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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1900, 2 JOHN D. SPRECKEL 'Propnetm, Address All Communications to W. S, LEAKF. Manager. MANAG FICE .Telephone Press 204 PUBLICATION OFFI arket mnd Third. 8. ¥. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS. ....217 to 221 Stevenson St. 'r.-le»onc Press 202. Delivered by Carriers. 15 Centx Per Weelk. Stngle Coples, 5 Cents. Inclnding l'o-ln:u Terms by Mail, DAILY CALL (including Sund DAILY CALL dncluding Sund DAILY CALL (nciudiug Sunday), 3 months DAILY CALL—By Single Month SUNDAY CALL, One Year WYEKLY CALL, One Year. All postmaste: uthorized to receive criptions. Sample coples will be forwarded --hen requested. Mall subseribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRFESS i order o insure a prompt and correct rompliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE.......... €. GEORGE KHOGNESS. Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chicago. (Leng Distance Telepbone *Central 2618.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: CARLTON. ... «+«.Herald Squnare NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH. ... .....39 Tribune Bullding NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, fI Unton Square; Murray Hill Hotel. CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House: P. O. News Co.: Great Northern Hotel: Fremont House: Auditorium Hotel. < ©. | WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE..,.1408 G St, N. W. | MORTON E. (‘l‘lA\l‘:. Com'.o BRANCH OFFICES—27 Montgomery, corner of Clay untll $:39 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until $:30 o'clocl McAllister, open until $:30 ¢'clock. §15 Larkin, open #:30 o'clock. 141 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Marl corner Sixteenth. cpen unti] 3 o'clock. 1088 Valencia. open unti § o'clock. 106 Fleventh, open \mux 9 o'clock. NW. ner Twer AMUSEMENTS. Grand Cpera-house—'‘Becret Service.” Grand Opera-house—Maurice Grau Opers Com o Gay evening, November 12 ek, Yo Alcazar— "Northern H;hu Columbia—“Oliver Goidsmith."" Tivoll—*'Alda.” Albambra—*King of the Oplum Ring.” California—*"For Her Sake.” Orpheum—Vaudeville. Olympla. corner Mason and Eddy streets—Speciaities. and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and By ot i1 E. Watkirs—Monday, November 5, at 11 o’clock, Vallejo streets. Horses, HILE to d the excitements of the campaign tend from Jjudicial and to incline the minds - oi an issues, it should not be for- cffice to be filled at thi stract public attention the W t stake, “tly part s ejection nt n that of Superior Judge. In her, either directly or indirectly, ail people are dependent upon the upnght judiciary, Candidates for , thereiore, should be scrutinized with 1 2!l partisan bias of any kind whatever. 1 or incompetent Judges would be a menace o the property but to the personal rights of no reason why any intelligent and honest i vote a straight party ticket so.far as ers are concerned. - Judges have nothing I n or with any form of partisan is to administer and adjust the g from the complex relations m these duties they must have ge i law; impartial minds 1al character and indepen ust be exercised, as in this case, andidates for such offices, it is the duty citizens to diligently and honestly seek to| } worthy for the bench, and The task of selection is not easy ass of citizens who have t60 much own to undertake the personal rious candidates. ghtenment of the public, has made It William William. P. Lawlor and Max Sloss ank H: Kerrigan for ‘the short ese men can be relied upon to uphnld the the ‘bench. and the interests -of ali ed by their election Coffey. ad experience 1'pon ‘the bench, and no seanda! sulljes the recards of their courts, the: ch are most n extensive in- the enl iy of the merits of all the candidates the election of J. V. Coffey, ngerfield, te onsery se five men, They have proven ives worthy of the high office they hold. It matters not upon what party ticket their names be | piaced nor by whom nominated.: Each of them upon his individual fitness for jndicial ‘duties and upon the proofs he has given of that fitness in the actual performance of those duties. The remaining two candidates are yonng men, but they are neither unknown to the city nor untried in law. Kerrigan has filled the office of Justice of the Peace with distinguished -credit to himself and bene- fit to the community. The record of his service in the inferior court justifies his promotion to the Superior Bench. Mr. Sloss, a graduate of the Harvard Law School. and a member of one of the foremost law firms in California, has had ample . training in all branehes of the law and has made a specialty of pro- bate and commercial matters, two branches of the law of great importance in a commercial city lxk.e San Francisen. The fullest investigation is challenged as .to the merits of these candidates. There is not one of them who has to solicit votes on partisan grounds. They de- serve the support of all citizens. Keep their names in mind and vote for them on election day. Let us have an honest, upright, able and fearless judiciary. ———— A minority in the Baard of Supervisors has raised a cry against the granting of special privileges to a2 few favored individuals. stand that his Highness the Mayor must hold some of his friends in fine? The Los Angeles pastors who unloosed their bat- teries of abuse upon one another in a political argu- | ment the cther day should be persuaded that their Christlike mission needs no spur from politics. Assessor Dodge has committed another blunder by which -the city will ‘suffer considerable expense. I: ‘E“uf | 1900 | ++.1118 Broadway BRYAN ON THE FULL DINNER-PAIL. URING his New York tour. Colonel Bryan spoke at Sing Sing. Pointing to the peniten- tiary he said that when the State puts a man lin prison it guarantees a full ~ dinner-pail, but takes | away his liberty, and that the Republican party is oi- ~ | fering the people a full dinner-pail in exchange for their liberty, and that its despotism is as great as the | despotism of the penitentiary. If men vote their real judgment it would be interest- ing to see how many would vote to indorse such a statement and to see how many really believe that the man who makes it is fit for the Presidency. He began | by denying that ‘there was any change in conditions | since 1806—since the panic of 1803. As his tour | lengthened he was brought face to face with evidence | that industrial restoration is established and prosper- |ty is restored to the whole country. His policy of | denial had to be changed, and he resorted to an ar- ‘ gument which compels the -admission that in this country prosperity and oppression are necessarily iden- tical! The logic of his later attitude is, that to enjoy liberty men ‘must starve. His vicious perversion of view and his idea of morality and law are brought out in his characterization of confinement in the peniten- D ons are the same inside and outside of the prisons Now, who believes this fantastic | exaggeration? What good citizen regards punish- | nient for crime as déspotism? What reasonable man |"believes that laboring men, or others, in free life, suffering all the punishments of a jail? It requires no. great strain on the memory to go back to the conditions which began in 1893 and con- tinued to 1896. It'is now hoped by Bryan that by his xaggerations the voters of Indiana may be brought There, taken | B i of the country. are | to give him the electoral vote of that State. as elsewhere, great and general prosperity h. the place of the preceding poverty and distress. In the counties of Indiana four years ago under- takers competed for the contract of burying paupers. In nearly every county the profits of pauper funerals paid the taxes of the contractors and left them a hand Now these same contractors can- { some sum besides not even pay their taxes out of their pauper fees. Bryan's leading organ there is the Inc polis { Sentinel. On December 17, 1893, that paper said: i “Let the preachersiact. The ministers of Indianapolis ought to have one common theme to-d and that charity. For the present theology should be dropped. isms Jaid aside and politics shelved. There exists in | this city to-day a st 1% necessity for reli Hun- of families are on the verge of suffering for | | raiment, food and medicine. People will starve to | death in Indianapolis this winter unless those who are | more fértunate give of their comparative abundance, | and give promptly and liberally. It is the duty of the i preachers to cail attention to this fact and to rouse | their flo to the gravity of the situation.” To-d The is no need for such an appeal. e tiary as despotism, and his attempt to show that con- | time protesting against the administration instead of helping to advance prcsperity, What we need at | Washington is’ constructive statesmanship and not calamity orations. The Seventh _District has many local interests that can be promoted by able states- manship at Washington, and consequently for their own good as well as for their patriotic regard for the welfare of the nation we may count upon the voters tore-elect Mr. Needham and so do their share toward giving California at the national capital a solid dele- gation in favor of sound money, protection, good government and prosperity. Chief of Police Sullivan wants to redistrict the city so that patrolmen will not have so many hills to climb on their beats. Late night pedestrians can assure the Chief that his hired men have already overcome the difficulty. I tional Livestock Association to prepare a bill for an act providing for the leasing of lands that are more valuable for grazing than for other purposes THE RANGE LEASES, HE special committee appointed hy the Na- | has been collecting data on that subject which will be used as evidence of the utility of the leasing policy. The need of leasehold protection to preserve the range, prevent extinction of the grazing business. conserve moisture in the arid region, and put an end to lawlessness and violence which now redden the | range, under the mistaken policy of occupation in | common, | this year the conflicts | rangers and the conflicts between owners of the same | class of stock have been more violent and destruc- is now more apparent than ever. between During sheep and cattle tive than ever. grazing, soil, As feed and water decrease by over- and destruction of the vegetable cover of the the competition for use of what is left increases, and the end of this great business is already in sight unless the forage can be renewed under leasehold oc- cupation and stringent public supervision. It is proposed to adopt a wisely drawn lease law, and then leave its adoption optional to the land and stock interests in counties west of the ninety-ninth meridian. It is difficult to see what objection can be made to this optional system, which leaves the policy subject entirely to the wish of the two great interests concerned, the land-owner or farmer and the stock- owner. The committee in charge of the matter, through the secretary of the National Livestock Association, has procured from the Government of New South Wales, Australia, a copy of the land laws of that colony and a statement bearing upon their practical operation. There the “runholder,” or range man, began, as he did here, controlling all the land he could and destroy- ing its utility by overstocking, which extirpated the forage. Fifteen years ago the matter was taken up by the | Government, and the building of the existing code of necessi ot present. Pauperism is reduced to a ! minim yse who were taking alms in 1896 can give alms now. and men are no longer gaunt and children no longer and proiessional | Therefore The. | Daingerfield and Lawlor | Do not the objectors under. | As it is there, Bryan meets it by declaring that it is the result of | so is the situation everywhere, and | despotisin like that of the penitentiary! its -author are beneath wholesome American contemipt. Four years ago he said that if he were beaten and the gold standard were med at the polls but few people would be able | to wear shoes, apd it would be the same with clothes. This was uttered to a community of shoemakers, to alarm them about the wages of their industry and the profits of their business. To-day more people are wearing shoes arid better shoes than ever before, and evil prophecy proves to have been a lie. But un- { | Such a statement and of its falsity he issues a new series of exag- gerations and a new lot of prophecies, all as false as | mind those which are discredited by events. | The wise publicist and student of affairs shrinks | from. the prospect of electing such a man to the Presidency. To say that it would cheapen that great K office is to prit it too mildly. Tt would degrade it and wortld mark the beginring of the decay of our insti- tutions Whatever men may think of the reason for our in- | dustrial restoration and revival, among the thought- | ful and patriotic there can be no difference of opinion as to the effect of Bryan's election. It would pros- trate every interest-and every industry in the country. Whether McKinley has brought prosperity or not, there is no denying that Bryan would bring poverty | and ruin again Sketches of the life of Charles Dudley Warner writ- ten since his death call attention to the fact that he laid the foundations of a literary reputation by writing contributions to the farmers’ column in a New Eng land newspaper; but while the story is creditable to | Warner it does not show any great regard for farmers | 1 on the part of the editor of the paper. In these days | re written by | thing about farming, and the column is not turned over tp amateurs to experiment in- literature. At least that is the wa California, but it may be dif- ferent in Massachusetts. THE FIGHT IN THE SEVENTH. ARDLY any Congressional district in Califor- H nia requires of the Republican party the exer- | ¢ise of more vigorous efforts in order to obtain victory than the Seventh. Fortunately the party has there a strong candidate, one who led the way to victory two years ago and who has gherefnre the pres- tige of past success to cheer the supporters of protec- tion and sound money in their contest against all the forces that Bryanite fusion can bring against them. Mr. Needham's victory two years ago was due mainly to the desire of the voters to maintain the Mc- Kinley administration and to Mr. Needham's own personal popularity. Those forces which were potent then are even more potent now, for during the past two years the administration has strengthened its hold upon public confidence, and Mr. Needham, having been tried in office, can now submit to his con- stituency a record of excellent work done for the dis- trict in the way of promoting its welfare and uphold- | ing all the interests in any way affected by legislation | at Washington. The voters of the Seventh District cannot be un- aware of the advantage a constituency gains by hav- ing in the House a representative of experience in Congressional business. Every intelligent person knows that a new man in Congress can never do hali | ac much as could be done by one of equal fidelity and | general ability after a long service there. What Mr. | Needham has accomplished in his first term is there- | fore but an illustration of his fitness for the office. farm notes people who know some- | | tional purchases, or homesteads, were made subject with the use | | to which the land may be put. | limited as to term or area, or both. | fix the value and rental by appraisement. | rental price is fixed every seven years | is known as | the use of land for grazing by the payment of a license | on December 31 of each year. | payments, | stroying | the sake of one year's His. real and full worth in the House will begin to | show iteelf with his second term. | Strong as is the opposition in the Seventh District, all reports justify the expectation that the majority of the voters will remain true to the party of prosper- 1|t), No considerable body of men in that or any is somewhat significant that the Assessor never com- | other district of California can have anything to gain mits a mistake which jeopardizes his fees. by sending to Congress a2 man who would spend his land laws began. All public lands not held as condi- to lease. The methods of leasing vary All leases contain provisions as to how the lands are to be used, and are Local land boards Pastoral “runholders” are unlimited as to area, but are limited to a twenty-eight year term. Their by appraise- These leases cover the range country, and may ases for the ment. | be surrendered at the end of any seven-year period by giving notice to the land board. There is also what “the occupation license,” which permits of not less than $10 per section, and is good only for the current calendar year, all such licenses expiring This system is to give a degree of flexibility to the system and accommodate | the runholder who by drought or accident finds his tun unable to support his stock for that season, and | is compelled to seek, temporarily, an enlargement of his grazing area. In case of fire, drought, flood or other trouble a lessee may on application. have conditions, in¢luding suspended for six months or a year. In appraising lands the local land boards are quired to take into consideration the cost of trans- portation to and from the land, its capacity for sup- porting stock and the original conditions surround- ing it. Reappraisement will be made when demanded, | in which case any depreciation in the value of wool, mutton or beef produced by the land must be taken into consideration. An examination of these colony laws impresses one with the evident desire to treat justly and encourage properly the grazing interest as one of great commer- cial and economic importance. Instead of regarding the stock-ranger as a pernicious person, which is too often done here, his rights are recognized and his in- terests are properly safeguarded. In fact, he is even protected against himself and.is prevented from de- his own business by that cupidity which, profits, would chance for many years of prosperity. for destroy The committee has rendered an essential service in securing this di- gest, which shows the working of the leasehold sys- tem under physical conditions which are practically the same as those of our arid grazing region. A enit, eminently ridiculous. has been instituted in Montana against the Standard Oil Company. An in- genuous young man says that the monopoly has tried to influence public opinion. If the Standard Oil Com- pany has any policy it is an avowed contempt of public opinion. , _— If the Board of Supervisors was as prompt in per- formance as it is profuse in promise of public im- provements, the horde of tax-eaters which infests the City Hall would have to make somewhat hasty prep- arations to earn an honest living. Through a curious fault of the law the city of Wash- inrgton has become the Mecca of malefactors who seelk to escape punishment for their acts in the States. Can it be possible that like draws to like with the power of physical magnetism? There are five generals in the new Spanish Cabinet. Probably every one of them, when he reflects upon the recent war, feels with consolation the force of the adage that he who fights and runs away will live to fight another day. Richard Croker has declared with all the emphasis of personal conviction that Roosevelt is a very dan- gerous man. Croker is right—from the point of view of those who fear men intolerant of abuses in public and political life. i1 ————— ‘When William Jennings Bryan read President Me- Kinley’s Thanksgiving proclamation the “plain man of Lincoln” probably thought that another campaign lic had been circulated for the bewilderment of voters. 1t took Count von Waldersee a long time to get to China, and.from the way he is managing things it ap- pears to be his intention to. make it a still longer time before he gets away. the | | | | JAPAN’S CAPTAIN: Keep your step; Furope is looking on! From the Novoye Vremva, St. Petersburs. shown here is that The Russians do not tire of poking fun at the desire ot Japanese to look well in the eyes of Europe.) (The remarkable the German army. “step’ % 'THE INTERNATIONAL MARCH PAST AT PERING. which belongs, in the first place, t5 the .F'4%H4+H4+H+H—H—H+'—i—l'++ g% A. L. SHINN, LIFE-LO GDE\[OCRAT NCES THE DEMOCRACY e RENOU rfoeferte e ofe Sacramento Lawyer Cannot Support a Party That Encourages the Enemies of Our Country. e L. SHINN, one of the prominent members of the Sacramento bar, ® created a sensation at the Repub- lican County Convention by re- nouncing the Democratic party. Mr. Shinn had been a life-long Democrat; had at- tended numerous State conventions of that party as a delegate, and had time and again stumped the northern counties of the State for the Democratic ticket. In fact, he was regarded as one of the lead- ing Demoerats of Northern California. His declaration that he intended to sup- port Willlam McKinley this year has be- come the political sensation of the hour. | Mr. Shinn gives his reasons for his change | times until ® of political faith in the following state- ment: “Editor San Francisco Call: At ail the present the Democratic party in its national platform and - its public acts when in power repre- -nted the principle of commercial and territorial expansion. That party fore- saw that our products would exceed our consumption, and that our territory would not always accommodate the population which rapidly flocked to this country. “From the birth of that party it ac- quired when in power all the territory available, and the result of that policy ve us a vast area of our most valuable possessions. Laying aside all that the Democratic policy of expansion has done and looking to the declaration of its plat- forms, it will be seen that the party has reversed its doctrine. It Is now opposed to the acquisition of territory agd con- demns _the administration for securing Porto Rico, the Hawalian Islands and the Philippines, and denominates the spirit manifested thereby as a ‘greedy commer- cialism.” Yet every prior declaration of the Democratic party was in line with the idea it now condemns. In 1844 that party declared in terms for expansion and de- manded the annexation of Texas and re- occupation of Oregon. “The platform of 1856, upon which James K. Polk was elected, contained a plank In the following words: ‘Resolved, That there are questions connected with the foreign polley of this country which are inferior to no domestic questions what- ever. The time has come for the peopls of the United States to declare themselves in favor of free seas and progressive free trade throughout the world and by solemn manifestation to place their moral influ- ence at the side of thelr successful ex- ample.” “That was good Democratic doctrine at one time, but it is the same policy, it seems to me, that is now called ‘greedy commercialism.’ “In 1560 the natioral platforms demand- ed the immediate acquisition of Cuba. 1 fail to see any material difference between the acquisition of Cuba and the acquisi- | tion of Porto Rico or even Hawali. “At the close of the war came the great tariff fight, and the principal argument against the Republican tariff was that It built up a ‘Chinese wall’ around our com- merce and influence. In the platform of 1876 it was said that the tariff policy had degraded American commerce from the first to an inferior rank. In 185 it declared for ‘free ships and a living chance for American commerce on the seas.’” Such was always the Democratic policy until it was usurped by Bryanism. L % H el oot @ | “O0m DL of our commerce, trade and Influence, and, as far as necessary to that end, the expansion of our territory. For twenty- five years I labored in that cause with a political party which was fully in accnm‘ with my views. We challenged the policy which we belleved was restricting our commerce, and placed it upon that ground. “Now the partyhas attacked that which it had defended and condemns Mr, Me-| Kinley for carrying to fruition the ex- pressed policy for which we have con- tended. ““The principie has not changed, but the party has abandoned the princi 1 do not choose to follow a name which does not represerit my political views. “Bryanism has saddled the name of the | Democratic party with the silver ques- tion, which is opposed to my convictions of good policy. “The platform of 1890 holds out encour- agement to those who are in armed con- | flict with our Government by [\rr)ml=[m' independence, in case of Bryan's election. to those who are in rebellion. I do not| understand the nature of the ‘patriot- | fsm’ which could give voice to such a| promise, and T cannot vote with a party that will thus encourage the enemies of our country. “I was not friendly toMr. McKinley four | vears ago. but his administration has been so admirably managed that in spite of the deep prejudice engendered by years of po- litical differences I have been compelled to accord to him the credit of a states- manship so free from error that no fair- minded American can truthfully challenge his intelligence, his honesty or his pa- triotism. The unjust and untruthful at- tacks made upon him oy the opposition | ought to strengthen him in the hearts of | the people. “How any American who loves the re- public and takes a pride in its greatness | and prosperity can support the narrow, | unpatriotic and insincere position of the party headed by Mr. Bryan I do not un- | derstand. “I think we should retain the Philippines | and give the inhabitants a good govern- ment and as much liberty as we possess | at home. I have no fear that any Ameri- can administration will enslave the inhab- itants of any territorv—at least T have no | fear of it from a Republican administra- tion. “There are many other reasons why I cannot support Mr. Bryan, but I think those I have given are sufficlent. As the people begin to fully comprehend the viclousness of the methods employed they will agres with the farewell address of | Washington, in which he sald when con- sidering partisan methods: ‘Tt always serves to distract the pubiic councils. It agitates the community with ill-faunded | jealousies and false alarms; kindles the animosity of one part against another; foments occasionally riot and insurrec- tion." “Those were wise words, and are pecn- llarly applicable to the inflamed utter- ances an@ unfounded charges adopted by the Democratic party at this time. Thers | is a danger in it, and one that should be | promptly met and overcome by patriotic | people.” A Sacramento, Oct. 30, 1900. X3 FASHION HINT FROM PARIS. b I ““As a Democrat I favomed the expansion I i /tfillflffll‘ L5 g - - SEVRES BLUE CLOTH DRBESS. This costume is of soft Sevres blue cloth, with short holero and chemisette of cream colored mousseline de sofe. The trimming 18 of black chenille, and a drapery of black velvet surrounds the neck. —————————— This year's list of accidents in the Alps numbers seventy-nine, of which fifiy. three resulted in instant death. —_——— AN OPPORTUNITY.—Take advantage of the round-trip steamer tickets, only $60 during No- V.-ul' h“fl‘u fifteen days’ board at Hotel | el Coronado, the ideal summer and winter re- tor'. Apply at ¢ New Montgomery st., city, .| sequently ANSWERS TO OORBESPORDERTB “A CELEBRATED CASE"—A. S., (‘"y | The play entitled “A Celebrated was prepared for the stage by D’ Ennery ana Garnot. GOLD AND SILVER STANDARD-C. C., Stent, Cal. The present money stan- dard of France is gold and silver, with the franc as the _monetary unit. CHINESE MISSIONS_Reader, Mont- pellier. There is no aggregate of figures showing how much money is expended annually in the Chinese empire for mis- sionary purposes. To obtain such 1t would be necessary to communicate with the head of each religious sect In the world and obtain the amount from each, then totalize the aggregate. HYPNOTISM—J. M. M., Newark. Cal. There Is nothing that this department knows of that will prohibit a person from becoming a hypnotist. This department does not advise any one to engage in any profeseion or business. That le a matter that must be fully investigated by the party to engage In the one or the other. T‘MBFR CLAIMS—-A. M. D., Chicago Pa Nevada County, Cal. Surveyed | lands in California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington not yet proclaimed and of- fered for sale, valuable chiefiy for timber and stgne, unfit for cultivation, and e unfit for disposal under the homestead laws, may be purchased hy individuals or_associations at the mini- mum price of $2 50 per acre. Before mak- ing the gurchau the applicant must com- pl{ with certain rules and regulations which will be oxplained in any of the 2 ces. where e, v the requisite blanks WATER A\D OIL—-J. C. G, Pacifie Grove, Cal. The article publlshell in The Call relative to the use of. ofl and water as he says, maintain youth and v|;ur. is so Dlnln that it does not need any explanation. It is simply to drink large 3unntl!lel of distilled water, which is pro- uced by boiling and securifig the steam. Which 15 the water relloved of ite mpare tles, and if one has not the means to dis- till the water, n_\lx.;h may be obtained from e practiced by the in el and is evt oR to thh day bny :5‘-;:"3?2 behuve u:n h imparts the supgl-nm of lmhfi ‘;““" Bope whg o lue it. The Bible anoin ebodyloutomo the B Dbeal Injuries, and strengthen Qo" m-un Views of the Press on Topics of the Times. INDIANAPOLIS NEW e at s of this campaign e not for- but domestic. _And on domestic jons Mr. Bryan has been proved ta que: Be “Wrong and dangerously WrOng. l‘ OMAHA BEE—Nothing is more certain | | | than that the evil influence of Mr. Bryan's | appeals to class feeline will long continue. | but i he shall be overwhelmingly defeated | the effect of his teaching will not be mani- fested in a serious form. INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL — An o~ Saxon liberty” and law are warrante keep in any eclimate and wherever they have gone Anglo-Saxon eclvilization has | followed. This is one of the great facts ! of history. CHICAGO TIMES-HERALD—Eliminate the race question from the politics of the South and there are abundant evidences | that the Southe: —particularly the { cotton States—would vote to indorse the expansion ¢ of the present admin- istration a continue it in power ancther four years PHILADELPHIA LEDGER—A Presi- dential campaign in this country is a mo- | mentaus event, and it deserves to be and tm- iucted on a hi dignity. Cond h plane of serfousne. ions are undoubtedly proving, and to be hoped that in the | future no candidate who aspires to the Presidency or the Vice Presidency will dare to st or foolish on the stump, and that, elther particular, he w one does err in be disciplined by the pubiie. CHICAGO TRIBUNE—The _original Jack ¢ dd nrnml:r‘! vhav when h@ came 3 The es his followers y com- A ean»--x he + s the workingmen that he will have their wages raised when he be- comes Presides LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL.— the United ol can come rs to | i ! | | | Th | i | States, whos atest and = gr ever known the causes which and for the want of which the Tra repub learn make decayed. America will not shu* th {in the face of a great though mista man who played his part in iife so w»‘! | up to the final hour. BROOKLYN EAGLE.-Df course, a!l the courts o o will have to offer ! thelr felicitations to Wilhelmina and Hen- | ry, but they will be more sincere than usual. And o o countries where men and their own Ar 1d where the a success tisfaction that dent of birth t deprived of the hap others in less con- PERSONAL MENTION. young girl on a throne \ Dr. C. Trumbull @f Chicago is at the Lick. 0. J. Mftchell of the Dramatic Mirror 11- at the Grand | Rev. T. E. J of Portland is regis- | tered at the Li | Captain Willlam Banning of Los An- geles is at the Professor T. §. C. Lowe registered at the Californ Dr. H. C. Allen and wife o do are stopping at the Grand. Fire Chief Henry A. Gutnrie of Sacra- mento s visiting friends in town. DeWitt B. Lowe and wife are at tha Palace. They have begn in Nome all sum- mer. Professor E. P. Cubberfey of Stanford University is at the California with his wife. A. M. Cunningham and wife of Peking are at the Occidental. They have been East and are on their way back to the Orient. Charles Coglan of Sacramento, secretary of the State Board of Equalization, ar- rived at the Lick last evening. Mrs. Cog- lan is with him and they will spend sev- eral days here. T. Tugila, N. Tamishi and T. Hayashi, threg prominent Japanese merchants, ar- rived in the city yesterday after an ex- tended trip throughdut the East. They are stopping at the Occidental. Dr. Albert Fowler ¢f Salt Lake Clty, his sister, Mrs. J. D. Johnson, and his two daughters, all of Roanoke, Va., ar- »f Pasadena { rived at the California yesterday, They expect to spend part of the winter here. Charles F. Price, one of the judges for the California Jockey Club, is back at the Palace, having just returned from Louls- ville, Ky. Charles R. Ellison, anothe prominent rarehorse man, alse arrived at the Palace last evening. i CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Nov. L—San Francisco— E. Dreyfus Is at the Broadway Central: A. J. Lowenberg Is at the Cadillac; D. C. | Bloom is at the St. Cloud; J. B. Castla is at the Manhattan: K. J. Faust is at the Imperial; E. Fish is at the Grand-Union: P. G. Gow is at the Murray Hill; W, Grant is at the Tmperial; Mrs, P. B. Keyes and J. F. Knapp are at the Astor; Mrs. C. F. Loney is at tha Netherland: H. A. Russell and A. L. Whitney are at the Holland; H. C. Wyler is at the Na- varre; T. Hopkins, Miss L. K. Hopkins and A. P. Redding are at the Holland: T. Schussler is at the Hoffman;: C. M. Bliven is at the St. Cloud. San Luis Obispo—-Miss Edmonds, G, Ba- monds and Miss A. Knox are at the Cos- mopolftan. Benicla—W. Unlon. Thompson is at the Grand ————— Cal. glace fruit 50c per ™ at Townsend's.® Spectal information suppited d..ny lo business houses and pul z Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), aw atn gomery st. ‘elephone Main 10€2. The Department of Commerce of Japan predic rice cro ing 1% (ficullur. and hi th t -vlengi: this year, the aggregate ¢ 220 bushels. - Anvxn’rxm!n FOOD MEDICINE Scott’s emulsion of cod-liver oil is equally food and medi- cine. A little of it sets the stomach at work on some easy food— that is medicine. How does it “set the stomach atwork?” By making strength: by creating strength : by turn- ing the oil into body and life —that is food. We'll seng you a little to try, if you like. SCOTT & BOWNE, o9 Pearl strest, New Vork,