The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 17, 1900, Page 9

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THE SAN FRA NCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1900. CUBAN POET IS DISCUSSE A '.’( h EXCITING TIME AT THE MEETING UF STUDENT BODY Electing Graduate ‘Manager. | D BY 5 AEGNIER An Is Made That Be Elected a General Vote. Amendment Officer by This g "THE WIZARD OF THE NILE" WILL HAVE BIG U Alexandre Petschnikoff an Artist of ESuperior Brilliancy. e s et New Company at the Grand Opera House—The Bills at the Other Theaters Remain Un- changed. SULE L e —_— 16.—The Associated | morning a w constitution. acles as presented were ation. Everything | until ection 3 of | follows ! nt, the secre- ber-at-lirge on the ted by of each yeal the month outgoing | te man ns. Four manager shall be of the Associated ber and alumni ¥ mmittee shall be of each year by the presi- ty this was offered so anager shall be elect The discussion | arm, and many d. | »on as nominations ager is made the chinson and C. E. ent of making @+ eie s a better . experienced man could * ey suggested that some one ° % 10 the present student B + as shown marked busi- “ udents would not . . amendment was carried o s jority and the managers { ¥ ! will be elected by the student body. - : @rirsese i et eiebeie @ . S . . . . . . . e i eteiece@® 4 in rare ewspapers works were DE REGNIER AND HIS WIFE. e e e e o S S ] “|FAIR POST GRADUATES | ENTERTAINED FRIENDS An entertainment and dance were given .WOOOOQS'O;OQQOOQ : by the post gradustes of St. Brigid's Academy last evening In Golden Gate | Hall. There was a large attendance and | the programme rendered was greatly ap- | preciated. The evening’s entertainment | opened with a selection by St. Brigid's or- | chestra, composed of the following young ladies: Misses Lulu English, Judith and | Irma Shirick, Joan and Josephine Bald- Edna Well, Grace Haley, Edith | ovan, Clarissa Graves, Edna Schaen- ling, Eulalie Kane, Jessie McHugh, Mabel, Mollie and Agnes Kelly. All the perform- ided the bow in an artistic manner. erine E. Galvin accompanied on | 0. The rest of the programme | sted of the following numbers: i Philip Paschal; harp selections, Kimball-Fitzeimmons; tenor solo | Frank Griffing; recitation, Thomas | cctions, Willlam Hynes; reci- | E. Johnston; vocal duet (Don- Frank Weiss and Mrs. James R. | solo, ary and gentlemen | In_charge: Mrs. Weiss, | , Misses Anna and M. ,\(;;mpcr. Miss L. English, Miss follo a wing ladies Mrs. J. | £ 8 oilosk M. 8¢ s Gaivin, Sue Healy, | Desmond; and . P. Dufty, Ed . J. McBride, J. R. ‘h J. Scanion and Bernard er. LIEBES WANTED NO CONTRACT WIDOWS Dartmouth A.umni Reunion. vable reunion of the Dartmouth | ion was held last night at iotel. Among the invited guests were Hon. H. C. Ide, '66, ex-Chief of Samoa and member of the Phil- ons Recorded in the the Young | | Commission, and Judge Sears of : ience of others, | Oregon. Addresses were made by ;ievr n this eity :[;rll l}r, Willey, first pry sident of the College - will for unlooked-for | of California; W. E. Barnard, Irs | : 4 for possible con- | William D. 'Walker, Fisher lr;iimco'um:;:i . filed yesterday the | Charles H, Ham ‘7. Hon. Thomas Fiint president of the State Senate, presided. | and Hon. Henry C. Ide was elected an honorary member of the association. —_————— She Was Despondent. Maggie Kineen, a married woman, liv- ing at 111 Haywood place, last night swallowed a quantity of morphine with suicidal intent. She was at on, v to the Recelving Hospital, where she oo | relieved of the poison with the aid of a | stomach pump. The woman's husband is | a peddier., and as he was preparing to make a trip into the country to dispose of his wares she concluded that she could will or in any | noij"“ I’\'l:l:’ul:l hlna. ;—\en for a few days, hall receive | and resolved to end iier existence. It s iatare "% | belleved she will recover s testator—Sidney | . re named as Nearly Died From Poison. m‘-': ur?n’?f- Policeman Ed F. Ward, who is on duty | at the Bouthern station, had a narrow by my i1 further such chi llars rpose, that any The support- | ¢ at each | most_insinuating charm and i e S = I have several hundred words to eat on the question of Victor Herbert's mu- sic, which hitherto I have found it im- ble to favor or commend. In “The d of the Nile” it is so much better n 1 dreaded that I might easily err in erpraising it. It s not better than some of the tuneful spots of his other but, en from the overture to 1 finale, it is a very even effort, yugh it is thumped out rather reckless- ¥ Mr. Hirschreld. ree actfuls of such good stuff should nough to mark “The Wizard of the as a singularly good entertainment be thankful for a bur- composed Wwith a seis- thanks to the iusic, nity of an opera and, more- the music carries off the usual y of Harry B. Smith's lines, which is no small achievement. gh 1t n It was different with “The ldol's Eye.” t optical opera the plot was not absurd as this; it silly was hopeless drivel. In ple at ntly the dialogue > Wizard" is worth a peacock’s tail- ful of Idol's Eyes” and it should out- run it & a walk. The olt people put a snap in the nd gave the smoothest and live- st night performance 1 have ever There evident In scene and seen. costume a more than usual taste, and the is ing is refreshing. s-gartered in tinsel, dtitude of golden calves that h to the general picturesqueness. LS opportunities movement of the t imes. Alf Whelan is Ssenll sorts of ways bet- ter than he has been in any other part, and Schuster gave me a similar surprise. Helen Merrill and Annie Meyers snug their parts and Tom Green is stiff but | harmless in a small part. Miss Graham is a picture that might be improved if she knew better how to make up her eves, and sings gloriously. It s a way she has. e hnikoff will be one of s of the twentieth cen- Alexandre Pe the great violin: Had he been born a decade sooner | tury. his fame would be a thing of the present, th era, for even th b s great. 1 am al- f) about using this ve, but his brow had strings _yesterday title to all that the s was indisputably but our patience not only have we nity r the king of layed by an artist, but the reme genius ational by ever. He authoritative. first Hi: feeling for his art sep and true as his tech- finished. He is electrifying, vet s brilliance to r rather than the rocket - is intense rather than immense; ather than broad and its superb s ined h perfect most pleasing security and igh and were uncom- sting of the major Concerto and Petschnikoff estab- - first movement of which was a delightful item a rarely limpid and sweet the concert and snowed lowed. The ne, rich with a fancy and spirituality that we do not usually associate with Bach, was given with the I shall re- chnikoff's playing of it as an ble exhibition of the sublime member Pe something of a disap- charm_of Rublinstein's vas due chiefly to the urg was ment. The able form, 3 Hambourg his interpretations, par- much abused nocturne, | of the virtuoso and Hambourg but show. us what new and strange things can be done to these compositions, of which the purely musical purpose should be sacred. The assisting orchestra was not bad and M. Lachaume was given much ap- jause and a wreath—probably because he good looking. PORTER GARNETT. Orpheum. There are some rare and spicy novelties at the Orpheum, but the character of the attendance never changes—it is always a full house. The -house Is so full this veek that the free list has been suspend- ed and standing room only is the lot of those who come late. Among the new- »mers, Bellman and Moore, singing and ng comedians, do some neat and | turns, the lady catching the ad- miration of the Johnnies with the be- wildering perplexities of many-hued petti- coats and shapely limbs. " Falke and Semon also score a hit with their clever | bit of singing, dancing and gond acting. Ventriloguist Duncan is one of the wit- tiest and funniest and thoroughly up to date. Something novel is the exhibit of trained ‘;lgmms. cockatoos and ravens by Mme. Marzella. Ravens that jump hrough hoops of fire and cockatoos that spell and turn back somersaults are not to_be sneezed at every day. The show concludes with the Guitanos, comic acrobats, who must be seen to be enjoyed. The holdovers are: 81 Stebbins, Bobby Gaylor, the De Forrests and the Empire Comedy Four. California. It was an appreciative audience that greeted James Neill and his company of artists at the California Theater last night. “A Bachelor’'s Romance” is one of those qulet productions which com- mands the keen attention of an audience. Last evening there was an exception to this rule. In one of the boxes was a party which annoyed the patrons and artists alike by making too much noise. Toward sym- | cantabile in the “Canzonetta” which fol- | Chopin has become a victim | zwe—o-@-o—o-o—o—o- "LOOK BUT CHIMMY, DERE3 DE QUY WOT TAKES YER SENSE>S” e e e e 2 Q%OOQA“:Q-QrQ 'FORTY SCHOOL CENSUS MARSHALS BEGIN WORK “\ES ONLY ] YEAR OLD, BUT YOU'D THINK HE WAS Two, HE'S SUCHA BEAR SWEET DARLING LITTLEPETHE NEVERCRIES~ M’-Ml SICK HEADACHE fndigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per fect remady for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowelsa Purely Vegetable, | Srnall Pill, Small Dose. Smafl Price. €0909CE0CPOPOS0S0S0CP0P0S0SON $ 13 0'I="Y IS HEALTHFUL! > A Natural Mineral Water 3 with medicinal qualities, & For Indigestion and Stomach Disorders. Socated VICHY IN SIPHONS 0e0¢ > B I R R B g 904040 WHY SCHOOL CENSUS TAKERS CANNOT SLEEP NIGHTS. SNTYWICHY S 4 = | o T I S R SR S S S S . ‘ | Get the Genuine 3 WO score stoo) houldered, sad- | against, but they were not left long In; would crowd him into a corner and pro- eved, weary, disheartened-looking ‘lgnorance. Of course, they were not in | ceed to pour into his ears a detailed ac- { men of all ages and sizes and pre- vious conditions of servitude dragged themselves up the stone steps leading to the office of the Chief Census Marshal in the City Hall yesterday afternoon just as the clock was striking the hour of 5. These same forty men had left the room earlier in the day full of enthusiasm for the work to which they had been assigned and joyfully thankful for the opportunity to work fifteen short days at $ per, | weighted down only by the multitude of instructions imparted to them by Chief Census Marshal John Ellert as to the | best and easiest means of securing a full and complete record of all the chitdren of either sex and of all colors within the confines of the ci and county of San Franeisco who have arrived at and not passed the school age—from 5 to 17 years. | The forty census marshals were told in the morning that their work must be completed by April 30, and then they were tched to the hithermost ends of the ; disclosing the number and names of her any danger of bodily harm beyond an occaslonal set-to with an indiscriminating bull-dog or a rather warm reception from an inconsiderate housewife and mother who had some inexplicable objection to progeny. | These little experiences were unpleas- ant, it s true; but the census marshals did not mind them so much after the first few hours. They had by that time ac- uired considerable ability in putting ences between themselves and the dogs and in standing off the lingual attacks of the mothers who did not know the differ- ence between a census marshal and a poundman. What they could not get used {o and what promises to make wrecks of them, mentally and physically, before the fifteen days expire s the excess of in- formation thrust upon them by proud and doting mammas who insist on telling any- thing and everything they can think ot | regarding their offspring. It made no dif- | ference if the unfortunate census marshal insisted that all he wanted to know was the number of children in the family, thelr names, ages and nativity, the mo- ment he stated the object of his visit { They little knew what they were up | these confidential and loquacious females count of the aches and pains and personal characteristics, together with a vivid de- scription of every act and incident in the lives of each individual member of their families. Different women accomplished | this result with varying degrees of suc- | CELESTI N S cess, according to their volubflity: but | - they invariably left the desired informa- 2 tion until the last. Occasionally the cen- | © A. VIGNIER, Distributing Agents sus taker was so dazed by the avalanche 0408080990 #040600080809090#0$090 of words that he made his uncertain $08000900090€0#0$0408340408 ;\;la); 1;; the frr)nl[ ate Utr’x"”lo( of the fact | - al e was without the information he sought, to have the same hurled after | OCEAN TRA him as he gained the sidewalk as a sort | . i of postseript. | H H 112 no wonder that the marshals showed | PaCific Coast Steamship Co. the wear and tear of their efforts when Steamers leave Broadway they reported back to their chief last night. 'hey had aged perceptibly and all declared that before the {ob s finished they will be either dead or Impervious to wharf, San F) April i, 21. 35 o _company’s any kind of an attack that may in future attle. be directed against them. For_Victoria, Vancouver (E. The following additional census mar- | ), Port Townsen . shals were appointed at a speeial meeti Tagumn, et of the Board of ucation )-u(enda; ol New Wantn ety morning: E. M. Dillon, C. W. Lubin, | TR AR George Orr, A. J. McDonald, D. A’|1and every fitth day thersa’ter: CRaner o8 3 Pringle, A. B. Lawson and John Carew. Ta to N. P. Ry.; at van- the end of the first act Miss Edythe Chapman brought the offenders to their senses by stopping short in the middle of her act and gazing fixedly into the box and walting until silence was restored. This lttle received a general ap- jlause. T Fhe Nefll ¢ next_production_will e ““Cap aire,” by Miss Mar- zar,x Merringto play in which E. H. Sothern scored a great success. Alcazar, The Alcazar had a good audience last evening, the opening of another week of The cast “Quo Vadis.” - fore—George P. Webster as Nero, Edwin T. Emery as Viniclus, Ernest Hastings as nius, Jeffrey Willlams as Tigellinus, the roles 'of Lygla, Pomponia and Ursus | *gle will be donated towar being taken respectively by Miss May | Blaney Mapgaret Marshall | and | George s. What has been previous- | 1y sald applies to the performance of last There is enough of the unusual | to keep the interest going and the scenes | are quite effective. The play seems to be booked for good houses during its run.* Columbia. Willlam A. West's Minstrels commenced | their second week at the Columbia The- ater last night. The house was well fillled. The singing in the first part of | Charles G. Weber, John P. Rodgers and | Richard J. Jose was thoroughly appre- | clated and enthusiastically applauded. In the second part the acrobatic feats of the | three Luken brothers and the grotesque | dancing and contortions of the three Mar- velles were marvelous, Grand Opera-House. The members of the new company at the Grand Opera-house faced a large owd last night in their second perform- nce of ““An_ Arablan Girl.” Thg piece | promises to go wells Fischer's Concert House. | evening. this week are Senorita Augusta Salvini, Signorita Sylva Puereri, Master Thomas tini, Signor Badaracco, Senor Vargas and Hinrichs' ‘orchestra. Last evening the programme included scenes from “Mig- non’ and “Cavallerfa Rusticana,” with Badaracco, Vargas and Puereri in the casts; also a great variety of orchestral musie, ranging from Strauss wal a fantasia from “Lohengrin.”” Among the numbers were Czardas from "(‘up}gelln." and numbers by Leutner, Parelli, Haydn, Sabathil, Delibes, Kerker, Massenet and Gounod. The names of the authors sug- that was the fact. Master Dunn made hiz first appearance in the house last evening. | He mad to respond to an encore after he had sung “The Holy City.” Hinrichs led the orchestra with skill and spirit. The house was filled. Testimonial to Miss Roddy. At Sherman, Clay & Co.'s Hall this evening Miss Adelaide Roddy, the well- known lyric and dramatic soprano, will be tendered a farewell testimonial, prior to her departure for the East. She will be assisted by Bernard Walther, violin; A. Rodeman, flute, and Roscoe Warren Lucy, plano, and the programme will in- clude compositions of Grieg, Tosti, Haydn, Sarasate, Donizetti and Gounod. Boy Fatally Injured. this afternoon and had her right ankle | fractured and her collar-bone dislocated. | The horse got loose from the cart and knocked down Roy Keuner, a l4-year-old boy, who received injuries which may re- i sult fatally. KILLED BY CARELESS HANDLING OF SHOTGUN Ten-Year-Old Girl’s Head Blown Off by the Weapon in a Little Broth- er's Hands. Oakland Office 8an Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, April 16. NIE NUNES, 10 years old, was hot and instantly killed last even- ing by the accidental discharge of a shotgun in the hands of her eight-year-old brother, George. The tragic affair occurred on the ranch of the children’s father, Joseph Nunes, located ers, and Ed- Vis left to Violet | escape from death Sunday night. At his | warae. & mars o heast of Hay- ft for the edu- | home, 120 on street. he made a salad | went to town and Np%m the ufiwt— s, @ nephew, and | end ate heartily of it. in a few minutes | ing to Deputy Coroner Grindell, who re- .@nd $2% a month, | he was seized with Violel:l pains and Dr. n PATred to the scene at once and made a f i 1o the testator's | O'Brien was called in. diagnos oped .,,.T,,' aiher. Aar. n“)‘!:;im’esl ot this §{" u:fed': one of ptt:men:ne 3 1;”:“‘;;?! o a"eéi'.‘;“n'.“:?.?a :mv.'iha 1‘!::3:. et ) of the esta mentio 's ¥ +d. The will Is dated May 20, 1809. It di- gxo'ud ‘was at one v.lmepll vw c.ilt‘ihc:} tunh::h'n’.:-fl.: entering &?“’ém"’“ n ;:::d that the testator's body cre- | condition. He was out of | from a distance of t feet. fidn house, and as he passed the kitchen door the hammer caught and . exploded a cartri The little slrl was standing ear the doorway in direct line of the shot. She expired immediately. The boa- was so frightened by the terri- gle accl ant thfi nl;; ?n“ and hl‘% for jours under a an outhouse, ;r.lt:;re he was found late at night by his er. Rumors of the shooting reached Hay- wards late last nl{,ht and it was then said that the boy had deliberately used his sister as a target, not knowing that e weapon was loaded. This s afternoon by tl e : M ¥ 2 quest to b heid to—'-:{:r;:gon the ranch, nghommosth-wm '”'" at roner was as hereto- | | The people at Fischer's Concert House Dunn, the boy soprano; Signorina Pollet- | SAN JOSE, April 16.—Mrs. M. J. Gilman | of East San Jose was thrown from a cart | | | | | | i | | Itzes to | Of an association. | tion was pronounced b{‘( ARTISTS CONTRIBUTE = TO THE GROVE FUND s no more disturbance. | Amateur Auctioneers to Invite Bids | for Pictures on Exhibition at | the Bohemian Club. ) An exhibition of pictures by the artist | members of the Bohemian Club will be | held in the jinks room of the club, com- | mencing to-day and closing Thursday evening. The artists, comprising the managing committee, announce that the pictures will be sold at auction on Thurs- day evening and that the proceeds of the sale will be donated toward the purchase the Russian River. The auctioneers will be Horace Platt, | Louis Sloss Jr. and Albert Gerberding. | The committee has named three days | when visitors may enjoy the privileges of | the exhibition. To-day from 2 to 5 o'clock the whole club will be placed at thelr dis- sal. To-morrow between the same ours guests will be admitted to the jinks room only by way of the elevator. On Thursday from § to 11 p. m., during | which time the pictures will be on sale at auction, visitors will also be admitted. For the benetit of those who attend the exhibition to-day and to-morrow the com- mittee will receive blds for pictures through the office of the club, which bids will be re,)or(ed to the auctioneers on Thursday night and accepted unless higher bids are made. | %he Bohemian Quartet and the- Banjo Club have volunteered their services for Thursday evening. | ———— Association of Secretaries. Several weeks ago Secretary Wood of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce started a movement for the organizatios of the secretaries of all the commercial and industrial bodies of the Pacific Coast, and in his letters to his fellow officials suggested that the organization be per- fected under the direction of the Board of Regents of the University of California. | The project found favor, and the Regents | appointed E, Scott, B. Goodwin, R, | { | Freud, G. Dennison an. H. L. Smith of the local bodies to get the project under way. This committee will meet at 2 p. m. to-morrow and arrange for the formation —_—————— Civil Service Examinations. The United States Civil Service Com- mission announces that from April 23 to gest that there was variety of moods and | 28 examinations will be held in this city | for the positions of first-class marine en- | gineering ‘drattsman at Newport News, va., at a salary of $ per day; of first- | cless mechanical draftsman at Newport | News, Va., at § per day. On May 15 an | examination will be held for the position | of statistical fleld agent, Commission of Fish and Fisheries. TRIAL OF FITZGERALD I FOR MURDER BEGINS | Accused Seeks to Obtain a Change of | Venue, but the Judge Denies | the Motion. | Special Dispatch to The Call. | REDWOOD CITY, April 16.—The trial of | John Fitzgerald for the murder of John Lennon commenced here this afternoon before Judge Lorigan. Out of the regular | | panel of talesmen but five were selected to act as jurors. A special venire of | thirty was ordered to issue, with a direc- | | tion to summon them from the body of the county. District Attorney Bullock is pros- ecuting and L. P. Boardman defending | Fitzgerald. Last Monday the trial of the case was to have commenced, but at that time Attorney Boardman moved for a change of venue. An affidavit of the de- fendant was read at that time, in which | he alleged that on account of his attitude | at certain times upon various questions of importance he had incurred the ani- mosity of certain classes of people in the county, who would now lend their ef- | forts to obtain his conviction. One in- | B e biring Valley Water Company, cy of the Spring Valley Wat mpany, n:othu that he had advocated the re- moval of the county seat, another that he Y::ed the incorporation of the town of ?:'& and for these reasons he had an- | tagonized, one or another, most of | the ple of the county. Countless af- fldnv?:: ‘were presented by the District At- torney showing that Fitzgerald had over- | estimated his importance and that he was but little known. The motion for the | change was denied. The examination of, the jurors to-day roceeded upon the theory that they must | biased against defendant for the rea- sons set forth in the afore mentioned af- fidavit. Very few :l't l:lmlo enm‘llned had Im;luliuunce him, and man; Rever heard of him. The case will be e | sumed to-morrow morning. A B R £ Hire a Train. Special Dispatch to Call. WOODLAND, April 16.—Court Yolo 1313, 1. O. F., has chartered a special ecar, with Klose. | and Congressman Metcalf is expected to- | trouble. He was 3 years of age and leaves wvmn&:unngm?wuu- oon on regular trai; or seventy members of Court Yolo 20 April . P, R"r: For Eureka, Humbe £ - e 14, 19, 24, 29; May 4 and every £ down to assist Deputy Supreme Ranger Duckworth in instituting a new court at | *5o% ta Cruz, Monterey, n Dixon. A team from the Elmira cOUrt gone pore Harford (San Lais Obispo) will also be present and confer the ori- Ventura, Hueneme 3:;;1. degree upon a number of cundl—‘z.g“s:;m{"ehf :'r'::'x,’\.g‘“::"n:} o s ——— | eafter. TWO MEN HELD AND | o g P S, ez st ey s | Ban Lond Redondo (Los Angelesi—11 & m., SUSPECTED OF MURDER Aziis s = = ser {iek il & San J For Ensenada. Magdalena Bay. 0, Mazatl Altata, La Paz, Santa Rosalia Rancher Mysteriously Disappearsand Guaymas (Mexico)—10 a. m., ith of each Indications Point to Foul Play | ™Eot™ purther information cbtain company’s tolder. Having Taken Place. EUREKA, Cal., April i6.—Peter Kloss, | a resident of the Dyerville section, has been missing for two weeks. Saturday | Sheriff Brown received a letter containing intimations of foul play and he immedi- | ately left for the scene to conduct an in- | vestigation. This evening word was re- ceived that the Sheriff has under arrest there Joe Hendrickson and Peter Faeling. | Kloss and Hendrickson lived at adjoin- ing ranches and there had been trouble between the two for some time In the courts over the right of way across Hen- The company reserves the right steamers, sailing dates and hours withont previous n. TICRET ot salling tice. OFFICE —4 New Montgomery THE 0. R. & N. CO. DISPATCH FAST STEAMERS TO PORTLAND From Spear-street Wharf at 10 a. m. drickson’s land. jearching parties thor- | £12 First Class lncludlnz Berth oughly scoured the country surrounding FAHE $8 Second Ciass and the ranches, but no trace of the missing | COLUMBIA salls ...._........ Apeil 8 man can be found. A hole in the grouna A _Shert Line to Walla Walla, Butte, | Helena and au Golnts in’ che “Northweet. Through tickets to all points East. E. C. WARD, General Agent, 630 Market st. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO., | Superintendents. SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY | AMERICAN LINE. TEACHERS IN SESSION saw roas. soorasxeros, Looos, Pamts. Stopping at_Cherbourg, Westbound. From New York e Wednesday, 10 & m. where Kloss is known to have buried $24 was found tmp!f’ and his clothes are also missing from his cabin. The two men under arrest are suspected of doing away | Special Dispatch to The Call. { SAN LUIS OBISPO, April 16.--The San | Luis Obispo County Teachers' Institute | convened to-day for a five days’ session. Mrs. Woods is ex officio president, Mrs. K. Goodrich secretary and Mrs, E. S. Wilso conductor of the convention. Ne: St. st New York and Antwers. | From New York every Wednesday. 12 noon. - Westerniand ..April 1t} Friesland . May The_reception_committee is composed of e - N eeternia Miss Mary McKennon, Mrs. M. S.pgpauldu T SR Y Wepans in% and Miss Hilda Soderstrom. ! he committee on music is composed of | James Preston, Miss Minnle Mayne, Miss EMPIRE LINE 8. 8. Ohto, from San Francisco May 15 and from Seattle May 24, to Nome and St. Michael. Mary Collins, Miss Bessie Collins, Miss | Subsequent sailings June 3. July 31, August 3. 7 3 First and second class paseage. No steerage. o aeer For full information regarding freight and At the opening of the session Invoca- Rev. Father V. Venable, presi. Board of Trade. wel- | passage apply to i INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION CO, 20 Montgomery st., or any of its agents. Agullera. .Yud(ge MeD. ity dent of the comed the teachers to San Luis Obispa. | At the musicale Mrs. A. J. Monihon, solo- | P R ist; Mrs. T. T. Crittenden, accompanist, g gy = and Miss Harriet Wilcox participated. Wednesday. m The main subject under consideration by or the first session was - Professional In- ‘he's.”"8. Anstraite piration,” by David 8. Sneddon, principal ealls for Honowis of Paso Robles High School. onpany- ¥ . May & 1900, at 2 5. m. Favorite line around the world via Hawall, Samoa, New Zealand, Australia, India, Sues, ; $610 first class. 5 SPAECKELS & 803, GO, Agts., 14 B o areight olhes. 321 Marter 30 TOYO KISEN KAISHA. TEAMERS WILL LEAVE WHARF, COR- plomm A et CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK. April 16.—John W. Taylor of San Francisco is at the Holland; A. Bouvier of San Francisco is at the Mur- ray Hill. A. M. Horton salls to-morrow for Europe. Congressman Metcalf’s Misfortune. OAKLAND, April 16.—Corinne Metcalf, the little daughter of Congressman Victor | © ner First and Brannan streets, 1'p. m. H. Metcalf, who has been suffering from | for YOKOHAMA and HONGKONG, caliing af typhoid fever, suffered a sudden relapse | Kobe (Hiogo), N and Shanghal, and to-night and recovery is doubtful. Ts. | connecting at Hongkong with steamers for In- Metcalf arrived from Washington to-day | aTge Fee ved on board om'day morrow. ————— | Death of an Old Engineer. | OAKLAND, April 16.—James M. Blanch- ard of this city, who was one of the old- A 1900 RU. Saturday, May 19th, 1900 v nd-trip tickets at reduced rates. For est engineers in the employ of the South- otfice, *n Bacifie Company, died In the Southern | (rvight and passase apply at company's ofice, 'acific Hospital yesterday from heart W. H. A three grown children. The funeral will take place to-morrow afternoon Ma- sonic Hall, West Oakland. Hatch's Property Attached. OAKLAND, April 16.—An execution was issued to-day by the court and an attach- ment fiied by Sheriff Rodgers on the prop- ert}* f"' A.d A ghu:h. ;h.eflf"r,u'n grower, to satisfy a deficiency ol . lue on a [ODATION mortgage to Sherman, Clay & CO. The | Regerves L i - roperty attached is located in Murray e B e . m‘fim-. LA 2 & ‘ownship. 41 California st. The Secrets of Planets Revealed. The immense telescope which is now in process of construction is expected to bring the moon within a mile's eyesight of this world, and to reveal the of all planets. COMPAGNIE GENERAIE TRANSATLANTIQUS. DIRECT uxI_r'l;o lu\‘nl.:-wuusi @ ev nstead of ery . North River. foot of ursday y, from November 2, 1389, Pler 42, gznon st., LA GASCOGNE. April 19: LA TOU- It may cause as great a_change in the world's IN; ?:u 2: LA BRETAGNE, May & LA thought as Hostetter's Stomach Bitters does cn;_lt'ju INE, May 10. First class to Havre, in the physical condition of from and upward: 5 per_cent reduction on round flylp&wl‘. constipation, liver or kidney to Havre, $46: 5 per cent re- troubles. Bitters strengthen the entire on_round trip. GENERAL AGENCY system,_and also, prevents malaria, fever and | FOR UNITED STA AND CANADA, 22 ague. Try it Broadway (Hudson ), New Yori. J. F. butiding Pacifie Coast Agents, 5 Moat- BAY AND RIVER STEAMERS. FOR U. $. NAYY YARD AND VALLEIQ. MON., Tues, Wed, Thurs. and Sat wt 9343

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