The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 18, 1899, Page 9

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: D R e k2 R A S P AR R SR O e S S i o S R S S AP ‘ONE HUNDAD QA TAHY FOAR OASTAR COCKTALLS . JUSTRALI Hard Passage of the Eark Inverneil. i the crew bard time sed when in ually aore thi I n ple cesels arrived from Hamburg yes- One was the British ship Cam. kenneth, which made the run in 181 the Italfan -bark Salvatore it in 151 days. The has 1400 barrels whisky been-around the Horn t Logan, from San n which. 10 per cent arrived at Astoria 1 on arrival that noch, which was POSTUM CEREAL. SURE TO ASK. The Kind of Coffee When Postum Is | Francisc Well Made. “Three & ffre drinkers were my old sct and her two daugh- ters. They are a ys complaining and taking med 1 determined to give them 1 Coffee instead of coffee wY visited me, so without saying to them about it, I made a t Postum the first orning. ing four heaping teaspoons to the pint of water and let it boll nty minutes, stirring down occa y ore the meal was half over each passed up the cup to be refilled arking how fine the coffee was. The her asked for a third c¢up and in- and of coffee I used. T her question just then, rd her say a while before idn't like Postum Food Cof. unless it was more than hailf old- fashioned coffee After breakfast I told her that the coffee she liked s0 well at breakfast was pure Postum Food Coffee, and the reason she liked it was because it was } rly made, that is, it was boiled long enough to bring out the flavor. I i been brought up from a nervous, *retched invalid to a fine condition of physical health by leaving off coffee 1 using Postum sd Coffee. 1 rid out of coffee slavery to Postum frecimm, and have earned the gratitude doing all I can to help the of ms ¥, many friends.” Myra J. Tul ler, 102 Troost ave, Kansas City, Mo. | Yo bor. | "The outlook for the whalers next | | | was going west and the Mission-street | Sar morth. rough a misunderstanding of signals both cars tried to cross at the same time. The Mission-street car struck | street electric ear nd hold him oysterbound until ses him. In his waking hours ers at an oyster sign and trem- bles at an innocent suggestion of his tor- mentors. all came about through the Root- s fight Jast Wednesday night that affair Joe owes his undoing. He d some of his friends, among them the THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1899. TRUE STORY OF WHY JOE NOLAN SEES OYSTER COCKTAILS IN HIS DREAMS O ¢ ment. Thelr path was through pleasant places, and the hour was late when they sought home. Joe invited his friends to accompany him to his home, and they aoc- cepted. When they arrived there an un- quenchable thirst seized them, and they floundered for the suggestion of some- thing to satisfy ft. A happy thought struck them. Oyster R g e e e e e e “ Heae , QNEFTT ADoLLAan. . ‘Taxm BACK YouR DolLLAR-. THI9 B (5 82520 - restaurant to send post haste to the Nolan | _‘‘Hol, house a hundred oysters for cocktalls. | PROD In due time the message was answered by o the arrival of a messenger with oysters and a blll. Joe looked at the bill. He gees very imperfectly in dim light, and saw 25 cents. “Oh, give the man a dollar,” he said to a servant. smoke!” replied Nolan. T tele- for 100 oysters for oyster cock- swer, and just then another mes eng:r_ came with more cocktalls. The place an to look ltke an o‘r ter grotto, bu; here was no help for it. The cargo o Oysters was accepted, and that is why Nolan sees oysters in his dreams and in- vites his friends out to his house to have “Can't half it,”” was the messenger’s an- u ATE boys, attended the contest, and | cocktalls would be just the thing. A tele- | ‘This bill is for §25," sald the messenger. | one emselves while he shuts his at its conclusion sought other entertain- | phone message was sent to a downtown | “It is for 100 oyster cocktalls. eyes. = lon overdue from Panama, was ten miles hwest of the Columbia River. Both vessels were driven past their port by the utheasterly gales which have prevailed fu_; some time past. ennial arrived from vy in ballast. She took | 273 head of horses and another load. When 210 | of the Farallones th Louis was spoken osed to be on her way lu, but is co with nd Oriental Steamship Dorie safled for the She took away all the carry and a full pas- 1 rived day £ty from Cape with twenty- tons of Cape er is reported to he Kimball & Co. in- out in a warehouse Albion, due here is bringing down 100 tons d a £ which will be he shoveled up T beach where th miners were | working and It was th 5> steamers and f Kimbal Kimball was taken fll w ver during the run from Cap rly dead when Seatt son s th pe SAYE ric not been exaggerated "There e for all who want to dig for he yesterday. *Cape Yorke is 4 4 Lebe e ve e i e B T o SR TP S OVERDUE PORT LOGHN 15 SHFE Finally Made Her Way to Portland. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. ASTORIA, Nov. 17.—The ship Port Lo- gan, long overdue from San Diego to Portiend, arrived in port to-day. A pilot was put aboard the vessel & week ago last Sunday, but & strong off- shore wind carried her to sea soon after- ward. He attempted to approach the harbor entrance twice, but dense fogs and rough sea compelled her to stand off again and she beat around outside uatil to-day, when a tug picked her up. At o0 time has the vessel been in danger nor has any uneasiness concerning her safety been felt here. The Port Logan last Tuesday spoke the St. Enoch, 120 days from Pandma. The latter vessel signaled her correct posi- saying her chronometer had been en. Later this afternoon the FEt. Znoch and the British bark Criffel, from Antwerp, were both reported off the riv pilots aboard both vessels. expected to cross in at daylight to- | morrow. [ R R I T IR S SN AP S AP S DA D S, A aaaees s b e E e s e an b a e ae ae aa ] Ly 4y YA D4 They morning and the body of the late Captain Henry will be brought to the e for the urg_o-e of hnl'? an autopsy held on {t. The Morgue officials | will convey the body on a dray, as it is incased in a large lead casket, too bulky and too heavy to be placed in a Morgue | WAR TAX CASE SENT BACK T0 JUSTICES' COURT Elaborate Opinion by Judge Morrow. HUSBAND AND WIFE ARRESTED. George M. and Lillie Carter En Route to Napa in Charge of an Officer. George M. Carter and, his wife Lillle were arrested on Howard street yesterday by Detectives Fitzgerald of the Seven- | teenth street station and Anthony of the | | Central station on a warrant Issued from Napa. The complaining witness in the case is David Rose, who had been a friend | | of the couple previous to his being seized | with the l-?lan?l(ke fever, As soon as the | United States Clrcult Judge Morrow re- Klondike thirst for gold took possession | manded yesterday to the Justices' Court of his brain he, so the Carters say, gave the gult of B. Johnson against Wells, them his furniture as a present. On his Fargo & Co. Johnson refused to pay for | return from the frozen zone without the | a revenue war stamp and the company much-coveted yellow metal he regretted | refused to accept from him a package his generosity and asked for the Teturn | for gelivery, of his household goods or the equivalent | “Jyqge Morrow delivered o lengthy and The }m being final and having no | €xhaustive opinion, from which are taken strings to it the recipients refused to see | the following extracts on salient points: | 1t in the light viewed by Rose and conse- B. Johnson vs. Wells, Fargo & Co.—This quently there was a difference of opinion, | s an action %o recover damages in the which’ must be adjusted by the legal | sum of fifty dollars for the alleged neglect minds of the grape growing valley. of the defendant, as a common carrier, to —_— ee—————— recelve and transport & certaln package of photographs offered and tendered by plaint- A Painter’s Bad Fall. iff for conveyance and transportation. The L. 8. Miller, a painter, living at 17 Little | case was originally removed to this court Russ street, fell from a scaffold on a| Under the act of March 3, 1587 (2A Stats. | house at the corner of Golden Gate ave- §52), as corrected by the act of August 13, 1888 (25 Stats, 433), and the jurisdiction of this court was invoked by the defendant under section 620 of the Revised Statutes | providing that the Circuit Courts shall original jurisdiction of all suits at law or | 1n equity arising under any act providing for revenue. The court held that although the court might have such original furisdic- tion of the case, it could not acquire that jurisdiction under the act of removal where it did not appear from the plaintiff's state- ment of his cause of action that it was one arising under the constitution, laws or statutes of the United States, and that more than $2000, exclusive of interest and costs, olved. The case was accord- ingly ren to the State court. The case Is now here upon a writ of | certiorari, under section 843 of the Revised | Statutes.' When the writ was granted upon the petition of the defendant the question of jurisdiction was reserved to be further considered upon & motion to quash the writ. That motion having been made by the plaint!ff and also a motion to remand, the question of jurisdiction Is now before the court for determination, and the solution of the question depends upon the construc- tion to be given o section 643 of the Re- vised Statutes. This section relates to the removal of sutts and prosecutions against officers and persons acting under authority of such officers, on account of acts done under the revenue and registration laws of the United States. ©® © o It is clear that the writ of certiorari provided for in section 643 of the Revised Statutes fs not common law writ, but a statutory writ performing the office and function of an order of removal, and the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court to lssue the writ and entertain the suit after such removal is dependent entirely upon the pro- visions of the statute as applied to the facts of the case. ® o o The first part of the section points out distinctly the two classes of persons who are entitled to have certain sults agalinst them rem 4 from any State court to a Clreuft Court, namely (1) any nted under or acting by author- ¥ revenue law of the United States, any person acting under or by authority of any such officer. The char- acter of the suits is then described, and removal limited to those suits against the officer or person acting under his authority on account of any act done under color of office or color of law, and on are.unt of @ - . ¢ . PY + @ She Is Now Owned in San Francisco. American clipper ship Servia has been purchased from Eastern parties by A. Anderson of Lewls, Anderson er home port In future. du Boleo at Santa Rosalla and will sail for that port in a few days. and others and this will be Campag Puget Bour 1 and there load lumber for The Servia has been Australla. Captain Gilmore is in com L i I S R A e IS | any right, title or authority claimed by . | such officer or other person. Clearly the - "w!]hnr person’* ':mt( referred to s a person acting under the authority v B SRS S I S S WA PSP APUD AP PP SO S SO U SO 3 authority of a revenue officer, since only such a person s men. tioned In the first part of the section as being entitled to have suits which may be brought against him removed to' the Federal court. The fact that the revised section {ntroduces the person acting under authority of a revenue officer and gives him the right of removal of a sult against him and omits the ‘“other person’ pro- vided In the corresponding nart of section loaded here by Felix Santallier for the From Santa Rosalia the ship will go to mand of the Servia. 1 two loads of prospectors iere by the Alblon before .«hnl rancisco. No one but a | ¥ man should go to > r e, the climate is very trying.” The little sc er Elk N also ar- rived from Cape Nome lny. She was twenty days ma | Dutch Harbe ort allows coal was Gate not b no telling wi craft he Elk No. 1 is only thirty-two tons burden and was bulit at Dutch Har son is not as bright as it might be. It will cost 40 per cent more to fit out this | than it did last, and there is no prospect of an increased catch or better prices. | The cost of cordage, copper, metal, safls, | fron, beef and pork has advanced from 3 to # per cent, while the price of bone and ofl 18 the same as it was a_year ago. The transport Zealandia led from Manila for S8an Francisco on November 11. Streetcar Collision. Car No. 516 of the Sacramento-street line was struck by a Mission and Kearny yesterday morning while crossing Kearny street at its junc- tion with Clay. The Bacramento-street er on the side of the dummy. A Wink the steps of the dummy and springing_and otherwise damaging the truck underneath it. The glass front of the Mission-street car was broken. Fortunately there were no passengers on the dummy of the Sacramento-street car at the time of the collision and no one was injured on either car. el . Emily W. Young’s Estate. Martha Wood filed a petition In the Bu- perior Court yenenlhly for leuefr-hot uand- t tate of her de- ::’:m’:g?:r,umly a'.uYoun(. who died October 1§ last, Decedent’s estate consists of an interest in the estate of the late q&uphfiwm, hich s valued at $10,- IRA MOSS HELD. Hired a Soldier to Pass a Counterfeit Fifty-Dollar Bill. Ira Moss w «fore United States Com- missioner Heacock yesterday morning on ge of attempting to pass a counter- ) bill. He held for tr Moss offered two soldiers $3 each if they 1 in passing the refused. He g dler named John Me( it in W. H. Nolar for a pair of p bill for him, the bill to a sol- ew, who offered shoe store In payment 1t leather shoe M W turned informer after having ced in custos and furnished the nce on which Moss may be convicted, ————— Captain Henry's Body Ashore. The ship Cyrus Wakefield will dock this “but | % of the act of March 2 1853 ADpears to be a clear and consistent revision of that section. The purpose of the statute is to protect the revenue offlcers of the Gov- ernment In the line of thelr affielal Aduties and those who are employed to met nndep them in the performanes of such Autt-e: but further than providing this necessary protection to the administration of ite cenues. the Federal Government has ne ercat In the business affairs of the Deo- ple incidentally hrought within range of the tariff system. ® © * Where the question of jurt ubtful the rule now fs ht amainst the fu - Federal courts. et nue and Broderick street yesterday after. ; oon, a distance of two stories. ile WAS ken to the R--(‘l‘l\lnii Hospital, where it was found that his left knee, leg and | ankle were fractured, and he was also in- | ternatly injured. His chances of recovery are doubtful e Three Fantan Games Raided. | Police Sergeant Duke and posse made « raids In Chinatown last night. In rded thirty-six gamblers be- bars. The clubs raided were at| €uit remar the Tustices’ Court of Waverly place, 8 Ross alley and f14| "¢ ¢ty and_county of San Francisco. Washington street. The iptures were The Anheuser-Busch DARK is & new brew of the largest brewery in the world, t old style German bre and palatable beyond an: ever given to the public. effccted Ly Officer Conlon, Who masquer- aded us a Chinaman and who entered the nts while N games were in prog- . The prisoners were taken to the allfornin street police station. mellow, other dark beer In the Divorce Court. Sarah Van Dyke Hentz has been grant. ed a divorce from George Clarence Hentz on the ground of cruelty. The plaintiff was granted alimony in the sum of $20 a nfonth, together with the custody of a minor child. Teresa Batemos was grant- ed a divorce from John S. Batemos on the ground of extreme cruelty. Suits for divorce have been filed by Olive Murphy against Willlam A. Murphy, for desertion Lottie Hansen against Bernard H. Han- Minnie A. Jones agamst Graeber against Louise Graeber. for cry- elty; Adela Hollman against Henry Holl- man, for desertion; George Kenncdy against Polly Kennedy, for desertion, and George McVicar asainst Emma McVicar, for infidelity. Joseph Scharf has sued to annul hig marriage to Catharine Scharf, on the ground that the defendant is now an {n- mate of an asylum, hopelessly insane, and ‘was of unsound mind at the ti of their marriage, & fact that was kept from his knowledge. —_——— Yesterday’s Insolvents, Francls Tully, merchant, Healdsburg, $1481 60; no assets. John M. Tyson, mer- chant, Irvington, $3218 97; no assets. possesses the merit of being an | nutritious Jones, for desertion; Charles | STUDIES BY DR. MARY ROBERTS SMITH. Copyright, 1899, b ¥ Seymour Eaton. Contributors to this course: Mrs. Helen Kate Gannett Wells, Mrs. Louise E. Hogan, Miss Emily G. Balch, Miss Lucy Wheelock a: V. ARTISTIC FURNISHINGS. (Concluded.) If the general principles laid down In the last paper be applied to the details of house furnishing we shall find it neces- sary to vary frequently from common practices. The first effort of a good housekeeper is to keep dirt out of the house, the second to get it out. From either point of view carpets are unsani- tary, while they have the additional dis- bugbear, house-cleaning. Good floors are now to be easily and cheaply obtained: if properly painted or (preferably) finished Wwith ofl and wax they form the best foun- dation for sanitary and tasteful house- keeping. Even when the floors are old and rather defective the space around the edge of the rug may be puttied and paint- ed 80 as to look very well. Often the price of a handsome carpet would better be spent in laying a new floor on top of the old one. By rugs I do not mean sev- eral little rugs, placed like oases on a slippery floor or at & doorway to trip the unwary, but good, generous-sized rugs which will just escape the edges of the stationary furniture around the sides of the room, rugs which are substantial enough not to “kick up” and yet small and light enough to be handled by any person. Rugs of this sort have the warmth and stability of carpets combin- ed with all the hyglenic advantages which carpets lack. No such terrible upheavai as the semi-annual housecleaning is nec- essary if now and then the woodwork and pictures be wiped with a damp cloth, the windows washed, the floors dusted and the rugs beaten out of doors. They may be had in all sorts of materials ready made or may be made to order from vari- ous carpetings. Among the varieties may be mentioned Japanese cotton and jute, ingrain, Brussels, Smyrna, Axminster, Wilton, Moquette and Orlental rugs of many kinds. The least expensive, the Japanese rugs, fade rapidly, though they are substantial and come in charming de- signs; Ingrain, though more durable, is almost too flimsy to be used as & rug; but anything from Brussels up will generally give satisfaction in proportion to the amount of money Invested. If, however, the floor be too old and poor to be made presentable and a new one cannot be laid on top of it, it must be wholly covered. If one still wishes to use large rugs the floor may be covered with denim or burlap In neutral tints, or with matting or woolen filing. These should be lined with carpet or building paper for warmth and softness. If the rug be of proper size the floor covering need show only about eighteen inches around the sides. This device, however, and regularly laid carpets are only alter- nate evils. All the furniture that is intended to be moved—that is, which is not actually bullt Into or fastened to the walls and | floors—should be easily movable and | easily cleaned. This at once precludes | the purchase of large upholstered chairs, heavy sofas and tables, Wicker and rat- tan furniture, though not so artistic, is | lighter and much less costly than antique | wood. With good removable hair cush- fons it can be made quite as comfortable and far more cleanly than upholstered plush and damask. The cushions may be beaten at the same time the rugs, and the dust thus taken out of the house. For bedrooms white enamel and brass bedsteads and washstands are rapldly superseding the old heavy wooden bed room sets. Curiously enough, many house furnishers still buy chairs by the i set, without reference to the fact that | the persons who are to sit upon them | are of various ages and sizes. Fairly well designed chairs In hardwoods and rattan are now to be found In the shops in great variety, yet the prime test of a chair is whether it is comfortable, not whether it is ornamental. It is not well for somebody to sit upon. Dining rooms and reception rooms may have rather | formal, straight chairs. The dining- irnum chairs should have rather high backs for support, but the tops should never have any kind of projecting orna- mentation which may impede the waiter's movements. In providing chairs, cush- foned window seats and small sofas for sitting rooms one cannot o amiss in choosing such designs as will secure ease. If furniture be chosen with these simple principles in mind—i. e., freedom from dust, minimum of labor for the house- wife and ease for those who are to use | ft—there remains only one other way in | which to go astray: it may still be su- periatively ugly. It should be decorative by its graceful form, its coloring or by the charm of the design upon it. Nowhere is the principle of subordination more ap- plicable than In decoration; all ornament must be wholly subordinate to the use of the object which it adorns. For Instance, lendnwn are for two purposes, to light | the house and to see out of; if a window | opens on an unpleasant prospect sash curtains of muslin or silk are both useful Iand decorative, since they shut off the view and yet admit light. But if you wish to see from the window, sash curtains | are an absurdity rather than a decora- tion. In the ordinary private house elab- orate heavy curtain draperies are out of place both for artistic and hyglenic rea- sons. Wherever cleanliness Is portant requisite draperies should be easily moved and cleaned. Silk, woo! and velvet hangings are only to be tolerated when there is ample service to keep them clean. | The factlity and cheapness of mill work | and lathe work in wood has vitlated the taste of Americans to a terrible degree, Nearly all ready-made furniture |s grooved, machine-carved and ornamented |In a way to violate not only the principles of beauty, but of strength and cleanliness as well. Ornament that is meaningless 's | vulgar. In the room where I sit there are | four chairs of different patterns, costing from $1 50 to $15; all of them have legs. Now, legs are Intended as a support, yet | all of these are grooved and beaded and | hollowed out in spots, so that twice as much material as Is necessary to insure support has been used. The ornamenta- tion is not pretty, the depressions are in- evitably full of dust and the whole de- sign means absolutely nothing to any one who sees it. By way of ornament there is glued on the front crossplece of one large chair a design in oak leaves. If these | had been carved upon a beautiful strip of wood by the hand of a cunning workman | they would have expressed a man's “)mulhl and skill. As they are, they sug- | gest merely a machine and a glue pot. Contrast with this gingerbread furniture | the plain, substantial colonial chairs, bles and sideboards, made of beautiful | wood, almost without ornamentation, with slender, tapering, strons legs, beautifully polished by hand. There is no reason why machine-made furniture should not be as well designed, and at least as simple and dignified, as hand-made furniture. But so long as there remains a large class of those who think that the more grooves and oak leaves they get for their money the more beautiful their furniture will he, it will continue to be made in large quan- titfes. Patterns of every sort, whether for car- pets, wall paper, drapery or china, must be very carefully used that they may not advantage that they involve the periodic | designed unless it be really comfortable | an im- | HOME SCIENCE AND HOUSEHOLD ECONOMY. Campbell, Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster, Mry. Miss Anna Barrows, Dr. Mary Roberts Smith, nd others. be miore conspicuous than that which they decorate. The floor and wall are the basis both of color scheme and decoration. as well as the background of the people Wwho are to live there. . Espectally in ordinary small dwelling houses patterns . should, therefore, be rather inconspicuous, indefi- nite in design arnd the color tones either neutral or rich irf effect. If the elimat be sunny and the room well lighted, th. walls and floor may he. dark and rich;: if the clihate be uncertain. and often | cloudy, or the room. badly lighted, the ef- fect should be light and gay. Color is the | chief means of producing this result; th walls and .floors of livirig rooms sho be in soft rich brown, yellow, red. green or warm gray tini Blue, thoukh very lovely when artistically used, absorbs the light, is cold In effect and 1s seldom sat- sfactory for living rooms, while the biue- y'S are positively chilling. Yellow in paler or deeper shades, depending on the lighting of the room, is uniformly cheerful { and satisfying: next to it rank the various | terra-cotta shades and the richer greens. Neither floor .nor wall covering should have. large, striking designs, but should rather, If having pattern at all, have a wandering, indefinite design or small con- ventional patterns. The furniture .and decoration of bed- rooms can scarcely be too simple. The wall and floor coverings may be lighter and gayer than those of living rooms. Blue and white or pale green and white may be used as a color scheme for any sunny rooms; yellow or pink and white for less sunny .ones. One or two single white Iron and brass bedsteads and wash- stands, a bureau or a chest of drawers with glass above, two or three low, light chairs and-a desk or tabls large enough to write upon, a hassock and a waste basket make ample furnishing, if there be a good closet or wardrobe. A calendar, writing materfals, a warm dressing gown and a palr of bedroom slippers and a furnished sewing basket add much to the comfort of a guest room. The rug need only be large enough to cover the space In front of the bed, bureau and stand, it the floor be well matched and painted or ofled. A bedroom should give the im- pression of spotlessness and Inviting com- fort; everything in it should be readily cleaned, and unless it must be used also as a study or sitting room it should con- tain only strictly necessary articles. Mats, bric-a-brac, superfluous fancy work, even many pictures, are quite out of place. Most buyers must take what is offered In the shops; they have neither the money | nor time, nor indeed, perhaps, the taste, to find that which is choice and which is perfectly adapted to their circumstances. Many of the most cbvious mistakes in such matters are the result of mere help- lessness In the presence of the dealer and the manufacturer. So many very ugly things have been made by man since the era of invention began that ome must £pend either much time or a great amount of money to secure that which is really tasteful. Unless one is conscious, then, of a matured and cultivated taste which may be safely trusted, it is always better to buy plain, substantial, well made arti- cles; they at least will be only negatively ugly. As one's taste becomes more and more trained by observation and experi- ence, and the amount of money which is avallable for this purpose increases, it |s very easy to add more costly and artistio furnishings. But If a mistake is made 'n the beginning in buying ugly things which are rather costly, there is growing dissat- isfaction In living with them. Striking patterns and fashions are safe only in the hands of very well trained persons. Inconspicuous designs, soft colors, plain surfaces are very seldom Inartistic. Sim- plicity, appropriateness and genuineness | are always safe. There are now to be | found In all the large cities a few shops | where expert advice may be obtained on | points of taste, but unfortunately the | | | g00ds sold In these places are often so costly as to be quite beyond the ordinary purse. Meantime the average buyer can at least cuitivate his taste by observation. | and as his income permits may add tq the house furnishing articles not only useful and hyglenic but beautiful as weil. Leland Stanford University. | Note—a faper on the social life of the home, by Mrs. Kate Gannett Wells, will be published next week. COURSES OF INSTRUCTION. Autumn-Winter Term, 1899-1800, MONDAYS and THURSDAYS: | Popular Studies in Shakespeare. | TUESDAYS: The World’s Great Artists. WEDNESDAYS: Desk Studies for Girls and Shop ahd Trade Studies for | Boys. FRIDAYS: Great American States- men. | SATURDAYS: Home Science and Household Economy. These courses will continue until February 15, 1900. Examinations will be held at thetr close as a basis for the granting of certificates. Republicans Organize Permlnently. The young Republicans of San Francis- | co are not to be shut out from a hand In the affairs of the party in the future, |as was evidenced by the enthusiastic meeting in room 1206 of the Claus Spreck- els bullding last evening. The Marquette Club was organized as a permanent social and political elub, and to ve downtown rooms near Kearny and Market streets, with all the convenlences | of a clubhouse.” About $50 was subscribed by those present last evening, and it iy :un:lvr tood that ‘rrnmlm nt gentlemen of will lend their support in finan- other ways. W. M. Abbott ac as chairman and Morgan Backus as s retary. It is the intention of the organization to be active along soclal and political lines, and to keep a continual open club- house to all active Republicans Most of the members of the Unfon League drill corps. which did good service during the campaign of 1895, are Inter ested in the new organizat! —————e Frenna Jury Complete. Next Monday the taking of testimony In the trial of Joreph P. Frenna, charged with the murder of James F. Turner, will begin. The jury was completed ye | the following ~ talesmen beins & | Jeremiah Geary. 308 Guerrero street; Hamburger, ¢ ter street: Edward Cam. d eron, 351 Devisadero: L. Hous 126 El- lis: H. C. Hinkel, 1610 Dev Fell; J. H. Doole; , 12 Hartfor: son, 7177 Pine; L. Friedlander, 411 Mont- omery; Sol Cahen, 406 Battery, and J. P, Eurnor, 6 Sutter. —_——— Evans Pleaded Guilty. Ivor Evans, the degenerate arrested by Postal Inspector Erwin some weeks ago for sending mrough the malls obscene let- ters to a respectable young woman of this eity, pleaded gullty of the offense yes- terday morning in the United States trict gun. e will appear for sentence next .

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