The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 1, 1903, Page 6

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ean-f%m WEDNESDAY RS AGIORY 1 W JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprictor. ltduu All Cemmunlvnllonl to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPKON E. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department ¥ou Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE. EDITORIAL ROOM! Delivered by Carriers, 20 Cts Per Week, 75 Cts. Per Month. Single Copies 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage (Cash With Order): DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one year -§8.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 6 month: DAILY CALL—By Single Month SUNDAY CALL, One Year... WEEKLY CALL, One Yeaf .Market and Third, S. F. 17 to 221 Stevemson St. { Datty... {1 Sunday.. | Weekly.. $8.50 Per Year Bxtra 4.15 Per Year Extra FOREIGN POSTAGE. All Postmasters are authorized to receive Matl subscribers in ordering changs of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to insure & prompt and correct compimnoce with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Broadway.... Telephone Main 1083 2148 Center C. GEORGE KROGNESS, M tising, Marguette Building, Chicage. (Long Distance Telephone “‘Central 2619.”") WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT: MORTON E. CRANE. ... .1406 G Str “ N.owW, NEW YORK REPRESENTATIV] STEPHEN B. SMITH. Trib BRANCH OFFICES—327 Montgomery, corner of Clay, epen until 9:80 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 639 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until 9:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open untll 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until § o'clock. 1088 Va- lencia, open until ® o'clock. 108 Eleventh, bpen until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until ® c'cicek. 2200 Fillmore, open until § o'clock, 10 SUBSCRIBERS LEAVING TQWN FOR THE SUMMER | ot mmer months can have forwarded by mail their sddresses by motifying The Call Business Office. This paper will also be on sale at all summer resorts and is represented: »y a local agent in n the coast. THE INCREASE OF"LYINC-HING I a race prc m on hand, the most serious that has faced any nation. Two or three years ago The Call discovered the misuse of the forms of law in several Southern States whereby negroes were charged with some . petty , bemng prox.‘np!;_\' convicted, HE lynching oi negroes the increase. The country to appreciate that ‘it° has is. on begin oft were ‘turned over worked under the tence. This system was in vogue extensively, and’ prob- ably i$ yet, but by more recent revelations it seenis to resort to the planters or cohtractors to-be lash during the ‘term of their sen- that it is not considered necessary forms of law in order to subject ’negroes to involuf- tary servitude. The Federal courts have recently se- cured the South’ for subjection of negroes to In one case a hegro had be- come indebted to a whiteman, who. and whipped him and compelled him jo serve him. In another case the pretext of dgbt was omitted and negroes were forced imto involuptary service. convictions in peonage. caught There are things in human relations that law can- | not regulate. from slavery it loses ne tion, which had mar features, and does not acquire the restraint that should take its place. The deprivation of politival rights has been followed: of nn:pwn;sbxfny. in the form of and” this by a savage The use of the forris of that he disci beneficial y an expression ime committed by negroes, lynching of blacks by whites of law to subject n general in the South than the North suspects, so So- phisticates criminal statistics that the country has no reliable information upon which to base an esti- mate of the pergentage against ~ them. of crime Whether our thirteen million negroes commit more | than their share of scrious crimes.i$ not known, and under presentc conditions cannot be One thing appears to be certain—the Northern °ne- groes, long domesticatéd in this section, are as or- derly as their white neighbors and show no undue | percentage of crime. The flagrant offenses com- | mitted by members of the race’in the North are al- known. most entirely the acts of Southern negroes, who have crossed Mason and Dixon’s line. This has been true of the unspeakable offenses that were punished by lynching in Colorado and Kansas. It would seem that one need not seck far for the cause of good order among the Northern negroes. They have all the political rights that the whites en- joy, and have before them constantly the good ex- ample of law and order in the community. They are at work like the white people around them, and their children are in school. They support churches and other institutions of religion and morality. They have no more social equality with the whites than there is in the South. But they are greeted without harshness and feel the touch of human sympathy for l_ I their welfare. They improve by the atmosphere of order and law which is around them. Of -course it must be admitted that much in their condition comes from their being a mir{ority of the population, while in the South the race suffers wher- ever it is in the majority and is subjected to the wviolesit control of white men. Its subjection to peon- age and the perversion of law to redice it to involun- tary servitude are symptoms that may well be studied by sociologists, Are these not the signs of returning slavery? Is nature at work, or destiny, or fate? emancipation, has produced a generation of them in parts of the South mot much more advanced than were their wikd ancestors in Africa. Booker Wash- ington finds that class of negroes a very hard for- mation, almost too hard even for his philosophy. It would be better if the various “black belts” in the South could be broken up and their black people dispersed and scattered so that they would be minori- ties in white communities. The North desires to trust the Soulh in respect to the negro problem. B_ut with 2 dozen lynchings in as many days and a dozen more instances of negro peonage in the South, the confidence of the North will require something more inspiring than the Dro- fane ravings of Tillman. 1.00 Per Year Extra | As the negro race gets further away - institu- | groes to peonage, which is more The mneglect of the negro, following upon‘ THE SA E have had occasion to tell the sectaries who attack Mormonism, and even assume V'V that ‘a professor of that faith is without civil rights, that the peculiar institution of Utah will be more likely to wane if let alone. Attacks from with- out cause solidarity within. :Nothing flourishes un- der persecution like religion,.no matter what kind it is. The point to the advice - that Ephraim be let alone, for he was- joined to his idols, was that Ephraim was more likely to quit idolatry if he, were not pestered and persecuted- about it. No one persecuted Abraham out of the notign of making a mud man and worshiping the thing as a god. He had a streak of common ‘sense and human nature in him, and perhaps of humor, too, and he saw how idiotic it was to endow with supernatural power that which he had made with his own hands. | But if some one had cqme along and called him a flathead and ordered him to cease the worship of | images Abraham would have gone on making and | worshiping idols though he might have hanged for it. All men are religious, for religion is every man’s congeption of his relation to the universe, and we be- | lieve that np tribe has been found that is without | ideas as to the universe and how the members there- of came to be a part of it. ! t.gay be truthfully said that the legends of man’s | origm differ mostly in the diction in which they are | FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESD 'HUMAN NATURE AND MORMONISM. | been prompt to take advantage of it. The Scottish NANCE O NEIL professors look upon the development of that 5pmt as an evil and are deploring.it. Thus mecssor Story’ is quoted as saying: “The cl:emosynary system seemed to grow.in attraction for ingenious youth, and it could not go ot long and yet leave the: honor of students untarnistied and thc:r independence un- sapped.” 3 The entertainment of such icans as curious. We have i this country an abund- education is provided for various classes of young men and young” women, and-we have obsetved-no tarnishing of honor -nor sapping of:-independence. As a mattér of fact a young man’ has a much .right struction as he has to profi( by a not dissimilar bea- efit offered through a free frbrary or a picture gallefy. Scottish pmfessors do not hesitate to accept salaries’ provided by endowments, neither do Scottish nobles’ hesitate to accept pensions from the Govertiment. In short the Scottishi’ student in availing himself of: | the Carnegie fund is doing just what any othier man would do under similar circumstances, and the critics of the endowment are fretting themselves over, an | imaginary grievance. land there is no reason:on earth why a peasant’s son should have to slar\e hxmscl’f in order to get an. edu- | cation. -'—-———— tadd by the different races. Lach bears traces of an attempt to account for something by pure investion. } The Book of Mormon is such an invention, Sidney | Rigdon and the other “witnesses” to the contrary | | notwithstanding. But the essentials of the Mormon ! creed are the essentials in all creeds, and there is in | | that form of faith no peculiar excellence that should | | make it outrun any other form. Those who object } to it as a religious institution and propose to re- | prove it as such are simply planting it deeper and | giving it energy to resist the storms of time through | an infinitely prolonged future.. In the reasonable 1[\1& there can be no objection to Mormonism as a religion. The creed does not conflict with good citi- | zenship, and belief in it is cornsistent with social law. The offensive_feature in Mormonism that. the and the lierarchy has not yet outgrown the itch for wielding civil authority, | is church is a government, inherited from the high and mighty days when Brig- ham Young was prophet of the Lord, head of the church and civil Governor of Utah Territory. let the religion that is in Mormonism'alorie and deal | | with'its pretensions as a government, and as a gov- 1‘ ernment in business,.we will prune its - offensive fea- | tures. more rapidly. The institution is not hurt by | going at i with Scripture texts and attempting uproot jts supeistitions by offering others in their plece. But:when it is opposed as a civil government, | that is in business and in politics for what there is | in thiem, then human nature fights its pretensions. | This was proved ‘recently in that thriving Mormon | town, Brigham City, which nestles at the -foot of | the Wahsatch Mauntains, @ few miles west of Og- | den. The church, ha\mg a’ few dollars, to invest, If 'we | to ‘bought the opera-house, and then- prucecr‘ed Yo e | m icians in’. the’ rmhem'a of harinony proposed” unto | f a.dance,- f(')r- The chifch im-{ duce the pay of the " Thereupon those song themselves a benefit in the form whiich they constructed a pavilion. | mediately arranged fot dn opposition dance uridér its. e godiy patrohage in its ‘qwn ‘opera-hoitse and ordered | all of its light: ecl:d sons and daughlers to attend | its hop and to: ‘smib the otheér, under penalty. of ex cominupication. The outcome jarred Zion. Three- hundred ‘couples attended the opposition dance aud‘ only: twelve. couples went to the.holy Hop in they opera-house. Instead: of excommunicating t_he_s_la‘ * humired rebels the <hiirch’ is-painéd to discover that | “theyirefuse té attehd church of theit pwn-accord, and | in effect ha\: € commumcaxcd the church gcmng Jn | oung Pcf)ple rewhed_ .mon :phst!'e, or’.of any othw kind of attack xhdt' | touchés the rchgwus qmck o( those pcg_pl As the fervor. of patriotism advarices from new'to |’ lhedatc when it rxhaus!s itself i m one grand, scrcé‘.h- ing. snzrjmg, p--ppmg climax,-it might not be out \of plice to give:the ustial annual advice to the small | boy of Sar. Francisco to deal as ncnt‘\ as possible | | : his friends in the selection of a place on- lhc&r | anatomy at w}uch to- shoot, so that the.effect may not be any -mre painful thau necessary; also in start- ing fires it mxgh! be just as welil to light mvncthmg less expgnsive than the family residence. I : e ! SCOTTISH STUDENTS. S onc COTLAND has been taking a second thought of the Carnegie giit of $10,000,000 to her uni- When first the gift was bestowed, it was be- lieved the income would mean a clear addition to , the revenues of the universities and would extend | the scope of their usefulness.” The results have dis- appointed that expectation. The income derived from student fees is rapidly falling by reason of the | numbers who apply for assistance.from the Carnegie | fund, and fears are felt that eventually the entire in- | come will be expended in support of students fully | able to take care of themselves and that there will be little or no extension of university advantages to ‘a larger number of students. 3 | The situation was recently summed up by Professor Story of the University of Glasgow, who in a gradu- | tion address fo the students is reported as having | caid: “They did not know as yet what permanent effect, if any, the great Carnegie benefaction ‘was, | through its payment of fees, to have on the number of students. attending the university. What- effect it was to produce on théir character was, he feared, less uncertain. In the -winter session of 1901-1902 the fees paid by the students (male) themselves were £6510; those paid by the Carnegie trustees were £6239. In the session of 1902-1903 those paid by the students were £6350, and those paid by the trust £7350—show- | ing an increase over the previous year of about £1000, and also showing that the majority of the students had become beneficiaries of the trust,and had either been living hitlierto in unsuspected neediness or were now reaping the harvest of a ¢gop sown for such as they. The same downward grade from independence to indebtedness marked the summer session of last year. In it the fees from students were £1500, and from the trustees £2923.” It appears ffom that statement that the Scottish students having been provided with a means to get university education without cost to themselves have ‘usul for our money | maintenance taxpayer finds that colonial loyalty and liberality fall W | ‘khas been washed away at. Kiel in copigus flog{is | . |2 haid diet-to go up, again versities and has found the subject a perplexing | Australia has agreed to contrihute about $1,000,000 a’year to the maintenance of the British fleet that Australiair waters, but as the full cost of is upward of $5000,000, the- British guards far short of meeting Australia’s propér share of the cost of empire. S THE GENlAL KAISER HATEVER :Il fcelmg ‘may -have existed:- at Manila. and later ‘on .in the West. Indies, sparkling wine. The_ Kaiser has been- a most genial as well as a most generous host. in praise, in presents’and honors. | honor to"a foreign fleet as was done by tlie Kaiser | in person when he sailed. his imperial ya(i]:l with an | American flag flying from her after mast and dipped the imperial standard floating at the stern.three umes i as he passed the Kearsarge. The geniality of the Kaiser.is the more nomble be- cause he happens to ‘be having’ a bad time at home just now. his pcoplc beware of socialism, saying to'them that socialists are “fellows without a counlry’ that they are “base and traitorous agitators,” that they are “a horde of men unworthy ‘to bear the name. of Germans”; . and yet in the face of such \«armngs pretty nearly !h:ee millions of his good people hav-. | ing a right to vote went to lhc polls and \mcd (ur_ snuahq candidates. . Such” -vote after“such a v)cech .can hardly be de’emtd anylhmg less. than what the French term’ lcse mz;mtc The Kaiser's law has a sterner name ne.that is hard enough to; frighten horses, the | being known -in Germany.~ as’ * \lajestaets- It was certainly wvery gracious of thé gverlook-that row’in his hoime and’ come | :mnlmgly to greet his ‘American - guests at | Ki iel. * It is pleasing to l:arn also that he has been leera] m his prefiems, and that Ionng cups and ! cxgar:ne cises will ‘be borne back to" America by | | hoits of naval officérs as-evidences that the Kaiser esires to be remembered ‘as"a goad- fellow, who ishes Amenc;ns to' meet hxm only for. a feast, a | frofic, a drink and-a smoke: \\'hc'her thé good- lmmqr will survive in the. im- perial breast -arid - shine forth on the Impcrml “face | next speech on sonahsm rfmams to be seen. That, however, is none ‘of our B He_, has given us “the glad Hand, and if now the maiied fist be shown, | to the folks’at home we flm Id dmcre:tly turn our e)c< away and let the ‘racke:” pass, unn(ncd ’A I\ev\ Hampihm: man-who rcccn\ly dmd at’ thc goed nld age of 103 sfated just be(orc his death that he had live 3 cake and talmg rum modc‘ratcl) That sounds! like but it may be there is ie thaii sorhe people have. :\xppuscd T —— 'THE RIGHT ‘OF WAY. \\()R (.)L >y of -Oaklarid has lha( the * p!Oplc uf that city sesume their | M right of way.over the sidewalks. In all citiey there 15 a cnn’slaut tcndcncy to permanently, . en- croach .on the sidewalks.: - le: intérest of thie public in the free way.is surrendered by degrees until in more v lrtue in, suggested ten. The evil of which the Mayor of Oakland has .taken notice has existed in older States and has grown to such propoftions- thi the courts have to be invoked to curb it, In Chicago it has been '.tl‘le 4practice to permit the projection of bay windows and even the en- croachment of house walls over the -sidewalks, and the .city has derived revenue from such permits. There was always a doubt of the power of a city government to grant such permits, or even to closé’ | a street that is once dedicated to public use. The Supreme Court of Illinois .has decided recently the | right of encroachment on.the sidewalk to be' non- existent and beyoad the power of runicipal gov- ernment to confer. ~The court lays down a‘ stern rule of law that the people.may inalienably enjoy ‘the use of the foundation or ground of the streeis and sidewalks, every inch of it to travel on, and are en- titled also to enjoy the air, light and rainfall on every portion of it. : 3 When_one citizen monopolizes to himself the €x-, .clusive occupancy of any:pertion of this public space, for the use of his wall or window, he, is doing some- thing which, if its ‘right be conceded, means that he may, in the same manner-and on the same terms. monopolize the use of the.whole sidewalk or.all of the street. Under this decision any citizen can ap- ply to the courts for remedy against the illegal oc- cupancy of street-or sidewalk, and the occupier can- ‘not plead 3 pemut from a city govemment which that government had no right to grant,” nor can he recover money pa d for such privilege. Our Oakland neighbors seem to be deriving front their street fdir a bundle of fun as big as their mam- moth balloon. It is to be hoped the profits will alsé | be as large, but infinitely huv\er, smce the object of the fair is a worthy.one., . STt e 5 New York is at present experiencing “cold Novem- ber rains,” while here the summer is trying to outds its unexcelled reputation by - gmng us more thu ance of colleges, universiti¢s. and schools where free | to profit by a benefaction offered (hrough free in-- In a country so rich as: Sco!- ! | between American and Gerfan naval men of | He has been lavish | We are told that’| 4. | never before has.the Gernian navy done so much | 1t is only a.short time ago that he bade | | & tion gratified by the news which i when he.returns.to his hame .1fl'avrs and makes hxs’ i .| gim 2 good p!mn Tife, calmg little pie and, some places its.very exjstence seems to be forgot- AY, JULY 1, 1903. TO ACT ‘UNDER NEW AUSPICES L3 \ { | A | ! A(‘TRESS “HO HA:S PLAFED ; HERSELF IN THE HANDS GF NEW MANAGER. Frank Perley Will| Direct Actress’" Affairs. IS8 NANCE O'NEIL pretty nearly has come having her. ambi- she received yesterday from New | - York,. that it had ‘beén finally |.arranged for Frank Perley o undertake - the responsibilities of her management. A. L. Erlanger; of the firm of Klaw & | Erlanger, wired McKee Rankin yester- | day that the contract between Periey and Miss O'Neil was-desmed_quite satis- factory and as Perley the_ syndicate, the approval of Erlanger means that the California tragedienne en- a. new era under the best au- Miss O'Neil mariaged by -orie . of the bent | | known managers in the theatrical, calling |. | and - Perley, who virtually discovered - | Alice Neflgon, is just, the man both he ! and s O'Neil have been lonklnz for. 1t is anticipated, too, that uuh a touch with the syndic may have her choice of powerful plays written by | | Tot” | and English authors and ‘will thus be able | to give: first productions. | "“The fact, too. that Miss O'Neil ias gone | under new management wilk gréatky em- | hance the interest of her forthcoming { appearance at the Herald Squars “Thea- .| ter, New York. coming’ ay | Speaking of the new management yes- | terday Rankin sald ‘his hope now been realized. FHe. himself, .will be re- | lleved of a d-uble duty, that of manager and stage director, and".will h‘n('urur-h |.devote himself solely to .the .part | of the productions,” whi -mme carries with it a great | sponsibility. | : | ‘Miss O'Neil is perfcetl «nmhml ‘with | the new arrangement : to the happl the new re- | PRELATE WILL DECIDE DEMAND ¥OR REHEARING Report That Courts* Will. Now' Con- sider Bishop Morelsmd Cnse v ALLEJO, June 30.—T} Wiliam Bollard: of this ‘city, who has taken a conspicuous part in the preceedings re- garding, the admliiistration of church. af- faire by Bishop Moreland of this diocese, was seen to-night in relatio. to the report- that the matter may he faken -into.the civil courts. The Rev. Mr. Bollard said: “A demand for a_rehearing of our charges against the Right Rev. Willlam H.. Moreland ir now in tht hands of the | Right-Rev. T. U. Dudlev of Kentueky, | the assessor to, the presiding Bishop, the Right Rev. Thomas M. Clark of Rhode Tsland. We wiil insist upen the church | doing its own work, which it has not- done up to this time, as’we have abundantiy shown. That is all that is to be said at | this time, as we could, not resort to the civil. courts until all the resources avall- able in the church had been exhausted. We have shown that there has not been thus:far a propér hearing held by the church authorities- of the ohnrzeu pre- ferred against Bishop Willlam H: More- llhd. BA.NTA ANA !ALOON HEN LOCK DOORS AND RETIRE Prohibition Ordinance Goes Into Ef- fect and -a Mighty Dry- ness Prevails. SANTA ANA. June 30.-By, (he provi- sions "of the néw prohibitipn ‘ordinance, | all of the saloons n Santa Ana closed their doors at midnight to-night, so that this will be a dry towh commencing July 1. 'The proprietors of the saloons were ail preparing to-day to-quit business without any demonstration. Some of them .held auction sales of whisky and beer.* Narcotile a New Anaesthetic. Dr. 1. Eastman in a paper recently read before the Eournemouth Medical Soclety in England described his experience with" a2 new an hetic, a bichloride of meth- lyethylene called narcotile, which he be- lieves has some important advantages over those now in use, for short ana the: It acts rapidly and -effectuaily, and produces no troublesome after ef- fects. In its administration fhe narco- tile is placed in a bottle, and air forced through it to an inhaler which .is held ovér the mouth ind nose. The narvotile is very volatile and the air in ts passage becomes saturated with the vapor. It is also necessary for the reason to keep the bottle in tepld water to maintain the.requisite warmth. It resembles ether in its physlological action, but is rarely followed by the distressing sickness which accompanies and follows the adnrinistra- tion of the latter. Owing to its extreme volatility the patient rapidly recovers from it.—New York Commercial Advnr- tiser. RN BN S Y e Trunks and Valises. o Trunks, vnll:el. .dress sult cases, trivel gg.ro pocket books, wrigt bags, thai ary and are cheap. - born, Vi & o 9 Mathet se> sef th hmencdn | ke forward | |DOLE IGNORES " INDORSEMENT OF HIS PARTY Special Correspondence ‘of The Call: * HONOLULL June N —~Goyernor Dole and. the Legislature are session. One of the dajly papers recent- send a veto message to .the Legislature, as he was opposed- to some of. the items in the appropriation bill. With ohe ex- ception the ‘items specified were correct, " showing that the Information must.have originally come from the Governor's of. fice. Before the message was received by the House, Representative Vida intro- duced. the following resolution, which passed by a vote of 16 to 9, as follows: Resolved, That the Clerk of this House of Representatives be Instructec to address a | communication to Sanford B. Dole, Governor of the Territory of Hawali, asking hon If the unprecedented appearajce in the Adver- i tiser of this date of the purporte]l salient [Dolmu in his message on the unpaid bills act_ not yet before the Legislature, is au- thentie: And. it so, by whom such information | was given out to one section of the press of | the city and_under whose authority. Resoived, That the clerk of this House of ‘R&DP!“I".I(I\(*I be further instructed to ask an(nrd B. Dole, Governor of ‘the Territory | of Hawall, in said comrhunication If such giving out of his purpflned message on the | Unpaia bills ‘act. or anything pertaining there- | to, previous to sending the same to the Leg- | 1siature of the Territory. of Hawaii, | act of courtesy- to.such- Legislature. There "was considerable warmth dis- played in discussing the resolution. A year from now the Governor's term of office will have expired and he is cer- tainly not. trying. to gain popularity before his retirement, for he .has Jjust turned down the -Republican party. For the posi- tion of Superintendent of Public Works, to be vacated at the end «f this month, the Republicans indorsed an old Califo nian, E. C. Winston, a_member of their executive committee. In an _interview with Chairman Crabbe of the Republican Committee, Secretary of the Territory Carter, President Roosevelt's appointee, the Governor refused to consider Win- | ston’s name for the position and advo- | was an | cated the claims of a persoaal friend, Eben Lo saying that “Low will do 1 tell him." . And now it appears that Cooper may remain in office after all, as he has with- drawn his resignation. This will avoid the necessity of filling ‘a vacancy till af- ter tlie Legislature’ adjourns, as the Gov- | eriior Is very doubtful as to the confirma- | tion by the Senate of any nominee whom | ‘he may send to that body. ernor Dole | _thus runs counter to the wi of his lown Cabinet Council. This body has no legal existence, but meets twice a week. of the fellow members of his council and then acts independently. of their wishes. | Every member of the council is opposed | i to lettifig Cooper retain ‘office after he has | |:resigned, secretary of the Territofy Car- | | ter being particularly proncunced in_his | opinion. A stormy session, or conference, rof .the “Kitchen Cabinet,”. as Dole's e ‘cil is termed; is said to have been hel ¢ e |'SAIL TO THE ISLANDS i UNDER ASSUMED NAMES n- HONQLULU, June 24.—Mr. and Mrs. | Fred J. Berfolani are injoying their {"honeymoon Hawaii, Mrs. Bertolani is the daughter of Cornelius Shea of Santa tRosa, Cal. She was formerly Mrs. Ver- non Tukey, but secured her freedom from | the courts bef. ng Fred Bertolani, ‘who was in bu ‘4t Santa Rosa. They :were quictly married in. Stocktoh, June 3, ‘leaving San Franciséo’ ¢n the following ay. by the steamship Ventura for Hono- {lulu under.the names of C. R. Gray and | wife. " Since arriving here they.have given ["their right- names and talk of remaining on-the islands for a vear. At present they lare staying at the Ingleside, but have | already made one sightseeing. ‘trip to { Mauoi. Mts. Bertolani is a tall and hand-. ome brunetté ‘and Is well known on the Pmlnr .Slope. e 2 PERQO AL ME\TIO\ Kahri-bf Napa is at the - J. | = vérmore is at the |- Los Angeles is at! \ 'is at Hill- of* tho Pnlam‘ | “F. C. Lask; an’attorney of Chico, | the Pala';f‘ A Lo | Dr. W. F. ch of Elmhurst is a guest at the Lick.. c . J. D. Sproule, an atsorney of Chico, is | Fat the Lick: ° | Bishop -Moreland of Sacramento-is at | J-the Occidental. . | A. F. Eaton,a mining man of San Jose, | S at the Grand.: W. Forsyt), a raisin grower "ot Fresno, | is at the Occidental. Former Senator C. B. Jillson of Napa is stopping at the Grand. Dr. W. 1. Seymour and family of Chi- cago are at the Occidental. ' George D. Kellogg, .4 fruit. grower o!» Newdcastle, is at the Lick. Rallroad Commissioner A. C. Irwin o!l Marysville is at the Lick." James' E. Wadham, a mercham of Ban ! Diego, is at the California. | V. Rugnole, a mining man of Sutter-| Creek, is registered at the Girand. G. C. Wrightsoii, a mining man of Bul- ly Hill, Shasta Countys, is at the Califor- nia. S Robert E. Cranston, onc of Sacramen- to's merchants, 1s a guest at the Califor- nia. Among the -latest arrivals at the Lick is H. C. Schroeder, Assessor of Nevada County. 5 F. M. Clough, who represents the Dia- mond Match Company’'s interests at Chico, is registered at the Palace. §. M. Damon, a member of the banking "firm of Bishop & Co. in Fonolulu, arrived dn Jyestesday's steamer and is registered at the Occidental. Willis W. Russell, head of a large man- uyfacturing firm of New York and who is interested in mining properties in North- ern California, is at the Palace. . ‘Manager Agler of the Southern Pacific Company, who has been inspecting the Sunset division of the’ road with Super- intendent Ingram of Los Angeles, re- turned yesterday. Alfred Lohmann, general agent of the somewhat #t| | ‘0dds during the closing-days of the extra f. iy announced that the: Governor would The Governor apparently seeks the advice | - | a week | more active duties to the young members | of the department | Paget fer at least a year. AGED TUTOR - RETIRES- FROM ACTIVE ‘WORK b S : EDUCATOR WHO HAS RE- TIRED FROM ACTIVE WORK | AT UNIVERSITY. | > |Prof essor Paget Is Ov;rcom= by licien V. Paget of the chafr of languages and litera- not be in his accus-- { place when the University its doors for the fall for hé has just been emeritus in the de- tome of Califdrnia open sémester in Al st appointed professor partment he has led for so many years. In fact, Professor Paget has not been the active head of the Romanie lan- guages department for the last year. a. ness having prevented him g in pursuits of any kind. now about cured, from engagi Of’ this iliness he is though he is still weak and unfit for the least labor. The infirmities of ald age. had their effect for Professor ) years of age and only Sat- hav too, Paget | ye: urday celebrated his last birthday. Fully realizing that he could never again plunge, into active affairs with his old-time vigor, Professor Paget recently - plied to President Wheeler to be re- Heved of the ious duties attendant upon the position of head of the depart- President Wheeler acquiesc w‘. m: whu!ely and - afterward ~ rec mended t Professor Paget be ap- T 1 professor emeritus, a recommen- dation that the Board of Regents unan- imously adopted in consideration of Pro- fessor Paget's long and faithful service. Now ke will need give only a few hours to the university, leaving the There will be no successor to Professor The work will go on under the direction of Professor A. F. Lange, dean of the department of letters, and in time a selection will be mades Professor Paget has beer head of the department of Romapic languages for sixteen years. The first few years after his attachment io the university he was | the only member of the department. It has grown rapidly, however, and ‘s now one of the largest. —_———— ' The firm of Howadlt, specialists in sub- marines, are making arrangements to re- float. the submarine boat constructed by Bauer in 1830, which was sent to the bot- tom by accident. — NEW ADV“TWI- ASTONISHING RESULTS Follow Each New Diséovery of Science. The great strides that medical science has made in the last few years is due to the germ theory. When the germ of a disease has been discovered the doctors have not been slow in finding a drug to kill it. In a few years it will be rare to find a bald-headed man or woman. The falling out of hair is due to a dandruff germ, and now it nas been discovered how to kill this germ. The remedy used is called Newbro's Herpicide. Its success has been marvelous. Not a failure has been so far reported. It is also a delight- ful hairdressing. free from oil or sticky substances. Try it and be convinced ul its actual merit. Sold by leading drug- gists. Send 10 cents in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of North German Lioyd Steamship Company in Australia and a son of the late direc- tor-general of the company, is due here | on the next steamer from the colonies. J. C. Adams, farmer Mayor of Phoenix, Ariz., proprietor of the Arlington Hotel of that town and owner of onme of the largest stock farms in the Territory, has been stopping at the Palace for several days. S. H. Babcock of Salt Lake, who re- cently resigned the position of assistant trafic manager of the Rlo Grande road, arrived in this city last evening, accom- panied by the members of his family, lnd registered at the Palace. He is on ‘way to the Santa Crua lou-tum, whi - he expects to spend several months, —_—— New Church Will Be Built. SACRAMENTO, June 30.—The West- minster Presbyterian Church Trustees have awarded a contract to a local firm to contsruct a new church of stone and brick at Thirteenth and K streets. The ;‘;’,w“ will cost in the neighborhood of eandie < CUTLE EVERY LAY WARRANTED TRUNK AND VALISES AT MANUFACTURER'S PRICES J. MARTY, 22 TURK ST. Factory 828 Howard St. W.' T. HESS, NOTARY PUSLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tenth ¥loor, la- \ouh‘c:u- Spreckels bldg. 983, Resldence, fll fornia st.. h-lu' N Residence Telephone J: Weak llen and Women Slot e R s et et

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