The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 14, 1901, Page 6

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6 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1901. - JOHN SFRECKELS, Proprietor. Atdress A1l Communiestions to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER'S OFFICE. . ...... Telephone PIQVII 04 PUBLICATION O rket and Third, §. F. Telephone Press 201. ROOMS. to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 202. EDITORIAL Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coplex, 5 Cents. Including Postage: .-..$8.00 . 3.00 1.50 65 KLY CALL, One Year e All postmasters are authorized to receiv subscriptions. Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. ne change of address should te AND OLD ADDRESS in onder iance with their request. to insure & pr OAKLAND OFFICE... +....1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Masager Yercigz Advertising, Marquetts Building, Ohisags, (Long Distance Telephone “Central 2610.”") NEW YO XDENT: C. CARLTON ...Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH..... .30 Tribune Building S STANDS: rentano, 81 Union Square; CHICAGO EWS STANDS: ; Great Northern Hotel: WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE....1408 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Corresponden mery, corner of Clay, open open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 k Larkin, open until 2261 Market, Valencia, open . cor- treets—Specialties. o every afternoon and Recital. TO KILL SAVINGS BANKS. f the most remarkable bills is that intro- (\) Se Belshaw, by request, to a and turn the State treas- age institution. cted by forbidding that savings sitors more than one per cent per ut an end to such me end one of the d economy on the d people engaged in limited for a branch of the treasury to be t which shall receive de- P s r than $2000 and pay interest ¢ e rate of 3 per cent per annum for so deposited is to be loaned by er on real estate, mortgages and no smaller sums than $2000 oses to deprive small nce there is no ion exercised by the State er. In effect it would be e to borrow money at 3 at current rates. The first to the community of small ks and the next would be ement of such a loan .and bar as its origin in that ignorant h is fostered by dema- e people who think that savings 1 locked up in their vaults, on and causing a money Of course the 1 keep money out of their vaults t the best author of the bill was quite per- g to get it before the Legiglature and duced even though the Senator he would vote against it. As g0 to the proper commit- ect of an intelligent report, ng in right views those who it presents a feasible and work- t f t to the State and people. s hard to imagine a plan that would do more harm than this to individuals and re mala ration, corruption and loss to the te If the € its mortgag so that an shift be = embarked in such business of course d securities would be non-taxable, ! burden of taxation would be lers of individual taxpayers. B e — unpardonable blow has struck at a thriving home industry. 1pon it Another serious, been authorities have imported a man to teach the art of using the hammer. This seems to be an un- just discrimination, for the Alameda School Board not have been compelled to travel far to find masters in the cheerful art. There is pending before the Supervisors an ordi- nance making the owners of street signs responsible for any injury which may be done to ’pcdestrians The framers of the proposed law have strangely for- gotten to make the almost universal hideousness of The legislative inquiry into the 2ffairs of the Police Department seems to have called forth the very re- finement of pe: The Chinese witnesses who lied ere amateurs in comparison with o confessed that he was a liar and eved. e wh en asked to 1 e man i Accusers who stand behind the undefined, mysteri- ous shadow of 2n unkmown, uniflentifiy‘l Chinese gambler 2nd ask the public to believe their charges against officials are demanding more than any one in- spired by a sense of justice will grant. The accusers of the police have rezlly left something undone, ] { 5% | that when his State, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi ct is that such banks con- | ate of interest that can | would produce | The Alameda | ign decoration an element of criminal injury to the | VEST ON THE WEST. N his speech in opposition to a revival of American l shipping Senator Vest of Missouri charged that the shipping bill would benefit New England more than it would the West or the Mississippi Valley, and { made an attack upon the New England Senators for their support of the measure. Among other fault-finding he made a bitter attack on the New Engiand fishermen because they are per- mitted by law to have a drawback of duty on the salt used in curing fish. He regarded this as a great offense to the West, and when it was added to the fact that New England would build ships under the proposed law the accumulation of offenses was nearly enough to | justify Missouri in seceding from the Union. Talk of that kind is called statesmanship in certain But Senator Vest forgets | | precincts in Pike County. and Louisiana ask in every river and harbor bill for | irom eight to fifteen millions of dollars to be speat within their borders in improving the navigability and restraining the floods of the Mis: ppi River no New England Senator objects or calls attention to the | fact that the river does not run into Cape Cod Bay | and is therefore unworthy of an appropriation. | The five States whose transportation interests de- pend on the river, and whose best agriculture must be protected against it, get in every Congress more | than the entire annual subsidy that will be paid to the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific coasts for the restora- tion of an American merchant marine. About twice as much of the river appropriation is spent in Mis- souri as all New England will get out of the ship subsidy. Yet Senator Vest draws a picture, plaintive and pitiful, of the Missouri farmer distressing himself to pay a subsidy to greedy New England! The salt drawback for benefit of the fishermen is put forward as if jt were the only drawback provided in the tariff. If Senator Vest will visit Kansas City, St. Louis and other manufacturing and industrial cen- ters in his State he will find his own constituents get- ting drawbacks on tin, on glycerine, sugar, alcohol and a number of other articles to an amount enor- mously i excess of that given to the fishermen of New England. | Those fishermen follow a most hazardous occupa- tion. If the Senator would go to Gloucester and get the record of ten years’ wreck and loss of life on the fishing banks of the stormy and foggy North Atlantic coast he might learn that catching cod and mackerel is a calling somewhat more strenuous than raising hogs in Missouri. But he is a statesman who knows nothing of the great industrial and business operations of his coun- try. His constituents think that fishing is an amuse- | ment, that it means digging a can of worms, getting credit for a bottle of whisky and a plug of tobacco and going out to the creek for a day’s fun. He plays !to that sort of an audience, and as long as he can represent it in the Senate he doesn’t care wmhe,—l‘ another American ship is launched or not. | He took occasion to compliment the New England Senators on the care they take of the b ests of their people, and said, truthfully iness inter- that as long 2¢ they do that they are certain of their seats. This suggests the contrast between him and them. He is sure of his seat as long as he attacks and tries tor injure the business interests of every section but his own. His politics is of ‘the old, narrow, provincial, plan- tation kind that inhered in the institution of slavery, with an infusion of the modern demagogy that has come to be the ruling spirit of his party. The seacoasts of the country, the maritime States, have supported Government aid to the railways that penetrated the interior and furnished transcontinental transportation. Missouri would be without rail con- | nection with the Pacific, the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico were it not for the support given to the aided roads by the maritime States. But such con- | siderations have no influence upon Senator Vest, | whose rhetoric is about as useful to his country as a gimlet is in boring an auger hole. B QUESTIONS OF RECIPROCITY. ON. JOHN A. KASSON, Commissioner, plen- ipotentiary for the negotiation of reciprocity. treaties, has recently made an elaborate reply to certain objections urged by the Home Market Club | against the various treaties he has arranged with | France and with certain West Indian colonies and South American countries. The paper is the mos: vigorous defense that has yet been made on the part | of the Commissioner, but it still falls short of justi- | fying his treaties. | The objections expressed in the resolutions of the | Home Market Club are: First, the treaties “are not | | based on the true principle of reciprocity, which is the | | exchange on favorable terms of dissimilar and non- | | competing products”; second, they “are based upon | a principle of dree trade which will introduce a dam- | aging if not ruinous competition”; third, the treaties | “practically nullify a revenue law which originated, as | | the constitution requires, in the House of Represen- tatives, and do not require the co-operation of that body”; fourth, the treaties “disturb the harmony oi adjustment between industries and will introduce such inequalities as to unfavorably affect all business.” | Mr. Kasson objects to the definition given of the | “true principle of reciprocity.” He says such a defini | tion is not to be found in a dictionary nor in any precedent of legislation. His statement may be true, but nevertheless the majority of the American people will accept tHe definition as the correct one. Cer- tainly the people who voted for the party of protec- | tion to American industries never intended to fritter that protection away by treaties that would admit competing articles to weaken American production, To do so would be to nullify the whole value of pro- | tection. In fact, Mr. Kasson's policy, if carried out to its logical conclusion, would result in bringing about virtual free trade, not by action of Congress, but by diplomacy. As an illustration of what he has accomplished for the industries of the country Mr. Kasson cites his treaty with France, and after pointing out that the goods of other nations were admitted to the Frénch markets on better terms than ours he says: “After | more than a year’s negotiation France finally agreed | to give to us like reductions, averaging from twenty- six to forty-eight per cent of her present duties, on all the possible exports of the United States now duti- | able save nineteen in number, only a few of these | being of importance to the United States. We gave her in return reductions averaging only 6.8 per cen, | and applicable to about one-fourth of the articles in | our tariff list, reserving (without any concession upon | them) all other articles, including many manufactures and woolen goods of every kind. If under the treaty j we shall export to France the same percentage of her imports of goods now subjected to a discriminating duty which we export of other goods now admitted on equal terms, our annual gain in exports will b from $20,000,000 to $30,000,000.” Now that is a very good showing on its face, but M posed to competi.tion for the sake of profiting other : * | EDITORIAL PAUL REVERE IN KANSAS. industries? The true principle of protection means equal protection to-all American industries. It does not mean that some shall be sacrificed to others. The Boston Transcript in commending Mr. Kas- son’s defense says: “There are a few industries, ex- tremely petty in themselves as compared with the gen- eral benefits set off against them, that are afraid they would suffer, and in consideration of them we are to forego the advantage of putting ourselves on a level with the most favored nations in our trade relations with that great country. This is not protecting home industries. It is simply lugging a few of them bodily, while others more numerous and quite as important sweat and suffer in consequence.” Why should the wine, the fruit, the sugar and other industries made subject to loss by the Kasson treaties be called “extremely petty in themselves”? And, even i they were petty, why are they not as justly entitled to protection as the bigger industries of the country? The great.mass of protectionists will hold that the Home Market Club is right. True reciprocity is the exchange on favorable terms of non-competing products, and true protection is the protection of all the industries of the American people. DISSENSIONS IN AUSTRIA. ANY times have the students of international politics in Europe predicted that when the present Emperor of Austria dies there will be an immediate outbreak of civil war in the empire, and that as a result the political map of Europe will be reconstructed. To such predictions something of confirmation was given by the dispatches from Vienna announcing that when the Archduke Ferdinand’s re- nunciation of the right of succession to the throne was read in the Lower House of the Reichsrath the Czech representatives rose in a body, left the House, called upon the Archduke ahd assured him“the Czechs do not recognize the right of the Reichsrath to deal with matters affecting the succession to the throne of Bohemia. In that incident alone there is room for a wrangle that may result in the predicted civil war. If the Czechs refuse to acknowledge and adopt the order of succession to the crown agreed upon by the Reichs- rath there will be nothing left to do but to fight it out. There was a time when Hungary was the weak spot in the Austrian empire, but that time has passed. The Hungarian question is now a slight thing in compari- son with that of Bohemia. The population of the latter kingdom is divided between Germans and Czechs. The Czechs desire to obtain for Bohemia | something like the home rule that has been granted to Hungary. The Germans oppose the desire. The Czechs dgmand an official recognition of their lan- guage, and again they are met by German opposition. Thus it will be seen that in Bohemia itself there is a deething discontent wkhich is kept from breaking out | into war only by the strength of the empire. So sure are the European statesmen that the Aus- trian empire is bound to break up within a few years that calculations have been already made as to the division of the spoils. The empire is made up of va- rious races, including Hungarians, Czechs, Germans, Poles and Croats. These races are held together solely by the authority of the Emperor. A disputs over the succession would break the single tie that holds the empire together. Then would come the | struggle of the Russians, Germans, Italians and Hun- garians to seize the ceparated provinces and annex them. France and Great Britain would of course hava no chance to share in the plunder, for they do not bor- der on any part of the Austrian domain, but they would undoubtedly insist upon having a voice in- the distribution. A recent forecast of the outcome predicts that when the first sign of civil war appears the Russians will at once enter Austria to support the empire, as was done when the Hungarian revolt took place. At the same time the clamors of the German people will force L THE CHICAGO INTER OCEAN ASKS WHY SOME ENTHUSIASTIC FRIEND OF THE HARASSED SALOON-KEEPERS DOES NOT EMU- LATE THE HERO OF THE FAMOUS RIDE. 3 PERSONAL MENTION. F. A. Kaufman, a merchant of Wood- land, is at the Grand. C. W. Tuttle and wife of Colusa are reg- istered at the Palace. R. L. Rader, an ofl man of Bakersfleld, is registered at the Lick. L. F. Booth, a merchant of Spokane, is registered at the Occidental. Bank Commissioner John Markley of Geyersville is a guest at the Lick. W. H. Clary and De Witt Clary, mining men of Stockton, are at the Lick. Schuyler Alexander, Assessor of Den- ver, is at the Occlidental with his family. E. T. Perkins Jr., a Government sur- veyor from Sacramento, s at the Occi- dental. §. Robinson of Sacramento and E. Rich- ardson of Los Gatos are guests at the Grand. L. McDonald, a mining man of French Gulch, and W. H. Hatton of Modesto are at the Lick. Mark R. Plaisted, editor of tha Evening Democrat of Fresno, is a guest at the California. Walter F. Burrell, a merchant of- Port- land, Or., is at the Palace, accompanied by his wife. W. B. Jerome, general Western agent of the New York Central in Chicago, ar- rived in the city yesterday. W. H. Mason, an oil man of Bakers- field, and E. McLaughlin, a banker of San Jose, are at the Occidental. Manager J. A. Fillmore of the Southern Pacific leaves to-day on a tour of inspec- tion of the Southern.division of the road as far as El Paso. R. W. Fowler of London, England, is at the California. He s a large agricultural implement manufacturer. Early during the Boer war he recelved the contract from the British Government to supply all the plows that were used in South Af- rica by the troops in the construction of trenches. He also manufactured the ar- mor for the military trains. He is travel- ing around the world for his health. — e CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Feb. 13—The following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—G. L. Chase is at the Herald Square; C., E. Fredericks is at the Hoff- man House; Mrs. Kelly is at the Cri- terfon; Mrs. S. Lilly is at the Grand Union; A. L. McLeod is at the Amster- dam; D. M. Moses and 8. L. Saurter are at the Herald Square; L. Curran is at Germany to send an army into Austria to protect the jthe Grand Union; the Misses Drown, A. German population there. As a result the predic- tion is that Russia will retain the provinces of Gal- licia and Transylvania, while Germany will take Bo- hemia and all the western states of Austria clear | through to the Adriatic Sea, thus obtaining for the German empire a frontage on the Mediterranean as well as on the Baltic. Italy would be forced to con- tent herself with a narrow strip to “rectify her fron- | tier.” Such is the stupendous outcome expected of the disturbances to follow the death of Francis Joseph. It will be perceived that the Czech demonstration in favor of Archduke Ferdinand was something more than a spectacular performance. It was a distinct case of playing with fire, and may prove an important factor in inflaming the various races to outbreaks which will end in the dismemberment of their em- | pire. e England persistently declines to accept or to reject our proposals in reference to the Nicaragua canal. She has evidently brought her shop-keeping methods into affairs of state and forgets that the bargainer and huckster do not figure in matters of international principle. She may delay long enough to accept what we choose to give her. A New York Judge has decided that the debts of the Courit de Castellane must be paid. Thjs interest- ! ing jurist must think that the Gould millions are in- exhaustible or that it will be in the nature of retri- butive justice to reduce the family to poverty. The expose of the operations and flight of two charlatans, posing as physicians, indicate that a cer- tain percentage of the population of San Francisco still insists upon the privilege of being fooled by any one who cares to make the effort. A German adventurer is trying to go around the world on nothing. He is evidently attempting to | imitate some of the titled gentlemen of the fatherland who left home for the same purpose and inflicted their presence upon us. A lad said to possess X-ray eyes is one of the happy new possessions of Texas. He can see, it is said, two hundred miles into the earth, but it is safe to say that he can see no further than the rest of us into a millstone. The dead Chinese official who is to be subjected fo the indignity of posthumous execution has been placed at a most serious disadvantage. The other fellows will have all the fun at the interesting ceremony. = A society of looters has been organized in Peking. If the seizures of smuggled goods from the various army transports be any indication the society must have a very powerful branch in this city. The legislators who are agitating their brains in an effort to draft a primary law which will be satisfactory to everybody should remember that a measure which what of the “nineteen industries” that have been ex- | will please all will be valuable to none. N. Drown and wife and Mrs. G. W. Gibbs are at the Holland; J. 8. Doge is at the Belvidere; C. A. Henry is at the Hoffman House; J. W. Keegan s at the Gilsey; E. B. Smith is at the Marlborough. From San Diego—J. E. Lewis is at the Girard. e CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—H. W. Goodall and wife of San Francisco are at the Arlington; Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Oxnard of California are at the Gordon. + + FASHION HINTS FROM PARIS. o 3 + BLUE CLOTH €O embroidered with braid t lar and lnpels of the bolero: mee The 1] Mebfick velvet. The tutexl:m &5 $ Ir:f: of hh;e black, and the skirt 1g on one side. e e - The British crulser Terribl lished an T record prize record at ‘I;y ntn.uw with the six-inch rounds were scored out of 104 STUME. r costume represented is of sky blue ANSWERS TO QUERIES. VANDERBILT-F. M. J., Oakland, Cal. The residence of W. K. Vanderbllt is Fifth avenue' and Fifty- Rey Yoo y-second street, ROYAL FLUSHES—B. M., City. Ifina game of poker one player has a royal flush of dfamonds and his opponent has a royg‘l flush of hearts the pot must be di- vided. THREE-HANDED EUCHRE — Sub- scriber, Crockett, Cal. In three-handed euchre the rule is laid down in Hoyle that if two players go out together the elder hand of the two wins. TO CHANGE A NAME — Reader, Fresno, Cal. A person in California who desires to change the name by which he is known should make application to the Superior Court in the county in which he resides, and if there is good reason for lg«:ichange the court will grant the appli- cation. AVERAGE—A. S., Oakland, Cal. If a horse covers a stated distance in a given number of hours, to ascertain the average per hour dividé the number of miles by the time occupied in traveling the dis- tance. If, however, the animal was rested a certain number of hours on the trip de- duct that time from that occupied in go- ing over- the entire distance and divide the distance by the remainder. KANSAS PROHIBITION—F. W. A., City. The prohibition law of Kansas is a constitutional provision, which is as follows: “The manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor shall be forever hihited in the State except for medic sclentific and mechanical purposes.” There is no such offense known to the law as “joint smashing.” That is the local name given in Kansas to the acts of Mrs. Carrie Nation and her followers because they joined together to smash things. ASHES OF TOBACCO-T. F. J., City. The popular theory that the ashes of a cigar or of a cigarette introduced Into a beverage, such as beer or whisky, to be drunk by an individual partially Intoxi- cated, will produce Increased intoxication or produce narcotism is at fault. it is the nicotine of tobacco that is introduced in the drinks to produce the effects hamed. Those who wish to produce such an effect usually dose the liquor with snuff. The greater part of the ash of tobacco consists of insoluble salts, principally car- bonate of lime. The solubie consists prin- gipally of potash salts, which amounts to from 5 to 3% per cent. A NOTE—C. R., Westside, Cal. there is'a stipulation to that effect the uncollected interest on a note is not added to the principal. In this State it has been decided that if by the terms of the note interest is due and payable every six months the payee is mot entitled, under interest. not p: as it falls due, unless there is an ex%s provision in writing to p: such intdzest. The maker of a note can- not be compelled to renew a note. The remedy is to commence an sction, The law of California on the subject of com- pound interest is as follows: “The parties may in any contract in writing whereby any debt is secured to be paid, agree that if the interest on such debt is not punctu- ally paid it shall become a part of the principal, and thereufter bear the same rate of interest as the principal debt.” pro- | n. Unless | the statutes of this State, to Interest upon | if the instaiiment of interest is | UTTERANCE 1 - Carnegie Church Organs. Andrew Carnegie has begun to give away church organs as well as public li= braries, but he Is still in grave peril of dying very rich, and so disgraced; accord. an ing to his own doctrines. steel business bas been The iron I'has to keep on the move to spend his ir | come, much more to dispose of his capi- | tal.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Boer War Not Over. “Actions speak louder than words,™ and the dispatch of 30.000 fresh troops o South Africa outweighs all the protests | from interested authorities that the wa is over and it only remains to d | guerrilla bands. _Moreover, the | siasm reported in England for enl | the new corps indicates’ that the | still popular in that country. Th. | facts are pretty good proof that | will last for a considerable time longe | Public Leager. | war = | Defective Coast Defenses. The old story is repeated on the au- thority of General Miles, too, that not | many guns are in position in our coast | defenses, and that there is no ammunition | for them, the supply of smokeless powder being altoget deficient. We believe | that some 350,500,000 has been expended on coast defenses in the past eleven years Must it always remain the same; that in time of peace no ordinary precautions | against a possible sudden war will ever | be made?—Salt Lake Tribune. ‘Wide Popularity of Golf. A surprising growth in the game of golf i America is shown by Harper's Official Golf Guide for 1%1, just published. De- tails are given of 1037 courses existing last season against less than 90 the preced- ing year, and the aggregate investment of money must be very large. New York | State is first in the list with 164 courses, but Massachusetts, the second, shows | mueh greater concentration of golfing eul- | ture, with 158. Idaho and Indian Terri- tory remain the only sections of the coun- | try’ without golfing organizations, but as | Oklahoma and Wyoming have not entire- ly disdained the sport, there is still hope. Possibly golf iIs destined to wield a soft- | ening ‘influence in those unregenerate | communities.—Springfield Republican. | Opening of Parliament. The new King of England is catering manifestly to the popular taste. London people require more court gayety, as that brings money into the coffers of the trades- men. The King has determined that Par- liament shall be opened on Februar}' 14 with the most impressive ceremonials. The magnificent state carriage, which has not been used since the death of Prince | Albert, forty years ago, has been hauled | out from its hiding place for complete re- | pairs. It is to be so renovated as to be | more brilliant than ever, with gold orna- | mentation and plate glass and with ex- | pensive frescoes on its panels. It is fur- | ther understood that Queen Alexandra will accompany the King to the Parlia- | ment House, and we believe that this |is the first time in a hundred years of such an occurrence. The Peeresses are | expected to be present and the officials |and Peers In their robes of state. The | Peeresses are not allowed to wear any | jewelry. Edward Rex knows that the people’ want a grand show on every state occasion and he is shrewd enough to cater to that taste. In this respect Vic- toria was too somber and too melancholy for the public requirements. It may be said that this is tickling the people with a straw, and yet straws of this kind often secure a widespread popularity. —Evening ‘Wisconsin. The Nation Hysteria. Has the coming woman come into the new century with a hatchet? Has she abandoned moral suasion and will she se- cure reforms by smashing things? These are questfbns which must shortly be con- sidered seriously. The hysteria which so suddenly seized Mrs. Carrfe Nation ap- ears to be spreading slowly but surely. g'he source of the affliction is still in Kan- sas, but sporadic cases have manifested themselves in widely separated localities. The saloon, or the “joint,” as Mrs. Na- tion prefers to call {t. is not the only e gravating cause of this hysterfa. In Chi- cago the drug store has produced quite a violent attack ot it, and eminently peace- able and well-disposed dealers in pills and potions now look askance at every bevy | of women entering their stores. to dis- | cover whether they are bringing prescrip- tions or hatchets. Having spread from saloons to drug stores, the engrossing question now is. in what other directions this hysteria will spread before its force is spent and women return to their normal selves. Epidemics of this sort are apt to spread | rapfdly and to break out in quarters | where they are least expected.—Chicago Tribune. — e Valentines for old and young; the best we have ever shown. Sanborn, Vail & Co.* ————— Choice candies, Townsend's, Palace Hotel* Cal. glace fruvit 50c per Ib at Townsend's.® —_—— Spectal information suppiied dally to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont« gomery st. Telephor: Main 1 . SAD STORY OF CALIFORNIA HAS DO YOU KNOW has estab- THRILLING ADVENTURES OF A SAN FRANCISCO GIRL IN PER THE POPE’S INCOME. Did it ever occur to you how much money the Pope receives yearly? Read about it in next Sunday's Call EARLY TRAINING OF CHILDREN. By Mrs. Martha Taft Weatworth. ELAINE SINCLAIR. A HOSPITAL MAN- AGED SOLELY BY WOMEN. Beginning of a series of articles on HOME MEDICAL SCIENCE. Next Sunday—*The Philosophy of Geod Health " MME. BERNHARDT’S HOME IN PARI | THE STORY OF THE KAHUNA? Read it in next Sunday's Call HOW TO REMOVE WRINKLES. By Harriet Hubbard Ayer. - EFFECTS IN FLOWERS THE LATEST FAD IN NEW YORK.

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