The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 1, 1901, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1901, EALD BUSINESS COLLEGE, 24 Post Street San Franclsco, Cal. Women for Business Careers 18,000 ates now successfully ap- their knowledge. = X 1,000 Nearly one thousand puplls en- 1,000 rolled last year. 450 Average daily attendance 450 800 Nearly e hundre gradu- 300 & last year. 74 Powitions fillel during the year 274 250 Add 1 positions offered last 250 l? at could not be filled ack of graduates. 60 !\'Dewr'(mx Machines in the 60 Typing Department. 53 Counties in Celifornia represent- 53 ed last vear. 40 Heaid's Business College tenear- 40 Iy forty vears old. 2§ Teachers emploved in the school 28 17 States and Territories sent stu- 17 dents to the college last year. 7 Foreign Countries were repre- v sented in the student body last year. 3 There are three Banks fn the 3 Business Practice Department. School is open the entire year, DAY and NIG WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE (FR COGSWELL Polytechnic College Corner Twenty-sixth and Fulsom strests, FRA: BAN 1SCO. Courses of Study to fit young men for positions as CARPENTERS, PATTERN MAKERS, FOUNDRYMEN, MACHINISTS, DRAUGHTS- MEN, SURVEYORS AND STEAM ENGINEERS. Open to eny graduate of the grammar £choole or equivalent course. A ONE-YEAR BUSINESS COURSE, FITE STENOGRAPHY AND TYPEWRITING ung men and women over 1§ years of age. TSIC COURSES, PIANO AND VOICE. DOMESTIC SCIENCE COURSES, With_Instruction in COOKERY, DRESS] INERY, HOME NURSING, ALID COOKERY, ETC. NORMAL COURSES, To Prepare Students as TEACHERE OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE AND MANUAL TRAINING. NO TUITION, except a fee of Five Dollars per half year to cover cost of materials and breakages. TERM OPENS JULY 2, mf.u now open for aplicaticns, & Catal BARTON CRUIKSHANK, M. S., President. MAKING, Send for ST. GERTRL’DF‘S ACADEM\" FOR Conducted by the iecers of nercy opens Aug. € il Academic Course of studies. Spe- N preparing Teachers. on State ted; MILLS UULLEGE AND SEMINAHY. ONFERS DEGREES AND GRANTS DI- seminary course accredited to the rare opportunities offered in mu- fall n elocution: thirty-sixth year: term opens Aug. 7. 1801. Write for catalogue to MRS T. MILLS, Pres, Mills Collegs P. 0. Cal HAMLIN SCHOOL and VAN NESS SEMINARY 1849 JACKSON STRFET, San Francisco, Cal. Boarding School for Girls. _Accredited b, universities of California and Leland Stanford ar., Vassar, Smith and Wellesley colleges, Reopens August 12. 1901 BA RAH D. HAMLIN, Principal. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL, 1615 Bush o (West of Frankiin) PRINCIPAL, GEORGE BATES, M. A MISE MARIE McDONNELL. the best preparation s to a limit- AY, Aug. 5. y Dep't., Sl' IGNATIUS COLLEGE. will reopen on Monday, trance examinations are now being Grove street. SAN FRANCISCO BUSINESS COLLEGE, 1236 Market Street. ess bookkeeping; only expert ac- reporters as teachers; Gregg fastest and_most read- FULL COURSE, $60. ST. MARY’S COLLEGE, OAKLAND, CAL. be resumed MONDAY, August _BRO ERMINGLD, Prn:ldpn( Etudles will THB LYCEUM, AN ACCREDITED PREPARATORY ECHOOL for the university, law and medical colleges: references, President Jordan or any Stanford Professor. Phelan Building. THE HITCHCOCK SCHOOL SAN RAFAEL, CAL. Xmas Term Will Commence August Major Geo. C. Collins. Commandant REV. C. HITCHCOCK, Principal. TS CALIFORN_}A BUSINESS COLLEGE. HOROUGH SCHOOL. Progressive. exceedingly _thorough, _finely equipped departments; positions for mfluzn %06 Larkin st H|ultntod catalogu L. DURHAM, PmldnL IRVINC INSTITUTE. Boarding and day school for girls, 2126 Cal- fornia et. Accredited to the universities. The next session will begin Aug. 6. For illustrated catslozve address the principal CHURCH. A. M. REV. EDWARD B. ST MATTHEW'S IIUTAHY SCHOOL, EAN MATEO. CAL. The next term will begin August 15, 1901. For catalogue and illustrated circular eddress Rev. WILLIAM A. BREWER. A B. Rector and Head Master. MISS M. G. BARRETT’S HORTHAND ACADEMY. v st., San Francisco, Cal. or by mail. Acknowledged by “‘best teachers, best system. Collece Sa~ Pafael for Young Ladies. by the Sisters of St. Dominic. ugust 1, Full college course of ern building; steam heated. Un- #urpassed for besuty and healthfulness. Ad- | dress FMfmzrv: SUPERIOR, College San Ra- fael. San Cal Weekly Cau,gx.oo per Year BEN McKINLEY IS APPOINTED THIRD ASSISTANT ATTORNEY Is a Cousin of the President, a Native of This City and a Graduate of St. Igna- tius and the Hastings College of Law =5 g * NITED STATES DISTRICT AT- TORNEY WOODWORTH re- ceived a telegram from the At- torney General at Washington yesterday announcing that Ben- jamin L. McKinley of this city had been appointed Third Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of Cal- ifornia, at a salary of $2000 per annum. Mr. McKinley took the oath of office be- fore United States Commissioner Manley and entered upon his duties yesterday. The appointee is a cousin of President McKinley and is the son of Assistant Postmaster Benjamin McKinley of this city, the President’s uncle. Young Me- Kinley is a native of San Francisco and 27 years old. He attended the public schools here for some time and later grad- uated from St. Ignatius College as a bachelor of arts. He graduated from t Hastings Law College in the class of 159 since which time he has been engaged in the practice of the law, having been PRESIDENT'S RELATIVE AP- POINTED THIRD ASSISTANT U. S. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. { %\4‘ admitted as an attorney before the Un States Supreme Court and the State Ltfig‘ Federal courts of California. The office of Third Assistant United States Attorney is a new one, having been created because of the recent increase of business in the San Francisco UmLe, one stant being required in the United St'u Circuit Court, another in the Dis- trict Court and the third in Commissioner Heacock's court. ADDITIONS MM]E Tl] H[]STS flF STHIKING PUHTEHS Continued From Page Two. CUSTOMS INS?ECTOB BEATEN. Strikers Mnke Attacks Upon a Few Non-Union Men. N. F. Peart, a United States customs inspector, was struck from behind yester- day morning by unknown ruffians and knocked down, kicked and beaten into un- consciousness. He had been sworn in on Tresday and was on his way to drive a dray for the Overland Transfer Company with goods to the Appraiser’s store. He was removed to his home, where he now lies in a critical condition. Under direc- tion of Acting Customs Surveyor Chaun- cey St. John, several John Doe war- rants were obtained from the United States Attorney and they will be served upon the assailants if found, or upon any others who may interfere with or assauit a Government officer. Mr. St. John ap- lied yesterday to the Secretary of the reasury through Collector Stratton for asuthority to appoint fifteen additional customs inspectors under pay to guard non-union teamsters engaged in hauling bonded goods and also on their way to and from the stables. Strikers who are arrested for attacks upon these customs inspectors will be tried before Federal courts. Roscoe Horn and William Ferguson, the two colored non-union teamsters for Em- mons & Co., who fired several shots Tue: day morning at strikers and wounded Pe- ter Lynch, appeared before Judge Conlan vesterday on the charge of assault to murder. They were represented by At- Torney Joseph Coffey, who was retained by the Employers’ Association, and after being instructed as to their rights the case was continued for ten days, as it will take that time before Lynch is able to leave the hospital. The Judge sail that he would increase their bonds_ to $1000, or $500 cash, as he believed that $100 was entirely inadcquate, They were or- dered_into_custody, but were soon re- leased, Coffey putting up the additional $800. C. F. Blair, a recent imported teamster from Bakersfleld, was set upon yesterday morning at Buchanan street and Golden Gate avenue while on his way to the sta- bles of Smithe& McNab by a gang of strikers. Blair feared trouble and drew his pistol. The weapon refused to respond to the trigger, which probably saved the lives of the men who attacked Blair. In the meantime the men closed in on him and struck him on the head, inflicting an alp wound and bruising his face. taken to the Emergency Hos- pital, where his injuries were dressed. He stated that while he was being assaulted | two of Curtin’s private detectives stood by and did not attempt to assist h im. Edward Selma, a teamster for C. Lippt, | 218 Washington street, applied at the Warrant Clerk’s office yesterday morning | for a warrant for the arrest of Policeman | Duncan Matheson on the charge of bat- tery. He said he went to Misslon-street | wharf yesterday morning for a load of | corn. Mathoson came up to him and told | him to ‘“get out of that.” He jumped | from his wagon to explain, when, he al- leges, Matheson knocked him down and hit him with his club, inflicting a scalp wound. The issuance of the warrant was deferred till Matheson's explanation could S il T hio 1! L anning, who is employed by the Calill & Hall Elevator Company, come- plained to the police yesterday that he had been assaulted by a number of strik- ers yesterday morning at Fremont and Mission streets while going to his work. He had purchased a revolver to be pre- pared for strikers and they knocked him down and took the revolver from him. Edward A. Logston, a teamster, was arrested last evening by Policemen Kear- ney and Dow and charged at the Central Police Station with carrying concealed weapons. Logston had a large dagger concealed in his pocket. He was cap- tured at the teamsters' headquarters at Fourth and Townsend streets. Accord- ing to his story Logston was a non- union man until yesterday morning, when he was induced to join the ranks of the strikers. John Heaney, an old man, who has been driving a team for Whitfier, Fuller & Co. since the inception of the strike, was brutally beaten last night by a num- ber of striking teamsters at Fourth and Townsend streets. Heaney had been at- tending a_meeting of Red Men on Post street, and after the meeting took a walk with a number of strikers who met him and spoke to him of the benefits to be derived from a membership in the union. He answered their arguments by telling them he was satisfied with the position he occupied. This enraged the men and they attacked him. After knocking him do n and kicking him his assailants ran Heaney s the father of a large family and resides at Twenty-second And Point Lobos avenues. His wounds were dressed at the Emergency Hospital. 04+I-’—H+r4—!—“1'H—H°J44—!—‘—l—H+h»H—H—I—H—H-l+PH++H+H+. BOY PLAYFULLY HANGS HIMSELF Tries to Show Playmates How Executions Are Conducted. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., July 31L—Ten thousand persons saw Jim Anderson, a negro, hanged tere last Friday. Among the spectators was yvoung Lemoyne Jayne, a son of Porter Jayne, a carpenter. After the execution the lad inspected the scaf- fold and to-day completed a miniature scaffold. He invited one of his playmates to take the place of the condemned man. Failing in this he sought to play the dual role of executioner and the person con- demned. He adjusted the noose around his meck, stepped on the trap and the arop fell. His neck was not broken, but he is unconscious, and the doctors give no hope for his recovery. The fatal injury to the boy will un- doubtedly result in Governor Davis rec- ommending the repeal of the public exe- cution law. Had Tobacco in Her Trunk. LONDON, July 21..—Mrs, Sarah H. Col- lins, an American, and a first-class pas- senger on the steamer Furnesia from New York Jgly 20, for Glasgow, was yesterday fingd £2 10s with costs at Bel- fast for havigg three pounds of tobacco in her trunk. I MINERS STRIKE VEINS OF GOLD Extraordinary Discovery Is Reported in the Northwest. TACOMA, July 8L.—The latest mining boom in the Northwest is that at Wau- conda, in Stevens County, where develop- ment work proves that the Wauconda mine will be another Treadwell or Lero. Three great ore veins have been uncov- ered, giving a total ore thickness of over seventy feet, with values ranging from $7 to $20.° The values are chiefly in gold which is largely free milling. The work- ing tunnel is in 815 feet, cutting all three \:ms The mine is be;]ng put in shape to stope ore as soon as the mill Oi\mbe{ o ‘91 is ready in n immense plant of ma been shipped tfrom St Paul munmg:v?y.h B C., and will thence be hauled in wagons across the boundary to Wauconda. —Car tracks fifteen hundred feet long are being built for carrying out these improve- ments. The townsite of Wauconda has been laid out and street ding is in pro- gress. There are now in construction a hotel, two stores and sixteen residences. The town has a daily stage from Republic and a postoffice has been applied for. Suffrage in Alabama. MONTGOMERY, Ala., July 31.—The constitutional convention to-day adopted e suffrage article. ADVERTISEMENTS. o Old Virgi Cheroots HAS BEEN REDUCED TO 3 for 5 Cen If your dealer charges you the old price, 5 for 10 cents, don’t pay it; go to a dealer who will give you your money’s worth THE. PRICE. OF nia 't< A.‘DVEBTISEMENTS. ADVERTISEMENTS. RAILWAY TRAVEL. RAILWAY TRAVEL. ~* AUCTION SALE! REFEREES’ SALE! BY ORDER OF COURT. CHOICE PROPERTIES. MONDAY, AUGUST 12....cconeunn .1901, At 12 o'clock noon, at salesroom of G. H. UMBSEN & CO., 14 MONTGOMERY ST. No. 813 Washington Street. Southwest corner Washington and Waverly place, between Dupont and Stockton sts.; m- provements consist of three-story brick bulld- ings; rents $188 per month. Nos. 716 and 718 Jackson Street. North line, between Dupont and Stockton sts ; improvements consist of four-story sub- stantial brick building; rents $250 per month; lot 24:4x137:6. POTRERO. The following three pieces are in the vicinity of properties recently purchased by the Santa Fe Rallroad Company: Boutheast corner 19th and Wisconsin sts.; lot 135x111, irregular. POTRERO. Nortiwest corner 19th and Wisconsin sts.; lot 67x165, irresular. POTRERO. Northwest corner 1Sth and Wisconsin sts.; lot 2011152, irregular. TOWNSEND STREET. een Fourth and Fifth sts., northwest line, B BoUT horn Tacife Ralirosd aepot "Fhis choice holding suitable for manufactur- lot 60x215, ing apd warehouse purposes; ir- regular; 2 frontages. For further particulars apply to referees. T. HARMES, 626 Market st. UMBSEN, 14 Montgomery st. SULLIVAN, Parrott bldg. P. Broken Epe-Glass Lenses Replaced for Fifty Cenls. Any Astigmat'c Lens Duplicated for $1.00 o $1.50- Oculists’ Prescrip’s. Filled. TPhone—Maln 10. Quick Repairing. Factory on Premises. IC APPARAT! OPTICIANS #py 5106 "H:)munncw' 642 MARKET ST. INsTRUMENTS UNDER CHRONICLE BUILDING. Cararogue Free. DR.MEYERS & CO. Specialist. Disease and weakness of men. Established 188" Consultation and private book free, at office or by mail. Cures guar- anteed. 731 Mar- ket street (eleva- tor entrance), San Francisco. BROADWAYCORNER FINE BAY VIEW $12,000 Northeast corner Broadway and Pierce | st 621 feet front on north line Broad- by 1371, feet deep on east line Plerce Broadway is bituminized. THOMAS MAGEE & SONS, REAL ESTATE AGENTS, 5 Montgomery ave. RAILWAY TRAVEL. Santa Fe Trains Leave Market-street Ferry Depot. Local | Lim'd | Ovrl'd | Local Daily | < | Daily | Daity Chicago..|. !: a for morning. p for afternoon. *9:00 a. m. train is the California Lim- ited, leaving Monday and Thursday only, carrying Palace Sleeping Cars and Dining Cars through to Chicago. Chalr Car rung to Bakersfleld for accommodation of local first-class passengers. No second-class {iokets: nonored on_ this train. Correspond- ing train arrives at 5:55 p. m. Tuesday and Friday. 4:20 p. m. Is Stockton and Fresno local. f'crresponflln‘ train arrives at 12:30 p. m. dail, ] Kan City! 31388833288 SeeEsREDY m. is the Overland Express, with through Palace and Tourist Sleepers and Free Reclining Chair Cars to Chicago; also Palace Sleeper, which cuts out at Fresno. Corresponding train arrives at 5335 p. m. 7:20 a. m. is Bakersfleld Local. stopping at .n points in San Joaquin Valley. Corre- sponding train arrives at 8:40 a. m. dally. Offices—641 Market street and in Ferry Depot, San Francisco; 1112 Broadway, Oak- land. NORTH PAGIFIG COAST RAILROAD. Vla Slulnll!o mmencing _April FROM SAN FRANGISCO 1O, MILL VALLEY ND S£N RAFAEL, Ferry. a. m., WEE! 12:45, *1:45, 3:16, 15 m. EXTRA TRIPS—For Mill Valley Pand San Mondays, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays 30 and 11:40 p. m. NDA i 11:00, 11:30 12:45 2:30, 45, 6:00, 7:30 11:00 a. m. does mot run to San Rafael () £un,to San Quentin Rafael on a m, p. m. Sundays. Trains marked FROM SAN RAFAEL TO SAN FRANCISCO. WEEK DAYS—*:25, b T4T, 8:35, 10:15 a. m., *12:25, 1:15, 2:20, -! 40, 5:30 p. m, EXTRA TRIPS on Monday: Wedneld and Saturdays at 0:45 and 1 m.. 1.00. 2:15, 330, 4:30, S 45 1 :m ID 10 P Trains marked (%) start from San Quentin, FROM MILL VALLEY 10 SAN FRANCISC DAYS- 56, 685, 1 £ 00, 6:15, HROUGH TRAINS 55 a. m. week days—Cazadero and way sta- p. m. Saturdays—Cazadero and way sta- :15 p. m. week days (Saturdays excepted)— Tomales and way stations. 6 a. l'n. Sundays—Cazadero and way stations. 10 a. m. Sundays—Point Reyes and way stations. —_— MOUNT TAMALPAIS RAILWAY Via Sausalite Ferry—Foet of Market St. 145 0. & 130 P. M. 2309, x. Many Excursions. Here are a few—only a few—of the ROUND TRIP rates from San Francisco soon to be offered by the Burlington Route: LOUISVILLE...$77.50 August 20 and 21. CLEVELAND...$82.50 September 5 and 6. BUFFALO........$87.00 August 22 and 23. September 5 and 6. Through standard sleep- ers daily, San Francisco to Chicago.” Tourist sleepers, Tuesdays and Thursdays— Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis and Chicago, mak- ing direct connections in latter city with similar cars for etroit, Buffalo and Boston. Write or call-we'll gladly give you full information about rates, limits, stop- overs, ete. The special advantage of going East via the Buriing- ton is that you see all the world-famous _ scenery of the Rockies and yet make almost as fast time as the fastest. W. D. Sanborn. General Agent, 631 Market Street. San Francisco. Burlington foute CALIFORNIA NORTHWESTERN RY. CQ. LESSEE SAN FRANGISCO AAD NORTH PAGIFiG RAILWAY COMPANY. Tiburon Ferry, Foot of Market S& San Francis<o to San Rafael. WEEI\ DAYS—7:30, 9:00, 11:00 a, m.; 12:3, 5:10, 6:30 Thursdays—Extra._ trip Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:50 1:30, 30, 11:00 a. m.; San Rafacl to San Francisco. Y 210, 7:50, 9:20, 11:10 a. m.; 12:45, 0. 15 R Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:5 and 4 40, 11:10 a. m.; 1:40, 3:40, S v 3 Leave In Effect Arrive San Francisco. |April 28, 1901.| San Francisco. Week | Sun- Sus Week Days. | days. Destination. | days. Days. 7:30 am| 8:00 am| Novato, [10:40 am| §:40 am 130 pm| 9:30 am| Petaluma, | 6:05 pm{10:25 am 5:10 pm| 5:00 pm| Santa Rosa.| 7:35 pm| 6:20 pm Fulton, 7:30 am| ‘Windsor, 10:25 am 5:00 pm| Healdsburg, [10:40 am Lytton, Geyserviile, 3:30 pm| 8:00 am{ Cloverdale. | 7:35 pm| 6:20 pm 7:30 am| 5:00 pm)| Hopland |10:40 am|10:25 am 3:30 pm| 8:00 am| and Ukiah. | 7:35 pm| 6:20 pm 7:30 am| e [0:40 amj10:25 am 8:00 am| Guerneville.| 7: 3:30 pm| 5:00 pm| | 6:20 pm 7:30 am| 8:00 am Sanfl:‘nl 9:15 am| 8:40 am an 5:10 pm| 5:00 pm| Glen Ellen. | 6:05 pm| §:20 pm 7:30 am| 8:00 am 10:40 ami10:55 am 330 pm| 5:00 pm| Sebastopol. | 7:35 pm| 6:20 pm Stages connect at Santa Rosa for Mark West Springs.and White Sulphur Springs; at Fulton for Altruria; at Lytton for Lytton Springs; at r Skaggs Springs: at Clove : at FHopland for Springs, Highland Springs.. Kelseyville_ Caris- bad €prings, Soda Bay, Lakeport and Bartlect Springs; at Ukiah for Vichy “Borings, Saratoga Springs, Blue Lakes. Laurel Dell Lake, Witter Lake, ‘Pomo. Potter Valley, John Day's. Riverside, Lieriey's, Buckneils. nhedrin Heights, Hullville, ' Orr's Sorines, Mendocino” City, Fort Brags, West. port, Usal, Willits, Laytonville, Cummins, l!cll'i“I . enig Olsen’s, Dyer, Scotla d ‘nlllu.rflly to Monday round trip tickets at re- es. N round trip tickets to all points beyond San Rafael at half rates. Ticket Office, 60 Market street, Chroalcle Building. H. C. WHITING, Gen. Manager. | Prem SAN FRANCISCO—Poor of lnh! “(fl)b— - | 718 9:00 11:00aM. 100 w13 From OAELAND—Fool of Brandway. 10:00a.. 12:00 2 SOUTHERN PACIFIC. Trains lenve nud are dus (o arrive as NAN FRANCE (Main Line, Foot of Market Streeh.) Frow JuLy 14, 1901 T00A Benldt. Buisup, Eimirs and Sacrs- 31004 Vacarills, Wizicrs, 71304 Martinez, Sau Kamon, Valloj LEAVE — - ARRIVE Maryaville, Uroville. . 8:00. A’lantic Kx; s:004 N“‘ thmn.'fi\ndwn 1 8:004 Niles, -ldfl‘, w vm . ¥ mfl"’f . 783r nonosan one o llm'"h, Qbi), Red Biuft, . 4:33¢ Yosemite), Olld.le5 Chiness ( pronge ..hv.n.-..., Santa Togs. .-+ 4307 Hagward, Niles, San Joss, Livermors B34 132237 18:534 4:307 Port Costs, Stockton 101334 3:007 The Owl Llnn-d—h—o. Bakerstield, Saugus for Santa Bar- Ssoep Mo Los Angelce r Martines, Antioch, Fresno Louts, Chie 7100r Orogon and Oaliforsis Exproms, anento, Maryaville, k-dolln,, l’nfllunl l'npt Hound and Fash San Pablo, Port Costa, a5 Stations. 8:35, 11:35. 7357 COAST LINE (Narrow Ginuge). (Foob of Market Streat.) "!-fil_.___‘—_fi— Santa Cruz Excursion {o Santa. and Princij Stations. Jose, Feiton, Grassnd Wai $:134 Newark, | Olnifl'nlt b s o Bouider 3300 Nowarh, San Jose, Low Gutos 7 Glomwond. Boulder Oreek, Sania Orea 41304 OAKLAND HARBOR FERRY. COAST LINE (Broad Gauge). ('n.l..x nm‘l ‘l'ouln-ud Sta.) Grove and Way Htations 141157 San Jose and Frincipal Way 13100E B2 ome ‘Low Gates and Principel Way Stations. Si30p !An.h-a and Prinollul Way Stations 6:007 Red: .Vt-i, Gilroy, Mn‘ ta S:207 San Joss aud War o auuu_ e San Tose and Way Sta Alot Moming. P for Afternoon. Sunday ompud. xmo-n. "GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY, COOL AND DUSTLESS. DUCED IIOU R AGTERN POINTB. E. S. BLAIR, Gen. Agt.. 6338 Market st. Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensary, 629 KEARNY ST. Established the treatment of 'rivate in 1834 for .ll ‘m & X =rax. | Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year

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