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> THE SA FRANCISCO CALL ATURDAY. ADVEBTIMNT& ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine GARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS must| bear signature of 2. sy Vory small and as oasy to take as segar. (3 DT e | FOR HEADACHZ. QCARTERSIFM mm::ss. SEE SEE | i i i GENUINE | JUER |ron rowintnes. | GENUINE ; PiLLS. |FOR CONSTIPATION. WRAPPER FOR SALLOW SKIK. | WRAPPER | FOR THE COMPLEXIOR e '""' s | PUTDLy Vegetable, Chmiiiet. —wmv—— PRINTED ON RED PATPEIR? £EEEEEEENEEENNREE lll Free Tlckets uusu:ms (..RAND OPERA- HOU<L TELEPHONE MAI MATINEE TO-DAY. BOEEI\E’;Elov Orpheun! “ALADD N JR » Lenox and lvory Soap COLIMRIA e A i SAVE YOUR WRAPPERS AND - - b GET FREE TICKETS TO THE e e N ORPHETUM. Y‘At'.!>- BAT N iA K8 B JoNEs kmbek uani0:) & The Johmson-Locke Mat nee Tn fa' **The School for Scanda " . . Me:cantile Co., 203 FRONT STREET, BAN FRANCISCO, Wil Exchange for Lenox and Ivory Soup Wrappers THE ORPHEUM LLOWING €ON- THE FAMOUS BOST_ONIANS “THE SMUGGLERS OF BADAYEZ ** COLUMBIA THEATER—EXTRA! FIGHTH ANNUAL BENEFIT € CHARITY FUND, San Francisco Lodge Ko, 21, 17 You Want a 2c Reserved Seat Eend 2 Wrappere of LENOX Or. 12 Wrappers of IVORY Or else send 16 Wrappers of LL\'()X SOAP snd & Wrappe: it You Want & ed S nd.....00 Wrappers of LF\O)\ SOAP - Wrappers of 1VORY <mu> Ve IVORY SOAP SOAPand 12 Wrappers E é"'!" DR. JORDAN S smear WUSEUM OF ANATOMY¢ T,EA‘IRIUAL HECHANIGS o he ..1uea 36 y=ars ll!l JD!BAI~”IVITE DISEASES l or Book, PHIL QROPRY or SO IATION - P .mnn \\ & L0 1051 ertnl'lt 8. F uQ Aqg,,mr;,gnmu LL Nervous Dw:uu-’ulmu Mom. TJE LADIES ALL COME TO SEE work and fa discrin ey qu "i?' { d io xm qiie IR ’ fra T A 2 ey Sl Dess or bloasure, nun.kl_ ani r s Ci AN AND NCRUCIAT msamption it taken iz 0. hair | NNY .‘9: :nuw; Imu.odrlluf lr,upmmem and eflecta 140 L rr | ghoreallothers fall Iosist npon baving thoganuine | - . N AN 0 pure yon \\az fe neurodn l“ A ureBaphariugs | 59!1'8. mént] for 83 80 by mall in ploln AIAX PEMENYCO’ Topeom, | For sate n 5. ¥. by Leipoits & Goo No eentage Drug (‘o Ow! Drug Co.. Oakl'd. | ROW NIGHT Y CUMPANY CULKO e Here ‘T HE | AMUSBH!HTS. | P i | i (THE PEOI S POPULAR. PLAY. HOUSE)| PHONE SOUTH 770. | THIS B NG, MATINEE TO-DAY. | POPULAR; PRICE! A SHOW WITHOUT A FLAW | BEST THIS POPULAR HOUSE HAS EVER OFFERED. rEOW aftérnno RIVIF R will e presented at the: Ex- | Oakian h ehruary 4, 5 and & C0. HALL, STREET: g, TIVOL! OPERA -HOUSE. sucomnn cunr 23 SUTTER “HO0T MON, Lvery One Is Lauzhing.” | i ';I;KA\'O. SPECIAL MATINEE T0-DAY 4T 2 | Wi | ©f the Encrmous Comic Opera Triu: | , TREBELLI peeine aT o * AN EXTRA SONG RECITAL ™ | THIS AFTERNOON, ALCAZARA_THEATER. _;HERMAN & CLAY HALL. TS | SSDAY EVE, i, Fe ary -6, at §:15, w! Pastoral Play, G.VEN BY Mrs. Adelame Lioyd-Smith, I TIC SOPRAXO, ed. by 3sc | SOc Peacetul Valley 32 RESERVED SEATS xt Week— FRIENDS ¥ of MARY HAMPTON. 5 NOW READY. £ cmnss AND 0. NING, . at Sherman, € ning at 9 o'clock. RACING' RACING! RACING! 1600—CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUB - 1900 | ND © EVERY AFTERNOC ’V\AJOR MITE Junusry 22 v February 1, lnclun\w. OAK: RACE TRACK. Racing Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs- | Fiiday and Saturday. Rain or shihe. or more races ¢ach. day. r‘ > da ¥iv The Smallést Actor on. ¥ Races start at 205 p. m. shary. - - 1 K D Ferry -boats leave San Francisco at 12 m. and D A GREAT YAUDEVILL! mflv\ 10 e and 3 b M. cORREeting trains stopping at the entras 10 the Teck. Last two cars on train reserved for ja- gies and their escorts: no smoking - Buy your ferry tickets to Shell Mound. Ail trains via Oakland mole connect with San Pablo avenue electric cars at Seventh and Broadway, Oak- jand. Also all trains via Aldmeda mole con- pect with San Pablo avenue cars at Fourteenth | and, Broadway. Onkland. These electric cars &0 direct to.the track in fifteen minutes, H Murnlu—!‘rllm Jeave the track at 4:i5 and er the & ar Perforiaance; GRAND PRIZE GAKEWALKING CONTEST ! OAKLAND vs. SAN FRANCISCO. BALLOON ASCLNSION SUNDAY. | ¢z g,z and im n'gx.if’lu?s";i'.hf»'.‘:“u"f‘ ! Phone for Seats. .PARK = R. B. MILROY, Becretary. 1 1 first [ Shechan” for the fmdiatment: of idegr trying many f the congested, | JAS BOVES§ 8. 1N LOFSTAD, T C HUGHES. GRIEVANCE OF THE SOUDANES Troops Were Secretly Sent to the Front. R PARIS, Feb. 2.--A ‘dispateh to the Havas News Agency from .CGairo confirms the réport that a rebellion had -6ccurred | among _the Soudanese iroops in Khar- toum. © It says: “Ther¢ 15 much anxiety here. There bave been & num‘er of grave incidents, noiably -the growing discontent . in-- the Egyptlan army, which has attained to a | mutiny in two Soudanese battallons. The | Government tias sent C lonel Wingate to parley with them. .The army complaitis of bad treatment and the secret dispatch of Egyptian troops to South -Afriea.. It Appears cértain that ten Maxims and & large dssignment - of saddles have gone :rban, and & humber of English of- | Prn and - civil funetionaries hn\e ob- 8 unlimited furlough to outh- Africa, which is bdle\ed to be L preach of “Egypt's neutrality | ernment is alarmed at the. am(ude n( the black troops und has asked the Khedive to intervene, The latter has.sent a- Jetter urging obedicnce, but_the ‘anxiety, never- theless, continues, 'pt - 18, almost de- nuded of Europum oldiers.” A cable dxsnalch to. the Anlochzad | Press from Paris, January 31, said ¢ were only 150 white British w]dieru “at | Khartoum, under command- of a major. The Soudanese force, It was added, conx sisted of two: battailons with a total ot 1500 men. e — SURPRISE IN THE JOYCE CASE. Joseph Reedy Testifies That the Mur- dered Man Fired First. The preliminary examination of ex-Po- liceman Thomas H. Dillon, charged with the murder of Charles Joyce, grocer, Sev- | enteenth and Castro streets; on January 13, was commenced before Judge Conlan yesterday. He was represented by Attor- ney Reddy. PmsccuunF Attorney Weller conducted the prosecutlo ¢ evidence of Joseph Rved) the prin- itness for the prosecution, was a surprise, He testified that Joyce shots at Dillon before Dillon ed firing, which would lead to | the supposition that Dillon acted in self- de Iense His testimony was in effect that Joyce and Dillon had some words | arked that he was going to the and when he - returned he pull a revolver out of his pocket, snd taking hold of Dillon told him to get out, as he did not want either his trade or his nee. — Dillon remazked, ‘‘That’s an ult with a deadly weapon. and I'I »u fixed for it.” Joyce said, 1 gun on me once before, but'if you &« gun on me this time I'll ill you "' Joyce pointed the revolver at Dillon’s face, and then put it on the drainer behind the bar., They shook hands afier that, but soon had some more words. - Dillon attempted to draw, but Joyce stepped toward where he had put his revolver and fired twice at Dillen, and then Dillon fired a shot or two at Joyce, who ‘ducked. behind the bar, Joyce thén retreated toward the end of the bar and. fell, saying, “Don't shoo( Tom: I've got it’” . At the same.tim Dilion. fired another shot and Reedy ran out of the saloon. Charles Taylor, 35 Diamond street, roborated Reedy. up.to the time of the hooting: He gid npt know who fred the shot, ag he x’)‘: out of the side en- trance on’ to Castro.street hefore the first shot -was fired. The examination will.be | continued- this morning. R Grand Jury Investigations. The Grand Jury vesterday took up the : corisideration of the case of Frank Mit- | chell. who: Killed Frank McAuliffe last Oetober, - Mitchell’ was held for slaughter by Judge Mogan, and Joseph McAliffe, brother of the murdered man, | Is_endeavoring to have the Grand Jury indict Mitchell for murder. The request of {ormier Tax Couerlor Wise, {and Goldstefn, two. deputies in his office, | Tor perjury in- having swofn to alle false aMdayits rvzufimz A fraudulent | salary warrant of one Chapman was alio taken up and continued untii next Friday. ADVERTISEMENTS, SAFE AND EFFECTIVE. A Certain Cure for a Common and Annoying Disease, Many people suffer” from piles. because salves. ointments and Tottons without relief or-cure lave comé to the conclusion that ‘a surgical opera- thon " is: the only thing left"to :try and rather than submit to the shock and risk of Hfe of an cperation: prefer to suffer on. Fortunately ‘this 18 no.Jonger- neeessary, | as a new prepuration has been ‘discovered, which cures-every form of pllég, without pain, ~Inconvenience: or { busine s Bt is in the form-of Suppositories, easily applied ‘at night, is absolutely free from cocaine, .oplum .or *any ‘injurious. drug whatever, and no matter how severe the puin, gives instant relief, ‘not by déaden- ing the nerves of ‘the part affected, but rather by its healing, soothing éffect upon sensitive: membranes, The name of this preparation is Pyra- mid Pile Cure and I8 undoubtedly the | most effective, safest and most extensive~ ly sold of any pile cure that has ever lieeri- placed: before the public. Thig reputation has: been seaured by rea- son. of 1ts extraordinary merit and the reasonable price at which- it is sold, all druggists from Malsie to California selling it at 50 cents for full sized treatment, and in many eases a single package has been sufficient. A person takes serious chances In neg- lecting 4 simple case of plles, as the trouble sogn becomes deep. .seated and chronic. frequently developing into fatal, incurable rectal diseases like fistula and cancer of rectum. Any druggist will tell you the Pyramid 15 the safést and" most ‘satisfactory pile cure known to the medical fraternity. A litsle 'book on cause and cure. of pies | ;‘q iled fn‘(— ‘biv addressing’ Pyramid Co., Mic! _DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Malia1 on_Application. COAL, COKE AND PIG: IRON, ] 3 Ba J.C. WILSON & 0., rovo matierg, Stroste, covPER-mrrn. JOSEFH FOX, sur:. H“m Bb‘n'g!. Mgr. CW.SMITH. andsniy S and 1§ Washington -_v..:x,'dgyhan: 81, FRESH AND SAUT MEATS. y c..}'?"l. J‘"'!be”‘ ‘l KHMI * lmll ‘ Latey “tyles, lowast prices remodeling. PAPHH DflAL!fl. WILLAMETTE FUir axp autl w. PRINTING. . PRINTER, 1 Sansome st.,' 8. F. >1‘ATmH£'§ AND Pkls‘l‘zh. Cades. -unt. Dtln -M | cor- man- | detention: fram | | James_J. Jefmen acted as ume-keewr O A ST |18 -known | mit will, be made the feature of the e S A Ll e TOM CALVERT FINALLY WON FOR McGIBBEN The Oakland Announcer’s Horse Scored a Hit—Long Shots lirgminem. The many. trials and trlbulations of An- nouncer. “Bob” McGibben were brushed astde -at ‘Oakland -track vesterday—Tom Calvert: won a race. “Bob” purchased Calvert at o give-away’ sale nearly a vear | ago; and while out at pasturage. the geld- | ing 'mave promise of being a great horse some day, However, .when taken up and laced in training he proved a disappoin: fnem.‘hls starts. causing ‘the. announcer's bank roll te tumble down to the natural | sed level. Yesterday he. met a plebald meées of horse trash at a mile and a fur- long. and with *“Jack’ Martin up ‘and a | 5 10 6 favorite wen easfly from Senora | Caesar. - When Bob entered the ring to announce. the result of the finish book- | makets and tatent alike gave him & recep- [ tion 'second only to that tendered | “Kisser” Hobson on his lffl\&l here. ’rha | winner will 1cceive a spectal \the Burns handicap. But two first choices were ‘able to anne: urses. Cipriano, at 10, and Louls B, M- Whirter, a 12 to 1 chance, were among the prize ‘winners. “Icéeman’ 8pencer m&de front run of | ft with Cipriano, a 10 to 1 shot, for the opening scramble. beating Vioris, the fa- vorite, a neck. At the stretch turn. Jen- kins took theI Jatter back mfl;_nkl Tor- sina would mistaken, for Tomnn crscked. like & pr{we of crockery, and the first cholee was tard: 0 getcing up. Lady Britannie tan third, Rollick, with Bullman up, won the four- furiong: dash for two-year-olds at . the commencem-ent (:mlng A runhing start, he was never headed, beating the favor lte. Gaylon Brown, out four lengths In hornwild, 'a. son ‘of Thornhill, | finlmed a fair third, Burns & Waterhouse captured | fourth purse with their big gelding Mar- | | cato. Sent to the post a 3 to 5 favorite, | hie was hard ridden by.Bullinan to get to the. front, finally winning cleverly from Harry Thoburn. Peace™ led the stretch, dying away ‘at the close, = Cor- | morant, a bad actor at the post, made a splendid run after getting away poorly, | taking the show. | “The talent fell again to Dr. Nembula in tHe mile and a sixteenth handicap. Al-| lotted 100 pounds he closed a slight choice over Po(eme with 117 pounds, in the sad- dle. Away nrsl 1o a good start, the Docs tor led to within fifty )xrdx of the goal, 5 e | " the | where Walsh brnugth( up Potente, win- | ning oclgverly In 1:46%. Malay was. unable to nish Inslde the money. ufs B. irter, at odds of 12 to 1. repeated hls \mnn of a few days ngo m the closing event at seven furlon; titoe again had the mount, and ter, coming with' a rush outgamed Flor bird in & hard struggle, getting the ver- dict by a head. San Tomas, the favorite, ied to the stretch and then “blew up.’ Naglee Stake To-Day. The valuable $1500 Naglee selling stake will be the feature of the card at Oak- land -this afternoon. The distance is seven furlongs and . Buch fast ones -as | Timemaker, Afamada, - Scoteh Plaid, | Rosinante, Peace ard Pat Morrissey will | face the starter. o | To-, Day s Entries. First race-Six and a half' furlong: Yyear- uldl selling. 110 718°St. Anthony ...107 | i) Antier £1071-458 Floridan 197 £ Rachel C 106! (899)Slsqaoe 650 Ziska 0 Saul of T } | Secona race—Seven furlongs; four-year-olds and up; selling. Don Luls 712 Rio. Chico ¢ .. Pertwig . | 732 Montanus 72 Imp. - Conallla. Mike Rice . | (12 High Hoe 077 (S99 Dotore. ..: i | 724 Torsina 9 El-Estro 1 | (303 Toriblo . 67 Gauntlet pice. Irosie. farones:. malden two-yaasc.| 1d Hiiten: relling. | 688 Lucidia . Intrad 10 <. Catherine Bravnll\l Bmu‘h Be“e Sublime 10 Tallta: - uu} Z.. Mollle Connors.. 1 |89 Aphrodis ..,.. no b3 Glrl) “Bucat. ‘.ll\l €35 Laura )llx [ Pourth’ race—Seven furlongs: mm.w.mm-l | and up; the Nagloe selllng stake; purae $1500, ha.m'rlmemaku 17 (67 Rosinants | ‘9 sadton Platd 633 Afamada | (BT Pt Morrissey. 103 660 Headwatel | 897 Dr. Sheéppard 0. 727 Peace -.. Fifth race—One pille; thres-year-olds and up; | | selling. A1) 708 Iverary 11 1) ?‘ Finnegan. 111 | 1808 T e 09 Grady 114! 691 Brown_ Prince.. J11-| . Sixth race—geven furlongs; four-yea-oids and | 5 seliing. AN Lost Girl, MNthle Reld 112 Wyoming -~ 74 P:.mp{nn 3 722 Mary Kinsel 544 Jack. McCabe. 681 Canipus 887 Good Hops . 10& v?u)llnule Jingle Selections for To-Day. |- First race-Alee Rachel (. 8jsquod. Becond race—Clonsitia, - Toriblo, High Hoe, Third . rac&Lucidia, Laura 'Marie, Scotch Belte. : { Fourth race—Timemaker, Rosfnante, Afa- mada. Fifth. race~My Gypsy, Mont Eagle, Flamero. Sixth race—Wyoming, Jingle Jingle, Mary Kinsella. | EIGHT CITIES TO ENTER. American Association of Baseball | Clubs Now a Reality. { | PHILADELPHIA, Feo. 2.—The meeting of the American Assoclation of Baseball Clubs: came “to an end (o-rla{ennd the gr‘wlxnlun may be. said a fact. ix citles—Boston, Buhlmore Mllwaukze, Chicago’ and _St. " Louts—have slgmod the agreemem each furnishing a | bond. vidence and Philadelphia | hme not vet signed, but the former has "pled ed Itself to furnish the bond as soon tfils city registers. Before adjourning | | Detroit, | tee to remalin here and arrange the Phil- adelphfa end of the circuit. = The next mcerlm; will be held in Chicago on Feb- ruary 1 i iy Orelcent City Races. NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 2.—Cotton Plant, which scored easily in the fifth, was the only winnfng favorite to-day. The track | was fast. Results: Seliing, seven furlongs won, De- bride second, Corlalls third. Time, 1:29, Six furlonge—Ophelia Bugg won, Et second, Siddarth third. Time, 1 One ‘mile—f. B Cline won, Quanih Parker second, Topgallant third: Time, 1:41. One mile.and an elghth—Tlarataria ‘won. Our Nellle second, Strangest third. — Time, 1:54%: Selling, #ix nnd a half furlongs—Cotton Plant won, Thurlea second, Banker Green third: Time, 1:2 One mfle and a _ sixteenth—Arthur - Beehan won, Major Mansit second, - Florizar third; Time, 11 Brond Knocks Out Bernstein. NEW YORK, Feb. 2—Joe Bernstein of this city was knocked out by Kid Broad in. the . thirteenth of what was to have |- been a twenty-five-round bout hefou the Broadway Athletic. Club to-ni| From the first round Broad was on t ‘.-", sive. In the - thirteenth round roac rushed Bernstein and landed a viclous len. hook below the ~heart, Bernstein fell agalnst Broad. and clung. to 'his arm. Broad backed away: and Bernstein fell heavily to the floor. He tried to get up. | but failed nnd was cuunted out. Ryan Gets tha Decision. HOT SPRINGE Ark., Feb. 2.—~Tommy. ! Ryan of Syracuse was given the declsion over Gearse Lawler of-Detroit after four- teen rounds this afternoon. . Lawler was badly punished, thonsh he had the ad- vantage in weight-a reach. Chnmplon A Good Dinner Can always be had at the Pup. Ronnafle 12 to 16 Stockten at et. near Market, Mr, -Jean . Loupy, ff nswprletpr kno" how to serve his custo: !ccenmll and Neill u..m..d Frank McConnell, 0 and was beaten. by H!'lteflolu Billy’ th in New Yorl :t 1 short time, the matched - to'. focal ter, next month, The i ‘FEBRUARY | Mortatti, 7 | Electric and Gas ks ;'g | Light Company for 1809 was $132.100 97; | penditures, it 3 hous 80 bundlng} ofle | was: 310,00 and flnn"v the dclegates appointed a commit- | 1, 1 ‘the “middle-welght |- | who defeated Jimmy Hauley a short time | g REACHING FOR ORIENTAL TRADE Flan of John H. Webb of San Dieg e gia L Special D(snntoh to The Call. "SAN DIEGO, Feb. 2—At the regular meeiing of the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce this afternoon, John H. Webb appeared in advocacy of & plan for the increasing of the trade of Southern California with the Orlent, and partieularly ‘with Japan and Yokohama. Dr. Webb's life work has been journalism, and he was at one time part proprietor of the New York Star. He Is at present the advocats of a movement for the estab- llshmenl in Yokohama of a Japanese- erican exchange for the purpose of u bullmn; trade, and he showed to e directors that while it was possible to take the products of Southern California in Yokohumn from San Dlego at a cost of from 3 to $7 per ton, it was costing the Brflducers of this sectlon from $3¢ to lss ton to land thelr products in Chic Tt 5 hi purpese to establish and mal ratn 1 Pobahhma an exhibit of Bewtborn Californfa products, which will draw at- tention to the possibilities of trade. Al steamer Hnes which cross the Pacific to the Orient make Yokohama thelr I t ort of call on the trip this way and the! ret port of entry on their trips from this side. Thess lines are grest. consumers of food products, and California food prod- Hote tican e supplied to meet the de- ‘mand. b Weabh hes the indorsement of.fhe Chamber of Commerce and of the Mer- chants' and ‘Manufacturers' Association of Los Angeles, and his ideas met with favorable comment lhls afternoon from the members of board of directors who were gresenl ® The subject matter was referred to the ways and means com- 'mmee. and will be n\oroughly canvassed nd the establishment of the ex- hlbl! Wlll undoubtedly be extended. e —i————— HIGH SCHOOL DEBATE. Students Discuss mmicipnl Owner- ship of Public Utilities. An interesting debate was held last night in the auditorfum of the Girls' High School, corner of Geary and Scott streets, under the auspices of the Debating League -of Northern California. The question debated was, “‘Resolved, That the City of San Francisco Should Own Its Public: Utilities.” The speakers were: AMrmnuve—H\lmbolm Evening School, Joseph Cresse. F. McMahon an: (hmles H. Lofle' "negative—Polytechnic High School, C. F. Adams, Joseph Prich- ard and Joseph Lucey. All the debaters evinced a therough knowledge of the sub- ject under discussion. ecision was rendered in the affirmative by the judges— Fdward_A. Belcher, Frank J. Murasky and J. B. Casserly, Selections by the Humboldf School Glee Club and an ad- dress by Colenel C. H. Murphy rounded out an agreeable entertainment. Follow- 1 ing are the committees having the affair in charge: Reception Committee—John D. Spreckels Jr., Leonard J. Fross, David 8. Cahen, (‘hArhl Conlin_: Monroe Green, Allan H. Browne, W. K. Galloway. George ‘A. Moriattf, Levi Ship- ley, T. Formyth. Commnittee of Arnngementl—Edwnrd S. Aben- heim, Jacob Sch Leo A. Levy, Georze A. Buelt & Neisan, Herbert’ Archur. —e—————— Phroso removes tan; sunburn- and plmplu Good. for rough hands. e PROFITS IN LIGHTING. Compantes - File Statements With Supervisors. In ¢compliance with the requirements of | | a resolution passed by the Board of Su- pervisors, the Equitable Gas Company has submitted a report of its receipts and expenditures as follows: From August 1| to. December 31, the total receipts from the ale of gas amounted to $28.046 30; ex- penditures, §15,730 72, leaving a balance of :rm”s out of which sum all administra- | tlon expenses. were paid. The amount ex- ended for materidl of every kind and R)r labor in the construction of the plant | 1€ _$252,000. Thé revenue of the Mutual Electric 392,779 28, The original cost o he. plant was $336.158 56, but the claim s " surplus electricity of the Miils unt is amstriputenand r. who obtained the Street priviieges or ihe conduita - The Fevenue for 1800 was 88957 17, expenditures, $2700 71, leaving a net profit of § ung‘lnal cost. of the dlslrlbu(l‘f the estimate value is $5 The . Ce ntral ngh! and Power Com pany reports {ts revenue {or 180§ at !lZlnS 5, and expenditures $8656 3 The original plant In»mllod in the Em- porfum_building was not installed by the Central Cempany 80 the actual cost of he 1d - b sy stp present | ex. | ! penmanship, rows of figures or even won- | made lhat it could ‘not 'be. duplicated for | Kate Gannett Wells, Mrs. Louise E. Hogan. XVI. CARE AND EDUCATION OF | CHILDREN. (Concluded.) The Occupations. The gifts are distinguished from the 2 occupations in that they are more con- structive -and *the forms -made . with them are less permanent. The tower s bulit and unbuflt and rebuilt into a wall, a seat or a bridge. Various picture-forms made with blocks or sticks or rings are quickly transformed Into other things, and at the end one comes back to the original material. The occupations, on the other hand, af- ford means of permanent transformation and of individual creation. The little ar- tist seizes a pencil, and lo! a horse, a man, a rose, never seen before. “It is mine, I made it.” The shapeless clay s molded into a ball, a cherry or an apple, and something exists which did not exlst before. In the sentence, “Man is a cre- atlve being.” Froebel's greatest interpre- ter found the key to his system. Any material which children can han- dle and through which they may express themselves is legitimate fof use in a kin- | dergarten occupation. Leaf garlands are made, burr baskets, necklaces of herries and other decorations dear to the heart of childhood. The kindérgarten sewing Is not a preparatory course In dressmak- ing or tafloring, nor is its drawing. mod- | eling and coloring to make artists fully equipped for life. ‘“To make visible the invisible spirit of man” is, according to Froebel, the function of art. To foster the spirit of art, which seeks to find what it may work at. is his purpose in his. direction of childish actlyitles, for “even a child is known by his doing.” Education is only g process of unfold- ing. All that can be done from witheut is to supply right conditions. To under- stand these conditions and to meet them is the effort of the child gardener. He needs to know not only the particular game, story, gift or occupation, but the | nature and ‘needs of the growing child plant. The gardener must know his gar- den. He may scatter seed and till and water. The plant must grow. The true | kindergarten is the garden so cultivated. The First School Years. In Mrs. Wiggin's story of Patsy, the | street waif who slrays into the Kinder- garten thinks himself in heaven, with bird songs filling the air. the windows full of bloom and a loving, sunny woman to mother a flock of children. Such a | heaven is not now the exclusive province | of the kindergartner. There is no sudden change of climate when one enters . pri- | mary room. Here, too, are. warmth and sunshine, blooming geranfums and sing- ing birds. In one window we may see a garden planted with Jpeas or beans, that Iittle eyes may behold the ever-new mir- acle nf germination and growth. In an- other window the egg-shell garden makes it possible for any child to know and care for his own plant. Jack and Jill and all the other names are plainly writ- ten on the half shells, that each child may gain the sense of responsibility and feeling of affection for the (mw!n( lmug, that comes from ownership. Another window possibly rejoices in ln aquarium, and at the right scason some other bro ther s sure to Drlns a jar of pollywogs. of watching day hases of the fom a rabbit, | o7 duy for the different | | i'l‘ en there is the | aft I A visit B onurous changs a squirrel, a kitten or from mother hen | and her chicks is not at all a surprlslng event in the modern schaoolroom. In a| | few places such pets are kept and sent from one school buflding to another. The four wallg of our ideal room for lit- Itla children are not to be covered with blackboards adorned with specimens of derful crayon drawings. Pictures. t¢ gray or green tone makes a good szl:‘;;rf'mfid’agnms( which are hung = d pictures of Interest to the little |f0‘n¥'~g°}1"‘hepl’er'y pictures are within the ! e S oo eb-ebe@ | construction is not known, but $238.800 has | | been paid out in cash on plant account by the present owners. | e Smiths’ Cash Store, 25 and 2‘; l-la‘;kel eet, I8 open for business and glad to 425 old and ?-ew patrons. Free delivery in city. THE CALL’S R (Copyright, OAKLAND RACETRACK, Friday, 724. FIRST IL\CBT_F‘I\'ew(urIu)nn; 190, by H. H. Egbert) February elling: four-year-olds and upward: purse, $300. { ACING CHART. 2. 1600.~Weather fine. Track good. | _ Hm. fim.fislr __CL T no, h 1h 13 | 3} 891 ‘:‘.‘3222 { ;h 32 21 1 2148 0 _Lady Brit 5% 5h 4% r 4 & | ... “Torsina. a L e g8 3 Nora Ives 4n a1 81 bow o8 2o Chigpa, 4 12 1% 11 | 0 10 | a k ¢ H L R P L [ %8 ... Silver Beau, 4 B or » | 1) Gocd start. Won first - lhree driving. Winner, D. J. Bo- * 3% by sl ('nrlo-Anrome ck at stretch turn. taking her time. RACE—One mile and an elght! \-Inrl.l should hu\! won. ‘orsina_was backed. Sh Regelong a_bad “actor. SLrllched«Schlllcr 111, Miss S ak 106 7 Jenkins made a mistake in | ¢ ought 1o hang on better next selling; four-year-oids and u T Deleota, 4 707 Los Prietas. $3 Adam_Andrew,; 6 Time—%, ariving. tearing in on the. rail e by i He is improving. . Senora Caesar stayed longer than usual 726. THIRD RACEv furlongs; on easlly when Martin got him away. from It. two-year-olds; purse, $400. 5%: 1%m, 1:56%. Good start. Won first thy ndoo-Pure Rye. Tom Calvert nearly lost ¥ Prietos - 830 Rolilek 1T a5 Gaylon b e 708 Thornw . C Cak 10| 6 |Conley IR e Gattie 08 3 [Hennessey . Belarlo a5 {Bucharan Tocation 08¢ 1 ¥ i |Logue 53 : Baad econd ‘and third. driving. Winner. Burns | & “Waterhou: o . By Take Notice-Happy Maiden. Bullman on winner got a running | 5 away. poorly. ~Thornwild ‘showed improvement. Scratched—Sofala | 115, | Vo7 F 9 ! T olds and upward: purse, $100. ; m. _Fin. | Jockeys o | = 3 Tk [Bullman 33 3% |Spencer 4 55 r sgott 4 32 |Jenkins 12 2n |E. Jones. n E: Wila Het, 5. g% Fitiston” » | San Venado, 3 5| (104) colonel Root, & o 5 U-‘onley zw Time—! : %, ng start. Won cleverly, Weiving. - Winfier, B ‘s o Dake ol Mestros Minaehans. Delle. - ‘Winner bard ridden to Set. 00 the fromt. Peacs dled awes. Thoburn Fap 10 the BOtel. . Coe: morant, awa; Ay, mAde semafiably: game offort. Wild Het gut:aff at tact: Sevutehod —Soclallst 1 rles Le Bél 107, Be Happy X i FIFTH RACE—Mile and a si thi free hmdlclp three-year-olds and up: purse, $00. e.. . W St. Y. 4n 2 1 | 3% [ 5 i-15, second and third llrh won. the rear, easily Potente atrolud along lflm i 13-16, 1:30%: mile, 1:40% k. Winner, C. E. Durneil's b. Once around the ring sul Scratched—The Fretter 107, Lothian 102. 6m, " 1:46%. - Good . by Racine-Pow Dr. Nembula. Malay will a0 better with light we 720, SIXTH RACE—Seven (nfloun. -selling: three-year-olds: purse, -$400. Index. Horse. Weight.[St. _%m. %Jm. %m. Str. Fin. | ~Jockeys. ~ [0p. ClL 3 0T . 4% 68 _ 4h s mo)ha SeWirter.. 0T 4R AR r‘ ) 21 4% 31 38 15 3 5% 6% 61 42 - 10 % sN. 4% 11 5% 0w 1. 3p P 63 1 92. 9 9 7 1% |{Henry. 50 - 100 1% 11% 11 82 n ns 2 T4%. T4 8 1§ 92 Devl: o 5 !_:m_.i X 100 1271 start. Won' three- driving. ner, 8. J. t’m': B0 Mont Eagle locked & wiiser at the nlln‘,- | to suit t | In - the | inee by confining H (ureny what can be easily a ‘mny developed. | the SOME IDEAS FOR MOTHERS AND TEACHERS. Copyright, 1900, by Sqmour Eaton. HOME SCIENCE AND HOU!EHOLD ECONOMY. Contributors to this.course: Mrs. Helen Campbell, Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster, Mrs. Miss Anna Barrows, Mrs. Mary Roberts Smith, Miss Emily G. Baich, Miss Lucy Wheelock and others. reach of every teacher, even if they are mot furnished with the school supp | A few Rembrandt mounts are made of the gpeclal spring and summer subjects. A iliet or e other industrial Sscene, some of the best pictures of animals and t Christmas time some of the Madonnas wlll be of dervice. If these pictures are rmned on a burlap hanging or hung on a Ine stretched aeross one wall of the room they mlfl be changed from time e school programme. Nature Study. Nature study. followng the round of the seasons, holds ‘an tmportant fnlnce in the modern_school curriculum. 'The frequent walk or excursion is & valuable adjunct to the lessons of the schoolroom. stimu- lating interest in out-of-door life and giv- to time .Ing an opportunity for the collection of materials for futuire work and for the school cabinet. The method of scfence work during (he first year of school life fs that advocated by Froebel In his de- mand that we proceed from love of nature to study and comprehension of her laws. The function of the teacher is not to teach facts, nor to conduct a series of monot- onous object lessons, but to be as a learn- & duitms, lonzviere. Sptetug s ARt b terest and love for all that God has made, Whittler sings of “Knowledge never learned of schools; Of the wild flower’s time and place; Of the wild bee's morning chase; FI fowl and habitude Of the tenant of the wood . . . Of the black wasp's cunning way, Mason of his wall of clay. The primary school to-day does mot deny l!s.pu?ilw this mest desirable and de- ;re?t knowledge, but aids them in gain- g it Gymnastics and Games. Some of the kindergarten games repra- senting the actfvities of the animal wori the movements of great natural forees. water and wind, and the growth of plant are used In primary grades to great advantage, and e as a stimulus to the more exact observatien of what {8 repre= sented. Throughimitation.one appropriates the life of the thing, and sympathy Is born of a fuller understanding. To fly and bulld like a bird one must know what a bird does, and must for the nonce become a bird. Cear them let us sof While the biraiin ty creep, Say Peep! Peepr Who has not hoticed the tenderness of feeling in a circle of children Iistening for the gentle pecp of the play birdlings> And could any boy “needlessly set t upon a worm' who had transformed kim- self .in play movements from a siow, crawling caterpillar into a fluttering but- terfly with joyous wings? The brown creature creeping over the sidewalk has a new interest when one knows it has such hidden possibilities. The fiying bird, tha soaring butterfly, the busy bee. the hop- ping frog, the whirling arms of the wind- mill, the steady turning of the weather vane, the waving trees and running brook, suggest movements of legs. arms. wristy and hands which give best sort of gymnastic training. in addition to the quickening of sympathy and interest thac comes from the !den!lncauon of self with all this active IHif: khymn or Poems. Khymes and simple poems are vaiuable auxiilaries to this nature work and serve also to make the. beginnings of literature. The poet often gives a tongue to what the young child feels. The child heart everywhere rejolces in the time when ““The golden-rod is yellow, The flclds are turning brown: The trees in acple orchards With fruit are bending down™j Or In ““Pretty gypsy dandelion Dancing in the sun™; And no less In the winter, when “Out of the bosom of the air, Out of the cloud-folds of her garments shiaken Over the woodlands brown and bare, Over the harvest fiel 1‘1 forsaken, ow. Language. The repetition of such rhymes and meniory gems helps very much inthe lan- guage work of ths school. The child's | Yocabulary is enriched thereby and right | forms of expression appropriated. Stories. Stories are another iImportant agency acquisition ur ianguage. The science story, pature myth or lairy fale told in Connection WIth the observaticn of natural obfects or some particular hap- | pening of the day Is reproduced in both oral and writter. exercises. Reading. The best preparation tor reading is not to dull the interest and eontract its prov- re child's attention to dead symbols of ldeas, but rather to quicken and direct the natural desire to hear and to know about things which shall create the need of suppiementing one's own slender stoek of information by all_that books can offer. Recognition of . 'words and letters constitutes the mechan- ism of reading, and, ke any other mes chanical process, is only a means 10 an end. Reading is a process of interpreta- tion, and as we see with all we have seen and know with all we have known, so we must lmeryru igeas with all that we have in mind. ‘The first years of school life. then, should be largely devoted to gain- fng the basis of experience which gives | the power of understanding and inter- preting ideas. Out of ihe richness of the ¢hild’'s experience is born the desire to relate, to share what one has e fl'leq and with the constant practice of tel what one has seen or heard by oral and written exercises grows mastery of guage. Hand Work. But there is a language of the band which may not be omitted in our efforts to endow the human being with full pow- ers of utterance. Musie, drawing, model- ing, color work, outlining with thread or worsted, cutting and foiding are not te be classed as “fads” or “frills,” but as essential means of education. The child | must learn to speak “‘a various langu age in order to come into full possession of all his powers, Number Work. In connection with these various forms of hand work we discover the most natu- ral_methods of number work. The best authoritiés agree that the first two years of school life should be kept free from drill in number. Much effort is now wasted in attempting 6 teach prema- uired at a riod when the re-sonlns faculty is more ol R In n: ‘;Edncu on_of ary nts Gut the conneetion between d\‘a'm and umber. ow many. legs for & chals, & table ow mnnz’ arms for a man? How many cher- ries In this bunch? And so on. In folding and cutting the relation of parts to & whole is a ma!ler of practical demonstra- “‘Music,” writes the wise Comenius, cspecially natural to us, for as soon as we see ‘the light we immediately sing the song of paradise,” and he fer- vently, *plessed is the home where voices resound in music.” #chool where harmany, nr; cultivated through sorg. Arnd theére is no more complete sum- mary of the general purpose :t the nrnm school years than the statement of this same herald of modern education: o sound iearning; it adm: !oul den. lbt we. l« o mt'u.:'t‘:'m‘- t do seme thinks, &nd i say some ] r.(h'r w!hunlahm.wdondu- except such as are bad.”” e_-’7,z,cz< Not.-'l'm evndudn the course “loz.. ence and Ho " & LRE