The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 20, 1903, Page 4

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The Sl Call. JULY 20, 1903 Pcdress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect Fou With the Department You Wish. arket and Third, S. ¥, .217 to 221 Stevenwon St: PUBLICATION OFFICE. EDITORIAL ROOMS. .. Delivered by Carriers, 20 Cts. Per Week, 73 Cts. Per Month. Single Copies 5 Cents. Terms by Mail, Including Postage (Cash With Order): DAILY CALL (including Sunday), one year. .$8.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), € month . 4.00 DAILY CALL—By Single Month. SUNDAY CALIL, One Year WEBEKLY CALL, One Year. = . . 100 [ Dafly... $8.80 Per Year Extra { Sunday.. 4.15 Per Year Extra | Weekly.. 4.00 Per Year Extra FOREIGN POSTAGE...... All Postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample copies will be forwarded when requested. Mail subscribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order 10 Insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Broadway..... Telephone M 1083 BERKELEY OFFICE. 2148 Center Street.........Telephone North 77 €. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- tising, Marquette Bullding, Chicag: (Long Distance Telephone *‘Central 2619. ) BRANCH OFFICES—327 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open un 30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until 9:30 o'clock. 1841 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 corner Sixteenth, open until § o'clock. 1096 Va- open until § o'clock. 1068 Eleventh, open until 9 NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open 1 9 o'clock. 2200 Fillmore, open until 9 p. m. 10 SUBSCRIBERS LEAYING TOWN FOR THE SUNMER Call subseribers contemplating a change of residence during the summer months can have their paper forwarded by mail to their new dresses by notifying The Call B ess Office. This paper will also be on sale at all summer resorts and is represented by a local agent in nll towns on the const. LARGE, SAFE AND PROFITABLE. USI S is still characterized by midsummer B apathy and presents hardly any features worthy of comment. The improvement in the weath- rn States still holds and is helping ly the consumption of sum- 1 especial mer goods, which makes retail trade lively and thus It also ndirectly expands the jobbing movement by especially those lines that do a er resort business. In fact, it is reported mmer railroad traffic is the So much for the weather on ger ea i sum the present known er prominent factor in trade is the labor )t nearly as acute as it was some time beer verted and there is a growing disposition on of the community that labors for a living enough alone and agend to business for ill, there are a good many strikes about a good many others hanging fire, o restrict trade, as frequently pointed e past few months the New York stock market has con- terious during the past week, prices tum- wering without apparent cause, the only generally accepted being that liquidation St The cc tinued m} entirely over. There are still great blocks ks to be disposed of and as soon as the mar- these are ladled out with no unsparing go again. This liquidation an end some time, and it is to be hoped ime is not distant ling among the banks and large financial is much more optimistic than among the nd pri me to down Bl interests eneral public, which is still in the pessimistic vein | ; ¢ ’ - g s ISHC VEIN | wre Will be seen that the whole theory in effect is | noted for the past few months and rather disposed to the future. The financial interests are pointing out that the monetary situation has greatly improved, having been gzelieved and strengthened by the heavy liguidation of the past six months; that the banking capital of the country has been greatly en- larged during the past year; that there has been a rge increase in circulation; that heavy foreign loans been repaid; that our borrowings in Europe re m 3 llions less than in the past year or two, and that the crop prospects are such that practically good times are assured for another year. True, the dency in prices for most lines of goods is down- ward, but that is really a good thing, for they have short” ve been altogether too high for the public welfare; but | the situation on the whole is very cheerful, when comprehended, and not.such as to cause any sharp and protracted shrinkage in the country’s stock mar- ket. Taking these facts into consideration it would seem that the cause of the decline has been liquida- tion and that banking institutions and large financiers have become tired of holding a lot of idle stocks and bonds and are getting rid of them piecemeal at every | passing opportunity. In this connection a remark made by one of the heaviest and best-posted Wall street operators a day or two ago is very suggestive. He said: “It is re- markable how many very rich men are short of cash at the moment.” This says a good deal to the in- itiated. It means that the very rich have become property poor and are getting rid of their property, which consists of the famous “undigested securities,” as rapidly as the stock market will allow them to do This condition is more openly exhibited at Chi- cago than in New ¥York. The great Chicago packers do not hesitate to say that they are getting tired oi holding up the provision market by main strength and that if it wants to decline, why, let it. But they demand for general merchandise | the crops, and swells the railroad passen- | strikes have closed; others have | THE SAN FRANCIECO CALL, MONDAY. JULY 20 INTRATOMIC ENERGY. HEN the Roentgen ray was a new thing to science sanguine experimenters believed that they could make use of the new en- ergy as a curative for almost all forms of human ill. It will be remembered that following the demonstra- tions of the working force of the newly discovered ray we had extraordinary reports of wonders worked by its remedial powers. Experience, however, soon proved that most of the high expectations would have to be abandoned. The Roentgen ray can do much and is doing much in the service of man, but it has fallen far short of enabling physicians to heal every disease that comes before them. We are now having a new outburst of expectancy over the power of radium. Since the wonderful en- ergies of the new substance were disclosed to the world we have been getting reports of marvelous cures effected by its aid. One doctor is reported to have enabled the deaf to hear, and another the blind to see, by the mere application of the radium energy. The latest report is that a physician in London cured a “rodent cancer” by the use of radium. The report adds: “The cancer was exposed to radium four ex- posures of an hour each given at intervals of a few days. In three weeks the diseased part was healing nicely and in six weeks, with two more exposures, the cancerous growth disappeared, leaving not a scar to remember it by.” Stories of that kind must be taken with a large allowance for the infirmities of human credulity. In the long run it will be found that radium, like the Roentgen ray, has excited a vain hope in the breasts | of the sangulne and hurried them into believing too mucht = That the new energy will be found useful in medicine and in surgery, as well as in other depart- ments of human work, is, of course, quite probable, but it is not at all likely it will be found to work all the cures that have been reported. Nevertheless, the effect of the new discovery upon science is in all probability destined to be the greatest resulting from any single discovery in the history of the world. It has already virtually led to an aban- donment of the old atomic theory, and may lead to an abandonment of the belief in the existence of mat- ter. Sir William Crookes, in his address at Berlin, intimated a willingness to abandon the “substance” theory of the universe and to accept a doctrine that the whole range of material phenomena can be ex- plained in terms of electrical energy. The declaration made by Crookes at Berlin has | been followed by similar declarations from leading scientists at a recent conference at London. In an | especial degree Professor Curie of Paris, who dis- covered radium, and Professor Lodge of London | declared that a great revolution is to take place in scientific thought and teaching. The statements of such leaders as these have had the effect of awaken- ing a widespread interest in the question, and it has been disclosed that what Crookes and his followers now assert to have been demonstrated is but a con- firmation of ideas put forth long ago by their fore- runners in scientific investigation. | Crookes is reported to have said at Be “Matter | and electricity are one and the same thing. He has since recalled a statement of Kingdon Clifford: “There is great reason to believe that every material atom carries upon it a small electrical current, if it does not wholly consist of that current.” Hum- | phrey Davy is said to have speculated apout “radiant matter” and sought for it as far back as 1809, and | Balzac set forth a similar idea in developing a theory of the transmutation of metals when he said: “This explanation will become a commonplace when men of science will recognize the great part played by electricity in human thinking power.” A summary of the discussion in London says: “M Curie, the discoverer of radium, in some wonderful experiments at the Royal Institution, showed that radium spontaneously and continuously disengaged heat, rapidly affected photographic plates, even when merely brought in its vicinity and gave off emanations similar to itself in constant and even vio- lent streams or radiations; in other words, the 120,000 ions which compose each atom of radium rotated so violently that they flew apart into original units. It has been calculated, however, that this efflux from radium is so infinitesimal that a square inch of sur- | face would lose only one grain in ten thousand mil- | | Hion years | an astronomical one. Chemistry has, in fact, become | the astronomy of the infinitesimal.” | The net result of the new theory is that we live not in a universe of matter or substance, but in a universe of energy, and as one speculator puts it: “Before the discovery of radioactivity, the idea of intratomic energy was wholly unknown to science. | Its development now demonstrates the existence in the universe of an amount of energy which has never even been dreamed of. The conversion of atomic potential energy into kinetic energy upon the sur- supply of radiating power far in excess of that which the accepted theory of meteors could supply. As it | has been said, what controls these gigantic forces is still a2 mystery. The knowledge of their existence, | matter and make us regard the planet on which we live rather as a storebouse stuffed with explosives inconceivably more powerful than any we know of and possibly only awaiting a suitable detonator to cause the earth to revert to chaos.” e A Boston engineer says Boston is sinking into the sea, but as it is making only about an inch in eight years, the movement is so slow even Philadelphia may beat it. B study the social conditions of the people of the leading nations. Before going he has ac- cepted an invitation to address a Democratic picnic at Chicago, and has done his best to turn it into a barbecue by serving up Cleveland and his Wall street friends well roasted for the delight of the BRYAN’S BAZOO. RYAN, it is announced, is to go to Eurgpe to through opaque bodies, discharged an electroscope | face of the sun, for” example, would furnish him a | however, must alter our attitude toward inanimate | do not talk in this way in New York. Secrecy is the rule there, and the public can do the guessing. The staples stand about the same. Iron and steel continue casy and whenever a change occurs it is usually in the direction of lower prices. Provisions are weak. Live stock is becoming more numerous throughout the country and prices show a slow down- ward tendency. Wool is firm and moving off well. crowd. | <The speech was a plea for “Democratic ideals,” but contained no specific declaration of a platform, a policy or a programme of statecraft. Devotion to ideals among the Bryanites means evidently nothing more than a determination to get even with the goldbugs for their defection in 1896 and in 1900, The speech, in fact, met all appeals for harmony with a Cotton is quiet, with the mills steadily curtailing production, both here and abroad. The bank clear- ings, though over $2,000,000,000 for the week, show a decrease of 5.7 per cent from the corresponding week last year. The failures for the week were 173, against 174 last year. The money market shows no change worthy of note, and credits and collections are un- impaired in all sections. Briefly, the country is do- ing a large, safe and profitable businese. warwhoop and a scalp yell. In a wild, barbaric yawp it gave notice to all whom it might concern that if {any of the Cleveland combine should be nominated by the Democracy next year Mr. Bryan would take the stump and call upon the heavens to fall. A striking illustration of the extent to which Bryan has become affected by something like a mania with respect to Cleveland is shown in his as- thing in the Chicago platform, nor to anything ob- jectionable in his own canvass, but to the popular disgust with the second Cleveland administration. He even said that the heaviest handicap upon the party to-day is the fact that “the last Democratic administration that we had was more subservient to corporate dictation than any Republican administra- tion that had preceded it, and the record of that ad- ministration has been a millstone about the party’s neck ever since.” . The folly of that kind of talk on the part of a political leader passes the reach of criticism. There are no words in our language that do justice to it. It is clear that Mr. Bryan in renouncing all hope to further retain command of the Democratic ship has resolved to scuttle her and then rouse the crew to such a pitch of mutiny that they would rather drown than work the pumps under new leaders. As the matter stands now, Democratic politicians might as well make arrangements to follow Bryan to Europe, for there will be nothing for them to do in this country for many a year to come. et e 55 Uncle Sam’s soldiers in Arizona, probably weighted with ennui, fell to fighting among themselves the other dav and wasted considerable energy and some blood. This warlike activity should suggest to the War Department the propriety of sending the bel- ligerent fellows to the Philippines without unneces- sary delay. B Mississippi Valley for harvesters there has | been started among the young iolks of that section and of the Atlantic cities a genuine harvest craze, Many men and not a few women, representa- tives of all classes of youth, are hurrying to the fields, | and farm news and society gossip are getting mixed up in the papers. It promises to be about as merry a harvest as any that ever happened and may result in making the reaper, the header and the harvester more popular than the automobile. Kansas led the way. Quite a number of young ! men of the “highest circles” in Topeka left their offices to seek a holiday, not in the woods ar the mountains, dut the grain fields. Instead of playing golf with athletic girls, they have gone to hustling with the harvest crews and rivaling one another in doing justice to the suppers prepared by neat-handed Phyllis of the farm. Ohio started a little behind Kansas, but has sur- passed her. | State harvest items are now written up in a style that resembles a cross between a report of a society function and an account of a university event. A D — A MERRY HARVEST. [ reason of the demand in the States of the this way: “The hay harvest on the McDonald farm, | near Richmond, began to-day, and Mr. McDonald was in the city Monday preparing to cut seventy-five acres of the prettiest meadow in the country side. | The grass has doubled its growth in the last thirty | days and is now a green sea of beauty as it rises and | falls to the ripple of the midsummer breeze. Mr. | 3 ; | McDonald has secured a fine lot of harvesters fresh | | irom collegiate hails, who he expects to put up the | hay in the most scientific methods according to the *Greck and Latin lexicons touched off by Blackstone, along with the latest Harvard and W. and J. stroke. These harvesters are James McDonald of Harvard University, Clifford McDonald and Finis Montgom- Pittsburg. Frank Sinclair has been. made general manager of the harvest and has donned a picturesque irega]i:\ that is short-sleeved for the occasion. It will | be a grand week on the farm and when the hay is | down assistance will be lent in raking by Misses | Florence Donaldson and Marie and Wilma Sinclair, who will be the house guests of Mrs. McDonald the | last of the week in time to play Maud Muller.” From the Eastern cities men of all trades are hastening to the sport. A single company that set out from New York one man in search of a cure for malaria. College As a rule they | | men, however, are most numerous. | call them in as much style as if they were going to a football match. The “co-ed” is not missing from the | rush. To a labor agent in New York there went a young woman described as “a college girl of athletic propensities and pleasant appearance” who made in- of harvesting, and explained: “Where so many young men are wanted I thought there might be places for at least a few women.” The reasons given by college men for seeking the fields are various. Doubtless some go for the sake of earning money, many for the frolic and not a few for a chance to see what harvest life is like. | One collegian wrote: “I want to do this work to get in trim for football. I just finished six months’ training for rowing, and so you see I am in fine form, but if I lay off I will get too stout. I came down from the country when I heard about the col- | lege boys going West and thought I would try doing | what the rest of the boys do.” So they run along, one after another, hastening to the fields. The tinker and the tailor, the soldier I’Id the saflor, the college man and maiden who wish a summer gay, are all going to try in the ripened wheat and rye to make work a picnic at three dollars a day. It is asperted that a good many of the more enterprising youths intend to go to the Dakotas after leaving the wheat fields of the Valley States and perhaps a few of them may venture as far as Califor- nia. It is a good venture as it goes and promises to help the farmers without hurting the universities. A gang of scoundrels attempted recently at Iron Mountain, Mich., to destroy by dynamite the prop- erty and life of a Judge. This appears to be a dis- agreeable and peculiarly new method of trying to prove that the American people honor themselves by elevating to the bench men whose honesty and ability make dangerous the operations of rascals. After the most diligent inquiry and careful scrutiny there has been found a deficiency of only one cent in the city treasury. And there was no hefting in the count, either. It is disagreeable if not unfortunate that these incidents of public honesty and care aris constantly to afflict some of our ex-officials. } It is now announced that Russia intends to hold Manchuria against the world and for her own personal profit and diversion for at least six years. If press re- ports be true the rest of the greedyvand militant world wouldn’t “stand that sort of an arrangement for six days. The hideous being, Fischer, who paid for his hor- rifying crime with his life the other day, grinned on the gallows. He simply gave more violent expres- sion than the rest of us to the gratification we all felt @ g sertion that his defeat in 1896 was due not to any- itlnt his unhealthy career was at an end. In the country papers of the Buckeye | % | specimen item from the Steubenville Gazette rans ery of W. and J., and Percy Laird, a legal light from | recently contained painters, ' printers, tailors, plumbers, telegraphers, sailors and | | engage special cars and go where the wheat fields | quiries about the work, the sport or the function | 1903. MARE ISLAND AND BOSTON NAVY YARDS TRYING FOR A SHIPBUILDING RECORD — HALF A MILLION DOLLARS. BATTLESHIP INDIANA, FACETIOUSLY KNOWN IN THE NAVY AS SAM'S WAR VESSELS THAT HAS UNDERGONE MUCH REPAIRING, AT A COST — HE two steel sailing training ships, Cumberland and Intrepid, are to be built at the Boston and Mare Island Navy Yards respectively, at a cost not to exceed $370,00 each, exclusive of equipment and armament. They are to be exactly alike, of 176 feet 5 Inches length on water line, 45 feet 7% inches extreme breadth and a displacement of 1500 tons on 16 feet 52 inch mean draught. The building of these two ships will be watched with much interest by the Navy Department and efforts will be made in the two vards to make records. The Boston and Mare Island Navy Yards are equally well equipped for such work and the advantages which the former yard possesses by proximity to material is more than offset by the climatic conditions in California, which will enable our workmen to | carry on work in comfort when thelr Eastern competitors are ' sweltering from heat or clad in arctic habiliments to escape freezing to death. A wooden brig for use in the training of landsmen and apprentices is to be built at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, at an estimated cost of $50,000. The Syren vigorously criticizes the action of the Navy Department to allot work of this kind to a navy vard which could be done at a private yard for $35,000. Senator Hale will not relish the uncompliment- ary remarks made by the Syren about his navy yard, which asserts that work in the Kittery (Portsmouth) yard costs from twice to six times that of similar kind in private vards; that the work never well done and that ships repaired or refitted at the Kittery yard has to be done over | again at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, owing to the facts that the yard has been run for many years without. regard to business principles and -because most of the mechanies are either farmers or lobster catchers. The battleships and other vessels of the United States Navy built up to 1896 are beginning to become a heavy tax on the naval appropriation for repairs, and some of the ships will require repairs and recomstruction equal to one- third of thefr first cost in order to make them useful. The armored cruiser New York, which went into commission August 1, 183, has cost in repairs $18,000 up to July 1, 1902, of which $241,800 was expended during 1900-1%1, and the vessel 1s now to receive repairs estimated to cost $500,000, besides a new bpattery amounting to another half-a-million. Her first cost was $4,107,127 69, exclusive of speed premium and trial trip expenses. The Indiana, placed in commission November 20, 1895, at a cost of $5,937.447 57, has been known in the navy for some years as “the lame duck,” and will require entire reconstruction if continued on the effective list. Her repairs up to July 1, 192, have amounted to $408,880. The Iowa, in commission since June 16, 1897, cost $5,636,582 29 and her repairs up to July, 1902, foot up to | $220,189. The contemplated repairs and improvements to this ship will require $1,00,000. The Massachusets, which is but slightly better than the Indiana, Is also in need of reconstruction, and the Texas, upon which over $300,00 has been expended in repairs since 1595, is not likely to be worth any considerable expense to continue her in active crulsing service. The triple-screw cruisers Columbia and Minne- apolis are being overhauled preparatory for sea service, after nearly five vears of Inactlvity, and their total cost of PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. D. S. Bourn of Wisconsin is at the Lick. Oscar C. Schulze, a hardware merchant ot Dixon, is at the California. George W. Reynolds, manager of the Hotel de! Monte, is at the Palace. Henry Wollman, a prominent attorney of New York City, 1s at the Palace. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Meverfeld have re- turned from a four. weeks' visit to Port- land. C. H. Meeker, principal of the Pacific Grove High School, is a guest at the etched boxes. friends. fornia street. ——————————— Townsend's California glace frults and candles, 0c a pound, A nice present for Eastern 715 Market st., above Call bldg. * e Spécial information supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 230 Cali- Telephone Main 1042 “THE LAME DUCK,” ONE OF UNCLE l TO DATE OF NEARLY | et el repairs will not fall short of ome milllion dollars for each shin. « . Thornycroft has completed the last of five torpedo-boats ordered about a year ago for the British Navy. They have all exceeded the contract speed of 25 knots, the highest speed being 2.436 knots with 39 revolutions, developing 3069 horsepower. The boats are of 200 tons displacement, 166 feet in length, 17 feet 3 inches beam and § feet 3% Iinches draught. Their trials were of three hours’ duration, carry- ing a load of 42 tons. An interchange of army and navy officers between Great Britain and Japan has been agreed upon. A number of British officers have already arrived in Japan, where they are to remaln for two years. During the first year the language is studied and during the second year they are aswigned for duty with the army or navy. Japanese officers are to go to England under similar conditions. The first submarine boat for the Swedish Navy is under construction at Stockholm. It is named the Hal (Shark), and s €5.60 feet in length, 11 feet beam and has a surface draught of 6 feet. The motive power is by electricity and the submerged speed is calculated at seven knots. The Austrian armored Cruiser E, building to replace the Ravétzky, is of 7400 tons displacement and 21 knots speed. The notable circumstance about this ship is the fact of her excessive cost, which Is estimated at $4,774,000. The Brook- lyn in United States Navy of 9215 tons and built in 1396 was completed at & cost of $4,056,000, exclusive of speed premium and trial expenses which amounted to 3367,249. It has been found in the Russian Navy that the use of eleetricity of high power seriously effects steel and particu- larly boilers, shortening the life of the latter considerably In order to ascertain the effect of the electric lighting system one of the seven torpedo-boat-destroyers to be sent to the far East is to be fitted with oil lamps and this boat will be made the base of comparison with the other six boats as th the assumed deteriorating effects of the electric lighting _system. Two Russian cruisers were iaunched June 2—the Almaz at St. Petersburg and Kagul at Nicolalep on the Black Sea. The Almaz was laid down September 25, 1%1, and is 72 per cent completed. She is of 238 tons displacement. 17500 horsepower, but her speed is estimated at only 19 knots, which Is evidently an error, as the Boyavin of 320 tons and 15,000 horsepower is credited with a speed of % knots. The Kagul, begun September 5, 191, is of the Bogatyr tvpe of 6675 tons displacement, 19,500 horsepower and 23 knots speed. Both vessels are constructed entively of Russian material. The Epoca states the Spanish naval programme to be as follows: Seven battleships of 15000 tons; eight armored cruisers, including five in hand, and three of a new type to steam 22 knots; three cruisers of 25 knots speed;”eight train- ing ships for general service and three training ships for midshipmen. A number of submarine boats and other mis- cellaneous crafts are included in the programme, the cost of which will be between $130,000,000 and $140,000,000. A general overhauling,and improvement of the several dock- vards is also contemplated. L o e e : ittt O Pictures and Frames. Everybody likes nicely framed pictures, and everybody can have framed if they will let us do the framing. New moldings, new matboards and bind- ing_papers just recelved. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market street. . ANSWERS TO QUERIES. SCOTCH NAME-M. D. K., Concord, Cal. The Scotch name Macleod {8 pro- nounced Mak-lowd. them nicely GODDESS OF LIBERTY-M. D. K., Concord, Cal. A lady representing the in artistic fire- &dflfl' of Liberty may be either a nde or a brunette. SIRUS—K., City. Sirus, or the dog star, 1s not a lunar star, because it is outside of the earth’s orbit, and, like the supe- rior plants, never can have the phases of the moon. Grand. N. V. Nelson, who operates several stage lines out of Marysville, is at the Grand. Brigadier General Robert Meade, com- manding the United States Marine Corps at Mare Island, is at the Occidental. T. M. Schumacher, acting traffic man- ager of the Oregon Short Line, arrived from Salt Lake yesterday and I3 stopping at the Palace. Colonel W. 8. Guffey, known throughout the West as the ofl king of Texas and after whom the famous Beaumont gusher was named, is at the Palace. George Mitchell, who was formerly in- terested with W. C. Greene In the Ca- noneer copper mines and who owns sev- eral large properties in the north, is at the Palace. George T. Parkyns, assistant general freight and passenger agent of the South- ern Pacific Company at Los Angeles, is in this city on business and registered at the Palace. IN. Acts as a Bar to Profitable Employ- ment. You cannot afford to grow old. In these days of strenuous competition it is necessary to maintain as long as pos- sible one's youthful appearance. It is impossible to do this without re- | THE HOUSE OF THE LOVING HEART Here Is Something So Truly Out of the Ordinary That It Will Make You Gasp. The Pictures Alone Are Stunners. Just Watch for Them in the NEXT SUNDAY CALL The Superfine Printing of the Best Modern Photographs Obtain- able Is Not the Only Thing That Makes the Sunday Call So Tremendously Populam Just Read These Features: “THE GIRL WHO LOVES” By “Colonel” Kate. “WHY YOUR PHOTOS ARE BAD” by Charles M. Taylor Jr. “Why China Is Now Sitting Up and Taking Notice” taining & luxurious growth of hair. The presence of dandruff indicates the presence of a burrowing germ which lives and thrives on the roots of the hair until it_causes total baldness. ewbro’s 'H'erplclde is the only known delightful to use. Herpicide makes an elegant hairdress- ing as well as dandruff ccept ro sul Sold by leading d estroyer of tive as it is By a Titled Oriental Potentate, Who Is Now Paying Nearly $3000 Every Day Just for His Hotel Bills Alone and Making Things Hum Generally From New York to San Francisco. his pest, and it is as effec- “Ode to the Summer Girl” “The Bear in the China Shop” By Edwin Markham. By Edgar Saltus. And the Best Novel of the Hour, Which Shows the Cause of Eec- cure. titute—there is none. Send 10c in g:m tfir‘e sample o 5P Herpicide Co., mtrhnfinmeo in ::: 'm;:, the lmw::u of 'CASTORIA L o 2 For Infants and Children. FREE- The Kind You Hare Always Bought nEEYMT.HoE gfi%&sfiffi :“" ""’:‘ N oIy SUFTCERRS

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