The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 22, 1897, Page 5

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4 PROBO MmN NGB O DO GE THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY o 22, MARCH 1897. - zoverned nations the impotence of politi- The Roman Catholic Church of St. Peter, on Alabama street, which has been completely renovated, and has had the | uterior most elaborately frescoed and otherwise beautified, was again opened for worship yesterday. A solemn higl mass was celebrated at 10:30 a. M., at which the most Rev. Archbishop Riordan presched. 1Inthe evening there were solemn vespers, the sermon on that | occasion bewng delivered by the Rev. | Father Yorke. at both services. The high mass in the morning was ren- | dered doubly impressive by the excellence The church was crowded of the m | programme, which com- | prised the “Kyrie,” “Sanctas” and *“Ag- | " from Mozart's “Twelfth Mass”; | The Credo,” from Millard’s mass in B, and the nedictus,” from Cimorosa’s The organist and director -was | s Mamie Cgonan, and the choir con- | i of the following: Sovranos, Miss N. Giusti, Mrs. J. Knight, Mrs, J. T. McDonald, M manda Cor- corsn and Mrs. J. Owens; altos, M Krieg, M ne, Miss A. Miss A, Miss 1 Seely, . Macauley Hickey. ded at the mass, pastor of the church o celeb James McDonald, sabdeacon deacon; Rev. P. E. Mulligan, masterof ceremonies. the In sanctuary attending tbe Arch- e was in effect sing the rchbishop’s discou; eloquent apolog in 1is theological | acceptation—for | ihe esthetici=m of tue Catholic ceremonial. | a splend wa d in part reor i mplete in the detail: i beautiful in t lavish adornment of its walls, the thoughts and feelings are re- | vived of many years ago, when we en- | tered it for the first time and with solemn cerem es dedicated it to the service of divine worship. We are glad to-day that | H your parish church, | of its architecture | the wo un_ then is at last ¢ 1o the honor and glory of God. “My firsi words are of congra n to | your devoted pastor, who has directed i forts to supply the material needs of the | without nezlecting its spiritual | and 1o his assistants and the people | arish, who have alwayvs baen ready | to second his efforis and give unto the | house of the Lord some of the means with Almighty God has endowed them. | ven a superficial reading of the his y of the charch of Christ shows th: wherever tne church exists under normal | conditions at peace and in an atmosphere of liberty and permitted to put forth her activities from the besinning to the pres ent day, those activities, woile they have displ themselves in many depart- ments fe, have, above all, displayed themselves in the noblest, stateliest and | most_costly b and have sur- rounded our worship with all the adorn- | ments that music or art can contribute. “In the music and the litargical obser which mark out different parts of year, joyous or severe, full of jubila- tion or of sorrow, we see manifestations of the Catiolic life which, to the Catholic saind, are indications: of the will of our | divine master. To those who assert that | the intellect should alone be appealea to, | Ireply that man is a composite being to whom impresions are couveyed through the senses, which are the feelers of the intellect. Both a spiritual and a material | temple are neceseary. God's church is | not built for a day nor for the passineg needs of human nature. Itisthe neces- sary equation between God’s mercy and | the wants of man, and so the external en- vironment of Christian truth and of st's church should bear a character Chb of stability and permanence, binding to- gether in one communion the past, the | nt and the future.” ather Yorke, who preached in the evening, also referred in complimentary | terms to the completion of the church and aveiled himself of the opportunity to criticize those who are wont 10 cavil at the manner in which the Roman Catholic Chureb spends money on its religious esiablishments. Some of those critics, he caid, were emulating the spirit of Judas ariot, who, whken Mary Magdalene poured the precious ointment upon the head of the Savior in the house of Simon the Leper, objected to the action as ex- | travagant and wasteiul. | 480 to-day,’ continued the speaker. | sere are_some men who look upon this church and churches like it and say: ‘For what purpose is all this waste? In these | hard times the money might be better employed in relieving the needs of the poor.’ Our answer to them is the same as | was given by our blessed Lord to the mur- murers in his aay. It is done for His sa Does tne beautifying of God’s house inter- fere with charity? It does not. The hurch which spends money for this pur- pose 1s the church which alwavs spends more upon the poor of Jesus Christ than | any other institution. | ““No charitable organization can parallel | the work of the holy sisterhood for the re- lief of tne sick and suffering, a work whose value cannot be estimated in dollars and cents. Those who gzive stingily to the church give sii to the poor, and those who give generously to the church are those whose hearts are never hardened against the appeal of the deserving. he preacher justified the magnificer.cs | of Catholic churches on the ground that | they lhouses of God, and undertook to | mistakabie nature of the real vrove the prese nd the doctrine of transubsian- | tiation by the express declarations of | Christ himself to that effect. i —_—— Dr. Wells on the Marriage Relation. At the Second Unitarian Church last night the pa Rev. Dr. Wells, deliv- | ered the first of two lectures on marriaga, his special subject being the place of | margiage in nature. It was an attempt to | find the rules of this humaan relation. Two causes,” he said, “operate to im- air the famiiy—ihe loss of faith in the acredness of marringe and the growth of individualism. By so much as the influ- ence of the family declines 85 much does the order of society suffer, and in self- cal forces to stand alone -is disclosed. Nature is domestic in her purposes. Many of the birds and beasts pair, and fae vrinciple of sex is established far down in the vegetable life.” After tracing the evolution of man and | showing the development of the two-fold form of the individual, the speaker nointed out_certain causes of dissonance in married life. First, the habit of semi- deeeption. 1 Young people.”’ he said, ‘‘wear a mask; they put on an appearance. In the most simple life of the country this is not pos- sible, but in the city there is the restraint of convention. The result is that they know little of each other—less than noth- ng. Often courtship is a game of cards, ip which it is of first importance not 1o re | Literature.” | men, | tnar both Jew ana Pa | the | question, righteousness and fatth. veal the hand. But the revelation is made at last ana they find that they both en- deavored to cheatand did wnat they in- ed. The second cause is mstaking for love. The attraction that ends rarrisge, should be an inner rather n an outer fitness. If not, a mistake is made for which life will not be long agh to repent in and get righted. “The life of the man and the maid must be an ever closer interlacing Of tastes, sympathies and affections, or the founda- tion is laid for a thousand petty irrita- tions, “Another cause of dissonance is the inequality assumed to exist and which | places the woman at a disadvantage. A more radical Yeason is the quality of the high contracting parties. The truest wodded life can only come out of .the truest unwedded life. Make the skeleton soul without trust and it will be unequal to the fulfillment of the marriage vows. Given the manly character and womanly ity, given the love which is the seal of ghty God upon a relation toward 5 nature has traveled for ages and we bave nature’sifoundation for the family.” - The Literature of The New Testament. | Rev. William Rader of the Third Con- | gregational Church preachea the second es of sermons on “New Testament He said in part: 1l was not a theologian. His writ- contained no system of thought, no They were of a se “p, ing studied arrangement of ideas. not an unbroken chain of thought, buta | casket of jewels thrown together out of a great soul, which apprehended certain hs and uttered them. He wasnota philosopher, yet he had a philosophy. “The source of Paul’s theoloz in 1 vigot. After the universal love of Go ble to limit this divine love. is conversion he preached 1t is im possi: The histo; | of religion is an exhioition of its constant overflowing_the narrow boundaries set by God is not a God of one race, but of all races. This is_proved by the experi- ence of Jonah, of Philip preaching to the eunuch, the conversion of Cornelius and the ministry of Paul. The question which Paul took as the fext of his theology was, can a man bacame r his is his starting p nt. He declares come _short of hteousness of God; that a jew with his broken law i« little different from a pagan with his Bible written on his con- science. He preached in answer to bis lieved that men are not to be made right with God by ceremony or ritual or a blind | obedience to law, whether written or written; that religion is a life; that salva- tion is the character of God, and that this character is received through faith, wnich is the nower to see and_receive the invi: ble. He believed that this righteousness is nota barrier but an invitation from God to man, and that men are good in proportion to the degree of this righteousnsss iu them; and that as & proof of God's will- ingness to_be merciful, and to extend his own character through’ faith to the world, he has given bis Son in demonstration, in whose sacrifice ‘we love him because he first loved us.’ The theology of Paul is that of just:fication by faith rather than righteousness by law. | The Loverof God Is Infinite and Eternal “Divine Love and Wisdom—How Can They Be Reconciled With the Existence of Evil and Misery?'’ Tuis was the theme of Rev. J. S. David’s sermon at Washing- ton Hall yesterday morninz In course of his remarks he said: *It is a revealed truth that God is love. And as\he is infinite his love is infinite; and if infinite it is universal. He loves his enemies. If infinite it is also eternal, and cannot diminish or change. He can- not love his enemies in this world and hate them in the other world. “But if God is infinite and eternal love bow can evil and misery exist? The sun cannot send forth rays of | frost and darkness, and ye: ice- bergs could not exist if the sun did not exist. The sun gives birth to planets and when the poles are turned from the sun the water congeals into ice. “Likewise the Lord cannot give forth rays of evil and falsity, of misery and death; aud yeu these could not exist inde- pendently of the existence of God. He | evoives the human will and understand- ing, but when these are turned away from Bim the will stiffens into self-love and the understanding darkens into falsity. Man is a free agent, the aroiter of his own des- tiny, and he i3 destined to go wherever he wills to go. vine influsnces, ever seeking to draw him tenderly upward, but he is never com- pelled.” To compel him would destroy his individuality and make of him a machine oranonentity; ana it is better to bea devil than a nonentity, for a devil can be of use to the human race, but a nonentity cannot. Byil spirits are our tempters, and we are regenerated by means of temp- tations. It is indeed a negative use, but itisause all the same. If they should cease to be useful they would cease to ex ist, for nothing can exist save for a use.’ i e e | Rev. F. R. Farrand’s Story of Esther. | In the Howard Presbyterian Church, corner Ok and Baker straets, the pastor, Rev. F. R. Farrand, preached the sixth and lust of a series of sermons on *“The Story of Esther.’ His subject was “The Tables Turn-d, or Retribution” (Esther vii:10). He said it is bard to realize the amount of wickedness there is in the world. Even the wicked will be confounded by the | enormity of theirown misdeeds. Yetsuch ignorance does not absolve from responsi- bility. it was Xerxes' business to have known the reach of his fatal edict. “Like all arrant boasters and mean men, Haman was a coward. His plea for mercy was met. by the King’s order to nani[hlm on the gallows he had prepared for Mordecai. Behold the irony of fate! How are the tables turned! Mordecai has the crown while Haman bas the cross. In tbe moral governmerit of God there is the element of rewibution. However much wickedness may seem to flourish and escape the consequences of its evil deeds, a time wili surely come when tho righteous judgment of God will consume its doers. “But I thank God that while this fact of retribution is here made plain, this story makes equaliy plain the most blessed fact of mercy. The pure and gentle Esther, kneeling before the throne of Xerxes— ber life in the balance—tearfully pleading for the lives of her people, and the golden scepter Of mercy Tesiing over her, is a peautiful tvpe of our advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ, the righteous. “But the type pales before the anti-type. Esther's life was not required. Christ Gied for you and me. Tne people for whom she pleaded had done nothing to merit the King's displeasure. We all isiound | He was educated a | Dt with Goa?’ | He be- | the | He is operated upon by di- | have sinned agamst the King of Kings. ] Come beneath that scepter of mercy and find pardon and li % S | The Resurrection Of the Lord A large assembly greeted the English evangelist at the First Baptist Church yesterday morning on his return from Los ‘Angeles and the south, where for two months he has been holding very success- ful campaigns. The subject chosen was in connection | with the resurrection. The preacher showed how difficult it was for the Qis- ciples in the Apostolic days to receive the transcendant truth which is at once the glory and proof of the Christian _revela- tion. Iugiving an exposition of Luke, chapter xxiv, the facts indicated were cleariy illusirated. | " “We do not,” said Mr. Varley, “take kindly to the. great doctrine of the resur- rection by reason of our present life, our senses and our environment.” The | preacher showed that it became neces- sary for the Lord first to open the under- standings of the disciples; second, to open the Seriptures to them concerning the great fact; third, to open their eyes, especially the eye of the mind; fourth, to open their hearts for his own incoming. The knowl- edge of fellowship with Caristin resur- rection, said Mr. Varley, needs a divine instructor, and in every experience the Lord himself must be the revealer and teacher. The subject of the resarrection was shown to be essentially spiritual. The union of the veliever with Christ was shown to be in his resurrection and not in nis incarnation. The subject proved to be of deep interest, and the attention of the large audience’ was closely maintained throughoant. HDVANCED CUBYS CAUSE Echoes of Saturday Night's Big Mass-Meeting Still tounding. | San Francisco’s Citizens Aroused in a Just Cause as They N .ver Were Befor:. { San Francisco is yet ringing with the echoes of the mass-meeting that filled Metropolitan Temple on Saturday night and sent to the struggiing Cubans the knowledge that the City by the Golden | Gate is heartily in sympathy with them | in their valiant fight for Liberty. Certainly no such gathering was ever be- | fore held in this City. There were few or none of the idle curiosity-seekers who usu- | ally attend such meetings merely to get | comfortable seats for the evening and listen | carelessly to the eloquence of the speak- ers, Almost every member of the audi- ence seemed to feel that he or she had & personal interest in the cause of the patri- otsand the eagerness with which all lis- tened to the addresses and the spontane- ous applause tnat greeted each horoic name or patriotic utterance testified to the depth of that feeling. Many went Lo the meeting full of sym- pathy for Cuba, but not exactly knowing | why, except that her men and women were struggling for liberty. When they left the big ball they knew just wny, and their interest was vastly increased. ~They heard eloquent, logical speakers tell of the rights of the Cubacs and of the indig- nities heaped upon them. They heard the strong but respectful resolutions that were passed in bebalf of a downtrodden though brave people, and they caught the enthusiasm of the thousands who | filled the hall. Then they thrilled and { cheered with the rest and went home to talk of nothing else but the necessity of aiding the Cubans and to think only of plans for doing something substantial in their cause. The mass-meeting did vastly more than | just pass those resolutions. 1t aroused | the people as only such gatherings can and 1t set a ball rolling that will not stop until Cuba is free and received into the | family of American republics HEKBETS 00 AL | Two Barbers Ride Four Blccks | in Wheelbarrcws and Dine Free. Comedien Burk: Has & Jolly Time in Ferris Hartman’s Part at the Tivo'i. Market street afforded yesterday after. noon still another measure of the great- ness of the Carson scrap. A wheelbarrow bet was paid, and wheelbarrow bets and peanut rollings are not brought forth on this earth except when a nation has | beer: stirred by the hazard of something that approximates the momentous im- portance of a Presidential election. | " There was lots of fun_at this Sabbatn wheeling in honor of Robert Fitzsim- mons, but no psychologist or philosopher 10 observe its ways and to inquire about the whys of these strange treaks of human nature. A block and a half into south of Market, at 128 Fourth street, is a flourishing bar- ber-shop, and next door isa flourishing place of business and pleasure, with | “iree hamburger day and night” and neighborly relations with the tonsorial | palace. W. F. Niedermak, who came here as one of the Monogram baseball team of Portlana last fall, twirls mus- taches there, and so does E.J. Prell. A fine young man, named D. A. Desmond, comes daily for the laundry work, and J. | Bishop, another fine voung man, finds tne barber-shop fillinga large place in his life. Two weeks of “chewing the rag’’ over the fight didn’t change the deep convic- tion of the two young barbers that Fiiz would knock the head off him and the certainty of the two other feilows t] Fitz was & “big stiff,”’ and bantering in iriendly fierceness brought the serious re- sult that the two that lost were to wheel | the other Lwo around the plock, preceded by the Oxiord string band, and 'to pay for a French dinner. £o at ». M. Desmond and Bishop, wearing placards “I bet- on Curbett,” started the trundling of the barbers, who proclaimed “I bet on Fiz,” aud tne string band and the flags helped draw an at- tendant crowd. The day after the fight one messenger- boy entertained Market street by wheeling a comrade from Second street to the City Hal! and back. Tivoli theater goers had an extra langh last night because John Burke, who was doing & comedy part at the Orpheum, paid his bet with Ferris Hartman on the zht on the Tivoli stage. These popular comedians agreed that the loser should lay the other's part that might, and Bke pmd hisbat He sepatiedon toe stage in the first act of ‘‘Pinafore’ in artman’s costume, which was twice too big for him, and without knowing a line of his part, while Hartman sat in a box and enjoyed it. “Don’t laugh,” said Burke to the con- vulsed audience, “let the fellow in the box laugh.”’ At the end of the szcond act he hastened 1o his own part at tne Orpheum. iepaindd e ifeos SUPERIORITY to fit defective sight conceded 10 Berteling Optical Company; removed to 14 and 16 Kearny streot, ' PREPARING FOR A NEW CONSTITUTION How the Resoclution® Went Through the House at the Last Moment. A Defeat That Was Turned Into a Victory in an Hour. The Qu:stion to B> Submilted to the People Within the Space of Two Y:ars. Members of the Legislature arriving in the City last evening were occupied in discussing nothing so much s the consti- tational convention, provision for which was made in the l2st moments of the ses- sion. Credit for the passage of the measure is due they say to James Reynolds more than to any other one man. Reynolds had been | in Sacramento through almost the entire | session working night and day for the amendment to the constitution whick: gave to the Legislature the power to regula taxation. The bill sprang from the Senate, but got through the House first with a good easy margin. When it came to the last trenches in the Senate a distinct change in the sentiment of that body toward the bill was discovered, which was traced ultimately 10 letters and telegrams from real-esiate men and biz land-owners in this City who feared the single tax might tind a realization through it. It died in the Senate, the vote being 9 to 18 against it. mDuring all his championship of this amendment to the constitution Reynolds had incidentally calied attention to the involved and binding character of the constitution itself, how full of legisiative handicap it is. The defeat of the amend- ment, of which he had had reasonable as- surance that it would pass, was a great disappointment, and came in the lasi bours of the session. There was one re- course—the calling of a couvention for the building of an entirely new constitution, A joint resolution had already been in- troduced and came up for passage imme- diately after the defeatof theamendinent. Reynolds stood in the lobby and saw the resolution walk through the Senate al- most without opposition. It was a very satisfying spectacle, after the loss of this measure upon which he had concentrated his ererpies. Hearing the result of the vote he hur- ried over to the Assembly and arrived just in time to hear the vote announced de- feating the resolution. A question arose as to whether a majority or a two-thirds Vote was necessary ior the passage of the resolution. The chair announced that the resolution was lost. Carminetti made a rousing speech in fa- vor of the chair's ruling. Coombs climbed to the coairsplace and read- the law on the question, declaring a two-thirds vote necessary. It was in the last bours of the session and the Assembly was in a humor for trifing. There were motions o “‘re- consider”” and they went throngh. Then came questions as to tue pres.nce of a quorum and a call of the House was de- manded. The business dragged in this fashion for some time. The chair grew weary and Guy took his place. He, too, became tired. A motion to raise the call of the house was made. While the vote was be- ing counted Guy called for a substitute to take the chair, Keegan volunteered. Now Keegan is a stanch single-taxer and was eager to see the resolution pass. He announced, although the ‘“ayes’ were almost unanimous, that the seemed to have it. ‘This struck the easy-Humored body as a good joke, and Keegan, seeing he had made a hit, declarea the *‘noes” bad it. The call of the House was continued, and friends of the measure were dispatched to bring in other {riends. the rear, rallying the friends of the reso- Iution and keeping them to their task. For two hours this sort of thing con- tinued, while the Assemblymen enjoye themselves throwing wastebaskets at each other and making mock motions, with now and then moving that the *call of the House” be raised. Atlast the requisite number of votes were marshaled to carry the measure and it went througn. “Now,” said Keegan, “you can raise the call a8 soon as you wish,” Reynolds threw his hat in the air and declared himseif better satisfied than if the amendment resoiution had gone through. The question of calling a constitutional convention will be submitted to the beo- pla some time bafore the next session. If 1t carries then the next Lagiglature will pass & law to that effect and appropri- ating money to defray the expense. Members of seemed to think the people would vote in favor of the bill. The convention would have to be held within one year alter the next session, or within three years from date. In tie meantime an active cam- paign of education would. be carried on with regsrd to taxation, and the new con- stitution would very probably introduce some novelties in that ling SUCHLIST LIBOR PARTY Preparing to Organize Sections in the San Joaquin Valley. A Stanford Professor’s Interesting Address Before the Amar- ican Branch, The regular weekly educational lecture of the American branch of the Socialist Labor party was delivered last evening by Professor George Krieten of Stanford University. The proiessor's subject was “The First Social Revolution,” which he said was the English social revolt in 1381, He described the condition of English so- ciety in the fourteenth century, and par- ticularly the condition of the serfs, the freemen and the laboring elemeni in general. Coatinuing he sai In 1348-40 & great pestilence, called the ack death,” attacked England and swept away perhaps as much as one-half of the popu- lation. Theeconomic resuitsof this plague for the workingman, however, were very good. Wages more than doubled while rents sank in the same proportion. The land-holding P liament strove to destroy these good results by enacting the statute of laborers, wiich soreed the workingman to labor for the same wages as beiore the plague. The laborers re- pliea by organizing societies of resistance to this statute—the firsttrades anions in history— with purposes 1dentical with those'of their moaern ' fuccessors. Discontent was rife throughout the land and it wanted only an occasion i cause it o break forth. This occasion was furnished by the tempted collection of an unjust poll tax. The people arose and in irresisiibie multitudes surged on London. it was found {mpossible to withstand them. At Mileend the boy king Richard 1I tremblingly granted all their demands. On the foliowing day Wat Tyler, their chief leader, was lured sway {rum his men and secrotly slain, wnile the insurgents ‘were induced 10 leave the city at the supposed the Legisluture generally | Reynolds stood | § on guard directing the proceedings from | | i command of their leader himself. But every one of their demands had to be granted be- fore they would retire. In like manner did the insurrection rage far and wide over England. In every recorded case ihe insurgenis were granted whatever they desired. After the people had thus retired home in perfect faith the King’s counselors rescind- ed his promisos and punishied the revolt witis great Cruelty ind bloodshed. Nevertheless its cause ullimately gained; Teceived its death blow. It wasa great social movement, the back- bone oi which was an_uprising against serr- dom. Besides this, the rebels demanded & low limitation of rent, which wouid have given them economical liberty, free huntin and fishing and freedom from ail tolls an oppression. They wished to force the King to rule by their own instead of his lords’ ad- vice. Several others addressed the meeting, and among them was A. Bersford, the author of the new socialistic work, “Philosophy for Wage Slaves,” whose re- marks were well received. M. W. Wilkins will soon depart for the San Joaquin Valley, where he will or- zanize sections of the party in all of the towns. The wagon will start out with socialist speakers and literature for propa- ganda work in the last of April. VISITED CORRAL HOLLOW, A Party of Capitalists Inspects the Big Coal Mines Which Are Soon to Open. A party of prominent San Francisco capitalists and merchants returned yesier- day from a visit to the Corral Hollow coal mines, which have just been opened, and from which fuel will be shipped within the next few day! The journey was undertaken at the in- vitation of the San Joaquin and Alameda al Company, which owns the mines, and was in the nature of a junketing trip to mew the resources of the vast deposits of coal that are. expected soon to free San Francisco from the necessity of bringing fuel from foreign markets. A portion of the party went to Stockton, | the rend:zvous, by boat, and others by special car, the guests of the company be- ing escorted to the mine by Superintend- ent John Treadwell. - All were vastly in- terested in the big mine, which boasts of its own railroad to convey its product to tide water, and spent a pleasent day about the property. AROUND THE BASES, The San Francisco Athletic Club Defeats the Santa Claras. Hal: Bros. D:feats the K S & Fs. South Ends Win From the Do!phins—Other Games. The defeat of the Santa Claras yester- day was due to the clever pitching of Fleming, the Athletic Club’'s new south- paw. The visitors were only able to get one hit off his delivery. The game was an excellent exhibition ot fast vlaying, and the large crowd was kept in a constant state of enthusiasm. The following score shows how the game was won and lost: S. F. ATHLETIC. A.B. K. B SE PO. A ¥ | Sheenan, 1 1 B L 02,0530 Speliman, 5 b e T I Keisso, r 1. 3 0 0 0 0 0 o Johnson, s LT Pl et e Van Norden, T daianots gi gt cp i, ¥ord, 1 b. &N 100 R T Giaoini, c. B 0000 320, 0 Dreus, ¢.. 4 12 0 6 0.0 Raymond, p 0 4 0 0 v 0 W & 1L 0003 0T 33 8 9 4 2711 6 AB R B SB PO A E W B Nt Robinson, c. 800 08 e 3T Lyon, . £ 5 0 0 0 0 1 1 Pireria, c. 8f 0 0ol 3 o Farry, 1 e s e Draghl, 1 B Lipdeel 1. 000 . Foler, i S MR O ST e teffani, 4 00 0 1 0 Carriero, 2 § 0.0 0 1 3 Totals.... 3 4 5 3 24 12 8 S BY INNINGS. Athletics. 0 0 2310 2 *-8 Base hits.. 0022 20 2 9 Santa C 5 3100000 0-4 Base hits..1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-5 Earned run—Santa Clara 1. Three-base hit— Speliman. _ Sacnfice hits—Robinson. Spellman, F. Folex. First base on errors—Adhletics 3, Santa Ciara 8. First base on cailed balls—Athletics 5, ra 3. lefton bases—Athlatios 7, Sants Struck oui—Raymona 1, Fieming 6, Hit by pitcher—Van Norden and Draghi. ‘Time of game—lh. 55min. Umpire. James 3cDonald. Official scorer—F. D, Lowry. The Commercial League. The game played by the Kohlberg, Strauss & Frohman and the Hale Bros. teams was exceedingly exciting, despite the score. The Hales were very strong both st bat and in the field, and their bunching of twelve runs in _the seventh inning lost all hope to the admirers of the losing team. The attendance was over 1800. The score and line-up is as foillows: AB R BN SB PO A E 5 0 2 A o 5 0 0 3 0 1 Stuple, 83 5 0 2 R0 Lewls, r. 1. (RS 0 0 o Biowa, 1b. 5 1 0 9; B R Donde, 2 b 850 0 o0 3 Cad s 7 8 b 3 65 gho 10 Roberts. p. 4 1 0 10 32 Total .44 8 7 2 14 16 HALE BROS. AB R BE SB PO A E 6 3 '3 0 1 3 T iy 50851 ¥lynn, < R 8 o Crawford, g AL 1 8 0 1 T N8R 32 0 o 7 4 3 2 a0 Barnh irt Tika ) 8 01ty Payuter, T. 1. 7 543038, 02zt 1 Walter, ¢ 6 4 3 657 .8 *Copp, 'ss. 10 0 v 0 0 Total 21 16 12 *Hurt and had to leave field. SCORE BY INNINGS. Earned runs—Hale 6, K. & & F. 1. Base hi:a— Aale19, K. 8 & F. 7. Doubie plays—Hal (Barthart 1o Flynn, Crawford to_Fiyan). Bases on ouils—Hale 17, K. §. & F. 3. Hit by pitcher— serfdom had | Hale LK. S & F. 1. Pasied balis—Hale 2, K. S & F. 6. Lett on bases—dale 12 K. = & F, 8. *trdck out—By Crawiord 7, by Heberts 6, by Sta- Pple 2. Wild pitches—Crawford 1, Roberts 3. Umplre—Geggus. Time of game—Two hours 10 minutes. Presidio Athletic Grounds. The Californias defeatea the Marcus and Runnels by a score of 16 to 4. The feature of the game was a sensa- tional running. catch by Krug, the Alerts’ shortstop. g The National Guards defeated the A. Shireck & Co. team by a score of 21 to 18. The Dolphins were defeated by the South-Ends by a score of 42 to 7. The Hall of Records defeated the H. Friedman & Co.’s by a score of 10 t0 9. An exciting game was played last Sat- | urday on the St. Mary’s Coliege campus. | The competing teams were the Bank of 1767 vs. Yard. The former won by a score of 605, The Pacific Stock Exchange team and the William Clines will piay ball next Sunday morning at the recreation grounds. The Conway & Baumers defeated the Oakland Examiners by a score of 6 to 2. The winners will accept _challenge from any amateur nine, the Examiners or G. H. Tays preferred. Send challenge to 0. E. Baldwin, 21134 Jones street. The Friedmans defeated the Golden Gates by a score of 14 to 10 The features of the zame were the superior -pitching of William Pabst and the heayy batting of Lange, O'Leary, Malone and Pabst. The married and single men of the Ex- celsior Redwood Company crossed bats in an exciting game of baseball at the recrea- tion grounds in Golden Gate Park yester- day, and the boys who have not yet had a chance to decide whether or not marriage is a failure, won by a score of 26 to 18. The game was for $25 a siie, and the winning team was made up of Conaelly, itcher; Lombard, caicher; Simpson, firs: ase; Liovd, second base; Ward, third base; M(Grill, short:top; Ayres, right field; Sundberg, center field, and Kelly left field. The married team was as follows: pitcher; Williams, catcher; Faust, first base; Firch, second base; 'Bodie, third base: Perry, shortshop; Norton, left field; Stone, right fieid; Auson, center fiel d Mr. Knignt officiated as umpire. Nve, Lieutenant - Colonel C. P. Eégau Assigned to h>D:partment of Caiifornia. Men Must Have Intelligence as Well as Physical Ability to Join the Army. Lieutenant-Colonel Charles P. Eagan having reported at the headquarters of the Department of Calilornia, under tele- graphic instructions from the War De- parument, has, in orders, been arnounced as chief commissary of the department, relieving Major Wells Willard, commis- sary of subsistence. Captain Lockett, Captain Starr and Lieutenant Miley sat as a board last week at the Presidio to examine into and report | on the qualifications of First Sergeant Jacop Schnurr, Battery G, Third Artillery; Sergeant Gustav Bonitz, Light Battery C, Third Artillery, and Sergeant Joseph W Schmid, Light Battery F, Third Artillery, for appointment as ordnance sergean:. It hes been a subject of general remark by all who have visited the Presidio of late that the men who are in the service are all of a superior cl physi- cally and mentally. Of late a great deal of care has been taken in the selection of men for the several branches, and educa- uion and intelligence are taken as a guide in the selection of men at the recruiting stations. > The grandsiand that was erected on the southern Line of the parade-ground for the accommodation of those who wanted to see the games last Wednesday has been ound too small for the purpose, It is be- | | { ing extended and will be 140 feet long. It | will also be roofe | in. | " Thera is considerable speculation in | | army circles at this time as to what will | be done in view of a change of head in the War Department. There are some who look for a change in the Departmentof Cali- fornia, but as yet it is only a matter of speculation. General Alger, the new Secretary of War, has made an_important ruling re- garding the detail of officers to act as aids to the commanding general. Under Sec- retary Lamont’s ruling aids could only re- main four years away from cheir regi- ments. In other words, Mr. Lamont took from general officers a right clearly given them by law to select their own aids. This week Secretary Alger considered the ques- tion and decided it by authorizing the de- tail of Captains Michler and Maus to duty on General Miles’ staff. The colors for the Secretary of War wili be of scariet xilk, 5 feet 6 inches fly, 4 feet 4 inches on the pike, which will be nine teet long, including spearhead and fer- rule. To havein the center, embroidered in silk, a golden brown American eagle with outstretched wings; on iis breast a United States shield; in the right talon an olive branch, with red berries, and in the left a bunch of arrows; a red scroll held in the eagle’s beak, with the motto, “E Pluribus Unum,” worked in yellow, and in the upper part of the United States shield a group ot thirteen white stars, about three-quarters of an inch from point to point, arranged in two rows, the upper row consisting of six and the lower Tow of seven stars. The design, letters and figures to be embroidered in silk, the same on both sides of the color. To have & star embroidered in white silk placed at each corner of the flag, about 414 inches from point to point. The dis- tance from the upper or lower edges of the flag to the center o the stars to be about 734 inches and from the pike casing or end of tue fly to the center of the stars about 13 inches. The color to be trimmed with white silk knotted fringe, 3 inches deep, and one cord and tassel about 8 feet 6 inches long, to be of red and white silk inter- mixed. NEW TO-DaY LR GHIRARDELLI' nsest Frésh 30 cups for.< NOTIGE. Office of the Chief of Police, SAN FRANCISCO, March 20, 1897. The attention of the pub'}ic is hereby called to Orders 3063 and 3064 of the Board of Supervisors, which makes it a misdemeanor, punis able by a fine not exceeding Twenty-five Dollars or by imprisonment not exceeding ten days, for any person to expectorate on the floor of any public building, or on any sidewalk, or on the floor of any street-railway car in this City and County. P. CROWLEY, Chief of Police: h- LV SELTZI'RS y > The best and simplest remedy for regulatin; the action of the stomach, liver and bovrels. 1% cures Sick Headache and Censtipation, pre= vents Diarrhoea, removes Gouty, Rheumati and other poisons from the blaod. carried by every traveler and kept in al holds. Sold by Druggists for so years. Should be 00868084 000000 £ uoughs and Colds ¢ CAN BE CURED. 1f neglected they canse that dread dis ease, Consumption. Dr. Martin’s Pain Curer Is a remedy that is unequaled. Price, 25¢c, 50c, $!1 Per Bottle L. CALLISCH, ; Wholesale Agent for the Pacific Coast, San Jose, Cal. Forsale by all druggists. The trade supplied by Redington & Co.. Mack & Co. and Langley & Michael. cisco. * 9808460200080B0808 03¢ 8609000909 090000¢090 D¢ 03090609 n Fran- NEW TO-DAY. \ keeps up the action of the stomach. netism or electricity, which is renewed in a few weeks by DR. SANDEN’S ELECTRIC BELT. This famous Belt is a life-giver, a tissue-builder, because it renews the energy of the weakened. parts of the body. and it has cured me. Lean now do I got your Belt for Dyspepst rty & meal as I ever could. My fa herand brother and & frient of miue ars W. H. FAY LOR, Fruitvaie, Cal. Let Dr. Sanden send you his book, “Three Classes of Men.” Dy and they are well satistied with it."" is free, closely sealed. SANDEN ELECTRIC CO., DYSPEPSIA. Business men, who use their bod- ios and brains as pieces of coarse machinery, will some day find that there is a delicate function con- cerned which will not stand such treatment—the stomach. It is abused and resents it. Dyspepsia is very common among men of brains and extensive business re- sponsibilities. It “comes from a waste of ~ the vital force which This energy is only the animal mag- arl a day’s work and eab as il wearig your Leil 1t 632 - Market St., Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco. Office hours—S A. M. to 8 P.M.; Sundays: 10 oL Los “Angeles Offica 204 south Broai- 0 way; Portland, Or., 253 Washington street;’ ver, Colo., 935 Sixteenth street. D01k —alake 00 mistake 10 the number—E3 323 Marke: strest Make note of it / DR. SANDEN’S ELECTEIC TRUSS CUKES RUPTUKE. NOTICE TO DECORATORS. ENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED FOR DE- corating the streeis for the Carnival of the Go aen Gaie during the week, May 3 (0 8, at tho offices of the executive comumiittee 0f the ¢ rn val. rooms 19. 20, 21, Columbian building, 916 Mar cer st. Bids will ciose March 23 at 6 r. M. Bidders will specify the price ) ec bios The decorations to consist of flags and streamers of the carnival colors, strung On TOpe s ACTuSS (he T-ets. five lines on ench block. nine flags and nme streamers on each line. The flags and streames 10 be of the carnival colors. The flags to (4) jeet wide and six (3) feet long. the i to'be eight (8) Inches ‘wide and 13 fect lont Van-co or d shields. (0 b1 used, of proper d For_further information apply 10 carnival h quariers. NOTICE TO BUILDERS. Tenders are hereby calied for the exclusit priv e of erecting grand siands and tribunes on ©f the march of the parade of the Caruival of she Golden Gate. Pinus and specifications are at the office of the Carnival Committee, 100ms 19, 20, 21, Colam b building, 916 Markei s'. PATE A Weak M&;n andemen SHOULL USE DAMIANA BITTERS, Tii 5 great Mexican HRemedy: gives Health Skrengih to 1he Sexual Orgaris, © rtsda RANOLA RANOSE - ARAMEL | EREAL Th Foopilo ENA - Cal ANITARIUM HEa < e T H

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