Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. 1900. JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. sddress Al Communications to W. S, LEAKE, Manager MANAGER'S OFFICE Tfl?’hnle Press 204 FUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, 8. ¥. Telephone Press 20 EDITORIAL ROOMS....217 to 221 Stevemsom St. Telephone Press Deliverea hy Carriers. 15 Cents Per Week. Stngle Coples, § Cents. 1 FEEEKLY ( All postmaste Sample copies wil ze of address should be > A OLD ADDRESS in order correct compliance with thelr request. CAKLAND OFFIC .1118 Broadway KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building. Chicago. (long Distance Telephone “Cebtral 2619.”) . NEW YORK € C. CARLTON. ... CORRESPONDENT: Heraid Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH._, ..30 Tribune Building NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, $1 Union Square; Murrey Eill Hotel. CHICAGO House:; P. O. uee: Auditorium Ererme. Fremont H WASHINGTON (D ... Wellington Hotel WORTON E, CRANE, Correspondent. ERANCF OFFICES Montgomery, corner of Clay. open t o'cl Hayes, open unti] 9:30 o'clock. o'clock. 615 Lark open until 10 o pen until $ o'clock. 106 Wieventh, open unt On the Trail.” Sixteentn streets. THE VERMONT ELECTION. in the there is 2 red from > party has vear and will an excepti The Republ there v a 3y reason of those i the parties the Repub- 20 per cent less than it n something like on the whole is le the resul c i oral which Republicans Union d take to heart and r rable number of d to vote for Bryan in arty. That was not un- Maine, Vermont and er He is gener- t about as reasonable. ical earthquake like that cy in 1896, but as soon back to his old place. ndidates and voting for ty, though he has never ature. a; e wiil continue to do so n his children will take up h the next gen- ed for the study of uch mere interesting is not so steadfast as bered that in 1880, v the Presidency, the actually gave about the big- politics. It s and set them to work for lost time. The work was carried Maine and the rest te election That wa Ameri bly be an ex- party year. come reports of over- ¥ ranks, while the Democrats this in States like Vermont forlorn hope to fi Tt P erc is to be no waikover this year. A da- cline in the Republican vote and an increase in the The generosity with which Democratic plug uglies iing Herrin, Crimmins and Kelly in their assault m reputable Republican methods suggests that the lanite crop of the “push” must be extremely large good every-day sort of an American. He has an- nounced a willingness to accept a seat in Congress if the people will give it to him. S tius Vanderbilt is, after all, one of the “boys,” | LABOR AND LUMBER ABROAD. HE Treasury Department has received notice Tirom Sonneberg, Germany, that the values in consular invoices must be advanced on im- ports to this country from that place. Sonneberg is a toy-making center, and manufac- tures also other articles of wood and glass. It is in Saxe-Meiningen, on the river Rothen, and is such | an ancient seat of the industry upon which its people live that its goods are known®in trade, the world Sonneberger ware.” With a population of rts miltions of dollars’ worth of | over, as about 10,000, it ex; its wares, , of which customs officers in d guide them in o s, a labor nber. to two cau in the price of 1 i Sonneberg has c c , $3 80 per week, and has cents a week. M which is . consumer, by being The concession of plc dy cenceded the advance, 1 1ce carried forw yods. 2dded to the price o expected to becom cberg is center, so that all i ports will be affected by the new condition of wages. Another cause of the rise, which is of special interest in the United States, is the steady and recently rapid rise in the price of lumber. This affects the trade throughout. The wood used in the articles manu- factured, the wood pulp used in the papier-mache of wh doll heads and torsos are made, and the boards used to make the packing-boxes, all have advanced. general throughout e general in the distri ex- the rise i t This condition is The replanting of forests and preservation of grow- ing ber have not kept pace with the consumption of wood and the destruction of timber. The empt to make forest growth a permanent about a cen- crop has been going on in Eu er began centuries before and the ope only e use of ti ged the Rhine, demand has 1 st face to face with a timber imine that reach o many lines of commerte and ects the course and the profits of trade in many ections. rope i vears th small imber used in Europe has iimensions, looking, in width, shakes. The wide boards, dimension timber so own there. admonish t ates to be wise in time and our roofing d immense e u conditions people of the secure the per- Destruction has rioted but our forest area was so extensive too late to preserve it to permanence t produce the most valuable of all crops is the domestic price of lumber advan n demand increases with the rize ence of their forests 1pant, irope. ¢ interest can be had upon capi- an by investing it in forest land and preserving to be harvested when ripe, without damage ) the growing crop. There are thousands of acres in California that are use- less for other purposes that will harvest vast fortunes ees, 1 are also thousands that will yield a rich return if nted in the Catalpa speciosa, for railroad ties and ion timber. The hog wallow lands of the oothills, so costly to level and often so rebel- lious to tillage. may in a few vears be clothed with forest, with the most grateful effect upon the moisture and frui ess of the valley lands. As for our mountain forests, one sickens at 'the sight of their destruction. ery summer money is burned in the mountains to the amount of millions 1s is destroyed and t was IS ce its place is reduced to ashes and the still dormant germs in the soil are burned to death murdered nent lumber supply to which the world will turn mora | and more, and for which it will bid higher and | higher, will soon be exhausted and that source of | wealth will disappear. | follc to So a forest is its cradle, and the splendid and pern SENATOR WELLINGTON'S BOLT. :NATOR WELLINGTON of Maryland, in a public speech on the platform with Bryan, has denounced the Kepublican party, which elected him to the Senate, an: declared himself. for this cam- paign at least. a Bryanite. The action was not un- expected. The Senator has long been known to he opposed to expansion and to the administration, and, being a man oi considerable aggressiveness, it was foreseen he would come out into the open to fight in- stead of sulking in his tent and growling. In Maryland, where Wellington’s character is best understood, it is asserted his opposition to the ad- ministration is due not so much to the so-called “imperialism” involved in the Philippine policy as to a personal grudge against McKinley for refusing to place the entire Federal patronage of Maryland in his hands. Wellington, it appears, aspires to rule alone as absolute boss of the Republican party of Maryland, and, finding his ambition balked by the President, has turned against him with all the rage of a proud man who has been humiliated in his own camp. Be that as it may, the country will judge Welling- ton by his own statement. He has thus far said noth- ing showing personal animosity to the President. He | claims to be acting upon political grounds only, and i« entitled to a hearing on those grounds. In his speech of Tuesday he is reported to have said he sees no reason to fear any changes in the tariff or in the money laws of the country resulting from the election of Bryan. To him the one issue is that of imperialism. On that point he said: “I cannot see my way clear to inveigh against imperialism, against the unconsti- tutionality + eousness of attempting to enslave the inhabitants of the Philippine Islands and the dishonor of breaking our pledge to Cuba, and then, because of the mandate of a sinister influence which domi- nates the President, forswear my convictions, set at naught my declarations, and do, as did Senator Hoar and others—appeal to the past and the future. The past is dead. I eannot change it. No appeal will reach its deaf ear. The future is not , |in my keeping, and it is not in my power to fashion !it. Therefore I am here to-night to reiterate convictions T voiced in the Senate and record my opposition to the principles of President McKinley as evidenced in his foreign policy, and with all the | vehemence of a positive nature protest against the violation of the principles upon which our Govern- ment is founded; against the desecration of the con- stitution and the reversal of the policy which has given us a century and a quarter of national prosper- ity such as the tory of man has not recorded in | any age or clime.” | As that is Wellington's own defense of himself, it may be accepted as the best that can be made. Its weakness will be apparent to every one who gives it a moment of serious consideration. When he declares | that the election of Bryan would bring about no / { Europe. | | rown with population and advanced with civilization. | planted now in the ironwood eucalyptus, and there | | years. of the Porto Rico tariff bill, the unright- | the | change in the tariff or the currency, he virtually de- clares Bryan’s pledges and those of the Kansas City convention to be worthless. He discredits the asser- | tions of Bryan on two important issues of the time, | but asks the people 1o believe all that Bryan says on another issue. The unreasonable nature of such a { request is augmented by the fact that on the ques- tion of free trade and free silver Bryan has been con- sistent, but on the Philippine question he has not been consistent. He urged the ratification of the treaty that put us in possession of the Philippines and brought about the very condition of things he is now denouncing. Senator Hoar and ex-Senator Edmunds have been as earnest opponents of “imperialism” as ever Sena- | tor Wellington can hope to be, but they are not fan- | atics. They do not permit that one issue to blind | them to every other issue of the time. Both have de- clared the election of Bryan would be more danger- ous and more disastrous to the country than anything else that could befall it. In a recent interview with | the New York Herald Edmunds said: “I believe the good of the country demands the re-election of Mc- Kinley. I suppose expansion is his greatest vice, and I do not really know that he is an expansionist.” He added: “Altgeld may be honest, and Bryan may be honest; I believe, for that matter, that the majority of anarchists are honest, but it is the ideas they have and which they try to carry out that make them un- safe.” Senator Wellington has chosen to shut his eyes, and is a wew proof of the old saying, “None so blind as him who won't see.” He has of course destroye- | his political future past redemption, but that is not much to mourn over. After all his election to the Senate was but a political accident, and when he | passes he never will be missed. | e — i BELGIAN HARE CH@SING. O UT of San Diego there may be expected to come in the next year or two a more dazzling aggregation of unrivaled sprinters and match- less long distance runners than were ever seen in any | part of the known world by any generation living or dead. The cause for the development of the fleet- | footedness in the county is to be found in an ordi- nance which according to reports was adopted on Tuesday. The ordinance makes it unlawful for any person to liberate Belgian hares in the county or to permit any which may have escaped to remain at large | or unconfined. It will be comparatively easy for the | owner of a Belgian hare to prevent him from escap- ing, but the clause which forbids any citizen to allow one to remain at liberty after having escaped is going to require some tall running on the part of the pubtic From the way the ordinance is framed it appears the clause forbidding any one to permit an escaped Belgian hare to remain at large applies to every citi- | zen in the county. The moment notice is given of the escape and flight of a hare all persons must set forth in pursuit of him. Still more imperative will it | be upon any one who happens to sce a free hare to | get out and hunt him down. There is seemingly no | exception to the operation of the law. FEach offender is liable to a fine not exceeding $100 or imprisonment | in the County Jail for a period not exceeding thi-ty days. The results are likely to be interesting. A preacher coming late to church will explain, “Brethren, the devil set a hare along the road and I had to stop to catch him.” Young men and maidens expected homa by early twilight will return late and explain, “We had to help run down a Belgian.” Jurymen will not get to court in time because of the necessity of pursuing stray hares on the way. Altogether, there is going to be a fine time in San Diego—races every day and hare for supper every night. prospect the sport wil Moreover, there is a last a long time. One expert has figured out that the increase from one pair of Belgian hares will amount to 1,723.846 hares in ten It will be seen that there’s lots of fun ahead. THE HARM IN BRYAN. HE supporters of Colonel Bryan are engaged in T pooh-poohing what they call “the scare of | 1806, and in assuring the country he cannot do any harm if he is elected. | This is equivalent to saying that if elected he will not try to do vthing that he has promised to do, b(nr there is harm in nearly all of it. Even as to the Philippines he has invented a theory that makes their alienation dissolution of the EL'mr)n and reopens the sectional sores of three- | quarters of a century. | Let every business man and every laboring man think it over and ask himself if there is no disturb- | ance of industry, and no harm to the country, in | electing a man to the Presidency who is pledged to destroy our monetary standard, obsolete our bank- ing system and inflate the currency with an unlimited issue of irredeemable greenbacks? If the industrial depression of 1893 began in a fear of changes in the tariff, what are we to expect from a change in the tariff supplemented by a slump to the silver standard, the closing of all our banks of issue, the emission of an inflated credit currency, and, on top of it all, such a disposition of the Philippine issue as reopens the settlement of the Civil War and plunges the country into discussion of a motion for a new trial of the Southern Confederacy? All this is on Colonel Bryan's programme. He is now agonizing about putting the dollar above the man. If he get the power to carry out his fanatical schemes the dollar and the man will not be within speaking distance for many a year to come, and when | the man catches the dollar at last it may be only 43 cents, and many ouly 30 cents, for the greenback dol- lar fell nearly that low during the war. | Industrial disturbances and financial panic are too iserious matters to be provoked merely to serve the j ambition of a quite worthless young man to be Presi- dent. His service to his country is so far lacking, and certainly does not deserve a reward paid at such a frightful cost. a i It is reported that the Russian proposal to with- draw from China is due to a desire on the part of the Government of the Czar to head off a scheme of Kaiser William, and if such be the case it is to be hoped the Kaiser will show forth his trust in the effi- cacy of prayer and not resort to any other means of | getting even, s If the squabbles of those Americans who received the decoration of the Legion of Honor and those who did not continue it might be wise to change the name of the decoration to something that will tell better its meaning. e Richard Croker, it appears, has accumulated so much money that he is willing to throw some away. He has bet $20,000 that William Jennings Bryan will be clected. Perhaps Croker is seeking to win a repu- tation for eccentricity. e Recent developments in the Fair case indicate that another great legal drama of California is about to close as many others have done—in the shadows of a madhouse. HELLS-FARGD HGHTING THE WAR-TAK CASE Supreme Court Is to Decide Who Will Pay the One Cent Tariff. e Attorney General Ford Vigorously Attacks the Michigan Decision on Which the Corporation Seems to Rely. T The Wells-Fargo war tax case was ar- gued before the Supreme Court yesterday by Attorney General Tirey L. Ford, repre- senting the people, and E. 8. Pfllsburs_' for the corporation. The action was origin= ally brought by the former Attorney Gen- eral, who sought to make the transporta- tion company carry the parcels of its patrons without compelling the latter to pay the one cent war tax. In the lower court the action was defeated. Mr. Pills- bury based his defense on a recent de- cision of the United States Supreme Court in a similar case, which resulted in favor of the transportation company. After the case was submitted to the Su- preme Court and after the briefs were all filed the Supreme Court of the Unitea States' decided what is known as the “Michigan case,” which presented ques- tions quite similar to the ones presentea here. In the Michigan case, however, it were rajsed by the express company just one cent In every instance to cover the one cert required by the internal revenue The Supreme Court of the United held that this the express company thus raised were not unreason- the pleadings in the case showed - were not unreasonabl oy General Ford, however, argued the case here in California can be inguished from the Michigan case in at in Michigan the rates were ised to cover the one cent, whereas in \lifornia the rates remain the same, but the one cent is demanded of the shipper a prerequisite to the forwarding of his arcel or package. The matter was taken under advisement | by the court. | | EVA NOT BLAMED FOR BABY RUBY’S DEATH The Blow She Inflicted in Play Did Not Have Any Injurious Effect. The report of Dr. Adolph A. Poehner, made to Coroner Cole yesterday, lays the as and death of Ruby Kayser, 4 months old, at the feet of her sister Eva, 3% years old. Dr. Pochner gave the cause of death peritonitis, following an abscess caused by a playful blow from Eva two weeks he parents of the Gead baby, Mr. and Charles Kayser of 412 Octavia street, | ted the Morgue vesterday and ex- ed the greatest widignation that the th of their bat hould have been | made a Coroner's case. They sald that! Dr. Poehner had informed them that tha | infant was aflicted with brain fever, a child of another family in the same house | upstairs having died of that complaint. vi pre; de 2 ser stated that while Baby Ruth was in her carriage, wrapped in a quilt and thick blankst. Bva patted her over the stomach i1ly with her open hand, but not hard ““The doctor toid me,” sald Mrs. Kayser, “that if he could get the matter from the baby's head into her stomach he couid let it out there and save her life. He operated i on the baby hal n hour before s last night.” The autopsy made yesterday afternoon by Morgue Surgeon Leland showed that death had been caused by brain f 4 vere no evide s of a blo A ere will be no inquest. Sl SR Officers Are Elected, Papers Read and | Comforting Cable From China | Received. | The® annual meegjng of the Woman's | ard of Misssions of the Pacific was held | terday at the First Congregational | Church. _ The clection of officers was heid | during the morning session ara resulted | as follows: | e died dent, Mrs. Peck, Oaklan i president—Mrs. J. K. McLean, Mrs. W. C.| Pond, Mrs. Galen M. Fisher, Mrs. S. S. Smith, | Mrs. George C. Adams; r, Mrs. 8. M. | Dodge, Oakland; recording secretary, Mrs. S.l F. Buford, Sen Francisco; home secretaries, Mrs. W. J. Wileox, Oakland, and Mrs. C. B. Pradley, Berkeley; foreign secretary, Mrs. C. W. Farnham, Fruitvale, Alameda County. An interesting feature of the afternoon session was the receipt of a cable from | Peking announcing the safety of the Con- | gregafional missionaries stationed there. | ‘A series of interesting papers were read | and able addresses delivered during the day. Those who contributed to the pro- | gramme were: Dr. F. M. Price, Rev. Wal- | ter Frear, Mrs. F. M. Greeley, Mrs. Dr. Price, Dr. Adams, Miss Denton, Mrs. Jew- | ett and Dr. A. P. Peck. | 'T. 8. Hawley, one of Santa Barbara'si most prominent citizens, {s a guest at the Occidental. Attorney General Fora is In the city. He is here for the purpose of arguing the no- torious San Joaquin Valley freight tariff | case in the Supreme Court. The argu- ment will begin to-day. Rev. A, M, Smith, who has been ap- pointed principal of Oahu College, in Hon- olulu, is at the Occidental, accompanied | by his daughter. The institution over which he will preside is one of the oldest in the islands. E. Black Ryan, the famous attorney ot the Southern Pacific Company, will leave for the East in a few days, accompanied by his wife and daughter. His destina- tion is Lexington, Ky., his birthplace, which he has visited but once in thirty- two years. The return journey will be made by way of New Orleans. E. 0. McCormick, passenger traffic man- ager of the Southern Pacific Company, is on his way home from Glenwood Springs, Colo., where he went to confer with the | general passenger agents of Eastern lines regarding the reuting of passengers. The proposition was to save time and avold annoyance, and it is understood that much was accomplished. R Right to Serpentine Av:nue. The City Attorney advised the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday that the city has a right to Serpentine avenue and it should act upon this assumption until the courts have otherwise declared. He does not know of any power the board has to give a deed to a certain portion of the lands within_the lines of the avenue to Chris- tian Helling, who lays ciaim to it. An act of 1878 requires the board to sell at gub“c auction to the highest bidder all of erpentine avenue from old San Jose road to San Bruno road. —————— Telephones for Fire Service. Rolla V. Watt, president of the Fire Commissioners, has made arrangements with the Pacific Tclephone and Telegraph Company under which the telephones used by the department will be allowed to re- main in use until provision is made by the Russia’s New Calendar. It 1s said that Russia s about to adopt a new calendar. Each year contains 13 months of twenty-elght _da: h, b iy s e asht o R iy R of this calendar is its apparent stability, and in this it resembles the sovereign remedy, Hos- tetter's Stomach Bitters, which has held ynmovable position for half a century. Try for_indigestlon, t L e e ML R SRS nuine. s appeared that the rates of transportation | werfect right to do, provided their | Board of Supervisors for payment for the service. The president guaranteed that his board would bear the expense tem- | porarily. Monticello Club’s New Quarters. The Monticello Club held an Informal reception Tuesday night by way of house- warming of its new quarters at Kearny street and Union-square avenue. Its new rooms are those formerly occupied by the Olympic Gun Club., They consist of a large meeting and lounging rcom, billiard room and card rooms, all fitted up in ideal club style. Judge W, P. Lawlor is president of the club, Dr. T¢ B. W. Leland is secretary and Hull McClaughry, Louis de F. Bart- lett, Curtis Hillyer, W. W. McNair and Louls Mooser are directors “Al” Blum Gets Back From North. | St The German Bark J. C. Pfluger Is Sold and Will Be Transformed | Into an American Barkentine. s arrived from Seattle yesterday, was A. L. Blum. Al went north on the Jeanette to seek a fortune on the Nome beach. Al's father is one of the heads of the| well-known firm of Roth, Blum & Co. Al iscovered that Nome was * 3 ingtead of spending the money he in- tended to invest in mines, folded his tent and came back to San Francisco. | the beach | | i On board the ship A. J. Fuller, which | a Trip to the Frozen } DISSATISHIED HEIRS CONTEST - COGSWELLWILL Charge Widow With Having Unduly Influenced the i Physician. & | Say She Confined Him in His Rooms and Took Advantage of His Alleged Mental In- capacity. |day. A ¢ ent in which | Caroline well, decedent’s widow, is | named as e of the bulk of the es- | tate was filed y D Alvaro Skellinger. A second contest filed by Marion S. | Stevens aud a third by Mrs. Emily May Sammi 1 Mrs. Florence E. Mills. er is the son of Mary Ann Cogs- ccllinger, a sister of the deceased. d resides at the Veterans’ Home, Napa County. Marion S. Stevens is a sister of Alvaro Skellinger and resides in r. They allege that the will of the d i1s vold by reason of the mental ity of the testator, who they de: incapac | claim was also under restraint, undue in- fluence and a victim of fraudulent mis- entations. = For a long time prior to his death. ants aver, “deceased was under the nis wife, Caroline E. [t preventad the from 1 intercourse w the contest or any other relatives. He would cocnsent to no meetings with relatives save by stealth and under prom- ise that his wife skould not be informed of such meeting.”” They also aver ‘hat | for fear deceased would devise portions of his estate to his relatives she confined him in apartments at ths Marechal Niel Hotel and there influenced him to_be- queath her the bulk of his estate. They o allege that “in addition to such un- e influence the deceased at the time the a from St. Michael to Cape York is a good | will was executed by him, if it ever was | | He says that Nome and all | place to keep away from, Sale of the Pfluger. The German bark J. C. Pfluger was sold sterday to John Rosenfeld's Sons for About $10,000 will be spent in put- Ing the vessel in first-rate order and then | she will go into the Hawailar sugar trade | under the American flag. he Pfluger will be rigged as a barker ne. Water Front Notes. | son and John O'Brien were ar- | rested yesterday on a charge of burglary. | They entered the men's quarters on the | river steamer Apache and stole a suit of | clothes, $3 in money and a check for §100. | y § t | so executed, was not of sound mind, and i o physically weak, which rendered | him subjec o the dominion and control of_nis wife.”™ Mrs. Emily May Sammi. wife of H. Sammi, cashier of the Deming-Palmer Milling Company, and Mrs. Florence E. Mills are nieces of the dead millionaire They A ence on tha the con- THE BEST SEASON | mento and were on their way here to| The thieves were driven out of Sacra-| work the Golden Jubilee people. | The trading schooner Herman arrived | from Kodiak yesterday. The brig W. G. | Irwin got back from Alaska. During her | sence she was nearly burned to the| 's edge through her cargo of lime | To OF THE YEAR Visit Lake Tahoe. Round Trip §10. Go. at catching fir. BARK MELANOPE IN PORT WITHOUT OWNER : On Friday and Saturday of this week Captain Cragen and a Young Lady | thers will be rsion to Lake Tahoe Die on the Last and the tick d for return tiil Voyage. Wednesday noon, S T 12. The will be §! for the round trip The British bark Melanope is in the o stream awaiting judgment as to her 4T €Xxpenses “‘lll not be inc ownership. John R. Cragen, captain of | Withstanding this sligh the vessel, died last August. On the ar- [ate is still v m”wnm. ength of time rival of the Melanope the Public Adminis- (ne limit is t trator applied for letters of administration s taken. one of the most comfortable and upon the estate of the dead captai trips In the world, from first Later three children of the deceased liv and particularly that portiom ing in Orange, pplied for letters. Truckee Ca It Is said that Cs ragen transferred which i his interest In the vessel to Miss El-ia narrow Mabel Taylor, who accompanied him on is so cool Hiis trip to this coast. Miss Taylor died hot and at Panama of fever. If ft is f. year to visit e Central Park Theater. the transfer of the vessel to M was legal her relatives in 4 be searched for, if otherwise the v will pass into the hands of the children. The Central Park Theater, corner 1t is claimed that Miss Taylor, who was Eighth and Market st Witl he ope reputed to be wealthy, advanced the!for the first time ne aturday ni money for the purchase Captain Cragen. ———— Ice cream and soda at Townsend's. ——ve——— of the vessel bY | Jith a grand cakewalk carnival. There will be a performance cvery evening. ginning next urday to the 16th clusive, with special matinees next § day and Monday —_——————— Soldiers May Be Buried Here. At a meeting of the Board of Health yesterday afternoon it was decided, n motion of Dr. Bazet, to admit the bodies * | of soldiers who have iled from contagious diseases into this country for burial. —_————— Pure fruit juices used at Townsend's, * —_——— Ice cream by the gallon at Townsend" e Townsend’s California glace fruits, pound in fire-etched boxes or Jap bas 639 Market street, Palace Hotel. = Special information supplied dafly to | _ business houses and public men by the | Ladles take Dr. Siegert's Angostura Bitters Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's). 510 olz!— generally when they feel low spirited. It gomery st ‘elephone Main 1042, brightens them up mmediately. THERE ARE PROPHETS AND SONS OF PROPHETS. The newest son of a prophet is in Southern California, DON'T MISS THE comic SECTION. DON'T MISS THE MAGAZINE SECTION SUNDAY CALL September 9. HOW JACK CHRETIEN SPENDS IS TIME IN JAIL. THE MOQUI INDIAN SNAKE DANCE. HAS SEEN AND TALKED WITH THE DEPOSED EMPEROR. THE STORY OF LEUNG KAl TIN. THE SENSATIONAL STORY OF THE DAY, L “‘[ALDA” ® o0 BEGINS SUNDAY NEXT, SEPTEMBER o .. THE SUNDAY CALL LEADS THEM ALL....