The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 18, 1899, Page 5

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good time! ¥ Yes, this is a good time--a time of peace, cheer and good will. Too good a time to criticize others—or to boast of ourselves. And yet their interest as well as ours re- quires that we should remind MOTHERS OF BOYS that this is “a good time” to learn for how little money a first-class, high-class all-wool boy’s suit can be bought direct from the manu- facturers. is the most popular price with us--repre- senting suits for boys 3to 15 years, which other stores, with the best of “good will,” can- not afford to sell for less than $6.50 to $7.50. These spacial values we offer in all the fashionable and best materials, coler- ings, patterns and styl's. Yes, we have good suits for less and for more—in a completely satisfying, wholesale assortment. And the men—suits, overcoats, ulsters—but that is another story. Whole- sale Manu- {acturers of Clothing. 121123 Sansome trez, | AMUSEMENTS. | AMUSEMENTS. (L e COLUMBIAS Qg AT TERNOCON, 1978 People. | NGHT 2000 attended. THE -HOW GREAT? ver THOUSANDS GREET THE NEW BILL. LA SYBPHE. Most Sensational Dancer in the W HARRIGAN, The Funriest Ju o The AND MRS MILTON ROYI CAPTAIN IMPUDEN( FULLER GOLDE Thiae ; E. MARION S WARDE rid MR ¥ Stories . 5 WE L PLEWELL YN i ' B T | Ivstay e TEOAND HAY HILL ‘and the BIGERADIE TS 1y 1 0 o Wi | SEAT SALE | Bginning X 115 TINERS WEDNTROAY SATURDAY AND 11 bler & Co. present RALL CAINE'S powsrfal pl-g, the CHRISTIAN GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. ELEPHONE MAIN Opens Nex! THURSDAY, | Bec. 2l ! TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. ONLY FIVE TIMES MORE OF ONLY THIS Y “EK t the Sparkiing dance. M 2 Kir Presented by a Great Cast and 3 FERRIS HARTMAN. Last Time “TAR AND TARTAR" Friday ev OUR ANNUAL EXTRAV Gorgeous Holiday evival In N DieFledermaus = “THE HOTTEST JANZA! ¢ Production of “LITTLE BO-PiEP” [E" : Hote ar : IN ENGLISE SEATS ARE NOW ON SALE a Week Ahead 2 y Ev < Woltz Kine. Port IA!:‘-»:‘(::-‘l...n-_ 1 and 10" centa. o v CHUTES AND Z0O. Branch Tie Office, Emportum T“EATER"TP"-C]‘-‘ THE PEOPLE PLAY HOUSE, ‘ADGIE AND HER LIONS, Eddy and Jones Sta, PHONE S0UTH 770. OUR USUAL PA EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING MAJOR MITE, The Smallest Actor on Farth In His Great Imitation of CORNILLE ! I SSUAL PACKED HotSE. THE GOTTLOBS, I i 2 2 o ; 6 2 j«.\fiEKS GF_R.\L\.\'—_(:H EDIANS, onty Aspearanits 5 2 I IIWO) VRIS, ELLA BURT, Coasting the Chutes, VLADIM [ The Greatest Colored :i‘i T" Earth, | AND A GREAT VAUDEVILLE SHOW, | THURSDAY NIGHT, U P : mUbfiEUU{S AMATEUR | INAFORE MiNSTRELS. B ac mann P oria ek | Phone for Seats, Park 23. Y AND SUNDAY. e ———————— - XMAS | e 50c and 75e. , 35c and 5oc, EUGENE FIELD'S POEMS, A $7.00 BOOK. The Book of the Century. Handsomely RACING! RACING! RACING! | 1899—CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB--19800 y s 1 e intee Mbeting. Deteinber It ‘1o ooy 81, the Ulustrated by thirty-two of the World's | TRACK. | 3 : Sk ETRACK o GIVEN FREE ALCAZAR THEATER. | A et | LSO A NGRS | each day {] to the Eugene Field Monument Souvenir m. sharp. Fund. Subscribe any amount desired. n Francisco at 12 m. and | O-WNIGHT, Subscriptions as low as $1 will en:itle T nd 2 5 m.. connecting {] domor to this daintily artistic volume APPEARANCI OF M pping ie entrance to the | “ P (EAPPEARANCE OF MR v ars on train reserved for Ia- | & bful,fi“slx‘"rl‘qg'{,ffi ' & R A .1 smoking, Buy your | A0 ) Ttificate of sub. ERNEST HASTINGS, | 3. Al trains via || scription to fund. ' Book contains a sele | Pab tion of Fleld's best and most A Happy Revival of the Funnlest Comedy “roake || tive works and is ready for delivery. Shhes A | Iut for the noble contribution of the gt N Ko il o ol S world's greatest artists this book could not e roadway, Oakiand. These electric cars || Bave been manufactured for less than §1 The Fund created is divided equally be- tween the family of the late Bugene Fleld and lh'é F‘.:flfl for the building of a monu. ment to the memory of the beloved poet of childhood. Address 4 EUGENE FIELD MONUNENT 800V (1R romD, Monroe St., Chica; (Also at Book Stores.) o, go direct to the t k in fifteen minutes. i Returning—Trains leave the track at 4.15 and & p. m. and Immedintely after the last race. Tk m Record, ' | ] ] | JOMAS H., WILLIAMS JR., President. [ _R._B. MILROY, Secretary. 'LOAN EXHIBITION Theater, New York. rom the Gard INEES SATURD/ 1f you also wish to send postage, enclose PRICES | Bihirtier ¢ = ¥, CHIMMIE OF PAINTINGS Mention this Journal, as Adv. Is Inserted as our Contribution. COKE! COKE! Wholesale Déaler ang. SAIBOF of. Cole V] esale aler an ipper of . I OFTICE 518 FOLSOM T, ° g | ted Artists, Including Millet's Fa- g mous Picture, “THE Man wiiil +HE "OE, ONLY THREE nlAlnt MORE, From § a. m. til § p.m. MARK HOPKINS INSTITUTE OF ART, Cor. of California and Mason Streets. TT BNEY-AL-LAW, Cluus Spreckels Bidg. 3 below Powell, wn 1015, none Brown California st., | Aamission TarandTarfar RHIORS I THE AR AMOIG THE OARRY SHILOR Serious Cutting Affray on the Front. g e SOME OF THE COOS BAY FLEET ARE 'MISSING. ] Transport Flintshire Sails for Ma- nila—Tanis Discharged Yes- terday—Preparing to Blow Up Barrel Rock. — - There were ‘“razors In the alr” early | Sunday morning on the water front. There was a “hoe-down,” followed by a “crap' at 108 Jackson street, and the juabble that followed landed two of the ty in the Harbor Recelving Hospital and one in the Harbor Police Station. Of the men sent to the hospital one had his nose split from tip to base, and Dr. Cher- ry had to sew the cartilage together with inches long on his thigh sewed up. sault with a deadly weapon. uel Joseph and anot evening at 108 Jackson street. accompanied by Joseph was the morning there was a dispute, and Harris drew his razor. =uit, but before he could get to work Har- ris nearly cut his nose off with a slash. Joseph had no razor, and while he was | covering the retreat of *“‘the ladles”” Har- | ris took a mi rdvantage of his position and cut him badly on the left thigh. About this time the fighting had become general, and the end would have be. more serfous than it was had not Offi pdman and Dower appeared ne. Harris was taken to tion and Dom 7 2 ! 2 3 3 3 < » 2 El Ey a: ew steadily from the northeast all sterday, but, nevertheless. many of amers due from northern ports to arrive. turday night It s owing a southwester when the sun went en. but Sunday morning there only » Dbreeze from the northeast. Of r-bound flect that got out of Coos the Homer and Arcata arrived, but Rival, Empire and Alice Blanchard » vet to be heard from. The Albion Millamook. the Newsboy and Ne Harbor and the Aber- all expected from Gr: from Portland were burg deen vesterday morning. but did not ret {n dur- {ing the dav. w The chances are that they re delayed by the southwester of Bat- The Arcata. which got in from Coos Pay vesterdny. reports that when off Point Arena she passed through a lot of bundies of rnew surfaced pine lumber, Thi probably the deck 10ad of one of lue schooners that reached port in distress rk ntingo and Archer made a pretty run from barkentin Hilo. Th. e l ADVERTISEMENTS. ‘ : THE HEALTH HABIT. STORM DELAYED STEAMERS| | catgut, while the other had a slash six ! p, The | most_completed their arrangements, wielder of the razor was charged with as- | moorings for the barges have been laid | Ulysses 8. Harris, John Domingo, Man- | her negro spent the | and as soon as they have been his wife and a young | In. and If all goes well “lady friend.” Toward the early hours of | D¢ no more Domingo followed | cons e | Just as Easy to Form as Any Other. | do not deliberately form our pet but they are unconsclously 1d grow as we grow, and by the time we learn they are hurting us, we find them too strong to be easily broken. Then. why not form a good habit, a habit which will counteract the many bad ones. in other words contract the un- fashionable habit of being al vs well? st health habit to get Into is to have and keep a vigorous stomach; If you bave a healthy digestion you can drink vour beloved coffee, smoke your favorite brand of tobacco, with little or no harm; the misch beging when these things are forced upon the falthful stomach with- out any assistance. Form the habit of taking after meals hatmiess Mcient digestive L | | which will relieve the stomach of so much extra work Nature furnishes us with such diges- | tives and when they are combined in | f ae Stuart's spepsia the over- worked stom Just the necessary as- | sistance to secure perfect digestion with- | cut any of the harmful effects of cathar- tics and similar drugs The habit of taking Stuart's Dyspepsta Tablets after meals is as necessary to the ® 1o get the benefit from food eaten nothing used. Many famlies consider Stuart's Tablets as essential in the house as knives and fork: They consist entirely of natural diges- tive principles without the effect or char- acteristics of drugs; they have no ca- thartic action. but simply go to work on the food eaten and digest ft. Tauke into account your bad habits and the expense they éntail and then invest 5 cents in a box of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab- | lets and see if your digestion for the next month is not vastly improved. Atk the clerk In any drug store the name of the most yuccessful and Populnr stomach remedy " and he will say “Stuart’s. $1 A WEEK USEFUL HOLIDAY Large assortment to select from, 1814 S S CHICAGO CLOCK C0., WHY Use a Welsbach Light ? The Welsbach Light is a mel- low light; its color is right for the eyes. Ask your oculist. la: Genulne ahu WE L‘r&m atistaction. ;nm Box Bearing x.;k‘c“ ALL DEALERS e ¥ SIS A e ey BAJA CALIFORNIA . . Damiana Bitters lé A GREAT RESTOKATIVE, INVIGOKA- e o mORAUFUL Epretictie and Spectai Sells on its ow, ALFS & BRONE, “Agonta, - B. F.—(Send for Circular.) i NABER, 223 Market street, better and certatnly nothing safer can be | & IR | | DECEMBER 18. 1£9 tiago should have made port Satur- morning, but had to stand off shore Owing to the heavy weather. The Archer tame along and taking advantage of the northeast breeze made the lightship, and | being picked up by a tug was towed Into | Port. . The.Archer was 14 and the San- | uUago 16 days coming from Hilo. Chfef Whartinger Henderson had con- siderable trouble In getting Lombard- street wharf ready for the Santa Fe | steamer Thyra. . There were over 5000 | sacks of grain stored on the wharf, and | the owner could not be persuaded to | move it. All Friday the chief and A elstant Chief Wharfinger Dryden were | kept busy notifying the brokers to get the graln away, and when they saw that no notice was being taken of their warn- Ings, they set to work and had all the grain sent to the warehouse. By reason | Of their united efforts there was plenty of | room for the Thyra to discharge cargo | yesterday. All the freight will probably | e out to-day and the steamer will then | go to Portland to load flour for the Orient. | he will not come back to San Francisco, but will complete her loading at San Diego. The work of unloading the Kosmos | llner Tanis went on yesterday. The mitrate she brought from South America | wag unloaded into bay schooners and is being nurried to the powder works, | where {t is grreuly needed. \When dis- | charged the Tanis will begin loading wine, oil and general merchandise for European and South American ports. For the first time in eighteen months | there was a lull on the transport whart and nearly all hands got a day off. The Flintshire departed with a load of horses early in the morning. and after that there nothing done. The Grant, which will | the next vessel to sall, Is aimost ready to leave and will be in first-cla #afl at a moment's notice is her of fresh meat. The transport splendid order when she came into and has been kept up to her high s ard all the time she has been alongside | the wharf. The contractors for the blowing up of arrel (or Shag) and Arch rocks l;m'n-’rt;‘l- and a derrick erected on Barrel Rock. | This week the work of drilling holes In | “the menace to navigation” will begin, unk far | enough a charge of dynamite will be put rrel Rock will | hon as that fob h. As successfully accomplished Arch R w be attacked and ite destruction will be | mmated In a similar manner. HOWARD TUTTLE DECLINES T0 REMAIN A SUICIDE | s 4 “ontinued from First Page. | ember 10 because of his un- e T e e e il lndy was ostensibly Interviewed and she | was quote t length, although she | was never ¢ an Examiner reporter | and was miles away from the mendacious | interviewer. She was represented unmarried woman living with her pa in Oakland, while, as a matter of fact, she is a married woman living with her husband in this city and sceking no such unenviable notorfety as given to her by the Examiner. The only basis for the Examiner's cruel attack upon her Is that she knew Tuttle before her marriage and did not know | him well enough cern herself with his affairs. Upon the authority of a man | who cannot be found and who for all| practical purposes has no existence the | Examiner bullt its fabric of maudlin timent, melodramatic nonsense and cruel | fnsult. From this point of such Journalism Is anything but a j It is a menace to the community upon which it Is practiced ROYAL ARCH MASONS. California Chapter Makes a Remark- | able Record in the Line of Exaltations. The twentieth team of California Chap- ter No. 5. Royal Arch Masons, performed its bor last evening by and mak never before eligible to that degre self a record that equaled in any yea tory, the tc exalte ditlon to eleven r thereby increasing t hundred and forty-two ed In the presence of more than ndred companfons. including vis- itors from other chapters in the city and from the jurisdictions of the States of Nevada, New York and M the chapter room In the M been r of the chapter's his- belng sixty in ad- | ed by afliation, membership to s This work w After the close of the chapter all pres- ent repaired King lolomon’s. {all, where a first-class supper was served, Priest John Tonningsen acting 4 aster with that grace and d that have distinguished him in tt tion on previous oc The Golden e Commandery imber of cholce sis W ndered selections d to by s ferriil . ter, Los An W J. Burns of Mission Chapter, of San Francis seph Savage, a man, E. B. Church and others, tivities being prolonged until midnight. | —_—— stomach as food ftself, and indeed @K AKX AR AKX AX R A AR A A kAKX Q * Copies of The Call's great Christmas Edition, wwrapped and ready for mailing, can be obtained at all nezws deal- ers’, or at The Call business office. Please place vour or- der at once, as the supply 1s linited. L R TR R ) e T T | NO PLEASURE IN LIFE. | Two Disconsolates Attempt to Shuffle | Off the Coil. | Fred G. Oechsle, an old man, living at 3115% Sixteenth street. attempted to com- mit sufcide yesterday morning by cutting his throat and left wrist with a razor. | He was discovered by his son, with whom | he lived: e had lost considerable blood, as he had used the razor several hours | previous. | * ‘Word was sent to the Seventeenth-streat | olice station and the old man was taken o the Receiving Hospital,where Dr. Dray stitched and dressed the wounds, which were not dangerous. He sald that he had | no pleasure in life and wanted to die. He Lnd his left arm broken recently In a | railroad accldent and has since been un- | able to work, and his children aid not | want to support him. He declared that he would make a surer job next time. | Myrtle Iienderson, a young girl | at the Parker House on Turk street, quar- reled with her lover yesterday morning | and as she sald she could not live with. out his love she swallowed a dose of lysol, a deadly poison. She was taken to the | Recel\'imi Hospital, but as she had not | taken a large enough dose she soon re- | covered and was sent home. —_———— Handsome Christmas Presents. The Taber-Prang and Hargreaves Art Panels, water colors in gold frames, pas- tels, colored photographs and etchings ex- | hibjted by Sanborn, Vall & Co., make | most desirable, moderate-priced Christ- mas presents. Their banquet lamps, onyx tables and statuary are also the very best in style and prices. . x O XXX UNXREREXY * x * * x x x * x * [ ] ng —_————— Went Tnrough Pockets. John Avery and Henry Newman, charged with burglary, were locked up | in the City Prison yesterday. Avery is accused by “Mike" Jackla of 1020 Van Ness avenue of going (hroufilh his clothes and stealing whatever valuables he found in the pockets. Newman was at first supposed to be Implicated In this and ot to the credit of r ‘robberics chnriod 'Aver{. but as no evidence to conviet him was forthcoming, he was discharged. CHRISTMAS EDITION POSTAGE | Postage on this issue of The Call is as follows: Domestic, 4c; for-| eign, 8c. - | You Like It. | in all Jetalls of their action, while It sel- | DR. ROLFE'S SHAKESPEARE STUDIES. Copyright, 1899, by Seymour Eator POPULAR STUDIES Contributors to this A IN SHAKESPEARE. " » ton W D. Mabie, Dr. Scudder and ot VIIL—AS YOU LIKE IT. ert though par- Ottver BY DR. WILLIAM J. ROLFE. The Title of the Play. There has been fome dispute as to origin and significance of the name It may have been suggest- ed, as some critics have supposed, and I am inclined to agree with them. by the preface to Lodge's novel of “Rosalynde " Lodge says to his readers concerning th. book: “If you like it —that is > be it” or “well and goc an affirmative or acquiescent use of “so,” which is not | uncommon in Shakespeare. The man critic Tleck fancied that the title was sty meant as a reply to Ben Jonson's criti- rie on the loose and irregular style of are's comedy. Ben was a scholar and belleved in the classical rules of dra- matic composition. The free and methods of his brother playwright cas w rank heretodoxy in his eyes, and he ¢ This cer not help sometimes expressing his right- the old Dul ernl years back into eous horror at them. In the preface to past, when Cella now at “Cynthia’s Revels” he had sald of his own | Years of age, wais 1. and so play: *'Tis good, and if you like it. you “'j;'*'”'% own speech at the opening of may,” and Tieck believed that this sug- bt gested to Shakespeare the title for s i ers in extle You Like It"—as If he had sald: “Well, t N N Se Are not the here is another of my ess comedies; take it as you like it.” But It does not seem to me at all probable that Shahes- peare would select & name for a play s court? An e W 1, Iy or mainly to Indulge in a little hit at| Which when it bites and bl e P e i another author—and a hit that would not counsetore ) be readily understood without an explar 1e what [ am tion. Clearly he and ds have been Whatever may have suggested the title, | long enough In the forvst to get used 1o and t ce the difference the winter as well as the summer. It would be Inter- esting to follow this analysis through the whole play. " but " ft would ve me o room for anything else. As 1 have sug- gested, the student may profitably carry it out as an exercise 1 may add that in Shakespenre compiled by and Mary Clarke (n most valuabl - d pages) Is d » this sub . . of dramatic Shakesp:are Memorial Picture Gallery, Stratfor d-ail the on-Avon. % I have no doubt that it was adapted as|Ing quoted and fitly expressing the tone and temper of Th - ¥ e Meter of the Play. play. This 15 the view of another | . oo 0 0 You L < AN that rman—Ulrici—who in summing up his | of Shakespenr per ‘ - ent says: “In fact g 5 is 1o exactly what and as they ple thot looks upon and shapes life as es him or her. * ¢ * It is the re- flex of a life as you like It: light and | hand, he contem smooth In its flow, unincumbered by se- | for 1 refu rlous tasks, free from the fetters of defi- nite objects and from Intentfons difficult d by them The Tem There are Winter's for e to realize; an amusing play of caprice, of | w " s Tale. for ex imagination and of waverlng sensations | their source, we and feelings, prose. At the me time C Eovib. ealled Labor's mitted that some of the pe he comedy of lelsure,” but, as | fification I8 to be found here and there in Verplanck remarks, “he might have given | 'Hut in At You Like It as in e the title in a higher sense to ‘As You Like | plays of the same period—about the mid It where the pervading teeling is that | dle of the poet's career a writer | of a retined and teful, yet simple and | have the utmost perfection of blank unaffected throwing off t ‘lendings’ :,lui','."..? Sassied . A v of artifictal soclety.” For myself, I would | MUsial, vet seeming to . ey call it the “summer-vacatlon comedy fmp g e the arthasencs o) ST belie t it was such an “outing” to or g Shake re himself, after t ympletion = This contains w to my of the series of En, rical plays 1"'{[:‘::;'“" e h";' . :mx-l muaical ot counting his part of “Henry VIIIL" | FREAUSN W repeating the same thought :-m.-'h "’“”L‘L nhf: L;{m_" S >m" ten | OF sentiment to be found anywhers in as o v n Shakespeare. It Is in 111, 7, where Orlan- years later. The poet was weary with | do in his address to the DuKe siys long tarrying in camps and courts, glad | 1 ever you have 1 on better days, to escape from the company of kings and he re bells have knolld t queens, and to take to the woods for a | If S¥er fat at any good man's feast o your eyelids wip'd a te thoroughly unconventional holiday. It | xp5%Ch (00l YOUT Syeliis winidd o tear. | was like o midsummer dream of his early - ickshire, where there w t would seem that this eould hardly be t of Arden, with no lions 2 altered without marring it; but faultless as it Is, Shakespeare shows that he can repeat it “with a difference,” yet with no diminution of fits beauty or its musie The Duke replies “True 1s it that we have seen better dayw, And have with holy bell been knoll'd to churel . And st at good men's feasts and wip'd ‘sit and sing datnty dew-tmpearied fowers." It probably this charming play which Milton had in mind when he refer- red to the poet In “L’Allegro”: Amongst the eyen Of drops that Every cred pity hath engender'd.” 5 | statement Is varled, while the Fancy's il | leading words are retained, and the varia- . tlon i« Ifke that of some éxquisite theme A characteriza which foolish critics, | in music, repeated yet not the same bt who did not ut nd its limited appli- | as sweet as before. cation, perfectl eping with the de L - lineation of the *cheerful man” in whe Note—Dr. Rolfe's study of “As You Like mouth it is put, have denounced as inad- | It will be concluded on Thursday. equate. e —— Dramatic Time in the Play. BURIED BY COMEADES. “As You Like It affords good illustra- = tions of Shakespe rt In the manage- Herbert A. Hopkins, California Vol- ment unteer, Interred With Mili- play. Tempest tary Honors. and plac Herbert A. Hopkins of Company F of of the action represented shall not exceed | the First California Volunteers, who dled Sslugle day, S LhAt the Scend In the iospital at La Carlota, Negros limited either to a single | 4 a, Neg; piaces 5o near that the persons Island, last M was buried yestorday can pass from one to another within tae with military honors by his day. In most of the plays the time of the | action covers several days, months or 1eral services were held In the | years, and the localities are widely sep- y cf Company F at SI5 Ellis street arated—England and France, Bohemla sket was placed In the center of the I under a wealth of flowers and guard- ed by one of the d man's comrade Around it were arranged seats for the re, and Siclly, ete. But_ though the classical Shakespeare thus ignores law concerning dramatic time, he follows what may be called an | atives. The members of the company in artistic law of his own i dealing with | Campaign uniform were assigned to one time, which was not recognized by any of the gallery. Rev. Mr. Parrish of of the critics until about fifty years ago; | the Church of the Advent was the offi- and then, as has often happened with im- | Clating minister ortant discoverfes. two men detected It | The pall-bearers, all privates of Com- > Reo dependently at the same time. In No- | pany F. e .. Johnson, ( b \‘I:w,nEer‘ 1849, Professor John Wilson | Wita, P. Peters, i (“Christepher North™) announced this Hubbard and Gus Ohlson. law in Blackwood's Magazine as “an_as- | squad. nnler Corporal tounding discovery, {llustrating it min- posed of Privates Homer, Holst utely by an analysis of “Macbeth™ and (in | Cobn. Cleveland, Gambella, Jones April, 1850) of “Othello”; and the Kov. N g s n _had been furnishe Presidio and on the th J. Halpin, during the same mo vember, published an essay on fc Unities in Shakespe: {llustrating | ried to th th the same law by an analysis of “The Mer- | tery. Another p r by chant of Venice" There could be no | three volleys by the firtng squad and teps question that the two men had been blown by the company bugier. 5. M. New working independently and had reached | man. completed the last honors to the identical results. dead 1 may mention Incidentally that this Mr. Halpin, who was an English clergyman and a good Shakespeare scholar (the au- | —_—— No More Christmas Presents. thor of some valuable papers printed by | At the last meeting of the Master the old Shakespeare Soclety of London). | Hakers' Protective Association ft was was the father of Charles Graham Hal- | golved to discontinue the giving of Chris ne (as 1 belleve he preferred to spell the E:‘::mel). better known by his pseudonym | of “Miles O'Rellly.” who came to this | country In 182 and served during the civil war as colonel In the Federal army. and wrote much in prose and ve mas or New Year's presents o custome under penalty of a fine of 3350, —————— BUSH-STREET THEATER FIRE. <. ” | “Colonel™ seofln Gives a Satisfactory in 158, eight yenrs after \I\na ather ulm, The law discovered by Wilson and Hal 4 th " pin may be briefly stated thus: Shakes- | Explanation to the Fire Marshal. r Everett Stone, the angel” of the Filipino acrobats, has been peare uses two kinds of time In his pluys —one fast, corresponding to the brief time | required for the lcllm:“on the n‘l:l‘lv: her slow, corresponding to the longer | # : At s » Sime necessary for the netual succension e e s, ool e i Bnas of events represented. e law has been | t1on With the fire in the Bush-street Th more conclse esignated ad | Ater on Friday afternoon one of whicn | He called ¢ re Marshal Towe late “Colonel” Wi on v on Saturd: it eith his daugh- oes fast, while the other goes slow. | ay : FANmn-n(l_v this manner of dealing with | [eF, and m: a full t of where dramatic time was original with Shakes- | ¢ had been and what re the fire broke 4 wughte The Fire Iy satisfied with his ied the conclusion result of an acef- by a match eare- and after corroborated by his Marshal was thor dom, If ever, Is noticeable In other dram- | Ftement and has re atists. | tha 3 i e - In “As You Like It" the two kinds of | J€nt. probably c: peare. It 1s used by him In all his plays (except the two I have mentloned). and he - waly 0 side the janitor or time are very easily recognized., and lessly thrown asi Y n have therefore tntroduced the subject {n | Some one else after lighting a pipe. cigar- connection with this play. It will bhe | €tte oF clgar. 0od exercise for the student to trace the ndications for himself in other plays. When the banishmest of the old duke is first mentioned, we Infer that it has Closing out children’s I doils cheap. Sanborm, arket street > Great Bargains | books, me | Vail & Co., T4

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