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w HE SA FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1900. Che Faks< Call.| OUST THE FAKERS. “HE Phelan fakers and their partner in doing TUESDAY... malicions injury to California, Dr. Kinyoun, must,go. The far-reaching harm done by them KELS, Propnetor, SPRECH tddress All Communications to W, S, LEAKE, Manag MANAGER'S OFFICE. . PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third. S. F. Telephone Press 201 EDITORIAL ROOMS....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 202. Deltvered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 6 Cents. ms by Mail, Incleding Postage: snday), one year dav). € months. subseriptions. Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. ng change of address should be » NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order ure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. ...1118 Broadway C GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chicago. (ong Distance Telephone “‘Central 2615."') XEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON. Heraid Square YORK REPRESENTATIVE: NEW STEPHEN B. SMITH..... ..30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Eherman House: P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel: Fremont Hcuse; Auvditorium Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waia, storia Hotel; A. Brenteno, 51 Union Square: Murray Hill Hotel. WASHINGTON (D, C. ..Weilington Hote! MOR Carrespond ot hildren of the Ghetto,” Monday, Miss Hobbs ™ A Milk White Flag.” nd Eaay streets—Spectalties. Vaudeville every afternoon and Fischer's—"The Huguenots.” Sutro Baths. nights. B — AUCTION ;;LES. Tuis day. Horses, et 1722 Market GUARD CALlFOVRNl{-'L warned the Republic ik o il upon slection depends s no wisdom in relying upon the im- 1 to e pa be clean 3 d When the decent people of t o use in passing them stale ng them to believe that it come out from behind hust get off the free lunch nters of influence in the There never was any reason ich were the nve tion loon i Republican politics. Let there be an ion is in preparation. The 1" Everything has been nd in order. ty justify the expectations of its - coming primaries 1 a n that it is, as of old, the party of law, sure e primary election be a holiday for San Fran- 1d let them see to it that the deje- ntative of the par tal reputation. ilure of spring wheat in Minnesota and the Dakotas, with partial failure of winter wheat in and Ohio, seems to make certain a 1d shstained rise in price. Nebraska and Kan- have good crops, but wheat is not a specialty in States, corn being their great agricultural fea- But as all grain feels a rise in one, the corn tes will get a dividend out of the advance in wheat . _ At the present rate of rise we are likely to see dol- lar wheat by the Fourth of July. California will fortunately be caught by the rise in first hands and the wheat ranchers will get a much needed benefit, while our barley and oats crop will feel the effect beneficially. It seems probable now that the United States will have but little wheat for export, and the ‘effect of our shortage will be felt everywhere. It is interesting to note that the politics of the world is controlled by the wheat crop and the price of bread. There is less tendency to go to war when food is high, and th re less of that kind of politics that makes toward war. those crop in activities. Its pre e depends somewhat upon its cost. » The cause of the American wheat shortage is dis- quicting, for it is drought. The crops in Ilinois, Iowa, Minnesqg the Dakotas, Nebraska and all that group of States which get their moisture from the Great Lakes depend upon the spring thunder showers. T e distribute the moisture to the growing fields. Its first source is the lakes. It is brought in snow in the winter and in the November and March rair In its primitive physical condition that whole country was dotted with sloughs, swamps, ponds and Jakes. These were the secondary reservoirs for water. Evaporation from the Great Lakes filled them; evaporation from them distributed the water to the land to supply the growing crops. The draining of | these sloughs, swamps, ponds and small lakes has added to the area of tillable land but decreased its fertility by destroying the secondary reservoirs. It is this that renders crops uncertain in all that region. It is no dream that California may be the last perma- nent wheat field in the United States, with great crops made certain by irrigation. The storage of \ storm waters in our mountains will make a certain supply for such irrigation, and when wheat has ceased to be possible in the Upper Mississippi Valley California may be meeting the American demand for the PBest milling wheat in the world. Heretofore but little irrigation has been used on wheat in this State, but the methods of its application to this crop may well be studied in view of the fu- ture of wheat. ¥ must not take its orders | the dictation of the bum | luence in any politics, and | Now let Re- | The fair average i War is like other great human | "\\-ili be long felt by this State. As far as travel is con- | cerned they have succeeded in sidetracking San Fran- | cisco. The overland trains from the East bring’ out +.....Telephone Press 204 ! five and ten passengers instead of the full list that is | usual at this time of year. This ¢ is on the grand !l'ghw:\y around the world, but travel is dodging | around it and seeking side lines, because the Mayor's | Board of Health and Kinyoun and a monkey and a j guinea-pig have conspired to make ali the world be- lieve that there is a plague epidemic here. A due the monkey and the guinea-pig. Led us well by r ptic poison taken from dead Chinese. Their human | partners should be prosecuted by the Society for Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animals. They have never seen |a living case of plague, here or elsewhere. If | they ever attended a medical school, or had any train- | ing in their profession, they would remember that the first warning they had in the dissecting room, from the demonstrator of zratomy, was, not to cut them- selves while dissecting the dead. The chemical changes that begin in the body immediately after death make such a cut, or a mere scratch, dangerous. As all men know who have worked in a dissecting- room, the blood-poisoning which resuits from such a wound causes enlargement of the glands, depravity of the secretions, septic fever and death, unless the speediest precautionary measures are taken. More than one surgeon has lost his life in that way. To take any part of a cadaver, either blood or tissue, and hypodermically inject it into a living animal, is to in- troduce this fatal sepsis more directly into the blood than is possible in a superficial wound. It is poison, no matter of what disease the subject m have died. | Even if death is caused by an accident, it is the same. Yet this Phelan Board of Health has taken blood and tissue from dead Chinese, injected it into mon- keys, and when they turned sick asked the profession and the public to take that as evidence of the plague! Their conduct is the odium of the madical profession. Dr. Kinyoun has aided apd abetted this farce, and with the members of the board should be disciplined by medical bodies. know the folly of such a test. dence an evil reputation has been created for this city and State that will be hard to correct. On all grounds the board and Kinyoun should step down and out. "heir retention in office gives color to their false re- ports of an epidemic, and if one should come in the future no one would trust their judgment in dealin with it. | Kinyoun has t]mrnuql.‘h‘ and the Federal Government should transfer him to some apology have Any intelligent layman . would Yet upoh such evi- discredited himself, | place where he will have nothing more serious to deal | with than measles, whooping-cough and hives. Let im have leisure to try these on his monkey colony, 1. When he goes, as he Its exasperating 11 do but little ha 1's Board of Health must go also. t has been vicious, a he v most We appeal to the mpathy acerations f ignorance and malice That is not medicine; it is a the more intel- a plague epiden monkey shine, in v ligent party. We repeat that the only way to get rid of the harm- reputation which the city and State suffer is by gnorance getting rid of the officials whose malice and ayor Phelan is about to attend the Democratic g The delegation will take on 2 lot of California w and fruits. While the Mayor is acting as bartender and caterer to the arid crowd, what answer can he make when asked if it is true, as "rcpnrted by his Board of Health, that the plague is | epidemic in San Francisco? e e s OUR STATE SCHOOL BOOKS. g I ~0O such bad eminence has our series State school textbooks been raised by its own de- merit that it has attracted notice even in N York. This is shown by the publication in the Edu- cational Review—perhaps the best magazine of its class in the United States—of an article on this sub- ject by Mr. Richard D. Faulkner of the Franklin Grammar School of San Francisco. This is the best resame we have ever seen of the history of our State textbook legislation and should be read by every taxpayer, whether he have children in the public schools or not. The State textbook system of California originated in a well intentioned attempt to rid the State from scandals in connection with the adoption of books published by private firms. Like all attempts to make people moral by legislation, it is a failure. The constitutional amendment upon which the sys- tem rests is, in turn, based upon a report submitted to the Legislature in 1883 by James J. Ayges, then State Printer. The fallacies and jniscalculations of this re- port are responsible for much of the blunder and waste that have ensued. Ayres stated that the cost to the State of a speller, three readers, a grammar, an arithmetic and a history would be $x'38%; that the retail price of equally good books bought in the open market would be $5 03, making a difference in favor of the State of $3 6474 on every set of the seven books. From this must be deducted 25 per cent for purchase of machinery and for wear and tear, leav- ing still a difference in favor of the State of $3 304 on | the series. It seems marvelous that such patent misrepresenta- tions of cost of production comld influence legislation, | but they certainly did, for, combined with some “good work” by astute politicians, they resulted in the constitutional amendment which declares that the | State Board of Education “shall compile or cause to | be compiled and adopt a uniform series of textbooks | for use in the common schools throughout the State.” | Space forbids us from following Mr. Faulkner ! through his clear and dispassionate criticism of all the egregious follies that have been committed in con- nection with the publication of these books; specimen must suffice. “Three thousand eight hun- dred dollars has been paid for the manuscript of a primary history, which, though accepted, has not | been published, and for the manuscript of-the revised history which, though submitted, has not been ac- cepted.” X The controlling power in the State Board of Edu- cation néw consists of the presidents of the five State Normal Schools, the president of the State Univer- sity and the professor of pedagogy in that university. That is as it should be. The State has confidence in these gentlemen; it believes they know their busi- ness or it would not have placed them where they are. Among the many affairs which claim their at- tention none is more important than this of the State textbooks, for the enforcement of the compulsory education law is the duty of local boards. Mr. | Faulkner very properly calls upon the State Board to formulate a new and better policy, looking to the expert revision of some of the books and the substi- tution of new books for others that are hopelessly onal Conventio: of using to die when injected with | one | bad. Or, if the board is convinced, after investigation, that the whole system is bad, they should fearlessly say 5o and ask the Legislature to submit an amend- ment to the constitution repealing that system. So far as money goes, the State never made a worse invest- | ment. The Legislature has appropriated for the ex- penses of the system $466,000 up to January I, 1900: | the receipts from the sale of books have been $1,043,128 83, making a total of $1,549,123 83. The ex- penditures have been $1,375,251 80. This leaves as assets $173.872 03, ®ogether with “a worn-out print- ing plant and a series of textbooks either obsolete or needing revision.” If the books had been furnished free, this showing would have been poor enough, bat they have been sold to parents at prices little if at all | lower than those for which better books could have been purchased in the open market. The people have thus paid for the books twice—once by taxation and once by purchase. A CONDITION OF PEACE. AL influential Filipinos, who represent S Aguinaldo, and were until recently a part of his civil and military establishment, being yet in sympathy with him, have proposed certain terms of peace to which they engage to secure his assent. The proposition is intrinsically interesting, because it di- vulges Aguinaldo’s unbroken leadership of his people and their unbroken sympathy with that for which he stands. Again, these men who are submitting terms for pacification are not wild men suing for an end of slaughter. They are mostly cultivated gentlemen with educations acquired in European universities. They have a clear knowledge of their own people and their opinion of the conditions upon which peace may be had is entitled to the greatest respect. The seven propositions which they submit are mainly a modi- fication of the platiorm of the anti-Spanish revolu- tion of 1896, and are included in the treaty of Biacbatano, by which that revolution was closed Spain immediately violated that treaty. Her perfidy was foreseen by Aguinaldo, who deposited the pay- ment made by Spain for the benefit of his country, to be used in defense of the principles of the revolution, as it has been since against both Spain and the United States. These seven propositions raise questions that are not without difficulty in treatment. The slaughter and destruction we have wrought in the islands have im- poverished the people, sapped their substance and left them desperate and destitute. The_placid and peaceful conditions which Admiral Dewey's officers found in Luzon as late as January, 1800, are there no longer. Paymaster Wilcox and Cadet Sargent, especially commissioned to that duty by Dewey, made a journey through the island in the autumn of 1898 and their report was issued as an offi- cial document at Washington. They found the peo- ple iriendly, happy and prosperous; they were every- where well treated, and found the people very kind and hospitable. They especially note the intelligence of the natives. Arriving at'the town of Aparri, they met there the report from Paris that the American Commissioners favored the independence of the isl- ands, under an American protectorate. The military comimander of the province, Colonel Tivona, rega~ded the news as so reliable that he concluded warfare was | at an end and surrendered his sword to a civil officer who had been elected by the people. This civil of- ficer made a speech, thanking the soldiers and their colonel for the services they had rendered liberty, and assuring them that the principles of the war they had begun would be perpetuated by the people of the | province, and that “every man, woman and child “s:ood ready to take up arms to defend their newly won liberty and to resist to the last drop of their blood the attempt of any nation whatever to bring them back to their former state of dependence.” This report, considered of sufficient importance to be published by our Government, is an index of the | feeling current at that time, not in Luzon alone, but in | Negros, Panay and throughout the islands.. The | seven conditions of peace now submitted need to be | judged by the causes of the revolution of 1806, and | the state of the people after the Spanish surrender, as | shown by this report of Dewey’s officers and by other | testimony equally good. One condition is a money payment to assist the | stricken people in the poverty and distress which have i taken ‘the place of the joy and prosperity which | Dewey's officers found there less than two years ago. It is probable that no war has ever leit as complete ruin and sorrow in its train as this which we have waged there in the last sixteen months. As we gave money to repair the devastation wrought by Spain in Cuba, we cannot remain indifferent to what we have ourselves done. Others of the conditions relate to the establishment of civil government and the part to be taken therein by the natives, and the whole protocol leads up to the last of the seven clauses, which is a demand for expulsion of the Spanish friars. These friars secem to represent oppression to the natives. There is no need to go into the reason or lack of reason for this fecling. Next to their aspiration for independence it is their most enduring sentiment. They demanded expulsion of the friars in 1896, and Spain promised it in the treaty of Biacbatano. These friars seem to be chosen by the Archbishop of Manila as parish priests. But the people want native priests, and c®mplain of the exactions of the friars, s well as of their conduct in particulars that may not be discussed. More than one member of the first Philippine Commission has said that there can never be permanent peace under any government that keeps the Spanish friars there, | This situation reveals a start]ing condition which may well be considered by those who talk glibly | about our “Providential responsibilities.” If the | treaty of Paris extended the whole body of the con- | stitution to the Philippines, we are not permitted to | forget that the constitution is there for the friars as | well as for the Filipinos, and that under it we can no | more expel them, or interfere with the Archbishop's | independence in appointing parish priests, than we can in like manner interfere at home. This is likely | to be found the crux of the Philippine question, and | the country will await with gnterest the action of the | Taft Commission. This sécinl subject will go for digestion to Professor Moses, to whom all ecclesias- tical issues have been referred by the Commission- | ers. As he is a Californian, his decision will be of special interest on this coast. The liberality with which response is being made to the fund for the stricken family of a local hero is | evidence that the people of San Franc isco have not forgotten that charity which marks their history. Tn vain the Democrats of California put their best men forward. The choicest bunch they can make will not be anything more in the public eye than a tail to the Bryan kite. Pasl i e | In its administration of the schools, particularly in the issuance of certificates, the Board of Education has at least one merit—it is consistent in its absurd in- consistency. X 1f the Chinese wanted seriously to set the world on fire it is unfortunate that they forgot the Standard : Oil Company’s plant at Tientsin. s 1851 sian war in 1866. surrection. stan war, 1870, in Spain, 1874. Ashantee war, 1873, lan war in 1875. vian war, 1876. OES a war always follow a big exposition? Read this Internaticnal Exposition, Crystal Palace, London, , followed by the Crimean war. position, Paris, 1855, followed by Russo-Turkish war, 1855; Persian, 1855; Indian mutiny, 1857, and our Clvil War in 1860. Vienna Industrial Exposition, 1865, followed by Austro-Prus- | Exhibition Universelle, Paris, 1867, followed by Garibaldi in- | Berlin Industrial Exposition, 1870, followed by Franco-Prus- Brussels Industrial Expositlsn. 1874, followed by Carlist war | Moscow Russtan Progfess Exposition, 1572, followed by the | Vienna Industrial Exposition, 1873, followed by the Abyssin- Industrial Exhibition in London, 1873, followed by the Ser- Philadelphia Exposition of 1876, also the Paris Electrical and Brussels Industrial Expositions, same year, followed by International Ex- Paris Exposition of ness was good. Bevised by him as a Russo-Turkish war, 187; Afghanistan ¢ World’s Fair, Chicago, 1803, followed by Greco-Turkish and Spanish-American wars. Exposition this coming summer? Those who take note of curious historic coincidents are more than apprehensive of the war of 1%1 as for After an Exposition Look Out for a War ar, 1878; Zulu war, 1579, What will happen after the Paris adowed by the rkings of some 1900. According to the mysterious law which military and naval men think may ex- ist, a great exposition is apt to be followed by a great war. The notable coincidences : Passing such smaller affairs as the Zulu, Ashantee and Al sinian campaigns, there are some startling colneidences in tb | list, and most startling of all is the first. In 1851 Europe was In profound reforms cutbreaks of 1848. The Prince Consor was then at the height of HIS\influenc tically a thing of the pas great peace_jul Iy had it closed before Brifain. F cembining in a_bloody, Russia in the Crime: wn ab llustrating the law are sk cace and prosperity. Busi- granted because of Ibert of Britain, who believed that war was ;stal Palace show was all pation: Iy and Turkey w indeeis inglorious war against a.—Cincinnati Trib had been The 1 L R o O SCat SCE S SR o S S S ot ot e oA o e o aie an e o e MAINTAINING A PARITY BETWEEN SILVER AND WHEAT. vr e e eP S5SSSSSSSSSa ==~ —Denver Times. B R R e S e e o o oo o o S S o o S S D SADPEP P ST S S S S S S S SRS S S G ae as s e s ol e e s e o o s ART AND' ARTISTS. HERE is a charming little French subject on exhibition this week in the galleries, “The Musicale,” by that cleve Frenchman, V. dc Paredes. *“The Musicale,” an old Parisian | | salon on the reception day of Mme. la Comtesse. is 4 Watteau subject, treated in Watteau fashion somewhat, and is a conspicuotisly clever bit of painting. It is almost a miniature, being only 10xI4 inches, and contains about fifteen figures, admirably grouped and composed. The cosgtume and detail are lavish and ornate, but most deftly subordinated to the prin- {cipal interest the picture, which is truly a small gem in its way. In the same gallery i shown a pleasing sheep picture of C. Westerbeck, an ex- emplar of the Dutch school. The subject is a shepherdess and sheep returning | home over the flat Dutch meadows In the twilight, and the painter has well caught of and tender sadness of the hour and scene. The picture is warm in tone | and handled in & broad and simple man- | ner, which just escapes sketchiness. The | atmosphere has the clear freshness of a it between showers, which the watery unset mournfully foretells. Ethel Marion Wickes shows a Cinderella —a Cinderella in sabots—at least the title | thrusts itself upon one, kicks itsélf intu | a laggara conscicusness. so to speak, with the unvanishing point of a Chicago Sabot, which peeps proudly from beneat petticoat of the little water color lady of erella is not worthy of fer little Irish landscape attests that. It is unpardon- in drawing and manner. ably careless The figure is seated on the ragged edge of nothing, the arm is too small and the background appears as if drawn from a photographic_scene. Charles Warren Eaton shows three landscapes, two snow scenes and an even- ing subject. The latter is a delightful bit of color, rich and subdued, the aftermath of a sunset and the handling is especially happy. The snow pictures offer curious contrast to the brilliant California land- scapes around them and are full of queer, ghostly suggestion. A In another gallery is a curious study of sea and sand dunes by Mary C. Brady. As the phrase goes, there is ‘“‘something to it,” but it is a little difficult to decide what. It is certainly not the sea, whici is entirely without drawing and resembles nothing So much as a disturbed mass of cotton batting; nor is it the immediate foreground, which, according to the treat- ment, i{s farther away than the middle distance; it must therefore be the sunny, forceful middle distance itself and a cer- tain curious color harmony throughout. The style Is the most outre impressionism, and almost anything might be prophesied of its painter. If there were more mys- tery in the method, if one could not so plainly “see the wheels go rqund” at any point within the half-mile range these at- tempts at texture and atmosphere would be of infinitely more interest. FIBER RESOURCES OF THIS COAST 1 saw a leader on “'Our Export Trade,” in which you say, referring to raw material, such as silk, wool, flax, hemp and jute: | “These raw materials hardly come into competition with honie industries.” Now, in so far as flax and hemp are concerned, such an assertion could only be made by | one who is entirely unacquainted with the | vast fiber resources of the whole Pacific Stope. This fact is not at all_surprising | i the press, because even the State legis- lators of California and Washington passed laws excluding the use of native fibers in their respective State institu- tions, to the benefit of Anglo-Indian jute. Last year 1 was allowed by the State Board of Prison Directers to experiment with California hemp and Oregon flax tow. The grainbags and twine made from these fibess weré simply superb, and much better than jute manufactures. Mr. A. B. Spreckels, president of the State Board of Agriculture, told that body that the sample sugar bags I submitted to his judgment were much erior_in strength to anything he had seen. ~Our brainiest and mest enterprising men. ng {ou ‘will pardon me for intrud- ing at sucl Editor The Call: In vour issue of 23d | native fibers is a subject worthy of our |{ length on your very valuable Ir n. yours sincerely, LIAM J. J. CUNN{NOHA)L Gridley, June 24, 1600. Suit on Dupont-Street Bonds. Siit was begun in the United States Circuit Court yesterday against the City and County of San Francisco to recover s to be due on bonds issued E&-ang of Dupont lgrest; now !.v for are Edward ums -es wai Scutor for T. R. Reynoids, $i1.125; trustee under the deed of The plaintiff: ue. e pl nTg‘nndmb PERSONA_L_HENTION. Thomas L. Siil, a rancher of Fresno, s at the Lick. «J. W. Henderson, a banker of Eureka, is at the Lick. C. W. Pendleton, an attorney of Los Angeles, is at the Grand. | F. Treskow, a prominent business man | of Crockett, is at the Grand. | John Kinman, one of the big shippina | ™ men of Portland, is at the Occidental. Charles Thayer and J. A. McClurg of Ol City, two prominent ofl well owners, are at the Grand. | Fred A. Kribs, a mining man of Min. | neapolis, accompanied by his family, is at the Occidental. | John J. Fleming, who is connected with | the Lick Hotel, returned yesterday from a two wéeks' trip In Lake County. E. 0. McCormick, passenger traffic manager of the Southern Pacific, has re- | turned from his Eastern trip. He was in | New York In attendance at the meeting | of the railroad presidents and in Chi-| cago at the conference over tourist travel | matters. | J. C. Stubbs of the Southern Pacific | Railroad will return to this city on Wednesday. Mr. Stubbs has been' to Washington to attend the.meeting of the | Interstate Railroad Commission, repre- | senting the railroad in the case of the | orange growers against the Southern Pa- | cific. _—ee——— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. . NEW YORK, June %.—G. W. Hull of | Berkeley is at the Murray Hill; P. Kil- man of San Francisco is at the Park Avenue; Judge L. E. Mosher of Los Ange- les and N. L. Bell of San Francisco are at the Imperial. — e ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. LONDON TO MANILA—S., City. The distance from London, England, via the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, to Manila is 9685 miles. N GOLD AND SILVER-M. C. H., City. The market value of gold is $18 per ounce. The value of silver fluctuates, but it av- erages about 60 cents an ounce. MURPHY AND YOUNG EGAN—Mc., City. To ascertain the details of the fight between Murphy and Young Egan “which took place some time in the 'Sis” you would have to consult the flles of the papers of that date. FOUR COINS—F. J. B., San Jose, Cal. For a quarter of 1861 dealers ask from 60 cents to $1: a dime of 189 without mint mark is worth 10 cents; a dime of 1802 does not command a preémium, neither does a nickel 5-cent piece of 1883 without the word “cents.” WRECK OF THE SACRAMENTO-—F. A. K., City. The steamer Sacramento, Captain Farnsworth, struck on Sacramen- to reef, 200 n¥iles south of San Diego, at p. m., December 5, 1573, Her passen- gers, treasure and cargo were saved, but the vessel became a total wreck. FISHING—H. M. City. There are a number of points in and around the bay of San Francisco where one may" catch fish. As to the kind of bait uired, such will be fyrnished by bait dealers on the water front, who will tell you the kind gou will need for any rticular kind of sh you may desire to for. AUTHOR WANTED—A correspondent. wants the name of the author of: Tho! his babes he .,,,:‘:)"’“"5 Ny may shift, too, and even e, Stomach he starts with stays by bim Can any of the readers of this department give the desired Information? A MORTGAGE—A. S., Metz., Monterey County, Cal. In regard to a husband placing a mortgage on land, the law of this State says: * management and control of t - commun- ity property, with the like absolute power oI d?spotmon other than testamentary, as he has of his separate property; provided that he cannot make a gift of property without a valuable consideration unless the wife in writing consents thereto.” REGISTERED NAMES—J. W. C., Liv- ermore, Cal. The way to have names of individvals removed from the great regis- ter of a county because such were flleg- Cal. glace frutt 50c per I at Townsead's.* bbb e i by Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by tha Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’'s), 510 Mont. gomery street. Telephone Main 1042. *+ —_——— Mickey—Say, you're de guy dat sald yer could lick me wit' bote han’s tied, ain't yer? Chimmie—Why—er—yes. Mickey—Well, come an’ do it. I'm ready r yer. ‘himmje—Aw, no you'se ain't. You'se .;,lr 't got yer hands tied yet.—Philadelphia ess. —_— e— Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. The best liver medicine. A vegetable cure for liver ills, biliousness, indigestion, constipation.* — " Ladles take Dr. Siegert's Angostura Bitters generally when they feel low spirited. It brightens them up immediately. CONTRIBUTORS — 10 THE SUMMER TERM COURSES, THE CALL’S HOME STUDY CIRCLE SERIES. D.D., Boston. COLONEL THOS. W. HIGGINSON, Cambridge, Mass. ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS, Boston. F. HOPKINSON SMITH, New York City. HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD, ‘Washington, D. C. FRANK A VANDERLIP, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. G. STANLEY HALL, LLD, President Clark University. PROFESSOR LEWIS E GATES Harvard University. PROFESSOR JAMES F. KEMP, Columbia University. ALBERT S. BOLLES, LL.D, Haverford College. JISSE MACY, LL.L., Iowa College. WILLIAM J. ROLFE, LITT. D, Cambridge, Mass. 0. P. AUSTIN, Chief of the Bureau of Statistics. A. C. McLAUGHLIN, LL.D, University of Michigan MARGARET AINSLEE, Philadelphia. PROFESSOR €. B. CARPENTER, Columbia University. REV. LYMAN P. POWELL, Authot of American Historle Town Beries. JAMES A. WOODEURN, Ph. D, Indiana University. WILLIAM HOUSTON, M. A, MacMaster University, Toronto. GEORGE M. WRONG, M. A, University of Toronto. CHARLES H. SMITH, LL. D, Yale Unfversity. PAUL C. FREER, Ph. D, M. D, + Unfversity of Michigan. ROBERT M. TCOKER, M. D., Chicago. OSCAR H. ALLIS, M. D, Philadelphia. WILLIAM HOWE DOWNES, Art Editor “Boston Transeript.” ARTHUR HOEBER, Art Editor New York “Commercial Advertiser.” all; laced thereon is to mak mx{apflmt to the authorities in caw;n'm:; the register. rties complained of will be cited !c-“ q'; - al:gt lbl'g)w cause why nam s from the register. The 'y mnT: he complaint will have to subordinate the complaint. legal registration. Illegal 0] w, tion is a crime under the vi- B nlth.?endeqdofimmw:,c{ And others whose names: cpp2ar in connection with the programme of studies.