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34 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1906. AD“ERTIS]E!}E—\'T?. A WONDERFUL CLAIRVOYANT Marvelous Powers of “Khiron,” the Hindu- | stan Seer, Formerly of | Mawpur, India, Now at 1122 Market Street, | San Francisco. e | | | | | | Dear Mother Your little ones are @ constant care in Fall and Winter weather, They will catch cold. Do you know about Shiloh’s Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, and what it has done for so many? It is said 2o be the only reliable remedy for all | discases of the air passages in_children. tis absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. ltisguaranteed to cure or your money isretumed. The price is 25c. per bottle, | and all dealers in medicine sell SHILOH This remedy should be in every householk Sold HE OWL DRUG CO. 1128 | Market st. and $0 Geary st * One of Qur Samples Genuine Leather . BARTY C0, o e nrreers Fhone Eust 5224 1906 MODELS i s Automobile \R | Masks and Goggles 1 $1.50 ) | . Sligitly Used £10, 815, $20 | Second Hand | $3, 85, §8 | | You Emow? Wher | e ‘“‘ ¢ Window, YA e | SEWING MACHIKE CO. HOTEL ST. FRANGIS Sunday Evening Table d’Hote, B e Will be served in the white and gold room every Sunday Evening &t 6:30 o'clock. $2.50 per plate. Huber's Qrchestra Reservations may be made with the Maitre d'Hotel. . DR. TOM SHE BIN & SON CHINESE TEA & HERB SANITARIUM. :R’Vll and Read Testimonials at | drug stores under the 642 MARKETST J | riches the blood by Dolls Swing i | ¢ €15-619 KEARNY ST., Botween and_Com- mercial, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, U. 8. A, WARDEPARTMENT FAVORS NEASURE MecKinlay’s Bill for Diver- sion of the -Sacramento River Water Is Considered PEGOE G EN NAVIGATION PROTECTED Federal Government Will Reserve Right to Stop Irrigating at Any Time Epecial Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, March 24—At a confer- ence at the War Department today amendments were agreed upon to be in- corporated in the McKinlay bill for the diversion of the water of the Sacramento River for Irrigation purposes. Those present were: Representative Stevens of Mi: a, chairman of the sub-commit- tee of the House interstate commerce committee, having charge of the bill; Frank Freeman of Willows, representing any to bulld the Irrigation i General Mackenzie, chief of of the army. They the report of Colonel n army engineer, cover- tion as to the navi- amento River. rence adjourned the 1ts were agreed upon: is to be taken from the riously affect naviga- on All dams and ‘works built by mpany shall be und the super- f arm i and a water- > is to be kept, by which the amount of water carried can be determined. & the Federal Government igation is being Injured at to take charge of the works them down altogether if neces- 1—Reserving the right to the nent to utilize at any time it the excess water for irrigating sees, pur- next that b-committee will meet early eek and there appkars no doubt the McKinl reporte orably to the full committee and by it in turn to the House. resentative Gillett to intro- a bill appropriating $200,00 to be used by the Secretary of the Interior in making examinations and surveys ‘“‘for the location of reclamation and irriga- works for the storage, diversion and s arising or occurring of the Sacramento and ry thereto.” ated that the purpose of to carry out the views ex- E. Grunsky, consulting en- ed in an official report of 1906, addressed to the di- the Geological Survey and by resolutions adopted by ia Miners’ Association at the pose of the bill is to provide funds for the survey of the Sacramento A San Joaquin rivers and the streams g the possibility of carrying out | future projects for the purpose of drain- ing and the reclamation of lands adja- | thereto and for c rrying out a great lands in said val- water stored in reservoirs. The of this water in the winter time relieve the rivers of floods and can ed in the summer time for irriga- has been working with F. engineer of the reclama- , on this subject. Mr. Newell interested in the Sacramento tion ser is deep . Gil the hat in this great pro- will have to co-operate State e Government and the necessary | tion will have to be enacted. cost anywhere from twelve million dollars to complete to this ever undertaken in its bear- development of California. culmination will of the arid lands of the section and m the breaking up of large areas for the Mr. Newell says: “Opportunities for de- velopment in the Sacramento Valley ould be safeguarded by the Government | for the benefit of the people and not per- into the hands of specu- | mitted tc pi lators.” 'What Sulphur Does For the Human Body in Health and Disease. The mention of sulphur will recall to many of us the carly days when our mothers and grandmothers gave usour daily dose of sulphur and molasses every spring and fall. It ‘was the universal spring and fall “blood puritier,” tonic and cure-all, and, mind you, this old-fashioned remedy was not without merit. The ide was good, but the remedy and unpalatable, and a large quantity had to be taken to get any cffect. Nowadays we get all the beneficial effects of sulphur in a palatable, con- centrated form, so that a single grain is far more effective than a tablespoon- ful of the crude sulphur. In recent years research and experi- ment have proven that the best sulphur for medicinal use is that obtained from Calcium (Calcium Sulphide) and sold in ame of Stuart’s Calcium Wafers. They are small choe- olate coated pellets and contain the ac tive medicinal principle of sulphur in a highly concentrated, effective form, Few people are aware of the value of this form of sulphur in restoring and maintaining bodily vigor and hcalth; sulphur acts directly on the liver and excretory organs and purifies and en- the prompt elim- ination of waste material. Our grandmothers knew this when dosed us with sulphur and mo- s every spring and fall, ty and impurity of ordinary flow- ers of sulphur were often worse than the disease, and cannot compare with the modern concentrated preparations of sulphur, of which Stuart's Calcfum Wafers is undoubtedly the best ‘and most widely used. They are the natural antidote for liver and kidney troubles and cure con- stipation and purify the blood in a way tnat often surprises patient and phy- sician alike. Dr. R. M. Wilkins, while experiment- ing with sulphur remcdies, saon found that the sulphur from Calcium was su- rior to any other formu He says: “For liver, kidney and blood troubles, espeecially when resulting from consti- pation or malaria, I have been sur- riced at the results obtained from tuart’s Calcium Wafers. In tients suffering from boils and pimples and even deep-seated carbuncles, I have re- peatedly seen them dry up and disap- Pear in four or five days, leaving th skin cleer and_emooth. = Although Stu- art'’s Calcium Wafers is a proprietary article and sold by druggists and for that reascn tabooed by many physi. cians, yet I know of nothing so safe and reliable for constipation, liver and kidney troubles and especially in all forms of skin diseases as this remedy."” At any rate, people who are tired of pills, cathartics and so-called blood urifiers” will find in Stuart's Calcium Jafers, a far safer, more palatable and effective preparation. Gov- | v bill thus amended will be | in California and the | thereto for the purpose of as- | , which it is believed will be one of | mean the develop- | DEADLOCK MAY END N STRIKE After Five Days’ Delibera- tion Coal Miners and Operators Fail to Agree Upon a Single Point CERTAIN EMPLOYERS FAVOR A SURRENDER Men_May Refuse to Accept Terms Unless Granted by All Owners of Collieries in the Affected Distriets S R INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 24.—After being in joint conference through commit- tees since Tuesday afteroon, the coal op- erators and miners of the central compet- itlvé district, consisting of Illinois, In- diana, Ohio and Western Pennsylvaia, | and those of the Southwestern district, | composed of Missouri, Kansas, Texas, Arkansas and Indian Territory, are no nearer an agreement upon a wage scale to go into effect in one week than they were when the former joint conference adjourned in disagreement on February The present wage scale will expire next Saturday, and, unless an agreement be reached by the miners and operators be- fore that time, 225,000 union bituminous miners will be called from the mines in | the States named. The joint scale committee of the cen- tral competitive district adjourned this afternoon after being in session four days, to meet on Monday morning, when a motion to weport a disagreement will be offered and, it is believed, carried. The session of the joint conference to receive this report, according to the pres- ent programme, will be called to meet on Monday afternoon. During the four days the operators and miners have been in conference not a motion or proposition offered by either side upon the wage scale has been adopt- | ed. In every case where a proposition was offered it has been flatly refused. OPERATORS ARE QUARRELING. The operators have been confronted with seriols dissensions in their own ranks. F. L. Robbins, of the Western Pennsylvania operators, has agreed to pay an advance of 5.55 per cent, whicn is the demand made by the miners, bue the operators in Illinois, Indiana and | Ohlo have firmly refused to pay any ad- vance. Under the rules of the joint com- | mittee the votes of both operators and miners must be recorded as units and this division o€ the operators hag resulted in the defeat of every motion not favor- able to all of them. The meetings of the joint ,scale con- vention have been jmarked by many bit- ter personalities between the operators. Robbins has announced that he intends to pay the increase in wages asked by the miners not only in the mines of the | Pittsburg Coal Company, of which he is president, but also in his own mines in | Western Pennsylvania, Ohio and Illinois. | Independent operators in Western Pennsylvania, represented by G. A. Ma- goon, have announced through him that they will pay the advance if Robbins does. Other Independent mine owners also have signified their intention of pay- ing the advance if those In their districts do so. STRIKE MAY NOT BE GENERAL. Those of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio declare they cannot afford to pay | any advance whatever, and President ‘\h chell of the Mine Workers has firm- | ly declared that no settlement will be made unless an advance in wages is given. Whether the offiters of the | Mine Workers will allow the miners to sign the scale and go to work in districts where the advance is allowed |is a question that the operators have tried in vain 'to get President Mitch: | to answer. The only expression Mitch- €ll has made on the subject was made | today, when he remgrked in the com- mittee meeting that the course the operators were taking might bring that situation about, It is not certain that the national convention, which must ratify any action taken by the joint conference, would allow any district to sign the joint scale and go to work with the other districts idle, even if such act were indorsed by the national officers. ‘When the joint scale committee re- | ports a disagreement to the joint con- ference the fight will be renewed upon the floor and the finality will then soon | be reached. RESERVE SUPPLY OF COAL. NEW YORK, March 24.—At a con- ference of the Gould interests here yes- terday a message was read from Frank L. Robbins, chairman of the PRittsburg Coal Company, ini which he declared a coal strike was inevitable. “Coal strike inevitable. It seems now impossible for us to reachw- an agreement,” was the message. Robbins is now at the meeting of the joint scale committee in Indianap- olis. Announcement was made today by the anthracite mine operators that they have on hand within a radius of less than 100 miles of New York City | a reserve supply of more than 9,000,000 | tons ‘of good, marketable grades of anthracite coal. This is in addition to the supply held by the dealers and larger consumers. In accumulating this vast store of coal an army of men have been stead- ily employed for months. Storage fa- cilities have been increased very large- 1y, in some cases by the leasing ' of farms along the routes of railroads. Many of these spots are isolated, but they are within easy transportation distance from New York. The operators declare that should a strike come there will be no fncon veniences such as attended the di turbances In the anthracite region in 1902, % —————————— DEAN HODGES TO LECTURE. OAKLAND, March 24—The Rev. George Hodges, D. D., dean of the Co- lumbia Divinity School, will deliver an address Wednesday evening, April 11, at {he Common School Assembly Hall, Lafayette Park, at invitation of the As- sociated Charities. The lecture will be on “Practical Philanthropy.”. The Rev. Charles R. Brown, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will preside. Dean Hodges is delivering a course of lectures at Stanford University. He ranks among the leading theologlans of the United States. —————————— - BCHWARTZ SENT TO JAIL.—Oakland, March 24—Thirty-five cents in two montas 1s the amount that wnlhn“lahuj &wlm maintenance hiiaren, " obedience 1o the order of Polcs G T L i1 “Shend” che mest i monthe 1n the City MARCONI WIRELESS TELEGRAPH AN OPEN LETTER This letter contains most important and valuable information. It will pay you to read every line of it. If you have not the time to read it just now, put it aside and read it at the earliest possible mcment. We have advised repeat- edly through these columns during the past few months that a great oppor- tunity for investment in Marconi securities would soon come to pass; that there would be one last day which would have no tomorrow. The time has come. Stoek ATl Sold. We have been notified that the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America has no more stock for sale now. The last financial statement of the com- pany shows that there are but 2900 shares unsold in the treasury of the com- pany; that this stock is held in reserve and at present is not for sale at any price. Z As usual, when something is not to be had, everybody wants it. There will be an enormous demand for Marcon! securities from now on, as the law of sup- ply and demand, fvhich governs everything marketable, will, -on account of the great demand for and the scarcity of the stock, send its price up by leaps and bounds, as was the history of the Bell Telephone. Syndicate Seeking Control. It appears that certain prominent interests, backed by those who desire to possess themselves of a controlling interest of the Marconi Tele- graph, have formed a powerful “syndicate” and a “pool” which will endeavor to get such control. They have already tried in different ways—by advertis- ing and otherwise—to discourage Marconi stockholders and induce them to part with their holdings. ¥ People have offered and advertised Marconi stock for sale below the mar- ket price while they had none to sell, but have been and are now heavy buyers of it. It is believed they are prepared to pay an enormous price with such an object In view. They must, however, obtain the majority of this stock to ac- complish their'ends. This we know positively they cannot do. We take advantage of this opportunity to thank all of our customers for their patronage, and urge them to stand with us to a man and oppose the aforesaid syndlcate. The following advertisements appeared in the New York, San Francisco and other leading dailies throughout the country within the last few weeks: MARCONI WIRELESS, “A large stockholder in the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of Amer- lea desires to enter into nn ugreement with all holders of stock in this com- pany for the formation of a pool which will have the power to fix the market value of these securities at a fizure commensurate with their intrinsic worth. The pool arrangement to extend over a period of one year from March 1, 1906, All poocled stock to be placed in escrow with a prominent trust company i New York. For full particulars nddress Large Profits. box 438, Herald, Down Town.” MARCONI STOCKHOLDERS. “Special notice to stockhold of the Margonl Wireless Telegraph Com- pany of America and to holders 9f Marconi depobit certificates: “The advertiser desires to purchase a large block of stock and deposit cer- tificates of the aforesald company. and will pay spot cash for all offerin; up to 27,000 shares offered at n reasonable fixure, or will pay a nominal sum for an option to holders of these sectirities to purchase witlin a period of sixty to ty days. nh"“{ llelylre every holder of Marconi stock or deposit certificates to communi- cate with me immediately, stating number of shares or deposit certificates held and price desired for same. Write without delay to New York Syndicate, 64 ald, Down wa.” H“Thu demon:t‘:ate: beyond a doubt that there are two cliques trying to ob- tain control of this company, and there are other pools working in secrecy. Hold On to Your Stocks. We say to you, and we are in earnest, do not pert with your stock. It will soon be worth several times what they are willing to offer you now. There is no possibility of their getting the majority if Marconi stockholders stand to- gether and don't sell out to them. Do not sell, but buy all the stock you can. The stock of this company is in the hands of investors, not speculators, and is held by thousands of stockholders all over the country, all the way from New York to San Francisco, and from the Yukon Territory to Panama. In this :vlde distribution of stock is found the strength and security of the Marconi Com- ves the wisdom of its policy. P D iowbted integrity and. abllity of the men at the head of the com- pany--its president, Hon. John W. Griggs, ex-Governor of Ne\_w Jerfey and for- mer Attorney General of the United States in President McKinley's Cabinet; r. H. H. McClure, publisher of McClure’s Magazine, and others of equal prominence on the directorate; the consulting engineers, including Thomas A. Eaison, Professor Pupin of Columbia College and Mr. Marconi—positively guarantee “a square deal” to the stockholders. . 2 Do not allow the votaries of “Frenzled Finance” or the “System” to fool you into selling. Now that the Marconi wireless telegraph is doing business on acommercial basis; that all the expenditures have been magde to bring it to that. point, these syndicatef, of course, want to grab it and reap for them- selves the enormous profits which they know are now near at hand. The re- ceipts of ghe American Marconi Company have steadily increased and dl\(ldend date is getting nearer and nearer every day. Targe Business. According to the latest statement in the public press of Mr. John Bottom- ley, secretary of the American Marconi Company, we have it that on the _buls of the last quarter the messages the American Marconi Company Is receiving and sending amount to several hundred thousand words, and at the rate the use of the Marconi telegraph is increasing will reach millions almost imme- Giately. 1':;: stock of the American Marconi Company is.held closely by insiders for a big advance in price fo hundreds, even thousands, of dollars per share. The prospective value of Marconi stocks is unsurpassed, unparalleled; is greater than any other security ever offered. . " Value of the Patents. .ct of the “syndicates” above referred to, in trying to secure the maj;ll‘:yo:tjicr:eostcci uyto turn over the patents of the company to the parties who want them for many times the company’s present capitalization. In conse- quence of the low capitalization of the company ($6,650.000) they could imme- diately bring up the value of the securities to many times their present value. We repeat: Keep your stocks. We know whercof we are speaking and our ad- vice is worth heeding. This advertisement appears to-day as a warning in the leading newspapers of our large cities, so that everybody may be Informed. Marconi stocks ure held to-day by the best of people, among whom .are bankers, lawyers, physicians, clergymen, ‘Army and Navy officers, Senators, public officials, skilled mechanics, merchants, etc. Within the next ninety days the stock of the American Company should double in price. The opening of the transatlantic service to the public from Cape Cod, Mass, and Cape Bre- ton, to Poldhu, England, is due within a short time. From private information we know this to be a fact. * Opening of Trans-Atlantie Service. Fr. Melville E. Stone, General Manager of the Associated Press, is quoted as stating that the results of the secret tests now in progress “are amazing.” The syndicates know this, too, and this is another reason for their trying to get this stock away from the present stockholders before they wake up to the realization that their holdings have increaged greatly in value as the immedi- ate result of the opening of the transatlantic service to the commerce of the world. the Marconi Wireless Telegraph, becomes a powerful com;rt(:::rt::tu:l::fi:s; as it can ‘afford to send messages across the Atlantic at lcss than half the rate per word charged by the cables, ard they fear this will greatly depreciate the value of their stock in the, cable companies. The opening of these transatlantic stations will be rapidly followed up by the | establishment of more transatlantic stations until there will be as many as are cables to-day, which will cut severely into the receipts of the cable ;2‘1;::“" whose carnings amount to $35,000,000 annually. There are $647,000,000 invested-in needless wires in the United States alone. The substitution of wireless for wires would mean a saving of $20,000,000 in ‘Interest annually. 5 To The Public— To Investors— ToMarconiStockholders The Progress of Marconi Wireless. The capitalists who now desire to control the company would not ]hnn bought Marconi stock twe years ago, when It could be had at a much o'e‘; figure, but have waited until they knew beyound a doubt that the Marcon! system was an absolute success. This has been proven to even the most skeptical. The Marconi system is installed on every transatlantic steamer afloat, which means that messages can be sent to and from all steamers and to both sides of the Atlantic. A number of the largest steamers are publish- ing daily news TS. % Thsycomva:;p;aa arranged with the Postal and Western Union Telegraph to recefve and transmit messages from each and every one of their offices throughout the United States, Canada and Great Britain, giving the Marconl Company the benefit of offices in some 75,000 towns and cities and the use of over $200,000,000 of capital invested by these telegraph companies. There i3 no waliting for the company to meet with success. This point has already been passed. Nearly all the foreign navies are equipped with the Marconi system. _ Adoption by Government. Another very important thing that the “syndicates” realize is that the Unit- ©d States Government will now be compelled fo adopt the Marconi system as the result of the siveepinz decision just rendered in favor of the Marconi Com- pany of America on March 21, 1906, by Chiet Justice Melville W. Fuller of the Supréme Court of the United States, ranting n final injunction agajust the Do Forpst Wireless Telegraph Company, strictly enjoining them to forever desist from the manufacture, sale or operation of any system of wireless telexraphy. This decision affects also all other wireless systems, and by Its terms virtually xives the Marcont Company the momnopoly of the wireless telexraph business. Now that this decision has been rendered, the United States will be left with- out a wireless telexraph service unless it adopts entirely the Marconi sywtem. The officinl organ of the Government. the Army and Navy Journal of Wash- ington, D. C.. In one of its latest issues, confirms this fact and states that the work of bullding over a dozen Government stations on the Atlaniic and Pacific coasts is now delayed on this account, as the Government must be secure in the use of the wireless system that it adovts. Immense Profits. The “syndicates” also realize the enormous profits that the Marcon! Com- pany must receive from the equipment of the merchant marine of the United States, numbering over 25,000 ocean-going and coastwise steamers and sailing vessele, which with the United States fleet of over 300 warships, on the basis of only $2000 per vessel, would amount to over $50,000,000. The Marconi system does all that the wire and cable systems do, and also what they can- not do—send messages to ships at sea and from ship to shore. We stated from the first that the profits would be enormous, and we maintaid and re- peat what we have said. Press Indorsements. The Marconi system has already been the meéans of saving hundreds of lives and millions in property. Almost daily such occurrences are reported throughout the world. The newspapers for the past two years have been re- plete with accounts of the success and rapid adoption of the Marconi system. So many new stations have been installed during this short time that the opening of new omes no longer creates any surprise. No invention er enter- prise has ever received the newspaper publicity and the high commendation accorded the Marconi Telegraph. Universal Adoption. Thomas A. Edison foresaw early the pcssibilities of the Marcon! Wireless, when he said: “Every craft that floats the seas” will be supplied with the Marconi System; that any vessel In any part of the world could be reached. ‘The Marconi Telegraph, he stated, has a fleld—the ocean—which cannot be touched by any other method. The public now demands the wireless system. Before long the Marconi System will be made compulsory by law on all ocean-going passenger steamships, just as lifeboats, belts and other equip- ment providing for the safety of passengers and crew are insisted upon by both the British and American authorities. It is plainly indicated that within the next five y2ars all this large fleet will be equipped with the Marconi Wireless Telegraph. Admiral Dewey stated that no Government today can afford to send out its warships to battlé without first equipping them with wireless telegraphy. The New York Sur, January 28, 1906, in a three-quarter-page article de- voted to the Marconi System and its great achievements, stated that 1000 mes- sages, commercial and personal, had been sent from one ship to others and to shore stations on one trip. This means an expenditure by passengers of more than $2000 on a single trip. On a recent trip to New York from Hamburg the Amerika sent 700 dispatches to ship and shore, which, if taken at the mini- mum rate of $2 per message, would be $1400. This gives some idea of the enor- mous revenue of the company. History will not only repeat itself, but will surpass itself in making for- tunes for Marconl investors, as it did for Bell Telephome stockhoiders, the protits of which to an original investor of §100 are more than $200,000 to date. Last Offer. We are, and have been from the start, headquarters for Marconi Securities in the United States. Through our prominent connection with and in the sale of these securities, we were notified in time of what was coming. We personally hold a good-sized block of this stock which is not for sale; first, because we know it to be a good investment, and, second, for important reasons which the future will develop. Our time for the sale of Marconi stock will soon expire, and we do not want it to fall into the hands of these “syndicates.” Wae therefore give the holders of Marconi Securities this opportunity to advance their imterests. We now offer for immediate subscription the last allotment of certifi- cates for stock of the Marcohi Wireless Telegraph Company of America. This allotment is very small. If you ever in your life expect to buy Mar- coni Securities, this is pesitively your last chance. Applications will be flled in the order of their receipt. First come, first served. After this stoclk is sold we can offer no miore. This is the end. In the event of over-subscription, wa reserve the riglit to reject subscriptions and to return the money. All applica- tions for stock must be accompanied by 10 per cent of the subscription, bal- ance payable on our acceptance of the order. Conelusion. R In conclusion we say, do not sell. Hold on to your stock and buy all you can. This closes our last allotment at any price. These last certificates (non- asscssable) go at $7 each, in blocks of twenty, and no subscription will be re- ceived for less than twenty certificates. This absolutely winds up our sales of the American Marconi certificates. No one will be able to get any more after this. As we have told you already, the stock of the Marconi Company of Amer- fca is nearly all sold out. We cannot, therefore, get any more. For the reasons we have just given you, and others which wa do not propose to give to the “syndicates™ just now, we believe Marconi certificates will be worth over $15 each' within ninety days, and will be worth over $190 per certificate within the next five years as a result of the immense dividends that it should pay. Electrical inventions have proved the most profitable of all inventions in the world's history, and the telegraph business the safest, as no record of fail- uxes is heard of in this line of bugigess. 1f you comprehend the meaning of the word “opportunity,” you will act at once. Prompt action on your part is imperative or you will be too late. Never again will you find another such opportunity. Bear in mind this allot- ment is very small, and will not go round. It's up to you to get all you can before the stock is withdrawn from the market. Send us your order today. Do it now. We advise the reser¥ation for the number of certificates wanted by tele- graph at our cxpense, remittance to follow by mail. Further particulars on request. Address all communications and make all checks or money orders payable to the order of F. P. WARD & CO. Bankers and Brokers. KFor the accommodation of our customers, we will keep our office open week from 7 to 9 o'clock. / % FILL IN, TEAR OUT AND MAIL EITHER OF THESE COUPONS TODAY. 3 e e ———— INFORMATION COUPON s A ¢ r.rrwmaco_nn-mnm‘.mmma e . Please send. by 'return mail, free, 16-page fllustrated pamphlet and other literature on Marconi Wireless. ) REMITTANCE COUPON F. P. WARD & CO. Crossley Building. San Franelsco. Cal.: mail, ciiiisseciaooo ... .. American Marconi n each, which send me by