Eames Tricycles Have you a relative, or friend, that is debarred from the enjoyments of life by not being able to get around and see the busy world as it really is; or who could materially benefit himself by being able to get about almost as well as the more fortunate ones? Eames' Tricycles extend this boon to him. Hundreds to-day are enjoying life through their use. Send for catalogue. Eames Tricycle Co. 2100 Market Street San Francisco, Cal. FRONTISPIECE. THE STONE SAILS... GUADALUPE, THE SACRED CITY. G. Conyngham Cunningham. 482 483 491 494 495 504 505 511 513 SOME AFTERNOON AMUSEMENTS AT THE PARIS EXPOSITION. Josephine Tozier..... 514 Illustrated from Drawings. [CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE.] SYMPOSIUM-WHAT SHALL SOCIETY DO TO BE SAVED? Present Processes Sufficient. A. F. Nye. AN AWAKENING. Elinor Merrill... TROUT CULTURE IN MENDOCINO. E. D. Ward... Illustrated from Photos by A. O. Carpenter. SAN FRANCISCO'S FIRST POSTOFFICE. Hester A. Benedict... Illustrated from Drawings and Photos. THE SUN'S ECLIPSE. A. K. Spero... ETC. BOOK REVIEWS... CHIT-CHAT.... PUBLISHERS' COLUMN Overland Monthly Publishing Company San Francisco: Flood Building, Market St. 521 530 534 535 537 544 545 554 560 561 562 567 xiii The Pacific Coast: San Francisco News Co. New York and Chicago: The American News Co. Honolulu: Soper & Co. Entered at San Francisco Post-office as Second-class matter. Continental Building and Loan Association OF CALIFORNIA ESTABLISHED IN 1889 The Hamlin School, (Van Ness Seminary) OLD VIOLINS Pacific Coast Bureau of Education A reliable medium of communication between Teachers and Schools, Families and Colleges Anna McNeill, Mgr. 31 Flood Building, San Francisco WABASH TELEGRAPH SCHOOL guarantees you a position soon as competent. Short Hand and Typewriting. Write for catalogue. Address Montpelier, O. Book of Gold Mines Free! A prominent Denver publisher who is familiar with every phase of life in the Cripple Creek (Colorado) gold camp has just published a volume which he styles "Cripple Creek Illustrated." The book contains nearly 100 views of the big gold mines of the camp, a correct map, and in fact a world of information. Full reports of ore mined, dividends paid, etc. The edition cost $1000 to issue. To introduce his big illustrated weekly family paper (founded 1890) he will send you a copy of "Cripple Creek Illustrated" and his paper 13 weeks on trial for 25c. Clubs of 5. $1. Stamps taken. Latest mining news and western stories. Mention THE OVERLAND when you write and address, Illustrated Weekly, Denver, Colorado. Buswell Company A CITI WITHOUT SOAP. Miss Kate V. Johnson, of Madison, Ind., who has lived in Japan for thirteen years, talks in an interesting way of the little people of that country, who live without chairs, bedsteads, knives, forks, spoons, or soap; of the women who paint their teeth black and shave their eyebrows to indicate loyalty to their husbands; of the carpenters who make long beautiful shavings by drawing their planes towards them, and who place the back door at the front of the house; and of their books in which the preface is placed at the end of the book and footnotes at the head of the page. Miss Johnson first went to Akita, a city of 60,000 persons, and found it a city without soap. Naoye Saito, a young Japanese girl who came to live in her house, had never had a soap bath in her life. She kicked and screamed when her first bath was given her, and said they were trying to kill her. A cake of Ivory Soap was sent Naoye Saito's father with instructions to use it on his perHe came back the next day and asked for another cake, saying he had used it all up. son. Before Miss Johnson left Japan last summer she took Naoye Saito, who had been with her for ten years, back to her native province, and left her to earn her own liv Bookbinders ing. While still in Tokio, a few days before Binding and Mailing Weekly Papers and Peri. odicals of Every Description. Mail Lists Corrected without Extra Cost than Regular Weekly Charge Newspaper and Catalogue Folding and Stitching on sailing for America, Miss Johnson received a letter from Naoye, in which she said: "I forgot one thing very necessary to our comfort in this place. Will you please go to the grocery store and buy me a dozen cakes of Ivory Soap and send them to me at once?" She sent a money order to pay for it, and the soap was sent. In writing to advertisers please mention the OVERLAND. |