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} THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1903. 3 MAKED MEN 08 VIGTIMS [N DAYLIGHT Enter ILodging House| ard Hold Up Roomers at Pistol's Point. Segure Loot Valued at $1600, Then Leav/e Premises Unobserved. —_— FPolice Believe Burglars Are the Same ®zir Who Have Been Terroriz- ing City for Several Weeks. . irglars entered a lodging- ke 252 street during the ne d with drawn pls- | t iward Buckley and Ye tw dgers, to throw up the the robbers went s' clothes and took p g of ey possessed, $1600 1 word of warn- to utter a cry 3, the burgiars left & quietly as they had entered, ¥ L them & X ew we VALUA ELE JEWELRY TAKEN. alw vs door be- kley and ce to of the s of the d move 1 the ough their k a dia- 1d watch and sev the that no 2 either rance to s = at they had e from a small alley- when no one was re and entered Buckley and ad of went d the Martin. ves Wrenn and = hey worked on it all to find the cap- ctives ADVERTISEMENTS. RBREWSTER'S MILLIONS ] FOR SALE |In Book Form —AT=—= ALL ROOK STORES BUY IT-TO-DAY SHIRTS ARE THE BEST AT THE PRICE CLUETT, PEABODY & CO. MAKERS < Schilling’s Best is the fore- runner of great improvement in life and trade. At your grecer’s ; mencybach, CRIME WAS COMMITTED, THINKS THE ATTORNEY Santa Cruz County Official Will Ask for Special Grand Jury Session to Probe the Green Case Which Has Caused a Sensation in Watsonville — | i >ATSONVILLE, Sept trict Attorney B. K. Knight of Santa Cruz County an- nounced this afternoon that he would make a specjal piea to the Superior Court that the Grand J v of the county be called into session xt month to take up the investigation the death of Mrs. Elvira J. Scales- As a rule the Grand Jury meets of Gre but once a year, all the evidence he has gathered before them and leave it to their judgmeat whether an indictment should be issued agains Robert Green, e husband of th writer, whe un- timely taking off has created a suspicion of foul play in the minds of her numer- Knight will lay ous friends. While I have i gated the matter thoroughl: the District At 5 I hav ence to allow me to have a issued for the arrest of Green. HIs s ments to me are conflicting and. there are which lead me believe that a For instance, death her husband attempt to gain He tried to facts to crime has been committed £ Mrs Green's cessful ssion of her property. his wife to deed over a ranch she owned, but she refused. On another oc- casfon, where his wife had taken a mort- gage on some property, ae had his name inserted as mortgagee and when she dis- | covered it Mrs. Green had the name stricken out and her own substituted. INQUEST MERELY FORMAL. All these facts and many more which have been gathered by Sherift H. V. Trafton and Chief of Police Rassetce of Watsonville will be turned over to the | Grand Jury. The inquest over the body of Mrs. Green was merely a formal one. I regret that 1 was not notifled in time that I might have been present and in- errogated the witnesses. The examina- tion of Green last Saturday night was a searching one and the testimony taken down by Court Reporter Wililamson will be transcribed and used at the hearing.” There is some talk in this section of ex- huming the body of Mrs. Green and hold- Ing an autopsy the remains may be done in order to ascertain wheth- er a drug was used on the alleged victim. A great deal of discussion is being heard around W: Some of the wise men cannc how Green es- caped d asphyxiat Itis a fact that Green occupied the same room with his wife and that he slept on the side of the bed nearest the adjoining room where the gas jet was. Dr. Briggs ounced that Mrs. Green had been ad half an hour when he was called in and Green recovered very quickly and | was around the next day consulting a lawyer to learn whether he should make | an immediate application to be appointed administrator of his wife's estate. These facts and the further fact that Mrs. Laura La Schells, his housekeeper, re- turned to the house immediately on tac death of Mrs. Green make it look some- what mysterious. An effort will be made to make Mrs. La Schells tell what she knows of the case. 1t is thought that if she could be made to talk she might divuige some interest- ing things. GREEN’S STATEMENT DENIED. Green states that the gas was in the house but three months and his wife turned it out and lighted it at different times. Mrs. C. P. Terwilliger stated to- day that Mrs. Green Lever about the gas. She says the deceased would always call her iu to light it and to turn it down low. Mrs: La Schells strenuously denies that she was ordered out of the house by Mrs. Green and vet the Sheriff has securca a | witness who will testify that she was and that during her absence Mrs. La Schells corresponded with Green through the agency of a Mrs. Hilborn, who lived in the house. These letiers were sent in an envelope addressed to Mrs. - Hilborn and were rurned over to Green. The Sheriff is now trying to locate Mrs. Hil- born. This same witness will testify that she would not allow Mrs. La Schells to stay in the house, but Mrs. Green was very charitably inclined and did not want to turn her out of doors. She then took Mrs. La Schells to her side of the house and allowed her to use an adjoining apartment. This witness will also testify that she called Mrs. Green's attention to the actions of Mrs. La Schells and Mrs. Green replied, “It takes me long to tumble,” and the witness replied, “Then | it is about time you were tumbling, Mrs. Green.” @il O JURY WILL BE SHOWN REVOLVER WITH NOTCHES Interesting We;pt;n- to Appear in Trial of a Constable’s Slayer. SAN DIEGO, Sept. 8.—The trial of Se. bastian Velarde for the killing of Consta- ble Peter Burke near Yuma several months ago was begun in the Superfor Court to-day. A jury has not yet been secured. Eix witnesses who had been summoned failed to appear and a bench warrant was issued for their arrest and given to the Sheriff, who has gone to Pi- cacho to serve them. Attorney Capps for the defense has the revolver of Burke and will endeavor to show that six notches on its handle !n- dicate that many lives were taken by its e o £—Dis; | This | bothered/ o but the demand of the | residents of this county that immediate | eps be L has d the District At- torney to ten action. When the Grand Jury meets Mr. | | Jority of the votes, - WOMAN WHO IS HOUSEKEEP- ER FOR ROBERT GREEN IN WATSONVILLE. THIEVES STEAL PRECIOUS PAPERS appear From Bakers- fi=ld Vault. BAKERSFIELD, Sept. 8—When City Clerk Lightner returned from a two weeks' absence thieves had entered the vault in which are kept the city records and had stolen the ballots and election | papers upon which hinged the result of the contest now pending between E. P. Davis and Bert M. Tibbet for the office of City Marshal. the principal contestants for the office of City Marshal were E. P. Davis and the late T. J. Packard. The returns showed that Packard was elected #by five votes | driving rock tunnels, etc., against the ac- | and the certificate of election was given | nim. Before he could qualify he was killed in the battle with Outlaw McKinney and the City Trustees apointed Tibbet to fill the vacancy. Davis, with permission of the Attorney General, began quo warranto proceedings to establish his right to the office and the matter is now pending in the Superior Court. Everything depended on the recount of the ballots. If Packard received a ma- then Davls was out of the race and the right of Tibbet to the office would have been established, but if Davis recelved a majority the appoint- ment of Tibbet would be proven illegal. The affair has created a sensation here. It is presumed that some one entered the room in the day time, as the doors of the vault were left open to give the city of- ficlals access to the records. The Board of Trustees this evening re- ceived a petition asking for the reappoint- ment of City Marshal Tibbet. A sensation- al scene ensued. The petition was signed by five citizens, and the attorney for the Marshal explained that it was pre- sented on account of doubts arising as to the regularity of his former appoint- ment, the same having been made a few | hours before the late Marshal Packard's term expired. . v Former State Senator 8. C. Smith, who represents the contestant, E, P. Davis, in the case now pending, in a speech de- nounced the petition and attacked the mo- tives of Marshal Tibbet for presenting it at this time. He declared it to be a use- less proceeding, intended simply to em- barrass litigation. Following immediate- ly the theft of the ballots which it was sought to have recounted, he said it was simply an outrage. If any appointment were to be made it should not be done until the Marshal had cleared himself from the imputation which in the mind of the people rested on him. After a long wrangle the board lald the matter over until next Monday evening. S e FAIR WOMEN STUDENTS WILL TALK OF MILLINERY Juniors at Stanford Decide a Dis- tinctive Style of Headgear Is Necessary. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Sept. 8— The women students of the class of 1905 met this afternoon to discusé the propo- sition of adopting a hat symbolic of their dignity _as junior girls. - The. following young ladies were appointed a committee to investigate the bonnet question and report to the class on Monday next: Miss Edna M. Reeve of Ukiah, Miss Helen M. Salisbury of Los Angeles, and Miss Ger- trude E. Stroud of Alhambra. A lively discussion of millinery is an- ticipated next week, as there seems to be no definite idea of just what will prove representative, ———————— Reduced rates on household goods to & fro the East & South. Bekin's, 11 Montgomery. * AN PO 5 WON BY OPERKTORS Umpire Wright Files Findings in Coal Strike Cases. | Concades Employers’ Right to Discharge Men at | Will. i AL | Holds That Former Employes Should Be Given Preference in Recruiting Mine Forces. PO SCRANTON, Pa., Sept. 8.—Carroll D. | Wright, the umpire to whom was referred the five disputes between the operators and miners’ representatives on the board of concilfation appointed under the pro- ! vislons of the anthracite mine strike com- mission, filed his findings to-day with T. | D Nicholls, secretary of the board. In BEAVERS IS WEARY OF HIDING dealing with the question of the em- ployers’ right to discharge men for any | cause other than of connection with a labor unjon, Umpire Wright agrees wholly with the contention of the opera- | tors’ representatives and declares that the right of an employer to discharge with- out giving the cause of the discharge is sustained by the award of the commis- sion. He says that the Lehigh Coal and Nav- igation Company and Coxe Bros. & Co. should take back old men instead of put- 4ing on new men in all cases where the {old men are competent and have not i been convicted or not awalting trial for crime committed during the strike. The ! umpire’s findings cover twenty-five pages of typewriting. Regarding the case as a whole, he say { The opiaion is rendered that all the men employed by Coxe Bros. & Co.. Incorporated, at the time of the strike in 1902, except those who have been convicted of crime during the strike or who are £till under arrest or to whom employment cannot be given cn account of new machinery or who ars ipcompetent ought to be preferred to new men in giving out work { when they apply thercfor. | OPPOSES DISCRIMINATION. | tlon and blacklisting of employes in the | Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, { who were reinstated at the end of the been shown that the men were diserimi- { bership in the union, but is of the opin- | fon that discrimination existed against a small number of men, and makes tkis | statement: { I am clearly of the opinion, as In the case | of Coxe Bros, & Co., that the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Comp to all thelr old men—those employed vrior to e strike—who have not been convicted of crime committed now under arrest awaiting trial or are not in- competent or not guilty of misdemeanor to render thefr employment undesirable. | terms of the submiszlon and the language of the award under It make this conclusion in- evitable. | pire says: There can be mo doubt that a man has a right to quit the service of his employer when- ever he sees fit, with or without giving any cause, provided' he gives proper notice, and ploy and discharge men In accordance with the | conditions of his industry; that he is not Regarding the complaint of discrimina- | strike, the umpire decides that it has not | ¢ ought to give preference | during the strike or are not | The | Leading up to the final award, the um- | | that the employer has a perfect right to em- | Election Documents Dis- | | obliged to glve any cause for discharge, but ! “ o FORMER OFFICIAL OF POST- 1 OFFICE DEPARTMENT WHO 1 WILL FACE TRIAL. L+ ] ; Former > Postal | Surrenders to the ’ Authorities. ety EW YORK, Sept. 8.—George W. | Beavers, former head of Lhe | Salary and Allowance [ of the Postoffice Department In | Washingtoy, surrendered him- self in the office of United States Com- and gave before Septem- { missioner ‘Hitchcock to-day $5000 bonds for his appearance | Commissioner Hitchcock on | ber 1 ! WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—After deliber- ating several wecks over a mass of docu- | ments submitted by the postoffice inspec- tors, the Federal Grand Jury in this city returned seven Indictments in postal cases involving six different persons. All !lic record, and both the officials of the ! District Attorney’'s office gnd of the Post- office Departifient refused to discuss the | mames or details of the inZictments until the persons indicted shall have been ar-| | vested. It is expected that arrests will occur to-morrow morning and that the Postoffice Department will have some an- nouncement to make during the fore- | noon. | The Grand Jury's action probably | marks the beginning of the end of the in- | vestigations that have been made since the middle of last March. Voluminous evidence had been laid before the Grand | Jury as a resu't of the inquiry, and while | the present report of the jury disposes of | most of the cases there vet remain sev- eral cases to be passed upon. latter are disposed of, according to Post- master General Pavne, the investigation, | s0 far as the work in Washington is con- cerned, will be at an end for all practical that he should, as in the reverse case,’ glve | purposes. Several of the persons indicted proper notice. o # % | P"Tic Teht to discharge must, therefore, be t0-day live outside of Washington. They | sustained. Any other view of the case would result in compelling men to work for an em- | ployer when they did not wish to, and thus { enslave them, when, on the other hand, it | would compel employers to’employ men whether | they had work for them or not, and whether the men were incompetent or not, and would thus stagnate business and work to the Injury of all other employes. SPIRIT OF JUSTICE NEEDED. All discharges, as all quittals, should be | made on a reasonable basis. The employer and | employe should treat each other with justice | preserve veace. Attempts in all such cases to adjust desire to made and a should be | affected and a superintendent and such at- | tempt was not made In this case. | Regarding the complaint of John Bowin and Richard Roderick, contractors for tion of thelr emploves under the award | of the anthracite coal strike commission, the employes having gone on strike, de- manding a 10 per cent advance in wages ! granted to contract miners, the umpire decides that ‘‘contractors driving rock | work, not being parties to the submis- | sion, nor having agreed to abide by the | awards of the anthracite coal strike com- | mission, are not parties under the award {and have no standing before the board of conciliation. | ——— | PRELATE’S ADVICE TO UNIONS. | i | Archbishop Ireland Speaks on In- dustrial Conditions. ST. PAUL, Sept. 7.—The principal | speaker at the Labor day picnic here yes- terday was Archbishop Ireland. He spoke in part as follows: A country without capital Is impoverished. Labor should invite it into use; never frighten | it away by making it unsafe or depriving it of reasonable profits, On the other hand, capi- ! tal must respect the manhood of the wage earner and allow him, as far as it can without | loss to itself, a fair wage. Extravagant and needless expenditures by capitalists do harm in irritating the poor and should be avolded. A generous usc of capital for the publle good, Whether in purely beneficent or industrial en- terprises, does much to soften the asperities of opposition. We should not be afraid of capital, in what- ever form it comes, whether in large personal accumulation or in trusts or in syndicates. Names are bugaboos that should not frighte As a matter of fact, without large aggres: tlons of capital great enterprises are not pos- sible, and the country Is not developed. It fs time enough to hold the hand against trusts and syndicates when they do harm. If they are known to do harm the country will attend to them. If they do mo harm and, on, the contrary, do good, they should be weicomed. The wage-earncr has rights—his right to a living wage, his right to reasonable hours, his right to more than even a living wage when circumstances and success warrant it. Wage- eamers have a_right to combine and form trusts and syndicates and call them labor unfons, Labor guilds were common In the | middle ages and did good. Labor unions have given wage-earners the consclousnees to their rights and have done much to obtain higher wages and shorter hours. But labor unions must_bo on thelr guard against serious evils threatening them. They cannot be tolerated it they Interfere with the personal Ifberty of non- unfon men -who have a right to work in or outside unions as they please. Public opinion and public law will and must protect this lib- erty. pose our opinions on others by force. What right have I to fmpose my religlous beliet by force? What right have labor unions to fmi. pese thelr opinions by force? 1t i* wrong in labor unions to limit the out- put of work on the part of members, The members themselves are injured: they are re- duced to a dead level of inferlority. They are allowed no opportunity of rising fo a higher or better position. Soclety Is injured as it Is injured by cverything that prevents its mem- bers from putting out their talent to best ad- vantage. Benefit Ball for Kramer. A grand benefit ball will be tendered to ‘Willlam D. Kramer under the auspices of the Palo Alto Club at Temple Hall, 117 Turk street, on Wednesday evening, Sep- tember 16. Excellent n.usic will be fur- nished and the price of admission will be 25 cents, ladies free. i 1] | tunnels, sinking shafts and other similar | It were soctal chaos If we were to im- | { will be arrested as soon as bench war- | rants can be served. | Two other important events occurred | to-day in the postal inquiry. Leopold | Stern, the Baltimore contractor, who left | Baltimore before he could be arrested on |an indictment returned on July 31 last, | was located in Toronto, and the long de- layed surrender of George W. Beavers, the former head of the Salary and Allow- | ance Division, to the New York authori- [ ties took place. The postal officials have been search- | In April last at the municipal election | the matter between the emnloye or employes | ing for Stern ever since he disappeared | | from Baltimore, and finally received word | from the Canadian authorities that he | was in Toronto. They expressed much | lem of extradition that now confronts the | Government_and the possibility of his | making good his escape, now that the in- formation has become public in advance | of the readiness of the authorities to ef- fect his arrest. Beavers' arrest caused no surprise, for the Government all along has kept advised of his whereabouts. TORONTO, Ont., Sept. S.—Leopold Stern refused to be seen when a reporter | called at his home to-day. He referred | all callers to his attorney. Stern's law- vers said that their client was ready to appear before an extradition judge and prove his innocence, which is fnterpreted as a declaration that extradition proceed- ings will be fought to the end. He would [ not leave the city, the attorneys said, |and if an extradition warrant were se- | cured Stern would at once leave for | Washington. [J ® FIRMERS UNITE FOh PROTECTON CHICAGO, Sept. 8.—Co-operation back- ed by $100,000,000 capital is the plan pro- posed by a joint meeting of farmers and their representatives by which the pro- ducers of the country are to protect their interests. An association having this as its basic principle is in process of organ- ization here. Farmers and representatives from pro- ducers’ assoclations in nine States are in conference. Three societies are to be amalgamated, the foundation for a mons- ter exchange by which the producers of the country expect to control the mar- kets, build elevators, establish packing houses, organize banks, maintain schools and improve the highways. These asso- ciations are the Producers’ and Consum- ers' Union of Tennessee and of New York, with 400,000 members: the American So- ciety of Equity of North America, with €0,000 members, and the Farmers’ Nationat Co-operative Exchange Company, with a membership of 20.000. The day was devoted to the discussion of plans. It was proposed that the new association should be incorporated for $100,000,000. - The representatives of American Society of Equity sought te have its name and declaration of princi- ples adopted, but the convention tabled the report to-night and entered into a general discussion of plans. The commit- tee will resume work to-morrow with a view to reaching some practical conclu- sion on which the new association can be launched. The widening and deepening of the Erie canal to allow the passage of larger grain boats will be taken up before final ad- Journment. Official Division | 1 : vere kept off the pub- ' nated against on account of, their mem. | °f the indictments were kep) d When the | surprise at the premature publication of | his whereabouts, on account of the prob- | the ! NBANOON HOPE " FOR THE CAWA Isthmus Residents R gard Treaty as Past Resuscitation. Question Colombia’s Sinca in Dealing With This Government. Special Cable to " The Herald. Copyright, 1903, by the Herald Publishing Company. PANAMA, Colombla, Sept. §.—Kccord- ing to the latest reports received from Bogota the Hay-Herran canal treaty is now generally regarded in the capital as { “dead and buried,” and it is dec'ared the United States might as well turn seriously to negotiations with Nicaragua. Here on the isthmus people have lost all hope of getting just treatment from | the national Government. It is felt that the only chance of preventing the total | ruin of the isthmus depends entirely upon the efforts of the Isthmians to save them- | selves in the near future. | Senator Obaldta, the newly appointed Governor of Panama, who left Bogota on | September 3 with the new military com- | mander, is due here about Sentember 16. | It Is reported that he is bringinz a canal | plan which will be satisfactory to all con- ; cerned. This, “how=ver, is belizved to be { merely a promise intended to pacify for | the time the exasperated feelings of the { isthmlans whil2 the Bogota Government | gains the opportunity to take precau- | tionary measures against trouble in Pan- | ama. { That the revival of the canal treaty | with Colombia under the cireumstances, in any shape or manner, is materially impossible is the firm and general con- viction of the {sthmians. BOGOTA, Saturday, Sept. 5.—The bill which Congress Is now discussing, author- izing President Marrocuin to megotiate a | new Panama canal treaty with the United | States, conta the following stipula- tions: The perpetual use of the canal zone is ed, provided that at the expiration of 100 years the United Stat all pay during the succeed- ing 100 years 23 per cent more premium and rental than for the preceding term, the pre- mium beginning at %&’Iklvl and the rental at £400,000, The mixed tribuna in’ the canal zone shall try suits between forelgners or between Colom- biars and forefgners i The police and sanitary measures shall be { practicaliy in charge of the Un: ates. | Twenty million dollars is fixed as the price | of the concession, beside the rental (sum?) of | $10,000,600 ‘payabie by the canal company in consideration lombla’s approval of the | trarsfer of shares. The railrcad shall in sixty-four years reve-t | to Colombia, btt the United States may buy it | under a valuation. % A term shall be fixed within which the canal must be begun and finished. The contract shall provide for a means to set- tle differences hich may arise between the governments durinz the consiruction and exe- cution of the contract. | — e — MELBOURNE, Victoria, Sept. 8.—The G | ernor, Sir_George Clarke. at the opening of the State Parliament of Victorla to-day, said that the deficit of $3,000,000 had been convertcd into a substantial surplus and added that the good rainfall justified the hopes of a bounti- | ful Barvest. | BERLIN, Sept. 8.—The Government will in- | introduce In the next Reichstag a bill designed to promote temperance. Saloon-keepers will be required to sell non-intoxicants, such as lem- onade, milk, coffee and tea, and cold fooc Credit is forbidden. | SAN DIEGO, Sept. 8.—Word was received ! from Pala late to-night that forty Indians | who were evicted trom the San Fellpe ranch have arrived at Pala, where they will ‘dwell | with the Warner Ranch Indians. { DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. HOW TO FIND OUT. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let i stand twenty-four hours; a sediment or settling indicates an un- healthy condition of the kidneys; if ft stains the linen It is evidence of kidney trouble; too freqr 'nt desire to pass it, or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. WHAT TO DO. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, the great kidney and bladder rem- edy, fulfills every wish In curing rheuma- tism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold wa- ter and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne- cessity of I ~ing compelled to go often dur- ing the day. and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the ex- traordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful crres of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in ffty- cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle of Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy. and a book that tells all about It, both sent absolutely free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing be sure to mention that you read this generous offer in The San Francisco Daily Call. Don’'t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. INFLCT HEAN LOSSES ON FOE Handful of Soldiers De- feat Small Army of Insurgents. PARIS, Sept. S.—Dispatches from Oran, Algeria. state that the recent defeat of the insurgents by a French force near Almoungar, in which the French lost sixty-seven killed ard forty-seven wound- ed, was one of the most brilliant feats of the French army in Algeria. It appears that the insurgents inter- cepted a convoy, the escort of which, consisting of 120 men, resisted the at- tack of between 3000 and 4000 Moors for eight hours. The little French force suf- fered greatly from thirst, but after inflict- ing heavy losses on the assallants, suc- ceeded in repulsing them. The French | relieving force found the Moors’ line of tered for a mile with dead Lieutenant Satcenhauser, who is a Dane, and a sergeant have since died of their wounds. The French dead, excepting General Vauchez, were buried on the scene of the fight General O’Connor, at the head of a bat- talion of the forelgn legion, has started on a_punitive expedition and the entire for- eign legion has been ordered to hold itself in readiness for active service. —e—————— Arrested for Insulting the Emperor. HALLE, Prussia, Sept. 8.—Three men and two women have been arrested here, charged with having insulted Emperor Willlam. The precise nature of their of- fense has not been disclosed. retreat and wounded. | { | Our Stores Close To-day to commemorate the fifty-third anniver- sary of the admis- sion of California into the Union. 740 Market St. and Cor. Powell and Eddy