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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WED DAY, APRIL 8, 1903. 19 ___.___—_—_—_____;______’____________————-— WEDNESDAY APRIL 8, 1903 JOMN D. SPRECKELS, Rroprielor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. | TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Departme: t You Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE EDITORIAL ROOMS Market and Third, S. F. to 221 Stevensom St. | Cents Per Week. Delivered r: 1 Coples, & Cents. | Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL (including Sunday), cme year. ..86.00 DAILY CALL (inciuding Sunday), ¢ montbs.. 8.00 DAILY CALL Gncluding Sunday), 1.50 3 months DAILY CALL—By Siagle Mou: EUNDAY CALL, One Year WEEKLY CALIL, One Year All postmasters arc sutherized to receive subscriptions. Shmple coples will be forwarded when requested. Mafl subscribers in ordering change of address should be particuler to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESSE in order 0 insure & prompt and correct scmpliance with their reques:. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Broadway ..Telephone Maim 1083 BERKELEY OFFICE. 2148 Center Streetf......... Telephone North 77 C. GEORGE EROGNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- tising, Marquette Bulldiag, Chicago. (Leng Distance Telephone *'‘Central 2618.”) NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE STEPHEN B. SMITH. . 30 Tritumne Building NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON..... ve...Herald Square NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Unicn Square: Murray Hii Hoiel; Fifth-avenve Hotel and Hoffman House NEWE ETANDS: ws Co.: Great Northern Hotel; Avditorfum Hotel: Palme: House. Eherman Ho Tremont House WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE. ..1406 G St., MORTON E. CHANE, Correspondent. N.ow. BRANCH OFFICES—S: enti! 9:80 o'clock McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock #:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, ket, corner Eixteen Montgomery, =crner of Clay, open 300 Haves, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 615 Larkin, open until open uatil 10 c'clock. 2281 open untll § o'clock. 1098 Va- te, open until ® c'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 8 oclock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, cpen until § o'clock. 2200 Flllmore, open urtil 9 p. m. T ‘ ELECTION PREDICTIONS. Pocis figuring out the prospects. nat that it should be so. t scason of the year, when there We are is very cs going on, and as e minds of pol take advantage »ok ahead and take note of the pos- contest next year. held in the M ippi Valley ¢ s show hardly any change of public sentiment t al elections of last year. Most oi the elections were municipal contests and the result ned by local or personal causes. io won a personal victory of which he ud. He had to face a Republican ticket, a Democratic ticket and a Socialist ticket, but by a good majerity. He is known in his “Golden Rule” Jones, and he seems to be| t works well in every direction, for 2s a Republican, as a Democrat and as independent, and has always been a winner. Such | election has of course no significance in national | | not be taken even as the proverbial | ows the way the wind blows. nson has been re-clected in Cleveland, and | ¥ v be able to get the Democratic the next contest. His e some effect on Ohio | to -endanger Republican . the other ci of actual pol issis: e Congress Mayor p elec- sion that the Repub- rity but smaller n was held in Michigan, and lhere‘ ns rolled up a majority that shows how | ind. Although the vote was light, the was elected by majority esti- | s 40000. In the city elections of the It in some of the cities the Social- | t members of the city councils. | growing | Republican victories is of the t ther evidence in the . . | thing in these elections will serve | ypes of Democracy. There was a| lid South, together with New York! ild elect a President. but that time | ee Southern States, Maryland, Dela- | ginia, are no longer solid. The | h the Democrats can now count with clectoral votes, and in order to win 88 votes in addition. New York would 39 of them if it could be carried, but with Roosevelt as the Republican leader the chances of Democracy for carrying that State are slight. To' Jook for 88 Democratic electoral votes outside of | New York is however so utterly absurd that no Dem. | Consequently in all Democratic | forecasts of the election there is a claim upon New | York. It is for that reason that such an unknown personality as that of Judge Parker is suggested as a Presidential possibility. Democratic leaders know that New York must be carried, and out of that sense of necessity comes the hope that it may be car- ried by Parker | Should the New York vote be added to that of the | Solid South there would remain 49 votes to be gained | elsewhere. Should Maryland 4nd Delaware be car- | ried the vote would still be 38 short of a.majority of | the clectors. New Jersey and Indiana would add 27| to the Jist, but there would remain 11 still to be ob- | tained, and cven the most sanguine Deniocratic | prophet hesitates to name the State or States where | they can be expected. The superb majorities given to Republican candi- dates in the Congressional elections of last year pre- clude any reasonable expectation of Democratic suc- In fact, it is doubtful if there has ever been a year preceding 2 Presidential election when prospects were so reassuring to Republicans. Unless something wholly unexpected happens the Presidential clection will-fesuit in an overwhelming vote for the party of protection and prosperity. s e ocrat undertakes it cess next year. A lady lawyer in Ohio has won much local fame by defending a lady burglar and getting an ac- - | | lic man so prolific in epigrammatic statement of the | ! the President may well be an equally influential factor | | in this and the coming time of development and ad- | | you and it will not help him.” | sense.” | man inside should run the machine, but it is not so | | the independence and welfare of the farmers of the | country. Agriculture gains immeasurably by the in- T guittal; but then she had a lot of men on the jury ROOSEVELT'S SAYINGS. T would be possible to compile a textbook on the right philosophy of life from the sayings of Presi- dent Roosevelt. | Not since Ben Franklin has this country had a pub- | homely philosoplly of a plain and strong people. The | sayings of “Poor Richard” are believed to have had a very powerful influence upon the life of the people in the formative period of the republic, and those of | justment. His methods are entirely his own. Itisa mistake 10 represent him as the child of wealth and all that it implies. His parents were in moderate | sircumstances, and he had to fight in his youth against | the handicap of physical weakness and a certain shy- | ness that made it seem improbable that he would | ever acquire leadership of men. By steady persistence | he overcame these drawbacks, and his present state- | ment of the rules of life is no doubt drawn from his own experience. The value of personal character is his constant | theme. “You can lift a man up if he stumble; if | he lie down you cannot carry him. It will not help | “You can't get out | of a man the stuff that is not in him.” “The Govern- ment can help the farmer to help himself, the only | kind of help a self-respecting man will accept and | that in the end will do him any good.” *“Don't make | the mistake of thinking that law or its administration | can take the place of the fundamental qualities of | good citizenship, of courage, honesty and common | “It is easy to sit outside and say how the v y to go inside and run the machine yourself.” | The chief factor in determining a man’s success in; is the sum of his individual qualities. He cannot afiord to lose his individdl initiative and will and | lif power " “The well-being of the tiller of the soil and | of the wage-worker is the well-being of the State 1f they are well off all others will inevitably be well off, too.” So riin his expressions along the line of inculcating good character, a spirit of 3 independence and of scli-reliance, the qualities which belong to free people. Especially interesting is his graphic statement of the work of the Agricultural Department in its relation to troduction of mew crops, by increasing its versatility | and thereby making sure that in every season v.hm'ci may be some profitable production. The department | iike Morton and Wilson, both practical farmers of the | Lighest intelligence. Morton established the agricul- | out Europe, since it implied an eagerness on the part | tural prosperity of Nebraska, years before he went | into the Cabinet, by a course of experiments that re- [ sulted in the production of a ninety days’ corn, that | germinates, grows and ripens in three months, escap- | ing the early frosts. Wilson has introduced a dry | soon make us a large exporter of that grain. The | help given by such means to the agriculture of the | country is beyond the power of individuals to fur- | nish, for they cannot make the necessary search for | plants to add to our profitable crops, nor can lhc_\'lK afford the experiments which must be made to provei the utility of the new crop before it is tried on a large scale. The President’s statement of these helpful things and his insistence upon the value of individual | character are directly against paternalism in govern- | ment. Jefferson never made any clearer or stronger: declarations in favor of individualism and personal freedom. The President’s statement of the labor problem is in the same direction and the same spirit, and he | takes occasion to point out how little the Federal Government can do, and how much can be done by | the individuals immediately concerned, to bring abouty a lasting adjustment between labor and capital. “Let each try to look through the other’s eyes” is wise counsel that both will do well to heed. In reading all that he says his countrymen are studying a man who does not hand down treatment and advice from above, but who stands in the throng, | in the midst of them, has felt the pinch and pressure of circumstances in his own affairs, and who carries with him a vivid impression of every experience that‘» is common to his countrymen from childhood through | the whole span of life. So, speaking to the school- children, he said: “Enjoy yourselves, but don't let play interfere with work. Play fair and hard and then work hard. Boys, remember the manlier you are the nicer you can be at home.” Books could not say more, nor say it better. Our British cousins are feeling very good over the fact that Shamrock IIT beats Shamrock I in every trial, but they forget that American yachts beat not only Shamrock I but Shamrock II THE NEW OAKLAND. HE new city government of Oakland is now fully installed. The principles upon which its administration is to be influenced by the Mayor were plainly stated by Mayor Olney in his address | to the Council. He has, with others, noted the wide- | spread attention to Oakland, attracted by its struggle | for the betterment of municipal government, and he may be trusted to see to it that the great expectation of exemplary results shall not fail through any fault of his. The combination of parties, cemented by the de- sire for needed and genuine reform, he treats not as a spoils-hunting fusion of greed, but as an order for non-partisanship in the city’s affairs. So in his ad- dress the Mayor says: “With that end in view the Board of Public Works and Police and Fire Com- missioners will, as rapidly as possible, weed out the incompetent and inefficient men under their control, but will take no action whatever except it shall ap- pear to them to be for the good of the city; and in considering applicants to fill vacancies will utterly ignore all considerations except fitness for the work proposed. The people therefore feel the assured con- fidence that the affairs of Oakland will be adminis- tered upon a purely business basis. From Seattle to San Diego people who want good government in cities and are studying municipal problems were in- terested in our late election and are now watching the experiment, herc attempted, of running a city gov- ernment for the benefit of all the people in it with an interest never before known. Not only is this ad- ministration the hope of our own citizens, but it is the hope of friends of good municipal gover‘nment everywhere on the Pacific Coast.” Mayor Olney is a brcad-minded man, and he sets for 10 help her out. In cases of that kind there should be | Oakland the mark of a high calling, which that city 8 lady jury. much needs. Time was that Oakland was one of the | best known California localities abroad, but the city has been somewhat eclipsed by being the victim of vicious government and almost equally harmful pseudo reform. . In the past what was called “reform” was merely the personal use of public authority to pay up personal obligations, or to wreak personal resentments, and these vicious clements in it produced worse govern- ment than a frankly avowed spoils administration. Now, for the first time sjnce the necessity for it ap- peared, that city has an administration headed by a gentleman who has no personal political debts to pay, no grudges to satisfy, no political machine 'to build up, and he may well be expected, and trusted, to lay such a foundation, for in two years he can do little more, as will hold in the future none but a clean, de- cent, public spirited and public serving system of government for that charming and brilliant city. The latest suggestion in the way of Arctic explora- tion is that of a man who wishes to make the attempt by going as far north as possible in a ship and then making a dash in an zutomobile. The the pole and causing a general smash-up. THE STRIKE IN HOLLAND. ABOR disturbances and agitations in Holland L and in Belgium, which have occupied serious attention in Europe all winter, have culminated in what appears to be a wholesale strike of organized labor throughout Holland. The extent to which it has been carried is suggested by a statement that the diamond cutters of Amsterdam struck out of sym- pathy for the railway strikers. The two lines of in- dustry are so distinct that a sympathetic strike under the circumstances seems to show that on this issue the wotking classes of the kingdom intend to stand (Ugtlhcl\‘. | It will be remembered that in the early part of the past | | winter there was a strike among the employes of one of | { the railways in Holland, and that it ended almest as | soon as 1t began, for the Government refused to in- terfere and the railway company yielded at once. An outburst of indignant criticism followed from the commercial world. It was asserted that if the rail- ways are to be subjected to disturbance commerce can no longer be carried on, and a demand was made that the Government be more resolute in the protection of property and the maintenance of railway traffic. So far were such criticisms carried that it was even intimated that Kaiser Wilhelm would hold Hol- land responsible for any damage done to German mer- i : 7 3 | chants by delay of Dutch railways d th | ha chants elay railways, and the report, tial campaign, but nevertheless po- | 125 been fortunate in having at the/head of it men Y Y P | whether true or false, had a disturbing effect through- of the Kaiser to pick a quarrel with his weaker neigh- bor even at the risk of a war. Whether moved by outside pres: ire or by a be- | lief that the workingmen have gone too far in thcirs ago‘f Jand wheat, that enlarges the wheat field toward the | brought in a number of new l“”;‘ for the purpose) arid region, and has found a variety of rice that will | of preventing strikes. The submission of the bills has | demands, ' the Dutch Government some time had much to do with the present strike. They are re- garded as being antagonistic to labor generally, and it is for that reason the sympathetic strikes have so promptly followed the strike of the railway employes. For some time past the Government has been pre- paring for a struggle. It was announced in February that soldiers on furlough had been recalled to duty, and that the Government would have 35,000 men | under arms to meet any emérgency. Then the strike laws were submitted to Parliament. These bills pro- vide punishment for any public or railway employe who refuses to perform his accustomed work, and for any one who interferes with him in his work. An- other provides for an increase of the army and aug- ments the importance of the ‘“railway brigade,” which forms a part of the engineer corps of the army. Another bill provides for the establishment of a commission to inquire into the conduct of railways and report on such reforms as may be found advis- able. The submission of the bills was followed by an out- burst of agitation, in which the Socialists are reported as taking the lead. In the face of the growing popu- lar discontent Dr. Kuyper, the Prime Minister, held | on his way, and for a time it seemed the labor agi- tators would back down. It now appears, however, that they recoiled only to perfect their organization. The reports now coming in imply something like a | universal strike on the part of the workers, and there appears to be a fear that the disturbance will spread beyond Holland. The Socialists are not confined to that country, and if it be true that they have organized and are directing the fight against the Government in this instance they can count on liberal support in money centributions from other European Socialists. Strikes have become so common in this country that outside of Massachusetts comparatively little attention has been paid to the combined strike and lockout at Lowell. Yet it is a business disturbance of great magnitude. The persons thrown out of em- ployment number upward of 20,000, and the mills have a combined capital of $11,000,000. The loss of weekly wages affects nearly all tradesmen in the city, and it is feared that before either side gives in the ‘damage will run up into the millions. It has been proposed to establish at the St. Louis Exposition a building designed to remain as a per- manent memorial to be dedicated to the heroes of the West. Bustswor portraits of the fiity men who were most eminent in,settling the country west of the Mississippi are to adorn the structure. A discussion concerning the fifty who are to be thus honored has begun, and is likely to be lively. In the first list sub- mitted Brigham Young holds a conspicuous place, and a row is imminent. A report from St. Petersburg says that the Impe- rial Botanical Society has made a number of experi- menfs in artificially advancing the growth of fruit trees by supplying them through the trunk with the food required for growth instead of compelling the tree to take it up through the roots by the natural pm‘pess'. The experiment was tried on 800 trees in the Crimea, and report says the results show the ex- periment to have been successful in every respect. A report comes from New Zealand that at a recent conference many of the labor leaders roundly de- nounced the compulsory arbitration laws, and thus another Australasian dream vanishes into nothing- ness. It was the hope of the New Zealanders that their arbitration courts would prepare the way of industrial peace, but it seems they are giving sat- faction to nobody, and the talk is of war. z Tt is announced that the National Dressmakers’ As- sociation has decreed that the shirt waist as a part of the feminine garb must go, so there is now a chance for the men of the sweltering East to get possession of the shirt waist and keep it forever. scheme of | course involves the danger of running the auto against SAN MATEO COUNTY WILL HAVE - SPLENDID HOME FOR OFFICIALS+ |1 | HANDSOME STRUCTURE WHICH WILL BE ERECTED IN CITY TO HOUSE OFFICIALS OF SAN MATEO COUNTY, PLANS FOR WHICH HAVE BEEN ACCEPTED BY SUPERVISORS. > REDWOOD ‘[ | | i [ HE San Mateo Courthouse at Redwood City, for which the plans of Dodge & Dolliver, architects at 206 , Sansome street, this city, have been accepted, will be one of the best buildings of its class in the 1t is to be built of faced brick, with stone and terra cotta trimmings. and will cost $125,000. It is/to be situated in the center of a block of land and has been designed to take advantage of its | fine location. The design is Ttalian renaissance and the principal approach is enriched by a | broad flight of steps leading to a portico. | | extending with massive columns the full | height of the front. Rising from this is |a graceful dome, which brings all the | features of the design into a harmonious whole. | The interior, as well as the exterior, has | been worked out in a masterly manner. | The main entrance opens into a rotunda, | | Btate. PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. D. Smith of Livermore s at the Grand. Dr. and Mrs. Adolph Kahn of Napa are | at the Lick. Dr. C. A. Thornton of Nicaragua is at the California. Dr. J. Goodwin Thompson of Oakdale is at the Lick. J. R.Garrett, a foundryman of Marys- ville, is at the Lick. F. M. Chittenden, a fruit-grower Fresne, Is at the Grand. Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Clarke of Grinnell, ‘lnwn, are registered at the Grand. | WM. C. Frick, the Pittsburg steel mag- nate, and his party leave for Portland to- | daay. Henry 1. Kowalsky, the lawyer, Te- turned last night from the East and is | registered at the Palace. | Jacob \P. Bates, the millionaire coffee | mercnant of Boston, and a party of | friends are at the Palace. L | Preston Woods of Folsom, who is ex- tensively interested in mining in that sec- tion of the State, is at the Lick. William Plankinton, banker, philan- thropist and hotel man of Milwaukee, is at the Palace. He is on his way to Pasa- dena to join his family. Colonel Samuel Bernard Dick of Mead- ville, Pa., a-veteran of the Civil War, ex- member of Congress and former president 'o( the P. B, and L. E. R. R, is at the Palace. Word was received at the Palace yes- terday that John D. Rockefeller, the Standard oil king, and his family will ar- rive here from Santa Barbara at noon Saturday. Former State Senator John J. Boyce, the newly appointed United States Dis- trict Attorney for Juneau; Alaska, ar- rived from the south yesterday, en route to his new post of duty. John M. Studebaker, the millionaire wagon manufacturer of South Bend, Ind.; Mrs. Studebaker and John Stude- baker Jr. and wife arrived from Santa Barbara yesterday and registered at the Palace. S. B. Rose, president of the Wilder Steamship Company of Honolulu, and wife arrived yesterday from the islands and are registered at he Occidental. They have come to San Francisco to attend the E—— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. CLEANLY WOMAN Erroneously Thinks by Scouring Her Scalp That She Cures Dandruff. Cleanly woman has an erroneous idea [that by scouring the scalp, which re- moves the dandruff scales, she is curing the dandruff. She may wash her scalp every day and yet have dandruff her life long, accompanied by falling hair, too. The only way in the world to cure dan- druff is to Kill the dandruff germ, an there is no hair preparation that will do that but Newbro’s Herpicide. Herpicide, killing the dandruff germ, leaves the hair free to grow as heaithy Nature intended. Destroy the cause, you remove the effect. Kill the danfiruff germ with Herpicide. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought o7 0977 of which is under the dome, and by the use of art glass a magnificent light effect will be had. On the first floor the financial departthents of the county are grouped. The Treasurer's and Tax Collecfor's of- fices are on the left of the main entrance and the Assessor's and Auditor's offices on the right, with separate basements for each for the storage of documents. The Recorder's office, on the first floor, and the County Clerk's office, on the second floor, are in separate wings in the rear, | which excludes them from danger of any | fire that may attack the main building. This separation also insures excellent light facilites to all floors of the build- | ing. On the second flcor are also the court- room, Board of Supervisors’ room, Board of Education quarters and Public Admin- istrator’s office. The attic Is given over to Jjail purposes and this is so masked from the exterior as to be almost invisible to the casual observer. @ -ttt e @ burial of their daughter, the wife of Cap- tian Brugulere, who died recently in the Philippines. The remains were brought here on the transport Thomas and inter- ment was deferred until the arrival of | the parents of the deceased Californians in New York. ZW YORK, April 7.—The following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—H. G. Bidford, at the Herald Square; Captain E. Johnson, at the Ca- dillac; 8. Sollenberg, H. Merrifield, J. Rose, at the Hoffman; G. Fernan, A. L. Stmon. at the Grand Union; C. L. Follis, at the Holland; Mrs. J. L/ Mason, at the Broadway Central; L. McCreery, at the Manhattan; 1. Apple, E. C. Hegler, J. F. Myers, at the Astor; M. Buckley, at the Gregorian; Miss J. Fitzpatrick, at the Continental; E. A. Monoss, at the Ven- dome; C. A. Rand and wife, at the Im- perial. -— Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, April 7.—The following Californians are registered at the hotels: At the St. James— . Erwin and G. W. Lippman: at the New Willard—W. H Kern, Ado!f Kortland, N. C. Ray, and wife, J. C. Martin Jr. and J. Wenteheller ard wife, all of San Franéisco, MOTIVE POWER DEPARTMENT MEN IN CONFERENCE President E. H. Harriman of the South- ern Pacific Company I8 rapidly getting the affairs of his roads nn;mlu:._od L that they can be handied at his main of- fices more readily. As was recently an- nounced, the chief auditor of the Har- riman lines, Brastus Young, bas been here for several weeks with Assistant Chief Auditor Sterling, working on the books of the local auditing departments with a view of completing the wo(‘k un- derfaken® two years ago of establishing a general system of accounts in all l:a departments of the various roads in the West, and in this work he has been as- sisted by E. S: Benson, auditor of the Oregon Rajlroad and Navigation Cc;’mv pany; Audifor Kiink of the Southern Pa cific, Assistant Auditor J. C. Wilder and E. E. Holton, ticket auditer of the same road. Within the last. few days the represen- tatives of the’motive power departments of the syndicate roads have been drdered | here for similar purposes, that s, to standarize all the equipment used on pas- senger and freight rolling stock of the Harriman roads. Among those who are here are H. J. Small, general superin- | tendentgof motive power of the South- |ern Pacific; Superintendent of Motive | Power Dunne of the Oregon Short Lize, 1Supeflnlendpnt Graham of the Oregon | Rallroad_and Navigation Company, As- | sistant Superintendent of Motive Power | Hibbitts of the Union Pacific, Chief Me- | chanical Engineer Mabkl of the Southern ‘Pflclnc and Master Carbullder Gilbert. | | They have been in conference with Sec- retary, Thorpe, Harriman's new assistant, s getting up a set of cations, which will be e in ordering cars of all e rcads and for the pur- | chasing of all kinds of material for use on the rolling k, so that the latter may be made interchangeable on all the branches of the tem. It is expected that the conference will last until tae vnd of the week, by which time Secretary for several da standard spec used in the fu character for | | Thorne, who is a new man in the dutles assigned to him by President Harriman, will be able to return East and report to his superior. President John Martin of the North | Shore road stated vesterday that it is | the intention of his compamy to make no | changes in the operating department of | | his road when the new electric system Is | ready for service. | e have conciuded,” sald he, “to as- sign our locomotive engineers to the elec- trie motor cars, believiag that they are better experienced’ In the matter of dis- tance and speed of trains than the ordi- nary motorman #nd that they will be a greater guarantee for the safety of pas- | sengers. Of course, we will have to pas | more for this higher class of labor, but it | will prove of greater advantage to the | company In the long run. Further more it will enable us to make changes of men from electric motors to locomotives | whenever the circumstances demand without any inconvenience.” William Sproule, freight trafic man- |ager, and G. W. Luce, general freight agent of the Southern Pacific Company left for Southern California yesterday | morning, but for what purpese no one at this end of the line appears to know. E. 0. McCormick, passenger traffic manager of the road, also left for the south yesterday for a few days’ rest. He expects to remain. at Monterey the greater part of the time. | ANSWERS TO QUERIES. MINORS IN THE N | A minor over the age of 13 years may be enlisted in the United States navy with- out the consent of parents or guardian, | but minors claiming to be and who are | not 18 years of age are liable, if enlisted, | to punishment for fraudulent enlistment. EMERY—Subscriber, City. Deposits of emery have been found in Bohemia, in the Ural Mountains, in_Australia, North Carolina, Georgia and Montana, but the principal mines are In the island of Naxos in the Grecian archipelago, and in Turkey. ORPHANS—S., Laporte, Cal. The rea- son that the amount allowed by the State for the support of orphans per capita ‘s larger in some counties than in others Is | that the allowance s based upon the | amount appropriated by the county for that purpose. — ee—— Easter eggs, at Townsend's. - e Townsend's California glace fruit and candies, 50c a pound, !n artistic fire-stched boxes. A nice present for Eastern friends, Moved from Palace Hotel bullding to 715 Market st., two doors above Call bullding.* —e—— Special information supplied dally to business houses and public men by the Pr Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Cali~ fornia street. Telephone Main 1042, . | Near Tiverton, Devonshire, there is to be seen a blackbird with a white head and speckled back. —_— The favorite for restoring life and color to the hair is Parker's Hair Balsam. Hindercorns, the best cure for corns. 1Scts. OF ' > < g Easter features. > » = x w z s ° Frontispiece By ARTIST CAHILL HOW TO DECORATE OUT NEXT SUNDAY Great Faster Fdition «.SUNDAY CALL.... Is a journalistic triumph of pictorial art and modern color press work. Besides the usual wide array of up-te-date maga- zine articles, there are pages and pages of special The Garden -gg Sepulchcr By EDWIN MARKHAM. A Magnificent Easter | The California Easter AND A NEW AND BEAUTIFUL EASTER CAROL The Iast installment of THE THILTEENTH DISTRICT and a thrilling short story by Robert Barr The King’s Tryst OUT NEXT SUNDAY THE AVANNS L1X3IN 1NO Girl By SARAH COMSTOCK THE EASTER CHURCH