The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 7, 1902, Page 6

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The— sgmsac Call. ..OCTOBER 7, 1902 TUESDAY Eteta JOHN D, SPRECKELS, Proprietor, Atéress A1l Communiestions to W. 5. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. FUBLICATION OFFICE...Market and Third, S. F. EDITORIAL ROOMS. ....217 to 221 Steven: Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Copies, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: THE SAN ! THE FOREIGN TRUSTS. R. JOHN P. YOUNG of the Chronicle has rendered the whole country.an essential serv- ice of the highest importance by ‘the exact M and, patient research which has enabled 'him to fur- nish the complete and instructive statistics of the foreign trusts—organized, existing and operating under every economic system, from free trade to the tightest of protection—in every commercial nation of Europe. “ . The proof is incontestible that to apply free trade as an anti-trust prescription to this country will in no way relieve our people from the domination of the trusts, but will simply open our markets to the products of foreign trusts that are looking for mar- kets, and will speedily flood ours. The people have supported protection as an economic principle that sustains home enterprise and maintains the American standard of life and wages. The method of produc- WEEKLY CALL, One Year. All postmasters are suthorized to receive subscriptions. Sample coples Wil be forwarded when requested. of perticular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order t~ insure & prompt end correct compliance with their request. ALAAD OFFICE.......se0000.111% Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. ¥enager Torsign Advertising, Merquette Bullding, Chissgs. (Giong Distance Telephone “‘Cegtral 2619.”) REPRESENTATIVE: NEW YORK STEPHEN B. SMITH. .30 Tribume Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: 1 House; P. O. News Co.; Grest Northern Hotel: remont House; Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. O.) OFFICE....1406 G St., K. W, MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES-—521 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open unttl 9:30 o'clock. 800 Hayes, open until 8:20 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:80 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until #:80 -o'clock. 1941 Mission, open untl 10 o'clock. 2961 Market, corner Sixteenth, open untl 8 o'clock. 1098 Va- lencia, open until ® o'ciock. 106 Eleventh, open until § o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until § o'clock. 2200 Filimore, open until § p. m. = DANIELS OF RIVERSIDE, ARELY has any man entered upon the first R steps of a Congressional career with such bright prospects of success, and with so much of popular confidence to sustain him, as Captain M. J. Daniels of Riverside, who, after a hard contest with able and honorable competitors, has been chosen as Republican nominee for Representative from the Eighth District. Captain Daniels is one of the Civil War veterans whom the Republican party delights to honor. En- listing at the outbreak of the war, in the spring of 1861, he served continuously to the end, and having received from Lincoln a commission as captain was afterward made brevet major in recognition of his services in the field. e war was over Captain Daniels returned ne in Minnesota and there demonstrated life a capacity for business and finance that de him one of the leading men of his State. to California in 1887 he settled first at Los I er on established his home at River- s new residence Captain Daniels at once rank among the men who have advanced sts of Southern California and given to that ts high reputation for industry and enter- When the Orange Growers’ Bank was organ- prise ized 1800 Captain Daniels was chosen president, and he has held the position to the present time. His interests, however, have not been confined. to financ: He is one of the largest orange-growers in the State, and has been instrumental in building up that great industry snd advancing it to its present fiourishing condition. The people of Southern California have long since recognized Captain Daniels’ capacity for legislative work, and when the Dingley tariff was under co: sideration he was sent to Washington by the frui growers to look after the fruit interests of California. While at the national capital he performed his duties with such success that to him is given a large share of the credit for the establishment of the protective duty on imported citrus fruits. Such 2 man running (')n‘t\he Republican ticket in Congressional district in “California would be fairly sure of victory, and in the Eighth his election may be looked upon as assured. The district is strongly Republican, for all of its interests are safe- guarded by Republican policies. Democratic free trade would be more ruinous to the fruit men of that section than a drought. In fact, so clearly is the relation of protection to the industries of the district perceived that even' the opposition candidate will hardly venture to ask the people to vote for a change in that respect. Captain Daniels, however, will in Congress be something more than a champion of protection. That policy being safeguarded from attack by a Republican majority in the House, he will direct his energies to sdvancing the welfare of his district and the nation by cordially supporting the general policies of the Re- publican party. The new Representative has in him the making of a Congressman of first-class rank. In commenting upon his nomination, the Riverside Press said: “Captain Daniels loses his political resi- dence in this little valley and becomes a representa- tive of the whole great district, and, big as the district is, the man is broad enough to cover it all. The wel- fare of Kern and Tulare and Santa Barbara is ‘as much his special charge as the interests of San Diego, San Bernardino or Riverside, and as we know this man and this candidate we can promise every section of the district his vigilant attention.”, Such is the candidate the Republicans of the newly organized Eighth District present to the people for their suffrages. He is 2 man who has achieved much znd therefore ome from whom much may be ex- pected. We may count upon him as a permanent addition to the California delegation in Congress, and the whole State may be gratified by the choice of the Eighth in sending so able and so energetic a Rep- resentative to assist in advancing California - in her, rightful prestige at Washington and giving her a po- tent influence in the great councilof the nation. Manchester claims to be the special. custodian of the Shakespearean drama. The chief theaters of the city devote themselves largely to elaborate produc.- tions of the great plays and with such success that 2 seven months’ season is well supported by the public. A recent presentation of “The Merchant of Venice”; drew good houses for 112 performances. At i There seems to be a steady conviction in Towa that refuse to divuige them. Speaker Henderson had “ulterior motives,” but they j tion, whether by individual enterprise, the ordinary corporation or by the combination called a trust, is merely incidental. The main issue is the defense of the American market and the American wage scale. In Europe individual, corporate and trust capital invested in great productive enterprises has in each form the benefit of cheaper labor and a lower stand- ard of life. To the American it makes no difference whether our home market is opened by free trade to foreign products sent by individuals, corporations or trusts, since in either case it represents fower wages and a lower standard of life. If we attempt to com- pete at cur own docrs with the products of. such labor our own must descend to its wages‘and to its condition. This is an undeniable truth, if there is any saving grace in protection as a principle. Free trade with all the world does not mean the.raising of the world’s wages and standard of life up tg ours, but the lowering of ours to the level of the world. All American publicists who have studied protection as a principle have ascribed to it our superiqr standard. Practical men here and abroad have truly ascribed to it our superior productive advantages. - It enables a higher standard of life, a superior intelligence, an individual initiative, which give a better and greater productive power by which we have been achieving the commercial conquest of the world. Remove the cause of these American attributes, approximate wages and,standards to the level of the world, and we surrender our superior productive position by de- stroying its cause. Granted that this effect will not appear . in.one generation, and that tHe inspiration’ of protection upon thelife and energy of the people will not be quenched and overwhelmed at once, nope can deny that free trade will firally cancel it and our wages and standards and productive power will decline to the general level, and, perhaps, in the degrading vio- lence of the reaction, will be carried bélow the aver- age of the world. In the light of the universality of trasts in Europe, controlling industrial production in fivalry to ours, the free trade remedy for our own trusts is Seen to lbe purely empirical. . It is a convenient policy for | politicians to advocate, takes well with the unthink- | itg, and the. mere politician cares nothing in the :premises except for the votes that it will produce. i But it is different with the free trader. He advocates | a definite principle in antagonism to protection. He has learned by experiment that when he presents his policy, naked and. directly, to the people they reject it. But he is entirely alive to the value of a prejudice in politics. He feels on all sides and hears | from-all voices-the growing antagonism to trusts. It ‘takcs the form of a prejudice, ready fashioned to his | purpose. He hopes that the people who will reject free trade as a principle will take it as a medicine to destroy trusts. Therefore whenever men are met to talk over this anti-trust prescription there is: the free trader also in line with the proposed policy and add- ing fuel to the flame of anti-trust prejudice.” If he .can succeed in identifying protection and the'trusts, L one as cause and the other as effect, his fight is won, and after that the deluge. This, then, is a subject on which labor and capital can unite. Both depend upon protection. Each must rely upon equal administration of the law for protection against encroachments, but neither will have anything worth encroaching upon if protection be withdrawn. | The latest critic says Theodore Roosevelt is more of a preacher than an orator, and now the preachers who have been looking upon themselves as good orators have a right to call on the critic to explain himself. ANOTHER DEMOCRATIC ROW. HENEVER one Democrat says ra thing, Wanother Democrat jumps him and says it isn’t so. It matters not what be the nature of the thing said, nor where, nor when, nor how it was said. The mere fact that one Democrat has said it is sufficient to enrage the other fellow. We have had so many illustrations of this condi- tion of ill-feeling in the Democratic camp that the subject has become somewhat monotonous, but of late a new instance has occurred that is sufficiently odd to be interesting. This time no less a person than President Roosevelt is the issue. It has pleased Mr. Lane, the Democratic nominee for Governor, to speak in commendation of the President, and there- upon the Democratic organ, ‘the Examiner, wildly raises the war whoop and proceeds to do a ghost dance menacing death to Roosevelt and all his friends. ¢ The cause of the Examiner’s rage appears to be certain utterances of Lane during his canvass of the south. In a ‘report of a speech made by Lane, on October 2, the Examiner quotes him as saying: “From this night and through this campaign I shall try to present to the peoplg of this State an ideal con- dition. 'We are making a young man’s campaign, full of life and energy, with high aspirations and noble ideas before us. We are not speaking in bitter partisanship. I ‘stood on the platform at Ventura the other night and I paid a tribute of praise, and worthily, too, to that man who is our President of the United States; a man who is brave, courageous, noble and single-minded; who is in my belief a true patriot, no matter how we may differ with him on policies— Theodore Roosevelt.” Having made public -that statement of the party ‘candidate for Governor, the Examiner straightway turned its editorial columns on the President, and for several days has been bombarding him with hard- boiled sentences. Yesterday it published two fulmi- nations against him—one charging him with playing the -hypocrite. in dwealing with the trusts, and the other charging him with extravagance because the United States navy has two yachts which the Presi- dent sometimes uses. The two taken together show that the Examiner is really quite cross with Mr. Lane and intends to let the camp know it. ; The President, of course, goes on with his work, lunaware of the trouble he*is causing in the Demo- FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, cratic camp. The people of California, however, who are watching ‘the course of this zigzag Democratic campaign, can hardly fail to be amused with this latest outbreak, and wait with curious interest to see what will happen next. e The discussion of the revival of the old language of Ireland has given rise to differences of opinion as to the right name for it. One authority says it is not Celt but Iberian, and still another says Xanthocroic is the right word, and there are other philologists to be heard from. S THE MOROCCO QUESTION. . MOS‘I‘ Americans have doubtless forgotten al- ready the splutter caused in European diplo- matic circles by the recent speech at Toulon of the French Minister of Marine, M. Pelletan. It may therefore be necessary to state that he said France, by establishing strong ramparts at Toulon, Corsica and at Bizerta on the African coast, could hold a door between the two halves of the Mediterra- nean, despite Malta and Gibraltar, The speech was looked upon as a defiance to Great Britain, and ac- cordingly it has been made the subject of elaborate discussions throughout Europe. The: cause of antagonism on the part of France toward British supremacy in the Mediterranean is Morocco. The French have their eyes on that de- cadent monarchy and desirable country. They would Tike to annex it to their African empire, and they would also like to have the seas between France and “Northern Africa securely under French control. TSpain is not deemed an obstacle in the way of French plans. * Great Britain firmly planted at Gibraltar and Malta is an obstacle, and hence the significance of the statements of the French Minister. . In the partition of Africa France has obtained a’ larger extent of territory than any other power, and while the area consists mainly of desert, French energy has so developed it that France can claim suprémacy in Northern Africa with a better right than the British can claim it in Sou#h Africa. The Westminster Gazette, in reviewing the work of France in ‘Africa, says: “The country has spent four milliards of francs in the conquest and develop- .ment of Algeria; it has succeeded in establishing a population of 600,000 Europeans, among whom are more than 350,000 Frenchmen; ‘while a complete sys- tem of roads and over 3000 kilometers of railways have been constructed. Commerce, which in 1830 did not'reach twelve millions-of francs per annum, now, amounts to more than 600,000,000; and in all these figures Tunis, perhaps the most prosperous of all French colonies, is not taken into account. Let us add that this African empire is defended by a per- manent army of 60,000 men, which in case of war would be increased immediately to 100,000 by the calling out of the Algerian reservists of French na- tionality, without speaking of.the numerous auxil- iaries which the natives could furnish.” Having such large interests in North Africa France certainly cannot be expected to permit Morocco to fall into chronic disorder, nor yet to pass under the control of any other power. How far the occupation of Morocco by the French would be injurious to | British interests is a difficult question to answer, buta strong French fortress at Tangier would be such a countercheck upon Gibraltar that Great Britain would no longer have undisputed control of the straits. ‘It has been suggested that a solution of the i<lifficul(y could be found by neutralizing the straits and putting the Spanish’in control of Tangier. The suggestion is British, and may probably be met by a French suggestion that Spain be put in possession of Gibraltar, The discussion, while spirited, is by no means bit- ter. The French Cabinet has explained the utter- ances of the Minister of Marine and excused them on the ground that they were spoken.in an after- dinner ‘speech. ~ British statesmen are saying. very little. There is no danger of war, but the concert of Europe has on hand another problem calculated to keep diplomats awake at night. ——— THE INVINCIBLE SARA. ULL is the. time and unnoted the season when Sara Bernhardt does not give some new proof to the younger women of the day that she still holds an unquestionable supremacy-over the public to which she and they alike appeal. Recently there was started in Paris a movement to form an academy of distinguished women, which should be for aspiring womanhood in France what the Academie Francaise is for aspiring men. For the purpose of obtaining a genuinely influential corps to organize the proposed association an Appeal was taken to the people for votes through the newspapers, and when the votgs were counted, lo!—Sara’s.name led all the rest. . Her competitors are by no means insignificant, nor do they lack for either artistic or popular esteem. Among those who were clected with her are Made- leine Lemaire and Louise’ Abbema, artists; Daniel Lesueur, novelist; Augusta Holmes, composer of music; the Duchess d'Uzes, patroness of art; Severine, the lady journalist; Mme. Rejane, the actress; Mme. Adam, the lady politician; Mme. Ros- tand, poetess, and wife of the dramatist; Mme. Al- phonse, Daudet; Gyp, or the Comptess de Martel, writer of amusing fiction; and so on. There weére also nominated two vocalists, Mlle. Marie Delna of the Opera Comique, and Emma Calve, and the fa- mous lady explorer, Mme, Dieulafoy, was not for- gotten. After such a vote who shall say any more that men are fickle or that wemen must grow old? Sara Bernhardt easily antedates the generation that has just voted her the honor of being the favorite queen of the French heart and the finest exemplar of woman’s genius. She has been amusing, entertain- ing, instructing and inspiring the men and women of to-day since they were children. Still no one finds her wearisome, nor dull, nor decadent—no one sug- gests that she go way back and sit down in the shade of the chestnut tree. Women with fresh young faces, women with new ideas and poses, women who are novelties, women who- have the ‘glow of youth in every vein, come afid go, but Sara finds in none of ‘them a dangerous rival. The world is hers. “Time cannot wither her, nor custom stale Her infinite va- riety)’! Who is better fitted to preside over an academy of “immortelles” than she who by example teaches all ‘'women how to be forever young and perennially admired? e—— A’big comet is said to be coming our way at .a rate of about 3,000,000 miles a day, and the astron- omers promise that while it will make a gay spectacle in the sky it’ won’t be any more dangerous than a Bm{an kite in 1904. : —_— In a shooting excursion the other day the Grand Duke Nicholas Constantinovich of Russia wounded | five men in his party. The Duke must have fired his | name at the wounded huntsmen. OCTOBER 17, 1902. ELECT REPUBLICAN NOMINEES TO THE SUPERIOR' COURT BENCH ALSKY o § Pro FOUR NOMINEES OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY FOR THE SUPERIOR BENCH, THREE OF WHOM ARE IN- CUMBENTS WITH FLATTERING RECORDS AND THE FOURTH A BRIGHT YOUNG ATTORNEY WHO POSSESSES UNDOUBTED ABILITY AND MANY FRIENDS. Ko e HE peace and welfare of San Fran- cisco, the personal and property rights of its citizens, and its order- ly and profitable commercial and industrial - progress, depend very much upon the character, ability and ex- perience of the men who compose its lo- cal judiciary on the Superior Bench. Mindful of this and of its trusteeship of the public interests, the Republican party has nominated Hunt, Hebbard, Cook and McClellan' to the statutory vacancies on the Superior Beneh which are to be filled at the November election. The first three are aiready on the bench and their judi- cial character and temper have been am- ply tried and have stood the test. Mr. McClellan is of the best standing in his profession and with an inheritance of the judicial mind which fits him for promotion from the ranks of the profession, which he has honored, to the bench which he will reach as a very sacred trust. These gentlemen know only the equal and impartial application of the settled principles of the law, to be administered to all without fear, favor or partiality. The courts are the rationalizing branch of our system of government. Their fune- tion is the safeguarding of every right of man. That he may acquire the means to own property they protect his right to la- bor and his control of the avails of his toil. They enforce the legal exemption of his means of livelihood from rapacious creditors. That his ambition to be an in- L PERSONAL MENITION J. A. Hays, proprietor of Harbin Springs, is at the Lick. % Joseph Craig, owner Springs, is at ‘the Grand. Judge A. Hewel of Modesto is among the arrivals at the Grand. P. C. Drescher, a merchant of Sacra- mento, is at the California. W. A. Junker, a hotel proprietor of Paso Robles, is at the Palace. H. M. Anderson, a lumber dealer of Aberdeen, Wash., is at the Lick. N A. C. Snyder, a capitalist of Santa Cruz, is registered at the Grand. The Rev. W. R. Tenney, a missioiary of China, is at the Occidental. Bishop Moreland of Sacramento is at] the Occidental, accompanied by his wife and family. John W. Mitchell, ome of the most prominent attorneys of Los Angeles, is at the Palace. . 8. M. Rucker, a furniture man and well known politician of San Jose, is regis- tered at the Palace. Captain H. Berger, who has charge of the Royal Hawaiian Band of Honolulu, is at the California. — e Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 6.—The fol- lowing Californians registered at the ho- tels to-day: At the Arlington—Miss Fischer, R. H. Warfield, J. B. Fuller and wife, and Mrs. Tirrell Phillips of San Francisco, and Miss Vivian of Los An- geles. At'the National—Leonard Stocking of San Jose, D. S. Copen and H. P. Brain- erd, San Francisco. At the Ebbitt—H. Mc- Farland of Los Angeles, William All- mayer, H. F. Crinedinst, and Major Gen- eral William R. Shafter, U. 8. A., of San Francisco. At the Willard—C. T. Foss, W. W. Fisher of San Francisco. At the Raleigh—R. W, Costello and T. F. Costel- lo of San Francisco, and A. W. Naftzger and Mrs. Naftzger of Los Angeles. of Highland Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Oct. 6.—The following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—W. Babcock, R. G. Brown and wife and Mrs. Bachman, at the Manhattan: J.-'O. Blanchard, at @ iriieiieinbieidnie i @ Prunes stuffed with apricots. Townsend's.* e Townsend's California Glace fruit and candies, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etched hoxes. A nice nt for Eastern friends, €39 Market st., Palace Hotel building. * ——————— Special information supplied dafly to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), Cali- fornia street. Telephone Main 1042. ¢ ————————————— Photographic Supplies. Films, plates, papers, cameras. Print- and developing. The best of every- at Sanborn-Vail's, 741 Market st. * 1 ! dependent owner of property may be pro- moted, they protect the rights of proper- ty. The courts should be independent of all influence, except that brought to bear by the legal principles which they must apply. They must know no class nor kind of men or property, but must treat all as equal before the law. The venerable John-Marshall, while at the head of the Supreme Court of the United States, was elected' a member of the constitutional convention of Virginia. He ‘sat in that body with two men who had’ held tane office of President of the United States, and one who later became President. When the judiclary article of the constitution was under tonsideration, the venerable Chief Justi®e sald to the convention: “The conception of the func- tion of courts, formed in my youth, has been confirmed Ly age and experience. The courts concern man in all of his rela- tions, in his life, his liberty, his property, his reputation. Therefore it is that no greater punishment can be visited upon a sinful people by an angry God, than a weak, dependent, or corrupt judiciary.” This conception of the importance of the judiciary is not exaggerated. It should be seriously considered by the people who, under an elective judiciary, have in their own hands the constitution of the courts. Class interests and personal ambitions should have no place among the motives which influence the ballot for a judge. No accident of birth, or wealth, or social po- the Hoffman: J. H. Browning, at the Grand Union: J. Coop and wife, at the Ashland; James B. Duggan, Joseph Dug- gan,"B. J. Wise and J. B. Osborn, at the Broadway Central; G. D. Eaton, at the Normandie; J. Flood, at the Rossmore; R. Forsyth, H. J. Morton, H. S. Scott, L. M. Scott and_W. P. Scott, at the Hol- land; Mrs. J. P. Gray and J. W. Heisner, 1 sition, should have part in such a cholee. Impressed by these considerations the Re- publican party of San Francisco framed | its judicial ticket. It may well be asked, | “Why party nominations at all?” And | the only answer is that it is the custom | so far approved by the people, but with ‘1 the reservation that party nominations to | the bench carry with them no partisan al- legiance due from the Judge to his party. Fie soke allegiance is to the equal law | and the only pledge upon his conscience is | that expressed in his judicial oath, to ad- | minister justice in a free society,.impar- | tially to all of its members. So these four | Republican nominees are not prepledged. | They give no promise to influence tHe | votes ¢f any class or kind of men. With | profound respect for the judicial charae- | ter, they stand for the equal balance of the scales of justice, and are entitled to the support of all men who, comprehend | the vast Injury that follows a partial, prejudiced, ignorant or corrupt adminfs- tration of the law. In the partisan hurly burly, in the nolse and confusion of warring ambitions, it is a.pleasure to find one spot where the con- flict ceases, where all citizens may meet with a cemmon purpose, and thers is no rivalry except the desire to secure the best and most impartial and equal administra- tion of justice. Belleving that it furnishes this zone of peace and this meeting place of all interests, in the nomination of its judicial representatives, the Republican party appeals with confidence for support of its judicial ticket. at the Grand; S. R. Marvin, at the West- minster; L. Murphy, at the Sinclair; W. Oesterreicher, at the Imperial, and Miss S. Wright, at the Albert. From Los Angeles—A. Deleur, at the Sinclair; Mrs. P. Forve, at the Victoria, and H. C. Ratcliffe, at the Bartholdl. From Santa Barbara—Mrs. J. Doulton and Miss Burk, at the Manhattan. I *—————-——-“—-p Best Ficlion of the Year Free With the Sunday Call. N EXT Sunday’s Call will contain the second half of that did novel of the present day’s social and political life, “The .Autocrats,” by Charles K. Lush. the first half of which appeared in last Sunday’s Call. have one of the standard works of fiction of the season splen- ; thus completing the book, Here you free! Two issues of the Sunday Call, without any loss of news or feature mat- ter, and a whole novel as well—all for ten cents. “The Autocrats” is a story that is filled with the fresh and in- vigorating atmosphere of Western enterprise and energy. The mo- tive of the novel is founded upon the dramatic incident of a combi- nation of politicians and capitalists working to secure a street rail- way franchise in a Western city. the book is a powerful and capable man who is a master hand at the manipulation of city councils. But here the game for playing has a much _ higher stake—he hopes not only to“get his coveted charter through, but to secure for himsel? the prize of a seat in the United States Senate, This n most lifelike picture in fiction of the promoter and the group of men that always surround him—bankers, promoters, newspaper men and hangers-o: setting and the accompanying quota of would naturally arise in such scenes, Mr. The most prominent character of which he is more valuable ovel gives the modern trust, the financial . Besides such a strong dramatic incidents that Lush writes a pretty love story through the weaving of the politicians and social strivers—a love story that is filled with human inter: divided attention from start to finish. o3 e e : The first half of this novel was published in the Sunday Maga- zine section of The Call last Sunday, and will be completed {m next Sunday, October 12. Buy it at the bookstores and this book will cost you $1 50—read it in The Call and it costs you not a single cent bf.hor books of equal merit to cast 2 over some of these titles and nofi::.thm :'1‘“ o Sthee who are on The Call’s fiction list. The followin, the splendid novels soon to appear in the lm_:dggy Call: “The Gen- tleman From Indiana,” by Booth Tarkin, 3 “Al o cennes,” by Maurice Thompson; “When xnf:m, :: iolldl'mlo' er,” by Charles Major; “The Leopard’s Spots,” by Thomas Dixon Jr. “The Gospel of Judas Iscariot,” by Aaron Dwight Baldwin, etc. Second Half of “The Avtocrats” Will __~ Bc Dublished Next Sunday .

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