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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, ¥RIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1899. | | i | NOVEMBER 24, 1899 t | FRIDAY JOHN D ECKELS, Proprietor. Acaress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager PUBLICATION OFFICE...Market and Third, 8. F. Telephone Main 1868, EDITORIAL ROOMS. .. - 217 to 221 Stevenson St. ’ Telephone Main 1874, ! Delivered hy Carriers, Single Cople:s Term y M Inclading DAILY CALY Tod & Sunday DALY CALL ¢Including Sunday 15 Cents Per Week. 5 Cen | . 300! OAILY CALL (melnding Sunday), 3 months.. 1.50 DALY CALIL—Ily Single Month. G5c | SUNK CALL One Yenmr.... 1.50 WEEKLY CALL One Year.. . eess 10O Al postmasiers are authorized to receive subseriptions. fample copies will be fornarded when requested 508 Bromdway | K ROGNESS, Advertising, Marquette Build- | ing, Chleago, NEW YORK CORRE ©. C. CARLTON. ..... C. G wer Forelgn PONDENT: «..Herald Square | NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: ! PERRY LUKENS JR. 29 Tribune Building CHICAGO NI Sherman House; P. 0. Fremont Ho VS STANDS: News Co.; Great North- i Aunditorium Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) © J. L. ENGLIS FIC ~Wellington Hotel 1, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery street, cor- ner Clay, open until 9:30 o’'clock. 300 Hayes street, open until 9:30 o'clock. 639 McAllister sireet, open until 9:30 o'clock. 6156 Lerkin street, open until o'clock. 1041 M open unti o'clock. * 61 xieenth, open until ® o'clock. | reet, open until 9 o'clock. street, open until 8 o'clock. corner Twe second and Kentocky alencia 108 Efeventh NW. mpla, corner Mason and Park echase and pe: of Manila Ba street, near a-mough Theater (Onk School for Scandal.” Racetrack—Rac AUCTION SALES. By Knierr & Allan—This day, Horses, at Silver avenue, s fay, at 2 o'clock, Elegant Furniture, ber 28, at 7 at corner FORCIBLE EDUCATION. s we don't have to go far afield to find the 's t r lo! 1t is already upon that hich is represented e home of Secretary Wilson go by treaty the lands e Sac and Fox Indians, the 1 to the United States. of the Missouri River, raphy as the Great American e star-spangled Sahara. subnamed Musquakas, un- Poweshiek, languished on horn river bottoms for a ught several sections of thereon and have lived ver since. They are treated nd have an agent. They | ities, raised squaw corn, made muskrats for more than ee-nee-saw, who managed their sires, died long ago tree-top, and others have suc- | hem were hali-castes, in whose | e best pioneer blood of Towa, er days when laws and ements.” never have been heard of by the out- t their agent been recently seized iring to conduct them rum to a higher civilization, he built a schoolhouse and proceeded to make education | In gathering them into the arms of | ly corralled a girl . Now, Puckachee in thei " “Go away,” and had the agent known this he would have avoided trouble, rried woman d is thereby under yss the Pons as ge means and up and inocculated with knowl- e three R’s. Her husband, Mr. Ta-ta-pe- means “Good-by, my dear,” refused to live d when his wife was taken from him by prisoned in the school compound in the of a spelling-book and wash- paint and feathers and stirred rage. The people of Toledo ting guard for a week 2ga massacre. The chief, h means horse, is minded to show and does not propose that the be shall have their domestic duties in which h, a learned can Indians,” ide of the aborigine ecessary facts and fig- and their throats. t of the burden has 1 a speciai sitting of the court to issue the great writ of liberty to Madam Puck-a-chee, and it is probable that white- can there soon and that the hor- »ah-dutah at Spirit Lake will not The raises the very interesting question whether the Government can compel In- dians to attend school, and whether, this power granted, attempts to educate by force can produce any ' l2sting good. Federal rors wrong be repeated Cut rates in matrimonial knot-tying are the latest—- ported from Alameda that a Justice of the Peace in that city performed a brief ceremony | the other day for the short price of a dollar. at least it A Tacoma real estate man claims to have seen two heavenly visitors recently in the sky in his neighbor- | hood. Can the Heavenly Twins of Sarah Grand have strayed so far west? i A Chicago speculator has failed for a million dollars | because he invested unwisely in a steam boiler con- i cern. This is probably the most expensive boiler ex- plosion ever recorded. I DEALING WITH MALAYS. Tample of Great Britain in dealing with alien whites war is once begun the whites must dictate the terms of peace or surrender all authority. It con- cludes, therefore, that we have no alternative except to crush the Filipinos, “if it take twenty or fiity years.” In the same article the case of Holland and Achcen is referred to. Malays, in Northern Sumatra, while under British rule had made agreements and treaties with Great Britain which were to be indefeasible. England ceded Acheen to Holland by treaty. Holland disregarded the British treat voided their terms and withdrew | whatever protection they implied to the Acheenese. This planted in the Malay breast a sense of wrong which caused a revolt that has continued for twenty-five years. In every battle the Dutch |have won, but the moment military vigilance | of the renewed sternest form is relaxed the fight is It has cost Holland so dearly that all the public revenues of her Asiatic possessions have been absorbed by it and a balance is left to the bad side of her colonial account. It is not in the heart of a free man to condemn any have been wronged and cheated, and while this trait in the Malay character is regarded by imperialists as deserving nothing better than the crushing process, administered by an army, still it is a trait common to all races that have made any mark in history. It is not useful now to review the history of the Philippine war. Two incidents that preceded it suf- fice for illustration. When the President said that forcible annexation was criminal aggression opposed to our code of morals, and the Senate of the United States followed ratification of the Paris treaty by a solemn resolution declaring that it was not our pur- pose to annex the Philippines, two official pledges of the highest order were given to the world and to the people immediately concerned. When these were added to what had preceded them, the Singapore agreement with Aguinaldo, his landing at Cavite, his proclamation of a government prepared for him by ! our Consul General at Hongkong, his expulsion of Spanish sovereignty from the four islands before the treaty of Paris was made, it will be scen that we have a case and a problem on a parity with that of on han Holl for the people to finall abandon that originality of the spirit in wh n Acheen e question for us to consider, pass upon, is, ch our own nment was f accept the methods of England and Holland as the best If we do, notwithstanding 21! the rosy reports, there is no rea the success of the present campaign will end struggle any Acheen has been nded by a Dutch victory in every battle. If we don't ave twenty or fifty years of actual war we must ded and has been maintaiged and t can be devised? more than that in e its equivalent in constant readiness for war and system of heavy garrisons throughout the islands. hat the natives feel that same sense of injury which the Acheenese refuse to forget. But when affairs reach the angle of temporary Ye- pose, may the American people not hope that an merican way may be studied out, that may be better n the British way, that will remove any sense of ury and put those people really at peace? It must not be forgotten that, as Senator Lindsay, en expansionist, has declared, wherever our jurisdiction inj goes the constitutional principles of our Government | must go, with all their guarantees. It is hardly pos- sible, then, that we can long continue in the ways that are proper to monarchies like England and Hol- land. Where they must crush may we not conciliate? Where they may go with the mailed fist of an enemy | may we not go with the unarmed hand and open palm of a friend? It is to be regretted that when such con- siderations are suggested there is an outcry about the trade and the g raised regardless of the dense population of natives and their rights as owners or tenants of all the wealth- producing capacities of the country. After all, the prestige of a republic differs from that of a monarchy. Our truest prestige is in an inflexible adherence to jus- tice and morality in all dealings with other people, and in promptly righting wrongs we may do either by inadvertence or misdirected intention. It is proverbial that pulling teeth is both difficult and disagrecable, but the members of the State Board of Dental Examiners have discovered a task which has proved to be a severer strain upon their ener- gies than that to which their profession has made them familiar. It is to retain a public office under the conditions which Governor Gage imposes. EUROPE AND HER DEBTS. ROM the tenor of reports from Europe con- cerning the difficulty of the Russian Govern- ment in floating a comparatively small loan it appears that in urging his movement for a general disarmament of the powers the Czar was not ani- mated by moral so much as by economic motives. He was thinking of saving money rather than of sav- ing life, and desired to get rid of his big army not for the sake of having peace in his empire but money in his purse 3 Despite the difficuities which confront the Rus- sians it is not at all likely they are much worse off than the Germans, or the French, or the Italians. The debt of France in particular is something enor- mous, and, according to a recent estimate, is larger than that of the whole British empire. The French of course are a thrifty, saving, industrious people, and can carry a heavier debt than most people, but thers is a limit even to their capacity. European financiers have to consider other things than the prospects of Russia when debating whether to make the loan the Russians wish, for there is no telling when their own Governments may call upon them for money. The most irritating feature in the Russian situation is the sudden aggressiveness shown by Japan. The Japanese remember how Russian interference pre- vented them from gathering the fruits of their war with China, and they will no doubt be glad to settle accounts at the first opportunity. They have made good use of the money they obtained from China as a war indemnity, and are now in good financial con- dition, while Russia is not. Moreover, they are in a position to ask much of Great Britain and to receive much, for the British are not going to run the risk of losing an ally they would need if the Russians should undertake to profit by the war in South Africa to make further aggressions in China. In the complexities of European diplomacy it is not easy to distinguish clearly what is going on. but the change in the attitude of Germany from one of hostility to Great Britain to one of friendship may be due in some measure to the pressure of these finan- cial difficulties. Great Britain has no monetary problem to fret her statesmen. Her power, therefore, is worth conciliating. When a mighty empire like Russia has to go almost begging for a loan, and when other great nations deem it unadvisable to encour- age their financiers to make the loan, it is clear that the debt question has become one of the most sig- HE Chicago Times-Herald, pointing to the ex- races, says that when between them and the In that case the Acheenese | people who fight because they | Are we to | on to believe that | the | 11 be necessary, because it is probably true ! ering wealth of those possessions | nificant in the field of diplomacy. Wise statesmen hereaiter will seek alliances not only where there are great armies but where there is the money required to maintain them in the field if war should come. Judging from the mystery surrounding the present whereabouts of Aguinaldo and his Cabinet, it takes no expert to venture the opinion that it is one of those disappearing aflgirs you read about. DAILY SCHOOL INSPECTION. ONSIDERABLE attention is given in the | C larger cities of the East to the good results ob- | tained in New York during the last two years | by a system of daily medical examination of the health of school-children. From the reports it appears the beneficial effects of the work have been notable in many ways, and it is likely a similar system will soon be put into operation in other cities. In outlining the plan upon which the inspection is | maintained in New York one of the officials of the Board of Education of that city stated to a cor- respondent of the Philadelphia Ledger: “In this in- spection are included all the public and parochial | schools. The inspecting physicians are appointed by the Mayor and are paid $30 a month for their ser- vices. The city is cut up into districts, and the schools lin each divided among the inspectors, some having several schools to visit. They report at the schools irom 8:350 to 9:30 every morning of the school se:- sion and examine each child suspected by the teachers in charge. All those who show any signs of con- | tagious or infectious disease, especially measles, diphtheria, scarlet fever, croup, whooping cough, mumps, contagious eye disedses, parasiftc diseases of the head or body, or chicken pox, are at once ex- cluded from the school. Each pupil so excluded is given a printed card, on which the reason for exclu- sicn is noted. In the case of severe contagious dis- eases inspection at home follows within twenty-four hours after exclusion from schoal.” By reason of this daily inspection the danger of the spread of discase through the schools is greatly di- minished, and, in fact, virtually eliminated. The health of the community is improved and the welfare of the children thoroughly guarded. The system | was put into force in New York in March, 1807, and :as therefore been subjected to a thorough test. It merits consideration here as well as on the Atlantic coast, and a similar routine of daily medical examina- tion might well be included among the improvements introduced into our schools under the new charter. ‘ A WILD ALARM. [ ANY and various are the lessons that have /\/\ been drawn for the American people from the | course of the war between the British and the | Boers, but perhaps the most singular of them all is | one which the New York Press has put forward in the statement that the ease with which the British have transported an army corps to South Africa is a proof that we need a larger army in the United States to protect our country from military invasion. The Press says if Great Britain can pit 50,000 men on South African soil in three weeks Germany can put 100,000 men on North American soil in ten days. It argues that Germany has now two great steamship lines possessing ships that can carry 23500 men each across the Atlantic in six and a half days, and that 1o furnish a flotilla capable of transporting an army of the size named to the United States within eight days would not be too great a task for the German mer- chant marine. Having thus stated the transportation problem our contemporary goes on to say: “The two large army corps necessary for such an expedition would impose | no strain on the resources of the German army, with | its peace footing of 562,000 men, or of France, with its | of 579,000. They would be, however, equal to the entire United States army on a war foot- ing, regulars and volunteers. They would be four times the peace strength of that army and more than three times the strength of the force now avail- able, with 60,000 men in the Philippines and 10,000 in Cuba. The harbor defenses, rapidly and defectively installed, mainly as a result of the war with Spain, would have no part to play in such operations. They are designed to protect cities from attack by hostile fleets. Invasion never strikes a fortified port. It seeks some remote and undefended point on the seacoast.” The Press concludes by saying it has no desire to alarm any one, but merely to direct attention to the { fact that we can no longer rely upon the ocean to protect us from invasion, but must maintain a stand- ing army to defend ourselves. It is not likely the | menace thus depicted will be regarded by Americans with much foreboding. If we are in such danger, however, it would be better to guard against it by | increasing the navy rather than the army. Why wait until the enemy has landed on our shores before we slaughter him? Why not have a navy like that of Great Britain, that can meet the invading flotilla on the sea and demolish it there so as to avoid the ne- cessity of mussing our seaside resorts up with blood and bones? rsuggeslcd the existence of a type of man who would like to own the earth and put a barbed wire fence around it. It now appears the jest was at one time very near realization, and not in joke either, but in the earnestness that is known as “strictly business.” In his testimony before the Industrial Commission John W. Gates, managing director of the American Steel and Wire Company, stated that after the con- solidation of the big wire companies in this country he went to Europe to effect an international combi- nation of all the wire manufacturers of the world. In explaining why his plan failed of accomplishment he is quoted as baving said the German manufacturers first proposed that in case of an international consoli- dation the United States should be content with 25 per cent of the product. This he had declined, and they afterward increased the allowance to 55 per cent. He had to run away from Berlin to avoid accepting this allowance. He had himself represented the pos- sibility of increasing prices to the extent of about $10 per ton in case of the proposed amalgamation, but found that the Germans had in view an increase of about $20 per ton. The witness further declared his combination has a monopoly of barbed wire patents. It has shut down some of the mills that were running before the con- solidation was effected last January, but it still gives employment to about 36,000 men. His company sup- plies Great Britain with about 60 per cent of the wire used there, and ships abroad upward of 700 tons of wire a day. The only competition in sight is that which is maintained by Germany, and it is for that reason he was eager to make the combination. It will be seen we were very near to having a world-girdling wire combination as a fact and not as a joke. The imagination of the humorist is great, but it does not keep much ahead of the schemes of the modern trust manager. FENCING IN THE EARTH. OR many years past American humorists have e ol 2 o FACTO REZETEI [T ¥ ) ‘V'I: B e e B e e S e R T o = S ST -0 -9+t Q . D AR e rr et e e D R A I S e L e e o o o HE WILL SOW HIS SEED ON A STONY SOIL. “This winter Mr. W. J. Bryan will campaign largely through the New England States.""—Telegram from Omaha. —New York Tribune. 'COMPLIMENTS FOR THE CALL'S BOOK PAGE. Established 1838. The Bowen-Merrill Co., Publishers, Wiltizm C. Bobbs, Pres. Chas. W. Merrill, Treas. Foln F. Curtis, Sec'y. 9 and 11 West Washington St., Indianapolis, U. S. A. Novemter 17, 1899. Editor Call, San Francisco, Cal.—Dear Sir: I have read with much interest the book page in the San Francisco Call. which it contains give The book reviews every evidence of care- ful and intelligent preparation, and are sure to cause an increased interest in good liter- ature. We congratulate you upon the appearance of the paper and the care with which it is edited. Yours very truly, L. B. THE BOWEN-MERRILL CO. = ARCUND THE CORRIDORS G. Brochn is registered at the Occl- dental from Germany. Frank Barret, a Palo Alto banker and capitalist, {s at the Lick. Stuart Taylor, a mining man of Everett, ‘Wash., is a guest at the Palace. H. D. Campbel!, a wealthy mine owner of Keswick, is a guest at the Palace. A. G. Nishon, a well-known contractor of Visalia, is registered at the Grand. F. M. Lee, a leading business man of Reno, Nev., I8 registered at the Palace. N. Burns, a well-known rancher of Biges, is at the Russ, accompanied by his wife. Dr. D. H. Sparrenberger, U. 8. A, Is among the arrivals of last night at the Lick. B. F. Durphy, a capitalist of Eureka, is among the arrivals of yesterday at the Grand. | T. S. Up de Graff has come up from his home in Pasadena and is staying at the Palace. George Griffith, a traveler from Lon- don, 1s one of the late arrivals at the Palace. W. O. Blessingame, a wealthy stockman of Fresno, Is among the recent arrivais at the Grand. Jackson Dennis, one of the prominent mining men of Sutter Creek, Is among the recent arrivals at the Grand. ‘W. 8. Stoddard, manager of the Slerra Lumber Company of Red Bluff, is on a visit to this city for a few days. C. R. Scott, a prominent railroad man of Portland, Or., is a guest at the Occi- dental, where he arrived yesterday. H. F. Bumgarten of New York, one of the firm of decorators who beautified the interfor of the Flood mansion, is at the Palace. Dr. J. W. Robertson of Livermore is at the Occidental. He arrived last night and is accompanied by his wife and family. W. J. Gillipsie, a well-known and popu- lar hotel man of Fresno, Is registered at the Lick while on a short pleasure trip to this city. Dr. A. W. Warden, one of the leading speclalists of New York, is at the Grand on a short vacation which he is spending in a visit to this State. H. H. Hunter, a wealthy resident of San Jose, who is heavily interested in varlous mining properties throughout the State, is a guest at the Grand. N. Hilderbrandt, an extensivp rancher of San Luis Obispo County, is at the Russ, where he arrived yesterday on a business trip, which will necessitate his remaining in the city for a few days. . S. N. Wood, president of the First Na- tional Bank of Denver and partner of D. H. Moffatt, the well-known millionalire, is a guest at the Palace, where he ar- rived last evening on a business trip to the coast. P. R. Lund, assistant to Passenger Traf- fic Manager McCormick of the Southern Pacific Company, has entirely recovered from his recent attack of la grippe and is now at his office recelving the congratu- lations of his numerous friends. Staying at the Occldental, where they arrived last evening en route to the Or- ient, are the following missionaries. They come from various points of the East and are bound to their chosen flelds of labor in China: Mary Kitring, M. D., Tien Shu 4 Nein; Carrie J. Denbillls, Jeane Adams and Nell M. Adams. —_—— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.—T. A. Rogers and wife of.8an Francisco are at the Na- tional; W. A, Ferrall of Oakland is at the St. James. ————— gmmms:o!mumsofig @ HOME STUDY COURSE. g | § An eight-page supplement 2 | § containing all Home Study ar- % \g ticles published from October |& 16 to November 15, both dates & & inclusive, has just been issued. g o Copies con be obtained at The & g Call Business Office. | =3 @NTNINONINOR GUORIRRONTNY e ANSWERS TO CORRESPOND; 3 POSTAGE STAMPS—F. R. W., Oak- land, Cal. For explanation of the postage etamp language see The Call of Sunday, October 22. An illustrated article tells all about it. READING CLUB—A., Dunnigan, Cal. Without knowing what kind of a reading club it is intended to start, it is Impos- | sible to advise what literature it ought to secure. AN OLD CLOTHES PARTY-IL S. M., City. *“An Old Clothes Party” {8 one at which the participants wear any old clothes. Tt “does not follow that the clothes worn should be tattered and torn. GOVERNMENT SEWING—A. V. C., Oakland, Cal. For {nformation In regard | to securing Government sewing apply at | the Commissary Department, U. 8. A., corner of New Montgomery and Jessie streets, San Francisco, Cal. TO GO—A constant reader, Palo Alto, Cal. It is not proper to say “I would have liked to have gone,” but the proper form is I would have liked to go.” The latter sentence expresses the idea of the speak- ;r‘ which is what he would have liked to 0. CHRISTMAS BOXES—A. 8., City. Christmas boxes intended for sailors or soldiers at the Philippines may be sent to the quartermaster's department, U, S. A., Jessie street, necar New Montgomery, San Francisco, and they will be forwarded by the first transport that leaves for the islands. HER MARRIED NAME-Two Per- plexed Girls, City. If a girl is about to be married, she should mark T linen with the initial of the name she will assume. If she is vain enough to have her linen marxed, it would not be In accordance with the facts, if she marrted a man named Smith and her malden name was Jones, to have napkins, aole linen, etc., adorned with the letter 3. 2 MAJORITY—A. 8., Borden, Cal. By majority is meant any number over and above one-half of the whole, in_otner words if 100 votes were polled and one candidate received 51 votes and the otner received 49, the former would have a ma- ority of two; If he received enough votes n addition to an equal number receivc.i by his opponent to .xceeg two-thirds of the vote cast for that opponent then it could be said that he was elected by a two-thirds majority. OFFICERS OF STATE—A. S., Borden, Cal. The State officers ot California are: H. T. GGnge. Governor; J. H. Neff, Lieu- tenant Governor; C, Curry, Secret: of !u}{:; E. P. Colga Cornrlymller; e‘l':':/- man ves, Treasurer; uirey L. Am)rn(esve General; Martin J. ‘Vfl(’hl.’ gfi: veyor General; ‘thomas J. Kirk, Superin. tendent of Pubuc Instruction; A. J. John- ston, Superintendent of State Prin The salary of the Governor is $5000 a y that of the Lieutenant Governor $10 day when the Legislature s in ses and that of each of the officers nam $3000 per year. California has seven Rep- resentatives; Nevada has one. TUNITED STAT CIVIL SERVICE- L. L. G., Crescent Mills, Cal. If you wiil address a communication to the United States Civil Service Commission, Wasn- ington, D. C., you will be furnished a manual that will explain everything in relation to all classes of examinations. THANKSGIVING DAY—S. D., City. ‘Che first Thanksgiving day held in this country is usually sa to have been a day appointed for that purpose in Feb- ruary, 1631 At that date the colony at Charlestown was reduced to the point of starvati when a vessel with 4 arrived, and a day of ing and thanksgiving w Gover. nor. In June, of Mase sachusetts Bay held a day of thanksgiving on account o vorable measures for the colonles pas by the Privy Council of the King of England. In I and, 184 the annual Thanksgiving day was appointed national proclama- tion. Since then proclamation ha been issued annually by Prestdent. ONCE MORE THE CENTURY-J. H. R., City. This correspondent writes: “In your Answers to Correspondents of Oc- tober 22 and November 15, it appears that the next ctentury will'commence with the 1st day of Januar: 191 1Is t not wrong? With the 3ist day of December, 1599, 1500 years are completed, and January 1, 1900, will be the beg! an’F of the new century. Is tha ©_both ques- tions the answer is The answer given in this department to other corre- spondents on the dates named were cor- rect. . H. R. will for a moment con- sider the fact that it takes 100 years to complete a century he will discover that the first century, which commenced with the year 1, was not compieted until close of the year 100, consequently the sec- ond century did not commence until the first day of the year 101. Following that rule down the centurles, this department is at a loss to discover how or by what rule of figuring 4. H. R. arrives at the conclusion 1300 years will have been com- leted on the 3ist day of December, 1569 n that day 1869 years will have been completed. If the correspondent will do a little figuring he will soon satisfy himseif that the twentieth century commences with the year 191 —_——— Cal. glace fruit i0c per Ib at Townsend's.* —_——— Special iInformation supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042, ¢ —_—— “Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup” Has been used for fifty years Ly millions 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 Mrs. Winslow’'s Soothing Syru; a bottle. ———— Tourist Excursions. Personally conducted tourist excursions via the SANTA FE ROUTE, with latest vestibuled sleeping cars, through from California to Bos- ton every Wednesday, to St. Paul every Sunday and Friday, to St. Louls every Sunday and to Chicago every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday, Call at ticket off . 825 Market st., for full information. ———————— HOTEL DEL CORONADO—Take advantage of the round-trip tickes Now only 30 by steamship, including fifteen days’ board at ho- tel; longer stay, $2 50 per day. Apply at 4 New Montgomery street, San Franeisco. —_— e — California Limited. SANTA FE ROUTE—Connecting train leaves at § p. m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Bat. urday, giving passengers ample time to see Los Angeles and Pasadena. Finest equipped train and best track of any line to the East. Get handsome folder and full particulars at 623 Market stree ADVERTISEMENTS. The Young Mother She thinks little of her- self, and fails to notice how pale and thin she is grow- ing. She worries constantly over the baby that does not thrive, although its food seems abundant, nourishes and strengthens the nursing mother and su plies to the baby’s food the bone-forming and fat-pro- ducing elements which were Macking. SCOTT & BOW N o S Yorke