OCR Text |
Show Miscellany Newspaper's Jubilee. The San Francisco Chronicle's "Golden Jubilee and Exposition" edition. Issued January 16. is filled with much that will be of special interest to those who are anticipating a visit to the Golden Gate city. The first pages of this number of the Chronicle give a comprehensive review of the agricultural indue try and commercial commer-cial advancement of the Eta to during 1914. The exposition section contains descriptive de-scriptive articles and many illustrations that will give the reader some conception concep-tion of the beauty and grandeur of the architectural and sculptural designs, the vast size of the grounds and the natural acenic effects in the surroundings. There are also descriptions de-scriptions of the various concessions forming the "Joy Zone," designed for the amusement of the exposition visitors. Among the most interesting of these spectacles are the " '49 camp' and the reproductions of the famous Yellowstone National park. Business and financial conditions In California during the past year are reviewed re-viewed by able writers, who show the unfavorable un-favorable effects resulting from the great European conflict; a'so, the profitable results re-sults to be gained by that greatest financial finan-cial event of 1M4. the establishment of the federal reserve system. The history of journalism in California and the assistance it has been In the growth and development of the city of San Francisco is given In a highly interesting in-teresting Ftory by John P. Young. Mr. Youn? tells of the issuance of the first r.ewsnaper of the Mate, the California Star, a one-page sheet printed in Mon-terev Mon-terev in 1846, and the various journals that have succeeded it down to the present pres-ent day. The 'biographical section contains sketches of the Uvea of prominent men in all walks of life who have assisted the upbuilding of the state. |