The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 13, 1902, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANOCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1992, M THURSDAY................FEBRUARY 13, 1902 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor A Adéress All Communieations to W. 5. LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER’S OFFICE...... .'l‘elep‘ho-e Press 204 R ORI ST PUBLICATION OFFICE. Ilrket nd Third, S. F, . Telepho: 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 202. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Weelk. !ll‘le Coples, 5 Cents. = by Mail. Including Postage: DALY CATE Gncluging Sunday), one year. $6.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 6 months. 8.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 months. 1.850 DAILY CALL—By Single Month. . 652 SUNDAY CALL, One Year.. .50 WEEKLY CALL, One Year. .00 All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Bample coples will be forwarded when requested. Matl subscribers change of sddress should be particular to give ot NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order o insure & prompt and correct compliance with: their reques:. OAKLAND OFFICE. .1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Advertising, Marquette Building. Chicago. (Long Distance Telephone “Central 2619.”) NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: ©. C. CARLTON....ccccceevsese..Herald S NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Buflding NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: wemerman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE....1406 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Corresponden: BRANCH O"ICEHZI Inflwomfl'r corner of Clny 1008 Ve- 106 Eleventh, open untfl 9 corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until § o'clock 2200 Fillmore, cpen unti] 9 . m. Alcerar—"The Rogue's Comedy." Columbia—*"In the Palace of the King." Orpheum—Vaudeville. Grand Opera-house—'‘Raglan's Way." California—*“The Sign of the Cross.” Tivoli—'"The Ameer.” Chutes, Zoo and Theater—Vaudeville every afternoon and Mechanics' Pavilion—Juvenile Fairyland Carntval. Sherman-Clay Hall—Angelus Piano Player Recital, day afternoon. Metropolitan Temple—Lecture Sunday afternoon. Metropolitan Hall—Song Recital Monday evening, Feb. 17. Oakland Racetrack—Races to-day. Satur- AUCTION SALES. By Wm. G. Layng—Monday evening, February 17, o'clock, Racehorses and Stallione, at 721 Howard street. at 7:45 PRESCRIPTIONLESS CURES. N one of the large Eastern cities Colonel Sabin I recently lectured in behali of Reformed Chris- tian Science. There is no desire to dispute the influence upon the human mind of Mrs. Eddy’s cult. It is still young, but has furnished come-outers al- ready, and the reformed branch is in the field. This is according to nature. Six hundred years after Ma- homet Omar Khayyam found occasion to poke philo- sophical and poetic frn at the two and seventy sects | into which his creed had laminated. Prior to the Council of Nicea Arius and Athanasius had reached the parting of the ways in the history of Christianity, and now the sectaries are numerous, active and no doubt 2ll doing some good. But to return to Colonel Sabin. His statements sre calculated to make Professor Pearson take the back track in his treatment of the scriptural miracles, for Sabin makes them look like thirty cents. He de- clares that religion must rest on proof that it can heal the sick, and that he has the divine gift and will impart it to others. He asserts that “faith can con- trol the elements.” This is an old doctrine that was for centuries held by the Christian church, and still reappears in invocations for rain. Even the church, however, puts up Franklin’s lightning-rod in thunder- storm countries, and where it freezes banks up the zellar in the fall to save apples and potatoes from frost vertical sun from the tropics and made it thaw ice at the poles. But Colonel Sabin does not stop at asser- tion. Whatever he is he is not a vague and abstract person. He is concrete, crystallized and cubic. In his addresses he tells this: “Many months ago a sablegram came to me in this codntry asking me to give absent treatment to an incurable cancer afflict- ng a woman in Natal, South Africa. I began the Lreatment at once, and the very day after the message was sent the cancer utterly vanished and the patient recovered.” Where is Marconi now? Where the dog-Latin prescriptions of the doctors? Where, indeed, the miracles of the Bible, which were performed in im- mediate contact, compared to this antipodal wonder, worked over a space of 15,000 miles? Observe, too, that Colonel Sabin did not select | salt rheum or soft corns, scald head or colic to oper- ate on in this test case. The cable brought him an incurable cancer from Natal, a difficult disease and a difficult distance. Cancer is a scourge of civilization. It is the odium of tHe medical profession. form a perfect rose, that grows in the flesh which it consumes. Its ravages increase yearly. It attacks che angles of the exterior body and the external glands. It takes a bRte of the liver without bacon, and placards itself on the walls of the stomach, which become dead walls at once. It gouges out the eyes, and never fights fair. But Colonel Sabin knocks it out as a breakfast spell, across 15,000 miles of land and water, in twenty-four hours, not accounting for longitude and difference in time! This beats all the ante and post Christian miracles. Krishna, Zoroaster and Buddha could not draw crowds enough to pay their license as conjurers with | Sabin on the road. The X-ray is the pale glimmer of a tallow dip compared with this, and Professor Pearson must descend from his high horse and repent while there is time or Sabin may prick him for the simples at long range. When asked who is best fitted to lead the Demo- cratic party in the next election Mr. Whitney said: “Mr. Shephard is a good man, and sg is David Ben- aett Hill” Having thus spoken a good word for sach of the New York factions the retired statesman doubtless feels that he is now entitled to a complete rest, and it seems he needs Orchestra chairs at the Grand Opera-house in New York on-the night the Prince is there will be sold it $30 each, of which sum probably $10 will be to see he Prince and $20 for the satisfaction of boasting of t afterward. The music will have to be thrown in. open’ No manifestation of faith has yet removed a | It is in | MILITARY ECONOMISTS. HE CALL was the only paper in the United T States that called attention to the extraordinary course of General Wood, Military Governor of Cuba, and a number of other army officers on duty in that island, who were volunteering, not advice, but dictation, to Congress as to its procedure in a matter of economic and not military legislation. General Wood's original statement of the case was in the highest degree impudent, officious and offensive. He put it in such form as to make it accusative of all op- position as dishonest, dishonorable and unpatriotic. Other cfficers of less rank were not less rank in their offending against the decencies of their posi- tion. The idea which possessed them seemed to be that civilians, inciuding members of Congress, were expected to obey without question such orders as is- sue from military headquarters, Time was that the militarism of Germany went no further than Wood and his officgrs have gone. But that was the green stick. In the dry, a German officer shot down a laborer, killing him on the street, because, carrying a heavy burden, the workingman had unintentionally rubbed against his uniform! The murderer went un- punished. When it is assumed that an officer of the army can dictate to Congress, o1 even be permitted to criticize its acts of omission or commission, it is time to ad- minister a lesson that will be remembered. General Wood's zeal in behalf of Cuban free trade is like unto that of a planter or a planter’s attorney. He made one special pilgrimage to Washington to advocate it, and did so with an air offensively dic- tatorial, and now he has addressed a letter to the United States Senate, in his official capacity, enjoin- ing it to obey his instructions. The constitution makes it the diity of the President of the United States to communicate to Congress the state of the Union. There is no such authority given to any sub- ordinate cfficer of the Government, either civil' or military. But a little thing like the constidtion does not stand in General Wood's way at all. He has ruled Cuba so long that he fancies that his jurisdic- tion as dictator has spread over the mainland. Republican Senators are incensed by his impudence and by some revelations incident to its latest mani- festation. Our readers will remember that Congress passed the Platt amendment to the Cuban enabling act, which established our suzerainty of the island in international matters. The Cuban constitutional convention resented that amendment and sent Senor Capote and others to Washington to try and effect its repeal. Instead of succeeding in that they re- turned to Havana advocates oi its adoption. It is now revealed that on visiting Secretary of Wa- Root they were promised ty him positively that if the Platt amendment were accepted he would give them tree trade for sugar, tobacco and fruits! Upon that pledge they changed, znd so declare now. | This incident is explznatory. It reveals the reason | for the close rhetorical partnership between Root and | General Wood. Root made a promise he had no right to make, a pledge he had no power to perform. Under the circumstances it was a despicable trick played upon Capote to sugarcoat the Platt pill. Of course it may be said that the Cuban delegates should have known that the Secretary had no right to make | such a promise and no power to redeem it. But they | did nat know this, ard went back deliberately de- ceived to advise action by their people procured by |a device unworthy a member of the American Cabi- | net. | It is now evident that Root and Wood are trying | to induce Congress to make good Root's pernicious |and deceptive pledge. It is time for the War Department to keep its hands out of civil legislation. The Secretary of the | Treasury is the officer intended by the constitution to advise in revenue matters, and when an impost or an | excise tax affects American agriculture the Secretary | of Agriculture is to be sought for council. Let us have less wood-root for a while. WORKING THE GOVERNMENT. | § Y way of giving the public a fuller understand- | B ing of the extent to which the second class mail privilege has been abused by unscru- pulous parties that portion of the Postmaster Gen- eral’s report for 1901 which deals with the matter has | been republished in pamphlet form by the Govern- ment for general circulation. The facts therein pre- sented fuily justify the action of the Postoffice De- partment in excluding from second class privileges the fake journals that were virtually living upon the ! Government and reveal the need of further exclu- sions. It is not likely that the Postmaster General can under the existing law put 2n end to the whole of | the abuse, and it is therefore the duty of Congress to | undertake the work by a thorough revision of the postal laws. Figures are given by the Postmaster General | showing that the Government at the close of the last | fiscal year was carrying an aggregate of 200,000,000 | pounds of mail at one cent a pound which should ]uther pay the third class rate, equal to eight cents | a pound, or not be carried at all. In that vast amount i°l mail matter legitimate publications, for whose | bengfit the second class rates were established by | Congress, are not included. | lications whose existence is due to the fact that the | Government circulates them for less than the cost. | The report says: “Not counting the expense of handling, it costs the Government $10,000,000 a year to transport this matter. It returns in postage $2,000,000 2 year, thus involving ‘a direct loss on transportation alone of $8,000,000. If it be charged with its fair share of the total cost of the mail ser- vice, on the very conservative calculation heretofore given, the loss to the Government is not less than $12,000,000. That amount is three times the postal deficit of the last fiscal year.” One of the serious evils resulting from the tolera- tion of these.abuses is that it makes the Government a partner of fake publications in opposition to legiti- | mate periodicals. The report says: “The extent of the complicity of the Government in these purely pri- vate enterprises is not generally realized. The state- ment will probably be surprising that in the case of |! |lmndreds of such publications wherever the publisher spends $1000 on his venture the Government spends not less than $2000 in carrying on that publisher's business, and wherever he puts-$100,000 into its run- ning expenses the Government puts in not less than $200,000. In explanation of that condition of affairs the Post- master General points out that the stimulus of cheap paper and nominal postage has led to the publication of fake journals, which are run mainly for advertising i purposes. While legitimate journals maintain a large staff of workers and expend vast sums for news or for literary and scientific contributions, the fake journals do nothing of the kind. They have no news service and no contributors. Their only expense is It is made up of pub- | {no value whatever. hat incurred in buying cheap paper. The Govern- ment does the rest by carrying and distributing the Despite the thoroughness with which these various abuses of the postoffice have been exposed, the men as vigorous as e#r in fighting any effort at reform. Postmaster General Smith did good work in ridding gress to complete the work by so amending the law as to put an end to such abuses as remain. FTER its prolcnged sessions apd searchings the Industrial Commission, of which the coun- report. It has done justice to the magnitude of its work by cxtending the report to the propo{(lons of recommendations “upon well nigh every subject of legislative interest except woman’s suffrage and the A strong support is given to the claims of the Inter- state Commerce Commission for greater power in pose of regulating commerce. Upon that subject the commission recommends: “The definite grant of never on its own iritiative, but only on formal com- plaint, to pass upon the reasonableness of freight and power to declare given rates unreasonable, as at pres- ent, together with power to prescribe reasonable the establishment of a permanent corps of expert auditors, who shall have authority under the super- examine periodically the accounts of all railroad companies, whether operating or financial in their na- ing andfiling of annual reports by carriers be made misdemeanors, and propiptness in making such re- Passing from commerce to -agriculture the com- mission recommends that the Secretary of Agricul- tended for export, to fix standards for cereals when intended for export, to cause stock yards and stock meats from one State to another or to foreign coun- tries, and that a law be provided for the inspection for export. i Turning to tariff questions the commission recom- tariff by reciprocity or otherwise adequate protection. to the beet sugar industry be maintained. Then it and urges that increased appropriations be made by Congress” for building sample stretches of improved courage the more rapid construction of such roads at State and local expense. Next it gives attention to free rural delivery system, and then advocates the ex- tension of the present policy of protecting the forest of the Government which have charge of investiga- tions and administrative work in connection with It may be remembered that.this commission was appointed to inquire into the adulterations and sale carlier investigations was mainly due to the testimony which was brought out on that subject. It is pleasing that phase of its work. Among other recommenda- . tions it urges that a pure food section in the chem- established to prevent the adulteration, false brand- ing and deceptive imitation of foods, beverages, can- | bia and the Territories, and for regulating interstate traffic therein. | sion’s wotk. It may be that Congress will give heed to them, but that is doubtful. The report has two A ST. LOUIS IMBROGLIO. FROM St. Louis comes a story of a political courts one of the nicest points for decision that | ever was submitted to a judicial tribunal. The point, material property as the sum of $135000 in cash, and such moral questions as whether or no a cor- statesmen when the statesmes have done the best they can to keep faith with the corporation. the St. Louis and Suburban Railway Company de- sired a franchise for an extension of its lines, and coo for distribution among certain influential parties when the franchise was granted. The story goes on with double locks and a key to one of the locks was held by each of the two parties to the agreement. { were opened neither side could get at it without the co-operation of the other. That matter having been grant of the franchise would be to the advantage of the public and proceeded ‘to grant it in due forni. case was carried into the courts, and there the fran- chise was declared to be illegal. does the money in the safe deposit belong? The mu- nicipal statesmen claim it because they carried out way corporation claims it because the franchise be- ing illegal is of no value. Neither party can get at out $135,000. The position is awkward, but after meditating on the subject the corporation decided to lock the safe and gwi up the cash. Thus the issue 'has been raised, and it is now incumbent on the It will be perceived thc issue is a subtle one. The statesmen fulfilled their agreement by granting the eration for its money, and the franchise granted is of How the courts will decide we case where they would be justified in sending both parties to jail and holding them there, while the case — sheet for less than cost. who profit by them have not been abashed. They are the miails of much'of the stuff, and it is now for Con- AN OMNIBUS RXPORT. A try heard so mnuch at one time, has filed its a volume of 1000 pages, and has included within it adoption of a national marriage law. dealing with violations of laws enacted for the pur- power to the Interstate Commerce Commission, passenger rates or charges; also the definite grant of rates in substitution.” Another reconfmendation is vision of the Interstate Commerce Commission to ture; that violations of the act respecting the keep- turns be required. ture be given authority to inspect dairy products in- cars to be cleansed, to prevent the export of diseased of nursery stock intended for interstate commerce or mends that whatever changes may be made in the | makes a jump to the subject of highway improvement roads in various sections of the country so as to en- the postoffice and recommends the extension of the reserves, and the consolidation of the thre¢ bureaus forestry. of articles of food, and that popular intérest in its ‘to know that the commission did not wholly overlook istry division of the Department of Agriculture be dies, drugs and condiments in the District of Colum- Such are some of the conclusions of the commis- defects—it is too long and it scatters too much. deal and a lawsuit which promises to give the moreover, is one of importance, for it involves such poration is bound to keep its pledge to municipal It appears from the story as it comes to us that in order tc avoid trouble it agreed to put up $135,- to say the money was placed in safe deposit boxes As the money could not be reached until both locks duly arranged the municipal council found that the Somebody took objection to it, however, and the Upon that showing the question arises: To whom their agreement and granted the franchise. The rail- the money. The railway men found that they were appeal to the courts to compel the statesmen to un- Judges to decide on which side justice lies. franchise, but the railway wished a valuable consid- cannot undertake to say, but it would seem to be a is taken under advisement for-a series of years. et s e Tillman says South Carolifia has made more his- tory and written less of it than any other State in the Union, and‘it may be she is too much ashamed of | what she made to care about recording it. SCOTTISH RITE MASONS ARRANGE GRAND RECEPTION FOR FRIENDS gt T. VALENTINE'S night Golden Gate Asylum on Sutter street will be in possession of the several bodies of the Scottish Rite of Masonry, which = have invited the lady relatives and friends of members to attend a reception, concert and ball. The entertainment is to be given by San Francisco Consistory No 1, Godfrey de St. Omar Council No. 1, Knights Kadosh, Yerba Buena Chapter' No. 1, Rose Qrolx and Yerba Buena Lodge of Perfection No. 1. The reception and ball will be an unusual evént in Masonic circles. The necessary arrangements have been completed by the following named committee: F. C. Van Schaick, master of the con- sistory, thirty-second degree, chairman; Hen- Ty C. Schaertzer, secretary; Frank B. Ladd, Charles L. Patton, master of the Kadosh, thirtieth degree; Harry Aseroft, wise master of Rose Crotx, elghtcenth degree, and yener- able master of the Lodge of Perfection, four- teenth degree; James A. Wilson, R. E. Miller, J. G..Spaulding, M. Simonoff, Harry J. Lask and George Filmer. 2 After the gencral reception a musical and literary programme will be presented for the entertainment of the guests. It will include selections by the Knicker. bocker Quartet; contralto solo, Mrs Dieckman; select readings, Mr. Greenleaf; cornet solo, Mrs. A. L. Larsen: tenor solo, Herbert Williams; soprano solo, Miss ES I —p | | | 4 Grace Davis; bass solo, A. L. Larsen; wit | and song, W. J. Hynes, and 'ceilo soio Arthur Weiss. Dancing will follow in the main hall and also in the banuuet ha!l. Refreshments will be | on the upper floor. served in Commandery Hall on the top floor. committees: Henry C. Schaertzer, floor director; George Filmer, assistant; George W. Bauer, F. Kessling, Charles Bliss, Willlam L. Seott, Charles Jellineck and N, H. Neustadter, floflr‘ committee. Reception Committee—J, D. Abrams, G. E. Bacon, J. P. Beck, J. O. L. Brunswig, J. Cas- | ot 0 "B s cdimanint, Phil | ¢ M. Troppman, F. C. ! Wessenbers and W. @ ettt e el e ‘ serello, F. Cramer, W. P. Filmer, Jacobovieh, T. O, Jones, C. Jellineck, F. V. PERSONAL MENTION. J. F. Fosler of Marysville is at the Russ. W. P. Lynch, a mining man of Oroville, is at the Lick. J. M. Royce, a merchant of Stockton, !1s at the Grand. i Joseph McCormick, a cattle dealer ot Stockten, is at the Lick. W. M. Woodson, a merchant of May- wood, is at the Grand. H. H. Compton, a mining man of Tono- pah, Nev., is at the Russ. F. W. Sisson, a lumberman of Flag- staff, Ariz, is at the Palace, W. D. Haslan, cashier of the Santa Cruz Bank, is at the California. Hervey Lindley, the well-known lumber man of Klamathon, is at the Palace. W. Leslie, an engineer employed on the Siberian Raflway, is at the California. L. P. W. Quimby, owner of the Quimby House at Portland, Or., is at the Russ. Prince David and wife of Honolulu re- turned yesterday from San Jose. They are at the Occidental. James H. O'Brien, the well-known con- tractor and politiclan, returned yvesterday from an extended tour of Southern Cali- fornia. F. W. Peters, general freight agent; W. R. McGinnis, assistant freight manager, and C. E. Macpherson, general passenger agent of the Canadian Pacific &t Van- couver, B. C., are at the Oceldental. They are on their way to the Transcontinental Freight Bureau meeting, to be held at Portland, Or. by Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Feb. 12—The following Californians have arrived at the Lotels: From San Francisco—J. A. Veatch and E. H. Tyron, at the Marlborough; Mrs, 1. Draper, at the Park Avenue: G. H Francoeur, at the Earlington; C. W, Mills, at the Grand Union; W. W. Treat, at the Ashland; E. D. Baker, at the Navarre; H. C. Clarke, at the Sturtevant; J. S. Hanson, at the Pabst; T. Henshaw ana Mrs. T. W. Hansom, at the Holland; Dr. I. Newmann, at the Gilsey. Los Angeles—A. L. Bréwn, at the Hoff- man; H. Laughiin Jr., at the Grand; Mrs W. E. Rothary, at the Union Square; Mrs. N. E. Smith, at the Imperial. e Where Four States Meet. In the United States there s but one “four corners,” where four States and Territories join. More than this, it is the only place of its kind in the world. This point, upon a spur of the Carizo Moun- tains, 1s the one where Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona join. At no other place on the globe do we find four States, Territories or provinces uniting to form such a junction. This spot s not easy of access and few tourists ever see it, yet a monument stands at the point, erected by United States surveyors and inscribed with the names of the States and Territories whose boundaries meet there. The point is reached by a trail from the road leading from Navajo Springs, in Colorado, in the Ute Indian Reservation, to the S8an Juan River. The trail leaves the road and crosses the river near Scott's trading post in Utah, and leads to the monument, which is of the usual type erected by Government surveyors to mark State cor- ners. A former monument was destroyed 2 few years ago by Navajo Indians and only the ulm of rocks was left, but dur- ing the past summer another surveying visited the 'Y“ and rsbum the monument, leaving as it is shown in the pictu: | | The following named compose the sub- | v. | | 5 | Kessling, Ottenheimer, §. Myrson, N. w. H. Neustadter, §. G. W R nnington, J. uck- Storni, W. Thoma: Van Schaick, D. W Hindle. H. A CHANCE 70O SMILE Mabel—What do you think of the Rev. vou call that heaven?—Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Nexdore—I guess you've noticed the new way my daughter has of playing | the piano. Where do you suppose she got the idea from? Mrs. Peppery—From per- versity, I suppose.—Philadelphia Press. What | Hope Most Original ington L Have Coloni THE SUNDAY MORE CALIFORNIA THE OTHER SAN .;.{ 82 feet 8 inches, Dr. Leach's idea that there will be few l(i any men in heaven? Maud—Huh! Would = How | Played the “Fiddle” in Dawson. BY MAYOR EUGENE E. SCHMITZ Grow Up. Fifteen Grammar School Girls Picked at Random Reply tc This Question Read Their Unique Answers. San Francisco. How to Serve a George Wash- San Francisco Women Who Look for ‘‘Brockman’s Mav- erick.” Eight Pages of Color That Are Pleasing to the Eye. Correct Fashions for Lent. PAPERS COMBINED. ANSWERS TO QL ERIES. DIME OF 150 A Reader, Towles, Pla- cer County, Cal. None of the dimes of 1594, y-four that were coined in San Franci command a premium. DERAL JAIL—S. L., City. There is | no such institution In Californla as a “Federal j When parties are sen- tenced in the Federal courts to terms of imprisonment the Judge imposing the sentence designates some jail in the State in which to detain the prisoner. Prison- | ers sentenced in the Federal courts have | been sent to the County Jail of Alameda County. STEAMERS—Subscriber, City. The gross tonnage of the Oceanic is 17,274, net | 6996; length, 704 feet; breadth, 68 feet, and depth 49 feet. The gross tonnage of the Celtic, launched last April, is 20,83 tons: net, 13650; length, 700 feet; breadth, 75 feet, and depth 49 feet. The displacement of the Celtic at load draft of 36 feet & inches is 37,700 tons; more than double that of the largest warship afloat, and 10,300 | tons more than was that of the Great Eastern. The measurements of the last named vessel were length 631 feet, breadth depth 48 feet 2 inches, and gross tonnage 15,915 tons. The meas- | urements of the Deutschland are: Length, 668% feet; breadth, 67% feet, and depth, | 44 teet. Her gross tonnage is 16,000 tons. —_—————— Ex. strong hoarhound candy. Townsend’s.® ————— Cal. glace fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend's.* i ————— i Look out for 81 4th st., front of barber and | grocery; best eyeslasses, specs, 3¢ to 40c.* pachatom . rrihe s ks Townsend's California glace fruits, 50c a pound, in fire-etched boxes or Jap. bas- kets. A nice present for Eastern friends. 639 Market st., Palace Hotel building. * — L —e——— | Special information supplied dm]y to | business houses and public men by the | Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 on:- | zomery street. Telephone Main I | o —— to Be When | Society Girl in uncheon. al Costumes. CALL PRINTS STORIES THAN ALL FRANCISCO SUNDAY

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