The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 20, 1902, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

el 3 The THURSDAY.....orz sorvsss ins _..MARCH 20, 1902 (l JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Address A1 Communicstions to W. 8, LEAKE, Manager. MANAGER'S OFFICE. ‘Telephone Press 204 e -t ¥UBLICATION OFFICE...Market and Third, 8. ¥. Telephone Press 201.- 217 to 221 Stevensom St. Press 202. - Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cemts Per Weel% Single Copies. i3 Cents. - Terms by Mail, Including Postage: EDITORIAL ROOMS Tele) DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one year..... $6.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), 6 months. 8.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 momths. 1.80 DAILY CALL—By Single Month. 88e FUNDAY CALL, Onme Year.. 1.5 WEEKLY CALL, Onme Year. 1.00 All postmasters are authorized to recelve subscriptions. Bemple coples will be forwarded when requested. Mall gubscribers In ordering change of address should te particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order i insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. CAKLAND OFFICE. ++.1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Forelgn Advertising, Marquette Building, Chioags. (long Distance Telephone “‘Central 2619.") NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON:.ccscevnncceessss . Herald NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: ETEPHEN B. SMITH........30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS Eberman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Fremont House; Auditorfum Hotel. NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 81 Union Sguare; Murray Hill Hotel ERANCH OFFICES—&27 Montgomery, correr of Clay, open untfl 9:80 o'clock. 800 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until $:80 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until 9 o'clock. 1096 Va- lencia, open until § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until ® o'clock. 2200 Fillmore, open until 9 p. m. Northern Hotel; STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION OF THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Month of February, 1902. February February February February February February February February February February February | February | Februa | February | February | February | February ¥ February Total February +++ 1,695,380 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN On this before me, Willlam T. Hess, a Notary Publi city and county aforesaid, W. ) FRANCISCO. | % in and for J. Martin, the San Francisco Call, City and County of San Francisco, which number divided by twen | W. J. MARTIN. bed and sworn to 1902 before me W. T. HESS. ate of California, Boom 1015, Claus Spreckels BEldg. 5th day of March, 1902, personally appu:;:i and now being sworn | according 1o law, declares that he is the business manager of 2 daily mewspaper published ‘in the | State of California, and | that there were printed and distributed du-ing the month of February, 1902, one million six hundred and ninety-five thou- | i three hundred and eighty (1.695,380) copies of the said | hooad and insult. -eight (the number of of issue)'gives an average daily circulation of 60,549 coples. this 15th day of Public in and for the City and County of San Fran- AMUSEMENTS. Grand Opera-house—*‘Cleopatrs.” Fischer's Theater—Little Christopher.”. Califania— Nathan Hale.” Tivol ‘The Serenade.’” “The Bowery After Dark.” ‘On and Of." Columbia—""La Madeleine.” Orpheum—Vaudeviile. Mechanies! Pavilion—Norris & Rowe's Big Ehows. Oakland Racetrack-—Reces to-day. AUCTION SALES. ay, at 11 o'clock, Howard street. & Menton—¥riday, Marcn 21, at 12:15 o'clock, res Hale & Company, at soom 22, Chronicle 150 head of iy Fio MONG the bills before Congress which may be justly looked upon as matters NATIONAL HEALTH BOARD. of impor- A are two relating to the conservation of public health by the establishment of a national com- upervise all matters that ate likely to h State and Territorial Board of Health on to is t0 have a representative on the commission, which ! scope of action is to be thoroughly national. The advocates of the proposed commission assert upon its establishment it will be possible to do with the old system of quarantine by substi- for a system of coast and interior disin® ch will prove more effective in dealing epidemics and at the same time be less difficult Jess ivjurious to trade in its operation. e question of dealing with infectious diseases is se a complex one, but it would seem in our stage of civilization to be quite possible for sanitary experts, backed with official authority, to devise er means of protecting public health than d rantine system, which has come down immemorial time. The very establish- Jment of a quarantine gives rise to a panic that is often far worse than the disease against which the quarantine was set up. Moreover, nearly every quarantine of a city of considerable size seriously in- terferes with trade, injures industry and causes a loss of work and wages to many thousands of people. We-ourselves had an- experience of some of the of the quarantine system during the scare our troubles were ht in ‘comparison to those which repeatedly have fallen upon the Eastern and Southern: States by rea- son of smallpox or cf yellow fever. Every time a serious outbreak of cne of those diseases occurs trade is interrupted, and sometimes so great is the alarm that communities refuse to permit the run- ning of trains to their depots from an infecfed dis- trict. In short, business is at times brought almost to a standstill in panic-stricken cities, and the whole country suffers more or less in consequence. If the proposed National Health ‘Commission ac- complish one-half what its advocates promise it will well repay whatever cost it may entail upon the Gov- ernment. Even if large allowance be. made for exag- geration and undue expectations on the part of over- sanguine promoters of the new plan, it will still be worth a trial. - Certainly it is time the issue were gJealt with as a national question. Plagues and pes- tilences do not respect State lines, and consequently cannot be so effectively mastered and checked by separate State action as by the Federal Government. The proposed legislation, ‘then, may not be perfect, !.mt it is in the right direction and should be acted apon at this session. . tion wh q om about the bubonic plague, but THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY,. THE CLERICAL PARASITE. PON every stately gx:o“}th, prolific nature fastens some kind of parasite, Crea- tures incapable of self support affix themselves to some stronger and nobler crea- ture and fatten upon.jt. The phenomenon appears in the moral as well as in the physical world. The“most august institutions among ‘men are affected by para- sites. They swarm in the court, the camp and the council hall. not free from them, for as Defoe has told us: Wherever God erects a house of prayer : The Devil always builds a chapel there. casts forth the pest. A maxim that has come dowu to us from the ancients says: “The worst is. pro- duced by the corruption of the best.” The human parasite is by that rule more pernicious than the insect. Those which prey upon the higher institutions of men are worse than those that prey upon the lower. Those that fasten and fatten upon the church are then the most pernicious of all, for they are of the breed of men who distort religion itself i:}to viciousness and transform a sacred office into a safe nest where they can lie in comparative security and sting with impunity, until the stinging becomes intolerable and the church The evolutior of a clerical parasite is an easy study in human history. young cleric with an attractive presence, personal magnetism, easy assurance with a showy talent for speaking and writing, but possessed of no deep reverence for his calling, nor re- spect for his own dignity, animated by an inordinate vanity, greedy of praise and delight- ing in flattery, and having no moral scruple nor well balanced judgment, and his de- velopment sooner or later into a parasite on the church is inevitable. The process is as simple as it is natural. The young cleric pleases his venerable superiors by his youth, his talent and his seeming zeal. They praise him and promote him. He rises rapidly over the heads of older men and soon attains a conspicuous - position. Once there, however, his innate weakness displays itself. His superiors observe he is not equal to the dignity assigned him, that he js more avid of cheap praise than of wise coun- sel. They rebuke him and he resents it. In his vanity he persuades himself that they are jealous of him, and it becomes necessary to remove him from his high position. Irritated by the condemnation of his superiors he turns for consolation to the praise and plaudits of the ignorant. He learns to love flattery in its coarsest form. He appeals more and more to the rabble, becomes the sycophant of the mob. Swollen with a vanity that rot- tens as it swells, he arrives at last to a point where he mocks at dignity, derides superiority, scoffs at men in the highest office, and by his offensiveness of speech compels his su- periors to dismiss him trom all official position whatever. of any service to the church by which he lives. He has become a parasite. { Once having reached and accepted the degradation of a parasite’s life, the worst | characteristics of the man’s nature rapidly develop into a swollen and abnormal growth. I'For him thereafter the veracities, the dignities and even the decencies of life have no mean- |ing. He not only loses the serene grace: of clerical dignity, but he abandons even the 0 ‘ common courtesies of a gentleman. In his eagerness to keep himself before the public 40 | and to retain the praise of the unreflecting which has now grown to be almost necessary ¢ | to his life, he speaks on all possible occasions, and in each succeeding speech goes fur- Even the church itself ig Given a Thus dismissed he is no longer ther and further in his mad efforts to win the applause of the vulgar. He becomes a com- | mon scold. His invective sinks to billingsgate. Hardly any one of sufficient-eminence | to be noted in the community escapes his assault. To use a phrase which Charles Sumner | has made classic, “He casts the loose expectoration of his eloquence now upon this man 5\ not wholly lost. upon that.” Respect for the church in whiech he still poses as a cleric compels men to submit in silence. Even where he is condemned he is not always named, for there is a reverence for the sacredness of the church which prevents men from assisting a vain- glorious parasite in making a public scandal of his career even when he seeks it by false- There is one infinite advantage which the human parasite has over the insect. There | is a conscience within him which he can never wholly silence and through its prompt- ings he may be brought to repent and to atone. The clerical parasite so long as he re- mains young is not beyond the hope of good men. There is a chance that the dignities by | which he is surrounded, the influence of venerable men whom in his folly he has derided, but who with a high solicitude are still willing to help him back to the better paths, may in the end affect him more deeply than the shouts and clamors of mobs; and so through | those good influences he may be led to see the error of his way and return to render | faithful service where he is now but a parasite. Humanity is not severe upon ‘those who [ truly repent, and those who have become the worst by the corruption of the best have {only to be true to their better selves and they will yet live to fulfiil the promise of their | youth and win once more the praise of their superiors. Upon that truth all human parasites should ponder in the silences of the night when the praise of fools has died out from their ears. Let them then remember:they are So long as the lamp holds out to burn, The vilest sinner. may return. T URING his life and concerning the incidents D of his public career we have dealt freely with the late Governor Altgeld. He was in all re- spects one of the most remarkable figures of his time. His material successes—for, entering Chicago past 25 with fifty dollars as his sole capital, within twelve years he had acquired a million—were won entirely by the exercise of the perfect freedom of the indi- vidual, which he exerted all of his great. ability to i destroy for others by sinking it in the dead sea of | communism. Not many of our public men of any time have exceeded him in capacity, and not one has excelled him in its trained and energetic use. Any analysis -of his principles, to determine their | classification, will be disputed by his friends and fol- |lowers, and even his enemies will not agree in any. | conclusion as to his guiding philosophy. In our i judgment he was a communist who sought the mil- lennium of a common level by anarchistic means: | While he had sat on the bench and had been Gov- ! ernor of a great State, he keenly and constantly an- ! tagonized the purposes for whi¢h others understand | government to have been instituted among men. His | temper was saturnine and his manner austere, It {was said, and not by his enemies, that he did not | know how to laugh, and he had none of the traits of | good-fellowship. Yet within his sphere he wielded | «n influence in which he had no rival and no peer. { - No one can tell the extent to which the incidents | of his early life permanently embossed its austere features upon his character. He swas, German born, served an enlistment in our Civil War, which began when he was 16 years old, worked his way to an academic education and wore out his shoes tramping westward from St. Louis in search of a career. . Ad- mitted to the bar at 25, he entered upon law and poli- tics at the same time in Missouri, and went from there to Chicago to become a millionaire. In that career there is nothing to induce the acrid ferment that affected his character. Others of our public men have had a start as unpromising and years as strenuous. Garfield struggled harder and so did Cleveland, but during the time of theif testing and trial they are known to have been optimists, to have let none of the searing fires of trial brand their tem- per nor check their cheerfulness of spirit. Not so with Altgeld. Though he won out, acquiréq fams and great fortune in the same social state in which hi scendent powers in smiting that state and seeking its overthrow. A B In some respects his life need not be vainly sought for good example. - He was a personally honest man, Many things in his administration of Illinois. remain unexplained, but it is not expected that when the light finds them at last it will reveal his corruption. His public offenses, and we have no desire. to use a |is strange how some people become grossly care- 4 trials were endured, he spent his life ag,d‘its “t{_an-) THE PASSING OF ALTGELD. preserver of human society. His course in thé strike of 1894 was strictly\ revolutionary, and had he not met a strongcf man than himself in President Cleveland it is believed that every State government north of the Ohio River would have been _paralyzed by in- surrection. Dr. Barth, a member of the German Reichstag, who traveled with him in his stump campaign in 1896, regarded him as the ablest and bravest enemy of all government that had appeared in any age, and de- clared that if his physical strength and opportunity equaled his will he was capable of destroying every government on earth. The passing of this singular and, in many of its aspects, sinister figure permits an analysis of its fea- tures and purpose that may be instructive. He leaves no successor in our public life. Compared to him his followers and imitators are pigmies. They are indeed mere mannikins which his fiery spirit in- spired. He wasfull of the forces of destruction, of revolution. Let us credit him with the belief that beyond the tempest he sought to invoke and after it had comminuted the social structure and ground it to powder he looked for a recrystallization in some form of order, and not to the chaos which is the hope of anarchy. D — According to New York reports the visitors to Prince Henry’s yacht while she lay at that port were so eager to get souvenirs that they came very near looting the cabin of everything movable, even some of the curtains being carried away. A little more of that sort of thing and the metropolis will find it necessary to treat the souvenir craze as petty larceny whenever a distinguished visitor comes to town. ST B New Jersey anarchists have attempted again * to commit murder. It scems about time for New Jer- sey to institute a vigorous house-cleaning. and to purge herself of some of her social disease or live among the sisterhood of States as nmiember. AN Sl Mr. Carnegie’s munificence mill is said to have turned out donations for forty libraries in one bunch, and it is now becoming evident that the American town that has no “Carnegie” will in the next genera- ‘tion have a distinction to be proud of. The yellow journals -have been “doing things” again. This time it was an, unwarranted, black- guardly attack upon a member of the House of Rep- resentatives. This new triumph will probably receive the customary self-applause. s i David B. Hill, it is said, is to be made the custo- dian of all gubernatorial booms in New York. ' It harsh term, were against the law in its function as a less of what may be of some value to them. an unclean | ARCH 20, 1902. |POPE LEO SELECT ASAMERICAN CON as the American consultor on the of America, and, second, because it pays by birth and education.. His classical co was called to the chair of sacred Seript self to further study of the Holy Script: Syria, Asia Minor and Greece, and for t of the Franciscan order. modern questions affecting Holy Writ. fundamental, far reaching and tremend REY. DR. CHARLES P. GRANNAN OF NEW YORK, WHO 1S THE PA- PAL CHOICE FOR AMERICAN CONSULTOR ON THE COMMISSION ON QUESTIONS CONCERNING HOLY WRIT. cerning Holy Writ, is a priest of the archdiocese of New Ycrk. pointment gives immense satisfaction to Amerficflg cause it recognizes for the first time in such conspicuous de; THE Very Rev. Dr. Charles P. Grannan, who has beenh named by the Pope Bardstown, Ky., and finished at Montreal. of the Propaganda, Rome, where for seven years he studled philosophy and the- ology, taking the degree of doctor in both. On his return to America he was engagad In parochial work in New York, becoming canonically resident of that archdiocese. in the Catholic University at Washington as professor of sacred Secripture. English speaking part of Catholicity is further represented on by the Rev. Dr. Robert F. Clark of the archdiocese of Westminster, England, and the Rev. David Fleming, the Irish scholar who is at present the superior general S HIM SULTOR Pontifical -Commission on Questions Con- His ap- Catholics, first, be- gree the scholarship honor to their favorite educational pro- Ject, the Catholic University of America. The Rev. Dr. Grannan is anr American urse was begun at St. Thomas College, He then went to the Urban College After two or three years he ure and dogmatic theology at Mount St. Mary's College, Emmittsburg, Md. He was called to the Catholic University be- fore its opening, in 1889, and'spent two years in Paris and Berlin, devoting him- ures. He traveled in FEgypt, Palestine, he last ten years has been in active work The the commission Pontifical commissions on the Holy Scriptures are not new. The only signifi- cant part of the present commission is its recognition of the fact that there are The questions before the commission are ously important, say American Catholics. SRy / ANSWERS TO QUERIES. NETHERSOLE—Subseriber, City. Olga Nethersole, the actress, was born in Lon- don January 18, 1870. SHARKEY AND MEXICAN PETE— Subscriber, City. On May 7, 1901, Sharkey lost to Peter Everett, ‘““Mexican Pete,” on a foul. DIMES—W. A. V., City. Dimes of 188 and of 1893 do not command a premium. The only ones of 1894 that are. premium coins are those that were coined in San Francisco. ARCTIC CIRCLE~F. A., Santa Clara, Cal. The Arctic circle is an imaginary line passing around the north pole at a distance from it equal to the obliquity of the elliptic, or 23% degrees. NO PREMIUM—O. F. A., Palisade, Nev. There is no premium offered for a $10 piece of 1848 nor for a 50-cent piece of 1857 nor for a quarter of 1853, unless it is one without arrowheads at the date and rays around the eagle. BLYTHE ESTATE—E. 8. G., Florencs, Ariz. The Supreme Court of California rendered its decision in the Blythe case on the last day of November, 1885, and the United States Supreme Court on the last day of April, 1897. The fee of W. H. H. Hart in that case was $400,000. A MISSING BROTHER—E. B, City. If you desire to obtain information about a brother who years ago went to Valpa- rajso and was a teacher :n a college there, but do not know the name of the college, address a letter of inquiry to Robert E. Mansfield, United States Con- sul at Valparaiso, Chile. MINING FIRM—P. E. C., Ri¢hmond, Cal. The directories of San Francisco zor the years 1860 to 1870 inclusive fail to show that there was a mining firm of San Francisco known as “‘Fair, Flood & Burns.” There was a mining firm known as the Bonanza firm, composed of Flood, ,O’'Brien, Fair and Mackay. DRAW POKER-D. H., Merced, Cal. In draw poker ‘“‘the blind” is the amount of thé ante deposited prior to the deal. “‘Straddle” is to put in the pool a sum or amount double that of the ante. No piayer save the ane directly to the left of “the age” can straddle the ante. When, however, one does this, then the next on his left may straddle his straddle, and so it may continue in turn until the limit of the game is reached. Each straddle costs deuble the preceding dne. The last strad- dle has the last say before the draw. BUILDING IN CASINO—J. C., Center- wville, Cal. In the game of casino should a player build up a card to a certain de- 'nemination and his opponenc decline to build it up higher, he, the first player, wmay not alter his build, but must take it with a card of the same denomination; he 1is, however, at liberty to make another build either of the same or of any other denomination, or he may pair or combine any other cards before taking up his first build, but he must comply with one of the above conditions before playing a card which will not do either. RAINFALL—M. N, City. In the United States rain is officially measured by some one under the direction of the weather buredu. The rainfall is ascertained by means of a rain gauge. The collector ot the gauge may have any diameter—one of about six to eight inches is generally used—it must be of thin sheet metal and eylindrical in form. The mouth of the col- lector should be from one to two feet above the level upon which it is placed The rain collected in this should flow with the least possible loss to the receiver or ‘holder, where it is protected agains. evaparation. The holder should be large. enough to contain all the rain that may be caught in the heaviest single fall ot rain. A graduated scalé on the receiver shows the amount of rain that has fallen. - ~ACHANCE TO.SMILE. “T belleve,” sald the boarder ‘at the head of the table, “you are something of | a lepidopterist, Miss Peller.” | “In an amateur way only, Mr. McGin- nis,” replied the young woman in the next seat. ““Well, here's a butter fly you may have,” he said, pointing at it as he passed the dish to her. ‘Whereupon she promptly stuck a pin in him.—Chicago Tribune. “What Billy Mason needs,” remarked the political journalist, “is one or two personal organs.” “H'mph!” said the plain citizen. “Doesn’t he make enough noise with his vocal organs?’—Chicago Tribune. A Boston reader has discovered three split infinitives in the President's mes- sage. This is an average of one split to every five columns. However, nobody has discovered any bad breaks in it.— Kansas City Journal. “I wrote to him the other day that I thought it would be kinder for me not to remit the check he asked for. Now he writes: “ ‘Dear Father, I shall never forget your unremitting kindness.’ "—Tid-Bits. GIVE FIRST LUNCHEON OF A SERIES A delightful luncheon was given yestor- day by the ladies of the whist section of the California Club. It was the first ot a series to be given every two months. The guests of honor on this occasion were Mrs. Lovell White, Mrs, George Law Smith and Mrs. A. L. Cotton. The lunch- eon. was served in the banquet room of a downtown restaurant. The elaborate menu was lengthened with clever toasts and two papers were read by Mrs. L. Hertz and Miss Semple, Mrs. E. P, Schell r:i:;lm;‘an of the whist section, presided er usual tac Bt soare t and grace. Those Mrs. Lovell Wy Mrs. Aylett Cote Mrs, George Law Smith, tz, Mrs. Elsner. Mra. McCabe, Miss Alice Washburn, Miss Tessa: Semple, Mrs. J. A. Lord, Mrs. T. J. McCrossen, Miss McClossen, Mrs, Green- wood, Mrs. Coleman, Mrs. Jackson, Mrs. Deahl and Mrs, Bickel. - arsw ‘The members of the Laurel Club enjoy- ed a pleasant and profitable session yes- terday at the Sorosis clubhouse, 1520 Cali- fornia street. After the business meeting an-excellent programme wasg, rendered, consisting of a recitation, “Vashtl,” by Mrs. Dohrmann; a violin number by Miss Mary Casmore, and a vocal solo by Mrs. ‘Wilbur Swett, in addition to an able dis- cussion on “Readable Books” by Mrs. Ella M. Sexton. The different features of the entertainment were enthusiasti- cally ‘received by the appreciative audi- ence, and ithe afternoon proved a pleasant one. Refreshments and a reception foi- lowed the programme. & e The ladies of the Deutscher Club en- tertained their friends at Golden Gate Hall last evening and the reception was largely attended, about 300 guests being present. An excellent musical programme was given and dainty refreshments were served during the evening. iy g Miss Rowena Burns was guest of honor 4t a-luncheon given on Tuesday by Mrs. W. W. Grissim at her home, 1303 Leaven- worth street. The affair was pleasantly arranged in every particular. o e Mrs. Merritt Weed has returned from an extended trip to Honolulu. R Miss Edna Robinson, daughter of C. P. Robinson, 1213 Jones street, is at present sojourning in Alabama. Miss Elsie Tallant is again in the city after a trip to San Jose. Miss Elizabeth Huntington has returned to her hom on Jackson street after a rest at her ranch near Santa Barbara. Mrs. H. E. Huntington and Miss Clara Hunt- ington are still in New York. s e ® Mrs. H. M. Fortescue went to New York Tuesday on a trip of business and pleas- ure. She will spend the Easter holidays with her brother, H. Stobo Northrup, who is at present engaged with the Mary Marnering Company and is playing in “Janice Meredith.” Violins of Porcelain. A well-known manufacturer of musical instruments in Germany—Max Freyer— has introduced a process for making vio- lins from clay. These fiddles are of the ordinary pattern, but are cast in molds, so that each instrument is an exact coun- terpart of its fellow. It Is sald—but it is somewhat hard to believe—that the porce- lain body acts as a better resonator than one of wood, and that the tone of the in- strument {s‘theérefore singularly pure and full. The same inventor is alse making mandolins of china clay, and it seems that they are much appreciated in southern countries, wheré the instrument ig re- garded more seriously than it is in Brit- ain, The obvious disadvantage of a mu- sical instrument being made of china clay is the brittleness of that material, well”as its weight, but both these draw- backs seem ‘to have been forgotten. For some time we have heard rumors of most excellent violins being made of aluminum, and this metal, from its extreme lightness and other qualities, would seem to be admirably adapted to such a purpose. ———— Ex. strong hoarhound candy. Townsend's.* —_—— Cal. glace fruit 50c per 1b at Townsend's.* P TR D . 7 Look out for §1 4th st., front barber and grocer; best eyeglasses, specs, 10c to 40c.* —— e Townsend's California glace fruit, sc a pound, in fire-etched boxes or Jap. bas- Kets. A nice present for Eastern friends. 639 Market st., Palace Hotel bullding. < ———————— Special information supplied daily business houses and public men b; Fress Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 510 gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 —e——— Sometimes it is what a man doesn’t say that. is most interesting. to the ont- . SUNDAY’S CALL 9C000000000000000000000000090000000000000000000C0Q00000 >000000000000000000000000090C00000000000000000000003000 900000000000000000000000000000000TFO0000000A000630000009 0| Do You Want to Sec a Pholo- §°52552338522 graph of Rennett? 9909900003 One hundred photographs wers submits H s 3 b b ted by The Sunday Call to Krone, Lehas Mo caoooocs nier, Stengel and Schell, the only men §5255522252329 known to have seen the murderer of Nora i b b S pih L Fuller. From their selections a compo- 0 099009599905 site phofo gives a likensss of Bennett §°5°°°922°999° » ¥ Qo000 00000 Shovld;lhipping in Schools §:2352553555° Abolished? 35539850838 Read What Teacher, Parent and Pugpil bydbdbs o b Have to ; o R My Expericnces in Baler. §255523232323 By Captain Detchemendy. 55520000000 50090000090 Can You Describe Your Best 96990550 Friend? 08050600 06090000 Anoth, Sua. 30900000 er Test Next day. 88550080 58650600 “MaKing a Home.” 26800000 90680888 AqEv:ry-DnyTalkbEvery—DtyPu’k 60000000 ty Rev. F. K. Baker. Qooo000O y Yy G 2056500001 BEEEEERE The Romances of Staniord. o Q o ° o o o o Pages of Intera‘sljig'bsurk; ©000000000000000000P0000000000B000000GI00000 ©000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 800000000000000000000000000000000000000033a %909 00000000000 9 900900990003 0000G0 00600000 00000000 00060000 o«000000 00000000 0006000 00000000 00000000 00000000 0000000 00000000 ?VT NEXT SUNDAY, MARCH 30, THE SUNDAY CALL’S GREAT EASTER EDITION. of human interest appertaining to the glorious s Easter Day. t ) 4

Other pages from this issue: