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THE SAN FRA NCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER/10, 1903. GIVES SPAl SOME CREDIT Professor Moses Says Influence for Good of That Kingdom on Filipines Is Underestimated SPEAKS ABOUT MANNERS Declares Polish of Castilian Ntandard Could Not "Have Been Given by the Americans AL ¥ essor Bernard Moses, one of the ners who represented the s Government in the Phil- w of the University of livered a most interesting ast night before the Channing ry and friends at the First Uni- 1 Church. Every seat in the edi- € was occupied long before Mrs. nsky introduced the lecturer subject chosen by Professor was “The Old and the New € in the Philippines He began h an illustration of the character of Spain’s policy with reference to the Philippines and to her colc gener- ally. de! C. Professor Moses said in part “Ne pain has fallen from the la sition which she once occupled and her colonies have either become evendent states of been brought under the authority of other it is al inevitable that her ts d be® underesti- failure in politics and war world generally to think the s activity SPAIN'S ACHIEVEMENTS. other products of a political and military decline of to are likely @ lower es give r ¢ Spain behalf of civilization, and it quite possible that these estimates 1 be erropeous; that Spain in her ess will receive just credit achievements in the d to new achiev not t, become fashionable of Spain’s work in ex- ng America and the f the Pacific. But this flippant uttered a thousand times not the final word respecting to civilization, ed in reference to th f the peninsula or of the American has always to appreciate thé the Spaniards, partly f political rivalry and partly f the wide divergence of their and the unlikeness of their na- nts of view. The Spaniard t while the American saniard is polite, and mportance to forms of nies in social inter- American is unconven- h, and regards the cere- rompt in actic the ults of Spain’s Philippine Islands we into consideration not tently benevolent inten- but also the uncon-: of subordinate ofe le private per- might design the we nders, but if his agen he was powerles: ntentions; t during the r h colonial period the the most infrequent ect communication with PRACTICAL IDEAS. under Spanish influence Christians and the course of the centuries ated them, has impressed upon minds a large number of practical Through the influence of these ideas the Filipinos have, to a certain extent, been turned away from the Oriental point of view and made to see things as Spanijards see them. They have been brought with respect to many particulars to ‘occupy the Spaniard’s point of view. “As the Spaniard, through long con- tact with the Moors and theinfusion of ‘a certain amount of Jewish and Moorieh blood, has become something of an Oriental, so the Filipino, through long contact with the Spaniard and the infusion of a certain amount of Euro- pean blood, has become something of a Eu GAIN The Filipir their deas opean The importance of bringing an Ori- ental people under European law can- e ———————— 5 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. FROM FOUR STATES. Testimony to the Efficacy of the New Scientific Dandraff Treatment. James C. Rowe of Livingston, Mont “Herpicide cured my dendruff ane my hair falling. McCombs, St. Anthony, Idaho: “Herpicide cleaned my scalp of dandruff and made my hair soft as silk and glos- ber. Champaign, IiL: on one customer for aff and on another for falling hair n excellent resclts.” w micn. y fall Champ = Send 10c Herplcide Cc If you want your baby to grow and be strong, healthy and happy, use Mellin’s Food. beautifull, inted of heipful w ;‘bau! - rngyc-nmnmd'?a‘u of Infants, bount in cloth, will be sent you free if you sk for, it. STAY CURED. Casto MELLIN'S POOD CO.. BOSTON, MASS. !—:— Health rustored. Ab obure. ASTHMA == 25 o, B 80 PR, phery S rages, allabont Buffalo, N.T, PARTY LEADERS - ARE ASSEMBLING Republican National Commit- | teemen Gather in Washing- ton to Plan for Convention R Kilvni CHICAGO IS IN THE LEAD| | —_—— ; Proposal to Reduce Representa- | tion From Southern States| Finds Numerous Adherents | | WASHINGTON, Dec, 9.—Republican | national committeemen are arriving| in Washington for the quadrennial | meeting, which will open on Friday in | the Arlington Hotel. With this van-| guard of the men who decide the date and location of the next national con- | vention come the convention boomers. | Some of them are already on the| grou rtably located in head-| | qua and prepared, through the| | proper committees, to talk eloquently | in favor of their respective cities. | The question of representation in the| next convention, as expressed in circu- | lar letters sent out by General Brayton | of Rhode Island, is a topic of no little| | interest to the committeemen. Most of | the committeemen who have arrived| agree that they have no authority to| | eay what the basis of representation! shall be in the call to be issued for the convention. The most-the committee n do, they say, is to pass a resolu- »n recommending that a basis which/| | will reduce the number of delegalesl | from the South be adopted. | This view of the situation in part is| shared by Postmaster . General Z Payne. member of the commit-| tee from Wisconsin, and vice | chairman both of the national com-| ARCHBISHOP HARTY OF MANILA HERE ON WAY TO HIS NEW SEE | The Distinguished Catholic Prelate Carries! With Him a Souvenir From Pope Pius Selected From Relics of Late Pontiff Wy AN 7 mittee and of the executive committee. | * Payne is the father of the idea for re-| Archbishop J. J. Harty of St. Louis, duced representation and urged it|recently consecrated at Rome and del- stoutly in the Philadelphia convention. | egated to the diocese of Manila, ar- “I still favor my plan and belleve it| riveq-in this city yesterday, .accompa- ought to be adopted,” said Payne to-| njeq by his secretary, Mgr. Fowler, for- night, “but I am aware that It iS &|merly of Sioux City, and is registered matter which the convention must pass| 3¢ the Palace. The distinguished The rr@mntt»fl may discuss it 3‘; Catholic prelate will leave for his new pproaching meeting if Mr. Hanna | gee on the steamer China, which sails woses to rule it in order, but the| oyt Saturday, a fact which was cabled s ttee. as I understand it, cannot| 1, Bishop Guidi, the apostolic repre- Tulie Gy Gcisive Soiipn. | sentative in the Philippines, westerday. | Th:» talk about the date for the con-| Archbishop Harty received his ap- vention seems to favor the Tuesday| p,intment i» Manila on June 6, it being nearest the middle of June. The senti- | ne of the last official acts of the ‘ate ment in favor of Chicago as the eonven-| po,, 100 XIII. He was later called to | tion city increases, £o that among the | Rome and on August 15 he was duly | delegates now here it is regarded as a foregone conclusion that that city will be selected not be easily overestimated. The United consecrated by Cardinal Satolll, acting | under the direction of Pope Pius, the | ceremony being participated in by the | { members ‘of the American colony and | the students of the American College - . of Rome. As a memento of the solemn States in entering upon its task in the| ;. agion, the new Archbishop to-day Philippine Islands enjoyed the very| . 1o’ carries with him a golden great advantage of Spain’s preliminary . .oeq of beautiful workmanship, pre- oty : | sented to him by Pope Plus, who se- “Through Spanish influence and |, i0q it from the relics of the late precept the Filipinos have attained & | pone 1 oo it belng a present to the | noteworthy _ distinction _among the {1 0% 560 TS O s, | peoples of the Far East for their 800d | " pegarding his future work in - the manners and generally dignified bear- ' pyyinnines Archbishop Harty said ing. As instructors and models in this depariment the Americans would have been greatly inferior to the Span- & et AL S iards; for the American’s manners do| FPRELATE 'E““L PLAN » not « tute a conspicuous claim to| “Ihave no plans,” remarked he, “ex- | dist He goes to the islands | cept that it is my intention to imine- s the representative of a superior civ- | dlately take up the work as I find it ion, but his personal superiority , When I reach Manila. The Holy See In | has already outlined the work of the We are ex- last night that he had not as yet de- cided on anything definite. ction. does not anpear in his manners. this respect the Filipino outranks church in the Philippines. 4 | him. The American, however, jus-|Pected to act along educational lines, | tifies his presence as a leader and a |and it is especially to the improvement j | of the schools and the colleges that we | are expected to give our greatest at- | ntion. Before his death Pope Leo ap inted Bishops to all the dioceses o!" teacher in the islands by the fact that his mission begins where the mission of th ard ended. The Spaniards | te! pa taught the Filininos the forms of en- | PO! the islands. As to my own position in the city of Manila, while it does not in | any way interfere with the work of | and humane spirit.” | the outside Bishops, it is, in a way, one | - o to which certain matters may be re- A R T | ferred. All the Bishops of the Philip- | After speaking of the civil govern- | pines are, like myself, Americans. The mental offices created in the Philippine | request was made to the Holy See by Islands, Professor Moses continued: | this Government to appoint only Amer- “In the municipalities or townships | jcan Bishops and to this request the the first steps were taken toward the| Bope gave his full approval, for he establishment of local self-government. | clearly appreciated the need of teach- | The president, vice president and the|ing the natives of the islands to be members of the Municinal Council are | loyal to this country and its flag. | elected. But in view of the limited Throughout the war with Spain the knowledge and experience of the bulk | Catholic church of this country, as is of the inhabitants, it was found to be well known, maintained its loyalty to expedient to confine the privilege of | the highest Gegree to the United States voting in the beginning to a compara- | and it is endeavoring to inculcate the | tively few persons. It was confined to same feeling in the new subjects in that lightened society; the Americans are expected to give them an opportunity to acquire its open-minded, liberal postmaster), | those who had held some of the princi- pal municipal offices prior to the Amer- | ican occupation, those who had prop- | erty valued at 500 pesos, or who had | pald taxes to the amount of 30 pesos, | and those who could read, write and speak English or Spanish, “By granting this privilege to the lim- | ited number of persons who had tihe | qualifications required an opportunity | was given to the people to acquire th: first elements of ‘the knowledge neces sary to enable them to govern them-| selves. This provision was in marked | contrast with the law established in Porto Rico and Hawall, which con- ferred the highest privileges of eiti-| zenship alike upon the fit and the unfit. | An important branch of the govern- | mental organization is that which em- | braces the system of public istruction. DOUBTER AND CRITIC. 1 “At this point the doubter and the | | critic apoear and wish to know the reason and the ground of the author- | ity which onesnation exercises over a part or,the whole of an alien people, | as when the United States assumed to | set up a government in the Philippines. Sometimes a reference to the political tendency of the age stiggests a reply; and of the tendencies of this age none is more comspicuous than the rise of a few great nations to domirate the world. In political as well as in eco-1 nomical affairs the tendency is to ge- | velop larger effective units for control. “One of thc consequences of this “en- dency is the hope which it brings of | permanent peace and order. When the | small nations shall have become either !nhsorbed or relegated to positions of virtual dependence, only the great na- | tions among themselves will be able | to disturb the peace of the world. But these great nations will find peace, with a mutuzal understanding as to the ! method of settling difficulties, more ad- vantageous t\,n w for among the great nations of fifty vears hence war ! to a finish or to the point of subjuga- tion will be ar. impossibility.” { ————— DERLIN, Dec, 0, —The sailing orders of the German Gulf of Mexico squadron are so drawn up that at least one and possibly severai ves- sels will call at New Orleans toward the end of January. | far-off posséssion.” PROUD OF HIS PAST WORK. While Archbishop Harty leaves for is new see with the fondest of antici- pations, he nevertheless leaves behind him some regrets for the happy sphere that he has been compelled to abandon. He was born in St. Louis fifty-one | years ago and received his spiritual education there, being a graduate of | he St. Lauis University and the St Vincent Theologi¢al Seminary. “Pwenty-five years ago,” said he iast | evening, “I was ordained a priest, and for fifteen years I presided over the destinies of St. Leo's parish, which I founded. and in.which I built a church, a residence and a school building. which aggregate in value eomething like $230,000. I have patiently watched my parish grow and naturally I feel proud of the success that I have achieved in my clerical capacity. I have left behind me a parish of loyal people, who reposed in me their fullest confidence and never missed an oppor- tunity to demonstrate the fact. It is therefore but natural that I should show some regret in bidding these good pébple farewell, and the greatest con- solation I find is in the hope that I will accomplish as much good in my new sphere.” S Before leaving St. Louis Archbishop Harty turned over to his parishioners his personal property, amounting to about $14,000, retaining only sufficient money to carry him through to the Philippines. He felt that he was about to begin life anew and wanted to start afresh as he had done years ago, when he undertook the building up of St. Leo's parish in St. Louis. The Arch- bishop's journey westward was by way of Los Angeles, where he has a number of friends, and where he received quite an ovation on his arrival there last week. Yesterday, shortly after his ar- rival in this city, he and his secretary paid their respects to Archbishop Rior- dan and Archbishop Montgomery. To- day he and his secretary will visit the Cathclic Theological Seminary at Men- lo Park. P LSO R et P Guillett’s Christmas extra mince ples, fce- cream and cake! 905 Larkin st.; tel. East 198.* . | 3 HIS GRACE ARCHBISHOP J. | J. HARTY, NOW IN CITY. ——— CONVERSES WITH STRANGER AND LOSES HIS MONEY Purse Is Snatched From A. G. Lee of Ogden by a Chance Acquaintance in Buena Vista Park. A. G. Lee, a visitor from Ogdeny who intended taking his departure this morning, secured a warrant yes- terday for the arrest of ‘“John Doe” on a charge of grand larceny. Lee went out to Golden Gate Park on Tuesday with a camera and after taking some snapshots made his way to Buena Vista Park. While there he was approached by a stranger, who pretended to be ignorant of the local- ity. After conversing for a few min- utes the stranger suggested that Lee should toss up a coin for cigars. Lee replied that he not smoke, but to humor the stranger pulled out his purse and selected a 50-cent piece. They flipped the coins till Lee said that, as the sun was going down, he would have to take a photograph. He pulled hfs purse, containing $80, out of his pocket to put back the 50-cent piece, when the stranger snatched the purse and ran. Lee pursued him till the stranger stopped and putting his hand in his hip pocket warned Lee! not to follow him or he would be kill- | distance | and the stranger disappeared. Detec- | ed. Lee kent a respectful tives Ryan and Tayler are looking for the stranger. ————— BOY BURGLARS ARE SENT TO THE JUVENILE COURT Charles Blackman and Fred Hart- well Accused of Breaking Into 2 House at 12 Mary Street. Charles Blackman, 11 years of age, and Fred Hartwell, 12, were arrested yesterday morning by Policemen Scott and Flynn and booked at the City Prison on a charge of burglary. They will be sent to the Juvenile Court. Blackman was out on vrobation from this court when arrested. The boys are accused of breaking into a house at 12 Mary street, be- tween Mission and Minna, on Decem- ber 2, while there was no one at home. They forced open several trunks be- | longing to three Italian fruit ped- dlers and stole §40. According to Policeman Scott, who is attached to the Boys' and Girls’ Aid Society, Blackman is one of the worst boys that have come under his observation. About a year ago he and two other boyvs held up a fourth voungster in Golden Gate Park and forcibly took a $5 gold piece from him, which his uncle had presented to him. ISR § R Framing the Picture Is sometimes as difficult as naming the baby. You will find the task an easy one if you bring your pictures to us and try the moldings &nd mats here. We have so many varieties of moldings and such exquisite ones that a_satisfactory selection is quickly made. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741- Market street. . ——— Found Herself a Prisoner. Mrs. Bertha Zeigler, an elderly wo- man residing on Tenth avenue, entered the ' Adams building on Kearny street early last evening with a view of visit- ing the headquarters of the Christian Science Society. Failing to locate the latter, she wandered around the corri- dors for several hours, and when she decided to leave the building she_ dis- covered that the doors had been locked. Realizing that she had ‘been made an involuntary prisoner she became fright- cped and frantically endeavored for some time to attract the attention of passing pedestrians, but failed until shortly after 9 o'clock, when Sergeant Shaw and Officer Kreamer discovered her predicament and reieased her. Indian and Mexican goods, burnt novelties, beads, Cal. souvenirs, The Curio, 32 Eddy. *, THIS | | 7 NEITHER SIDE |END OF FIGHT - ASKING TERMS| FOR A REWARD Restaurant Keepers® Association | Farmers Who Were in at the and the Cooks’ and Waiters'| Death of Outlaw Traey Are Unions Far From Agreement| to Be Paid for His Capture CLATMANTS ~ FAIL BRI S, Governor of Washington De- cides to Recompense ){gn Before the Holiday Season OVERTURES ARE AWAITED | OTHER Some Eating-Houses Reopen and Are Suspended by Organ- ization to Which They Belong TACOMA, Wash.,Dec. 9.—After wait- Eight restaurants that had closed | jng sixteén months, Governor McBride under orders from the Restaurant| and Attorney General Stratton to-day | Keepers’ Association opened thelr | gecided to at onge pay the reward of doors for business yesterday and are | $s500 offered by Governor MecBride in on the suspended list. Most of these;Ausu,‘_'m)z, for the.capture, alive or | houses are known as bakery restau- | gead, of outlaw Harry Tracy. The rants. They are conducted by Ruedi- | money will be pald to Maurice Smith | ger, Loesch & Co., 111 Larkin street; | and four ' other farmers of Lincoln Arften,” Eicher & Co., 228 Kearny | county who engaged Tracy in combat street; Vienna Cafe, 222 Sutter street; | gne dark night in a wheat field. Tracy, Detjen & Mengel, 35 Market street; P.| who was shot and wounded, killed him- Westerfeld & Co.. 865 and 1035 Market | self before morning rather than be cap- street; Peterson & Bertelsen, 247 Grant | tuFedev:.Next-anérning. the Sheriff of | .11 | Lincoln County and other inembers of avenue, and Polli & Payan, 317 Powell | il pown: KeEtwed i street. Smith’s party in beating through All the other eating-houses, number- | wheat field and in finding Tracy's body. ing .about thirty-five in all, remain | The Sheriff's party set'up a claim fur' closed. The Restaurant Keepers’ As- | part of the reward and -brought a suil sociation is determined to win and in- | in the Superior Court, which, they lost. tends to stand firm. On the other hand | The time for appeal having expired, the Cooks'‘and Walters’ unions be- | Governor = McBride desired before lieve they will be victorious. Officers | Christmas to reward the men who of both unfons say that the men and | brought Tracy's career to an end. women who have lost their places by | Several county rewards will also be| reason of the closing of certain res- Paid. The question of Governor Mc- Bride's authority to offer a reward of Special Dispatch to The Call. taurants have secured employment s " more than $1000 has been waived by all | Peter Peterson, a restaurant keeper ) concerned. { —_———— at 621 Kearny street, has posted a sign on his window informing the pub- lic that he will reopen for business to- | Buyers of Christmas Presents Should visit Andrews’' Diamond Palace, | ras | 221 Montgomery street, and see the large | day. Shortly afterward the Sign Was| gioci of diamonds, watches and jewelry | read by a walking delegate of the | at lowest prices. Open evenings. « 0 Waiters' Union and the latter entered | —_—————— and tried to get Peterson to sign the Lapique Must Stand Trial. agreement. Peterson refused and the Jean Lapique, who has been before walking delegate ordered a union man | tne courts for a number of years and | to walk out of the place. Peterson | ypo has the honor of being the oldest | gave up the plan and tore down hiS|inmate of the County Jail, was up be- sign. He will remain closed. fore the Examiners of the Insane ye: Both sides are holding meetings | tarday and declared sane. He was re- daily. Each is waiting for the other t0 | tyrned to his old cell on Broadway and make overtures and neither will start| ) appear before Judge Cook on next the ball rolling toward a settlement. | satyrday and have h's case set. | M. Johnson, chairman of the executiv: s SATS DUNSITIR DRANK REAYILY Edna Wallaee Hopper Gives Tmportant Testimony in the Case on Trial at Vietoria VAN e 7R d TELLS - OF LEAVING \}IO.\EE + Aetress Declares That Decedent Had - Hallucinations. and He Wanted to Sign €heeks 3 R A T VICTORIA, B. C., Déc. 9.—Edna Wal- lace. Hopper, the actfess who Ys suing James Dunsmuir, gave evidence in the trial hére to-day. She said she first knew the late Alexander Dunsmuir when a child in the seventies. ~ She had been sent to boarding-scHool by . him. He treated’ her Kindly.--She went to live with him and her mother at San Francisco in 1885-and. 1886. . She noticed that Dunsmuir drank excessively then. He had ballucinations ‘and wanted to sign checks always when in that con- dition. * She told of ‘her life:with her mother and Dunsmuir’ at San Franeis- co and of how she had been sent from school “one day with a note to her mother. She then told her mother that time to ad¥tsf[She had been sent from scheol because the}. her mother’'s name was Wallace and his was Dunsmuir. The witness also told of how, when a child, Alexander Dunsmuir had sometimesagicked her out of bed when sound asiéep and placed her in a tub of col@ water. Eventually, the witness told Duns- muir that, as her mother was not ac- knowledged as Mrs. Dunsmuir, she wonld gc away. He persuaded her not to, but during his absence she went to New York and went on the stage. She next saw Dunsmuir in 1882, when play- ing an engagement-at San Franeisco. He was then drinking heavily and*not strong enough to romp with her as-he had formerly done. She saw him again in 1897. He was very weak and child- ish from excessive drinking. She wiil be cross-examined to-mof- row by E. P. Davis for the defense. L. P. Duff, for plaintiffs, to-day &p- plied for a commission to be held at San Francisco to take the evidemee of Louise Balley, a maid who had been employed by Mrs. Dunsmuir, her hus- band refusing to allow her to come to Victoria. Justice Drake refused the application. It will be renewed on the arrival of the San Francisco coumsel, who has been telegraphed for. | committee of the Restaurant Keepers’ | Association, said last evening that it | was up to the unions to move. He | said the association had closed many} | restaurants and would not settle untl: certain clauses in the new agreementK | were either stricken out or amended. | | He reiterates that the unions have no | | right to ignore the association or try to | | compel individual members to sign the | agreement. Mr. Johnson is sanguine ! | of victory and actually clalms one. | There is a rumor that both sides will come together to-morrow for confer: ence. Gooch’s oyster-house, on Ellis street, near Powell, will close at § o’clock this | | morning in sympathy with the asso- | ciation. | The local joint executive board of | the unions involved in the difficulty is- | |sued the following statement last | night: / “There has appeared in the daily | press as coming from Mr. Johnson, | chairman 2f the Restaurant Keepers' | Association, a statement to the effect that they had notified the Cooks' and | | Walters’ Union of a desire to meet with | | their representatives. | ! _ “If any communications to that effect | have been sent to either the Cooks’ | Union, thé Waiters’ Union or to the undersigned executive board, such | communications have not reached the i above mentioned bodies. “To the contrary, when the Restaur- | | ant Keepers’ Association sent an ulti- matum to the unions that unless the employes of the Central Restaurant, on Ellls street, were ordered back by 10 a. m. Saturday they would close their places of business, the unions appointed a committee to go before the Restaur- ant Keepers' Association, which was to assemble that same afternoon. “Our request for a conference with the Restaurant Keepers' Association was refused by Mr. Johnson, chairman of the executive committee. “The unions are and always have been ready and willing to meet the em- | TSNTERESISY RO 4 WESUMOEY ployers.” —_—— | STRIKE OF BUTCHERS REMAINS UNCHANGED Members of Union May Succeed in Tying Up the Slaughter-houses of Miller & Lux. The strike of the butchers in the slaughter-houses of Miller & Lux is| still on and there seems but little pros- pect of an early cettlement, as both sides are firm in their demands and de- termined to fight the issue to an end. The strikers are working among the non-union men, trying to get them to join the union. If they succeed the business of Miller & Lux will be tied up. It is probable that the cloakmakers’ strike will soon be brought to an end, as both the employers and the strikers are anxious for a settlement. Secretary~O. E. Tveitmoe of the Building Trades Council was given a hearty welcome by the members of the council when he returned from the East a few days ago and was congrat- ulated on having secured for this city | the convention of the National Federa- tion of Labor next year. Waiter J. Joyce, financial secretary of the Laborers’ Protective Union, brought charges against Thomas Rea- that Reagan be expelled. At.a meet- ing held last night the executive com- mittee of the union investigated the matter ard dismissed the case without even reading the charges. It decided that the charges were brought by Joyce out of a spirit of revenge. y e e A . Supervisor Resigns From Oflqe MARYSVILLE, Dec. 9.—W. B. Fil- cher, Supervisor of the Third District ignation to Governor Pardee. Filcher was requested to resign by the Grand Jury at a recent meeting. et Plain pongees will not be worn as ex- tensively next season, but new striped effects that will certainly be very popular are to be int now from San tric Company, and Elec- . Gas 415 Post street. gan, a member of the union, dsking | of Yuba County, has tendered his res- | roduced. Buy your gas range | The public has been erroneously led to believe that all fur ar- ‘ticles are much higher in price than heretofore. We would therefore like to set our patrons right and give them the facts:—that most furs ara really ¢heaper than they have been and that this accounts for the city being flooded .with a lot of Eastern maide cheap stuff, which is being offered at a really higher price than its true value. We have inaugurated a special department for' pop- ular fur neckwear, such as is being used ‘this season, and will guarantee that our prices are lower for first-class articles which we offer than inferior goods are now being sold for. i As all goods are of our own manufacture, we are able to guarantee every article we sell as to quality and price. Eaich garment bears our name and trade mark, with the selling price marked in plain figures. FOUR-IN-HAND SCAREF in Mink, as illustrated, for $15.00, or in Siberian Squirrel for $17.50. These scarfs are also made in all other popular furs. SABLE FOX SCARF, as illustrated, $6.00. tration; extra quality, $8.00. SA%&E FOX SCARF, extra long, $10.50. Extra quality, |, Similar to illus- ASTRAKAN JACKET, as illustrated, a very stylish garment of excellent quality, made of full skins (ne piecing) and “lined with best quality of brocaded szf:n, $60.00. : SABLE OPOSSUM RUSSIAN SCARF, as illustrated, also made in Isabella color, $17.50. H. LIEBES & CO., Inc. The Largest Exclusive Fur House in the Werld. 137 POST STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.