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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY .JUNE o, 1903 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprictor. pidress ATl Commumieations to W. 5. LEAKE. Manage?. ‘TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. Market and Third, S. F. .217 to 221 Stevemsom St. PUBLICATION OFFICE. EDITORIAL ROOMS. Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, & Cent: Terms by Mail, Including Postage: DAILY CALL Gncluding Sunday), ome year. .$6.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), 6 months. . 3.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sundsy), 3 months. . 1.50 DAILY CALL—By Single Month . 6% EUNDAY CALL, One Year. . :: WEEKLY CALL, One Year. bscriptiol Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. | All Postmasters are authorized to recelve | | | | Mail subscribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order | 1o insure & prompt and correct eompliance with thelr request. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Bromdway..... BERKELEY OFFICE. 2148 Center Street. .Telephone North 7 C. GEORGE XROGNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- | tising, Werguette Building, OChicago. (lopg Distance Telephone “Central 2619.") NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH... ..30 Trib NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. €. CARLTON.. .Herald Square NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldort-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 81 Unfon Square; Murrey Hill Hotel; Fifth-avenue Hotel and Hoffman House. BRANCH OFFICES—S527 Montgomery. corner cf Clay. opea | wntil :30 o'clock. 500 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAlister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open untii $:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until ® o'clock. 1096 Va- Jencia, open until ® c'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, cpen 1 ® o'clock. 2200 Fillmore, open until § p. m. 70 SUBSCRIBERSV LEAVING TOWN FOR THE SUMMER | Call subscribers contemplating a change of | residence during the summer months can have their paper forwarded by mail to their new sddresses by motifying The Call Business Office. This paper will also be on sale at all summer resorts and ix represented oy a local agent in the const. all towns on POSTOFFICE SCANDALS. L he charges and counter ct O ed b and forth among the officials Ive e postoffice sca s we shall in | insight into the e department manner in | been made . has oses wrongdoing 1ent and promotion in persons to downright frauds and over, as the investigation goes scandal widens so that it would epartment were more or less | th corruption been so much conflict of state-| will not undertake to pass judgment | nocence of any of the accused, | 1 confidence the decision of Post-{ 1€ He is evidently prosecuting | hout fear or favor and can be | out” He has the| e President in his work, and indeed is | the President. | he rascal direct instructions of ed that when the first traces of Rec with his accustomed | ructed the Postmaster Gen- | where it leads.” | ch side the President’s influence is | assurance that under his ad- | evelt no matter gives , as under that of Grant, the orders will Let no guilty man escape.” ramifications of the frauds of ier are reported to have amazed ster G . and almost every day of the | 1 brings a new surprise. It appears the| has been defrauded in one way or an- every turn. Even in the rentals of | fices the boodlers have managed to get ke-off for the enrichment of themselves and their hmen, and one report of that phase of the scan- “Rentals mn first-class postoffice districts e not yet been investigated, but it is hinted in| that the scandals in those offices will 1 worse than in the smaller ones.” e vigor with which the 2dministration is prose- X ier: estigation is the one cheering fecature It i= an assurance that Roosevelt ve up to the high popular expectations | ased on his known political honesty and firmness His action is not designed as a mat- but it will none the less affect the i the country and strengthen the hold | which the President has already upon the people. It , 1s another illustration that we have the right man in +he right place, and will confirm public confidence in he wisdom of re-clecting him. here however, another phase of the situation chould not be overlooked. The advocates of governmental control of public utilities of all kinds, ncluding the ownership and operation of railroads by e National Government, have been accustomed to point to the postoffice as an illustration of how effi- ciently and honestly the Government can carry on 2 large business. The disclosures now being made’ will give the people a sober second thought on that We perceive that in the Postoffice Depart- | ment, notwithstanding its close relations to the| business world and the watch upon it in every city, town and village in the country, the politicians and their unscrupulous followers have made it a means of robbing the Government right and left. Cer- 1ainly no private business of any kind would be car- ried on in the way that has prevailed in so many branches of the Postofiice Department. When all the wrongs have been sought out and made known the people will have a clearer understanding than cver of the difficulty of conducting any business through the medium of political control, and the ad- vocates of socialism will have to search elsewhere for arguments for their creed . uation the office 1 i character e i subject A ranch hand in Montana complains bitterly that his employer hitched him to a mule and compelled the team to plow the fields. It is unfortunate that we cannot secure a record of the mule’s feelings in thus being forced into companionship with a Tellow who would permit such an indignity upon himself. | tions. | conservative reorganizers have no platiorm to offer, | | action to submit to the people. | zealots. | 'and bait every line of its platform {1ot party, and decent men will not remain in its | radical demands of the people. RADICAL DEMOCRACY. ESS the unexpected happen the Demo- cratic converition of next year will be not only the most interesting feature of the Presiden- tial campaign, but one of the most important politi- cal gatherings that has taken place in{this country since the war. Virtually it will have the whole atten- tion of the country, for the nomination of Roose- velt by the Republicans is a foregone conclusion, and there will be little or no interest felt in the pro- ceedings of the convention. In fact, the nomination might be just as well made by telephone. Thus the Democrats, with their rivalries, antagonisms, factions, confusions and wrangling, will have the center of the stage and an undivided public interest. The multitude of factions and rival leaders in the party causes confusion, but through it ail one can plainly discern the outlines of an issue of far-reaching importance. Nominally the struggle is between the old silver faction and the gold faction, but in real- ity it is a struggle between a negative and a positive Democracy; between a Democracy seeking office along well worn political lines an aggressive. Democracy, more or less careless of office, but seck- ing power for the purpose of applying new principles in American The triumph of the radical wing in the coming convention would mean the beginning in the United States of a struggle for | the attainment of something so closely approaching | state socialism that for all practical purposes it would | amount to the same thing That much has been made evjdent by the declara- tions of the leaders and spokesmen of the two fac It has been noted time and again that the and government no policies to advocate. Their one plea is for har-| y. They are willing to accept almost any leader | who will consent to look upon iree silver as a dead | issue, and raise no bar against those who bolted the Chicago and the Kansas City platforms. They have | nothing in the way of a programme oi governmental They talk of Jeffer- son, Jackson and Tilden, but not of men who are| alive They ask for a return to the original prin- ciples of the constitution, but they do not specify | in what way they would apply those -principles to the | vital issues of the time. Virtually they would say| to the voters. “Elect us to office, but ask no ques- tions as to what we shall do when we get there.” Very different is the attitude of the radicals. Th make no plea for harmony: they have but little ca- pacity for organization; they have no leader since | the discomfiture of Bryan: but they have a very clear idea of what they wish, and they are prcaching‘ their creed with the ardor and the vehemence of They desire to array one class of peoplci against another: to strike down what they call “plutocracy,” and in place of the existing freedom of | industrial energy to substitute such an amount of | state control as will handicap the enterprising and mon limit the energies of individual initiative. George Fred Williams, recently abdi- cated all pretensions to the leadership of the Demo- cratic party Massachusetts, has undertaken to preach a crusade for the new faith. In an address the other day before a Democratic club at Somer- ville he said: “We have outlived the Democracy | which is conducted by those who furnish the funds | with hypocrisy. cant and unredeemable promises. A party which will sell its candidacies to the highest bidder is a har- who has in company. The social unrest in our country can only be abated by loyal, progressive and unpurchasable leadership of a party which has no alliance with ra- pacious capitalism. 1f Democracy offers such lead- ership and such a policy it will survive, otherwise it goes to its doom. The duty and opportunity of the Democratic party is now, it seems to me, not only to take no backward step from the stand of the party in 1900, but to advance still farther to meet the The voters will not | be satisfied with evasions and subteriuge What Williams is preaching in Massachusetts Tom Johnson is putting into practice in Ohio. Last year eight Democratic members of the Ohio Legislature voted for a bill which the radical Democrats had denounced. Johnson then vowed he would drive them out of office. Legislative nominations are now | being made in the State, and Johnson has carried out his threat. Six of the denounced members made no effort to fight against the radical machine. The re- maining two made a hard fight, but Johnson went down in person to their districts and succeeded in | defeating them. Radicalism, then, is triumphant in Ohio. Carter Harrison is working for similar re- sults in Illinois. In short, the issue in the Demo- cratic camp is rapidly emerging from confusion into clear light and the decisive battle between the new and the old will almost certainly be fought out in the convention of next year. B In dread of new atrocities the Jews of Odessa are zrming themselves to resist the Russian demons who are making of religion and civilization synonyms of horror. This seli-reliant act of the Jews is worth a continent of petitions for mercy. A shotgun or a pistol equalizes many differences. A peutic Society at Washington the principal subject of discussion was a paper read by Dr. Oliver T. Osborne of Connecticut on the evil effects | of the too strenuous life we lead in all lines of ac- tivity. There appears to be something in the very air we breathe that drives us forward and wears out | our more energetic men at an age when they shonldi be still robust, vigorous and capable of a large| amount of either mental or physical work. According to Dr. Oliver there has been of late years a large increase of all sorts and kinds of neu- roses of the heart, or debility of the heart muscle, ac- companied by a degeneration of the circulatory sys- tem. This ever increasing frequency of weakness of the heart or of the blood movements he attributes mainly to the high tension at which we livg,and the excessive strain with which we carry on not enly our werk but our sports and recreations. In exploiting his theory the doctor said: “We hardly realize this daily tension and its effect on our hearts unless we analyze it. We rise on time in the morning, whether by an alarm clock, by the call of a servant, or by habit, eat breakfast and read the papers on time, a clock in every room and a watch in our hand. * * * During the day we rush up long flights of stairs or take elevators that go up with a rush and stop with a plunge. If we drive either horse or automobile, by the carelessness of bicyclists or pedestrians, our hearts stop, jump or receive the vasomotor contraction check from the sudden anxiety lest we do an injury. If we are ail- ing we slight nature’s signal to relax, and still keep vp the pace. If we are actually sick, until we are se-| THE STRENUOUS LIFE T the recent meeting of the American Thera- | with her administration of public affairs. | that in the various scandals which are agitating the | Federal Government the fair sex could not keep its W \for some time and has progressed far enough with | | cent writer sa rious!ly ill, we fight and wrestle with the diseas’e, whatever it may be, instead of calmly giving up and zllowing the disease to be temporary master of cere- monies.” There is hardly anything in that statement to be called an exaggeration. It is a fair outline of the daily life of a majority of the business men of any progressive American community. Still it will be difficult to get the American people to accept the soundness of the doctor’s conclusions. Some of the Americans who have done the largest amount of work in the shortest time have lived to be hale and hearty old men, enjoying their age with more satis- faction than most of those who have been more slug- | gish in business. It was known of old that one man’s meat is an- other’s poison, and the saying may be true of habits of life as well as of food. Doubtless a serene, well ordered life is better for men than the incessant | rush in which so many Americans live, but there are a great many exceptions to the rule. Cardiac and ‘arterial troubles are not confined to Americans, and Russell Sage, Carnegie and many another veteran of hard work are still living to prove that all Americans | of the steam-engine type of worker do not die | young nor suffer premature decay of either brain or! body. % : s —— 1 Miss Marie Ware, who was formerly a United | States Commissioner at Eugene, has been arrested | and chaiged with forgery and fraud in “connection It is a pity skirts clean. SPANISH POLITICS. HEN in the recent Spanish elections lhe! Republicans carried Madrid and had suchl a success in several of the provincial dis- | tricts that there were eclected to the Cortes thirty- | four Deputies who avowed themselves opposed not | merely to the Ministry but to the monarchy itself, it | was feared that there would be stormy times when the Cortes met and the legislation of the year was | undertaken. The results, however, have not justified | the forebodings. The Cortes has been in session | its work to give good assurance that, while the radi- cal movement in Spain is working its way steadily forward, it is not likely to be accompanied by any | serious disturbance of governmental activity. | Foreign observers in Madrid report that some- thing like a test case was made between the opposi- tion and the Government at the time the Ministry | made out the list of appointments of life Senators. | The conservative oligarchy sought to obtain all the appointments, but a combination of Radicals Liberals compelled a compromise which resulted in a fairly equal division of the appointments between , the two parties. From that fact the conclusion is | drawn that, while the’ oligarchy retains office and' semblance of power. yet a genuine revolution is be ing wrought out peaceably in the state, and that hin a time comparatively short there will be, po- ically speaking, an entirely new Spain. i In reviewing the growth of radicalism in Spanish politics as distinct from the old Liberal party, a re-| “The disintegration of the Liberal | party commenced with the secession of Senor| Canalejas and the extreme Left of the party; but it was the death of Sagasta that rendered it complete. | At the present moment this party is without a chief. The rivalry for the leadership of the party has made it impossible for any true cohesion to exist between | its units, either within Parliament or without. * * *| The Republicans are making evidently honest ef- forts to concoct a practical programme of work, above and beyond the sterile policy of systematic obstruction attributed to them. This is no slight w | task, however; for this new fighting corps in the! Spanish Congress includes elements the most dis- parate, ranging from sheer revolutionary anarchism ' to lukewarm and doctrinaire radicalism.” ! The leaderless and demoralized condition of the| old opposition party in Spain and the consequent drift of certain elements of the organization toward extreme radicalism is the more interesting because | exactly the same political phenomenon is to be seen ! in the politics of the United States, of Great Britain | and of Germany. If the simultaneous occurrence of the political portents in the four countries be only a | coincidence then it is one of the most surprising in | history; but if it be the result of some deep, strong, | far-reaching law that is affecting the whole civilized world then it would be stranger still, for so pro- found are the differences between the social condi- | tions of the peoples of the various nations that it is | difficult to see what economic, political or social in-i fluence can be working upon them all in the same direction and with such similar results. | Those who love the odd and fantastic facts of his- | tory. which serve to illiminate and color the mono. tone of life, have a chance to suggest a memorial tablet for some niche in the treasury of California. The legislative committee chosen to greet President Roosevelt did not spend all of the money allowed and actually turned back some of it into the treasury vaults. China has a new cause for alarm from Occidental aggression. She fears the presence and activity of | French troops within her dominion and suspects | that the French may be acting in concert with the Russians. Her fears and her suspicions are probably well grounded, but their expression ie not likely to influence the result. 2 Some social reformers are trying to get all the churches to combine in an agfeement not to marry persons diverced for other than causes sanctioned by the Bible, and doubtless Justices of the Peace will be pleased to see the movement succeed, for it would mean a large increase in marriage fees for the Justices. The arrest of a former Civil Service Commis- sioner of this city on a serious charge is somewhat of a safe indication that public office aiter all is not the private snap which it is supposed to be. If the pre- dicament of the offender serve no other purpose it may act as a horrible example for some people still in office. —_— Uncle Sam is counting cash in the big vault at Washington. One of our “estcemed fellow citizens” should caution him that whatever the time'and cost may be of a complete counting, let him under no condition resort to “heiting.” John Wilkes Booth is dead again. He seems to have been endowed with more fives than a cat, but even as an assassin he appears not to have the privi- lege of a cat finally dead. Sensation mongers will not let him rest in.oblivi_on and dishonored death. s : and ! | | registered at the Occidental. | printing business in Sacramento, is stop-+ IUJ. E 9 1 CHAUTAUQUA ASSEMBLY RALLY |GIVES WORTHY IS TO BE LARGELY ATTENDED| YOUNG WOMAN — e — —_——— = TWO MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE WHO WILL ARRANC i CIAL AND LITERARY PROGRAMME FOR THE COMING PAC (‘ GROVE CHAUTAUQUA ASSEMBLY. S 2 — HE twenty-fourth session of the | tertainment has taken up no small part Pacific Grove Chautauqua Associa- | of the sub-committee’s time. Every ef- fori is being put forward to make the e i tion will be held this year from July | 14 to 26 and already general arrange- | ments are being planned for the reception of no less than 5000 participants Already, too, there has been an im- | portant meeting of the sub-committee, | which consists of the Rev. Eli McClish, D. D., president; the Rev. H. N. Bevier, vice president; Mrs. E. J. Dawson, sec- retary; Miss M. E. B. Norton, curator, and the ‘Rey. Thomas Filben, D. D.. su- perintendent of instruction, to consider | the social and literary programmes. The sub-committce had before it plans for lectures and read letters from promi- nent men, including clergymen. states- men and many foremost in the highest of- | fices of the land, who have notified the | committee of their intention to take part | in the deliberations of the assembly. Because of the fact that such a numer- ous body of participants in the assemb exercises is assured, the matter of en- ® el PERSONAL MENTION. E. P. Colgan, State Controller, is at the Lick. J. Boldefeld, a merchant of Colusa, is at the Grand. J. E. Levi, a merchant of San Jose, is at the Palace. F. G. Noves, a lumberman of Napa. is at the Palace. H. A, Drachman, a merchant of Tucson, is at the Grand. C. B. Shaver, a lumberman of Fresno, is at the Palace. R. L. Voorhees, a merchant of Napa, is at the Oceldental. P. Scheld, a merchant of Sacramento, is at the Occidental. W. B. Cline, a merchant geles, is at the Palace. of Los An- ‘W. Patterson, a merchant of Los An- geles, is at the Palace. P . Drescher. a merchant of Sacra- mento, is at the Californfa. F. E. Dorr, a lumber man of Saginaw, | | is registered at the Palace. Dr. Alfred Whelm of Philadelphia is W. A. Mackinder, a merchant of St. Helena, is at the Californ:a. man of Red-! a guest at the Grand. i D. Dierssen, a produce merchant of Sacramento, is at the Palace. J. R. Wood, a mercnant of Pueblo, Colo., is registered at the Russ. | Alex Brown, a member of the State Board of Bqualization, 1s ac the Lick. | Drummend Hay. who is connected with the Shanghai Herald, is at the Palace, J. M. Anderson. who is engaged in the | ping at the Russ. . | Maurice Schmitt. the capitaiist, who has been in the East several months, re- turned yesterday. Walter Parker. assistant land agent of the Southern Pacific Company at Los An- geles, is at the Lick. | Henry E. Huntington arrived yesterday from Los Angeles, and will leave for the East in a few dave with his family George F. McCague of the Carnegie Steel Companv and family are at the Palace, having returned vesterday from a three months’ vigit to the Orient. Al Hayman, the New York theatrical manager. who has been making a tour of the Old World with his wife, arrived here vesterday from China, and is registered at the Palace. 3 W. Z. Allen, a prominent young husiness man of Honelulu, H. L, arrived yesterday on the Korea, and registered at the Occi- dental. Mr. Allen’s visit hers is for busi- ness purpos —_——————— Littls Princess ‘Is Christened. HONOLULU, June 2.—Princess Abvgail Helen Katani Kauleleiwi Kapiolani Kaw- ananakoa was christened May. 31 at St. Augustine Chapel, Waikiki. The young lady is the daughter of Prince David and the Princess Kawananakoa and the granddaughter of Mrs. Samuel Parker, formerly Mrs. Campbell. The littie Princess held a formal recention after the ceremony, being assisted by the young godmothers, Miss Alice Campbell, Miss Anita Chrystal and Miss Irene Dick- son. - Half the people living in New move one or more times a year. York 0 gathering one that shall be memorable in the history of conventions and assem- bijes in the State. People are not only g from every art of California, but from all over the country, from the .Jid- dle States and the far-off coast of Maine. Men and women closely allied to the high- est educational departments of the State and numerous students are among those Expected to swell, the ranks of the assem- y. The matter of accommodations has been | - | —London Answers. discussed and there will be found every possible facility at the grove. A large number of eottage rooms will be found cozily furnished and the tent accommoda- tion is receiving special attention at the hands of those who have been entrusted with the work of perfecting that particular and essential department. When the full programme of the Chautauqua Assembiy shall have been formulated it will be fovnd to'rival any previous effort of the i.d. ERIES. W. D., Milford lifornia. is in the trict, represented ANSWERS TO QU LASSE. Cal. Lassen County, ( First Congressional Dis: by J. N. Gillette. GIFTS—L. 8., Selma. Cal. Any gift that may have been made to President Rooseveit as President of the United States belongs to the Government. All such as were made to him of a personal character are his personal property, to do with as he desires, TO THE SEA—Mrs. E. W. City. The correct question is: “They that go down to the sea in ships do business in great waters.” It is to be found in Psalms evii:23. If you will read that in the Bible and the verses that follow you will fully ulflderslnnd what {s meant by the quota- tion. | | | of his earnings. AN EDUCATION Special Dispatch to The Call. IRVINGTON - ON - HUDSON, XN T June S.—It became known to-day that, through the generosity of Miss Helen Gould, Miss Elizabeth Glenville of Trying- ton-on-Hudson has been enabled to .a(- tend the State Normal College at New Platz, and will graduate with honors m‘)r. ing the commencement exercises this month. Miss Glenville, who is 20 years old and a pretty brunette, is a very happy girl. Her mother says she has been ap- pointed a teacher at Tuxedo school and will take her new position mext seasor Her brother, Charles Glenville, has been coachman for Miss Gould for thirteen years, and when his sister wanted to go to college he offered to pay her tuition out When Miss Gould heard of this she | said: “I'll pay your sister's expenges, Charles. You shall not give a penny to- ward her college expenses. Since Miss Glenville has been at college her board bill has been paid by Miss Gould, so her mother says, and she aleo received frequent gifts of money for pri- vate use. —_——————— A CHANCE TO SMILE. ge is e going to give for libraries and things it is him to begin.—Somerville 1f Russell away mon about time for Journal. ever ride in one of Church—Did you those electric cabs? Gotham—Once. “How'd you like it?" 4 “Got a terrible shock when I got out. Heavily charged, was it” “Yes; I wi »nkers Statesman. pugilists } Otherwise Occupied—“You to ‘don’t seem to have nearly so much say as formerly."” “No,” answered the eminent represer tative of the »rize ring. “To tell the truth, we got so interested in listening to these naval gentlemen that we kind of forgot our own affairs.”—W ashington Star. have you found a stage career Has Dame Fortune “Well, all that you hoped? smiled on vou?” “T haven't met the old lady yet. But I know her daughter: we have traveled together for several years.” “Her daughte “Yes—Miss Journal. Fortune."—Kansas City and Bob bet 100 kisses I understand. Patience—You on the electiol Patrice—Yes: we did. “Who won “Well you e. on election night, upen | the face of the returns it lookedl as if Bob had lost, so he paid up. The next- night we found that he had won, so I had to give him the 100 kisses back again and 100 more.”—Yonkers Statesman. As a sergeant was bawling out his or- ders in a barracks in Dublin and watch- ing the line of feet as the new recruits endeavored to obey the word of com- mand, he found_ to his astonishment, that one vair of feet, more noticeable on ac- count of their extra large size, never turred. Without taking his eyes off those feet the sergeant bawled out a second order. “About face! He could see that all the feet except those he watched turn- ed in obedience. Rushing up to the own- er. a little fellow, he seized him by the shoulder, shouting . “Why don’t you turn with the rest?"” ‘I did,” replied the trembling recruit You did, eh? Well, I watched your feet ard they never movewu. “It's the boots they gave me, sir,” said “They're so large that feet turn inside.of them." the poor fellow. when I turn my e e—— Californians in New York. NEW YORK. June he following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—Mrs. W. Coieman, at the Gregorian; J. Hermann, at the St. Denis; R. J. Keilus, at the Imperial; A. MacAr- thur, at the Murray Hill; T. N. McFar- lane, at the Metropolitan: C. F. Brant, at the Herald Square Castle and Miss N. Castle, at the Manhattan: Mrs, M. W Denver and Mrs. H. Turuger, at the Grand. From Los Angeles—E. Lemon and Mrs C. 8. Lemon_ at the Park Avenue; A. H. Helser, at the Holland. Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, June 8.—The following Californians registered here to-day at the Arlington: Mr. and Mrs. Kirby and Miss M Kirby and A. Franklin of San Francisco: at the National—Miss Susan Longfellow of Pasadena and Mrs. J. M. Morris of Los Angeles; at the St. James—C Mann of San Francisco and Addison and wife of Los Angeles. e — Townsend's California glace fruits and candies, 50c a pound, In artistic fir etched boxes. A nice present for Easter friends. 715 Market st., above Call bld H ————————— Speclal information supplied daily to l:unlne:cuuhouues s and pr:}{e men z:’csm Pr ng Bureau (Allen’s). i- ‘ia u’;’g‘l Telephone Main 1042. g t evaptaentzdby Something new. You may choose any locality from Catalina to Puget Sound. And here’s something good for you to take along to read. “At the Rainbow’s End” By Jack London. From Santiago to despair or—2 The Gnomes” Daughter Fable. “The Mississippi Bubble” By Emerson Hough. Summer Vacation an American per.