The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 6, 1903, Page 6

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TLE €AN FIRANCIECO CALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1903, FRIDAY. THE SENATE LAUGHS. ISPATCHES from Washington describing the closing scenes of the session in the Sen- D ate show that the distinguished statesmen of % JOHN E. S;lECKELS, Proprielor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. arket and Third, S. F. to 221 .tevenson St. PUBLICATION OFFIC EDITORIAL ROOMS Delivered by Carriers, 10 Cents Fer Week, ingle Copies, G Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (including Sane: DAILY CALL (iny DAILY CALL (in DAILY CALL~—By SUNDAY CALL, Obpe Year. WEEKLY CALL, One T All Postmasters are authorized to recelve subscriptions. Sampie coples will be forwarded when requested. | subscribers in ordering change of address should be to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS iIn order & prompt and correct compliance with thelr requert. OAKLAND OFFICE. .111S Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNES Mazager Foreign Advertising, Marquetts Buildiag, Chiss3> (Long Distance Teleph: entral 2819."") NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH .30 Tribune Buildin NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. CARLTON. .. ..Herald Square NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentaro, 31 Union Square: surray HII Hotel; Fifth-avente Hotel and Hoffman House, CHICAGO STANDS: Sherman House: P. O Co.; Great Northern Hotel: Tremont House: Auditorium H Palmer H use, WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE. ..1406 G St MORTON E. CRANE., Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES—327 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. €31 [ 8 N.ow, McAllister, o'clock. 615 Larkin. open until $:30 o'clock . open until 10 o'clock. 2201 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until 9 o'clock. 1098 Va- lencia, cpen until 9 o'clock. 108 Eleventh, open until NW. 1ock. Twenty-second and Kentucky, cpen 2200 Fillmore, open until 9 p. m. 5> A BATTLE IN THE AIR. o o'clock until § o INCE the booming of Judge ker for the S Democratic Presidential nomination next year has proceeded far enough to be heard on the fth ’latte Mr. Bryan has suspended farm nd listened to the mingled voices that rus of the boom. Among them he has noted the voice of the Brooklyn Eagle saying that ng enough “to put under him a » be adopted, and should be careful to do so. A bad platiorm would beat him.” Those words have disturbed Mr. Bryan. Parker 2 ca te he might be able to stand, but Parker Democratic platiorms alarms him. n in a recent issue of the Commoner he The Eagle is one of the most plutocratic of the papers that ur 896 posed as Democratic. It is ne the ives most servile and sycophantic of the rep- wealth, and editorial v weaken Judge Parker if it is to be accepted as reflecting his views. The Com- moner w d at the proper time report s record, but in the meantime resent of organized its support must necessar 1 investigate dge T the readers the paper will be interested to know that according to the e the nomination of Judge Parker will necessitate a platform repudiating the platiorms of 1896 and 1900.” Having thus brought the issue to the platiorm question Mr. Bryan went on to say: “The Eagle seems a us to get rid of ‘the Bryan remnant’ be- | e the loss of this ‘remnant’ will be ‘more than | e good by better men whom they alone have alienated from the Democratic party.” Is this the source to which the Judge is looking for support? He save the worry of a campaign if his ¢ of a nomination depends on the adoption ficult to please newspapers ke the Eagle and also please the more than six mil- lions of voters who have supported the Democratic two campaigns. Which side will he take? he speak for himself or allow the Eagle to speak or him? The Kansas City platiorm Democrats will attend the next national convention.” That is the sort of thing that is going on in the Democratic camp as a continuous performance. It can hardly be deemed practical politics. It is like a battle of two owls fighting in the air and in the night. Neither side has a foot on the ground or an eye with a vision of clear daylight. There is nothing in the situation to provoke such a ceaseless quarrel, for there are no spoils nor victories in sight. It is about as certain as anything can be that the next President will be 2 Republican, and that about the only thing he Democrats can hope to do is to put forward a andidate who will be influential in restoring harmony n the ranks. Instead of trying to attain harmony, however, the two factions have no other delight than that of fighting each other. One has only to review the vote of last fall to see ow plainly the figures reveal the futility of Demo- cratic hopes. A recent compilation shows that Re- publicans carried the following States by the: plurali- ties named: California, 2550: Connecticut, 10,010; Il- linois, 89,770; Indiana, 35,264; Iowa, 79,214; Kansas, 42004; Maine, 27,494; Massachusetts, 37,120; Michi- gan, 79,384; Minnesota, 58457; New Hampshire, 827 ew Jersey, 19,377; New York, 8803; Ohio, 90,- 465: Oregon, 17,146; Pennsylvania, 142,340; Washing- ton, 25051; Wisconsin, 47,500. Can the Eagle or the Commoner name a man who an overcome any of those pluralities? If they cannot be overcome where is Democracy to get the otes required for the election of its candidate? Lven politicians are not justified in fighting about nothing. Bryan has promised to investigate and re- port on Judge Parker and his record, but he would serve his party better if he would investigate and,re- port on the feasibility of electing any Democrat. There is such a thing as 2 would-be statesman be- coming an absurdity, and Bryan has become that kind of a thing. Incidentally it may be said the Eagle is not much better. About the only result 6f the t of King Leopold to this country will be the chance it will give enter- prising actresses to get free advertiseménts by announcing that they might have been favorites of the King, but preferred the American public. It is announced that by the retirement of Senator Jones of Nevada and Senator Vest of Missouri the Senate will lose two of its best smoking-room story- tellers; but Chauncey Depew is left and the Senate is safe 3 | © | which everybody joined.” | | the upper house deem the delay of public business by | dilatory tactics to be a laughing matter. Despite all that has been said by the country against the dis- | grace of minority rule as manifest in the proceedings | | of the Senate, every allusion to the subject on the | closing day was taken as a joke and received with | megriment. | The reports state that when Senator Allison noti- :fied the Senate that President Roosevelt “congratu- |lated the two houses of Congress on the excellent | work done during the session” the Senators re-: | called that Mason had just been denouncing the fail- jure to pass necessary legislation, and “a titter went | round the Senate, which broke out into laughter, in | A moment later, when Bailey wished to call up a} | bill in order to take a vote on it the same Senator | { Mason who had just been denouncing others for de laying public business, began at once to talk against | | time, saying that in his former speech he had left out | the most important parts of his argument. There- | upon there was “loud laughter.” Still later Bailey [once more tried to get the floor, and on failing to | do so declared that at any rate he could force the | Senator from Illinois to talk the session out.” To | which Mason replied: “The Senator irom Texas could not force me to a more pleasant duty. Like| | him, nothing pleases me more than to hear the sound | of my own voice.” Thé dispatches say, “Again there ! was an uproar of laughter.” | One might reasonably ask of the Senators, “Why | so merry, gentle sir: By minority tactics in the Senate the session has been almost useless to the! public. Some of the most important measures of leg- islation before the two houses were defeated and post- poned by that sort of work. The statehood bill was held up by a minority for months and finally defeated | by the simple method of preventing the taking of a |vote. The fight over that measure delayed many | others, including the currency reform bill, the Phil- ippine bill and the Cuban and the Panama treaty. | That much of wrong has been done to the country, and yet the Senators treat it as a joke and laugh over it There are many people who do not look upon the issue as a matter of merriment. Time and again the Senators have been warned that they cannot afford to separate themselves from the American system of government so far as to utterly deride all attempts A conviction is growing that some- at majority rule. thing in the way of a better regulation of Senatdrial proceedings must be provided or else there \\-ill! | be some day a conflict between the two houses over | a matter of urgent business in which the sympathies | of the people will be wholly on the side of the House, | and then the Senators will find that the question is| not one for jests and laughter. | Mr. Cannon in speaking of the subject to the House, after pointing out several specific instances in which important legislation had been virtually dic- tated by a single Senator under a threat of talking a bill to death unless framed to suit him, said: “The Senate must be forced to recognize the right of ma- jority rule. Majorities and minorities shift back and forth, but a majority of the people voiced in the House and the Senate has a right to have its will ex- pressed. I have made my protest. I do it in sorrow and in humiliation, but there it is, and in my opinion | another body must change its methods of pro- [cedure or our body, backed up by the will of the | people, will compel the change. Otherwise this | body, close to the people, shall become a mere ten- derer, a bender of the pregnant hinges oi‘the knee to submit to what any one member of another body may demand as a price of legislation.” That statement of the coming Speaker was greeted | in the House with prolonged cheers. It will also be | greeted with approval throughout the country. There | If a Republican mi- | nority, headed by Aldrich and Beveridge, defeated the statehood bill by preventing a vote on it, it was a Democratic minority that prevented a vote on the | Panama canal treaty or the Aldrich bill. It appears | also that when the facts were brought out members of | both parties joined in the laughter and the merriment that prevailed. In short, it is the Senate as a body | that is -responsible for the delay of legislation, and ‘il is now to be seen how long public sentiment will | tolerate such a method of interfering with the will | of the people. | —— 1’ Chauncey Depew says “Republican editors are the { most modest of men,” and it would seem that he is no partisanship in the issue. | i | SCHOOL DISCIPLINE. S thought the victim was armed there has been | ing man put bullet holes in the back of another lead- | case an unfair advantage was taken by the dead lead- | self, for the Coroner found a pistol, fully loaded, on dead man convicts himself of incurring the death pen- While this interesting case was still rousing some lina that is not without interest. Rev. Mr. Pitts is a of the Lord, and likewise educated him for the profes- enlarged with pride as he stepped forth into the mary, intermediate and grammar grades and took ternal authority, that they might be taught to shoot. bulbous forehead to his bulging pistol pocket, and re- taineers. The men of the mountains were ever full of it was time to stop slopping and so essayed to warm | prosecute whenever a sworn statement is made of a ! their objections to it are well grounded. One of them | this country have taken the crowded condition ; sessidn of the hickory. Here the account becomes confused, but emerges from nebulous uncertainty with mountaineer number one lying dead on the {floor with a hole drilled in his stomach by the teacher, and mountaineers two and three saving | their stomachs from like perforation by turning their backs on the gun and running the other way. Reuben explained that he expected to have trouble, 1 s a teacher, in enforcing discipline, and had merely! provided himself with a gun as part of his profes- | sional outfit. Hereaiter then we may have added to the reasons for justifiable homicide that trouble is | expected, and part of the training in Normal schools | will be pistol practice. [ — Carnegie has given another million to another | { . American public institution and the public simply | shrugs its shoulders, amazed at the stupendous -and | bewildering wealth of this modern Croesus. OVERCROWDED CARS. ONSIDERABLE attention has been given of} ‘ late to the organization in Chicago of an as- | sociation of voters known as the “S(rap-; hangers’ League,” whose object is to bring about the | enactment of municipal régulations of street car traf- fic so that every passenger will be entitled to a seat. A similar movement has been started in Massachu- parade and passwords and buttons of the Chicago or- der. It has gone about its business quietly, but effec- | tively, and has already interested the Legislature in{ a bill designed tq attain the desired object. measure is now under investigation, and it is possible Massachusetts may be giving the experiment a fair | trial while Chicago is still in the whoop-it-up stage of a campaign of education. The Massachusetts bill provides that no street nor elevated car shall carry more than five persons above its seating capacity. The penalty is a fine of §50 imposed upon the company for every passenger in excess of the limit stated. One-half of the fine is to go to the informant and one half to the county treasury, and the District Attorney is required to violation of the law. The bill has of course met with the opposition of the street car companies, and it must be admitted stated beiore the legislative committee that it would be impossible to operate cars in times of great crowds if the bill in question were passed, for the people would insist upon crowding upon the cars, and 2ll the employes of the roads would not be able to get a car started away from a football game or a circus with only five people standing. Another objector said that to enforee a law like the oné proposed the railroad company would have to use force, and force would result in accidents and | innumerable suits against the railway companies. In the rush hours of morning and evening, especially evenings, the companies are running all the cars they can. If only five people were allowed to stand in each car besides the seating capacity, and all others were kept out, it would take many hours instead of about an hour to handle the evening crowds in the great centers of population. It will hardly be denied that the objections thus stated are valid. Some clever foreigners traveling in of American street cars as an evidence of an astonish- ing amount of patience on the part of the American people. “Europeans,” they said, “would not admit of such crowding and crushing. They would demand seats.” That sounds very well, but as a matter of fact the overcrowding of American cars is an evi- dence not of our patience but our impatience. When an entertainment of any kind is drawing to its close there passes over the audience a nervous movement of eagerness to hurry up and get out ahead of any one else. , The same eagerness is exhib- ited everywhere. People will not walk three or four blocks. They will not wait for a next car. They prefer the rush and the crush. This is a part of our national character. It has its good effects in many ways, but it has also its cvil. We may be sure, how- ever, that even if the law should impose a penalty on every man or woman who gets on a street car con- taining as many as five passengers above its seating capacity the crowding would still go on. In fact, so long as “Get there, Eli,” is the motto of the land so long will we have to accept the struggle and the rush to get there first. B The New York and Hartford Railroad has issued an order forbidding card-playing on their trains on Sunday, and now we would like to know by what authority they did O it was common for the men of Harvard and of Yale to speak contemptuously of what they termed “fresh water universities.”” The derision had developed out of the comparative weakness of the universities that were remote from the Atlantic seaboard. The term is no longer used, nor is there any further derision of Western institutions. The renowned universitics on the Atlantic coast have ceased to dominate the country, and while two of them, Harvard and Columbia, still rank above others in the number of students, there are several Western universities that are pressing them closely, and may even surpass them at a time not far distant. The registrar of Columbia University, who has re- cently compiled figures on the subject, gives the list of universities having more than 1000 students in this order: Harvard Columbia . Chicago Michigan California Minnesota . Cornell ‘Wisconsin . Northwestern It will be noted that out of the seventeen only five belong to the Atlantic seaboard. The others are Western and two of them are Californian. The East and the Eastern universities will of course continue to grow, but the percentage of growth will be much larger in the West. The prospects of the two univer- sities in the suburbs of San Francisco are especially bright. With the expansion of our oriental trade and the increasing importance of the commerce of the Pacific, San Francisco will grow rapidly in the fu- ture and her neighboring seats of learning will ac- quire an increased prestige, Finally, it is to be noted that the development of the universities of the West is an evidence of the ad- vancing intellectual development of the people. The demand for university. training is increasing, and as WESTERN UNIVERSITIES. NCE upon a time, and not so very long ago, | setts, but it has been accompanied by none of the| ! The | | WORLD’S NATIONS WILL CONTRIBUTE - TO THE ST. LOUIS MINING EXHIBI'I; — | [ DUSTRY FROM COUNTRIES IN f— ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. VIEWS OF THE IMMENSE STRUCTURE WHICH HAS BEEN ERECTED ON ST. LOUIS EXPOSITION GROUNDS TO CONTAIN A REMARKABLE EXHIBIT OF MINERALS AND EQUIPMENT USED IN THE MINING IN- | | T. LOUIS, March 5—The Palace | of Mines and Metallurgy for the coming world's fair s now about ready for occupancy. Owing to its liberal provision of funds the exposition will supply to its patrons free of charge all space needed for exhibits, and all on the ground floor. It will also supply free of charge a reasonable amount of power for such working exhibits as may be desired and ample light for gen- eral fllumination. The plans of the department of mines and metallurgy are proportionate to the scope of the exposition and provide for illustrating every important branch of the mineral industry both in this country and abroad. The splendid and commodious bullding PERSONAL MENTION. ‘W. P. Thomas of Ukiah is at the Grand. Rev. W. 8. Clark of Benicia is at the Grand. S. Mitchell, a banker of Visalia, is at the California. Dr. A. M. Vall of Rock Rapids, Iowa, is at the Palace. ‘W. C. Cressey, a rancher of Livingston, is at the California. C. A. Wilder, a wealthy leather dealer of Chicago, is at the Palace. Dr. D. Smith of Livermore is among yesterday's arrivals at the Palace. A. McDermott, a prominent citizen of Victorta, B. C, is registered at the Grand. R. Robertson, praprietor of Gilroy Hot Springs, and wife are guests at the Lick. | A. Satta, who is engaged in the coffes | business in Guatemala, Is at the Califor- | nia. | A. Satori, a wine dealer of Seattle, and | wife are among the latest arrivals at the Lick. H. H. Gard, who is promoting several rallroad schemes in Northern California. is at the Palace. Judge W. D. Tupper of Fresno is spend. | ing a few days in this city and Is located at the California. Commander Seaton Schroeder, former | Governor of Guam, who arrived Wednes- day, will leave for Washington to-night. H. H. Malloch, who conducts the wool- en mills at Marysville, is in the city on business and is registered at the Grand. F. K. Rule, who is connected with the Ciark road, arrived from Los Angeles yesterday with his wife and registered at | the Palace. Bishop Tikhon of the Greco-Russian church in St. Paul, is in the city, hav- ing arrived yesterday from Southern Cali- fornia. He is on his way home. 8. H. Moon of St. Paul, who is to ac- company Detective Willilam A. Pinkerton on his trip to the Orient, arrived from the East yesterday and registered at the Palace. Meredith Leith, chief engineer of the American can trust, which controls that business in this country, is at the Grand, having just arrived from Portland, where his concern Is starting a new factory, Sidney Collier, publisher of the weekly which bears his name, is due here this week. He is traveling to the coast with a party in the car Lucania, which was occupied by President McKinley on his last trip to this city. : Mrs. 8. Pisko, who Ie identified with the proposed home for consumptives in Den- ver, is a guest at the Palace. The lady was here a year ago soliciting funds for the institution and her éfforts were re- warded with much suc Malcolm Forbes of Boston, son of th bullder of the yacht Puritan, is vi:n:n: a result we are being furnished every year with an en- larged number of men who enter upon work with | will never get over the habit of talking platitudes and INCE the Lieutenant Governor of South Caro- a distinet rise of temperature in that part of the | ing man, terminating him thereby, and justified him- |ing man by compelling him to testify against him- | his person. Under the circumstances we can't see | alty according to the code of that country. He can’t { interest an incident occurred in connection with the prominent Baptist minister of that State, who reared sion of teacher in Furman University. Reuben gradu- world armed with high purpose and a pistol to enter at once the head mastership of a high school, and Six months passed without incident. The young spect for both grew, except in the bosoms of three adventure, and these three boys were slopping over the jacket of a mountaineer, with a hickory. The ; telling people what they already know. lina justified the killing of an editor because he | country. In the capital of North Carolina one lead- self by supposing that his victim was armed. In this | | what there is for the jury to do but acquit. The talk, but his gun does, and that ends it. administration of the school system of South Caro- | his son, Reuben B., in the nurture and admonition |ated in pedagogics, and his friends felt themselves upon his chosen profession. He strode over the pri- there the young ideas came, freely offered by pa- men and maidens admired the head master, from his large boys, who are indefinitely described as moun- with it. The pious young head master concluded 1rec:p|ent of this discipline objected, and secured pos- the highest training that modern systems of educa- tion can give. B San Franclsco and is registered at the e Palace. The young gentieman gained con. silerable distinction in the as one of Harvard’s best athletes and for a time ‘was the head of the athletic class of that college. A dispatch received yesterday -an- which has been erected and in which wili be placed the exhibits of mineral re. sources from all nations of the world, to- | Bether with mining machinery and equip- | ment and me llurgical processes and equipment, is feet wide by 750 feet In length, with an exhibit area of nine acres. 1ts_helght to the cornice line is 60 feet and the obelisks at the main entrance rise to a height of 150 feet. The building will cost approximately $500.000. There are no galleries. Joseph A. Holmes is chief of this important department. Bordering the building on one sidei a space 200 feet wide by 750 feet long has been ‘'set apart for working exhibits of various kinds, ore and _quarry yards, deep well drilling, placer mining and tun- neling in a hill facing the buflding. The design of the building, as well as its general and special proportions and arrangements, are peculiarly well adapted | L e L e e e aa ANSWERS TO QUERIES. JOCKEY AT A BALL—A, P, City. As no register is kept of people who attend balls in San Francisco this department cannot inform you if a certain jockey at- tended a named ball on a stated night. ARKANSAS—H. M., Dyerville, Cal. The Legislature has repudiated Webster's pronunciation of the name of this State, and declared by joint resolution that the correct pronunciation is, Ar-kKan-saw, | With accent on the first syliable. MARRIED NAME — Subscriber, Ala- meda, Cal. There is no statute that this department has been able to discover that compels a woman who marries to assume the name of her husband. It is the cus- tom that the woman takes the name of her husband. HOMESTEAD—Settler, City. If you will call at the reference room of the Free Public Library and ask for “Cupp's American Settler's Guide” you will find answers to the several Guestions you ask about taking up a homestead, and if that is not satisfactory, address a letter of In- quiry to the General Land Office, Wash- ington, D. C. This department has not | the spaceto give in detail the manner of taking up land, and what has to be done after the filing of an applecation. @ il @ nounced that Robert Lincoln, president of the Pullman Car Company, and party, in- cluding Marshall Fleld, General Merritt and Arthur Caton, the latter being one of Chicago’s society leaders, have started for San Francisco. The last mentioned gen- tleman accompanied Mr. Lincoln to the coast on his previous trip. Californians in New York.® NEW YORK, March 5.—The following Californians have arrived: San Francisco —G. Cutler, Dr. 1. Cameron, Dr. 8. B. Kobicke, at the Grand Union; B. Miller, C. J. Simon, L. Garsner, at the Herald Square; W. B. Whittier, at the Cosmopoli- tan; H. A. Cohen and wife, at the Vie- toria; M. F. O’'Brien, O. C. Pratt and wife, at the Imperial. S L P Californians in Washington. ‘WASHINGTON, March 5.—The follow- ing ‘Californians have arrived at the ho- tels: Metropolitan—George W. Mordecal Jr., Madera; New Willard—Charles Z. Patton and wife, James F. J. Archibald, San Francisco; A. C. Black, Los Angeles. ———— e Ex. strong hoarhound cancy. Townsend's.* } ————— and | TOWNSEND'S Cilifornia glace fru't candles, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etched boxes. A nice present for Eastern friends. 639 Market st., Palace Hotel building. * —_——— Special information supplied daily to e o A n X fornia street. Telephone Matn iog Co —_————— The B.Croner Co., corset designers and makers, have removed to 530 Sutter st * — for. an effective display of exhibits. Thers are numerous openings in the facades and roof of the great structure, admitting | light and ventilation, and every foot of the nine acres of floor space is directly avallable. All of this space is advanta- geously situated, being compact, symmet- rical, well lighted and well distributed ac- cording to aisies and entrances, there be- ing not an obstruction column In the building. This exposition at St. Louis will afford x:e mining and metallurgical. interests of | is country an excellent oppertunity to extend their business locally as well as internationally. By all reports it is to be the most extensive, complete and elab- orate universal exposition ever held. The exhibits to be made at the exposi- tion' have been classified under * fiffeen separate dedartments, each of whiéh in |turn is subdivided into groups and classes. Department L, embraces flve classes: Group 115 (embracing classes from 667 | to 681)—Working of mines, ore beds and stone quarries, equipment and processes. Group 116 (classes 652 to 700)—Minerals and stones and their utilization. Group 117 (class 701)—Mine models, maps dnd photographs. Group 118 (classes 702 to 718)—Metallur« 8Y, equipments and processes gf every | form and kind of metal working. | . Group 119 (class Ti9)—Literature of mine | ing, metallurgy, ete. i S R SPAIN WILL PARTICIPATE. | President Francis of the Exposition Cordially Received in Madrid. MADRID, March 5.—Dr. Francis, presie dent of the St. Louis Exposition, started back to Paris to-night. During his stay | bere he conferred with the Premier and the Ministers of State and Agriculture. He was assured by all that Spain would participate in the exposition and would appoint a commission to visit St. Louis to select a site for a Spanish building and apply_for space for the Spanish exhibit- ors. Mr. Francis is much gratified at the result of his visit and the cordiality of his reception. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. FALLING HAIR STOPPED. Baldness Cured by Destroying the Parasite Germ That Causes It. Baldness follows falling hair, faliing hair follows dandruff, and dandruff is the result of a germ diggng its way into the scalp to the root of the hair, where It saps the vitality of the hefr. To destroy that jgerm is to prevent as well as cure dan- druff, falling hair, and, lastly, baldness. There is only one preparation’ known to do_that, Newbro's Herpicide. an entirely new, scientific discovery. Wherever it has been tried it has proven wonderfully suc- cesstul. It can't be otherwise, because it xnerly destroys the dandruff germ. “You lestroy the cause, you remove the ef- fect” For sale by leading druggists. Send 10¢ tn stampe for sam; fer picide Co., Detroit, Mieh > © ' 10e Her CASTORIA or Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of BRUSHES Jrewers. bookbinders, ‘candy dyers, fiour mills, foundries, laundries, pap:r- hangers. printers, painters, shoe factorles, stablemen, tar-roofers, tanners, tallors, ete. BROS., mines and metallurgy, groups and fifty-threa FOR BARBERS, BA- kers, bootblacks, bat! houses_ billlard tab! ~makers, canners, BU Erush Manufacturers, 6u¥ Sacramento 58 e e Weekly Call, $1 per Year I

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