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FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 19, 1899 ADVERTISEMENTA New Spring Goods are crowding in. hour spent with us in looking over our new patterns, and all comers to the BIG STORE IN THE MISSION. signs, will give you just the ideas you'll need for your wants. Styles and Seasons. Where Do They Come From and Where Do They Go? “SALE OF BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE! Spring is recognized as the great season for the sale of Furniture, Carpets, Curtains, Our offerings have gained trade and the favorable comment of the buying public. . . . The We are showing all the novelties of the season. many of them our own exclusive de- . etc. An (e B B B B BB WELCOME AWAITS YOU 2. | Golden Oak 0dd Parlor Chairs. ©0dd parior chatr n fin- est polished mahogany, silk damask cov- One of & hundred, all b he richest new de- plain_or over- frame richly ‘We are selling next week an Extension Din- arved or {nlaid. ng Table o designs; beautifully 50 elegant 5-plece sults, gyl Do/ wpltwosts Tul Spring edg 3 .00 2 #2575 150 25 Here's a rocker you can't match anywhere under $330; solid oak or birch-mghogany, cobbler seat, and substantially made, 0 it Wil QO O last for years... ThisExtra Large Gennine Leather | Conch— ‘ Deeply tufted, with the best $40.00 LADIES' dressing table, DAINTY| solld oak or mahoganized bt French plate ror ... oring: ul stss springs, reguiar price $75—our special price. 5 1 well win, ar $4 50 valu ment house. All goods marked in plain figures—CASH FIGURES—ours is not an in- We extend credit only as an accommodation. Spring Opening Sale of Carpets and Rugs. | Brusscls Carpets. sels Carpets—Hizgins & Sanford's make—'"no Ru R iate, = B 0c best ten wire goods; none bet- 7T $1.00 Ingrain Carpects. H at $150; curtain, 60 Monday for, ¥ Silkoline and G 38 inches wide; every roll re- your 12ic n Warp Mat-| Chenille Portiere LOT 3—Consist s 20c $400; come this week. You Save Money at Pattosien’s. -{or MIS SION & | Lace Curtains *Uhnostery. Nottingham Lace Curtains at %c; our price, tfle Curtains, plain or figured, choice, pair. Nottingham Lace Curtatns—W tnches wide ar we_have two special $135, 8160 and . 975 pairs of High Grade latest noveities: the ent ing manufacturers in thi yard wide, all good Brussels de- day at prices asto 1eham Lace Curtains sold o goods; yard el AT S and §2 9, golns for 18 90, designs ca: aten: $340, 3290, $240 and §1 : your cholce Monday, Porticres. About colors; going for, pair and_Tapestry “Portieres—We sc and ever offered; for, s 30c¢ French Tapestry Portieres— import price on t what we ask; pai Couch Covers—Arablan goot our price Mon Window Shades. of the best « > o he: nti- mo on Hartshorn 'or quantities i 2 bors 2 81460 TS o Tor dve yea o7 THIS SALE IS SIMPLY AN EXAMPLE of how reasonable our prices are. Space won’t permit the description of our finer goods, but they’re here for you when you llosiens Lace Curtains. pair, Gk S e show the greatest value in a yards long, ever shown prices, ipalr, @ 2.95 ers tingham Lace Curtains, in all the e surplus stock of one of the lead- Iine will be placed on sale Mon- Upholstery. w ol and Silk Mixed Drapery = e SIS0 == 10c e e $2.00 will offer you Monday et S g Just double 55.00 made to sell ea rted to 1 Monda. 18c 2 and yard.........- £ pairs In al se goods day, ha You Save Money at Pattosien’s. =888 5 8E B8 ¥ 85880 E0N80a88TEs at the festal board of the Four Hundred in New York Clti. is home for the past HIS SONG NOT | 1 chanced to glance in at the window of a music store on Broadway and to his | amazement saw the child of his brain In | print, with the announcement that the | Bong had been “arranged” by J. S. Libor- | nfo. He bought a copy and saw that not 1 | a word had been changed nor a nolf(-l of 0oa music altered. Then wrote the po lawyer friend in this ci and sterday k2 VULGAH [A’RS | a suit was filed in the United States Cir- cuit Court against E. W. Armstrong and | the Model music store of San Francisco to | enjoin them from continuing to expose the | beauties of his song in print to the coarse Bohemian Joseph D. ig?;:r%}t]ea hard, senseless world, and to Redding Is Angry. | of their sales of the said song (it any) and to pay him damages. The compiaint contains a copy of the printed words and music and a manu- script copy in the author’s own handwrit- ing. There are only elfih[ lines, divided into two stanzas, but they are great, as will be seen by the following: A SONG TO HAWAIL ] The wind from over the sec Bings sweetly, Aloha, to The waves as they fall on the sand Say Aloha; and bid e to land The last line of the stanza quoted deli- cately and ingeneously proclaims to the world the hospitable character of the Al- | oha wave. Now, the average wave that | folis and froths in equatorial regions is Tot in the habit of bidding the stranger | to land except upon a coral reef or in the £ capacious maw of a -foot shark. But Heavy Damages for the Alhoa wave fs difterent. Tt Is not only 2 Swelcome, but a wharf and a hotel as She OR o0 | Well. One cannot linger long on this de- | lightful theme and must pass to the sec- ond stanza. The myriad flowers in bloom, Waft Aloha in every perfume. I read In each lovelit eye Aloha! Aloha! NUI OE! Observe the easy manner in which “ploom” {s made to rhyme with the noun and how gracefully the poet HE SUES MUSIC PUBLISHERS me; PRINTED HIS COMEOSITION WITHOUT AUTHORITY. | Joseph Asks to Have the Press Stopped and to Be Awarded A deathless song Is alleged to have been gtolen, both words and music; an.impious | hand has dared to snatch the laureis from & gifted brow, and that is why Joseph D. Bohemian, musician, bon vivant, | Redding, fomeume’ art gonnoisseur, lawyer and soclety idoi | his availed himself of the license of his nurses his wrath in wicked New York. | craft as to shift the accent from the first Eiont years ago Mr. Redding paid a|fo the second syllable of the latter word. - i hew he returned to| For the last line, “Aloha! Aloha! Nui xiait: ¢ Henolulss and pe BEEEH et criticism has hothing to offer. The this city with the scent of the Orange|yn, no doubt, has reference to “each e sate him down In his | jovelit eye” in which the poet read the cisco | Aloha and so forth. | 7 At the end appears the following: JOSEPH D. REDDING. 1591, groves in his hair h boudoir on a sad, misty San Fran summer eve and poured forth his soul in song. Then he breathed into the verses the breath of melody and sang them to his friends, who pronounced them beautl_l fu} beyond compare. For years the song was cherished as his own. It was not intended for vulgar ears, upén whose tympani the soulful sentiment end the harmony would fall as seed on barren ground; %ut the author sang the tender verses to the select in Bohemia and To Kalakaua Rex: 3 And this is the outrage for which the injured poet asks balm at the hands of the court. e Trio of Convicts Sentenced. August Schoen, who passed a fictitious check for §8 4 oo Willlam Beckman and defendants to render an account | | where the poet-mu- | fense, w was subsequently convicted of the of- sentenced to serve a term of sician_has made ven vears in Folsom b: ] ¥ om by Jud three years. Mr. Redding | LeSterday. In Judge Lawlor dfifiar?;'é’,l’é‘ One "day not long ago Mr. Redding | Tsung Sin, convicted of an attempt to commit burglary, was se d e e ntenced to three Francis Dunn, convicted were sentenced to serve year each, the former in S latter in Folsom. = AN UNCOMPLETED GIFT. An Impartant’ified’éflin of Supreme Court Affecting All Beneficiary Societies. of burglary, a term of one an Quentin, the A deciston of importance to beneficlary | bodies was rendered yesterday by the Supreme Court. It was in the case of the Supreme Council of the Amefican Le- gion of Honor against Albrecht Gehren- beck et al. and Jacob Kornahrens, ad- ministrator. The -council issued to one of its members a beneficlary certificate for 33000, which was in favor of the mem- ber's wife, Marguerite Gehrenbeck. She died a few months before her husband, and after the husband's death the admin- istrator set up a claim for the money due on the beneficiary certificate as a part of her estate. Gehrenbeck’s children by a former wife contested the claim, assert- ing that the money should go to them. In the meantime the council paid the amount into court. The children by the former wife obtained judgment, from which the adminjstrator of the second wife ap- pealed. The Supreme Justices hold that the in- terest of the heneficiary is that of an ex- pectance of an uncompleted gift, which, ke a will, Is subject to revocation, and “the beneficlary having died before any rights had become vested in her, this mere expectancy died with her, so there is nothing left for her heirs to succeed to.” Hence the first wife’s children are entitled to the money, and the judgment of the lower court was affirmed. SeLiemg Aol E Lurline Salt Water Baths. Bush and Larkin sts. Swimming, Russian, hot and cold tub baths. Salt waterdirect {romocean. —_— e —————— Elected as Delegates. Court Golden West No. 20, Foresters of America, has elected Sol Peiser, E. H. Levy, A. S. Alexander and I C. Scharft as delegates to the Grand Court, which will meet in Santa Clara on the 2d of May next. eCourt Washington No. 37 of the same order has selected Henry Goldman and Sylvester Shaben as its delegates to the same grand body. Beautiful new Mandolin, finely fin- ished, for $6.50 at Mauvals’, 769 Market.* Hewey Walker and | SUTHERLAND PROVED T0 B INFATHFLL Cast Aside Charming Mrs. Webber. FAVORITES RAN 10 THE NOTCH AT INGLESIDE The Select Gathering Wept Copiously. POLICE PREVENTED BETTING SUIT FILED IN CONSEQUENCE DAMAGES ASKED FOR BREACH OF PROMISE TO MARRY. | | REAL SOFT SPOTS FOR CORRIGAN | HORSES. Widow of a Chicago Physician Re- fuses to Let a Local Capitalist Tamper With Her Af- fections. Pat Dunne’s Survivor Also Remem- bered—Won the Farewell Handi- cap—Fleur de Lis a Factor in Future Events. Through ne fault of hers Mrs. Jennle ‘Webber will not become the bride of Colo- nel W. J. Sutherland, but she demands $20,000 damages to fill the void in her abused affections. Mrs. Webber filed suit against Colonel Sutherland for breach of promise yesterday afternoon and asked To use a turf expression, “there was not much doin’ " at Ingleside yesterday. The | stand contained a scanty gathering of the fair sex and down In the betting ring were | knots of bookmakers standing about here and there, with possibly, in all, about 150 members of the talent. The majority of | these passed through the turnstiles on | that judgment be entered in her favor | complimentary badges. The police were | I the amount named. very active and the attempts to accept| The plaintiff in the case is a charming bets on the handbook plan were most | Widow, who arrived from the East in Au- | feeble ones. Fearing arrest, the principal | Eust last. Colonel Sutherland is. presi- | members of the bookmaking fraternity | dent of the Holmes Mining Company and | made no effort to violate the ordinance. |iS 2t present quartered at the Palace Ho- The flelds Were small, permitting of five |t} Taking into consideration the sphere straight favorites to catch the eye of the | Of life In which both have traveled it is judges first. “Skeets” Martin plloted three A Mmanifest that an Interesting trial will be of the winning horses. the fruit of the action. The 4-year-old Opponent was delegated | The complaint filed is very brief. It | by popular choice to take the opening mile | Simply sets forth that in September of | and a sixteenth selling run, which he did | 133, being a single woman and therefors at odds of 6 to 5. Walting on his company | S PeLe Ofeeo T o Colongi | until the stretch was reached, M: e e braiatl to: become: his | the st ached, Martin | Sutherland and promised to become his | gave Kid Weller's horse his head, and he | bride. Ever since that time, she avers, | won easily from Wyoming. Joe Mussle | She has been ready and willing to appear disposed of the others for the show. | betore the altar with the colonel. but he B = absolutely refuses to consider her rights p“:;,’eds"z’“erfi mare Fleur de Lis dis-| 3¢ all and consequently she will make an D] proving form in the mile run. effort to make him pay for his perfidy. Closing a strong favorite, Limewater gave | A pretty romance is tangled in this sult her only a mild argument, belng downed | for damages. Mrs. Webber is the widow & length at the wire after the daughter of | 0f a once well-known Chicago physician. Maxim had led from the start. | Possessed of some means she decided to The. steeplechase could not get away | take a trip to this coast and last August from the Corrigan household. McAuliffe | arrived here, accompanied by her littie on Vanity walted until the others were all | daughter. She spent a few days at the out or had fallen, and then challenging | Palace and then took apartments at the Lord Chesterfield downed that jumper a | Berkshire, where she resides at present. iength. Huntsman was third. Our Cli-| When she came to this city she brought mate would undoubtedly have won had he letters of introduction to Colonel Suther- | not come to grief at the first jump. | land, who is reputed to be about 5 years Corrigan’s filly Sardine, with a soft spot | Of age and quite wealthy. They soon be- arranged for her, was asked to beat a | Came great friends, often dining together, most ordinary bunch of two-year-olds in 2nd ultimately, as Mrs. Webber states, the fourth event. The race was farcical, became engaged. As evidence of this con- for she had speed to burn, winning in a tention Mrs. Webber holds a handsome | canter. Ned Dennis took the place from | S¢litzire pearl engagement ring, which Ella Boland. the groom-to-be was happy to see her The “farewell” handicap at one and a | Wear until about two weeks ago. They ,gunner miles was another extravaganza. | bad a quarrel at that time and Colonel urvivor was called on to beat nothing, therland broke the engagement. Then and galloped over the top of his flelg, rs. Webber began preparing her plans leading Sardonic past the wire with sue him for breach of promise and re- pounds to spare. Track Notes. Sardonic ran her last race yesterday. | She will be bred to imp. Bassetlow. | “Skeets” Martin will pilot Sardine in the stake at Oakland to-morrow, leaving for the East in the evening. Rutter will depart for the Eastern country at the | same time. Spencer was fined $25 by the stand for | not weighing In to ride Sardonic. to | tained H. 1. Kowalsky and T. J. Crowley to prosecute the action. en Colonel Sutherland heard that suit was to be flled Mrs. Webber states that she received an invitation from him to dinner, but she refused and continued | strengthening her position for the action in_court. It s understood that while Colonel Webber he denies that he ever asked her to be his bride, so consequently there Wiu be two sides to the story when it is called ; in court for adjudication. 18 S ank \ HAS TODA JUMPED HIS BONDS? New Orleans Winners. NEW ORLEANS, March slow: weather cloudy. First race, selling, six furlongs, Gen- eral Maceo won, Banrica second, Rush-| fields third. Time, 1:16%. | When Second race; seliing, fve furlongs, Tri- {aditga won, Luciile second, MyTtie | Japanese girls, particularly relative to a SRahe r‘a“éid‘sefl?e' T A rter | YOUDE girl named Chivo, was called again mifes; Domation wor, Wood: Ranger mec- | 1o, Judse, Conlaw's court yesterday an- . hber | other continuance for a week was grant- ond, 'Tinto disquaiified, Babe = Flelds | 0q'a: the request of Justice of the Peace third. Time, 2:08%. Groezinger, who heard the testfmony. Fourth rate, handicap, one mile, Ta- | 38, B0 q Vesteraay that Toda, the Hongkong Maru. the case of K. Toda, charged ¥-nasee won, Bamatarla second, Elkin| who is out on bonds, had lett for Japan Fitth race, one mile, Effie Alnslee won, | Friday on the steamer Hongkong Maru, phifth race, one mile, Bl Al artay | but no notification of the fact was made third. Time, 1:43%. to thie court. Sixin race, selling, seven furlongs, Sau- | X T, N Bullivan second,’ Eisie| Advances made on furniture and planos, with Bramble third. Time, 1: | or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1023 Mission. INGLESIDE RACE TRACK, Saturday, March 18, 1899.—Sixty- first day of the winter meeting of the Pacific Coast Jockey Club. Weath- er fine. Track slow. EDWIN F. SMITH, Prestding Judge. 837. JAMES F. CALDWELL, Starter. FIRST RACE—One and a sixteenth miles; selling; four-year-olds and upward; purse, $400. | ] Betting. Index. Horse. Age. Weight.[St. Std. ¥m. %¥m. %m. Str. Fin. | Jockeys [Op. CL 08 Oppoment, 4 % 4% 3% 21 1% 12 [H Martin..[63 1 Wyoming, 6 % ¥LooaEl gk 4% 38 6 1 1 52 4h 41 42 31 | 4 5 h 21 64 3% 334 42 | O % 1% 1% 56 66 519 o iy | Roadrunner, % 63 &1 620 640 640 I Powel g 32 | s10 Edgemount, 8 73 710 720 730 (Persico . 5@ ... Outright, a. 3 TEiis 8 8 8 |J. Brown.. 10 2 | Time—1-16, 8, :36%; 13-16, 1:22%; mile, 1:42%; 1 1-16 mlles, 1:49%. Win- by Onondago-Elsinore. Good start. Won easily. Seeond and ner, F. W. Doss & Co.’s c! third driving. The race was put on the card for Opponent and he won it. Joe Mussle was ridden in the deep going. FEd Gartland failed to go the route to-day. Caspar was trying. Scratched—Gilberto 103, Annowan 34, Sardonic 103, Petrarch 106, Lodestar 106, Myth 106. | 838 SECOND RACE—One mile; selling; three-year-olds and upward; purse, $400. . | Betting. | Index. Horse. Age. Welght.[St. %m. %m. %m Str. Fin Jockeys. [Op. CL 791 Fleur de Lis, & Ty Tm A3 7 A i1 [Rutter s 15 65 26 Limewater, 3% 82 2h 23 23% |McNichols 3 Sk 526 Morinel, 4.. 5% 53 42 32 310 |Loullller 3 4 £26 Los Medanos, 3 22 23 31 42+ 41% (L Powell g 828 Judge Wofford, 3 X ES SR 84 58 Relft. 2 B 516 Glengaber, 3.. 61 75 712 715 62 |Bassinger 55 | 8§18 Robert Bonner, 5. 44 42 610 62 720 |Hal Brown, [3 3 | 786 _Carrie U, 6. 8 £ s 8 s~ |J. Brown. 5% 3 : % 1:16%; mile, 1:42%. Winner, A. J. Stemler & Co.’s br. m. by tmp. Maxim-Fleurette. d start. Won first three driving. seems to be good again. .Morinel was weakly ridden. Los Medanos won't do at present. B Scratched—Bonnie Ione 9, Sombre 9, Una Colorado 9. 839. THIRD RACE—Steeplechase; short course; handicap; four-year-olds and upward; | purse, $400. | Betting. Index. Horse. Age. Weight.(St. 1J. 4J. W.J. L.J. Str. Fin | sockeys. |Op. CL | (s23) vanity, 4 ez gL 6L 1x 1% |McAuliffe 523 Lord Chesterfield, 5.142 1 43 34 310 320 215 [Mattier 523 Huntsman, a ‘M0|3 2n 54 51 41 83 |Hanna | 811 Uniwersity, » ..cas{3 11 1h 3 31 4 [Routllle §23 Monita, a . ST Ly . [Livermore | 85 Imp. Alien, 6. TS LA 4TS |Ambrose | &5 Our Climate, Fee SRz an e {Doane 572 San Carlos, s - |Lenhart *Ran out. *Fell. Time4:04%. Winner, E. Corrigan's b. g. by Rio Bravo-Virgle. Good start. Won first three driving. - The race was made for Vanity and he won it. Lord Chesterfleld was meant. 840, FOURTH RACE-Three and s baif furlangs; two-year-olds; purse, $400. . ] Betting. Index. Horse. Weight.St. %m. %m. %m. Str. Fin ‘] Jockeys. |Op. % (759) Sardine . 1 T3 A 19 1 13 §33 Ned Dennis 2 2L 3K s s §24 Ella Boland 19/ 3 FealE Yasas 3 52 ... Hiiloutte 05| 4 46 46 410 1w 13 Hindoo P 06\ 8 s 5% 51 2 5 Hilou 1050 5 Bo b s B8 s as 5 » Time—3-16, 36, 42%. Winner, E. Corrigan's ch. f. by imp. Bassetlaw-imp. Sar- “donyx. Won easily. Second and third driving. “tin-canned” in. Others not in her ta: This recital was arranged for Sardine, and she class. 841. FIFTH RACE—One and a quarter miles; handicap; three-year-olds and upward; purse, $500. ) | Betting. Index. Horse. Age. Weight.[St. Std. ¥m. %m. %m. Str. Fin. | Jockeys. [Op. CL §26) Survivor, § Foeggeigr a1 11 | 13 G0 Sardonic, 4 $h 43 3n 34 3n 21 TS 813 Mistleton, 4 ... 1% 1m 1ih 2h 31 32% &5 o e Mooker 4. %811 31 2% 415.°4um 44 44 [Caley s 1 S7 Charile Reif, 5......8{3 4h 6~ 5 &5 5 13 Reiff, 15 2% Time—%, %5; %, 3L %, 115; mile, 1:43%; 14m, 2:10%. Winner, P. Dunne’s b. c. by Strathmore-Eila F- tart. Won easily. Second and third driving. home. Mistieton might | Good closing number was meant for Survivor and he jogged second bave beem bag the two leaders mot taken care of him. Sutherland admits his friendship for Mrs. | with carrying on an immoral traffic in | THE CALL’S RACING CHART. e |l | DR. KILMER’'S REMEDIES. HE EMINENT SPECIALIST AND HIS GREAT DISCOVERY The Discoverer of Swamp-Root at Work In His Laboratory. How to Promptly Cure Kidney, Bladder and Uric Acid Troubles. You May Have a Sample Bottle of This Great Discovery Sent Free by Mail. As we are by nature subject to many | Dr. Kilmer, the eminent physician and diseases, the only way to guard against all attacks on our health is to make a study of our own physical self. If a peculiar pain attacks you, try to locate its origin and discover which or- gan of the body is sick and in need of attention. If the kidneys are at fault—and in al- most every case in the failing of our health they are—lock well to their res- toration to health and strength. They are the great filterers of our body, and, consequently, the purity of the blood is entirely dependent on their cleansing powers If the kidne are not in a healthy | condition, the blood becomes impregnat- impurities and a decay of the soon takes place. If your desire | | | 1 ed with kidney to relieve yourself and you find it n times during s neys are sick. As t ealthy stage, a s takes place as the w or dull ache in the bax erable. If your water, w remain undisturbed for water incre: - to arise many ng hours, your kid- v reach a mc un- ing and irritation flows, and pain you mis- en allowed to twenty-four Results: | ey | hours, forms a settling or sediment, or ot |Beported That He Left for Japan on | has a cloudy appearance, you are in the grasp of most serious kidney disorder. If neglected now the disease advances until the face looks pale or sallow, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, the feet swell and sometimes the heart acts badly. There is no more serious menace to | health and strength than any derange- ment of the kidneys. Swamp-Root is the great discovery o <pecialist, and will be found just what s needed in cases of kidney and blad- der disorders and Uric Acid troubles due to weak kidneys, such as lame back, lumbago, catarrh of the bladder, gravel, rheumatism and Bright's dis- e, which is the worst form of kid- ney disease. It corrects inability to hold water and promptly overconfes that unpieasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day and to get up many times at night. The mild and extraordinary effect of this great remedy is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures, and is sold by druggists in fifty- cent and one-dollar bottles. Make a note of the name, SWAMP-ROOT, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and remember it is prepared only by Dr. Kilmer & Co., nghamton, N. Y. amp-Root has been tested in so , in hospital work, in private , among the helpless too poor to e relief, and has proved so suc- in every case that a special ar- ngement has been made by which all readers of The Call, who have not al- ready tried it, may have a sample bot- tle sent absolutely free by mail. Also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and containing some of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women who owe their good health, in fact their very s, to the wonderful curative proper- of Swamp-Root. Be sure and men- tion the San FranciscoSunday Call when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Binghamton, N. Y. A JAPANESE TELLS SHEGETARO MARIKUBO AT ME- CHANICS’ INSTITUTE. Delivers an Interesting and Highly Intelligent Discourse on Chry- santhemum Land and Its Beauties. Shegetaro Marikubo, a Japanese, lec- | tured before a large audience at the Me- chanics’ Institute Library building last evening. Marikubo has been in the United States eight years and has t State Universit, to his departure from Ja uated from the Tokio Academ ject to which he has devote study has been philosophy. Throughout his remarks he interspersed wit, which with the unique manner of his expression highly amused his The subject of his discourse was acteristics of Japan. He omitted any reference to modern advancement in Japan, but confined hi elf entirely -to a history of the ng usages. He touched upon the Japanese idea of beauty, and its idea of celibacy, marriage and divorce. “Few Japanese remain single,” he said. “Tt is their nature to marry, and they are careful in the selection of one who is to De their partner in life. Beauty, of course, is admired, but it is not regarded as an element of high quality or of good- nes The queer requisites for those who are about to unite their hea and hands brought smiles to many faces in the au- i arriage he d: event of life, and every ef- de to thwart a union which is likely to prove unsuccessful. Among the preliminaries of engagement is an ex- Change of courtesies between the parents of the contracting parties, which cousists, in most cases, of five barrels of wine and five species of fish. The bride sbaves her eyebrow as a s that her heart i to be the property of her futyre husband forever. Silence s observed At the mar- riage feast, and nothing but the clinking of goblets breaks the stillne: for some time. The bride is attired in white, and purple is- prohibited, being the symbol of 2 fading flower and not representing joy or life. The rule of absolute bmission must be observed closely by her. ¥ “Divorce,” said Marikupo, * cons;di y the Japanese to be raceful :;?‘lddgémding. nce united, husband and wife will suffer much t o prevent a dis- Taption of the bonds of matrimony. Di- vorce is seldom heard o Previous grad- . The the most f in the country T &eneraily marriages ase happy on: A B eunds on which a dissolution may be granted are much the same as the law on the subject. —_———————— MRS. ADAMS ARRAIGNED. Attorneys Expect to Clear Her of the Charge of Murdering Her Child. Mrs. Minnie Adams was taken to Act- ing Police Judge Barry's court vesterday morning .and after Sergeant American sworn to the complaint charging her with | e the murder of her child she was instruct- ed and arraigned. Attorney J. P. Swee- ney on her behalf asked for a continuance till next Thursday afternoon. As there was no objection by Prosecuting Attor- ney Carpenter the Judge granted the re- uest. qus. Adams begins to show signs of tne awful strain upon her and looked hag- gard and drawn as she sat patiently waiting in court till her case was called. She seemed listless and indifferent and took no_interest in what was going on around her. Attorney Sweeney has associated with him Attorneys Gullfoye and Caldwell and | nded the | lared to be the | he has no fear of the result. He the aefense has discovered the 1 who purchased the carbolic acid Loehr’s drugstore last Sunday night will produce her at the proper time. . Adams, he says, and was mistaken in his he says posi El Dorado’s Sons. The members of El Dorado Parlor No. 52 of the Native Sons of the Golden West have chosen the follcwing named as its delegates to the next session of the Grand Parlor, which is to be held in Salinas on the 2ith of next April: Frank Brass, Dr_W. J. Hawkins and D. D. Lowne: with W. Leavitt. W. J. Guinnani and J. MclIntyre as alternates. This parlor has arranged for a theater party in the Alcazar on Tuesday evenin rext in aid of its 1500 fund. “Nerves” wil be presented B Mate Moye Escapes. The Federal Grand Jury vesterday ig- nored the charge against Arthur Moye, nd mate of the American ship Er- skine M. Phelps, for beating and wound- ing seamen. ADVERTISEMENTS. 2 g = > B8 Z <y T4 Ie g e = o 2o My 5 = =z & o \ -— DOCTOR SWEANY, The old reliable and longest-established special- ists on the Pacific Coast. NERVOUS DEBILITY and ail its attend- ing ailments of YOU MIDDLE-AGED and OLD Men. The awful effects of neglected or improperly treated cases, causing weakness of the body and brain, dizziness, failing memory, of energy and confidence, pains in the . loins and kidneys and many other dis- special treatment can cure you, no matter who or what has falled. WEAK MEN, Lost vigor and vitality re- stored to weak men. Organs of the body which have been weakened or shrunken through dis- eases, overwork, excesses or indiscretions are | restored to full power, strength and vigor by 1 his successful system of treatment. RUPTURE cured by his new method with- out knife, truss or detention from work—a pain- less, sure and permanent cure. VARICOCELE, hydrocele, swelling and tenderness of the glands treated with unfail- ing success. CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON, and all diseases of the blood promptly and thor- oughly cured and every trace of the poison eradicated from the system forever, restoring health and purity. PRIVAT ¢t DISEASES, inflammation, dis- Duke had | charges, etc., which, if neglected or improp- rly treated, breaks down the system and cause kidney disease, etc., permanently cured. Women's Diseases a Specialty. WRITE if you cannot call. Letters confl- dential and answered in all languages. HOME TREATMENT —The most success- ful home treatment known to the medical fession. Thousands who were unable to all at office have been cured at home by our special treatment. ' Consultation free. Call or address 'F. L. SWEANY, M. D., 7387 Market Street, bt gict%imd‘lul S ;‘.fl&.";_égufi’w-m from 10 to &