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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 13800. DNESDAX.... JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Commun . S. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER'S OFFICE Telephone Press 204 Market and Third, 8. ¥. 201. PEFT clephose Fress PUBLICATION kS EDITORIAL ROOMS. 17 to 221 Stevensom St. | Telephone Press 202, Deltvered hy Carricers. 15 Cents Per Weel. Single Coples. 5 Cents. Mail, Including Postage: | without adding to the price of its service to the pub WELLS-FARGO FOR BRY@AN. HE Examiner has solicited and secured a state- I ment of the position taken by that great cor- poration, the Wells-Fargo Express Company, in the current campaign. The information is fur- shed, as is proper, by the corporation’s president, | Mr. John J. Valentine, and lines the company up with Bryan. We do not deal unkindly with Mr. Valentine. He is the president of one of the great- est corporations of the country and controls its policy. byt in his corporate relation. el Bryan has published, in many counts, his indictment of the Republican party, and one of the strongest of these is the charge that the war taxes were purposely arranged in the interest of the gor- porations, so as to fall 'off them upon the people. Now nan Company stamps its tadable paper c2| lo; Co 7ze of mddress should be | OLD ADLDE in order liance with their request. subecsthire ar to give both NE ure & prompt and correc ..1118 Broadway KROGNESS, rtising, Marquette Building, Chicago. Telephone *‘Central 2619.”) ESPONDENT: Herald Square Menager Fore Aovs EW YORK SMITH, REPRESENTATIVE: ETEPHEN 30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Eherman Fouse; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremcnt Hcuse, Auditorium Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentans, 5 2y 24 Hotel. Usnion Square;’ o - Wellington Hotel AUCTION SALES. t 27, at 11 o'clock, Horses he re of or- { the Mikado | and promptness, | ve provgd more pon them. It in the atmos nd exist- cen avoided had lization of ese war. 1 in the But ok advan- powers more ad- ed had she been the pres- The ey. ersy from collision final de- In the selfish designe or such sentiment toward s a right to expect, as the re- 1 ion with the allie By the be trustworthy, it again seems t ited States, Great Britain he~great evil of a verted. i the secret ambi diplon warranted | assertion of in- gtsekiang Valley makes mci | 1 nese polity is to be | | « ons of | has and her and Japan very uncom- 1 about the trusteeship ‘of the P ngs that interest mankind. well agree that this trustee- the integrity of China is in- { | | | 1llion people, stubborn | on, their moral order m:\in—{ hings of a philosophy of life | any developed by the | e first importance. It | ions that accept dif- | rds, which, perhaps, } ! | | | ¥ to boast. ve not duly considered the nese and other Asiatics. ile composed of many races, ves and their genius from the whose belief was that if they ensive arts and let others disturbed. The Moguls asy prey, and themselves, non-resistant subjects, in turn Great Britain. But it is a mis- the Chinese are like the East In- | crse to the arts of offense and | rehend, as no other people, nce. this and is anxious that | 2 turbed and Chinese terri- At the same time Japanese statesmen necessity ited States and Europe may position and the opinions of . for it appears that peace. international right- cousness and the prosperity which follow lie that way. | e Charles Towne, the Populist, intends, it is said, {o camp oratorically on the trail of Roosevelt. M. Towne has been associated so frequently with political circuses that he probably thinks that in the present campaign even a side show will receive some patron- i afford to respect th | Wells-Fargo. | seribed by Mr. Bryan. {J land traitors,” or abating the wages of its employes. The railroac 1p their bills of lading without trying tax to their customers. The only corpora- in the United States that from the beginning i war stamp from the people was When it was exposed in this, | President Valentine defended the shirking of its war | tax in the same able manner in which he announces the support of Bryan by his shirking company. | Among the amazing things in the political maze of | the year, this is perhaps the most extraordinary! The only great corporation that furnished the basis of Colonel Bryan's charge against the Republican party | goes over to Mr. Bryan's support! The E rer greets the support of Wells-Fargo | with glee, and is sumptuous in its ascriptions to President Valentine. It introduces him as a supporter of McKinley in 1896, now changed on the ppine issue to.be a supporter of Colonel Bryan. We have reasons for doubting that President Valen- tine voted for McKinley four years ago, but, be that it may, I reasons for seeking the Examiner's company and using its command of publicity for the enlargement of those reasons, with which that de- lighted paper expresses the greatest sympathy, are things that are justly subject to criticism. With what the Examiner calis “clarity of reason- position of Wells-Fargo is summed President Valentine in these “To opinions from the beginning to the pres- ent of this whole miserable business, which I abhor; 1 think the Philippine Islands belong to the Philip- pine people. I think that people have a right to such government as they think good for themselves, and we have no right to give them such government we think good for them.” the the words: This he prints in the Examiner with approvai | Mr. Hearst. Now, as we have shown by quota- ns from the Examiner, Mr. Hearst and that paper were the first advocates of imperialism as now de- The Examiner, as early as . 1898, was shouting in big type, “Nail the flag to the Philippines.” It said in rejoinder to ex-President Cleveland, call- | him a “pompous, stuffed prophet,” “It is per- haps worth while to point out that ‘the simple ma- chinery of our popular domestic Government,” of which Mr. Cleveland speaks, will neither be changes at home nor emplo; abroad, should it become nec- essary to administer outside dependencies. It is in the power and right of Congress to devise any sort of ystem that may apply to the conditions of such de- | pendencies, and this power is in no wise limited by | the national constitution, nor does its application in- | All | these things are familiar knowledge, but they do not | ppear to make any part of the intellectual equipment | volve any modification of our domestic system. of the superior person who puts his faith in adjec- tives and expects the people to take him for granted.” President Valentine carries Wells-Fargo over to the support of Bryan in company with Senator Mor- gan of Alabama, and quotes Scripture in transit, and is indorsed by the Examiner. But that paper indorsed Morgan in 1898 in saying: “Brave Californians have died in battle in Manila. Above the graves of those heroes the American flag floats, and I believe the American people will never consent to haul it down. That flag will remain. The hand of God Almighty planted it there.” In the same month in 1898 the Examiner called all | men who took the position that President Valentine takes now, “little Americans, copperheads, and accused President McKinley of intending @o let the Philippines go, abusing him there- | for as roundly as President Valentine does now for not letting them go. About the same date in August as the publication Valentine’s letter, the Examiner said: “With Manila in our hands by right of conquest, it becomes more than ever impossible to withdraw the Amer- ican forces from the Philippines. The American flag must be nailed to the Philippines.” So on, day after day, and column after column, the Examiner raved and roared for imperialism in the Philippines, for government there irresponsible to the constitu- tion. and even published and indorsed General Jarnes’ wild imperialist speech to the Republican State Convention, saying that “he spoke for the broadest and most progressive of the thinking men of the country”; and now, that President Valentine ut- ters the opinion of “thoughtful men of affairs.” of | Surely politics never before put such folks in the same bed as Valentine, Morgan and Hearst. The public is interested cnly in guessing which of the strange bedfellows is laughing up the sleeve of his night shirt. PROSPERITY IN CALIFORNI@. It wifi be impossible for them to specify any industry that is not more flourishing than it was in the days of Democratic supremacy, or any State where there is not now a more abundant prosperity than theres was four years ago when Bryan made his first appearance as a candidate for the Presidency. In California the advance of prosperity ever since HEREVER the Bryanites go this year to raise their howls of calamity they will find it neces- | the overthrow of free trade and free silver has been continuous and steadfast. The wealth of the State has augmented from year to year at an encouraging ratio. Evidence to that effect can be perceived on every side. Its latest manifestation is in the returns of the County Auditors to the State Board of Equali- zation. In nearly every county in the State these returns show an increase in the assessed valuation of property, and it is quite possible the Equalizers may add to the increase in some of them, so that the total wiil be even higher than appears upon the returns; Taking the figures as returned to the board the total value of assessable property in the State this year is $1,218,228,588. Last year the amount was $1,104,000,000. The increase is notable in the more populous counties, but is shared generally by almost all sections of the State, except in some of the mining districts. It is figures like these that have given Bryan a notion to shift the campaign from his much-lauded We do not deal with him at all in his individual | Tories | sary to make their talk vague as well as dismal, | crusade for free silver to a new issue. With all his crankiness on the mYney question he has sensc enough to perceive that to repeat his predictions of 1896 in the face of the facts of 1900 would make him the laughing stock of the people from one end of the country to the other. Prosperity has come. It is measured in the stand- | ard of gold and is founded upon the rock of protected industry. All the prospects of the future are bright and there is no menace except that'of Bryanism to | disturb the mind of even the most timid. | FIRST NEWS FROM PEKING. | NCE more The Call and the Herald have O demonstrated the superiority of their service in the world-wide domain of news-gathering. Throughout America and Europe there has been the | keenest eagerness for direct news from the besieged lcgations in Peking, and that news was furnished yes- | terday by special cable to The Call and the Herald. 1t included, along with an account of the situation generally, an interview with United States Minister Conger and another with the British Minister, Sir Claude Macdonald, thus giving to the public infor- | mation direct from the highest sources. This was the first news from Peking and the first interviews with the Ministers. In New York and the East the Herald had this news exclusive, but owing to the difference in time | between the hour of newspaper publication in this city and that in New York, two of our contemporaries were able to have the Herald’s story telegraphed to ! San Francisco early enough for them to publish it at | the same time with The Call. Both of them profited | by that opportunity, but they dealt with it in dif- ferent ways, each after its kind. The Chronicle honestly gave credit for the news, but the Examiner, true to its habitual practice of enriching its fakes by stolen news as often as possible, republished the di patch without giving credit or making any acknowl- edgment of the source from which it was received. By obtaining this important news so promptly un- der circumstances of such difficulty, The Call and the Herald have achieved one of the most signal of the recent triumphs of journalism. It was not until the afternoon of August 14 that the Americans and the British succeeded in forcing their way into the city by a gate near the legations, and the Japanese did not enter until midnight. Yet in the short space of time that has followed, the correspondent of The Call and the Herald saw both the United States and the British Ministers, had interviews with them, gathered accu- rate information of the whole situation and forwarded the news at once to Shanghai, whence it was dis- | patched by special cable to New York and to San Francisco. Such a feat ranks with the best that has ever been | performed in the gathering of war news. It is an- | other demonstration that legitimate journalism has its sensations more impressive than anything the yc,llow journals develop in the way of fakes. The old adage that truth is stranger than fiction is illustrated in this swift gathering of news in the heart of beleaguered Peking, amid the very confusions of battle, and trans- mitting it promptly to the people of America and Europe so anxiously waiting it. The fictions of the of China” and all that sort of thing, but it takes enter- fakers can give alleged “interviews with the Empress | prise, money and energy to send courageous and re- | | liable correspondents to the scene of action and ob- | tain the facts of the situation. THE MAN WITH THE SHIRT WAIST the shirt waist and the established authoritics : :I,F..-\RL\' the controversy between the man in in the East is becoming serious. Several times | have men without -oats been ecjected from dining- | rooms, and the conservatives have rejoiced; but now | | the shirt waist male has turned. He has shown a | pluck worthy of his cause, and one of the swell | restaurants of Chicago will have to go into court and | show why it presumes to exclude the coatless man | from its halls. The damages asked are $50,000, and while that scems an excessive amount to ask for so small a wrong as that of refusing to serve a wayfarer with viands at fancy prices, it is perhaps none too much for the dignity of the occasion. It is to be noted that the fight for the preservation of the coat is waged mainly in Chicago. New York appears to have ‘surrendered willingly to the shirt | waist—indeed, it said she has even welcomed it as a thing altogether lovely and more to be desired during midsummer than a coat of many colors. The Boston Herald, in recording the progress of the reform move- ment, said recently: “Judge Garrison of the Supreme Court of New Jersey appeared on the bench arrayed in a pale blue negligee shirt, white duck trousers, turned up at the bottom and supported by a belt, rus- set shoes and a flowing silk neck scarf. Frank Dam- rosch, at the suggestion of the women of the chorus, removed his coat while conducting a rehearsal, and it is reported that W. K. Vanderbilt dined publicly at the Waldorf-Astoria coatless. It has also been re- | ported that the Waldorf-Astoria would never Yolerate the innovation. But, if the hot weather of last week had continued, few persons or institutions could have. held out against the comfortable custom. The cafes of the Normandie, the Herald Square, the Vendome and the Marlborough hotels were frequented on all | the warm evenings of last week by uncoated males. It will be hardly surprising if the fad becomes a gen- eral rage in the next hot summer.” Such being the course of things in New York and in Boston, it is hardly worth while for Chicago to fight. The man in his shirt sleeves may yet prove himself the king pin in the city as in the hayfields and the shirt-waist youth be a worthy beau for the shirt-waist girl. —— The Italian anarchists who arrived in New York recently with the purpose, it is said, of murdering President McKinley, will find probably that in this country the industry of assassination results invariably in an immediate demand for hemp, the supply of which, fortunately, is large When “Young Dutchy” returned from Nome and with a flourish announced that he was going to do a deal of talking in reference to the conspiracy to rob the Sullivan estate, he probably meant that he would talk to himself. His silence has been positively elo- quent since his ar'rival. —— The ways of local lawyers are inscrutable. An at- torney who wanted a fee for getting a woman mar- ried and then wanted another for getting her divorced now says he will work for nothing to keep her mar- ried. . The Grand Jury investigation of the sale of posi- tions on the water front by corrupt politicians has had at least one material result, It has turned several rascals loose upon one another. The physicians of Jeffries, the pugilist, say that he must not under any circumstance exercise violently for a year. It is sincerely to be hoped that the in- junction covers jaw practice. | L R R R G SRS SR SOt UNIQUE summer house is being built for Millionaire J. B. Haggin upon his Elmendorf stock farm, in It will be'constructed of steel, stone and brick, like the most modern New York ern colonial mansion, with broad verandas to the roof. NEW KENTU | i i City skyscrapers, and yet it will be a per- | fect reproduction of a beautiful old South- | cost, It {s said, more than $100,000. It will about 3000 acres of the finest blue grass FOR J. QP 040000040400000440400060400000 0000000000 IT IS BEING BUILT OF STEEL, STONE AND BRICK, LIKE A MODER ERED WITH STUCCO TO HARMONIZE W But the pillars will be of steel, painted | white, and the brick and stone walls will | be covered with white stucco, and thus | I | kept in harmony with the cld architectura; design. | This up-to-date Southern mansion will be two stories high in addition to the ! two inches thick. The interior will be fin- | CKY HOME TH THE OLD COLONIAL DESIGN. B. HAGGIN CITY SKY SCRAPER, AND COV- IT WILL COST OVER $100,000. : 3 : ! { } } { ished in hardwood of the finest qualities. The contracts were let last week, but it will be many months before the beautiful Fayette County, Central Kentucky. | the modern fireproof construction will be home is completed. Mr. Haggin is reported to have pur- chased Melrose farm this week, and if this is true he now owns in one tract land in Kentucky, much of it in woodland and porticos and massive piliars extending | basement, and the walls will be twenty- | and beautiful rolling pastures. He is the largest land owner in Fayette County. & e e B A S S 0-;0—0 PP e pbeDe DD + OUCCESSFULTRIAL TRIP OF NEW SUBMARINE WONDER ‘*WM«O—&HHH@-‘-@—O—W&O—O—O— .H—HMWWOM—«H@+©-& beo e evore@ | - *s e oD ® D00 DeDOPEDEI OO DO 0D eIededebedededede o ed i r ‘ THE HORROR, THE LATEST SUBMARINE WAR VESSEL. TAMFORD, Conn., Aug.'?l—Inventor J. C. Carter's mysterious sub- * marine torpedo boat built on Ware Island, has made a successful trip | & after scoring one failure, in which she capsized for lack of proper ¢ | ballast. The “Horror’—the nickname given to her by Connecticut peo- * | ? le—now rides the waves as buoyantly as a cork. Out of the water the “Horror” looks like a projectile of some sort. The * queer features about her are the lateral fins intended to raise or depress her & | ® and the odd superstructure, which looks as if it does not belong there. . Every precaution has been taken by the inventor to prevent outsiders tak- | | & Inga photograph of the mysterious submarine craft. He claims that the | + Vessel will revolutionize submarine torpedo work. Later he will tell how. | e e @ A CHANCE TO SMILE. AN ABLE SPEAKER. Of all th are bes®t, The man who makes:an “able” speech, he is the toughest ¥et. 2 The people stand and whisper, “Be as quiet as you can; You mustn able man. And the bn{s 7“ tired and wiggle, And the girls all want to giggle, And I Jose his chain of logic and go drift- in’ into doubt, And my head in rhythm nodding With hzs cadences goes plodding, While T wonder what the mischief he is hollering about. It really must be a most depressing men- tal strain For a man to have an “able” reputation to sustain; And know he 'dare not dally with an anec- dote or two To keep us all from wishing he would hurry and get through And just when I am dozing, And ‘in_comfort am proposing able chap, His monotone he changes And through wild crescendos ranges In 2 series of explosions, just to jar my little nap. “ —Washington Star. DULL B READY. Two commercial travelers in a raflway carriage entered into conversation. One of them tried very hard to make tha other understand something, but he was either very hard of hearing or slow in be- lieving. ?tr;gut his friend lost his temper and ex- claimed: “Why, don't you see? It's as plain as A B ““That may be, you see, I am D E F."—St. Democrat. VACUUM CROWDED WITH BUSINESS “Does your father seem depressed and said the other, “but, Louis Globe- restless without occupation in his declin- ing_days?" ‘g'wuhout occupation? Wh{. he-has a camera angd takes pictures of baby from morning tifl night."—Detroit Free Press. SOME HOPE. The Rejected One—Can you give me no hope.. At some future time perhaps— &fe—\veu, come to me in ten years, and if T should be still unmarriel TI-I'll think of it.—Judy. IT DOES HAPPEN. ys have the last “A woman doesn't alwa: wggifi does she?” ., no. another woman.”—Life. —— e How to Address a Monarch. The simple title “Madame,” reduced in practice to “Ma’am,” is, as most people know, all that serves between Queen Vic- toria and her court to mark the former’s dignity as the ruler of a world-wide em- pire. Had Britain a King he would be no more than “Sire,” the old French form of “Sir,” sacred to royalty. With us the term “your Majesty'" is only for servants and ceremonial ns. There are few other courts where this wholesome simplicity prevails. e Em- peror of Germany is “Majestat"'—there i3 no gmuoun in the title—to all and sundry, even to his family, except when in abso- lute privacy. The Em; 2 all_times and under all circumstances; the King of Greece is “Votre Majeste"—French being the court nd our recent visitor, the King : of Sweden, is “Ers Majestat."” 'n:e# 1 consorts are ad ith the Same formallty. % Only at the courts of Belgium and Italy e tantalizing things by which we | 't interrupt him. He's a very | A2, To vield my own opinions to this wondrous | Sometimes she is talking to | ‘ror of Austria is | the sovereign be greeted as “Sire” or adame,” though the etiquette of the IR n court permits it when the French | language is being used. When Russian is | being spokfiR‘. Nicholas 1I is to his cour- | tiers” and officials *'Czar’’—employed like the Prussian ‘“‘Majestat,” without a pro- noun.—London Mall. I et inat Bt I T e ] FASHION HINT FROM PARIS. § --o-+8 Eaae do ol B ol e At 2 i T A S e e e e S S I B T e e 1 DRESS FOR A YOUNG LADY. _The dress represent tion is of white musli; is trimmed with small Jin, sallor’s knot are of black velvet. e ———————— Vet Would Make Public At a meeting of the Flayground. trust - | chanics' Institute held In:ee:):t::ua‘: :‘:s gwqde_d to open the institute classes the rst I:::rl:xé? September, with G. A. Behrnd or hani and | ‘i:‘."‘l;;(lmer as |ns‘:]rucc‘:|or ti‘:'x:e‘- Janitor of the Mechanics' I a‘v’l}l’o;lcstlecg' I A Jackson, deceased. 4 number of suggestions we: regard to disposing of some. . o?tfl‘gfni{-‘l tute property. and there was a diseussion n; sxhe matter of interviewing the Board .of Supervisors in regard to establishing a public playground or park on the Six- teenth and Folsom street grounds, owned Dy athe Institute. the city already owning at portion of the block which was formerly Mission Creelk. ed in the illustra- n over sky blue, and ! | | i | | | Examination of Teachers. PERSONAL MENTION. George E. Goodwin and wife of Napa are at the Palace. James McCudden, a naval contractor of Vallejo, is at the Grand. Dr. G. D. Marvin of .he Agnews asy- lum is a guest at the Grand. John Flannagan, a wealthy millman of Mendocino, is at the Grand. J. H. Gardner, a wealthy rancher of Rio Vista, is a guest at the Grand. Judge Jarnette T. Richards of Santa Barbara is a guest at the Pajace. Marion Bigss Jr., a wealthy ranche? of Oroville, is stopping at the Grand. John N. Woods, a prominent attorney of Stockton, is a guest at the Grand. M. H. Walker, a banker of Salt Lake City, Is registered at the Occidental. W. B. Clichton, a well-known attorney of Fresno, is registered at the Grand. N. J. Nixon, a well-known citizen of an Diego, Is registered at the Palace. J. J. Stevens, a big landholder of Wood- land, accom by his wife, is at the Grand. C. G. H. McBride of the Miller & Lux Company is at the Palace. H: is accom- panied by his wife. F. H. Yost, the new Stanford football coach, arrived yesterday evening and im- mediately departed for Stanford Univer- sity. H. Aubrey Forteseue and H. F. Ander- son, prominent members of the English colony at Ben Lomond, are registered at the California. Jesse D. Carr, the well-known capitalist and politiclan of Salinas, was released from the hospital yesterday after having undergone a successful operation for the | removal of a cataract. Among the officers and surgeons of the United States army who arrived at the Occidental yesterday were Lieutenant B. C. Byroode, Dr. John D. Brook, Dr. Ed T. Patterson, Dr. J. J. Malley, Dr. W. D. Preston and Major J. B. Ayleshire. They are bound for the scene of mortal strife in China. —_———— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK. Aug. 21.—L. E. Mosher ot Los Angeles is at the Imperial. Hon. Marion de Vries is at the Waldorf-Asto- ria. He will enter upon his duties to- morrow ad one of the General Appraisers of Customs. —_—————— FOR CALL READERS. Some idea of the importance given to athleties In colleges and universities may be had from the fact that Yale, Harvard, Columbta, Princeton, Pennsylvania and Cornell spent §304,243 for that purpose last year. A physician declares that ! robust health walks with nis tocs potnted to the front, while one with his health on the wane gradually turns his toes to the side, and a bend Is perceptible in his knees. In a Poughkeepsie (N. Y.) newspaper recently the following marriage notice n\)peured: “Holder—Close—At _ Jersey City, July 22, by Rev. Charles J. Allen, Charles E. Holder to Lillie W. Close, boti of Poughkeepsie.” A bright boy in the district of New York has a long list of customers whose pencils he keeps sharpened. and who also patron- ize him for new penetls. He has a patent sharpener and goes from store to store and office to office. Ninety-nine descendants g:nrrx Smith, who recntly died at Sout erfleld, Mass., at the age of M. His de- scendants are nine sons and daughters, thirty-five grandchildren, fifty-six great- grandchildren and two great-great-grand- children. Oxford has among its undergraduates a married Lancashire millhand, 23 years of age, who worked his way into the univer- sity by studying after factory hours, with the help of free libraries uu\rriltly extension lectures. He has won a schol- arship worth £30 a year. amusement monopo- ||=I::n:ilrx\771ehb30'th:nyoung and frivolous. Mrs. Phoebe Crabbe of Norwalk, Comn.. is 103 years old, and she i suffering from rheumatism bm,u'};\gl on r'hyyo;hxgérm'; Reonsas. who 13 %, broke his les recently while doing a hornpipe. B w in Maine that the bounty lnlr' te:ag:esrl.:n be paid when the animal’ nose is shown: in New Hampshire the ears must be exhibited. Some enterprising sportsmen living near the borders of the two States get a doubie bounty by ecol- Jecting on the roses in one State and on the ears in another. Cal. glace fruit 50¢ per Ib Railway Company Sued. Mrs. Nellle Murphy and her husband, Dantel F. Murphy, filed suit yesterday against the Market Street Railway Com- recover 327,000 damages for per- in & coliision between a wagon and a car at Fourth and Foisom streets on Febru- ary 26 last. Mrs. Murphy alleges that she was caught between the wagon and the car and sustained a fracture of the right ankle. Special information supplied dally to yusiness h nd blic t e iipping Bureau Calion sy, s10 Mont: gomery st. Telephone Main 1042. . were left b Townsend's® “Christian militant” might be applied to Colonel Aaron S. Doggett. in command of the Fourteenth Infantry in China. He has the reputation of being the most plous man in the United States army. He Is 63 years old, and does not smoke, drink, gamble. awear or The programme has been issued for ex- aminations for teachers’ certificates, to be held in the Polytech: hool Bullding on " Septomber 5 to 4 Incrtoo! Copies may he Sbtained uipon, application Deput uperintenden Ingsbury the City fial.l. o = Chicago and Return $72 50. Tickets on sale August 2i and 22, good return within sixty days. Only 0% hours to Chicago on the * nd Limited,” vig the Union Pacific Rallway. 1 Montgomery st., Saa Francisco.