In connection with the Food Cards the following cards have been issued to provide for the giving out of other supplies:

FOOD CARD No. ......... DATE ..................

To Supply Station:

Give bearer the number of Articles punched out below.

FOR MEN.
Hats123456
Shoes123456
Shirts123456
Undershirts123456
Drawers123456
Socks123456
Stockings123456
FOR WOMEN.
Waists123456
Skirts123456
Under Skirts123456
Under Vests123456
Diapers123456
Drawers123456
HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES.
Tents123456
Cots123456
Mattresses123456
Blankets123456
Towels123456
Wash Basins123456
Stoves123456
Buckets123456
Pots and Pans123456
Knives and Forks123456
Spoons123456
Plates123456
Cups123456
Lanterns123456
Chairs123456
Soap123456

The issuing of these cards has reduced the number of repeaters and has been of great assistance in the systematizing of the relief work.

General Bates in his report to the President of the American National Red Cross states later that a further economic and salutary measure has been adopted in the establishment at the different camps and relief stations of large kitchens and dining halls or sheds where a contractor buying the supplies from the relief committee furnishes three cooked meals a day, and in case of all persons, excepting those who are entirely destitute, these meals are sold at ten or fifteen cents each. It is the opinion of the officers in charge of this work, which is just inaugurated, that within a few days, the greater majority of the people getting relief from the Committee in this manner will pay for it. General Bates also says, “I think it would be quite impossible for any one, without having been on the ground or having had a similar experience in some other place, to appreciate the enormous difficulties that these people have had to contend with. In the first place their three days’ battle with the fire was as horrible, excepting as to loss of life, as any of the critical battles of the world. During that time, with the water cut off from the city, the impossibility to arrest fire by means of dynamiting and blowing up districts so that the fire should have nothing to feed upon, the suffering and horror of turning two hundred thousand or more people from their homes into the streets, with nothing to eat and nothing to drink was simply appalling and notwithstanding the gigantic task that lay before them, I think from what I learn, that it is safe to say that no one has suffered from hunger or neglect.”

This is only a brief and partial report of the beginning and progress of the relief in California, but it conveys some idea of the methods adopted in the accomplishing of this great work.

Up to the date of going to press the various State Branches have contributed the following amounts:

Connecticut$119,094.74
Delaware18,900.00
District of Columbia58,911.01
Georgia200.00
Illinois144,818.55
Indiana34.032.16
Maine5,607.02
Maryland100,000.00
Massachusetts64,877.25
Michigan27,500.00
Missouri143,000.00
New York510,000.00
Ohio62,967.45
Pennsylvania129,600.00
Rhode Island87,000.00
South Carolina1,000.00
Wyoming1,694.60