The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 29, 1903, Page 6

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Pcaress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE. Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. .Market and Third, S. F. ..217 te 221 Stevenson St. 15 Cents Per Week. FUBLICATION OFFICE EDITORIAL ROOMS Delivered by Carrie gle Co) 5 Cen Terms by Matl, Including Postage: CALL Gneluding Sunday). ope year. 2 00 CALL dncluding Sunday), 6 months.. .00 CALL oncluditg Sunday), 3 menths. 50 | e Month 85c LL, One Year. 1.50 Tear 1.00 when requested. sibers in ordering change of address should be e both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order t and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. way Telephone BERKELEY OFFICE. 2145 Center Street.........Telephone North C. GTORGE XROGNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- n 1083 XEW TYORK CORRESPONDE CARLTON. : = OF FICES—S$27 Montgomers, corner cf Cl 30 o'clock. 500 F cpen until 9:30 o'clock. €53 McAlifster, open until 9:30 c'clock. 615 Larkin, open untli %30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 corner Sixteenth, open until § o'clock. 1098 Va- BRAXCH . opem u til § o'clock. 108 Eleventh, open until e'ciock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentueky. open | urtii ® o'clock. 2200 Fillmore. open until ® p. m. B - A KANSAS FUNCTION. President in his tour round LOWING the 2try come reports of various functions companied by a running com- a and methods of his host oW Many these reports good, ar comments are both witty e a little better than the | the supreme report one at comes ir chison Globe, being an a the dinner given to the Presi t by s the more interesting because Mr Governor were naugura- a bachelor after his nd shortly e early part of the winter he is re- proposals at the rate coming all parts It ic somewhat depressing to learn that de- prog ernor is still a bachelor. ess it was nothing but his respect for the of the Governor that induced the Presi- s objections to those who practice with the unmarried and un- Kansas. That, by the way, is but an sideration. The main thing is the func- it appeared¢ to the man who runs the received of from of the| e G osals dignit e cide a din g tal cor count begins by informing the world that | ernor’s home is the handsomest mansion in It was built by a hoomer in boom time for Kan $40.000, and wasy bought by the State during a pe- r collapse for $15.000. The account of the din- ‘The floral decorations in excellent taste. There was trailing everywhere and vines growing over the s from pots on the tiling below. There were | ¢ room, but as far as we are able to n to say b were ery ste displayed was excellent—not too is said: “The dinner was | , and there was not a single hitch. | the most successful social function | Kansas. There were three Tuxedos | rty. They were worn by Mr. Root, Mr. d Judge Hook. The other guests wore | swallow-tail coats. There werc five black | and twelve white ones. Three guests wore e others scemed to wear dickies. The President wore a black tie, which he had appar- Iy tied In the shirt fronts small gold | ons predominated, with a few pearl ones. (Both is three for a quarter.) The standing and turn- 1 coilars were about an even break. One man, | Loomis, had 2 stripe down his pantaloons.’ The menu appears to have been very much like the decorations—excellent in taste and not too much f anything. The account presents it thus: “There four colored waiters. Phe first course was a alad: around in it: then escalloped fish, served on shells, with brown bread sandwiches; then sweet- breads on toast; then squabs, with green peas, with white bread sandwiches: then spring chicken, with new potatoes and asparagus tips. Somewhere during the dinner 2 hot biscvit, sméll and delicate, appeared on each plate. Then there was coffee regular cups. with cream and sugar offered; then frozen egg nog: then shrimp salad.” Governor Bailey in welcoming the President to his hospitable board had announced that the din- ner would consist of Kansas delicacies, and there- fore when the salad was served the President asked, “Were these shrimps raised in Kansas That raised « laugh. The report goes on to say: “During the dinner. which lasted about an hour and forty minutes, the guests talked easily and naturally with those nearest them. Frequently the President addressed some one opposite him and told a story, and how we all laughed at the point! Still some of the stories were good. [ shall save them for private use and say hereafter, ‘The President told me an interesting anecdote at Topeka.”” . It is impossible to review the whole report. We must not, however, oit this tribute to the host: “1 don't say it because I was invited to his dinner, but Gov Bailey starts out as though he will be- come the most popular Governor the State has ever had. He is popular in Topeka, and looks as well in a plug hat as any of the President’s party. His bachelor dinner was a success, but he confessed to me that he had a great deal of assistance from ‘the meighbors” A Topeka woman who is a pro- fessional caterer (we have forgotten her name) had charge of the dinner and bossed things in the kitchen. No wines were served, although the prohibitionists, White the u e tied ties, himse in -aycomplaiubemuohslighduhofruninm‘nw if the census man do not find them on egg nog.” |oFFICIAL RE | | the Dneiper and in the valleys | old soldiers of Russia who are Jews S | fruit mixed with cubes of toasted bread | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MAY 29 190 'SOCIETY GIRL OF LOS ANGELES WILL SING IN MUSICAL COMEDY PORT ON THE JEWS. HE Government of the United States ago, when the operation of the May gan to have an expulsive effect upon sian jews. sent Colonel Weber of the Immigration Bureau at Washington to Russia to investigate and impartially report upon conditions as he found them. His report fills the greater part of an official pub- | lication, which is Executive Document 233. part i, ‘firq session Fifty-second Congress, on “Causes | Which Incite Immigration to the United States.” | Colonel Weber is neither a Jew nor a foreigner. and the detail of his report shows that he made a pains- taking and impartial investigation. We use his re- port 1 of the statements hereto- ten years laws be- the Rus- now verificatic ropean sources and from original documents. made twelve years ago, and | from This investigation was | before all of the excessive limitations of the May {laws had been made operative upon the rural Jews. These Jews, being forbidden to lease land directly { from the Government, were made the Christian Russians leased the victims of a J«,\flrm of sub-letting | land and sub-iet it to the Jews at a large advance in Colonel Weber were agricultural colonies 7 per the cultivators ‘of their own lands or leaseholds, that 7 | children rents. In | found only not or cent of the Je who ‘ per cent were widows or infirfi persons Originally these agricultural colonists had nothing, neither capital nor cattle nor farm imple- Everything they had acquired was by labor lar with that cold and | Of the 749 farms of Jews he found 38 equipped with The others get on by bor ments on the land. unpromising good farm machine 18 such machin as they need. |farm owned by its workers he found such simple | implements as plows, hoes and harrows and some | cle. All but 20 per cent of the farmers and cows 2 kind of veh ow horses, sheep were owned on ec 617 farms | In most important respects he found the Jewish farmers better fixed than their neighbors. the C | tian Russian = peasantry 'he second generation, |born on the land. were a pleasing picture of com- parative rural comfort, and of comparatively high- grade rural In that community of 5000 Jews all the labor was periormed by themselves, and their condition refuted the Russian opinion that Jews will labon not perform manual labor or become agriculturists. | the colonies till these Yet the land they were permitted to was poorest in Somthern Russia. That are now declining is due to the restrictions placed upon the Jews' freehold and leasehold rights, with the deliberate purpose of driving them back to the d the Ghetto. ews of the pale, towns The vhile recruited by immigra- tion caused by oppression in Spain and Italy, were Their settlement was there before the Christian era so remote in time that its record is lost. They were there m when Rurick, by conquest and persuasion, began the formation of re than a thousand years ago. These original Jews were on the Bug and the present empire of Dniester before the Tartar Slavs appeared In this country we are accustomed to witness the honorable who have been soldiers and fought for the flag. It is a fit conclusion to this exposition of Russian official bru- tality to give Weber's account of the treatment of the Under the law they are entitled to the freedom oi the empire, but this legal right is not respected. The pay of a Rus- | sian soldier is 17 cents per month! A soldier dur- treatment of our countrymen | ing the period of his enlistment, nor during a life- time in the ranks, could not accumulate anything for his support on that allowance. When a Jew ceases to be a soldier he must immediately go at work in order to live. Weber found one Jew who enlisted in the army in 1846 and was discharged in 1864. He had a bronze medal for bravery in the Crimean war and a chevron | for faithful service. Discharged in his old age he sought to live by his trade, being a barber. His dis- charge paper, being a permit to live in Great Rus- sia, was disregarded and he was ordered expelled. Another ex-soldier, aged ;o years, with medal and record of conspicuous service, was expelled. Old men who had served their country as brave soldiers were hauled down by the police all over the empire outside the pale and brutally transported like crim- inals, some even being sent penally to Siberia. Weber says that the cases he cites, giving the names, are | simply examples, and that he found the policy of expulsion, starvation and punishment of Jewish ex- soldiers to be general. Their permits as ex-soldiers are first taken away from them by force by one set of officials, and then they are punished by an- other set for not having the permits in their pos- session Both within and without the pale it is forbidden that Jews be received or treated in public hospitals, and they are not permitted to establish hospitals of d | their own. ; | We are not able to give even an extended synopsis of this official report, but any of our readers who }wish can obtain it by applying to the document | clerk of the House or Senate at Washington. It is a horrible record of cruelty, sodden wickedness and | inhumanity that sickens the reader. The conditions |it reveals belong to a far past, which historsmwould be glad to forget. Yet these conditions are flour- ishing in holy Russi | massacre, inflicted by the fanatical and bloodthirsty subjects of the empire which makes these its delib- erate policy. The Russian Jew has faults, but it is wonderful that they are so few after generations of their race have been subjected to this dehumanizing process. Let it be remembered that the faults complained of |in him were common to all the race in Europe in |the ages of persecution. Now, in France, Great Britain and the United States, the Jews show the virtues that grow in an atmosphere of justice and equality. With every avenue of physical and intel- lectual employment freely open to them these Jews are no longer all mere money-makers. The acute intellect of the race is far afield in science, art, litera- ture and learning. The drama, painting, sculpture, poetry, prose, law, physic and divinity are all being enriched by the contributions of the Jewish mind. That high imaginative faculty to which we owe the poetry and the sumptuous imagery of the Old Tes- tament, emancipated from the sinister restraints im- posed by persecution, is gracing and garnishing the iife and literature of the iree countries of the world. What these Jews. our equals, are doing, the Jews of the future would do in Russia if that coldly cruel Government would reform its ways in conformity to the Christianity which it professes. SETEETE——— The “Two Million Club” in Chicago will now rest from its labors. There has just appeared a city directory containing over 2,000,000 names, and _the aext tally he will be hanged for negligence. : ' [ becomes indeed a cover for a multitude of sin | fore made in this series of articles, which we derived | start. | But on every | . in the twentieth century of the | | Christian era, and are fitly crowned by murder and | CHARITIES’ INDORSEMENT. | Y the first annual report of the Charities In- | B dorsement Committee of San Francisco ample argument is given to justify its work land to assure the support of all charitable people { who wish to secure for the unfortunate and the de- | pendent the best service that a genuine charity can | | give. The report exposes some of the evils that ;fnllm\- indiscriminate giving, and makes clear the! | fact that where no investigation is dreaded charity ranging all the way from carelessness in the adminis- tration of charitable service to downright fraud. | In a city as rich and as generous as San Francisco | there is at ail times a large amount of money to be | | obtained by solicitors in the name of charity, and | |as a consequence such soliciting has become a P"C"! fession with a number of persons, who are not al- ways scrupulous in their methods of obtaining money in their system of expending it. The city has long been exposed to frauds of that kind, and one of | the salient features of the annual report is the expo- | sure of some of them by the investigations of the | | committee j The report states that several of the organizations | applying for the indorsement of the commitee have ! i been paying to theit solicitors or collectors com- missions varying from 30. to 50 per cent of the| for {amounts collected from the public. Having a big | percentage of collections to stimulate them, some of the solicitors have resorted to dubious means of It reported that two were | found to have arbitrarily raised the subscriptions of | well-known persons for the purpose of inducing | obtaining money. is others to give more largely than they would other- rwise have done. Another trick is to get young| women to act as collectors and carefully train them | {to represent themselves as young society women | lgmusz their time to the sacred cause of charity. In };m«-l!wr case a solicitor was found collecting for an | alleged building fund of $30,000, when no such fund _ | existed and the directors of the institution had no i ! | mtention of building. They desired the money fnrj | current expenses, and the collector resorted to the | trick solely because men would give more largely to a building than for ordinary purposes. The promotion of schemes and devices more or less fraudulent for collecting money i< not, however, | the only evil of indiscriminate giving. In many | cases it is found that the so-called charities thus sup- ported are by no means charitable in effect even if ! they be so in intent. The committee has adopted Ihel principle; “That every charity is in the nature of a| :puhlu‘ trust; that it should be administered by a ’rehpunflhle board of trustees; and that therefore i | | no person can legitimately solicit public support for an enterprise controlled entirely by himself.” The | adoption of a principle so seli-evident has barred an | | unexpectedly large number of charitable enterprises in the city. The report says: “It is hard to realize that indiscriminate giving has gone so far in San | Francisco that any one, no matter how doubtful his reputation, how unprepossessing appearance, may organize any sort of charitable enterprise and | in its name collect his own support.” Several instances of that kind of work are given, {and the report adds: “In this connection it is sig- | nificant that we have in San Francisco five societies fpr the prevention of crueity to children, only one of ‘which holds the committee’s card. We have in the State four societies for the placing of ‘dependent children, three of them having their head(uaners in this vicinity. Not one of the three is indorsed, not one of them is sufficiently well established to have secured the confidence and co-operation of the or- ganized charities of this locality.” We cannot review the report as a whole, but it should be read in full by all persons interested in charitable work. It can be obtained by application | to the secretary of the committee, Katherine C. Felton, 606 Montgomery street. The conclusion, | however, ought to be impressed upon all who are likely to be approached by solicitors for charity, for it is clear that if indiscriminate giving goes on those who support the system will hurt rather than help the cause of genuine charity. They will en- courage many devices in the nature of fraud, and will sustain practices that in the case of children very often lead to wrongs that can never be reme- died. his | Another American officer has been killed by the Filipino rebels. It requires such incidents as this to remind us of the price of territorial expansion. ————— A are with Senator Hanna, since his attitude on the Foraker proposition brought out such an expression from near the President as to enable him to show prooi indntestible of his good faith. He is not and has not been a candidate for the Presiden- tial nomination, and proves it, not to Senator For- | i aker, but to the President himself, by making the | way clear to an indorsement in the coming con- vention in his State. The country will feel a sense of relief that all appearance of a contest over the Republican nomi- nation vanishes. The people are so evidently with President Roosevelt that any fight put up against him in the party would lead to serious disorders. There is no doubt that the trusts and combinations, iled, by Mr. J. J. Hill, are intensely vengeful against the President for his fearless enforcement of the law. They were plainly hopeful of wreaking their vengeance by using the Republican party as an in- strument for the punishment of the President. They could not enlist Senator Hanna in any such enter- prise, nor use his power and experience in the ven- ture. Now by his action in the Ohio matter the | trusts are driven into alliance with the Democratic party as the only means of punishing the Ptesident for enforcing the law. From this time on we may expect to see the flush of hope overspread the pale face of the Democracy. Newspapers owned by the trusts will be at the dis- posal of the Democratic committee, and every ef- fort will be made to get out a candidate who will serve the purposes of capital while appearing to be something else. But the people are content to have it so. President Roosevelt comes as near being a perfect popular hero and statesman joined as we have had since Jackson. Put him afoot or horse- back, before an audience or in the Cabinet; and he appeals to the highest form of Americanism. His support will by no means be limited to party lines, nor will it, outside of those lines, be limited to the mugwump vote. There is that about the President personally, and that in his vigorous policy, which strongly appeals to the class of Democrats who re- jected Mr. Bryan, and his forces will be recruited by a heavy contingent from that source. So it is satisfactory that his nomination is now practically sure, and that the trusts are driven into the Demo- HANNA’S TRIUMPH. FTER all the honors of the Ohio situation | | | | { i | | | I s | | . - | | | | | | | | | | FORMER SOCIETY BELILLE OF LOS8 ANGELES, WHO WILL OON AP- { PEAR AT THE GRAND OPERA-HOUSE WITH THE ROGERS BROTH- ERS MUSICAL COMPA ! RACE B. CLARK, handsome brunette, be very popuiar in the younger soclety set in Los Angeles, is o with the new Eastern company which opens at the Grand Opera-house on | Sunday night in the musical eccentricity, “In Washington.” Miss Clark received her musical education from Madoni Wood | and was for some time a valued member of the Los Angeles Ladies’ Quartet. She is the possessor of a rich contralto voice of considerable volume. About a vear ago she determined to adopt the lyric stage as a profession and went East to seek her fortune. She secured an en- gagement in the “Suitan of Suiu” com- @ oo fofonfnfnfoenfefoonfefeonfnfofocfnofeofnfofooniofomonfofoonfofo o fnfefonfrfes 'HH-.: PERSONAL MENTIO 1saac Bird, a rancher of Mcreed, is at the Lick. Dr. L. M. Benepe of St. Paul is at the Occldental. Frank Giannini, a rancher of Tulare, is a: the Grand. The Rev. Willilam S. Miller of Pittsburg is at the Palace. W. H. Nichols, a fruit packer of Court- land, is at the Grand. ‘W. O. Randoiph, a fruit buyer of Los Angeles, is at the Grand. Andrew W. Martin has just returned from an outing along Carmel River. H. H. Henderson, who is engaged in the banking business in Merced, is at the Lick. 0. G. Woodward, the well known rancher of Woodward Island, is at the Grand. Congressman James McLachlan arrived from Pasadega yesterday and Is register- ed at the Palace. Stephen M. Kandall, a contractor and builder of Brooklyn, and family are reg- istered at the Palace. J. J. Van Alen, the New York clubman, who has been visiting Monterey, is reg- istered at the Palace. Mr. Harry Wiel will reach home from Johns Hopkins Medical School in a few days. He intends spending his vacation with hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Wiel of 1817 Jackson street. s Californians in New York. NEW YORK, May 28.-The following Callfornians are in New York: From San Franclsco—L. J. Meany and W. H. Ste- vens, at the Hoffman; A. Oub, Miss Hoyt, Mrs. F. Jerome, J. Maginnis and Miss Rose, at the Grand Union; A. Rulp, at the Broadway Central; H. Downing, at the Bartholdi; Miss L. C. Fuller, at the Normandfe; H. L. Masson and A. W. Pape and wife, at the Ashiand; S. New- mark, at the Herald S8quare; J. A. Robin- son and wife, at the Park Avenue. From Los Angeles—Mrs. Treadwell, at the Bartholdi; H. C. Gilbert, at the Viec- toria, and L. Morrison, at the Astor. —— Republican Clubs. Maennerbund Hall on Twenty-fourth street'and Potrero avenue was crowded to the door last night by the Republicans of the Thirty-second Assembly District. The object of the gathering was to take a hand in the permanent organization of the club. There were two factions pres- ent contending for supremacy, but all thoroughly alive to the success of the Republican party at the coming municipal election. Jacob Steppacher, A. Ruef, Henry Ach and other Revublicans from the organizing body, the United Repub- lican League, were present ‘o assist the club members in harmonizing their dif- ferences. They were successful to the ex- tent that President M. P. Fitzpatrick's selection of three vice presidents, Fred Zimmerman, James B. Johnston and J. . Heiman, was indorsed. The chairman was authorized to appoint seventeen members as an executive committee. Republicans of the Thirty-sixth Assem- bly District will meet for organization to-night at Harmony Hall, 1749 Mission street. Soldiers Hold Field Day. The detacbments of artillery stationed at the Presidio held an athlefic fleld day yesterday. The events consisted of the a strikingly | pany who used to | | Chinese Honeymoon.” usual running, jumping and weight throwing contests, together with several purely m&ry competitions. An“ essary ‘the day. and subsequently was engaged play the role of the bridesmaid in She acquitted Her- self very well. Wisely realizing that there was no royal road to prima donna success, Miss Clark accepted an engagement with the “In Washington™ company in order to prefit by the tutorship of Charles H. Jones, the foremost comic opera stage manager in this country. He thinks she has the requi- site ability and that after the necessary training and experience she will develop into a most capable artist. As the season of the company here wiil probably be a lengthy one, her gradual advancement will be watched by her many friends with interest. ITEMS OF INTEREST. The receipts from passenger traffic are greater on Japan's rallways than those from freight. The standing timber of Canada equals that of the continent of Europe and is nearly double that of the United States. Abraham Lincoln, the oldest male sur- vivor of the Lincolns from which de- scended the President, is living at Lacy Springs, Va, The inspector general shows that in London the losses from unsuccessful com- panies during the last ten years have ex- ceeded $2,690,000,000. The navy which gives England the s premacy of the seas costs $155,000,000 a year, or a little more than the United States pays a year in pensions. Professor G. C. Maynard, Department of Technology, Washington, has in prepara- tion a volume on all the guns and rifles that have been used by the United States army. The average European is five feet six and seven-tenths inches high; the average American five feet seven and eight-tenths. Their respective weights are 138 and 141 pounds. “The | FORECASTER McADIE SECURES WORLD RECORD — atd for | . Point Reyes has the world's strong winds. It captured the homor year from the weather stationsof the ear® and this month has again | notches up the scale. . The metaorologi experts of the nations are filled with An inspectio ast terest and with wonder, the records shows that Aeolus nd been having a merry time of it t where California’s index finger points the Pacific. And the Fast. which is erely recef devastated by clones ing a swish from the tai made its mad race al coast of the continent On May 18, 1902, the wind at Pe attained a ve of the wind t hg the yint | and for two minutes w & at rate of 12) miles an hour. The gale lastad for three whole days, and at one time playful breezes ripped the c from th | anemometer. The number miles ra | corded during seventy-two comsecutive ! hours was 4701 The automatically photographed by Prof Weather Bureau and It is expected that tF exhibition at the Lou | position at Lout marked records were ssor MeAdie of the ent to Washington will be placed on iana Purchase next year that x th students ¢ meteorologica! phenomena | may marvel at them This year on May 14 the winds com | menced to blow again with the greatest violence. For four days the velocity res istered averaged more than sixty miles an hour. For nine days the average velocity was fifty-two miles an hour. The total number-of miles recorded on the anemom- eter was 11,223, This is the highest velocity for the time on record. McAdie is very yud of his winds out at Point Reyes is willing to race them against those of any other | locality on the globe. He says that he | can produce the records if any one gets curious, and that the inquirer can then go out where the gentle hyrs froii and inspect the machine, which is one of the kind. that doesn't lie Observer Walter W. Thomas was In charge of the apparat 1 performed his work well during the trying nine days from May 14 to May Professor Me- Adie is generous in his praises of the feat of his subordinate, and will give him | honorable mention in his report to head- quarters. ANNUAL EXERCISE§ OF | ST. IGNATIUS COLLEGE illnstitution Will Hold Commence- | ment, at Which Interesting Ad- dresses Will Be Delivered. The forty-fourth annual commer ement | exercises of St. Ignatius College will e | held in the college hall, Van Ness av~ | nue, next Monday and Wednesday even | ings. The first evening will be devoted | to literary exercises by the rheto ‘c ani grammar classe; On Wednesday evening the distri n | of ordinary prizes in the college > and of extraordinary prizes in the aca- | demic and college courses will take place. to be followed by the conferr de- gress upon the gradua The programme includes an address by the ‘Most Rev. Archbishop Riordan. Two | interesting essays will be read, one hy | John L. Mulrenin, A. B.. who will take | for his subsj abor, Its Rights and Duties,” the other is L, Fe | A. B., on “Trusts and Danger.” The introductory address will be - ered by John L. Whelan on “De Conso- cigtionibus Quibusdam Modernk The musical pertion of ramme will comprise selections by lege orches- tra of forty pupils, under-the direction of Rev. Father Allen. Among the numbers will be overture, “Festvorspiel,” by Zim | merman; canzonetta, “Felice | ley: waltz, “Wilhelmina,” by | march, “Pontificale,” by A. H | will also be a quartet loncellos “Barcarole,” rendered by Donald Forb. Alfred Huber, Harry Benson and F Block. —_———— Children Present Operetta. The eperetta, “Florinda”™ was presented last night at Union Spuare hall by thirty children, the pupils of the Misses Ruby and Edith Moore. The little ones made a favorable impression and were frequent- ly encored by the large audience. Many clever songs and dances were introduced | by the juvenile performers. The stage cffects were exceedingly good and the affal: was such a success that the young ladies in charge are thinking of present- ing it again at a later date. ————— Bankrupt Teamster. John Dillon, a teamster of this eity, dled a petition in insolvehcy yesterday in the United States District Court. He owes $997 and has no assets. | ——— s Townsend’s Cal. glace fruits. 715 Mkt.* —_———— Special business houses and public men by the Press Clipping_Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Cali- fornia street. Telephone Main 1042, b ———— Townsend's California glace fruits and candies, 50c a pound, in artistic fire-etched bexes. A nice present for Eastern friend: Moved from Palace Hotel building to 7 Market st., two doors above Call building. * information supplied daily to ODOOOODOODOOOG&DOC:\‘ Emerson Hough’s Great Made the Vast THE HUMAN HYENA By Edgar Saltus 00000006000000000000000000000000 00000000600000000000000000000000 000000000 The Mississippi Bubble Intrigues of English Beaus and Belles That America What It Ls. Have You Been Visited by the New Souvenir Pilferers Read and See The Dashing Mermaids Latest Watch for this and also for the Announcement Extraordinary in the New Animal 0000000000000 Romantic Story of the Middle West of 5000000000000 0DO0 LA DOMPTEUSE By Chas. T. Murray

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