The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 4, 1900, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1900. Hale'’s. | Hale’s. Easter grace for the form and face! ttornta. 4 spring epiay dainty every virgin be throes of wi Hi hefite o elegant hion dema: ing the approach of Easter; umes, French milll appears here in these appeal to lovers of style! - Easter millinery Here e sketeh lines, ers b Here w chiffon The style such lealers as we are ! laces as delicate swell Easter costumes s sketch as grandma has For exsmple rich tailormade suite rich ribbons for Easter No @ ® e b and 8 e good taste ca AMUSEMENTS. WRA r‘ OPERA 9 BV wouse AR A SNOWFLAK! ; e oS AN ORASSGES BEOSSOM LAST THREE NIGHTS OF THE SEASON “0n the Suwanee River” TheBEGGAR STUDENT ;\’:LTT\' :bPléTl;RE. tichard Watton Tu ¥ YEEK ONLY — 5 o 5 MR. JP‘;V\E:;S\;?[.EH: : USUAL POPULAR PRICES. - Presenting od_¥ ved Seat In Orchestra at A ELOR'S ROMANCE.” Lo S CALIFORNIA THEATER. | »!?EOWN.XRS_ N FAIRYLAND. % Y TO HEAR . Paderewski ..o - & e o <+ A NEW BILL OF HIGH-CLASS NOVELTIES! FIELDS GUILLE; CHARLES SWEET h ené Rice present Comedian WILLIE COLLIER | LGAEAR MR.-.I Own New Farce — | EVERY NIGHT AT 8. SMOOTH. | Prsgne iy — | o w40 VADIS!” MINSTREL JUBILEE! Orgastzy 80 PEOPLE ON THE STAGE. The Greatest Minstre: 8-GREAT SCENES-8 EPECIAL PRICES—25¢. 80c o PRICES—15¢, 25¢, 35¢, 50c. MATINEE SATURDAY AND SUNDAY e . s s | OL Y MIPLA 2825350 THE CITY THE BLACK BARTONS, King and Queen of Comedy. ALICE KAYMOND, rica’s Greatest Lady Cornetist TRIXEDA, Thbe Talented and Beantiful. MLLE. THELMA, IN POSES PLASTIQU! AND OUR CELEBRATED STOCK Don’t Mies the Topical Songs £ee the “HOOT MON GOLF Hear the “GREAT PATRIOTIC Popular Prices. - - . .25 and 50 Cents Teiephone Bush ©. NEXT WEEK- “THE BQHEMIAN GIRL” April 16th—Magnificent Production “THE WIZARD OF THE NIiLE 122-124 O'FARRELL ST. COMPANY. ADMISSION FREE. MATINEE EVERY SUNDAT. RE COURS 5, $p. m, Y. .. Manager | 2 o 3 AELES R’ BROWN THIRD ACT FROM “FAUST” Qerimivrav m.. IN ALL R CAST. i 2 ‘: #’g?‘:’ USED AT ALL Sa and Vargas; | PADEREWSKI RECITALS. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO., “La Boheme | 10 cents | RACING! RACING! RACING! 1800—CALIFOENIA JOCEEY CLUB- 1900 2 Pr ADMISSION | f MARCH 2% to Aigfl}:sn. I UBIVE. OAKLAND RACE TRACK. " Racing Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs- __ Pacific Coast Representatives. eay, Friday and Saturday. “R-m or shine. R " ve or more races ea y. FOR BARBERS, BAK. boats lbn\-:-n :r:nriro at 12 m. end hou: bill: 2 13, 2 2 &N« P. W., conuectin, ewers, binder cand with tfains stopping at the entrance to the | Grone Hor i fanae pakers . m: ack. Last two cars on traln reserved for la. | 2,,’,’,’,’..""‘5;mun, pathters, and their escorts; o smoking. Buy ferry tickets 10 Shell Mound. Al trains vig, | DI°Men. UAF-roofers. tanness, oy ey L P e e electric car venth and Broadway, Oak. ufacturers, acram, land. Also ail trains vis Alameda moie con. | - e = s Dect San Pablo svenue cars at Foartesnth | and_Broad Oakiand. These electric cars £ direct 1o the track in fifteen minutes. Returning—Trains leave the track.at 4:15 and G Ry 20 immetiataty atter the last race. | €3 HOMAS H_WILLIAMS JR., President. R. B. MILROY, Secretary. Weak Men and Women great Mexican remedy; gives health and | strength 10 sexual organs. Depot, 328 Mark-~ HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE | ‘TWO MILLION DOLLAR GRAIN FLEET fi REACHES ENGLAND FROM PACIFIC COAST \Another Big Sugar Fleet Sails in Through the Golden Gate. ‘ The Booming Water-Front Trade Shows a | Scarcity of Sailors. e e S S e S SR e S Y ki * 5 @ 4 * . kS 4 . | & @ ! - * P & IR . ¢ ¢ d . @ L 4 P - & ® P * | & ® - P ® . . 4 ® . * ® ® . . o o . . & L 4 + . & © P - “ L 4 Y * 3 o . * 2 . P * & * . > ' g * . B I S S ) Merchentmen and Sugar Boats Bound in Through the Golden Gate. @+ P et eiei i eieieseiy Two big fleets reached their destina- | in heavy cloth so the chances ars he | weather in a gale, and that was the on'y terday. One came in through nt down al without a struggle thing on which to base an excuse for re- o Gate Sther from the Pa- | insurance. » pe almouth and | Chief Wharfinger Percy Henderson was 1 ports tha a_very digappe ard composed of vessels f the arrival of He had be we formed a. pool of e overdue and place the money arrival. Fralen at ‘the fracture of Johnson, a sweeper, was treated Harbor Hospital yesterday for the left leg and laceratl were p days from Memgo, | of the forehead, cheeks and hands. While wie, 160 d mber at work on the corner of Drumm and S mber | Sacramen a s ge wagon vem- | driven by Sam Kfper. ran him and rcauld | knocked him down. The injured man ws Royal n, De- to the s take the sat hosg Iberhorn the cargoes of ighborhood of . will that there was until t etween the sailing will go yard and ; slo after wh s are scarce 'f the cc old timers ry instance TR A few Iy eve W CONTRACT L Workman H INCIENT OR man wi dur ANNUAL SESSION Twenty-Third Council of the Grand Lodgeof California Formally Opened: OUT COMPLETELY o g,;._,“', Commissioner Powderly Fir- omel ally Rules Against the Jap Inouye. grand recorder, F. the amount of relief by the relief board was granted ¢ $149 586, alifor; The A year in the be it . — to pay one hundred and eighty-seven $2000 hird annual session of the and sevente $1000 claims, and leave a | The effort of Japan contract laborers the Order of balance of §; 29 deaths | to gain admission into the United States Workmen of ia opened 4 in the | by means of machinations of the Ku- vesterday morning in Odd Fellows' Hall, 2 the report | M@Moto Emigration Company has the grand officers a four hundred laws and amend. | celved a setback at the hands of Comm and fifty representatives being present. A. Freeman and | sioner General T. V. Powde backed The lodge was called to order by Grand ken up. the approval of Lyman J. Gag Master Workman J. M. Collins and im- S0 reclassify the as- | of the Treasury. United State: re shall not be any odd nts was recommiited tion Com ,1;“]‘:1\:‘;' xm(rm e .\g| i One to establish an employment bureau D€Ws day In a dispatch signed by ADVERTISEMENTS. was lost ymmissioner Powderly and approved by | ———— ~~~" | One to permit a member of a lodge who | Secretary Gage. The dispatch reads as has been a_member ten years, ha follow: the age ¥ and is The sion of H. Inouye into the United pay his as: .10 doposit States under contract would be a_vioiation of iciary certificate w dge 1 law. The appeal, as mmended by you, Is sessments it mi *e was, after | therefore dism De a very long discussion T POW n One that all lodges semi-annually was lost <hall install officers Commissioner General Gage. Approved: L. J Busy Woman One that persons engaged in the whole- | Inouye arrived on the Gaelic on March f::rl"fnr;w”rrrdv. lik '\“‘1 = ;.g'm‘ th [ 13 and exhibited a contract made by him He.n was referred to the supreme | With the emigration company. The con- tract séts forth that Inouye is not of the class prohibited by the of the United State: rep! One shall in €s. the term report of lodge e the names of those members immigration laws that he is not com- 7 Who,Jduring | the term entered into the | ing here as @ contract laborer; that the usiness 1 rried. : company guarantees that for the period Hucing the chatter fees for a new | of Tiiree years he shall noi become a pub- o R X _ | lic charge upon the United States: that is Mrs. Pinkham. Her requiring that supplies for a new | in case of his illness he will be cared for be furnished without cost § car- | by the company or sent back to Japan as the circumstances may warrant; that his fare and other traveling expenses are pa wholly by himself; that he is not an a sisted immigrant and that he has paid the company in consideration of the contract 10 yen. Inouye tes of inquir great correspondence is under her own super- vision. Every woman on this relating to the reinstatement of members In any lodge was after a long discussion carried. The -Grand Lodge adjourned at o'cloc] Last night there wa of Workmen in Odd F ness the exemplification A a large attendance llows' Hall to wit- tified before the special board that it usually requires from of the secret| g A g > o e bl continent should under- ' " 5oy o e secret Sx monibe f 8 yed fte & Jopansee erui- stand that she can wrife ' i::m: it a contest for a trophy. The con. | Srtl 12,7 (alT THom NS Bovirmment the testing teams were from Y of Fresno semite Lodge Prosperity Lodge of this city, | Cave the country but that by becoming freely to Mrs. Pinkham = ry ~ : ber of the Kumamoto Emigration Enterprise and Mount Hamilton lodges of | & mol e oigk i about her physical con- s:: 7ouni'sicaments Lodge of Sac | Company and paving ihe 10 ven he re- within a few days after the date of his application. He was not acquainted with his guarantors, they having been furnished by the company. Commissioner North notified Commis- ramento dition because Mrs. Pink- bham is { Degrm of Honor. Silver Spray Lodge of the Degree of Honor at its meeting last night tendered | sioner Powderly that the contract used 4 c Excels a by the company was drawn in this city | o o B cers and ¢pa¢ Inouye was put forward to make a ;na;u UT’:he :{Tlergun to llhn udl‘fl:\d test case. "lf;l! xgn;xld slrxxcv:eed the eoun- .0dge. The visitors were welcomed by | try would be flooded with Japanese con- and because Mrs. Pink- IMTY M .!1 shu. vart. chief of honor of the | tract laborers within a few years,” he odge, and there were responses by Grand | added. ;mm never violates con- Chict’of Honor Vicla S”"Norman, Grand e T ”.m becm dy of Honor Florence Nay,” Grand | an up-to-date hotel, The Bradbury. Every- and e she Treasurer Miss M. Ohea and many others. | ining first class. 16M California st., cor. Polk. + knows more about the ilis of women than any other person in this country. vl ydia E& Plnkhanhn;s -mpound has cured a million sick wo- men. Every neighbor- hood, almost every family, contains women relieved of pain by this Mrs. Waiter Malloy is chairman of the | committee that to-night will give a public reception to the grand officers and dele- gates in Laurel Hall of the Shiels build- foe: | CENSURED BY A JURY “STRAW BOND” KELLY IR e SENT TO SAN QUENT'N quckerman censured RAILWAY COMPANY IS jury in the case of Alphonse the Market-street | Zuckerman and several friends tried to Prisoner's Aged Mother Mckes a|board a Havesstreet car last Saturday evening. He caught hold of one of the | ;5. Btrong Figa fo the Ouxt far " | SEITS st the dinmitly, but cn deaian Mercy. of the.car being overcrowded he missed Thomas A. Kelly, recently convicted of | his hold and fell into the street, where he feloniously accepting a “straw bond' for | WAS run over by a wagon of the Alameda the release of a prisoner, was sentenced | 1 i grisman. 1 D. McConnell, denfed | to three and a half years in San Quentin | that the deceased got on the car at all. by Judge Lawlor yesterday. Although | Neither he nor the conductor would admit | Kelly was surrounded by many riff-raff | that the car was ever overcrowded. The | peliticians when he was in office, there | jury was unable to fix the responsibility were none in court yesterday to see him | for the death of the deceased, but said: sentenced. His. aged mother, however. | “We recommend that the Market-street fl.' o“ was _present and made a strong | car system be censured for the dangerous g{leu for mercy. Judse Lawlor said that | way in which it allows its'cars to be over- x» BROWN’S elly’s previous good character and the | crowded.” fact that his mother spoke so highly of | him as a son would tend to ameliorate the | severity of the sentence that the court gl bo: s Gugaty. might ptherwise Impose. Kelly was then | The new buildings and beautiful grounds rdered to stand ip and sentence was im. | at Hoitt's School, Menlo Park, will be | oven to summer guests June and July. * —_————— BRONGHIAL TROGHES. mmmv-’t,‘(a/gg:'! Signatare | i : I nacad Railway Company yesterday for his death.._ | I % I "GOLDEN AGE OF ITALIAN LITERATURE. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour BEaton, e i GOLDEN AGES OF LITERATURE. XII. DANTE AND HIS RELATION TO MODERN LITERATURE. (Concluded.) BY C. W. BENTON. PH.D. Another of the principal elements of | culture came from the Arabs. It is now recognized that scholastic philosophy was taken in great measure from their writ- ings. They form the link in the chain which connects ancient philosophy to scholasti The works of Aristotie, as commented by the Arabian philosophers, were translated into Latin and may be said to have contributed much to awaken the desire and the thirst for the original Greek sources, and thus prepared the way for the renaissance. | Front the Caliph Almamonn Honain re- ceived a weight of gold equal to each of the Greek b he translated into Ara- bic. From the ninth century to the mi dle of the eleventh the Arabs were mas- ters of Sicily, and_even under the Em- peror Fre < III, in the thirte h held the pen intellectual sway. Althc them for being ammeaans. it was f cinated by their superior civilization, th rich fabries, their ornam ts of jewelry, thei ely tempered bl and Toledo, their el which, a nenais s and wonderful tracs some brilliant dream lost in the pursuit of a symmetry at every moment it hopes to seize, which escapes it ever. Many of the s Europe floc to the jan universities back numerous sc The first clock known in to Charl R e R I e mente Vitellion P onais 1 of Alhazen. Gerar e astronomy b f Prolemy ieber. The sons the court of Frederic taught him the natural b and animals, and w them that umous comm which 1a. a Mussuima s him in that vast n the shades Socra and Aristo The Arabs Humboidt, e re- must b he physi- he § icenna, born 90, wrote on many sei- enc but was known in Europe only as a doctor. His rules, in five hook: the basis of medica A ri tropies t rgans are gifted wtih more vital force. the vegetable kingdomy is richer aro- matic gr hs. Caravans came from Arabia with tha spices and cense of Yemen rugs and pearls of Hadraman were ught into the markets of E The abs _constituted chemical macy From them came the first learned pre- seriptions Dante himself was registered books of Florence among the phar: and so was probably well acquair this branc bian science, Astron- and find numerous allu- sions in his pag That famous passage uttered by Pluto in the seventh canto, which most commentators have supposed to be Hebrew, is in all probability Arat It is on the face of it more likely that the poet should put into the mouth of one of the princes of the Infernal world an ut- terance in_the language of the great ene- mies of Christendom than words in the Hebrew. which, according te common be- lief, was the sacred mother of all 1 have thus mentioned some of the chief literary elements which combine in the “Divine Comedy.” The same may be done for_several others, such as the poli- tics of Florence and Italy, the art and sciel the “Di the medieval epic ever, a work of this, that these religion, nee of the middle ages,so that may justly What makes it, consummate art diverse elements is in are given not as simple facts of knowledge, but, like the chemical constituents of the living tree or flower, they all form an in- tegral part of one body of culture, which is the soul life of the great poet himself. | I have compared Dante to Homer, but he differs from Homer by all the differ- ence of the romantic and the classical | ideals in art. Homer brought the gods down to earth and made them men. Dante | takes men into the spiritual world and so connects them with the infinite. Classic art is clear and well defined. Its most_characteristic form was sculpture. It sprang from a simple and natural civ- ilization, not overshadowed by a dread of | the future coloring all its thoughts and | movements with a sense of the Invisible. The Grecks were children of the present, filled with the enthusiasm of actual en- joyment, and so their art attained the most exquisite perfection of material | form. During the middle ages, on the other hand. devotion and theology had their eyes turned toward heaven. Earth | was considered not as a place of enjoy- ment, but of expiation. To deliver the | sepulcher of Christ from the infidel would i bring salvation to the soul. Hermits went into the caves of the mountains to flee the world and to dream of the dutles of eter- | nit; 'l?here was a sense of the infinite value of the human soul. All that was done should be with a view to avold the penal- | scenes. DANTE ties of hell and secure the mansions that fade not awa: It was the duty of the strong to protect the weak and cppressed. The institution of chivalry ai which combineq the love of woman with the adoration of th virgin mother of God. Ideal womanho was made the intermédiate of the d This spiritual worship of woman is different from that beckoning on t E peared to there was suct soul that he When she and the tomb the Christian strength to him by of Beatrice has no power over a o his fal mortal after she was leal was ages, . N S S S S Y 1 The go: and the poin was very ible h xpr! art t h for freedom e ¢ te. hed with bec reproduction art he defines as This lineage fervor of the of portray: ermen painter’ more ra glory intere: tal ha is precious light of a sympathy [ es to the things. Whe speaks at some object In the realm of shades It 15 with the Intent look of a shoemaker try- ing to thread his needle after the twilight has gathered. When the spirits come around him in paradise it is as when gold- fishes in an aquarium flock around a crumb of bread. The music of the sky- lark is made real when he stops for a mo- ment as tisied with his last note Evi ng e time when t thought turns fondly toward he left at home or when the pil turn heavenward on hearing bell weeping for departing day of Galilee bec br: The heroes f the yme lilies the giant Antaeus stooped to Nft the travelers ove o of t} bterranean chasms he iw likened to the leaning tower of x at Balogna when a cloud has gathered upon it. There Is searcely a city in Italy which does not retain minis- cences of him. He used to sit on that stone to look at the cathedral path outside the city he used to walk i deep thought during his exile Florence has done all she could to atone for her ingratitude to her greatest citizen. She has erected monuments in his honor, and in the ghurch of Santa Croce a ceno- taph near the tombs of Michael Angelo and Galileo. but Ravenna, where he die refuses to surrender his ashes This_power of mingling human feeling with the ordinary scenes of nature and of life, possessed in a suoreme degrse by Dante. has become one of the chief feat- ures of modern litarature, the gift of fin, ing “sermons in stones, books In the run ning brooks and good in everything." Along that Division Encampment. Tt has finally been decided that there shall not be regimental encampments of the National Guard this year, but shere shall be a division encampment on Lavegs Heights at Santg Cruz. The adjutant general is preparing an order fixing the event for the week commencing August 4

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