The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 10, 1902, Page 2

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o THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1902. > DR. LAWLOR CONFESSES Continued From Page One. mpson is a sweet-faced lady of snowy white hair. = manner is such that| children whom nature ssed with full reasoning pow- won by it. ¢ furnished parlor of Mrs. Hatch and Young listen- | of what she had seen at | the Glen Home for Feeble-minded | Childr nder the rule of Dr. Lawlor. | She of her appointment as a com- | home and how she was/ arge of Paxton Hall. She de-| Fd k hole” that had been the ward by order of Lawlor »vs had been immured in there | time for the slightest in-| es. "BLACK»}i‘OL‘E" AND INSANITY.| The witness gave the names of many boy d been cast into the dungeon | C a diet of bread and wa- how Ralph Fraser had y ix , and how, | placed in the “black | 1sane. She described in nate boys were left | e filthy condi- | ted while under- | pani. placed 1 <o told how she had | y Lawlor and | " because the lie Bresnan, an | | ) cross-examine the | tifully. He was in- nd asked the witness and a lot e’ tortur: was in- Mrs. | corded the newspaper d_contrast to that of or- DAVIS TELLS OF DUNGEON. Dr lied as his first witness 3. H who works on a Heard said that and was a better Osborne. hed out to allege often struck the hile he (the witn s an orderly. Heard ften helped to place tic boys by order atch informed Dr. vestigators were not| e of hearing any evi- Dr. Osborne had con-| t that they w. *harges of gro: r were true. | rmer barber and now | - home, was then called | Dr. Lawlor. oundi statement n the “black hole,” | believe that it had ysician at the | he had never wlor as to the vs, but that r superintendent, at boys had been La r and that r treat- y Lawlor, he ed that @ to lose his position. FEARED LOSS OF POSITION. my work,” said I interfered that I saw many of the terfering with Dr. ipline and I decided s best for me to keep quiet.’ s then proceeded to state that of Dr. Lawlor there w: pt to belittle the admin’ Osborne, the former su- fect angel’ in his treat- ren and similar evidence Mabel Gilroy and Miss for four years n in at the h had seen infraction > cots and kets fa iron rings. ow long the answered that it at a time. She trapped dow girl would not LAWLOR TAKES STAND. r th k the witness stand e admitted that the fitted up under his t he never used it | They proceeded to the Palace Hotel and | | Al “and I gave them bread and water in lr;xl'd(-r to make the restraint more forci- e, ‘“When the boys sent for me and prom- ised to be good, why I at once ordered them to be taken out of the cell.” Lawlor then entered on a tirade of ab- rd statements as to his being found guilty without a trial and proceeded to abuse the name of his predecessor in of- fice, declaring that “Dr. Osborne is held up as having wings.” Lawlor's {mproper statements _were | promptly cut shert by the investigating | physicians, who reminded him that they werc there to probe into the charges of cruelty to the children of the home. ! Wken Lawlor was asked why he had | discontinued the use of the “black hole” he made the following reply: “I discontinued the room when Mrs. v, the former hcusekeeper, was dis- missed. When she was dismissed, there were no further complaints as to the mis- | conduct of the children.” | TRIM CADETS WIN PRELATE'S PRAISE - AT REVIEW IN THE SANTA CRUZ CAMP Young Soldiers of the League of the Cross Make a Splen- did Showing During a Ceremony Attended by Arch- bishop Christie of Portland and Other Prominent Men| INQUISITORS SATISFIED. At this point Drs. Hatch and Young ated that they had heard sufficient evi- dence to warrant them in coming to a conclusion and reporting to Governor Gage. The investigating physicians took | the afternoon train for San Francisco and | arrived in this city at 6:30 last evening. | were closeted with Governor Gage for | more than an hour. The doctors declined to state what transpired during the inter- view with the Governor, but stated that they had been requested to file a written ort this morning. ! Governor Gage will have the handed to him before noon to-day, and | D. Lawlor's head is expected to fall into the basket before sunset as a scapegoal for the political jobbery by which the | chief executive turned the Home for | Feeble-Minded Children into a home for | “job chasers,” and added another dis- | grace to his administration. HEARIN AND MRS. O’MALLEY MUST STAND TRIAL Will Have to Answer Charge of Stealing a Lot of Jewelry and Diamonds. PHILADELPHIA, July $.—Wiliam J. | Hearin, who is in prison here, and Mr: e O'Malley, wife of Professor Austin O’'Malley, an instructor in Notre Dame College, South Bend, Ind., will be ar-| raigned for a hearing to-morrow on a | charge of stealing diamonds and jewelry from the home here of Joseph O'Malley, brother of Professor O'Malley. The lat- ter is in St. Agnes Hospital seriously ill from the effects of poison. He was brought tg this city recently by his broth- er from South Bend for treatment. report wife, who accompanied him, stopped at Dr. O'Mall ome. During her resi- | dence there several hundred dollars’ | worth of jewelry was stolen from the house, and Mrs. O'Malley and Hearin | were arrested as they were about to board | a train for South Bend. | TORPEDO-BOAT DESTROYER PASSES SUCCESSFUL TRIAL WASHINGTON, July 9.—The Navy De- artment has recelved telegrams from the | Union Iron Works and from Lieutenant | Fenton of the trial board at San Fran- | sco, announcing that the torpedo-boat destroyer Paul Jones had passed a suc- | cessful trial. The lieutenant sa; | Official trial, maximum speed 28.9 336 revolutions and 7800-horsepower; 27 for one hour at 322 revolutions, Originally the Paul Jones was required i to e 30 knots in a standardizing trial, but requirement was reduced o 28, and on the s run the requirement was reduced to 1 b 50 the boat has complied with the trial condi- tions. The Navy Department has accepted prelim- inarily the torpedo boat destroyer Perry, built by the Union Iron Works. PRINCE FBANC{S -JOSEPH WILL ALLEGE CONSPIRACY Hearing of the Charges Against Him Is Resumed in a London Police Court. LONDON, July 9.—The hearing of the charges against Francis Joseph of Bra- ganza, who was a member of the Austro- Hungarian mission to the coronation of King Edward, and other men, was re- svmed in the Southwark police court to- day, and” attracted much attention. Sir Edward Clarke, the former Solicitor Gen- eral, defended the Prince. The prosecu- tor altered the charge from felony to mis- conduct, under the criminal law amend- | ment. Sir Edward intimated that the de- | fense would be conspiracy to rob and blackmail. | | MISSAGES THROUGH WATER. | French Submariné Boats to Use Wire- less Telegraphy. Special cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyright, 1902, by the Herald Publishing Company. PARIS, July 9.—A telegram from Cher- bourg s that Rear Admiral Fournier was present at the experiments in wire- less telegraphy carried out on the sub- marine boat Triton. Messages were r ed without any difficulty when under 1t is the intention of the French naval authorities to install wireless tele- | graph apparatus on board all subma- ! rines. : A B A TR { , Belgium, July 9.—The Queen of the gians (Maria Henriette) contracted ‘a chill yesterday and her condition for a while caused | grave anxiety. To-day she was better and JODOOO OO0 ACRORORORORD S s SHRORO RO OO0 HICHIHH SIS LA IR «:Dooooo&oooo o;:foom =5 RO O THE SUN RO RO IOMSHOROROH HOROICHORCS LR POSORORCHORC -OROROHCHY HORORCHDS RO A Day With the 000 United States 2 District Attorney __-'é;’ By Bertha Smith o c Do : Amateur _ Actors Ever 3 .. Become “ Professionals ? See ‘~ The Sunday Call Poster Fashions Picture Puzzles Stories of Interest By Weil Known Writers WMen Wto Perform Hazardous Feats For A Living See New Adventuresfim Of Pat and E%gggfi&pgunuoqaufifig§§g | the | of Burrows’ boathous | from Renton | Bothell or Meadow Pofit. The convict, | follow this path he had simply. te. take the | There the.bridge has been cut at the mid- { the other. | -outlaw’s favor. | son-street bridge. * Leschi — ANTA CRUZ, July 9.—The Leagué of the Cross Cadets were honored to-day by the presence of Arch- bishop A. Christie of Portland, Or., in the camp. The young sol- diers learned early in the morning of the prelate’s proposed visit, and by 9 o'clock, the hour of his arrival, the pretty tented field was as clean as the proverbial new in. P'The Archbishop, the Rev. Father O'Reil- of Portland, the Rev. Father Smith, | S. P, and Chaplain O'Ryan drove. into | Dolphin Park and watched a speclal dress parade and- a supsequent regimental re- view. His Grace received the salute ! while standing in*his carriage,.and after- ward: made most favorable comment. on excellence of the alignment, the smartness of step and the general evi- dence of military efficiency. ™. ' After the review he witnessed a.guard mount, which was followed by inspection. Aloni every avenue in- the ca the ‘Archbishop ‘walked and carefully vpserved the condition of the tents. He found them all in perfect order. He was ‘delighted with all he saw and declared that he in- tends to' organize a regiment of cadets in his Ore¢3on diocese. | 1y At nbon the Archbishop was the guestd ! >.' Leonard of the Sea Heach | of J. -F..C. Hotel, where a dinner was given in his honor. ‘Those present besides the Arch- bishop and -Mr. Leonard were the 'Rev. H. McNamee, the Rev. P. O'Ryan of San Francisco, the*Rev.”M. P, Smith; €.'8. P,;, the Rev. C. J. O'Reilly of Portland, T. ‘W. Kelly and J. J.. Doran. ] This evening the dress parade was held on Paclfic avenué, and the cadets won | much applause from the many people who | witnessed the affair. After the parade the regiment marched up the hill and the | band serenaded the School of the Holy ! the parish priest. In the town the band gave an open-alr concért from the Hotel | St. George porch. At the Dolphin bathhouse,the members of Company. A did. the ‘honors with a-mi- | itary hop. The floor manager was Lieu- | tenant J. H. Wilson and_the assistant | floor * managérs were First Sergeant] George C. Thompson, Sergeant J. Mc- oss and the Rev. Father H. McNamee, |. Lo 4 FEATURES AT LEAGUE OF THE -CROSS ENCAMPMENT IN:SANTA CRUZ. X + Merney, Corporal J. Steele and Thomas L. O'Nelil. ; Thirty members of Company M made a D ] ) OUTLAW TRACY, Continued From Page One. this time have brought him no return. He is no further advanced toward any objec- tive than he was when he landed on the | shore at Meadow Point. REPORTED IN SEATTLE. When Tracy gave the bloodhounds the slip Monday night he was in the vicinity about a half mile this side of Renton. He followed the track of the Renton car line a short dis- tance and then went up the river. To+day | he was reported in different parts of the | city. According to reports received by the Sheriff’s office he ate breakfast at Leschie Park. Later a woman living near | Madrona. Park telephoned to the office | that he was in that vicinity. In neither | case was the report correct. | If Tracy is heading again for Meadow Point_or Bothell it would be in keeping with his previous record for him to walk through the streets of Seattle. He' may have followed the lake shore on this side | to the northern suburbs, | where he would have a clean sweep lorl‘ | however, if he went in thig direction, may | have taken the east side of the lake. To old deserted ling of the Northern Pacific belt line, which ‘i&’ bdllasted but’ not easy | for travel, as far north as Mercer Slough. dle by unknown parties. Often 'a plank is | stretched acress and. if theboard.is there now Tracy would have had no obstruction in his course from one end of the lake to If desired he ‘could leave the belt line where.it, is crossed by the York wagon road. This road would place him on the slough a considerable distance above Bothell, the place around which he has lingered for so long. The surrounding country on this course would be in the It is well timbered. PATROLS IN THE CITY. ' No matter which way Tracy turned he would have to avold armeéd- men. Seat- tle was patrolled all day to-day and to-| nignt by guards. Men were stationed at | the gully on Madison street and the Madi- | and Madrona ' parks were closely watched, as were the | approaches to the northern suburbs from the south were also patrolled. Parties of | two and three were stationed on the roads | leading from the vicinity of Renton to Seattle. Others watched the roads to the Palmer cut-off.- Six Bothell ‘men lay in | ambush on the Snohomish road and sev- | | eral were placed on the bridges and | strategic positions beyond - Bothell and | Ravenna. A significant feature of the branded | man's travel seized upon those who be- | lieve he is trying to reach friends here, is the supposed method of escape from Ren- | ton last Tuesday night. A man mounted | on a stolen horse, suppesed to be Tracy, Was. seen at 5:30 o'clock Tuesday night a l little less than two miles out of Renton on the’county road. He was proceeding in the direction of Seattle. This report tangled working material furnished the deputies working in Renton to-day, be- cause. its authentic source has created considerable excitement for the greater part of the day. The horse bearing the man supposed fo be the convict was seen by Miss Florence Willlams, sister of City Attorney Sidney Williams of Renton, and Ibert . Sprague. Mr. Williams were returning to Renton from a drive out into the country in a buggy. MYSTERY OF A RIDER. The story of the encounter was told by Miss Williams as follows: “I had been watching the road ahead for several minutes, when 1 saw the out- lines of a white horse. The evening was growing very dark and 1 could not see Vvery plainly. Evidently the rider of the horse saw our buggy at the same time we looked at him, for he immediately turned the horse off the road into the brush and hedge along the roadside. I thought this act very suspicious. For that reason I watched him closer. In the shadow of a large fence and half concealed by the brush I saw the man disappear over the side of the animal opposite us. We were close upon him then, “‘As we drove by the horse I got a very good view of it, but could not see the man anywhere. The animal was gray coated and of less than ordinary height. "My sus- piclong of the ‘man and his intentions grew more when I had seen the place where he had dismounted, for it was alongside a ten-foot fence. There was no gate anywhere near the point, had he n- ended to enter the field and dismounted for that reason.” The horse seen by the young couple rid- ing in the buggy answers in every way an animal ‘stolen from the pasture of John Mordich’s farm some time Tuesday night. Mordich's report of his loss was current on the street shortly before Miss Williams had told of the experience of the night before. Mordich is certain that the horse was stolen because of there having been no opening through which the horse could )‘;s;lde escaped from the fencing about the eld. . HORSE IS MISSING. The general opinion is that should Tracy have ridden the horse up the road toward Seattle Tuesday night he probably hid the animal in the woods before making toward the lake, as it is supposed he . In that way he could have thrown the hounds completely off the scent, reached the water without any great fatigue and been ready for an opportunity to approach Seattle from the east by way of the Lake Washington shore. The horse had not been found up to a late hour to-night. A man answering the description of Tracy called at the house of C. B. Hili- man, near Kenwood station, to-night at 8 o'clock and said he wanted to use the telephone. Mr. Hillman was sitting near the telephone, and the man pushed him to one side and tock down the receiver. Mrs. Hillman says the man did not call for a number. She went outside to see about her two-year-old baby and the man followed her out and went down the street car track toward Kenwood statfon, — ‘| Meadow Point. Sprague and Miss | Mne —fe | trip to Ben Lomond to-day. Company O had a picnic at the Big Trees. Private O'Dool was court-martialed at the grove. Sergeant Hurley was the president of the court and Sergeant Riley the judge ad- vocate, Corporals O'Connor, King and Miley - were balliffs. O'Dool was found guilty of the water cure. The officer of the day is Captain Thomas | Johnston of Company K, the officer of | the guard Lieutenant H. J. Leonard of | Company N and the sergeants 'of the guard J. Fitzsimmons of Company N and | H. Moore of Company F. H | _When he came_ into-the’ house he.was carrying a gun by the barrel, with the stock down, but. when._he left he was carrying the gun under his arm, with the muzzle pointed to the ground. The Sher- iff's office was notified and a Wfl? , @ac- | companied. by Guard Carson - witl the loodhounds, " started out.:to Hiliman's ouse at once, The dogs caught the scent in ‘the kitchen and worked carefully for about fifty yards toward Kenwood sta- tion, when they began to bay and dashed off toward the lake. Flve men atcom- panied Guard Carson and the dogs, Five men were left to guard the Kil-| ‘bourne résidence, which is vacant, and an- | other squad was sent on the streetcar to Ballard to patrol between that point and It is not likely that Tracy took refuge in 'the vacant Kilbourne house, as the dogs worked past the house and headed into the timber. The posse is in charge of Deputy Corcoran, and he ab- ' solutely forbade a big crowd of armed | men to follow the squad with the dogs. ' The Hillman place is at the north end of Green Lake. P | MRS. VANHORN’'S FEAR. | | Conduct of Tracy Described by a Woman in Washington. i SAN RAFAEL, July 9.—The Mrs. Van- horn in whose home the outlaw Tracy had a meal on July 3 is the wife of Pro- fessor H. R. Vanhorn, principal of the San Rafael High School. The Vanhorns live in this city during the winter months, but rent their home in the summer and live in the north. Although Mrs. Van- horn is in the north, her husband is here. To-day he received a letter from his wife corroborating the story of the grocery boy who notifiled Sheriff Cudihee that Tracy was in the Vanhorn home. The greater part of the letter was devoted to the relating of her feeling during the time the outlaw was domiciled there. Mrs. Vanhorn wrote her husband that her timidity bordered on hysteria; that Tracy not only demanded a meal, but that he wanted a cap. She offered him an old hat, but he would not accept it, and dur- hig sojourn he searched the house | but falled to find a cap. | —_— : Cuban Editor Pessimistic. HAVANA, July 9.—Regarding the re- fusal of the bankers of Havana to make an offer on the loan of $4,000,000 de- sired by the .Government to assist the sugar cane cultivators of the island, the Diario de la Marina says to-day that the meaning of the second clause of the Platt law is vague and that such'mean- ing ~was . undoubtedly clouded by the | United States Congress. The apparent meaning of the clause, says the paper, is that Cuba can devote her surplus rev- enue only to the payment of interest and principal. of loans, The Diario says the economic future of the island is very un- certain. The action of the bankers in re- fusing this loan is charged in some Cu- ban quarters to spite. Ao L Cyclist Falls, but Wins. PRQVIDENCE, R. L, July 9.—Hugh Mc- | Lean was thrown from his wheel in the last lap of his twenty-five-mile race with Howard Freeman at the Collséum to- night, but trundled his bicycle over the tape'and was declared winner by ‘seven laps. He was badly bruised, but no bones ! were broken. In the first mile McLean ' redl{czezd ‘the werld's record from 1:23 1-3 to 1: The twenty-five miles was made in 36:15 1-5. ¥ To Assimilate Food see that your stomach and liver are in proper condition. To do it easily and pleasant- ly take Beecham's - Pills Sold Everywhere, In boxes 10c. and 25a. { the hands of a State | but food products alone. | terests he came across the continent. | sired equality to all parties alike. | objected to the power being vested solely FAVOR NATIONAL PURE FOOD LAW Dairymen and Manufact- urers Discuss Needed Legislation. Bill to Be Drafted and Sub- mitted to Congress for Passage. ISP SR PORTLAND, Or., July 9.—The National Convention of Food and Dairy Commis- sioners met in this city to-day. A. H. Jones of Illinois, president of the assoclation, read his annual statement, in | which he stated the principal object of the- association is to secure the passage by Congress of pure food laws and to have ! all foods labeled. John Hamilton of Pennsylvania deliv- ered an address on the national food law. He read a bill which will be submitted to Congress. He said the pure food laws should protect public health, should pre- vent fraud; second, such a law shoul protect foreign manufacturers; third, it should provide for proper labels; uniform- 1ty of labels is essential; fourth, it should | provide, for fixed standards of weight and analysis; fifth, the law should be within Commissioner to enforce. In his opinion, the law should not embrace drugs and chemical fluids, The application of a pure food law should be placed in the hands of experts. The Department of Agriculture, the speaker thought, was | the best body to have the enforcement of the law in charge. 3 L, M. Fraily of New Jersey spoke in be- half of the manufacturers, for whose fi)- e said the manufacturers favored national pure: food legislation, but that they \1:- e in the chief of the Bureau of Agriculture, | He wanted the convention to understand that the association of manufacturers was in favor of indorsing any national pure food bill which the convention might adopt in case it was equitable and just. Hon, H. R. Wright of Iowa read an interesting paper on the best way of en- forcing the pure food law. Hon. T. L. Monson of Colorado followed along the some line, offering some valuable sugges- tions. Dr.' Mitchell of Colorado, while not a regular delegate, was allowed to speak along the lines of better food laws. The practical enforcement of the national law —commonly known as the Grout law—in regard to oleomargarine, process butter, eté., and the general effect in the various States was taken up by H. C. Adams of Wisconsin, and replied to by F. J. H. Kracker of New York and George M. ‘Whitaker of Massachusetts. ' Commercial Traveler Killed. MISSOULA, Mont., July 9.—George C. Rowan, one of the best-known traveling men in the Northwest, met death in an accident here to-day. Rowan, with sev- eral companions, had got into the hotel ‘bus to catch a train. The driver had left his team for a few moments, when a bi- cyclist ran into the horses, friglitening them. Kowan, in attempting to get out of the 'bus, was thrown head foremost, breaking his neck. Four other passengers were slightly hurt. Rowan was the gen- eral manager for the Northwest and Brit- ish Columbia for the Swift Company of | Chicago. S Explosion in a Smelter. BUTTE, Mont., July 9.—In an explosion of matter in the converter building of the ‘Washoe Smelting Works at Anaconda this evening George Persic was killed and John Galich probably fatally injured. Geéorge Goodwin and John Nadeau were badly burned and cut by flying particles of molten matter. The men were engaged in dumping a ladle of hot slag, when the molten metal broke through and came in contact with water, causing the explo- sion. All the men were thrown many feet. Persic and Galich were fearfully burned. a | BICYGLES TELL OF THE FLIGHT San Diego Officers Find the Wheels of the Fugitives. Criminals Who Broke Jail Are Probably Now in Mezxico. S SAN DIEGO, July 7~Little trace has been found of J. M. Brooks, H. R. Hall and Bessie Hall, the three prisoners who succeeded in breaking from the County Jail here last night. They took a bicycle from a lodging-house and with two other stolen wheels are supposed to have left town in this way. Three wheels were found by officers this morning near Natios City, six miles south of here, and this leads to the be- lief that the fugitives left for the Mexi- can line. Officers from this city are scouring the country between here and Mexico and a Sheriff’'s posse has taken ufiolhe trail. The Lieutenant Governor of wer Cali- fornia, Terrazas, has promised assistance in case the fugitives reach his jurisdiction and he has ordered the rurales to keep a close watch along the line. Thete seems but little chance for the three people to succeed in evading recap- ture. They will almost certainly be caught if they have crossed the line. into Mexico, as the rurales guard every trail and waterhole in that country. They can- not eross the desert to the east and would be apprehended if seen in the back coun- try and the country to the north is clogely watched by officers. Brooks, who is fa- millar with all the trails in the country, might succeed in escaping arrest If alone and it is belleved that he will leave the Halls. The woman is attired in man's clothing. It is thought none of the three is armed. PARLIAMENT DISCUSSES BRITISH NAVAL MATTERS Lord Brassey Deplores Loss of the Place Britain Once Held in Mercantile Marine. LONDON, July 9.—Lord Brassey (Lib- eral) initiated a discussion on naval mat- ters to-day in the House of Lords. Dur- ing the course of his remarks he deplored the fact that Great Britain had lost the place she once held with her mercantile marine. The question of subsidies, he thought, must depend on the action cf the_otheér powers. All the naval powers of Europe gave liberal subsidies, he said, while President Roosevelt and . former Secretary Gage had recommended this poli ‘While it was contrary to Britishk policy, he added, to foster industries by bounties or protection, to pay for a re- serve of auxiliary vessels he thought would certainly be to the public advan- tage. Lord Selbourne, the First Lord of the Admiralty, in the course of a reply re- ferred to the Atlantic shipping combine. He said it seemed to him that the bal- ance was one of disadvantage to the com- bination, because it necessarily placed very large powers in the hands of a few men. The Government disclaimed any sort of jealousy of the Americans. Whalers Think Vessels Safe. SEATTLE, July 9.—The freight steam- ship Conemaugh, which arrived to-day from the north, had no news of the Jeanfe or Portland. Captain Baring of the Cone- maugh says the masters of the five Arctic whalers at St. Michaels when he sailed had no uneasiness concerning the-fate of the Jeanie and Portland. It is his opin- ion, however, that neither vessel will be able to break through the ice pack in which they are supposed to be canfined and reach Neme before July 15. s praiie -t x MINNEAPOLIS, July 9.—The trial of Ca tain John Fichette of the police force began to- day. He is charged with having received $200 for obtaining for Patrolman Long his appoint- ment on the force. ADVERTISEMENTS. thesed® Box Ends from I will Pay 50 cents per 100 for any quantity of orany retail dealer on the Coast will accept them as cash Herman Heyneman 204 Sacramento St., San Francisco California COMFORTABLE LINE to be on is the Santa Fe. Living on the California Limited is as lhuxurious as residi , Fifth Avenue palace. Sumptu- ous appointments: myriads of'« real electric lights « Chicago in three days City Ticket Office 641-Market St. " inae e ~ ~

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