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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1902. SATURDAY...............SEPTEMBER 13, 1902 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor, Zédress A1 Gemmusiestions to W. 5. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The ‘Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE. ..Market and Third, S. F. EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Deiivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies, 5 Cents. Terms by Mafl, Including Postages DAILY CALL (including Sunday), ome year DAILY CALL (including Sunday), § mont 283 DAILY CALE (including Sunday), 8 months. ‘m DAILY CALL—By Single Month. . SUNDAY CALL, One Year. - :,: WEEKLY CALL, One Year All postmasters are authorized te recelve subseri Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. Maf! subscribers in ordering change of address should be —&u:u‘mmxzwwnmmnmmm to insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. CAKLAND OFFICE..........00..1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Yesager Yoreign Atvertising, Marquetts Bullding, Chiosgo. Ghong Distance Telephone “Central 2618.”) NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH.. .30 Tribune Building NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: € C CARLTON..cccevesenss «.Herald Square NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoris Hotel; A. Brentano, 81 Union Bquare; Murray Hill Hotel. STATEMENT CF CIRCULATION OF THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Month of @ugust, 1902. 61,160 Angant 1310 ugus — g'l‘l:(-l...-..........-.--............1,835.705 ETATE OF CALIFORNIA, CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO—ss. On this 10th day of September, 1902, personally appeared be- fore me, William T. Hess, a Notary Public in and for the City end County aforesaid, W. J. MARTIN, who being sworn accord- fug to law, declares that he is.the Business Manager of the San Francisco CALL, & daily newspaper published in the City and County of San Franeisco, State of California, and that there were printed and distributed during the month of August, 1902, ‘one million nine hundred and thirty-five thousand seven hun- @red and five (1,935,705) copies of the said newspaper, which pumber divided by thirty-one (the pumber of days of lssue) gives an average daily clreulation of 62,442 copies. W. J. MARTIN. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 10th day of Septem- ber, 1902, ‘W. T. HESS, Notary Publie in and for the City and County of San Fran- taco, State of Calffornia, room 1015, Claus Spreckels bldg. = A SURPLUS AGAIN. HEN the treasury statement for July showed that the new fiscal year had opened with a deficit for the first month of some- ng more than §7,500,000 the timid became a little alarmed and the calamity men began to prepare for a prolonged howl. Such anxiety as was felt among intelligent men was promptly removed, however, by the announcement of the treasury officials that the de- ficit for the month was due mainly to large payments which had to be made that month, but which were not a part of the current expenses of the Govern- ment, and accordingly there was no reason to fear a ficit for the twelve months to come. In fact, the predicted a safe surplus at the end of the = th; of year, The reassuring estimates of the treasury have now fr confirmed by the returns for August. In he cut made in the revenues by the repeal of the war taxes the revenues for last month were in excess of those for the corresponding month of last year, and showed a surplus of about $5,500,000. The receipts for August were $48,605,812, while the expen- ditures were $43,113,610. be spite of A comparison of receipts and expenditures for last August with those for August, 1901, is given in the following table: RECEIPTS. August, 1902. August, 1901 -$26,582,231 11 $21,462,171 19 22,036,784 T2 Miscellaneous .. 1,895,169 52 Totals $45,394,125 43 Civil and miscellaneou: $ 7,582,365 85 \Yar 9,320,615 03 Navy 5,040,831 25 India 1,108,603 44 Interest .. 2,463,026 88 .$43,113,610 53 - $5,482,202 35 It is to be noted that while the repeal of the war taxes has reduced the internal revenues for August from over $22,000,000 in 1901 to something more than Totals Excess of recelpts .. $39,351,497 67 $17,500,000 this year, yet the total income of the Goy- ernment materially increased by reason of the aug- mentation in customs duties. This is a clear proof of the abounding prosperity of the people. There.is certainly no other Government in the world that could materially reduce its taxes and at the same time increase its income. Another good showing for August is to be found in the reports concerning the circulation of money. The report for September 1 shows that of the eight forms of money in use six have an increased circula- tion. The increases run: Gold coin, $1,052,685; sil- ver dollars, $2,078210; silver certificates, $4,011,481; subsidiary silver, $1,102,828; United States notes, $3,713,105, and national bank notes, $510,414. This makes a total increase in these six forms of money amounting to $13,458,723. Allowance must be made, however, for a decrezse of $8,119,08 in the amount of gold certificates in circulation, and $1,012,835 in the amount of treasury notes of 1890 in circulation, These twp make a total reduction of $9,131,015, and the two movements result in the net increase of $4.326,808. 4 . That showing puts the calamity howler out of.busi- ness. With an increase of revenue, despite the redyc- tion of taxation, and an increase of money in cifou- lation, the people @n well afford to be satisfied with the situation and with the administration whose wise policies have made prosperity possible to Govern- ment and people alike. A2 5 A woman in this city who gave $750 to a clairvoy- ant and now can find reither her money nor the char- latan seems to feel aggrieved over the incident. Per- haps she never heard that the money of fools is by right divine the patrimony of clever men. $6,042,627 76 | i THE Republican campaign in California will be SENATOR BEVERIDGE. opened by Senator Beveridge ‘of Indiana. He is one of the youngest of the Federal Senators, and is among the strongest. He belongs to the ranks of the plain people, and worked his way to destiny literally, for he had no means other than his earn- ings as a farmhand to/get on in the world. He is full of energy, of a thoughtful and observant habit, boldly original, and as a speaker and writer has at- tained eminence. His originality and desire to know things at first hand for himself have been shown in his Philippine, Asiatic and European travel. Going out of beaten lines and away from conventional paths, he saw for himself conditions in Luzon, China, Manchuria, Si- beria and Russia. He has the same habit about af- fairs at home and is a great traveler and observer. Realizing that he is 2 Senator of the United States, he makes it his business to know his own country. To that end he has traveled and studied the conditions of production.and development all over the country. He mixes with the people and peers closely into causes and reasons. He is really a unique personality. As a speaker he is in foremost rank, and as a writer commands a descriptive style that is not excelled by any of his contemporaries. Older Senators have some- times complained of his self-reliance and originality, but these attributes, while they may seem out of line in the maze of precedents which bind the Senate, give 3 relish to his work. There is in the young man a certain zest and vital quality, a geniality of compan- ionship, ‘which make him a favorite even with the ! older Senators who have occasion to deplore his bold- ness. It is pleasant that this strong and interesting gentle- man is to spend some time in California, for he is really out on a vacation, but has his eyes with him, and before he leaves us will know all that is worth knowing about this State and its people. His partisans and his opponents will hear him with almost equal pleasure, for his charm of manner. and clear statement. He is a truly and strictly American product, and before he finishes his parliamentary career will have furnished the Senate with some new traditions that are of this day and time to displace others that were fresh in their time, ' but are not abreast of this. o m——rcT The chief success achieved by the war maneuvers off the coast of New England is the demonstration that it is possible for the navy to work without getting up a row between rival admirals. The only row in the whole of this mimic war was one raised over a high tea given to some society dame, and of course that doesn’t count. G benefit upon the public by publishing a re- cent address of Horace White before the joint convention of the bankers’ associations of Mis- souri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory. The banking problem is one of the most important before the country, and since it is evident that a proper solution cannot be attained until the public has been fully educated on the subject, the addresses of men of first-class authority like Mr. White are matters of genuine interest ‘to the nation‘at large. Mr. White is an advocate of a system of branch banking with an elastic currency based on assets, though, as he points out, there is no necessary con- nection between the two. In the address under re- view he confined himself exclusively to the ‘question of branch banking, leaving that of asset currehcy out of the field altogether. He was justified in doing so, for there is no reason for making two issues in a single brief address when one is amply interesting in itself. The argument for branch banking is based largely upon the experience of other countries. Mr. White briefly reviews the results of that system of banking as practiced in Canada, Scotland, France and Ger- many. - The results have in every ‘case been signally beneficial to the communities where such banking prevails. Canadian ccnditions approach more nearly to our own than those of any of the other countries named, and therefore especial attention may be di- rected to the results there. In reviewing them Mr. White says: “The Cana- dian system of ‘branch banks tends to equalize the rates of interest in different parts of the Dominion. A bank receiving deposits in Halifax, Montreal or Toronto may lend them the following day through its branches and by the issue of its own notes at Win- nipeg, Vancouver and Victoria, the branches redeem- ing the notes by drafts on the head office. The rate of interest in the smaller towns of the west is only 1 or 2 per cent higher than in the larger cities of the east.” One of the chief advantages the Canadians have over us through' their system of ‘banking is thus stated: “The annual crop movement in Canada is marked by an expansion of the note circulation, while no such thing takes place in the United States. What occurs among us is & movenjent of the currency it- self from one part of the country to another, frém the commercial centers to the farming districts, and a reverse movement after the bulk of the autumnal grain and cotton has begn sold and housed. This money has to be carried long distances and guarded at considerable expense and with loss of interest. Those costs fall upon the agricultural community, since the work of moving must be compensated out of the value of the thing moved.” Summing up the argument Mr. White presents six advantages of branch banking over our present sys- tem. First, other things being equal, two banks joined together are stronger than one, and three are stronger than two. ' Second, the public has greater confidence in a union of banks than in separated banks, and hence there is less danger of panic. Third, branch banking would reduce the costs of maintenance and thus result in a saving for the bank’s customers. Fourth, it would tend to equalize interest rates throughout the country. Fifth, it could be ex- tended to towns and villages too small to maintain a bank of their own. Sixth, it would provide a means of prompt financial communication among the dif- ferent sections of the country and thus greatly facili- tate all sorts of business. While there is at present a good deal of opposition among bankers to the branch banking system, Mr. White believes that in the end the system will be adopted and that when once. its benefits are realized the very men who are now opposing it will be strongly in its favor. He says: “It is a matter of history that when the-country banks of New England were asked to redeem their notes at the Suffolk Bank in Boston they declared and believed that such a policy would ruin them. Vet after a trial of the system they found their credit so much improved and their circulation BRANCH BANKING. UNTON’S MAGAZINE has conferred a so much extended that nothing. could have induced them to abandon it.” — An Eastern physician has.arisen to assure his fel- low citizens that if a man will drink whisky and eat onions he need not fear malaria, and now many an Eastern community is likely to be afflicted with a nuisance that is far worse than malaria ever was. e e acree ¢ A QUESTION OF ISLANDS. ECAUSE we have annexed certain islands in B the Western and the Eastern Indies, and cer- tain others in the Pacific and the far-off South Seas, there has arisen among some Americans a be- lief that we ought to annex every other island that makes itself conspicuous. When Jamaica sugar planters meet to complain of their industrial condition the island .grabbers promptly propose that we take them in and give them the full prosperity of the United States. When the Newfoundlanders send to Washington to ask for free trade the jingoes would at once annex Newfoundland. In their eagerness for that kind of expansion the san- guine promoters of insular empire would exchange a large part of Alaska for the British islands that we acquire. Some of them seem to be so eager to make such trades that we may yet hear of a party among them proposing to trade off half the continent for all the islands in sight. Such being the condition of the jingo spirit in the East, it is not surprising that a report has been cir- culated among them to the effect that the disturb- ances in Hayti and Santo Domingo have led Presi- dent Roosevelt and his Cabinet to the conclusion that the best thing we can do is to send a gunboat or two over to the West Indies and annex the two republics. ‘While such a report is so absurd that few if any intel- ligent men can regard it seriously, it has been re- peated with such insistence that Mr. Adee, Assistant Secretary of State, has found it necessary to contra- dict it. Even the official contradiction has not had the ef- fect of silencing the voice of the annexationists. They are now declaring that if our Government is not pre- paring for the annexation of the island it ought to be. They assert that we owe a duty to the world in this matter, that we are under a moral obligation to humanity to bring the island out of the troubles of bad government into the peace and quietness of our American life. They quote with approval the recent statement of the Kolnische Volks Zeitung: “In the general interest, therefore, it is desirable that some world-power, even if it be the United Stat®, should put an end to the wretched: conditions that now pre- vail in Hayti.” Of course the advocates of Haytian annexation are not without high-sounding arguments. Thus, for ex- ample, the Baltimore American says: “The island would be valuable in our hands. It would complete our control of the Caribbean Sea, clinch the perfec- tion of our defenses for the isthmian canal and our own Guli Coast. Commercially, the island is capable of development. Once the people are brought under the control of a strong government, compelled to live right and to work, it will produce wealth in abun- dance. With two such ends to be attained by the mere act of annexation, supplemented by a little of the characteristic American enterprise, there is no reason why we should not take Hayti. The cost of so doing will be no greater thgn the present cost of keeping warships there. The military and commercial possi- bilities are great, and our control will mean an added peace for the world. The proposal is worthy of con- sideration.” Clearly nothing expands like expansion. Having once swallowed an island we must now proceed to swallow a new one every year. Once upon a time the argument “for exparision was that we should annex territory fitted to become the home of civilized men, but now the argument is that we must annex because the people of the desired territory are barbaric and unfit for self-government. It is of course a good plea in some respects, but if adopted as a principle of na- tional growth it would lead us in the end to annex nearly all of Africa and a good deal of Asia. e —— PROHIBITION IN NEW ENGLAND, ERMONT in her recent election has given the Vpeople of New England another lesson on the subject of prohibition, and the press of that section is busily engaged in discussing its meaning. Some of them indeed maintain that the lesson is so plain comment is hardly necessary. One of these is the Boston Globe, which in reviewing the contest says: “It has been demonstrated beyond a doubt that a license or local option law is desired.” Prohibition has been tried in Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, but in not a single State does it appear to have been effective or to have given satisfaction. Many of the very people who voted for the law would secretly violate it. As the Globe says: “It is a matter of common knowledge how the law has worked and how State after State has repealed it because of the constant scandals that have occurred in consequence of failure to enforce it. The trouble has been that the people did not see to its enforcement, while they have taken care more and more to see the local option law rigidly enforced.” Having found that State prohibition does not pro- hibit, that it has hardly any other effect than that of provoking scandals in the administration of law, the New Englanders are getting rid of the incubus. The Globe says: “The prohibitory law has become an eyesore to the temperance advocates in all parties. The extremists would of course never be satisfied with any other law. Even Republican Massachusetts in or- der to get a license law elected a Democratic Gov- ernor in 1874. After the passage of the license law a Republican Governor was returned to office. ~ The people simply demanded what they wanted, and the Republican party had to give it to them.”’ It is gratifying to perceive this evidence of return- ing sanity among the prohibition States. The cause of temperance cannot be advanced by laws that offend the sentiments of the people. Among persons of the same grade of intelligence there is more temperance in California than in New England, With reasonable license laws enacted on the principle of local 5pticm the New Englanders themselves may learn to use the light wines of California instead of the brain destroy- illicit groggeries under the prohibition law. Then a truer temperance will spread among the people and the law itself will be more respected because more in accord with the real sentiments of the community. T ——— The bright stars of the political firmament of St. Louis who shed so much luster on the town as offi- cials until the howl of perjury and bribery cast them into an outer darkness probably have reached the se- | rious conclusion that the more brilliant a. man was [ assumed to be the sooner he tarnishes. ing liquors that have been dealt out to them in their . RULER OF SIAM IS Bkt 5. PAY US A VISI"E LOND TO BE THE NATION'S GUESTS. — P sons with him. with him. Roosevelt. spenid his icome—and never tries. to own whatever it may be. cotuntry, but it isn't likely. jesty’s family, on a pinch. PERSONAL MENTION. George E. Catts of Stockton is at the Lick. B. U. Steinman of Sacramento is at the Palace. J. F. Platt, a mining engineer of Chi- cago, is at the Grand. Captain John Cross, a capitalist of Los Angeles, is at the Palace. Carl Smith, a manufacturing cutler of New York, is at the Palace. E. I. Woodman, Democratic nominee for State Printer, is at the Grand. Dr. E. H. Thornton of Portland, Or., is at the Grand, accompanied by his wife. United States Senator Beveridge of In- diana is expécted at the Palace to-day. John Markley, a member of the Board of Bank Commissioners, is at the Lick. Alden Anderson, Republican nominee for Lieutenant Governor, is at the Grand. J. N. Gillette, Republican nominee for Congress in the First District, is at the Grand. —_— Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Sept. 12.—The following Californians have arrived: San Francisco —R. Brown, W. J. Morse, at the Imperial; Forsythe, at the Holland: J. Joseph, at the Herald Square; M. J. Savage, S, Shaen and wife, at the Grand Union; A. A. Steenfeld and wife, at the Netherlands; P. M. Suarez, at the Union Square. Los Angeles—C. J. Heineman, Hoffman. ——— FAMOUS VENICE TOWER SOON WILL BE RESTORED Half a Million Dollars to Be Ex- pended in the Campanile Reconstruction. VENICE, Sept. 12.—The corner-stone of the new campanile will be laid April 22, 1903, and the authorities are projecting much ceremony for the occasion. All the at the month hence. At present the courtyard of the Doge's palace is entirely occupied by fragments of statues and bas-reliefs saved from the ruins. Some of them will be employed .In rebuilding the cam- panile, while the others are destined for a museum. The Venetians are much gratified at the contributions ‘which have been received from the United States and which are promised from that country. The sub- scriptions from all sources aggregate $295,000. The rebuilding of the campanie, dollars. ——— London Mails Will Be Delayed. LONDON, Sept. mails for the White Star line steamers will not reach Queenstown until 10:15 a. m. Thursdays, instead of 7 a. m., as at present, thus considerably deléying the departure of the vessels. The reason for the alteration in time is the refusal of the White Star line to further co-operate with the general postoffice in accelerating the mailboat service from the Union sta- tion, London, to Dublin. The company has hitherto contributed $30,000 yearly to- ward the accelération, but it now says it feels it is no part of its duty to continue such an outlay, and the postoffice there- {fore is reverting to slower trains. i i Mrs. F. L. Castle, at the Manhattan: R.| debris will have been cleared away a it is estimated, will cost half a million 12.—After October 1. HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE KING OF SIAM AND THAT RICH AND INTERESTING LITTLE COUNTRY'S, CROWN PRINCE, WHO ARE RESIDENT ROOSEVELT was authorized in December last by a resolution introduced by Senator Frye to invite the King of Siam to come here ana be the nation’s guest, and the King may come and bring a few of his At any rate it is known that the Crown Prince will be He may bring a few dozen wives, too. He has several hundred. The King is not very old, but he has an amazingly large family. His sons and daughters are numbered by scores, but some will remain at home to keep house when the King comes to call on his great and good friend, Theodore As a matter of courtesy all the King’'s hotel bills and traveling expenses will be paid out of the United States treasury, but he really does not need such help. He has more money than he ¥nows what to do with. He cannot begin -to He doesn’t have to spend money when he is home. All he needs to do when he wants anything is to send a high official with his compliments to the owner of the property, be it a house, an elephant or a daughter; and express his wish That settles it. presses his unfeigned joy that His Unspeakable Serenity has condescended appropriate the goods and chattels or real estate. s Shopping s one continual bargain day with the King of Siam, and he never has to pay any bjjls. In Bangkok, his capital, it gets pretty warm in summer, but the King never suffers from the heat. He has a wonderful glass villa, so constructed that it can be submerged until it rests on the bottom of a lake, where all is quiet and cool and comfortable, His Majesty is “Lord of a Thousand Elephants,” and has enough left over to stock half a dozen of the greatest shows on earth. He does everything in a wholesale way—elephants, wives, babies he counts by the gross lots. walls of his palace in Banghok are a mile in circumference. It may be that the King of Siam will be astonished at what he sees in this If he sees anything that particularly takes his fancy. from an automobile to a cloud-kissing office-building, 2 will order one just like it for his amusement In Bangkok. One of the big office buildings, say a twenty-five story one, would just about accommodate his Ma- The owner Kkisses the dust and ex- to Why, the the chances are that he .WW%%‘H‘H’PH‘H-FL%H-M. ANSWERS TO QUERIES GEOLOGICAL REPORTS — Ullwein, City. For such reports as you desire rel- ative to the Unlted States geological sur- vey apply at the office of the survey in this city, Appraisers’ building. SKAGWAY-M. W., City. Skaguay and Skagway are both in common use. The United States Postoffice Department recognizes Skagway. CALIFORNIA'S SENATORS—A Read- er, Bradley, Cal. Ths United States Sena- tors from California are: George C. Per- kins and Thomas R. Bard. GOSSIP FROM ON WORLD OF LETTERS Are London publishers growing too cau- tious for enterprise? Professor H. B. Morris,, who filled for many years the chair of modern languages at the Univer- sity. ‘of Melbourne, died at his brother’s house, on Harley street, a few days after his arrival in London, at the beginning of the year. One of the objects of his visit was to arrange for the publication of a new life of Captain Cook, the English Columbus, on which he had been engaged for five years and for which he had col- lected a considerable amount of new ma- terial, including a hitherto unknown log of the famous mariner, which the pro- fessor unearthed in Melbourne. Since the professor’s death the manuseript has been submitted to but declined by half a dozen publishing houses in succession. A guar- antee fund has now been raised by a num- ber of the late professor’'s friends and the book will shortly see the light. The publishers who have been unsue- cessful in the struggle for General De- wet!s book -have received word to that effect and it now only remains to learn which firm has secured the book. As to this no reliable information seems forth- coming, but I learn it may be expected in English before Christmas. " General De- wet practically finished it by sheer dog- ged toil morning, noon and night, Under the title, “Plctures of Many Wars,” Frederick Villlers has written a book which consists in effect of reminis- cences. Its contents are notes and sketches gleaned by him during his cam- paigns as a war correspondent in Eu- rope, Asia and Africa. He throws his personal experiences and facts- which came within his own knowledge into the form of so many short tales. Villlers began his career as a war correspondent in 1876, when King Milan fought the Turk. He next saw the great battles of the Russo-Turkish war and recalls them in this volume, which Cassells will pub- lish. John Oliver Hobbes now thinks the story-comedy which she has in hand, “The Flute of Pan,” will run to a full length novel. At present she is arrang- ing into a volume, to be called *“Tales About Temperament,” a series of stories which she has contributed to magazines. Her immediate book, however, will be the novel, “Love and the Soul Hunters,™ which Fisher Unwin will shortly bring out. A library of rare value is to be disposed of in Dublin in the course of a few weeks. It belonged.to the late M. Hickie, who was a noted second-hand book seller and one of Dublin's best known characters and wits. His book shop on Osmend quay was always well stocked and was a fa- vorite haunt of Bishaps and clergymen of all ereeds, professors and scholars gen- erally in search of rare books. It has been stated in some papers that a new novel by the late George Douglas Brown, whose sad death was referred to last week, would be published soon. Un- fortunately that is not so. He was en- gaged on a story at the time of his death, it is true, but had not half finished it, and it will not make a book. His repu- tation 'will, therefore, rest upon the “House With the Green Shutters.” B A CHANCE TO SMILE. Meekton—I don’t see why you should call 2 man a “Mugwump” who is merely & non-partisan. : Hardschell—-No? 8" 3 Meekton—No. Yon seem to be the bit- ter enemy of eévery one who doesn’t bé- long to your political party. Hardschell-I'm not his enemy; merely a non-friend.—Philadelphia Press. Dicky—Pa, were you a gooder boy'n me when you was as little as me? Pa—Yes, indeed, Dicky. I was always a very good boy; but somehow or other I had a great many serious and painful misunderstandings with my patents.—Tit- Bits. “Yes, Count, in all the park thers is no place I like so well as under this old, old tree.” (Sighing sentimentally.) “There are tender associations, you see.” “Aha, I comprehend, mam’selle. You have yourself planted this tree!”—Punch. “Why don’t that romantic .star -and that emotional actress get a divorce, if they can’t bécome reconciled?” “They have discussed the idea. But each is afraid the other might get the best 6t the advertisement.”—Washington Star. _—————————— Prunes stuffed with apricots. Townsend's." —_———— Townsend’s California Glace frult and candies, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etched A nice present for Eastern friends ‘é%“!“lfl(.l l(.? Palace Hotel building.* ————————— Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by ths Pr Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Call~ lfl:;].l ltxpepfl?‘ Telephone Main 1042 » FOR A SIDE EXT SUNDAY’S CALL, SEPTEMBER 14: FRANCISCANS WHO LOOK LIKE FAMOUS MENs . A MAN WHO HAS A KING THE PRIMEVAL BEAR s SIXTEEN PAGES OF HUMAN SAN PARTNER »2 INTEREST STORIES, BOOKS, FASHICNS, FICTION AND STORIES OF THE COAST.» NEXT WEEK ANOTHER GREAT BOOK The Mystery Box BY MRS. C N. WILLIAMSON IN-TWO ISSUES SEPTEMBER TWENTY.ONE AND SEPTEMEER TWENTY.EIGHT.