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THE SAN FRANCISCO. CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1902. SATURDAY.............. .. JANUARY 23, 1902 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address All Commounicstions to W. 8. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER’S OFFICE........Telephone Press 204 e A A A A A A A A NN PUBLICATION OFFICE arket and Third, S. F. Telep! Press 201 EDITORIAL ROOMS. ....217 to 221 Stevemsom St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples. 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Incluling Postage: DAILY CALL (inciuding Sunday), one year. DAILY CALL (ncluding Su-dey), ¢ 1 snths. DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), $ months. DAILY CALL—By Single Month. All postmasters are aut subscrip Eample coptes Will be iorwarded when requested. Mafl subscribers fn orderiig chanee of address should be particuler to give both WEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to insure = prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE..............1118 B €. GEORGE KROGNRESS. Yenager Forelgn Advertising, Marguetts Building, Chieag. (Long Distance Teleohone *‘Central 2615.") NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON.........cc.cs00e..Herald Square XEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Bullding NEW YORK NLCWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoris Hotel; A. Brentano, $I Usmlon Square: Murray Hil Hotel CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: ®herman House; P. O. News Coc.; Great Northern Hotel: Fremont House: Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE....1408 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open unti] $:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 3:30 o'clock. €3 McAllister, open until $:30 o'clock. €15 Larkin. open until 430 o'clock. 1M1 Mission, open until 10 o’clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, cpen until § o'clock. 1096 Valencis, open wntil § o'clock. 106 Eleyenth, open until $ o'clock. NW. eorner Twenty-second and Kentucky, opea until 3 o'clock. 30 Filimore. open untll 3 p. m. rized to receive dway ‘The Princess Chic. Orpheum—Vaudeville, Grand Opera-house—Don Caesar de Bazan.” Californi King Lear.” Tivoli— Toy Maker.” . Central—*“The Fire Patrol." Chutes, Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and evening Central Park—Vasco Ball Game. Oakland Racetrack—Races to-day. AUCTION SALES. By Wm. G. Layng—Thursday, January 30, at 11 o'clock, Palo Alto Brood Mares, at 721 Howard street. W JUDGE HEBBARD'’S DECISION. UDGE HEBBARD'S decision in the Mahony J case to the effect that the Clerk, being a county officer, is not subject to removal or to investigation by the Mayor, ‘who is a municipal of- ficer. To that extent the decision is favorable to Mahony, but no further. Insfact, the Judge plainly declared from the bench that’ “for malfeasance, mis- feasance or nonfeasance in office an officer ought to be removed. I believe that every officer ought to do his duty and should not enter into such contracts as are alleged here; but the only question is, Has the Mayor the power to suspend the County Clerk, a county officer?” . The statement from the bench concerning the con- tract is as important as the decision concerning the exemption of county officers from the operation of the provisions of the charter. It has been somewhat a matter of dispute whether the contract the County Clerk is alleged to have made is in its pature suffi- cient to work a forfeiture of office. The statement of Judge Hebbard appears conclusive on that point. It can hardly be doubted that in saying “I believe cvery officer ought te do his duty and should not enter into such contracts as are alleged here” the Judge meant to intimate that if Mahony's_ participa- tion in such a contract can be proven in the proper way in the proper tribunal his dismissal from office should promptly follow. The declaration clears away some of the complexi- ties of the case. It may be accepted mow that the contract alleged to have been made is in its nature a violation of law. The Mayor cannot remove the of- fender nor suspend. him, but there is a2 way to reach him if the fact of the contract can be proven. That proof of course can bc readily furnished. In fact, it furpished during the investigation before the is was all) Mayor, and-will be forthcoming again as soon as the | proper authorities desire it. Such being the case, those upon whom the duty rests should enter at once upon the task of bringing Mahony to trial. It is to be borne in mind that the personality of the accused is but a minor matter in the problem. The important issue is that of upholding the law and maintaining it in its full integrity. The office of County Clerk is one whose fair and impartial -~ ad- ministration concerns every citizen. No man should be permitted to hold it who is not characterized by a strict fidelity to duty and a scrupulous observance of all the requirements of law. In the hands of a man who is willing and ready to violate the law the office becomes a source of possible danger to every liti- gant in the courts. It is for that reason the public takes so keen an interest in the case and is so eager to see the law vindicated, justice done and the office purged of the control of a violator of law. The assertion of Mahony’s friends that even if the contract alleged against him were ~ established in court it would not constitute an offense sufficient to cause his remowval vanishes before the plain statement of Judge Hebbard that no officer should enter into such a contract. The way, then, seems to be cleat for a final victory for the law. It is now the duty of the proper authorities to act promptly. L e Eastern critics are finding fault with Mr. Schwab’s denial of the report of his gambling and breaking the bank at Monte Carlo. It will be remembered he denied that he had engaged in “sensational” gam- bling, and the critics are now demanding a definition of his idea of what constitutes the sensational in the way of bucking the tiger. 3 ——— During the last few days, in the midst of political storm and stress, removals and reprisals, in the City Hall, and 2ll the hubbub of municipal distress, some people have wondered what Mayor Schmitz would do if he didn’t have a Ruef over him. Eastern moralists are discussing whether a man can be a Christian on five dollars a week, but they never stop to consider how he could be anything else, It costs big money* to follow the devil even in Chi- Cags. MORE RAILROAD LATA. HE sentiment of the Supreme Court of the United S&tes swings like a pen- dulum, and no one can determine the effect of one decision upon an issue until |, the whole arc has been described and the pendulum is in repose. After shearing State railway gommissions of their powers, in the Minmnesota :and Texas cases, by compelling the judicial process and the judicial finality, the court has now retrav- ersed the ground and in a decision just announced has provided a short cut for ‘enforce- ment of State laws against extortionate freight charges. % The issue decided was in relation to. a recent law of Kentucky. In that State the Railroad” Commission was reduced- to the same flabby and flatulent condition -as the California Commission. To remedy this the Legislature passed a law against extor- tion in rates and providing penal and civil remedies. The clause in issue declared that: “The Circuit Court of any county into or through which the line or lines of railroad car-{ owned or operated by said ion of the offense and of the railroad company or cor- rying such passenger or freight Circuit Court, shall have jurisdic‘! road, and the Franklin ‘poration offending, and’ the Circuit Court of the county where such-offense may be com- mitted by said officer, agent or employe shall have jurisdiction in all prosecutions against said officer, agent or employe.” The railroad law of Kentucky contains the same long and short haul clause as the interstate commerce act, and the same provision for exoneration as that act. The recent law just passed upon by the United States Supreme Court and affirmed as constitutional and valid, in addition to giving the local courts civil and criminal = jurisdiction of thej. railroads, provides that if a road violate the long and short haul clause, without exonera- tion by the State Commission, an order in writing to that effect shali be entered and de-| livered to the complainant and to the offending company, and to the Grand Jury of any county the Circuit Court of which has jurisdiction, “in order that the railroad company or carrier may be indicted for the offense, and the Railroad Commission shall use "all proper efforts to see that such company or carrier is indicted and prosecuted.” This law is directly upheld by the Federal Supreme Cgurt. In former decisions that court left State commissions powerless to enforce the simplest decree. Now it picks them out of the gutter and puts the whole judiciary machinery at their service. It will be| observed that by this last decision proceedings adverse to a railroad company. do not originate in the judicial' courts. its “will. They originate solely on the order of the Railroad| Commission, and that body uses the Grand Jury and the courts as-an instrument of |; The Kentucky law, which is wholly upheld by the Supreme Court, covers. fully every question of extortion and discrimination, of which communities and individuals may be the victims. The local court, in the county where the complainant is domiciled, has primary jurisdiction of the offender, and the Railroad Commission must initiate the prosecution and see that an indictment is found and the offender tried and punished. In order to take advantage of this decision the law of this State must give this; power to the commission, and then the people will have this short cut to redress of any grievance against a transportation corporation. 5 Our readers will see that this is one way of reaching the prompt action which The Call has advocated. The decision.of the United States Supreme Court giving this impor- tant function to railroad commissions when conferred by State law was written by Chief Justice Fuller and was concurred in by the full bench. The next Legislature of this State will be called upon to adopt the Kentucky statute and bring California under the wing of this Federal decision. Such a law will give a new lease of life to the Railroad €ommission by giving it a function it can MINING INTERESTS. discharge. EPORTS from Washington to the effect that R some of the representatives in Congress from this State are “lukewarm” in their support of the bill to establish a Department of Mines and Mining under the supervision of a Cabinet officer should set in motion a sufficient amount of activity here to warm the gentlemen to'a greater zeal. The effort to obtain the desired department might as well be abandoned if our representatives do.not stand for it firmly and persistently from first to last. Even were it conceded that the chances of ob- taining the creation of the department at this ses- sion of Congress are slight, that would afford no rea- son for lagging in the work for it. The more we ac- complish at this session the better will be our posi- tion hereafter. We have everything to gain by an carnest fight and nothing to lose. .On the other hand, should our representatives display no interest in the matter they will give the opponerdts of the movement a rehson for asserting that the people of California as a whole are not interested “in the movement and that it is being worked up by a few mining men for their own interests. The reports of lukewarmness on the part of any of the California delegation are the more surprising be- cause the subject has been long under discussion throughout the entire West and hardly a single ar- gument has been brought against it by any repre- sentative man in this section of the Union. The great mining States naturally look to California for lead- ership in this movement, which is for the welfare of all, and it would be a serious loss of prestige to us should our delegation at the nationalecapital break down or disclose the existence of any inharmony on the subject when it comes up for action. Of the importance of the issue—not to the mining interest orly, but to the whole country—there can be no question. The United States is the greatest mining country in the world, and yet we are the only great ‘nation that does not provide for an adequate supervision of the industry. At the present time the direction of mining interests on the part of the Gov- ernment is divided among many bureaus scattered through different departments. The result of this division of authority Las been a confusion which ma- terially interferes with the development of our min- eral lands and the operation of our mines. It is be- cause of that confusion the mining men have asked for the establishment of a Department of Mines and Mining. It is believed by those most familiar with the industry that we can never have a proper gov- drnmental supervision of the industry until the de- partment has been created. 2 - The industry itself is amply large enough to jus- tify its representation in the Cabinet. There is scarcely a State or Territory in the Union that has not more or: less interest in mines, and in ‘many of the States these interests are of immense propor- tions. The mineral output of the United States in 1900 approximated the value of $1,700,000,000, and it is certain to increase with the years. In California the industry in its present magnitude and in its pos- sibilities is second to no other. Our delegation, therefore, ought to be earnest and insistent in urg- ing the creation of the desired department. It is an issue upon which any lagging or lukewarmness im- plies an indifference to-the general welfare. e e ey In his recent attack“upon modern art Kaiser Wil- helm is reported to have said, among other things, that it is characterized by too much “advertisement”; and while we do not pretend to know what he meant; nor whom he was roasting, it is safe to say that if the art had no advertisement it wouldn’t pay and the Kaiser wouldn’t buy 1 ; —_— Complaints continu¢ to come from all parts of the country that the railroads cannot undertake to “ 'handle all the traffic that is offered them, but as yet we have heard no single rumor of their neglecting 'a chance to handle any politics that comes along: \ i FOREST PRESERVATION. HOULD the present season prove deficient in S rainfall the people: of California will have an- other important lesson tipon the value of the conservation of the water supply of the State, and in- cidentally upon the equal importance of preserving the forests in order that the waters may be conserved by natural forces as well as artificially. It is to be hoped of course’ we shall not have fo receive a lesson in that way, but if it come we should be prepared to profit by it. The growing need of forest protection has now reached a point where = disastrous lessons are no longer needed to impress it upon any one who gives heed to what is going on around. him. Evidences of the rapidity with which the forest area of the United States is--diminishing appear on almost every side. It is no longer forest owners and lumber men only who note the increasing lack of trees in places where woods were formerly supposed to be “inex- haustible.” Every now and then there crops up in some unexpected place a statement showingithat the public generally is becoming -aware of the situation and with more or less reason is speculating where the timber supply of the future is to'come from, In New England an opinion prevails in some quarters that the Pacific Coast abotinds with timber and that it can supply all New England’s ‘needs as soon as a cheap method of transpertation can be pro- vided. Thus a writer for the Boston Transcript re- cently said: “There zre forests on the Pacific Coast that may avail to save the forests that are now being devastated in the East. The purchase of the Panama canal would. mean \tHe opening of tremendous ave- nues of industry which have hitherto been blocked by excessive transportation rates;: The diminution of available timber throughout the Eastern States and the prospect of ultimate exhaustion of the forést products therein turns the speculative eye of lumber tradesmen toward the immense tracts of the Pacific States, which are now unayailable for Eastern trade on account of the enormous freight rates.. The Pan- ama canal would solve that difficulty and could by proper legislation be the means of balancing one sec- tion of timber product against the other, giving time for renewal of growth while the alternate sections were being cleared.” That sounds very well, but it happens that devas- tation is going on as briskly among the timber lands of the Pacific Coast as anywhere else in the world, and it is not \likely our forests could long stand any great drain in addition to that now put upon them by our wasteful methods of lumbering and by the devastating ' forest fires that follow . one - ‘another throughout the whole of-the dry-season. ply the Eastern demand for timber we must begin at once cxercising the strictest economy ‘in the management of the forests that remain to us. We have the ckperience of the older States to teach us | wisdom in,that respect, but up.to this time we have not profited by it. g 4 X | ——— The two ' parties who are just now glaring most fiercely at one another 'in Washington are not the R.epublican and the Deémbcratic, but the men who wish to reduce thb revenue to the level of the pres- ent rate of expenditure and those who wish to raise expenditure by liberal appropriations to the level of the income. SRR i Bt A0 b Gt Andrew Carnegie is a good ‘man, ‘but his practice does mot harmonize with his preaching. He says “every man should have a competence and a good wife.” Then he gives every man—a library. He should keep his books and furnish either the com- petence or the Wife, or else quit preaching. An individual of that disgusting species known as a “male masher” was fined a thousand dollars a few | days ago by a St. Louisjudge. Similar punishment for similar offenses would be gladly welcomed nearer home, 4 : . It is clear ! at any rate that if we are to be in a position to sup- | PITTSBURG PHYSICIAN FIN DS LOCKJAW CURE CLARES HE HAS SAVED FOUR WITH A SERUM OBTAINED FROM SHEEP, DR. A. LETEVE DE- FROM DEATH EROM DREADED TETANUS. HUMAN BEINGS AND A HORSE g Leteve, body knows recoveries are not frequent. of glass and tetanus set in. by stepping on a rusty nall. jthree days. “My thi ing in a stable, and tetanus set in. four days. She was gi it might not cure. most prominent physicians in the city. ory, ‘but—. practice so far as I have gone.” Pasteur Institute. Ed. Page—For Dr. Leteve Cut PERSONAL MENTION. Kiah is at the Lick. is at the J. B. Sanford of P. J. Cannon of Salt Lake | Grand. T. C. Drescher of Sacramento is at the Palace. Senator A. F. Jones of Oroville is at the Palace. C. T7 Colombert of Nevada City is‘at the Russ. + A. Chilberg, a banker of Seattle, is at the Grand. C. A. Harrington, formerly of Dawson, is at the Russ. J.°C. Campbell, a mining man of Nevada City, is at the Grand. C. K. McClatchy, editor of the Sacra- mento Bee, is at the Lick. H. Willard, a rancher of Red Bluff, is at the Russ, accompanied by his wife. George 8. Nixon, a banker and miner of Winnemucca, Nev., is at the Palace. W. B. Gilbert, Judge of the United States Circuit Court at Portland, Or., is at the Palace. Bruce Cartwright, a sugar planter of Honolulu, returned yesterday from an ex- tended tour of the East. He Is at the Palace. United States Circuit Judge Gilbert ar- rived yesterday and will remain to attend the next session of the United States Cir- cuit Court of Appeals, which will open on February 3. PR AR Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Jan. 24.—The following Californians have arrived at the hotels: From San Francisco—S. T. Bernard, H. L. Johnson and wife, C. H. Johnson and wife and 8. Bare, at the Herald Square; perial. From Los Angeles—Mrs. Fletcher aund | M. Isaacs, at the Cadillac; Bishop J. H. Johnson, at the Park Avenue. From San Jose—J. C. Alinsley, at the Broadway Central. ———————— ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. RAILWAY COMPANY-F., City. Fora position with the Market-street Railway Company make application at the com- pany’s office, on Second street. WARD McALLISTER—Enq.,, City. ‘Ward McAllister, who was a prominent that city on the 3ist of January, 1895. - ‘WAS ADVERSE—Subscriber, City. The official verdict of the Prussian War Of- fice in 1894 was adverse to the adoption of the ~‘“‘bullet proof” cuirass invented by Herr Dowe, the Mannheim tailor. cerding to English numeration, a billion is a million of millions; in the United States, France and many other continen- tal natlonl’ it is a thousand millions. CORONATION STONE — Subscriber, City. -What {s known as the coronation | stone was also called the Lia Fail or Fa- tal Stone. It was used by the Kings of Munster, and it was upon this stone that they were crowned. It was deposited In the cathedral of. Cashel, formerly the metropolis of those kings. Tradition has it that Fergus, a prince of the royal line, having obtained the Secottish throne in 513, procured the use of this stone for his coronation at Dunstaffnage, where it re- 'mained until the time of Kenneth II, who removed it to Scone, and 1296 it was gm‘o'ved by de:::d I from that place to ‘estminster, 'sent - corona chair being made to recetva it o oHOR ohtain from sheep, is injected, not by the quart, s The point of injection is not the brain, but in the left side, near the liver. four cases I have cured there is now not a sign of the disease. “My first case was that of a 10-year-old boy, who cut his finger with a plece He had spasms, and was not expeeted to live much longer, when I gave him a hypodermic injection. teen injections, and the boy fully recovered. > “The second case was that of a woman 40 years old, who contracted lockjaw Ji Barth and 8. W. Sallefberg, at the Im- | A BILLION—Subscriber, Napa, Cal. Ac- + ETANUS, or lockjaw, can be cured, and the epidemic of the disease now raging in Camden, N. J., and other places in the East can be checked,” said Dr. A. Leteve of Pittsburg the other day, where he has charge of the C. L. Magee pathological department of Mercy Hospital. “For the last six years I have been working on a formula,” “The method of treatment is radically different from the present onz and the recovery is much more rapid. According to the old method of treatment, the skull is trephined and about a quart of serum injected into the brain. Every- said Dr. By the new treatment serum, which I but in very small quantities. In the In four days I gave him four- ven thirteen Injections and was cured in , rd case was that of a man 45 years old, who cut his foot while work- I gave him twelve injections, curing him in “Then I decided.to try it on a horse which was suffering from tetanus. The in- Jectjons of serum were larger than those I had administered to human beings. In a few days the horse had entirely recovered. “I'd be egotistical to say my method will cure every case. I speak of it was an unqualified success. It may be tried on some others whom My professional brethren think well of the new treatment. ‘When I had the matter all studied out about a year ago I told-some of-the: In the four cases Nearly all said it was all right in the- " Since then I have demonstrated to them that it is all right In Dr. Leteve is recognized as a specialist on histology and bacterlology. He was born in Paris and studied medicine first with Professor Rour Doirrel of the He came to America in 1889, and for several years was con- nected with the Pasteur Institute in New York. He went to Pittsburg in 1880 and was put in charge of the laboratory at Mercy Hospital. L S e e e S S Y A CHANCE TO SMILE. Minister—I am sorry I didn’t see you at church yesterday, Tummas. Tummas—Weel, ye see, it was siccan a wet day it wisna fit tae.turn out a dog in. But I sent the wife, sur.—Tit-Bits. “I see that $50,000 in counterfeit railway tickets was recently found in the posses- sion of some St. Louis ticket brokers.” “They ought to be good for passage one way to the nearest State prison.”—Cleve- land Plain Dealer. “Let’s see. The State motto of Pennsyl- vania is, ‘Virtue, Liberty and Independ- ence,” isn't 1t?" ¥ “Not quite. The motto complete is: ‘Virtue, Liberty/and Independence—When Satisfactory to Quay.’ "—Chicago Record Herald. GOSSIP FROM - LONDON WORLD OF LETTERS A great deal of discussion has been cre- ated in literary circles by the proposal for the incorporation of a British acad- emy for the promotion of historical, phil- osophical ~and philological studies. Its first fellows are to include professors of Greek, Sanscrit, Latin, Hebrew, Anglo- Saxon and Celtic. Hall Caine, on being asked his opinion on the subject, said he would regret the addition of dramatists and novelists to the list of fellows, because no academic study of a thing so variable, so emo- tional, so individual, so independent of principles as the work of Imaginative writers or their art could be anything but misleading and mischievous. Further, Mr. Caine did not consider -the experi- ments“of the French Academy at all en- couraging. Mrs. Craigie points out that if imagi- native writers believed that such an in- stitution on French principles could be maintained in England they should have the courage of the distlnguls{;led schol- ars whose names are printeéd the Ga~ zette and prepare a petition bn similar lines. The fact seems to be that English poets, novelists and dramatists either agree with Hall Caine or with George Meredith, who laconically replied that he had no opin- ions on the subject. A book which the Messrs. Longman an- nounce, namely, “The Correspondence of the Princess Lieven,” should be interest- ing. S‘he was a great figure in London so- cigty during the early part of the last century. These letters were written dur- ing a residence in London which extend- ed from 1812 to 1834, a period of no small stir and Interest in. various ways. As the wife ‘of the Russian Embassador Prin- cess Lieven was naturally*in a good posi- tion to learn what was going on. - Her letters will, therefore, be another contri- bution to that delightful kind of history which is to be found in the “Greville Me- moirs.” Sir Wyke Bayliss has recently been en- gaged upon an 4rt book dealing with Leighton, Millais, Burne-Jones, Watts and Holman Hunt. g It is now almost finished. Messrs. Sampson Low will publish it during the spring. Sir Wyke gives many personal reminiscences of the great artists of whom he writes, for he was known to them all. The specialty of the book is that it reveals to the reader the differ- ence of vision that underlies their tech- nique. All of them were figure painters, all of them of the Victorian era, yet each was essentially alone in his art. Lord Acton's reputation as a historian has attracted gemeral interest to the “History of Modern Times,” which he un- dertook to edit for the Cambridge Uni- versity Press. There is corresponding regret that the state of his health does not allow him to continue the task. He will seek compara- tive rest for a time, but no doubt his counsel will be at the disposal of the new editors. They are Dr. Ward, Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge, who is a great authority on the history of literature; Dr. Prothero, the learned editor of the Quar- terly Review, and Stanley Leathes, an- other distinguished Cambridge scholar. Lerd Acton has been able to edit the first volume of the history, which deals with the Renaissance period. It will appear during the course of this year. An amusing incident occurred the other day at Charing Cross road, where the bookstall keepers are dreading their ban- ishment by the County Council on- ac- count of thteir being supposed to inter- fere with the foot passenger traffie. There wad great excitement:when the .report was circulated among the Booksellers that the King had sent his portrait to one of the leading men of the trade, Beér- tram Dobell. Now, nearly every class of people other than royalty has been rep- resented in the expressions of sympathy which hgyve reached these booksellers since the Westminster edict against them was first made. The knowledge of this fact has perhaps led the fraternity to lend too ready an ear to the flattering tale of the royal demonstration in their favor. The report, however, was very precise, and the authority of Dobell was freely quoted for it. When Dobell was visited by a deputation of his brother sellers of second-hand books, it was found the news was quite true. The King haad really sent a portrait, but it was “The King,’ a weekly illustrated paper. —_——— Ex. strong hoarhound candy. Townsend's.* - —_———— Cal. Glace Fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend’s.* —_——— Townsend’s California glace fruits, i a pound, in fire-etched boxes or Jap. bas- kets. A nice present for Eastern friends. 639 Market st., Palace Hotel Jbuilding. * —_—— Special information supplied daily business houses and public men the Press Clipping Bureaa (Allen’s), flfihinlt- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 ¢ to e A 2. T 3 5 L kT i L B T . HOW THE PHILIPPINES SHOULD BE GOVERNED. By Brigadier-Gener:l Frederick Fuaston. i} ARE WOMEN’S CLUBS A BAR TO MATRIMONY? By Kate Tysea Maer. THE LATEST IN HOUSE DECORATIONS. |§ EARLY DAY ACTORS . AND i ACTRESSES. i EIGHT PAGES OF COLOR THAT ARE PLEASING TO THE EYE. THE SUNDAY CALL IS THE BEST LITERARY PAPER ON THE PACIFIC COAST. | Next Sunday’s Call leader of 'New York City soclety, died in “DICK BOYLE’S BUSI- “ NESS CARD.” A Western Fiction Story by Fret Ha-te, written in his happiest veia, READ YOUR FUTURE IN THE STORY OF THE STAR: ; THE WOMAN WHO DRESSES IN BLACK, FLIGHT OF THE QUE CHINATOWN.