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THE SAN (FRANCISCO CAL THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL: .Proprietor JOHN D. SPRECKELS....co00000s o ADDREES ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO JOHN MONAUGHT. «o..covvesessenssssssasasssssscieseseasss. Manager .THIRD AND MARKET STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO PUBLICATION OFFICE. UNEASINESS IN INDIA. | d show T is not unnatural that the subject races of Asia shoulI ) t is to PUBBDAY - o ore v 60 05 50 S5bnh sbasse boonssls guophisss s s ain PSR J1s ANON l signs of chafing in their bonds, since the rise of Japan. be expected that India should show some uneasiness. But that there is not much danger of a general revolt there may be safely assumed. Japan is a homogeneous country. The people originally of two races, the conquerors and the aborigines, are completely lgamated and have common religious and patriotic sentiments. the other hand India is a museum of races. There is evidence that for ages before the invasion of the white Aryans these races had fought for mastery over each other. The Aryans, by war or | policy, made conquest of most of them, and India became subject | to foreign masters. Alexander with his Greeks mastered most | of Western India and established cities, of which® Hyderabad re- mains to this day. The Scythians, ancestors of the terrible Cos- sacks, took their turn at conquest and rule, and then the furious | Arab Mahometans appeared and were masters in their turn, to be | superseded by the hordes of Timur, whose descendants established | the Mogul empire, and sat on the Peacock throne. The Indians have had religion as their master motive from | the remote past. The benign philosophy of Buddha appealed to | them. Buddhism was made the state religion by Asoka, and in its | rise and reign furnished a history that has been closely followed | history of Christianity. Even the Buddhistic myths, be- with the miracles attending the birth of Gautama, the ap- | ice at that event of a mew star in the sky and the coming | wise men to worship the infant, all have their analogues in the | | { [ t fled to Ceylon, Burmah, Tibet, China and Japan, as Mogul power rose and flourished. Mahometanism, propagated | 3 missionary sword and torch, threatened with extinction all | the other religions of the great peninsula, when Great Britain ap- | i on the scene as a new invader. It is interesting to note that | A wder and the Greeks found the Indians a strangely truthful people, without guile or deceit. Transformed by the oppression of so many races of foreign masters, the British found them to be in- veterate liars and full of deceit. That moral condition is always the sign a weak people. Incapable of physical defense, they resort to -deception as a means of protection. Great Britain pursued in India the .wise policy that made Rome the master of the world, by recegnizing all forms of religion and protecting the sectaries against each other. It is believed and stated by intelligent Indians that only the appearance of Great Britain as master prevented devastating religious wars of exter- ation. Native scholars and Princes, Brahmins and Parsees, Jains and Mahometans, admit that the English are the best of the | many masters who have overrun the country. In this is the safety English rule. The multitudes of native races have but little in common. Any one of them, made master by revolution, would at- tack the religion of all the rest. These, instigated by motives of revenge, would invite another foreign master, and the history that stretches from Aryan to Eng- lish occupation would be simply written again. The competitor of | I in for the possession of India is Russia, and the history as a conqueror has no features that will move India to | ake such a change. England "has endeavored to improve the material condition of e people, which is still very low. Railroads have been built, irri- | ation established and efforts made to make adequate and sure the | the peare Ale | | | 1 ood supply of the people. But while much has been done, more iesirable, and the people have no assurance that it will be given is de vy a change of masters. 1 Lord Kitchener has contributed to a feeling of unrest by his | ‘hment of the military strength of Great Britain in India. | 1t the present army in India outmatches the natives far more than | e army of Clive at the decisive battle of Plassy. Since the Sepoy | bellion no native has been permitted to handle artillery or become the htest degree familiar with the operation of cannon. At/ every British post the artillery is served solely by English soldiers, | ud this alone would render an uprising futile. With the English ; ces are incorporated many native regiments of infantry and cav- | The corps of Sikhs has been sent on foreign service, as in | 1 sl lined . If India intended to attempt to throw off the British yoke the | opportunity occurred during the war in the Transvaal. England | had her hands more than full for a long time, in the gallant re- | sistanc p by the Boers. The suggestion, originating in con- | tinental Europe, went to the Indians that the time was favorable | for them to move against their masters. The reply was a frank | declaration of loyalty to the British, in which Hindu, Jain and Ma- hometan joined. That critical point is past. England is much | stronger now, and if she were not, the mixture of races, motives,: nguages and religions in India is such as to render a concerted | movement against British rule impossible. The Mahometans would | be the most likely to try it, but their former mastery is remembered eturn is feared. Rather than armed revolution in Asia it may vected that the success of Japan will turn the scholars and men of thought in affairs to the imitation of Japan in the as- similation of the arts of western civilization to the betterment of | 1e teeming millions of people. Trhe mountains. There were conflagrations on both sides of the north fork of the American River, and betwgen the Bear and the Yuba, that burned over square miles of country. There | ought to be some way to stop the carelessness or the crime that causes this terrible destruction of property; if setting out these fires is not a felony it should be made so by law. _ In some respects the law about setting fires is strangely de- ficient. To set fire maliciously to a field of grain is by the law of | this State malicious mischief only. The penalties of arson do not apply to the offense. Standing grain in the field is insured, as buildings are, but it is not adequately protected by criminal penal- ties, as buildings are. Insurance has never been extended to stand- ing timber. When burned it is a total loss: To burn it inflicts dam- age far beyond the pocket of its owner, for-it means the decrease of moisture in the soil, and injury to agriculture. We do not know how complete organization has been made under the forest law passed by the last Legislature. In default of any, the Water and Forests Society should get in touch with the people and officials of the mountain counties and induce a spirit of watchfulnes that will better protect the forest from fire. It is nearly three months to rain. The intense heat has dried the forest floor. The wet spring made abundance of grass in the timber which is now dried out to tinder. What is to be expected of camp- ing parties, and irresponsible boys roaming around in the moun- tains? Two great gushing oil wells in this State have just been fired, causing a loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars, by a brat of a boy throwing his lighted cigarette into the oil. The same kind of willful éarelessness fires the forests, and there should be a strong and MORE FOREST FIRES. HE late hot spell had added to it the terror of timber fires in | | than the commonplace ways of -— CAB AND A CALAMITY ROBABLY there is no thrill in the world that brings to you quite as much pleasure as the one thfl-ti you experience in the reckless expendi- ture of money that you have hoarded and saved at the cost of many a neces- sity in order that you may enjoy the glory of one particular “splurge.” If you have ever eaten sparingly of your midday meal and walked when you longed to ride, you will apreciate the joy that Anne Batchelder and Ma. rion Dawes realized one night lasi week. They live In a miniature apartment. As both of them prefer the Iuxuries of life to the necessities, the manner in which they live can be better imagined than described. Certain it is that their | | ; — living is very much more worth while “CALL A CAB” &3 their neighbors. The theater is one of their extrava- gances. Usually, however, they walk down and ride home on that common means of transit, the street car. The long line of carriages waiting outside the playhouse after the performance has always appealed to their fancy and they have often pictured themselves awaiting the call of thelr carriage number. When this bliss did come to pass it was brought about by a very unroman- tic reason. The weather had threatening all day, but at just 7 o'clock the rain began. Soon it devel- oped into one of the most violent istorm- of the season. The two girls , watched the downpour mournfully. | They bad the theater tickets, but they | }ack.d the courage to brave a drench- | ing. | I think that the only way we can get down 1s to call a cab,” sald Anne | boldly. Marion gasped. “It's wild ex- | travagance,” she said, then quickly ! added, but I do think we shall have to.” | They counted up their cash on hand {and counted the possible expenditure ntil Marion’s pay day. The financial | prospect was not alluring, but Anne | resolutely went to the telephone in the | hall and ordered a cab. Having thus | burned their bridges behind them, they set about as triumphal an entry as pos- | sible. They rearranged their coiffures | and donned their gay gowns, since | their long coats would be bound to pro- i tect them.. They felt well justified in | the expense when they entered the i foyer of the theater. To add to their | delight, they discoversd several of | their most fashionable acquaintances within range of their vision. | Between the acts the two girls re- | galed themselves with glowing pic- tures of the way in which they should await the calling of their carriage number. “Are you sure that you will remem- ber it?” asked Marion. “Perfectly certain,” feplted Anne. “I have been saying it to myself ever since that lordly person gave me the check. Do you think that on an occa- sion like-this I should mar the splendor of our magnificence by such paltry for- getfulness?” Marion laughed. “Just the same, I feel that something is going to happen to change our drama Into a farce,” she declared. They would have enjoyed the per- | formance more had not the vision of | thelr walting cab obtruded itself into | their minds. But at last the curtain | went down and they joined the waiting | crowd. Next to them stood Mrs. Smith- | Lennox, who was a sehool friend of | Anne’s mother, and whom that young | lady particularly desired to impress be- | cause of the condescending manner of ! the older woman. Now Anne gloated | over the opportunity that chance had | given her. The lordly personage began to call the numbers in his important fashion, rolling them out distinctly and clearl | Anne did hope that Mrs. Smith-Le: | nox's carriage would not be called be- | fore theirs. | Just as Mrs. Smith-Lennox gmiled sweetly upon the two, a gruff voice ] sounded in front of them. | “See here,” it said, “here's your keb over here. Hurry right over. You | won’t have to walt, ladies.” The speak- | er, whose tones drowned those of the | caller, was thelr cabman. He had put |on his raincoat and a | sowwester rubber hat. He was the | most forlorn looking man who had ever | held the reins over a cab. But he was | determined. “This way,” he said, and | Marion and Anne followed him meekly. | to laugh. But the smile that they gave , the strange trio was harder to bear. GOOD HUMOR AND HEALTH. F it were generally understood how salutary the act of laughing is to the bodily health, says a physician in the London Chronicle, there might be more laughter than lamentation in the world, and farcical comedies prove more at- tractive to the invalid than physicians. The old adage, “Laugh and grow fat,' is founded .on a sound physiological basis. It is commonly observed that fat men laugh with considerable facility. But they do not laugh because they are fat. They are fat because they laugh, the act of cachinnation having a pro- found influence in promoting appetite, oxidation of the blood, digestion—in- deed, the entire and complex process of nutrition. Good nourishment produces the contented body, the fit temple of the contented mind, which {s, we know on excellent authority, a perpetual feast. The immediate physical results of in- dulgence in laughter are numerous. In the first place the act of laughing in- volves the exercise of a large number ot muscles, including many of those of the face, neck, chest 'and abdomen, which, if they are exercised sufficiently, often become correspondingly well developed, as do also all those glands, blood ves- sels, nerves and other tissues in inti- mate connection with them. The facial muscles, for example, of the man who laughs often and easily are generally developed to a degree which gives him the facial rotundity of a contented child. But laughter accomplishes much more than the production of this more out- ward appearance of well-being. It has a highly beneficial influence on those two vital organs, the heart and the lungs. During what Is called a *“fit”" of laugh- ter the lungs may be almost completely emptied of their contained air. Fresh air is then drawn in to the fullest extent of their capacity, inflating, perhaps, those little used air cells which con- tained previously only stagnant air and bacilli—for in the shallow breathing we ordinarily practice comparatively large tracts of air cells are not used. During this process the general circulation is accelerated, impure air is hurried out of the system and fresh air hurried in. With the forcible ascent and descent of the diaphragm during inspiration and expiration the liver and other abdominal organs undergo a kind of kneading not: unlike that undergone during massage, and this is of great benefit in rousing them from that torpor to which they are liable. The heart is also stimulated to more vigorous contraction during the effort to make an example of those who are guilty of it. The press year after year calls frequent attention to the neces- sity of preventing these fires. But nothing seems to come of it, and the destruction goes on unchecked. What is everybody’s busi- ness seems to be nobody’s, and by and by, when forest arson has done its work, everybody’s business will to regret, vainly, that proper precautions were not taken to prevent the vast injury that will follow. _ “PINCHED” missionary look that you captured 7 coout Cannibat-Ele ek kind i iion ot . active cachinnatory process. Persons who, so to speak, let themselves go, and laugh with a will, sometimes bring almost all the principal muscles of their body into play, twisting. turning and | bending themselves almost. ‘double 'in sheer muscle exhilaration. *“Low spirits,” or what is popularly termied “a fit of the Dlues,” is a mental state often caused by a poisoning of the nervous system with one of those curious toxins which the body occasionally elab- orates from the food supplied to it, and which perhaps a sluggish liver (whose duty it is to guard the portals of the sys- ten and prevent the entrance of hurtful miatters from the alimgentary canal), has allowed to pass unchallenged. Laughter alone has been known to dissipate this kind of mental depression, by mechan- ically rousing the system, Increasing the rate oxidation of the blood, indirectly stimulating the organs by which such poisons are eliminated, and, by its bene- ficial action on the liver, arresting the absorption into the system of any more poisons: To do this, of course, the laugh- ter must be hearty and prolonged—of that kind evoked by the well-played far- cical comedy. It is a matter of common | knowledge that a man laughs more heartily when in company with others | than he does by himself; this is because most of our emotional states are “catch- ing"; hence, in a theater, an audience is easily seized with uncontrollable laugn- ter, as it may be with equally uncontrol- lable panic. The most vigorous laugh- ter, then, must be sought in company. The spare, melancholy and miserable- locking man is thin because he seldom or never gives way to healthy laughter. Mental worries, real or imaginary, will | so prevent nutrition through the influ- | ence of mind on body as to produce wast- {ing of the muscular system and those other tissues which subserve it. If such | a man would look on the lighter side of life and laugh a little more his appetite and digestion would improve, and he would be able to acquire that minimum amount of fat which is necessary to the | well being of the body—fat being a nec- essary constitutent of the healthy brain and nervous system. The laughing habit i 1s one, therefore, that is worth cultivat- ing. It is a matter of every-day experi- | ence that one feels the better for a good laugh, an explosion of laughter being, in | truth, a nerve-storm, comparable in its effect to a thunderstorm in nature (on a very small scale), doing good by dissipat- | ing those oppressive clouds of care which sometimes darken the mental horizon. ® % i disreputable | been | The waiting ecrowd was too well-bred | The title of Embassador, b French-American Marriages. BY DOROTHY FENIMORE _— PARIS, June 15. T is something of a surprise to find| I that Frenchmen do not regard the| international marriages between their | country and our own with any more fa- vor than we are wont to do at home—we | have such a flattering appreciation of our | own worth. But it is even more of a surprise to learn that they look upon these alliances with a regret that is more political than it is personal in its origin. The' American girl who has exchanged her millions for a historic French name DROTHY FLENI/IORE - o and a decorative coat-of-arms, it seems, is regarded by certain social factions in France as a danverous element in Euro- pean soclety. The separate charges that have been brought against her are so diverse that their very diversity is hu- morous. It is not very long ago since a writer of Gil Blas asserted that American women are no longer contented with the money that their husbands have toiled to make, but, aspiring now to power, they are eager to enter the fieid of diplomacy, the article de- clared, has become worth as much in the eves of the American women who are | 1ooking over the matrimonial market as is that of Prince, and the position of an attache is equal to that of a German baron. It was not in this observation, how- ever, that the point of the criticism lay. Instead, it was in the deduction which was made concerning the effect these alliances would have upon international relations. The American woman. it was asserted, does not give up her patriotic feeling of nationality when she marries a foreign diplomat. On the contrary, she never ceases working for her native land. And, ‘becoming through her charm, ability and wealth, a real power In the diplomatic world abroad, she is able to influence advantageously the fortunes of her coun- t Y. Through this new ambition of the American woman, therefore, the inter- national marriage becomes a menace to Europe. It is more to be feared abroad, in fact, than are the great American trusts. Contrast with this view of the situa- tion the reason which the advanced re- publicans of France give for their oppo- sition to French-American marriages. They take the ground that the noblesse of Europe would become extinguished in the course of time, and that the republi- can social organization would spread over the continent, if it were not for the American heiresses. As things stand now, they say, the heirs to great names are enabled by the wealth of their American wives to buy back the mortgaged estates of their families, to strengthen their position in goclety and politics, and to re-establish the prestige of their blazons. Thus the American woman, although she prides herself upon being a daughter of liberty, becomes abroad a dangerous cnemy to republicanism. She is accused of “paralyzing democracy,” of helping to destroy the sqcial results of the French revolution. SORROW OF IT. Edyth—Cordelia is the most mistic girl I ever knew. Mayme—Pessimistic! Edyth—Yes. Why, ever since her en- gagement she has been worrying for fear she may not be able to have her own way after her marriage.—Chicago News. pessi- ————— MOST COSTLY LEATHER. It is said that the most costly leather in the world is known to the trade as iano leather. The secret of tanning his leather is known only to a family of tanners in Germany, though the skins from which it is tanned come al- most entirely from America. a OCCIDENTAL ACCIDENTALS | BY A.J. WATERHOUS® —_—t (Statistics secured by the Chicago Record-Herald demonstrate that wo- men outclass men in the universities of this country.) WHICH I casual wish to men- tion not as bringin’ pain to me, Bt it betn’ my intention that the same i a protest be In behalf of other fellers what is writ- in’ more an’ more While they're languishin’ in cellars with thelr sisters on the door: And I'm also not suggestin’ that a fact is mot a fact. But there’s some that in digestin’ pains your stummick in the act. An’ ef women men is leavin' in a game approachin’ skin % Folks sh'd mentlon it with grievin’, but they shouldn’t rub it in. my sister used to be In her books of style appallin’ to her brother, which was me. Yit I was not agertated when she punched my mental eye, Bein's s’peryer, es pa stated an’ my ma did not deny. But ef facts which go a-gunnin’ heart- L less crooel seem to prove That mos’ women have us runnin’, then our speerits it should move: Ef they've knocked us till we're sleep- in’ through the racket an’ the din, Folks sh’'d mention it with weepin’, but they shouldn’t rub It in. Which the same I'm yit maintainin’ man is her suoperyer mate, An’ I'm risin’ es explainin’ fact that now I state. In a ball game she's depressin’ and she hasn't got a show. An’ a prize fight keeps her guessin’ when the gore an’ glory flow: An’ ef some is yit maintainin’ that our minds sh'd have the call Men there is with business trainin’ do first-rate with none at all Let us heed this faet, my Quite regardless of them others which would yearn to rub it in. NCE there was a man who was so good and pure and spotless that he would have nothing to do with politics. “If I put my fingers in the unsavory mess,” he said, “they certainly will be covered with mire and filth. No, I can- not bear to even think of doing such a thing.” So he carefully held himself aloof from the political mud. But the men who were not so good and pure and spotless and who also were not so particular, sat in the mud and dabbled in it and made political pottery of it and the ill price of cor- ruption was on every piece that they sold. And the good, pure, spotless man bought his share. “But,” said he, “do you not see clean my hands are?” And still he bought the pottery. Moral—If you are too good, pure and spotless to take an active interest in things that should make for the wel- fare of your fellow men you would bet- ter remove to heaven at the first op- portunity—if the guardian at the gate will let you in. how CERTAIN soul parted from its body and wended its way to the pearly gate. “What is your record?” Saint Peter asked. The poor soul hesitated. “Do I have to tell?” it finally quired. “Certainly you do,” the good saint re- plied. “Well, I sometimes so hand-painted the truth that you would not have rec- ognized it even if you had met it.” Saint Peter shuddered. “And I said great, heated words that would have made your mother-in-law gasp as she did in your earthly long ago.” Saint Peter looked regretful. “And I left a few unpaid bills behind me.” “That might be forgiven here,” quoth the saint, “but it never will be on earth.” “And under my artistic touch my ex- pense bills sometimes grew to an ex- tent that surprised even me.” “Your case looks mighty tough,” re- marked the guardian of the gate with dim eyes. “What was your business?” “I was a newspaper man.” The face of the good saint shone with a glad, new light. “Walk right In; walk right in!" he said. “You have had your punishment already.” in- —_——— USES OF THE BAMBOO. An authority declares that .he bam- 0o, S0 important a souree of wealth in Japan and China, ex.sts in many varie- ties, and not only supplies the Orientals wita building materials, but is used for ropes, mats, kitchen utensils and a host of other articles. One kind is even cul- tivated as a vegetable, .ne young shoots bein~ eaten like asparagus. The plant is not confined to the ll'?’lcl. as is often supposed, but is found in Japan, wiere there is heavy snow in winter. It has been known to grow three feet in a single day. s THIS IS WHERE YOU WILL FORGET YOUR TROUBLES FOR THE NONCE ‘Which I'm frequent times recallin’ that | this here brothers, | through the thick an’ also thin, | « SMART SET = By SALLY SHARP | Didn’t Sally tell you to lock sharp ‘twixt Saturday and Tuesday for the nuptials of charmiig Maylita Pease and Arthur B. Watson? There's sweet exulta- | tion in the phrase “I told you 0, follow- ing ail human developments, but when there’s a romance at hand, why, “I told you so”* makes thrills—journalistic thrills. For many weeks busy dressmakers have been building what looked to be an in- ordinately lovely lot of frocks for a trip to Pertland. That started the gossip, for { it doesn't take a lady Sherlock Holmes to scent a wedding, when the engagement is out, and the dressmaker 80 mightily busy. To-night the wedding takes place at the Pease home. It will be a very quiet affair, without attendants, with only rel- atives as guests. Immediately after the reception at the home, Mr. Watson will take his bride East, via Portland, where they will “do” the falr. Mr. and Mrs. Pease Wwill ac- company them north. Apropos of the marriage there is this to be said: It is eminently fit, socially, financially and personally. And the knowledge each has of the other is the ntimate kpowledge gained from thelr | chlldhood friendship. R One of the handsomest women at the Martin reception on Friday night was Mrs. Charles Krauthoff—a splendid type of dark beauty, resal in carriage, and an artist in the matter of gowning. Far and away is she the handsomest woman in the army. Not such a compliment? Well, looking over the Presidio post, there are some beautiful women there, Mrs. Funs- ton among them. And speaking of the wife of the com- mander of the Pacific, she is making a lot of friends at the post and hereabouts. AT Mrs. Henry A. Butters, one of the re- | gally gowned women at the Martin re- | ception—has gone to her cottage at St Helena, the scene of the gayest of gay | sets in the paimy days of the 'S0's. White Sulphur Springs and the Tiburcio’ Parrott mansion were the lodestars of | the locality, and millionatres floated about | St. Helena as thick as mosquitoes in San Rafael. Now that the springs are revived, and many charming people are locating in and about St. Helena and its sister towns— Napa and Calistoga a revival of the good old times is looked for. The Joseph Tobins are among those whose summer home is located there- abouts. S o9 On the afternoon of the 2ist a reception | will be given to Susan B. Anthony, the much-beloved pioneer of equal rights, at | the Sequoia Hotel—Geary and Hyde | streets. The reception committee will includs many of the cleverest women hereabouts, | and the affair promises to be oma of the | most notable social affairs of the sum- | mer. | . . . Holbrook Blinn comes to town to-day from Monterey, remaining a few days. In August the Blinns return to New | York, but not until after the midsummer | jinks at the Bohemian grove, where he | will be a guest. . In September the clever young actor | wilt open in his now famous imperson- | ation of Napoleon. o | | Mre. E. K. Lombard and Miss Sue M. | Lombard of North Yakima, ‘Washington, | are guests of Charles H. Lombard. Miss | Lombard is the president of the Woman's | Federation of Clubs of the Stats of Washington, and a very interesting young ‘woman. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. 4 ADDRESS—Subscriber, City. It is al- | ways proper to use the prefix “Mr.” in | addressing a gentleman. CHURCHES—O. S. In the front part of the city directory you will find a list of all the churches in this city. TOBACCO—S., City. The statistics of the production of tobacco in the United States show that Kentucky is the greatest producer of the weed. GENERAL STUART—C. S, City. At the free public library in this city you will find a great deal of information relative to General J. E. B. Stuart of the Confederate Army. FISK-STOKES TRAGEDY—J. L. W, City. The shooting of Colonel James Fisk by Edward S. Stokes, in New Yorn City, occurred in the Grand Central Ho- tel, January 7, 1872. The shooting was ! the result of a quarrel between the two | men about their admiration for an ac- tress named Josephine Mansfield. For some time the woman had beem sup- ported by Fisk, who at that time was a speculator on Wall street. Stokes “but- ted in,” and the result was an intimate | acquaintance between him and the wo- man with the result that Fisk became very angry and there was a lawsuit. It became apparent that Fisk would have a legal advantage’ and that was assert- | ed at the time to have been the causa | for the fatal shooting. Stokes was tried, found guilty and sentenced to be hanged, but was granted a new trial, was convicted in a lesser degree andd was sentenced to a term of Imprison- ment in Sing Sing, from which he was pardoned in 1876 by reason of good be- havioer. ! e | Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 30 Cali- fornia street Telephone Main 1042. * —_—————————— Townsend's Cala. Glace Fruits, in ar- tistic fire-etched boxes. New store now open, 767 Market street. .