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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1901, THE RAILROAD IN POLITICS. veseena-- AUGUST 8, 1901 has been printed and distributed throughout the city a dodger containing a number of edi- BY the Kelly, Gage and Herrin committee there JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communications to HMANAGER'S OFFICE.. YUBLICATION OFFICE. . Telephone Press 201 EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Preas 202. Delivered hy Carriers. 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies. 5 Ce: Terms by Mail, Including Postages DAILY CALL Cncluding Sunday), one year. $8.00 DAILY CALL «ncluding Eunday), 2.00 DAILY CALL Oncluding Sunday), 1.60 TATLY CALL—By Single Month £5c FUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKELY CALL. One Year. Al postmasters are aunthorized to receive subscriptions. Eempls coples Will be forwarded when requested. Mafl subscribers In ordering chanee of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. .1118 Broadway €. GEORGE KROGNESS. Yanager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chicago (Lorg Distance Telephone “‘Central 2619.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. €. CARLTON...... ++....Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH 20 Tribune Building NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldort-Astoria Hotel; Morrsy Hill Hotel. A. BErentano, 31 Unfor Square: A Opera-house—*"Toll Gate Inn."” Central—*"Monte Cristo."” Olympia. corner Mason and Eddy streets—Specialties. Chutes, Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afterncon and evening. Fischer'e—Vauderille. Recreation Park—Baseball. Sutro Bathse—Swimming. State Fair and Exposition, Sacramento—September 2 to 14. torials on municipal politics which originally appeared in the Evening Post, the organ of the Southern Pa- cific Railroad Company. There are three of these editorials, each and all of them being abusive of the Republican Primary League and of the efforts now being made by genuine Republicans to drive the cor- rupt bosses ouf of politics and to give San Francisco an honest and efficient administration. That the bosses should make use of these utterances of the railroad organ is not strange. They are making a desperate struggle to retain their power in muni- cipal politics and any aid that comes is welcome to them. It is strange, however, that the Post should have published such articles or have in any other way openly manifested the activity of Herrin and ‘the Southern Pacific Company on the side of the dis- reputable bosses and predatory politicians. Some time ago Mr. Hays assured the people of California that the Southern Pacific Company was not to interfere in politics. A little later the assurance was followed by the issue of an order forbidding rail- road officials to take part in politics. So far as the | public is aware that order has never been recalled, and | yet the Evening Post, which belongs to the railroad company, is now as actively engaged in supporting political bosses as ever in its history. | If Mr. Hays has any regard for the reputation. he is to bear in California it will be well for him to give his attention to the serious discrepancy between his statements and orders and the actions of W. F. Her- rin and the articles of the Post. The people are not going to be deceived. They are aware that the Post is owned by the railroad, that its utterances are dic- tated by the railroad, and that it would not now be supporting Boss Kelly if orders from the railroad had not been given for it to do so. It is time for Mr. Hays to hold a heart-to-heart talk with himself and decide whether he is going to en- force obedience to his orders or not. He knows that the Post is the property of the Southern Pacific Company. He knows that -the company makes a monthly payment to the support of the AUCTION SALES. Br G. H. Umbsen & Co.—Monday, August 12, at 12 o'clock, Resl Estate, at 14 Montgomery street. 10 SUBSCRIBERS LEAYING TOWN FOR THE SUMMER. all subscribers contemplating s change of residence during the summer months can have their paper forwarded by mail to their mnew sddresses by motifying The Call Business Offi This paper will alse be on sale at all summer resorts and is represented by s local afent im | 2ll towss on the coast paper and directs its policy. The Southern Pacific Company has, in fact, full authority and control of the Post and can compel it to be decent or suppress it or sell it, as seems best to the managers { of the road. With these facts the people of San Fran- | cisco are familiar, and if Mr. Hays deems that he can leave Herrin and the Post free to combine with Kelly in doing the dirty work of predatory politicians, and | at the same time persuade the public that his order | requiring Southern Pacific officials to abstain from | partisan activity is valid, he will fool himself but he | will not fool the people. If the daring robbers who operated with such FURTHER TARIFF AGITATION. W HEN the people of the United States, under the stress of the industrial depression caused by the Democratic tariff, learned the value re would not be a tariff agitation in this coun- n during the life of this generation. The as- reasonable. With the enactment of y returned to the country sertion seemed the D prospe such abundant measure that hardly so promptly and in 1d 1 to note the significance of the heless, iple is once , and the assailants are sufficiently strong to force the subject anew upon the minds of the the protective prin more people The sault comes from three sources. First, from the unteachable free traders, who have roused themse ght the old battle over again in the interests importers and others who make a profit out o e importation of foreign goods, no matter at what sacrifice to American industry. Sec- ond, from the supporters of the so-called reciprocity treaties enate and which in their nature are essentially different from the principle of reciprocity as defined in the platiorms of the Repub- lican party. Third, from the followers of Congress- an Babcock of W who are clamoring for tariff revision this winter for the avowed purpose of low g in many instances the protective duties. now before the Of the three classes of assailants it is probable the Babcock following is the most dangerous. The avowed out-and-out free traders, notwithstanding their are too utterly discredited to consti- tute much of a danger. Their league is said to be increasing in mumbers and their circulars are being distributed far and wide; but the breaking down of free trade even in Great Britain itself is too plain a fact for them to overcome. The American people revived vi or, will not vote for free trade if they know it, and con- sequently <o lon that n The recipro the agitation is conducted under ill not seriously disturb the country. of getting rid of protection by means of ies is much more subtle than that of open fight against it, and to that extent idable. Fomunately, the treaties now > Senate have been held up so long the peo- ple have had e to fairly understand them, and there is good believe the Senate will refuse to \oreover, there have been repeated ons from industrial, commercial ‘and agricul- tural bod ning not only these treaties but the principle upon which they are founded, so that it is not likely th: inj will be done to the pro- tective system in that wa: There rema before es conde Mr. Bab- cock is himself a Republican, and therefore his fol- lowing is more formidable than it would otherwise be. His demand for revision has something of the at- tractiveness of demagoguery about it because it is cal- culated to-appeal to those who are opposed to pro- those industries which are largely under the control of trusts. It is of course well known that if any tariff revision on an extensive scale should be under- taken the whole country would be once more har- assed by doubts as tc what industries would be af- fected and to what extent. The inevitable conse- ould be 2 disturbance of business and an in- 1 depression. To prevent that there should be s Babcock’s proposition. tecting a resolute opposition te Babcock’s scheme. phase of advice which American industries have to give to Congress this winter will be, “Don’t monkey with the tariff.” ; The one In his latest manifesto Bryan says: “I am a can- didate for no office, but I would not enter into a bond never to beco a candidate.” - Tt will be seen that the gentleman is not closing any gates against him- self and will doubtless be in the ring when the next 1 election comes round. serving time for murder, so it seems there are Emits on women’s activities in that State after all. n to American industries it was frequently | signal success at Vallejo Junction have done nothing else they have given to the trade of the seller of gold bricks in this State a tremendous boom. Anybody who wants to sell a gold brick should have now an | excellent chance to find a purchaser. THE COMING OF THE END. ROFESSOR LUDWIG MARIENBURGER, | P PL. D., a graduate of the University of Berlin, i has been visiting Chicago. He wondered at the tall huildings that rise about as high as he can see, but when the thermometer went higher still he did not wonder. In fact, he took the heat so coolly as to excite attention. Knowing him to be a wise and learned man, the Chicago people concluded he had some reason for his serenity under the scorching of | the hot wave, and a reporter sought him out in the hope of, learning something that would please the public. He was asked to give an explanation of the weather, and he did so with great urbanity and scien- tific lore. According to the reports that come to us the Rro- fessor stated that the earth has slipped its trolley, so to speak. It no longer holds to the old orbit. It wobbles, and its course around the sun is becoming more and more erratic, so that every summer it approaches nearer the central orb than at the same iperiod of the previous year, and in the winter it gets farther away. We are thus going’to have colder win- ters and hotter summers right along, until eventually { through a process of alternately baking and freezing humanity will be eradicated from the planet and the earth will have a rest. The professor is quoted 2s saying: “The earth, of | course, is becoming old, and must, in the nature of Ilhings. reach the stage of decrepitude. " The other ma- jor bodies in our solar system—Jupiter, Saturn, | Uranus and Neptune, the outer planets, and Mercury, Venus and Mars, the inner planets—may have more vitality remaining than we, and manage to keep within their orbits, but we have no exact means of knowing whether they do or not.” It must not be supposed that the professor is a pes- | simist or an alarmist, or even a prophet of woe. He was careful to say that the extinction of the race will not take place within any measurable time. Ages, he says, must elapse before conditions become such that no animal life can survive on this sphere. That much was said evidently by way of comfort, but the professor conclided by saying: “The time is com- ing.” That is what Chicago got by asking outside opinion about her weather. She would have done bet- ter to have consulted the oldest inhabitant. The British War Office has lost another great bat- tle, an incident remarkable only in the character of the contest. The War Office attempted to gag some of the English papers and has now the humiliation of knowing that meither with the pen nor with the sword is it victorious. FACING THE CONSEQUENCES, MONG the appreciations which have been re- A cently published concerning the late William L. Wilson is one in the publications of the Southern History Association, to which is appended a letter from Thomas B. Reed. During the time Wil- son was the leader of the free traders in Congress he | had no opponent more forceful or more sarcastic than the Republican leader from Maine. They were not foes, however, but friends, and on many issues held similar opinions. Consequently Mr. Reed’s trib- ute to his former political opponent’ is at once sin- cere and interesting. In his letter Mr. Reed says: “I had great respect for Mr. Wilson, because he had convictions and was j true to them. There was something very pathetic in his last struggle, death-struck as he was, with that greatest of all human forces, popular feeling gone wrong. That that feeling is doomed to revulsion does not lessen its power. Human life is too short for the vindication of the wise man while yet alive. Many i1 suns may set and many dark nights cover the earth with clouds before the truth is ripened into fruitage. He is happier who is wrong when others are wrong; but no Darwinian ‘survival of the fittest to survive’ will ever convince the manly man that there is not something higher than happiness. - Doing your duty, and facing the consequences, is success itself.” In the phrase about public feeling gone wrong Mr. Reed had doubtless in mind the revolt of the great masses of the Democratic party from the principles in which Mr. Wilson believed. The wild craze for free silver and for what is generally known as Bryan- ism left Mr. Wilson without a party. He had the courage to face the consequences, and his public life was closed. There was, however, no failure in that ending of his-career. The Democratic party is to- day abandoning Bryan'as it once abandoned Cleve- land, and the course of the wiser leader is vindicated. Wilson had the misfortune to have his name asso- ciated with a tariff bill which brought distress upon the industries of his country, but in other respects he was one of the statesmen of whom the nation has a right to be proud. Certainly all true Americans, no matter how stanch protectionists they may be, will share Tom Reed’s appreciation of the manliness of Wilson's character. The republic needs in public life men of that kind—men who can and do stand firm when public fecling goes wrong. It would be better if we had more men in all stations of life who agree with Mr. Reed and act upon the principle that “doing your duty and facing the consequences is success it- self.” It looks as if Maclay, the so-called historian, would have to leave the United States service, where he has been rated as a laborer without having to do any labor, but he might get a job as another fool profes- sor at the University of Chicago. S T ——c— STRIPPING THE EARTH. HILE men are quarreling and contending \;.\’ about the distribution of the developed re- sources of the earth elements within man’s control and man himself are joined in stripping the earth of its fertility. While the Sempervirens Club is camping in the redwoods of the Big Basin and con- certing measures to put a few hundred acres of tim- ber into public ownership, the fires in the vast forests of the Sierra Nevada are destroying thousands of acres of timber that is far more important to Califor- nia than that of the Big Basin. So much other exciting matter has occupied pub- lic attention during the summer that it is not generally understood that the forest fires in this State have been more numerous, general and destructive than ever be- fore. It is an anomaly that as the economic uses of timber increase and their demands grow larger, and the commercial attack upon the forests is every year greater, their destruction by fire outruns their use by man. The forests of the Rocky Mountains have suffered this year more than ever, and the arid West, that needs forest protection for its water sources, is going far- ther from fertility every day. The pulp mills are increasing and the consumption of timber suitable for paper is making great strides. The demand for railroad ties advances. No substitute for timber has been found for ties. Stone and steel have both been tried, and failed. The tie must have some elasticity, and no bolt or screw fastening the steel rajl to a metal tic has been found equal to the spike held by wood fiber/ Railway statistics show the following consumption of ties: . Ties in use 780,000,000 Annual renewals 112,000,000 Annual cost of ties . $60,000,000 Required for next twenty years 3,000,000,000 Let ‘any log scaler sit down and estimate the acre- age required for that supply of ties alone and then reflect that instead of increasing to keep pace with the demand our forest area is shrinking and shriveling in the fire. ‘What seems, to be needed is some man in the Leg- islature who will make a specialty of forest legisla- tion. Some one who knows the subject and is willing to give to it his time and talents could probably cen- vince the lawmakers that California is sacrificing her climate, the fertility of her soil, the happiness of her people and the opportunities of all the future by per- mitting the wanton destruction of her forests. Travel- ers who are crossing the Sierras by rail this month look out upon the blue garment of smoke that covers the entire range. It gives a charming tone to the distance and blends the foreground scenery softly than the artist’s brush can imitate. Many who see it say, “How charming! What a beautiful blue haze!” But the man who knows the mountains knows the great cost at which that charming effect is secured. He sees in the distance the relentless fire sweeping down bosky canyons, putting to martyrdom hundreds of thousands of fine trees, sparing none, and in its great heat shriveling the green herbage and copse, laying bare the little streams and licking up their waters. He sees the fawn caught in the fiery furnace and nesting birds killed while they brood their young, and everything from the cooing dove to the crooked snake wiped out of existence, to make the ineffable lacework of this lovely haze. He sees the splitting rocks and baked earth, and the germs of future forests more i roasted and destroyed. He sees the sun blazing down on white ashes where lately rested the grateful shade, and jn farther perspective he sees the perished rill apd stream and river and the blear desert encroaching where vineyards purpled and the grain billowed in the wind. He sees destruction and drought, all to make the fairy scene of a month. It is wasteful, piti- ful and wrong. That itf§goes on unchecked is but a poor compliment to the wisdom of our people. - Another raid has been made by the New York courts upon the Gould estate to pay some of the debts of the erratic Count de Castellane. If the Count lives long enough he may distribute the vast property of the dead American millionaire through himself. Of all the hot weather stories- that have come from the sweltering East the best-is one to the effect that the recent $80,000 fire in Sioux City was caused by the rays of the sun passing through a plate-glass window and igniting the goods digplayed there. —_— A Dublin man died a few days ago after remaining in bed forty-six years just because he wanted to keep a vow and rest. He probably felt that death would carry him on a long journey and he wanted to rest up for the start. —_— The son of a Cleveland millionaire is working in a factory for $1 75 a day simply because he likes the job. The adage everybody to his taste may occa- sionally mean that some people are crazy. Some Eastern physicians are warning fat men not to try golf as a means of reducing corpulency. They do not say so, but their words imply that it would be safer to consult a doctor. 26 FINE ATTRACTIONS PROVIDED BY CITY'S VARIOUS THEATERS 3 ‘.':fc el ZOYLD 9 S ) T - % RS. DANE’'S DEFENCE,” at the Columbia Theater, has so far proven one of the most all-round successful engagements of this or many seasons. The play itself is highly worthy, artistic in a high degree and with strong interests, both of tragic and comic kind. The Empire Theater Com- pany, headed by Miss Margaret Anglin and Charles Richman, is a thoroughly well-balanced organization and gives a completely satisfactory interpretation of the play. Miss Anglin has added another great success to her notable record in the title role, showing a degree of emotional power therein quite unsuspected, even by her most ardent admirers. Mr. Richman also is an eminently satisfactory figure, delightfully voiced, one of the handsomest leading men of the day and versed in all the requirements of his art. Miss Hor- nick, one of our own people, has delight- ed her many friends here by her good work as Lady Eastney, and Margaret Dale meets with the same favor as on her previous appearance here with Mr. Mil- ler's company. The play will run for this and next week and is meeting with the heartiest appreciation. “Lady Hunt- worth’s Experiment,” with Miss Hilda Spong as Lady Huntworth, will follow. « s . The Tivoll’s bills for this week are “Il Trovatere” and ‘Lucia,” with admirable performances of both the Verdi and Doni- zettl operas. Collamarina as Azucena makes one of the best gypsies ever heard here and adds to her laurels in lavish fashion. Salassa, also in the “Trovatore” cast, is heard to much advantage, and Russo and Repetto as Edgardo and Lucia do some of their best work. Russo in par- Editor San Francisco Call: strike! the labor wheel. primary election of next Tvesday! Yes! came.” except at his office. existence has been letters from his PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. E. O. Jellinek has returned from his European tour. H. H. Forney, the Sacramento attorney, is at the Grand. Dr. W. S. Taylor of Livermore is stay- ing at the Palace. g Charles Bishop, a traveler from Tokio, is at the Occidental. ‘H. Morgan Hill is registered at the Cali- fornia from Del Monte. Raymond Benjamin, a merchant Napa, is at the California. George E. Eels, an oil magnate of Han- ford, is a guest at the Grand. Fred Dodd, a hotel man of Fresno, Is at the Lick, accompanied by his wife. J. E. Woodbury, a mining man of Car- son, Nev., is registered at the Palace, A. Easton, a rancher of Modesto, is of among the recent arrivals at the Grand. A. C. Bilicke, manager of the Hollen- So Governor Gage is coming to San Francisco or has already arrived to settie the labor For years he has ridden the railroad wheel. proposes to take a short trip, if he can only'steady himself, on Of course this has nothing to do with the Gage is coming, or, in the terse language of the announcement of Mose Gunst's arrival at It is a wonder the gold in the pockets of local capital- ists or the brass in the faces of Kelly and Rainey doesn’t melt through the mere friction of bis presence or intended presence. If he “has came” at an opportune moment to wear Jimmy Phelan’s shoes and march the community to settlement and peace it is the first time he has heen found where he was wanted. During his administration he has been everywhere There the chief evidence of his official secretaries anxious correspondents that the Governor was temporarily absent, but that, on his return, his attention would be called to matters of public business. Much of the time he has been apparently sunk in luxurious apathy midst the soft and best things of the season so far. Next week the new prima donna soprano Linda Montanari, and Agostini, the new lyrie tenor, will be heard in two favorite op- eras, “La Favorita”—not given here b fore for ten years—and “Otello,” with S lassa in his best part of Iago. Signorina Montanari will sing the part of Desde- mona in “Otella,” and Signor Agostini that of Ferdinand in “La Favorita.” £ The Neill company is giving this week quite the best performance of its sea- son ‘at the California Theater in Pinero’s happy farce romance “The Amazons.” Miss Chapman, Miss Dean and Miss Brownell are delightful hoydens and give a refined and thoroughly amusing picture of the girls who would be boys. Mr. Neill, Mr. Bloomquest and Mr. Bowles play the three lovers with much spirit, and the whole performance is well worth even a second hearing. § L. The Grand Opera-house has a new play, “Toll Gate Inn,” that has found a limited favor with the audiences. Theodore Rob- erts is seen as a noble red man, and his clever, strong, convincing portrait makes the “Toll Gate Inn" worth seeing if for no other reason. Mary Van Buren is well cast as Hester Pennington and Frank Mathieu has also found much favor as her brother, Ned Pennington. “The Liars” will follow, with Mr. Frawley as Sir Christopher Deering and E. J. Morgan in the part he played so well with Henry Miller last year, Edward Falkner. “Camille” is drawing the usual crowds at the Alcazar Theater and will be fol- lowed next week by Miss Charlotte Thompson's new play, “Silver-Mounted Harness.” This play is but just now com- pleted and will be seen for the first time Now he He also popped inte ‘was under headway. New York, “has informiag Scavenger beck Hotel in Los Angeles the Palace. g v eanien iy E. H. Benchley, a wealthy frult grower of Fullerton, is a guest at the California. Morse Wollf, a milllonaire merchant of New York, is registered for a short stay at the Grand. ‘Washington Porter, accompanied by hia family, has left for a tour of the southern part of the State. Dr. Hertzstein has returned home after an extended pleasure trip through the East and Europe. James Phillips Jr., a well-known socfety and club man of Beston, Mass., is among the recent arrivals at the Palace, Elmer DePue has returned from the Bohemian Club jinks and is visiting his mother. He will shortly return to his home in Chicago. Probate Judge James V. Coffey and his nephew, Jeremiah V. Coffey, who have been making an extended tour of Ireland, returned last evening. languorous airs of the South. ever, once in awhile, stream, where industrious anglers caught fish for his benefit. LEADING LADY AND THE LEADING MAN OF THE EMPIRE THEATER COMPANY, NOW PRESENTING IN THIS CITY HENRY ARTHUR JONES' PLAY, “MRS. DANE'S DEFENCE.” | b - ~ 'il‘ and the “Lucla” is certainly one of the Miss Thompson is here superintending the + production, which will be unusually elab- orate. L o “Monte Cristo,” at the Central Theater, is attracting the large crowds always in- terested in the fascinating adventures of the modern Croesus. James Brophy, whose last week it is at the Central, does his usual clever work as Edmond Dantes, and is well supported by the rest of the company. xt week *“The Great Dia- mond Robbery” will be put on. P& This week’s programme at the Orpheum abounds in good things and the house is packed at eve performance. The uni- cycle and bi ct of Hill and Silviany is the most sensational ever seen in this city and the three sketches presented by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kelcy, Sisson, Wal- lace and their company. and Hugh Stan- ton and Florence Modena, are all gems. The Standard Quartet of colored singers are pleasing vocalists, the Esmonds pre- sent a high class musical act and Al andra Dagmar, “the most sunning wo- man in vaudeville,” and the Molasso-Sa vaggt troupe of French dancers are great favorites. e At Fischer's Concert-house there is a good list of entertainers this week, includ- ing Irene Franklin, cornet soloist; Claire Canfield, lullaby singer; Seymour and Hill acrobatic comedians; little Jennie Metz- ler, juvenile performer; Maud Still, sing- ing and dancing Soubrette; Ouhama, a Japanese juggler: Nellie Bruce, contortion dancer; Billy Flemen, comedian, and Se- vor and Hathaway, up-to-date fun mak- ers. ol Some clever vaudeville people are on this week’s programme at the Olympia. To-morrow night the regular amateur ticular is singing admirably this season, on any stage at the Alcazar Theater. performance will be given. L e e i 2030 2 220 d S e e e i S Y Y GAGE SUCCEEDS PHELAN AS THE WOULD-BE SETTLER OF THE LOCAL LABOR TROUBLES Comes to Town for the Purpose, but He Will Not Be So Deeply Engrossed as to Neglect Boss Kelly and the “Push.” He has been heard from, how- in the neighborhood of some mountainous momentary view when the bubonic scare But on the average his appearances have been usually noted when Burns or Kelly or some other political boss pulled the string that sets him in motion and, then, his acrobatic feats have left the circus clowns out of sight. The last place to look for Governor Gage is the State Capitol at Sacramento, as a host of disgruntled citizens who labor under the delusion that the chief executive of a State should attend to business can gloomily attest. to know that the State Bird paused or is about to pause in his summer flight and is now temporarily perched or about to be perched in San Francisco with his right claw on capital, his left claw on labor and his hungry beak projected toward the next munlt}l{pnl convention. It is really gratifying From now until next Tuesday elly and his alds will no .doubt k night anc dair t'o x:r;na;e (r;l: nest. bt ke started the Governor on wheels and leave him owa perch. Perhaps the wheels are now in his head. » San Franclsco, August 6. »V. P. A CHANCE TO SMILE. Tenderfoot—Er—what does the judge in- tend to do with that shotgun? Aikeli Tke—Aw, he'll use that when he gives a charge t' th’ jury.—Montreal Star. “Do those north pole explorers ever ac- complish anything?"” “Oh, yes: they often come back and start out again."—Detroit Free Press. —_——————— Choice candies, Townsend's, Palace Hotel® ——— Cal. glace frult 50c per lu at Townsend's.* ———— Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men b t Press Clipping Bureau' (Allen’s). 10 Moot gomery street. Telephone Main 1042, P It 1s a touching farewell when a man gives you the tip of his finger: a vigorous handshake., | oor> metead of ———— Stops Diarrhoea and Stomach Cramps. Dr Siegert's Genuire Imported Angostura Bitters.