11 research outputs found
Türkiye'de "en hakiki mürşit" ne kadar "ilimdir"? Bir sosyal bilimcinin hatırladıkları
This article considers the interactive relationship between Social Sciences and the structure of thought of individuals. The author relates some of his experiences from his years at different schools and colleges as well as from those years during which he served as a staff member or research associate at various institutions of higher learning, and attempts to figure out to what extent those experiences could have contributed to the flourishing of an analytical mind in individuals and, conversely, to what degree they could hamper the training of minds in the same direction. Keywords: Memorizing by heart vs. thinking, description vs. analysis, analytical method.Bu çalışmada, Türkiye’de Sosyal Bilimler ile kişilerin düşünce yapısı arasındaki karşılıklı etkileşim konusu ele alınmaktadır. Yazar, kendi öğrenim ve öğretim hayatından bazı özgün deneyimlerini nakletmekte ve zikrettiği deneyimlerinin kişinin analitik bir düşünce yapısına sahip olmasına ne kadar katkıda bulunabileceğini ve ne kadar böyle bir düşünce yapısının ortaya çıkmasını engelliyebileceğini irdelemektedir. Anahtar Kelimeler:Ezberleme-düşünme, betimleme-irdeleme, analitik yöntem
Reflections on that-has-been : Snapshots from the students-as-partners movement
EDITORIAL NOTE (Alison): The idea for this multipart reflective essay emerged from first author Christel Brost’s reflections on her experience of striving to develop a students-as-partners approach within the context of a summer institute and then back at her home institution. To aid reflection on these experiences, Christel used Roland Barthe’s construct of that-has-been, which she explains below, to examine several “mental snapshots” of her experiences and what those mean for her personally and for students-as-partners work. Inspired by the vivid, emotion filled representation of Christel’s “snapshots,” we (co-editors of reflective essays for the journal, Anita Ntem and Alison Cook-Sather) invited participants from two other venues to share their reflections within the same frame. Authors of each section of this essay use Barthes’ construct to “zoom in” on different moments and lived experiences of partnership, creating mental snapshots from three students-as-partners venues. The first venue is the Change Institute at the May 2017 International Summer Institute on Students as Partners held at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The second is the May 2017 Pedagogic Partnership Conference held at Lafayette College in, Easton, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The third is the June 2017 RAISE International Partnership Colloquium held at Birmingham City University in Birmingham, England
Oxyanthus lewisii Sonke & O. Lachenaud. A. Fruiting 2016, spec. nova
Oxyanthus lewisii Sonké & O. Lachenaud, spec. nova (Fig. 4, 5). – Oxyanthus sp. B, sp. C in Sonké (1999: 97, 98). Typus: CAMEROON. East Region: près Mekomo, 8 km SW confluent Dja et Lobo, [3°14’N 12°22’E], 19.III.1962, fl. buds & fruits, Letouzey 4585 (holo-: BR [BR880499]!; iso-: BR [BR880466, BR880508]!, P [P 03907844]!, YA!). Oxyanthus lewisii Sonké & O. Lachenaud has fusiform fruits, resembling those of O. robbrechtianus Sonké, O. dubius De Wild. and O. speciosus DC. subsp. stenocarpus (K.Schum.) Bridson, but more narrowly pointed at apex than in these species. It further differs from O. dubius by the shorter calyx teeth (0.4-0.6 mm, not 3-4 mm) and bracts (1.5-2 mm, not 5-8 mm), from O. speciosus subsp. stenocarpus by the shorter and few-flowered inflorescences, and from both by the nerves sparsely hairy beneath and lacking domatia in their axils. From O. robbrechtianus, it also differs in the glabrous twigs and outside of corolla, the leaves symmetrical at base, and the orange (not red) fruits without longitudinal ridges. Shrub 1-2 m tall, with horizontal branches; stems glabrous. Stipules 4.5-12 X 2.5-7 mm, narrowly ovate with acute apex, glabrous, persistent. Leaves with petiole 0.4-1.2 cm long, glabrous to sparsely pubescent, and leaf blade 9-18.5 X 1.9- 8.5 cm, elliptic or elliptic-oblong; cuneate at base, acuminate at apex, glabrous above, sparsely and shortly pubescent on the midrib and lateral nerves beneath; lateral nerves 5-9 pairs, moderately to strongly ascending; tertiary veins rather densely reticulate; domatia absent. Inflorescences pseudo-axillary, one per branch and per season, very shortly paniculate, <1.3 cm long, glabrous, with 5-14 flowers (usually producing 1-3 fruits); peduncle absent or very short (to 0.2 cm), rachis <1. 1 c m. Bra cts s u b u l a t e, 1.5 -2 m m l on g, c i l i a t e. Flowers 5-merous; pedicels 1-2 mm long, glabrous. Ovary 1-1.3 mm long, glabrous. Calyx with tube c. 1 mm long and short subulate teeth 0.4-0.6 mm, entirely glabrous. Corolla only known in very young bud stage, c. 0.65 cm long; tube cylindrical, glabrous, c. 0.15 cm long; lobes narrowly lanceolate, c. 0.5 cm long X 0.1 cm wide, glabrous on both sides. Anthers smooth, linear, 3.6-4 X 0.1 mm, including a sterile apical appendage ± 1 mm long. Style ± 6 mm long, with a slightly swollen elongated stigma ± 2 mm long. Fruits orange, fusiform, smooth or slightly rugose but without longitudinal ridges, 3.8-6.5(-8) X 0.5-1.5 cm, gradually pointing into a narrow beak (0.2-0.4 cm wide at apex), glabrous, with accrescent pedicel 0.5-1 cm long and calyx usually deciduous. Seeds numerous, compressed, irregularly ellipsoid, 6-7 X 3-5 mm, the surface folded into numerous closely parallel ridges. Etymology. – This species is named after Prof. Simon Lewis, internationally renowned British ecologist (Chair in Global Change Science, Department of Geography, University College London) who made several expeditions in Cameroon with the first author, and constantly supported his research. Distribution and ecology. – Oxyanthus lewisii is sparsely distributed in southern Cameroon, northern Gabon, and eastern D.R. Congo in the Lower Guinea and Congolian Domains (Fig. 2). It appears to have a widely disjunct range, with a gap of over 1,000 km between the D.R. Congo locality and the rest of the range; similar disjunctions are known in other species, e.g. in Chassalia pleuroneura (K. Schum.) O. Lachenaud (Lachenaud & Jongkind, 2010). The species is apparently rare; it occurs in lowland forest between 380 and 750 m, at least sometimes in riverine or periodically inundated formations. Phenology. – Flower buds in March; fruits from December to April. Conservation status. – The EOO is estimated at c. 371,433 km 2 and the AOO as 20 km 2. The species is known from five locations, none of which are protected. Logging activities and deforestation for agriculture (and also for mining in the eastern part of its range) represent potential threats to the species. A decline in AOO, extent and quality of habitat, number of locations and number of individuals may therefore be expected, and Oxyanthus lewisii is assigned a preliminary conservation status of “Vulnerable” [VU B2ab(ii,iii,iv,v)]. Notes. – Oxyanthus lewisii is remarkable by the long fusiform fruits, which are somewhat variable in shape, being particularly narrow in Letouzey 4585 and Le Testu 9033, but distinctly broadened in the middle in Dauby et al. 2293. The only other taxa with fruits approaching in shape those of O. lewisii, although not so pointed at apex, are O. robbrechtianus Sonké, O. dubius De Wild. and O. speciosus subsp. stenocarpus (K. Schum.) Bridson. Oxyanthus lewisii differs from O. dubius by the shorter calyx teeth and bracts, from O. speciosus subsp. stenocarpus by the shorter and few-flowered inflorescences, and from O. robbrechtianus, it also differs in the glabrous twigs and outside of corolla, the symmetrical leaf base, and the fruits lacking longitudinal ridges. Oxyanthus speciosus subsp. stenocarpus also has a different habitat (submontane forests, 1000-2000 m). In the absence of fruits, O. lewisii might be confused with O. gracilis K. Schum., O. pallidus Hiern and O. subpunctatus (Hiern) Keay, all of which have the leaves fairly similar in size and shape, but either entirely glabrous beneath (O. pallidus) or pubescent only on the nerve axils (O. gracilis and O. subpunctatus). Paratypi. – GABON. Estuaire: Parc des Mts de Cristal, région d’Akoga, 0°51’50”N 10°29’53”E, 13.XII.2015, fr., Boupoya & Issembé 1211 (BRLU). Ogooué-Ivindo: Concession CEB, N de la Zone de Milolé, 2°14’55”S 12°44’19”E, 12.II.2010, fr., Dauby et al. 2293 (BRLU). Woleu-Ntem: Aloum [2°09’N 11°42’E], 14.III.1933, fr., Le Testu 9033 (BR). D.R . CONGO. South Kivu: Kingulube [2°39’S 28°02’E], fr., 15.IV.1959, A. Léonard 3872 (BR).Published as part of Sonké, Bonaventure & Lachenaud, Olivier, 2016, Two new species of Oxyanthus DC. (Rubiaceae) from Central Africa, pp. 173-180 in Candollea 71 (2) on pages 176-179, DOI: 10.15553/c2016v712a2, http://zenodo.org/record/572153
Monanthotaxis sterilis P. H. Hoekstra, Blumea 66 (1): 200 2021
<p>Monanthotaxis sterilis P.H.Hoekstra, Blumea 66 (1): 200, 2021</p> <p>Fig. 68; Map 9A</p> <p>Type.</p> <p> Gabon. Woleu-Ntem; on road from Mitzic to Lalara (N2), just after the bridge over the Lara, <i>Couvreur T.L.P. 869</i>, 15 Nov 2015: holotype: WAG[WAG.1575982]; isotypes: LBV; YA.</p> <p>Description.</p> <p> Scrambling shrub to liana, up to 6 m tall, d.b.h. up to 2 cm. Indumentum of simple hairs to glabrous; old leafless branches glabrous, young foliate branches pubescent with dense appressed to ascending reddish brown hairs 0.2-0.4 mm long. Leaves: petiole 2-4 mm long, ca. 1 mm in diameter, pubescent with appressed to ascending reddish brown hairs, slightly grooved, blade inserted on top of the petiole; <b>blade 9.1-15.2 cm long, 1.4-2.4 cm wide, linear to narrowly elliptic</b>, apex acuminate, acumen 1-2 cm long, base cuneate, papyraceous, below sparsely pubescent when young, glabrous when old, above glabrous when young and old, discolorous, whitish below; midrib depressed, above sparsely pubescent when young, glabrous when old, below sparsely pubescent when young, glabrous when old; secondary veins 15 to 20 pairs, almost perpendicular with midrib, straight, but curving halfway, glabrous above; tertiary venation percurrent, hardly visible. Inflorescences, flowers and fruits unknown.</p> <p>Distribution.</p> <p>A central African species, from Cameroon to the Republic of Congo; in Cameroon known from the Central and Littoral regions.</p> <p>Habitat.</p> <p>A fairly common species when present, but collected only twice in Cameroon; in primary and old secondary rain forests, along small streams, sometimes on sandy soils. Altitude 100-400 m a.s.l.</p> <p>Local and common names known in Cameroon.</p> <p>None recorded.</p> <p>Preliminary IUCN conservation status.</p> <p>Least Concern (LC) (Hoekstra et al. 2021).</p> <p>Uses in Cameroon.</p> <p>None reported.</p> <p>Notes.</p> <p> <i>Monanthotaxis sterilis</i> is distinguished by its linear or narrowly elliptic leaves and the secondary veins which are almost perpendicular with the midrib.</p> <p> The first author has seen this species numerous times across central Africa, either as a young sapling on the ground or a young liana, but was never able to find any flowering or fruiting material. The DNA analyses indicated that <i>Monanthotaxis sterilis</i> is most closely related to <i>M. pellegrinii</i> (see Hoekstra et al. 2018), with which it is very different in the leaf shape and venation.</p> <p>Specimens examined.</p> <p> <b>Central Region</b>: Mefou proposed national park Near Mefou town, 3.62°N, 11.58°E, <i>08 March 2004</i>, <i>Cheek M.</i> 11504 (K,WAG,YA). <b>Littoral Region</b>: Ebo Wildlife Reserve Djuma permanent camp On east trail, 4.36°N, 10.25°E, <i>15 February 2013</i>, <i>Couvreur T.L.P.</i> 628 (MPU,WAG,YA).</p>Published as part of <i>Couvreur, Thomas L. P., Dagallier, Leo-Paul M. J., Crozier, Francoise, Ghogue, Jean-Paul, Hoekstra, Paul H., Kamdem, Narcisse G., Johnson, David M., Murray, Nancy A. & Sonke, Bonaventure, 2022, Flora of Cameroon - Annonaceae Vol 45, pp. 1-532 in PhytoKeys 207</i> on pages 230-232, DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.207.6143
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Hen Frawcinct.. June 16,—
Por Palo AHo: Fwlr tatalgfft
latter ]fala Ata ite*
Prsgretil,,tn Istls-s,
*** Profrntlvf
Is Politics
Labor Saving Device
'll! KLKCTRIC UtOlta do ihe wwfc lhat w.wwlly take* sll
day -wee- a heat nm- Iu owe-qaaxtev the time, wMhorM i
t-etsffwe. Come In snd In as *how yea el the
■ uiMisi i i ..hum.
Vacation
Expenses
< make tttctw nl Ihe
Rebuilding Sale
**M. N. A M." HI tTK
"III TCIIf-jy PANTS
"l-:\ KKUKAlt" ll"**!:
WEDDING BELLS AT STANFORD ATHLETES PALO ALTO BOY
ALL SAINTS CHURCHTO REPRESENT WEST WINS COUNTY PRIZE
MIS*. IHO! Hih-JiV lllli.Mt*. VI Villi 1 IIP ll'.VI KMI V
op uomn.
untax.
PlTTHltt'ltti IN gl'KKT 111'
ll'iMH!**
i.lL.iln.l HiiIm.i *. (IP i*m 1
i<it.ii •*« iiiHii Tt'HVw |\ mc.
i I KM! i 1 KHHAV.
In order to dose out ihese lines
we will sell at cost the following:
TOV PI A SO*
TOYH
TRICVC1.RS
WAHONS—all »Im
WHKKlJlAltlloU*
ROCKING IIOIUiK*
VKLOC1PK1IRS
i.Mini \ IOOUI
Wli-e, Salr l*rt. ■** Ac- Ileal H>tlwg*.
CHILDRENS
IDS
Otfnrds aad -awndal* glvr
ililldrt-n foot freedom aed
I--.I comfort Ii* -ii in iime
weer. "ur Hm-* nf clill-
drew'* f nut weer sre well
mi'.I in baCh Mark and
1JCT t s PIIOPKRIA PIT
THK anUssUBTt WWWT,
^^vmtsT"
HAVE
11- ..ti your
CVBTAIN8 AND BI.ANKRTH
and rcdye yaws'
iM/tOWO CARPETS
Public Library Receives New Books
l.IHT (IP AIHHTIONH COMPIM4FI
MAIM.V DP FIITIOS
VOM'MKH.
Thr i.,ii-p» mc new hook* have
rect-ivi-d al thi- public library and
will be put ouj for regular ctrcala-
tloa:
Athertoii.
Splendid Po
llarop. M
1>
Ci-rtnide The
The lltngri
K..1.-1... ItutkliiNt it. High *-l..-rf ll..*-i«.-. Maae-t-s*. U).,«... aed IV- I Ul. " \l.edt*-l|.i,i aed (time" \t.|, In-
Ha*-a Ha* It* lts|*py Cwlmlna- it, Hun tetter t
ii.h. la M-rrUta.-. (Nymple (1
Yiwterday at the wltrhlna hour. Ki.ur n
he-ii iBiidli-* sre nrst llahicd. he-j the Cardl
re ihe altar of Ihe beautifully dec- Ihe rladei
orated All Saint* Kpl*c*>|ial Church, in,** leal
i-n, who havr rrpr*-*Muti'd
■,.! In fin in,'i season* on
path, wilt accompany (he
i ol lhe Olymptt Club of
t.i.'i.. I T. 1 .-ti ..1 '.I (he class nflgsn 1'u.in i-... on (heir irip i
111-1 of aundird I'nlveniliyy* and i hurt. Pa., the scene of the
311a* Alice Jackson of/Pelt, Allot American track aud Held champion
were -inlted tn lhe holy bonds of. ship* which I* io take place Ihcr
mstrimonr i on the days of Jun.- ao snd July I
tin. n iht* li.ii* slsle, with utfti* .' Tin- men who are lu make (he trl;
nt luiiii,»i and su*i-inl"1 baskets
of sweet |teas lo *oflen the austerity
of ihe solemn edifice, the bride,..,., ,„
a„.,,r.l In r.qal.li.lv ..mtroldantfl "",,1.*™*;
ier Ions "'', fa|tenrd
lag
mm the lo,'.! university'with the
elty organisation sre flam Ilellah
Oeorgr llorlne, Charle* Morris and
nf • Hoi
Ilalruer. K slid Mm tiara The
Aehlevemepi* ot Kutber Tranl.
ilrrhdnli. P H. The Hard Itock
Man
riaantl Knne-h Aintrtd -The Old
Wire*' Tales.
Ilrsinard, Kleanor lloytl—
sonsl Conduct of Hellnda
Cai.fl.-ld Chsunrey L ttt
ot Six
Day, Holman Francis- -The* Itani-
rodder*
i. lhbe.tr I*. -Salvater,
Oreene. 1I--A Lincoln Conscript.
Hay. Ian■- The Right Stuff.
Hopkins. W. i Tl,. Meddling*
of Kve.
Howell*. William Dean—A II*.
srd of New Fortunes
MeP.rlatie. Arthur' Rmersnn
Itesdni-t MrOaw.
n***d.Myrtle -Plowrr or the Du*k
Vanre. W J —Big John Baldwin
Walls. Mary Stanberry—Nathan
llurkc ,
Wemyss. Man ■'(*. The Profea
sloast Aanl.
by j .ntonei of mange* btosaom*. snd
iin.int * ah il a at bouquet or lilies
of iti,' mllf-f. ws* i-onduelod by her
fiUher, W II. Jackson. Tbe maid of
honor. Miss Ha-el John*on of Ihe
Alpha Phi Sorority of Htanford.
gowm-il In embroidered mrwaallne
.iter i-i nl. satin, and carrying pink
rat.i t.i preceded tbem At the
altar the iroom, accompanied by Mr.
Art*'Hollenstelner. and their g be-
lov.-tl i,itot. Dr. liavtd Ifiraoa. wbo
was to proclaim Ihem man and wife,
awatlt-d them.
' Following lhc newty-msrrled pair
frniu Hi-, church "were the fsther
and miu her of the bride. Mr. and
Hi w H. JaCkfanii. old i> 'id- ii'^
of' Palo ' Alio, the parents of Ihe
arot.in. Proft-tajuir I., ft. l^enoi. .-wt-
IiiF*!-**il ot ihi* cbi-nitsiri .di-pari-
ni, •.i nl Stanford, and bl* wife.
Hartley Jackson, brother ot lite
.LfV- arfah Ml** Kthei tiaiei. af tm
.i...I- an Ms arm. and other tm nil- r*
of the fsnill).
Tiu- bride rome* from the isroily}
of the Isle liiils-- 3- > Robinson., j.
ta.-H km.ot, Ih ibe early lenat circle*'
..I Kan 1'ii.tn Is'i.. snd land coniniltv
-i.in.-i for'Hie state or California
for more iban tv(*pt} years, aDd 1 has** ■ fcai
her grandmother, wife «*r Jwel«*-| (j^ ||(j-
Hi'llah captained the 1*11 (rack
it-am and ha* made himself a factor
In former Intercollegiate mntr»t* by
i.titiiiuit work In ii.. iHile vsuli and
1.1,..nl lump. Ite will be entered In
lhe**e* event* si the eaatern meei,
aad ll la Ihoaghl that br wtll be dell
wllhln (be polni* for bl* team.
Oeorga llorlne. who I* a local boy.
hold* lhe record of the Pacific roast
lu tbe hlgb Jump snd Is Jolnl holder
of the world's In term I leg late record
In ihi* same* event. HI* bet trial
over Ibe bar Is six feet and (our
Inches. It I* e-preled ;hai he ttlll
equal or betief tht* mark ai ibr
eastern meet, and In cither rvrni I*
'. H.iiii or raptnriaa nr*t plan- for(
Mara m.sii.i. i-..
"Alrobollam and Crime, "tlhe 4s**.,
say wrlllen by (leonte il.,.)*-,
which won «r*t prise o( lie'la lb*
prise eonlest nf (be W C T 9, IB
thi- local hiah school, hs* also beer
swarded Ihe first prlie of fill in the
roanly roniest
Th* eawsy .IH a,,, be ll. Una- lor
ihe Mala pit-,- ot lr-. and If aaaln
successful will be colored In (he national cnmpelltlon The- worth' dt
Hedges' essay le clearly aileated by
the fat in with which It ha* been
looked ii|ton hy Ihe ludge* of Ih* con-
leal*. The writer alarta hi* manuscript by declaring "The people ef
the Palled Slate, are pfUiag abhat
one hundred million di.li/.f. ''more
ror Ittiunr-tthl* year than last —the
total Is sori.i-thlns oyer iwo bllHoa*
of dollar* * We pay"more' fnr stetv
hflllc berrrsges by a hundred millions lhan for meal, whlrh rant*
second In the 11*1 of ei|ieiidtlure*.
Alcoholic* lead lhr list Crtmr fn-
rf-a*aatja In s like manner. Alcohol-
Ism and crime are not conducive to
-|iritgree*, Ihey are detrimental to
rlvlriiallmt Therefore- air..hull.in
and crime U a, <ine*lfnn '*lf.. ilng the
fatoee of^ihu counir?-. snd a*, such
I* worthr «f Inv'esilsstlni, \Whol-
Ihlll
I. ll
In ,
Had
Charles Morris Is well hlto. n in
Palo Aim for 'hi* work en lhr ut,t-
rertgt} track, snd also aa a nn-mlVe-i
of the fariilly at lhe local high
*. Ikii'I Morrl*. although a,graduate of Ibe university, hs* r^nialned
ta arihe irstnlng during u>o*i „t
hi* absrnc from lhe Hisnfnrd oval
and he U -aguaCtad In show In ciin.l
advantage In lhr high snd tow hur-
ree-ard of li;2 will place
him s* a contender for flrst piece,
ttyiiian. the lasl of lhe fjuarlei. will
appear In trie ijusrie-r mil-, and will
ird lash before him In tsk-
plaee from ibe field of fs*i
eaiii-n.er* who are to fare Ibe iai«-.
a* many of these n.-goilaie ihe dli
ltolilnMin. graced the occasion by!
bar prect ni-r Following Ibe fatuity
and aa*eiuhled (rk-nd* were the.,____ _ ,,
asm ua ,-.»„. ,-.,n. L'"°" "M *—• "" -'•"•e* *
Hnbert and Alfn-d Marlt-11 nf Mountain View, wbo hale been 1it« long
friends of the groom. _
Los Altos Bargain
Two lots, ".'ill': each, on Third
stte.'t. donated hy the Alios Ijind
Company for beneftt of \a* Alto*
School District: sidewalks, curb*
snd waler all In. l<ou ara listed at
li'-.' emeh. Money needed to cancel
debt of former school trusleee. Will
be offered at tbe low price of
600.00
Tltl'RMIIAV. PHIDAV.
SATt'RDAV
PHAXdH DAlim f%3.
'■• HUck «In artiata and trick
■ bieyclr i'hIHil;
11"l -1 AND I*OT. O ,■-.:;... «JjW
et( lot M*t-UV—
$^00.00
THE J. 3. MORRIS UPAI. llsivii:
niMi-iM.
1»0 1 alvcrslty Anwar. Fate Alia.-
4 Reels Changed Nightly
tUmis-alOM ac aad 10c.
Perft^enruu-ce Start* 7 tr..
Sater-Uy*. T:.ti).
FAMED CHERRY TREE
IS BLOWN DOWN
Csldwril, K ). June u-Tbc
rSarllett ..* heart cherry tree at Rose-
1..H.I. planted during, tlir Rcv.,lHti.ni-
-r, tt^t b] Jotiah Ha.tlctl. one trf the
itcnen f the tiecl-rjlioo nf Inde-
,_as,t,,..,_ WJ. .rapped ott by Ihr wind
storm ol the last 24 hour*. Thc tree,
f.l in.irr 1I1-11 ij feet in circumference,
wa* ..tie of the 1110.1 anted l-imliti ■■'■ ■
in iiii, M-e-tior. of lhc country
The shorn dipping was handed in
by our fire thi.f. (*,enr«r Bartlett,
Who (bitn* llic faaMBI cherry tree
wa. pfawtad '■■> hh ...i.e.mr. wh.-.
unlike George Washington, did not
cut down thi rherr* (ree with hit
hatchcl. ;;rnl ,ni> gnabgr*' **c nia> in
leT that on cmrrgrnry. Ive w-* able
M prevaricate te. beat the band tin
fire chief w». named O-ectrge 3. »n
,-fTs, 1 to thi* tendency.
1 The (im-tif-ii>wii gue*i* and rel-
I stive* who were present a* lhr rere-
titony were Profewsor and Mrs, I.. R.
:.e-ii" of leos Alios. Mrs. A. 0.
'ItKittipwKi of Mountain View, Mr.
[ Hartley Jackson of Bsn Joae. Mrs. 8.
Itobitis-.ti ML... Kdllb snd MabrI
j IlobttiMin aad Mi
j Frulfrate. Mr and Mra. .htm.
j Itoblnmn ot Ssn Krsnclaro. Faln-r
[Johnson of Ran Joan, W. a Joha-
aoa o( San Ju«- Mrs. tt A Itohln-
! son Of l.o» (lain* aad Mia* Kihel
j Haiclt nf San Jose,
J Professor J. M. SHIlman and fani-
■ Uy cabled eohgraiu lal Ions io the
■ voung people from IHJo.. iVtaare,
a* did Dr Hat id Starr Jordan from
San DIi'ko
Mr*. 1-eno* wa* a ntem)*er at Ihl
elan of 1911 at tba Palo Alto High
School, graduating from lhr iwliuol
In lhal year. She ha* made msny
friends In Pslo Attn during bit rt-*l-
iNH here by her geniality and
wtneleg manner Mr. lacnoi gradu-
sred with Hie same rlsss at high
school and eatored sianford OBfeort-
sliy wllh the lh* rls*a nl .1913.
Whll- si Ihe unlvrnlty Mr. I.»n..i
has haadt*-i thr phOUggs^hj for
the studeni publication* on the
campus He la well known In Palo
Alto for ht* good humor and fine*
character
man's best lime wa* made at the
tonfi-rrnrr m«el held al Cbb-ago In
lU.i, when be placed second to
Hnt.-tiport who ran Hie ill.lam .■ In
till Wyinsn * time In ihls m.-,-r
was Bgured at 49: l.
The meet 1* to be held under lhr
au*j*fr#* of Ihe American Athldle-
t'nlon. and (hoae who nu-lif'. al
■ hi* lime will represent tbe 1,'nM'd
State, at the world's ch*mptun*hlp
Robinson ol, which I* to be held si Sto*kholm In
If a percentage of crime I* (raresble*
(o alt-otioU-ai. aleobolUni 1* then
doubly a rurae." Mr. Hodge* Ihen
iatnoaMrataa thai Irom pollca-rer-
....I- rapOfla from penlienUsrles.
and from alatrntrnl* by prosecutor,
slid |udges |t est. easily be aaen
thvt al-f.ni ID (ier cent of .time la
dlrpritv due In nI...Iioll.in In concluding be say*
"Thai alcohollam I* reapoaalble
for aboat *a per cent of crime, that
saloons aid In the diffusion of vice,
that brewer* and r.'taller* are responsible for murh corruption of
goTTBmrut* aad murb civic r.-ttrn-
ness. hs* been lhr c-ndearor ,sf this
essay to show. Aflcr coiiNlderlng
the fact* presented, unr who I* In- -
lerested In Ihl* country should re*
allre- that tn order lo derelop to the
fflllesl eitent. io produce ihe beet of
which we are capable. Ihe saloon
and Ihe liquor traffic must go Wllh
ii will go. wholly or In part, many
of ihe Important end perplexing
<iti-.iii,n* whif-ii wn havr lo solve,"
Itll
The teem which I* to represent
Ibe San Ptanrtsco club In Ihe nut
will leave tn the near fulure with
Hit- rrillosliiK pe-nuiniicl
Ralph Rose.' shot put.
171 Ib-eeoB. hurdles, high Jump.
He-urge llorlne. high lump.
''ti a rlr* Morris, hurdles.
■ K. P. Campbell, sprints,
0 Snedlgar, broad Jump, sprlnl*.
1 MrCaulry. quarter mile.
Sam Rellah. pole vault, broad
Jump.
Hill Wyman, quarter mile.
Pete Gerbardl (captain 1. apslni*
Y. P". Campbelf. quarler mil*-.'
XI Plsw itsmm-r (brow
Atnong (he new rot!
a( Sianford Pnlverwlly
will he onr In Jfiaprrantr
fewsor A I.. Cm-rsnl ef
Innguaais fli-p,irttii*-iii *
raphy snd typewriting 1
(len -repsrirerni. t: a,
nlrni Jordan's secretary
charge of Hi.- ti * i!-*h
w^ll offer s similar rnu
pupil* of (he 'local tTigh
rwes offered
nett term
- undrr Pro-
ihe KoRianlc-
rid "te-nng- '
1 <hr ed.ura-
Clark. Pree-
. will has*
Mr Clark
irse'to the
arhool
p.l 1
''lr,
yesterday afternoon, when a horse
tied to a post near the station be-
i-miii*- MrMrnrd ai onArf lhe train*
The animal broke* away from Ms
ml t ■in*-, tn ar slop In front
of |-au*ten's tsllortog -eslsbllahment.
. , after overturning Ihe light rig and
Immediately folio-lug the m»t-|)Wflffilw . ,„,,,„, |0 ',b„ htronM
rl.ge the*- was a reception at the | M^ fpom a ^^ ^ im^
home of the bride'* parent* al llllj ^^ n(J- at resulted from tbe
Pryanl street, where ibe ejAgulBceal mfl^
You eaa play sale la -that fust
question if yon base 1*8 supply you.
There * not the slightest chance of
vou being supplied anything but the
cleanest kind of coal (bat will glre I
the msxlnram beat with the en-all-sT j
Imaginable eonsumptloD of fuel. 1
Prompt delivery, raarteona serrlce
and lbs lowest market price. .1
W. O. HorsAI(l>
PtMtwe 4KIX. 4*7 High Street.
e-yllectlctn of brtd-fi pre-emt* from sll1
over the'world wa* lp be seen. Mr.
and Mr* t>-uo> departed on tlie'
■K.iitlitMJitiiil Southern Pacific (rain
for e fortnight'* weddlag trip, after
which ihry will be at home at 'ihelr
beautiful rouniry place near I^m
Altos.
Novelty Theater
THK I AM II.V lll.MIKI
nkw picrt-Raa' i
-TeraatUy, ThMf-dwy, l*siardsy,
. Sunday .
tti>T of thk uunn
A . l.l CI tOfU**.
Of disfii*iI.- latenaliy.
THP MASIIilti: I.AMI
lllograpb corned;.
AND TWO OTHKR RSKIJI
Hear
MHW }JH\IS Y VI.I.l.'N
.Fspert PtsaJet.
Mglil MV - ■■■..■■■ >
'tsetardsy \lcM fflUL
. A good lime will be enjoyed lo-
nlghi )>* the friends and member*
or Palo Alio Cj-uip No. ,flt. Woodmen of lb* World, at Fraternity
Hall. The evealng will be spent in
dancing and It I* espected Ihsl a
large gathering will he preeeni
CLEAR FINISH
Santa Fe Lumber Company
0002
DAILY PALO ALTO TIMES, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 191*.
PAGE THREE
WOOD
AT
WORRELLS
FUEL
FEED
i'hos'e as.
BUY COAL NOW
I Governing Council of
Recreation Body
Has Meeting
PLAYGROUND ASSOCIAT'N
, ADOPTS CONSTITUTION
AND BYLAWS.
Test Case Made in
Palo Alto Gas
War
R COMMISSION DEMURS
TO JURISDICTION OF
COUNTY COURT.
Tho governing council of the new Judging from
:lV
srguments
Pslo Alto Playground Aasoclstionj msde this week la tbe case ot the
jheld s meeting In Scout| IUVH«Mi Palo Alio Gas Company against
[night for the purpose ot completing -John at. JCsbelroan. snd Ihe other
I orgsnlsstlon. The full list of on-! members of the rsllroad commti.
I cers and committees will not ha'slon. It 1. tin- Intention of both side,
'made public for several days. butl° Disk, a lest case of Ihe anion,
the constitution, adopted at the; The ...It came up before Superior
.meeting In Ihe Baptist Church Sep-1 Judge Rlrhsrds In San Jose Wed-
jtember Ulth. 1. printed In full be-;ne.dsy on s demurrer offered by the
.low.
rsllrosd comtiiis.lon.
rno.wa .7.
BOVKRNMKNT DiaPBUlBJI
■Baaiuaaiin nun
a. Mas
Stanford Meat Co
*M Ualvenasr Am ll
DKUCACUSw. rdlLTM.
Frejh flih ererj Friday
ELITE MARKET
MI'llKI A l-llll.l-ll-*-*
Pritprielors.
Phone 7. 218 I'nieenlt) A.r
Inspected meats. No. 1 grads
hams and bacons. Ash. poultry and delicacies.
Pbone S91. S8S t'nlvefwlty Ar.
Palo Alto Market
Iwandwen A a-nnlrs^..
Our Meals are the Best.
OUR PRICE IS RIGHT
Week's Poultry Ranch
will sup, your table wltn efeelet
■ Ilk -fattened poultry, dreeeed ens'
trussed, ready to rook, and delivered
to your door. Order over pkoas
774X. Ranch located on Hamlltes
extension. Palo Alto.
[ Any cltlxen of Palo Alto Is ellgl-' '* "*'■■■ I*-*- recnllrd that the city or
[ble to membership, and the dues areJPt-lo Alto held a special etectlon. at
jll a year. Miss R, T. Greene Is: which It was decided to place the
i secretary of the association. Fol- wetter of fixing rates for gas in this
j lowing Is the -ronstltution: '"■'>' lD th'' hands of the state rail-
Article I. { road commission. In accordance
* This association shall be called "**Hh an act or the legislature per.
'the Palo Alto Playground Assorts- niitting ihe same. This action fol*
: tlon. ■;. I **M! lowed the action of the city council
Article II. °- ''•■'" Alto In passing an ordi*
The object of this association! nance fixing the rates that should
'shall be: b**' char-ted for this year, this last
Section 1. To establish and main- ordlnanre being In conformity to
tain playgrounds In Palo Alto. Keneral ordinance prescribing that
Sec. 2. To serve as a medium such nctlon should--be taken at the
among the different social element*, bealnnlug of cmtfn year,
of the city tor bringing about a When the voters elected to place
more Intelligent and systematic un-.*he matter In tbe hands of the rail-
demanding of their mutual obllga- road commission, the fas company
tions. brought suit in tit-- superior court.
Article III. alleging that 11 had no plain, speedy
f Tbe membership or this nssocia-; or adequate remedy at law. and
tlon shall consist of persons who asking this court to enjoin any such
shall contribute to the fund of the Tansnctlon snd to restrain the com-
association the sum of $ *, or more mission from fixing or attempting to
per annum. n** *■'•**" rates and declaring the
Article IV rate* fixed by ordinance In force tin-
' Sort Ion 1. There shall be a gov- til the commencement or next year.
cnilng council r.uisl»tlng of fifteen' To ibis rontpla.ni the raldroad
members and such other members] coin mission demurred, and thla do-
as shall be added to It In accord- niurrer w«* argued by Mr. Chloker-
ance with section :' or this article. li*K of the firm or Chh-kerlng A
At the meeting or the association at Gregory ut **an Francisco and Max
which this ^institution shall be Thel-n. representing Ihe , railroad
adopted a council of fifteen ntem- commission.
hers shall be elected. At Ihelr first Theli-n •> demurrer hinged on the
meellna tho members of the coun-; Point that this court has uo Jurls-
cll shall divide themselves by lot dirt Ion over the railroad commission
Into three classes The first class! »nd that the proper course for the
shall comprise five members. who'n*-s compsny to take Is to go before
shall hold office for one year: the 'he commission Itself and make Its
second class shall comprise five' statements of fart and law. and
members, who shall bold offlce fori'hen.- In the event It 1. decided
two years; tho third class shall ngalnsi. I" I'-k the supreme court of
coi-.pr.s-. five members, who shall ■»•* *-*■*• to review IU nctlon.
hold office for three years'. Tbere-j -*>■ ('nickering argued that when
after the terms of office of all mem- fato Alio fixed by ordinance the
l-ers ot the council shall he—Ititt*.•«•-*■ *°* ■* '■*■■• tbni eas a eunlreet.
years. At each annual nuN'tlng all Inasmuch as It was mandatory on
vacancies by expiration <»f term shall •,1" ■■"rt ''■ lll(,'"»» en-many to fur-
he filled by Ihe iis-.oci-ltion The ■*•*•'■ «»■ "' ■** "•<"■• or forfeit Its
council Itself shell have power lo franr-hlsf. mid that for n year both
api-oint persons to Oil unexpired',t"' *■■--■ end the ass corporation
terms 1 w,'rv ■•*n''"id by the term* Imposed.
Wilson Women Will'
Convene at San
Luis Obispo
ANNUAL CONVENTION OF
WOMEN'S DEMOCRATIC
LEAGUE.
Frenchl.aundry
st. al. I\iurn:i.i»
Wv—m Ave and lsajwoaa s:
The first women's political convention ever he+d In the I'nlted
States will convene next Tuesday,
October Stb. at San l.uls Obispo. On
that date tbe California Women's
Democratic league will hold Us
state convention to last two days.
The organization is statewide.
embracing all counties which havej
affiliating county leagues'. The
headyuarters are at Los Angeles.
The leader of the California women
In the fight for Wilson ts Miss Mary
Foy of Los Angeles, organiier of
th*- laegjtH and now its first president. The secretary of tbe league
Is Mrs. imogene Huey. also of I-o*
Angelea.
- One of the notable features of I
the convention will be the presence
of Mrs. Gertrude Atlierton ot San
Francisco, . who will deliver addresses on "Our Friends—tho Enemy" and "Woodrow Wilson." Other speakers will be: Mrs. Mary
Kiln Hldle of San Luis Obispo: Miss
Mary K. Foy, president of the
league, Los Angeles; " Mrs. Ellin
P. L. SEAMANS
THE LEADING JEWELER
largest and Moat Complete SI.hJ
Ever I'mugM to Palo Alto.
Osdy Knf-r.-T.-r Id Palo Alto,
What We Bay It Is It la.
All (...Liu ttngraved Free.
Tupper Wilkes. Iam Angeles;
Mr.
Jame* 11 .llolohan, Watsonville.
LAST
Excursions
EAST
At Low .'ii.es
Oclober 9, 10. 11,
12, 13
Final return limit November 15 th. 1912
WEIGH OPK OOAL
Henry Hawson. ' Fresno; Senator ^and you'll And a ton weighs 2,000
pounds without the driver. Just a
ton of coal, nothing else. This Is
the best time to buy coal. We are
In a position to know, for w« have
looked over tba Held, "letter let as
011 your wants now.
Southern Pacific
Time Table.
(In effect September 15. 1915 )
TO BAN FRANCISOO.
No-
SS— I:tS a.m. dully except Sun.
.1 ■ l.'SI am. dally.
4"— C: SO a.m. dally except Sun.
1"— 6:3~i a.m. dally.
89— 6:58 a.m. dally except Sun.
41— 7:15 a.m. dally except Sun.
43_ 7*17 a.m. dally.
4t>— s ni a.m. dally except Sun.
47— 8:37 a.m. dally. *
It— »:13 a.m. dally
t: Id: IS a.m. dally except Sup.
17 —11:31. am. dally.
49—12:02p.m. dally.
tl— 2:19 p.m. dnlly.
23— 3:01 p.m. dally,
i *' p.m. dally.
LOW COLONIST
RATES FROM
THE EAST
September 25 to Get.
10, 1912
For particulars and rates, write
E. Shillirgsburg
Disl. Passgr. Agt., San Jose, i a..
or W. J. ROBERTSON. Agent.
Palo Alto
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
t 1'HtH-STf-HUNC- *lNi) llKl'MKlNfl
Awnings, Window Shades, H-wsw
Rods. Etc. Agency ror 8aa Joe)
Rug Works
M. C. FORDIA. W. MILLS
BI5 llamltloa Avenue. n.■« University Ave rhoiw .4.1
Storage
PAtUsUIQ OAiES FOI, SMI II v..-.;Ha* Fl.BKITVRE, PtAHOe
AMI KRKKIIIT HOVKII.
Palo Alio Transfer & Storage Co.
I1FFIOK IOI CIRCLE.-^ I'll.ink gw
IS
i . -■ p.m.
SUIHNKK'S ROMifMAIIB
.-mil'
A I'.l- Alio Article.
a. w. la mill- a sun.
Sec. 2
The council .hall organ-;
Holt, s.tornrj-s presented author!.
r.- r ir j. ^.
B9- fi:*3 it.m,
SI — G: f.S p.m.
*7 s 09 p.m.
r.l - 9:.7 p m.
gS —10:.'.7 p.m.
d.llv
■mnr.
Sail*.
dally,
ilnl)-.
Su.idar onlr.
dally.
Sebastopol
Call at my office and get new
Illustrated booklet of thla good
.•ountry.
John F. Byxbee.
lot 1 itii.n Ave., Palo AM.*. CkvL
TRY POLAR.NK HEAVY oe
Ot'B SPECIAL APTO OIL
tor sntomoblte Inbrlcauon. Vet
sale on!*- ny tne
G. H Allen Oil Co.
AM) High atrwas, ralo AkSw
Paid Gold Dividends.
(Hy fnlt.^1 Press 1
Tai-nms. Wayh.. lie. .1—a
thoush raptults^ f'.r I...I ISO 00
:-.:.<"i ('ompany
.................a...!!!..
An i iM'.iiii 1, Aim CAB. i
RIAOB I'AI.VTKR
HERMANN DOSE .
MONOGRAMB AMI SlllVg j
rys nigh at. Pbosw aatx ]
C II. BAIIOM
BICYCLES, ( stlllMI MACHlNBi
v.wrni i-i.kaxkri
Sold. Repatrce, BorKsL
Vacsrasa drawers for rent, 91 . Oar
.aa High atvswa. Fhoa. atai
In. l.v clcrllag a president, wtio.!'™ In "ui'l-orl ol their t-onlentloaa.
shall als.i I..- prasldmt ot 111. »»«v Sli'l Ut. iirsi.ni.-.il» «.-.-..n.paliVlnB
clallon: Ih.-y .lisll also sled a e.^*'1^ llreaentatlon war. very ahle In
relary and s tr.asorar. These out- chsract.r. i '"HI
cers. If nol already member, ot tba- J"*"' 111'bards look Ihe msllef
council, shall become members upon;undrr »dv!-ero<-nt.
Ihelr election, snd .hall continue to. g
be members while they bold office
All officer!, elected "by the' council
shall hold office for onr year, unless
el.-i-i.-d 'o fill nn unexpired tern..
I Sec. S. The council shsll hsve
Ihe power of prescribing Ihe bylaws |ho 'John
snd rule, under which Ih. work of Som|d dl»M.nd, ,„ em„
the sssoclatlon Is csrrled on 11 ,„„; „r ,,„, |0 lhl. „m„ull, „, ,,<,,.
shall have Ihe direction of sll com-; ol)„ or ,„ |)er C(,n| or „. ,.a|,llol
, mlltecs nnd of llie Onsnccs of .he: ,tock .rcordlng to lh„ ,dmlsi.lon
j assoelallnn. snd shall make an an.-, mad,. „|M)n tho .„„.„ „,„,! „,d,r
nual report lo Ihe aasodatlon. rb, joh„ „ nullock. president or
( See. 4. The annual meeting ot, ,h<| concern, on trial h.re wllh
■ he association shsll be held on the Ch,r]„ E nou„on „f ,„« PaelBe
second .Thurwday In September ot,Coa,t CoSI Companr. charged with
each year Al that meellng th. an-|fon>ul„c), ,„ defraud th« gorora-
nual report bf the council shall !»;„,,„, |„ coll contract, for coal at
; presented, wllh such other raports; Alsskan army posls.
i as msy be called for. and members Hullork. during a severe cross-
|ot Ihe conncll shsll be elected. 8pe--Mamln,„on conduflrt by Swlsl
I Hal meetings of Ihe aasoclstlon mar j Aaslstant Attorney General Town-
|be held at Ihe call of the president. ,Mnd d.rlarwl „ „„, ,„„ tbc r„m.
| and such cnll must be Issued at th.i pnn>. d,d „„, deo!arc an). ,ucn dlv|.
request of any .live member, of the|dend, bu[ ,,„, „,d Ihat hc had
I council. | ml.understood Townsend as lo tbe
Article V. . Tw,r mentioned and that his coo-
Twenty members of tbe sssoels-.^n, had ,„ ,,08 „a,d lhe aam mfa.
tlon shall form a Quorum for the tjoned.
transsctlon of business.
Article VI. '
This Constitution msy be smend-
ed by a two-thirds vote of tbe members present at any regular or special meeting of the assoclstlon, the
proposed smendment to be asnt byjstan government has recently en-
msll to sll members at least one;gsged the services of sn up-to-date
week previous to the meeting stl press sgent for iu army Is strongly
which the smendment Is to b. voted j suspected from the chsrscter of an
npon. Item appearing In a number of Per-
CITV
Garbage Co.
L. FOBBOII
A postal will arlaa
th. manager tc
yo-'r addrtw, al
ouoa. Oar address
Is P. O. Bex .si
r>io Ait*.
Russian Girl Would Fight
iny Polled Pre., >
Teherso. Oct, 3.—Thst the Rus-
The City Stables
hare mov*d to the comer of Hamilton avenue and High street. The
same first-class service and more
S. J. Par-sons. & W. Hi
room. Phone <S.
F. W. Sherman
Upholstering and
Repairing
497 WehMa-T ot.
tstan newspapers.
j It tells how the beantlful Terdo-
kla Yoletaeva of the Ijidoaheskaya
district, "tall, lithe, supple of muscle, a dating rider, a crack shot,
an accomplished horsewoman," petitioned the colonel of the local
Cossacks for permission to enlist as
sn ordinary trooper In view of the
regiment's forthcoming departure
for Tabriz.
Very politely and considerately,
runs tbe tale, the colonel refused
the girl's offer, bnt complimented
her patriotism.
PROM RAN FRANCISCO.
No. - -
a'4— r,:32 a.m. dally.
32— 7:30 a.m. dnlly.
2S-- 8:04 a.m. dally except Snn.
il 9:09am. dally. Pae. Grove
via lx>s Gatos and Sante Crui
24— »:64 a.m. dally, 8. L. Ohlspo
88—-11:60 a.m. dally.
10—12:43 p.m. dally.
90— 2:27 p.m. Saturday only.
Tor San Jose.
28— ■: '■• l* ni dal.y. Stops for pgr
for points beyond Ssn Joes.
42— 3:06 p.m. daily. -•'
62— 3:31 p.m. dnlly except Sun.
30— 3:1)1) p.m. dally.
M—- 4:16 p.m. dally.
44— 4:22 p.m.
41— '■ "' !'«■. dnlly except Sun.
48— »■ i ' ;• in. dally txcept Son.
U0— 4:28 p.m. dally except Sun.
:.'.'— 6:46 p m. dally.
6<— *:fi8p.ni. dally except Sun.
it— 7:32 p.m. dally.
10— 9:12 p.m. dally.
r,-_ ii :i-ie p.m. dally.
40—12:47 a.m. dally.
K. S. Jordan
OIAMONI) TlltK.*.
Ag<-ntS **:...:.:...I., r (1 k.ihI. r.i
".IO" and Itninl.li r Motor Car
W. Waltert
EVERYTHING IN
AUTO SUPPLIES
from lamps for the front
to iii .ni-i' tags for the
bach, from tires Ihat touch
Ihn i'ii ni..I to tools that
help keep your car from
going up in tho al£ Even
If you think your car fully ■ .|iiiii *'tl, better romn
In and look around. There
1h always,, something new
to be m-en hero.
■MON.MOIIILK" Olt*.
'*-±0." Stuib l.*kee (K. K. P.)
Jordan & Walters Garage
524 High Street Phone Palo Alto 24!
Ilt'lWON JEWKI.RY STORB
First-Claas Jewelry
First-Class Repairing
. Kirst-L.
Br*. Ki.minfcl. I ..... I.aphcl.d
BY
L. H GOWELL. OPT. D.
OPTOMETRIST—OPTICIAH
ON THE CIRCLE
Better Service
Two Telephones
691 - 692
BIXBY & LILLIE
HIGH GRADE GROCERS
Students' Dancing Class
Miss Lewis
will reopen the students' evening
class In dsnclng Friday. September
20th, 8 o'clock. In Fraternity Annex
sunlit. T.'iO Cowper St. Phone 604T
Smith's Stables
Now at -IIKI High Htreet-
Oppoeite Jewel 'ni.-ater.
PHONE 79.
Fresh Shipment
"Watsonville Fancy
Belleileur Apples
PARTINGTON & PETERSON
or*t-ri v fiitiH-r-ita
—j, aao llamllloo Stcou... p. o. Bkl
2
PROGRESSIVES WILL
MEET IN CHICAGO
•NEW YORK TO PROHIBIT
EMPLOYMENT OF BABES
IN CANNERIES.
Typhoon in Philippines Kills
Hundreds—European War
Situation Is Improving.
ft) t'mtlsl Pro*
Waahington. D. C. Nov. !».—
Senator Dixon announces tbat Col
en*, lloosevell will certainly attend
'hi* Progressive conference In Chicago on December 10-11. Ind lhal
•Governor Johnson may also be prss-
taal. The conterence will name an
• ...ciinvi- committee and also a committee lo draft a aerie* or hill* de-
flgned to fulfill the platform pledge*
regarding social and industrial Jus
tic*, which th* Progressive psrty
caucus In congress will support. The
conference will also consider ways
and means or conducting the Progressive propaganda during the next
four ysars.
Halite* l.ni|il..>i-.l In '**nn*f-!e**.
Hew York. Nov IB.—The New
York legislature will consider drastic legislation to abolish lbe employment ol babies In atate canneries
and *f women In Iron foundries. The
chairman of ihe com mission io Investigate conditions nf workers In
tbe fariorte* saya the report will be
ready January 1*t and will reeom*
mend remedial legislation Mlas
Mary Chamberlain, who haa had *>'".,,
Investigation In charge, swear* that!
children aged five years ar
ployed
CELERY YIELD IS !SAN FRANCISCO MAY TWO NEW STANFORD
NOTABLY LARGE
OVER i.mm.000 POUNDS IS
SHIPPED FROM PALO
ALTO STATION.
Typhoon VI*"!* Itilllppln—.
Washington, Nov .:> Oabla dl*-,
patches received todav from thn bureau of Insular affair* at Manila report that probably ]:••■••• people
were kilted and sounded In a ty-
. iili.nm thai swept tbe Philippine
Islnnds Tuesday. The storm wa*
•especl.tty severe in Ihe Vlaaya*
Island* and practically destroyed
Tarlob*. thi* capital of Caplx province. The governor general I* rushing n shipload of rood, clothing and
medical supplies lo Tactoba*. T*l*>
graphic communication la di*atroyed.
and onl» vague report* areoblain-
Sble ^*_
4'em-rnl Knn. iw4.it War Doubtful.
London. Nov 29 An uncon-
flrmed dUpatrh rrom IWIgrade *ay*
.that the peace representatives and
tbe allies have agreed io term*.
Turkey I* to retain the T.hnlalja
fori* Sen la'* nclnure of the seaport ot Durairo has not crested
vouch evrfiement and Rurop* is evl-
denlly tli-trr mined Ibat ihere shn'l
lie in. general war Ko definite answer* hnve be.-ii rt"-t*lved lo Sir Kdward fll rey *■ !>roi>os*l for n insallgg
This Is the Output of Only
Twenty-Five Acres East
of the City.
The shipment ol a. .versge of
10.000 pounds ol celery a dsy from
the Palo Alto atatlon. or 300,000
pounds a month. I* an Indication of
the remarkable fertility of land
east of the city along tbe bay shore.
There are but twenty-five acre, of
land devoied to celery culture, and
the shipments thla year will aggregate approximately '.-.50,000
pound* The seaaon "begins about
September 1st, and during the flrsl
month the shipment* nre eompaitr
tlvely light. The seaaon Is at Its
height from lh* first or October to
Jddle or Jsnuary. During
these Ihree and a half month* aome-
r a million pound* ot
celery Is forwarded to market
following the middle of January
there |* . period of lighter shipment* unnt lbe crop I* all harvested.
The celery Indnalry here Is conducted solely by Chinese, and In addition In this they raise conalder-
tiuantltle. of vegetable* and
flowers Tbe Isnd used adjoin* the
city limit* nn Ihe ea*l and I* ln the
eslsn beh. whlrh makes Irrigate *y. Then* nre hundreds of
acre* equally fertile and a* con*
venlently located.
The opportunities for making
money In cultivating ihl* land are
UOSQBallsd elsewhere on the peninsula, and eventually mery acre will
b.- made lo produi-e lhe largest possible yield a vteld lhal will bring
employment and comi"-*lence to hundred* of ramllie*.
LOSE BETCB BETCHY TRUSTEES NAMED
SECRETARY FISHER WILL H. C. HOOVER AND W. M.
REQUIRE SPRING VAL- NEWHALL WILL PILL
LEY PURCHASE. VACANCIES.
:Mayor Rolph Makes Vigorous Both Are Men of Prominence
- Protest Against Enforcement and Their Service* Will Be
of Such a Proposition Valuable to Stanford.
SALE OF BLACKS
PROPERTY POSTPONED
Wllh the eonseat of the Palo Alio
eta*
Mains) im i.iitu;
id In-.** Asso
of Iturliy V. Pe
Cos l. Ili.r-ity .ind charle* F Rut-
ter uf Sen Pgescl—u Tor an order
nodtfytag 'be isa-p-rarj injunction
promoting ibe salt* nl ill nput.il prop-
i-ity lu Palo Alto formerly owned hy
Marshall Black ma* gntet-d *.-■■■■
S** by -Mpsrlot Judgi* J It. Welch
Tbe modmralton ptevented Ihe
sale which was advertised for yee-
i.-rd.ii by IViiri mnl Unruly a* trim
Nor. 10.—Secretary Fisher cooled the hops* of
Snn f-'rsnclsco in thn hearing today
when he Indicated In a lengthy statement lhat any permit granted for
ibe use of the Hetcb lletchy water
supply would *lfpulate Ihe previous
arijulsltlnn by the city ot the prop*
erlles of tbe Spring Valley Company. This proposition won advanced by Attorney McCulcheon lor
the company, but City Attorney
Ding snd Mayor Holpb entered elk*
orous protests. The h-arlng* will '** ***** ****** ** * **** ***** ***
probsbly be closed tonight snd a de- take psrt In much constructive ba*t*
Cnlverslty held s meetlag In
Francisco Friday ot lasl week, the
mosl Important bualnesa transacted
being the election or two trustees to
Oil vacancies ex-sling on the board
The men chosen sre Herbert C
Hoover of San Francisco and Lon
don and William Newhall of Sao
Francisco. Only a abort time ago
Frank B. Anderson, president of tbe
Hank of California, was also ap-
iHilnled lo Bll * vii-amy The ap-
I'olntmenia were made at this time
cl*lon Is expected before January 1
A «•■ 't-Hl.-i.-VUI. - S, ll. Mil*.
Ir Unite- Fi***
laondon. Nov. 30 -Apparently In-
plred by tbe report tbat Gaby
Dealys ts receiving •'•,000 a weak
during her present American tour, a
pretty d.naeuse in lierlln wrote lo
x-Klng Manuel begging htm to
promise thst tf sbe came lo t>ondon
he would ''compromise" hsr by hts
attentions. At least that Ib ihe story they sre telling In the clubs of
Pall Mall and Piccadilly.
I am and want to remain . good
girl." ahe i* satd lo hav. written,
hut wllh an advertisement such .■
you could give me I could get rich."
Being deficient in a **n*e of hair, hla ei-ma]e*ty I* reported In
exfwdingly snnoysd hy
Incli7
- roneep
Puritan
of IBS postponement of Ihe
■t ih-remb-T l.lh pending tbe
.iiuiil.ii a* in Ihe real owner
I* Hn
lhe
form
of ihe
-do:
di*--*j
nlthoi
• ■•vpiTti'd lo accept
ov .fi A Itiirli-in-
es thnt Itoumanla la
n I'ad tie attorney, who to-
*Uh Howling and Haarsban
-.1 or ii.viirit ii-.il hi* know]
Itlaek's trsnaartlon- as s
ranting Black io i.uy stork
i- relieve them of all stock-
respoadMltt) f-.r »he affair*
' * Go_aj CMnpaay. a*-**
,.-.i.-ril»*. io getbsr wiih oth
Tnanksgiving.
Nobory ever had a h-ntt*r
m ot It-lr* than
Fathers,
Ihey wer* -tenierated wllh
gmiiiiiili. nnd anxious lo remembar
Deity fitly
That wa* the rub fitly.
Tb-* Creek* and Itomans offered
gold and silver, bui our Puritan
"-"allien., with tli.-lr consecrated In-
IkIii. ..mi-Hived that Deity did not
•11-fa having Ihe clrculailng medi
nm re.) unit In ihsi way at the risk
of bringing on a stringency.
The Jewish custom of offering
burned ini'nl an* even more Bb.M*
tlonabte or roans, Detiy did not"
wish lbs hand of lh« ti.-..f trust to
In- plated Into.
Finally, Deity iieing a Profaibt-
tlonlst. libation* of wine were out "f
the tinesllotl
So our Parltaa Father* hit apoa
Ifc. .■*,,.,-*:.nl at living thanks
Thank* were not a competitive torn*
tun-lilt nnd could be given In not
tiiiauritr without disturbing trade
Mr*
ni-** activity planned for 1913
Timothy Hopkins will continue ss
president of the board, snd Chart**
Q l_ithrop will stilt Oil the position
of treasurer.
Hcrtiert C Hoover.
Mr. Hoover graduated from Stsnford with the claas of 1S9S at tbe
age of It. He at once took a prom*
inenl position in hla profession ss
mining engineer, within Are year*
In- wa* receiving a salary or 33.-
000 a year from an Rngllah company. For aonte yeara lye has been
one nf ihe most eminent Valuing engineers abroad, and has followed
in* profession In Africa. Australia.
China and India During the Boxer
*ar he waa general manager of the
_rhlncee .engineering Mining Company, and at tbat tlm* took a prom I-
nt-nt part In the defense or Tientsin
Dpoa leaving Chin* b* was lovlleo
i" heroine s partner In a celebrated
I'ugilsh mint* operating firm -Be-
*lrk. Morelng * Co. He made a
-ilium record while connected with
Mi firm by the reorganixation of
'it* greal mine* controlled by them
■it Kalgoolle. Broken lllll and elsewhere. Ile retired from Ihla company In IS"** to take over the direction at a targe group ot mining and
industrial Corporations with head-
•inariers in London HI* name appeals aa chairman or managing dl-
****-tor ol firteen la.ge concern* in
London
An e\ld**nre of ihe esteem in
which Hoover is held abroad waa
lhe ri.i-ent Invitation extended to
hlm lo, join Ihe Association of the
("Ml t*'ngine.'rs of Franre
Hoover I* now ln Calirornls rep-
l.-s.-mliiK ihe Rngtlnh group which
tint, i.tk-ii inin in the flnnm-lng of
the General Pstrotoam Company
und sttpplled a portion- of the fund*
for ih.- pur.bai**- of lhe l'nion till
Company b*. Ihi* General Peiroleum
Coiiipiin*
Hoover ta the author of a well-
known textbook on the principle* of
nd his miMi rr4-.nl pro-
PALO ALTO EASILY CONuRESS WANTS
DEFEATS STOCKTON BIG APPROPRIATION
SCORE IS 31 TO o IN GAME ASKS FOR A BILLION DOL-
ON STANFORD FIELD LARS FOR NEXT FISCAL
THANKSGIVING DAY. YEAR
This Givea Palo Alto the A. A. L. I Moat Important of the Estimated
Ch-mpionship (or Third ' Appropriations Is 30,174,000
Successive Year. for Completion of Can—.
i:> deTeatlng Stockton 31 to o'hy t*a_d r—•
Thur_d.y afternoon P.lo Alto High' ********* D c* *>** *-~***
School's Kugby team won the chsm-i*"" ***** ***** ll«.«l-.4-- 'or
plunahlp of the A. A. I., for ih* '-ilfnw*during tbe Bscal yesr stsrt-
tfalrd aurcetMlve rear. Against the ing July l*t This Is an Increase or
rast asd well-directed attack or the ,„- 6S() 000 ow ^t pnmttpt fiKj_
champion*. Stockton*. h*i_-0«btlng ^^ moM laporUut Q* ^
combination «s* too unorgsnlMd »|appiwprtaUoM aaked were the Tol-
--•*" " ' " At^J**, lo»lo_:
Completion ol the -anal. ISO.174.-
m.ke effective reslstsoc*.
sam* tlm* Pslo Allo's backfield
rushes were Inlerior lo tbos* ot ota*
week ago agalnat Berkeley High
Poor passes spoiled several oppor*
(unities of tbe local boy. to scor*
Boon after the ktckoff. wtth tha
play st the Ua-yard Hoe, Nagel car*
000; three new battleship*. 171,000; sensts mslstse-
sne*, I1.H44.O00: house malnten-
I4,»74.00«; p*n*ion*. 114,000,000.
****** CtJttotmkm HartMt-.
A passing ruah gav* Lachmund an
opportunity to circle th* wing. Mc-
Ollvray converted. Score IS to 0.
Stockton attacked tot* aeveral minute* after the klckoff. until Davld-
•on Iniercepted a pass and ran the
bsll lo within ten yards of the goal.
Weeks scored on a pas. from St.r-
en>. .nd McOJIvray's kick finished
the first half "wltb an tl-to-0 .-rare.
Stockton Improved botb la .tuck
snd defense during tbe second bslf.
Palo Alto wa* held to three tries,
two of which were converted. Wallace and Week* scored after passing1
ruabea. while Gladstone broke]
Ihrough a Uneout and ran ihlrty
yard* Ior tin* final aeore.
Following were the lineups;
Stockton, Pnlo Alio.
Fullback.
Kelcbln I Wallet.. Bowie fKtrksey)
Wing.
Morse .... Lai-hmund
Center three-quarter*.
Bui
m*. cap. f While 1
Wallace
Wing
ky .
Weeks
Second live.
illurgn**) . ...
Risling
First five.
Washington. I> C\, Ooe. 9.—
Among the river and harbor ssll-
m.tes of congress .re th. following:
San Fr.nrl.eo fasrbor, l"*i,000: Sulaun channel*.
111,000; Monterey river harbor, 300,000; Eureka
channel Improvements. 2.0,000; Sacramento and Feather rivers. .40.-
000; San Joaquin river Improve-
menta. _S.500: California debris commlsalon. I:"-!-- An indeterminate
amount wa. :-■:::,.! for further
work.
IU-..lull.ins foe -|lii-nii__n.
Washington. D C. Dsc. ..—Coo
gress w*» In -e**ion at noon. Bacon presided over the senate and
Senator Root announced Vice-President Sherman'a death. Senators
nornh and Heyburn presented resolution* or aympathr The resolu*
lion* were adopted and the senate
adjourned at lt:2i p. in
COMMENDS CITIES FOR
PLAYGROUND ACTIVITY
Steven'
Furry
Spayd**
Parker
ttlOHMIIIl
Hl.-kenho-hai
Front rank.
Arnott
Wl
lli.fi
Slocum
McCllvra
g forward.
"Davidson, cap
That Callfornl. haa done much
nwanl sdequate plavground pro-
l*lon. ihough very much more retain* to be accomplUhed. la the
.tatement or Frederick II, Moore ol
Flugeli i-tH-K-rintMident or Public Instruction
Olal"*| Hyatt'* ofllce In a pamphlet issued
recenily lo forward tbt- movement.
In calling the rosier of cities th.t
have msde s»rfoua efforts along tbl*
t'l.dstone
*****.'l
Card-
Moore *a>i
bli
Pe
Act-..n.mt Vt*.its
M.iyfiel-1
O trl
•
Kllfl. r*,*bl
er of Ihi- \l
n<
i.t n
ink
and t j n- r
pDTapaa- l
ib
•* hor
ior
Thnnknrlv!
tn; d** »f
■ it. dinner
. Martla.
ol
th"
gr
.!-■ .- -*i
onaui* in
wi
>rld
M
r Kllei )■
interested
lb
e run
plain* nf t
'11 Pin In Mar
a*
ab
tb.V
le In.-
hit
;nt.
..- n benrln
n of an in-
E on the pi
In
alll
aplatn MarMt
I. 11 Halle, mtpearad
: £ t'aahtni and J s.
sho ri-pr--i-in Hi- I'.ii..
; aud loan, whirb .lalui.
■apart? under a desd ol
nl in WK-urtty of s loan
U...1.- ... Marshall nii.k
he tatter 1* snld lo have
was ordered ifaai ihere ifagil he
1- 1 ■' ■■ i.-mporary restraining
' that will In any way .Sect the
cola.
logelher slib
n tran*la:ton
rrom th
e l-vtln of tbe
creitt Itfte.-lith
cenlury
euglnt-ering t
lassie b> that
author.
ha* al|raried
i-on*Iderable
attention In lunar*
and scientific
fdrchM
Ho..v
er married Ml
kr I.011 Henry
or the
etaas or mt
Th-y have
a meri.l-.-r of the I"nlt«l Stale* n-*r
on.utli I USUI la and ranking captali
for tht- state oT Waahlngldn. It
coiitein|iiiitfs tiling aeross iba **t
tantii- In the near fa tar. It.* ot
ganlifl the Harvard Aeronautic Se
-*'**!> nnd -.-.:■■• it tor a time dur
ing whlrh he made a nnmbsf 0
*ii<-i-es*rul (light* He ba* mml
fiighl* In Franc nnd Kngland. and _^
for two vears was lti«tmi-ior at On* ., . . ... . __ . _,
lleli-h M,..Li Hi-ariug t'onltnue-
ham While* eeiehrated school ln<_ ,. . .
1-ondon j Waihtngton. I». C. Sov. IS.—Ao-I
Captnln Martin wn* plonaed wilh j s**.>ritiu KiiRlncr Juh.i It. Wrtt*
hi* vi*l( In Mayfleld. and considers {man's stalsmaal that rive year*' ad-
SUnfOTd t'nlvi-ftitt-* n* a Rttltable lo-jdltlnnal Investigation and a half
cation for an aeronautic school The; million dollars* furlhir expense
and naratv as truaiee* In the second1
deed of trust, daied May 1 **.. IttJ.j
axscutod bv Black and his wife to
ih-1 mnl 10 Cbarle* F Rati*, as a
third aarty. and by mean* of wblch
, Black I* aliased to bate bought up
tin* stock or tlie Crass;- Ooloaj
.Company
pro*[M*rt* for the development or
thl* movement will dei>end largely
on the Interest *hown bv the people
of thl* locality.
Opium Smnn*-r Hentef*-*e>d.
14- Pin
By ' ,
Ann fYanclsco. Nov, 30. Judge
de Haven loday m-ntem-ed Hubert
DonnId*on. formerly Pacific Mall superintendent, to aerve one year in
tbe Alameda county Jail and to pay]
a fine of 350 tor conspiracy In
smuggling opium. Cuatom* In*p*c-
tor Gallagher, who wa* Implicated
In the plot, will be tried next month.
I-nurs* -Clara msnied her husband to reform him. Julls—Did she
succeed? l-oulac—No. He only lived
forty year* after the wedding.—Ufa.
would he inittoteo imh.ii San Fran*
claco ir rt*|Mirts an. reiiulred on lhe
collateral latUM raised by the city'*
opponent* in the hearings. Secretary
Ftahgr denied that he wl*hed to delay the decision longer than Is absolutely necessary. Mr. Fisher la
asking a thousand queailnns. The
chief engineer for Spring Valley
III probably testify late today.
Order. T^p-nUt-on.
tlT l-ni-_* prrm
Waahington. P. C. Dec. J.—The
miprcmc court today ordered a dla-
■olntlon of ihe H.rrlman merger of
the Southern Pacific and Union Pa-
cltle Immediately. The decl*1o*n
permlla the Union Pacific to retain
It* Ogden-Reno line direct to San
Francfuco.
San Jose Has Municipal Harbor, ducilon * biographv or Oeorge Agi
.**an Jess ha* long felt tbe need <.r
.1 man trips) harbor, but it w.a nol
until Wedntsdaj of thla wesk that
tb" matter wa* put lo lhe ottti-l.l
ti-st ind »a* carried almost unanimously
.\i il lection held Wednendnv
upon ibe i|in**tlon ot whether or nm
lhe .itv -(..I.ild gain political 'url-
dicilon over a strip ot land running
tn the mouth of the duadalupe riv. r
from the n.irlherly limits at the cit.-
lhe vols at* vlrfually unanimous
A. runt lug to Ihe liiiolltclal returns
of City Clerk Roy Wallers. 4.3"!
ntSS w.*re east, t.ttt. of Iheee wer.*
In favor of the propoea) and 7C wr
lnst While this la a very »nn
i* for Shu Jone. II t* alinnat gl
targe n* thai ca*t al the bond •»'•*■■
tion a year ago when the city bond
ed Itself ror -77.OOO ror Improvi
Tbe bearing on tne report of ih.
ments.
Th.* election Wi-dnenday was onb
the first *iep In bringing about thl*
condition, but tt give, the city Juris
diction over tbe land, and Tbe de
-flopmt'ti! of the barbor la a mat
ler which will come Inter.
two honv both of shorn have been
around Ih* world several Hme*
W. M. Newh-.ll.
Mr Newhall come* from a dl*<
iiiiKu-.'.lii"! and wealth) pioneer t.im-
tly of Cslirornia He I) a graduate
or Yale t'nlversltv nnd alao of the
Columbia *-***• School He doe. not
".practice hi* profe**lon, a* hi* large
', hunlncr* ini.-i.-sis demand hi* time
'* He hn* the iiiaiiagement or Ihe great
Newhall ranch.** and 11 1« thought
lhat bl* training in this line will be
or value In the direction nf the large
land holding* or tlie university. For
. number of year* lie ha* been a
turn match When and where ***—lo.
-rnii'- should Ite held would be an-jj,,,
other question. If another game1
nhoiild !•" deilded upon
At the pre*ent time Palo Alio *«
awaiting the d-*cl*lon of the referees"
union, to whom the question of Referee lJifferty* competency. ** dem-!
1 >n«tr.it.-.I laat Saiurriav. ha* been
truaiee of iht* San Franclaco Stale r.-r*ri*ed
Normal School .
"San Fraurlaio ha* «pent well
over 137,000 for
tin- v..ni. Thl* i*oriinHK*|on ha. sti-
iiervlMlon of thirteen piny center*, in
addition lo a site of fifty-three ncre-
■..-.tir.d tbla )■■»-. which is 10 be
made one ••. .o*..plete retreat.oft ground* in anv city tn the
United Stale-
lli-rk.-ley. Sacramento, Stockton.
I'hltu. Marysvtlle. Riverside. Red-
land*. Pasadena. San Dlego. Kureka
deavorins'to bring about a re-. -.s.„no_ tntm 0tr u»isonvIHe snd
Monica are among the Other
cltle* ol the Ntale thai have been
active along Ihl* line Seashore and
mountain campn are becoming popular, extending the field ot activity to
rursl district* "'
l-..:.. .\llK-IWekeley .,..,,.
t'nte** Berkeley High agr*-** h
play another game for the champion
ship of Northern California the vie
tory over Stockton tn the A A. I.
fin..I lettterday afternoon will closi
ihe Rugby s.-a-.on at Pato AltO IflBt* intl*_i s"tat
Srho°' :t»lt. bad
Whether or not Palo Alto «*iil;,h), mrp**-
Berkeley will aenln meet hn» been
loft to the Berkeley team Coach
lloulware nnd Captain Porbss are In
favor of settling tbe dispute in another jmrounler, but the re«t of the
fan, hnve not been fon*.lnrcd that
thl* f« neceartary Pracilt-nllv everv
tnfluenllal Itugbv exttoni-nt who wlt-
BSSS.ll the Palo Alto-llerkeley game
fi.fr f.i While
Mayor Wliaon'* "V*i IHe*. t1, ••„h«1 f*mm
Itv l!n.i«l r.*** Berlin. t>ec 2.— Dr. Frederick
I Berkeley. Nov. 30.-- Melnolle, mm^ mnaowieoo todsy s discos-
Wliaon. aecond son of Mayor J. Stilt prv of „,„,„, ,rQn ^ ,„„,,. op0
Nllaaa Ol thl. ctty. died today rroo-.mj^too of whkh h# tWmt will
kill every tuberculosis germ *"**
Palo Alto avenue m the county road with the same disease snd Mayor'
will lie held by the *ii|*ervlaor* at Wliaon I* quarantined
Hcarine of Viewers Tuesday.
the matter of extending!diphtheria Mr
Amietophrynus superciliaris subsp. superciliaris superciliaris
Amietophrynus superciliaris superciliaris (Boulenger, 1888 “ 1887 ”) Figs. 1, 2 b, 3 a–g, 4 b, 5, 6e–g, 7 b–c. Bufo superciliaris Boulenger, 1888 “ 1887 ”, Proc. Zool. Soc. London 1887: 565 Bufo laevissimus Werner, 1897, Sitzungsber. Akad. Wiss. München 27: 212 Amietophrynus superciliaris – Frost, Grant, Faivovich, Bain, Haas, Haddad, de Sa, Channing, Wilkinson, Donnellan, Raxworthy, Campbell, Blotto, Moler, Drewes, Nussbaum, Lynch, Green, & Wheeler, 2006, Bull. Am. Nat. Hist. 297: 363 Type locality. “Rio del Rey, Cameroons ” Material examined. MHNG 757.61 (juvenile) Cameroon, Efulen; MHNG 917.99 - 100 (2 juveniles) Cameroon, Sangmelima, Foulassi; MHNG 955.88 - 89 (female + juvenile) Cameroon, Sangmelima; MHNG 1018.74 - 75, MHNG 1018.78, MHNG 1018.88, MHNG 1018.91 (2 males + 3 juveniles) Cameroon, Sangmelima; MHNG 1018.77 (female) Cameroon, Ambam (Ntem); MHNG 1390.94 - 96 (male + 2 females) Cameroon, Okola, Yaoundé; MHNG 1390.97 (juvenile) Cameroon, Kolmon Nga, Yaoundé; MHNG 1467.9 (female) Gabon, exact locality unknown; MHNG 2094.10 (female) Cameroon, Ongot; MHNG 2207.55 - 57 (2 females + juvenile) Gabon, Ogouée- Ivindo, Makokou; MHNG 2207.62 (female) Gabon, Loa Loa-Ivindo; MNHN 1946.157 (juvenile) Gabon, exact locality unknown; ZFMK 4578 (female) Cameroon, Kumba; ZFMK 8328 (female) Cameroon, Victoria; ZFMK 14905 - 6 (2 females) Cameroon, Mezam, Bafut; ZFMK 15990 (female) Cameroon, exact locality unknown; ZFMK 18682 (juvenile) Cameroon; ZFMK 57800 (female) Cameroon, Kumba; ZFMK 67268 (juvenile) Cameroon, Meked; ZFMK 73192 (juvenile) Gabon, Barrage de Kinguélé; ZFMK 90569 (female) Cameroon, Rumpi Hills, Mofako Balue; ZMB 3907 (female) Cameroon, exact locality unknown; ZMB 19919 - 20, ZMB 19924, ZMB 71139 - 40 (formerly part of ZMB 19920) (4 females + juvenile) Cameroon, Bipindi; ZMB 19921 (female) Cameroon, exact locality unknown; ZMB 19922 - 23 (2 females) Cameroon, Kribi; ZMB 19971 - 73 (3 juveniles) Cameroon, Bipindi; ZMB 20074 (juvenile) Cameroon, exact locality unknown; ZMB 20076 (juvenile) Cameroon, exact locality unknown; ZMB 20694 (juvenile) Cameroon, south Cameroon; ZMB 20718 (male) Cameroon, south Cameroon; ZMB 28775, ZMB 74317 - 8 (formerly part of ZMB 28775) (female + 2 juveniles) Cameroon, Bipindihof; ZMB 32037 (juvenile) Cameroon, Bipindi; ZMB 74319 (juvenile) Nigeria, Cross River; ZMB 74522 (juvenile) Cameroon, Nfakwo; ZSM 148 / 1989 / 1-2 (syntypes of Bufo laevissimus) (2 juveniles) Cameroon, exact locality unknown. Problematic material. MNHN 1923.50 (juvenile) French Congo, locality unknown (today territories of Gabon, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo); MNHN 1933.16 (adult) Equatorial Africa, locality unknown; MNHN 2002.0655 (adult) Central African Republic, La Maboké, Mboye. As MNHN 2002.0655 was completely dried out, the taxon specific characters are irrecognizable. Diagnosis. Genetically the taxon belongs to the African toad genus Amietophrynus (Frost et al. 2006). As part of the Amietophrynus superciliaris -species complex, the taxon differs from all other members of the genus by a smooth dorsal skin in adult specimens, straight loreal region and large size. Large toad; dorsal skin smooth in adults, granular in juveniles; body shape very broad, ovoid; tympanum distinct, drop-shaped, smaller than eye diameter; parotids prominent, shape of parotids like slender drop, parotid glands distinctly converging caudally, posterior end of parotid glands pointed; eyelid triangular in dorsal view, enlarging from edge to middle of eyelid in lateral view, forming a triangular eyelid process (Fig. 2 b); flank colouration reddish-purple; posterior part of back coloured like anterior part of dorsum; pair of spots on abdominal region present; extremities slender; males with nuptial swelling on fingers I and II. A. s. superciliaris can be distinguished from A. s. chevalieri and the new species A. channingi sp. nov. by colouration and body shape. For characters distinguishing between A. s. superciliaris and the two other taxa see below. Description. Large sized Amietophrynus species, with very robust body shape; females distinctly larger than males (maximum snout-urostyle-length – SUL – in males: 116.0– 128.4 mm, in females: 108.1–153.4 mm); mean head width similar in both sexes, in males 38 % of SUL, in females 39 %; snout in lateral view short, slightly rounded; head without bony ridges; canthus rostralis distinct, angular; loreal region straight, slightly concave; distance eye-snout similar to eye diameter; nares closer to snout tip than to eye; eyelid in adult specimens of prominent triangular shape from dorsal and in lateral view, possessing a distinct prolongation in the middle; eyelid process in juveniles less distinct and almost absent in very small specimens; tympanum more or less distinct, positioned at a concave part of the cheeks; tympanum vertically prolonged, horizontal diameter smaller than eye diameter; dorsal skin smooth in adults, warty in juveniles; parotid glands very prominent, shaped like a slender drop, converging backwards, usually with a pointed tip (parotid length / parotid width ratio in males: 3.17, in females: 3.23); in some specimens posterior to parotids a glandular bulge extending to the groins as a dorsolateral fold; parotids distinctly bi-coloured: like flanks on lateral lower part and like back on dorsal surface; gland openings only on dorsal part of parotids (rarely extending onto the borderline of the colour transition); border between the two colours sharp; fingers and toes simple, not enlarged at the end; subarticular tubercles simple; relative length of fingers: III> I> II ≥ IV (mean length of finger I / length of finger III ratio in males: 88 %, in females: 94 %); manual webbing absent; femora short and slender; mean tibia length in both sexes 38 % of SUL; inner and outer metatarsal tubercle present; relative toe length: IV> III> V> II> I; webbing rudimentary: 1 (0.5), 2 (1 - 0.5), 3 (2 - 1) or 3 (2 - 1.25), 4 (2.75 - 2.75), 5 (1) or 5 (1.25); females growing larger than males; males with nuptial pads on fingers I and II. Boulenger (1888) mentions the presence of a tarsal fold in his description of the species, while Werner (1897) states that the tarsal fold is absent in Bufo laevissimus (current synonym of A. s. superciliaris, see below); a character also used within his bufonid key. A distinct tarsal fold was absent in all examined specimens, only an indistinct bulging of the skin has been observed in some specimens. In dehydrated specimens, this somehow concave skin might be mistaken for a tarsal fold. Juveniles possess a granular skin till they reach a size of about 40 mm (Amiet & Perret 1969). The largest specimen still showing minuscule warts on the dorsum measured 46 mm (MHNG 917.99), in few subadult and predominantly smooth specimens, single tiny bulges were recognizable on the eyelids. The eyelid projection can be very small and almost absent in juveniles of A. s. superciliaris, forming only a very indistinct “swelling” on the eyelid. Colouration. Dorsum a pale yellowish colour or marbled orange yellow (Figs. 3 b, c, e–g), extending from the tip of the snout, along the upper side of the parotids backwards to the abdominal region; a pair of dark spots on posterior third of back (Figs. 3 a, c, e–g); additional smaller spots on anterior part of back or between eyes in few adult specimens (Figs. 3 c, e); intense red lateral colouration from tip of snout, continuing beneath the canthus rostralis and along entire flanks; sometimes parts of flank colouration darker, red-purple; ventral colouration ranging from light to intense reddish colour (Fig. 3 d); extremities dark purple; inguinal region rarely with small spots; upper hind limbs and feet with white transversal bars; anterior extremities dark purple ventrally; gular region coloured like venter; juveniles coloured like adults but with additional transversal bars on tibiofibula, usually less distinct in adults (Figs. 3 a–c, e); juveniles with more spots in addition to the abdominal pair on anterior part of back and in the interorbital region (Figs. 3 a; 4; 5), these dark spots of different structure than surrounding skin, “drier and softer”. Interorbital markings of juvenile specimens usually consist of a pair of small blotches (sometimes dissolved into several smaller spots), caudally converging towards each other and barely reaching the eyelids (Figs. 4 b; 5). Exceptionally these blotches are fused (Fig. 4 b), a pattern also reported by Andersson (1905). Boulenger (1887) describes a “very fine lighter vertebral line” in some juveniles. According to Amiet & Perret (1969) juveniles possess a brown-black gular colouration and breast, while adults show an overall pale belly. Perret & Mertens (1957) comment on the absence of the pair of dark spots on the posterior part of the back in two specimens. Werner (1898) mentions a female from Cameroon (referred to as Bufo laevissimus) with pale red-brown upper surface and chocolate brown flanks. Colouration in preservation. Preserved specimens may loose their reddish colouration, which turns brownish. The typical reddish colouration was only observable where it remained covered between skin folds; in other specimens it completely disappeared. Nonetheless, in many specimens a clear differentiation between the lateral and dorsal colouration is recognizable. Very old specimens may be bleached out completely, lacking any colour pattern; e.g. even the pair of abdominal spots then may only be recognizable by a closer examination of the skin structure. Natural history. Amietophrynus s. superciliaris inhabits the forest floor in primary forest vegetation along small rivers (Frétey & Blanc 2001; Lasso et al. 2002; Figs. 6 e–g). Akani et al. (2004) report the finding of the species in the rainy season in a pristine swamp site. But the species also inhabits secondary growth with dense vegetation or even plantations (Amiet 1976 a, 1986; Rödel et al. 2004). Occasionally the species can be seen in more open places searching for food (Sanderson 1936 a). Similarly, local farmers in western Cameroon reported to the senior author on occasional findings of the species in plantations. During the late rainy season (September 2010) M. Hirschfeld and M.- O. Rödel (pers. obs.) observed an adult male (SUL 124 mm) in a near pristine part of the Ebo forest, Cameroon, over a period of four days. During this time the toad only moved about 25 m, the largest daily distance being about 15 m. During two consecutive nights the male climbed onto the top of two different bare rocks of 50–60 cm height, respectively and seemed to stay there motionless for the night. The other days it was observed sitting under a smaller tree, turning its body only once into another direction. According to Amiet (1976 a) breeding males possess slightly hypertrophied anterior extremities and black callosities on fingers I and II. A. s. superciliaris males lack a vocal sac (Perret & Amiet 1971) and the species is assumed to utter no advertisement call (Perret & Mertens 1957; Tandy & Keith 1972). A published sonogram of a A. s. superciliaris vocalization is not regarded to show an advertisement call (Amiet 1976 a). This vocalization, a dull buzzing noise, lasted for almost 1– 1.5 s, comprising a long series of pulses (Amiet 1976 a, b). Amiet only observed movements of the flanks during sound emission, but no movements of the gular region (Amiet 1976 a). Hence, Amiet doubts that this noise represents an advertisement call, as it can be heard on short distances only. However, it may function in short distance recognition (Amiet 1976 a, 1989). Clutches are deposited and tadpoles may develop in slowly running streams (Amiet 1976 a, 1986, 1989; Gossmann et al. 2002; Figs. 6 e–f). Egg size ranges from 1.40–1.95 mm (N= 102, mean= 1.67, SD= 0.09). Amiet (1976 a) assumes that reproduction takes place in the dry season (January – March) as most specimens have been found during that time and only at that time males show their nuptial dress. Juveniles have been found in January in Nigeria (M.- O. Rödel & A.B. Onadeko, pers. obs; Figs. 3 a; 6 e) and Cameroon (Schmitz 1998). Amiet & Perret (1969) report on juveniles (<40 mm) collected in February, May, June and July–October. According to Angel (1931) specimens in captivity feed on insects, snails, but also on frogs and tadpoles. Perret & Mertens (1957) mention beef meat as food in captivity. Affa’a & Amiet (1990) report on nyctotheres (Protozoa, Clevelandellida, Prosicuophora basoglui, Nyctotheroides ptychadenae) found in adult A. s. superciliaris. Distribution. Amietophrynus s. superciliaris inhabits the western Lower Guinean rain forest (Fig. 1). At present the taxon is known from localities in Nigeria (Boulenger in Perret & Mertens 1957; Schiøtz 1963; Akani et al. 2004; this paper), Cameroon (e.g. Müller 1910; Barbour 1911; Parker 1936; Sanderson 1936 b; Mertens 1940; Perret 1966; Herrmann et al. 2005, this paper), Gabon (Frétey & Dewynter 1998; Frétey & Blanc 2001; Lötters et al. 2001; Blanc & Frétey 2004; Pauwels & Rödel 2007), and Equatorial Guinea (Nieden 1910; Lasso et al. 2002). According to Frétey & Blanc (2000) the species is also known from the Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic, but the authors do not provide localities. Joger (1990) lists A. s. superciliaris (MHNP 1968.331) for the Central African Republic (Oubangi-Chari = without specification), but the respective collection number is associated with a Ptychadena trinodis (mentioned with this number in the very publication). The only specimen of A. s. superciliaris with a similar collection number (MHNP 1968.359) refers to a specimen from “Afrique”. However, a specimen in very bad condition from the Central African Republic is deposited in the MNHN collection (MNHN 2002.0655; see remark above). The placement of MNHN 2002.0655 in the distribution map (Fig. 1) has been matched according to publications referring to the same locality (Joger 1990; Rasmussen et al. 2000). Hence, we tentatively assign A. s. superciliaris to the herpetofauna of the western part of the Central African Republic, but suggest verifying the taxonomic status of this population as soon as new material becomes available. The wide distribution of A. s. superciliaris in western lowland rain forests of Central Africa (Fig. 1) makes it likely that this toad is indeed living in the south-western Central African Republic and possibly likewise in western Congo. Taxonomy. Amietophrynus superciliaris was described based on a series of juvenile specimens from “Rio del Rey Cameroons ” (Boulenger 1887; Fig. 5). The description of Bufo laevissimus was based on juveniles and one adult specimen from Cameroon (Werner 1897), and in a later publication Werner (1898) describes a second adult toad. Werner (1897) distinguishes the two species on the size of the parotid glands and the lack of a dorsolateral fold in B. laevissimus. According to Frost (2010) B. laevissimus was synonymised with B. superciliaris by Andersson (1905). Indeed, Andersson (1905) discusses the consistency in morphometrics between juveniles of B. laevissimus and those of B. superciliaris and remarks that distinguishing characters presented by Werner (1897) are based on the presence of an adult specimen in his material only. He concluded that the differences in the descriptions may have been the result of allometric growth (Andersson 1905). Earlier, Boulenger (1900) remarks that “adult specimens [of A. s. superciliaris] have been redescribed by Werner under the name of B. laevissimus, from Cameroons ”. Boulenger (1900) reports on a toad of about 120 mm and already lists B. laevissimus as a synonym of B. superciliaris. Andersson (1905) later provides a more detailed comparison and confirmed the conspecificity of the two species. He states that “therefore it can be that both Boulenger’s and Werner’s descriptions correspond with the case in this same species, that of the former with the young, the latter with the older ones”. He also cites Boulenger’s (1900) publication. Consequently, the synonymy of Bufo laevissimus Werner, 1897 with Amietophrynus s. superciliaris (Boulenger, 1887), as defined in this work, is based on Boulenger (1900). The syntypes of Bufo laevissimus Werner, 1897 are deposited in the ZSM collection. Two juvenile syntypes (ZSM 148 / 1989 / 1-2) are still present in the ZSM collection (and have been examined herein), while the only adult female syntype (ZSM 1113 /0) is lost (Glaw & Franzen 2006; M. Franzen 18.01. 2010 in litt.). Our examination of the two available syntypes revealed no characters distinguishing them from other juvenile A. s. superciliaris. The available specimens also correspond in the shape of the eyelid (Figs. 7 b, c) and we regard these specimens as conspecific with A. s. superciliaris. Amietophrynus s. superciliaris is morphologically most similar to A. channingi sp. nov., the second taxon from Central Africa. Amietophrynus s. superciliaris differs in colouration and morphology from A. s. chevalieri and A. channingi sp. nov. (see respective paragraphs and the key). Ethnozoology. Perret & Mertens (1957) report that indigenous people fear the toad because of its venom. According to Herrmann et al. (2005) A. s. superciliaris plays an important role in traditional medicine for people in the Mt. Nlonako area, but they also report on the people’s fear that the toad transmits leprosy. This is similar to the belief in villages close to the Ebo forest, Cameroon, where people think that the saliva of the toad may damage human skin (M. Hirschfeld & M.- O. Rödel, unpubl. data). Lawson (1993) describes a local belief from western Cameroon that toad bones are used to treat poisoning and mentally deranged people. Traditional healers of the Bakossi people dry toads and pound them for native medicine (A. Schmitz, pers. obs.). In southern Cameroon Bakola-pygmees use the parotid secretion to envenom their arrowheads for hunting (Medjo, WWF-guide at Campo Ma’an NP, pers. comm.). Lawson (1993) reports the local belief in south-western Cameroon where people assume that these toads indicate the change of season by changing position into the opposite direction, while they otherwise rest for long times in the same place and position (see above). Local hunters in southern Cameroon reported to the senior author on large frogs sitting for months without movement in the forest.Published as part of Barej, Michael F., Schmitz, Andreas, Menegon, Michele, Hillers, Annika, Hinkel, Harald, Böhme, Wolfgang & Rödel, Mark-Oliver, 2011, Dusted off — the African Amietophrynus superciliaris - species complex of giant toads, pp. 1-32 in Zootaxa 2772 on pages 6-9, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.27686
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DAILY PALO ALTO TIMES. SATURDAY. JUNE 15. 1918
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A dtSshtfst dinner aad lajrs fete
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lavllad guests trom Msnlo, Palo Alte
snd auay otber points on tbe neo-
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Mme H. Fore msa- Em rich ot Palo
Alio had beea Bolted to prsssat a program as tbs evening's sntartalnmaat.
The groonda ot tfas estate ara of uu-
.asBal bsanty aad aa amphitheater Is
]<m* et tke sl tractive fsataras ot tfas
loteresUog plan Tbers sra many
rare old trees frotn dlffsrent ports uf
tfae world la this garden One tree,
ths lii_ddl.ii. wblch blooms Is Jane,
, Is of unusual beeuty with lis brilliant
1 pnrpls spikes, around whlcb bov*r tha
| butinrfllss of Isle spring. This rars
■ old ipec-mea of nature', art was th*
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lis the crsntlon of tbe delightful pro
Brain of buuerfltes sad fairy folk.
jMoat ot ths efasrncteri ohoaen by
' Madam* Emriek for tbts graceful pre
oas tattoo of bsr art were children, la
foci tbere wsrs only two taking part
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thsss csrried tfas spirit of lbs occasion, for thsy srs Uay aad eoold
bs distinguished from the children
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The falgfaly appreciated program
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veranda of tb* ilahn resldonee Is ss
follow* :
Tb* km number, wss lbs dance of
Ib* flowers sad seagulls, Iwo Ultle j
girls playing lhe parts of seagulls flying over tbe sleeping flowers.
Tfas second wss sa .'"■'•'*' Jjj
Entsrtalni fsr Friends
Mii^ Usrtruds .Tones gave a small
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wrny t-ejiei with a little solo dsneer,
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i !ii.niiit.*c solo dane*.
Al the and or lhe children's per
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'Miilnl dsnes snd s tnnat effective
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| mmlc being umeen. The back of
Un- pisno which was toward the an
dtenrn was entirety hidden from sight
by enveloping polled palms
Tfae children ware drain from
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j Palo Alio psrtlclpstlng tn Ihe program. (
j Alter the program Ifa* garden was
jlllghiad with many Japanein laaterna
land Madam" Ktnrk-k her.elf danced
J for the guests.
• * *
{ • BlMum-Foetsr
Amid a profuilou nt white and pink
:Juni flowers, slstely p«lmi and he-
i tween draped banners *! the red.
| whit* end Mb*. I-lent. !_e4'(-unt It
si... .ti.. son of Cspt. and Mre G. it
j Slocum. took ss his bride Miss Su.
iFoater. the chsnulng dsughtor ot Mr.
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H.r David Evans reed tfa* man-teg*
l ceremony of tfa* Bptecopsl church
! Tlm i-.T.niii.tiv delightfully simple, bi
jhn. !,.■,.n the fu.hinii ta weddings Ihl.
: year, wss Impressive as only wed-
| dings srltfa tfas military toseh taa be
The qnslnt little All Saints church,
tike ths Ultle church sround thr* corner, with lis vines snd high hscked
pews, wsa a soluble setting for tbe
ceremony. Trim raw. of Shasta 1
daisies In the tall, stained <■'■■'-*■ -*la.
dows and ta the choir stalls, wtlh thej
whit* Iceland poppy, pink tiger lilies
and nodding pelms along the sides
of lbs church proper, bouqusts of gorgeously plnfa sweet peas and rose* St
tbn rigfal of ihn chancel and above
Ihe alter, tranilermed Ihe small
chapel Into a bower of spring faestyy.
Tllr dll-ilt bride, .irjul-il*- ta B
simple gown of beaded Oeorgette
erep*. with a r*l| of whit* tulle covering It.-.-- auburn hair and a long lulls
train, was given swsy by her tether.
Sb* csrried s mammoth bridal boo
quet of white sweet peas wlib main-
deahslr fern snd white lull* bows of J
varying slie.
Tfa* mold or honor. Miss Madslelnr
Evans, a cousin of th* bridegroom,
wore a gown of white becoming tn
her demure beauty. The bridesmaid..
MIm Rvelyn Sanderson and Mlsi
} ..aura Kennedy, cousins of lha bride
Mlsi Mary Smith, Miss Rath Herd
man and Mlsi laouiee Kelly, wera it
' irncllvely * I tired In deep pink voile
< with white tulle veils snd wreaths of
■ plak rosebuds and carried large bou-
: OUrls of plak aad while sweet pees
t Th* smsll tin wrr girls, tfae Misses
! Sylvis sad Jsnn Hyde, were cousins of
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i snd the choir cross, were the brlde-
Mmlt your meat c.ii.umptloo. to 1
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A certain aaMBBt of tot each dsy
Is nscssssry to baman lit> Don't
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W. 11 ITt.krlion te visiting with
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snd daughter will gn soutb wttfa blm
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Kiss Kellte L. Andrraoo arrived te
Palo Alto test evening from Elko.
Ner., to hs pressnt at the wedding of
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Miss Lorna Doaaldoon this evening.
Prank Klrksey arttred Thuraday oa
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where bs has tfas rating or qusrier-
taaator al Ihs submarine faass. H* te
visiting fats parents at 7M Cowper
■tmt
Ma
11 a. ia.—Baccalaarsate ssrvten. to
ih* Msm-orlel Chnrch; sermon by tba
Iter. 1-stfa.er John V. 8e_iven ot Ml.
sloa Dolores, 8aa Praactooo; soioin.
Mtss Helen Cot burn Hsnlfa nf Bsa
Pranclseo; chorus. Ibs Morris Clab ot
Palo Alto. P. T. JiiTera. conductor.
Monday. 17th
' Commencement day.
- 10;M a. m— Twenty-eeveBth snnanl
rommencem*nt stsrcissi. tg Msl
ill Church; commcaoraunt sddress
by Jobs L McNsb of Baa Francisco
Tassday. lath
Tbe summsr quirter opens.
Registration ot sll stadseta. • to IS
B. m, 1 M to S:M p. m_ st tfa* regts-
. offlce, room IIS, Inner Quod.
Wednesday, 1Mb
3 p. m — Food tunssnstlun meeting
ot tbe oMrial food workers of Son**
(lira and Bsa Mstso coun tin. la tbe
I.l tile Thsntor; ipeskere. Mrs. Robert J Burdens, Ralph P. MerritL Tbs
pnfaUo Is wilcome.
t a. m -laitrartloo bogtas.
Thwredsy, 20th
4. It-- Organ mcttol.
T.3i>-Choir rsb*nrasl to tbe Mem-
oriel Cbareb.
T:»»-Lsctara oa "The Red Cross at
the Front." by William Allen Whits.
editor of tfae Emporia Ossstts; in tba
LIIUs Tbsstor.
S p. m— ttenellt
Brigisa and Prench relief, fay tbe children ot Palo Alto; la tbe Assembly
HalL
ORDCft TO IHOW CAUSE WHY
PETITION POR CHANGE OP
NAMES SHOULD NOT BE
QRANTED
. .. MltMtMa. «( CVar <n
S_miwi K.»*r, Alw. M..HV Katwr. law wttt.
ami Oaltn Au*-wt»4 lUah-r K.t-". t'.iMt
rar Ann. .>,-■-. I -. . .I........ |Wlr K»l-
Wt*. WiUww ll-**.' Kwmr. 9-m.I MtaaM.
,*4 K*.., Win K.w. —rir «W-
Oen. Leonard Woo-: "We ara only
st the beglDBlag now My word lo
yon is to ssve ***r.ihtag yoa can.: it,
Produce *veryibla_| you caa. Do rv-;-1-
erylhlag yon ran--«t,-t we will make „;
tbn world safe for d-iiocracr." j h.«> thw *iy Msd _i
Mtss 8*rans PbUlp* ho* r*turned' J^U
from Vssaar Colteg*. wbera sbs has.**—i. j__ iWh L-
beea teaching botoay during tfae past! l^Z* ^^ *£%? j££ ■>» n>«fc«ii
». E_ SaraB l-waWi. *****, •** tern*
\ Kx -.. i ■ BaA—1 Wn. S—«n. u
_e**e*eee*ee*eeeeeeseeeeee;<V_ *?**!!Z&.
Notice to the Public
We tn rite oil resident* of Pslo Aho. fafaySeld. Stanford University
and vicinity to can snd inspect oar bow Bs_k__g Boom ta Pala Alto,
si No. HI Unlveralty Avmra*.
Aay customer of ours cao now be convenlenUy snoomamdatod by
os atlber in Palo Alto or Mayfleld. * -
Tba llbersl yet eons in stive policy of tfaa tenser Msyfleld Bank
baa an aa nam ebssg»d We be** merely btamSm** *m ***** *m* tm-
cree**d osr cs pi Ul aad todll Ues tor y our con rantenoe.
Wa pny 4% totorsst on monthly balances oa Barings; no tntsnat
forfeited; end soospt Commerctel checking sccoanta.
Ptieinoof Solely Deposit Boies Bor Usat at |2 par year.
Tbs following srs oar -Jtrecton and OAosrs:
HOS. C P- COOLCT. Praa. DR. CABI. O. WTLBOK. Vlcwpres.
KLMBB i. WORTH
CHAB. r. WIUOHT
WILUAM D. WA8RON
AU-RED W. EUUETT
The Stanford Bank
CoshBiarrisI aad Saving*—Undsr Stela Bapsrttoton
Untied Sta tea Pwtil Baringi Bank Dcpoo! tary
Ws pay 4% tourast on monthly balances on Savings
No interest (orieltrd
Mala Oflca, PALO AMt>, CAL. IU University Ave.
Branch at Msyfleld. CsL
High Grade Vocation
Far
Yoang Women
tnntty te now svsltebta to a few Inteiiisint and snvbmsns yisw> -
womsn In our operating depsrtmenL
Tiliphon* sseratlna te s buslneea career msttk ssssllsnt sp»S>
tneKtea and sdvseitstss. Ths work te InteraetlBj and lesjirtsit Pec
wtsnent snd stosdy employment, stead salary and regular Ineraaass
st fre bus nt tatorvals.
Psstttens open to exaerteneed telsphoas sseeatoea sspaelalty.
Call at Til.pt.on. OBtes and ask fsr Mre. -Cell, Chief Operator.
The Pacific TeL & Td. Co.
,l«'a* .*' ...lh< lS».r t
- ' rt miawi tt.il.lr." I
mnaim TLuwr I
IT l> IIKRRIIV IlKllKRF.II Ihal .1
JM i'-i'iti"il In ''•* i.i'l " >il'' ':■■:•'.
tt** tbr «id S«fih>* <Vmrt. rvf_ai,n«
■ Uw t*t* d*J ot Jlljr. I
..«* ol I* »'<lail a _.: *
!THE WEATHER;
: :;
s***eeeeeee*eseeeeeeeeeese <l
TIMES forecast for Sunday: P-ob
sbly Nimwhit dowdy; combination'""' . ev «l i^ _***** ,*^,»**— «*■•« **
of warm »iv. «»d m*fare«e. LedL *• ~d*?t*aJ&V*mm^m£i
Timp*ritura yiit*rdsy, Jun* 14: |**e** *t e.Mr.1 M—Am »riirt-4 i.d -mb-
Mi.i-ium 7* <• y**r ago 84: tw*'!* -
y*sre .go TS thr** y**ra sgo 71;
four* y**r* igo 72). mlnmum 47 (s
ywar ape 44: two ,ts-s one *■; thres
year* sg* 4S: lour yttrm ago M),
Obnrv.r.or.. st 8 a. m. snd noon
todsy ware, re_-p«ctl-/s.y.' Bare—star
2t.M, M.H Inches; thermometer M
•7 degraee: hyoro—*tor too. 12 psr
cent; westhsr hsiy. hsty'. wind n«sr>
ly calm, north.
Jun* 19—Time of *unrl*e, 6:44; sun-
ML «:31
The high prettsuri* of sir. noted ye*
lerdsy aa oB Ifae canst of Wsafalng-
ton, has moved northward Initi'id of
esitwsrd and Imtsad of s wsrm
wave for Ihla district, cool sir hss
rushed la from the Psclflc ss tfa* re-
•ull of the depression moving northward from Arlsona. Tbe latter movement i .<■: ■•■; southerly wind In Yums,
where tbe lowest tsmpsrature tsst
i.tght was >4 degrees; sad slso It
reused light rain in Los Angsles.
Another fall In temperature bss
occurred In the middle we«L the
change In Chicago was ■ degrees (U
degrevi st 7 s. m ). The* cbong* Is
Ht. Paul wsi • degrees HZ degrees
it 7 i in i The cbsage In Dse
Moines wss V degress tit degrees).
Light rala fell ln Boston sad Washington. D Oa hut It was clesr oa th*
Atlantic coast si sll polata this morning with very Utile ehsnge In t*m-
ANNOUNCEMENT
San Francisco Riding School
G. L Smith, Manager
has now opened its
Summer Branch
.i
335 Hawthorne Av., Palo Alto
Phone Connection
SADDLE HORSES RIDING LESSONS
lor Hire by Competeht Instructor
Special Attention lo Children
Men in the Service Given Special Rates
Gentle Horses Finest Equipment
Your Patronage Is Solicited
George Picrsoiu Riding Master
After il>* ia.ifi.Uou lu ih* ri.ut.i.
j garden the bride and groom weal al
■ ■:■."■ lu their bungalow on Lincoln
t avenue, whence tbey will leave lm-
imedlai«ily Ior the woddlng trip, tbs
1 place of wblcfa has been kepi s secret After s furlough of two weeks
from Csmp Fremont Lieutenant sad
Mr*. Slocum will return to.Pslo Attn.
where they will be st bonx* to thslr
frinnds st tfaelr now borne on Lincoln svenue.
e e a ,
Cspt. sad Mrs. J. Msrioa Reed sre
receiving tbe congreiutetloni ot thslr
friends on the birth of s son on J1
13. Cspteln Reed li connected u
the ssaltary train o( the Arid hospltst
sl Csmp FremooL
Palo Alto Calendar j
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesa
Saturday, llth
Warrrlry Clab dsoo* at Palo Alto
Woman's Clubhouse.
Tuesday, IBth
Womaas Society of the Congregational Church will m«st with Mrs. A.
Kennedy, if.:: Wsvsrisy streeL S
m. Work for lha Red Cross will
be provided. A Urg* atao dsnes lal
desired.
ITS inventor, DoviJ Bushncll, an American, in 1776
attempted to sink tbe British worship, I;aj*Jc.
Bushncll t.m-in* hts torpedo, chanted with powder.
by mcanj of a hand-power scmi*ti_ibmersiblc, planned
to fallen it to the hull ol the attacked ship with tt
steel plunger; then, explode ii by clock work.
Hb torpedo — too prnch of an experiment-—failed.
Safeguard in ft the user aisinit failure, Goodrich
never markets sn experiment, tires or anything else.
-Goodrich Tires, though built with the exSerienct and
skill of the oldest and largest rubber factory. Are proved
out by the practical road travel of Goodrich Test Qir
Fleets to make tbem in tponf and drtd—
III
SOLDIER'S REMAINS
SENT TO COLORADO;
Pnccral serrlces over th* remains!
of Joseph Bowsn. metntxr of Com-'
pany D. Sth Infsntry, who died at tha,
base faostptsl Thuredsy night. *ere|
roadacted yesterday afternoon from |
tbe Roller A Rapgoed mortuary. De-j
cesoed wss given s fall military bur-;
lal, s military band and * company j
of soMlen escortlt_g tb* remains to!
the Southern Picldc depot for shlp-
iiient to Trintdsd, Col. The body wm
accompanied "" Its test Journoy by
the mother of the dscssssd. wbo sr-
rlred two days previous to his dssth.
ICH
■name tires
For Goodrich recognizes but one vsbo in Ures—•
their sr-Kvice VALVE on your car and on the road: ooe
tire value—Sl'-RViCR VALUE.
Whatever pounds of rubber and other material go
ia tires; whatever hours of work and skill, ihcir
VALVE to motorists ts tbeir service, in corn-
_*!_______ fort, dependability snd durability.
And you are sure to get it if your tires are
GOODRICH SILVERTOWN CORDS, or
BLACK SAFETY TOEAOS.
Make sure of ttcaeety and stcttrity tn Ures bp
demanding big, masterful service value tires.
THE U. F. GOODRICH RUBBER CO.
Ssa Rudm Branch: 401 faUmion s _ Saa Txamteo*. CSL
■ a _e*V»_-7< «i ^^M*MBi..'ttn »v ■.-^•s.\-_*rM*ir-_h-_M note smCAtp.
THF CITV OF GOODRICH < AKRON, OHIO.
iinmiiansisiiBiiniii
