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THE SA JALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1900. JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. J PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, 8. F. Telephone Main 1S68. | EDITORIAL ROOMS....217 to 221 Stevemson St. Telephone Main 1874, | 15 Cents Per Week. 5 Cents one year.. -36°00 & Sunday). 6 month 3.00 £ Sunday), 8 months. 1.50 gle Month 650 . 1.50 WEEKLY CALL One Year.. E 1.00 | All postmasters are authorized to receive | sabscriptions. Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. OAKLAND OFFICE C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Advertising, Marguette Building, Chicago. ..1118 Broadway NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON,.... ... Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: PERRY LUKENS JR.. .29 Tribune Building CHICAGO NE 0. News Co.; STANDS: Great Northern Hotel; STANDS: Brentano, 31 Waldort Hotel; A. Union Square: a WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE MORTON E. CRANE OFFICES—! Montgomery, corner of Clay, clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open n. open until 10 o'clock. , open until ® o'clock. 1098 id § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until w corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, ock. ...Wellington Hotel Correspondent. BRANCH ntil 9:30 open 839 antil 2261 xt AMUSEMENTS. ‘Pudd’nhead Wilson." ki, Monday, March 26. She Loved Him So.” fusketeers.” e Grand Duches AUCTION SALES. s day, at 11 o'clock, Horses, at March 26, at 10:30 o'clock, Tuesday, March 27, at ot “BUBONIC” EFFECTS. ANDING the prompt exposure which “bubon: of the evidence up started \ its repute of the city and exerted whose effects are beginning to Pacific Coast and in the East. Victoria announce that the Cana- ordered the authorities at that Il steamers from San Francisco and the further information r Curacao has been held in n, Mexico. In both cases the pon the report that San Fran- | bubonic plague. Thus the folly, i of Health has already proven shipping interests and innocent and inconvenience because of it i are much more easily started | 1 reports travel fast and grow as | A story that originated with | pposed to have been inflicted with | T | e, eam | pread about the world in the form the plague is raging here and that | stration of the rapidity with ? ns in cases of this kind get about | in ell 1 people a telegram | w e morning from a gentleman in ning his son to leave San | once, as he has information that the bu- | r re and the city is to be quaran- the country. A telegram of that | } from such a source shows the alarm that has | East by the sensational and reck- the Board of Health here. San nned as if it were a pestilential stead of being, as it is, one of the healthiest he world, istration of the readiness with which re exaggerated is at hand in a circular ss, Or., protesting against reports that Ipox is raging in that locality., The circular We hear that in some places we are credited g a number of cases reaching into the hun- and that we are dying at a rapid rate. One of ighboring towns gives the information that our litia has been called out to preserve the quarantine. er has officiously quarantined against us. The e of affairs is this: At the present time there re two very mild cases nearly recovered. * * * re in the outskirts of the town and the ¢ ted. * * * There is no excitement tion here, nor any reason for any. The ut- ulousness of the circulated reports gives rea- e rest o son for the belief that they are circulated by rival towns for the purpose of injuring our trade, and, while we hesitate to ascribe a motive so contemptible, can imagine no other cause for the persistent cir- tion of utter and complete falsehood.” 1 not be necessary to attribute jealousy to the stors of the injurious reports concerning San Francisco in order to explain their action. When our Board of Health makes a tremendous display of 1ing a large section of the city, and its or- gan issues something like 2 “bubonic edition” to jus- tify the action, it is inevitable that outsiders should deem our city infected like some port of the Orient proceed to establish a rigid quarantine against it. 1e evil has been done, and we must take the con- but the public should bear in mind the se authors of the scare and let them feel the force of ces ar indign ome way devised for making the jingoes get e firing line and do the fighting. | | we have published. | endanger the paramountcy of Great Britain. | again shall he be able to treat an Englishman as if he | Representatives, Now that the Czar is mobilizing his fleet and his army, The Hague conference hasn’t a friend left in Europe. 1 ANGLO-AFRICAN POLICY. T would be interesting to make such an analysis as will reveal the effect, if any, that Christian civilization has had upon statecrait and the morality of nations. Apparently it is inappreci- able. The course of the United States for the last two years is full of incidents which show an abso- lute decadence in conscience since Greece and Rome, and Great Britain seems about to furnish further illus- trations in her African policy. That she intends to destroy the republics and forcibly incorporate their | people in her empire there is no longer any doubt. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, announces that policy in the debate which In answering Sir W. Harcourt “We hoped that when President Kruger saw how little it was we asked, and how determined we were to have it, he would give way.” Yet in 1896 Mr, Chamberlain, then, as now, Colo- “To go to war with President said: he nial Secretary, said: | Kruger to enforce upon him reforms in the internal concerns of the Transvaal, in which successive Sec- retaries of State have repudiated all rights of inter- | ference, that would have been a course of action as immoral as it. would have been unwise.” If he told the truth three years ago, no matter “how little” in- terference he asked last year in the Transvaal, he had no right to ask any at all nor to impress Kruger with his determination to get it, thereby trying to intimi- date him into concessions that were declared beyond the right of England to ask. Mr. Chamberlain makes it plain that when he asked in 1809 what in 1806 he said England had no right to ask, it was for the pur- pose of forcing war upon the Boers. In 1896 he had said to go to war over the very issue he made in 1899 would be “immoral and unwise.” In the Harcourt debate he said the war over Kruger's re- fusal to permit internal interference in the Transvaal is, on England’s part, “a just, righteous and neces- sary war.” If just such a war, for precisely the same cause, was “immoral” in 1896, what has made it “just and righteous” in the short space of three years, dur- ing which none of the issues involved has shifted a | single span from the position they occupied three | years before? What has effected the moral and ethical transforma- tion is perhaps unconsciously revealed by Mr. Cham- berlain in the same speech, when he said: “Never again, with our consent, if we have the power, shall the Boer be able to erect in South Africa a citadel whence proceed disaffection and race animasity to Never belonged to an inferior race.” Translated by the key of the history of the case, that means that Great Britain intended from the be- ginning to destroy the republics, in order to be su- preme in South Africa, and that makes a war just and righteous now that was “immoral and unwise” three years ago The appeal to English bumptiousness is enough to make the Muse of History laugh as it goes into her record. The Boers refused to let the English treat them as an inferior race, and that is always resented as interference with the natural rights of an English- man. Denial of his superiority by anybody is taken to be affirmation of his inferiority, and if he is a tourist he writes to the Times about it. If he is a rabid speculator, like Rhodes, he organizes a Jame- son raid. If he is Secretary of State for the Colonies he goes to war, if the enemy is weak enough to jus- tify it. The Jameson raid, the fruit of a conspiracy with Cecil Rhodes, from which Mr. Chamberlain has never cleared his skirts, was the beginning of that *race hatred” of which he complains now. It taught the Baers that their English neighbors proposed to respect none of their rights, and the preparations then begun for defense are amply justified, though they may prove inadequate, because a state with only about long 100,000 people cannot resist an empire with The officials of the Morgue ought to send a letter | of thanks to the Supervisors for the laudable effort which the Board is making to lessen the Coroner’s duties. A resolution has been adopted ordering Southern Pacific tracks out of the Mission. MR. SULZER'S CAVORTING. W HEN at a Tammany banquet last fall Mr. Sul- zer was put forward as New York's candidate for Democratic leadership in the House of there was an expectation throughout the country that the new man might prove himself to | be possessed of at least a fair degree of political as- tuteness, even if he lacked statesmanship, and that he would be able to show an appearance of dignity even when he failed to manifest the wisdom that should go with it. All such expectations have been disappointed. Sulzer failed to receive the support oi any considerable number of Democratic Congressmen in his candidacy for the leadership, but he has man- aged to make himsclf conspicuous, notwithstanding, and as a result Ite is now known to tRe country as about the nearest approach to the colt of a wild ass that ever kicked and brayed in the House of Repre- sentatives. It appears to be the ambition of Sulzer to pose as the only American patriot in Congress, and at the same time to be the mouthpiece of the yellow journals of New York. No matter how silly be the fake in the way of politics the yellows may devise out of their lunatic imaginations, Mr. Sulzer is ready to bring it before the House and make upon it a speech full of froth and fury, but signifying nothing. His latest exhibition has been that of demanding that the War Department furnish the House with all the information it has concerning the British forti- fications on this continent and particularly those along our northern border. It will be remembered that the yvellow journals discovered a few days ago that the British have a fort at Esquimalt, and that the officers in charge will not admit yellow artists to take kodak views of the guns, magazines and other fea- tures of the forts. Since the reporters could not ob- tain the information from the British, Mr. Sulzer undertook to obtain it for them from the War Depart- ment at Washington. Of course the War Department declined to make its military information public. To the demand of Sulzer the reply came back: “The in- formation the department possesses on this ahd like occasions has always been held confidential, and for good and sufficient reasons has not been made pub- lic.” The reply gave Sulzer the opportunity he de- sired for a wild ass exhibit on the floor of the House, and strange and wonderful was the use he made of it. Had a wanderer from a far land, ignorant of our poli- tics—some wild man of Borneo, for example—heard Sulzer's speech he would have concluded the Ameri- can Government had sold itself to Great Britain and that the only virtue left in the United States is_ that which lies in the tongue of Sulzer himself. Of course the object of all this is something more than that of revealing to the public what a donkey a Congressman can make of himself when he tries. Sulzer is doing Tammany politics as well as yellow modern, journalism. The clamor about the fortifications at Esquimalt and the shrieks against the administration for submission to Great Britain are designed to raise a new issue in the country and thus enable Tammany to eliminate the free silver question from the cam- paign and with it get rid of Bryan. It is a pretty trick in its way and consists in substituting a new | donkey to draw the Democratic eye and ear away from the one that was upset with the cart in 1806. Tt is hardly likely that anybody can beat Bryan in his party this year, but if the thing can be done at all Sulzer is clearly the man to do it. B R In their great “bull conic” plague campaign the members of the Board of Health ought to adopt a rallying cry by which they could locate their scout- ing parties in the labyrinths of Chinatown. Perhaps this would do: Health Board, Health Board, ‘Where are we at? Guinea pig, guinea pig, Rat, rat, rat! —— LICENSED GUIDES. HIEF SULLIVAN has .recommended to the C Police Commissioners that all licenses to Chinatown guides be revoked, and is reported to have declared an inability to perceive the need of licensed guides for that or any other portion of the city. Here is a clear case of zeal outrunning not discre- tion only, but common sense itself. Licensed guides are a necessity of the age. In our time tourists are numbered by the thousands. Every city of consider- able size, or of any interest either by reason of its history or its picturesque location, attracts them. In the great majority of instances tourists desire some one acquainted with the locality to show them about the place in order that they may be sure of seeing all that is noteworthy and of understanding what they do see. To meet that demand the professional guide has come into existence. He is a necessary part of the population of every city that attracts tour- ists, and is to be found in them all. So long as tourists continue to travel and are eager sightseers, so long will there be a demand for guides, and so long as the profession is lucrative there will. be persons to follow it. By requiring guides to take out a license the municipal authorities assure strangers from falling into the hands of rascals or the touts.of gambling-rooms, and thus render sightseeing much safer than it would be otherwise. To revoke all such licenses would give the touts an advantage they do not now possess, and as a result many a stranger would be duped and robbed by them. Sightseeing is a legitimate desire on the part of every one who visits a strange place. Nearly every one who comes to San Francisco on business or on pleasure wishes to see those localities of the city which are noted as peculiar to it, or are much talked of. Chinatown is one of the show-places of San Francisco, just as the catacombs are of Rome or the sewers of Paris. People Jike to see them, notwith- standing their gloom and their discomforts. It is therefore imperative there should be Chinatown guides, and to refuse to license honest and intelligent men to perform the work would simply open a way for rascality to practice frauds upon the tourists who visit us. ——— Local Chinese intend to hold a pafade in June in honor of one of their national holidays. The march ture of the spectacle. e ——————r— PORTO RICAN POVERTY. | excited because it thinks The Call sneers at Porto Rican poverty, caused, according to the Standard, by a hurricane. cover that he is in a bad humor on his own account and not on account of the Porto Ricans. From the world’s earliest knowledge of them, all tropical peo- the exertion of man and not the bounty of nature. Nature is bountiful in the tropics because the climate disfavors human exertion. and they were not impressed by it. Now as our sev- eral tropical paradises, one after another, hold up their hands for alms, and we call attention to it, the determined, as far as we can influence the decision, that poverty in the United States shall not be pro- duced by taking in eighteen millions of tropical peo- labor. Poverty in the tropics is chronic. It grows out of climatic conditions. Yet it is not the sort of poverty that free trade brings to the workingmen of of the hatchetmen ought to form an interesting fea- HE Humboldt Standard permits itself to be 1f our critic will analyze his feelings he will dis- ple have been poor. Wealth and progress depend on All this we pointed out to the imperialists long ago, imperialists whine that we sneer at poverty! We are ple and giving them free trade, to compete with our the United States. Tropical people are poor, but the | poison climate in which they gender and die. produces spontaneously most of what is needed to supply their physical wants. They have not the need for exertion that northern people have. But poverty among us it a very different thing. Not being able to buy food, poverty means starva- tion. Not being able to buy fuel, poverty freezes to death. The horrors of poverty are found only among the temperate zone races, for its sorrows and burdens are mdltiplied by that very vigor of climate which puts into man the energy that must be exerted ! to support life. The tropical wage scale is about 25 cents a day. Labor at that wage competes with ours. ‘Does the Standard wish free trade with that motley horde of eighteen millions? We don’t, and propose to aid in preventing it, no matter by whom proposed. As for the Porto Ricans, they were not in revolt” against Spain, but were tumultuous in their desire to break into this country. Now, according to the Stan- dard, they appear to think that they have been ad- mitted to an eleemosynary institution, entitled to their bed, board and tobacco. We are perfectly willing to Jet them return to Spain if they wish, or set up for themselves if they can, but we don’t want them in the United States in any capacity whatever. The Interstate Commerce Commission is coming to California to listen to the complaints of shippers against the Southern Pacific Company. The distin- guished gentlemen must expect to stay among us for a year or so. The Democrats and Populists of Nebraska have decided that Bryan shall be their nominee for Presi- dent. This decision is one of those that are most forcibly described in pugilistic affairs as “No contest.” In San Francisco there is one advantage to dis- tricts in being lawless. Chinatown is amply provided with lights at night, while the rest of the city is in profound darkness. A Spanish gun 150 years old is to be mounted as a trophy in City Hall Park. Visitors will think that it was put in place when the antique pile it graces was’ erected. e £ -sent + L4 t @ 3 B e e B e e i e e e e e e i i e e i e e B S SR S The Bubonic Brigade Picked the Lock With a Jimmy. D50 NS s = It D S AR AR as o S CPEP PP PP T PEP P EE PO PPt P PP PP 0O PP P00 0400000000000 0000000000000 .-*Mofiwmwfiwflfiwflfl* R e e e e e et e Y ] L AROUND THE CORRIDORS Fred Dodd, a hotel man of Fresno, is a guest at the Lick. S. A. Lowd, an Insurance man of Han- ford, is at the Grand. W. H. Clary, a wealthy mine owner of Stockton, is at the Lick. C. Rogers, a traveler from Ynkohamu.l is a guest at the Grand. | T, Sokata, a merchant of Japan, arrived at the Occidental yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. B. Marshall are at the Oc- cidental from Washington, D. C. Rav. J. L. Humphrey and wife are reg- ijstered at the Occidental from Little ‘Falls, N. Y. J. M. C. Jasper, banker and capitalist, is registered at the Grand from his home in Wheatland. o RS . H. H. Brown, a prominent- medical m:); of Chicago, is at the Palace with his wife and family. C. C. Hay, a New York journalist rep- resenting the American Banker, is among the arrivals of yesterday at the Lick. Count A. R. Martiny and A. Gorni, Ttalian gentlemen on a tour around the world, arrived at the Palace yesterday. A. B. Cutts, general passenger and ticket agent of the Minneapolis and St Louis road, is in the city on a business trip. e v?r. H, Granberry, president of the New York Stock Exchange, is at the Palace, where he arrived yesterday, accompanied by his wife and family. Mr. Granberry is here on a pleasure trip and will probably remain in the city some time before re- turning home. Lieutenant W. de Bodisco, Surgeon D. Vasnetzow and Lieutenant B. Ellis of the imperial Russian navy are at the Palace, where they arrived yesterday on the Jap- anese steamer from the Orient. They have completed their term of service with the Asiatic squadron and are now on their way home to St. Petersburg for orders. —_—————————— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, March 22.—Ed C. Bu-i ham, son of Representative Barham, is in Washington, accompanied by his wife, and will remain here several weeks. ————————— “CY” . CONCILIATES. In the cloakrooms they tell a funny story at the expense of Cy Sulloway, the tall Congressman from New Hampshire. Cy is a picturesque and graphic talker, wherein lies some of the point of the story. In the campaign of 189 Sulloway went to Portsmouth, N. H., to make a speech. The Republicans there, knowing his flery nature, waited upon him with a few words of warning and explanation. “Cy,” said they, “the Democrats around here will vote for McKinley this year if you don’t are them off. Whatever you say in your speech, don't get the Democrats mad. Conciliate them, (;x: conciliate them.” Sulloway shoo! s shaggy locks by way of understanding and approval. “All i 1" he said. g1 The speech befiu' It ran along all right erg)u‘h until Sulloway roached the sins and shortcomings of the Demo- cratic party. Then he 'w emphatic and eloquent; also severe. “If before me,” he said, ‘‘was a yawning chasm, and at the bottom of the chasm were the fires of hell, and if above the chasm was suspended a basket containing the entire Democratic party, do you know what I would do?” The erowd listened lntenu*. The Dem- ocrats present were especlally anxious to hear the answer. “I would cu}1 the h;zpe," shouted Sullo- way in his loudest voice. T{e nl:!pubucan committeemen who had B.P ealed for conciliation went out on the sf P ewalk and said ‘“Damn.”—Washington ost. COSTLY POSTSCRIPT. A war correspondent for an Eastern paper sent in his usual dispatch for the day from the little town out on the firing line, relates the Chicago Tribune. Under the rules the dispatch had to be addressed and sent direct to the press censor, Cap- tain Green, who, after he had passed upon it and struck out matter that he regarded as objectionable, sent it over to the cable station. There the correspondent’'s co- laborer was to review it and strike out anything from the message that he already sent. But he had himself hur- ried out to another part of the flrln{ line in the afternoon and left word at the cable office that the messages which came in from the first correspondent should be just as they were to the paper in New York. The first correspondent, thinking his co- n edit hl:. etrdn. p _Some -olmdhr stole am weal pants ; took :!u.y “rom a Filipino. also a pair of socks, es and a bottle of whisky. it all up as streetcar fare X g0 a5 it was written, for ke . e Sppn e cable station ofl it. But the colaborer was not there and the night operator had no orders to do anything but send messages as they came in. Besides, he did not know but what it might be & code. So he sent it to_the New York office. There were_sixty-thres words in the rostscrflpt at $2 50 a word gold, amounting n_all to $157 50. What did the telegraph editor in New York think when he received that appeal for a pair of khaki trousers and a bottle of whisky? Nobody knows. For the sad- dest part of this story is that it is true. —¢—e—o—0—o—oo+Q FASHION HINT FROM PARIS, i .—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—t | . e | | | | | | [ T S S . ] BEIGE CLOTH COSTUME. The costume represented is of beige clath, tailor made, with a bolero having indented edges trimmed with black and white striped silk. The lapels and tunic are ornamented in the same manner. The walstcoat is of beige muslin, crossed by a trellis of black velvet. ——————— =3=3=3:-3-2-3-3-3-3-3-3-3-3-F-3-1 In next Sunday’s Call will appear a full page of repro- ductions from the best work of San Francisco artists— scenes that they consider the most beautiful bits of local color. This page will prove a gem for all who appreciate the artistic efforts of Califor- nia’s talented painters. f-8=R:R-F=F=2-F=F=F:-F:F=2-F-3-F-8:3 He Couldn’t Hold It All “Madam,” said the tramp, as a middle- aged lady came to the door in response to his knock, “would you give a poor old man a bite to eat?’ “Why,” replied the lady, “you are cer- tainly able to earn a living. You don't logk very old.” “Looks_are often deceitful, lady,” an- swered the wanderer. ‘I am old enough to be your grandfather. A _moment later he was seated in the kitchen and nothlnf she had in the pantry was too good for him.—Chicago Record. ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. SCHOOL OF DESIGN—Subscriber, City. The term of the Californta School of De- sign in the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art Sioy Brtents from the aae or'ts Hoats admitted. s, i CATHOLIC KNIGHTS-M. R., City. The office of the State secretary of Cali- fornia branch of the Catholic Knights of lAe;"gE is on Shattuck avenue, ‘Berko- THE POPE—A. 8., Quarantine Station, Angel Island, City. For a number of years the Pope of Rome has confined his move- ments to the Vatican Palace and the mu:d. secured to him by the Govern- 10X 10F 106 06 508 308 0 I X X O 000 0 GOLDEN GATE PARK — Subscriber, City. eomm Gate Park in San Francisco following the X, i' : I.b 1 | sioners, S. F. Butterworth, D. W. Con- nelly and C. F. McDermott, was organ- |ized, and in 1871 the park, though not | formally dedicated, was used by the pub- lic as such. BIRTH OF PUGILISTS—W. H. F', City. | J. J. Jeffries was born in Ohio, 1875; | George Lavigne in Bay City, Mich., 1871; Solly Smith, Los Angeles, 187 Tom | Treacy in Australia, and Dal Hawkins in | San Francisco, 1871. Do not find any rec- ord of Young Peter Jackson's birth. FILIPINO INSURRECTION—A. H., City. The Government called for troops to put down the Filipino insurrection on | the 6th of July, 18%9. The first troops that left for the Philippines after that call was the Twenty-sixth Infantry, which left in September following. THE LITTLE CHURCH—G. H. B., City. The Church of the Transfiguration, lo. cated on East Twenty-ninth street, New | York, is better known as “The little church around the corner” from the fact that its rector many years ago read the funeral service of the church over the body of an actor after a neighboring | around the corne e o | | OCEAN DEPTHS—J. H. A., San Diego, Cal. A solid piece of metal will reach the bottom of the ocean Irrespective of depth. This has been proved by sounding to the depth of more than five miles. A flat | piece of iron will go to the bottom, but | If the same plate is made concave, i the shape of a cup, or like a boat, it wili float. | The heaviest bodies may be made to float | by shaping them so as to make them dis- | place more than their own weight of wa- | ter. "An iron ship wrecked at sea, as soon as it fills goes to the bottom. | AN ALSATIAN—Alsacten, City. If an | Alsatian, now a citizen of the United | States, does not owe military service to | either France or Germany he is free to | visit those countries without fear of mo- lestation. If he intends to visit various parts of Europe he should provide himself | with a passport to be obtained from the | Secretary of State at Washington, D. C. By writing to that official he will be fur- nished the blank form he will have to | fill_out, before he can obtain the pass- port, and he will also be furnished a cir- c'ul:.: of manner of procedure. The fee —_——— Cal. glace fruit 50c per I at Townsend's.* —_—— Specfal information supplied dafly to business houses and public fen by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 - —_——— In the recent discussion as to the merits, Tespectively and relatively, of white and rown bread, there appears to be a weighty learning, on the part of profes- | slonals, in favor of the former. They are firm in their belief, after having made flahor&(e l'n;l!te‘![lgatl:ons.h[hat white bread s more_nu ous than the brown v: y. —New York Tribune. St s —_——— “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup” Has been used for fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while Teething with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays pain, cures Wind Colle, regu- lates the Bowels and fs the best remedy for Diarrhoeas, whether arising from teething or other causes. For sale by druggists in every part of the world. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. 25c a bottle. Personally Conducted Excursions In improved wide-vestibuled Pullman tourist sleeping cars via Santa Fe route. Experienced excursion conductors accompany these excur: sions to look after the welfare of passengers. To Chicago and Kansas City every Sunday, ‘Wednesday and Friday. To Boston, Montreal and Toronto every Wednesday. To St. Louls every Sunday. To St. Paul every Sunday and Friday. Ticket office, 623 Market street. ADVERTISEMENTS. SCOTT’S Emuision Oures Coughs and Colds cures them quicker and better than any cough mix- ture “ever made. It does more. It enriches the blood, strengthens mind and body, gives vigor and vital- ity. Cough mixtures won’t do this, nor will they cure deep-seated, stubborn coughs. Scott’s Emulsion will Tryitl 4 foc.