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RDAY JANUARY 27, 1900 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprieto: sddress Ali Communications to W. &. LEAKE, Manager PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, S. F. Telephone Maln ISGS. IDITORIAL ROOMS....217 to 221 Stevensom St Telephone Main 1874, Delivered by Carriers. 15 Cents Per Week. Siagle Copies, 5 Centn. Terms by Mail, Inciudinz Postage: CALL (including Sunday), one sa.00 N LILY D AILY CALL (Including Sunday), 6 months.. 3.00 DALY CALL (inelnding Sunday), 3 months.. 1.5¢ DALY CALL—By Single Month. .. 65e S ADAY CALL One Year . ¥ WEERLY CALL One Yea . poximasters are authorize: mubscriptions. wple copies will be torwarded when requested GAKLAND OFFICE.........00...808 Broadway €. GEORGE KROGNESS. Macuger Forelgn Advertising. Marguette Build- ing. Chicag - = NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. €. CARLTON.....cvcnes .Herald Squarec AEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: PERRY LUKE CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: fherman House; P. 0. News : Great North erw Hotel; Fremont House: Auditorium Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Square: Murray Hill Hetel WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE..Wellington Hotel J. ¥. ENGLISH, Correspondent. LR ANCH OFFICES—3527 Montzomery., cormer of Ciny 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes. open uptil 9:30 o'clock. 639 McAllister, open 530 o'clock. 615 Lurkin, open until o'clock. 1941 Mission. open until 10 1 Market, corner Sixteenth. open k. 1096 ¥ Pt Eleventh. ope; corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, until 9 o'clock. open lie every afterncon an h are not 10st per- to vote for tical suicide whict at the election of Burns a, and the second is t ces of the Republic Not a § two points on me. leclare they wou han to see the grand ce of Burns and 1 to the best tra- sm declare they Burns, who is neither to nocrat. but simply a rascally tool mp: ws which e f the session and of the it Repub! do well to g > take brought go of such men, for they represent v as a whole, and with that se will have to deal in to consider whether the er ing knaves or the bl +he enemies of the Re; 1 party rejoice, ed the indignation of Republicans them- C The taxpayers ve not failed to note that s a large expenditure Republicans, of public Democrats or not pleased that they have to pay order to enable the Governor to y to Burns and the Southern the debt he owes them. her 1 reg he clear meaning of the interviews we pub- 1g. The issue is in the hands of the mbers of the Legisiature. They cannot lost honor the dishonor he would put finishing the business for ed, and by electing an honor- nited States Senate, they can re- m the menace that threatens it s upon them and there is no way the 1a w department of the Southern F mpany is inclined to think that his personal pre<tige is at stake on the issue of the extra sessio: 2t Sac If that be really the case he can ¥ the satisfaction of knowing that what he loses others will gain in unsmirched Honor and untainted PR m F. Herrin has announced that it must be ns or nobody for United States Senator. Mr. errin evidently means that California must be rep- ented at Washington by nobody or by somebody than nobody. wO! ent Republicans in | Y way, perhaps, of distracting the attention of 2 the British from the war in the Transvaal and | i Gage, but they can save the | where another halt would be made until Russia had extended her railways to that point and established a strong base of supplies there. The third campaign | COLONEL BRY@N AND THE FATHERS. | 1 N his pilgrimage in search of an office Colonel Bryan recently reached Baltimore. The Demo- | would carry Russia to the Indus, and India would cratic Legislature had refused to invite him to in- [then be at her mercy. | struct it in its duties, and as this snub indicated that It is curious that Lebedyeff does not advise the i“My M and” was the enemy’s country, the colonel |actual conquest of India. He prefers to leave the rushed into it like the unthinking warhorse into battle. | country in the hands of the British after Russia is in To his Baltimore meeting the members of the regu- {.1 position to dominate it. jar Democratic State Committee were bid in n. | “With the extension of our dominions to the In- | dus,” he says, “we could prepare new bases for irrup- The office-holders elected by that party last year upon a platform that omitted Bryan and his iree silver and divinely appointed ratio,” also put their willing abashed and unappalled, the Monumental City and He put great stress and train npon the income tax, and we refer to that part s fairly illustrative of his method. He ion do people pay internal tion into India; in our hands would be a Damocles sword, by means of which we could thwart all Eng- lish opposition in Europe, while England would be compelled to increase her army and live in constant dread of losing her Indian possessions. In all prob- ability this would lead to a close alliance with Great | Britain, with immense advantage to both powers. The Eastern question would be settled in Russia’s fa- its hands to the snub. But, the colonel d gcly in proportion to the |vor, and Russia would have as her neighbors in India use. And so far as you col- | not fanatical Moslems and emasculated Hindus, but rom liquor and tobacco you make the poor | the sh—the foremost nation in the world.” more than the rich | Only military experts can rightly ~estimate - the colo st and expert in matters lue of the strategy proposed, but the political i : afiecting those wl the poor,” we take it | cleverness of the final statement can be appreciated by that the result of his observations is given in that jall To drive the British wholly out of India would ence. But we submit that instead of being an | be to release that power to oppose Russia elsewhers, but to leave her there and then compel her to serve economics, and the conclusion is, if you want to get | Russian policies in all other parts of Asia is a stroke rich go light on liquor and tobacco. But the able | of diplomacy worthy of the best masters of the art. colonel continues: “The Republican party looked |In the meantime, however, it will be remembered that around for any old thing to put a revenue stamp on. | the man who sold the lion’s skin while the lion was My friends, you heard men denounce our income tax |yet alive was killed in hunting him. in 1806. I want to say it is stronger to-day than it was then. And if those who have been shirking their taxes think that they have settled this question for- ever, I want to tell them that the income tax will be in the next campaign, and it will be in the campaign til the Constitution of the United States is so argument in politics it is a sermon in morals and THE BIG RAILWAY COMBINES. A MONG the arguments advanced by the Inter- state Commerce Commission in support of the recommendation that larger powers be amended as to specifically authorize an income tax, so | given to the commisslon in dealing with railway mat- neither one Judge nor nine Judges can build | ters is one drawn from the recent combinations a bul around the fortunes of the great and throw | formed among the railway managers. On that sub- the burde ject the report of the commission says: “It is a matter of common knowledge that vast schemes of | railway control are now in process of consummation, and that the competition of rival lines is to be re- strained by these combinations. While this move- ment has not yet found full expression in the actual consolidation of railroad corporations, enough has i transpired to disclose a unification of financial inter- ests which will dominate the management and har- monize the operations of lines heretofore independent and competitive. This is to-day the most noticeable and important feature of the railway situation. If the plans already foreshadowed are brought to effective results, and others of similar scope ‘are carried to execution, there will be a vast centralization of rail- road properties, with all the power involved in such far-reaching combinations, yet uncontrolled by any public authority which can be efficiently exerted. The restraints of competition upon excessive and unjust rates will in this way be avoided, and whatever evils may result will be remediless under existing law: It is pointed out that coincident with these schemes | of unified control the railways operating through an of government on the poor.” The coruscating oratorical career of the colonel has fi shed but few better specimens of the Bryanic mett He assaults the Supreme Court for build- ing “a bulwark around the fortunes of the great,” and that the constitution will have to be that aforesaid bulwark can be torn , that the “bulwark” was built not by the Judges, and that ses that all his rant against the Re- for not enacting an income tax is an late the constitution. | mended to permit such d od re pears, the: it refuses to v tution has to be a position now violate the constitu- wor an’s noble is misdirected. His ap- | The Republicans and 1e for the lack of an income | plutocrat and monopolist and | ot to blar & r, George Washington, who pre- that made the constitu: P of the great 1 al 1 this nal purpose he v HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1900 fed by James M 0. Alexander Hamilton and | extensive territory have recently made very large in- 10le pu and abetted by Jeffer. 1 Mon- | creases in their scale of charges. Numerous articles roe. It is well that these conspirators stand exposed | have been taken from a class in which they were for- | last. Mr. Bryan has smoked them out of their | merly placed and put in a higher class. The advances es and smudged their fame in , and | have been agreed upon by carriers without oppor- nend their infamous handiwork out of ion ar tunity for shippers, dealers or consumers to be heard. As a result there have been many complaints, and under the law the complainers have a right to be but as the commission say “So long as carriers are practically free to make and apply such rates as they choose, and there is at the same time no adeqtiate provision for determining whether such rates are just and reasonable, or for preventing the exaction of those found unjust and unreasonable, al- though declared by statute to be unlawful, the injus- of Colonel Bryan when, to the con- | these the confidence heard; which nstrument had left out, he toc palpitating bosom of h protection of the poor audience to t erished to restore a | ion of Inde- and administered according to erson; 1to its shell-like ear his ¢ ‘I want, if I ¢ unded upon the Decla: ani whispe doc- nt that will stand n a bank aristocracy 1e aress. The statements of the report are almost matters of | common knowledge. Certainly the public under- I cannot tell you whether it | stands that railways fix rates at their pleasure and is to be our lot to triumph, and in our triumph lay | grant discriminations at pleasure, despite the la the foundation again in the old places and raise again | The report says: “The commission has made earnest the ancient landmarks which the fathers had set up.” | and persistent efforts to secure enforcement of the What are we to do with this remarkable colonel, | penal provisions of the law, but. whatever may be the who in the same speech spits upon the “old places” | reason for failure, the fact is that convictions have and the “ancient landmarks” by declaring that he will | been very few in comparison with the number have to amend the foundation and move the land- | prosecutions instituted.” marks because they build “a bulwark around the for- | That is the situation of the time. To defeat the e the great and impose all the burdens of gov- | law and defy the nation the railway managers have or- ernment upon the poor,” and then asks for a triumph | ganized larger combinations than ever. that will enable him to lay the foundation in the same | the nation abandon the fight and surrender to the old place and raise again the ancient landmarks fixed corporations, or shall it meet the increased strength by the same old fathers of the corporations by increasing the power of the We fear the colonel is threatened with paresis, or | commission sufficiently to enable it to enforce the law thinks that his hearers are paranoiacs. and do justice? a governn o did in Jackson's day, be d the people. But, my what fate has decreed. friends, I cannot tell you of es of e o i A NATIONAL PARK 4T TAHOE. Mayor Phelan has most emphatically denounced a government of the people by the pre In the light of recent manipulations before the Police Commis- 1 his Honor probably wished to give force to an S te snap. { »n that a public office is a e———— THE INVASION OF INDIA. NATOR STEWART of Nevada has intro- duced a bill to set apart certain lands in Cali- fornia and Nevada as a public park and forest reservation, to be known as Lake Tahoe National Park [he bill proyides that townships numbered 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 of range 14 cast, and the simi- larly numbered townships of ranges 15 east, 16 ea 17 east and 18 east, Mount Diablo meridian, shall be | withdrawn from occupancy or sale under the laws of | the United States and set apart as reserve forest lands and dedicated as a public park and pleasure-ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people. It is further provided that the curplus waters due to the annual rainfall in the Lake Tahoe catchment basin are to be reserved for irrigation purposes, and | the Secretary of the Interior is instructed to estab- lish such regulations with respect to the outflow of water from the lake as shall best subserve that pur- pose. The United States Geological Survey is re- relieving them from the strain of an over- amount of thonught and emotion on that subject thers has been recently published in Russia by a military writer, V. T. Lebedyeff, a work entitled, “To India: | A Military, Statistical and Strategical Sketch; A | Plan of Future Invasion.” The book has certainly | had the cffect of drawing some attention at least, for the London Chronicle has made it the subject of an elaborate review. T work must not be confounded with the general | style of treatises on the invasion of India. It is not designed for popular reading, but for the study of | quired within one year from the passage of the act to | Russian officers. It is technical, and not literary. It | survey and prepare plans showing such tracts of land is made up of complex calculations of the ways and | as may be necessary for an impounding dam at the means and cost of transportation of armies and their | source of the Truckee River, together with estimates supplies, of intricate geographical and strategical de- | of the cost of constructing and maintaining it. tails, and is intended to serve as a basis for a plan of The passage of the bill will secure to th i le | campaign in case one s¥x0|xlll !\c undertaken. another great park and add to the pcrmancncl E:t'l)"a)c‘: ‘“05.. wux_’k\- or magazine articl on thc.prohlcm of | tions of the mountains by preventing the destruction |a Russian invasion of India are of little importance. | of the natural beauties of that wonderful regi I | Lebedyeff's .treatiflt“ however, appears to be well will also be another step toward the al(ainr:e:l(“ f - worth attention. According to his view the conquest | comprehensive system of forest protection and “:tc: j of I'}d‘“ 15 now praclltalfl‘c by the Russians, but wiil preservation, two objects of vast importance to ever | require a series of operations extending over long | portion of the country, but particularly so to xhi ‘:pcrmds of time. He divides his p!an of a{l\'ancc int> | West. Ample provisions are of course made in the four campaigns, after each of which he thinks Russia | bill to compensate all persons whose property may | be taken from them for the purpose of establishing would find herself in an impregnable position, and | could force England to make peace, while retaini % | : > Aamning | the park. Thus there will be no injusti | her conquests and holding her hands free to construct 2 justice done to any K one, and the bill apparently merits the support of ail | ": ‘\h ba;fi«d(o,[ ah further fl.d_‘a““' At the conclusion | who take an intelligent interest in the preservation of of the third of these campaigns she would find herself | our natural parks, our waning forests and our sur {on the Indus with India at her mercy. The fourth : ! A plus waters. | campaign, from the Indus eastward, M. Lebedyeff | thinks, would never need to be fought. 7 | The first step in the forward movement would be the capture of Herat, and Lebedyeff thinks it wouid | be better for Russia to risk a war with Great Britain | by seizing the t_’ortress rather than to declare war in | faithful might discover a trick or two which they did i the ‘hope of taking it afterward. After fortifying that |'not know. It appears that a vote for Senator in position the next advance would be to Kandahar, | Montana is worth any old thing. Some of the worthy gentlemen who are handling the Burns campaign might find it to advantage to have the testimony in the case of United States Sena- tor Clark of Montana issued in pamphlet form. The tice which may result must be without available re- | Now, shall ! | | charged a hail of beribboned brass but- | Lick for a few days. ! on a short business trip to this city. | the body of her soldier husband. B0+ 0+0+0+ 000+ § A DALY HINT FROM PARS E .o—o—o—o—o-o+0+0—o—9+o*’ | B e e e B SR L R e ST S S e e 3 BLUE CLOTH COSTUME. | The novel costume represented is of blue | cloth, taillor made, trimmed with black | mohalr braid. The corsage forms imita- | tion lapels and corselet. The skirt Is trimmed with a braided band around the §ides, beneath which are flat pleats falling | DANCED UNDER | CKOSSED SWORDS Army and Navy Cotillon | of La Jeunesse Club. Each season boasts of one big dance | that establishes the 1 standing of all | who attend. The season 1599-190 will be remembered by the army and navy co- tillon given last evening by the patron- esses of the La Jeunesse Club. It was the dance of the year and stands pre-eminent in point of fashionable members, lavish decoration and originality of conception. La Jeunesse, heretofore, has danced at Cotillon Hall, but the unusvally large number of invitations lssuea for last night's affair found the Polk street hall too small. Consequently, the patronesses arranged that the dance be held at Golden | Gate Hall. The fact that it was an army and navy cotfllon was made evident everywhere. Flags and tri-colored bunting were used with artistic effects in decorations, and each of the ladies was gowned in the national color of her cholce. Lieutenant John T. Halnes and Lieuten- ant R. F. Gardner led the cotillon and in- troduced three charming figures—a sword march, in which the ladies moved beneath the crossed swords of the men: a flag fig- ure, in which the dancers moved around an outspread flag, and an absolutely new figure, called the cannon figure. A little brass mortar mounted on the stage dis- tons at the dancers and the gentlemen charged the canon’s mouth to bring back to their fair partners the favor projectiles. After the cotillon a spendid supper was served, after which dancing was resumed. Those in the first set were Miss Cockrill and Fred Poett, Mi ara_Huntington and Percy King, Miss Elizabeth Hunting- ton and Dupont Coleman, Miss Georgiana Hopkins and Harry Stetson, Miss Kate Dillon and John Baird, Miss May Denman and Thomas Ransome, Miss Katherine Glass and_Arthur Foster, Miss Spreckels and Roy Pike, Miss Bernice Drown and | Mr. Stevenson. Miss Margaret Cole and Lieutenant William Kelly Laura Crellin and Abraham Lewls, Miss Anna Yoorhies and Chester Murphy, Miss Ruth McNutt and Reddick Duperu, Miss Isa- belle O'Connor and Lieutenant Guy Scott, | Miss Ardella Mills and Lawrence Scott. | The patronesses of the club are: Mrs. i H. Voorhies, Mrs. Timothy Hopkins, Mrs. W. H. Mil Mrs. W. A. McKittrick, . McClung, Mrs. Phebe Hearst, Mrs. A. W. Foster of San Rafsel and Mrs. H. E. Huntington. | | AROUND THE “ CORRIDORS | W. H. Cleary, the Stockton mining ex- | pert, is at the Lick. | Marion Biggs Jr., the Oroville capitalist, | is a guest at the Grand. Homer, U. s at the Occidental. L. Sanford, a popular hotel man of | Corning, is staying at the Lick. | W. A. Howell, District Attorney of Bakersfleld, is a guest at the Lick. { W. W. Douglas, Deputy Controller at | Saéramento, is a guest at the Grand. j ) 8. A, 1s among | Dr. C. 8. F. Lowndes, U. is one of the late arrivals at the Occidental. F. A. Dunlap has come down from his home in Stockton and Is at the Palace. R. H. Brown, one of the prominent busi- | ness men of Los Angeles, is at the Palace. | J. M. Oliver, a prominent attorney and | politician of Merced, is registered at the | Lick. State Senator John F. Davis of Jackson | was among the arrivals of last night at | the Palace. | Mr. and Mrs. Gillen, prominent residents of Palermo, are registered for a short stay | at the Occldental. | Fred L. Baker, a wealthy iron manufac- turer of Los Angeles, is staying at the | A. P. Maginnis, claim and tax agent of the Southern Railroad of California, is| a guest at the Palace. Dr. and Mrs. V. T. McGillicuddy are registered at the Grand from their home | in Deadwood, South Dakota. George Mare! a New York manufac- turer, is registered at the Occldental while F. M. Schumacher, the fruit shipper and cold storage man, is at the Palace, where he arrived yesterday, registering from Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. B. Bentley of Youngstown. Ohio, are at the Palace. They arrived yesterday and came for the purpose of | helping Mrs. John A. Logan Jr. look after | ———————— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—T. H. Sorenson and wife of San Francisco are at the Marlborough. H. A. Laws and T. B. Laws of Oakland are at the Manhattan. e ————— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON - — | WASHINGTON, Jan. 2%6.—J. H. Maupin | of San Franclsco is at the Regent. Wil- liam C. Mayon of San Francisco is at the St. James. Frank A. Jones of Oakland and Thomas Malcomson of S8an Francisco, who have been attending the convention of marine engineers here, returned home to-night. Benefit for S:amen’s Institute. The Seamen's Institute will have a benefit entertainment at Native Sons’ Hall on Thursday, February 22. The in- suwute was established by the Catholic Truth Soclety over two years ago and for the past year has been under the control of the Paulist Fathers. The proceeds of the entertainmer‘ will be devoted to liqu.dating a debt of $400 and to remodel- ing the rooms now occupied bv the or- nization. It is encouraged by Catholic fl‘dlu all over the city and is under the m:l-fl&c&gn&*fl of Mrs. M. H. de Youn& Carroll, Mrs. Joseph 'Omcers From Mare Island, Officers at | fault. | ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. ANDREE BUOY PICKED UP What the One Recovered the Arctic Looked Like. ..@..-9*@—0—»@4-@ &g HONOR TO THE MEMORY OF A BRAVE SAILOR Services Over the Gal- lant Carlin. n R FRIENDS SURROUND HIS BIER SIMPLE 'nu—n;;z:o A MANLY CHARACTER. i the Army and His Club Asso- ciates Follow His ‘ Casket. SR | Friends of the late Commander James W. Carlin of the United States navy gath- ered around his body yesterday to pay a last tribute to his memory before his re- | mains should be sent East for interment. Services were held at the Unitarian church and were under the direction of his old friends of the Bohemian Club. Yes- terday morning the body, which had re- mained all night on the transport dock, was escorted to the First Unitarian | Church at Franklin and Geary streets by | a detachment of bluejackets and marines | from the navy yard. he detachment was headed by the marine band. The casket | was covered with the unfon jack, but at the church a pall of violets was thrown-! 4 over all, hiding every part of the casket. | Following in the train were friends of the deceased from civil life, officers of the navy and retired officers, who had known and loved him, and officers of the army. Lieutenant E. T. Wilson of the Third Ar- | ¢ tillery, aid to General Shafter, represented the general, who could not attend. Services at the church were brief. There some music by the choir and a eulogy the dead, delivered by Rev. E. Brad- Leavitt, pastor of the church. He e e e e e e e e e L R S N S Sk I b S o S b 4 w for ford HE discovery of one of the buoys be- longing to the Andree expedition has been noted by the dally press. Twelve of these buoys were taken with the expedition, h one consisting of a cork balloon ted with the Swedish colors ellow and blue) and covered with a net- rk of strong copper wire ending below in a spike. In the upper end o was an opening in which was secured a cvlinder, that was closed at the lower end by means of a rubber packing and at the upper end screwed in the copper plate to referred to the simple, unassuming char- acter of the man, his kindness of heart, his goaod fellowship and his great physical | and mental courage. “‘Here was a good man and a true one,” he said in_concluding his gone address. “He from us. God bless his mem- | (3 one who heard and knew r re-echoed the wor rvices at the chure cluded the procession form again and the body was escorted to the ferry, where it awaited the afternoon train for the E As the escort disbanded a bugler to the head of the casket and ha the balloon there 1 SR hich the netting was secured. On the ander Carlin was a prominent “qich 0 B D, Andree's Polar Ex- member of the Bohemfan Clab. "Affer nis | Ditte the nseription, “Andrees o0 ved. return from Samoa, where he had gatned Fhe inecription dated 139, the year world-wide fame for his heroism ¢ 1e | for which the expedition was first planned, Vandalia in the great gale, the club gave was not altered, although Andree him a dinner. Among the guests on that i The fron eylinder occasion was Rudyard Kipling. In re- unications in sponse to the lofty eloquence of General which pro- Barnes, Stuart M. Taylor, Judge Boait . extends a strong and other orators of the club at that pe- terminates in_ a riod, Carlin made a brief and modest made of sheet .iron. This speech, in which he declarea that the is very practical, for if the United States needed more ships. The R er it will al- mode: ke down, and y and simplicity of Carlin’s bearing r elicited the admiration of Rudyard Kip- »r on ice the spike ling, who was present, and the author's vill always be hat the flag upperm e buoy which was found 5 inches long. and has been declared experts who met in Stockholm > be the s. led north pole buoy Andree was to t after the th pole had estimate of the brave in English literature, Commander Carlin was a brave genial man, a true type of the American sailor. He was modest, or reticent, to a He sought no political or personal influence to gain favored assignment to dut e was grievously disappointed, however, whea the Oregon this bay for Cuba because h dered duty on the battle portunity for active service i squadron, which he had for ma hoped to obtain, vanished when t gon sailed a Raphael Weill, who was Carlin, conducted such fun, ar ments’ as were, by the courtesy navy, allotted to the Bohemian Among members of the club and sailor has a place have thrown ¢ be: passed sen thinks that the finding of this 1 n and believes that the that it was thrown out as bal- her than as a means of commu- He thinks that the buoy was ar Franz Josef Land. np Nan Celebration at St. Mary's Church. There will be a special celebration at St. ) Church to-morrow morn- ing to commemorate the feast of the con- who paid tender homage to the mem version of St. Paul the Apostle. The | of the gallant officer were: Barry Cole- | Sermon will be delivered by Rev. Father ! man, Vanderlynn Stow, C. A. Maddox. Macodnald, pastor of St. Charles Chure . . A.. Geor ¥ g\‘ me which will b (retired), the mn service at 11 D. rge T. Bromiey, Hugh M. ck will be unusually elaborate. Burke, He Marshall, H. Dimond, pranGincas s diar wama Colonel George W, ~Granniss, W Free exhibition of candy making from 3 sreer Harrison, C. P. Welc! : vkt - st ® Clunie_J. M. Wilson. George I to 4y m, =t Yous Bl oy Yale, A. Joullin, Lieutenant Townsend's famous broken candy, made Reginald Nichoison, U. S of pure sugar Market st Trilly, U. 8. N. (retired}; Char : i e s Lieutenant J. Burnett, Captain Taylor, Cal. Glace Fxm_vg ._A:_ ib, in fire-etched Dr. Arnold, George W. Fletcher, Aibert boxes. Townsend's. 735 Market street. * Gerberding, H. S. Foote. Raphael Weill, e Lieutenant Commander Drake, U. S. N.;| Townsend's will remove early in Febru- Lieutenant Commander Thomas Phe ary to Market st., Palace Hotel build- U. 8. N.; Lieutenant Cavanaugh, U. S. N.: | ing. A ket st. until March 1. eutenant Commander Bowman. U. S N.: Pay Inspector Thompson, U . inf. ihn supplied dafly o and Lieute T. Wilson. U. § Hoycial o - sqgpig | s and public men by the reau (Allen's). 510 Mont- lephone Main 142. ¢ ———————— ast Presidents to Meet. t there will be a meeting of the Past Presidents of the Native Sons of the Golden West for the purpose of closing the charter and going into permanent or- business ho ping B UNITED STATES TRANSPORTS-T. H. W., Caspar, Cal. The following are the transports no~ owned by the United States Government, together with present and former names: Present Name. Former Nama. ke Foit ira Mohaw] ;[;.;:.ctrwk Arizona Personally Conducted Excursions Warren Scandia In tmoroved wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist Sheridan Massachusetts sleeping cars via Santa Fe Route. Experfenced H;;“:’ ;’,’L’;fl{:enk“ iex"u!:«hn conductors accompany these excur- Meade Berlin | stons to lock after the weiare of passengers. Sherman Mobile | To Chicazo and Kansas City every Sunday, Missourt Missourt | Wednesday and Friday. To Boston, Montreal Relief Relief | and@ Toronto every Wednesday. To St. lLouis o | every Sund To St. every Sunday and MARRIAGE—Constant Reader, City. | Friday. Ticket office. 623 Market street. 1f a man and woman agree to live —————————— gether as husband and wife without a| The fashionable ladies’ corrective tonic s Dr ceremony being performed according to Siegert’s Angostura I ; the world re- law, that is construed to be a_contract | PoWned South American invigorator marriage, for a contract may be either = P SR —————— Verbal or written. Such a “marriage” i The Fastest Train Across the Con- 5ot now recognized by the law in- Cail: tinent. fornia. the parties had so lived prior g = = Bt to the repeal of the contract m,";‘m:‘_‘ The California Limited. Santa Fe“{! e, clause_and each had acknowledged the | Compecting traim leaves § " odax other by the title of husband and wife, | Voonesday, Friday and S " it track of | equipped train and Suchits Ticket office. poses. A marriage with a minor . consent of parents is voidable, yet in the | case cited in the letter of inquiry if the | parents were cognizant of the marriage and entered no protest, but allowed the | couple to live together, a court might construg that to be a tacit consent and | a marriage to all intents and pu, | the East. 65 Market he criginal eolor given Hair Balsam for corns. A vigerovs growth and to the bair by Parker’ Hindercorns. the best 15 cts. —_— e —— Alcalde Parlor's Anniversary. the minor so married conld not legally de.| Alcalde Parlor No. 15 of the Native sert the other and “be free and Independ- | Sons of the Goiden West will give it ent of the marriage relations.” But this| tenth anniversary ball in Native Sons® is a matter that would depend upon cir-| Hall on the night of February 8. It will cumstances and would require a int tation dress affair and the grand nterpretation. tarted at $:45 o'clock. be an evenin march will be s | RUSSIAN CIGARETTES With Mouthpiece 10 cents for 10 Monopol Tobacco Works udge McKinstry, Mrs. Sam. uel Rainey, Miss Hager, Mrs. Welch, Irwin, Mrs. Whittler and others. xm'l