Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The San Francisco Call and Post from San Francisco, California • Page 6

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

CORONADO TENT CITT." Coronado Beach Will' be the; popular" summer resort this season. It became famous last year for entertainment and health. Its splendid cafe was a'. wonder, "the fishiitg uncxecelled. Because Queen Alexandra said that' all coronation robes and gowns should be made of British materials, the London milliners have intimated that she doesn't know what she, is talking cost marble and stone, forMron, bricks and brickwork, carpenter 'The metal, work': of the tower on the top ol which! stands the' immense figure of William Penn alone cost $756,537, while the tower clock represents $27,960.

V. The paving "of the courtyard and outside cost nearly $200,000. while to install electric; lights in the hall Incurred an expense of To city department rooms cost a fiscal accounting the commissior showed that 43 had been expended in. immense' marble pile todate which includes salaries of architect, superintendent and secretary and clerk, and messengers, $19,375. The Philadelphia City Hall, work or which was begun in 1870 and which still i unfinished, has just been transferrec "Mayor "Ashbridge as the city's represehtatiye by the abolished Public Build ing Commission.

COSTLY CITY HALL. -NEW YORK, Aug. The followinj Califdrnians are in New York: From Sai H. W. Gaodall is at the Hoi land; W.

Kirske the Rossmore Dowd is. at the Normandie. Frorr Los E.W. Potter, G. E.

Browi and W. L. Stewart are at the Square. Calif ornians in New York. Within a time comparatively short we may- expect to see a well perfected system of the new.

telegraphy established between this city and The governmental authorities are now working out such a and have our interests in mind, y.lil 'may be, as the Tribune has said, that the installation of the service at Nantucket has not received the Jat- It will be seen that the development of the system is going forward with a rapidity that keeps pace with the most sanguine expectations of those who noted the first experiment of The Call in obtaining by wireless telegraphy the announcement of- the approach of the transport bringing home the California Volunteers from Manila. One of the most interesting demonstrations of the power of the new telegraphy was obtained, quite unexpectedly during the recent maneuvers of the British Channel fleet. A summary of an official report on the svibject to the Navy Department at Washington says: "Messages were exchanged up to a distance of ninety miles between two ships, when "communication suspended owing to a minor break. The instrument onone vessel was then adjusted to send a. message to Portland, and, to the surprise of the signaling staff, that station was heard 'talking' to a second ship.

The distance at which this'information was 103 miles as the crow flies, a record so far as the naval, service is concerned." It is probable, however, that in the near future there will be hardly any port of importance in the civilized world unprovided with some system of wireless telegraphy. The adoption of the improvement is going on much more rapidly than many persons suppose. Thus the New York Tribune, in commenting upon the establishment of the wireless news service of the Herald from Nantucket lightship to the island and thence to the mainland, says: "The first application of Marconi's invention to systematic work in America a few days ago has hardly received the attention which so important an event deserves. The establishment of a wireless telegraph station at the quaint little village of 'Sconset, on the island of Nantucket, ushers in. a new era in communication between passengers on incoming steamships and their friends on shore.

It will also give those on board an ocean liner earlier tidings of occurrences since they left the shores of Europe. At least twelve hours are now cut off from the period of enforced silence incident to a trans-Atlantic voyage." There is no questioning the truth of that statement, but it should be applied jjot to the Canadian Government only. There are other rich and enlightened countries whose foggy coasts are unmarked the new telegraphy, and among them is our own. BY way of preparing for the approach of the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall to the dian ports on their tour of the empire, the British Admiralty has ordered the installation of a wireless telegraph system along that coast. Commenting upon the fact, the Boston Globe says: "It is a wise provision for the royal visit, but other vessels needing to pass that dangerous cape ought to be similarly safeguarded.

It is little to the credit of either the Dominion or to the imperial authorities that a region so notorious for its shipwrecks should have to wait for the Ophir's approach to get an equipment that was required long ago." THE NEW TELEGRAPHY. Horsburgh of the passenger traffic department of the Southern Pacific, left Wednesday night for Chicago, where he will confer with J. C. Stubbs and E. O.

McCormick on matters pertaining to his duties. General Fred Grant, U. S. is at the Palace, en route to the Philippines. Gen eral Grant has been East on a leave 01 absence and is now hastening back t( Manila to rejoin his command.

Charles B. Younger a young attorney of Santa Is at the Lick while on a short business trip to this city. William Britt, formerly a newspapei man of this city, but now interested ir valuable mining -properties in Alaska, has returned from Mr. and Mrs. Young have conn down from their- home in Napa and an registered at the Lick.

Frank J. Brandon of San Jose, secretary of the State Senate, is spending a few days in tffe 'C. Ivins, Sheriff of San Luis.Obispo, is among the recent arrivals at the Grand. P. McBride.

a capitalist of Kansas, is among the arrivals of last night at the Palace. Graham, a. mining man and.cattle raiser of Nevada, is at the Grand. R. A.

Rheinstron, a wealthy merchant of Cincinnati, is a guest at the Palace. W. E. Humphrey of Denver, is a guest at "the Palace. Senator F.

Jones of Oroville is staying at the Palace. Dr. Jacob Eissenstadt of. Denver Is registered at the Grand. J.

W. Smith, a merchant of Honolulu, is staying at the Occidental. D. B. Fairbanks, the Petaluma banker and capitalist, is at the Lick.

George S. Jones, a mining man of Grass Valley, is a guest at the Grand. Fred Grant', U. S. is among the arrivals of yesterday at the Palace.

Lieutenant Carr, U. S. is at the.Occidental, accompanied by his wife. Oakland. Cal.

Hobby-de-hoy, sometimes written hobbledehoy, "neither a man nor a boy," Is an old English term applied to a lad between the ages of II and 21. Tusser. In "Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry," published in 1557, has the following: 1 7. The first seven years bring up as 5 a child: 14. The next to learning for waxinsj too wild; 14 21.

The next to keep under Sir Hobbard de Hoy: 2S. The next a man and no longer a boy. The Lady I see you advertise home-made bread?" Yes, ma'am. Does it taste like home-made? Baker Xo, indeed, ma'am. It's sweet and light.

New York Weekly. Last week a party on one of the bfg yachts (out to see a contest that was thrilling'the whole country) retired to the cabin as soon as they got on board and remained here the entire day playing cards. As they were being landed at twilight some one on the wharf called out, "Who won?" "Mrs. Blank!" answered an ingenuous maiden; "she held all the Evening Wisconsin. Farmer Name his mother seen in the graveyard over yonder an' took a fancy "to, Jacet 'William Polk." Philadelphia Press.

Farmer My oldest boy's workin' in your town. His name's H. J. P. ICorntop.

Ever hear tell on him?" Mr. BorCen No. Where did he get all those initials? A CHANGE TO; SMILE. The threat of Texas to place a heavy tax upon the oil output will not stop the "gushers," but it has already mixed a sound of wailing with the gush. With such prospects- ahead.

twentieth century, promises to be even more 'marvelous than the The' man of the past who" has had money. fo. burn- will be as in comparison- with, the man I of, the future who has aluminum for. fuel. In commenting upon the subject Dr.

Andrew Wilson argues that the diamond, the ruby and other jewels may be produced by such degree of heat as was caused by the combustion of aluminum during the experiments. -He says: "To produce the diamond from carbon by imitation, of; the ways of nature in the past intense heat is essential; therefore the idea of iising metals as fuel may supply enterprising science with' means of building up the jewel, such as have been hitherto wanting. Sir W. Roberts-Austen, indeed," himself sounds a note of hopeful augury here: -He tells us' that', the alumina which results from the reduction of oxide, of chromium, when ut- is allowed to cool, large, ruby-tinted: crystalline masses, closely. resemblingTthei natural Again.

in an interesting peroration the lecturer tells us that burning of aluminum' as fuel gives us sapphires and rubies iii the of ashes, and metallic -fuel is burned, not the air, but by the oxygen" derived from the beneath, as it occurs in the fed and, yellow oxides to, which our rocks and cliffs owe their. color and, beauty." Of course no such intense heat is needed for ordinary purposes, but science can make good use of it in many ways, and when science has led the way art will not be long in following. It was pointed out that such heat will enable us to approach the intense temperature I under which our planet was developed, and we may thereby be enabled to some extent at least tc reproduce the processes by which. many of the metallic and other constituents of the earth's surface were -formed. That in turn would imply our power of reproducing them from their original elements.

The report of the lecture says: ''The oxygen for the combustion of the metal is supplied by metallic oxides, because these latter readily: part with -their oxygen to the metal if it be raised.to a certain The experiment was. remarkable, for its results. A mixture of oxide of iron, ferric oxide and finely divided aluminum was ignited by a piece of magnesium wire. The heat produced wasintense. According to Sir Roberts-Austen, no known pyrometer or heat measuring apparatus can sum it up.

He, believes the heat thus evolved to' be. about, 3000 degrees centi-" grade." We have now had cheap aluminum for some years, and there is, no any enthusiasm on the subject. However, it is likely there will be a new and greater enthusiasm very soon, for 'the London Chronicle reports that in a recent address at the Royal Institution Sir W. Roberts-Austen spoke of the commercial and practical bearings of. "petals as Fuel," and says the chief idea of the discourse, and the principal centered around the use of aluminum for that, purpose.

ONLY a few years ago aluminum was rare and costly. It was "a disputed question whether it could ever be produced in quantities of commercial value at anything like an economical rate. In those years of experiment in the production of the metal it was frequently predicted that as soon as it could be furnished cheaply enough to be available for manufacturing purposes it would work something like a revolution in. the civilized Sanguine enthusiasts spread abroad glowing accounts of what great benefits might be expected when once this light and beautiful metal was at the service of humanity. ALUMINUM AS- FUEL.

It is a sere thing to say, but it is true, that humanity Mould rejoice at any complication that would work retribution in behalf of a brave people, whose only offense is love of their land and defense of their freedom and their homes. The United States has no other stake in the issue, as far as sentiment is concerned. On the material tide we have nothing to lose. "Such a clash as is impending would defer the proposed European trade concert to oppose what is called abroad our commercial aggressions, and a war would simply increase the call upon our surplus to supply the nations involved. There may be another appearance of sentiment, or many'such appearances, but the matter deeper than any trivial dispute between France and the Sultan.

The Ottoman torch may light, at the beginning of the twentieth, a fire as great as Bonaparte started at the beginning of the nineteenth century. the South African republicans is the same that disgraced Spain in dealing with the Cubans. The British besom has swept the Boer country clean of all the subsistence. The farms have been burned, unspeakable outrages committed, and weak women and children have been ruthlessly slaughtered, by famine and disease, in the camps to which they have been driven like cattle to be treated worse than brutes. She has sought control in all the Danubian states, and apparently has not lost the desire to dominate the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles.

It is at present a great play of diplomacy which may easily be exchanged for the harder game of war. In her emergency Turkey can rely on England, but Adam Zad, the bear, evidently. feels that England can stand no further strain upon her resources than the Boer war is imposing and that now is the time to strike. The Sultan, whose miseries are quite incapable of augmentation, may well feel that he has nothing to lose by precipitating the conflict of which his empire will the earliest theater. His army is unpaid.

His diplomatic representatives are without salary, and his administration is decayed to the marrow. Revolt is ripe for adtion among his subjects, who are no longer restrained by the bonds even of religion. Turkey in Europe may be about to pass away, and the territory it has occupied will fall to the strongest. During the last year there have been many evidences of a substantial concert among the Continental powers, so that it is doubtful if even Germany will actively interfere with the plans of the Czar. The passing of Turkey in Europe would be a distinct gain to civilization, but the greatest sentimental result of a present conflict would be the helping of the indomitable Boers.

The English people are restless under the prolonged war, which is beginning lo reflect upon England's military macy, and still more seriously upon her humanity. Admissions of her own officers are a Wed to other evidence that her method of warfare THE renewal of French trouble with the Sultan is portentous. There is no doubt that and Russia are in accord. Ever since the Berlin treaty deprived Russia of the right to occupy Constantinople after the Balkan campaign that empire has pressed her Asiatic frontier southward to reach open water. Her appearance in affairs in Persia and Afghanistan, in Korea and China, is in pursuance of an aspiration cherished ever since the time of Peter the Great.

To be a first-class maritime power Russia must have and control seaports on unfrozen water. Turkey has been used to block the way against her the Mediterranean to the Black Sea, and England lias interposed between her and the Persian Gulf. It seems to be a foregone conclusion that if the Czar on his arrival in Paris should express any desire for partition of Turkey, France would be very willing to help inMhe carving. THE OTTOMAN TORCH. DIVORCE AND G.

Santa Rosa, Cal. This correspondent asks: "Can a man marry out of this State (when he has a divorce from his first wife) according' to the laws of the State where he marries and have his marriage recognized a3 legal by the courts of this State upon his return?" The answer is yes, if he is married second time after a lapse of a- year after obtaining divorce from his first wife. It has beon held that a man who is divorced in this State and before a year has expired goes to another country and marries again, such marriage is not legal in the State of California. PASTOR OF ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH, WHO DIED SUDDENLY WEDNESDAY.

Frultvale, Cal." It is said that the simplest method of keeping cider sweet Is to allow it to work until 5jt has reached the state most desirable to the taste, then add a tumbler and a half of grated horse radish to each, barrel and shake up well. Thls-arrests further fermentation. After remaining a few weeks. rack off and bung up closely In clean casks. It Is not an easy matter to keep cider sweet and pure for any of time, especially if the weather is warm.

If the elder Is not made until Just before winter sets in, and can afterward be kept at or near the freezing point. It will re-' main sweet and- excellent. No arrangements for the funeral have as vet been made, although it has been decided that the burial will take place on Sunday. dren, one son and three Franz, Emma, Mrs. Sophie Koenig and Mrs.

Bertha He leaves also two brothers and two sisters, C. E. Beehler, a well-known business man of Baltimore; Miss Charlotte M. Beehler, Miss Nanna Beehler, also residing in Baltimore, and Commander William Beehler, naval attache at Berlin, Vienna and Rome, PERSONAL MENTION. Dr.

Buehler was a native of Baltimore and 64 years of age. He was graduated at the Theological Seminary of St. Louis forty-one years ago and came directly to this city. He was the pioneer worker, of the Lutheran church on this coast. On his arrival here he took.

charge of a little church on' Greenwich street. From Greenwich street Pastor moved his rapidly growing congregation" to the church on Geary street, between Stockton Suddenly he put his hand his head and gasped. His wife and daughter hastened to his side, but too late. The zealous Christian worker, who for fortyone years had "served his Maker, had pasesd to his reward. Dr McNeil and Dr.

Damkroeger were hastily summoned. They pronounced that death was immediate apd gave cause as apoplexy. Death came suddenly. The pastor had spent the evening with some friends arid returned home shortly before 10 o'clock. With his wife and daughter Emma he sat in his study chatting about the approaching wedding of Miss Emma to Rev.

Mr. Tietien of Crockett. REV. JACOB M. BUEHLER, pastor of St.

"Paul's Lutheran Church, passed away on Wednesday evening at his home on Eddy street. IRISH COIN-G. A. City. The coin asked about is either a penny or halfpenny of the time of George IV, who reigned 1S20-30, and was coined- for Ireland.

All coins minted for Ireland flave the harp on the reverse from 1601. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth. This, like the thistle on Scotch coins since 1632, is placed on the coin to designate the fact that one Is Irish coinage and the other Scotch coinage. TO WALK Inquirer, City. To "walk or "walking a chalk line" is an ordeal on ship board as a test for sobriety.

Two parallel lines are chalked for some distance on the deck and If a man who is of being under the -Influence of liquor can walk from one end to the other without overstepping either he is declared to be a soberman. HELL E. K. City. The obstructions at Hell Gate, New York harbor, were removed by Brevet Major General John Newton, TJ.

S. Engineers, September 24, 1876. The button that set off the exploding material was touched by General Newton's baby daughter. The explosion sent up a body of water, spray and vapor to a height of 123 feet. TANANA E.

W. Sacramento, Cal. The Tanana Hills of Alaska are just below the Arctic Circle between 143 and 155 longitiMe. The hlllg are marked on the recent Alaska as is also Forty-Mile Creek, which runs into the Yukon River between Dawson and Circle City. CIVIL.

Subscriber, Butte Valley, Cal. If you will write to the clerk of the civil service board of the department in which you desire to take an examination the date of the same will be furnished as soon as it is determined HARD AND SOFT WATER-S. City. Hard water la Impregnated with earths and minerals. Rain water Is called soft water because it Is not so Impregnated.

Exposure to the air will soften hard water, so will soda or borax. The death of such a "man may be truly accounted a loss to the whole community. It will be felt in that way by thousands of sincere and loving hearts, and the bereaved family in their sorrow will have every sympathy humanity can give. The essential characteristics of the man were hereditary. He came of a family distinguished for faithful and worthy service in whatsoever line of work the members of it undertook.

One of his brothers holds the position of naval attache, doing service at the courts of Berlin, Vienna and Rome, and is" honored both at home and abroad, while others of his family, though less widely known, are held itrnot less esteem by those who come in contact with them. It. is not among Lutherans only that his. services were useful and uplifting." His fine life has an influence wider than his parish, or' -the circle of those' who embrace his By. the moral order of the world a good man's life issues far beyond the reach of his personal acquaintance.

The emanations of a noble nature reflected from' mind to mind arid soul to soul broaden out through all the processes of human intercourse, and affect the hearts and the conduct of thousands who may never have met nor even heard of the individual from whom they emanated. Buehler was one of those strong. natures that constitute an elementary force in society and help to hold the social organism together by spiritual bonds but irrefrangible, and not to be broken by force or worn away by time. Mr. Buehler came to San Francisco forty-one years ago and founded the first Lutheran church in this city.

He was therefore a pioneer of the State as well as the father of Lutheranism in The success of his work is attested throughout the length and breadth of the land. Lutheran churches have arisen and Lutheran communities have flourished among us largely through his personaHeading and the potent influence of his example. To the younger pastors of his church he was a never failing inspiration and help. They looked to him' as to a father, nor ever looked-in vain for all a father's kindly and gracious counsel and aid in any issue in; which they appealed to him. WITH profound sorrow, the people of San Francisco, and many throughout the- entire-, country, learn of the death of the Rev.

Jacob M. Buehler, pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Church in this city. The sorrow is the more acute because the death came suddenly and No heart was prepared for the blow. To; his family, to.his relatives and.

to the' wide circle of his parishioners and friends it has come like an appalling calamity. JACOB M. BUEHLER. AND A. S.

R-. Oakland, Cal. It la perfectly proper to speak of one of the gentler sex as a woman instead of a lady. Every lady is a woman, Is not every woman who la a laay. What will it profit the Iowa Democrats to" have reaffirmed the Kansas City platform if Bryan should strike oil and quit politics? and Powell.

This church in turn became too small and the next move was to the chuich in Mission street, between Fifth and Sixth. Pastor Buehler remained at the Mission-street church until 1894, when he took charge of St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Dr. Buehler teaves a wife and four chil- MANILA-Subscriber, Butte Valley, Cal.

The shortest route from San Francisco to Manila, P. by steamer Is by the great circle route, 6237 miles. Manila la connected by submarine cable with China. The business men and property-owners of this city, the vast mass of peaceful laborers, appeal for order and safety. They counsel the mistaken rioters assailants of peaceful men to pause and consider that they endanger their own rights when they attack the rights of others.

If they will not listen to any but the advisers who put murder in their hearts, the issue will be met. No city has ever surrendered to a mob, and San Francisco will not set the cowardly example, though the United States have to use its army to help her resist. Government is a trust, and under our system it never fails for lack of a trustee. The city is the primary trustee of government here. If it fail the State succeeds it, and, if the State fail, the United States is the ultimate trustee, and so far nobody has whipped the United States.

But it will "not dissolve. The business of the United States must go on. The transports that load and unload at this city will not be sent to Seattle or Tacoma because the laborers who load and discharge them cannot be protected here from murderous attacks. Already fifty strikers have fallen upon eight of these United States laborers and beaten nearly to death. It was not only the act of cowards, but of men Who have no regard either for the good name or the prosperity of San Francisco.

Let such understand that these laborers will be protected. If the city government cannot do it the troops at the Presidio will. In no case has one man fairly attacked one man. The strikers have gone in parties largely outnumbering their intended victims. This has been unfair, unAmerican and unmanly.

The men attacked have been only standing on their lawful right to labor and take wages. If the law cannot or will not protect men in this, then government is dissolved. There will be no surrender. If those who are charged, with the maintenance of law and order skulk and refuse to use their authority to protect life and property, then the city will pay dearly for every blow taken, every life sacrificed and every dollar of property destroyed. From the beginning of the strike the mob spirit has been insidiously cultivated by the demagogues and evil counselors of the strikers.

It has been that sort of advice that educates the manhood out of men, destroys their respect for fair play and makes them cowards. Hence we have seen gangs of ten beset one helpless boy and beat him into a pulp, and when he escaped he was pursued by the whole party and struck' down again, and when he defended himself with his pistol the men who had sought his life yelled "Murder!" The daily attacks of the Examiner on the police, the action of a police magistrate in fining an officer for preserving the peace and setting free those who broke the peace, and the incendiary advice of a lawyer to the strikers to arm and shoot policemen, all led surely to one the mob and attacks upon life and property. It marks the end of the strike. There can be no capitulation to violence, no surrender to a mob." Bad advice has borne. its fruit, its intended fruit, and has raised the issue whether government and public order shall'surrender to violence: WE have referred to the bad advice to which the- strikers have been subjected.

They could follow it or not, as they chose. We regret for their sake that they have followed it to its final and only logical a display of mob violence. SUDDEN IS THE DEATH OF PASTOR BUEHLER IN ANSWER TO QUERIES BY CALL' READERS tention which important an event but none the less far-sighted' business men are the work of the new and in due time their demand will bring about the establishment of, the system wherever it is needed. THE MOB. FRIDAY 30, 1901 JOHN D.

SPRECKELS, Proprietor. Adftnti All CcnEtnieatleni to W. 8. LEAKS, Hunger. JIAXAGER'S OFFICE Telephone Press 204 PUBLICATION and S.

V. Telephone Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS 217 to 221 Stevenson St. Telephone Press 2O2. Delivered by Carriers.

15 Cents Per Week. Sing-le 5 Cents. Terms by Mall, Including DAIX.T (Including Sunday), ona year. DAILT CALL (Including Sunday). 6 3.00 DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 months 1.60 DAILT By Single Month 65o SUNT5AT CAI-I.

One Tear 1.50 "WEEKLY CALL Year 1.00 All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Sample copies will be forwarded when requested. Mall cubscrlben In ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS In order to insure prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAAD OFFICE 1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROG7TESS.

IFaBiger Foreign Atrertiiisg, Xarqnatta Building. Chicago. (Long Distance Telephone "Central NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: C. CARLTOJf Square NETT YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH 30 Tribune Building NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldorf -Astoria Hotel; A.

Brentano, SI Union Square: Murray Hill HoteL BRANCH -527 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open actl! 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until o'clock. 633 McAllister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkln, open until o'clock. 19U Mission, open until 10 o'clock.

2261 Market, ecrner Sixteenth, cpen until 9 o'clock. 1096 Valencia, open until 9 o'clock, lot Eleventh, open until 9 o'clock. NW. comer Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until 9 o'clock. J200 cpen until 9.

a. m. 6 THE SAN FRANCISCO: CALL; FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1901. Grand Ooera-houie "Lord and Lady Algy." Two Orphans." California "Rosemary." i Orrhtum Vaudeville. "Wheels Within Wheels." "Romeo and Juliet." Olympla.

corner Mason and Eddy Specialties. Chutes. Zoo and Theater Vaudeville every afternoon and evening. Vaudeville. Recreation Baseball.

Sutro Swimmlnr. "llng-llng- Circus and Sixteenth streets. Mechanics' Pavilion Scientific Boxlncr State Fair and Exposition. September 2 to 14. Call aabscrlbers contemplating a clianffe retidesee dnrlngr the summer months can hare tiieir.

paper forwarded by mall to their lew addresses by notlfylnsr The Call Bmitncii Office. Thia paper Trill also be on sale at ail summer resorts and Is represented by a local afreat lm nil tawBi am the coast. 10 SUBSCRIBERS TOWH FOR THE SUMMER. Choice Palace Cal. glace fruit 50c ner Ib at Selling out.

Best eyeglasses, specs, 10c ta 40c. 81 4th front of barber and Information supplied dartly to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's). 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042. The KIFYT Ireland JMCA.l AA Compared vALLo The J' ADVENTURES OF A SHARK CHARMER.

ireiaXlCl A THRILLING STORY OF THE SOUTH SEAS. 4 A TOWN THAT WAS BUILT IN ONE Boyhood. HOUR AN IDEAL HUSBAND-BY SUSAN B. BY. ANTHONY.

I. V. COFFEY. v. HOW TO SEE YOSEMTTE ON FOOT- BY GEORGE D.

SAiFD. PATHETIC STORY OF -THE MAN IN Tim BEST KNOWN ARTISTS' MODELS of san HCTION. EOOKS AND HUMAN IN, rrom terest stories. The FamOUS LEADS THEM AWXTSEMEJTTS..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The San Francisco Call and Post Archive

Pages Available:
152,338
Years Available:
1890-1913