The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 25, 1901, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY. JANUARY 25, 1901 THE CANAL Che +Sokoe @all. FRIDAY.. ..JANUARY 25, 1901 | by this session of Congress. JOHN D. SPRECKELS. Proprietor. time for Congress to procced. If the amendments | are not accepted we would have to make a new treaty | or abrogate the Clayton-Bulwer convention. Making Market and Thira, 8. ¥. |3 new treaty requires time, and there is a sense of Press 201. { honor that revolts at zbrogating the old one, which | was made at our instance. Of course nations can re- fuse to keep their word; they can do that which is forbidden to individuals and can break promises and ’kcep bad faith instead of good. But it has not yet | been agreed that they can do so and retain the re- spect of the world. e | The Democratic members of the as good policy to press abrogation. | would be to con: Adéress All Communiestions to W. 5. LEAKE, Manager. MaNAG PUBLICATION OFFICE Teleph EDITORIAL ROOMS. ... .217 to 221 Ste Telephone Press 202. Delivered »~ Capriers. 18 Conts Per Week. Single Coples. 5 Centsn. Terms by Mail, Including Postaze: DAILY CALY, (including Funday). one year. DAILY CALL (incloding funday). § months. DATLY CALL (ncluding Su: ). 3 months. DAILY CALL—By Single Moonth. FUNDAY CALL. One Yesr WEEKLY CALL, One Year. 411 postmasters are = Senate regard The better way the party of t Great Britain, =ubscripts, . | second part of the agreement, and endeavor to ger €emple coples will be forwarded when requested. her consent to a mutual cancellation of the treaty. Mol robecrfhers in orderne chanes nf aAdeses <hould e | This wc be nocent and ord process, con- particular to give both NE' £ & REF AR T " o msure & prompt and correct comuliance with th sistent with honor and good ut it would not be what Mr. Bryan regards as “good politics.” However. the change wrought in English affai f Victoria will probably suffice to holc e until the present Con The coming to power of changes in the British administration Il international matters indefinitely. g and Lord sbury have never been on cordial terms, and the venerable Prime Minister to voluntarily retire, or Edward may he needs rest from official la- UAKLAND OFFICE. ... ....1118 Broadway . CEORGE KROGNESS. Yasager Foreign Advertising. Marguette Building, Chisags, ong Dists Seme “Central 2619.7) gress expires new sov NFW YORK C. CARLTON..... ereign im RESPONDENT iivsssss.Herald Sguare | YORE REPER: ITH ENTATIVE: 3v Tribune Buliding XFW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldore-Astorie Hotel: A. Bremtano, & DUniom Square Murray Hil Hotel NEw ATEPHEN B. M CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: rman House: P O. News Co.: Great Northern Hotel Ecuse: As@itortum Hotel vily upon him. not expect inet upon The amendments were the m spee am the WASHINGTON D. C.) OFFIC 1408 G st N. w. | Paun treaty HSRTON CRANE. ondent. effective means that could have been used to del ERANCH OFFIORe— ntzomery. corner af Clay. epen | the canal. Direct opposition to project, per se, ant!]l $20 o'clock 200 yes, open unt!! 9:30 o'clock. € The injure it best way in which is by making the hjuring some other coun- by complete. y of State see this, forward in good faith n of the would not have succeeded v to pted 1e enemies of the 1d its success has been dent and Sec has pressed y beginning an and - people will see this pseudo- iotism, and ould and e law, y to begin We VEST ON SHiPS. er that our ocean exports are Our f country, and for their trans- d are therefore of With the canal 1e beyond ber and timber output will greativ because we can reach the lumber the continent w be had by rail from the timber regions in the middle consuming cheaper freights than can 5 of the continent. Our base ores, canned goods and « other great supplies that are germinated in our varied ¢ resources will receive value by use of the canal, and are impatient with the pol which, under triotism.” is blocking the project in enemies. s e e ADVERTISING BRQAN. that would fi t It was a fine e interest of HENEVER Bryan has changed his vocation \V or made a public appearance he has had in view the presence of the camera. operations were carried on beiore the lens, and when he stood forth in all the brazen glory of a colonel’s uniform he bravely faced the man behind the camera. It made no difference that he knew nothing about f: e hing about regimental tactics, and that he learned neither. The chance to pose was the learing-house from -London come to pass ch Vest predicted owners $160,000,000 the expenditure one thing desirable. His weckly paper bas been in the press dispatches and photographed on films and wet plates and d in all its stages. If he went to the imposing stone to inspect the forms it was with an Associated Press agent on one side and a photographer in front. If he touched the sheep shank and mallet he let the world know it, per wire. When his paper was put to p-ess | he tried to feed the white sheets of print, and pre- | sented copies to all present, verified with his signa- that $160,000,000 2 'y profit of A ho are not o nor people t 1s economy to spend ers. He is an orator and a manufac- s of speech. He excels in sarcasm and But while he orates the . made up of the busy workers er. who have ront among t | ture. Nothing is wired about the contents of the may come when Missouri will no longer | paper, which are probably of the same style as his ! tiresome speeches, and it is evident that he values the rewspaper project solely as a means of getting that public notice which is necessary to his excessive vanity. nate two men who live in small country aception of the size of the na- | itude of its business interests. D . | | THE UTILITY OF —BAO—S“S CROKER. = o = the best ngs in the metropolis the assertion he added: &= R : | peared in this country. NK MOSS, 2 citizen of New York, who has | 1o use events as a curtain on which to display him- seli. For this purpose he used the death of Victoria. uttering some dull commonplaces and wiring them to the country. We may expect to get his opinion of the new King of England, for he really takes him- , self seriously, and seems to think that people hold in | abeyance their formation of an opinion until they Hear from him. He knows to a nicety just how R beer uous in every reform movement in y a year past, recently told meeting that Croker’s perso: a nality is one of By way of proving “Without one man standinyg as the representative par excellence of every evil prin- ciple in public life we should never rise to the stan- dard of citizenship or be spurred to the height of | patriotism which alone can bring about the highest | President Kruger. The old gentleman is in a position good in any community.” | to be useful as a sandwich-man, and Bryan will not It is always well to have in a community a cheerful | jet him escape. optimist like that—one who sees good in everything When all other means fail he may visit the Sphinx nd can draw moral lessons from such 2 boss s | and the pyramids, and with pot and brush inscribe Croker as easily as the boss himself can draw tribute himself there. from vice. Unfortunately there is such a thing as being too optimistic, and this happens to be one of the instances. So far as heard from Croker has not vet spurred anybody in New York to the height of patriotism, while he has led many to political degra- dation. public necessity and :s of the opinion that the coun- | try will languish and fade away unless he is made | President. He is entirely unaware that the best in- fluences in his party are more than mildly disgusted with him. The Chicago Chronicle, one of the ablest party papers, declares that Bryan's ideas are reflected only by the “hired men” around the committee head- quarters, who “profess great surprise that anybody not a Populist or a socialist should presume to in- timate that the present management of the Democratic The indignation vents itself in speeches at | party can be improved upon. Of course if the ser- mass-meetings, and there is the end of it. Meantime | vants of the house are to direct its management wa the base influence and power of the man continue te | may look for no change in its affairs. The hired dominate the community and to corrupt its politics. | men at Democratic headquarters of late have not been Boss Croker has his uses, of course, for he would Democrats, nor have they represented Democrars. not be in power nor would he have acquired wealth | They have embraced all the isms, from Populism to unless he had been useful to a considerable number of | anarchism. They have come from the far West and people, but it has not been the kind of utility that | the far South. They have had as associates from the Mr. Moss deems it. The standard “of patriotism | North and East a few socialists and other dreamers which the boss has inculcated in New York is noth- | and schemers, but it is literally true that Northern ing to brag of. Inm fact, it is the standard which has | Democrats and Northern Democratic ideas have had made New York a reproach to American local gov- | no place inithe headquarters of a party which finds ernment, and the sooner it can be set aside in favor | three-fourths of its voters in the, Northern States.” of a better 2nd a higher standard the better it wili All that is true, and it explains Bryan's posing. e for all. From evil men the results are evil. Even the indig- nation which Croker arouses in New York does not mate: benefit the city or even the persons who feel it. It has led to forty different kinds of move- ments for reform, but it has not yet led to any actual reform. l HERE is but little prospect of canal legislatioa Under normal cir- cumstances it would have been surprising had = | the British Cabinet acted upon the amended treaty in | His farming He is the best advertiser of himseli that has ap- | He announces now that he is going abroad to meet | It all means that he regards himself as a great | He has effected a party organization that exults and, cew or trying to feed a printing press. But sensible | men who are aware that millions of better men have | milked cows and fed presses are simply disgusted with | his advertising methods. But it is safe to say that the | “hired men” at headquarters will manage the next ‘com'cmion, and that the great and peerless photo- ] graphed will be there znd will be the nominee. | 1 ——— . EXTRAORDINARY GRAND JURIES. ITH the new century there have come from “/ deveral grand juries in the East reports that may be truly called sensational. They have been valuable reports. They have won the commen- | dation of the public. They have actually acomplished | some good. Such, at any rate, are the statements that | come to us from the Fastern press, and, while state- i ments from that source are not always accurate, there will be in this case a general inclination to accept them. A valuable Grand Jury 15 something this country has lacked for so long a time that the | show of as many as [our of them at one season is too attractive to be met with skepticism. The gities in which these rare and wonderful things have occurred are New York, St. Louis, Baltimore and Richmond. In New York the jury has brought » light the horrible mistreatment of patients at Belle- Hospital and has made an investigation seem- ingly without fear or favor, so that a great wrong i that city is in a fair way to be righted and the re- sponsible parties brought to punishment. In St. Louis the jury has examined into charges against the police force and it is said has revealed not only a general system of corruption but the practice of wholesale violations of the election laws. In Balti- more, according to the Sun of that city, the last Grand Jury “proved of invaluable service in pointing out many abuses and suggesting remedies for existing evils”; while from Richmond comes the announce- ment that the city has been shaken from center to circumference by Grand Jury disclosures. Such reports are encouraging. It is not to be de- nied that the American people have been for a long time skeptical of the uses of grand juries, and in many cases it is known they have been as great an evil as any they were called upon to remedy. Last year there was an elaborate discussion of the subject in vlvania brought about by a declaration from a ge of the Superior Court that grand juries are no longer serviceable to American communities. During the discussion evidence was submitted showing that juries are frequently packed by political bosses and used for the purpose of forcing violators of the law into the payment of blackmail. On this coast, so far as we remember, there have never been any grave scandals affecting the personal honor of grand juries; ‘but, on the other hand, grand juries have never been of any notable service in exposing such wrongs and outrages as go on among us. Chinatown stands as a continuous reminder of the inefficiency of San Francisco grand juries; nor does it stand alone. Time after time has a Grand Jury gene out of office with a final report asserting on the part of the jurors a moral conviction of wrongdoing among public officials, but without submitting a trus bill against anybody or revealing by its investigations the full extent of the evils of which it complained. No argument against the continuance of the Grand | Jury system has ever fully satisfied the American P duties expected of a Grand Jury could be better ful- filled. Accordingly the people have maintained the system and hoped for the coming of better things. It now appears the good times are coming. When in New York, St. Louis, Baltimore and Richmond grand juries can accomplish great movements toward reform, it is not to be doubted that in other cities the same good may be attained. VENEZUELA’S ASPHALT WAR. O in Venezuela we are not likely to get war, notwithstanding we have three war vessels there; neither are we likely to get glory whether we have war or not, for Venezuela is not in our fighting class, but we are likely to acquire something of wis- dom in dealing with trust problems. The asphalt controversy is a struggle between rival corporations to get control of the rich asphalt de- posits of Venezuela and exploit them for American uses. It appears that in 1883 the Venezuelan Gov- ernment granted to 3 man named Hamilton a con- cession to export wood, spices, etc., from the state of Bermudez, and also gave him a right to exploit the asphalt deposits of the state. The concession was transferred to the corporation now known as the asphalt trust. Some time later the trust acquired a concession which had been granted to a man named Carner in 1888, which included title to a certain tract of land containing several pitch lakes, near the town | of Gariquien. In 1897 a corporation of Venezuelans obtained from the Government certain mining rights in the same district. That concession was transferred tc an American corporation, so that the trust found an enterprising rival encroaching upon what it deemed its monopoly. Recourse was had to the Venezuelan courts and decision was given against the trust, whereupon the trust determined to resist the Ven- ezuelan Government, and the result has been the trouble which has led our Government to interfere. Of course our Government can be counted on to act with justice to all concerned, but in determining %what are the merits of the contending parties our diplomatists will have to investigate the whole im- | broglio, and in doing so they are apt to learn a | good deal about the way in which trusts carry on | business. | Possibly the Venezuelans are wrong in trying to oust the trust, but the chances are they have at least | a showing of right. At any rate the contest is that of one American company against another, so we ars bound to win whatever the result may be. In the | meantime it would not be a bad thing for the Gov- ernment to make the affair so costly to all, concerned | that the capitalists of both corporations would con- clude in the end that it would be better hereaite- tc use their money and their energies in exploiting the resources of their own country instead of going abroad for investments. e —— Reports are being made daily that certain parts of the city are in such a dangerously unsanitary condi- tion that death is coming to people forced by circum- stances to reside there. We will probably soon hea- that the Board of Health needs another appropriation with which to refurnish its headquarters more elabor- ately. London financiers are trembling in dread of the col- lapse of several institutions which have been so reck- lessly overcapitalized that they threaten to crash at any time. It might be wise for the apprehensive ones to tremble less and set the police on the track of the thieves. . . is in raptures when he is photographed milking a pay tribute to avoid indictment, and that some- | times even innocent parties have been threatened | ple. because it has never yet been shown how the | UT of the troubles over the asphalt industry | BUILDING BOOM MENACES A POET’S BURIAL PLACE St. Giles’, Cripplegate, Whicn Holds Mil- ton’s Remains, Doomed to Be Razed. i | | | 1 s | T. GILES’ CHURCH, in Cripplegate, London, the burial place of John Mil- S ton, the poet, is soon to be torn down to make room for modern buildings. The church was built in 1090 by Alfune, proctor of St. Bartholomew’s. In 1392 it was almost entirely reconstructed It passed unharmed through the great fire of 1666 and was threatened by fire in 1897. It is one of the oldest churches in London. D i e e e e s ] i RECENT KANSAS LYNCHING. Pastor of First African M E. Z'on Church Commends The Call’s Stand. EDITOR CALL: I have read with great interest the editorial In Sun- Call of the 2)th inst. on the grave subject of lynching in Kansas. I have also considered the import of the language used, and I must confess, sir, that it is one of the fairest and best articles of its kind that I have ever read from the pen of any newspaper writer of the country; and I have read quite 2 number of them, from both newspapers and magazines from all over the country and also England. And therefore, on the part of my church and the people at large in the city and State, I express to you thelr sentiments of high aporeclation for you and your paper and for the manly and digni- fled stand which you have taken in defense of my race and justice toward them. No intelligent, honest, upright, cultured negro, who maintains a high con- ception of morality and religion and intellectual refinement, would dare sup- part one of his race in rape or any crime In violating the laws of any laffd. I, with an untold number of my race, am Willing to banish every rap- ist from the face of the globe, be- he black or white: but give him justice before the law. Give him a fair trial, and then if he cannot prove himself innocent he must suffer the consequences of the law. Or render unto the negro the thing that belongs to the negro and unto the white man the thing that belongs to the white man; or, in other words, give every man equal justice before the law. Anad since your paper, The Call, demands it, yes, justice to my race. Long may your paper live to do much good as an evangelistic organ, advocating the practice of exact justice to all American citizens alike. I am respectfully your obedient servant, T. BROWN, Pastor of First A. M. E. Zion Church. . | | San Francisco, January 23, 1601 L i o S O O o e B o B T o T 0 S B i f FERSONAL MENTION. | 1 k Louis Kahn, an Oakdale banker, is at the Lick. i L. D. Bendixsen, ship builder of Bureka, | ‘[ is at the Grand. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. MANKIND—J. S. G.. City. The lowest | type of mankind is as much a human be- ing as the highest type. { BLANCHE BATES-J. P. O, City. Sheriff E. C. Ivins of San Luis ObiSD? | Blanche Bates appeared in “‘Mme. Sans | is at the Grand. | Gene” in San Francisco from July 24 to | Mark R. Plaisted of the kresno Demo- | July 30, inclusive, 15, } crat is at the Callforma. MUSIC—Alameda, Cal. Any first class | John Cusick, a Sissons lumber mill man, is registered at the Grand. % Dr. W. B. Lovett of Paradise, Butte County, is at the Occidental. A. J. Bowen, a Los Angeles office furni- ture manufacturer, is at the Grand. B. F. Shepherd Jr. and Charles C. | Teague, Fresno oil men, are at the Grand. Lieutenant Commander John F. Parker of the United States navy is at the Pa'- ace. Dr. J. A. Crane, superintendent of the Agnews Asylum, i8 registered at the Occi- dental. G. W. Luce, general fieight and passen- ger agent of the Southern Pacific at Los | Angeles, is in town for a few days. W. M. Lampton, assistant general freight agent of the Denver and Rio Grande at Denver, is at the Palace. Charles F. Saylor of Pasadena, who is connected with the Department of Agri- culture, is stopping at the Grand for a few | days. H. R. Wiiliams, general manager of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Rali- | road, is in town. He is here with his fam- ily on pleasure. T. M. Schumacher and D. W. Hitch- cock, freight and passenger agents of the | Union Pacific in this vity, have appointed | George Lang, formerly agent at Portland, | general agent of the Unilon Pacific lines | at Los Angeles. The appointment will take effect Februarv 1. ——————— music store can procure for you the words | and music of the songs that were in vogue at the mining camp of the Midwinter Fair | | if the same are still in print. WHOSE—A. §.. City. “Whose” is the | possessive case of “who,” used also in-| stead of “‘of which” (referring to things); consequently it would be proper to say | “‘the piano whose keys are ivory.” SOLDIERS" HOMES—S., Willows, Cal. A man who served through the Spanish- American war and the insurrection in the Philippines is entitled to admission in either of the soldiers’ homes in California. STRAGETICAL, Cupid, City. Strageti- | cal is not to be found in the English dic- | tionaries. but there Is strategetical, which is the same as strategical, which pertains to or is in the nature of strategy, as “in a strategetical manner.” CLOSE SEASON—G. P., City. The close_geason for game in California is as follows: Doves, from February 15 to July | 15; mountain quail and grouse, from Feb- | ruary 15 to September 1; valley quail, wild | duck and rail, from March 1 to October 1; | male deer, from October 15 to July 15. BIRTH OF A CHILD—Subscriber, City. | If parents see fit to send out cards to| their friends announcing the birth of a child, and fix certain reception days, they should entertain the friends who call the same as a bride and ing_out cards on t! wedding trip. BALDWIN | | | | gfhom would on send- elr return from the THEATER-R. F.. City. The Baldwin Theater was opened March CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. g, 1876, as Baldwin's Academy of Music, — Tom Maguire, proprietor; A. J. Herne, NEW YORK, Jan. 24—The following | stage manager. The open! play was Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—E. Korn Is at the Heraid Square; Mrs. Ayers is at the Grand Union; M. F. Dreyfus is at the Continental; D. J. | Guggenheim is at the Holland; H. B. Ladd i{s at the Continental; J. Marks is at the Herald Square. From Sacramento —Mrs. E. Reaves is at the Everett; S. B. Gregory is at the Continental. From Los Angeles—L. S. Read is at the Astor. e A CHANCE TO SMILE. _ chalrd I!d,‘;‘:lmth Bleryhsu ivan in the e role an B e ise Hawthorne as Queen TO BECOME AN ENGINEER—A. C., City. A young man who desires to be- come a marine engineer should, in the first place, secure a position as an oiler on a steamer. Those in whose charge he weuld be placed would be able to deter- miné his ability and titude and then advise him what books he should study. ‘The book stores will procure for him any number of books on marine engifreering. OREGON LANDS—F. H., Forestviile, Cal., and several others. This department | has no other information relatjve to cer- tain lands in Eastern Oregon that are to | opened to entry than that pub- lished in the news columns on January 12, | . For information in relation to these lands communicate with the United States Land Office at Lagrande, Union County, or the one at Burns, Grant County, or_ the General Land Office at Washington, D. C. DYEING OSTRICH FEATHERS-D., City. Ostrich feathers are dyed black In the following manper: They are cleaned “But I don't love you!" objected the young woman. “Then why,” howled the indignant youth, referring hastily to divers memoranda in his poeket diary, “did you eat a total of sixty-five pounds of 60-cent candy I brought you during the clost: vear of the nineteenth century, it yoll‘nsdlydn’t love me?’ ‘‘Because,” she said, with a rapt expression on her love- !}nt““"‘" “1 do Iove candy!"—Chicago bune. “Men of my profession are very good sto! ullen.‘ymmukcd the barber. “Yes,'" assented the smarting sufferer in the chair, “and they usually illustrate their stories with cuts.”’—Tit-Bits, menm B., overnight, and are then Kind Pedestrian—Here's halt a_ dollar, | which has nech bells mar cyomt posch I mg poor man. Instead of living this 0od and quercitron, the imi why don’t you learn a trade? when the liquid is'at “hand heat.” dler—I would, sir, if I knew of b’l:e y are removed and a better one than this.—Judge. warm T. Al three and one- Her Mother (repro®in |l | | reached Spain. for there is a strong m | with competitors and | | abled | should be | maids. In with carbonate of ammonia, washed and EDITORIAL UTTERANCE IN VARIETY juman k: same Dast nature is much the oruWecl. North or South. The lynching of the negro Alexander. had it occurr-d in Georl'l? would cail for rmeoul la- dignation m the press of sas. A3 it Is the press of Georgia will probabiy <omment on the S:A isgrace. —Kansas ¢ Ity teem with scathi flower State’s World. Reward for Neutrality. From Beriin comes a confirmation the story lately told ‘hat Great Britain is | going to turn Zanzibar over to Germany |28 a reward for neutrality during { aal war. Along | tion comes the further statement | England is going to throw in Pemba. an | other island thirty miles north of Zanzi- { bar_ with 10000 inhabitants. Now, wha | 12 Engiand going to give Fran | the United States and all the ¢ | tries as a reward for tieir ne | Chicago Chronicie. | May Suppress Bullfights. { The march of civilization seems to ha with the confirma- ment to_abolish the ! sport, t | famous bullfight. A mass-meeting has been held in Barceiona. the home of s | eral prominent matadors and the scen | of many a hard-fought battle, for the pur se of formu g & demand on th> | Government to suppr bulifights. Prom: | nent citizens addre: the meeting an« | expressed the hope this nationa spectacle would soon disappear from R | country forever.—Boston Post. ~ ‘White Mark for Rockefeller. The Rockefeller wedding ceremony on | Thursday was simple. decorous and unos- | tentatious, as a wedding shouid alwa: s | be. Mr. Rockefeller has much censure in the | where of en visited with ubiic press and els= his merciless dealinz« with_railroads m to build up a colossal | However this may be. in his private Mr. Rockefeller has n example w | men with less wealth greater preten- | sons would do well ‘o imitate.—Chicas { Tribune. | Progressive Tax on Bachelors. | A bill to impose a tax of $ a head on | bachelors is before the Michigan Le: ture. Wu Ting Fang. the ter at Washington, is an ardent advocate of this discourager of single blessedness. The other day he told David B. Hill tha: he ought to marry and that while he re- | mained a bachelor he should be made to rly a good stiff tax for his freedom, ris- ng with age to a very high rate. Mr ‘Wu’'s plan of a progressive tax is the only | practical way to accompiish the resuir. ? the tax is only 35 alm. | will pay it cheerfully rather than face the ! bills for dry goods and baby carriages | which come in after the wedding. A tax | on bachelors, bowever, if estabiished. accompanied by one om old these days, when women are independent, preferring ‘“‘careers”’ to wifehood and motherhood, they, too. should pay for their freedom. If the man is gander enough to remain single give him a dose of tobasco; and If the woman s goose enough to do likewise why not make her swallow the same sauce?—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. - * -+ ] | | ! | | | | | | 1 | | | < P DRAE CLOTH MAN The mantle represented is of bright drab cloth, with large lapels extending 0 A0g Pottom, and embroidersd with chenilfe. Tt is bordered with stitched leats. and slightly hollowed at the waist . behind. Choice candies, Townsend's. Palace Hotel * —_———— ‘Townsend's California glace fruits pound, in fire-etched boxes or Ja kets. A nice present for Eastern frien: 639 Market street, Palace Hotel butlding.* ——— Special information supplied dafly business houses and public men by t Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s). 510 Mon:- gomery st. 12. - to Telephane Main 10432 A federal union of vegetarian socleties exists in London. London has a vegeta- rian hospital with twenty beds in connec- tion with it. —_———— New Santa Fe Train. The new Sants Fe train knmown as the Cali- fornia Limited affords service very much supe- rior to anything ever before offered to Comst travelers. " Gas Consumers’ Association, 344 Post st., re- duces gas bills from 20 to 40 per cent. Gas and electric meters tested. FElectrical departme: All kinds of electric work promptly attended to * South Carolina s naking progress in the line of educating its rising genera- tions. On the public school enrollments in the State there are 126,395 white pupils and colored. ADVERTISEMENTS. BABY WANTS nothing but steady contin- uous care with regular food ' and sleep; he wants no variety —nothing but rest and food, | good air, soft water, and gentle friction. His dainty pink skin re- be- washea | sponds with the glow of health. y)—Couldn't du er mure! . He 518 he couldn't—Puck. | O" ¢ : % 11 At Hotel Del Coronado e shaken ‘The !_thlnunltre imme: feathers are then drawn out, the mrpg! at gentle heat. The | When the least bit off, as babies are occasionally, use i ) > i 1 f mos! ressed wing be- | Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil. mmhmu:‘m:t:h :‘mnu:‘“:h.h mbn:gtfl:"n‘.”,rm u.! . £€ I""W »h.-.~ vom'_u‘.un:-' then dr!':.d over ..rh‘ Bently | we'lisend you a littleto try, if you like. el character of enf ex i 4 New Montgomery st., city, for special ticket. | are required for good work. SCOTT & BOWXNE, 409 Pearl strest. Now York,

Other pages from this issue: