The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 19, 1903, Page 6

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, THURSDAY. :BRUARY 19, 1903 Fee Ask PUBI EDITORIAL ROOMS. . JCHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. ress @Il Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager TELEPHONE. for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. rket and Third, S. F. LICATION OFFICE. ..217 te 221 Stevensonm St. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Fer Week. DATL DAILY CALL (incly 00 .00 DAILY CALL ¢ .50 DA “ALL—By 65 € AY CALL, One .50 WEEKLY CALL, One Year. .00 Anl Single Coplex, & Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: Y CALL ( . One year.. Postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample coples will be forwerded when requested. Ma(l subscribers in ordering change of address should be | OAKLAND OFFICE., STEPHEN B. SMITH. th NEW correct AND OLD ADDRESS in order pliance with their request. | viiivs...1118 Broadway | KEROGNESS, ing, Margrette Building, Chicage. phone “‘Central 2619.") C. GEORG 3 axeger Yereigr £ivert (Long Distance T NEW YORK REPR ENTATIVE: 30 Tribune Bullding NEW YOR PONDENT: « C. C. CARLTON.... ...Herald Squnare | NEW YORK > ANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Murray Eill Hotel; WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFF.CE. BERANCH OFFICES. ot F A. Brentano, 31 Uniom Square; | ue Hotel and Hoffman House. cH House; GO NEWS STANDS at Northern Hotel: r House. P. t House; Auditor: O. News Co 1; Paln 1406 G St., N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. 27 Momtgomers, corner of Clay, open 00 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 pen until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until X. 1941 Mission, open untll 10 o'clock. 2261 corner Sixteenth, open uatil 9 o'clock. 1088 Va- , open until 9 o 106 Eleventh, open until 9 k. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open 1 8 o'clock. Fi open until $ p. m. 30 o'c ster, THE PARKER BOOM. | in politics is the Presiden- A seople outside his ker, and not that 1t of him as a Judgg Parker of New York. = P hundred i Judge Pa had ever s arded him as He has made re ched enii- mocratic ham and fid his D ork bench, Pe 1seli eminent, but when | of the liner on ind him ster of the e sinking pe he left judicial 1is now a Justice of the s family of Ver-| as a family of | s, whose members have | But Parker, re- at haracter, by the law, had n narrowe: pressed his per- the co ke an unexpected | t upon the country dresid { for the Presidency! | 1 K a mind sharpened | led by the| 1896 it has been led by lives by publicity and see to be contrc If common. On every t fair to a State con-| t Mr. Bryan has made himself known. Where | a crowd sion count on him to | He even made negative use of gatherings of ple and got as mu ch notoriety by refusing to at- | s by attendin The party seemed | went into the gloom the shadowy seclusion of the | and of | Judge Parker sitting in the twilight line was visible, and with this mystery about him invited the atten-| The Nebraska | known to ever suc- uded to displace him by a man not | e country to his candidacy. ader having become too we eed, it was cor politicians who laid the plan had | v of the campaign of 1844. Clay and when Polk was nomi- to the great Kentuckian, “Who % " said Clay, “that no one make him dangerous.” But Polk n a Representative in Congress and Speaker | of the House. Of course in that day of no telegraph | slow mail and few newspapers a man might be | Speaker of the House and not become a household ncy, But granting all that was said about Polk’s ob- urity, times have changed. The people want a ground plan and front elevation of Presidential as- pirants. They want to see and know the men who re thought fit for the greatest office in the world 'his was understood by Mr. Bryan, and so he went | barnstorming for the Presidency like a one-night- d tragedian. The people came, and saw, and rd bim, and went home not liking him and voted he other way. e after all he seems to have permanently cor- rupted the taste of his party, for it is clamoring for ludge Parker to go barnstorming and exhibit him- self in many States. Democratic Legislatures in the South are sending him invitations by joint resolu- tion, and various clubs, societies and banquets beckon im to come and show his paces. His managers are a quandary. Admonished by the fate of Bryan, want to keep their candidate off the circuit; but on the other side they are tormented by the demand ! that he show himself. No man knows now his age, Social state nor any of his dimensions. There are not half a thousand Democrats in the country, in- cluding his own State, who would know him if he passed on the street. Practically he is as unknown nd mysterious as Mokanna, the veiled prophet. It is a dilemma. To keep him canned is to weaken in. To let him out to go barnstorming is to weaken The people are not much concerned They | want the Government administered by tried and | own policies and men. They will not need to take 1 passable Judge off the New York bench to make a raw President when good and seasoned material is t hand. they Dr. Parkhurst is said to have found it compara- M THE KING'S SPEECH. ING EDWARD has informed Parliament that in addition to the regular business of the ses- sion his Ministers will submit bills dealing : with the Irish land question, London education, sugar | bounties and the London docks. Of those measures 1lhe one of most importance will be that relating to | Irish lands. There is a widespread hope both in Ire- |land and Britain that the issue will be dealt with in :n comprehensive and satisfactory manner, and the King expressed the popular expectation in saying: series of measures | “It will, I trust, complete the which have already done much to substitute single! | ownership for the costly and unsatisfactory condition | still attaching to the tenure of agricultural land over a large part of Ireland.” It was announced some time ago that the com- | mission appointed to investigate the subject and | recommend legislation had devised a biil that would | be satisfactory to landlords and tenants alike and would be approved by the Irish themselves. A gen- eral outline of the plan was made public and has | been widely commented on. The Irish leaders who have spoken of it have indorsed it, and if the Min- isters introduce the measure substantially as recom- mended by the comunission it seems there will be very { little opposition to it except from those who fear it ; lead to an enormous drain upon the treasury to out the landiords. st how much of an expenditure the bill will re- quire is a subject of widely varying estimates. Ac- | cording to the plan recommended the landlords are to sell their property for a sum that at 314 per cent will vield them an income equal to the rental derived under the terms fixed by the Land Courts, and they are to be sold to the tenants or other buyers at a sum from 13 to 25 per cent less than the landlords obtain for them. The treasury will be required to make up the difference. Some authorities estimate that ex- t not less than $100,000,000, while others penditure believe the expense will be hardly mpre than nomi- | nal. of the is reported to have esti- The O'Connor Don, reputed to be one brainiest of the landlords, mated that the sum required from the treasury will be not more than £830,000 a year for about twenty still more fay mate “The t will have to pay about 3 per cent interest for the sum involwed and get back about 234 per Thus it will nomi- e about £1,000,000 a year on the bargain, but this is only nominal. To keep down the agrarian troubles the Government of constabu A years rable es say: Goverr cent from the purchasing tenants. n Ic now has a standing army ary quartered in Ireland of some 13,000 £1,350,000 a year. With no agrarian troubles force be reduced three quarters, and there comes your £1,000,000 right back again. Moreover, with the Irish discontent allayed for the first time in ten centuries, the unity and strength of the empire will be well worth the mil- lion pounds, even if it all had to be paid yearly. Eng- nd could no invest- ment.” Comparatively little interest will concerning the other would be men. These cost abc can surely make better business this which the The sugar bounty problem affects those European nations pay- ing bounties on exported sugar, but does not mate- rially concern us. Neither are we interested much in the improvement of Londonglocks and London education. Even in Great Britain itself those meas- ures will hardly occupy much of public attention out- side of the city. The chief issue before this session of Parliament, therefore, is the settlement of the long- standing trouble between the landlords and the oc- cupiers of Irish land. be felt in sures submitted country me King announced Of foreign aff: but little to say. s it may be noted the address had There was a tone of optimism in the references to the Venezuelan affair and the ratifi tion of the treaty concerning the Alaskan boundary. The King also had the satisfaction of being able to speak encouragingly of the outlook in Africa and in India. In each of those lands there is a prospect of the peace and the prosperity so much needed after the war in the one and the famine in the other. Taken altogether the address was pleasant reading to the British public, and also to the world at large. S Ep—— Steamships arriving at New York or Liverpool are now announcing that at no time were they out of communication with land, and wireless telegraphy has thus put an end to anybody’s hope of getting out of reach of trouble by taking a voyage on an Atlantic steamer. fore the worid for so long a time that most ci the world Las grown weary of them, Talk of the “war cloud” ¢ sant for many a ye: er the Balkans has been inces- and men of this generation cannot recall a time when there was not some rumor of a crisis in that rezion. By reason ol the repeated false alarmis there has developed a spirit of incredulity concerning the whole Macedonian story, and as a rule very little serious attention is now given to any- thing emanating from that quarter. The incredulity is not without justification, but at the present time the indications~are that something serious is likely to happen in the near future. After repeated denials of all reports about the mobiliza- tion of armies and the menace of war, the officials of the great powers are now plainly expressing uneasi ness on the subject of the Macedonian troubles. King Edward has even deemed it advisable to speak of the danger in his address to Parliament, and the Governments of Great Britain, France and Austria are said to have agreed upon a programme of action with respect to the issue. Such declarations from official sources would not have been forthcoming were it not certain that dan- ger is imminent. Europe has been expecting an outbreak in the Balkans for a long time and has gen erally been prepared to meet it. It is doubtful, how- ever, if at any time in recent years an uprising in Macedonia and Buigaria would have been more in- opportune than at present. None of the great powers is just now ready to deal with the issue, Each would like to postpone it, and we may be cer- tain that if any plan of postponement can be devised it will have cordial support in every capital from Lon- don to St. Petersburg. The one power that has persistently sought the overthrow of the Turkish empire in Europe and Asia Minor is Russia, but at this time the Russians are busily engaged in Persia and Manchuria, They have far more to gain at present by keeping the peace than by precipitating a war. It is therefore not at all likely that the Czar will give any support to insur- rection at this time. On the contrary, the influence of Russia will doubtless be exerted harmoniously tively easy to obtain subscribers for the stock of his ideal newspaper, but now he is up against the real difficulty—that of getting subscribers to the paper it- scil | with that of Great Britain on behalf of peace. One of the curious reports current in relation to the affair is that Germany has thus far declined to join the programme agreed upon by Great Britain, France 1 vy and Austria. | sows seed of discord to be reaped by future genera- Just what that means is not clear. It is to be borne in mind, however, that for some time past the Kaiser has shown a marked iriendship for Turkey and the Sultan. German capitalists are con- structing a railway across the Sultan’s dominions in ! Asia Minor, and German business men have almost a virtual control of Turkish banking and commerce. It may be the Kaiser intends to strengthen his pres- ent influence in Turkey by acting in this instance as the supporter of Turkish rights and sovereignty against the allies. Even he, however, would hardly venture upon a war on the issue, for as yet the big navy he has been building is not up to the strength | desired, and, moreover, the trouble between the Germans and South America has not been wholly settled. The demand of Great Britain, France and Austria is for reform in the administration of Macedonia. | Such a demand is but a makeshift. #In the first place the Sultan is powerless to provide an effective and | honest administration of the country, and in the sec- ond place the Macedonians would not be satisfied no matter how just and fair the Turkish rule were made. They wish union with their fellow-men of Bulgaria, and will never be satisfied so long as they remain subject to the' Sultan. In the end they will have their way, but when the end comes it will involve: much more than the union of Macedonia and Bul-| garia. Back of the locat issue is one affecting world | politics, and when the time comes for reorganizingl the Balkan states it is not unlikely that there will be | reorganization elsewhere as well. e The distress caused among the people of Brittany | by the failure of thefsardine fishery last year appears to be even more serious than was at first reported. It is not the fishers only who suffer, but also those who are employed in packing the catch. the French are a very provident race and nearly al- ways have a considerable sum stored away, but the Bretons seem to have been careless in that respect, and now the Government will have to go to their as- sistance. S negro woman from the position postmistress at Indianola, Miss., and the protest in Charles- ton against the appointment of a negro, Dr. Crum, to the office of Collector of the Port of that city, that it is werth while to call attention to the fact that while those two incidents may be taken as ex- pressing the prevailing sentiment of the South toward ! negro office-holders, they do not represent the who]c} sentiment. There is a considerable body ofpublic opinion in the cotton States that is decidedly friendly to negroes in office provided they are at all fitted for | the place. ! Even in Indianola the evidence brought out by the | debates on the subject is to the effect that the attack on the postmistress, Mrs. Cox, was not due primarily | to the fact that she is colored, but to a belief on the | part of certain politicians that if they could inducc“‘ her to resign one of their number would get the of-| fice. In order to force her resignation mass- meeting was held, but it resulted quite differently from what the politicians expected, for forty persons at the meeting voted in her favor against only thirty- | seven for her expulsion. The wrong done to Mrs. | Cox then was riot on account of a universal objec- tion to her, but because the authorities of the place could not, or would not, enforce the law and protect | her against the violence of a lawless minority. A more striking case is reported from Georgia, where the people of the port of St. Marys have noti fied their Representative in Congress that they do not desire to lodge with the Senate any objection to ! the confirmatjon of a negro recently nominated for the office of Collector of the Port. The county in which the port is located contains a large majority of negroes, and the whites have concluded that it is better to encourage the higher class of negroes to try to rise in life rather than to keep them down. | Some of them in their letters to their Congressman | are reported as saying that they would rather have; one of their own colored men in the office than to | have an outsider sent to the place. In that locality | then at any rate there seems no violent hostility to negroes in office. In the meantime the agitation of the subject has | called forth a good many expressions from the | negroes themselves, and it appears there are wide differences of opinion among them as well as among the whites. Recently Mr. James Bond, pastor of one | of the negro churches in Nashville, wrote a letter to the American of that city, in the course of which he As a rule NEGROES IN OFFICE. O much has been said about the driving of a a |said: “The negro wants his political ri i ACEDONIA and her troubles have been be- |- FUIoKIR s Lis poltical £, heiaighs to vote and to hold office. He has no sympathy with | Booker Washington’s witticism that none of his stu- | dents ever broke into Congress. | them will. He hopes some of | While he has a growing respect for the | ability and high moral standard of this great negro, | and while he has confidence in the integrity of his | motives, the educated negro has never accepted Mr. Washington as his leader. He believes that when the | solemn, sober verdict of history has passed upon his | policy it will be seen to have wrought untold evil | not only upon the black man but upon the whole | country as well. He who in any way advises or en- courages the negro to be less than a man, and a full- fledged American citizen. does him a great harm and tions.” Such are some of the feelings that have been devel- oped by the controversy. It will be seen that both among the whites and the blacks of the South there are evidences of division, and that is a good sign. The most portentous factor in the problem of the South thus far has been the solidarity of each race in-antag- onism to the other. When the races divide over some great issue there will be a chance for both to improve. S —— The editors of Germany have won new laurels for their recognized sound judgment and critical under- standing of affairs. They are of the opinion that the fatherland came out measurably well in the Venezu- clan controversy. The fellow who is looking for a fight and doesn’t get it is to be congratulated from whatever point he cares to view the outcome. —— A Long Island girl who piled a lot of stones on a railway track explained her action by saying she was tired of seeing trains go by the house every day, vear in and year out, without stopping. She wished for variety and proceeded to compel it. As the girl is still young we may yet hear of her as a star on the variety stage. Some men seem born under a lucky star and have good things thrust upon them. It has been made public that Sir Michael Herbert, British Embassador | 1903. UNDERWRITERS DISCUSS TOPICS AND THEN DINE P | e | l | | THORE o I OF TO OFFICERS WHO WERE ELECTED AT YESTERDAY'S MEETING THE FIRE UNDERWRITERS' ASSOCIATION OF THE PACIFIC SERVE THE ORGANIZATION FOR THE ENSUING YEAR. HE managers and special agenta who constitute the Fire Under- o writers' Assoclation of the Pa-| mittee is not in favor of associate mem # hip, believing that thiz would not be a w cific counseled together earnest- | *lb & : pr ., ot ly yesterday. Last evening they | it desires to asalst as m ), Dessible the e i ' younger men in the insurance business, and banqueted together with invited guests) o nfec, niN. " erefore recommends that the in the Maple-room of the Palace Hotel and had a jolly time. The twenty-sev- enth annual meeting of the association | was brought to a successful close. Presi- | dent Gibbons presided over the delibera- tions of the day, and, as toast.master, | led the festivities of the evening H Yesterday forenoon the fire underwrit- ers devoted the time to the considera- tion of papers. B. Whitley of Seattie seng a communication from the north m which he advocated the establishment of use of i the library of the association be ai- ) the members of the Insurance Clerks' ation. Concerning the proposed change in the time for holding the convention therc was some discussion which resulted in a vote that on a poll of members, if two- thirds of the association should be found to favor a change in date, such change | with an experiment station, bringing into | to build the Pacific Coast cities and fac- a fire prevention committee apd expe- riment station on the Pacific Coast for the benefit of the underwriters. This be- ing a new proposition, considerable at- tention was devoted to it. Mr. Whitley set forth that the British Fire Prevention Committee, the Insurance | Engineering Kxperiment Station at Bos- tlon and the laboratories of the National Board and Fire Protection Association at Philadelphia and Chicago are accom- | plishing much in the way of insuring bet- | ter methods of construction. These, he | cialmed, are far in advance of the ordi- nary needs of the smaller cities of the Pacific Coast, the experiments of the in- stitutions named by him being largely tests of the most superior and expens! office and factory construction. He sa that the extension of the material r sources of the Pacific Coast would be great and said it Is time to form a fire protection committee of the Pacific Coast, the membership not only the insurance | companies, but the architects and factory owners, to get before the people who are torles a praper knowledge of important facts. INSURANCE PROBLEMS. F. J. Alex Meyer read a paper written by him upon “Slow Burning Frame Con- struction,” which was an exhaustive con- sideration of all that goes to make up a modern building of any class. D. A, Spencer presented a paper on “The E SOME ANSWERS TO QUERIES BY CALL READERS | CRABS Subseriber, City. This depar | ment cannot find a record of “the lar ‘t.'dl» caught in or near England.” | REVENUE—J. H. G. Oakland, Cal. T following is the amount of United Stat | revenue for the years asked for: 1570, $il 3,526,611, 1890, $403,080, & Rt NO SUCH CENSUS—R. A., City. The was no census taken in 1902, ther | is impossible to give the popula sex in the city and county of San cisco in that year. THE PUBLIC DEBT-J. land, Cal. The public de ates in 1560 was 354.8 7; 1880, 32, H. G, and 1900 D, "HOOLBOOF riber, Gras: Cal. It is im for this ment to discove what moves the Board of Education to make changes the State textbooks of ( >raia. TIVM? VF[R)!——J, J., P AN OLD Arena, Cal. By addressing a letter quiry to the publishers of the L. City Directory you may learn of th when an old firm in that in existence. tim. THE CRESCENTS respondent wishes to readers of this him where he cdu by-laws of an orgs TIME OF DAY—A mouth, Cal. Among the custom to say as to the time of day railroad rey -five m mark they say it is twent ) 11 o'clock, th railroad man 1 continue, 10:35, ¢ would not s Ex. strong hoar — e Townsend's Ca candies, #c a p in boxes. A nice present for E: &9 Market st.. Palace Hotel —_——— srmat supplied es and public men by g Bureau (Allen's), 20 Telephone Main 1042. @ iR @ rule sh made by f) stic fire-etc astern fri datly Press Clipp! fornta street. ther such red: ewal or rew ly whe ont 1l a be v Colonel Knapsack funny stori underwriters, others imagin €. Mas read the annual collection and odd experiences of the »me of which are real and To serve the association for the year ensuing Whitney Palache was elected president: J. L aller, vice presid Calvert Mead, secretary and treasurer W. H. Gibbors, Louis Weinma and Herbert Folger, executive committee, all being past presidents of the association. GUESTS AT BANQUET. | weuld be made, otherwise the meeting in T L S | 1904 will occur at the regular stated time. ngton. _7.‘1“‘»5‘» 4..1,::‘.1 J“H Schiv- | AN IMPORTANT REPORT. C. R. Sgreet and H. T. Lamey. we An important matter was treated by a | SUests of honor. The complete list of joint committee representing both the |those . who took part in the bauquet, | Board of Fire Underwriters of the Pacific | Which was informal, is as foll and the Fire Underwriters’ Association | George W. Dornin, of the Pacific. A report was submitted Overtc - F.C. 8 by Herbert Foiger for this committee | o Yath Vi M. Lewden, which did not purport to be final, DUt | yon, William H. Hill® Fra oy was understood only to make a beginning | Fuller, Dixwel Hewett, €. . Roger for an understanding in the matter of the | B. Friend. C. F. Aaron, Norman Sinclair, A reinsurance or risks. In the report was | (hur M, Brown. W Wayman, ¥. P. Cuine Thomson, Heuer, Thomas J an agreement which the joint committe . William e S proposed to submit to the various com- Levison, tow, Welden B panies for signatures. The agreement | :’Vh;j:_:, H 31 X )\I-\hvr n Y embraced the following Tules: i.\ll-‘l\A n, H. H. Price, S, Simamen, 5 iray Rule 1—If a policy under which reinsuranca | Dutton, George H. Mendell, J. H. Ric has been effected be canceled and a new policy | issued in place thereof, the reinsured co pany shall notify the reinsuring company of sueh relssue as soon as practicable, and the refnsuring policy shall apply thereto from the ate of reiss Falling such notice the re- nsurance shail attach to the new policy for noc nore than tw days beyond the date of ca iginal policy ror or omission be made by company 28 to the location of | 7 o uring com- | ation tor | between | the amount of the reinsuring policy and the | liability, i any, which the reinsuring company shall already have In the correct location un- | der ocher pollefes. Rule 3—If a reinsuring policy be reduced ir amount and a loss occur before a new ar rangement has been made with the reinsuri company, the amount of the reinsuring policy shall be reduced in the same proportion. 1t there are reinsuring policies for more than one company and cancellation or reduction of one or more of them has been effected in conse- |i. quence, the nder of the reduction shail be applied p ta to the reduction of ¢ remaining unreduced reinsurance policles and | of the net amount retained by the reinsured Stephen Echiin, J the reinsured 2zam, Myron W E. J. M Andrews, Holmes, R. H ree, lution of Policy Form. t the afternoon | ssion Arthur M. Brown read a paper on | "se and Abuse of Sprinkler Equip- | ments which was one of the best of ihe | efforts at the two days’ session. Several matters of general interest were introduced in the afternoon. The com- mitee on insurable interests submitted a report. The committee consisted of Willlam Sexton, William H. Lowden and Bernard Faymonville. In it report the committee expressed the following opin- ion: We do not doubt that a warehouseman, me- chanic, cleaner or laundryman or any ona else | who in & eimilar capacity & for ecleaning. for repairing or for a_depository under the provisions of section 2548 of the California Civil Code and has an insurable Interest to the extent of the value of the goods, and that any policy fssued to such a person covering goods held by him in trust would cover all articles taken by him in the courss of his business or trade. whether he had a med specific labilfty thereon to the owner or not. A committee consisting of Frank J. Devlin, Charles O. Scott and Willlam Sex- ton submitted the following report: We recommend that a new vote be taken upon the date of meeting, as tha last vote taken showed a considerable difference of opinfon as to when the annual meeting should be held, and your commitiee believes that it would be best to submit the two dates receiv- ing the highest voles and ask the members which of these two dates they prefer, viz., the second week in January or the third week in_ February. Your committee notices that $175 55 was expended last year on the library, and vour committee would recommend that limit of $50 per year be made for the pur- chase of new books, and your committee sug- A NEW ADVERTISEMENTA SCIENCE SCORES AGAIN. A Preparation That Will Destroy tae Drmdruff Germ Discovered. Finally the scientific student has dis- ! covered a certain remedy for dandruff. When it first became known that dan- druff s the result of a germ or parasite that digs into the scalp, and saps the vi- tality of hair at the root, cauning f;mnfi hair and baldness, biologists skt to wor! to discover some preparation that will kill the germ. After a year's labor in one laboratory, the dandruff germ destroyer was discovered; and it is now eml a4 in Newbro's Herpicide, which, besides i at Washington, did not like anything which Minister Bowen insisted upon in the recent negotiations re- garding Venezuela. And Mr. Bowen has no thought, cither, of aspiring for the Presidency. curing baldness and thinning hair, - ily and permanently eradicates dandruff. "Deltre‘otho cause you remove the ef- fect.™ 1d by le drus company before the reduction of the policy. | M. Mendell and Frank J By THOMAS DIXON JR. IN NEXT SUNDAY’S CALL FEBRUARY 22— The Tenderest, Most Dramatic Book of the Age. _ THEBLUE STOCKIKG 6IRL | WOMEN WHO [0 mnl En‘h: .:.k.l:.' KOT APPRECIATE. ‘ By Kate Thyson Marr. WHY THE GREATEST SCIENTISTS IN THE WORLD ARE WATCHING BERKELEY. By Dr. Frederick W. &'Evelyn. 8. Send 10c in stamps for sample to Herpicid Co.. Detrolt, Mich, 5 i

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