The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 11, 1904, Page 8

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| | - t Germany's Westmiuster. I'I.P.LI.\'v and ashes of Kaiser the bones eighty-seven Hohenzollern an- estminster Ab- | of strong religicus fervor, will be given {elor of laws and doctor of laws, Har- |ister of State - brecht of Prussia, and other monarchs places of special prominence and honor. The extreme length of the cathedral is 320 feet and its width 220 feet. Kanelo, Japan's Minister. A man much in the public eve just now is Baron Kentaro Kaneko, bachs vard University, member of the Jap- anese House of Peers, formerly Min- for Agriculture and Commerce, one of the four authors of the Japanese tonstitution and special envoy to America of the Japanese Emperor. He has made many friends, end aroused much interest by his ad- dresses at Harvard, where he has beeh a guest of the Japan Club, and else- where and by his published articles on Japan's law and constitution and on the war in the Far East. The July Century also announces an articie from his pen, “The Magna Charta of Japan.” Baron Kentaro Kaneko was born in BERLIN'S NEW CATHEDR WILHELM AS A RESTIN: ERS OF THE HOHENZOLLERNS AL, BUILT AT THE COMMANDS OF PLACE FOR THE BONES OF OVER 4 | Berlin as it is called in Berlinese— { bey”—the Dom will be new cathedral, or( dedicated with brilliant ce: monies in January, 1905. January the Kaiser's birthday, will probably be chosen the exact date, as the cathe- | dral he Kaiser's personal project, ] initiated by him shortly arter he came to the throne. The magnificent edifice, | which stands in the Lustgarten direct- | 1y opposite the north entrance of the ! royal castle, has been building for eleven years, the cornerstone having ! been laid in June, 1894, and it repre- ! sents a cost of mearly $3,000,000. The | Kaiser planned originally to spend $5,- | 000,000, but the Prussian legislature de- | cided to vote énly balf that amount of | state fupds for the purpose. Of German white sandstone and beroic Roman architecture, the new ¢athedral will be a fitting addition to | Berlin's many fine public structures. | The dome of the building rises to the | commanding height of 305 feet, and it will be surmounted by a gigantic gold- | en crucifix, 30 feet high. Four hand- some bell towers rise at each corner | of the almost square building to a height 6f 197 feet. The magnificent ex- | terior effect is ktill further heightened by a series of marble statues, set in | miches or adorning the coping at var- jous points. Above the main entrance | to the cathedral is a statue in copper | of the Savior, 20 feet .in helght, exe- | cuted by the well known. Berlin sculp- | tor, Professor Schaper. The architects | of the cathedral, which is certain tai rank as one of the great fanes of con- tinental Europe, are Proressor Julius Raschdorff and his son of Berlin. The new cathedral is the successor of the old Berlin “Dom™ and stands on the selfsame spot. The ancient struc- ture, which was razed to make room for the new, was 200 years old. Tt had been the traditional resting place of #ll the Hohenzollern Kings, with few | exceptions, together with their con- | sorts and offspring. The new cathe- | dral has risen over their sepuichers, which were restored and covered be- fore the foundations of the present structuge were finally laid. Frederick the Great and the Kaiser's grand- fether, Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, are pot buried in t(he “Dom,” but com- memorative sepulchers in their honor, es well as in honer of Bismarck,| Moltke, Goethe, Schiller ‘and many other great Germans, will probably be | erected in the new cathedral. Empercr | William intends that it shall be the game sacred shrine for Germans that | Westminster Abbey is for English- men. The interior of_ the cathedral is in | keeping, of course, with its palatial ex- | terior. Magnificent mural paintings by | Professor Anton von ~Werner, Ger- | many’s first living artist, will be the | chief grdecorative feature. Biblical scenes representing the life of Christ will appear in the interior of the dome. Marble statuary by the first German sculptors will also be found in pro- | fusion; representations of Luther and Melancthon, Zwingli and Calvin, to- gether with Frederick the Wise of Sax- ony, Luthér's great royal ‘protector, | Joachim 11, Elector of Bghndenburg, Philip the Courageous of Saxony, Al- | | | the service thus rendered, on the pro- PETen S NAR ST | 1853, the year of Commodore Perry’s | famous visit to Japan. At the age of | 18 he attracted the attention of Mar- quis Kuroda, one of the richest and | most pewerful of the old Daimios of | Japan, who determined to provide for | his education and sent him in 1871 to | Boston. After his studies at the Rice School and the English High School, | voung Kaneko entered the law office ! of Messrs. Gray & Swift, his .work | there being jargely directed by Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., now of the Unit- | ed States Supreme Court. During his course in the Harvard law school, from which he graduated in-1878. Returning to Japan immediately af- ter graduation, he was in 1880 ap- pointed secretary of the Senate and had assigned to him the task of ex- amining the constitutions of all the states of Europe and America, in preparation for the impending change in the Government of his native coun- try. Four years afterward he became secretary to Marquis (then Count) Tto and was appointed on the commis- sion to draft the new constitution. The following year, continuing in the sam« line of work, he was on the commis- sion to reorganize the administrative departments of the Government, For muigation of the constitution he was rewarded with the decoration of the Order of the Sacred Treasure. In 1889, receiving an_appointment as imperial commissioner to study the actual workings of parliamentary in- stitutions, he traveled axtensively in Europe and America, and on his re- turn, as chief secretary of the House of Peers, superintended the organiza< tion of the new Japanese Parliament. In 1892, having been elected a mem- ber of the Institute of International Law, Mr. Kaneko attended the meet- ing in Geneva, where his plea for the abolition of cxtraterritoriality was in- fluential in determining the favorable vote of the institute. In 1894, be- coming Vice Minister of Agrizulture and Commerce, he was again honored by the Emperor with an appointment as life member of the House of Peers and received the @dditional decoration of the’Order of the Rising Sun. Re- signing his office on a charge of min- |. istry in 1898, when Marquis Tto again came into power, Mr. Kaneko entered his cabinet as Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, holding the office un- til the premier again retired. - Since then he has been Mayor of one of the Tokio munieipalities. ‘While Baron Kaneko has come to America as a special envoy of the Jap- anese Emperor, his field of activity is commercial and economic rather than, narrowly speaking, diplomatic. Broadly speaking, however, it is dip- lomatic, for his Government, looking hopefully toward the end of the pres- ent struggle, realizes the growing ime< portance of the United States on the Pacific and believes that a community of trade interests between the two na- tions, convincingly demonstrated and carried into effect, will, with the An- glo-Japanese alllance, constitute an impassable barrier fo future Asiatic encroachments by Russia or any other POWEL.. 2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY :IU’NE 11, 1904 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL ‘WD.SPREIE.S,M&........--'.MkcssAllConmmkzfiusbJOINILNAUGET.M!“ Publication Office Market Streets, S. F. SATURDAY ;.05 = THE SOCIALIST PROGRAMME. HE socialism of the world as a cult is just now T directed from Italy. The Italian socialists haye been divided into two wings, led respectively by Bissolati, the reformist or conservative, and by Labri- ola, the revolutionist. The party has just held its annual congress at Bologna, and after a serious clash and heated discussion the revolutionists won. The re- formist programme, submitted by Bissolati, included recognition of the existing institutions of government and denunciation of the tyranny of capitalism, but, also, the proposition to support such measures of other par- ties in the government as would advance the socialist ideas, such as government ownership of pgblic utilities. In opposition Labriola submitted this: “Reaffirming the permanent and intransigent revolutionary character of the party of the proletariat in opposition to the bourgeois- state (the term borghesia now comprises all classes outside the proletary), the congress declares that the transformation of the political organization of the proletariat into a parliamentary, opportunist, con- stitutional and possibly monarchial organization is a degeneration of the socialistic spirit, inconsistent with the spirit of class warfare, with the very essence of the conquest by the proletaries of the government (pub- lici poteri). Hence it.repudiates collaboration with any other class—not only participation in any monarchi- but also systematic support of any whatsoever tendencies it may cal government, bourgeois government, evince, even if reforms proposed may be partially useful to the working classes.” \ It was explained that by “bourgeois state” is meant such republican Fovernments as France and the United States. This programme had one-fourth more votes than the other, thus reversing the conservative action of the last congress at Imoia. The socialists all: over the world have looked for inspiration to this Italian congress, and its declaration of class warfare will be found the inspiring, force of the party in all countries. It is explained that since the Imola congress ‘the revolutionists have gained strength by promoting labor strikes and increasing friction with the employers of labor, but that this €ourse has had the effect of diminish- ing the sympathy for/labor on the. patt of those here- tofore friendly. But the revolutionists have been com- pensated for this loss of support of labor by the alle- giance of that very laboring class whose troubles have been increased by their violence and recklessness. In a highly classified society like that of Italy, it might be taken for granted that no further effort to stratify society would be necessary. But the socialists seem to realize that they require the elimination of all sympa- thy with the country and its institutions ‘and of all sense of community of interest with their fcllow men who do not see as they do. & It is evident that this revolutionary idea is the strong- est sentiment among socialists in this country, and that they feel the same necessity for the isolation of a class which they can lead as soon as it feels its complete separation from the body of the community. This ex- plains the insidious development of class feeling here. The American idea of gociety, long the motive of all our people, was that we had no .distinct class among us. Labor was held by all Americans to be dignified fmd the first of man's natural rights. The broad opportutity, open to all men, if rightly used, held open the door of hope to every laborer, and the workingman of to-day could by thrift, temperance and economy become the independent man of to-morrow. So, also, the capitalist of to-day might in the mutations of fortune become the workingman of to-morrow. All observers appreciate the decline of that idea and its substitution by a distinctly class spirit. Everything tHat force and policy can do is being done to inculcate the socialist idea, that a man must live and die in the station in which he was born and that his hand from the cradle to the grave must be against all other men than his own class. So there has grown up a system of curbs upon individual ambition. The skillful man is denied the benefit of his skill and is taught that he must keep step with the lame and the lazy and unskilliul in his craft, whatever it may be. We suppose that the jeaders of this class theory, who compel these condi- tions and force this leveling process, would deny, and perhaps sincerely, that the are +- instruments of socialism. ~ But the drop of water that runs gdown_ hill, and not up, might as well demy that it is subject to the law of gravity. The bold emergence of the Italian socialists into the revolutionary stage is an indication that they have com- pleted the process of class isolation. Hereafter, they will rapidly assimilate the revolutionary element of the anarchists and communists, and in due time the sqcialist movement everywhere will follow their lead. Unless their instruments in this country cease in promoting that class organization, which already assumes to divide the country into laborers and capitalists, we will be in the midst of a social revolution that will appear out of a clear sky. The Italian socialists see in the French republic and in the United States government by the great mass of people who are classed neither -as laborers nor capi- talists. These are the independent, home-owning peo- ple, who work for themselves and reject dictation by the leaders of a class or organization. In this country there appears a set purpose to deplete that force by denying to men the right to become independent by the fraits of their labor and the use of their skill. If they will not submit tq classification and to the dictation of organization they are practically outlawed and forbidden the right to live at all. Therefore, it is that the mass to which such men naturally belong, the mass called the bourgeois in France and the borghesia in Italy, should immediately address itself to thbe assertion of their rights if it would avert the pending revolution. O Roosevelt were loudly deploring the fact, which they assumed, that he was putty in the hands of the politicians and that he submitted to their dicta- tion in all things. They were appalled at this. and de- manded a man for President who would not only man- age his own campaign, but run his own administration, Now the same horn toots another tune. The Presi- dent has selected the astute and irreproachable Cortel- you for chairman of the National Committee, and being chosen nominee and leader of his party, has set the campaign in-the field in form to command the confidence of the country. This independence appals the same critics, who have just got done saying that he was a d9ugh ball without independence or initiative or cour- age. They now point with pride to Judge Parker of Esopus, who broods the Hudson like a sphinx, says nothing and Joes nothing, while Dave Hill selects the THE PRESIDENT'S CRITICS. NLY a few months ago the critics of President ¥ et e S temporary and permanent chairman of the National Convention, the leader of the National Committee, and all. . President Roosevelt evidently does not study to please those who criticize him. What his own hand should dc is done by his.own hand openly, frankly and pub- licly. He goes to public judgment, not upon what others Go or say in his name, but upon what he does and says himself. The great and antagonistic variety of criticism oi him is due to lack of anything in him that may be justly crit.icized at all. Hisvemies manufacture a set of characteristics for him and call the country to listen to what they have to say about it. In the midst of the saying the President shows plainly to all men that he has none of the characteristics ascribed to him and then a new set has to be manu- factured, The fact is that the country understands the President entirely and thoroughly and the attempt to make it misunderstand him has had troubles in the past and will have worse in the future. Keen observers of passing events have noted the- fact that the closing of the New York poolrooms has re- sulted in a tremendous increase in the attendance of be accepted with complacency, as it greatly simplifies the work of ‘the police and materially reduces the gambling clerks and bookkeepers. THE SUNDAY CALL. I first installment of “The Fugitive,” a new novel by Ezra S. Brudno, which, notwithstanding the plot or treatment. On the contrary, it is as simple, di- rect and sincere of the world through hard, bitter experience, and who, therefore, "write of the things that they know, and not Without doubt it is for this reason that “The Fugi- tive,” which came fresh from the author to the pub- men and women at the racetrack. The outcome should ground of inquiry and search for merchants that hire O-MORROW The Sunday Call will publish the title, is nu“_rise sensational or melodramatic in either have suffered lo{:s and severely, and learned the ways merely the things they imagine. lishers only three months ago, and which is said to be a frank expose of the writet’s own life, is already at- | tracting wide and critical attention, not only in America ! but in Europe as well. Indeed, notwithstanding it has been so little advertised, the leading booksellers of San Francisco in particular already declare it will be one of the most popular novels of the year. In a new way it depicts the life of the Jews, both in Russia and America, describing, not so much as may, be supposed from the title of the book, their fanatical persecution under the rule of the Czar, or.the merely humorous feature of their life in the Ghetto of New York, as their inner hopes and fears, their religion, their family customs, their ambitions, the secret of their law of intermarriage and the causes that have led the race to be the fugitive of the world wherever they may turn. In this sense it is a remarkable book, a truly powerfyl series of word pictures that linger in the memory of the reader long after the book itself has been put aside. Even to those who know the Czar’s domains and the social and political conditions more than ‘passing well “The Fugitive” will be a revelation, while it departs-far from the popular truditions of the Ghetto in the final scenes that are laid in_this seething section of New York. . It will be published complete in five instaliments, and in order to make its appearance all the more notable, Mr. Bert_levy, who is just arrived from Australia, has been specially commissioned to remain in San Francis¢o and illustrate it from beginning to end in his best sly;e, exclusively for The Sunday Call. Mr, Levy, who is himself a Jew, is one of the best- known artists in the Antipodes. Thus under The Sun- day Call’s liberal and progressive literary policy of &iv- .ing its readers the very latest high-class literature by the most notable authors in the world, tliere has been secured not only the novel of the hour by a writer of unquestioned ability, but the work of an able arfist from another far distant quarter of the globe. both brought together for ihe first time in one edition to picture the sorrows and sufferings, the ideals and the history of their own race. But apart from the first installment of “The Fugitive,” The Sunday Call to-moorrow will contain many other interesting and important features, notably the first photograph yet: presented of the ten of the nations whom the Mikado seeks to keep off the firing line; the photographs of the first Esquimaux school in the shadow of the North Pole; the “Arts and Crafts Move- ment in America,” written by Gustav Stickley, editor of “The Craftsman™; the “Right and Wrong Time to Punish Children,” by William J. Shearer; “Our Dese- | crated Flag,” a most timely treatise, by Nellie Blessing Eyster, illustrated with a striking picture of the new Francis Scott Key monumeni; “The Child Model of the Studios,” with a full page of photographs; the answers to questions of “What Women Want to Know,” by Madge Moore; “Wagneristic Stage Manners,” humor- ously dissagted by Jerome K. Jerome; “Sankey’s Double Header,” an exciting. half humorous, but at times wholly pathetic railroad story, by Frank H. Spearman; “The | Second Violin,” by Otto B. Senga; the new multiple color music page; the full-page picture from life of “Driving in the Park,”»and many other articles which space will not permit enumeratin The municipal authorities of New York have adopted such regulations regarding the construction of new theaters that apparently every safeguard possible to hu- man ingenuity has been called into service. The dan- ger from panic has been made very remote, and there is gratificati®n that the horror of Chicago has not been altogether in vain, These facts may be of interest to our own city officials, who have talked much and have done nothing to improve and correct the condition of our theaters. American marksmen hold their honor in such high esteem that rather than accept a trophy from British competitors who were beaten in_a recent contest and now question the decision the prize has been re- turned and the triumph repudiated. The Americans are fortified any way by the conviction that the victory may be repeated at any time and under conditions at which even British opinion cannot cavil. e A police officer was caught in a saloon.a few days ago while he was supposed to be on duty, and the Police Department is greatly agitated thereat. Our local guar- dians of the’ pface have made saloons their headquarters frequently! that one is at a loss to explain the Purry that has followed the expose of one poor, lone offender. His dereliction evidently is not in what he did, but in being discovered. are all the narratives of men who | o= A Big Jem’s Politeness. Courtesy in a lumber camp might be said to be in a primitive stage; its manifestations are sporadic as they are unheralded. The courtly actions of big Jem Blake up at Towles’ lumber camp I Nevada County will testify to this assertion. In the big camp there at Deer Creek mills there is an unwritten law that | Italians, even if they are suffered to work in the same county with “white men,” must not dare to associate on anything like familiar terms with the superior breed pf mankind. Above all else they must eat at the side table in the cook house, and never at the “white man’s” table. This fact was unknown to the newly employed son of Sicily who dropped into the camp on the early rain and sat him down af the “white mén’s” table for breakfast. Nothing was said by any “white men”—they’ contented of the them- selves with dark looks ani .open re- marks about the “gall” of the Italian unknowing, until, all the mnewcomer b | | 3 HE THRUST THE HOT CAK INTO THE VICTIM'S WIDE-OPEN MOUTH. 4____—.__—__4. called down the wrath of judgment upon his head. The Chinaman had just set a pile of steaming ‘“‘bucks” on the table, and the Italian reached out and transferred the whole of the hot cakes to his own plate. Then there was something doing. Big Jem Blake, who was sitting fully ten feet up the table from the uncon- # ‘ ! saw the transfer of the “bucks” and lacted forthwith. Rising from his { bench, he planted himself squarely on his hands and knees in the middle of the table and commenced a rapid pro- | | gress down the length of the cluttered ! oilcloth. dragging coffee cups from their saucers, Big Jem shuffled on down the tabie un- til he had reached the place where the Italian sat open-mouthed in wonder- | ment. Without a word of a flickering of an evelid Big Jem reached out one brawny paw and grasped the Italian by the chin whiskers, giving them a downward wrench which made the jaw creak. ‘With the other hand he gathered up | the pile of hot cakes and thrust the { whole, steaming, into the | mouth of the victim. | Then he crawled carefully back down the length of J table and took his | seat as if he were at a church service. Has Kuroki French Blood? _ Several French soldiers, survivors of | the Chineese expedition of 1856, are responsible for the statement that { General Kuroki, who is leading the { Japanese forces in Manchuria, is in realily, half French. His name, they say, is properly spelled Curique. Ac- | cording to the story of these soldiers, !a French officer, Captain Curique, vhile serving in China in 1856, mar- ried a Japanese girl. A son was born to them, who was given the Japanese name Kuroki, corresponding to the French Curique. The son is General Kuroki. Captain Curique died last vear in France. Until the last he cor- responded with his son, who has since become famous. Diaz and Mexico. In the marvelous development of Mexico in the past generation Diaz has played the leading part. Among the foremost achievements of the existing Mexican government must be counted the _founding of a national school system, free from sectarian influence. The strong hand of the President is also seen in the marvelous regeneration of the capital city, which is now drained by the greatest piece of sanitary engineering in the world, and which is being rapidly modernized in the matter of good pavements, parks. public buildings and canals. Another great achievement of - the Diaz administration has been the im- provement of Mexican harbors on the Gulf and the Pacific. The latter fact is especially notable in the instance of the Tehuantepec route. By this high- way goeds in transit from Atlantic ports to California have an advantage of. 1500 miles over the pro e posed Panama Conspicuous, also, has been the rail- i e ———— TALK OF . immediately | scious cause of the tension in.the air, | ‘With knee in butter and coat | wide-open | TOWN | OF AHL THE | - way development, of which the Te- huantepec is the latest phase. At the beginning of the first term of President Diaz, in 1877, but one raflway—the Mexican, or Vera Cruz line, 283 miles in length—existed in the republic. In | 1880 the two great systems of the Mexi- can National and Mexican Central railroads were commenced. Railroadd now traverse every State except Lower | california, Tabasco and Campeachy. At present abeut 12,000 miles of rail- road, operated by tem companies, are in service. S An equally remarkable feature has been the solving of national finanecial problems. When Diaz came lgto power the public debt amounted to above $150,000,000, and the annual deficit in national revenues was near $10,000,000. In fourteen years the debt has been reduced 0 per cent and the Govern- ment's income had met expenses.— Booklovers’ Magazine. “Bug All Awake.” Because Lem Wah, Chinese passen- ger agent for the Canadian Pacific Railroad, doubted his ability to tell the truth by the “Melical God,” Mr. Coul- ter, Clerk of the Children’s Court, in- augurated a brand new oath yesterday morning. Lem wanted to swear that Joseph Volensky, 11 years old, owner of several names and a very,red head, had broken his windows. “Swear to tell the truth, the truth and nothing but the ‘ruth, | | whole by the d. God of your own choice s: “Slay it again. Slow,” asked Lem. By the God, of your own choice,” eated Mr. Cculter, and then the Chinaman began. “Melican bloy velly bad, Judge,” he said. “They bleak windows and #lube and slings. Velly bad. They blake for more’'n a yeal. Now, bug all awake.” Judge Zeller looked puzzied. “What are you talking about? Stick tc the case.” he remarked. “Bug all awake—done tuln ovier now,” continued Lem. the worm has Coulter.—New “He's trying to say turned,” explained Mr. York Sun. An Ancient Bell. The oldest bell in the United States is on exhibition in the New Mexico building of the World’s Fair. The bell was brought from Spain on one of the first expeditions to Mexico by Father Juan de Padilla, one of the Franciscan fathers who accompanied Coronade to New Mexico. It was hung in one of the mission churches established in one of the seven cities of Cibola. From there it was taken to Gran Quivera, where it was hung in a church of which the ruins are still visible. From jran Quivera it was taken to Algo- dones, where it has hung in the parish church ever since. Father Padilla was killed by his guides while on the way from Gran Quivera to Algodones. The bell weighs exactly 198 pounds. It was baptized Maria Josefa. It was cast in the year A. D. 1355, according to the inscription which is cast in the bell The “F” in the word “Josefa™ is in- verted, and thé ldtters “S” and ire transposed, the mistake evidently afog been made in the mold | | | Answers to Queries. THE MAINE—T. K. S, City. The of- | ficial records of the Spanish-American war do not show that the Spanish Gov- ernment after the sinking of the Maine in the harbor of Havana offered to raise the vessel. COIN QUESTIONS—Several Sub- seribers. This department answers questions relative to the value of coins through the medium of the mail. Cor- respondents desiring information of that character should, with the query, inclose a self-addressed and stamped envelope. GERMAN CONSUL—E. L. 8., May- field, Cal. The German Consul in San Francisco is Adoiph Rosenthal, 318 Sac- ramento street. He is Consul for the en- tire State of California, He is also the Consul for Germany for Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wash- ington and Alaska. There is no German Consul in Los Angeles. 'RENCH ABBREVIATION—J. E. H., City. If a person sending out wed- ding cards receives a personal card from any one to whom such have been sent and the card hag written upon it the letters “P. F.,” these mean congrat- | ulations. They are the abbreviation of i the French words “Pour feliciter.” GRAPHITE—A. A, City. The great- est quantity of graphite is obtained from Ceylon and Austria-Hungary. It is produced in smaller quantities.in Ba- varia, Italy, Siberia, Mexico, Japan, Canada and in the following sections of the American Union: Hague, N. Y.; Pennsylvania, Alabama, Wyoming, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Mich- igan and Rhode Island. Graphite has been found In Califarnia, but there is no production thereof. The American graphite has been found to compare favorably with that found in Ceylon. e e— This week gen. eyeglasses. 15e-50¢c. 79 4th st.. front Key's Cel. Oyster House. * oieblenid Sk it acalli Townsend's California Glace fruits artistic fire-etched boxes. 715 Market st.* —_—————— mspecnlhlntormanon supplied daily to siness houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), u‘cfl- Telephone Main 1043, *

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