The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 11, 1901, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANCISCO . CALL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1901. WEDNESDAY.............SEPTEMBER 11, 1901 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Communiestions to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER’S OFFICE... .Telephone Press 204 PUBLICATION OFFICE. ..Market and Third, S. F. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one yea DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 6 month: DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 r.onthg. DAILY CALL—By Singlé Month.. SUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. ped 288 All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample coples Will be forwarded when requested. Mail subscribers in ordering change of address should be perticular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. . C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Mangger Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chie-go. (Long Distance Telephone “Central 2619.”) 1118 Broadway NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON. ceevvssvseessesse. Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: 7 STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Buildin CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern -Hotel; | Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Breatano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel. ‘WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE....1406 G St.,, N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—327 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:80 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until 9:30 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until $ o'clock. 103 Valencia, open until 3 o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 3 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until 9 o'clock. 2200 Fillmore, open until § p. m. AMUSEMENTS. Grand Opera-house—"‘Quo Vadis." Tivoli— Faust.” ‘The JNt.™ udeville. Royal Family." Central—*"'A Voice From the Wildern Alcazar—*The Taming of the Shrew Chutes, Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and evening. Fischer’s—Vaudeville. AUCTION SALES. By Willlam G. Layng—Friday, September 13, at 10 o'clock, Palo Alto Brood Mares, at Agricultural Park, Sacramento. By G. H. Umbsen & Co.—Monday, September 23, at o'clock, Crooks’ Estate Properties, at 14 Montgomery e e—— A WRONG TO AMERICANS. NDREW FURUSETH, in’a statement A shed yesterday, exulted in the fact that the ority of the Sailors’ Union are indifferent to the prosperity of the port of San Francisco, or to the welfare of American workingmen. Boasting of that indiffcrence, he is quoted as saying: “The sail- 12 ors are not worrying about when the strike will end; | if they cannot find work here they can find it else- | where. Europe. Francisco within two months. They can go to the Eastern ports, or to That was in 1893. Many of the sailors are foreigners who have relatives | in Europe, and they would not object to a trip to the old country. Probably 9oo out of the 1500 sailors now on the beach are not citizens of the United States. These men would gladly ship as deep-sea sailors to visit their friends. We have no objection to having the men ship as deep-sea sailors, and there is a great demand for them. Runners for sailors’ boarding-houses are offering as much as $40 a man for every one they will secure to go to sea. Most of our men have no hindrances to keep them in San Francisco. They can easily go to other ports to find work. I do not believe that more than 5 per cent of the men are married.” That plain statement ought to open the eyes of American workingmen to the menace of the situation. Accepting Furuseth’s statement as true, it will be seen that a union composed mainly of foreigners and almost wholly of unmarried men is now endeavoring to tie up the trade of the port, prevent the shipment of the products of our farms and enforce idleness and the danger of destitution upon the homes of Ameri- cans; and, moreover, are doing it with a feeling of impunity, for, as Furuseth says, they can profit by the stagnation of business here to make a trip to Europe, visit their friends and have a good time American homes are bearing the affliction of the strike. Such a statement, emanating from such a source, aggravates the wrong done to the public. It is in the nature of an insult added to.injury. It is a mocking declaration that American workingmen with families to support are to be forced out of employment by 2 union of irresponsible foreigners having no interest in the country whatever. It is a defiance not only of law and of society but of the American home itself. It virtually says to the community, “Let your farm products rot on the wharves, let the homes of your workingmen be destitute, let the wives and the chil- dren of Americans lack for food; we are going to mazke 2 holiday of the strike and go to our homes in Europe.” The unfairness of the situation is evident. Ameri- can workingmen are expected to place themselves at the orders of foreigners; men with families are ex- pected to submit themselves to the dictation of un- married men; those who have a stake in the city and in society are to be dominated by those who have | none; persons of responsibility are to be controlled by persons who have no responsibility whatever, It is not easy to conceive a situation more intol- erable than this which has been so exultantly depicted by Furuseth. The merchants of the city, the farmers of the State and workingmen of nearly all classes are injured by the strike of men who openly boast that they are doing all the mischief without any hurt to themselves. Of the 1500 men now on the beach. says Furuseth, probably 900 are not citizens of the. United States, and he estimates that not more than § per cent are married. Such is the force that is operating against the business of the port and the in- dustry of the State. How long will Americans sub- mit to it? ——— It is now announced that Cleveland is going to Colorado on a lion hunt, and it is just barely possible he is going to see whether by following Roosevelt's strenuous life he can get himself back into conditiof to make another race for the White House. 7 pub- | I have seen 1200 men leave the port of San | SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. HE volume of expressions in the country press-of this State against the vio- lence and apparent ethics and purpose of the strike, and in stern reprehension of the course of the Examiner in that and other matters, is so immense as to render general reproduction in our columns impossible. But in order that all men concerned in the industries and business of this city may be informed as to the con- dition of intelligent country sentiment, and may see the overwhelming disfavor in which lawlessness is held, we condense what is said by the fearless and untrammeled country editors, reflective of the sentiment around them. The Humboldt Standard commends The Call for coming out “with courage and vigor in favor of law and order in San Francisco. It is to be commended. How con- temptible the yellow Examiner appears beside the clear-cut and courageous utterances of The Call. Every honest striker will have more respect for The Call than for the cring- ing, sycophantic Examiner.” 3 The Redding Free Press says: ‘“There are people in the United States who, had low press. The odium, infamy and shameless libel heaped upon President McKinley, Vice President Roosevelt and others at the nation’s head by such freak newspapers as its effect. They are the organs of anarchy—the more powerful because they move be- hind a mask.” said: “‘The Anarchists’ Own,” otherwise the San Francisco Examiner, continues its ill meant efforts to stir up all the strife it can between employers and employes.” The Visalia Delta says: “There are to-day in all parts of the country hotbeds of anarchy. These anarchists are encouraged by yellow journals like the New York Jour- nal and San Francisco Examiner, and deeds of violence naturally follow. Unless the gates wre closed to foreign riffraff and yellow journalism is suppressed there will be troub- lous times in the near future.” Marysville Appeal: “Yellow journalism, by foul cartoons and reckless lying and | bitter attacks, did its share to bring about the awful tragedy of Friday, by which alone the Pan-American fair will be remembered.” e Woodland Mail: “The attempted assassination of President McKinley is a most !terrible and damnable outrage, and can be traced almost directly to yellow journalism.” | Alameda Argus: “There have been many outrageous representations in connec- | tion with the San Francisco strike, but none that excelled in pusillanimity that regard- | ing the discharge of theStrauss factory girls. The paper (the Examiner) that makes it a | practice to misrepresent everybody and stick to it announced that half the Strauss force had been discharged on account of boycott of the firm’s goods. It stated this with glee, but it was a clear-cut fabrication.” Sausalito Advocate: “Many idle men, strikers, encouraged by the Examiner, are standing around the streets waiting for the success of a lost cause.” Stockton Independent: “To trace the conspiracy that has led to this infamous assassination it will be necessary to examine experts-on mental infirmities and deduce from their testimony the natural and unavoidable impressions and influences exerted by inflammatory cartoons and editorials. tim of a liberty perverted and abused into lawless ense.” Record - Union: “How far responsibility attaches to a sensational, vicious, dis- | trust-creating and contempt-breeding current literature can be measured by every honest | man who has read the vile assaults and seen the scurrilous cartooning and the malicious | caricaturing of the administrators of national affairs.” [ Sacramento Bee: “We are Sorry and ashamed to say that it is not necessary to | go to other States to find apologists for and applauders of satanic assassination. On the | fifth page of to-day’s Bee will be found a statement that W. T. Eaton, walking delegate of the Building Trades Council of Sacramento, yesterday gloried in the shooting of Presi- | dent McKinley, and declared he should have been shot in San Francisco.” Tacoma Ledger: “The San Francisco Call is to be congratulated on its courage of expression in relation to the strike. No set of men has a right to terrorize a com- munity. When honest laborers are torn from their tasks and beaten almost to death, the ruffians who are guilty of the act deserve no consideration. Whoever they may be, they are no longer representatives of labor. They deserve to be clubbed by ‘the r;clice | and driven to their holes, and The Call does not hesitate to say so. Nevertheless, the Examiner stands by the thugs.” Phoenix Republican: “The competition among sensational newspapers has de- | veloped a good market for picturesque lies. The New York Journal and San Francisco | Examiner were the first to recognize that many residents of the large cities are credulous geese, and that by catering to the appetite for the horrible and the wonderful a large cir- culation could be achieved.” Visalia Times: “We heard recently of two San Francisco strikers who were in this section looking for work. We would like to ask by what right the striker from San Francisco comes into the interior to seek employment, when he refuses the right of the man from the country to take the job he has voluntarily quit in the city? It is a mighty poor rule that won't work both ways. The strikers appeal to the country press and the workingmen of the interior to stand by them in their troubles. Then they come and take the places of the country workmen, but when the countryman concludes to earn his liv- ing in San Francisco he runs the risk of having his head broken if he accepts the posi- | tion left by the striker, who has crowded him out in the farming section of the State ” Sacramento Bee: “The course of the Examiner in the present labor trouble in San Francisco is a disgrace to California journalism. It has exerted all of its power, if not to egg the strikers on to deeds of riot and anarchy, at least to glory in their law- less acts.” § Colusa Sun: “We were taken all aback when we found the San Francisco Exam- iner had cut us off its exchange list for printing an article on a public question it cculd not answer. We are boycotted, and as in duty bound we feel badly.” Ukiah Times: “A number of the union strikers from San Franclsco are in this val- ley and have offered to pick hops for 8o cents per hundred. The price for picking as fixed by the Hop-Growers’ Association is $1 per hundred, and no one has been asked to pick for less. If this cheap offer from those who profess to believe in keeping up wages does not smack of the worst kind of ‘scabbing’ we don’t know what does.” | To show that sentiment here is not exceptional, but is common with that all over the country we quote here the New York Saturday Press: “Yellow journalism has attained its savage ambition—the assassination of one who by virtue of his lofty office represents | the very essence of all that yellow journalism and anarchy hate—authority, government and law. At the door o the New York Journal and its kind shall the people of the United States lay the atrocious crime against the President of the United Statzs.” The New | York Sun, referring to the above, said: “This refers, no doubt, to the infamous handiwork of the editor who proclaims openly that it is his ambition ‘to have the Supreme Court of the United States tarred and feathered in the streets of Washington? Just how long mer- chants and the people of New York will tolerate this sort of thing remains to be seen.” The Sun and Press seem to agree with Mr. Gavin McNab, who, speaking of the assassination, said, “Atlast Hearst's papers have accomplished something.” Our space permits no further quotations to-day. In addition to what the press says, The Call is in receipt of hundreds of letters to the same purport, on the assassina- tion and the strike. One expresses the meaning of all. Referring to our paragraph on Sunday under the caption “Lawlessness Must Cease,” the writer says: “Nothing more true. Follow it up and you will have a thousand foliowers where our fathers had hun- dreds in the days of Vigilance men. As I pen these lines the ambulance passes my door, carrying another victim of the ‘peaceful strikers.’ with his body torn and beaten.” President Wheeler's allusion to “the Vigilance men” seems to have struck a popular chord throughout the State, and people everywhere see in the lawlessness of the strikers, encouraged by the Examiner, the same spirit which it encouraged to murder the President. €8 It is apparent that the State is ready to back up a movement to enforce order in | this city, and secure the safety of the men who are at work. they the courage of their unreasoning hatred, would be willing to attempt the life of | President McKinley. They are the jaundiced people who have been diseased by the yel- the New York Journal, Chicago American and San Francisco Examiner is not without| The Evening Blade of Santa Ana, a few hours before the attack on the President, | William McKinley assassinated is the direct vic-| ODD FELLOWS’' GRAND ENCAMPMENT WILL SOON ASSEMBLE IN FRESNO.l The < HE next session of the encampment ber 17, there will be a grand parade of branch of the Independent Order of all the cantons in the forenoon and a 0dd Fellows will be held in the city military council in the afternoon. of Fresno from the 15th to the 23d of prize drill will take place on the after- October. From the arrangements that roon of the 18th and the awarding of the have already been made by the executive committee it is probable that the Grand B3 : prizes in the evening. A ball will follow. Bakersfield will endeavor to-secure the Encampment will be one of the most at- tractive that has been held in years in this State. The work of the grand body will be interspersed with entertainments each day and evening. One of the fea- tures will be the part that the Patriarchs Militant will take during encampment week. There will be three prizes offered to the various cantons that are to com- PERSONAL MENTION. Thomas Barrett, a Napa rancher, is at the Russ. A. Clark. a merchant of Forest Hill, is at the Lick. A. B. Gibson, a miner of Nome, is reg- istered at the Russ. R. V. Ellis, an oil speeulator of Han- | ford, is at the Palace. Dan Patton, a wealthy Napa, is at the Grand. Judge C. E. McLaughlin County is at the Russ. rancher of of Pluinas Dr. G. Parker Dillon, U. 8. N, Is a guest at the Occidental. A. C. Hihn of Santa Cruz is at the Grand for a few days. ‘W. G. Kerkhoff has come up from Los Angeles and is at the Grand. E. R. Reed, an oil magnate of Bakers- field, is a guest at the Grand. I'. Van Denburgh has come up from Los Getos and is at thq California. Mr. and Mrs, Frank B. Glenn of Ja- | cinto are staying at the Palace. Dr. J. H. Barr, a leading physician of Mariposa, is a guest at the Lick. Albert Fink, a young attorney of Nome, Alaska, is registered at the Palace. George P. Whitelaw, a capitalist Scnta Barbara, is at the Occidental. | “Registered at the Palace are Dr. and | Mrs. W. Young of Wellington, N. Z. R. Luscom, a well known business man of Los Gatos, is registered at the Grand. R H. Herron, a wealthy manufacturer of Los Angeles, is a guest at the Palace. Jchn E. Budd, a prominent attorney and pelitician of Stockton, is a guest at the Lick. J. Rummelsburgh, a merchant of Wint- ers, is registered for a short stay at the Grand. T. O. Toland of the State Beoard Equalization is one of the arrivals of yes- terday at the Lick. Tonyo Takebe, a Japanese merchant whe has been touring through the East, is among the recent arrivals at'the Oc- cicental. A number of missionaries arrived from the East last evening en route to the Orient. They are staying at the Occi- dental and will leave next Thursday on the China. of gL Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—The follow- ing Californians have arrived at the hotels: St. James, Daniel B. Dwyer; National, R. O Lincoln; both of San Francisco. : Injustice of Gage. Cloverdale Reveille. Governor Gage, for to him is directly due the removal of Dr. A. E. Osborne from the Glen Ellen home, has not only done an injustice to a competent official, one who had earned the respect of all for the most efficient manner in which the | affairs of the home were conducted, b: he has done a gross injustice to the peo- ple of Sonoma County. For fifteen years under the management of Dr. Osborne this institution has been the best con- dQuected of all the public institutions of the State. No scandal or disgrace in any way came up to mar the good name of the home, but we find a fatherly interest manifest, an interest in the poor unfer- tunate inmates that was not bought for hire, but the outcome of an affectionate and kindly heart. Sonoma County re- sents the acts of Governor Gage and his political affairs as a blot on the good name the home has borne and to Sonoma County, in whose domain the home is sit- | uated. —_—ee————— “Andrew Carnegie will come to want yet.” “Oh, no; he could get a job as librarian in lots of towns in the United States.”— Chicago Record-Herald. Choice candies, Townsend's, Palace Hotel* —_————— Cal. glace fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend's.* ————— information supplied daily to the ont- . Special business houses and public men b, Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 gomery street. Telephone Main 1042, ———— He who is only passively willing to do right will find himself actively wishing to do wrong. —— e 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- ifcan Club meals from 35c to $1 each. Book free, showing pictures of exposition bufldings. Hotel accommodations reserved. JAY W. ADAMS, P. C. P. A, 37 Crocker building, San Franeisco, Cal. parsie e e O Parker's Hair Balsam is the favorite for dressing the hair and renewingits life and color. c\li ‘Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 15 cts. LE | ANSWERS TO QUERIES MARRIAGE LICENSE—F. B. 8., City. It is legal but not customary for a woman to apply for a marriage license. ARMY COMMISSIONS—A. City. Commissions in the British army are no longer sold. The purchase system was abolished by royal warrant from and af- ter November 1, 1571. MEDITERRENEAN SEA-S., City. Soundings under direction of the Austrian Government show that the greatest depth of the Mediterranean Sea is 2406 fathoms or nearly three miles. PAINTERS—Subscriber, City. The ten greatest painters are named as follows: Michael Angelo, Raphael, Titian. Rubens, West, Reynolds, De Vinci, Veronese, Guido and Rembrandt. SQUARE FINGERS— W. B. 8., City. In the language of the hand, “square fingers” are indicative of great reasoning powers, order and regularity. RESTAURANTS—F. D. C., City. There were in San Francisco on the ist of July, 1901, 512 places classed as eating-ho including restaurants and Dboarding- houses. RUSSIAN WORKS—Reader, Bowman, Cal. The works of Maxime Gorky, the new Russian writer, have been translated | into the English and have been published by Scribner. WHEELER THE STRANGLER—S. O., City. George A. Wheeler, who was con- victed of murder for having strangled Adella J. Tillson, his sister-in-law, was hanged January 23, 1884. SLOBODA—T. D., City. This depart- ment is unable to ascertain the informa- tion asked for in relation to the editor of the Sloboda for the reason that the paper is not in existence at this time. SCULPTORS—Subscriber, City. The following are named as the ten greatest sculptors: Phidias, Praxiteles, Michael Angelo, Cellini, Cernova, Flaxman, Thor- waldsen, Woolner, Thomas and Bartoldi. —_-— LIQUOR SALOONS—F. D. C., City. On the 1st of July, 1901, there were in San Francisco 3030 places in which liquors were sold at retail. This includes liquor saloons and groceries with bar attached. RING—Subscriber, City. If a girl is willing to marry, but is not engaged. she weags a ring_on the index finger of the left hand; if engaged on the second finger of the same hand, and if she wants to join the army of old maids she wears the ring on the little finger of that hand. When married she wears a plain gold band on the third finger of the left hand. LOCOMOTION—Curious, City. The fol- lowing is given as the rate of locomotion: Per hour. Per second. Man walks 3 miles 4 feet Horse trots. 7 miles 10 feet Horse runs.. 20 miles 29 feet Steamboat runs 8 miles 26 feet Sailing vessel moves.10 miles 14 feet Slow river flows. 3 miles 4 feet Rapid river flows. 7 miles 10 feet LATIN QUOTATIONS—A. S., City. The words ‘“‘Sasva indigitas” are Latin and mean ‘‘cruel accusation.” “Integer vitae scelerisque purus non ecet mauri joculis neque arcu” is a Latin phrase which means ‘‘the man whose life is unblem- ished and unstained by crime needs not the javelins nor bows of the Moors. Such a man may be wounded in body, but will remain unscathed in soul.” INK—M. B, City. Oxymuriatic acid re- moves ink from paper, and should the paper require bleaching the operation an- swers both ends at the same time. A so- lution of oxalie, citric and tartaric acids is attended with the least risk in taking ink from paper, but nothing that is used for removing ink from paper will leave the paper in exactly the same condition that it was in before the ink came in con- tact with it. FLOW OF WATER-D. B. L., Oroville, Cal. The following question is not suffi- clently definite to admit of an answer: “‘How many gallons of water will one inch of water flow under the regulation pres- sure of six inches in a given time, say ten, fifteen or sixty minutes?” In cal- culating tne flow of water there must he kncwledge™ as to whether the water is flowing through an open or a closed flume {or through a pipe, the pitch of the flume or pipe, whether it is a straight run or whether there are any bends or turns whether the wood of the flume is in the interior smooth or rough and what the interior character of the pipe is. There must also be knowledge of the size of the flume or pive, SUMMER RATES at Hotel del— Coronado, Com;i:v Beach, Cal., effective after April 15; $60 for round trip, including 15 days at hotel. Pacific Coast S. 8. Co., 4 New Montgomery st. = Grand Encampment tor 1902, and as pre- liminary to that there has been organized in that city a new canton with twenty- five members by Frank W. Smith. who took a very active part in the prepara- tions for the encampment held at Red- ding last year. This canton will take part in the drill and its membership will also compete for the $100 diamond ring of- pete in the drill. One is $200 and a pre- ** fered to the best drilled chevalier. The sentation sword, and the other two $175 officers of the new canton, named Bak- and $125 each for the best drilled cantons. OFFICERS OF THE BAKERS- ersfield, are: Frank W. Smith, captain; Brigadier General H. O. Brower, com- FIELD CANTON PATRIARCHS Howard Healey, lieutenant; Dr. T. W. manding the Department of California, in MILITANT, ODD FELLOWS. Helm, ensign; G. H. Peters, clerk, and orders announces that on Thursday, Octo- 24 L. B. Seabrook, accountant. o5 = 3 B e e e B e e i e s e A CHANCE TO SMILE. “I notice that a lot of white men lynched a negro at Girard, La., because he stole a bottle of pop.” “Those Louisianians are so wedded to their traditions and so bitterly opposed to the introduction of innovations.” “Wkat are you geeting at?” “I've no doubt they would have let the negro off if he had stolen a watermel or a chicken."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Bartender—Why do pousse cafe made like thi Golfer—Bec: I'm a Scotchman and it's got to be plaid or nothing.—Judge. 1 have your Nell—So he said my bodice was heaven- ly, di@ he? Belle—Not exactly i sald it was unearth) ord. n those words. He .—Philadelphia Rec- “They have found a prehistoric palace with 1660 rooms in Colorado.” “It would be auite too Arabian if they could find one room more.” “How so0?" “Because a fellow could sleep in a dif- ferent room 1001 nights.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. An old colored preacher in the rural dis- trict accounted for the lightning in this way: “Ever’ time Satan looks down en sees de Lawd's work gwine on, fire flashes f'om his eyes. Dat's de lightning. En w’en he fail ter hit a chureh wid it, he lays back en hollers. Dat's de thunder.” “But, parsen,” soid an old deacon, “whar is Satan in de winter time? We don’t have no lightnin’ den?"” The preacher studied a minute and then said “Well, hit may be, Brer Willlams, dat hell's froze over den!"—Atlanta Consti- tution. B.XATSCHINSKI PHILADELPHIA SHOE ¢0. 10 THIRD STREET, SAM FRANCISCO. 52.40 WILLYOUPAY $2.40 For first-class shoe that is a shoe that is sty n ate; glove fitting in appearance and__ guaranteed for wear. Ladies’ French Vici Kid Lace Shoes, black imperial cloth tops, new coin toes and tips, cir- cular vamps, and heel foxing and French stitched heels. All sizes and widths. Reduced to §2 0. For ove week only. ' & 7 4 WE HAVE CUT THE PRICE Misses’ and Children's Red Kid Lace Shoes; new coin toes and tips, and spring heels. Widths A to D. Child’s sizes, § to 11. 3 Misses’ sizes, 114 to The latest fad—Colored Laces for ladies’ shoes and oxfords. We have all colors. ‘We have no branch stores mnor traveling saiesmen. PHILADELPHIA SHOE CO. 10 THIRD STREET, §an Francisco.

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