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THE CALL AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM. NLY a novice in-advertising will declare that advertising is a simple proposition. There is prob- 8 THE S FRANCISCO THESANFRANCISCOCALL JOHN D. SPRECKELS. i ok ;Pr'_;p_rlfl'o_r ADDRESS ALL COMMUNT o O JOHN McNAUGHT.........cccc0ausien Manager | CATION OFFICE. ARKET STREETS, SAN ¥ eebbessabes THIRD { MARCH 11, 1905 | OUR PHILIPPINE TRADE. amphlet issued by the Pacific Commercial f\lu-! istical nds from Europe to this coast. Com- iment. It is exceedingly practical. Its »se who seek them, not to those who depend on | nternational relations, or political considera- »se that because our flag is in the Philippines it will | our trade there. The two have but little re- ms to be needed is that our merchants make a y of the islands, to disclose the needs of the people, to an external supply. When that is done the San Francisco to meet that demand may be easily known, ng it the tastes of the market to be supplied must be know d conformed to, strictly, The latter point is one in which ! American commerce frequently fails. Customers abroad will not | take what we think they ought to want, and made or packed in the | shape in which we think the best for them. They want their tastc“ satisfied, not ours. Other countries that have long catered to the | Asiatic trade understand this principle thoroughly, and in that un- derstanding is the secret of their control of the trade. The sarong, the long cotton garment worn in Asia from the | Gulf of Oman to the Irawaddy, is made in the mills of Lancashirc.: The British manufacturers could undoubtedly make a different fash- ioned garment, better adapted to the purpose, but their Indian cus- | tomers would not buy it nor wear it. In the West Indies the natives | like best what we call “sour pork,” which they eat with molasses. | We call it spoiled meat, but if we sent them prime bacon they would | refuse it. | In Europe, and especially in the British isles, the market de- mands bacon cut in a certain way, and has also a special taste in I s d shoulders, and the rise of our meat trade there came only n a Scotchman started cutting and packing in this country to he taste of that market. If the Filipinos want cotton goods ed like a barber’s pole and colored like an Easter egg, we should ve them the stripes and colors they want, for they will not buy g to our taste, and will consult only their own. If we made images for the heathen, as Great Britain does, the figures must not represent our ideas of art, but must respond to those of the people who believe in the efficacy of the idol, cast according to th notion of what makes the image supernaturally powerful. It will be seen that in dealing with the people of the islands-and of Asia we cannot expect to work off on them the surplus that is left after supplying our domestic demand. They will refuse it. We t in all of our fabric trade manufacture especially for that mar- 1 to get that trade we must compete with the other com- | nations which do the same thing. The commerce of the idels or islands are valuable. Their production of sugar, to- 1 ibber and gutta percha is large; and by some fostering creased. ct of rubber and gutta percha is especially impbrtant. s the only substance that will protect submarine ca- ocean telégraph cable can be laid without its use, and e principal expense in such construction. At present s a monopoly of gutta percha. The whole Philippine ngapore and is handled by British merchants. Of ade produced by the exchange is in their hands also. monopoly is largely sustained by the supply from, the | American commercial enterprise and ingenuity ought some way to turn the trade in this most important article from e to San Francisco. If this were done, it would break up h monopoly in gutta percha. it ade is next in importance, and it is believed that the de large producers of that important material, and off ual facilities for the putting out of rubber planta- will contribute to the future supply of an article that yearly increases in price and importance. Manila tobacco is capable of great improvement in quality and quantity by proper attention to its cul- ation. There is no reason why it shauld not equal the Sumatra r, which is a necessity in fine cigar making. The Manila hemp roduced nowhere else, and its valye in rope and cordage is con- | increasing. The value of these leading products is by nd,| total of the commercial capacity of the islands. There are | 1g native products that enter -into trade, and the agents ! Agricultural Department may discover many uses to which the | soil of that country may be put, that will supply many other valuable ‘ articles of exchange. There are about 10,000,000 peoplé there, tropical people it is! true, but still a people whose wants are not completely supplied by their own soil and climate. Other nations exert themselves to get the trade. We cannot expect it to come to us without exertion. We are of the opinion that it will pay the merchants of San Francisco and the producers of California to send one or more commercial ex- perts to Manila, to visit all of the islands and make a complete com- mercial survey of them, and report upon the present\and prospective | trade, and the ways and means to be used in getting control of it. Tn portant part of our fruit industry is planted. The producers ' of California have been immensely benefited by the Federal weather service. Indeed there is hardly any part of the Federal service that | exceeds this in importance. It eminently safeguards production on | one hand by its warnings of the coming of frost, flood and rain, and | commerce on the other by its storm signals along the coast. The prune crop of the Santa Clara Valley dominates the'prune | market of the United States and controls prices in Europe. When ! hilipp’ to find ffer of our WEATHER STATION AT SAN JOSE. HE location of a2 meteorological station at San Jose is of great | practical importance to the Santa Clara Valley, in*which a very | the French prune crop fails, Santa Clara prunes are exported to| Bordeaux, and after being processed in the French method of pack- ing are marketed as French prunes in order not to lose the market | for Bordeaux fruit. The Santa Clara crop is exposed in the drying | season, and if the dryers are not warned of untimely rain grcati losses may result. The local station will perform this and other im- | portant functions. There is room in the State for other extensions of the weather service. There is no station between Fresno and Los Angéles. Bakersfield commands a very important agricultural and horticul- 1 region, so far from Fresno and Los Angeles as to have a me- ogy of its own. Last Sunday heavy rain fell east of Bakers- 1 and there was a precipitation of nearly half an inch in that n. It did not rain at Fresno and therefore the precipitation did not appear in the reports at all. The home-seekers who are now re- sorting in large numbers to California soon learn to look up the records of rainfall. In the Sacramento Valley they find such records at Sacramento and Red Bluff. In the San Joaquin Valley they exist at Fresno only. Bakersfield should be a station, and then statistics will be available from the midst of the valley and from its southern ex- tremity. As is well known the meteorology of Los Angeles is entirely without relation to that of the San Joaquin Valley, so thdt record is without vafue this side of the Tehachapi. bt oY The Sultan of Turkey is trying to negotiate a loan of $15,000,000. He has probsbly been reading the Chadwick lterature.—Louisville Courfer- Journal. i —_—— There is a shortage of $27,000 in the Koloa (Hawail) postoffice. s2id the islands wouldn't become Americanized ?>—Chattanooga Times. g We ehall never have rapid transit until we are all under ground—that is to say, in a subway.—Philadeiphia Inquirer. Who considerable and is capable of enlargement. The pro- | | the shoes his wife had worn. {1 heard a shot. U Francisco paper.” For the month of February, 1905, the total distribution of The Call reached 1,846,159 copies; 3 of this great total 1,403,465 copies were of the Daily and 252,504 copies of the Sunday editions. The | 1ss average daily distribution was 62,231 and the Sunday distribution 88,148 copies. It seems hardly neces- sary to invite attention to the excellence of the news service, local and foreign, of The Call. It is frequently ahead of its competitors in giving the world news of impoértant events, and so carefully is the matter edited that the reversal of its published articles is a rarity. The conditions therefore existing : ably no department of business which requires a clearer insight into local or general com.iitions and a finer perception of the methods of feeling the public pulse than the department of 'pub- licity. One may be thoroughly capable of preparing attractive copy and yet allow prejudice of )}ablt or he specious argument of the advertising solicitor to guide him in the selection of a wrong medium. It { is true that badly prepared copy in a good medium will fail of results, but it is a fact even more pro- nounced that good advertising matter in 2 medium circulating in an element to which the copy does not appeal cannot win. In the main it may be said that the question of greatest import to the purchaser ; i stir our merchants to an active effort of advertising space is, “What medium shall e employed?” If it is to be a daily newspaper (and.the' daily newspaper is conceded to be the most valuable organ of publicity) the question to be determined is, “Does it circulate in the locality or among the class of people who will to the largest extent seek these particular goods?” Where the merchant has to offer the general or specific articles of home con- | sumption, there need hcmo hesitancy in selecting the paper known to have the HOM ce follows commercial enterprise and energy. It is a|distribution in the homes of the buying and largely cash-paying classes.* i In the morning field The Call ‘does not claim to have the largest distribution, but does claim, | without fear of controversion, that it has the largest circulation where circulation does the most good | | to the advertiser—that is, in the ciass of homes where there is-money to meet the necessary require- | ments, and tastes and tendencies which call for the expenditure of considerable sums. So far as known, The Call is the only San Francisco newspaper for which advertisers have! | been willing to make and have made affidavits that in the conduct of their advertising campaigns their | announcements in its columns have brought larger returns than advertisements placed in any other San I. Of a news service of indisputable superiority. II. A large circulation. 111 An unquestioned ‘distribution in the homes of the buying element of the community, to which the merchant must necessarily appeal if he hopes to meet with success in business: A constitute the strongest argument for the use of The Call's advertising columns as a medium | for publicity. The Call's circulation books are always open to advertisers and advertising contracts are entered into on the basis of its monthly sworn statements of circulation. -3 N HALL OF FAME kD, O, o 0 ~+ SPEAKER CANNON, A BiG GUN Likewise Lnown to fame as “Uncle Joe.” — New York Herald, SHE KNEW HE WAS GOING TO BE SHOT. Spiritualists were exchanging experi- ences last night at the Tuxedo, says the New York Sun. Several well- known mediums were there, a preach- er, two or three Christian Scientists and a few business men. Some of the stories told were first-class ghost tales. Miss Margaret Gaule of 257 West One Hundred and'Thirteenth street, who has given a number of “tests” at the Tuxedo, told this story, which she in- sisted was true in every particular: “When I was 15 years old I went to work in a shoe store in Baltimore as a clerk. One day a man, whom I knew by sight as a rich business man and prominent socially, came into the store to exchange a pair of shoes his wife had purchased the day before and found unsatisfactory. As I was re- storing the shoes to the wallcase I heard, as sharply and distinctly as if it had been fired close to my ear, a pistol shot. I asked the man if he wasn in the habit of carrying a revolver. ‘No,” said he, very much astonished. Something impelled me to touch again Again It came over me at once, I couldn’t explain how, that the man was going to be shot. I told him I didn’t want to alarm him, but that I belleved he was going to be hurt, may- be shot. Naturally he laughed at me and left the store, telling me I was a | FRIENDSHIP! “Borem and I ends.” “Do you like his jokes?” “No; but I like his cigars.” are good | SBARBORD AND THE STATE SENATE To the Editor of The Call: I have just learned that the Senate has refused to confirm my appoint- ment as “State Normal Trustee,” which had voluntarily been made by the Governor without any solicitation. The reason, I understand, given by the Senate was that I antagonized the building and loan assoclation bill which the Senate had unanimously passed and which the Assembly upon due investigation has veoted down. I stated that the Senators did not thoroughly understand the true in- | wardness of the bill which they ap- proved——that if they had they certain- ly would not have passed it. I believe so still, as that bill would have been detrimental to the 120 honest “local” building and loan associations of the State which have been the means of 1 procuring homes for thousands of wage earners and the saving of $50.- ‘ 000,000 by young wage earners of Cal- i ifornia, which in a large measure would have been Squandered. I inclose you a copy of a letter which I sent to Assemblyman Drew and which gives my reasons in full for antagonizing the Senate bill. You will observe that at the end I say: “I have helped to organize and have annually been re-elected secre- ! tary of five of these meritorious insti- ! tutions for the past thirty years, and durirg that long perfod of time, al- though I have handled several milllons of dollars belonging to thousands of stockholders, not one of them has ever | left the office of the associations with |'which I am connected without receiv- ing every dollar he has pald in, whether he withdrew in three days, | three months or three years after he made his payments, together with a reasonable interest on his temporary or permanent investment.” A. SBARBORO. city, March 10. ANSWERS T0 VARIOUS ~QUERIES SULLIVAN-DEMPSEY— Subscriber, San Pablo, Cal. The record fails to show that John L. Sullivan and Jack Dempsey ever met in the ring. * REVENUE—P. Chinese Camp, Cal. The revenue of the United States Gov- ernment for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1904, was $530,641,749. Dur- ing the previous twelve months it was $560,396,674. RACE TRACKS—A Subscriber, City. You may obtain information as to the track records of the different distances at Emeryville and Ascot by addressing a letter of inquiry to the secretary of each track, ENGLISH LANGUAGE-—Subscriber, Oakland, Cal. It was estimatéd in 1900 that the English language was spoken at that time by 111,100,000 persons, and the French language by £1,200,000 persons. e DEPTH OF OC! —B. C., Pre- sidio,’ City. The direct answer to the question: “Will a plece of lead sink to a depth of six miles in average sea ‘water, yes or no?” is, no. The depth of average sea water is not six miles. The greatest depth In the Atlantic Ocean is 27,386 feet, of about five and one-fourth miles, and in the Pacific 80,000 feet or about five and one-haif miles. The lead of the Challenger has touched bottom at the distances below the surface named. - F I AR S A AR R R sort of shoe clerk. . “Next day I read at brealkfast that the man had been killed by his wife, shot through the head as he lay in bed, with a Derringer she had under her piliow. She had no motive for Kill- ing him as far as could be learned, (| but did it on sudden impuise. - It was that experience which had a good deal to do toward making me a medium.” & spirit, to actually behold a ghost. “That is foolish,” said Miss Gaule, “Don’t put any faith in mediunis who tell you they can materialize spirits _|out of a cabinet. They are fakers. They know they are not doing business oh the square. Materializations of any sort are so uncommon as to be un- known practically, Mediums who pose in darkened rooms and appear to pro- duc;u-mr.t@ from m»uwm medium—at so a LR L e T toolish girl, and & very extraordinary | One man present was anxious to see | IMMENSE PROFITS OF STANDARD OIL. In the twenty-three years of its existence the Standard Oil Company has pald $496,065,000 in dividends on its $100,000,000 of stock. This $496,- 0€5,000 is considerably more than one fifth of all the money—gold, silver and paper—in the Unijted States, says the New York Press. The $496,065,0600 hitherto distributed does not represent the total profits of the oil combine. What its surplus and undivided profits are no one outside of the innermost hierachy of the oil kings knows. Nor is there any means of knowing how much is spent each year in lobbying and In i legislation, in crushing competition 'and strengthening the grip of the combine on its monopoly. By far the larger part of the Stand- ard Ofl profits has been accumulated in the last nine and a quarter years. Prior to 1896 the total dividends paid |amounted to less than $130,000,000. Since that date the profits have been E circulation—a on such a scale that the total is astounding. The annual figures follow: 3 $31,000,000 33,000,000 30,000,000 33,000,000 B0 45 44,000,000 . 86,000,000 15,000,000 Total. .$486,065,000 e il such a case,” he answered with con- viction. “And—and if she wears them?" anxiously. “I think the man would be justified in construing it as a hopeful sign, | don’t you?” Miss Anstruther flushed painfully and drooped her eyes. “Why, I—I—" she stammered. [ o | “Duck, sir,” interposed the butler again turned toward Miss Anstruther BY A. M. D. OGDEN she was talking gayly with her left- hand neighbor. Carroliton, free to let his eye wander, fell to watching the | eager, beautiful face of a girl across changed with every varying thought. “And if she doesn’t wear them,” he mused a bit ruefully. | with the consciousness of having, in all probablility, part of her companion’s remarks with utter irrelevance. She could only trust | that Mr. Morris, a fluent talker him- self, might not have noticed. The| girl’s thoughts were hopelessly tan-| gled. Carrollton’s words about vio- lets had startled and disturbed her. Did he really attach such significance to the little flower? She had never | dreamed of such a thing, and pinned with enjoyment of their beauty, In- deed, but without any idea of oeccult meaning to the act. But now—her eyes sought him doubifully—a lttle wistfully. Did other men feel that | party scattered. Miss Anstruther felt | herself borne along to the billlard- | room, while Carrollton sat down for | 2 rubber of bridge. It was not until some time later that Carrollton, walk-! ing down the hall, absorbed in wor- | rying as to why Ethel Wheatley had | so persistently avoided him all the | evening, heard his name being called | softly. Turning, he found Miss An- | struther facing him within a curtained | | window embrasure, her cheeks scarlet, | “it's you I | her eyes full of a new shyness. She| he means—not me.” | was breathing rapialy. *‘l" “Forgive me for stopping youw,” she IS8 ANSTRUTHER wuche' the | sald. “But—but I wanted to tell you | purple blossoms at her breast Something” avolding his glance as with caressing fingers. she spoke. “Tt—it isn’t announced yet. | “They are lovely,” she said; But I—I am going to marry Joe “so fresh and fragrant. I think Wright. I—I felt that I must tell them the only flower for a man to send | you,” she ended half beseechingly. a woman.” | Carrollton, conscious of & vague ex- Carrollton laughed. The dinner hq.dl pectancy in her attitude, hesitated. Teached the stage where general con-| ~It's awfully good for you to let versation glides imperceptibly into Me know,” he answered. “I congratu- monologues or duets. The soft shaded !ate you both most heartily. Joe's lights, the odor of flowers, tempted 2 bully chap, and mighty lucky, too,” | to copfidences. | he added a little awkwardly. “Of “Then you agree with a friend of ccurse, I am to be an usher.” What mine who declares it is deceitful for Was it the girl wanted, Carroliton a gifl to buy violets for herself, thus | Wondered; he noticed that she had creating & false impression of owning 8TOWD quite white. a ‘voung man,” he answered lightly. 'You—you and Joe are such friends Miss Anstruther's lips curved into a that I Was sure you knew,” she strug- slow smile. |gled. Why was he making it so hard “I am wot sure that I should go so f°oT her. "It was only at dinner that far as that.” I began to suspect—when you spoke “Well, perhaps not. And yet”—Car- about the meaning of “vxfl.u.. her roliton’s volce grew more serious— | VO.C® Was unsteady—“I—I never *I suppose the mending of violets does dreamed that you cared; I thought mean more than the gift of other YOO had sent me them because——" flowers. When a man begins to asso- [She stopped, startled by the change clate a girl with violets it's usually aul |\? 18 face. Carroliton jumped. up with him.” . 1—I sent you,” he stammered, star- Miss Anstruther, a faint hint of dis- !5, Mis8 Anstruther stared in turn. | quietude creeping into her dark eyes, But—but didn’t you?" she demand- glanced quickly around. ed. “I found them in my rdom. Your | “But—but couldn’t he have sent!°3rd Was in the box. To be sure, it them for any other reason—because he Was not addressed. Tell me,” with | knew she liked them—for congratula- a quick inspiration, “there was some tlons?” she asked in a troubled tone. | mistake, then?” Carrollton shook his head. Carrollt “Oh, no; he would send roses in ing to n':,";, :,.ke;'“:_b"k’ Whin ST THE MUDRCE LEFT | o S | he muttered stupidly, then bit his lip. ‘What a brutal speech! A sudden flash | of comprehension lighted the girl's | face. H “To the blue room,” she repeated fn | undisguised relief. “Why—oh!” Dart- ing tmpulsively into the hall, Miss ' Anstruther seized a girl standing by, the billlard-room door, and before either she or Carroliton could realize what was intended, had whirled her “Ethel,” she gasped, “here’s Mr. Carrollton proposing to the wrong | Birl; it's, you he means—not me,* br The next moment she | had vanished down the hall. Miss Wheatley, startled and a little indig- | nant, turned to follow, but Carrollton caught her by the hand. “It's—it's true,” he murmured in- coherently. “I've trying all the evening to tell you, only you wouldn't let me.” “What made Patricia think you were | making love to her then?” demanded |the girl, still resentful. Carrollton . shook his head. “I don't know,” he groaned be- ‘The Actor—Do you think her fll this to voice s loud enough theater? : wilderedly. “She—she began talking e —Don't know | |gpout some rot that I had said mmngnm dinner, and then burst out that at was engaged to Joe and said T had sent her violets. You are in the blue influencing | | the table—a face that sparkled and | Miss Anstruther finished her dinner ' answered the greater | on the odorous cluster before dinmer | roem, aren't you? | pause—then Carroliton - TEE SMART SET BY SALLY_S~H~A—RP 1[. The California Pelo and Pony Rac- !ing Association meets at InglesMe to- | day and if the climatic conditions are favorable there will be an interesting day. Burlingame will send a delega- tion of residents and auto cars. e | The engagement has been announced of Mrs. Leslie E. de Ruyter and Wil- liam Denman. The news was un- locked for, but has caused a very pleasant flutter among the friends of both. Mrs. de Ruyter was formerly Miss Leslie Van Ness. RS Mrs. A. D. Tourtillotte was hostess at a charming informal reception on Thursday evening at her home on Union street. Mrs. Josephine Gro of New York was the honored guest and among those asked to meet her were: Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Morrow, Miss Helen du Boise of New York, Miss Gertrude Gates, Mme. Corona, Charles H. Lombard, Arthur Street, Clarkson | Dye. @ vhe ol The Scottish prima donna, Miss ! Jesste Machlachan, with John McLin- " den, cellist; R. Buchanan, pianist and conductor, is to appear at Lyric Hall on March 34 under the auspices of Clan Fraser No. 78, the Seottish , benevolent society, which every year 'gives a series of concerts introducing - Scottish artists. Miss Machlachan is . mow making a transcontinental tour. | She has the most cordial indorsement | of the New York, London, Boston and Canadtan press and is the only Scot- tish singer who ever appeared at the request of Queen Victoria. After sing- |ing for the late Queen at Balmoral | Castle she receivéd from the Princess | Louise a letter expressing her Ma- {Jesty’s admiration of her voice and | method of singing and her de\itht with the Scottish and Gaelic songs. She re- ceived algo a bracelet, inscribed from Queen Victoria, as a memento of her | visit. R e Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fickert (Ethel Wallace) have returned from thelir | wedding trip. as 8 | Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mills, with Miss Elisabeth Mills, will occupy the | Lefevre hove at San Rafael for the | summer, leaving town within £he next few weeks. * e s Mrs. Frederick Knight will be hostess at a tea next Thursday at her home on Scott street. e Mrs. A. H. Vall and Mrs. Frank Vail held the last of their “at homes™ yes- terday. e Mrs. Lyle Fletcher entertained ime formally at bridge on Thursday. A Among the summer sojourners at | San Rafael are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur | Holland, who will leave town in May. g | The Sorosis Club rooms will be an | animated sceme of charity to-day, | when many fair maids and matrens {will lend a hand at the attractive way about violets, too? She must| pazaar that has been arranged. The ;speak to him again, but not now. ;‘ume Sisters’ Infant Shelter is the | After dinner, however, the house | peneficlary and will materially fealize from the efforts of these society people. . . . Mrs. Maleolm Graham, whe is visit- ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Kent, will sall from Portand, shertly, with the Nineteenth Infantry, which is to be stationed in the Philippines. s = Miss Sadie A. Wafer will give a piano recital in Century Hall this evening. " A Miss L. Eaton and Harry J. Grifith were married on March 1 at the home of the bride, 1431 Sacramento street. The bride formerly lived in Eureka. Mr. Griffith oceupies the pesition of private secretary té Hon. Tirey L. Ford. Sra Mrs. Arthur W. Cornwall has re turned from an extended trip through Southern California. $ e The recent tragic deatn of Miss Me~ | Credy in Italy aroused much conster- | nation and anguish in this éity, for thought immediately turned to Miss | McCredy of San Francisco. Great relief |is experienced in knowing that the fdentity is established, the victim being the sister of Mrs. Frederick Coudert of New York. WHAT 1T WA FOR, ‘When asked by her teacher to de- scribe the backbone, a Neorborne, N. Y., schoolgirl sald: “The backbone is something that holds wp the head and ribs and keeps one from having legs clear up to the neck.” S N e i Mrs. Mortimer said you were to be,” doggediy. “I—I brought them down from the city my- self.” But Miss Wheatley's soft laugh had rippled out. “Why, I was to have had the blue room,” she explained. “But it had no fireplace and Patricia, who doesn't mind the cold, insisted on changing with me. And then, when she came in wearing those flowers and saying _‘thn you had sent them——" with a delicious pout. -Carrollton, whose face had cleared, joined in her laughter. “There seems to have been a mix up all around,” he declared. “Now see here, Ethel, that was a pretty nar- TCW escape, and the next time the girl might not be engaged. Don't you fhink that you could do something teward claiming your own property? It isn’t much good, perhaps, but still— hadn’t I better tell Patricia that we have been engaged for some time, teo? That would remove, finally, from her mind any lingering idea that I was in love with her, and besides, I'd hate to have her think you second choice,” artfully. “What do you say. dear?” There was a pause—a long thrust his head from between the curtains. “Pa- trieia,” he called. (Copyright, 1905, by A. M. Davies Ogden.) it > SN Townsend's Cala. Glace Frults. in ar mmmm. boxes. 10 Kearny st. * ——————m This week. best gold eyeglasses, speecs, 20¢-80¢ (sold in store $3-34), at 79 «h‘ front of Celebrated Oyster Restaurant. ————————— information supblied dally to houses and public men by the mmm“@. mm Telepbone Main