Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1599 Address All Communicatio PUBLICATION ns to W. S. LEAKE, Manager FICE...Market and Third, S. F. Telephone Main 1568, 217 to 221 Stevenson St. 1874, EDITORIAL ROOMS. .. Telephon Deltvered by Cnrriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (Including Sunday), one year. .86.00 DAILY CALL & Sunday), 6 mon ing Sunday), 2 months. . ~ily Single Month WEEKLY CALL One Year.... - . All postmnasters nre authorized to subseriptions. le copies will be forwarded when requested recelve OAKLAND OFFICE veee D08 Droadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Bulld- ing, Chicago. NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON, ... v+ssss.Herald Square NEW YORK R PERRY LUKENS JR NTATIVE: 20 Tribune Building CHICA NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. 0. News Co.; Gireat North- ern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. Waldorf- Square; Murray Hill Hotel. tano, 31 Union OFFICE. . Wellington Hotel SH, Correspondent. AMUSEMENTS. Vangeville W Left Home.* A Kentucky.* ster—Vaudeville every afternoon and evening a son and Fllls streets—Specialties. ¥ nd performances. ama Iiay, Market street, near | Oliver Twist.” ba AUCTION SALES. ¥, November 27, at 7:45 p. m., at ber 25, at 7:30 p at corner Van A PHILIPPINE MYSTERY. n in velation to the execu- ng to the y is dis- r consistent wi ported, the course confirm the which now ar people. It is even said that i 1 to Agoncillo in Paris b ok ilitary nce, and 1 is preparing mewhere there must rd and hold these is proved Spanish That plan was abandoned \gu d so Sp ners where they were raise the presumption that some exertions have been directed The humorous report of the O'D ell recites that our ed the place unresisted at night e house, kicked the occu- , amid _the shrieking the These exploits are satisfactory s of our presence in the country, ey are going on where are the thousands prisoners and the force that must be guard ing them, and where are Gilmore and the American prisoners? \(\/;,'m text of the agreement reached by the three powers at Apia we said it was an arrange- ment that would not long stand. That prophecy is ied, for the agreemént is already obsoleted and England has withdrawn under an arrangemeat in- tended to bring Germany over to acquiescence in British pretensions in South Africa. Having the Caroline Islands and other cessions from Spain, Ger- many requires for her new naval and commercial policy other insular possessions, and the United States aids England by an agreement to partition Samoa be- i of as n but while of Spanish ——— THE SAMOAN TREATY. HEN The Call exclusi: ver: twes ry and Germany. We already stand | in the s, by the possession of Guam, and now we agree 1o take an island in the Samoan group, so that in both cases England puts us in her shoes to face 1 watch Germany. It is believed that the treaty by which we take Samoan territory, made not with the people of & Germany, is in preparation and will be reported to the Senate for ratification. It will be a wide depar- ture from all past policies. We acquired all of our continental territory by treaty with the sovereignty in possession or by direct consent of the people, as in the case of Texas. In Samoa neither the United States, mor Germany, nor England had sovercignty. It is as if the United States, Portugal and England should by treaty divide among them the United States of Brazil, where neither had previous sov- ercignty. It is indeed a novelty in international policy and one that in no way secures the future peace of the world. The commercial reason for our acquisition of a part of Samoa is not good, for the commerce is limited in the variety of products supplied by that group, and at its best is of inconsiderable volume. The military reason must be the leading motive of our Govern- ment, to secure a place from which to stand guard | over Germany and be able to threaten her at some Opportune moment in a way necessary to impress some European situation, with which, according to our past policy, we should have nothing to do. ely published the com- | : but with Great Britain and | NO DISARMING. HE Czar's proposition that the great nations should beat their spears into pruning-hooks and their swords into plowshares has gone glimmering to the limbo of forgotten things, along with other millennial plans that were intended to usher in the Golden Age. If the United States had continued its policy of a small army and had ab- stained from the ambitions of conquest our example | of happiness and prosperity would have continued to impress the world that great armies are not necessary | to the welfare of the people. The great strain upon | the industry and resources of a nation involved in the | support of immense military estahlishments was tell- |ing so seriously upon every European Government that the fatherland sentiment of patriotism, appealed | to to make the burden endurable, was yielding to the feeling of the people that their share in the dynastic glories reaped by war was insufficient to justify the | sacrifice of supporting armies. This popular feeling had its strongest support in the example of the United S Tens of thousands of immigrants came an- nually from the military nations to this country, where they seldom saw 2 Exuberant at their | release from military burdens, they inoculated senti- ment in every land they left by singing the praises of the republic, which, by dreedom from militarism, of- fered to all men the broadest and best opportunity for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. This example of ours was that enlightenment of the world by liberty, represented by Bartholdi's statue in New | York harbor. It was the sole enlightenment, and it | means all that is precious to man. But now this light !is being quenched. Its flame burns weakly. We have | entered upon what Jefferson called the hell of war and ambition that was the curse of Europe. We have I'gone as other military conquerors go, far abroad, | where we are necessarily involved in hostile contacts with other conquerors, and have sought far away that [ form of prestige which endangers us at home. As a consequence there is a stead:; | ciy soldier. v, persistent, unyielding | propaganda for the purpose of increasing our traine:l | military strength up to the measure of our new posi- Ition and purpose. The arguments of this propaganda Granting its premise that we are nes: answerable. e owners are un of rly twenty millions of subjects, nt and hostile, ready to strike us any moment en ot attention is diverted, ready also to join any nemy of ours who makes a demonstration against our new pretensions, we must look forward to a stand- ing army of at least three hundred thousand men These will be needed t only to warn off foreign ake of ilitarism. War taxes are already upon us, h the i prospect of crease rather than decrease. g, in a blind way, abor is strik at changes in our system of Government, the very sugges on of which lies a revolutic ¢ spirit. ining itself to lean upon m Property is gradually tra ary ather than ju- dicial protection, and the signs circle our political hor on that foretell our rapid transfor: ation into a tary republic on a scale more vast and portentous than the world has ever seen. True, there are among pa- dis- ility of such a change in the purpose of our people and the spirit of our Govern- ment, but evidences are not wanting that they statesmen of experience and well-seasoned , like ex-President Harrison, who are believers in the jure in v Our good example of a peaceful spirit and of pros- port of vast armies worked its way ple of other countries and through aining in its impression upon their Goy- perity without s among the pec the: 1w nm Our bad exampl every monarc . being in line with the necessities al establishment, has not only mpression, but has instantly inspired other Government in its purpose to arm more completely and justify itself by promoting every fric- | tion that may the wo | deliberately chosen o f effaced that every with war. If we have r new lot nothing can be said ce of all its consequences, its diffi- culties and dangers. Our physical resources are the { finest in the world. We can stand a larger drain to be wasted in the destruction of war. But many a sad eye will turn to the past and many a hand will clinch | in protest against our embarkation upon a career of | military power and glory in exchange for our majestic | progress in the paths of peace against accep! ————— An entirely successful hunting season has just closed in the Adirondacks. A dispatch from Platts- | burg, N. Y., contains the information that twenty- three people were accidentally shot by hunters from | its opening to its close. — A BRITISH cdLIco TRUST. OME time ago a movement was started in Ne S ‘ngland to consolidate all the cotton mills of that section for the purpose of more efficiently meeting the competition that has sprung up in the South. The movement has not been heard of lately, and from that fact it may be presumed to have failed. What could not be accomplished in New England appears to have been achieved with comparatively little difficulty in old England, for a recent number of | the Westminster Gazette notes that the Calico Print- | ers’ Association, Limited, has been registered in London with a capital of 6,000,000 pounds sterling | in one pound shares and 4,500,000 pounds in mortgage ‘debcnlurc stocks. The Gazette says: “It is another | combination on American lines, it being declared that the company will have the monopoly of the whole trade in this country.” The success of a trust movement in Great Britain | where a similar one failed to establish a monopoly in of light uponthe much mooted question whether Amer- ican trusts are the creatures of the protective policy. Under our protective tariff the attempt to form a comprehensive combination of the cotton mills of | New England failed, but under the free trade system effected and the monopoly established. It is pretty safe to say that if free trade in calico were permitted in the United States it would not be long before the small factories would be driven out of business, and then it would be as easy to consoli- provide for such consolidation in Great Britain. Pro- tection, by making the industry widely profitable, hasy enabled so many communities North and South to undertake the manufacture of cotton that a combina- tion of them is virtually impossible. Protection in this instance, thercfore, so far from promoting the formation of a trust, has actually prevented the suc- cess cf a movement undertaken for that purpose. It is to be noted, moreover, that the Southern peo- ple, who have been the persistent and zealous oppo- nents of protection, are the direct beneficiaries of that system in the case under consideration. With free trade their small factories would be exposed to the ruinous competition of mills operated under the trust system and could not long remain in oper:atinn. iree trade policy would be disastrous to all sections, but to the South more, perhaps, than to any other, for the manufactures of that section are just begin- l | even a section of the United States throws a good deal | which prevails in Great Britain the combination was | date what were left in the country as.it has been to | Al ning to grow into importance. The more intelligent | @¢-04-00-9096 4046140494040+ +0+-0+0-+0+0+0+@ Southerners already perceive this and are by no means so clamorous for iree trade as they were a comparatively short time ago. What will be the effect ol the calico consolidation on the cotton indus- tries of Great Britain is not easy to foretell, but, thanks to the Republican tariff, our cotton mills South and North are fairly safe from any attack the giant trust may make upon them. The gamblers who were captured by the police in the Mason-street den might reasonably plead in de- fense that they were not gambling. The evidence in the Police Court is very clear that the patrons of the place didn’t have a chance on earth to win. e e THE PANAMA CANAL AGAIN. ONGRESSMAN HEPBURN of Iowa, who as C chairman of the House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce had charge of the Nicaragua canal bill in the last Congress, is reported to have stated recently that he would introduce a canal bill in this Congress on the first day of the ses- sion and push it to action. In making this statement Mr. Hepburn did not overlook the opposition likely to come irom the sup- porters of the Panama project. On the contrary, he admitted that obstacles would be put in the way by that company, since it is clear that if the Nicaragua canal be constructed the Panama venture will coi- lapse and all the money expended on it and invested in it be lost. Nevertheless Mr. Hepburn stands firmly in favor of the Nicaragua route and of prompt action by our Government. He would have that action taken, moreover, without reference to the claims of | the Maritime Canal Company, the Cragin-Eyre syn- dicate or other companies claiming concessions from the Nicaraguan Government. In fact, he said: “For | my own part I do not think the United States need | bother about any of these concessions. I have no doubt that Costa Rica and Nicaragua will be glad to | give the United States any territory and any rights it may need to prosecute and complete the canal.” Such statements, as a matter of course, aroused the Panama people, and they have been prompt to make The New York Times, for example, aiter quoting what Mr. Hepburn said about obtaining ter- ritory and rights from Costa Rica and Nicaragua, said “So it appears that some work is to be done in the field of diplomacy before any canal can be undertaken by the United States. Meanwhile there is a commis- n at work under the authority of Congress inves- tigating the whole question of an inter-oceanic canal, with authority to expend a million dolars, if neces- ry, and with instructions to take the Panama canal into consideration. The Panama company has oi- fered to complete its canal within a specified time and to sell a controlling interest in it to the United States | after it is finished, without any risk to us. This offer is one of the things to be reported on by the investi- gating commission. Now would it not be well to wait for this report before introducing and pushing a new bill in Congress which is to involve so large an ex- reply. penditure of money? The country is quite in earnest about an isthmian canal and is rich enough to pay for one, but the question of more or less pay, more or less labor, more or less time in securing it, ought to be considered open until the commission makes its | report. | There is unquestionably much redson in the argu- ment stated by the Times, but it reopens the whole issue and will have the effect of indefinitely postpon- ing the construction of the canal. Sooner or later the route must be decided, and this winter is as good a time as any to do it. It appears that our Govern- ment can get almost any concessions it desires from either Nicaragua or Panama, and all that is needed now is for Congress to determine what shall be done. That question can just as well be decided this winter as next winter. It is therefore gratifying to know that Hepburn will introduce his bill and push it vigor- ously. If the Panama people have any definite propo- ition to make let it be made without delay. The people of the United States are not particular whether the canal be at Panama or Nicaragua. All they ask the control of the Government of the United States, | undisturbed by foreign interference, but they wish ac- tion taken this winter. GROWTH OF POSTAL BUSINESS. | OSTMASTER GENERAL SMITH in the p course of a recent address at Washington made an interesting showing of the marvelous development and expansion which have taken place in the business of the postoffice. In 1880 the depart- ment expended $36,000,000 and had a revenue of $33,000,000. This year expenditures will be about $105,000,000, and the revenues will be over $100,000,- 000. In a period in which the population has in- | creased 50 per cent the postal business has increased 300 per cent. The revenues are increasing faster than the expenditures, so that in a short time it is expected that the deficit will be wiped out, and this will be ac- | complished in the face of the increase in the effi- | ciency of the service. | So vast an expansion of postal business is a subject of just pride to the people whoseactivities make it pos- | sible and to the Government that has provided for it. } Nevertheless the expansion has not kept pace with | the popular demand. For years past there has been | an agitation for a postal savings bank system and for a parcels post, and some of the ablest of our Post- masters General have endeavored to bring about their establishment. Up to this time, however, all such | efforts have failed, and to that extent the expansion | of our postal facilities has been disappointing. Fortunately there are good reasons for believing the parcels post at least may soon be provided. Ar- | rangements have been made for providing such postal conveniences with foreign nations, and as a result there has arisen a strong movement to have the same facilities extended to the domestic postal service. In a discussion of the subject at the recent Commercial Congress in Philadelphia there was but one speaker who opposed the plan. The sentiments of the mer- chants generally are in favor of it, and some of the most potent of our commercial organizations are zealously working for it. It has been said that what- ever the business igterests of the country persistently demand of the Government is sooner or later granted, |and it is therefore probable that when next the Post- master General has to describe the extension of our postal facilities he will include in the list the parcels post. Another army officer in our “drugged,” and while in that interesting condition made an jpoffensive citizen a target for pistol prac- tice. One of these nights some reveling soldier may discover that hot lead is a complete antidote for most midst has been drugs. The Chicago Record is authority for the statement that the price of leather in the United States and Canada has taken a sudden jump. Well, it will only cost some people more money to toe the mark, | | | under the c . hold on to their positions in spite of the I | discussed or cont. | G. | civil service Alas is that the waterway be provided and that it be under | J3J tha | it_should now pro: L R AR R SRS SRR SRS S SRONE SRS S TS “I have a plan that will quickly settle the difficulties in the Philippines,” ob- served the man with the bulging brow, entering the office of the editor of the anti- imperialist Screecher. “'Good; take a chair,” sald the editor, greeting him warmly. plan?" “Why, it's as easy and cheaper than lending money,” began the man with the bulging brow. “All you've got to do is to induce McKinley to declare war against Spain; give her another good lickin’, and then force her to take back them {siands and cough up that twenty million she bunkoed us out of.” “OH! HE WILL COME AROU Do these facts explain why the sympathic 4,:1' t‘llilr:edfcolmlnu are wholly with the Boers 7 They do. ARCUND THE CORRIDORS Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Preston were among the late arrivals at the Grand. , & mining man of Santa a, IS @ guest at the Russ. A. W. Jackson a lucky mining man rom Dawson, Is registered at the Grand. T. C. Gorrie, a well-known mining man | of Placerville, 1s at the Lick for a few | days. | Morris Blum, one of the leading busi- ss men of Vacavile, is a guest at the | | | | —Life. | | | | fi | Grand Charles Mclver, tie Mission San Jose capitalist, Is at the California on a flying visit to this city. A S S S S S S PP LI U U J. 8. Hs ¥, one of Victoria's promi- nent business men, t the Occidental, | accompanied by his wi b Grant came up from his home In @ ego yesterday und registered for a short stay at the Palace Attorney of San tered at the Lick x er 1 Dr. H. R. Arnst, one of the leading % | medical men of Diego, s among the ? | recent arrivals a Lick. ) Fred Dodd, ular boniface of Fresno, 1 r it the Lick while on a short ples to this cfity. ® F. P. Tuttle, two of the i soclety people of Auburn, are & | among the late arrivals at ths Occlden- tal. | 2 | John A. Lowell, head of what ts posst- | bly the largest lithographing cstablish- $ | ment in the United States, s a guest at @ | the Palace, where he arrived yesterday on 4 | a business trip to this coa @ | Grand Secretary and Grand 4 1 ¢ | Treasurer Henry 't the Native ND PRETTY SOON!"—Life. @ | Sons of the ( West have just re- 00000 00000-00+000-00-+@ | turned from an exten d vacation which they spent among the mounta Patrick Lannen, Lake Tribune, is t the o s arrived yesterday on his way to Hono- 'What's the ' | 1,1, He is on a vaca and fs taking | the trip purely for pl re and recrea tion. J. M. Barr, a Fe; W of the Santa third vice president of the . general manager ; John Playe Sar connected with the a Fe at Te CIVIL SERVICE LAW. Henry N. Clement Declares as Erronoous the Conclusions Conoerning Apgointees Reached by Attorney Squires. wl hich subjects al interest aining Information * Will be of interest to its readers, without holding itself responsible for the opin- ons of the writers.) gene a In your yesterday's issue communication from Editor Call: there D. city, fidence by telling them through the cc umns of The Call that he has been pro- fessionally consulted by numerous meme bers of “the push” as to whether the ap- pointees of the officers who take office ter on January 8, 199, can law, d t while he a ed his “push” clients that they 1 be “buckle down' te the study of ¢, geography, spelling and read- ter service law, arri at the conclusion that it does not apply to the appointees who will be appointed by the officers who take office on Janury 8, 1900, In order that the public shall be m- formed of the important fact that he absolutely forced by the resistiess rule of logic to the conclusions announced 1 him, and not by the persuasive influence of a possible retainer fee from his ““pust clients, he hastens u ure us that h “n civil servic himself, is and that it is therefore with deep and heart- felt bordering we may infer on ish of mind, that he is com- pel 3 1 his unwilling assent to the legal proposition that his c ts, ‘‘th push,’”” will be able, in spite of the civ ervice law, to hold on to their positions until the die, and he then dol Few die and none resig g (u’;' the civil service law! It is too t after all our long and continuous truggle to incorporate it in the charter : to be inoperative, ingly rejoiced to ed legal friend, ave S0 rec- reg: et, 1 am, however be able to assure my whose transcendent abilitd | ommended him to “the push’” that there is , and that his conclusions are en- In the poignancy of his t the y tlought that the civil law in the charter might be in- operative his eyes seem to have been so blinded by the tears which flowed from his grief-stricken heart that he could not see to read the provisions of section 10, ar- ticle 13, of the civil service law in the charter, mpletely answers his point, and no doubt will bring consolation to his heart and joy to | soul. The following is the provision which Mr. Squires overlooked and of which he makes no mention in his communication, to wit: ‘o prevent the stoppage of public busi- ness, or to meet extraordinary exigencies, the head of any department or office may, with the approval of the Commissioners, make tempc appointments, to remain in force not exceeding sixty days, and only until regular appointments, under the provisions of this article, can be made. Respectfully, {ENRY N. CLEMENT. San Francisco, Nov. 21, 1899, —_——,— ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. THE EARTH'S MOTIONS—Subscriber, City. The earth has two constant mo- tions, the.daily and the annual. The earth moves around the sun in a nearly circular path. TRANSPORT SERVICE-L H. J., City. The assistant to the marine superintend- ent of the transport service on this eoast is C. G. Lyman, whose office Is in the Army building, 36 New Montgomery street. DOUBTLESS AWARE — Subscriber, City. “You are doubtless aware that Ha- belongs' to the United States of merica,” is a correct form of expression, is used in the sense of yet hop tirely erroneout “probably know. TO SIGN A LETTER—Writer, City. A lady writing to a person who does not know whether she is single or married should sign with the prefix Mrs. or Miss, as otherwise the receiver cannot tell how to address the reply. TO LEARN A TRADE—A. C. W., City. At the Lick School of Mechanical Arts girls are taught trades. Make applica- tion to the superintendent in the scheol building, corner of Sixteenth and Utah streets, San Franclsco. MEDICINE-B. H., Oakland, Cal. If you desire to make a tonic medicine In any form for the J;urpose n‘f‘“‘"g it on the market you do not need any authority from any medical society, but you wiil have to pay a manufacturer's tax. THE SUN—A. 8, City. The dlameter of the sun is $66,500 miles, or 109'% times the mean diameter of the earth, so that “he volume or bulk of the sun exceeds that of the earth 1,300,000 times, and is 600 times greater than the bulk of all known planets together. A QUORUM—S., Borden, Cal. By the constitution a majority of each house of Congress shall constitute a quorum to do business, but a smaller number may ad- journ from day to day and com the attendance of absent members in such manner and under such penalties as each house may provide. During the first fifty Congresses the rule relative to a quorum had been interpreted to mean that the constitational quorum was present by a count of votes. In Se%lember. 180, T. B, Reed of Maine, the then Speaker, ruled that he might decide a quorum to be pres- ent when enough members were visibly present, though some did not vote. The Call publishes communications in | e 18 rtheless “convinced” that | need not do so for the reason that as, after ully reading the civil | Kans.; C. A, Carpenter of Chi al P s | J. R. Hitchcock of Angeles constl. The South-African tute a party of distl hed railzroad of- rrived in the registered at the ¥ des Gartes city last night Catechism. his brother, ques des Gartes, Parisian aris- who have extensive arests ndike mining district, ar , where they arrived last 16 make ArrRties ir Alaskan claims to att v o | Why did the Boers migrats to their present | abiding place ¥ Because they abandoned their former holdings for the sake of being farther away from the English. Were the English undesirable neighbors ? It seems a safe inference when a whole nation gives up its homes and moves away. Why did the English follow them up ? Because gold and diamonds were di covered in the new territory. What was Jameson's raid ? CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON () . rs and wi WASHIN 24.—Representa- tive R. J. Wa L hannon and Wi the St. James. B Special informatior supplied business houses and public mes Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), gomery street. Telephone Main 1 dally to omething new ched boxes at | wnsend’'s. A hanc as card An attempt by the English to possess giv with every be noice candle s themselves of this new land. 627 Market street, I tel bullding By fair means or foul 1 Foul. Time to | Townsend's {in fire-etched 1 Then are Jameson and his fellow-conspira- | tors still in disgrace ? | Market street, Pala . | John Bull keeps el They have never been in' disgrace. & K | They are national heroes. and charting the o | But the English were at peace with the | | Boers at that time ? | Yes. Then the raid was in op ternational law ? en vessels sounding an beds. Tourist Excursions. Personally conducted tourist excursions via the SANTA FE ROUTE, with latest vestibuled sleeping cars, through from California to en violation of in- | ton every Wednesday, to St. Paul every Sunday | Fr to St. Louls every Sunday and to ry 8 nesday and Friday Distinctly. Call at ticket office, No. 628 Market st., for full An indefensible attempt to gain possession | ‘normation. of a neighbor's country in time of peace 7 Dr. Slegert's Angostura Bitters fs indorsed Yes. by physiclans and chemists for purity. Don't What led wup to the present war? accept any substitute. A desire of the English to control | Neglect your hair and you lose it. Parkers country which was not their own. What is the uitumate object of the Eny. | lish 1 | Treasure. And for what are the Boers fighting 1 For their country. Will the British outnumber the Boers About ten to one. Hair Halsam renews the growth and eolor. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns, 15 cts. —— e —— California Limited. SANTA FE ROUTE—Connecting train at 5 p. m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday an urday, giving passengers ample time to see Los | Angeles and Pasadena. Finest equipped trdin | and best track of any line to the East. | bandsome folder and full particulars at | Market street. | In the Sunday Call, NOVEMBER 26, 1899. HOW 1 SPENT 63 THANKSGIVIN DAYS AT SEA. By CAPTAIN HOLMES, SERGEANT WASSON TELLS HIS FICTION, OWN STORY. | FASHION AND ——————— | Ges OF THe || WHAT SAN FRANCISCO HAS TO BE REST CXMEeES THANKFUL FOR. OF THE- ILLUSTRATORS' ART TO BE SEEN PRISCILLA ALDEN, ACalifornian, and direct descendant of Langfellow's famous “Priscilla,”” in a page of special poses for the Sunday Call. IN ANY SUNDAY PAPER IN AMERICA. HOW TO PREPARE A THANKSGIVING DINNER, THE SUI‘;DAY CALL’'S CALENDAR OF CALIFORNIA ACTRESSES. WHAT TO WEAR AT THE FOOTBALL GAME. BOOKS OF THE WEEK Reviewes by PROFESSOR H. B. LATHROP of Stanford University, THE FIRST THANKSGIVING DAY. ; g g | | § : s ; |