The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 4, 1900, Page 18

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18 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 1900 | @MERICAN CITIZENSHIP. ’wupons of all kinds. It then provides that any con- HALL CAINE’S NOTABLE REPLY " -@a,ll l lN the spring a young man’s fancy seems to turn to Zir:r:inci.:sgli:ga‘glz?::r::l!;z;: mu:;;m;;:‘:“g“’_}‘g: TO THE SAVANTS OF FINLAND thoughts of oratory. Colonel Bryan does not wait 'tax begins to be levied on concerns with a turnover of 1900 for the buds to swell, but keeps in action the year —= | round. Just now his voice is merged in a great £25,000, and the annual tax which such a firm would pay is £375. A business with a turnover of £40.000 | ¢¢ Countries Are Not Made Great by Great Armies, but by the Just | chorus of speech-making that rolls over the continent pays £625, with a turnover of £60,000 a tax of £1100, ’ oW S LEAke wp~ |like a diapason of the spheres. | and so on. LaWS Wh]ch Make Happy and Contented Per)pleS. Manager | s ; o : | We are proud and happy to state that the one in- | 1t is said that in Germany the bill is regarded as R —~ ; i oM eb. 7, 1900. Market and Third, 5. F. | dividual voice that has recently been identified above | another illustration of e L s e B diter of The CANY E, Feb. 7 o Main 1568 | i | Fuotsuules de L i t Helsingfors, Fin- s {all the rest is the voice of a Californian. For the | he affairs of the people in a paternal manner, but it When “The Christian” was performed as a drama for the first time a £ s L X ts grew vhol. i t ake the |; i i . v olds the chair 7,00 231 Stevemson St.|time it s0 u\crfrtv; the il :e cIl:o:: j‘!scej’le‘:dl: sau |1s mot deemed of much importance. The proprietors | Jand, on January 26, 1900, the enthusiasm was so great .thzt Professor Setala, who h st e B AT A I Y | of the universal stores are not making much 0pposi- | ¢ Eunnich [iterature in the town university, rose in his place and asked the audience if it di s rriers, 15 Cents Per Week. |that the Californian was General Barnes. The Gen- | tion to it, and th beli il 1d it be en- e R el Gevllisiha dhop not wish to testify its pleasure by sending a telegram of thanks and congratulation to the author Coples, 6 Centwn. :8%:00 | long enough to electrify the Union League Club of | compelling the manufacturers to pay a part of the tax | in Rome. The vote was carried by acclamation and a committee formed on the instant sent JMITORIAL ROOMS Telep Delivered by © Singl Terms by HAILY CALL (nelnding Sunday), one year DAILY CALL Oneluding DAILY CALL (including § 1. Including Postame: | eral interrupted his sentimental journey to New York | acted they will be able to take care of themselves by ¥). 6 months. . 3 momths. . Chicago on Washington’s birthday. He was easily the | and the consumers the other part. It is also noted lengthy telegram to Hall Caine. DAILY CALL—By Single Month orator of a ccas n whic atory ap- : . 5 . . e PP e BUNDAY CALL Ome Yea g s b puch The aerasian | at as the bill does not impose the tax upon stores The author’s reply below is of interesting political significance: WEEKLY CALL One Ye pears and coruscates in constellations. € OCCasion | dealing in a single line of articles, no matter how D A A et et ] All postmasters are authorized to receive e -expansion affair, illuminated by npalescent‘ g g 2 o 2 3 3 [ e e e e e e e e e o S S S o anboesiptichs. was a pro-expansion affair, 1l o ) acel huge it may be, it will be of little value in protecting * Sample copies will be forwarded when reguested | dreams of glory and trade, and the General easily |the small dealers after all. * g g e i S o | 2 + PARLAND St ...1118 Brosaway |€arried off the honors and plucked the laurels to bring | Tt is very well known that the development of uni- : & el e hom : p g . | versal stores in all parts of the civilized world has . Mamager Foreign Advertisinsz., Murquette Build- There was, however, one feature o 1s ISCUSSION | heen due to economic law, and is based upon the fact e as, Chiongs. that passes beyond the interest taken in a _SPECC | that it costs less on the average to produce or to . MEW YORK COMKESPONDENT: made by an orator who studies to please. Viewing | handle a large number of articles of a particular kind > Mo i i EETES St e Herald Samare | the balm-breathing islauds that are now ours, fting | than 2 small number. The object of the Kaiser in . CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: their fronded palms in air from where the cross seeking to interpose and prevent the operation of o fherman House; P. 0. News Co.: Great North- | o TEE H > kil i the 5= : A 7 b4 eru Hotel: Fremont House: Auditorium Hotel, | novers over Porto Rico to the shimmer of the cres- | yhat jaw in the domestic trade of Germany is reported . sunsh lus, ¢ asped + s > & oy cent in the sunshine of the Sulus, the General clasped | to be due to a desire on his part to preserve the small s NEW YORK NEWS STANDS * il and af i Saric is | 5 i g Waldess-Antoria Hetol: 4. Breatane 31 U them all and all their various breeds of people to his | ;ader a5 a social class. In the meantime the British ® Sguare; Murray Hill Hete bosom, which served vicariously for the constitution, |, o watching the experiment with a good deal of sat- . EEW YORK MEPR .am{ w raised vision saw them sitting .xmhr_ the | jsfaction. The Chronicle says: “We doubt whether > VERRY LUKENS JR =& | shelter of the flag, panoplied with American citizen- | (uch efforts to confine commerce within the lines of - e ship and parading in that birthright which he pro- St : . 4 WASHINGTON (D. C.» OF . R e 3 P 'gh . “ 80 R social ideal are likely to be successful in the long 1 3. F. ENGLISH, Correspe: | poses to share with t S e o d B€ | run; but, nevertheless, we need not grumble at any X et | in his tropical and erotic serenade, proposed to antic | 1. idation which is Ii i FPRANCH OFFICES_—537 Momtromery. ecormer of |\ 5 tree for the bia’s nest and to twang his guitar | S i M likely to m'r:ke Ge Y & Jeas . Clay, til 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, | P . > keen competitor in our markets. 'Y open o'clock. 639 McAllister. open | where the mango apples grow, there has been no | g o e o * til 9:36 o'el €15 Larkinm, 1 3 { . 5 gl <o Ry Y Mission, open omtil 10 | more lover-like and generous proposition made to | There is every reason to believe that the boasted > e'cloek. 2261 Market, corner Sixteemth, oven | the dusky sons and daughters than that flung upon | fortifications at Esquimalt do not amount to much * until ® o'clock. 1096 Valencin. open until 9 | % . & g < 5 o~ R it : S3ts e'clock. 106 Eleventh, opea until ® o'elook. | their necks like a string of jewels by General Barnes. |after all. Two suspected spies were caught within > . ope | . | P D! o ormer Tmenty-second and Kemtucks. | Iy jts climax he exclaimed, “I do not know the race | the lines and released a few days ago on taking an B that is incapable of American citizenship.” The type | oath not to tell what they saw. : | of the Chicago press seems to carry to the printed » | page the gas heat of the casting process of a hundred | THE COST OF TRACK GAMBLING. 3 Mergenthalers in recording the “cheer after cheer” P ? that “rent the air” with a regulation rent at this ut- UPERVISOR TOBIN’S argument in favor of . omestead,” to-morrow night. terance. the racetrack gamblers is made up of two o ew South )¢ a—Operatic concerts, Tuesday afternoom, March 6. Getting down to cold, sober facts, we venture an | counts—first, that the gamblers have made a (% Zoo and Thester—Vaudeville every afterncon and | inquiry into the extent of General Barnes' ethnologi- | large investment of money and are entitled to such f Mason and Eddy streets—Specialties cal knowledge. He goes abroad to declare the policy | privileges as will enable them to earn a revenue = s fall —Flano recitale, Monday mOTBINg | of the open door of American citizenship to all races, | from it; second, that the license fee fixed by his reso- Trained Animal Show. and uses it in an argument in favor of expansion |lutions will bring to the city a revenue of $100 a day. iy e everywhere and on all sides. We are to take the land | For the sake of these monetary considerations he is & Races domain and the people into our body politic, | willing to give the Eastern gamblers full liberty to for he knows of “no race that is incapable of Amern- ;encourage vice and to bring as many men, women | can citizenship.” We file a demurrer, right here. Te |and boys as they can to those dishonorable practices esday, March 6, at 12 o'clock, | be consistent the General must not wait for annexa- | that lead to crime and to suicide. tion of a job lot of races. We have a variety on | There may be others in the city who, like Tobin, hand and ready for experiment. Our own Indian |look upon money as the supreme thing in the world, | races were first on the ground and should be the first | and regard profit and interest as matters superior to | to be escorted to the ballot-box. The negro follows. | all the virtues combined. It is therefore worth while | He was once a slave, and is now a helot. The Fed- | to point out that even from their point of view the eral constitution, without lifting its fundamental | a;gument of Tobin is invalid, because it is based upon voice in oratory, a whole generation ago declared | an erroneous caleulation of the financial results of ks back to the con- | him capable of American citizenship and endowed | track gambling. Mr. Tobin has taken into consid- es of 186 to | him with it. But the ballot handed to him by the | eration only that side of the ledger which shows the tutional gov- | Supreme law of the land has been snatched from him | credits due to the gamblers, and has ignored that We quoted to | by his white partners in citizenship, and he attempts | which shows their debts to the community. by the San | to make effective use of his citizenship at the peril | In the first place the investment made by the gam- ceive with e. Next in the line come the Chinese. They |blers is not an industrial nor a commerecial invest- « end to |are far up-in the scale of intelligence. They have | ment. It produces mothing that sdde oy the ene JOHN STORM'S .PLEA WITH GLORY QUAYLE : ONE" OF THE STRONGEST SCENES same hive | been long with us, but our Jaws declare them inca- | of the city. On the contrary, it is in the nature of a IN “THE CHRISTIAN. le of American citizenship and specifically exclude | sponge. It absorbs wealth and gives nothing. The | @e-4--4-0404-0-4-0-0-040-0+-0-0-—--+-0-4-0-0-0+0 S O ] § & into ot AUCTION SALES. sday, March 7, at 11 o'clock, of his 1 D e L kSR = s ol o d MH“MWHQ“—H‘*MW+MWHWMMMMMH . el fr‘r '3 the operation of our laws of “““‘.{“1’1?' | money which passes into the hands of the gamblers is PRINCIPAL HJETT, THE UNI- | souvenir of an interesting event. vain, how sad would be the outlook at he | tion. Will General Barnes come home to Californla | drawn from the community, and the community re-| VERSITY, HELSINGFORS, FIN. | wier sorq interesting évent. = |vain, haw sd would be the ontlook to swap |and advocate, personally or as a party measure, the | ceives in return for it no single thing of any value. | LAND. T e tntest 1 fass s the Sresett hositice | Hiroughout: Brope! been mistaken, e capabi or American citizenship and start | The gamblers grow rich and disport their ostenta- My Dear Sir: of your country cmboldpem m:pto say The world, however, goes onward, aign for their legal admission to that privi- notwithstanding every obstacle, and for and i ile the e s Fran- |3 €3 tious vices in our most expensive hotels and saloons. T has not been for lack of interest or | that the news of the opening of your ¢ o TR 1 - | . § 5 E b < 3 my own part 1 have no faith more firm certain extent supported Bryan, | lege? Next are the Japanese, our more recent para- | byt their dupes sink steadily downward to the poor- I of gratitude that I have not replied | Diet has come thus far, and that there | £ O P ¢ BERE N8 20t OPT P T sites, who are already beginning to swarm in appre- before this to the telegram which | are those even in Rome who feel with the people, and that God‘s will speaks through them as the interpreters of his | law. as i favor of The Wiiec HIgNC. 108 i hioisc fehe Morgae you were so good as to send me, in | you in the delicacy and difficulty of nal, which is the New e ity iy | The amount of money which the gamblers draw 10 | the name of your colleagues and of | your position, as a nation with a right amese twins, is daily ‘;‘\")‘hehy SR e and At*: ' | themselves by their nefarious trade is enormous. The | the public, on the occasion of the first | to seli-government which is in_danger to the cause of |In the harlequinade that will make an election booth | 45in js 50 exhaustive that it soon empties the purses | performance of “The Christian” in Fin- | of becoming only a name. It seems ‘o am, yours very truly, look like a museum of races? Next are the hybrids o . |land. A more happy thought t'han that | us that it is an anachronism to limit the . HALL CAINE. xami “;;r:‘}f: ot Boeto Bich, il sikes™es Selor i e o | of the victims and compels them first to borrow, until | Gricy suggested the message it would | powers of the people, and that the ten- . . s year. % Heaniy : : 4 | they can borrow no more, and then to steal. Through | be difficult to imagine, and I beg you to | dency of the age is to enlarge, not to | The Tairte e ot 1he aosatis of he other enemies put | dice, 2l as capnb.e- of American citizenship as Gen- | .’ Widber defalcation alone they drew into their | receive yourself, and to communicate to | lessen the bonds of freedom. Let us|piat ,Mwedhm;' prrc}?r]gusljs ‘hheldler;; t at Kansas City, | €2l Barnes himself! coffers $116,000 out of the city treasury, and that was | Professor Setala, Mr. Cajander and the | hope that the militarism which is now | by which the Finnish people hold the Sb Bokar oad be B Nor is this all. We have in Hawaii, Samoa and b f th P 4 by thei ] " g | autonomy, which was guaranteed to them ST A e e | but one of the many defalcations caused by their so- | ya¢ part of the public which received | rary distemper, and that the rulers of | joeq. ciable and unpleasant numbers in the midst of us. "With renewed thanks to you, Baroness Palmen, and, if possible, to | passing over Europe is only a tempo- | ¥ he strongest possible caths and prom- better quote from some | the Pfh‘"pp;?.a’?"' "x‘" t,r\’lbis":"'b;“'“g '."b"’ called “sports. your suggestion so kindly, my grateful | nations will come to see that countries | JMr. Hall rightly regards militarism 13 n Grover Cleveland or | F2¢%, from Tounesians fo WMaays, and sub-tribes, |y, pig protest against the resolutions Dr. Dille | acknowledgments and the assurance of | are not made great by great armies, but Tt Ik I Sretabiy mave seute nmew than septs, clans and factions of more shades of yellow than the robes of a Buddhist priest, but none of them in- my intention to preserve your telegram | by the just laws which, make happy and | 3t a0y %’pxexil,‘lm" the last decade. | pointed out to the Police Committee that Chauncey | I¥ B Er'G 10 BHLTnd distinguished | contented peoples. If this hope w . CROKE, LL . | Depew stated not long ago that the large business y harmony, like that of ”f‘“:’IF °fb‘;\ml:"°3“‘ ‘“‘""::I’i‘z ;‘:d‘ 3]_111‘; be :;‘ad‘ failures, defalcations and embezzlements of the past | @ iy DT T AT > | Angeles, and E. A. Meserve, a well-known bies sucking the two ends | €9ual in a black and tan rep at will be made to |y oor have been wholly due to racetrack gambling; 0 SR R PA0 SAS JAige, SIS Sgivnelt 5 . f . | at the Grand. . prevailed in the Bryan |10k like a k'?"d e :"h h"";‘[‘;“;m""f‘ from the |44 $250,000.000 is spent annually in the maintenance 0 [/ sion to be told that the | Milk white bull terrier, the spotted Dalmatian }?ound. | of the track gamblers, with their following of touts CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. | to the various shades of rat catchers and linked- | O aridrc posed to Bryan. Not only is it dis- . v. oalt sausage-like Dachshunds. | and toughs, NEW YORK, March 3.—V. H. Metealf [ ] any more. We supposed emoving a fixed impression, but it is a | It is to be borne in mind that in the gambling the of Oakland and H. G. Bond of Santa ge to Bryan on which we had not | California will not pay a cent nor cast a ballot to | public has no chance to win any more than just Sacramento Bee to the People of the Town of Washington Across 8 Clara are at the Waldort-Astoria; E. 5 . G , i y Saunders of Franel: [ the treated his candidacy as handi- | 5¢¢ the General's show. He may open it successfully of Ban Francisco Is enough to entice them to further gambling. The }Gund. y the Examiner’s support, but it seems that | i? Ch":“"‘,,wfhe" ': m"de. pmsP;filus wm'“g c]h“r Eastern sharpers did not come to California to en- il Sies, - he goes into the n 5 Nighter than our eptimate. | SPOft St STOXR RS ARNeOG o DIt meteithiere |0 e horse-breeding nor for the benefit of horse- DI G | Spedont Nouenters. The F . sosel: dke oie. oF tantall 4 s less disposition to immerse American citizenship in 3 | glast Tuesday night in Court Yerba e Bee w t our pea of mind and | e s by Ea e ik 4 | men. They came here to enrich themselves by prey- A proposition has been made that if you will permit the iniquitous poolrocoms | Buena more than thirty members a: strengthen our conviction of Republican success if jt | 20y darker dy £ ; 15¢¢ ling upon the vices of the community. They arrange | to flourish in your midst the owners of these dems of Satan will elther light |ed the meeting, and after the transactic 1 a i 't bri | to color it. A change of citizenship by consent, or | " r Blreate of the routine business it was decided will shuffie again and see if it can’t bring Bryan out . » | the races so they can win, and they do win. your town OT pave yo! 3 that at the next meeting there s % , e allegiance by force, works no change in racial char- | % - 3 Y Good people and neighbors, can you afford to put your homes in darkne | Introduced under “good and w a burdened by the ner’s support. | S O ¢ f he ski | Against the amount of the investment made by the wring your hearts in sorrow and angulsh, in order that your town may be il- | new feature which [t s believed w. e o e e e acteristics. ratory even cannot change the skin of Eastern gamblers, which Tobin regards as something | luminated? struct and greatly interest th nounce that the war in the Phili the Ethiopian any more than it can relocate the spots Savar 8 ‘Would it not be a fearful price to pay for paving your streets if your own | ship not only of the court b ] he Philip sacred, there is to be set the vast sums of money the | gons were started on that path which is smoothly macadamized to hell? from other courts. It was also 1 | of the leopard. If the witchery of General Barnes’ om: And, good people and neighbors, who would really pay for lighting your town | 2PPoint an entertalnment er. There must be a dread i i i £ | gamblers have alread; 3 1 arr: an en ent to ose that have |art could do this he could by oratory transform !g: 5:0‘: - rev;'mtak:n lbn fl;ion? thde ;I(‘}' Atiam‘?t or paving your streets? |{:r‘::fn::$b:r :::1 .p?n{,:s for the ben- my of the dead lowered body by | horse into a cow, or vice versa, and after a spin in | . Y e i Siow ol B Not the poolroom owners. That money would be wrung from the fathers | efit of the members and their friends. . y-ny. cense must be set the cost of extra police work, | and mothers, employers and employes of Sacramento and Washington. It would Senior Woodward A. Volkmann of Court be taken from the family hoard, would be wrested from wives and bables, would | Yerba Buena on the 2lst of last month p Hancock y i _ | the park behind his favorite roadster milk him in the ock now in the har- P | celebrated the twenty-second anniversary court trials and the heavy array of thefts from the r. ra | stabl d secure cream for the morning coffee. In- | . - 3 be stolen from tills. | nt 1 roer” 4 3 S N ekt & ik h!‘z " | city and from private parties. Thus, then, waiving Your town might be flluminated, but by its light you would see some Promis- | Gonee ot bis Larimte: heon cartes arier deed he could go further and charm himself out of ing young men on their way to State prison. disg s and | : ‘ & g aced and damned for life. There were -tour Iad! | consideration of the morality of the issuc and the Your streets might be paved, but it would be hell's own pavement. entiemen, In addition to: the members ot | deep concerns of honor and of life, the proposed Be warned in time, good friends and neighbors. You have homes of your |the family, and there was a very p t DOMINICANA, his known and well-beloved personality into that of £ n . own. You, good women, have husbands whom you love, sons whom you idolize. | YeNing of music, songs and dancing S a Mandarin of the coral button or a Pasha of five tails. ve n to the periodical literature 2 licensing of track gambling would still be a thing to after 3 do all these protean turns as easily a z ling te ur homes blighted as many d and h congratulations had been extended. ppears this month with the first He fan Do P = o lly as change be condemned by the intelligence of the people, be- | Are you wiling 2,":1’0 - b s AUy hem. Court Diana has made arrangement the racial nature of men, using a naturalization paper | % et Sacramento has beel give an entertainment every third T zine bearing the title, s potiltice or a bleacher | cause on Tobin’s own ground of finance it is a blight Are you willing to pay the terrible price for street {llumination or street ay night In its hall at 20 Eddy street. “Dor devoted mainly to the af- | — |and a curse to the community. R e e Mowh hAE 1 ta (ATl Abous | The vAcslE of Sacramento know by | Cal. glace fruit 50c per Ib at Townsend's.® s ers and the interests of The th swhich % " h B | bitter experience. Not all the faro games that have flourished in California 5 ¥ however, that it will be | e frequency with which “errors” have been found There is an absolute certaint 3 since the early days have done the work of the devil to such an extent as have Special information supplted dafly > ho: > Is i y that there will be no e o doiasadicis in the books of ex-Tax Collector Sheehan creates a PR ¢ it Taink 5 Aidint these later day poolrooms. o P ?";:l-:e(':h "‘:“-tsn and public men by tha a means of m a- | . . over a one grea mert » Good people and neighbors: Do you want cramento’s erience re; pping Bureau (Allen's), 510 ; Z y | peop experience repeated 3 people, a chronicle of events ‘Slfst‘;‘“m" ‘hm(':,ald“?i:r }_';: . ]""‘"‘f‘i" :”““T"‘O“ |tate even in these times of squabbling heirs. An | In your own little town? Do you want your sons ruined, your homes devas. |ECMerY street. Telephone Main 1042, i * | of scope of his duties. e place of < | 3 : ? P R O TG ers of our different congre- | Of e seope of s duties, “The p ast resort fof | American king of one of the Fiji Islands was mur- | tstedbythiscurse? o @ einst the iniquity thet i seeking to An Insolvent Miner. advocate of the educa- | | dered by his subjects some time ago and the natives futlgl ns:u on lyour‘fix‘)mmur:lly.d Yoigts ot Joseph A. Ohmert, a miner residing at re Sisters of St. Dominic | = | Haye chicsen Rk BE BRI £ e e ck the unclean thing out an out! Spenceville, Nevada County, filed a peti- M IMENT 2 e of themselves for the succession. tion in tnsol ’ 3. bly identified.” |AN EXPERIMENT OF THE KAISER. | i American heirs will not contost. . States District Court. His Habilitics ars 2 ble articles in the first number are: | AISER WILLIAM, in addit % AFTER THE CITY’S LIGHTS WENT OUT, #1414 9 and he has no assets. ) ons in the Philippine Island ~ A, in addition to writing a| Cecil Rhodes says that he is firmly convinced that 4 The R oM aer e drama for the purpose of elevating the stage, i 3 E i Mrs. Gayboy (severely)—What time did you get home last night? | Personally Conducted Excursions ’ he Rosary—Mary’s Gift, i vl Gt e T 2¢, | the divine destiny of the diamond is not to decorate Gayboy (cautiously)—Oh, a iittle after dark. ' In improved wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist ory, “The Secret of Grossmeister P g 2 ¥ project in Syria for the pur- ' the persons of the fair sex. Cecil has shown no par- Mrs. Gayboy—After dark? Why It was daylight wken you came in. sleeping cars via Santa Fe route. Bxperienced ' D. O'Brien. There are also |POSe of ex.pandlng German commerce, and promoting | ticular inclination, however, to sell sparklers for fuel. Gayboy—Well, lan't that after dark? “,,c"',,,_"‘" conductors accompany these excur- ems of rare merit, that add con- | 21 €xtensive naval programme for purposes not yet | To m?ca:k-:;w;::::'g:;' S St s terary interest of the number. | declared, has undertaken to prevent large department | Enthusiastic merchants of this city are planning to AROUND THE arrived yesterday from his home in Ban | "¢I1°%d8Y and Friday. To Boston. Montreal T ne will be found of particular value to | Stores in Germany from driving the smaller traders | organize an “Asiatic Association” to encourage and o8 e B T T o . Lente # e to keep posted on the affairs of the ad. | Out of business. To that end his Ministers have in- | develop oriental trade. It strikes one as a very poor CORRIDORS 1.1;:;!(;“1:-.:::1‘:3::::::.]11“ o‘h!‘n Toego, | Friday. Ticket offics, @8 Market stroet. stration of the Roman church, as close attention | troduced into the Reichstag a bill imposing a heayy | name with which to characterize a very good cause, vy e, i | i npo v Dr. B. B. Cory, & physician of Fresno, | S8muel Nicholson, a wealthy mining Incredible but True. be given to such matters by the editors, and, as | graded tax on the big stores, and it is being sup- Rica and Ni s at the Grand. ~ " | foan. of Leadville, Colo., is at the Palace | Passensers on the Union Paciflc “Overland ed in the introduction, “The establishment of | ported with all the strength of the court and the | _Cost2 fica and Nicaragua have appareatly declded | ®/ 7"y Sie L o souyer of Frowo, 1a [ % SRt et s, 8en Prancisco fourteen L ? ToaL T H . W ¢ o cago near! rmanent bulletin guaranteeing to the people pre- | administration. |to ‘“"‘h‘ ate ‘:;‘ ;“olh_fl:- They might save “‘effl' a guest at the Lick. land owne: :‘t .th'-t!.,mz ::‘: “l m“r hours earlier than by anmw ‘,:h., n,,.,.,,: ::: cise and accurate information concerning the feasts | A correspondent of the London Chronicle, in giv- | 317y the trouble by waiting for some angry and in- | Bev. Tnomas B. Winseoff of Tasoma is |day's arcivats at the hitiorain T et | Mg end celebrations of the church, the work of societies | ing an account of the measure, says it divides staple Jucsdusion to e an‘_d RD dheabotl, W. J. Hogan, & prominent merchant of x.D:gu":: p." lCo.“u. b:'" and capitalist, TR s A TR and general organization of religious life among the |articles of merchandise into four groups—frst, eat- | The row between American and Spanish officers | Felnood: i & Fuest at the Paiace. terday from m hoe o, 8 ATTived yeo- [The Fastest Train Across the Con- young and the old, is an enterprise which can justly |ables, drinkables and drugs; second, drapery and | over what happened to the Spanish ships at Santiago | of s-lnu cLlndn'z, 1 '”"‘"::‘“ ‘lm,“ Mr. and Mrs. John Ditmas and famfly | Tne can oy count on the cordial approval of those for whose |clothing; third, house furnishing; fourth, gold, silver, | continues merrily on. The ships still remain at the | the Lick. ";:;_";‘h‘hmw;mmxtn M'“.,"‘,,_ — "“".. __" ""h benefit it is inaugurated.” istationery, objects of art and instruments and | bottom of the sea. l R. J. Langford, Sheriff of Banta |trip, party is here on & pleasure | Wedneeday, Friday and Saturdey. . Pree Clara County, is at the Lick, where he George H. Stewart, & merchant of Los 7'-..“'2“.."—?’::-‘.“".&?--.:..:-’.""

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