The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 10, 1901, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WE ESDAY, JULY 10, 1901 Che Soisse Ealls WEDNESDAY......... JULY 10, 1901 N D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. ..Telephone Press 204 JOH Address All Communieati MANAGER'S OFFICE. PUBLICATION OFFIC Market and Third, S. F. Telephone Press 201. ECDITORIAL ROOMS. ....217 to 221 Stevemson St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies. 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Inciuling Postage: CALL (ncluding Sunflay). one year.. CALL (including Sunday), € months. CALL*(including Sunday), 3 monthe. CALL~—By Single Month.. . SUNDAY CALL, One Yea WEEKLY CALL, One Yea All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample coples will be jorwarded when requested. DAILY DAILY DAILY DAILY L1 Maifl subscribers in ordering change of address ghould be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to ineure a prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. v...1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building. Chicago (Long Distance Telephone *‘Central 2619.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON. NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH. 30 Tribune Building NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, Murray Hill Hotel. CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE...1408 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—S27 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. #:30 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open untfl 9 o'clock. 1% Valencia, open until § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until § o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until 3 o'clock. Fillmore, open until 9 p. m. AMUSEMENTS. Tivoll—*Babes in the Wood. Orpheum—Vaudeville. Columbia—*"Under Two Flags. Aleazar—""The School for Scandal Grand Opera-house—*‘Secret Service.” Central—'"Held by the Enemy." Olympia, corner Mason and Eddy streets—Specialties. Chutes, Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and evening Fischer's—Vaudeville, Sutr Swi AUCTION SALES. July 11, Horses, at 721 Layng—Thursday, 70 SUBSCRIBERS LEAVING TOWN FOR THE SUMMER. Cal! subscribers contemplating a change of residence during the summer months can have their paper forwarded by mail to their mew sddresses by motifying The Call Busin This pager will also be on sale at all summer rexorts and is represented by = loeal agent in all towss on the coast O of Assembly constitutional amendment No. 28, which was adopted by the Legislature during the closing hours of the session and which is to be. sub- mitted to the people zt the next election. We revert to it because the measure is of such an extraordinary AN INIQUITCUS SCHEME. N Sunday, June 30, The Call published an nature that the public should be fully warned and | the warning made impressive by repetition at once without waiting for the approach of the election. The proposed amendment contemplates the crea- tion of a commission of five persons clothed with authority to regulate telegraph, telephone, water, light, power, transportation, sleeping cir, express companies and “other corporations.” Thus the com- mission is to have authority to fix rates for about everything that is supplied by a corporation. All such powers hitherto vested in local governing bodies of cities and of counties are to be-swept away. The commission is to be everything. For the purpose of electing the members of the commission the State is to be divided into five dis- tricts, from each of which a Commissioner is to be chosen. His term of office is to be ten years, and his salary $6000 a year. ‘It is provided that no one shall be 2 Commissioner who is “interested directly or indirectly as a stockholder, creditor, agent, attor- ney, employe or otherwise in any of the corporations, companies or business over which they have charge.” It will be perceived that as the Commissioners are to have charge over nearly all kinds of corporations, the cffect of that stipulation concerning their qualifi- cations is to virtually exclude about one-half the voters of the State. There are very few men of any business capacity who are not disqualified under that clause, and as a consequence the commission would be made up of professional politicians. A significant part of the scheme is that the com- mission is to be originally appointed by the Gov- | ernor, and that of his appointees one is to hold office for two years, one for four years, one for six vears, one for eight years and one for ten years. Thus the people of the various districts will not have a yote on their representatives for years to come. The Governor’s appointees would control the commission for a long time. It will be seen that this is a very strange scheme It virtually turns the State over to the corporations, for of course the commission appointed by the Gov- ernor would hardly be anything more than a railroad committee. It is worth noting that the amendment was rushed through the Legislature in the closing hours of the session. That means that the men who are pushing it are up to many tricks, and it will be well for the public to bear the fact in mind. e The New York Press asserts that the shirtwaist as a dress for men is demoralizing, and as a proof it says: “Refined women think it no disgrace to ride in the same car with coatless men in negligee shirts, but on Tuesday this liberty was quite overdone by three swell lookers who rode in a One Hundred and Thirty- eighth street car in their undershirts.” The British public is said to be “hungry for jingo poetry,” but evidently starvation point is still a long way off, for we have noted no cry for more verses from the poet laurcate. Bowdoin University has conferred the degree of LL. D. vpon Sarah Orme Jewett, and now the writers of dialect stories can claim that their work is not only literary but classic. ..Herald Square | 81 Union Square; | €15 Larkin, open until | omce. | elaborate analysis of the purport and effect | A SUMMER CRITIC. HE University at Berkeley is managing a very T successful summer school. THe attendance is as large as can be properly taken care of, and that | 50 many mature people are in the classes is evidence of their earnest purpose and desire to learn what the school is intended to teach. A majority of these sum- mer students are women. ' The gentler sex especially prevails in the English course. Professor Wendell of Harvard segms to be toiling | with the English classes and has shown some impa- tience with the material that he is trying to hew into approved Harvard form. In order that he might know the sort of intellectual Carrara presented to his tempered chisel he had the ladies write compositions, which were submitted to his Eastern and highly ac- complished judgment. It is not known whether he finished reading the numerous productions or not. But it is known that he issued from the task suffering a severe inteilectual | nausea, his Harvard sensibilities retching violently, and his literary taste blue around the gills. ‘When he next met his class ke dismissed their well intended literary efforts by telling them that the most of what they had written was “disgusting slop.” No explanation was made to inform the class what Harvard considers slop and what makes the same dis- gusting. Although Harvard has had one professor hanged for murder and at present has another on trial for the same offense, she has taste and knows slop from soup. President Wheeler seemed pleased with the remark, and quieted the class by expressing {his delight that “we have a man here who is big ' enough and strong enough 4o criticize us. That is what we are here for, to be corrected if our ideals are not high enough.” But the summer world outside the summer school is not quite that much delighted. That %orld wants to know if the use of the term, “disgusting slop,” applied to the conscientious ef- forts of a large number of earnest ladies, is regarded as criticism. What made the work disgusting and |slop? Was the slop in the orthography, etymology, ntax or prosody? A high school principal from Northern California, who is a member—and we assume a male member— of the class, was also pleased with Professor Wendell's choice of terms in which to criticize his pupils, and said, “Pupils of mature age have to be hit hard by the instructor to feel it.” That evidently was the view taken of it by Professor Wendell, so he | hit them with “disgusting slop,” and it is the opinion | of the president of the university that it takes a big man to slap with slop. The further proceedings in | this Harvard court of criticism will be of intense in- terest to a class that reeds to be hit hard in order to feel it. He may be expected to pursue the same line of expression, and as their work is “disgusting slop,” we may yet hear him tell the workers that they are “a lot of goggle-eyed slobs.” The Northern California high school principal says they must be hit hard, for their skins are mature {and thick. The Harvard professor of manners, gen- | tility and English may yet find it necessary to pene- | trate the walrus-like pelt that protects the literary | quick of those ladies by calling them “spavined ga- | zelles.” How happy are we that he was so good as to | forsake the summer seas of New England, and per- | haps an outing at Siasconset, and days of delightful | clamming around Holmes Hole, for an unpleasant exile to our summer school, where he has to wet the lfen of his Harvard taste in the disgusting slop writ- | ten by California ladies! | How different it would be at home in Harvard! | There a class of summer ladies, summoned by Pro- | fessor Wendell to sudden composition, would stand | on one foot and duplicate “Evangeline,” “The Psalm |of Life,” or “Mog Moggone,” “Thanatopsis,” or “The Fall of the House of Usher.” Carrying out his |liquid analogy, instzad of being compelled to call | their work “disgusting slop,” he would characterize it as “ambrosia,” or that New England equivalent of the food of the gods, bean soup. No doubt he talks in kitchen equivalents and praises the superior women of Harvard summer schools by calling their work at least equal to codfish balls. e e During the tariff campaigns the Democrats and free- traders made a great fight against the protection given |to tin-plate manufacture in this country, saying it could not be produced here as cheaply as abroad and that the protective duty was a tax on the working- man’s dinner pail. It is now announced from Wash- ington that American tin plate not only supplies the home market, but is being shipped abroad. The next time the free-traders rise in this country they will have to hunt up another cry. AN APPEAL FOR FREEDOM. ELATED, but still interesting, comes to us B the Fourth of July address of the Anti- Imperialist League, entitled “An Appeal in Behalf of Constitutional Liberty.” It is signed by a long array- of distinguished men, among whom are George S. Boutwell, Carl Schurz, William D. How- ells, Samuel L. Clemens, Moorfiel Storey, Leonard Wolsey Bacon and J. Sterling Morton. A communi- cation from such a source is always entitled to careful consideration, and the present one is no exception to the rule. 4 The great mass of the American people are san- | guine optimists. They are convinced that almost everything is right, and that such matters as are wrong will be righted in time. Consequently they look with indifference upon-any class of men think they perceive dangers ahead. adopted by the league discredits it in the minds of the people. “Anti-imperialism” sounds very much like Bryanism, and the country has long since grown tired of everything of that sort. Moreover, there is an as- sured convictjon on the part of the people that we | are in no danger whatever of empire or.of imperial- ism, and consequently there is a corresponding im- patience with the cries of the alarmists. The paper presented to the country on the Fourth of July by the eminent gentlemen who framed it and signed it is of course of the highest literary standard. America has no better nor stronger writers than some of the men whose names are signed to the appeal, | and the paper, by whomever written, is worthy of the most eminent among them. Passing from its literary form to a consideration of its substance, there will be found intensely strong statements of certain phases of our dealings with the Cubans and the Filipinos, which olight to have been modified in order to make them more nearly correspond with the facts. Thus the appeal says: “To-day the President is the abso- lute ruler of Cuba. He spends the revenues of the island as he pleases. No constitution, no law, fetters his powers. At his instance Congress has violated the nation's pledge. have been told they will not be allowed to establish any government in their own land unless they sur- render in part the control of their finances and for- cign affairs. * * * They are offered no option to who | The very title | The ‘independent’ Cuban people * refuse these demands, which are backed by the pres- ence of United States troops upon their soil. Thus to the world our course has become zn example of national perfidy.” Of our dealing with the Filipinos the appeal says: “The war in the Philippines has been prosecuted with i unrelenting cruelty until the resistance of the un- happy islanders seems to have been crushed. ~Many thousands of ‘their bravest men have been killed, or have died of disease, during the contest, and to-day the President exercises a power as despotic as the Czar's over the whole Filipino nation.” Exaggerated statements of that kind, even when made with literary ‘skill, can hardly have much effect upon the public mind. It is well understood that the military authority exerted by the President as com- mander-in-chief of the army is by no means despotic. It is to be regretted that the appeal has been couched in such language, for the problems which confront the country in dealing with the islands are many, and the people would have been glad to attend to any earnest discussion of them by men of such distin- | guished ability. Whatever differences of opinion there may be in relation to the statements made in the body of the appeal, there ought to be none with respect to the object for which it was made, and which was thus expressed: “Let every citizen study the facts and make his conclusions known, combining with his neighbor to influence Congress to stand true to the principles of the declaration by which this govern- ment was founded and under which it has grown so great. The gravest danger our country has known till now bhas come from a denial of those principles. The incoming Congress is not yet committed to the policy of incorporating the island peoples into our systen®without righ;s. Let it resume its place in the Government in defense of the inalienable rights of man.” The maintenance in undiminished vigor of all the great principles for which our Government has stood is unquestionably a duty imposed upon every patriot. Those principles are probably not in danger, but it is always well to have men on guard to note with sus- picion everything that intimates danger and to sound the alarm at once. Governor Jones of Alabama, in addressing the Con- | stitutional Convention, denounced lynching, and said: “We owe it to ourselves and to our God to put a stop to this reckless business of manslaying.” It is to be noted, moreover, that the Governor's record on that issue is not made up of words merely. He once pre- served a prisoner from a mob under circumstances that required a high degree of courage. His example serves to show that the South is not lacking in states- men able to grapple with the barbarous practice, and gives encouragement to the hope that it may be | eventually suppressed. THAT TRIBUTE TO REALTY.. HE observation of Mr. Purdy of the Tax Re- T form Association, that personal property pays its tribute to real property, therefore realty should pay all the taxes and personalty should be ex- empt, may be studied in the light of his declaration that Mr. Carnegie should not be taxed on his three | hundred millions of bonds, which pay him eighteen millions interest annually. Just what tribute does | Mr. Carnegie’s three hundred millions pay to real | estate? . | Let us suppose that he is a citizen of San Fran- | cisco and his property therefore all taxable here at his legal residence. His bonds should pay a tax of | three millions ufider cur dollar limit. Under the tribute theory they should pay that much to realty, | which it would transfer, under the single tax, to the city treasury. Mr. Carnegie has a family of four, and ‘probably ten servants. He is a plain liver, and it costs no more to maintain his establishment of fodr- teen than any other family of equal condition and number. Admit that their clothing, wool, cotton, linen, silk and fur, comes from the ground, as the plants, animals and insects which produce it live upon | the ground. So their food comes from the ground, ! and what they pay for it all is a tribute to the owner of the ground. But that tribute is not three millions |a year, and, as Mr. Carnegie is exempt to that | amount of taxes, the realty of the city, under the sin- gle tax, must make good the loss to the treasury. | Suj | gow, meet in San Francisco Mr. Con Sullivan, of Skib- | bereen. Con is a mechanic, intends to marry and has | bought a lot on which to build a house when he earns the money. His income is eighteen hundred dollars | a year, the wages of his daily toil at the Union Iron Works, and Mr. Carnegie’'s is eighteen mil- lions, for which he cuts coupons off his bonds. Con’s | little lot has to pay its share of the tax from which tribute does Carnegie pay to Con’s little lot to make him whole? Why should Mr. Carnegie live in this town and pay no tax, make no contribution beyond the board and clothes of his household, and Con Sul- livan pay his taxes? But the single taxer answers that land is a natural ! monopoly and those who own it can exact from all others what tribute they please for the privilege of living on the earth. But what tribute can Con Sulli- | van, from Skibbereen, exact of Andrew Carnegie, from Glasgow, as compensation for paying Andrew’s itaxes? Con owns a vacant lot and works in a foun- ;dry. Carnegie owns 1o realty and boards at the Pal- {ace Hotel. How does his tribute reach Con’s lot out in the Mission district? The Assessor reaches it, and the Tax Collector, and it pays tax to hire policemen | to protect Mr. Carnegie on the street and watch the safe deposit where his bonds are, and firemen to pro- tect him against fire in his hotel. When does Mr. Car- negie call around and pay his tribute to Con’s realty out of his three hundred millions of personalty, pro- tected by the laws of this city? Now add to Carnegie our multitude of other mil- lionaires, whose fortunes are in interest-paying secu- rities, and tell us how they contribute to realty a sum equal to their exemption from taxes? How does the owner of -a lot get that contribution in coin in his pocket in order to pass it over to the Tax Collector? How does the owner of a lot get it out of the owner of a million in personalty? . 7 Uncle Sam will surely redeem revenue stamps in accordance with the terms announced, but the chances are that he will be so slow about it that unless a man has a great many of them it will not be worth while for him to try to collect on them. Some political experts declare it has been already arranged that the reciprocity treaties now before the Senate will be rejected, and whether it be true or not it ought to be. exposition, and has now just about two years in which l ppose that Mr. Andrew Carnegie, native of Glas- | | Carnegie’s three hundred millions is exempted. What | St. Louis has selected the site for her forthcoming ‘to put up the buildings and make ready for the show. | MRS. M’KINLEY'S THREE CHARMING NIECES VISITING HER AT CANTOI\{ KX THE THREE NIECES OF MRS. McKINLE AT THE CANTON HOME OF THE PRESIDENT AND HIS WIFE, TO WHOM THEY Y—MISS KITTY, MISS MARY AND MISS IDA BARBER—ARE GUESTS ARE GREATLY AT- James V. Coffey was secretary of the Board of Port Wardens, San Franelsco, in the years 1869, 1§70, 1871 and 1S72. A QUARTER—G. M. H., Glen Ellen, Cal. A United States quarter of 183 with rays around the eagle and arrow heads at the date Is worth only its face value. GOAT ISLAND—O. D., Marysville, Cal. Yerba Buena or Goat Island in the bay | | of San Francisco is within the territortal | | imits of the city and county of San Fran- i cisco. SOUTHERN OREGON—H. C. 8., Ala- meda, Cal. It is claimed that the southern part of Oregon is, generally speaking, the best part of the State for “ralsing apples, berries and poultry.” | LOSS OF THE RIO—Reader of The Call, City. The record of the steamer Rio de Janeiro, which foundered February 22, 1901, was that she had on board 201 per- sons; 122 were lost and T8 saved. COPPER CENT—Sager, City. For a one-cent copper coin of the United States, tssued in 1857, the sum of from two to ten cents 1s offered by Eastern dealers, de- dendent upon condition of the coin. } | A CURE—A. 8., City. The information | { you seek in regard to a certain cure you | should obtain from any first class drug-| gist. This department does not adver-| { tise any medicine nor any firm that manu- | | factures medicine. MINTS—T. J. M., Sierra City. Cal. The | | United States mints that were in opera- | {tion in 1849 were at Philadelphia, New Orleans, Sharlotte, N. C., and Dahlonega, Ga. C, which is on gold coin only, stands for Charlotte, N. C. | A CASINO COUNT—A. K, City. In playing casino, if A has five points to make and gets cards, spades and one ace he has the right to count first and go out, | as he has made his points. Having cards | gives him the right to count first, no mat- ter what his opponent may have. COCKROACHES—G. D., City. Ttls sald that powdered borax sprinkled. around where cockroaches congregate is sure death tc them. This is harmless to hu- | man beings. Another method to rid a | house of cockroaches is to boil one ounce | of poke root in a pint of water until the strength of the root is extracted; mix the decoction with molasses, spread on plates and distribute where the roaches congre- gate. Paris green it is said will also ex- terminate roaches, but the use of this polson is one that requires great caution. SCOURING BALLS—C. E. C, City. If by powders for dry cleaning you mean | scouring balls, they are made as follows: Dry fullers’ earth moistened with the juice of lemon; add a small quantity of pearl ash and a little soft soap; knead the whole well into a thick elastic paste, form into small balls and dry in the sun. When used, molsten the spot on the clothes, then rub it with the ball and let it dry In the sun. When washed with pure water the spot will disappear. If you mean a | powder used by professional scourers and cleaners, that is a secret of their busi- ness which they will not give away. GREAT BRITAIN—M. A. S. and N. N,, | City. When Andrew Carnegie in the early part of last June sald to a newspaper cor- | respondent: “THey will act just as Great Britain did in the Spanish-American war; | what she did then was great, and it Is | not half realized yet,”” he no doubt re- ferred to what the representative of that | country did in Marila Bay on board of his | vessel when asked what he proposed to do in relation to Dewey and his squadron. | His reply was that what he would do was | known to Dewey and himself, but it was to prevent any of the other foreign vessels from interferring with Dewey in-his oper- ations. There were also some diplomatic arrangements on the part of Great Brit- ain which is a department secret. —_—————— CORONADO TENT CITY, Coronado Beaeh, Cal., will be the popular summer resort this season. It became famous last year for com- fort, entertainment .and health. Its splendid cafe was a wonder, the fishing unexcelled, el e e Tn Brl;uany and the lower Pyrenees fairs are held annually at which the peasant girls assemble to sell their hair. Parisian dealers are the chief customers, purchas- ing many thousand pounds. —_————— Are You “Of the Old World”? Everything pertaining to the New World may be easily and cheaply seen at the Pan- American Exposition, and the best way to get to Buffalo is by the comfortable trains of the Nickel Plate Road, carrying Nickel Plate Dining Cars, in which are served Amer- jcan €lub meals from 33c to $1 each. Book free, showing pictures of exposition buildings. Hotel accommodations reserved. JAY . ADAMS, P. C. P. A, 37 Crocker bullding, San Francisco, Cal. —————— Best Way to the Yosemite. The Santa Fe to Merced and_stage thence via Merced Falls, Coulterville, Hazel Green, Merced Big Trees, Cascade Falls and Bridal Veil Falls, artiving at Sentinel Hotel at & the next afternoon. This is the most popular route and the rates are the lowest. Ask at 641 Mar- ket st. for particulars and folder. STy Sy gl Chicago and Return $72.50. On sale July 20 and 21, the Union Pacific Railroad will sell round trip tickets to Chi- cago, good for 60 days, at rate of $1250. D. W. Hitchcock, General Agent, 1 Montgomery st., San Francisco, EAL B R Keep looking young and save your halr, its color and beauty with Parker's Hair Balsam. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 15 cts. | Californians have arrived at the hotels. TACHED. — — © -l Sofotefepetotofodet D ool . seogel s anar o ANSWERS TO QUERIES. PERSONAL MENTION. A CHANCE IO SMILE. you live? ist, Is at the Palace. | w Clerk—At Lawnville—close to the W. H. Cleary a well-known Stockton | mining man, is at the Lick. F. O. Carmack, a vinegar manufacturer of St. Louls, is at the Palace. Henry Katz, a leading merchant of Clif- ton, Arizona, Is at the Grand. i Harold G. Dillingham of the well-known Honolulu family is at the cidental. George W. Reed, a well-known planter from Guatemala, is stopping at the Ocei- dental, en route home from London. L. R. Wilson, a widely known resident of Dunedin, New Zealand, is at the Cali- | fornia, to take the steamer for home. | -Chauncey Olcott, Irish comedian, has re- turned to the Palace from Del Monte. He is booked to show shortly at one of the local theaters. ! R. A. Grunberg of the contracting firm of Grunberg & Rellly, Port Arthur, Man- churia, is at the Palace en route East. He will visit various coast points before go- | ing on to New York. - S S B Californians in New York. NEW YORK, July 9.—The following Cl;:h‘:ul of Firm—Um! I see. Well, move further away, and come in on an express train.—New York Weekly. Ralph was suffering from a severe cold. and his mother gave him a bottle of cough mixture to take while at school. On his return she asked if he had taken his medicine. 0" he answered, “but Bobby Jomes @id. He liked it. so I swapped it with him for a handful of peanuts.”—Montreal Star. A Southern lady met a colored widow, gaudily attired, laughing and talking and | seemingly in the best of spirits. “Why, Lizzie,” said the lady, stopping the horse she was driving, “how is it that you are cheerful when your husband died only three weeks ago?” “Lor’, Miss Mary,” returned the widow, with a broad grin, “‘ev'ybody know there ain’ no happiness in married life till one ob 'em’s done ’ceasted.”—Harper's Maga- zine Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, July 9.—The following Californians are at the hotels: Ralelgh— Mrs. Rose Eppenhauser, Miss Alice Mann, San Francisco; Arlington—Charles Hollywood, San Francisco. San Francisco—A. Brady and wife, at the gué“arre; C. H. Chase, at the Murray Hill; G. P. Morgan, at the Imperial; derson, at the Everett; E. J. Hallock, at | the Ashland; the Rev. T. M. Harvey, at the Holland; G, V. Levoe, at the Grand Unfon; C. L. London. at the Herald Square; Miss M. Mansfield, at the Everett; Miss S. O'Connell, at thé Grand Union: J. Rod, at the Cosmopolitan; J. B. Sharpe, at the Albert; A. N. Brown, at the Herald Square. Los Angeles—H. J. Kimball, at the St Deris; E. U. Bryson. at the Hollan L. Hanson, at the Imperial; Lambertson, at the Holland. Cheice candies. Townsend's, Palace Hotel™ —_— e e—————— Cal. glace fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend's.* —_—ee—————— Special information supplied dally to business houses and public men by the . | Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 310 Mont- | gomery street. Telephone Main 10420 * Mrs. 10 SPECIAL BARGAINS! 10 soo COVERT CLOTH SKIRTS, value for $1.00, will be offered at> o ol i ol B5¢ $1.00 31,50 $2.90 $5.00 $10.00 325.00 $35.00 30 GOLF CAPES, 30 inches long, value for 35 00 L $10.00, will be offered at o §T50 WANTED! 2 FIRST-CLASS SALESMEN. 2 FIRST-CLASS SALESLADIES. dJ. O'BRIEN & CO., 1146 MARKET STREET. 500 CRASH SKIRTS, neatly braided, value for $1.50, will be offered at.... ...... 100 CHILDREN'S SUITS, neatly trimmed, value for $4.00, will be offered at. . 100 LADIES’ TAILOR-MADE SUITS, value for $7.50, will be offered at. 100 BLOUSE SUITS, value for $12.50, will be oficred at s LI 50 GRAY SUITS, flounce satin trimmed, value for $20.00, will be offered at....... LADIES BLACK AND BLUE CLOTH SUITS, value for $50.00, will be offered at LADIES’ BLACK AND BLUE CLOTH SUITS, value for $;5.00, will be offered at 20 GOLF CAPES, 33 inches long, value for $12.00, will be offered at ..

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