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THE SAN FRAN CLSCO CALL JOHN McNAUGHT.. BLY N OFFICE, ATIO OPT()BFR 1 1904 LOUIS. RDAY i...e STATE DISSENSION AT ST. one.need be \urpn\(d xhat nh sension. has appcared at St. is between Southern and Northern California,” It was to be expected and must be accepted w’th philosophy. South- , with wonderful enterprise, an optimism and dn energy" that no reverse-can the utmost out of what. resources she has. ¢ e Her ake an orname the tree and e,-and every occupancy. & ead of ‘exciting all this is commendable of praise. Southern California is, and is to remain, show place of the Western Hemisphére. There is no rival. other section where all outdoors is so well converted ree live or a flower bloom, there may >wer. The prevailing spirit is. upon 3 f the jealousy and reviving- rainfall as- Northern -California has would be a Southern California, and $uch a lack of:moisture as ornia has. would send Northern California uthern California’s destiny is-not commercial nor pr ive primacy, but rather the winning of millions.from all the ] wo by the improved beauty and blandishments which will .alwa; draw hordes of tourists.and people who seek a_soft and dry winter climate for health and fer physical enjoyment: That section of th sort of enlarged:and outdoor Paris; and respect will - increase rather than dimimish, We in the north are fn6t jealous of all this 1 no envy, but.approve:it, for our destiny is quite different. | we have: the same adyaritages of climate -and capacity for | e veneering of surface beauty, ive have the prodiictive greatn State, “with - the rainfall to. make it available, and -our destiny is luctive and commercial. Thi commerce of Southern California, like that of Paris, depends much upon its merits ‘as resort. Ours depends upon out .orchards, vinevards,:fields, forests; | waters and mines, upon our herds and flocks, our mannfacluns and our arts. There is no fivalry. - Southern (“L\I'fnru'ia does 1ot and’ cannot acity, for reasons which her: people understand.” We- do not-compete -with v \un]-i\ for the reason that we do not want | s are invested in sométhing entirely different.: We <10«I to intensive agriculture g-attention fo .our waiting a-land as awinterless as y- greater. in its-productive twao sections -will,- in“a spirit of loyalty and philos- merits, t} -be-less bickering dnd f these dissensions which benefit n will ‘be no rgfl nor-necessary” rivalry hu\\un the’ two Northeérn California -has developed; to the full extent; as completely as: Southiern Califorpia has I her spectacular. ¢apaci and .then turns to .the external f the -State’ the ‘energies “that -are. released work. “Let us hope that ‘by ‘that ‘time’ s limit will be reached, that she-will have under sut > area. yeét to:be are We Proc tnia; busy their respe ere until s.untal her wvast resources; 1€°8, 1 forni ! rn attention to the exact facts concerning the whole State, facts are readily. available. " They ‘do justice] to the ‘whole cclude the merits of no section; THE SUNDAY CALL MAGAZINE Magazine \(Nim} of The S N an n)ll\( c front_page, Grace R 1o portray the zem-ml picturesqueness ‘that comes with the. first gusts of wind that scattér the gayly cnlurc(l leaves o’ the corners of the earth. But this is unl a sfarter, as it.were, for number an unusually- strong “one; filled to the brim.with agreeably diversified reading maifer. “In every respect, both feat: fiction, it is delightinlly ¢lean and whalesome, and"cinnot to attract and hol8 the anumun of ‘every member of the house- day Call wili nnl\c its amn ar-’ ‘he Calendar Girl,” posed. by ures and fail hold. “Anna the Adventuress;” which has app(‘arcd serially for the past. three weeks, will be -concluded. - The riext novel fo appear will be “The- Grafters,” by Fraticis Lynde, and as .it has heen ex tensively commented upon by Eastern’ critics, it has already- suc- ceeded. in exciting more than ordinary ‘interest in literary cxrch\ Marie Corelli; in her “Responsibility of the Pre deals in her keen and- satirical fashion with one of the greatést problems of the ‘ay, and she points out in her own forcible. manmer. the- adv: antages and the disadvantages of the press, and incidentally gives rhv crities Kl Tap or two. Edwin W. Townsend, in his “Adventurés of Rcuhen is ds dryly humorous as ever and the only. fault to. be fuuurl is' that his hera i spovers his. mistakes a- little- quicker than usual and takes bimself off home, where he can be properly, cared-for. . Jerome K. Jerome's “Gold ‘Braid and’ Its Fffeets” shows his lv_m]erfl?ndinq of : human nature, and his caustic remarks_ on-the: " question are not only. straight -to. the point, but- splendid T‘ta'llll” as \\d] “A Batch of Loyve Letters,” by Beatrice H(rvm \lm\\\d[ six short stories—"Consolation, . hy Keith Gerden “Badge of " hes Frank H. Sweet: “Their Symmier Erigagement,” by - Heérbert” McB. Tohnston'; “\Wanted: A Rehearsal,” by Forbes I)\\!"ht Boss,” by Stewart Edward’ White: - and “As. It Il"m)cncd On. the r at,” by Lucy Barnes—are all tempting, for the authors *have handled their subj ects in a ‘delightfully. breezy, fashion. - In the women’s department there is' a page by Augusta Prescoit on the latest in long coats and a pagé dealing mth the trials and tribulations of ninity; by. Madge \lm)re this, there ‘is an interesting article on sim i es by Profes- sor (George S. iehling, a page of music prmted in ga\ colos chilc ever. popu for the n and the TY e truthful ( !n{u correspondent is at |l again v\uh the story the Russians crush their assailants before the walls of hur by rolling bean cakes down :on them:- that A a-staple of Tvan Ivanovitch's diet. A bird fancier and game cock breéder has rccummended a swing- ing perch for prize fighters as well as fighting chickens. A folding bu rvy uncertain: mecharism would probably serve to induce eternai.| vigilanice as well as the cock figliter's contraption: The Board of Heaith has tabooed the Butchertown shrnmp “Too bad that this toothsomie -crustacean ¢annot be induced to regulate his diet along sanitary lines and thus remain m favor. with eplcures. — 1f a rich racmg man cares-to pay $135°2 day to llve at the new Hotel St. Regis in New Yark we suppose it is his nght Think, too how his presence will raise the social tone of the hostelry —_——‘-——-— Just lhmk of ‘those. good, kind gambling’: ‘men of Portland who have raised a pirse -to-take -a ‘consumptive dog to Arizona! How many of thcm'v\ould do: t‘he same thmg for thclr wwes> % © ——— A Berkeley prufes:or has written a treatise upon the smellmg organs of the flea, but this part | of the ¢reature’s anatomical economy is not the one the grcat publlc is most interested in. that | impair, | 1 her necessities have combined to produce all the | e in garniture and ornament. Every- spot that can | beautiful is made to shine, and even the small towns' are lways in ho garb. Wherevér enough water «can be building is comnstructed for. the eye as well | the | ictive landscape to ‘catch the ‘eye and enchain the fancy. | to ‘the | in! We encourage it | that can be accommodated ‘and :will welcome the- reves.'. the whole State can’.be.niade an outdoor Paris. The sensions-at St. Louis- will .pass away, sérving onlv to autumn with al] its changing - "he River *laid Port | The men of \1ppon_ may thank whatever gods. there be'that the bakerv doughnut is not- COPYRIGHT, 1904, ‘BY SPECIAL - ARRANGEMENT ‘OF THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL WITH - 1 i NEW YORK EVENING MAIL. EHE 'I‘HE “EMUTIUNAL GUWN” i) THE VERY LATEST THING IN I]BESS GREATIUNS IN BEAR ' i ~ OLD LONDON TOWN, WHERE 100, FASHIONABLE FEMININITY HAS THE SWINGING CRAZE 10.. ONDON, - Sept. n swelldom the " lat: craze is swinging s an athletic exercise, ! » L and-of course sician has ‘come dorsement of it. an ideal physical exercise; ders’ improves a the fashionable phy- forward with an in< that :t ren- woman's figure. and He declares that it is | the. muscles delightfully ' supple, | car- feminine | will be poyular durifig the:ceming sea- comedy, son; - where. competitors. in -ravighing gowns- will bewitch- all -beholders. Talk of ravishing drésses, the latest thing is the “emotional gown.” - Just bow gowns van express emotion is. something of a .mystery to the ordi- nary mind, but it is none. -to Mrs. Brown Potter and Lady Duff-Gordon, “The Golden Ligh It is said they, will mark by -their curves, colors | and textures” the moral changes in the | heroine as the play proceeds: ~That will be a new problem for the dra- matic critics to tackle when the time comes, but meanwhile Mrs. Brown Potter is getting a good the jdea and Lady Duff-Gordon is coin- Duif-G tled * | the | possible happiness. It tortures with its ! grays and pinks, its flush of deeper rose | “ad” out of | here and there, the tint of apple bloom, | which would hold and torment and en- ' = o are a\pI iined. ‘Thus, aecording to Lady don, one dress which is enti- Inf ssant Soft Desire;” is “full of and lenging, which wakes up slumbering, _indefinite - thirst for youth riage and imparts a pretty tint to her who, under the style of “'Luctie’s” runs |, ing meney out of it.. At Lucile's she | thral one iwith .the yearning and un- complexian.’ Dut it is on othet grounds | an ultra-fishionahle. dressmaking es- | has had a room fixed up as a minia-|rest of spring.”” Probably the strong- that it appeals to the vanity of fash-|tablishment in Hanover square, ‘and |ture theater, on the stage of which |est emotions -produced by the ‘“emo- ionable young ‘women. It enables lhcln.‘ finds hér title a'most valuable business ! lovely models make their appearance | tional gowns's will. bé. those experi- | at one and: the same time to-give dis- asket. Mrs. Brown Potter is to appear | arrayed in “emotional gowns.” For the [ enced by the hushands or fathers who plays of prowess and éffective dresses in’ “emotional gowns” designed = by | henefit of those who are not up in this {have to pay for them, for they comé and bewitching glimpses of pretty an- ' Lady Duff-Gordon -in_her forthcoming | millinery color cult a booklet is sup- | high.. Next we may be treated to sym- | kles: -1t js said ‘that “'swinging teas” | producticn- of Madame Raoul-Duval's| plied, in which their mystic meanings | pathetic shoes and hysterical hats. } e e iy et - i) Rats Gather Cran’ Apples, The family of one of the well-to-do citizens of Oxford, N. H., while sitting undexr a crab apiple tree a few.days ago § aftfacted by ‘an unbsual rustiing fifteen: full- an extémpor- izéd bndho built 1o the house and from there through’ a hele gnawed xhreuxh the -side: of the house- into -the attie; “where &' large quantity of fruit was away for . winter use--Boston Globe: (hurch af Coral. A church of: solid coral is a curiosity of the Isle of Mahe.” This island, ris- ing 3000 feet, is the highest of the Sey- chelles group in the Indian Ocean, and its buildings are all from square. blocks hewn' from missive coral and gllsten- ing like “white marble. e H - + The - “Blind” -Man (reading)—Now dat’s what I call nerve! Interferin’ wid. a man’s business. Dis paper sdays dat all de blind beggars hev got ter hew their sight tested! - _Froze His Indigestion. - Bcientific investigation has discovered { that that troublesonie disease, dyspep- $ia, ‘can bq eured by short intervais of evqmquru to intense ‘ccld,. followeéd by | | hearty cating: . M. R:u»ul Pictet, a Swiss scientist; - produced -an. -artificial témperature of between:140:and 150 de- | £rees below zerg inu' pit. He then ex-| | posed " hinigelf: for a brief interval to | this temperature: by. lesering -himself into. thé pit. On emerging he says he found: himself intensely’ hungry: The process wus repeated several times and, as. a result, he declares. he Was, cured of chroriic indigestion, from -which he | had .suffered. for -“years.—New . i1ork World. 3 e 5 For Your Aching Tooth. Toothache .may. be cured by placing a smali piece of nutgall inside- the hol- low- tooth: This denroys the nerve of- the tooth. The nutgall can be had from a chemist. - Take’ it out of- lhe tno!hl and repmce ntler one hour. | following commandments | the vearly calendar: Raules of a Woman's Club. A woman's club in Kansas has the printed in 1—Thou shalt have no other clubs be- fore this one. 3 » 11—Thou shalt not. worship any false thing. T1I—Remember ments. IV—Honor thy clib sisters. V—Thou ghalt not murder the King's English. - VI-—Thou ‘shalt flol covet office, To.which might be addéd: Punctu- ality is the politeness of kings; let it be of women.—Pllgrim: 3 thy. ' club . engage- Where the Toothsom¢ Peanut Grows. The largest peanut-fields in the world are supposed to be. in Guiana, on the north- coast of South' America. There ‘they .are grown by hundreds of: tons. ‘The -quality isinférior, however, .and the bulk' is shipped to - Marseilles, in Auntfe—What ' aré you- lu ‘to’ do with that hatchet? 3 Bobbie--Going to cut am tm ‘bush e tmmd the bnn under. | EE He—1. nnt mu Jonson som flower‘ by aimessénger, but 1 don’ want hér to get’em till to-morrow. you u:lnk he'll get them there vin umar Sbo—!e-. it he. hun-ln. bl [ strumerit’ on his leg led to hone djs- On the Lehigh Valley Road. i One of Simeon Ford’s latest stories is | about a Pennsylvania Sunday school A young lady with philanthropic mo= tives was teaching a dozen or two lttle ones in the mining. district, ., Where did I tell you the Sav- was horn?” she asked oné morn- ior ing. “Allentown!” shrieked a grimy 12- year-old. “Why, what do you mean, Johnnie? I told ¥6u he was born at Bethlehem.” ““Well;” veplied Johnnie, “I knowed ‘twuz: some place on de Lehigh Valley railroad.”—New York Times, Love of Music Costs Life. So -devoted -was a young Milan musician . to practicing on the. ’celle iHat- the constant. pressure of the in- ease. " The linib had to be amputated and ‘death resultéd from the shock. - uring, | féet. in . eircumference. [ celery, makes a nice sdlad l'or lettuce is' used you cun give it the | round or any cheap cut of beef. WELL, WELL, WHAT NEIT? HBRBS A HEN THAT LATS PHOTOGRAPES! photogra Somewhere thnre is a hen - which embellishes ‘the her egigs with landseape and mo produetions. That she has at lea it _onpce -is. testiffed. te by the: fa W. ‘H.' Herring; a weaver. who 2921 North Third stree€t, Phil ria The egz was bailed “with is. for breakfa When Mr. Hérring daughter, Apna, breke th k poured -the conténts into her her atténtion was arre culiar formation on the a of the lower shell “Why, it looks:like a picture sh exclaimed.. Other members the ily stiudied it and agreed that the ou lines of a photograph were clearl fble. . Inspection under a gl the-biurred outlines inside a distinet pieture. It was a phetograph the ‘sh showin | buildings, .evidently stores or fé 1ed On'.the: roof of one was a several fetters of -which were. distinet. In-the street betwéen the buildings was wagon: with two horses-attached and the figures of several persons. HE'S 600D ENUUGH FOR ME. {With Apologics to. Mr. Davenport.) When we're looking for a leader, Let us try and not forget, While he may be full of wisdom, He must be a mah of “grit.” If we find the man we looked for, And ‘we think ‘Him we can We- can theh procesd to send him “Oni ‘to Washington or bust.” trust.” Here we have one square. and homest, One who strikes above the beit. 5 Do you kinow the ‘man we vouch for? Why, 'tis Theodore Roosevelt: Teddy is. the marn we've chosen And elected he will be, For the Evening Mail has said so. Sure! . “He’s ' good. emough for ma." - George W. Leese: FASHIONS AND RECIPES. pig Filling for Cake. Take -one-fourth pound of- nice figs, chop fine, two tablespoons sugar, three tablespaons boiling water, one table- gpoon lemon juiee, cook together until | thick. Boiled Veal Salad. Cold veal, shirédded fine Iike chicken and -mixed with cabbage, -lettuce or It cabbage celery flavor hy using ‘a teaspoon of celery seed. - Tulle Pompadour. One of the Ixtw( novelties in- mate- rials for gowns and separate pompadour, a charming creation. Thlfl tulle has- a cream or white background cov d with sprays of delicately shaded flowers. It is g erally ‘made up over a lining of sil or satin matehing the background of the net. . The usual trimming is baby ribborn -~ forming trellis work, rosettes and large choux. Smothered Beef. Take one and one-half pounds of the Chop it fine or grind it in a small meat ehop- per. Make into a cake, lay on a pan and dust with salt and pepper. Add two tablespoons of water, cover with another pan and cook fifteén minutes in the oven, then set the pan on top of the range, dust the meat with flour, sprinkle with onion juice and stir in well, then serve very hot. A Stunning Waist. A most stunning waist seén recently at a fashionable resort was in hydran- gea crepe de chine of viague shaping, with the sleeves and bodice cut from one piece, and no shoulder seams. The whole garment was shirred around a yoke of Cluny lace, outlined by a flounce of lace. The distinguishing feature of the sleeve was the fancy button that caught the fullness, whicn fell below over an engageante of lace. The Young Girl's Skirt. | Skirts - for the young girl are lacking in. that fashionable fullness around the hips, without which her elder sister would - feel ‘10st, says the Fashion | World. This distinction In the cut of the skirt generally applies to the girl in_ her “teens,”” when the gored skirt | Is most used. These skirts are seldom trimmed, and if so, quite simply, when long, very narrow flounces give them the proper flare. The newest cut in gore skirts for the very young woman consists of four gores, the back and front gore being wide and the side | gores very narraw. ANSWERS T0 QUERIES. !\Sl'RA\CE—P H:, . -Marysville, Cal. “The: question asked in regard to insurance and suicide of .the party in- sured .depends -on: the n#ture, of the cortract between the individual .and the company: In ¢ase of suicide much would depend upon. the conffition of ming at- the time of self-murder: and it would require a judicial determin- ation before the question of the-com- pany’s responsibility -could be deter- mined. KINDERGARTEN — A Subscriber, City. In San Francisco there js.a kin- dergarten - training “school, - in - which, those who desire to engage in. kinder~ garten work. have. to go through_ a course before they can obtain.a. certifi- cate that will entitle them to teach in such schools. There are several kinder- garten schools in. Oakland, and unless the. correspondent names the one i formation is desired about this depart- ment cannot answer the question asked. BIG TREES—-W B,, De] Monte, Cal. There is no such thing as “the official measurement of = the . larg redwood - trees found. in _California.’ The big ‘treés of California are the glants of the Big Treeé Grove of Cala- veras County -and’ those of the Mari- -posa: Grove. In the former the largest tree. found -thére is the “Kéystone State,” 325 feet 1n height ‘and meas- ix fedt ‘aliove the ground, 135 in the: Mari- ’pmg ‘Grove. thefe - is -a free | which ukennlnjln:wuduoe? e Baldhead—Similar. mtmmug is tmmmmme’mu'm : :meuuru 93 feet in circumfersnce at the ground and §4 feet at a line eleven hfl. above the’ ground:.”. In Fresno @ tree.that méasures Si teet in elrcumrbrem- AT " Townsend's California Glage_ frufts in M lmnd Dboxes. 715 Markst st.*