The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 24, 1903, Page 6

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JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprictor. z PORISSSetit ebant S e S AR s Pédress All Communications to W. S. LEAKE. Manager. e e TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. The Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE...Market and Third, S. F. EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Delivered by Carriers, 20 Cts. Per Week, 75 Cts. Per Month. Single Copies 5 Cents. Terms by Mall, Including Postage (Cash With Order): DAILY CALL (including Sunday), ome year... $8.00 DAILY CALL (ncluding Sundi 6 months. . 4.00 | DAILY CALL—By Eingle Month. . . T5e SUNDAY CALL. One Year. - 250 . 1.00 WEEKLY CALL, One Year Per Year Extra Per Year Extra | Per Year Extra S0 4.15 1.00 FOREIGN POSTAGE. . | Weekly.. All Postmasters are authorized to receive | subscriptions. | Sample coples will be forwarded when requested. subscrigers in ordering change of afdress should be r to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order | re & prompt and cerrect compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE. 1118 Broadway.. Telephone Main 1083 | OFFICE. ..Telephone North 77 | C. GEORGE KROGNESS, Manager Foreign Adver- tising, Marguette Building, Chicago. ce Telephone “‘Central 2019.") CORRESPONDENT: ..1406 G Street, N. W. REPRESENTATIVE: 30 Trihune Building NEW YORK STEPHEN B. SMITH. CORRESPONDENT: NEW YORK €. C. CARLTON . 31 Union Square; Murray Hotel and Hoffman House. | of industry to the accomplishments of art and educa- 1accoums and details of any particular section or | phase of life. :‘ literary description. | quote men whose authority in special lines is rec- THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1903. FAIR BELLE OF YOLO A SUMMERTIME BRIDE Miss Nora Browning, Daughter of One of the Prominent Families in the County, Weds Henry CALIFORNIA TO-DAY. N the course of its work of advertising the re- I sources, industries, attractions and possibilities i X of the State the California Promotion Committee has’ compiled and published a new and timely description of the #State, under the title “Cali- fornia To-day.”” The wvolume comes as near fulfilling the object aimed at as is possible in a volume sufficiently compact to be eas- ily handled and read. It will therefore serve as a useful text-book in the important campaign of education that has been undertaken to enlighten the Eastern people with respect to California conditions. Within the space of 192 pages the work reviews every feature of California life from the achievements tion. The volume is therefore fairly comprehensive,_ though of course the space does not admit of full The task of the writers has been sim- plified somewhat by the aid of artists, who have contributed a series of photographs showing repre- sentative scenes in every section of the State. These pictures not only ornament the work, but add to its value as a medium of education, since they reveal at a glance something of the beauty and the richness of our landscapes that could not well be presented by The introduction to the volume justly says: “No book of this size could do more than to satisfy in- terest in briefest detail; to point the way to knowl- edge that may be had for the asking; to refer to and ognized the world over; to give figures of Govern- ment and State officials; to tell of things from the standpoint of the writers’ experience; and last, but above all, to present by finest reproductions of pho- tographs scenes of matural beauty, of industries, of houses, of lands, factories, horses, cattle, dooryards, dairies, racecourses, irrigation ditches, poultry yards, business blocks, buildings in the chief cities, parks, steamships, railroads, the thousand things that mean much to one whose face is turned to the Farthest BRANCH OFFICES— tgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:80 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 McA en until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until 1 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 open until § o'clock. 1008 Va- o'clock. 106 Eleventh, cpen until ® er Twenty-second and Kentucky, open ) Fillmore, open until ® p. m. 9:30 o'cl Market, it was d to call an ex- Congress in November to treaty with Cuba and finan- ted that the financial nd by the President, would aced sec 1e whole interest in the session. irmed by the tone of pub- made. , but upon ion there has been e press but from e announcement was 1 sections of the | to Washington from | at Oyster Bay de- wed as to what the President her than to con- § Senator Lodge concerning the je went on to intimate, however, t} the Foyler bill as presented at the c success owing to | on to permitting banks to is- | The Secretary also before no assets the other b »on i ing new would have to be pro- there were fo be any reasonable hope of | Jation during the extra session. | Secretary atement there has been a n at Washington that the Senate committ substant on lines reported in The Call a few days ago. It will be remembered that by the plan as outlined it is proposed yrize the issuance “additional currency” al banks up to 25 per cent of the amount capital. On this the Government would place 2 tax of, say, 5 per cent per annum of this tax banks would only call for the additional time of greatest stringency—that is, inter- ce the growing convict ee will report a new b to by nat of the curre! est on lo to induce a bank to go to the expense of issuing ad- | The instant interest rates dropped | ditional currency. below 5 per cent this currency would retire automati- cally The opinion prevails in New York that the Pre dent is keenly interested in the currency problem and i much more concerned for financial legisla- tion than for the Cuban treaty. Neither Lodge nor Secretary Shaw has spoken for the President, but each has directed attention to state- ments made by him in a speech at Quincy during In the course of that speech he “It is well nigh universally ad tem is wanting in elasticity; his recent tour. said: currency s that is, the volume does not respond to the varying needs of the country as a2 whole, nor to the varying needs of different localities. * * * Our currency laws need such modification as will insure the parity of every dollar coined or issued by the Government, and such expansion and contraction of our currency as will promptly and automatically respond to the varying | demands of commerce. Permanent increases would be dangerous, permanent contraction ruinous; but the needed elasticity must be brought about by provisions which will permit both contraction and extraction as the varying needs of the several communities and business interests may require.” Those statements are in harmony with the opinions of the business world, and the fact that they have been recalled by men who have just had a confer- ence with the President is everywhere construed as an indirect way of informing the public of the Pres- | ident’s attitude toward the issue. It may then be taken for granted that the administration, while standing impartial as to diff t, measures proposed for providing for a flexible !:Cr"rcncy, will none the less exert zll its influence to procure the enactment of some sort of relief measure. The outlook, in fact, is promising. The Cuban treaty will probably oc- cupy very little time for consideration, and there will thus be ample time for taking up the financial | question and settling it to the satisfaction of country before the regular session begins. The enterprising but unfortunately obscure town of Sour Lake, Tex.,aching its slow way to a plane of civic morality, has decreed that all gamblers within the city gates must leave. Somebody must have bc{nycd us and informed the Sour Lake crowd that on the map San Francisco is a glittering Mecca for anybody the | of the work are so carefully | thought and attention. These bear witness that if | giant the winters of Northern California are as mild as | those of the southern section, while the southern Because | ns would have to be higher than 5 per cent | Senator | mitted that our | West—all this is here attempted and accomplished in reasonable measure.” That the work will at first impress the uninformed Easterner as something of a glittering exaggeration may be taken for granted. The most carefully mod- erated statement of California conditions must al- ways appear to those who are accustomed to the 1ands and the climates of the East as a poetic descrip- tion of a fabled Arcadia. Still the general statements | backed up by definite | and specific facts and statistics as to reassure the mind of any reader who gives the subject proper the generalities of California life are glittering it is because they have a right to glitter. There is no need to attach glowing adjectives to them to adorn them. The simplest statement of the facts, the plainest ar- | mind an idea of | other land can ray of statistics, presents to the wealth and of promise that no match. THe reader of the book is first called upon to note that California is larger than all England and Scot- land combined; that all of New England, New York and Pennsylvania may be “laid out in California’s area”: that the people who have settled within its borders and laid the foundations of "its | ward of 77,000 women are in the poorhouses civilization are among the most progressive of Amer- icans and have achieved much not only in the way of producing material wealth, but in art, science and | letters. Ample stress, too, is laid upon the important fact | that “Northern” and “Southern” California are | geographical terms merely and do not mark anyi sharp distinction of soil or climate or product; that | the olive, the orange, the fig and the prune are grown | in the northern counties as well as in the south; that summers are as pleasant as those of the north. The industrial features of the State naturally form the chief theme of the volume, for it is designed to bring workers and investors to the State, but other attractions are not overlooked. In fact, as has been | stated, the work is a valuable addition to our de- scriptive literature and merits a wide circulation. 1t is to be hoped the people generally will assist the | Promotion Committee in circulating it wherever it | may do good. | By the exercise of shrewd and patient diplomacy the State Department has opened the door of Man- Washington should now polish | up the guns of our fighting ships as a necessary ele- mert in the splendid victory we have won and as a | wise precaution for the internatipnal rows which will 2lmost inevitably follow. | | churia to our trade. NLY a short time ago The Call had occasion to note with approval the merry rush of college men from the East to the wheat | fields of Kansas, with the intention of spending their "\'aca!ion in the merry task of harvesting the golden | grain. As the stories came to us from many sources in the East and seemed like the beginnings of | series of beautiful idylls, care was taken to point out | how glibly the rural papers of Kansas had taken to | combining harvest items and society gossip in one | eweet and charming mixture of business and | pleasure. | Later reports from the scene of the ‘harvest festivi- | ties are not so attractive as those earlier glowing ones. It appears that harvesting is not the jocund task it was in the days when poets sang of it and | when it was carried on without the rush of ma- | chinery. It has now become something of a hustle, and it seems the college athletes, so far from being ,ablc to periorm it lightly and with graceful ease, are | being laid out prostrate all over the fields. It would have been sad to learn that the aspiring { youths had failed under any circumstances, but the Kansas papers make bad things worse by saying that the athletes of the East cannot even so much as match the native girls. A Topeka report says: | “College students from Eastern States who are | working in the Kansas wheat fields have found that | they cannot keep up with the farmers’ daughters with whom they work. Several of the young men have been compelled to stop work during the hottest part of the day, but the girls and young women rest only at night. Two Swedish girls in Edwards | County are said to have tired out four of the em- bryo athletes who came from New York. The girls keep up with the binders in shocking wheat, and the footsore young men are obliged to rest every few minutes.” 2 We must take reports from Kansas as they come. There is no use trying to go behind the returns in that State. Perhaps, however, the college athletes may find a way to redgem their fame by challenging | ter than that of their predecessors. COLLEGE HARVESTERS. [ a| the harvest maidens tola football match. It is not fair to judge any man by a game to which he is un- knew so little about wheat fields that they did not understand what they were going to tackle. Mean- time the Kansas girl is in her glory. It is her turn ?o sound the loud cymbal and sing of victory and joy. e — One membe_r of the “Big Four™ has been indicted on a charge of dishonesty in connection with the failure of the firm of which he was the responsible head. This probably is all the public will receive to’ cation of fraud and thievery, conducted under the mask of legitimate business methods. A her work in Great Britain has been recently issued by the compilers of the census of 1901 and shows a number of interesting evidences of the progress made by women in establishing themselves as independent factors in the industrial world. In- cidentally it also reveals by statistics that when men marry under 20 years of age they generally marry women older than themselves; between 20 and 25 they marry women of about their own age, but after that they nearly always choose a woman much younger than themselves. A The industrial statistics, however, are much more interesting than those relating to marriage. Setting aside children and dealing only with persons of mar- ——— THE BRITISH WOMAN. SUMMARY of facts regarding woman and | riageable age, there are upward of 1,000,000 more women than men in Great Britain, and as a conse- quence a considerable number of women must of necessity earn their own living. The statistics show that for every twenty-nine unmarried women who do not support themselves by work outside the home there are thirty-two who do. Even among married women one out of every seven earns her living by work outside the home. The result of this pressure for work among women has been a steadily enlarging field = of occupation open to them. The summary says: “A comparison between these returns of women’s employments in 1901 and the statistics give;n in the census returns of fifty years before shows a striking change. In 1851 there was practically no general occupation open for women of the middle class except teaching. Three hundred, it is true, were druggists, and 100 were engaged in literature. Now practically the whole range of employment outside the army, the navy and the law is open to both sexes ‘alike. Seven thousand women now work as chemists; there are nearly 300 women undertakers, 4000 work as butchers, and three as slaughter-women. Fifty-eight of them are bill discounters, twelve are shepherds and one is the feminine equivalent of a woodman.” It appears there is no work too heavy for some women to perform. Thousands of them work at the pit heads of the mines, many more as blacksmiths and in other metal trades, quite a number as barge women and a considerable number as cokeburners. The great mass of them are of course employed in some kind of domestic service, but the better edu- cated are rapidly making their way in all forms of professional life and in the civil service of the Gov- ernment. The darker side of the statistics shows that up- and that about 45,000 of them formerly earned their own living in some definite employment. Of these un- fortunates one out of every three was once a do- mestic servant. The report adds: “Nearly 13,000 of these workhouse inmates were once charwomen or Jaundresses. Four of them were once artists, four photographers, 162 wofked as women teachers, and no fewer than 624 were once sick nurses. No woman author seems yet to have come to the workhouse. There is not a single actress or woman writer among the 2844 women in the prisons to-day. No women teachers are in prison, although twelve male teachers are, and no women doctors, although sixteen male doctors are incarcerated.” Dark as are the figures showing the proportion of failure and poverty among the women workers of Britain, it is evident that their situation is much bet- They have won recognition in the industrial world and are getting better wages than in former years. The pace of im- provement may be slow, but it is nevertheless steady, and the British working woman has no reason to be dissatisfied with the record she has made during the last fifty years. T a high degree of self-government. It comes high, but the people must have it. The appro- priations for carrying on the government amount to $28 per head of population. For the government of 150,000 people the cost is $8,423,850 49 for two years. The income to meet this is only $4,600,000 for the HAWAIIAN FINANCES. HE Territory of Hawaii is in the enjoyment of | same period. To meet the budget borrowing against future taxes is proposed, but that is simply getting income and outgo still farther apart. A tax of $28 per capita is probably the highest.levied by any Government in the world. When local and municipal taxes are added, annexation appears as the greatest luxury on earth if measured by its cost. Neither under the monarchy nor the missionary oligarchy of Dole did taxation come anywhere near the present figure. The government purchased at so high a price does not seem to justify its cost by its quality, for it is not a very good government. If affairs go on at the present pace the islands are bound to go heavily in debt. When a career of extravagance is once begun it is difficult to arrest the pace. In Hawaii, as else- where, there are large numbers of voters who are not materially touched by taxation, but who touch the results of taxation beneficially to themselves. These are appealed to by a lavish policy of expenditure, and their votes can be counted on to continue in | power any legislators who have excessively liberal views on public expenditure. By and by there will be an insolvent dependency on our hands, and Uncle Sam will have to put his hand in his pocket to pay the bills of his youngest daughter. Municipal authorities are again discussing plans for an adequate sewer system for San Francisco and have announced what it will cost to give the city this all-important adjunct to good health. The subject has been considered so often and failure has followed so persistently that something more definite than dis- cussion will be necessary to prove to the veople’(hat they are to enjoy the privileges of civilized sanitation. The opening of the Republican State Convention of Kentucky recently was characterized as spectacular. This must have been from the Kentuckian.point of view and in contrast to Democratic affairs of similar import as there was not even a single murder to en- liven the proceedings nor the suggestion of a riot to illumine the occasion. Kentucky has fallen upon thrown out beyond the pale of decency anywhere else, ,accustomed, and it is clear the Eastern dandies |evil days. ' ] I A% | Bush at Pretty Home of Her Parents in Woodland persuade it that American morality excludes a justifi- _—— PRINCIPALS IN A WEDDING WHICH WAS HELD YESTERDAY AT THE WOODLAND HOME OF THE PARENTS OF THE BRIDE, A POPULAR SOCIETY LADY OF YOLO COUNTY. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. OODLAND, July 23.—Henry Bush and Miss Nora Brown- Wlng were married to-day at the residence of thebride’s parents. The young couple will spend their honeymoon In S8an Francisco and in the southern part of the State. @ il b il @ | URGE COUNTIES TO HURRY WORK ON EXHIBITS —— Practical instructions to the counties of California were sent out yesterday by the California St. Louis Exposition Commis- sioners, over the signature of Secretary B. B. Willls. The most important pdrt of the admonition is contained in a state- ment to the general effect that the coun- tles must hustle. They must employ col- lectors of samples to be exhibited if they wish to make a creditable showing. The whole question of success or failure, so say the commissioners, depends upon the employment of collectors. The counties that have collectors are getting together a lot of good material; those that have no collectors are complaining of having a hard time. A part of the circular of in- structions is as follows: The California t. Louls World's Fair Com- missioners desire to {impress upon county World's Fair committeemen the urgent neces- sity of providing for active and energetic county collectors. There is no expenditure that can be made which will produce better re- sults finally than the employment of a first- class man, impressing upon him the duty of collecting liberal samples of all the material products of his county. Of course the com- mitteemen of the different counties are well advised as to the products of their respective countles, and know the season when they can be most: conveniently and economically secured, and the work in hand at present is to see that these things are got together when t! can best be had. Our belief is that a good man put in the fleld right ne if you have not already such a one in the fleld, can do more toward In- suring a good display of the county’s products at St. Louls next year by four months' active Work than can be obtained by the same ex- penditure in any other way. You cannot rely on voluntary effort. Such a collector should | be selected by the county World's Fair com- mittee, and his work should be outlined by them, ‘and he should be required to report to them' at least once a week, or oftener, if de- sired, so that they may know what he is do- ing, and be prepared to replace him with a better man it he does not do all that he ought to_do in the vremises. ‘We would urge the collectors to secure liberal samples of all good products, and not be afraid of quantity. The more you have of a good thing, within reason, the better, and be sure in your collections all products of the county are included. We want fruit, grain, grasses, vi Kin 1 varl: etles of nuts, nd wild; & full line of vegetables; a full line of fibres, animal and vegetable; samples of your wood (commercial and ornamental); samples of your clays, iime- stone, coal, bullding stone, ~preclous stones, and other minerals; Indeed everything you produce of value. When it {8 known that the material is col- lected and available, there fs no fear but that ways and means will be found for to St. Louis and having it att stalled. Hence, we ask every county {n Call- fornia which expects to be represented at St. Louts, and which has not already a county col- lector in the fleld, to take the matter up and provide for a collector at once. BANKS ENJOY A SHARE OF GENERAL PROSPERITY Are Reported Flourishing by the State Board. The Board of Bank Commissioners re- ported yesterday that the twenty private banks of California are all flourishing. Several of these Institutions have com- menced business recently. The statement of their combined resources and liabllities on June 30 is as follows: Resou real loans on real 14: loans rmnu‘-mfl 3 - 31?;1 019 37; mqm,nm ; due from banks her $119,663 15; total u.mm's:—'c- '.?‘n in coln, 802 80; Bl T ek apd B SE totdl unilicies, 85,008,823 28, ——————————— Nelson’s Injuries Fatal. estate. George H. Nelson, & tinner and con- - h«:':y':::’.m Guy mbrning ‘Trom- inyaries caused By & ' ' i atia e ot | FREE-THE SPENDERS-FREE streets. resided at 1619 Thirteenth Then, if You Want a Good R o T gk 1t Do ".T:"m“ ;:l‘h':lh '““:?wfi.:‘fl“- - COLORED COMIC SUPPLEMENT. The bride comes of the oldest and most widely connected families in Yolo. She is the fourth daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Browning, cultured, beautiful and ranks as one of the belles of the county. Mr. Bush is a prominent young mer- chant. He is the second son of Judge E. R. Bush, at one time Judge of the Supe- rior Court. He is a popular member of the local parlor of Native Sons. THREE WILLS 7 ARE OFFERED | FOR PROBATE e The will of the late Gfibert Palache, | senfor member of the firm of Newhall & Co. and well known ploneer, who died | here recently, was filed for probate yes- | terday. He disposes of his estate, which | is estimated to be worth more than $250,- | as follow: | To Louise K. Jordan, a sister, $1000; to | Kate A. Palache, a daughter, $1000; to T. | H. Palache, a son, $1000; to the California | Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, $500; the residence to Margery Palache, widow of the deceased, and | Sadie and Ida Palache, his daughters. Ida and Thomas Palache are named, respectively, as executrix and executor of the will. { The will of the late W. B. Hooper was | also filed. He leaves his estate to the | Central Trust Company In trust for his | widow and three children. Half of the property is devised to the children and half to the widow, Eleanor C. Hooper. Albert Clayburgh, the recently deceased hide merchant, provides in his will, flled yesterday, that his property shall go to his seven children, in the following pro- portion: To Delia, $1200; to Stella, $1000; to Lee H., $1000; to Bella, Etta, Carrie and Louls A., the residue, share and share alike. He explains the smallness of the three first bequests by saying the devisees are already provided for. He also provides that his son, Louis H., shall carry on his business under the direction of the | executors of the will. The will of James Tomkinson, the liv- eryman, was also filed yesterday. His estate is sald to be worth $100,000. The devisees in his will are: Alice Tomkin- son, a daughter, to whom he leaves the CALL IS ONE OF THE BEST OF NEWSPAPERS —— In the July 15 lssue of Printers’ Inky Geo. P. Rowell, publisher of the American Newspaper Directory, prints a list of the best 36 newspapers in the United States, This list includes the San Francisco Call, Reference to it will show that in Mr, Rowell's opinion advertisers desiring ta cover the entire Pacific Coast territory with the smallest possible number of pa- pers can best accomplish their purpose by the use of five dallles: SAN FRANCISCO CALL. SAN FRANCISOO EXAMINER. PORTLAND OREGONIAN. SEATTLE TIMES. LOS ANGELES TIMES. California is left to The Call, Examiner Angeles Times. n"l“’hel‘:pmmfu of Mr. Rowell, the *Littla Schoolmaster” of the Art of Advertising, have been sought for years by the lead- ing advertisers of the country. It s, therefore, with special gratification The Call acknowledges the compliment paid to it by so eminent an authority on puo- leity. 2 Page 48 of Printers’ Ink is as follows: Three Dozen Dailies. NEW YORK fl!MlH‘.nl.l ’W“Y‘a‘k TIMES—(Morning and gaY" yorK WORLD—(Morning, Su; NEW Evening and Sunday). L RK s P “Eooflyl.\’.‘ EAG and R OCHESTER DEMOCRAT _ AND CHRONICLE—(Morning and Sunday) BUFFALO NEWS—(Evening and lay). WARK NEWS—(Evening and T ADELPHIA RECORD—(orn- o ADELFHIA BULLETIN—(Eve- ning). ARTFORD 'I'l!E!—»{Pui‘ ) Il;l “CE JOURN A]o—(“r-- ing a ay). - ;IOVIDE!CI? BULLETIN—(Even- Ing). E)OI’I‘OK GLOBE—(Morning, Even- and Sand: e WASHINGTON STAR—(E ATLANTA JOURNAL — (Evening A EMPHIS COMMERCIAL APPEAL VI e i Do CINCINNATI TIMES-STAR—(Even- in; ELEVILAHD l'l"l;l'slll RG DE’ OIT NEW Evening). DE’I'III)‘I.‘I' Tllflma&‘ ex- ¥)- PRESS—(Evening ). PRESS—(Evening and mlrurcn—g::o(;l-m. POLIS :m::'u orn- and San . ‘housonRu—(lm- fer e FTUES—(Eventng and S FRANCISCO EXAMINER — (Morning an SAN FR - MIN ing, Ev“l-s hPORTLA!‘ d s--nyz. CI1SCO0 CALL—(Morning éLE! TIMES—(Morning and Sunday). KANSAS CITY STAR — (Evening d 8 y morning). POLIS NEWS—(Evening). Geo. P. Rowell advertising agents, recommend advertisers to use the daily papers and belleve the list named | above is as good a selection, so far as It goes, as can be made. ———————— Will Hold First Annual Picnic. The members of the Retail Shoe Clerks’ Association will hold their first annual pienic and excursion at Fairfax Park Sunday, August 2. The usual sports and games will be indulged in and suitable prizes will be awarded to the winners in each event. A special baseball match has been arranged between the members of Local 410 and the members of Local 432. The pleasure party will leave the ferry on the 8 o’clock boat. The following eom- mitfee has charge of the affalr: Frank Flaherty, chairman; Max E. Licht, A. Rule, F. Haley, E. A. Levy, A, L. Mohon, R. Rosenberg, O. E. Barron and J. B. Krueger. e General Wade to Relieve Davis. WASHINGTON, July 2.—Acting Adju- tant General Hall has been advised that Major General Bates Wade will relieve Major General George W. Davis of the command of the Division of the Philip- pines Saturday, on which day General Davis will be placed on the retired list. @iriiiniim i O property at 521 Mission street; t McGlynn and James H. Tomkinson, his two other children, to whom he devises the residue of his estate, subject to the payment of the following legacies: Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum of South San Francisco, $500; Hebrew Orphan Asylum, $500; Protestant Orphan Asylum, $500, and Patrick McAran, $500. ——————— Townsend’'s California glace fruits and candies, 50c a pound, n fire- etched boxes. A nice present for Eastern friends. 715 Market st., above Call bldg. * ——— Special information supplied dally to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 20 Cali- fornia street. Telephone Main 142 * NEXT SUN able Is Not the Only Thing by Charles “Ode to the Summer Girl” By Edwin Markham. IN 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 The Superfine Printing of the Best Modern Photographs Obtain. So Tremendously Popular. These Features: “THE GIRL WHO LOVES” By “Colonel” Kate. “WHY YOUR PHOTOS ARE BAD” “Why China Is Now Sitting Up and Taking Notice” By a Titled Oriental Poten Who $3000 i ey, Tusk fa :::. Hotel i-'n:"iz.’“;.fa"’" Things Hum Generally From New York to San Francisco. And the Best Novel of the Hour, Which Shows the Cause of Ee- centric Extravagance in the Rich, the Impudence of Titled Foreigners and Why Americans Are DAY CALL That Makes the Sunday Call Just Read M. Taylor Jr. “The Bear In the China Shop” By Edgar Saltus.

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