The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 25, 1900, Page 6

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THE S AN FRANCISCO CALL, :opnetor. AKE, Manayer. isnsto W. S Telephone Mein 1568, EDITORIAL ROOMS. Stevenson St. Telephone 1 » =i 74. 15 Cents Per Week, Centm. nding Posta; ear hs.. n 1% by Carrices, Single Copie Terms by Mail. Ine Deltvered ze: postmasters ure anthorized to recelw subscriptions. when requested. ANl e coples w OAKLAND OF) Marquette Building, Chicago. Japhone” “‘Central 2612."") NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: Tribune Building TANDS: ; Great CHIGAGO Sherman House; F Northern Hotel; Untoa Square: n Hote corner of Clay, ery Specialties. afternoon and clock, Horses, FIXING RESPONSIBILITY. f econ ¢ asked ciation to b were pro: 01 1 government t om the ct r, such selecting municipal employes < ny economy in t the most cost! old system we al the people. neglected by t sense | of unlighted latory foot- 7 to carry blished chairman of th C Board of Public es for t oard and ¥e is no money to spend in ¢ by that board which nd unnecessary He then and showed that “clerical sala- to the expenditure on public works of 830.” This, as he says, means n actually performing work $1 will be spent by the Board »f bookkeeping.” Federation Clubs credit is due for h which they are working for the general good. Did an equal public spirit pervade all sections f the city we should ere long obtain reform. The Phel ion ng to shirk responsibil- the shirking be permitted on the streets Public Works To the Mission the zeal etc., n admi T2 is t or existing ev shall have dirt a waste of publ we by funds jor the support of tax aters, as long as Mayor Phelan remains in office. 1 her hand, should the vigorous and well d protests of the Mission Clubs be supported we may force the Mayor least some of the many pledges he made be fore election. T on has done and is doing gat deal of work for the improvement of the city, at fact justifies the Mission Clubs in turning co-operation in the effort to for the present condition of the government and to force reform. Phelan has ently boasted that he controls the administration, ments iation for respo the heads of depar the people, but to h It is his policy that has left ark and unswept, a field for the operation and upon him will rest th= blame. the streef i recent developments in one of our local courts be true, it is pvident that the charter has not destroye.d k actice of the-fine art of jury fixing among us: kes something more than a change of form to ange the substance of things. ‘alter Besant says the term Anglo-Saxon race i ling, and that it should be Anglo-Celtic, so it is safe to bet the worthy gentleman is one of th who has followed the Queen in sporting th e fellows S RASCT S Ty Collector of the Port John P. Jackson ought tp sremely happy. Eight out of every ten coolie tive sons” whose cases he is not trying are being led to China by the Federal courts. * misfortunes of men to the * D | Board of Health officers and disinfection form { > ¥ tion performed, | trade; re responsible not to | THE POPULIST CANDIDATE. “HE country is getting a bit curious 7to scc ’_I whether the Democrats will nominate the Pop- ulist candidate for the Presidency and the Free Silver Republican candidate for the Vice Presidency. 1t is surely a queer sitration for the Democracy to be compelled to take its tuals already chewed from the mowth of Populism. On the estern frontier the law against selling whisky in bulk or by the glass as habitually evaded by a white man first and then Poor Lo mouth Indian. to his own of cracy has descended to the same It is the “poor Lo amongst parties, and and candidates out of the mouch s without revolting. Colonel Bryan ppeal to all the vagarists of the country bably because there is no social and po ry too rank for his indorsement. The an- of Altgeld, the communism of Pingree a fie pl; e socialisim of the Mayor of Toledo all scek and are welcomed. Perhaps this is because all of these « have thei Whenever a man finds himseli out the energy znd enterprisc to keep up with the procession, and lacking indusiry and thrift sees others pass hin e radix in pessimism. e he and in the march and succeed w ed, he concludes that the world wron 1 Bryan is pleasing all such. All who t the procession of the world’s progress to because they are too weak stop or too lazy to keep up it are pleased when Colonel B lays all the In 1896 e had a fine field for this The had been out of power for four were out of joint. money power.” sort of pessimism. lican party The gospel of de- as more popular than the tidings of salvation. | in went around rubbing the sore places out tr; and working aid all their lacks and losses to the rd and the gold bugs, and told t"em that men with go from the present bad to the future Kinley were elected and the gold standard | \pproved. ppose that his adm First Battle.” irers have his celebrated | f they will turn to page | 464 they will read his reprint therein of his speech ade at Baltimore in 1806. That speech pleased him t he thought it deserving of preservation in his I along with other gri palpitating, pulsing ights. In it he said: “If we win this fight now rm will begin at once: if we are defeated in this n there is nothing before the people but four re of der times and greater agitation, and then victory will come. Our opponents say they want to restore confidence, but the Republican party can- not restore prosperity in this country so long as that prosperity is doled out to us by foreigners our distress. who profit in that business nditions are bad: T warn them that business condi- anot iproved by following out the finan- in Business men comy which has brought business to its present | That was pessimistic prophecy, and not in broken Will the supporters of Colonel Bryan, list nominee, please to read it over and com- with the existing industrial and commercial | The financial policy he opposed has not cnly been in operation since 1897, but it has been con- creted in the law by enactment of the gold standard | bill. cent. cither. the Pop pare conditions? erest on the public debt is reduced to 2 per Wages have not only increased, but more than 100 per ceént more wage workers are employed. Busi- n everywhere and of all kinds is so brisk that or- ders accumulate faster than they can be filled. The ! bank deposits and depositors have increased more tk Where, then, are the “four years more of harder times and greater agitation,” so con- fidently foretold by this favorite of the Populists? We fear that he was not born with a caul and that his gift of prophecy.has not the trademark blown the in The Southern Paci that the wreck of the fic Company is pleased to plead Alameda train which killed and maimed - seven people the other day was due to the forgetfulr ju A conscientious in a damage suit might inspire the company to employ men who do rot forget. o o e s WAR AGAINST CONSUMPTION. - s of one of its employes. ISPATCHES from Boston announce that here- after “every physician in that city must report every case of consumption that comes to his notice to the Board of Health, as he would any other After a death from this disease hereafter the premises will be entered by the case of contagious disease. and other means will be taken to guard against the spread of tht malady in Boston. These new rules have just been issued by the Board of Health, and the plan is to enter upon a vigorous campaign against tuberculosis and stamp it out, if such a thing is pos- | sible.” | For some years there has been an active compaign | of education in the Eastern States upon the subject of consumption and the possibility of eradicating it | by the adoption of wise precautions based upon scien- tific principles. Massachusetts has taken the lead in | grappling with the disease, and in 1808 provided a fund for the establishment of a State sanitarium for persons afflicted with it. New York has now followed the example, and during the past winter her Legis- lature appropriated money for a similar sanitarium. Other States where the disease is common will un- | doubtedly make like provisions if the experiments in | Massachusetts and New York prove successful, and | in the course of a comparatively few years this dreaded scourge of that section of the Union may bewell nigh suppressed. : The advocates of governmentai action for the eradi- cation of consumption are sanguine of good results. The Board of Health in New York City a few years | ago issued a circular giving information concerning the tredtment of the disease, warning nurses others against carelessness in handling the sputa | | | and | of | patients, and laying down rules for the disinfection of | clothing and premises after deaths. As a result of | ! these regulations it is stated there has been an appar- | ent reduction of about 30 per cent in the number of | deaths from pulmonary tuberculosis in that city since | 1808 | Although consumption does not frighten commu- | nities and produce panics like such infrequent pesti- lences as cholera or yellow fever, it is far more disas- ,{ trous to the Eastern States of the Union than the yel- | low fever is to the South. Boston has been a yearly | sufferer from the disease, and Dr. Durgin of the | Board of Health of the city is quoted as sayin | “Boston is one of the worst places on earth for con. isumpfinn," The New York Post in commenting | | upon the disease in that city and State says: “In 1899 | there were. in the boroughs of Manhatfan and the | Bronx, Bo16 deaths from pulmonary tuberculosis, and 11559 from other tuberculous diseases. The average life of patients with recognized tuberculous disease in l this climate will probably not exceed three years. Some authorities place it at two years" among the badly housed, underfed poor of New York. As many 20 away to improvefor die elsewhere, the New York death rate indicates that we have between 20,000 and 25,000 well-defined cases of tuberculosis in Manhat- tan and the Bronx, nd for these an average life not cxceeding two years is statistically allowed. For the State 43.000 to 50,000 cases would be a conservative estimate.” So far as the experiments have gone in the direction of adopting precautionary measures under the super- vision of Boards of Health the results have been en- couraging. We have already cited the diminution of the discase following the enforcement oi Board of Health regulations in New York, and in Boston equally good effects are claimed. Thus it is stated the | deaths in that city from consumption have decreased | from 1349 in 1805 to 1236 in 1890. Considering that comprehensive efforts to suppress the disease have | hardly yet been made, and that what regulations are in | force have been applied but a short time, it is certainly encouraging to note so much of improvement as the statistics show. It may be, indeed, that in another generation consumption will be almost as rast as lep- rosy. B There can no longer be any doubt of the future oi Cape Nome. Gamblers, politic and .versatile sure-thing men are already on their way to the cape, and now the lawyers have turned northward. The situdation is complete; miners will be wise to keep a | INCE some of the merchants doing business in veturn ticket as an available asset. villages and small towns in districts where it * RURAL mMmdIL DELIVERY. S is proposed to extend the system of rural mail delivery have expressed a fear that the operation of the system would be injurious to their trade, it may be worth while to point out to them that the ex- perience of other communities where rural delivery has been in operation dees not afford any reason for their fears. In the recent debates on the subject in Congress that feature of the issue was tully discussed’ nd ample evidence was cited to show that the system is a benefit not only to the people of the rural dis- tricts but to the country villages as well. Representative Cromer of Indiana said: “Before I had the honor of representing the Eighth Indiana District in Congress I went over three or four rural free delivery routes in one of the counties now form- ing part of my Congressional district, in company with the special agent of the Postoffice Department detailed for the investigation. We found at one point an organized opposition to the service on the part of some of the country storekeepers, who feared all sorts of injury to their business if the country peo- ple had their mails delivered-by rural free delivery in- stead of being compelled to come to the village to receive them. the service a trial. Inside of six not only satisfied with the more.” Commenting upon the benefits resulting from the system, the Hon. Perry S. Heath, First Assistant months they were service but asked for Postmaster General, recently stated in a magazine ar- | | ticle: “Rural free delivery will eventually impel the, construction of macadamized agricultural roads all over the United States. We are working in harmony with good roads conventions everywhere to secure proper roads for the rural carriers to travel over. Great results have been already achieved in this re- spect, and more may be expected. On one route | alone the farmers expended $3000 for the improve- ment of roads as a prerequisite to the establishment of rural free delivery. * * * The direct advan- tages conférred on the immediate recipients of rural | free delivery are as cbvious as the general benefits received by the country at large. Farm lands en- hance in value by being made more accessible. Crops bring better prices because the growers can get the daily market reports and learn just what their produce is worth. The wife can do her shopping at tha country store through the medium of the carrier with- out leaving her home.” Hardly any enterprise on the part of the Govern- ment in the way of improving its service to the peo- ple has been more beneficial than this. Mr. Heath states: ““Already the correspondence which the de- partment receives in regard to rural free delivery exceeds in bulk and diversity that of any other branch of the postoffice service.” For the intrgduction and extension of the system the country is largely in- debted to Congressman Loud of the Fifth District, who as chairman of the Postoffice Committee of the | House has ably served fot only his State but the whole Union. Rural free delivery injures nobody’s but benefits all, and there is no reason to justify opposition to it from any source. e T ——— A Turkish admiral has come among us with a pur- pose of studying our naval establishment and per- haps purchasing an American warship or so. That controversy with the Sultan over indemnity must hava reached the critical stage. —_— Mayor Phelan, it is announced, wants to be recog- nized in the local Democratic Committee. recognition be the same which the public has already | a given to his Honor it is safe to assume that it will not be pleasant. One of the strange and unexplained items of news from Europe is that the Kaiser has taken the upward twist out of his mustache. The fa¢t is interesting, but what may We its intent and purport must be leit to conjecture. —il The farce that the seniors at Stanford threatened to enact because they couldn’t play a different sort of farce has been happily averted. The young gentle- men have kindly consented to play ball with the faculty. Russia, it is reported, is trying. very hard to win our trade away from Japan. If the Czar would take some of the brown men who are swarming to our shores we might be in a mood to reciprocate the fa- vor. Some of our local politicians have improved the moral atmosphere of the town by leaving for Nome, Tt is safe to say that they will meet there with a frost quite as severe as they experienced here. The steamer City of Peking has just arrived and has brought 460 more Chinese to the port. If the procession keeps up we will have a new Chinatown on the Mail dock. —— One of the amusing sights of the time is the effort which the politicians of both parties are making to get the people interested in the question, Who shall be nominated for Vice President? Russia. it is said, will fall to pieces after one great defeat in battle. None of her critics seem inclined, however, to teach her the lesson of a great defeat, We persuaded these people to give | FRIDAY, MAY CRACK SHOTS' IN COMPETITION PP P S S SN P S S S A S SN SN | | i If the ! sults now in sight much credit is due. PR P S S S S S S | awaiting the opening of the competitions | Exposition, and there is every reason to | Clubs of France will be liberally respond- | tournaments will be carried on almost | | ready in the streams. and you conclude 1 | Judge 1900 25, AT THE PARIS EXPOSITION R R SRR SRORE SECRT SRS S B e man e o S S e e ol ol e TweNTY FTABGETS FOR FLOBERT CARBINE CART IN QULESEYE TH1LINCH: BULLSEYE 2 3-16INcHes RANGE 3 YARD3. ETER N eve 2)gincnes, OUTER CIRCLE OF TARGET 115 INCH ES RA ‘—0—&«0—0—&0—0’—0—0—0&—04—0—*«9—&04@—0—6—»&—0@ ARIS this year will be the Mecca for expert marksmen of, all nations. Al- ready a score of noted American shots are, in the French capital P in which they hope to prove their superi- ority over the marksmen of all other countries. The rifle and revolver cracks of the United States are particularly sought for the series of international tournaments to be held in connection with the World's believe that the invitation to them issued by the president of the United Shooting ed to. Beginning in the middle of June and ex- tending until the middle of August, the continuously, and a fortune will be dis- tributed in prizes. > Rewards are offered for best work with rifles, shotguns, carbines, revolvers, pis- tols, military arms, bows, crossbows and cannon. The tournament will be under the auspices of the French Government. It has been organized by the Union des So- cletes de Tir de France. Shooting in this tournament will be be- gun on July 18 and will be continued daily | until August 7. The contests will be di- vided into twenty-four classes. for which 10,973 prizes, aggregating $49.660, are of- fered. Competition for these prizes will take lace over the fine ranges at Versailles. Oone hundred and thirty different styles of targets will be shot at, and the iis- tances wiil vary from thirteen to thres = B o o o o Included in LR R e ) hundred and thirty yards. the expo: n programme is the fourth international team rifle match and the | contest for the rifle championship of the world. On June 19, under the direction of the GETS FOR MILI"A" REYOLVER DIAM- | IN BDLLSEYE 1 3716] e Y *P P eP-o or ciReLE ¥ 23 (N BULLS' INGE 21| YARDS PIGURE a 52% INCHES L T R R R R R R R Y part in the open team revolver and r matches. M. Celisse, a member of the United Shooting Clubs of France, has lately ar- rived in this country in the interest of the exposition shooting tournaments. After conferences with leading spirits amon, markemen | of the Eastern States, M Celisse feels sanguine that this republic will be ably represented in both individual and team conmtests at Paris. M. Celisse has prepared a list of the principal exposition events that are open to American marksmen. This list, with total prize money for each class, follows: Class 1—French national unlimited series of three for targets 8, 9 and 10. Clas rifle. a: 220 yards: limited serles of five shots: $1650. Class 3—Rifles of any make, at 220 yards unlimited series of three shots: §TS70. Class 4— Rifles of any make, at 220 yards; one series of ten shots for champlonship of world; $228. Class -—Rifles of any make, at 330 yards: un- limited serles of ten shots: $1545. Class 6— French military Iver, at 32 yards; unlimited premiums for targets sivers of any make. at es of six shots: 3630. ass $—Carbines any make, 0.2-8 inch gauge, at 13 yards: uniimited series of four $728. Class 9—Carbines of any make. 0.38 inch gauge. at 13 yards: two limited series of four shots: Class 10—All kinds of arms from 0.5-16 to 0.6-3 inch gauge, at moving wiid of Bois de Boulogne Club, the competition for the Grand Prix du Centenaire begun. It will be at the distance ty-five metres, at live birds. Two thou- sand dollars will be awarded to the four | " of which one-half will Under the direction o 0 to the I'Exposition, at live birds, will be started on June 2. This is the richest single shooting event of the exposition series, the first prize amounting to $4000. The conditions for this match are that six pigeons shall be shot at from a dis- tance of twenty-seven metres, at the rate of two birds per day. The second prize wilk be 50 per cent of the entrfes up to | $3000, the third prize 30 per cent up (0} fifflll and the fourth prize 20 per cent up to 1200 Another live bird tournament will be | held under the direction of the Societe le | Fusil de Chasse, from July 15 to 17, inclu- sive, the competition being at twe‘ny pigeons. for which thirty prizes. consistin of a division of the entries, with $500 add- | ed. will be given. The Franco-American revolver match | by cable will be one of the most interest- ing of the international events, and will | take place on or before June 20. It will be shot by teams of ten men, each team com- | peting in its own country and cabling its | scores to the opposing team. Independent of this there will be an open international team revolver match beginning August 2. Teams will consist o five men cach and the distance will be fif. ty-flve yards. French marksmenare partic- ularly desirous of having Americans take i1l be | twen- | shooting for the Grand Prix de | | | | | | | | boar, with running distance of six yards, at a range of 44 yards; uniimited series of four shots: $601. Class 11—Fighting pistols not ex- ceeding 3 inch: u d_series of five shots on cards at 22 yards: section A au vise and | section B au commandement, on silhouette section B to be shot at Vincennes under rules ociete de Pistolet. Class 12—French national i aniimited series of thres premiums for targets Class 13—international club team contest, French national rifie, at 220 yards: four members on each team; one serfes of flva shots by each member H—8mi- lar to class 13, but for juniors only. Class 19— Fourth {nternational t rifles of any make. at 330 yard s on a team: each member to 201 ling and lying $1400. Class 20—Revolvers of any make, at i3 yards: international team match; five members on a team, each member shooting ten serles of six roynds each: $6000. Special popular contest —On sithouette of five feet four and @ quarter inches, at 219 yards; limited serles of thres hots; $1200. Special excellency contest—For | smallest scores made by the addition of DBest cards national and any make rifles and re- volver serfes; $140. The regulations for the international team rifle match (class 19) require that entries be made one month prior to Aug- ust 4, accompanied by an entrance fee of $20 for each team. The target will be of one metre diameter, with bullseye of 23% inches, and ten rings, counting from 19 in the exposition to 1 Foreigners cnmpelln%’ tournaments will be allowed to take into France with them free of duty their arms and 500 rounds of ammunition for each nresrm upon presentation of invitation card. CONDITION OF THE HYDRAULIC MINERS The Call does not hold itself responsible for the opinions published in this column, but presents them for whatever value they may have as communications of general Interest. T seems strange that San Francisco re- fuses to understand the conditions sur- sounding the hydraulic miners and the | residents of the valley whose property has been destroyed or is threatened with | destruction by debris from the mines. You congratulate your readers in your issue of Tuesday on the promised ending of the prolonged controversy between these interests, and . cite the fact that work has been -authorized to be com- menced on a dam on the Yuba, recom- mended by the California Debris Commis- sion for the purpose, as that commission | expressly said. of impounding matter al- your editorial as follows: To the men who have achleved the good re- ne strife between the miners in the mbuntains | nd the people of the valleys was hurtful to ihe best interests of California in many ways and it was a matter of general congratulation when they agreed upon a programme which promised to open a way for hydraulic mini.g while at the same time securing the farms along the streams from harm. The outlook is now encouraging and it is to he hoped there will be no further hitch in the work. Now there has been no programme agreed upon by which one monitor may run one minute, and there will be no such programme. Many years ago the detritus from il.e hydraulic mines began filling up the riv- ers and covering up the lands, including many homes, and even the sacred spots where rested the dead. and the valley people were compelled to seek redress in the courts. First came the Keves case, which continued for several years, and this was followed by the noted Gold Run case tried at Sacramento by Judge Tem ple. and_ finally the ceiebrated case of Woodruft against the North Bloomfield, in which Judge Sawyer of the United States Circuit Court laid down the law in 0 masterful a manner as that no word of it has since been controverted. Judge Sawyer said that no man had a right to injure another In person or property for his own aggrandizement, and further, that no power on earth could grant authority to one person to injure another. “After getting such a decision and an acknowledgment from all men that it was the law; after erecting such an_ insur- mountable wall around their rights, it would be idio E'nn the part of the Anti- Debris Associatlon, representing the val. | ley, to voluntarily' make a gap to allow ihe' entrance of any wooden horse. even | if recommended by such oracles as the great metropolitan press. All experiments must be made at the risk of the party seeking the benefit. When Mr. Caminetti proposed his law establishing the Debris Commission it was sought to the indorsement of the Valley Associal but while that asso- ciation did not o e it did not indorse, but was content to rest the matter where Sawyer put it—content with the nowledge that Congress had no right to elegate any authority to any commis- slon to license the destruction of prop- enx. If the tflmr who was in search of a dump wanted to get the approval of a Government e e By which he could do it -M.’"a&fi"n"“?% to any one, the assoclation had no fanit to find; but it could become no party in any shape or‘ form to its construction; | branch of mining, and every expression could take no part of the responsibility of | a failure. | Neither the Anti-Debris Association nor any one authorized to speak for the val-| ley interests bas asked for the constru tion of the dam on the Yuba of which you speak in the editoriad, although the avowed purposé was the retention of the matter aiready in the sireams; nor has it expressed any opinion of what it will ac complish. Now, then: Every man in the vailey feels an interest in the success of every at meetings of the association has been to let it go to the very verge of dam- age. That it has acted on the motto of Davy Crockett—"Ee sure you are right, then go ahead"—has been proven by the fact that in all the numerous suits it has always been right. No objection has been made to the expenditure of money by the State or the Federal governments to help the miners along, but when plans are be- ing made it does not intend to be com- | mitted so that it may not go into court and assert its rights. Individually T have taken as much time | and have given as much thought to plans for the safe impounding of the debris.as | any unsalaried person, and T am sure no man in the State would be more pleased | than I at some solution of the problem, but I would not compromise the valley on any plan, however much it might meet | my judgment. for you see my judgment might be at fault, and they are not the eople to stand the consequences of a aulty judgment. Now. to repeat, it is the miner and not the vailey man who is in want of a dump, and. the latter has nothing in the wide world to do with finding it for him. There is no use in the world in juggling with the situation, and San Francisco had just as well understand it—a_thing, however, which she has persistently refused to do. ‘W. 8. GREEN. Colusa, May 23, 1900. PERSONAL MENTION. Rev. B. Orth of Portland is at the Ocel- dental. { | R. . Hyde, a'banker of Visalia, is at the Palace. Sheriff George Watt of Austin, Nev., is at the Lick. D. C. Page, is at the Russ. Frank H. Farrar, a lawyer of Merced, | is at the Grand. H. K. Stahl, & mining man of San Jose, is at the Grand. Colonel’ Gaines Lawson of Pasadena is at the Occidental. W. Forsyth, the raizin grower of Fres- no, is at the Occidental. George B. Eppstein, a merchant of San Antonio, is at the Palace. T. J. Sherwood, editor of the Democrat of Marysyille, is at the Oceldental. John Burns, the well-known farmer and grain man of Verona, Sutter County, is at the Russ. ~ Dr. W.,J. Jackson hae returned to the city after a, month's visit to the East, where his wife ahd her sister, Miss Edith Bergson, accompanied him, G. W. Harney, a prominent young busi- ness man of Northern California and manager of the largest peach orchard in the State, is a guest at the Grand. He is accompanied by his wife, John Sebastian, general passenger agent a merchant of Santa Rosa, | of the Rock Island Route, arrived in thi city yesterday and is a guest of Clinton Jones. The mission of Sebastian to the coast is to change the personnel of the Los Angeles office of his company. —_———— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, May 2 of San Francisco a L S: s . D. Grimwoo the, Waldorf a an Jose is at the John A. Woodward o. Manhattan. ————— ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. A KEG—M. P.. City. To learn the cubic contents of a Kkeg ascertain how ma gallons the keg holds; 7.4805 gallons eq one cubie foot. OAKLAND'S FREE LIBRARY S., San Rafael, Cal. The amount Andrew Carnegie agreed to donate Oakland Free Library was $50,000. DEPORTING-C. E. R., Fast Oakland, Cal. The law which authorizes the de portation of an undesirable tass of im- migrants was not passéd at the time James G. Blaine was Secretary of Sta‘e, The law wa?2 signed March 3 (l\“l. Elan:a n Secretary Cal. glace frult 50c per Id at Townsend's.* —_—————— d‘b“’ o business houses and public men the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen ). 510 Mon Special information supplied gomery street. Telephore Main 142 ¢ e advice given to matrimony— She—But you know tb | reople who contemplate | *Don't: The Lover—Yes; that never saw you Thin often develop into weak, delicate, backward children; undersized, nervous, feeble, adults. Lack of nourish- meant is the cause. Scolls Emulsion. is the remedy. A little of .t three or four times a dav will do wonders. The pinched. sad faces becom: -ound and rosy: the wasted limbs piump and firm. If yaur baby is not doing well, try this great food-medicine. €. aad $r.00, 4l Irugpse but the man who wrote | I

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