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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1906. YANKEE BULLETS TOO MUCH FOR MOROS GALLANT SIXTH REGIMENT STATIONED IN KANSAS BEFORE GOING TO ORIENT) News of Engagement Creates Great Interest at Leavenworth, Where Brave Officers and Men Are | — LEAVENW( Sfxth Infantry fight w stationed £6ing to the P Sikth Infantry me X RTH March 9.—The ated in the ry 17, 1889 March 2, 1899, Johnston, who houlder, He is nd cavalry d the army war and Cavalry of the Fifteenth Cavalry, and appointed & first lieutenant in | Lieutenant Ernest Agnew in 1898 d a second lieutenant of Kansas Volunteer Infantry He became captain of ippine campaigns. 2 States Volumteer | eventh United n 1899 ng the grade of first lieuten- : | yylie T. Conway, nois, entered the army ate on May 27, 1888, and on February 191, he was commissioned & second | as a ser-| nd Mississsippt became a second ird United | entered the a second lleutenant in In 1902 he became a | He was appointed second | the regular army February | leutenant L HIT BY FLYING TIMBER | WHILE | SUSPENDED IN AIR | Employe at the Drydock at Mare Isiand | Navy Yard Meets With Strange { Aceident. | VALLEJO, March 9.—While aded thirty feet in midair, Gibbs, an employe of the Schofield Con- struction Company, at the scene of the big dry dock bullding operations on Mare Island, was struck in the back of the head by a flying timber and a nd several inches long made in the Every one of Gibbs' fellow em- ployes “expected to see him lose con- sciousness and fall to tha grbund, where he would hdve been dashed to pleces by striking the stone pavement. He held on with grim determination, however, while the blood flowed from his head. As quick as human hands could act, he wes lowered to the ground and hur- ried to this city, where a physician was summoned. = Frult Growers Aroused. LOS ANGELES. March 9.—It is ex- pected that the meeting of citrus fruit growers at the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce mext Monday will be one of the most important ever held in the Bouthwest. Practically every associa- tion has appointed delegates to the meeting and a plan of campaign will be formed. which, it is hoped, will re- sult in stirring the United States Sen- ate to action on the Hepburn rate bill, the one hope of growers and shippers #ince the recent United States Supreme Court decision % sus- | Harry | Well Known. GALLANT OFFICERS WHO TOOK PART IN FIERCE BATTLE ON. JOLO ISLAND. | s | (LLED WHLE SEEKINC PEACE Negro General and Six of His Soldiers Are Lured to Their Death by Dominicans A A SANTO DOMINGO, March 9.—Neney Cepin, a one-armed negro general, and six of his followers were killed today at Guanyubin, where he went to hold a con- : | ference with Governor Camacho of Monte S & | Cristl. Cepin was one of the most noted revolutionists on the island. He took sides with Morales in the last outbreak. After the latter's defeat he received guar- antees of safety, but then, with Navarro, took the field in Monte Cristi district with a small party, presumably to assist the smugglers at Dajabon, on the Haytian frontier. After negotiations lasting some days Cepin and Navarro agreed to lay down their arms. Cepin was promised the of- fice of military commandant at Dajabon. He went to Guanyubin on a friendly visit to arrange terms, General Ginebra, Min- ister of War, says the only information received by telegraph is that Cepin layi a trap to kill Governor Camacho. The news created a sensation here. The general bellef ig that the Government lured Cepin to his death, not intending to fulflll. its promises. ——e——————— OFFICERS FOR THE YEAR CHOSEN BY THE Y. M. C. A. Dr. E. E. Kelly of San Francisco Is Elected President by Delegates at Riverside. RIVERSIDE. March 9.—Officers -for the ensuing year were elected at this morning’s session of the Young Men's Christian Association - State conven- tion as follows: President, Dr. E. E. Kelly, San Francisco; vice presidents— G. W. Marston (San Diego), J. Q. An- derson (Fresno), S. H. Herrick (Rive) side), J. Ross Clark secretary, N. assistant secretaries—E. E. Edson (San Francisco) and T. 8. Caldwell (Occi- dental Collexe). o Care a Cold in One Day Take TIVE BROMO Quinine Tabl Druggists smoney AP 3t tels. tor oate B. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 236,% PRELATE INCURS PRESIDENT'S Quotes Chief Executive as Saying That the Hebrews Furnish the Crimindls ALEERUCE T Special Dispatch to The Call NEW YORK, March 8.—Archdeacon J. Townsend Russell of Brooklyn, in a re- cent speech at a dinner of the Hamil- ton Club on the subject “How Best to Extend the Activities of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Brooklyn,” sald something about the Jews. He was quoted to this effect: They should be converted by us for four own protection. President Roosevelt, before he took up the matter. of trying to ameliorate the condition of the suffering Jews in Russia, looked up some statistics and found that 83 per cent of the prisoners in the penitentlaries for crimes against morality were Jews and that out of seventy-two pickpockets sixty-five were Hebrews. The Archdeacon’s remarks, as quoted, came to the attention of the President, who sent a letter to the Archdeacon, which tn part said: You stated that “it I reported that T ha found that 82 per cent of the criminals ulin‘;: morality and. property -were Hebrews.” I do not know who made any such ‘‘report.”” but I never madevany such investigation and never made any such statement. I should be obliged if you would tell me who made any such “report.”” ——————— JUSTICE AND CONSTABLES SCORED BY GRAND JURY Present System. Is Denounced After an Investigation in Somoma County. g SANTA ROSA, March 9.—T of the Sonoma County Grand gir\;eg'o:: presented to Judge Emmett Seawell of the Superior Court this morning and the jury adjourned. The feature of.the report is the denuneiation of the meth- ods employed in the conduct of the Justice’s Court in this city, in which Justice of the Peace A. J. Atchison pre- sides and Samuel J. Gilliam and James H. Boswell are the constables. The re- port in this connection says: There were 600 criminal cases i Justice's Court of Santa oo R ing the year : 247 of these were ¥ In 141 of, these there was suspension. 1\13- ment; there were sixteen dismissals and forty- four sentences pronounced; the remainder were either continued or disposed of in some other Each case cost the county in fees $4.80 and upward. In = these cases the defendant fs the crime of sleeping in a boxcar, and in almost every instance the complaint is made by one or the other of the constables. The defendant forthwith pleads guilty and is discharged by the court. 4 [y The fees for the Justice and Santa Rosa Township were but than for all the rest of the. The amount 1 ship for Justice and year 1905, is as follows: stables, $2249.05. of public funds and the Peace and constables ship in thiv NMIES Cr i UL ‘e recommend that- in the future these be | made salaried offices. % b | artillery. Carry Continued from Page 1, Cols. 3, 4 and 5. AR oy e s SRS SRS R T “Captain Tyree Rivers sustained a flesh wound in the thigh; slight. “Lieutenant Gordon, wounded in' the right hand; slight. 3 “Lieutenant Conway of the Sixth In- fantry, wounded in the left eye; slight. *The wounded are doing well. “The action resulted in the destruction of a band of optlaws, recognizing no chief, that had been raiding friendly Mogos on the target range at Jolo, and, through defiance, had stirred up a dan- gerous condition of affairs. “Colonel Joseph W. Duncan of the Sixth Infantry directed the operations. “All the defenders of the Moro strong- hold were killed, and 600 bodies were found in the works. “The artillery was lifted by a block and tackle a distance of 300 feet into position on the lip of the crater. ? “Brigadier General Bliss and myself were present throughput the action. “The attacking columns were command- ed by Major Omar Bundy, Captain E. P. Lawton, Captain Rivers, Captain L. M. Koehler, Captain McGlachlin. and Lieu- tenant Johnson. ““The.officers and men engaged highly commend the Moro constabulary, who did excellent work, their casualtles number- ing seventeen out of the force of forty- four engaged. “It is impossible to conceive a stronger natural position than that attacked.” Another account of the fight near Jolo states that 600 outlaw Moros were Kkilled in the crater of the precipitous volcano five miles from Jolo. The Americans lost eighteen Killed and fifty-two men wound- ed, including Captain Rivers of the Fourth Cavalry, Lieutenant -Agnews of the Sixth Infantry, Licutenant Gordon Johnson of the Signal Corps, - Ensign Cooke, commanding the Pampanga, and Captain White of the Constabulary. The attack was upder the immediate com- mand of Colonel Duncan of the Sixth In- fantry. The fighting lasted two days among the lava ridges which had been strongly fortified by the Moros. Artillery had to be hoisted by means of ropes up the last 590 feet at an angle of 60 de- grees. General Wood highly commends the work of the troops. MANILA, March 10.—The cable between Jolo and Mindanao is broken and there is only a launch service between the two islands. As & result of the interruption of the cable service further detalls of the recent battle on Mount Dajo are not available, but the military _authorities are endeavoring to speedily obtain them. Apparently there will.be no more fight- ing on the island of Jolo. On.the island of Mindanao Federal troops and constab- ulary are pursuing hostile Moros and probably some unimportant engagements will follow. Advices at hand show t the attack on Mount Dajo was a ma# notable one. Major General Wood ted Colonel Joseph W. Duncan-to attack the Moros in the crater and capture or kill them. This was accomplished after repeated demands to surren pg 600 Moros were killed. It is 5 t no pris- oners were taken. The attack was made under the most hazardous eircumstances; ' Starting early in the.a arch § the; assail- ants 3 :’::‘:‘}:k of 2100 feet up a lava e, thickly wooded ridges of which furnished the only foothold. The last 500 feet of the ascent were at an angle of 6) degrees and the last fifty feet were almost perpendicular. At the top were 600 fanatical Moros armed with rifles and knives and supported by native The fortified crater was al- most invisible and seemingly inaccessible. At the word of command the troops rushed into the crater and many hand- to-hand encounters followed. A complete list of casualtles has not yet been made up; but the company com- manders are working on it. GENERAL WO00D TELLS THE STORY OF THE FIGHT Official Account Is Re- ceived at the War Department. WASHINGTON, March 9.—The official account of the fight near Jolo is contained in the following ‘cablegram received at the ‘War Department this morning: “Military Secretary, Washington—The following is condensed from Major Gen- eral Wood's dispatch from Zamboango of March 9: P, “Troops, naval detachment and con- stabulary, Colonel Joseph W. Duncan commanding, attacked the Moro fartifica- tions fn the crater on Mount Dajo, near Jolo. The action laSted from the after- noon of March 6 until the morning of March 8. Mount Dajo is 2100 feet high, the last 400 feet, at an angle of fifty de- grees, being lava ridges, with heavy tim- ber. The artillery was_lifted by block and tackle 800 feet. The Moros deprédated from the stronghold for the past eight months, and resisted to the death. About 0 were killed. Major General Wood and Brigadler General Tasker H. Bliss were preserit throughout the action. “Killed—Army, fifteen enlisted men. Cap- tain Tyree Rivers, wounded in thigh, slight; First Lieutenant Gordon Johnston, wounded in shoulder, serious; First Lieu- tenant Ernest H. Agnew, wounded in head, slight; First Lieutenant W. T. Con- way, eye, slight; thirty-two enlisted men. The names of the enlisted men Xilled and wounded will be reported later, Navy—Wounded, Ensign H. 8. Cook, wounded in foot, serfous; Cockswain Gil- more, elhow, slight; one seaman, slight. ““Constabulary—Killed, three enlisted men. Wounded—John R. White, In thigh, serious. ““Total killed, eighteen; wounded, fifty- two. The troops, naval detachment and constabulary are all highly recommended. “ANDREWS. “In absence of division commander.” The last list of troops stationed in the Philippines at the War Department shows that on January 20 the following troops ‘were stationed on the island of Jolo: - . RELIEVED BY SIXTH, Companies I and 'L, Fourth Cavalry, and the Twenty-eighth Battery Field Artilery. Companies I, K, L and M of the Twentieth Infantry had -been sta- tioned at Jolo, but are understood to have been relieved by a battalion of the Sixth Infantry, commanded by Colonel Duncan in January. Colonel Duncan was the superior officer on the field, save Ma- jor General Wood and Brigadier General Bliss. Assuming that the 't were up to their normal s _there were :::ut Do.;nldim in the action be- sldes naval contingent, the streagth fl:'v::‘ch is ‘80 far unknown. lg.bo- however, that owing to % list and other causes, r engaged. The strength of the constabu- lary is also unknown. The official dispatch does not enable the authorities here to place exactly the Scene of the combat. The only crater known on the island of Jolo is well to- ward the center of the island and some distance removed from the capital, which is on the sea coast. There is, however, near the city of Jolo, distant only five miles, a mountain answering closely, ‘save for the crater, the description given in the dispatch. This mountain was con- trolled by two dattos—Calbi and Joakin- ine, the latter one of the chieftains who i signed the famous ‘“‘Battes” treaty. The mountain js very steep and at its apex is a Moro fortress which had never been trodden hy white troops. BATES FEARS NO TROUBLE. Lieutenant General Bates, chief o ‘staff, who has seen service in the south- ern islands of the group, and is well ac- qudinted with the Jolo country, has no fear that this last trouble will extend throughout the group. In the first place, he says there is no homogeneity among these island tribes, strong jealousies exist and it has been impossible for them to cohere im' opposition to the whites. It is algo believed here, from the official dis- patch, that the Moros attacked were really a set of robbers and that the ac- tion ‘was undoubtedly precipitated by General Wood's determination to exterm- inate them at any cost if they could not be otherwise subdued. \ The movements of the gunboats whicl had been- detailed from the Asiatic fleet for duty i the southern islands of the Philippine group are reported only to the { commander-in-chief of the Asiatic sta- | tion at Manila, and the Navy Department consequently is without information as to the whereabouts of the ships until a considerable time has elapsed. However, reported to have been wounded estab- lishes the further fact that the gunboat Pampanga, a small craft of about 200 tons, was at Jolo, for this youns officer is the commander of the vessel. Cooke is a native of the Pistrict of Columbia, but was appointed to the navy from New York, where his father lives. He has heen on duty on the Asiatic station since 1803, and because of his good record re- cently relieved Ensign Oscar F. C. Coop- er, in command of the Pampanga. of which prior to that time he had been act- ing as executive officer. BLISS IN COMMAND. The Department of Jolo is now in com- mand of Brigadier General Tasker H. Bliss. It was formerly commanded by Major General Leonard Wood, who afterward became commander-in-chief of the Philippine division upon the departure of General Corbin. Some of the army officers here who have served in the Jolo group say that Mount Dajo, the scene of the actiom, is located about fourtegn miles from Jolo, ‘the capital ‘of the sland. Morocorito is on the very top of the mountain. Once before its garrison of natives was induced to vacate the place hy the exercise of diplomacy, but heretofore no force has been able to g‘iu ure. ft. a The Sixth” ntry, which seems to have horne the brugt of the fighting, was from Fort Leavenworth, and has been in the Phillopines about a year. - The officers of the general staff fully acquainted with the habits of the Moros say they have not the slightest fear that the Moros will try to retaliate for 'the crushing defeat. These officers judge from the dispatch from Manila that there were really two actions, the first probably a surprise and serving merely to locate the position and establish the strength of the Moro defenders. This having been done, the second day seems to have been occupied .In hoisting the artillery and ammunition to positions from which to operate upon the Moro fortress in the crater, and the second action, fought un- der the conditions described, on the slope of the mountain at an angle of fifty de- grees, undoubtedly broke the Moro lltren‘th in that locality for an indefinite time. i oy CABINET IS IN SESSION WHEN . NEWS ARRIVES Secretary Taft Com- ments on Wood’s Report. WASHINGTON, March 9.—Not because of the casualties among the forces en- gaged, though they were more numerous than in-any battle in the Philippines for several vears past, but rather because of the extraordinarily large number of the natives killed, the news of the battle of Mount Dajo was received at the War De- partment (and the Navy Department as well, for the bluejackets were in the thick of the fighting) with intense inter- est. The first authentic news of the bat- tle came through the Associated Press reports, though at the same time the cipher experts of the War Departmeént were busily engaged in trying to unravel a long report which had come direct from |Hl.nlh by cable. This message was from Colonel Andrews, the military secretary at- army headquarters at Manlla, who had received his data by inter-island cable from Zamboango, where the com- mander-in-chief of the - Philippine divis- ion, Major General Leonard Wood, hap- pened to be. Secretary Taft was at a Cabinet meet- ing when the officfal cablegram was final- ly deciphered and a copy of it was sent at once ta the executive office and the President and members of the Cabinet listened’ with keenest interest to its read- ing by Secretary Taft. After his return to the War Department Secretary Taft, commenting upon the engagement, said: “General Wood appears to have been there by accident, or rather without any idea of what was going to happen. I had a cablegram from him saying there were some matters calling him to the Southern islands, but he would not be out of reach of the cable, and I suppose when he got there he fotind the trouble on. General Bliss, who, as commander of the Depart- ment of Mindanao, exercises - military ljudmaflnn over the Jolo group, -was probably at Zam) when General ‘Wood arrived there on his trip of inspec- tion. Here I8 Wood's cablegram: “'MANILA, Feb. %.—Leaving for Zam- boango. Be absent eight days. Civil and military business 5y tb turning over dutles as Governor More provinces. Shall be constantly in eable communica~ thon.” ** - WOOD'S MOVEMENTS, The date relativa to Genéral Wood's ngwon;:ntl ‘were p:iuced by the Secre- tary nse a suggestion that possibly mll ‘Wood may have gone to Jolo with the intention of organizing a punitive expedition against the Moros out for the past A ‘The Seeretary sald A e et aid thet the fact that Ensign H. 8. Cooke Jr. is | two years against the | Destruction Into Camp of the Hardy Natives. during his visit to the Philippines last summer. Refreshing his recollections by some of the official flgures at hand, he said: ““The island of Jolo is miles in area, with a population of 44,7f8 people and a density of eighteen inhabitants per square mile. In the whole commandency of Jolo there were only 1270 civilized, as | compared wth 50,19 wild - inhabitants. 1 Jolo is the most important island of the archipelago of that name, lying south- west of Zamboango in 6 degrees north latitude. The surface is covered with hills, which in a few cases, such as Bahu, 2510 feet; Butpila, 2739 feet, and Tamal- anguils, 200 feet, nise to the dignity of mountains. Mount Dajo, referred to ln' the dispatch, was probably not mentioned in the same connection with these moun- tains because it is only 2100 feet high. The Jolo archipelago is inhabited by two races of people, the Jolos and the Sismas, the former a Malay people, long inhab- iting the Jolo islands, who have been proselyted to Mohammedanism. The Sul- tan lives In a native town near the city of | Jolo, and is the nominal head of all| Moros there and in Mindanao. The lat- tér recognize him, however, at their con- venience and when it suits their purpose. SULTAN’S CONTROL LIMITED. Two or three Dattos have always re- sisted the Sultan’s claims, and there has always been a state of war between them. The Sultan’s control over them, therefore, is quite limited, and with three warring factions in the islands the jealousy of the support of the Americans for one side is quite enough to keep them in a constant state of .turbulence and fighting. “T suppose one of the factions thought it had sot together men enough and that they were absolutely immune. so they were just cleaned out. By the way, it is worth noting that the conmstabulary, which is highly praised in General Wood's dispatch for its work, was in that section made up of Moros themselves. It has never been difficult to enlist them in our service to fight against their own people when called upon, probably owing to the number of factions on the islands. In this particular case the heavy mor- tality among the Moros engaged would probably be explained by their method ot fighting. It would have been impossi- ble to have inflicted the same loss on the Northern Filipinos. The latter have a way of disappearing before the troops in the interstices of the jungles and conduct- ing a guerrilla warfare. But the Morog on the appearance of an ememy sound the alarm and gather everybody inside thelr forts, where they will fight to the end. Probably the heavy loss in this case was caused by the fire of the soldiers’ ar- tillery. | “No, T have not the least fear that this movement will extend to the other islands, and in fact I think that the heavy blow struck the Moros will have a strongly deterrent effect upon them.” No further reports of the fighting in Jolo reached the officials here tonight. | In addition to the advices to the War | Department today it has been expected | that in view: of the particivatien of the bluejackets some message in the way of an official report from that source also would be forthcoming, but up to -mid- night no report had reached the Navy Department officials. DEATH CALLS MOTHER - OF GAVIN McNAB UKIAH, March 9.—Mrs. Susan McNab, aged %0 years, dled at her home at Largo this morning after being stricken with paralysis for about a week. Mrs. McNab was one of the piomeer women of this county, having settled on the splendid MeéNab ranch at Largo with her husband, Alexander McNab, in the early days. The interment will take place in the fam- ly burying ground on the ranch on Sun- day. Mrs. McNab was the mother of Gavin and James McNab of San Fran- cisco, Charles McNab of Spokane, Attor- ney J. L. McNab of this city, and Arthur McNab of Largo. RVl At JACOBO BLANCO DEAD. EL PASO, Tex, March 9.—Senor Jacobo Blanco, chairman of the Mex- ican International Boundary Commis- sion, died here early this morning after several weeks' illness. Senor Blanco, for the Mexican republic, and General Anson Mills, for the United States, have been for years surveying the Rio Grande and settling disputed points as to the boundary. The work had been about completed. e Well-Known Woman Dies. OAKLAND, March 9.-—Mrs.. Daisy Pauline Calhoun, wife of Dr. J. V. Cal- houn and a sister of Paul J. Schafer, assistant. postmaster of this city, died yesterday in a San Francisco hespital after a short illness. She was 26 years of age. Besides her husband and brother, the deceased leaves two chil- dren, Vernon and Thelma; a mother, two brothers and three sisters. The funeral will be held on Sunday at 2:30 p. m. ————— Tehama Postmaster Dead. BERKELEY, March 9.—A. J. Chit- tenden, postmaster at Tehama and for- mer Sheriff of Tehama County, died here today of heart failure at the home | of his daughter, where he had been spending some time for the beneflt of | his health. The remains will be shipped to Tehama, where the funeral will take place on Sunday under the auspices of the Masons, Odd Fellows and Knights of Pythias. ——— Archhishop of Nova Scotia Dead. HALIFAX, N. S, Mareh 9.—Arch- bishop O’'Brien of the Roman Cathelie ‘dioceses of Nova Scotia, Prince Ed- ward Island and Bermuda, died sud- denly here tonight. —_——————— . ‘Will Advertise Napa. NAPA, March 9.—Under the auspices of the Napa Chamber of Commerce a fund of $6000 yearly will be raised for the purpose of advertising the re- sources of this city and county, and it is not unlikely that headquarters will be maintained in San Francisco and probably in Los Angeles. The chamber has received a great deal of encourage- ment from the merchants and business interests of the city in its campaign toward raising the necessary monthly contributions. —_— High School for Bakersfield. BAKERSFIELD. March $.—The Board of County Supervisors today a to C. J. Lindgren, a local contracter, a | contract for the erection of a new high sechool building. for which $50.000 was recently appropriated. Lindgren's bid was for $48,800. The new building Is to be modern in every particular, with floors and metal CAPITAL, SURPLUS & PROFITS $ 3.000,000.00 suecessful merchant ex- tends to bis customers every courtesy and personal atten- tion. This policy. combined with o ment. has contributed to the success of this Company. We savings and solieit cheeking accounts. | CALIFORNIA ' Safe Deposit & Trust N - (;ompany 4 California and Mon Sts. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA ASSETS OVER TEN MILLION DOLLARS WAHA IRRIGATION SYSTEM. LEWISTON, Idaho, Feb. 1. 1906 Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the Waha-Lewiston Land and Water Com- any, at Lewiston, Idaho, until 3 p. m., March , 1906, for the construction of 18 miles of Flood water, Catchment Ditch, 4 miles of Main Supply Ditch and 2 Storage Reservolms, situated on Craig Mountain, Nes Perce County, bt dabo. This work involves the handling 810,000 cubic yards of earth, 298000 cuble yards of rock, and comstruction of about 18,000 cubic yards of concrete and other masonry, and about 4000 lineal feet of tunnels. A certified check, or a Trust Company's Proposal Bond, for & sum equal to § per cent of the amount of the bid must accompany each bid, and the successful bidder will be required to r into a contract at once and furnish satisfactory bond In the sum equal to 40 per cent of the amount of the CONtract as & guar- antee of the proper execution of the contract within the time specifled. The company reserves the right to reject any a all bids. Bids will be recetved (1) for the construction of the ditches, (2) the reservoirs and (3) the tunnels, or for the entire work. Plans and specifications are on fila at the Additional information furnished upon ap- plication. office of the company at Lewiston. Idaho. WALTER H. GRAVES. Engineer. 15 Cents each, 2 for 25 Cents OLUETT, PEABODY & CO. akers of Cluett and Monarch Shirts. TRACT FOR SUBDIVISION Chance to m:k_e_ 8]00,000 $25,000 REQUIRED -MARK LANE 634 Market Street L0S ANGELES TIMES SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE ROOM 41, CHRONICLE BLDG. 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