The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 2, 1900, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1900. o B ——S———— T [T PATTOSIEN' S ™ e t0te s AT PAYS TO TRADE IN THE MISSION. e L Hanford. SHAASAE PARLOR FURNITURE | comease s D 2 . s CARPETS and RUGS PRICES! e S e . an | : T AR LACE CURTAINS and DRAPERIES i <o of livestock held here last Saturday. Bur- ris and a l‘;Jyoun( Eastern sport named o2 2 Charles Valentine were figuring over the points of a dos. . Huxge- Bsnlelrea into the i H H discussion an e an urris came to Commencing to-da ill Blows. Hughes, though much the larger Parlor g y we will inaugurate a great Parlor |biows ‘Hughes, thoush much the larger and left the sale, vowing vengeance. The Furnitur e - Furniture Sale to continue this week. Many of the suits fhreamen ‘were' under the tuiuence of and odd pieces will be sold for less than the cost of Dirrts and his wite arove.tat town this mother's Burris went down the street to Sale. manufacture. Note prices and description BELOW : | transact some business, He met Hushes; who was. still drunk, on Front street, and the men rasuéned tge{lr quarrel. IEl‘umhuy ogan: e, | 7000 B-ph dor Buit, Ve Burris started to-drive away. ughes T, o | e weat, torred bk e snie = ¢y | 900 PARLOR ROCKERS UP | drew a revolver and began firing. ~Imme- e te s B € .00 | Taald o et e Glately nfter the shooting he gave himself 7 Chair. upholstered in £ @3 5, 3140 00 Parior Suit, four nice picces, large and FROM $1.35. up to City Marshal Rueck and was taken ak: wiil che aot Tor. HOe comtortable, hand carved | to Kings County Jail. {shed $1.35 A singular fact in connection with the upholstered in silk dam- 8‘8 : . 4 back—Sale price...... #9000 Psrlor Sult, large sofa, easy chair, and - affair is that Hughes had been drawn on parlor, “upholatered 1n heats' tp- @7 Ladies' Wood- |a jury in Justice Randall's court, but ar- Setry, ‘wiil closs Qut 82:..rorsiorr: & rived at the Courthouse just five minutes $1800 Easy Chair, tpholstered. seat 12 Seat Rocker, too late to be accepted. But for this un< end back, silk damusk—Sale price $ ty Tik t fortunate m.;dlnecs the érnxedy of to-day exactly like cut, | would have been averted. 3500 Parior Chatr, solld mahogany, ' "clock to- Bl et e menopaty, . BID At 8 o'clock to-night Burris was resting 6 00 Parlor Sult, & very comfortable shape and i o v-and luxaious. | G5 vers ton meleer e 22 BB ny frame - v tame SIS #9860 Parior Bult carved aad uholstered, full e s tai seat, tufied back—Sale price cemnsk— G @ $85 €0 Parlor Sult, hand earved ‘and . polished, upholstered in aseoried colors, silk g/ = ask, & nice pieces * $5d physique and strong constitution, he may large and com- | recover. fortable, sells gy e 95 KAISER WILLIAM “sras | 0 HMI_AHHI[]HS In order fo close-out all | ’ £ wna Tapen | Speaks of Germany’s hew: {mportation 18 re: hree hundred rolls at very | ietopnancred olls of ety 1 - Army-and’ Navy. ge of our offer. In this sale. we will &= by the roll of 40 yards. o PRIZE-PACKAGE SALE. Suttings from Fu verings and Draper- | each package gus | e closed o e srécufi. sAL:l 'LACE CURTAINS. | s week we will sell ut Epectal Reduced Prices for This Salet 80 1olls gocd China Matting, . a durabte’quality, [ 2 } patterns, usual price per 4q < Risclal Disatel -te e o Etylish Lace Curtaina, ‘worth $3 00 $l £.40 yards $5, for this sale.. . olntl : BERLIN, Jan. 1—BEmperor. Willlam at a Toimtiens rattine. In 3| 1o New ‘Year's parade to-day addressed for thi $6-50 the officers of the garrison as follows: a Matting, jolntiéss, In 4" The first day of the new century eees our i 1as St s G 0 = S hn*‘:k ns, ‘worth $8.75 [ ual’ price per ot of army—in other worde, our peopie—in . arms, . i bl se 50 40 s $12, for this sale................ gathered around their standards, . kneeling be- wir 8 . roils White Inserted Japanese Matting,: fine | fore the Lord.of Hosts; and, verily, if any one ¥ quality, cholee patterns, usual price. 89 has especial reason: this day for bowing down per.roll of 40 ynrds $12, for this sale.. before God it'is our army. A glance at our | Figure, £ vrice per_ roll yards $i4, for this sale.. 3 of All-Lace Curtains will sold at & special low 2 for new SPECIAL REDUCTIONS ON A | . 10 | 72 e embodiment of our. history Tn what: condition did the past century at. its | dawn find-our_army? - The giorlous army of | Frederick the Great had slept upon its laurels, 6 feet 3 ‘ Zosailized amid all the petty detall of pips olay, . led by guperannuated and insufficlent generals, inches | With officers unaccustomed to useful work and /. | lost 1n debauch, luxury and foolish arrogance. high, has | Our army.in'a word, ‘was not ewal to its g [ misston, which, indeed, it had forgotten. Hea French | Was thé chastisement of heaven which over- | took it and feil on our peopls. It was cast bevel plate | into the dust, the glory of Frederick was ex- ale | tinguished and our standards were broken. In ngu ! | many long years of servitude God taught our mirror 40 | Seople to look to themselves, and. under the : 2 pressure of the foot of the proud conqueror, mcheshlgh | our people engendered in itself the most sublime . | thought that 1t is the highest honof to dedi- 24 inches | cate one’s blood and purse to the Fatherland . | n her army e. Form and life were given wide, |it by my great grandfather; new laurels : crowned the newly created army and its youth- y service only | ful banpers, but universal milita | attained its trus significance through our great ' departed Emperor, In his quiet work he evolved FEW ARTICLES TO BE ST _ CLOSED OUT. LINOLEUMS. "t Cabrate, w04 o Third Grade Tap. Brussels. .50¢ Second Grade Tap. Brussels. 70¢ Axminsters. ....00000...$1.10 188C Half-Wool Ingrains. ......40¢c | MORE BARGAINS! Ex Super Ingrains........50¢]| Drapery Fabries, | T %o o o008 ®0ld as | the reorganization of our army in spite of op- position and ignorance. Glorfous campalgns crowned his work in a Regular way never expected. His spirit filled the ranks . of our army, even as his own trust In_God price $25_ bore our troops to astonishing victories. With H 3 this, his own creation, he brought the German | : : i d gav: back long-desired Furniture Coverings, | p Linoieum, 2 yards wide..45¢ Rihly: | | | e sonster sodssas oa Seck b€ st CarVCd are Aue, and, by the help of that army, the o German empire, commanding respect, has again ORIENTAL STUFFS, ETC., ETC. . i C Linoleum, 4 yards wide..60¢ Sesumed’ tHe Dosition assigned o it In the ALL "HEE WIDE ..o | B Linoleum, 4 yards wide..70¢ DINING CHAIRS. "I’fi :llsxi‘;:::,mg:fitle‘mcn,‘tho praserss and em- : A 2 oy 1o ks e entury” the old quallties’ by 302 | A Linoleum, 4 yards wide. .80¢ | 5344, >k Cone Seat Dining $|.25‘uhxvlfnnuvef:-}e"zlucr--ndm.a‘e l:hexn'n;._vhg,m: . sy Pamely_ mimpileity. ana modesty. i dally life, 20 American Inlaid Tile Linoleum, in- Hr ‘Fav\ ed Ouk Box Seat Dining | unconditional devotion to the royal service, the . d : 8280/ destructible, special $1.40 laid | Q3 | employment of one's whole strength of body i and mind in the ceascless work of tralning and leather seat " | developing our troops, 5 $2.75 | rather labored for Bis manner, unerringly earry o even as my grand- reversible, go T = RS the work of rerlr“g.n‘n«‘xr:n:l:;y"§:§’-:—‘ Tr?%ré{'{::‘:.fi? ALL ROADS LEAD TO PATTOSIEN’S BIG HOME STORE. k y BRL nate Ly i o empire may also be in a position to_win the place which it has not yet attained. With the two united I hope to be enabled, with a firm BOY SCARED To bEATH trust in the guidance of God, to prove tha r T ® 1 | truth of the saying of Frederick Whilam,I: T | CALIFORNIA THEATER: b A COLUMBIA 8= | A b | BY POLICE OFFICER| cordine S oy i ol 0 S 1 " House, { = William has fssued an order | NDIN Was Caught Playing New Year |, Fmperor Willam hbe o —reerr sovoax. | ETAYRING 1O DEEP. g! g to the army announcing that, In accord- AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. . e PMICRALARNS \')“TFI:D.AY Pranks and When Threatened anch with the :Annmmo\ll,s dd(,-cls! m of the MATINEE SATURDAY. | T NC ESTE ‘ With Arrest Drops Dead. erman soverelgns, a badge commemo- ALL THIS WEEK “WiTH FLYING COLORS.” | rative of the last century and as a fresh Jan. 1—Ted Rowley, the| pledge.-to the unity and indissolubility of son of Thomas Rowley, | the empire, has been established. for the night. It is claimed he | c0lors of the whole arm: death by Policeman and other boys, I g off the gates verors| FURTHER COMPLICATIONS Sfficers went . s captured and threats IN WOLFSOHN CASE He dropped aver dead g considerable talk. s i The Great Pnglish Adelphi Success. n-y and Company Present THE FRAWLEY COMPANY. | aroppec de 'S Power Play, THE SEE ;Kx 2. :‘il:'?“fl'fnmh SCENE. THE GR TELEPHON e it v | THE GREAT RAILWAY HOTEL, o Ao | REMEMBER, (ING ened with arr wilt run for Bight s b . tn for Blaht The affair is THE G CURTAIN RISES AT 8, T Attorney for the Heirs Says That the TEET PLAY OF THE DAY. == TORN TO PIECES BY LIONS. New Claimant to the Insur- WELCOME HOME % = > «ittvely Final Performances of | The Peerless Diva, Keeper Foolishly Enters a Cage of ance Is a Fraud. “THE TAN s | EmmA NEVADA. Ferocious Beasts. sy o Bk Sl | Mondsy Evening Jan. sth, SEAT SALB: ENNA, Jan. 1—One of -the animal | S3%, Batmberger; wh : T & TIVOLI OPERA-HOUSE. | W&RWliis i Fihatiy: 1 e Viena Zoologial Gadens 13 the WOl 108 et Ly honeny | , 82, 3L the cage of lions to-day in'a spirit [ the New York Life Insurance Company, g —: | January sth—PRINCESS AND THE BUT- | 0f bravado, and six lions rushed on him{ig in the city. . He will not give up his I 'HE PLACE OX A RAINY NIGHT! | Y. and tore him to pieces. The attendants | case, though his cllents have waived their stteams of water, to drive t! YOURSBLF AND BRING THBE wi that who came _from cAg0 1d beusts | that the man wh 1! Chi CHILDREX TO 2 retending to be the real Wolfsohn is so. THE GORGEOUS HOLIDAY DI e is & frand,” eaid Mr. Bambergar EXTRAVAGANZA, | ~ AMUSEMENTS, to-day. . “He is made up to resembie R B0 ool o bt SR gpend 00 of Xy OWh maney if need be s mystery. ALCAZAR THEATER. |“Ma Moo O'Nell, the, woman who A NEW YRANE: VADDEVILLS PUASE. - paid the supposed Woltsohn's funeral ex- LAST WEBK—— - | penses, is not satisfied either. = She tried EVERY EVENING AND SATURDAY | EVERY ACT A HIT. 6 confront the supposititious Wolfsohn MATINER. = Ot the Only Fybmakerin Towi. while he was here, but he would not see PILLY RICE and g W. FRILLMA G ROSINOS: DOROTHY DREW; DOU EDATS SELLING ONE WEBPK AHBAD. D POkD; AR her, : i . doubt th: h Wolf- POPULAR PRICES. veees-35 AND 80 CEINTS ull of mystery ever. s e hmniosd FOUGERE F A DDEN D. W. PARKHURST PASSES AWAY . P - THO ND CARLETON; LA SYLPHE; e GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. | Hi2"3Vafte SERIeAN nichnd Former Southern Pacific Officlal Dies BIOGRAPH. { TELEPHONE MAIN #82. aDservell smate, Yo atcofty. 306: obare thilre Binsiliion: Hows st Al Paclctnabiin of Heart Disease. PLAYING TO CAPACITY. Matinees Wednesday, Saturday and Sundey. SECURE SEATS BAKLY IN ADVANCE. FRESNO, Jan. },“?'|W‘ FRIShOret, & A FITT HOLIDAY ENTBRTAINMBNT |~ ————————— | MATINER SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. -|Plonser. resideut. died last.night at his FOI DIES AND CHILDREN. — * | vineyazd g:;’.'"fln{fr‘;nggg ‘)‘;‘hremh!m' g pres . were ] X s home AT § O'CLOCK SHARP. | :53?:—;“;}’;‘*{’3::'5""‘5 -¥5e, %o, e | 5¢ Berkeley. - He was the Southern Pa- G = cific’ agent who graded the.price: of its % ' ! grant .lands in this valley and had the THE PEOPLE'S POPULAR PLAYHOUSE, e ——————————————— | S UPET{tendency. of construction of its va- eese ®00® | Eidy and Jones Sto. PEONE SOUTH 770, | rious lines in this district: His. death EVERYTHING UP TO DATE. - was. from heart fallure after an fllness NEW BON NEW JOKBS, NEW SPECIAL- | A VERY JOYOUS EVENT. of only two days. It is said that worry TIBS. | TO-NIGHT! | ! o;ver l;nablmy- ::‘melem”hla tmo.r;;:ged ¥ JOE IGHT 7 | PROFESSION » 'INE vineyard aggra: s allment and hast- BAN JOSE NIGHT, EATURDAY EVENING F TONAL MATINE E THURSDAY. : Yied his death. Burviving are the widow. THE ORIGINALS, APF RIATE SONGS AN [CISMS. | and two son & : D’:“:-T::k iMURIBQ..‘,{nxlfig.quACK’ BOWELS DEATH IN THE FLAMES. e e oo~ | FINNIGAN'S BALL ! presaeeenss st o st | " purming tomer = WESTERN TURF ASSOCIATION. : oo u X R | bowels . D well. Force, in BOURSVILLE, W. Va., . L— "°<‘,5{‘.§,“=".‘§.,‘:'¢_ B ey s o ,m-,»,,fig: w';]fifmomm. his wife and ;vol:;:ld:en N . 1 B | Bowels cicar and clean I8 10 take e were burned to death in their home near “TMAFFTII:\(’?RJ?H'\L’ITAR&(;I“" NBXTSUNDAY AFTERNOON. THR RENTZ hers to-day. The origin of the fire iz un- EETD> . 1-20, 1900, o PR lig e e 0I5 SR CANDY i h-cl i ool eek - - ah S -ciass runsing raced every wesk-day. | CONCERTS AND RESORTS. | CATHARTIC e i i g er rucetrack of America. Pu- | Blackburn, residing at 1411 Oliver street; B e i Do sapes g e | 'WW.) FARCWLLL RECITALS. 4 caught fire to-dni;' from a grate and the fortsbly b 4 in by her they SHERMAN, CLAY & CO.'S HALL, infant was fataily burned. -The motaer i urchetructed view of the races’ " | THURSDAY and BATURDAY AFTERNOONS, and other child were severely burned in ave Third snd Townsend streets at JANUARY 4th and 6th, at 3:15. extinguishing the flames, 'S e el 3 VLADIMIR DE s i 1% m uroing | e e T . e et e | PACHMANN, Muskogee Ph 1d. D 04 thielr sscorts. No smoking. The World's Sreatest Chopin Interpreter. mufll;lg?gf‘fl‘.':-‘ 1:61';“1:6-1&:,“‘& n;(m:; ey e Ay ke | SRR . on sale at Sherman, | _pieasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste: Dogooa, | Moore, J. Frischmann, D. B. Melton and 245 5. m. Leave San Bruno at 4:% | COMPLETE CHOFIN PROGRAMMES. | Ry rres ckom v :::';'a’fifi’é‘.’.%é"&%.. M 13, 5 Dewing sl old employes uf the 555 Frsociaco 10 Tantorsn and se- | Sl S WAL LIANO USED | g Remety Company. hnr, Aenie o York o | S0, opmmiticeman Leo' 5. Her 'he e . Nati o n.{ffi'!" nml‘ w“kl’ calL $1 per Year EEP YUUH Bl-onn cI-EA ading Daper of Intian Territors: b; f’{*&; S lead ¢ Tnalan Territ £ e leading paper of ‘ndian e . The consideration was $S00. ek antique finish, easy, and being a young man of fine | en Warp Japanese | standards -suffices .as’ an explanation, for they | “© so will I, in like | sought in vain, with flamlngalorche! and | claim to the $10,00. He does not believe | Attempt at Murder in|A Mountain Grave Re- | command, with headquarters at Santiago. | plete reorganization of the military com- | Miss Ada May Churchill, Prominent | MURDER 0F MINING M veals Horrible Crime. |FAMOUS LANDSCAPE PAINTER OF ENGLAND. Copyright, 1889, by Sermour Eaton. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. bEISg]EE, Arizona, Jan, 1.—Evidence has THE WORLD'S GREAT ARTISTS. that B, '&‘,’f’,’,’,’;’,,’f‘.",’,‘,‘,‘m?‘ t;::;‘,’:’,f;“f;z: Contributors to this course: Dr. John C. Van Dyke, Dr. Russell Sturgls, Dr. A. I = I her, Fowl d . had been missing, was deilberately mur- EOttang Te < AT TRCI FEUN DO . - ered. L. C. Brown, the dead miner’s for- beyond the need of potbofling, he was mer partner, is in jail at Tucson charged 2 IO G any. enabled hencefocth to paint that which wnz tlhe crime. Derry’s body was discov- | Bo little has the Frenchman In common | Interested him. In 1813 fie was el ered in a shallow grave in a canyon in assoclate of the Royal Academy, the Sierra Jeflqulpegm untains of gonor-. ;‘fi:,g:’:‘:,.fi'.',";'{:.:".,',"E,,’:,‘,;;,‘,;_‘;‘::: up to that time it is doubtful if Mexico. The corpse was clad only in un- g sold a dozen pictures from the exh dergarments and in the skull were two | MOTe or less responsible for the great|tions. To the exhibition of 1322 at indentationa as though made by the blow | change that came over the French land- | British gallerles he sent what is now con- ggmr:‘ gi!ckax.l Slrcuxgul;ntllr avldex':ge scape work early In this centuryand made | §}¥§;e<lflh"s mlfls ?r;il{v" ’"d,.,.}‘,.',‘,?w‘;‘, As rongly towar rown as the | possible the “Barbizon painters,” as is| .. st At n B Ll o v e Perpetrator of the erime, sisappeared | “3lled the great school of landscape men e e Brown stated that he had bought his | Who started into life about the year 1830 | sold. Later a Frenchman bought this and partner out and that Derry had left for | and which completely revolutionized the | two other works for the modest sum of Other parts. Within ten days B dis- | manner of work and of looking at nat £210, and the owner sent it to the exhi 3 en days Brown dis- and of looking at nature ; ~ gg‘l‘?dmoetn m:,nsn"rekofi!md“ Prospecting | then prevalent in France; but it Is safe Lo | l[ant n at IPam,fi l:‘\pncrh‘s-x‘r»\ nex-c:nl:n:‘r;a R e p:i’rtyeg:“ger:'mfg; say that had it not been for John Con- | pOiirfe b B ROCC TNIES O or racatv- a thorough investiga stable we should have walted some time | o . om the King. The g Igation of the ground on ing a_gold medal from <. Christmas day where the partners had | for such men as Rousseau, Corot, Dau- | French Government offered to buy t. but lpfitnge%ime!r!tem. The search resulted in | bigny, Dupre and the coterle of brilliant | the owner refused to sell It without ;no next made his appearance in Bigbee, Ari- ;_’h‘;“,",?}" referred to as the “men of | ;}." osceasion of an Englishman named zona, with plenty of money. From Bis- - | Henry Vaughan. Then there was no lac *r’,?:‘r:lye :’ne(lllt“l:sTuscusocn, w‘h?rsihe ’Ssfiflu‘,‘" John Constable, who was born June 11, | h& a f‘imf"“lt(n;x the w.-rrkil‘na:’ h;ouha's ) ccesstul in sec | ' | offered for it the sum of £10,000. s 41000 from_the Bank of California, wmclli;”’-l ":l East Bergholt, Buffolk County, | creqir be it said that the offer was re- sum had been deposited there by Derry. | England, was the son of a well-to-do | fysed, and In 1888 he presented It to t An acquaintance who knew Brown by his | miller, a man with plenty of Intelligence | nation. It now hangs in the national ga giléficgfergehae(}:xxg s\tx'.:p:;-‘xounma“ncde “éif;‘; and common sense, but with little notion | lery in London. IS is- fe e of the fine arts. He had hoped to have| The Frenchmen went wild over his something was. wrong. Investigation of | pyy oon enter the church; fafling in that Brown's apartments revealed a lot of pa- he desired him to succeed him in the man- | @ ¢@ -+ @498+ 6-+3-+0-+4+0 . per upon which ne had practiced writing the name of E. W. Derry, a significant | agement of the mill, and 80 consclentious point that forgery of the name Was in- | was his child that for a year he tried to s lended. He was arrested and is now in|content himself at the trade of the father. | ¢ afl at Tucson a il L jatlat m awaiting trial It was not to be, however, for the boy spent more time watching the heavens and studying cloud forms than he did In looking after the business; though his | knowledge of wind and storm, of weather | possibilities and the like served him in a way, it was all rather with a view of put- | ting his observations down on canvas than of utilizing them for the turning of the great salls to produce power for the grind- 1 ——— | ing of grain. = After awhile he received a | half-hearted permission to follow his artistic inclinations and he fllled many | Commands to Be Greatly | sketch books. Through the assistance of | some friends who were interested in him Reduced. he secured some paintings to copy, for In those days most of the students spent considerable time in making careful tran- [ T ot e ol e ot e o oo ok 2o o S ot oo 2 —_— Epecial Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.—It s probable that the ‘month will be marked by a com- mands in Cuba. The impression prevails | that there is to be a heavy reduction in | the: forces, and it is intimated that the | outcome will be-the creation of two de- F&rlmen!s, instead of the six which orig- nally comprised Cuba, and the four into which the island 1s now divided. General | Wilson, who commands the combined de- partments of Matanzas and Santa Clara, as been ordered to Washington, and it is not the present intention that he shall re- turn to Cuba. It is said that while here he,- with General Davis, who s coming | from Porté Rico and s due on the 5th at | New York, will confer with the commit- tees of Congress having to do with the | creation of a new form of government for | Porto Rico and with legislation for Cuba during the time it shall remain under American control. The combined department of Santiago | and Puerto Principe is without a com- mander, although the duties of the post, vacated by General Wood upon his pro- | motion to the Gov r Generalship, are being temporarily discharged by the se- nior colonel. Thus the entire Orient, as | the eastern half of the island is cailed, | is without a permanent commander. It is understood that the four departments in the Orfent will be consolidated into one and that a brigadier general will be pamed by Secretary Root, upon the rec- | ommendation of General Wood, to take VERY PRETTY WEDDING IN THE GARDEN CITY PP D R S S S S S A S S S in Musical Circles, Becomes the | Bride of S. B. Hunkins. 1 SAN JOSE, Jan. 1—A wedding, in which musical and socfal circles of this city took espectal interest, occurred at the Centella | Methodist Episcopal Church to-day when | Ada May Churchill and Romayne S. Hun- | @4-8-4-0-404063404-06090+0+00040+0+040604Q kins plighted their love and became hus- | band and wife. The young couple are | scripts of the work of other men. Draw-| work, however—that is, a certain portion among the most popular in music and |ing also the figure, he made a number of | of the public, for there were many discus- church work, = The bride is the daughter | portraits, but his work In this direction | $i"us regarding the remarkable departure Hunking s the son of S. B. Hunkins, the | Was not destined to make him famous and | |7 The Janc :?#;?zfi.{n:hfi}q’?{{{‘f l-;rr:w_l[xs'n- capitalist. that which remains i3 only of the moSt | him, however, and he continued on his Centella Church was prettily decorated | mediocre character, not for a moment 4 . = o e with greenery, holly berrles and flowers. | | ¥ Only the immediate friends and of the families were present. M za- | THE VALLEY FARM, BY CONSTABLE, (In the Natfonal Gallery.) L D R e L A way, undisturb: comparable with his landscapes. It was, | blame. He was however, the only sort of work that paid | Iy at work, ma | him anything and his peaple urged him | for he had d heth Kelly' was maid of honor and Arthur | | : Hunklns,)bruth»r of the groom, was best | to centinue. l{;'fil‘) of the ape depended on light, man. - The ushers were Fred T. Black| Overcoming all home obstacles, how-| While the oth. en of his time were and Dr. Charles Hablutzel. . Warren | ever, he finally went to London just at | Wor<ing in thelr studios almost entirely Churehill, g brother of 'the bride, was| the dlose of the last century, when he was | i1 o e Sl (ha Dt e T e Swaw Dy M et oone attired In s crea. | course of study in the life classes at the | the light and shade of nature, with the re- Gurch: white silk Trish popiin, trimmed | Royal Academy, of which the American, | sult that his pictures fairly shone. His With chiffon and lace. . She wore a mag- | Benjamin West, was president. Con- | ETeens were not the dirty, opaque tones nificent pearl necklace and carried a | stable continued meanwhile at his land- | th2t Were then the fashion: they had the bouquet of lilies of the valley and hya-| scape work, and from the first saw na- | SParkle of summer, the light of dew and cinths. Miss Kelly attired In white | ture In & larger, grander way than the | (D¢ reflection of the sky. All this seems chiffon. A trio, consisting of Mrs. Mary | - ol el Gy tence with | 9Dvious and easy now; but then it was a Weaver-Macauley, Mrs. W. J. Kirkpatrick | Ie% about him. He no patience With | different matter, and it took the pubile o and Miss McLellan, sang the bride's song | the prevailing manner of painting, for | lunr while to accept it. Constable paid in the “Lohengrin Wedding March.” most of the men were working In a | little attention to the lesser, u"imp-»r:anc 'After the ceremony a wedding break- | niggly, highly finished mannér, giving | detalls of nature. FHe beliaved in givin fast was served to the bridal party at the | littls impresslon of nature and securing | the bIg aspects of the picture. Somecimes tilom;lot mfi‘brk{'e's par;n::. lesd?nd tMrs. | almost none of her great truths. Theirs :;;(fle& bruh\l;j !'h»rn was nevertheless al- unkins will enjoy a short wedding tour, | . - ys & rugged force abe D me hich Coronado and Del Monte wiij | Was the manner of Claude and Poussin, | wog e Ty ahout Me work that be visited. A pretty home has been fitted | S2CUFing all of the faults of these MASLers | was in advance of his time, but o nig up for ‘the newly married pair_on Fourth | With few of their virtues, and the pic- | faith in himself, and it was his poars oad Shreat. mear St, James. Mrs. Hunkins is | [ures were composed on conventional | nosterity would recopnie RoCoos that a. graduate of King Conservatory of | lies, worked out as It were by recipe.| How true were his prophect Sy e o beon the orpanist of ‘Cen. | according ta certain laws. The : pubiic | peJr, true Wl prophetic visions ma. e R oy soveral soare . °She js | liked this, or at least had been %o accus- | 09, KNOWN When it is seen how the plcture one of the most prominent musiclans in | tomed to It that it resented any de- . S fo Lugzles to get ng studies out of doors, i how much the S work ¥ artures, buf it is needless to say that | in these days, for his canvases brin - :Eeufiz 2 Mr. Hunkins is a 'celloist of | BATIWTEN O ;m S 3 ¢ Mous sums. & enor- D N Barly in his career Constable had had | During his lifetime Constable was never - his pictures rejected by the hanxlri’ com- | I0_any sense a popular painter. His RICHARD CROKER THE mittee of the Royal Academy. He feit | themes were possibly too simple to suit ihe injustice bitterly and on one occasion | the English public, accustomed to ar VICT|M OF AN ACCIDENT | be took a despised canvas to the presi- ficially composed pictures: or th 'e‘r“ g dent of the Institution, 4sking him frank- | t00 artistically conceived to appeal to an —_ ‘{‘ 1:1 hedv:ouldmtellh}ho :gl‘aon of ma;& ;;L}?;t;urg flllen(elo n; was fond of de- 2 usal and to give him advice as to what eat masses of sky for e LONDON, Jan, 2—A-spectal aispatch |- {0*4, “"Wvest Teceived him cordlaily and | Simple stretches of quict sounicy ang Lo from Wantago, county of Berks, says that | examined the work carefully; at length he | loved to paint the River Stour, which Richard Croker, who has been staylng at | “Don’t be discouraged, young man, | flowed past his old home. Windmills he & country house near there; sll%ped while | we shall hear of you again; you must | Introduced frequently into the iandscape, mounting a . horse owing to.the animal | have loved nature very much before you | #nd one P%cullanu' of his work was that swerving, -and his leg wa#d broken. Mr | could have palnted this.”. Constable was | he invarfably made his preliminary study Croker {8 belng ‘attended by Dr. Emerson, | much encouraged by this, maturally, but | 0ut of doors much larger than the com- who has reduced the fracture. He Is now | for many years, although he had better | pleted pieture, which he finished In hisw resting easily. The accident ocourred yes- | Juck with the hmfinf committees, .. his | 8tudio, thus reversing the usual custom of terday (Monday) merning. pictures eame regularly back to himy un- | the artist. Two such large studies may . = #old, and had it not beefl for a few private | be seen in :{x.» Mergrnp«)l:zan Museum of ity | | Explosion Wrecks a Church, | Patrovs, pasticularly one stanch sup- | Art in New Yol They_are called | s & orter, Archbishop Fisher, he would have | respectively, Lock STROMBERG,”. Neb., - Jan. 1—BEden | had a sorry time. “Valley Farm. and though ther K. Baptist Church, which was dedicated only | - As it was, tc make both ends meet he |lost some of thelr color in the rs, 1 3 i . years, they @ year ago, was.totally :destroyed by fire | made copies. of portraits for rich Deople | are fine, sturdy works. He used a pale: s vaornfit and two persons were | Who desired: duplicates..and occasionaliy | knife quite freely in painting, and some: rlously ‘injured. The fire was caused he received a commission for an origmal | times he kept a canvas a long while in el e Dlosion_ of acétylene gas. witn | POTtrait: - Constable was tall, of fine fig- his studlo before he let it go out into tha D i ihe church was. lighted.” The. gas | Ure:and podsested of great strength,. Aoug | world. .1t id that he had his famong enerator ani-the furnace were located | the country. 'he was knowf.as “the hard- | picture, - “Waterloo Bridge,” some thir- BT ment And It mas sapposed oo | some miller,” a name. that has clung to | leer years under consideration before he 1‘1‘. me Rt wiis (patied by ihe mma:! | him: even now. these many years after his | finally pronounced it complete. Tweo of S s Twatch meetings were boiy | death. -He excelled in feats of streng:d | his_works. “The Rainbow" and “Wey- N e & lavse number of persons ws [and was generally of the fine physical [mouth Bridge” were presented to-the ol N e et o them Bad Jast 1ory| manly type. of . an. Englishman. There | Lotvre in Paris fm 183 by a Mr. Wilson, Prebutiaing when the explosion occurred. | CAme, however, Into his iife an affair thit | and there are many of his pictures in the ‘The bullding was badly wrecked and what | a8 o cause him ereat amxiety and for | South Kensington muscum and the Na- ~ time to impair s splen éalth: an o ndon. Fas not destroved by the explosion was | power. It was the old story and the wom- | %, 1557, in London. T8 S M fier daughter Pearl wera - seriously . in- | 20 In the case was a Miss Bicknell: -shé Jured. eventually became his wife, but the:cotrse ——— of u‘:le }g‘v,e 'xn hthe cm:le hvlvns uxlmsluany rough. Her father, an: rticular & Steamer Saratoga Floated. D ncle. viclently oppossd. the union: . SANTIAGO DE CUBA; Jan. 1.—The | for, and with justice, they. thought such Ward line steamer Saratoga, after hav- |& match at that time guite imprudent. It fng ‘been ten days aground, was pulled | Was the occasion of many a heartburn, | New York City. off. yesterday by. the Santiego and two and Constable’s mother was most inter- 2 her son’s love affairs. Many let- tugs. All her cirE0 and coal were re- | Sers. paseed | between the Swecthiaris, Ovurses o Tustréction. moved and the channel around the pro- | formal, dignified epistles, written in state- Autumn-Winter Term, 159-1909, peller and keel was dredged. An investi- language, as was the manner then.| Mondays and Thursdays: Popular Stnd- gution has shown remarkablé port regula- | Fhey seem, It must be Confesscd as we |fes in Shakespeare. ~Tueslays: Tha Hg;:'u enxcgpt ®two t?oidfitw gp';’xfi.; 100k at lhinf! w-{g-y. btor!enb:’ St and | World's Great Artists. Wednesdays: licenses, but several others are permitted | 1 ier " Shoes continued. homeenr, mank | Desk Studles for Girls and Shov snd &;{ u;.lztcgmma‘?g:l:ug(;;x: port dto use | years, and finally love triumphed, for the | Frade Studies for Boys. Fridays: Great o s e e 'ff;;"l;‘ :fml:,? pair_eloped. - All was Soon forgiven, even | American Statesmen. Saturdays: Homae e i o the flcg u{.file rolgn&n%;nd leaving them | Science -m.n;ll Hous'enhold Econo. Thes: TR 2 at eath a substantiai sum. courses will continue until F' 5 Bave money by buying your blank | Constable presently lost his father and |1900. Examinations will be he?gm:" e m their books, printing and all office supplies for | mother, and receiving from the estate|close as a basis for the u Ler= from Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Markets | an ampie sum of money, which put him | tincates. ATRVIN o 2o

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