Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
....MARCH 12, 1900 JOHN D." SPRECKELS, Proprietor. ‘ddress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. PUBLICATION OFFICE. nd Third, S. F. Telephone 3 ROOMS....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Main 1574. by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies, 5 Cents. by Mail, Including Postage: (including Sunday), one year..86.00 (Including Sanday), 6 months.. 3.00 (ncluding Sunday), 3 months.. 1.50 EDITORIAL Delivered Terms DAILY CALL DAILY CALL DAILY CALL DALY CALL—By Single Month . 65¢ SUNDAY CALL One Year.... . 1.50 WEEKLY CALL One Year..... . 1.00 All postmasiers are mathorized to receive seriptions. - forwarded when requested . sample coples will OAKLAND OFFICE.............1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Build- ing, Chicago. NEW YORI& CoR;E!PO’DB‘Tl €. C. CARLTON.....c00vsss0042...Herald Square ESENTATIVE: 29 Tribune Bullding NEW YORK REFP PERRY LUKENS JR CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great North- ern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union | Fguare; Murray Hill Hotel €.) OFFICE..Wellington Hotel 1SH, Correspondent. ERANCH OFFICES—S527 Montgomery, Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. open until 9:30 o’'clock. 639 McAllister, open 0 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open unt! 1941 Mission, open until 10 2261 Market. corner Sixteenth, open ontil ® o'clock. 1096 Valencia, open until 9 WASHINGTON /M. J.F.1 & corner of o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 9 o'cloek. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until 9 o'clock. [ ————————SSSSSSSSSS AMUSEMENTS. « eum—Vaudeville. Grand Opera-bouse— "The Girl From Paris.” Grand Opera-house—Concert Thursday afternoon, March 15. ta—*"Because She Loved Him So.” alifornia—Operatic concert to-night. fornla— The Brownies in Fairyland,” Thursday after- e Idol's Eye.” Never Again.’ ‘Have You Seen Smith."” nd Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and corner of Mason and Eddy streets—Specialties. s New Concert House—Grand opening March 13. Pavilion—Trained Animal Show. lay Hall—Piano recital this afternoon. AUCTION SALES. 300 Hayes, | ‘l ONCE MORE TO THE FRONT. | UPERVISOR TOBIN, ii he keep his word, S will submit to the board at its meeting to-day 1 the resolutions of the Police Committee con- cerning the reopening of Ingleside racetrack with gambling privileges. It is therefore incumbent upon the representatives of the people to appear once more beiore the board to protest against the gamblers’ schemes and to demand the maintenance of laws in | the interest of private morality and public welfare. | At the meeting of the board fast Monday Tobin, as chairman of the Police Committee, asked for further time, as his committee was not ready to make a re- port. That hesitation was undoubtedly a concession | to popular sentiment. The Call had exposed the trick contained in the resolution submitted by Tobin to the | committee, and the public had become aroused. Many of the most influential pastors of the city had de- ed eme from their pulpits, and some went before the Supervisors to renew their protests. In the face of that opposition Tobin did not venture | to make a report. Now we are to see what he will | do to-day. Let it be borne in mind that the resolutions sub- | mitted to the Police Committee, while nominally lim- Eiting racing and track gambling at Ingleside to a | period not exceeding forty days in any one year, really authorize racing and gambling every day. The { not the sch | resolutions, after setting forth the terms under which | authority shall be given for racing and gambling at | the track, say: “No such authority shall be granted | to any one person, copartnership, association or cor- | poration for a period exceeding forty days in any one | year.” It will be perceived that the track gamblers [ have only to transfer the lease of the track from one | to another in order to get new permits for racing and | gambling every forty days as long as the year lasts. flghe profits of track gambling are large under any | circumstances, but the Tobin scheme would make them larger than ever, for it proposes to close up | poolrooms down town and give to the Eastern track gamblers at Ingleside a monopoly. With such vast profits at stake the gamblers can afford to be patient | and persistent as well as cunning and unscrupulous in | their efforts to obtain the desired privilege. They have waited a week for public indignation aroused by the exposure of their scheme to die down. If before | the board to-day there appears again a strong body of zealous defenders of morality and public interests to protest against gambling schemes it is likely the To bin committee will once more ask for further time. It looks, therefore, as if this is to be a waiting fight on the part of the Eastern track gamblers and their | allies. So long as it lasts, however, the representa- | tives of the people must keep on guard, ready at all times for the fight when it comes. { Once more, therefore, we urge the business men, | the taxpayers, the workingmen, the pastors and rep- resentatives of all the better and stronger elements of 1| Cohn—This & Carpets st 11 o'clock, at S58A Pine street, | ¢ the Supervisors to-day, in order that the popular sentiment against track gambling shall be repeated and re-emphasized The Call has every assurance that the fight against | the gamblers has been virtually won. The experience of the city with the results of track gambling at Ingle- still fresh in the March streets vie—Tues: 13, at and Harris o'clock, side under this same Eastern gang i minds of the Supervisors. of crimes and suicides shown in the records of the police courts, the criminal courts and the Morgue, and it is not likely a majority of them be willing to renew that blight upon the commu Never- theless it will be well to have them backed up in their stand for law and morality, and therefore the friends of good government should to-day show themselves once more to the front when the issue comes up. trade centers last week were ing. One commercial author- increase if business, due her the Eastern and Western firm tendency in prices for most while another authority, equally ed a general slackening, with weak- 1 along the line, though the great some in society to have an earnest delegation at the meeting | They know the fearful list | stubbornly holding up quota- , as the bank clearings showed a fall- per cent from last year, and the failures 182, ct, spring trade is not up to expec- a halt all along the line. It is not money, for money is reported easy t in Wall street, where the new aturally created a little hardness in o slight as hardly to merit remark halt has been given several times The rea ich characterized business last year has been satis- ion has finally caught up with pro- ituation in a nutshell. v @ trade be allowed to take its and pro- t their output to the legitimate de- ic the present healthy condition of vey temporary. If manufacturer: tics rather supported the latter view | the enormous demand for goods of all sorts | e no trouble and the halt will be | Politics is a queer thing in even so well-regulated a land as Germany, for we are now told the passage of | the Kaiser’s naval bill is dependent upon the passing inseparably linked with sausage. At a public banquet Roosevelt has declared he will not be a candidate for the Presidency this year nor any other year. with a bureau attachment. an imperial policy is SOME CONDITIONS 4T DAWSON. | ;FRO.\I the Dawson Weekly News of Febru- | ary 16 it is learned that the people of that sec- 1 tion of the Klondike country have obtained at last something like a fairly good winter mail service; | but, on the other hand, the gold diggings on the | near creeks have been about exhausted, and the “prominent citizens” of Dawson are trying to in- duce the Canadian Government to make more of the Agrarian meat bill; and so the expansion of | Now look out for a boom for him | e indefinitely; but if goods are | © < on speculation, without regard to the cur- | liberal terms, not only for Canadians but for out- the country, overstocked markets and | S:d¢ miners, so ',1!3.1 th‘c region may not be aban- | surely result. The former course will | doned and Dawson itseli become hardly more than a be pursued, for the financial storm that be- | Way station on the river. d lasted five years was followed by pros- | Concerning the mail service, the News announces to turn the mercantile head. The les- | that the mail just before the date of publication had s of that famous panic are still fresh in the com- | Prought to the city a considerable amount of second- d no sane man wishes them re. | class mail, on which there had.been paid only second- | class postage. As in the past the mails have not de- | livered papers or magazines, even though first-class wi rie judging from present indications, will at a low ebb all over the are confining their opera- | I te wants of the markets. As long of conduct is followed times cannot be hey may be dull. les, leather is firm, ost markets. highly gratifying to the community, and the News | says: “People of the Yukon have been so hungry for | their ‘home paper’ and the current magazines that the matter of postage did not figure, they having grown d to paying extra prices for everything. But they did chafe upon not receiving the goods, the price being paid. Now it Jooks as though the em- bargo had been lifted. The second-class mail is not only coming, but at second-class rates; so that the friend on the outside who may do the mailing of these things may be encouraged to do more.” The information concerning the conditions of the mines occurs in a report of the proceedings at a meet- ing of the Board of Trade which, we are told, was but hides are @ull Orders for boots , ably small. Wool is weaker, line at the opening sales in gged again, and seems to have . has been enor- Cotton has touched the highest point here are signs of a reaction. Stocks of re reported somewhat larger, though the pro- i duction fell off in February. A redeeming feature in | he advancing tendency in wages. I except in those cities where strikes atened. e situation stands about the sarhe. A 1 he central and nogthern parts of m- | and operators who follow no other vocation.” The ! object of the meeting was to provide some means of adapting the mining industry to the changed condi- | tions of the district and to induce the Government to er t the State ier gilded the crop prospect. though - < 3 e ying for more. The season prom- jrc]ax some of its restrictions. S es e strange to say. there has been no | One of the speakers at the meeting is quoted as say- |ing: “El Dorado has been practically worked out, | and large parts of Bonanza. We must secure an ad- }jl'-lmcnt of these regulations to the new conditions. s | For the future the camp must lay its chief dependence ! on creeks farther away, and therefore still more ex- | pensive to work, while they are not so rich. We must make recommendations now looking to the | very existence of the camp. With regulations in | keeping with the conditions—I mean such as shall | encourage the prospecting of ground and the develop- ment of mines—I am assured that large owners here | would put not hundreds but thousands of men to | work, and the dying camp would be revived.” His | motion was that a recommendation be made that the Bur die chanols e Biae she il seet Trzya!ly 'be wholly Aabolishcd< but that if a royalty was g | till insisted upon it would be placed on the net prod- 1 0ld Jady of her age would under | ¢t and not on the gross. the circumstances and do what she feels like doing | Other speakers referred to the restrictions put upon just because she feels like it. : la]ien miners, and one of them reported that when rep- sequence thus far. We occasionally i and this may be one of those i export trade of this port continues body is complaining. There is some halt trade, and some lines of produce are . taking the list of commodities all 1ess is as good as conld be expected at the year. to some reports Queen Victoria will not s spring because she is afraid of anar- ding to others she is to stay at home as 2 postage was paid on them, the new order of things is | well attended by representative miners, “large holders | resentatives of the Ottawa Government were at Daw- son they defended the regulations by the argument | that the mines are worked chiefly by aliens, who | carry United States goods into the country instead of buying Canadian goods, and who take the gold away to the United States to spend. Commenting upon such arguments, one speaker said: “This country has to be opened up, and it has to be opened up | by people who are willing to come and do the work. | That's all there is to that. Canada has no welcome | for the Chinaman. For every white man it has. If anybody says otherwise or talks of legislation based | on hostility to aliens it is the voice of ignorance and | nothing more.” Another added: “I venture to say | that” England will ultimately get her share of the | earth’s new gold, wherever it may be dug. Just as soon as the authorities see that this country has be- | come non-producing they will change their method. ! So long as it was rich and juicy they would squeeze it for all they knew how.” From all this it appears that Dawson is rapidly ap- proaching bedrock and will soon find out whether iupon that rock it be possible to build a permanent | prosperity. There is no longer any desire to shut out | aliens or even to put any restrictions upon their work. | Dawson, in fact, has ceased to be proud, and the Ot- | tawa Government will have to repeal its stringent ‘regnlations, or else it will kill the golden goose. The Senate committee which has just made a report upon the extent to which adulterations or substitu- | tions are used in food articles in this country has isuggestcd two methods of checking the evil, but we | notice with regret that neither remedy provides a | short and ready way of sending to prison the rascals | who manufacture the stuff. | v — |CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEETINGS. | P. WOOD, secretary of the San Diego Cham- | H ber of Commerce, has issued a circular letter . ;uggcsting an annual meeting of the secre- | taries of the various commercial bodies on the Pacific | Coast for the purpose of conferring on issues with { which such organizations are concerned. It is hardly | necessary to give indorsement to a proposition of | this kind, for its merit is self-evident and will win | favor wherever it is given due consideration. | In his letter to his fellow secretarics Mr. Wood say “We are of course thoroughly familiar with our immediate surroundings, and some of us are | more or less acquainted with the products and com- merce of the entire Pacific Coast, but undoubtedly we can all learn of one another, and the results of such | | a conference could not but make us more useful oi- i ficers of the organizations we represent. * * * | My suggestion is that we organize an association for | the purpose above indicated, holding our first meet- | ing at San Francisco some time within the next two | or three months This proposition comes timely and pertinent to the movement now under way to provide for the estab- | lishment of a Pacific Commercial Museum, on the | lines of the great institution at Philadelphia. It will | be a step in the direction of co-operation among the commercial bodies of the coast, and will therefore have an influence tending to advance the projected | museum. While, however, the proposed organization will serve to promote the enterprise undertaken here for | the establishment of the museum, its merit is by no means confined to the service it will render in that espect. Even were there no such thing as a commer- | cial museum under consideration, it would still be of | advantage to have the commercial bodies of the coast | drawn into closer relations and affiliation with one another, and an annual meeting of the secretaries | of such associations would materially aid in the ac- | complishment of that end. The Pacific Coast, while a part of the Union, has many interests peculiar to itself, and to some of these the East is indifferent, if not antagonistic. To pro- cure the legislation needed from the National Gov- | ernment to promote the welfare of the Pacific States, and to promote other coast interests not dependent upon legislation, there is needed a strong system of co-operative effort among progressive men. We cannot have too many Pacific Coast organizations. The more we have of those associations which incline men to consider the welfare of the whole coast instead | of separate States the better off we will be, and the more success we will have in developing the varied resources of this rich section of the Union. Mr. Wood's suggestion is therefore well deserving of a | cordial response from secretaries of kindred bodies, and it is to be hoped the proposed meeting will be arranged for an early date. s: AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES. NE of the series of our Home Circle Studies | O for the spring season, most generally interest- ing to all classes of readers, is that dealing with the history of American political parties. The course, which has been arranged under the direction of Jesse Macy, LL. D., professor of political science of Iowa College, is designed primarily for young vot- | ers and for the Presidential year, with a view of di- | recting intelligent political study and discussion. it |is therefore one which appeals to all who take an in- | terest in public questions and the history of the republic. The full course is to contain sixteen papers, cover- ing the principal topics of American party history from the days of the Federalists down to the cam- | paign of 1860. Among other interesting articles will | be accounts of the risc and decline of the Whig | | party, the origin of the Republican party, the organ- ization of parties on sectional lines, and of the various | minor parties that existed before the war. Not the | least interesting and instructive will be those giving | account of the origin and development of national nominating machinery, the national convention and | the fully organized party machine. For the general reader there can be no better intro- duction to the campaign of this year than these stud- ies, which embrace an outline of the whole party his- | tory of the republic. While prepared mainly for the instruction of young voters, they merit the attention of all, for they will throw much light upon interesting periods and events of our national development. ——— If the British decide to banish any of the Boer leaders to a lifc exile in a remote island they should in justice send Cecil Rhodes to stay with them and keep the situation from becoming monotonous, The country would like to hear from somebody in Kentucky in explanation of what there is in the gu- bernatorial office of the State that makes it worth while for anybody to fight about it. —_— The discovery of a number of feminine garments hidden in a cave in the park is not a revelation of a mystery, but only another illustration of the fact that the ways of women are peculiar. Governor Roosevelt of New York does all the tak- ing about the virtue of the “strenuous life,” but Tay- lor of Kentucky is the man who acts it out without blowing about i* l THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1900. NEIGHBORLY CONFIDENCES. France—If I had this thing finished I'd come down and whip you. John Bull—If T had this thing finished I'd come up and whip you. = e v —Denver Fimes countries. The Canopus of 12,90 tons was | rell street, will open March 19. A large AROUND THE CCRRIDORS | Dr. J. Loeb of Chicago is at the Occi- | launched last year at the Portsmouth dockyard. The materfal in her construc- | tion ‘cost $1,520,000 and the cost of labor amounted to $72.2 per ton displacement. Simultaneously with this ship the Jena, battleship of about 12,000 tons, was built at Brest at a cost for material of $2,689.- 400 and labor at $87.2 per ton displacement. dental. State Senator Thomas Flint Jr. is at the | Palace. | . The material in the French ship exceeded | e danes apd. wifp.of Oroville are at | ;. cost of that in the British ship by 4.7 gk per cent and the French labor was 10.1 S. R. Porter of the Balial mine is at the | por cent more expensive than the British. Occidental. | The cost of material and labor footed up Dr. E. Wislock and wife of San Jose | 31.28 per cent for the Jena over that of the are at the Palace. Canopus. The fact that the French me- | J. R. Foster, a hotel man of Marysville, | chanics and laborers receive about 70 per is a guest at the Lick. | cent that of British workmen indicates 4 : nent physician of | that the French dockyard system is very pRne . T SaFimaien Aha | defective and that low-paid mechanics are b étork an attorney of Santa Bar- after all the most expensive and unsatis- bara, is a guest at the Grand. . | Tty T nR—-— J. C. Murry, a speculator in Hanford oil | @—0—¢—6—0—6—6—0— lands, is registered at the Lick. ® orchestra and_the Italian artists, Senoras Barducei and Pollettini and Signors Bada- racco and Vargas, will constitute the pro- gramme. On Thursday afternoon at 3:15 the last of the symphony concerts of the Holmes orchestra will take place at the Grand Opera-house, The programme will be: The Manfred overture; Mendelssohn’s “Scotch” symphony: the scherzo from Tschatkowski's “Pathetique” :i'r{l.phtny and the overture to ““Willlam Tell. To-night Madame Gadski, Mr. Bispham and Mr. Damrosch will be heard at the California_Theater in expositions of “Das Rheingold” and “Die Walkur: ‘To-mor - row night “Siegfried” and “Gotterdam- merung” will be rendered, and on Wednes- day night a miscellaneous programme wiil be offered. . Damrosch’s explanatory recita will take plaee at Sherman, Clay & Ce.'s Hall this afternoon and on Friday and The mes 0 be, respectively, “Gotterdamme- “Parsifal” and “Tristan and Isolds On Friday evening the Minettl quartet Superintendent of Public Instruction Thomas J. Kirk is registered at the Lick. Simpson, a millionaire lumber man of Stockton, Is a guest at the Occi- dental. F. P. Maher, an official of the United A W will give its last concert at Sherman, Clav Co.’s Hall. The programme will inclu Smetana’s “Aus Meinen Leben.” Three members of the Lambardl opcra company, assisted by Signor Wanrell, will ve a concert at Sherman. Clay & Co.'s all on Thursday evening. The artists are Senoras Barducci and Pollettini and Signor i FASHION HINT FROM PARIS, i | @——9—2—0—0—0-9—0—0—9—90-@ [ R e e e R e R e e ] record is that of a 12-pounder brass gun invented and tried in 1770 by Colonel De- saguller. The gun was tried at Woolwich in the presence of royalty, and the in- ventor loaded and discharged the gun at the rate of twenty-three rounds per min- ute, including sponging. The Framee, a torpedo-boat destroyer of 300 tons, built at Loire, has been deliv- ered at L'Orient for completion. She is of the Durandah type, but of greater horse- power, and is expected to steam 28 knots. A sister boat named Yatagaw is nearly ready for delivery. It took the builders twenty-seven months to construct these craft. The British battleship Glory of 12,90 tons, just completed, returned February 8 to Portsmouth after a thirty-hcur trial at sea under natural draught. The ship was on an even keel, drawing 26 feet, and the steam in the boilers was 240 pounds, de- veloping 10,587 horsepower and givinz a speed of 16.73 knots as indicated by four runs over the mile course. The increase in ships in the German navy will necessitate a corresponding growth of the personnel. It is planned to increase the number of naval officers from 867 to 1212, engineers from 128 to 283, sur- geons from 142 to 188, paymasters from 104 to 122 and enlisted men and boys from 18,597 to 33,746. The growth will cover the period between 1901 and 1920. The keel of a third class cruiser was laid Iast menth at Devonport. The vessel is 320 feet in length, 36 feet 6 inches breadth and is to draw only 13 feet G inches, dis- placing 2200 tons. The engines of 7000 horsepower are expected to give a speed of 20 knots. The armament consists of eight 4-inch, eight 3-pounders, four Max- ims and two Whitehead torpedo tubes, and the cost exclusive of armament is es- timated at $725,000. Thé excess of cost of French war ves- sels over those of Great Britaln is conclu- sively proved by a comparison of two bat- tleships of practically the same tonnage built in the dockyards of the respective RED CLOTH COSTUME. | This original costume is in red cloth, | with the ground of the corsage and yoke in black velvet. The tabs on the corsage button down the side, and over the hips are similar tabs, which form basques be- hind. The skirt is set in with very fine pleats. DRAMATIC NOTES | AND MUSIC NEWS | HE Columbia Theater presents an important attraction to-night. “Be- cause She Loved Him So.” by W liam Gillette, the author of “Scer Service,” has been one of the big successes of the year in New York. It will be given here with the original cast, including J. E. Dodson, who is among the greatest in character parts. Annle Irish, Francis Carlisle and Kate Meek are also with the company. Next Thursday afternoon “The Brownies in Fairyland” will be given at the Califur. nia Theater and continue for the rest of the week. The next attraction Is to be “Puddin’-Head Wilson,” in_which Rurr Mackintosh will make his first local ap- pel.g('n.ncu lnAthT title ;\fle. ‘Wever Again.” the rat: ;:;ee. n‘;:l;] be’conilnueg uzut't'-g A’l‘;fin!:‘: al er week. * macy’ | pre rnu‘on. % e R ere is no change at the Tivoll, “The Idol's Eye” continuin & promise of an indefinite vaq " Wit the “The Girl From Paris” is the amusir, bill at the Grand. It wi . 1o the <5 11 be continued dur- Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Dre resent- ing a one-act comedy mv.n.l‘e’cll‘r‘g ’ve V;‘llll Find a-Way" at the heum. Other nev:- comers are Flato and and Howard ;l;h!: n, a ffi"fi'.:“ 'nn:lelever Smed- sen: acrobats are held over. e My 154 & - States Postal Department, is at the Oc-| [ ? | Badaracco. The memory of the latter's ciflenta) 54 4 | fine temor voice should attract a good Joseph W. Hirshutz, architect of the :zfi 2 audlence. Philadelphia Board of Education, is reg- | ¢ ‘ ——*—_soc S P TIAOO istered at the Occidental. B & | Cal glace fruit 3c p Rev. T. R. Price of England and R. A. | ¢ ¢ | Spectal information supplied dally to G. Annesley of Ireland, who have been | ¢ @ | business houses and public men b“ the sightseeing in Southern California, are at | & ¢ | Press Cl:'t)ng ‘?r“e'l’;;‘fié.;‘."ia".?.’f 510 ont- the Occidental. 14 4 | somery 1042. | e e . O'Brien Moore, who is well known in | 4 % newspaper circles throughout the West, | % | The American—You have no idea of the it & |immense wealth of this country until | has been placed In charge of the editorial | S e Trasciad e M department of the Daily News of El Paso, | 2 | *he’ Forsigner—Oh, Jes. T have. T've Tex. | lived in Europe. —————— e . s SRS CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. |, © | Trunks and valises. Immense assort- | . Sanb Vail's, NEW YORK, March 11.—Fred A. Whit-| ¢ ¢ | gaang cf heet, eea 08 Saapans & L more of San Jose is at the Netherlands; | ¢ ® paloninto - LAt Ed Keane of San Francisco is at the 4 | The oldest tree in the world, it is said, b B @ |18 8 CXPTent anvut the base, and which 1s s e o 5 NEWS OF FOREIGN NAVIES. | 4 | Befieved to be G0 years old and more an- 3 o aims Bt e & | clent than the baobab tree of Africa, | The masts on the new yacht Victoria | & + | which is said to have lived 50 years. | and Albert are to be shortened 40 feet. . & It you have not decided how to go East, go The French cruiser Tage, bullt in 188, ! b4 4 | to see the handsome moving pictures, now on is being transformed into a modern ves- | ¢ ® | exhibition, free at Union Pacific Ticket Office, sel-of-war and will receive new bollers | & AN esmpgre Lo B g and new engines. All the woodwork that | o ¢ i can be supplanted by stecl is to be re- 2§ h¢ «“Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup” moved. & | Has been used for fifty years by millions of . heir children while Teething with The Charlemagne, battleship, and o | mothers for ¢ | Guichen, cruiser, recently steamed five | 3 [ pertect smecmn. 1t sothes the chitd, setvens days at the uniform rate of 15 knots an | the gums, allays pain, c. regu ¢ |lates the Bowels and is the best re ly for hour. At the end of this trial the coal | 7 g G SN SO W Ao ey S ly remaining showed only enough for £ . . e a4 other causes. For sale by druggists in every about, 2000 miles, or one-half the estimate ) = L & oy e e Bt B g ediponsd o — 1 @ | Winslow's Soothing Syrup. e a bottle. One of the earliest quick-firing guns on | @ ¢4+ o+ &+o-+6-+5e@ —_——e—————— Personally Conducted Excursions In improved wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist sleeping cars via Santa Fe route. Experienced excursion conductors accompany these excur- sons to look after the welfare of passengers. To Clicago and Kansas City every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday. To Boston, Montreal and Toronto every Wednesday. To St. Louts every Sunday. To St. Paul every Sunday and Friday. Ticket office, 62 Market street. —_— “I saw you out with a lady last even- ing, chappie.” “Didn’t see you, boy. Yes, I was with my—wife. Who were you with?" “Your wife, chappie.”"—Pick-Me-Up. ADVERTISEMENTS. EXPERIENGE hastaughtushow tomakethe best Emulsion in the world; Experience has proved that this Emulsion is worthy. of cntire confidence. There are many imitations of Scolls Emulsion and all kinds of substitutes for it: but none equal it. If your doctor recommends you to take Cod-Liver Qil, or you know yourself that you need it, get SCOT%’S EMULSION ; The Alhambra has reopened mm‘dz. “‘Have You Seen m:h“’!' S Sitee At the Ol ma, Blanche Sloan a and Mlle. The The Norris tellow-“’“mm'" ea autmni s show at the Pavilfo: proved Entertainment. 1t il e contued ST noon "5 evening for one Fischer's new concert house, on O'Far- itis the best Cod-Liver Oil in the best form. If we had your address we would sead you a sample and a pampblet tellisg more about it.