The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 11, 1900, Page 6

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6 FrEncig,, Che -Sodiee @all. ‘ngsni{y. X A Vs?}";fi?}rmnru, o0 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address Al Communications to W, S. LEAKE, Manazer. MANAGER'S OFFICE .Telephone Press 204 PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, S. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOM! +.217 to 221 Stevensom St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers. 16 Cents Per Week. Single Copies. 5 Cents. Terms by Mall, Including Pastage: CALL (including Sunday), one year. CALL dncluding Sunday). § months. CALL «ncluding Sunday). 3 months. CALL—By Single Month. FUNDAY CALL One Year. WEEKLY CALL One Year. All postmasters are . 1% receive muthorized to subscriptions. Sample copies will be forwarded when requested. Mall subscribers in oraering change of address should be ular to give both & prompt and correct compliance with their request. UAKLAND OFFICE. sessesssa111S Broadway ERANCF OFFICES 2] Montgomery, corner of Clay. #:20 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. ster, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, teenth, open until 9 o'clock. th, open until 9 o'clock. NW cor- cky, open until $ o'clock. AMUSEMENTS. r—"The Girl 1 Lef The New I Ship Ahoy.” Behind Me.” nion.” and “T Pagliaccl.” streets—Specialties. and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and raudeville. ter, Grove street—*'On the Trail.” f San Juan, Folsom and Sixteenth streets. ! Park—The Sled-Slide. Open nights. Park—The Great Fair, September 24 to October 6. THE GALVESTON SUFFERERS. yris that come from Galveston and concerning the damage Saturday, it seems Texas irricane of i the loss will be so great that ade to nation at large nia will be a to th It best means of is therefore worth whil act no delay will occu NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1900 throughout the country. He wisely | It is a plain and strong statement. economic conditions suggests the risk and | der Colonel Bryan, who closes his eyes to what is and pretends to see what is not. Again X'E | the President salutes all of his countrymen of every section, treats them as embarked i:co | together, sailing in the same boat to the same destination, while he wishes them all, | without invidious distinction, equality of happiness and fortune. | letter is grateful relief from the daily preaching of the gospel of grudge and appeals to class to raise its hand against class, indulged | [ the establishment of the gold standard and l)e n\'crthrn\'\'n. ceasing war upon the Qold standard, sound piled in a common ruin. There is no use Colonel Bryan is pledged against the gold | Those who believe that standard to be the 1 public credit, to the profits of trade and the welfare of labor, have the issue made plain. [That they will vote their conscience and their interest in | bamboozlery has never yet captured the American people. Upon our external policy the President takes the country unreservedly into his What he has done may fall short of the expectations overgo the wish of others. But he in no degree trims or tacks to please either. In no spirit | confidence. of vainglory, nor greed, norfondness for the { beginning with clearness and simplicity. | ties is given—it is history. I ties and each a key to what had preceded, rebuke is kind, or any enemy whose criticism is noxious, to review the narration and| RESIDENT McKINLEY'’S letter of acceptance will strike a popular chord | ) : { been drawn and then returned a broadside of unmistakable force and clearness. The business and industrial condition of the country | s so set forth as to be within rather than beyond the facts, and is in most striking con- F. | trast to Colonel Bryan’s persistent calamity appeal, made now as the overture, again as the interlude and sometimes as the finale of his appeal for “votes. | common sense at once sees that the President’s moderate and truthful The country will receive with lively satisfaction ihe President’s clear statement of| Treating his opponent with the greatest courtesy, he states, with fdir-| Fess | ness, his opposition to the gold standard and his enmity to sound money and, crediting | {him with honesty of purpose, quotes the pledges he has solemnly made to wage un- 109% Valencia. open | The progressivi McKINLEY’S LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. deferred it until the fire of the opposition had The country’s statement of hazard of a change to an administration un- Really, sending his in by Colonel Bryan. its effects and the necessity that it shall not | money and the public credit, until they are splitting syllables over how this is to be done. standard and the President is pledged to it.| fonly safe and necessary foundation to the November is saying that of some. It may| exercise of power, he tells the story from the The beginning of our grievous responsibili- e unfolding of events, each bringing its du—i is stated. It is difficult for any friend whose | point out the exact place at which any difference of policy either could or should h:\ve“ been followed. It 1s plainly discernible that the President clearly comprehends that we | are not at the end. The conclusion may be But we can neither run nor| far or near. stand until we reach the point from which either must be done. | The country will neither repudiate nor justification in terms of such force. opponent to traverse the case ag: and how. Would he have ordered Dewey wh Submitting to his countrymen the reasons that im {will be promptly | pelled him and the conditions that seemed to justify them, it is now in order for his Would he have left the citizens and subjects of other nations ha hly iudge a President who is able to offer | iin and point out where he would have done differently, ! out of Manila Bay after Montejo's fleet was sunk, and where? Would he have disfavored the ratification of the treaty of Paris, and domiciled in the Philippines to the protection of such government as would have remained after Spanish sovereignty was cut by the sword? Let him state specifically the difference of policy at s« c request will come g . e A Consequently the A1y point in the past. Of course, he will not do this, because he cannot. It would not be | , al head of the State, is the |good for his fame to do so. | rnians forward sthing of be uld be seli-seeker e of it to make a profit and widespread appeals e many subscrip- e made there 10t i gen ppointed by the Gover: would in eve st that class of i ikely to raise a | sm firs: call comes him to appi 1en the people of sister § should not wait for urging ONE MCRE OBJECT LESSON. » ROM sweeg sver zcres of territory and destroying ' worth of valuable trees. 0 since similar reports came os Angeles and not long be- i L the news of the day told of fires in several counties. Thus in ope part of the | ier these object lessons occur, all | same truth that no reasonable system of r vould be half so costly as is the ¢ | he people of California to profit | erous, so frequent and so de- | to every intelligent man that | requires a century for a | Moreover, when the fore: one of nature’s means vith water at all seasons of the | hage is done and the evil | after the fire itseli has faded | ed to this subject again and mer because the people are ! 1 and the preservation of be made an issue.of the legislative in the State e office the From every } should ected he will support some people for providing for a compreher m of protecting the woods and | v supply. The issue ought not to | essive dry season brings | the fields, the pastures and the | Therefore every year of delay is costly, and | ¢ the Legislature 1 meets but once in two years, a lect to act tion for two years. The movement is one that might well engage the at- tention of the Native Sons and Nafive Daughters, There is no other problem of the State more int- portant than this. The destruction of the woods of California is going forward at a fearful rate The hills are being denuded and streams that once flowed | v throughout the year are becoming torrential nature, pouring off their waters in disastrous floods during the rainy season and drying up in summer. -We are in this respect wasting at the bung znd the spigot both. - We are threatening the future with a blight of direful proportions and we are doing i1 ¢ Governor should be requested to | ze done by a forest fire can | ¢ | come’to town to sec the show. This transfers the whole debate to the f Into this field the President pursues Colonel uture, to a time to come, to a day on which s | this nation is to declare its permanent intention and its lasting relation to the Philippines. | Bryan with logic that is inexorable. In the| briefest form he cuts Colonel Bryan's proposed policy out of its gilt frame and holds it up, | stripped of all accessories. The stage properties and grease paint, the trickery of light| and shade, are taken away and in this almost cruel nakedness the President presents it: | “In short, the proposition of those opposed to us is to continue all the obligations in It is well known that the Philippines which now rest upon the Government, only changing the relation from , to that of surety. principal, which now exists power is to be diminished. Our obligation Our responsibility is to remain, but our | is to be no less, but our title is to be sur-| rendered to another pouwer. which is without experience or training or the ability to| . yield our title while our obligations last.” | that statement will stand. rel. It leaves no room for controversy. The President shiould be thanked for clearing the air. That his letter will win for him itain a stable government at home and absolutely helpless to national obligations with the rest of the world. Tothis we are opposed. The obligations of a protectorate are distinctly imperial in their nat-re. m Texas. | a future reaction against holding the Philippines our responsibility then must cease with ' nt the com- | our sovereignty. This goes straight to American common sense. It leaves Colonel Bryan | without a foot to stand on or a place to plant it. 4 sition, the half-balled conditions of his views. perform its iater-| We should not | | When this time and the future which is now discussed shall have become the past | ! ainer, Oregon, is register, € If there be | It exposes the puerility of his propo- With it anti-expansionists cannot quar- | the respect of all his countrymen, who respect what deserves it, is undoubted. It is a grat-| sterey come reports of a forest fire | ifying illumination of the situation and the country will walk forward more confidently in | the light it gives. THE GRAND PAR@ADE. ALTFORNIA las made the largest, the gayest C nd the grandest parade in her history and has a right to be proud of it. From first to last it was distinctively Californian. In point of numbers it was not equal to the mighty procession which New York marched along her streets in welcome to Ad- miral Dewey, returning home from his epoch-making victory at Manila; nor in point of splendor could it compare with the magnificent pageant which lighted London at the celebration of the jubilee of Victoria’s reign, but it had a charm, lacking in those people, voung and old; men and women; every class, kind, manner and degree that make up the popula- tion of the State. The day was gloomy. The mists of the ocean had They put a leaden darkness over the sky and they dampened the air, but they did not darken the brightness of the parade nor dampen the spirits of those who took part in it. TIn act, the soft gray of the atmosphere formed an artistic background for the brilliant display that was pictured Perhaps mcore sunlight would have meant less beauty. At any rate, no one thought of com- plaining of the mist. The day was fair enough for a holiday and 21l of San Francisco and a goodly portion of the rest of California were out of doors to enjoy it. We have become : pageant-loving people and we are rapidly developing 2 talent as well as a taste in that direction. ch ment made in every feature of such spectacles. The against it. | street decorations arc brighter, the floats are finer ring the coming winter will postpone | and more artistic, the order of the procession is better chserved and the crowds that throng the streets have a gayer and more festal spirit. It is evident that we are a people who love color and music and light and motion. We are a community made up of nearly all races on earth, we have differences of creed, politics, guage and social customs, but when it comes to iday-making and street parades, we are all' Cali- fornians. In that regard it may be truly said there is but one California and we are the people. It goes without saying that the best of the parade was the presence of th Native Daughters. For many a year past it has been noted that the California woman is more distinctively Californian than anything it through sheer negligence in the face of repeated warnings such as that which has now been given at Monterey. else in the State. Visitors from other lands look upon her with admiration and rapture. She has been called a goddess, she has been called an Amazon, she Each new occasion sees an improve- | | has been called by every term signifying the highest type of the eternal feminine of which men have | dreamed. She has been the star of festal halls, the | wonder of thronerooms, the brightest beauty in the glittering circle of royal opera-houses, and Princes and Kings have done homage to her grace and glory; but she never was more superb than when in equality with her brothers she marched through the strects and adorned the celebration of California’s jubilee. Warm and even enthusiastic praise is due to the men who promoted and organized the grand obsery- ance of the day. From first to last all was excel- lently done. The line was long and hours were fre- quired for it to pass a given point, but so varied were the displays made by the different parlors of Native | Sons and Daughters and other organizations taking part in it, that the interest of the spectators never wearied. At every moment a new feature of attrac- tive power came into view. Many of the floats will long be remembered for their beauty and will serve | as models for similar parades in future. In short, it | was a glorious pageant and the thousands of specta- | tors who watched it will bear it in their memories | and delight hereaiter to tell of the splendor of the ; jubilee day. e ——— A local Democratic County Committeeman has re- signed his position on the score that his party man- agers are politically indecent. It seems almost un- necessary that he should have characterized the in- decency of which he complains in such a way. —_— Bear in mind that all your patriotic enthusiasm for the administration and all your ability to refute the babble of the Bryanites will not do much good unless you get your name on the great register so that you can vote right as well as talk that way. The local Board of Education, it appears, has reached the conclusion that it is a law unto itself, There is at least one satisfaction that the board in its strange career can agree with somebody, even itself. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria has a case of the sulks which ought to suggest itself as a worthy example o some Governors nearer home. He threatens to re- sign because he can't have his own way. The schemes of the powers in China are at last be- coming known. After the various nations have pre- pared the feast it appears that Russia and Japan want te pick the bone alone. | of Los Angel GOVERNIIENT TUG IS COMING BY WAY OF MAGELLAN STRAITS The Slocum, Only a Mite on the Bosom of the Ocean, Buffeting Her Way Cver the Billows From New York to San Francisco. OMEWHERE in or on this side of | the Straits of Magellan there is a | speck of a vessel, which before she reaches her journey's end, will have | beaten the Oregon’s famous run in the op- posite direction by several hundred miles. This small craft is the tug Slocum, the property the quartermaster’s department of the United States army. It found | ry to have a_tugboat in San ¥ | arbor, and the only thing th | variment could do was to send one arovnd from New York. The Slocum, which was | bought by the Government in 1895, was | selected and was put into drydock for | 1epairs for the long and perilous journzy. She J¢ the largest tugboat ever built on | the Delaware, and was launched in 1868 | at Hillman's & ard The present journey will test the quali- | ties of the stanch little craft to the ut- | most, and her log will be read with inter- | est by seafaring men when she makes | hort. ¥ The worst t of the trip s that| through the straits and just outside om | this coast of the South American conti- nent. Heavy seas are the rule in this part | PERSONAL MENTION. | E. G. Manassee and wife of Napa are at the Palace. T. L. Reed of Reedley is registered at the Grand. J. B. Chinn, a mining man of Porter- ville, is at the Grand. Railroad Commissioner Bla; suest of the Grand. *0. P. Posey, a big mining Angeles, is at the Palace. G. W. Armsby and wife are registered at the Palace from San Mateo. O. E. Weller, a rich merchant cf Bos- ton, is staying at the Palace. L. D. Baker, a prominent railroad man of ton, is at the Occidental. Willis Pike, a well known lawyer of the southern metropolis is at the Grand. O. B. Hinsdale, a big rancher of Gar- i at the Lick. D. Mitchell, a successful mining ran of this State. is registered at the Palacc. | J. D. Coughlin, a wealthy stock raiser of keview, Oregon, is a guest of the Lick. | H. D. C. Richards, one of the high priests of railroad circles in Boston, L guest of the Oceldental. He Is here on trip which combines business with pleas- ure. | John Wolfskill, a prominent merchant | reglstered at the Pal ace. He came to the city to witne: splendid display of the Native Sons’ bration. T. Baumgartner, a wealthy merchant | of cago, is at the Palace. He is| among the grand army of business men | i ckstock is a man of Los | the | = | | | of the East who have discovered that \‘)_ there is an immense growing traffic be- tween this port and the Orient. g it mirisiiacdy ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. | SHAKING DICE—C. R., City. There are a number of ways of shaking dice. Without knowing which kind of dice- shaking you seek information about this department is at a ioss to give the desired answer. WHO WROTE IT?—A. 8., Oakland. This correspondent wants to know the name of the author of the following lines and in what poem they are to be found: One by one in the lighthouse The lamps shone out on high, And far on the dim horizon A ship went sailing by. HOURS OF LABOR-C. A. R., City. The right to legislate on hours of labor is left to the Legislatures of the different States of the Union. Congress regulates the hours of labor as to all matters that come under Federal jurisdiction. Tre eight-hour law of 1842 passed by Con- gress restricts to eight hours the working day of all laborers and mechanics em- ploved by the United States, by the Dis- trict of Columbia or by any contractor upon any of the United States public works. There is an eight-hour law gov- erning miners in Germany. In Australi: there is such a law governing miners, those employed on public works and ser- vants employved in public works. In England there is no general eight-hour law, although there is much agitation ‘n favor of such. SURLOIN—C., City. Skeat in his ety- mological dictionary says that “sir loin" is “‘bad spelling of surloin” and that sur- loin is that which is above the loin and | adds that “the story about turning the | loin into sir loin by knighting it is mers | trash.”” The story alluded to by Skeat"is | that when James the First was enter- tained at Hogton Tower, near Blackburn, he was_more witty in his speech than usual. While he was at the table he cs his eyes upon a noble surloin at the loweé* end of the table and called out, “*Brin; hither that surloin, sirrah, for ‘ti worthy of a more honorable post, as I may say, not surloin. but sir-loin, ghe noblest joint of all.”’ He did not draw his sword and knight it sir loin. Dr. John- son was the first lexicographer who ’crianged the spelling from surloin to sir- oln. PROPERTY QUALIFICATIONS—W. T., Vallejo. In most of tiie colonies the right of suffrage was restricted.to a freehold qualification, sometimes the forty shilling freehold, sometimes a freehold of so many acres. The constitutions made in the rev- olutionary periods mostly provided for the former in the Northern and for the 'gner in the Southern States, while New Hamp- shire, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Geor- ja had simply a requirement of tax pay- . The constitution of 1787 left the mat- lt:r :flt{nlym tu‘th% several stntalfi nllo‘lv. 0 vote for Congressman who coul vote for the members of the State Hn\ng of Represental fter 1798, &Upen —--ul\?nflnn wae abandoned in m-pn': £3 MAY FLINT MAY BE BAOKEN UP WITH DYNAMITE Divers Say the Chances Are Against Salving the Vessel. She Is Now a Mecnace to Navigation and Shipowners Want the Wreck Raised or Removed. WSS The wreck of the May Flint is buoyed, and steamers making a landing at the Mail dock or going from the dock at the foot of Third street toward the Oakland mole have to keep a sharp lookout in or- der to get clear of the “menace to navi- gation.” Divers went down yesterday morning, and their obgervations show that the May .. 4 Flint lles wih her bow toward the Oak- land mole, while her stern is lying mid- way between Mission Rock and the Mail dock. The whele forward part of the | ship on the starboard side has been torn out. This shows that the yards on the sailing vessel were backed too late in or- | der to avert the collision. As the May | Flint came up the bay she attempted to | g0 to the left of the Iowa, but when the wind fell light she lost the headway, Cap- tain Woodside depended upon and drifted down upon the ram of the warship. | The buoying of the wreck is not as | good as it might be, but nevertheless the | lighthouse inspector has done all he can | in the circumstances. He has placed a | small boat with a light over the wreck, and navigators will have to keep tab on it. If the owners of the wreck do | not make a move in a few days a per- manent buoy will be placed over the s, | Wreck. - > ances of saving the May Flint of the world, and sometimes steamers of all indeed. . When running ou {he largest size find difficulty in making hq G A A e e O wi Even the great battle ship Or Shiv: cuan. Yo Shim e ad to run to shelter on her trip ea s were taken out and a few hundred ward when she struck the entrance to TTYing ”?‘hp"‘)'"[—‘kc“s Magellan. g xR o The Slocum left New York July 12 last w probably be Six days later she was reported a LB g o g Thomas, West Indies, and Augu AR he Y Frcls B B at Buenos Ayres. She was to make stops @ Position that hipping, and thi at Punta Arenas in'the strafis and at|owners will have to decide at omce Callao and Acapulco, on the west c Whethes 38 Rirw her S o vl iive S Her average rate of speed is ten mile 'xvl'h s favor another pyrotechnic dis hour. play, The total distance of the voyage fs 14,201 miles and the sailing time is ~ T houra she Wil coal Several times on ATEST STORIES the trip, as her ¢ t'l‘ll)' adr“l;‘s S stetra- ing only about 3000 miles without replen- | ishing her bunker Syt of the The Slocum is in command of Captain K. J. Hampton, United States army, quar- e TR e FUNNY MAN. ing master and navigator. | B b R PR A0 The tug is cons ed of steel through- | MOTHER'S LITTLE HELPER out. Her length is 12 feet, beam 23 fu 2 lo you love best? and depth of hold 19 feet. and her is from 14 to 16 fe he has t xtt boilers and triple expansion engines, 1200 estimated horse power. She is tric lighted and has steam steering gear. ONE MOR JRTUNATE. s ation, but In § “David” there was a change since 1865. An intend- | artha, ing voter must show that he is assessed | 1l has happened.” for property lued at $300 or more. The - RS a in her voice, and same rule applies In Louisiana and in]the old man strai ned up. He noticed Rhode Island he must be the owner of real | that she held a jetter. estate for at least one year before he ¢ “What's wrong?" he asked. “Is any of vote. the children sick " —_— - ‘,‘."1\ . Last h\\'vek .l| s’k‘; a plec»’m our AL ET. | farm paper that said if I sent a dollar [ PBOSPEB_I’I,'Y e ,PHAB i | eould find out Eow to get rid of rats and B o Sork |7 1 sent the dolsar.” etter times. i sk &8 24 Seiastey dcibrones e WhEE thay ™ Wit RSN Y muamien Then the poor old soul wept as If her | gl s heart would break.—Chicago Times-Her- Gold standard continued. | fg 3 Hawals asnexed- THE WO THE EDITOR. Independence to Cuba. : %fifg{zd‘gpfl;}-‘émmud The Baltimore American traces this bit Liberty extended. gt A « > 2 - = sobbed. Opportunities improved. | “What is the trouble, madam?" Inquired Protection assured. | the editor. as he blue-penciled two para- Quantities of employment I'graphs that had come as an inspiration é‘flfiffi,‘.“‘-“n? Bl to the young man who was “taking up te 3 - journalism."” Trade extended. [Ty I bot=heo~T sent il obituary Union forever. of my husband, —boo—hoo—and said Yalues upheld. in it that he had been married for twenty Wages increased. 13 and _you—00—0o—boo—hoo—your YE:RDL"(I‘;;n:llnmflI;‘:\It"l)' , set it up ‘worried for twenty Zenith of prosperity. he wept cinnati Commercial-Tribune. But _the editor grinned. 4 > > FASHION HINT FROM PARIS. | | § @ @ - B EMBROIDERED CAMBRIC DRESS. | The dress represented is of white em- | brofdered cambric over a ground ot straw-colored taffetas. The corsage and | skirt are trimmed with narrow yellow | guipure insertion, with long points on the | skirt and designs incrusted in the muslin. | e THE TURPENTINE TREATMENT. There is a little settlement of New Hampshire people in Kiowa County, Col- orado. Among other things, they brought ‘wflh lthem the New Hampshire aversion 0 using any more words In con than are ai!olulely necessary. v"“:;“on o in- them met on the road recently and ing dialogue: dulfied in the followi wMornin’, 8i " A few s later the men met agal and here’ way a hard luck story 'n. fold fn mi : 3 d,in, mighty few words: X !mia‘. Josh.” for botaz You say you gave your horse Kied “Mine, t “Mornin’ | sick list. Perhaps it was all right, all "round. Who knows? puecie SR FRESH FROM THE SEAT OF WAR. Here are a few items culled at random from the local columns of the Peking Pegpuller: Choo Gum is suffering from the removal of his pigtail just below the ears. Choo formerly sympathized with the foreign devils. Her Majesty the Empress Dowager is spending a few weeks out of town. Cordwood or anything else that is suft- able to hide behind will be accepted for | subscription at this office. | Lo, ouruvupull!r at b:'l!ehur, is on m; e met two Japs who coul outrun him Wednesday night, General Chaffee of America Sundayed in_our midst. M. de Giers is out again after his ex- perience in the vat of boiling oil. The death rate is increasing rapidly. Large numbers of Americans, English- men, Germans, Russians and other Euro- peans have recently come to town. are carrying on in an outrageous manner. Yesterday marauding bands of them des- ecrated one of the streets leading to the Sacred City by removing from it hun of loads of dirt that had been walked in and smelled by all the Emperors for nearly a thousand years. How long will these indignities be tolerated? Eating-houses in the vicinity of the le- gations report a largely increased busi. ness during the past few days. —_—————— Splendid Peanut Crisps. Townsend's, ¢ —_————————— Ice cream and soda at Townsend's, o —_—————— Pure fruit juices used at Townsend's, ¢ —_——— Ice cream by the gallon at Townsend’s.¢ —————— Lovely Ice Cream and Soda: fine view of Market street from our parlor. 9 Market street, Palace Hotel. . —_———— Townsend's California glace fruits, 5oc 5 pound in fire-etched boxes or Jap baskets, 639 Market street, Palace Hotel. . ———— Special express rates very low on Town- send's California Glace Fruits; fire etched boxes: 50c per pound. 639 Market str Palace Hotel building. gt Special information supplied dafly to business houses and public men the Clij Bureau (Allen” Eomery 50 "elepnone Mat 0@ 0¥ ——— Most of the tourists will not lie rich. They have saved up their holiday money by long seif-denial, pny1n§ installments for twenty months past. Young school- marms, bright mechanics, smart college lads will form the major part. —_—— An Important Announcement. To accommodate the citizens of Stockton and the San Joaquin Valley the Santa Fe routs will start their Bakersfleld local from San Franciseo at 1§ p. m. on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday nightd instead of $ p. m., the usual leaving time. Dr. Sanford’s Liver The best liver medicine. A vegetable cure fog ltver flis, billousness. indigestion. t3n, ¢ —————— Use Dr. Siegert's Angostura Bitters to :ummundhnmfl—-

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