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THE SA FRANCIS 30 CALL, WEDNESDAY, The Todese @all. | JOHN D. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER'S OFFICE ne Press 204 | PUBLICATION OFFIC | e S OCTOBER 10, 1900 | SPRECKELS, Proprietor. . .Market and Third, S. F. e Press 201. 2 to 221 Stevenson St. Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. | Single Coples. 5 Cents. 4 Terms by Mal neluding Postage: | DAILY CALL (including € . one year. $6.00 DAILY CALL dncluding Sunday). § months. .3.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 months... . 1.50 DAILY CALL-By Single Month SUNDAY ¢ One Year WEEKLY CALL, One Year . - - s; All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample ‘copies will be forwarded when requested. subsc. ibers 1n ing change of address should be | particular t> give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order | to insure @ prompt and correct compliance with thelr request. | OAKLAND OFFICE. .....1118 Broadway GEORGE C. KROGNESS, ; | Manager Foreign Advertising, Marguet’e Building, Chicago | (Long Distance Telephone “‘Central 2619.") ‘ Masi NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT | C. CARLTON ++..Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIV] STEPHEN B. SMITH. . .30 Trib NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: | Weldort-Astoria Hotel: A. Brentano, 3 Unlon Square; Murray Hill Hotel CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: | Sherman House: P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; | Fremont House rium Hotel | WASHINGTON (D. C. .1406 G -1 ORTON E. CRANE, Corresponden: BRANCH OFFICES—2] Montgomery, corner of Clay, open | es, open until 9:30 o'clock. (3% . open until 8:30 o'clock. 815 Larkin, open until | 1541 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, | open until 8 o'clock. 109 Valencla, open | h, open until 8 o'clock. NW. cor- ’ i I c. e Building | Alhambra— Orpheun | > Vadis.” corner Mason and Eddy streets—Specialties. Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and | | AUCTION SALES. | | 1 and 2 o'clock, Turkish sckton streets v, at Geary and THE SHEEP AND WOOL INDUSTRY. | | | ROM the Department of Agriculture there has just been issued a report on the sheep and wool of the United States, prepared by J. R. erly a statistician of the department. In | prefaging the report it is transmit it the purpose of the department in having view the history and development dustry in this country and *o 3 r domestic wool in particular, in prices and the nature and extent of creign competition.” In making such a review it »f course impossible to eliminate reference to | and its general effects on the industry, ted that the v # legislatior came was taken “to confine the discussion to the ts with as little argument and theory as pos- | A review at kind is timely and pertinent to the | the for once voters are called upon to choose between | T n and the party of free trade. | 2 official publication have more | lligent men thin a mere partisan It is therefore worth while to | shows to have been the effect 1 policies upon both the wool- |-manufacturing industries. ff on wool the number in 1884 was 50,626,626 inge in the tariff, and in the 1 revenue decisions in favor of had a discouraging effect upon i in five years they decreased their With the enactment of ey tariffi a new era of prosperity began in four years the number of sheep increased 1804 came tariff legislation making | well as all forms of shoddy used in adulterations. The effect Prices of wool and sheep de- he destruction of flocks and in- ct in their care. present political campaign, more the party Aioreover. will weight with Gc note what § the d of In pporters wool-growers, a by 11 per cent 2bsolute’ wool and waste mater: difference and neg In 1897 a new tariff was enacted restoring customs jes on wool. and at once the prosperity of the wool industry of the country revived. The report says: “The value of sheep is nearly doubled. The depart- | tent estimate of average value in January, 1805, was 2 head. and last January $2 03 * * * It ap- pears that XX Ohio, which was worth 18 cents in London in 1897, when the Dingley bill was passed, Tose to to 2 cents in the United States, though our | markets were burdened with an enmormous supply bought on a free wool basis, and next year, when a | relief from this handicap had barely commenced, it was worth 20 cents here and 197 cents in London.” So much for the wool-growers. Their interests are clearly on the side of protection. Now for the manu- facturers. It was argued by the free-traders that cheap wool would benefit the millmen and enable them to extend their industries. The results proved the argu- ment fo be invalid. The report says: “The effect of the law of 1804 on maaufactrers was scarcely less in- jurious than upon wool-growers. They were not sub- jected to free goods, but were exposed to a competi tion under a reduced rate of duty which they could not withstand, flooding the country, stopping sales: first exhausting profits, then-reducing wages, and finally shutting down mills. i Such is the record of the woolen industry of this | country in recent years, told officially and without | partisan bias. The review gives the history of the in- dustry from the beginning of the Government, and the same lesson has been taught by every change in the tariff. Free trade means rmin, protection means prosperity. 5 ion owes a debt of gratitude to the courts that have temporarily re- strained the honorable body from making a further exhibition of its evident unfitness for its duties. A Filipino agitator has come among us to tell us what his people want. This is one way for the visitor to discover what his people won't get. . eSS Assessor Dodge is at present a splendid example of an industrious, aggressive, persistent public official. He is fighting for his politax fees. B ‘;.coplc to subordinate or destroy | nental railway connections with the East. | ping point also for lines of steamers, some plying up | |and down the coast, others to Japan and China, | others to Mexico, and others still to Hamburg, Ger- BRYAN ON THE JUDICIARY. EFORE his nomination in 1896 Bryan wrote and published his views on the judiciary. He said that the courts should not be independent, that the judicial branch of the Government was dan- gerous to the liberties of the people and should be subordinated to what he calls “the popular will.” His idea was that a court should be compelled to decide according to the resolutions of a mass-meeting instead of according to the law. His views went into the Chicago platform, which denounced the right of a court to enforce its own judgment by proceedings in contempt. It also denounced the tenure of the Federal courts and proposed to destroy it. He boasted that he would reorganize the Supreme Court of the United States and subordinate it to his will. In his campaign that year, as now, he devoted much time to misrepresentation of the courts and appeals to the them. He has ed nothing that will foster disrespect for the v, rouse hatred against it and invoke a spirit demands its revolutionary destruction. His course is an attack upon the constitution, which made the judiciary a co-ordinate branch of the Government. To make that branch dependent is to destroy it, for that the makers of the constitution carefully provided for | its permanence and usefulness by making it indepen- dent. It was intended to be the rationalizing co- ordinate of the Government, its duty being to reduce to reason and to constitutional rules the acts of the legislative branch. Every writer on the constitution, abroad, has affirmed that if this Government is to en- dure its permanence depends upon the Supreme Court. Every expounder of the constitution, Mar- shall, Webster, De Tocqueville, Professor Bryce ani I_Iudge Story, has pointed to that court as the anchor of the government. But Mr. Bryan desires to de- stroy it! § John Marshall, who was Chief Justice from 1801 tn 32, put in force the provisions of the constitution by his judicial decisions. He found the constitution a blear skeleton. wired together and lifeless. He fleshed its bones and breathed into it a living soul. In his old age, while yet Chief Justice, he was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Vir- ginia. He sat there with Madison, Monroe, John Randolph and John Tyler. When the judicial clauses of the Virginia constitu- tion were under discussion John Marshall said to the convention, in a plea for an independent judiciary: “The judicial departnfent comes home in its effects to-every man'’s fireside; it passes on his property, kis reputation, his life, his all. Is it not important to the last degree that it should be rendered perfectly and completely independent, with nothing to influence or control it but God and its conscience? I have al- ways thought, from my earliest youth until now, that the greatest scourge an angry heaven ever inflicted upon an ungrateful and sinning people was an ignor- ant, a corrupt or a dependent judiciary.” Marshall might have included ignorance and cor- ruption in the one word dependent, for they are in- separable from it It is such a judiciary that Mr. Bryan proposes, if he get the power, 1o destroy, | abolishing that branch of our constitutional system. His attack upon it is an assault upon our whole sys- tem of government, for, with the prop of an indepen- dent judiciary removed, the whole structure fails in ruin. SAN DIEGO’'S ADVANTAGES. HILE other cities of the Union are giving Wthcir undjvided attention to politics San Diego takes time to survey herself and her sur- roundings, to note that all things are lovely, and to ssue an attractive invitation to all the world to come and share them. of a special edition of the Union, a handsome number | of twenty-four pages, richly illustrated and abound- itg in glowing words from poets, statesmen, artists, preachers, scholars and pleasure-seekers declaring the surpassing excellence of San Diego as a winter re- sort. The invitation of the Union is, however, by no means confined to winter resorters and pleasure- seekers. It is even more urgent in asking the atten- | tion of capitalists and men of business, and points out the many advantages the city offers for profitable en- terprises in all lines of industry. Thus, after noting that San Diego is more advantageously situated than any other city south of San Francisco and is the | “chief commercial port of Southern California, the only one having a spacious deep water harbor ade- quate to the requirements of the commerce of the Pa- | cific,” it goes on to add: “The city has transconti- B many, via the South and Central American and Mexi- can ports. The commerce of the port, both coast- | wise and foreign, has made gigantic strides during the past two vears, and promises to increase steadily.” The Union has done well in issuing its invitation thus early in the season. When the election is over and Bryan has been defeated westward travel will | start up and all prospects point to the conclusion it will be larger than ever. Doubtless thousands of Easterners are already thinking of the trip, and the Union’s special edition, therefore, is timely as well as attractive. San Diego is to be congratulated upon having a journal so alert to its interests and so able to advance them. Fleaders in that city have adopted a practice of having the labels washed from champagne bot- tles before they are placed upon the table. The guests are thus compelled to judge the wine upon its merits, 12 comes to them anonymously, as it were, and they CHAMPAGNE LABELS. ROM New York comes the report that society | approach it without prejudice and without bias, The object of the fad is said to be that of promoting the use of American champagnes. It has been the custom in this countty to regard native wines as in- ferior to foreign wines. The label has been more at- tractive to the consumer than the wine itself. Rich people who By reason of their wealth have been able tc direct the ways of rociety and the customs of clubs | have delighted in paying fancy prices for anything foreign, and have scorned everything American. It is to put an end to that custom that the reformers have started the fashion of washing off the labels. It appears the movement has been well supported, and now no man or woman in swell society in New | York dares to serve a bottle of wine from which every trace of the label has not been carefully re- moved. A correspondent of the New York Press in giving an account of the origin and the progress of t says: “Ex-Judge Frederick "C. Gedney yea ago stopped buying imported champagnes when it was his treat, and recently a millionaire in upper Fifth avenue turned down every champagne agent in this city when ke gave a swell dinner. His wines came from a cel- at home and: The invitation appears in the form -| It is a ship- | fad | OCTOBEEK 10, 1900. lar in the State of New York, and there were no labels on the bottles; but it is a solemn fact that no one of | his guests hung back on that account. So beautiful ‘iwas the frappee that all possibility of identification was removed, and the guests thought they were drink- | ing nectar from the chalk cellars of Epernay instead | of a natural wine from up State recommended for its | purity and effervescence by Duncan B. Harrison. | When other millionaires of deep patriotic and eco- nomical instincts got wind of this they tried the American wine, minus labels, and the fad was inaugu- | rated.” | Upon a fad of that kind a qualified judgment must be pronounced. It is undoubtedly a step in the right direction. Anything tending to relieve New York | society of subjection tc foreign labels is good. Any- thing which will lead the clubmen of the metropolis to | judge wize upon its merits and give the American | product a fair show is good. Nevertheless the fashion | cannot be,wholly approved. There is a sort of cow- ardice in it. Why should the promoters of the fad be afraid to serve champagne with an American label? Since they believe American wine to be as good as that of Europe, why not have the courage of the con- viction and frankly serve it without conceaiment? | fornians, for in this State the superstitious devotion | ta foreign labels has nearly vanished, and the host who is sure of himself and of his company does not | have to serve foreign labels with his wine in order to | feel at ease. Neither dces he feel it necesary to wash off the American labels. Still, the New York fad will | on the whole be received here with approval, even if we do not follow it. It is a sign of growing indepen- | dence, and the general wish will be that it live and | flourish. NO TIME TO SWAP. HORSES. U\’ITED STATES CONSUL HANAUER, in a report from Frankfort, Germany, announces that all business signs in that country point | toward a crisis in industrial and finangial lines before | two years have passed. According to his view any | political disturbance of note may bring on the crisis | suddenly and without warning, Failures have already begun in the building trade. The German papers | speak in alarming tones of the sad position of the tex- | tile industry. Late statistics of the Gera district show | 6022 looms idle out of a total of 11,828. The weavers | still employed there earn but eight to ten marks | ($1 90 to $2 13) per week. Shares of industrial com- ;p;\nies have already commenced to decline, though | the reports of their operations promise for this year ; large dividends. | A condition of affairs almost as ominous exists in | Great Britain. In fact, it appears the United States is the only country in the world where there is an as- | surance of good ‘business for an indefinite period to | come. Our prosperity rests upon solid foundations, | but they are not so solid but what they could be weakened by bad legislation or by vicious and in- efficient administration of national finances. many an effort will be made to dump their surplus goods upon the American market at whatever price. Should that be permitted our markets would be over- workingmen would suffer. It is therefore imperative that at this time we should carefully guard our pro- ourselves from the threatened evil. A financial crisis in Germany or in Great Britain, fort to obtain gold from the United States. thing in this country that implied a willingness on our part to surrender the gold standard would of | course increase the tendency to ship gold. Thus the | financial crisis in Europe would be followed by an equal if not worse crisis here. would be an act of the wildest folly on the part of the | people of the United States to elect to the Presidency the candidate of a party pledged to free trade and de- voted to free silver. Should Bryan be elected there will be at once an era of tariff tinkering and meddling | and muddling with the currency; and if at the same time there should come hard times in Europe, with a | consequent flood of cheap goods to be sold in our markets for gold, the result would be far more dis- astrous than that of the panic of 1893. We are now | in the stream of great events in the business world and it is no time to swap horses. Light is at last beginning to gleam in the foggy at- mosphere of the Phelanite administration. Even his Highness the Mayor has a suspicion that the charter is not perfection. His hired men may soon be able to see themselves as the public views them. Widespread surprise seems to have been created by the fact that the sons of two American multi millionaires have adopted a business career. There is | nothing in our laws, however, which bars the sons | of rich men from earning an honest living. | A New York minister has set his foot firmly on the | road which leads to enduring fame. He says that a est possible service to the world. Most of us want to be of service to our fellows, It is said that Chamberlain may come out of the clections as the most picturesque figure of English public life. It was thought that the friends of the gentleman would accept for him nothing less than the spectacular. —_— The Eastern speculator who invested $125,000 in a mine and issued $9,000,000 in stock evidently shares the opinion that the world takes a man at his own valuation, He ought to make a good advance agent for a lottery. —_— The German soldiers who retired precipitately the other day from the advance of Chinese near Tientsin | seem to have accepted altogether too literally Ep- peror William's injunction to take no prisoners. Ao, Now that the various boards and commissions of our municipal government have taken to blackguard- ing one another it is reasonable to suppose that there is much of serious truth in what they say. e e e A movement for the reform of a certain class of ras- cals has been started in Pennsylvania upon the plat- | form demanding a whipping-post for wife-beaters, and it is said the chances for success are good. i Al The patient young man who was thrashed almost to | death by his wife in this city the other day is prob- | ably convinced that the lady's contention that she is Lis better half is no joke. S The great problem of China has been settled out of band. An international peace conference now in ses- sion in Paris urges the nations to pack their traps and go home. —_— Hope seems to be dawning for a long-suffering public which has been racked by the Presidential campaign. Bourke Cockran has a sore throat. Such questions will suggest themselves to all Cali- | If hard times come upon Great Britain and Ger- | stocked, our mills would have to close down and our | tective tariff as the only possible means of preserving | added to industrial depression, would lead to an ef- | Any- | Such being the condition of affairs in Europe, it | man who makes himself a millionaire does the great- | 0NE OF Declares the Nebraskan Would Block Coun- try’s Progress. R 3 e Believes That President McKinley Should Be Re-elected. PR AMES B. BELFORD, Territorial Judge under Johnson and Grant, Republican Territorial Represen- tative in the Forty-fourth Con- | gress, but for the last tweive years a Democrat and one of the Bryan cam- | paign orators in 1806, has announced that he will cast his vote for President McKinley and the Republican ticket at | the election in November. He tells why | he will do so in the following statement: “Editor San Francisco Call: While I still admire Bryan personally, I will not permit- him to stand in the way of the nation’s progress if I can help it. The United States is destined to lead the world powers in commerce, and I am convinced that President McKinley has pointed out the way. Our possessions in the Orient must not be forfeited. “JAMES B. BELFORD. “Denver, Colo., Oct. 2, 1900. Hon. James B. Belford Opposes' the Policy of Candidate Bryan. | | COLORADO DEMOCRAT WHO | THINKS BRYAN AN OBSTA- CLE TO PROGRESS. | b | P There is a most extraordinary example of a most extraordinary school to be seen in one of the local galleries this week, and it is a rare and uncommon privilege to be able to see work of this kind so far from the art centers of the world—a Monticelli subject, ‘“The White Horse.” It is difficult, indeed, to avold falling into the sin of the superlative’” in even mentioning the existence of the picture. | Says a London eritic, in speaking of a | late Monticelli exhibition at the Goupil | Gallery there: “It seems like an excess, | a debauch almost of color, when you first The splendor It is not until go in the Goupil Gallery. bewilders and blinds you. | and you begin to look at each picture apart that you are thrilled to the soul | with his ‘paintea music.’” He cared for nothing but color and it would be absurd to ask anything else from him.'" And that about expresses the impression | of a first look at “The White Horse,” a splendid riot of color—pure cobalt, pure | vermilion, pure lemon yellow—the arti: vith magnificent audacity. He was ovencal, like Tartarin of Tarascon, steeped to the s in the same brilliant, surd, roma atmosphere of the coun- hero, and it is all here hogany which One might almost dub this glorious Gascon the Don ote of the palette, the same splen- of imagination tr“nsmu(lng milk- | maids into Dulcineas, ihns into ancient castles, barbers into gentle knights, per- ides the wo! Perhaps also the same unearthly indefiniteness may be seen, for though in places “The White Horse"” shows rare skill of draughtsmanship (wit- | ness the superb impertinence of the half- | drawn, . hajf-suggested _ilgures on the right), vet one would cry the artist's | mercy occasfonally and ask a slighter la(r‘-un on the imagination. | | “The White Horse' is the center of the siton, holding a richly garbed per- of consequence; a dark brown se immediately behind seems to belong an attendant, and these, with two didly dressed women, a baby and a rly drawn hound, are all looking at strange, small animal or reptile on the ground—perhaps a lizard. The sky behind is absolutel cribable. Heaven—a Taras through. The picture is left with profound regret, and doubtless when Monticelli is dead eriough (he only died in 'S6—of absinthe drinking) a special niche will be reserved for him in that rather heterogeneously populated establishment, the temple of fame. Another original piece of work, in the shape of a canvas by Arthur B. Davies, a new Amerlcan, is also to be seen in the | same gallery. A quleter luxuriance of color, a more subdued richness of con- ception, a less frank bravado of person- ality, a’ subtle ideal, is here evidemt. Mr, Davies is of the moderns, modern. This study of swirling, angry waters in treat- ment of wave form so frankly Japanese; the cliffs interrupting rocks so daringly adapted to the artist's tonal conceptio | the large wnalfference to commonplacas of beauty and traditional forms of compo- sition; the slight touch of grotesquerle evident, again also a borrowing from the Japanese: a lofty disregard of the easy gossip of the paint brush, and the final |result of pecullar harmonies of line, | tone and color, all point to that which to- | day is individual and free, and to-morrow will be tradition and a new artistic bond- age. There is also a fine Keith subject in the same gallery—an evening study, with mysterious depths in the foreground very effectively relieved by two white-winged birds homeward bound through the dim | gloom and a shadowy dream figure over. looking the depths. A threatening sky overshadows the landscape and a brilliant break in the clouds on the far horizon | forms the high light of the composition. The new-old fashion of “book plates,™ for some time now a favorite fadpln the East, has at length reached San Fran- clsco. Mrs. Albertine Randall Whelan for some time now has been busily occupied in designing these plcturesque additions | to the library of a connolsseur and some of her productions are indeed things of | beauty. BELGIAN HARE-M. Relt, Mont. There is no great demand at this time for glinldz!ant hare meat. The fad has almost ed out. MRS. TOWNSEND—L. 8. F., Harri- man, Tenn. Mrs. A. S. Townsend, ‘“the soldiers’ friend,” died in San Francisco, July 21, 1900. BLACKLEG IN CATTLE-J]. H., Lam- bert, Cal. The Department of Agricul- ture at Washington, D. C., puts up a prep- aration for the cure of blackleg in cattle. DISCHARGE PAPERS — Subscriber, City. There is on file int the War Depart- ment at Washington, D. C., a_copy of every " discharge " given to Soldiers who served in the Union army during the Civil War. For a certified copy of such address’ that department. TRESPASS—E., Point Richmond, Cal. | Ifaparty of hunters go on a ranch to hunt game without permission of the owner, they are liable in an action for trespass. This department does not know of any law that would authorize the owner of the ranch to compel the hunters to kill their dogs because while on the ranch | the dogs had killed a pet animal owned | by the rancher. FINAL PAPERS—P. E. Sacramento, Cal. When an alien who has declared his intention to become a citizen of the Il‘nlted States applies for his second or final papers, which are those which make him a citizen, he is required to produce two witnesses to certify to the fact that he has resided in the United States the preseribed time, that they know him anad that he will make a goad citizen. Tt is not necessary that such witnesses should be citizens of the United States. They must, however, be reputable persons. HOTEL DEL CORONADO—In making your winter plans think of this beautiful country home with city advantages, ideal climate, no heavy fog or rain. At 4 New Montgomery street, city, get information and special rate, you have recovered from the first shock | PERSONAL MENTION. H. W. Taylor of the Chicago Record is | at the Palace. Frank H. Smith, an attorney at Stock- ton, is at the Grand. H., M. Reed of Reedley, the well-known oil man, is at the Grand. Robert C. Poppe, a Sonoma attorney, is registered at the Grand. L. F. Coburn, a mining man at Yreka, is registered at the Palace. Ex-Supervisor Judge Edward Sweeney of Redding Is at the Grand. H. D. Campbell, a prominent mining man of Keswick, is at the Palace. J. G. Rothwell, a prominent hotel man at Honoluly, is stopping at the Occidental. Judge T. G. Lambert of Monterey has been stopping at the Russ for several days. L. P. Swift, a Fresno lumber dealer, ac- companied by his wife, is staying at the Grand. W. W. O'Connor has returned from a trip to Arizona and is registered at the | California. Bishop Hamilton, the we‘ll-knnwn Meth- | odist divine, is expected to return to-day from Mexico. Survevor General M. J. Wright and wife of Sacramento are stopping at the Grand | for a few days. E. D. du Puis and wife and Miss Klein | are at the Palace. Mr. du Puis js an ex- tensive mine owner at Carson, Nev. E. O. McCormick, general passenger traffic manager of the Southern Pacific, will return from Chicago on Friday. John A. Gill, local ticket agent for the New York Central. left yesterday after- noon on a few days' trip to Sacramento. J. W. Forgers, wife and child, of Santa Cruz is spending a few days in San Fran- cisco. He has avartments at.the Cali- fornia. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Robbins and Miss Charlotte M. Robbins of Boston and Mrs, C. S. Bigelow of New York are at the California. Captain H. Berger, leader of the faaous Hawallan band and formerly connected with the Royal band of Hawail, is here on a month’s vacation. He isat the Cali- fornia. Mrs! Sedgwick Rice, wife of Major Rice of Fort Logan, Colorado, is staying for a few days at the Occidental. She is companied by Miss Hudson of field, Mass. Alden Anderson, Speaker of the State Legislature, accompanied by his wife, is staying at the Grand. Mr. Anderson ‘s here to attend the Masonic meeting, which opened yesterday. Proféssor William T. Brigham of Hono- lulu, who has been East on a pleasure trip, arrived here yesterday and is at the Occldental. He will leave for Australia on the next steamer. Senator Thomas R. Bard of Hueneme arrived in the city vesterday and is at tae Oceidental. He came to meet his daughter on her return from Honolulu, where she has been visiting Major Greggs’ family. # Dr. Edith E. McLean returned yester- day from an extended visit to New York and Chicago. While in the East she spent the greater portion of her time -in the hospitals and in . the principal clinies studying = the latest methods in. vogue there. 3 J. M. Brownell of the Occidental Hotel, accompanied by his.wife, will leave in a few days for a pleasure trip through the East. Chicago, New York and Boston Spring- will be Included in the itinerary. This is | Mr. Brownell's first vacation in several years. He will be away three weeks. ———— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—Thomas Dick- son and H. B. Safford of San Francisco, J. L. Milligan, B. H. Heinemann and wife and Miss E. Jones of Los Angeles are at the National; Charles L. Morgan of San Francisco is at the St. James; Mr. and Mrs. Moller and son of Oakland are at the Raleigh; Harry R. Lipman of San Francisco is at the Riggs. The Story Hanna Told. At one of the meetings during the open- ing of the Republican campaign in Ohio Senator Hanna was called upon for a speech after Senator Depew had conclud- ed. The Ohio Senator remarked that it was not fair to expect a speech from him after the able address of his predecessor, :o"lnste:d ofnxnnu:lngl a speech he would ell a story, illustrative of t ing- man's dinner pafl. 8 Wikt farmer, he said, el GEmeT. M ERLL bovene e cow home, the calf followi n the 5 Tying. the the calf He started to lead rection, nhuuted:ihum‘ K. ont 3 ead, blame o ah : the difference when dinmer tas o knON inner time comes!™ ————— A Harmless Pleasantry. James Russell Lowell, in the North American - Review -of January, 1864 ;Iolll‘nmefl ‘“}tfl;e Tesult of that election as ows: “It is a less pléasant A t ““e‘ug;e l!.lneuln ‘Abraham &e li‘lnt!{w: he: to Bresident Jackeoms b e Was applica asy, we lurlpacl. to uad ‘:“:vdenm:lr& omlll:or(y tfi‘: thc;' 0W what a o Yy t!ley are victims of des- ae- | COW and | its di- | COLORADO’S DISTINGUISHED f EDITORIAL SONS DESERTS DEMOCRATIC FORCES ¢ UTTERANCE 2 - Views of the Press on Topics of the Times. i —— NEW YORK TRIBUNE—The wrec | Colonel Bryanm's two candidadles ha made of Southern prestige and Southe opportunity Is complete and - ble. ST. LOUIS GLOBE-DEMOCRAT-Th outlaok for the Republicans is diatinctl brighter a month in advanee of the eec tion of 1900 than it was at the correspord ing date in I¢ BALTIMORE ism cannot b AMERIC A paramou people, because at best it 1% s 1 ard involves ciples | nothing mere than demic impoftance NEW YORK COMMERCIAL ADVE TISER—Not since the ~eley camp of 1872 h so mand shadowings of a Presidential cand date s defeat, far i tion, as ther. are of Bryan's de t 0 STATE JOURNAL- lic" has no faith in the hénesty ¢ of the peoyp power for their own of those whom destiny their care and protectic NEW YORK TIM hope that the powers ¢ manent and the people intercourse in being able to conv foreigners are not would-be oppressors. PHILADELFPHIA their enemies PRESS-The o States which all candid men of both par | ties are not one party or the othe land and Kentucky, |-eneugh te change the an carried them. CHICAGO TRIBUNE-Th eror should be gratified th: | Emperor does not demand his head and gratitude alon ouid impel h designate the guil and t over for the sacrlf nich he | order libations poured as freely disposed. | CHICAGO TIMES-HBRALD markable that the disturbances b So few in_number and that so lttie ¢ age has been done thrgugh lawless: If the same restraint is maintained to close a record will have been made wh will redound greatly to the credit of 1 miners and secure them a large meas of public approval. NASHVILLE AMERIC/ 3s industrial life. When she h making goods to nd the balgnee of the wor ve wealth afid pdpulation. W rmers, who Are.«f course ducers of wealth, but we artisans to turmy the fasm products into scmething | money. BOSTON HERALD—The positi by John G. Carlisle, who i in the practice of liw ix New factories that will ports sound money fixing the = 3 in the Democratic wi | ed it. i NEW YORK POST—While an American hine is being impokted into Englan | from this country it is being supplanted here and converted iptg old junk. uIt is the spirit of industelf] ingenuity'} and willingness - to as flaks In ew menting which cha i can manufacturer, and it b rught about the pe of the etion an manufactur nr American nt. RICHMO: to let a take possession of the;Philippine Is!a- and to take from ys fhe position of ad ntage which the p: ion of those 1ds now. gives us. “We have already expanded,™ as has been well said. and the qugstion now is as to Whether or not w shall control; whether we shall withdraw entirely from the East and leave all East- ern _questions to be determined.by the foreign powers. ND TIMES—We cannot afford v -one of the, European powe-s “I know the first thimg my wife would T‘ay if she were to be m@de Queen of Eng- a | IWnat | _“Is my crown on straight?"— del- | SR =l Philas | | | i | letin. “‘You know,” said the Chinese diplomat, we are very much attached to our an- ety | _“Oh, that's all right!” sald the Euro- | pean statesman, cheerful “We'll leave Puck. Hoax—I don’t understand what Binks |sees in Baggs that .he should always | speak of him as “handsome.”” i‘ Joax—Quite a number of eople have | | | ¥ou your ancestors. told Binks that he looks If gs—Phil- adelphia Record. g0is o s den “And now,” continued hi y thoroughly W e aroused, “FI'm going to giv you another piece of my | S You doing s P ™y mind—what are 1 { [ am_turning the other ear,™ 3 [ replicd Mr. Mecker O s ribotenty pee PARE & | Employer—Well, Chagles, T sup| you | have earnied your waget this weeks. - { _ Office Boy es, si considerin how | bard I have worked né: to earn them. T think I have.—Boston Transcript. 'And, my friend: shouted the spell- binder, grew enthusiastic in_point- ing out the political defects of the Po- dunk Clarion. “‘the editor of that paper | may call it the party's organ, but it has been a good while since that organ has played any of the party's music."—Indian- apolis News. “Candidly, Jane.” shid a September bridegroom to his bride, in a splrilpul' sell- abasement, “I can't perceive what you saw in me to make yoy willing to marry i ever mind, dear,™’ replied the bride; that's what all my rela \?es say."—l’it‘l:‘- burg Chronicle-Teiegraph. | Lo s [ - Cal glace fruit 50c per 1> at Townsend's.* —_—————— Special information supplied dafly to buslneug houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont- Somery st. Telephone Main 1 - | - According to Lloi'd'n Register of British | ard Foreign Shipp ng the total number ot steamships and ing vessels in the XGEld on Jnue 30 of thepresent year was ADVERTISEMENTS. PNEUMONIA leaves the lungs weak and opens the door for the germs { of Consumptioh. Don’t wait until they get in, and you begin to cough. Close the door at once by healing the inflammatio. Scolls Emulsion makes the lupgs germ- proof; it heals the inflam- mation and closes the doors. It builds up and strengthens the entire system with wonderful rapidity. : Soc. and $1 oo, all draggiats, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chest sto; New York.