Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 23, 1901 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Aééress All Communiestions to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER’S OFFICE. . Telephone Press 204 ?IS.LICITIOK OFFICE. . .Market and Third, 8. F. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS 217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one yea: .0 DAILY CALL (including Surday), € month: .00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 r-onths. 1.60 DAILY CALL—By Single Month, 5c SUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. pe 2% All postmasters nre authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample coples will be forwarGed when requested. Mail subscribers in ordering change of addrgss should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order %o insure a prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chis * go. (Long Distance Telephone *‘Central 2619.") NEW YORK CORRESPONDEN' €. C. CARLTON.......c.sivesass..Herald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH ..30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorfum Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Unlon Square: Murray Hill Hotel. 0 11 and Mr. Hyde." Modern Crusoe.” Vaudeville. —*Little Lord Fauntleroy.” Alcazar—*'Sapho T bucco.” > and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and o Fischer's—Vaudeville. Sutro Baths—Open nights. AUCTION SALES. John J. Doyle—On Wednesday, September 25, Bixth street, at 11 a. m., Horses, Wagons, Harness, etc By G. H. Umbsen & Co.—Monday, October 7, at 12 o clock, Crooks Estate Properties, at 14 Montgomery street By at 327 TRADE®*STANDING UP WELL, ONSIDERING that last week witnessed the ‘ greatest funeral in the history of the modern world, when cver seventy millions of people 1 their murdered Chiel Magistrate, and whet exchanges of several other countries were closed, of re for one day at least,.and that the rit great nation wac averse to doing any more ness than could be helped, the week made # brilliant showing e far as trade was concerned The country’s bank clearings made a gain of 260 per cent over the corresponding week in 1900, though about hall of the most important, cities exhibited a thing which has not been seen for several But there were only five business days in wee instead of the usual six, which probably explains this falling off. The failures, however, | decreased materially, being only 157, against 211 feature of the week was the practical the steel strike, which enabled some workmen to resume their vocations p a number of large plants which have idle or worrying along with small forces. mproved cond . however, were secondary to the removal of the cloud which has been hanging g values and disturbing quotations in Wall Now that the mills have resumed the industry nediate improvement. Steel rails are in demand and steel mills are reported sold ahead well 1902. Pig iron is in better request, with an advance of 25 cents per ton at Birmingham. It is also announced that in anticipation of an expanded business nrext year some of the largest mills are to 1 ir capacity. street shows The other great staples are firm as a rule. Wool been strengthened by higher prices realized at the recent London auction sale, and woolen goods are firm in sy pathy, though the market is guiet. The boot and shoe trade continues in good con- dition. Boots have been advanced and prospective large orders for distant delivery have ecaused improvement in the price of leather. Cotton alone i ined to halt and is irregular. In farm products ure of the week was the series of heavy frosts an the fe; in the corn belt, which did a good deal of damage | to the late grain, especially in Nebraska. The market is beginning to exert an un- favor fluence in Wall street, as it is quite apt to do at this time of the year. The withdrawals of currency from New York to move the Western crops have been larger than expected, which tends to render operators wary, though this may be more or less offset by imports of gold from Europe already under way. Of comrse, this westward flow will soon turn eastward again, so the deficiency will be merely temporary. : Here in San Francisco business is good, but it would be much better were it not for the strike, which is hampering the delivery of country produce and cutting down the demand for it, which all comes back upon’ the farmer in due time. For instance, the commission merchants on the Hay Exchange report an unusual number of orders for export and domestic consumption, which cannot be filled, as the goods cannot be delivered in sufficient quantities, and the dealers in oats say that owing to-this same strike the consumption of oats in San Francisco is less than one-third of the normal at this time of the year. These hindrances, of course, affect prices, and they are but two out of an extended list which might be cited. The hay men say that business would be better by 25 per cent than ever before were it not for the strike, whereas it is now less than usual, And so on down a long list. Still, in spite of these draw- backs, the trade of the city is making a good showing, and, excepting in regard to the strike, the merchants are not complaining mone; A curious story comes from Mississippi to the cffect that 2 convict sentenced to be hanged recently refused 1o take advantage of an opportunity to es- cape, and while several of his fellow prisoners got safely away he remained in his cell. It is not stated whether the man acted from a conscientious sense of duty to stand by his conviction, or whether, after a philosophical review of conditions, he decided it is better to be hanged in Mississippi than to-live there, THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1901. " of rage against it that went up from Having abused the police of this city cowardly strikers to murder non-union men, it turned on its pup: win a strike.” and in its business, admits that “even if the u one. knees knock together. whom it has led into crime and trouble. demned to death and was killed. other gang of the Examiner’s union thugs. violence! guilty leadership which it chose to assume. ries safe without its assistance, It is not an | ministering its punishment, F the THE CANAL TREATY. ROM the moment that President Roosevelt took the oath of office the press correspon- dents at the capital became more interested in he would pursue relation the | isthmian canal treaty than in any other single feature In their reports they have given.a good to the President's words on course in to of his policy deal of space not only the subject, but to rumors and gossip concerning his attitude toward it. It is hardly to be doubted that |in giving such prominence to that phase of the correspondents have | change in the Presidency the | reflected the tone of official sentiment in Washington. ant work now in the hands of the administration, and there has been great eagerness to know whether the new President would support it or not. The emphatic deciaration made by the President just before taking the oath of office that he would carry out President McKinley's policy in its entirety | did not completely dissipate the fears that existed in some quarters at the capital, for reports came from that point to the effect that .it was believed Hay | would soon retire from the office of Secretary of State and that a new Secretary more in accord with President Roosevelt on the canal controversy would take his place. Even the last lingering fear of that | kind seems now to have been dissipated. Secretary | Hay is to retain his place, and the special correspon- | dent of The Call has been authorized to say: “The State Department is greatly encouraged to believe that it will be able to make a treaty embodying all the ideas agreed to by the Senate and at the same time satisfactory to the President and to Great Britain.” The news will be thoroughly gratifying to the American people. The construction of the canal has been long desired. In Congress after Congress cfforts to provide for the work have been made and at many times success has seemed to be in sight. At each | promising juncture, however, something interfered and a new delay took place. President McKinley was heartily in favor of the enterprise. His treaty with Great Britain, arranged for the purpose of enabling an immediate undertaking of it, was rejected by the Senate. A new treaty has been under consideration all summer and will be ready for submission when Congress meets, The retirement of Secretary Hay would doubtless have entailed the making of another tréaty and consequently a further delay in the work. Is is thercfore gratifying to learn that there has never been any danger of that kind. Late reports on.the subject from Washington are | altogether favorable. The Senators who were opposed to the first treaty have been consulted in the formation of the one now under consideration and there is every reason to believe a majority, if not all of them, are satisfied. The treaty itself, it appears, has not yet been framed. Nothing has been done further than to settle the points in dispute. The formal document will not be drawn up until Lord Pauncefote returns to this country next month." That will give ample time for President Roosevelt to shape it in accord with his views of what is best for the country. Thus the long negotiations preliminary to the undertaking are 2bout to end. Our Washington dispatches say: “All signs now point to the accept- ance of the treaty by the Senate. President Roose- velt will do everything in his power to bring about this result.” It is stated that the.friends of Sir Thomas Lipton have given him more than fifty birds, cats, dogs and | other kinds of pets, each being specifically donated as a mascot for the Shamrock, and the whole crowd has quarters on the yacht, but all the same Sir Thomas puts his trust mainly in his crew. + It is now claimed by a French scientist that he seem that the man of the future will be able to work himself. to death without ever having that tired feeling which has been so conducive to holidays in the past. cowardice and fear, not sorrow, made it pretend a sympathy-it did not feel. will usually furnish unconscious evidence of guilt. The Examiner did this when it edited out of all memorial addresses every reference to the agency of Hearst's yellow jour- nalism in the crime that good men and women were deploring. to destroy unionism in San Francisco, that would not be two murders that it had procured to be done. presses news which expose its evil and criminal influence, but begins to mouth against The treaty is evidentiy regarded as the most import- | has isolated the bacteria of fatigue, and it would sslelieh i RN B ke A FRIGHTENED GROCODILE HE Examiner, after inviting and suggesting the assassination of the ' President for months and up to the very morning of the day that the crime was committed, | broke out in a crocodile blubber over the accomplishment of its work. The roar every State in the Union frightened it, and A criminal for trying to protect men in their right to labor, and by every possible sinister and open suggestion having advised gangs of and having done all its bad best to foster law- lessness and crime, until the city streets are safe only for ruffians and murderers, and the railays and ferries have become dangerous to travelers, the crocodile is getting scared | again, and begins to retreat. On Saturday morning it began to turn on its dupes just as . the assassin of the President. murder of non-union men, it on that day announced cditorially that “brutality cannot Labering through a list of lies about the police and the employers, and announcing that it “has protested against the employment of ex-convicts as special police- men for the purpose of provoking strife,” that paper, which engages ex-convicts on its staff | Having counseled and advised the employers publicly announced their intention justification for five men beating Again, then, the thick hide of that paper has been pierced. The gorilla turns tail, the baboon blubbers, the crocodile resorts to tears. After more than two thousand deadly assaults have been committed, after doctors who attend wounded nop-union men have been threatened with murder, while two mur- dered non-union men were lying dead in Oakland, and law and order have been suspended for weeks by the violence it has incited, the teeth of the coward chatter with fear and its It is getting ready to sacrifice the dupes it has deceived and de- luded. As it barked and blubbered at Czolgosz, it is getting ready to betray the strikers In the very issue in which it threw out this first feeler, it did as it has done from| | the beginning. It suppressed and sophisticated the day’s news. Renas Mathesen, sole | support of an aged and helpless mother, had dared to work for wages without permission | of the Examiner’s partners in infamy, the union leaders. For this reason he was con- At the same time died Frank McGuire, murdered by an- But that paper made no mention of these It mutilates memorial addresses and sup- There is blood upon it and the red evidence of murder shows through the black ink in which the frightened, filthy and unrepentent coward begins to write its way out of the It could deceive the strikers and law-break- ers, but it cannot deceive the law-abiding people of this community., They will bring order on the fields it has reddened with crime, and will make the street, railways and fer- EX-convict, It is convicted and sentenced by public opinion and must do a felon's time for its crimes, Decent people do not need its help. Tts lawless associates, against whom it is wetting ready to turn, will soon be ad- A McKINLEY M EMORIAL, INCE a movement has been started to erect in | S this eity a monumental memorial to President | McKinley it is to be hoped the committee having the matter in charge will address themselves | to it with promptness and “ergy. The work should be accomplished while the services and the character of the illustrious dead are atill fresh: in public ‘unmum‘y. Time, of course, will be required to com- plete the monument, for great artistic designs are not to be achieved in a day, but the money required for the cost ought to be forthcoming at once, America is rapidly becoming noted for the magnifi- cence of her monumental work. Our growing artistic taste and our increasing wealth are finding expression in the production of 'such structures, and we have aiready several which surpass anything of a similar kind in any part of the world. One result of this tendency is that as soon as a great man dies a movement is started to erect a nfonument to him. Most of such movements come to nothing. A con- siderable sum of money is collected, but not enough {for the desired monument, and after much talking and a good deal of :olicitation for subscriptions the affair is abandoned. We must not have an instance of that kind in the present movement. William McKinley merits a memorial monument in every State in the Union, and there are special reasons why such a monument would be appropriate here. It was under his administration that the nation | began to look across the Pacific for expansion and | for commercial greatness. His name and fame will be forever associated with that policy which has carried us forward in the Orient and which in the future is to achieve so much not for ourselves only buf for humanity itself and for the welfare of the world. His part, therefore, in the destiny of California has been a large one, and the public appreciation of his statesmanship and his patriotism will grow with the vears. It is therefore fitting there should be a monument‘erected to him in this city. If it is to be done, however, it should be well done and done quickly. We should not leave the enterprise to linger and delay so that it will come at last as if it had been coaxed from a reluctant people. e ————— ‘The Geographic Magazine in discussing the size of Siberia says if the forty-five States of the American Union were taken up and planted bodily in the midst of Siberia they would be inclosed in every ‘direction by a wide border of land, and in that border territory could be placed all the countries of Western Europe, leaving still unoccupied an area of 300,000 square miles, or about twice the size of imperial Germany. That sounds like land enough to satisfy anybody, but the Czar wants more. Lord Farquhar, who has been appointed master of King Edward’s household and who is also at the head of the syndicate organized to liquidate the King’s debts, is stated to have already devised ways and means of saving more than $100,000 annually in the royal expenses. Of course that means the reduc- tion of salaries for many officers of the court and the dismissal of several officials from sinecure jobs, so the economy is not received with universal con- gratulation. / There is to be an international congress of physi- cians and insurance men,at Amsterdam during the latter part of this month, and Americans have been invited to attend it, but for some reason there has been no invitation given to undertakers, One of the most distressing things ever witnessed in the progress of journalism is the effort now being made by the reform papers in Philadelphia to induce the people of that city to wake up and get a mave on before the machine runs over them. & The controversy between France and Turkey has not been submitted to arbitration, but it is believed the Sultan caught the eye of Kaiser William, and when the Kaiser shook his head- the Sultan decided to pay up. TEN DOLLARS A WEEK SUPPORTS COUPLE A ND NINE CHILDREN - FAMILY IN COMPARATIVE COMFORT. JOSEPH CHARLAND, A SALESMAN IN A RETAIL FEED STORE IN MI BOYS, AND HIS WIFE IS SUCH AN EXCELLENT MANAGER THAT HIS MEAGER EARNINGS KEEP THE APOLIS, IS THE FATHER OF NINE i L FAMILY of eleven may live with comfort and self- A respect In a large city on an income of $10 a week, says | the New York World, | You may doubt it i€ you will, but Joseph Charland, who believes that happiness is independent of wealth, 15 In a position to dispute you, for Joseph Charland of Minneapolls | has trled it and it works Moreover, Mr, Charland's family is a sturdy one, consisting of Mrs, Charland and nine boys, all well and strong and with the best of appetites, They have never gone hungry or barefoot, their father says, proudly, and they never will, They do not consider themaelves noverty-stricken, and Mr, Charland would not take ald from the eity under any consideration, Boys grow up all the atronger, he says, for not be'ng pam- pered, And as thelr mother {8 too sensible to worey, and as he himaelf has u good conaclence and a good digestion, there 8 never a fingneial cloud on the horigon of the family happiness, The chronfelex of the Charland family are simple enough Joseph Charland was born in New Brunswlek, and his wife | came to thin country from Ireland when she wus but 3 years | old. They were matrled in Wisconsin and moved to Minne- apolis n 1883 1ot many years pust Charland has been employed in a retall teed store in Minneapolle as a salesman, In this way he sarne @ bt HE Japanese Government has practically decided on a scheme of naval and army reorganization, in which it is provided that the Ministers of these two branches, in- stead of being necessarily officers on the active list, may be civilians sharing full responsibiiities with the other Cabinet officers. The scheme also provides that the chief of the Military and Naval Bureau shall be independent of the Ministers in strategical questions and responsible only to the Emperor as the chief of the staff. This reorganization will un- | @oubtedly result in greater efficiency, and is following the sys- tems of Great Britain, France and the United States, where civilian Ministers control and are held responsible for the affairs of the navy. The training and environments of naval officers are not calculated to make them politicians in the broad sense, | nor are they, as a class, good business men. If naval officers in this country were eligible for the office of Secretary of the Navy it is easy to foresee the disastrous results from having a partisan in that office. There would be soft shore berths for the victorious contingent and walting orders or updsslrahle sea | duty for the others. It is now done to a considerable extent through hoodwinking a civilian secretary, but with a naval officer in absolute control the unchecked rewarding of friends and punishment of enemies would result in utter demm‘;?hzatlon of the service. The Japanese navy has suffered from this abuse of power for some time, and the remedy proposed will benefit the navy and army. . The naval expenditures of Japan have increased vastly dur- ing the past ten years. The ordinary expenditures for 1;91 of $2,706,000 are now $10,085,500, and the extraordinary expenditures have risen from $2,044,500 in 1891 to $8,477,000, the totals for the | two periods being $4,750,500 and $18,562,500, an increase of about 300 per cént. .o . . . The new royal vacht Victoria and Albert has proved a safe vessel, but on her initial trip to Gibraitar she rolled to such an | extent as to make many of the officers and crew seasick. Under | half-boiler power the engines developed 5200 horsepower, giving a speed of 16.2 knots. . .. By the operations of the United States navy personnel law of 1889 the engineer corps ceased to exist as a distinet| branch of the navy, and its members were transferred to the several grades in the line. One hundred and sixty-five officers | were thus affected, of which there were 8 captains, 15 com- manders, 27 lieutenant commanders, 63 lieutenants, 30 junior lieutenants and 22 ensigns. All of the first two grades and twenty-five lieutenant commanders were to perform engineer duty only, while the others were required to qualify for line duty by examination after March 1, 1901, and by this time all of the latter have passed the qualifying ordeal, except one, who has been temporarily rejected because of physical disability. The vacancies in the engine rooms of the ships have been filled by a corps of one hundred and fifty warrant machinists, and only very few of the original stock of line officers have been de- tailed for engineer duty, as was the intention of the pmmoter:l of the law. Engineer in Chief Melville is apprehensive that the the $10 a week which he claims is sufficlent for health and happiness, The nine sons are all below the wage-earning age, but neither mother nor father seems to be in a hurry to set the youngstors at work, The family might have numbered eleven boys had not the oldest one, born In 1884, died, his death being tollowed by. that of another brother 8ix of the boys attend one school, and as all are quick at learning, thelr parents wish them to continue until graduation In the pieture of this remarkable family, shown e, tha tallest hoy, standing next to his mother, is Joséph, aged 13 The athera follow in order; Edward, 12; John, 10; Walter, 0; Henry, Willle, &; James, 4; Thomas, 3; « & months. The recret of this household's prowperity on so small a foundation in, according to her gallant husband, in Mrs, Chaes land's gonlus for housewifeliness and motherhood It in she who s administratrix of the fumily Kueh W finances with vess that three satisfuctory meals a day never fall o Nttle house, sufficlently suburban in location to be for an ineredibly eheap rent, s amasingly neat #oher, industrious ehap and bolleves that some blaker salary, Ho & worey. abeut it, though that he particularly It Inde v regret in the world s that he tw not able to save gomething from that weekly $10, o sometimes, indeed, ac« cuses himself of extravagance day he JAPAN WILL REORGANIZE ITS NAVY DEPARTMENT ON LINES NOW IN VOGUE IN OTHER COUNTRIES Belief That the Result Will Prove Beneficial and End the Abuse of Power That Has So Long Existed in the Navy of ths Oriental Empire. machinery of the ships will suffer in consequence, but the former engineer officers are as a whole content with having attained actual rank as line officers, and the line officers are escaping disagreeable engine room duty, thus demonstrating to their own satisfaction that Rear Admirals Walker, Evans and the majority of old-time line officers were correct in their assertion that it needed only warrant officers to run the engines, il e ‘The naval powers of Great Britain, France and Japan are somewhdt skeptical about the success attending the abolition < of the ergineer corps in the United States navy and continue the management of machinery on board ship in the old way. The two first-named navies are increasing the number of engl- neer officers, and in Japan the education of the deck and engine room officer is distinct and separate. One hundred and five midshipmen in the latter navy who have recently concluded a training course in the Hashidate and Itsukushima have been distributed among fourteen warships for a second term of traini; and forty-six engineering cadets, recently attached to the Chiyoda, have been assigned to eleven ships for further practical instruction and experience in engine room duty. Two vessels were launched September 1 for the British navy, namely: the battleship Exmouth at the Laird yard, Birkenhead. and the armored cruiser Bedford at the Fairfield yard, Glasgow. The Exmouth is of the Duncan class, six in number, and is of 14,000 tons and nineteen knots speed. There are ten sister ships to the Bedford of 9800 tons and twenty-three knots speed, of which four have been launched. The keel of the Exmouth was laid August 19, 1899, and that of the Bedford, February 19, 1900. A shallow-draught gunboat for the British navy, named the Moorhen, was launched August 13 from Yarrow’s yard at Pop- lar and had ner cficial trip two weeks later. The boat drawing twenty-seven irches, with a load of forty tons, averaged over thirteen knots for three hours under natural draught and against a twenty-five knot breeze. She is+bullt in sections and will be taken to pleces for shipment to China, where she is to serve as a river patrol. The Moorhen is just the type of wac craft needed in the Philippines, where the, intricacies of nayi. gation meke the use of large vessels extremely hazardous, s e o Disquieting rumors are going the rounds in the British press concerning the late maneuvers, and thus far the Admiralty hs done rotting to allay public uneasiness. It i clamed thatde break-downs were frequent and that desertions of firemen have Dbeen so rumercus that it became necessary to employ seamwn to work in tke boller rooms to make up the deficiency in the enzineer force. . . . Two gunboats for the Mexican navy are being built at Eliza- bethport, N. J. They are of the Machias type in our navy. 0 feet length, 33 feet beam and 10 feet draught, with a dis - ment of 1000 tons. They are to have a speed of sixteen t3 and to carry a battery of four 4-inch, four -pounders AR o bow torpedo. Their coal eapacity is alleged and the engines are 3400 hotsepower, “L°5¢d to De for 7060 miley e WW{-H%{-H% L] l PERSONAL MENTION. R. E. Hyde, a banker of Visalia, is registered at the Lick. ‘W. E. Woolsey, the orchardist of Santa Rosa, is at the Occidental. Dr. Gordon Wilson, a physiclan Scotland, is staying at the Grand. W. W. Worthing, a real estate man of Stockton, registered at the Grand yester- day. D. 8. Rosenbaum, a prominent grain broker of Stockton, is staying at the Palace. The Rev. Herbert Thomson and wife of Wilburn are among the arrivals at the Grand. A. F. Luening, connected with the Pabst Brewing Company of Milwaukee, is at the Palace. A. P. Stewart, traveling agent for the Chicago and Alton Railway, is a guest of at the Occidental. W. H. Clary Sr., a mining man who resides at Stockton, is spending a few days at the Lick. John Fennell, one of the most exten- 3 sive ranchers in the State, is spending a few days at the Palace. Hervey Lindley, the lumber dealer of Klamatho, is a guest at the Palace. J. H. Edwards, the well known cattle man of Newman, has made the Lick his headquarters for a few days. General John T. Harrington, attached to the Governor’s staff, is up from Colusa and is staying at the California. Hartwig A. Cohn. who owns several mining claims in Utah, arrived from New York yesterday and is at the (alifornia. Luis F. Breuner, the well known furni- ture dealer of Sacramento, arrived at the Palace last evening and will remain here several days. Colonel E. 8. Godfrey, Ninth United States Cavalry, will leave for Manila about October 1 to rejoin his command. He has been visiting friends in Ottawa, Ohio. —_—— CORONADO TENT CITY, Coronido Beach, Cal., will be the popular summer resort this season. It became famous last year for com- fort, entertainment and health. Iis splendid cafe was a wonder, the fishing uneaecelled, \ l ANSWERS TO° QUERIES CANADA'S POPCLAT!ON—SUD!WF Oakland and others. The population of Canada, according to the census iIs given as 5,397,3. e HIGHEST POINT—C. H. R., Vallejo Cal. The highest peak in San Fracisco is one of the Twin Peaks, the altifuda of which is 925 feet. The north side of Mar- ket street is on a direct line With the cen- ter of that peak. E ‘LIPTON—T. F. M., Oakland, Cal. the title conferred on Thomas Johnstone Lip. ton was that of a knight, not banan. A letter directed to Sir Thoma: tone Lipton, New York, N. Y., care New York Yacht Club, will reach higuy 7 —_— = Cholce candies, Townsend's, PalacaFlatels b R Cal. glace fruit 50c per Ib at Tawnss '._( Special Information supplied 1y to usiness ho da %f-! cuvm:r l\l‘rnuuT‘.&‘rfl. 1) Main 1042, gomery street. Telephone & e il