The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 25, 1901, Page 6

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~ _ them WEDNESDAY... JOHN D, SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Addross All Commounications to W, 6. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER'S OFFICE........Telephone Press B ) PUBLICATION OFFICE. . .Market and Third, 8. F, Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS Teleph Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cen! ingle Coples, 5 Cen! Terms by Mafl, Including DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one yea DAILY CALL (including Sunday), § months. DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 8§ 1.onths, DAILY CALL—By Single Month SUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKLY CALL, One Year. All postmasters are subscriptions. SBample 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 %o insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. . C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Mansger Foreign Advertising, Merquette Building, Ohie” go. (Long Distance Telephone *‘Central 2613.°) AMUSENENTS. 1118 Broadway Columbia—*'A Modern Crusoe.” vaudeville. jttle Lord Fauntleroy.” apho.” Californ! Texas Steer.” Grand Opera-house—"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” Chutes, Zop and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and evening. Fischer's—Vaudeville. Sherman-Clay Hall—Piano and Vocal Recital, to-morrow night. Sutro Baths—Open nights. AUCTION SALES. Butterfield—This day, at 11 o'clock, elegant Furni- 227 Pacific avenue. at 327 Sixth street, & m., Horses, Wagons, Harness, etc. By Wm. G. Layng—Thursday, September 26, st 11 o'clock, 20 German Government horses, at 721 Howard street. By G. H. Umbsen & Co.—Monday, October 7, at 12 o'clock, Crooks Estate Properties, at 14 Montgomery street. —— i —— EXPLANATION NEEDED. INCE W. R. Hearst has begun making ex- planations to the American people he should at once explain what he meant by publishing in the Examiner of Febru- ary 4, 1900, this verse: “The bullet that pierced Goebel's chest Cannot be found in all the West; Good reason. It is speeding here To stretch McKinley on his bier.” e ———— at 1 THE RECORD OF VIOLENCE. ROM the tone of the utterances of Mayor F Phelan at recent conferences on the subject of the disorders that prevail in the city it appears the Mayor has at Jast awakened to a sense of his offi- ial responsibility, and that he will hereaiter cor- dially co-operate with the police in their efforts to preserve the peace and protect citizens from violence, Surely it is time that he did so. Should he now act uever so resolutely no one could accuse him of being over urgent in the matter. He has waited until to t longer would be something like participation in as been charged by the Examiner and by the Peter C. Yorke that The Call has exaggerated Rev. the number and the nature of the assaults committed by ruffians upon peaceable workingmen in this city. The reply to that charge was made effectively by The Call yesterday when it published a list of persons taken to the public hospitals of the city suffering from injuries inflicted by these lawless and violent gangs. The Jist included only the names of those who are known to have received their injuries at the hands of strikers, It did not include the name of any person assaulted but not so badly hurt as to require treatment at the hospitals, nor the name of any one whose wounds and injuries were treated in his own home, or in the home of a friend. Yet that list, matle up solely of victims of violence cared for at the hos- pitals, contains 160 names. Many of the cases cited show such serious injuries as to prove that the ruffians who inflicted them were reckless of the consequences of their action and would not have stopped short of murder had the victim been capable of resistance. In fact two men have digd from the effects of injuries received, and others who may live will be lifelong sufferers from the consequences of the beating, kicking and clubbing to which they were subjected. Among the weapons taken from the strikers by the police are many that show a murderous malice and hate on the part of those who made use of them. They include slungshots and clubs and bludgeons of various sorts, some fashioned of heavy billets of wood and some of pieces cf gaspipe, steel cable, or other material of similar kinds. It is to be noted, more- over, that many of the assailants were so vicious that weapons of clubbing and beating could not sufficiently y their-hate. Such were in the gang that as- ed Isaaac Ryerson of the Hendy Machine ks, and aiter beating him tried to blind him, and mistaking a glass eye for his perfect one drove the re into his head. In the face of this outbreak of violence the public must discrimi All the strikers have not taken part in the assaults, nor do the members of the va- rious unions as a rule sympathize with the outrages. The ru are but a minority of the people, and have carried cut their lawless acts only because the Jaw has not been sufficiently strong to cope with It is as well to point out also in this connec- tion that the police hzve done as much as can be ex- pected of so smail a force in so large a city. They have acted with sufficient vigor to bring down upon the Chief and many of the subordinates of the force the attacks of the Examiner, and better proof of their efficiency could hardly be given. At this juncture the law-abiding citizens of the community will ask themselves what would be the situation now had the Examiner succeeded in getting one of its tools appointed Chief of Police. It will be remembered that the scheme came very near to suc- cess. With lawless ruffians assaulting citizens on their way to and from work, and the compliant tool of an anarchist yellow journal at the head of the police force, order could hardly have been restored by any- thing less than a vigilance committee, From that danger we have been spared. We have a good police force, and if the Mayor will but strengthen it we shall soon put a stop to the ruffians. Mayor Phelan, the issue is up to you. - zlrea glass sphere ......SEPTEMBER 25, 1901 " THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, lHEARST. AND HIS JUDGES. |[ELECTRICIAN TAKES REMAR WEDNESDAY, ILLIAM R. HEARST has sought to turn aside something at least of the pub- lic indignation against him by the plea that those who charge him with re- sponsibility in the crime of Czolgosz are business rivals who are trying to ben- efit themselves by injuring him. In his organ, the Examiner of this city, he | directed that plea on Sunday in a special measure against The Call, and will doubtless re- peat it in the hope that by iteration and reiteration a considerable number of the pecple may be induced to believe it. It is therefore incumbent upon The Call to take note of it. ' Hearst could hardly have conceived a more false but at tlhie same time a more cunning plea. The public cares little or nothing about controversies between rival news- papers, and Hearst is aware that if he can so shift this issue as t6 make it appear nothing more than a questio.. between The Call and the Examiner, he will be able to sneak out of the storm and escape the punishment which public condemnation has prepared for him. Let it then be noted that the charge of Hearst’s responsibility for anarchy and for crime has not been made solely by The Call. On the contrary, it was the spon- taneous outburst of public sentiment in all parts of the country. The intelligence of the American people had noted the tendency of the teachings of the Hearst journals and had long since condemnecd them. In that condemnation, however, there was a contemptuous disbelief that the vicious teachings by pen and picture could result in an actual attempt upon the life of the President who was daily vilified and maligned. The crime of Cvol- gosz startled the public by a disclosure that the Hearst papers were not so harmless as public contempt had supposed them, and at once there arose the cry of the public— “Down with the anarchists, and down with the yellow journals.” That cry came from all classes of citizens. In many parts of the country Hearst was hanged in effigy as an evidence of the popular rage against him, and while the masses were expressing themselves in that or other equally forcible ways eminent men were pro- nouncing the condemnation of Hearst in the most emphatic manner and under the rmost solemn and impressive circumstances. Among those whose charges Hearst has to answer, and whom he cannot set aside by the shuffling lie that they are business rivals, are: Grover Cleveland, Cardinal Gib- bons, Archbishop Riordan, Bishop Cranston of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Presi- dent Wheeler of the University of California, President Jordan of Stanford, Vice President Cooper of Rutgers, Abram Hewitt of New York, and almost every orator who spoke at memorial services held at every important city in the Union on the day of the funera! of the President. To these are to be added the host of other men who acted as the repre- sentatives of public institutions and organized bodies, such as the Chamber of Commerce in tl‘n's city and the State Board of Horticulture. These men were not vague in their condemnation. Some of them, indeed, did not name Hearst nor the yellow journals which he supports out of his wealth, but they made their meaning so clear and plain that no one could mistake it. Others frankly spoke the loathed names and specified that they meant William R. Hearst and his three papers, the New York Journal, the Chicago American and the San Francisco Exantiner. Does Hearst deem it possible that he can induce the American people, or even a respectable minority of them, to believe that such men are his business rivals, or in any way jealous of his “superiority”? He has threatened to retaliate upon those who condemn him. How will he retali- ate? Will he burn in effigy all who have burned him in effigy? Will he slander every man in America who has refused to take one of his papers? Will he hold up the eminent men who have spoken against him and daily vilify them for the purpose of rousing against them some wretch of the Czolgosz type? Should Hearst, learning discretion from cowardice, hold fast to his scheme of mis- representing the issue to the public and insist that after all it is but a newspaper fight, he will even then have his hands full when he undertakes the task of retaliation. It is not in California only that he has been exposed and the meaning of his vicious teachings made clear by the press. He and his journals have been condemned in the East almost as uni- versally as in California. In the whole of this State he has had but one or two apolo- gists, and in propertion to the number of papers he is about as badly off in the East. It would require more space than we can afford to publish the list of all Eastern newspapers that have expressed the popular condemration of the yellow journals. Taking only the more important papers and those only that have emphasized the criminal char- acter of the Hearst publications by repeatedly directing popular attention to it, we have this long array: Brooklyn Eagle. Newark Evening News. Philadelphia Inguirer. Springfield (Mass.) Union, Chicago Evening Journal. New York Journal of Commerce. Elizabeth Daily Journal. Fitchburg (Mass.) Sentinel, Detroit Free Press. Ithaca Journal. Philadelphia Times. Philadelphia Press. Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin. Albany Evening Journal. Richmond Dispatch. Wilmington Morning News. Marquette (Mich.) Mining Journal. The New Yorker. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. . New York Sun. Washington Times. Burlington Hawkeye. 2 New Orleans Times-Democrat. Baltimore Herald. Louisville Commercial. Wheeling (W. Va.) Intelligencer. New Haven Leader. Bridgeport Standard. : > Topeka Daily Capital. Warwick (N. Y.) Advertiser. Chicago Chronicle. Chatham (N. Y.) Republican. . Fargo (N. B.) Morning Cal! and Daily Argus Kansas City Journal. Augusta (Me.) Daily Kennebec Journal. Elmira (N. Y.) Daily Advertiser. Watertown Daily Times. Indianapolis News. Paterson Guardian. ¥ Paterson Cail. New York Press. Colorado Springs Mail. Chicago Tribune. Baltimore World. ~ Hudson (N. Y.) Republicar. Troy Press. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Gloversville (N. Y.) Leader-Intelligencer. Concord (N. H.) Independent Statesman, Newburg (N. Y.) Daily News. St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Milwaukee Sentinel. Detroit Tribune. Louisville Courier-Journal, | Minneapolis Journal. Troy Record. Troy Times. Passaic Daily News. New York Commercial Advertiser. Schenectady Union. Boston Transcript. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. New Brunswick Press. 3 Trenton Times. Jersey City News. Baltimore American. Rochester Post-Express. Providence Telegram. Syracuse Journal. Portland (Me.) Daily News. Richmond County Advance. Worcester Spy. A Buffalo Commercial. Dayton (Ohio) Daily Journal. Providence Journal. Memphis Commercial Appeal. Western Christian Advocate. Jewish Messenger. New Haven Register. Brooklyn Times. Philadelphia Item. Montreal Daily Star. Utica Daily Press. The Music Trades. (New York.) ‘ _ Cleveland Leader. - Rutland News. : Fr9m that list, including as it does almost every eminent legitimate journal in the East, it will be seen that in trying to sneak out of public wrath by setting up a newspaper fight the yellow anarchist has hardly benefited himself. There is no other man in Amer- ic.:a, or probably in the world, who is regarded by the members of- his .own profession .thh so much of abhorrence as is this man who has sought to degrade American journal- ism to the slums and bring the profession of Franklin, Greeley, Bryant, Prentice and Dana down to the level of Czolgosz. SEPTEMBER 25, 1901. PHOTOGRAPH OF s AR s ;&f‘;’ KABLE NIAGARA FALLS BUILDINGS OF THE PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION AT BUFFALO ARE PECULIARLY ME‘RGED VYI'TH THE FALLS OF FAR-FAMED NIAGARA IN A MOST EXTRAORDINARY SNAPSHOT RECENTLY SECURED BY CHAN W. HOEY, AN ELECTRICIAN RESIDING IN SCHENECTADY. L ® There he took a night pleture of the buifldings while NE of the most remarkable photographs taken in re- | a srap shot of the cataract. cent times s that of Chan 4 Huay? a Chihese elec- | night picture of the pulldings of the Pan-American Exposition trician living in Schenectady. A short time ago he vis- | was superimposed upon his day picture of Nlagara Falls. Both ited the Pan-American Exposition with his camera, | pletures were beautifully blended, Buffalo and Nlagara com | bined. Above the graceful roofs of the exposition bulldings When the film was developed his ted with thelr Incandescent lamps. | grest volumes of water were tumbling down. they were brilllantly {lluminated i I3 N O S el TEETEN TR e 400 oF the most A short time afterward he visited Niagara Falls and took | remarkable photographs ever taken, He forgot to move the film, @t PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. B. J. Hennessey of Napa is at the Grand. L. R, Poundstone, the well-known resi- dent of Davisville, 1s A guest at the Grand. Albert C. Harmon, a mining man of | Valley 8prings, is among the arrivals at | the Palace. Abe Marks, a prominent merchant of Ukiah, is here on a business trip. He Is staying at the Lick. 0. Y. Woodward of Woodwards Island is in the city for a few days and has made his headquarters at the Grand. F. Vanstan, manager of the Seattle branch of the California Saw Works, is down from the north on a business trip. His Grace Archbishop Riordan leaves Monday for Washington, D. C., where he will attend the annual meeting of Bishops of the Catholic church in this country. He expects to be gone about three weeks. Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—The following Californians have arrived: San Fran- | cisco—E. F. Baxter, at the Navarro; W. B. Clarke, at the Morton; J. B. Duffey, | F. McMahon, M, O'Farrell, at the Her- ald Square; G. Deming, C. W, Valentine, at the Grand Unlon; A, T. Dunbar, R, W. Hills, W. F, Cohen, at the Imperial; B, H. Fitzhugh, at the Holland; E. A. | Freeman, at the Continental; G, Martin and wife, at the Astor; M, Murphy, Mrs, | A. Welch, at the Manhattan; E. L. | Brune, at the Belvedere: A. J. Dougal, | at the Unlon Bquare; B, Eppeley, at the | Bartholdi; B, P, Btone and -wife, at the | Westminster; M. Taylor and wife at the | Hoffman. | Los Angeles—G. Davidaon, at the Ken- | gington; (. K. Platt, at the Grand Unlon; | E. H. Terry and wife, at the Cosmopol- ftan; W. R. Bird, at the Marlborough. Oakland=W. M. Wateon, at the Earl- ington, —— G —— Gage Shirks His Duty. Oakdale Graphie. At last we have learned in whose hands 18 lodged supreme authority. Last Friday a British sailor was beaten while ashore in San Francisco, becduse he was assist- ing in unloading his ship at the wharf. The strikers beat him, of course. The leaders of the strike sent word to the captain that whenever he wanted any of his crew to go ashore he would please in- form the strike leaders and they would furnish a guard. “You blawsted idiots,” quoth the skipper. Then he appealed to | the British Consul. The captain bad no doubt heard of a thousand incidents of men being beaten nearly to death by gangs of strikers, and he had no doubt seen arms in slings, eyes blackened, heads tied up, and had heard of eyés gouged out, ribs broken, and many other cruel deeds by the cowardly and criminal gangs train- ing under “union” badges. And the lead- ers of these cowardly brutes in human form offer to furnish a guard for men who have the right under treaty to the protection of the United States Govern- ment in every port of the nation. The strikers have acted all along as though all power was in their hands, and now they express the thought of their heart by assuming to perform the function of the United States Government. “We will furnish your men a guard!” The Mayor has proved himself powerless or unwilling to cope with conditions existing in his city. The Governor has spent three weeks traversing the streets of the dirtiest city in America, and has been totally blind to surroundings calling for the exercise of his authority. Then Mr. Furuseth, the leader of fifteen hundred striking sailors —nine hundred of whom are, he says, for- eigners—steps forward and offers the pro- tection that neither the Mayor of San Francisco nor the Governor of California can give—or, if they can, they do not give. The British captain has salled the- ocean too many years to accept such guardians for himself or his men. If San Francisco is not under the heel of anarchy, it is dangerously near it. PARIS PEARL FAMINE. Paris Is suffering from a pearl famine; the pearl necklace has become so fashion- able that pearls are fetching enormous prices. In relation to this famine it would be interesting to know what has become of" Linneaus’ recipe for the manufacture of pearis. That philosopner, in the year 1761, informed the then King of Sweden that he had discovered a method by which mussels might be made to produce pearls and offered to ‘disclose it for the benefit of the country. Bechman says he saw some of the pearls produced. The offer not being aceepted, Linnaeus subsequently dlsposed of the secret for a sum of money to Bagge of Gothenberg. In 1780 the heirs to Linnaeus were desirous of selling the sealed recipe to the highest bidder and it has been said that the secret Is in the possession of a London merchant. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. FIVE-DOLLAR PIECE-C. €. C., City. No premium {s offered for five-dollar pleces coined after 1834, PLANETS AND STARE-I. O, City. Planets are easily distinguished from the stars from the fact that they do not twinkle. BICYCLE GEAR—8. W.. City. To find the gear of a bicycle multiply the diam- eter of the rear wheel by the number of teeth in the front sprocket and divide the product oy the number of teeth in the rear sprocket. PARK COMMISSIONERS—R., Chiles, Napa County, Cal. Phil J. Fay is the sec- retary of the Golden Gat» Park Commis- sloners. A letter addressed to the com- missioners, Park Lodge, Golden Gate Park, will reach them. MAFIA-B. J, City. The Mafia was a secret Sieillan soclety organized in the fifteenth century. Its purpose was its or- ganized deflance of law and justice. Its members were bound by a solemn oath, not to seek redress or give evidence in a court of justice. ANTI-POLYGAMY-8. G. A, City. What Is known as the arti-polygamy bill was Introduced in the Urited States Sen- ate during the Forty-seventh Congress by Senator Edmunds, It passed the Senate February 16, 158 he House on the l4th of March following, and elght days later it was aigned by the President, THE HORSESHOE—L., City. The su- peratition mbout horreshoes ia very old. The legend i that 8t. Dustan, in shoeing the devil, tied him to the wall and sub- jected him to so much pain that to secure his release he promised never to enter a house where a horseshon was displayed. From this ariges the custom of placing a horseshoe over the door, GOVERNMENT WHITEWASH — An Old Reader, Oakland, Cal. The following is the recipe for what is known as “gov- ernment whitewash,” sent out by the Lighthouse Board of the Treasury De- partment: Slack one-half bushel of un- slacked llme with bofling w. , keeping it covered during the pio Strain it and add a peck of salt dissolved in warm water; three pounds of ground rice put in boiling water and bolled to a thin paste, one-half pound of powered Span- ish whiting and a pound of clear glue. mixture stand for several days. Keep the wash thus prepared in a kettle or portable furnace, and when used put it on as hot-as possible with painter’s or whitewash brush. KIT-CAT CLUB—Sub., City. The Kit- Cat Club was formed in London in 1688 by the leading Whigs of the day. It held its meetings in the house of a pastry cook named Christopher Cat, whe for short was called Kit-Cat. He suppiled the club with mutton pies and in gratitude its members named the club for him. The club was of a political character and its meeting place was looked upon as the headquarters of the friends of King Wil- liam. On its membership roll were the names of Addison, Steele, Walpole, Marl- borough, Congreve, Lord Stanhope and a famous painter, Sir Godfrey Kneller, who painted the portraits of the mem- bers of uniform dimension to adorn the walls of the clubreom. The particular size has ever since been known as the kit-cat. The society was dissolved in 1720, NATURALIZATION—Subscriber, City. The naturalization laws of the United States say: “Any alien under the age of 21 years who has resided in the United States three years next preceding his arriving at that age, and who has cantinued to re- side therein to the time he may make ap- plication to be admitted a citizen thereof, may, after he arrives at the age of 21 vears, and after he has resided five years within the United States, including the three years of his mincrity, be admitted a citizen; but he must make a declara- tlon on oath and prove 1o the satisfaction of the court that for two years next pre- ceding it has been his bona fide intention to become a citizen.” As you are now 21 and over and not having taken advantage of the provision of this section of the law, you will have to make your application and then wait two years for final papers. At that time you will have to prove that you made your application for first papers at least two years previous, that you have lived five years continuously in the United States, one year of which was in the State or Territory in which is located the court in which you shall apply for such final papers. —————— SUMMER RATES at Hotel del Coronado, Coronado Beach, Cal., effective after April 15. $60 for round trip. Including 15 days at hotel. Pacific Coast 5. 8. Co., 4 New Montgomery st. Mix these well together and let the | D e e o T ) A CHANCE TO SMILE. Layaround Lucas—I'm ashamed of you, Weary. Weary Walker—Can’t help it; teen don't hold Post. A oan- enough.—~Washington Johnny (In the garden)—Father! Father! look out of the window. Father (putting out his head)—What a nuisance you children are. What do want now? Johnny (with a triumphant glance at h playfellow)—Tommy Brooks would not be- lieve you'd got no hair on the top of your head.—Tit-Bits, “Now, children,” sald the teacher, “what great inventicn is it that enables us to see 80 many things, even when they are ever so far away?"’ “Rubber,” shouted the small boy at the foot of the class.—Indianapolis News. “Here's a correspondent who asks: ‘Ts it proper for a woman to pick her teeth in public? ' “It's proper enough,” replied the smaks editor, “but when the average woman has to select a set she usually prefers to do so very privately.”—Philadelphia Press “How do you like vour new neighbors™’ “First rate. The first thing they did to borrow our lawn mower." “Have they returned it “Not yet, and I hope they'll keep It Then they'll be caroful about using It early In the morning or at any hour when it would attract my attention unduly.” Washington Star, “Don't you think you could drive that mule without the use of profanity?’ In- quired the person of refinement, “Yes," answered the canalboat man. “1 reckon I could get along all right. But it would get powerful lonesome for the mule.” ~Washington Star. Colonel Corktight--The blamed bdellboy in this hotel is enough to give a man 4 ¢ epasm. Guess what he did when I told him to bring me a ‘“horn” beforp I dressed. z Major Nash—What, suh? Colonel Corktight-He brought me & shoehorn.—Philadelphia Record. “So pretty Miss Sweetthing broke the bottle of champagne over the bow of your new yacht as it was launched and chris tened it the Gobolink,” remarked Hemp- stead. “Well, not exactly,” responded Mec owbrook. ‘“‘She christened it the please wait a minute!” but I had name Gobolink put on the stern all th same.”"—Brooklyn Eagle. “Take that dog off the street or I'll run you in,” ordered the conscientious police man. “But why?" dog. “He has a license on.” “That's all right as far as it goes, but that's a spitz dog, and we have stric orders to enforce the anti-expectoration ordinance.”"—Baltimore American. asked the man with the Young Checkleigh—Sir, I wish to marry your daughter. Old Gotrox—But she is only a school girl of 12. Young Checkleigh—I am aware of that, sir; but I came early to avoid the rush.— § Chicago News. uite ort Newitt—That's Burroughs. He's an adept In the art of constructing storles. Ascum—He doesn't look like a literary man. Newitt—He isn't. You misunderstood me. He can tell you he's broke in more difterent ways than any other man [ ever met.—Philadelphia Press. —— Cholce candies, Townsend's, Pulace Hotel® P 2 % ST I Cal. glace frult 50c per Ib at Townsend's.’ —e—— — Best eyeglasses, specs, 10c to dlc. Look out for 81 4th st., front of barber and grocery —_———— Special information supplied daily business houses and public men by (e Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042. —————— Berlin has on an average only twelv? days a year when ne clouds at all ar® seen in the sky. > —— “Go Away Back and Sit Down.” It is satd that Certain people cannot sing his song, but anybody can go away back East and sit down in the comfortable trains of the Nickel Plate Road. These trains casry Nickel Plai3 Dining Cars in which are served American Club Mgals at from e to §1.00 each. Cail or for free book showing views of Buffalo American Exposition. Jay W. Adams, P. P. A.. 37 Crocker Bidg., San Francisco Cal. —_—————— Age tends to kill the halr and turn it Parker's Hair renews color and I Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. ,‘ -y

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