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2 24JLYJEC0RD^mi0N ISSUED BY THE SACRAMENTO PUBLISHIH& COMPANI Offlog, Third Street^botween J and K. THE DAILY RECORD-UNION fFor one year _ •« nn ur«ix months " " *? rX or ihr«e months. . . " ? 50 <v™tCrll *rB B? rTed by <»«ie™ aTFirrEKM V w7\E* r Woek' In all interior cities and .'^P* V*J* T <*" 1* »>ad of the principal i enocllc*l Dealers, Newgnien and Ageuls. THE WEEKLY UXIOX 3« the cheapest and most desirable Home j • wsaud Literary Journal published on the 1 aclfle Coast. The Wihii Union per year....™ $1 50 Tj'a^rThe^ P«^l'<»tion» are nnt either by jlail or txprpss to agent* or single sub u k^ a Weiits Ch*rge ''Prepaid" All 1>o*lmas* [o J^? best advertising medium! on the Pacilic Entered at the Postofflce at Sacramento aa ('■ r.nd-class matter. Record-Union—Telephone Ko. 48. For Editorial Rooms, ring oue belL For Bu«lneti Oflioe. rW turee beUa, Special Agencies. This paper Is for gale at the following places: li. P. Fisher's, room 21, Merchants' Exchange, California street; the principal News Standi and Hotels, and at the Market^treet Ferry, Han Fran<-isco. Los AM.iELKS.—Eclectic Book Store, corner Becond and Main strec-U. San Dikgo —Emmal <fc Co., 860 Firth street. Coronado.—Hopkins & Cox. Coronado Hotel. Santa Barbara.—Hasslnger's News Depot. Fkksso.—C. T. Ctarley, 1111J street. Santa Cruz.—Cooper Bros. News Depot. 4&~ Also, for tale on all Truing leaving and Miming into Sacramento. Eastern Rnslness Offices. 4 8 Tribune Building, New York. 509 "The Hookery," Chicago. ln» Betlcwltn. sole agent foreign advertls- The Rjecord-Unioh and Weekly Union are the only papers on the Coast, outside of iVm Francisco, that re ceive the full Associated JPress Dis patches from all parts of the world. Out mde of San Francisco, they have no com petitors, either in influence or home and general circulation throughout the State. Weather Forecast. Official forecast for the twenty-four hours ending at midnight March 3d—Northern California—Fair weather; slightly warmer; variable wimls. THE CAMINETTI BILL-ACTION. Now that the Caminetti hydraulic mm ing and river reclamation bill has been nlgned by the President, aiid thus be come a law, tho question of speedy action under it becomes prominent. From the past experiences of our peo ple with Federal departments there would be warrant for tn% fear that nothing will be done for a year or two—that tiie War Department and other oflicials will tako ten or twelve months to think over the matter, and ten or twelve more to uct upon it. What the friends of the rivers and of mining should join hands In doing now is in prodding the Federal departments to action. There would seem to be no rea son why the Engineering Commission should not be named in a week or two, . u-it as well as a year hence. Conceding tl at custom and the gray of age havo ap parently hallowed the convention which makes (iovernment departments move wlowly, this case is an exception: one in *\ hich there should be prompt action, be cause a great commerce is waiting: be cause cities and towns on river stretches are waiting: because settlement, develop ment, prosperity and the needs of an in dustrial people demand speedy action, and which at the best will stretch over a weary length of time. One important thing the valleys and the noiintains ought at once to petition the :.,•!"'intmu doparttuent upon—and that is the location of the headquarters of the Engineering Commission. That body t hould be close to its work, it ought to be removed from the atmosphere of Sau .'"rancisco, into which it will go unless the War Department directs otherwise. The Commission ought to be open to testi mony by the people in certain cases, and doubtless will be. It would seem to be a kind of tribunal that is to ascertain tacts not all of which are of record, or are sensible to vision, liut whether the Com :nission is to be such a body or not, is ought to sit either in Sacramento or .Marysville, certainly not iv Sau Fran cisco, arins'length away irom the problem it is to handle, and in an atmosphere that is not notable for its friendliness to oither valley or mountain, except to the extern of gain the metropolis can make out of each. It the Commission is seated here or in Marysville it will be close to iv work, al ways an advantage; near to the scene of its examinations, always promotive of rapidity; it will be within easy reach of the people of mining and of river sections, and will have besides, at its easy com mand, all the data accumulated duriug •several years by the State Engineering .Department relative to past river condi tions. The fitness of things in all ways points to the wisdom of locating the head quarten of the new engiueering board close to the scene of its labors. A GOOD BILL IF MODIFIED. senate Bill No. 4JS provides that proprietors of places of public amuae uient or entertainment, such as theaters. tmon In ill w. race courses, museums and tlie like, shall not refuse admission to auy persons who present a ticket of admission and who are not under the influence of liquor or guilty of boisterous conduct. The bill is one that, with moJldcatious, should pass. As it stands it is error. Inder the bill notorious women, the low est of the demi-monde, could purchase tickets to an opera or dramatic per formance, and", despite the protests of the management, seat themselves among de cent women, and Haunt their shame in the faces of honest wives and virtuous daughters. Surely the friends of the measure should not wish such a state of things. So, too, take swimming baths and en tertainments to which clearly only the de cent are expected to come, bazars and society fairs, for which tickets are sold and public patronage solicited, no one will say that the roughs, toughs, Barbary Coast rounders and fallen women and denizens of helltowu should not be ex- ' eluded. But under this bill they could not be kept out if they purchased a ticket by hook or by crook. So, too, if a public ball is given for an admission fe.j and to which the public is invited no one will exceut to the man- i agers excluding those whom they and the j patrons they expect to attend deem dis- ! reputable characters; what such are will differ in different places and under differ- \ ing circumstances. 1 here are cities in the j Inion where the notorious gambler is re- I fused admission to a public bazar or fair as quickly as is the courtesan. There are I public entertainments in California where either is welcome, and others where one is and the other is not, and still others where neither need apply. There are i public entertainments where the color line is drawn and others where it is not I and by commou consent there is no pro test entered. It would seem to be no wrong to concede to a management j the right to proscribe the terms of admis- I sion when the character of the ticket holder is deemed essential by the manage ment to the success of the business. The bill we believe grows out of the fact that two reporters were not louu ago excluded !ro:n a race track simply be cause they had exercised their right to criticise in the papers they represented alleged dishonest methods of the man agement of the course. That exclusion was outrageous; it was in the nature of the threat of private censorship. The bill will be right, and it ought to pass, and is really needed, with the pro viso attached that the management of any place of amusement or entertainment may prescribe rules, and if so, must post them conspicuously, by which the man agement reserves to itself the right to ex pel or refuse admission to any persons for reasons set forth in the regulations. Hut theso reasons should run only to the tituess of the applicant in the matter of cleanliness of person, decency of charac ter, and so on. IndeeU, so long as the rules of a place of entertainment are gen eral in their application and are not per sonal, and are made public and notori ous, we do not see why the management should not be protected in the right to prescribe what people it invites to and what it excludes Irom its entertainment. That right is now conceded, and all man agers by common consent exercise it. Nevertheless, a bill to prevent the abuse of that right, or its exercise for merely personal and unworthy ends, and in vio- i latiou of the rights of others—and that is really the purpose of the Senate bill should be commcuded and put upon the statute book, to set the questions in volved at rest, and to prevent such in justice as that in the special case referred to. IN A NUTSHELL. We believe that the New York Com mercial Advertiser has put the best of reasons for Hawaiian annexation into a nutshell of expression when it says: v, "iiuM a people proves itself unable to inuin ta.n :i Btable government, i: is t lie province of a Injjlii r civilization u> step in and supply Uie need. Tue Hawau&nsare to be treated kindly nrmly as children. The lime has paased for seriously regarding them as competent to govern ihenui Ivei or to tell others how to govern them. President Harrison baa more ,■>,- i. taken bis counsel from superior, trust worthy Anglo-Saxons. Then, his ilulycl'ar he ceased to ulk, mid acted. The Anglo- Saxons are the nation-builders of the world To lavish sympathy on the poor, dying con tingent uf aii aboriginal race la permissible Out to prate 01 the ••justice" of temporizing with them, when decisive action is culled fir Is to forget the history of nations In all times under the sjrim but beneficent law which con fers on iii^hiy civilized States the prerogative o; government. That is well said —concisely and strongly said. When Princess Kaiulani tells us of "her people" and the necessity aud just ness of consulting the "pure Hawaiians" in this matter, she touches the quick. She is not herself a pure Hawaiian, but a half-breed. The intellectual capacity aud physical comliuess she has comes from her educational contact with and half descent from Anglo-Saxons. Her "pure Hawaiians" are confessedly incapable of self-government; the men who have he come Hawaiians by adoption and years of devotion to Hawaiian interests are of Anglo-Saxon descent iv the maiu. They represent advancement, progress and strength; the pure Hawaiian represents decay, retrogression and weakness. There is, after all, more of sentiment than of politics in this whole matter; for an nexation is in harmony with the pro gressive, enlightening, uplifting senti ment of the age; "pure" Hawaiianism is the reverse of these. THE PAROLE BILL. The Assembly yesterday refused pas sage to the donate substitute) Kill Xo. 137, establishing a parole system lor con victs. The Senate passed the original bill, which was wise action. A motion to reconsider has been made in the As sembly. It ought to prevail. . The bill proposes nothing new. The system has been tried and has proved economic aud in all ways successful. The details of the operation of the system have been repeatedly set forth in these columns, aud citation of proofs of its beueiicent character made in great num ber. It has the approval of all advanced penologists, and, as a reformatory meas ure, we Relieve that it stands head aud I shoulders above any. The Assembly ought to prove equal to thorough comprehension of the worth and economic character of the parole sys tem. We are perfectly well aware that there are some related to prisons in Cali fornia who are opposed to the system, but their opinions are overborne by the judgment of scores of experienced penol ogists who have had opportunity to study the practical working of parole systems, and who speak, by the card. California can well afford to try the experiment the bill proposes; it can do no manner of harm to give it a trial. The weakly assaults that are made upon Mr. Steinman, Republican nom inee for Mayor, all come from one direc tion, aud all hint at dishonest and un worthy motives in the candidacy of Mr. Steinman. If nothing else this should elect him. A man who has lived a third of a century, boy and adult, in a com munity and borne himself squarely, up rightly and dealt honestly and openly SACRAMENTO DAILY RECORD-Tjxio^ , FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1893.-EIGIIT PAGES. "with all men, ■wronged none and been unjust to none, must be assumed to have builded a character worth having. But the shafts of malice are always aimed ut a shining mark. Mr. Steinman's char acter is too well grounded for anyone to believe for a moment that he would be untrue to any official trust. The whole trouble with the vulgar opposition, for which Mr. Weil is so unfortunate as to stand, is that it fears business ability, courage, decision of character and energy in the Mayor's oliice. It is non-pro gressiye opposition that pulls against the Republican nominee. I nablo to put a tiuger upon a blemish in Mr. Steinman's declaration of city needs or a weak point in his announced policy Of administra tion; unable to assail his character or blacken his reputation, it is seeking to put him upon the defensive, and by in nuendo and meanly suggested suspicion create the imuressiou that li. U. Siein mau will prove uulaithful to a trust, be tray the people and promote uneconomic government. Ii won't win. Such as saults have uo effect ainous thinking peo ple; the source from which they spring are odorous of political short-hair dump haaps. The chief regret is that John Weil should be associated with a contingent that descends to such means to accom plish political ends. Oakland papers express the opinion that under the puriiy of elections bill, now a law, political committees are not required to name nuance committees re quired by the law for the spring elections, because the bill did not become a law until after the political committees or conventions had nominated. That is by no means settled. The law does not say when the finance committee shall be named and certified to the County Clerk. The presumption is that it must be mimed in time to receive the money candidates propose to contribute to it; or that it must be named at the time candi dates are nominated, but certainly some time before election. Since the nomina tions "were made beloro the bill become a law, it would seem to be the proper thing to do to name the finance com mittees at once. Clearly a committee is commanded, and clearly, too, it becomes a duty to name it the moment the bill became a law. Oakland holds an election on the 13th inst., Sacramento on the 14th inst.; the law applies to both elections; candidates must lflo reports under it after the ele>- tiojis; they must therein set forth all tho permissible outlays made. This they cannot do properly unless the finance committees are named. We repeat, tho wise thing to do is for each party to cer tify to the clerk the names of its finance committee at once. Such action can do no harm at least, and will manifest a dis position to obey the spirit of the new law. The Yosemite wagon-road bill, the unwisdom and dangers of which we have pointed out, has made the trip nearly complete to the statute book, it will be regretablo if it becomes a law. Besides what has been advanced against it it is worthy of note that it is ill-guarded so far as the State is concerned. The whole matter is committed to the Super visors of a county, and what they order and accept "goes," and the Slate Treasury must respond. There is no requirement as to what the road shall be, how it is to be constructed or protected or cared for. It is simply provided that the Supervis ors of Mariposa shall build a wagon-road aud the State shall pay for it. Whatever the Supervisors choose to accept as a road must be paid lor by the State. We sub mit that this is very loose legislation. NOTE AND COMMENT. J. M. Rench has sold his interest In tlie Daily Citlifoniian, published at JJakers iic;kl, Kern County, to the Kern Publish ing Company, John Isaac, manager. Mr. Kench has made tho Californian an ex cellent paper and ho introduces his suc cessor as a man fully competent to keep up its character. "The Best Representative." [From the nroville Daily Mercury.] The Hkcoko-Ujjion has passed another milestone on iv career and is just as stanch and trustworthy as of yore. The Recobd-TJnion is tlie best representative on the coast of a clean, conservative newspaper. "I'vk tried all sorts of blood-purifiers," said an old lady to a "cutter." and you can't persuade mo that any other Sarsa pariila is as <jood as Ayers." There's where she had him. Sho knew that Ayers was the best—and so did he, but it paid him better to s-ell a cheaper brand. special iloticca. FAST TIME TO THE EAST.-The Atlantic »md I'ucifK; Kuilroad Fe route) is now twelve hours shorter u> Kiin.-uK cay and bt, Louis, aud twenty-lour hums snorter to Chi cago than formerly, Pullman 'Jouri:>i Sleep ing Cars to Chicago r\ day without change. Personally conducted excursions every TutisUuy, with tuurist car to ijuaio.i. UE< UuK W. RAILTON, Agent, 1004 Fourtb street, Sacramento. M\\ !•' MK.S. WINSLOWB "SOOTHING SYRUP, has been iv u.-,e over nfly years by millions of mothers lur their cnildreu while teething, with pericct success. It soothes tho cuila, soltenh the gums, allays pain, cures wind colic, regulate* tlie bowels, and is me best remedy for diurrhcea, whether arising from teething or other causes. For sale by druggists lv j evtry part vi tlie world. Be sure mm u»ic lor i Mrs. Wiusiow's Soothing Syrup. Twenty-live | cents a bottle. M\\F FAINLESS EXTRACTION OF TEETH by use of local anestrietic DR. WELL>ON, Den tist. Elf nth and J street*. £tent gVMici-tiacmeutflr. CARD OF THANKS.—WE DESIRE TO e.xpi'esß our ttmnks and gratitude to our niHii}' Mends for kind-deeds and sympathy shown us during tho long Illness ot our be lov.-d husband and father, I lie Inle .JAMES !, WHITE. Especially, wi- d.-sire to lliank the members of the Grand Army, and also the Y. M. I. MRS. J. B. WHITE A.ND FAMILY. It COSBY & ROTHER, Importers and Dealers in WINES. LIQUORS AND CIGARS. 1008 Second Street. Arcade Building, between J and X, Sacramento. I Sole agents lor the Pacific Coast of the Cele brated Old Jordan Kentucky Whisky, For Sale in cnaflues to silt to tie Trade. STATE HOUSE HOTEL, /-IORXER TENTH AND X STREETS, I \.i Hacramento. Board and room. $1 2:> to Is 2 p.-r day. Meals, 85 cents. Accommoda tions first-class. Free bus to und :r>m hotel. W. J. ELDEK, Manager, i i'Mie *3roe. & ©cr. I) «MMill'hbtok&nhr tf attraction. There arc many tempting values to be loiintl wm the lerait lines. Six Specials for TO-MORROW. FIRST. One lot of Gents' British Half Hose, regular made, finished seams. Sale price will be 9c a pair. SECOND. One lot of Scrubbing Brushes with handles. Regular value, 10 and 15c. Sale price, 5c each. THIRD. Children's Light Goat Button Shoes, spring heel, turn sole, rawhide tip on toe; sizes sto 8. Sale price, 50c each. FOURTH. k Misses' Fine Kid Button Shoes, spring heel, neat patent leather tip on toe, worked button holes; sizes 12% to 2. Sale price, $1 a pair. FIFTH. Ladies' Light Dongola Kid Lace Oxfords, extra long vamp, plain square St. Louis toe, flexible sole and low heel; sizes 2# to 7. Sale price, $1 10 a pair. SIXTH. Men's Seamless Hook and Lace Shoes, wide toe and tip, double sole, sewed; sizes 6 to 10; excellent working shoe. Sale price, $1 25 a pair. HALE BROS. & CO. — i A RARE OPPORTUNITY : Good Agricultural Land for $1O to $2O per Acre. The Pacific Improvement Coinpimy lias r«- I rentiy purchased two i ve thousand rres o j I lunci in the heart of Teha:;>a County, for the j purpose of promoting subdivision and settle ment. This land embrace* lands •from iir.-t -; claw Sacramento Valley agricultural land, to I landof fair average quality, and ia offered at 1 from $10 to S~O per acre, in subdivisions ol ! 40, 80, 1U0,160 and 320 acres. Tho terms upon which these lands are offered are especially attractive. Tliey will be sold iv subdivisions, as above indicated, by tlie pay ment of interest only lor three years, a: wliich time the purchaser can begin the payment ol I principal by 1 aying the first of five equal an- I nutil installs 1 ms. Thus no part of tlie prlu ; eipal is to be paid for three years, and then I the purchaser is to have five years in -which to pay nve equal annual installments, with in terest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, making payments extending over a period ol eUht years. Intending purchasers are as sured that this is an opportunity to purchase ■ land of fair ay, rayc quality at $10 per acre, and good agricultural land at #20 an aero, I with other grades uf land at prices to curre- I spond between those ligures. The assertion is trequently made that good lands, suitable for general funning, and es pecially adapted for fruit gmwing, cannot be I had in California for le»s than irom $G'j to I 1 100 an acre. An examination of the land j iubject of this advertisement will prove to I home-seekers that this is an opportunity fur the purchase of good agricultural land at $20 an acre, and for qualities grading down to fair I agricultural land at *10 an acre, on terms of j payment which should make the disposition ! of these lands to actual settlers a result ea-y of accomplishment. The primary object of the purchase of this I body of land was the breaking up of a lame j holding for the purpose of promoting Us set- I tlement in smaller quantities and its devotion to diligent husbandry.' For further particulars, call upon or ad- ' I dre?s 'AM. It. Mir.l3, i Laud Agent of the C. P. K. J;.. • rth and j Townseiid streets. San Francisco. i'uL ! AGENTSFOR THE GENUINE OLIVKB SCHAW, IlfC-KAM, BATCHER & CO., HARDWARE MERCHANTS, M 7 and 8)9 .) streot. - Sacrumouto. GRAND OPENING A SPRING and SUMMER COODS Jj* —AT — |PmJ\ Prices iliat Defy all Competition vV' (sis Ib«e just r'.irc!ia«-.l KOO fall niecu w£ ■ "ti/jy °*tht'B—l En *lith DIAGONALS, CHEVIOTS & SIRGES Ban ivifl bo iKcstly worn this sea- ! B\ son. 1 oflM OuruientK Made to Order \ KTs&M \ at an additknud n-luctiuatomy f<>rm- < \ »r Low- Frit en. Don't fail to see mjr jfjKfti % disjluy 01 Elegant Styles. h\ JOEFOHEIM. The Taller . IB H \ 600 J STREET ■Jpß ik JCi.pR. SIXTH ■ - SAORAMKXTO Branch of Sun i'nncuco. The Sacrancnfo Box and Supply Company, TNCOR?(.RATED, SUCCESSORS TO W. F. I J_ B.VKNEB <S CO., manufacturers and deal ! ers in Krult and Packing Boxes, Lumber 1 Doors, Sasbes, blinas, Shingles, Grape and ' Berry Baskets, etc., etc. Office and yard, , i 3£m]&4sl StreeU> aatramtuto- »•► I —THE— WEEKLY 11, ■ Containing all the news of the Record-Union, has the largest j circulation of any paper on the ] Pacific Slope, its readers being found in every town and ham let,with a constantly increasing list in the Eastern States and Europe. Special attention paid to the publication of truthful statements of the resources of California and the entire coast, best methods of agriculture, fruit and vine growing. AXi. POSTMASTERS AKB AGENTS. DAILY RECORD-UNION one year $6 00 WEEKLY UNION 1 60 ADDKESSI Sacramento Publishing Company, SACRAMENTO. Baker & Hamilton, —IMPOBTKKS AND JOBBEKd OF— HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, COAL, POWDER, Agricultural Implements and Machines, BARBED WIRE, CORDAGE, BELTINO. Sacramento...—_ -..California SHERWOOD HALL NURSERIES^ [ Timothy Hopkins, MENU) PARK, SAN MATED COUNTY, CAL Carnations, Roses, ( hn-wintheinnmi and Out Flowers. W SWEET PEA BEJvD A BPECIALTY.-H JilisceUaitcotta. 11 MNCIE i 4N HIC KMAY . Has Been Granted Dpod Tweoty-flrst Street, And this eligibly located block has a frontage of 3^o feet upoa Twenty-first, X and V. PRICE NOW ONLY $7,500 IF XOT SOLD BEFORE RAILROAD IS COMPLETED, $10,000. It has a large two-story frame dwelling, containing eight rooms, a good istrble, tank and windmill. There are 300 BEARING I'EAR TREES upon the place; they will net, if properly cultivated, in two more years, over $3 50 per tree. The block of land vacant at present is worth #0,000. The improvements could not be placed for 53,000. At price named there is a prolit of $3,000 in the property. TERMS OF PAYMENT: $1,000 Cash; deferred payments at 6 per cent, interest, purchaser paying taxes; interest payable quarterly. EDWIN K..AL.SrP & CO., IOIS FOURTH STREET, SACRAMENTO. WM\! PII.\I.\! PIM1I!~ Flour and Meals are now in every household, because they are the best and linest that can be made. HUlohkUlfflo! furniture: IS AT W. P. COMSTOCK'S. N. E. Corner Fifth, and X Street., IK f T DJVIQ Furniture and Carpets. X / f~\\ I \/ T° LOANon Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry. Aoc l\/ V J \ F~ V rSIVZSL A Vefifft Lnr"l«n"1 Podges. f.\CLE IKE'S IVI V> 1 N I I IQLUTfcIUI LOAN OFFICE, joi X Sl. Sacramento. C.I KLUNE & FLOBERG, XI'ATCHMAKERS AND JEWELEBS. 12S J STREET Brl'WKPv Fni-nTrr \vn W FJ/th.deolers In WATCHKS, JEWELRY and DlijMON SiREFAI^H? «U^2 branches a specially, under Mr. Flobtrg. Agente for R{ CX FORD WATCH "oMPAXY. HE. WACHKORSTr' T EADINQ JEWELER OF SACRAMENTO. AOENT FOR PATEK PHILIPPE A CO "i JU WATCHES-bert in the world. SIGH OK THE TOWN CLOCK,' 816 JSEREEI\B«2 Y\ TA T D AIT TTV D i XKE!'s ON HAND A FINE °" °* VVIVi. D. lVlilvlvL/iv, DIAMONDS, WATCHES AM JEWELRY. *S- Repairing of Watches ana Jewelr* Xo. OJB J St., Sacramento, Cal., made a apeclaltr. Je«ury tffe lUIHOOD RESTORED r^ sw^5 w^ ri « f* v *,™S ralltf" *° ,? urn a" """"" dise»»e». such »• W«ak M^lioJ?" W fi c^i tt* Lo»*of Brainpower. liea.iache. Wakefulne^s, Lost Manhood Nlelult Em& V i'^n N( JSCW. Bion3 ' Nerroastieiß. bassilade. alHrniii^ anJ Inuof power of Ihe Ueiitritn » i*K jSr 1 **i'^;. «r t:ar.f in cil'ier sex cause. by otct ei.-rlion. yonthfnl crro -s.or .■i,;ej.iTo f^^CC A rfffV" 1' tobacco, opium or stimulants whicl; -oon lead tn Ir.flrmltT. Conanmp. »rrn RE isd irriR DOM. r rf.tumi£/«! moa«i-. Circular free. AdUroso Werre «<-cd < '■£, chleaco ill i«r Sale at JO?EPfI HAHN & CO.'S. Drmmists. Fifth and I Sts.. Sacrameata. Volttfcal. B. U. STEINMAN, Repuhli.an Nominee for fiijst trustek. •jomn \a/e:ii_, Citizens' Independent Candltale for MAYOR. Indorsed by BegtUar Democratic Convention. J. E3. RODGERS (PRESENT UrcUHBEXT), Republican Nominee and Independent CandlUaU- I>,r CItIKF op POUCH. V»/. M. BRADLEY, Citizeus- and Democratic Nominee lor CHIEF OF POLICE. F\ O. KING, Independent Candidate for CHIEF OF I'Oi.IC K. GEORGE A. PUTNAM (PRESENT INITMHKVI I', Eepnblican Nominee for CITY COLLECTOR. <J . D . VO U N G (PRESENT INCUMREITT), Canrlidato for CITY ATJDITOR. iri:i:<KN i imi muknt). Republican Komlnee for C|2 V ASSESSOR. IV!. A. HOWARD [PMBW IN'I KBBB r . Republican Nominee ;or FIHK COMMISSIONER. DAVE AHERN, Reorganized Demo mtic Xomiaee lor VIKK COMMISSIONER. JOMN HANT2MAN, Regnln • Nominee of Reorganized Demooracj and Indorsed by People's l'ur:y for CUIKF OF rOLICK, I BUTTER AND EGGS ' ARE NOW CHEAPER THAN MEAT. See Us for tho Lowest Prices. KILGORE 6fc TRACY, ' A-II GUOCKKS, X. E. Corner Eighth ami J Streets, Sacra r.itnto BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY mHE OU) ESTABLISHED K.MI'IHK. BfAB. X kit on X street,between Front and Second, Isofiriecl for rent. Now Joini; ago^a business, Apply to JOHN COOK, on the premises. W. F. FR AZER, —WHOLESALE X>D RETAIL Lumber Dealer. Office— Cor. Fifth and L Streets FRIEND & TERRY Lumber Company. MAW YARD AND OFFICE, 1310 SEO ond street. Brunei. Yard, comer TweUUl and J streets. "«••» RICHARDS &KNOX DEALERS IN LUMBER. Ofllce—Corner Second aud M Stieetb. Saoi«neuto. SVIUXtSCUtOJttft. METROPOLITAN THEATER. ■'■ "■ To»D .Manager. Tel- I I 423. TWO NIGH7B AVD MATINEE ONLY. Reappearance of ow Favorites, the Won • 1- -'Hi 1 LILLI P UTIANB, FRIDAY, MARCH 10th, ONLY TIMIC, "CAN OY." ■■ larplay! Four Grand Ballets I The Klectrical l>aiice! Zlnk's "Tu-ia-ra- Uo -Ay! SATURDAY, MAI«;H Unr, MATINEE am' evening, the: dwarrs wedding The B. -I i ral Grand Ballets! I- raus KLm i I h- Kein i MATINEE, i m. «b on -.il ■ Mouday morning at Clunie Opera-ln CLUNIE OPERA HOUSE. I. 11. Todd Manager Tt;l*]»hone No '.— '•. Commencing M( U DAY, Pi brnarj 2Tth,and every night and Saturday Matinee during en tire we k, the i r. at Melodrama, LIGHTS OF LONDON. 10, -i) and :.o cents. DAN O'LEARY And Att.ii tea at th. ir best O N SUN D A V AT SNOWFLAKE .. PARK ROR SSOO. mr'.'-3l* MUSICAL AND LITERAHY TREAT Al s; a i,i Lutheran CUiuch FBI DAY EVEVING, March yd. Admission, 25 and IG< mr2*2t4 IMPORTING TAILORS, 820 J STREET. BEST PLACE IN THE CITY FOR FINE WORK. «a-Klrat-cias.s workmen. lit always guar anteed. BXTNOL, S:O8X. l'-M-O AI.TO, S:08^. AICIOX, S:H)', i : MAN. 2:ia. . THE ELECTIONEER STALLION Don Marvin, RACE RECORD, FIFTH HEAT: 2:221-2, Will miiWc the ensuing season at L.ODI, CALIFORNIA, AT $50 THE BEASON, With wiunl retnrn prW . _-p. Go.>d pastura^o for mares at S3 per mo Kor further iiarlicukiro and complete cirenlan address. CHARLES I. LOWELL. l_oc)l, C«»^l.__ FRUIT, SHADE AND ORNAMENTAL TREK Of Every lX.eription. SOLE AGENTS FOB THE lUXG ORANGE, The finest cf all < Innges. Call aud ex u.i.lr.e =tuck. Xree Yard Nt\l i<> l'H-senjrer Depot, "W. R. STRONG COMPANY. DEPOT ROR California Wines OF ALL KINDS. GEO. SHKiIO.NET. Eighth and Gstreets