English: Identifier: chamberofcommerc01todd
Title: The Chamber of commerce handbook for San Francisco, historical and descriptive; a guide for visitors ..
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Todd, Frank Morton Greater San Francisco Chamber of Commerce
Subjects:
Publisher: San Francisco, San Francisco Chamber of commerce under the direction of the Publicity committee
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: Sloan Foundation
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f these bazaars are not, usually, the names oftheir proprietors, but expressions of poetic sentiment or invo-cations of fortune. In the most modest of them you may findthe oriental treasure bit that makes the strongest appeal toyou and at the smallest price. The Chinese attendants areuniformly courteous, and whether you buy or not you arewelcome to admire and enjoy the wonder-works in silver,bronze, enamel, lacquer, teak, rosewood, porcelain, carven ivoryand sumptuously embroidered silks. Along this street are some good Chinese restaurants, withrecessed balconies where huge globular lanterns bob in the 11 Handboof( fcr San Francisco breeze, and with tea gardens on the top floors, where one candine upon dishes of the toothsome Chinese cuisine. Preservesand tea are served at modest rates; and, on a days notice,almost any of these places will arrange dinners at prices rang-ing from $2 to $20 a cover, that will include such delicaciesas birds nest soup, snow fungus, shark fins, chop suey,
Text Appearing After Image:
THE NEW YEAR LIIJKS. chow yuk, squab, bamboo shoots, almond pudding; chicken,pork and noodles served in the various oriental modes, ac-companied by plum and pear wines, and beginning, always,with dessert. Chinese orchestras can be engaged to accom-pany the feast. Live fish are imported in tanks from China for banquetshere. At the north corner of Clay street is one of the deadwallsused as a bulletin board. Here advertisements and notices ofall sorts, in black Chinese characters on the universal red A Walk in Chinatorvn 73 ground, are posted, and here eager knots of men can be seengleaning the news of the day. No people is more keen fornews and the little community supports four daily papers printedin the Cantonese dialect. Butcher shops, grocery and drug stores along this medieval,looking street present curious sights—dried roots and herbs,jars of sea-horse skeletons, dejected ducks flattened out andvarnished, and hung up to tempt the epicure, gobbets of porkfrom which the butcher ha
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