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30 THE SUNDAY CALL ALIFORNIA GIRL VISITS SARAH BERNHARDT AT HER HOTIE. 0dd Fads and . Qx{?eesran Makes Pets of Tigers and Sleek Yellow Wild Cats. Eccentricities inary rri nversation turned into other channels of the e ol A ehastit> Sihoash T was #ouch more interented me. I thought it was my \'ocu\innhm in her to herself. e J cent, but now I know that .« dying to ask her abou! Grepioes ¢ Was only my artistic temperament ot "%} N5 Mme. Gerard, as we W asserting itself. The ecstatic life of a (o " " 0\ way home, “but I_was ho sfleeps nun would have accorded much better .. . :q that it would be ”4::“,: = 1}{:;: X With s Her Coffin at the Foot of Her Bed. with my peculiar disposition than a s Lt commonplace life in the world. My 4 mother was a Jew but I was brought up a Catholic and at one time was excessively devout. I had a litt statue of the Virgin Mary that I ca where. I considered it a sort of porte-borheur. At last. to my great grief, it was broken, and I thought that all my good fortune had left me. Now I have anoth: bonheur that happily ever, it e self, hi t much like "o like a beautiful s are of white ith love letters arah proposes to the souvenirs of 1 of the coffin gic mask fon ‘quand time. It i eat 1 It is a little shoe, th= first on. ree Mde:u my son Maurice. I hav carried t ey e ‘..\ il with me all over the world, and e morbi She l{( ows th it must r ter her own pe- night I put it on the table beside me, and prepar : where it greets me the first: thing in culiar Aashvxynn. You the morning. very good. cnow she is really e ecct atercesee A7 A $TULPTOR IN HER FTUDIQ 7" 1IN FTHE CTOFFIN . PEJISNED BY HERFELF L LC T L Y all of this savage alcove I8 cus skins and the while above '\ Enhanal cors belt. Tt is a wonder that from sheer inging her slender hands in force of habit I did not applaud “I suppose “Mme. Gerard Is very Kkind to ued, smiling bring you to see me,” she said with a ys so and graciousness a ot it. You know I without inst my will. I to the © f 1 aclre: but my of A to it. I think if I tinugd yself t I should 4 It 1 or alptor. < in the direction from sl Hioar Yen had d v t is too in » not have much 1 There wa rah ica is t Everybody . wall, her reddish it this regard, ar € ace : 3 ulpturing after the fashion. A digritary st and b th 1 of 1 is alseep. me to to s it may rer arts more than rebellel heartily mother, did not dream arti ar talent, but 1at 1 might learn to do minor thus living. The How beautiful, yet how like the “Is she?” I sald, not meaning to con- months at the conservatory “commonplace” woman that she had vey a doubt In the interrogation, but st in my work at all. scorned to become! The wife of the (hich the old lady half Interpreted in “hanically, simply glovemaker cherishing a baby shoe it & o™ Mg B a0 B T one hing better to i easy to imagine, but who would have : 4 Suspected ¢ this} simple in said, emphatically. “There-are many , rmed people who criticise her, but they are toward h W ha s were fu could not appro: ation 1 the the high church bsol 1fusion y ally for such s would but she sav nal way. S top of a are charmi to Ameri 0 much imm THE HALLWAY OF JARAF BERNHARVT'} HOME when she that I h > in any n the world laimed. five alone for for instance, I had no inte dred s of I went about it r bccause there was n 1 story T have he : childhood a most orig a cat_to the solutely re looking B h v he othe Ime. Gerard tells me that you + be and a th 2 < . I wanted to be a nun.” toward her after this confession and I all fools—they presume to judge a great T often wonder how my femme de cham- “Ah, Mme. Gerard has been telling felt her very approachable. After all genius according to the little laws that her serpentine noses br k of se things.’ tales out of school,” she i this great genius, this Phaedre, this are made for ordinary people. The a diva n Mme. Be 151y toire must ne- smile the old 3 Camille, thi mlet, whose applause thackles of conventionality would be t I felt as though the cessitate a great ¢ “of hard work?"” d to be a nun. When I v could be heard around the world, was death to Sarah Bernhardt gone up in irst act ‘Pha ¢ Yes, indecd, [ earn all of young several men, among others a yet a woman with a woman’s heart! “Yes, I understand it is hard to put S for there she was wearir i the money that I make. I hav tanner and a glovemaker, asked for _“What are your Impressions of an eagle into the cage of a canary.” own with a v my hand in marriage, but the prosy Paris?’ she asked me, and then the GENEVIEVE GREEN. ah, how I have worked iinmhh_v. D. Appleton & Co., New York. Price, $1. OF LITERATURE ARE DOING. fife: vz sae = ® Appleton & Co., New York. Price, 50 cents. ‘““The Game and the Candle,” by Rhoda ey Broughton. D. Appleton & Co., New York. Price, $1. = : Hi) : T o ag “The Kingdom of Hate,” by T. Gallon, . Lathro D, Stanford Universi ty_ Appleton & Co., New York. Price, §1. ks as little as ed what et WHAT THE LEADING LIGHTS A Critical Review by P]’O’fé&‘é;l; H,N is death and would be @ « detected Snow on the Headlight,” by Cy War- D. Appleton & Co. ew York. Tnited States, 1 organiza- Upon such mysteries he loc possible. *“When we are a ective story if the de thiny. it lips s in Burope and the listment cf tre : - s of natioral and lo pa nge Story of Hester Wynne,” r I finally done with hen who have a list of Jewish periodicals pub- by G. re. D. Apple N e ey »d Christ, be- lished in this country, Jewish i York. Price, §i. ppleton & CoiNew se him, and of the leading events Navy in T by Bran et e de ing elites in vear L R el - n Matthews. D. Appleton & Co., New k. Price, 75 cen ncle Sam'’s Soldiers,” by Oscar Phel, Austin._ D. Appleton & Co., New Yorl cents —_—————— . such a book is mainly valuable to ehrews, but ontains some matter of ¢ not totally nor irre- interest to Gentiles. Chief in this is t! yet who dic e attention paid to the Dreyfus ca: ngelicil repentance and con- the list of fmportant events every step in ‘e do not know. Why should this case is noted: “June S—Colonel G. Picquart released from prison.” “Junc 01— Quaint Marriage Verses. phases of the dev the army is the 2 difficult task, o will be seen, is conserva- Captain Alfred Dreyfus leaves Devils Tsl- 0 S t wo v we do know and for In Joseph Jacobs' able 1D @ select m e, very popular in 1t vealed plan of wion introducto article on the Jews in New York City w the present century but it is a v of but one answe A Enrope the siznifi. e of the persecution 5 young and unsophisticated, In the iplined, so much a tion of Dr rown's of Dreyfus is justly n d on. Of Drey- column devoted to th marriage notices that God's fus himself he & Fierieal N e e Imit of but one answer. is turning out one of the ; 1d be opposite, and Dr. -able characters history has led. He lowing: < a rebuke to over- his martyrdom with the pa- way. Obviousis a book tience of a saint and the heroism of a sol is ‘addressed to evan The severest i ave dimficuitie: have not s Solved by orthodoxy. aimost the only Drey is who feel the opy clamor_for revense ditionad views of « have chosen their type may well be a help and very well _accept it sesty and courage, its have had their attention fix ipathy, must command the Drevfus cose meant f < Whether they need its is well fo be reminded that the ¢ human freedom has found its embodiment ed not to in the pe of a Jew. This is not by stiment or any means the first time Israel has con- but iittle to tributed its e to a victory won by ¢ fort ate for feat. typical tr adane most remark- . would not otier- in simil; he purpose. Mr. love and jus of the n The answe oic deeds wh Rrown's attitude nay be, ca eagerness either merican with in such a te gelical belie and who w or religious m sion_of some t nity this bo itor ded Mr. Henry M. Locke to Miss Cathering daring feats the bar t in Time of Wa wews. D. Appleton & Co., publi tor ne on the n Iy f e Soldiers”—By Oscar Austin. D. Appleton & Co., New % cen popul the army ar are writ but wiil e of i zch the mos on of the ed Susan Stone: was not good o ie ila C. R. Brown, pastor of the ational Church, Oakland, y publi book_enti n Point he Christiz book but to n way of thi : short Say on suct g on such the world are clergy who American Jewish Year Bool sus Dreach in such a tem By their agency Cyrus Adler. he Jewish Pub! svitable advance of science and ciety of America, Philadelphia; similated e breach-loading has oading e t alene Wolt: P by night, edited by ation So- 75 cents. ACe, Y member tne fl 4 John W. 450k up nis pe Am Lompany, per with his tee r trades unite, The Atone bt int >rayer,” “I'ne Hope of ive philosophy may be ¥ Last Judgment.” 5 into the t tional bell undly 2 a? > & 0f! o 0se 16 t0 Eive LI it of Tia rcAma. modlfying it, butin n stroying Bocks Received. “o'er my brow for a wad, i a it, ;. nat - dimi hing the religious feeling ex- “The Life of t. Among the books sent to this office f e overed nov- drew a soft round ecially de- t it in the w Nelson,” by Captain A. T. Mahan, U. 8. N. Second edition, revised. emen : atement e the Wolf. of thoug] . pouch bullet pressed through “The Main by C. R. Brown PR Y I ¢ to originality 2 o SR S Little, Brown & Co., Boston. Price, $3. h to Miss Hary v 1o rea B ns. Its to place, {ook up i the pEg ¥ The Whitaker & Ray Co., San Francisco, Little, . Boston. Price, § Miss Harriet Weed: & PunpEt BH6 i % o oo o pi 5 nd puts his book forwara B ’ £ = et s Fhilkas ol ot it ki, ftop of the EUR o ech, e s, et S by Cyrus Adler. The Jewish Publication nd if 1 was d_the pan, flint. His g r 200 yards, and it was only Weeds some of the profounder theo~ A second edition of Captaln Mahan's Society of America, Philadelphia. Price, of the time. “Tife of Nelson'” has just becn published, 75 cents. of the Christian church The author has amplified his treatmenf *The Puppet Show,” by Leonidas Wes- constantly at work, of some disputed points and added some terveit. F. Tennyson Neely, New York st; it must be God's curious information, but he has left the ' vppe N, " rtaken 8 SR 3 to the ms of woman, Win- minute can send twenty-five or thirty Wil the other, s'is God's will; 1t second edition subsiantiilly the same as o 2‘.ill§‘:;‘ed 1\,:‘1.‘“' Nb’ ";}hf’" Ro oy 11 op lures Miss Trever into a wager that long, hard projectiles, carrying death a mMmust be jus One is the volce of con- the first. It would be impertinent'to write W, Dillingham & Co., New York. Price. $ will mak e painter fall in love with mile or more. What would haprnn to an fidence in the reasonableness of (od’s at length of this already celebrated book. ‘The Day of Temptation,” by Willlam ir. Beverly Win- need be sharpened hi nd, a struggling good for 15 3 Lee, & commission for the after lon yvements that it could be T reighing beauty @Miss Tre- fired once a minute. Now a soldler claps tWO g sure that the painter is im- five cartridges into his rifle, and every One% ving: netiv anguish ¢ wom. by and thus gets for Lee the oppor- army in these days which should wait for WOrld, the other the oxpression of the The reader does not know at which to Le Queux. G. W. Dillingham & Co., New unity to paint her portr Sut of This it of the whites of the enemies Seénse of its mystery. One looks toward feel the greatest surprisé: the literary york. ation the story develops. or even of their brass butions? or Science, the other toward revelation. faculty of so accomplished a naval ta here are two questions which have In- which should advance with a solld fronts It is in this second spirit that the tra- tician, or the technical thoroughness with ' Hats Off!” by Arthur Henry Veysey duced the ascetlc recluse who writes these Mr. Austin’s little book gives a vivid ditional theology of evangelical Protest- which so sympathetic and skillful a writer G. W. Dillingham & Co., New York revicws n his cell In a monastery to make picture of the modern tactics—of the antism was built up. Aceepting certain treats naval questions. Nelson's care: Price, $1 25. utlon of this book. Miss Trever i rep- troops scattered, crouching, crawling d0gmas as divinely taught this theology had the unity and intensity of a gry “The Sacrifice of Silence,” by Edounard resented as a singularly attractive young from cover to cover, or dashing a few rIigldly deduced their logical conclusions. drama; but the treatment of the great Rod, translated by John W. Harding. G. the author woman, a leader of the highest soclety. yards on. He explains clearly Fow the The result was a philosophy of life the. mass of records in which Milton’s life lay v pyinoham & Co., New York. Price lo certain- Do such ladies ask gentiemen if they re- soldler, thus left to himself, must be more Simplicity and logical consistency of buried in such a manner as to reveal this e D - £COs, gular ac- member “that awful Nelsin girl,” " and intelligent and independent, even more Which have given It a power which fas- unity and intensity required literary art $1 conception which cre- show them pictures cut from comic pa- genuinely courageous.in some ways than cinates and controls the mind. Cold, of no mean order. The American nav. s remarkable is the pers to kuow if one of the girls in them of old. 2 calm, logical, attacked as mechanical, distinguished alike for scientific attain- Seton Merriman, new issue. G. W. Dil- ity glven 1s not “the image of the ‘fair’ Miss Nel- The history of the navy has the same cruel and even devilish, this theology ments in peace and for valor and skill In jnoham & Co., New York. Price, $1 30. an indirec gestions sin?” And is it consistent with the ideal central facté to present—the development Stands as the opposite 'of Dr. Brown's. war, has received new honor from Cap- “The Mal P ints,”” b = Ph,m,"g“ !{;-\'- alpable than th rcumstan- 0f gracious and well schooled femininity of the modern gun and its effects on Where the Calvin{st elaborates a system tain Maban’s books. The “Life of Nel- e Main Points,” by PSS T e of his love for Mme. Herde- for & woman to bet a silver bracelet that tactics. Ships no longer can close with Dr. Brown refuses to take a step beyond 5on’ is one of several important blograph- nolds Brown. The Whitaker & Ray Com- solation. the foregoin, he brides an ith actual ortitude; but couple of ge notice “The Slave of the Lamp,” by Henry compani the mildest she will make a man fall in love with their antagonists muzzle to muzzle and the plain words of Scripture. here a ical works to be published this fall in new pany, San Francisco. Price, $1 25. fusions quotec the ef- a Iefsl powerful hv{rmlfif}:-fisli‘frle";‘?c‘g;inrf:—gg::rgd books ,-mgd ca:\dnnn-haills crashing into each guclrline ’r’ gaqut he interprets it in its yidt‘:&g.apao;d t]\\!lu}gnrsth)lrs (BI'VOa“}"m""' “The Algebraic Solution of Equations e S a ower and e seem 80 other’s sldes until victor and vanqu applest form. Nowhe; s Dr. Brown | Le cCarthy *‘Gladstone,” v " by L. an 18 on & sim- queer to us unsophisticated lower clusses, both Arift from the Aght. Neison aies seam o Gepart from betioqasy as 1t 18 fof Instance. The first edition of the Of AnY Degree’ by L. A Buchanan, M. Why She W as Happy. s © Inly lovely, cighteen dollars ers, bound togeth- The story runs along briskly, and is not Lor assiusine s Doatie e ORI vertar T e on hes. He 'Life of Nelson' cost 3, the second costs -y and J. Lewis Andre. The Whitaker & v o pep "ot , their passion, gullty in it- unpleasant. Of course it need mot be sald his men scross her deck to an en:rr:'xdy o ellaves in the dl\‘?rfifigtg]f %‘r‘\’rrfs:f’m an 33 and is a fine plece of bookmaking. Ray Company, San Francisco, Price, 80 4,00y 4y " the fact that the man has that between you and me there Is pre- yond. Contrast this with Santiago, where atonement by him, in the propriety of . The “Life of Nelson’—by Captain A. T. cents. cost s Dlood on his hands, fise clous little in it. For its purpose that s the fwo fleets were not within kaying 2or domie & Mahan, U. 8. N. Second edition, revised. *“Alaska and the Klondike,” by Angelo Sod (MItY cents—quitc as lovely as that t o in isolation from the its chief ‘%tu? Ike ;u pet Show.” By each other. & mile of ]?em’;’d(ible ‘moral d‘::gg;fiog?‘:;d anc. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. $3. Hefi:atir‘:a D. Appleton & Co., Nzw Yirk. fil‘;"gg"‘e:,‘_"m“" 8, which had cost nearly a i. The woman's beauty is destroyed ifmid,uh esterve . Tennyson Neely, It must not be ln!‘e'god that the In an everlasting state of lostness for Wil Price, $1 5. ‘It the Smiths are able to ow: *'an accldent. The lover, against all New Yor! Lo authors have meant to write only of the some sinners. But his dootrine is at low A pew venture of some mportance to iy Casmopolitan Comedy,” by Anna CONSHCUOUS pew in chirih Ghon ™ HOKE e struggles of his will, loses his love 2 changes in the art of war on sea or land tide. He resorts to the moral senss of the Jewish comunity is the publication of faltered her husbana B e e Lut not bis tenderness, his pity, his affec- “The Day of Temptation,” by Willlam caused by the improvements iy weapons. mankind to justify God's ways. He must the American Jewish Year Book for the Robeson Brown. D. Appleton & Co., New "y . 11, they g - orhe York. Price, $L we can,” she exelgime,i any later than mysiory of & very mysterious hature It meitiods of modorn wartare, from the en feries to God's Wi, Jo¢ he doos #0 SeIOR. Calendar, & Driof Teview of the state of “Dr. Nikolws Experiment” by Guy troit Journal o % radiently.—De- i tion, his devotion. “He lives a lie to her, Le Queux, is the story of a mysterious Mr. Austin's book is an expositlon of the sometimes take rofu ing mys- 5660, Wik D ot nd Touna Bk i n P L] ge in referring my: year “5660,” containing an eccl