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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, fFRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1902, FRIDAY...c.00nseeessenssnnss . JANUARY 3, 1002 JOHN D, SPRECKELS, Proprietor, Adfress A Communiesilons to W, 8. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER’S OFFICE........Telephone Press 204 PUBLICATION OFFICE., ..Market and Third, 8. F. Telephone Press 201, EDITORIAL ROOMS. +217 to 221 Stevensom St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: OXNARD AND THE JUNTA. HE New York Evening Post, free trade, nat- l urally supports the Cuban junta in its proposed removal of protection from the American sugar and tobacco growers. It would with equal energy support free tin, plate glass, silk and the numerous - other articles which have been domesticated in this country by protection. The free traders are wise in their day and generation. They know that the strength of protection lies in its support by the farm- ers of this country. Withdraw that and the system will fall. ' They know, too, that the best way to turn the farmers against protection is to deprive them of it. When they are no longer in a system which can justify itself only in its equal application to agricul- the struggles of the people: to throw off the yoke of Spain, he served with distinction as a soldier in what is known in the island as the ten years’ war, and afterward was chosen Prefident of the provisional government. Taken prisoner by the Spaniards, he refused to yield to the demand that he take the oath of allegiance, declaring he would die, if need be, as President of the republic of Cuba. He has thus given proof of his devotion, his energy and his firm- ness. Those who watched his course bear witness to his sagacity as a leader of men and as an adminis- trator of public affairs. He seems, therefore, to be the best man the Cubans could have chosen to be the first-President of their new republi Charles C. Dawes, former Comptroller of the Cur- gigg gfii’ :::3::‘:: 2‘:‘;1:? 2.0 | ture and manufactures they will resent its use as a |rency, says that th‘e next Presidential campaign will ORI TR S S, T S—— 'i:: means of extending Government partiality and favor |be fought on the issue of “asset currency,” so the CALL—By . . x H . . :(‘11:11‘)‘;7"(-“1. oil.‘mye.uuwm 1.0 | to one class of industries at the expense of another spell blf}dCYS might as well get in and begin to study WEEKLY CALL One Yeer. 100 | oo the subject so as to be able to illustrate it on the All postmasters nre authorised to receive subscriptions. Eample coples will be forwarded when requested. Mell subscribers in orderirg change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to fusure s prompt end correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE......::..004.1118 Broadway ©. GEORGE KROGNESS. (long Distance Telephone “Central 2618.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON... Herald NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Building NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Weldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Bquare; Murrey Hill Hotel CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: ®herman Mouse; P. O. News Co; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE. 1406 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—S527 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until §:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 3:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until #:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, cpen until § o'clock. 103 Valencia, open until o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 3 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, opea until 8 o'clock. “Junice Meredith.” rpheum—Vaudeville. house—"A Lady of Quality.” Seeing this, the Post enlists under the banner of the junta and fights the battle of free trade from prin- ciple. Knowing its motive one can easily respect its tactical acuteness. But we may not respect, for that or any other reason, other organs and agencies of the junta. Some of these have decided to make a personal is- sue of Mr. Henry Oxnard, who has been and is a leading promoter of American beet sugar. It is not necessary to defend the consistency of Mr. Oxnard'’s statistics as a promoter and investor with his argu- ments against free trade in sugar. Nor is it necessary to vindicate him as the beginning or the end of wis- dom on the subject. The farmers, who have felt the relief of a new use for their land, and the benefit of 2 new crop more profitable than any of their former staples, have ideas on the subject which do not at all depend on anything Mr. Oxnard has done or omitted. Yet the junta seems to wish to go to trial on, the consistency of Mr. Oxnard. To this.end it is ex- pensively circulating 2 statement by him that, under the McKinley bill, which admitted raw sugar free, the lowest average price for sugar was 4 cents a pound, being a reduction of 2.17 cents a pound from the ave- rage of the year before that law took effect. The junta says: “But that did not dismay Promoter Ox- nard = little bit. Indced he went on to show how, even at the free trade price, the beet men could pros- per amazingly. His experience showed that, conser- vatively estimated, beets would .yield 250 pounds granulated sugar per ton. This at 4 cents a pound stump with entertaining anecdotes. [ — OFFICIAL SALARIES. ° OR a long time past there has been a strong F movement in Washington to bring about an increase in the salaries of the higher officials of the Goyernment. Bills to that effect have been repeatedly introduced and this Congress will have a good many of them to deal with. In fact the cam- paign of education.on the part of the promoters of the movement has been under way ever since the as- sembling of Congress, and several times a week there emanates from Washington some sort of argu- i ment in favor of it. It is stated that the recent resignatiofis from the Cabinet have been due mainly to the inability of the resigning officials to any longer sacrifice their pri- vate interests by continuing in public office at an inadequate salary. Ome Cabinet officer, name not given, is reported to have said that the rent of his house in Washington is very nearly equal to the en- tire amount of his official salary. Another, who lives {in a more modest way, is quoted as saying that a fitting residence in the fashionable part of the capi- tal cannot be obtained for less than $4000, and as his salary is but $8000 he cannot keep up the hospitality required of his position without drawing on his pri- vate fortune. While the names of the officials quoted are not given it is probable the stories are true. Washing- INTERESTING ARE THE JADE SEALS R IFIPRESS/IOoN ©F THE YI~RUN SEAL. IWPRESSION OF THE ERFPRESS DowAGERYS OF THE CHINESE EMPRESS DOWAGE A ORDINARS SEAL or THE SIPRESS Dow, SOME OF THE IMPERIAL SEALS THAT WERE PROPERTY OF THE EMPRESS DOWAGER FOUND IN THE PEKING PALACES. THE CHARACTERS UPON THEM DENOTE TO WHAT THRONE HALL, PAVILION OR KIOSK IN THE PALACE EACH BELONGED. - — » ton has ceased to be 2 simple country town where a man with $8000 a year and perquisites could afford fornia—*Black Pattl Troubadors.” Chutes,” Zoo ‘and Theater—Vaudeville every alternoott and MONG the many beautiful and unique specimens of Chinese art taken from Peking since the fall of that writing or painting a scroll she used these seals on it to show meant $10 a ton for every ton of beets marketed. The where it was done. A . There is another pair of similarly shaped evening cost of the beets was $4 per ton, the cost of working to entertain his friends. It has become one of the city, a unique one, owing to there being no duplicates, | seals belonging to the Lichinghsien Court, one of which has Fischer’s—Vaudevills - » i v < . . # h Dowager's set of jadestone seals, now | dragons and the other hoenixes carved on the borders. As a ;,”):;‘:r: qu:‘i.\—eF(ano Recital Saturday afternoon. them into sugar was $3 per ton. This would leave most extravagant and expensive capitals in the i D PR . s > Oakland Racetrack—Races to-day. LATIN IN THE SCHOOLS. RESIDENT JORDAN of Stanford has i P pressed the thoughts of many educators in de- | moting Latin from the primacy it has too long | oyed in the curriculum of the schools and univer- s. A knowledge of its grammatical structure y be acquired, to serve as information upon its derivatives incorporated into the English tongue, but to make it the leading part of a scholastic course is | to divert attention and take time from learning that is far more important to the modern man or woman. Dr. Jordan is himself in the front rank of American scholars, but how small a part of his eminence is due to his Latin! . Latin has middle ages, accepted as plishment ex- been made a fetich because in the and long subsequently, to know it was | evidence of great learning and accom- But when it was advanced to the head- | ship of studies physics was practically unknown. At that time the world had alchemy instead of chemistry- | and astrology instead of astronomy, and the nobler uses of mathematics were unknown. ince then practically the whole of physics has been born, and its application to materialities is that great body of applied science which distinguishes the modern The useful man of these days does not patter Latin. He is at work tpon the dynamic problems which af- ct the welfare of the race. He has applied power d has derived it from sources unknown in that age whén learning consisted in reading Virgil, Caesar and the literature of the Augustan age in the original: Learning now has its best application in the study of man and his needs. Compare our scientific agri- culture, with its analysis of soils, its breeding of plants, its vegetable physiology and pathology, its hybridizing, its adaptation of food to desired results, with the bucolics, and the dependence of man upon the practical is revealed. A strong guild of classicists yet holds its ground in our universities, but the children of the people are turning to the studies which increase the power of man over nature, and not his knowledge of a dead language and the blind staggering of the races that thought in it and were without knowledge of the physical universe of which they were a part. world. At the present time Democracy has three military men suggested as candidates for the Presidency, Dewey, Schley and Miles; but it is to be noted that Mr. Bryan has resumed his activity and will deliver speeches in various parts of the country during the coming winter, so perhaps the colonel will save his party from the necessity of choosing between the general and the admirals, —_— A report from New York states that even at this early date all staterooms, cabins and' other choice places in the steamers between that city and Europe are engaged for the early summer by persons eager to get over in time for the cordpation, so it will be seen America will be well represented at the show. It is said Chauncey Depew went to France to get married without taking with him all the evidence concerning his birth and a lot of other things which French law requires, and at the last minute he found his wedding blocked and had to apply to the United States Government to help him out, A The promptness with which the Panama Canal Company reduced the price of their canal from $100,000,000 to $40,000,000 i6 a proof that they are the kind of men who will not let a few dollars stand in the way of a trade, and it is evident we have not yet heard the last of them. The commercial editor-of a Boston paper in not- ing the trade conditions of that city says: “The in- nate resiliency of the market will soon develop into kinetic buoyancy.” It is just the same here, though of course we would not ézy it that way. | se |aid of Government protection.” a net profit of $3 per ton.” All of this is put out to allay the fears of American sugar producers and in the hope that they will forget {that Mr. Oxnard’s statement was based on the fact that while the McKinley bill admitted raw shgar free if also paid a bounty of 2 cents a pound on domestic sugar, beet, cane and maple. While assailing Mr. Oxnard’s consistenéy the junta should tell the truth. Inconsistency may be a folly, | but lying is a vice. Applying its misrepresentation of Mr. Oxnard’s statement of conditions under the free sugar of the McKinley bill, the junta says: “Cuba knocks at our | door asking help.. Why should it be denied? Have we not assumed a protectorate over the island? Do we not practically direct its government? Cuban in- terests are ours, and we should deal with Cuba on a basis of broad liberality commensurate with the power and generosity of this great republic. It is for the United States to make or unmake Cuba. Per- petuation of the present raw sugar tariff on imports from that island means its ruination. Should we ac- cept such responsibility? It is on record and beyond question that the domestic beet sugar industry is a supporting and profitable enterprise without the The “record” re- ferred to is what Mr. Oxnard said about it when it received a bounty of 2 cents a pound, the fact being that beet sugar has never been.a single hour without protection, either by tariff or bounty, so that there is not one howr's cxperience to prove the assertion of the junta that it is profitable without protection. The United States does not own Cuba, but it does own the Philippines and will maintain a tariff on Philippine sugar. A policy that shuts out Philippine sugar by a tariff and lets Cuban sugar in free would | be a sight for gods and men, and would be matter | for hooting in a campaign. e S —— A Philadelphia millionaire helped out the Christ- mas merriment in his set by giving a “Klondike dinner.” Everybody had to eat from tin plates and drink from the bottle. It was, in fact, just such a dipner as none but a millionaire could afford to give, 2nd shows what a nice and economical thing it is to be rich. CUBA’S FIRST PRESIDENT. D ISPATCHES from Cuba announce that in al- fulfilled their threat of ignoring the election and withdrew their candidates for Presidential and Senatorial electors. The result .was a light vote and the overwhelming success of the party of Palma. While, therefore, the formal election of the President does not take place until next month, Cuba has vir- tually chosen her first chief magistrate and is about to enter upon the experiment of self-government. One of the curious features of the situation is that the successful candidate has been living in the United States while the campaign was at its hottest. A New York dispatch announces that Palma was seen on the night after the election “in his home in Central Valley, N. Y.,” and announced that his aim as President of Cuba would be to strengthen the pleasant relations that now exist between Cuba and the United States. It is somewhat surprising that the successful candidate should have remained in this country instead of going to Cuba to lead his follow- ing, particularly as the opposition to him was based upon the charge that he is more subject to American than to Cuban influences. It would seem that he had no doubt about the result, and it may be there was some truth in the charge of the Maso party that the election was fixed® beforehand and that for them to take part in it would be a farce. A Under any circumstances it is to be regretted that the first contest in the island should have resulted in the withdrawal of one party before the election took place. There is in it an implied menace to appeal from the ballot to the sword. So long as the United States troops remain in the island there is no dan- ger of such an appeal, but t‘ley must be withdrawn sooner or later, and it will then behoove the newly elected President to see to it that order is maintained The Philippine tariff bill went through the House after a few hours’ debate, but it is said the Senators are going to use it to exercise their oratory on, and the chances are they will keep it on hand nearly all winter. and any effort at civil disturbance promptly sup- pressed. Palma enters, therefore, upon a difficult task, and merits American sympathy in every well directed effort to accomplish it with success, Judging by his past record there is every reason for expecting Palma to lay the foundations of Cuban government firmly and justly. He was prominent in most all election districts the Maso party world. No matter how simple may be the ideas and how frugal the habits of the man who goes to Wash- ington to serve the Government, he soon gets high ideas. The first time he meets an Embassador he feels that he must raise his style of living to the Em- bassadorial level. The Cabinet officers are not the only ones affected. The desire for higher pay and a larger life runs all along the line. The Senators, for example, are not asking for more pay directly, but they are discussing a scheme to get the Govern- ment to furnish each of them with two committee rooms. By and by they will demand an official Sen- atorial residence with a salary to fit it. Shortly after the principal foreign nations had raised the rank of their representatives in this coun- try from Minister to Embassador there arose a squabble over the question of precedence. Tom Reed, who at that time was Speaker of the House, disposed of his share in the fuss by saying that since we had asked for the presence of the jepresentatives of royalty, we must concede to them the precedence to which their dignity entitles them. “We cannot have Embassadors,” he said, “and treat them like Ministers.” That seems to be the philosophy as well as the etiquette of the subject. We cannot have a brilliant capital on a duli salary list. Congress, there- fore might as well put an end to the agony and pass the salary bills. They will help to reduce the surplus and to keep it from cccurring again. B —— Some of the ladies of the British aristocracy are engaged in getting out a sumptuous “Book of Beauty.” It is hardly necessary to say it is to be an album of their portraits highly improved by skillful artists. MIDWINTER FESTIVALS. PASADENA has led off in the series‘of festivals which will be Leld in various parts of Califor- nia during the winter, and has furnished the country with an illustration of what a New Year's fete may be in this favored land of ours. The festi- val this year appears from reports to have been the most successful of the kind that has yet been held in that city, and affords cvidence of the increasing popu- larity of the fete among all classes of residents and of visitors. * The descriptions of the day and of the sports will seem to readers in the frozen East like a fairy tale of tropic lands. The sky was clear, the air was warm, and while, there was no such profusion of flowers as in former years, there were still blossoms enough of all kinds to make the festival glov: with beauty sur- passing anything the East sees even in the glory of spring. It is gratifying to note the success of festivals like this. They serve the double purpose of providing a joyous holiday for all who are in reach of them and at the same time they demonstrate and advertise the delights of our midwinter climate. With each suc- cessive fete of the kind a new proof is given that it is in California that nature has provided the happiest habitation for man. Here it is that the soil yields most to his labor and the climate is most propitious to his enjoyment. - Southern California has made ‘effective use of the excellence of Her winter climate as a means of at- tracting settlers. San Francisco and the district round the bay should follow the example. We have never advertised as we should the advantages of the winter climate of this section of the State, and as a consequence we do not receive anything like the win- ter travel from the East that we should. The frolicsome spirit of gayety that manifests itself in this city every New Year's eve suggests the possibil- ity of a carnival at this season which would rival ‘if not eclipse the Mardi Gras festivities of New Or- leans; and it would douvbtless repay us well to under- take such a celebration. Certainly our midwinter climate deserves more attention than we give it. In a Mississippi trial for murder it was shown that the accused was attacked by a negro known as “Buttin’ Jim,” and that the assailant had his head lowered for assault when the defendant shot him, The court held that the negro’s head constituted a “deadly weapon” within the meaning of the law and that the shooting was done it seli-defense. The de- cision shows how easily the law can accommodate it- self to circumstances and .also the high respect that a fighting community has for a good hard head with |a stout colored man behind it. 2 in_Paris. or kiosk in the palaces each belongs. to posterity. imperial hand. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. VOTE FOR GOVERNOR-J. E. 8., Largo, Cal. As soon as the official figures on the vote for candidates for Governor of Massachusetts, Ohlo and Iowa are re- ceived in ghis city the same will be given in this department in answer to your question. STEWARDESS—Anxious, City. For a position as stewardess on an ocean steam- ship file application at the office to which belongs the steamer on which you seek to be employed. Accompany the application with such recommendations as you pos- sess, together with statement of capacity and experience. THE LOST STEAMER—C. F. F., City. A friend of this department, writing from Mare Island and singing A. E. B., fur- nishes the following in regard to the steamer inquired about: Having formerly resided near Norwich I can answer the query as to the steamer asked about by C. F. F. The name of the ill-fated steamer was the Atlantic, commanded by Cap- tain Hilliard. She left Allyn's Point three miles south of Norwich, on the arrival of the train from Boston, via Worcester, with pas- sengers for New York. The steamer left the whart at 10 o'clock at night, a very strong gale from the northwest blowing at the time. Danmiel Webster was one of the passengers on the train from Boston, but decided to remain over until the next day, fearing that some dis- aster might occur. When the Atlantic was about five miles off New London light the steam chest burst and she became . helpless; both' anchors were let go, but the steamer dragged them during the night, owing to the heavy sea that was raging, and at 9 o'clock November 25, 1846 (Thanksgiving day), she went upon the rocks at the west end of Figh- er's Island. But few of the eighty or more passengers were saved. Captain Hilliard went down Wwith his vessel. Another friend of the department, C. M. H., writes: “The steamer was the Oregon of the New York and Fall River route. She was lost on Fishers Island and many lives were lost. Daniel Webster arrived in New York the day before Thanksgiv- ing, 1847, on his way from Washington to Marshfield. He and a friend drove to the wharf just before the steamer was to leave. Webster remarked that there was a fearful storm on and his friend with difficulty persuaded him not to go om board.” X If the vessel was lost on Thanksgiving day, as stated by A. E. B., November 2, it could not have been in 1846, for in that year Thanksgiving day fell on the 2th, but that festival fell on the 25th in No- ‘vember, 1847. —_—————— Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Jan. 2—The following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—F. Baird, A. M. Smith, at the Grand Union; Mrs. G. A. Boyer, W. A. Kirkpatrick, at the Hol- land; W. B. Clarke, at the Morton; H. F. Dodge, T. M. Ferguson, at the Imperiai; G. Martin and wife, W. E. Pettes and wife, at the Navarre; W. H. Snydam, at the Ashland; H. A. Wahl, at the Astor. From Los Angeles—W. Gregory, at the Normandie; Mrs. Griffith, F. E. Mack and wife, at the Earlington; J. A. Johnson, at the Park Avenue; J. P. Norton, at the New Amsterdam. From Santa Barbara—L. Dreyfus, at the Victoria. _ From San Jose—E, Haven, at the Astor. From Sacramento—S. W. McKim, at the Albert. % —_——— Choice candies, Townsend's, Palace Ho%‘ —_—— Bx. strong hoarhound candy. Townsend’s* 3 —_—— Cal. Glace Fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend’s. * o ety bt iy Bpecial information supplied dally to business houses and public men Ly the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 Mont~ gomery sireet. Telephone Main' 1042. Bt S — It is hard to say which is the bigger fool—the man who always gets fooled by a woman or the woman who always fools herself in believing that she fools the man. . —_———— . HOTEL DEL CORONADO, choicest Wintet Resort m:.h- world, offers best living, climate, boating, bathing, fithing ments. E. 8. Babeock, The seals in question are of different sizes, some square and some rectangular, and the characters (ancient Chinese seal characters) on them denote to what throne hall, pavilion It is a well known fact that the Empress Dowager was very fond of painting in water colors and writing large characters, some as much as a foot and a half square in size, which she liked to hang up in the different palaces and imperial apartments as a proof of her ability in this line, and which she intended to be transmitted On each of these scrolls of paintings or writ- ten characters her Majesty pressed one of her own jadestone seals to show to the world that these scrolls were by her own Of these jadestone seals the most beautifully carved are a pair of rectangular-shaped ones with phoenixes carved on the borders, while the characters in the middle denote that they belonged to the Yik'un Palace—that is to say, when the Em- press Dowager happened to be in the Yik'un Palace while There are other PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. W. G. Downing and wife of Suisun are guests at the Lick. G. W. Crystal, a fruit grower of Vaca- ville, is at the Grand. Thomas B. Bond, an attorney of Lake- port, is spending a few days at the Lick. John F. Gardner, a capitalist of Los An- geles, is among the arrivals at the Grand. J. M. Williams, a mining man and ex- tensive stock raiser of Newman, is at the Lick. ~Fred H. Bixby, owner of the Bixby ranch, is at the Palace, accompanied by his wife. P. George Gow, who owns a large in- terest in the Juniper mine, is a guest at the Palace. Dr. George Ivancovich, the well-known medical practitioner of Petaluma, is spending a few days at the Grand. Byron Waters, formerly claims agent of the Southern Pacific Company, but who is now practicing law in Los Angeles, is' a guest at the Occidental. L. Farish, office deputy United States Marshal, has returned from a va- cation spent on his ranch in Capay Val- ley much improved in health. matter of fact, the phoenix is the special mark or crest of an Empress or Empress Dowager of the Chinese empire, while the dragon Is the mark of the Emperor. | however, the Empress Dowager, having usurped the reins of government, arrogated to herself the prerogatives of the Em- peror, and therefore she had dragons carved on the borders of one of these seals of the Lichinghsien Coufrt. the pair of seals belonging to that court the most interesting | of the whole lot of the Empress Dowager’s seals, and will be a token to succeeding generations of her usurpation and the reality of her power in the empire. In the present case, This makes seals of various shapes and sizes belong- ing to other imperial palaces, courts or pavilions, but the above brief description suffices to show the uses to which they are put by the Empress Dowager. in these seals does not lie in the material of which they are made (green-colored jadestonme), but because personal property of the now famous Empress Dowager, Tze- Hsi Tuan-Yu, etc., the present real ruler of China, In fact, the interest they were the A CHANCE TO SMILE. At the "Ocean Beach Hotel: “Howdy, colonel! Taken your morning dip yet? Colonel Kaintuck (puzsied)— “Dip? Ain’t it usually called ‘nip, sah?" —Puck. Friend— Mr. Crimsonbeak—Oil is usd to make machinery go, you know. Mrs. Crimson beak—Yes; and if you let the barber put so much of it on your head it will make your hair go, too.—Yonkers Statesman. “I've often thought of what an un- fortunate fellow Jonah was.” “How's that?” “Why, if he had turned that whale trick in the twentieth century he'd have been in every soap advertisement in the civilized world.”—Denver Times. Mr. Newlywed—The cashier o6f the ’Steenth Ward Bank informs me that you have overdrawn your account. Mrs. Newlywed—What an idea! I haven’t told a soul about it except Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Brown, and I'm sure [ didn't overdraw the account a particle.— Judge. Sunday's (Gall, Read the Story of the Man Who Lives ; Among Skeletons Read | The Reindeer Queen of Alaska How the “Old-Timers” Spent Their Holidays Read the... Wolfville Stories By Alfred Henry Lewls. The Best Western Stories Ever Written, PAGES OF FICTION and HUMAN INTEREST STORIES. The Famous Masked Wrestler of Paris Now Lives in San Francisco THE SUNDAY CALL Is the High-Class Literary Paper of the West. .8-Pages in Colors That Are Pleasing to the Eye-8 =