Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1903. i séntioned in al Method,” | 1 2 number pupil ean r him. 3 SRS LSRR ST TN CENTED SCALE.” BTl Rt ded | inte; is violin both hands, and has learned already—in a and not to| In sight reading Iy is mosL neces the ]--1'»1‘ should , »r stumble must m uhder- ing “get in on and he must as s00n as one not2 is Ne ad to se L the going to take him. While be is nting aloud the pre- AMPLE OF EIGHTH | NOTES. WL B N B T v 5 eSSl scribed beats of the note already played he must always be looking abead, so as not to be taken unawarss when it is time for the next note to be played. An accomvlished sight reader is al- ways several measures in advance of his fingers, and it is only a question of time and application when cur little pupil may become egqually proficient by following out the method of sight read- ing prescribed here. \ ¢ It will be seen that sight reading is taken up in 2 manner entirely opposite | from the ordinary study of exercises and pieces, In either of the latter per- fection is only to be gained by working on a few notes at a time, by going over and over each measure, until, every m! ke having been rectified, persist- ent practice has made it impossible for the fault 1o occur agzin, and the piece of mu stends complete and sound'in ticular. A piece of music »arned i mever forgotten, and is |hu~ not only a delight to every <ne who hears it played in its finished state, but is a valuabie aid to the pupil in the next piece he undertakes. in sight reading, however, one would accomplish nothing if one stopped to carefully remove all the flaws that are ligble to appear during the first at- tempts in this new field, and the pupil must 1ry to grasp the music as a whole, in the impressionistic style, rather than to seek to go into detail. A little later, as he becomes more at ease in reading at sight, he will naturally take jn more at a glance, and will thus be able to play more and more correctiy at sight. Now, taking it for granted that the pupil has become proficient in the first few exercises in his book, we Will take him a step further. His next difficulty will be when he finds that his two hands are no longer to play the same thing, but are to go in opposite directions oftentimes, It B. Bowies. | | right , being merely those | slications of tempo | b 31 9960 resuiia | keep right on, | g may trouble him a little to conquer the natural dependence of one hand on the other, and it will help him to acquire the desired independence if at this time he tekes up the “contrary motion” in his scales. Let him place both thumbs on “mid- dle C” and proceed to play his scale with both hands, going in an opposite direction toward each end of the piano, the left hand playing the descending scale at the same time the right hand is playing the ascending scale. Let him practice this exactly as he has been in the habit ‘of practicing his ore-hand’ scale—that is, in one, two and three octaves respectively, with the | accompanying accents, as previously explained in other lessons. This must | not be done to the exclusion of his reg- ular scale practice, however, but in ad- | dition to it. It is not necessary to go into all the | details of “time,” and so forth, for if ! the pupil understands fully the proper- ties of whole notes, quarter notes, and | s all of which were explained in e last lesson, he can easily follow out the working of his instruction book, with the aid of a little simple arithme- tic; for instance, one quarter pote Is equal to two eighth notes, and so on. mples of eighth notes (they are just a quarter note only that there is a little curve attached to the stem) are | given in the illustration. The numbers at the beginning of the staff always signify what the “time” | » piece is to be, as, for instance, ans that two quarter notes are | counted to each measure. things are all to be taken grad- and care must be taken mnot to > him. ite early in his progress through | truction book he will come to arps and flats, and it will be well here to explain to him that a| | sharp ra a note half a tone and a | flat lowe Show him the flat and | sharp sign d let him draw them | >d them in his memory. | natural” sign, which is used bring the note back to its normal | after it has been sharped. Have | child illustrate this himself by | the staff, then placing the | notes, : , upon it. Tell him ! to put the sharp sign in front of (that to the left of) f before he writes g. v, after writing g, let him continue writing another f. | me, however, he must make a | “natural” before the f, showing that it | is not to be sharped. Then let him fin- place th l { | +- | | l | EXAMPLES OF WHOLE, | HALF, QUARTER AND | | EIGHTH NOTES. | I | | - | Let him try this with different groups | | of notes, alwavs being careful to have | | some note therein that is first to be played with a skarp and then made | “natural” the next time it is played. | Now explain to him that in case there | is a sharp written at the beginning of the staff beside the clef sign and the | “time” sign, it means that that partic- uvlar note must be sharped every time | it is struck during the whole exercise, | unless there is a natural sign put in| somewhere. Tell him that the only key that has| | no.sharps or flatsis the key of C—that | is, the key that all his scales and exer- | cises have been written in hitherto. It is time for him to know something about the other keys, however, and it ould be well to let him draw a staff, divided into a number of measures, with a simple “time” sign at the left, | by the clef sign. Now let him place a sharp on the top line of the staff at the extreme left. This makes the key he is writing in the key of G. Let him | now write a number of notes, enough to fill out the measures, and sprinkle in a plentiful number of fs, so that he may come to understand the use of the | #harp. Let him put iy a number of naturals, too, explaining to him at the same time that the ‘naturail” sign holds good only to the end of the meas- | | ure. After giving him an idea of the uses of “flats,” by this same method let him look through his instruction book and find “sharps,” “flats” and “naturails” for you until he is perfectly familiar with them all. #In addition to this, let him now take up the scale of G, and from now on divide up his scale practice between the | two scales, C and G. He must take the scale of G in exactly the same way that he did C, first in “ones,” then it with the metronome faithfully. By this time he should have become proficient endugh in scale of C to play it with perfect ease at the metronome 50. Therefore let him hereafter play it at 60, while playing the scale of G at 50. This applies to both hands of course, although they are still to be practiced separately. ltwouldbeweutommbwtry his “contrary motion” on the scale of , occasionally, for the sooner he be- comes accustomed to sharps, the bet- ter. Moreover, his scale practice will be much more interesting to him if it | goes hafid in hand with his study- of written music, and whenever he attacks a new key, in exercise of piece, I should advise practicing his scales in that par- ticular key, that all things may work ~ #| him, not_himself knowing why, except that he is or- | but not equality of achievement, since achievement s un- | deprived of his civil rights, he is handicapped in the race | earth. enough to govern another man.” | attention of the world she has declared that she will ! Colombia evidently shares our opinion that if we give her *|ish out the exercise with e, d and .| | McAdie makes manifest its value to agriculturists and “twos,” then “threes,” and practicing THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL| JOHN D. SPRECKELS, J’roptidor. S bk - Address All Communications to JOHN McNAUGHT, Manager B NEREION ORI ot isesabe wosima s at e b @ etietieeieses.....Third and Market Streets, S F. ..DECEMBER 23, 1903 JORDAN ON SOCIALISM. HERE is a socialist propaganda in this country T that is not called socialism. Herbert Spencer characterized socialism as a form of slavery, a sys- tem in which finally the many would be subjected to the will and control of the few. It is a system that differs widely from a condition of civil liberty. No man has liberty when he is compelled to submit, or willingly sub- mits, to the arbitrary will of another. If he work under that arbitrary direction, or quits work when it orders deredy, he is depnveg of civil liberty. I1f he do this willingly he is a voluntary slave, no matter what high sounding name be given to his condition. Socialism proceeds by various propaganda, one of its arguments being that what it calls “capitalism” has produced all of the existing inequalities of condition. In a harangue to the striking miners in Colorado, a leader of them said: “Those mines belong to you, and so do every house in this city, and every stock of goods, and every dollar in the banks. It is your right to seize it all, and that you do not is due entirely to your own modera- tion.” Against this is the brief statement made by President Jordan in his recent lecture on “The Call of the Twen- tieth Century.” He said: “The greatest discovery of the twentieth century will be that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points. This means de- mocracy. The century calls for the man who can kick the goal, build the road, write the book. Democracy means equality of start, the best education for all, a fair chance to the son of the poor man. It does not mean equality of achievement. Horse races start even, but the horses do not finish' even except where you handi- cap the best animals. America is a country of perpetual inequalities, because it gives an even Sstart to all.” That statement supplements Spencer and is needfully explanatory. Civil liberty is that condition in which all men start even, which means equality of opportunity, equal as the individuals are unequal in capacity, indus- try, thrift and temperance. When the benefit of his skill, strength and capacity is denied to any man, he is in order to reduce him to the level of those who are in- ferior in skill, strength and capacity. This leveling pro- cess finally conquers the desire of men to excel, and so- ciety stands still, and then retrogrades. | It is no argument against the views of Spencer or Jor- dan to say that open socialism spreads, and that its col- lateral lines in which the handicapping is already prac- ticed are so strong that in this country the individual is beginning to doubt whether the law is powerful enough to protect his rights. Time was that chattel slavery gained such headway that it existed under the jurisdic- tion of all the powerful governments, and republics, kingdoms, empires and principalities indorsed the chat- telhood of man. It was entrenched in theology and sup- ported by religion, but now it is denounced by the same powers as a crime, and is forbidden everywhere on the It is only matural that the same human tendency that canonized chattel slavery should return and plague mankind by again renewing over men some form of ar- bitrary control, but against it -stands the belief of the people in Lincoln’s saying that “no man was ever good In the wariety of ways by which Colombia seeks the fight to restore Panama to her unenviable former asso- ciations. More than this, Colombia says she will strive to punish the United States for the part we have played, according to her notions, in this international game. rope enough she will do the rest. CALIFORNIA CLIMATOLOGY. HE Weather Bureau of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture at Washington has just pub- lished a remarkably comprehensive bulletin upon “The Climatology of California,” the work of Professor Alexander G. McAdie, district forecaster of the Weather Bureau in this city. Through the courtesy of the author The Call is in receipt of a copy of this extensive review of climatic conditions in the State. Even from a lay- man’s point of view a perusal of the work of Professor all those whose business is dependent upon the rise and fall of rivers. Aside from its strictly technical information and the minutely tabulated statistics of rainfall and temperature changes, McAdie’s bulletin contains some interesting facts upon the very paradoxes which are found to be characteristic of California climatology. Though our stretch of territory from north to south corresponds with a like strip of the Atlantic seaboard from Boston to Savannah, a difference in the mean annual temperature of ten degrees only exists between San Diego and Sis- kiyou counties. At Eureka the mean temperature throughout the year is 51 degrees, at San Francisco 56 degrees, at San Diego 6!. Yet we have the extremes of Sahara and Greenland.” In the Salton desert the maxi- mum thermometer has registered as high as 130 de- grees in the shade; yet within three hundred miles of that point, at Bodie, on the summit of thé Sierra, the freshening breezes have registered as low as 30 degrees below zero. Though it is certain that no other State in the Union can offer such admirable conditions for a Hammam bath on a large scale, McAdie’s bulletin demonstrates it to be also the fact that nobody can approach us for ups and downs in topography. Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the United States, has the gentle lift of 14,552 feet above sea level, and yet almost within view of its summit our land dips down to Death Valley, 263 feet below the line of the ocean’s surf. Truly California is the enchanted land of fable. I Daniel hope to defeat the Panama canal treaty. They have the power to do this if they hold the Dem- ocratic vote solid against it, through caucus dictation. They regard this result as a vote of want of confidence in the administration. But suppose it should result in another vote of want of confidence in the Democratic party, registered at the polls next year? To get a canal we must cross Central America some- where, and we can never do that if these Senators intro- duce Central American politics and ‘methods into our own Government. When Ma W the Jao- lombian Minister, Herran, to m)zg u!ruldmtm*cfidafl tict!' EXPENSIVE PARTISANSHIP. T is announced that Senators Gorman, Morgan and But in the Colombian Congress were the Morgans, Gor- mans and Daniels who concluded to make politics out of the defeat of the treaty. They defeated it, and the Panama revolution followed. Our own Senators might be in better business than the imitation of Colombian methods. But if they choose that kind of statesmanship they are independent of any control except by public opinion, and for the present that can only find expression through the press, and its authoritative declaration can only be made at the polls next November. We are well assured that the issue they make will work both ways. The strong financial interests in this country which oppose the canal will go with the Democracy and will slightly divide the Repub- lican part‘ But the issue will also divide the Democ- racy. In view of the history of the canal project Senators Morgan, Gorman and Daniel are taking a great respon- sibility, for it is no less than the responsibility of de- feating a canal entirely. Their action presents an emer- gency in which the commercial bodies and the citizens of the country should be heard. The President has.done his duty by taking advantage of a situation for which Colombia is responsible. Having done all that the con- stitution gives him to do, the issue is thrown upon the Senate. Those who are so confident of the destructive | effect upon the President of what they call a Jote of | want of confidence should remember that our political history furnishes instances in which Presidents, denied the confidence of the Senate, have had the confidence of the people. These same Senators were earnest in denying the confidence of the Senate to Mr. Cleveland on the money issue, but the election of 1896 indorsed his side of the issue, though to do so the people had to elect a Repub- lican successor to him. This time such indorsement will require the election of President Roosevelt to succeed himself, and the cabal ofi opposition Senators should learn by experience that the people are not to be de- ceived nor be misled from the main question by their attempts to create a party issue. —_— The authorities of Oakland have practically reached | a conclusion that they want no more of professional pugilists or their affairs. It is to be hoped that these unwelcome plug-uglies will come to us. We have now so many of ‘these undesirable parasites that a few more will do no harm and may act as the straw with which to break the camel’s back of our municipal endurance. HIGHER CRITICISM IN FLORIDA. RITICS ‘have exhausted their ability in passing ‘ judgment on the works of Emil Zola. It is the deliberate opinion of France that his “La Terre” libels the French peasantry, and there have been serious objections in religious circles to his “Faute de I’Abbe | Mouret.” But Zola is dead, and his last years were full |. of lurid experiences derived fom his “J'accuse” letter on the Dreyfus case. 3 Death and judgment have not caused examination and criticism of his work to cease. Down in Ybor City, Florida, two critics met and discussed the obscenity of | one of Zola’s books. We regret that the critical com- munion of the Republic of Letters is not informed by the Associated Press which nowel was in controversy, but, as Zola managed to be risque in most of his books, | perhaps this makes no difference. The Ybor critics were Jesus Fernandez, a Spaniard, and Enrique Velasquez, a Mexican. They discussed wtth their bare fists, and when time was called Zola’s work | had not yet been decided to be obscene or pure. In pursuit of higher criticism the two literary champions met next day and resumed the discussion with revolvers. Jesus got in the first argument to prove obscenity, and Enrique fell at the second fire. But the champion of | Zola’s purity raised on his elbow, and although his op- ponent’s arguments had made five bullet holes in him, his vindicatory revolver put the Spaniard out and com- pelled his retrea¥into the shelter of a saloon, whence he emerged prepared to resume the debate with fervor and a dagger. » Meantime the riddled Mexican had got upon his feet, and opened fire again, proving that in literary criticism the pistol is mightier than the knife. The Spaniard found himself unable to respond, and the Mexican quit and died winner. The Spaniard was. taken away and at last reports was expected to die during the night. It is a pity that Zola died so soon, for this method of deter- mining_whether his pen makes the greater contribution to vice or virtue would have appealed to his imagina(io” and his method. | It is a pity too that the arguments put forward in this debate were so evenly matched. The incident transfers the seat of literary criticism from Boston to YbBor City, and it is to be hoped that the good work will proceed in the new seat of learning and literary iudgmenL 1f Zola have many friends in Ybor it behooves them to stock up with citations of the latest pattern, self-cocking and hair trigger action, and to keep their cartridge belts full of phrases. His enemies there will have learned that de- bate with a dagger puts them at a disadvantage, and the great discussion may proceed with the critics more evenly matched. It is said on what appears to be excellent authority that neither Japan nor Russia may indulge its evident desire to leap at the other’s throat for the very good rea- son that neither can borrow the money necessary for war. Occasionally this commercial age of ours vindi- cates itself by preventing even nations from making fools of themselves. International bankers in their re- fusal to lend money in this affair have done a ser\nce to humanity. The powers of Europe are interceding diplomatically with the war spirits of Colombia to keep the peace and to take no action in reference to Panama that will in- volve herself with the United States. Colombia hardly needs such a warning. She made what may be consid- ered a fairly fiood bluff ‘for one of her size and was fon to Mr. called in the natural development of the game. She has paid the usual penalty and must wait for a'new stake. One of the few professional anarchists who has had the impudence to make California his home has been sent to Folsom penitentiary. He should be made to suf- fer the complete term of his imprisonment and then as a disagreeable object lesson should be deponed, with due publicity, from the eouatry. S{r Thomas Lipton has announced that he will try m ‘more to” lift the America cup. If fate in uku‘;m ‘and independent fortune as perhaps the grumndmmi’unmtmthewofld. m..nzmmu-m Mmfle&r%uwumwb To the Radiant Lady. Little Maria Luigenetti wanted a doll for Christmas. She knew that her mother, who went away for the whole day and worked for the bread that they ate, would have nd silver to buy that angelic vision of white and lace which stood in the window of the store down near Washington square. Her father she only saw at nights when he returned from the wine shop and too often she saw the blows which he struck upon that bent back of the mother. He buy a doll—impossible. The mother had sometimes taken lit- tle Maria to the big cathedral and taught her to pray before the beau- tiful golden images all set around with candles. She had told the tiny girl that there was a good mother in heav- en who answered the prayers of those who sought her. How many times the little waif, left alone in the dingy room which was her home, pictured to her- self this radiant lady. Sitting there in the half light which filtered through the smeared window, Maria bethought herself of seeking her doll through the kindness of this wondrous vision of the lights. From the wall in her mother’s room she took down the gaudy print of the Virgin. Then upon the top of a cracker | box she spread the cambric print of the flag of Italy which her father used when he marched in parade. Rev. erently she set the colored print upon the flag; a stump of a candle and a vagrant wisp of geranium filched from the neighbor's window box com- pleted the decorations of the shrine. Then in the flickering light of that stump of a candle the child prayed aloud to the Virgin: “O blessed lady, all lighted up by candles and with the gold crown, and with the sweet smell- ing smoke all around you, Maria Lui- genetti has no doll and wants one for Christmas. Give her one, blessed lady. ‘cause she wants one very bad. Maria is" A loud guffaw interrupted the prayer. Quickly the little one turned her head and there, leaning heavily against the door jamb with his great head tipped away back, was the father come home from the wine shop. g Mr. Devotion. It was at a recent graduating enter- tainment of trained nurses who had | just received their diplomas from the City and County Hospital that a well known city official was made the vie- tim of a joke that caused immense amusement during the entire evening. The official’'s name shall be “Devo- "tion” for the occasion. As soon as the evening’s entertainment was set in mo- tion by a promenade Dr. McElroy, the superintendent, introduced Mr. Devo- tion to a young person who was known as Miss Bine. The gallant De- votion was charmed at the introduc- tion, as Miss Bine was the handsomest trained nurse in the room. She hooked Devotion’s arm with a charming grace and they were soon in the mazy dance. She coquetted flercely with him, looking up into his face and sending one of those soul | piercing glances right at him. To be | brief Devotion was captivated. His heart was gone; he confessed it to his personal friends, but with the admoni- tion not to let the fair charmer know it as she might decline on such a short acquaintance. The secret was kept until just be- fore the breaking up of the entertain- ment when Miss Bine had the rude- ness to strip off her nurse's costume right in the midst of the select as- semblage. Lo, the fair coquette was none other than a young doctor, an interne at the hospital. What became of Mr. Devotion is not known as he has not appeared at the wirewoven window of the office since. Should he not return by the end of the year the bottom of the bay will be dragged. Dialects. A woman was recently picked up in New York who spoke a dialect that no- body in town could understand. This | is saying a great deal of New York, where there are said to be more lan- guages and dialects spoken than in any other city in the world. All the language sharps in the city were summoned, but after several days tLey were obliged to give it up. Some stoutly averred that the woman was playing a trick, but there was am- ple evidence that she was not. She sank back into the world again un- known. Sixty yvears ago it was reckoned that seventy different vocabularies were to be found in Brazil. The number of dia- lects there runs into the hundreds. There are also hundreds in Borneo and Australia, and always the number of dialects is in inverse proportion to the intellectual culture. The greatest talk- ers in the world are all dialect and nv sense. —Bo!ton Globe. Supports Call's Policy. The Oakdale Leader of December 18 copies from The Call an edjtorial upon the choice of typical California gifts to be seat East as hcliday remem- brances and pays us the compliment of remarking upen the attitude The Call has adopted in exploiting the resources of the State. Says the Leader: “The Call has been doing valuable work in devoting its columns to a se- ries of articles descriptive of Califor- nia’s vast resources and the special in- ducements the Golden State offers to home seekers. These articles, published by The Call, are not only of inecalcu- lable benefit in advertising broadcast California’s wonderful resources, but lend encouragement to others who are inclined to aid in the good work.” Diafhonds in Borneo. According to a recent report of the Geological Survey, a new diamond field is being exploited in Southwestern Bor- neo, where diamonds have long been known to exist. In the region of the Landak River, near the mouth of the Soran River, a piece of so-called v v! dhn-d : M”“‘““M“ this district, one stone weighing sixty- seven carats. It is a peculiar belief of the natives that the gold and diamonds in the earth are a sort of bank and should be worked only when they themselves need money, :ince they be- lieve that gold and diamonds are al- ways there when they desire them. The great Borneo diamond of Mattam, said to weigh 367 carats, is believed to be from this same region. Search for Lost Species. Not 1long ago Dr. Frizzell of the Canadian Government lighthouse service reported the discovery of fresh tracks of the mammoth on Unimak Island, Alaska, says the New York World. Mammoth meat, preserved for cquntless centuries in natural re- frigerators, has not been an unknown delicacy in the Arctie, and there seems to be no reason why the region in which perfect carcasses have been kept on ice should not contain the living animal. An expedition to Patagonica to search for the ancient three toed sloth has been unsuccessful, but a fresh egg of the giant epyornis, a bird with bones bigger than an elephant's, is said to have been found in Mada- gascar, and an expedition from the University of Berlin is now searching for the living creature itself. The dodo, the great auk and several other extinct birds have been exter- minated by man in very recent times. If we can find a region in which the destruetive activity of humankind has not been exercised, there is no rea- son why we may not find there types of animals that have disappeared elsewhere. Some hoped that such species might be found on the virgin plateau of Roraima, which, perched on the precipitous cliffs 2000 feet high, was believed by the Venezuelans to be inaccessible to man.. t that hope was disappointed, lie th& search for mammoths in Alaska. Perhaps the most promising placo to look for extinet animals now is in the depths of the sea. It is known that some of the lower forms of life in the ooze of the ocean bed have been there unchanged for millions of years. The sea serpent is believed by many scientific men to be an actual sur- vival of the gigantic saurians of the prehistoric seas, and the colossal cut- tlefish of the Newfoundland coast would have been at home among the giants of any geological age. Answers to Queries. DAVIS—Subscriber, Oakland, Cal. Jessie Bartlett Davis, the actress, wasg born in Morris, T, 1859, NEW YORK POLICE—Subseriber, City. The pay of a police captain in the city of New York is $2700 a year, CONSULS—Inquirer, City. The United States Consul at Cape Town, South Af- rica, is W. R. Bigham of Kansas. The one at Johannesburg is Willlam D. Gore don. MAY MARRIAGES—J. W. City, The supposition that marriages in May are unlucky has been traced to the an< cient Romans. Those people held tha festival of Lemuria during three days of that month to propitiate the spirits of the departed -and considered the whole month unlucky because of that festival. ‘“Mense malo malae num- bent” was one of their proverbs. Thig means, “In May evils marry.” TO GET RID OF ANTS—Subscriber, City. The following is given as & means to get rid of ants: “Houses af- fected with ants, black or red, may be cleared of them by a little atten- tion. A sponge is one of the best things. Sprinkle it with dry white granulated sugar; the sponge being slightly moist, it will adhere. The ants will go into the cells of the sponge in large numbers after the sugar. They can be destroyed by immersing thelly sponge into boiling water. The sponge can then be squeezed and sugared again, and the process repeated until the last ant has been caught.” ENFANT TERRIBLE—Subscriber, City. The French phrase, “eafant ter- rible,” does not mean a wild youns rascal, as many suppose, nor does it mean an ungovernable, unmanageable or terrible child, but a child that, by ill-timed remarks, innocently made. causes others to have terrible or ter- ribly annoying feelings; as for in- stance, a child may say, on seeing an individual who unexpectedly enters the house at dinner time, “Oh, Mr. Blank, I didn’t think you'd come here to-day; mamma said she hoped you wouldn't come, as you come here too " The feelings of Blank and of the mother can be appreciated. —_—— Nut and fruit candies at Townsend's. ¢ ————————— Glace fruit cream bar at Townsend's. * wisnh B S e ‘Thousands of packages ready at Tm send’s. ———— Choicest candies and chocolates in fire- etehed boxes. Townsend's 715 Market. * D SR an Townsend moved from Palace Hotel to 716 Market, 3 doors from Call building.*. it Townsend's California glace fruits and L B R a"fl‘!m St: above Call bldg. * e e -.hfib A