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THE SAN FRANCISCO CAL e actively urging on x Manhattan men ta 5 THE RED TROUBLE. what are known as “the lwallov%vuil Demograts” of a;l’c L) .1% * G . = the metropolis. His lieutenants a b, - o THE Indians of Indian Territory are showing tl_:e campaign against Tammany, }and it is’ quite pos- THURSDAY.. ~........ JANUARY 24, 1901 uneasiness, and, under Chief Mekko, are taking | sible an effort will be made by th an attitude hoftile to the whites. The five civil- ArG;Y"l_ D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. one Press 201. EDITORIAL Rooms Tele: 217 to e Press 221 Stevemson St. 202. Deltvered wr Carriers. i5 Cents Per Week. Single Copies, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Inc nx Postager DAILY CALT, (including Sunday), ope year. DAILY CALL (including Sunday), ¢ months. DAILY CALL @ncluding Sunday), 3 months. DAILY CALL—By Single Montb. EUNDAY CALL. One Year. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. All postmasters mre anthorized to receive subseriptions. 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BRANCH OFFICES—7 Hamz!m Ty, corner of Clay, open uotil $:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until $:30 o'clock. 63% McAllister, open until $:30 o'clock. €15 Larkm, open un“fl 930 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Bixteenth, open until § o'clock. until § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open ui ter Twenty-second and Kentuck: ntil 8 o'clock. NW. cor open untll § o'clock. AMUSEMENTS. “Way Down East e Fencing Master.” r—""Darkest Russia.” “The Moth and the Star Boarder.” avender. and Eddy streets—Spectalties eater—Vaudeville every afternoon Flame.™ and — Lecture by Rev. Peter C. Yorke, ry 1 LEASING FUBLIC LANDS. ~ HE proposition of the cattle men to lease such blic domain as are more valuable of the landed endowment < in the public land States. of education began in the or- »y which Virginia ceded her North to the Union on condition that slave- thereon, and that de for the permanent support be perm | education. nded that the school lands 1s to support common school rting to taxation ver, the school sections have a slight advance on the Government und produced has proved so inadequate taxation is resorted to for the sup- Had the public land States re- sections the revenue orted the schools in their develop- aged t res some sing the school e supy and when the lands were made valuabic ! population their sale woul 1 to maintain the per by the pres have capital y the unwise policy of increment of value has been the and the schools would ail close upon the income of an endow- profit adivic f they were to dep: me uffice for their entire ani § ermanent su The er is of present interest ir view of the plight or our State University. 1t had a public land endowment of eighty-two sections. The P Code fecites that the endowment of the university is the proceeds of the sale of seventy- land granted to the State for a semin- ng; t proceeds of ten sections of land State for public buildings; the income 1 the ‘investment of the proceeds of the , or the scrip therefor, or any part thereof, granted to this State for the benefit of agri- ulture and the mechanic arts; the income of the fund set apart by an “act for the endowment of the University of California.” It appears from the university report that the in- come from all these sources is only $135,000, while the needs of the institution require now at least $510,- 000 y. It will be seen that the endowment intended to suffice fog its permanent support falls short $375,000 per annum, and that sum must be sup- plied by some form of taxation. If the eighty-two sections of land had been leased and held in university ownership, to be sold when their value reached its most favorable point, the an- nual income from that source alone would now be $524800. The proceeds of the land scrip and the State fund, added to this, would have made the insti- tution independent of taxation. It can now only be regretted that the expansion and the needs of the institution were not foreseen and its infancy supported by the leasing of its lands. 109 Valencia, open | any other purpose brings up | on is credited to Mr. Jefferson, | ized tribes in the Territory, the Creeks, Cherokees, Choctaws, Chickasaws and Seminoles, have for some time complained, and with a color of justification, that the Government does not observe its treaties with them. They have made overtures for an arrange- ment with Mexico whereby they might acquire lands in that republic and settle, to live, as they say, “under a Government that keeps its word.” These tribes formerly derived large revenues from leasing their lands for cattle grazing. This has been prohibited by the Government and the prohibition is regarded as a violation of their rights. The Territory is a fertile section, wel! covered with forest, and was given the five tribes in lieu of their lands east of the Mississippi River. At the time this exchange of lands | was made it was intended that the Indians should be as independent in the occupation and control of their land as were the ‘whites on the lands they exchanged. Not only was this the intention. but it is claimed as | an express part of the treaty. But the Indian Com- | missioner at Washington assumes the right to dis- approve of the grazing leases and to deprive the In- | dians of the resulting revenue. Behind it all is a political movement in the interest ct the Territory of Oklahoma. That Territory is quite | arid, and its resources are believed to be incapable of supporting a State government. - The Oklahoma plan is to eject the Indians from the Indian Territory, by nagging them into armed resistance, and then seize | their territory, annex it to Oklahoma and admit the whole as a State. The Indians, who are educated and intelligent, are perfectly aware of this conspiracy | | against their rights and seem about to make the mi take of armed resistance, which is just what their enc- mies desire them to do. | capture the Democratic machine ;:i the city and thus | deprive Tammany of most of its ',zower. 3 While all that is going on in :New Yotk there is a significant movement toward Hill going on in the South. Texas has invited him to visit that State, and the Atlanta Constitution, which has hitherto been a strong Bryan organ, takes the invitation as a. text upon which to preach the doctrine that if Hill the country, would have been re-»lected in 1896 and would have placed the Democratic party permanentiy in power. It is a far cry from now to the next Presidentia! election, but Hill is evidently ge:ting ready for the nomination. BUFFALO H_N_.D CHERLESTON. WHILE the work of preparin‘ a display of the industries and the resources of California at the Pan-Americarr Exposition at Buffalo is in good hands, the efforts of those in charge should Be cor- American States, and consequently all citizens should, in proportion to their ability, contribute toward the success of what is being done to make that demon- stration. It is now certain the Buffalo enterprise is to be an the peoples.of the three grand divigions of this hemi- sphere an opportunity for studying the needs of one another and the extent to which those needs can he supplied by an interchange of products. It is well known that we do not obtain anything It would seem that the laws and courts of this coun- try should afford ample support to the treaty rights of these Indians, and that it should not be necessary | to add another chapter to the history of our century of dishonor in dealing with the red men As this-country has paid Indians for their lands, the sums paid have been carried in the Federal treas- | | ury as trust funds. These trust funds now amount to | $23,315.955 09. Once at least these funds were raided | and roebbed by public officers, and we are not aware | that the Government as trustee ever made the loss | good. The Indian Commissioner reports that Indian’| ownegship of these funds is harmful to the tribes and pfigposes that they be gradually exhausted by devoting them to the cducation of the Indians! This, we believe. would be = distinct violation of the treaty | rights of the Igdians. They sold their lands for th money, and it is theirs. To dispose of itwithout con- sulting their wishes, under pretense of giving to them: an education which is of no value to them, is to vio- late their rights. Our whole Indian policy is a tangle and labyrinth of wrong and injustice, and it is too much to expect that it will ever be made straight; but the country | should pause before it proceeds to the slaughter of | the five civilized tribes for the offense of insistinc‘ upon the rights they retained by treaty. | —— ! THE CENTER OF POPULATION Y the superior organization of the (Census B Bureau the population statistics are available for analysis much earlier than heretofore. By | the census’of 180 the center of population was 2 | little west of Columbus, Ohio. By the census of 1900 | this center has moved westward and is near the town Columbus, in Bartholomew County, Indiana. The coincidence in the name of the two centers is nrot without interest. The name of the Genoese dis- | coverer of this new world is perpetuated by towns | in Missouri and Iowa, and it will not be strange if the | moving center of population in its march westward | is found ten years hence to be near oné of them. The first census, in 1790, located the center of popu- lation about thirty miles east of Baltimore. In 1800 it was eighteen miles west of Baltimore. BY¥ 18i0 | it had moved thirty-six miles farther westward, with a slight deflection south, and was forty miles north- | west of Washington City. In 1820 the center was fifty miles farther west, with a still stronger deflection southward, and was sixteen miles north of Woed- stock, Va. In 1830 the center had moved thirty-nine | miles southwest and was at Mooreficld, Va., iow West | Virginia. In 1840 immigration to the Mississippi Valley pulled the point fifty miles farther west and reduced the southern curve; 1850 found it fifty miles advanced westerly, with the southem curve restored, | and located it at Parkersburg, Va., now also in West Virginia. In 1860 the center had crossed Mason and | Dixon’s line, and, advancing westward eighty-one | miles, was within twenty miles of Chillicothe, Ohio. | In 1870 the advance had been forty-two miles, with a strong deflection northwesterly, to a point forty- | eight miles northeast of Cincinnati. In 1880 it had | advanced west fifty-eight miles, a slight south- | ern deflection, and in 1890 it was still in Ohio, with | a turn north again, and had advanced forty-eight miles. The center has moved westwardly since 1790 a dis- tance of 505 miles, with slight deflections north dnd | south. | Columbus, Ind., near the present center, is a large | ,and important manufacturing city, surrounded by a | rich farming country and near enough the natural | gas belt to use gas for manufdcturing fuel. There is | | located the largest tannery in the world, which draws | on California for its supply of oak tan bark. | { of WORKING A_EgOM FOR HILL. W HEN the Democrats of the natioh gathered at Kansas City to carry out the Bryan pro- gramme there occurred one’ incident of inter- | American peoples for our products. | of politics prevented kim from catrying out his great | the West Indies, like as large a proportion of the commerce of South America as we should. It was one of the aims of the far-reaching statesmanship of Janies G. Blaine to establish reciprocal trade between ourselves and the continent to the south of us, and in that way not only provide a material benefit for all concerned but bring about closer political affiliation, so that our influencs might be helpful in improving South American con- ditions and thus preparing the way for enlarged in- dustries and an enlarged market among the South The vic plans during his life; but in-this respect his work lives | after him, and the Buffalo Exposition is going to Be | an important step toward accomplishing what he | desired. The exposition at Charleston, which is to follow | that at Buffalo, is of not so great importance to us, but still it will be worth our while to take part in it. The object of that enterprise is to promote trade with a matter with which we have com- paratively little concern. The South; however, is a rapidly advancing section of the Union. The people there are increasing in wealth and ought to become large consumers of California fruits and wines. More- over it is a section which just at. this time is doing its uttermost to attract settlers from the North. Ar- rangements have been made to grant special induce- ments to people from the Northern States to wisit | Charleston during the exposition and see the South. Should California have there a notably strong dis- play of her products and her resources, we might be able to direct to this State a considerable number of the Northérn \'ifiors who otherwise would decide upon making homes in the South without giving a thought to California. 4 It is to be borne ia mind that at this juncture we can never advertise California too much nor too often. Our State is still undeveloped. We need a larger population and a greater variety of industries. Furthermore we neel more commerce. Out of the two expositions of the year we may gain something of all those things, and it is worth while to make a united effort to do so. S — " KANS@> BLEEDING AGAIN. ROM Kansas comes the report that a bill has I:been introduced into the Legislature designed to deprive the women of the commonwealth of the right of suffrage. The experience of the State with woman’s fashion of voting has not been long, but it is said to have been amply sufficient to satisfy the men. The voters Lave rid the State of Populism, and now they wish to get back to straight, old- fashioned politics, where the privilege of trading votes and whooping it up for candidates belongs ex- clusively to men. Several grievances are urged against the Kansas woman as a voter, but the one which appears most serious is that of the cost which her manner of doing politics imposes upon candidates. It appears that the first campaign in which women took part was one of unusual excitement even for Kansas. There was a | big demand for votes in every district. Consequently the party managers on both sides determined to make a bid for the votes of the women by treating them with distinguished gallantry. In almost every | closely contested precinct carriages were sent to the residences of the women so that they could ride to the polls and do the grand. It is hardly necessaty -to say the women were pleased. A carriage tide is not to be had every day by every woman in Kansas. They thought the custom was a necessary part of voting and were very glad that suffrage had come to them. When the next election came along they dressed themselves for 4 drive and waited for the carriage to come. It came. Since then at each succeeding election the Kansas candidate has known that he must provide carriages for-the dames or be snowed under. | Now ecarriages cost something. The Kansas politicians began bleeding at every pore. They came to the conclusion that something must be done. Hence the bill to put an Some of the newer land States are acting more | est. The long struggle between Hill and Croker for | end to womanhood suffrage. Tt is a measure in the wisely. admonished by the sore experience of their | supremacy in New York came to a crisis and Croker interests of economy, retrenchment and reform. clders. Colorado has a large area of land granted in lien of the school sections included in Indian and Qther reservations, and is leasing it for grazing pur- poses. The leaschold control increases its value by preserving its moisture, and if the sources of water | supply are not destroved by grazing sheep in the forest reservations this land will by and by produce more for the support of the schools than all the rest of schoo! sections which have been sold. Students at the military academy of West Péin: have given every possible assurance to the Congres- sional investigators that there shall be no more haz- ing in the institution. The young gentlemen have probably reached the conclusion that they would pre- fer to finish their Jegitfimate education at Uncle Sam’s expense. A proposition is on foot to change the time of meet- ing for the State Legislature to later in the year. This ic the first definite indication which our lawmakers went tc Sacramento ‘huhh ;osuntatious]y triumphed over his rival by refusing | | to permit him to serve as the representative of New ‘ that Hill wem so far as to personally solicit the "posi- | tion. The day after Croker’s triumph Hill was re- ' ceived by the convention with agclamations which showed that his personal popularity among the Demo- c]lzs of the country at large had been increased rather | tifan weakened by Croker's action. The Tammany boss noted the storm of applause and. prepared for | revenge. When the time came he virtually elimin- | ated Hill from the New York campaign, and when | Bryan went to New York City he found Croker so | supreme that in 2 moment of ¢xultation he shouted, “Great is Tammany, and Croker is its prophet.” - Since those days the whirligig of time has been | getting in its little revenges. A storm of indignation has risen in New York City against the corruptions of Tammany government, and Croker has taken by | ! . that judgment which protects a refuge from its fury in England. Hill has been . ————— The Chinese Minister to Washington is making a our money. He might be of great service to us, to tell us the way how to keep our money after we have made it—a gift which his people enjoy. It has been decidemuhinmcm authorities to,raise the salaries of some of our fellow-citizens in the Hawaiian Islands. It is a safe wager that the native party, organized in the islands fo oppose American sovereignty, will quickly disappear. The soldier who was forced to take his bride to the City Prison for a place to sleep may be admired for his susceptibility to the grand passion, but hardly for a public charge. v —_— 3 UATL Ttawould be interesting to know whether it was a | Cal. [ S e ) of being conscience-stricken or a scheme to de- dially promoted and assisted. The interests of the whole St#e are to be advanced by a proper demon- | | stration- of their value in competition with_sther exposition of the industries of all the Americas—South- | | ern and Central, as well as Northern. It is to afford had been nominated in 1802 he would have carried | L, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1901. r | | 4 ald Saquare. | York on the platiorm committee, notwithstanding | tour of the country trying to find out how we make |. man from becoming ;uhé THE CARTOONIST ON THE ST. PAUL PIONEKR PRESS MUST HAVE BEEN JUNNING FOR THE REAL THING WHEN HE GOT THIS ZE- ROICAL SPECIMEN. +* BROTHER TO THE “OLD BOY.” IN VARIETY | Hazing and Tabasco. “Our hazing,” says a West Point cadet, “is speeifically for the purpose of making a fourth class man realize the necessity of prompt obedience.” And the tabasco sauce is to prevent any ifs, buts or other | | articulate waste of time.—8t. Louis Globe- | | Demoerat. | | Imported Raw Material. ¥ i 75,000,000 worth of raw m:theenxmx:g“beatmf;umclured during last | year is a significant nem. It shows even | more _clearly than the total exports hov the United States I8 cccupying the posi- | tion formerly held by Great Britain and | Germany. It is one thing to manuramnt > | and export our own products: it Is quite another thing to import raw materials and export the finished products. In ths latter operation there i3 a final demo stration of superior abflity on the pa of the manufacturers. Unquestio | | cheap tuel is a large iactor in Ame supremacy. But the man behind the m chine is the most imporiant factor In the whole equation.—Pittsburg Dispatch. An Insult to New England. From Plymouth Rock to Agawam, from Cos Cob to the jeadwaters of the Argos- took, will arise dire demunciation of New | York. A degenerate hotel-Keeper in this decadent town has insuited the spirit of all New Englapd. ©On his bill of fare he has made the honored, the delectable, the serumptious custarg pie of that great re- glon to masquerade under the frippery | title of “cream frawns.” Cream frawns, | indeed! We mai; revise the creed of Ed- wards, reform the suffrage or amend t | constitution, but to attempt to remake or | to rename custard ple is worse than a degradation—It is a vulgarity. Out ‘nn cream frawns from this day forfn— | Brooklyn Eagle. | Denuding the Forests. i atis The great forests of the Unites ates are being rapldly denuded of the finest trees by the demands of commerce. The | extent of the lumberiag interests of the country and the rats at which the for- | ests are being cut down ;h‘rg"'l‘tr;rn[?u h just issued by the 3 Bepapunent Jlle(‘l ‘The Lumber Trad 4 STATE PRESS COMMENT E ON LEGISLATIVE DOINGS The mass of bills that has been offered in the California Legislature already may result in an extra session, - It is astonish- ing to see at each session of our Legis- lature how many new laws we are in need of, and still more astonishing how we ever got along without them.—Willows Journal. .« . Think of a sergeant at arms having four or flve assistants, a bookkeeper and an assistant bookkeeper! That officer could eep his own books and meeds no book- | keeper; but, if he have one, what folly to give him ‘an assistant! The real name | for this ‘“‘patronage” is public plunder.— Humpoldt Standard. .« e There seems to be considerable trouble brewing that will greatly occupy the time of our present session and already an ex- tra session has been talked of. The Cut- ter bill, to redistrict our Congressional | | | | districts, is going to meet with consider- | able opposition, and Senator Cutter will find it hard work to please the many aspirants for Congressional honors that want a_sure-thing election. Then there comes the Paris Commission scandal and investigation, which. with such men as the Hon. W. H. Miils and Hon. W. W Foote taking a hand in it, is sure to make matters very interesting for some one.— | Magysville Demu.crnt'. San Benito County is not going to be left when the new apportionment is made. She is to have an' Assemblyman. Assemhlynl{n Higby and Senator Fiint of | class committee. | | Department ent + | the Tnited_States.” The pro the lumbering industry in the States is surprising, that part ountry supplying nearly three-fourths of xport trade. p ®Yfore lumber 1s now being shipped from the country as a whole than at any pre vious time in its history.—Anaconda Stangard. Cigarette Habit Declining. Trade reports indicate a decline in, the cigarette habit. In four years the an nual output in the United States is sald to have fallen off nearly one-fourth. | is probable that other elements enter into this decreased manufacture besides a di- minished consumption. Fer example, many confirmed smokers toll their own cigar- ettes. Nevertheless the general stat ment accords with observation. The arette is not so conspicuous an offer it was a few years ago. This is a healt sign. Certain diseases pass over the coi munity from time to time, certain vices, habits, fashions, or whatever they may has Dbeen introduced into the Legislature | proposing to divide Santa Clara County, | and forming a new county with Gilroy as | the county seat, and another bill is being prepared. for introduction which will form a new comnty out of the south part of | Santa Cruz County and the north part of Monterey Counfyy, with Watsonville for | its capftal. atos will be wanting to | secede next with headquartors in the Gem | City. Why not? We've got the best kind of material for county officers to be found anywhere, and that's dbout what the | whole_thing amounts to. anyway. The | way things are run now there are not of- s be called, thpt do a great deal of L e o el round.—Los Gat08 | gnq physical harm. The epidem all. | oo R | rage for a few ye d then abate | vice is not eradicated but it ceases ¢ Speaker C. W. Pendleton may have | threatening. Cigarette smoking, acted wisely in the formation of commit- | vailed In the later years of the tees, but to a layman it don’t seem so. It | tury, was a sign of degemeration. Our looks very much as if his appointments | youth are getting away from the condi- were made so6 as to punish thosé who | tions and tenden symb: favored another for Speaker. Assembly- man Melick is serving his third term. He | favored Anderson for Speaker and was | not given the chairmanship of one com- mitteec find was placed on but one first- | Other Anderson men of | are starting the new century w wholesome and vigorous view Philadelphia Times. Items of Our Growth. ury's growth is already some- cxperience fared Ikewise. Is this £00d | thing of & chesthut, bit possivly & olitics? Having so easily won, Speaker | figures which we are assured by a popu endleton could have well afforded, from | magazine don't lie may still astonish selfish or partisan standpoint, to have f They refer mostly to the growth of the formed committees without reference to | ['niied States, and are largely matters of the support of himself. His course, if | comparison. The center of population practised in the future, will force men of | was at Baltimore a century ago; now In- independence and self-respect to get out | diana has it. Two hundred anél fifty thou- of the party or in some way fetallate to | sand dollars was the maximum of private the injuty of party discipline. placing suc- | fortunes in 1500; now a fifth of a billion cess In jeopardy.—Pomona Times. sounds well to taik about. Agriculturs b o has increased from a net value of §l0b. are on the apportionment | The lower house of the California Legis- | 000,000 to 3. Farms al R raantY e thay will aee fo It that | lature Is distingulshing ltself by Dutting 1, calth 1 S Henito County ls without additional | on g needless lot of attaches. The proper i States has increased territory in her Assembly district.—The | way to pay campalgn debts is to put ymxr‘ 4 »;M e Bt g : Pajaronian. | hands In your pockets and shell out the | fourteen fold. > the ea ".L“a' wh_ ™ B T coin, and not draw on the public treasury. | has vmli_\"nrri‘v;‘uhmnl its ‘nn’z- r »‘)m_flev‘ . The spirit of secession is abroad. A bill | —Halfmoon Bay Coast Advocate. e A e e T e | different kinds of manufacture turning out PERSON.&L_ MENTION. L. T. Hatfleld, a Sacramento attorney, is at the Lick. Dr. George J. Fanning of Oregon is at the Grand. J. E. Koeberle, a Los Angeles ofl man, is stopping at the Grand. .. Marion Biggs Jr., capitalist and land- owner of Oroville, is at the Grand. George A. Smith, a Portland rancher, is among yesterday's arriyals at the Grand. 8. A/ Ransom of the United States Marine Hospital Corps is-at the Ocel- dental. Colonel A. K. McClure of the Philadel~ phia Times is expected in the city to-day. e will stop at the Palace. Thomas J. Kirk, State Superintendent of Schools, arrived in town yesterday and is at the Palace. George F. Ditzler, manager of one of the largest frult ranches in the world, lo- cated at Biggs, I8 registered at the Grand. Frank Powers, wife anf child of Har- shaw, Ariz., are at the Grand. Mr. Powers has extensive mining interests in Arizona. The Duke and Duchess of Manchester will arrive in this city next Monday. They are traveling in a private car and léft El Paso over the Southern Pacific line yes- terday. The Duke will make a short stop at Los Angeles. Mrs. H. E. Huntington and two daugh- tes, Misses Elizabeth and Marion, and Miss Ethel Malone start this evening for the East and next week they will sall for Europe. All the forelgn countries will be visited by them. Mr. Huntington wiil meet them in New York, to which city he was summoned by telegraph Tuesday. ———— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. | NEW YORK, Jan. 23.—The following Californians are in New York: From Sau Francisco—T. Bare, at the Herald Square; M. Block, at the Savoy; H. S. Pl at the Bay State; ¥, W. Clarke, at the Her- | From Los Angeles—W. T. irrer, at the Albert: L. Bradford, at tho erald Square; L. T. Bradford, at the Astor. —_————— SHORT HISTORY OF THE GRIP. A wheeze, - A sneeze. Bones 3 Erains Sake; Eyes red; Sore head; Can't feed; Can’t read; Can't smoke; No joke; Can't sing; Ears ring; 't tall . Can't walk; Don't care; Rip! Swear! s ; 118, —Baltimore American. ANSWERS TO QUERES. C. H. City. Acetic and a in a dry state, dissolved in | not injure gold, silver, rolled or lated ware. 5 Take Doc’s every year over 300,000,000 worth of values and our metals and minerals yield us 3700 000,000 more. Foreign commerce brings about $2,000,000,000 arrd our banks are capi- talized to about 35,000,000, These are all round nymbers, but t have prob- ably gone beyond this limit since these statistics were compiled.—Minneapolis Times. with the general Land Office , Washing- | ton, D. C. | JUNIOR ORDER-M. C. B., City. Ir| the correspondent will send a self ad-| dressed and stamped envelope, the in-| tormation asked for about the Junior | Oraér will be mailed to him. —_————————— andies, Townsend's, Palace Hotel.* PrERELRDSS*OIAS AL ofl burners. Office and sal ssion street. Telephone Joh GERMAN HOSPITAL—Enquirer, City. | C10/® © A fire which broke out in a Louse in the | vicinity of the old German Hospital on | ;¥ Brannan street, between Third and| i LR o Dk Fourth, and destroyed that institution as S well as a number of other buildings, oc-{ Townsend's California glace fruits curred on the-night of the 28th of August, | pound, in fire-etched boxes or Jap 1876. kets. A nice present for Eastern 39 Market street, Palace Hotel building ——————— information suppjled daily friends, New Santa Fe Train. The new Sante Fe train known as the Cali- [ Special fornia Limited affords service very much supe- | business houses and public men by the rior to anything ever before oftered to Coast | Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's). 510 Mont- travelers. . 'gr‘m»ry st. Telephone Main 1042, . CAREER OF “BONNY RILEY™ (COUNTESS D'HENRIOT). LOVE MILITANT. 245 Rives. PROFESSOR LE BRUN OF ANTWE®P COMES TO CALIFORNIA TO DISCOVER THE SECRET OF LIFE THE ECCENTRICITIES OF GENIUS. By MAJOR J. B POND. TRIBULATIONS” and »MR. BOWSER'S . »THZ WIDOW MAGOOGIN TALKS.” SOME GHOSTS | HAVE SEEN. % By HUGH GRANT. PECK'S BAD BOY,AND THE GROCERYMAN $ 1 PAY A VISIT TO CHINATOWN. | 8¢ 4 . + + 44 5 *+ e | HOW TO MAKE A $20 CORSET FOR $2.30. | 84 +4 < o8 2 . +4 9998 | AND MANY STORIES CF GREAT HUMAN INTEREST. | 8884