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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, COMPLIMENT TO CRONJE. - YT comes as news from English sources that Cronje is to be exiled. Great Britain is an artist in exiling.© Bonapirte, the King of Delhi, successor {'tc the Moguls, Arabi Pasha and the King of Bur- Mg | mah have been successively the victims of her policy Zer |of punishment by a liviig death. " We have been her partner in one small job of that kind in the banish- inent of a Samoan chief for the crime of being pre- | ferred by his countrymen for their ruler. | While the banishment of Cronje may be | eftected. that it springs up first of all propositions in the English mind, as a proper disposition to make of | (¢ mmunications to W. §. LEAKE, Manager BLICATION .Market and Third, 8. ¥. 1568, . DITORIAL ROOMS....2IT to 221 Stevemson Telephone Mnin INT4. .. never 1% Cents Per Week. ples. 5 Cente. Deltvered by Carr Stngle Terms by Mall. Including Postages |a brave foeman, is a revelation of the mean spirit oi VUTLY CALL (incloding Snmday), .00 DATLY CALL (neluding Sundngs. 4 mancne. | a.o0 | revenge that goes along with the larcenous politics | JAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday). 3 months,. 1.50 | i Chamberlain and Rhodes. Cronje's crige, to be DALY CALL—By Singl nth. vees GBe P . p A SUADAY CALL Ome -Yenr 1. punished by exile, consists in manfully defending his | WALEEKLY CALL. Oae.Xear. . 00 | country.” Beset by a British force that outnumbered | All poscmasiers are authorized to receive | 2 : | anbreriptions. kis, in men and guns, more than ten to one, he held ta:uple copies will be forwarded when requested |ihe empire in action ten days, fighting until powde food and water were gone before he surrendered, not {to Lord Roberts, but to the necessities of nature and | the demand of Instead of appreciating the | | manhood. of such a foe, Lord Roberts subjected him to hu; ation ‘by compelling him to wait at the flap | of his tent until that representative of British gal- ABLAND OFFICE C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Masager Forclgn Advertining. Marquette Build- ing, Chicago. 1118 Broadway mine. lantry chose to receive him and grant terms of sur- b Y e g e perent Nomth- | render. - Washington «did not treat Cornwallis that - wazy at Yorktown, nor did Jackson insult the suc- AEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astork : A. EBrentane, 31 Union Murray otel. cessor ‘of Pakenham at New Orleans. The conduct of Roberts toward his brave prisoner has touched. the quick of soldierly honor throughout | the world. It was the insolent forerunner of the | | proposition to send its victim into exile, to fade un- ! der a strange sun and die broken in spirit and in KEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: PERRY LUKENS JR.. .20 Tribune Building WASHINGTON ¢ ©.) OFFICE.. Wellington Hotel | Democratic Congressman from this coast agrees with 3. F H, Correspondent. b - heart. | BRANCH o ICES. Montecomery. corner of Th n 1 iri itain is st e oo g g sl £ e gentle, the Christian spirit of Great. Brita n i open until . o'clock. MecAllister, apen | further shown in selection of the spot to which until 9:30 o'clock. 616 Larkin, open until his 1 > & . H 3 7 h- -~ Slelodic. T ADEY MicHen: otim et 18 this manly sohh‘vr is to bé sent to punish an for with o'clock. 2261 Market, sorner Sixteenth. open | standing her legions ten hard days and nights, though i » o ) V. o e 1t e o s atita |they outnumbered him ten to one. The place selected o'cloc 106 Eleventh. open until ® o'clock. E AW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, | is Mauritius, formerly known as the Isle of France, until 9 o'clock. ————e "AMUSEMENTS. Ataadin 3 s Twine’ Tuesdlay afternoon, March 6. lle -every aftern ned Animal Show Races AUCTION SALES. March €, at 12 o'clock, ng e 'l Police Coin chair is ) the Super rac: Ty g ev i at the track upon held : there. The opening ain it ‘cannot be mistaken, b any astuteness r the E: h the terms upon ng may be per- I be granted to association n the tern sports or cor- g le extent of the limitation put g ave the privilege for orty days in any one No one person, ere-i1s nothing in the stern gamblers from | one to another, rivilege ev y forty days of corporations has i not be difficult for the the East to form them- s for racing purposes The resolutions, however, slight trouble. ’ g of & ed of i | They can take another as individuals, or as ons, and work the game in nind the gamblers will have | ke evéry possible advantage of the w s been provided for continuing their g s profits to the managers of track P under any conditions, and will he r the terms of -these resolu- | the downtown poolrooms a the Eastern gang that controls The city and county of San Fran nblers through Widber's defalca- | .000, and there is no felling how muc}; | nd business men through the petty. theits of - their employes, nesty by the track ganibless. y light,. the. proposed resolutiofis » being an_actual infamy. or | The specious | . in the pretended restriction of gam- | son” of fos adds to the vile de ypocrisy has been, called »minatien spect ch. vicé pays to virtue, but in this | 0 for the pretense is toon | t meless to deceive any one. All of the | 1is'te be obtained by tempt- and women to enter upon a path isaster, dishonor and suicide e of the trick in the resolutions should t the whole project. It is a astern gamblers are aiming wish to revive here an iniquity ¥y city-in the East, fter it had added o of the biackest crimes in our many @ victim the . Morgue. for any one person or corpora- lutions, and the gamblérs. smile, for re are more than one of them in the that they can easily work that provision 1l the year round. n suppressed in e | s suppressed here ords s sent to “I know - of nothing that has caused me to change my opinion or position .regarding the of Ingleside. . 1 am decidedly op- osed fo public. gambling of any description, ause there is no doubt that it leads to many erimes-of defalcation, -suicide and murder. It is a bad cxample to set before the eyes of our g youtlh.”—Excerpt from an interviezo ith Mayor Tames D. Phelan. : e 119 g pen v OINNE N grown ! lingsgate. | end wrested from France with other small plunder | during the Napoleonic wars. It located in the middle of the hot hell of the' Indian Ocean, and is | only about 470,000 acres in extent. It is a tangle of. poisonous tropical verdure, and is crowded by a coolie population, which steams and stews in the sun | and evaporates quickly. It is the Devils Island of the British empire, the black hole of that widespread | greed which is called imperial power. Its population is periodically swept away by pestilence. In 1854 | 17,000 died of cholera. In 1867 malarial fever carried off 30,000. Before the first and between the two epidemics and since the last pestilence worked in that choice, steaming, tropical culture bed of plague and death. The number of victims is never reported ex- cept when depopulation cuts off the revenue of the British exploiters, who wring pounds, shillings and pence out of the brawn and blood of the ¢oolies by “benevolent despotism compared to which cham,l} slavery in the United States was an eleemosynary in- stitution. To this seat of plague and pestilence, this hole of horror, where a vertical sun sweats poison out of tropical growth that rots and grows and grows and rots without ceasing, mdking air and water toxic agents of death, it is proposed to send brave oid Cronje, because he defended himself and the liberties of his country as long. as food, water and cartridges held out < We do not flatter ourselves that there is enough sense of justice in the world to rise and shame Eng- land out of this purpose; if that Government enter- tain it, for the world’s public opinion is not enough to have made the proponent of the scheme ashamed to propose it. It is a compliment to Cronje. It is confessing that Roberts and Kitchener will feel safer in completing the assassination of the republics if they know that Cronje is a safe .prisoner in the midst of the Indiaa Ocean “Ingleside. was closed in response to a uni- | versal, unanimous public sentiment aroused by outrages committed among us. The réopening of the track will be a movement toward the subversion of . morality, the encouragement of and the propagation of crime.”—Rev. Dr. E. A. Woods. ] —— ABOUT DREAMS. HE Examiner suggests the great luck that is just now coming to Colonel Bryan. It says | that if he had dreamed: of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty four months ago and of the Porto Rican tariff bill he would have been put under treatment for de- lirium No one will dispute that Colonel Bryan is a dreamer. His campaign in 1896 was composed of reveries, involving prophecy that never came true. and perhaps the only reason why he did not dream | about the treaty and the tariff is that they are facts, and his dreams run to pure fiction and fancy. But some one had a chance to dream about the Zxaminer longer ago than four months. It wasearlyin the field with the proposition to take Porto Rico and rail the flag t& the Philippines, and to govern them and all external possessions non-constitutionally. ¥t | attacked Mr. Cleveland for saying that the whole con- stitution must go wherever the flag was “nailed,” and declared that everybody knew that the constitu- | tion need not be applied to external regions that fell | inte “our hands. This it affirmed to. be a matter of common knowledge, kriown to everybody but the | ex-President, over whom it poured a bucket of bil- Who would have dreamed that now ‘it would be hugging the constitution and insisting that it must be nailed up with the flag? So acute is its change that it suppresses news in or- der to conceal its inconsistency. The Examiner's party has one member of Congress from this State, Mr. de Vries, and he voted for the Porto Rican tariff, and therefore for the non-constitutional government of external possessions.. He gave his:reasons for t vote, and it sufficed as the reason for the votes of the three Democrats who agreed with him. In its report of the vote, “over the longest Icased line in .the world,” the Examiner excludes Mr. .de Vries’ ‘name entirely,. and refers to. the Democratic defection in this paragraph:. “As fot. the four Democrats wha voted for the bill, it is obvious that Messrs. Davey and Meyer of Louisiana did so because of the .sugar intérests of their .State. -Mr. Sibley is to all intents and purposes a Republican in. everything except the | Congressionat Directory.” But what influenced the fourth bolter? Who is he? . Where is Mr! .dé Vries?. Is he also a Republican, or was he influenced by the sugar interests. of California? The .Call ‘and the Chronicle gave him the benefit of his statement of his reasons, ‘but- he is as completely lost in the Exam- iner's news as Colonel Bryan will be in the ‘returns next November. E e A ? Now what is the use of having “the longest Jeased wire in the world” if the news is either manufactured or suppressed at the Examiner end of it? Perhaps 3 the constituents of Mr. de Vries want to know how he voted and his reasons for it, and as a public man he is entitled to publicity of both his vote and his reasons. Does the Examiner-think it can do a very large business in politics by attacking the President | for lack' of consistency, or for his policy in govern- |ing external possessions, while it is afraid-to let its readers know how the only Democratic Representa- tive from the Pacific Coast voted on the first roll- call in the House which involved that policy? Hay- ing nailed the flag to Porto Rico and the Philippines, what will the Examiner have? Does it want our gates opened to an invasion of ten millions of Asiatic coolies to overwhelm American white labor? Dues it want these tropical people endowed with the Ter- ritorial status, with the prospect of speedy statehood? We say frankly that rather than either we would draw out the nails and bring the flag home, where it belongs, under the shelter of the constitution. While Colonel Bryan might be dreaming. about President McKinley, perhaps he will say, or the Ex- aminer will say for him, just what policy he proposes for these external possessions? He ‘is responsible for their presence in our problems. ‘Senator Hoar had the Paris treaty beaten, and would have forced its amendment in the matter of the Philippine pur- chase, but Colonel Bryan persuaded enough Demo- cratic Senators to vote for it to ratify it, and, ac- cording to the constitution, make it the supreme law of the land. What will Mr. Bryan do in his cam- paign? Will he favor statehood for the islands he in- isted upon taking? Will the Examiner use its “longest leased wire in the world” to get a state- ment of his policy? As things stand now the only The Call, and the Examiner is afraid to publish his vote, and mutilates its own news dispatches to avoid it. 2 “Public gambling is a great evil, leading to poverty, disgrace, defalcation and death, which the .records of this city abundantly prove, and its practice should be discountenanced and suppressed.”—Extract from Mayor Phelanw’s message to the present Board of Supervisors. THE PRESID=NTIAL CAMP@IGN. INCE the accession of Président McKinley o S office, the enactment of a protective tarift and the firm maintenance of the gold standard have been followed by an era of unexampled prosperity in all parts of the Union, an impression has prevailed | amonyg Republicans and business men generally that | the Presidential campaign this year virtually a ‘walkover for the Kepublican candidate, and that the crushing defeat of Bryanism is a foregone conclusion. Others have argued that since the Senate i strongly Republican there will be no danger of a sil- ver bill even should Bryan be elected. From that they have proceeded to draw the conclusion that thz Bryanites will be not only indifferent to a calamity agitation in a year of prosperity, but, perceiving the hoplessness of the silver movement, will be déspond- ent and inactive in the contest.. To these sanguine citizens the re-election of McKinley seems, therefore, | to be doubly sure—first, by reason of his own strength, and, second, by ‘reason of.the weakness of his opponent. - 2 Such views are in the main correct enough, but | now as the campaign is approaching it will be well ior Republicans to take note of the strength as well as of the weakness of the adversary. We had an era of prosperity during the operation of the McKinley- tariff under the Presidency of Harrison, but none the less the Democrats elected their candidate at the next election. The warning ‘of that year should not be for- gotten. If the Republican leaders be not wise and the rank and file animated by a resolve to work to win, the campaign will not be so easy a walkover as is now believed. In the first place it is to be remembered that in 1896 Bryan received over 6,500,000 votes, being about a million more than were cast for Cleveland at the ‘previous election. That immense vote was given to him despite the fact that a large number of conserva- tive Democrats forsook the party after his nomina- tion, and that he had to make the contest without the aid of many of the most eminent Democratic leaders arid without the help of its best organizers. There is a spirit of radicalism behind the Bryan movement that gave it strength to capture the Demo- cratic party, merge it with Populism, and poll a vote that will be forever memorable in the history of our politics. That radicalism will not have in this period of prosperity the same power over the masses it had in the hard times of 1896, but it will still be too pow- erful for any patriot to despise. The fact that in spite of the efforts of so many Democratic leaders to de pose him, Bryan holds unshaken his control of the party, is a proof that he has on his side a host that will make a vigorous fight for him and his platform from the time the campaign opens until it closes. Moreover, it is unsafe for Republicans to rely too much upon the Senate. The Republican majority in that branch of Congress is large, it is true, but there is danger that the seats now held by Wolcott of Colo- rado, Carter of Montana, Shoup of Idaho, Baker of Kansas and Thurston of Nebraska may be lost to the Republicans when the next Congress meets. The. margin of security is therefore narrow, and it is evi- dent the Republicans and sound money men generally can afford to take no chances. It must be a campaign oi work from start to finish. i3 “Supervisor Tobin insists that all invest- ments must be guaranteed a reasonable inter-| est. Should ‘we then pledge a burglar initerest | on hiis investment of . burglar’s tools?”—Rev. Dr. E. R. Dille. ; The advocates of Ingleside insist that they do not’ represent the gamblers. There. is proof absolute that they do not represent horsemen or legitimate sport. and it is beyond the range of human sugges- | tion that they represent decent people. Perhaps the worthy gentlemen appear in"advocacy of the cause of the convicts. e “I speak for 10,000 famifics of this city who |, protest against the ‘re-establishment of - the crimeznest of Ingleside.”—Rev. Dr. E. Nelan- g : ; : : - -The 'rr!embe‘rs of the Board of. Education are lay- | ing up for themselves-a store of wrath that some day | rodorfons are the Welsh society. | Thursday evening they celebrated St. Da- R PROTESTED, BUT : CYMRODORIONS DANCED Ce]ebration of St. David’s Day Marred by Unexpected - Action of the Clergyman. PASTO ; ! ; ; : : ! : i 1 : ; =, — O ),':"’.f 9 =5 "W e . T 5 = e L T S G G 7 i e b i 1 2 o 3 times ‘from the snow In high altitudes. Much so-called cosmic dust is only vol- canfe_dust ejected from a volcano during its eruption. Such particles may remain suspended in the upper atmosphere for a long period of time. AROUND THE CORRIDORS L. L. Grean, a banker of Oroville, is at the Grand. ; . E. X. €oxa banker of Madera, Is at the Palace. W. H. McKenzie, a banker of Fresno, is at ‘the Dick. W. R. Spaulding. a Visalia lumber man, is at the Lick Dr. and Mrs. W: C. Henry of Seattle are at the Occidenial. Colonel T. 'W. Brooks of ‘Yuma guest at the Palice. Judge Charles Silent of Los Angeles is a guést at the Palace. F. W. Patterson. a speculator-in Fresno oil lands. is-at. theLick. P..F. Montgomery i at-the Oceidental [ from :Washington, D.. €. - Witliam Hufiter, 2~ weaithy landowner of Napa,is.a guest at the Lick. Ex-Secretary of State Thomas Beed ‘Watsonville-is a gues.at the Licks W. W. Chapin. a Sacramento. merchant, is’ regisfered- for a- short stay at the Palage 2 Frapk: Griffin, ~a : well-known mining ‘man-_of: Ofoville; is one of _the late ar- at the Californfa. is a THE REV. J. S. THOMAS. .0*-0-0—0+0+0—0—0+M—0—0+0—0-0—0.—0+0—0-0+«9-§-0+0+. \EV. J. 8. THOMAS, pastor of the | only addresses ind songs of the most ex- | Howard .Presbyterian Church, and | emplary sort and was to wind up with the Cymrodorion Soclety of Call- | & dance, for which an orchestra had been | It s +b+m+o‘+wréw‘mfl*wo+..-¢+m+...A@ .o - | engaged. The people talked the -matter | fornfa have had a falling oUL | ,ver g little, but soon were merrily danc- | all over dancing. The Cym- | ing and seemingly hed forgotten the epl- ast | sode. | “Rev. Mr. Thomas heard what had been ! | said by the chairman publiély and yester- | AReR et ReReReR RN +ReR 032‘032053 088‘0&8088 e eRNeRe R R so, has been made known throughout the world, and the advertising alone that we have received from them is worth ten times the $100,000 for which they have naw been sold. Then there are the historical and botanical features to be considered —the fact that the trees belong: to a genus found nowhere on earth but in Cali~ fornia, and if we permit them 1o be destroyed the sequoia will pass from the face of creation forever. With these varied considerations—all valuable to ‘the State's welfare—at stake it does not seem possible that there will be aught but a general and prompt indorsement of the plan to induce .Congress to set aside the Calaveras grove as a public park. = - % VISALIA TIMES. . 1t would be an outrage to permit a single sequoia in the Calaveras grove to be cut down for any purpose, and if the Native Sons and Ploneers do not stand solidly behind the ladies of the California Club In their efforts to have the Government buy the land and make It into a public park they will miss a}n.ofiorturflty to Show their love for the State that may not oceur again very: soon. e Mariposa and -Calaveras big tree groves have done more to advertise California than any- thing within its borders and will continue to attract thousands of tourists .here fust as long as the trees are protected and preserved from the ax and forest res. 4 & ? . soe ; SANTA ROSA PRESS DEMOCRAT. i The people of the entire West should urge, and in terms Congress cannot fail to understand, the purchasé of the Calaveras big treé grove by the Government as a national reservation that its tréasures may be preserved for all time. If this plan fails, the property should be purehased by popular subseription, and we belleve that if this becomes necessary California has enough wealthy and public spirited citizens within her borders to insure the success of the undertaking. The big trees must be saved, If not one way, then In another. \ . SONOMA COUNTY FARMER. “The Cal\veras big trees must be saved,” is the sentiment expressed on every side and from all parts of the country. The efforts that are being made to secure governmental aid in saving one of California’s most valuable possessions from destruction are meeting with en- couragement from the press and the people in general. Many Eastern people - are greatly Interested in the fate of the wonderful grove of glants and it would be a disgrace to the State if through neglect or lack of interest it should fall a victim to the woodman's ax. o - e FRESNO DEMOCRAT. Money can work wonders in Legislatures and in Congress. Tt can defeat the will of the people at elections or debauch constituencies, but all the money in the world cannot reconstruct a sequoia grove, once the ruthless grasp of capital has been laid on it. On the other hand, money cannot buy the.indifference of a people whose State iz being shorn of its chief glory for private greed. Let the people of California arise in their might and say of the sequolas as Jackson did of the Union—"The sequoia must an zhan_ be preserved!" 1 3 LOS ANGELES RECORD. : The sequoias of Calaveras have done much to proclaim the greatness of Cali- fornla— greatness that man had no part in producing and which no man should itted to destroy. Not while there are other Jess no Pl i B LA B B gl B AR B et fed'to lay Violent hands'upon the great scquoias whose ‘majestic (runks must have sheltered the prenistoric races that left no trace behind. AT ALAMEDA ARGUS. « The movement for the preservation of the Calaveras big trees desérves the support of every Californian. Once the destruction of the glants of the forest by a lumberman began the outrage would arouse. the people of the State almost to0 a frenzy, and no actionl to prevent it would be deemed too extreme. But un- mistakable unanimity and demand that the trees be preserved, if given expres- sion to now, will doubtless result Ix;l u-s nr.esen'atlun of the grove. &5 P - STOCKTON INDEPENDENT. The sacrifice of the big trees of the Calaveras grove merely to permit & lum- ber speculator to make a profit would be an outrage for which the Government of the United States and California should be heid responsible. The natural wom. ders of California were a material portion of her original endowment and" ong people would begin to appreciate. their value when they were sacrificed for a tem. porary profit. 3 ¢ S ARG RIS SR ALAMEDA ENCINAL. 5 It would' be a disgrace to. the State and the country if the Calaveras big tree grove were permitted to fall a victim to man's greed and.these forest glants. be converted Into lumber. There Is a resolution pending before Congress authoriy ing. the purehase of the grove by the national Government, and it is to be hoped - that it will pass without: Unnecessary logu o£ time. - * ot eg R : BERKELEY GAZETTE. ° The Intended destruction of the big trees. for. commercial forth the wrath of all-people of California. In losing them. of the world will be destroyed, for it will be impossihle to safest way to preserve these trees is for the Government to’ ‘the Slerra forest reserves or set aside as a national park. - purposes s caling one of the wonders replace them. The incorporate them in - ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. .an illustrated arti, e S DT et ¥ The Call of Sund: CHURCH RATE—A. R., Alggneda, | that Is gi Cal. It Is not true “that every house- | the” meani holder in England has ‘to pay. a thurch| MILITARY AND £ rate for the established: Church of Ens-| prineeton. Cul. toimais A VAL—N: land.” to the United cle which appeared of Sunday. October R in Yeg. the position of stamps’ and . Candidates for admission States Military ‘Academy *| Schaezlein & Burridge, United States Eand Surveyor B. L. Mc- Coy. is registered at the Grand from his home ‘izi; Oroville: . Mr, McCoy ‘is accom- panied by “his wife. Dr. R. A. Campbell, a promirient physi- ‘¢fan’of Ontario, Canada, is at the Grand. 8. N. Griffith, a well-known attorney of Fresio, is at. the Lick. F. Phiscator, a wealthy mining man of Alaska, who has -been visiting the ofl lands of Selma. has returned to the ecity and 15 at the Grand. A large number of Raymond excursion- ists from different parts of the Edst, who have been spending some time sightseeing in Southern California, are at the Palace. George J: Lighton and L. H. Wales, ‘wealthy. Eastern manufacturers, are at the Palace, where they arrived yesterday from New York. Both gentlemen.are ac- companied by their wites. — e — CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW. YORK, March 2—C. F. Serra of San Francisco is at the Cambridge: F. L. Oreutt ‘and L. B. Feigenbaum 6f San Francisco are at the Savoy: Ernest K. Derrick of San Francisco is at the Em- pire. } vid's day, the exercises taking place In’| s T D roeeee eSSy | day told a reporter for The Call why it | P"’“":‘;flz:"-'g“et °’;:§;‘;‘:";ss::;|: ':; | eas that he did not appear to make the | + : progr " 0 ol | expected address. *‘For ten years,” said| 4 Phot h: en E Rev. Mr. Thomas and he was duly an- | Mr. Thomas, “T have been preaching 4 oo °5:;‘p - :‘: c‘:"'d >4 nounced to speak. While the proceedings | against dancing. When the Cymrodorion | 3 8lly-for the Sunday will ¥ were'in progress the - chairman of the | Soctety invited me to addréss them T con-| ¥ appear to-morrow,and are just & Cymrodorions, Tallesin Evans, rose and | sented. Something was sald that there | % (87 0 70 P S sald that the second address of the even- | might be dancing after the exercise, 1|4 you want to see, + |Ing’ would not be deifvered, as Kev. Mir. | was surprised when [ saw the printed |4 they are the pictures of King + homas at the eleventh hour had decided | programme which _anno: ! that he would not take part because there | and dance on St. David's day, the dance | ¥ Carnival and his royal court, : was something on the programme that | being as much & part of the progfamme |+ all in the gorgeous costumes he did not Like. as the literary exercises and.concert. “The members of the soclety looked up | coula not consistently addfess the society | ¢ 10 which they appeared at the surprised when this announcement was under the circumstances. That is all there | great Mardi Gras of last Tues- + made, as the programme . consisted of | is to the matter.” . ; 1 day. z : e b Q44444444444+ —_———— | I'SrSrocee camorn| 8|, Townsend's Cal. glace fruits and cholee e SAVE THE GIANT SE U[]IAS []F CONGRESS SHOULD | ¢ | candies back to Palace Hotel. 139 Market.* & : - i PRESERVE THEM. P e s é i _— 8‘8 Send your Eastern friends Townsend's A o i e R | california. glace fruits, 50c_Ib., in_fire- ® [ _THEY PRoCLAI L‘M.AVEBAS I:B[]M [][STHUC“O" & ctched boxel 1 Markei st., Palice Hotel* | STATE'S GREATNESS. i — e g b o o s e & | spectal information _ supplied daily t» 2 R s TR . 4| business houses and public men by ihs 1 i « 3 510 Q - 2 Newspapers of California Declare It Would Be an Outrage to Per-. & ey T e . S oS 8 mit the Big Trees to Fall Victims to the 2‘! o High 7 % F of the Woodman. ; ? The trustees of the Department of Phar- [ macy ‘of the State University have dectd- QlielioNe NN eBIReNIN +ReR+RIRIRN RN R +RoRNeRNoReVe N R4Q | o 10 hold the annual smoker and high : 7 v : jinks Tuesday evening. March 2 o OAKLAND TRIBUNE. committee -<consists of J. - Crowle; The Calaveras trees have been one of the principal factors by which the State | {chairman), A, Bri ; ggs, H. Simmons, J. B. Argenti and J. Warren —_——— Personally Conducted Excursions In fmproved - wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist sleepinig cars vie Santa Fe route. Experienced excursion conductors accompany ' these excur- sions to look after the weifare of passengers. To Chicago and Kansas City every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday. To Boston, Mostreal and Toronto every Wednesday. To St. Louis every Sunday. To St. Paul evgry Sunday and Fridey. Ticket office, 623 Market street. —————— Incredible but True. Passerigers on the Union Pacific * Limited” can leave San Francisco fourteen hours later ‘and arrive in Chicago nearly five hours earlier than by ‘any other line. D. W. Hitehcock, Gen. Agt., 1 Montgomery st., 8. . —————— The Fastest Train Across the Con- tinent. The California Limited, Santa Fe Route. Connecting trains leave at § p. m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Finest -| equipped train and best track of any line to the East. Ticket office, 623 Market street. e As a dressing and color restorer Parker's Hair Balsam never falls to satisty. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 15 cta. pus. sty e m L All lovers of the delicacles of the table use Dr. Siegert's Angostura Bitters to secure & good digestion. Broke the Dog's Back. A warrant was sworn out yesterday for the arrest of a barkeeper named Casey, who.is employed in a saloon on Thirteenth and Mission streets. He is accused of brutally kicking and- breaking the back of g fine fox terrier belonging to Robert aer. CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. AMALGAMATO?S, SAVE GOLD—Krogh Mfg. Co.. 9 Stevenson st. _Amalgamators, Sand Centrifugal Pumps. CENTRIFUGAL AMALGAMATORS. SAVES fine gold. In daily operation at 254 Beale st., San Francisco. ROTARY AMALGAMATOR. MOORE Improved Gold Separator & Rotary ‘Amalgamator on exhibition. 69 Stevenson st. BEACH GOLD CO“CE\NTRATOR. SAVES All the Goid by gravitation. No siiver. Hand or power. In operation 14 GASOLINE ENGINES, HERCULES GAS ENGINE WORKS large numbers, of orders for Nome. First st., 8. F. GOLD SEPARATOR. MARSHALL Gold Saving Machine. 229 Fol- som street. Orfental Gas Engine Company. juick- pear. flling 11-143 OILS. LUBRICATING Of1, Crude il and Gasoline. ENSIGN & McGUFFICK. 23 Spear st., S. ¥. PLATES FO? SAVING GOL™. 3 Hardie place, streets. Kearny, between Sutfer and Bu PORTABLE “OUSES. BURNHAM-STANDEFORD CO., Washingto: and Ist sts., Oakland, or Builders' Ex., S. F. SAND CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS, Lift Gold-Bearing Sands perfectly. In tion at 625 Sixth st BYRON JACK! MARSH STEAM PUMPS Supply fresh or salt water for slulce boxes; high or low lifts. Simopds, 33 Market st. ra- N. will break in a storm about theif heads. They have | = g at ‘West Point must be bety " = CONTENTS OF A WILL—F,, Vallejo, . between 17 and 22 gently -annouriced that there will be no wholesale | cal, contents of & will become legal- | Naval *® Anciemd o8 ""A-,}'n“.'g‘,’,,s",';‘: . e T e 1 Pamps, reduction of salaries, but that there will be a wide 1 Jaoniils he E‘.geg‘ Saltr s Ll .fihA BOY who wishes to e | Enkiness Boiiers. HendyMach. Wh., 4§ Fremont and deep cut in many individual cases. .éou‘rt ;or probate. T 0 s s }f“:fi, 3 tg:let i»‘r@-?‘éfl‘b%"?#‘c‘oflifi:; “ {E::Pz »\PI:DHASO',INB % NGINES. < % i —_— . SRR G R gy 3 Do | Al nd * The-first instail T Tantorad’ i CHURCH ‘RATE ABOLISHED_L. M. e (lairichin which he ves. ~ | A5 G0Tin"% LITFLE, siz Markee st o pr The first installment of Tanforan's crop of criminals D., ‘Fruitvale, Cal, The payment of [ COSMIC. DUST—P. S. City. " Cosmi 5 e v has made its appéarance in our courts. The Super-| chureh rates in Bnsfand was made volun- | Qust is matter in fine particles upow the | o srerm . koo LE1S: ETC. visors might derive some. valuable information by in- |-1ary, July, 3, 1865, and such rates fwere ::::o rf:;'? “.1"‘:;:2"‘1"”';“""‘“ like | PR dhicen:on the cuast: Pne & Davie s specting it before making it a greater harvest with the |. STAMPS_V. C. H., City. e . |in any sensible amount is in '"fncso'f:"b': TENTS AND . OVERS. =3 vite seeds of Ingleside. : 5 3 15 pi : e nguage | but particles. . etc., called by this | NEVILLE & CO;, manutacturers, bags, tents. 1 2 . of postage stamps fs fully explained in|name, have been. collected vulo-l' covers. 31 and 33 California st.