The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 16, 1903, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1903. GRAND LODGE OF MASONS LISTENS TO WISE WORDS OF GRAND ORATOR Leading Citizens of Mill Valley Are Admitted Into the Great Fraternity as the Baby Organization, Impressive Ceremony Being Carried Out in the Temple--Grand Masters Who Passed Away This Year Are Eulogized| _— WARDEN DENIES | COMVIET'S STORY Wilkinson of Folsom| Says He Didn’t Cut His Clothes. { BACRAMENTO, Oct. 15.—The cross-ex- emination of Warden Wilkinson of Fol- som prison was resumed when the cases of Convicts Wood and Murphy, who es— caped from the prison last July, were | taken up by Justice J. R. Brown this| morning. | The Warden denied that emphatically he had cut his own clothes, the garments which were uced in evidence by the prosecution showing they had been cut with a knife Guard Ryan testified that he himself had locked Murphy in his cell on Sunday the day before the break, the defense in- tending to show that he could not have been engaged in conversation with other yrisoners prison yard on that day hatching conspiracy to assault toe prison off in order to escape. Convict Abbott will be brought down from the prison to-morrow to testify for the prosecution —_——— Man Killed by Train. OAKLAND, Oct 15—A man was struck by a Southern Pacific train at the foot of B street West Oakland, to- night and instan killed. There is no clew 1o his identity. e e SPRINGFIELD, Ohio, Oct. 15.—*"Mother™ Stewart, the world-w hristian temperance Jeader, is not dead, as was reported throughout the country to-day. The person who died was & woman also known as ‘‘Mother” Stewart and | a resident of this city ADVERTISEMENTS. T Chas. Keilus & Co. B.x ¢ 1. ae N v ¢ High-Grade Clothiers No Branch Stores. No Agents. Have You Ever Tried on Some of Our Fall Models? That Exclusiveness Which We Put Into Our Late Smart StylesIs Lauded by the Correct Good Dresser °e13Z e Kearny Street - INTERIOR MASONIC, TEMPL ML VALLEY ey sWeTe ‘e L | OFFICERS OF MILL VALLEY | LODGE OF MASONS, IN- STALLED LAST NIGHT. | | | | + | | * * HE Grand Lodge of Free and Ac cepted Masons resumed business | vesterday in the Masonic Temple. | The morning session was taken | up with the disposition of many | matters that relate to the good of the order exclusively. At the after- noon session Grand Orator E. H. Hart delivered a lengthy address. This was | | followed by eulogies of two past grand masters, the late E. M. Preston and N. W. Spaulding. In the evening there was the constitut- ing of Mill Valley Lodge under dispensa- | tion of Marin Lodge of San Rafael. The Mill Valley Lodge is the “baby” | 1odge of the year and out of eight new lodges instituted during the last year it is the last one to be constituted. The first | step taken was in July. Within four | weeks from that time the necessary num- ber of charter members had been selected and a dispensation petitioned for. Before the dispensation was allowed sufficient funds had been collected and a building was under course of construction. To- day the Masonic Temple is ome of the most imposing structures in Mill Valley. | The building and lodge furnishings cost nearly $12,000. Harry A. Klyce, worshipful master of the lodge, personally supervised the con- | struction of the temple and it is complete in all its appointments. The inside fur- | nishings are especially elaborate and cost- Iy, while the electric illuminating para phiernalia is not surpassed by that of any | Masonlc lodgeroom in the State. All of the emblems of the order are brought in | | relief by a concentration of incandescent lamps. | The lodge consists of the most promi- nent residents of Mill Valley as well as some of San Francisco’s foremost busi- ness men, whose domiciles are under the shadow of Mount Tamalpais. + The temple i# located on Corte Madera avenue. The lower floor has been leased 10 the city of Mill Valley for municipal offices. i The officers of the lodge who were in- stalled by the Grand Lodge are: Harry A. Klyce, worshipful master; Louis L. Janes, senlor warden; James Newlands Jr., junfor warden; Samuel N. Burt, senfor deacon; A. H. Pritchard, junior deacon; F. F. Bostwick, treasurer; F. F. Runyon, secretary; Thomas T. Greaves and W. Gordon Selmood, stewards; N, P. Yost, tyler. Marin Lodge exemplified the work in the first or apprentice degree before the Grand Lodge last night in a very impres- sive manner. To-day the officers for the ensuing Ma- sonic year wil be chosen and the file will be cleared and on the following day the new officers will be instalted. - ————— Slot Machine Ordinance. OAKLAND, Oct. 15.—The Council com- mittee to-night considered the ordinance introduced by Councilman Dornin regu- lating slot machines. Chief of Police Hodgkins was present d was qu Thurlow Bioc ki o e e oF Sy ‘ o MINCTES ARE WRITTEN IN ADVANCE R S Continued From Page 1, Column 2. while acting as director, but could not recall any of their conversations. He had been given the minutes of the first direc- tors’ meeting before the meeting was held. The minutes were a resume of what was to be done. They included all of the documents and resolutions ready to be passed. The proceedings were put through without change. The witness said that he and his co-diregtors voted for the acceptance of the offer contained in the minutes. Seward said he had never heard of John 7. Young before that meeting. He also aid that he did not at that time know 4 | the representative of the Hyde Windlass Company. Aside from the papars he knew nothing of the Canada company. He accepted the papers that were sub- mitted to him at the meeting because they came from relfable persons. He did not know of the firm of Moore & Sons and did not know where he had voted to acquire their plant while he was act- ing as director of the shipbuilding com- | pany. | The witness said he had placed no val- | uation on the plants separately. He said | he had, however, placed a valuation on | the whole group of yards, and Unter-| mever asked him how he could value the | whole if he had not valued the plants. | The witness said he had taken the report | of the accountants on the valuation. Untermeyer sought to show that Sew- ard voted while a director simply as he was told by the attorneys for the cor- poration and that he had possessed no knowledge as to the value of the sev- eral properties which he voted to pur- chase, EARNS $20 AS DIRECTOR. The redirect examination of Seward brought out the fact that for his sefvices as director for the shipbuilding company he had been paid the sum of $20. Later, when Untermeyer asked him if he would have voted the same if it had been pro- | posed to issue $171,000,000 worth of securi- | ties instead of $71,000000, the witness re- fused to answer. Guthrie had objected to the question as immaterial, and in the end it was agreed to certify the question 0 the court, after counsél had exchanged sarcasm on the subject. «Horace T. Gould of the Corporation Trust Company, who said that he had acted as Incorporator for 100 or more | companies, was the next witness. He had | two shares of stock in the shipbuilding company, but did not pay for them him- self. He s=aid that he had no personal interest in the company and that he probably had had the two shares of stock long enough to indorse them and hand them back to the Corporation Trust Com- pany. Kenneth T. McLaren, secretary of the Corporation Trust Company, was the next witness.of the day. He sald that his corporation had five directors, but he could only name three of them. He was sure, hqwever, that neither Max Pam nor Charles M. Schwab had any interest in the concern. He was one of the incor- porators of the shipbuilding company, but could not tell who had asked him to become an Incorporator. He had two ghares of the stock, but did not pay for them, had no pecuniary interest In the shipbuilding company. e Baptists Meet at Santa Rosa. SANTA ROSA, Oct. 15.—The forty- fourth annual session of the Pacific Bap- tist' Association convened here this af- ternoon, the Rev. G. N. Annes moderator and A. Stanley secretary. After an hour nwlcfie aev‘:w;3 to (h‘:. m:mfi?‘! of the late Rev. . Banks of - 3 O I sebi, who died a few _ago, deli by _the . W. E. Story, the Rev. W. L. the Rev. M h sermon was | memory of one of the great men whom, | was not only in the importan: | modern | Ing_end the size of the armies engaged, | greatest ! in the national capital is to- | dead men great. ! memory of Sherman comes fro | boastings, Pays a Tribute to the Memory of Sherman < Continued From Page 1, Column 4. General Young was chief marshal and, with his staff, headed the procession. Following came the Second Cavalry, the engineer battalion from Washington Bar- racks, headed by the engineer band, two battallons of coast artillery from Forts Washington, Hunt and Monroe, the Fourth Field Battery of Artillery from Fort Myer, a company of the hospital corps, a detachment of marines and two battalions of seamen. The second divis- ion of the parade consisted of the vari- ous organizations of the District National Guard. The unveiling ceremony began with music by the marine band, General Gren- ville M. Dodge, president of the statue commission, gave a brief description of the statue and then introduced Willlam Tecumseh Sherman Thorndyke, who, from the base of the pedestal, pulled a cord and two Iimmense national flags slowly parted, unvelling the statue of his grandfather. Attached to the cord was a bunch of flowers, which the little fel- low carried to the stand and presented to the President, who congratulated him warmly. The President was introauced by Gen- eral Dodge. As he arose the veterans gave him round after round of cheers The Presjdent’s speech was frequently in- terrupted with applause. The President said: To-day we meet together to do honor to ulm n our nation brought The Civil War of the lssues e reatest of times. but It was also, taking into account its duration, the severity of the “tht:; since the close of the Napoleonic struggles. ~Among the generals who rose to high position as leaders of the various armies in the field are many who will be remembered in our history as long as this history itselt is remembered. ~ Sheridan, the incarnation of flery energy and prowess; Thomas, farsighted, cooiheaded, Whose steadfast courage burned cver highest in the supreme moment of the crisis; McClellan, with 'his extraordinary gift the hour of her agony, forth for her reservation. at stake and of the outcome | for organization; Meade, victor in one of the decisive battles of all time; Hancock, type of the true fighting man among the regulars; Logan, type of the true fighting man among the volunteers—the names of these and of many others will endure so long as our peo- ple hold sacred the memory of the fight for union and for liberty. High among these chiefs rise the figures of Grant and of Grant's great lieutenant, Sherman, whose statue here to be un- velled. It is mot necessary hae to o over | the long roll of Sherman’s mighty feats. They are written large throughout, the history of the Civil War. Our memorfes would be poor indeed if we did not recall them now, as| we look along Pennsylvania avenue and think of the great triumphal march which surged down its length when at the close of the war the victorious armles of the Mast and of the West met here In the capital of the nation they had saved. Thére is a peculiar fitness in commemorating the great deeds of the soldiers who preserved | this natfon by suitable monuments at the | national capital. I trust we shall soon have a proper statue of Abraham Lincoln, to whom | more than to any other one man this nation | owes its salvation, Meanwhile, on behalf of the people of the nation, I wish to congratu- late all of you who have been instrumental in securing the erection of this statue to Gen- eral Sherman. MUST BE TRUE TO THE PAST. The living can best show their respect for the memory of the great dead by the way in which they take to heart and act upon lhel lessons taught by the lives whith made these Our homage to-duy to ths the depths of . We would be unworthy citizens did we not feel profound gratitude toward him, and those like him and under him, who, when the country called in her dire need, sprang | | forward with such gallant eagerness to answer | that { endurance and patrfotism, have made us and call. Their blood and thelr toll, their all who come after us forevpr their debtors. They left us mot merely a reunited country, but a country incalculably greater because of its rich heritage in the deeds which thus left it reunted. As a nation we are the greater, not only for the valor and devotion to duty displayed by the men in blue, who won in the great struggle for the Union, but also for the ! valor and the loyalty toward what they re- garded as right of the men in gray; for this war, thrice fopfunaté above @ll otner reeent wars in fits outcome, left to all of us the. right of brotherhood alike with valiant vietor and vallant vanquished. Moreover, our homage must not only find expression on our lips; it must also show itself forth in our deeds, It is a great and glorious thing for a nation to be stirred to present triumph by the splendid memories of triumphs in the past. But it is a shameful thing for a nation, if these memories stir it only to empty to a pride that does not shrink from present abasement, to that self-satisfac- lllrm which accepts the high resolve and un- bending effort of the father as an excuse for effortless ease or wrongly directed effort in the son. We of the present, if we are true to the past, must show by our lives that we have learned aright the lessons taught by the men who did the mighty deeds of the past. We must have in us the spirit which made the men of the civil war what they were; the epirit which produced leaders such as Sherman; the spirit which gave to the aver- age soldfer the grim tenacity and resourceful- ness that made the armies of Grant and Sher- man as formidable fighting machines as this world has ever seen. We need their rugged- ness of body. their keen and vigorous minds, and above all, their dominant quality of force- ful character. Their lives teach us in our own lives to strive after not the thing which is merely pleasant, but the thing which it is our duty to do. The life of duty, not the life of mere ease or mere pleasure—that is the kind of life which makes the great man as it makes the great nation. MANIFOLD DUTIES OF PEACE. We cannot afford to losethe virtues which made the men of '61 to '65 great in war. No | man is warranted in feeling pride in deeds of the army and navy of the past if does not back up the army and navy of the pres- ent. If we are farsighted in our patriotism there will be no let up in the work of building and of keeping at the highest point of effi- clency a navy suited to tne part the United States must hereafter play in the world, and of making and keeping our small regular army, which in the event of a great war can never be anything but the nucleus around which our volunteer armies must form them- selves, the best army of its size to be found among the nations. So much for our duties in keeping unstained the honor roll our fathers made in war. It is of even more instant need that we should show their spirit of patriotism in the affairs of peace. The duties of peace are with us always; those of war are but occasional; and with a’nation as with a man, the worthiness of life depends upon the way in which the everyday duties are done. The home duties are the vital duties. The nation is nothing but the aggregate of the families within its border: and if the average man is not hard- working, just and fearless in his dealings with those about him, then our average of public life will in the end be low, for the stream can rise no higher than its source. But in addition we need to remember that & peculiar responsibility rests upon the man in pubiic life. We ‘meet in the capital of the nation, in the city which owes its existence to the fact that it is the seat of the national Govern- ment. It is well for us, in this place and at this time, to remember that exactly as there are certain homely qualities, the lack of which will prevent the most brilllant man alive from being a useful soldier to his country, so there are certain homely qualities for the lack of which in the public servant no shrewdness or ability can atone. The test leaders, whether in war or in peace, must, of course, show a peculiar quality of genlus, but the most redoubtablé armies that have ever existed have been redoubtable because the average sol- dier, the average officer, possessed to a high degree such comparatively simple qualities as loyalty, courage and hardihood. And so the most successful governments are those in which the average public servant possesses that variant of loyalty which we call patriot- ism, together with common sense and honesty. ‘We can as little afford to tolerate a dishonest man in the public service as a coward in the army. The murderer takes a single life; the corruptionist in public life, whether he be bribe-giver or bribe-taker, strikes at the heart of the commonwealth. WRONGDOING IN OFFICE. In every public service, as In every army, there will be wrongdoers, there will occur mis- deeds. This cannot be avolded, but vigilant watch must be kept and as scon as discovered the wrongdoing must be stopped and the wrong- doer punished. Remember that in popular gov- ernment we must rely on the people themselves alike for the punishment and the reformation. Those upon whom our Institutions cast the initial duty of bringing malefactors to the bar of justice must’ be diligent in its discharge; yet'in the last resort the success of their ef- forts to purge the public service of corruption must depend upon ' the attitude of the courts and of the juries drawn from the people. Leadership is of avail only so far as there is wise and resolute public sentiment behind it. In the long run, then, it depends upon us ourselves, upon us, the people as a whole, whether this Government is or is not to stand in the future as it has stood in the past, and my faith that it will show no falling off is based upon my faith in the character of our average citizenship. The one supreme duty is to try to keep this average high. To this end it is well to keep alive the memory of thoze men who are fit to serve as examples of what is loftiest and best in American citizen- ship. Such a man was General Sherman. T very few In any generation is it given to render such services as he rendered; but each of us in Lis degree can try to show something of those qualities of character upon which, in their sum, the high worth of Sherman rested— his kindliness, his clean and sim- his courage, ple living, ness and te of life and, finally, his inflexible rectitude of soul and his loyalty to all that in this free re- public is hallowed and symbolized by the na- tional flag. TRIBUTES TO GREAT SOLDIER. As soon as the applause following the President’s address had subsided, David B. Henderson of Iowa, former Speaker of the House of Representatives, spoke on behalf of the Army of the Cumberland. In eulogy of General Sherman he said: The language of this statute tells what he fought for—peace. To recount his battles is to give a history of the Civil War. His march to the sea is generally regarded as his greatest ign, but it is an error. It was a bril- -ampaign—the world so rated it—but it did not come up to the genius and grandeur of the campaign immediately following it. when he carried practically the same army from Savannah to North Carolina. That was the greatest work of Sherman's life. Could the living and the dead of the Civil War unite in one Volce they would say of Sherman, ““He was a great man, he was a great soldier, he was a pure patriot.” For the Society of the Army of the Tennessee, Representative Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio, in a long speech, said of General Sherman: His fame will go forward to future genera- tions as the fame of a great American soldier, not confined by the limits of any society, but expanding and growing and glorious as the honor of any American soldler ever shall be. General Thomas J. Henderson of Illinois eulogized Sherman on behalf of the So- ciety of the Army of the Ohio. Speaking for the Society of the Army of the Potomac, General Daniel E. Sickles sald: Sherman fills a consplcuous page in the his- tory of great commanders. He will always hold high rank in the estimation of Americans as one of our most herolc figures. He grouped with Sheridan and Thomas among the chief lieutenants of Grant. The ceremonies closed with the bene- diction pronounced by the Right Rev. Henry Yates Satterlee, Bishop of Wash- ington. WORK OF LOVING COMRADES. Sherman’s Old Command Carried Project to a Successful Issue. The movement to erect at the national L e e o e e 2 i GOPHER'S HOLE MIELDS THE COIN Money Stolen in Sanger in Mysterious Man- ner Is Recovered. Special Dispatch to The Call. FRESNO, Oct. 15.—Through the efforts of Deputy United States Marshal Tim- mins and Detective J. M. McDopald, $1500 in coin stolen from the House & Gal- 'lugher stage office at Sanger on Septem- ber 10 was yesterday recovered, the offi- cers digging it out of a gopher hole near the stable. The money was sent from this city to Con Harrigan at Millwood and was left at the stage office over night. The next morning John Price, foreman of the sta- ble, handed the satchel cortaining the money to the driver, who in turn deliv- ered it to Harrigan at Millwood in the evening. . ‘When Harrigan opened the satchel he found it full of bricks instead of money. He\ at once came to Fresno and secured the services of the two officers. Clews were at first scarce, but Price was sus- pected of tie theft. On the morning the money was stolen he left town on a vaca- tion and did not return for several days. The officers questioned him and he at first denied all knowledge of the money. Finally, however, he gave way under the questioning and admitted taking the coin, which he had hidden in a gopher hole near the stable. ] 4 Timmins and McDonald went to the hole and dug up the money after search- ing a few minutes. It 1s not probable _that Price will be prosecuted, Harrigan | being satisfied to get his money back. g;lce is a brother of the Sanger consta- , is @ man of family and has always borne. a good reputation. Filipinos Kill a Few Locusts. MANILA, Oct. 16.—Returns from all the provinces show that the natives up to date have killed 17,000,000 pounds of le- aP0Ts ON 501 MAY. REAPPEAR Santa Clara College As- tronomers Renew Observations. Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA CLARA, Oct. 15.—Observation of the sun spots yesterday taken at Santa Clara College has led to the belief that they may again be visible when the sun has revolved upon Its axis. The spots were very clear and distinct against the granulated photosphere of the sun when the first observations were taken at the college at 8 a. m. yesterday. The last vestige of the spots disappeared at 10:30 4. m., standard Pacific time. Providing the large spot on the sun does not vanish before a revolution of the sun on its axis is accomplished, it may be visible again within twenty-seven days six hours, the average time required for a comblete revoiution of the sun, if the sun’s accelerated equatorial motion does not bring it back sconer. Sun spots al- ‘ways appear within forty-five degrees on either side of the solar equator, and as the equatorial motion has been known to exceed that of other parts of tlhie sun by two days, it is possible that the spots may return in less than the average time. Drawings by the Rev. R. H. Bell, who is achieving remarkable success in his wireless telegraphy development work, made from observations taken by the Rev. Jerome Ricard, astronomer at the college, show the principal spot at the time of its disappearance to have been in the western limb of the solar body. In form the spot was oblate, slightly pointed | - at the upper edge, with an intense black protuberance at the vanishing edge. It capital a fitting memorial to General Wil- llam Tecumseh Sherman, the man who did so much to bring to a close the great Civil War, was started soon after his death in 1801, The work was undertaken by the So- clety of the Army of the Tennessee, his old command, and to the members there- of is due the credit for the final accom- plishment of the purpose. They raised $1L,000 by subseription among themselves, and secured an ap- propriation of 330,000 from Congress, mak- ing $41,000 In all, which was thought ade- quate to complete the work as originally planned. In 1895 the leading sculptors of the country were asked to prepare de- signs and twenty-six models were sub- mitted in January, 1896. On May 27, 18%, the design offered by Carl Rohl Smith, a Danish-American art- ist, was selected and in November fol- lowing the contract for the work was awarded to him. It was soon found, however, that on ac- count of some unforeseen contingencies a much larger amount of money was needed. The Army of the Tennessee subscribed $5000 more and Congress raised its origi- nal appropriation to $80,000, making. 3$9,- 000 in all. The supervision of the work was con- fided to a committee consisting of General Miles, the Secretary of War and several | members of the Army of the Tennessee, with the eminent sculptors, St. Gaudens and Olin Warner, and Architects Bruce Price and Charles Post as advisers. | Upon recelving the award for the monument, Carl Rohl-Smith removed from Chicago, where he resided, to Wash- | ington, and set up his studio on the ground, but in 1900, while on a short trip to Denmark In the interest of his work— which he intended to be his masterplece— he was taken ill and died at Copenhagen August 20. Upon his death his widow undertook to complete the work by the employment of other sculptors. Henry H. Kitson of Boston executed the four b reliefs. Stephen Linding, a Norwegian artist, the two groups of “War"” and *“Peace,” and Lauritz Jensen completed the model of Sherman and his mount. The great bronze horse represents such a mount as General Sherman always pre- ferred—quiet and subdued—but capable of | hard service and good speed. General | Sherman’s figure sits erect thereon with | the head turned toward the White House. | Below the horse and ridér are four bas | reliefs—“An Incident in the Battle of | Missionary Ridge,” “The Battle of At-| lanta.” “The March Through Georgia | and “‘Sherman in Camp at Night.”” Eight | medallions represent the following of his commanders: Logan, Ransom, Grierson, Blair, O. O. Howard, Dodge, McPherson | and Smith. On the terrace base are four heroic bronze figures, standing on the corner pedestals, representative of the | men who followed Sherman in his cam- | paigns, | On the north side is the following in- scription: WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN. 1820-1891 | On No Earthly Account Will I Do Any Act | or Think Any Thought Hostile to or in Deflance of the 0ld Government of the United States. (Alexandria, La., January 18, 1861.) War's Legitimate Object Is More Perfect ace.” eace. (Wasnington, D. C., February 23, 1882.) The inscription on the south side is as follows: Semingle War, 1840-1842. War in Mexico, 1847-1848. Occupation of California. Civil War, 1861-1865. General Commanding Army of the United States, 1869-1584. Erect#d by the Soclety of the Afmy of the Tennesses, With the Aid of The Congress of the United States The ground covered by the monument is about fifty-seven feet one way by fifty | feet the other. The pedestal is of New Hampshire granite and on the east and west sides are two allegorical groups, “War” and ‘Victorious Peace.” The height of the statue proper is seventeen feet six inches and the extreme height of the monument fifty feet. The site on which it has been erected is an ideal spot directly south of the treasury and one where all the artistic points of merit can be seen to the best advantage. T ADVERTISEMENTS. 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They possess exactly the same properties that the gastric juices and other digestive fluids of the stomach possess, and they actually do the di- gestive work of the stomach and enable that organ to rest and recuperate and become sound | and well. They act in a mild, natural manner and cause mo disturbance in the digestive or- gans. They prevent any fermentation of the food which causes sour stomach. In fact, un- der thelr influence the subject forgets that he has a stomach and his resulting cheerfulness presents a great contrast to his former dejec- tion. L Millions of boxes of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab- lets are sold annually and they are but in the dawn of their popularity. letters of thanksgiving from gratetul ones who have been cured of this terrible disease. The | following is one of hundreds received each | week: Rev. J. R. Hoag of Wymore, Nebr., writes: “For six years I have been troubled with dys- stomach trouble was the cause of the heart disturbances. 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Residence Telephone James 1501. POLITICAL CARDS. For Mayor HENRY J. CROCKER Republican Nominee For Public Administrator For Tax Collec. lor Edward J. For Sheriff PETER J. CUuRTIS Chalrman Street Committes of Present Board of Supervisors.

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