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6 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1899, NOVEMBER 16, 1899 THURSDAY JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. e e i Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manages. e e e e i PUBILICATION OFPFICE......Maorket and Third Sts., S F Telephone Maln 1568 EDITORIAL ROOME...... .. 2IT to 22! Stevenson Stree! Telephone Matn 1834, DELIVERED BY CARRIERE, 15 CENTS PER WEEK. Single Coples, § cente. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (including Sunday Call), one year. DAILY CALL (including Sunday Call), ¢ months. DAILY CALL (including Sundey Ouil), 3 monthe DAILY CALL—By ingle Month . BUNDAY CALL One Year WEEKLY CALL One Year. All postmasters are authoriee to recetv. subscriptioos. Bample coples will be forwarded when rquested. veesss 908 Brocdwoy C. CEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Forsign Adverti Ch @. Marquetts Bulldiag, 4o NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT €. €. CARLTON < ieeeeson. Herald Squars NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE,: PERRY LUKENS JR .. 29 Tribune Bullding CHICAGO NEWS STANDS. Eherman : B Fremont House: Atciterivm kS NEW YORK NEWS STANDS. w Murrey Hul Hotel WASHINGTON . C.) OFFICE. ‘Welltngton Hotsi J. L. ENGLISH, Corrcspondent. ERANCH OFFJCES—5S7 Montgomery street, corner Clay, open untll 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes street, open until $30 o'clock. €39 McAllister street. open until 9:30 c'clock. 615 Lerkin street. open untll 930 o'clock. 1541 Mission street. open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market street. corner Sixteenth, cpen until 9 o'clock. 1096 Valencia street, open until 9 o'clock. 106 Eleventh street, open untll 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twentys nd and Kentucky streets, open until 9 o'clock. AMUSEMENTS. Home. » Jomes."” h Left ¥ apper Gr x M Show, to-morrow. 2 le every afternoon and v Olympls, corner Mason talties. Park—Stee and performances. t Turt Assoc San Mateo County—Races, AUCTION SALES. By Chase & Mendenbail day, at 11 o'clock, Trotting- breda M + and Geldin & Market and Van Sices RAIN AND WATER STORAGE. O 1 ated that it is a shower, and i1s a duck under an u ties is SO sit under a mist o rella. T e Sugy the water storage conven- ¢ meeting 1o ¢ r that wet bject, just as mt i the State « ed and the. skies are themselves sibly to many dele ted the present moist condition of t! 1s they would be if the s ef the first n of co- operative indorsement oi plans heretofore in rivalry, but for a ¢ | little, or a mean much, or great We occupied lown until S to a section ve sought to secure ady so fencing the lands they own in fee as t yublic land, but s process is now outlawed act of Congress, and the stock- men are besic Qg we lo what it should have « 1 preserve the permanency of the rar Is to the cattle- men. T itation of the pad- dock pe h has been the life of the w er to strengthen themselves th have succeeded in an alliance with the irrig tion to start la conven- nto a fund for the construction rage of fl age of flc d waters to be used in irrigation that the capi estimated ar ich the stock no objection, except le available is grossly over- ¥ in excess of any pri fiord to pa wh for lease- tockmen have ave taken up he grazing region, which is A been wise in and own the wa absolutely necessa carrying on their business, man who owns n € of the public it, therefore, : nds, and those who do own nly ones who can bid for the Jeases. The rar re now veried that years of under-stocking be required to restore their forage producing car what it was when the vast herds first occupie | the gnawed-out condi- tion of these land price, which ca Government terests gain m the irrigators, 1 succeed and will soon be § not only an importar fixing the leasing regarded by the re, that the stock in- e in the a 1 quitably ¢ 1t i Ik g the iance with t we hope ir plan for leasing: will operation, for it concerns stic food sup- ply but an important trade: What is desirable i Jed into dependence v speedily effect storm icle profitable to our export the rent of ‘these lands to er storage and by ere their o Jull a do-nothing policy w produce speedy results Mr. Mead has pointed out, California has capacities which give her a greater interest in the subject than other State in the Urion. Wyoming is not so much interested in irri- gation, perched as she is on the cold summit of the Rocky Mountains, as she is in the leasing of the stock ranges, so that the buffalo, bunch and gramma grasses and the white sage may grow again to.cail back the immense herds that made her greatest of the grazing States. The same is largely true of Idaho, Montana, East- ern Oregon and Nevada, to all of which we wish grear success and prosperity, which we believe can be at- tained without hurting California’s development, as it would be retarded by full commitment to a policy which is less in our interest than it is for the benefit of those other States. - The British need not be uneasy because Oom Paul s issuing letters of marque. There are no privateers of mark to take advantage of them. o' clock, Real Estate, at rsion of the | compete for the leases | . | passions subside. SCHURMAN AED HOAR. original anti-imperialist, with those of Senator | | joins the ranks of the fatalists by saying that no mat- ter what one’s individual opinions may be we are in the Philippines and must consider what we are to do there. He commands a measure of respect which is denied to some by omitting all cant about Providence having commanded the situation. In discussing the matter outside of the official report of the commis- sion he rebukes the spirit of ownership as con- fot i with the idea of sovereignty, and says that to | claim ownership of the islands and the people, with | the impiied right to do as we please with our own, is to take a barbaric position, incompatible with the | growth of any feeling of obligation to be just to the | arms expelled from the archipelago. | must of our treasure expend all that may be necessary g - g » 'iAl“ educate them, | lag? Was he not a Republican? Was there ever an | | | -Astoria Hotel; A. Brentana, 31 Umiom- Sguaref | do what may be done to obliterate race and tribal dis- | | tinctions among them, give them a sense of oneness largely on the same indignant and hostile people over whom we assert a sovereignty bought with money from a power which they had not only repudiated but had with their own He repudiates the money-making idea utterly, and rebukes the spirit of commercialism with which Senator Carter and | Colonel Denby view the whole question, and declares that we must have an eye single to the highest inter- ests of the Filipinos themselves. To this end we organize their industries for their | | of interest and a common thirst for advancement and progress. These views are humane, civilized and proper. The programme which is to make them our effective policy is one that no conqueror has ever car- ried out, and that no race, feeling itself the superior, has ever adopted and successfully held toward an infe- 1f we can do it the accomplishment will be rior race. the greatest glory in our history and will put out of fo- cus all that we have heretofore accomplished. That w= | bave done just the opposite of all this in our treatment of the inferior races with which we have been in im- line mediate contact makes a discouraging datum from which to start on such an errand to a people so distant and so different from us in all racial respects. | Turning to the views of Senator Hoar we find them | He “When the Presi- [ | dent said that forcible annexation, according to our American code of morals, would be criminal aggres- sion, was he a copperhead? Was he disloyal to the utterance so calculated to give courage to Aguinaldo and his people as that? The time has come to make If you are to declare that you do not ipinos then you iples of your 1d the war can be e this declara- up your minds. to subjugate and enslave the F t toward them on own De the prir ation of Independence, ended in an hour. The refusal to m n brought on this war, and your refusal now to de- | for its con- s had been ands in a United States ship, and clare yourselves is alone ible The 1 brought to the i was in arms at the head of his forces with our full rence and co-operation. If the statement at- ed to a high o I who is sometimes called to sitin the C et with the President is true, | ader had been offered, by President McKinley, the high office oi colonel in the regular army of the United States, which is of itself a sufficient re! charges against him. They had framed a pro- nal constitution, which was a model of its kind, resp tinuance. ader of the Filipi concu tribut upon their 1 atation visic | establishing a dictatorship like those established by { ment m | cent meeting of the executive committee of the Na- | irrigators shall not be | ivar in South Amer lic as soon as the mili ca, to give place to a repub- ry condition should make it Now we have to settle the question which the President has repeatedly declared is for Congress or the people.” He then points out that such settle- st be in the interest of the natives, that it must ingly consider their welfare, and that in prpportion we aid them to become a self nation we will relieve ourselves of the cost and responsibil He says | this great question has been discussed with a leyity and intolerance and witl i possible. governing + of governing them in spite’ of themselves. and cheap passions rarely paralleled in political his- tory, and concludes with this: “The American peo- ple, the brave and just people who made the immortal | Declaration and deiended it with life and fortune ! and sacred honor; who. established our wonderful | an appeal to low mnxi\-c;} freedom of the American continent from the Rin‘ Grande to Cape Horn, have not changed their char- | acter nor their principles in the twinkling of an eye | under the temptation of any base motive or personal | advantage, or the excitement of war. They are sub- | ject, doubtless, as all masses of men are subject, how- | ever intelligent or however upright, to great waves of | passion. But their sober second thought is to be | trusted. Their deliberate action will be wise and just. | The great passions by which they are stirred and by | which their judgment is now clouded are generous, | noble and humane. Reason will resume its sway and | the great republic will remain a republic.” It is plain 40 be seen how narrow is the line which | divides the thoughtful sentiment of the country on this subject. And it is further seen how quickly that division will disappear as scon as war ceases and its “Line is busy” will probably not ring so eften now in the ears of the victims of the telephone monopoly. The Supervisors evidently believe that people have a right to receive that which they pay for and do not get. DEMAND A PARCELS POST. s the country hape tu obtain from Congress at | its next session is the establishment of a par- cels post successfu ystem similar to that which has been so y in operation in other countries. At a re- tional Association of Manufacturers, one of the | Jargest industrial organizations in the Union, there was adopted a resolution declaring the committee fa- vors the establishment of such a system and author- izing the president of the association to take such steps as he may deem necessary to procure action by Congress. In an interview on the subject Charles A. Schieren, treasurer of the association, said to the New York Sun: “The association cites the records of our Post- be carried in the mails here at about the English rate, which bégins at 6 cents a pound and increases at the rate of 2 cents a pound up to ten pounds. The limit is eleven pounds and the rate for both the ten and eleven pound packages is 25 cents. According to the last annual report of the United States Postoffice’ Deffartment the actual cost of transporting a pound of mail in this country for the estimated average dis- tance is a little under 6 cents a pound and not more than 8 cents, which was the rate for merchandise in the mails at the time it was changed in the early seventies to 16 cents a pound by what was then known as ‘the great express companies job.” The Govern- \ actual cost on the parcels post which we now have in 4 .| this country. T is of much interest to compare the views of Presi- | the express companies get the benefit of this discrim- dent Schurman of the Philippine Commission, an | ynation in their favor.” The rate is prohibitive and therefore The “express companies job” to which Mr: Schieren —————=| Hoar, a présent anti-imperialist. President Schurman | refers is one of the scandals of our postoffice history. | The companies not only procured the increase in the rates which the postoffice charges for carrying parcels, but they have also stood in the way of every attempt to provide the people of the United States with an adequate parcels post system. who when John Wannamaker, Postmaster General studied the subject, stated “there are only four great objections to a | parcels post in the United States, and they-are the four great express companies.” The issue before the Manuiacturers’ Association, therefore, is to overcome the corporation lobby at Washington, and in that effort the association should have the cordial support of the press and the people. The time is propitious for the contest. By the open and defiant shirking of the war tax the express companies have revealed something of the extent of | their greed and aggress tore ready to grapple with them in earnest. veness. The people are there- It is in- tolerable that great improvements and extensions of | the postal facilities of the country should be blocked by corporgtions which, not content with what they ve gained from the public in that way, have shifted | their share of the taxes made necessary by the war, | and have defied the decisions of the courts declaring | benefit—not ours, raise them in the scale of existence, | it to be the duty of the express companies to affix the revenue | The issue is one of far-reaching importance. | parcels post system is one of the needs of civilized It is more needed in the United States | than in any other country, and yet we lag behind Europe in the establishment of such facilities. | gratifying to have the subject taken up by so impor- countries. stamps required by the law. A It is tant an organization as the Manufacturers’ Associa- tion, and it is to be hoped the movement for reform will be pushed vigorously. The desperate San Quentin convict who murder- | ously attacked his keeper and was then saved by a rope from drowning will probably discover that there of a rope. | is more than one sensation in dangling from the end THE PAPAL SUCCESSION. P OPE LEO XIII will be ninety years old next March. but at ninety years human life is very frail. It is | | liable to pass away in a night even when there is no | particular malady or ill to hasten its departure. There- | fore there is inces He is hale and serene in his old age, | ant speculation going on concern- ing the succession, and we may be sure the speculation accomparied in some quarters by quiet efforts to direct the course of events and determine beforehand who the successor shall be. For that reason more than ordinary interest | taches to the recent dispatches to The Call concerning at- the men who are supposed to be most likely to suc- ceed Leo. Our dispatches report Cardinal Gotti to | be seemingly highest in favor at the present time, and a similar view is taken by other authorities who have made public expression of opinion on the subject. DOOR OF that time. T hands of nobles and of beggars, of vile swaggering duelists and of gentlemen of September 10, 1524, been forgotten long ago. HIS thing, which is not at all pretty, has the distinction of perhaps the lovellest and most beautiful sight that many men ever saw—at The time referred to was when they were racing for life. the sight of this ugly plece of metal was finer that anything else In the world could have been to them, because it was the knocker on the door of the sanctuary of St. Cuthbert in Durham Cath-dral. In the old times criminals who could re: suers got them were housed, fed and protect which time not even the King might harm them. speak, there would come from it thrilling and rare and sorrowful stories. REFUGE- z % | | i i having been Then ach the sanctuary before thelr pur- Zor thirty-seven da during If this old kno could The murderers and persecuted women, of the road, all have wielded it lustily and ker anxiously. The last one to touch it and to claim sanctuary was admitted on No record rémains of who he was. He and his crime have GREAT CHANCE LIS Alameda, Cal., Nov. To the editor of The cisco Call—Dear Sir: college student and the The London Spectator, for example, in a review | of the chances of the probable candidates for the office, pointed out that an Italian is almost certain to | be chosen, Card no hostility Spanish-American countries, and the chances of such | @ candidate are therefore no better than that of one from Germany or France. ! The choice being virtually confined to Italians, the | | Cardinals in choosing a new Pope at this juncture will undoubtedly seek for a man satisfactory to other nations as well as to Italy. that the conditions of the time will lead to the exclu- sion from the field of choice of all conspicuous and well-known the Pope is said to favor as his successor, Cardinal | constitution; to whose Monroe doctrine is due the | Jacobini and Cardinal Vannutelli dispatches that Vannutelli is favored by the “Ameri- canists,” but the word must not be confounded with Americans, for it is used to signify the supporters of a certain policy to which the name “Americanism” has been given by those who oppose it. While the prospects at present presage the choice of one of these three, and the character and disposi- | tion of each is being widely discussed, it is to be re- membered that in Papal elections, as in everything else, there is many a slip "twixt the cup and the lip. | The venerable Pope may outlive the men who are | now suggested as his possible successors, 2 1d, more- | over, when the three leaders may defeat one another and leave an avenue open for some other Cardinal who is unknown | to fame and not thought of as a candidate. A dispatch from Kansas contair that Brigadier General Funston fears there will be no more fighting to do by the time he reaches the Philippines. than one river to swim. Admiral Crowninshiel ‘and. having thus amended his ideas, has proceeded to | amend his report. We have thus a double improve- ment, one in the man and another in his words, so £ of the benefits which the business men of |let us be thankful. Latest London adviees are to the effect that the British War Office has accepted a gift of 10,000 plum puddings for the troops in South Africa. Who wili deny now that the fates are not on the side of the Boers? What may be characterized as “The Great Puzzle of the Philippines—How to Capture Aguinaldo,” is keeping the There are no indications of an early solution of the puzzle. To Hobson will probably be delegated the task of raising the Charleston. We wish him the success that, | attended his sinking of the Merrimac. The lieutenant office Department to prove that merchandise could | will go down in history as sinker, raiser and—kisser. It is announced in the dispatches that Uncle Sam intends to improve the shape of Porto Rico. a chance for Harriet Hubbard Ayer and the other beauty doctors to pull the old man’s leg. “All things come round to him who will but wait.” Our astronomical friends who have -been waiting thirty-three years for the meteoric shower are now having their day, or rather their night. Admiral Dewey has safely re:ched his Washington home with his bride. its attention to that other hero—the football gentle- ment rate is therefore now 100 per cent in excess of | man who is kicking his way to fame. Is are Italian and as the governing committees | of the church are centralized in Rome they would not | like a foreigner to preside over them, but mainly be- cause there are such international enmities among | British, French, Germans, Austrians and Slavs that a candidate of either of those nations would meet the | antagonism of all the others. | dinal from the United States would probably meet partly because a large majority of the | It suggests that a Car- in Europe, but might find it from the The Spectator concludes | s 2R e | Cardinals except Cardinal Gotti, whom It was said in our | the test of comparative strength comes the information. What's the odds? He will find more i d has taken a second thought —_— | —— pursuing generals pretty busy nowadays. | Here's The country will now’ turn the press. The scheme is of inestimable value to the home student who has Joyed the advantages of not en college training. AND COLLEGE STU The Call's Home Study Circle affords the dent an opportunity to pursue |reading such as has never been |presented through the medium of FOR HOME ENTS 10, 1899. San Fran- home stu- A. F. ST. SURE, By an hour's di’ligent:: study each evening he can become versed in the classics, inart and in |of his country. Wishing you every success, I am, yours, oo Dot ok, Grand President Y. M. I., Pacific Jurisdiction. the poli ical histor s f si ncerely t ¥ AROUND THE CORRIDORS Jesse D. Carr, the Salinas capitalist, is | at the Occidental. | Senator H. V. Morehouse of San Jose is | a guest at the Lick. | L. 8. J. Barenian, a traveler from Eng- | land, is a guest at the Palace. | Judge J. W. Hughes of Sacramento is | at the Lick, accompanied by his wife. | T. B. Rickey, a wealthy mine owner of | Carson, Nev., is at the Palace for a short stay. R. 1. Bentley, one of the leading attor- neys of Sacramento, s a guest at the Lick. Benjamin Ide Wheeler Berkeley yesterday and the Palace. John Sunderland, a wealthy resident of Reno, Nev., is among the late arrivals | at the Palace. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Baxter are regis- tered at the Occidental from their home in Watsonville, W. H. McKenzie, a leading banker of Fresno, is at the Lick on a short business trip to this city. Mrs. B. M. Kellogg left on Tuesday last for New York City. She will be away until the holidays. Judge A. C. Hinkson, a prominent ju- | rist of Sacramento, is among the arrivals | of yesterday at the Grand. Colonel ‘A. W. Jones, a prominent rail- | road man of Paciflc Grove, is among the | recent arrivals at the Lick. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Davis, two promi- nent society people of Santa Rosa, are registered at the Palace for a few days. B. U. Steinman, the well-known Sacra- mento politiclan, is at the Palace, where | he arrived yesterday on a flying visit to the city. Andrew Muir, one of the raflroad. con- tractors who built the Valley road, is in the city on a short business trip. - He is registered at the Occidental. Professor Natanabe of the Royal Col- lege at Tokio, and H. Tantkawa, promi- nent in the commercial affairs of Japan, are at the Occidental en route- to the Orient after a visit throughout the East. - H. H. Eddy, son of W. M. Eddy, the Santa Barbara banker and capitalist, is registered at the Grand, having just re- turned from Juneau, Alaska, where he has been engaged in business for some time past. Editor C. K. McClatchy of the Sacra- mento Bee, accompanied by Mrs. Mec- Clatchy, spent a few hours in the ecity yesterday, en route to San Diego on a pleasure trip. They left for the south in the evening. came from registered at —e—— CALIIOEINIANB IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—J. D. Echert and wife of San Francisco are at the St. Jomes; W. A. Harrington of San Fran- cisco I8 at the Willard. —_——— ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. EDUCATIONAL-D, D. D., Fort Point, City. There is an educational journal ublished in this city called Th gournnl of Educati le Western BOXES FOR SAILORS-L., Oakland, Cal. Christmas boxes intended for sail- 1 ors at the Philippines add d_ty individual and uhgn on bourd";evhlghtg: is, and marked “Major F. B. Jones, gen- eral superintendent army transport ser- " will be sure of delivery. it Pl STUDYING MEDICINE—H. H., What medical works and i Who desires to study medicine should read at home is a question that can be answered only by one who would have City. rature one the student in hand. Such a person would know what to advise, according to the student’s capability to understand and ap- preciate what he would read. PHILIPPINE LIBRARY—E. E., Santa Cruz, Cal. Literature intended for the Regiment. BOOKS OF AS THE FRENCH VIEW OUR MILLIONAIRES, By GENEVIEVE GREEN, The Latest Fashions in Furs, Dramatic Stars of the Week. Have you noted the fact that the Call Magazine Section for stories of interest, fine B I e e e L L ] NOVEMBER 19. A Night With the Provost Guard A Sunday Call woman's experiences with a provost guard rounding up the missing ones of the Forty-Sixth LESSONS OF THE WAR. By GENERAL NELSON A- MILES, OUR AMERICAN GIRLS By MRS. NELSON A, MILES. ADNIRAL DEWEY'S WIFE. By a San Franciscan who knows het, THE SOCIAL EVII.:lTS REMEDY. Reviewed by PROF. H. B. LATHROP of Stanford University. n illustrations and artisti rivals any other Sunday paper in A:\:w:’:“ soldiers’ lfbrary at Manila, P. I, may be sent to the tfi:\rlrrmnslrr's department San Francisco, which will forward the same by transport. This department not aware of what church General Otis is a member. When officers in the service of the United States are commissioned they are not asked any question as to re- ligion, and no record of religion is iept. 'WHY WEBSTER GOT HIS SALARY | Ex-Auditor Broderick Explains a Point In School Department Salaries. Editor San Francisco Call-In an .’l('l— cle published in The Call of November | 4. headed “Webster Found a Golden Wi 1" T think some injustice has heen done, and I therefore beg leave to make or suggest some correction. Al- though the subject matter of the article Is now two and a half years old, 1 have very distine The article e that Mr. intendent of Sch . the incumbent r the office; that Web it in 189 and obtained a March, 1597, and Up to in h a contest, tion 936 of the Political Code, the Au would have been obliged to hold all claims, but in 181 that section amended, making specific provision direction for the payment of the salary of an office to an incumbent discharging the duties of the office during _the bendengy of a contest, the same as it no such cofit ing was pending. Mr, Babco ived the“salary of the office under this provision of law, and 18 therefore under no obligations whatever to the Auditor. His demand and warrant was le d could not be denjed or re- fused, The article also stated that upon Mr. Webster obtaining the office he present claims for salary fron ry 1 (shouid be December 24) to ¥ d them 'y had b ald to abeock. ehster contended 1t rock had no Hight to draw it, b ick was ob- dur. and Webster finally let the mat- ent Is absolutely errone K's rec of the salary nothing whatever to do with the my refusal to pay Mr. Webst rintendent of Sch. my judgment had to so the allowed iston. He salary s the reinstated t ary notwithstanc has been pald for t irg the pendency | ment. rtion of the Political Code pre- ibes th no School Superintendent who receives an annual salary of $i more, must follow the profession of t g the class dur- of suit for reinstate- ing, or any other vocation that can - flict with his duties as Superintendent but those receivingless * * # may teach in_publi s of this State Mr. Webster presented demands for sal- ary properly allowed d by the Board of Educatio er in the Polytechnie High received payment ith _of De of January ary, 18 He was admonished and advised at the by the Auditor that h ¥ izing his right to the nt in the his favor. bl it as to the t, and Mr. Webzter “a bird in’the hand years ago. entitled to but on visions of the law reed me the teacher duri he contest ore In my to his deliberate tary aetion of disqualific \Iu!l\'. W t judgment nd_ volun- 1 Respect- BRODERICIK | the city wa | the benefit Ban Francisco, Nov. al. glace fruit c per Ib at Townsend's.® ————— Look out for §1 Fourth st. Nr. 5e barber or grocer. Best eveglasses 10¢ and 4c. ® —_————— information supplied daily to houses) and public men by the ing Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont- | gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 —_———— Two Years for Counterfeiting. Karl Krist , the counterfeiter, was sentenced yesterday morning by United es District Judge de Haven to two 3 * imprisonment penitentiar at San Quen a fine of $100. Karl had pl nd thus saved the Government some trouble and ex- pense, and he was not at all disappointed with the lenity of the sentence. ——ee s No_well-regulated household should be with- out Dr. J. G. B. Slegert & Sons’ Angosturs Bitters, unequaled as an appetizer. Special MAGAZINE SECTION. + THE WEEK. + + \ Sunday intense