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Che 2Ese @all. | = | SATURDAY ..APRIL 11, 1903 JCFN P. SERECKELS, Broprieior. . LEAKE, Manager. A¢cress All Communications to W. TELEPHONE. | Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Departme: t You Wish. | Market and Third, 8. F. FUBLICATION OFFICE 21 Stevensom St. | LINTORIAL ROOMS. .. Delivered by Carrie Sinzle Co) Terms by Mail, 15 Cents Per Week. | 5 Cenmts. | Including Postage: l DAILY CALL (includin S , One year. .36.00 DAILY CALL « luding & , 6 months. -3 :K‘ DAILY CALL (ncluding § , 3 months. 1.50 DAILY CALL—By Single Mouth.. 65¢ SUNDAY CALL, Ove Year E : :g WEEKLY CALL, & All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Semple copies will be forwarded when requested. | One Year. Matl subscribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order | ic imsure « prompt and correct compliance With their request. | o 1118 Broadway BERK 2148 Center Street GDORGE EKROGNESS, tising, Marguette Building, (long Distance Telephone *Central LAND OFFICE. ....Telephone Main 1053 | OFFICE. Telephone North Manager Foreign Adver- Chicago. 2619 NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH .30 Trifune Building x: TORK CORRESPONDENT C. €. CARLTON.. ..Herald Square | W YORK NEWS STANDS: Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Square; Fifth-gvenve Hotel and Hoftman House. Waldor!-Astor’ Murray Hill Hotel ERANCH OFFICES—527 Montgomery, ccrner of Clay, onen mmts! §:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until $:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open unti] 8:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until $:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open uatil 10 c'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, until 9 o'clock. 1095 Va- n unt 106 Eleventh, cpen until § cond and Kentucky, cpen urtil 9 p. m. | open until 9 o'clock NW. corner Tw 2200 Filim WHAT ABOUT NOMINEES. B published in the| under the title “What | It was not noted to any| appears with all time ago Mr. moner an article Non extent by the people 3 inees.’ large, but it ¢ reorganizers hell, and tk cannonade ever b ere has | of rce a amp a terrific re was a short one. After briefly noting | nizers to provide a Presi- 1 closed by y, the article 1 from time to time pre- s whose position on | be questioned and whose cannot be made an issue in a| jese names will- be presented without | e part of the Commoner to urge the | lar Kansas C p}axfcrml 1y other Kansas City platform | oner has no choice between | for Demc those who look to the rank draws file of the party for their promotion and those corporations; first, to aid their their election; and third, cw the corporations to dominate their ad- ponses have been many and various. The th a Puritan firmne and went on to say | due either to a desire to wreck the | By way of establishing that| an’s relations to the party for | , and then said: “We repeat that the for in-| action is to assume that there| ald met issue w i Bryan as a n to insanity t reviewed B ix ¥ rom escape responsibility malice toward the Democratic | part of Mr. Bryan—the purpose | 10 compass its further destruction out of re-| venge for his defeat. But we cannot believe this of | man who was once so amiable as was he. We pre- fer, rather, to accept the opinion that long brooding | nisfortunes has unsettled the bal- or look at the utter absence of lle Courier-Journal takes a less tragic It will have it that Bryan is neither malicious nor crazy, but just a perverse poli- | tician. It declares that he of all Democrats ought to be he foremost in righting the errors of the past and tting the party into harmony, but with sadness it adds: “Instead of ruly schoolboy of the situation. this he is acting the part of an un- | {ay, he threatens to become an ir- Hav sworn the horse to be sixteen | he proposes to.stand by it and to die by jcet high, It has been clearly proven that the horse is not sixteen feet high. There are those who deny that it is | 2 horse at all. Yet, there stands Mr. Bryan, scowl- | ing upon every Democrat who wins a victory, as if victory were a crime, and Democracy and defeat are merely synonymous terms.” While the organs of the party are thus grinding‘; out their various songs of wrath or lamentation, the | reorganizers, in the quietness of their inner councils, i are devising ways and means for eliminating Bryan | from the partv. The Washington correspondent of | the Philadelphia Record says the reorganizers are 1ite sanguine that it will not be very difficult to get d of the perverse man of the Platte, ome of “The disgust at Bryan's ntolerance and his refusal to accept changed condi- ns brought about by the logic of events has per- meated Sowuth and to a lesser but by no means inconsiderable degree in the West itseli.” them as saying: That is the sitnation that presents itself in the Democratic camp. It may be that Mr. Bryan as hopelessly discounted among the rank nd file of the party as the reorganizers as- ert, but if so. it is strange his words should oceasion so much wrath among them Bryan s not a wise man, but then he has never undertaken He has beaten the conservatives of his party in two national conventions, and despite ¢ nnreason of his course, he stands a very good chance of beating them again. In fact, it may be s a foregone conclusion that in the conven- well as in the Commoner he will have some- to lead wise men. taken ing to say about nominees, ed in a time terrible to contemplate us in the prospect of reflecting minds. o W i suspect that we would be called upon to directors have been convicted of bribery? Perhaps it is 2 scheme to excite in the staid old town a fellow- | stock of the companies which it acquired and killing | of the party. - | the President for not doing anything to enforce the | forcing what law there is and promoting more law | courageous insistence, the courts have made it impos- | sible for any more syndicating of competing rail- | merger was brought under the Sherman act. ]in transporting those articles, it was argued that a | clusive of State authority. | portance and | low will be affirmed. J He quotes| 1l ranks of Democracy in the East and the{ him and that it will behoove him to care something E THE MERGER DECISION. | incensed when President Roosevelt ordered | suit brought in the Federal courts to di\:ul\cf - —~ o J J. HILL of the Great Northern was greatiy | the Northern Securities Company, by which it was | ])!(v[nJSL" to put threc competing lines of railway | under a common management by merging them in | a trust. Even good lawyers had some doubts about the Jegal strength of the President’s position, and r. Hill was so confident of his own position that he announced his intention to have the President’s scalp for daring to raise a judicial inquiry into the legal propricty of anything he chose to think proper. ( In the scalp hunt t he started the President gets the first bunch of hair, for four United States Circuit Judges, Caldwell, Thayer, Sanborn and Vandeventer, rined the President’s position and decreed the | have dissalution of the trust, enjoining it from voting the it effectually The presence of Judge Caldwell in this adjudica- tion is of very great significance. He was a lawyer of fine attainments and repute before he went upon As Speaker of the House in the lowa and while the bench. Legislature he had experience in politi he has abstained from any political connections for a quarter of-a century, his decisions were so marked | in their tendency to restrain the exercise of unlawful power by capital that his nomination for the Presi- anti-corporation candidate has been seriously considered. He is a Republican and was an ve participant in the great formative struggles dency as an It is the fashion of a few irreconcilables to attack law against the illegal use of combined capital. Mr. Hearst, who is 2 candidate for the Presidency, runs this sort of attack as a cartoon serial in his news- papers. But the President, paying no specific atten- tion to these false and partisan attacks, goes on en- to reach whatever issues are left uncovered by exist- ing statutes. By his action the beef and salt trusts have been destroyed, and now, by his resolute and roads. It will be hard to make any headway against the ent when his views are confirmed by such a jurist as Henry Clay Caldwell. It is noteworthy that this suit against Mr. Hill's Mr. Hill's attorneys contended that that act was directed against the manufacture and marketing of the articles As the railroads are engaged simply Pre of commerce. combination between them was not obnoxious to the law. The law brands as illegal “every contract com- bination, in the form of a trust or otherwise, or con- spiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations.” As com- merce consists of the trinity of actions, production, 1emutation and exchange, it was obvious to the President and is affirmed by the court that transporta- tion is a condition without which exchange is im- possible, and therefore a transportation trust comes within the law. If this case go on appeal to the Supreme Court tr: bench. Mr. Justice Field covered the ground for that court in writing its opinion in Welton vs. the State of Missouri, in which he said: “Commerce is a | term of the largest import; it comprehends inter- | course for the purpose of trade in all its forms, in- | cluding the transportation, purchase, sale and ex- | | change of commodities between the citizens of our own country and the citizens or subjects of other countries. The power to regulate it embraces all the instruments by which such commerce may be con- ducted,- Where the subject to which the power ap- plies is national in its character, or of such a nature | as to permit of uniform regulation, the power is ex- It will not be denied that that portion of commerce with foreign countries and betwen the States, which consists in the transporta- tion and exchange of commodities, is of national im- admits and requires uniformity of| regulation.” That decision, rendered in 1875, was the forerunner | of the later decision by the same bench; affirming | the validity of the interstate commerce act. Its definition of commerce and trade is exact and its | principles so perfectly apply to the verbiage of the | | | Sherman law as to leave no doubt that the court be- | The people are gratified that something is doing. The law is growing up around the trusts and is being | | enforced as it grows, and the antagonists of Presi- | dent Roosevelt will soon find themselves in such a small minority that they will easily hide from public view. In a suit on trial the other day the testimony was convincing far beyond the point of discussion that our French restaurants are properties oft amazing profit. | It is thus occasionally that some venomous lawyer lands an upper cut on our morals. DUNNE IS AMUSED. UDGE DUNNE has met the exposure of the scandalous way in which the records _of his court were kept by saying that it is none of his business, that he has no responsibility for the records, no power to appoint or remove his clerk and no au- | thority over him. Furthermore, he is quoted as say- ing: “Personally I care very little about the matter, | as it is of no consequence to me.” Before the affair is ended the irresponsible Judge may find that the matter is of some consequence to about it. A Judge cannot shirk responsibility for the manner in which the records of his court are kept. 1t is very well known that the County Clerk’s office is made use cf to provide places for incompetent tax | eaters whom the bosses wish to reward for political services, and accordingly the Judges of various courts have time and again refused to accept the incom- petents as clerks of their courts, Judge Dunne should have acted with the fidelity of his colleagues on the bench. He should have seen to it that the records of his court were properly kept and that a competent clerk was assigned to the position. Had the Judge performed that duty in even the most superficial way he would have learned of the neglect of the clérk and could have compelled the right keeping of the records, or at least have re- ported the negligence and thus brought it to the at- tention of the public. In jact. it would have been very easy for Judge Dunne to have guarded against the wrongs committed by the clerk of his court had record the fact that 2 bunch of Philadelphia scImd“m not been himself so indifferent to the interests of the litigants before him and of the public generally., It is hardly necessary to point out that the attitude of the Judge's mind toward the public is shown in his tecling for the rest of us. | statement: “If these two men were dishonest—and they were dishonest, it appears—what concern is that of mine? I cannot prevent them from doing crooked work. T was amused when I read The Call this after- noon.” So Judge Dunne fezls no concern over crookedness in the records of his court and is amused when he hears of it. Is it any wonder the crookedness went on for three years? So far &s this peculiar Judge is concerned, it might go on under his nose forever. It is no concern to him. At a recent artists’ dinner in New York one of the speakers said: “What do we artists care about Anglo- Saxon rule? We would have been ten thousand times better off if French civilization had become as- cendant here. We got one thing and lost another. We got trial by jury and lost all sense of art and lit- erature. 1f the French had been here they'd have taken care of Niagara Falls.” AMERICAN SILK CULTURE; CCORDING to the Philadelphia Press, Sec- A retary Wilson is doing good work in develop- ing the raw silk industry in this country and has already attained considerable success. It notes that a colony of Italians established in Georgia has set out 25,000 mulberry trees by way of starting the industry there, and adds: “Another colony is on the way to this country bound for South Carolina, where a general distributing station will be established un- der the auspices of the Agricultural Department, from which thousands of mulberry cuttings will besent ont.” If our contemporary be correct in those statements the matter is one of considerable interest to Cali- fornia. No State in the Union, and probably no lo- cality in the world, is better fitted than this for the production of raw silk. Our climate in its freedom from storms is not only propitious to the growth of ihe mulberry, but to the breeding and raising of silkworms. The advantages of the State as a place for the development of an extensive silk industry have long been known not only to the Italians living here, but to some of the more progressive managers of the silk industry in Italy itself. As a consequence, there has been some discussion concerning the feasibility of establishing an Italian colony in California to start the industry. The promoters of the plan were met by objections that the laws against the importation of contract labor forbid the importation of colonists for that purpose, and when a ruling was asked for from the officials at Washington, the objections were sustained. Consequently the California project was abandoned. Such are the facts which give us an interest in the story of the Philadelphia Press. If there be one colony of Italians established in Georgia to develop the silk industry and another on its way to South Carolina, where the Government intends to establish an experimental station, it would appear that a similar colony might be established in this State. The issue is of sufficient importance to merit the attention of the California Promotion Committee, for the silk industry of the United States is a large one and is increasing every year. The statistics show that during the last fiscal year the United States im- ported $42,635.351 worth of raw silk and $32,640,224 worth of manufactured silk. Here is a total importa- ic principles; it simply | there can be little doubt of its affirmation by that | tion of silk valued at more than $75,000,000, and it is surely worth while to make an effort to establish it as a permanent home industry. The Press, in giving an account of the work of the Agricultural Department in promoting the industry, states that three steam reelers have been ordered to be set up in stations convenient to silk producers, and adds: “Secretary Wilson says they are meeting with gratifying success, though this is only a.small begin- ning. The purpose of the department is chiefly to give employment to the idle members of families to which $60 or $100 a year from the culture of silk- worms would prove a gratifying increase of income.” This is of course a good way to make a start, but there is no reason the industry should not be developed into one of great importance. Perhaps California, with a little aid from the Government, might be able to take the lead in the enterprise. It is certainly worth trying. EETE—— Oakland, prolific in affairs unusual, has developed another sensation. It is nothing less than a startling resolution on the part of some of the young men of the town not to indulge in or encourage kissing. What a relief this must be to the beautiful young ladies of the city. While the Government is planning to provide for the irrigation of the West a private corporation has undertaken to irrigate upward of 271,000 acres in Southern Idaho, and thus we see that no matter how progressive a Government may be individual initiative | gets there first. —_— The President of Peru has indicated his desire to resign the high duties, responsibilities and precarious pleasures of his office. It is now reasonable to infer that somebody is planning another of those South American diversions which we call revolutions. It is gratifying to know that the Washington au- thorities, around whom scandal is clinging, have de- cided to wash their dirty official linen while President Roosevelt is not in the capital. It is to be hoped that the job will be finished before he returns. ; An aged man of this city, who has been imprisoned many times for petty offenses, has been caught again and wants to die in jail. How unfortunate jit is that this worthy purpose of the old man is not fanatically emulated by some people we all know. Some oi the patriotic descendants of the French heroes who aided us in the War of the Revolution want to present us with a bust of Washington. The offer seems to sound better than that which carries with it a statue of a foreign king. The Hawaiian Legislature is going to draft a law intended to prevent the embezzlement of public funds by Government officials. These ambitious statesmen appear to think that a reformation of human nature is an easy task. A gentleman named Cutts, wisely determined tha his place of usefulness was not on earth, slashed him- self almost to death the other day, and still there are some of us who insist that there is nothing fateful 1m a nanie. Official reports show that during the first three months of this year the net earnings of the steel trust were only $24,656,136. We may expect to hear of proceedings in bankruptcy or of another cut in wages. The Mayor of Baltimore is a bachelor and is re- ported to be over 50 years old; but he is so fond of the office that he has announced that if the peo- ple will elect him again he will get married. i 1 | | OBERT Y. HAYNE ME IN SAN MATEO B2 UDGE ROBERT Y. HAYNE died early yesterday morning from heart failure at the family home at San Mateo. The news of his demise oc- casioned much regret. For months he had been ailing and was a of the nature of the malady which im- periled his life. Nevertheless, with char- acteristic assiduity and courage, he ap- plied himself steadily and repeatedly ap- peared in court. His last appearance took place only a few days ago. He passed away, conscious of his impending end, surrounded by lis family, for each of whom he gave a parting message of affe Judge Robert Y. Heyne was born in Charleston, 8. C., in December, 1853. He was a son of Colonel William Alston Hayne and grandson of Senator Robert Y. Hayne of South Carolina. He was born in the now famous “Motte House” in Charleston, which was one of the first colonial houses built ia Charleston, the bricks of which were brought over from England. This hovse is now famous in all colonial periodicals. His grand-uncle was Colonel Isaac Hayne, the martyr of the Revolution, and his great-great-grandmother was Rebecca Motte, whose name is familiar to all stu- dents of colonial history. y On his mother's side his grandfather was Judge Thomas Duncan, who was for thirty years Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. In that branch of the family was his great-uncle, Chief Justice Gibson of the Supreme Court of Pennsyl- vania. Judge Hayne grew up on his father's plantation on the Wacamam River- e old Alston plantatien—which was onc of the most famous plantations in the Stat: of South Carolina. Colonel Willilam Al- ston, Judge Hayne's great-grandfather, had over a thousand slaves there. Alter the war Colonel Hayne moved to Califor- nia, when Robert Y. Hayne was then in his fourteenth year. The gifted lad stud- ied in the public schools of San Fran- cisco and was admitted to the bar in 1874. He afterward went into partnership with Edward J. Pringle under the firm name of Pringle & Hayne. In 158 Robert ')Y Hayne was elected Judge of the Superior Court. While ‘was Judge of this court he married Miss Grace Parrott, daughter of the late John Parrott. About two years after his elec- tion on account of his wife's health he resigned his position and went to Colo- rado, where he remained about two years, and while there he wrote his work on “New Trial and Appeal,” which is the standard work on that subject. After a year's travel in Europe he returned and resumed his partnership with Edward J. Pringle until 1887, when he was appointed as one of the three Commissioners of the Supreme Court, which position he hald until 1891, when he resigned and becgme a member of the firm of Pillsbury, Bland- ing & Hayne. ‘While Judge Hayne was on the commis- sion he wrote a great number of opinions which were adopted by the Supreme Court and are leading opinions to-day After four or five years Judge Hayne retired from the firm of Pillsbury, Bland- ing & Hayne and devoted himself exciu- he DISTINGUISHED JURIST WHO PASSED AWAY YESTERDAY AT HIS HOME IN SAN MATEO, DEATH RESULTING FROM HEART FAIL- URE, WITH WHICH HE HAD SUFFERED FOR MONTHS. -+ Governor of th‘. State tendered Judge Hayne the position of chairman of a per- manent commission to revise and sugg-st legislation relating to the four codes, but he did not accept the offer. Recently he was requested by .ne Judges of the United States Circuit Court to draw up a set of rules for those courts, g0 as to harmonize the Federal practice at law and in equity with the State prac- tice so far as it could be done. These proposed rules have been submitted to and are now under consideration by the Circuit Judges. They go further than any San Francisco Bar Association and has for many years been a member of the local council of the American Bar ciation and also a member of its mittee on uniformity of laws. For years he has been one of the trustees of the Hastings Law College. In politics he was always a regular Democrat until the first nomination of William J. Bryan. Then ne took a nent part in organizing the Gold Dem cratic party, becoming a member of its governing committee in the State and one of the Electors on its Presidential ticket. sively to practice in the appellate courts. rules of court heretofore existing and He leaves surviving his wife and two About the time of the dissolution of the constitute a code of practice. sons, Robert Y. Hayne Jr.,, and John firm of Pillsbury, Blanding & Hayne the Judge Hayne was twice president of the Parrott Hayne. B T B B e I B e e e PERSONAL MENTION. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. CHANCE TO SMILE. V. 8. . is at the| EILVER LINING—W. H., Willats, Cal. | “Just my luck,” sald Borem. “She's al- PB:}::M S of rerupe 8 ® | «There is a silver lining to every cloud,” | ways out when I call.” “So she was tell- X meaning the prospect of brighter days or | ing me,” sald Miss Pepprey. “She told T. D. Petch, a lumberman of Eureka, is at the Grand. Dr. Clarendon A. Foster of New York is at the Palace. Dr. and Mrs. Julius King of New York are at the Palace. The Rev. C. Hitchcock of San Rafael is at the Occidental. Dr. J. W. Hammond of Byron is in the city for a few days. Charles G. Bonner, a fruit man of Fres- no, is at the Grand. S. B. Bennet of the United States Geo- logical Survey is at the Occidental. Lieutenant Colonel L. W. Juillard of the Fifth Infantry Regiment, N. G. is down from Santa Rosa, and registered at Lick. | Professor J. B. Stubbs of Reno, a broth- er of Traffic Manager J. C. Stubbs of the Southern Pacific Company, is at the Ocel- dental. Harry Green, the Spokane sporting man, who has been racing his horses at the local meeting, left for the north last evening. William G. Johnston of Watertown, N. Y., and wife are at the California. Mr. Johnston is a pioneer of the West, hav- ing come to California on the first wagon train that crossed the plains. N Lty Californians in New York. NEW YORK, April 10.—The following Californians are in New York: San Fran- cisco-O. W. Brown, R. Patek, at the Herald Square; A. F. Green, C. H. Hol- brook, at the Holland; B. McPherson, at the Hoffman; A. S. Baum, at the Cadil- lac; W. E. Green, at the Winsonia; Mrs. J. A. Primson, J. H. Goldman, A. H. Meryill, at the Plaza; J. A. Macconahe, at the Grand Union; €. R. Morrison, at the Vendome; Mrs. J. C. Peck, at the Cosmopolitan; H. Rogers and wife, at the’ Belvedere; W. H. Talbot, at the Man- hattan. C., ———————— BIBLE SOCIETY HOLDS ITS ANNUAL MEETING Reports Show That Good Work of the Organization Is Rapidly Increasing. The annual meeting of the California RBible Soclety was held yesterday after- noon and the work of the organization of the last year was reviewed and the re- ports of the officers were read. Then an election took place and resulted as fol- lows: President, Annis Merrill; first vice president, D. Gilbert Dexter; secretary, Willlam Abbott; treasurer, Edward P. Flint; superintendent, John Thomp- son, D. D. The reports of the officers showed a great increase in the work of the eor- ganization during the past vear. More than 500 Bibles were distributed among different families in this city and more than 6000 Bibles were distributed through- ont the different missions in California, Arizona and New Mexico. ————————— Incorporate Water Company. The San Pablo and Oakland Artesian ‘Water Company was incorporated yester- day for $200,000. The directors are W. B. Hellings, A. W. Craig, J. R. Little, M. J. Seely and B. E. Loomis. o NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NO GREASE OR DANGEROUS DRUGS In “Herpicide,” the New Scientific and Successful Dandruff Treatment. Have vou dandruff? Then you have a contagious parasite disease, unpleasant, unhealthy and one that will eventually lead to baldness. To cure it you must destroy the parasite that eats at the root the hair. The only pmls.nuon for de- these germs is Newbro's Herpi- H e allaye e ing, d the dandruff and stopped my halr's fall- "5:0“; and it is bringing a new crop of l; " ' H o is 5m {romhrruu or [angerous , and makes hair gl and soft as silkc. ' One bottle will convines T lop, Tl et e n he Harnicida Ca. Deteate, Micp oPie Jlo the promise of happier times, has been traced to Milton’s “Cosmu: where the lady lost in the woods resolves to hope on and sees a “sable cloud turn forth its silver lining to the night.” NAVIES—S., Surf, Cal. The United States has, all told, 310 vessels, which in- cludes 63 under construction or author- ized and 24 unfit for sea service. The navy of England is 1119 vesseis with 161 obsolete; France, 810, with 9 obsolet Russia, 5M, with 5 obsolete; Germany, 480, with 41 obsolete, and Italy, 423, with 79 obsolete. HEMP—W. H., Willats, Cal. “To have some hemp in your pocket” is a transla- tion of the French phrase, “Avoir de la corde de pendu dans sa poche,” and means that the one who carries such in the pocket will have luck, even under the most adverse circumstances. This is from the old French superstition that a piece of rope that was used to hang a man brings good luck to the owner. SUICIDES—A. O. E., Pleasanton, Cal. The number of suicides per 100,000 of po: ulation in prominent American cities av- eraged for a number of years past: St. Louis, 25.7; Chicago, 23.3; Oakland, Cal., 2 New York, Manhattan and Bronx, dilwaukee, 19.! Cincinnati, Newark, J., 16 ew Orleans, 15. Brooklyn, 15.7. These are the ten highest rates in the United States. In European cities the rate was: Paris, 42; Lyons, £t. Petersburg, 7; Moscow, 11; Berlin, 3§; Vienna, 28; London, 23; Rome, 8; Milan, 6; Madrid, 3; Genoa, 31; Brussels, 15; Am- sterdam, 14; Lisbon, 2; Christiania, Stockholm, 27; Constantinople, 12; Gen- eva, 11; Dresden, 51. you the same thing, eh?” sald it was just her luck Press. Fes, only she Philadelphia “I understand, Senator,” said the .influ- ential citizen, “‘that in your campmign for re-election you propose to keep in mind the public interest?’ “Yes, sah,” emphatically replied the op- timistic candidate—'‘most assuredly both principle and interest, sah! more News. Comforting.—A Droitwich barber was just finishing lathering a customer and was talking volubly, as usual. “Yes, sir,” he said, “there’s no care- lessness allowed by our employer. Every time we cut a customer's face we are fined sixpence, and if we make an ugly gash it costs us a shilling.” Then, picking up and brandishing his razor, he added: “But I don’t ca to-day. I've just won a sovereign. don Answers. ——————————— Easter eggs, at Townsend's. ————————— Townsend's California glace fruit and candies, 30c a pound, in artistic fire-etched buxes. A nice present for Eastern {riends, Moved from Palace Hotel building to Tia Market st., two doors above Call bullding.* —_————————— b::fd“ :n!oml.uon supplied dally to ness houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Cali~ fornia street ~ Telephone Main 1id % —————— As a self-inflicted atonement for sins committed thirty years ago, a Moscow beggar has ever since worn an iron chain from which two heavy weights depend. —_— Care, worry and anxiety whiten the halr too early. Renew it with Parker's Hair Balsam. Hindercorns, the best cure for cofs. 1Scts, OUT NEXT SUNDAY OF Easter features. SUNDAY By EDWIN OUT NEXT F By ARTIST CAHILL HOW TO DECORATE Al -THE... Great Easter Edition «.3UNDAY CALL... Is a journalistic triumph of pictorial art and modern color press work. Besides the usual wide array of up-to-date maga- zine articles, there are pages and pages of special The Garden q; Sepulcher A Magnificent Easter | The California Easter THE EASTER CHURCH A NEW AND REAUTIFUL EASTER CAROL The 1ast installment of TH= THI. TEENTH DISTRICT and a thrilling short story by Robert Barr The King’s Trysi THE MARKHAM. AVGNNS 1X3N 1NO Girl By SARAH COMSTOCK OUT NEXT SUNDAY