for ""m‘)orro\\'.. $6~75 We reserve the right to refuse the sale of this bed to anv one recoenized as a dealer. All Bird’s Eye Mapie Dressing Cases at 25 This artistic litule Jardiniere Stand, in oak or mahogany finish—onlv 1 to a custom:r to-mor- 45¢ 200 Reed and Rattan Rock- Has any house of- tered you this An- tiq Folding Bed, h a tempered steel wir> spring, a cood finish and fine con- struction.'. $10 00 . This and Thre® other patterns in Golden Oak Ch e ff o niers, with French beveled mir- Best Kitchen Tables, per cen; off the marked ers, bought at rors, to- mor- to-morrow... price for to- morrow 3oc onthedol- row o . $1.40 onl for. $9.00 Carpets and Rugs. Oour fall showing of Carpets and Rugs is one of the most extensive we ever made, and the prices are so extrem:ly low that we feel confident of winning the approval of all wise buyers. Brusseline Carpet, 36 Inches wide and reversible, beautiful patterns that will wear as good as high- 35C priced Carpets; Monday, yard The Famous Columbia Brussels Carpets, 36 in wide and reversiole, a b carpet that cannot be ex- is being shown for, a celled, we offer 70C {ard.‘ $I.|0 for, a yard...... Made-up Carpet Rugs—made up out of the finest Brussels and velvet car- pet remnants, about 600 to be closed 3-ply Union Ingrain Carpet, heavy weizht, 25 patterns from which to choose, in the very latest 50C shades and styles ; a yard.. Smith’s Axminster Car- pets—a very large line, with borders to match, Tapestry Brusse's Car- pets, bona-fide Sanford’s and Higgins’ goods. en- tirely new; a 45c vard... Brusseling Art Squares, doubln-faced‘ goods made—Monday the only 000909090+ 0e0e0e0e0e0600+0e0+0e0-+0e0e0s0e0e0 S0 0S0S0SCI®US0SOP0OS0S0 S 0SSOSO 0S0S0S0S0SOS0S0®0 S 0 S0S0S0SIS0S 0S0S0S0S0S0S0 S 0S0S0S0S0S0S e Ce0S0e0 S 0SOS S OS0S0S 0SS0 SIS 0S0S0 S 0SS OSOSOS0 the surrounding country to San Jose's upon men than devotion to the flag, and that when a nation goes wrong it is | farthest suburbs, Oakland and Gilroy. the duty of the church to withstand it. | The climate of the district was ordained There would then be indeed that sepa- | of heaven for the delight of man, and ration of church from state which we |the people who live in it have expanded all so loudly profess to desire, and as a | in all good things until they have be- and finest compan- ions good fellowship can desire. It was once the capital of the State, and has a good right to celebrate its past hon- ors. The festival of a thousand drinks | will be a halecyon and vociferous time | indeed, and he who wishes not to take {all his thousand in wine may drink in | patriotism and hospitality and the beauty of fair women. It is to be hoped | the undertaking will prosper, for there |is virtue in it. [ ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. of immense proportions, for it is an in- variable rule that when men are grant- ed their desires there is always a row. If we have faith in religion we must believe it possible to educate a Filipino without Killing all his relatives and re- ducing him to servitude; but if we have charity for all men we must tolerate the war-breathing preacher and concede his right to practice Christianity by blood and slaughter. In a recently published letter Mrs. Elizabeth Bar- rett Browning said: “In our age faith and charity are found—but they are -usually found apart. We tolerate everybody because we doubt everything; or else we toler- ate nobody because we believe some- thing. Largeness of intellectual vision | ri becomes indistinctness in the apprehen- | gwORD—Subscriver, City. General U. sion of outline, just as the case is in |8 Grant was a general who did not wear physical near-sightedness.” a sword during the Ci ‘War. Mrs. Browning is dead and her age is | ACTION FOR DIVORCE-S. T. T. C., dead with her, but the old problem re- | Seattle, Wash. How soon after the filing mains; and what is perplexing the|of the papers in an action for divorce e e e o ot JITHER IS GOOD—Subscriber, City. Neither of the following expressions is a | good one: “There are more than 3000 | miles from San Francisco and Paris.” | “There is more than 3000 miles from San Fragcisco to Paris.”” It is proper to say, “Tifre are more than 3000 miles between San Francisco and Pari to Be Commended | RWlills Gollege, Alameda Co., Eal. % Bar- | rows. Those papers are to be published on Saturdays, | President’ s Dificn Sept. 30th, 1899. cal. o Your plan for presenting to the readers of The Call the dif- ferent courses of study will, interested in good journalism and in the proper education of I heartily indorse the plan, and shall be glad to com- I am sure, commend itself to all who and through them to their remain, Yours respectfully, T T e President Mills College. Qoedoeiedede B R N o o o S S e o e o brains of our debating societies is to, in Californiz (e matter will come te find out how we can have faith iz “our esde 15 ““_“‘t“g g"“::g"c;"ll:gu;n- national mission” and still indulge ent unon any calling. of . the a charitable respect for the religion of 1f the party against whom the ac- commence out of the State | ther'e is service of summons by publica~ tion and by maiiing a copy of the sum- mons through the mail to last known ad- dress. 1If a rce is obtained by fraud rlrl‘lfmpzn't" aggri ]e(l _hflshu‘ remedy by aking a proper showing before 7 that granted the decree. et our infancy. W w8 San Jose has undertakén to entertain the State with a grand jubilee in com- memoration of the fiftieth anniversary | of the organization of the Government | of California as a State, which took E i Cal. gl f 0 2 place.in that city December 20, 1849: If | - 5 2c€ fruit e per Ib at Townsend's. ¢ iny memory be not in error the body Special information supplied daily to business houses and Press Clipping Bureau gomery street. Convicts Sentenced. Judge Dunne has sentenced James Mor- gan, convicted of an attempt to commit grand larceny, to two yvears in Folsom; that organized the Government we are now so proud of, in that beautiful pueblo on that auspicious occasion, is known to fame as “The Legislature of a Thousand Drinks.” The moderation of the men of that time is amazing. thousand drinks would not last a Leg y\‘uAl)‘llu‘. men by the en’s), 510 2 - Telephone Matn, 1042, U3¢ A lature of our time even a little while. | I'rank Sato,” eighteen “months at $: = 2 uentin, fe 2 2 R an That many would be poured out in liba- | &22 grand Fififii\.'afig;"!Vzea!}g % glv— tions on the first appearance of Ma- Quentin; James Davis, grand larcenr;' n‘w‘z’é zuma. The title, however, is full of |Y¢ars in San Quentin i ———— Northern Pacific Railway. Upholstered tourist sleeper Paul every Tuesday nlthpe Nv.:h:;:::e toTsz. car Is nicely upholstered in leather and 1q " | tremely comfortable in every respact. Do sleeping cars of the latest pattern on er ot train. Tickets sold at lowest rates to 11 :;;;z East. T. K. Stateler, Gen. Ast, San Francisco. T MGt pleasant suggestions, and if San Jose carry her patriotic endeavor through it is a safe prediction that every promise the phrase suggests will be fully real- ized to the visitor who goes there thirst- ing for joy. In all earnestness, there is no better place for a December festival in all the world than that selfsame San Jose, for | if the rains come and the Coyote and | the Los Gatos overflow there can be a | Venetian fete, and if it do not rain there can be an Elysian frolic, starting from the city and spreading all over Cheap Rates. September 29 to October § in, ta Fe Route will sell tickets wdgk::::':om-.t N Government bullding and fall festivittes, Geg full particulars at 625 Market street, -