The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 4, 1903, Page 6

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SATURDAY APRIL 4, 1903 JCEN P. SPRECKELS, Bropriefer. Az@ress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPHONE., Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You Witk the Departme t You Wish. PIBLICATION OFFICE EDITUORIAL ROOMS. .. Market and Third. S. F. Delirered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. single Copies, 5 Cents. Mail, Including Postage: Terms DAILY CALL ( DAILY CAL DAILY DAILY SUNDAY CALL, WE! Y CALL, One Tear All postmasters are authorized to recelve subscriptions. will b forwarded when Tequested ange of address should be D OLD ADDR in order ance with their request Mafl sub sarticular to insure 4 § OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Bromdwas......:....Telephone Main 1053 2148 Center Stre 3T C. GEORGE XKROGKNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- tising, -Marquette Building, Chicago. Long 1 tral 2619.”) EW x YORK .REPR! STEPHEN B SMITH. .. NEW CORRESPONDENT C. C. CARLTOYN. Herald Square NEW “YORK NEWS STANDS: Waidors-Astoria Hotel -A. Brentano. 31 Union Square: Murray EUI Hotel; Fifth-avenue and Hoffman House. CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Shermsn House: P. O.'News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Tremont House:.-Auditorium Hotel: Palme: House. WASHINGTON (D. C) OFFIUE. ..1406 G St., N. W, MORTON CRANE, Correspondent. BRANCH OFFICES gomery, scrner of Clay., open untf? 9:30 o'clock Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 alclock 615 Larkin, open untj Mission, open uatil 10 c'clock. 2261 open until 8 o'clock. 1085 Va- 106 venth, open until ® nd Kentucky, epen PLAYING THE. HARMONICA. ; been playing Bryan and e 2 one Iowa, and the tune played o war son took turns at the M ers because they want c ‘i a yariety o ount issue, Mr. f the tariff and its de- So variorum that issues are L 1-essent was perhaps di ,.who will be remem- ior the Presider in a speech in the 1 erlc for Congress, ’ a So, at Des 3 tiness of the occasion, because was by the presence of Mr. | this special vaudeville n the Hearst boom righ political and ‘moral Stevenson ‘attacked Cleveland a political criminal, who has M v thousand people in the ssion of their opinion eveland as a criminal pu knife against swore by the point thereof it Stevenson said es meant disaster, therdfore go forward carrying the issues of 1900 That is all right. The country tented with it. It is quite certain that going n demands 1 s defeat: and as he eat too, the country g set a trap that will catck ier going or coming. Wh 1g .of amusement was going on at Dheis party of Démocratic members of ( 2 organized to take a pleasure special train of Pullmans at and, of course, to promote incident ly advertise his san as th shame th ing to be seen abroad 1 unconsc det o the 7 the 1 try can be disgu or amused by the spectacle, ac- S —— Washington reports announce that cording to it the political ng the time in guessing who will be Roosevelt’s running mate next year, and goes on to say: ne wlio assert the Vice President 1 California, as it is recognized that mmch dissatisfaction in that State with the Cuban reciprocity policy, and the Democrats b The ery good, but anything which in- look to California for a Vice Presi- experts of that city arc pz to note the s pleasing report there has beer es of capturing the electoral vote.” dent ma accepted without grumbling »ar noted German agriculturists is coming t California and its physical resources. The hed gentlemen may be assured a generous me and a vision of prosperous industry that will ‘ ¢ that we are as proficient in the arts of peace as re aggressive in those of war n Oakland burglar was sentenced to thirty nprisonment the other day he pleaded ir;r the ground that he has a wife and child to He should console himself with the assur- wife has in her family one member less r to note that summary vengeance sicd out 2 few days ago to the Chiiean murder- itizen. The time has evidently the subjects of Uncle Sam were fre meanest nation that floated be of the most strenuous stripe in A boy in that interesting State killed him- he other day because his parents commanded him cingan o to church. Death rather than devotion is cer- ternative. Stevenson St. | By | ing to act as| ous of the ! t they play, the coun- | | | P | at this time the occasion for much misrepresentation of the ad- | ministration. It has been represented that the Mon- | roe doctrine- was violated by permitting the blockade jvi Venezuelan ports, and that we should have for- | bidden that action, even to the extent of incurring the risk of war with the concert While this domestic criticism was going on, German writers | ike Professor Wagner 1 :pr]hnz that empire to observe the Monroe doctrine THE MONROE DOCTRINE. RESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S Chicago speech was an exposition of the Monroe doctrine in one of its phases and that the most important The Venezuelan incident has been made 1 powers. were attacking us for com- | by abstention from conquest of territory. The President makes the point clear that the con- certed powers first came to us for permission to make the demonstration toward Venezuela and re- ceived it with the admonition that the integrity of | the sovereignty and territory of Venezuela must be respected { Naturally the exposition by the President brought into focus the issues betwen the United States and Europe that may originate in the Monroe doctrine. We cannot forbid war upon any Latin-American country in punishment of its de- fiance of international obligations, but that punish- ment must be limited to action at arms solely, in-| cluding devastation and destruction of life and prop- erty, and must stop short of the conquest of terri- His exposition is sound S tory or subversion of sovereignty. To go iur[hv:r‘ would make us a party to every quarrel between | Latin-America and FEurope, and, considering the | nature of the Governments of that part of our| | hemisphere, there will be quarrels enough to keep | us busy and finally deplete our resources if we ven-| ture to mix in them. | The P: that the Monroe doctrine is a national policy of the | United States and is not yet written into international | esident shows wise restraint in declaring | I it were part of the law of nations we would lose our distinctive relation to it. If it were inter-! national law every other country would be uudcr! the same cbligation to defend it that we are, and al inajority of the nations could abrogate and abandon | law it, cut it out of the body of the laws of nations and the Latin-American nations of this semisphere the peculiar protection which it gives to remove from them The President is right; it is an American policy, »ud, like all national policies, depends for its vitality upon defend it. It is well understood by ‘every reasonable American that this doctrine, | as our foremost naticnal policy affecting our for-| ecign relations, must be kept intact by a navy large nough to defend t hemisphere. for the defense of our own coasts is not sufficient. our power tc A navy sufficicnti We are the first nation in history upon which is Iaid“ 2 duty and a responsibility that require a navy strong | gh to patrol and defend one-half of the surface | e globe This fact cannot be too strongly nor too altcn; called to the attention of our people. Everybody | wants the Monroe doctrine maintained and everybody : must equally want the means of maintaining it pro- | | vided ‘and kept in readiness. The President, in his | forcible way, advises that we try no bluff on the rest | of the world by insisting upon a national policy so | affecting il other nations. but that we must back it} | with adequate power or become mere boasters. He selected the locality in which to make his Mon- | roe speech wisely, for Chicago is the commercial center of 2 mid-continental region, a majority of | whose people have never seen the ocean and have but | 2 limited comprehension of their relation to it. \Vhen“ { of | the largest navy in the world is proposed as a neces- | sity of our national position, it is much of a riddle | to them. They see no deep water, no foreign flag,} on | can no threat of investment of seaports or dest of commerce on blue water. No man-of-war reach them with its guns, and the outside world is a far-off shadow. Yet they are faithful to national | traditions and regard the Monroe doctrine with a reverence scarcely second to that felt for the consti- tution itself | What the President says is said with such force | | that impact felt by public opinion and| ts permanent upon the memory of| | men. its is imprint is His Monroe speech will be long rcmembered‘ by the people of the prairies, and less opposition to | necessary naval appropriations may be expected from that part of the country. e A Frenchman has invented a harmless bullet, made j oi a chalky compound, which merely marks the spot where it strikes and does not do the least harm. It { would be of excellent use in future wars. Let the | nations agree that every man marked in a spot where | a wound would be fatal shall be counted off the field, ! and then battles could be settled without hurting any- body. SOCIAL SERVICE. i 1SS HELEN GOULD has provided the | M American Institute of Social Service with a | fund to carry out an elaborate plan for edu- cating the American people in the best of all that has been done in the world for the improvement of mu- | nicipalities and the betterment of social conditions. { The plan includes a careful study of what has been | done along such lines in Europe and a dissemination | throughout the United States of the facts thus ob- tained. The director of the institute has made public the programme designed to be carried out according to the wish of Miss Gould. A commissioner, accompa- nied by a suitable staff, including a photographer. will make studies in various parts of Europe where important municipal or social work has been achieved. | He will compile a statement of the various kinds of work which have been found successful abroad and which may be expected to be advantageous here, so that the American people will be given an under- standing of the manner in which social problems have been worked out and solved by the people of older nations. As illustrations of the kind of work that will be undertaken the director stated that much can be learned from Paris, where children are trained to be- | come artisans of such excellence that in all parts of | tie world there is a demand for Parisian fabrics. | Paris can also furnish good object lessons in the | construction of model houses for city dwellings. In Ttaly there has been successfully established a co- operative system of financing workingmen and farm- ers. It has been taken as a working model for an agricultural bank in Ireland and may prove worthy of imitafion here. In Belgian cities there is much to be learned in the way of beautifying public thorough- fares and the regulation of billboard advertising. Great Britain is expected to furnish instruction in the way of mode] tenements, the operation of municipal orks of various kinds and the instruction of children in manual industry. Finally, Ireland will furnish in- | | | | | | | | | system as expressed in the Dingley tariff. | course they will; the Republican party will “stand | palpable hit on the gold bugs of his party by remind- | ing them that ) teresting instruction in what has been achieved there 1 by the co-operative dairy societies and by the agricul- tural banks. It will be seen that the scope of the work will include almost everything that tends to the service of society and that can be best carried out either by govern- mental direction or by co-operative methods. No explanation has thus far been given as to the means that will be used in disseminating the information, but doubtless that part of the work will be provided fnr in due time. The plan appears to have originated with Miss Gould and represents her interest in the improvement of the social conditions of American cities. It is therefore another evidence of that glow- ing patriotism which has been noted in her life ever since the war with Spain, and of course if the plan prove feasible there will be no lack of money to carry it out. If Mrs. Burdick, the Buffalo woman who has held the stage of the reading public for weeks in tragic and unhealthy interest, is as various in disposition as she is in the pictures which have been published of her, anything might be assumed in reference to her con- nection with the unwholesome affair. STAND PAT. :CRETARY ROOT'S address to the Home Market Club in Boston may be taken as an announcement that the administration has no sympathy with the so-called “lIowa idea” of tariff re- form at the coming session of Congress. It is also a notice to all shades of the opposition from outright | free traders to the advocates of reciprocity treaties that the administration will maintain the protective In other words, the opponents of protection may adopt what It is quite probable the speech virtually fofmulates | the issue of the coming Presidential campaign. With ! the exception of Bryan and his immediate followers, | the expressions of Democratic leaders of late havei been almost universally in favor of a tariff fight. Bryan, indeed, has used the subject to make a very iree trade has been beaten much oftener than free silver, and accordingly it does not befit them to denounce him as an upholder of a dead It is not likely, however, that the hit will have much effect. Democracy must have an issue, and from every part of the East and the South, from Massachusetts to Missigsippi, the counsel of the lead- crs is to resume the tariff fight. The position of the Republican party on the ques- tion is virtually set forth by Secretary.Root in this statement: “There is no fetish in the tariff schedules and no sacredness in particular rates of duty. If issue. through original error or change in conditions any provision of the law work ill to the country, then at the proper time and in a proper way the people will change the law. working well as a whole, common sense requires that we endure some faults rather than destroy the gen- If, on the other hand, the law is| eral good effect by censtant tinkering. Upon that platform the protectionists can meet their foes without fears of the result. The battle, as | Bryan says, has been fought over a good many times | oftener than the silver fight, and it is not at all likely | the people have forgotten the results of the last ex- | periment with even a modified measure of free trade. | An important phase of the question was thus stated | by the Secretary: “A revision of the tariff is a great and difficult task, not to be undertaken except for grave and serious reasons. The decrees of an absolute ! monarch can make or change tariff laws without dis-‘ cussion or delay, but 14,000,000 voters, reprcscnted[ by 368 Representatives and ninety Senators, cannot. | The effects sure to be caused by discussion of the | Iqueslion are among the chief reasons why revision | | should not be undertaken until it becomes a real necessity.” That phase of the issue should be seriously pon-} dered by the people. A prolonged agitation over the | tariff, accompanied by a threat to materially weaken | the protective system, would unquestionably destroy confidence in the permanence of the prevailing pros- perity. Capitalists would hesitate to undertake new enterprises so long as it remained uncertain what measure of protection is to be provided in future | against foreign competition. We went through tha experience during the years that immediately pre-] ceded the Wilson tariff, and the consequences are not yet forgotten in the homes of the working people. | The final statement on the issue is, as Secretary | Root expressed it: “If a tariff is to be revised it should | be revised by its friends. Whatever principle the peo- ple of a country wish embodied in a tariff law, the men who believe in the principle should frame the law. If the American people are ready to abandon the principle of protection and face the crash and downfall of our present prosperity, which would im- mediately result, then they should hand revision over | to the Democratic party, for that is the meaning of | the men who are crying, ‘Revise the tariff in order to destroy the trusts.” That is the issue upon which the people in all! probability will be called upon to vote next year. It is being formulated by the Democratic leaders and will doubtless be made prominent during the coming session of Congress. Then it will be seen whether any considerable proportion of the American people will be willing to vote again for Democratic tariff tinkers and thus deliberately forsake the prosperity | they have to fly to evils they know well of. -5 1 i A German antagonist of the practice of vivisection is said to have produced a realistic drama called “Der Vivisector” and put it upon the stage. He presents vivisection realistically, and it is said Kaiser Wilhelm ' on seeing the play rose in anger, declaring, “vivisec- ' tion is a horrible curse to humanity and a disgracz‘ to science.” It must be admitted, however, that the vivisection of animals on the stage is quite a dif- ferent thing from vivisection done for scientific pur- poses in 4 laboratory and, furthermore, it may be the play was made just a little bit worse than reality for the purpose of dramatic effect. —— A society writer complains of the lack of marrying men in that section of the country and says,of Wash- ington: “Those who indulge in statistics declare that no less than fifty-seven different varieties of mixed un- pickled rosebuds swept a fluttering courtesy through- out December. This is undoubtedly an exaggeration. but even by reducing the number one-third there re- main nearly forty girls added to the large collection of those of older growth, and this is only one com- munity.” A professor of the University of Boston is charged with saying that no woman who wears in her hat the feathers of a song bird or a seagull could ‘enter the kingdom of heaven, and now the average woman will have to take her hat off when she gets ready for the next world. FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 4 S | % 1903, SOLDIER WHO RESTORED PEACE N MIN DANAO RETURNS HOME BRIGADIER GENERAL FRANK D. BALDWIN, WHO WON THE PHILIPPINES AND RETUKNS HOME TO ASSUME COMMAND ' I FAME IN | OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE COLORADO. i ! * 3 ; HE army transport Thomas, Cap- | Lewls, Lieytenant F. C. Lander. C. E. Mitch- - fv o - . | el A McGill, James [cComb, L. B. il- tain Buford, arrived - vesterda¥ | jiman, wite and baby, Mrs. W. B. Moses, Dr. from Manila, later a few days | E. W. Miller Dr. 5.8 McClure, Captain 3. T. N e, =ns * W Pressy, B than had been expected, JUINS | Drmo” Lutner: Parker, Mre. G L. Hice and from the time she left Nagasakl, | baby. Captain W. B. ‘Stone. Lieutenant C. b. but in good condition and with all on board but the officidllly sick in good health and high spirits. While no heavy storms Were encountered during the voyage, the weather was cold and nasty nearly ail the way across and just enough of head wind was encountered to lengthen the trooper’s time by a couple of days. For about a week of the twenty-one days oc- cupled in making the trip, the Thomas’ course kept her in the trough of the sea | and her rolling was something terrific. There were two brigadier generals | among the passengers, General F. D, Baldwin, who so regulated the Moros that all is now peace in Mindanao, and Gén- | efal Morris C. Foote, who réturns to en- Jjoy on the retired list the honors gained during a busy military life. General Baldwin has beén assigned to the command of the Department of the Colorado, recently vacated by General Funston. During the last six months of his service In the Philippines he was on | the sick list and is not yet in robust | | i health. He was in command of the troops in Mindanao and for his work among the Moros recelved promotion to his present rank. General Baldwin has been in the regular army since 1866 and is the only man in the service who has been twice decorated with the medal of honor. Of his achleve- ments in the Philippines he has little to say beyond that he believes in the per- manency of the peaceful conditions he left in Mindanao. General Foote, who enlisted as a pri- vate in Company C of the Forty-fourth New York Infantry in 1861, has gone through four wars and numerous Indian campaigns. While in the Philippines he superintended the construction of a num- ber of bridges in Northern Mindanao. He saw little fighting in the islands, but | comes home lame as the resul¥of a fall | from one of his bridges. After spending | some time in California he will retire to his home at Cooperstown, N. Y. Major E. W. Halford of the paymaster’s department, who returned on the Thomas, was President Harrison’s private secre- tary. He has heen disbursing Uncle Sam'’s money In various parts of the Philippines and comes home for assignment to some | new post. He was accompanied by his daughter, Mrs. Hallock, and her two | babies. Mrs. Hallock's husband is a cap- | taih surgeon in the army. t F. C. Burtis, a navy apprentice, died on hoard of consumption on March 6 and on | March 28 James C. Tucker, who was a | private in Company K, Fifth Infantry, ' died of dysentery. In addition to the cabin passengers the | Thomas brought §39 enlisted men, of | whom 584 belonged to the Artillery Corps and 306 were casuals; 12 enlisted men of also brought 105 sick. the navy and 108 discharged soldiers. She The cabin passengers were: Mrs. P. G. Anderson, Brigadier Genesal F. . Baldwin, Lieuténant C. Briand, Mrs. Alice V. Burgess, Dr. H. (. Blerbower, Lieutenant 7. K '&ncki!rom. Lieutenant . F. Brigham. Lieutenant R. W. Briggs and wite. W. LeC. Feard and wite, Captain A. §. Conklin, Lieu- tenant 8. Caldwell, Dr. Alden Carpenter, Dr 8. ‘arson, L. V. Carmack, F. Chieilk, Lieutenant M. ¢. Doyls, Lieutenant . A. Dolph, Captain A. H. Davis, Captain M. F. Davis, wife and two children, Lieutenant H. A. Drum, Lieutenant C. H. Errington and wife, Brigadier General M. C. Foote, Mrs, Jacoh Fetzer, Miss Bertha M. Gertsch, Cap- tain C. H_-Hunter and wife, Lieutenant J. P. Hopkins and wife, Major E.' W, Halford, Mrs. Hallock and two babiés. Dr. 8. W. Hussev, Mrs. L. R. Holbrook and two bables, Mrs. Al ., Harshaw, Mies D. M. . J. L. Hughes, wife and b Mrs. Hollenbeck, Mrs. W. . Mrs. G. D. Jarrétt, Dr A DOCTORS INDORSE HERPICID] Because Its Formula Is Submitted to Them. Alexander McMillian, M. D., a prominent physician of Lansing, Michigan, writes: “On three cases I have tested Herpicide for dandruff and the result has been all that could be desired.” Herpicide is made upon an entirely new principle, that is, that dandruff and falling halr are caused from g micrabe that in- fests the haeir bulb, and, by ‘destroying the microbe one’s hair is bound to grow luxuriantly. Herpicide is the only hair remedy that claims to and ly does il:;lroy the lead- T 1! Raralt sevn. Bort vy Smith and wife, J. E. Smith, wife and biby. Major J. E. Saw: Mrs. J. P. Sebree, J. J. Smith_ Mrs. J_ R. Sands and baby. Miss Inge- berg Stokke, S. Swift, . R. A. Sperry, Lieu- tenant C. E. Taylor, Lieutenant J. C. Taylor, J. L. Taylor, J. E. Tucker, Mrs. H. J. Tutt, son and daughter, Mrs. E, C. Timoney, Peter Treutlein, Lieutenant A. Trotter. Mrs. C. E. Thrall, Dr. A. D. Willlams, R. E ward, E. V.’ Withelm and Mrs. H. O. Willard and aby. Homeier Gets His Music Back. - The search warrant case of Louis Ho- meier, leader of the orchestra in the Cen- tral Theater, for the recovery of a book of music from P. Engel, a former mem- ber of the orchestra. was heard before Police Judge Cabaniss yesterday. The | evidence showed that the book was blank | when Engel got it from Homeier and En. gel had filled it with music. He claimed he had a lien on the book and that was s he kept it. The Judge thought that Homeler should in the circumstances pay Engel $10 for the music, which he agreed to do. and got his book back. —————————— At a reception of the patriarchs at Con- stantinople the Sultan has declared that he will make no distinction between Chris- tians and Mohammedans. ————————— trong hoarhound candy. Townsend's.* ——————— Ex. Townsend's California glace fruit and cand s, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etche¢ boxes. A nice present for Eastern friends. €39 Market st., Palace Hotel bullding. * ——e——————— Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Call- fornia street. Telephone Main . —————————— The wives of Slamese noblemen cut their hair so that it sticks straight up from their heads. The average length of it is about one and a half inches. —_— A vigorous growth and the original color given to the hair by Parker's Hair Balsam. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 15cts. | zle, AME PLENTIFUL IN THE VALLEY OF YOSEMITE | Special Dispatch to The €all Specia P G Ne April 3. Yosemite THE YOSEMITE in’ the history of the | ! fox | tional Park has there been such a Ling | cold winter. Snow is piled up in the Hixd ver beva Sier: to a height that has i attained befo ring Jar continuous, ruary the snow ing up masses of snow which have Be come great glhclers, hundreds of fest high. | ng from Glacier Point, cast is | one solid mass of ice, extending from | Mount Lyall to the Merced group, & ve¥ jtable Switzeriand . This winter has been very exceptional. says Charles T. Leidig. the Government | forest ranger, on account of the prescr vation of the forest. There | tree In the whole park that has s | from a windstorm. Hitherto ther been many trees struck by iightning anl | torrt up by windstorm: There have Been a few thunder showers, something ver | unusual in this region during this of the year. In the summer months thu torms are frequent in the highe of> the park. Why these thund ms should occur this winter is & pu because such a thing has never be: known before | On aceount of the severe cold the game left the higher regions of the park is scarcel neve | nave | in great numbers and sought warm-r | climes. This is especially true arouid Wawona, where it is a very common oc~ | currence to encounter all Kinds of wild | animals. Bear. mountain lions and we { have been howling continucusly in vicinity. It is_not safe to go any tance without firearms. There have bes several narrow escapes, one of the mc striking being Walter Farnsworth's an- counter with a mountain lon. After a fierce struggle he succeeded in cutting the animal's spine with a jack knife aud | barely escaped with his life. Deer and | grouse are ecially plentiful. ~ Leidiz | while making a patrol through the park | saw fifty deer between Chinquapin and | Wawona, a distance of only thirteen | miles. The streams are teeming with trcut, 500,000 having been planted last summer by the Wawona Fish Hatche In the Yosemite Valley there are several wonderful phenomena. There is an icicle the Yosemite Fails 60 now underneath feet high, covering about three acres. The | Bridal Veil has an ice cone at its base 300 feet high and the Merced River has been frozen up all winter. Wild animals | have also been numerous in the valley. John Degnan, a boy of 14, has trapped twenty wildcats near his house. The snow in the park has mostly turn to ice and this will result in a long peri of high water. The falls jn the Yosemi will be as gredt as they have ever beer |in their history this coming summer Many new and unheard offwaterfalls will be seen in the Yosemite as there will he numerable streams flowing over alls of the valley from the gréat qua tities of melting snow in the higher Sier- ras. President Roosevelt coyld not anced upon a better year to visit the emite, as the falls will be-at (h maximum by the middle 5f May | PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. F. Stabel of Redding is at | Grand. e SR | Judge C. C. Bush of Redding is ai the | Grana. . CTRT | Congressman Van Duzer of Nevada is at the Palace. ’ - Dr. E. L. Jones of Mokelummne FHill is at the Grand. C L. W. Bond, an attorney of Santa. ¢ is at the California. Houghton Murray, a mining m co, is at the Palace. Dr. J. D. Moffat and wife of Washing> | ton are at the Occidental. | George M. Scott, a prominent merch of Salt Lake, is at the Palace. 1 3 1 the- an of Cls- F. 1. Smith, Western freight agent of the Big Four lines, is at the Grand W. C. Price, a capitalist and oil man ‘of. | Pasadena, is registered at the Graid: Ex-Senator John Cross of Los Ar is at the Palace |a raiiroad contractor, | Charles C. Hickok, a capitalist and | 1arge realty holder of Cleveland, is at thé | Palace. Thomas A. Hender of Sonora, 2 member of the Yosemite Valley Commission, fs at the Liek. A. J. Condon, head of several mining companies, of Tonopah, s registered at the Palace. Mrs. Joseph Pulitzer, wife of the New York publisher, and her son. Ralph-Pui- itzer, arrived yesterday from Southern Californfa and are stopping at the Pal- ace. Dr. R. A. F. Penrose, managing own- er of the Commonwealth mine at Cochise and nephew of former United States Sen- ator Penrose, arrived here yesterday and is registered at the Palace. General Luke Wright, Vice Governor of the Philippines, who has been absent from the islands on a leave of absence, ac- companied by his wife and his secretary, Charles Smith, has arrived from the East and is at the Palace awalting the de- parture to-day of the steamer Korea, upon which he will embark for Manila. One hundred and forty-four Cardinals have died since Leo XIII became Pope. Most Absorbing of All THE THIRD INSTALLMENT OF The Thirleenth District Wherein the Hero Makes Some Awful Sacrifices in His Struggle for Something That Means More Than Life. Next Sunday Call * Three Special Features Which Every Wo- man W OF DIVORCE By Kate Thyson Marr RO . ill Read. Coquettish Maid By “Colonel” Kate I And One of Jack London’s Best Stories

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